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THE 


AND 


FOR 


LONDON: 


PUBLISHED FOR THE PROPRIETORS, * 
AT 5, UPPER WELLINGTON STREET, COVENT GARDEN. 


1849, 


INDEX OF CONTENTS 


GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 


For 1849. 
A Andromeda floribunda, 14 etheris 
e, 422; 8 of, 501, 518, 534, Inventions, 615; Woodward on 
a ee a 360 1 hoenga su- ne 618 to inite, n Suthep plan of keep- Light, 631 ; Curtis on the Rose, yes 
pavonin 53 : 
sf 14, 41, 139, 361 TON. 525 715, | Aneroid baromter, 323; Bå — sg a ing, to send by post, 694; Australian, Draining Tables, bn At lg Desert, 9425 
of Ri a Mr, Cara, 406 28, 138 ; s system | Anglesea, climate of, 86 Ber aden 23 Taylor on, rev., 231 Portraits of Members of the I * 
age g ; Dr, S On Aa Animals, 694, 726, 758, 790, 807, 823; new, 38. | Bee flowers, 104, 116 663; Mrs, Sabine’s . of Hum. 
3 68 posting 389 in dwelling- | AD nual, dwarf, ‘10s; 5 21 5 „i68 Pye Beet, ‘Silver, a ‘substitute for Spinach, 342; boldt's A of Na 678 ; 1 
A } aising when to sow, Guide to Science, 695; Harris’ Guide to New, 
Bal: fant Mins ob * 534, 565, N. pe a aoe i n suitable for, 118 South Wales, 759; Wilkinson’s Handbook to 
an 598; legs and of, is a i 32 adonha Lily, 676 South Australia, 759; Lankester’s Transit, 
‘Advice to gird — ang 2 Ki 7 a retusa, . 205 295, 826 Bella sombra, 86 —4 of Schleiden’s Botan v, 775; Fruits from 
— — n wey 675, 694 3. ot ton — 49 A Bonin ai N Barometer, rev., 327 1 pb gre and * me 755 „ 
„ t enefit clubs, eners’ anack, 791; Moore’s Han 
Agardh on Algology, 2 s, 357 Aphelandra oris siata majon, 4 726 Ben n ** of Tip sh Ferns, 721; 1 yy. 
, 3 k eeds 7 - 
ry — howering of, 583, 614 iy en age 392, 486, 5013 Nelis d'Hiver Pear Berber ae — 1 1 dener, 823 „„ = > 
ts, land, 5 cations of; 538, 572, 778 N ch, a ** by, 155 Birds, metal — ran aye to, 104; cage, | Booth’s nursery, Bambari, sateen 391 
2 ve view of, 9; f| Apios t a Sa 135; sparrow. * r. Balen Botany, study of, 116; W es Translation of 
288.05 s * ce ireland, 42, 205, 539, 618, 3 . Chelsea, ditto, 420; fe sy a oobi 2105 en de Jussien’s Elements of, rev., 120; 
22 al, “ts, 1 nce, 44, 125, 290, 331, 348, |, Apples, go pod ete rs, 184; 9 A a 200; fungi | 153, 469, 4 Dr. Lindley’s M , 
08, » 523, 588, 604, T: ai aa 764 ; 75 596 1 96783 8 dessert, 744; kitchen, Biseay x as, 69 Ty 390; yri — Pitcher by — 
; i Black leg, to prevent, 173 Botanic and Experimental @ Edin. 
= 10 ** ri 1 0 186; progress of, Apricots, to force in pits, 181 Blight, e of 373 ; new Pear, 755 h, ie 
agi A — * 202; am and manufactures, Arable v. Grass land, 12 Blomley on Insect Blights, rev., 583 Botanical 3 India-house, 260 
—— * e Hieko 9, 412; n , Arabis grandiflora, 245; alpina, 245 Boilers, furred up, cure for, 648 Botanical collectors, 503, 820 
— — 257, 555 N of, rev., 509; Arancaria 2 181 Bones as manure, 125, 188 ; ditto steamed as, Botanical Dictionary, Paxton’s, noticed, 120 
pog tion ART. DAG, BG Nite 651, das, Leeres 252; to crusb, 188 ; and acid, 283 Botanical Gardens, Lisbon, 54; Port Phillip, 
mate — 636 ; contain Inet ays, 86; and oli- | Arbours, Books REVIEWED: Gray on Plants of the Mr. Dallachie’s appointment to, 599; Cama. 
— s aws affecting, 809. 4 — pomological, 199, — heh had United, States, 7; 3 Garden Alma- Benne, 80 
— mnie chemistry, 41, 171, 364; and Mr. | mee 8 310 ; a nack, 7, 759; Williams on Drainage aA uets, French, 356 1 
; ge, rev. Irrigation, 13; logy, 3 Boe 12, 27, 41 . 107, 154, 
serea College, Cirencester, prizemen at, | Arnott’s stoves, 292 2 Wilfehs Tithe Agardh on a S for ee = 4 249, 268, 1 5 283, 333, 354, 
Agricultural discussion, 5 Arsenio, use of, in agriculture, 10 1549, 77 ; Bustigns’ Natural History, of Go- 571,603, 636, 668, 720, 7% Ä 
Agricultural improv: * en t for, 54 lalming, 87 ; pee Campaign es for cate, 10 n 
Agricultural 1 8 4,4 200 r aden of Giant 1 69, 101; prices of; 667, 698, 718, 
—— tural Model 15 rev., 155 ni Saint 109 ; Sturt’s Expedition into. Brower’ Dr.) Guide to Science, rev., 695 
Agricultural demoralisation, ris Saal $ 358; to salt, Sen — a D Raston’ Botanical | Bridge's Unloniaation of Ireland, . — an 
Agricul * er ti > ranslati Briggs’ . 2 
enden education, 602, 612, 033, 065 TONA floor, 6 Aden dg Jassien’s Elementa of Botany, | tropolis, Le. revy 1 
—.— 1 ssociati u. British, 612, 629, 644, 661, 676, 120; Briggs on How to Improve the British Association, G12, 629, 644, O61, 676, 602, 
9 70 08, "725, 757, 806 of the Metropolis and to Feed the People. 09, 725, 757, 
Athrotaxis imbricata, 7 710 Ireland, 141; Duncan on Land Broceali, to grow fine, 421 
ee, nosa farming, 23 245 141; Areschong on Algæ, 151; Marshaibe Brunsvigia Joseph 668 
ET 281, 1 528, 573, Index Ready koner, 151 „ Buckwheat for 92 
oa aides pe Sa elt 157; W 5 . e | Butte, on 24 24; preservers for, 246; Cape, 
’ ; Weaver on 
Aan nene e death of, 3 ture, 167; Hine on Model for Agri- | 437, 453, 468, 551; ditto, culture of, 518; Ss 
Alman A VO CROD, 44; otato, } cul bourers, 167; 8 plant, 
. Bre Garden, rev., 7, 759); ey expedition into by Stash, rer., 119; | &c., 183; Körber on ams, 183 ;| Butter, London, 61, 77, 92 impromptu, 381 
: 8, 740; John. „ i &c. in, 551; hand-book. to, Caponising, 189; Stephens Book of the 
eri Farm, 189; Dredge on Davies’ Rotary En- 
hasi Vaiala 152, 182 gine, 189; Bridges Colonisation of Ireland, 
Azalea ite inin 508; y, 184; select, 264; hardiness of 198; Duodecimo, or the Scribbler’s Progress, 
propagation of, 788 198; Handbook of New Zealand, 215; ies 0 


son’s Rural Cyclopedia, 221; Shaw 
Tenant Right, 221; Pi cong Bar Hiv: 2313 


Hocker's Rhododendro: ma- | CABBA cee 
laya, 228; Solly’s cathe on Chemistry, en $10, 792 ; Brain AADO 


B 263; Whiting’s, Gar for Ladies, 279; „ 436; i; Kong oF 
a on igt Farming, 285; De Candolle’s sold a; eae n sched 
B 1 020 3 tr, bal wo Magee a Stewart's Stable Foipnaii, ss manele 
B e . * 317; Belville on . Cactuses, to sow, 
Hatton n S Savin farmin . W. 25 409, 
Balsam es sor Societies, 333 ings! Someries W OR 4 Ene inp ye a 
Balsamina * 326 ys 2 7 Ooune 
Bamboo, sacred, 277 Male of Ferns, 3 i E a PE mheanma EPO i 
ame Bamboo tubes: for irrigation, 539 tive Beings, by 358; Re- 2 ulis, tayi, 325; 
57, 502 Bambusa, rate of growth of, 471 ew, 381; Dr. s Medical and Eco- an erg ) 4 
American blign Bantams v. insecta, 758, 790 ioe 3 See 40, 216, eee 
can bli antams v. 3, 790 neer an se b ; “A 
Wertes Cotto, > Cure, fon, 22, 88 Bark, price of, 230, 285 Sea-side 4% Kaewa bedding, 712 ; 
arley and Carrots, 172 ambles in i 
Barns, m : in, 92; fee, 21,72 . Illustrations of 
321 FRI: a, ed TGS son? Hoskyas His 
Be Haricot, to cook, 342; gy 345, Reid of Storms and of | 
ST, 095 anno 490; Kidney, seed of, as. Toca re 519 ; age rane ees 
Wen 284 sow, 622, 766, 794 duction to 534; 
Beer, to correct acl 684, 701 — honing os 


Cape 
— 4 — 
ear na 
* = 
i, 453, 46 
era IA 
— 504 
Carp, 8,7 pus culture 
rot, ame 44 ep 1 
— . 503; to | Cow clubu, 749 
cater Go — of ae la; m, to 
173, pets tera 485 8 
187, eb 828 horse. a — „ 82 
i75 — ; Scotch, ar 9 Crocus Hi s 
boil 1 aii, 25 a 2 55 ae ge 1N 
are steers 5 EERS . Be 
— Gt TIC 2 123 wi a Bor e a E k 
EEN e ae 245 s 
3 ** e —— M 5 Eepallers, 
4 p 2 sta er. pu 
ape ioe 9 8 0 * — — Nr — ebe $ 
22 1 755 son, 2 22415. Ga —— otme * — T iit tre 
et res TI 120. 769, 139; Cuc — me, & ' Disease of, vem ty — i 
a s, an 9. 269 5; . 4 itt D 30 i great 15 1 pi ; 
Krr- ica te 0,2 48 camber e Sorte ci ns, totr ter than th 
abe Leen tee 2 5 Potten Camber d f 2 * Bey a n the fa 
Celery, = oe redo f 1055 , cunt x: 1 to make, GL 7 — nÈ i ; z ee 
— wera, b 780 hy he san, Cu —— 7 eS 105 — ` e- 21,64 aut 
ceni NN * ioe — I Sen s gale race ie rat reen 
ta "yý ; jorii ; a 
. toe ole’s, 256 a. 3 NN e 206, ; ‘ nin 3 F 52; to ti td Chis 
— e — = i 2 th aa 1 sa; it —.— bun 165 fos! 8 
Cha iis + Jal 5 phit N 7 cam Lal 5 ae — 
med Ls ng, ; cultiv h Cydoni Jia. ert nebri vidi = for, 1 Atay bl lls, A keep of. 11 008 
of tion lo 733. 28 ation a ia = „ 63 Goose 8, 2 pri ing of, 109; 79, . d Apple, Pe 118 to seber 
on wer, pè * Cyp l is, ura, Wis ‘ 3 son, 3 man 122, 31 69 — ms 230. rabbits lim rry, 
rene opt tifr of, 1 an Wi . Tar 8, 1495 p iò 
L ha ons, — “se — ) Wil es, to acr 4 oan fi 65 ple 763, 37 to, 2 ropi 46, 2 s fr ; pr 86 o prun 
47 788 ona fanebral often sona 1 = ogy 62; sm fn pe 811; 1 261, 29 pping ' ow, 200 rates rune, ; 
TH mags oy rs „518, of lim 2 32 flu, “ar aad Hampshire 570; 0 2 = for, port trea: on sa 31 * a 43 ; 1 ; 
e anim men 4 5 red o, 208 . 8: TiN 1 L 5 shire, 497; ii e, 378 Iriak, 607 aig, 31 pe ges, 1 — 5 aii m ma 720 cies 373, le ito, È 0 ing, 104: — 
nal 47 0; 85 588; Ball S 67 3 i S Ar e, ; 
ysis a Tri for. 29 n 52; aliyy tir! ott or 3 of, pr N ’ i ted , h to 
— conversion 9f asin eifects 4, 487 * F 669 5 pajta eee Iv en Son, 18: io for f 7; ¢ ted tli, 6 blis Aga 
. G42; as dra etor of” ditto, to 1 mshi ivaing 1 te rines, Fier sho + 
— eg 232 pan p toj an Scotch, mode 1 at South n wE oe abe Lede 
ka 1 n 1 455, 278, D 54 fo 32 D and — 1 — fue perim Nort 43 Bast — 7 = ford ste. — to, 
Chen aa elation e 1 Sid oi aa rot a 0 i frien 3 — 203 “yg - 5 ; ental Nadi of, nt 8 = of dito, e 4 141 — lito, ; 
eat io 40 372; oak ect, 30 Farm Ti; En of, 6 698 266, i ar I pauper, Fru T pects, ; t dise? fo Sulden ne 8 Ps 
Cherries, A am ditto 41, Vie. Damsons a. 10 nal, 9, 59 En aripis agit Rael „ 714, en el ries, 792 urra: 300 Be iseased, e 
cher a ca yb cal SS a ae ee raat e Ae ig e ne 
5 merican, 150; e . gardens 379 eedling, dita and = 42 0 60 eign, tage 178 80 2045 sias ders ili ous Ao aink 504 
diinon en À p 634 ; Bon 22. ponte (Dr) on ma duce het that 9 ve view 70 683, 3 7 — herr 3 * ert to 
China, 1 us H pas cal cle: on th profi 699 sof P ofits „540 of, hemistry Fumi eee crete ion ak r dif. 
in, 12255 505 pak Davies wv he 100, al cook 2 i ar 71¹ aud ei 5 57, 5905 he, and Fu ngl Podis ý fie . 86: td; liats 
food 3 1 1 „ > 
Chinese ee Set atin sale Gas ke 12 th 4, — ve 585, Sanat 2 în Auchnos ofla e 7533 in frames, self-a —— 216 to w 
Chinese winter for, 1 „ 109; De Can 5 1 e 1 a vane 9. pgs M 76 ati ur 795, = pl e, es om ctin mates a arm 
Chirita oval 11 3 ntifrice, 3 olle 48, 164 , 52 e of | 299, 331 1 18; k Las saa * 5285 1 ting, £88 orb, 1 ti , 
Ske — ee Pro 5 oat 2 2 1 25 ORS. ogi eh 1 875 aot t u 
nts ; e 9; 8, e 0 pog -E ; 
22 1 > 21 e —— inia 141, 5 mus 9 of aeia Thora d, . effect of deer 285 ee 7 to REN f me p ; Napo f 
. — — ady E ams a note % anci 1 p me te ore 52 own, pagate Ka hgt 
2 n aon, e. 7 
BHN — 644, 662 ‘ 4 Ne oes 11 AF i a, 312 2 bar — 15 3 508, 59: * 1 oe 96 ; by, 3 ? 
Cider e bie, Newt 28 nareo 71 — le ee fae pong 3 0 ; l 
e w 6 n 0 6 t o 2 4 deh, 9 0; a Í 
ae nt ane * = ama Fe f : al as, son's 47; Le ama 683, 4207 of, 396 oe 125, tion 5 
ria. 4 8 0 D cha 7 1 ; 
Cion: S i — 9 5 8t; , 235 24 * „ 222 r, 519 642 — Sale E teur, in k in 40 2 38, 604, Gan of, 
. — is ne — "372, 519, 63 n agai 40,219,412 L. 
e v eee 2 2 1 cred EA . atts 18 Oana, c | 
1. N 4 5 m i s bY nt: $ 748 4 „8 m 3 N 
gare — ; select, 2 Row: 270 5, 4 0 ssifc d, 363; 725 a cere a as 11 been t 
arm — 64, 8 A 15 6, , 468, 24 ation Dr. Farm, lastani n’ Pat e trad 5. as Sore enea 
* . 0 648; %, 1 74, 57 93 7 773, 29, 310 af Farm’ Ch 0 e's 41, glis — 8 e, 7 Ho x 120 10 Edi * 3 nan 
Clima — ollege, trea Pan 2755 of ok 789, 945 60 $ 211 33 Grice. a ree 5 W 350, o keep an 
te p es of 8 te —.— 97; * 0 7, attle, 9, 805, 660 ? 372, 998, arm crv eo tog + 61 9 ee 5; 196; i Chiswick Ho g 53 0 
of An En a, Downi ps, l Cherry Sy of the 92 7 0 » 389, oe — implemen tof a Cia Dr. 89 521 ou 2433 Fali on He Botanic oro 
= a — —.— ol 2 260, 4 22 ber 55 SOC nts, 1 la ond’s 8 8 in Horton nata 
In — 2 3 oe hee ng’s La “ofp ent N 6 1 e 15, 9. 421 g- i na; 
FRL e 72, n East 1 ran 2 ma tom 0 
gona s $p 235 : 3 8 ech s, i ge box: Prony of, 1. 94; b 3 669 g-park, 1 43 ditt 
Clim — 4 0 to sig, caning dsc * <a 9 5 357 2 ete 780; 800 * of, eri “ee 19 iral, mo o 
7 baa, o HEEE a, 86, ür utti M 245 254, Ei dihri ; 0 —— 18 2, gee 000 412 8 Tisbor 20 5 K M —— p 
lod- A ‘688 1 io, y tas ee 3 r mae 72 219, 24 O'Connor cotch, ie s * ower 2 167 5 
Aktin g" of ; of 1 Dra 86, put and fi 5 S * ie 220 of, 7 7 3, 6 9, 2 43 76 Zurich aN 54, Bu; 30; ditti 8, 341, 10 8 Chin 167. 
Wera See Pa 55 os ih TEN S eae ore i 8 51 20 3i Port 105; bs ead o pi 1 S 
„ 3 A 
Gade 411 ppore for aa Sed — Yia 1 T, T — ò , 550 — 2 ori ental, 24 4 jiy 282 107 —4— 1 cane, 37; T 4 . ae 
pn * fi It Seigwick o a aot a, Seay ne en age N orth 93 
beke! lowers, N lt;a pih 780 4 be Anes al, 245, 26 „ G 05 e hi 0; 8 ort 8 246 2 
Senden 770 a 17 ay ra, 1503, 27 dit 96,5 roid 4 8 ree p Apot . Pee 
ch nefit, 703 hou real 5 s Re atio £ 807 stoppage 8852 rot of, 2 n iron 262, 63 to 288, 333, G de s for, T28, f Bota mer ho 4 ro 3 
— ha et h 50 oy, 369 a 4 mera 0, 483, Fi ig 2 mks ealt 5 tto ì and 662 ót. 2 425, Siei me Ao, 7271 the: 8 Bt 
—— iat 0 for. > 47: Draini nee 60 ks by 1555 esrin Fi , cul 0 534 tur ni w 3 f . co n ats mb 3; D — tl poe 
= 3 co * 12, 3 A on Will hen Fir wise e of, pa Nap 2 +s copings 1 an rið E a ey, C 0 
urs w, 248, 502 5, 6 2 Were 1 — caring 3 vati 8 fla ma 8 a. e, 10 ast gs ls, a ge lvas kei o 51 13 
a — groupin ue — T — 650; il N. iles new warmed coal. a anni to 72 5 an le o 5, 9 B28 28 bits G stu enan for, 24, glaz . P — 95 Í 
171 vaping of, > 192 greh — tiles m, 5T), wa ty, as 141? Pr Firs, a nihilat od 7 book of, — 4275 garden g g tr 152; 186.214 —— 7 — 
. 7 to in bea ME ae. 35 Engl for Pro Vey id oe tig — e, — 392 1 8 of, list $ —— jal An 1 214 eds 5 me po 2 115 
See cal, 87, mal peice 00 15 sof w ay Pe po f. Pish ge 7a heim 5 fa 343; of h 549 = ssip, 437 for, 246 1 2% * ie: 789; | 
v and fs, B0, 8 Prad v 72 bom 3, 159 759, er 70 we a8 1 5 5 iat 2 . ; 89, 
a e Pre par 5 of pips * i Ss seen | et . c | 
riers, „14 ee Dri! brick: i 1 the Flax cni 348; iam, 2 „ 501 expe 725 582 75 d su 246 agg 56; r i 
Ee Sios salle D ae ta ; Mochi ony 18 sol 12 pine 1255 | os i barba 2 * 
ati — oe i toe. borders H ublin H chine isng ats Florist 367 . —— foes 1 7 5 7 485, TE si 1. 
el . | Duc bin ore 486 0 7 8 F s,h t of, 8, N ar Aka adic fi 46, 00, 7, l 
e zi, 201 walks, 346 ae magne re K Flower, be 2 a 2 carrer ae ale, ee yee 517, 5 
Se F. hes e i EEO ac; ira ir 85 e ees of i hoh, | Garde 1 oe . S e 5 
2 oi i a > 7 0 
e collecting alten g machi batitute, 3 ™ ee — ie * = —.— ers emi N 7 ance 9 k 
Cordia nea, 58 trai Drying of 21 s} 11, i * E 2 ; , 404 G e ers mi „ 5 to, 7 ce apii 
of aub 24 4 to 1 ugs, 27 lo gr ch 2 * seed aed — ae ait 3 59; of, e 
Corn, I 2 pre aay — e Deyasa ot, n 810, agate 5, 27 wer. iiaa 2 8 Svea Gardslle be n 8, 8 of, 698 
a a poe 7 ee 827 . 1 0. 1 sar fe 05 f wee mn Gar en: rs’ t nevol hes 15 7 hn 
_ Wheat, ele Ge te 1285 hre Englan 0 | Foo er-gard 08. É — yrei nee jks fn, Gau sim r me Instituti ; advice 
gora cro, expor of detecting t „ 251, 193, 1% r d, 3 por Bek enin 1, tock, 227, 2495 tb grees 2 seit th o on 
— ma 2 ag ti 128 75 he Joast „ E a eset ape s bo, toup, 157 . — cm Seite oy 
rk , 266, 15, 18 i 9 35 mized 7 — figs 
a Bj 1 . erminatio t — 
orn var 5 27, our of Ey sas E aa — 9 219. 8 nera tion, sto 5 627 
5 329, n i; in ia: — 51. 199 fi amr ‘ 4, 10 A 4 90: pot 2 279 221. lass 2 pe ge 
88 oa; act 4 —.— kalen — latam as, 3 ‘aa, 3 ing wi ati 7205 20 aneo 
gs 5 — Fents, 684 8 g of as, 8 oe e $ tivo value 78 293 88 N 
eaver "on. n 95 i padi Winter Amh 386 ; of bash; : ; di e e 1 ; 
ate of T aars 1 f, . n j? ea: itt 0 u = 18 
2 n Rit e 5 erstia a bt pa 8 . 7 8 5 2,2 
n, 4% ~~ oe stro pwn jA pes AM en nobili cake as, Lin e, 47 . ae 426710 Glazi — le the mith, 
Cows, 6 27 , by 1 oe ride 9 15 = 80 s as in 5, 8 as 2054 Gl is 1 25 1 278, 
J EM n e eum, for horses en a. va 1 10 ebi tto, 230 ‘atmo 
Suse ; gw on — Arrn — * xperi 81 8 619; d ng nutrit 8 88 n cap oa bong — tint of, nal 
obra „ ing om sa ms ms a 1 aa 3 pe “a 
ł Mess in rev., 1 Pe pla t 42 Sa sntal F ts, ro „ 15' 575 mal 92. 1 to, ecti A here 263 4 
f 8 rers’, , 310 pl 657.49 braries, 620 ral, 537, Gard Pore est tr rah pa ah a tons Siew y ng, 86 . ney j for, g 
vor Portugal 76 aa ant, ryt 620 602, na For 15 1, is 7 alt 3; iled e of. Go wes marine, 1 118; 50; 6, 61 78; eet, 
Ca xf bee Em sston Gas scarl pote gt Mexi 619, 5, Pors 3 oie * 63; as, 3 “ig Linseed Gordon Cs rine, to'i exch 4; to 
on A 1 3 ere 5 2 SI ws sae TE ae ‘ie 
ant to de, 7 zy ae 103 , | Poss n a 151 —5 662, koe 4 en e 6 anack, “gg 
— n ndliche 0, 7, 38; , 7, ple, 118 268, 2 ssil ph iridis e 00 = ito o Hoos e, 6 “a rev n: 
Engines, € be fen, 3 wis and g — e-t =" =| caver 776 ry of, 77 7 law 
cc 50 1 805, 82 Pas | hen nd phat nis? ine, cant , ae 
to | ame ee — Tse a St oe crane = re 
of, an Pre n se dea , 2 m, 202 9 n a s 87 
457 nn 1 . Pri neh ind Hope 17 1 en 555 1 , 47 — ae 
e — Bote ion pina = sr = 
Porat di Frogn sarge ca Nr =, 1063 N 236, 8 eee et 792 + 
tio 1 tt Fi gn ci ibi 6 sal » 6 6 Mr. dı t, 5: 232 
Sagi oe * n MD, dee = re ; 
, 555, 8 nor m 4 9 ry Asi to 
iü of, inl 589, F ts, ate 92 » 228 $ am 485, 660 ; — 1 8 Peace 
6: 685, 62 Taits, ing, ens ya eee J nsmt 120 
0 1223 nd ters, — 6 — u 
a ex 77; 95 36 n pae 31; to 3 9, eprom ta 
vendishii 8 k a S ps St. of ditto, 
185 g. ©, th — 8 lea gu 53 St. 63 on of, 
à , 184; 40; eli G pi 5 an — 
wees Rte i; ka a ra see $ 61 0 8 1b 474 
0 r, ri fan E r 88, 64 on 2, 3 rrp 5 rust in, 4 
arch in pe gi fi 0, 32 rass artif n „ 66 627 8 A 5 3, 229 
he 8 — in or, 5; rede new, 1 s 0 1 21¹ 
ogy ie of, * 56; in Gras ; for cial, 1 z za asse 2 of, 54, 
Fi n Ans * 9 tes Ja 8 la 141 15 71 * las . 
and Field, K ne N ata . 
ea heal 7 52 8 = fc „662; de of, 
. — lia, tto n. arge ee — „236; „184; 3; Age 2; 627 Toul 
214, ae ve Pe is 5 03; earl 630 
245 3 Tit Pear Gray (D y do for lay Bee 3 
45 0 — rd wh, a 0 u 664 
ot G (Dr yta arable a ay oded ty ; 
m ol tell „ shiki r.), 0 verer! Je 12 7 1 * 4 7 
the Ga al shade for, n the Plant 25 of W is, 4 
ar. — sto lani sd, 004 al 6, 
rea ya oe glaze, 7 of the Uni coda for, 
“Se age err oops eh * 2 
phides. Pollet 1 tate 
be vine 2 be 6 
tm 8 
- ent of, 1 


Reser 


— — 


oi a 


r 


Sees 


| Heaths, Gane, 500; ayia 166; hardy, 197; 3 
t, 264 


1015 ee of botany, ie: is: 133 ; culture 


: 4 80 
ie r ü 


— . —ů—ůůůů 
Groom's aed Tulips, 327; Japan Lilies, 551 


Grouping flow rs, directions for, 787, 893, 804, 
810 

Guano, to apply, 168; trade, 435, 7 
ditto 


P eruvian, usi Turnips n iein 
477; colour of Grapes altered by, 598 ; ‘a 
cause of disease, 604 


— societies for the protection of trade, 


—— jelly, to 

Gutta percha, use 1 e a repairs 791 
Gweedore, Facts from 

Gypsum, artificial, 28 


H 


Hamrtton’s (Mr.) case, 153, 169 
Hailstones, form of, 454 

Hares, 2 rage a i against, 823 
Haricot 


Harv side Book, rev., 407 

Hatherton’ s Torch. 1 no oticed, 4 

ee on Savings’ Banks, &c., rev., 388 
Hewthorn flowers, 373 

Hay, matter taken from a meadow in a ton of, 


Haymaking 
Hazel — 8, 


Heating, Po 102; by gas, 181; 
fruit tree borders 230, 9355 cheap, 245, 292: 
new pn 436 cure for furred up boile TB 

33 695, 710 

Hedges, ‘Cotoneaster, 225 ri Holly, 216; 
plants used for, India, 82 

Hedge, for a ma aze, ? 

Hedgerow timber, 557 

Henderson's ( Messrs.) nursery, 670 


Herbarium 2 
Hibiscus 28 vulen 310 
peatland district destitution of, 245 
Highland Society’s members, 233 
Highland cro: 
Tite onc —— and Soma r; 


otbed, 69; Pota- 4 

es, 85; — ih ditto pe retain 

of Roses, 149; transplan nting of budded ditto, 

181; bed of “ditto 245; remarks on di 

260; propagating of ditto, by cuttings, 405; 
tm 


treatment of Cactuses, 229 ; floral arrange- 
ments, 277; fruit trees, 292 ; Dahlias, aoa 
325; ; hiving bees, — fun giin garden fram 
357: necessity o — 
gar ing. 373; liquid — 389 to 
orists, 244, 309, 341, 404 
Hip age 


a, Dr. Newington’s, 579 
Rene 1 kh 500; and ‘drilling ma- 
one 


n ios sai a by soil, 71; 
Mr. Chater’s, 5553 
Nong Kone, pews s fro 


Hooker o 9 6463 * of 


Vornet's nest, et - 

Horses, Carrots as food for, 157; m ea 
feeding of, 189; foot of, 285; to box feed, 
363 ; brui sed Oats for, 412 at Norwich Show, 


490, 539, 571, 636, 684 
Horticultural ’Society’s Garden, noticed, 167, 


Hoakyns’ 5 rev., 509 


— an Iudian, 447 
Hot water v. mildew, 502, 518, 550 
Humboldt’s Cosmos, 
es, iron, nite riety * 357, 373 
680 


H e 56; Peg: a 
Hylargus piniperda, 7 


toeais sempervirens, 245 ; saxatilis, 245 ; cat 


folia, 2 
Im barns for, 2, 72 27 ; houses for, 21, 23, — 
cks, to kee 1is ; ‘size an 
figures of pieces of, 358 y 
tion, heat required for, 268, 317 
its, farm, 219, 412; ditto fi for small 


Š 1 579 
see s from, 278 ; culti- 
tea in, 387 ; climate of, 488 ; hot- 
“he ies in, 825 

0 


„ 363, 365, 


. at 600; Morrell’s, 392; zine, ink for, 


antl Liquid manure, 
ie | when to 
55 oi [ade te 


worms, 3 soma pyri, 755; Otiorhyn- 
chus * 1 ; killed by bantams, 75 58, 
790; Vine e 807; mole cricket, » 5 
Insect blig om Dr, Blomley 's lecture on, 583 
Ipomea 
ro 491; estates = legal mismanagement 
E TS: moss land 74; improvement of 
— land in, 153, ‘is, 169, 220, 236, 252; 
colonisation of, 198, 458 


11 and Potato blight, 
o, 556; ditto from, 71 


Iris pu umila, 310; cristata, 310; etc 
Tron hurdles, paint for, 342, 357 ai 
Irrigation, by Wil liams, rev., 13 

ditto,and profiteot 397; Bamboo ‘echoed — 530 
Islington mark 
Ivery, Mr. 
Ivy, 726 


J 


J van fi s (Messrs.) nursery noticed, 247 


EX. 


Lisianths, prince of, 628 
Literature, agricultural, 186 
Lo: 628 


th =e tree, 339 


e; 636 
Lunar hornet — os 
Luzuriaga 


| Lyell, Esq., 1 inte: Charles, 727 


M 


„ ee drilling, 488, 500, 556, 600, 829; ditto 
and hoeing, 500; drying 525; Dr. Newing- 
ton’s, 572 

TA Mase ata’ uses of, as applied to agriculture, 

409, 4 


Mackay, Dr., 103 
oe (Mr.), Soe to, 182 


477 
Maize, 363, 365, 620, 699, 726, 732, 762, 764 
traction of s sugar from, 103; cultivation o, 


n Lilies, Mr. Groom’ 10 551 


Je ily, , Guava, to make, 552 

J esuits in California, 

Johnson’s re mers? Ae, 749; ditto, 
Gardeners’, 

ary” a St. 1 Grape, 229, 454, 469, 485, 


J kiiks Doab, climate of, 183 


K 


3 245; Buda, 376 


Kidney Bean seed as food, 5 
Knox's Ornithological Rambles in Sussex, rev., 


Kohl rabi, 237, 493 ; to plant, 381 
Korb pt oga ms, rev., 18 
Kyanising timber, 60 


1 


ae . cost of, 73; and land capabilities, 
ae carey % A „ 89, 91, 123, 299, 
n the midland 2 107; Mises 

139, 185 395, 396 ; ; ditto i in 1685, 26 7: 
farme ers, 


game gio? cottages, 763 
alias, culture of, 6 
en indica, 501, 518 
og Thibetan, 170 ; fattening of, 269 
A glebe, 86, 101, 118, 134, 150; in Ireland, 
mprovem ment of, 74, 158, 155, iss, 220, 236, 
; fl for 61: Gra 


summer fallow, 316; past ure, bad, 365 ; steep 
v. level, 379, 443, 457. 473, 474, 538, 539, 571; 


hea 
fected by capital, 668 shallow, Dr. and Cr. 
account of, 749; and labour, capabilities of, 
729, 78 0 


tof, 604 


Landowners, — —.— 4 764 

Landlord and tenant, 171, 777 

Land agents, 8 oh — 572, 778 
Land scheme, Mine ee 

Landscape Garden Do 550 
1 rs British 8 sts 503 


ane’s (Mr.) nursery noticed, 471 
gored to cut in May, 278; when to fell, 291, 
293, 325, 3 73, 8 07 


Lasthenia californica, 261 
8 Portugal, disease in, 71, 86, 150; to 


Law. perde 1 estates, 73; relating to 
drain bricks, 89, 107; relatin ng to lebe lands, 
86, 55 118, 134; respecting corn exportation 

and mport ation, 266, 297, 829, 377; of 
— Te 360, 22 
Lawes (Mr.) and eae for, 1845 chemistry, 25 
Lawns, Grass — 184; effects of chalk 


on, 470, 518, 

Leases, 313, 88 

Leaves, skeleton, 86; impressions of, 229; 
Peach, blist eri of, 261, 293, 810, 373, 405; 
curled, cure for, on tto, 453; on cuttings, 
bad 5065; 2 cause of fall 


diseased, 595, 660; 
2 


“han Desert, adventures in the, rev., 647 
ace fall of, 581, 612; esculentus, 611 


Light, efect of, on . TEID, 710 
Lilium laneifoliu 5 


Lime, — — — e of damp, 38; use 
of, 92; use of, ‘10, * et 3315 317, 

3, 284 ; mildew 
408 


sease dee i 


Lime e water, to make, 360 
3 8 Medical and economical 


and | Norwi 


— 
nn 275 262 3 
140, 357, , 520, 565; 
, 404, 4985 d 


124, 202; Forty-day, 124, 202, 251, 282, 315, 
411, 412, 791; and Wheat 379 ; suitableness 
of the climate of England for, 707 ; green, 
substitute for Peas, 790 
Malt, duty of, 219, 810, 827; as food, 700, 747 
Malva mosch ata alba, 925 
Mandrake, 391 
ange, cure fo 
angold W 
anna, fall of, 581, 6 
nure, 681; su of ammonia as, 43 


M 2 
Ma sulphate 
liquid, 140, 357, 380, 389, 520, 565; pits for 
tto, 77; ditto, when to apply, 404, 493; 
tanks for, 123; to disinfect, 141, 643; char- 
e 


237, 316, 331, 347, refuse 
wns as, 230; ih Ph — Be 252 ; water, 
to 3 279’. 3 288, 1 371, ppd 
ditto, Denton o agement 
348; sawdust pra 381 heto substitute, 395; 
green, 426; adulteration of, 453; 


; Islington cattle, 555 ; stock, 
or pitch, “318 ; dee 1d, 764 


177 
oe 


Kk-la 777 
Marshals Ready Reckoner, rev., 151 
Martindale's Analysis of Soils, rev., 566 
Martynia lutea, 823 
10 v. 5 5, 38, 67, 70, 71; advice 
o, 675, 6 


Mats, 8 and glazed sheds, 8 
May bug. or cockchaffer, and the J July bug, 484 


— 9 85 ; hedge for, 


Meadow, matter taken from, ag a ton of hay, 


Mealy bu bug 

M echi? 58 Gir x copii 2 85 

Melilotus leucantha, 163 

Melon set, 424; flavour of, 566, 582, 598; 
pits fo 

Melon 


Melon house at Chatsw — 372 
1 Dr. amg S, 2 om 
Mexico, w, Edwards rev., 
Mieroscopie 93 to — 5 rve, 25 
Mignonette tree, 52 
Mildew, 724; cure for, 467, 566; hot water as 
502, 518, 559; gas lime, as a, 627; grape, 
627, 630, 662, 726 ; ee of, 675 
Milk register, 139; to kee eps 
ulus Hod oni, 310; Col 2 310 


Mole bills, 508 
of Ferns, re rev., can 
M on walls, to — pa 
Moss land. in Irelan 
ppe ‘ne lunar . 68; ; death’s-head, 600; 
Apple, 660 

sone traps, 10% 119, 135, 138 

ilkworm, rm, 184 


ooms, to grow, 
Myosotis sylvatica, 245; scorpioides alba, 310; 


N 


the tong nce. bulbocodium, and sero- 


Nectarines, “peak oe 182; select, 376; for 
forcing, 7 
Nepenthes, — treatment of, 5 
1 fluid, en o 470 
Pus 453 


cl ahi 
43 
Newington's (Dr.) hand N N 249, 807, 
823 i 579 tag 
New South Wales, Guide to, 
w 5 „ letter from "bs Handbook of, 
from, 614 ; Potatoes, 


; Potato seed, 
in, 9 8 
Niphæwa rubida, 6 
North Pages Pcs 
how, Bie Tia at, 490, 539, 571, 
636, r 


Nosegays, bedding plants for, 360 


Notes ofa Sagan m 8 214, 277, 484 
Note Book, J. W. S 

. ye 3 Testen, 
rseries noti a sed 8. 

NY ‘h’s, Hamburgh, 291 ; Paul and ‘sons 
Cheshunt, 423 ; ‘Rivers’, Sawbrid worth, 

i Lane's Great N 471; 

. longh, 503; Standis d Noble’s, 
oa Nia 230 Henderson's, Pine Appl “aa 
679 ; rs. Lees’, Hammersmith, 695 

Nurser T 


555 74 


0 


Oar, the tank, 420; the Pessine, 468; winter 
cut, best, 486 ; the chapel, 533 ; African, 
728; Oak-apples, 


> > 
range flower, 645; Orange, 645; 16383 

6153 Patchouly, 645; Pea, i ; — 
Rhodium (Convolvulus se 
ry (Rosmarinus officinalis), 88 D 
6933 1 705 709; Tuberose, 709; Tonquin or 
Tou 709 hym e, 709 ; Vanilla, ( anilla 
153 709 Vetiver, 70) 709 ; 

iolet, 741; Wallflower, 741; 

(Trientalis), 74 741 
Another eed ig ae bc cine as 325 


Onions, Potato, a 610, Foti of ditto, 518; 
8 


1208 bia” 534 

263, 312, "343, 392, 519, 
mpor tation of, 
ocks, a din 


; from seed, 549, Bas 661; to pot, 583 
soll’ for, 712; to gro 
Orchid house, mac of, 539 
3 been hs 
are, 
Orn — Rambles, Kuox’s, rev., 407 
Mer to plant, 


5 
1 monster, 205; produce of ma- 
re by a feeding, 138 
; | Oxmis, -e ` crenata, 231 ; floribunda, 324, 342; 
eleg 
Oxide p Toad, = injured by, 660 
yster p 


PÆoNTA tree, 198 
Packet of Seeds saved by an Old Gardener, rev. 
823 
1 for iron hurdles, &e., 342, 357, 373 
alm, the Talipot, 328 ; Cabbage, 487 
Panchen: Be] colours, 168 ; select, 264; to culti- 
vate, 


Pa apar et 237 
Parsnip a. 7 
Pasture lands, bad, 365; Wales and its, 554 
Parton s Botanical. Dict ctionary, rev., 120 
Paulovnia 8 flowering of — 405 
— ul's 3 rs.) nursery noticed, 42 


Pawpaw, 


Peaches, * flowering, 84; blossoms, “tie. 
ping of, 232; leaves of, blistering, 261, 293, 
es 318, hermes 376; cure for curled 


405 

s on, 453 n pri rotected trellises, 614; 
for 8 

Peach-house, dimensions o 

* er 709; to plant, 735 É train, 743; 

ntof, 7575 N 7743 stand. 


y 
pen winter, ripening of, 198 ; Chaumontelle, 
1 744 


710; se 
Pear bra: nch affected by aphides, 755 
2 for r em 88; MG ae meh 
; pete ; stic T, 
2a eights of 74 green, Maize e a si substi- 


A — wood a — for, 452, 518 
Peat 5 a n 643 
Peat mos 5 N of, into charcoal, 455 
Pegs for rs, 342 
N ce wintered, 723 
t, 264; scarlet, 279; show of 


6133 Geranium, 613; Heiotrope, : 
bine, Jasmin 5 613; 


or Orange flower, 645 ; Orange, 
ne 645; Pink, 645; Pea, 645; 
el aa “Sanaa scoparius), 
sem : ; Storax, 
8 uin or Touka, 
Thyme, 709; aniis 709; Verbena, 
etivert, 709; Bhronn h etal: Wallflower, 741 
wince pol (Trien „ 741 
. Malvina, 325 
— of, 534 


89 


Pheasant br breeds, 28 
Ph 
a * origin of, 
5 te of lime in the chalk e 170 
Phosphate beds of the att chalk, 203 
Phys age ved questions, 70 
Picotees, 106 5 ne 28 532 . 
Pi “a 
Pi Buckwheat for, 92; on killing, 204, 252, 
283 and their tails, 205, 252, 283, 294, 427, 
445; live and carcass s weight 284, 
cost of, 445 ; on boards, 458 ; disease of, 4745 
571; breed 3 539 
— — low mre for, 5t; Mre 
Wilmot’s, 87 ; shading cess ‘or, 135 ; 
mil system of growing, 150, 246 
2 s at Trentham, 628, 724 
Pine Plants, 487, 633 of, 199 
Pink ae 
Pinus W — and Pindrow, 22; patula, 


Pitcher 
Pits, — 
168; winter, 
* 


368; cold, 


Protein com 
Pruning V compounds, new 
in — 
e 
— 1 5 


0 
urrants and Goons 
+ 


a bifolia, 
* 26 
10, — alba, Sit x, 261; campan 
05 Perr Nan 168; 
ee 


Scotch fi 
— 
ny 12; 1575 te 
farm 
763 


K of 
— the United 
tisin; States, G 
purple, 148 16, 19, 35; ray on 
shows : egg, "scarlet, 54 rev., 73; 1920 
5 di Rhod 
— . en | fred rey ra i 
= 
e 452, A, of, 100, 133, 164, 180 int | Pumpkins, cerasifera, 149 8 ‘cam 
g, 136 ; to dry, ; analysis . 23, 726; Scour esters, 181; 1 
Re Se » 152, — MAS saccharine, 365; in cow: 91, 250 c 
147 — rock n Pyreth rum American, Scythe s and calv 2 7 struct 
for beddi 7 Brus partheni 1 es, to prev ur 
„ 168 ins japonica, um flore serpent, a 830 Foust Cometh 
of species, tution elim! plen g 822 
2 11 27552 ; climbing, 168 ; 0, 325 eae ig ot oe sou — os 
4 weed ey’s, gric 
Soa, o. 403, 100 son, oh 0 Arer — Seed r N — and 508 Stamford-hill H ultural, annual meets 
603, St W07, O14 0 480: 300, 242 pace Ae ig an A yo x Pie ag i Fifeshire, Ai 487 
— „ 750, 772 „645, 660, 676, Q ditto for an 46, 61¹ oat 141, 17 178; ditto Wenio 9; thin pa iy > gricultur 
po summer „ 789, 805, , clay, 71 : ditto for l for ock Readi gT al: 8 
25, 38 3 beat of me, bas | aer 1 north iat 8 awan, 18; | ture 1. — at F 
ian A ol „ atts 555 9 ve of damp * S agri 986; transmisio 2027 for Upton- riend and A 
Aru, 701 chart of, r Ea ; food of, 116, 149; in plant agricultural, quantity to of, ha York Fans Pelargoni griculs 
of, 308; dt, zino cisterns spaa 544. 740, 9055 . — ne Pe eae 3 — — 
og Perspective „10; . ' 5 for cottage in k Ho 8 491; hou slat at ‘Leeds 
labela fo As ee ae aoe ir Fe R sidney — — eu 5955 . me oattle, 05 
Tre l gerniad — meek gays, 360; | RABBITS, seeding thi as food, 599; ‘qnion, * * 0 as we onay : smal pox i 
439 nation 392 Sy Senna, 50 n, 29, 155, msheep, 2 
ns apip inr in — 425 ; distribu- ME ee keep from barkin — 749, 764, 799 R betean ie SAA „220; manures 
rev., 430 Orders onshire, 437 „ portab nee for; 326 g trees, Se ag 3 28 ebe — k 
ae 8 a0, caleba, wining, ae nabi for farms, 109; W | Shade o . „ ee Wet conning A 
3 foal sna ble, 50t; for | apa pa agricult heakriaks walls, Kc. 56 | oe pa 
» 563; 7, pa SA 84 Dr Beni Fe ere, 22; at Wit at cest , 586) ote 3 t s adleigh: annu oni 380 
er pa 109; NF; 35 1 im Jers Winder. — transmutation pee sa * nual: meeting, Mr. 
bn hürchyard, 104 104, 182 * Tynem ag ha — — 3 aid 533 of 518; noñtran deep ste Mechi's 
er 819; ing of, 00 rdg, to winter, 660 r a . 188; in Ba — = . 72 „  Sprliedito agxion apanum UG. Mechi 
Plant for > grow of, > ration 4 262 ; fall o. n Banffshire, haw on Te 3 23: New riculture es of machi on 
nn 108, 787, 808; Rai 7 f, exceeded . — Sheds, nant Right, * castle: sc 409, 412 chinery ag 
tne 519, 712 151, 199, 216, in water, — E 405 by ev Sheep » Fe and. irdan mats a m — aes ience and agric 
Plant houses, 283, 312; 349, | Rak p 421 j tank filter pox in. 10 in, pa iam: KA 4 
of, a means R ke hoe, 342 for, 469, zot 40 am 234, ape. a Im; eterborough: cating spri ip wine, 
ree to heat, 180 poe As 1 — — ee death of, 94 203 sonb ts 8 . ear’s rent Pa aa Ir 621 
* > p „ 3 th b 
Plant i > ; tion — 101, 312 765 a spring flow Turnips, Bee — be charged — a 
Planting, , of, St: in Rasp cake as food, 70k “haat 360; amarina, S4, 116, 14 attle, eding, rearin ins, 
Wheat, evil of A north, Rasp training Silk, culi ne, by 3 es, 662 — * late Reading: g. and feeding 
Punta experimen 8 roots 12 — of 118; 149: N e i ha pet sat 1, 2 ae 755 Nr 
— — * in, 145; Rage phosphoric. balls, 36 Stuga, to feed, 2 — 1 TA; show, 7933 5 557 
Pleroma — Red 5 ; 30, 3 25; tra h report 
el to Mr, me a ae 3 ps for, 125 at ew 
I.. —— — te reva, 157 — ene F York: fa s and treatmen 
—.— ene 2s manok Joga! ail tempr jinne, ‘ash erm = 
g, subsoil, 188, 397 y + rms, &. —— Snow on 1,1 68 ogical Garde: b tem and 
Podisom Larpente 4 R geer a — A.. 2 po tig e hill amet yaa ages 60 — of, 3, 19, 
Politics 3 52, 550, 646, 726, 773 of the previo hs Senia, . 2 tee erties of, 290, 23 exposed to air ag wee a are en e 5 85 asd 
„ 698, 825 ture, 29 25 — year’s should what, portion 8 „new. f. 37 
Polmaise heatin 7, 555, 569, 587, 634 — * tenant, 749 be charged, Socteties : pot Analy: > R 3 liyhoo fiect. of, a 
Polyan pits, 535 51, 86, 102 Ser hododndrons, bar n m 06, 200; 240; on tural of England, f, 566 ne e na ‘Martin ke Th 
thuses list of, 280 ease wod, iai, , ok ing ee — T81, 809, ts Sees — we; 1m, i Dantas, 6305 for 0 n 
502, odod „151 ect, In- filli eather Bp 579 
518, 534, 550 and calcareum, 454, Rhubarb, to n da: aths.. imaj Potato — EN — 7 1 91 a Selly grey Leg 58 712; phosphorus, 
x y A e > 
Feet ty tam a coer ees pipea mar 
— we N ; cultivation o 8 thin, 29 
Poor, rural, Tab! 714, 245 — orus parado; day abbage, 1 tion of Maiz — Mr. Mechi i 
24; : alze, 124; 3 of 345, 45 on, 73: 
918, 634 11. 27, 28, 74, ö mone, 926 ms, 140; li implement m- 427, 764; 2 thick, », 7995 
Peer a , 23,74, 8, A 1 . ticed, 455, 471 ten 140, Sint; ure, 140, 8 mall Se ae à 1 0 0 hice ano thine 
Poplar, of —— „123, 172, Robin tural r ee rous anim quality, ofw diseases parrows, — * 
ä —— wy Rockwor! —a 269 ; * rd . 252 ; ater, 252 ; 310; nuisance for, 150, 280 ; 
Poe: ge aea ata a — * e culture level 2533 blue e — — Sipan kig w by a robin, 
— to e — * Roots, evil plants for, 147; ah a ural 1 2500 bins earth, Stable Review, m a substitute 
ortraita 0 e, 766 tution of, 824 123, 252, 5 te 148; 534 fi „ ian 5 tatoes, Bee, 364; + Ramp le sig bs — 381 for, 342 
3 pata oS E e . 
$ usenm — 677, on f 458, 475; ditto, le or wie andish ’ 
o Of; 5 „ | SORY 4430 ‘ore, 59 Simo ungi of > ich 8 ing. N 
plant, 102, 177; sea mat 1 15 ——— the British, wm | Stapbylings oble’s nursery 
zid —* denn — for s culture — W soil for 3 490, me ety, bors form) 460°; Beatie’ olens, 6 , noticed, 550, 
Hie, 178; tto, 179; 228 51, 135 bedding, ‘ici added, e autumnal, 72 ment prizes fo 36, 684 ; —— 2 Sadie Ste engines, 4 
Bo tof sat er’ . ant an Cloth of 5 i, 262 a See aan 101 ‘Agricultu fbr 221 schedule of cord on Stead ns’ Book of the F: „ 589, 6 
— ly * * ae growing oy a in, 405, 4 * i uker, 2 Agricul va Chemises aå poe ple- | $ rs — f the Farm, 3 1 
Amarican, 108: to co disease, 883, 8. DE} cation of 23, 471 al aden mag port alahan o, narom 3 r * r 5 
183 ; culture WW — ea cut or most esti * tase Ge Ge 455 5 2 ateur Tulip Sho land, re- imonds o in, A "269, 
Count de L of, 630; of, = in — logues, 66 8 35 os 646 lassifi~ 37 iret calls ago wW, 2 we pea ean on ; 460, 524; 
358 plant, 294; plan of growin: of, 247; to prune, 582, 677 ot, 570 ; cata. of town as manure 230; ste al refus Stoves Reid on, re al. BEM while 
— lie, Ba r ‘for, Mgt to] 742, T08; cij to fari ha ph yes 631; age; ration colour oe tine: n wets lb o M 
ai aa qt 437, 454 ; blin 759 plan of ape ag ag n and man lon of Bink glean, ies ,Aighurth, 1 
58 25 6. At. Lod 85 710; Martin’: 647 ; to Rose gard ing, 741 ; a Australasian, Horti 8, stilton chees 81; to force, 437, 4 
New Zi à x ji . i ct 582 pan of me lata thant 805 8 poha cura 129 se, ‘to make, 445 69 
best ou planting, Ireland, as nefit, 106, cultur. 
4 dry and 9 — Mong oe Rural B, 115, 214, 265,80 p keene A Association, 685 Subsoil plo Central Australia 
; Mr. ae of, 614; 218, 684 poor, 11, 27, 28, Ay SB, 662, B gham mae g tural: 8 5 Sugar, agenes rev. 
Ge on dae 7 rhag E T4, 89, 91, 92, g Rnd of London, datt 8, 700 = N rocess 97 
N ; to out thin ae — inn. 123, 12 209 GAT, 828 ; of Edy 103, te, 737 Sugar 103 of extracting 
a preventive the haulm ; in New 211, 236 470, 759, 823 3 of Edinburg! 198, 295, 408, suger oa $ 788, 791. ß 
— 8 710; and — 1 h, 55, 268, 489, Suminski ( magnesia 
oe 773 8 and orticultur: — J as manur 
Potato. ; traversed Chepsto al, 166, 3 8 on the Male O e, 477 
aomi bes — . TN 
nn sont g s at cnet aa —— , tenacity of life 
s disease, , 7 483, 8 ö en Horticultural 327 Sind in, 
521, 1 J y 186, ABINE’: f Dav * 5 of lime, 52 7 
S Wag a 0. 325, 355, 51 566, | ` pects of Nature, rev. Derby Tu — hes 08 1s, 15 18 12 
on, 8 . sdintfoin, Giant” 207; en. N 9, 196, 540, 646 
Dending ; loss by. 83; effect 22 ies Dond, Fee t’s As- 439, 502, 56 A* 5, 10 „4r 
ig down MT; 5 to 6, 917 
4 v the, 151 ; endmanures, 1; of, by Hine, rer, 8 e 151, 281, 295, 
MSA; in Incl be, 181; and salt, 163 3 aa; Salads boiled, 6” 109 and 1 on —.— and 5 ibaa „ 320, | l 
ad Ireland 390 of t 5 8 hgh. Chicory, 0 ent Hora 503 
— 2 ee es 3 Artichokes, as a winter, 308 ultra 678 T 
Poste Gies in TOA, returns and | rd bas oy pen m BA. 9, Potade dines Hamm the protection of trade, 868, | T 
Pots, charcoa oe — lt in | Santos ibe ge a shite 11 Pans om, Ne te 
2 a y of, 518 Bapo (Mr.), po ge 710, . osont, 3; dissol L aog 3 Tanks, poe 390 } 
ge me 481; Sardinia, tee ing, 1883 x kalonin 12 125, at 105 Scotland, hone ang ey B l 
aan 3, cases for, Savin membe injudicio 125; science to 57 373 iron hurdles, 
Hat banks, 88 ‘eke. rs of, 233; us feeding of — * Taxodium as wien & q 
Sawd on, rev, St. wire, 428 ; chemic: es, ston: se 5 5 Taylor’ 3 c s 
lust „ Marylebone, e, W. T s, Bar : 
— n 381 * 107; garg Ro taney eet cad | eat è: 4 
, to ki 8 feotares * 630, 710. 119, 151, St, 178, 476 Tedworth cultura — 1 i : 
Scents, ee Ha, 310, a eh te „774; annivers 215, 246 Lech, eam owe gardens bot 5 { 
„ 564; $ 1850 ed, 1 > 390, 406 rsary, 27 2 Temper: phor ced a 
8 2 0, via , 167, 359, 6 „422, 45 » 278 ratare, „ 407 i 
596 ; 2 596; 375: rep ; garden 8 schedi 4: gar- 659, 677; lo 563 ; of the J 
596: Cl 596: oin, 596 at rt of ditto. ibitions, 2 of prizes app ples, TR night, 7, 37 saa A 19; 35 k 
briar 613; Eld o Bay Cassie, » 294, 373, 4383 4 ari, $28, Aa hee i Si 15 ; for 3 ; 
613; Jast 613 ; Honeysuch Sweet- o r Tenant rig and landlord; 271, 7 
629 ; M êt 7 — or 513; 406. 743, 85 K ish 185, 300 Pre g and Tenantr right, 380, 393, 
Myrt agn * Woodbine $ 231, 2 Tench, y, the F. 427; * 
A ; — a 62, 279, to feed, n m 
og 7 2 sacs or „ 629: Microscope, n Tsing, ce ae 
8 'atchouly, 64 e flower, 6 N nse a 203 et 8 8, 19, 85, 69, 659) 
or Storax, 709 Rosemary, 8 5 Norfolk and Norwich 13 R — sd 155. 42 
nilla 700 Tuberose, 709; S P ampton T 10 Thistles 10 764, thin, b t 1. recht 
R 2 aris Hort lip, rticultural, fro 
vert, T T alt bang Thoms m 
rt, ; Violet, oe, 109; Vanilla 4 — 429 pen wed o. 
s Dr. Lankester LAA m r . pors al, Botanic, 710 236 ert peti oo 1 
: of * oes : 3 l 
757 0 Aaa exhibition 1 505 
211.4 illag s 44 
N sie 55 Royal Horticultural, plant show, — 
ante ee M; T 388 615 of Irela W, res „ to preserva, { 
3,714" > n * r Ee Oy te 
; 27. , TL, 27 ; lasting 325, 326. fell, 454, : 
; to „ 326, 358 „ 467 i 
‘Royal * a rov _ to measure, quality of, 5 , decay of 4 ee 
emeni, ; eng ef, R; 
of Ire-. tree-hall farm, 2; hedgerows, . 
Ti farm : 
‘Tobacco, 28; Willich’s, br 


vo, 395, 520,523, culture of 0% 


„ 341; for 5 purposes, 454; to 

— for ditto O, 
Trade, 
369; 


Trade m 73 
Transplanting, 152 BE. . 3, 21, 54; 
Cedars, 710; Potatoes. trees, 765 


for mice 102, 119, in 133 ; for slugs, 
7713, 230; for sparrows, 150, 280; for birds 
821 ht’s), 280 
e of a, 133, 196, 214, 277, 484 
Trees, Conifer, in 22 ; ; ditto, 
evil of cramping roo 148 ; a native 
di rae * to fell, 200, 261, 


278, 291, dss, 373, 807; itto, peeling, 
325 ; ditto, to train, 293,325; ditto, to prune, 
3443 ditto, attacked by fungi, 344; ditto, at 
Rédleaf, 598; insects on ditto, 373, 758; to 
strike ditto, 824; plan proposed for obtain- 
ing seeds of ditto, 820; Laurel, 71, 86, 
150; ditto, to layer, 422; for churchyards, 
568; transplanting, 152, 5 


fruit, to ring, 55, 168 ; Currant and Goose- 
berries, to prune, 52; to lime, 86; Ras 
es, training of, 118, 149 ; protectors And 
133, 166 ; to ~~, rabbits from barking, 134 
to fasten to , 198, 230, 246, 277, 435; 


Peach, 709 ; „ 232 
double flowering „ 84: ditto, 
blistering, 261, 293, 310, 373, 405, 453; ditto, 
select, 376; ditto, on p: d trellises, 614; 
ditto, to _ ditto, to train, 743; 
ditto, treatment of, ; ditto, manageme 

„ 774; di for forcing, 776; stand 


ditto, failure in, 501; 504; 
Cherry, leaves of, diseased, 595; bly “rise to 
— 632, 744; to close 2 „ 694; fo 
different aspects „ 696; Pea lect, "744 ; 
lists of, nd 1 urran cession 
Gooseberri 

oe Kia to Warm, 230, 355; to con. | 
erete, 68, 86 


— — — — eH 
Trellises, protected, 38, 69, 181, 198, 293, 614, 


Tricho onema bulbocodium, 26 
a rrp 3 Van Thol, 245; Potti- 
baker, 245; Couleur de Pouceau, 225; Mr. 
8 

Turner's (Mr. ) nursery noticed, 5 

Turnips, ger and toes in, 8; ops of, 


st of a => of, clay. 
with guano, 477; 
5553 sheep on, 779 
Twinin ng’s ( Miss) Illustrations of Orders of 
Plants, 439 
Tyndale’s Sardinia, &c., rev., 183 


„ 443; 


ee 3543 ‘ grown 


seed of, 


U 


UNITED States, Dr. Gray on the plants of, 
rev., 7 


Y 


VARNISH for glass, 246, 2 

Vegetation and climate, 355 387; and “alkali 
works, 515, 531, 563, 595, bos, 646 ; effect of 
light on, 710 

Vegetable life, tenacity of, 

Vegetable seeds for cottage matik 534 

Vegetable Marrows, 373, 7: 

bps of cottages, 285 ; of stables, 398, 


ven seed, to sow, 232; pegs, 342 
Veronica teueriam patens pasen 245: cau- 
casica, 245 ; am lis, 28h 


cena, 
» 694, 729, 758, 788, 807; r ate of 


n garden 372, 
88, 404, 421, 436, 453, 468, we FA . 533, 
f; 582, 597, 614, 630, os 6, 660, 677, 693, 


8 
r.) Wilmot’s, 39, 163; pruning of, 54, 
i ode of, 39; 3 ag 
120 ; for open walls, ; 
kaine é mm g cutting back, 117; * a 


EX: 


growing, 245; tendrils of, 262; cause of 
ae in, 232, 725; side = — 662, 726 

Vine berd ers, 88, 725, 726, 788, 790; to con. 

sa to cover, 132 , 182, 278, 632 ; to 


o make from the vinegar plant, 808 
violae 7263 naa of, vied nel Russian, 136 
Viola a palme 2 „ 278; pennsyl- 
vani ca, 3 
Vipers, 791; r T. Brown on, 166 
Virgularia 3 564 


W 


Wacdks, gardeners’, 22; e 139, 185, 
wd vad — — in — 
Wal ts pas 884 589 ; tour in, 329, 


346 
Walls, garden, 24, 198, 214, 536; shade of, 56; 
Vines for, 120; copings for, 152 ; to protect 
on, 108 sf 


all trees, to close prune, 

ame: to kill — on, 88; conerete, 246 
Walmer Castle ens, 

Walnut, vegetation of, the 101 

5 obo ases, 390 


vom quality of, 252; to keep, 373; rain, 389, 
— 421 ditto, tank, mar for, 469, yo 
818, ake, t v. milde ew, 5 


Water — corrosion of iron, 55 
Water wheels, 44 


er's (Mr. H.) exhibition of American 
plants, noticed, 343 
W 


Weaver, on 18 —.— rev., 167 

Weeds, t to eradicate, 501; 

Weevils, 285; action of carbonic oxide on, 517; 

me ag T 

rosea, 149, 

Weights of pigs, 284, 363 

ah farming, 329, 346 

Wells, ic 

Wheat, steeps — 10; smut in, 10, 43, 46, 109 
— r, Ôl ; to keep slugs from, 25 

— 2 7 —— my sul of 


— OEA, 152, 616, 728; and carrion, 165 ; 


— for, 43; anal lysis «ek 155; ditto of 


r 


vu 


pollard, 70; Egyptian, 92; seed, 109; twin 
headed, 363, 378 ; ee 379 ; gro wing, 
27; mowing, 475, 523; bur rat ears of, 490 


„717; to plan 
Wilkins’, 705 

Wheat flour, to detect 1 es corn ditto in, 167 
Wheat ricks on a rail 4 


iting g Ladies, rev., 279 
Willich’s Tithe Commutati ion 1 Tables for 3 T 
illiams on Dr; inage an tion, rey. 
ilmot’s (Mr.) Grapes, 39, 
lson’s (Mr.) Farm at ton, 2 
Wilson’s Rural 8 
ilson’s translation of J * ee of 
Botany, rev., 1 


L 
Wistaria sinensis, 84 br 
Woods, management of, 54 
Wood, decayed, a sub: j titute for Pa — 518 
ditt to, Rhododendrons in, 451 
ifi 


Woodlice, to kill ‘fa i! 4, 
3 dward, on ed light, rev., 631 
orms, to 


renek (Messrs,) ) greenhouse, 487 


XYLOPHAGA, 383 


r 
ccas, treatment of, 200 
Sauce gloriosa, large, 710 
Z 


Zino, worthlessness of, 773; durability of, 823; 
ink for, 776, 790 
Zurich Botanic 


+ 2 
LIST OF WOODCUTS N THE PRESENT VOLUME. 
A F L Rain-water tank filter, 469 
Rake-hoe 
Aunzz bilis, 199 F bbit, —— j, trajni 1 60 f 
STIA no ENCE, ra 326 s -leaf miner, 5 p 
Aphides, Pear branch affected by, 755 Filter, rain 1 469 8 brad A rece a of cramping, 1483 in drains, 611 
Aphis, Lettuce root, Arr enh ney 403 team diseased, rt 
— Gardens, 5 plan of, 213; =e Lettuce- root aphis, 54 
Arbours, a and of hothouses in, 19 Lichen esculentus, a; 3, affinis, 612 
Arnott’s stove, 292 Fruit trees, 10 for, 133 ; Cherry, — 8283 Pelnceps, 6 
Asarum Europeum, 392 of, diseased, 59 Gooseberry, to prune, 692 Lovers' tree, 339 
y Fungi e f — 261; cholera, 644 Lunar moth, 53 x 5i 
4 
B 0 l 15 * EATS, garden, 723 
GARDEN walls, 1 n ViA Gh 
ARDEN 8, 198 5 drilling, n oil, diagram illustrative of tempe i 
Bazzow ay herd 645, 663 Garden fork, 403 peee pert 456 5, ditto, and lioo. thermometers for discovering ditto, 659 ; i! 
Bird trap (Knight's), 280 Garden chairs, 723 Marjoram, wild, 39 Staphylinussolens a 
pate Sa mp 692 May bug or westen, and the July bug, 484 Suffolk box-churn, 237 i 
? Maze, pian of a 
* Greenhouse s ann ; 5 
Te Gribble, and other submarine Xylophaga, 388 Bilon dio 372 at Chatsworth, diagrams illustra- | , | 
N ole cricket, 821 g 
ae 0 Moths, lunar horst, 53; death’s-head, 600; 
Ermine * 660 T 
Lan leaf, pitcher on, 772 E e S 
Coreen latifrors, “8 Tanx filter, rain-water, 469 cs. 
form of, 454 - i Therm: j terrestrial, 
Chatswo th th, Mélon-house at 372 Harrow ale ù 0 : Tiles, draining, form of, 44 
pae piad leaves, 595 er: brick Arnott stove for, 2023 e. ma : Ec ‘oie, * irde’ (Knight's), 980 
cal plan hai uniting Polmaise ; i raps, mice, j ( 
Shar, ghar AG box, diagrams illustrative of, | ` systems ot, aa tank Oxicanum vulgare, 391 Trees, youn ung, evil of "eramping, 148; E 
wee rake, 3 natarally grafted, 421; effects o f alkali wor 
—— 8 sting and drilling machine, new 500 On, 
Climate, terrestrial, 3 illustrative Hylurgus pinigerda, N i Trees = protectors for, 133; leaves of, 
35 ; thermometers for, 659 * P + diseas ;G rry, to prune, 692 y 
684 Trellises, protected, diagram illustrative of, 69 
e mbi teni pin 6 
i urnips, fingers an 58 ; monstrosity 
Pran e affected by aphides, 755 n toes in, 
Pinus laricio, root of, 148 
. se 
2 3 y scro- Plant lice, 420 5 
oceris Meianopa, 324; | Plant-house, di ‘am illustrative — u 164 
arine Xylophaga, | Planting, eril of eramping roots i v 
nt lice, 420 ; Podisoma fuscum, 26 
or 8 and the July bug, 3 heating, economical pla of uniting 
uce-root aphis, 548; Raspberry. leaf tank system a the, 436 VICTORIA regia, 740 
3 1 olens, 600; des th’s Poly deuanas complanatus, 648 Vine weevils, 774 N 
i — Poplar, Logics 806 5 
Pot, wi th feet, 711 " 4 
m à 1 N a 
sof, 60} 3 
o: 
Watts, garden, 1 A 
Wenn: gard cals filter for, 469 4 
Meee y twin-headed, 36 ; ear, with an Oat 4 
3 
Wingless subterranean plant lice, 420 iy! 
one 696 Š 


* 


‘ ee ere Liverpool, C Brighton, and other 
Provincial towns, where * gave universal painan — by its 
‘extreme earl and beauty. Strong roots, 2s. 6d. 

, 23. 6d., and * od.; — 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICL 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News. 


No 1.—1849.] 


The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, JANUARY 6. 


[Price 6d, 


I 
iculture, retrospective view a zı | Gardeners v. masters, the case 


use of arsenic in PC 5 0 
Agri. Chemistry Association. 1 Glenny’s Garden Almanack, rev. 7 e 
A ee 1 Grass or arable land.. lla 
Ami teurs, hints ſoer « Gray (Dr.) on the Plants of the 
$ irak v. — — 1 2 8 United States, rev 7e 
n agriculture «. 1 Labourers, agric al.. 10 a—ll e 
b ‘ora — wi. Lelias, 7 bie e 6 e 
Boile ake 
Box fe 
Calendar, lch. cake 
ard 
Cattle, to box fee 
Cattle Show, Newbury 
Chemistry Association 
Cider, ropy 
Climate of England, ae of 
Corn markets 
Dauben n food 
Seon gri S a Ann, — i d 7 
rainage — rri on, by 
Williams, ren. = 3 13 5 — 1 
Dryness ef clean imate of England 36 i ba 
27 7a r W 
Evergreens, to trans nrplant 3 a | Thatchin 
Farming, retrospective view r va — ee ee teese 0 
— Scotch and English...... 12 a | We 3 the è 0 
Farm aceounte . 144 | Wheat, ste ps for. re | 
Food, Dr. Daubeny on.. 45 — smut 8 N 12898 
Fuchsia verratiei nn 7 6 | Williams on Drainage, rev.. q 13 


ARDENERS’ BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. 
NN 


Wednesday, 17th uae, = Pe London C 


lowing 3 ponte testimonials have been examin 
approved of bythe C 
Name, Residence 
Epwarp MARSHALL. London. 69—6th application, 
Mary Browne ndon 2—4t a 
MARTIN MILLER Exeter. 78—4t 15 
Jonn SKEATE lapham .. 69—4th ts 
MAS GOODHALL.,, Dulwich 2—3rd 75 
THomas MILLS Wandsw . 71— 3rd 37 
CHARLES AINSLIE od dete Essex i OAS ¥ 
OHN APPLEBY laph —2nd 5 
ROBERT DUNCAN ig ats 69—2nd 77 
OO ILV NEI Scone, Perth 80—2nd ï 
HUMPHREY TAYLOR., Clapham —2nd ; 
JAMES BATTEY .. London 65—1st 5 
Epwarp BAR 6 oucester 74— Ist 55 
JOHN 7 ee 7 pae 62—lst 35 
Jonn Ros: 64—1st 55 
RICHARD eg. 76— Ist 75 


JOHN SHEPHERD 


: Dartford, Kent 
. Clapham - 0W—Ist 


The Ballot will commence at 1 and ‘ne at3o’clock e 


y request those Members whose sub- 

33 bate as yet unpaid, to remit the same An delay, 

as no pers will „be allowed to vote — subscription for the 
year of elec 

3 ROGER CUTLER, Secretary, 97, e Jan. 6. 


J e IMEROVED ASH-LEAVED KIDNEY 


tr es most fic and best Early Kidney 
Potato grow sound seis 1 per bushel, kom from the 
8 gned. ` 
Tuo is N Ki Surrey. 
ONALD anp SON, of the ye Sab Nursery, 
Wo ear chai Surrey, are re: 
en, and the tendo A any portion of 


RUIT and FOREST TREES, 3 
NIFER &e. & c. 


Gcods 3 ree to London, per Rail, —Jan, 6 


NINGTON’S PEARMAIN, 
AMES CAMERON, 
a to inform his — sg and the pu 
hat most excellent 
. LINDLEY, «Manning ton’s Pear 
at Uckfield, and hitherto confined * 
pple, with a rich, —. — and genre 
25 “op eel in every respects * the Ribstone Pippin, 
will } f May as been favourably —— 
oo Plants 
. each, 


d, S 
c that hed is now 
led 


It 
nthe Garekar” Ooni icle N 
Apple can be nage — . rf Maidens, at 10s 
by . omen Messrs, Gray, e * ‘Hogg, 
Nurserymen, orate bie —— ‘London 
emittances expected from unkn rrespon — 


OUBLE 


ITALIAN TUBEROSE ROOTS. — 


ll, and a 
—— double, at 4s. per dozen Also, expected atoll: the vend 
of January, ti range, — sates Citron, an 
Shaddock Trees, er ith Catalonian, zorian, 
Arabian Jessamine plants, any of which — be bespoke. 


— 


IMPORTANT TO SEEDSMEN AND OTHERS. 
T 


be bad in any quantity at 
J. G. WAITE's Seed Establishment, — High Holbor: 2 ee 
at 5s. per bushel lower than r house i in Lon 
Catalogues of Vegetable tw A — had on enen n, 
which contain all 2 choicest kinds in cultivation, at extremely 
low prices,—Jan 


A ai GARD) DEN SEEDS. — 
— —A ren collection, consisting of 20 quarts of 
t ki ine of PEAS, inclusive of Pairbeard’s Champiv on of 
t 


e’s Ec 
&c., and all other Seeds in proportion, of the newest and bes 
sorts, sufficient for one year’s cropping of a cP garden, ie 
choicest Melons and Cucumbers i inclusive 38 Od 
No. prog er quantities 
eig cholee' sorts ee 2 ; 
No, 3.— 


No, EDRO This is sufficient for a gentleman’s 
small ien 12 
No “ve charge for packing ; 3 carriage paid i London, 


If +h 


in th he 8 ction, i 


increased quantities of —— most desired 
would ba sent. 
— 


sh 5 to be e paOina by a remittance, 
or > reference unknown corresponden 

W. J. Epps with pists ure, ice to ‘sak of the most 
respectable families in England, Ireland, and Scotland, who 
are in the habit of pure chasing i the aboy ve collections every year, 


may be had on application ; also e List of Seeds. 
Fine Bates ained Peaches and Nectarines, 20. 6d. to 38. 6d. each, 
AMEs Epps, Maidstone 


Dun CAN HAIRS, SEEDSMAN and FLORIST 109, St. 


3 Charing-c -cross, London, takes the resent 


pportunity of informing the Nobility and Public in 1 
2 has Seis Fegan pleted his selected CATALOGUE of 
VE were 1 and AGRICULTURAL SEEDS, 


whic’ 4 ca ation. 


EW CABBAGE. 

can be had in any quantity at 
Establishment, 181, we. _ Iborn, London, at 8s. per oz 
above iest and best known, 


G. WAITE begs to inform 

* — at his unrival'ed CATALOGUE 
ready, and can be had on 
blishment, 181, High Holborn, Lond 


“TRUE ASHMEAD’'S KE 
1555 very different from, and far 
generally known by the name of Ashmead's Kern 
ek 3 WHEELER had the honour of sup- 
ply a great mary — the Nobility a 
1588 of ie true variety last spri 
mentioned the names of His 
the Right i 


srs, and Sons, of Bristol; 
Mr. Darby, Cirencester ; Messrs. Jackson and Co » Bedale 
ursevies ; "a r. Gregory, f ‘Cirencester. I the 
emand was so large that he was entirely sold out of all the 
saleable portion of his large St of the true ; but 
ving propagated a great 1 h n now offer fine young 
plants at 2s, 6d. each, with th ual allowance to the trade 
hen half a dozen are ta 


1 be published in a future 
„ Deets Apple to their praag 


=J. Chas N WHEELER e Nursery, Gloucester. 

AMILTON’S IMPROVED FLOWE SUP- 

PORTER F a HYACINTHS AND NARCISSUS, &e.— 

As 2 Byin s grown lasses are now. coming into 

bloom, W. H. recommerds the immediate adeption of the 

above to those who Mepis 3 reserve the elegance of this 
pom flower, Particulars have 8 given in 


THE MOST BEAUTIFUL ORNAMENT for SHRUBBERIES 
AND PLEASURE GROUNDS for the 8 N MONTHS, 
IS THE SPLENDID JAPANESE LILY 
» Clapham-rise, near L n, by 
appointment Fronts To Her * — IE STT THE 4 and 
MAJESTY THE KINd or Sax — — to 
15 attention of the Nobility — Gentry t endid 
LILY for greene in their — ubberies a 
as it is quite hardy, an 
they sre at their country s 
can supply 100 good flowetiag bolis of LILIUM ney raara Seren 
ALBUM, for 5l., co wom included, This is the best season 
the year to plant th 
or the prices of his er Bulbs and Plants he begs to refer 
to his Advertisement a — Paper of November 11. 


J OHN SALTER, F.H.S., begs to inform his i 
and the public, that having Ie ft Versailles, in 

of the 3 coe of the Continent, his establishment will 
rer d, Fulham, 
ear Hammersmith turnpike), London. 


Pen iew Enamelled Labels,.the most 
gn jue ot 8057 Lind; Royal Folding Garden Chair, and 
wers’ new Wate ar bay Pot, all of which pee be seen at the 
above rae ges or lithograp hie draw wings forwarded per post. 
ntlemen purchasing = for distribution — their 
bon ‘ons or tenants, also emigrants, trea ted o mos 
liberal terms, 
Mee: of all. 


9 as Fe 9 the 
1 cannot | have it t lyi d 


5 
teh ah £ 


5 


ay 
ost | inclosing two postage stamps. 
Fulha 


ee useful culinary and fruit 3 

DT ee POTATOES (imported), 12s. per 
bus OOM SPAWN, Mee directions for cultivating ; 
PIOUS: ELASTICUS Se ate LOES, &c., suitable for in- 
door cultivation, always o n han 


or tee 


rich Gree ya A be h 


(whol 
CLARKE, Seed Merchant, 39, 


— 


TALL WELL-FURNISHED EVERGREEN FOREST 
-AND ORNAMENTAL TREES, FOR IMMER BOT. 
J. J. FOSTER, of the Edgeware Nurseries, having E? 
a fine stock of the above frequently transplanted, and 

grown on on an — a oil (which permits them to 
with good balls of pot and safely — on su st heave at 
very moderate rates, The Evergreens c t principally of 

p and Scotch Firs, Ever 5 — thee Por- 
tugal and common aa B sg Ke. The 
includes 2 es, Beech, beam, Elms, Scarlet a 
Horse Chestnuts, Lareh Lilac, Ganda E sasyse Tabana 
Acacias, Mp ee » &c.— s given on appli- 
— noe log urs of the e of Fruit Trees, 

? 


— — —— ꝛ ? ˙L 
ITCHELL’S ph ALBERT RHUBARB 

still retains its su 

uced, it being fr w 

ther qualities 
most delicious in flavour, a splendi 
rolif c bearer, and"free grower, 


UCUMBER GROWERS should not delay purchas- | 
ing the Seed of TILEY’S VICTORY OF SAAR, and sce; 
DON’S WHITE SPINE, E 


è has n umerous letters by hins wh ich he has received, 
required, an 


speak ing Meni f th its of the above Cucumbers over all 
oth 

VIC ORY OF BATH, 10 Seeds 
BORDUN'S FINE WHITE SPINE, 10 Seeds. 


Also, LORD KENYON'S FAVOURITE Cina se better 
known as the SYON FREE BEARER, — ee to the old 
a 1 as a Cuc umber for winter cu ; 10 Seoda, 


ond ‘oon "Hane can be supplied ip pac kets of! 10 — for 10.00 Gd. 
For farther parti toularg; see E. Titey’s Advertisement in this 
Paper of December 16th, A remittance must accompany each 
order, either in cash or posta ge stamps to the amount. 
Sold at Epwarp TILEY’s General Seed Shop, 16, Pulteney- 
3 Bath. 


pee for early forcing is more suitable 
‘It has been acknow 


Offici Ptr ng me SEEDSIER to the 
AL hin sage nates suCIETY OF ENGLAND,” 
e Society, and A culturists 
House and Seed Ware- 
55 Ficoa- 
Dies oa 


a 
s direct 
from the growers ; cae has several novelties for the spring of 
1849, among g them ome stiiped an ‘ipa Dahlias, totally 
ior to any yet seen in England ( 
d'or ot Empereur de Maroc were sent out by him last season). 


A splendid new Fuchsia corymbifiora, with white Somers: 
several seedling Chrysanthemume, including the five t blush 
hi 


e 

ebru many, aud may be pry BP A 
3 Versailles Nurs 
William-street, North-end, 


—“ KING or ann CABBAGES ” 
J. G. yates Seed 


the Trade generally 
OF FLOWER SEEDS 
ag at his Seed Esta- 


— "Hs a most delicious 
superior to, 1 variety 


ESSRS. J. anv H BROWN’S new priced CATA- 
LOGUE OF PLANTS for 1849, sent by post on applica- 


tion, They also offer the following, which the ey will T to 
an rt by steamer or railway. 
25 New hardy ier Azaleas, on their 1 vim 
flower buds. of a sort, by name =~ 20 0 
American —— ditto ditto ditto - 15 0 
2 American plants, with flower ype fit for forcing . 10 0 
3 Hardy flowering shrubs, one of a sort, by name . 10 0 


2 Rhododendrons, including mad ae and ye 
hardy varieti 13 
each 7 78. 6d. to Ar 


2 y Heaths, K Imi. Ledums, 3 
6 Fine hardy e one of a sort 3 10 4 
50 Dwarf Ros urd Ties, one o f a sort, named, 16 í 


pa and half-standard Roses, 
wone N per 100. 

n Mo: oss and climbing Roses, per doula < as Se 

Giycine si aras, extra fine $ pag eg noone 15 Tak, ok 4 d 

aleas 8 25 


an dh 


12 Greenhouse Az , one of a sort, 

12 —— Camelias, — same, ditio, ditto se 2 

50 Choice flowering Greenhouse plants, one ofa tort <. 45 

24 Choice Ericas, one of a sort, by name 32 
6 —— 3 and 6 new Correas œ» 12 


© 


he beau 

Double. Talin Tubercle se roots, ipene 4 e, 
Pæony r 3 she ble, 

crimso: 


Fine e a) Dwarf tr 


st and most appr 
kinds, true to name, 23. 6d. ea 
23 Maiden ditto, 1s. 
ants, a 


Hees tie a Figs, appie, and W. nut 
Sen atk 5 choice 


Vane 


2 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. ‘ CJAN. 6, 
“DESCRIPTIVE PRI = GS PERUPTAR pee, pa he fi je ah E 
x SS anp BROWN S N of the finest quality, direct from 
| DES SORT PTIVE CATALOGUE OF 2 Mr TALOG GUE for 1849 is now ready, w which contain a cee ho: S 51 
* 5 arieties tor 1 “i he Wituiam | many choice additions ies for iy prepaid on appli — NITRA 0 POT 


FLOWER-POTS AND GARDEN S 
OHN Monae 3) ee respectfully 
announces that h 
above articles in — — . Nail nieht re 8 rly 
tion scription of useful CHINA, GEASS, and 


Copi 
Fey hol asale prices to the tra 


wa 
and Horticultural . Sudbury, e 


e CHEAP GLAZED LIGHTS OF ALL SIZES. 
J WEEKS anp CO., King’s-road, Chelsea, Horticul- 
* tural 5 &. xe; Lights for Hothouses , Greenhouses, 
Fits; & c. kc, gna of the best yellow deal, gla and painted, 
o Is. per foot 


m ple ma from 9d, t 


EARTHENWARE ar at the porn possible price, for cash.— 
xford-street, near Hyde-pa 


OLE’S SUPERB DWARF BED CELERY. 


Wen being a remarkably fine nutty flavo 2 in 
and epg et 3 size (Mr, Cole ae 
— 


a 43, 


| its heating powers 
00 


WEEKS anD CO,’S PATENT HOT-WATER | 
APPARATUS 


le, a o be seen ex- 


the oii efficient, si nd ecorfom 
“hice their 8 Establishment, 


— ely in operation 
King’ s- 5 Chelsea 


„ porta ISE.— The Sug, wid success of SMITH’S 
POLMAISE APPARATUS, is now firmly 
established se of 
ple ter hot water, and 


vere test 


It is more sim 
equally as economical. 


geet averaging 6 
+ be goes | 12 months from the time Jof 
beg be te: 3 to seed. his Celery will 
ieee uring th a week at the y Er seed shops, where 
also weed n — be obt aine so ¥. Warner, Cornhill; Mr. W 
— Bi . D. Hairs, 109, St. Martin’ s- 
mig t- aring- cross ; Mr. Ben wa , Gracechur ch. street; 
interns and Son, Mansion. house-street; and alg Berns 


in no single instance has failure of any kin 
fac 8 bsg Smitu 3 Co., fand Foundry, 383 Prices 
from 81. to 15/,, acco: ding to 


LASS FOR GREEN 3 CONSERVA- 
TORIES, GARDEN F &e. 
Hothouse Builders, Nurserymen, and others supplied wit 
ss ugh Plate, 2 


= M' Mullen, Leadenhall.stre 
—— that his selected 8 


friends upon whose integrity he can depend, eee 
op ——— 6. 


Glass Tiles, Propagating, Cucum 


cumk . 
Glasses. — Address, T, Cocan, 48, 5 Londons 
PRICES OF SMALL SQUARES IN BOXES OF 100 FEET, 


rown, Sheet. 


GYPSUM (SULPHATE OF LIME), 

88 ib Neal) 

SOD Pew WORM co og pie ; 

Fürs OF LIME (m on bone only), 

AGRICULTURAL{SALT, and all G of known 
value, may be had 

Marx Foruencity, 201 a, Upper Thames- street, London. d 


1 AND over ecb NG TRAIN — 
L. HODDESDON, HE .—This Institution i 
been N on the largest — T Par pdp ud will 
found complete in every department. ectuses . 
other oo plea apply to the Head 1 . E 
let 


or by WILLIAM HASELWOCD, Head Maste 


Laa 8 possessing Was 


or the same superintended in Englan nd; Ireland, Scot. 
land, or Wales. For further particulars address WM. HARRIS, 
Surveyor and Contractor, Almodington, Chichester, Sussex. 
AS —.— of — disposition, who h much 
experience in private tuition, and has just gates a family. 
in which she 1 ided 14 sce wishes to 1 another engage. 
ment, in whic aie —— of mental instruction keke not e 
required. Sh uld be happy to enter a family of which th 
Children, through — eavernent need MATERNAL CARE AND 
NESS; and she feels sure that docile children would 
receive from her “the bean and sympathy which 88 cir- 
Unexceptionable references 055 be given. 


Squares under 6 by 4...,..10s. 6d. a 123. rg 
k- y : and bea! 7 by 5.. 22 OS ese 16 
WOAS, Une 0 1 
I 1 


285 H 0 6 
Litryer sizes, of all qusifties 125 substances, equally low. 


M. H, BOW 
of the Horticultural Society of 8 and reat public 
io for his New and Im 9 må pr NG. POT 
aoe now offers it uced pri 100 y Gardeners, 
who wish to succeed in the management of plants 
751 is Neate, Please to ea the ban 


ad 
superiorit: tyo f this over alle 
of watering plants, that to any — disapproving te will retard 
A gent Dri l 8 1 .* pom r 

oncan Hatns ne, or a t 
LEN odalming, Surrey. a ed 


| GLASS DEOR CONSERV eS ES, 
HOUSES, PIT F 

BYLEY ax are suppl lying 16.02. Sheet Glass. 

of British * anufacture, pack 

yoo t som at the fo — 818 ng REDUCED PRICES for cash, 


|. secure 855 any requir 


15 
in boxes containing 100 | 


— — In ices, Per * Per 7 2 
D 6 by at ie 5 £0 
From es » 7 „ 5 * ” 01 8 
T „5 5 „ „n 018 9 
ae yi Ooo I ret Ff 244 1 18910 
„ „ * „ Ra 1 2 11 
er sizes, not — 40 inches long. 7 
i ox om f per square foot, according to size, 
„ 


20 0b. td. „5 


w 
ieee et Rovan i PEATE, T THICK CROWN GLASS, 8 
+ bn E GEASS for ee ural purposes 
—— quare ae 
onA TILES kanen 1 SLATES mad 
eicher in Shee 


eR: der p 


ber 
ous other artistes not 


hitherto manufactured in glass. 

PATENT PLATE GLASS. -The extremely moderate 
price of this s cle should cause it to supersede all 
— — — — — — s a 3 resident 0 

TASS SHADES, — . — to, . the 

every descrip’ goods susceptible of inj y ex- 
ure. Prices, since removal of the Excise duty, re- 
ced eee. List of Prices and Es — or w. i on 
o James Herixy and Co., are, 


—. e ceed 
4855 Nez GLASS FOR CONSE ainina 

UT T TO size SIZE UP T PRICES oF SMALL BREET 
rs = aint Rae. of 100 feet 12 4 
16% „ Het 6 


per foot, 


8 by 6 .20 
ROTG en GLASS for WIN 
and FLOORS in sizes not. exceeding 5 ‘DOWS, SKYL TOMS 
hcg + per foot 43 po 2 0 
. — r 35, Od. 


— *j5 


—** 222 1100 


pa Tent. ROUGH PLATE TILES. 
14 Vine each 1s. 7a, 


Linen. —.— era hare 


These are 


well worth 
MILE- PA) notice, 


'PROPAGATIN G GLASSES, anD BEE 


N S . 


DOMES for SKYLIGHTS, from 15 to 30 hes in | *°*? 


AINTS.—LITHIC AND OTHER DUR E 
AINTS, re a use for FARM ete Se 
Implements, Park F s, Outhouses, &. Genuine White- 
lead, Colours, 3 ‘me: best quality, ‘ud lowest pelted, 
GLASS MILK PANS FOR THE 
Cream Pots, Lactometers, Glass Kolling Pins, sas Pans, 
Shades for era gi aoe Shades, &c., 1 usual. * — 
(priced) direct to T. Coc cone Colour, and Lead War 
house, 48, Leicester. Reet ton 


TEPHENSON anv CO., 
„ondon, — a ee 


i become 2 street, 
E 


Manufacture he Improved CONICAL —— DOUBL 
CYLINDRICAL BOTI LERS, oy egbe ae solicit ai attention 01 
ulturists beir much improved method of 


— 4 Tank Syst Pd 15 Pineries, 8 Houses, 
&e., by which tal pet heat as well as bottom-heat is 


8 they are now m 
Copper, by bing the cos 
* 


every 
abe Buildings, — wei — for heating them, m 
8 upon the most adva terms. 
onservatories, & e., of Tro a W bod erected upon the most 
—— tal desigus. Balconies, Palisading, Field and Garden 
Fences, Wire- work. &e. 
2J7õͤĩ]2?ẽ3˖L .. . 
git METALLIC HOTHOUSE bh | 
5 cancel 1 — Proprietor, M 
CLARK; Manager, Mr. A 3 Taran paR 


e actioh of frost i 2 ; 

* — of —— adi 8 

rat in — h all, all the n most recent 

LARK refers to th 

by 1 him in the new Royal Gard 

— judges to be the most 
wer id, 


BY HER 
MAJESTY’S 


ROYAL LETTERS 
P inia 


A. LYNDON, TÉR Works, 
„Manufacturer 
DRAINING — 


Birmingham, 


of Patent SPADES, —— and 


| Address, prepaid, N. J., Po 


n, London, 
= U B 10 92 F ING. 
Houses of all descriptions can be roofed at less than 
one-half the "ordinar cost, — s the 

PATENT ASP HAL ED ROOFING ‘FELT, 

2 b; 
FRANCIS RITCHIE AND SONS, BEL 

Who also make Inoporovs FELT for lining — — walls under 
paper in place of lead. Samples, directions, and all necessary 


EY san 


information — free — — . to the Manufacturers, or 
of t — 


Manchester James Hurst, 14, 


Carlisle Edward Jobling. High. street. 
Hull— Thomas Flint. Newcastle-on-Tyne — Richard 
e saas ger se Bow- Warham 

man, a Southampton—John Vaux 


Kondia Niy, ‘Anderson, and | Whitehaven — Handle eson and 
Sangster, Newington Butts Forster j 
Hurst and M‘Mullen, Seedsmen, 6, Londen alb-etheet; Lonas, ; 


ORT 5 CEMENT. a receivedfrom 

all rters prove this CEMENT to pos 
perty of Tiana the severest frost, an 

superior to every other for hydraulic’ purposes, such as 

and lining of Reservoirs, Cisterns, Baths, Fish-ponds, 2 For 


colour nor paint, It never bce and will carry from three 


to four y of sa 
eee J. B. Wiley and Sons, Millbank-street, 
Westmins 


WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT. 


ee 72225 RR N 


2 ae 


oe 
2 


2215 
RRAN 


IRE NETTING, TWO-PENCE 


S W 
FOOT.—This article requires no paint- 


prevent pou 
g plants, it answers admira ; 
of the Netting always kept in ie 1 cs i 


af which can ise forward à fi 
7 * e Arn of expense) to a 
te inches, wide 34. per yard 30 inches wide Tid. per — 
18 ” ”» kád 
2 355 . — „ 1 
14. — foot extr 
rds, Fl. 3 ers, Meat Safes, 
Mie Hint, G arden A bordering and arches, E standt, i 


i at aai he = 5 Snow-hill, London. 


rserym `% ardeners, and Agricultura boure 
these Spades ni will t be 2 d invaluable, — ca — e wee | 
aterially ; the 
carry a knife cone which will i neither break h — — warante — 
y brigh dla ee ong as three ——— or 
are now coming generali 
into use amongst the rich al z 
— he pri cpa Nurserymen, Market gardeners 


cul ingdom 
The Draining Tools gained two prizes at the R 
1 oyal A $ 
tural ety’s Meeting held at Northam ton, —— 
— 7 they have been award prizes and e endations from 


li the local socie e i 
ade, called Im- 
Non — e., and labelled 
pert full upon the pand label. 5 8 
es, Shovels, Drainin Tool 
and Hay Forks made to 1 patteri; and adapted for brome 
ption of soil r 3 all lronmon sac fams 
PN a aane a a a A O 
WARM AIR nf ace 
A 


toves, suitable — 
of 


; 
sss Tanp shade and Gaie 


L HAND FRAMES, 
' ROUGH PLATE, 


CROWN @ — PATENT 


3; Halls, School- roo —— 
Chuseh or Chapel 8 — Greenho 1 t E d pos 
bui = WARMED 5 3 WATER | from ‘ 


Offices, o of WARM AIR 
SYSTEM, irtena onthe POLMATSE | 
19, Wigmore-street, Cavendish-aquare, London drate cost. — 


WNS ACT. 
SEWERAGE z BOURSE. oF. PECUNIARY PROFIT. 
Cb IRRIGATOR ge is or the first 55 5 a 
y ill a 
ton for less ss than woke — wlio. ch 3 luna or 
On it. um 


e 


PA ATENT SES: LE 
TUBING FOR AJ 
DENING AND AORTE ; 

AN | AGRICULTURAL PUREOS &c. 

THE PATENT VULCA SED INDIA- RUBBER ; 

HOSE — H uor a a 


and all p 
is required, Made all sizes from 
: stad vith brass taps, I 
e, ready to be attached to 

3 JaMES 4 


Hot-water and Der, 
oi lioi mater and Seu Epes and wad oor purposes 


{—1849.]__ THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


any vegetables not requir red, 
had. A list of the collec- 
ed, Carr rings pn to London. Poet-office 


orders are able to eit ither ss and Brown or STEPHEN 
Being K of an extensive 8 of Seeds, we hall aa 
happy to fo nan a g s to the trade of such sorts as we 


on to off 
Seed and Horticultural a 
Sudbury, Suffo 


The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
SATURDAY, JANUARY 6, 1849. 


MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING 3 
Medical 


“ must be determined by the nature of 
and the state 8 bea Ae rah curre * year gro 
“has 1 e ie, 
“ ning mne gan © A; ; Sot 
$ plants ee 0 their wood m dehi 
„Others. ene therefore, should f 
s earliest 85 
In hot and dy autumns the foliage of me 75 
“ the sth specimens of certain species and v 
“ ties, especially —.— as — — large and — 
“le pers a will flag To uard against 


cg 


it 
„has been exposed to the sun. ns of 
d value, it would amply repay the 


eee een Bri arcs IIIS ra Le foli the evening for a short period after 
Tell hens 175. “planting. This, however, will be required 
5 1 5 edical and Chirurgical . . . 86r.. - — the weather be either cloudy or moist.” 
— 1 3 2 . For ourselves we have little to object to in these 
WEDNESDAY, — a e 2 pres beyond what has been often stated 
Royal . before r no objection to the end of 
ane, eee e August or beginning of September, if circumstances, 
Fatay, — We Astronoiaical ... om. that is ay, the st te of the season, are favour- 
Moxpay, = J Pathologic F P.M. able; quite the contrary ; tha g so, it is an 
—— ai Pirang excellent period. In fact we have formerly show 
ae Linnean ir sim that the time at which plants are to be removed is 
Weowsspar, — 17 Í Geological . 8 Byrn. determined by external not internal circumstances, 
— ag 20 fe 355 2 Given a favourable ee any time is el 
„CC whether in the growing season or not. Ther 
Tue disputed question relating to the season at great Scotch planters whe maintain the dindi 
which EvERGREENS S E TRANSPLANTED, has of the late spring, or e n Midsummer. With their 
been taken up by Mr. GLENDIXNVIxd, whose ex- eg 8 1 . daome summers they may 
tensive practice entitles him to attention. Mr. —— right t Hol edges in the Garden of 


NNING “entirely eal from the co 
ben that the st prepar se is the winter, that is is 
q 5 of April; 

unds: 
be trav sti over 

enter into any ge Saha 3 respecting the ey 
and descent of the fl . aud the for 
“tion and depo inition annually of new wood in all 
„ ligneous vegetation. It will 
purpose to state that this 1 = formation 
“ takes place 3 after Mids ‘cae and princi- 

in s durin when the 


— 


“consistency. It is during this downward tend- 
“ ency = the fluids, and when the solar action is 
i ure ecline, that I should 


e on 
“ seize 220 conduct with all rapidity the operations 
if this is intended to be 


commen 
their shoots, Another and very important tesa 
s6 3 


“ to A force of the sun during summer, 
although now on the decline, has warmed t 

e oa ide depth, so — 
. „ e mutila ratively situated o 


ited roots a 
a gentle bottom-heat, iel rapidly promotes sior 
ri sten, and n y: sër orh A i of yod 
“ spongelets during the 
2 4 he adds that. om the” slightest “acquaintance 
* y demon- 
s —.— sa truth of this assertion.” 
He however qualifies his opinion by a limitation. 
“ Let it be clearly understood that I am alluding to 
plants of from 6 to 30 feet and upwards in height, 
“ and not to mere nursery stock, which is gene 
bed —— t moved about every two nets to ensure its 
safety when transplanted out perm 
In 8 ald of his p 
the following re 
I had oe 


tly. 

aper + Gert DINNING has 
arks in Mustration F his views: 
to superintend the removal of 


* upwards of 2000 trees and shrubs, all evergreen, in 
varying in size from 6 to 40 feet high, during 


“cain autumn. The trees were prepared as for- 
“merly described the pre vious ‘spring, and as th 


and progressively exhibited our 


8 
and 

pu 
a beaten track to D 


be sufficient for my b 


tree missed. For the sake 


made it possible, and if seasons were 


e season, KA the soil at an 


- of transplanted evergreens find 


structe di in the f be of formin 
n 


ly 
the Horticultural Society were all planted at Mid- are n 
and hardly a 


early than at a late peit He 
ery justly says that early in the am the roots 
sely 


— HOM 
ound temperature near 
what is the veil gain in this respect. 
mean temperature of the soil, on an average of six 
years, to be 


One foot deep. Two feet deep. 
vgust a 2 37 a! 61.95 
September 58.35 59.04 
etober - 52.38 53.74 
November 46.79 48.09 
De rir 40.75 * e 
Thus, n Augus st, the Sih is from 8° 10° 
warmer ihan in October, and in peek "aba 


6° higher than in October, 10° to 12° higher thanin 
gif and I6° or . bigher 2797 in 1 December. 
ere ave a great element o ntage 
favour of Sepre; for r, although, ae will 
make new roots all the winter long, if the earth is not 
too cold, yet it is certain that they will do so 3 
more quickly a rah abundantly in warmth t 
cold; and 10° form what may be called, noc 
exaggeration an immense difference in their favour. 
n the other hand, they = ed mpi ob- 
ew TO ven 
“bottom heat,” if their hapiri 1 chrivelied up 
420 destroyed: 1 is always to be dreaded at too 
early a period of the 5 44 he 1. . vod oa. 
selves — the 
42 or what may be gai et by the wait of the “soll 
may be more than lost by the dryness of the air, 
The gardener is thus plac 2 in a practical difficulty, 
out of which it is difficult fo im- 
self. d nts 


of this —— — ive. Res n Biei are 
often determined by cire tennit the most 
consci — and skilful buster fails t to perceive, 


and thus they are laid to wrong causes.. A series 
of experiments conducted under equal — 


eram we should always take the period named | for several years, at least in several diff it places 
Mr. GLENDINNING, in the same year, are absolutel e 2 
ut annot e n such seasons; and the mind. Solit experime ardening, as 
therefore the question to be settled for England i is well as in farming, may almost be called useless; 
what time of * is the se 3 the average, at the best they can only be taken as indications, 
considering wha t our seaso the value of which Naber experiments must 
The folloy . memoranda óir the rg diy- determine. 
ness aud . ure of our autumn months. We have, however, this res nap gain, from 
Mean deg ai GLENDINNING’s experience, that for England 


a 8 co to Daniels hygro- 
rage of 19 yea 


meter, on a ‘ave 


e danger of planting Evorgre ens in suring ay 
and t 


ee 4.45 regarded as finally determined; us the main 
9 . e 2 principle for which the —— Ghanian has 
Novem ber a T ae: : 8 75 been eee -n man a . is established. 
Dec 3 OT The poin stigate is ee the 
Dryne of — above period according to — bynes planter should s slet "August September, October, 
metric sent saturation be at au oe oe. Nov r December ; the spring ‘being out of 
gust 5 mes — Probably it will be safe t 
nber es 908. An, d ras the edvantegeoss of 
Octobe 22 ñ ae aai e five months, except under special circum- 
November e 963. stances; and that upon the whole, September, 
rs 2 969. October, or November should mee 
Mean temperature, average 23 years. 5 being better in one year and one in another. We 
—.— Gi shall only add that a ground te — re of 47°, 
. i : 50e 46 which may be taken as that of thoroughly drained+ 
November... . 30, land near —— in November, is sufficiently high 
wives 39,76 for plants like hardy Evergreens to form roots in. 
— facts are our guides; they show that — — — — lose «sight —— i E AAE 


rally i 


u 
times as dry as “October. It will also be seen from 


them that the mea 


by trees is to a great degree dependent upon the 

dryness of the air. it is obvious that in that point of |° 

view August is almost four times as dangerous 

October 

o be borne in mind that — 
the direct action of light, 


length of time during which the surface of plants is 
exposed to sunlight ; best and dryness RE r as- 
e d: 


tate of the a 


oberi offering, on a better chance 
of — a ae —— than ue 
September; and for similar reasons, which t 
receding Tables will explain, we should infer that 
Norder i is near: than either, as we have gene 
rall loans it to 
t 883 has fiitrodaced anew and 
. argument. 


e exact period to commence these — a 


m 
Í tmosphere is against the first month 
e | and in favour of the latter. m 
se ese grounds, — at should regard 


| gratitude of posterit 
lt 


se 

tion is owing to the inability of the roots to supply 

the system with the water it loses by perspiration ; 

and to a ene cause. All the power which it is 

e to plants, of their 
fore the enormous loss 

nn the season 


possible 
mutilated roin i is nothi 
t their by perspir 


as | 38 —— to that function 


Ware others are recording the leading events of 
ord 4 uckland’s political . aud attempting 
atal errors o 


e 
other pasma in the character of 3 grea 


on record 


and lamented noblem 
ord 


AvcKLAND, “although not a talker like some 
ise and good in the truest sense of those 


T 
. 


- | friend of science th 


ity. ae 
was Lord eee eee in 
-societies -under -bis } 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [JAN. 6, 


equally all 9 but it hg epi to lateral pressure | Cabbages, or in the suckers of trees, when they gr 

ay be ore ed that our| excessively fast and are interfered with in their 
fo reed itself Beis n two stones, or | later n In such cases they, too, flaiten 
ds, when it first began to swell, and become monstrous, and, if they had the power 


4 


them in their objects, and held out to the young and 
rising men of his day the powerful hand of a mighty 
It was he who brought 2 ard and gave 
the means of distinction FITH, the first | t | 
of Indian 1 an carly 25 4 to scientific all it is the same kind of production as is ane for becoming tubers, they might also form 
exertions. e who 8 8 the capabilities of often found in Cucumber plants, in the stems of another Belgian hand. 

to be dee who also laid the 3 


it 1 flatte 
Belgi ony 


ssam 
foundation of those im . Tea plantations , 
ia the Himalaya, which eem destined at no =s 
distan y to win from the Celestial Empire = 
the most valuable part of its commerce ; and — 
when the armies of England penetrated into the r 
wild country of the Afighans, it was he who provided SS e y 
the expedition with a scientific staff such as has et E 
not been attached to an army since the days of R Fa 
Narotron in Egypt. Gardening was more espe- = 
cially * Res CKLAND's favourite pursuit; where- = A 
ever his p in India extended this art was pro- = = 
tected ‘ni py ter d by the resources of his native = 
country, which in its return was enriched with all that 3 
Indian establishments could furnish, Itwas at his lord- Pe <a 
ship’s instance, seconded by OBERT GORDON, G 
one of the then Secretaries of the India Board, 4 
that the East India Company laid the foundation = BA 
of that important system of continually importing a2 
dian seeds, to which we owe the numerous an =e 
invaluable Coniferous and other Box that have = = N 
now become so common in wonder = = 
that on departing from his Indian 5 t Lord SA g 
Avckranv should have been followed by the deep = S 
regret of bes for a iy which they knew might not = = 
be easily repaired. Hea — = t 
On si ‘pos to England . "zed ne Bical ey 8 
Kensington Gore, where his eS 
haustible ada r happiness. 1 * Sp lan an == — 
— = 
active support e Royal Asiatic and Horti- m E 
cultural Societies, 575 of University College, in — SS 
the management of which institutions he took the > SSS 
—— — 
greatest personal interest, uate his nopeiten to => = 
the Admiralty rendered it necessar y for him to con- 3 — SS 


Ii 


fine himself to the official ioiei of his high 5 arge. 

se duties, when they killed him, deprived 

his country of 5 Srae:hearted aman as eyer wore 
the chains of Sta 

Ix reply to some 9 respecting Dr. Liyp- 

Lkx's examination cts connected with the 


parts of the United Kingdom is nearly abstracted, 


and that the —.— will be * made publie in 
columns. 


Ha xps grow under-ground in Belgiu 

We recommend the discovery to the notice of 
all the lovers of marvels; it is much more e — 
than that of a sea-serpent, é a and has 
advantage over them of tru 

There was dug up Jast —— — the Guillemins 
station 4 a aM. Ropenzours, a live object, 


having 9 e of a human HAND 
ay my four little psa a holloy palm, a 
— a wrist, and = as are 
be found in’ e gouty mart rier e possessed] A LECTURE ON THE NUTRITIVE VALUE |i d pre- 
byt this n as is shown in "the — repre- | . ENT ARTICLES OF Foop, paring it va oe table, _ Now it will a appear I 787 — 
sentation, "faithfally drawn ps the 1 original, now . is el 4 to tks ber D Da * g eke to the e late — — 
ive and in our possession, for which we are in- : to alleviate ar ha at that a 
debted to Messrs. a Maroy and Co., of Liége. mki for aa me tei ace = interesting much greater amount of 1 Tee agit 
Were the worthy Dr. Pror still here he would University . E Oa y key ce e roi a 3 by ten views wi * = freely tendered, if 
“ s certain mista — seal — ol n 
have seized upon it as an example of that “plastic known upon this RR subject, and will appear and what, with refer ce to these ‘det — is pae 10 
ee e purpose, eerie preotii impressions respecting 


” “by means of which the earth nest oe from — to week as we can find room for them 
ane In the spring of last year, whilst i od hi 

heinould. quate it.an'a:peeot of the existence of.the e pring ast year, w e nation was yet the mode in which oe — = ng —_ is sa 

Sonn ol ving hinan being o 8 5 peig from the effects of that awful calamity which, had been in |. Thus, 

by vapours and thence deposited i in fittin places,” ence, had reduced the inhabitants of the pms 3 to elli 

whee, according to its quantity and efficiency, it a state of almost entire destitution, and had a 26s. per sack, one par of persons to to vim, the 9 


E 
= 
8 
5 
in 
ae 
3 
a) 


3 
5 
© 
2 
z 
2 
HA 
8 
8 
N 


m. pro- | tl 
duced a hand instead of a man. Modern lovers of ue arti 
: : of explaining how we might apply to the greatest ad- the 75 ein thm that the scarcity which then pre- 
nev i any circumstances beyon 


tation upon it. In and speculative gentle- | ¥4™ —— 

a might, for instance, sus Tide Bal gian’s viduals, or the assistance of Government, might have h of rete e great bulk of the population, and that 
Wand tel athe feld when 3 d bia Poldi placed at our disposal. This led me to consider the | purebasing those offered for sale, they would have in fact 
aes and vegetalized by some inscrutable process Fe ride way fs A. 3 75 phn: . oo, 5 by much larger antler see yen ni iam 

alas, fo or ingenuity ! we are obliged to dispel | use which mi iat peda Beets Sian f si pra Aa eee À á re 
ight be capable of supplying, at the smallest | the Potatoes w had poate 
Pay id the an specul ations. egw "en A. ex ee che publie, + the —— X mene matter | n 8 cates his sicher 
nounce f rT | essential to the maintenance of he health and vigour ‘hus, too, we found erso 
this Belgian hand individuals. The recurrence of the same Potato blight service to th 0 e e e batte 


Potato. The thumb and fingers are five sprouts, E FAASIN MIA : : . e 
similar care in husbanding our resources, aud the animal that furnished it, pe too, in their pra 


springing from a flattened stem, which forms the |P omy 
alm akd . è . | therefore renders it important that we eo sorria worth pply food g 
er 2 naba 


pene 

when all were young, after which the whole swelled 

> A to the population at the least e Sa hich 

raher kosas fetta ; 8 sary pop pobeg an ene whie sis fa to be highly nutritious 2 — taken in con- 
og flattened body e need not in | how we can fit it for the digestive organs of man with junction w o be highly matr pporting li 

alone, and that soups in — gelatine is the main in- 


out 2 — 3 and other. substances for hum Accordingly, in prosecuting this ees. 
o contrast 


= 
žá 
W 
S 
2 2. 
2 
* 
HEE 
8 
3 
— 
~ 
n 
a5 
8 5 
mh 
4 
T 
2 
S 
z 
8 
= 
5 
ae 
= 
8 
F 
Ee 
8 F 


uman 
* See his ‘‘ Lithophy Britan : 
+ A friend suggests — the sea —— re more the commercial value of each, and secondly to consider physiology, as well as of | 7 se 
— a a, false keel, kept steady by a load of barnacles and the best method of cooking them, with the view of been of essential service, 8 the 
as much as possible all the nutriment belong- ture, in the first place, to lay before you a statement of 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONIC 


LE. 5 


1—1849.] 
hment, in order to 


A nouris 
what is kee in the way © 
an d a state of health and | 
aintain the hum y} degree 


tive abunda 
within the Air of the great mass of 


1 „ then, 4 e you, that the alte 
body appears to possess at least under ordinary circum- 
imit 0 


of which muscul ALA 
garded by Mu ier as three differ rent 
same prim i ary compound, proteine, but L 
8 79 5 08 of this "by pothetical 5e ta nd d 

to produc and phos- 
9 3 by the addition of 1 5 or both N v deln he ey 
above named a uppose ced. 


h 
e air we 9 although t the necessary 
e —the common parent of all 
animated beings, is at the same time waging a constant 
war against its own — 


mniparens eadem 


employs — its . and, s 
athe t destin of life, 


it would oa —— every a d being, if the 
latter had n all tim —— ee ri for ap- 
peasing the appetite of its ain enemy. opera- 


physically incapacitated from swallowing that w ieh i is 


set before him. At first the action of the oxygen of the air On this 
w 


muscles, but, when this is consumed, the muscles them- 
selves are attack d 
a ai 


that ac 
modifications of proteine, 
ecessary to compensate oe 

the aoe the body : namely, either a ues (obtai 
esh and blood of — als), fibrine (the prio: 
cipal — of muscular fibre), or caseine (derived 
fro milk). These, in nt case of animals that live 
-> veyed into the sys = un- 

ged, and are, in anner, transferred w 

ah Wisteves froth the dead individual the 


an us e cow that feeds 

on Clover has onl e tem a certain 

amount of ono i mil . eae goes towards the 
ts m n like 


— Pk urzel, or Turnips, 
ce called vegetable eee, in 
‘respects —— to that existing in the nimal. 
the gluten of Wheat, and of other ee 
tables, eo 


hus, whe 
vegas vegetable food, = 2 
mar — > sem unimpaired. ary fo 


ow the 
4 te subser- 


up the ues 1 climates such as 
ate who have to undergo 
3 Abbe nc are assumed be in a condition a= si 
health, no ess than 13-9 ounces of carbon a n- 


into tele sy stem, 
of e arbon. 


ie big disputes c 
defies | am 


e —— of Barley 


Pitcher P 
K are behing ta bn and 
s from 


sumed dail 


tion, may ; giv 


n these eli 


vegetab 10 eg 


de Sar “th 


* 
Ei 


Herbivo 


8 on 


onl YE 


analysis 
46 ounces of bre 
Dr. 


quantit 


food taken pe pe stich ach by himself daily was 11; 
s p e m instances | € 
uch less even than ene mploye 


d 
of vegetable and 4 of 
13 ounces ef val Ss 
and Bar 55 me 
100 parts of Oats con 


This 


s the maxi 


Pe — aps, however, the most accurate account of the 
at 1 Aieri 5. — persons in an ordinary condition of 
3 a a state of solitary e indeed, but 


in 


ing 
involving some 751 


the re 
port of the rs crear Prison, presented to the Houses the 


of Parliament in the 
the sear pope 


$e ounce of cheese 
a 


S some idea 

sary asd ae mg up t eH beat of the bed 

, | taken A 

o | upon 

8 0 Name, the 
nu an 


Sire sen 
and 28 abaia in the 1 
th 
Yr; 


fe tices of carbon for che maintenance 
in a ni vorous 


Dalton, eh ane 6 
carbon 


rg rden 

Capim food are — daily ; s the 
meal 

— into 3 and broth. — a 


e same 
may be regarded as seni equiva- 
lent, so that about 7 ounces of carbon may be 
lated as the quantity consumed in this 
he ereas and 4 from the kerit matte 


mac 
therefore may be r 
. of carbon consumed, whilst 14 ounces are set 
own mum, 


of the: he: ay of food neccs: 


This quantity mrg with 37 ounces * like Epiphytal 92858 suffer greatly ſrom stagnan 
stem m ciall 


moisture, y when the temperature is 
a fiourish in a warm, moist 
atmosphere, it it is k 
tiop, aot 2 Sate free from 
currents 

if Pitcher e Plant 
house where 
Jation Kad time vind pci is opened, they will flourish 


y, which must 
1 subsisting wholly | 
mie lar s of 
Carni 1557 that in Shay upon 
also, as well as 


100 giia 
erefore, to provide 
of — Ri im 


In order 

animal, rather more than ] 
b required, white ihe same 
supplied, Wang to the 
x i 655 es nly 


her band, ee that the 
e e solid and liquid 


that in 


any 1 


h wo us e, 


table food consisting of Oat 
ng 
ntain 50 of carbon, and t 


cu- 


regarded probably as the 


er certain trades or pe ONE 
ical exertion, is given in 


session of 1 It appears that 


at first, in aaa numbers, of about 
ke 


5 per cent. ga ained 


eee in the articles of meat, soup, a a ad 


OW Sta 
es o Aoa 


20 


t 62 per cent. of son convicts lost in 


e quati of pring then increased to | he 


f bread 


wor “ne for fhe on 


- variations, or wh 
heir 


ca 
instance, 25 na 


th uc h be tt 

É kdu; Where n air and moisture are less disturbed. 

Plicher Plants also — a good s upply of heat and mois- 

ture to their roots do not thrive under the close 
Th 


in t ots, — which cases it is absolutely requisite to 
ae 


Pitcher 


ugh — pc freed fr bin 1 — 
well drained, and the 


m 70° to 
and in an atmosphere well supplied with moisture. 
The — in which the pots are plunged should also be 
well supplied with water. 
The different species cf 3 — inereased 
ither by cuttings, layers, or seeds, 
à, the young shoot 


oss in a bottom heat of 8 
baibai Pe 
When layers = vei. — are taken off in the ordi- 
ry way, using t ind of material as for 
r | cuttings. saat — de — ode of i wearer — 
obtained should be 


dee ds sho 
agen nga be plunged i 
f 80°, and c * with a bell- cr 


a e — h to be handled, they should 
be shifted into pots singly, 5 the same kind of 
post as that ed sown ; afterw 


eep them — nd moist, wut pra 
from the effects of their ee. 
decome well ostablish hed, 

fall a ae but still w 


harre 


8 pana 
ary has 


n 43 p t lost w 


st “3 ney "tie 


8 ounces of soup 
16 ounces of gruel 


16 ounces of I Potatoes 


5 mn of cocoa 
unces of milk 


Wien this diet 58 per cent. 
er cent. remained sta 


pe 
estimate o 


u fo eep a 
la —_— ng adult in — and 1 let = enden 
ulate from it, as ne wha 


10 calc 
amo ount 


PROPER TREATMENT OF NEPENTHES. 


3 — 7 4 suitable 


ranges 


of nitrogenous a 
is required for the 3 3 3 Caa 


of the cony fon pained in 
3 


8. 
od which will 


ar] ec 
and non- nitrogenous 8 
body. 


situation for the different kinds of 
i ich air a 


where 
o 60° at night ; for Piloree Plants, 


e of an Hessian Soldier. 


Bread per day. 82 ounces. Carbon 9 ounces. 
Potatoes 18 j 
Meat (Beef and Pork) . 8. 7 
Peas, eats = 15 Px 429 „ 
Sour-krau ee e i 
A few 2 et cateras Sb ie S 

Total... Bia 0 13,9 ounces, 


British 
Dry vegetable | food 8 
Animal food, if salt. 


. yy 
Dry vegetable food ... r 
Animal 100d, if fresh. s4 m 
“32h 39 
5 erable s to the East — — 
vegetable os ik 

Abe 8 

314 


ilibank 
Food chiefly vegetable, 3 15 is reduced to 21, followed by scurvy. 
Food chiefy aii: <2 


Vegetable food . 


Edinburgh Norxhouse.— Diet for a Te — 
Vegetable food ong into ps 5 


and Barley broth 
Animal food 


... wee 


This DA sufficient. © 


. 26 ounces. 
ei TTY 


iary, Mi 
we aes - hn uge. 


Ship. 
16 ounces, 
7 zt 


Kolana 1 Convio 


233 oun 


1 ounces, 


ee 


ore eee 


only 164 


temperature | © 


d to be insufficient for f 


the 
should be ‘done, for it is more diffie alt 10 keep them in 
alth nae oe ite * . to form their woody 
stems than at any © In een zue it tbe sg 
found that ill peal —— “feom the of bot 
heat ; finally, when the young plants are evel ee 


and in good health, they should be at on sfe 
— to pots en boxes, which are sufficiently 
rae to keep them in, without the necessity of shi 


m again for some y 


to die ee va e arent cause, it is always 
desirable a young stock to replace them. 
George — 


MASTERS VERSUS GARDENERS : THE CASE. 
ONSIDERED. 

Tue transition Pave of education which is going on 

perhaps all over 

ces some evil 


ciety. They are driving out fast 
3 — gentlemen who are 
well studied in the ‘traditions and wisdom of their an- 
tors, an i 


cestors, int of perseverance and pra ice 
succeed about once in twice; but as yet one who is not 
ble of keeping a —— establishment, a 
gardener, apprentices, labourers, mowers, old wo 
and children, is rathe put to it. He has to seleet 
between one of the old school, who laughs at 
draining, puts i seeds on given days by the 
cc “ Calendar,” without reference to hange of season, 


e house 
ona r given — or wi 2 ro ans — ve — leaves them 
exposed lying on wet borders (as I lately saw — 3 own), 
and exposes them to a frost of perhaps 10 


poor sop 
a to 30°, Are border itself Pompe down — pro- 
bably cov vered by some sotto crop of Cos Lettuce, 


Giant Stocks, &c., and having been e some 10 or 

years ago, from 5 to 7 feet deep, and a perfect 

of dead horses, cats, and dogs, or a smothered sheep or 

so. Between this class and a class of very concei 

half.educated young gentlemen, with all the assumed 

ee. r. Errin ton, &e, and who will 
suggestion or bear a onstrance without a sneer; 


5 what is 53 a determination to act in u 
position to any hint, a 

latter contains erin a * 
despise yo 


ee 


. 4 


6 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [JAN. 6, 
good depends on 9 and climate; one ou see I am not blind to the faults on 1 tec 1 the 2 by the * er i yee: and 
2 never fund i — the who will 3 to | side, but yet I think a little more concession on the part we hope in an reased r If nnot 
humour the m 5 san e ere are excep- of the gardeners would have a good effect, and tend, in | “ “break ene int g 3 — spears into 
tions, but I sincerely believe they are very rare. ave | the first place, to make the master contented, to give him | pruning-hooks,” we can at least cause the operations of 
had some e in the ma ean more, having | an — st in the garde d in the ne the gar- | the one class of instrumen be a ive-as th 
been rich e mg a with one of the really well | dener himself might — something, or if he followed | of the other, and we hope to steal a march upon them, 
educated and intelligent, $ have, in the different periods | any 3 which was wrong, might in the end con- If we cannot drive discord from the world, we can 
of my n life, of all kinds of both | vince the master. 2 . in * own case, ve a gar- nevertheless transfer its energies and 1 and 
classes, and on the whole I 1 . * dogged old ae dener age ; 40 years been fond of | skill, to = Bein of spat until men e become 
thumb e knows the worst, | gardening, observed the ron et of „and marked | weary o ing, and find ready to their hands a 
and by dint of sme aag 5 3 sometimes I ate the progress of my own garden ; read all that is usually | terrestrial ir — produetions have taken root 
been able to get w I wis a ed. ith | read by t who take an interest in such matters ; but ourished, in popo ion as their wey pro- 
the half-educated gentleman Ihave been less successful. I find it utterly impossible to him beli ve | pensities irei grow and decayed. May 1849 take 
With the ill-te e I have that I could make a suggestion or give a direction that | rapid strides in this 1 ma 27 a rie enerated world. 
parted ; with the civil and conceited I have gone | was n t founded in ignorance, and the result is that : ut how many ho aon ore happy, and 
on ior a . * ing tha should be able to | cannot get an e tried or a particular course how many individual min debo ieved dof some of their 
vin but end I have found the one |pursued with any hopes of 13 yiii — perae by the horticultural ioh of 1849 ! Th 
bad 1 believe the best — — those fairly and honestly carried out, and 1 on the be speculation in va views 8 in the pre- 
who cannot have some eve of giving up all real 8 in my — „ and ceding paragraph, but none i 


as 
ing superior, those 
who do as the late Mr. 3 Knight did, . — ha ve 


common workmen who did what he directed ; but then with the usual routine of a iddling garden 
he had hi great 38 knowledge, and was | produce, be it o vegetables, fruit, « or flowers, aud thus 
ys on the spo what he was executed, | lose a delightful — and amusement. 

but by all accounts he was not in| Ihave, however, omitted to one other great 
plishing at least the only time I saw him | failing of your “ middling, conceited, half educated gar- 

(years ago at Ludlow) I recollect his ining to me. dener, viz ays findin f. lt y 417 1 = 1 7 

have tried the experiment of dividing the responsi- appliances at bis . this 
=r by compromising matters, root- i e of }of all bad artis You Brrr di wüde is 


a more 


despair. 
think you may be — 5 according to your lights and 
experiences, * give some good eners in 
next generation will produce ae 
coupled with ¢ experience, aud we common people wi 
able * have good gardeners, 


se — versus servant 


serv: 
which would teach he could not 
success; who would make allowances for failures — 5 
accidents, seasons into consi 


5 left his place 

and all 3 Melee and sa — had been 
d spider, at least 

88 


ournals, and takes up 
do have them all put i 
a su 


know why I write all "this but 1 
0 


be | body can dress a iad, dinner with plenty o 


— e is not poet enough 


is 

nd | sugges of 

„sent to . It is a happy art — —.— the iak 
cloud 

t 


and we wish all 
lon | The — of discontent 
Reg se 


8 end in Pane content to a 5 bars a, and put 


always very nice and dainty about his cue, na 
the very chalk he uses. Messrs, Windsor an 
ton would iot sell such a stock of paints and 8 if 


No 
by such small m 


the skill of the cook i is 8 sh 


e Lord So- 
or this, nor hands sare 
wa that. range of some 60 or 80 feet of cold 


ba Naw. | to be 


anton | the 


ther in 

rom the outs tretched hand of the little one 

seeking to pluck 
pil who goes ou 


ctive 
to p un nlistenéd to. 
by 


child erry i equally often a lessons of wisdom tau 
uty of trees and flow here is yet 
4 for the 1 while nat purs ring men in 


contact with these ameliorating influences are becoming 


increasingly popular. H. B 
r 


Home n 
Culture Lœlias.— In the following statem nt I 
end Sarai to give the best metho doi . eee eee 
— ant which no Orchid house should be wi ithout, 


rames, I have soen my my stock drawn up through 
— winter because e of the pits were too deep, as 
if half a dozen N a d down, and a few hiaan, 
would not in half a da 
and bro m, accord within | 


iing to r stature, w 


inches or a foot of the light, instead of lingering out — the rema 


the winter in a well. Do what you can for us masters. 
Dodman. 
PRACTICAL HINTS FOR AMATEURS 
MALL GARDENS 
Wuar mai — TICULTURE DO 
te 


earnestly forward to thei 
coming events of the fu tu ure The pressure of ci circu 
he in 


have saved my etiolated plants, | | 
their 


ence, 


— hadi in flower for two months at this dull season of 
= — 


in in perfection 
It dislikes a close a 
ient fi 


aily; during re 
d should receive but little water; the tem- 


ispense wi th 
rature should then — from 60° — 70. 
expose it to much t any 8 


e its exis 
or it will at once arad pana of outfening. It ap- 
best in 


t 

and the 3 stmto o of affairs — are 
all men anxiety of spirit t aud a 

A A wise man will seek to 


hope’ together whic hp will ¢ 


ny ain forth its silver lining on the night,” 
our readers to become skilled in it. 
and sorrow may be found 


of evil, = = — all e i 
n- | of 


t now locks — its iron em The 
lingering flowers of autumn, indulged with a i pestonged 
existence, are dead. 


Pe 
2 


of cold 3 to be, 
same time Hh: eficial ! Ev man who 
loves en will hail vesh rule 5 the — King 


| Leelia euperbiens, a a no 


lHo 
- | over which I 8 an inch of s 


an open, rough, wooden basket, 
filled with sphagnum and potsherds ; it also 2 — 
a block with a little sphagnum on i lia 

ossom fo — 
. have a plant wn — m spikes 
block 
with sphagnum, e peara 
Lhave Leelia —— . —_ spikes of beautiful 

owers open o pre gro — on a 
rough — wee, filed with — and 
rds. -I round a po x ro 

It also — on a ble Le 

— albida, likewise, do well on blocks, 3 singe 5 ; 


pereg e 
g tim . flav a 
se in — half filled ‘with potsherds, 
spha 2 moss; I then 
big as a hen’s egg, 
less water given 
Ul be the growth 


ö 


fill the pot with peat in pieces as 
mixing them with potsherds, The 


by mich the soil i + to becom rised and mellowed, 
na for futu s poe ions. While this 
is being so sirel, though silently performed, let 


i 3 
and the sow freely: the plants will flower, a the 
roots are kept fresh and alive. Plants 
— those oe moes, require, as ev pè — 
ts 0 


party. 


recollect man 
ago being for a short time at Holkbam, — 


8 Ppt the i a 
uting cause to norance or 8 
nach of their bailiffs or tenants,” | * ue 


tastes of society, of one thing we are — that the earth 
and that we = always be more | [+t —— 


N 


arden ee his 
bg secret of. national wealth an 


ascertain what Horticulture may do for 1849 ; A yea, 
— it will be mom to accomplish. 
G 


e dull care away, 
ing can more N do s, — a semi-corporeal 
— than gardenin 

Whatever changes may take agait in the me of 
governing the world, in fashions the artificial 


must be cultivate 
r | dependent on that art than on any a 
increased and ine — population will render > 
annually more necessary to take advantage of huma 
ingenuity and skill to get from the earth the rer. 
uce of the in —— for the smallest 
utlay of money and labour. n helping to soi 
this erent we have often affirmed that the garden 
5 mueh to 


n his neighbours, 


ho 
ear 1849, 


f eer as maj 


ore water r baskets. 1 water 
when growing — i 


-W 

bsolute ely necessary that as warm 

a the air of the none in which the plants are kept. I 

these latter-na species in the same tempera- 

1 find them to do best in a cool house. 

— B. S. — gr. to C. B. Warner, Esg., Hoddesdon, 
erts 


m to be considered Briti 
the other, John ami Chislehurst Kent, J 
Boiled Salads,—1 think you have not followed up 
r | your plan of giving sone for different 8 £0 
much as you cught a bave done. Now I fin t of 


wil 
ests eat salads, whilst there — pom 


like its predecessors, will bear its 


good d. 
is part in eliciting the Í 


— 


j—1849. | THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


7 


aalad. The best materials are boiled Celery, Cardoons, 
salem Artichokes, ttom 
kale, r 


to. bear ose 0 D 
table-spoonful of claret, or light 
i improvement; es 
detestable e e called distilled 
grind their 
but merely bruise it; = this gives a better 
e it iss — —— me of the oil shops, 
name of 1 45 è 
12 W strictly to the 
nd pr rovide 9 — 


yo 

rosin and s 

betty ios Gite that vessel at the end of 
a feelin, 


that 
the voyage, w in to that of leaving a 


— — g h 
home. „All the erowding and smallness of space allotted 


n - 

berless — contrivances for convenience s aud comfor 
fal in pene colonial te and ‘the incon- 
veniences canes dan voyage 3 ad een 
t of nag them — 45 ote 


upon on — 
fasten ev ayia tightly . jet 2 be 
ide abort time all will be — pa Tal valli g. 
n one side then on another, so that if things 
are not secured whilst the vessel is in 


“we 


thon — ick, and t 

could have induced you to — the — e, and all i 
comforts: You will in that moment 5 orget all . 
I’ll give you a 
8 Pen = ape: eiteummtances 


You may 


irelud 
9 Eyi 


— ess will n But here’s — 
— 
ee offers 


eee on 5 8 me you — our 

Na shone, you will find the ship getting into oe 

Ww order o ip is-indispensable, and m e 
mbe 


imod at an cost, nd 
as much de at any — mee r your sie is 


s anyone's. Therefore obey 
= instrtetions, not only . — but = alacrity. 
the first to get yo ur beddin ng 


erations, in which you will have to won 
a part, Let the officers of me . have your zealou 

in is service 
t Jack 


— 


18 much 
— up at ces. I — 
— Jon —.— it ik it is e sought for't in the daily cecu- 
— ae I desire most earnestly to im- 
— — — that there is nothing more necessary on 
ta make a stock of good humour, and a determi- 
e light of every little difficulty ; termi, | 
The Weather R 
Nain — Mr. Boot’s account of the 
a Ma in Cornwall 1 for: 1848, I am 5 8 bat 
— — oe counties in 


i, | bee 


o | pla 


m 
TA: Da no near Ar 


o enter | a sunn 


Sussex the depth of rain over that of former years has 
n considerable, and the great absence of sunshine, 
ing, summer, and autumn, 


S 
— 
* 


es, 3 
3 winter follows 
ould do well to — to Pravas haf — ardy and s 
ants as — y resist ordinary winters utot: 
doors with = protection ot re ng 


8 


m the unripe state 


add below the depth has 
place during each month of these last three years 


1846, 


1847. 1848. 


8, Inches. 
2.37 


—— yy) bh, ¢ Qe t he 2 Pr 
SSS i" 9 
2 


ardoons.— About the Zach or May form a trench, 
as for Ce ay, Sow in the bet — transplant), 
when up, thin to 18 inches apar arth up as 
This plan has never failed 10 — me a good 
crop; A Devonian, Torquay 
Low Night Temperature. The following statement 
may appear somewhat inere oe incl 5 * ne er less 
true. About four years ago th neigh- 
pease | eee (of the Seal ‘eet ale a 
o me one morning to know 
aa house, —— A "abide 
, the latter meee at flow 


t bogin — and to g 


] n 
[Excellent advice els.. 
d 


> 
Ru 
< 


; no injury was done 
swelled off a nice crop of 8 This is, however 
extreme case. J. ‘Marshall, Shelton. 


> ty o 
sound Potatoes 
N. 


nd i 
-8, gardeners an 


condition less able to bear a sharp frost | 


oO 
“<> 
oe 


é his fam y 
ginality in ray bem Se is is litte 7 


e but 2 75 is not the place for pent criticis 
lete the 


— 

tatoes grown in pen and also in the JPA sand (en 

blowing sand, hav wind Front 
e. In 


er beer, the e Mountains, 
e grown e peat where it was 
I believe all were en wha or at least the 
e of them. These are facts carefully ascertained 
be relied on. Cavanensis. [The 
— l with other instances, of Which we 
shall soon have to render an account.] 


Bebiews. 
he Genera of 28 Plants of the United ioe — 


ray. 230. es. Wiley: 
roi the ee, of botany this will be one of the 
eleome books that has lately issued 3 
Each genus of plants forms ‘the entire 


ases 9 em mas 
ees $ soso rege position of organs, are given in 
The whole is fler fr scientific 
pretora ani systematical criticism by Dr. Asa 
Gr T the first of the American as ae botanists. 
h are drawn 


cases to the ag agy 0 e 
been overlooked Hyperie 
+ oh Dr. Gr se À te: y led in e remarks upon 
Parn Mb, ther phere la sas will be 
found to a require modi digen 
As alr 2235 — Sir gp ew is fur- 
| tea 571 Dr. nf ee ra oubt that it 
i to 


— 


serven, 


nd 
oweve e and there mrep of critic 2 de- 
serve attention, although we are far fro eeing 
with the learned author in all his systematieal view? 
d to 2 ete ork in on “ollie: 
it Sapte in a systematical 
point of vi n hard ly rhe overrated. In the mean- 
while no e botanist can dispense with it. 


The author of Glenng's Garden Almanack would 


Fuchsia ia.—I enclose a flower of F. serra- 


ur lot at — for {lo 


tifolia, whieh t 925 n planted out here in a border 
aving a western ine since 

protection except a ree 

which is 10 feet high. 


W Geranium out of doors in b 
Mezereum, Violets. 


many perri ha 05 flowers. S. Topping, Darimouth, 
Dee 


Pact 75 5 15 


fo 
, 
that probably 1 — best Potatoes in the field 
and 


articulars, |. 


not one rotten. This year they did 

similar result, as kinds they 2 vere Toby’ s 

Cups and Lumper end the seed w 

A man alle Sheridan, in the — neigh 
bog in his 


April. 
farm, i. e., be 


surfaco, — a otatoes 

a bad Potato. The 8 
oie 
mie his si to show me 
st a : ie centre of the field arose a knoll; 
red with eath, the soil peaty. Lobser ved 
grew there, 
He seemed surprised, and said I was right, that the 
Potatoes e. were all opie and that he was keeping 

Ir. J. 


van, bad two acres of 


325 mixed with the ieee ‘the. pea was defective. 


2295 moor) vi 


—— 
se a in the early part ef pba 


% road from 


the ds dn the old Cap e aaa: and Cork 
Sligo to there: were 


a Pear tre 
„Primroses, orrik erer with 


i eee of their profession as the 


put in 3 culated to 
bour 


on pean 


because in reality his little book is this vie a good one. 
It was much i improve ed last Lear; and 2 rience has 
ena able d him to render * viceable. 


Calendar of — 
For ihe oe sre 
r a new year, 


seine for th 
all gardeners are not 


3 
He pen — —— belle, “whose ——- 22 


shall nevertheless try to furn 
e of service at Toast! to the tyro and the 
mateur. 
NERAL REMAR 
t this season “of the year, one of — t important 
points which will need anag s in — every de- 
ment is protection — frost. Any tender shrubs» 
or vegetables shou! rote by mule iag half 
decayed leaves or old ta wer weli for thi ; 
neater in — —— ance. aaa litter, 3 
things cannot be 


im 
* = shut 
at all convenient; 
— in throwing off t 
li ie close to the g naples is occupied by a 
tum of — er — as well as the wood, 
a non-eonductor of heat ; they are more — p 
as 


off — on, and prevent in a grea’ ure 

f glass, wh andling frozen 3 c 
ngers is almos woidable, and althoug 
pensive ia a rst — the. advantag 


Cork Red. 9 It is, however, a clumsy 


arg It is frequently 
a layer of straw or hay betw 


e, Win mats 


8 s THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


[JAN. 6, 


3 t that they should be perfectly dry, and to this 

end, when not in use, they 8 be spread out in the 
or hung up in a warm s 

see SOP PLANT DE PAR 


bee d 
have 1 all animal life, 


good stock of Orchid baskets should now be made. Of | th 


very grower will own fancy, but no 

233 gives us more general satisfaction than t 
mispherical wire basket. These may be made of all 
sizes, and should be painted at once, that they may be 
for use whenever they are re Watering | 
equires ca a on, and should be 
applied with a nicest — $ — being taken 
to avoid two very co which is 


of 
ring before a plant 7 requires it ; and the 
other is giving water in too small a tity when it is 


really needed. ge n it has beeu reful certain 
that a plant is in a fit state to receive water, enough 
To moisten every pa f the so 


for the reception of Pears and other e d ~ x 

the soil be deep and retentive, a stratum of as 

substance should be laid within 9 7 — es 
a ne 


e, forms the best soil for the healthy and fruitful 
development of ‘the Pear tree. Apricots, if not already 
rotected, should be covered immediately ; nothing is 
ranches for 4 ose, 


if — were 


earlier than many s gi be to 
hem old damp situa’ 


ee tt Bis the. eee in 


ey would be found to repay phe little additional 
trouble artis Sp upon t them 
TCHEN GA 


AA + 


415 taken of the frosty moning to 

3 manure on to the groun nd, t 

All the r m t 

hedge clippings, &c., if charred according to the direc- 
iven i — 5 keeras should now be applie ed 


N — if £ 
— localities, they will be quite as early. In 
eg 


50°; Geraniums and soft wooded greenhouse plante, | sowing vegetable seeds, which are liable to be attacked 
38° to 43°; New Holland hous me; Heath by the mice, it will be found useful to sow choppe 
„ 32° to 389. The day temperature shoul rze or malt screenings in Ils. Root. house 
from 5° t 40 higher. This is to be regulated entirely — Take advantage of wet weather to examine and re- 
by the amount of light. The practised eye will detect | m ayed or decaying roots. Adopt efficient 
pr 5 litle alteration which may be made, such as re- measures for keeping the frost out. Make up a bed of 
to the plants | Oak -lea ficient to produce a gentle 


FLOWER GARD it AND, SHR UBBER 

Half hardy plants in pits frames should have all 

the air which the weather vill allow. In sever 

it is often necessary * kee 

even weeks; when this occurs take advanta 
first openi g in 


t great at myst and the ‘benefits of the 


e 

d or decaying leaves ind 

plants, lest ther = Doe oar er their neighbours 
DEPA 


r of soil b 


the of ee a crop of 


Som 
year, with regard to all o 
e 


t 
. The Potatoes se 
eaf-mould, and pie anted as soon 
i ong ; by takin bg 
this precaution, all gaps are f they should be 
planted 45 —.— apart and 6 inches deep, w 
. the bed of lea B 
plan | 3 this depth at once, ia trouble of € carting 
up is avoided ; and an excellent oy gee is affor 
adishes, w will be 3 70 
* Sta in the ver of the Potatoes 
ISTS’ FLOWERS. 

uch depend on the 5 at this season of — 
t-· door 


with tt inches 


draw be 


Dee. 31— 


—Foggy: hazy; sligbt rain in the e 
Jan, 


5 hazy; overcast ; Foeltr. 
2—Clear, with harp * — — right sun ; clear and frosty. 
— * —5 re ; frosty, 
— 4— j and uniformly 3 $ ie. 
Mean temperature of the week 5 deg. below the average. 


State ofthe Weather at Chiswick during the Jast 23 years, for the 
ensuing week, ending Jan. 13, 1849. 


— SR 
a 1 Prevailiug W; 

ee r e | Grenen ee 

Jan Ss £28 | SS | which it uantity er S E 

of y EE 

Ze | ZSS | me | Rained. * cages 

Sunday 7| 40.6 | 20.3 | 26.4 6 21 in. 1 

on. 8| 380 | 80.4 | 342 4 1.26 2.27 2 71 1 

Tues 9 38.9 | 31.4 | 85.2 6 20 1| 4| 4| 3| 3| 4 3| 1 

ed, 40.3 | 29.4 | 32.9 8 40 i| 5| 3| 4| a} a} 2| 2 

Thu 403 | 20.8 | 355 12 1.88 3| 4] 3.— el 5 317 

Friday $ 41.0 29.7 | 35.3 10 76 214 5 2| 5 5 2 1 

420 | 326 | 37.3 13 29 4! 2! 3| 21 5| 3! 3| 1 

he ab on the 7th, 1845 

Beg oy te and „ 1841—therm, 6 hog 2 


Moxrn — — age in inches and hundred parts of an 
i t Chiswick in the years 1841, 1842, 1843, 


— whi ch fi 
1844, 1845, 1610 11847 and 1848. 


1841. 1842. 1843. 1844. 1845. 1846. 1847. 1848. 
In. In. In. In. In. In. In. In. 
Jan. . 2.60 | 1.06 1.33 2.25 | 2.97 | 2.85 | 1.81 | 1.16 
Feb. ..| 0.76 | 1.32 2.35 | 2.27 | 0.93 | 1.47 | 0.94 3.12 
March | 1,32 | 1.81 | 0.47 | 2.44 | 1.25 | 1.09 | 0.41 | 3.05 
April 1.58 | 0.15 | 1.62 | 0.33 | 0.95 | 3.93 | 0.92 | 3.06 
May .. 2.16 | 1.73 | 5.26 | 0.25 | 2.89 1.35 1.59 | 0,98 
June 2.45 | 1.58 | 1.62 | 0.97 | 1.36 | 0.80 | 1.31 | 3,20 
uly 3.56 1.52 | 1.67 | 2.10 | 2.81 | 1.78 | 0.79 2.21 
August 2.69 | 2.81 3.28 | 1.84 | 2.79 | 4.50 | 1.50 4.70 
Sept. ...| 3.71 | 3.39 | 0.98 1.31 | 1.77 | 1.76 | 1.66 | 2.90 
Oct. ...| 4.61 | 1.71 | 4.19 | 4.13 1.39 5.54 1.75 2.93 
Nov. . 3.41 | 4.47 2.13 | 3.06 | 2.11 | 1.43 | 226 | 0.90 
Dec. . . 2.12 | 0.76 | 0.58 | 0.89 | 2.61 | 1.21 | 1.81 2.03 
— al 
mount 30.97 22.31 25.48 21.34 23.33 27.71 Hi 25 28.84 


food (compost), and there is 
present for preparing mixing, a At rning 
soils. We have been in ihe hab 


N ing a fresh surface to the action of the w eather ; ; by 
J this simple precaution many insects, their eggs and 
75 35° b ing pits 95 59 to 60° b yn ight, se wo larve are dest —_ tav ving the a mateur much afte 
800 (or 7 riam ) during the a : Bottom- re uble. The great secret in the successful cultivation 
ec wt i vey kv, The 98 * — the of flori „ is re and minute attention ; 
if A s i 
moisture, should be regulated by the clearness of the bet sila pota d Geath ensue, Tt the Aie ii 
Do putea 3 sage the salve to pine ch Nite eath a broken or ed pane, drip 
y mp ags 2 eai an eng to the health. of the plant, ard 
the plants. Successions need not be kept quite so high, crea estroys i = * a . —— be — in 
23 8 5 
hough a mee : = ES po rin erial whether ik — ie — plants them with the claws 
he shea: no k a 8 „upward or nt , they w t ma ar- 


appearan vin n 
more 1 revents corrosion 
border is 3 secured, this sh 

e 


before e Yi ines are 
tend into the N n the ho 


y as the plants advancein growth. Sy- 
bc a gaa fine weather. Peac h-house.— Outside roots 


to be a successful cultiva 
m — 


| 2 
replan 


the wet off into the drain in front of the border. If the 


buds are just 1 maintain a temperature of about | i 


50 by night, and sprinkle the trees 
in 


2 — that it is in 
state, they should be to i 
well rotted du 


me approved early 


ce; > 
enumerate must be dee to, if che amateur means 


eo 8 of h 


conclude the spot they bave been upon is ex- 
hausted ; ; it will be beter ry therefore, to to “pa Age 
By di 


another s si sere vid ing your 
me tim 


r some pretty or 
Sow a few 


ss importance than eee the risk of 
having an entire “lure 3 from che seed being 


bad or untrue to n 


Melons.— 
kind should now be 175 — a bed prepar 
HARDY FRUIT GARDEN 
of choice fruit trees, should be 
secured and laid in under a north wall. 15 of 
fruit trees should be proceeded with, especially of the 
rae i fruits, as their buds will soon be gu l It 


The average annual amount for the above eight years er — 
inches, 53 hundredths. 1847 was drier than any year in 
present century. 


Notices to Corresponden 
ALMANACKS: A Constant Reader must excuse our — — ing in 
any examination of astronomical mistakes. It is not 5 — 
ae The instance to which he refers is probably a 
misprint. 
panes eleien JF. We have received the eee and will 


9 MBERS: J BH. These may be 
tion, as detailed in the sa Kanin Nese? PO Hes, for’ the 


growth of Melons ; that is, wholly modern pra bark, You 
h as 


may, however, rest assured the ern practice is far 
8 s I + 21 A A 41 
virs: H. The small early G Pe y U y 
Black beget il 

3 3 E — seem in —— — pit are 


— — s of Julus, which will =e 


— ei —— in your Mushroom bed are the 
larvæ or grubs of a fungivorous gnat, which would probably 
be dislodged — 2 dest troyed by a solution of tobac o an 


quassia. Wil so good t 
grubs with some got — plants, sothat we may see their mode 
of injuring the 8 


our Lelia — els — ring from cold and 
—— combined. When these plants are growing fast, they 


will not bear a temperature of 45° with damp. 
Lawns: W. Cannot you feed your lawn with ? Li 
will be a useful dressing if the drains draw well: but in th 


Stover and black Medick k Medicago lupalina), rolling them in. 
ARKET GARDENS: ar you os to 
cultivate 1 = an very poor 
garden, which requires so be extremely fg 
you 7 55 — attempt something more feas 
lant P no manu 
this will, en you a small crop, but it wiil increase their 
chance of escaping disease, Since you ask us for advice, w 
say to Le you have any capital, employ it in a more ae 
If you have no capital except your labour, 
may try the experiment. At all events mind 
hat your soil is dug deep and well drained, not by paltry 
ine gutte nin but with good ground drains. 
NAMES oF PLAN SW. Ne eph rolepis ee S.—P B. 1, 
Pilumna ak. 2 Angrecum virens; 3, Lelia 
2 Lelia 5 5, 1 3 a great gi 


and for a market 
If not too 17 
ible. If 


28 not sea 8 heh is figured in our 


—— for 1848 It is a of P. amabili 

Poin Simplex, Preserve it — day i — nee paper. cases 
in ein place, and moisten it whe 2 to examine it. 
ae you can keep the paper cases 3 bor so much the 


Po 8 S S. It is difficult to . poultry out of a garden 
once 3 e oe a way in what can be done by 
mea netting karesi at p. 871 of our last 


7 


sa 
Roses 17 ez oses like a rich soil, sens —— 
be made lig . cher —.— rooting varietie 
8 fe the robust hardy kinds. M 
y 


mere t 


year, h — a Kg bees ey —— 
nd . 


three m 


——— 
State of the Weather near London, for the week ending Jau. 4, 18 
as observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiewiek. a 
Dee. | BAROMETRA, |! THERMOMETER. | 
and Jan, | Moon's eee | wina.| Rain. 
Max. | Min. max. Min. ; Mean | 
— | — || | 1 
Friday. 2° 20,18 44 0 | 37.0 N. £0 
— 4 — 17 80.171 20.084 40 4] he N.E, -00 
unday » 31 9 20.126 30.110 40 0 35.0 N. E. a 
Monday” J 10 80.179 | 30.144 33 9 26.0 E. 
2 11 20.124 2 0 21.5 E. 10 
Wed. „ 29.744 | 29.696 || 32 3 27.5 E. 00 
Thurs.... 13 784 29.704 | 35 2 | 335 || E. 14 
—— 20.041 gs 32.1 2.1 41 0.15 
— Te Ss 


— 30—Fogay; fine; nine sie 


Mise: WH 0. r of Juniperus 8 will vegetate the 


first 568 of Fane tJ nat. be Ano md da are 

attack “the spot,” which is caus eea damp. 

he a on the C Camellia — somo is oth y 
consequence, 


is of 
by drip. t 


3 


* 


` asin, 
mended to to 27255 only to Dealers of established 


THE AGRICULTURAL: GAZETTE. 


= 1—1849. | é 9 

— IR. RYAN’S CHEMICAL Ee so pee fo Sp tion of the most tangled maze that thread whose | acti o an extent during the last month un- 

Manufactured e oon F colon hi recognise as exclusively our own. recedented at the close of the year, with an i 
* RA Cavendish-square, London. t us ask them what has been iko st Agri- | proved foreign dema Pals 


into an arrangem 
red i + 1 — Roys 3 aden n, Lo e 
prenec to superintend the manu 
entirel 3 and “scientific 


ene rists, Messrs. pei 1 wanee, and 
3 e ost confidence state, that their Manures 


measu protected. E° karte uelet, are particularly recom- 
ar „Pr. Ryan’s Garden Manures” for 3 pur- 
poses. Sent, carriage tree, to any part of the kingdom, a 

3 dressings - £510 0 per ton. 

heat, Barley, Oats, Hops, or any 
* n or seed A ia 4 ma 

Dr goeds s genuine Supe rphos hate of Lim 

Nitrate of Soda, Gypsum, Rough Bones, Sera Acid, ‘ke. * 
emist at lowest vont pi 
ngli 


d by their Ch 
n English and Foreign 


EAT SOWING. 
HE LONDON MAN —.— COMPANY beg to 
offer as un 
ae MANURE COMPANY'S CORN AAN 


ME. C 
eee pein’ 


Peruvian Guano, direct from Santee 3 ee 
Agricultural Sa n for Clover Soda Ash 5 front ~ 
wireworm, and every other Artificial Manure. 

The 1 Manure Geb pany would call particular atten- 
be to — orn Manure and Urate, the former ee ves 

of Ammonia, Phosphates „ and Silicates, all so 
— fo fore — crops, while the Urate i 57 Moner in Phosphates 
and other mineral substances required fo 

Full particulars and prices forwarded 25 eo ee 

oe ARD Purser, Sec., 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars. 


preeyias AND BOLIVIAN anor ON SALE, 


EO — 
ANTONX 
WX. JOSEPH erie oi Co. "LIVERPOOL: 
eir Agen 
GIBBS, BRIGHT, XRD G TLVEREOOL —5 e e 
COTESWORTH, PO WELL, AND PRYO ONDON, 
= o protect themselves an ainst the niin eg tein we of 
inferio ious Guano, . peo recom- 
r, or to 
named importers, who will supply the arene in any 
a at their fixed prices, delivering it from the Import 


The Agricultural Gazette. 


SATURDAY, JANUARY 6, 1849. 


r and spur: 


0 F. eee 
cultural Soc iety of En 


Tuursr Erieu 
fane eek Sin: 82 Ef ven Yoxfor 


Q: 
Market.—Jan. 10: Harleston .—Jan. 12: Wadebri lage. 8 ber, 25 


Tua. all men, in all ages, have shewn the same 
pennen to exaggerate the importance of their own 
„is a rema h 


cu 

ti 

Year after year the journalist, on a smailer scal 
5 e, is 
similarly illuded, and easily —— dragging — Meader 
him, into the sincere persuasion. The 
and oe” pr eee of 
y ge in the 

P 


» Which defi 
any oth mparison or contrast with 
hum an eee of equal length in the history of the 


Ie oA 5 Bsa — this course 
°c ended. To his comprehensive 


and as in social life each u 


k to 
Soe i ractice 


ect that t 
: „When 8 — oe that 
wer may trace through all the i invata- 


k a 2 mitting Dr. Rya atest an 


Aue during the past year—what are its prospects 
for fe e she Prine one 

1 has the question been asked, when 

a fall 8 0 fai 

ct, was 


rst sight, we look 
ob ee and latt tterly of low, | s 
t field 


* 
e e and 
more forward soils, been in 2 en è augh 
y drenching and continued rains at Barrett: and 
with the exception of a fine fortnight in November, 
the seed-time indefinitely postponed . constant 
lea tae the latter part of the year. Add 

ormous influx of foreign corn, fee 
15 pola et i to a degree of y ich we have 
not yet s 


r market, without even the 
mild tribute of a revenue duty. 
these elements of complaint together, and vei 2 5 
at once 75 5 view— the north side aspect 
—of the subject; ew which, it must be owned, 
some ate do Ash delight to take: an 
i o any imparti 
is evident that 27 re ya of Truth and Fairness is 
e ed not s ch by the impartiality or liberal 


Tet us then at least hold the balance fairly, which 


rchy xpo 
: the y aen er in a state of ante threatening ruin, 


more a 


a 
be laid i’ the e 
e 


all | consumed a lar 


entiments of every “class of thinkers, as throug the 
dow 


The mene, of 2 is ready, and loud. „Foreign 
supplies!“ says one: Free Im ortation in Febru 


shouts an 
8 


nch, —the aa 8 h 
i Fe 


shade o Perce come xe sae "ill it “never 


th?” For tw 4525 months endi 


perate alarmist, y ith t- pric unex- 
ampled steadiness throughout; but no sooner does the 
dreaded ‘1st of February 1849“ come looming withina 
three months’ view 


wn go the prices ac- 

needy seller . to the fall, spa 

n they then go lower still; as t 
duty goes up, the Importer wi 


8 only be done by a — nd equal statement of | grumbles into bond, looking 

e Bikes side of the que This task is the m no one can se 4 2 . Wer is on sale, for no 
dificult | in the latter eae: beans in the former one | one will buy— ary ; even the most expe- 
we have had to deal e Past, which can be | rienced irde aleatin tel, 5 nst every assur- 
looked upon at one view, without any effort, with | ance of reason, every evidence of past fac ts, wayers, 
pr 8 aea and opaa w a are open and at | loses nll Polish, Aeee way at last, to the 
hand to every observer: while in this we have to | pressure of numbers not ar , and 5 stpones 


we 

— with the Pater, thick is 5 with indica- 

— which st careless or interested objector 

an challenge without — fficulty, and with arguments 
ich li under-current lie beneath that super- 

ears along with it all hasty and 

dgments which can be 


aval eren W hich 

gr egarious views and all ju 

formed witho 

reflection. 

To shorten 

upon the weather and the se 

we are by very trade and 3 perns tite 

is no class of men who, in reality, have a deeper 

more experienced a e 0 

perfect Wispom which “ giveth rain upon 

and sendeth waters,“ than those vara ay it is 

be upon the elements in aan a act of their 

d to be “i ag 


m 
even the w 
ate goned sa ut, of all mankind, the farmer has 
had too sure experience of the order, and resulting 
good, which pervades the most inexplicable extremes 
of atmospheric phenomena, to hazard the insane folly 
of one serious complaint o — ich he knows to 
changeable, and peel to change 


be at once un 
for * etter. 
ut not so with pune legislation. Here we have 
a sort of handywork to with, of hes > Time, the 
sure and faithful nic, í is Hot always t pprover 


And never perhaps di e bun 
human laws, and the defect of legislative foresight, 


exhibit themselves in a more disastrous shape than 
the two ths we now look back upon, and in 
the prospect of the two to We are far from 
= i 


told that many other 

5115 See e the profit — an article, besides 
the price it fetches in the ma ut when through 
sheer want of 


fire steer 


Daring i the past Autumn, down to the end of Oc- 
raen when er was at its ere 2% point of 3 
, with abroa 


2 
aT 


n of amillion of quarte rs of 


and under the importation 
as fast as it 
not 


foreign grain, taken into consumption 


arrive ved, the Corn market alone, thou; high, 
was ively h t ails it 
now? With Trade in every branch revived a1 


ut the cost of labour, or the pause of q 


our task, we 7 — Bok waste much ane 2 
Grumblers as 


ton 
e earth, 
to pri 


e very stones to this count 
we fiiy ere something yet ö 


sati 


a it what we could in the matter. 
| 


sa — and a groan 

Far amers” Prospects 15 end ing one soli- 

tary epistle, from a Corn-de aler’ i in the Mar 
Express wate against his ow at t, and 
eserves a statue of brass and letter 
s 1 make 
n stale loaves—till February. 

with strong indications of gels 
oundin ng us at home, and impen 


about 


m 1 at the Jast 
and Medit 


u 
entering upon a sort of metallic rev olution, which— 
whatever — a exchange may be in—bids fair to 
close at any rate the account of Corn for Gold with 
England ; all 1 with the before mene causes 
of p t an nd = ture deficiency at home present to 
our —— 
sion ata — — of legislative foresight would 
m to have been requisite, as the time of the reim- 
— of the present scale uty in March last, 
to prevent the purely batte state of things above 


escribed, and which w. ure to have happered, 
as it is sure that the arent of a market flutters 
and sinks more under an apprehension than it ever 


0 
does under a present fact of twice the magnitude. 
He must have studied its phenomena to little pur- 


experie € 
vainly taught—in the matter of Corn—to a nation 
hich in every other article of produce or manufac- 


Our readers will find in another page that we 
have 5 mplified our report of the Coax 
Man We 


must confess the inability of a 
nd most 


Saturday s pogan io give e rapes an 


will, ai eik, be sekans — . — 


N i 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


[ JAN..6 


> 
10 n 
M he must take to the old member of the institute, 2 pene active we as a 
— sin the country: : and in . to mark the pe r e e —_ em ::.. e ae caaca 
— F prices, we hav int ge emis bl histatins f to the manner in | the subject, a copy of w e pr ve to me, and to 
cy ot pric de This state of things is often owing to ö Fe eee 
— each on two e. e ays. hich — 0 are treated by tl mployers, and awa 1 = in ebte te : nfo met ow forward 
tly objects 7 sympathy rather you, As lop 
regret ovr inability—owing — e is eee io 3 at a that a iemet emple s | Monceau, in his“ —— oe Agrieu 2 — 
— th rer dt i i i ially in winter, employment of arsenic by the farmers o for 
publieation of thehe reper as little labour as possible, more iw ah y 3 i * 
to romurk u t roceedings ENGL! an idea that the 7s. or 8s. per we k he pays a pels agra of t, 3 speaking of — 
AGRICULTURAL CHEMISTRY ASSOCIATION” in = er is so much money out of his pocket, and when | arising frou Sate emp i 2 pass 2 
detail e is — e. This we must postpone + | employed it is always considered as a charity to give a | pressly poin gers arising P 
hat unt defer appealing — this pitta v six days’ labour in | ridges, pigeons, &c., eating the poisuned seeds, and thus 
rer ie odes ort wit h s0o v mable a Societ, or | pao jin the . usually will pay grudgingly 3s. or endangering the lives of those wh them fer food, 
— or — — * . 100 t — 4s i. week to keep the workhouse, rather than | It would appear that in the 10 years from 1830 to 1840, 
— — — oe Dee ri- 7s. or 83, to em joy him. The labourer cannot fail to there had occurred in France 235 public accusations of 
a oe — — err peraga, AT age 5 i 400 that his seg are dispensed with as soon as ever poisoning, out of which nu ber 110 were gainst 
pagar nh em — the farmer ean do without them; if the man does not go | viduals connected with agricultural pursuits, and it was 
any wise AAt aa . 3 pane ae to the workhouse, he often does worse, as his state considered that this arose from the readiness with which 
of our agricultural periodicals amply — when unem Joyed i usually the to poaching or | they were enabled to obtain — especially arsenic, 
That it is through t orough elueidation of the“ P. me > : e | for te Senai SA 
as a chemical manufacture that its — — n h 
must chiefly fòr, all our most intelligent 
authorities agree d looking at these two facts 
together that the reason why the Chemical Ass 
ciation 


imply because people do 
Swe” fen b e lt “hi no 
uch as 


For cons 
— the enormous . 2 een —— in 
gland: 


cai call erte to — ye proceedings 


It is well known that in agriculture as in manufacture 
idyen e employed will repay, and is gre teed 
the of amassi une, as hun — 
kee en i kshir in- 
stances, a who will candidly say that . — 
| between employer and employed is reeipro 
There is abundant oes in this —— * e3 who 

m 


the worst tion; the = gh 


for labour to keep the hedges in good order; and 
sso bad that more e been sent 
hi , when there was plenty of stones upon 
his land close by for gatherin i have seen goo 


roducing 7 a fourt n average ing 


, ara 
armer said 115 land * 


m i boon enough without draining it awa) 
The ers much betterin the Nor th: Thik daii manure 8 exp d un and air 
there, many times this income have for the five — a fortnight before it was ploughed in, on land 
the 3 What intended farmer in 


years been spent in answering 
can science do for Agriculture? and yet 
splendid 5 — rewarded efforts . as 


has 


for Wheat and Turnips, me the 
k 


ced the first year of the Societ The place occupied by a dar 
teal of the Seottis ‘Agricultaral Ck Chemistry 0m ering ane of Revel clay are P etki’ 
iation were well satisfied, and justly so, if 28 as 8 A ot ae i go roofed 


informed on matters of 3 in i their profession, 


can be 
diatel: * is sure to 
"hia discover 


e im 


to support i 
AGRICULTURAL I LABOURERS. 


vs 


cocint conditi 


3 


irec ers, me 
Though — = a village sch 


=. aes 2212 raed cot ample, pesing 


mas pare 
This is the sort of material Font tes 


together with his knowledge that his condition ‘hardly. 
be worse than it 


the earliest opportunity ; 


3 although h ie knows where food 
are to 


mpe- 


ei 
been 2 


N 


contam 
boie encouraged 


causes him to get married at | 


re 

and ent of | in such 

labour is the source of pase wealth, that — obligation x 
nica 


d | metre 


t | was separated from its 
which was sare. uncultivated whilst the experiments 
ous 


8 tS “om only employ ed women at 'þay-ti me and 
harvest. Can it be wondered that the labourer is in a 
low condition where iene — some of the specimens of 
labourers there 

— as — 


each of thes 
e have an nite feeling: towards the other, 
he labourer suffers. lso ece- 
k should be adopte 
a judge of a fair day’ 
mae 


ed, g farmer should be as good e 
s work as the: 3 who 
ily sa wang lis all executed by the piece. 

wages are ans of insuri 
kg e a m illi 


er has it in 
to make Wer —— good, 8 or bad, 
ug as they —— placed 


in —.— — — Lacie upon as bad, and treate 
no inte 


e Wheat selected for the purpose of trial was the 
red 80 otch Wheat of the harvests of 1843 and 1844, 
8 eres ine oe in 50 slightest degree tainted 
with 0 rocured, 
with whieh re ery Whe eat was — — saturated 
a manner 1 the 8 = 3 attached 
N grains of W and commu- 


the same nature through its whole extent, 
neighbour by a strip of ground 
were in progre hey were each sown early 
of grai 


ATURE O 
ue 


n, re 23 decilitres. 
E WHEAT, AND MODE OF STEEPING EMPLOYED, 


Fo Wheat gathered before 8 at maturity, whilst 
f the grain was still in a milky state. 


pid 

3. Wheat gathered when the. grain and the e 
yellow te when the grain might still be oat with 
the n nail. 

4, Wheat ä rd >- grains had acquired their 
har ney. 

5. Perfectly 8 ben 5 not smutty, nor having 
received any prepar 

ipe Wheat, 5 sus without any preparation. 

mutty Wheat, ed pre -e to sowing with 
double its ae et of pure w 

8 Smutty Wheat, plunged — two hours in a solution 
of sulphate of copper an 
ar — Wheat, prepared with sulphate of copper 


10. Sinutt ty Wheat, prepared with ars 
11. Smutty wane prepared = fach, aanas lime. 
at, prepared w 
13. Smutty Wheat, prepared with ant phate of rod and 
ime. 
At the end of April the Wheats, of which the germi 
nation and — 5 — chat time re no appre 


as follows 
i Tolerable bata a Mae deßeient at the right side of 


-Tolerable ; a little less deficient om the same side. 
3 Pretty goo 
4. eG good, but a litile less clean than No. 3. 
58 ood. 
8 clean, but 5 irregular. 
than No. 8. 


ted as 


ays 
titude 
rte dishoriest . is grant si 


e in | sack, so t that not a grain might t be lost. 


m the sound, aecount ta 
Realty ears ot A ae were ihat W in a close 
igi Wheat 


_ sae Br paranan leder 

wind heh to denounce the’ whol 

| with him h. his owa e condemnation, for it shows he has 
them once a 

amai — oe teh nce to his master — his master 

80 f Dg, inei p 
— he would — aay aad rob himself ö 
emp J. H. 


ON THE EMPLOYMENT or A TARE IN 
GRICULTUR. 


Pustic attention 1 2 been ca 
m 


medical journals, I forward you apse Retinal: 
) — — a — results — investigation of a 
missi d at Rouen in December, 1842, 
ating for its see to determing “the ber best process o 
| preventing the sm in Wheat, an a to ascertain whether 


UNEI 


and | 
least t 
meal 


vi aiaia oF whero he is W got'a l 
morrow. is their ignoran 


copper (boti 2 which are extensively emiploy ed in 
Great ay were ee ah of equally good results. 
| The la nis eer tended over the years 
1843, 1844, pr 1845, a 
peated two years followi in on the farm-of M. 
one of the commission, at Boisguillaume, in the depart- 
ment of Iuferieure. My friend, M. Girardin 
Rouen, and 


un, 


e class carries 


| ears dedu — from 


eighed, 
nd each lot was — in a ret aoe v 
ovg of the soand grain and the weight of the rs 
the weight of each sheaf, gav 
absolute w t of the straw. 
The —— Table contains na information relative 
to the produets of the different’ lot 


— — 


Number Number weight of Weight of Absolute 
of — of smutty —— " sm Vs xa mt 
al. Ear Ears, 


Volume o 
good THE 


Grain, 


2 2882888882888 


SS SAA 


S 


RNIN ge NO ge ge ho ao ao Er 


TORE 
* wre 


This Table clearly es thie enges of ie arent 


treatment of smutty Wheat, as well as 
various stages of maturity in the 


T ere e 
vember, in ———— weather, with the same — f 


U 


— 


——— Oe 


11840. THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 11 


S — t of the smut. Observe that Nos. 1, 2, ears amongst the se sy 2 with a ere of cop- — private N aud you at once sift vor om 
re ge different ‘periods of maturity, present | per and sulphht e of — ote ook upon as of its chaff— — you exclude the evil, and re yoye 
3, and 4, Two following years the same results the most active and — * smut. One — — of becoming members of f — 


ake the per es as in the thing is mei ale that cas 99 — in these — we would say, in the words of ‘the “ Address d 
— stl — pes ake — smutty ears for each | researches, M. Fauchet, has for many yea: made reierred to, “ Avoid ‘ining every society of this de- 
f the last eight lots, we shall better appreciate the influ- | use of Glauber’s 2 and no longer knows int it is scription whose meetings are not held apart from a 
0 me ee nt. o have smut. This salt, then, associated with lime, we | public-house, where a large portion of its funds are 
is 3 Number of Smutty Ears per cent. must look upon as an "infallible e remedy. spent in periodical eating and drinking, producing 
7775 2 En resumé, the commission is of opinion— 1. That it many evils.” The subject of savings’ banks = 
W oo rka ree se * he is best not to sow seed without steeping, 2. That it is — ermine is one of the very highest im portan 
é 3 best to make use of the sulphate of soda and lime pro- and as their principles are now ae — wien 
8 C 2 inasmuch as it is more simple and ie eee, and 2 we would earnestly recommen eade: 
9 „ 853 no way injurious to the health of the so or in- | not only the establishment of such — ii their 
0 336 — — ee ak BA = and that it yields, 5 most own neighbourhood, but also the diffusion of advice and 
— te cag gS ex 3. pat BS producti t Wh heat. 5 as arsenic, | information relative to them, among those classes whom 
i 2 pas at . om 8 arranged in sulphate ‘of copper, ee ene other pi a on pre- | they pe s ely to benefit. But it may be asked, and 
The rent m es ations s eously re 1 sulphate indeed, since the establishment of savings’ banks, it 
the following order, to show the respective efficacious- ot soda an ie as neal she bol 2 eg ede has been asked, “ Are friendly —— alter 
mess of each: ould = e d by the Govern E. H. all, of any real value; avd may not savings’ banks be 
No. > wipe set i and 3 et Pleasant-street, Dublin, Deo. 2 20. substituted for them?“ We answer, confidently, that 
- Sulphate o ——— —— 3 ien cieties are of the highest importance, and 
13, Sulphate of soda and lime. arse ra SOCIETIES. that savings’ om are by no means to be substituted 
12, Lime * salt. THE comparative advantages of savings’ banks and | for them oH F 
10. como friendly » ee baig already been brought — 1 —— — 
7. Washing sii pure water. the n of your readers, in a little tract referred to a Home C d 
11, Lime alon page 596 it will rt my endeavour to show that sa — The Rara! phe e 3 1 
“Thus ri a A te of Pew jer one tt ae banks, though admirable adjuncts, should never be pose when I sent you the short Tac on het 8 
2 e ee e Fey n eee eo i s, and 1 „that the | and crime that p the rural districts that it was 
lime produces i ak very aime 80 a its use 2 even — aiiis — under the me administration, i is ed made of ee of a leading article, and likewise 
4953 s than a? tha send. in a z the means of letting jou roll your editorial thunder 
less advan ing that from which the most eubstanta — a g% ex- i 
water. 3. 7 t com = ae very marked in- eed y. ln a nt As I ig nithe | over my ad. In giving you the account I 
scare ea ie fy wa Paras W ere eee i ntor did, I only hoped to have awakened a sense of the de- 
2 of savings’ banks pi earnest sly ‘to sustain the | graded and ignorant state of the agricultural labourers 
acquire a more Diad: beneficial action than that which authority of — reren, af —— expressly says, 8 


| generally, an — ave aroused the feelings of the up 

classes, that something must be done to better their 

condition in the social seale "of society. So far you agree 

with me, but as to the means and other essential points 

we app differ. Passing over the maudlin senti- 
t 


they possessed alone; for instance, lime then becomes | « if the country needs one institution, it cannot do with- 
very efficacious, 3 zd ee produces better | ont the other,” and this sentim 5 we are e willing to 
anni than when 5 ingly. 4. That arsenic — — as — basis of our own ar, nt. 
anything lik is destructive action on | One of the great adva antages of io savings’ ba -n 
— astl the friendly s 3 is, that it has the benefit of — 
ship. If the ontributor to a savings’ bank dies, the editorial remarks, I come to the assage, s But what is 
w n 0 a I How x 
on the contrary, the member of a friendly society dies, B. Bs? 20 laboure 
Its have bee Pm whole of bis prone. 3 the sums ordinarily 
mish those forme! y made W agriculturists allowed to the widow, sometimes to'his children, is 
and we careful observers i in different 3 Thus, i e be boki ative all that time and his dedii 
onan bh da i isto f the past; he 
J.... mH ,, ny, of te pretent, not ie ya he en 
— S he 3 ee Soe heath; hi th grent E When which is cape of — to any considerable | and pilfering habits . UDH to disgust any one? 
thau he Suga * ss pm I T, N = `t jsum in a savings’ bank, that the difference of the We venture to assert that this writer ter his 
ipa YA oe 2 * he, N * contribution, if paid into a savings bank, would still on condemnation.’ These are bitter words, Mr. 
À ‘se of ume is abandoned, from its Wen e o the create a fund for the benefit of the survivor. The re ny Editor, and 1 hoge won Will not allow ae to condemn 
: ; 3 : 8 of a fri — socie — always be paid into — oer 1 boaters Tate 
eulturists, M. ia ena President of the Agricul-| Ano y r great A tage of say ings” ban ks ov o ü Pe e 23 oy an 
phate 3 — ccits, — as these last ordinarily Dave | them for some ve agrant misdemeanour n tryi 
It is the ~ copper, to which 10 8 mee sts ye ee been — et contradistinetion to the | to work upon thei debe kindness and ese 
l th sie’ Tee ee an’ pay eas led andr regulated friendly —— is, that | have, to my sorrow, found only ingratitude and treachery 
> the Lot and Garonne, the | the — societies have been the prolific of con- | of the deepest dye. Now these men have not 8s. or 10s. 
` ` | tention and immorality ; — the — of erg but from 14s. to 15s. a week, and other advantages that 
discontinue its use is curious ellas Useful to | appears Habis te n * uch abuse. Manz of our | few Jabourers in the kingdom enjoy; and I can safely 
ascertain if the different plans of steeping the Wh í EED E r gere . that the best paid are in general the most unsteady 
Steal Tam pro ping the Wheat | societies. Some tea: the ‘evils of the — system may aud improvident. It is not three weeks since that one 


th of grai $ 
these part iculars, we took carefully "e rece ee 535 of them stole two 55 3 h 2 tent ob ponr 
the account of the vola ume and weight of the grain, and Out of the 2s. per month subscribed or the — 8d, is on the pay-day put ey in 2 Phi it the p 
the moe weight of the straw. To render these dif- | to 1 spent in anor for the benefit of ne N mises, and igo the some of filching same 
the more apparent, we h t ferred 8 3. Whatever the number present ma the ih afterncon, The su 8 an the same night com- 
Sn — of our 8 "T es e ji © | the whole society are to be thus spent ; ves that if the night be 1 ce ar inking an faing money e e and Í 
we J pre g a E into hecto 8 eae hy see other obstacle to their meeting arise, 10 men may Gnd oat er daf y that the er ‘theres ten ed Ki 
Pare the pro 4.5 lled, memt fe legal with going to a “wise man” — tell him the 
a ee of 0 cultivation with t that usually wide against the society, Eer ney betheir griovar ce. name of the thief. This had the 1 effect, for 
— heciolitre (equal to 22 imperial] 5. Even should the funds not have been borrowed t he ; th 
gallons) of g the money was ~ ae back and p e e 
grain so society, — spent in articles of show, or other objects f — h, * ye 10 1 
— — to their proper purposes, there is a“ breaking up” and division place as myster asly as it bad vi Aken. 
‘Res Produce in | Produce in Weightofa }_ _ Absolu te ofthe money, ata greatloss to original mene, just when | bave had the chatge of quite as many men in another 
o. of Corn. . by ese rte ggh of s we ght ofs : they are getting old, and most liable to sickness, part of the gdom, where the hig hest wages were 
0 
— h itre of 30d Krain. Y eee Now the public house is no essential part or necessary | only 10s, a week, and yet these scans: from sobriety 
— 2 Kile companion to the benefit society ; on the contrary, let and strict habits of economy, were better off than the 
goue 7.13 578.333 0.747.8 2171.666 | them be separated, and we think these societies would | midland counties Jabourers with their bigh w. 
inaa ken N 0:4465 1785.333 | have as much tendency to improve publie morals as | Kindness shown to them 8 repaid with 5 and 
MS chee: 56 33 09528 8 they bave now to injure them. According to the pre- confidence was never abused; this entirely resulted 
10.00 787 606 0,787.6 1879.000 | Sent constitution of these societies, it is obvious that | from a higher intelligence, caused b a good system of 
— 800. 5 ial hope the 
hial educa and early ope 


1 


„ vey 


2089.000 also hav tendency to promote habits of ex- | classes in Herefordshire. e “conseience” part 
2094.6 6 pina; and osje of the worst kind; and this deseribing the failure or e . v his endeavours 
2090.000 is but small part of the evil, As the matter now tater must rest with himself, but I am convineed he must 
The — “~~ |many a young labourer who would before have halted, | commence 52 the young 2 to insure an 
Tables are the f a to be drawn from these | from a sense — their . . at the tbreshold it an àn honest breed o 
i 2 e following: 1. That in all — it is | ale-house, w dra nto it for the business of the ‘The * peas — their country’s pri 
2. That the Wi. employ only sound Wheat for seed. | elub. — . he the 3d. which the club | Ion I was wrong imattacking the — societies 
which i eats least productive of grain were those —— for bim. This indulgence whets his appetite | for converting Jews, Hottentots, and Hindoos ; and 
arsenic, lime, and salt, and lime | y 


5 

= 3 e man of Mr, Batson 1ccessfi 
9 1943,000 — to exreate —— of . among the poor, they in his efforts for the advancement of the labouring 
3 The 

1 

2 


Phate ‘Sulphate of ot. mind.“ Not wishing to ——— your 

f 1 of copper and salt, sul- and next for the sake des drinking. He acquires à mind. ot wishing to occupy th of ) 

Was — lime, 4. If the washing with water —— — tippi ng. Some other club member 15 always valuable Paper at too great a length, in answering your 

Femarkably diminish nof grain, its weight is | lingering about the fatal threshold of the tap to invite | correspondent’s st — — 

Same bulk s volum = a 5. The heaviest Wheat of the him to satisfy the cravings of his new appetite for cation, I shall shortly refer to“ J. R. V.“ and bis — 
7 2 : ` gt ut 15 of ho seal 


e rock, to have a ene ie 
— st al villages and parishes, But we once more remind our | holiday ; of his being at a. a printing boy by the 
tenpoa there w — er the various parcels of Wheat | readers that all these evils flow not from the ai but | Messrs, Chambers, and of 8 
und, as may be seen, a certain from the public house in which it is commonly held; not | men in supplying reading. sooms, baths, Ke. Now — 
ifi ci Si — that there is in from the = te ga of laying up in health 28 ‘ie hour not see the drift of drawing a comparison eee eg 
e nor eegen and infallible remedy for gegee sickness and decrepitude, but from spendin pg in Messrs. Chambers’s workmen and Rs set 
o be remarked that to ren- 5 — ties cones to have bisa given to their ply, bourere, for the latter must be taught t ea before 
—— — we saturated the | or laid up in a savings’ bauk. ‘The three pene t | fittin Up reading-zooms for them. A veda 
practice, howe 5 this ie never in beer counteracts the benefit of the seven remai ng enen ee nl tient Mery L lived | 
— classes wel 7 


three-pences paid into the ‘dub, aore s the nary 


to this « i from the publie-house, 
8 : e black and hold it in the vestry, — — 


12 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. CJAN. 6, 


t entitled to his gratitude and i for ; one-half of it, it will appear the benefits are not always | bas he is so 1 3 Also the advocates forlbes 
pony — — of the — of his parish almos reminds on the side of the En nglish form. In Scotla ge and the | feeding have not themselves the proper ideas, = ea 
one of the golden age. True, he has lost by thieves, — of England the straw is always laid on dry, and if | not 2 them distinetly. What Mr. W. se 3 — 
one sheep, a 2 of fowls, and a one in his 20 years’ in such exact 8 order, it is done more. object to most is the accumulation of the urine in pits, 
residence ; but by distributing soup in winter, and | | expeditiously, — the shor inferior straw all used and consequent unhealthiness of the cattle. Now several 
selling linen, pod — &e., at — cit, and — easional | u up. I think “J. * ear e wrong in his conclusions | = the writers in favour of box feeding state “onl 
distribution of Turnips, Peas „ he has foun d of their r e the straw sliding off, otherwise those supply the cattle me 3 of dry straw and th 
a remedy for all the social evil of — life. Th hope, he has roped down must be done in an imperfect | keep them dr hi o doubt that those whom 

eorgos,” when he “ p off this mortal coil,” may | — 1 alt of the circular corn stacks that I have Mr. W. has gone to van eat wit — he; has seen 
have a ee, in Madam "ussaud’s collection of seen have no ropes passing horizontally round them, the system not succeed, have found they could no 

as one of the philanthropists of the age, 3 rag 8 one immedi ae under the eaves, to afford to supply enough of nie 2 soak = all the 


d ng each other what m is my little 
one. B. B.—I venture to suggest that owe gentlemen! at yos wd are panied e or tied t to, and the pr x port experience e ing this matter, which may enable 
si, ning * —— ives B. 88, V., &c.,| points of the straw at the eaves (never cut) are neatly | both parties to meet a little, for I consider both 
who have favoured you with opinions so aich diflering folded to one side as the work proceeds; the mt of rah in what they have in vot, or both are wrong ip 
upon the subject of the honesty and general character | ropes required depends much upon the size of the stack | confining themselves to mall a 88 Se and not 
of the British labourer, should give the name of the| and the closeness they are put on; — eral way lo baie Bidz. to 25 ited of the que I must 
county where their observations are ma ® ecause very | they are from 12 to 18 inches apart at the eaves (the | let you know I far a hill side with a geod Slope, bat > 
great, and, I think, 8 apie be done to widest K and about 30 will do os a pretty large a v boden! impervious to water. before the 
the charac'er of the farm labour r by the circulation of | stack, t 16 inches distance. It often Welt use of liquid manure was much noticed h in n This quarter, 
such remarks as are pence a in your publication of prerai as an "English observer how it is possible to get | I had a covet place for my manure to keep the rain 
the ci ult., — the signature of the letters “ S. S.,“ | them made so sharp at the point or top, when he is told | from washing it; ark x some 3 feet below the surface, 
and others previous to it. me experience as a magis- | the person nae thus arranges the ropes does so without | and I have often t e dung raised 6 feet above the 
ihe a 32 and farmer for upwards of 10 years, a ladder to stand on. A s ick is generally thrust in, to | surface, from this T found sees liquid e exude, and 
leads me to think that the farm servants are in general | which the first four cardinal ones are attached, an nd it 3 = = in the shape of ae ex on Gra 
e most respectable and most honest portion of the | being a job in which no inconsiderable amount of pride | but tanks soon were spoken of, and I d t fail to dig 
population of this district of the West Riding of the | exists in being neatly performed, it is often very skil- a goo cate one to contain Peg 30 000 gations, tad carefully 
county of Yorkshire. do not think they are as well | fully done. I am no advocate for the s system of securing conducted all the e from my houses into it (no rain 
educated as they ought to be, but I am sure that the the thatch by horizontal roping, the water must be im- | water getting in), eins ‘find with only about 50 head of 
resent generation of farm servants are grateful for | peded in its descent at every rope it meets, and thereby | cattle besides eae horses | fill that in a winter season with 
nesses, are vere honest, are more trustworthy | induced to enter the stac ; the oblique methods of | extra urine, for I have my dung what I consider well 
; that portion of the population employed | crossing each other, so as to form a series of diamonds, moist, besides notwithstanding this I am always short of 
in collieries 22 trades; and, I believe, feel 2 they is also pajen 2 whereas the one dassi given facili- straw, and every year have to buy some 50 to 60 
ought), more attachment for their employers. there- | tates rather than retards its descent, and when it is quarters straw, to keep all to my mind. Now I havea 
fore beg to suggest that your arii Sere should be | borne in mind the 8 it Sirsa 10 * thatch, far | fair proportion of straw for my shift; I have 2 
invited to state a general character e l rods 50 acres in corn crops (mostly sto at and 25 a 
the farm labourers in each county, wiry that you should | could bes it there will be less 83 to its adoption, Turnips, and some of Turnips are given ee ba 
strike a balance between the two accounts, J. G. Smyth, | and the security it possesses in high winds, storms, &c., | sheep s, and do not require straw litter, 
Heath Hall, Wakrfield.—I have found, from long ex- gives it a “decided advantage. I think it is not too much 0 —— Turni 
n over- | generally succeed; I give 2 cwt of guano, and 5 tob 
bushel baie dust per Wee: shove what dung I have 
5 is hono urable, you will obtain work has been well done, while every one must admit | (some 25 to 30 —.— I have furrow drained all 
turn, quite as much as such is not the case with English covered stacks. J have my farm (or rather my H 75 rd for me 
on one side the | subsoil Sense the most of it; so I try to farm as well 
it is no as I 


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E 


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5 
2 
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2 
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university men 
Five Hundred Acres of a in Hants. or hurdles, and 


8 
e 
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= 
85 
25 
D 
wn 
8 
8 
£ 
@ 
— 
5 


1 l : us 3 ir gard to the relative expense of the think, with Mr that if pits are in the earth 
Coke, to the discussion of this question ; and though he | two systems, but little aa exists. Three or four | for boxes, and cattle pit hitb them, ther the urine 


does not touch upon the main ground o the question, | ordinary han nds, in Scotland, would thatch quite as | must get away from them erhaps unperceived through 


to your readers usually inserted in leases, and parti- | rally made by women and children, or by men 
l w 
sone My i — when population is so propor- days, &c., the difference may be sli ghtly i in 8 of the | my manure 
cause 8 “at he aa now. He observes ; „ Agri- a system. With respect to th ying up of Beans, | the dung got above the level of the surface. I alsostrew 
8 reat account in ce as bein F.” must not have duly considered the difference ae byres ies — with — — of lime, to keep them 
i m. In 


5 
pA 
c 
be 
0 
— 
og 
2 
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ee 
8 
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bad 
F = 
3 8 
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8 
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rath ia tae maine | to p their being taken there at once, dan {i 
mrbin rease, irst, 1dlenesse, au indifferent tie up will suffice ; while in Scotland th i f mine 
3 oe monn ripe ae Saas p 5 n Scotland they and, I be 615 before oe — om 

i und and beginnin rds carried by hand | in this jise of 10 ie ro . 50 —.— — 


rson ; „ 
petal 3 rp of ti lage into pir sal, lono, veal e eee Hens — oa crt — cue. "of it bas aa a8, 
God's and axe — 8 ape tak 1 sheepe of | suitable to its cire foe anosa inthis Rape 5 dane 3 n of pores a al 
' stares 33, Mosban ar y which is one of the greatest be aid e examine many things closely, the same may 5 or 3 — great advantage. a 
` destroyed, and the "ie e ad by dim 3 OF ubling you with this paper I lodging on its surface, it runs into a sort of putty-like 
EER of a Ji n (as by igen: A of kis, &e. we, English fashion, “There eee A 
— nj ng is patrons and G of management in detai 


e Scotch at the | cohesi on; it is then little better 2 the — oe 
0 


ac ny yea 
© proceed, which 1 On examining these — 4 last year, I ae d- thes 


3 5 e i 3 to h ays. Re hastily con 
e he may have omitted objectionable idee laced upon the il but on — alia sau after 3 
ef 5 ceedency tices which, if Sperry. it will be Ba duty to call 2 of pon t toes had been taken E it 2 found re 
ands w] and, h á cannot close this | considerable quantity of 8 

the plough have ia sense ean ria earuar 8 of 3 ithout adverting to the disputed point of thick va ugh ahs. Junel of the tiles, and it is believed tha 
5 oy e other * t Pees SA Wheat. I have practised them both 0 years these drains will be little better thao , 

` r twice f rm T nd into 
before that on a smaller scale, and the conclusion I tile mye aia — — 3 p he use of tis 
3 taint 1 thin sowing at best is but an un- with collars. This a eee — Wa by M 

they thatch or cover in their —— stacks r Au favourable seasons a good crop ‘may | Josiah Parkes, at Dray n Manor, 

w , an gained, | The other method is to pat a bau of ay A A 4 
the collars fit very close, they may exclude the sar 

rrun with weeds, and | but that is >h uently von such a subtile nature, that th 
paired, while at the best | is alwa ays a danger of its penetrating through 

y i in pre 


n law N arable land ( hi hs 
called hyde and gaine), the pre· em 1 a 8 
meadows, p 


t 
J € eaves, and an | is, know but little of fa i ata 

> rming. N : 
dit siranger the tree! (if as ewer seems to require a a to see the subject „ ee Ag 
closer 


wan , 
8 is- 
„ l 5 à N. V., Heii but @ 
t ss neey horses ripe — Ml 9 is a pe Teg — 855 noticed 10 some si ow — mae A ae a cam TT kA 
ble f wet g ing hard a | sufficiently close to — out the sand. 


red that all the inferi ached pori ot the: straw > nope i essentially necessary an 
= and that in in some cases amounts to nearly the he means it is the abuse of your P aper o of the grie baea be out 3 or 4 inches wider at the bottom than the g, 


the system, and not f the tile, so as to admit the strong goil down the S% 


15 
8 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


much m 5 
to Wen very y bottom 3 of the joinings of the tile. 


at the bott om part 
i ave been used for oe out the sand, 
W — fi any pn eo 
alleable, 


se ave no égevibe 
2 babe me eral are to bs 


„Sui eties 
Sourn Dev cae “Annual Meeting of 
this Society, the wage ee were made by Mr. 
FOWLER, o Pri e-halt, Dartm 
e! a is morning yai those hills, which have 
resent everything that was 8 


of Turnips whic ry 
— this A rovetbia lly fertile district. A. 5 Ia 
has. don ne and I alo thank you very cor- 
m hy u have expre essed, in a variety 
feelin with regard to rea repens ations, I also may 
at nays Jour j as 11 Mall my 8 3 Thope 
n whic e see 


year, the se t the crop na a 8 
and deen and I dont tr. ry t siam ny mor But the first 
time I grew Swedisb — 1 N used set. of We : 
— 7 having far ma ard e I could not use it, so I used 2ewt. 
črt. t. of Peruvian guano. But mar 

pete 1 say now; hat "Ye peman guano came direct out of the 
vessel, it did ik get into any stores and get what they call 

ualified. —— this 5 I got over 25 tons of Swedish 
e on land which, I need not fear contradiction 


complime N has to aye cak what I Helieve, rey 1 teli 

— rit plainly that the farming of Devonshire is inferior 
many other parts o of the kin ngdom. Now, to Prove this, I wi il 
come to facts ; in Wheat is not 
more than 22 or 23 bushels an acre. If yo ou go % War wickshire, 
4 nee or e eae and a a higher average 
produce (and thatis the test of real farming, the number of 
ps per acre), it ‘shows iat the farming of this county is 
inferior. Then, again, take the crop of Oats, and you will 
find the same rule exists. Again, it you take ‘roots you will 
. What did pit do . year 1 


t you will all find it out before 
mat eder 1 mt ar rand one that hears me 
n rmour and s ork in right earnest. 
(leer, le, 3 Ta SHES that spficient nerdy 
is not showu in the PE of the land here in Devonshir 

here may ellent farmers among you, but 1 
ay that that =, Eou so diffused, not so universal 
as it ough: to The landlords too must. for para 


you 
d ream. It is delightful to 
raining, 1 rote eT aoe ve rio 5 

Ik 


8 k d mere bog, t wa 
pete ow I can gallop m se p Ae Bat — — drains 
pi u the most excellent manner—soles-at the botto 

h Tp eee are this assembly that if any 


udg 13 inch pipes I would not us 
sa erat) Are opinion on this subject I know— 
ad 8 wholike the 14: inch pipes, may have 
ntend that drai ns ought not to be constructed 
want drains that wiil last us for 20 
€ i oo: 8 


ischief i is done by the sand | 


nds. 


En Samea. that the 
hes p. Why,” said be,“ you 
—.— ruin the land , and never get any 
y loss, buti in the PTE shall go. 

— 75 1 


* op.” 
5 aut, messier, you will f tetch 


wi 1 e de ; — 
had y 8 — aaa e veas opinion I higbly value, I 
ing th beet 2 ew vt. of Peruvian 


this cou sites, Ta 22 ‘the 
(The aa 


— 
wn 
n 
— 
© 
1 5 
E 
pS 


m 
and tenant, Tin 
es of men in this wide ‘world. 


very much 
be a wide sprea 

the e 8 the other; 

the I andiords mu ust give 


— end of th 

' Production, 
nate leral a t, tha 
compensation for his unexhausted improve- 
“aid the same thi 


can tell you, that now they all acknowledge that the lambs are 
4s, or 5s, per head better than ne of the old Dartmoor 1 e 
Mr. Fowler having stated that his steam engines and farr 
buildings were open every Wednesday for the a ection of 
agriculturists, concluded by proposing ai toast, “Justice to 
landlords, equity to tenants — Tou. ud e 8.) 
NEWBURT Cattte Snow. — The great attraction of 
he day was s valuable prize of 15“. 10s., given by 
Tell, Eeg., f Peasm EF. aes: 5 , JI. P., 
upon the iliowing conditions: ie breeders 
sheep shall sell 
iama 8 nike 
be then taken ; 


„ U 


e 1848, wh en 955 shall 2 
reweighe ied, and one killed 2 00 each lo ot, and the car- 
cases shown in the cattle- yard, in addition to the three 
rom each, and that the breeders of those which 
hive attained the 3 weight shall be =p se to the 
premiums above 1 There were etitors. 
No. 7, 354 lbs. nines S King, of Haward, disgualiße ed, 
not being. the rane fe 3 12, 294 lbs. gained, Thomas 
Spicer, of Lar as awa arded the prize, 3 
the digualifieation of Mr. Stephen King. “The sult of 
this eee competition was s 80 satisfactory zu it 

mens have been, leavin 18. = experim ded. 
micus, Dis c. 4. [Wil co iin a, j3 good | 
enough to give us stis details ‘of this experiment 1] 


Rebtew, 
eras and Irrigation, &c. By E. L 
t. C.E. Ridgway, 169, Piccadilly. 
a periodic 


Essay on Land 

Williams, M. I 

No one is better ibis than 5 condueto 

work to appreciate the eff 
m 


It is nee Ma 1 
it goes, as o ce more, t 
wel a ay 1 3 ultimately ee heard and sented 
upon by landowners, farmers, and capitali ists, if agricul- 
= is x furnish labour and food for an increasing po- 
tio 


2. 


“all the old 2 ae on the subject 5 5 


The profits of oem Graham Ps fae ard, Mr. 

De n, again made Saute he 
temper oF pea soils is again e urged as a 

chief müischief e by them; and cold is agai 


(we believe pean) attributed to 3 “greater eva 
Sauen from water- logged ; we are again told 
how much water is retained iy ifferen i 


wee details, to 3 to — sect, to have no rule fitted 
rali cireumstane it is very “ashe that — 
tonite = aoe be o-urged cate and a there is a 


novelty, but there is 2 on. in doi ; for pers 
vering iteration is the only way to gain 1 attention, 
The only novelty in Mr. Will liams’s Essay is the argu- 
= for catnip rainage water = e. power, paini $ d 
what Lord Hatherton has n this way at Ted- 
dedi We ~ A oom extracts — n this 1 as soon 
as we can fin pr we would 
confine our reeds 2 aay might and Eats to have 
been a more 3 9 in this Essay than it is. 
on: the connection geter 
i t 


0 
. Williams develope s he might Lute 
= two are as nearly identical 2 * and Nature 


3 ee 3 out is simply = 22 8 


water in excess to well drained land. The 
re agent- 10 is the nap that does 1 7 
i t say, t tter, What then 
C8 a in = meee 


of fertility i is e of a 
water baving been — »i ey which * the —— 
of water trons lands overchar rged with it,” is mentioned 
as asd the vs m of all good aen draina age? The whole 
statement is founded in mista misconception. The 
water ee does positive mischiof if it be stagnant ; 
du of what are srely vegetable 
shower 


more especially 3 of what it doe 
of the non-perform of the duties which properly 
belong to it, — water, v when stagnant ia la = checks the 
for be full of the rich- 

y 


rve 
amid it all, jus n chained to a spot wouid. do in 
the best eres harder if fais were no means for convey- 
8 the food 
ndained tend each plant a its locality 2 
ared for it, and tho oison 
there to injure its vigour, it w 
sim = 50 ation. But on nly establish a current `o 


ade but very little ; and 
2 fates them at all 
on their place; I hav 
am ver much be aed 
introduced a Cheviot 2 : She it 
by ail my neighbours 
5 but I 


wal ough the so eee ve an in- 
exhanstible rk el 3 up; every drop its store is 
akes way for another laden wich ginei ent 
3 the soil a and the air, and though the 
one place, there is a 

its roots, on which it 


plent be 3 as i z re, to 
uous siream — Passing 
— 


alu 


ud irrigation acte in just the same way 5 it is to the 


— supply of fresh nourishment which ru g 
ater keeps up that its effects main e. And 
. an Essay on Land Drainag eo e ” ought 


ortant relationship 
etween them than Mr. Williams ae mabe, in doing, 


gene r of Operations, 
EMBER AND JANUARY. 


i 2 55 sugge correspondents the 
propriety of making their reports a little more pro- 
spective—less a history in dry detail of the doings of 

e past week, 575 statement of what is intended 


weekly return 


8 des of eeding horses, cattle, and — 
he general condition of neig bouring agriculture—the 
state of the labouring elasses the results of farm ex- 
periments, &c.—all are subjects on which our readers 


have hearty appetite. 

BEDFORDSHIRE Farm, Dec. 26, —Our horses — the e 
have been 1 with — , earth, 
Turnips, & c. 


i payee 


receive cut Turn 9 2 and t 
— attend — 70 bead ot cattle, 30 of 7 are fatting, — 
living entirely on prepared food. [Wi — u give us details ?) 
a — of fuel — ls. per day. 


jhe w 

— ; in filling Ttipi: picking for the Soin and: 

R the carts that were carrying the dung; one man 
3 fences, & c. J. B. 


each dall „also —.— conte for 
the ony, and building: bricks intended for new cottages in 


spri 
— iia Farm, Dec. 80.—Since our last report the 
weather bas been — a bates —— — 
w day rost, which 


2 aby the Pressure. of other 
I season. Der — — — 

— — he — Carrots * . days, 3 — Wheat 
stubbles which are intended for a Turnip king at the 


in | threshing — ice ting gravel, &c., . — frost, ploughing 


and sowing Wheat after the plough, in two fie — 

second crop of Swedes has been fed, with sheep; 8 

has been constantly at work carting drain tiles 2 bushes to 

the drainers, ca pea * 8 cs * removal of sheep, and 

carting Swedes for the pigs, e &e, Our labourers have 

gear banking, and repairing fences, 
ing m 


and forkiv og out Couch- 


season, we havin ng now rabon 3 
past, yet we do not pci ag — Down ewes are quite so 


| forward to lamb as in the two past seasons; our horned ewes 


and lambs and also fatting Down ewes are now all penned 
upon — eg 2 —— not find. they gain condition so fast 
as we could nt of sn 9 — — been for 
the most Nr va have been ed 


wome 
| paring cole for = og, —— Swede Nara in 7 
Tu utter 


nd atten nding at the threshing machine, 


petan À 8 kind) . — 26 tons 12 t. per 
of the white Belgian kind — 21 tons 13 ewt. per pone: 
which we consider a good crop, taking into account the 
rhe season; our later sown Swedes 
weigh varying from 17 to 20 to 

have heard of was the field of Ashcroft Swede Turnips, which 


ga 

South Hants Farmers’ Club h 
per acre being computed 27 — 8 ent. Our own Carrot erop, 
named above, obtained the prize as the best crop of Carrots at 


the same eek Sbow. 


SOUTH WIGTONSHIRE Fakt, eee * —Our Wheat Pag which 
is but limited in extent, pro well, a somewhat 
damaged by the — —. of ls last tlie We — a 
25 bushels of s — per 1 for this — 2 the 
spring, which can be —— t Oa: Our C 
(produced at i. outlay of 5l. ibe an 3 including seed and 
1 averaged 17 tons, which we are selling at 308. 2 ton. M. 

TIRLINGSHIRE CARSE FARM, D 26. 30. —Since last r report we 
| hav s been chiefiy employed in the “ordinary 
of the — as weather permits, a and occasionally 
threshing and st rg eff grain; cleaning in the rick-yard 
into the dungstead, and drivin heme Turnips. The horses- 
— kept on bruised Sars, with cooked food once u- day, and a 

l allowance of straw. W. F. 


tic os a — nts. 
It does not appear advisable to carry 


ALKaLiEs : T Eo 
gre or 


wlan: 
this e vot the controversy into the 
But we shali be glad to re-open the subject, on 
eek K any sien. 
ALSIKE CLOVER : R H wants to know 
Alsike and common white Clo 


e relative merits of 
5 


earlier, and 
was introduced from Sweden b 
Mr. Lawson suggests that from 
from common . it on thi ive 

BARLEY AND CARROTS 
In Belgium they gr 
English farmer 5 Bikey 

n Im 


n 
fecily successful, as A Method of reduei ing theth to powder, 
EKE ani Tr You had better not b the sea- 
weed ; a oo — aged ees ek 
pin 2 3 y itwhen en 
n ama would exert their jull effect 


. with sea- 
Leti 


14 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. LIAN. 6, 


— ̃ͤ —..ññññññ— H—— K— 
S — —— ̃ ̃ͤ——ꝛꝛ—ß— cent tor —— 
— “oF the other ‘on its alkalies. eg could not substitute the | abundant and pa Cau'iflowers, Broccoli. &c., sufficien the dem imited, aud oniy some 
the other with adv oy the demand. Asparagus, French Beans, Rhubarb, and — of the choicest kinds are noré F freaky — of. There ary 
— 7 C. Parkes’s * explain the theory, and| kale are becoming more plentiful. France, Belgium, and | very few Calves, e sequently there is an advance of about 24. 
Sephena “3 — Draining” i the practice of draining as satis- | Holland still e to — ee of Potatoes. per 8lbs. From Holland and Germany we have 100 Beasts 
The C — will not The foreign ones fetch about 5l. a ton; the very best — 150 from Spain, 150 from Ireland, 400 f. folke d Suffolk 
de out hee — . . "ie is aw wom of time to collect | grown ones about lll. a ton. Le —.— and oiher salading are | 2200 from Leicester and Northampton, and 300 from Lincoln, 
materials and À er e We Youatt’s book on Swine. | sufficient for the demand. Mu oms are pretty plentiful. Per st. of a d — st. of 8ibs—s d 8 4 
- C. “The f Wine making” by David Booth, con- | Cut Flowers consist of Heaths, — Christmas Roses, Best Scots, Here- st Long-wools. 4 2 tod 6 
tains a 5 0 on Cider a nd Perry.—Ctericus. “ The | Camellias, Gardenias, Fuc chains, and Roses. fords, &c. 0 to 4 2 Ditto Shorn . 
orse,” “ Ox,” " Sheep,” of the Useful Knowledge Society. UIT Best Sho rt-hor ns 3 8—3 10| Ewes & 2d quality 3 6 2 ny 
‘Cuancoat: J F C. Thinnin 7 1 of plantations may be charred | Pine Apples —_ Almonds, per peck, 6 2d quality Beasts 3 0—3 6 pano Snor 
in heaps just as charcoal itself is ordinarily p — — aer zr. “ato = 8 er 1b, 3s to 38 Best Downs sad. „ 5 % Lambs sn. 4 enn 
. nuts, per 100, 1s tee m 3 
‘CLAY soit: L. That depends on the crop you are about to grow W a eA aie Fauth es to 7s 2 per — 16s to 248 Half-br .4 8—5 0 Calves waa reo ia 5 22 9 
and on the present richness of the soil. A govd winters * en 55 bushi, 3s to 58 Chesta — A nA! DEER Ditto Shorn n — een Pig 
C! r 
frost — ole — — amtet — as —— — — — t — half ai — eres to oa — Filbert 2 ibe 107 to 1006 Beasts, 3891; Sheep and ee. s, 905 090 5 “Calves, ibe Pigs, * 
acre, Bean > an m — R s to 1508 rg 
Din or Ma — Wurzel, ania ga harpen green 2 — per . — 2 to 28 — 1 12s to 168 * 9 dead 1 Beasts T sheep is by no means large; 
— ACHINE : es— Dr. wington, Frant, — per to t eman batched is at this time “of year so 
Wells, iii VEGETABLES. — — that it is difficult to, effect a clearance. The choline 
—— womy: A, We regret our inability to advise, — red, ee mna is to as * a ions, per bunch, #4 to 42 Ed des criptions pretty 8 —— Monday’s rates; but ete 
Du. Newincron’s DIBBLE : Falcon. See last week’s Paper. Has | Sa roys, per doz. 3d to — Spanish, per doz., ls 6d to 48 | barely realised for second-rate, Tradeis dull for Calves, at à 
any one any experience of it on 1 — land? It will not ae nA sta bu oe og hes, 1s 6dto2s6d ite emer: Pot sieve, Is6dto38 | reduction of coon ia. per 8 lbs, Pigs sell slowly at about lata 
ed, For Beet it would; and for Parsni auliiowers, per doz, 28 to 48 o Liep ta rates. Fro land and Germany we have ? 1 
and T Se fe malate be’ mad P | Br ay waite, je bunch, ts to 2s Garlic, * Ib., 4d to Ss nny bess easts, 150 
peste ihe Foar ba pian e's to ratau Eeen ß 
* . „ di 1e8, 
your “distinct species“ London Zoplogical Society, Potatoes, per ton, 60s to 1808 Artichokes, per seat 6d to 2s Best Scots, Here- Best „ 4 2 to 4 6 
a request to K with an espect. 2 nir Le 3 —.— vhs Aho fords, G. 4 Oto4 2 DittoShorn ... o A 
them from some one of the many able naturalists 9 3 —.— 1s 6d to 28 ugg, Cab peP seor to Is Best Sh s3 8—3 10 Ewes & 2d quality 3 4 — “4 0 
therewith. I may observe that there are ons having Red Beer, per doz., 6d to 1s Endive, per score, ae Is 2d quality Beasts 3 0 — 3 6 Ditto Shor 
specimens for sale who are apt to persuade themselves first, | Hore Ba er Wo, 2a to Se Is to 6s 3 — o ls Best Downs an BIDES- T 
po panan — ae that . ble’ iris the ie per pun 8 0 i to? 1261 Small Salads pe per roan 240038 —— . 4 8—5 0 “sot gin asitie ti ae pi 
7 u T une ~ 0 ls enne. dt itto rn eee ah des 
‘ay ite fa pe —— mich age claim to bigh character, e sare 4 Beasts, S11; Sheep and ambs, 4220; Giles, 150; Pigs, 160. 
* a writer who professes to limi province ** 
of selence, guard the public against falling into such . 1 84 * 12 small bun dcs Mank Lang, Jan. 5, 1849.—The weekly reports from 
Pye ee yg —. value of su * — ert £ sana, er 30 5 bunches 3s tos s aajo oat neee 15 to a 04 nearly all the great leading markets generally w 
See nemt * pae sion as land. . eee Wheat and Barley somewhat lower, and other grain a 
dink. qrepmenet book-keeping” we The principle HOPS, Paar, Jan. 5. Paina & before. At Mark-lane to-day, the supply was fair of 
on which the whole proceed is o course ; but the Mes TTENDEN and SMITH — that there is more de- English Wheat, and many buyers of Foreign; 
. @ four di l and “Bach l ioe midig and erori n clea) aan taal eat —— FEE 
n bax . —ͤ— air consumptive demand for free Foreign at about 
in which every money tran dekom ee 8 prse its 15 POTATOES.—Sovrawark, WATERSIDE, Jan. 1, late prices.— Barley is also abundant, and ls. lowers 
; Committe rt that k k y 9 5 7 
5 es —.— the a Soe Ee Neate oe ies ar i — in suc- every sont of 8 ** A from . — 1 — E —— ans and Peas the same, and not at all wanted. —Oatz 
the ow fe — y 9 Ga = i tries f ‘or the latter is good, but all others meet a ver. a iii sale, and | in great abundance, varying m much in value.— Flour of 
etree lf into paym —7 ee 4i peng om ite it is but seldom our highest quotations: are realised, the bulk rse quality, 46s. 5 ‘Norfolk on Tomo Pred 
sides of th and then into payme e er going off.at the lowest, The lowing are this day’s quota- IMPERIAL BEANS, | Peis, 
pat Bor helis of e — ya e under | ons — ork Regents, 140s. to 170s. ; Newcastle and Stockto AVERAGES. ee 3 
— — —.— the transactions of each iepa- do., 100s. to 120.; Scotch do., 100a. to 120s.; Scotch Cups, 60s. to | Nov. 25........ | 51s 6d| 33s 2d 208 2d 30810 %ͤ 365104 403 6d 
Tate business. Thus as farmer you F 808.; ; Scotch Reds, 60s, to 80s.; Scotch Whites, 60s. to 708; Dec. 2 50 3 32 0 19 11 31 2 36 2 40 6 
. ᷑ͤ w . tO, to Pn — 9. 48 9 1 419 5 28 5 36 70 
ry pein including cattle, &c., and grain crop. And HAY. Pad ines Xa 36 Trusses, — O 47 6) 31 4 18 11 29 8 34 339 8 
shaving arra all your money transactions on the receipt SMITHFI an, 4, 3 47 6 31 418 429 1 33 7 38 1 
2 8 vou 8 9 taterior di — —2 N wont g to 13s | Serr R AN 50s to 90s — B00. | 46 10 31 3 18 0 28 6 33 11 35 
them on (Dr.) or subtraction (Cr.) In ew Clover — . 
sides (eo to speak) of these several heads. The gross balance | Row w 40 55 Stra 5 28 Agsreg. Aver. | 48 9 31 9 19 12 7 35 138 8 
would our financial position on the Sole matter — New Bay. r * on Fo- -e 
33 but A oe — al re thes The supply short, and the trade rather Fader. gn Grain 9 0 2 0/3 02 0 2 02 9 
è . leads are oe result i MBERLAND ‘MARKET, 4, 
~arrived at, 1 raph „ red row eror f — fey Seba Meadow Ba 7 „Jan. Fluctuations in T last weeks’ Corn e 
* ai pay ieee. COCR te 80 
Scales ery sn ome ene aur sain | rig at 8 ec Oe 
„ 5 —.— e to de- New prea s a ‘ 32 33 
Fori. upon it ina — sevens: — agg: Fo ve brag — 2 Old Clover . . 90 95 JosnvA BAKER. 50 8 3 525 a 55 * 
. now o aining a 8 3 e 5 “i asa 2 
. ton this subject. But there i SMITHFIELD, Monbax, Jan. I. ae we a sS gs 
* of — Noy a er eae der abject Bat menace We hove stirpe Se Beasts. ‘there isa good attend- | 47 6 s = FCC 
eeping must be developed in farm practice. Ance of buyers, but it is difficult to o og ance of price. | 47 H 0 an i * 
bape will find a good essay on the subject in the first 3 The choicest Scots realise rather ani —.— The number of 10 ve = ii * „ ae 
— 1 Agriculture which is to appear in a month | i pap- 
regen ow Panuzns: O . We know th parties, and so d London. Liverpool. || Wakefield. Boston. |r 
` e and so „ 
— doai win which we are in p be ee PRICES CURR NT. Jan. 2 Jan. 6 ||Dec.26)Jan. 2. Dec. 22 Dec. 29 Dec 27 Jan. 3. Dee 28 | Jan. 4 
amass Lass: Copy asks what ptr at > amare opi 1 ‘ g$ * gyi 8 108. qr. | qr. qr. | qr. 62 lbs. 62 Ibs. 
ridges or oo in Leicestershi wh ste E „8. 8. 8. S. S. 8. 8. è „ 8. 
shira. aie kooi Belis dia miea i 5 Wneat— New, red. 42 t04 4 to to to? to 45 to48 38 to44 38 to44 5s 6d | 6s Od 
_ from one another boys standing in adjace i white . = — 6 7 — 465040464046 6 6 | 6 6 
On Mawoninc : Inquirer. It would be more useful ploughed Oa, r pa — taji — 7 
in green. Your question we s presents be — e i . ei 
of a cut crop suffered to lie or be ploughed in; for unless its : Fo . tes aE = 92 ok al — |\46—48/46—48) 6 6 6 1 
— 3 the mustard would of course on 3 - reign any Sips A ares = =r — 35—48] — . * 0 7 * 
aih * 5 rass land is more benefited by de ing 480lbs. 480lbs. „. . ee 
being left untouched— because the Grass will Pot be. | Rye—New ts us —.23—28 
— — z. ge aamin 2 absorbs much 3 ot ee ae. SE Bai pare TTE pE 
and stores it upin vegetable matters * ie a fe eg = a ae po — n = * ots: 
a woody, and undecomposable, that it is long bet Foreign meal win) lbs aig ak = 
oasis’ a B. Our lance horses cat 10 pE = — — id — 
f ens: 4 B. Our large horses eat 1 Barley—G indi 2 $ i 
~ Tay, an d'about di. o of Carrots a day 3 n ae — | — | = || — 20 e 2420 23 
e e eee, e DE a — e a 
of lean stock now derived, and are suc lies a S = ED ee S awe oe 25 
increase or decrease ? h supp on the 6 bush. 6 bush 
dams : J F Cator. Apply 40 or 50 l. ag. — oa o ah T a S — 
‘dung and ditch scraping now ; and 100 bushels of limemixed Sc ee e, att oe a ee 
2 a a, o 
tice to tin apparently impoverished soil, Oats— White j : 
Poxp Mop: W H. We do not know Mr. Braine’s address, The Black sr er 16-22) — — 8 Gd — | — ||17—24/17—24 30 18—30 
m dug out and led into a allowed to drai ack k Zi A 7 4\17—24 3 
poe wre arated drying is turned over, broken . — Foreign... 2 a — 16— 19 12 
rt wee ore 1720 — — — — — — — eee. 
Pourray : Ar & has sent us a communication for “North. | Peas— Boilers 30—3 = = 
Boiler... 8032 — — 4040 5 
e ee, e e eee 
leaven, which is the agent of fermentation. If Apple juice oe ee Se — — — — 
3 — anes in s Soie, in Ba n Similar 
that which is observed i 7 Scar Beans New, small 
cider is boiling o ort. * é —.26—34 — — |36— — |39324193 39193 f 
catia bition — — bo „ Longpods, &e 8 32—34623—3223—3211—14 — 
. p it d to employ all the ferment, e * : ae = = Az 2 = ee gE ar E 
See ane g , We ZZ „ 
6 ve nef iseen a ropy — e 85 1 bem apie — 29—32 red ee ga or 
certain : “i 
F O Saa ehg .. (WOES Q ns | Tk 
—.— r dae J be 5 3 — 3 Bios Se 3 e 
1 . 
any time during w rl in Gry weather. Parsnips are Clover me per cwt.35——44; — — . ua aiia — 
— — pope that te tee are better per ton ek — — * oni 
more generally grown, nson thi 2 ee Sat pee a = 25 
Tus onks: W W W asks—Can 
1 any of corresponden 
= Sauer bern — j required 18 starring a trick — 
nnn to be informed: he thier 2 of this —+ 
Prone ped oe ete 
be necessary. 1 have some idea ‘euch that would 
for otber ph A E coal erecting a steam-engine 
. : make app to : 


g 
Jou would perhaps state also at wh — 
and building bricks might be ome expense r pipes 
that e readers could furn ish, 


COVENT GARD 
ES SEREN, sarit 


uffic pples are 
= T pry been —— 
5 est Vegetables, Carrots Tesis are | 


1—1849.] 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZE 


— 


TTE. 15 


= we . 
ROM 

4 N ll ll “Auction, at his 
l Si se y aces at his 


of the best sorts, 


Belgium, to be sold w. Aae . 


COTCH SEED OATS.— The Subscribers = 3 
at their disposal, during the ensuing sea-on, FEE ATS | 
= the different varieties cultivated in the Nor th of $ ames | | 
reand unmixed, direct from the principal Agriculturiste in | 
2 counties of Ross, 5 T aon Aberdeen, and which 
can be forwarded to Lond r Newcastle, and thenc 
per railway to any part ot gta dg To prevent disappoint- 


DICKENS’S NEW CHRISTMAS BOOK. 
This aay is 3 P Five Shillings, elegantly bound in 
= Illu cad D CLARKSON Bionde kne- R. A., 
phe 


and Jonn T 
D 


MAN AND THE’ wag ye ed 
Teneon: 


5 — 
HE HAUNTED 


: A FANCY ror CHRISTMAS. TIxE. By C 


BRADBURY and Fyays, 11. Bouverie-street, 


ment, at PPAR is requested. — BENNETT, TAYLOR, 
and Co. Aberdee 


sale, and Catalogu 


— eo 
ee 4 NUR SER T MEN, d Oth 

N, GE LEMEN, N an ers. 

en ag 3 of eiaa s, Azaleas, New Fuchsias, 

Pre rbena te Rhododendrons, and choice Greenhouse 

lant 
Mi e en will — by rea on TUES- 
win 


f 220 J 
o’clock precisely, 
pe postal i es, the eure $ am ewa 
under peed of . t, for the benefit of his we shy ab 
veplendid collection of 5 Rhododendrons (lately 
sorted), Azaleas, fine ico Plants, choice Berantem. 
limbers, last year’s ias s, new Verbenas, select collection 
f Phloxes, 3 nd other Potted Plauts ; 
a amental Shrubs. 


b 
ress, Hyb 
2 Fetus othe ses, & e erection of Ca- 
nellia, Specimen, Propagating, and other Houses; i 
rames, Lights, Hot-water 3 &e. ay 4 ee 
three days previous and morn Sale, Catalog yb 
had on nk Premises ; at the Windmill Inn, Salthill; Pighung 
Cocks, Maidenhead ; uers Inn, Uxbri ridge 3 . — rded 


ser, 
—N.B. The Stock i in the 1 4085 paken 
of 


15 t, E 
which due notice 


wil de z ited o? Sold i in the ensuing week, 
will be 


cat BUCK 
To Noblemen, PE nia akory Builders, and others, 


MAS STEP PHENSON vill A sal by Auction, — 
2 


mainder of 7 N NU RSER’ STOCK, tery —.— 1400 
choice Standard and Dwarf — 500 Hyb and — 
Rhododendtuns kún and American fies — Evergree 
Ornamental, and Deciduous Shrubs ; tine large specimen Portu. 
Laurels, Au cuba, Hollies, . Ber we Box, Lil 


8 4 
5 


sale. ad o 
2 Salthill; Fighting Cocks, Maiden hàd; Chequers Inn, 
Uxbridge, or 'forwarde ed by post, upon spp ation to the Auc- 
tioneer ard App r, High-street, Eton, 
ABOUT 200 p UPLAND MEADOW HAY OF 
UPERIO OR QUALITY. 
R. PE Y begs to inform the Publie he will 
mi 


S. 


(who wi : > he princi- 
al Inns in the nei — at the King’s Head, Cumber- 

Market; Ram, Smithfield 2 d Lion, 8 Brick- 
layers’ Arms, Kent-road ; and o f Mr. PEIsLEY, Houn 


CHEAP AND DURABLE ROOFING. 


ROYAL LETTERS 


BY HER 


MAJESTY’S Ba PATENT, 
Base gS FS 
M‘NEILL anD > Co., of bene bange Bunhill- 
bd ay apes the Manufacturers and aed wee es ot 
ASPHALTED FELT FOR R 
Houses, Farm Buildings, PUn 3 — for Garden 
purposes, to protect Plants from F 
At the-Great National Agr N u Shows, it is this Felt 
which has Deen 9 oe obtained TWO SILVER MEDAL 
PRIZES, and is the 


Roya BOTANIC GARDENS, N B Pa: 
And on the 2 of the Dukes of . No rfolk 
land, "Newest tle, Northumberland, Buccleuch (at Ricboond), 
the late Earl Spencer, and most of the Nobility and Gentry; 
Koyal Agricultural Society’s House, Hanover-square. 
It is half the price 8 any other description of Rooting, and 
effe ber in the construction of Roofs. 


$ 


*,* Samples its Use, — Testimonials 
of seven years’ experience, with references 5 Noblemen, Gen- 
tlemen, Architects, and Builders, sent free to any part of the 
town or 8 and orders by post —— 
The Publie is cautioned that the only Works — London 
or Great Britain 
Patent Felt Manufactory, n ee. 
London, elt muy be s 
The new w Vice-Cha neellor’ i Courts, a ihe entrance to We 


st- 


o years since, under 
R A. Her Majesty’ 585 mission 
80 sananen sti Be result that ‘chess 8 ordered the Com. 
mittee Rooms at the Houses of Parliament to be roofed with 
their Felt. Geaipties 8 used, 24,000 feet. 
— Consumers e — — to the Factory can be 285 
plied in lengths best - uited t r Roofs, so that they pay for 
no more than they require. 

affor e 9 of Roofs, or 
ny proposed particular application of the Fel 
In Weekly Numbers price 2d., Stamped 3d., and in Monthly 
Parts. 


HE COTTAGE GARDE 


ER; or Amateu 


“Gardeners’ Alman ictionary,” &c. 


THE FRUIT "GA RDEN. By . ERRINGTON, 
Gardener to Sir P. Egerton, Bart., Oulton Pay 
THE FLOWER GARDEN. By r. J. APPLEBY, 


Floricultural Manager to Messrs, Henderson, Lapewire tok’: 
THE KITCHEN GARDEN. Byt the EDITOR, and 
Rolle, at Bicton. 


W1 ee —— 


Adv vertisements are received at ihe Office >t ae 
Cottage Gardener, e. Ph Strand, and No. 2, Amen-co 


TS a DISPOSED OF, a KUNE = SEED 
Be aes <n ne clas ss, in one of th 


n counties, 
a valuable ene een 


— Wa F. * 1 8 Corn l; or 3 NOBLE, Fleet- 
peen Arey © will explain the reason of the Proprietor relin- 


BEL TO FLORIST 
ET, a SMALL HOUSE, with Greenhouse 
dhl te ae Paradise.row, Rotherhithe. A goo 
wor 
Ketsey, 72, Paradise-strees, eee . 


— —-— 
ENLARGEMENT OF THE “ WEEKLY DISPATCH,” 


48 


Saturday morning, = — me by the 
Morning Mails, so th rsons residing in towns 250 nies 
from London may receive 11 the same evening. An EXPRESS 
EDITIox of the Dispatcu is published cee shh —— ae 
NOON, containing News direct trom Paris, a r parts 


TO GRAPE G GROWERS AND FLORISTS. 
120 LET, wich immediate poss cession, a series of 
N eran PITS; 92 gun Sor upw — 
al d on, t 
—— —— . — e it ee 
bg de rt of B 


pa, 
The > Opportunity y otter Sred is me 
ge uable collec 
cleat ere ima and tl 8 in will only eae 
by. applying 885 8 Tun particulars may be obtained 
pee Be. Joun CHEEs 30, ” Devons hire- 


Pars: 


before tee 


Max, jun., 


LIFE PILLS are ‘acknowledged to ne 
orld, This Medicine nag rt 

* few years, and perhaps in — 

seen “success — to their pro- 

eat acknowled; 


wily bro veh be praise, 
continun — t before — 5 ic 
which —— ; the 


— "thelr 3 
oment there is scarcely a country 


hen than cic pate: . —.— be er. 
eee 


Government 
of the of th 


Va. to Pean 


ged | s 


H matte 
E all p parts or the earth. 


the Continent, up to po o’Clock on Sema Eve — 
Orders should be given early to Mr. Bec HARD Woop, 125 
Pleskutrect, or to any of the New e 


w ready, price ls. 6d. 
2 pene tg DRAINAGE ica boca Stet and 
as a Motive Power 
for 5 . — . red By E. LEADER 
C. E. and Acting Engineer to the Severn 


WILLI ret 
Commiss 

JAS. 5 Piccadilly; — Worcester; FLETCHER, 
Norwich; and all Bookseller 


t Published, price 1 
Tenth ee m PETER LEO, Esq., A.M. &e. de. & e. 
London: don s, 196, Stran id, and ail Booksellers. 


HE THE ANGLO-SAXON MAP ni Published in 
„Ed., THE ANGLO-SAXON ; being a Pro- 
a new 0 Publication — to be devoted 
rs of general a to the ant nse R Race” in 
wp of the 
World, colour — so as to dieting +h every spot on he Eurth's 
surface in the Anglo-Saxon Teme is dominant; an 


| Tis 


HE OMBROLOGICAL ALMANAC for 1849 (its 5 


wW 
3 ne an Saares 88, 
Mes ONGMAN and Co., Paternoster. row, London. 


LICO.—Just publish 
TREATISE ON THE PRAC Toan AND cU CUL- 
for 1 


AL CARE ~~ E: e een 
th or advantages of Early Cut sree 
espe iM e Authors in 
Disense and raising Potatoes from See — By ABRAHAM 
and Sons, Seed 2 i Maldon, Essex. Price 6d. or pos — 
stamps equivalent, free by post to any part -R United 
Kin . 


— 8 
— 
ot ta, 


wing 
Ha refer- 
ng 


stamp, pasted gemy ak 5 to! 
— Lenke? 


Now Reacy, in imperial quarto, 
A SERIES OF DRAWINGS Oe STONE, 


1 RI SIN GENERATION. 
By JOHN LEECH. 
Forming a * and amusing Christmas Volume 
or the Drawing-room Table. 


In an nluüstrates Cover, 3 me Twelve Prints, price 
10s, 6d., or 18. each fel pte el 
Pun FFICE, 85, Fleet-street. 


In one brite Svo, illustrated with numerous Steel Wagravitige 
na Woga 2 by the Author; price 215 cloth, 
I 


By W. M. THACKERAY, 

“Mr. Thackeray’s path os reminds one of the Wee 
touches Bal a, in Biyi 8 Amelia.’ Time 

“We littJe prepared the dee eep 
wisdom, ie the * 3 ak which Mr. Thackeray has 
interwoven in the ed —— ure and whimsical pattern of 
Vanity Fair.“ It is on e most amusing books we have 
read zor for yay r 2 year. "= Quarterty Review. 

yan s, 11, Bouverie-street. 


“ i oe pee cae COB” IN ENGLAND. 
— 2 3 sda wee 


Price 
Stamped 4d. Being “the F Fer ende of Vol — ‘the Sixtee 
JUNCH’S ALMANACK FOR 1849, Price Sd. 3 ; 
Stamped 4d., beautifully illustrated by Joun LEECH and 
RICHARD DOYLE. Also now ready, price 8s. Cd., in cloth. 
pe UNCH, 


en saree FIFTEENTH. 
e, 85, Fleet-st 
~~ Fourth Edition, * 0, 10s. | ai; cloth lettered, 


LEBIG'S CHEMISTRY, IN ITS APPLICA- 


e 
z the straight sank of W philosophy, the conclusions. 
ch are n from its ke meget are incontrovertible, We cam 


ean 
London e WALTON, and MABERLY, 28, ‘Upper Gower- 
street, and 27, Ivy-lane, Paternoster- row. 


e e. FIELD FLOWERS — The First 
mber of a New § —— “aa this 8 Work hong 
published on February 1. 


5 


contain, as th 
furmer series did, 16 2 8 eee and 1 cence 
group of Flowers, and will appear on the Ist of every month, 
until — volume is completed. Price 
London: HovLston and STONEMAN, 65, Paternoster-row. 
This day is published, in fcap. 8vo, price 
N THE USE oi LIME IN AGRICULTURE. 
By ES F. W. Jonneton, M. A., F. 
rof 1055 Royal — è ec oF ieai 
* Lectùres on Agricultural Chemistry and 
Geology, a 20 


AM Bus cKWoop and fons, = meree 22 London. 


out bly. 

the Elecrie e, the Ter ut's 

technic Institution 
ja 


Year; True Fr eedom 
neeze; the 8 the ‘Minister, and 
r 3 
ful Receipts Trif es; ures, e Gard 8 Friend; 
the Boa cawik s Friend; die. ahi e Friend, & c: Famil 
Cautions ; Interesting Statistics 5 2 1 Pa ume; Questions 
5 by the } ditor, Ke. Åc 0.— cimen Number alore 
can con = 
the wor 
London: HorLsrox and STONEMAN, and all Booksellers. 
CHRISTMAS FESTIVITIES.—The gaiety tl that 
ig e at the s Ae oe a 9 oe 
the year onets i the fair and youthful te be more than usu 4 
desiro pes — 1 in Senani attraction w while hha ate 
e clear and transparent com and t 
b —— admirable trephies of the — 
WANDS 000810 C OIL. 


25 — ret rat tee 
virtues of 
KA R. 


2 and —.— ihe a celebrity un- 
an be more re- 


S IMITATIONS S. 
mplied sanction of Royalty and 

— . — similar — ati 

tion. he name of “ROW- 
Ds. is i that of the 3 on the Wrapper or 

Label, with their 2 at the foot, in Red Ink, thus 

OWLAND & SONS. 

tton-garden 


Sold by them at 20, iat and by every re- 


„London, an 
spectable Chemist and Perfamer — the Kingdom, 
ASTHMA of 14 years’ stand- 
2 ted 


[JAN. 6 


CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL’ GAZETTE. 


7 
dka 


16 THE GARDENERS 


; AND HIS MAJESTY, 
FLORISTS TO HER MAJESTY, 


QUEEN VICTORIA, THE KING OF THE BELGIANS, 


SELECT LIST OF. CHOICE VEGETABLE AND FLOWER ‘SEEDS, 13 


GROWN AND SOLD 


WILLIAM E. RENDLE & CO., Plymouth. 


ESTABLISHED 17 86. 


i ones full 1 befi eur and prot thé remainder from Seed Growers on 
Great attention is paid to the Seed Department of ou ae ag o s t e pleasure PA 
Dien tae tan oes Wis Alaa cond lyi 107 5 Pidi hould ata be made, we si much į nding thre 
times the value in other Seed . and w a 1 and vi pnd y a 1s I . n r e ide r of. And it is P particule ly desired that any bp ahaed in quantities, OF . 
attention to orders, be at all times te at Britain and Ireland, who have procured Collections fro and can 8 


+ 


ed to 
“UNSOLICITED Testimonials of the po wer manne of i hoe 


COLLECTIONS OF GARDEN SEEDS, 
Te NING ALL THE CHOICEST SORTS, OFFERED AT THE FOLLOWING Big np x E 
No. 1 Collection 0 Quarts of 8 and all other Seeds in N for one = s supply wee £2 92 — 
* ee mig srs it “maller eTa . s : 
0. 3.— * 


No, 4. cae 


ee eee 


ditt 
THE GROWING QUALITIES ‘OF EACH KIND ‘OF SEED IS PROVED BEFORE SENT our. 


DIES IMPROVED MODE OF PACKIN 


G GARDEN SEEDS. 


SS eee be: Aes See, 


We have the pleasure of 3 hy e notice of the Nobility, 2 and the Public generally, OUR NEW MODE OF PACKING SEEDS, W e 
enn be no tsent mode of sending o be * ing a p P ae he 6 
; contents ofa peasy sowing, the remainder ag apped and placed away ‘(probabl y) in the garden house, and is 3 n to ve ‘destroye A * wou 
‘vermi: nd if the weather should. the time of sowing, the names viia be: obliterated, and hence would arise confusion of sorts, and.t sy mia i ap 
ji codstquentiy usel In order to pe against these defects, we have m T s “n 4 a: ke to pack MAN 
Labels will 1 ie to = case with the names printed in full. The expense will be trifling in comparison e benefit reeled ae 2 will undertake to p 


N named ‘above (except P. Nos. 1 g= 2, at 10s, each, „extra. Nos. .3 and 4, at Ts. Lb A The Sheek, ge being. patpi 
i , how they w 


will be useful for many. purpo aT í 
N B. Purchasers will b wish their seeds pack ; 


The following witt 5450 Sorts and Quantities furniched for a No. 1. COLLECTION, and contains a general assortment of all the best kinds of Vegetables 
have been serorea th serupulon 3 Jar 4 gk i 
2 — itendle’s first Barly Green BROCCOLI—}-0z. Grange’ s Early Dwarf Cape —— Sey mour's Superb White ONION—2 oz, James’s eeping 
Early ne — „ Early Pu ape = Be se napaten pon ` ver-skinn 
4 Early Packet Adam’s Superb White w ury Walnut-flavoure f 
2 » Packet Legg’s Late Dwat White | CRESS— 1 w. Curled PARSLEY—4 oz, pate teh cu 
2 „ Bedman' s fren: ot E i True Walcheren . Rendle’s aan Ridge 
1 „ Flack’s Dwarf Victory Aas Cha pee Cream Sion Hou PARSNIP—2 oz, | Improved Guernsey 
2 „ Scimi „ Rendle roved W illeove Fine Barly Frame RADISH—4 oz, Wood’s Earliest Frame 
4 „ Blue Prussia CABBAGE—half-oz. Shillings Mpritish Quien: DELAWARE GRE . — nod : 55 Barly Scarlet 1 
1 „ Knight's Dwarf Marrow . Wheeler's Imperial ENDIVE- x. oz. Gre White and Red Turnip i 
1 pint V Branching Marrow sign Reale’ Barty Admirable | LEEK—2 oz. Fine Targo “Broad-leaved Scotch SPINACH=1 ib. Round i: 
1 „ Bishop’s Early Dwarf — Early Corn LET TUCE—aqr.-oz. Green Y lb. ie only 
BEANS,4 arts. Early White Lo d r.-0z. Large Pa my qr.-oz. Ady's Pies Coss TOMATOES—ar. F 
„ Green Windsor half.-Oz. Fart = — Bath Coss TURN erg oZ. i. Rendle $ 
„ Jobnson’s Wonderful = Red Dutch (pickling) N come 4 Early White Dutch N 
1 pint Scarlet — 0. rng 5 s Ear rt hless . 4 „ White 8 * 
„ Dwarf SAVOY—half. — . Gree 5 — Tee 5 x » Yellow Alkrincha m a 
BEET—} 0%, Rendle’s coca Crimson Packet Cattell’s 9 Curled ae Six Weeks Yellow ae 
oz, Whyte’s Black Red CARROT— 8 Earliest Horn (for frames) MUSTARD=1 Ib. VEGETABLE ‘MARROW —qr.-o7. _ 
o. Silver or Sea ey proved Al am MELON— —— Dunn's —.— Flesh HERBS— Tr dee Basil 
BORECO z. Dwarf * mes’s Gre Marjoram 
acket Green Cabbaging „ White Belgian oro, — White 8 — PR isast: Savory A 
BRUSSELS SPROUTS—}-oz. imported ovrig tt! Oz. Large Asiatic Red De eptford „ Thyme a 


IL CO 


PEAS—1 quart Rendle’s First Early Green BRUSSELS SPROUTS_qr-o mported ONION—Hhf. oz. Silver Skin 
1 „ Early Prince Albert BROCCOLI—pckt. proves s pede Dwarf Cape rge Manchester Red PARSLEY—2 — Rendle's i b 
2 * Warwick 5 arly Purp’ w bes ape CRESS— half lb. curled PARSNIP—1 e oved . 2 
1 1 e Wal UCUMBER—packet Rendle's Fine » Ridge RADISH—2 oz. Wood's Ear sa 
1 80 TASAN w 5. Fine Early F 4 „ Baniy Anara 1 
a 5 „ Adam's Le White DELAWARE GREENS—gr oz. 2 „ White and Red Turnip 
te pore CABBAGE, „ 8 British Queen ENDIVE—hf.-oz. Green Curled SPINACH—hf.. a Round 
1 5 ; LEEK—1 oz. Fine » Largo Scotch . Prickly 
i „ Rendle a Easily Admirable | LETTUCE—qr.-o —— TOMATOES— Pa acket 
” k qr. „ Bath Cos TURNIPS— : oZ. Renate fog: A = 2 
ai ” „ Red Dutch (pickling) if Drambess Cabbage 3 White D 
y VOY—hf.-oz. Green ed qr. White Cabbage 0 > Teller . — 
i pint ‘earlet Runners CARROT. 1 oz. Earliest Horn, (for frames) MUSTARD—hf.-lb. Whi veep ani 1 * ket p 
Improved Altringh MELON—packet Green Flesh Packet t Bas 
e’ ò 8 Celine oz. 


BEET—hio. Ren — 


LLEOTI . 
CELERY—Packet 5 8 on Superb White 


55 — oram 


-oz. Silver or Sea Kale * eptford ” 
oz, Dwarf Curled —— qr.-oz. London Superior 1 ,, James’s Long Keeping — Savory 
PEAS quart E ick BRUSS 1 eee aka 
| ELS SPROUT * | CUCUMBER—Packet Rendle's Fine Rid PARSNIP—1 oz. Improved Guernsey ji 
epeen Marrow BROCCOLI—Packet Grange’s Early Dwarf Fine Barly P Fr aie. RADISH— 2 oz. Wood's Early Frame 
i — Bedman's Imperial „ Adam's pes mh White DELAWARE | GREENS—qr-o „ Barly Scarlet 
I pint Blue Scimitar True e Le s» White and Red Turnip 
1 „ Rendle’s First Early Green „ Rendle’s Improved Willcove | LEEK—1-oz. 5280 1 lange Scotch SPIN AH OZ. — — 
2 quarts | CABBAGE padie 3 LETTUCE—Packet Green Coss TOMATOES—Pac 
‘a 1 pint Bishop’s Early Dwarf eva Imperial „ Bath Coss TURNIPS—1 oz. Rendle’ s Early 6 Weeks St 
BEANS—1 quart . w Bar „ Drumhead Cabbage „ Ear utch 
1 „ Green Windsor Š Rendle P- Early Admirable | White Cabbage > White 
1 pint Jobnson’s W | CARROT—1 * "Barlies 3 MUSTARD—4 hite yzat ABLE MARROW. Packet 
n n neater Fa — a a Altringham — a Packet Green Fl Flesh HERBS—Packet —.— Basil (A 
” è ? * a. 
wen te fe e. e re ae, . B , 
— Packet Seymour's Superb White L 8 Su Sa 2 
BORECOLE—nhf,-oz, Dwarf Curled CRESS—4 rled PARSLEY1 oe Rendle’s Treble Garnishin g ammer 4 
5 5 8 IV. V, COLLECTION, —Somewhat similar to Collection No. III., but in smaller = 
if e not required in the above Collections, rai quantities of those most desired could be sent. 
| — CHOICE VEGETABLES. a 
The following ae ORWARDED FREE by Post, at 6d, per Packet, or Twenty Packets for 8% 
BEET. 221 88 1 —+ L | BROCCOLI Rendle’ Im e | CABBAGEnte Market = I 3 Large * Cabbage 
te’s Black Red equal late White variety—un- 9 A — —— (a valuable Early | LEEK—Large ä pas 
BORECOL a (valuable new | — . chy i SAVOY—Cattell’s 3 Curled (superior to m pak = 5 277 
BRUSSELS Si SPROUTS- Truo » Imported aiuabl sarin omen e common kind Tee Cabbage 
Warn 


_ BROCCOLI- a T 


pated. vg Altringha 


on Market 
ONION—T: ag — 1 
s Superb “White (a 1 a 3 AULIFLOWER—Large Asiatic PARSLEY— rae Spa ’s er 
cember vni gy ready in Shilling’s British Queen T Superb White Myatt’s Extra 
i att’s True Walcheren (saved Borne, 2 Nes Early pais Dee very Veen i avoured 18 improved Guernsey eee 
b ut- Eog 
e pn Mr. for gine the celebrated 5 5 (an Immense | COUVE TRONCHUDAN(Valuable new Vege- Terie Ma cuba were i 
CUCUMBERS—ARNOTT': 8 SURPRISE. We have but M lim 
y nited supply of this Splendid Variety. 9 18 to 20 inches in len London, hangi — 
i fi 292902 77 — — Packet, free r be recommended as one of the finest and most yet sc — eee „ ee 
ae 7 — 8 2 a “ae news Wopen. e, Improved Sion HoUsE, CKW00D (Fine Ridge), WEEDON’s FINE FRAME, CHARLTON Eno 
MELONS—Dowean’s GREEN Frreu, Beecuw: and 2 Gawen 
„% All Orders above 21. will 


or Liverpool, 


way 3 to all of England Scotl d have ma 
E our r Castomers fan Caen tr in ae reat Britain. re instance of of Overcharge reat — be i 
ge che: pitied 8 the King Constant Steam communication from this Port to © 
wis E. RENDILE- AND C0, Prem 


Great Western, 
—.— 


Bristol, and Exeter, or South Devon 


leamers. 


n 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, JANUARY 13. 


[PRICE Gd. 


No 2.—1849.] 


E EEDS. — ALL PURCHASERS OF BAREEN AMES CHARTRES b i 
egs m * 
Hippeastrum aulicum. . . . .. .. 22 N SEEDS —4 refer to last week’s Gardene J form the Nobility, Gent > 3 . sane 3 
a | Iee-houses . .. 21 4, 22 a—23 Chronicle, on the back Ad TY, generally that 
i segne . ck page of which is his CATALOGUE OF SEEDS is now ready, and will be for. 
; Lawes (Mr. r.) and agri. chemistiy 2 ¢ RENDLE’S NEW CATALOGUE, 
b R r il tl A copy can behad | _ J. C. og ther begs to add that g firs 
4 Pheasant ah — *** 4 on application to WILLIAM E. RENDLE & Co., Seed Merchants, Early rue to their kinds : Warner rs E mperor, Girling’s 
aes 22 3 | Plymou Danser, e . and Fairbeard's 3 of 
ce! 19 x in illiam-street, ict 
25 NNINGTON’S PEARMA 
E AMES CAMERON, NURSERYMAN Uekfie Id, Sussex, 
22 1 begs to inform his friends and the ‘public that hei is now 
9 ready to send out ar 8 that most excellent APPLE, — 
oe si 11 a. 71 e by Tek fila, ax 0 PAE rio ington’s Pearmain,” a seedli ing raised 
Climate, terrestrial . 1 “2 22 4 | at Uckfield, an 8 confined ide’ fa to this locality. It vol a 
— No numberi . 196 wi aromatic 
vd 5 k T 21 e | flavour, superior in cele opiate to rn Ribstone k and OSLING’S ST. AL y 
i 22 Slug feeding oeoo; b 5 $ 255 keep even to the end of May., It has been poke —— J jatuna b Pe BAN’ 5 GRAPE, = Same as 
; Tithi N LINDLEY, Gardeners’ Chronicle of 8. Plants e Queen, Prince Albert, Committee of 
Tr hema — ‘Seed nm S ot this Appie on can 1 obtained, Dwarf Maidens, 4 4 5 10s. 6 . each, 4 oe f Lo a ae * R, Thom 
eee e aiis a by application as above, or to Messrs. Gray, Adams, and H ? er n, Fine- apple Nursery, an e editor of the 
33 26 rymen, 7 — on- park, Kensington, Lond ey 8, Gardeners’ Journal, as being distinct and one of the best i 
Walls, garden 3 old planta, 7 4 -y old pl 10s, 6d, each; one year 
eners whi Wheat, 5 wo slugs from..... 2) | wal BAS, e OG; CRC riag e to Lo ne 
Hedge for a maze . 24 C| Wheat sowing, economy in . .. 29 4 GurERion NEW 1 SEE DS ected. The usual all if tł tal 
Carriage free by Pickford and Co. Per quart May y be h ad of any respectable Nurseryman, or the grower, 
2 ROBERT JoszIxe, Seed St. Alb 
(GARDENERS BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. U af Begin Pons... 28. 6d. Prise y EE 
MEETING of the Subscribers to this In Ail be held Bollar s erly — 5 Avi 
the Subscribers to this In — wi —— ellamy’s Early n Marrowfats, fine flavour, dark ETER 
Wedne vag Ss 1 17th January, at the London Costs oase, 83 een — early ons AE TH, Nuxserrman, Falkir 
Ludgate, for 22 lecting officers for the ensuing “< Marrowfats, tlie best. late Pen Pii stock, from two to three millions of transpl 
ear, and msn Be the accounts of the Charity for the past year. „ LARCH plants of l ry at the following gt per 1000: 
he chair rhe wan at-12 o’clock 3 An Election for Thom psv Early Dwarf 61 to 12 inches) „ e | — to 10 inch 6d. ; 13 foot, 7s.; 2 feet, 6d, ; 24 
— o Pen 2 sioners afterwards plac m amon gt the fol- Cormack’s —.— Quee as 2 0 pA se ras "OF. ted K feet 8 3 feet sizes, than are above 
ing Can ates, wi — se testimonials — e dan Cormack’s Prince Albert *. 0 10 ot them, which are we both the Scotch 
approved of bythe Co een examine lack’s Dwarf Vict ry, ‘fine 1 EST and En nglish markets, and as it is now well known that strong 
i Name. i te’s Queen of sone bet ry fine arge . Aa 1 are —— in the 3 early applic 8 
w. z Goan. 1 56th icati ee ee Larches is 
T te Lae the cory bent Wh OS Peg toe 2 . the a they Yo mein af be Bits vadoni eee 
Sao eR T 
e am q 'ON’S stoc. A EEDS A zan 2 e 
3 83 — . ; 72—3rd m is very yore in al of which are of home growth, and the | lm — 2 — — eg — Ter A S 
* LES AINSLIE ... Tayin, Essex. — 3 B mia B mete oo tag a Mie vir: con if — 1 1 fo oy sant 14 foot, and 2 feet, Bs. 83 Ta Fi : 
OHN APPLEBY Clapha . . * seh gh e 3 urled s. d ot, 14 foot, and 2 feet, 4s. to 58.; Oaks, 24 feet, ; 
ROBERT DUNCAN Highgate us 3 ” ' Lettuce : . , 2 0 Pars 4 Elm, Alder, and Beech, 3 feet, 8s. 6d. ; Ash, 2 feet to 4 ee a 
OGILVIE NEIL ne, 80—2nd ” Sutton’s superb Green 1 4} to 58.3 ; seedling Pinus „ 2 years, 3s. A very large stock 
Houmparey Taxtoz . Clapham a fe one „ Cos do . p. Oz. 2 0 Selected Scarlet bal transplanted Thorns very cheap. A ae or reference 
Jauss B eo bondit X 68 t 1 2 Dark woe ee ata Carrot 3 . P. Oz. 0 4 accompany a — rom unknown correspon 
DWARD BEACH Gloucester |... 74—Ist y — 
Jonn Cock j4 True Walcheren ‘Sauli. „oz. 0 4 PLANTERS. 
R N H ae » lower... p. 08. 2 0 5 Imper rial Gab. W. DRUMMOND 1x0 SONS, Nursery and SEEDS- 
teamed RUDLAND é Dartford, Kent a — sip an geen i 4 1 D f a „ 0 4 1 tock oF FOREST et ES, 8 sane for disposal 
OHN PHERD 01 ingOnion, be s’s Dwarf do. 30 a large s . 

Th New bor ra ye 0 6 | Shilling’s Queen do. ,, 8 ANSPLANTED LEADING SORTS, 

The Come — commence at 1 . Hamm ao pe Fine Frot pa io.’ Oak and Beech, in sizes, 1} to 3 feet 18s. to 27s. per 1000 
actiptt 8 sna request those Members e sub- Grose 5 0 9 Ash, Elm, and Plane, do. do. 158. to 188. „ 
poh * yet unpaid, to remit the same without delay, | Snow’s Winter White 2 Seymours Sold ‘White Larch, common, do, 1 to A feet f 9s. to 14s, 

person will be allowed 
A nepali ou the e for me P. Oz. 1 6 „p. o. 1 0 yroleae, do. 0 
Epwazp Rocer Co uel ie 4. . 5 Farrirgdo Tiu eg Late White 3 Suttoni — do. —.— Fir, do. 9 to 18 inches 
> m-st., . . P- 2. 1 0 F ca fh 2 a 
WOODLANDS NURSERY, MARESFIELD, NEAR Howden’s superb Purple 75 4 Thorns 0 ki 3 yea 
FIELD, SUSSEX. . * 0 T 
W r WOOD axp SON have the honou int- Bany six weeks iorcing 1 6 0 
their Friends that their CATALOGUE of New and 1 pi 
Beteom i VEGETABLE, FLOWER, and AGRICULTURAL 5 . 
Tt will be found to os Le may esmga set on gee Berkshire 3 er Ove CUMBER ©. 7 | 3 Sula ety 
to alt N. B. Copies of T eae oa will be pap hl Victory of Bath es : g .Radish Pp. 02. 0 3 daß tho Seed of rey S Vic Pore OF BATH, and GOR. 
usual, to e aa Cuthili’s Black Spine MS og Beal's net Short-top DON’S WHITE SPINE,. E. Ter having last season meo seived 
Fon QUICK THORN, iar Bee woe d Melon . p. 0% sonenn we er 2 ‘the See m ali Jowa adar It pos- 
R SALE, 100 of the 4 3 p. P 0 4 Scarlet Olive do. ” g 3 | Sesses the whole o: t reg es è s aid down y Mr, Glèùny. 
„000 bein ars P. = a Parties competing t Piizcs at the for hes gad 
transplanted, and extraordi fine. Delivered 8 _ Most of th above kinds are included in Meesrs. SUTTONS | Cucumber Exhibitions 15 1849 a ld 155 5 the seed 
po de Watford Station, algal me ern Railwa 5 n GARDEN SEEDS E. T. has e de bas l. 
i Y e cg required, —ROoBERT 8 Se or 3 4, authoring hih — use * the sig, es if required, and 
—— iase GA rue Ashleaf Kidney, Chalmore veges een Baly speaking highly af the merits of he abe Cucumbers s over all 


HENRY DAVIS, of Ogle’s Grove Nursery, Hills- 
OGLE’S 8 255 PIPPIN. — 0 with- 
‘Temarkably wel one of =e abundant bearers, "keeps 
and ‘appearance. ‘ead suitable both for table and 


ling APPLE amed the OGLES Gi avery superior new seed- 
Aal the mo 2 June), is of first-ra 
he 
6d. * Meshes u 


Ons WELL-KNOWN EARLY RHUBARB. 
—_ Say eed io. yr ope RT Mg gas ihly de 
most prolific — and Sa — ree, with 


_—— and ae pare dl ee ny 2s. Gd. p 
HN SUTTON and Son 
rs in all 


4 anig on the 1 32 

E 

Berks. 

J.. T.:... . A S 

on, | GUPERB NE NEW „ —— 
rieties of Ranu 


superior and n ie Rovere, which 


the —— few years f from immense — s of seedlin ngs. 
* 
p- f $ 


or v 
e alder varie 
PENURCULUSES, —— ty post, with printed directio 
ting and culture. 
50 superb new —— named, 40s, ; 25 for app i 
63. 


3s for 


50 fine older varieties, named, 138. 25 for 8 
100 finest mixture, 10s. ; 8 100 fine, 5s., or, raip 
GLADIOL US. 
oe AS 8 early varieties, post free, 15s, 

endid mixed early hybrids, a „ or, post Sd. 

The — 55 varieties flower from Jun to August in the Ope an air 

are best planted 2 t delay. a 

h: Breach- 


TUBEROSE ROOTS. 
and fragrant Flower 


— Rah 
7 at A. * : 
3 7 A U e 1 — ds, free 


2s. 6d. 


An 
Gandavensis, large roots, 1s. 6d. eac 

Rosa Mundi, Ramosts 
Those at 2s, (d. and up- 


2 Gd. ; 
1 


— — 
ass and E> 
3 


having — many 8 been exten- x 


JoHN Sorvon and Sons, Reading Seed Warehouse, Reading, | 


ser 2 2 
pi : 


VICTORY OF BATH, 10 Seeds, 2s, 
CORDON 8 1 WHITE SPINE, 10 Seeds, 


Also, LORD 7 FAFOURITE peste * 
known as the 8 EE BE: be e very. papa to the old 
Syon House, as a Dabi for cultiv Seeds, 

* 28. 6d. or a et of the: ah el afire yeh The true 
old Syon H be in packets of 10 seeds for 18. Gd. 
For further particulais, s E's Advertii 1 
aper of December 16th. Ag. ‘tance n each 
order, either in cash or postage stamps to the 


ti cng t EDWARD TIET's General Seed Shop, 165 v. 16, Pulteney- 
ge, 
S aE OF — F- MOON STRERT. 


3 ha ini ëd 1, Ind light Sones and 
dy imme 80. y 


dames W 
Kent-road, ee 
FLO WER P. 
OHN MORTLOC! K 2 
5 thet he bas EY very lax 
e Kies ts varioas ee an ds P 
10 “Brey desert} CE 1 
a N Wan at the bee ra Broe, far 
50, G ford- 8 neat Hyde-p : 


65 20210 


18 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [JAN. 13, 4 


nity, GLASS: FOR 0 00. 1 | aaa 
Se ee e 
0 ithout, are su 5 GL 
4 K e gri white | OSEA WATERER offers the following very d desir. reduced Pries for en se * f — 
82 . or flarour. SU able plants. 4 feet high, RTICULTURAL eats FOR CONSERVATORIES, 
GREEN Cs, yery 7 ý t, broad toppe! — CEDRUS D — fine plants from seed, 3 to 4 fee ig oor TO SIZE UP 970 4 PRICES or SMALL 8 
close, without ty 1 apa are very sperlon Le Lettuces, INCHES LON HEET 
sufficiently shar to (stand 4 mrii ter, but 4 — — er » ” ype 4 padi whos Soe er i 16 of; from 3d. tod. — foot. In wee of 100 feet, 4 
without Funning to > Seed, each tha that it i idea to obtain | ARAUCARTIA IMPRIGATA, handsome plants, from 2 tò 3 21 „ 33 5 „ 6 by 4 a ae . 2 tl 
. Price 2s, per oz., of ls. per packet.—Address Jonkx feet, 42s. each. A fe w ve ery fine plants, from 3 to 6 feet, 98 „ 3 oe 7 by 5 oo 9 
gé y> Ke bs Lit other choice Seeds in era. ry from seed, 5 to 7 ft., 4 to 5 guis. 92 „ 93 „ 8 by 6 10 by 8. h 
. re, Scrron’s 0 c ‘om 
> ion ROUGH 1. GLASS for WIND DOWS, SKYLI 
the’ ist paso 8 i ney stot lanis, 2 2 ~~ 2 and FBO ORS in sizes not exceeding 5 feet supe erficial, GHIS, 
IUM SEMPERVIREN 855 
TO PLANTERS: TaXOD roe 6 feet 3 guineas ł thick’... per 2 9 Finch per foot 2 0 
-i inch 
SCRIBER has to 24 Po following | PINUS DOUGLASII, from — 14 to J feet, 55 each. inch . ...... ... I inch ... ..... . ..., 30. 0d. 
. Ngee e Ad TRE s z 2 to 6 feet, 215; to ginch $ 6 
6a. G ng r 1000 ie od. 0 MENZIESTI, $66 pfit, 428. to t "Oe — PATENT ROUGH ret dae ; 
ee e TST ee ee 8 „ INSIGNIS, 1} to? feet, 1s. Gd. each. rrol f cast. bald. | finch. ina 
2 15 o „ ö Plants, from iener, th AR O TA ae ia a E o r 20 
aliers, A — 7 e s ° nites, 8 aea g y 5 gúin GLASS DOMES for SKYLI GHTS, pole 15 to 50 inches ig 
3 ears 6 0 „ CEMBRA, 1 l fect, 102, to 15s: e diameter, These are well worth notice. 
Broom — ena 3 * reen,bedded,50 0 ” and very handsome plants, 10 to 12 | Siameter MILK-PANS, PROPAGATING GLASSES, an BiR 
2 2 Whitethorn, 1 yr., 28. to 3 0 GLASSES. 
—— — RNAMENT, ts.) o» CANADENSIS, or Hemlock rn LACTOMBTERS for trying the quality of Mile 4 beefy, 
TRANSPLANTED POREST AND ORNAMENTAL TREES. 1 5755 6a, 
eacins, hestnut, Spanis ee 05: per dower: 6 tubes 108.; einth Glasses an inth Ditte“: ; Crotts 
A Agi ae a 2 9 E 1000... 60s. 00 9 lar anger, 1 10 10 0 feet, 30s. gy ie Glasses ; Shades for Ornaments : Fish Globes; ; Plate ahd. 
Aah, 3% 9 Tees, p: 1000, 2 0 Chestnut, Horse, i, poke ” BXICELSA, 3 be: — tthe dave 4035 erag indow w Glass; ; LampShades and Chimneys ; and every artigle 
»» 4 to feet S feet; per 100 . 20 0 „  MORINDA, or Smithiana, 2 to 4 ft., 2s. Gd. to 5s. each, | in the tr AL Hak Pha 
Bike, toben 1080,39 ae Bto 4 feet, 12, perlo] WEBBIANA, 2 to 4 feet, 10s. 6 to-42s, each, HARTLEY'S PATENT ROUGH PLATE, AND PATENI 
tin, ere, > eet, 12s, per K NSAP 
gues ER pyn A eet, 16s. — 100 * 5 CEPHALONICA |i of the largest Aia moat DOUBLE CROWN GLASS. 
” eet, 27s. per 1 P LAMBERTIANA andsome plantsin the trade. / ß a T, A. ene 
4 pi * to 10 feet, 608. per 100 HART WEGII oe will be given on appli- GEASS FOR F Glass 
» 5 ; gay =~ 4c orie » MACROCAR a T s oe — plies — ing — 2d. * 
3 * ritis an 
” Hertiordshire, <4 $ the same prices per 1000 MACROCARPA per square foot, for the usual sizes required, many thousand 
Fir, § „2 to 3 feet, 50s, per 1000 nien EWS, 1 78. > — eet of which are ae ray pa — immediate dell 
„ Silver, 2 to 3 — ote. s. per 1000 ; 3 to 4 feet, 903; per 1009 Mae it often happens injured or rendered Tasse et Prices and estimates forwa n applic: om i 
Nestes 3 to dteet, 485 * 1000; 4 m0 5 feet, 50a per 1000 “unsightly ome plants her tendetiey to to divide in —— or sien 7 ROVER ae a TH THICK SOROWA GLASS, GHAS i 
s plants offered are grown from one stem | TILES an A Í 
Tia roa — phe nyse 8 to 10 feet, 705. ae only, —— to thos at Braten, which are the fines GLASSES, 3 Aue PANS, P PATENT | geome 5150 
feet, 1005. ORNAMEN AL l 
Maple, 2 to 3 ft., 25s. {ioe ; 122165 225 d.; 6 ek, 50s. CEDARS F “LEBANON, 2 — 1 fe = ett * and hand- to James HETLEY and Co., 35, Soho: —— ie — i 
Worwa, , Sto 10 feet, 2 ae: 3 i See ahd Gardeners’ Chronicle i miri — in ved ae $ 
Oak nglis 1 8. each, les srs. an ou : 
F = : 9 — "to E TRETE 2 < 1 i splendid plants.) dimes of at goma nna ce: Feet, i 
Pine. 3 to $ fee 1000 ; £ to 5 feet, 508: per 1000 | eo SRED 3 Tsi 6d. to 105, 6d. each. 1 Pine ery „ Bg k 
azy lak alan, 7 7 foot, 40s. per m D 8 to 10 feet, ie aoe 1 D canes ne Bom is 4 
s on 10 ‘at 10 ft. r 100 eac „„ i $ 
e 286° per 1000; Et fo 5 fet, 3i. pe er 1000 5 OnLNENEIE, Ato 5 fet Ts, 6d. to 10s, Cd, „ 
wa, to 905. 6 feet, yt aad „ ares A a ghee o plants "oto ez 21s. i Pit” er vie . SB ae TD 
Dea a site: destin Sle nd ak apg ceased aoince. ake ace 
Acacia Geben several Ane anon per dos; / „ TRISH UPRIGHT, AO 6 feet, e — LASS FOR GREENHOUSES, CONSERVA 
, 0 | 
Athather e a. $ to 9 feet, 125. per doz 2 om ese two last-named Junipers 0 to: be planted | Hothouse iS agg Nina tn FRAMES, @ ‘apie with 
8 a fine collection, 95 ook g REA one who has any place cee a lawn. 2 } Rough Plates èe 
% per d —.— description of 9 and — Glass; 2 — a 
. are tne gold-barked, Chinese, Hosa Wa yi a eng Ay ane one — Arbor Vite), | Glass Tiles, Propagating, Cucumber, and all oth a 
a, Ko., 129, Glasses.— Adress; T. 5 48, Leicester-square, pln i 
7 We wing in the 43 ‘qrobiid, are healthy z 1. 
eee 2 t0 n. 3 bob feet, 186. per and nee specimens ; ; they have never been in pots, and PRICES OF SMALL SQUARES IN BOXES OF 100 FEE i 
N +88. per doz, 50s, per 100 ; 3 to 4 ft., 10s, | CnSequently are the more desira! Squares under 6 by 4 . 10. 6d. * 55 at 
1 100; 0 5 fe 5 ft. „1 per dog,, 100s, per 100 | HOSEA WATERER would also wi attention to his stock 6 by 4 and Png 7 by 2 een 14 C n ; 4 
per doz. of large Spruce Firs, from 7 to 15 feet high ; large Red Cedars, iby 5 EEA O 2... o 18 6 : i 
Phillyræas, green and variegated Hollies, Common Yews, 4 to 10 by. S Soi 16: 0 > 
7 feet, fine Standard Weeping Limes, Weeping and Purple È — Sak of all qualities and 8 spate low. 
A* Standard Ma vollas Tulip T ees, & alf of which Are arse 
ag iy — — —Uä—ä— — e 
igen fe double scartet, dwarfs, 10s. a capital state for removing, ane be il reasonably. P tann —LITHIC AND OTHER DURABLE — 


, ready for use for FARM Buildings, 


fine, és. per dót; 40s, per 100 Park Fen ine White- 
Mountain Ash, 5 to 6 ft., 128, p e 100 ollection of AMERICAN PLANTS at 2 KNAP HILL les lead, . Coiontsy Brusbes, ‘ke. „best Lei, — lowest prices. 
he and several choice kinds, 9s, per doz. NURSER is = ve known as 1 the extensive in S MILK PANS FOR THE DAIRY. 
ection of American can species, 93. ra 508. P. 100 88 witnes e beautiful E MAUN 15 the — — c r 3 Glass R 
A688 5 555 best hardy kinds, 30s: to 60s. Fs ad 


Shi 
thers searlets, large A genes 28 per do: Toon oe ra ai Gawat, Gisan Go 


KALMIA) “LATIFOLIA, from 10h. to hs. itor Larga lente, ahd QTEPHENSON D CO, 61, G 
nab HF, DY HEA ATHS) 2 a first-rate collection of abont 25 of the} 3 aa Manuta and ani ati T Son 


gon ep 3 3 to 4 feet, 12s: 
a e 
ar charges 


? 


a m 

creamy indak SPR 25 at the hun- 
at the thousand 1 For smaller quanti- 
ae will be charged 


itemise — most part do in the autumn 


apee har to —— 
renders them still more valu: éri 


55 


105. 5 rhe 21s. 
‘owl. th who have not 2 in spectuses 
— Err aa fs 55 T a eae variety t be forwarded, as well l reference of the highest authori 
ite’. pe. „ N inches to 12, 50s, 3 e ats and : 
of the extensive prose a 22 5 peg rrn SON a ‘whee — aa aat article req report — 
ursery, in Essex, hich ben i 21 78185 5 fg se ois ot, ep pep Po of H Buildings, ae Well aa fi — 
e forts er superior collections of p re — 2 Mert plant for there purposes, | Obtained upon thie most advantageous terms. eme 
GHENT ae 1 pst — only to be be better known to be more exten. — ey ior emia ne —— Fiela and Garden 4 
5 well set with fower-buds, Fences, Wire-work, &c á 
perdam ORANGE AZALRAS, . l promen 20M %% ͤ ens men aae ea 
aliy ier l — Feng So N LAURELS, fine bushy ae 10s. to dö; per 1. | PERUVIAN AND BOLIVIAN GUANO ON SALE, 
25 0 — ` 
% | QUICK, very strong, transplanted, 8s. to oie 1 ANTO nied SONS 3, LONDON; 
2 4 2 8 3 f 3 v Ww. A JOSEPA G 7 ie aib Co. , LIVERPOOL; 
ee 35 0 e Pass Fine trees, 23, Cd. 
5 — five, with Rin ook 2 ’ Cherries to 3s. each, 
TIPOLTA ‘Ae ney en i a 3 | 
ja Peaches Fine trees; 38. 6d. 
6 0 Nectarines each, 


Goods delivered free to to-Londea and to the Slough $tation 
me Srp Tss ane. The 3 
a s 

eee maneng being. near Woking Station, 


rticularly ge aas ge letters intended for this 
ae een, W. 
dette Woking, Benen Hosts Warsnes, Kuap Hill 


C aeae A Tre 
pe iws — — Beanfort-street, K King’s 
A sea special appointment 
un Abert, — Qui Alena WATER WL, 
saving f blac and white swans, Egyptia Chins, i 


IRE-WORR, A ay WATER APPARATUS, 
e a a 

USE, 

A, Manufacturer 


sar pern BAK MANOR-HO 
FL ACE, wile Sane 


enano Soo 


9 4 


Se 
ann 
ÈS E 
FE 
AN 
a 
gee 
25 
8 
E-i 
15 


i p 
dora. eile ted nioned - i : C y 
Eoi Poland, Stites and Dorking fowls; W Cochin China, 
| nee commod peh and pure 1 

ges age, dt acechure] ; 

r 


ie 
$o 

ð 
g 
& 
a 
4 


WARM AIR 
2 . 
1 LEY ane eb e oven.” Greenbouses, Hals 
Post off 5 


ee w 
VAT SM a at 
— ae ae 


W 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


19 


2—1849.] THE 
— — — 

N GARDEN SEEDS. — 

K — —.— collecti — Fairbea — ae Chi —.— 4 
kinds inelusiv airbeard’s 

gaun Early — A British Queen, Burbidge’s Eclipse, 

* — * Seeds in proportion, of bee —— and best 
Tes ant S iont for one year’s cropping of a large garden, the 
Melons and Cue inclusive .. 33 Od 


No, 2.—Complete alen in spelen Wen es 
i Tac <> legate 4 


Ditto 1 
No. Dito This is sufficient for a gentleman’ 3 : 
No extra charge for packing ; 3 carriage paid to ind. 


2 


If there sho tion, dnereased We accompa of „those mont i Serion 
ttan 
0 


bit of urchasing the above collections every goar. 
a the e Babit of pi — of er ors ultural S — 
und on.applieati 13 Erann st of Seeds, 
1 — Peaches sand N 0 38. 6d. each. 
WILLIAM James EPPS, Maidstone. 


The Gardeners Chronicle. 
SATURDAY, JANUARY 13, 1849. 


MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 


Patholoeical 9 
? t P M. 
Mowmay,.. Jan 155 statistical 2 8 P.Ms 
PM. 

; i : 1 Hortcut ral pe 
- innen „„. „ 6 P. . 
Nun E Civil . 4 P. M. 
ö P.M. 
Waosaspan — e Geologial s. 2 TET ebe. 

8 Pr; 

Tuvaspay, — 18 85 
Peat, ety Thatitution . «sans aseseseess . *. M. 
5 P.M. 

Sarunnaz, — 20 Feral . p 
8 (Anniversary) . . . 8 P. M. 
Mon par, — afana tish Architects cev . 
oo FF 
i *. 234 20 ological: Aisi: alter ene ot: 9 Fiat 
Wepxsspar, — 42 8 o 
ne, , eee 

Fntpar, — Philolo gical 8 


to be 


m evertheless 

the truth is just the reverse; the proposition should 

though the constitution of plants 

cannot be altered to as . —. yet climate may 
be altered to suit plan This is one of the m 

whose 0 is 

Ae de of the 8 to believe in them 
When men limit the word elimate to the con- 


E 


daly equalled by ‘the 
thi 


follows to the letter, even condescen ding to weigh 

and measure the quantities. and Fae. ap of 
good things he puts i it, so as again “to be su 
it’s all right.“ Then studies~-n0 not studie 


exactly when he begins fires, and how he starts his 
Vines, and when he stops them, Bei so forth, still “to 
be sure it’s all right.“ i 


it was out — Sg ht and he 
ow there was such a thin, 

It is city the same with farmers. Jacon 

Puppte had some of the finest land i in H Baroo; he 

b it at half. a- crown an acre, and thought it dear; 

shes be of Wheat an acre were all he could get 

t of it: and so, after ity « at it, and toiling at 

t; Ca taking “all the pains bahi ould with it,” he 


“dratted ” the place, ca pa up as a bad job 
The land next fell ‘nto the ds of a stranger to 
those parts, one Jos ho AyBURN, who, to the 


—— of all the neighbours, 1 * for his first 
Whea LAYBURN 
ne ee ; JACOB; 
HER, never heard of 
such a thing in all his days. 
pores 8 then, is for plants a subject of 
at least as much consequence as atmospheric ; espe- | 0 
cially ne it can a be a s ee DB: artificial meant 
Our usted for ay; 
d we must reserve er — = our car Å 
tion of what terrestrial climate is. 


Tux Council of the Roral Irsa Honricbr- 
TURAL Society haveşheld their promised meeting, 
as we learn from the Dublin pa rit He and their pro- 
ceedings have been marked by their usual want of 
judgment. After some fima] observations: upon 
the state of their accounts, the Council proceed to 


reply. to pax , complaints that have been made 
against 5 a very original answer they 
hav ve giv Oe amounts to this: that the Gar- 


| deners 8 has published attacks upon them t 


“ bgp and calumnious ;” that it will not make 


that it g — disregards. the d 


eparatio 
— statement 3 e by the Coun 
lent its colum 


ysis are committed sun 
takes (not — use a harder word)“; but notwith- 

andin “gross mistakes” the Council justify 
themselves te doin: things whic 


s-| we continue to quote as a sensible 
ke: 


and calumnious—but they take care not. to 8 
wins ee ogee way consists. wri 


E 
a 
838. 


hi e have paid mee ki a attention,” says the 
editor, “to yk statements put for by the 
Council in reply to these charges, and we not 
hesitate to state to a greater o 


hat 
they. have been admitted 40 be well fo 
question — as to the —— to which the alleged 
abuses exi i 


F 
© 
2 
— 
EE 
Se 
o 
5 
ot 
8 8 
© 
— 
— 
= 
+ 
o 
p. 
yn 
p 
pel 
8: 
© 
5 
o> 
a 


nial of the accuracy of 2 — E e we took 
— trouble to make of their schedule of prizes is of 
the same . * declare that it con petals 
gross mist use a harder word. 
ought, — e be e for the leniency of 
this rebuke ; and so should be if 


loy eir 
em. Well may the 
Dublin Adeveate bay.“ that the chief subject which 


dt tha a+ 


to show that — whole of the charges so made were 
unfo 


nymous to us, as w 
aon stated; and it is alittle unreasonable in them 
o expect us to gratify er curiosity . reveal- 
ing the sources from which our i 
‘Tt is especially worthy of remark — not ot oniy 
did the Council avoid the least allusion: 


of prizes, they should present to their meeting an 
exact return of the sums received for prizes by 
9 2 2 


ee of Council. Why did they. shrink 

“Tt is is idle,” says the Dublin Advocate, which 
q and 

looker on,“ It is idle for the gentlemen connected 
pon thei 


with this Society to fall b 
character, as à guarantee for the groun 


up 
pe e a year. 
English excuse for matters 
of maint kind, that Christmas comes: — — once 
ee no 
net ks which — . — not willing t e rediew,” 
i more there is re- 
quired 


to atmospheric climate, th 

* Seah 7 

essent should thorough]: understand., 
because the ae A 


3 
8. 
o 
i 


Pree. 
Re wre mysterious e when he 40 


One trenches his ground, manures 


terrestrial climate, 
Middlesex an exotic of great 
e has heard of as hardy 

> oman near Edinburgh; he 
ubt that with a er latitude and 
Sill t least as well as the 
ar rope) he totaly fails; his Leno, not- 
* perishes th first 
winter s he ias, not u though ft tertestrial climate. 


neglects attendi 
as so much. attending toi 


magnificent; e. ‘Jase PER, THORN’S 


he has a vast reputation 
a — a makes 


rains and 
at his country 


beyond this ben p 


Thursday last. No ins sinuation has 
| against the private character of any gentleman con- 


referred against them in their collective 
capacity—a point strongly urged at the meeting 

been made 
nected with the Society ; but so long as this is relied 
upon i of t it, 
we must Geclare not t proven” to their case. y 
of: these abuses grew up gradually; and we are 


mise; and that is, its fulfil 
ment ; people are not tob P. ‘satisfied in these days 
with mere promises ment, and we at least 


have no faith i ina body v which has hitherto sho wn | 


satisfied they were . in chiefly from the 
silly —— of not wishing to appear to be coerced 
by pu — 


er; the pon a “at, except that oa ‘busing the 


famous borders 
was the skill of a Crawsuay, se wins all 
exhibitions 


and in 3 face of the notorious fact that Mr. Urrox 
NES, Mr. Tic AMILTON, and we be- 
lieve ace hay. i 

n the most glaring m 
othing is more remarkable in u ingenious 


mismanagemen 
No 
document than the care with which eve 
rase 


1 not on t 

water take the place of that plain straightforwa 
mode of dealing which alone can satisfy the mind. 
We have not one poge of specific reform ; not 
a wesi is said N warding the prizes t 

rs; no proy made that practical men 
shali ta 175 faturo 4 5 and aia the Council 
shall to all that relates to the agi 


Gardeners’ Chronicle for its errors 
os com! 1 value, 


alse that we ran over your 
But as for trampling 
d upsetting, your beehives, 
krant 


ne charges br 


e been driven to resign as Members | i 
ns the Council —— they could ia no change | which ev 
obje 


- fi 
wished to make he Socie 
5 — — 1 of the 
rd 


-|in Bag this gentlem 
entire e a pei 
pon bl a chief 1 


3 
| matters: of ch to notice, 
roared = bakes jane aa they . — acri- 
| andunfounded: He pointed cally 


n admission that they 
were pe kiei in the ion, „This has been the 


systematic opposition 
movement. encountered, i, havioge for its 


This it was — has, from time to time, driven 
il-board who 


country. 
ion of the report of the Council was 
ame 0 by Dr. Praxr, a member of the Council; 
it would be interesting to read 7 modest langusge 
man must clared his 


Mr. CaarLES HAMILTON, — 
— of 5 particular 


? 


out pathetically 
> tho diffculty dee the Couneil had experienced 
n getting pers rank to send thei „ 
specimens to exhibitions, for whieh ems p it was, “6 
thought that the best way. 4 li getting. diffi 
ake 


| cu was to m 


a AA a themselves talked, dg Potatoes: : 2 
having deserted Ireland; aud announced his deter- 


of them, by their own, friends ahd paighhonn 11 it is mination“ 
— ne that our columns ha 7 


been in his 
amount 


20 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. (Jan. 13, 
——— — = | ilk, hms of m ere used to mi 
7... imo pha enter fur Si a amr — a 
r nt 


f be destroyed. Raising them in pib we may set d the amount of carbon supplied b 
+ Withi the last year the t most a exhi 6 th * in 2 ground, i. to prevent gaps article of diet at about 0.3 of an ounce, Lastly, 2 — 
be’ wrest, Rete and A . f Eur in the rows, and to give the grad of e. all eon 3 * — ey 2 ees ran of 
i us i idge of size, SO n | whic es of tha foid 
bitors, bave qui g i | the plants in the ridge of equal size, m ere Diy will 1 ut 0.3 of an — 


Hamırros and Mr. Lyons, of Ladiston ; mnie We | earthed up, the plants being alike in strength, the same 


venture to predict that at least two more, the very | quantity of soil will be ert for all. The weakest n * principles 3 of ben — weed 
best and 8 useful among them, will follow the ag a be kept in the cold frame 10 days longer, the system. I will ther wees opose the lowing a asa 
i ive a succession. tolerably n near eee n to the amount of nutritious 


example, if they have 1 done so already. The which, with a second sowing, 


sowing, 
eners who could act for themselves have long | Water the newly turned out plants, and loosen up the and of heat-forming principles received into the system 
e prison. 


by the convicts at the Pentonville 


i - finishes the lanting part of 
since to a man . it, and, in spite of mani- soil between them, which p 
fold difficulties, have maintained a second Society, | the business. weather succeeds this operation EOE ys Len et 
e. i i te or twice until utrogenined 
hich hs proved orale ia,” Wii a | han Sa ey ae dommene, o o Taine 
months a Horticultural Association has sprung into gy gry 9 en i 5 mont will be 20 ounces = of bread re ites 15 f 
; and the Royal aras —— ublin, | Hor most advantageously done by forking among them occa- | J ounce ee ee ae ee » 
that there was no hope of mending the Koy sionally, which will keep the weeds in check, and pro- | 16 fluid ounces of gruel PEA 
ural, Ys 
ticult hes taken the matter into its | mote the growth of the plants better than the use of the — ounces — ao 2 
and has resolved to work 3 the * hoe. In the beginning of ‘October, the most forward ? fluid ounces of m. 08 „ haw 
of gardening, which forms one of the subjects to | trench of plants will have attained their full growth, Total $4 vines 750 
which the public funds that Pastas annually | and a sufficient number of well twisted hay-bands must | To this amount of e arbon, hovers, mos * added 
at its dis are destined to promote. be provided for winding round them. Take advantage about 3 an ounce derived from the 4 ounces o 
f meat, 
n Ireland, | of a fine dry day, and commence by carefully — nnn en a slits of the bea 


n of ili the leaves into an upright position, in which they | and potatoes, and from the milk 2 nd ¢ Cocos. He 

of the charges whic e have brought under the should be held by one person w. while another astens ha amount of carbon co oneumed w be 

notice of the abe, brought, not for the purpose | hayband rou A. ole oft he — ga ee inds a 7 Prin the nov-nitrogen eed principles . 

arassing in viduals, as some of the judicious gen- 1 2 until the whole of t 2 x iad yn 3 nd round, an e From the nitrogenised 22515 — 3 

tlemen in the Council seem to imagine, but 1 he the 8 is ior pe then . up till the bands Seeg 

of the misapplication which they have made of the are covered with the soil, which should be be pressed very | Bot it is evident that ie 3 

funds entrusted to them, and the monstrous injustice | tightly round the plant ‘at the top, to exclude air and | this exact 8 t of the food to the wants of the 
d dh 


5 90 0 5 


wich which ee ers and the interests of gardeuing mois — as effectually as possible. Proceed in the same | individual can never be adhered to. Self indulgence in 
have been tr manner with the remaining trenches when fit, until the | the rich will git lead them to exceed the necessary 
The — to — the Royal Dublin es | a are finished. standard ; poverty in the mass of the community 
has come judicious. It has ample| Your correspondent “ D.” states that hay-bands rot will as frequently oblige them to fall short of it, 
means of — $ its garden at — is | the Cardoons ; but I find that by deferring the earthing | Nature, however, always provident, has by a very simple 
one of the most beautiful places near Dublin, and | UP ' till October, and by twisting the bands well, and | and beautiful expedient remedied to a certain extent the 
i is 4 i cial business. It Deca aE — 8 very few on ae both 8805 a a fs deficiency and a 
65 1211 ” failures, oug our 81 ation an 80 are very in em xeess In the means oi subsistence, an 
e rr — tlio” Association” should different. We have tried blanching by fastening the she has done ty formation of fat. Fat is, in fact, a 


give it the advantage of its infant strength and jeaves closel 
3 y — with mira or matting, and | magazine kept eserve for supplying animal heat, 
pe pole by oe sop vy 155 mS cto peer putting an earthen drain pipe over the plants, and | when the fuel for. mieh ing the combustion in the lungs 
attempting to stand alone. At all even a hi ee! | filling up with sand. This plan lites admirably ; and in the capillaries by which it is supported has not 

t. Byi 


that the object of what has been done in our the whole of the leaf stalks were — blanched, wi y 
columns is attained ; e h gardeners vil have quite erisp, and fit for use. The indeed, hibernating animals, which breathe very 
shewn that Horticulture can no ould prevent the loss of room see te by “he Fidges | a ely, are enabled to live on darin ring a long winter 
onger be pressed et, in eee by the dead | as no soil would be wanted for earthing ; b tirely witho at food. Thusthe bear, who is covered 
ofa ee ee iety. pipe 7 or 8 inches in eter for a well grown i * vith fat in autumn, wakes up in the spring lean as well 
Let us hope may neve —— be necessary | an irane, many are required, are expensive. The ungry, imal heat having been maintained 
for us to revert to eos unpleasant subject, cook here, who is one of the first in his = gives | during his winter’s sleep by the slow combustion of his 
r —. me the following recipe for cooking and serving. fat ; hence, too, the predilection which the inhabitants 

CARDOONS. After the Cardoons have been Acceso ps and washed, | of northern regions evince for oily descriptions of fo, 


Tun , although seldom cultivated to any ex- and their outside leaves ede cut them into pieces and the disgust which is entertained in summer for fat 
tent in this country, is much esteemed on the Continent, about 4 inches long. Put the pieces into a pan of cold | meats, although enjoyed with relish by the very same 
where it occupies a prominent position among hirud | 8 when boiled take them out, and with a eloth rub persons in colder weather. Fat is of course most 


8 un ter 
this is done, let them be well washed, and boiled three already. Thus, that of the animals 
r hours in good stock or broth. Serve them e hot | or butter of milk, and that present in most farinaceous 
5 with brown sauce made with go ood gravy. It an — of food, if not consumed in respir ation, go directly 
— ards the formation of — ut it is maintained by 
you have any. G. Fleming, Trentham Hail. Liebig, that — , Sugar, and gum are capable of being 


r 
44 tf 


converted into it by the ses of the animal economy, 
A LECTUR us ON THE NUTRITIVE VALUE * that by this ere such kinds of food as are sub- 
oy 7 6. Dat UBE * D. 8 ser vient to the production of animal heat, may be stored 
up by the body cess as a provision for future 
Mear, if lean, consists chiefly of fibrine and water, in emergencies. In in her animals the invo- 
the proportion of one of the 3 er to three of e luntary processes going on in the system fulfil the same 
latter. But flesh in general co lates Ga i fat and cel- end as the instinctive ones do in e yin and in some 
lular tissue, which together ples: unt to about one- other of the lower tribes, secu ring „ without any 
that re. | S°Venth of its weight. As, however, it is said that the — on their part, and by ea exertions the end of which 
r re- | soup — of the liquor of the meat of the same day, is entirely 3 ties them, from the e ee uences 
croppin 4 strengthened with three Ox heads, Barley, Carrots, and that would have n from a temporary deprivation of 
Onions, we may n is in our cal „ and | foo od. leis however, admitted by all, that muscular rte 
co th l 
D of | 15 , ence in 
a | meat t 1 oz. z. dal. 2. of prety eit’ same carnivora are necessarily eae since the erence on 
i sist sist of about 14 of flour, l arg 100 parts: — they subsist, having no fat themselves, 3 
them none. The converse, however, does not hold good, 
ae gum, and other non-nitrogenised 10 | for museular fibre is uite eapable of generating 
and other nitrogenised do, — heat by its combustion, the only difference being, that 
Newt this will giv per diem: a much larger amount mus nsumed than would 
— 5 ath enise red principles FA happen, if starch, sugar, or oily were the sub- 
Water in flour Gi =e i —— supplied for that pur) pee. Hence man 33 
Water combined with do. in oo 0 capable of subsisting entirely, for a time at least, on an 
wi. —_— it is to be rem oa : 
9 | required under such circumstances fe T Ma 8 1 
11.2 oz. of starch, gum, and sugar will yield abont | is very considerable. eatery ak, l 


4.8 oz, of carbon fi 
ze or maintaining the animal heat, 1.4 of -bred voyageurs of Canada, a ccording 


gluten. and other nitrogenised principles will go towards | Captain Franklin, usually consume from 1.” to 20 Ibs. of 


. some burnt clay, in about th T and, if we have it, | supplying the ~ Age of n oog, and their value in es meat daily, and consider themselves put upon sbort 
of each kind. This is into the trench in such a a Nae elu te * ey con- | allowance if li lbs. The an ; 
— to keep the compost. merely covered while ni uten reerde 16 per cent. of of Siberia habitually devour a quantity of eet food 
_ the ground below is loosened to depth of a foot at — r poy 1.4 oz. of elite will yield 0.22 of which would be fatal to o any one cf eee cold 
beast, and this fini which ought to lie | valent to quently may be as equi- | climates, where the expenditure of carbon necessa. Y ta 
— uncropped until the season for planting out ounces of Potatoes contain 1.9 f ere 16] keep ap al heat is of eh n 
ay by which time the ground ill be in fine order to; about 2 3 contain yi 5 n, and only uantity devoured is ore enormous Captain” 
receive e shout 1 3 principles, or in 16 Pavey rela he case of a young Esquimaux, w 
3 two rows of dwarf Peas upon the ridges, account, as the greater wir print ait be iakat indo iha swallowed in 24 hours no less than 35 lbs. of various 
í a row of Spinach between ; these will be off before | tained in it i p e nutritive matter con- | kinds of aliment, including tallow candles. ` l 
the up. fore been eels adit ge pr =o lin quantities are much —— han w be inferred from 
the pint, 14 ounce of oatmeal soot E OaE of tae} bor per centage of carbon present in muscular fibre; 
starch ch (6: ‘oop oatmeal contains about $ ounce of supply 14 4 canoes already that about 6 Iba, of ment woul. i 
2 Aton Tw W 3 of consumed in respiration during 24 hours by a number romp 
babi ant of on — e adults in the prime of life. What need there is 
amount Rape in 12 ounces of cocoa ; pro- | therefore, for is great not seem 
47 of carbon, we shall not be far i y explained, but theory, as well as experience, agree 
the carbon in that in the we g | at least in suggesting, okota te 
quantity used, ‘Now as 2 of an onia anded, at of the | in trusting to the animal portion of the diet solely ur 
— PE g OF 8 8 y g tbe 


p a 
2—1849.] 


GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 21 


2 


THE 
Esterials for the maintenance of animal heat from the 
this the more practical part of this 
of diffe ag aliment, so that we may 
enabled to employ them most eta page ara and to sal pas 
best advantag 


rel 
food, that because 240 
aize four a no less than 
the other 


hods — the one scie EH 
8 
from experience of the quantity té each iN 
ich 


would maintain the body fin a healthy | 


ves aw o the 


e to 
pt’ determination of the relative values | put 
of 


is as} ventilators 
them when he e 


the 
Now with reference to the 7 be these peng ey. Li; 


new buildings which he, 


E 
> 
eh 
* 
£ 
ey 
~ 
— 
* 
G 
25 
EA 
wB 
yo 
p 
2 
cr 
®© 
* 
+ o 


he house wa 
of the ventilators, thus leaving an empty space 
roof between the two ventilators, so that a current of 
air might pass over the ice One of the garden men 
was put in charge of the house, with orders to open the 
off work, and to shut 
ame in the morning. ow here 
to work to 
cannot be 
apenat.. 14 
r it 2 torily to your own 
atte — 7 0 diligently to all rad mi inutie 
respecting this new Bow pose for these last onths, I 
have arri t g conclusion, namely, t that 
wastin ng o 


all last summer. 


es will 


ment. seen, contain 
of R — “of which at least 7 74 per cen 
zum, which supply e 


and dextrine, hat in this respect su 
only about 11 a pate whilst the N of gluten 
resent in it is only 3.6 r cent., although Dum 
hat its nitrogenised principles, collectively 
up to 6 or 7. So therefore, 
this od, 5 Rice 


req 

nitrogenised diet, as they labour less, and therefore 

less waste muscular fibre to supply, its * 
even leavin 


is as 18 to 14. 
cing these numbers to one scale. 
Whea 

Commercial value si iR 78 
Heat producing vikis bis bee ines 
Nutritive value 6 70 

(To de 83 y 

ICE-HOUSES. 

In a y the many important changes for which 
the es a po in the annals of the 
world, allow 1 a comple 2 satisfactory 
revolution 8 we 1 effected h manner 


been 
complaint against the way in which ice e — in in the 
ordinary ho 4 r to b 


kinds of ice-houses, and our house here 
e 


; in 
2 hey are. For small families 
“ae ee, but for ae families*or establish- 
cé-house is indispensabl 
of “ flesh, fish, and fowl,” — hundred o 
belonging to the 


F. m 
ipp null consumption, however, 
J be managed with an ice-bin in-doors 
an iceberg. It is much easier to 


su orion a for 3 or for the re con- 
2 most acces- | 0 


acne nn 


the 
We are somewha; 
for ice ice contriy *;*— eA logit wn and | carri 
ance; 
the ice for ti a 1 only carry in 


is | trary. A butler or housekeeper who has attended to 


the household, | ven 
| 


Anot 
fest: all articles sent into th last season came 
out in better ear rp ion than formerly, owing no doubt 
to the free current of air which we effect ed through it, 
and whi h 


ut t 
ay current w f being 
hotter had eater capacity for g up moisture. 
for it is well known 


imbibing moisture, and a co 


the melted water pass 0 
bee soon waste away from the underside, and the e 


ll these things L to my recollection incidents the 
edays be excused for adducing | a 


of ‘es bygone 
in illustration of this 


ys, which Imay b 


5 ubject. I recollect ver 


trac 17 their foot- 
when I essayed a 

game at deer stalking, 725 frightened a herd of these 

bounded aero snow like 


In November, 1847, a aig who was on a visit | cross 


e | ice on, and nothin peters: 


hen 
: is too much negle 


drains under iceberg with rough wood over 
them ; on that we i 
use 


and n 
unfa e * ane ice, we pang 
— till the * 5 0 mber. D. B 
ton, as s Shrubland Park. 
my ad substan- 


dress, to 
e this e your readers will be 
5 x enough not to ask — to write private letters 
respecting it. Many gardeners have given up writing 
in our periodicals through that very cause, which eg 
much to be regretted. [We cordially second this 


parai Che importunity to which writers are subjected 
eal, u oder 
eben signatures, many whose names 1 add great 


value to their communications ; and others are deterred 
Sopi from making their ee known.] 
PRACTICAL \L HINTS FOR AMATEURS 
SMALL GARDENS, 
PREPARATION — SEED-s owinc.—If we 


e take a sur- 


e crops, some being a much in a eae 


you sow your Onions!“ says one gardener 
“for ag are bulbing while — are 2 above the 
ground.” “Inthe middle of February,” is the reply. 
“How did oe manage that? P tht ome the enquirer, 
“for at that my ground was so wet that I could do 
nothing with it it. ” The ‘explanation of this ap 
mystery, by which one man gets the start of his neigh- 
our, is simple ne , although in e e the matter 


412 41. 


8 until the opening epring r reminds them that it is time to 
in the seeds for the 


bestir themselves, and p crops 
9 so highly prized 2 grown N and well. 
4 on this “pape = he goes to the en, and 
i nny he anticipates no 0 diffi 
commit to the earth 


rig 
draw off the moisture occasioned by the 


probabl 
of March —.— have — up the earth, 
In the meanwhile his neigh- 


ground, How did he accompli 


fi 
the bright day mentioned above, and began, not to dig, 
but to level the hac ks and the trenches which had been 


he 
under mass ; the moist vapour will soon 


shower falling from the arch for two or three months, or | 
ong x ken, and then ee sides 


He found the “eal ‘nicely arene and when the spade 
asy work, the 


side e po 
y form a aeri arch, and, by-and-bye, a visti of 
a water issues forth sufficient to drive a mill, a heavy 


5 * that you might y amia in it.” is house, 
p 


Then op 

a circular ope d afoot in diameter, tele 

b at the’ rim of the dome arch drain 
a from 225 inging surface of the outside — . he 


ve been 3 at once. 


dir ice. But | but T shall first 
ty 8 try so 


me experiments to ascertain how 
y be useful. We have three or four open 


ate. Let 
i unoceupied — thrown 
a sharp f 


us peridis, 
e | as a general rul spring — — should pode 3 


had thus done its e rake was 
he w 


— 
— this trenehi — 


increasing, 3 the soil is more 
a rapid germination of the seed. This work 
have been —— — —— but it is not now 
very part of your kite tehen- garden which is 
urro after 


this advice is taken you 
—— be performed so well whenever you par 
it. H. 


0 espondence 
. large Evergreens.—1 have 
with much interest your commentary on 
prina paper on this subject, 
N nted in the “J 
The result 


traordi require 
may — 5 transplanting * very various 


Remembering, then, that 
most — under the — 
mind the desiccating infi 
which characterise our springs, 
transplanted it denne which having only m 
roo supply of sap against 


discard this period as and 


am ts, cannot 
amount given off by y perspiration 83 it is 
3 8 it in hing, the a when 


Cs 


22 jl Re VAALY LWA NAV 
mulated heat of summer’s suns 


mulated 
the surface 


Wit NY 


iN 2&2 VU dd 


ive Eustis AG 


— — buted 


“a ten go 
of the earth. A few mber 
many pent — who 1 r of “thei im- 
d perhaps mainl * 
yar- perl i of the paper a the late Mr. Knight o 


Pine 


with 1 planted in deep and saturated so 
t 


tom heat (part 


e soil to which la 
moved is then an tina rtant cons 11 but sufficient 
ose remains till the 


r packing. 
* the ful in by old. 8 house must exist in 


the drain o rh ey t lengt important 
too little attended to, Our 1 8 5 5 7 syd is similar to 
y 


that a 


brie 
8 10 feet . the floor o 


ing the 
24.1 H? i 5 and having me of Pullers pa 8 . iee · pre- 
tablis venge 2 be with - 


h no 


ouse 


Subsequent observati in various ge 
parts of ps he world have —— established the fa 
that it is a provision of Nature an i 


mportant one 


aprins are re- 


d of September | t 


fear 


well an 


door at entrance to well ( (which i is 


in June (tw 


0 


a totes 


istmas, 


1 
S. of th 
— 


seeds, raised some, Some Mexican Pines, given me 
a few years ago by the Horticultaral awry * do not show 
themselves hardy here. Two or three will do. On 
I believe it a be apuleensis, r very 
n | Cryptomeria ars here. I am 
— — premia es My Araucaria — 
ta was measured th ma hy sa it is 19 fee high A 
| girted 17 inches at 44 — fro is a 
straight aspiring plant. — ae killed ~ the epenn 
here last — Green te n. 6 
Pinus Webbi and Pindrow 
Hill, P. Webbiana 10 or r feet hi igh; 
white on the under side; as borne cones which 
2 w 


nf 


to be scarcer 
most of the — ately gaa 
powy to be Pindrow. W. S., Bur 


bbiana 
Hill, Jan 


s gardener, 

wages), nai advertise — — — 
like — — 
ven in oti ow ares 
—— — pul 


t ke a pride and eir garde 
and will attend strictly to a system of economy. Under- 
paying head-gardeners is a ba 


e, slightly. acrid g 
ceeding] 


h 
trying this | ease 


p ad — —.— — 


{ thateh, aon at this time blanched growths little is 
of a 


ferior in poin and 
ood * and are valuable at ! 
ncy, when the severity of — 
arcity — vegetables 
an. 9. 


appearance = apama 
ooked, 


Cau — 
may exist. James Duncan, — „J. 
d a Cure for the Po 


and it yielded the aly ee of the 8 that e 
di 847, all the arly Potitas were 


ase ext yea 
1 — with shell ind, and wared quite sound, w 


with it as 
e Potato submitted to 
white Kidney. sand w 
co cy ground unue the e am were planted, but it 
found to have the same effect when spread over the 
rufa afterwards, — “toad; of which a sample ig 
rwarded, is what was used. s. Smith was induced 
it from Whg t ites similar — i improve — 
Cra land many years since. D. 
Mr. —— and his Celery (see p. 23). e. culti- 
vation of — years, much 


f Celery has, en 
Ft ga: 8 Many 


the apei of the lovers f good 

new varieties of this es ahs mt have appeared in the 
market, and Mr. Cole, among others, has announced 3. 
ne ata superior r kind. About the merits of this Jatter 
I am totally ignorant. uo 


wo 
when de, it is always made, and does not require | entertained by a good man ill paid, or ill used, is a desire 
— t of more simple construc- | to leave th ice, and an intention to do so the first | my opinions, eel ssed in the paper alluded to. What 
In a place where I once lived, great expense was opportunity that — J. R., Jan. 9. [Under- paying I objected to was, very early sowing for the main crops. 
gone to in a blasting a rock, in order to obtain what was any 1 ad policy. T still to aver t t Celery sown in the end of 
to be a proper site house. The well re for “American Blight.— first scrape = the | January will assuredly be less tender, and indeed more 
was, Seer the en were dry 8 te! = a — 40 k as clean as I can, and when the stringy, he 1 5 hé early part of 
thatche e ees are y I give the trun k 220 pine! al | April, So f. ing to extreme luxuriance in 
it the fi fit . 4 (oven bt pr a 33 * was beard branches a good coating of Jinseed-oil with a brush. j I | growth, I consider such fon as the key- stone of the 
lenty for ow A ov? 8 een . ad 3 o rub the oil well in where there are cracks arch. It will be y Mr. C., on referring to the 
K that it has s proved almost a taal felis ea — . A pee whl "Tn ia AANE Whe dh with ot rapes that sna ons a Sa 
and, g into consideration the first cost, and | touches the blight does not again F ae sey suntan ia 3 ei 
* pa has would oe on i a 5 ‘aan? Hi N K a litem: This noble bulb cultivation Once more 1 il pinion is, that he who-eul- 
house ca containing 100 à yeta of ice . i meee y if pr Nera eas d 1 20 i 25 K penton ces b lam xe” — bend: aa 
which would ensu i 3 | ; ed it retains its gaudy, — equal, bese grow an 
J.D. MacD. Iocan as an abundant supply of —— E. h 8 Marcas oat end, whether 1 Oulton F Bact tee at oe r in April, 
Large or Small Potat E . e of tw obert Errington, Oulton Par 
tala ith oniy onc ̃ T.. 
is the crop isa f. i — e injury done to dep: 
maturity. a p ki ew — pass) 10 — — x seater ae the size of the bulbs. I * 5 stocks by the loss of brood when the combs are tak 
opinion, as also to theory and expe netsh, (Lindley’s | 9:inch pots for bulbs ö er 7 inches ró ere ig Ae Mugan — — 8 assure 
orticulture.” e pera- | th never found any comb in either my 
.... and 196), Thee | tue of from 60° to 75° wil suit when in fall growth, | side boxes. Ba even bad this geese ty bos wo 
2 ᷣ⁵ , , 
then gen eee in similar soils, | water must Pi and they tht lade kee? os teen. — l — bought hi — of bees, 
tubers large enough for lle ‘will bs, ahiahi fe ari > ave several times bought hives o! 
small seed. But if such seed be i a ed into growth — ee and “driven” them in the of the summer; in 
under the ordinary course ae Sete | till the flowers begin to all these cases there was of course some b comb in 
will be very diminutive. Another method should be va * Somer a cool conser- | the hive; bat on as much as 4 or 
adopted in these cases, Large tubers should be cut cold draught hts ; they ‘Wit oag it Wldstoan foe Bve Ue uit [tase Germany becom atrasa aie 
into sets, and if in each only à si single eye grows, the Wher adie Re P ossom for five or six | lose many bees would break apiarian’s heart; L 
crop will be the more valuable. Let Mr. Cuthill take — to tke their w — —— the therefore derben ue fi plan, and have since 
a ent, weighing 4 O., place it in a warm roo room unti ot —— should ctised it in ot ces with success. Having 
the shoots from the eyes are about a oih inch aero ty i ost of the other | adjusted the pieces of brood comb to the best advan- 
ran gro ay . . LA hee Ghd pam fiain i 7. Warner yän — — — „„ —— 
e him » Esq. esdon, | props a s of stick in their pro rpendi 
nts, of the number and weight ‘of these sets, osition, T placed the box by the side of the bees from 
plant them 3 1 manner, and at the same 1,22 November e om the b — ad been taken the day before. oo 
time, p the i 4.05 December 3.63 m Many books on the subject, but could not find 
Sevag sia nt A E 
e of the latter Si a. . rienced no lea in observing that 
im e has been described as th — swered perfeetly. The instantly : ognised 
of that genus. Tt —— nor flourishes with a 21.91 | ld combs and their grubs, and waited u the latter 
oe capense and the variety riparium do. Can — e their usual eare, for bees are very faithful n 
8 Proper treatment of variabile? 1 4. H. 2 30.92 | a month after, seeing that the bees did not frequent 
one pr peti ae tum — been so strongly stated by T in l'side box much, I took it away, and found that 
actor’ 7 8 — a ae ents a ate to Be individually r. ‘Rain at the e Craig, Windermere, 1843, — he s me bees, n their 
es, to re i ight, except a few which had been ie 
— t it to 8 ome answer f a — r nuary 2 876. Wet N 25 July ore Wet d — — Mi — eells — all shee conti 
— a a Boge for sale. Having lately purchased Moun “aie 3 | August %% „4 deen fixed in thelr places by the bees with pillars of wax; 
x ` uld be glad to know if there is any ” Sept. 3.257 8 t when the sticks were oved, the combs re- 
j the statements above alluded to. A. F 1st Quar, 23.782 65 3d sidan —— | mained firm Wighton al asks hy the old- 
Climate of Northumbériand,—A few ights at ha ias 2 „ _5*| fashioned bee keep sal t — j as his 
had the th ometer down to 19° at a nerth Aa — = * ‘Tan Wet days 17 | October 7.79 ~~ | more humane neighbour k e — aoa : ame — 
peg bred 4 side of the house, T June Tiss 885 3 2 — ie It iseasily explained. When a f bees is allowed 
in some situa r PE ! e warm, that i lo- 
county, e have about 1 J inch of snow, chief ort 10 re Ke P. 4th Quar. 24.942 5 there are se — star — 2 1 5 
oa ae eet” na the ends which ‘has be 9 à i — 72359 inches, and — . oe which rain fell, | three or four tim many eggs to — to, — 
week, is fallen into the n 1 N rant Aeria e gauge, Ae bs to be fed; 
26 raised| Blan v and almost all —.— bees being thus 
. 1 ones, o 1 = Fora last year, from removed from t Wheat Ih ee 8 ho 8 — — mille oad 


friends, to w 


hom I distri- | an 


e Turnips w 
from the: Wheat lain some two months dk, 
d stacked in in ridges under a Taik covering o of 


3 the ney season is all over a 


o 


— 


* 


EEA Sja 


T 9—1849.] THE GARDENERS’ 


the season continues till some weeks; fat 


their form and are able to work ; 
oung bees (p d by three or four 
) are able by their greater numbers to 2 up 
or the loss of the earli rt of the season spent in 
parsing di m. This — Mr. Wichton s — 
questions, viz , why in a ery stocks are more mney 
to be lost” by the ofa fashioned be 555 master than by 
modern. An . 


SEL 
Ice-houses. — find the preserving qualities of the 


imp g 
i i the middle of the mass, resting cart 
aye the drain. This fi 1 allows the exeess of 
moisture to escape from under the ice into the upper 
— of the house, thereby prolonging e me 


season of su . a find a hollow or double doo 
33 um of 2 inches — een the eee a 
— * better but 'Iikely to wear out three.of the usual 
doors. T rences in usefulness of ice-houses 
arises from —— committed in their construction ; 


No. 1, space for ice within the wall of Fern, 24 feet by 
20; extreme height of .stack, when complete, 15 feet, 
t by 16. F 


stack; the embankment rises to the base of the tre 
shown in the figure. W, Ingram, Hatfield-house, Herts, 


Reviews. 
Species g et ordines Algarum auctore 
2 Vol J. 2 e 
P- 
. on Algology have issued from 
the aa) plija within the last ten years, „ much light 
— — ion of the tif 


ul pro- 
—— which it dertakes to Mpeni ok ying . 
— prineiples ‘for we definition and limitation of 
pecies, Hosts o cies e been 
ey their geographical ne species | has be 
studied; system upon system h ed; the Alge 
of various beri and districts have been more 
successf ted, a work p ing to com- 


the deste circuit of the science has attracted con- 


the present state of £ thi branch of botan 
he prese of th yan the ub- 
licatio; tion of ent volume now b us. "The 


1 * op 3 and asit ape ppears 
E 8 followed othe s ——.— e apar in oe 


3 of our ganea to give 


8 5 
—. 


ö oe 
iS as to fpdividnal 4 pijen, opr alyact | w 
o eee vin 2 


amply sufficient to meet the demands of this place. M 


her as Curator of the Royal Botanic Garden, reflects ar 
the highest eredit on those who —— conferred it we 


father's death all eyes were turned on him merely 


as the legitimate, but as the best Be highest qualified 
uccessor ; for, to an Bed ve acquaintan 


n 

the discovery of remoter truth, haying the courage to 

resist the fairest mony 5 tested by the strict ap- 
N 


ciety of Edinburgh, in which he has held office. for 
ears. Wh lat i 


protien on 80 ene a choice, we cannot but lament 
e loss which another valuable —.— will, sustain 


es | moted the interests and advanced the position of the sa 


Caledonian Hoxtie ultural Society, of which he has been 
manager for 12 years, When he entered on office, in 


Society’ 8 Saen viz., a Vinery, e og and stove. 
in additi o these, the Society has now a hall, 


house 


ag po splendid erection just finished as a winter 
garden. How much the Society is indebted to Mr. 


contest, again, the state in which 


alike just as to ‘the date Pr cultivation, as to the co ol- 


CHRONICLE. 


are full grown, be 


il it with feelings of unmingled ys tapas 2 his after 


pliances of practice : Mr.M‘Nabis already favourably | 
iea 


1836, there were but three small hothouses in the | ri 


he found the garden peer oe is now, would be to | gr 
contrast.an een This remark is ba 


en 
uler i is, that it will stand 12 12 months without ranting f. 
of | 0 for see uch 
of 
à as representatively rather than gr 


o the sy 


3 and arranged, but comprise all that is rare and 
uable. The collection of Camellias, in particular, is 


ce- aaisa; containing most of the finest and rarest 


larger specimens of these, the Society is indebted to 


G. Mr. M‘Nab’s industry in obtaining exchanges > 


he as gardens. Nor 88 collections of Azal 


lan 
t the Himalayas. (these last comprising all the 
eee less co to regard. Their nd cape owth and 
state of icate minute acquaintance w 
studious attention to their various habits and conditions 


sincerely trust that so valuable an institution may not 
N 


o | suffer by Mr. 1 ab's removal, though this is hoping 


e ; 
ae is perfectly familiar with Mr. M‘Nab’s system and 
of management. Edinburgh Evening Courant. 
UU ,⏑——————— 


Miscellaneous. 
Cultivation of Celery.—At a meeting of the Horti- 
tural Society in Regent. street, held Dec. 5, Mr. Cole, 
8 Collier „Esg., of Dartford, exhibited some 
very fine Red Celery, to which a 
aes, i and with it a sent the following fog ces of 


: 


the ` Society’s cali al. Herewith I take the 


which I have grown for the last three years, and whi a 
„think, both in point ‘of size, solidity, and flavour w 
be found superior to any which hitherto been 


* 


e vated. The specimens sent are not 


l tE 
erely examples.of a general crop, planted without 


any 1018 in view beyond that of the supply of my 


er's table, entirel 
pi any of it for publie exhibition. My stock con- 
sists of 600 plants, planted in rows, apart, and - 
the plants 9 inches apart in the row; and I have not a 
doubt that the whole 2 would average 6 Ibs. per 
stick. Not the least ble excellence in this 


mt 
= 


r starting for seed, a thing as a pipy or 
ine leaf I have never noticed so long as I 
own it. For a more su detail of my method 
cultivation, I may e seed was- 
first week in February, soon as the p were 


€ and so i plants we 
large enough they were pricked o e 


the w 
that its fie adler will not be Tinagyointed. 
a. 
: TAL GARDENS, Ennii- 
of k M.Nab, of the "Cale. 


most cordially, — aie 


bed. The plants were of course stro 


od ball h adhering to 
erwards receiving a copious watering) they sus- 
poncu.— | tained or no check. In E Nabe |p 
rally endeavour to steer between tlie 


; lamented Somes saikine sa saree ely when tpt] Pa 


0 ea 
models of 2 For the 2 portion of the 
indeb 


arer For an early crop o 


sera himself, an a art i in which Mr, M. Nab encela * —.— 
è ee from the beauty and correctness of sar. 
a 4 


its cultivation, which extract from the ber of the 


of 
Überty of handing * six sticks of Celery, of a kind 


but in more elevated situations it is almos Minea 
to give too much water, always, however, —— ing to 


give a thorough soaking 


once every fortnight rather 


than gece dribblings, which 2 my opinion do more 
harm than good. Were J so disposed, I have no foai 
I could grow this.Celery en ‘he size of that sent; 


rgy | and to effect this I should 


directed, excavate the tren 


prepare the 4 as 2 ae 
ches 18 inches deep and the 


5 about the plants, taking great sit however, to 


prevent the soil getting 
in 


into the hearts 


In a late 3 ae the 


p lery s 
certain if the leaves of Celery — ex total i 0 
an i of time, the — 


s | the leaves are exposed for. 


a long time 


acrid flavour which = n can wholly — 


f Celery I so in heat early in 


January, and . the plants out upon a slight hot- bed ; 
in Fei in hea 


as before di- 


r a secon 
rected, and Po a 5 crop in March in the open garden,” 
P collection of ias, fruite 


and Rhododendrons, 1s. is. £ hose tre 
from 1s. 6d. to 2s. per 10 plante. Apple trees. from 3s, 


to 4s. per ditto. Pear 
Datch Bulbs the following 


ees the same, and 
prices: 50 — 6 double 


and single Hyaeinths, and 20 Due Van Thol Tulips, 
28. Gd. ; 6 double and single 8 6 varieties 
Narcissus, 50 Croeuses, and 20 Van Thol Tulips, 28. 6d.; 
three more si ots the same ; 6 Hyacinths, 24 Van 
Thol. Tulips, and 50 Crocuses, 2s. 6d.; 12 H 

20 Tulips, and 25 uses, ditto; 18 Hyacin 25 
Crocuses, di Hyacinths, ditto 

there were in all 2 


Edep 
T of Operations. 
For a 3 r ) 
ERAL REM 
ADVANTAGE should be taken of. frosty weather oa cart 


eayed 


gs of de- 

leaves ra succession of years, it will 5 
advisable to ve it a change, by applying a dressin; 
oa t clay, 0 r charred refuse of of any 


er, produce a splendi 
rop of almost any vegetable. if the land ie, al 


wes sifted 


the SHU 


of. If vou have not already a stock of burnt 1012 no 


e prepared in the usual mann the first week in; 
on | June, by exea cavating them 9 inches 4 deep, gen : 


kitehen-garden, bu t in the 


these I may mention 


in a mixture o 


e e 
Ee out, and each was removed . trench with should be 
f * 


useful in 


also; ——— 2 — A 
d indeed ding Rhododei ‘het 


25 Orchids, which I have ye to thrive and flower better a ae 
burnt elay, sand, and — than oe 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


[Jan. 13, 


24 dents. 
richer compost ; Notices to Correspon 
ve at least flower. w un ei weeds an 4 Constant Reader. Th 
requie iess heat and eagar Aer poirot 85004 ts | for this flower than i Sepa ion omg. b Wen bee Bnd We cannot insert letters une 
three months’ rest. p mare veal — shortly to give a few hints complaints pati pon a misconception of facts. Buyers 
than you will require F Ripe Age Pi nk — n perfectly arán) | have always an obvious Sep N L. The forth 
d if well make nicer | on this matter. Just wet i g EI aeit ” will bé 
are easily an well grown I lits te winds, and| Third Part of the “ Elemen y crow 
plants than old ones, and by disearding the old | will require a little 48 h ll with woodcuts of 1 a b en plan 
for other thin You will nothing is table * this purpose than small] ore Burns: o following Gladioli, hich 
stumps you — Be. make | pi f Spruce ne Fir which may be be inserted in the bed, should either be takoi 51 pret umn or $ 
at this time decide what 5 1 intend to 1 Z With respect to] tected from frost: G. psittacinus, “Cardinalis, ‘byzantinuy, 
peci. of; and in doing so, be careful not to | and wh on ee pane Á d ad wat blandus, floribundus, and varieties. The Japan Lilies ara 
have more an you have pro — for. It is ofte florist flowers, little can be done, beyond giving) alf hardy, and therefore well suited for planting in the open 
— 2 faul aes too many, but wi 8 of air to Auriculas, Polyanthuses, Carnations | border. No Amaryllis is sufficiently hardy for open border 
considered a good t to ve Any, n fra ay say, “there 1s a ulture, except A. lutea and Belladonna; you may, however, 
wing this decid mistake, | a d Pansies i a hich we h y all axe i try A A. formosissima and glauca; also Vallota purp 
and it is much better to determine what you have no — time coming,” for t m e . —.— 3 p an d some of the — hybrid ‘Amaryllids, protecting them 
winter, 
room for, at once, — sny E . 1 If a stock of leaves for fermenting is not already pro- Gan 8 : JT ON. W Elliott, er ens. we 8 received 
in a few months’ time, ee 8 ured, no time should be lost in doin ; greece e several letters respecting „ Dodman’s” remark ; but w we are 
to throw away, and along with them all 3 tel obliged to 5 that s of the wiere — misunder- 
the ble and care whic ou wed upon | be ed together when quite dry, a ned stand the scope and tendency a g +* article. see that 
trouble an k hould be put in of | stowed away in —— sheds, that they m kopt i must take this matter 1 wn hands; in the mean. 
uring a 2 0 parek r and | that The obj — getting and Aon fi 1 ary 5 ebe 3 r correspondents to 
wee r. fs — — e = Shae tumn is to prevent — n from taking lace until oe for wt laing their letters, ; Bn pe cot is ven thank 
p Poly E * should be struck in | can be usefully employe e If y ol are ere — — — cause may be 7 
r 3 ch convenien a a 
of — — — laced for a where — e ay s ected ; the roof should be Guth e Iti — long since 57 =s upon ventilatie 
where the temperature 2 ` and further experience does 
than 40°. When the bases of the enttings are ei supported by pillars of Oak or Fir, with one side open, | to wiles serine opinion of Mr. Knight, that ventilation «wil 
— may be plun in a moist m-heat, So and the back and ends closed hn rough 7 — not supp . wom the 
aad i ordinary way. These, o t d to the sun without the 
treated, they will soon make both —— 1 roots in — 2 be — 7 — ir pI bex 3 2. * d of 5 fruit i is at 1 e same t aer era Nectarine that eve 3 
H m: 4 re 
e : 4 ther 8 eais balls — but although anit. 9 they, and everything — N —— ve “cireumstane at urs sate 2 8 . 
on a h ~ the whol else abou e same quarter, may an nd should be kept We! beli ieve the fact o be the reverse, and that with good ven- 
— * withor e ; e old — perfectly “ia The same remarks will apply to tan, will be obtained with 7 — _ We doubt 
— soil pron reek > — = em 1 Bae en 2 . — i dlie bald which should be kept as dry as possible until wanted | a the expediency of placing the renit awda ‘ee praia er —— 
should then be held in tt hand, and t l shaken for use. By keeping a stock of all kinds of ma Pen but we want to see some actually made before we — an 
it with the other: th vious mpistening wil r use, a much greater amount of work necssity. 
over it wi eee eee g ff roduced, with e ap- | GoosEBERRTES : An Edinburgh Subscriber. dr sa find in- 
è h Je | done, and a greater effect produced, p 
the — roots : and b tenes ar bled’ 32 to proceed formation respecting the largest Renee ‘ Chronicle 
method a very important point in potting plants will be parent sically in Kyo nage ee n 0 Where of last year; and you may also consult che oos 
, viz, the equal distribution of the soil amongst 8 3 Grower’s Register ” for 1848 if uk 
the roots "A very excellent compost for lants the pot syst d, t EDGES: Who shall decide ? Yew, Holly, or Tree Box 8 
e nd P be carefull srt every two or three weeks, — best hedges for a maze; but they must be many yo — 
0 third rich mellow turfy loam, one-third y — they bec large enough to produce an t. 
leaf-mould, not too much decayed ; and the inaenea 4 all such as at the HARDY ieee ~ borer be repotte whole the Beech is t we — wa take; because 45 cli 
Ut ter. e 
‘ 3 Nn should be proceeded with now,| ea Ot because i i wil ‘not hold ite ane e so well. AB to 
pigeons’ d th b mantie ta used. it a — ep Hornbeam, ppe g — 
ad wi a Do mobbed tr through the hands till the sates without delay, especially on the val 1 will the plan of a e done; tha 
0 
require their 


, 3338 atten’ 
place perfectly neat and clean. 
in immediate); 


opportunities. 
south wall, and when they come u üp phoned thts aftr 
few evergreen boughs. 


State of the Weather near London, for the week endin: n * 1849, 


ee * as observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Ch 

as the Jasmine, flowerin g Curran k Moon’s|| Banomrrer, || TAERMOMETER. 
8 Ke. sharp after the beds of Cents and ae | Mat: |, Mia: | Mm am RT 
other: ering „as mice are very apt to Friday.. 5 2 20% NE. || o 
attack them. We use the common figure 4 trap, baited ee a 19 | 370 || NE. || 00 
with anything that mice are fond of, and find them Monday’ 8 a 7 SE. || i 
answer the desired end. Wed. © 10 a | aso || swe || be 
1 FLOWERS. — 1 NW. | a 
8 Pine. —Perbaps few floricultural fa have | Average... 4 | 29,5 | 35.0 II Tas 

: the 


i 20.784 | 20.559 
5— Hazy; drizzly and foggy: snow. 
6—Sli t snow ; fade 

— gh = fine in 8 overcast; sharp frost. 


State ofthe Weather at Chiswick during the — years, for the 
ensuing week, e: ending Jan. 20, 1839. 
——— 'KV5 


Š j 
228 Sea} ea | No 
4 Tanha 
ESE | S62 | 8 | ohicn i Grantley |- 
<n] | 455 | ^E] Rained, | Of Rain. |z] 
— 
Sunday 14 40.4 30.6 35.5 12 = in. 4 
„ Vb} 40.2 | 29.0 | 346 8 3 
16} 404 | 30.9 | 35.6 12 O34 — 
: 17 4.6 30.9 | 36.2 8 0.11 2 
burs. 18 41.6 | 30.1 | 36.8 Wf 045 — 
Friday 19| 41.0 | 29.7 35.4 11 # 033 4 
atur. 20 — 30.3 | 35.3 z 0.85 4 
8 the above zuria occurred on the 
owest on the night of ti 


3 wer the 


x epig 7 If cuttings of Goose. Hanon Court always appeared | is expected of he con- 
with the other in The Achimenes should be ber? and 0 already put in, this should trivance. Your space is very sma : the passages should be 
ingre be immediately eee to he arrangement of 5 feet wide; cannot you manage that. 
ainrted i castor rage = soi, "and a * a your Gooseberry gr , the most economical weld Names or Fruits: Col. E, DE 8 8 mund 4 same: pe 
The Pigeon i 
be i —— — ae h — Sith plant a row of dwarf busbes and w of standards int ow N across that Wers are only four seed 
p be” plunged at sa into x tesa — by f alternately. It is a great advantage to have all the cells, instead = — the — number in Apples. 
n wet n ined as standards, as the fruit a Le NaMEs or Pua cidium divaricatum, 
a should be potted at once into the | fee fi the spl achin effects of hea ides | something : $o “crushed in the Post-office that it cannot be 
not in whieh — —— to flower. n v rs as 4. identifled.— 6 A. Both Picea Webbiana Pindro 
whieh I think i in e and flavour, ¢ owing to very narrow leaves, which ar ch longer than those of 
_ FLOWER GARDEN wont Aharon e freer palris N air around and beneath its] P. ‘Webbiana.{—Jdem. Your specimens are in most e 
It is an excellent pas ee gardener: tò decide e The pendant varieties of ee ee also Cryptogami¢, and have no relation a gardening or eerie’: 
the arrangement va his f ‘flowerbeds for the en- roduc ch el fruit when trained in this wa ture; we are obliged to decline naming all such. 1 * 
ing year the sea vanced ; 2 e ees wari 3: Carix intermedia ; 2 looks like ne ai ple Se 2 — 
so doing he is enabled t to calculate his requirem Success in our on lant g operations, as in numerous Editor ofthe" Botanical Gazette,” Red Lion-court, Fleet-st. 
ace ’ com account WI nds very much on the Porarors: J We know of no rewar 
come * . 3 kaiia t wih other of the affairs of life, depends very 5 OTATORS f d having been 
stock in hand, he may tell to a trifle w attention which is paid to small matters, many of whic: re brid kinds, seed freely, 
the way of propagating between this time and | examined peah m ar appear trifling, but if omitted or | POTEYTILLAS : JC. These, a yt ee ate they have 
the Ist of M T dec h aA bik 8 and they ar Samiri increased in t 
2 33 is 1 +H bse i e | neglected, prov ats eres s: — ‘done flow marine. by ‘The see eg soat 2075 young ss 2 
i : rth A ‘the little ings ooked closely e ol seeds may be en 
. er hat would | after at this season of the year, the garden snail ea A Mareh ͤͥͤ ·˙ ĩͤ are Dard a 
form most pleasing harmonies and contrast with aspersa), the common grey slug (Limax cinereus), and | checked in the spring by late trosts, that they pot up such 
the natural he eye, than when that has to | their congeners, may rank first. These hide emacs abundance of 8 The r may moved, i | 
entire} i bstract ; but late in the earth, box edgings, an and other snug corne: 9 till n summer. Rotten ung is 0. marth or well 
not at oie oe — the í ao of the ker for this warm weather occurs, when they come forth and attack Roses ; itis best applied as a top-dressin planted Maa 
year be at : 3 and for another, we | every vegetable in their way. On a mild day hundreds | Rorar HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY oF IRE The pronat 
per aiis all's Swell) remind 5 ‘of it — we make y be seen crawling over the val of which a great| ings at the annual meeting of this Body. G n s 
observ Bouvardias are utiful | hey fre Bere. W st that the interests of Horticulture are pron. ‘i 
i number may be picked up by a quick boy, as they fre- | about to be looked to by others, who have both wer, 
things fo for planting out in summer, but are often quently continue visible during the — of the day at the means, the knowledge, and the will to consult them. To 
cted, being considered rather difficult of pro-| this season By begin mp to destroy them very early} “ Hort Hibernicus,” r, and to all our one | 
3. this is however a mistake. The plants in the season we get the ground com aratively cleared | friends, we only offer our thanks for their able an 
at this time or ough be, in a dormant & P trustworthy assistance, Let us hope that a new æra is a 
ate, and he antl ' n of them b, byt the 8 2 youn lants appear in spring. begin, and that it may be long before public duty com- 
—_ 3 1 done by means of a ls us again to undertake so disagreeable a task as that 
turbed in a moist bottom- 8 for a few days, slight hotbed of 1 . litter with a frame upon it; which has been accom ish ave done our part; it 
until the soil is moderately then by covering with ers the bleaching is remains for Irishmen to do 
: them out and cut as many of b roots off as ; 53° to 55° is sufficient for Toat: Ek yr s: A Lady. These may be grown successfully {6 ingota 
Jou dare ; these 2 be eut into 1 inch elosely after Endive in damp weather, and remove all ena water —— with weak liquid manure. b 
3 an inch deep of and ying leaves. ine Cauliflowers and Le Vises: P S. You need not hesitate in applying liquid man, 
leaf 3 Teplunge them in bottom-heat, and they in frames, and dust a little quick-lime amongst them if end Plenty oft, 6 8 ode — 
will soon be ready for potting off. They shoul i ecessary. Give ple air on all favourable 2 i e i 
pal iti ake a sowing of Radishes Watts: Vicarius. bly the best thing you c o is to 


will grow through this from the other side. — the 
thickness of stone sari must a oa = papa of 
materials. Ife 
sideration, the walls pac be 82 of th 
18 ke ote otherwise, 2 3 ie 3 fergie 


much old soil os — — can 
= rer soil consis 


ati Oe. Both the Chrysanthemum and Cineraria i 
ewed ; they are old leaves. Cut them off an 


8 Had sul applied early enough, it auld 20 
doubt have acted ; you know the common cus . 

the stable door r the steed is stolen. Apply 

with a dry s brush, which will Gest — on wi 
ood . Leaves are distorted 


nam bods of tendit 
oe apply liqui oe 
adar never suffer 5 


-= AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 25 


ing, strew your fields, once for all, with Turnip-t 
which will be prefe . 
long 


2—1849.] 


We have not referred s 8 details of thi this dis- 


anp GARDEN 
F Siam Leery en nd puto — crease i its value ti old at the least, 
dit 


pte soit ced i GATOR will sp 
pe hoy ut hurt 


er 
urt to land oF crop, 2 source of the alkalies in plants, in connection with 
which 


all this feeling has been pla, Sag Web a 
furnish occasion for future remark: on the for 
So — 2 = . 
SCHOOL, 38, Kennington-lane, London.— we sr still some observations to make. T, L. C., | devoured one strewing of Turnip-tops, it will be too 
kno owledge of Analytical and Agricultural | we does not in his second paper write so far adv 
Levelling, Railway Engine n as in his first: — ve does not at its 
— "Geology, ey 8 ia = 
Suton may be obtained in — 5 Aeterna, ‘i outset, but his c rises e proceeds, and, 
syy Soh ys works on Arithmetic, Mensuration, Gauging, 255 an appa N succe ssful encounter with 
another opponent who had challenged him, it soon 


ESSRS S. NESBIT’S 1 AND AGRI. 
CULTURAL 
A sound practical 


arsing, Ke. . are published by Lone- 
1 


c 


ö 


: 
H 
BE 


The terms of the Sc n be had on application either atti its former sticking place ; and he ends thus: 

personally or by letter. „ Mr. Lawes has, we believe, 58 = 1 mate of the probable numbers which require to be 
NO AN OTHE ES. of another article on Agricultural Ch * . a g wet Ay yi like the present, we 
t quality, direct from | Satisfied it will never see the lig 3 bene of the | have covered ou so thickly with Turnip- 
G3 PERUVIAN GUANO, e e T Royal Agricultural Society wi r again be dis- tops as to conceal the ground, and, in the space of 

NITRATES SODA AND POTASH. grac th such worthless scientific information. a few weeks, 83 xcept the mai 
Saen dete ere Tha Mr. Lawes’ reply, too much attention has | ribs of the largest and toughest leaves, It will be 
DEAD sat WORM DESTROY now been directed to the matter : it will never happen | best to err a E oveni Ma yar 
a RAZA A LIME (made from bone only). | again. Should, nbd wed rd Pour eee tee save after trouble, and will obviate the necessity of 


lue, be 
20 201 4, Upper Thames-street, London, 


AND n possessing Was 
1 ound meg under the Enclosure Act or + ies 
same rained, Enclosed, Farmed, and 


ed in Eng 


a e 


land, or Wales. For fur Poar 
Surveyor and , en, . 8 


HEAT SOWING 


‘PRE LONDON 
Otter as un 
n ve by COMPANY'S “CORN MANURE, 


(LIME, 
SUPER-PHOSPHATE OF 
eruvian Guano, direct from m Importers’ stores—Fishery and 
ene Salt—Gypsum for Clover—Soda Ash for destroying 
wireworm, and every other Artificial Manure. 
The London Manure Company would call particular atten- 
tion to their Corn Manure and Urate, the former containing 
a large amount of ay S Ste oripa and Silicates, all so 
essential for corn crops, w the Urate is richer in Phosphates 
and other mineral 8 required for roots. 
Full particulars and — a stab tre on application. 
Enw ARD PURSER, Sec., 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, 


The Agricultural Gazette. | anc 


SATURDAY, JANUARY 13, 1849. 


MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
— Jan. AB sae | Imp. Society of lreland. 
— Agricultural Imp. e sad of Ireland, 
: Stra 


Fa miS CLUB. a 


Mr. J. B. Lawes, or 55 published, as 
our readers know, a long paper in the 8th volume 


“English Agricultural Society's Journal,” 
developing conclusions connected with the chemis- 
0 + seat whic 


a laborious and 
im 


with ignorance of the ordinary lan- 
guage of chemistry—insinuates that his deductions, 
eir o i i 


re c 
d confident invective with sym 

is “ brother farmers who e lot h 
vided with such ee scientific 


Now there are 
e hold ind 


not yet very many men who claim 
ent opinions on the subjec — of 


F doctrines of who have made it matter 
— ol iene investigation—and to attack the charac- 


an 
airy impartial reader will con- 
conclus; 
C. L.“ “himself uses the lan- 


oe ami he 


wek Mr. 


wa of the 1 ge Magazine 
ee but with an evidently | m 
style ; ig langes does 


MANURE COMPANY beg toi 


t — rag ae long experience in the t 
co An anonymous writer may pretend to 


rse 
on the best mode 


| feeding slugs. 
rres 


his intention, let hi 
once ; on’t presume to call his writings Agri- 
cultural Chemistry ; 3 2dly, write common sense ; 3dly, 


Mr. 
under this treatment : 


2d of last month a _ ‘was read 
-| before the Newcastle Farmers’ Club What 

as he for Agriculture ;” aid very 
r it is, as our xe es ers (we hate it 
The 8 er, 


asks, ers 
Certainly not,” 
WIS 


y: 
n. Nor wi 
by saying that all fallows are synonymo 
ma and imþrovident agriculture. Nor w 
ook ne ein m to Dr. THomson. * 
X * 


No In fact 
institutions 


r IEBIG 

l sok ba, “tial tek and to 

2 and supporting as the only s 
And v ood advice dhi is 


a more intimate acquaintance w with i doe 


n the Agger en 
membe er, is a farmer, 5 Pt of his deste ph a 

eber arises hate his garni fagia ona 

fi y the task of 

teaching scientifieagrieulture t ` excl rely scientific 

en indeed very desirabl 
ferme 5 — to display their experience for tho 
good of others were more common than they are 


u 
encouragement. is there for 
forward, if a “T. L. C.” be ready to meet them 
with the insolence which inp: the 9 gad 


is induc- 
that sound practical 
field 


tions from them were guided by t 
had 


9 his airs, but the really eminent in 
the scientific yo and A — 5 5 among 
re in them ong the 


It is, 
farmers 


till the spirit pn cur 
T.L the rough and ungentlemanly cri- 
tique we 9 226550 ee must — s that he has 
little chance of attaining his des 


Ovr columns have abounded with e 

of feeding sheep and cattle, 

horses and hogs; we now 8 the attention of 

readers to the scarcely less important neg of 

“ FEEDING wal exclai pe 

our ndents, “ Why I am en er in 

task of destroying mine, and a 8 labour 1 
find it! I collect half a peck every W =. 


ticity of 

* flow flow 2 1 $ eis is engaged in self- 
2 er than att ack, and in this 

not cut 


is we must 


two 5 and re they do not appear 
We tell you, — sir, that you are Siting 
— eee trouble, and ineurring much un 
necessary expense. feeding our slugs you will 
e your Wheat more — and at much 
Instead of troubling yourself 


ere e een. to be 


Te AWES is, et . able to sit unmoved th 

venture ” 2 that |. 

there is no other reader wisi is tot indign = 
On the 


* 
we gin * 


of ou 
aa of assist- 
Far C 


ble that scientific t 


y be suppose 


We 


rot among shee 
the ee of m 
soil, by those who had destr 


p on mountain pastures, ascri 


ed to 


ee 
The slugs will . the blade 


empting to 

urge that Poliak has 

hat in the chain of being, 

t one cannot be 
hat if 


oles, the ee 8 2 oe 


roye 
— pond eased of me ile land, the diminished fertility 
g, by a 


of which was traced to a sudden 
flood, of the 1 which had previously 
abounded in it. ou cannot point out the 
precise benefit which slugs t 

be no doubt t 


ssing thes 
wes shall appeal to ee ri ae 
e are on 


as attended 


the practice whi dine of pre- 
W of * critique, gie ve 
. Lawes, a He rtfordshire gta T many 2 10 y 28 eny food 10 hei ager oe A 
hi estigations on the subject of YPP Ymg ee ee f s 
years pursue nutrition with pai patience of a true e | ith th Originated: rithaf more thas 90 Janr igt 
ith the farmers of Middlesex. After in vain en- 


trapping lugs by E ps, whi 
e neighbouring reer e practised suc- 
cessfully on a small W hild 


were emplo ed 


of the slugs, i d they 
ployed in the interval in devouring their t and 
that as long as they were supplied with Turnip- 
tops ath would not touch the Wheat. 

is discovery, the tice of slug-feeding 


soon —— ame pram’ in the district, though be 


it the 55 of the plan are little = 


eyond 


ourself to slice ee 
ined every morn- 


OO lee MAID AT £ 


THE 


aS 


GAZETTE. 


each bank to the wide — and 
high 


er beds. 
a village sheltered with 
But this and other high 
with town haml 
of the * traet by which A4 are Rom 


wW. 


river n ay 
ceives that it rid 
and wide — 
one of those “gangs” of engines 
tween the remotest districts of the lev 
oes of corn, —5 and other mere 
onally whilst 
line of windmills 2 at wide intervals aas each 
stance, oer ooking as busy 
ints in the wind,” 
ith “their ir great wheels 
n drains, or (as frequently 
happens) standing rita. motionless “for want of 
— though in the midst of a heavy rain, with 
ditches filled to pee r — — waters to rise 
for a time ov 


ir own ancient 
and wonted domain e ob. 


ier ban 


minor up to the m 


A 


š conveying th 


rves |state as 


hole k land sunk chiang feet, so 
onsider- | 


oldere 


has sunk considerably since that 
the different outfalls have 
re still 
a very large 


The cates 


thog 
Laces 


ence 
jects from the ce the Jong cloud of 


smoke from the tall y is of one “pr ‘those more werful 
in 


e main channel or river. In wet 
i ing off the downfall 


er | laid dry, 
| fowl; ‘but so om a benefit to the nation as 


s, and meres which eould n 


and those were the chief places for Heien nd 


The el fane 14 ae is seen rising in 28 — 
tending he away from any quarr 
all sides by a tract of — 
altere 


t 
modern ereward and his Saxon warriors 
defended the the "isle ‘of Ely eee Wiiliam of Normandy ; 
when the fens were wild ex 
air 


e | owner 


s 

| Shall John Stile be a 
always glad w 1 
cannot, I must not endure ; for if the , | lost, 
may be worth 5002, a year, though he part rt with 


numerous high ounds in various parts of th 
formed 3 A tes for monasteries i 
being solitary an naar w well roy and it 


bere tint the ferocions Dan ie 


estroyed 
too re- 


ing the rivers from natural 
2 1 — . whole course of the 


rror 

2 maet, Eat drains an cing riv 
sis. th ae e and cleansing the 
ret 0 this has been a bur 2 

huge engines, multit 
— 3 oer — for taking up the 

is called the general drainage (i 

1th 2 ie fen waters, combined pt * hill 
Fee off by their natural deseent to 
peat earth, being thus in some 8 
ee, and co: compressed, a 


ers, iu- | 


certain amoun 

their — 
e had perform 
gah of e Nr d 


e | ru 55 


ud the kept in win ter on hay stored from the 


d” ind end quickly be in as disastrous a 
ga 


bo 
drained | quantities of these reeds 
aining and | latter part of summer, dried, dressed, and sold in bundles 
s | for ch; this covering, 
ge. | in summer an 


us | each, w 
feathers ‘and quills formed valuable articles 


$ me fens about we 7 of the 17th century, a 


wild fow 


would be 


what similar prejudices, oe were pag tacit objec- ops ng 


tions, et for instance, the 
aspiri 


of their 
private D es or mere — 

2 ther be said t 

though they were scarcely w 


; and again, 


orth 1000s. a year to him 


ens. 


Their chief subsistence was fish ang 

fowl, geeks with bread 1 
Cy gT 

ug in the fens” 

ae ® ring for the whole — 

and landown 


and comfortable subsistence to sens 
Wh or peat moor is found, it hag 


rmerly in man 
Were 


it is Sal 


warmer ones in n winter, than any other 
ial. In some districts a considerable trade 


was 0 
wild fow were ta 
called“ ack. ae, sid B ater years w 
ve disappeared also In the u üb state 
of "the fens, geese (in —— localities) Mee considered 
— fenm e trea a thousan 


t ryan 


e kept, an 


different have 
The a of “ paring and burning” bi 
o be nly way in which the light 
soil could be bronght successfully into tillage. 
ng before it became ral; many di 


Thus, the pote in which i lived, or — starve =s upon 5 
o be owner of 1000 acres, wild an . sw tht as commons, all seleetion 


being prevented 


fall sorts o ws wi 


er 
than part with 500:acres to — the rest 8 a a variety of “balls (belonging 0 a "proprietor in 


or envy, 
“ notorious 80 7 A a vice amongst them 5 
ol “ that a 
bed tel as Hy dn a Mees in the fen 

ohn Stile has 2000 acres in the fen worth 


ariance wi 


po oot 0 and dy kes, 

es for the 3 
ene laces of retr 
the Gaston fens.of de 


may; butJohn 


N . his rich siti esi mist saith he? 
Le tter man than I, been 
aa i 1 my e 1 
is | 
be little 


e is glad, and, pecans it all he | winter 


When the 
ormed therr. work, and begun to — 
nd of other nue allotte 


ocon 


men, having losi 


das | 


n. grass, 
ld ducks, 
herons, where e have been mired 


a. rses 
1 


their 


neu tn 


f time. reac even these desolate: places 
— . 


occu 


Their 
pany Je eg gs ee to sell Py 205 eaan i 
f 


places, broke the new sluices, cu 


arms, burnt houses, destro 


e poor commoners do 
ir co d do 


m 


sey’s drainin 
pos Ree the chief of our | | 


mmons. an 
we 


press the poor te 


jec ough man 
1 the work, all had failed ; {ire Feo 


* philosopher’s — for it had undone most 
of vada that had panan ieys a it.“ And th 


vid the com- 


ef 


rioters referred x Ave were not pro- 
ey were merely tenants. 
roprietors of rights (with the exception of some 
at were unjustly treated) had allotm: 
open field — aus and divided) 2 proportionate | 
their 


tocking the wet, coarse, and 
ttagers, both amg 
ake — chiefly dairymen who “ined 
on the ( hai’ or islands in the fen, 3 the co 
mons and fens all summer with their cows, wifich neal 
grounds allotied 


ents of the | 


for a more valuable ration, mal a 
with Co 


d | The ‘wretched system of ot ning shee} 


d, Beans, o 


p and catt 
ons has been followed fi 
ing 


into 


beben on the flan Tea 
1 pate es on the igh lands, 


LIAN. 13, 


6 —2A2ʃʃʃ 


are be 
11 within the — subsoil ploughing is 
— og Po the land i is of a suita le nature for it ; 


tages yet to be enjoyed by the fen cultivators would | stock, I sa 
— 


ee vol ak e this outline of the 

— irira of advancement exhibited in the agri- | sult her, assist her in all 
cultur of —.— with but one remark :—Surely they | in any of h erations. 
who talk and write to dispara ge the work of “ reclaiming | tinue, from n downwar 


2 Rg 


ve e 
and if the y really do search for Bets i in favour -y their 
opinions, A is certain they will find none here. J. d 


— BOX FEEDING, 
In replying to the polite and courteous lett > re — 
Sir George Robinson, Bart., of Cranford hat 
18 aie but I think very inappropriately, “box erding 


wish part 
this 


cann ger main 
bat joyfully acknowledge that I have all along be 


under a cloud. Con 
— 


grea 
but I am sorry to Seger that nearly every inquiry I 


make tends onl 
d 


ck-making ; 
graves, and have let 
them. Mr. G. 
the only gentleman 
—— so 


those 


1. 
we nor numbers can error truth, nor 


am convince, ° that by far the} 


right : but I 


Im 


Twas at the Christmas Cattle Show, and 


of respecta who has his 
„and rams,” 


11 AUGUHNIUULI 


manure thus made, and also 
avy 


aces, sacra on 


xformance, and of the advan- 


well around them ; 


icularly to observe, that in all my 


my own views — the 1 — 


duet like this, I pinni mAy if 
opt it, give me at pleasure ; 


have 
down their living machines into 
wler, I am led to believe, is not 


„weltering in their own 
sunken dungeons ; ; but neither 


Private 
the general and — — of 


numbers more than 


| gentlemen at one per 


URAL GAZ 


faster made 
es; but thena 2 direetl 


con o nature is not made to agree with it because 


Hiikh. 27 
Ss 
| Maintain that both beef and muck are and ſ of soils, and the feeding his pigs and hens should extend 


the neglects, the — and all other 2 to which 
subje 


one person only ciated it. ia | man in 


e 3 av 
meat. and drink for am 


to be thrown to dogs. 
The qu 


what 
| whether many or few, practise, but what 5 herself | 
me. In all m 


for psan or for 
the „81 


lungeons; but Sir 
ce 


numbers a 
feuer re eae the“ sgt quite as much as eee heen 


BEES 


1 


Geo 


and the bos; but in doing so I co 
robber of Nature only, and not a common thief, 

„He takes all her smiles; he leaves all her grief; 

So the thief of all thieves is the box feeding thief. 

But, however much — Ne 


The vi — How muc uch of the severity of 


our ‘laws i is to be attributed to the —— — 
+ 


affirm that it was both 
even medical 
ractice 


which at another period they all as strongly condemn ? 
e 


retieu 

et omne quod exit in wm—preter remedium; and at 
sien time all the ums are uae as physic only 

I 


with me is, no 


oning on this subject, 
3 and to all feeders of 


een my A 
—Gentlemen, treat animals as you would 


ate a 3, 4, 0 c 
own excrements, from a bed gene- 
ating 8 an. on ews renee it be 

or assages 


a be 

r; | absorbed by the straw that is under them; the greater | 

portion of it either remains 
or sinks into a porous soil, o and is 

ee words I think it will 2% reat | that I was 


zx — 2 — * pew state, 
lost. 


2 to the box feeding system generally, and not to 
any particular tier of boxes, and especially not to that 
third tier previously described by Sic George, 


. Gaz. No. 45 1848) 


that he kept horses, colts, pigs, apea two rams, in such m 
orge 


dislikes my having intro- 


the 
nsidered him to be a 


with the Rev. Sir G. 


ding of cattle, and however 


I think, has compared them to th 
— Smithfield, and Sir George, I believe, is equall 
ing of 


ear that the dry-rot 
cathedral pagen fit only to inclose cattle or lunatics, 
into one heap of ust. 
as In conclusion, I observe, that as I am anxiously care- 
fal to give my opponents in argument all the advan 
can, I admit that ani 
slippery hodge 


he compares the change 


| most —— to Mr. Warnes's sweeping away the 
old sweet and comfortable cattle stalls ting 


we sought i to remedy the errors of pd — the 
de of example, or diminish temptation to 

poo. Th 2 — done little in this; what things 
have been don e ‘to be found in the ee 
eee. efforts of “ ‘indies who have a taste” for 


à 
crime unishment and example. I have seen soldier 
after soldier at the halberts till their comrades 


— as 8. S.“ . it, is ‘weal stupid work, 


a; ry n 5 
and to “dry nurse” pove — is little to the taste of 


him till strong enough to assail it more effectually, 
and then returns him on the world with — to 
“awaken his hope,” to starve, to beg, to rob—a 


+ 


ir 
For the credit alike of pro and poverty, E 
gon hope that S. 8.“ has Phy. Ari ths journey 
f life with some of the disease of Sternes travellery 
and * through such a medium, seen . rders of 
his neighbourhood. I hope he i is led a own 
strong sense, perhaps rather morbid, of Ae te to ex- 


y ; 
hae ve known tio frequently a regiment or a compan 
has acquired a bad reputation — a very few i 


os | ferent characters in it's : and as I also know that the 


— ral i a step pE that prevails i in England of the cha- 


— and that the belief of the ptam of property 
and of capital employed in Ire rest on as narrow a 


ve e 5 s 
I the amor patrie of the ngai Ane 
have heard less of Geni I say few outrages; compa- 
ratively with the 255 aa a want of employment 
of the Poe on they are very fe 

I cannot believe that the ural Aimon of i We 
is 80 —— worse than I know that of Irelan be. 


& 
5 
S 
ic] 
2 
PE 
au 
R 
1 
ae 
a 
2 
1 
E 


i * 
neighbourhood. I do not recollect having been robbed 


e by one of my laboure: ie D So eS Se 
bourer of min a th 


ief 5 Turnips, 


ane e ware dina bat’ B * neighbour- 
ag oe e she to leave them, and refusing to 


name him, but assuring me he would hot return again, 

and I lost no more. I must, however, it I have 

heard others complain, but they sere generally close- 
their own interests. 


. | fisted fellows, even as regards 
»| have known piece after piece of an “old broken gate 
il the pot of Po have 


— 
| food ; I also readily acknowledge that the 

| of beasts so fed very readily pass through the litter — 
to the bottom of the “ boxes ;” and I do not arly ea if 


— ] | night. 
cel | state ; —.— a pe rare — the anny, endave- 


T 


j 
be 


y | all well-made, well v 
| eattle-houses, George Wilkins. 


HE RURAL POOR. 
a + N 


WHEN ne e heng zh his falar ho ma amonei 2 in 
husb peaceful e m ve commission 
raise a hubbub that from culture | was then also 


silken 4 i PEERS i 
authority. In 40 years the only actual punishment I eyer 


you may rule m vith a rr 

With those heared e < of the Agri- 

cultural B "which the the editor has so judiciously 
mn taries on 28.8.2 1 flip, I yr 


THE AGRICULTURAL to 


Officer, who had a me, ga Home Correspondence. — 

mand of a company, and which I held for some 18 Gardeners’ erste —Havin beer weed ac 

months, and y services w for on other | agricultural friends turn to the 3 con- 
duties. In this company there were no punishments, | sidering the Chronicle as appliabl o nly to eners, 
and = t end my brother farmers never to omit looking 


ed was satisfactory. “I sw 
da oy Eee for eight 8 y 
ival t 


of o. A few 
civil and military commandant remarked to me the 5 
conduet of the men, and che ri 0 n to 
put one of them into the black 4 for a night, and I 


against them, but that ys had not behaved to 
mind, a ues! in their stead; the 
were sen t the expiration s the eight months, 


when, by a palliation in th 


Feakle, ET gap 80 tance by 
whole population 0 with the strongest ex- 
ns of approbation of its conduct. 0 


At head - q 
oity 3 that | 


a body of 
peko i rahiri [ishme — pol duties 
very great temptations, yet, — 
have con minet i the mselves 


lose them. I 

rea how little will influ- 

ence men ; a newly raised regiment was marched from 
a 


e 
up, by encouraging 
; 3 this is gave a spur, and 


say meni I marched thein all iz Sith 


as 
paper an 

tach- | s 3 ev ents cas 

comin 


ent into m 


non-commissio officers 0 y 

men’s rooms, that they might learn ae to anes their own. 

How was this aceor t by continual watchings 

and followings, by working on their aes, by scoldings 
cease! mstant solici 


cares and e 


t fre 


3 


IU pet . od, 


trade poli 


— 


as 8 


in which hav 
that are considerably lower than what 
av 


oe 


Davis states, È And w 


this large quanti 


ty h 


upon a sudden 93 


a such requirement, 5 5 after a 


old stock 


ge on e 


e passa 
> | theory, was I think corr ge 


and still 


xports, 1 


to know the truth ; $ pote 


— we * rigod 
Rural Poor.—The 3 of the ru 
y 


10 | upon by seve 


a subject 


uggested by 
e | the practical question, and a apep eno answer wo ould 


ns been collected in 


rest 
contains brief, but very clear, 


garden 
| ini, and — rly expositions of the principles of 
d cultivation of the the 


utmost value to 
cesti 
x witt Davis ina 
di which is published in 


Mr. Davi 


oubt to many jor 


such 


have been th 
-= in the last 60 pan 
is highly impo . to 


its eee has had little 
t fo 


e . 
aes 


plimenta 
but it is not so generally considered that it is our schoolg 
and our ki rk, the shorter catechism, and the 


aracter, 
and developed those moral and 1 “qualities 
which have led to such success in 


of wee ings — aie sinking deeper and deeper in 
ignorance and wretche 3 ve itap 
k pe crime ; and, if the only rémedy 


them So deep in 
dition. pa oer — of our people, and so 2 
st regard — to God or man, 
ersons consider their 


it as the dr well-meaning, but weak enthusiasts, 
Let all consider t d elf has provided a 

edy, at His blessing has always accompani 
its honest perseveri ti 


Iry, 1 
a pep dd ak bre is 
0 The 


the f ing m 0 
“a oa tee tra herd use * eat numbe f old cock 
beg to be set | grouse feathers in the birds, besides being feathered to 
sire ee ce vent mischief, and oe toes like the wi a bird 2 of a doubt of 
uce ‘3 indeed, Ih ard so of an ar 


ral poor 


correspondents, an 


nished a topic for some most judicious observations b 
yourself, Will you i 


upon this reall 


momentous subject ? 


7 
it a Scotsman to add a word 
our corre- 


2 I doubt not, are sensible men, * emg al 
and in the guidan 


ces | by * 
admit of, but, as they: are fit for it, they: put t them under 5 


of their ordinar , fu — 
y ‘fect. 
are never 80 absurd as . 
a porig; ; and as 
oe the 


requir 
t suitable kor our columns, and 
your let he 


hey have seen gas “with their oe close to the 
and an old sportsman once tol that he see a 
uch abuse in his life as oman, 


so in quiet, and will break thë eggs. The next 
will enclose eo eon prunon n fowl, and will let 
5 B. 

Mr. Huæ “abl Farm aer —On reading, in the 
Agricultu mal Gasette of the 23d ult, the report of & 
8 lately delivered by the A. Huxtable at pee 


hear the resu 


d they desire to follow; aud 
know that no man 
of | of peas op.a s 


is 
skilful 


arrogance towards 
ae 3 that gentlemanly feeling ne — 
from wounding t by sensibility K others, and disdains 
attem 


J. M. Goodiff, Granard, Dec. 81. 


— nines 


1; Barley, ås 
I Tugi to state, , for — — 
vil, 


each 3 of rent- e 


to 100/. 3s. 7łd., or nearly 2 per 
year. 


srr Aa 
: 33 
„ 


£1317 0 87 8 
General average for thelas 13 soar. £101 6 23 


Chas. M. Willick, 25, Sufflk-street, Pali Mail, Jan. 5. 


artisan, 
so many sensible men fail to ‘apply, ‘this mune Mr, Hux 
of the peasan 


the part ticular 

all this just because they 
rn a good scholar, 2 able man 
mes it to 


| and Ss the last veh he gives h 
to me farm. I have 


t question, namely, r. 
system of farming been one productive of profit or loss 
table r two fi and doi 
believe about five or six years, oe for on 
s * balance sheet 


not the 


yield such 
ting of th 


1 in 
lived 


before 


go, an and 
in the Bible has 
ich secures 


nts or minist 


Is ae. not EEI 


slightest _ that the 
3 as it goes, i ectly true and 


in the way he s 


said, “ Train up a 
when he is old he will not ay he from it,“ and 
fully made kno 


wn to us “ 


4 250 could 


scandalous in their conversation, or 

eir Wee so long as a 88 te 

years in ish where I ever 

cad an oath ; om you might have ridden many miles 
you heard an any. 


Also, you could not, for a great 


* 


„ that we all alike inherit a 
nature which, if left 12 itself, will as 
oy * fruits of wi 


e, yea, in most of 
ren read the 
Scriptures, and were . of Bible either by their 
ers, ter was a very full 

ecordin 


y tro 
1 but what 1 by it 2 prove which the pole 
benefi The “ balance shest” 


might materiall 
41381. 8s. Id. profit.“ ee 
lieved from the necessity 
roduced in th 


uld afford every reasonable 
1888 of the soundness of his system to those w 
the ener d capital, to follow it. 


That society y has p 
which Mr. f has has devol 
ink in 


to doubt as before the statement * 
deners? Chronicle of „10. per ceni 


e| 


75 
sol 


Se. 13, ) 


#1849. ] 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


4 1381. Be. 
Constan 
Having ha 
Dial ing. 
ving nerally arrived at useful results 
and he Aa 4 ‘he furtherance of tl 


en Fo 
te am regs to I l observati 


in deep nor far apart, say * 982 
a rod apart. —— t is 


uantity severa 
if —4 strong clay “it vil n all 
ter, leaving but 8 little oe 


do clays less 
(euch we e — a etal it wi it will be found neces- 
arte: AO epth of t ain 


51908, Ge. 14 clear profit.” An Occupier of Land and] si sanoni, a fai 
wa 

had some years of experience; guantit FOl abd 14 GOR. 12 

ts, and Barley 

rtant | Shee 


a 
ill confine my remarks ne to the common plough furrow, both sown on 8th 
in which s field was „much infested with annu 


8 in view a fall of a 
n filling up the drains t 


beneath wh workin 


ears, in order that 


for for perhaps many years aa, by a aer — 
in five or six y 


ether 
experience, and that a loss of capital i is sure to follow, I 
feel bound to protest against it. B. Hunt, Basingstoke. 


Sokieties. 


BSS 
2 d 


ace with 
j 55838 not suffici 


intermixe 
usual quantity of = which i is sown broadcast is from 
4 to 5 bushels Whea: 
Oats per Scotch 


I have. chosen this subject in 5 to ony oiher that 
to me, as — involves the 
a do not annually w 
an is A ay- ps raise a 


fi 
BEE: 
E 
2 


it 
5p! 
7773 
inde 
8 
i 


p i Hi 
ferreri 
B ö 

9. 

3 


SFE 
2 87 
g . 
H 
aE 
i 
D 
5 
Hel 
8 


and pa per acre in favour 
of ees seed saved th 
ed by pra 


ots. 
of acres, after two year o oe 


experiments I yy tad re 


ir crop can be raised on light 

Aan er certainty wy reducing the quantity of 8 

s found that it is better not to e the land 
ade 


field T eip the previous een 
nik winter. 33 acres were plou; ughed and 
the worst side of the field, and 2 
The other part of the fiel 
h s 


a: 
o hand hoe ibe thin sown crop. 

ooked much the best u p 
other be egan to sho 


with pre roadcast 21st April, 
cut 18th and ri 30th August, 1848. 
Bushels o 
Seed per 
Scots acre. 


Grain, 
Bush. and dec. 


Weight 


‘| Straw. 
Cwts. and dec. Per bushel. 


land with much 


y soil tion—two years e, 8 
3 r the field; Barley tightly: manad; and drilled 
furrow ; sow 


4 rk their — men 


ai refer to the Calen 


way 
and children, 
a very few instances, any Prarie, has been made to 


nt, feeding, &c., it has rarel been accom- 


example, if men of some experi 
e . give the r, of the 
gt the mber o 
P 1 the general 
subsoil— mbe 


regular hands, 
oys, exclusive of oc 


tz 
hg 
— 
do 


524 
521 
53¢ 


117 


oo 
In this 5 expert ment the results were even 


thin sown 5 TA vest appear to be ese the preceding tabular 
ew 


statem ao All 


a of 
Seed per Straw. Grain. 


Weight 
bee e. | Cwts. and dec. Bush. and dec. 


Per bushel, 


A mul 
reports would be give n Oy those only whose establish. 
men after mature 8 on 


5 2 quart, gallon, and sere the inch, foot, 
and yard—the s tute acre—are measures about which 


* e 
ite 
S 
ao 
= 


sown re 
circumstances were ve 


‘avo 
This season a light sandy e of upwards of 20 Scots 
110 001 sown at the rate of 4} 


o Oats. The whole field was press. 


made was early 

rather a ‘inion 2 5 without 

| Param ety although Sidh levelled down on the sur- 
ugh t 


med by the — 
e crop is not — threshed, but I — 3 . that o 
m * are formerly bay d to be sown 
74 to 8 Lge oe I ver saw 
r 3 9 fof straw, thickne 
al 


ze, vi 
ar, and, kernel, 
2. That hick sowing, 


ot be 80 ee eee to open grower 
other 9 bein 
rat 1 


These deductions seem t trom the 


ad, and 


the results of the tw 


e shall have done little more than intre- 


but the members wer 
a less 


seed is usuall ets on 

plough 13 by the hand, would be — 

N t that it would 2 — well to er semen ar | bour. 

hin sowing, besides the saving | the operations a Simitished® and drilling would admit 
2 Buist t ut the 


— 
pag approaching to this 
on the 


0 
— A greater 


n over stocking of 


i i the bleak ge, ses of the Ochils 
Rcd 


continue our ‘investigation for another 


0 
on Wheat — — other spring crops, for if we S 


k shed is n led ode and the — 
a rin the pengi stead gera Ny shown. 
should the tenant T restricted from erecting a 
valuable conveniences by the fear i 


y 
having a large open shed, 16 feet vide, 
aie: with rack and manger; the corner of N yard is 
fenced off a crib for fodder : 
appear to be in better h ealth than 


they were drawn that they amet 2 over to separate the 
rotten or 5 before they are given to the ee the peco 
here is akon 15s. We shall en commence with 
Mangol we, in sce with most o 
neighbours, only obtained a moderate crop, none kania 

their appearance e until J une, five weeks after being 42 The 

; Whea 3 


173 stones per coomb, worth o 
clining, and 11 stones of Oats spi for 165. per quarter, sets —— 
m 


and r. ent, putting 


Di 5 


8, and the = al 8 Lane even B them The union 


| 


. Sep 


serv 
rent ses fill, higher rates must be paid if 
ployed, so that doubt and despon 
bewilder 


s plan 

duped, subservient preng Aaa his — 

of free tr and how lame 

trade is 8 e ee 1 : ge 

game, or the rent, or the hedge rows, or an swampy fu 
or the scanty rotten — or the 50 acres of Gorse and Has- 

socks, or an — e d ; : 


paa ars eucounter, isolat 
er? rent and wane rates and ta 
victory, and stifle his ru must talk 
of his emancipation * time. May 1 ask wei 2 5 B.,“ of 
the South Ham 1 Farm, means by fo orking out uch. 
grass from between the rows of Swede T 
being fed with sheep.” If these notices are intend 
ges ages of i 3 ments, why shoul 
a tallow aig and i had, w 
an operation 2 Sa Fie 


ed 3 bis re and ‘his la- 
obtain the 


eterborough, 
—8.— —During the late hard frost, we 


Calendar: of Operations. 


NUARY, 


*.* [We rome ‘the following Fr to the con- 
sideration butors in 


this column. It was 


1. Turnips “We have —— agai 


emptied the y 
it in convenient heaps for appiying to the Swedish Turnip land 
As the — here, . 3 
farm, is rough, 


suffered very little from t 
rse, and not very suitable for the table, itia 
pele A — at the farina mills. On the 


‘hey exercise ee and 
when tied up in stabl 


what is t — 


N 


l; 
1 
i 
ö 


30 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Jaw. 13, 


renewed confidence in the Potato. Tarnips COVENT GARDEN, Jan. 13. HAY.—Per Load of 36 1 


a third short THEIELD, J $ 
heless an. f 
year’s crop, and grain is being used more largely in| Pineapples; though not over abundant, are, nevertheless, Meadow Hay 68s to 75 81 f 
pte the fattening of stock, both to economise the Turmips | sufficient for the demand. Hothouse Grapes continue to be — ieee lage Sew Sov „„ sve 708 tO 95g 
and to on the condition of the stock. Markets — be well | scarce; niger, ones sr pe * a oe chiefly — X ka ee * = 
supplied prime stock, but we fear b Salen | | consisting of Chaumontelle, Glout Morcean san Pa 
have nota ee, of pay, as the stock Sally go off two and Old Colmar, are now, a8 might be expected, not 3 plen- New. Hay anada ria: Better. J. Cooper, 
monthis or six weeks n — last year, owing to the short | tiful. Apples the same. Nuts in g eneral are sufficient csu Marcet. An. 12 . 
of Taruips. 4 — are now emand. Oranges and Lemons are plen tiful. Amon ongst — prime Meadow Ha 70s to 788 — = is 
feeds of cut pore: W — 1 of Bean-neal, Ț 13 ib. of tables, Carrots and Turnips are * — and good; Cauli- ee ee y 50 — New ‘Cloves ue i i 2 
bruised Q nd 14 Ib. of braised Linseed each per * The flowers, 1 K — 1 . a wee * 7 
z i in n Beans, Rhubarb, and Se ge 
arm i fen d a, — erga =. 2 tog gether, and given D N = d ce, Belgium, and Holland still N. prn Old Clover ... ... Wore Lee . ` Josava Basil 
balled, a as 7 — Phy mi mistake in last report from | siderably to the stock of Potatoes, which remain pretty steady Pine Old Ha: 2 — i 
this — The cows giving milk are receiving Bean-meal in ome Lettuces and other salading are sufficient for the maha ditt y “ae 2 4 dure 1 30 te is 
Gaily in their drink, besides a supply of Turnips. 1 * pig ne — and: 2 are pet — 8 — e sh te — s 
which we have a large 8 stock, run about loose in the dung court, | sist eaths, 7 2 Old Closer ce Tl pee g 5 y 
nat they can among the chaff and straw, re- | denias, Fuchsias, and Ro y 
ceiving besides a supply of Indian Corn meal, mixed with their “FRUITS, * Lang, Jan. 12.—The weekly re; from 
drink of “burnt beer” from the distillery. Wheat, though a ee eS dine, we meek Ae nee. Ae woetiy reports: from ii 
fine sample, does not thresh out to the Balk of crop, 165 Sold — — 2 yé to c sweet, per Ib., 2s to 38 aiae me provincial markets, with little exception, quote 
aqua ay at an av i — — s: Gd. Tren — l — — — — — p. lb., ↄd to is Walnuts, p. 100, 1s 6d to 2 grain somewhat lewer. At Boston only picked samples 
> raged , — — met — — * Apples, dessert, p. bsh., 48 to 7s * . bush., 168 is ate of — advanced Is, Here to-day the prices are 
. bsh., 38 to 5s estnuts, p. pe sto 5 Semel 2 
bourers are well 9 eek being the common wag Pp. p aint igp 
P per doz., 28 to 6 Nuts, Bar., p. bush., 20s to 228 
. KKK seve, ato 10s | = Hib. p, 100 bs 0 to 100s a ae Foreign — mode 1 
a, ations Oranges, per doz., Is to 28 — Job, p. ” a ‘aii K ) 
of ware.. The value wer — 8 — j to Lemons, Sar ris yg — Brazil, p. bsh., 128 to 163 about 1s. lower since Friday last.—Oats in great abun 
from 10s. to 12s, a week. per 0s to 19%; dance, at about the same value.—-Beans and Peas 
— —— Farm, Jun. 6.— All our land for fallow an mA VEGETABLES. same, without much inquiry.— The sale of pastoral is — 
gees oropa is mostly roughed, ee titan E fon aon Cabbages; p. doz., 3d to 18 7 — eve, odto ls $4 | slow, confined to the daily consumption, 
wher , , sto 48 ni $ : 
finishing right above the drains, In this clay soil it 2 — nent doz. 3d to 18 — pi bush., Is 4 to 2s 60. millers Wheat sp: ly.— All sorts — opinions are 
itso to take off surface water. On land that is thoroughly | Greens, p. doz. bunches, 1s 6d | — Spanish, p. doz., 1s 6d:to 4s | given as to the effect of the great change on the Ist Fel. 
— — is naturally dry, I — — age —— to 28 — pickling, p. hf. sieve, Is 6a The prevailing one seems to be prices will 
ng more , HA | iff doz., 28 to 48 38 > 2 1 
if by hand, an expert sower can f a ridge; a d — VAA, p. — is to 28 | Shallots, Pre) Ib., 4d to 8d | BABES S moderate improvement, but the Prospectig 
capable of sowing with both hands, he can take in a w. = e — brown p. Dun., 8d to 1s 3d | Garlic, 4d to 8d far from promising to farmers. Still, the cheering | 
at once; and in harrowing, a pair harrows, if property er el, p- bf. sieve, 6d to 9d er * “doz, ls. 17 accounts fr rom the man utacturing Aistriets the vat 
they —— conv — . — — a 3 P naeem De She Gon, to 1808 fy 84 m, p. half sieve the ahuda i 
„ 5: ee 
dourers are employed in cutting and repairing hedges, paling | = er bus, Qs 6d tos Lettuce, ‘a 7 1 * a to 4 | and cheapness of money and various other favourable 
„eee Al z. bum., 1s 64 i to2s | = Cos, do., 9 9d to 1 A cireumstances—may reasonably afford them hope and 
Sussex Pann, Jan, oo 7 — ar or hi m Rea B Beci, = oh, d tols | Endive, N score, eonfidence. 
next will b be, when weather is open, 4 55 pay — | Hors adish, p. bal. lat dè to és Mushrooms, p- pe to 1s gt Rye 
-after weden, all drained Aspar: per b 0 — : 
intended for the green crops, for drains, earth from Asparagus LN eng eee eien be 40 — | mn 
N —— — — — and Bark with b d 3d . e e 508 34 32s 04198114312 
— vagy omer atara — — * We Rhubarb, panilik * Is 6d | Fennel, per bunch, 2 hes ner Mee 48 9 31 4 19 5 28 5 
Bare a good number — po gat 1 — trees, making s, per 100, 8e 6d | Savory, per bunch, 24 to wn: Mises ET Gi SL. 4S 31129 +8 
1 g geighbour | Cucumbers, each, ies to 2s Thra —— bunch, 3d to 4d 2 1 4 n 1 
roads, draining, &. I am rai — ped Se sas our neig r doz., 84 to-la Watercress, p. doz.bun.,6d to od N „ 
Aal. They have quite depended | Clery, P. bun 4 ˙ 2 do., 1s 6d to 23 A 45 10 30 8 17 0 26 4 
now seem — ~ 4 pen Carrots, p. doz. bun., 38 ts, oie ig ga PRGS 
on the — s — parts o their farms to mate Radishes, p. doz, op pee Marjoram, per bun: ch, 2d ‘Asie 41 9 31 1 18 7 28 10 
— Ress 9 — Turnip, do., 94 to 18 Mint, green, per bunch, 2d daes Fo. 4 
— - — POTA TOES—Soprewanx, Waregems, 2 a iaa eno 10 0 i 2 03 6 * 0 
4 pond The Committee re at arrivals for the past w Fluctuations in the last six weeks’ Corn 1 Averages. 
Damr i. a a aaa. of your cor- —. coastwise and Continental, are more than — demand, Prices. | Dec. 2. | Dec. 9. Dro. 16. Dre 23 JAN. 6. 
vour me with the form i i ister, llo 500 34.— 85 gi 2 
Mz hs bailiff, jen —— do ——— a dairy 48 eed 
0¹ 42 s.. pres bee 
— ACB an is Y have the 45 x . 18 — 8 
of the expense of sending a y 46 10 > ah 85 pme | 
n Johu's, Battersea, he would 3 10 : te oe 
oblige one who might _ — z * ipa 
0 2 NE — ; 
B. H” would give a rew more particulars respecting his Wakefield. | Boston. Birmingham. 
oa ba J E EE o 
which he describes is perforated with holes, h — SE cians | Dec. 29 Jan. 5. Jan. 3. Jan. 10 Jan. 4. Jan. 11. l 
— — qr. ar. 62 lbs. 62 bs. 
: Sow 3 et. per acreof guano, and 2 owt 8. 15 
per acre of , and 6 cwt. per acre of rape- dust 45 932 t046 6s 4d6s 8ålős 446s 84 9 
of It for a crop to dig in, 46—5046—5040—48 4048 |5 0 5 5 6 5 67 6 
Mios: JLP d., How are their 4 04 b ed 
a owe r to i 
è : A, W. The smell may be “extraeted” hy the use ET * “ii 
ot charcoal-dust, which retains those volatile — — 35—48 5 6 6 A 
; which it is due; the moisture be dried up in the Be . & 8. 
Rye : Hiquirer, Is Rye sown in May like to yield satisfac- ht ay pP 
r May-day S anro hannen * — 7 
— aide — d 
suae € P Guarino wer . — M N. qr. qr. 
to er merely by diminishing their available 2 ; 
SMITHFIELD : Anon. The Prince’s om sold to Mr. Wendor, of 22—2521—2426—282 23—28 23—28 
Chelmsford, for 38 guineas, We do ow its weig 26—30 peaa 30—32 — 30—32 30—33 
. -4 Regular Subecriben: You will have nothing 24—262 ie _ p — 
inl aeai amata bass 4 TA 
York Meeting, in the “ English a — 1 
— 8—30 | 18-30 
‘ HOPS, — 1921 1 
. W is — 
“good demand for all fine Hops with colour and quality. : . : 2 
aber eee abe mp rene e . — 1° L 36—50 | 36—50 
83—343336] a jai 12—14 } 12-14 
nek heap — — i at 
32.241 3303.29 %% 20 
\ 4 31— 045 


3738813 Re y i 
dm DOI md f 1D: 


eicester 
Per st. of 8 Ibs. —s d s d 
Best Long-woois, 4 Otot 4 


9—1849. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 31 


— er : 
SALTHILL, BUCKS 
bN n, Builders, and aes. a 
rn een may lea, WILLIAM HILL'S 
TUESDAY, Jan. 16, and. sa ; 7 
32 olloek precisely, 1985 et e E reiter zue re. IMPROVED FLUE BOILER AND FURNACE 
ander the valuable N 4 — wae Tigo pense 1400 5 
ping ste d Dwarf Roses yorid — ae eee FOR WARMING CHURCHES, CHAPELS, 
Rhododendrons, Peciduus Shrubs ; fine large specimen Portu- MUSEUMS, MANSIONS, MANUFACTORIES, HORTICULTURAL ERECTIONS, &e. 
ox, 


3 
oplar, Eim; — orked Lime, Ash, Thorns, Registered sparse to Act of Parliament, 6 and 7 Vic, o. 65. 
5000 large test 


0 
xbridge, or forwarded by post, upon 1 to the Auc- 
Ganev ond Appraiser, High-street, Eton, 3 
, LOADS OF UPLAND MEADOW HAY or 
1 SUPERIOR QUALITY. 
7 EAEE pb egs to inform the Public he will 
ri 


URSERY AND SEED BUSIN 
T, BE DISPOSED — within 5 — 


3 aaay tuated, in a highly oe 
unexpired Lease of 26 y 
2 — . a capital of 300“. or ° $008. wil find FRONT ELEVATION, LONGITUDINAL SECTION, SECTION, 
2 excellent o piegi ——— — 2 eee e e e For Testimonials, &c., see Gardeners’ Chronicle of November 4. 


Y. Z. Y., at the Office of this 


TAS BE DISPOSED OF, a E and SEED | 
ADE, the first of its class, in one of the most important 
A counties, eens can 60 years, and having | DORTLAND CEMENT.—Testimonials received from | S WIRE e r „ a 


*,* Communications addressed to W. HILL, Horticultural Works, Greenwich, will meet with prompt attention. 


a valuable re Manas 3 rey, —— m ae oe We by apply- all quarters prove this CEMENT to possess the rare pro- r yard, 2 fee 
Swit a4 sen of the Piyon cy reli in paei of withstanding the severest frost, and to be consequently 

eet wi who prie superior to every other for hydraulic purposes, such as building 8 725 9 

quish = lining of Reservoirs, —— Baths, Fish-ponds, &c. For 


0 BE LET, on ut Ferse, with immediate’ possession, 8825 
THE WARRINGTON SCHOOL FARM, of about 320 colour nde paint. cle never vegetates, V 
Acres of excellent Corn and Turnip Land, 200 5 recently Manufacturers; J. B. Waite and Sons, Millbank-street, 
and effectually. tile drained. Bounded on each side by 4 5 Westie i > 
roads, and only five miles from Birkenhead, A well-bui 
Tilery and exce ent clay in the centre of the farm, with vats HEIMPROVED HYDRAULIC part | 


aged 


=(8 


access: each way. Buildings well adapted for Stall-feeding, i 

3 all Ema nage a ro o or r further AnP O x fey 1 * joie upara e Coina 2225 ne 2222 22775 
o Mr. NEILSON, r. MELVILLE, Cherry St f half. an- u. 

Cottage, ne at Birk sad, Ch 4 set ‘ Aeh 15 pon 3 2272 ORA atata taba ata 


obtained. The same 2 ih 

Nee ENAMBLLED ae be properly | out the aid of a Tank or Cis- 
tood, these should be seén; for elegance, light- | tern, — to throw a Jet 

ness, and 5 of character they 4 oe to be| of Water 8 a “exp 


Galvan. J apanned 


compared to them, and being enamelled o nd the | = ay the head of water be- 7 ized. 
names sean oe eu — pM eee are unde e Ro ia ase _ aE OND coping som * 
pe — ory, i retum, or Rosery should be ome s for deep wells of all = 3 2. a “is 5 a 
wits without them, u, ‘Gentlemen, and Ladies waited on Buildings 5 heated by hot water, ter wheels to work small 1 om P extra strong T 95 a 3 é oe 
pecimens * ot ve London; or drawings forwarded ns Be 151. Estimates given aioe vg ip supp y of 1 e. Ig inch „ ext T a 5 
le ur Bath, all complete for 44. 1 Ci ” extra strong ., 20 
BOWERS NEW IMPROVED WATERING-POT also on nA PO Te vate 5 n e 3 
roots for forcing; 100,000 yards of Box, cheap. STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROOF y the upper half is a coarse snp it will * the Aa one- 
Flower con Areal all * ‘and re ee Vegetable, WIRE NETTING. rth. Galvanized sparrow-proof netting for cise 3d. 
ind ce, 5, orwarded by post, or can — square foot. Patterns for warde t- f 
I foun — E. ä of Seeds made for any given 8 by Barn, NARD and Baker; re Nor- 


Wich, in L gdan, 
RABE ER Hall, pg Bose y 


A * LADY, of of great e baa peg ik 
herself 


Sole — Duncan sone bate and Florist, 109, St. 


JA WRACLIC ENGINES, WATER RAMS, 


is desirous 
r Gentleman’s 


Ces 
ples; Engines worked, by —— or 68 Famil 
A irp Y, to Superintend the et cae scape and take 
a height * ms — * — pe longer “eS Ss e She has for some years had 9 
Vapour, Hot - air, and all other kinds of Baths. Building 5 sees Wind be g mp freim 8 I., Fos 
an by Steam, Air, or Water. 3 begat Upper aden -stivet Now 
2 g of a dc. Towns supplied,—Direet 222 ss PE Ee — — — 
8 — ct} Af ETCALFE’S ALKALINE et dsr POWDER x 
SPADE C : 7 will be found to be the best that has n : 
E CULTIVATION AND DRAINING, C mantes rags m gies C0 OMPANY aire it contains no aids, nor anyuling . — 
$2 PACTURERS OF IRON AND WIRE WORK, kc. „%%% Hr ag oth rt oe mo o 
ROYAL LETTERS Casrrz- Bun Denpy.square, LIVERPOOL; 128, Hien- | anditstragrant — to — — 
: STREET, eee; aud 32, St. ENOCH-8QUARE, Gtascow, M. and Co., from the man a 
“ 20 y years they have been celebrated as 
: PATENT, beg respectfully to call the attention of Landed Proprietors | Toothbrush Makers, have had opportunities (that occur to few) 
s- — and others to their strong Wire. Net Fence, for excluding Hares of testing the relative merits of those powders that have been 
7 and Rabbits from Gardens, young Plantations, Nurseries, &e. brought before the public. They 3 rubtesded in 
W. A. LYNDON, ` he Works, — 2 — This Net was exhibited at the Show of the Hi a the receipt from which the above Powder is prepared, 
Daa Manufacturer of of Patent SPADES, * SHOVEL Agricultural Society of Scotland, held lately at Inverness, | and confiden ent ico wii 
T INING TOOLS. ptei its Efficiency, Great Strength, and Exceeding Cheapness sale and retail at MeTcaLre, Bindiey, & Co.’s, Brash-makers 
e Furserzmen, Gardeners, and Agriculturat Labourers, attracted general Attention, and had awarded from the Judges to H. R. H. Prince Albert, 2s. per box. Caution The genuine 
the Spades will be found Wende and calculated to lessen the Society’s Silver Medals, with high commendations. powder will have the Royal Arms, combined with those of 
labour of very materially; they are warratited to The immense damage done by Hares and Rabbits in Gardens EE H. Prince Albert, on the lid of the box, and che signature 
dn ew i Wi etter th 1 Webs ver. and Young Plantations is often so great, that in the course of | and address of the firn thus ri “ Mercazes, — — 
moras ¢ t on the surface, and last as long as three poder ot ee Pg r an thie — pe of 130 b., Oxford-street, London.” : : ; 
into use p n nd, and 0 rally ting t is Net. t 80 4 t 2h ; 
and 4 atts ste al Nurserymen, Market-gardeners, | protection ite bo remor inp nie Pood * MIGRATION FACILITATED. —Those 
ge i ihe — facility, b. Iabourer. As w Pence 4 expect USTRALIA to assist them 
tural 784 Meeting e righ th ome — 0 n, Ts ne whch |B -Ea nd Rabbits; i ig or itself quite sufficient, having only to in their OUTFIT prenre poaae friends there to pay the 
3 A ard . p 2 sinh “Aiea Ce an e unrolled and atta sma sent for that pur- | Money into the hands of S. W. SruveR aud Co.’s Agents in 
be local redete, marae’ Eaa baaa, SEMNA nerang 3 kes driven into the 1 shout every. six Australia, or to their ‘connections in the district, who o would be 
prored us imitations of these Tools are being made 3 fin. | ° p seven feet a s, besides, peculiarly adapted fo . — ñ ae tek i 
similas wt, Cast Steel Spades, Siorels Ge gia Akbel á dering ring Hedges, Paling or ' other ex existing Fences, completely i in The agent's would be received by 8. W. 
name in to the above None are genuine 1 ; and By belig cut up in ))) 
Sch the 4 Label. sé g the Pieces dees of x A “i — au as required, 1. torms a — 22 outfit. This proposal will be also comm the 
by te ea Tools, Digging, Potato, Manure, | “ttt guard, at little expense, for individual Plants and Shrubs. | Colonial Journals, Emigrants’ warehouse at No. 4, 
iede to patiern, ame vinta rid Prices.— high, d.; 24 ins., 1s. p 30 ims, Is 3d; and Bishopsgate-street (opposite the London Tavern), where 
obeind of al adapted for every 36 Ing., 1s. — 5 l colonial information may be obtained, and small parcels 
Ironmongers in ‘tho kingdom, Oria web of 100 „18 ins. wide, Will cost . 63 15 0 eee and cig — the colonies, 12 
0 ‘ 


Do: 100 yards, 36 ins. wide 
If more or less than gene required, it would i charged 
ie rate ho 


— another ardie in the market the am 4 
C. D. Youre & Co. manufacture every! description of IRON. 


[JAN. 13; 


32 
ROYAL AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE.—The Prin- | 
LTURAL COLLEGE.—The Prin- PROFESSOR THOMBOMS ALGEBRA. 

Rur —— TANT. He will be required to keep Just published, a New Edition, 12mo, 5s. cl 
the Farm Accounts, to the Students in Farm Book- N ELEMENTARY. "TREATISE 0 ALGEBRA. 

, and to attend lass on the Farm Theoretical and Practical. By J. Taomson, LL.D. Pro- 
Baily. “He will have opportuni r many of the fessor of Mathessaties mee > Catone of Glasgow. Key, 4s. 6d. 
por 2 — N ma | dade eae ieommmaselhe | je best elem ders, teacher, and 

With the details of ng a e Farm.— | students, the 8 en 

Application, with m de made t to the Prineipal, | v went as copara text-book of the science. Atlas. 

the College, London: Lox mam. ona GREEN, and LONGMANS. 

ENERA A. 


CHOOL FOR GENERAL. L AND ) SCIENTIFIC | 
EDUCATION (especially with regard to Agriculture), 
kham der tho immediate L of | 


20th Edit., 1 — ed 1795 roved, 12 mo, 2s. cl. 
f eee PRONOUNCING * EXPO SITOR ; or, a New 

; h the — words are 3 
* — ed b oy th a 


ames: 


plan 


Ww Market, Suffolk. Un 
the Right Hon, Lord Rendlesham, , and the ry, 
and Parmers in the neighbourhood. Conducted by Mr 
Downes. The oa and Mathematical branches are en 
trusted gentlema s so te of Cambridge, the Com- | 
mercial and eficient assistant-masters. 
A Farm, a La — of 'hilosophical Apparatus, 
a on, and a adnan are attached to th 
School. — — young 2 en are prepared 
for the BE e for Professions, fo or —— and other 
at modera es apply to Mr, G. 
Bownzs, W Wickham Market, Woodbridge, Suffo Folle 


AXTON'S BOTANICAL MAGAZINE. Wanted 


purchase, the Numbers of the above work 
from 1941 to 1847, tony — inclusive. Letters, stating the 
est price, to — to A. Z., Office of this Paper. 
Just Published, price 98. $ $ by t, 105 * 
H E * a 3 H ANDRY. 
RAWSTORNE, 
Sold 85 f. Oaken, 28 — Pishergate, Prost 

“T * apua of the most caD. of its kind 

which ad ears.” — Preston Chrow 


me 
— — ‘of lat y 
“Con veering an cost 2 its details and results, must i ‘not 
— 


be a new bus — —— men so superior, and em 
ploys instrum uch m o paret, and ‘produces crops s0 
much heavier, sande 9 4 22 s before unknown, and has 
reclaimed the forests, and wastes, and swamps, in the midst of 
which the old husbandry was content to linger ?”— Agricultural 


Gazette, 
“ Here we have the results of various experiments, and tte 
na of various a — . — before us in a * Umited 


enough for the leisure st farmers, and cheap enough for 
an. Farmer 
Colonel Rawatorne has laid down the sword for the plough- 


share, and in bis 
his own ba erg ci 
which he has bl all that is cae V 
— 2 and modern au Phage 9 
which can occupy the attention ot man. h Farmers G 


1 HE PRACTICAL GASDERER, AND MODERN 


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iti 


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w the words are eir princi 
ples of accentuation. By — MAS 2 — By "hen Edition, 


ndon ; LONGMAN, 8 Green, and Loncmans; 
and Warrraken and Co. 


of Geography,” with | ar 


an accurate ‘by of French Accidence me Syntax, ona | 
. ni | 


sume 
It is 8 * — that these 

ies should be well anderstood, b orm the 
5 reer function 
ystematic 


sc be adie e — Sie z re can have v o logical Lat 
cisio: * e principles o * aphy are exactl sett 
A eee * — 5 exists a 4 + 5 2 — x ost 20 


bota po’ is 

that ir b. * 12 found 1 to N 8 into 
mu nt 2 for the purpose of satisfying the student of the 
accu of the facts and * ders upon whic h he is -a 


portant d etails of 


seh rather than d a 
nd essential that the 8 
arly received . . cme as trus 
or rej 1 9 . given at len 
9 follows GLos 
water 


1 mage are either be fo excl iy in Botany, Of 
which 4 — “employed in science An in 1 cular and 
unus e 1 his book, as also to the subs tantive 


NEW ies ee 5 75 N e ele 
Just nn New r ih Ah ation of a Treatise 
bound, 


y A. Nesp 


n Lev 
A> TREATISE Paactican MENSURATION, 
les an 
e ag 


Cor. 


containing abont to raise 7 r of seedlin — — urvey 

an acre of rari price ls, free by mo 4 inga, heh wil be obtain Lalla ng the chin coe = — vering, 
20 — . — 1 capped mean este ponent Eoy T. Bax ON PRACTICAL ARITHMETIC, PartI, 5 
rc fer Plo 65. per bushes, he Aadi eon -INTRODUCTION TO ENGLISH i PARSIN ve 
Remittances requested, : : ws, GREEN, —— 3 


d in Organograpby, will be found in a copious 
at the ent wd of the vol 
as the Autho Aen wish to bring every subjec 
ntroduced do own, as nearly aè pone e tothe reste 
it is found atthe present day. In d 50, he bas 
hte latent e quantity of new ae. Boe sapoctatty 25 
e — apa “i j -g eis the p 
nares conside 3 jt — et 


THE THEORY OF "HORTICULTURE, 8vo, 123. 

SYNOPSIS OF OF ea E — FLORA. "9 
London: 3 — GREEN, ians Loxcmane, — 
and 


Printed by W x Baapzuny, of No, 6, York- 
agers Murar Evans, of No. ies h-row, Stok 
the Freeinet of W 170 ths iar 


mo, 108, 6d. 


A where al 2 


in the City c yo Lon 
Garden the pte: —— 
ADDBBSERD TO THB EpIvoR—Sarvapay, JanyaRy 8, 1849 


called ORnGANOGRAPBY ` 


—— — 2 


ard. street, 
Pauls, “4 
‘Communications 


SATURDAY, JANUARY 20. 


No. 3-1849.] 


fa 

39 6 

n.. 26 

Labourer, the —14 K 
Lime, quick, a 9 Mag 2 +s 

„ „„ „%„%„%„%„%„ „„ „ 6 . e 

4 Manure, sulphate of —— Ba 

liquid, when to apply . 40 e 

Í Master v. gardener on 6406 <33 0 

| Newcastle Farmers’ Ciub — 
peeh ce and agriculture. ...., 44 ¢ 


4 46a 
Plane frames, eT ameans 
of 0 0 


— * 


Ta 8 


ES N 


. 38 
4 . 39 
e ne "a 
a Water Wheels... es esccsccenes 
¢| Wheat sulphate of ammonia — 3 
e prevention of smut in. 43 
e Wilmot’s (Me) Grapes 3 


of electing Two 
Fort ou Ballot, 


tes. 
70 
82 223 
78 321 
69 15 
72 338 
71 110 
83 252 
56 45 
69 89 
80 250 
70 cen 17 
65 . 19 
74 ate 31 
62 22 
64 8 
76 26 
—— 

ALL an ARTIN 

est number of Votes, duly 2 d 


ry, 97, Farringdon-st,, Jan. 20 
RHUBARB. 


ently rec 
to any offered to the ati. It z ak ; 1 de- 
„a most prolific and fi „ with 


os 1s. Gd. per root. 


ao wa 
1 Witson, Enf . Apel orders payable 
Š — ALL 1 PURCHASERS OF -KITCHEN 

should refer to the Gardeners’ Chronicle 
LOGUE, 


Arbe tivation, co 
E. RENDLE & Co,, ‘Seon 


9 can be had 
Merchants, 


iis bogs to of ffer them in quantity 
ts are strong; viz. 1000, 
ers eS 500, Nb; for 100, 106. Post. office 
Wi roth Af N orkshire, J. 
W DOSARE 


n. 20. 
TRLD, NEAR UCK- 


of 100 kar e REES, i d 
i ed A compris ng upwards 


onour of acquaint. 
OGUE of New and 


„ &e., 
the pies d N . 


HAN TUBEROSE ROOTS — 


uti a fragrant Flow 
from 2 5 at A. ee 
8, 9 and are 


of this most 
ar ‘Old. 
war. 


portion of 
„may be always 
His 8’ Chemical 


HU BARB 


hi 
ks er than any 
es eminently © entitled to 
d red co! 


the above as being | 


| consequ 
HOSEA W ATERER would also invite attention 2 his stock Elm 


KNAP HILL NURSERY, NE AR WOKING, £ SURRE Y, 
TO GENTLEMEN ENGAGED IN PLANTING. 


H OSEA WATERER gion the following very desir- 
ants. 
CEDRUS DEODARA, fine 5 — from seed, 3 to 4 feet high, 
ii 20 8 4 bes 10 feet, 1 to 7 guineas each, 
(T are magnificent plants.) 
miie ghd ry T IMPRIOATA, “handsome 2 T 23 to 3 
ery fine plants, from 3 to 6 feet, 


A 85 10 yo ri 
CRYPTOMERIA JAPONICA, yr seed, 5 to 7 ft., 4 to 5 guis. 
13 fo t, 84s. per doz 
TAXODIUM SEMPERVIRENS, good $ pee plants, 2 feet, 84s, 
1 to 3 guineas each, 
PINUS DOUGLASII, from seed, 10 — 3 — 158. each. 
0 6 feet, 218. to 638. 
MENZIESII, 3 to 5 — 42s. to sis on doz. 
renee iy to = r 78. 6d. each 
md fine e plants, from 5 to 7 feet, 2 to 


— 


CEMBRA, 5 — 7 "feet, 10s. to 15s. 

F ierg and very handsome “plant, 10 to 12 
ot, 42s. each, 

CANADENSIS, — 3 Spruce, 4 to 5 feet, 218. 


ozen 
f arger, e1 to 10 fee eet, 30s, to 60s. per dozen, 
„  EXGELSA, 1 3s. 6d. to 10s. 64. each. 
„ FRA ZERI, 3 to to 5 feet, 308. to 42s, whe 
MORIN DA, or Sm itbiana, 2 to 4 ft., 3 
— ig ANA, 2 to 4 feet, 10s. 6d. to "42s, each, 


* 


re NSAPO 

j CEPHALONICA A few of the largest and most 

0 LAMBERTIANA er nts od regen in the trade. 

5 HARTWEGII x will be given on appli- 
DOUGLASII 


” 


„  MACROCARPA 


IRISH YEWS, 6 to 9 feet, 7s, 6d. to 158. ea 
„It often happens Irish Yews are * ed or rendered 


E GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
RICULTURAL GAZETT 


1e Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News. The Horticultural ; Part Edited by Professor Lindley, 


[Price 6d. 


NNINGTON’S PEAR 
AMES CAMERON, Nurs field, Sussex 
and the public that ‘he i is now 


egs i 
ready to send out trees of that — 5 excellent APPLE, called 
earm i 


superi 
will Hi even to the end of May. thas’ an e 
. L hroniele of April 


ve, 0 
insets 


sie VEGETABLE SEEDS 


corresponde ents 


fro 
eing growers of bey — No S ; 
happy to forward ou ir prices to ety of 2 \ w 8 » 


s and BROWN, 
S kini, Suffolk, 


Seed and Hortloatiarat al 


“unsightly from their tendency to divide in windy or snowy 
wea 


8 
. hia oe 


only Siar to those at Elvaston, 


CEDARS OF LEBAN el Š to 2} feet, very bushy and hand- 
T per doze en. 
eet, 10s. 6d. 
acs nat are splendid plants, * 
ee iaa 1 : to 11 78. 6d. te each. 


fet fe > ban Sag pra tp plants, 


TEETE, its 5 fet, Had d. to 105. 6d, each. 
<< PAN ts, 6 to 8 feet, 21s, 


IRISH UPRIGHT, 4 to 6 feet, 38. 6d. to 108. 6d. 


0 9 foot 15s. to 21s, 
% These two urg gane, Zune ought to be planted 


” 
39 


39 
” 


wa aa one who has any place approaching a lawn, 
i n NA ya best er — oa Arbor Vitz), 
nts, 5 to 7 feet, 5. 


The 21 41 are all 88 i the poe 7 are healthy 
and handsome — they have never been in pots, and 
en e the more desirable. 


of large Spruce Firs, from 7 to 15 feet high; large Red Cedars, 
Phillyræas, green and variegated Hollies, Gommon 2 4 to 
7 feet, fine Standard Weeping Limes, 2 d Purple 

Beech, Standard Magnolias, Tulip Trees, & oft which are 
ina capital state for removing, and will be sold reasonably. 


The Collection of AMERICAN PLANTS at the KNAP HILL 


S. 
e | NURSERY is well known as being the most extensive in this 


8 witnes . — beautiful Exhibition in the King's-road, 
Chelsea, every spring. 
RHODODEN DRONS, are hardy kinds, 30s. to 60s. per dozen, 
fine hard 8 large plan 8 608. per dozen. 
AZALEAS, best „ © om 18s, to 


1 LATIFOLIA, from 18s, to Mas pe large pe and | 


3 rve. Nothing can be more interesting and 
and flowering as they for the mos 
renders them still more valuable. 


FOR PLANTING COVER, CARRIAGE DRIVES, &c. 
e 1 fine bushy pla nis, from 
Os. 6d. ri 
5 PRIVET (a new and very superior variety to 
d Evergreen), 8s. to 128. 6d. per 100. 
BERBERIS AQUIFOLIUM, bushy plants, 9 inches to 12, 50s, 


r 
ditto, larger, 1} to 2 feet, 7s. to 10s. per 100, 
DULCIS, 1 to 1 foot, Ts. to 108, bar 100. 
17 1 shir * to we a 21s. per 100, 
This an e ut plant for these purposes, 


sively — ted. 
8 JUNIPERS, 1 to 2 feet, * hog 12s, 6d. per 100, 
WEET BRIARS, 8s. to 12s. 6d. 
COMMON LAU RELS, fine bushy plants, 10s. 1 aama per 100. 
ORTUGAL LAURELS, 2 to 3 teet, 3 
UICK, very strong, trans ee. 8s. 2 10s, ta 1000, 


FRUIT TREES.—Dwarf tr pples 
11 Pears Fine trees, 2s. 6d. 
85 Cherries to 3s. each. 
— Da 
cots 
5 Peaches Fine trees, 3s. Gd. 
m Nectarines 
Goods delivered free to London and to the Slough Station on 
the Great Western Railway. The . ae is within 


— ride — bos! London, being the Woking Station, 
ilway. 


ed root a eee ai 
t mu address OSEA W AT. 
Nursery, near Woking, e 


siv 
2 
Ca 


WAITETR 
transpl 


| Althæa frutex, a fine 


st reasonable terms, 

atalogues may be had gr Win field. Statio Mid. 
land Railway, is 4 miles * the e sery. * 
Tansley Nursery, Jax an. 


R MACKIE, "Nursery 


TO PLANTERS. 
THE pda epe has to offer the following 
SEEDLING FOREST TREES, &c. 


Ash, 1 = per 1000, 2s, 6d. | Gorse, 1 yr., 125 8 * 
2 years 2 6 years , ` 
Aiders, bedided 2 2 years, 6 0 g 7 Years 15 2 
eech, a K 6 4. 
Broo m, 0 * years 0 
N ‘english "bedai Evergreen ‘bedded, 50 0 
0 hitethoru, 1 yr., 28. to 3 0 
3 3 AND ORN. TAL T 
Aca 1 p. 100, * * Chestnut, Spanish, EES 
Alders, 7 to 9 feet to 4 feet, 1000 60s, 0d, 


Ash, Sto 3 — p. 1000, 25 0 Chestnut, Horse, 6 to 
to 5 0 8 feet, per 
Birch, dee. 35 0 


s, the true tingian, raet Maoa, $to $ gai, 2s. ee 100 
‘x 


6 feet, 16s. 100 
$ ” ” 8 feet, 27s, — 100 
» » 10 feet, 60s. per 100 
8 og 0 t0 12 fect, 30s. Per 100 


000; 3 to 4 feet, 90s. per 

4 feet, 408. per 1000 ; 4 to 5 teet, 508. be 100). a 

ornbeam, 8 to 10 ft., 10 
Limes red. t wigged, trom ayers, 8 to 10 feet, 70s. per 100 

0 12 feet, 100s. . per 100 
Maple, 2 to 3 ft. 258. 000 ; 6 ft., 228. 6d. ; 6 to 8 ft., 50s. 
y, 8 to 10 fet, 283.1 — 100 
Odk, English, 3 to 4 fl., m 4 to 6 ft., 55s, per 1000 
aha rf ; to7 fect 15s er 1 
Pine, cote to 4 feet, 40s. per 1000; 4 to 5 feet, 50s, 1 
Poplar, Black neisi, 5 to 7 feet, 40s. per 9000 e 
y, 8 ft., 258. per 100; IT 100 

5 —. 3 to 4 * 25s. * 1000; 4 to 5 1 perk gf 
Willows, Bedfo rd, 4 to 5 feet, 30s. per 1000 ; Che de 


Acacia (Rob fine species, dwarfs, 9s, per doz. ; 
standards, 12s. per doz. 
Ailanthus 20 losus, 8 to 9 agr For . doz. 


collection, 98. per 

Ash, 12 fine sorts, amongst hien are tne parks Chinese, 
heteroph ylla, &c., 12s, per doz. 

Beech, Fern teaved, 5 to feeb, t 1 5 doz.; 3 to 5 feet, 15s, per 

doz 6 to 8 fee t, 248. per d 

Tusple, 2 to 3 ft., 8s. per — 508. per 100; 3 to 4 

per doz., 75s. per 100; 4 to 5 ft., 156. 

> Weeping, 18s. per doz 

— . Bop — sorts, y per doz., 40s, per 100 


108. 
per doz., 100s, pon 


73 


5 


Moun iin An, 8 fos Ry 1, per 100 
22 ce kinds, 9s. 
Bde “4 100 


of which a Catalogs ai 

Not less than * will be bozal at the e mie 25 at the hun- 

dred pri 500 at the . 7 or smaller quanti- i 
ties a align increase will be e 

—The above charges ar are for ready money. 

Susan Woop, Nurseries, 


THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


34 5 
NEW AND GENUINE GARDEN SEEDS.. I TCH EN GARDEN SEEDS.— ING an AND OLDROYD | (many years Asiana | 
LARRE is Ce, ” Saman , 26, * h. street, ar = let amig oan | ae vai the late Mr. Bags and Mr, Por ro), Nensemy and ~d ; | 
Tem their F rinds end blie they 5 e ae PREAS, e ob Front „ Cham of 20 sean, D * — — 4 8 _— Daa 4 inform ths 
Wave now publis 25 “el CATALOGUE 2 “the — 1 nglan a, — . propor Š p iea ba 2 ee A aus, by K sing . . 
d in, 20 as ** — * — si nt for one ye of rden, the description, to metit a share of future patro det 
Ne, — ch pander Melons and sembari inclusive . od Nurseries. London-road, Abbey, Foregate. 
p — quantities LASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, & 
Tin D DAVIS, 1 0 * „ Nursery, Him No. 2. Co . — sm 4 Sa 
borough, Ireland, has te athe 177 5 . 22 or — =r". 1 - 0 FJ RILEY ane co. 2 tere: Glass of 
DES or ti th» 3 ritis anufa arying from 2 
2 1 4 — ee eeps 15 1 This i 18 sufficient Tora gentleman's 9 12 6 per square foot, for — call moked for fm neni thon 
a of ve a R err se e- feet of pa 5 pt ready pa r janosh i 
— ae yoo ee — ibid 550 for table and No extra charge br packing ; ; Curtiage Paid: to Fondon. | Lists of Phices ‘and estimates farw application Be i 
kitehen rows Pie he aby standard rf, |. "IF th PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK. CROWS GL ss, GLASS 
do,, 3s. ach; wi usual discount to the Trade if three ia the collection, increased quantities of those most desired | TILES and SLAT PIPES, Tit AGA 
e 3 hog pth Plt Tre es ma > be obtained at the would be sent. All orders to be ‘accompanied by a a remittance, | GLASSES, GLASS MILK. PANS, PATENT PLAT TEGhase | 
Narsery eau. Hoou Low wna Clayton, London. a refévence fom Unknown co — * ORNAMENTAL WINDOW GLASS, 1 ne GLANS w 
— ä — W. J. Eres can, Bajo: — r to some of the most to gaea Heriey and Co., 3 5, Soho- 
respe n En gland, Ireland, and Scotland, who he Gardeners’ 1 first Sat — oe “mn each month, 
DRUMMOND ae ‘SONS, “Nonseay and SEEDS- etions*every year. ae NO AND OT TEER JA NON 
— uiahea TREES,” aili aars are 4 Gene ‘aca — — — a Secas PERUVIAN GUANO, of the finest quality, A NURBS | 
e M Fine trained Peaches and Ne ctavines, . 6d. to 8s, Gd. each arehouse | 
TRANSPLANTED LEADING SOBTI. Wines 2 Err, Maidston y NITRATES SODA AND POTA 
— bis — A N Bratt 1 a ct Se eee GYPSUM (SULPHATE OF LIME}, 4 
pom re brawl met SS 4 817 8 * o OF HALF. MOON STREET. DRIED fit ui nn rs Tno vB 
Do. Tyrolese, do. , re e 88 RAT HOS PH O OF LIME (made from bon 
Scoto J inches 7s. 64, to 10s. 64, „ ficial Appointment) th the Seedamen ot — 
XN 2 + areh nya * a mew: a oval AGRIOL TURAL s — OF ED “AND,” a —— * and all other Manures of ⁰õꝗttv 
Thorns or Quick %, 2 a0 a to 105. — B nd the ociety, and Agriculturist M 2 e, may En Upper Th inns 
s Priced 1 — W asyan and Pruit T n be had in that — fo Gount 5 House and Seed Ware- ARK 2 Ay e 
ne Nars — 23 2 sharp | heuse is at the corner of 3 PICCA- EAT SOWING, 
— brous-rooted Trees, we ted | DILLY, LONDON, as for the — Pitty Yeu HE LONDON "MANURE COMPANY beg o 
gravelly woi — 1 — Orders above D vo delivered ced Lists of ‘Agricu ultural See — ready during offer as under 
frees at t the rincipal Ports of Britain and lrelan o season, af and ma y be had on ones’ i sommes gora ea coy pawon 
SLEY NURSERY, NEAR MATLOCK. pra NEW WATERING.P Ani ingenious PHOSPHATEOP 
Josera SMITH, impressed w with gratitude to his vical contrivance in watering choice plan ants ns _ Peruvian Guano, direot from Importers’ stores- i 
y s to return his sin 4 thanks for the nayi avoiding the unclean aoe = disfigurement of foliage, an gr sh for des 
distinguish e — — — so Wberally favoured with 00 frequent * plan — — 4 old method | wireworm, and every “other Artificial Ma 
—— ye . Tt will be constant study to do all in 422 — ng. o be had i in ali „ 6d. and 10s.| The London Manure Company would call particular atten. 
hia pe erit woontinuance i a t; — now takes Lo —— 1 n Seed tion to their Corn Manure and Urate, ormer 
the Sait ** e that * e — be carried | Merchant, 109, 9, St. — or apply to H. Bowens, God- | a large amount of Ammonia, Phosphates, and Silicates; alle 
by N alming, essential for crops, W e Urate is richer in fe 
Nursery, an. N. B. ‘Utility gu guaranteed, other mineral substances required for roo 
er i i RPE md — —— ull particulars aud prices forwarded on applicat fu 
ASS v ROWN’S S DESCRIPTIVE ‘PRICED OHN 182178012 AN D GARDEN SRA fall Enw ARD PURSER, See., 40, Bridge-street, reee Aa i 
MO TLO — Xford-street, — FR ea ! ; 1 
AT ene for 1840, sent free by post cation. ces that he has a very large assortment of the 6 anp CO., 61, Graeechu 
to offer the following in collections, inet many | above-artitles in various — and solicits an early inspec- London, and 1 w Park-street, Sou 1 ra 
chalco naw tortas. voce TALE SEEDA, ETC r 
ö ARE at 2 oa sible priee, for cash. frp, herr ib ye oe F. 5 e a 49 


hr oe 11 meting Thurs" Reliance, E , d. 
bofr bear. h 


— — — dne 7 20 or in all, and all 
other Vegerable genre nd newest Kinds, in . 
e Collection, # tiler quantities oe D 
3 
0 15 0 


do. 
A Collection suitable for a small garden 
‘A list of the sorts farnished if 8 
SELECT FLOWER 8 
Free by post, with full directions for —— ‘heights, 3 
1 5 


100 varieties best * newest = apes 
GO varieties for 88. 64 
20 varieties best dwarf kinds, — * ee — suited 
filling beds on lawns, 78. 6d., or 7do. .. aa 
20 varieties best t Gr reenhoa sos Annuals, 78. 64. 12 f for .. 
son ait e ials, 1 12 for 
387 choi 225 ee eng at 79. 75. ‘a, 12 
a6 varieties AK f Stocks a 
20 D, 


5 
5 
7 
5 
5 
2 


neee co® 


T FLORISTS.—The Advertiser is desirous of pur- 
chasing an Established rere ve this kind, or a share in 
one of sufficient Maret O —Address, stating the amount re- 
quired, to H, T. „ vert Cot ttages s, Hamme rmi 


„dare vered Railroads, with plans for fixing, a 
the follo 4 0 feet by 12, 62. 10s 
30 10s. 5 60 feat hy a 104. Tos = be seen in re 


Middlesex. 
REEN avp HOTHOUSES made e by “Machinery ery 
— iit usual cost. II. inch Greenhouse — 
1, gla 1 — ith 16-oz. sheet glass, — 
ndon, 


e railroads or wharfs in 
at ma pe foot; Linen 
18, Hothouse Works, Stamford-hill, Middlesex. 


a 
= 
22 
72 
E 


; 6d. ; 12 for 
Remittances with orders are requested from unknown corre- 
fre orders 


t | they m 


the Taik System 5 Pineries, Frenz ating Houses, 
mf c heat well as ‘bottom-heat is. 
cere — — Ly erie degree, without the aid of pipes or 
re 


40 65 t 


ay be 
Nurseries Wen e ut the kinge om, 

gA an See pee to inform the Trade th at at their cama 
17, N street, every article required forthe construction 
of Hortienlearal Buildings, as well a ae them, aye 

pon the most advantageous 

denz — te „e., of Iron or Wood opened upon t W 
ioe designs. Balconies, Palisading, Field and che 
Fences; Wire-work, &c. 
parsers AND GARDENERS, ERS, Liqui ify all your all 


ure, and put it on your land pis 3 dst a TOT 


is will inerease its value fo 


mdents. Goods carris to London, and with afl 
an — e arietes A = 1 O08 t. olfos orders Pie LMAISE.— The complete success of rset e. H’S 60058285 Tale will ee itas 9 — * i 
to and Brown, or to 8 „Seed 1 APPARATUS, with dome cover, ou ròp, at one-tenth part of thi ; 
— E stablishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. e late cold weather haying been a severe a of of your — oh ven — — om 
—̃ . — —— —-—- — 8 mede It is more simple than hot water, and eee l; 
U PERTOR NEW — — D8 regan economica? is int 4 a — — . d > F AND PROPRIETORS ke ssessing Waste and 
free by Pickford and Co. rt | answ resp ers are daily received, an ‘Uncultivated Land, therwisc, 
PFairbeard's Champion e N AET 6a, in no ae der instance has failure of any kind ensued.— Manu- j, and lahta votes ‘the’ oat 1 —— —— and 
Pelttari Barly 8 1 6 | fac IH and Co., Ironfounders, Eagle Foundry, Le: ildings Erected on well 2 and economical 
— and Suy Green Martowfats, fine flavour, dari owe mington. P Hoet from S. to 15l., according to may do so by Contract or otherwise; also Drain Pipes, 
„ r 4 work ‘per. 
Su cs 8 va superb Green: Marrowfats, the best inte Pea GLASS POR CONSERVATORIES. ber — ‘ . în Bngland, 8 seo. 
“14 TER 7 AvD CO., 116, Bishopsga — land, B Wales. For further particulars add ss WM. 
Norm Barty Dwart (t 8 to 12 inches) oe 151 1 * — Oi ing SHEET GLASS at the followin r and Contractor, Almodington, Chichester, Sussex. 
0 i ue * pon 8 e ces for — oe 
‘ofmack's Prince Albert i aaa Oy AO HORTICULTURAL GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES. AND aap 
lack’s Victory, very fine targe 40 ‘CUT TO SIZE UP TO t0 | PRICES OF gem SHEET 8 ey LE ROOFING. 
Waite’s Queen of Dwarfs, p — Sait INCHES LONG. SQUAR LETTERS 
— — and 8 recon — ete — ot 10 . 12 4 ROYAL 
i Peas now t k Under .. » 
have he at e. to 9d per | 96 „ 2 * Sby4 and under 2 by 5..16 6 ‘PATENT. 
8 Messrs. serene stock of KITCHEN — = 38 5 ‘ 9% " e w — © 2 l 
s very i 00 ome e » i 8 i 
underm ate a few kinds y eup ines pe 3 H PL. ou am for WINDOWS, fea F M‘NEILL AND Có ar, wennn Bunhil- 
Denne Eiowh Cosa d. | Extra ‘Dwarf Catled s @| *4 FLOORS in n, 5 feet W only Patentea 
a Lettuce e , p. 0%. 2 0 Parsley... pos. 0 4 a - per den 1097 7 Per foot Houses; F. —.— ASPHALTED PELT FOR noorise Garden 
u t „ n 7 ers Marrow Seen were eee Fee 0ũ3 ã hz * 
Wes iia poh 20 22 uen rR PEE, 5 de, 0d. ay ogre , 4 protect Plants fom Prost i ™ 1 $ 
Carrot P Fa. TILES, onal Pa —— is i 
WZ ie a. thick ah Od a ee iach . 7 which has been exhibited a wo SILVER been | 
Tys Walcheren Cauli- topped do. . 0. 0 4 — A ‘Prizes, ee. —— patronieed = — 
b n = ; Sutton’s b wut Stas DONES for MARELE ag from 15 to 8 . — — er Un ; i 
ReadingOniom bestsort 0 6 | Atkinw’s Dwätf 3. „ 0 8) GEASS MILK-PANS, PROPAGATING GLASSES, anp BEE N 
d’s Whit French Ourles Her MAJE 
ee Tan Cape gt Gee ae ie. p |g HACTOMETERS for trying the quality of Milk, 4 tubes 7s. 6d., hora buen — 3 
Snow's Winter White do. „% TTT of Sutherland, Norfolk, it 
mene poniej Celery. promt 0 Window — eii ar mane — sles Bae a al, sass Tona e ebe an , 
Mammoth Late White Sutton’s superb Pink do. Lamp Shades and z and every article | the late Earl nl Spencer, and most of the Nobility and Senn“ 
Tae Oe 1 inthe trader and at the RICULTORAL Socrert’s Hoss, Bano | 
e E ape wow tee een METAL HAND PRAMES. er i 
= 2 ie —- ayy a HARTLEY’S gt. 17 ma AND PATENT Teis seni Sy ar dap S er description ör Roosa ni 
six weeks foreing Fresh imported Brussels EEG ͤ ST 8 $ Soe #0 sana areia P of Roos. 
an... gt. 1 6j Sprouts ... oz'l 0 » FOR GREENHOUSES, CONSERVA- Slade to any lengthy 
Marshall's Dwarf Breed {Extra Green . TORTES, GARDEN FRAMES, de. Paton One Pesar Few Square Foo Pes 
an i C] Dr nN en, and others, supplied with Samples, with tions for its Use, and Testim 
erk shiro’ Champion Ca- Barty Monsetait Turnip we 8B —.—.— n Rough rr ‘oN — fag | 
i „ppkt 1 0 W. Early Scarlet Glass Tiles, P Caecum’ — S tlemen, and Builders, sent free to ary part 1 
* es, * ber, a all other Garden ? 
Victory a Bath do. „ 1 0 Radien. . p. Of. 0 8 | Hasses,—Adéress, 48, town or country, and s by — 
pee . 1 0 > “eaper’ 22 i PRICES OF SMALL SQUARES IN BOXES OF 100 FEET. . it the the only Wor ha sis ne in 4 
— we a ea s made, are Ea 
„pkt. 1 0 New Scarlet Ofive do. „ 0 3 Squares wader - 108, 6d ..£0 “Bae 6a. . MNEILL anD COS 7 
‘Most of th kinds are * in Messts, rere enn Patent Felt Manufactory, gs, Barbe 
255 Ae e amin enen legion. — 381 „* 15 0 p 0 50 6 i ithe r 
asr - ; e 4 
i ĉi ng Soden’s “Early Larger sizes, & all: 1 8.1 and MAE am se low. —— were roofed with F. M Nin and Co. Pole 
Oued Sooty Frame ope peck. PAINIS—LITHIC AND OTHER DURABLE A A Inn . 
sive Divs regu gandeira iar S, ready for use for FARM Buildings, Agricuitural’| so satisfied wich ine result that they have ordered me 
parts © nga 8 — | made , ‘Golours, B k Fences, dee, be. White- at the Houses of Parliament to be 
. Pickford snd Co, to deliver their goods free to either of GLASS MILK PA Re ‘OR he Y. thet ir Felt — — he can 
Western — i Any Station on the Great. — 1 Glass Rolling Pins, Pastry Pans, pied i eee. thelr Roots, — 
E For Lists, ng more 


13 omy SUTTON — Sons, Reading Seed Warehouse, Reading, 


Ornamen 
priced) airet to T. ocan Gia Glass 


if 49,1 „Colour, and Lead Ware. 


afforded construction of pools 
— — the — Felt. 


IHE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 


* 2 ae 
manure over artificial composts, as well as the in- are the indications of the two thermometers at 
58 NEW LINCOLN GREEN PODDED | creased efficacy of the latter when mixed with the —— — reckoning from the time the vite 
supplied : 


35 


ected. val 3 s New 
1 l — e of the original | former, is a mere exemplification of the advantageous | water 


„„ 


4 5 nd at the same time having a effects of apse fee rg o It is because this ques- Thermometer}, Thermometer a. 
Boi. To visable oly) Garden. | tion does not seem to be generally understood in 101 
“Cuiere, Seed Merchant a 5 e its most ics bearings, notwithstanding all 2 h. 30m eee 
~~ COLE'S ARS begs to inform his friends and that is now said of the advantage of draining, that 12h. 40% 45 


. PORT f did Wm, G- , ,, e a 40 
M. P shat wee pn a 2 Wan; — * — n 2 * to be ca al or. The mean temperature of the external air.to-which 
7 eg in sealed packets at Bs. Gd, each, yis improved by good drainage? Many | the box wns exposed during the above period was 42° ; 
2 * Society) an. is Celery, W. P. A. fools believe that the whole advautage consists in re- the maximum being 47° and the minimum 37° 
‘ree by pow a ne entire satisfaction, — pending: „ chardeter- moving water. But water is not of itself an evil; Expzrimenr No. 1L—With the same arrangement 
ole paving a crop of on the contrary it is the food of plants, and its as in yet hogy | case, n gallon of ‘boiling water was 

. i i is th © peat 


e ust as a y 
zing he nk a the following seed sh 7 7 | excess of food injures animals it ha this difference nes wan Kak any aan eee a aia, 
; Mr. F. Wart » : 
Gack Bae Peay aie 2 while plants have no choice, but must take into Ert 225 . eee alg OS 25 
eee Son, Mansion-house-atreet ; and Messrs, Hurst their system whatever is in contact with the surface 30 minutes the cock he ‘Box z 
and M Sr —— that his selected assortment Of their roots. The latter are therefore more readily and, more free egress of water being thus afforded, at 
of Kitchen Garden and Flower Seeds is now 8 55 3 gorged than the former. 35 minutes the flow was no longer continuous, and the 
and the Whose integrity he ean depong, nh rameter Se But undrained 2 is not merely wet: it is thermometer b indicated 48°, The m was drai 
by Mien eea Blackheath, J waterlogged. e interstices between the par- an varingly a to a fresh supply of w. 
— E QUALITY. = ot earth deier filled with water, air is neces- ceor ingly naye gallon of e water was 
NEW LETTPCES 0 arily absent, except that small N 0 is aie 
TTON’S ‘BERKSHIRE BROWN COS require tine olived in the water. In thi 7 minutes the thermometer a ae to 77° 


i way p 
1 
3 faves ring an pg wie deprived of the most essential part of 2 — 15 » to 763 
ee re en topped, turning in | But when water is removed air takes its place and 20 4 „ „ 
we 1 lee Punter, bat peculiarly adapted | holds in suspension as much water as roots can thrive Ih. 50 a 5 N 7 OF 
ee nom greatest heat and drought | upon; for it is not water in a fluid state which plants 
running 


In these two e ~~ E Aai 1 the 


h 
e 0 
* bottom of the box suddenly rose a few degr 
Reding, Berk that they feed upon it best. So that the removal of |: : y E 
„80 j ‘eri Üm of other choice Seeds in 4 488 of immediately aſter the hot water was added; and 
water permits air, and air-borne vapour, the best o hence it might be inferred that heat ied 
aemp stine mke 135 : ‘all food for * to take its place. domiaaits bs Da 1 sg 33 
NEW ENAMELLED LABEL Ap oe pro operly But those who imagine that this is the whole ex- | ; y 84 rar y eee e Tse 
woe ; er ites have Ahing 10 be 4 of the effe cts of fainge 817 another t ; Ob. vader an 
ed to them, and being enamelled on copper, and the 3 of the highest ed —. . ‘ 
re akari p r 3 ne is. in summer, from 10 5 -to 20° warmer than meter To prove this, the perpendicular thermo- 
‘without them, Noblemen, Gentlemen, and Ladies waited od e ee, land. Professor SCHUBLER 5 De ROR aad 
‘with specimens in any part of London, or drawings forwarded | came to the . — me = loss of heat caused we eee thermometer (a f) aem aean iis 
“bins wew 1 IMPROVED WATERING-POT also on by evaporation in undrained lands amounted to „iousl secured through a hole made m th F ide f 
roots for forcing; 100,000 yards of Box; cheap: | 113°-to 134° Bun. Mr. Pins has shown, in — t y 8 made in the side o 
Font sk glad ee 33 Essay on the Philosophy of Drainage,” that in the 
E ö Collections of Seeds made for any given draining the Red Moss near Bolton-le- Moors, the 


sees ets Maa, So Pein and Florist, 109, St. 


ater to within 3 inches 


: ne, NOOT 1 th ter, 
o 66° at 7 inches below the surface, while in the vi ao pod 3 teat tape wi 55 boiling 
eighbouring 3 land it would beside rise eas, | Yn dhe ia y 
d 


; p of the 
The Gardeners’ í Chronicle. abo ve 473 an enor Sacie us gain. In the Garden off The intelligent . . once see the appli- 
be wooden box 


ayn the mean temperature of 
SATURDAY, JAN UARY 20, 1849, the thoroughly drained soil at 1 foot below the maine sae e eee 110 a 
face is, in the month of July, 63°49; if we take field the peat and cold. water represent the water 
AGLTINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. a. oe y ee UE e 5 . we tase logged portion; rain í surface e- 
enn, Jen, 2 5 — enen egen jang to r RRR spring comes warmed. by contant with soil at a temperature 
: 92 5 water, or 47°, there is a gain of 164°. Thus it is may be of 130°; ated to, say 100°, and 
ele TTITO TTOTTE P. M. 1 ` > 
Touma, = igh Baad | ae evident that drainage produces the very important 50 descends. But it t is Fr by the cold water, 
eee . effect upon land of raising its temperature; it com- ai the heat will go no further: so that if hot water 
1 
P Pa. municates what gardeners call bottom heat, and were to be rained.onva water-logged field for a 
2 Ri . 22 N. those who are least conversant with plants know month the temperature of the soil would not be 
Pareto rr ece tees San. the value of that; in fact, in the absence of some 
} fe 5 . or h ‘Nettle and'G at raised to the depth of a single inch below. the 
horn aliy ra 8 P.M. amount of it, even the common Nettle and Groundsel surface where the cold water naturally stands. On 
bal ende . . . . he td b. 7 b 
n e e eee e er wouk . No mistake can be greater than to ing contrary, if the soil is : 
8 e ea. imagine that it is only the Melon and Cucumber, and | logged, the warm rain trickles through the crevices 
— — such tropi productions, to which bottom heat is in the earth, carrying with it the high temperature 
A ber been better to speak of unpgr-| serviceable ; soil requires to be heated in some it had gain ee ee n dle surface parts 
than of i and a 7 3 


rather TERRESTRIAL degree for all plants, but some kinds dem 

ie a ood ent is more agree- | higher temperature than others. As scar cely any | heat which is so een to plants, I 80 pee 
let that fine exotic phrases: but | of aur cultivate crops are natives of countries so ever suspect its existenc 

A hia Wehave now to show what under- ae as our own, it is manifest that they all require 

Š imate is, o have the earth warmed for them, or are much the} Tur return of the Poraro Disease in 1848 ren- 

the su Aes H oi * they burrow below —— for it. dered it evident that this visitation was likely to be 

e earth, are not, on that account,| The reason why drained land gains heat, and | permanent, and that cultivators could no long 7 

din et i ences which are felt by the Mepa ay land is always eoi consists in the | upon the plant, even when the greatest skill was 

laian ve the e = the con- | well known fact that heat cannot 2 transmitted | shown in its treatment, unless better information 

itive, or more so. If downwards through water. “This y be readily | could be secured than any that had been previously 

oe iter beneath sy scorching air, seen by we floes experiments, ary fs anybody | collected. Ordinary means of e oe were 

comes | can sie 25 himself. exhausted, or had failed, and at the end of four 

snare te in the — Errana No. IA 6 square box was made of the years men were in as much uncertainty as ever, even 

the form dere by the AREY diagram, 18 in. deep, | as to what conditions were most favourable to the 

m, and ¢ pompela tha | in. wide at top, and | security of the crop. A discovery of the cause of 


"h 


|- perish, 10 é inches wide at bottom. | the disease appeared to be hopeless. No such 
the other hand, that warmth | It was filled with peat general conclusions as were of real value could be 
m to — , and the leaf 8 saturated with water to drawn from the 1 en testimony that had accu- 


— 


sentie -| , ee forming, to b mulated. culty was seen to be caused in 
„exciting it to growth, and ‘| EU 8188 g vem part by the imperfect manner in which facts were 
it su force by which the 3 d — + ag TES an related, in some measure by the doubts which neces- 
Nor is the access $ water to g sarily attach to anonymous communications, and 

the other ; both it N (a), was plunged most especially by the impossibility of prep 

on air, the roots more than ; $ so that its bulb was Safe e comparison between cases all the m 

lace where air ca 1 within 14 inch of the of which ara not be under consid. . In short, 

ves, and they fall off, to be ii bottom. although-the mass of information that had col- 
: roots, under the it ture of the whole mass | lected in four years was apparently very consider- 
gradually shrink and die. i of peat and water vas able, it was found that after the — Sigh 

of the air which lies $ found to be 39}° Fahr. | mous, imperfect, and self contradiċtòry evidence was 
‘of the ground i 2 . eee Ft ewi elim A the total amount of well B ortained pr 
require i it Jalak te Sitio of) sm Bee facts | * not so great as was generally 
e atmo- =Q Bil the water toc. In five | Supposed ; as more especially dificult to 
he im- minutes the thermo- | distinguish between pa results and the accidental 

t. || meter a rose to 44°, owing to conduction of heat the | coincidences which are so often mistaken for them; 


` te hp aay i 


by 
thermometer tube, and its guard, At 10 minutes from and that the only hope of extract rg 
C T was to reo the. ae 

su higher. 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [JAn. 20 
GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. An, 
<n that a large majority of those |:London : 679 from er 182 from Scotland, ; stracting of . a clerk and his assistant, 


It was apparent, too, that ne 3 fu ad- | 92 from Ireland, 32 from Wales, and 14 from persons | 16 weeks. To print it would 88 a space such 
Dai themselves to the cases in which the dis. whose en le = rtaine ae ah the — . — per can command. It has, therefor, 
been ili 999 , 28 bear the signatures of noblemen, un 
ease = the a — ra cca its 401 pps — 50 of pon. ssc" 333 of farmers, ie heads, three * — are now prin 
loss, ing greater; but passing over ightly the and 187 of gardeners. To rather me — Ne Ara week give the ny yor z they 75 po 
highl cases i ji lars no answer was returned. evertheless 3 n 

6 r he United Kingdom from con ear harabas are which seem to follow from the 
e ye eee e T whic * . 3 with shown in the Tables, we maae for many future ce 


e i 
g d | which some information has no 
it became clear . “ae eptions 8 8 the exception of Radnorshire, Selkirk, Kinross, | sions; as well as a comparison of the certain results 
"> order 3 this inqui inted circulars | Tip ore Limerick, and Roscommon, from which | now elicited, with the mass of floating testimony 
Ps order erer 10 te and Novem- | counties n rson sent a reply to the inquiries previously collected in our columns and elsewhere 
ber or last, with a request thee the gentlemen to whom | that were “aa ressed to him wre E Tae rib to each perso on — a ever | 
ere addressed would fill up a printed form The information — collected i is of the highest | reca See th a e they SAT! apply for them by n, 
Le information as they possessed o could interest, and forms a permanent record of pir, sar This intimation is rendered necessary by the extreme JE 
procure 9 it b heir signature. Of| cated facts which will always be of importance for | — 22 vr eg Ne say oot a aaa | 
these returns, 999 were filled u up and transmitted to 5 reference. The eee 3 and ab- $ hich the informants reside. 
TABLE I- EFFECT OF DIFFERENT PERIODS OF PLANTING. 
Tiiehted in June. and Blig! * d of blight not j 
Blig 2 , and 2 July, and * — a 3 2 — ger — — ra Suffered ) 
al 8 8 56 8 8 3 i 32 . * 53 
Plan gisiaelalaleeladl¢dleldadl¢ ild |T 3 3 2 
Lie 
A E az gz gA 22 
October to January... 2 1 1 J $ l mie 6 | 18 = 3 1131 p l 
+ et T le en wa eS ae EE 5 51 10 105 9 7 93 ~ 
ENGLAND... March... eee ooo PTN **? 9 ore 16 40 ees 1 1 1 8 27 64 4 170 44 4 12 
„.. 41 | 22 9} 11 1 | 81... 7846 6 228 182 84 7 & 
ay % % % 8s 008 4 1 eee 35 4 he 7 me Laren 3 1 66 10 3 139 112 23 4 i 
FFF „ RE Fa 5 2 || 16 5 2 
f (October to January ...) ++. t... 4 SD | “Rtgs MM cai OE E. 1 4 |...) 2608 
January ce vee veel eve | cee f ane E beet ba wos oP ae a a ae oa ores aha pele eet „ „ come 
. 505 eos 1 wae 1 aie E 
SCOTLAND March. 1 ‘ 4 3 7 6 5 10 11 43 3 20 i 
TE e é 1 3| 3 4 314 11 a 5 4 6 | 38 16 104 13 55 8 
a tL . . . 21 2 1 1 2 1 5 9 6 33 10 | 15 8 i 
y } 
June 55 . . . ‘ e ett Siem 4 ° os . Mate GEIR, EE ji 
4 
105 to re f x 1 : Sa oo E22. Sa 
. s.. . ove . . see eee . eee 1 eee 1 
| [Fet February . o | ees oes 3 1 1 aos a 1 {| 12 l 19 11 
Iaxtax D ...< March. . i IIA 4 8 1128 8 44 2 888 
April è jevn S Ere ; ; ae ik . Bpsry 19 | 10} 9f we 
1 13% A | eres l 2 - é — METAG 3 Era 44 17 
June wee ae . . oe .. — . eee . . oe 1 . see . 1 ee 1 
Oetober to January . . eee ete .. * .. . ... ] eee 1 eee 1 oon 
Janu . hee ieee . .: . ib we 3 8 e 
„ Fe . eee * . . ig e aia A a a 4 a 4 abe 21 
Wares bao March „ „ . 1 ere eer 1 eee eee oer eee ere ore wee one 5 1 eee fi l 
| ae . Piers le as Ae een eg) ae Ei 
ee ON Be c ` EEIE 6133 
eee eee Time 25 PLANTING. —Fe — — laene boty uch parse Gy iid aai said to be more beneficial than autumn planting. Some say Febra 
ting prednes a eavier and as sound a crop as autumn planting ; but the returns show that 235 ting escaped disease, where Fe planting suff 
Fie. some of counties, where there was comparatively little rain, April and May planting succeeded well. —— + rrr rma THE CROP 


Hardy or coarse growing varieties, in some cases a fortnight later than finer varieties in bli 
: - being blighted, and do not decay so rapidly. DM 
: . sheltered situations. In some — — ceed on heat} 
land (if Jer 

Autumn recommended; said by some not to h sound spring i 
IRELAND.—Autumn planting not better than early sp . — senan — S F 


TABLE II. - EFFECT OF SOIL AND MANURES. 


ON LANDS, MANURES, &. ee 4 
3 : ; ce tame 
Q š . 8 „ . ixture arm- t : 
mee \ ETETE All, 355 5 — 4 S 8 8 E E 3 a 8 € d p ear 
eee Bays 2/42 2/1214) 213/ eta] el alway 
3 8 = SIE, 
i 8 Suffered much —. 134 37 129 24 79 *5 (13 21 4 8 E g 
: aoe . a 82 4 7 14 awk 
ExctanD.., 1 Suffered little... 18]... 196 17 14 18 1 128 50 8} 28 : + i : x o a 
Escaped, or nearly so. | 1] 16]... 117 10 11 3} 459 46 16 3 2 1 6 1 3 1 6 2) 
Suffered much ... .../ 15) 111 5 1 20 — 
= fee eee 2 see ee 1 ... ee 
ScoTLAND ... f Suffered little , 7 1/48] 6 1| 6 48 1] 1 i one : 2 5 i n ; 
Escaped, or nearly oo. „ 9 „81 25 „ 7 2 77 10 1| 2. of 6 4 3 
“i Suffered much 15}. 4/1} 2| 1] #2 a 
N os ji * ý e at à X ipe 1 * 14 1 eee eee ee * 
i Treas * ; 4 eee eee oe ee ote aoe 37 24 2 2 ‘ee 30 5 45 ea 1 1 a eee or x 4 ! 
Si T Esçape bof nearly so ee: coe one oe 11 15 3 eee eee 6 2 eee eee 1 <= eee 8 à ö . 
„ Suffered much "IRET aE ars ae —— — 
į 5 oe eee eee eee oe 1 see 7 1 oon fsi 
ee ce f = bhag y ai sto ove 8 eee eee ... oer 6 1 = } 5 te et 1 
: __| Escaped, ornearlyso |. 2 iy Tt 3 II . 2 
. E had been clayed or marled. Mr. Campbell reports that near M. Ty ee amad 
s oar Mall avd ; bat Releases any in wist condition the laid wane Mr Monee Sipe ng that new eth Jand, pane in 
o or in places, especially if the soil was loamy, Heavy Lanp little if naturally dry dealt Piai much when highly manured, planted 
~ Such as loose litter, ashes, or without manure, or well or planted early with manure that does not stimt 


| 


THE GARDENERS’ CHR i 
1849.] ONICLE. 37 
ad arative power of resisting the disease possessed by certain varieties. (In heap; or, as J have seen done in large gardens, let it 
TABLE m 9 bers areas the number of instances in which the variety is mentioned.) ( be stacked up, and a thatch put on on it, to ward off te 
this case f this is allowed to stand 6 or 12 months, all insects 
ENGLAND. SCOTLAND. IRELAND. WALES. Toran, will be dead, the Grass will yed, and the 
= ; pire will be rous mass for almost 
a Shy EY | PE AP | ER | ANE eT e anything. Ad is an equal quantity of leaf. 
VARIETIES suFFEBED. | | | | | | 3 leaves thoroughly decayed, and about 
K an eig e sand ou will have a 
ish Com 8| 11/22] 14 | 9/65} 15] 9) 15 I +1} 4) 1 || 88 | 88 [105 | compost to Your hand in which any plants will fanais 
lich Ap ple : w z — — Cte eS: 1 1 b > Bote bor If ps ieee it, you n — mix more than you want 
oes ents Pic ccommodate your proportions to the 
—— Glory. 1 me aes A | ee oa Pee Ki Ay 1 1 8 17 s productions you pot. But whichever plan you 
be “ave vee 3 10 eee eee eee eee . . eee 3 10 bey the fib of the turf and a d ill ure you - 
3 „ en bi 34 | 28 | 7 | lightness of texture and su so that 
bai iy 2 6. Fa 1 sey me „ y your p are watered: the liquid will rer. 
5 „„ i 1 1 
Lung „ 1 „ 1 3 f * a $ what tis to be done before this wie yor bag lo 
j made, for a whole season will have passed before turf 
WN Kidneys .. on |23 12 5 6 | + l 3 2 1 17 51 now stowed away is fit for use! The mae ira 
-eyed Kidne 414 ove 7 10 n a i we can ou is, to get rials as nearl 
Taylor’s Forty-fold . 2 || 1) 21 | 36 like those recommen ded as possible, and make shift 
American Ea sf eos M 8 3438 . Pees 3 | 10 | 46 til yo etter provided. If your flower beds 
Ameri veel ere | 2] 2 |] oe | 2] oe weet] * 1 ||... | 41] 8 | have had a layer of ma gi? put on this aut 
Goldfinders 1 En ee e e 4 1 1 ſthe fro d rains will ime have 1 it to 
1 2 . soles 1 1 |a nice state ad use, Bog lit of tha with 
Jersey Blues. 17 5 | 4 2 5 17 5 6 | the lightest so find. Mix up ae nm 
Dora ii fe aes oe * 5 1 2 1 bits of rotten nay fi all together, for those things 
Oxnoble . Pare Pee Pee ay 1 .. 2 | Will secure a ge, and it is a fatal mistake to pot 
2 12 plants in fine or sifted soil, as some ignorantly do. 
umpers — 9 a 5 || 8 13 3 13 20 5 
pri . 14 6 xperience will be the best teacher in this matter, and 
Cheshire Pink ¢ es 9 ys OE Oe 2 2 | 118 tical a wd K a well what soil will d 
Hen’ N : “ey aoe 1 5 eee oe eee 2 eee * „ 1 | t.. for rap e knows what kind of bed 
Mangold W 8 n 5 1 805 p z e es 3 i | : i — 453 clothing» 1 oe ae 7 health and comfort of her 
Kentish Kidne 8 8 1 ONES ack ra. — ihe A | 5 ] ee 
Farlis ses) „„ 12 14 ... eee eee eee ee * — | 12 14 A LECTURE ON THE eee, Ae VALUE 
Trish rate eee eee eee see 2 eee 8 eee eee Ə . * | eee 10 "Dro. wee MD r RS 
r“ ae ace ee we „ (Continued from page 20. 
Scotch Reds b 6222 pa Be ox 32 6 4 THESE ealeulations require, of Saree, b be confirmed, 
20 1 = 23 and are liable to be set aside by the more oertain test 
. 2 || 14]. nk ieee, Diak 
Irish Pink-eyes AN Se Pare: 312 1 2 2 3 5 have been as yet instituted to determine this problem 
Peelers ri oe 3| 1l ole on the empirical method. The same unce relates 
Beil OR el wee Mierer fresi — — : to the subject of Indian corn,* of which we have, up to 
be 


are quite local or little Eosi, or which bear names to 


N.B.—In this 105 at all those kinds are omitted which 
which no particular meaning attaches, as “ English Potatoes” in Ireland. wetted — pre in 100 parts : 8 
LOW NIGHT TEMPERATURES. a few of the most popular kinds every year by removin Gliadine (gluten) .. 4.5 
I rank that t gardeners are much ted to you for them from one aces — ure —— as other, as dictated td bee Sugar i and gum $ 15 
your inter 0 tions as to the impropriety of | veni ime , re thus . 59.0 
ing high nocturnal temperatures in our stoves grown in pots of Euphorbia jacquini 3 pen Lignine ae 
— forcing houses, quite e in your opinion Stephancti floribunda, C endron Modes and Water 114 
Hat much mischief has been done by ignorant prac- | others, which having ae a their growth by the end ee 
uae have acted thus tionally ; but while | of 1 were removed into a la e gin 
N 2 avoid th bdis of ancestral empiricism, | nocturnal nne Ton 35° to 43°. In this place According to this, Indian meal will contain, of nitro- 
42 axe care that we do not founder upon the Scylla | they received scarcely any water ; their treatment in Ee principles;:12,8 ; nan — i 
ay * The case of the stove creepers that all other respects being airt to the preservation eg — ee a a l pg — 3 — whi ch, 
: 32° at anor, | of the 83 for which slight fires were lighted ever T 
ne 3 pier ed as on an vacate arn he excep- | morning, and ven tion ever all possi j Ae . 8 rp „5553 bi 
I fear that there may be dispel damp went on apparently well, till a i 
2 Er ae may insist upon having the same | house being about to be started for forcing flo o the principal: kinds-of farinaceous food, at the p 
very well to have ted he exper It m 7 — pun n PERE nee into it, bi a nigh > f es 112 Tbs, of Wheat- flour Is, 0d. to 15s. Od 
i ermen u ou 0 ore eat. P i „ ) 
plants upon the bac Many objections 30 having stove The Clerodendron . ich maintained the most a Oatmeal : 1220— 15 ) 
which (h k wall of a Vinery, not the —.— of a a verdure of leaf up to this time, now sickened » Indian meal 33 
wi (ney in) would be the discordant treat- and died, every leaf falling off. Euph jacquini- z 2 2 = 5 9 $ 8 
iige mans to the Vines and plants in =< h i all its leaves and is w $ ni A: 3 
the Stephanotis is not eel 
Pr it ve the Vine which were frozen in an early I. ‘ue ia in past years these Fim this Table one thing at least is clear, namely, 
(mentioned — one of your corre- plants under this e gong 20 ave never | that Pota 
48 certainly an extreme one, and reminds ae . mselves. : thin 5 past sunless ood that en —— t the pr csont — — rg A — 
season did not mature their gr th sufficien 7 to with- = een ee. 
ee 8 stand the low temperature, believing that their capa- 3 — — is to 15 = wyi — j ` 
It is p bility in this respect is in direct a tet 2 the ripe- i or less), ye rom 15 5 p : 8 a of 
many plants which are ness of their shoots. Henry "Bailey, Nune es in it ee. —— 
— ac dure (as Sir Thom eee eee 1 1 
us) very se frosts in th er, 75 per cent. and woody ür whe ries 
but the * — —— — PRACTICAL p HINTS oR A AMATEURS does hot nourish, frou 6 bo B. f 
has been m,n, influence under which their Preparation ‘te iBar FOR Porri, e. E Wheat contains in 100 Poe vai 5 
j A on by whie the w 41 more ne to the amateur gardener oon — find it Sorry matter viz., gluten 7 — 14 et W 
i 4 g properties, In t his — and be des t the i nised in ents viz, : 
3 plants are very dif- | same dine of of the eight material. 0. meneen sO Starch TEA 2.0 persi E A 
like ripening p ill ac- | choice plants are given to him the roots of ed z 5 3 — — 
Na 
2 e in and he looks a 
gardener will for a moment dissent something of the same quality, in which to pot — In short, whilst Pos — aur 20 pe per Seite of 
n A best is as ts as vain exation would never occur if a little fore- prá epo rming and nutritious principles, . — Sami 
i 8 1 should be the last, to ight were exercised ; and w now endeavour to an 70 of the form 
initiate our reade mystery of making ait 10 of the latter. The value of Wheat | to 1— 


m 
m me and low ture in the dark, 
winter, when the vital functions 


tt“ Dodman” has draw — TA 
he —.— concei —+ and 

emplo: ho is a 
— — — bonne 


Š 


is reason 
. Amon ng suc! 
ners“ Chronicle is 


ason) adjust the balance 


cer. | a moul 


‘amount of 1 informa- 


such Persons what same o 
ed 


ed 
rather n be 


to the art and ry 
-heap. Humble — such a possession may 
be . it will save much trouble to have one, an 
tend, more than eng one thing — to ensure a Stock a 
of — * plan 


ant — AERE —.— 
pot, and ret will find the mould is 


are 3 embedded i o that 
separated; and water will with diffculty 


comfort of 


e ea turf from a Apa 
eadow 3 let it be eu eee eg ek, and then laid in 


this time, no analysis upon which full reliance can 
pl 


cht re is at least 4 to 1; or if Wheat sells 
ir ae n be equally cheap, ought to 
at between 3s. 


continu + Bee: use them 
2 instead of "exchanging 


he inst a double 
| quantity — ee ee aliment of . <A description. 
ae 


them similar e cauti 


. Indian Corn are distinguished, viz., via, Indian 
meal, flour unsifted, 1 do. hae cre Aar í 


finest ani niist aort, 
7 „ eee 


38 
a question of importanee which of 
—— ina d Gem 
of taking the Pc etary mt 


to the Potato, as containing 


per centag 
so that weight * — 5 the quantity of nutritive we 
matter eee 


er is — * 
cent., solid — 3 in 
amounts to 89, leaving only 11 — other — 
Mangold Wurzel, 85 in Carrot, 80 


THE GARDENERS’ 


; in Parsnip, 7043 3 


the 


in — — 52. 


Turnipa, 


n Po quantity 
may be reckone + — pe 14 and 15 per cent.; 
and 


per 


starch, bu 
only an. mes. panu and vegetable ‘ely le rege eid, | 
Per 


Thus we find that none = these v 


d Carrot 
g short im the following proportions 


tive value, the tem 
a being a nearest to it, 


but 


Mangòld Wurzel. | Carrot. 
16 1s 


It must not be forgotten, too, that as a large r 
tion of the solid matter in these v 


Turnip. 
— — 
Yellow. White. 
134 —.— 


1 x. of 


considerable loss will be incurred in boiling 


gar, a 
them, owing to the 


be supplied. 


e solubility of that — N in water. 
The ree deficiency also of the proteine compounds in 
tables than in the Potato v 


other 


I have ring ay A remarked in a former lecture, that 


It has calculated that 


been 

112 Ibs. of . ... 154 Ibs. of bread. | what they are in England. If you expect to find in 

pe — * me » Australia, or New Zealand, or 5 the Cape Se 
— 560 oi such — su , Such conveniences. of 

Homony nnd Mains foe on 450 j you have left behind in your native land, — 
Hence though it would be ab to co r Indian | will’ be very seriously disappointed. But I can do. 
meal more nutritious, m ly use ells into a no more than land yo and toe give you one 
greater bulk, by absorbing more water than Wheat word of advice at parting. ware of long-shore 
flour does, yet this y may s as a recom- ks. You 5 — = set of idle fellows ready to 
mendation to its use, by enabling us to obtain an equal | fasten upon any s and to make a prey of him, 
of = d with a less consumption of fiour, | Now, do not Roach ie of by them. Attend to the. 


ing up the 9 by eating more of other and 
por | cheaper kinds of veget 
— pr pre ) 


e Correspondence 
Protected — one of er volit Numbers 


you suggest the use = moveable.sashes for a variety of 
Objects ; among others, for. accelerating the Ene 

of wall ‘fruit, and subsequently of the beari 

i this — 1 three years ago, but without any! 7 


ined by the 


e passing of the 


was useless, unle adopt the further measure 
of shutting up the bottom and sides, i in fact, making a 
ouse. enhouse 


that heat by its isolation 
ce the © temperature to that of the 

where is your forcing or ripening 
wer! If, then, it he true that a glassy m 


cts, an ve 
ienced similar results ; but we do not think they 


Py 
— — De a of animal physiology than his 
rs have done, in including legumes 


less than 38.5 


modem fiducia, phe 
amongst h i 

of abstinence,* ‘hich, | e 
3 the Romish be 
no less 26 per eent. of | 

albumien, 244 * 11.7, and Lentils in o 
ce it 


s state no 
appear, 
that a given quantity of many sorts of Legumes contain 
ay: as meat itself, which, as I have stated, 


affect the A nen as we have put it 
“a Animal.“ Dece 


at the will of the bearer tend to deprive it of this most 


as of “ Garbanzos” in 8 
southern nations who eat but little meat. 
sent price ôf Beans is 50s. 
an 


r —— or Id. 
Peas IId, E . t 7 oe 


whilst meat is 


rdeners’ Chronicle, it would 
ected by an 


* Whee 


effected admixture f Beet. | i 
t the same remark would 1 apply 8 
t flour ur contains, ve seen, . 


of some species 
m, by those 
the pre- 


lb. x 


„ or 8d.; 


ead 


pala 
by Dr. Lyon Playfair, i in the | | 
that a co: A 


would lead to infer that — 


tobe 


an 
Hall, Ja 


CHRONICLE, 


surrounding | q 


medium is the of ta 


x pee isa ee class of 


you hold your 
piace, 
Mig saver fares t the — — family — — 
gece ag and a hen tha 
at sea, it 5 be l you are 


ad 
10 me urge apon circumspect in your 


only 24, whi 


Wheat poe Fors 10d,, or 11 — — ey 
employing : of 


— it 8 4 that by 
eae ae 
Nevertheless 
end would pte to 9 
a portion farinaceous 


a 


may 
expenditure of 42 by 4. 
} tions of Tain o 
— explana 


and the comm rye 


take his choice of 


s the case at the time when 
geliy ered, yr present it is considerably lower, 


wre f itherto 
in; and if it 2 objected that inveterate 
a certain bul 


more simple way of attainin the same 


ess to those rye ene yet i 


vou to be very 
onduet, and carefully 15 — ok all — che your | 
no hast: uaintan 


[JAN. 20, 
minds for finding ee a very different state to 


and all strange; 
so from the habits of regularity you have —_ accus- 
tomed to at sea. me we I have 
held out to ra no ex 
the prask of any lp a pete D 
few 


him paxa but his stamp w 


as u 
able gardener in a sin le-handed place. In 3 
. he stated, ork we must in Australia, 111 


trans- | work hard, but we thio no want rg people that. 


idleness are the 


woman had t 
e colony,“ I i oy liv 
9g Joga anywhere but im 


1 off, I placed lumps of quicklime on. 
en-pots among them, and found ina 

after it use a check of the disease. I ma 
but from ni ee beneficial — 


plants, were 
Master v. Gar dener - am 
take this subject in h 


de 
little knowledge is a great 
edu man is not en esd. I be 
ike 8 fond of their 
who N some 1 ut who can- 
have a first-ra dener, not onde on 
e ampuni of Fa wages, but of the neces- 
I believe that this 


ae afford to 


ein deners’ Tr respondet 
an's statemen so far as it goes, 
is good gea ae 


oanneare ta m 


g that a g tained on 
for = hladne, —— of . and in- 


dustry, ay = ilo 


more is to be said << masters and gardeners. In 
the first ant pen I must . that there are 


; 
ce, bebe oped that 


on whi ch re — * r 
of 2 species of vegetable or the in- 
ed interpretation of Jerem 


You m may say, how 


no 
l 


you will have a few usef 
none of = trashy sort, now- a-days the fashion, 
so ruinous to the youthful mind, teaching it to live in 


colony, will w 


dis 
arrival in port. Now I — you will prepare your | 


d | many 


instructive with 


their o own lives 


wl 
e 
t 


numbers 


and 


2 
© 
e+ 
= 


t, perseverante, 
study, 7 — that of gardeners; but ape: are many 
fo deal, 


gardeners, 
sions ; with such as these“ 


render 


THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE, 


39 


ould wish suel ch things reformed. But 
-= is no ap of se 


A inds of injustice a 
subject 

the han £ the san servants of the 

12 of quite subservient to 


a lady’s-maid respectin 
b in Oxfo oe hire, * 
r to your Paper 


ci ag to ave brought them to 
» Now, how sta ds the fact:? 


Í i ve 
— exception of ~ Chad paha 
peyia 


e rest, th t b 
5 touche, long before the dish 
ish of handsom 


om 


“Dow Lahn. at $ 
— to see that “the things are produ 
el lo; adh and to do py to him- 
= 5 en ai who would e psig 
nothin ing, A hose case 
vants ; but | t give 
i his profession, 


1 


thy a 

donn, asing his 

— a l utter d fv . at malta on master’s 
Vines.—I am about to prune some Vines 

of one m anxious to 7 as 


one year’s a 
N. a8 posible next season. It has 
disbud 


e upper — 
shoots produced 
pray sitet cage 

it. G. 


7 
be 


ded portion of shoot wil 1 


urn, I 


Unetions, 
git jasa 2 
ure by its whole enient 

on 15 it can manufac 


„seed Wheat, or other articles, 
to an 


and sell them for whatev veil 
er “the will fetch. 
Ši ripe 
di noe en A chad for 
did no e ings a friend "of his h — 
from A vo hat the Ese uit TRARY ths 
„ way, d 
r12 dozen Albert — 106, te fa sked 
“give for them. I inquired where 
Seen, and he answered, 4 Xt an auction 
1 the — — r — ; 
ya not yet 
to Mr. M jakhan ca: this post, in 
he circumstances, a nd I ha 


en tobe 


rvants so sub- | wa 


o | Esqs., were elected F 
d been rea 


y be) for 


Lee 
em . which, howe 


w | This 
it e with the same plant are 


bg in so the young shoot at — Pine. 
hte must, however, ene d ob 


0 trie the a lot of fi 
3 oad order from any ‘too confiding wei 


now I know that these have been a ina similar | 
n 


ring, an eminent firm 
e ont” ot nearly re worth 
an 


thing in that part of the epe Ea for „keeping on the 
ines without losing flavour or 


FA 


n 
n to write to their 


ought cuted, not to simply take the 
a ae reference which they are all prepare re with, 
and which their own party, I had a other 
instance las st week of a, party in Manchester mice A 
steaming apparatus, and on being asked for a reference, 
he boldly named a oh n here, who is now in gaol 
swindling. Thomas Whalley, 
There was a vile 


there nearly four years, and h long b 

of Coldbath Fields 3 id 2 7 now 5 ba abe eine 
on the er ee here he fe 2 that he is 

a regular impo —— as most g those a e that go about 
in the same sort of way. J. Stewart, — 1 


S cietis, 
Ho ORTIOULTURAL, Jan, 16.— int 1 Esq. ste 
President, in the chair. G. * and G. T. Davey, 
ellows. The sax Bye-laws, which 

d at two eee meetings, and suspende 
The meetin 


had 
in the meeting room, w 


ayes 
a Viee President —— dis new 
e anes of the 
e des fot — ae of the Soe 
ition, M 


© 


om Guatemala, and a 


an 
ore apparent, on account, of . eee 
oe Soeiety's gar- 
den, the latter being in the bes health, 4 leaves 
deep p green, ren y blossoms Veta bright. e 
managed. t W h n 
Fae like hae must be e regarded as one of our hand- 
somest wi feed al tove panes its * ani searlet 
Mr. Glendinning 


ong them was a. scarlet, 
very bright, and ataje 10 stand heat wal A Certificate 

was awarded 
+ ong ons — a collection of Pears — ve Moor- 
man, Esq., pham-road, equally p sound | i 
en 


the 
ent condition, whieh makes 
eh wags ga eeping them sho ald he 


avies, 


epee 


ee suckers, on each of w 
vies grows his Pines on the Hamil. 
ker . whose — is now — to be uni- 

ised by gardeners; of plant - 
wa — out in the bed of the Pine pit, m — Hamilton 
oes, he cultiva them which 


ha same 

the p t had been cut on the 

28th of February — one of . — oe 4 Ibs. 8 o, 

e the other 4 Ibs. 10 oz. ; the old s as then e on down | 
and pap — which it had — wn out prod 

h of which apparently Soit . 
— es Be — t has been stated, the 

advantages of the Hamiltonian over the ordinary mode 


FE 


shifted 0 al was awarded. 
Mr. W eur r . Rushout, of f Wanstead; pe 
a 8 Pine. apple weighing 4 lbs 


and white Bar- 
i 


t those exhibited. 


s-li 
friends nis 3 they pa rely, to 45 5 if ** orders wa 


e three varieties z ae 


0 = roghtiana 5 


eribed 
n friends which horticulture had ever possess 


- ath 


r n all that Jabour can e 


was pakiss countries * whence 
east 


of fruiting 3 will be ge _ the labour 
required in gro ing woa e former system is me 
trifling co seh in —.— old plan. 


t was mentioned that the mies — had not been | fro 


p Bevington, gr. 
s, Esq., of Stratford on- Avon, sent two sorts | ma 


C 
A box of red caved Kidney” Pose 
sprung and ready for planting, ca 5 Mr, Cuthill, 
of Camber well. These were sen 


16 y ago in the gar 
ticaltural Society, the agp t of these et that small 
sets yie goo rop as large ones 
5 45 pe of. e sent wire 


s were again shown. 


ls 
d | Stated that they ing ae frost, but that they Toe 


with a sharp * » however, beautiful labels, 
n be * ete, m e found 
t in the o arden. 
‘be wers of Chimo 
ragrans and grandiflorus, finely flowered specimen o 
Lycaste lanipes, and pr Orchids, two Cape Hea 
s, the same of Correa, a pale 
variety of Ges a Douglasii, aid the Sericographis 
ioned GA 
e Cha n drew attention to Pos great loss which 
ne Society had — is A the death of the Earl of 
nd, 


any 2 
ae —.— mem ‘of th e Counci 1 
7 next 9 would b 
of electing a suecessor to his Lordsh 
the part of the Counci 


be truly 


might 
one of the mo seful, and sincere 


den iid ae naa 
Mn. Wirnor' AE u.—It is an undeniable fact 
ae mies London market. gardons are tho best * p 
ea of kitchen-gardenin ngi In 
practised 05 only een of the 2 2 nian 
nt Garden 9 il 3 od E is conducted 
a profit e grow cag aree Bsr 
ponders these cline 3 it the fi 
ce; for, although in gma princely establishments 
shing 3 of nne excellence may be obtained, yet 
ombination of expansive applian 
aan by. Val d p 
us 


iris ina 2 
Ares by marketing his pr 84 


effect a nom 
mpete suc — i with the 


gest is equired to 
r, now copiously sent 


productions of 5 forig aul ee 
arkets. This tibe e 


e natural soil and elima 
hey come, ae. where 
ery co cheaper than thai 


he produee of th 


labour i 


which heads this notice. 
Mr, Wilmot n long known tobe one of the 

first cultivators in this eatntry, and his gies 2 establish- 
nahm poiat. of extent, is, perhaps, unrivalled. 

uch an extent as he possesses of hor Ee unsal erections 

vani not conducted upon the 5 . s of manage 

nt, disorder 15 soon apparent, and a re- 

tablishmen * pihia ssary; but so far 


— 


of almost 9 se mode 


and 
that a be salad within 20 miles of ei is an 
g care 


large both in and bery; it weg ed 2 lbs. 9 


3 it was stated to be a good beare 


and to surpass any- 


o. 3 pore: 


ent has em 9 1 7 ed in bis here 
ly a any bint D that has’ been 
| suggested as e; in horticulture that has escaped 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


[JAN. 20, 


Grape Vine ; the system w 

lots of Pris 2 may form the subject of a 
— rill 

Mr. Wilmot’s Vineries are various! 


tructed, 
are generally 90 feet ong aul, and 2 or nearly a 
them are 4 with hot-water 


recisely the sa 
were . in 1 1 


certain their 


each 
i — ex ie — bein 
d 


‘die 
extraordinary freak foliage is of un- 
-usual size, measuring 155 * the cae way and 18 the 
other, and the Vines er are v 


i 


mjó oui — „ * — $ dees to get a bunch or 
order relati 


them soil is kept in a uniform 


to syrin 
 sheivelling, as it is Se too early to 
adopts in producing 
| carefi 


— 
t | sticks in which 


have only one ; oa oh is impossible to 
to 


yom of a a little more care on t he part of your 1 
5 e layi 


out of the ground, and as these impro akaka 
the ed to 


will be usefu 


a 
„to 7 them from 
to kee 2 is a ebe 


generally co eggs of 

For the further pro of th * ts from thei 

ra at and eat mould ot 2 thoroughly 
ha; 

Abe — 4 rah 


8 
. 


basket — 


P — 
able to keep 1 plants 


unless * 
+ * has in a growing state comparatively 


GARDEN ct dah Se comin tee 


Wing 
us arrangement of pe colours e ſor 


are f 
be permanent, it will be found more 

o do the work weil, r it spr 
more time, marks 


course inten 
in | Satisfac actory t 
oceup a little 


“was partially apply to the 3 “of au 3 the 


paration ws the soil, and the taking up and replanting 
of « * shru 
CING DEPARTMENT 
BE ra -A “Tittle ingenuity is nee 
ung rods brea — 
e: by binding them down to 
rafter, and curvin 


to make 


the amount of heat and moisture be carefully regulated, 

not eh ae, 55° by night until they are broken, 
nor 65° by day, unless w -heat. Parti 

ill now be 


th ct will | days at thi ill do i le injury in this 
confer ” fie. Wires, my olin this rather knotty nore Ru — badkar all spy which do not show fruit, 
matter, Mr. W all his experience, fails to |as ey ar inguishable, except where 
account for e — is —— If useless shoots are 


ete of Operations. 


State of the Weather at Chiswick during the last 23 years, for tung 
ensuing 


week, ending Jan. 27,1849. 
gic | fee] gg | Stat | grace 
Jan. 2 2 5 ae 8 2 which it 2 — . 
Sane | 238 Rained. | ef Bain. |z 
Sunda; 21 42.6 33.2 37.9 10 0.48 in. 
= Mon. 2 433 | 34.1 | 388 11 0.57 
Tues 2 44.0 34.0 39. 10 0.27 
Wed. 24| 439 32.5 38.2 9 0.51 
Thurs. 25 43.5 33.0 38.3 9 0,59 
Friday 26| 44.5 33.5 39. 10 0.90 
Satur. ZI 44.4 | 32.7 | 33; 9 0.34 
high emperature during the above period occurred o; 
. Ae aaa i and tap Ien the 27th, 1827—therm. 17 de 2 


ae to Corresponden 


during the 
Emigration, — nd the m 
rd Lg ayer ——— Parker. 


— 


mere aceident. 
Eracrises: J Macintyre. Your seedlings are pretty, as all Epa: 
crises are; but they exhibit 7 sab pace p on the kinds 
already in cultivation; No. 1 is 2 . 2 the worst. f 
Exotic Frurrs: WB. You — . — sands Oranges 
and the ate or p ia iR AR AS T ona shaded haok wall, Those 
most worth having are Mangos, Bananas, Longans, Rose. 
apples, Cherimoyer (hard to set), and Chit —.— eJ müb 
17 Pires: Scotus. We are unable to answer the pm 
erha mi ssrs. Hartley y, of Sunderland, could give th 
7 aiio 
HEATING: ami 3 reland. For such houses as yours Bete 
ll suited. If Ad are near Dublin we 


n fre- 


1 &G00D 5 
— supply microscopes, ae ~ * called Eile fe a the sort 
commonly used by working botanists, if they do not require 
3 instrumen 
pirang Let your — E. east and west. 
A 4. Fru rune your Beech hed ow. Thorns will 
best guard au the new — ive long enough. The 
coraa of all piii branches is that they soon die, 
ae ct light, and offer no defence. 
voi Bras itor. b “fangs parasite is visible on your 
tea ; they look as if they n been kept too damp = one 
this is not the cause it pro- 
2 lies in the soil. wale mane plants with very weak 
uriate of omg and see whether the same effect is not pro- 
— — ade 


4 


urs, 


We 
ment many things 
which wil 


moment’s notice. I precaution reg a geod 
ote time whch ght tb ceed ia doing the an 
wi 


PLANT „ 
be “rsa watched at this 


—. Aad The of the 
TRE lined with 


ala — 


k of 
0 a in no case leavin 
aon a spur. 


posed ys, an 
as much as possible of this space should be monopole 
by the leaves of the fruit-bearing spurs. 
any of — which p= 
in n- 


power and future mgoa 
ving more than one bun 


over the 
e diately 
kag Sg 1 may be given; it should 
winter, and e either fi 
left | to 8 pour by the rain, 


Asparagus 
be spread 


State of the Weather near London, for t 
1 — for andes, Click 


Jav. 18, 1839, 


the il trom fa 3 a and, and. by is 1 powers ofa 


abeorp A 
ciently moist. That Friday. 12 
à Satur. . 


8 —.— ea it is evident from the beau 
tiful network 
fa 


um absorbs nearly sufficient moisture from 


me atmosphere o of the house, and r — oing ie with 


mamn 
22" 2224 


29.79 
29.712 


ssss588 d 


ie 


fine; ~~ 
15 overesat; rain. 
Rain; —— with ‘rain in afternoon; cl 
1 — overcast ; eeg clear at eke a 
t rain, 
n; ; clear; slight fı 


— 
ean ne; 2 e re 


and overcast at night. 
average. 


9 deg, above the 


forked in at once or 


cases. 

nels ir ty but not 
ne but; not "strong manure. Your leaves 8 heat 
water. Drain off the water; pre- 

wel — the access of more; and they will soon 


— 


Names or Prants: W C. The plant looks — variegated 
variety of the Snowberry. We are unacqu Guinted with it.— 
M — to learn, if he considers the specimens of 


8. —F b. tis Eranthi 


you to give the localities 7 
P M. Erica hiem 
NEAPOLITAN VIOLE 
with th 
on all favourable occas 
Pu¥siotoe GICAL QUESTIONS: eee We will endeavour to 


ON 
room for an answer next w 
NG: Shem. You correctly at ttribute the — 
growth of young wool to the reduction of large — 
winter. You must thin it out, cutting one of two s 
clean out are very near each other; sh 
others — various lengths, r. recolle Pias 
shoots will push immediately below 


Your treatment is 


you cessions of young 
you must attend * With 


— pM u must reduce the irre; 


ruben ae 


bers 3, 


Yes; eac „ Yexley, 


n, Surrey. Fida and TA. Te 


SEEDLING FLOWERS but 


Paas HJW. 5 seedling is pretty in colour, 
it wants size; nor will it rank in 5 es with the 
improved race of these beautiful 8 


A Gard correct, 
the — — of] keeping th them close; they should have 
ns. 


shoots, 
regard to yout 
5 and > similar tendencies in check by : 


ie + art are ; 


bt be forw: 5 
want of a good 1 of the system, “The Christian name 


wems eo Se S 


— 


. ——— — — 


833 —k— 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZE 


— Max URES, 
ti Ae Sr — 5 50 16 818 and Co., 
URAL 'A 
— icli AL AGENTS on, 


Waars Fat 
Se AnD Co., bavo 


In en 
Messrs. STRETTON, ee and 
t 


Taing povera th their andina (being 40 per cent. a price 

ust en ot anures, 

of apr peng ertllizers those ct 

Alter trom 

measure 

bers. Sent, carri i to made a of the ho at 
- £5 10 


0 per ton, 
Oats, Hops, or any 
ae Barley, ps, . e 1w o 
ws penine Su hosphate of Lime 
Lien Gyps perphosphs Bones, eee Acid, Go., 
their Chemist at at lowest market pri 
English and Foreign Oilcake 


vtionlsarists are particularly recom- 


Riva 
tested by their 


PERUVIAN ANDE BOLIVIAN GUANO ON SALE, 


ONLY IMPORTER: — 
ANTONY TIBBS AND SON S, LONDON; 
Wx, JOSEPH MYERS anp Co., LIVERPOOL; 


nd by their Agents, 
BRIGHT, anD Co., LIVERPOOL and Bet tN ot 


400 TESWORTH, POWELL, AND PRYOR, LONDON, 


007. 
To 


ROYAL LETTERS 
PATENT. 


W A, LYNDON, en Works, 
. vet of Patent SPADES, SHOVELS, an 


and Agricultural Labourers, 


to 


9 5 rizes at the Royal Agricul- 

04 5 de , ton a j 

endatio ons fro 
it 


shee F ire a „ and 1 — — 
5 enuine unless beari 

name in full upon the strap and a label, re 
wr 7 a made to = 5 — 

inti any pattern, 


Digging, ae Mauure, 
an apted for every de- 
p ar vias behad of all Tronmongers in th e king rà dom, 


The Am Agricultural Gazette, 
pi JANUARY 20, 1849. 
R THE TWO FOLLOWING W 


0 WEEKS. 
%—~Agricultural Imp. Society of Ireland. 
haa Imp. Society of In — 


preceptor without being an 
seat ol in relation to moral = 
Pk 


to tenia one who is u 
bad farmer, 


We he 
fe ci 


this 

oth merits as t The rem 

meet a ann already existing, which 
with m 


tae and other 
rs, will not think that 


in the p ‘of a . 
in ey other Bre will, no 
ry itself by a pro- 


Pen ee ainted ong and e 
. b ns “ae details of n ment 
Wey se depend, they 
1 pt afer may be, are the 
8 success. 


est | ance 


the vi 
fertilizers which so frequently | sha 
the — of the fly and e insects ate in a great | - 


protected. Dr. Ryan’ Garden Manures” for general pur- | mi 
age free, 


But, surely, it cannot be until a doctrine has been 
tested with all the tact and skill of an accustomed 
practitioner, as well as with the goodwill of its 

= ar , that its profit or loss can be held to deter- 
min val 

How comes it, then, that such a daore — our 
amateur farmers ex ists for pa ALA if 

we had them, they onl prove nothing’ but Point 
skill or the want of it— points of no public import- 


TTE. 41 
in many important particulars : and these are pia 
ties which will no doubt soon make him ally 


a 
likely to foster that capes of intelligent agriculture 
of which S 


he ba lance sheet is, no doubt, the true test 
arm other business . 


ve no 
. er if it 
of our f scientific men to 


first years ma ive to animate the officers and 
supporters of i 3 present aed id 3 and that 
Scotland, hav ample, induced the 


ill main 


e must n owever, do ourselves the injustice 
of omitting to vel to Mr. HUXTABLE’S balance sheet, 
or to thank him for his ele efforts in the cause 
of agricultural improvement ; b 


desire for progres 
in principle, as would have ensured full 9 being | 
d 


m 
en pee. wh 


one to them, and the results wiene tan should obta 
b ructive. e find a cere: 
28, askin ng fot the money- 
result of Mr, Huxranrn's experience from the co 


ut w 


culture. 
at cultivators and chemists 
ought to preserve the same degre 


argument that Life, which 11 7 recognise 
agency, puzzles the merely chemie al peer e of 
our pr chee, and confounds his attempts to prodi 


our exes nee. This should only redouble efforts 
at the man aye chemico-agricultural problems which 
Life 5 roposed for solution. The difficulties 


she presents to the chemist will not ee him, if 


, 1847, since * : 


| appreciation of the real value of te testimony or evidence | 
3 — will be found wall. and calculated to 272 | 


in respect of agricultural doctrines, that we could 
wish no balance sheet had been publishe d at all: 


for it must mislead all but those who remember the |i 


circumstances under which it has aris 


agriculturist, who now urges his rs at 
public meet ngs, is to point out the course in which 
their efforts at self improvement may be most use- 


is own experience, no doubt, 


fully Eod i give 
art—but, above all, to 


5 particular points of the 


s 
try and impart some of that energy — hope fulness 


which, as as ter ine are agricultural 


ous the settee! of ing 
t 


otherwi e ex- 

periments he 1 aa till people a ipa able 
to separate the two, let him do his own do ctrines 

the justice of silence on the onaya of his 

general 1 

t one im 

ple den for the e brunn va 

actuates = remar 
for the 


t anything but sim- 
agricultural truth 
sincere respect | ö 


amateur | ti 


asa sable ini introduction t a | voca 


i them o is 

as the good which an enthusiastic agricultural ad- 
cacy may do. Let owners of land be informe 

by it of all 1 aden pt png 85 Profits of 

farming, to 


ugh their 
knowledge of all i ‘subjects the better ter for $ their M 


tenantry : but the publication of exa; jews 
on any of them should be p a Avoided they 
onl not injure those whose landlor ab pisoi 
rience i ; 2 * 3 farmer 
0 
E ee enema who sive + beet tured, to their 


n injury, in 


Tue CHEMISTRY OP AGRICULTURE has all along 
received heartier agricultural eee in — he 
land than in England. And there is no suchen 

as exists here to appeal ii its su joi in the North. E 
After the sort of outfield cultivation which for five | 


eso n a ma 
ment of its objects within their own de 


epartment : 
and the Scottish Arenen e n 
a with we believe the good understanding of its 
embers, now assumed the form of the ‘Chemistry’ 
roared of the Agricultural Society of Scotland. 
The 5 8 of chemical offi 
ferred M 


st 
which it a oe difficult to co 


ej o the offer of an oo rent by the be 
Ne sich — held o 


urnip 
and | only — happened by such neglect as I should 
d | have thought I am perfectly confident | 


overcome them 
i 3 


matter; an ery grou 

ay ey bold . thos feelings 8 it 
which the reaction conseque pon exaggerated 
ideas of its importance has ee 


ON <4 ARE A 


ns a ta ve no doubt, an Teal read 
and enjoyed by gre of your subscribers, 
This places en responsibilty upon himself, 


and makes it all the more important that his doctrines 
should hon aome worthy and correct, 1 1 not think that 
they — 

For i cis nee, he appears to have an unreasonable 
antipathy to the e of cattle feeding and housing 
r. Warnes has advocated—an — w. 
howev ver appropriate as regards the 

ystem which he TR as existin 
am sure, enti 


4 i 
his opinion is that of everybody fae : aa pi thing of 
im 
very opinion is leading to the xtensive adoption 
of that va y nyitom of box feeding which ig pa s to 
demn. Itis because the man our feeding 
oxen is n capable of being mad th 1 
wit ting the air or fouling the cattle, that we 
have substituted the box system for poe ee ng on 
this farm ; and it is because we can m re beef 
upon it at less expense, that we have “substituted 
Warnes’ Linseed compound for the oilcake 


Vilkins — not yet have seen — dry and 
ere the dung is allowed to accumu- 


only say that they have never seen it. But there rated 
been many witnesses to the success of box 4. 


far ast 


which have 


science dig the quantity of iter I av 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


[Jan. 20 


waste of the liquid: our boxes are 
and some 


He 


y untrue 
* bolting that sli pudding in those dark and dism 
dungeons” John C. Morton, Whitfield. 


Hive for some = 
of Wix, 


expending 
and —— 
due 


person 

pita mode of winterin 
beasts, I ses fully believe 5 — with 
to hi 


2 


mid dirt, wet, and put 
always met wih, i is sr om 
have never one i 


a| very properly con 
Newtons, Wansford. 
15 re- 


Your Lead 
your — on the lette 


a 
carried out the system of box- | j 
the SF gy ot Gazette the the average 


those very bad, — — he has hitherto 


condemned. Edward Compton, Water 


— ig Arang IN IRELAND. 
ca 


— — 
That — the impossibility of profitably im- 
proving — parts of the w reland. It is m 

r in this letter, to o compare a the pat of money 
1 in improving the 80 oun 
returus which similar fo bate — pr l 
in the west of Ireland, The balance, sheet lately pub- 
| lished by Mr. Huxtable affords mater 
arison. The return 


r. 


cannot be eane — account of the humidity and in- e 

clemency of the 
nt say 50 bushels per 

2000 bushels (w — — to 38 lbs.), and —— on the 

per to 166? 


t plastered o 
But — the best eri 
feeding was this, that the 
— of the same age 
were disposed | a 
n hovel, and the 


the west of 


reland | v 
Bat I gree 


with the | amount o 


ials for a suitable 


aer eat, yield a erop — 091., and 
would be paralleled in the ‘west of Ireland, where Wheat| T h 


unerative, But it is Sept irpini to en- i 


day, does as much work as a well-fed —— n de 
= English farmer can ploughman for his 
wi — 


touched, are ee fou remote parts of 
d divided into little patches of tillage, 


way infe 
fashionable watering place of H 


reaction begins 
landlords, encumber 
— ſew 


recal inst n their experience of v 

attempts at improvement in such N 

every w years’ 

of money, have been ed, The — ine been 

an improvement of te A asi for eiad but a con- 
viction in the mind of pe investment 


—— the Irish peer in be | 
such ble outlay ; 


san in 
of capital such s altogether unprofitable, 
‘Two elements are at eth which have ea * 


— deavour — 
— sor en 
jo conelnsion in the ho ns which 


straw-yard have eaten one-fifth more food, 
and are only in good store — s whilst those in the | 
Grass. re ' 


. ae 


above the 


per, wh in. 
oreover, the manure so made, in ence of the 
pe not 2 — . it, is aor every 
ed. 
no relish 
to m 


in ; 
e to show him what I have 
stated, T weld, I ra ig make him more 
mereiful those who have 
adopted box feeding All that ] * oe hitherto seen pate | 
described is 


to Ae — aksin to correct 


——— to me 


ward in condition. want of 


compoun 
he glance the 


Irish difficulty, 

success W 
sive pa for retaining profitably the waste lan 

the west of 

2 instance than Mr. Huxtable's 


produce is obtained which 


as ee 


an In — as e as Ire 


eee 8 Seas 


tenant on 40007. capital: 


pose the to be laid ont on l 

simile £ quality in * ead of Treland 
same skilful superintendence 
the artiste of —— alone as 
the only 


ripen in the ave 


of Wheat at Whitfield, at 40 bushels per 
sere =. = 4800 bushels, at 6s. per Siebel 3 
120 a of Oats in the ge of Ireland, at 30 
Dussia s per acre (35 to 88 lbs. per bushel), 6000 
2 DHE find aes 
Leaving a difference ob. 
This difference on one nih of N annihilates 
both 5 and tenant's returns, and dag at a 
azardous nature of sueh expensi ys 
in — cli —— 

g the produce and facility of 
— it has much — do with the profitable — 
in culti 8 the soil manh clearly under- 

nm by this, that good and bad soi 


equire an equal 


such i 


are—a gradually diminishir g Tate of 
ual os inerease in the 
tock seem 
va, and steak armers accor only 
78 ever make money in the cecupation of farms in a 


uncertain climate, 
“We e me, of ai 8 of 8 Celt, and hi 
t. 


antag 
the 3 en 
repeat — If there 
of ae „ the Saxons 15 
ate, for, . tice the soil is fer 
there have they aene 85 
the bl 


28 8 
pin 


nn H 

too long. If these dis districts « were 

to . the * would work i 
W 


outlay in their improvement and manageme 


roduce is e 
elsof Wheat, in "the other by tay my value 
By s e ontlay of 1 d 


while ben 
e by | of 


still ho 


cli N 
climate you 8 pa in- 
shels of Wheat e 3ʃ. 
An 9 — of the same a bad climate — in- 
eyros the — by 10 bushels of — ne uch 
parts of 

| — 8d. "The difference between thes ese . 

e apparent cheapness of le abour is urged by 
as à reason a the cultivation of land in A se 


of Ireland, | 


any | 


suff 
epe eee eyi the soil, for it may be 
an n the soil, however great the 


should be remunerative.. But ness is not 
real. Grant that an il. fed Trish 5 8 at Is. 2d. a 


singe it may mals panle an 5 — unless ib i 


* 


THE 55 GAZETTE. 


repay 


be 


county J. C» — 


the enterprise a 
lands, the resources of the state wi 
— if made from, duetive debt of the 7 
an addition tothe . pos 


nden 
3 2e, Gares on 2 We Whe Field —The 


bad trong clay ; b 

land was of eet å va tiled i a the customary 

vel met 3 any erop, and 
m 


ie a 11 es ci on t 
the spring the cr 
September, iat of * tion 


‘| 


ute acre 


follows, per sta 


E 
ot 


the be a 3 18445 the rat 


. Wheat in 3 r and of Straw in 
stones of 14 


dressin 
or aba Gdp per owt., il. 75. 6a. 
of soda, lj et. per cwt., IL. 4 

a tena A p-cwt., UL. 115 
guano, at 108. 9d. per cwt, 


of ammonia, i} ewt, at 205. per 


Stones 
of 
.| Straw. 


126 
144 


boo o eo 
he Wheat, vie 


reserved see of t 
t N 


ant quali of 4h 


now been four years in u 


nitrogen ; and as 


a 
of 3 than hay, it foll 
which contains proaches n 


nitro 


Sende ei; 100 yard 


in the an 
ag wet 2 


5 
s 


ows a 


8 long by 


85 . to 25 yards long 1 


Wa! . rateiof om 1} ewt: to the statu 


With fine ashes or san . 
avec J 202. to a gallon of 


a. vit 
our = " 


is done 


done with it? Of 
British Oak, which 


he cas 
without 


te 


may be 


8 For gardening pur- 
ater, and apply twice 
Spedding,  Mirehouse, Bae Cum- 


— a Royal Forests.‘ We have often heard of them 
are they ? what timber do they pro- 


iles m 
kene gem po ollards pers 


g — ashing. fa 


P: ame: 


of 10/. 17s. 


Po — weighing 6 to 

7 ance of 21. 7s. per pik 
tate — planting. * 

karsi gr 


pretty evident that these forest 
ed, but 
e determined upon 


er to, and after an aceurate survey; for they con- 
tain 3 kinds of soil,“ sige strong clay, N erp loam 
EEM + m freeston e t 
sa a: of Ma Ite un’s *% 8 it is 
— —. Great Biisin and Ireland contain 1,869,952 
eres of woodland ; 0 about 950,000 acres ar 


9 5 
[That there is a . extent ee cro 
forest, — one can deny canta dise ss the 

whieh — led to thie a but if our padi oe! 

methods for more usefully employing these 
ood.] 

pital of Agriculture.—As 

is of our r an 
important that they should be accurately a 
ackman, in his“ Analysis 
imates the inca pe! tal at 500 185 
of pounds err being a fraction over 101. 1586. per 
„970 imperial acres.* My ow ncaleulation 
ression n is s, from the perusal of pie gat 

e 


statistic ts form 
nelusi mone, i it is a highl y 
ted. Mr. 


= Hop grounds 

If I am aa this deen alone would 

din packman’s e r 85 the far 
ae by 128 milions, a dpe mportant item. Per 

you, or won of y — nted correspondents will throw 

a little more light 2 interesting su 

right in ‘caloulating. that the farmers’ a 88 pro a Fe 

Re 2 80, * r cyi 

o year ieh I 

hut 1 pele feel obliged = 2 
ve the slown 


slow a way of getting money, o 
so quick a way of losing it. I. sà eshi, Tiptree- “hall, 
near Fe * Ly 2 

The Labou 


t to 
— ever, dut 3 
ee and ill conditi ion of a vast extent o 
I passed through, that, if properly drained, they would, 
with the advanta age of elima roduce most valuable 
crops Sw and Turnip na enable the far 
to make the best — muek, and so increase his co 
+ Instead of seeing the poor unemployed la- 
bourers i i 


born never a rise higher 

might ear: money 

the work if 2 had a belly ful. Sepa pours end to 
are half starvin of poor rates 


ess; and, at puts dis- 4d. in t Zd., for poor ra 
ap tad Som y men have 12s., 138 d 158. a week, have good 
portions and near the arian of | houses, live well, and wor I could not re- 
d of being cut and bi to the turn to farm in my old country. I could not to 
see the poor labourers who, y pai well 
are 


to ‘merchants re 


i where they please, not 
; from the forest.” (Builder, 
sai 


The 


one 


Dee. 95 


principal 


G 
Growing 
6,000 
1,700 
11,000 
4,402 
3,378 
1,841 


ns 
— 


5 i follo 
Beye com- | soda in hot water, 
Sportsmen n * as stage for rabbits 


o which adii b 
wen would be sure to di 


232.962 


be applied is 
aes and 


- 


we have much to do, and 


—In 
Agriculture » which appeared in 


i. No. I., I — to give the proportions of 1 of 
wens (Glauber s salts) and lime ended 
t ni 


in the preven sen à 

:—Dissolve 22 oz 
and slak l 
burnt quicklime in the ordinary way, by pouring on it 
small pranama of rt water ; place 22 sapere! 2 
of the see 3 or other suita 


the seed m 

excess of liquid left; Fran ir- 
12 well until ya — be covered with 
ready for 22 Should the 
ergone this 


ny oceasion ally 


the best system | o 


b. of the s 


8 
amant farmer in the 1 
W 


my letter on the |i 


e pro- 
be added, 


indica 
e process A out. Thus, instead of 22 oz. 
of 3 use oz. of dry sulphate of soda, and 


2 galls. 11 oz. (or rater 2 ‘than 2 2 gallons and } pint 
ater, H. Durden, Dublin 


n. more Fe — the 2 of — ae 
few o the 


J hereby beg lea 


23 of Scotti sh s 
o do with their ‘prosperi t 


En 
self from the monopoly of her 7 


Did 
r own market! ra net 7 


ek 
Scotland o or en has as yet reached its 


ing. -As often happonh, Sir G. S. Robinson: 
ia his. GA ee? n. Mr. Wilkin Aah on box- 


rs little to what cause 
attributable, i it he a mischief which does recur, or is 
likely to r that an idle feeder has — 
the water “troughs into the — among the litter; has 
Sir G. Robinson since cured him of his pind habit, 
man sh again com- 


erg to happen again 
attended with the l 


healthier: beean 
counted for; one obvious cause to be assign 
the dung and urine. The evil in the third case is ae- 
unted for in a most extraordinary: way, totally repug- 
received notions of gravi ty a and KR tee 
the ied was of a * porous soil, and 


nant, to all 
ud e are told that 
e 


had supposed that a porous soil would suffer to 
rag gh ugh it, but to find that it causes them: 
ugh it is wholl to me. live 

vas n 1500 2 es of porous soil, porous to a depth 
from 400 to 700 feet. I would give scores, yeas, 
of pounds, to find that the woul - 
eously, or “ of course” flow upw 1 
de considerable sums to line tanks with briek and 


instances seen by Mr. f 
applied, and that the cattle were suffering by the prac- 
ice pursued, a — indub sig m i 


It seems so important to the inte- 


ueted chemical 


oes not contain any of that deleterious 
8 packman’s Tables, pa page 35: pin ‘England, Wales, ‘Scotland, 

— and British icles—arable and gardens, 19,135,990 

statute acres ; meadows, pastures, and marshes, 27,386,980,” 


x f 
show that Wheat, the produce of seed prepared | o 


S 
rests of agriculture that no 0 a should occur 
n the superior merits of ee Lag ty that you will 
8 n gar columns to ex- 
of sa 


y 
| oemt it respondent of yours has stated 


rs. 
that the high rents ae 2 Scotland were > attri- 


è 


THE AGRIGUETUNAL 8 


[JAN. 20, 


with 


there 
There is 


but not so — 2 to account for 

The rent of the * Barns Farm 

acres statute, or about 4. 123. 6d. 
th 


and 1 t 
. management. 


the diff eld ma 


n the works of the 


© grea 
to — of our al t soils ; and it 
wing to reyr ear iA consistin * 
more educational know! 


d; and not only paid, but paid with ease, the tenants 


ll three 
An eminent gt prs fe 
agriculture, was called upon to 


— that had been much run eats the 7 


and in arrear, the proprietor much 
ced b their non- payments. he begi 
owering their re rents? No, qui 


ces, rth their gratefal thanks i 
their deliverer Coates — e came to visit them. It 
be easily understood by any one not dee 


per 
time with liquid man 


res that 


ow the otk i in the farm-yard, — be — i infinitely 
isera ill 


more the 
— 1 


= 
8.8 
— i 


“ New | — 2 ( fige 
22), a N is given approaching to the ludicrous, 
wn by Lord Kames in his “ Gentle armer,” of | m 

— na, Scot e ratri consisted i 
“Our o scarcely able to nat eir o 


pie 
hits of nd or A 
The ay s its 42 the viele and the — ny ore of 
be | Ear 


| recomm 


d | of using a ——— A 


fatt fal 


Ane. 
Scotch gaed and of the aren upon ner as 5 — 
these statements were ound 

hora ; but 
when facis pee renie — — Perm 
ee ~ ve * 80 far from 
3 to San good. 


ists 
ed wit ith — aay nat y hold up 


cres | eyes 
for imitation a model of imp roved — and by 
or- th 


the rewards attendi 


en Ah ma struggle going on, e 

Kames, may please himself, but ean: never please others. 
or tham, 

acre: Plan — 

d manure indispensable. 


A good | ar 
Roots— 


n 
other half, Carrots, ditto we: ditto Parsnips. 
y Potatoes in July, and plant in their see — 
tween the Mangold, &c., half Turnips, half Cabbage. 
ane ome. the whole, plant half Wheat, ve Cabbage. 
Corn—Barley, with —.— un st t, 5 
Turnips after. Grass rass, “Clo 
——— with half ‘he talian Hye — to bbe cut 
the other half E 
. Hulme 
with — Grass for the roots in spring. Other crops 
ressed 
not water 2 4 ga 
used i 


e 
my own vicinity as an example, there 
water — on be i 
a level co ner and n y 
feet — I hav — 'ofien thought how easily these 
mills m be turn sah d 


for the 


1 through, in 
W., Deo. 4. [The Turbine is a modification of “ Barker's 
Mill.” 
Agricultural Labourers.—The poor agricultural la- 
urers of this district are, I fear, aye = be sorel 
winter. The farmers are selves get- 
sson as to the 4 e f greater ae 
of th 


they can n r rate they had 


d “small holdin — 1 r not * — 


wish to dra 
of mie principle of 


‘Weighty 10 polig a's pongi led on by two 
enormous — ul — over 
tens and a penne rm going on 
or superiority . corn a 
Sir J inclair 3 in 1812 
the present state tch hus 
gular that, with 
tions have bee 
seen the differe 
this — ‘ae e., The rinei of th 
establishment of parochial Tho prin —.— — 


to travel states them. 
selves, or encouraged t their tenants in exertion ; leases 
ted; economy and — management; g 


the tenure of land to that which, — appear to 
u trace no connection hes v i ae - 


LR 


g 


© 
g5 
2. 
E 
8 8 . 
— 


a 
throughout the country (unknown on th 
| owe bao sgt an to the fee a of a necessity for co 
of — a 


ry 
| generous N A Touri 


oe 
inten E mid and yet T men 5. not occupy what a 
may b 


5 bo 
pe this subject is 

monopoly of 
—— ed from 


lved —— — words! ben speak volumes 
1 of landownership. The er 2 egis- 


l; 
another with soles pire this, the o 
iles g mad i 


g a machin 
that by which 3 me Bie , large solid 
wheels, with the wished-for W N one 1 them, turning 
— contact = in opposite directions. I have long 
ought ae an- f 
exed modifica 
tion of — k 
mon tile a Bi — cos 
3 obviate n otjeotions, and prevent all moye- 
T made so as to slip the tile over the sole 
Em “a do own a sole and nini on a tile alternately; 
the s W: of the soles coming in the middle of the 


= 
7 


FE 


a 
8 8 


rm of Drain Pi = —The oar in your paper 
rrated ends for the 


of drain n pipes being made with s 


ends alternate in — * ute 
3 ng. A qua 

e end to ger the other and when laid thus i in a con- 
3 


ae publication in your valuable Gazette, 1 doubt not 
some of your reade see ay 3 bare it a trial, and I think 
find i it effectual. H. W.. 


Farmers’ Clubs. 

Newcastle, Dec. 2, 1848.—Mr. T. L. Cor RRck, of 
East Denton, a a 1 on the ite oA What has 
Science done. for u 
my some ey that I introduce the sub- 


They seem to 
yee made in 


mu advice given * armers 
—.— the ey shouid Arne to despise the 
=. pid is n as foolish a 


and m 
— — 4 of science. 
merous, that the chief difficulty I have fou nd has been in the 
selection ; and they certai 
r, with 


s: ren ressively in cen t is difficult to believe t hat time, we 
— * y 1 = — mae r t per dividuals, as there are | procured our iron from Sweden ; ent our webs of linen 
— 0 ra starving paupers 8 bout without where to lay | to Holland to be bleached; that we procured our printed calico 
back re rent from the large outlay that is| their heads, k from the famine that from India; that a journey from London to Edinburgh 
going on in farm 1 ch farm h m- | oppresses th I — agent not long since if ¢ — — e leading between th 
engine with its — — 2 at — : wo cities there few others in the country passable by 
aildi — imneys, and at East s new he thought that out of 130 farms, of which heeled carriages ; that (to come to our o ighbourhood) the 
buildings, wit — neat cottages, had lately 2 — there were h a wesc road leading from here to C was then in e state 
of many thousand pounds. Indeed tal wasTinvested. He said, “Not one.” I then asked — 3 had been left in by the Romans 1200 years before, and 
Mr. Grey, 0 f Dilston, mentions, in his report of Northum- hin wW hy’ inä pens — — 1 to other à of s 5 
ved e 5 ra 
rer that 10,000. had been expended on his tena t of —.— Which: their fathers brought corn — os „ thin , 
two of the farm buildings beionging to Grey; but capital vould authorise lis repl ay, are scarcely credible, when we now have even In 
on the other — the increase of rent ha p t the money to do — l He within a ew — jo —London as near h 4 
ive: sev ; : castle was on ve or eno 
ve; ve 1 hot nning sent | must put up new + buildings, and han belly aiii tocover | much farther from Edinburgh than | Leith to Portobello. How 
a rental of 55604, but falling out of his constant ex Thus, hav aw that much of this progress ia due to the application of science? 4 
— relet for 12,05 7. In like man e of says the are entitled to a living off the land first ; “mg ld ago I met with a — r en to this question. 
x — 3 said ve a 33 the act of Elizabeth carrying out the laws of Nature. jus yb al enaA engi ae be nr 2 N ote e ae 
e “ New Husbandry ” a case is men- law of entail retains the ownership of land to} 5 was a hollow in the raadde ip» S sacri of the size 0 of 
— 6 30 wh ] 

p. ere a landowner near Howick, on individual families, who cannot cultivate it themselves, this table, wages nrg clay and covered with slag, and 
renewing a lease with an old per. obtained an advance and h å evidently been used by our fore-elders to smelt iron bee, 
of 100d. a years tail and have not the means of so disposing of it as to insure | for their spear head cnet dee 

oy after t reement was concluded | its best cultivation by othe in | is inde 0 — > 4 


inquired whether the — ie * not made a on 
sum during his = 3 “to which the reply » 

80007. Do any of the ers of the 
make 8000. on — — Do 
content themselves with not being los and are satis- 
fied if they can exist and pay their — rnp a proper day. 


uld show, 
“Tenant Right 8 š ‘world t — 1 is in- 


sprung erly v 
r | the art of saang was * — as understood, ‘that only y the 
ked. This 


and activity has was then ut ; because 


rich ores of Sweden a be profitably w was our 
98 until by the pre 


weden was cut off. The attention of scie 


ssure of the rane war our supply 
ntific and 


= rned to our own resources, 
r men was imme ah smelting our own abundant | 
receive i e 


15 


17 
. 


t of the man 


to land, 


N 


actu! 
ur sci 


m 
ufacture of alkali, which is now 


ed war against them 
— were: thus involved in, a 


uf. 
eedil discovered in Eng 
Pas au us quite i independent of all 
r 


THE 


. GAZETTE. 


45 


received, that the | lt 

ample, has ve ah by some to the animal matier 2 
contain n—by others to the phosphoric acid—by s to the 
lime, and, eso to the power which they have, cy pbs 
with other porous bodies, of absorbing and retaining moisture. 
Such ignorance of the very principles of the profession by 
which many of us have to make our bread, 3 be productive 
of loss to the community—in many instan of ruin and 
misery to . gh r in all cases bed deficient rent-rolls to 
our landlords. e improvement of agriculture, in this view 
of the a becomes a 9 9 .— in wales all are interested ; 
and I shall now procee 
= are at iie labouring Caie a 
can only be indebted for "er ca to ‘the * labours of scien- 
tific and practical men, he most eee ortant, 
5 ai 5 has ‘recently been 
s bee di as to the proper de epth 


m 


The temporar; 


om Beet-root 
8 


anti es i 


oe 


eds of square 


pet mg ‘or what science has done for ca! 
fo the manufacture of paper, ated 2 and ‘hing with 


many others, w! which ar 


. — —— se 4 «6 "mauuthotory, cs anes 


as the beneficial * r Aa its application are ASR to all, 
nation of shopkeepers forty years ago, 
ee manufactories; but what would | 


called ù 
our then 
he . us, when our railroads 


esc rier miles, and our steam-engines by thousan 

may justly be proud of our late townsman, Mr. DA 
remembered alon 
ever there is an Englishman. I do not expeet 
science 4 ever make any great change in 


sors man mi be 


we can 


ror linen spun by ou 
4 — could only — 


nl Ny was 8 to be 
gas, 185 ear 8 to light by 


undr 
1 22 és Oe n sp 
be bl ed in an hour. 


e 
moistur re, Near the 


salt, the use of 
> uae more than 
n in a life- 

—— be difficult to | 


e yards 


week: some advocating 2 feet iad others | 
aitios 


recommend pipes li like pencil cases ; and they are placed at a 
distances apart, from 15 to 30 feet. Now, as each ‘advocate of 
these various plans carries out his own views, and as they can- 
oe all be correct, it is obvious that a great extent of draining | t 

t be imp roperly ap This e * — the case. 


proper 


a proper apart, a proper 
ze of tile, and a proper 7. of Piling. 2 “the drain ns; and 
the sooner these matters are set at rest, by a well-con duct ed, 
* arranged Series of 2 the gt it 0 * for us 
all. 2. What is the reason that we cannot now grow the long 
Science alon ne can answer this question, and anan e 
1— it b 
raising Potatoes from the seed, and the use of 1 arge — 8 
of manure; — * e have failed. 3. Is n any reme dy for 
the Potato disea et What is its cause 
a sign of a — failure? I ines to the former ; dat 1 
think the remedy yet remains to be . and would 
strongly recommend those wri riters in the newspapers and 
* zines who are continually puffing their 2 to try 
before gr A — 
. faith 32 put in their nostrums. 
near us, which used formerly to grow Potato Oats, will now 
only grow Tartar Oats. What is the cause? I consider that 
the remarks which ben be szerin pitii in our e and in some 
of the London paper ecting i o measured terms on the 
| farmers of Northumberland for aroun Tartar Oats, were ex- 
| ceedingly ill-timed, and showed a degree of ignorance in agri- 
| cultural ne by no means uncommon with the writers of 


a tato? ? 


can be reckoned by their 
ands We 


any private individual. This, then, is what I think s 

do for — We are indebted to Liebig for "suggesting N ra- 

tion of superphosphate of 1 and it is the only thing science 

KE hitherto done for is What a field is hove opened out! 
the powers of the steam engine be unlimite d, wh 

tant so Many quarters of Mairg 

are all we can grow! One 

have done, 

have done, it is because they have — difio 

with unknown to the m anufacture 

seasons are uncontrollable — 

of recent origin these disadvant 


research is not a Tenant-Right at le oti = 
umberland; and — Agger erp i not a per — — — 
his rent m a bad y I ot one nor both of these combined. 
It is a lea a su e on which I may, at 
some future bea address you. “If Thay poken too sanguinely 
the nefit derived — science, or too ‘iscouragingly of our 


m a farmer and a 
farmer’s son, and, like t ie t of — depetiiant upon my 
farm — my “position in life; and J trust you will rece ive my 
5 emark 


sed 
Club. 


he pleasant meetings ‘of the Neweastle Farmers’ 
e 


Calendar of Operations. 


* We beg those who contribute regularly to this 
5 not to desist because they find pena that 
their returns are unpublishe We must irp a strict 
3 ip over t thei eir reports— with which w neverthe- 
= ow 5 ope thats that e indl y favoured. 
e that the abrid gm r tion-pablication 
of uninterest ting details will beds repetition, not aban- 
donm of the eg rege to rere ea 
HIRE M 


servants. 


yet. [Will you tell us i about the Berwiekshir 
management of "ae 

Dorset FARM, —We have this week received and 
tried one of Garrett's te horse-power threshing-machines, 


raphs, Upon some parts of my own wn farm I 
can grow 50 Dustiels of Tartar Oats where I 25 
bushels of Potato * Of course I should be glad to grow the 
latter only : it does not require much calculation to discover 
which oe — most valuable crop. 5, Myworthy neighbour, se 
Stephen wary — on — than I can 
rown. The — ice respecting the cause of this, 
has usually been that his land i 4 154 than mine. I know =) 
is, but is mine incapable of improvement? 6. Some farmer 
assert that lime hastens a ripening of corn—others that it 
retards it, Whi ch is correct? 7, Lime has been used from 
doubt exists but that it is many a time 


tions of our food zo to — — uses in our bodies. For instance, 
one part goes to form 35 part — E keep up the 
animal heat, or the formation of fat—and another part to the 


being the one to which the prize of 20“. was awarded at the 
York meeting of the R Royal Agricultural Society. — * vin 
visited the show for e ha 
the good fortune to make the acquaintance of Mr. 3 one of 
the judges of implements, babes whose kindness we derived 
much informati ion and advantag our selection, 


2 


4 


équal to the flail, and, with its registered straw es haker, hom § 
not a particle of grain in the straw. Hornsby’s prize corn- 
dresser | is also a most excellent article, and performs its work 
0 ourselves as of our 8 
who seem quite proud of these new machines. We have availed 
ourselves — the mild weather to dig our Carrots—Ear 
and Pelgia 


—— ation of muscle or desk 
stances used as food are 228 we shall then know 
what kind to give to our young o wing animals—what kind 
ve to our — k enimals—and what kind to give to our 
2 or mil with- 
out loss to ~ animal — "waste of food, 
the ame par t of th 


I have men 


not this poin 


with Watt and Ark- 


ascend and 


our hilly 
no doubt but that ste 
8 

in th 
pope 585 


of a of a plough 
songs k 


8 
` Gane e 


an o 
als m 
4 — more money in 


ae 
and us 
I admit iat 


not f. hal 


en very great 
20 per cent, m 
Gee 
r neighbours, 
Toads e are co 


fields as easily as our horses ; though I have 
team threshing machines will become more 
> and fixed instead of moveable ones more com- 
th of England. 1 1 this, and the rapier = 
ee 
g —— the . — of mechanical 
rust . 1 ao now said — to 


may be better Wartens, and he m 


es his k knowiea e, but — his practical 
ean doube EY knowledge and study w will prov 


an 3 ‘equirements have as 


bee 
ect must * it that much of the land under the 
more 
ppened? Is — less ready to 
who build manu 


lle 
bave only been the * 


The threshing machine is, I 
ears old. Bones 


reason to hope fo 


t will. 
a farm with 


e may obtain better 
may have, at 


his pocket than another 


m their science 


corn if it were properly 


factories, sink 
d to confess that our 
. * i 


n times 


ough, 


ood tha èro 8 are 


rst used 


Doe hat m 
rrangement of feeding cattle! in open folds i is 5 worst 8 
| we ne ge te e full benefit of our Turnips, &.? I look 
mtn w! ich are now y being ace 20 steam the Lin- 
chop the straw 
e that they will 


of 
the habits of these Date, our attempts — o avoid the — they | 
cause oftener fail than succeed. time ago, the Swed 


Som 
— sustained. erious . ra the 4 ‘dockyard, pan 
g int 8 barr ber, Poe thus W — 
alone: t 2 tigate 


ommended 


The 
e Bagshot formation. 
Ground — and ie 
— 3 — 13. rh 2 Eks ring the 
pa Sere 2 unfavou for eral farm 
wor or Sthiough the iw e atop of Fok. 2 have nad! — tended 
o ameliorate the soil, yet i it has not been of ` sufficient duration 
2 a si 
as carting chalk, carting manure on to Grass land, &e., bein 
done o mu uch extent, Ou ur — rse 3 have been employed carting 
Wh en weather has been favour- 
ble f “3 sats *. fallowing Wheat stubble, 
1 9 nex e find where the 


continually 5 —— 


8 reque 
matter : he stadied the habits of the insect, and rec 
that the timber shou 1d, at 115 ogee be covered with 
water. — we know, if similar 
— ere to the insects living oh our farm produce, 
— a similar 22 pies might be dis d? 11. There is little 
oubt but that every crop requires * een manure. How 
much more information have we on this 2 than the 
— e had when they put their Wheat into the mummy 
cases, 3000 years ago ? 12. Bare fallows have, by the cultiva- 
tion of the Turnip, been nearly banished from light soils, Can 
we not lessen their extent on 2 clays? 13. The numerous 
experiments which are tried all over the country are rendered 


nearly useless — — by By! — recognised 3 
of the soils. marls, clays, loams, &c. 
convey no *. Pan to be epended on. I think we shai 


How 
culties to be Certainly not as 8 R 
wishes 1 to do, by leaving scientific farming to scientific men. 
Nor will Sir Robert Kane he — us, by saying that all fallows 


are — nymous with an ignorant and Ur. Thoms 2 


in ‘or 
horses, cows, and — in carting * for * give gl $ 
and in carting manure as fast as removed from the cow boxes 
and pig pens, and eee it regularly over pr ee 8 


ip falliows previous sto 
g 


nips, which, if allo remain, will in 
aoe 2 2 —— —.—. in rotation 3 a “allow, me me 
e do great injur, the growing crops. Our shepher 
woe v fall 1 in we e sheep. 
with their lambs are n Aegina Turnips in 
the open field. Our 8 — upon Turnips, 
we mero a portion of. Italian 1 left ior we have 
about own lambs, which, * with the ewes, are doing 


Our — ben aves 


Nor will * paar for — para oe 
l 


commends us to cart our new mov 
— the purpose and spread it over floors heated with flues to 
onvert it i This he considers an improvement over 


our present ant itor can we even look to Liebig, so signally 
has he failed to enable us, as he ath in a circular, to 
ave white crops, one after another, as long as we eae In 
tact, we ooo — to ourselves, and to institutions of our own 


creatin ng an rting, a s the only source of — The 
Royal Agricultural Society rand the Highland Society must e 
the lead. These ne their . nobly so far: they h 


attracted — . Roo bo oi ultural matters, and undoubtedly 

te nded to raise the character —— * farmers and fa Bu 

e have seen — can — 
e 


good: I trust this Y, 
with the English Sooiety, will see the importance of some of 
the questions I have proposed, and offer such inducements, 
yo honorary = pecaniary, PA as will justify a man in devoting 


attention has the subject | 


— hen quantities that the field in which o their solution. Those only who have pai 
e 1 tf tagn These tention to — subjects can know the labour involved in 
of the wh ee ht be brought forward | — questions. They can only be settled by & e scientific and 
Years? 3 — s tthe 2 culture has made during | practical man working together; and w — some such 


e as I have named, they are beyond the reach of 


well, Dane almost free from t to the Hoe which for several 
the floc 


bo urhood ; our fatting 2 and lambs are all receivin ng their r 

Turnips cut, and also a good allowance of ‘Clover hay and oil- 

cake. [How much ?] ee women 

ing and stacking Swedes in readiness hs the cutter, collecting 
uch-grass ag the 1 pigen out Couch-grass from. 

betwee en the of Turnips, and 5 king and sweeping leaves 

to — — — . pas ture land. 

M, Jan. 15.— Our 1 


r will be much th 


8 
Beans. 


— ed at a vey small ot — Wheat is — cultivation ; 
for the most part is —.— wet, it — draining : the old 
sluggish way of plou 27 wom The plough 


the 1 

as à road; the water * are, "pen pte —— 3 

Farmers here are — men of large capital, but what 

capital, they pri pe the want of security, they are afraid to 

—7 out; mostly — tenants, and can be turned out 
by a six — — rd. B. 


es to Correspondents. 
NG — LIABLE TO TOLL : A 


ARE DRAINI 
‘learned in the law,” 


Farmer. 
We do not profess to be a cannot 


« 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


[JAN. 20, 


— — 


Hax. — per — of 36 Trusses. 


, Jan. 18, 


legal 

Bounpaass: A Deep Drainer, You can go to the outside — Prime Meadow Hay Sisto 15 | y Chena 3 60s to 95s 
yous pooperty, and, if you have mo other math than æ Inferior ditto ibe dais p- New Glover mi — — ah Cows from the home counties. 
with e diteh, to a dista — amg i 60 Stra 24. 28 Best 8 est Long-wools. 4 i 4 
varies in different districts; three feet is, we believe, a large — Hay | . COOPER. n fords d 3 10 to 4 0 82255 rl AP 
allowance. CMBERLAN ND D MARKET, J an. 18, est pe fe 3 6—3 8 aren — i quality 3 0 —3 10 

Cno OP B. A ý me Meadow Hay 70sto77s | — Star “he 50s:to 84s oa quality Beasts 2 3—3 4 Ditt Rii 

Cows: BA. — 1 and to all your questions — 45 65 | New Clover 7 23238 x 1 ta Tami * — 1 
therefore we say—No, II. C. S. 1 Har — — iy ar 5 — ves K 8—5 9 

€ PEDA: ABW, lerton's was not referred to by us. old Clover 90 " Josmua BAKER Ditto Sh Pigs 5 8 
We must not advise in this case. 1 WHITECHAPEL, Jan. 18. Beasts, 8833 Sueep and Lambs, 2520; Calves, 154; Pigs 1 0 

Da. Newincton’s 2 5 Anon: In —7 er to —— abyss | Fine Old Hay... 668 to Be Hew —.— i Mato ape IK LANE Farmar, Jan 8 iis 

dibbling * "a aro assu one who has 5 rior ditto 5 5 nferi tto.. 0 0 5 
ample experience if the wy smallest dibbie-irons be Hom Bey ai 63 63 Stra 24 28 e weekly reports from the leading provincial corn 
used, the wt ma mia o sate, provi er 95 100 markets, with little exeepti r 
placed deeper than 1 — to ip — panes the sur recedin ; in v. — The D — * 

8— —1 oe 1 The — 8 ee Gee jotian Tor 3 t week Wheat fee upwards f 90,000 sacks 27 ther, 
safe 50 t preg T t lime, chemi omm report vais for the pas we n 
—— as — e If you — — a straight and have been limited, but quite equal to the demand, and with the Flour at Liverpool, has e : pric re to be of 

drain du mon pipe tiles ont — safely us eption of F h other description of Potato is near ly lowe felt and talked of h a Posi- 
The English — Soctety — next year, the same price as last week. The following are this day’s quo ? ott - 2 n some parts 
~~ We oi fa south of tions :—-York Regents, 100s. to 150s. ; Newcastle and Stockton of Lincolnshire the wet weather and slu ve done 
in dul * gh con 
r mast not pablish then them. do., 903. to 100s,; Scoteh do., * Oe ees Scotch Cups, 60s. to | siderable i injury to the young Wheat, which i the absence 
— : R. Your article bas been published : 24 w, eii * . E i i — 15 8. of frost w ill pro y make worse. Her day rte 
vi bbish 8. to gian do., 608 a 
ing i it alone, — down ing | in the turf and with ita little of tthe HOPS, Fnipar, Jan. 19, — be called about the same, with little 
yellow under use of lime—to bu a the whole] Messrs. Parrewpen and Smirw report that there is a steady ceptible variation. don on Flour of first quality declined 
oe J H asks where tbe coarse Oatmea ended — mand for all K . y no reason. 
ms — — to the — te form part 25 the ‘let of the rer p — 50s to 603 Farsham Kents ar ar able prospect 2 ts being lower. 2 The peso; therefore, 
* can be obtained in London, or any town south of | wyald of Kents . 40 — 70 | Yearling Sussex . 40 56 of first realy A is now 44s., v between that and 
Sussex o . 40 — 65 Old Hops 33s. 6d. for Norfolk Flour on board. The sale of Flour 
Ostras, bo.: JCW. 92 intelligent correspondent, at page 69, Sen Al e week ess and slower t 
1815, say s: —** Now, if I had 4 acres to plant with Ostere, i ae pol . [FI ——— * - PUSE, | several weeks past.—Barley is vi slowly moving at 
e su hin of Beasts to- — — a pr 1 y — * r 
One with brindled Osler fl. 0 in. by 2 ft. 0 in, the advance.— Malt is also slow and little i 
— . wee a , 1 s - ? — conequenee of a of a 1 — — — — — me — n the for-at 54s. to 58s.—Oats seem lower, with * ae 
Half with yetlow. inet Oiler’. 2° wee kinds, but v we — ———— — than 4 2 — — oat at about the e — Beans and P — axe but little sought for 
Halt with green. „„ 98 or these _ There 1 also a 5 Lalling off in the at about the same ee ye sells slowly at 268. to 
Half with real French E, SERS i tis, — very difficuit to obtain more 278.—Linseed Cake with t variation, * glish 117 
And I would arod or two of bitt Purple, remembering money, the bathers ha much stock on hand. Choice to 1. 10s er 1000 ; Pa 91. a to 9/ 1 
. ates | ia- enda wiht alleraon 1. 
„ and Germany we el — 60 48 
5 Osiers grow beat in swampy T row best | 700 Beasts , toa Norfolk a Beasts 960 8 . . p| JMPERIAL |WHEAT./Ba | OATs.| RYE. | BEANS. i 
a pess ee oe loam, but be — t being 8 and North Ph GES, 7 ae 
age no doubt. answer. Per st. of a i — ec. 9. . 488 9d) 318 440198 5d 288 5d 
The eatings, &c., are merely to keep the crumbs out of the aa tg sa sd 8 — ri 44 2 — ae ines . ii : 4 À 18 11 29° 8 92 150 ry 
„wo suppose. fords, dec. 4 Oto4 2 DittoShorn ss ssr — 23e. ; 18 4 29 1 33 7 6 1 

Piarons: A Constant The word ‘poultry hardly in Beat Short-horns 3 8—3 * Ewes & 2d quality 3 3 10 — ne 46 10 31 3 18 0 28 633 11% 9 
cludes them, and the plan n of Mr, Dixon's work Ne did 2d quality B Beasts 210— Ditto horn een Jan. 6. .., 45 10 30 8 17 0 26 4 32 43/7 9 
not embrace them. The subject is hardly enough for us ; ie 8 — RS 45 4| 2911117 8127 9} 32 2 135 0 
but we should not object to an occasional „and many Pal — =i 4 6—4 10| Calves . 4 2 9 
of our readers be glad of instruction upon it ; no one | Ditto Shorn ~ N 7 Aggreg. Aver. | 47 0] 31 0 18 3 28 3 33 8 37 3 
is better qualified as instructor than yourself, taught by | Beasts, 2784; Sheep and Lambs, es “Calves, 99 ; Pigs, cit e 1 tg ; : pe ate 

Tijan 6 0 2 0720 
Quarter Evih on Brack Lea : @ Lee. The rapidity of the dis- e have to- day a very — ate pa of Beasts ti thn lan 
ease is such that a cure can r ne; w din z spin ustuations in the weeks’ Corn Averages. 
CCC T 
wa reventative, not the young oati 2 torus — 5 to. Th 
pein. f 9 4 at ali — winter m mon ths ; give them a| small ; — re — are . tew more Sheep, still the number is 483 94— — pod Fe ies ae š 
T. Monday. Te eee eee | 147.6 5 wl - 
‘Rorx Crier : Meria ki — —— ent 0.“ price ap ane one n am aie gaa 
puts haif.a. ra seed into 60 gallons of his ropy malta lato pi tad. per ibs. i oe 5 45 10 — — e 
r k [owing to the warm’ weather the choicest Mads realise late | 43 4 0 
2 0 . in enic A 

again to-da 4 e Bat jey and 1 ke na London. Liverpool. Wakefield. | Boston. Birmingham. 
— wes Tieki e luted one: £ misg — no 
ti against wireworm ; an — at no aith in drill 

of Mustard beside 1 Tarnips; | nor in soda. * PRICES Jan 15(Jan 19| Jan, 9. Jan. 16, Jan. 5. Jan. 12 Jan. 10 Jan 17 | Jan. II. Jan, 18. 

‘Spaine Bo er 4 He. be had bette: ter he in some 7 or8| CURR á 
wer f ae} ny T aie, or the bearded April Wheat, qr. qr. qr. qr. 62 Ibs. 62 Ibs. 

Soutruare or rete} Glendower. See Home section 

Wanar: J3. There are rohad i between 7 7 and 8 millions of ; — ý 

acres of Wheat sown annua og = cks is the New, red ak -- 6 r 4 — — 3 
. Ou volume for 1849, page 18. Lime may be applied to| oy white 0 7 66 2.5 8 
Grass lands in autume, or now in compost. 60 to 80 bushels Old, red oe ee smal 

every four or five years is: supran 12 „ WHIM: e ee pe 

WIEWonxn: ash ¥ trength exceedingly ; | Fo 
we have no faich in i, piee Paniya 4 4—. Perhaps some 3 e * 

e Wee its s point 
e—New_ 
Markets. = x a 
COVENT GARDEN, Jan. 20. Barley— 
The supply of Pine- ap be sufficient for the = A qr. Ar. 
Hothouse oveign ones tolerably Grinding 21—25)21—25 23—28 23—28 
P i jani 30—33 30—33 


rather lower. From Holla 
— —.— — ‘Beasts, 150 Sheep, and 41 Tee fea 
Norfolk and Suffolk, cotland, 300; — 


126—31 
26 


e S Se & R 


l 


— lt 


- 


Sa eee 


a i i. 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETEE. 


PED WIRE GAME NETTING, —. 


F, under the Direction of 75 
. WILLIAM Hicks, TH Eana 
a gern cos 
1 — Roxley 
d House, Farm, 
—— in a ring- 
* re to Mr. G. 
„ SAMUEL RICH- 


D. Wap Solicitor ln Baldock, Herts. 
SED OF, a (URSERY and SEED 

0 BE DISP ‘ofits elass hemostimportant 
T RAD seat ey 60 years, and ad 
—Particul “y “ an be obtained by apply- 
28, Co r Messrs, NOBLE, Fleet- 
lain ‘the — i af the Proprietor relin- 


— — AND SEED HU SINE 
ge DISPOSED OF, within 5 aiias d of West- 
— situated, in 8 increasing 
unexpired — of 26 years. 
soe “eapital of 3001. 92 400 will find 
_ rther particulars address 


ith immediate pe possession, 


P i a 
TRI; 8 0 SCHOOL FARM, of about 3 


THE W Turnip Land, 200 being 5 5 
e ee Bon daa on © ach side by publi 
and effectually tile miles fr irken bang A well-built 
8 ent clay in the centre of the farm, ready 
Tiler, wa Buildings well adapted for Stall-feeding, 
aud okt ‘ob 0 roe n — fur rticulars apply 
to Mr. nos, ATTO to Mr. MELVILLE, Cherry 


Cottage, ear Ser Cheshir è. 
ET, and entered upon at 


Michaelmas, 


ial 
FARM ef about a cine 
g 


‘ating rent and 
Upyjer Queen’s-buildings, —.— „Lor 


WI V, of great eben 18 — 
of ‘herself in a r’s or Gentleman's 
g k 


ue It never ve ao, a 
to four its own body of — 


AND 
COMPANIES, BREWERS, 
— GAS COMPANIES, GAR- 


3 
* bine 
— o yban els 
erally to 


1 0 9 Outfitters, Clothiers for 
at St. George’s-crescent, 


5 EE are acknowledged to'be the 
he. B im the world, This Medicine has been 
P dee a few years, and perhap 2 in the 
S) 
Seen suceess equal to their 


gs it requires neither 
nd will carry from three 


J. B. Warre and Sons, Millbank-street, | 


Gr 
per yard, 2 feet wide. 


. 


shar 75 
Iro 
2 inch mesh, jo 24-inch wide 70. per yä; Bid, persia 
2-inch „ 9 i 4 
2-inch Fase strong » 2 
Inch „ light “2 5 » 3 „ 
lj-inch „ strong ” 10 ” 8 s 
inch „ extra strong, 14 11 
Uthe above can be made ny width a t pro portionate prices, 


rth. —— 20d pheasa 
— square foot. Patterns forwarded post. free. 

Manufactured by BARNARD and BISHOP, ‘Market-place, 
Norwich, aud delivered free o expense in Jaiton Peter- 
borough, Hull, or Neweastle. 


brace, 


“WIRE NETTING, ONE ] PENNY PER PER SQUARE FOOT, 


— od 
S 
i Der i n 
sid 100 0 S 
i 1 oe 
95 40 0 1 n 
i e 8 s * e 
H $ X 
1 N 38388 
9 ea 1 
Wi 


Garre SED WIRE — TTN PENCE 
R SQUARE FOOT.— Thi s no paint- 

ing, the atmosphere not shaving tis slightest —.— on it. It 
5 e for many 

years, and is apare inan A to be the chea: article ever 
hag into the market, It forms a cheap, Bale sen durable 
fen r the intention of go ak and 3 rs against 
the depredations = hares, rabbits, an kr fie 
ee ntries, and to prevent poultry from ea ling, as well as 

or aide creeping 8 it answers admirably. 

Large quantities of the Netting always kept in Stock, samples 
of 3 an be forwarded —— of oe to any part of the 
King dom. Prices as follow: 

12 it inches wide 3d. per 
18 ” 43d. „ 


300 Tables wide 73d. per yard 
7 9d. „ „ 


6d. 18. E 
"Galva nised do. 1d. Ra foot ex 
Also Fenders, 1 Fly- proof Dich e. overs, Meat Safes, 
Wire Blinds, Garden bordering and arches, Flower Stande, 
and every — of Wire Work 
Tuomas HENRT Fox, 63, Snow- hill, London, 


RAY, ORMSON, anD BROWN — 
a, solicit the attention of the Nobility, Gentry, an 
T ise 15 their superior manner of Erecting and Heating 
8 description of Building connected with Horticulture. The 
by them Right Hon 


v done at the the Earl of Kilmorey’s, to 
hich they “los had the honour of pisini so long, still con- 
—— to give —— satisfaction. Mr. Kingnorn will be happy 


to show and give any information, 
They — Teg to 44 to the . built pa them during the 
past seas rshipful Apothecaries’ Company 
don, in cher 885 nie Garden at — 
Curator, will kindly show the work, and 
g also to say the building only is referred 
Heeling ‘Apparatus was not erected by them 
Gray, Oxmson, and Brown have also the honour of krio 
to many of hes nobitit and — in the country, and to severa 
of the London — j 
N.B, Pians and Estimates furnished free. 
RM ATR STO STOVES. 
ENHAM axo SONS 
attention of Architects, Builders, and 
general, to their — stock of Air anys suitabie re 


„ Ko. Also a great variety o 
Church or 1 — pone A — — er | 
buildings ——— by HOT WATER from 
z ces, Or — RM AIR on the POLMAISE, 


YSTEM, Wien! is — — t, and 
85 Wigmore.street, 0 re arroen er Se London, 


of very 


rtant Sanches 2 thoroughly into the 


before the publi 
pread their Mn AND Co. 3 ATTERN TOOTH- 
— BRUSH and SMYR 9 4 —The Tooth-Brush 


a 
ent stamp, mp, pastea round st 
à on 


ner. The of 


1850 fon in the most extra- 
manner, and is famous for the hairs not 
An improved © Clothes B Brush, that cleans in a thi 
of injun ring the finest nap. 
— unbleached Rus- 
like common hair, Flesh 
— — improved graduated an ana powerful friction. Velvet 
. 75 — — — aa Menta ith it oad — 
uine ponge, with its pre valu * 
paina g and durabilit means 
ct importations, Sispensing with all intermediate te partie 

profits and destructive bleaching, and securing the 

uine Smyrna Sponge. Only at METCALFE, — et 
olles-atreet, Eoo o 130 B, Oxford-street, one door from 


3. «oR MW. 5 4 4 


If the upper half is a coarse hex it it will reduce the price one- 
3d. 


and 
respectfully j Ns ; 


— 
by some 


w ready, in imperial 4to, cloth 253 p 
INTS on CÒTTAGE p r cre 


f 55 H a Waa, ja and Land Agent, 
ondon: HENRY Porz, 22, Budge-row, W. ; 
Salie: Jos Pe Oa Lar a AY, Milsom-street, ating men 


BONO ] PU 
TREATISE ON 


LICO.—Just published, 
THE Ph 5 AND CUL- 
HE 


dv 
en 0 thors in preven 
Disease and raising Potatoes from See 3y ABR ®t pred 
pov Sons, Seed growers, Maldon, Essex. Price 6d. or postage 
tamps equivalent, free by pest to any part of the United 


Kiv rem dom 

Ap acket of Hanpr's genuine selected pe 
N — 4000 s — 
suffici 


eeds „wich directions for sowing, Fe. 

raise 7 bus — of seedlings, which will fn half 

an acre of land, price ls. free > by post. May also be obtained 

at most of the London n Seed Establishments i Seedsmen in 

all principal towns, ry liberal terms 
Also — a — of “early ‘Rides ey and Roun 


Potatoes, for Wlanteen > — 65. bushel! 
Re — 9 s sits a ET 
F} Edition; revised, 8vo, 105. 6d., el 6d., cloth lettered; 
TEBIG'S CHEMISTRY IN ITS APPLICA- 
TIONS T 


4 the Uni. 
eript o oe pga 
e ux ON PLAYFAL In, Ph.D., an m dunn G Onrcony, 3. 


wich a more thorough c onvic ction of the profound nene, 
ofthe 
onelu- 
ned from the present volume. Sili- 


invincible power and importance of itsreasonings onde 
sions, than we haveg 
man’s our: 

ondon : TAYLOR, WALTON, and — 28, Upper Gower- 
street, — 27, Ivy. lane, Paternoster-row. 


han, a 

bant of Patn e East — Saen for years from 
Bile, Tadigestion, peine Flatuleney, and a ugh he — 
the most eminent surge: f the — aem: ae be- derived no 
b their — bet gradually became more 


igh repute 
— ay the world, very „Soon reins ta ted, him in perfect 
health, and in gratitede for the wonder- 
ful cure to be made public.—Sold by all druggists, and at 
Professor Hol LOWA v's establishment, 244, Strand, London, 


MOKY ee CAUSED BY WIND, are 


guarante e cured by the application of DAY’S 
NEPLI INVENTED SIMPLEX WIND-GUARDS, which offer 
following advantages over the tried invention kno 8 
— 5 Patent Windguard, viz., Greater Cheapness aud Durabi- 
ity, Impossibility of Clogging with Soot, and the Prevention of 
z scent of Sm Chimneys. Price, in Gal- 
Iron, 253; ; i Sine. for Kitchen Chinineys, 402, To be seen 


anized * 
on tested at Mr. „ the Sole Proprietor, 51, Great Rus 
Can street, B} Baiiian 122 ealisi ses forw 2 a on aeplication. 

e Licenses for Manufacturers grante 


PERFECT FREEDOM FROM COUGHS in 


Ten 


and distressing cough, under 
months, by. the use of Lovo 
libert hoping g thu t m 


abou 
s Puimonie Wafers, I take the 
y fee = 


Jd., and 11s, per box. ny ete aud Co. T 
Bride- lane, Fleet-street, Eien. Sold "ay al er vendors. 


M= perg A — — 2 Lene r es and 
greatest v Gentlemen at 
RODEA] MAN e and EMPORU Me a ELEOANGE, 
4, Leadenhball-street, may be suited t 
mist and 1 5 8L. 108 
desks, 8s, to 201.; dressing — 58. to 
; leath i 


to cases, 

7. di. to 251.; gps chests, 7. is. êd. to Sl; 
inkstands i wood, bronze, and pa — 

papier maché work tables, 64, 10s; to me tea tx 

per se 

N.; hand sereens, 108. to 4. 106. 3 pole. — ens, 2. 58. to 4110s. ; 


netting boxes; card boxes; ies’ co in pearl, shell, 
papier maché, and leather ; Frings scent cases and e 
card cases n: elegant 


papier maché chess ables ; gold — silver — cases, in 


every v ~ Gd. each ; of plated 

silver dessert. secret: Bee — ene plate ; splendid 
table cutlery ; ted razors and st Gd. each ; 
sporting knives ; and every descri — of phe 3 With 


a variety of other les, which catalogues. may be had 
f | gratis 


of 
s.—As Mrent manufactures —ů— on his own 
premises, the quality o of every — warran ted 


JEW ZEALAND COMPANY, 
n 


ex 
. ck precisely, when purchasers or 
their — are . art 
1 3 sum of 1201. 10s. for each Property, 3 of 
must be paid, either to the of 

Scotland, ‘in Scotland, 5 to Messrs, Susith, Payne, and = 
Bankers in London, on the New Zealand Company's account, 
on or before Tuesday, the 15th of —— ne t be 
— nied by an authority for 

signature of one of the 

Fa ether 


may ouse, 
London; aud at the Offiees tion, Ne. 27, 
South H hianover-street, Edinburgh ; and N 0.3, West Nile-street, 
Glasgo By order of the. Court, 
Tuomas CERT 3 
New Zealand House, 9, Weng. bes 
London, Jau. 20, 1849, 


TO THE „ 
OTH G = 
erate neat ARD 
L TE co 
EDUC Soe tale ENERS’ 
0 N. ELE AND CH 
8 COLLEGE AND 8 rd ü r 
300 RKS 3 AND 
to bl AND SCHOO Co. cL I } 
on” application t may be ed Works in "AND LOGUE | sf a URES D ie Vol. 8v GRICUL 
Lo to Mesara. 1 gratis of brand — . N DICTIONARY. TURAL 
adon : 1 — Te ag tom seb tone 7 — ARY -, the Thi 
Lone axan Bookse Scho- REC With nod Pr NES OF A rd E 
J SCHEL'S man, Bpow Sna T — — in 1 8 NT hei ractie. Ti RTS, M RAL GAZETTE. [ax 
PLEX tehe x, GREEN p veng upplem 1 Third Edition. MANU. |” TR 
EMENTS OF RE OK NA , and Lon ter- ent to 3d Edi ES; EM ENTS 885 eal anne Bonn i 4 
——— OF . fep. Sv TURAL 1 Londo irion iN — 0 — 
eS PHY URAL PHILA — : Lona d Edi mag HE TR —— fro Jan 
y ol. Le 5 sip Baa Royal YŠICS. cuts, 95 OP PHY. AVING NGMAN, BR 4 MA NU Re Form EE RO —.— Subseribe Ve Ji 
— = oo 22 * c J ls. cloth, s — „ BROWN, no pis a of Dr. U d printed ation an 8E.— ts, Gd, 2 A 
111. I Phy — at Be a D Pesci A PLAI Just pub AN GREEN, a 1 3 derd J ERT 22 2 to Bs. € ~ 
T e the 1: Tmponderabie —— Notes, War HEL, CLA N AD ublish D FRI , and Lo ust publi Gann 1 eal I ea. at — 
of pS pha of able nderable by E . and FR SES, DR ed, fo IENDL NGMAN ; lished, ENE llustr: nstr pos 8 Of ths 
prier 1 raid lucid ster. odies, Bodies, r c th — the ADYA 10 11 ributi Y SOCIET 9 U R 2 is RS’ —— * ap * res.) 6 
a — — Pract der, 9 who — , 7. êd. ose whom fay IET VANTAG THE. T IES. f Experi a . 6d. (post free CLE, 20 prag 
oe 5 d we me ie tp — a it is likely to as ES of SA ABOUR Snn ar E H ), in o vith add oul 
N noxam —4 — 5 ee — little of science in of 6s. per yt 5 ee f. VINGS’ r a Chemist 29 L nu M TS “uong, 
Ne * ilosophical N e i vo 
ew Raion On ON OWN, GREE yelopædia | 2 100, rbot * 1 NDON HEws, 5, e Horticultural R 8 ol. 12m 
A Hee A ENCYC xN, and po ine. by 1 Wee i oa on amon Geo (Establish ASSU pper a Ste L R * 
AN EAD ED Aor Svo. LOPEDIAS. NGMANS, HE I Forty-Af Readi 251. 5 ondon: circulati aape nere | 10, oria First, eh by URANCE ington- ety of 1 A 
AN AN ENCI 97874 1. F.L. ae — plet NTELLE editio ATTON. on at the LIF wens D. 1720 al Cha: CORP 
1 2 HER pos snan ARCH astea malt LECTUAL 8d. b rate | Siira, r 0) 7, Royal Ex the ORA 
TUS BR DIA 2 eet 88. & I Eerd Ho his N inclu SLATE a CALCU nd in r third — the ARTMENT y Ex cha: nis thy 11 
ng aT hes 1 êd. 9. — Also, RE, meg it . 1 e Ee Ta oaa isd ange, Sits 5 
IDIA OF AND 50a. Th ighly » (vide ogi usual RITH A al Mutual us ey p rpor of shill, and 
J PROPE Mo AGRIC * SHRUBS. ments aser E by — rid, in 8 The Prof Ses ae pay nn — fen az 
cane’ OWEN — and son, | tbe che their suco y the leading Reviewers as gre | or applied t 4 saad without Habi ses of os — 
"a EN 509, è su p nE d the ar Nair 
By URES on Cc 1 * A and Lowa — resus of ite coess entirely to og! enantio “ANN i a Bom K enfi 2 
Vol Rien SIOLOG n CON ngravi RIAN MANS ctise pils, as Syst ely to th cholas ») and UAL PR of us to ti d op r ts d 
— 5 Peia Ow Y, slant roe fh tage aii 1 1 ci me of Me e holasti 1 Estab Age. t Par. EMIUMS F future pit Pole, 1 1 i 
nire are di 5 bi RS at th IVE a ANA 1405 am and Co.; “business, best — Arith = ar te 7 icipating. Non. OR THE A al Pren orpor aaa | 
a may iret. Vo Hunte e Royal NATO clotb, — ia 111 , Ma athem metic 20 2 ticipati ii: a abe 
vora — pose olume rian 1 Colleg MY 4 Book — aticilans even 25 0 fing, | NOE oi A 
ing subj a comprising Fes the dee tothe urgeons om apted to ee 2 82 and Co. ; es 1 aur 25 3 £1 15 - | Age. . £1005 
, pensable -oda its de work in o College. ALY b. im P SOHO si mame, paraj hc 2 17 9 pa 16 a5 — — No e 
— ble for every a 3 er Ver. | bek to the — . BOOK Abans, | , Pro 3 5 1 213 1 s| £31510 | cing 
Se er withthe most inte- to the more — pie 9 1 2 a ae haruraa so 5 8 3 REF TA 
t en thi 0 trongl ad e 0 a t * at} | Sani |259 j 
5 r Ati 2 prore ator re ciating To * — TAE tures haya “ene oo a sree din’ 1 3 2 9 l itten application 5 ay are 3 12 | $ 53 i 
W reid z the beaut s I ee — Senter a Sch . n; and tod ong pon 4, and Sequel es, and 22 a o the Actu 7 of mode of 4 if y 1 1 
red ndo ieee We Lectures fai vlencoa nt all 898 shoo Society, ted in th set, reapers = eA d] bdr! descripti had | Z avi L 
one . 4 louts, ss on the 11 ——.— > Establishments gone — ò School apest and | PRO on of pro i 
„„ , Brown, i. vertebrate ry " Mans i pete a — the B most — — L Jonn 1. 8 at m 
l 1 — $ Animal nd Co, ALL, a nd ning N Bran IFE 0 AURS u um odere to 4 
— LD I' ols. la ENGLI ND Lone 8, DESC , Patern 80 Oe 5 and ission and — Ro FFIC ct Se 55 f 
. 8 COSMO IL. pos SH TRANSL MANS. ND Newest and most oster Ro Haxıuron into Pome Posto! cy H ppan Eachan 50, 190 , etary, - r 
n; i 
London: Lo Col. E Os. e ce 85 Hast L LOWEN 8 most CATALOGU , ADAMS, paid sine f HOLDERS! p tegen Se. t · rest; 
NGMAN, 1 1 cb, cloth, Pa at 156 EEDS A iy sate E, Presid the 2 APITAL, 
New M and Jony | —— R.A under th ith the for a anges Cheapside pr Piori ny —— es 8 Th a 3 p bee E 
Falcons, corrected an 8 an — i. A., For, S or. — receipt of T Wee sip a published Kerin He The peg ART ne oN errain the € red, £743.000 ! 
co! — * h a eg y be L yB. ev. HU. able E ee, £l E 
pret RE arom OPULAR T m 5 5; In Weekl ree 8 forwar getable sot P had o A a = Nando Alex 3 rE pim 2 618, * 
2 1 Refere XEASURY | OF Ta es- HE y Numbers pri o all Pied Seed: applica- ea. EY 
B1oG rae KNOWLEI 103, a cor ce 2d. 2 tes, e 4. Cie 
: THE — bon OF KNOWLEDGE each work, ~ | yation, er’ TAGE ewan fre e Sir Rich J 3 M George | Soe r — r angi 
ICAL f Uni GE roan. “Gg ES s Guid GAR arts 3d. lard D. 89 , M. D. James 80 g 
SCIEN’ TR versal and L ar BN wes eto O DEN! “and in Kin James Sede Esq. 
5 ography : EA K ib TH A ed b ut-d ER: Mo: Physi J.A. z, Bart. 3 gwick, I 
e IREASURY : «Dil ibrary | aren 11 80 5 e weben a . 
H ot n N emr a é 
HISTORIC! LITERARY * snes ition THE FLO y mohair ie A Bones. NIN —— 3 n one P 
THE TR ICAL TR RY TREA — | THE FLOWER GA sn Gardeners Di Spado Cali ETEEN-TW ee, MD 783.2 3 ran 
T ural „Bart. ic or F. -TWE antin S.S. £ ree 
E TREASURY RY OF NA EASURY : SURY : urg, E KITCH, gor R Tae tionary” be: mS a Tig eg 
don : tories an R e: . | Da at l 
— Py SF at ny of eve Outlin IN HE GREENE GARDE Hend Mr pra ris of] S aS THE IN PF sgu 
THE A aman, B AL H very Nati e of Sb . B KEN ener to EN. erson, E T, AP ey. I um me | 
ew Editio RTISAN ROWN ISTO on, — Te Mr. 5 HOUS Lady R By t dgew: PLEBY 1806 red · Original ARE 4 
D, in G CLU » Gaaan, 900 RY ; 1 Brarox E an olle, a he Epr ee £2500 Premi i 
TRE oe Volume, 4 a Woodeuts,. ids Gardai , Gardene WINDOW DITOR, an — £ * ar of Bon 
— ee — ito, with STE — ; cute Gardener Aar Ti E WINDOW G * anā | 1000 Z ae | . ee, 
A e N ents 1 Ex v4 sabis ; 
1210 ation to M ON THE STE 18 aloe as — CROWN Tm 3 Middleto RDEN-| ‘30 pens 2 16 10 Iy pn . TSH ; 
1 8 2 N 8 eived ton, Bat, ey 10 ea.) £ — 
. E rr e. 25 sad Wo E has Bert, -y Date. | a ao. | a , an f 
The = Lus, Edited 11 9 | „Notice is h wB ; ASSURA 98 521 | 3807 rts | mon s added to oth: us ni 
dition, aa ke by Jone Bočan aoe 98 ereby give arra ae AN -corner, — Sees £900 uses added. | e Poel, 18 10 
Men in fep. Sv Hor: and Lone aaa, 8 any da N that th lackfriars OMPA 1820 1200 £982 12 adatik 
ACTON'S MO bho win Pome e 1 — 5 NV, | sppli Feta S ae. 1d. toms, to ba 
MODERN — Woni Jol a pted) betr yeay Dividend 184 copay arid ul 8 17 8 12 
he most Receip ERN cloth, d Wood ng . — cha Sm E Director be rid declared Offi the Ag 5 
Sood wih fe vt min a COOK AND y. | Jamest apman, Esq.. Horan, Es ved at nara 
com been s — B. es Col ppin ale, ‘<a 84. 3 this R nt- at th fice in be 4 
Lox pendiam of — B. D. C fates ia Depa GUS TAS E 
A oman, Ba of the art 5 ear, adm n, Esq. Esq. * —. Chairm 25 LIF eee — rincipai upon fh 
aes is pul OWN, that and M.P. 1121 15 „LL. D. a — — hrogm E Apert 3 A 
By Ra ATi blish 7 , GREEN, a An Thomas H cides te 8 13 Esq ge orton-stre ASSURA X 4 
var RD BOOK on a nd Lox qua ade. H E y mee 1 elson, , R.E. x Richard a a comb, et, Bank NCE 
m : Inte —— ee + pn . ates Physicia „A. Forbes lexan fee Week eee, ane 5 = af, keari prr ap 14, — ANY, 
in aai Lonomay, ce 33., Sur. —Sir treet Es William W: Whitmone E — — Ba bar. — „ Depu n, Ch: Mall. gi 
1 MAN, BA A the Registration gem. 0 q» tmo te s ty airma 
| —.—.— Sey . —— a | Beans mos Mishel, Bag . — fre | 3; Humphery, Ba F 
8 Sie wer t AER, und Fa Counsel. „ Be M. D. K Eda, 8 Audit lift, Esq. sq. ma ngleb a 
E 92 Sue Bik OF ä e 1 ius Eg” l 3 1 e pe 
ores 0 RD 2 x ils mi ù all 11855 f 
3 compl OF and of 1500 p 1 8 NIA ten. ace, Prova N 0g. 3 Fine 3 j 
perias complete de G upwards of bro preceding i Y» L IN — n, 2, E hutti 5 
Institutions, y of each Os EOGR 4 100 least three years average toi an Ac Maret ADY. N sor t Esq. 
each C on of th APHY o To si we tae os 31 per cent. 11 51 nk ee ANTAG cn Romi M k’s-p! N . j 
ere „ 5 its e Ea rege 7a 0 into the In additi ES m Fish mill, A. e, Old ; 
By H Civil „and Ph rth: Policies ass n the 846, a the Me vrata OF A 4 15 , of Kin Jewry. 
Loxe ven M vil and the arh : exhib d effec ed to Premi Bonu million, cot Ale alarge ie araks 1 g’s College, ; 
v man, Baown, N =| on the viz. : ee ned to all Policies e 5 and eee an W h General, 
Just EDTTIOx phe 1 , the | On average, u IRST 1 Bo e whole dur. — — — = ate Anis | 
5 122 NES Low averag gon of 2 were de titl BONU sof A Sian licy-hol 
SUR BIT’S GMA ND * N, IN clared ed to ersons assuri 8; 6000 } eee ders 
a * A MEN Ns. D DIVIS ryan de * of fi 1 OR PR holder batt 
15 — 2 ge apa IN the ma e year. cent. o the B OFIT creasing, 7 
E O T AD pimi y te y f the 0 B arising 
EON ÉRA ma prico ce, zom, | A participation the penta p ums pai YERE added to the sum o profits c ofr arene 
55 lca a hma tio ES OF — paid d. zum . will be 
LMEN Treatise hee r applied ok septenniaily in for th The T ON. assured, o A anole annual 
SURA pared 8 OFF e pre- 24 beef 8 5 
TI sums, in nms ICE, am 1 OR . 
eee policy stead ay De 9 wosthirds of ere the ob “a LOW ned to each Potes 
suc contin of by pai Tane pren * PREMIU ofthe 
b uin an d in th | as bject A 
S. the a wtb parti 1 s is th M B 
ilkia 5 annual paymen limited n fits, at poaa secured to e least nei ie aort pe ö 
3 Be for renin Gua a at le i Premiums ced 8 age afford 
Interes: or n pro the — — to . sible outlay, the 
TOD PRA and the t =n — fits after the ole pe annual of premium, Y» 9255 
m e re ert 
2 5 ae ARITH inclusive, o fo Conti d is not payment of 
Tananan, Pe a oF proceed een tinental subject * 
Nocte deen TIO. P em sik Garvie Pots Ss ‘die ) 
SING the Arm, Bres 
. 18mo 8. be pai —— t 
0, tg e 2 —— 
2e ta, |in Londen ora 8 dapon Se po — 
or of Tabl. their po 
the es of 2 — 
Comp ates to the 
e to be Company. Pint 
had y- 
G. Co at the Printed by ag 
NYERS, office | in Poptart M uB 5 
, Secretary, the Precinet of vier E *. 
4 at the AN at Wee 1 
are jen, in a s 5 ae thee 
to be. the said 5, at we 
ES thei oie N 
* N r 
in Lom! 0 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, JANUARY 27. 


No. 4—1849.] 


IND 
7 5 4 
Agricultural 4 3 
Agricultural š 
Arboriculture zer . 
Antich a ag Lisbon | 
— jt 5 
gf 40 Plantations, mana . of 
vei 5 Polmaise 2 7 tees cre ee 
—j— — ' Popular errors . 
Potatoes pt from disease 
id season for planting ...... 
N ` Poult 7 Fy ee aiai. 
nals poseberries ..++ Rats and phosphoric balls 
57 Fon food — L e552 2 „ 
—2—*2ꝛ alt for Artichokes 
Bex plant, apre OS Sea serpent 
2 — — i 4 of ine <u 
Beotel aby is al uper im 
pe ade Temperate, stow might. 
De Thistles from sece 
Deshi Timber, . . 
Trensplanting evergreens ...... 4 
Trees, fruit, to riug +.. 
Turnips, fingers and toes in 
6 Vine, pru ing of 
§ OT. 
eae Walls, shade of S$ 
— 85 * pipes, corrosion of iron. £ 
eres Wheat, cure for smut in € 


TANSLEY NURSERY, NEAR MATLOCK. 
OSEPH SMITH, impressed with gratitude to his 
: > 


o return his sincere thanks for the 
33 ith 


patro! 

1 of nde n 

I rit a continuance of their support, and now takes 
the 2 8 that the business will = future be carried 
on in all its branches by J. SMITH and Sox 

Tansley Nursery, Jan. 27. 


Wama 3 KNOWN EARLY RHUBARB. 
2 “a — — pia tl d the ab b 
far sy ntly recommen e above as eing 


to the public. It is of a highly 
rolific bearer, and free grower, with 


ee from a seed . 


4 
shia tomas to tothe trade. Post.otfice orders payable 
to Josian a WILSON, Enfield Hig hway, Middles ty! 
TONURSERYMEN, MARKET GARD ENERS, and OTHERS. 


W ing in „posses sion of a large 


. 1s. 6d. per root. 


of GÖOSEBERRY TREES, comprising upwards 
y ashire sorts, begs to offer them in quantity 


¢ W prices, The plants are strong; viz. 1000, 
or more, 1 5 1 5 ; for 500, 27. 58.; for 100, 10s tong st-office 
The flops Mekos Bedale, Yorkshire, Jan, 27. 
33 


= 
oe — 
— 


Trees may also be obtained at the 
Waureriony. Low and Co., Upper s Upper Clapton, London 


13 


tremely fine and well-rooted ; 
he prices as hous Jor A ad quantities, 
ry, Norwich, Jan. 27. 


HN 588.— 
8 3 IDNEY Foa! TOES.—The above 
proved itse be a more abundant 
e n fofinitely > superior to the deb. 
also Suffered less from the disease than 

1454 
and tuber and Son, hy ged ~ yg er preside = — bushels of 
< the “at ls. Tanh seed, have ot pia re in offering 
i j $ Pea A remittance 25 — — from 
s Marestieta, near Uckfield, Sussex, 
MARESFIELD, NE - 
> 5 AR UCK. 
e the 


‘Ad Fiends that their CATA 
BLE, FLOWER, 


bonour of acqua 
GUE of New mar 


Lin excellence. N.B, Cop 

BA urs SEED POTATOES, 5 

G SHARPE, NURS ; and SEEDSMAN, 

ee of the Nobility and Gentry | er 

ns The sorts are very ea arly and pro- 

me The satisfaction to Potato 
ey 


BEAUTIFUL GLADIOLI, &c. 
ILLIAM DENYER, SEEDSMAN and Fror IST, 


to growers | 
are offered at the following | 


1000, 8 fag 3 


P b 
ie 2a = Potatoes. er sg 9 4 56 Ibs. 
dann pet Kidney 
oe 8 5 St r 
hak „ fine epee es 3 
r Winter and ‘Spring uso: 
er bushel of 56 Ibs. 
«Sis vel a 
SA one 5 
. z 0 . 
. 


Order, 


ce e their safe delivery, 


pay any letter to Belgium. 


* 


„ 6d. 


2, Gracechurch-street, London, near the Spread Eagle 
begs to offer strong flowering roots of GLADIOLUS GANDA- OSEPH BAUMANN, NorserYMan, 5 and 7, Nou- 
VENSIS, 64. Saag or 5s. per dozen. This is a new and velle Promenade, Ghent, Belgium, We wah ons offers to 
autiful v 33 eN obili ty, Gentry, and the Trade in general, the yes | 
ll NCIFOLI AL 2 h, extr: iggi * z ripsa 
W. IUM L LA! ANGIE et 2 hi 2 * By — the P ublie that hie 100 naati, in 3 fine Ys 1 foot 1 i 0 
New —— ike the present season is now ready, copies o ” = I ) 0 
which may be had upon application, post free. 100 55 10 mt A gh ae = ) 4 
2 plena 110 
HITE BELGIAN CARRO EED, new and 100 # ge alba plena, 1 foot high 0 
genuine stock, 1s. 3d. Ib., or 112s, per oak LONG | 100 ” we e —— 0 
RED, YELLOW GLOBE, and RED GLOBE MANGOLD 100 » imbricata rab 0 
RZEL, 1s. per Ib., or 100s, per cwt. ; all other Agricul- 100 „ in 190 varieties, 2 feet hi gh 0 
tural Seeds at the lowest market mig pa be obtained on | 100 ” 50 » 5 T 
application to 00 75 100 5 from 2 to 3 feet high, 5 0 0 
WILLI eee, RE EED MERCHANTS, Plym 100 50 » 0 0 
100 stocks, frown II. 10s. to 0 0 
r Agric ultra l Seed Li ist will be rea dy shortly, , All the 3 and choleety ai eties of dame 
and will he forwarded Gratis to all who may wish to see it. may be had at reasonable price 
VVT 8 = indica, in 50 varieties, 2 years old 4 0 0 
FIRST CLASS FUCHSIAS AND VERBENAS, 5 95 2 0 
( sate SMITH begs to inform his friends in 25 S 3to 4 years old, with 
eneral that his DES TIVE CATALOGUE o flower ds 115 0 
above | is now ready, and comprises every novelty of the season, | 50 ” varieties, 3 to 4 years old, with 
n with confidence recommend his Seedling VER- flow . 400 
having ta nu First Class Certificates. | 100 Rhododendron arborea hybridu um, 1 year old, 
so his Seedling FUCHSIA, LORD NELSON, has ta graf weg Poe re vars. 4 0 0 
three First Class Certificates, rete for exhibition will be found 100 ” 2 ” 2t rs old, ; 
the ription, see Catalogue, which es pi i . grafted, i in 50 va rs. 
will be for t 
Tollington e . Islington. z x ” dioa with, Hawes. bate ” s 
L 
ING anp OLDROYD (many years Assistants 10 12 s ) 0 
the e Mr. Brod and Mr. Ports), Nursery and 8 ee Moritzianum ma jus 421 sis ) 
MEN, 2, High: street, ogg beg act ae va 1 — the speciosum, strong one a — 0 Z 
Nobility, Gentry, and the Public in gener they have s grad 5 : * 1 
commenced as above, and trust, by keeping etary of the best Pæonia tenuifolia flore pleno . x ' 
3 to merit a share of gg satan age. 1 8 - 
Nu s, London-road, Abbey regate n Iris germanica, in 7 5 varieties ži ) 
ORNWELL’S VICTORIA RASPBERRIES.— * 8 a — from 4 to 5 feet high 1 — 
G Oaa 2 e . rina versie A i 
any sort ever Prizes were 9 to them at the a 
Hort. Society’s Gardens, Royal Botanic Society’s Gardens, and curiae, 1. 3 3 0 
the Surrey Zoological Gardens, as 1 the best shown for ot ordilac ie tat 
size, colour, and flavour. The fruit in Covent Garden was 85 14. 15 3 
2 at a higher price than any other. Stroug Cates to be had N Net noe altra 11 t 
t E. —— ali — — W. and J. NoßLE's, 152, 75 Mba super ts. ) 
-Aad also of Cor RNWELL; Market-t ee es b ae tye 
Ba — Herts, ae 17. 10s. — 100, or 4s, per doz, The u „ ae 17 0 ( 
llowance to the trade. 
Le 1 Dionwa muscipula 125 ‘ í i 
ne NEW RANUNCULUSES, ete ce piellets remontants, 25 varieties 12.4 
c.—T new Mg ol 3 Ranun culus consist of ver 25 pai 1$ 0 
superior and first-rate flowers, which we have selected duri riug These Piellets are most beautif ful, "espes jaliy in 
oe last few years from. immense quantities of pede and the winter months. ; 
ik aps referable to 1 Phlox — 4 E E een 90 4 
coh 298 * . t 
RAN UNCULUSES, * ty post, -with printed — for = fine 3 of Phiox hair ses 45 sas 3 
plan ing end oer 2e n 
50 superb new varieties med, 4 : 2 2 STA * inf a 0 18. 0 
50 fine older y varieties, named, ioe, Sa L 4 pat hi . ee 08° 
100 finest mixture, 10s. ; 100 fine, 5s., ae post free 6s. 94 a t stron ait 9 
OLUS, Rhododendron at ith a to. 0 4% 0 
en RR . tap 
12 apatis ean early y parietis, got to TA i 15 . elegantissimum to 0, 6% 0 
12 Splen d ear s, 88. or, post fi a ehrysolectum 48. to 0 8 0 
he early varieties flower from * c in the on air, 1 Hs a (Smith) 4s. 10% 8 0 
are 1 anted wi EY ay. 1 flavescen = 48. 10% 8% 0 
Gladiolus Gandavensis, large roots, 1s. 6d. each; Brench- 1 “4 flavum ... Ne . 4s. to 0 i 0 
or 4 - splendens, 5s. ; Rosa Mundi, 2s. 64. j Ramosus, a Norbitonense 5 5s. to 0 10 0 
18. Psittacinus sanguir eus, 1s. Those at 2 and up- a grandifl . 4s. to 0 o 
sii ` free b by post; under 2s. 6d., 3d. each extra, 8 ås. ta 0 0 
LE ANEMONES. L 5 alleen 38. to 0 0 
4 Finest Capper 2s. per doz., or 12s, per Ib.; Fine, 1s. 3d. per ms mpanulatum Alexandria 25 w 0 10 6 
o., or < 10 or to 0 10 0 
12“ varieties, named, best scarlets, erimsons, Ce., 38. (d.; 1 i birlo rum ia be 8 
post free, 48. 3d. ; Single, 9 mixed colours, 4s. per ib. i 92 lacteum superbum ås. to 0 8 
Catalogues of Roots, free by post, comprising our superb a latifolium .. s * 48. to 0 0 
new Ranunculuses, panaia of 40 My sia ee had age Ee. : k nacrophylum 85 „ 108, o 0 15 0 
Post- otfiee . made payable d brown or to n oseum ... A 108. to 0 12 0 
STEPHEN come Remittances 1 thot unknown | cor- j speciosum . 8s. to 0 10 „ 
doree triumphan 68. o 0 12 © 
— Brown, Seed and Horticultural Establishment, a ar —— gloria Gandareusis 0 ü 
Prt Suffolk, strong ese 
THE “ QUEEN” MELO 8 Lilium . aibom, s smal balbs .. 21 Ms 
DWARD TI begs 3 respectfully to apprize 100 „ 28 woe 
the Nobility 14 ae .. ured Mae woole 100 55 Ne rubrum, ree Es smali bulbs 5 0 
of the stock of seed of the ubov sine 115 Mellen, from one of the | 10 5 a ong AEN 0 
most noted cma in the teh of England. This Melon! is 100 mger . Cee 09 
allowed to be by competent judges, who have seen it, the These flowers areof a "most beautifal rea colour, 
earliest and finest flavour grown ; it has proved itself by com- grown in the open air, tae shes turn pale if 
| —— for the last three years to be the — yet known. It gronni i a greenhouse. the same if the buibs 
as been awarded three first prizes, It is a handsome shape, n, but never white. 
— thin skin, greon flesh, and melting faroh not Hable to 1 Litium Janelfollum rubrum, the old 1 (or ; 
ack or lose 5 5 vour when kept, as most others do: it rubrum Bsc good bulb .., 10s, eS a 
— AnS 1 Achinenes scheriana.. se 
* 8 Melon i is well a dapted to small growers, being a 1 nea for: nosa wut o 
ted seiter, very productive, and requi res et heat than * 5 as crandiffora 1 0 
y yet pack Sold in packets of 7 seeds, 28. 6d. ; h also the 1 5 a Cermesina aa ` 
follow wing varieties: 1 ” ‘ eatoni R 8 
Bow ood — flesh e ne .. 6 seeds Is, Od. i 55 gi splendens k ae 5 5 s 
Manahan (Era 1 10 41 0 = pallida 2 ite 0 i; 
P a 0% % SD 1 » „ illaeios o 
Beechwood (true 3 410 1 0 sane vie ee i. 0 28 
Cuthill’s (true) 8 coe | „. 1 0 The fon ing n ew Achimenes will be sen coor cha for po Er ime 
Emperor green flesh i a 5 1.0 a is portal in the be of Map) at reasonable : they 
— gate — 1 0 sent to J. B. by E. Regel, a DR: ot Switze “land; 2 a 
Egyptian gr a feh t0 ‘hae laamanni Achim hirsuta spenden 
wo packets ee, of the latter a ‘will be included is var. rosea 55 
with a packet of the peeo Melon for 4s, ` j 5 oculata » 
BROCCOLI.—The three best v: ia cultivation are the p 5 fulgens K losg flora 
W Wilcove r Tamworth, at ls. each per packet. a 3 pallida 8 
Sold by Epwanp Titey at his General shop, 16, Pulteney- 15 Bodmeri Dicyrta Warszewiczian 
—— nding ; the whole, or any part of the above, will be sent 3 striata | piot 3 
A ittance accompany th pon the N. B. sent free per rai 0 
— iota. Postage stamps, Antwerp and Dove peuny postage 2 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


[JAN. 27, 


J 

+ it e ing, Thorn 

Bae 
Kailwa * 


Nadel E Ev 
éc, on the most reas: — n — as 
tis, „Wing Id Station, on the Mid- 


AD, GRe 
100.800 "PLANTS, in * An 
and in 4 te tivation, at less — = 


price. The choices b “be Stove, Greenkou 
servatory, and Garden, of be are 1 e 
—.— — un i eo of sizes. Also y beauti- 
mul specimens tit n, 3 —— eudid 
W — 1 fine” dwarf trained and standard frait- 
trees, 0 d 
.* wanes ‘and. Co., aitoa Nursery, mine ‘s-road, Chelsea. : 
E SEED TR 


ILLIAM J: AMES EPPS je ‘offer the Pine, 
2 — n from fine selected stock of 184 


YELLOW GLOBE MANGOLD WURZEL. 
1 or oh aon DO. 
an ABBAGE —PARSNIP. 
SOIM S, S. 
The prices f 55 m — whieh will be 1 tag . 
cation) are N low. —Maidstone, Kent, Jan 


„ rpuurston’s RELIANCE - PEA— All persons de- 
PEA, should lose no time in 


| mw the comparat 


‘and a 


HOME GROWN SEEDS. 


‘Which can be warranted new and true. ‘Carsiage fise by 
a and Co, 


kin 
e merits pr ind ai are enabled — to 
supply . ae ng with Seeds of v ery. superior quality, 
wp 
ITGHEN GARDEN = 8 
dpm 


np“ 
Peas; Sutton's Sur 
kods mp iflowers ; 
Whi e Snow's "Wint er er White, _ Hammond’s 
+ Berkshire — — pean hrer 
Spine — hill ing's Queen, Sutto Im and 
Atkins’s wre Matchless Cabbages, are particularly ene 
mended. o true Ash-leaved Kidney Potatoes, 7s. per bushel. 


T pe 9 ON OF FLOWER S 


‘Satton’ 3 Ean 


EDS 
St n E arny 


=D 


FLO R SEEDS (rREE BY 2 

The best 40 45 hardy showy kinds... ase 

The pa: 30 ditto. ik 3 

The best 20 ditto 5 0 

a ee a a may 3 had, gratis, € on n application, ad ad- 
di 


103. * 
T 


OHN ‘SUTTON ~ NS inds 
= LS situated in various con piace which they pomp 
for the purpose of seng SEEDS true to their and 


RPLE-TOP*SWEDISH TURNIP, Red Ron 
and White Globe . va: 
urze. 


—.— 


— A 
UNDER THE ESPECIAL PATRONAGE OF f 


HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN, f 


TRUE F OE RASP BERRY.—This 
valuable and highly — Raspberry, unequalled for 

ıd richness of flavour, and a long continuance of bear. 
and Co., can now be 


N Nobility, as well as having Certificates 
for * by — iaje Hera! Sse Packages contain. 
x White Raspberry, 3s. per dozen, 
FRUIT TREES, 
— — ves finest sorts of Peaches, Nectarines, eater 
Plum , Cherri „ Pea ars, A ippies Gooseberries, and ion Tort 


cultural “Society. 


rt} 


Sint aspera 2 and 3 year — 2s. 6d. * 3s. 6d. per ite 
Sea Kale, strong, 1s. per dozen 


sirous of ing a good 
de ond Gk planting the above super? variety, as truly 
1 ed = oP apers. 
S. and J. THoxston, Sto 


i TOE. 2 
OHN LEWIS, — bridge, Somerset, 


. 


e free to either of — Railway termini in 5 A 


* Oa — 
on the Great Wester r South-Western 


or 70 any Station 0 
Railw: ays. 


Standard Roses, finest sorts, — name, 12s. to 15s. per dozen. 
| Tigridia — fine flowering bulbs, 68. per dozen. : 
Great Yarmouth Nursery. 


5 
of the Early ’Ash-leaf ; Ditto of the Blossoming Ash A LIST OF FLOWER, KITCHEN-GARDEN, AND OTHER SEEDS, SOLD BY df 
leaf; and a few of the Bath White Potatoes to sell, all of 
‘the very earliest and best sorts, and perfectly sound. A line by i. È y ATZ AND ON, NURSERYMEN AND SEEDSMEN, ERFURT, PRUSSIA, 1. 
post be im — attended to. p 
eam 1 8 9 FLORE PLENO, AND Hibiscus — . 23 Pe 
Gilia splendens . vid 5 8 per oz. 
BEE AMIN R. CANT — r 3 of FLOWER- | 36 Splendid varieties of Samer ‘Stocks per assortment, 7 d. Iberis lusitanica — er Id. 3 
B pa e., of this season's growth, to offer to the Trade, containing of each variety seeds „ umbellata purpurea . aaa Per 
© andn be happy to forward —— -a upon application. 24 Ditto ditto ditto Jas R seeds Ipomcea coccinea ee 2 ee 3 
; ohn! s street See, Colcheste aoa oe kea each colour separately, per oz — - — —— div. E 2 .. per tb, 
—— — upi albus... 4 aX oe * ee 
DLIN G DAH — Ditto of Autumn al — per assortment, containing „ Cruickshankii 1% per oz. 
RENFIELD’S "LO oh DACRE, ~ Colour dark Rose variet, 1 fa utus cœrulea 5 É 
tinted with Purple, ant show Flower ; | 15 Ditto of Winter rocks, “ditto ditto, 100 seeds 2 6 k cbs. 2 sÀ bes ie: 8 
consequence of the ae. frost . Lerhibited only three | 15 Ditto ditto, per 10 0 eet ie ” 
times, and mee — a iam Certificates, 4 stock is 6 Ditto Branching 8 ditto, per assortment, con- M idigi g w e RADINA a 
a short one. Fine apt l. 43. each, may be had o: tain ing of each variety 100 se cea ak? @ Mirabilis jalapa 3 per R Ser yü s 
Mr. TRENTIELD, 4 2 Ditto Winter Kaiser (Emperor) ditio, ‘extra, ‘of each Nemophila insignis oe ‘ah +. per oz, 
INION 2 prices 1000 s 3 0| Nigella ee i a ue „* 

“ Trenfield’s Lord Dacre, Seedling Dahlia, 1847, 24 blooms ASTERS,—AstEn On HINENST 1 , 
dark rose shaded with purple ; petals cupped, smooth, and w eli 30 Splendi y varieties of tall, quilled, G rs s rton en e Papaver somniferun Marschailiamain i : 
arranged ; centre me oane and orden Leet the constancy of | ent, con aining of each 5 100. anne * 0 Marsellii : ” 
this flower cannot be doubted.” —Garden lara, Ot 1848. e Bt to ditto, 100 seeds 2 0 Petunia integrifolia „ e D 
——— H— Ditto ditto, per o 6 0 Phlox Danh noaa, BEV, e A en Se 

: N NEW, AND GEN 20 Ditt aef 3 per assortment, containing « of Reseda odorata, per Il lb. ee 7 ‘ ie i 

OHN MITCHINSON ano 00. D 0 39 each variety 100 see 20 . js 

of the requirements of the Horticultural interest, 10 Ditto ditto „aito ditto, 100 seeds .. 1 0 Scabiosa anit, G erin we ” 
have made Selections of the best and most approved varieties of 20 Ditto ditto, p CE he 55 atroparpures “ihe a 35 
KITCHEN-GARDEN SEEDS, which they offer in properly Ditto . Asters, per assortment, contain- nana, div, za * 
ections : ing of each variety 100 seeds aE lO Schizanthus pinnatus , n 
0. J A completo eee — a large garden £3 3 0 | 8 Ditto ditto, per oz. „ 6 0 | Senecio ee Er flore 825 atropurpurea .. „ 
(eq ually choice) 2 : 0 6 8 Eri Asters, per assortment, containing of ” ie 
2 55 useful assortment) 1 riety 100 seeds a ¢ ” ” — ine . 3 
No extra oe 5 table aes 25 sagaia no 1 6 6 ua “ai „per oz 1 g eee Saber Bagh 00 € 7 
charge ‘or pac age; and a ers above II. deli- e agetes striata ... , . \ 
TR Nad yr by 5 ford and. Oo. 38 ibi to. 3. BALSAMS. 3 Hii FLORE >. 20. n patula fistulosa Je a ‘ 5 * 
any on the Great „ Bristol a 5 nn 24 Splendid varieties of Balsa per e RTS „e Grange. ; 
~ Boath. Devon Railways. *. — . ons , g of each variety 100 seeds. 9 0 1 ais H 
uar of those most Wer will be — Catalogues ̃ ͤ Gitta, per os. 9 0 p majus di Piero = 
: Sorts and 88 y be obtained 10 Ditto dw We m per assortment, containing of each iy — 5 3 $ 75 
on application v S 6 0 minus E Bovag “ge 
Joux . and Co., Seed Establishment, Truro. 3 0 R 1 n _ ditto, 25 seeds . F v Verbena g e ee 
„ bells e is e 2 
OGrcunven GROWERS shoald not delay pur- | 1° bit fip 02. 5 0 Visearia oculata:.. é 3 
chasing the seed of TILEY’S VICTORY or BATH’ 4, LARKSPURS, 3 AJACIS FLORE PLENO. Xeranthemum annuum fore pieno diba ee A, 
and GORDON’S WHITE SPINE, he h 1 eason | 20 Spl varieties of Dwarf Dou hcp rubra i 
—— paeran —— when the seed was all disposed of. each colour separately, per oz. Sige ey — 9 alba „35 a IST 
whole of the peter: as laid down Ditto ditto pone a. abe. vee RD 6 ares Pek 0 
Giang Passe os comet for e firs t prizes at the forth. 20 Ditto ditto ditto, mixed, per lb. 1% 8 0 ” 55 aurantica Me et x ” 
coming Cucum bitions should procure the seed | 10 Ditto Tall wae soa — separately, per oz. % 1 ” „  carnea.., res iis as yi 
ig time i 10 Ditto ditto ditto, per Ib *. 10 6 ” „ coccinea 25 
me à ne has Ditto ditto autre mixed, 8 » » ’ fistulosa, n ner 5 
tho mamos ofthe writers Ire 20 Sptendta varke SORLLANEOUS SEEDS. o ae canned 
i approval as to merits Splendid varieties Winter i 3: 4 
$ Cucumbers over all othe ment, lenatiog Wrens t tetas 8 . i 7. KITCHEN GARDEN SEEDS. 
RE, itm i din TORDERA | BU elt ie ier online + S a 5 
H e s0, YON’S 10 Ditto Scabiosa major, unini Conti nin t arge white F 
Free Bearer, 8 D * 5 y 1% Savoy Cabbage, yellow C 7 
ouse as a Cacumber for winter 10 Di tus (Sweet Pea), ditto mu 1 » dwarf early Ulm ... VE SONG 
cket of the above three | 12 Di to e 8 ditto cee ig % ite Mm 75 
supplied in 12 Ditto Mirabilis Jalapa (Marvel of Pera), ditto ditto 1 0 Borecole, green curled winter ” 
ny |12 Ditto Zinnia elegans, di ditto 3 4 agree Seal. waved cay white Yiannis for hosted » 
amoun 12 Ditto o, per oz 2 » 
15 Ditto Pa paver N Saar; gue oa. i — round hard Erfurt eee woe aby 
7 * T goran kearn 1 3 Leeks, large th thick’stemmed 1 Erfurt... 2 a Oe 
10 Ditto — * . Lettuce, large yellow Asiatic . 
d S AN,| Extra Pinks, very fine. 100 see 20 ert „ 
lemen, Gen. Cheiranthus cheiri (Wallflower), fore pleno, dark ingsi Fe 
ge who have favoured him brown, 1000 seeds aK 46 Radis nth} wede’s-head „5 
ring the past 20 years ; and now begs to inform | 20 Splendid ‘varieties of Creeping piants, very fine, per | fa mo iy white Turnip Erfart 2. „ 
assumed his two Nun and ass ent, containing of ach 1 small packet. 2 0 piak dee ee o 
, who have had long experience in | 100 Ditto very Bwar ditto =. ee colours mized = ioo o o 
e that in future the business 100 Ditto og oe o g cd ate Belo e 
anches under firm of Jonny Ditto 1 ite new, assortment, contain- bd ” Hi „* ses on ” 
E 8 48 m ing each aipee >. eee Å.. 0 Cucumbers, long green net oe ... eee ” 
oun Stewart & Sons, NURSERY- Bes Ww $9 55 „ _ Serpentine wave Spe 
FF 6. ous 8 n V 
* PLANTS to dis- s z n che? n e a D 
55 1 tinti .. .. ee y ” aa tee aoe aoe .. ” 
chea oe . ons ” long horn, ip 45 1 
, from 1} to D a b a yellow be i mapan TSN 2 sf 
” aaran pea na sie oe ote 5 27 
— Celery 10 3 celeriac, Erfurt S 
* a wee 
x Turnips, — 8 — ae o 
* one . 
m2 0 ee 825 oe 
„* „summer 1 gees 
8 Purslane, green 55 
” ellow Se ley 
” asil, ote 9 
ss — for cutting 2 J W 
ee 48 Spinach, — eaved ie ” 
1 ” leayed T e „„ 
* 3 4 AT 
ber oz. . 100 Ibs, —s 
1 
b Fraxinus work 
8 3 “is a 
Per oz. 25 
, per Ib. 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


S «PRINCE ALBERT” RHUBARB 
bait from the S Subseribers at 1s. 6d. each 
PATA. This splendid new variety at 25. 6d. 

EW SCARLET, 1s. per packet 
AC CELERY, 6d. per packet. 
aaa and Flower Seeds can be procured 
D MENCHANTS, Plymouth. 
552 8 can be obtained on 
att ond should be in the possession of 


nent Fl TRE KIN 

— to His the attention of the Nobility and Gentr: 

‘mend to ps, we he can supply of the best Mut ae the 

100 superfine sorts, named £2 10 0 

w fo TAN NCULUSES, in 1 + 100, from 73. oe os „„ 
fine sorts, nam 

e 100, from 6s, to 10s. 6d. 

ne sorts, n med 210 0 

018 0 

om Is. ito 28. 6d. 


FEEDS. 


TO PEAR GROWER 
RENE L LANGELIER, Clartbdon St. 
BEURRE 7707 LE CLERC and BLANC P to dis pene 
of; Beurré Leon Le Clere 10s. 6d., Blanc Msp 7s. 6d. Any 
amateur wishing to * the sorts of Beurré Leon Le Clere, 
R. L. can send out ed E s full of fruit-buds i in perfect 7 255 
at II. 1s. each. It ear that should be» 
as well as Blanc pern, which ay. 
selection of the best T P B. L. 

moderate price, all e to be correct as described, a 
in his experi Reference will de reduived 


8 


own correspondents, 

— ALL PURCHASERS OF KI EN 
of Jan. 6, on brs ck pag 

DLE’S NEW CAT ALOGUE, 
comprising sa best kinds in cultivation, A copy can be had 
on application to WILLIAM E. RENDLE & Co., Seed Merchants, 
Plymouth. 


KITCHI 
GARDEN SEEDS — refer = the Gardeners’ Chronicle 
bac of which i th 


Cranes NEW LINCOLN GREEN PODDED 
' MARR Bei 


only) of — Ragga a 
LARKE, Seed Merchant, 39, King: my ‘Covent dis 


> RUBE Mo 21s 
collection of sii $ Seedling LILIES, 6 sorts for 18s, 


, for planting in 
m album for 5l., 


1 
— ae CATALOGUE, comprising the 
fewest and most Popular Varieties of VEGETABLE 
1 wig for 1819 is how published by WILLIAM 
5 and may be had on applica- 
—.— 

e e Vegetable and Flower Seeds oS ag 

oe dto all parts, carriage free 
— esd 


visti PIE eee tee eae le 


ad o the trade if three are taken, 
de had of any edle Narseryman, or the grower, 
RT JosLING, Seedsman, St, Alban’ 


; A RUSSEDLIANUS, — 


Now 


Very fine 
1 Boo — 1 1 05 Cucumber, Melon, Strawberry, 
Lisianth ion ley Satisfaction to all who have 
pure only 1s, pos 
A gn Florist, Camberwell, near London, 


5 UB — s E 
eee ITALIAN TUBERO SE ROOTS.— 


trawbarry 


and fragrant n 


expected — che wok 
i a 8 Ang of 72 ar Lemon, Citron, and 
0 with Catalonian, PAR an 
— any of which may be bespoke. 


2 
feet sizes, a 9 

ted for bot . 1 — 
well known t trong | 
bolni, early —— 
tock of transplanted Larches i 


fee t to 4 feet, 4s. 


eure efer ence 
nown oe eae 
— — 


E e by licati 

t long collections, including sary 
VEGETABLE SE 

includin: 1 8 8 * 4 . d. 


a a alt ae U, 
best and n ee 


or sowing, heights, 


at 
8 2 8 


wananga * 
———— coke 


gardener — that one- 
e ted i 


VS DE DESCRIPTIVE PRICED | 


Tne Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
SAT UR DA Y, JANUAR F 27, 1849. 


MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
Jan. Medi 8 


Monpay, 2 ca P 
Society of Arts 8 P.M 
WrpNEsDAY, — 3l 8 ů A Ir. 1 
Antiquarian 8 P. u 
T Bugs Dar, Feb. 14 Roya 89 v. 1 
JJ ĩ SiRiRn Saat Ma 9 P.M. 
t — o S Botanical 8 r. 1. 
> Royal Institution Sgr. u 
BSATURDAT, — 12 5755 3 PM 
Chemicals X 8 P.M 
FF m TE E E S P.M, 
Monpar, Sr 0285 Pathological i 8 P. N. 
Pean por Aae 3 8 F.M. 
sgos 8 P.M 
Toxsp se 60 Gi vil Engineers P.M. 
THURSDAY, =- 8- = Royal Society ot S aa? me e 4 r. u. 
stronomical (Anniversary „ F. u. 
Frrvax, =F of Philalggloal; PETE TEN ae 8 P.M. 
SATURDAY, — 10—Royal Botanie . Zar. N. 


ursery, 
rsey, begs to ‘state that a poe still trees of 
RNE t 


— 


or, for Geis i ye 265 
h 49 w were instances of lar. 
0 


more or less successful; 
cases, of hic 


on- 

In Scotland the little disadvititage 
attending April yen is e 8 the northern 

latitude and late 


B. 


e the important 

fact that in England, Wales, anid Aena only 44 
out — 155 Potato crops, planted i in May and June, 
or | in 3, escaped an almost total loss. “Were we to 
eliminate the mountainous crops, which are subject 

o a climate neger to that of Scotland, the pro- 
— of bad cases would, doubtless, be much 
augmented. 


In proceeding to — the bearing Si be 
evidence now collec concerning th 
DISEASE, it is desirable to pass by for the B prevent 
all speculative ppn oi and to confine attention to 
the facts which have been elicited. Hereafter we 
may ag eed to theory. For to-day two points 
only can 3 considere 

e MOST ADVANTAGEOUS SEASON 

demands aed earliest notice. 

Autumn agri ei that is to say from October to 
January, has been strongly recommended, but very 
—.— prac etised nevertheless in the few cases 

reported upon, it has advantageous. Out o 
64 English returns 513 are in its favour, and only 11 
against. In some Cornish cases this is a striking 
result ; for in that compy, the crop suffered very 

Sim 


reat loss. Mr. 


FOR PLANTING 


ike luTcHINSON, of cae sus- 
tained little. injury in his crop set in er an 
November; Mr. Mitter, of Morv el, sa Hi Gotos 


ber Plented Potatoes were excellent, but those of 
otember not so go Simila 
e| from Rags piers er fac: ravaged 
disease; R. Saunpers, woodman, of Dawlish, 
his 8 5 and N57 ed crop perfectly safe, 
while all the rest was very bad. The exceptions to 
success appear to be heavy rich pan as at 8 
don, near Derby, where Miss T Sir 
half of his Fortyfolds, 
were diseased when 


od. 


— November 


N ember ee edford Kidneys were hardl 
injured when the top spit was kept at the top and 
dressed with about 2 tons of burnt sods and rubbish. 
A few es of autumn planting having failed 
ur, the Sy ea of which is not discoverable, 
as w Mr. T, of Cor tle, whos 
November plan ae aari was this year much injured, 
— ao having a appeared in his neighbourhood 
three weeks earlier than n pear 


lanting are mentioned in 

Scotland, all of which received little or no injury ; 

in Ireland but two ig are reported, both success- 

ful ; and in Wales 
ua 


seems 3 in — arly mon U jo 
the = dete we find that out df 142 trials ‘of January 
and February in the southern and western parts of 
the United pm ge there are 131 cases out of 
142 in which the crop escaped or was a injured. 


te 
I i 


March is largely yiee for Potato planting; in 
have 170 e of which 44 were 


Eng! 
failures, and 126 sacs more or > successful ; in 
43 8 which 40 w in 
2 great aiat in Wales Sall 


H= sac 


The foregoing calculations may be simplified thus: 
a ae Scortdwp, 
Bad. Good. || Bad. | Good, 

Autumn 11 56 0 4 
Jan eb. 11 131 — 5 
March ts 88 136 3 40 
T, Saag ee + 105 18.:4. Oh 
May and June] 155 44 10 23 


Showing conclusively that, for the principal part of 
the kingdo om, the autumn, with 3 and 
February, are the best months for planting; that 
March is unsafe, = a dangerous, an 

a ruinous. In Sco 


it about 7} per cent. in Mar per cent. in 
pr ril; for that country the May crops, known only 
in che ars aegis Sx tricts, may be disregarded. 


. karer thus: 


_ WHOLLY ESCAPED, 
ENGLAND, IRELAND, 8 

WALES. SCOTLAND. 
Autumn 22 in 67 2 
Jan., Feb. i$ 34 in 142 — 
‘Mareh ... ie, 9 in 222 20 in 43 
April. 8 in 250 36 in 104 
May and June... i 15 0 8 in i 

ese fact roposition that, the 


Th establish t 
earlier Potato planting is papi THE BETTER, 
and the later THE Wo 


worthy of credit. latel 
notice th e fancy that Thistl ‘ 
Jlover are spontaneously generated in particular 


t was 
no pos ied as 
One advocate for oo 
that his Wheat 
more! another 22 the blight 
could be traced from a * 
so as — mark out the 
point stood a Berberry bi 7 
readily admitted, and yet the — A to >be 
a — need not be thet 


form of a Pear, yand in that 


hag bye Ey we 


os 
which has occurred | 
to practical men why blighted Wheat has often 


been met with in situations where the Berberry is 


of 

675 of the past year ving 

rse to mysterious influ ences for an explanation | 
of moet acts, to * * plausible an 

„ in 

teac qre iian or any other 
worthy of two or three centuries bac The ood 
of the eck is deep * war therefore, say 


meeting, 


th 
eologists * hitherto 
i Brought 0o 1 e Bee no geologist would have | pe 
int ughter, because he would 
ave jan 8. e the, 2 — take la ay; wh 
ariously) in nere dulous as to 


what science |i 


nya 
- | the habit of correcting their N 
t more disposed than oad 


e | 80, 


d bran which w 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


creature w k y lying 1 out for his 


practised obse ey certain! 


ome peopl 
bility of their having been . mistaken. 
S. H. 


A LECTURE ON THE NUTRITIVE VALUE 
* FERENT ARTICLES OF Poo 
y 0. Da UBENY, „M. D., F. R. S 


Ae 


avoid was ne kind often unknowingly practised 

is the 2 ‘rom prejudice or fastidious dice, of 

pable of — a 9 and 

e great nstance, 

ing g brend perfectly » white or ‘Pleasing to 

of this d ee 3 it leads to 

the re 3 me part he food 

one whieb, along not digestible alone, i is sufficien at 
in that of adm — om the 8 

egg Ë has vee it for o Profess r Jo hn- 

e Number of “ es zine 

as shown that the pollard or inner | 

a 


8 


ston, 
— 2 slei to, h 


s the 
fore more efficient in supplying the * for build- grow on t 
ur body. ofessor | 


ing up the solid ake of our 
igns very sufficient —— for 
the nord in whieh Nat 
9 wholesome, as well as 

ectly — — rt which fashio 
„It appears from the 


supposing that 
re has | presented it, is 
than in the 


n has led u us to 


a few wee 
bread. Even 


pze 


whilst they thrived upon the whole meal 


asitd 


saurians had ceased to inhabit our planet — 
el ens were formed from which * Lawes | 
e materials for making his s 

phate of eA and before nthe other strata that were 
named as also 8 saurian * 

its is in fact app doubtful (and we ure per- 
suaded to the contrary) whether the n 
nodules — to ate . at all. uch 
ubt they are, 
rer ee man, but 


as that ot finding one of t of theg 


Tphos- | dients 


hem with i oe chives es quite as great N 
gigu antic | flour: 


s, m ph 


phate of lime, and other kutilia, matters. gies 11 5 
refore, should be adopted, not merely on a principle of | 
ore of those in 


th parts 
the flour, Other methods of economy will be pointed out 
in my next ary. but to all these, which aim at makin 
the nutrimen i 

ible, aia a prompted to a 
which, as they conceive, would bee ected by ge volun- 

oy abstinence from a portion of his habitual n 
ment, which each individual might be 17 to . 

for himself. I co: 


urishing country vom En orn fe 
ulati ila more solid nourish- 


sea serpent itself upom 8 8 of of Engla nd. 
_ Many unscientific readers thought it was a very 


ment, than is ne 


healthy 


12 ; serpen . seg A one of those 
3 7 gigantic sau 
really little less ektravagant 17 Ne fancy that ri 
ergela ad eviathan of Scripture were 
nd Dinotherium of the prea e 
mighty b e in- 


me of 


be g eologist with the views entertained by so 
our e must 


ex pounders of prophecy! And pre 
e.totally ing ce with one of our corr 
s, at p. 846, that hee question 


- tain is no more Hely ake a 
land, if he were 
than 


be could mistake a seal jor a serpent, th 


i 


a conjecture is lies ir 


e aaf se in int K. quantity would 
not be anisi but ee My and if adhered | ° 


e 
d 
ANOTHER obvious duty at a time like the present is to dis 


a continen 


o experiments of Majendie, be 
in a ks, 


the bran or outer envelope i a probably. _ very.) . e 
ng, 0 


raion as | to b 
ving To keep worms from ent 


[JAN. 27, 
or to spread one’s s fasting over the week 


by 


locomotiv tained at of progress by 
a less expenditure 0 of fuel, tend there are fewer stop. 
ges, th 


— 8 1 
grievous 
icted a — — 


ported to? us, 

to have been pr by a diminution only in the. 
supply of the staple ers of life. That to w 

ial m the pee te annihilation of the 
and a 


untry, su 
only to be pes by ag through the impoveri 
. 8 that surrounded it 


a MIGNON mr 
or common s Mign 


Tur Reseda odorata, o eet oneite, 
2 — after the followin manner, a etna a real treat in 


te delights in sandy loam, not too 

eeder, a 7 — diluted manure- 
heey a week with advantage. If this is 
mould need not be made so rich in 


y called, requires | 


Mign nonette, as i it is 
It is 


Win generall, 
| to 12 tre ae, differently w the above. 
the 20th of August, 


if later ‘i a 


inter. Out 


during w of nearly a usan i 
lost one by attending to this, by e 


I have often seareely 


to, ha TEN * powe 
n w 


su 


ae by some nations and 

and was proved to be 
. in longevity i in cae celebrated instance of 
Louis Cornaro, who limited himself. to 12 oz. . 
But sey ieee disease is a rey different fins to 
à and vigour of mind and body, aud the 8. 
worthy 8. at the Pentonville 
Pri ave shown, that in foyo te 
tien matter cannot be dispens 
j e a hea th, and enfeeblement of the physical and 


It is of pt se quite practicable 2 persons, influ- 
enced by motives which I will not here discuss, inasmuch 
at of these lec- 


7 5 t if natu- 
the balance eir 

king more largely ‘of “food on ye 
permit themselves to indulge in it 


discussing whether it be best or most 
„ this alternate course of re repletion and | 


se ela callings, of maneng that i ae the end 
to the ot te I fancy they would 


temperate habits, t 
co” 


5 — 


are Camber 


by never waterin ing them unl 
ride 2 we at all times 
owever, 


they were tagging d 
plenty of of air. In the case case of : 


ot flower so strongly as those 22 pin 
yield a succession of bloom. 8 Ci 
well, 


PRACTICAL, HINTS FOR pee 
SMALL GARDENS, . Ae 
Gooseoenns a a je oa not dont 
ease will soo: time to prune 0 esi 
trees ; ; vegetable life is in activity much 
case e than w th other fruit trees, and it it is a 
a state of rest. Every in HENA 

oft is so much abstracted from thase i 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 53 


to have been concentrated | blance to a large wasp or hornet, that perso 1 c- | perforations being in the solid wood pote a. 
now cut off, select some quainted with its real character. „would eee, gp 1 and bark. The wood of the Salix caprea ordi- 
will root immediately if it to be a moth ; its general colours, eae nt wings, 2 sold to the rake-maker for the pu rpose of 
ings and long legs 5 taking fr from it the ordinary look of aj being 1 tad into rake teeth, or converted in de 
ý he comfort of the lepidopterons insect. e general 3 of the body | flakes 
and therefore a little trouble | is brownish black, with a black sy vr upper side of eee wE to ot common ahem which is form: — 
elect strong shoots, | the palpi are yellow The thorax has a narrow trans- | of round wood twisted and plaited together without the 

by the ion 


mi 8 
D 
— 
= 
® 
m 
— 
88 
E 
© 
me 
— 
or 
© 
g 
— 
8 f 
© 
Th ct 
8 
2 
E 
2 
D 
8. 
oe 
© . 
= 
© 
8 
o 
E 
Q 
pr 
= 
— 
© 
= 
= 
© 
Qu 
— 
(= 
— 
E 
© 
D 
i=] 
* 
h 
5 
E 


soil, and 8 for — — nh i is to gui the me of | of the first and seco segments of abdomen, and | or occasionally a foot or more, is spoiled and rendered 
mean exclusiv ve of ast consis consist of three or four buds, so the broad pona margin o of the 15 pe fourt h seg- | unavailable to the above purposes. Mr. Bree’s practice 
which m tlie futur Sieg mage shall ments, are black ; the remainder of the fourth being | is to cut coppice wood 4 ad or 11 years’ growth, 
arranged round ces from each other, es are ure a dark. red re, 255 the rema ainder of the abdomen is but long before this time und he observ es that 
be at equal ~~, the head advan 8 range yellow, with the hind margin of each segment | on every stool of ne bad Wr Willow most of the 
eup-like form the buds to be pr ome carefully | dark brown. The w wings are quite transparent, except the rods have ceased to thrive, and many have eyen died; 
determined on rest, especially those on the part to dark veins, margins and fringe along the apical margin; this premature decay being probably, in part at least, 
If this is not done, you will the thighs are = pa with the tibiæ very densely clothed | owing to the inju 0 = icted at the base of the stems s by 
: ar, a pes ill be with o “a e hai the * of the in 
great extent if this rule is attended to. J ee — arati ely rare species, occurring, how- emale en are very sluggish and easily per- 
itive statement, but I r, mer — y widely- dispersed no — appearing Aue on the stum E the trees within which they 
der finding 5 neier proceeding from the seven P in kip e winged state ly. I have met with it in | have been developed, one of the most advisable means 
po 0 


u 
roots and even from the stem where there was | Osier grounds on the Surrey s side a the Thames, near | to be adopted for “prevention of the injury which 
no bud. Do all you can to prevent the evil, Barnes, where the stumps t above ot high, | the nsist in carefully examining the 
must yee be poa against in the | and have observed the males pie ing them ae ves on the boles and stumps of ‘the trees at the beginning of July, 
best manner afterwar ul leaves of the osema; alternately raising and depressing = empty p 5 3 are perceived protrud- 
In tuo or three pea the ioga will b ave good | the eure but fall ing half out of the apert ; s formed for the escape of 
heads, and the may then be placed in the situations t is in its prepa ratory states that this -> is in- | the moth, in the ie jo vieinity of which the moth 
they 2 i finally to occupy. At that time it will be | jurious pa the cultivator of Osiers and Willows ; the will be found, and may be easily destroyed. J. O. W. 
proper to determine whether you will grow them as habit of its larva of burrowing into s solid wood, wn e — ——— 
standards or espaliers, the latter mode being adopted | manner in which the perfect insect makes its escape Home Corresponden 
with suecess, especially in the case of those Gooseberries | from the chrysalis case — very similar to those of  Fmporzance of f having 6e Pisoni some 2 houses. 
of s trailing habit of growth, peculiar to some of the best the goat moth and wood-leopard e described in The remarks you ntly made upon the tem- 
rieti which makes it very difficult x 2 a Reais former articles in the — Chronicle. perature r plant- — forcibly — to mind the im- 
perfections of the present mode of classifying the exotic 
e paie in gardens. There are congregated 
— vegetable e of every clime, 
irtually separated into three groups only, 
ponding See the torrid, the temperate, and the frigid 
zones, arent oblivion of the tee of tempera- 
ture whieh — from the equator to the poles. e, 
up any of the catalogues of plants which profess 
the guides and remembrancers of cultivators, aad t 
preceptive dee god convey will be found so 
Look a 


1 


oe 


rra . 
tion, and in — — out of every hun in- 
stances they would be found so arranged in practice. 
There is the hothouse for tropical plants, the green- 
house for those of temperate regions, and, in e — 

the open borders for those of colder co 
robably be found a cold frame for pen of the 
fone more severely from its ravages than} Mr, Lewin, in the article above referred to, ners — as may b be 3 = sged angia from 
ae to the respecting its habit its, that “the larva feeds on the wood | wet. is is usually the of all accommo- 
8 whence we set out, the | of the Sallow (Salix ca vee in — = rt of which it | dation provided for the shelter of sists? — It 

is true we sometim of the additi 
i 


0 in 
Pi Ae ase Wa sun and air, and | pupa till May following. Mihe ores enters the wood | “intermediate” house; and in large establishments, 
i and open arrangement of the near the surface of the ground, sometimes from the | sometimes, of separate houses for those plants of which 
melli 


thes, If the tree is old, remove as much as , 
i of the older “aoe s you ra are rate 2 Te enerally in the pith) for the | the cultivated forms are numerous, such as Camellias, 
eal ae moi n young — in its bá — er eek it e fe head | Geraniums, Heaths, New are pe plants, Succulents, 
wood, not exelusivel: 5. 5 8 bear on last year's do 8 — sie s itself up within, the rage there | and such like, the provision which are so many 
diferent modo is Day rr and aie 5 ve rai waiting t the proper time to change.” From several | evidences of the imperfection 5 . rdinary practice in 
so that E 9 each. The for years’ attention to the subject, he mins that the cater- this soups we But even this provision falls short of the 
perky erat pe — shall remain as longa as | pillar does not araa the wood till the seco — pa olii mark. Such a country as New Holland, for example, 
off, Glia Gri. Ha age, as among all the numerous larv. rom | presents too extensive a range of climate to admit of 
shoot being eut down ae hie are spurred, each new June * November, he could per aiio but a a slight ifer. the proper culture of all its products in one structure. 
excepted, for the future pia two buds, a few leaders | ence in size ; probably, therefore, they may feed on the | Moreover the miscellaneous species, that are still con- 
same plan may be ado Oey rgement of the tree. The | te — bark of the Sallow root the first year after they aa together, when such as those above —— to 
wil re this 2 5 with the Gooseberry, but it are a, and it seems ‘that they eat into the wood | are separately provided “for, are too their 
; vantage ; the fruit will be too about Jun | constitutional — es, to attain individually a 
the The Rev. W. T. . in an article upon this insect, high state of perfection, when all submitted to the same 
r. 


5 W. I e st toa i å 
re can be no d History,” (new series p. 20) considers that Mr. Lewin’ all are colleeted into one house. It is the same with 
-growth 3 me removal of the profuse opinion as to the early stage of the larva bein ng passed | what are call tender in 
‘Strength and 86 57 ee — thro ow greater | externally, is confirmed by his not having observed ‘a its constitution to bear the climate of a greenhouse, is, 
8 z 00 rit . * E 
ran 


ere a 
pillars ron hatched. This is a question of consider- | have a ‘ligt temperature, one or the 1 i 
able interest, as it involves the undetermined fact as to | be sacrificed, or both must be compromised, which 
the situation in which the eggs are placed by the female latter is what most usually happens. This seems 
moth ; and until this is ascertained, we cannot be said | to explain how it is that many of what are called 
ning | to be in — 3 5 sg what are —4 ae stove plants will bear a much lower artificial tem- 
‘advisable remedies be employed to pre or| perature than is generally believed; they are not 
diminish | the annual —— of Peep Y which thir — properly stove plants at all, but belong to one or sean 
. causes to the proprie of Osier grounds. of th which it is genera 
The caterpillar is whitish pears Slightly hairy, Por . custom to make proper provision in pie arrange- 
brown spot formed by the spiracles on each side of each | ments. No doubt in some cases, r as 9 
joint of the body above the legs. It feeds eben: than is necessary is kept up in 
by | through the solid wood, but before changing to the chry- sre ee of so called pA plants is; amd e ‘probably all 
h — * p 


3 to Lewin, it had previously entered the tree,| and in the winter season, 
but which we believe the larva itself has the instinct to plants at rest. Hence, as all the plants in 2 
| are spinning some webs toge pe to form a defence | be submitted to the same treatment in this respect, it 


t the prac 
T | body — pr- raie just pre . arriving — tures so fully as 2 would, 2 few 
the perfect state, and forcing its way to the front of the circumstances can afford to invest their stove plants 
hole r ere of the series of short recurved horny | wi ter aspect of 
N an Soc ints on each segment of the body, as we 2 n objects which surround them. The plant stove is, in 
„ig. ig, 60u one a the name | is its habit by the late Captain Blomer (Loudo 's Mag. such cases, for the most quired to like 
its resemblance to a Nat. Hist., vol. iv., p. 445), in which respect it 1 oasis in the desert. As to the rest, most of the good g 
gh ape by Donovan with the other foo itish species. deners of the present day are prepared to adopt, and 
ect, having) Mr. Bree notices that in the neighbourhood of Coven- do adopt, low night temperatures, as might be 
some eai writers for | try, when the erat weet cal — of the coppice wood takes | abundantly proved; and adn and adopting the 
$ a e He re 


2 · et 
@ 

+ 
<< 


3 = 

insect measures | fiye i to be e They will, 
: separate perforations occurring in the same scien ;| which the 5 placed will allow. oh 

of the fore wings, 8 that the caterpillar does not confine | however, n not forget that there is a limit which may no: 

50 great a resem- | itself to the pith, which is sometimes untouched, all the | be passed with impunity in this no less than in ober 


54 


THE GARDENERS’ uno ee 


LJAN: 27, 


ae" 


fre neg om nnam ete 

Matters ; — and ho — — they may — hava 
Occasion to exercise it, take care 

their hands the power of raking a — high t vi 
ure as a safeguard in ri ar. — 

. the tropical et and the ordina 

an 


e 
cold frame, ‘tos additional | 


mau t the re pragare s of — tion. 
is especially the case — gards the interval between 
the greenhouse and s rp now existing. re 
here abundant use for a structures, Such as might be 
deseribed by the ti due wa reenliouse. 
The s principle of classification adopted : at Kew, where i in 


anta lr 


tru up t 
2 of “hich will —+ run 
„ I have 


is recolleet that it is not e 


therefore I ee that a interpretation of Mr. 560 


3 was 


sow 
i rab por for 


by showing — from paes 80 
s not run to seed u as 


not the least e on to Mr. Es iq of late 
ut 


high eu — after wards; 
Tos Donil time | 


who 


sowing and 


» those of ac — 


g in so 
and every clime, 
ive 


that should be 
Struct 


ardens at and near 

ruit very showy, Dodman, 
tacoum. 

Pruning. — As I have no doubt you will admit 

that 3 is 13 to theoretical 2 lation, 

I ven ture to diff t“ ||,” who 


t appeare when i 
(Yes; it is the Solanum 


cannot be 2 . every Vine contains within itself, 
independent oots, rvoir Se organisable 
matter, and ia Mr. Knight proved many years ago that 
the whole foliage of a 
of a Melon fruit situated at the mos: 
hoot at the b 


ase a 


a dishudded shoot, In youn oots 
— the disbudded plants —4 very materially stronger 
than rom Vi and 1 e no 


attend the practice, the disbudded 
quickly dried up, and that in 2 at; en where they 
„G.“ mak 


= r we 2 ia . 
experiment, pe 2 8 e result, 
N. P. 4. 22. 

Low Temperature for Pine. apples. — The Pine- apple 


Sent herewith was borne by a plant which 

ge was very mild, not averaging more 
uring the night. My object in sending it is to 

that Aii siem fully justifies me in advocating a lower 


— this part of the country. 


lant contributed a the support | so 
istant point, I see | si 


shoots were a 


blie an 
| ment upon the kinds at present in cultivation. W. Cole, 


artford, Jan. j 
Tra — Trees and E 2 8 soon in 
as the leaves of — es have assumed 


g mn oR 
{ a — — sure 3 that nc — | 
sed to to uch asja p 


g 
5 


oug h the r leaves wi 
inter, phn 
according to <4 — but it 
er, a favourable month, 
and the 

m 


may vary a a few 


w days, ac 


es exempt fr iseas 
— let mse rof “Cava — » on “Potat 
m disease in peat. Iamo occasionally hearing of a 
ame favourable’ results * similar eireumstances in 
wh z I — e 
et ultu re pur. 


must | with 


; | varies in inte 


a 1 — 5 at a distance o than 

d digging, ee cae e admits, ay it, 
all vey — and do may give a 
growing tr trees for a aa w saps whe 
nent benefit or not ; but I am persuaded that a judi 


which it is 22 ay een of er Tn but I ben 
hav 


— 


p A 
mal is WEES N. S. Mountjoy, F. H. S. Be 
Eal: 


e Heating. ep has been said and wri 
Nee this system of heat ing, a I am happy to inform 


with it fairly ; they may be compared to jewellers who 
beat true diamonds to powder in order to cut and polish 
m 


rter 3 
“That field is ‘where 1 intend to 
Potatoes next year. In March I will plough 11 0 over, 
then eross plough it, after which I will drill it and ie 

m the usual way.” 
urf, as it Sote, 


3 


agi! 


o Pot 
14 ‘Burnett Roby Hall, near Liverpool 
In the “ Journal of t 
cultural Society,” Mee ogg page 366 . 1848), 
Mr. Denison, „ on the 
nd 2 of Plantations at Welbeck, 


w at the oe owt aisn 
coldest end of a pit 70 feet. in length, where the tem- beds 4 


m | hand. Soe 


he plants — 10 inches prety 
and we 
or 


pe following 


yon 
iJ 2 Larch are slanted in — intervals —— the 
The | p 


e row down each 2 yards apart. 


com: 
that he 


in t 
Celery 
Public oxen is 


ane h us 
aaoo sa 2 gh specious in e 


oreover has 


mmendable to 
encourage size at an 5 it y ps mot line that | 
the mode employed to produce such enormous 
must be implicitly 3 px those Whose office it i is 
sala hose 


pec 
well wn 
2 wally DEON: E AAA be 8 


Pear ong 
| the woodm: g 


ur | stated to pay 


* Ò aa even disa 


ards a 
are then left ma Ani om about 12 years, the 
other for the m f 
ment paa E Ek 


102. 17s. 6d, per acre 
have to fight with one 3 te for the 
or an 


gra- im 
uence of sun 
— 2 e which are 
hen 10 or 12 feet hi gh. 
all the Oaks out of the ways the 3 
age, would be too thie 


“pen 
aed M — in a little of the 
and air t these 


— 


r years 


te of plantations, even of 
land, end 


he ‘ays, pointing t to | iti 


c m 
: ae the Polmaise, an 


t systemi i 


Agri- | h 


colder than 


and is sati 

et up sere lately and I 
de ‘of oe should be a 

d I have no cause yet to 
en made use of, for tue 

s working well in the frosty weather we have 
just experienced, which is more than can be said of 3 
het water 9 which I visited lately; it was to 
in the way of heating be it is 
still ma Dee below the mark. Pet 
—In the 


V ²˙ m pe 8 


pent of the plan which has 


not see ; it is near 


ear the 
rather cold; $ 


pope 


lanting. | 


2 greatest curiosity you eu 
neculent plant under 5 : 


parte lik on 
bushes of * r 
bad 


if near a wall 


possible 3 all kee 
t, with painted 5 


of 12 


tops of the te Fal and other 
N autiful, 1 


S 


aces not ho 
formation of rust was oo“ vive hr 
n for domestic u Severa 1 
on the siibjedt ; at length I 
the ¢ 


4 the nitr 


united with the nitrog 
monia, and the oxygen n With the iron m oxide 
iron. I have tri tried the ioni on, water containing 

ra artificial com- 


eat. 
7 quising friends, 


en 

ing to are kpa = 

8 and keep 
ues ; thi 


to i 
dar 


horizontally until the b. 

means they break more — 
Wet me draw Viana bs the 

practice of ringin g. Ifa 


edge of a 


THE GARDENERS?’ 


| including the leader, till the a ones have 


be blo 
n | ferred till the blossoms are expanded, 


8 Subscriber, 


ate of | You 
8 


ñ wiere et 


t. 
live 
> 
i pate 


2 | brance of me. 


| insects was prese 


May and June all the young shoots on the upper tiers, 

made | w 

Sep shoots of . suficient length to give uniformity to 
e ch 


This, ell observes, requires much atten- 


sap is flowing my not cutting t 
wood, nor too wide for the . i perj in one seas 
dakat — a iance of the tre 
open rip 
In doubt'al —— aer ring 


upper tiers, the rin “if 
will camel the 
mprove the size and quality of the fruit, A 
Goudhurs & ike 770 t, Jan 

New Zeal way 2 rom a Cornish set- 
ellin 3 August 15 


int, w 
ossom buds on 2 
b 


setting, and im 


very er 

ee — ed of any kind, tt 

ural to Nöw ealand ; eoneerning pet — surmise 

arding —.— erty, T have ma ention in 

John? s letter, tioii 4 . wil — 55 ou. TH 
— e never came to 


e of the 
8 ng London journ r Mother, I —— 
ae i — myself o on being in "neh a place as New 
ealand, where riers e or porch ity is wholly unknown ; 
ave plen 


1 8 — advis you here, an 
should have as much tea as yotik might feel disposed to 
se, and a carriage to ride in b des. Just think what 


u 
A ——ů— from 


ate k or think, 2 
mente to feel, inat a man is some 
God. Iam very happy to — of your prosperity, as I 


m well 8 ri no person in your country regeives 
more than their due for labour, or services of any kind. 
lease e to Sam uel, and tell him I 


u will p 
on well and doing well, — that Ido ore expect ever to 
see Canada again, as the climate is much better here. 
I have lately bought a very beauti fal place, . 
54 acres of splendid land, about nine miles from Wel- 
on my trade, as I 
e 


-a soon give up busin You wil 
e to al = tee ipi their sreamadh and all en- 
ar 


sion, in ready m 
rather a at 50 Pe 
arrived in Sydney, amount t 
not indebted st 3 so that I 3 er safety sit down an 
nie oh e: 3 — 7 
“a oe 


altho bagir: we are 15,000 „„ 
112 ae — 5 boa, as my father. You will ‘all 
my espects ; and ever believe me 
a d) William Wilcock. — P.S. 
nA her, I should, mue = 


55 


e e5, 
e of 1 5 


848 
ceipt of Jo hn’s letter, | on 
Lon 


ith the political stato of 
k Bailey — . I reg aer to som Ba 
My de 


the time I wore kue 
o the a das — cet years, — o could soareely 
m I feel a 2. 


oi n the pation ‘of den, 


y dear 
watch, and | | 


ins etek receiv 2 4. 


Eva 
rrespondent at Rio, who stat ted 3 it was as general 

belief that the pas Brazilian Fal e out more 

ligh from the produced portion E its head than the 
mmon Elater noctilucus. 


Linnean, Jan. 16.— E. 8 Esq., in the Chair, J. 
Hepb * q. „and F. Salm 
wis read fro m W. es 


is a genu hydrostatje jelly- fishies, which, like the 
whole of the e Diphyides, antes two individual ls whose 
structure and re a ations hay yea eviou 

perfectly under: ese 

of tropi izal aiid de sou —— seas, andthe 


;| himself of travelling in those parts for clearing up many 


points in the structure o 


a, possess an air vessel, and sh 

~~ of com podici pot thr co a the very v 
which these creatures pre The paper was 

e by a series of well Ekorren drawings. 


BOTANICAL OF EDINBURGH, Jan. 11. — Professor 
ALFOUR, President, in the 5 5 The following com- 
munications were rea A ioe Notice of Berwick- 
shire nee s, by J. Hardy, 150. P = nshiel.— In 
me = = ee Mr. Hardy first alludes to the ve 


— 


that t shore, but it — now — 


Sid 
45 es, &c., by Dr. 
ie ? 5 58 Balfour by Mr. M. Conta I, o 
is s used — — e peed = — oture i in ame and 
rnambuco, 
a ge ner account — — “fibrous manter yell iy 
e and allud 
oody bundle 


TEE ou my w 
1 as soon as I oppor 3 that if I never 


get 
n See apie again, na ate 75 assured I shall never is 5 


you, and you will have mgee ne to keep in 
W: Ww? 


Sotieties. 
ENTOMOLOGICAL, Jan. 1 Spence, Esq., F.R.S., 
President, in the chair. 
uncil and officers 
was including that of Mr. G. R 
President elect. Certificates in 
read, Ama 
rie to the ae ran ton, 
and an especial vote of thanks passed for the same. 
— 1 . Sa cokes bible a singular scale 
Fim on the edge of a 
8 gas shes. i in texture 


magnificent collection of Indian 
by Mrs. Ha 


new = Aig a not captured in 1847-8, aor. = 
— no rms, but cae them w yw 


11 2 4 


W. 
The names of different mem- a 
he i 


leaf of an ppn a 4 
nown 


ned cel mbling 
the thickening matter being deposited in en ; 
eeds ae an oily albumen; and a kind 
med from them. Specimens of 


re 
He noticed the aificulty of 


species. 1] uglas exhibited 3 of the = regi m daana le — 4 5 5 5 7 
i ants foun rtain elev , while in the 
gro keme bowl S Steropus at 3 Mg — a p above the re gion of the Spruce F Fir 

ng Pinus Abies in yrenees there is above this a 
nidus = Oxypete e one = eth a e mi marked belt of Scotch Fir (P. sylvestris). : Again 
meee Hawt a singular ¢ 3 R 2 eee in the Alps, above the limit of - Birch (B. 

alba) is the e E tree, yrenees 
„ 5 bd who probably desribes gas 5 = 8 very rare. The paper will pres Annals 
Wollaston, Esq., on the ent a ae 

He had during his present visit met with not more than 


e of Operations 
F. 


Fy 
rte, 


t aued pleasure, that ne am, eye apg eee c 


56 


hewerimg plants tasvetall 
but it is necessary. 


contribute to render 


ch 
da whie 
neatly and correctly labelling ms $ ir pl 
will also add considerably to their own convenience 
PLA 2 
1 e plants op have 
or which g their growth without showing 
their po bs Weng be petted, This will include 
e Aine Acacias, agg - pe &e. By pot 
them a y go out of ee it will save time six 
weeks 3 when work is ressing. In po ap 
these 2 9 var atte tiom should id t 
making the new soil sufficiently firm to cause the water 
to erte peie rena it — the 3 after potting 


they should ibe place a modera ture, just 
— t og growing ata * 1 with 
mount o 0 e will be benefited by a 

slight bot bottom ie p tions, 1 the top heat), to 
ena y edn Me t a little in ce of the tops 
reat care must be exercised in ee newly potted 
fants. Hyacinths 0 lips and other 


hard- —.— p! H 
forced bulbs, should be freely * 
occasionally with weak guane attention 
useful plants forw 

°, the top ere 
yf aari ge 1 

bed AND SHR 
Propagating b half hardy plants for —— should now 
with, in order that they may be well 

ore turning. out tim res 


y arranged is very 
Nel it to give eon | 


done flo wering, i 


H all the seeds in a canvas —— 
KLicHEN GARDEN his wie must be rammed itt in your 
Ca must be carefully attended to during | — clay. n to tools, supply yourself win coe such bs a wood. of 
dull her ; — a circulati p gh} man as well as a gardener nn Spades and cag 
the pit or frame : healthy vigour of the fo ues ye 735 most importar ant. They ought to be of the 
the setting of the fruit, depen E O 1 a D C. Water your Gesneras, which a 
Avoid high night temperature and sealding evaporation, oe, cutee at first, increasing’ the oa en 
unless you — fruit about the thickness of progress. After they m oroe 2 wi 
4 elongated shanks and curled up points. 2 5 ge pour orher bulb. Ae: ason of rest. Th 
of Lettuces and pirea a be made on M rer na: JJC. Your A should not be kept under 
‘ede the seed should in the bot rer “drills tan bark too long, or I dra aw. If they have sł 
about 4 inches deep. ightly — 3 ; the sides their flower shoots, as 1 * — fla to fores them, you 
the drills will 1 tect the young plants when up. in which Pangot Ves! oor 7 z > 5 Pg ak es 
sowing of y should also be made under a wall, ; if any ste 5 2 75 to be too late, however, ‘stimulate 
it 2 protected. Forcing of French then by a little 
ns shoul ed to; if a heated pit can be Ins Shem, Without an oniy advise mad the insects which 
spared for them, it will d the most economical attac ck your Carrots, N ater with er eet Ca 
method of ing them. It should be fil ith} quantity of common w. 0 ould suggest Ya prop 
fermenti terials to in 12 inches of the glass, of digging up the eit: And letting it a fallow f — 
and upon this should be laid 9 inches of rich loamy soil, months. W: — 2. unr . PBS x 15 e oa 
a e se wni lon tudinally i. for as the tno Peach the tr ‘ — of be latter. The most efficacious 7 Pic 
soil will, of co „be upon the same incline as the of getting rid of the scale is to w ash the branches = 
gl the rows will not shade one another. fally with water at 140° or 160° It will be duly noticed in 
— , — columns nan e, iy extol 5 3 r ready for sale, 
If the walls of you are not already furnished, Sulphur, vit yg st lec th, eee 
‘he It 8 not ossible to prevent the growth of 
they should have — — oe es form . re ot gr round "horou ghly. pa es ond ae 
the most profitable covering, but they should pa ed esy 1 * mitigate the evil. You may kill it 
the description called riders, that their Ser ce m — water, but more o will g gr row. Drain and it will lI dis- 
ut of each of children one of the walls lass a 
fi 5 MASTERS v. GARDENERS: ang. possibly can 
sout ct, and if the height is sufficient Pea find room or time, we will {dispose the pile of er. collected 
Tay e Cherry, or Apricot, may be planted against | on this subject. There is — 7 ubt, think, that our 
3 be it has the 48 f a chimney it will be 8 are alike.— 4 Wilson 5 1 appear next el at all 
2 ry 8 1 ad ry A for the oo use — ‘or Frorrs: J B Warren. 1, Grande Bretagne Doré; 
um ane osen, e io 2, Ne plus Meuris. il 


ch 
ing list be found — f in forming a se 


sele 
15 * —.— the aspe ect which will suit them. 
G 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


ction, 


Peach: Royal George, al Neetarines : 
Pitmaston Orange, S.; Violet HAtive, S. Plums: 
Green Gage, E. W.; Coe’s Golden Drop, E. W.; Blu 

peratrice, E.W. ; r, E. W. Apricot: Large 
red, S.; Moor pa k Cherries: i — „N.; Elton, 
W. $ prak rtariar ars : sag 
7 N.; Beurre — da W.; 2 oils 

nter Nelis, E.; Easter 


oF 
will st tate ok in A wy ame 
temperature ; po after ‘they also hav several 
crops of cuttings, po may be gradual a off. 
W 


FLORISTS’ 
most urgent call on e amateur’s re 
tion will be the preparation of his compost for 
Picotees ; we often parties complain 


in the cult 
e pects son simply is, because 


rs, 
y not at proper manner te is very 7755 or Weather near 1 
` i s London, for the week ending J: e 
portant point. Fresh turfy loam, which is an indis 1 observed at the gosta toe ths week is, Chiswick. me 
pensible ingredient, generally abounds with wireworms, gas BAROMETER. | THERMOMETER 
to suc! ee it is absolutely necessary that Jan Axe. NI 
a Max. Min. || Max.) Min. M 
à broken £ ugh SETAR ee ee eee | 
15 5 0 ts A .983 20.0 ur W. 

the grower’s e ar a 98 Satur... 0] 2 eee | 30009 || 81 | a ee Ss | 105 
one may direct their attention Sunday. 2 26 30.238 | 29.965 50 39 | 445 S.W. al 

i; Monday 29| 27 20.214 | 29.953 |! 50 | 43 | 490 |} SW. || ‘Oo 
comprised of 3 turf and vegetable airg: equal Tues. . 2% 23 30.4 30 212 | asol] Sw. fo 
parts, with very rotten Melon bed manure, and wash. | . @ 4 omo || $0 i HEIE 
sand forming 8 part, * die under oui: pm 7 ir = 2 * | = 
13 on all sides to the act of the weather. ey ee — ee -2 5 -iu t 1.20 

. er ne; mild 

Here, it y roed and turn hot again; 3 it will war — 2- jery fine and mild; denseiy iy overcant siamo 

ng of its 8 by freque nt cor aming Rice. tare — A- Very fine; overcast; boisterous with rai n at night. 
nothi $ — 22—Boišterous ; fine; clear and — « at night. (clear. 
will thus be ready at a moment's notice to de u ed “ee — pee 8 barometer —1 ft alt! though wee fine; 

i. 8 — ensely clou: cast . x 5 
AvricuLas.— Water ore abundantly, and — 2 ai ter el „ * N 
as le; oom Mea ure of the week 10 deg. 2 e 
hold 


to the Polyanthus. Top-dress seedlings of | 
e bas ant T t tects ! 
heat, 


l 9 
Prom the time when the b 


early Melon bed is 
iately attended te: I 
ald be constructed in such a mann o secure a 
f ee the end of May; if yai 8 not hot 


HARDY Armor GARDEN, 
Punia pe aue AS soon as the female flo 
be syste 


wers can | 
matically | 


d, the bushes should be 
ed. All ‘the shoots which ms not show fruit should 
length according to 


hich these 
bush 
p s 
pietia Pe ny of the bah bashes w will, in all probability, 
male flowers, it necessary to 
some well-furnished . other bushes, 


and shake them gent) over the female lowers. 


e, E. 
i list will appear rather formidable be a cottage 


LIAN. 27, 


Garrya elliptic —H E M. Amaran. 


Melia Azedarac 
break or crush bones to use them gore 1 7 — 
cannot, then yo gh bury them near the e which are 


to call a dwellings cottages, and it is for thi 
are 


that these ar articularly intended. Itt aoe 
are fond oe the choicer of our hardy fruits, they will 

a higher value upon them when they have been 
cultivated with t. n hands; but if, on the sapi 


efer making them a source of pr 


n the m 


ofi 
rom the above will be found to contain fruite 
ltivation of these bar are soba fe in ee constitution, and will fetch a 
cet. 


ensuing week, ending Feb. 3, 1849. 
Jan. 212 38 | No. of reatest a 
and Feb. | £3 ARE at Ha : 
izi ZSS |AS | “Ruined. | of Rain. : 8 
Sund 445 | aa 380 10 2 2 
4.0 31.3334 12 * ni 
30) 43.4 | 31.9 | 37.7 6 0.32 é 
Wee 31 446 31.8 | 377 10 0.12 5 i 
Thurs, 1| 423 | 31.0 35. 7 0.52 14 
Friday 2 433 | 305 | 37 1 | On ts 
Satur. 2 a thn — 11 9.42 a H 
he abo 3t 
tune de A Re À te dex; ond the ea Va ADe Nt) 


184i—therm. J4 dex. 


ely th 
— to give 8 nformat 
but we cannot consent to ge labour of writing le 
racting 


wood 
apt to tweed Ls 
accu with rhs 
< kikre ed : 
d give A the bo 
‘ope in in Spain oe 
F . 
the “ Florists’ Journal. “f 


K W 
in skalon ns in ligħt soi 
Place the pan gent e mesy td 


cannot, have 
Ourselves the responsibility of recommendin, 
e; 
d the 


lw price, a 8 * 
bo la, Poara 


State tii’ Nelke at Chiswick during the last 23 years, for the 
ee 


er mixing the materials, 
r paet be laid 
jurious to t e roots of — plants, — 7 — Sei bess 


would be obliged to any 8 t 
— go e of the plan — 


We are unable to gire you any information 
ash the seeds out of the seed vessels, sow th 


- 


nh m heat, er them buts lightly, 
or, t 
eee . e 4 rater 
A our sici 
e sow the . — ne 
‘Catcrotanrtas: C 7. See our last week's N 
MIGRATION : We e bee ee +e e} 


g colon des to our 
Aa al ; ; for which 
Emigration a al cae 


ran 


A booksellers’ H Nea Takeo eutall 9 ap ote LE the | 


tor Sock Oak, an sete a . 


to feed on them.— omiley. 1, Poa procumbe) . rigida; 
2, P. nemoralis, pron 2 3. e 5 4, a 
nusually small.— X. Myeinema phosphore 
plant of the Algal alliance. 
PHYSIOLOGICAL QUESTIONS: ecard Our —.— columns 
render it impossible to find room for them jus 
PORTUGAL La s: Haih well ačquainted v with the 


ha 
sh. The — ‘Kidney will probably 
A “ Treatise on the Practical Culture 


having. We, however, by no mea 
recom 
PROTECTING i wt i e 
made by us upon e contrivances, you will perceive the 
cause of your — — It > 2 so much use 
gained that they 
their base ge and the greate r th — give to sui 
We want to — May in April and to extend October over 
eventos —an immense gaiu, which such frames seem to 
promise. Grapes do not refuse to ‘ripen in the open air be- 
cause we have not heat n Bes is pacanie r does not last 
long enough. Give a Vine weeks’ n the spring, 
with an August in ren ki Aa it will Hoek; unless it 18 
one of the tender phage 
Rats: F JC, 


ns agres i 


If you refer to the 


troublesome in number and 55 fans only to thank 
avec} for negle ose 15 n the eee of the Ne oe 
photos balls. Nes ye Pt they find no advantage. 
only state our 
Roses: Marie. 


areful, howeve 
8 Roses in 3 are somewhat shy flowerers, and 
hi orse than 


dry warm situation. Your plant, being on an pf raih 
will suffer from sudd ecks oned by 
chilling 8 late frosts. The best wake treat it is to 
thin out all ery robust, shoots. ns iat a Je 
to nail it now, “aad when spring z ; 
the effects of frost. t 
SHADE or WALL HousEs: JH n 


built, so that the former may not shade the ioe on 
Nov. Ist Ist.“ You must asc e la ol 
e place in t any almanack, yee can find the 
sun’s declination for every day in the year. To the latitude 
add the sun’s declination for cular day on which you 
wish to know the length of shadow, if this is between the 
a March and 22d September, but subtract the suu's declina- — 
n between the 22d Sept a 5 ; the 
result wil b will 51 e oe to the ang! back of 1 
direction of the sun’s rays from its top 
the d. The form the hypothenuse of a right-angled _ 
triangle, of which the wall is the ular and the 
len zi mei D e base, Then, as ye the tan- 
gen ean ö ht of th bes or other 
) e length o of shadow On the ky mention, 


union win — a Y haden to the 
on March Ist, to 


rer O. Ni keko i 
ob oikani ‘of — 1 
ty, luxuriant 


n made in the garden of the Horticul 
as ag has ged 
impression yee 


Watt Trees 


a proper trial of it. Pind shad be h 
8 wind AE Ravo a duplicate 


to 
may be i of any 


because of © 


the dis- 


artificial heat, yo ae 
il heat, you ‘ought to apply iti in 1 


0 bers 
N Ward's ase 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


57 


URAL GRASS SE 
ot | MES SRS. JOHN SUTTON anp F SONS, having y for 


many years paid especial attention to the collecting of 


and improving old = adows, “have much confidence in recom- 
mending their present stock of Seeds for that purpose. The 
furnish of the zoil being stated, J. S. and er will be happy to 


f 
i large garden, the 
s cropping . 
bes inclusive As £3 33 Od 
and peal 7 
3 3.0 
Ae if 
mi t for a entleman’ 3 
Xo. 2 This is sufficien g rb 
garden oe carriage Paid to Lond on. 
No entra chargo for pack a Masts that would not be wanted 
should be any d tities of those most desired 


there ti 
oad — orders to be accompanied by a remittance, 
or nag 


wn correspondents. 
N pleasure refer to some of the 
be: p Bera iles in zl Ireland, ana iepen who 
pabit of purchasi g the above ¢ 
are in the Horticultural snd A sricultaral diets 


| 
| 


en r i OON STREET. 
F HALF-M 
Mais 11 5 AND CO., 
8 the Seedsm 
URAL SOCIETY OF pto LAND,” 
rs of 


Officia fl 10 
“ROYAL haa Society, and Agriculturists 


Bde 
of Agricul Seeds are always ready during 


other information 
requ red, The cost of Seeds for laying 8 Tend will be 25s. 
bo 55 per acre; and mixed Perennial dien and Clovers, for 
mproving old e and Upland Pa es, 15s. per bushel, 
half a bushel — sufficient for an acre. 
bse — 1 TON and Sons have also for sale excellent new seeds 
wth of Skirving’s Liverpool, Taing s and Ashcroft 
Swede Taralo; White Belgian Carrot, Guernsey Cattle Parsnip, 
Yellow Globe and Other Mangold Wurzels 8, Lucerne, Giant 
Saintfoin, Italian Rye-grass, St. John’s Day Rye, Summer 
8 White Mustard, &c. which may 
on apelin.’ addressed Jace SUTTON and Sons, 
Reading W ading, Berks. 
N. B. All goods delivered free to either of the Railway Ter- 
mini in tone don, any station on the Great Western or 
South-Western Ra ny Se ave . 


OWER-POTS AND GARD 
| Joes MORTLOCK, 250, Oxford. j t, respectfully 
very „ ent 
rtieles in various an . a 5 
brow description of 1 aro CHINAS GLASS, and, EARTHEN. 
nt 2. at the eee er e price, for ca 
9, Oxford-stre r Hyde-park. 


at ne . ave 


EE R’s PREA SANTRY, Beaufort-street, King's 
oad, Chelsea, by special appointment to her — 3 15 and 
H. R. H. Prince ‘Alber rt. — ORN ENTAL 1 5 TER FOWL, 


and may be had on applicatio 


UANO AND OTHER 
PERUVIANGUANO, of the finest quality, direct from 
warehouse. 
NITRATES SODA AND POTASH. 
GYPSUM nye OF LIME). 
ED NIGHT-SO 
2094 ASH (WIREWORM DESTROYER), 
SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME (made from bone only). 
AGRICULTURAL SALT, and all other Manures of known 
value, may be had of 


= Manx Porneneitt, 201 4, Upper Thames-street, London. 
l HEAT SOWING. 
T LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg to 


offer as under. 
| eon oo EES URATE, MANURE. 


G 


IME. 
SUP. wo ag OF 
Peruvian Guano, aie from sates’ Shove? and 
Salt—Gypsum for cial Manure. Ash for «mkt 


en- 


+e ication, 
ecretary, 40, Bridge. street, Blackfriars, 
PA EOL. 1 0 ON SALE 
Y TERS, 
ANTONY GIBBS 4 pat SONS, LONDON; 
Wu. * np Co., LIVERPOOL i 
ir Agen nts, 
70 AND 92 LIVERPOOL aua BRISTOL; 
10 dane WELL, AND LONDON, ’ 
Protect i 
iou 
cter, or to 


e who will supp Asie articis in an 
their fixed prices 62, delivering it trom the Ines 


ee 61, Gracechurch-street, 
PA ise. 3 and 17, s * few Pak see Southwark I Inventors 
ounce BOIL peorfali 
Horticul 


scientifi ERS, respec 
to their m: 


n p a se 

of the highest authority ; or 

e Nobility’s seats and aredi à i 

TEN e Trade that at their ee 
td article tg aie — the construction 

as well as for h eating the em, may be 

yor 


8, P. s Palisading, 


Field and Garden 


ROYAL LETTERS 


PATENT, 
YN, Minerva Works, Birm ham, 
— Patent SPADES, CHO EIB, and 


d Agricultural Labourers, 


d upon the most | 
Ice 


and calculated to lessen 
ed to 


are now coming generall 
wan urserymen, Ma — 4 


fnew two priced at the Basi ‘Agricul. 
— ganar garter n, 1847, since — 


a Digging, P ep aiguas anure, 
any —.— 
had of and . te 


Liquify all your 
s da day, 

3 value four ss dive least. | in 

8 as 


gyptian, Can oF „China, 
ber nacle, brent, and laughing geese, sheildrakes pintail, 
widest „ summer and winter teal, gadwall, Labrador, 
hovellers, gold-eyed and dun divers, Carolina ‘eee e., 


omesticated and i also 8 wren I we se China 
Malay, Poland, Surrey, and Dorking fowls ; white Japan, pied, 
and common pea-fowl, and 3 China 1 . at 3, Half. 
moon- passage, Gracechurch-stree 


LASS oa 5 HOUSES, 6 
DEN F 

Hothouse Builders 333 Baer 5 1 with 
every description of Sheet and . N Rough Plate, &c. 
Glass Tiles, Propagating, Cucu her Garden 

Glasses.—Ad@zvess, T. COGAN, 48, “eicester-square, London, 
PRICES OF SMALL SQUARES IN BOXES OF 100 FEET, 
rown. 
under 6 by 4...... £08, Gay’ <i: 

4 by i 21 ‘dai 7 by 5.. 0 


15 e 


8 — P 10 by 8...... 6 0 
Larger sizes, of all qualities and substances, equally low. 
AINTS—LITHIC AND OTHER 
opel ready Pye use z FARM Barana E e e 
Implements, Park Fen 8, Outhouses, e White- 
lead, Colours, . — ere best dedit So eee peli, 
GLASS MILK PANS FOR THE DAIRY 
Cream Pots, Lactometers, Glass Rolling Pins, Pastry Pans, 
Shades eo Ornaments, Lamp Shades, &c., as usual, Bich 5 Lists, 
(priced) direct to T. CoGan, 3 Colour, and are- 
house, 48, Davies square, London 


|The Agricúltural Gazette. 
SA 849, 


MEETIN a N THE TV TWO Fí FOLLOWING V 
J 


THURSDAY, —Agricultural Imp. Society * ‘ous 
TUESDAY, — 6—Agricultural Society of England. 
WEDNESDAY, — 2 nd and Agricultural Soci ciety. 
THURSDAY, * ia cultural Imp. Society of Irelan 

MERS’ CL y St. Mary.—Feb. 3: Ne e N - 


ampion, feb. 5: e ‘Groat . Clyst.—Feb. 6: Framlingham.— 
Feb. 7: Purness.— Feb. 9: Halesworth, Needham Market. — Feb. 10: Peterboro. 
THE ag eer — the conduct of Conrro- 
VERSIAL Disc N have yet probably to reach 
their climax in "Agriculture. That “ ee of the 
as it has been truly called, 
ay w in to feel the throes and struggles of 
co auh opinion, and become the arena of contests 
begun in amity and the simple love “of Truth, yet in 
which chee most friendly combatants are presently 
amazed at ‘an own heat, yal the noS sev et 
of the sport. Accustom ach, to t his 
Opinion as obedient! to ‘the jars of polished life, as 


2 
* 
+ 
0 


n 
before ue earnest e had time to think what 
they were abou 

ner 7 is this perceived, vies a third 
5 “ mild as the zephyr,” steps in to set all 


e the doubt,” out comes gome favorite 
proposition of his own, so n and _ 5 self 
evident (to his own mind t his 

ounds = ing ‘himself 855 5 a den; 


ceeds all 

1 contra collected 
asoner, and self — ati all before 

9 ae ar 1 8 own a lofty position of mediator of 


others’ theories put upon its self defence, for his own. 
th so it has ever done 
from time out of mind, upon ee were of the 
ae and most lasting importane 
m and t well-being of man. Bach, pit —_ 
to infirmity, in the results of his own observatio: 
and se ver te of every courtesy and attention 
to the statemen another's view, yet o d 
away sient by self-illusion at the ver Tots dhien 
s to be most deferential to 15 opponent. 
It is but the old sto Of all the difficult eon- 
ducts of life, the conduct of pate is the most 
e, even to the humblest l 
of Truth. Not to be zealous 
okak a disciple: but alas! not to foe 


2 


began gran between Terura, and gens seems Truth 
too n eyes, is to be but hum 


mite new, ractical and clever 
chemis 

aid of their respective 1 0 to the service of the 
Fa armer, is to be considered under 
a perpetual living illustration of me working profit 
of every principle oaches, or every suggestion 
he offers to the ee, of his hearers ; and in 
vert to be worried down as if he were an im- 

tor 


Does not reg ewe man sie that the de- 
tailed — m- management, upon which 
profit te fa: is a complete busines of itself, only 


15 be acquired by lo long usage and experience under 
the unremitting spur of keen self-i 5 ? vd no 5 
this as well known to every man of e 


om 

as ane fact can be, in agriculture Pr with ¢ avery 

other art or trade? And will any man knowing 

this and rf that öthers know it too, pretend 

in joini g the dec ceptive cry of ‘Shew your 

1 —. — he really believes that the farm 

accounts of an active and charitable clergyman, 

r of a clever citizen whose main business is in 

Farming a mere 
a 


quate t 
sake . on the o 
and 


possessor to submit to 
0 believes 
Balance-sheet himself doesn’t believe it. He knows 


cause it has 
quire that 2 7 qualification which they are con 
fesse without, — long hard practical experience 
n the, direm» details of farm-manage 
hat then is = motive of the demand? for it 
must or — eith ignoran 
ofthis © 8 ee ej 
or it is a covered attack, at unfair, and incon- 


d 800 acres for an 


politely 3 
Po 


d 
© 
= 
E 
— 
"3 
E 
E 


build incontinent In merry England a ts s me tr 
e his Castle 


2 
7 9 
E 


Pipe b and Turnip-fields around it! But your 
unbidden guest got upon more dangerous mn 
He put his foot into a 


of fair-sounding 
phrase—but 4 N were recoil pini dreamt of, 
as it a i seem, by the writer. scovery, 

ed 


what Inven fe in agriculture, quoth yis has deriv 
its birth fom Tiptree Hall? 
Wete o biography of agriculture a little better 


known a it is by those who ought e 
have been 


most 
familiar with it, we should the 


ing of our very Tarnip-tops, and a for 
first time, at the sound of this ‘parlous amas * 
o hear it from a mouth is 


noug 
make “ each particular hair to stand on nd r Will 
that lecturer of weer confer upon us the ever - 


ow 
run 1 poy 
well known rA ofn names— 
LIB, BLY ESTON HEND, FLETCHER, 
IRWAN, — Lerrsow, — “amy 

PIN LE, Menzies, Harte, You 
Raam, and others of more recent date, end d living 
vain have the eye of 


, each a 


D ae — ae 
unfold that is enough to give 2 a 


in the name of al per is e to 
use 


but not, it seems, if it have 


— 


x 


= 


į 


ang 
curious trade of Farming. 
wyers, one Seoteh advocate, two Di 
urgeon, three l K 


y red anc 
cated, crossed like a bankers checque, with 
style — title « 2 mmg eee or Invention 
made or given in the of agriculture $ 

The fight has Tal Ta all tke other way : 


and as to balance-sheets, if you want a well-known 
imen, backed by a well-known name, take that of 
ETHRO nae who died broken-hearted and a 


$ if, indeed, that testator may be called in- 
SHivernt w 
FNA TUNG 
the b va ele and tue Dri 

evidence of ‘the Balance- sliest* — ſor 
what it is oak let 


arp manager, 
eye * his own 


8 pa insect 


it be set dan nas 2 that the 


. 
20 glad to welcome the implied e 
that book-keeping is henceforward to be a part 
all good farming, ar ree it of one atom of its ile or 
oo closely 


: 42 ene from the analo: 
* — 1 3 or a in this nine- 
teenth century of ours, by a i 
2 and honestly a to saimo 
the the t 


ory o f human art, 
more rar TN nowhere than in the annals of 
h. H. 


Ploug 


is 
the 


E — 2 of this Poses | in Laneashire— | 
and t r counties may p 
well = aes! eae —ofthe attempts of a“ 
writing from Dover-road, Southw 
n article in u 


ver-r 


ce 
am 1 “a agriculturists.“ 
the Se whence he 


i t to found a 
dates his 3 : and this circumstance, 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
pete arabe 


Turnip ; another asserts it to be 
ird asserts it to be a 


poisoning 

sert com- 

“ed orga nic * fesbleness — completed by 
ee depredation.“ 


Je come do w e contrive to pay these high rents 

19 years’ lease, no doubt, gives encoura 

| tenant ve expend his in th r 

land, in the hope oe sark hie is pro 
h remunerated in 


an 
— to observe a regular rotation of ero 
forbidding him to sell the straw off his farm, 
account 2 molest the ga 


aggrieved by the 3 of hie 
oe as to join in an anti 
m is almost t 


which his etter j Lenke conden, 
I she not make use 
expre which ma 
sidered offensive to our landed 
ey; c 
— the — ood fi feelin 1 
rally exists be hes them 
tenantr. ay E ostii = 
crease it is to be 
that, in — cases, these leases are 


There is one thing which we help us out of this 
labyrinth of conflicting opinion: namely, that the i 
disease is of far less Feen occurrence than it used 


along with the method he t b z by the prices of but his i * no o means of atch 
z ee e is sufficient to en a our advice ar |È e en Malt A lisa a ane 1 25 . car southern . onr 
cauti east, it has not been so in p 
AOR getic stin to geen sapere Fite ri now that the clamour of the manufacturing p 
We things as strange as any Belgian prod upon a Sts oe, that had Turnips every five “te wi 
tion — is a ae dy, limbs, and all— indeed; tl je aoa for p 9 a 1 1 is y whale ‘field is is genia free m a S v bioa hig loge a 
re conveys a very fair: general idea of Mr. | affected wit = — and toe et this year, peat ae may ee iisi but in tl 
Dickess tinai porter in the tale of the “Chimes ” | although good farm manure had been applied. Sup meantime, the prospects for this country are ver, 
: prentice hand t ane mes made worse | phosphate of lime, which h ound so wonder- | gloomy, for, with the 3 of Wheat at 456, 
: tempts than this sat “Trorry VEck. “hand” | fully creative of luxuriant growth in the Turnip, | there is actually more general distress than whe 
figur in No. is not indies curious than the would probabl rvice in . or 8 were twice igh, ason of whic 
Fonts ann Tors” of the annexed draw wing. We venting the disease next rop is grown. farmers can no longer afford to lay out their money 
* wish the latter were as rare. Bone-dust, which, in other penta might | 1 in per ONA ees nts, consequently, al 
une, — d from its effects | almost equally efficie oes not decompose very eee ah pa ee E employm mA is 
. 18 t | county, so far n ascertain, the avera: 
2 iy 8 Gee is a di readily in peat soils, owing to their antiseptic nature, manal labor labo — 15 se 20s. to 30s. per acre, and 
ing to warts cankers, and Bard ox the e connected with horses and implem 
aly aed ending in fetta — 1 — — iwe “oa rosa pe 2 ae mag : = itio Kei okam or 
crop which, from whatever cause, | which appeared in our columns afew 8 o upon e loughme 
exhibited a genial growth ; and thus a dry this ps in which the writer exp: Sago. for ween se l jar plough sg eget by sick sickness or 
in bad condition, and want information on some of the chief points of difference in weather, are entitled to their wages. 
to bring it abont. The the two systems of agriculture pursued = England and | partly in grain, and amount to OM e a 1 
e on this subject is l; and, be Re lon; remain un- | extra hands wis that we require in or carting, i 5 
eee ation y get from 10s. to 12s. a . — ; 
‘ier sation are o Ce your correspondent — of the skill and | ood, which is to 4s. additional. omen are 
— 2 “oe East Lothi think they — with 9d. or 10d. a day, exoept in in harvest, when we give 
e theory supposes it to be a topical disease aoe naw — he has = them on BRS all our whether men or women, “alike, as all do 
e been propagated from one place ia k re n any experime e ee 3 of work. : 
f nowledge they may have acq This is not, indeed, ts of Engla 3 that th 
e carriage. of seeds; another su he first time that we have been styled «princes of stubl after th 
en from a e 3 e 2 8 pne stu be is "lett sboti 18 inches high, and out: 
culture in o . locality, and to have heen meeting in this county, at which aed se net some 5 ed ue 2 * 
by infection ; a third supposes it to be gane Proprietor present, assuring us 3 e eee AI e ai 
cent o dle an ezoamive or undu] prolonged | farming in the world equal to that of East Lothian, It the most valuable for manure, to remain so long 
cultivation of the Turnip, and to have been fore eq is this very fame which, Ag case of the professional 1 An i 12 agree 
i toe erg 5 Pa svat had been | 45 3 much to oth hone ge — „ your correspondent’s remarks on — urnip en 
orth su poses, ii ve instead in i ae aae rmer, and is one o! in some instances is arryi 
* and inclemency of weather throughout 0 e — — ey 20 enormously high as | too far. On soils re y adapted 1 0 ao w 
„ ording | Such is the competition that, hiesa re may be consumed by sheep, esse 
| time, there will be few of the old tenants left in this very 8 Shishi ratte Ha: 0 : 
district, a ing almost invariably given to| Barley crop are togeth roe fallo 
psc Ea TOR sg as ee rent by, the | Yet te basana st er equal to 
d | previous occupier, who ought surely to be the best judge | when Turnins are a farm nust be very mi 
it of the ne — is farm. Were our N the pce od de wee 205 . 
: oo ierland te the 8 —.— . — ‘+ es lado 
is as are in most ingland, In all 
eh pete that paos pat, he wee: ote Turnip en 
eee a eee ee a * stake with regard to 
appearance and deteriorated con. pa Se ae ayoa fan sx ; 
2 spacing. dition of what were till lately d crack ” farms, r 
3 5 as our 
The question question which “J. F,” v ery naturally asks is, | lowed by pasture. by 185 hay 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


59 


not soi eee 


ceed 10 ine 


eir ee wie ted more pungent 


of life, will rarely submit to the es semi-im- 


a and Scotch | prisonment, and 2 25 aints of a union, in which they 
ee, 25 the month | are looked upon ucumb: 5 ave reason to 
en he co ow that suc n feel irritated and excited, when 

lanå aip a paer . observing (acutel iwagi) the half cultivated soil 


a 
my lot to employ men aris as poachers, and having a 


essed down with the copper-lid, and in a few — 
the ar having 3 the mucilage, the compound 
0 por ca — e three or four ti times a da 


le ve horses engaged plo Ih em, | for the artificial ingredients reased to about 
because “ their land was so and they candidly 3 that 80 as they could 28. In adherin f 
ploughed, it got quite consoli. find employment it ver all they 5 but they failed to obtain am uneration for grazing, inde- 

ider it to be of the greatest | would catch ev — — n the parish r — Je to | pendent of the box-manure, ye is beyond price. 
soils turn r immedi- the union. I hav found “that —— 1 bited also at Nor sham, a Dutch heifer, 
as it is only by exposing them to the | reasoning with then a kindly but firm rem — that co 10s. a short time — last Christmas. 
ately after harvest; ter that we ca them su far more repressive of crim than severity or neglect. | She was fed —— to the above system, at the rate 
frosts and pose By following this met we are eve In the course of three years, with my property much | o W r Linseed till June, when an un- 
ciently — on land not naturally adapted | exposed, my whole losses have licen three ducks and a limited quantity, compounded with Grass, Pulse, Grain, 
enabled ei Whee the soil is so apt to to- sheep. The parties who were assu to have taken the | or Turni s daily placed before her. During this 
for their Br dik not be worth while, as an experiment, latter were subj the usual legal process (we | time, however, she consumed on the average only 20 
i of it up in the same fashion as our Tur- should always strictly endeavour to punish offenders), | pints of Linseed, and 35 of Barley o per week, 
io ridge wer eg s; said too much on thi the evide a nelusive. Having failed in the value of which was 4l. 16s his sum, added to 
soak bibl 9 that to know how and when to punishing, my next step was to employ and thus give 2. 14s. for the previous six months’ compound, amounts 
Ae landis one of the most important branches | them an op 9 8 pe aang eir — nd | altogether to 7/. 10s he y fer is eon- 
plough our avoiding a repet offen My ives have | sidered to weigh about 70 stones of 14 lbs. Three weeks: 
‘= e straw ropes, to which, it is said, | been appreciated, — "io desired — fo ‘te — n acco ince I refused 30 or her. last, 29“. 
wate Aab biete d attachment, I can only say, plished. Do not suppose for a moment that I wold were only offered, Taking th sum as the crite- 
— forced to st economy oiie ss by a man of known oie character, such men must | rion of value, and deducting the original cost, leaves 
— refer a stra w. rope to a piece 9 and a preference; but I am quite sure 20/. 10s. for tw mae a maintenance upon the 


“ stout friend 2 
~~ him with 


hou frond. * would ave — much 

2 . — e with him 

rilling of our experience 

o that of ‘our Hagliah friends, Ex- 

e, light cl, subject to the gro wth of annual 
be iffi 


e opinion 
= anand longer than I a 
ter further into etait, but shall 
at any time, what in — 


at present, en 
i cami 
on these subjects, as an Eas 


I mak e aequir 
nee 2 mals 15 “aig 
ace DEMORALISATION. 
Have read with Considerable 8 the remarks 
your vz ts, 8. Sar 
«pB, br de, on this subje Paes fe 
three years in 5 — 9 — 
m heath, far from church o 
it any n gentry, Ta am enabled 
d fi 


q 


nors readily ac corded to an 

=e 12 and — patch of of the 

and transfer must soon add 
vantages and legal charges, 
design, no drainage! all 
arani Tiptree Heath was not 

kee — a half starved pony o 

À Apa every third man to he 


chance! 


h eh bor fi a little a e kno red a 
; deserved eren for us their respect and affection, sia 
ulat 


— for 


icipated, I of 


in | ture will all 
3 | pletes the first 


reà a discreet regard 7 the w 
ur poorer neighbou 
id par iere w 


ell being — well doing 
8 solace in sickness a 
it is requi 


timu 
moreover rit is our duty. 
greate 
relief — — mage particular circumstances, employ- 
ment is the gre 

Ifo — we are 1 they are not 
are and actions of their pg coat 
© keenly ‘an faithfully — andl Ws the am 
r goo evil m r have a ongida and 
important Joel pi veg Moia situated 

the parish church, “a 

—— exists within a radius of four 

miles. Although a member of the church, I have e = 
sidered n m ay daty ni aid the only place of wors ship an 
educat this neighbourhood, a small dissenting 
chapel on school, feeling that yem out -en ee 
hat ot 


Indiseriminate charity is a 


when the nume: 


receive legislative Lare ation and correction. 
present I could poi t numerous instances where the 
pi a ma —— are at the extremity of a pa arish, 
without congregations, the congregations being at 
another 5 of the parishes w without churches. This is 
in our 

Hall, 5 — Kelvedon, Essex, J. 


RAW v. BOILED . LINSEED. 
At the recent Smithfield Cattle Show, I promised to 


— that you will ales afford the medium of 
g state, that the bullocks, afier 


ssess the greater 8 — 
ispensed with,—2ndly, because the mixture 
turn preria a ly, — — cattle eat it bie gm 
vaste, It my 1 n to co i 


the hot food. 


veyance the uth for ion. Gelatine, 
proper fot Seattle — is —— eicher by boiling 
Linseed reduced to fine meal 5 or 10 minutes; or by 1 
soaking it about 25 or 30 hours in cold water. 

‘The morhiog of making the cold compound with which 
the bulloe 


< c 


* conveniently placed, 

straw, &c., or hay, and Turnip-tops cut into chaff, is 

sodas „ Two or three hand- -eups-full of the jelly are 
upon it, and stirred up wi 

fork. Another bushel of the — chaff, &c., is 

next the gelatine as 


| before ; all of which are then expeditiously stirred and 
| worked together fork a 


with the nd a rammer. It is 


pe ressed down as firmly as tl 


into the tub, 


Jelly salt 
which the 


ene oe s J. Mechi, Tiptree 3 


con. | a advantage 


‘he Swed 
d I ee 


ine was for — — aly} 


e produe f the f 
ich, I repeat, i ja e price 
to prevent m misunderstandings, i think it pe to 
eny that the heifer never had a and that s 


arm, besides the manure, 


Is 

have repaid 10/ 10s., whereas, by reta oe her si 
months longer, her value ns increased 10/ Barats at 
an 79 — cost of 2“. 28. for eompoun 

will be seen ipe the heifer repaid 4 a 12s. ex for 
the 50 half- yea may, 
3 Se cael ~~ if Kept. Een half- 
mp proportionable decrease would occur. 


belie 


e Ro cu 
powerful illustration of the advantages de- 
fattening cattle with native, instead of 
a | foreign, produc 
The weight of the heifer in June was estimated, with 


e 
the others, at 54 stones of 14 lbs.—now at 70. Then the: 
l stone. 


was calculated at 7s. — now at 8s. 
refore, had not the worth of the meat been increased, 
15 instead of gain, must have been noted; and as the 
pa is only 16 stones or 10 per week 
idea may be totaal of the loss sustained in rearing and 
fattening cattle for Christmas shows and prizes, at 10, 
15, shillings per week, for oil-cake, &e,, &e. 


8 


with our own ;— 

inseed compounds oe one-third less than the 
cost for Po and that growth of Linseed, 
with summer and 

9 perier 
nure, and for cattle food, might be avoided. 
Varnes, Trimingham, Norfolk, Dec. 16th, 1848 
[ Abridged from the “ Norfolk Chronicle. oa 


ON STORING ROOT CROPS.’ 
w things are of 3 
s than the m 


ere they debe never grew sns 
ties I doubt not but this is 


le of th the. ‘wk and hence 
knowledge of 3 1 Seems so 
ä — even to us ela For my o 


er that of 


4 nth difficult = to make me return to 


a en ge 

88 is the eee and is the one to which 
ly allude. By this time of year all the Swedes 
should be removed out 


tect them 


rodent visitors mae  plenvifal in this neighbourhood), and 
which so often leaye the of their tee th beneath 
the epidermis of the bulbs. anre 
methods „ up this crop hi 
been tried My various people in the neighbourho 
as throwing them indiscriminately into pe 
ing th soil in the field, The tops 


t of the 9 and stored in x 5 5 
from 2 the frost 7 ae 


es 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [JAN. 27, 


ae do not approve of| of the wood I had occasion to use on the estate—for | is called Nee Bs omn hes mt ea ae 
&e. It was in| Jew kind (sometim casan in 
the — 2 have an ae 5 75 —4 hurley ee, rand nd fencing ff liseovered | berland, and “the old Scotch breed” at 
ine fflea 


A 3 

ing . K even in thie wet season, I have | that time shed all my y hurdles c payed” ‘with boiling oal- ai pry . will 1 pan 22 
mearly effected (without resorting to the fantastical | tar, which I believe to be the best preserv „ e thy ge py is b fi 
Feige egs 1 igen A pat = 9 re fo now known, in proportion to er he: H. S; and a very well known poultry fancier sent some ọf 

e e Gees Mulas adlie deg a | POULTRY NOMENCLATURE. r 

ready for use, and are removed from the field to a con- | — 1 living specimens of fowls is an endless as F. rt nee m te the caine baste lien 
venient spot at the homestead when all ne | bus ness. For two amateurs each to send a couple e of | greys. 8 ther counties. Thus, too, * 
ing i he remaining part of p 2 which is fowls three or four hundred miles, as the “ distinct” | exist, I „ in o ent counties a de 
not intended for use till a later period o season is crack species of their sph counties, and to find and the Serran be eee eee 1 
to be taken up, the tops eut off, — — — removed thet bots are alike and are well known under other | 3 ; p oS in Do Rag a E 0 
from round the roots. not suffer names elsewhere, is enough ‘to damp a man’s ardour in | under no rag ris the — — . h q 
to be cut, as it is my impression the b bulb will not suffer | a more important * than the name of a hen. Let and Scotland, is 5 “nid a en 3 8 the 
any injury half so soon as when the roots and fibres are unless the question of nomenclature is taken up and London, and the Bolton bay $ ai ers; 
en 


hich doubt or confusion about breedg 
may afterwards follow. The z are all sepa- | questions era to the mutability or apo any A of would be no kg 
rated from > roots, — — be consumed by you 2 41 the oa dh d modification of races by hybridiza- | of fowls in books, nd the names then fixed on would 


{ 
or y : 
straw to secure the produce from any L weather | miliar, it will be in vain to discuss the more important by a competent authority such as that I propose, there ; 

+ 


stock on noe pd ya If this A adoptoi. reta 
advisable not to draw them off, they should be spread | shape in fowls, and other questions bearing in ry | and cottages. this proposal 1s adopted, perhaps yoy 

evenly over the surface of the field, as I hold them to | direct and important way upon the doctrine of . will be so good as to receive a few . for the 
yield a manure of the most fertilising qualities. G. F. in general. One chief cause that so little knowledge of purpose; a very few guineas would e whole, 


a satisfactory kind is to be found on the subject of| L., Valley Rock. 
ON KYANISI ING, breeds—from Col. Smith’s and Lawrence’s and Knox’s 5 
I sex that one of your correspondents desires some | speculations on the human species, down to the hum- Hom e Corresponde ne 
information yan’s process for preserving | ble fancies about breeds of poultry in the columns of Expenses o of he Agricultural Society. T observ 
I have 


res 

ber. pT: Bot om had experience of the Gazette — is, that the greater number of the the last financial statement of the Royal Agricultural 

it for more than 20 years, an and fy vouch for its effi- | creatures to which our inquiries are directed are too Society of ‘England that the expenditure of the past year 

» Prov process is perfectly performed ;| long in coming to maturity and in being reproduced to 

for, like every other undettaking, fit has failed through | enable a man, in the 20 or 30 years he has to give to| to make a considerable encroachment on the funded 

the negligence or default of —— who have tried it. the subject, to N at results of any great im- capital of the Society. Whilst this is certainly to be 
When | first used it, the patent was in ing ons ak bea portance. Thus, though many breeders have studied regretted, and must aes require the adoption 

ey I had 14 take out deere and sign an successfully the methods of 9 any individual a some e a ethods, phon hopes that MAI l 

e sublimate Ren "ie species or a variety, the way i easures will such as minish the usefulness 

— of the paisata, and Aps nif use the solution under | originated, not to speak of the higher laws ‘relating to ar the Society ; p Teast of als should any diminution 

a ibed strength, the reason being that so much | the produe ction of varieties in general, is still wrapped of the value of the Journal be allowed to take p 

sublimate of an inferior quality was frequently sold, | in myste: , con- | for this 8 is the hoe valuable product 4 

and many from a mistaken economy e the solution | stantly under our eye, we have perhaps better means of | the Society’s labour, and returns indee all the 

too weak to be effective, that rey ensued, and dis- | studying this subject than in creatures o greater | members a good proportion of the value of their sub- 


* 


credit attache oa pe invention. Another cause 0 longevity. e analogies to be drawn from plants are scriptions, and thus  gratifies hundreds who are unable 
i i i uch 


oceu ce, and 
some old timbers into tan the remains | some of your contributors, learned in the breeding of When we see the . 5 2 of the ex- 
of i in the e iron 1 caused the both plants and animals, would give us a paper (there peters at these r the e returns 
to precipitate, and deprived the solution of is matter enough for an interesting volume) on the way | realised by them, a are in m pie of ‘the liberal subscript 
its Care should be taken that the iron urs in which vegetable and animal physiology illustrate | of 1000 supplied b ink, con- 
in the formation of the wooden tank is so so placed as each other in the pr roduction and development of va- | sistent with fairness 7 justice to the whole body of 
to come in co with the solution ; and which should rieties.* Hence, says be. Lindley, in an article of mata aly that the expenditure at these meetings should 
be pounded mixed in a wooden vessel, and with a | Dee. 30th, 1848, to which I 1 4 to refer the student of become the subject of financial reform. It appears to 
‘ood only. this subject, “we are led to the highly important in-| me there is one saving that might be readily 
The corrosive sublimate should be first dissolved in | ference, that the e great principle of life within them effected without any impairment of the real objects of 
some wooden vessel ina small quantity of boiling water, | ( 7 is, in its essential nature, the same as our own.” | the meeting, and with very little to its cone I referto 
ut into the tank with cold water, in the propor- F- fer also to the brief remarks about hybrids in the | the large sum of nearly 7004. ont is a y spent 
tions of 8 gallons of water to 1 Ib. of sublimate. This, | « Theory of Horticulture. in the erection of a temporary b ing, merply for the 
i „will lution of sufficient! Taking it for pune’, then, that with a view of help- 1 of a large body of bene eating together 
strength. ; There is a gauge sold for ascertaining the ing 8 only towards a good nomenelature of 


our ery indifferent and not very comfortable dinner; 


morticed, &e. 
it should be sc depends upon the place in or near that city 


en 
dimensio e timber ; about two days for small | éggs from various parts of England, Scotland, and 1 is quite ri the 
i i gand, Scotland, and Ire- It is quite right to afford every opportunity ha: 

timber will probably suffice. and, to be hatched and reare ere, so that a parlia- g, te Cation ~~ of 8 
softest timber becomes hard after being rer . cheat of ow fanciers, elected by the * of the | together, bs this, I take it, can be readily 4 
and turns the edge of tools, on which accoun t carpente and re scale. 
— it being steeped 2 they et, weak it. Cordage general 1 fit, ubl en ac ies o 

i i rips gs well packed i in Oats, or saiast iat 5 400 and 500, and these, with meetings for discussions, 
hands of the person who operates get wet with $ ee T any turpentine), in small barrels, will travel any dis- can, I take it, readily be made to answer all th 
should N TES may be injured. tance with safety. Were a suitable Pe and person | of the meeting. We ou ubtless 
state a cases success of this process vikia | fixed on near Norwich to provide clucking hens, to | great fact that upwards of 1000 farmers can safely and 
my own knowledge. A stake of fresh cut — Sallow, superintend the eggs and the fowls, there perhaps comfi t 3 
about 5 feet long, 5 inches e was . * | ay in producing specimens of all the best breeds | this great fact has already cost the Society some 6000. A 
ariver’s ek ee the tide flowed, and was “used to E whe ichi ear ganap 2 3 nne e 


society, may examine report upon them for the| by public breakfasts ka ‘dinners on a smaller 


to 
bscurities on the subj 15 
e it up, it was i furnish oad subject. ae few | to adopt a less expensive method of fe feeding in future, K 
through, and it was s Perfectly sound and pt ba for the L ug ee mesoi farmer’s vifo ; s| Scotch and English 3 ve am very glad . 
$ „ Ornam = i 
use for many years without Paalis? youll 2 * 3 — 6 to 5 3 f do t English. Farmer has u 


i an e | defence of the Lothian i f straw: f 

2 steeped about 10 years since, proper ede of the the plan. Living „ Posy bi Le * men, ia the matter 0 e 
are still sound Aerie sail poy: 4 vk D k of mildew ee e i bart — T with the subject, no one is so that I might have staid at home and foun 
them, whi ely, e will kindly undertake it, to see the details fashi * 
being vith hem three days of bad weater, the oat successfully carried out 4 1 >; : 80 
ng ark and no one able ‘idee get to her during | homely details. 1 It tall Sense ae ive edie 1 dura 8 thatching, I would observe, that” 


th to imag 
yan’s solution. proper time. Three or four different kinds could be i 
put | becoming sl Pale ia all com 
: —- together, and thus the otherwise unmanageabl ; 5 
— Kahk ie Le n p pany (I think) in cluckers reduced. The eggs sent * be 3 e but we and 
1838, and wee e my tank at very le| marked in full with the nam e of the breed and the labourers, j 


ptoms of I ; N : are ad 
caused me to discontinue the use of coro. | the A grdi 1 iure with ag wa — be very bad judges of where their slovenliness is 
and e 3 


; ws, 

ed the What the 

d from a are the | stra: 

eae thee sive si not nearly cover oe oe | Sime breed under different names, and the same kind | labour Topon PANAS Tav ind an slacks tn 

. > Sai pret ie the whole | | hone, give ue aii ‘Beding, nin th in the new tered ata padia, will, I a pa to 50 quarters of Wheat each. T 
ttered abroad at present, said about 8 role 


* 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL 1 


ETE. 61 


wood,” | sa 


m 
~ 


him hundreds of 


ous for the growt th 
somewhat fam show 


cely a that oe 


f circumference hall 


Farmers are now-a-da, muc = 5 e 
improvement, — a hint is sufficien 

doubt that my tion that hundre 
aed Wek bene aia 


5 


ds Seas acres of | Bean 


sat hs 
. ystem 


sale ; this morning the same farmer 3 
what bull it m he could not think it 
| animal he had lately aeri so rapidly has ibe; young bull 
arda Bight yearlings I have which 
winter they are now luxuriating 
themselves pe in in a Se ; and bear breed into con- 
sideration I challenge the rev. gentleman or any other 
gentleman to show eight rep. 2 on one ee 
in napon dee that can bea m or equal them. 

r to remarks in pid previous Tetik O P. Fo i 
Piina Hall, Dartmoo 


Calendar of Operations. 


BERWICKSHIRE MERSE FARM, Aan — Since last report we 
have been ploughing Turnip land “uly sowing Wheat, ome, rer 
finish next week ; we shall then 
for Oats. We hav fin ished draining the old Grass land, aii 

and plough it again for 
nting green tor Turnips for seed, and 

yellow. 1 
d, — intend t to plant some 

p v we have also been picking 
he white eee that came from Sou ith 9 hen 
the 


We have aig pla 
ntend to pla some Swedes —— 


with 
he en shey 
We intend pulling and storing: ae 359 it Be wea- 
ave 22 acres to lift, in all about118 acres. J. B. 

N Farm, Jan. 15.—The g 
3 pet ek, amounting to 20° in 2t hours, has produced violent 
storms and rain, and caused a corres pondi ing uncertainty in 


a ... 
7 does milk which has vv hone properly, and 
rned, produce no 
ast ares weeks, The 


answered. 


hic ot an atom of butter ever 
ppears.—Beurre says, Perha you or one of your numerous 
Correspondents would solve the mystery how it is that fresh 
London is always exactly the's at 
of t i 


a but can scarcely believe this. 
CARROTS ow 3 cwt, of guano broadcast, harrow it gs 
and sow Ibs. of seed per acre in bf tie 18 inches apar 


CHARCOAL : 3 rer, S. It has | 
by gardeners, 


all t 

tend ed to ee, ana divide thst over the acres of our Turnip 

„break.“ The 
Co ows : J old Wurzel if you 
d it all 81 — the poor 
milk only now e bat case, we canno DN 
re must have been some ogg 
Fan BUILDINGS : . The mai 


nection in use; to arr 


winter, parton gere : 


oil the harn ness, — the sacks to 
; but heavens 7 f st it is advisable to let a 
age the utfalls 


=i wha . 
| labourer examine * a 
remove obstructions _whic 


coughs and 


a good one, our plans? 

frout us with 

See the answers in the past numbers 

0 ear. We must ‘aka the subject up again in the lead- 

ing section. 

ES: Quickthorn. Enrich the bed with manure: or bone- 

dust võti very probably answer a similar purpose, 

nets Lanps : Stercora. Apply 2 cwt. of guano, and 2 


superphosphate of lime, mixed with 10 or 12 car loads ot ve 


1 riding 
st, at 
mpe ede the water- 


* —— the fields several “ae of white Turnips 


have been led to believe pt they o 
to have 1 5 eaten before Christmas, and am of opinion that a 

small farm: uld prefer Swedes altogether, AE TENTED if 
he e requires any y for E pring use; but if he has n unable to 
obt ain i 


0 —Th nter months have 

725 fr eat jalatsi, 3 the excep- 

tion pt pa sey 1 . from the 2d t e Sth inst., 

which enabled the farmers to oa a quantity os mien carted 
I 


hith 


remarks in a la 
and I will notice them, eudeavouri 
more, and I think for the last — record my “tan, 
erits of 


In consequence | 


— — openness of the we r, farming work is in a state of 


getable mould, broadcast, per 0 towards the beginning of 
March. As for rices and tru worthy merchants, you must 


n Mess srs. Lawson recommend, for 

s, liable to * 3 stolonifera, 2 eS 

Festuca 2 ea, 3 ; Glyc fluitans, 5 lbs. ; 

tica, 5 Ibs, ; Phalaris arundinacea, 2 ibe; ; 2 2 
lbs. ; Lo otus major, 1 lb.; Poa pei ziba. An 
e water 6 Ibs. of common 


you 
Rye-grass, and add 6 or 8 Ibs. of mixed sae 2 — 
Guano pay auper phosphate of lime, 2 wt, of e 
vo be as good a 1 ime itself 
ould be a good thing to use; 80 or 100 1 els per acre in 
early spring, in the furm of a a compo: ost with vegetable e matter, 
D S 4 Constant Reader. A very good manure = 


Gilletts, of Stourbridge, or i e = 


+ 2; Barrett’, Keynslia um, Bath; 3, Attwood, Lewes 
Robino; Lisbur 
IRRIGATION : Jg7 preis ws. Of course :—all 8 irrigatedland 
has been drained in the first pine, not been well: 
— if irrigation chokes the 
: Northwood. The Dutch, we Friesland Oat, is a hardy 
variates wall e to E. e seedsmen 
PRESERVED 
that paragraph $ 
information ? 


and, according as the 
ves en ushes ae lime are a good thing to 
ase, 


. Delay was unavoidable, 

en roa sulphate of soda, md 
gave the 3 last week. e have used sulphate of 
copper, 2 quarts of water, and 3 Ib, E f the blue vitriol to every 
4 bushels of Wheat, 


arkets, 
COVENT GARDEN, hoy 275 
Pine-apples continue to 1 sufficient for the demand. 
Hothouse Grapes are scarce, Foreign prd **. isa well sup- 
plied. Pears consist of Beurré Rance, Kaster Beurre, Ne Plus 


Meuris, and Old Colmar, Apples arenot pe plen ntiful. Nuts 

in general are sufficient for the demand, — and 

Lemons are plentiful, Amongst Vegestien, Carrots and 

oe? are abundant and good; Cauliflowers sufficient for 
mand. Quantities ‘of 3 Cornwall Broccoli are 3 

rans Thursday. Asparagus, French Beans, Rhubarb, and 

Seakale are plentiful, _ France, Belgium, and Bolland — 


merits or h forwardness, — ploughing. * for Turnips is 
as to ti í system in question, mostly done, and ploughing for spring cor s briskly com- 
To enter practically upon the aher, I may state I ced, I am sorry to say the Wheat plant i T ee 
eee 17 inches d and 9 feet nan from: the slug, Eames gs alay, ioii, * nd where la te 
TJ) just returned | 0%", which was che case with a vat breadth this year, Wo 
7 e i el 140 head of stock of various kinds i AN | years past at the rate of 4 cwt. per acre, is almost a com plete 
uch proportionate o ort and cleanliness as my | cure for those things. Turnips, which are principally con- 
K po ent himself can possibly be e joying, even sumed by sheep upon the land in this county, are being eaten 
3 i surrounded with ible d . fast, and are advancing in price, old sheep being worth 64 per 
O z e very able drawing-room | head per week, and hogs in proportion ; the latter have done 
i vm Most fre y do I admit the imperious wall —_ two ‘months past: we have just got upwards of 600 
~ Necessity keeping ie clean and comfo 3 for upon Swedish Turnips, where they will contiuue until our 
i ' i eir state, the food spring fairs i in April, Notwithstanding the depressed state of 
is to a great exte h 2 a given the markets for farming produce, our labourers are pretty well 
teu lice wh extent | rown away. Aà wee I had employed and t good 5 per week being the regular 
Alles who are ace all t at ancies of a | wages for able oe men, and whem at piecework they a 
life visiting my cattle bo to si d earning fro . to 3s. per day. I am happy to say the bulk 
| never before witu A they of farmers in this county deprecate low wages. I am eatisfied, 
and if the é suca animal comfort aud delight, from f 2U years, they are equally as injurious to 
aay Tev, gentleman would lik put any queries | the loyer as the employed, as when low wages are given the 
; tg who reside in this county, he s masters have very little control over oe 2 5 Should the 
; privately | ve their . E N of farming produce continue, whi 8 reason 
remarked in my n ete hort 17 05 3 i think but i t will, 33 e “immense il be the me we ns 
much r a f „It is a System requir: ave La afraid it wil ene meg 
owu w. ere 1 hake of = Sage thie h ich bys th ts going o ht 2 b Pane case. tat still 
POE Na. irably : i cc . | of employ, whic ee not to be the ca: 
ionat gir” o wirage a t rho aa pta it is . t nce the frost we have had 4 m men a nd 8 
8 oa It. | boys 1 * eep; Im ut 300 
a oys cutting Turnips fo p; 
Nat gaye on this wild w ot i ogs, at which . they will 8 until 9 55 beep 
extensivel are sold. Our other labou r these next few weeks, will be 
Power to to produce y hi ‘4 fed ca cattle, but it is in 107 a gaged principally threshing- and delivering corn, draining, 
beef fed i in my gn testimony o n ener and | ploughing z for spring seed e a 
I will now give the rev. NGsHIRE CaRSE FARM, pa —During the past two 
ig-feeding t in * — the —— jai — 45 e changeable; we have 
Pig g tria the 
alias pits. had sudden thaws, mpanied with heavy rains and occa- 
the 8 th sional roed winds, which have entirely done s away | with the very 
severe f a somewnat 
Ibs., and on the 17th of | varied 8 . and we have now commenced, with three pairs 
res and 7 lbs 3 of — lea ploughing — Oats, and when Possible, 1 pafar 
3 that it. should be e expose —— as the soil is 
young Devon sow, 
here and fed | labour at seed-time ; also in ral we find that it secures as 


which 


i 


other salad aue ut for the demand. Mushrooms are 
Lah ome Cut e red Heaths, tan onl anes Christ- 
s Roses, Camellias, Gardenias, Fu chsias d Roses, ; 
ITS, 

1 per peck, 68 


RUT 
-apples, per 1b., 5s to 7s 


2s to 3s 


he prea to "a g, as she 
of the Pap 2 ia” 


the real 


Sa 
8 


him 

ak n. 22.— s here ch 
behind in not keeping a sufficient quantity of stock upon their 
farms, ao ncn pr of green crops is very much rg eg 
they gro the consequence is that they keep no 
stock in "thet winter, — harvest. When the 8 * Oats 
are off the ground, the land lieg 3 — winter, w yad 
lambs are taken in to keep at so per w * 
kept on eo stubble and Anne ‘half area through the 
winter, and then the land is ploughed up in the spring, and 
called a —— — net r * 3 or pm again, A crop 
of Swedes betw value to'the fasta they 
would create labour, Teed — oaii in the outa, and enrich 
the dung-heaps, J. B 


N oti —— to Corresponden 
ays SHIRE Cows : J M'K. You will have about 2 tons of green 
food csi all the year reed, re straw, au ta this will keep 
Ayrshire cows. would not purchase 
that 1 Me ay to begin with, but feat our way to the a num- 
ber. Phosphate of lime may be SS to cows in 1 nips, 


but not —Rothamsted, St. Alban 
ane SHEETS : Will Mr. B, Hunt favour us ‘with his hey a 
BUTTER ; EC will feel feel obliged by having the following 8 


* 


P. 248 
— kitchen, p. bsh., 3s to5s | Chestnuts, p. to 7s 
Pears, per doz., 2s to ts lee gy p.b 2208 to 228 
p. half sieve, 6s to 1 — Filb., p. 100 lbs.,60s to 1008 
Oranges, oz; — ta 1 100 lbs., 90s 10 150s 
= u, p. bsh., 128 s to 19s 


Lemons, per doz., Is to 28 
— per 100, 10s to 18s 
VEGETABLES. 

Cabbages, p. roe 3d to ls Bere p. doz. hands, Is to- 

„2s to 6s 


Savors, per g sa to ls e rnip, one — bet Is éd 
6. doz. bunches, 1s 6d Onions, p. bunch, 2d 
reer st 1245 is 
cauliflower, doz., 2sto6s pan ish, p. doz., Is 6d to 
B white p er bun., ls 6d | — panig P. hf. sieve, Is 6d 
to 3s 
— to 28 Shallots, per Ib., 4d to 8d 

Meld p. ht beaun * 0 Is 6d ` | Garlic, per Ib., 4d to 8d 
Potatoes, per ton, 6 60s to 180s | Arti erusalem, p. half 

per cwt., 5s to 9s sieve, Is to Is 6d 

per 7 2s 6d to 58 Lettuce. Cab. p. se. 4d to 6d 
T arnt ps, p. doz, bun.,1s to 23 — Cos, do., 9d to 1s s 
Red 4 per doz., 6d to ls Endive, per score, 1s to 
Horse R adish, p. bdl., latoés | Mushrooms, p. pottle, 6d to is 
Asparagus, p. 100, 2s to 7s Small Salads, p. pun., 2d to 3d 
Seakale, p. punnet, 9d to 2s nel, bunch, 2d to 34 
pepeg 3 — pe ede a i 6d | Savory, per bunch, 2d to 3d 
Fr Thyme, per — — i 
One — each, 2s to atere oz.vun.,6dtoId 
Leeks, per doz., 8d to Is Parsley, p. hf. seive, Is 6d to 2s 
Celery, p bundle, 6d to 1s 34 = p. bdle., Is to 1s 6d 
Carro! ta i dati. Dai, Be to5s | Marjoram, per bunch, 2d A 
Spinach p sieve, Is 6&dto2s (Mint, Ab Ei cs sa 


— 


ENGLISH TIMBER AND BARK.—Jaw. 27. 


gs 4 aa PLANK. piven Bosan. 
er Load. Per Foot Cube. | 
Oak * 0 Oto£8 10 Oe Gdn e 4 
2 . 3 0 0—7 0 92 6 
ihe 3 0 0—410 o, 
Beech... 210 0—310 % 6 
Lime 4 — 12 


r 
5 0 5 02 0 — 0 58 
Enzlish Bark is in great request, at a further advance; but 


the best samples of Coppice are bringing 20d, and Timber 181. 
Sedat B, om 


HAY.—Per — of 36 Trusses. 


Jan. 25, + | 
srw — — traps 63s 2 | Clover see see TOS to 988 | 
50 6 |New Clorer — — | 
ie i ed 60 | Straw 8 
New Hay . | J. COOPER, 
xD > Ma ARKET, Jan. 25, 
Prime Meadow Hy 3 5 — ccs eee a 608 to 846 
Inferior ditto ag 27 aE 
Mew Hay 2... — E 32 
‘Old Clover 90 96 ~ Josnua BAKER. 
Wurrrenarzt, Jan. 2 
Fine Old Hay... . ay pod Clover e e to —s 
Inferlor ditto... Inferior ditto... ... 
New Hay . — n oe 25 30 
old Clover... sa 88 98 


POTATOES, — SOUTHWARK, WATERSIDE, en 
The mittee r revalen 


Com — uther im 
winds our market bas _ sp — * — jed. ‘the last 2 552 


nigut, which bas on 2 quantity of warehoused 
tatoes to be cleared 3 15 — fo a — this —* # quota 


0 
tions :—York Regents, 1008. to 140s, ; stle and Stockte — 
to 


Dutch du, 504, to 706. — 4 aes — 


HOPS, Fata, Jan. 


al good and fine Hops continues brisk ; inferior ones are 
for, on speculation, ion the whole — market looks 


healthy, with ev ospect of advancing in pr 
Mid, and East ein Parohams P. ee 80s — ie 
ents p. ewt. 1 earling Ken 40 


K a 508 to 
Weald of Kents 40 — 70 | Yearling — * 40 — 5 
‘Sussex nk . 85 — 65 | Old Hoj and 5 * 20 — 35 


rt TELD, Mowoar, Tan. 2 allied 
1 Beasts is rather lar is exe 
‘dull, endl prices are the turn stg man the —— a 
— io very small, it is la: than the de —— We have a 
very slow trade at lower prices. * 3 — * 
— * bs. 4d. Pigs n demand at a 
rates. From Holland and ¢ — — have 132 5 
Zan Sheep, and 18 Calves ; 1600 Beasts 2 Norfolk and Suffolk, 
ster and Northampton ; 200 from Lincoln; and 


200 from Scotland, 
Per st. — & nu Perst.of8ibs—s d s d 
Best Bes t agg 3 10 to 4 2 
— 2 i. 10 % 4 2 Due bern 
0 
Beasts 4 


ek breds ... 4 4—4 8 Oies e 2 4 


—8 
y Pigs —5 4 
Beasts, 3128; Sheep and Lambs, 17,430 ; Calves, ; Pige, 160. 


THE AGRICULTURAL ee 8A 


DAY Jan. 20. 


have supply of Beasts, and consequen 
trade is more 1 quotations rem: 


ber of Sheep is — smali, so 


ves rfo 5 
; por — Milch Cows: * the home coanti v 
ots, Her Best 138 3 10 to 4 4 


D „ -osipe 


Ditto Sorn 
enh 9 


2 
— 5 
Bea sts, 710 Sone ie 1800; 0; Calves, 17 71; 1 140. 


An. 
pri cipal provincial 


* 
Tun eekly rom the 
markets heer little exception, — the value of grain 
e Wheat is reported 


as having a 


he 
better sale at Boston ; and Barley somewhat dearer at 
ats, Bea 


supply 0 of ‘English Wheat is about the average, 
to the consumption, For 
ry moderate, say 408 0 q 


H 


Wheat ; of Engish 52 25 1210 sacks. Ho Iders of 


with confidence to oe E of 
Man 


rice. — eans are — 
e 0 0 . — Malt sells idl ot former | 
ri m lour r. 


ee 


me 
have had — sup lies since 
esday, and some business in Wheat and Flour in bond at 
improving rates,” at Bol the —— 5 — 3 to — a pe 
wer 


8 


ull iow were given for ae 


wa 
A 3 Beans, and Peas were much th 
A* Hp t rather easier in price, with a fair de. 


Wheat sold. at 6s. 74. and fair 


1 Canal Flour, 268., and 


tly 
altered, a — 


7 wes & 2d quality 3 T 


ES, & 
Sar THOMAS BAKER, EEO Moun a 
FE EN 


PRICES Jan 19\Jan 293| Jan. 16. Jan, 23. 
ENT. ; 
qr. | qr. 70 lbs. 70 lbs. 


Wes rey ey ta Ay Sar 
New, red 4 6 6 7°06 6 7 
white .. 485252566 8 7 616 8 7 

Old, red . 
7 6.7597 8 7 

8 7 96 6 7 

bs. | 480lbs. 

qo 


Blac — 92 32 4 
Foreign 16—2316—19 2 42 6 
3 ü qr. qr. 
Peas—Boilers |23—31/28—31| 38s— 388 
Grinding... 2729 — 32 —33s | 32 —33s 
Foreign 36 —37 | 3537 


33 —35 | 33 —-35 


34 —36 
27 —34 | 27 —28 


London. Liverpool. 


— OArs. RTE. | BEANS, | Peas. 
31s 4d 18811d 29s 84| 34s 3d 398 3d 
31 418 429 1 33 7 38 1 
31 3 18 0 28 6 33 11 35 9 

17 0 26 4 32 437 9 
9 11 7 8 7 9 32 235 0 
20 1 17 1 28 4 Sl 134 9 
30 7 17 10 28 3 32 1136 6 
186 4 90 6 2 8312 6 
‘ Birmingham. 


Jan.24| Jan. 18. | Jan, 25. 


qr. 62 Ibs, 62 lbs. 


d. 
0 
6 
3 
9 
6| 


31s— 336 26—30|26— 
— 23—2 


e Ce . Obes ee a 
456 4 6 815 8 6 6 
486 2 6 816 2 6 8 
6 S 
50 — 5 10 6 9 

5 8 2 


qr. r. 
26—28 | 23—28 23—28 
0—32; 30—33 30—33 


20—25 1 8—30 
17—21 12 18—21 | 18—21 


11—18 a: — 


er. Impts. 
an. 13 Jan. 13 
A 


190lbs. | 190lbs. | B 
— 15—15 6| 15—15 6 | succes 
BURB: 


nu 
B RBIDGE 4 


y pz d 
ie ts of Prices de Lad imates forwarded, o 
PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK CROWN GLASS 61 
TILES and SLATES, WATER-PIPES, PROB PAGA: 
GLASSES, GLASS MILK PANS, PATENT P 
ORNAMENTAL ra GLASS, and GLAS 
to James HETLEY an » 35, So oho-square, London. 
See e the 7 first Saturday in 
FOR CONSER RVATORIES 
AMES PHILLIPS AnD CO., 116, See 
ithout, are Ibn ng SHEET T GLASS at t he following 
ee, Prices for Cash. 
HORTICULTURAL GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, 
CUT TO eax be TO 40 | PRICES gh SMALL nn y 


INCHES LONG. 8. 
16 oz, from 3d. to 4 per foot. Ra Ten sain of = feet, 11 
21 3} 4s 1 
26 „ 34 mi Ks 6 by 4 and . 
32 ” 4 ” ” 
R H PLATE GLASS for 


each os * bod Le 
e ee “inch Se 2 
GLASS DOMES EaR “a U GHTS, rden 15 to 50 5 
diameter. These are well worth notice. k 

GLASS MILK-PANS, PROPAGATING GLASSES, un * 
GLASSES. $ 
LACTOMETERS for trying the quality sp a 4 tube 
6 tubes 10s.; Hyacinth Glasses and Hya h Dishes; 
Glasses ; Shades for Ornaments ; $ Fih Ok Plate 
A Window € a Lamp Shades and Chimneys ; and every a 
in 

METAL HAND FRAMES, 
HARTLEY’S Ped EA n ae F 
E CROWN G 


REDUCTION IN PRICE OF BOILERS, _ 


m iI 


Pas fe Friend, Ta anp HEALY beg soneel = f 


of iron, they ar 88 to ‘make 3 considenible à ed 
e price o; of their gohen, The price will be, n 
10 in. 50 ft. 4 ine Sipo 21 
on . 4 in. do. oa 
14 in. „ LOOPY Hine do. Bie 
16 in. do. 150 ft. 4 in. do. 3 
18 in. do. 250 ft. 4 in. do. 4 
in. ie B00 Tt 2 in, l... 
24 in. do. 3 4 in. do * is 
New PATTERN BOILERS. : 

30 in, ge Poa 00 f 4 in. ips + aoe 
36 in. do. 0 ft. 4 in. do. .. . 25 
Boilers with donb arms, Sap! to 18 1 in., 55. 


All 
in., 10s. extra; all abo e, the same price 
130, Fleet-street, Lowden, Jan, 27. 
B'an enc AND — ie NEW BOILER 
isa of their seat (before 
arge 


are also extensively put pated: reat atthe Royal 
u an. 
BURBIDGE and kie 130, ftir London. 


Royal ere, anes Gardens, Kew, 
Horticultural Gardens, ies rti 
large Conservatory. 
al Botanic Gardens, I 


ks und 
8 werd at le: 1 
r and rut ts Important — pre 
ORCHIDEA GROWERS. 
axp HEALY, ‘150, F 


Houses. They h 
Royal atthe nder — oe 
z Gardens, Kew. 


ee hs. Se T 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE: 


63 


HIDS. 

for Sale b 
1 220 Gi STEVENS pa: ni fo A , Cov = 
e Eas 


oten 


d several other fine 
Grammatophyllum speciosum, 
distinct from 


Ccelogynes, &c.—May be viewed 
5 — ind Catalogues had. 
id LEMEN, AND NURSERYM EN. 


1 


the 
aR J.C STE 
M 


i and ad good ne 
ite a Sal Sale will be 1 in 


e chr 
3 Jan. 27. 


WERS, NURSERYMEN, FLORISTS, AND 
10 GRAPE GRO pu 


OR LET. w ith immediate possession, 
1 ratte en BUSINESS in the — ari Bie te 
best localities for such a pee “por w 
as ying fully open tot the 80 — — 2 
1 nya and west. * — of the premises 
mprise a series of 12 Forcing and Suc- 
3 Stove, 9 nd Plant houses, 
upwards of 8 feet of glass. | ¢ 
nal ar 


ery part of the 
If sold, a large amd of — porch ase aon one 
f M e, i o Mr. Par 
Auctioneer and Estate deca, 430, Mane Pathe, — 
4 BE LET, and entered ons at Michaelmas, 
a excellent FA t 117 deres 
no and 103 i acres of 
e Far 


good state of cultivation, and it is n t often —— a ame de- 
sirable estate is — to the > cl Fone to J. H. Cor- 
TERELI, Land Agen 
Mee Res CHEMICAL AND s 


's Academy, in 


Mensuration, Gauging, 
— 3 rsing, sy are pahuma by Lone- 
2 — 2 had of all Bookseller 

WN San the aile an be had on EE se either 


STOVES. 
RENHAM anv SONS e solicit yr 
D attention of Architects, Builders, and the Public 
g eed extensive stock 95 Air an — for 
reat 


Ron the POLMA ESE 
very efficient, and of very 
Cavendish-aquare, London. 


= 155 1. — Testimonials received from 
by this CEMENT to possess the rare pro 
petty of withstanding the severest frost, aud to be consequently 
to every other for hydraulic purposes, such as ogg 
of , Cisterns, Baths, Fish-ponds, 


a e. 
stering and ornamenta. al castings it requires neither 
neon = Er vegytates, and will carry from thre 


em 
2 Sons, Mifbank-street, 


3 HYDRAULIC perak, 
by Fare Strand 


need 41 0 Fountain Maker, 70, 
3 


OLMAISE.—The pepee ee of SMITA’S 
POLMAISE APPARATUS, with dom ea is now firm] 
eee oe late 2 weather having be 
its haine. p It is more sim 
equally a i 
i f. of any kind 1 — Manu- 
factured by Suirn and Co., Seed teuiiders, Eagl pean Lea- 
mington . Prices from 81. to 15d, ac ccording t ag 4 


WIRE ‘NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT, 


at ceil 
= L 


i a, 
10 8 rt 0 
. 


1100 
if iit a 


ll 


10% 1 0 6 
1 0 
P 1 ington 
100 10 a 
aural 0 0 0% ndj 
3 jll 10 


5 
arate 
BER 


150 


I 1005 


it 


e See NETTING, TWO-PENCE 
R SQ UARE FOOT.—This article requires no paint- 
the slightest action on 25 It 
lustre for many 
o be the cheapest 1 ever 
It . Pe meer cs light, and durable 
fence for the protection of Garden Shrubberies against 
the on here ons of hares 97 — — d cats; for Aviaries, 
Pheasantries, and to prevent . — from strayi ing, as well as 
for eane creeping plants, it answers admira y. 

Large quantities of the Netting — Aon in Stock, samples 
of which hat be forwarded (free i expen se) to any part of the 
United Kingdom. Prices as follo 
= inches wide 3a. pe Per me 30 inches wide 45 eer 1 


having 
ia Ai ap ppearance of silve 
— 3 is 8 . 
brought into the et. 


z 6d. 46 15. z 
nised do.'1 


"Galva foo 
Also Fe eae Fire eguards, Ti — Dish Corni pms Safes, 


Wire Blinds, Garden 8 ana arches, Flow r Stands, 
and every description of Wire 
THOMAS nt Hew Y Fox, 63, Snow_hill, — Mee 
NETTIN Gm 


Galvan 12 ED WIR WIRE GAME 
7d. per yard, 2 feet wide, 


a apanned 
Tron. 


Galvan- 
ized. 
7d. ee 5d. PT 

8} 6} 


2-inch mesh, light, 24-inch wide 
2-inch š 


„ Stron 
2-inch ,, extra Sironi n pa 4 » Dis: 
lj-inch „„ light pence oe » Ey 
18-inch ss oe 10 » 8 


r „ 

itis ch extr 14 11 
all the above ood — = ade any width at proportionate price 
If the upper half is a coarse mesh, „it will reduce the price car. 
fourth, Galvanized „ od 
per Square fuot, Patterns forwarded post. fre 

9 ed ae BARNARD and BISHOP, Market- N 
Nor w- and delivered ~ of expense in London, Pet 
borough, Hull, or Newcast 


HOR TICULTUR AL IMPROVEMENTS, 
D RE 


s 
the. pue that he has tak 
3 — the Valves of his 
Engines, Machines, and Syringes, which a aie ees o simple in 
construction and perfect in their action, that he will warrant 
ng the term of the Patent. May be 


Regent Cireus, Piccadilly, where they may be seen and proved. 
except stamped with the Royal Arms and 


h Mier 
eels ti 
ble Vado for the 7 he a Py ae =. 
apour toed all complete for 4l. 
PIPES AND 
Is, ——— RS, 


Patentee’ s name. 


tile seen mp and OT 
to the times and 


ery 
armer, 35 b us per acre, for II., bent equal to 10 loads of 
manure. The preparation is simple and cheap, and suitable 
oe seasons, soils, and crops : also showing how to fatten 


2 
t valuable mper ever odra 
with full —— for use, fog fie late . 
rist, Mr. * N, and others, and a Wit 455 
udso 


fear 10 pny 
ntry, by poh sore one shilling, or 12 postage 
8 prepaid, to Messrs. TAYLOR and Co., 


am, Air, or Water. 
. Dag supplied,— 


EYS CAUSED BY WIND, are 
Ex Wi pplication of DAY’S 
t WIND-GUARDS, which offer 
invention 


49, 5 street, Lisson- grove, London. 
MIGRATION, eee — Those pers 
friends in AUSTRALIA to assist — 


the oar 


— their 00 152 £ ‘might — — to their friends are to pay 25 
| — he would be 
0 


W. — LVER and Co. 
8 —.— 


al Journ — 
Bishopsgate-street (opposite a 


at No. 
London sy where 
colonial information may eke woes 
ved and forwarded to 


and small parcels 


received an the 

_ N.B.—Cadets to India, and “Cabin Passengers e gers in 

all parts of the globe (wi rien emale eater aod 
. — for * ted out as 5 


67, Cornhill, a 8. W. SILVER 8 
home use, and Contractors ; 
` (Liverpool, 


17 ORTANT ro FARMERS, ere i GAR- | 
DO 


che and 


STRONG einn HARE AND RABBIT PROOF 
WIRE NETTING 


65 1 


eee 
D. iene AND eae a 
W. anp C. YOUNG), 


MANUF A, OF IRON AND WIRE WORK, &e., 
CASTLE- BUILDINGS, Y-SQUARE, LIVERPOOL; 128, Brem- 
STREET, EDI INBURGH 2 75 32, ST NOCH „ GLASG 


Ame ge d one b t 

and As Plantations i is often s0 so 98 that in the course 2 
a year or two it 
‘protecting them w 
diprema 


o other me Ps gee — 
the ene facility, 3 er. 
Hares and Rabbits, it is of itself quite fuel 
be unrolled and attache d, w 
0⁸ ode 


abou 
s, peculiar ly ee oy ie 
or other —.— dee completel 
iou uch vermin mo 0 ‘ot cut up into coal 
pieces of three or 8 fee d, „it fini a most effi- 
cient guard, at lit ee fori ‘individual Plants and Shrubs, 
. — is in hi gh, 9d. ; sls 18. 3d.; and 


5 


36 ins., ls, Ed. i al yar 
Or a web of 100 — ae ins. wide, will e 3 15 0 
0. of 100 yards, 2 wide ST 0 
Do. of 100 yards, — ide . 6 5 0 
7 10 0 


of 100 yards, 36 1 ins. wits 
web is required, it would be charged 


‘thie N N Vetting i is “also admirably adapted 25 . e 
rg A 


Poultry- yards, and is char 
has, in m 


Do. 
if f more or less th 


grea 
strength oft their Premium Wire ‘Netting than 2 stating that 
the weight one 


reig n countries, 
5 and Ireland. 


rae TOWN, VAN DIEMEN’S 
ND. 
Mr. WX. e at Mr. Ro obert Westmacott’s, 
156, Cheapside, 


London. 
We th 1 Members of the Committee of the 
so aches rs and Amateurs’ reesei sos Society, be eg to tender 
ur best thanks to you for the two parcels of superior Flower 
Vegetable Seeds whieh you forwarded to this Colony in 
sie a 1846 and 7, to sÈ CHa roe aa 5 2 
eyo ee stow ed i g them for 


rof hé Australian — Pia you 
— 8 ad Proms may always depend on receiving 
pae — r Diemen's a 
e beg to rema r, yours most respectfully, 
F. Aiha Sec., J. Anderson, W Wm. Cato, Hy. a eon 
R, “meeps Jobn H Salisbury, John Moir, 
3 —— les &. — 


eee a 
[AND PR ND PROPRIETORS | possessing W 
Uncultivated sr under the En egg rar Act or Sheree, 
and wishing to have the same e Drai ned, Enclosed, Farmed, and 
8 Erected o 1 i 


may do 8, 
making, "aad every description of ground an work has 
formed, or the same superintended i gland, Ireland, Scot. 

nd, or Wales. For further N address WII. Hants, 
Surveyor and Contractor, Almod n, Chichester, Sussex. 


DY, of as respectability is desirous 
bli 2 herself in r Gentle man's 
e 


` 


f — peo Where the lady is an Invalid the advertiser 


0 
would be bas an acquisition.— Address to M. M., Post. peer ta 


UF per Baker-street, New-road. 


J ETCALFE’S A ALKALINE TOOTH-P OWDER 
yet 


M. a om the many years they h 

Tooth-brush Makaa have . ne (that occur to few) 

of testing the relative merits of thos: bee 

tt lah afore ey 8 
uring the r which the above 


4 ee pets no » 
Aen CURE OF F TIOR E COUGH, pria 


1 „ by Dr. 


— 3 me from one box Aeg ; ny, € 
. — Ear e. i J. Noble, Bookseller, 5 


and lungs, i td. 25. 94. * 
D. Sv ard Co., 1, Bride e-lane, F. 
by all medicine vendors, 


as ae FOREST TREES, &e 
; T LANTED 


Torma. N. — of that value. Jou GRIGOR and 


1 KITCHEN GARDEN SEEDS, of the newest 
description, can be obtained from 
WILLAN E. "E RENDLE and Co., . on the following 


— collect tai 20 quarts of 
2 80 ear pyr amaga iE gegrom Saa pie £. s. d. 


So sapply ... ae * — 210 0 
No. 2. collection, in smaller quantities 110 0 
No, 3.—Do. = z = : 
No. 4.—Do, 
complete List of of the 3 furnished ne pet 
collection can be obtained on a pplication 


FLOWER 'R SEEDS. nat a 
Web wiy very superior stock of all the newest kinds, = 
as som 5 the ‘choices varieties are grown under our 
* — warrant them to be quite new — 


on OF PRICES — POSTAGE FREE. 


No. 1.—100 kets, choice sorts, including au the best 
Hardy, 1 Half-hardy, and deen nhouse Annuals, #. d 
Biennials, and “nt aie <a peg 

No, 2.—-50 do. do. ee e e 

No. 3,—25 do. — on. ee © 

No. id a 

No. do. 

No. 6. -5 — cheice 1 imported à German Asters’ 

No. 7.—12 do. 

No, —1⁰ 3 choice named rem... Si a 

No. 9.— do. Hollyhocks .. ae 4 

No, gt pac ckets, e choic enhouse Annuals pN 

No. 1 2 —.— choice Greenhouse Perennials 1234 ) 

No. 1 niale 


ENT POSTAGE FR 
A complete 1057 Oe 5 ee furnished for each 
collection on ap 
99500158 * 
TENHAM SURPRIZE Cocumpen.— This variety 
all who purchased it last 
anag ioe the finest and 
kinds, 1 i por — free by post: 
bariton Hero 
Barne’s Man of Kent 
Roman Emperor 
Ca — Wonder, 
eg Flesh, Beechwood, Green 
— 1 Fle: 

3 * ALERT ——.— is undoubt- 
— 4 the and e tivation, and should be 
6d. 12 
aie „ All Orders * 2. will be delivered, free of 

k o any Station 
youth 


* 
or to any Town i 

blin, or e jA Steamers. 
The South Railway is now open to Plymouth (Laira 
Green), and we now oer — Communication t to all parts 
po pee breer pint and ager an rrangements with 
Mesar. as — è 

every Town in Great 

be im tely 

to see — a tomers are Tg 
Constan 
Glasgow, ee London, Falmouth, and most of the pri 


Core E. RN DIE and Co., Plymouth. 
— Unión- road, 


DRUMMOND. pis SONS, * and SEEDS- 
© MeN, Agricultural Museum, mg; ue for disposal 


y post, 
r, or 98. pf dozen; aud seeds at Is. per packet, or for 
per pair bo, Nurseries, 


GLOXINIA CARMINATA SPLENDENS. 
-ESSRS. RADDENBERRY, Lower a Cot- 
tage, Clifton, beg to inform all the a this — 


resting and beautiful tribe of plants, that they a: 

supply pond which has ban pronounced uy te several of 
best judges in speek md vag that has — 
been — i Flower t, and perfectly round; 
ground colour rich carmine, its 1 and distinct stripe 
of intense ca ; habit strong, and 
up its flowers, which 5 above the plant. It 
as obtained oo — has been ordered by the 

: men, beside: 

Messrs. Low and Co., Cl 8. Messrs. Backhouse and Son, 


apton. 
Messrs. Garraway and Co., 
Bristal. Mr. 


WORKS 


INTED FOR 
TAYLOR, WALTON, asp MABERLEY, 
28, UPPER GOWER-STREET, amp 27, IVY LANE, PAT 
NOSTER-ROW. 


Liebig’s Helsatohes - tite the Moti 
of the JUICES in the ANIMAL BODY. By JustUs 
LIEBIG, M.D., of Chemistry in the Univ 
Giesse _ Edited by wil. —— — -= 
fessor of 


This Work PRETA, be: 3 with th 
marke on the effects of evaporation ants, his o as 
to the a of the Potato Disease ; also a very — 

lan by a German, for the prot tection of the Potato plant 
— 1 


Liebig’s Chemistry, in its Application 


to AG n and PAYSIOLOGY. Fourth Edition, 
revised, s, Gd. T 


It is n say, that the publication of Pro- 
fessor Liebig’ I istry of Agriculture constitutes 
an era of p pesha importance in the history of Agricultural 
Science. Jts acceptance as a standard’ is unar ; for, 

aip i n ight 
the conclusions which are drawn fro 
vertible. We can truly —— that we have never risen from 
the perusal of a with a more 
the profound know — 9 — extensive reading, and . 
research of its author, and of the in vin cible power — 
9 ¢ un we 


gained from the present volame.”— Silliman’ s Journal, 


Liebig’s Animal Chemistry; or, Che- 
MISTRY in its APPLICATIONS to PHYSIOLOGY and 
1 Third Edition, — wholly re-written, 

(the first half of the work), 6s, 6d. cloth. 
I, to appear — 
“Under the a of animal reg of the nutrition of 


— Part 


le; 

consumption of — of the DN and use Of the non- 

nit: ss Me gp —— and pipe 7 larly of fat, and 
ati es of hea hse — 

cohol and fer Mont ted ars of the e 

volume of the po air by — diferent articles s “food + 

= lastly, —— rue fu fos tions * 

he origin, natu ure, and composit — er s, with the i 

a dre * * 

thet 3 the Bios will find such an 3 of ne 


appeared.“ Fron 
8 oe dics. 


“Se Chem 
Eighth Edition. i by ey We JUSTUS LIEBIG 
and GREGORY. 8 e o. 11. 1 


Editor's Advertiseme 


o Parts 
Part I. INORGA ANIC. CHEMISTRY. 15s. 
Part Il. ORGANIC CHEMISTRY. 15s. 
“ The present is, in short, the most complete and the 
most luminous system of Chemistry i toh the —— lan- 
guage ; and we know no one in F or Germa 


= 9 | 


4 


N 
„har, e stili to the T 
d two-year SEEDLING LARCH = a nde a guanti ot a 
— oo een which will be furnished on application, — 
kaldy, Jan. 27, 10 


Baad ERS. 
Th SUBSCRIB: has to offer the 
SEEDLING nr TREES, &c. 


h, I year perl s. 6d. | Gorse, 12 er 1 q 
„ 2 years 3 6 8 ar mis 1 * d 
Alders, bedded 2 yen, 6 0 | Hollies, 2 years” AS 3 if 
3 aa 5 6 | Oaks, 37 3 f 
Broo! 2 years 0 ” * 
Elm, eie. r * Evergree nieddi 6 | 
2y » 1yr., 28, t03 : 
2 — NTED FOREST AND — T 
Acacias, 5 to 6 ft. p. 100, ges Od. Ch re sow Spanish, 
Alders, 7 to 9 „ per 1000 
Ash, piat — — p. 1000, 25 0 Pathan Horse, 6 to 
3 8 feet, per 100 „ 
Risch, by tp. 1 4 
Elms, thet — 8 A here, : to 4 feet, 12s, per I 
5 to 6 feet, — rem $ 
” ” » H tos feet, 27 
s 8 to 10 feet, — — 


* ” 

6 10 to 12 feet, 803. 

i Hertfordshire, at the same prices sid 

n En — 3 to 5 * 455. per 1000 
t, 50s. 


to 
Eae pin Ser SNG, 3 to 4 feet, 20s. 

t. 40s, per 1000; 4 to 5 feet, 50s. per 1008 w 
Horubeam, 8 to 10 — — s. per 100 


Limes, red-twigge ony, 8 to 10 feet 70s. per 100 
77 0 to 12 feet, 100s, por 109 
Maple, 2 to 3 ft.. 25s. per 1000 ; 3 22s. 6d.; 6 to 8 ft . 
Norway, 8 to 10 fi t, 253. per 100 4 


per 
r 1000; 9 505. 4 
—— 3 5 to 7 feet, 405. per | 0 i 


V, 7 , 25s. per 100; ey A 358. 

Sycamores 3 70 1 25s. per 1000; 4 to 5 feet, 30s. per 1000 

Willo ows, 3 5 feet, 30s to € fous N 
TAL TREES AND SHRUBS, 


ORN 
Acacia 9 ‘several fine 


species, dwarfs, os, per 
standards, 12s. 
Ailanthus gland — S to ange 12s, per doz, 
Alt "n Spe e collection 


a fin s. per doz, 
Ash, 12 rts, amongst whiten are tne gold-barked, 
me behed a &e., 12s, i 
Beech, Fera-lea ved, 2 to eet, 9s. tiem J 
0z. ; 6 to 8 feet, Sant per coz. 
Kale 2to3 fi., 8s. per doz., 50s. per 100; 3 to 4 fl., It 
oz., 75s. per 100; 4to5 ft., 15s, per doz., 1005, p 
8 seer ag 188. per doz. 
Berbe il sorts, 63, per doz., 40s, per 100 
Birch, . 25s. per 100 8 A 
ms, fastigiata, cur! „ e., 125 
Thorns, 24 varieties, 5 new double scarlet, “dwarfs, l 
per doz., stan —— 
La s 


2 ts per doz,, 40s. per 6 
Li Mountain Ash, 7 to 6 ft., 
Maple, Eagle’s Claw — several choice kinds, 9s. E. doz, 
2 mes ne oo s 93 N pe 4 50s. p. 10 
N S, FAnn 2 8. 
cuba 2 1 2 be b fine, 50s per 160 
town 3 to 4 feet, fine, 30s. per 100 ; 3 2 to 3 feet, 
per 100; to 4 feet, fine, 1008. pe 
Cedar, Red, 2 10 8 feet, 88 stood r doz. ; 3 to 4 feet, 12s, 
Arbor-vitæ, Chinese, Itos feet, 93. per doz.; 25 to * pek — 4 
„Other | Ornamental pees es, Evergreens, &c., at similar . 


domes near rit” 


Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal, Jan. 1, 1847. 
Gregory’s Outlines or Chemis stry, ! for 


3 on of Seinas — 


Petzholdt's Lectures to Farmers on 


e 
AGRICULTURAL CHEMISTRY, P s Edition. . 
small Svo, 4s. 6d. sewed ; 58. cloth. 8 a 


The author does not overload his subject with 
srun, n Sraa edea Ma pay some such ap oy * 
the reader to ty and these he only which he Ne ought to be 
— acquainted with, a _—— ear and 
simple way. ” Gardeners’ C 


— R Ne e ar i ee — 
g 


at one-half the Original Price. Svo, 6s., 
edges. 
I. FIRST LESSONS IN SINGING AND he 
TION OF MUSIC, Price 1s, x 3 
II. RUDIMENTS OF THE pg ong 
OR THOROUGH BASS. Price 1 el kn yee 
III. THE FIRST CLASS bt apes 
pan oe Airs, arra 
Children. x 
IV. * SECOND CLASS TUNE-BOOK. Price ls, 6d. 
v. THE HYMN TUNE-BOOK. Price Is, êd. 
„ Any whe be 
The Exercises, Moral Songs 
be 
| aan Sa — 2 had, printed on 87 
+5 Tayo, ins and Maberley’s Catalogue 


separately, 
and Hymns, with 
Cards, "Pres fa, 4 — 


Catalogue will be sent by Pest | 


“Greet nee. 


Catal ‘be an 
Not les n6 will teu t the dozen ain at the 
dred — gone 500 at the thousand 97 For smaller quanti- 
ties aslight increase will be d 
N.B.—The wert 


RANSP) SORTS, e charges — for ready money. i 
in sizes, 1} to 3 feet 18a, to 27s. per 1000 the | Use of Student ente, By w LIAM GREGORY, M D., N Woop, Nurseries, Huntingdom 
1 0. 0. . to 183, Chem ee ay nthe Un 4.— of Edi h. Second 
ji 4 to 2} beet a „to 145. H 2 revised u Cones lete in 111 vol. feat „Near th 8 1 — ar ey bid aes 
Do. do. 5 125. to 166. „ 8vo. 128. cloth fo I. (INORGAN pume STRY) 5s. OHN WATER Poe 
—— F ** 9 x 18 inches 78. ps mae pis cloth, II. (ORGANIC CHEMISTRY), 7. ran Ai Ar BR R. begs. aa state that he T: pre 
— = s, 2 and 3 wn 95. to 105. Gd. oe “ This is beyond rison 170 to DODENDRONS. —.— trong “bushy plants, the 
Priced Lists, including Ley and Fruit Trees, can be — istry which has yet appeared. The directions for pre- 7 2 consist of clear and Whites, let, 
on application l Pho ursery. Grounds, consisting dë s pe 2 — are usually . ioe rosea D k Purple, Ros melee, &e., N to 
0 . e size an 
gravelly soil, paas hardy fibrous-rooted Trees, —— — price of this Tittle work, as well as its intrinsic merits, com- 1 elegans $ 
5 Hill and io. x planting. Orders above 5l. will be delivered 8 „ speciosum ae 
free at the principal oy of Britain and Ireland. mand it to every. student of Chemistry.” Lancet. Atrorubrum purpu- Perspicuum 
- (ARIGOR’S AQUILEGIA GLANDULOSA—The|Parnell’s Elements of Chemical ata | 
G new and o — So 855 11 out 2 Ay _ ANALYSIS, 1 IVE er QUAN l by the addition ae 888 nepe osum 
ace new and beau * w ` and enlarged tion sple Bellonum Glennyanum 
Linpcery, in in June last, saya: “ This 8 — 1 el Gloriosum 
og 7 y Perhaps, the handsomest hardy Lom th — vikat : The enlargement of the present edition is principally | Candentissimum 7 Macranthum 
aon st to 80 blossoms. We have a stati no now before “was p which, caused bs Agee — e —— —— Delle Variabile M —— 
p A ui N : > on a j 
; f'n = Jenny * iene, 3 expa — —— * ges tative analysis, and by the i tion r Eburneum Splendidum Mirandum 
31 inch e ca 8 r ip An portant processes for the analysis, or valuation of various | E i Russellianum 
shorter petals, the upper half of which cae 8 e aa —— pA ain — 0 1 
orter p if 3 „lead, an ae 8; ni Standard Rh 7 
on an az be effect is fal in treme ; "manares, ey — pons ork includ n ododendrons, 78. 6d., 15s., and 21s. each 


S, good mixed sorts, 18s, to 21s. dozen. 

K 1 Made in cultivation, 24s, to 30s. per SE ; 
2 . IA, handsome bushy 

er ditto, Is, 6d, to 2s. Pago sas opr 


fa tang iene F. 


er of 8 3 ii z 
Plow pemard Also the following, for 6A. 
5 | PONTICUM, the very be best Evergre? 
aniy p — 10 TY tE gm d fo, 14 10h 

8. , 15s. to 
3 The per 10, bushy, te pee 
COMMO aig ben baaki stat 105 pa lc. ; 
er 
55 EVERG 


ee Any 15 


Printed by WI 


sy i 
No. 


5 
2 
Garden, in the 
are to be 


GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
RICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


paper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3. 


[Price 64d. 


ze 


ä 959 2 44 


OHN KERN AN begs to say his LIST OF SEEDS 
will appear in this Paper on Saturday the 17th February. 
4, Great Russell-street, Divinit Garden, London, 


MELON GROWE RS. 
G’S NEW HYBRID PERSIAN "y 
rded First Prizes at all the Chiswick Shows of the 
of London last season, needs no further 


Freut 
9 Society o 
. Fleming’ 5 8 Hybrid Persian, 3 ameg 2 


Seymour's Golden Perfection 12 
From unknown correspondents post-office "orders or Aitado 


stamps can be sent to H. Lane & Son, Great Be rkha amp niona. 


TATON A 


UNDER THE ESPECIAL PATRONAGE OF 


HER MAJESTY THE. QUEEN, 


HE TRUE FASTOLPE RASPBERRY. —This 


„valuable and highly catenened g rrx, unequalled for 


Nobility, as well as having 
for it by = Lond — Hordcultural al Society. Packages contain 
g 100 e ; 50 ditto, 


Tartarian 


Bizarreau, Black Eagle, B 
May Duke, — 


Cireassian, 8 Purple Guigne, Florence, 
and Late Du 


UR’S CELERY. : 
E CHAMPION CELERY is 
te sort, and now sending out for 
a yE ‘and Son, Nurserymen, Great Berk- 
mi ite eam * per packet. 
> pa 


( ie PH ‘opie Pagal 

ROH FIRS, ALDER 
D ann SO Shine an immense 
above, fine trong plan meats, are L to 
it possible Prices will be fur- 


p sa 
ih only) of 3 Mr. Hensy 
„street, Covent ( Sh rene 


A 
correct as d pane „and 
s desc 
al garde en, Reference will be re — 


FUCHSIAS ak N 

m his feiende i in 
8 daran of the 
Prises every no 


s i ted stock of 1848 
17750 eee WURZEL. 
P CABBAGE.—PARSNIP. 


„ o. 
be forwarded on 


will be 
Maidstone, Kent, Feb. 3. appli- 


or a large garden 
(al ually choice) — 
en) 1 1 0 


TORIA RASPBERRIES.— | 
end the above as e to | 


— |e * 5 to 


ORNBEAMS, for Fencing or Underwood. — A 
rees of the above, from 1 to 4 feet 
= a beige , and from 5s. to 25s. = 1000. Carriage paid to weg? 
—Tnomas RIVEAS, Nurse s, Sawbridgeworth, Herts 
J. AITE’S Unrivalled 9 OF 
FL 75 R SEEDS is now ready, a ad on appli- 
cation. Seed — — 181, High —— London, Feb. 3. 
NION S 
* ons of White Spanish ONION SE . the h of 1848, 
e had in any — — at extraordinary low ator Prices 
and 5 likewise of 1 other kind of f Seeds can be had 
33 tod. 0. AITE, Seed Merchant, 181, High Hol- 
ndon 


EED.— Ten tons of Brown 3 and 5 


born 
NEY PE EAS. — EARLY BLUE UE SURPRISE, as 
— as the Early Frame, and flavour of the Knight's 
Marr 
FAIRBEARDS F BARLI CHAMPION OF ENGLAND.—A 
blue wri , fine flavours 


led n 
BURBIDGE’S ECLIPSE. —A pee blue marrow, 15 inches 
high. — 1 
Can be nad in es, — 85 prices to be had on appli- 
cation to J. G. Wart, “Seed  Ratdblishipent, Tal, High Holborn, 
Lo 


N 9 SEER Sys BR D S. —If yor 
wish SEEDS that will grow, a Ne, 
J. G. Warre’s Seed E Establishment, an Wah bee 
you can obtain every kind of Se eeds vorig of cultivation lower 


in price than auy other * 1 in the k 
181, High Holborn, Feb. 3 


nes, 15s, 
* arge White 8 3s. per dozen. 

FRUIT TREES, 

gg. the finest sorts of Peaches Neetarines, Apricots, 
Plum „ Cherries, Fears, pples, Gooseberries, and Currants, 
„ as obtained from the London Horti- 


cultural Society. 
Gia ant Asparagus, Fand 3 year eld, 2s. 6d. 2 2 E. 
Sea Kale, strong, ls. per ray 
Standard — finest sort es name, 12s. to 15s. per dozen, 
Tigridia conchiflora, fine owe ering bulbs, 62. — dozen. 
ANEMONE SEED. 


| Saved from the finest selected sorts, is now being sent o 
post, free, at 2s. 6d. and 5s, per 3 ufficient to sow she of 
12 and 24 yards.—Great Yarmouth Nur 


OSES FOR FORCING.— The “following ng select 
varieties are established = year in 6-inch pots fit for 
immediate forcing, 20s. per doz 
H 2 | "Melanie C 


Aubernon m, Jesse; ; meny others. 
Augustine a 
Baronne 1 1 
Clementine tae Celina 
a, of Sutherland Blush 
Duc de Aumale Malvina 
i 3 — 
La Reine Eci 
Lady Alice Peel Prolific ; Tid several others, 


Persian Yellow, Crimson Perpetu lio. some of the finest 


tual, a 
Tea-scented, sew and China Roses, established in 6-inch 
rice. congo paid te London. 3 
drinne worth, » Herts. 


| pots, at the above 
THOMAS Bivens, Nurseries, 


H and Tender An e 
18 papers, 5s. ; 36 ditto, 10s., free 8 Post. 
Also, Messrs. - Brown’ s New Oa AN 0 of 


K we or OF THE CABBAGES.— This Cabbage is 
by J. G ae E the best in ay very 

early, large size, and extra fine flavour; price 8s. per Ib 

a Evcablishment, 161, High Holborn, London. 


11 HEN GARDEN EEDS.— 
No. 1 1—A complete collection, consistin ot 20 quarts of 
t kinds of PEAS, inclusive of Fairbea s Champion of 


— or Burbidge’s Ecli 

of the —.— em 
the 

35 0 


— land, Ear! 
&., and all other Seeds ia pro 
sorts, sufficient for one year s crop 
choicest Melons pa — Sa 
No. 2.—Complete ection in smaller RRN 
equ: om: ¢ ard ete +. 2 


No. 
No. —Ditto, This i is sufficient ‘for a small gard 
acking ; carria aid to pete og 
A — Catalogue may be had; * ` List of each collection, 
SELECT FLOWER 8 
—— e of the ne 
— — 


25 
A — 1 Geenen "a importe 
„ 3d. cket, Sent postage 
scriptive Flower Seed hansr yg sent with each collec- 
tion ty og two post 
M JAMES Eres, N Mai — „Nest. 


1 MELON. 


R TILEY ost respectfully to — 
wh 


g flavour, m 
ra t oe most others do: it 


This superb felon is well adapted to small growers, being a 


prea — aud requires less heat than 
8, of 7 poste 2s. Gd. ; with also the 

6 seeds Is, Od. 

we i ee 


— po pt pal et 


) 
be included 


Walon. 1 
Sold by EDWARD TILEY at 
bridge, Sio e whole, 
free. Keen pet 


e $ apa erea y 


1 


Or an 
e mus an the or der; or the 


fae ug bow 


the above, 3 be sent 
Sha 


separate List wer and Vegetable Besdi he. 18 — ** 

had by post on 3 

met Nersery, Stoke Newington, London, Feb. 3. 

ELLS UNRIVALLED DAH 
piei MITCHELL begs 1 soe 172 AeA i end, 
170 1916 eee owing first class 

DA 28 zon e y 5 

ECLIPSE, $ “yl baat Social oa scarlet ia o tivation ; 
first el Bower; 
4 feet. 100 * 


SUSSEX HERO, en ee A noble and constant show 


— 
onstant and beautiful ‘show Rate ; 
cred ed PRINCE, Crimson.—Par ‘tially sent out last season, 
admired at all — Pale aye ae shows; 4 feet. 38. 6d. 
urseries, Maresfield, Sussex. y 


and m 
— N 


NTERS OF CEDRUS DEODa 


pwin sent tuitöus on 
eee ed urseries, Bristol 
KINGS ROAD, CHELBE 
8 OF 100,000 PLANTS, in i 
the highest state of cultivation, at less than half 
price. The choicest collection for the gry Greenhouse , Cou- 
of whic’ e Ericas, Camellia 0 


stamps.— 


variety, 


po WEEKS 


—— 


SEED. 


= 
— 
3 
2 
8 
g 
E 
B 


Swede and other Turnips, of 
per Catalogue 
and Sons, Reading, f Berksh 


Jovem 13 ITALIAN 
3 ; gy 3 T 
enablished Italian 5 


1 
. 


museen R078 
utifal an Flower 


at A. 0 oe 


66 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


OHN STEWART, Norseryman and MAN, 
Dundee, begs to return his thanks to * ont sepa Gen- 
a Public im general, who have favoured bim with 
mags 
1 


o inform 
LLIAM and 
Davip STEWART, as partne e had long experience ia 
the Nursery and Seed Tr ade, — that ha future the 
all its branches under the firm of Joun 


Srewa — Sow 

With — pe f the above, Jony Stewart & Sons, NORSERT- 

MEN and SEEDiMEN, Dundee, beg to — — that ay have | 
ko 


a clean and well grown stoc wo sage 8 PLANTS to dis- 
e of. The following will be sold cheap, ali fine plants, 
LARCH, 2 years transplanted from * fe 24 feet. 
SCOTCH “PI R, native, la —- 
SPRUCE, 2 — 


APLE, Norway, 4 to 5 feet, 8 2 * 15 
RIVET tto 2 feet. MOUNTA 6 to 8 feet 
PINUS M US. 2 7% —— 13 oot. 
WEYMOU PINE, Afo YEW, 9 to 12 inches. 


pple, Cu upressus 
ustr iaca, Pinns maritima, 
Pinus Mughus and pumilio, aleppica, altissima a, acutissima, 
Hamiltonii, Cedar of Lebanon, Cedrus De zis, Horn- 
om 1 5 r s aur 


— Yews, í Acacia, 
communications regarding prices, ‘Be. will be replied to in 
direct course of Post. —Dandee, Peb 3 


P 
—— t 


het Ao ata 3 
Contract ‘Planting, the laying out of grounds, and every 
branch of Landscape Gardening, negra in any part of the 
kingd wor in 2 ost approved manne d taste. 
All orders and praade rean — to W. H. Rourrs, 
130, High-street, Southam bpt on, will meet with prompt attention, 


LANTING SEASON. The present bein pg one of 
the most favourable months — * ome aeg ae H. Rocers 
ely-g grown Nursery Stoc — + 

Fruit 


ipti n 
* 


Mireugrles S ROYAL ALBERT RHUBARB 
ov + ot — sorts pong! 


oduced, it being from t eeks earlier than a 

ind now grown, It has dither “uation eminently entitled +. 

notice, It is most delicious in flavour, a splendid red colour, 
— prolific bearer, and free grower, "witht largë floshy stalks, 
and for early foretag is more suitable than any other variety. 
It has beer 8 y N all * pea —— coe: 
ing the London r » be b; the r introduce 
In . pe M. 
the f 
Birmin mer =, Live 
provincial towns, where it 


quality — beaut 8 g roots, 23. 6d., 
also Mya att's Linnæus, 23. 6d., and Victoria, 9d. ; usual 
88 to the trade.— Post office Ord ers made payable to 


Witttam MITCHELL, Enfield — Middlesex. 

(cucumber GROWERS s should not delay p 
chasing the teed of TILEY’S VICTORY OF BATH 

and GORDON’S WHITE SPINE, he — 

received numerous letters when th he seed wa 

It possesses the whole of the properties as laid d 

Glenny. Parties competing for the first prizes at: ‘the 


beth, 


| for improving old Grass Lands, 
r Ib. 


SEED “AND | 9 AL ESTABLISHMENT, | 


EEDS. — — oat "Vegetable, 4 
tural, and et Seeds, including all the Aegon ees _ 
superb vari may be obtained at the a 
blishment, ot the — genuine quality, at considerably 8 
rices, All orders prom ptly and carefully ted ; and, if 
above deli ivered-fre ithin 100 miles o ofS A 


Th 


203. 
en ap 


og > wi 
plieation, a. 
á Address, W. H. Rogrns, 130, High-street, Southampton, 


Q EEDS. — MEA AND PASTURE GRASS 
SE EUS, — mixtures suited to garias soie Ke, at 328. per d 

nere, allowing 2 bushels and 121 tions for 
sowing r —— will accompany — penn Mixed sorts 
ls. 3d. per lb. Fine sorts for 


forming Lawns, &c., 13. 4d. 


per 
* oe = GIBBS & Co. beg to notice that their Agricultural 
vee 


List, pua s, for the ensuing season is re: eii and will be 
forwa n applicati ou, u eee — Catalogue of Kitchen 
Garden — Flower Sceds.—A ORGE Sande and Co., 


26, Down-street, Piccadil 


ee — ont STREET. 
S GIBBS 
(By Oficial 712 — 3 to the 

s 3 13 2.4 ey tor oe OF ENGLAND,” 

ciety, and Agricalturists 
‘Bouse and Seed W 
-STREET, PICCA- 
ars. 

Priced Lists of l Se eds i are — ready during 
tl 1e season, and m 


Saenen; een to the Royal Agricultural oS gee of Bel- 
gium, &c. &e., ly, London 


GBEDS.— 2 — 


CHRONICLE. 


ONY FOR — the property ofa 
p about 12 hands high, dark roan Y of a prina a, 
and tail muzz “<j four black lege iach many 
some, in fact a perfect 3 5 n miniatur and 20 hand 
lady or child may ride or drive him m witha t 
A 5 C. N., James Phillips & Co.’s, 116 e 


street Without, who can spéak as to the qualities “yim 
Price 15 guineas of the ony, 


er sr ene (E EEE ee 
hie se Ae a l 2 Sha Hand row 

gi n stems stir t oo sae 
day. A —— ese — ie s ethe: 
— on Seeding, Stirring, and Hoeing, * ther wii Lee. | 
ying to Dr. N., Knole Park, Frant, n ear Tanke! 


Welle Kent. 
— 

URPLE-TOP SWEDISH TURNIP, Rea 

and White Globe Turnip Seeds, as also Lon e 
and Yellow Globe Mangold Wurzel Seeds to be a 40 
Mr. Ar 3 E, Long Sutton, Lincolnshire, v 

Mr. as long been a cultivator, and his stocks are M 
„ 


— a a 
8 FOR GENERAL AND SCLENTIRIc 


siS inapi with. regard 
— rena | 
— | 


Wickham Mark der the — 
metre branches are are en, 


į 


the Right tee ora endiesham M. P., and the Gentry. 
and Farm in — peo Conducted by 
Downes, The Classical a 


and 


LO 3 -POTS AND GARDE N SEATS. 
OHN ‘MORTLOCK, 250, Oxford-street, respeetfully 


> 


Agrie Other 
pursuits, at moderate terms. For pint iiae ‘onl to Mr. 0, 
Downes, Wickham Market, Woodbridge, Suffol 


d solicits an early inspection. 
are EARTHEN. 


articles 
Every LI Of useful CHINA, — “et 
T E'at the — = ossible © price, for 

0, Oxford. s ar Hyde-park, 


— — WATERING-FPOT.— An ingenious | f 
echanical ‘contrivance in watering ‘choice plants to 

— avoiding the unclean slop, disfigurement of foliage, and 

too frequent los of good plants, — —— the old method 

beds oi To be bad in all sizes, those at 7s, and 10s. 

are the most in use. London e Duncan Hains, Seed 
Merchant 109, St. Martin’s-lane ; or apply to H. Bowns, God- 


alming, 
N. B. Utility guaranteed. 


appointment) to her Majesty, begs to inform Amat 
bmg Pr: spee Scamp, and the public, that he has ate 
a NEW PATENT f j 


them tò keep in repair during t he term of the Pat tent. May be 

worked wo a the labour va bag other Pade te 5 

the e power. — Manufactured only by the Patentee, 
— piven, — where the may 05 seen waa — 


OR CONSERVATORIE 
PHILLIPS anv CO., 116, — * 


I y —.— Members of the 
Wenlock Farmers’ Club Two Bes 
GREEMENT BETWEEN LANDLORD AND TENANT; 
r heavy soils, — eor for 2 oils ; and ha 
à reference be * of bot h La nal 1 3 2 pe 
Con > 
have to tear, in m ind, fir rst, ho w the i terest, of. whe — 
can be secured, 93 good cultivation insured, without an dom. 


ARM AGREE 
POUNDS will be fiten 8 
r the 


3 of — N as to cropping. 
2, f the Tenant may be secured by birg 


F 


1 
a Scale of 
gs + 


HORTIC lin 
ICHARD READ, Instrument er (by eren 


of tha 2 

3. Aer A 7 bel 

ng the amount cof such Sorensen f 

4, Competitors will inclose their name and address ing 
— e wri 


, Wenlock, Salop, oh or telre the im 
onday i in Crab heit ’ Wenlock, Feb. 3. 


W LADY, of 2 . — —— 


‘ound an acquisition.— Addre 
ad. 


Upper r Baker-street, Newæo 


| james 
out, are roe ie g SHEET GLASS at the follow 
reduced Prices for Cas 
HORTICULTURAL GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, 
CUT TO SIZE UP TO 4 PRICES OF SMALL SHEET 


aes Cucumber Exhibitions in 1849 should procure the seed | INCHES LONG SQUARES, 
n time, 

„ has numerous letters by him which he has received, 16 ox, from 8d. to 1 per foot. —.— boxes of 100 feet. = d. 
authorising him to make use he names of the writers if re. 21 „ 37 10 é by — by so 
2 speaki hly of their appro erits of 26 7 K 1 à ake init 

e above Cucumbers over all ‘eke 32 94 ; — : 3 y 6 3 
5 ve aes 10 8 25 82 ROUGH PLATE GLASS for A 10 by 8: 520 x 

3. á r 
FAVOURITE (tseel, ¢ better known — the Syon na nearer, a er foo sizes uot exceeding 5 feet superficial, 
su 8k House a- winter aaah. 'pe oot se ohi — perfoot 2 0 

9 10 — 7 6d., or a packet of — shore ee Linch . Od. 

varieties, “ true old Syon Hotise can snpplied in Nins 

packets of 10 seeds at Is, 6d, * ust a pany i thick ii T ROUGH PLATE = 

the order, either in cash or penny postage stamps to the amount. 8 pr r Ée «each 1s, 7d, 

For further particulars, see Adve ent in this Paper of pap eS TE MSC» E OTE 0 


se 
Saturday December 16.— Sold at Epwarp TILEY’S — Seed 
Shop, 16, Pulteney Bridge, Bath. 


NEW AND SPLENDID 3 DARLIAS for 1849, 
Plants of which will be ready, strong healthy, first we 


Treck 


9 DOMES for SKYLIGHTS 


„n 15 to 50 inches in 
ameter. These are well worth not A 

1 17 8 ILK-PANS, PROPAGATING GLASSES, anD BEE 

LACTOMETERS for 


the q 
ont 108. ; ; Hyacinth bade 


ality of Milk, 4 tubes 7s: 6d., 


RAY, ORMSON, AND BROWN,” Danvers: 
Chelsea, solicit the ‘attention — — — Nobility, 
peri of E 


in May. asses and Hyacinth Dishes: Crocus | Gardeners, to their su recting and Heating 
HOMAS BARNES (m Manager, and now Q = Fish Globes; Plate and | eve — of B din ra — with Horticultur 
Successor, to the late Jy, ropa dhe Girling) * great Window Gla Glass ; Lamp Shades and d Chim mneys; ry article | — ne by them at the Right Hon, the Earl of Kil k 
ciation — 8 8 — —.— 2 any of METAL HAND FRAMES, — hich they his vai — = . 0 5 — — 50 alc. — ies 
which have gained first-class © cates at the open Dahlia nues ction. Mr. 
Shows, and have been favourably noticed in the var ives gulon oe ets TENS CER. gael tn. ai to show the v or and give ne ation, the 
ing periodicals, viz.— Queen e East, Fe s, Madonna, . ͤ—— ea refer to the houses built y th md 
Confidence, Dauntless, an Mulberry; in the Show Class ; with UANO e THAN EVE t season, for the Worship othecaries’ Company of bbc, 
Keepsake,’ Forget-mé.not, Discount, Contributor, Honey. porrer’s ‘GUANO is now 7/ peton, and of su in thes Botanie Care: as Che 
moon, d Can te, — ‘the Fancy Class. a i quality, owin danas 1 è Fiiss pe- | Curator, will kindly show the work, an swer 21 eng 
Descriptive Catalogues of the above, in g general col- mode 8 ahead — Tr — 1 to say the building only is referred to, 45 
lection of Dahlias, Fuchsias, Seedling ditto, Petunins, Seedling haf uea node Of manuf ual to the best Peruvian Guano and Heating Apparatus was not ea py Hen 
ditto, Verbenas, Seedling ditto, Phloxes, ditto, Mis. — yeg nial 15 ano, and | Gray, Orson, and Brown have also the honour of referit | 
ne planta, e. o., iu may be stad on 3 enclos- | a specifi arrangement may ap asin 1 is taken to many of th the nobility and gentry in the country, an nd toser 
g post age st mps; utal er patrons to establish 0 e midon Nurse es. 
ment at well receive one in due — -YPSUM (Great Reduction i in PHON offered at N.B. Plans and Estimates furnished free. 
yor ont > — | ti nas en analysed by tyes Fars Ais AN proncunesd | (V ALY ae NETTING: 
ast season, at low prices, Odair of which may be inent chemist, an . — need IZ mE 
had on fons ay pure.—W. H. Porter, 28, eee ad Place, Kennington, — GALVAN AN a 0 eee : a 
necroft Nurseries, Stowmarket, Feb. 3, 1849. j ORTLAND CEMENT.—Testim 5 f | 
OHN CATTELL, Nursery and Srensman, Wester- b 
J ham, Kent, begs to inform his Friends and the Public that peyton oe h — t, and to be consequently 
his selected collection of VEGETABLE SEEDS is now ready | and lining of Reservoivs, Oornag purposes, such ding 
to be sent out, consisting of his inrprovity- and enn nes — , Cisterns, Baths, Fish-ponds, & e. For 
the best of others, and generally own saving. All orders 8 — —— — 
N ere will be executed ao — iaus — and to four — its Bbc body of san £ 
£ 
may be a — n application, by inclosing a penny éti — pr 8 ter, 3 Waves — ed 
aes te + Barnes Cabbage n — be — 
e ae emcees | Monnaie, ee rei PS am 
J. pA e — a g e Stock o f the ene ready for DISTILLERS. FIRE. ENGINES, GAS COMPANIES, GAR 4 
ee 3 e fay aria, Kentish H 18. Gd. each, 2 AND AGRICULTURAL PUR POSES, : 
1 pinne plant i K leeolarias— T HE PATENT VULCANISED INDIA- RUBBER i 
Master Professor Lindley, Standishii, T, and — wit “OSE PIPES reece ha: gus stiff i — a acl ized yd 
te . 6d, ; te any temperat . 
ls. Oh anand steed Ud 55 2 8 r — 228 — flexible), — — pE e -a sight, 24-inch wide 13 * À 
florum x 0 ssing, — for Fi „ * 
25. 6d, each ; this’ is 8 “<i 8 th g a engines, Pum — Beer- engines, Gardens, an all purposes | 1 — » ana strong » a n » : 5 
of a deeper shape, and very dwarf en n — where a perfectly flexible p ipe in toqulred. Made all sizes from | } JACS , light 8 2 
Fine healthy > thio Seas mpac oi +e bore 8 and o to or » stron ng j 1 1 
cya . CCT C 
wering plants, 7s. 6d, each, ard and Dwarf 8 Fiete - Ah Binge rege I aiove can be made any width at pr mt 
een fine, a C 1725 Vater date — —.— —Sole Manufacturer, James chin aith. "San half is a coarse mesh, it will reduce 
Ing : = 2 atalogue of which may be had ere TNE lente, — 5 Mews, Washers ofa . don. pr see — > 22 arrow-proot pio for phe: beste 
re N ref rubber ers of a; — J rns forwarde st- 
re quired, — Westerham. Kani CiN D Te rpa. of Hot. water and Stoam i Pipes, and V B Joints Manufactured by BARNARD and ‘BISHOP, Market 
any thickness, for all kinds of Joints, and her p purposes, Norwich, and delivered free of expense in London, 
borough, Hull, or Newcastle, 


] THE 


GARDENERS’ 


‘CHRONICLE. 


67 


j 2 


EDS. 
‘ cael Cet including Thurston’s Reliance, E s. d. 
2 Rival, Fairbeard’s Surprise, British 
, and other fine Peas, 20 quarts in all, and all 
‘ Ee, best and newest kinds, in 
y for S 
same Colleton, i in -T quantities 
Do, 
R suitable for a sy 
88 oom: —— ifi required, 
ECT FLOWER S 


EEDS. 
Freeby im l directions for sowing, heights, ns 4 
1: 


100 varieties b best and newest Annuals 
50 varieties for 83. 55 en a 6d., 20 for 
N varieties best dw n larger packets, suited 
for ash êd., 55 = — 
20 varieties tet Greenhouse ‘Annuals, 12 for 
0 varieties choice Greenhouse . 13 6d., 12 for 
0 vars. choice hardy Beonialy an and Perennia ls, 7s, d., 


0 


5 
4 
5 
5 
7 
2 5 
5 


acoace cos 


iditto, 3s.. ‘Gd. 12 for : 2 
orders are requested from unknown corre- 
e free to een and with all orders 

a. Post. office orders 


Remittances with 
oi ands 
3 * pet biralak EEr Seed and 


$ Fortra udbury, Suffol 
a Chronicle, 


SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1849. 


_ MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING = 


carriag 
articl i * ented e 
and Bnowx 


Chemical ; x 
5- e „ 8 72 
8 N. 
9 1 ness cn ecs rosis 8 na 
Linnean ......,. „66% 2 6 65 8 PM 
PCi b 8 PF 
8 P.M. 


Lh eee 


8 Sine 


$ to some undoubted a 
an general facts 5 


the first — . Under this 
ed all those warty known in the 
cotland as 


ar 1845, it 
remarkable fact that Iris 
escaped the 


99 . or marled, or 
e, or art on tes: i 


92 


that early period, attention | 


ouring crops; it was, 
is ae “halt and | Man 


a similar ee, as is en by the following 


we 


of the apparent exceptio 
On Trafford Moss, near b r, Mr. Fonsxrn 
ee and 

1841 was planted on the 16th Ma ay with whole 
Radieal Potatoes in drills, e de with 8 


very pla sam 

ical Potatoes, planted on ri 30th May, o on la 25 

reclaimed i in 1847 and not marled, and manured in 

the same manner produced per acre 46 ary sani 
and 1 load diseased. 

Mr. 3 3 eae reports rop Scrooby, 

e that on common land,“ of a 

t peaty“ nature, almost all Big: bad, 

planted in 18 middle of Ma n har rdly 


The follo owing cases seem to explain the history | 


marled in | we 


ay. 
e called a case of peat-land, even if the en of 
— planting were not taken 2 8 5 acco 
LD Moncr 


EFF, Baili lif at Orwell | 


. eee — * ear, There we hay ` escapes against 5 
i . * — N and SEEDS comparison of reported ca o-called failures: but of t — failures E 
p xin eee E 3 Tr e ee e arded as r titi a ay 
1 solicits he The sorts are very early and pro- Suffered much. aa little,| Escaped, 5 epetitions, and are referable to the 
i r OES for Seed. general 92 jsfaction to Potato growers effect of clay, 2 are cases of liming or mar ling, 
‘Breet es are offered at the following 1845 0 0 5 and ] is altogether doubtful. 
imal part of e, Pe bushel of 56 Ibs, 1846 2 1 11 s to the action of peat on the Potato, and the 
‘prices, soene pariy Od P a. Od. 1847 0 0 4 cause of so general an exemption of the 
ow 2 5 ò 1848 1 2 13 planted in it when pure, that is a question which 
Early Hen Fran 7 6 0 ay be hereafter discussed the prese 
e a o ni = me 0 wo 3 ra sufficient to add to these remarks the further fact 
penjal e end Spring aw It would thus seem that, in the published r reports T seal A ag 5 75 2 — a 
“Second ear y sorts, Per bushel gs iba.: LSF peat cases, not mo e than 1 case in 12 suffered | "UTC t seems to act . 
e Potatoes madh ig ury. servative; for there will at found among the returns 
re, 4 ° ‘i e returns now before us seem to indicate that homa allude . . 2 * of * ard 
: ances of escape 
| . ceipiofa 3 Onder, this is a general rule. The following numbers show ; i 
gece tree n to ensure their safe delivery. A how the fact stood in the United Kingdom i in 1848. in England, and 15 in Ireland, with no ex ple of 
eee een 7 8 5 failure in England or Scotland, 4 in Ireland, and 
7 „ Seedsman, Wisbeach, — aieri much. f. ‘Suffered ittle.| Escaped, | Lin Wales. The cases are perhaps not worth much 
, EY POTATOES.—The above . it seems desirable to point them out, especially as 
8 8 KIDN teh ret ope tee ee dant iat á n 17 10 the losses in England are very great where farm-yard 
pit pata itely superior to the Ash- Scotland ... 6 25 manure alone been — This question we 
Taking; it has 2 etry less from the disease than Ireland 2 24 13 shall however pursue en the effect of manure 
N. Woop and Sox, having 8 — by few be id Wales 2,2. 0 0 1 comes under special conser ion 
ave muc easure 1 T 
site per bushel, 4 T remittance will be expected from the — i — as à second point, 
Sent i „ a7 51 proved by the evden, that » RE WELL DRAINED 
Woodlands Nursery, Maresfield, near Uckfield, Sussex. So that scoring to the returns which me mentioned 2 — r 
peat hog 1 820 at more then TERE x Te wen week heavy land wil come under exa- 
ASS axp BROWN'S DESCRIPTIV 4 A e much injury. or it hin be put thus; out of 679 | minati en ee FS 
Me beg ler the for iar ng a Re Ba) tiud Wany English returns we e 5 cases in seh eat bog article headed 2 v, Gardeners, which appeared in 
was much diseased ; ca of 182 Scotch we have 0; our first a maari palaran „ 
out oe 2 Irish we 1 8 2; and out of 32 Welsh Sodi a in a 5 At 8 W pi 


“id are 

perfectly unable to imagine what. few 3 on page abject 

ve been ished by us, or ate aea * e ion; but 

wre have bo "fancy for r lending ou colum s 
bli 


ion 


N our peon i the attempts bisa a OF 
N Corr d that the 


most famous for its 
muslins, much Cotton was imported by the Ganges. 
orta- 


Mr. Taytor , in 1788, that the first impo 


tions took plae 1783, previously to which Daeca 
had been — from Surat. In 1799, we le 

that the weavers of Bengal depended upon the im- 
portations fro . for or ighths of 
the Cotton which they required. In 1802, of the 
450, 000 maunds (at 96 Ibs. ), 180, ,000 Wee ty te 
from the Decca 270,000 from 


ugu 
a question whether it would zam p Eome 


well drained newly broken Y peat escap als 
15 sim ma A in Kendall, in the possession of 


Of the, fas Irish exceptions, one 3 mentioned by 
C 


OOKSHANK, ‘of 


next, on t ecently 
The other is that of Sir J 


e N 
It ma at 

pure peat ee in Ireland is 
assume: beeau 
55 suffered greatly; against this, 


eat as we 
ow- 
parts o 
Potato — 3 to N 
And 


eircum contine our attention to 
err one, the instances of -diseased peat land 


„General Briees, as 
ose | ex — —— commenced in 


‘the Chinese Loquat, the Strawberry, 
the rag hg si well drained 


many ponent 8 retum “ all | in 


ERRATUM.—Miss Winmor SITWELL begs to correct a mis- 


to our own 


erring 
ny ce haye been mentioned of 


8 her ee report of Potato cultivation, in the 4th | 


the ede omits, r Bedford réad 
tter being the eu: 
2 ood, Quorndon near y 


a “ plent 1 2 Lier Etawah, and of Bundlecund, and of the vicinity of 
half diseased, “including all the largest and finest.” | Jaloun and Jhansee, and of other Mahratta states 
Here, agai can hardly be called pe immediately to thetw. rd of the Jum The 
moss, and it Ww largely limed, the effect of which porte Go yan 20 e for the manufac- 
is to dest the peculiar quality of peat. e | turers of Benares, of Behar, and of Bengal. 
planting did not take place till the first week in When the se a of the dierent 8 was 
ay. Mr. ONCRIEFE. also remarks, what must not es ape t, an effects of 
be overlooked, t ail. of climate in modifying the — and the 
attacked in the beginning of July, his peatland. crop Benes gn se staple of Cotton were “al most un- 
| was not seized till the beginn ning of Aug It | kno n, ot surprising t was found 


e found favourable for the growth o 


n aa eee have been considered equally so pri 
the Induce 
©} dou 


culture of the merican 
bt, 
banks of the 


tural Society of India, 
oceeding to detail the results of 8 
spring in 


inter, sho 
Wapak pe known in Europe com 
as the Apple, Pear, Peach, and Plum, together with 


— 
8 


ever, may be the very 2 —— of an unclouded es a and a —— 
ny of tha aa country; so bi mln 50 wind. The maximum of te been range 
under a 


‘aa 

often fall in sesso a ally continuing a 
middle of September. mone quantity varies in 

5 in different 


Bie ae Chiefly eat ealivated in in | 
near Derbi, Jan J 


most 1 
ears. A reduction o P temperaturo tak plaoo, but 


68 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
it is still though more equable. The Mango the middle of January, but the weather is, upon the ı for the American Cotton plant. But in D 
ripens de accession of ‘the rains, and Rice, whole, mild an — with occasional aas an 4 of moisture, there was overluxurianee , ' 
with other grains is cultivated. In October the | a few showers about Christmas, but it is well calcu- fr 
sky is clear, = sun t and powerful, and eva- lated for o culture of Wheat, Barley, and other | water, there is extreme dryness, and the plants are 

e surface of und and of European-like crops. We adduce the means of the | burne dup. This can 8 counteracted apparently 
plants „en But during the clear nights radia- eee for a few places, and instead of Delhi only by a supply of moisture from rivers, canals @ 
“| lhi canal, 10 miles 8 a for early —— before the rains can | 


i copious dew | give that of a place on the De 
deposited. The cold increases until about to the north of that capital. , or at their conclusion, to make up for the in. 


— Citas E Ome 
TOUJER 


Mean 
April. May = July. Aug. Sept. | Oct. | Nov. | Dec. | of ON CONCRETING FRUIT-TREE BORDERS, 


Year. 


5 51 | 94.85 | 90.28 | 85.71 | 85.72 | 85.99 | 81.49 | 72.13 | 63.45 | 80.26 readers for information res 4 f 
2 ; 03 | 78.95 | 75.2 A 21 ‘ concre 
£8.55 | 96. 5 91.23 | 86.65 | 87. 4 | 85.03 | 78.95 | 75.25 | 67. 5 | 80 ‘tree borders, I beg leave to reply to their sage 
75.08 | 82.59 | 87.75 | 88 61 | 88.90 | 77.83 | 72.32 | 60.26 | 49.35 | 71.70 | through the medium of the Chronicle, as by this mame i 
jo. | Se 5 88. | 86.75 | 85.25/78. | 74. | 64.75 | 56. 5 | 73.58 | others who may feel interested in the matter, will be 
i 


3a 81. 86. |as. |se | 78.5173. 5|57. |56. 5| 70.65 a ved the trouble of further enquiry. 
ng the most southern of these localities, their proceedings, some of them shot as the staple| I prepare the borders by thoroughly draining the | 
subsoil, — by forming the bottom ee . from 


Taki 
Benares, we find Mr. Duxcax, in 1788, stating that | of the indigenous Cotton, and others lengthy as 
the best kind of native Cotton, called tarreah, was —— it has been spun into yarn. 1 r in the house a oe oe 3 drain in front of the 
sown by itself in the month of August, in a good November of — first year) ‘complai ain of the late- * n gus bree! o ultimately pre On 
rich soil, a little elevated and near a well, for about | nes th son (Apri May) before they ety ty eee ee one 5 feet a 
beginni ber ots begin to water | were settled in ** farms ; aie of the smallness of through the front 2 eid ee 1 nike 1 
it once in every four or five , and continue | the bulloc w st supplied them. But py bringing up chimneys at the extreme oints 125 
d qr till the capsules ar in March or April. | they thought favourably of land. Mr. FINNIE | drain, a current of air is produced, which 5 a 
Mr. Vincent, in 1831, stated that in the district of | writes,“ I think, from the appearance of the land,| the border and communicates with t e 
Allahabad, which begins about 50 miles to the west that cae can be e ced in abundance ;” a h Over each air drain som n rubble, 
stone, or other coarse material, is laid in the form of a 
een and over these ridges is laid the 


the 
of Benares, the ryots sow their Cotton immediately | Mr. Mercer, “ There is no question that the soil of 
after the first heavy showers in June or July; irri this part of "the — is excellently suited for | ridge 
gation is seldom necessary, and never before the | Cotton.” But in the season they were singularly | Compost which forms the border. In forming the 
end of September. Some prefer sowing in May, | unfortunate ; the rainy season, which usually con- ga, : 
and — 7 alee setin, The 7 Ís | tinues for thre e months, not having 3 alto- Possible, and to lay the largest pieces nearest to the 
+0 tton to the begah of 160 | gether be — six weeks. With Mr. Finnie the ; i the ‘ai 
feet square, and the crop is not so subject to failure frst shower fell on the 24th of June, but he ‘had no paren — . e hoy’ a i 
as the in crop in general. Mr. Bruce, of Calpee, | rain from the of August to the 10th of Septem- aes 38 p på air g ale py has 
which rt n the S.W. bank of the Jumna, and about 1 7 75 Mr. Mencer had a sprinkle of rain on the s. — aay concreted roof. damde, 
p n account, in | 9th of June, but no proper rains until the 24th of 
1836, of the different kinds of soil in Bundlecund, | July, though it had — . wen a ee all | for lasing go e de sail U 
and stated that, in the best black soils, upwards of round him, but then the try ed. 2 dry state. ur mixture consists of om 
700 Ibs. are obtained from the begah of 18,225 Daring August, en = Th pet sthof — part (by ) of lime, and Ppi parts of fine gravel 
square feet; but, on the average, about 2 that the rain was almost i ssant, but on the 11th the | With as much water as will bring the whole to the con. 
quantity. The — is invariably sown at the weather became hens he sun looked down |®stence of mortar ; when thoroughly incorporated, itis 
beginning of the rains, and begins to be 8 with the fiercest glare, * a hot dry wind, almost Wheeled ee the border, a 
about ember or October. He also states that | like that of June, sprang up from the west.” The 14 inch in shiekaete.; the ankaa should: be. mady aaa 
very often the crops cultivated with the Cotton | surface of EE earth ag hard and bilad; the VVV 
more than pay for the land- rent and labour of the | leaves began to wither as if s ed by fire, and per oif. oped ok Soars tert onse Z 
tn m cultivation. a 88 statements refer to native the bolls or bert capsules 8 falling in showers. ee tance 8 We n ere 
otton, we must that, previous to this period, | Of these, Mr. M. I never sa 
American Cotton had been cultivated still l further abundance or more healthy: looking on tin f kiia liable P 8 red in 2 — 3 ii — icf 
é the no r rth by Dr. Rovte at Saharunpore, and by | same size.” After the lst Oct ober the weather | should be spread over ft as a prote Sea tn ee The 
olonel Corvin’ in several villages along the Delhi baina a little cures at night, = after the 10th | border pein its supply of moisture from below, by 
The Georgian Cotton had, moreover, been | the air somewhat damper. The u nblighted leaves | capillary at action, and this action takes place to the 
cultivated ee at Allahabad and at Delhi: we have | of the Cotton pote a lively look, and the plant 8 extent in = hottest 3 be its dan 
ni the Deyra Doon; but that the diffi- | afterwards began to revive, hd’ the ugh slowiy, to CC 
—— experien there were ‘those of over-luxu- put forth fresh leaves. Mr. M. adds, “if I can get bengal tuis, PS find the roots most. beautifully nel 
* Se the moisture of the soil | a rain, I yet have hopes of finding a very fair sets 3 va ee ee 9 
and parere esin in that Himalayan valley during the | from what I have planted ;” also that «the Cotto ef Ae 
1 ene Tolo 5 “e * l as i its eee being its first year in a I find it an ation of the eonerete the floor of 2 er, 
N — ea rectors of the foreign | and, as a hardy dro ate plant, in | as well as its surface ; for it is necessary to pirata 
pany ans of Captai n | having surviv ved such weather all; and I am roots from d i 
Do whom they had N dispatched to that with anvth stiff clay. a 5 subsoil, — 
Apmis 1 ree N W N a oath — este as usual in this count ry, thee s, rains | Close proximity of a river, Wherever the same natural 
e eee * cessful | followe by heady dews and cool 4 that the | isadvantages have to be contended with, this double 
u 5 g on. They were fur- n abundant crops of Cotton can be produced.” | COBCFetDS will be found useful; but in medium soils, 
with seed, with ploughs and other tools for Mr. FIxxIE justly observes, “this he Ae requires er 
the culture of the Cotton, with saw-gins for cleaning | more rain than the southern states of America à The : ee 
it, and with 1 e se = American season at home would have been called dry, but would be positively injurious ; as the border would be 
editors pronounced this “a gigantic enterprise,” | still the Cotton crops would have been fi Pth s s F eee 
and “an extraordinary bet of England against we are anxious to get the ound d Sandisk to r 
the United States. plough after the winter eens ng but 8 eno the poorer e C concreting ie 2 
i s up,” but “here we| unnecessary. The utility of the practice will of cours 


$ 


From the papers published by — H i 
8 “a 1847 = nena e — a = —— z arke . s 42 te be eet va send 2 upon the peculiarities of the climate, soil, ad 
xy were sent to Madras „three 0 niai and | hot-bed.” We have seen Mr. — a "Daas E by Be ton eles Ere 7 e that 

pans sa re prre e l and Manchester, complaining of the length of time which the Ameri. bere concreting has been of r e 
2 3 N aptain Bares vid t to the can plant takes to come to maturity. In the Doab If I were afraid of the soil beneath the cone 
aare sidency. It would no doubt have been |it follows a very different course. Mr. FINNIE becoming too dry at any time, it would be easy to e. 
323 have wate these planters over ee. states, in one place, that the Cotton which was th ; s , s unde 
— — over t div f th 23d : z — 8 = — as it would be in every hen, other 
S ADAR a grea iy a on the of Septemb h o secure the means of a Wi water when. 
‘toll and climate. But as the planters naturally of June on the "26th of, 3 ot oe 28th | ever it was Maer: eediul, I wou att e e a row of 
: to bet at heir d s ep „and that he | slates, or small flags, nea r the front wall of the house, 


com plied with, the four for Bengal were located |} co 
r journal he states that he first picked i ace, à 

near Cal on both sides of the J 0 picked on the Sth of with broken rubble or some other pervious material, ¢ 

2 n e August, which gm- ea 8 to 25 days sooner than it ae general level. About the $ kasi ae ch slate J 


second went to 8 ppi ace a drain ll a draining 
uan r a third ~ Rung- | “ It is with a a ion pleas ure, however, that 1 pipe, on the top of the rubble „ would for | 
poe nal south-east, while an ci the fine Late ‘iat 7 few ee. tube to convey water into the border after is 
om- ese from LE 


: a eight ee on different parts of a line of about 


— 
— 
22 
© 
PS 
È 


The Governor-General 8 that the e i i 
experi- great disadvantages; the only thing that h 8 TE e 
oe ae be first tried nea » in four fully established is _ superiority. of the . sani ea my 7 — To Ara aa on 


B soil, have ee N nothing, and | border ; and in formin : oe 

no i th eco 

re almost dried up, whereas the Cotton should be slightly 5 sound the 79 0 tem; 

(native ued) pon by ies Americans is still the rain from washing in. By pushing a tube en, 

1 and bearing frui ey holes into the soil (as you oud uy 4 
© reserve en p observations on Would be easy at any time to ascertain the 


* 


n i tbe 
evident that -neith aros = = eg the border ; and 1 j 
Di nor 7 bob i is oes any incor Satin ater gen s0 1 spread o te 


THE 


5 


. 


69 


culty in this respect, 
1050 pila Ti e 


APEEF H 
EF 
11 


essary t 
ould be F 
3 ee een 
— E 
A ANGUSTIFOLIUM. 
ee ul in the cultivation of this 


zema, I am induced = 
. 1 aug its manag 


arch or April. 


to, my oe an inch of the rim, 
s to cause it toi 


soil, so 


not to expose it to cold draughts, 
or it will be found a “diffieult matter to ree it in good 


This Chorozema is generall 
subject to red spider + but if it a 
the summer months, laid 
in six weeks 
Will be little to 


supposed t very 
fully exposed priben 
n its — abo 
and syringed with warm s 

to fear from spider. Water sparingly in 


following April the om should be cut down 
ee inches of the pot 7 Bagh cause it 
N of young s shoots 


Pp 
to within 


this will cause it to 
when its beauty will 
Wandsworth. 
n AL HINTS FOR AMATEURS 
AND SMALL G GARD 


ers grow 4 PERESA they 
peration, and be 


Our 
8 


arch. 
ths we week is ahs preten. 


h 
d as an auxiliary fo Wet success in flor 
the coming 


17 


E 
ua 


LaF 


rel 3 
F J 1 


i 
É 


p 
urposes a bed of 1 5 and able 
made up, about a r than 
TOR and not less pte made en 5 


fee 
177 


a 


HPA 
TERI 
11 


is bed 
{pt sor 1 
ade gen to hil the the summer pa: 
fender annuals, not 3 Phlox. Drum- 


T 
send tho e hia 


> plan 6 or 8 1 high, in a — 
i M If l 


e pre 
3 it should then be shifted into a 12 . 


bestowed upon it. 
fro 


ear 
Dahlias to shoot, cuttings of d 
uehsias, and all = plants 28 shoot r 


8 1 


red Be 
atid ma 


has b 


reves ce of air ee at all times be given, a 
to 


Hom 
Protected 
Rivers’ mode 
z Tiere Society. 
co 

s 


othe Me, Mon 
Three of ‘the six sashes, together nie se trellis adir 


ll. Abun- 
and care 
which will often destroy a 2 
t. When 


against. 
removed to a e siden 
the young seedlings after being transplanted 
H. B. 


e, also 
— into small pots. 


1e Corresponden 

Trellises —One of these, — to Mr. 
just been vin in the garden of 

It i 

ashes, each 8 fe 

on A 


— 
38 


steam-cu 


the saw; the s nailed on, 
r 


s but much less 
een bestowed on them than sashes i in general 


4 8 of 
0 


might 
In the 


cial z measu 


— 


ant, 
the rebates 
Z inch square; those 


thick ness. 


the purpose 


object was 


vee des to 
Vine 


5 
hibit a 


bud at to 


ployed i in each half of 0 e baci 8 0 3 in n 
85 


poles a 


be put up mu abou 
accounts Ae al nimed to the cost cam thus: 


2 aud 3 the trellis, 113d. p 


ach sash ess chai 


in som 
2 


push „ ean the extra vigour 
N A 

appropriation of organised 

come, 

pe 


the 


and t the 
Iu cou ces, 

re plen ntiful, of course — trellises 

cheape r than t London 


„ 54d. per foot, and in- 
fo ot, ag — measure; 
„ 83d. per 
foo 
wood-work for rough sashes costs 
the steam-cut and re ‘eng te 


he painted sashes 


poner 8 65 ffere 
‘ price — a rough sasb, and a planed and painted 
Fig. 1. 


Fig. 3. 
on the stiles am top rail should be about | t 


n the bars one-third their 


Disbudding v. removing Vine ae. —It appears 
om the statement of W. P. A., 
has splines on leaving a disbu 


at p. 5 that he 
dded Vine rod for 
of nourishing the young shoot De from 
the latter, in 


sta 
ed from the 


e cases, 
bleeding ; in rs, , gam ing. 


A 
may be safely buvoaded os aig circum- 


ieee which would sg ea cs * it off = in- 
n 


over-lux t Peach shoot m 


5 N deprived o 4 its pien by degrees, sik, 158 62d. 
the tree gumming t 


an if the shoot, with all 
i e ag 


be correct! 


of great importance, 
the resulting shoot will ex- 


eà It is as natural ri the M 


x supply by mea 


| bread, to which ther 


a 
tives of By rather), co I pa 
er ga 


y attri 
matter. A bud well started 


valuable 23 it may be the 
d | good to the consumer. 


appropriate the o contained in 
stron 


ae ee, rs 
ower par shoot, 3 we only ex 
the kale ‘eft at the — of the 10 fee . 


that one shoot or branch of a tree 
u he organised matter which another had fairly 
e do sometimes say that when a very 
strong shoot is alowed to 1 a Wer. it robs the others. 
Strictly speaking, this It does not 
directly feed upon its de bes 1 n 
position, or other circumstances, it gains a su 
3 ; mi i own 3 
ot biag h * ela- 
its own foliage have bee —_ 


tance 


that 
oe gh — ence lea 


ual reciproc 


will appro 


ood from r distant ra is fo 
some p fluids from very dis 
La ky the Vine will p prefer a 
„ however far the latter 
ed up substance in dis- 
P. A. 


may travel, far before my a 
ith § ” that experi- 


budded ee I agree wi 


ms, ments oag | te this wii would be very desirable. 
Bro —Dr. Da bl 


ubeny's valuable lectures on 


t 
the 8 fie of different articles of food, directly 
bearing u subject wh ong interested me, 
I wish to call your 3 of coarse meal 


nly 
it acts medicinally or 3 an a 
ew constitutions whi a it doe 


ba a ae ie ga a yee from the bran 
n the Fro this karge of giving 


ties for N the bone and musc 
are wanting in the finest Wheaten bread, and 
it 8 seem nge anomaly to me 3 ani 
Laer grow w fat when fed upon the bran and toppings, if if 
hey were s 
Kia _ There i is mgen advantage wh 
white, 


mical and whole 


ixed with it, as well 
men 5 keeping t the bread moist for a longer pon it is 


to the poor man 

Indeed, he would be very 
pay a higher price for it than he is 
the best quality, and the d 


8 


hs more = 
racy is gene 


arse foo 
a ag I hope, by admit 5 e aier 
I wish . a mill of small size 


which is charged the same price as flour 


1 ith 10 feet of shoot, 


may | formerly, in the country at least, it was was much cheaper; 


—— la 
could grind it at home or at a neighbour's. 
that their wives and daughters 
but I trust. the da 


iscuits, su sold in 

in London, which Al — ſor 

and are not very hard, it will oblige A 
"he observations of rofesso 

» Daubeny’s wate (vide No. 4, p. 

received — from the researches of M. “Millon, 


Sciences 
found the proportion ogen n the 
than in the flour ei A and —— he get con- 
Th 


Millon gives “the following as 
bran or pollard of Wheat, — 


„unis and mr 
ccharine matter e abl Om 
luton Ki i T 
toa matter 3 
Bale . 
3 

Ca matters, and aromatic principles 3 
1000 


THE GARDENERS” 


be | kept them 


soil out of the heart of habe piant 3 ; by 
. ha d heal 


Celery in this way — years ago; the seed was give 
me by a gentl 

oie i it came up very well. r removed the 
plants except when 1 3 them into a rows, but I 
wn sag inning them 


any | the culture of the 


giving them away, — i y adding a 
from where I took the plants ; ; — palthough the garden 
I then 47% was in asiaa fn soil, 1 never 


Fig in hothou ae 

— ing well 5 we aut stated t 
being planted ina lied in 
of this pit or bed 


1 e 1 
best Fig houses, igs being plante 
In the bottom 


z 
"ES 
> 
* 
— 
S * 
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b= 
2 
=, 
8 
8 F 
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8. 
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= 
2 
—. 


CHRONICLE. 


er deners, or of making th 


no 
èman who had it in his — — 


thers 
. | disgusting, says “J. L. 


Gardeners.—1 I do not think that sue 
from “J. L. S.“ will co much — on 
em more respected, ef 
their masters or their fellow servan 


E 
* 3 


as we would hav pe othe 


. 
SR 
< 


“to's any men of 
eity and possessing so few ——— 


narrow ta 
oe ss, let loose on the worldas gard eners.” Not 


the busine 


ery shoot should be twisted 
as much as possible — breaking, in order to retard 


8 s00n ha a * 


8 2 


this ſor 
oving a small quantity of ligneous 


ulture.—I have had nearly 20 years’ experi. 
ence in the culture of this fruit, and I have —— K 
of Vines ee in clinkers, cinders, and gravel The 
borders at Bis ial 


washing, &c., 

May n If the Wu be started about 
the poy T January, Figs ripen their wood early in 
N t is sometimes necess 
pretty freely. 


than these. imagin e, or * Vines mar * — not pre 
been so diana I have made Vine borders in various 
ways, but for soil I re — tarfy a from 

s f-mould, stable manure, and earrio 
not glut my 


te 


real —.—.— 1 cannot kire kair how Mr. Wilmot | 


and hard materials as clin —— 
J. —.— oberts, yr. — ia Watt 7 orkshive 


tm We 


p | Bru 
Nerii, lang Whi 


when well pre- 
be given in a few 
Coathorpe, Nailsea Glass mya 


information will 
— 


=a s5. 


— 


‘very, pe any amount of m 


ime, 
w approved * suitable for Peig: 
1 * 1 1 Violet, T 
e, and Pre; About t 
of January is the ‘artist p 
be — 


lowing are a 


are * 


r 
plants 5 not be * until they ha 
nly — slightly. 


- the maligni 


ee e serpent 
though the stupidity of the one is proverbial, — sois 
other, I may surely congratulate. 

sa bells 3 only fruit in the garden 
5 8 


Pine- apple is es up a 
N e seg ss a 
raes m it will be sent up again next day, and 


d — e any wish either to * 
A pre or the produce 


ow — the time for the servants. e could not 
touch you yesterday, master Pine-apple,” say they, 
“but we = whack you. to to-day 5 what could be easier 
than to Man ny Pine- ple Pos ae, 
e dining-room at all, a 
y 75 of a 


a 
ent to the 

to be De. and 

videne ten by tbe se 

apples therefore king of fruits though qa pan experiences 
immunity fro e fate of other fr wen 2 
— on that butlers, ens ers, a a 

ciate the character of te 

he garden 

out of a situation ee as much diffi ae in aa 

another as a he a and when he gets a good one he 


is equally anxiou eep it. The length of time 
of them retain their places isa proof of this; and it 
most them onest men. 


preserve it, in in order to prolong 
| season a rani much as possible; what is left from n one 72 


7 7 
in a 2 


se 
th antage could they reap from 

either eee the ä or eating the Straw 
had see 


Naaa all up their stems; pe will en- 
can be giv 
had, however, bo a 45 3 spoiled dough over- 


By Grapes as, 
r. end of next month. 


think we have no fruit to preserve, for we have — 
as, with care, vill serve till de 
would g 


that the usekeeper not on 


oes Diseased — I write to state that much st direct interest 
y be its work among the | should be well watered aaa e meikar aieeaa e 5 al ee hee ra oe 2 
tepid water, a few car ; e ga 
Indeed ed pos ty tubers higher than th perature of the house, They vil — * con 
refre vi a i preserves. — 5 dhe 
twice a day, overhead, with tepid water, taking other 7 necessar 
care 9 Syriuge the fruit that is erent — — and this aan . ch tho 
ade a little in | the i 
oe hot weather, say from 10 till 1 o'clock. A t | is anxi . — 10 
i an mentioned to be sufficient heat for commencing charge of a garden for a 
© force with, raising the temperature as the plants | once felt any anxiety or trou 
gressed in Babe aw soe liberally supplied they were in 
rene t all times; nes necessary to | they are wasted or destroyed, why not 
The heat should in very gers fe — — 
a rise of 15° during day, | weighed and the Peaches counted ? Crimes 
— * at 65° at night, Some daub and ho can onl grow six srt, 
c their p ts over with a cow-dung, or some not fond of me 
> ilar wat ids in ‘onder to pr to prevent scale and other i 
a ae — yt a o 5 ; but it was stated that no such | cution ten o 
ins g lay a oy to LlFalage | on — is 1 the plants are well treated. J. Wall educated men bo wi be laughod at, a 3 
* ern by’ planting 0 Glasin) eS A me to recomm 3 nd to a Alexander * 
— room between the row 2 S ita Qu — — 
nee; having a e ah wa to the la, whieh is the o —— N not solved et . 
when they: Require it, taking | r A R. M. Ein Se, Maree beard cPanel | aeonit ha Cay. Ai ne 2 6 
me | called, when obstructed by ligatures or 1 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, 71 


‘ o produce leaf buds as well as blossom Colour re me nn by — —I find that — great a rtl bg injustice and breach of confidence as conle be: 
; — £ nourishment in the branch ? | transplan g Hollyh — . ontaining an aiani Fee a packed meeting for 
le matter 8 = rere 2d. Is dance. of — = “oe become nearly b ack, aud 2 over the whole —— of it ofthe Society 
of the u y A causes | although they were — ly of a light — The — teurs, and this act they succeeded in accomplishing in 1830; but 
nt Funn on which this was effected is on the gault formation; | tae n . : ade enn what had been 
they u mously remonstrat 
[No.] | and the lime * in it was in the state of hydrate, a ch was the influence of the pirties bei before a ealluded 
: r s this — by, the i not — at 1. S; G 0, Mat 2 Under passed off for that 2 ap 
i ther ardeners’ Troubles, —— ing. Under the new regime, things * 
of the roots, and various o different as 
8 5 pect : the arrangement of the AAEE age s 2 oa” 

part em to me much more likely: to create and agera prizes were no longer 3 on the days of exhibi ition, an nå the 


or Sin i 
and b bu 


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eo 
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p 
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— 
m 
Qu 
= 
oe 
— 


i e em amateurs, now released from the ical know. 
J therefore it appears to me likely | do ~~ understand: what — — by such terms as ledge, dealt out prizes to whom they wist, until, in the short 
5 but of 


i 
i 


5 
© 
25 
> 
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n 
— 
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Qu 
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EA 
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et 
2 
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2? 
5 
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a4 
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kal 
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e e it was 
i i and those around them i i riterion of their one 9 5 ccirele it 55 S re t gaa a Prize; no 
: — e ed. eo — anes ed with was. It was 
less by see accident.] 3d. Wh 2 e pen sta ation —.— are especially sae in 1835, at the June show, I was first awakened to this 9 stem, 
sist : 245 to the 
ery 2 dvo- | servants is of fancy’ s- own creation, and) Rotunda with a ba — of fruit 3 I intended 5 hibit, 

t instead of branches ? ea y bag prs 
bear frui ‘ij probably say that the blossom | emanates 3 “a ~ 5 exists in a morbid imagination, 47 that such a state of thivgs could N I determined 
ogy will p y f d on hi he — 5 d 27 test the truth of it; and did so, by submitting the contents 
hes and trans orme n his own showing, wars on women and on of my basket for co mpe tition $ iaa to my utter astonishment, 
F 7 w the means by which we can | boys ;” T soon . P e truth of the str ange ren of the 
into blossoms ; 3 is is obvious “ I hate when Vice can bolt her arguments, morn iog: wen this circumstance det etermined me, ond 5 
And Virtue Ry no tongue to check her pride.” 


TREGE 
ao 
LES 
28 
> ot 
Ese 
f 3 
i : 


tt 
1180 
8 

i 


es 
11 


ut why is it 80 5 , 
les of morphology are understood. hienoi. fa attendance upon the propriet of chan in this 
fully ex plained it on many former occasions. ] | I mostly fou — rs intelligent, agreea cable, |! —— state of things — form fee rèr ther Soc — be sed 

AA d fruit require less nourishment than e e ctful, ag conse panig aeh respected ; and n the identical principles of the original one, In fact, res 

2 oe: be tubes which convey. the | L believe that the pe ee g their ir productions | establishing the old one Pere hor as 
| 4 [No] 5 5th, Are the 10 y the F by in sent gts Cm ani the old Societ y had never ie changed, and we must have a~ 
— nice from the leaves to the extremity of the root 8 dle prep ja 9 ne ng 0: ta 2 distinetive one, to “ ent ours from being confounded zs the 


tinuous. con nection ? [No and if s 50; would not the an oe do ha them as carefu lly, a mostly ta take as others; ; consequently, we were under the necessity 0 ving 

eon sowgha A ‘Kes rene’ No.] I know gre 1 9925 in sending s as plen did dish % Fuh ac ours the title ease The Practical Floral and erte So- 

stock e: 3 on bothisides of the | % the erdener hial! does i 5 ene vg it ee no ciety of Irelan us, in August, 1835, we held our first 

that | „Knight sawed them acros meeting, and — bai old Society anew, under 2 2 

middle, which might not prevent the proper nw y gardeners should not prepare fheir fruit, o title. Such was our eee ager? ey were onabied to adopt 

„If notches. were cut for ‘table themselves, if t they e . to do so; and I that part of the old system, viz., the distributing of the prizes 

the juices would be prevented, of course, from a 3 w ility 2 a ea me ded she for Aeg t 

ing the same tubes as before. One more inquiry |! o beg to L. 8. that he bart of the Council of the other Society to damage and anno 

Š practical matter; will you have the kindness to 8 serve ens —— ( ua size a his arm“ on paper | us, even to the actu, al 3 ace | tl ployers an 

pr form me which is the proper time for ringing trees for- only I suspect) at table himself, that he 3 receive | the gardeners who d to join our society. To such a 
the 


er t r ringin for 

Š 2 s - . height was this en carried, that three aly it- 56 

purpose of producing fruitfulness a ate cepa? Nr the comp liments he might be thought | their situations thro ough it, and a gentlemen, Sniper tae no 

[Now.] and what time for improving the siz to merit for so barbarous a produc pp ohu Fisher.— | had the audacity, at one of our exhibitions in the Rotunda, te 
[When the fruit is half grown, if the 14. ings are I have been a reader of your Paper since the first nr walk up to my employer for a similar purpose; but it matter: 

losed up: ] I think you sai J ans ods 0 ini. lous of its existence, and I am proud to e alt that I h not now the reply he got. Under such continued an and pora 
that would furnish us = yore re received much benefit from its pages. I formerly felt |‘ aterest of me Soviet suffered severely in its pecunias 
you Xp war 2 F. 
of Mr, Ker’s plan of frames for. Peaches &c., near the an honest pride in belonging to the humble and hard- | resources ; so much so, that we 
d, open at 


at the sides and ends. 1 should ] ike m nen working portion of that body of which it formed the arrangement for Paying pr izes on the day. of show, and w 
ire, head, but latterly my sng ions are mue pis and I under all these difficultie e determined still to persevere in 
oie | frosty winds. blowing through pee feel — ed to belong to a bo dy w which requires news- Aha , pur prine aie: Vand such has been the result atter 
the frame woul d not be injur ious. I obse at Mr. | Paper controversy to guide it in the private ‘aflaire of a epee of fi ean poik nmitigated —— perex 5 4 9 va 
i 3 h the usurping Society, t ur ex 
uses the precaution to De a neg in front oceasion- life. If “ Dodman, and “others of his. class, wish to their ee ter, pr af HO more than rivalled those of the 
alone . his reason for covering the become their own gardeners, let it beso ; no one claims other Society in its best days, whilst their’s haye fallen olf not- 
bed nih a of Asphalte felt in in pes umn to: keep. off a, right to gainsay them: 5 let not“ ere attempt 

a discontinuo the 10 4hrow. ee upon a body of men, simply because | gardens of the Roya 
88 111 sa thought it wo nld have a con: | one eof their number . — not follow his ‘advice, which, ment Socie ty is in reality the ae a Society that first in sti- 
in the warmth ‘of the soil, [But if acted upon, paid pen . brought discredit t to tuted flower shows in this country, an ad that the others nk rood 
3 ; . 4 yj £ 3 cannot lay the slightes 
viele the we wate er, which is exactly what is wanted 80 eter ee ce = ee 1 p b be the o riginal 906 ciety. The Royal Horticultural 
aj We ot 8 wet soil only pro- gardeners, i $ 15 eee Society i is therefore in all reason fully entitled to 
motes * tay ing it. l M a si in avery grade of — there such. Your corre- | the support of every patron of horticulture in this country. 
— — Pat sander ra sava 4 r four spondent, J. L. S., agrees a spend ‘against Now with regard to another subject—that of the Royal Dublin 
ne > seth 5 si not the butler, cook, a —— ane room m Poo Society in future taking the matter into their own bands, it 

Lined et, « ho 0 T, ty iti is 
jua lagii . 1 ze probably ‘eg tea hong agha of | could not but think that he must be. unt to ee | to do so, butit does 7 abe to be dictated by either reason 
ong on the the plant stoves or — — when his experience r sound sense You 7 ai they 1 ty Ge app Ap for te 

i sh 1 i at ir disposal by Govern 
tree, ncn —. 9 tg — 1 — that the is ay able.to keep: such N f . * 5 mabe: maintenance of the depar sr of horticulture for such pur- 
study of the Theory of Horticulture ” would Save you hex. 3 biol fate banish ahnen pis e, but you seem to, forget that those funds are ar 
ae of and misconceptio us.] 2 utin ; vat 


lowing is the fall of rain in the years 


1 Dublin ia From this brief ee 


i, 
b se, for d t 
* ar as indicat ed by my . ee * your renden ig ready to receive oas e * e has ever the Royal Dublin Society done for 
Inches. 184 tocha Nami ing vr Plants.—If this s done with the view of the improvement of horticulture? True, there is their fine 
` el 1. . ) eee the = aK teren g that object will aes: pa Botanic Gardens, at Gtastiesio, neatly ig proper irur ve 
95 Re effected by m xing botan ical names 5 is there one instane of i improved horticu gard — ver 


— 
8 


ma To general e, * English name, the Sui u point to one ope eta instance of any emine! 
`. 0.44 COuDtry, an r introduction, will be more W ever ae ving emanated from 1 It did so hay 
ee and T be added for their sake. The | that, in 1818, me 3 of the origina deere } 
: 3. ei i 4 
natural ore accompanied b 8 Angli- of 2 acres of their grounds at Glasnevin, for an experimental | 
cited fo via ae nding t o Dr. Lindley's “ Vegetable ground, upon which to employ gardeners when not in situations, 
ungdom,” wil afford 79 — interest to the botanist. | but they refused to grant this, e however, as the 
i Royal D ot afford th: i 

The genera) si might dees = he pipt ayana tah e tion to the m ize P Aostan exbibiting which would be 
5 colour of the flower, are frequently appended, but these e insure complete — ; neither would 
30.00 are not 80 essential, as T one is very variable, and their mode enp ” suit enie Lee ncitement ciently 
‘ ire ce i 


Leow wok 


„ -e ge S ge 
ä 


— 
= 


. 


epends upon es, is r 
Portugal Laurels.—In the year 1841 I better explained by the plant itself, an its Praber season, nps grand ut putting any ee eee in 
mies of considerable extent round m; * 5 by any tting e Roy: 

: d by trenching it 18 Ae lind! i atau bject not e 
> plaut; whaler * x e eee e phates ys eset mit var Bo the working out o o 833 
ght, but of ood useful ; and under this head an posonoug.or dangerous improvement: by holding horticultural exhibitio 
K — a A, B. W. ovg find th 


i i d ere lovg find the RE injured the 
and ecially ortugal | Aualities should be particularly mentioned, grounds, they woul s aeg, bad bag ce 
ceeding i i Societies. — troubl ith a brief t they so to improve. Very wide . 
A ingly well, and these now ld robes 8 and — 3 that e elity whi ct —— object — Fae — ru betmeen the e “Lo adon Horticultural a Society, 
in general of ve tly be considered as the “ original ” one, but — through- | with its vast al 
ars go, however, I ob | ou jan tthe: — has been — d upon a as a mere 3 wosing out, ge and. on one obits a ant aly “ozal D al Dubli x 
a ` “ horticulturally ” king, a mere revious to | Society,” wish its di i ; 
po "a silvery look ' 0 J no 3 = pe ted in this — Ai and many | widely extended field of pra S a field wider — that 
e till, Sa the end of | of those gardeners who filled important situations in the metro- tro. | embraced by any existing Society in Europe. YS, 
the r politan, district feeling the necessity o — regular means of | Cork Abbey [We have appa ahy personality 1 e 
pas Poad ii ut ear social intercommuvication and instruc first mooted the | affected Mr. Humpbreys’ arguments. ‘for the pr ot we 
P al Laurel, i in gai t subject of ors: ring a society; — according they ste vend a 5 — m We have effectually drawn attention to 
ite 4 mbe, 1816, and | with otber matter. 
first meetin nt that pu pose att 1 
* o formed a A ety e essentialiy pre aten in —— way in which Irish 1 nee hrana 2 5 
case hp one oa 2 . honinding to its wo-thirds of the committee | by its great Society, and a at cap oe 
ve just transplanted it sg ves if that were always to be basee — 8 and the ing on — 2 0 55 al S 18 ay 2 pets for help to a 
alarm 38 i teurs : and so jealous were they to guard against abuses, orticultural Society — 
is that I now obs e oe ici ial w X- | very men whom have 8 and it is for the 
of th e eee — geek —— might — obedi 8 the mos 8 — Manip a sa osìtion, all that we can ‘do is à 
iese, shrubs, and I cluded in from the council, lest they mig 5 really aue! 
ing the place laid 3 2 asor indirect influence u — „ 5 to hope that honour N iven 
i ; im es Tera according- to es F na SENS 
ante 9 be obliged: 4 oes p <atividan, and t ae oc this: the commi — p ‘ One 
3 0. Nothing except | dered the plate from Ta 9 versmith, who brought alendar o rations. 
seem affected, but for to the show, it was displayed to view in a circular glass 3 
i W: S: , bie Fae ase until the close of the show, when the tary . Sr r the ensuing week, 4 
My to read out the awards, and tbe chairman of the committee cING DEP ARTMENT 
cause of it is — (a respectable gardener) presented each competitor with such f 1 Melon 1 
prizes — awarded to him. The was then paid for, e 15 y sova ee? pay ig, 1 
rathered: the common and the day’s business losed; such was the invariable rule | cessfully, it ; the € y for planting 
this day on a bank 8 33 up e si es when ne marsersman, mow D them out. The following An me 
i i i A n 1d vreman urse 3 ave 
"3 ou Potentilla arias- ` — — of its original founders oo gg op — e ir | MY ee begs by a inte 
since, i ie- sit and left the — e opportunity | the 
1846, the N 8 * was taken D) by some: am ome vies it seems, bad influence | to the middle of October. My pits are ted by hot 
1, March i x * je r ata the aforesaid, nurseryman and his foreman—the | water pi top and bottom, and the beat from the 
larch 3d; 1842, March: es vee mon inp math os ——4.— the D about Dublin i — ds to the soil koncha healt le. 
i : „Jun. 2 ; e them to to perpetrate TEAK T, a 5 à Ei 


a 


72 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [Fes. 3, 


— —— snes 

suriace lunches 1 FLORISTS FLOWERS. 
ie kid, which, sax bites tached etn gers I THe Porranruus.— - To the a florist these 
into a solid mass; after this is made sm some , ca arenes 


guano is sprinkled over it, and then the hills are put in | the least interesting of any. hou gh their 3 


a smaller pot than that which the plant preriousiy . 


To fow er it well, it pre have a rich loam 3 


gro and heat it that c: n be coma at 
Nur rit! has done growing, gradually withhold water, in 
to give it aseason of res Order 


preparatory to planting. and the regularity of their lacing is duly admire ired, still | CorToN : L. “Early sowi aoe necessarily advan 10 
FFP contrast is wanted, the majority of them having "dak | tha conerary Dr. Wight ed I and h, that cara 
i fil t of the roots some depend upon the > Em H a ‘poe and not upon what 
— — — the ramifications "s r swelling, a and | beautiful varieties have latel y been o —— wi ractised ee gp en joma 6 oo oom Beth 
by piercing the soil with ma i yer tube enabled to or searlet body colour, neatly laced w m aa — ; districts of the 1 — n hand 
s during that benen period we allude more particularly to Addis’ Kingfisher, Er- | Dar Ror: A Sub. It resembles Mushroom spawn, and afte 
without wetting the aaa 2 rington's Fire- king, and Bullock's Lancer, the last of owe 1 r- —. 4 — = op es, very lik like kid-leather © 
moisture in i E IONS : ie 
zi 22 oe he quality of $ of the wa * cs t ans matter of ta oag aly aha i not, the delay i is krear Aola ien not — — tie dee 
o iffe i 
maintained, and h y vigour o k | aa re we get form, with other propert so te 2 make your 1 y to write 
gs i 7 GERMINATION: W Boone. t of Crinum amabile is the same 


h the a e r 
y are kept in a fruitful state for * months. = not eth novelty of Found colour 3 des 
0 s 


DEPARTMEN varieties, we know of no florist’s flower in which 
As the season is rapidly 3 when many deere is more requi be 
plants 1 require repotting, a sufficient stock of all | now. The compost s — consist chiefly o of Aire 
requisite materials should be prepared beforehand, and | and ‘sand, slightly covering and pressing the surface ; 
i ils this should be particularly attended | keep moist, and when the e seedlings appear, and during 
to. Itisin many places very difficult to get good peat, | the ensuing summer, they must be kept in ka shade. 
and without it daai hard-wooded plants cannot be | Turres. — very wide-meshed 
gro ction. If, bowever, — plants are an] net over them, that when frost ty nights — they 
object worth trying for, they ee have soil, — may be securely covers with mats. This may appear 
may be the trouble of p ing it. As the amount of | troublesome, but we would strongly advise all who 
daylight increases, the ‘ocaperarure of the greenho uses | possess any sorts worth the tronble to me so. Dantas. 
may be slightly raised, particularly in fine clear weather ares extensive propagation is required, these 
but be cautious not to exeite stove plants, especially should be got forward on a gentle — Aber tank or 
hard- wooded ones, until the days are longer, as there is | hotbed will fork 1 e pu 3 — will give directions 
a much ter difference between the light of their | for striking the shoots in due 
natural habitats and of ours than there is between ours renne ‘Gan 
and those of greenhouse plants, hence these last are less It is a common thing to see cottage + gardens crowded 
liable to be injured by a temperature approaching their | With large fruit trees, most of which are inferior or 
one in conjunction with our dull atmosphere. | Worthless varieties, and even the good ones, from want 
Stoves and the Orehid house should not range higher | of proper management, are generally pri war gre 
i use, 60° ; green- 


removed i nto the ss cane Fo use, to cause cae to ex- be drawn down, if they wil e it, and the dwarfs 
pand a little earlier than they would otherwise trained as pyramidal or goblet shaped bushes. If the 
s0 ich 


EN. 
A crop of Peas should now be sown in turf, and raised 
in a little 3 to be planted out ioui the middle of 


runin 
most economical to fruit trees for a cottager’ 
5 M n f s garden is to ben, espaliers 
cut strips of “turf 4or 5 geile and lay them er on the south side of all walks running east an Dig and 
* 


with their sy si own a 
Ps he — — om the middle of the e by press- — 1 a — e, eee — 
g a strip of w em; in t 0 } 
sown and covered with a little light soll The boards as ene Se aiani, aun the Wiss 


t will be necessary to support the fruit trees 
Pete bP: As toon by ase" for afew years, after which shay will support themselves. 
e 


: pberri le 
should then be placed under the trellis of a Paa avaliable space of ans garden will be left for oe 
5 a oe — w sh 


set out of doors. The best situation is under a south ‘Feb, | Moon's 3 | en: 

8 where they should be protected by a few branches — Ae _| at | | Mex. | Min. Mean | 25 
òf evergreens unti are inured to the | Friday.. <6 2 | 2s | ar 

open air. The variety which I have found best ads — pag || 

for purpose is Bishop's Early Dwarf, 1 they | Monday 29 

should be sown three-quarters of a * ander, | Wed. . 31 

3 uiries about the tity of F salt 1 


qua 
used, I reply, it is perfectly safe, but it is my general | Av 


as in other Endogens ; ie —— which remains in the seed ig 
the cotyledon, not the radicle ; see Lindley’s “ Elements of 
ocr E p. 116, par 3 

HEATIx cus, N. would advise you to con sult Mr. 
Kendal, Elizabeth- walk Stoke Newington, who, for =< smal 
fee, wi to all your enquiries about t Polm Ex. 


u will find 
Do not ring your Magnolia, but have gee heni 
the roots ; 11 is te oud we 4 J to flow 

Icg-nouses: A Harv ing to do with Bre: old. 
a 


0 $ 
ton’s — on. e The eas should be 14 inches thick, 
and the — 3 to the quantity of ice to be kept. hy 
pes bag bn e heap according to Mr. In ngram’s plan, till your 
* oy ‘ “Tittle accustomed to 8 Pounding, and 
packing ice? A shady situation, but not under the drip of 
td is the best place for ice.t 
NSEC rost ert not kill emmets; try the effects of 
turpentine on them, onst Reader. Apply hot a ial when 
ale is 


ou find ; 

tions. Apply sipna the ment the mildew ele is 

observed, red N. e hish you 2 soni 2 
J. 5 


of Hae Water or gastar water one 

| Lanp TSP. We have ps ery dou to 
feasiiiy o oft the 1 Where a are the weekly ha ale crowns to 
come fi Men would have to pay thati in ee to all 


wee 
your acon If you can co an K ise of hot fabs: for the 
outside of your pit, you wiit. St once put in the quantity of 


vanta i 
water should be given to the plants until sh a are in full 
wth; when in a bearing state they like a moderate supply 
re. Keepa toad in Jour pit eep 
The 8 is one of the best 
nd it is = easy to grow as the other com- 


“Cla avaria corniculata, growing on the 
77 colour is natural to it— 


* ` dull al co! 
— apply it when there is no crop upon the Jan. 25- Raimy ve ry fine ; clear; sli ht frost at night, of call * medullary rays aia lite mn — whieh 
ground. Three q a pound to the square Z fen 0 2 R. enld: frosty. — ̃ ˙ of the medullary Tays os 
23 2 . 2 2 ~ 2 is ca 1 Ellis 
yard do not injure vegetation, but ma i with —  30—Slight fog: driaziy; slighe Ta 8 from N.; cloudy and Rossii ‘cai 1 ar ipn of dry ro iet yar ee from 
greater vigour (weeds in ). it is sufficiently | cd, 3!—Fiue throughout; frosty at night, uite new to us, and beautiful I: he absence of its 
stron d : Feb Frosty; foggy; rain a nig 4 us; an auti 10 í =a eine 
ete y wireworm, maggots, &e. ; perature of the week deg. below the average. —— it en 8 dificult to asce me; it * 
— — 8 88 elsi caused| State ofthe Weather at a Chiswick during rhe Tast 23 years, for the 3 ab it swells, any frait pray send 
te ina nak eiin iomad FTT. 3 wers, and no stem. leaves. 0. Geranium f 
ge b rather moist soil, me P tundifolium. 
3 a dressing for the ground if it Feb. 3 2 FE 35 . He Onances: C H G. We are unacquainted with this disease; 
light or sandy. Twelve months ago I gave my “ae | £86 | RE | Seated’ | of — fll the which the pial ner i oe sorbed; rently nte 
beds bs. to the square yard, which caused ES 1 
i J which cau À, clue to be found in its esis t 
the plants to make an eege pna, but the ground Mon.” 3 aT = ys PEL — : C. Pr ming that the „ Petitia niums pe 
was so saturated salt that it a 45.6 | 32.5 | 39.0 you have wintered our re scarlets, they sho 
weed throughout the season. With the addition of a | Tees. f f | 39 22 2 taken out now, provided you havea frame greenhouse, or evet 
little li . y hs a 4s : 3 a warm window; shake the soil from their divest them 
** d consider it particularly useful as a reviver Satur. 10 aa 2 22 Ha 9 5 of all and straggling shoots, repot them into li 
0 ete soils, and it acts as a rectifier in ground which | The highest temperature during the above period occurred on vie 10 dy soil, and water them sparingly until they have formed 
— received a dressing of the same kind of manure | u- therm 65 dex and the nd the lowest on Ith, 14 herm. 3 deg. below cer” loth | new pe hy ate. oots, 8 ma nS posed 
——— e on avourable ons, As soon as 
uring many successive years. Bens: y yen —— a 09 espon D ndents. F chat i 1 — het may be planted out 10 the open border, 
an you a ted rw ral 
FLOWER GARDEN AND SHRUBBERIES. ended wes some, it is ear ants Manasa 5 POTATO 3 ye nches are deep enough, too deep for 
Let no exertion wanting to render this department bees. — brood com zy are cut from a hive in February w heavy 1 land the best way is to 8 them 4 inches diss! and 
perfectly clean and neat ; any large trees which are March, m h progeny is lost, as in your own case, and the to draw 2 inches of a ridge over them. you want is 10 
md t, ee a 3 Dipoena n some measure if the operation is performed Prevent the shoots from — before the frosts s are gone 
condemned | , dead a October. The bees have not suftic t time.to the| aud we have no chance of hard frosts now.—J M 
ig branches cut out of th hich are to ir. damage that occurs in the heart hive, where they pass | Because they are diseased.— 7 F Arrowsmith. They are sound 
The surface of all the clumps should be dug or forked {he winter and rear early brood in spring. Vapour from the | Sood.- looking Potatoes ; but whether tt they will resist disease 
over, manure or whe it i ed. deen, and not the fungus, rendered your hive wer, Your bee. more we or any one can tell.—Hortensis. We must 
compost wherever it is n -| house seeme well constructed, but we fear tha i for the present confine at l 
Advantage should be taken of this k damp: i t the situation 2 sth ng to the importan 
Opportunity to make is damp ; if so, you had better adopt straw hives on the facts which we ae continue to some time to 
terations in arrangement of the prieg plan, and, except when combs are very old and de. Come. The public is ety tired of 2 — mee too often / 
plants Se yoa to remove a portion where they are too PTS. pg gle . a pa p E nee Age 4 dens. ae + ee 
wish to make make fine let ever box, instead 0 
= y| driving the bees ome and which is Roses: G8, Notts F from 
— * pi stand distinct and free from its neigh- loss.. Besides, little time would be pe for the oper n June till Novem or four white pillar Roses, mone fa a 
: 8 ld not bed » for the operation : + Procure the 3 
ou bushes that will admit of it, and | g Wage no A hance of success before Ap; . yar * : SA agens Hardy, Bourbon ame kacke 
: re n with , ach o are 
Prune, support, or e according to their in- «School Botany.” Thanks: we 40 et to give AUAA f. whitest autumnal pias l Shoes "o 
dividual S. „ n a great pity to see trouble in sending us specim For Cactus seed, se Tanks: H Greyson. Use Pori it would be 
„ „ See P. 56 and but 
masses of choice shrubs jostling and „ot last week’s Nun ; enhouse annual. better to make tank of iron: never yet 
Selves together, and compelling each other to to stand on 24, gur, volume for 187. — H WL. The 88 a a z ine ‘ast iron we have i 
tiptoe to daylight ; Lindiey’s “Elements of Botany.”— Adam, The latest sad d dryness, with great fi f temperatnre. 
get a peep at daylight ; but ludicrous as this best edition of Donn’s Cata it Sir 
may sée; ; Since you have no pe 
y S#em, it is too often the case in been r advertised. "tire pene 8 Tent — i tite aca 1 2 ar eau for 
prs inna to proceeds, the edgings 1 l not aes Properly under th ordinary tempera- | js same 5 will also ans wer for Gesn 
shou ipped, and gravel clea greenhouse; it may become eatable, and that is m started no 
rolled, y finishing i 74 i ned a e answer the q about Pelargoniums ; 3 sae ye pe ting wilt Ay, given for No. 36, 1846; and 


B i you no reported to us, and Fi toni was 
much L a ol work = be —. — ine indigenen, aal. Geranium striatum is not considered a5 as 
enn ge 


to Canta ÆTHIOPICA | HS. Examine th 
af and others, she b y doing a ——— at the same time, ime, divest it of suckers. If ie roo 1 555 

but never co completing anything, 8 into a size larger pot; but if they are 

shake the soil Soil from them and prune > then b — 


oe A 
— nea FLOW WERS. 
in colour to 


CINERAR your s T 
ling are — . cultivatio ion, —— your flower r 


sh 3 
bor which is deficient in N size and width 2 + 
very i cultivated varion”. 


TES SODA ase wp POT 3 


1 a SOLE 55 

DRIED N DESTR 

OF LIME 2 from bone only). 
ther Manures of known 


— t, London. 
2014, e Thames- street, 
Mask 3 — — 


ANURE "COMPANY beg to 
HE LONDON "Ma as un 


8 CORN MANURE. 
icon mn COMPANY'S URATE 


4 
: 
$ 


SU. R. 1 
rters’ 1 and 


direct from Im 
T her Arti 
ous goa 


pa 7550 n 8 ON SALE, 
"GIBBS ad SONS, L x Dox; 
wa JOSEPE nd by 47 D Co. i , LIVERPOOL; 
And a Agents 
IGHT, anD C VERPOOL and BRISTOL; 
s COTESTORTH rows, fom PRYOR, 


THE 5 GAZ ET Soke 


roprietor, Mr, THOM 


eral patronage ot of the abov ee 


his grateful eas to — ee and tp e 


73 


g, breaking 
7000 5 ming can 


dd th 
ga 8 of considerably over 10l. per 
of annual profit has 


yet Lys 


ra gente by 
the 


N GRAZIERS, GAR. 
„ 2 


13 


I 


nufactured without a license by every 


anure, is sim 


—— 35 basha p ae ng for 12., being equal to 10 ſoads of | $ 
par ; 


ple and cheap, and suitable 


fo or all seasons, soils, crops: also showing how to fatten 

every description*of 8 and poultry, at one 

now adopted. the best and e ee of draining, Ke. Ke. 

This excellent Treatise on Farm and G 2 

aa entered at Stationers’ Hall, e 
e most valuable receipts ever 2 in agriculture for 

— „; with = by a for use, by the late celebrated 


agriculturist, Mr. 
highly recommende a by H 
Farm, = Royal Agricultural So 


NDON, 
inst = ag Ae consequences of 
and s wane s Gua purchasers are recom- 
| only 55 Dealers of established character, or to 
the above-named importers, who will supply the article in any 
— at their fixed prices, delivering it trom the Import 


DR. RYAN’S CHEMICAL MANURES, 
TT or, HarwanD and Co., 


es, based 
2 sited to their ahead Co oor and the 
nature of the desired In submitt yan’s latest 
discoveries to agriculturi: ists, Messrs. cia Footy Harwann, and 
Co. can with the utmost ving mpana state, th at their Manures 
— Ä 3 tner Pos to o possess far N v fer. 
ich, 


tert witht Aci cheapness (bein ng 40 per cent. under > ain — 
eruvian Guano) mu ust eee gem all other Manures. 
so frequently 


Measure protected. Hor - 
mended to use „ Dr. Ryan’s Garde es” for — pur- 
enn, Sent, free, to any part of the 1 7 at 
or 5 - £510 0 per ton. 
For — Barley, Oats, Hops, or any 

| Dr. Superphos phate of Lim 

— _ Nitrate of Gypsum, h Bones Sul 5 Atia, 0. 

| tested by he cen at p Rough Bone price 2 ko, 

English and Foreign Olle 


REDUCTION IN PRICE OF BOILERS. 


osing one shilling, or 12 — 
addressed, * prepaid, to Messrs. i RENE and Co., 
40 . erst. Lisson- -grove, London 


Cite ‘Agricultural Gazette, 
DAY, FEBRUARY 3, 


ppe tas THE TWO Fe TWO FOLLO OWING Dea 
TUESDAY, T- 


aier arts can boast a biography of purely profes- 
ional men: and it appears to be a feature e 


t mor 
infusion of fresh blood than to ‘the e extraordinary 
rts of th all the habits and prejudices 
which accustomed routine inflicts. 
hese ks may appear beside our present 
rk er but sen may be permitted 3 
; in its tree lig 


„ ee Imp. Society of Ireland 
Far : London, Lich: — Clyst.—Feb. 6: Fram- 
linghem.— “Feb, 75 — eb. 8: Hadle! : Halesworth, Needham 
arket.—Feb. 10: Peterborough—Feb. 12 an * 


Tue want of well crn hy facts or data in 
agriculture as the no 


may — — far a redict the 


s Own operations. 
reat results of th 


oa O 


s tending to p t questions of 
detail—in ra ah riie a of Agriculture—like the 
one before Wh want now is the mpe 
rience of practics al men on the amount of labo 
which, under given circumstances, ‘they have found 
profite able. 


he 
ing, the in eriorence of the Legislature is loudly 
alled 1 


d for, to remedy the evils of the misrule and 
mismanagem a complained o 
must premise that the cal from which 


ge in per 5 5 which men, not 
to the law and irag by the a Pe would mistake 
injustice. 


enture to lead the: — to a discussion of folly og 
OF our in arable — by simple 8 155 2 the 2 offices in oe 1 at the en i 
vec of an experience to the results of which | of their 8 t forward such statements 
e had access. fii 1847—a year which is |as W ing to transfer to our pages (from their 
a Bramar sin itely because it is the only one whose | obvious aisd intimate connection with the interests 
I their Fri E NE . respectfully to stone records are open to us in detail—on an arable farm | of Acricutrurs), we € no hesitation in believ- 
| dim, abled to make a co e present ps sme gs i „ ing that the details in question are but a few in- 
2 mte incre make a considerable 7 eductica in of about 270 acres, where is grown four ing k 9 ch le 
vila price will be, n times alternately with the 2 crops, Clover, stances of general abuses under the present grossly 
En . ni 115 0 rzel, ht | defective system. The public are indebted to the 
Un. n. . ts a 5 Beans, Mangold rzel, in every eig 1 h ntl we 
Win, 55 100 fr, 4 in. do. 215 0 years; where the rent paid 25 landlord, are e and faithfulness of the legal gentlemen who 
Bia — 120 ft 4 in. a0. 310 0 poor, &c., amounts to about 5807. per annum; wher ve published such or Surely they deserve the 
An. do 550 fr. 4 in, 8 3 10 0 wages vary from 10s. to 12s. a week for able- bodied attention of of the : egislatur 
_ 450 ft. 4 in. do. 0 0 men throughout the year; the following was the 4 ear aa all now state * eri e. om * 
Hin, y iN Borns, labour bill : hat es under the control of our Courts 
in, 4 Equity are — ted in and value, is the 
Boile fl. K in. a ae ay 8 For -work . £173 oar 8 ident in the eountry, and of 
i „arms, up to 18 in., 5 For 52 ks of 5 m en ‘at 13s. a week 169 ; i 
pier 1797 days of a mam at Is. 10d... 164 14 6 2 ene, Am eo Boat where 
Fo days of a woman at 10d. 5 4 
overty and neglect have laid a heavier than 
respectful! inform gece 2268 sy ofa tga oe . en pd ss along the wayeile, fields ——— 
at e time £698 10 73 irregularly —— 1 meh * 
ir state of re + no controlling power directing e 
er to mne This amounts to upwards of 50s. per acre: 8 weeds faset the cottier tenantry, the dd family 
ex- is equal to the constant payme f 16 men, 10 ion of the inheritor presenting a forlorn a of 
women, and 7 boys throughout the y ir. We | dilapidation and decay; oppre hs of pain- 
$ Chiswick ; particularly the new cannot say what pro of this sum is fairly | ful melancholy, and s , even in with 
siun 1 chargeable on the produce of the year in which this scene of desolation, “sg — to what ‘proprietor this 
as e eee ee t we know that the apon bill of region e feels quite 
e alt other years resembles it in amount : we know | should be its sypearance when he is informed that ‘ 7¢ 
5 — ving ng 5 up A guished that that th s are — TO that | îs in Chan aei 
important one if a sum spent in labour or otherwise be not fairly |, If a etor were a man of very limi eae 
i portion to the extent of his estate—if he were 
chargeable on the farm returns in any gen grae enir e . his 
stores, it is entered in a dormant capital 33 ee e ae the had 
. x i pane nat or thang Pag te an ; complete 
estate a 


ully solicit. the 
t, Builders, kodi in 
8 of — tesa suitable for 
of we 


St fal, = 
ervant. 
feat ARM (ATR on the o POLMATSE la 
London. 


ut piec pe m 
Tae of years deving “which i its effects are supposed 
to th 


The position of adviser between masters and 
aegis is one of 2 responsibility; and we do 

while urging most 

ak e mass that 


with — 


compelling pact in others, and yet his estate 
Sented the appearance we ig — 1 itself 
could find neither exeuse for con 


pity 
anita for er s0 80 unemployed, and fora manage- ` 
ment productive of such lamentable results. 


TRE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


many | tion also will etill further extend the control of the Court 


ancery over nd dazali bjects may, present 
15 azzlin su 
More attractive an * * eg but he could 


a practical remedy for 


nd r 
and the Court of Chancery seem to no natural 2 The calamities of Ireland do not spring ive 
; they have never improved wy — — a sing! n com 0 e — 

other. The proprietors of Ireland are told, thatif they w 
But let us not ley on the management of such a exert themselves, prosperity is within their grasp & 
court more sins than it is justly chargeable por The | they prefer idleness and inattention, they mustinevita 5 
wretchedness of its uncared for estates is not, in all eink. Should the same reasoning x applied to the 


instances, primarily attributable to it; from p em- 
bàrrassment of the inheritors, they had been previously 
— bs Pais rented, . undergoing a rapid 

f de inert what we do. blame the 
system purs — * the Court 1 Chancery for is, 01 
when it finds such estates bad, it makes them worse, 
L T 3 


We take 


itched. 
Au instance often illustrates a principle. 


Court of Chancery 1 Is there anything 
under me — to exempt it from the comn.on 
Irish estates ? 

“ Let the. receivers under the Court of Chancery be 


angereus: to bnd re- 


eivers an independent discretion, 
ons of the court be conveyed with the rapidity "of 
directions from landlords to their agents. The see ae — 


one of the many which the annals of the Court o 
Chancery could furnish; the facts came 
court the last yea and were verified by the affidavit of 
In the year 1835, a receiver 
ppointed over a property year, increase of expense to the country. e costs allowed 
head rent of 164/. ; at the date of his appointment, the ceivers during the four years compri t 
rs on the pro to revious gale-day to which we have primarily alluded, averaged 
amounted to 24. 14s. e “oe 4 higher than | above 30,0001. per annu dd to this the 5 per t 
that subsequently settled by the court; there was no |p ndage on near a million sterling, and there will be a 
hanging gale, an me — nr falling due in September total of nearly 80,000/. 2 — showing an expense of 
and Nov gt aid in the following December per cent. on the rental, a greater per centage than is 
— the —— and no pauperism required for the — ye and improvement of the 
on the ae The very first aceoun A aper ed by the re- most — private estates. 
ceiver showed an arrear of 3227 10s. 1d. ; this 383 * $r great, is not all that is lost | 


progressively accumulating, until in 1842 ‘the 2 had 
2 of 8414 10s s. 3d., the greater part of 
h appearing by the 


master in one stro 
went on incre till it re 


ing, n 
the sum of 678/. 12s. 6d., and in 1848, upwards of 900/. 
costs incurred for this excellent and efficient 


= 
2 


d 
cumbent of the parish, whose tithe-rent charge, amount 
ing to ipsa nual sum of 16. 4s, 2d., was allow 
to 1 * aid. 
he inheritor — satisfaction of knowi 
sss hilt — clergym nd cre * r — nd 


e receiver's affidavit to be ir irre- | sho 
coverable, the sum “4 832. 5a. = was wiped out by the | the 
o be ho that. hence- 


2 
= 


that 3 he be 88 $ all bK ‘over aie 
A t the ‘ove thei n- 

dition, and not a shilling was expended on the perty 
permanent provement en, length, he 

was restored to his proprietorship, he found his t nantry 
ly unable to pay rent, and ma - 


law. The condition in in which is e was restored to 
er, evi ongly the defective 
of the Court of Pasasen A managemen aa a a | 


with . 

e aamerous and amall lao of tenantry. PEE 
pa is the 

2 th proprietor of this system 


pied | been 


ere ports, Ko., neither suit the eren nor Ne 


8. Su 


under this sy — og large sums are annually permitted 
to lie un 28 tive in the hands 

uld, the moment. they were received, be 
credit of — different causes, and be ma — 
tanta te for the benefit of the parties intere Re- 
ceiyers, in this respect, should be placed on a T 


during their transition — it, and cease to be the 


.| speaking reproach they are 
x 


IRISH MOSS IMPROVEMENT. 
In 1834, Mr. Inglis published his tour in Ireland, ra 
as little known 


misery and desti 

paea m these eg a befo. 
Ki e, and w 

dy. 
clamation of wW 
ntu “i at the aa to follow him with unequal steps, 
dad i may not be saying too much that had his plan 
been then adopted, 20 milione of morey. might — ve 
to this country ; the late cite st rebellion 

might. have | been preve ented ; some hun of tho 


writer 


* e Fetar of the power of aiding bi. den d 
A y con in preventing sub- | 
—— g the i ingress of AE ora tenan r ts, the over- pr ng | 
—and it confers that 
on nobody. hile. an control of the Court of Chan melee 
— a extinct ; the reosiver, 


a former article, 
quired 
is the t species. teeism, us managing 
estates shave non- resident agents, who have no aim 
cretion committed to them,—who cannot: i 
paros; the subdivision of a-f 


plasan 


which it takes e landlord 
transfers to are 1— i 
3 4 — — * a vote: its 


and 
en — 


ires much more 
nee when it is 2 mae 1847 there 
were over 1000 es tes, co covering a fifteen — art of the 
3 wand — in all likelihood more than afifteenth 


we have observed in 
qualification but to find. sufficient securities; he is re- w 


eath—starvation ; the — 8 panie 
yea hh out of the cou ntry 8 millions 
rving poor, might have been 


for the oided ; 
zae ai ves pia instead of bein 


g miserable, 


ards it, no attempt.to tr 
y of that which i is the onl renl ans effectual 
5 at can be applied for en vils 


e employed at 
poak or 4 5 must abstract one- half that number, 
to 


pancor 


to grow, 80 ve all 
condition, in character, in 


- | Here a field for labour is 8 apable of emp 
any nu 


caused 
of money for ont 
tion 


somewhat deceptive character, states TEON 
Ireland at 20 millions of acres. The total area 
0,0 
es i 


oa 1 oe pad acres of flat — 3 op pg: 
untain bog. The e work gives fhe 


0 
different " oceupations jad ‘the 8 according to wi 
ce 


us of 1841, whic 406,7 
Le . 743—or 66 
rade and manu! factures 1, 933, Sete 24 ber dr 


of England is not set down 
h n acre. If, therefore, os prese 
agricultural instruction should pro x 
the present rental sins only be fi seein to be — i 
3 his shows th 


fellow-creatur 


prev ant it. If thie 
er 25 hitherto e failed, if it is sure to 

n future, from the statistics produ ced, as e 
ee e as any m eee = proposition, it is 
evident some N expedient must be —ů 
we would war the im a ev his ex 


vil. 
ean only be fou e in the reclamation of the wana iii 


mber of pos 

contents, that it an 

cult, n t, in es operation, but which, by ju 
e easy and pra 


etieable. 1 


E 
D 
4 
. © 


lie 
fisheries, which, u 
oub tg 


prey are no doubt good i 

mploym the remu 

Government capital is highly problematical 
ti db 

wor pl 


— ilps Pale 
standard, and, at the same time, of bri nn 
return, not only to ba labourer enna "a 

proprietor w s it, it seems like somethitg 


approaching - infatuation, that no effort should hat. 
made ores either ot 


nt whith 


been hithert 


og 
o 
© 
d 


as br 5 
e 3 sped on 9 reproductive work, in e 
bog lan i 


t 
7 3 bar published instances of grea 
bog | 


oO 


claim 
2 0 
arge m uring towns, an 


wealthiest d in the world. 
existed in their 


THE RURAL PO OR. 
Ir is not very often that we find pa , 
written in such an cars — 5 as those 
and “B. B.“ Dur last three years 


“ 
1 do 


fee, a single article or 


low views of the morality of any — 
persone, except one by some unhappy 
mee y d and stoma 


nion of our Courts of — 

— — 
e present term contains 171 causes, 

nine-tenths of which relate to land. The business 

2 in the Rolls. Court is rapidly and ively 

ment ok oe — — o r 

nearly double their, or i „ 

revenue hitherto derived x 

annum ; last year it exceeded — one, e — 2 — 


in his Page on the Iúda Re. |e 
ull of information, 


— ough of a 


nd many apne on Fen a of ‘the jon 
9 indeed, are so entirely discordant with 


THE. 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


75 


ters in it; 


patient, anxious labours yee ever been directed. The; on earth they mos neither with gratitude nor ag 


the disease i he one as the 


ent.” Social evils, however, W be shot down in 
this s hair-trigger sy le tnd I hinted to S.“ — Ts 
1848), “ we cann fallow w a piece of vie d . 
vo V a das — ee. of light horse,” so I v 


n”—your advocate of that neither can we sweep vice as 

to become turbulent and a et ced and ee cultivator vill try a little rance out of our population or ourselves, wit ng, 
uch asocial | judicious dressing and not of the branches | painful, laborious efforts nd “ gratitude !” alas f 
cle and Gazette N ‘but of the roots 4 Poy uch e as * S582” us say it, as e alone—for what has the 

ith prejudice, igno- | and “ B. B.“ will not see how necessary it is ot e gra to society? For the 7s. or 88. a week, 
“republic of letters“ it is true, the root of the matter in search of lt these | with intervals during winter and sickness, when even 
h there is, or such voices a of ae social tree. Is not the 2 * 5 that pittance cannot be had? for his ignorance, or his 

to be heard; in this business? Does it, without dou glimmering knowledge, which is.almost worse ? for th 
surface t Let us see if am mischief be woh seat in | tender ser of tho agistrates, who, if they have 


similar opinions have bee: 
and contributors since 


r the Sanaa 
in sentiments and 
me to. — calling © 
sake of 
e 
per: very much . e interpellations 


would have been a 
on the 55 8 nana 


— broth brotherhood 5 sa ies nal, s few 
grow a 
„ er a . eas: g 
on a gridiron or so; but all this spiriting 


2 


5 
37 


ates 
s get sen wa steal; ladies wib g 


ct hia 


the roots. Have we not sown ignorance and harsh- 
ness, ae reaped crim 
1 cee ree has torn us, and we bleed; 
We should. h 3 known such fruit would spring from 
such 
* 8 8. si solemnly warns us aan the utterance 
of “morbid sympathy ” with the labourer. “N 
peasant or proletary in the kingdom,” he says briskly, 
o is not — with i 
tice t the dogma 
the “ precious doctri ines of Louis Blane,” merely disguised 
by a little“ milk and water varnish ;” and he concludes | 
oracu me pi 75 m me, if you wish P ong the ps 
ee ings of s r, you 
ase 5 fatten aoe (the anan E bisting sins, pe 
learn ie — them the truth the whole trut 
ough it may well be doubted whether “s. a ae 
e- petter qualified by his reside 2 as a man of w: 
i ing atis on the 


=a 
E 


the gaol? for a life of pen 

prospect of an old age in the workhouse and a paupers 
coff Int ed name o naniii for what has 
the ył 


labourer to be grateful to soci 
The worthlessness and in — of the poor is a 
pie amongst many, neda a common reason for 

t them. And the same “en ent is 
he same class of ——— o decry the labours. 
= -> who, by means a ae * ae instruc- 
are striving to 

of neat ‘Britain, Those who- 


indness. 


—by 
beats the working man 


* n 
adily into . own soul, and, having m 
the lots that are there. t 


cated outcast, ands 


n semi-civilised countries, for giv tude? Surely the — of th is no re 
ocial conditi a — the — gli 24 Enema than he is is, by | but the contrary, for withdrawing from them the help- 
his experie ” for teachi ing | ing ha If they are worthless, they are even yet the 
more minis and, perhaps, — the timely ee 


agricaltural . pe gen 1 willingly admit that it is 
t desirable. “a if 5 ee, possibly be avoided, to goad 
ats lab — ness by dwelling is wrongs ; 
but tthe we should set about a remedy as ye etly as 
p le. 
ver, itis not likely that many of the class re- 
60 to, especially in “ S. S's” n sme where 
po The edu 


n 
rejoi a more or less enlightened intelli- 
ence, have we exerted N dae to lea ind out 


life ; | every one, 


gent tle emen, 


virtue. 

But are not worthless nor ungrateful. I must 
have had ten times the experience among labourin 
poor men. which any man 3 has beet 

the army or navy can have had, a: 

labouring man of England and washers above all of 

debased worthless wretch- 

y “B. B. My e een of 

these classes: 3 ‘with that of many of your corre- 

and with your own ; itis 


s, of Ipswich 
the Messrs. 
last named 
e: paper 


2 
of Edinbur 


ow 
Chambers — 4 
2 r ve 


Mes: 
Carr, the rea bakers + 


of the dismal ere of ignor and hi ab oeri t 

and have we an 

Ae be him 
consoles 

hires e sO e — — of privations and sorrows | 
than ours, renders only so much more desirable for 
? These are en 3 1 believe, to a large 
number of a friends of the Gazette, thoug 8. 8 

d. B. B.“ only * not 1 them import 
Notwithstanding the ong honourable labours of the 


ant. 
la 


gather of Dr. 
Lonsdale oft that city, in 5 scons tr of Health,” have 
succeeded d ears, simply 


friends of man in dib & * ihe of our rural rr. ned 
urban ‘poet tion is uneducated, not only in| brothers of them, dissimilar, but hearte 
book Rv tab but in the common lore of the heart, | who were are yet famous for ihe 2 ithe, sand 
e of kindness. The spirit of u re and the | contented peasantry that tilled: y iaeia 
black. hole, — law o son ce, with true thas. ther a ing classes are — ict 


ing 
e alternative; is = too Shish abroad | 


5 
- | ignorance and e coercion, had they —— lorier to their 
for 


e| that educ 


ewr 


DULCI ing 

amongst il r spir meS and 
| education aie 6 widely diffused, i it is Vain pi: e for 
| practical resu This spirit, howeve >i of 


will, ta ever, 
Obser vr shallowness of the oma: 3 — S 
in e to the effect of kindness upon He 
takes an especial r * and having place 2 
the influence of benevolence, pe rhaps not directed, as he 
hi at 0 once 


ul 
nce is — on 
failure 25 an iso 
debased society as he describe 
not d is i 


ic or peasant is idle and dissipated, 
nite common with Genet philosophers to ar, 


etrines. Duri ast quarter 


of a 1 8 3 eat Pe en of various 
more advoe 5 ae 


kinds hav the 
— 1 the ne N e e 
d them; and I think the doctrine tha t 


2 des is pretty spa Nr 
ering 


arar of su 


He 
solated kind. hearted family in thelr efins SOL 


th and there i pe and i 
that the English; peasant would, with the same advantages, 
become as moral, industrious, and w orthy as t — Scottish. 
And” this I will say, I believe there will, or at least a 
hay: > heen found as 


peasants 
any 12 men taken at random out of any class of society» 


in the kingdom 

I confess- I have felt somewhat indignant that the- 
common cant of the hard and the worldly should have: 
found its way into columns weer we rr 
t genial views of *. and earnest promote 
the best material and moral interests sof the tiller of the 


Jew in ; 

not in silence hear the labourer 

| slandered, and that I fervently bid his friends aud ad- 
tes God speed. L. 


‘OUR PROSPECTS. 
UR editorial remarks are . to be 8 at 
boldness and their 


Yo 
once for 


prudent 
| speculation. Your proper function is to point out to 


people as as useless ; nay; ev! 
shall have their reward in ue ‘ange 48. S * bal 


th 
ine 


us to adopt in any change of cireumstances. For once, 


- 16. THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [FER 3, 


— whether equal to your | as he now does, all the loss meurred by the farmer in| reside too many miles from me to enable me pap 
usual self — vou —— us still to hope (a =. ! against | his contest against the laws of Nature. Our labourers, | tain — — e eee to go to the post and b. 
hope) that corn-growing will again in England repay its now the victims of a stagnant cultivation of cereals, | publis is Peery me add o l 
I, for one, am uaded that it will not, and I would certainly have little to complain of in a system | the last ee, 4 3 nis — orton’s 
know many able and 3 men who have the same which doubled or trebled the floating capital and labour | cation. I dare er 0 p ‘ — : rward for a linguist, 
et I am no rather rejoice | of the Pee ad ge en, 1 3 = am prepare prove, in reference tote 
that legislation, by jerking us — rudely out of the ruts at cultural problem of the day, i l pute 8 T 
of our old — 4 wit y make 8 about us fora Ar. Coote, is, ew to convert our green crops with | slippery pudding in those ark and dismal du 
way more suited to our 2 T even fancy that we | profit? We hope and believe that it is eor of a è 
may already discern a broader, straighter, sounder | satisfactory practical solution, but we do agree t a ya 8 
safer road than that we have hitherto travelled. with our correspondent if he thinks that this it gtn 4 dark and dismal, ns on x y eee I referred b 


In times gone by, when we had but a limited 3 | received. Hitherto the profits of green crops have was a slippery be c Z, requiring no mast, 
of transit from other praag — many of been proved * by — such a value o n the manure | cating whatever, and in my opinion it received non 
great corn-growing countries and colonies were ty a they produce as it possesses in virtue of its ability to | I believe, however, the receipt for the making Of the 
condition, or had facilities, to export, or we had com- | grow corn, on the growth of e Mr. Coode considers compound varies ad libitum, or re nata, as the docting 
modities for profitable exchange, the inducements to | us to be wasting our strength. ] write — Mr. Compton’s being certainly the most reas 
grow corn at home were sufficient to compel the climate — 2 3 yaa speld ‘ned 8 mnt ] 
ard the more favoured soils of Great Britain to produce espondence. rm for it, i e-podge ; but 
the corn required by our then scanty and frugal popula- em Gorresp to adopt Mr. Mort ’s language, not to disp re 
tion. It was easy to gos a =e further with the aid of a | « Opinionum commenta Dies delet ; Nature judicia confirmat,” | words, I will henceforth adopt any other more app. 

— tter and e Nat. Deo. | priate term, if one can be pointed out to me. I u 
our inferior 2 a supply- never a 2 one In replying to the many excellent 3 men who | already writtten much por than I intended on th 
ne mpi increased and more consuming popu- have troubled themselves to notice my oftentimes too | present occasion ; but I must not forget to thank, 
latio hastily i communication icultural | most — all the 9 n who have tely s 


written s to the v 
Not to open a free trade discussion, let us pass to the | Gazette, I resume the above motto, whieh 1 adopted at | handsomely noticed my very humble and imperfect em 
fact, that —— is om ia that we have Hewes the commence me of this important discussion on the | munications on this all- important subject. Although | Í 
Sieh to ur soils and climate, and our present and pro- mode of arran ing and constructing a farmstead ” for | do not agree with them in box-feedin „ J appreciate 
spective P ee e circums — to guide us in the the feeding of cattle, in order to show that the guide their motives, and particularly the spirit in which they | 
selection of the produce we are to raise. We have a whom Sarapa to follow is the infallible one which pn replied to my letters. All that I request of then 
d increasing population, year by year more and alone has t aa ipe wre ta conduct me to the trut] | is to confine themselves to what I write, and to give me 
more consumers and less and less raisers of agricultural “fla us, et melior litem natura diremit.” a little credit, and - not conclude that I h ha plated 
produce; a commerce and the means of transport | T° the classical scholar I will also beg to recommend a kaiki in a position which I am not prepared to defen, 
adequate to all d ds, and capable of infinite i ; | passage in “ Plinii Historia Naturalis,” lib. xxxi., cap. 7. | This observation particularly applies to — 1 
and with this a close connection with colonies and | Shall te also ask the favour of those gentlemen who N o that only, in the excellent letter of Mr. Compton, ws, 
foreigners all too happy to supply our wants, and take rg. o notice my ke Mr. Morton, cone a. hat because I condemnow 
the products of our manufacturers and the services of an d important inquiry to reperuse some of my earliest thing, or the hodge-podge, I must recommend 
our commerce i hese economical facts have letters on it; but particularly those of Dec. 4, 1847, as I have shown this is a 8 i 
an irresistible influence on our position as farmers, |and Feb. 26, 1848. I make this latter request in exhibited what my thoughts may be on this subject ial § 
Our population must be supplied by us or others—and order that we may clearly understand each other; but at present they are not made known. But I 
others than ourselves havea voice 8 which | Particularly that I myself may be understood by the ever travel within a convenient distance of Was. 
part we shall supply. ve aniones has the para- | gentlemen who believe that I am in error. P®, | Newtons, I will certainly pay Mr. Compton a visit, a 
mount voice in this m also, that these requests will not be cons sidered un- from the style of his letter I am sure I should receives 
Corn, 8 and other se seeds, a pena sae dried produce |” easonable, when it is remembered that I stand almost Ma welcome, I wished, also, last week to have ete 
—which coul of co ted value in little alone on one side, and that my opponents are many sed the same to the Rev. Sir Geo. Robinson, but th 
bulk or 8 be profitably — by our com- and powerful on the other; the odds being so fearful lengh of my letter precluded my doing so ; but I nm 
merce from the Anti rom wheresoever soil and | against me, it is requisite that I should, as it were, show that La appreciated his kindness also in inviting m 
pra is e rsa or the demand for our | choose my own ground; but I ask for no favour; only | +, witness his comfortable bo ox, however much I d 
0 


— 
— 
“+ 
c 
eee 
S 
x 


an unlimited competitio: ch pressed fo e | a 
oe wor! ecu concentrated products. 8 sam on box-feeding which 3 in the Agri. and exhibit too excellent thoughts, to see unders 
other lk TAE ficti bi 
usual root and Mal arom physically incapabile of di dig- this 5 st is the article from my friend, Mr, . eon a oy ef ee speech S apply 
t transport, anc d their wales would not bear it. So of „ Mor ton. The first observation I make here is on the saie a under the initials “ M. V., and indai | 
fresh meat and milk. For these, our carnivorous popu- | doctrines ;” this being in the plural ees eee, e e othate: -in poren on, I state that it h] 
ion i erh e 


. 2 2 
was to grow ara ef upon it, at less expense, that we substituted Mr. M 
forage er crops and tostall-feed — The perverseness | Warnes’ linseed compound for the oileake formerly ill pk 3 a re? 7 
m could alone have made us, in the present d. ow. with oileake form ha y 
use i 


y from th ture, me. Mr. Mor - 
oe in 3 — quality of our own eer ea we (i. e., we at Whitfield) can make more | 1848, Geo. Wilkins 
— r 


T eoupy a pact of th the nan 
not pay, except as helps to the corn crops. This I am | myself, nor shall I attem mpt to give an opinion on i oe oe 1 rei one and. tae those: that e, o dens 
bold to say, and ready to prove, is a pernicious error, until, by analytical examinations, I have made myse f aj re 1 i ane pa e f — bi 
PTT — 1 Dave undertakes to oh heal Hama aig soy oes ou of Fe ne 

— is now placed the whole burden of pro- en ting a prohler so 3 like this; “let it be mon 2 ma a Keep a bondag ak er or fms le erm 
= itis cong er e dr, cuiii. ia the | wi, js ‘ther i hired by them or she is a m ber of bi 


e 
has still placing of them in an unnatural position, is it the family; these 3 e 8 3 . 
Ip carry in th resh the lan, 


Fire 
F 


22127 
: 
ta 
|=} 
; 
8 
t=] 
3 
a 
$ 
E 
2 
2 
8 
oO 
55 
a 
E 
oO 
2 
S 
g 
A 
5 
8 
2 
3 


man ting from their own consumption, the pick | Í saw the same gentleman, and, when a ie 5 how to handle a hoe or perform many farm Paa te 
of the seasons, the whole operations of the husbandman | answer to the Rev. Sir G. Robinson, he said that 1 PY Which they might earn much. In South Hatt oj 
rected to their 8 can top and 


; and, to Ge. 
yh language, he added, the beasts, as he looked and take a week to do 2 or 3 acres, make bays 1 
e the 


as an objection ; the great a en Mort to do Sheik: I di fields, are general] i di Juster, talking "5 

; the concentration of capital in | on to do so, w eave sige: I a ee wi 
stock, I of labour in tillage, in foddering, and in the could; point out p the hospitable’ pve tor of that | the news of the next e 1? rotera oo i 
dairy. grant the ag at and admit that 100 acres establishment the propriety of keeping cattle in such cottages, the Duke complains of their bad s 1 
a 1 us 0 


' „ Buti koco 2 over them than E 
3 . Ag won for all of us. The occasion to where the bas feeding was practised ; 2 stalls of the farm offices. y gamer 1 
name; fo ae naa from a concentrated invest- and I feel confident, also, that that gentleman, and eee tenant, be ought — — 2 | 
5 a, The farmer will be a manufacturer | he is a truly scientific one, will confirm all that I have | th cottages in repair ; and if the mc a 3 
5 enjoy the advantages of a manu- written on the dirty appearance of the box-fed cattle, | e inside clean they ought to be ke nee ej 14 
facturer staple which knows no fluctuation of For obvious reasons, of course, I I do not publish the | 7 the buildings are ruinous or that d 


shion, and no slackening of demand. The landowner names of other friends without th tion tends to a want of cleanliness, this ango ; 
will probably find how different it is to draw a neb | e Abam Constable; Bed, Rast Pa e ene | belongs to the p r. . 
revenue from a soil culti in accordance with the Suffolk. N Bergholt, Stratford St. Mary, perly said the only effectual remedy for these 
highest ca eapabilidien of the di tases instead of discounting, | t 8. — Esq., M. P., Knole House, Frant, near Ton. do construct a better deseri 
bridge W | often many of 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


77 


i ee room for four or | labourers of a superior class will grow up, who will 
: kitchen, sitting- 3 rog serv | have been 1 a habits of industry, a he will not, w 
- M ndividnals; sometimes is crowded, but there | cause they have a greater amount of knowledge, be 
five . if the 1s 2 2 2 . 2 
sleeping apartments floor for the removal or quiet of — their station but 3 eir duty the 
i no room above the Hc Baily. wever a change is | better for possessing that knowledge ; and by a 
1 sick member of ighland of Scotland are — their repay those ‘tenfold who may have 
i at t ner — wards the ar tes of these — rater g p t ee 
j 3 labourer. t Dalmeny, | Peckham Rye. 
Wann of Edinburgh, a bet r class of cottages 
within a miles ing to improve the heal 
_ have erected, jon. We only hope the Duke, I 
habits of theru dl will sweep away some | Annual Supplement to the Tithe 3 lion Table 
the best 4 pe ia wellings — biam — large} So., Go., “oo 1849. By C. M. Willich, — 
if not all these, Jace th such a rd and Actuar ae na University Life Assurance 
2 3 The "Bea tch labourer ngs _Longes A — sf wi 1 ; N 
F land, let him also ave been favoure y 8 i “3 with a proo 
takes the first rank in . ` Hint sheet of this tract, to enab -i the following 
ser ari ent is dou Mi a great a 8 for the 5 een regarding 
Liguid a perhaps there there is no more plentiful source — nage — of Wheat, gare and . during 
i t 8 
a to agricult ore systematic | the pas 
272 hid ure. > . Ne ana * ANNUAL AVERAGE PRICES PER IMPERIAL QUARTER, 
2 i ori 9 . 
inoperati ties — 15 the preliminaries in this pur- omy Wheat. Barley. Oats. 
ep i the prospect is as 
suit. . * 8. d. ea „ 
— dina e reward of enterprise, aud in t 1841 64 32 1 22 5 
the present, of doubtful prospect, to _expec et from 1842 57 27 19 3 
22 a spirit of peg enterpri an un : 
field would be the height of folly. We are entitled to) iss 290 1 31 2 6 
hope at present for a trial of novel principles only when 1846 54 32 23 8 
trial is both easy and inexpensive. It is therefore 1847 69 44 28 8 
matter of nee sieg increasing repetitions of such | 1848 50 21 206 
— as th “M. at p con- ur readers inte TE in the 1 ae of annual prices, 
structed a ae fer A ue gallons, Gbich is filled in the and their influence on rents, rent- charges, &e., will find 
= bu ee the 


course of a ool 
urine in his catt! 

day 
a large and expensive con nstruction 
not certainly i 3 . ee 

inevitable loss. Swee his 

— . “ia stil 
cess, for the accumulation of sulphate 


together with the other elements of urine and products 
m a sweet or salubrious 


of decomposition, is steed > 
Contrast ail this 


only large enough m — 
‘a few days, should receive all the 


of growi wing wea 


— 


manurin 


=m 
= attendant on 
ie prevailing idea of 
—— ie see 
8 


ate utterly ignon 


ignorant. 


eu; 
know, from experience, that one 


of the 
Conten a, an improving agricul has to 
tof that de ebstinaey of ignorant labourers. If 
a deserip tion is set to plough, and you teli 

ed a certain depth, if he has b 
—— he will chink 1 know 

urn 

You, and such will se ts eka with with all you 
All the time whi may be bestowed in 
is thrown ipa ; their mind 
makes inate. It is 
is Young, while the mind 


He 
apks “of Hate, to Ke sek sw 
285 i His lig aud i is pi he 


the entire liqui 
such a pit be applied to the land daily, the 

solid matters, 8 to so frequent 

and pereolation of atmosphere, rapidly 


, and ready to ore and mul- 


er. 
no other möde of irrigation, hog so early or 
in t 


incomparably less r 
g. his 


which I m 


rance 
1848), has to pepe of v ne 
as often iged 


and women, wy in lioii 


the 
„ and he will not 
— A Similar means, 


ws his Ay ew every 
Here is 


a ‘indeed . 


d by 
ha e pro- 
of ammonia, 


information — i in this tract indispensable, 


Caiendar. = S poratoni, 


AsT LOTHIAN FARM Sch ae 2 2 ave been employed 
during the week plough in g lea and car off Swede Turnips ; 
likewise making up drills $a 3 % E . carting . 
spreading the same, and nting early Kidney, and the 
named Forty-folds, and a ‘iw of the Irish Cups. We Prac 
part of a field — up in drills intended for Beans, and will 


sow next week. 
LAMMERMUIR een Farm, Jan. 22.— The farm consists of 
elevation of 700 to 1200 feet, held 


4763 imperial acres, at an 
under a 19 years’ lease. Of this we — 1 from having 
— 5 


6 
and 1200 blaci facea. ewes with a 
faced h Leicester 1 


sanitary 
but all 
d 


a saturation of 


ewes, are kept pure. There being no wedders, the whole pro- 
duce, rect the live lambs required to keep up the stock, are 
sold off. The Cheviot ewes are drafted at fone r years old, while 
a ot the black. faced are retained — 25 bo are five. 

0 shor t-hor nan a Ay 5 oe are ept, being 


— during winter, 3 ike ania which 
allowance of Turnips. The steer calves are sol 
6 months p the heifers being kept and disposed of 2 cows, 
when two how i years old, to farm servants in the — . 
As they 3 the cattle are 
not — 3 ay 18 graze out of th l * 

Five horses are kept for workin ng the arable land, abou at 120 


acres of which is under a 4 years’ rotation, the rest lying in 

Grass. Two men and two lads, with t 

three women, manage the work ; in summ 

boys or ‘girls being requir ed, One man wit almost consta 
Five shepherds attend to the sheep. Wages 


er ihree or four more 
ntly 


No water 


will be given on a future occasion, Were it not for the Turnips 

and hay, which are oe for the stock, tillage does not pa 

at mv Nee sm eare 
ed t £, 


w . They 
or ploughed in two months ago, but, as the weather was fresh, 
and they appeared to rowi 


th 
needed for the ewes. Weh stored ich 
raain the wea 4 union we fea 


cannot all 


picking out those fa — field which — still sound, ands 
them. As 45 rest are still of some 
— 4 sheep on them, being the — of ‘different kinds a adai ages. 
apeh i continues ma eee indeed, we never had so few 
aan ths at this s season, St ail i in fair bt pe thou zh the 


8 


the direct 


the 3 day 


wo 


er much. e ex- 
alvesin a eo . “and plates have been 


first ca re- 
During frost we were employed eee 


pect our 


ime w 


y. 
> SOTTY to say that the late intense — 976 m 
Ye 


DIBBLING MACHINE: Salsola. Apply to S. 


— —— 
alsol. Newingt 
Knole Park, Frant, near N =a ei Wells, W 


K ent. 


EJECTED TENANTS : the value of 
seed and of growing crops; ; unless he entered under the very 
same circumstances of which he now complains. 

Friaes: A Regular 7 You must drain the land; or dig them 
up. The land will send them up if it be wet and their vor 
be there. There 
Num 

Guano: t10t 


a n tees quantity than it is convenien You 
had much better sow the nf 4 2 — or 1 Va just 
sen l regularly, and the 
by itself, not with the gu no. 2 . — e of rao gee 
purchased of the ee should be most of it soluble 
in wate 
ITALIAN Piratii: 
mown in June, 


Practice. We have sown in March and 


8 WURZEL Subs al Cultivate just as fi r Turnips. 

Sow 7 lbs. of 1 (Ora Pitan per acre, dibbling it at 
intervals of 14 inches 2 12 tops of the drills, which should 
be at least 2 feet apart 

MEASUREMENT OF CATTLE eee * useful s 
appeared i n sd Éo: Plough, ” a monthly periodical; Longm 
Multiply th the girth, chee least, a 5 times the 

e from the ‘boulder to end of bods, and divide by 21 

Mountain FL. JW L W. Linum catharticum we s 

it is indinative: of dry but poor nse Lime or vit hick 
by fertilising the land would encourage the growth of more 
useful plants, _— no doubt be beneficial. 

OILCAKE TO goer Subscriber. The results of your practice 
are surely th — es e of its 5 a give 
our — — Liked and chaff at night during win 
good effec 

“abscess, 10 SHEEP: 2 A. It was _ quite right to lance the 


an injury, or from 


5 of eh ig 


some rnal c There is no other objection to a poultice 
an the “difficulty of eit — a animal wili most pro- 
bably get well without it; if not, warm fomentations “will be 
desirable. W, C 
THRESHING Mac ‘I have long had 
roof of you willingne ss to assist all and everything ora 
nected with agricultural improvement. There re bu t fi 


ange ed threshing machine. I = lately pate up a new 
3 8 mes six horses ; the hor Wer is a good one ; 

wheel ove. mac a floor in the 
barn, afis m gt as the wheel; but from some cause 
we ee, wo Foggy | small wheels to drive the 8 rake, 


ine on 


fan ers, so that we oppress the horses too much if 
we — 1 bushels of Wheat i in one day ; this will not do, 
and I am advised b rum for the 


a peg 
beater dram it is 4 feet wide, beaters 23 inches 3 Will 
Jou or any of your correspon ndents well vers sed ir 


of your * paper, give me an opin 
merits of a drum machine. I see it will —— the 
straw more 7785 the beaters, and thresh more with the same 
ower, a matter withoutthan 
he beat er dru where rollers are employed. Is it pos- 
sible to get me 1 jt sor manent 1 e. >i rom it to 
make e good thatch, impor 
consider,” 
her aera ney ao Your 25 S insufficient. You sho 
woh fall of —_— you 
vahe et its 


water 
would load the buckets of a wheel of the igh 8 going 
5 a 3 rate. 
. Where is the large- 3 Wheat of Bessa- 
ssia, to on had ? You- had better apply to Messrs. 


rab 
Teese, Edin ey 
itrate of soda p. 43, col. a, 


ERRATA: Lusor. e pro duce fom 
sho ould have Bee 294 bushels. "the apparent — — 


ciled by supposing ind 2 et » to timber 2 
land actually gro ti 
Markets. 
5 COVENT GARDEN, Fes. 3. 
t kinds of Fruit. Pe- apples ure sufficient ety the per 
Hothouse 5 are scarce; but foreign ones are toler- 
ably well supplied. Pears consi ist of Beurré Ran nce, Easter 
Beurré, Ne Plus — and Old Colmar. 9 te = 
altered since Jaer w 3 7 in wor ce are -sufficien 
the demand, lentiful. 
win ae S abubdant an 


+ Vv. 


8 
emand. OC 
Heaths, Poiargoniums, Cheiatmae oy Camellias. Gardenias, 
Fuchsias, and Ros 
FRUIT 
7 apples, oh Ib., — to 78 e per peck 
rapes, hothou . 8S 


post after Turnips Potatoe s for Ou is e — now 
ploughing this in, — finished the lea, a- far as we can get 
at present, for drains, which are putin every 30 feet, 3 feet deep, 
and filled 16 inches with broken stones ; cost of sr ao 3 73 
per y: mig Similar work will employ us for some tim 
r Farmer, 


Notices to Correspondents. 
t know what are — base ils of the 


ASPHALTE: J O M. We do no 
process for making an as —— floor; but perhaps this notice 
may 1 * ber e — ieme one e P 

Bo nes: J W uld be ned. The ‘acid _may be 


Ifthe bones are not cr — they Sn take longer to br renk 
down under the acid; and you may fail in getting 2 — 
answer your 8 ose. 
BuckwHeEat: 4 Cc any of our correspondents say if 
Buckwheat i is generally 28 in any cad England as a 
sheep? and if so, is it considered 
to be fattening ? or is it diuretic, or of too aae Sap ies a nature 
for those animals ? [Sow a bushel of seed per acre in mid- 
on poor sandy soil, in rows 12 inches apart. 
* 
isfactory to the re eaders of the 
o be informed that E. C.’s” question 
e non- appearance of butter, men. 
1 = last n number, bas been solved, by i 


as ba d her name 


dagen. that the milk was — i 
been 3 Par pi Ted: = ad (if 


reeipe } 

erook churn ing it round 
three times, = the Jast ti the witeh will fel ìi it, and take 

her depa: “E.C” bas had some diff n per- 


büading the tee ee — G went deen has fot 12 
Pin her oss t the door to every 

who as pred Feel fringed in Wales 
. without — puniahiment, through ‘the intervention of the 
Ours witches. the same time, E. C.“ will 


feel obliged to any correspondent for a more raticnal cure, 


„P. 525 8 2s to 5s 


22 
— Filb., p. 100 1bs.,60s to 100s 
— Cob, p. 100 Ibs., 90s 10 150s 
— Brazil, ` „128 168 


„108 to 188 
VEGETABLE 
Ca = p. doz., 3d to Is Radinis p. doz. hands, Isto 
. doz., 23 to 6s 
| Savo an ` 757 doz., 3 3d to Is ls 6d 
Gr — * doz. 3 Is 6d Onions, pt ‘nel 2d ou 
to 2 — p. b tye to 2s 6d 
Cauli flow rs, p. doz., 2s to 63 — ani 18 Is 6d to 48 
— whia per bun., Is 6d | — pickling, p. br. ‘sieve, Is 6d 
3s to 3s 
wn, p. bun., 9d to 2s Shallots, per Ib., 4d to 8d 
gebe p. hf. ey 1s = Is 6d —— per Ib., 4d to 8d 
Potatoes, per ton, 60s to 180s rtichokes, Jerusalem, p. half 
— per 8 to 98 ieve, Is t afd 
per bush., 2s 6d to 5s Lettuce, Cab, ry . 4d to 6d 
Turnips, p. doz. bun.,1s to 23 — Cos, do. Feat to 15 
Red Beet, 6d s ndive, per score, Is to 


to 2s 6d 
3 p. h piin vy a — 

Asparagus, p. 100, 28 pu 
Seakale, p. punnet, gate 28 


Rhubarb, bundle, 6d to Is 6d 
rench Beans, per 100, 2s 6d thyme, per bunch, 2d to 3d 
uacumbers, eac 5 2a 5 A Wat p. doz. bun 9è 
Leeks, per doz., Parsley, p. hf. seive, Is 6d to.2s. 
Celery, p. bundle, 2d Hk 15 3d — ts; p. bdle., Is to Is 6d 
Carrots, p. Zs to 5s Marjoram, per bunch, 2 
Spinach p. ere. ls 6d to 28 ( Mint, greeu,pe er bunch, 6d to 9d 


POTATOES. ie hy WATERSIDE, Jan. 29. 
The Committee report 
left our market so barely — with 
tatoes, that we have but few sorts to 
zm prom are this day’s ge ions: 
150s, ; tle do., 90s, o 110s. ; French Whi 
1108. ; Batch da, 50s, to 80s.; Belgian do., 80s, to 


4 e winds — 
every escri iption o 
quote prices of this week. 


1008, 


78 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
Per Load of 36 Trusses. MARK LANE, Parmar, Feb. 2. tigi TEPHENSON anp CO., 61, Graces 
n Feb. 1, Tue from the principal provincial S London, and 1 — somiat 4 
Eulis — T oe Clover — se 60810958 | markets, — little exception, write all grain as being CYLINDRICAL BOI! BOILERS, seca RIGAL and ee 
— 
Tank B 


20 5 % | Saw . . ap (Somewhat improved in value. At _ Wheat | seie impor 
. | brought Is. to 2s. more money, with very brisk sale, | applying the tem to Pineries, P 
_ Trade heavy Feb. J. Coors. and greatiy improved feeling. At Liverpool, although | £c., by which atmos pheri eat as well 
— . 3 sec 
Prime Mealor Hay lay 7000750, 1 * 8 „ 70% to 84s the weather was called wild and rainy, a much ar S, and Co.thave also to state that at the request 
Inferior 50 653 New 8 . — L | feeling was manifest. At Wakefield an opinion prevails | friends they are nom making their Boilers of 
New * — nave — Stray .. 28 32 | that the worst is past. At Birming ham and Gloucester | Copper, by which the cost is ‘reduced, : 
Old Clover 50 56 JosHUA Bakes. hol a rs 0 of grain are firm, are now so well known, cone bo mite. i 
i N n pros 
HOPS, Farmar, Feb. 2. today, the trade is altogether better, aud be forwarded, as well a s reference of the highest 
Messrs. PATTENDEN and Tura report t ae the trade is firm, — much higher — may not be obtained, there they may be seen at mast f ah obility’s seats and pri i: i 
anda 2f P ps, both for con- is no reason to eontemplate any decline. The ex 1 245 throughout the kingdom, me * 
a Arei 
Mid. and. eeu Farnhams...p. ewt. 50s — 120s — 7˙‚— pay aes Bot eee — Po 17, New Park. street, every article 5 be 
Kents... p. cwt. 50s to 1203 Yearling Kents ... 40 — 56 | reverse is the result of this day’s — All — Buildings, as well as for heating 
— ma Kents . 40 — 70 | Yearling Sussex . 40 — — grain is decidedly more valuable. Timid ones now — 6 — —— —.—  adratitageous te them, 
hess — 65 oid Hops sso 0 “ p . : y? Th 8 onservato: or Woo erected 
— — — * — at — 1 eee pply d- mental designs. "Balconies, Palisading, Field ang 
SMITHPIELD, Mowpar, Jan 8 “Ba 5 ans iT O e set — Fences, Wire-work, We. 
The number of Beasts is rather la han pe Monday last, | VAnCe.— ey 18 firm} — 7 — — — 
but the morning being — — 22 — markets a iiti ls. t d r.—Peas, scarce and inquired for, SPADE sioner eres AND DRAINING, 
clearer, trade an 2d. Ibs. on reign 


mak mo oney.— ittle 
— brings 26s. to 278.— Malt moves slowly at former value, BY HER 
2 c i ced.—Seeds are gen i 
tain late ae — but — is . egg — middling — a little better. cake the same, say MAJESTY’S 
* s a steady orkers at late Za Ps 
From Holland and Germany we have 316 Beasts, 630 1. 10s, per 1000 for E Engleh z be a ag Fig he s 
and 89 Calves; from Norfolk and Suffolk, 160 — ply fore eign.— Flour sells y at s. per W. x A. LYNDON, e Works, 
Leicester . Northampton 700 ; , and from — s vance, though the ban pe te 1 all calla 448. only; W N of Patent SPADES, . 
Per st. of 8 Ib. - d Per Sibs.—s d Norf. * on board, + = 6a, RAINING TOOL 
‘Best Scots, Beat Tong” 1 4 7 t0 4 6 o Nu 1 1 "Garde ners, and tural Labour, 
fords, 0. 8 10 to 4 2 Ditto Shern LIVERPOOL, FRIDAY, F expiration of the Corn Ae Spades will be found ieee — vad calla to 
Best Shortshorns 3 8—4 0 Ewes ~ -= quality Bér 0 relonsos o our bonded sieke — thal Is per qr. Sets, a of Wheat Abodi the 1 —— of digging g very materi the 1 
A quality Beasts 2 10 — 3 4| Ditto Shorn s ),000 qrs., and of Flour —— 80,000 —4 — els. To meet be = — will mei ten * turn, weng, 


5 
= 


4 and a | fectly bright on the surface, or last as eae M three 
mig onthe 8 Mat wt prisno ac sare dar fot ic ae amongst ths ee 
Beasts, 3244; Sheep Lam abs, n, 280 ; i ise; A s 140 n so much request. ere was a better sale — ve ts 

"i y noa Calves gs, Tueeday’s rates, and Oatmeal was 6d. per load dear * ee 


T i 
— number of Bonnes is consider ably larger than on nape d Iurentat | Witeat. (BARLEY. | Oats. Rye. | Beans, | Peas, | tural Society’s Meeting held at 8 1847 ce Wh 
zes ommen Ta 


‘last, and the demand is comparatively small, owing to the u time they have been awarded pri d ; 
favourable e in tgs weather ; consequently the — . BB Sie 148 4d 204 id 227 74280 14 41 lade societies where 22 — — * 
reallsed on y is not maintained today. Our top quota- 31 3 18 0 33 11 35 9 Spurious imitations of these Tools are being made, called 
tions are extreme prices for the best qualities, and several of 30 8 17 0 g k 32 37 9 |proved word Cast Sada Tam. 8 &e., and lab 
remain oe . o number of Sheep is 11 17 8 27 9 32 35 0 ree to the above. Non uine unless be 
r, and lower prices taken to make a clearance ; 29 1 17 1 28 431 1434 name in full upon th be creas 1 
* 
Downs —— ‘Monday's — but other kinds 28 10 17 0 28 11 30 3 32 8 Spades, Shovels, Draining Tools, Di igging, Potato, 
‘are about 2d, per 8 ibs. lower. are more ple and Hay Forks made to any pattern, and adapted Be nb 
trade is dull, sh a cobention e046. —+ ers Pige A 30 2 17 6 28 2 32 3 35 8 1 ag 
are ran Go lower, — eet sete he change of weather. 2 From pes; g —— 
-n —— wi 56 Ca ves; p 1 , 
ry sey — P nce, 2 — — — 0 +6 e ik 01 01 0 AND PROPRIETORS possessin 
b e. and 140 Milch C Fluctuations in the last six —, Uncultivated Land, under the Enclosure Act or 
st Long-wools. 4 0 to 4 4] Prices. | Dre. 23. Duo. . 30. JAR. 6 ‘eget arin Jan. 20 N. 27, | and wishing to have the same Drained, Enclosed. 
po mg 8 “et * 10 to 4 . ²— Re k 1 Nts Buildings Erected on well organised and economical 
Best Short-horns 3 6— 3 10 wes 8 240 quality 3 4—3 10 47s 64— a K =a may do so by Contract or otherwise; also Drain Pipes, 
2d quality Beasts 2 8 — 3 4| Ditto Shon 46 107 zi, § — a making, and e description of grou d 
Best Downs and — one cans eee 45 10 i ‘in zh formed, or the same superintended in Englan 
—— % 4 64 10 Calves ... Ì . — 5 0| 45 4 a * — — 1s or 3 For further sot aang address Pal 
tto Shorn 444905 Pi —5 0| 45 4 urv ntractor, Alm 
Beasts, 886; Sheep and Lambs, 2850 7350 : Calves, 196; Pip, 160. 45 3 


ARMERS anp GARDENERS, 1 all ye 


i i Wakefield. irmingham. Man d put it on land and d 
tendon. Liverpool | — Binning it is —— ; par — will — its alee fourfold at 1 ler. 
* b COODE’S IRRIGATOR “pa 5872 yi "m nen tly an — q 
PRICES Jan. 20 Jau. 29 Jan. 23. Jan. 25. Feb. 1. 2 without hurt to * nd o nth part ot 
T. | sN ; 
qr. qr. 70 62 lbs. 62 Ibs. GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, &e. 
. ke he d. 8. djs, d. 3. d. ETLEY AND ‘CO. supply 1602. Sheet e 
` New, red 42 to4iid2 to47i6 6 7 0 86 65 0 6 6 British age gre at prices varying m 24, t 
„ White ... 52—5646—536 8 7 6 2 6 86 2 6 8 
rec 50-88 — 7 2 7 3 4686 4 6 8 
„ white ... 2—5650—567 6 7 9 10 6 9510 6 9 
Foreign. 45—5842—58 4 Sos 9 OF BG 18 7“ e ANS, Fr 
480lbs. 5 | 
ORNAMEN NDOW GLASS, and GLASS 85 ; 

Rye—New * 126-9281 26-——28 — — — J y and Co., 35, eager London, iE 

Maricy. aisan Chronicle, first Saturday in each mo 
. — r. T. A 

Srinding 21232125 E RTE CHEAP AND DURABLE ROOFING. 

Malting... _.... |26—31|/26—31| 31s—33s 30—33 33 

a s e oe BY HER HOXAL® 
: nnn r in. ea is MAJESTY’S PATER 
` Oats— White... 12092 20 22 251 0d 3s 2d 30 | 18~30 5 
Black... |1g619} — 2 32 8 18—21 18—21 8 ee moe Com of Lar of Lamb nailing Ba 
Foreign 16—19|18—25'2 5 e only 
sae eo a2 — 6 ay 19—25 ee ‘ASPHALTED PELT FELT FOR ROOFING 
Houses, Farm ding, 

Peas— Boilers 28 31027 30 38s— 36—50 36—50 purposes, to protect Plants from Frost. a 
Grinding... | — 20-33 32 —336 12—14 1214 At the Great National —— 
Foreign ., | — 2630 35 —37 aie; which has been exhibited and . re 

Beans ge Prizes, and is the Felt soLELY patronized and a 

New, small poe 22-97 2229 33 i ll 14 11 1 Her Masesty’s Woops AND STS, 

—33 — < — 4 Ho ae 3 

Ode. 430—4036—39 31 —36 15—17 15—17 Hoxoosancx Bete or sD 1 Company, 

«es 27.30 — 1214 1 HONOURABLE COMMISSIONERS or CUSTOMS, 
Her MAJESTY’s ESTATE, ISLE or W1GHT, 
Royat BOTANIC GARDENS, REGENT'S PABK, 
as N * — 1 etine pone 5 Bue . 
ewcastle, 
the late Earl Spencer, 8 the Nobility and 6 
and at the Roya AGRICULTURAL Socrery’s HoUsE, | 
At is belf the the price of ther description of, 
effects a great saving of Timber ia eee 
901lbs. Made to any length by 32 inches wide, 
15—15 66 PRICE ONE Penny PER 
3 with 
of seven pene experience, wi 
and 


country, and orders 
. “The Publie — caution 
reat Britain * the above 


‘NEILL anp CO.’S 
— 5 — — . 


More than thoy den „n u even oË 
any proposed particular application of the Felt. 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


79 


sales 9 Auction. 
O pra 
IAN ORCHIDS. 

East INg Wenn to 8 for Sale by 
t Roo ing-street, Covent 
* 13th, * B for f 0 flack, several 

ich h d from Java 


ee) 
Be ine e 


m aal a f sale, and 6268550 ed ha 
day 


= NOBLE STEVENS i is l wit — Arwen, 
srs. LODDIGES 
sheir premises, At — > 
„28th. February, 
traordina fine growth, mostly 
3 55 consisting of the favourite old, 
— 8 2 to 12 feet ca dpe Also 
§ in fruit, and W of the new hardy 
ROBUSTUM. K p 
ine ior to the 


Sed rote COMMO ON. 

Gentlemen, Nurserymen, Bui my Railway Con- 
tractors, and other apito s engaged in Planti 
MECTRE HEROE anp MO 

e 


To Noblemen, Gen 


Wo ESSRS, PR 

worth — nT 

at 11 o’elock 8 
bankru 2 


assortment of i 
ot iim m Aah Fla pits, a quantity of ser consisting 
‘of Elm and Ash Pollards, Fir Poles, &e., a capital stone 


2 
waggon, a spring cart — — manure 
&e—May be P. or to the ale. atalogues may be 
had (6d. eack) of of J. B. ‘ROBERTS; Esq., 227 P58 n 


0 BE DISPOSED OF, a pigs tous SEED, 
and FLORIST: BUSINESS, in 


re 


W. J. Nurrine, Seedsman, 465 


) BE L TET, san entered upon at 


EE, S s of Arable, and 40525 acres of 
Melon and Parure, Pe are o h. The Farmis in a 
good it is not often such a very de- 


ing, the atmosphere not having the slightest -a action on it. 


WILLIAM HILL’S 
IMPROVED FLUE BOILER AND FURNACE, 


FOR WARMING CHURCHES, CHAPELS, 
MUSEUMS, MANSIONS, MANUFACTORIES, HORTICULTURAL ERECTIONS, &e. 


Registered pursuant to Act of Parliament, 6 and 7 Vic., o. 65. 


Tr i T 


om 7 
5 


R 


LONGITUDINAL 
For Testimonials, &c., see Gar 


FRONT ELEVATION, 


deners’ Chronicle 
* Communications addressed to W. HıLL, Hortieultural Works, Greenwich, willmeet with prompt attention. 


a aq 2 


. 
2 — 


SECTION. 


SECTION 
of November 4. 


WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT. 


= SI} 
TE — > 
ine | H 328 
Hee i an 105 160 $ s: 
WN — H 
ean 0 0 a 2 88 
i 1 an 2 ote 

2 
(hog 1 > 282 


a 03% 
Wet 
5 D — 


— — ee NETTING, TWO-PENCE 
PER SQUARE FOOT.— This article requires no 1 


' GUBsTIT 


REENHOUSES AND a erien a 7 BY 

INERY.—A Lean-to Greenhouse, 12 ft. by 8 ft., 

glass at both ends, 3 ft. of do. in front, and 1 door, ena with 

16 oz. sheet glass, ‘painted times, and delivered to any Wharf 

er Railroad in E 3 a Plan to fix it by, for 
150. 10s. ; a do. do., ft. by „ 22. I0s.; a do. 

by 12 ft., 28l. 108.; a d ; 21 8 by 12 ft., 321. 10s. 


"a do. ter 
Greenhouse Lights, — 
size, and painted 3 — 14d. ; 2 in. do., 18., wa 
materials. Lew , Machine Hothouse Works, 
hill, Middlese 

TUTE 2 GARDEN MATS, Tarpauling, 

ck ETING, dressed with a omposition, 

admitting light t to e and excluding frost, 64. par square 
yard, or 18. per yard, LVAF v wide. This is recommended fo or 
covering greenhouses, frames, for fumigating cloths, and 
various garden purposes. Tt will outlast two 3 give light, 
keep out more cold, and is nearly the same pri Also tar- 
pauling, 7d. per square yard; 2 yards wide, i 24 —RoBERT 
1 21, cin New-road, London, 


Stamford. 


has IIIA , 
years, and ‘is acknowledged to be the . artiele ever 
a = the market, It i — a — 42 light, and durable 
fence for the protection of Gardens an beries against 
the depredations of re of pen oi eats; for Aviaries, 
tae mena and to e poultry from — as well as 


sirable estate is offered to the blic.—Apply to J. H. Cor- 
Tenta, end Agent, Bann... 
. 


RIST’S | BUSINESS TO BE LET. 
, With immediate possession, a ‘small 
situate near the Horticultural Gardens, 


0 » cottage, sheds, 


a to STORMONT, Florist, Turnham Green, Mid- 


one Fo OUR ACRES OF FINE RICH SOIL— 
` depth, admirably calculated to raise 
ate ouse with 8 yeild 


i ples 


shies ti sam 

of — —— can be — = ay of expense) to any — of the 
United Kingdom. Prices as follow 
12 inches wide 3d. pe cong > inches 2 5 pa yer = 
» — 5 


” 
* 3 46 is 
” galvanised do. ld. per foot e xtra. 

Also Fenders, Pireguards, Fly-proof Dish Covers, Meat Safes, 
Wire Blinds, Gardem: bo ering and arches, Flower Stands, 
akde every 5 — of Wire Work. 

THOMAS Henry Fox, 63, Snow-hill, London. 


Rr kyo application TS 
5 5 INVEN mn SIMPLE WIND-GUARDS, Which oi * 
tages over the tried invention kno 


e wills 
vous to take,—Apply-to J A Danone Bean — 


Sia el 
Teu LET . About 62 STATUTE ACRES | 2 
eld for a term o me of three 
Persons shall bout 3 


anized Iron, 25s.; Size for Kitchen Chimneys, 40s. 
and tested at Mr. J EAKES’, the Sole Proprietor, 51, Great Rus- 
sell-street, Bloomsbury. Prospectuses forwarded on application. | 
Country Licenses for Manufacturers granted. 


ty populous t of 1 ton, 
suet 8 sg any amount of produce y and | 
— m with London Port smouth, Ec. 
apted for Market Gardening, comprising 
gardens, with about 1400 feet of glas 
EN —— rable Land. The ere is a eati 


ater Readon 

containing ‘wo two sitting-rooms, six 
E and every 1 
mee "together with a good 


— 
“Apes 


on application 
uf. 


MIGRATION FACILITATED.—Those person 
o expect their 3 — AUSTRALIA to assist | 


2 
no on — 8 to S. W. Sm 3 Co. in Lon 
he agent's 1 would To received by S 
savin and Co. as cash at the hange of the pow for in 
outfit, This eres wit — 
Colonial Journals. Emigrants’ fitting-out pan ooy at No. 45 
the ndon Tavern), where 
small parcels 


tracto m 
Live 


ETCALFE —— m s NEW PATTERN TOOTH. 


ome use, an 
rpool. 


MOKY OHIMNEYS CAUSED BY WIND, are — — rent 
be OWLANDS’ TOILET 


r arc, ie e implied sanction of R 


2-inch 


n as the ordinary 


th 

not to rust, or require pai wire. 

Naben proof 6 feet by 3 nig 
—R, Ric 


9 Also on Sale, Rabbit proof nes nH 
. to 6s. 6d. each. Thi e-work is 
AxDs0N, 21, Lee dee, jaial y 
Lon 


ORSTED GARDEN NETS, 23d. per yard, 


new twine net, lid. per . old — cas nets, jd. per 
rotect the ‘blossom 
d fli 


near pori ton- -square, 


of fru 

a — 7 . Se toate aR RI ICHARDSON, maker 

of garden nets, fishing nets, and 1 nets by machinery, 
onbridge- place, New. road, London 


ARTI ICLES. — ROW. 


Some are 


—— — similar . — ts at — erda The 
— —.—. of each bears the n 4 ee DS’” pre- 
ceding that of tia article ont name 
us A. ROW D & SONS, is also, in >e 

of the ten. Oi and Kalydor, and o e Governm: 
Stamp of both the Kalydor and . w them at 
Hatton-garden, London, and respectable Chemist 
Perfumer throughout the kingdo. 


„et. eli LIFE wien: are E ormaren to be the 


Medicine has been 
e British — only a = As n, = Gunan t in the 
annals 7 the world was nev rpe their pro- 
gress ; the virtues of this 


ent 
20, 


and 


Medic — wad jape one 


oose—ls, 
rt 
Peaocrating sake aioe with l 
hich do soften ma . — 


r box. Agents, Da 
tendon ; 


sold by all 


os penal 


— pans 


h the same eee in Engle * 
PILLs amounts 


which act in the 22 ing and an- that the Pills of Old Parr 
ner. The Dron Smyrna S; its preserved valuable] BEwARE or SPURIOUS IMITATIONS.—None are genuine unless 
bite and durability, by means of | the words Pann's Lire Ps“ are in White Letters on a 
profits and destructi an — 8 igna „ i 
N eaching, and g uxury of a fac. ; 8 ture of the : 
uam a 38 Only at METCALFE, BINGLEY, and “T. g aie and Co., Crane-court, Fleet-s 2 
Go. “s ne B, Oxford- street, one door from | the Directions. 
Me! s adopted ch, by all —.— 8 e i 
OCauriox.— Beware of the words From METCALFE’s e 
= r directions are given with each box. 


80 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, Pz. 3. 


AND HIS MAJEST 
FLORISTS TO HER MAJESTY, Y, 


QUEEN VICTORIA, 


THE KING OF THE BELGIANS 


SELECT LIST OF CHOICE n AND FLOWER SEEDS 


GROWN AND SOLD B 


WILLIAM E. RENDLE & CO., Plymouth. 


ESTABLISHED 17 cag 


het elves, and Lee the kare r from Seed Grower 
Great attention is paid to the Seed Department vos Business We grow some of the sorts ourselves, a 
whom we can place the fullest confidence for supplying true true and genuine articles. N a rout, * — an error 3 at any time be 1 Mei a hat ole a SF serena: in sending they 
times the value in other Seed to compensate ; PY of. it is particularly —— = a ny d ee n 2 Mae 
attention to orders, beat all times communicated to 1 G tB land who have procure us; 


J of I 


UNSOLICITED Testimonials of the highest character, 77 8 


COLLECTIONS OF GARDEN SEEDS, 


CONTAINING ALL THE CHOICEST SORTS, OFFERED AT THE FOLLOWING PRICES : 2 
No, 1 a. Collection of 20 Quarts of Peas, and all other Seeds in EEE S for one year’s supp ply oe 1 + * 
No, 2.— Complete Collection in Smaller Quantities . “se 
o. 3.— Ditto ditto 1 af 5 S ee 122 
ii No. 4 .— Ditto ditto 8 0:10 -6 
THE GROWING QUALITIES “OF EACH KIND ‘oF SEED IS PROVED BEFORE SENT OUT. 
The following will be the Sorts and Quantities et ‘ne No. L COLLECTION, od contains a general assortment of all the best kinds of Vegetables 
which have been selected wi 
PEAS— -n Emr magh first Early Green | BROCCOLI. OZ. paroma Early Dwarf Cape . 2 Superb White 8 iae 5 Keeping ; 
2 — arly Prinee Albert » Earl Purph e Ca = — . Soest — P poll i 
4 „ arly Warwic Packet A am's Superb White ewsbury Wa nut-flavoure $ 
2 „ Woodford's Marrow Packet Legg’s Late st White | CRESS— 1 Ib. Carled PARSLEY—4 oz. Rendle r Trene A 
2 „ Bedman’s Imperial True 8 ichore CUCUMBER—Packet — > zie Ridge 2 40 ur N 
1 „ Flack’s Dwarf Victory Chap * PARSNIP—2 oz. ' Improve wheat Poe 54 
2 „ Bh — — 1 Re ndie, Shapes ved Willcov Fine Early Frame RADISH— : 02. 1 arliest Frame 
4 „ Blue Pruss * Shilling’s British Geel DELAWARE GREENS— —-qr.-02, ” mite 5 aT f 
» Knight's — iiai 2. Wheeler's Imperial ENDIVE—qr.-oz. Green Curled heie te 4 ed Turnip ua 
+ — ictoria Branching M Marrow 2 — Rendle’s Early Admirable | LEEK—2 oz. Fine Large Broad-leaved Scotch | SPINACH—1 ib. R 5 0 
10 N m > 32 * half.oz, Bariy Cornish LETTUCE—qr.-0z. Green Cobe . N Prie y 3 
ANS, rts. one, te — r. -OE. Large Paignton qr. -oz. Ady’s Large Coss i 
gh reen Windsor half.-oz Earl qr.-0z. Bath Coss ee 02. arme re er — 
15 Sinan’ Wonderful e — Red Dutch (pickling) hf,-oz, Drumhead Cabbage » Early White Du 
— Scarlet Runners Atkin’s Early Matchless qr.-Oz. White 3 i White tone Fe 
„ Dwarf French ’ SAVOY—half. Ae rise ur = mg 55 „ Yellow a m 
BEET— ome Rendle’s Superb Crimson Packet Cattell’s Green Curled . Maltese 0 Six 9 Yellow 
Whyte’s Black Red CARROT—1 oz. Earliest Horn (for frames) MUSTARD Tib w ite i Fart ante MAR ON — FE OE. 
152 Silver or Sea Kale 4 oz. Improved Altringham MELON Tacke Duncan's . Flesh — ~~ Sweet B asi i 
BORECO LE—}-o7. i rf Curled 12 James's Green top t True Beechwood eet Marjoram d 
Packet Green Cabbaging oz. White Belgian ONION — White Spanish i 3 Savory i 
BRUSSELS SPROUTS—}-o2, imported CAULIFLOWER —qr.-02. vies à siat » Red Deptford » 
Complete Printed Lists of Nos III., and IV. Collections can be forwarded by post on application. 
If there should be any sorts that are not a hte in the. abis Collection, pete quantities of those most desired could be sent. 
à CHOICE VEGETABLES: 
following can be highly recommended as being very choice and valuable varieties, and will be FORWARDED FREE by Post, at 6d, per Packet, or Twenty Packets for & 
3 A ofthe Crim emue, BROCCOLI—Rendle’s Improved ae CABB AGE—Enfield Leora: et ENDIV 3 g era tavan OO 
l our) large late Whi l Early | LEEK—L -leaved Scoick 
Wheto’, 1 bes ree 7 te variety ~~ ve (a valuable Early E de aot rae Dra esd Cage J 
3 — Green Cabbaging (valuable new | * Rendle ple’s Cream SAVOY—Cattell’s — 5 Curled Euperior tes ates ge Coss „ A M 
variety — Rend 0 Ear ‘Admnirable amost e comm 00 0 oe ” K 
BROCCO — SPROUTS. ‘Tree Hea riage aiuable Early Variety) ; CARROT— Improved rene arg s ondon Mar J 
Largs ! Warner's Benoa comparable (a very James’s True Green Top ON ION—True Spanish bed “Portugal E 
Adem Superb “White (a most CAULIFLOWER—Large Asiatic PARSLEY—Rendie’s Garnisting 
excellent kind, ready in De- Shilling’s British Queen CLERY—Seymoars Superb White atta 1 i 
ember and Ja ) oe 1 Matchles. Larje eg n = Red NIP—Improved Guernsey i 
7 3 — — 1 sp . Walnut: flavoured TURNIERendle’s Six . 935 Stone 
a $ t 
grower ofi d) | Large 8 {an Immense | COUVE TRONCHLUDA™ —(Valuable new Vege- arly Snowba 1 
ARNOTT?’S s CHELTENHAM SURPRISE” CUCUMBER, 2s. 6d. per packet, q 


FL 
We have a very superior Stock of all the Newest Kinds, and as some of er Choicest Varieties inspection, we can warrant them to be quite new and ct 


re grown und 
LE OF PRICES SENT, POSTAGE FREE, i 
best Hardy, Half.Hardy, and 


OWE * SEE 8 . 
. — 1—100 8 weer Annuals, Biennals, and Perennials ... — a 7 
No. Ses 2 * a 
oa 572 7 0 a 
55 = 4 0 4 
eee ore ave 7 0 4 
. 2 . 4 0 
1 2 * : 4 0 : 
ae er O d 
we 7 0 t 
“ws es 10 | eae 
55 7 0 ; 
A useful Chart, giving the height, colour, and mode of raising the principal sorts of Flower Seeds, will be sent 8 each order. 
3 bisa sity No. L. COLLECTION OF FLO EEDS. i 
: u 
a 3 Sa en, 1 er N 1 Wee prian ane ge 
-Amaranthus tricolor Calliopsis piss Eutoca viscida Kopimas € e ene, r 1 — — vt 
Aae, new bien i al mondii macranth Leptosiphon 2 bese nt 1 alba e bert 
9 Phillipsi i ampan a pyramidalis Gilia nivalis ; itto tricolor Nolana dog’ 4 Schizopetalum Walke 
Alyssum, sweet | Can gisik, new scarlet Godetia Limnanthus hus Dougtasii noth Pe Stocks, fine German 
Bales, fas ined Catananche — 1 fine, mized 2 Bs tra chryeanthemaldes eS es 
Bartonia aurea Cockscom Hibiscus Africanus Loasa aurantiaca e oroat sive Salpiglossis, mized 
—— Americana oi Collinsia 1 bi color Hawkweed, new silver Lophospermum scandens ` Papaver, fine mixed Sultan, sweet + 
nostoma pee Collomia coccinea oe ara ee grandifiora Peas, sweet phaenogyne sir 
— zo, olacea adia elegans tstemo 5 Thunbergia 
Clintonia pulchella 8 . 1 See Chinere Taia ocali 
í —— E 1 scares . — ‘ee pe superb, French Portulacca 1 Thelinsoni n 
Printed Lists of Nos. TI. and IIT; Collections eee a E an 5 
there should be any sorts in the Gelten not required we shail have much pleasure in sending ay other Wade det be selected from our 
ge al alove 2 wilt atalogue, which can be had on Grati oon 
3 i Orders ve be kae, fo of Carriage, 1y Messrs. Pickrorp and to any Station onthe Great Western, Bristol, and Exeter, or South 1 
Railways ; Town in Dion and Cornwall ; or i Cork, Dublin, or Liverpool, by Steamers. P” 
n On ke CA Ge ), and we now enjoy Rail way communication to all parts of England and Scotland, and iv 
intereat to des daf dur Cusn Goode to every Town in Great Britain. "Any instance of Overcharge mend, 
ere see that our Customers at the lowest rates. Constant Steam communication from this 
outh, and most of of the principal Ports in the Kingdom. 


WILLIAM. k. RENDLE amm CO., Puy od 
Vets the soy, mew ft: e at oe — ae 


Newington, and Mutuxrr Evans, of 
by them st Sid Nace cS said county, where all Advertisements and Com gurken 


HE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
GRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 10. 


No. 6.—1849.] 
—" 


i 


X. 
3 Natural History of, 


85 a 
ese BBC] rer 87 @ 
„ 84 e Enan caterpillan 86 
£6 e | He ing, Folmaisse 86 
92 5 Labourer, the. 89 91 e—92 
„ 86 e Laurel, Portuga’, dsease 
„ 92 b| Law relating to drain — 4 
92 ¢ | Leaves, sk-leton ...... vs 
87 e ein use and abuse of . ct 
93 a 
86 ¢ Montre al Hort. Sce. 
ġ—93 a | Moss on wiles, to rin’: . 83 
2 91 4 8 double efi wered . 3 
ronicles , 91 a Peas for succession ......+.. 2 
„ E6 ¢ Phosphates, fossil, origin of. 86 a 
of a . 86. e — Me wi ~ i. ak S] 
cu. . .. 84 % Pine-apple:, R 7 
i . 6 ö Polmaise heating .............. 85 
i V oe secede ee ersvesccenses 
seve 8t e| — North's seedling, v. disease 80 i 
89 
—8 


e| Potato disease effect of 
he eens I eon 83 a 
one 8 te 
Rain in Jersey in 1848.......... 87 e 
Ural Poor. ebie 89 abe ae a 
Shrubs, spring flowering . . 846 


W. o kill Moss on 
Weather in ee ise 184 
8 at, E 


to 3 
wis a 5 g 


Rora e souTH LONDON ere 


HIBITIONS rites above Society, 
fei mil iako ae as es viz., at the HORNS TA- 


April. 
bei nor St SURREY 14 6er GARDENS, on 


um, entitling eac h Se 5 = 
ee all Flower 3 
4 pra — of Exhibiting Flowers 
i „ in competition for r Prizes, w 
af 5 have two free admissions for frie 
each lower Show, Lecture, or Meeting. 
IJ. I. NEVILLE, Secretary, * bs Peckham. 
i 1 STOCK 
ENE 
R LANGELIER, Nonsenra 


and Ftorist, 
j, beze to offer a few 


and healthy, in full vigour, “at 50s. per 
an ity worthy th 
“Peruana ed need oa 
or remittance from 2 respondents. 
De UBLE ITALIAN TUBEROSE 


TS.—The 
ie this most beautiful and fae pee nas 
ved from Italy, at A. C TT’S Old-est 


Italian Y m ly, at 

arehouse, 18, Pall-mall, and are warranted 
50, expected about the end of Ja- 
0 e, Lemon, Citron. and Shad 


OSES, 
LANE anp SON can confidently recommend 
© their — — ROSE LA — AA it is very bri re nt, dis- 
tinct, and beau tiful, aoe dwarfs, 7s. 6d. e 


had, poy Hybrid Perpetual... o 18s. per 
Bourbon i 125 ved 183 


5 12 H ia 5 
ea- se 


ted 
ee established 1 in hikes pots, for im- 


Iybrid P 
mediate 5 20s per doz 
_ Nurseries, Great Ber rkhampstead, Her 


RS M‘MULLEN, —.— 6, Leaden- 
all- street, London, beg to inform their 
2 that they can supply SEED of the true TRENTHAM 
HYBRID MELON, at 2s. per packet. This See — bert and 
superior to any other, and took the First Priz 
ey in 1847 = not fo — 
DLEY an 


er quart; Ditto CONQUEROR POTATOES, 2s. 6d. 
2 pee 
G. WAITE’S aor — CATALOGUE 


SEEDS is now 


OF 
FLOW d can be had on appli- 
ca ation. Seed Establishment, 181, Hi — — London, Feb. 10. 
NION SEED — Ten tons of Brown Spanish, and 5 
tons of Pay 9 ONION SEED, the growth of 1848, 
to be had in tities, at ex traordinary low prices, Prices 
— ‘incon iy of every other kind of Seeds can be h 
el ase EE to J. G. WAITE, Seed Merchant, 181, High Ho “a 
— Lond 
NES E AS. — EARLY BLUE SURPRISE, as 
= as 1 5 Early Frame, and flavour of the Kni ight’s 
Marr 


F BEARD’S EARLY was a OF ENGLAND.—A 
blue htela marrow, fine flav 
BURBIDGE’S ECLIPSE. 2 lange blue marrow, 15 inches 
high. And EARLY DANECROF 
Can be had in any quantities, — prices to be had on appli- 
cation to J. G. WAITE, Seed Es G umeni a High Holborn, 
ondon 


HOBART TOWN GARDENERS’ AMATEUR HORTICUL. 
TURAL SOCIETY 
j x TM blic that 


HAMILTON bogs 7 inform Pees Pu 
the letter whieh appeare: 
382 27th (p. 63), 


he — nt to! Hobart Town in th as 
of manner in "Which they —.— — — 


pgm 5 and Arabian 
poke. 
FIRST 91755 FUCHSIAS AND —— 


1 


on, reid ae „ Which 
8 

. road, ig 108 

REY 1280 5 CULUSES, AN 


(anit ree 

tord, Bethe DO SO, Fronisr a Sod 1 
aon that Fe 
i. . at be re supply, 
: Ah e e 
Š 


Aa "Walling: 
bruary is the best 
per post, as under, 
ULU 


one 


ae from 8 Varieties 82 


to 3 
‘or two postage 
enclosed op 


„ SEEDSMAN 


» 28, Cornhil 


uite 
. — 
MA 


the latte 
Seeds, Lebe 


; they are muc 
r description of 
n application, 


ur, Evi 
which very othe hadon 


ar KIDNEY’ 
a b Soon free fr 


deen Cos LETTU om disease.) 


CE, de sg n — 
rer ; 88. 6d. 

W ot lAa ds per oun as — Ga 
ons. "sa PA ded by the 


my — Warehouse, Reading, Berks. 
l; Oxford, or r Basingstoke, 


0 
4 
ta- 


the 
wa as inserted at their expense, — unsolicited by him. The 
ollowing are the Seeds which were sent to the Society: Cal- 
— Cineraria, Fuchsia, Martynia — — Antirrhinum, 
Gloxinia, Gesnera, ae Verbe nium, Balsam, 
Rhododendron, Az alea Thunbergia, peri: a Tök ether flower 
Oe as also a variety ‘of ewe 1. ie ate 
t 


For 


packages, with 12 
free on receipt of 11. 155. 
Seedsman and ELI. x 156, Cheapside, London. 


une CATTEL and SEEDSMAN, West 
m, Kent, begs to 1 8 his Friends and the Babli that 
— selected collection of VEGETABLE SEE 
t, consisting of those of his — . — 
bo best — hats, ahd generally A his z= saving. All orders 
entrusted to — biso — — — h eatest care and 


unuals, Hara 


pac kets 0 superi 
— as usual in Fare for 12 —— 5 
heren sb bas 8 at ls. 6d. 
tock of the eee rivers Aaa for 
immediate: 3 2 — Kentish H 1s, 6d. each, 
s. per doz ; this is a first-rate bedâi ing plants "bal ceolarias— 
Em mperor, Beauty upreme, ny Smith, — 
Masterpiece, Professor Lindiey, Standish, Oscar 2 other 
fine eee » 1s, Ed. to 3s. 6d. each 


or 

0 prov d. Ine eraai being 
ofa deeper K better shape, . 2 — ee compact habit. 
— 


1 ne healthy plants, free — spot, of th varieties of 
ney and other Geranium Standard and oses 

| partiealany oe a of which may be had ‘by forward- 
g a penn 


required. — Westerham, Kent, Feb. 10. 


ndards 
ing very suitable, the fo — can be 
dozen. 


8 re 4 reference from unknown correspondents is 
t 


[Price 6d. 
Lolo 
ONE ann TWO Ba lee ee AND TRANSPLANTED 

ILLIAM M WOOD à ing an immense 
iy 2 e above, aa petite — are determined to 
ahed oe 2 2 
Wood! ands N ursery, Maresfield, near ear Uckfield, Sussex. 
W.—Being a selected variety from Clarke’s New 
arly R ood possessing all ber’ A rage ages of the original 
rich Green „ only) of Mr. H 
CLA nada Poe ni "King: street, Cov: le Garden. a 
The new et 
superior and first-r 
w ye 
for vigorous growth and 
a older varieties, 


LARCH Apa LDERS, &e. 
W ‘SON 
n the lowest possible t Prices will be fur- 
PEAS. 
One NEW LINCOLN GREEN PODDED 
tock, 25 — "earliness 1 having 
To be 
ees NEW RANUNCULUSES, GLADIOLUS, 
the last few 
ANUNCULUSES, fe by post. 


with 3 directions for 


ting and cultur 
50 superb new varieties, dame Os. ; 35 for 5285 6d. 
50 fine older varieties, named, 15s. ; 5 for 
100 fi „ 10s. ; 10 5 


fine, 5s., ée, post ie 6s. 
US. 


GL DIO. 
12 splendid early rarities, post free, 15s, 
12 Splendid mixed early hybrids, 25. bita 


or, post free, 45. od 
The early — — S rn from June to o August in the e open 
out dela 


Gl 5 — nsis, large roots, 1s. 6d, each ; Brench- 
leyensis, 5s. ; splendens, 5s Bape x Mundi, 2s. 6d. ; Ramosus, 
ls. 6d e ee sanguineus, 1s. Those at 8 6d. and up- 
wards, free by 


post; Axed 2s. "Gal. sys each ex 
— — ANEM NES, 
Finest ager ge a per d 


„ or ee per Ib.; Fine, 1s. 3d. per 
7 or 8s. per 


doz 


Post-oflice order 
STEPHEN Brown, — requested coat ebkns 
rior tear 
Ba d Brown, Seed and Horticultural Establishment, 
— olk. 

ELL’S UNRIVALLED DAH 

AMES MITCHELL begs to 9 2 1 send, 
he purpos 1 following fir 
— m strong healthy lan 


ECLIPSE, Scarlet e best formed % arlet in cultivation : 
| first class — rtificate e . first prizes; — shəw fl 
4 feet. 10s. Gd. 


SUSS EX HERO, Pl imson,— 


SAMOND STA NLEY, 8 tipped with white 
—First clase 3 the best fan y Dahlia of the season 
ul show flow 1 feet. 
RIN CE, ‘Crimson, Partially = out Last season 
and much admired at all the 8 4 feet. 33. 6d. 
Piltdown Nurs Mar 


RICAN NURSERY, 


A noble and constant sh 


BAGSHOT, SURREY. 


— —— bu plants, the colours of 
clear and spotted Whites, — deep Re Rose, 
Dark P at Rose- ede &c., from 30s, to 42s, sji r doz 


elegans Nealii Lyon 
„ speciosum P Siam Vittoria regina 
eee purpu- phd serge ——— ulti ee 
Catawbionse e Purpureum elegans Hyacintheflorum 
j a pie Cele — osum 
wi soled ny Bellon — — 
| Campanulatum — cn es Gloriosum 
Candentiss „ album Macranthu 
Cyaneum Deorai Marginatum 
Delicatissimum Variabile nlatum novum 
Eburneum lendida irand 
Everestianum Russellianum Maculosum 
ivaticum 
Standard Rhododendrons, 7s, êd., 15s., and 21s. each and 
wards. 
p ZALEAS, good mixed sorts, 18s. to 21s. per dozen. The 


est varieties, 50s. per 100. 


A ee Dp; 
mplete collection, consisting of 20 quarts of 
he best | binde of PEAS, e of 3 Champion of 
ngland, Early Surprize, British Queen, Burbidge’s ogg a 
tc., and all other Seeds in proportion, ol the newest and be 
orts, sufficient for one year's bay stead of a large garden, “ie 
hoicest Melons and Cucumbers inclusive 3 0d 
— Complete e in smaller quantities, 
equity bee as sorts 
aoe 


BS SoS} 
8 


No. This i is sufficient | fora small garden 
No extra ee for gon ; Carriage paid to Lond 
A General ge may be had; also a List of each bn. 
ELECT FLOWER SEEDS, 
er pae red of og newest a — ap hs ie 15s. g 


T above . W. in sites: particular attention, and bein 
he largest grower 
cee at the low prices quoted, Also the following, for GAME 
RESERVES. 


l RHODODENDRON 3 1 the very best Evergreen for 
of haree and rabbits, bushy 

healthy “plants, 105. 64. per 100 Larger ditto, 15s. to 213. p. 100. 

BERBERIS AQUIFOLIUM, bushy, 50s. per 1009. Larger 
ditto, — Sit 

COMMON LAURELS, good bushy stuff, 10s, per 100. Larger 
15s. to 25s. per 

82 — 71 EVERGREEN, 8s, to 12s. 6d. per 
BAN ON, 3 8 5 feet, 83 and hand- 
* very en for avenues „ 3s. to 5s., and 7s. 6d. each. 

IRISH YEW ha EE me sa 488 plants, from 


fi 
ST ANDAR D W EBPING TARCH, 6 — 9 ago Prarie. with 
very handsome pendulous heads, 5s. to 
SPRUCE; ne — d PIRS, 6 to 12 fe? 
TULIP TREES, We ping and Purple Beech, very larg 
all in a fit state for bir, an 


nigelita $ 


tion — 25 ing two postage 5 
Wittiam James Errs, Maidstone, Kent. 


FOREST TREES of all kinds, 
planting. 
Planting to 5 extent done by contract, 


Copse andotht 
Catalogues for. 


82 
Round Yi 
OLE’S ; SUPERB. DWARE | ` RED CELER 
“PURPLE TOP TORE — . rok C This — production; described in . adver- | 
e T 1 gold Wurzel a cats to. roger’ Fm sements, may still be obtained ot seated ated . — — 
2 Laie Sutton, Lincolashi tions for zal BY — Be ss mt 2 — — —.— Pes 


=. a run 
Pint i 

YMOUR’S CELE i 
8 WHITE CHAMPION CELERY is 


for 
anted a vt — — sort, and now sending out 
the first time by H. Laws and Sox, Nubeety men, Great Berk- 


stead, Herts. 
pgg ee . White Champion 
Red Matchless 
2 Superb White 
or postage stamps 


its 1% per Packets jam, Dorse 
„ do. 


LLA 


CE SE 6 do 
Post.oiitee orders from ‘unknown corre- 
sponden 


FO MELON GROWERS 
LEMING’S NEW HYBRID PERSIAN having 
F awarded — Dr at 2 teak —— Shows of the 
Age Society of on last needs no further 
“om Fleming’ peee Hybrid concord Na ee 8 
"i 
fice orders or Si ge 
Great ; Berkhampstead: 


. LANE & Bom, 


unkn 
stamps can be sent to 


ALBAN’S GRAPE, the same as 
a peor hy bythe me — Prince mej Committee of the 
London, y Tho 
te N 


be had of an e 
BERT JOSLING, —— St. Alban's. 


.. ul 
S PLANTS Nb Arbutus; Bay, 5 


urel, Ceda: weetbriar, 
Appl. aut 5 — rice per 
W n 2 iag , Edg sare road, 


From 1 
1900, . Wn ENsUnx 


TO PEAR GROWERS, 
EN LANGELIER, le St. 


Nurse 
“Helier, J 9 to state that he has — th! of 
BEURRE LEON L 1 CLERO and BLANC PERNE to to dispose 


is. 6d., Any 
amateur wishing ag —.— l 
R. L. can send out 1 fall of fruit-buds in perfect pyramid, 
at II. 16. ench: It is a Pear that s every collection 


Table Fruit can be had or Moy. 4 


g been a cultivator, and ‘his stocks are not to any —— 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


abie amoni 


lace, Blackheath.. 

EED P POTATOES FROM’ HEATH LAND, 
gue wly broken black heath, for two years n 

Price per sack of 2 cwt., 

o Mr. JAMES DunNING, Ware- 


— Potatoes ‘of excellent . 
125 = — included. Apply 


pa fo 
mni Cabinet” for the present —— and may be had 
tite 


NG 9915 
and all other Agricul- 
can be obtained on 
—.— atio: 
OTELIAM E RENDIE & & Co., SEED MERCHANTS, Plymou 
Ps Our eee Seed List will be . Shortly 


+ wo )DLANDS NURS SERY 


rade. 5 
3 Brookland Nursery, and 4, Tranquil- 
—Feb. M 


and "Co , Uni 
IR W VAR RIETY = FIELD. CARROT SEED— 
Large Yellow Py CAR eed, 38. 6d. — 


is much superior arden to the co 
White Bel 0 „ but is a uite equal to it in size 5 ‘and 
keeping qualities ; ve er and grows 


ung st i 
hite Horn-shaped Beiglan CARRO 85 an = 48 
variety 
a in: size to the al Whi 
antage in ec —— rete aes ap 
— consequently bulbing 2 e surface, 
Carriage paid to London. 
Post. office orders are m alt mee from unknown correspond- 
ents. ‘Direct to Jou Rivers, Seedsman, Sawbridgeworth, Herts. 
GEES, Sa > S E E D S.—If you 
wish SEEDS that w and true to their kind, go to 
J. G. WAITE’S Seed Establishment, 181, 1. High Hol born, wh ere 


ould be 
as well as Blane — which will 2 till * 
tion of the 


to be correct as dctvibed and — 
eference will be 


nown 
NEW ei AND FLOWER SEEDS. 


RENDLES CA ATA LOGUE 2 VEGETABLE AND 
FLOWER SEEDS app back 
the Gardeners’ Ch — dated: — rob. i nede: e mw, fion h 


can be had on ries tion to 
ee E. Renpre and Co., Seed Merchants, Plymouth. 
tural Seed List. will soon be ‘ready, a and | 
we shalt be — to forward a e ies, when published, to 
any address we may be favour with, 


BASS a> xD BROWN’S DESCRIPTIVE Sed 
CATALOGUE for 1849, sent free by post on application. 
following in collections, 3 


We 2 to offer g many 
à 5 4 1 1 SEEDS. ais F 
complete © includi: urston's Reliance, d. 
Danecroft Rival Fair urprise, British š 
Queen, and other: — 9 20 quarts in an, and all 
other pn, bagata ble Seeds, best and newest kinds, in 


> 


The same Collection, in smaller r quantities 


small growers, bei 


ee 


1 10 


with also the 


— 
2 
e ( 
ood 


preen fesh Melon (rae) 
true 


F 
p 
= 


—— 5 ped bed et pe 
SS SSS 


postage free, i 
amount in 1d. 4 postage stampa, accompany the arder ; 


ds worthy or cultivation lower | 
in price than any piia 78 in the kingd 
181, High Holborn, Feb. 10. 
ING ii ndee —— 1 Cabbage is 
warranted by J e best in cultivation; very 
early, large size, and aoe. 15 3 — 88. per 
Seed Establishment, 181, High Holborn, London. 


OCHIN-CHINA FOWL.—Eggs of these Fowls y 
B, 


be — bby applying by post-paid letter to A. B., eiis 
Mr. James Simmonds, Avenue Cottages, Brixton-hill, Surr 


SHED POTATOES, 
HARLES SH SHARPE, NURSERYMAN and 
respectfully solicits the attention of the Nobility and Gen — 
to his e eg for Seed. The sorts are very early and pro- 
ot and have n cont neral satisfaction to Potato Son 
all parts of the Kingao m. They are offered at the followi 
2 e 
aa bushel of 56 Ibs, 
s Early Oxford 9 see 125 * 
Lacy ee hae — 
Early Row 
Early Cockers 
8 


nl 

6 

. 6 
3 ng, fi ne for fo reing “6 


12 
less heat — ri 


Second early sorts, for Winter and Spring use: 
Per 


bushel > 
—— Native Potatoes ak in 9 = 
Regents „ 5 0 
Kentish a 
3 — Kidneys ~ 
‘on the Feceiptofa 88 Order, 
their safe delivery. 


in, Wisbench, Cambridgeshire, | 7 
BROWN’S ari seriptive priced 

a separate List | 5 
aa by and —.— 


ds, can be h: 
applying the following desirable Hardy 8 


8 


and 

25 New hardy Belgian Azaleas, on — own _— 5 8. d. 
25 
25 


flower buds, one of a sort, byn 
Azal 


one sort, per doz. 
Ane plants, in pots, 15 to 30%, e „ ea, 3 
„ on — g plants.. 25 
——— —ͤ— one of a sort 1 — 

am 

— a —— one of a sort, 
per doz. .. R 
beaut new Japan Lilies, one 3 12 


crim 
25 Choice Herbaceous 
Fine — 
tarines, 
cases 
8, true to na 
Untrained or e Maiden ditto, 
Fine Gooseberri 


ao 


Border Plants, for 
and Dwarf trained Peaches, 
» Apricots, Plums Pears, * — T — 

each, or, — Scone 4 


perdoz, 3 
dozen 15 


a dielo 
Apples, on tnd Raspberries 
and’6 ct 6 eho ah 10 


ice Pin: 
8 atar 


Strong Vines, F Pigs, 
* mama 


W. 


eo 28888 


8 fi 
eee 2s Beech, 3 105 U 5 
Newington, L ondon, Feb, 10, 


a 
Oo; J 
0 


—e oomo 2t 59 ú 
Ditt itt a 3 to 4 fa, de 
AHONIA AQUIFOLIA, be 04 feet ag 
RHQDODENDRON PONTICUM, nice © young plang i 
inche 
Dito 15 to 18 inches hi +- 10s, 64, to yy i ) 
2 to 3 feet; very bushy e H ae 3 
ZALEAS: ee fine e “= 
ies 
pi PONTICUM, fine and | bushy Per dozen » 
1 to f tee ee I * 
KAMA LATIFOLIA, l A 45 foo, te s 10 
1 
LEDUMS, vy ae Xi 
THYMIFOLİU — 11 
eee ATA WBIENŠE 11 102 10 
e Eiri) 
A K UTUM * 
niort (Ware’s compact Siberian), 2 266170 Wy 
very 
BOX, 3 tree, 2 to 4 feet bn 
reen, very i 
LAUR LS, 3 ‘ne, 3 to 4 feet w: i 
and bushy 2 any 
LAURUSTINUS, — a plants, 2 fi 2 25 all 
ditto 34 to 4 eet 129, 
PHOTINIA S RRULATA, 3 to 5 Steet, 4 
PRIVET, —.— stron ton ‘a 
denis DOUGLAS, 1} foot ki 
p R — 1} to 2 feet” 1 


11 to 2 f. 
ARAUCARIA . IMBRIGAT A, 91 to15 ities each, „eint! 


CEDRUS DEODARA, 6 to 9 in ches, fine 


per — 
92 1 to to 1} fo ot 
CEDAR OF LEBANON, 2 to 3 feet, very fine 
CUPRESSUS ELEGANS, 1 foot i 4 
ouor DEN 5 2 to 8 feet | gy 


” 
2 


JUNIPERUS REC URV K; 11 * 
PICEA PIN SAPO, Pe to 3 feet 


| 


PIN NUS COMBRA, i to 2 feet 
INSIGNIS? 17556 zr 

TAXODIUM DISTICHIUM PENDULUM, 104575 
each—2e, 6d, 


ASH, ney Bare rnk Chinese, 8 to 10 feet, each Is, éh 


Wee — o 10 feet, each, 1s. to 18. 6d.; per d 
BEECH, fer 5 to 6 feet, bach i 6d.; per m 
Wee g, fine, 6 to8 r each, 2s. 6d. 2 
ELM, New Weerd. Scampston, 6 feet, each, tie 
dozen, 25s. 
HORSE in ed 97 fine, 6 to 10 feet, each, l 
OAK, Weeping, 6 feet, each, 3s. 5 : Ber doz, 303. 


THORN , of sorts, each, ls. ; per doz, 
—. = aye ollowing have 
the great are offered at — — 


oom press, 1 0 — being leſt to Wa. W 
and S 


ROSES, OF THE MOST APPR ane Aa — 
b Dwarf and Dwarf Sta ee. 12s. to 188. 
7105 5 n 50 varieties, 50s: per 100: 


— 0 128. per 
China, — varieder, — pote, oe 2 12s. a 
Tea-scented and Bourbon, 12s. t 8s. pen donen 
Mixed Roses, for Plantat 
8 | CAMELLIAS, fine healthy 50 

rieties in cultivation er doz, —25% 10 
ene AZALEAS, of the most set kinds 128 0 
un 


CINER —— —— select — 
plan G INTO B 
CHRYSANTHEMUMS, all “the newest imported 10 
varieties 65.0 

A liberal quantity of plants allowed forearage v0 
or 88 eee 25 5 nk : 
ent al Catalogues of Nursery $ O Green ; 

s, &c., may be had GRATIS, on application. 
Woodlands Nursery, Maresfield, Fe — 10. 5 


j 


TO PLANTERS AND 3 TRAD 
M. URQUHART Ax SONS, , Dundee, ii 
d stock of Seedling and d Transpla á 


goo h 
TREES, ‘and SHRUBS, at very low prices, to be ¢ 


Gd anb MELON BOXES A aoe 
— t — —.— 3.light 1 ee 


dy for imm. . 
a rt ts of the kingdom; 
packet mee — se 1 pa 8 en Light 4 ‘a fe a 22 5 


Kent - ro 
GEEDs. — CORNER, th TL 
—— the sti 


Appoint 
sy ROTAL AC AGRIC AL SOCIETY 
Beg to 


the season, and may bak ad 


DOW AND PASTU 


Garden and Flowe 
Seedsmen, &c., to the Royal Agricul 
gium, Ge. Ke. 35 5 Down-street, Picesdilly, 


NURES ar sek 
THE FOLLOWING MA Deptford rt 


, LAWES’ Fac’ A — 
CORN an GRASS MANURE. 22 4 
CLOVER M M ANURE 5 
RNIP 5 s 
SUPERPHO: SPHATE OF. uni piis” 
SULPHURIC AOID AND COP. 
N. B.- PERU V elt oa 


3 ABO OF A ONIA, 
91. 10s. 3 3 ci, Tondon 
Office, 69, King Wi Ham- 


r — 


RANUNOULUSES. pete ANEMONES, "AURICULAS, AND 


THE . GARDENERS’ 


— — 


ae most of the 


A tha 


i by them stock Windsor, 
t Windsor, a 
Her M s Gardens a of Marit 
— "having Certificates 
on Horticul 


— tural: — Packages contain- | 
forit by 7s 
a > . 35. per dozen. 


T. TR 
WE of Peaches, *Nectarines, Apricots, 


Ploms, Cherries, Pears, les, G0 Gooseberrie es, and ch ee 

ee, namna; ch tained from the London 

* i the newest and best Strawberries. 
A kenny” 92 years old, 25. 6d, and 3s. 6d. per 100. 
— —— —.— by name, 128. to 15s. pore — 
Tigridia eonchiflora, fine flowering bulbs, 68. per 


is now being sent out per 


of 


Saved fine ected sorts, 
on from the 8 sl * per — 45 — 
24 yards, —Great Yarmouth N 
-HEIS «PRINCE ATOE R RHUBARB 
M can be obtained from the Subscribers at 1s. 6d. each. 
. QCULATA. This splendid new variety at 28. 6d. 
OX DRUMMONDII, NEW SCARLET, 1s. per packet. 
UPERB RED CELERY, 6d. per packet. 
“Tes races Vegeta le and Flower Seeds can be procured. 


“ani E. RENDLE & Co., SEED MERCHANTS, Plymou 


Our New Seed Catalogue. can be obtained of. 
in the possession of | ma 


spin, Gratis and shuld te 


UM dg 
GROOM, London, 


15 p HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN, 
H ec 
lity nd 8 


Hee 


Jord; Po — am except when the — 
pulled up 


High Elms and K blg. — one-third, 
and one-tenth.— Mr. J. Ferguson, Bul- 
mer, One- fourth diseased.—SrarronůbDbsHIRE: 
Mr. J. Mi Mylne; 2 Drayton Manor ; 35 per r 
smpe diseased.—Snropsnire:; 6. Mr. B. B. Hamil- 


r. 
asley; Nearly: all —— 1 where the 
Hats was pulled. 7. RoGar 

Hall; Land, e but dry; ‘one-fourth affected. 
EDINBURG 8. Mr 


Kent: Tooker "r Brenchley; Land, rather 
stiff. The onl y —— t in any great degree 
seaped were planted by s of the porters at the 
Paddock Wood Station of the on 


was, at — time 
e ee with weeds, which 
ng. No manure: was used. 


of platings in —— 
were turned in in di iggi 


of disease, — 


arch last. Scotch Reds and 
Cups were — without 2 manure, in April, 
with spade culture. Crops 


supposed, ‘tot 


— a Be per 100, from 7s. 6d. t 
100 ANEMONES, in 50 superfine sorts, n nake: 22 0 
r 100, from 6s. to 103, 6d 
35 AURICULAS, in aa srin, sorts, named : — 


inds, nam 
m LANCIFOLIU UM ALBUM "do, de 6 from As. to 22 — 


sture — sacks G rox: mith, gar- 
Land, sif is with open e 
posure and dry situation. American Earlies, &c., 
were plan i 


„ PUNCTATUM, 9 * 6d: 
oe a sti 
” 0., 58 to 
Anew 3 Hybrid Seedling LILIES, 6 — for 188. 
1. ö. 6. begs md — in 
Shrubberies, 100 fine Liliam — album for 5l., 
package included. No the shrubbery should be without e as 
— 3 during the autumnal months. 


SATURDAY, FEBRUAR Y 10, 1849. 
S FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING ‘WEEKS. 


Monpax, Feb. 121 Medical. ab TT ieeetteseses 8 r 33 
temas 2 15 jan en w 
j Medical Chiru: 
e SE 
ibu, — 5 — 
Tarnspür, wf Nails Ri nein vised i 
ee, HEM ; 
Moy, m. M. 
— z ofi EE 
MA 2 deiir af ilinin 4 — 
3 - = ie e 2 
Porato effect of msg land upon the 
vith to Darase the observer is necessarily struck 
curred in soilt oportion of bad cases which oc- 
Printed T, 528 description. According to the 
cn numbers stand thus 
P 
0 Suffered much. Escaped, or nearly so. 
Soad 2?” 7 $ 
** 1 ] 
Wales a 11 0 
Pete, 9 0 
Bea N ù 
But what je che in every four er ö 
itcluded in owed wet land in ithe Tables may be 


25 
rs’ Chronicle. 


seased.— EDINBURGH : 
M Lachlan, gardener, Cramond ; Land, 
rich friable — thor oughly drained, Potatoes 
il i per acre 


‘| planted: in — n drills, with 30 loads 
of nur 


n 

eed, gardener, Millbank Bren — 

subsoil dry; and — escaped. Land s 

at heavy and well drained suffered very little 
l 4 


cut Pot set es. Cute hen iced) 
about 20 Ibs, to se ton were diseased feen 
8. Mr. A. Gordon, gardene 
given to elay, which had — subsoil ploughed. 
Irish Cu x White Irish and Black oe were 


planted in April in drills without manu ro 
heavy and soun in Beighbourhoot gene- 
rally heavy and very little disease 


at 7 ar 
northern ; and it will be seen hereafter that really 
bad n orther rn cases are rare, the 3 having 
been most virulent i in the south and w 
d i 


ro 
diseased bushels in 4 or 5 ac 


as of sand. Irish C 
n- with horse. and cow manu 


Potatoes above, 


r, Esq., Leighton, dri 


dug, was large and fine, without the Iri 


— u 
thee 


und, owing, as it is C 
e good drainage and 3 broken up Marlin, E. 
. Si 


prises those e — planted in 
i thes 


up belono “tacked by d 
s| pian n November 


use; Land in 


e s 
e ies earthed . thinkin ug t shat 


( a ag! any 5 in parish) 
. M ha sig 


iwis Tom eavy. Prince 


Wishaw (a report of | 


Ps planted i 


per Scotch acre, 


at the 
alder, gardener, 
and heavy blac ck, &e. 


gow 
sand. No failure in the pari ish this year 
nature of the soil varying 


the autumn 


and very early arta Of e 16 are found in 
the returns, all nglish counties and. none 
more northern: Ave eae aia :— HERTFORD- 
SHIRE: I. T. H. 8 Hitch Land, 
stiff clay. Ash-leaved 3 a merican 
Earlies prane in Nove nehes 8 inches 
. A 8 sprinkled with sn — crop 
suffer for digging 


y little, i nearly fit for 
e. Some were also 


lan December, J 
— — 8 suffered: little, but the earlier 
they were planted less they su ie 
idney (a red sort), was planted. on the same soil 
March, and we arly all diseased.— RENT: 2, 
V. (a , farmer, s Land, stiff 
loam on clay. Ash-leaved Kidneys ve in No- 
vember with spade, in rows 5 ine eep, with a 


e of 2 ee of purat earth without an 
n spring sh neue instead of. 


tat 
not earthed up, provided they are planted suficienti 
deep to prevent them from turning green; crop 
ood and sound. — MIDDLESEX : g. awrence, 
The ay est Potatoes ‘tasted this 


nd in like man ome hs flowing II other Baling Park; N 
cases appear to be nected with climate, year; taken up as soon as the hau me became dis- 
viz. : — Doraam: 1. 0 ade, Rector of ea eased ; 5 sacks 3 out of 59; some still de- 
Elion; Land, strong nests and caying in October (although in a airy loft) ; 
American Reds, planted the aap end of May soil a stiff rich loam, with a very small proportion n of 
or er ee of June, with lime and farm-yard|stable-dung.. Those nted in. autumn aa 

generally only with the ‘latter. Land | turned eo much better than, 1 planted last 


seta 4, Mr. 


» 16 to 17 
: or, on the whole, 


Fi 


T 


Cases appear, hares so be = 
abso} a SY e general conclus 0 


| they h prejudice of h 
sae therefore, x received a —.— 
ascertaining, if 


n the proportions: | 
ei 


| the bottom with the cut ‘sets above, and co 


r. W. 
Regents, American Earli ies, TR mere Wonders, andl the —— 8 in upon depth of = 
planted in April, with 40 tons per acre of stable inches. e good, but esae of he 
ae used at planting ie 3 cut, Crop | crop and ; ames sorts planted same way ont 
Regents one-sixte dise ericans same ground in the spring are nearly worthless. 
one-fi Richmond 8 onetwenty our — BUCKINGHAMSHIRE : 5 Nash, brewer, 
EBLES : 3. Mr. W. Downie, ner, Traquair ;| Chesham ; Land, a strong Fy non a A — 
Lana light on gravel, an 8 ela soils Cups | crop ve except in the following case in the 
— 2 ee e _ 12 — 25 garden 3 The Bell Kidney planted in Octo- 
ber last, wit 


5 
no per acre, placed in in 
overing 
up with the soil; crop on the light soil sound, on 


manure, and 1} cwt. 


ease heavy óa 


the ati is as 
a 8 T Set llo 
* fact, to 2 aa according = the Tables, 
Souraseren Te —— dair, Big B rge loss, 
. Brad- 


the damp clay, scarcely 1 in 100 diseas 
r 


4. 
„gardener, Riccarton ; T nd, rather 
stif yellow loam, ee a considerable quantity 


el 
ae and: lime pebbish placed 
drills ; crop quite escaped, and excellent in — 
The same kind planted in March with commo 


ns | manure, and beside those of October 33 —— 


attacked with disease, and the produce exceeding 
G. — 7 


THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. .... 1 


2 were planted on the — soil 


t the 
lanted in April, whic 
a of 'a utumn planting, but 
amongst 
burn, Esq., Elm- 
light — and heav y loam. 
with light 


dise N e 
e Ee oshayle 
er of very stroug soil, 


e soil. ug up 


9) quite sound. ch- 

son, Esq., Canbor ne Me report of his gardener) ; j 
Land, a rich loam with granite bottom. Early 
Dublins — Yorkshire Whites planted in January, 


n 
:leaf-moul poker of 
was best, but both a 1 exc 
crops.— DEVONSHIRE : Mr. W. Craggs, gams 
dener to Sir T. ‘Acland, "Bileton, ands loam 

: 3 . Various sorts planted in 


aaa left uncovered. | D 
Hul 


—KeEN 
stable dung. Crop li little or none dise 
2 e land, clay an. 
veg — — 0 n furrows ; Peruvian 


horse- 


clay, a 
sh-le der Kidneys and six oth i 
planted on part o of this land at the latter end of 
April by hand-labour, with 20 tons of very good 
home-made manure, wh hich was applied to the ground 
re sown 


Hadzor ; 


poi 
— 
— 
8 
D 
. 
— · 
5 
AS 
w 
< 


escaped entirely. 
deep and rather strong soil, 
Essex : 


—HE paoa bsp 
Monies Hill ; Land, one part loa amy * part 
strong stony land. Ash. leaved Kidney, arly Shaws, 

rea adf _ and Fortyfolds, planted in April without 
any Mane ; 


produce of crop 70 bushels per three- 


fourths cae an acre, and four bushels of these 
ise 


bu 
leaved Kidneys, Early aws, and Denne Hill 
idneys, were planted in February, in furrows 9 to 
e, Hees feet < € uon apn; with 40—50 loads per acre 


sandy loam, part of a 


pasture field — . p near the bank of Fal 
0 


Devons 


ri ver. 
and 


ire 
March, in rows at 3 feet apart, pe a 
timanuring o of sw 


1 to the coldness of elim 
6 to autumn or early ite lantin 
9 to unexplained "ly spring pla = 


44 > 
ence we arrive at the conclusion, that POTATOES 
IN VERY RICH, WET, OR HEAVY LAND, ARE EX 


: pit 88 profusely. The plants vary from SSS 


summit =e 


S | principal porai 


instance of their rapid gro 


r trellis-work, &c., or for forming a B Against j 
in the covering of an arbour, Suppo 77 
work den stakes, it m n 

u » 1t may also be rendered 


very h 
qu Se cof artifi 
artially elevated mounds, I 
duce a 
rent 
luxuriant period of grow 
or more inches of the previ o 
ripened second or side shoot 
stems in summ 
aring spurs 


become blossom-b 


DONIA (Pent) Atana Asa 
3 branching s 3 


rub, is unri 5 for backgrmi 


th 

congregated 3 of scarlet flowers, imparta bre 
feature than d be obtained by any other piat 
e vey ‘partial interest 8 attaches to 1 
ment, arises from 


11 
annual growth ti) 
runed 


about 6 feet high, and the in diameter, w 
last pti g, was arene with tie richest scarlet bl 
ason exists why t the same ae 
perien 
is encouraged to 
re 


see n March, in drills 2 feet apart, 
— 30 loads of 4 d and 80 bushels of lime] In this examination “ 1 and rich Jand,” inches in length, according to its vigour, 
m pote a, — injured, being nearly | has in some instances ded ; and as s such | ficial stimulus to grow seldom required in 
ripe ba any a of disease. = soil is usually a highly fertile ne of some form of oil for shrubs of this description, lenf. men M 
planted a . 2 pab "half of the crop dise vy land, t does not appear to be any neces- pplied with ntage whe h culture Ser 
— ee = G. Hall, 4 „ $0 olicitor, | sity for separating it. We may therefore regard the The plishility of ite brane m P ret bal 
Alfreton; Land, strong clay. American Natives, | three 8 distinguished in the published tables ject for different modes of VANS aan d 
ited spank in Mord, in drills, vith ere ashes. 00 rich land, heavy | and, oe det lan noS PLENO ( aie 
E as g avy land, and wet land, as Pga less florid in feature, this is not less 
uffered very little from disease, and, in some in- | being for ar pract tical purpose T e | ful than the preceding, forming. asitd a stout cat 
stances, esca entirely.— : 13. Capt. Du heavy land returns will then be aptid by the | growin Ped ike gi ub, or small tree, laden 
Cane, Braxted Park, K sae > La ee a 12 following numbers, viz. :— fussi 5 ith 1 branched racemes of the l „ 
mellow loam. Early Shaws, Early Champions, s 3 1 yah Penh REPT blossoms, in Mareh s 
Fortyfolds, and Ash-leaved Kidney, planted the | Suffered much, [Suffered little or nothing. April. It is a fine object seen as a rising tree int 
second week in February, in ridges, with a covering | Enolan 19 ackground faw heltered shrubbery or pls 
pria 3 inches of ape rotten stable dung ; ; 1 7 Pota- Scotland ...... 1 i 28 tion. It is also valuable for forcing in pots, bet 
toes prepare e autumn, and planted in the | fre] d 23 16 of the earliest shrubs to greet the dawn of sprit? 
ame way as diem nded by Mr. Cath 88 W. * 1 17 0 at th on referred is admirably adaptei © 
a 33 little injury. — G. 1 TRC 5 0 bouquet. Planted jia a pr 2. È: n 
omley and Ha ig AI leas pretty. Parallel with the ia Pi. 
inai with tie dae. slanted: in “al ans : N, 44 —— is one 0 ths Peach 7 feet 1 
with early Potatoes ; but are greatly di ‘chen | ie erent about l instance of escape in in diameter, which, in 5 = gee 
8 pg si 2 May with late Potatoes. |? “Bo t, ae hee g flowers. gies Woo son 
18. „Nea sq., ton; Land, loamy an u 5 ese 44 instances of esca BY 
moist, but not wet enough to requir re draining. mae 8 are apparently eae 3 e LECTURE ON ECONOMICAN pee 


Ox, Tue METHODS OF PREPAR 
DEG 


peti 
weopingi > four a poultry roosting- | A N, OR VERY EARLY SPRING. In other in Some sense sa sidiary 
‘ith the exception of a few words, sik more than 1 crop in 30 can hope to culturist, the physician, 
m ank of the river, | Scape in such land. inasmuch as it shows us 
ong loam, well drained, planted © co! of — 8 in lig resources which the former 
V. between Janu r and °°°8PY our next Oaie S 5 am = 
manure, produced a sound crop — — advantageo art mu 
lity. A H The aie indeed of the gpd 
plantation of teed soil. 5 louse ley, | HARDY BRU ee cited a so many con aa — , 
' e same time as the others with |. 4S nearly all the extensive shrubb hi the place of the chemief ictber f 
und Chinese de ad hi Parmere’ Gi seen exhibit a great deficienc eries which I have which the stomach and othe Pret oa 
ith peat OTY, | plants, the following rem ental fi ng | canal egy to ex 
manu 7 arks are necessary, iher 
re: Cr : TEE with heir es 
‘slightly diseased, owing toy. be ieee P | pointing out their a a view of sented to it su for 
free circ idles of ele > to the want of a resque e ple nivel on Fou and pietu- | plying the 3 of the sre 2 fart 
| WIsTARTA SIN ; 5 auimal heat. In order to un the functions 
* f escape are entire} i SINENSIS.—This is, with moment Ip 
the eriga and middle f W Son shrubs. Ono of and graceful of My ley g — —— indeed a 92 4 be 
1 cause for eee, possibly thep require (ki dein rer hel = z . specimens of it in the although it way not be able, re ie 
111 A a calSy E a OEA 
E or ; and stiff, heavy, | exhibition it i k ive May | like the alimentary can 2 
d with otatoes for 20 pd de n it forms an object of universal admirati de and tough 10 fe w 
22 years. Earl ` hav : 1 miration, sugar and gluten fro aD ptation 10m 
dales planted in May, ground not manured f shrub canno x cannot be or 88 is handsome oriental | yet its flexibility and power of adap PPRT 8 80 
years; produce 5 or three e grown ee a wall; b ; us an a. pat bem 
1 » and very little diseased, | Bas Proved that it sA 3 but experience 3 which so perhaps 
Mr. W. § — Surge Abb 8 „exists, or whe ceed wherever a dry subsoil | quire perform, exceeds gammalt, dad 
stiff clay. b con, otsbury ; Land, > re there oud for an uprigh is fost 
sA + BF. a-shore, grow, As far north : pright shrub to | to — —— the — er prima) pris: 
rly and late | uri nort as York it is found ri 15 
e planted fe 11 ak uri to thrive lux- Now, as Dr. Prout obser 
arch and April with n trained ’ 
common | or stakes or trellis me SPSE eee this organ seems ms to beare ra i a 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


85 


g—1849.] ns er 
n i water. This pro 
dition inate rant of 8 of any, as 1 it is preparator, ry 
pag 3 oy be gone thro gh before any 
to all en imilated, and it is in this 
or e of = may cs obtained from nary 


the ordin 
of cookery, which perform a part h least of 


as, for in- 


T 


exper iriko 
the convertibility of — 
my = of —.— albu a substance con- 

5 ‘destitute of bee Sone 


T 


and ot thers have built -A as to the ne- 
f materials 
th to 


| 
| 


ana 


ng greater "On and effect a few 


other trifling altera — in the chemical nature of the 

third function 

— of orga 

substance, 

Seen to tak s, is onein 
— is e i entirely unknown, 
we perceive that in th 

the same in the three functions exer- 


~ aye stomach pointed out by Dr. 
g and vitalisin 
“ane of course cookery | w 
e agency is vital, and 


assistan 3 material, and 
-3 in Saen respect ural 


4 5 — — to render them more 
= 5 him a distaste for erude vegetables, 
. s itself 
ject 0 


tenet 


the in 5 of of the obje 


regarded as an 
(To be continued.) 
ne 
8 HINTS FOR AMATEURS 
AND SMALL GARDEN 


* 


y who kei" land enou 
amateur 


tute 
and those who lave Gina for careful 
his way 


- covered” 1 lend, with long litte r. 


The sooner Potatoes of every kind are in the groun 
the better ; but this 
sorts, such as the 
wanted for 


d 
is pan ex with the early 
Ash-lea ney, if the pro ae is 
the rae: I will detail the plan 1 purs 
n garden, — shali feel happy ifa an 

t lo aed 


shoots 5 — iti is evident that much time is gained i iew 
lan nee 


* t to mention i exhausting effect o 
he . rw being broken t I chose for 
lanting was that occupied leat year by Se Sea * t Runners, 
the soil there boing light, and having in it the thoroughly 
rotten manure em ployed for that crop, nothing being 
than that fresh dung or strong stimula ating 
I dug out a trench 


I put a 
ba or other dry and light r 
ere then carefully placed in the midst of 
the straw, the ari ante el — a good sprinkling of 
y ashes was laid the whol The soil ‘whith had 


D . 
B o 


Potatoes 


fused in so 
ng the different 


ra allay at —— an e nik 5 strong but 


more fa- of. — 


ea 
me are now being publish ~$ 
in the Chronicle, and g ares — e in ech the 
of them h 


dene 
rly kinds, unless ight walks, 
ents ; this may be a. Phe pass 
ob- 
We have — figures, & 


and now repeat it, that the pos- 
may make discoveries | great number of alleys, and the —.— turnings in 
of nations. Composition of this labyrinth, render it e 


this way will be kept from an excess of moisture during 


30 Fathoms 


heavy rains; the tubers will more freely expand, and 
the ashes will check the en e of insect 
Notwithstanding the i i i 


a and perv 
A lady in my neighbourhood 

ardener 
n 


| stata vo — e, = 

gar 

N by siete dogged a determination 2 — 
what they e t of thei n brains 

addition to the eee, sore in whi ch tt h 

brought up. found the following in an old 


Cyclo- 


t | pædia 8 many other practical matters, regarding 
use 


the Pota 
č Mop eri RAISING —— — Ton 


—Make a 
sa ost arth, on nd, att With this 


et 
taking care to water the eart 
ns the sets will Seven and pes a 3 inereas 
Last mber I some sets i 
in Soait} following 
Potatoe 


the above manner, and 
= a considera ble number 2 ee ng 
inned and well-flavoured.” 


— 

begged for 
— 
it may be useful 


AN 
ORRESPONDENT ha 


others as well a nquirer. 

“Itis a a large vó m spir ral walk, i n the centre of 

whic carry you 
ly i 

off with cabinets, latticed-arbors, g 


ic 
those kra — lost 


nothing in 


place 


alleys coming too uld take 
away = goer of it, and consequently all its merit.” 
From the Theory and Prac tice of Gardening, by John 
0 ; Radon: 1712 


ON THE CULTIVATION OF TROPICAL FERNS 
AND LYCOP 


Tue most suitable place for growing | the different 
kinds of Patel and Lycopods is a stove or an 2 
ere there is plenty of yt Si with a 

he wider season, 


us uquets, 
lasting a ea rie in e, — intermixed w 
* ntums, Cheilanthes, 


ose. J Ferns will sei under b ell-glas 
glass cases a a warm room, provided ite Kew. a Tittle 
ir. Many of the Ly ‘sped also succeed bee ts the same 
Aa ges 203 Some of the British Ferns, eno- 
phyllum — and 
— Wilsoni, and Tr nes 
a —— — || brevisetum, likewise do well 
: under bell-glasses, provided 
Sz they are keptmoistand have 
= lenty of drainage ; for the 
= = . — nd point to be observed 
= a } in the successful culture of 
EEE F erns, as well er 
N : = S piants,is — drainage; 

a a Ee B aS vithout t 0 i 
S| = = = = continue loigi in health. 

Sa es S like a mixture of 
„ — dau ities of good 
= =| rotten turf, peat, and leaf- 
= F =| mould, with a little river 
d. aterials 
ixed tege- 


A 


or they will 


Fer inereased ei 
by division of the ro 2 dr 
phe cat hey peronra e 
any t ime in pas 
ms cer hb broken abe ove which a layer of 
ough sp m moss should be placed, the remainder 


n; afterwards Fie 


ome o 
m, cæsium, and 5 do 
ce 


eat, 


small st 
au ve taken 280d . Would — 
potted and gently wa 9 We hav nd of 
our Orchid-house here a piece of firs lr 25 ye long 
and 10 feet wide, on which we grow a few choice Ferns 
1 60 eS 


I took k | gout cnt ; 
oes, clean- | Asplen: 
Gymn 


a plan of a high a 
which is e oli : 


a hall (9 8 by that 5 
Om 


w specimen Ferns, the best way is to plant 
in about 8 inches of earth. We 

planted no about two years and 
3 when they were planted: 

. e now $ eet high h and 7 feet 
. Massoni, the e Gold ee 


obs d the following 


Polypodium aure and 
| There is a wall behind the Teras 
whi 


he Ferns, we have i 
ffiei ator m), the Fan Palm , 
am sre ), Bambusa arundinacea, aranta 
sy Tillandsia s splendens, and one of the tree Ferns. 
these i den baskets’ sak 
Lobbianus, radieans, a few 
coccinea. 


and 
fashion have a wild luxuriance 


e dot 


Plants grown in this 


-THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


[FeEB. 10, 


r — 
them unknown in the specimens cultivated in the 

ordinary manner, which renders them exceedingly at- 

The following is a list of a few good Ferns 
n mma calomelanos 

ceun — ay 

forianum rupest 

formosum — Shepherai 


vipara 
1 * 
Cibotium baromez 


Cheilanthes tenuis 
lendiger: 
Blechnum poly podioides 


greens at all periods of the year, I am disposed to shin) 

that it may arise very severe pruning (such a 

cutting out _ pe — part of the body) at an im- 
er 

Pe Vorth's Se Seedling Potato v. the Disease. An ex per 


ment of some interest. and importance to the elie 


ever he has succeed 


prod 
ariety. The yield last vat was —— the ee ex- 


— ly good, and pees free from dise which 
the —— rkable as the Potatoes in that ‘district | 


d t 
alternately wi 


Asplen Nidus 

URE 8 

Acrostichum scanden 
Lycopodium 

i cordatum 

30 denticulatum 

phyllum n cæsium 

* ool * 


— M i 
2 8 ms, — to C. 
— Herts, hee: e Pte 


umbrosum 
Willdenovianum 
uspidatum 


B. Warner, Esq., 
nce. 


not of — ig 
wangres eted with “ ‘ roars of lau ughter ;“ no 


Chronicle exclaims „ untrue 1 It mais be e 
reply, “this is a small matter to be so serious] 


5A 


to task about, oak sent to Coventry, with after dinner- | į 


. , 
of Mr. Huxtable is — ally 3 for it is of 
no ‘made by Op" a — pe 
was made by 8, agog's pet 2 or 
whether all the tribes in Noah’s mighty n con- 
tributed: to swell the primitive stercorari 
ite beds of the — reen- sand are likely 
as the rock is mostly a — 
used for making whetotones and me 
t and Surre 


to 


s in every hollow 


substan 
— out of the ehalky an 
the . of t he phosphoric acid 
8 8 and exere- 


t 1 K i 

e collections of Mr. Carter of 
„Mr. Bensted of Trap anda i of 
ow Ie osauri as large as 


ose of 


„ hich M H 
o whic l 
Ë. nxtab e alluded — a 


3 i th 

1 as 
1 gical . Te 3 en de- 
more or less from the destruction of others pre- 


i we must beli 
rey were ae * eee 


in N Lourels.— I have suffered much aim 
is disease. never known it to 
ts have been 


„80 that, as I — in the habit of cutti ing my ever ever. 


t gigantic h 


wh ether his ssi manure under 


eposit 
— e phosphate ry lime —— it has | i 
No 


e $ 
| ductors; of 


lway ar inage — 
e of faith better —.— . — 


Severely 
Ways happen, even in these | fi 


= 
F * See poor Tom Hood’s „ Geological Excursion to Tilgat Tilgate | 


y much dam whilst t 
Oxford, F. 
Cone — = Fru tree Borders.—Mr. Flemi ing Sates 
that — subsoil is throughly drained ; that drain- pee 
are laid 1 n the po the — for the circu 
tion of air into the hou 8 
the roots * the Vines wih, that ‘lene ; he om 
ae . e r derives its supp moisture from 
by capillary attraction, and "this to the greatest 
— in the hottest weather, while evaporation is pre- 
vented by the conerete ; it is also found advantageous | 
to concrete — floor of the Bordan i in order to prevent 
ines from dese 


t 
the border bei concreted, no rain water can 
cend. 


0 soil; i 
is therefore nearly exe 
action of apps: grok air; but little capillary at- 
traction can ever lace, and consequently less 

evapora The — —— is, whether the roots 
of the Vines are placed in the most favourable condition 
such circumstances ? sing the 
border no 8 contains vegetable and animal matters 
ion with lime, _— potash, and o 
an souks matters; 

i suitable to 1 8 


ged 
ous form, [ How is that to be done I] an 
of the gases liberat 


agents, solar h „are near 
a low temperature. 


- | diately below the concrete the ound 
ted. The 


a 3 of the lime 


solar iy 
absorb pont slowly, but pe hag it 
surfaces. Chemistry teaches, ‘dail observation. 
ant | practi truth, that, open n soils, rich 
support dg Such pi 
and moisture rapidly, and through 
these fertility is nal 5 Do we not 
to stir the groun 


— thin 

— alth 

as in Mr, Fleming’s case, pial oc ‘ioral execption, 
adoption of concreting. can 


Wa SE Surrey. 


n, because ihe writer is a 


ere pre some ladies 

simply steeped in water for a fortni 
according to their texture, and t 
Pumping on them 


entir 
P. W. _ [But among the paps, 


aa tissues, 


ged, 
— sound. Richard pi eA lela Vicarage,’ b 


secs a pa 
states | m 


ve it Is, 
ly exclu uded, 
Rt rere. the soil composing the border willremain at | and 
„Fleming states that imme- | by mean 


e 
in —— and vegetable substances, are those best el 


Trors to su 


jess — the ripe fruit of Stramonium, ripe Hycserz 
and old Holly leaves. ] ome Hyoscyamus 


eperarance of white-washed trees, and does not ni, 

buds. J. Divers, Feb. 7. 

2 
ai Straits, 


Men 
bloom. Several Ver- 


ndance. in the onan 
in bloom. . S., Baron. 


Angles 
seberry Caterpill lar.—It is well known that the 
baer caterpillar is the young of a.particular say. 


summer and proceeds to lay its eggs sng the midri 
and veins of the Gooseberry. leaf. If you examine th 


he su ured them. hegn 
however, I should think, and those by 1 
age is done, are those hatched from the eggs 


clergyman, we: 
plant, cance bete do so without 
his friends after his 


the efficiency 


as regarc 
as two 80 500 greenhouses and a stove, 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


87 


— no feet of glass, heated on this system, 


iq 
23 
i 


ae 


feel 
ri to — er. stove, 
of those who pn dee (Sani osed t ‘a adopt 
efficient lan 0 
—— long — 


jat 


2 i 
$ 


W. 


à 
15 


yi 


the ho 
the og 42 — Ned with . 


bout me of W have 


Vines are P 
shot N feet in h. 
1 abou 


ERE 


3 
P 


: 


a 


8 ym flue, which 
the whole length of ya piti in — “ee chamber, 


closed in with iron — on the 
re of brick rubbish, 


E 


in the wall, about 4 inches squar sides thi 
is another so placed that 5 3 of the 


ving 
+ about it, Te 


ts ie Ci 


2 
opportuni 
not follow out pe Smiths! t planeza 


100 


mmm ..., , . . 


mo 
(T ortrix ——— 
( a nem 


Eads 


the 5 others, fixe 


tery; so, 


e| now, urged, 
use — be SAY es it for m 
dje rth 


ae sixth chapter, devoted 
jurious to vegetables, is that 
fora notice in the Gard 


— 


2 y 8 


and oe bur aia 
e hav 
hich. we believe no 


we are a to give it here, i 
our reader 


nd behold, 


m when, lo a 
gathered to their eee to 
apul 


ome had h 


re was none. 
a bloated Poplar leaf; 


t h 
t | egg being laid be tween — ee — th s leaf, then 


suction co 


e many, w 
ing has. been communi 


„Who gives 674 as 


Mr. WILor's, ISLEWORTH (see p 
of = Pine-appl 


subject, much u elicited. We 
ve Mr. Hamilton’ s pede energetically eed by 
—— of reputation and experience, w erg apy 
eminent in their calling, have abandoned un- 
8 bas general adoption, because of the 8 — 
able necessity of maintaining the same degree of 
ser Pe or dryness to t ripening its fiuit, 

swelling its fruit, and in flow This is 5 objection 
i age which practical men have, before 


to blights or insects i 
which m 


eners? Ç, 3 We have 1 
ft 


190 Ageia aphides, the Vine coccus, 


e quite st 
: thom with a straw, in order again to 


en thing i 
e is a 2 of the 


iseacres, I co 

wondering how, in the name of ee the aphides 

got ther 

An outline of the Flora of Bon 8 of 

Godalm 
sq. im r . 3 plants 

discovered i D: p vicinity, To tho: 1 who do n 

the works ich these lette rst 

present vain i will 5 — aia pleasant evening’s 

entertainment, J. O. W. 


Garden Memorand 


n- 


They acquire a high degree of flavour even at that 


American blight 
—— 2 p. 16); 
pomor eee 


, they wer 


author has noticed, 
in the hope that s some of 
6$ 


a 
they were all dea 
the tomb of all the 


the 
e caused, but 


myself with 


D. Salmon 


ot possess 
appeared, the 


39). <The cultivation 


; | he aims at kasiat the bulk of iima i 
season when 


e on whi 


—— — ae one passage, but as it details | 1 
other 


ted 
— a be defeated 


arket pur urposes ; nor does he | and 


season, aud | swell out their pipe flat and smooth. 
Wilm n in pots with the ex- 
pan roofed pits heated 


sepiions ‘mentioned, and in — 8 
h hot-water 


ripe y 
Ma 
the se t 


re he 
them ; this is accomplished with 
precision and aoe nty, 
ho ges 


. — them f 


possible time, an 
effected most pate torily. It would not pay for 
him to bur 7 with “stand overs” nor yet 


the period required, 
ate . effect a They w 
their burnt off, and 
ge tting * into Fath, His system has apashan fruiting 
a certainty, without either roasting or gy Te- 


taining their functions in all their vigo 5 
h — — —— — 


scellaneous. 
Mo 1 Horticultural Society.— We learn from th 
second annual r the Board ectors 
oe published i in — Montreal Weekly Herald, of 
uary 17, 1849, that the e 


yielded A oanien revenue. 
rae 
o 111. 1824 44. ; 
790 18s. Gd. It was 
treasurer’ s report that th 

f debt 


The proceeds of the 
y ETE) + A 


; the sale of ie 
2 that it appeared by the 
he Society not only stands free 


Statement ag the ~~" in eit in * 
Tempera 
ou deg. — 


he rai 
Jul Septe T, Ooto A 3 A an 
0 ‘dry months, Angels February, eae A 
April, During the past. y mo 
were October, Februa: rir i July, and June; 
the dry months, August, January, November, sg 
September; with the exception of October, J uly, 


and August, . reverse of the observed i aat From 


preferen purpose, I should | consider that by this system he could realise half the 
fae to an * smen that I have | money he now — wich the same number of its. the Jersey Tim 
i he Meudon system h een practised on a P 
scale by him for canes, and the Cayenne Pines lately ex- Calendar of Operations. 
\hibited before the Horticultural Society, 2 Me: W „ we é ae — 3 week. ) 
roduced by this mode of t e Pines a 
- —— consequently any system of cultivation | Do not forget om ah closely after ‘the wood ranger 
which would prod them pay would prove un- | just now, in order to secure a sufficient quantit, à 
rofitable. Mr. Wilmot practises the Meudon plan stakes -rods, and stakes of all sizes, for the season's 
bay all his cio A Queen pi hich start at the | supply. void Willow of e 
on end of summer. employs l pits for them, with which they are generally infested, and also on 
with a few wo 8vo. pr aran pam into a bed of — — as has been | account of the troublesome tenacity with which 2 
ean formerly stated in detailing me eudon practice, and — to life. The Ha neatest stake, 
which ee ora of letters by an anony- | the result is that these little p uce f m 3 | for durability the —_ psi preferable to anything else. 
Many years ago in the | to 43 lbs. each, scarcely an the being higher than | Perhaps the cheapest method of manufacturing first 
a History,” the “ En- | 18 inches from the soil to the top of the crow rate stakes for ra es purpose to p 
the Entomologist.” They A cultivates neatly every variety of Pine- i -year old seedling Larches, which may be ha 
the m ost part, to the habits | apple of any value, but the gre os es -= — 3 s. 6d. per thousand, 2 inches apart, in nursery rows 
PRA in a familiar (in | sists of Ripley and Moscow ome s, tw * inches asunder. At the end of wes first — 
familiar a) style, and will be | rate excellence, and which are 8 of being plese . plant may — 1 which, though | small, 
v t of door natural | ripened, and of moderate size. He considers that the be found very u In the ter after 
aoe zoologist very | smooth and gerry leaved Cayenne Pines — of first- | planting, ba alf thie: sank rar plants will be cut us 
rate quality, and invaluable for fruiting in winter. the same process may be repeated every season Ui 


88 THE 


GARDENERS’ CHRONIC 


LE. (Fes. 10, 


Const Reader. Now is a good time to apple ce 
the fifth or 5 . — r to be removed, and if the plant 3 vs naked stem eo ul Phot — 1 is a good time to apply hot ale f 
removed ; the will a a yia — Haie the com sho uld carefully we — it, being Laws: H C. It will be best to dig it over, and lay it dow, 
hocks, — Stan oses, &c. By pem afew | lowest at the margin of the po Phe revent an nahi proper T seeda ; 2 teka care that it is well dr drained, r 
thousands every year, a constant supply — e secu | accumulation of rg near the ‘ater of the plant. ee lawn will n ee N eee 
Stakes for garde ing purposes s cut in winter ter may be give „ but it i s advisable to place — of the — to which your plants have — piety 
an immed, pointed, and bound up in tight b dles eee on the soil, and by 1 ring water on this jt is impossible for us to answer your inquiry satisfa 
immediately ; by so doing they will form straight, well- the roots are not laid bare. Turirs.—As soon as suf- n 4, Po get bare, and soms 
seasoued stakes by the time they are required for s should be ‘carefully gone over, pwc — swel . er saw this happen with 

FOR 


RCING ae: arm ag noticing those whose foliage may be cankered ; by taking uta e, d . of Bene isa aoa 
In clear fine weather assist Nat y giving some them t in time, ing gt diseased part, ial for mixing with gua V be applied with 
di eat to the ante, 3 * as to the valuable roots are often saved. . 
Vineries and Peach-houses, now in operation. This in- in shallo 8 boxes in e en aoa peat Monsraous TURN Very "ingenious and — 
1 . ght. We will — ik ‘and then consider your ; 
crease of heat, accompanied by pal circula- | soil; cover very thinly, or the seed will not appia Fal aie, opinion 
tion of by me f tho ventilators, will be * Dahlias, &c., attend to last week's instr oss: Killington. You may killit by a mixture of non fag 
ficial ; on dull, clov i weather, however, it * KITCHEN and som e but it will return unless you drain your Lan 
advisable to be sparing of artificial pry the double It is or should be the —— ort every = — | T so a ~~ 5 — 70 * The Aprie este 
Purpose Hen ng the energies o lants and this t time of ‘year to decide in what manner the several] name of “Castle Major, » probably a good kitchen * 
enti needless waste te of that da article e subdivi-ions of his veget table pin are vü not know e synonymous with any other sorn- WA 
l A h beoc — during the fortheomingseason. This arrange- | Dumelow’ s Seed ae it, probati Wyken Pippin WNE, 
in the P ‘or some of the shows ple be liable to | ment should not be made in reference to one year only, wi rot or “Pas 8 e , ot Nonpareil 


come om eager el Me be careful in 


but should comprehend a regular system or rotatio 


2 allow any moisture 8 “fall 1 575 the 
wers. A iedo neglect on thiee poin _ added to a de- 
cient circulation of air, is productive of monstrous | 
uently of de se fruit. A eg 
y be given about 3 o'clock, P.M., to 
es which aro fairly set; yer with caution "for 
much 5 d water at this season is injurious bo ‘bo = 
to roots and branches. Leave a smal! portion of air o 
at all — 


ANT „ 
main ining v be aimed at is 


4 55 
Fonctxd- u 
to render the artificial — and other cireum- 
nder ro- 


fore a pe 

dition of the. soil, 

the 2d ee 

Carrots, Hats, Paras Saleaf ya ind re ns He omy 
ose 


e preparation which the cultivation of one crop 
makes for another of a different “amily 
range 


sst I inclu piai 


whieh plants are placed, as nearly p lud 
portioned to those ii which they naturally flourish as tensive — eh 3 mop Celery and Car: 
art and ingenuity can (make them. As the summer | doors By cultivating these two ten ae erops on the wide- 
season is to — ted n the sun’s rays have the | trench s broad ridges will be left between them 
greatest power, the structure ured for ‘plant forcing in order to afford soil to earth them up with; an on 
should be of the lightest p , painte ie Th d Bomac and 
loured inside, and ants on or pl ged any Turni F AFN A 8 root g i iat 
+ 1 . 3 
in — ee ible edo k gates one in their cultivation a considerable quantity of soil from 
and M 2 their foliage. The A s and laps . 2 tothe "5 8 3 E te ae 
should be ctly clean. The ventiltin 250803 de aun —: ee are: 
so arranged that air may be admitted un the binas surface rooting, ground exhausting Cabbage family 
— ised t0 thoi 51 the pes „portion of this partment will also be required for 
— ueint pr thon a the Top ait late Turnips and winter Spinach, a or ear 
ald be given by opening every sash a little, in pre- Po s, if the d is moderately light. This last 
— — . itte ia Sat crop should be planted without ma A clas 
raia: i prom theatre úd he: 1 will in lude odds and ends, as seed beds, Salads, herbs, 
curren en ‘At ; A wh avi nd garnishings. These will be suffici ently accomm -n ed 
—— = he : boonus H Saali bo Fe nder the walls, on the borders, and along the sides 
membered that forced plants require a greater supply a „ 
of water chan the generality of plants at this season, State of the Weather near London, for the week ending Feb. 8, 1819, 
ge latter being in a comparatively a state, as observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiswick. 
syringe be used with advantage da : 5 
except in 5 weather ; use wa r 5 . — ane a seers SS 
temperature as 5355 as well - = = peeves eo 
for watering the g exertions should now | Sawe. a| 10 20.408 30.48 A a 55 sw. || Di 
be made to eradi scale, mealy bug, or other | Senday. a| 1 || 304 | soars || 52 | 37 | 44 || Sw. || 0 
insect with which plants (particularly those | Tues... , 13 4 geass || 45 it | 4% sw. || 0 
in the stoves), may be infested. Hot wate st | Teta.’ s 25 36% si | 3a | ais || 3. . 
remedy ; it may ely d 130°, and even 7 — ; —— 8 a me oh 2 
higher, and it may undoubtedly be applied much 2 R aR 3 Ti 
at this season, on the o a ag parara = — — 3—Forxy : ha aay 28 amp: densely overcast. 
would be safe a mon = E Very fees overcast: fine 
pl ts have commenced their 8 row wth, or — 32 — 8 i asel meret knight. 
= 8 opening day will bring more than its own = E = Fine; very fine, with bright sun: overcast; rain; clear. 
ork wih can temperature of the week 6 deg. above the average. 
LOWER GARDEN AND SHRUBBERIES. State of mage at — — during the last 23 years, for the 
— ‘thi to Bee “he \k in this dé ensuing week, ending Feb. 17, 1349. 
ne much covered = moss; usual 3 EE 0. of Prevailing Winds. 
ee 8 Greatest 
remedy for whieh is to vp an| Feb. #3 fi 3E m Quentity Je) Beeler 
S ETS a brings up dt and sand to 45 | 456 | A6 | Rained. gic de 
surface, aves walks fir a a long time a after- r TE E STE m i md a 
-wards in a very 33 state 5 besides, — effeet San ae 63 70.5 225 10 — ee Ale 
che | Wat Hae feet | Be orp ee H 
operation near ly e very 3 It will se that hot Thurs. 17 $3 82.2 | 393 10 22 1 3 + 7 1 b : 
sais and il Friday 16] 46.1 | 31-8 | 38.9 4 023 3 4 1.2 — Sf 
dat it meer the purpose, and so it will; fe 22. wna leon! a | osz- lalilalaial alali 
pw used erable 
assist in prodúctio n of a 3 — or it will r and the A 
during theffollowing su summ course renders it eee e eee 
expensive, and were it not ee it could not be used near | Berri 8 otices to Ababa 
` Box-e cient and much cheaper method | the exception of Aspleni lateediatese, e Mad 
is to scrub the walks — a birch-broom when there is ex . ses Bader —— “i 1 8 
e ground, just asa thaw ceed best in the shade, and where there is a free supply of 


w will kans something like a soap lye 
will be serubbed to death 
the gra 


3 
“et their ie undisturbed. 


and Polyan 
5 


0 abe 
dressing A aps plants will Il have to nee 


n 
“made up fi 


ie amateur’s chief e will be directed towards | 
nthus uire 


, intermixed with tr he 
to > ping of the siz 


rcots. yee Dy ee 91 
. nf a frame, Eron 
plaine Moore’s 


der 
e will kiad Bae detalls of cepts ex. 
andbook of British Ferns,” recently 


ad — 
Cuancoan: JL asks where foot erg. tical instruetions can be 


ý 3 on 2 burning of charcoal $ 

RUIT TREES: J S P. It is not 8 to plant d Š 

— — wall border only 12 a * — ter trench and 
make good the soil under the k, and plant the trees 


: Royale 
Kirke’ s, Coe’s 


PP gee Ae ae 


„ all 8 leaves will i 


flowering,” that is to say 


“If you can oar afew goo: ei Anz 
office pour te would oblige us. S.— egies Po may be a leaf of the 
pene) Molly, Ilex crocea; if s new. —T 4. It is the 
is or aachen Kieinis articulata. 
. ak Six rts, to tm a succession, may 
consist of rie ag uriy Frar ne, Fairbeard’s Early Surprise, 
b Dwarf Blue, Blue rigora Milford Marrow, 
n'a Dev arf Ma rrow, ||— =J L. You sow — 


bkep a.f 

PHYSIOLOGICAL L QUES 2 5 Subscriber. In physiological dis, 
Tt terms — to used in 3 — ie 2 peo 

_ When “ Lancaster 5 used $ 
woody ma T i he meant young r oa 
employing the term in a gar Ardens tha uld alter the 
e ques — Onr answer was A fot] y A Frett and your 
à it to be so; but we car not enter now intoa 


Taa O, Waterford. Thin flags will an 
; thin slate is apt to crack and 


rde e bor Mr. Ken. 
R stove in ene . of to-day’s Paper as a casein 
point. L. 

Porators: Hum 


mpshi se Lime is well spoken of by s 
though others fail t o discover Ak 2 It is 
e likely to co good than harr rhaps you will be 
— Whole Putas, rae a 9 
eggs, than e —O § 
whether you will be able to oe i we rops off you 1 
e exper loka is, however, worth 
a m and we shall be glad to hear the result. 2 Ash-leaf 
Kidney will suit you best. In the present par of Potatoes, 
it is — advisable to = e any manure; but on this point, as 
well as on oi hers connected wee the caltivalion of the 
P we are pay ho — o information 
if you will begin at No. 3, 1819, and read for. 
ill then be in possession of the result dt 


the un 


r Mf liam Hooker, in describing the 
n Mag re me a new spe- 
‘a distinct 


nt Rhododentiron, z f great BU. tal dark red or 
large a glossy 
ee oe Se aon inquires if Were is a spurious 

of this Rho — —— in n as I “porsess a 
Peretii the sa po nite 

of a most respectable n ne 


tory. 
— e 
8 glass 
faa 2 AML the. Indian aman ceed 0 
well il with = e (the el t I desire to 
add every really distinct sort to my pei sal Ee 8 ra Deronian. 
Such questions can en 
As far as we cage? 1. ae 2 
gain your see 2 cutting through n of 
l lies below Ta r soapy loam. Si would 
ning it as gk ig 5 OCCU 


s 


bottom 3 Vin 
magnesian 5 All has e } 
rich fibrous turf, dung, and bone mauure, 
k to} 3. he wid 
before 


n 
in No. 40. 1847, but, as you m 
ve youa brief 8 of it 
gently si oped fro 
pui 


+ 


treme ed 


is 


n-hole ed on the top of these wal 
— pre eality, rm the — m of the 
es of broken 


— these ore placed about 6 inch 
bricks, 8 
itl 


she — ie — poe 8 an 
the back of gt border are * 
dicularly, and also communicating 
neath, those being higher than the flues in 
motion or p air 8 the boi der. 
the plugs in the flues in fi 

8 2 a great circulation of vires 
rating the drying of the border. 5 
covered with nates an 8 table — i 
of ce the Vines 105 this bein, 


k inches. er o 
rapes bave been obtained weighing 

5 Ibs. a — z 

180. : F Fairbank. It is immaterial wh 


S G. The she shoots you 

‘American blight. 
may be safely ap 
o young shoots, 


porte pac te and that 
as any for pruning your fruit- 


Ī a 
i a ias SONS having for 


of | perty of withsta 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


89 


61849. 


SUTTON ao 
ttent 

wl se tn naturally i in the verias 

pose of introducing a on 
land to Permanent Pastu — j 

y aei uantities of mi Ait 

* nisije: and the cost this 

per acre patira to 40 60 an 
a" lay ing down Waste etc 
arser kinds may be had, at 


325. 


for game, co: 


3 d Soxs 
the soil being stated, J. S. an 
The happy to a particulars of sorts and quan- 
biti other information Bee, red. 
of OR IMPROVING OLD PASTURES 

a Piiks and Meadows, are ne arly 
i Cre . nutr ritious Borts of Grasses, i in 

m. 


8 éaty as 
sown early in the season, the pastures being 
= arrowed, and afterwards rolled, the improvem 


. 8 nd fine Grass Seeds 92 mn ye gan 
atd antily required 2 i 
peg nto the condition of the 


whi 
finest and shortest growing kinds, per fectly 


soving Mes 
font solely o 38. Gd. per gallon, or 25s. 


nd other weeds. Price 


132 Scrron and “ae have also for sale excellent new 
of home growth of Skirving’s Liverpool, 1 and 


Gu e 
Yellow Globe and other Mangold W Galt ema 


Giant ntfoin, Italian deere e St. Je »hn’s Day e, Sum- 
mer Vetches, White Mustard f which 
may be had on “pe tion, K JoHN SUTTON and Sons, 


77. ee 
QTEPHENSON anD CO., 61, Gracechurch- pret; 
LE 


8 


CA AL and DOUB 


ORTLAND CE M ENT. ip yani received —— 
o pos 


all quarters prove this CEMEN e rare pro- 
nding 


requi 
and will carry fr ai ed 
or Bi WEE and Sons, Milbank. street, 
Westminster 


H YDRavric. ENGINES, WATER RAMS, &e., 
n Improved Principles ; Engines worked by St 
Hydraulic power, to raise from 


a height of 500 feet, and froma depth of 900 feet. Douche, 
Vapour, Hot-air, and all other kinds of Idings 
Conservatories 8, &e., ted by Steam, Air, or Water, Borin 


hea 
Sink, and Co ollecting of dete &e. 
to Joun Leco, Chelten 
` NESBITS CHEMICAL AND fol tata 
OL, pa, 2 
ea nalytical and dee, $ laura 
gy, Surveyi ing, Levelling, Railway 1 


ing C., may be obtained in Messrs, NESnIT's Academ 
addition to a good me a A e ion. 
Mr. Nessir’s works on Arithmetic, Mensuration, Gauging, 


Land Surveying, English Parsing, &c., are publish ed by Long- 

MAN and Co, an nd may be had of all Booksellers, 

The terms of the Schoo can be had on application either 
personally or by letter 
PATENT o TERRIBLE INDIA RUBBER PIPES AND 

R RAILWAY 3 8 

DI STI III ERS. 3 ENGINES, GAS CO NIES, GAR- 

DENING AND AGRICULTURAL PURP OSES, Ee. 

HE PA TENT. VULCANISED INDIA. RUBBER 

HOSE PIPES are e made m sana Hot Liqu ids 

Y ithout i injury—do or stiff in any en 

xible), and as they require no appli- 

cation of oil or "dressing, are „particularly adapted for Fire- 

engines, Pum engines, Gardens, and all purposes 

where a pe rell tly flexible | pipe is Aay Made all sizes from 
-inch bore pe and of any length to order. 

Vulcanised In rubber Garden Hose, fitted with brass taps, 
copper branch, ree roses complete, ready to be attached to 
3 Water. be or Cisterns.—Sole Manufacturer, JAMES 
es swell-Mews, Goswell-road, Lon 

e India. 8 
of Tot. water and Steam 1 wart Bubber 
any thickness, for all 4 of Sante, and other purpos 


m 
OILERS, respectfully : n 
rists t ir oved hod be 
Pr opagating Touses, 
s well as bott is 


ing — em, may be 
3 — — 

or Wood erected u upon the most 
8 Palisading, Field and Garden 


per. 
gland, trefand, Scot- 
rther particulars address Wm, Harn 
Almodington, Chic ichester, Sus 


EALY’S NEW BOWLER — he 
ification of their Boile lished), 
for pe large Conservatory, Chiswiel 

at work. m the observa ations 


ex, 


: any 
. unt to to wa haw 1590 ty of einen pipe. 


extensiv They 
ut 
balers apon whey aN at me plan Royal Bota: 
zim, 


3 anic Gardens, Kew. 
— 


. Ans 


Kew. 
— k, additions to the House. 
of — following distinguished 


à Gardens, 
Farnham Castle, 


be 
ne- 
„eq, gron, Pine-apple Place, 
ebb, Bog. blaphasz near Ware, 


a otters AND DRAI 


NING, 


ROYAL LETTERS 
PATENT, 


Minerva Works, Birmingham, 
of Patent SPADES, ’ SHOVELS, and 


Gardeners, and Agricultural Labourers 
one and 1 calculated to lessen 
Will neith, Al ater eure 
ro 8 as long. a Eres ipida er 


ming general] 
Nurserymen, wares re, 


— i tee orlins es at the Royal Agricul- 
3 e i pricsthampton, 1847, a Ace 
— arded prize and commendations from 
— 
e, called Im- 
ed 


genuine it Tabelid 
ne un! 
gen aring 


Potato, Man 
: end adapted for move de. 
Ironmongers in the kingdom, 


The agricultural Gazette, 
DAY, FEBR 


gni THE Fab be FOLLOWING WEEKS, 


t 


TUESDAY 3—Agricultural Society of England. 

THURSDAY, — 15—Ag 3 Imp. Society of Treland. 

THURSDAY, 22— Agrie ultural on; 8 of Ireland. 
FARMERS’ CLUSS Feb. 12; Claydon —Feb. 22; Darlington. 


Lovis Branc objects to- 5 as the prin- 
„| ciple by 1 ch value and remuneration are deter- 
mined. He is for reducin aye the condition of 

children, and ‘a N A represen ntative 1 

m on father: and of the latter he 

would require 885 nd em 5 — nt, and protection, 

for the according, not to the” pora Y but the 
its mem ers. He h nsidered 

atural instinct of n is so 

generally sufficient for its at the 

] 


he former may occasionally exhibit ; 
he his for gotten thet, “While he puts these aside, he 


necessarily checks s the grow of that t aoha ust man- 
hood on the one hand, and of that social poa i 
5 — on — ener which they naturally 


His theory is radically Rolly to en with; 
fruits, as in a late instance, have thus been fatally | 
8 


ee principle,’ as the a con- 
of the human constitution, we have a 


pursuing a course utter 
opposed to that which Lovis Branc would have fol- 
wed : and yet S. S.“ and ot 5 have ee us 
maudlin sentiment, Rand of i 
octrines of Sociali 


g, 
Towns supplied.— Direct 


which will make itself known, whether it Coan neg- 
ected or not—that the du >n of NricHBoUR are as 
them as those of M 


ado and, 
they fulfil a duty, the p will reap the personal benefit 
of intelligent and well-intended service d 


oor an opinion, 
cation more inden than that 
of an honest , upright, and 5 
when it is erereis 


urers by exciting in them that 
muchas will towards “others in return, on which, as 
myr e A 


a 5 of . implies, if its duties 
be rightly fulfilled. 
he 2 8 rene e both of these aspects: 
ne it exhibits to us two honest 


, according t to the 
market alis of the former ; in the other it presents 
equals i igher sense 


mined uta on the one 

will o 

and 5 eigh they wi 

both ways for his intelligent deze lee 
ar 5 methods in which intelligent benevolence 

part of employers towards agricultural 
] aborts exhibits itself we must refer on another 
occasion, 


W RELATING TO DRAIN-BRICKS, 


v. WALKER, de- 
irei p 5 30, 1 1849. ge 
r. Baron RoLFE: This is an information for prie 
against the defendant, under — Sm 2 = La ee Beer she 
sect. 18. As the case turns u : it isn 


i 1 bricks for any ot purpose than in draining wet and marshy 
e means of improving t k lan in constructing the necessary ins, gouts, 
a the whole trath upon that subject as much by verts, arches, and walls of the brickwork, proper and necessa 
deficiency as Dios of Lovis Branc contrast. —. att enti a“ maintainieg u the Lage — — 
ands; and every maker o 
We believe that the strict exercise of the mere duties alveoli, or a pe hs 3 — any brik with the word 
of master, even lary under a i tg right and drain so 8 amped or moulded thereon for any 
than as aforesaid, shall forfeit 
ent govern f the td whic hey k on a — works — 


jieitly consider ai ret ment of the subject, 
would be insufficient to er a degraded “er rae 
and that simple paym of service jus 
P of eee *. W 8 desirable 
as both of these are, g be unable of themselves 
o maintain an existing moral status, even though 
the people 3 assisted by the utmo st Sizer of 
taxation that true economy could permit, and were 
nefited be a Poor-law „in . ——. opinion, 
did justice to the industrious without — 
the idle. They omit from lations 


7 


ity | arise, 


fendant made large and extensive drains — 
crossed, and others ran a! de of public highwa 

In order to protect the ie from danger arising from those 
i — = to . — 2 — z use the highways crossed 


x Wc 3 oe 3 a believe to be a 


Gut nla ne 
ect: and 
badete er i 


wages a 
Mee 5 ‘articaily -resing ene 
tances ou yr bo adne — 
To To this su pork af 


THE 


obstructip 
“ide — — ma F 
nd bridges 


90 
A pg ry S 
Been liable to indictment — a nuisance 
making the passage along 


it is impossible 
r 15 oo — not arian; : 
2 that empt fr 
used od ined — a fie v g 
u 1 — — mits pe — 2 


but the jus 
om duty, . thoes e which are 
raina e provis 


The o in 


purpose 
— 1 constructing necessary 
2 — the s Orickwork pro per | 
pen =a" A 


N 


| 22 in the most e 
yo 


è 
j — 


ET TE. (Fab. 10, 
* —— —— 
eee, eee 


AGRICULTURAL GAZ 


— (ꝶ—ũ— 

ious or i injudicious sthe Principle may be on which they anes ae 

wever great the waste * — ks may be in the 

an may make . — dr 

well anamer | 1 

from — for a be bri 
atur 1 iett, I thin 

By 


sny the question T yeaa, 


what is the true legal con 
statute as iti — struction 


gp to 2 ohjeet of 

s part of it 

— t for th 

dom. It ought, therefore, in 
nd 


any of 

—— 131 — — a jo eri — to e 
the common law, and paang 18 is no 
it with jealousy, and m a 

oita 


nee ma it are capable of 
conomical way, or the number necessary | or derogate from 

ut a plan which — other person might choose to 

minim 

if he chooses, contem 


he cannot extend this exemption, 
to make othe — works 


meee 4 the drains, 


1 s the — of being permitted to conduc 
— * neighbours. mee 
wall = or to any 0 

though Without 80 deity + could never have m 
and the use of the bricks was mecessary in one 
"a to — 
In Une ma 

drainage o 
= ‘permitting th 
t bridges sha 


Heydon’s Case, pa ge UF, A 


ade the drain, 
sense to enable h Reports, page 


Act of Parliament for-the | s 


nner, if in a private 
— as the price 


a district, 25 Legislature 

e public rights of way t — interfered with, 

ll be built, me the bricks sed in t and remedy — to t ee true te tention of the makers of 
. 


tinua mischief, 


» 


to pendi an a * 
. — which — from * — rm 
~ not to — the y nor to be 
pl — n the proviso | 
— to the 
sed with 


— 


think, — — yeial — 
fair extension of —— — Ta 
to physical necosslty, 
Suppose rit to be a matter of dispute whether there is a high- 
payi heron a field traversed by the drain in this case. 8 
it w — os bt wheth hi 


thes so 1 


hat the 


—— — had pro- the act pro bono publico.” And I he maxim to be 
o- | fo —. in Bacon’ ~ Abridg ment pee Statute on the rule tobe 

tatutes strongly os to the 
“ such — con —— ction ou 
er the 11 which t 


a boat rry a 
should build y- "gvoreh or chape 
ntroduced for th 
cks used for these purposes be exem ted ? 
a e 


canse or: neceselt 


t red, it 


tion of the 


— e 1 discretion in statute, 
altho’ meh such cunstruction seem contrary to the letter thereof, 
not, and cannot du un tha at it w was the — of the 
Legislature that all brickw ning of 
of the act, necessary for ar ining,” shouid be — 
ic ork with nten 


pears 
drains and —— —— Pe yes, ct 
uildings or construe! ions 


that it has 
1 c ink therefore there must 


mare: — A collateral purpose. 


: In this ae I have the misfortune to 
cou My brother pona — most 
oa questi on at the o of his | b 
hat ped pears to 
che nee 
r stion 
NA : That drain 


h the law is 
f the yy plan in 


o be the h 
which relates a the section of 
The rule I a ee 

bric ks * be on 
verts, arches, and wal 
sary for th 1 m 


o 
or drainage 


nds I 
is, mrt no 1 4 bricks can ‘be used 1 
si y for con- 
walls of the 


ARON ALD m of the ——_ —_ — my 
Rolfe, and 1 wiil . very shorily for — 
he whole court are rene ~ tiis, that th 
mption refers to — 
does not extend = | 


gives tbis exe 


this is (as in every other case) t 
a absolutely ne cessary, 
e 


Kgs dagt 
f Pa — vy learned i brothers | 
eer ments, 


But to proce he 
f the court saa. such as — ases of i 
the side of, or — which the Posse is to traverse, 
and, 1 think, i conceded on all hands, that | the 


w atercourse 
| isl that is, to the portion of the entire work w here the water 

s. For, ifthe — ck foundation may be 

made, the ae of which may ~ ith the 
ecessity that calls for it. — a deep 


ise out of 


HE 


l purpo 
—— of | 


of | across boggy land, whic 


mee to illustrate this position 5 an 


(whether salos ravine, dee 
— necessity. If a drain bas to be carried 
i 


ep et, 
f drain- e — by walls or —— 


well a 
* yo — ‘kind 
ae of supporting the drain 


collateral to the 
0 


s foundation walls or supports 

Ys 0 if it erosses 

way, so as to s or buildings, the oa 

e constr 2 with reference — the incumbent 

‘he mere flowing of the w hee 2— ne 
sete the lateral nit kaan aa 

a i — — 


7 
iion such walls, arches, or columns; 
noten A deen ban as well as the 
9 K a open dr: seon be made in a | ence p 
ould flow. T aie, pate ver the 
come a d . or 5 and to pre 
seon duty-free bricks may be used, io. 
he DAUR, the extent of the necessity which gives 
use a 1 
ie hen, 8 be. established, that dut y-free pisk may * 
y phy sic pat difficult ,or to 
let us 


only rey) 
s rise to their 


a part of su 
— it on which ‘the water — and — re all ie s$ pro per 
may be constructed of duty- rm bricks —— 


malty 


ry, an 


pion 
daty. 


chooses — onana a —— drain, 


pod the. bricks so empl aed a 
The L 5 th 


This rule of course excludes any work no 


t bond fide erec 
—.— w to f 


ted 
rainage, and it — an done hal 
contract cr ze 
r Alderso 


nected wi 


. s drains, or the 
i | tat a Aeka might be used fo 


shortly the grounds upon 
I think nothing Fe ea 8 turn the. local 
respect of re os 82 auy. The commissioners, by the 97th 
section of the authorized ke bridges, but 
1 | bridges are not mentioned in e Excise. Act. Ar ches alo one 
able of bein I 


actin 


mere be q aeoea pa 
aw, W 


e pag a unless Pre — 2 is 
— nuisance — 

neighbourhood ofa — But this is apiy 
— — the 


d to make 1 
pe Bia being slows of 2 


— 
building a house or — — —— 
It — — — e a pranin i no er cola 
tather ten * 


1 ere a a purpose which 
— fellate - improve the drainage itself. I think, 

Ar. Bazon e Parae; The q — n this case arises upon the 
18th e 2d and 3d Vietor ia, — 24. Doss me 
1 the bricks, which, on th 


+ } ve 


do -not yaani, that — — faat are, for this reason, | 

entitled to they may think 1 rong But 
= 9 eine their act are empower o do many 

ings which without that act they could not accomplish 7 — to 
— ence to exemption from the duty on bricks I ) 

they stand i bot the 222 situation as many other of her Majesty’ s| dr 

: pic owever, removes an 7 — edi 
f consent, and enables s them na — AF pac ered 


as to endanger lan property, an 


isance da 


way of bar — A to m 
but as or publi —.— . — the authority of th — br anpa who has entered a 
My lea wer —— 5 alluded vere 5 to, the 
statutes u will mention that the first statute | 
— an ee rele! ye “bricks is the 5th George IV., cap. 75, 
been other statu: 7 
= — 8 but I belie en girne; b 


ou 
gs U ere parapet W 
nd fide to preven 
0 . say that the case of bridges is e 
| the word “bridge” had been actually u 
would have been no doubt 


dispose of all the 
to drains, with a vie t its being 


Me f 27 5 


oer a very easy clause to com 
ry difficult for 3 — to 
here 


which to me to be — e some question 


che must be made —— the | 
ni 


of ng may ane Sapte ting it 
> however, there is = Sa Rai 
which 


some bricks ka hate clearly been used his. 8 — S 
to th 


render 
“The section in — n provides 

. tr 1 —— = that it shall > oa gel 5 hy | 

t being liable to duty, * that it 


che de fendant | f 


The 2 2 = — ith George IV., ca 
p- 49, eect. 
which wful to make tiles or bricks for the 
le „r rel PPRP wet or marshy land. And that par- 
ose alone was mentioned in the Act of Parliament, The use — Sio bo a 1505 : 
bricks for an ny other purpose i p that of parai ca ba wai oe er to pa the = Fain 1 
alls, 


3, by a the dra 


of 


Shall not e lau fal for any person to make use of such 
any other ae — in — — wet — oa —— — n 
tien work — pron i —— arches, anà jy | 


ublie may e drain, b 
the drain a, feos ea. the public pam > hee 2 
under 7 | a The bridge is, 


n the construction sary to the 


walls 
oper and n uired 
— — — — pohe drainage 0 of such tanchivess? 1 — R 
yt 


judgment which z 
af my earned brothers own I 8 see the distinction 


that the exemp — 
n- 
rk 


drains, gouts 
parpoaes 1 
Inder all circums tanesi mader wh the d 
— the exemption is the sa een is, in na is 3 
ited in all cases to the — actually used in the van 
work z of drainage. | But the law leaves to all persons the full 
ake they —— ho 
— number, depth, width, or cons Faction —— — | 


ni thes 
rasai not extend to bricks used for any ether collateral 


taken in 

derson’s judgment, whether the necessity for the: 

before or after. f think in either case a 

spplies, and herein I think is the fallacy 
the subject. It is supposed that the aren 0 

for the panh Oak of the public. In my 3 

Apra ning 85 Py 
go u . 

ba it is paela? the ‘causa ca 
rch, and necessa pi 1 

1 "thin k therefore, th 

| allow the low lower gorto of 5 w 2 5 necessary toi 

way to be 


act in por stion, the 2d and 3d Victoria, 
atins er words 8 —.— which tie ca 45 
any of the prior statu . e present statute — 
oe 5 ae tanse. tha Pan ty- eae bricks may be use 
e necessar 
re Hanser of the brickwork rop — pet aris |se 
think must be read in point of necessit 
requ —— 7 for the effecting aud maintaiving the ; Sinton ably |b 
——— Fe tn Bot a may be well ar gued that the e, 
833 as ntended. to i niroduce new m 
ams of the 5th oa IV., so experience of the pheata 


oN the 
seot: 15 
found in a 


made of drain 
the upper part of the aaa (call it 


the pu 


rr 


i 


‘THE AGRICULTURAL GAZET 


TE. 91 


bridge, to be made of dut; —— are aes at mids’-eyes 5 au appa 
— — af indeed it be even technical), out ages Pen * — F * og — por po siey k ta eu wany a waye teed 


ewr eyes upon, and at some conven t pause regis. 


is too narrow an udgment, the 
e ac, ane, he extension 2 dies fos the opt eee; ae the top of a column in the ad- | tered their appr roval of, in a tone that vost ge some credit 
statute was framed, othe vin vewSement-page of the Wetlandshire Mercury which | for originality of taste, 

2 of — mes r TT i this, ang x was lying, fresh and damp from the Press, and casting The windows look ward, and the 
‘on the trial that 8 iar a hazy pattern of itself upon the polish of one of those shining in : the weighty-looking pacquet had rd eo 
ate, necessary to enla same mahoganies, there ared one Sat morn- | long on the table before the d 0 b 
in fat ons constructed ne drain is te Cross a 3 ing in the autumn of the year Eighteen-hundred-and jacket. yaptm aan tro 5 a al ey peas i 
— — way cannot lawfully be nae means th t thirty-something, a short dab of an advertisement in the >y ed the ero of ec „ 
the and reasonable me at | % wing's Pier eup of coffee was hastily poured 
p e phrase ut, and the nary of the pacquet broken. 5 quantity of 


17 


— 

were, of 11 

act; it is an arch the draina 

e and kad the statute must b 
Ze st interes 

tance, and of 

ways. 7 cannot impute 

compelling those who 

soesclusively by means o 

sad so abs m making an arc 

though the) arch mit 

economical, and the most conv: 


Ẹ 


15 


ae 


— answer — — 2 er whan a, 3 where the law 


bridge” itsel 
It was, 


y 
h 
and that in such a oae a P wühlt — ords of ih $ 
single arches, is per and necessari ; required for the | drained and otherwise improved in the hands of the | marked 1. to 14, of which h be pleas 
pr eee 8 required, 107. to the acre. Appli- | you wish answered. We ad yesterday six eee who 
to rs Penn and Debbitt, Bogmoor, Wet- | called, wishing to inspect personally and have refusal 
of the i 


to be 


4 
ba 
E 
ee 
2 
$ 
© 
. 
E 
E 
45 


made for that, am 


arch may be useful, and 15 
5 


be called d % 


us 
Hanat extend for some dis- landshire 


had to cross public or private ways to og 
of tunnels, barrel drains, or — advertised here 
aid a gentleman sitting in the window, to another | ow 


80 
as these bridges | acres. One third Meadow ba pikes Has been 
ve been aware that any | cati 100, 


say, Mr. Bowles, have you seen this Farm that’s 


g the other purposes, for 
think it forms no objection 


urged at nisi prius that 


essary; to whic 


— 
E 
2 * 


proper a 
engineering adopted, whether by a bridge or a barrel- „ WETLANDSHIRE, — Farm t; on Lease. 250 . fell out; one of which ran as follow: 


© 
S 
5 
A 
2 
88 


A to you applications for for Farm 
ed to 


same. We > ee you farther particulars. 


N and Daten: if 
Marked one ża svu peng, siz’ muttered the 


to-morrow. are, Sir, Sti very truly, 
PENN 


8 0 

nyenient mode of making the drain | gen eee n, in deep perusal at the fireplace, of whick he | letter amongst the others, seating himsel 

. I think the word “ arch” is P < A £ pi g himself in the arm- 

pr ees 8 — yt with P — e 7 aes seisin, holding it by the two ’ uobs—with rr and swallowing the lion’s half of the first cup of 

: "e ‘Yo —No: What is it:“ said the voice from the | two”—and twenty applications.—Hmm ! 

eee one ere word fireplace, unenquiringly and smothered in a leading avi 

does not occur in the section. arti s deli 

— very confidently e 

oren ita bridge co could be considered as merely the upper part 

ofa barrel-drain, as I think in some sense it may, and kotore i herois mo d by na roprietor? I wonder 

of —— made of f duty ere ae om parapet — — siw ose it is 7 — the 30 be atm young v hat's | arhi heb tk Mikis of vein ives 
18 name was 5 ou d just suit him, would n't pri from tha habit of the A ai hoofed race we wot 


ce be 
here’s a ren of 250 acres to let ‘drained | thought than syllables, he gradually fell inte’ pi Poni 
—the head oe the a and the elbow on the chair- 


f, that dine at one hour and chew at another,—Rumi- 


authorizes a thing to be done, it authorizes it to be done ea i 
Ee te and a such a manner lic ‘ Well, what is his name,” returned the other voice, N ng. 
s therefore, I am of opinion that the object of ene again, y= — 5 er j oking up. And so, my e. old Farm, I must now bid you fare. 
tha tats being to encourage the draining of wet lands in Wh —ch! name — I shall cps well. I who e taken your part through good and 
ga 2 itor prosperity oad Bomet the pahite vin secta my own ts grunt hen he oe place) «— ill report, sage ec very drain and could 
the comet, 3 eee an 3 15 — agaes — nip. Leejohn, you know him. You don’t mean to 2 van find blindfold every weeping outflow that has wrought 
the language o f the act is, that “the meooasary drains, gouts, don’t -n ae a o fair a change i once untoward look, and ill 
cla arches, and walis of bri eaor k, proper and necessarily | “I didn’t say I didn’t,” answered Mr. Bowles wit me: earth’s tears of penitence and Promise! I who 
Saale of dtp Roe y n Pike wale nate may be | pr ching: gravity of iterati , be pon giving the have taug anxious toil through many a long 
pained of were proper and necessarily required, whether by smail st odicum of intellect to anything else till he | dull day that serene and smiling look you wear 
nog ity or by the law of the pad: if they were had finished his Leader: whic aving just accom- lovely morning, which even in your plain face betokeng 
the drain, 24 er gal 3 bel the making 50 plished he starts up, lets go the hobs, and parting his something good at heart. Well! may he who wins de- 
made to exist without the other, . fendant. is. antitled.to at, tails, turns round, and again takes possession of the | Serve,—as many a sad heart has said, after all its 
2 But fas the majority of the court is of a different fire; indeseribably; and weg up to the subject, asks, | wa tehfu l care, in cases not altogether dissimilar. Now 
there must be a new tria But h n he take 5055 said 107. to the acre | let us see something of ed suitors ! 
is last remark seemed to have reference to the 


Tur to 0 ERIE . O. I. 
wn of Bogmoor is not famous in History: to give pd to the middle word, this invoca- 


didn’t you ? 2 oe she 125 
blesh ye’ 


CHRONICLES OF A CLAY F ARM, “ord b 
OND “os Added to a toss u up of the chin out of the cravat, ahs 2 suited 3 the word, y Ne arrested by som 
0 


eap of letters marked 1 w 14,’ but before the es 


Siti many ae me 


re 1 N — It may not perhaps have tion conveyed all the answer that was heard, to the | actions : a gentle KNOCK, Talp 
rara n amount of public notice | difficulty start y Mr. Bowles hat the exact IHE RURAI 5001 R. 
that reflect sagi i “hla yaa ee 8 ba 2 was that lay cg ae a oe the 9 Tnx condition df er mee is a subject for 
5 3 a ther it was per 5 avora shes oun : ee " 
= tat Marlborough, Wellington, and a pecuniary capabili bilit ities “A conclus 8 8 some Pa individ al quiry- “Whatever. may: ibe she moesality:of 
be ygi with great names’ that might | ence attachi ing in toto * the WiN “Kes ned dark |e" as —.— — = r init viima 
with aioa sometimes are mentioned, in to the present day. The 1 — | feli, 8 by some p ge r ee 
er es ‘ort of yawn of careless wonder, why ¢ Duke 3 topic of news room discussion : and the Chronicle religious institutions n 
tees meh à mew of Waterloo’ would n’t have witho ut S Soha ¢ — ee action of the laws, these are 3 men, 
per etter, th epend upon it, to sin s in irrem er 
an obscure to 25 tothe Laure 48 co x bee eai ra likea A o Tuo e sh three Pa s ne 5 1 coi epi. We are . from pride to admit this, i 
— N grammatic announcement in the ry, a thick and of submitting our judgment to the just influence of — 
d 


by which 


Said to make ey 
= rode up its one l. 
ig to 


weighty-looking "pa eque ot, W ies — what may (lor million of facts, seen, felt, and incontrovertible, 
pre 


refer listening to the trifling arguments of partial 
e proof of va I 1 met 
poi correspon 

ich has appeared within the last fow » — 
columns of your Journal. . the 
vardage of T. R. V.,“ 


ubli Bi onal nelled it ge 
Was utterly chloroformed against an ion, it i and the illy, 
) ny | and too square for proportion, it was crammed, in every | “ >» with 
as “quite of s popote corner and upon every table with miscellaneous piles of confessions ca! ae vhol tells ares 
olks en | arti 


— eee, he feels certain he should have been a 
essful candidate for the hulks. I hope he 


es emed 
t reason that nev i i iginal i i j 
er can in spite of original incongruity, and become reconciled 8 mine. Several others follow on the same 


the dilated eye of the o’-door’ seemed to contend for the mastery all over the | f 
thing look small. room: ul i 


3 
= 

te 
2 
Qu 
8 
© 
e+ 
= 
© 


at, Seem . to view 
ev s , 
that jens -p ery other object in life at last by lying under the same dust. Indoor’ and out- side, but with more discretion, though each in his turn 
ells us with many vanity-flourishes of self. congratula- 
the rural in his neighbour 


As 
long flat dull straggling | fancied ourself in a garden-tool- bonne if you looked ¢ on 
—— y 8 yet y ssh sober, orderly, and honest, thanks to himself; and — 


Se ie and Saenger ge in it. Hon | the mantelpiece you thou ef o: in localities where this is not the case, it is for want 
together u 80 much self satisfaction e oe ee four dried lum of s sol hard - „ lar | sympathy and humane treatment. ‘The last, though 
Wonder , 6 Unsatisfactory a spot was the indefi A 8 t.one end of it on sep te piece of e white te pape „ not the least, of — correspondents is an ex 

“er that was i l efinite and through their 9 of dust feebly indicated the nary genius. His bodily presence suffices 8 


as ; : 
was Stirred afresh in the mind by every | three primary colo 8 red and yellow, beso a rt and under ‘all: akona eke e, to 
ti f newspapers 
of the 


all the ne 
deal more al of the to 


ee eory an 
window, commanding there- eg leaves the mor 


25 and a Cc tifi 7 Olle . A 
pag a sma arp Are o e 
not ine ny other rooms small hone lay near, and a drop of blood along the edge 


Its vide look-out, like | yolum Raleigh’s History of the World, in black 


— pe and ‘eters — One feat on — 
pride deserves a I mean the march 
that „S. S. has started on 
diseases 


er officer supposes 
perme with some of the of Sterne’s 
S. S.” started on xe oe 


e or explanation, of the whol a nyse e 
> e whole | half meaning, disported themselves over the confusion disease, n that. 
8 “ine Y,—but there was of the little den: the end of a large pruning-knife a ee ago free from all = 
in on a g way up the street | peered out between the sheets of a new half. eut volume 
ae up and opie another | marked ‘Dendrology,’ suggesting something about his own n exploits, On the score of experie 
d Practice, a clearly exhibiting by the acquired amongst individuals or esto we — 
well as phy ig truth that abroad, “S, S.” is not afraid to stand muster with 
sharp ae are bad ptt cutters. Old Quarta ee dern of an much wider range than „ T. M. G. 3 


entalism, but also thas other which vein 
afflicts the noble captain when he is on no saa of 


0 of 
beerved he was emblem atic as le etter, Js open on a little table near the fireplace, with — 3 at issue! Is the soc’ and intel- 
2 bun dl lectu i lasses such be- 


he q 
Enough to say | had lef d had t; Mr. i 
der eft mark of some . — or haste = a 2 i T. M. Goodiff have 
dint do 8 Ae could hardly | smeared the page below with an ugly red line under the = asta ert —_ — of the great and grow- 
on the floor of el fee word gratitude. Except. tolerably well filled 5 case | ing? evil that sits, like a nightmare, in stifling op- 
ar i Fi 
sources 


b 
Is 9 T pression our . let him 
y e shape siz . was nothing else noticeable in the general medley, produce it, and a e clouds, in one 
enty- 2 an 7 genious p it, 4 iad ey * rsk] solid mass of Californian old, shall celebrate his 
r w D e and a shaded reading- 
oom or its bow-window | Ja 3 s x a y s ha à aae our gratitude, This discussion, prams pe 


r 
À poring re 25 bem and the s | burnt out in the hearth, leaving the ends of the 52 
‘etn to sit and read ee and the Teea despondently against the dogs, old- Bene help tai Femn-not-sorry it bas e Be gt 
defiance of the ent and the Fi 


at in d biped articles, which reared each a long swan neck 
and finish, 


news inside and e E 254 head of silver, by way of focal ornamen } plunge in deeper and strike out farther. 


= 


92 The AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Fes. 10, 


d f Las sold at lls. per cwt. The pigs were serüß 
N i increasin loyment, do uter for ourselves and wildren, and pro- j mea bhed 
Pau PENG 1 3 ee oe a 4 TA iola a of . — find that the mos labour ex- | every week, ee eee ed e e, clear Water ty 

: ble to the 2 classes than are to be found | pended on their ae so much the more valua de ould drink. The pork was — . + or. J. Price, Easteott, 
3 country of the world Computed with any | their land become; the labourers would be graufy];| Ancient Egyptian i a — e inquiries an) 
= ae the posse A of Europe we have an abundance | and though ess aa least, would be less poor-rates. 4 | statements — oa a ve ee 8 

i nerated ; i ivate en- | Workin, me ago, re g — of When 

2 a La lager mera ving pak pile k Tied 55 25 75 em Paper of Dec. 30 nee is 1 letter taken from the „ „induced me to put thy 
tens of Aao of artisans and craftsmen, oftentimes | on 1 use ai and abuse o ae lime by a Mr. 78 See 1 0 ; Tie. charred eee aii ME, patoi M 

cessi b tud infirmity, | and from the na of his communica e under- ne 
6 er 8 we ag stands less of the true use 5 lime t . he ro AN 8 * ag yon 1 

itals lu institutions, without number. | others to suppose. From all I can gather from * ig, raisig 
— — 8 and sah the ne- | Johnson, and puk the burning of stone for lime is not plants 2 it. 2 Re pacan K e brought 
cessitous. Private charities beyond conception or cal- entirely for the purpose of driving off the caste acid, 8 ’ 3 3 seme want of faith,» 
culation, piously concealed, but constantly flowing from | but to render the stone more liable to be finely divided ittle Gependanc p genuineness of 


: : i i f the samples of seed. Nn Seeds of plants 
l iest sources and pity. Add to | and mixed with the soil, and that the use of lime to land | apy ot . 1 plants u. 
us tue ODAR ok ra e a gees | is as follows: first to alter its mechanical texture, and known in ancient Egy — coats Kis found mixed wid 
All is cast into a gulf; pauperism is insatiable, aud next, and more pager for the purpose of absorbing “ee by —— or high en 4 rei —— ie 8 
still cries “ give, give, give. At the rate we are ice. this same carbonic cid, and supplying it to the r my’s pe (w aa fe ike 9 e Papen) | 
ing, the communism of wealth is not far off. While of plants, s, [Not 80; 30 Ekr the poe ose in thea aal: ha = ee 3 or more ancient, ut leg 
the name is a bugbear to our thoughts, the principle is | becomin saturated with this acid of inducing s — 
weaving its 8 about us. The industry and tnrife chemic ng changes in the soil as shall convert inert e * is, I beli ieve, misinformed that fresh butte 
of the few will soon be to the i e and 7. dissolute | vegëtasta pet into useful food.] and thus we sce, n London is manufactured sweet lard ani | 
enginee 15 13 iy procured, farmers seldom use lime, oe — Dorset salt butter; at — he is very fortunate : 
y- The cleverest char- because c alk is maa more easily divided and ai 1 he meet with such, An inent and venerable 


dg 
eo shia „ forgetting, probably, that the 0 of | lime is made m opila is, that it ma aia ae some 47 years 1 = an action between two 
= is ‘Se if not oe = great in that ys — i er long the Jime lies on the surface 7 the land; dealers, in which e facts were likely to 
which can read as in the class totally unlettered. It and if Mr. Fis will read Johnstona « reape which the parties aid = wish to be brought forward ia 
would be gratifying to know that every poor child re- Chemistry for Yor ung Farmers,” he will see the im- Guildhall was referred to him, and in the course of thy 
ecived an education sufficient for its intellectual wants, 2 75 ant part carbonie acid forms of the food of plants cause evidence was given o the way in which the bet 
but let us not overrate its worth nor shut our eyes m the ve atch of Sir H. Davy, Dr. Priestly, and | Epping butter was produced. The parties bought Iris 
its consequences. Will education endow a man wit cc Pra butter which was too rank for the salt butter market; 
more strength, more courage to sweat and toil ; will he Lins sa Compo —I have 4 in making a they cut it into thin flakes or slices, and exposed it 
bo able to fill his children’s bellies by writing on the | very goo ere 8 mpou und for my cows, by boilio the dew and air on the top of a high building till it vn 
le “ bread an s » will it be a receipt for his first aan 65 aie: then adding the Linseed. meal, ae perfectly bleached, (the use of chlorine was not 
rent ! in short, will it teach him to do his dut, 5 pouring both over a mass of cut hay chaff on a brick in th 8 i l ana 

1 in, bars nt State in which it has please ased God to e floor. By this plan I save at least half m Hear then added a —— material, to give it the huey 
their miseries more 75 quantity of hay, and the cows ieni admirably on it, | distinguishes the best Epping butter, and made * 
to to fel i more acutely, is only to ha ae. g catas- Ly t I cannot succeed in getting my fatting sheep to eat into the forms in which it is so eagerly purchased, : 
social government imposs The | it, though horses devour it greedily. Can you advise | 8° agreeably eaten. But its excellence is of a 
ptucation which leads to diligence, sobriety, 1051 ‘honest me how to prepare it for wine’ Should it be put inte | fugitive nature. Any achelor who has lived it 
95 toile that which er ulcates self-dependence, and | moulds, or how can I make it into cake, for I imagine | Chambers, and had occasion to set by his pat of buta 

er every cottager’s fire-place “ Help yourselves they dislike the oiliness of the a ? Sussex. wee for the second day’s breakfast, may remember that te 
bsg God will help you.” Our bold peasantry were | will eat it if starved into it fora day. We get has found a very different taste and odour on ie 

re i ed e i n 8 95 sec l 


pa 
E 
oO 
. 
dD 
— 
u 
et 
p 
E 
. 
° 
Rn 
— 
D 
ath 
oo 
8 
D 
— 
92 
i=) 
Qu 
O 
— 
= 
7 


and would have scorned to be seen cringing} Eutent of Barn F Aree an og? acl on the first, and on the third day it is scarcely eatable 
use- i n 


corres 8, infor ed 
of wages, education far more disseminated among | whether any kind of —.— has yet been e for p po ound of country butter made bya thoroughly clea 
\ 7 4 now! aud how have 985 de- the guidance of landlords, as to the proper extent of | dairywoman, in cool w eather, will be good at a fortnights 
barn accommodation that ought to be provided by them an Hantoniensis. 
i arms? A tenan 


of st r ä 
9 who never gave away a guinea in real | who commenced the occupation of a farm about 16 Sorteties, 
charity in make a lit e ough, was then RoYaL ÅGRICULTURAL OF 5 Month 
. Isay, i b i 8 was held at the Society’s House in Hano 
aggravated poverty by inviting to idleness and been W ee by additions to the farm, t eset 
waste, and that 88 pauperism vad se super- | 120 acres, and he now presses for a second barn and | The E 
a mi ous sympathy which has exagge- | floor adj pag d his present one allegi in that he suffi i 
— the rights —— 2 the duties ofthe | frequent loss — b. el different a S 
i poor have their duties as well as their kinds of protas t the most advantageous m ts. | Mr. Childers, Mf, 
hts, and when they forget the former they for- | He has how weve Pbre machine, bat he 9885 ee he „ . rag age hae Hi 
feit the latter, For gon ae sake as well as their | use it for any other 
bodil, jected 2 


rg 10568, : 
pez p 25 ae country. 5 ae shows | Mr. Jonas, Mr. Kinder, } Mr. Miles Fue Mr. Mil . 
; r o his business, and much anxiety to| Mr. Pendarves, M. haw, M aw, Jun 
ings ascertained and energies tried, “that when “they increase the produce of his farm, by making 0 Shell a — R. 55 San, Mr. "Stansfield, Mb Me 
apply for relief their claims may be estimated. To this manure, in which respect he has received the encourage- | Thomas Turner, Prof creat Way, and Mr, Jonas Vel 
d the minister and overseer of the parish, FA master | ment and assistance of his landlord, by the ere i 
who employs labourers, and the magistrate of the of a good ew of cattle i red in 
district, vired to co-operate, 8 of a straw-barton for the wintering of cattle; but = question Spennan, NONN T 
e in its | now is whether if —. — — ouey is to be! Reset aom T PO fa aein mangaan e 

action, let mercifal laws, admi sonnet | farm buildings, the erection of anothe: 3 is nb ia Amble * 1, Watkia 3 Hi a, Malifa f Y orkehire 
‘ered with the Son cere tht nts would ex of o ie ing it. A Somersetshire Man. [The Penrice : e, Rev, Cha res , Plums Imste a, Norni : 

children the encouragemen: swer t t 


* 


The following new members were elected : 


of the weak, and the s the — d, the an 1 n, J 8 Williams, 5 b, Tewkesbury, Ut N 
an nishment of t gem = Ormerod, Ven, Archdeacon, Rediughall, Harlesto 
igi W. y i — 7 — management opted. Ta Scotland the extent of Nicholson, Henry. 2 „ 8 — on, Beles, Lincolnshire 
7 hild, Hisi ginie porn fee small and eit 3 suffi-| Gilbert, Robert, Ashby Hall. Berghapton, Norfolk 
igor igs . intelligence will be a akened t; and where grain is — * d by — . — Charles, ä Brigg, Lincolnshire 
are no longer oppressed. He will un- machine, and gra sts, th of ner — Tiot 225 ae 5 5 8 “2 Long-Stratton, Norfolk 
p ud to main- any pro portion feed ante of sake 155 d, W m ee , Leeds 
í i ri ht, David, H rth, 15 rth, olk 
Syn baa teat ote ee extent of barh Donovan, Geo corse, ; adde . bee bart bas 
inquennial Eshibitio tion of the — vets of French 5 Sir Thomas, Ba rt., Aynh 
Industry —This exhibition has been fixed for the = 


Home Corr rrespondenc 205 Bigg, ` Edward Smith, The H g -piro ham, Sussex 

th of J i i ; a Pinch cy 
Rural Pore “S, S.“ were bette: ——— sik the | rary building, erected fr th 

poor, he would poma agema such a sweep- | Elysées. The 

condemnation on them as he one lately in the differ from all let which have 

$ : pe N preceded it. cul-| Ruscoe, Ralph, N M hi : 
ste; perhape you will allow one of | ture, which ee bar heen but imperfeotiy repro. Marden, William, Gerpeh ns, Rainham, Becex 

t these rrow, „L. 
has t jai the pee che has A bia Reta erde A pinson Rev, Ps 5 et ich 
construction of the building, contains two side De Ratzen, the Baron Frite Slebeck Hall, Narberth bs 
8 x laced at a dista ite the — build e oe eee ulolk 
ing, and a i i j er, Rev. Lowestoft, Suffo 

y more than he ean |I stock herp ae TTT 

* t of * 


held in a spacious tempo- William, The Close, Nor 
the oceasion in the Champs ppe Sie Kingsnympton, Chumleigh, Devon ural 80 
rtheoming exhibition will, in one ee 5 F lone 


e e cost of t 
combined with a good moral le fr aceias Kere ition, of the produce of "all dhe. Besar an wile bec ay 
example from | ments, with the tior aie wi nett, Thomas, Sah: Norfol 
CCC 2 . 
: been voted by the National A bl ; 5 ohn we, 
the one that is gone ; they have been Mee ssembly for the purposes, The panies of 72 candidates for election at 
a zo i — e 10 — 8 whose 5 — and for medals to those exhibitors 3 were then 5 N 


ONER, Chairman of 
carer ae presented ‘the’ ‘report of that eomm 
e previous month ; from w which i 


i — * D ming a geny Bape tions shall be pet worthy. E. H. Finances Col. 
as their and except ie iat’ give the — of feeding pigs Be . Buck- 
as wo ae of ob rvation. Sipe 5th Decem 


25 Ip — Chichester 
1 Ibs. 45 22d. 


b te = ug I cannot give 
crease wever, this result is quite | also reported that 10 
to determine the excellence of Buckwheat invested capital of the 8 


2 


THE cepa ect S GAZETTE. 


93 


b nkers of =A 
. * to R to the ba 1 wo a 


ith them 


ested to pre pare, i publication, in 
* Ria Journal, 5 list of the Govern’ 
on the books of the Society at the date of 


—The Council ig a AT re- 
of 1500 co pies, of the Society’s 
** r distributi ion, Ry prime 


COTTAGE “Tracts. 
os tee te gre 


igh oes x commenc- 


eil 8 


e 
Saintfoin ; numerous papers were reserv 

the ducting Weekly Meeting, 15 Eye held on 
Tuesday next, the 13th instant. 


Calendar of Operations, 


arn vi ne 1 — — chief employment of our 
and me 8 oe time be, ploughing 
dung, Turnips, and composts 


| storing eee Parsnips, aud Swedes, in 


ared and youd, ee ea 88 by 


I have eno 


pared a apart — a desire of diffusing an economica 

; * 3 any one feel desirous 
appy ish it. Butchers have 
per week in allowing halted beasts to live on 
food, and a ith the proportionate in- | 
i "i ern is Feen inly goes very far to 
prove the advantage of keeping beasts on Prepared food, at 
little mpre than half the cost of unprepared. We feel assure d 


that no one who piv es the system a fair trial, will be disap- 
pointed, . F. IN . — = 
am care st report we 


M, Feb, 2.— Since la 
e been . —— Oat stubble land for Tur pips; and Tur- 
aie leak and sowing it with Wheat, and are going on with the 
old Grass field that wa 3 threshing and delivering 
Whe threshing Oats for the — nts 
are feeding the cattle with 
Ki heifers in stalis are getting 
„the horses get each half-a- 


at; 8, as t 

in grain; storing Turnips, &c. 
Swedes, sliced with the cutter ; 
4 lbs. of Bean meal each per 
bushel of _ per day. 

oRSET FARM, Feb. 5. We are still og oi A —— up and 
clear the 
land for oughir yg. The Carrots and Parsnis 2 course are 
dug, 4 e ground left a 5 Be eee to have the 
benefit of frost and air; 20 for n we have the 

d after Swedes and Turnips ploughed quickly, as we find 
o be de posited lie ex- 


vigorously 

lamb 3 ‘and 0 far they N ddie very well. 

from k tho se likely to Jamb first, giving a "hax ‘a ad 
e them into a Sheltered yard at 


4 in either ewe or lamb. 
» Turn nips, e 


tieni to 
We aay ve a few 


hive zor . muc ch p 

suua for them to stand in, wi 
ing o the Turnips to it, and th 

ung from it, would have n paid for by the difference of 

time required to fatten iene r he dung will be more 

effectually made a rogether; car tel DE and ploughed in more 

quickly, wet od dropped on the land a nd left exposed to all the 


for pastures ; drillin D, T We have found on an average | changes ather. Hay given in the field to the sheep 
of that the er after this all prir of spring corm when eating o off forhipe is no doubt one 7 the most fruitful 
are sown the better, provided the soil n a proper state fi sources of weeds x ae e hace seed is scatt ut, ploughed 
the reception of the seed. We have drilled —— 3 after in, aud it ce LA estab! ishing "e for 1 three or 
Wheat ater 3 a 2 97 2 rat ear viene four years io eee ior in rotation n viz., 
rate ushels per acre, Wh E tite or nity i 

e Wheat soa soni — man superior — — wepe Clov x ae ae d no oe — 


sowing, for aiken @ other kinds, such a 

well known — 3 5 Got en arp Whittington, Saul: pih Am 

Le. We have filled up winter-sown Whe here defective, 

— — so that Gan spring-sown may ri Pel as early as the 
ther; Sue tnis s by no means . — — Talavera would — 
të e kin ire crop. We pur 


escription o w is pro- 
er s and a providence Barleye ‘aie good ; 
Sachin e of seed from one kind and condition of soil 


feed without disturbing the bottom of the furrow, it is 

advisable to le yip = alone; but, on the other hand, if 

pasted over, d by long ex- 

e to wet wing and there appears an adva Sninga in 

m to the top, and improving the tilth, it is 

the plo We, however, think it bad 

a gen sent 1 to plough 3 . moie 
piei ae toa common 

We drill as 


aud reg all 
e are an advocates for 
and order amon 


w days, and shall also 
Potatoes have ke 
ave been expected at ibe 
ti or eee Mangold 

oe Poe long stored. We 


have Carrots, at 
® covered as straw, and the 
ner 


is mofo nay 
Tne 
ty epee fa 


— 


6 
arni] 
001 

£0 713 


and giving the food is nearly similar 


$ ares reba 
at annually greai here. aoe rs Abd 


en re 
Sn upon. “capital employed, 


ore y nd previous to 
27 75 vod, ene pment that the 
an before, We are qui isfied 


t 
en 10s. per week per head, in 


e weeds until preparing again 


given to 5 the ground of t 
Tur 5 in the 


It is true Abies with the impro 
ay 
the 


n 
the weather permits of it, in carting dung ou 
e have also a age Swedes | to store, and 
is shing Barley 
ng after our rower i Barley, will keep 
some time to 3 G. 
TSHIRE Pansy, Feb. 5.— For some time pas 
pide ing for and drilling, ‘tnd Tibbling 
f 2 buche Is per 1 
{bas . Hauling 2 


ay, a d aah He Baridi na nage, 
receiving Swedes, corn, and 
Son UTH HAMPSHIRE FARM, Feb. 3. Buri ing the three weeks 


ince our lastr report, we have 3 
h it has allowed — 
operati ons s of the plough, hs sowing of Wheat, and in s 


1 S, J 
„ favourable ä for 
hand at this period of the Tar neher o we sider the 
samen of such mild weather at all ben 8 apoa TERE 
n in general, for we N in many instarces the Whea 
plant is getting too forward, in 7 the prospect is much i 8 
jured by the ravages of me slug, n ny field no 


appe meee 5 pa fen . and perhaps would be better 
pioughe with er grain, It = more than 
probable ae: this “ike wi Ba will be (as we have often 


38 3 © Ben ed by a ba ckward, cold, and “ungenial spring. 
The 


crop of Swedes has been fed off with ewes and 

labs, uch ve have sown with a mixed red and white, 
33 bushels per acre, which quantity we do not i ink too much 
when we consider the advan ced period of the nn! for we 
mare el in past seasons, when wn a liberal allow- 
„the Wheat pant icaves the gro a 


ance of s 
is 567 revised to tiller so much 


and delays the harvest, rendering it 8 re sus schptible of Might. 
and other injurious etřects, „ both quantity and 
quay. The horses have en also ployed 1 chalk. 


a 
Wheat, whith at days at m. dukes 
Our Jabourers are oon — ss in draining 5 
g land intended for tilinge, Feebntly . dut of 
= aes trummir hay for . and cattle, and A thresh- 
g machine several d ur labourers s are 


urnips 
— 


and At pipi of ee seals per day 
me 4 e pie 2 kpr rs = Hs 
e Turnip greens, and are — ied w. 
ugh the cutter, whilst 
h the — 


n ady ance 


ay per day 
Se above described, ex 


8 old, commencing 
email, „the — 8 season for 
mostly fat, and will be tit for 
g Our Carrots we find a unto! 
crop, Aden * some ade rotten, ng to the frosty weather at 
the time of st milch cows receive a liberal allowance 
which 2 “oo remain in their 
y go out sate pasture urs * psec 
‘he mauure they make, from e pen 


Casta of e equal ages and equal sizes 


uality. The pigs, of which w 


tian Beans, whi E 
much at this period of the year. 


and Kept i n open yar rd with she ed; the in-calf heifers ate spind 
We in open yard with shed, not being Soren to pasture at 
all, and — fed 2 * cut Swedes a nd ha 


SPRL IRE CASE FAR . 3. ute l» arm contains 133 
imperial pri arable— eats vonast 5 of a strong elay 
soil, and in part earthy inclining to loam ; it is farmed on the 


six-course shift, consisting of Ist Whea 2d Beans 30 
4th Clover, 5th ‘Oats, and ‘th Fallow with a few Turni Bora 25 
consequence of he w weathid for the past 
ertnight, our labour in the field has been anything but con- 
stant, pay = t we did = a chiefly in poue lea for 
Oats ; other occasio ur men and hor ave been for 
the most t part preii grain for 6 
Su Farm, Feb. 5.—As the we ather has 
dar e 
Pith) and Beans. We sh 
but I consider the Peas soon eno 


planting hedges ; digging stones for making roads, 
Three weeks since I — the er from the caives and 
lambs, and since tba eu them Drumhe 


— 
~“. ®© 


ramhead Cab- 
bages, I give two feeds — day to th e calves, and one cart- 
load to the lambs ; they eat them greedily, and if they improv 
as they have done, Cabbag 2 on e best kinds of 


ey 
food we can grow for young stock. I have a fine crop grown. 


on very poor soil; they e given to the stock i in all weathers ; 

they d TE B. 
Notices to Correspondent — 

Carrots: A Constant Reader. — ow 3 cw 


o per acre, 


or 4 cwt. of Rape-dust, a fortn 


EDUCATIO 2 of e ting a likely boy at 
St, John n’s, Bat tersea, would be 32. 12s, for 12 mionthirs ih 
ssa 


addition to which 5l. N of 7 8 Pho ould 
40}. would therefore 


alle By 
puncipi, 255 the college ‘all the reqatred information would 


be obtain One who is practically acquainted with agri- 
culture should be sent; for those be ESON thing but 
theory are but ill qualified to teach. Pi ue. 

Farm BumDixgs: C 4 At townsman of yours takes this 3 


ject in the ‘‘ Cyclo pædia. 
mended box- feeding, not “ards and a little experience will 
e of effluvia is tenfold in the 


ND GARDENS : X. If the fences are good, and the walls 
not 1200 than 4 feet high, Patel 2 be easily excluded. Cut 
to 35 eh 2 . of what 


are called the flight feather: me point of one: 
wing only. They “ai oe Tops prg 488 4 cannot fly higher 
than they can jum B 

PoTATOES: W X. ate sates are too good for them. If 


Soo 
your turf be rotten, “the: crop needs no “page 
HEEP-ROT: Chepstow. Notwithstanding the wet season, we 
have not 2 — ug rot has been prevalent, “We presume 

t 2 in 2 EN 8 and Mes 1 

yourself as to he ai ure of the d Wit ard to 
remedy, tg fe offers none. We ‘advise 1 to diy 
pasture, with plenty of cora aud cake, with good hay. The 
salt sheen — Continued. 

Sreers: Hilmot 5 We tried these steepe 1 
or three year bt from —.— : or 10 Ibe. 
of the saltin tub holding 20 gallons cf water, ith a basket 

d into it, and suffered to remain a gy ang * 

d out and suffered to drain, is as 


oer an 3 as Aby. 
sir TE OF AMMONIA: 4 Constant Subscriber 3 to. 


: X. This breed is men- 
„yet all oiis differ in their: 
with am muff, obtained by a cross 


Tos Jausonan. BREED vad Fow 
a cen airy 3 

3 It is a Poland, 

from the Russian fowl; w 

spangled. Those with combs 

now called thë Boulton Grey ef herd Boulton SES or 5 ees 

he pan fowi. 


THRESHING-MACHINES zW oh 
reason of your mahine being 0 o heavy; the cause is 
overhead wheel. On many farmsin Aberdcenshire, machines. 
with beating drums, and 5 to separate any loose 
left = ne straw, and a cleaning machine which half 
the re driven by four gag an ease ; from 
o ps of f Oats, and ay t is of * r. 

eshed in an hour. 


corn. 
dresses 
8 to 10- 


a pit 
e cost 8 ame such a — e would be about 
1000. sel 


a 
ma 
© 
33 


WInkwokx: Leith n. Sow Rape or Mustard, and consume on 
the Tana with 3 Your best plan was to havre parcd and 
burnt the old sward. 


rkets. 
-n ELD, Monpay, Feb. 5. 
he number 2 s is rather smaller, but cwing m the 
mildness = — w eather “the 8 is very limited. 
ith ty realised, 


+ 


unsold, The stpoly of Sheep continues to be very small ; it is, 
however, quite equal to the demand, and no quotable advance’ 
in price is obtained. Trade is dull tor Calves; prices remain 
about the same as on Friday last. From d Ger- 
many we have 241 pan 130 Bar and 62 Calves; from 
Norfolk and Suffolk, 1800 Beasts; from Leicester and North 
ampton 200; and from 

Per st. of 8 lbs.—8 d Per st. of 8 lbs.—s d s d 
Best Scots, Here- Best one ee 4.0to4 4 

fords, &c. bit Shorn 
Best Short- horns 3 8—3 


10 Ewes & 2d quality 3 4—3 10 
850 qe Beasts 210-3 t 2 Phaea 


iat 5 6 — 410 Calves 


H Ebel 1 vee 
Ditto Shorn 
Beasts, 3297; Sheep and Loata 16, 290; 
For k 


a very e choice 


3. 6d. to 
vs Pigs at a triflin ance. From Holland and Ge girer we 
thon ee 302 Shwe. 240 ‘Sheep, and 160 Calves; - and 161 Milch 
ows 
Best ata: Here Best Long-wools. 4 Oto4 4 
fords, &. . 8 10 to 4 | Ditto Shorn aes p 
Best Short- s3 8—31 es & 2d quality 3 4—3 16 
2d yian aes 2 8 — | Dit Shor 3 
Best Downs and Lambs ase ae e 
Half-breds 4 6—410 — noe et 8 
7 3 0 


their time, ie valuable . important, $ th in chp mg and 


horn 8—5 
Beasts, 1019 ; Sheep and Lambs, 2h 0; Calves, 2605 Pigs, 158. 


94 


THE AGRICULTURAL. GAZETTE. [ Fes. l 


most kinds of Fruit. are sufficient ee - Clover... «.. +. 608 to 908 
mand, Foreign Grapes are — well supplied. 22 60 | New Clover. — — 
ore — qara — — A se ene. 1 a — 60 A ae pire „ oe 
dearer. Nuts in general are sufficient forthe dema ranges | New Ha: — — 
and Lemons plentiful. Amongst V Carrots 4 Trade dull. J. CoorER. 
Turnips are abundant and good; Cauliflowers and Broccoli anp Marxert, Feb. 8. 
— wr hedapena. A rench Beans, Rhubarb, | prime Meadow Hay” 705 to76s) Inferior ... . T0sto Sts 
and 2 are plentiful. Po Fees pts 5 Price | Inferior ditto... .... 50 New Clover — 2 z 
2 — a — 2 
ficient for the demand.. Mushrooms are plentiful. Cut Blower | Old — n | = Josnua Baker, 
consist of Heaths, Pel jums, —5— Roses, Camellias. 
Gardenias, © 7 d Roses. WHITECHAPEL, 9 
er Ts. Fine Old Hay — age — Clow eee ape — 
apples Almon | Inferior ditto... rior ca 
= rn L New E — in 6368 Stra — 1 98 
4 dessert, 1 Walnuts, p- 1805 Is 6d to fs Old Clover ... ..., 95 
— kitchen, m, Pe bsh., 3s to 5s pba $ 16s to 24 Trade very dull, 
Pears, per do és Pe 
B., 203 to 


COVENT GARDEN, Fes. 1 
PEE RE iroa go pen arpi Vegetables 


4 
Sty b Bar. 30515 208, 


HAY.—Per Load of 36 T 
SMITHFIELD, Feb. 8. 


recom. 
character, 
| the aboy mporters, who will supply the article ape 
the 


ERUVIAN — BOLIVIAN GU 
P THE ONLY IMPORT e c 
ANTONY. GIBBS AND SONS, 
WILLIAM JOSEPH — — AND éo., LIVERPOOL 


GIBBS, BRIGHT, anp CO., TIVE ERPOOL an 
COTES WORTH, POWELL, axp PRYOR, Loben: 
To protect them — — the injurious cons 
using inferior an —2 — — sers are 
mended — apply, only to Pa ft of established 


whe! fixed deli 
quantity, at 2 their fixed prices, delivering it from lapel 
* THAN kaaa 
OTTERS. GUANO is now 71. per on, and of 


rior quality, owing to — chemie al — iscoveries — 
improved mode = manufacture. erience of eight an 


MARK — Farmar, Feb 
this eek 8 business — the markets 
all 


THE 
28 to 163 named fo foot, in 2 ean part of the week, were a 


— Wednesday, however, a change 
hich team 


od * = 64 grain 1 lower. The value may be 


nnn ed- | Written in 


isi 
sieve, ls 6d | — Bar! 


per ls to 2 
Lemons, per doz, ls to 2s — = Su 100 the, ans to 130 
— per 100, 18 „beh., 1: 
v 
p. doz., 3d to ls "Spinach p. sieve; 15 d to 2 — 
Periti i a e a — — 
per to le 
Greens, „ doa. bunches, 1 64} — 
to 25 01 — Spanish, p. doz., ls 6d to ts | * 
p. doz., 2 to —— ing; p hf. 
Broccoli, white; p. bum, lato 26 3s 
— brown, p. bun., 9d to 1s 3d | Shallots, per Ib., 4d to 
Sorrel, p. hf. siare, Is to 14 6d — add 4d to 8d 
Potatoes, per ton, 60s to 180s |A Jerusalem, p. half 
— per o 5a to sieve, Is to ls 
— per n p.se., 4d to 6d 
=- do., 94 to ls 


2s 5a 
to2s 
OZ., 6d to ls Endive, per score, 


seed abund. 
seed, Buckwheat, a 


—Clov 
1. ind Ee at low —— — Lin- 
d Indian Corn, about the 


eee aver FRIDAY, 1. — There has been a good supply 
ince Tuesday, and buyers have been cautious in their opera- 


t this day’s market we had a thin attendange of 


Red zn, d bal. 1s tots | Múibroom —⁵¹ 6d 7 = M tions, and the trensautaiee were of limited amount. Wheat 
a ne ey enn Small Saladi -E ten 14 to 3ă was 2d. bushel and Flour fully 6d. per barrel lower. Oats 
Seakale, p. pu nnet, 9d to 26 Faini oat 1 and Oatmeal were bought on easier terms. Barley, Beans, 
ay’s 
p sh, 


24 to and Peas also the pang — rand for Indian Corn Tuesda: 
Sa Ante not obtainable, the inquiry having materially 


‘xp 
e fully equal to ‘he 1 Peruvian 6 
25 per cent. cheaper. See ——— If a quanti bys and 


| a specific eo ane ay nine 


15s; er 60. — 
It has been * by an —— chemist, ba i Pronounced 
5 H. Porter, 28, Clapham-road Place, Kennington, 


UA NO AND OTHER: 
PERUVIAN GUANO, of the finest quality, d 
im 3 an e. 
NIT SODA AND POTASH 
OYPSUM. (SULPHATE OF LIME). 
DRIED NIGH 575 52 
SODA ASH (W WOR M DEST 
SOPERPHDSPHATE OF LIME fete bd ter — 
oe tone = SALT,and all other Manures 
ay 
MARK FOTHERGILL, 201 te Upper Thames-street, London, 
WHEAT SOWING, 
HE LONDON” MARURI COMPANY beg ta 
under. 
EERE: i at COMPANY'S CORN MANURE, 


French 1 aor" banch, 2d to 3d —— 
5 ë, neb, 2d to PHOSPH 
Cucumbers, ob sar 28 to on. un., 6d todd Peruvian Guano, direct from Importers’ Stores Fishery 
Leeks, per doz., 8d to ls Parsley, p. hf. selve, 1s 6d to 2a | | IMPERIAL. |WHEAT.|BARLEY-| OATSs. RYE. | Beans. PEAS. 1 Salt—Gypsum for Clover—Soda Ash for destroying 
S . bdle., 1s to ls 6d | “AVERAGES, wireworm, and every other Artificial Manure, 
p. doz. hands, Is to Mar oram, per bunch, 2d Dec. 30....,... | 46810d| 31s 3d 188 od 288 6d 33s11d)35s 9d aoe pe Manure . — would call particular attention 
Is 64 Mint, groen, per bunch, 6dto9d | Jan. 6 . . . 4510 30 8 17 0/26 4 32 4 [37 9 their 3 — nure sod 5 the former containing a large 
Carrots, p. doz, bun., 30 to 5s e MON 45 4 209 11 117 827 9| 22 2 36 0 amount and. Bilicates, all ce aaa 
— 20. | 45 4 29 1 17 128 4) BL 124 9 | tial for — — while ‘the bre is richer in Phosphates and 
POTATOES.—Sovrnwanak, WATERSIDE, Feb. 5. — 27 „% 45 3| 28-10 [17 0 28 11 30 3 32 8 | other mineral substances — — 
The Committee A t there have ao + ey arriva ls Feb, 3 oveceene 45 1 28 10 |16 11 28 5 30 3 32 6 Full part culars and prices fi — no application. 
| : ú 
— aro tae dase — ux — me Agere. Aver. 7 7 99 0 17 d n Purse. 5 10, 55 
1 Gaal R PF to 110s.; Scotch, Duties on Fo- 5 
— Cups, 90s. to’ 1008. ; French Whites, rain 1 0| a Teri 1 0of1 0| TOEN MORTLOCK, 250, Oxford street t, respectfully 
100s, 8 'Beiglan do., 90s, to _ Fluctuations in th y last s’ Corn announces that he hana very large assortment of the above 
Prices. Dro. 30. “| Jan. 6 45 11 Jax. 20. 9 — 8. 27 Pep, 3. | articles in —— colours, and pe e an . inspection, 
HOPS, Farpar, Feb. 9. | Every description of useful CHINA, GLASS d EARTHEN. 
Messrs. ParTexpEN and Suira report that the market con- 46:10d— ponese: R oak WARE at the — possible — s cash, 
tinues firm at late prices, 45 10 mn — ae 3 250, Oxford street, near Hyde- pa 
„ pont ORT E Coating. g Kamia 11 — 5 5 AKER’S PHEASANTRY, Beaufort-street, Kinga 
‘Weald of Kents .... 40 — e 8841 * — 56 | 45°38 ‘ ė Soi ids ove road, Chelsea, by special appointment eA her ATER EO 
6 ss e SS mM "S 1 ti pi Meta BS H. Prince Albert, — ORNAMENTAL 
/ r sat consisting of black and = 8 Eerie. Canada, 
| London. | 9 — | Wakefield.| Boston. Birmingham. — aay 2 ugh 8 5 s, 
PRICES | shovellers, ag, ‘and gun divors,” Carolina duc ‘ducks, &e, 
mesticated an inione also ish 
CURRENT. Jan. 20 Feb. 5. Jan. 30. Feb. 6. Jan. 26 Feb. 2. Jan. 31 Feb. 7. Feb. I. Feb. 8. Malay, Poland, 3 and Borking fowls; e 
qr. qr. 70 lbs. 2 qr. qr. * qr. 62 lbs. 62 lbs. and ¢ verse í pea-fowl, and rat China pigs; and at3, 
‘Wheat— 4. „ „ e, d. . d. le. de, & 6. . sfs ls. d. 8, d. s. d. 3. d. moon: passage, Gracechurch. street... 
pen don ee — 42604742 4446 8 7 26 8 to49 45 to50/40 65 8 6 65 9 6 6 E- WORK, HOT- WATER APPARATUS,» 
+t 4 6 10 86 8 53 43—50 44—52 6 
o “ay s 7 al? 3 eee 4 6 86 4 6 85 eae ee 
„ White 48—527 6 7107 6 7 1045046504650 46—52 5 10 6 96 0 6 10|INvISIBLE WIRE FENCE, to resist Grazing Stock, and rr 
Foreign 4258 7 27.1016. 8 8 035—5240—52 — 5 8 7 25 8 7 2|dered Rabbit-proof. WIRE-WORK in T 
ene 6. 426 — en ; TICULTURAL BUILDINGS, Green and Hothouses, Conse 
ji reen Hothouses, 
pak 28 28 Fer Tii — oe = rr 98 . vatories, &c, — —.— heated b by . APPARATUS 
roved economica 
Barley— qr. qr. : qr. qr. Parties waited on in Town aia and — and Drawings and 
Grinding- . 21252125 26s—30s | 26s—30s |21—24 22-25 2628/2628) 23—28 | 23—27 * free, Work: for th the Trade re Torte 
Malting - . |26—31/25—27| 31 31 —33 26312932 30—32 3031] 30—33 2933 S — 
Foreign. 20—29 28 —32 27 —50 2327 24-2 ̃ — — bee ans HEIMPROVED HYDRAULIC RAM, 


20—25 20 -25 18—30 
17—21/17—21 | 18—21 17—19 
11—18/11—18 


say — 36—50 36—46 
— — 12—14 12—14 


; 190lbs. 190lbs. 
— — 15—15 6 13—14 6 
sack per sack. 

35—42 35—42 — 37—40 


Aver. | Impts. Gloucester. 
Averages. Imports. 
s d. qra. „ 
44 8 | 2354 50 4 2202 
2 — — 31 3 586 
13 11 896 z 6 338 
27 9 138 40 0 20 
1 | — 40 0 15 


THOMAS | J.and C. STURGE, 
WRIGHT. eee eee 


fixed by Freeman Roe, Fountain Maker, 70 
ked by a 


neath, 
Engines for deep wells of all kinds, Douche een pee 
Buildings heated by hot water. 
pumps, from 15l. Estimates 
A newly-invented Portable 


0 
GREENHOUSES, PIT FRAMES, hi 
ETLEY anp CO. are supplying 16-02. S8 
of British Manufacture, packed in boxes. 2 
square feet each, at the 8 REDUCED PRICES 
A reduction made on 1000 pe 
Sizes. Inches, E epg" Per foot. Per 
Under 6 by 4 at 134. is 20 16 § 
„ 4:55 Th 5 „ 24. „ ere 
7 „ 5 ” 8 „ 6 „ 244. 9%) 
8 „ 6 ” 10 „ 8 „ 2 wk 2 
10 „ 8 55 12 ab al 9 „ 24d. 1 


Larger sizes, not n — long. 
— — to 33d. per square — ‘oot, acco gee 


epes pie WE i 
PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK CROWN, orase, ani 
. 3 2 ge 
mer 100 are . 
GLASS Ti LES A D SLATES made to any size oF 
Morii ore — Beehive Glasses, 0 . 7 
* cum 
Milk Pans, ites Water 55 s, and various o ” 
hitherto ma kotare f — i 


PATENT PLATE GLASS. = Tho _present ex 
it to 22 ee 
other inferior window | glass i. a pe omen residence. 


alteration connect th the wt is And vor che preserraties 
GLASS SHADES, — ornamen nd for the preservati by . — 
0 oriy e of —.— 0d of —— 
since the r ore 


d 
application to James HETLEY 
London, 


GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES 


— ¼ eine 


MA NURBS" 


6.1849. 


— a ee ee we. 


85 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


95 


by Auction. 
a nce for Sale by 
King-street, Covent 


— 
Sales 

T INDIAN O 
R J. C. EAEVENS begs to 


: 38, 
M* ld 25 ey — 12 for 10 clock, ae 
erden, on r hich bave just arrived from Jav 
cases of RARE ORCHIDS, om on tise beautiful specimen 
in most excellent e Blumei, and another fine species of 


before and a morning rest bed ai 
— OBLEMEN, GENTL NURSERYMEN. 
pay C. STEVENS is “favoured with sink uctions 
M — Messrs. 8 2 ann Sale 
penis at . u UBS DAV, 27th, and WED: 
72 1 O'clock, 133 ONE 
Peas of er tine growth, mostly 
7 ueg ower-buds, and 1 = — re favourite 
— es tions 
r 85 pears fruit, ando? 5 — har: dy Nepal 


Laa, a 
garden, 


on- 
sisting Hybrids, Bourbons, ö oe: 
1 ih a fne collection of American Plants, com- 
Andromeda floribunda, 
a or r 

ca ara ae be viewed prior to sah 


r he 8 
Cutsiogues to be had at the Mart and of t è 
American Nursery. 
ANDSWORTH ia 120 j 
€ urserym ers, ailway Con- 
a. and other Companies —— in Planting. 
ESSRS. HERO ave in- 
Wiens to Sell by Auction, on the ands- 
worth Common, on TUESDAY, ty 13th 1849, Rat fol- 
iw day, at 11 o’clock precisely, der of the Assi gnees of 
Mr. R. Neat, a bankrupt (the same — having been cleared 
5 former conditions of sale), the whole of the 
valuable NURSERY , consisting of osiderab 
of fine Evergreens, Fruit and Forest Trees, new 


American Plant: 
5 &c., several pits, z ayant of Timber, consisting 
—— and Asli Pollards, Fir &e. 70 a capital stone 
a 2-horse iron roller, t spring — „garden pots, manure 
tote be viewed prior to the Sale. Catalogues may 
had (64; eack) of J. B. Ropers, Esq., Solicitor, Wandswor th; 
Ewann Fpwanns, Esq., Official ‘Assignee, 7, Frederick’s-p} ace, 
peste inf 5 9 a 8 smen; and or the Auctioneers, 


rens 
T Nemen; Gei K Bulis and Public 
3 ait in Plant 


MESES. = Cae ORRIS are in- 

to sel uction, on 1859 emises, Streatham 
Nursery, on MONDAY, Feb, 26th, ee. aor following pees at 
1 delock precisely, 151 order Assignees o R. Neal, 
22 the valuable NURSERY STOCK, 
consisting a large qu ne Evergreens, Frui 
and Forest Ornamental Trees, aud Deciduous Shrubs, 


Plants, &e., and 5 the same time the valuable 
„comprising 5 acres 


of Nurser 


the perio mises are 
May be vietai as prior 8 the 
— — $ may k haa (6d. each) on the premises, of 
Worth » B. ROBER se pets Solicitor, Wands- 
ricl’s-place aan Ewa nps, Esq., O 5 J. ae wae 
— Old Jewry; and of the A pet ioneers, Am 
, ne, Essex, 


0 sell by pub blic Auction, 
be — required by the 


Dock Junction Railway 
LUABLE NURSERY 


gm; at ur pe T | 
of z us Sorubs ; the finest descri 

Stock fe oet; can plants in great variety The 

attention of No nest condition, and particularly worthy 

un vel as the Pieter emen and Gentlemen laying out their qrednan; 

text see its aes = particulars 
0 week prior to th 

may be had << ce premises ; of the prinċi- 

ursery, 


A yery exelent re 2 — aelmas, 
doy ng of about 117 acres 
and, reat a4 acres of See ore and 103 acres of 


Situate near the Ci City of 
State o Farm is in a 
i ore and it is not often such Sve de- 
zur, Land 2 * a the public, —Apply to J. H. Cor. 


TO aE ten, £? 


— suited for road, with a —— reenhouse, the a situa. | 
ett ty de had at a valuation. Rent onl y 131. 
Apply by letter to H., 21 and 22, —— 


s FLORISTS, 


AND § Ms, 
UNITY Y RARELY OCOURRING S = 
LEASE, a 8 CORNER 
in ed vicinity bo 


db PonTEN 
A 25 BE LET 0 
hO EROUN, n 
Meme — 


— or at Lad — der 
rant witi a moi d Lr ouse 


pe 
On ege. 
Price 150 Guineas. The cee ete 17 hands high, isat Ham- 


SOLD, WARRANTED re inten. TYO 
ae 


$ wa St Tork. 
pen Farm, near Andoversford, Cheltenham. Price 100 Guineas, 
O FLURICULTURISTS anv AMATEURS.—Im- 


portant Notice.—A large collection of 300 varieties of that 
sen flower — gi cme 7 — oo a to be the br tre 


n Europe, is cad 5 — Drawings 
n can be se W. 2 : Foreign 3 Offies, 
and condi- 


21, Catherine- strett: Strand, London, whe 
ions of sale ca n be proc ‘ 


ARMERS anD GARDENERS Liquify — your 
Manure, and put it o and e erops day b 
it is Eee eue ie this will i cee — —— fourfold 
COODE’S IRRIGATOR Pien sp i pA — 8 and equally as 
Par 


rain, without or crop, enth part of the cost 
our present * Nuneato 
WIRD NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT 
i ees 
< SERS 
ini 9 0 8888 39 
„„ pi 8 HHR 
i „ 5 H KHAL 
10 ii sd SDK ae << èx 
DSS 
H H Pa 3 
HO? a 58 
* a KHH 
4 s — ae = 


sah 


5 —— —.— NETTING, eee 


ER ager —This article r res no paint- 
ing, th ing t the slightest. action on it. It 
— lu —— —— 


tection’ of Gardens and $ ries against 
the —— of hares, rabbits, and Gains — Aviaries, 
Pheasantries, and to eee poultry from Ae as well as 
for r training creepin E Falte, n 5 


"i 


samples 
of which can be — — siren of seal oe a an of the 
United Kingdom, Prices as follows: 
12 inches wide 3d. per yard | 30 inches wide 74d. 
18 33 55 43d. ” ” 36 3 * 9d. 
” d. 39 ” 48 33 90 
Galvanised do. 1d. per foot extra. 
Also Fenders, Fireguards, Fly-proof Dish Covers, Meat Safes, 
Wire Blinds, Garden bordering and arches, Flower Stands, 
and every description of Wire Work 
Tuomas Henry Fox, 63, Snow-hill, London. 


STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROOF 
WIRE NETTING 


per yard 
” > 


18. » n 


CHaRLESs D. 
W. AND C. YOUNG 
1 OF IRON AND WIRE WORK, &e., 


eee anD COMPANY ase 
05 


tania — RBY-SQUARE, LIVERPOOL; 128, Hr IGH- 
— pe 32, Sr. ENOCH: SQUARE, GLASGOW 
— wilt to all a attention of Landed Proprietors 
and others to their strong Wire-Net Fence, for excluding Hares 
oe Rabbits from ea frisas Plantations, Nurseries, &. 


„ Ane WIRE GAME NETTING.— 
7d. per yard, 2 feet wide, 


DS. a tS ae = 
1 


Galva an- J 2 

2. inch er 8 24-inch wide td. Per yà. 5d. versa, 

2-inch ae 8} 6} 

2 nch „, N strong „ 5 9 ees 
lé-inch” „ light 15 ba 8 ” 1 
135 elt „ 3 iT 75 8 » 
13-inch „ extra str rong , 14 15 1 

All the above can be made — r width at proportionate prices, 
me duce the pric 


Zo 105 dee is a coarse 
fi anized 
Patterns parae post-free. 
1 ctured by BARNARD and BISHOP, Market-place, 
wich, and delivered free of expense in London, Peter- 
. — 55 or Newcastle. 
IMPORTANT — FARMERS, GRAZI ERS, 
e LAND 


3a 


> 


22 NEW 

for FOREIGN MANURES, may be manufactured without 

a 7 — ng every farmer, 35 bshls, per acre, for 12., being equal 
to 10 I! of manure, 

The — se ion is very simple and cheap, and suitable for 
all seasons, soils, and crops: also showing how to fatten 
ry — of stock and poultry, at one-third the expense 
now adopte 
This —— Treatise on Farming aud Grazing, W 
poa entered at Sta ’ Hall of 150 of 

e most „ receipts ever Arsen in 

— oft, &e. ; sng s for use, by the resi a. ae 
agriehitarist, Ur. re mand others, and patron 

ghly e by H. R. H. Prince Albert, at ‘Windsor 


n of 785 t, free 2 on y part 
— one chilling, na thirteen postage 
8 ate Tee de a Pe srs. TayLor and Co. 
-street, grove don 


DB 5 —.— 8 re DIBBLES, with a 


de- 
r more grains in pent hole, as is required. 
Er ae du ring t sd last 
, and they are 
1 perfect in every r. espect, The price is accordin ng to 
the number of depositors, being 10s. for each depositor, with 
four ien 5 7 for every kind of seed. 
Dr. AND- — O W. bee and 8 —— warranted 
that i ae hee e and stir, most eff ally, trom 3 to 4 
inches deep, on any soil, however stiff, with 1 ease, more 
tha s 2 acres a day. Price H. 10s. 
Ds. N.’s HAND-DROP-DRILLS, for Lee and Manure.— 
The Coulters can be shifted- to any dista 
or from see 5 il 5 
2 to 3 aeres a day. Pr . 
eee e will be iri on on applying g to DR. N., Knole-park, 
Frant, nea ridge Wells, Ken 


1 1, 2, 3 0 
Thes e implemen nts have been g 


GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES 
8 1 anp CO., 116, Bishopszate: -street 
e the pleasure to hand their Ne w List of Prices 
of SHEET el. ASS for Cash; 
etA ag GLASS, 
In Sheets ef . 40 in 


his Net was 8 yt t the Show of the Highland’ —5 
ag icultural Soc 


attractor anias rtrd and had aw warded recA = oo 


reat, that in 
a year or 9250 it will amount to more than the entire cost of 
protecting kear il this Net. It is so durable, —— when 

Plantations are su n t of its 
protection, "it can 
the greatest facility, b 
Hares and N ot. of Teel e — ‘Sufficient, h 
be 3 and a — ae er sent =, 
e, to wooden 


ue 
piece os of 8 
cient ‘qantas, at little expense, ree individual Plants ong Shrubs, 
1cEs.—18 ins. high, 3a. „ 1s.; 30 ins,, 
36 ins., 1s. 6d. per lineal yard. 


Or a web of 100 yards, 2 ics wide, will -e os £315 0 
Do. of 100 yards, 24 ins. wide ou 6070: 
Do. of 100 yards, 30 ins, wide ee ee a : 
Do. a 100 yards, 36 ins, wide 

If more or less than a web is required, it wean — — 


at the — pois per ya 

This 3 is also admirably 2 hed for epe penn and 
Poul and is charged he same rate. As carriage 
has, in Adain 3 — been on . to — ile a —— 
tance requiring this Net, C. D. Y. "= > N 5 1 


ments by which they will undertak t at any o of the 


ety of e ely at 
ere its Effici Ber Great ‘rte and Exceeding Ctieapneie ; 


bii w —— — packed i 2.8038 Cut to the size required, but 
not to exceed 40 inches long. 
130 oe —— re .. 2 Ts. Od. 
see ea e r : N Suet a to E — 
Eoo ðiVt 8 1 0 
Beno Sala are 3 : Ši 1 
T W 4 
Case not e ä charged, ‘but allowed 
‘or w 
SMALL SQUARES IN aoe — 108 "FEET. 
Sheet. 
Squares under 6 by 4 10s, 6d. eree (Se Le ö. 
6 by 4 and under 7 a 1 16 
— eer 3 0 P ; 


7 by 5 by 6 
T No 


8 
GLASS aoe WINDOWS, ens 
zes not exceedin 
0 


FL 
4 thick n. foot ! 18. Od. F. inch 9 res 28. Od. 
BACON AREST K .. a ss E Pret 0 
4-in 
PATE Ke ROUGH hy TILES. 
$ thick each 0s, 12 eee e = S 
ETT bee Se a A eee 
SHEET cece TILES, “AND SLATES, 
G-oz, 2l-oz. 26-oz. 32-oz. 
Ec made of brie Glass ... 8d. á 18. 1s. 4d. 
lates; 20 ins. by 10............... 10d. ls. s. 4d. 1s, Sd. 
3 are kept on die of the n sizes, and made to any 
* 


ASS MILK-PANS, PROPA TING AND BEE GLASSES, 

Pastry Slabs, Hyacinth Glasses aie Dishes, for Orna- 
ments, Fish Globes, Plate and 4 — ow Glass o de 

tion, Lamp Shades, 2 15 Lactom 


r tryin the uali of 
— 4 tubes 7s. 6d. ; 6 tubes, 102. s 5 


‘Self * Thermome- 


d of IR 

oe Bet nes WORK 3 ete for this and freien 5 

men sent to all of Scotland, England, and Ireland. 

ERMAN SPRING MAT TRES 
elastic 

3 feet wide. . . £2 


NG, with 
full partie culars of we ht, size, and prices, of every des scription 
a — 8 free st.—Heat and Son, Bedding-manu- 


pos 
acturers, 196 (opposite the Chapel), Tottenham-court-road. 


rincipal ports of Scotland, En int pi y Trel and, for One a Riin aig 
alfpenn y y per lineal ard. a 3 gt ARTLEY'S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS. _ 

i NG and Co, cannot give a er idea e grea , r -POWD 
strength of their Premium Wire Netting than by stating that 5 3 1 ogee occa ER 
— a fe of one hited = ole —— 8. is eq oot | it An — 
yards of another n the market, the same widt mel; it thorough! 

5 y removes thet tartar . — all impurities, pro- 
apt pe FFFFEFTb Bice of rip . ON duces that beautiful white appearance so much to be desired, 


e been 


and confidently recommend its universal adoption. Whole- 
sale and retail at METCALFE, BINGLEY, & Co.’s, sh-makers 
to E H. Prince Albert, 28. per be Caution.—The genuine 
powder —.— me e the Roy ns, combined those of 


“t METCA 


H. Pri Al 
and ie i of the firm, thus LFE, BINGLEY, and Co., 
| 130 ., Oxford-street, London 


E GARDENERS’ CHR 
ONICLE 
CATAL ICLE AND AGRICULT 
OGUE OF VEGE — 
ROBERT COO TABLE AND FLOWER — 
No i coM S I © N N 85 a 
1. COMPLE 8E 
Ditt TE covert OF sae Y, Cc R l 
3. Dito rig A SEEDS, 0 D 
y itto ; er 0 
RDEN SEEDS Ditto Dito Diy 3 | 
„ CARRIAG Ditto Dito F ato 
E PAID TO or Small Gardens 2 
VEGETABLES. O TO CONDON- F 012 6 
Asparagus ph ct ky LOWER SEEDS 
6, Eal 2. | Le ko ey 
Bean y Mazogan, ttuce, Cabbage, D sd. — PRR et 3 d J FREE BY 
» Sw . qt. 0 6) head, * oe 1 Euch res Peroffskianum ihih, PEIE x paper—s. d POST 
„ Large W 3 6 ” Pr HamptonCo charidium grandifl lope . p „ 
1 — indsor 0 8 Le 41 red a - mgs divaricata soe 55 8 ey Zinnia re 3 d. 
9 9 nziesii 92 alba... : 6 | Zi 
7 French, Don a 1 2 0 | Love Apple, 1 meand ‘ait Ti 0 ir vis — aa sii a Mall A ger . ” » 33 sa ) 6 * elegans'y e 
„ 0| E Wran 4 age eb ase pee 25 
5 n Tarn colour... 10 Melon, Adair reen cen =: © Pedia cormucopie 1 ic abl. R Balsam, double = 3 nba p Ai 
„ „ Robins 1 a -1 01 „ r paper si + ignota anuneulus m eee Globe, varie 
5 e a 3 ” — a Galinsogia trilobat. =. 3 dart dark r 8 a : be „ mottled = : 3 whit gated... o Í 
Beet, Red, fi hit ie 0 | ” b ae Gilla achillewfolia .. > tall k. 55 h a 55 Tee Plant 47 
Mitcheil’s T pakar: 4 Ontos doe gg 5 20 — ata 49 3 . n $ ho Beth xd P np coccinea... 4 
t | ed.. 5 „ nivali 5 N i 5 3 os ee ” a 
„Silver Kurita a N ah Deptford . . ä “i „ scarlet  ... 1 ri oe ale 
Borecole, fi eakale 0 4 | „ Globe Brown 9 „ tricolor Y 4 vier da 755 5 H flake Ipomops: is 1 es i 
cured cen 111 nite 5 arte trees 1 8 rachye ynia annua zx 
2 82 * el ee Wke Goassa abese phæniceum 5 S — at yeome wandten ” fragrans i 2 
Broccoli, Brimstou —_.. 6 6 „ su e 5 : 85 Nigella, drt, 253 * Browallia elata” white 3 — 
* i's * White ot a 8 pe „ dam 2 ee ryanthemum cati 
» Earl Fa * „ Vinosa is 800 G Spanish gerne „ Cure: 8 ' ra omental um. s 
y Cape.. Sty > 8 thera L one T icum eo ianum 
3 Nala 7 2 >a : N. Ideno rl. ” athera Lindleyana i long r sre ** s» tricolor — 0 6 
1 ern White a j p 5 i de j wao, pink 20 Ph „ rosea alba sake és ne Yellow vane te 33 ani s. 
i Hampton € 4 pe Seater ie C fine Curled 5 wis —. gpn pig's 8 a 5 Cases N dwarf r a. “ ” splendens 2 
„ Imperial Wint Parsnip, H oge. ‘hag Oxyurach „ Silvers F Rh n cha baw i 
” Millers Laie Whi — rb large e 1 Douglasii an Papa aver er j Egg Plant, paro Rodanthe Mangiesii < 
e ug ” „Kent e, per qt. Iberis ni etter 1 pag Anson Globe whit E — 0 
Ki Witleere Laie r 55 —— ne 1 É superba a ” 5 Lady Grown , purple Ae Sensitive Rant 25 * 
Cabbage, Atha’ og Me „ Phe Deere : ior amelloides `.. idee Al GREENHOUSE * en 
m Atkin’s „t > spur, do — dwarf „ yell nn i 3 onsoa grandiflora E PERENNIALS. 
Match- „ Bedman’s I 1 arf yellow ardis sia rr 
4 Early t Batter . „ Blue Pru a imperial 8 3 „ Sweet, nixed e EAA AT E 2 1 Barclay 
„ 6 tterten . 0 8 „ Seimi ) Lagurus o * „ black : Bossiæa th | P : E 
N 2 ae t < Britis sh raed 9 N aue oe 5 ” ee Lady 98 ie ) á eager, i fine mixed 
* Lor — te! „ Dw 8 Monaste! 7 28 N us pa * “4 e 3 8 
H P 9 ea ” 8 Cham ) Loi red ki n Persi a white is 8 aria, ys polyantha.. ) 71 nc ai on 
s of % „ oe 8 ion A e ear 12 re 29 obæa sean 3 : Pi white se as 
„ Red Dutch — 1 ged 113 waa: : 1 densifio ‘androsaceus Wa 8 = : . e nikas 5 fas Piteairnia punicea 
. Shilling's Qu via atchless Marro dai munant es Douglasi conges : ceremocarpus 1 ea Salpi sinensis. 
„ Engarloa een ... „ Noble's Green w 0 10 „ poo ee 402 Por porate E Fuchsia, fine ea . St piglossis, m mies a 
Cairo, Eurly 3 Py „ Knight's Tall £ wes Lina ia bipartita 4 fogs dou his darain | 88 3 Be aeoe Besseriana — 
H: eN At m „ Dwart bh » Perezi 280 oe 5 arlet oxinia, fi 3 ces P 7 
a tringham ... ) » ga 1 * vee se triphylla see — a is fringed a . . AR > Limont 
” wee m m 1 oor eg eve 7 ” 2 m. an 
Cau 18 8 noah Bari ea Marrow’ L Ltr ggg ek waite . 2 pseud- eed | 
V ower, Early cariet | 3 — 4 Short-top 1 oasa de see Price? 5 non 8 | Ipomæœa bona. ee ox we a 3 a j 
* ate... ’ LLN 0 Saponaria eatber 3 * Sti Hf 
ote shin ae? i „ ied Turnip isin, bine, 3 965 3 ealabrien ” monophylls ri Stieptocarpus R Rei e 
hpi e wi f rn : s 2 a „ rubicund- es e T exican 
tinge a Long white, pert. © B| > sts large 29 8 Saas Sina 20 e Bunbergia alata p 0 
„ Seym ee a ” Wood's aped é „ straw colour Ds } | Sphæno; 25 L. lateritia o a a „ alba 2 
” pr ei White. € re ape * ” acne me Stock, Wigan cphospermum a > — 5 „ 
„ %% Superd Red Runner's La es ae r 1 
pas j p scarlet, ninas bicol eee 105 8 hite Litas 114808 oe 1 8 s new light yell jet i 
Chervil, Gelen 2 A “ Sa bal white Date ‘per dt. Š Cera kaha — g at uintlower, tte Aer 3 . 0 6 Veronica lindleyana. 52 3 j 
Corn te testing T oz, „ Hartwegi . 3 Alys tall Alat IENNIAL: 3 
Salad æ N 1 n curl * % mit + owe rœme S AN Bi 
Couve Tronchuda 725 sé Soe ed 440 j arabil us... “a pts Looking- i 7 6 D PERENNIALS. 
Cress ek coe — nae GY ae Vine teu eien, ö eens eartsease, mited cs, 0 
Carled Å 9 oo = 6 1 P . he Was l a+ 1 poet a — i 8 — 
5 i per ALR AN . a, Alpine z He m, mixed 0 f 
ce pr stl Bac 0 19 515 pinach, prickly, per at. —— pairs en Sy ANNUALS. —. 0 BE Bane Paa a Hellstock, bee, 2 
Loug Pric 22 0 denip, carn Date Asier — oS gre ifior e 0 Marigold, Afi 3 ga ta 8 ” i a 
ily 3 rateb,p. on. 8 inese, aes: 0 mi ió e + ge 0 3 1 a 795 ” „ Antwerp 
e ‘Snowball eg ” m ata E ee vel of Peru, eke at Pp masis s. 35 „ Mulberry 
a4 n Ste ae „ n dark PS “ 8 8 5 1 = — 4 
2 Am erican Stone 5 » dark A 1 Të 5 E 1 hi „ purple 
6 5 Yellow Malta N » A — 9 orig |] aod „ Whi yellow Canterbury Bells, “do bi 77 s Scarlet os 
8 Weid ea = 5 3 » 72 | fied iped 0 e „ Sweet-scènted c 55 le : „ white a) 
Leek, Lo 2 bade 1 > ” 3 —— 0 3 N i white arnation, — 8 Hone yellow .. 0 2 
„London Fi 0 8 8 > ) * e and olana atra wie e „ finest d kit ysuckle, French | 
Br 55 weet E 5 r ifulia ouble ; Iberis T 
» Brosin Out „ 6) Baim erbs. „ „k. . ee = 5 — o „„ ; 
23 on 1 0| Basil, per paper 0 „ R. red & 9 Enot 85 8 ardan cellus Pas a cardinalis 5 
„ Egyptian Cos O| Borage. oa 9 „* iiae . 4 8 Laut pyphilides , 
1 Paris * i “10 ee eal oe . pale yellow ... ia califo mi j Catananche bicolor S teins, pubescens ne 
» . Aa ar oo i sc we 2 20 
„ White G. ; 1 . es 8 a 1 purple & white N Podolepis 858 Salis” teart j a = = arlet . Mae > | 
n Walls Compact Co 0 | Marlorsin, sweet... ane 3 * ù waite: 9 a Columbine, ted = oe longifolia ae 
” 7 bos ol 0 joram, sweet... 3 oe baus , fine . Schizanthus pinnatus .., Golutes, scarlet. = aoe bracteatum “96 
5 wi 0 12444 353 z ` 3 8 e Sed Priesti W Commelina cœ 0 Pe “rigs 
z eee „ doe 8 8|-Benect eruleum Coreopsis Atkins SS. gis, Everlasting «= 9 
* Brown n Sile ia 0 | Savory a “D ANIE Aloe o elegans os - Cowslip onia ... 0 83 white . 
Pa f Dae 8 VV eee or 0 4/ Solan white Crucianella stylosa iomon campanal 5 
7 ol 85 os oe Ambri 8 m ee 9 glochidia 
1 5 eres ede ro | Bio eis Ber specios ae ia 
8. ntaurea am sa German, mixed ongifi 
4. Chrysanth ericana : ee xed ) 9 51 ovum. 
emum tricolor S a je ‘colour ae : a mixed 
2 » > 
Clintonia „Fell. 5 ” en 4|> cipnintum s azureum 
57 3 . 2 z dark br 4 . 
aar = td TE dla 2 „ Bona À piinthas ‘jatifoliu : 
j aie 14 an 2 ” » fesh + super s „ 
ee netarum . 0 bane as Digita — cease 3 
Didiscus cæruleus  -.. „ 3 Mordoro 8255 
e eee | 
> b.s * * es! ” 
„ oS N 25 pn ee Ferula ao 
" ——— w 2 ” agg 75 creel ta os > 
” nge wee : Par ite cs 4 et-me n 
„ Pear-sha *. 0 „ Intermediat ate pag net 8 
” 8 ve = Ten-week, viene „ me asia tte 
” wee „ Scarl oe ” 10 
Helia ee „ z St Fraxi 15 
. . Ne ö 5 nella, Wr o 
ERN bracteatu z caved, purple . Fi ite 
‘ 0 3 22 macran nth — m 8 is pe ing R p e mrp 4 
et um ait : > rella * 
eae Impatiens glanduligera .. me sea pare = yy asclepiadea: |, 
Vos — Ld „ alba —*— 
6 3 Ta are n be Sa wee 
N se iaol getes i hs cruci eooo white 
ate: 3 e Tabasco, 8 „„ seo ny 
6 hie gris erubescens 85 ; Tourneforti Virginian 755 . punctata * a ; 
3 | Lobel 1 eres . a: heletropi- Geun menen 
3 4 ee ee e 4 } on m canariense.. 9 ” 5 R 
3 ` wee 4 ata » sanguin tee 2 v. 
te * 0 nihem 0 of Bhat here esicaria utrical 
3 3 } 3 o 5 * Wa Une er, fine d 
5 9 6 elegans, mi am 0 3 ab tained Lawn Grasaceer it lilac 
eee a —— : Soe: "wae ea Mixed ao Grass 
seman 13135 a * Large R e 
at Bt Pete Cen 
sales ensue en remy ure Se 
d county, where pig „Printers, at 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 


GRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


No. 7.—1849.] SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17. 
= INDEX KNAP net “NURSERY, NEAR WOKING, SURREY 
103% Labourers in the midland TO GENTLEMEN ENGAGED IN PLANTING. 
EERTE b 
10 | aye VV i $ jg osEA ee the following very desir. | 
sessoososs a 
jor Mackay, Dr 103 e | CEDRUS 3 fine plants from seed, 3 to 4 feet high, | 
3 sugar 5 103 doz 


exica, New, ee on, rev. 2 a 


M use 8 

Orch ds. 

Orchid ene “withering oa 

7 fossil 
Pinus e 3 of. 102 

og conditions 


G —[ͤ—b.l *** 


lant cultiv: 
necessary f 15 5 in 100 4 
Polmaise heating. 102 a 
8 e e 107 e 
10 Popular errors ase 99 5 
1 Potatoes, to p pat 4 as A 
r b 


9 best for sets 102 b 
Potato e effect ae light å 
ian 
Rainin ai REA cones 
8 ntl 


star 3 eeereeeees 


ates i 99 
ex e 
eevee. * Tres ie pe hain „ 
amateurs. eseo 1015 | Walnu ut, vegetation of tie 22 
ExAATUx. In the e headed Fan AGREEMENTS, 
—Ten ds,” &c., which appeared in No. 5, Feb. 3, col. c, 
met, in the last line, Jo" wag fir st Monday in October 
read “ the first of June nex 


SEYMOUR’S CELE 
9 * CHAMPION CELERY is 
tat t, and di 
the Err time, time by H. Sete 2 8025 erden, „rest Be sf 


oe White Champion ae per packet, 

1 5 ed A SERN 5 do. 

5 ” uper hite 0 do, 
Taal seta or postage stamps from 3 corre- 


he back page o 
, dated Saturday, Feb. 3, Ari of which 
and Co., Seed Merchants, Plymouth 
ed List will soon be ready, and 
forward 4 8 when a to 
we may, be . with. 
ONE BTW YEARS SEEDLING AND TRANSPLANTED 
yitam 1 90 700 B ALDERS » &. 
D SON havi ing an im : 
— tbe vi La je ime plants, are — dt 
ayes on the od owest possible terms. Prices will betas 2 
dande Nursery, Maresfield, near Uckfield, Sussex. 
y ute Frs r ERS AND THE TRADI 
D Du ndee, have still 
1 fod stock of Seedling and Transplanted FORES 
RUBS, at very low prices, to be obtained on 
NEW VA 


RIETY OF FI 


IELD CARROT — 
Yellow Belgian CARROT Seed, 3s. 6d. per Ib. 
wns eg i m 3 much supe rior in sweetness to the common 
* ‘gla Gres = is quite equal to it in size an 
ng qualities; vegetates quicker, and grows 
j when in a young state, 
ee Belgian CA 


: it is quite 


refi 
lal i size to the ori; 7 Fi $ 
; ‘original White Belgian D A ith t 
pened in drawing being i bi ie te 5 
. y bu 
oL 


SEED. 


more 


W are rrespond- 
N iv edsman, — Herts. 


oan e public that 
oa e of good Wund kid of his unequalled 
haa giver ry of Bath,” and Gordon's Fine 
5 : h in — Fe Satisfaction to those 
“ah Od. 
: e o! 0 digt in cash 
nt. Sold at EDWARD a's 
‘teney-bridge, Bath, kate 5 


Talak TUBI 


ROOTS, 


orders made abl 
, Middlesex, PERT 


e = Great Western Railway. The Knap Hill Nurse 
ts | an hour’s eee, bei 


$j j tromi 5 to 10 fee o 7 gui 
(These are tas sent * — 
8 . „ 1 reek 2} to 3 
_ ery fine from 3 to 6 feet 
— bps 8 panes 
CRYPTUMERIA ‘JAPONICA, . sora; 5 to 7 an 4 to 5 guis, 
1 t, Sts. 
TAXODIUM SEMPERVIRENS, Rood sto tout pla plants, : Fook 84s, 


each, 
PINUS DOUGLASII, from seed, 1} to 2 ke ie os 
o 63s. 


— 88 


15 06 feet, 21s. t 

» MENZ ZIESII, 5 feet, 42s. to E per 35 

” aaa ip to 2 feet, 7s, 6d. e 

75 biaa fne plants, from 5 to7 feet, 2 to 


CEMBRA, 5 5 7 ett, bh to 15s. ea 
arge and very ha 0 "leita: 10 to 12 
2r 425 bat = 
CANADENSIS, = e Spruce, 4 to 5 feet, 21s. 
dozen, 
lar ey to 10 feet, 30s. to Poca per dozen, 
EXCELSA, 3 175 e feet, 3s. rc to 10s. _ 
FRA AZERI, 3 to 5 feet, 30s. to 42s i pee do 
MORINDA, Pe Binithiana, 2 to 4 ft., 2s. 2 oe 5s, each, 
A, 2 to 4 feet, 10s. 6d. to 42s. each, 


” 
3 
355 
” 
33 


j PIN SAPO. 
15 CEPHALONICA A few cf the largest and most 
77 LAMBERTI handsom wit hes nts iu the trade. 
5 HARTWEGII 3 wil 
„  DOUGLA ation. 

MACROCARPA 


IRISH YEWS, 6 to 9 feet, 7s. 6d. to 15s. e 
It often happens Irish Yews are injur ured or rendered 
— ag from their tendency to divide in windy or snowy 
= 


| Early Ringwood possessing al 


N to those at Elvaston, which are the finest in 
ine 8 
CEDARS OF LEBAN = = to 2} feet, very bushy and hand- 
e, 30s. Let dozen. 
55 ” 3 to 9 fet, 10s. 6d. to 423, 
(These are splendid pla 75 7 
8 5 {to 6 fet, 78. 6d. to 10s. 6d. each. 
ea feet, 7 handsome plants, 
s. to 42s, each. 
Piaget Stet 5 be 5 ka 78. 6d, to 10s. (d. each. 
handsome plants, 6 to 8 feet, 21s. 


ach, 
55 IRISH UPRIGHT, vs too feet, 38. i to 10s, 6d. 
9 feet, 15s. to 218. 


tee These two 1 ee pa to be planted 
every one who has any place e a lawn. 
THUJA Wa (the best . of 1 ae n Arbor Vit), 
fine plants, 5 to 7 feet, 5s. to 7s 
a above are all growing in the open on und, are healthy 
+ Fe have never keen in pots, and 
8 are the more desir 
HOSEA WATE “re would ites invite attention to his stock 


[Price 6d, 5 


3 2 LINCULN beige ioe PODDED 
RROW.—Being a oe varie ty from Clarke's New 


ae t, 


stock, 
rich Green 
CLAR 


Ass _To 


“bane cH hans T 
ET! R BOOTH, Nurseryma «Paik is selling off 
a very 28 i 94 £ Transplanted LARCH plants, in sizës 
2 1 


rom 5 doof ransplanted Seote irs, from 
9 inches to s re eh nted Spri Firs, 1 to 1} foot. 
trong 3 Thora Quicks, and 2-year Seedling Pinus 


Austriaca, all very fine plants, and at further reduced very low 


ROSES. 
PAUL anp SON have still a fine stock of all the 
* most beautiful sorts of ROSES, which Poy will see ee 
to su uppl y of 
kinds being left = = 
tan 


21s. to a ag ee 


es forw ards d free bY hi post, , on the r 
I nt, Herts. 


Ew LAWN GRASS SEEDS. 


ry Superi pro 
Me et i SUTTONS LAWN 


solely of t t wing kinds, free 
end other wee Pr 5 6d. per gallon, or 25s. per bushel. 
Also an ace niece of Peredints al Clovers oa finer sorts 
of Grasse mprovirg old Pastures, r gallon. 


for at 2s. pe 
Quantity 5 being A ias 4 gallons per — — 
the conditio n of the paet 
`arriage free Bristol, or Basingstoke, 
ja SUTTON and Sons ‘eatin, Ber rks. 


NG SEASO 
COLLECTION OF RARE AND SORME ORNA-- 
aar 
The f. og uc is offered by ona 
ver. y t hy pla n pots, for 5l., package in- 
8 had carriage paid to tendon or Hull. 
Pinus n * cea pinsapo 
„ ila 1 — —9 na 
5 pear 
excelsa n, japoni 
„ Montezuma Cedrus Deodara, 3 fine plants 
„ insignis Araucaria 3 3 ditto 
. Cedrus Liban 
mbra 


Abies eue ives 
orien 
Picea cephalonica 
CEDRUS bropaRa PROM SEED. 
sion and Co. beg to call attention to their fine and healthy 
ock of the abov ve mo! oe elegant and hardy ornamental tree, 
y plants, in pots, 9 es to 1 fi at 


Spruce Firs 


7 3 ! 
Beech, Standard Magnolias, Tulip Trees, & e., 
in a capital state for removing, and will be saa — 


The Collection of AMERICAN PLANTS at the KNAP HILL 
arte is well known as being the most extensive in this 
country; witne pn Bae beautiful Exhibition in the King’s-road, 
Ch elsea, every s 
RHODODENDRONS, best hardy kinds, 30s. to 60s. per dozen | 
fine hardy scariets, large plan 5 608. per dozen. 
AZALEAS, best varieties, froin 18s, to 
KA 8 LATIFOLIA, from 18s. to 843., for large plants, and 


HARDY I HEATHS, a first-rate collection of about f the 

thost beautiful and distinet kinds, ht tg plants, at 225 5 100. 

* Hardy Heaths are not plan so generally as they 

deserve. Nothi ing can be more arean ng and beautiful, 

and flower ing as they for the most part do in the autumn, 
more v 


FOR PLANTING COVER, CARRIAGE DRIVES, &c. 
RHODODENDRON 1 ICUM, fine bushy plants, from 
10s. 6d, to 218. pe 
BUA rN ate Paver’ (a oh. and very superior variety to 
he old Evergreen), 8s. to 12s. 6d. per 100. 
BERBERIS AQUIFOLIUM, bushy plants, 9 inches to 12, 50s. 


Totto, larger, 1} to 2 feet, 7s. to 10s. per 100, 
Pa 


e DULCIS, 1 to iż foot, 7s. to 10s, 
” 0 14 foot, 21s. per 
“This i si 12 en " excellent plant for ‘these purposes, 


ENGLISH pi emo 1 te 2 feet, 7s. to 12s. 6d. per 100. 
SWEET BRIARS, — to 128. 6d. per 100. 

COMMON LAURELS, fine bushy plants, — — 25s. per 100. 
POR TUGAL LAURELS LS, 2 to 3 feet, 30s, pe 

QUICK, very strong, transplanted, 8s. —.— 1000. 

FRUIT TREES.— Dwarf trained 8 

Pears Fine trees, 2s. 6d. 

to 3s. each, 


Fine trees, 3s, 6d. 
each, 
Goods delivered free to London and to the Slough Station on 

ursery is eg 
ing near the Woking Statio 
South Wes 
Tt is 


—— 


articularly requested th t letters intended for this 
ent addressed, 19255 WATERER, Knap Hill 
‘near Woking, Surrey, 


in 
126 per Bldg Also, fi "hex ey: of a 2 size in any quan- 
tity. Specimens of the wood from the Himalaya Mountains 
can be seen at th Bam . 
THE FINEST ö 5 8 PICOTEES, 


OUELL a 


e, II. 4s. and £1 10 0 
itto ha 10s. and 3 9 0 

i pairs of. newest and ‘finest first class show flowers... 2 1 
di itto dito 5 H 
ine 4 border rte 125 per dozen pairs. 


PINKS. 
Finest first class show varieties, 12s., 18s., and 24s. per dozen 
pairs. 
GREAT YARMOUTH NURSERY, 


ASS anp BROWN $ DESCRIPTIVE PRICED 
CAT 5 for 1819, — free by post on application. 
the following ny 


We beg to in Solicettons, Nodal ma 
choice erst 
ETABLE SEED 
A 5 tt Collection, including Thurst ou? 5 Reliance, E s. d. 
ecroft Rival, Fairbeard’s Surprise, British 

Goi and other fine Pess, 20 quarts in all, ənd all 

oth ds, newest Kinds, in 

proportion. fo 3 3 0 
The same Collection, in smaller quantities — 1 4 0 

Do. 0 
A Collection s suitable. — Ps small gar 015 0 

orts ra hiad if required. 
WER SEEDS. 
Free by post, with tar directions for sowing, heights, sagt 
„ Viz. :— + Oe 

100 varieties best and n newest Annu 15 0 


50 varieties for 8s, 6d, 30 for 5s. 6d, 120 60 
20 gone best dwarf kinds, in larger packets, ‘suited 
ing nl 


beds on lawns, 7s. êd., or 12 do. 5 0 
20 va: ieties best Greenhouse Annuals, 75 3. 6d., or 5 0 
20 ice Greenbo r Ed., 12 for 7 6 
20 vars. choice hardy Biennjals oe by renuials, 7s, cd, 12 5 0 
36 3 N * Stock 5 0 
20 ditt rg 3s. i 2 6 


Rae L ach — 
nde perg 

of 2. a 
payable 95 


o Lon 


THE 


98 


MY 3 
obseribers at 
2s, 6d. 


PHLOX be TAT As Ths e ‘spies ndid new — 


Pox DRUMMONDII, NEW SCARLET, Is. pe er packet. 

SEYMOUNWS SUPERB RED CELEBI, êd, = 9 

All the ee Vegetable and Plo r Seeds e e procured 
omit: 

1 LIAM 1 RENDLE & Co., SD Metouawts, Plymou 

ur New Seed Catalogue e can be obtained — 
zige bes. bh A -y should be in the possession of 
arden 


rior to | 


227. 8. 
Hort. Society 4 i Gardens, Royal Bot 
the Surrey Zoological on tei as being th 
size; col flavour. 


Gardens; and 
e be for 

4 3 — fruit pi Coven t Abr 
per 


— 57 
— ether. rong ea — ad 
5 W. — J. e 152, 
toarnen 
—1— 


The 
nist, 150, 


than 
“Covent Gar 
1 ien Mark 

, per 100, or 46, per ae 


and Fron 


— tate aaraa 


SEEDS, 
rri 
ceipt of 


5 “PRINCE ALBERT” | RHUBARB n 


e be had on applicatio 


GARDENERS’ 


RTH SEEDLING “STRAWBERRY, 25s. 
es strong plants of this fine 8 
een, as to 


4 Pare: re, Live erp 


1 2 Ras FOR 797 · ANTED TRUE 
COURCHA can capa nearly all the new Ditas 


© of last year at 78. per doze 

Fleece, 3 Walter ore 
best 2 FAN D 

rancer, Mrs. s; Shaw ‘Lefevre, —— 


Varieties at 2s. 
FUCHSIAS an ave RBE ENAS at 2s. Cd. per dozen. ere 
carefully packed m all parts of the country. Catalogues may 
ion to J. Courcma, Florist, 83, Wellington- 
ondon; 
0 to. 


from 


Boule de Fe eu, — N wg 7 
— aede: Jenny Lind, Remem- 
r de Maroc, Ke. Older 


ants 
row, ns Order by pon 8 A 


0 unetus ur 


N y 
begs oe respectfully to apprize 
ocured the whole 
Melon, 4 5 one of the 
s Melon is 
the 


DWARD 
the Nobility — „ 
— * the stock patie of tke rag 7 ve poset 


an aot E Hatle to 
fl: 2 8 when kept, as most others do: 
woiglis ‘rom 5 to7 
This euperb Melon i is = adapted to small growers, being a 
ry productive, and requires as = vat than 

. Gd. s also the 


ackets of 7 seeds, 2s 


A superb ‘collection of 2 toe Asters, Balsams, 

Zinnias, &c.—156, Cheapside, Lon 
BELL'S UNRIVALLED DAHLIAS 

a gga Mi CHELL begs to announce to bis friends, 

ending out in May ‘ollowing first class 

mate 4 — healthy plants. 

The best formed scarlet in cultivation; 

— 7 first prizes; constant shew flower; 


ded gratis, on a ae oo 
an ks 
ondon 


— 


6 seeds 1s. 
8 1 

” 
33 
n 
” 


0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 


—— 2 —— 
o 


10 1 0 
rieties wili be included 


wits s packet of | the aes Melon for’ 


esl HERO, Crimson.— A noble and constant s how 
flower; 4 feet. 1s. ëd. 

MRS . * Crimson tipped with ji wie 
—— clasg certi e best faney Dahlia of thè seas 


ROCCO three best 9 in cultivation are the 
5 Wileow and the Tamworth, at 1s. each per packet. 
bri 


Sold b — — Tiie at his General Se ed-shop, 16, Pulteney- 
— Bath ; 3 yo or any part of the above, will be sent 


— at eA the principa A feet. 35. 6d. 
own Nurseries, M 
Su ariet sth cons'st of v ah a —4— 


— w flower; 4 feet. 10s. 
BLACK PRINCE —5— — Partially: — out last season; 
resfield, Su = 
22 — a 
2 NEW RANUNCULUSES, &v.—The n 
very erior 

awhich we have selected from Sag aime se an ntities ‘of seedlings, 
and for — rowth and prolife flowering a 


free. ron ance must accompany the order; or the 
n nount’ in Id. posta — amps. 
“WOODLANDS S NURSERY, MARESFIELD, _ 
ILLIA much pleasure 


y in offering the N * ow pease r E 
ape 4 ES, Laden ve Sat aps fee per 


an 


Er od 
nee 


able to the older S. 
RANUNCULUSES, eres by post. 4 ee printed dircetions for 
N oe” cultur 
50 su EEE eyre bor , 40t; 25 for 2 * 
™ 2 fine older fies, na iby. ; 25 for 
100 finest mixture, 10s. ; fine, Sater; pure i 
,ADIOLUS Savann large roots, 13. 6d. each ; Brench- 
leyensis, 52. ; e, 5¢.; Rosa Mundi, 28. 6d.; Ramosus, 
Is. 6d. ; 'Psittac — sanguineus, ls. Those at 2s. 6d. 
wards, free by post; under 2s êd., 3d. . tr 
DOUBLE ANBMONE 
Finest mixture, 2s. per doz., or 12r. per ih; Fine, 1s, 3d. per 
doz., or 8s. per I Ib 
12 varieties, named, best efor crimsons, & e., 38. 6d. ; 
pont e, 46. 3d ; Single, fine, m colours, 43, per Ib. 
Ca of Roots, free b; — — our superb 
new Ranunenluses, upwards of 4 — 1 a 
P: co orders made — to Bass and Bro 
Steruen Brown, Remit cor- 


respondents. 
Ass and Brow, Seed and Horticultural Establishment, 
Setter, 5 sami 


Wie 


algen CEDAR. Any Noblema 
mc ger * or planting by the acre will Do — on — 
usands of fine selected plants for Lawns and 


TERS OF CEDRUS DEOD 


Gies 5 — GLaNDULOSA— 
now 


seeds at 1s. packet, or 
Jon n ice and Da. eto fir | 


* ainoana 1 15755 90 15 — — each, 15.64. to 5 


v 1 ERUS RECÜRYA, i Pio fet 
os 


ve | ASH, new Weeping, Chinese, 8 to 10 cane 18. 6d 


LAD RELS, Pere, ne, 3 to d feet | 
fine and bush, 


CHRONICLE. 


[FeB. 17, 
AWN TREES S.—The he following cies 
JL e found highly 2 and varieties 
aba eo TREES, apne W pate 6, 2 ntos 
Jimus gla ets a pend -2n 
ana "pendula nova 
e : : 
ahos 8 w varieties of Wee 
Popuius joi (the V l Pop ar) ceping E Ele * i 
Tilia pendula rea ae 


Fagus pendula (the dba eed y a 

„ pendula nova (the new Weeping Beech) 
Cerasus depress 

D z jeecerasus 

F i reece 


Cytisus supin whe 
nera Richardii pendula see 
w “vi 


j 
Robinia ine 
— osa pendula ) 
Golden-twigged Weeping Ash 5 
FLOWERING TR eran AND SHRUBS ratte : 
o 6 feet in r ay — 
1 Portugal Broom g 
Pin do. 
Grea coloured room 


wee 


5 
3 
j 
3 


Glen . — 
—— 
purpureus 
pa rpureus mejor 


pu urpureus atropurpureus (new) 
Sk ogg 


We 

Thes ome all grafted . on the Laburnum. | 
1, Æsculus Wente, 6 feet 1 n 

orse Chestnut 

A 2 flore pleno, 6 

. #sculus rubicunda ee helt 6 feet 
No- 2 iͤ the ‘double white Horse Chestnut, which b 
ong spike like a double Hyacinth. 

—— er double carnation st viper 15 
d 


— 
9 


* 


~w 


moo 02 92 69 
277 


doub 
These are grafted 5 stra ms of the common lies 
3 5 pa ix N 


ee purgans oo r 
anxantica Si 4 i 
fted on Laburnums. 

Pavia carnea pubescens? n 2 6 
„ discolor „ i 
„ rubra se 2 

neglee 2 6 
These are the e red and crimson: Horse Chest nuts, 
rafted = the comm 

Prunus spinosa Riess (the double Sloe). 758 TE 

„  Candicans, (the Tay Plum n oa 26 

Cerasus nigra 12 Pere’ Be 

Cotoneaster mi terophylla Pee ae 2 65 

Pyrus salicifolia a s ee 
„ floribunda n 
55 grandifolia 7 1 
= er 
ns 8 age 10808 2 @ 

age paid to ondon 
For descriptions of mone et — species and fe 
f Trees and Shrubs, sent per pot 


for six postage 5 
_ Tuomas Kivens, Nurseries; Sawbridgeworth, a 


9 NURSERY, near . IN 


* 
12s, 
LAURUSTIN US, — bushy plants, 2 5 “ot 


ae 0 
oy ae shy, 3 to 4 feet 206 t0 25 0 
MAH HONTA AQUIFOLIA, bushy 105. to 15 0 
„ NDRON AERES nice o young plants, 
108. — na 15 0 
Ditto 15 to 18 in ches 0 25 0 
Ditto 2 to 3 feet, very bushy — 2 75 0 
AZALE AS, of sorts, fine varieties per dozen— 9 0 
* 9 5 shy icine SO 
h a A 
KXLMIA TATIFO IA, 140 1 foo", fine et 88 180 
Ditto wae 24 0 
LEDUMS, rte 9 0 
8 0 
wachen fie CATAWBTENS 1) to? fr., strong 12 0 
8 „9 inches 36 0 
10 0 
zaun (Ware's 3 5 Siberian), 2 2to4 feet 
very ar ‘ 0 
BOX, — tree, 2 to 4 feet Ak 6 0 
reen, ve 4 0 
0 
0 
ditto 3. 7 125. to 15 0 
piioriniA SERRUI rng b, 10 ja 1 0 
, Chines 0 
an 1 i 25 1 i 727 ea ber 6 
KHUTROW oe oe — 
[„ MORINDA, 1159 27 ines 16 0 |f 
0 


DEODARA 


di — informs Gentle a, N. 

, and others, that > hasa sar: 3 of MA 

AQU IFOLIA, or 1 Berberry, to dispose of, 
plants, 9 inches to 1 foot, 20s. per 1 1000; if “10,000 taken, 15s. pë 

1000. Ditto, 1 to 2 feet, 25s. per 1000; if 10, 00 taken, 208. 

1000. They are well rooted, and are the best size for 
out. aér 5 10,000 to 15,000, fine, . — althy, wel 
sh Oak, 603. per 1000; ditto, 3 fr. to — 5 


rooted E 
. ‘Scuteh Elms, s ft. to 5ft., 255. per 1000. 


r n palgal, from 18 inches to? 


0 4 ft., ki 20s. per 1000. Anda 
— bedded quick’, c of the ost healthy pae mt 
with joer (which will be r g to the quanti 


ulated accordin 
taken) sent on application.— ve 


PICEA SEMBRA” H 


J 
5 0 
. per 


. to 


0. 125. 
ng, 6 to 10 feet, each, — to ls. 6d.; per doz., 12 
H, fern-leaved, 5 to ö feet, each, 18. 6d. ; — — 1a. 

Weeping, fine, 6 to fect ea — 25. 6d. ; per doz., 24s. 
New i Somat to 8 feet, a 28. 6d. ; per 


Fh Pecan tal PD eee 


3 3 is n 


re 
a — bein extensive 
k e eee — aa 


er pat rts 
of Seed, nd B 
tiite and the 
. 8 for nearly that ine Tw 
Catalogue will be read with interest, . — 4 be n e } 
all who arè Some gy of 


Gl tèr, or Basin 
Joun SUTTON and new “Reading, Berks 


4 8 5 . gy bs — | 
OuN ere URSERY and Serpsman, Wester- ch, 38. ; ; per don, 30%, LATE = E he fal 
per d . RRS, ISLEWORTH.— The fen 
1255 ys el . ne e Publio that agi roeie S adone riar in Slate for RH arat Pa 
io be osit ui consisting of th 8 dy 2 of the following have been selected = to ray seon in use . 3 Sees 2 re | 
t of others, and i 5 All orders bile me xes, Tanks, —— — 2 — Path Sure 
e | soa F Woop a er-beda for Balconies, Shente, m 
also of Flower Seeds, | 4 idaceous F . a 
fi shosha upon Drawings posd: in Spet 


ARE 


ee 


n correspon‘ents is 


al barat — 
* es 12s. 2 not — 
8 varieties, 50s, per 100. 


, | CAMELLIAS, fine healthy — and all the best v 

OWINESE AZALEAS, of the most — oa to % ~ 

ERARIAS, very select collection, fine oe 
INTO BLOOM ne 

SA ‘THEMUMS, all the newest rs e 


wee vö 


General Outslog 
Sih seas eae 


3 
\ Greenh 
say be had GRATIS, on application 


d- 
ants, 


Se tat len 
allowed for carriage. A reference | 
— unknown 


Al mer ala of Slate Slabs, of all sizes agi 


sale in England, —1 talian andas 
outh Audley-street, Gros 


3 Ch reper a sizes ; 
eac use, London Agent 
Martin’s-lane ; or app to He 


1 


THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


99 


d 
RROT “SEED, new an 
0 or 112s. per ewt. LONG 
] GLOBE MANGOLD 

2 all other Agricul- 
ices, n be obtained on 


Co., SEED MERCHANTS, Plym 
sts road Sed List et 55 ready thot 'y, 
Gratis to all who may w wish to 


ani firean NOULUSES, 1 ANEMONES, a0 
a “TYS0, IST a d Seepsman, Wallir 1 


ann 
der 
dend that — — supply, per post, as un 
a for ANUN ULUSES 
season 1 SEEDLING R 45 


sion Selections from the best varieties ant 
1 ce one root of each 50s to 5 0 
— 85. 15s., 


aaa 1:0-0 
8. 
porate AN e 28 Pairs 
ced C 


- 20s. to 110 0 
ros Oo 
ee Ped C talo ogas fo — 1849 8 
how to Gro 


5 * two postage 
it,” euclosed on 


labels; 


he Ran 
n postage labels. 
First 8 tf 25 Mi Chiswick 9 5 18 
1 srts ats eason, needs no fu vane er 


— 
ELON GROWERS 
LEMING’S NEW HYBRID PERSIAN 3 
Fiann been a’ . 
— New 75 5 Persian, 


er packet 28. 6d. 
5 

8 
rders or pos tage 
FIRST CLASS —— p 3 VERBENAS. 
EORGE S 


SMITH be inform his friends in 

that his 75 eat, pale of the 

above w ready, and comprises every novelty of the season, 

6 Jy hp wit Modiidehice recomme his Seedling VER 

BENAS, they ha ken numerous First Class Certificates. 

“also his Seedling FUCHSIA, LORD NELSON, has taken 

Ae, First Class € cates, and for exhibition will be found 
the 1 a ription, see Catalogue, whic 

receipt of one po —— ta 


Tollington — Torker, Islingto 
— SEED POTATOES 


HARLES SHARPE, N N and SEEDSMAN, 
lly solicits the Scores ef ze Nobility and Gentry 
to his POTATOES for Seed. The sorts are very early and pro- 
ductive, and have given general satisfaction to Potato 3 — 5 
in all ok the Kingdom. They are offered at the follow 
prices, ded : 
Per — of 56 Ibs, 
Soden’s Early Oxford 8 
Early Ash-lea — . 
ou 
Early ly Ma i 
Fox’s Seiling, fine for forcing 

Second early sorts, for Winter and Spring us 


Per bushe! ay 56 Ibs. 
faren Native Potatoes 
ork Re O SERN 


Forty. fold 80 
PB gant be forwarded on the receipt fe ine — Order, 
care w aken to ee 8 their safe deliv A 
liberal allowance made to the Tra ue 
SHARPE, Seedsman, Wisbeach, Cambridgeshire. 


The Ga rdeners' Chronicle. 


SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1849. 
MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 


| ; . 
: lens, Feb. 19 Medical 1 55 
Statistical 8 r. x. 
Antish Architects „ ei el 8 P.M. 
O Tamno a A 870 
i Civil Engineers 4 8 M 
Wepszspay, — 3 19 CT 8 12 
ö Soe sry aie Sgr. M. 
. ociety o . 4 P.M. 
2 Numismat ie”, eier en 
. ar 3 
,, a a ane 8755. 
i Saronpay, 23) Rabat titution r AAG. oi 
= 24—Royal Botanic ............ 34. M. 
Torspay, 27 2 and Chirurgical , Sz. u. 
Fatpay, Maret 2 grii 6 2 P.M. 
_Sarvapar, Asiatic 2 — 

Trom 


he i appearance of the Disrase Ix Po- 
— as been entertained that light 
ey 


fone serious 
U; 


2 


„ we find the Honor 


.. S Rae oe ea 
Suffered little or nothing. 


CE ee 
og of the et 


injury was sustained, 
set sora give the flowing 


OS ee a eS 
Suffered little or nothing. 
F 


i Sakon 


Sreat disease i 


remarked a 
In light land is about 


of note that there is 
suffered 


of 
`| rienced large loss in the April an nd May planted 


id | cases are report 
Six other ies are where yp e fad heavy |’ 
mbined : 


take 
the pro- 
. 


Scotland or and that the whole of the bad 


stances under which they occurred gives the 
following results 

egards climate, n9 case is reported from the 
north of "York shire ; e from 
folk, 5 from ä 5 “fro om 
Shropshire, 3 from Lincolnshire, and the remainder 


are scattered through the intervening counties; one 
only is reported from 85 wall. Climate therefore | 


an explanation of ‘the prev 
lence e e in light 25 


o be a general cause of 


0 with 
ate planti e some highly j in- 
structive 3 Mr. Cotterell, Beid. agent, Bath, 
had his crop planted in May 2 as but 

m 


5 
6 


n same soil was little mune 
W. Norman, ERE: romley, in Kent, expe- 
t that 8 February suffered little. Similar 
by others. 


crop, but 


manuring- were is the 
pe of the Res v. G. H. Eg . — reports 


fro m Shropshire that in his highly manured land 
wo-thirds were diseased, but Where no manure was 
nit the crop did not suffers 


Three instances are where “Hight lind rested on a 
heavy or wet subsoil. 

There then remain 24 cases, which are altoyettier 
e ob- 
are 
distributed through the counties of Wilts, Warwick, 
Surrey, Saorg, “Salop, Norfolk, Middlesex, Kent, 


Bucks, ts, Cones ; Gloueester, Dorset, and 
Her d some cases they are connected wit! 
rile ground, or probably high manuring; Mr. 


Youell, of 
—— planted e 
oot deep with river m 


Gr ra Yarmouth, lost two-thirds of a 
rop, in pure sea mst covered a 
ud. , of Laken- 


rané near Norwich, lost from one- hited to one-half ‘ 


is hig ge where Pink-eyes were planted with 

gy Sev of the reporters in this class speak 
of na Hess 5 —5 been smaller where the aop was 

planted very ea ily: others, however, perceive 

difference. It is ae hoped that eee will 

be hereafter pen 8 the 

nected wit 


oe 


d Cas 
Connected dee — planti ste 


„„ „„ „„ 8 46 
Late planting and lei manuring. . 6 
Heavy or wi uldo 3 
Unexplaine 24 


79 
tthe it — “$e — . that IN ane 
HANCES ARE 213 T . — THE APPEAR- 
ane NDS “olttens 
Woe MANURING _EECESSIVE, on 
WET Adis in o other words, 
not mor A in 13 suffers much in light 
land, if “moderately a 3 early, and 
not 3 on a wet subsoi 
s to the rest of poa Uni ied 8 it has been 
Pine stated that no return — ions failures in 
light e 


p 
ought to be ted by the 
— well drained land . — be viidad ake 
that all strong manures should be avoided. 


We are sorry to see that our efforts to vindicate 
the elitin of natural science to better attention 
than many are inclined to bestow upon v 
given umbrage to a edrreapoudent who 
well rs to Da with our wi 
respect. p- 86) has 


= in either 


on- gig 3 sea-saurian in the erag “of Felixton. 


lowings, without better testimony to ie bay than 
the supposed evidence of their own eyesi 
The blunder to which we 8 in illustration 
of our position, we distinctly allowed to be “ very 
venial in the mouth of an . man,“ and we 
do not perceive that“ has been arguing 
for e more. It ust s uch a blunder as 
ny m „however vail” acquainted with one de- 
e of science, might have t 
to another epartment with which 
u 


phosphate nodules of the crag 
London clay which were dist! netly stated to be the 
soprolites of gigantic saurians en we remarked 


not unnat tral str x at thisjo ae 
of truth ind error, and y onsidered it an excel- 
] xample in i a a of those crude notions 


errin 

0 mpressed w gigantic 
5 of the 9 strata had disappeared for 
vast ages before the present creation was called 
—— existence, would be ine as to listen to the 
sneer of the s supposed sea serpent being an 
jehthyo osa 
That we 5 nothing more than this, a re- 
perusal of our article will ‘probably be sufficient to 
satisfy “ We are desirous to show that 
ies a position which 


has qualified her for pronouncing decidedly on the 
impossibility of certain popular opinions being 
correct, and the extreme improbability of ers. 
We wish to convince our readers that no amount of 
assertion in such cases, from numerous eye-wi 

nesses, unl they are accompanied by positive 
proof, ought admitted as conclusive eviden 


of what they may hf 3 bave seen. Although 
‘5. P. W.“ nclined to class the accounts of 
mong things which are even 
more than “highly improbable, we piap ed a 
our scepticism) consider them to all m 
o | likely to be unt ane Tatria to 4 19 750 
of our knowledge) than finding 5 coprolites of a 
As to 
of opinion ee ing the coprolitic 
— Lol the phosphate nodules of the crag, 
the opinion itself criginateds in the insuperable di 
culty of supposing these nodule -eotld have hada 
concretionary origin in the matrix of comminuted 
shel!s and rubble in which they occur. When Mr. 
Brown stated that he had met with similar nodules 
in the London clay, i it then ee highly piene 
that pe of the e ad or 
tion, 
when it met at Cambridge (see 
The phosphate of lime dispersed t through various 
nas —— have wore in — decomposition of 
h 


at forma- 
oe 3 
Re 


aa ee er these were previo — 
digested? Ver. But the amn of s 
dispe ersed matter into the form of nodules i is a vety 
different tk 


n the ae ‘coment ` soon as the Dean of 


su 
: walle’ int 


Westminster (and he is a good judge of such 
spen saw the elixton nodules, k — that 
the sgt true co 

bsequen aver y of these phosphate 
heir original beds, in the London clay 
. ct “iti to the British Associa- 


dily allow, ay — 

ey are of „ 3 perhaps be still 

a subject open to dispute. s to many a 

0 blunder far less . than that to which 

we have re Seow 1e points we are most 

n the unscientific advisers of 
s 


sage 


cblightings, and viper-swal- 


truth of his own princi iples. 
al- | that agriculturists would 3 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


Fx B. 17, 


100 


Chronicle, can do no service to the cause ree a 
on the 


=: ee animal nutri if p Presenting a 


mixtu 


ld be most advantageously applied to 

N nts. But on Lirzid a few 
months — enti ds completely shifted his ground, © 
k his censures on botanical | e 


the ber, via of the 3 
The, 
Science, the e checke 

physiologist, and the physiologist assisted by the 
chemist, and bot h must refer to the Deg 6 — 5 


—— 


e com 
h intelligence, — 


. Itis in this way hed — wi 
rer so rapidly attained to the 17 eee ong 
now occupies. The furemost laboure 3 
field have willingly . * the fiori o 
the skilled anatomist, the pro feed zoologist, con- 
em c. 


2 
with butlers’ * ladies nas squab If a man’s 


sion may T require 
gener: bearing and con uct as a man, vif his ability and 


endured, aye, if you backed them 
T | every returning atest will not procure it. 


LECTURE ON ECONOMICAL COOKERY ; 
n, THe METHODS OF PREPARING OUR in 
DEGREE OF WAST. 


I fear w ry By C. Davseny, M.D.; "PRS. 
receive due assista ee Pre science, if such ardent 
and intelligent promoters of their union as Mr.“ Tue true and legitimate Ane then, of cookery is to 
UXTABLE a by one party with an out- | bring the various articles of human subsistence into 
ery for a balance shee et, or r to be regarded by another the dition most favourable for being assimilated 


as sufficient authority in all matters that are purely 
scientific. J. S. H. 


We are we to say end a ne of chee: 

addressed “J. Hawronn, & „has b è i 

e 

ey are anxious to obtain 
the address from which it has been sent. 


2 
8 
i= 
8 
2 
@ 
E 


AN 8 INTO THE GENERAL CONDI. 
RY T EMPLOYED IN 8 

r their 8 ee e 

uld otherwise 


condition, or to alte 
taking the place of 7 — efforts w 
ma 


o be understood, in that po 

English cookery chictly | o 

| confines and whilst the Continental - s to em- 

ord aimed at b 

of practice a $ 1 only to place before 
imen 


theory or ystem 
aren is the writers wish to lay before he readers 


from appa vs ss the course of his every-day occu 
tions as and be it remember pet most tt seks and pig grote Spee it 
seco ject is too offen 

sacrificed to » Now it will not be denied that 
the second of these boken, namely, = compounding 
various articles ma 

with, provided the former ean be duly e 
without the loss 


rf 0 sp ha 
always resulted i in truth. In the course of these papers | 
cs of ee Be 2 Bad be 8 
ts on 
us of establishing a Principle of alti- 
not have been 


ee an 
shall be the meaus 
vation in peaa of the time, they 
written in v 

fore at ean a enter fully into this inquiry, and I have 
no idea of 


— 


. s well-attested fact) that 
sed * but a living, 


was by Nature i 
In 2 to 8 this, let us recur to the sub- 


can in no 

goera fibre contained in 
es tuber of the Potato, or in he bulbs of the Turnip, 
This, however, is in a gre 
pared for 


ts i'a courso of pot — 
nts is y under the 


tter then stands thus: That, as any given 

fr yep for | 

proportion | bran and 
cult vators | age 


plant is oe t 

the degree of development it may asst 

as those agents are under the ooie ot i 

and their application understood, so will b 

of perfection reached. Taking this as a starting 3 

dN that a wide field of inquiry is before re us, 

goly does much of the routine of ak sopann | 
under consideration, i- | 


d albuminou 


bone cartil 0 
6 yet the whole g er animal matter may, by mecha- 
contriva 1 


t be made 
efor that of our own species. 
sa 40 contrad's- a - 0 ing os which in —_ com 

=e in He ou 5 
it — whan i r e 8 g rather > kept 


occasions, | avai 
| mon course of 
reserve we ee " 
zi 8 than regarded as 
es proceed t = 8 
xisting in animal food 


re, is subservient merely to ep 

e serving to supply 

3 Pa two 
t would seem to 


der him a8 a subject of matter 
than of ends and to lift his oeeupation to to a 
e lato attempt to AAAA 
5 e late Hes to 
with the above remarks, in 


uses of food, i 


eg le Peaks but I have repeated his p 


EEE ie, the reason 


ind. | 
word philant rogersi || ir 
e pot-houses, 


from equals and superiors, all the records of gr ievances | 
with a leader to boot ou 
G 0 


00D WITH THE LEAST 
ra 


With t 
o be at and nervou 


! t | wil 
ulfilall the purposes for which it 


e | and, pacha iy, 


ar | sodi 
as been ee in 
e 


3 ‘the. 8 „ ; 9 pretended to have converted wood 7 ftre | jui 


e of both these portions, 
hat i 


t would alone be 
af 8 us with a necese 


ystem is 


arnt 


digests very large an 
cular fibre of the 


ee 
ood is kede * intermixed with 
a few cases where the latter 
s not to 5 accessible, 
ee Prout’s may point at the 
well as indicate that we are not 
ow 


h 8 
sist of fat as Ja as Mat; bit the third can only be 
furnished by vegetab It would s 


and that when n they are not pre 
expenditure of animal matter is ened than would 
othe erwise have suffic ed. } 


TW 


— consider what substances it t may be expected to oon 
. The basis 5 the flesh of anima als is fibrine, and 
cies the same i 


a fuid, enclosed 
r, more probably, in pé ‘oie of the 
e ay cellular tissues, to whic Lieb ig 

the name 


hich has 
der krea 155 
whether of fish or en sari rupe 
tions, that of a — the most, being see 
is a transparent colourless su 
omaia ii in prisms, and very soluble in water. In 
hich are le 


whieh 


the juice of meat contains v inorganic 

2 r — Che vrei to rather more $ 
a fou of the e of the m 
On 5 i 


than | 


nge fro id t 
condition has n Now it wo 
firs eaction v = be 


rocess, and hay 
the experiment to be quite fees usory. 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


101 


jase instead of 2, that he 
with 
ie i ae 
a smaller portion 440 be continued. ) 


A 
TIONS ON T 
SOF THE COMMON WALNUT 


pie) 


„ CARDAN 


Juglans 


VEGETATION 0 
r 


as 2 winter; 


Wonth sooner 
month of —— t Walnut trees take | oth 

another start, whilst the fruit is being develo 

this peri une-le May. 


the potass which had been com- 
as no ow appropriated to itself a 
phosphoric acid previously united with 


HE 


ws anythin g about Walnuts is 

ists A ets of this tree which does 
month or five wecks after the 
rds the end of and 


April, a 


sequence, the 
ha 


ped ; at 
leafing varieties 


are in the same state. It would be almost impossibl 
for one who saw them for the first time to distinguish 
the the late variety. In er, the 
leaves varieties are dead, and they drop off 
of themselves from the 15th of October till the end of 
November, The leaves of the late variety, on the con- 
trary, are still green, the nuts are in their pericarps, 
and are still astringent ; as soon ep ow weather 
comes, the leaves are frozen 


ts, though 


f 
2 ripe nor free from — fall with the 


If the nuts of the common Walnut 


be sown, the 


already in leaf 2 — sed ane in which 
Jma beginning. to we have 
ande or an Alm 


the sap 
8 daes a 


e is ean singular. The following 
8 to me sta 12 more difficult of explanation: 
n an upper bra fa June- befog ea tI 8 
a bud of La lande, ee leafs in Ma At the end 
ars, ap ee produesd eon the bud of 
May, as the Lalan 


“eens were se e 


e highest of “a, it woud 
o grow a 3 before the others, just the same. 
Comes Rendus, D 
5 HINTS FOR 5 
SMA 9 8. 

Ranu fave ever seen a 
well- iaki bed of 1 Wees flower will agree 
that there is nothing which grows in the open air to 
and that soins expense and care are well laid 


To preserve the roots, wire-worms mu 


up 
e dry, but oa, for if su be 
apt to shri res up. 


tions for ing Ranunculus tubers 
ia a state of health aug planting time arrives, H. B. 


Hom pona enc 
n Ex 3 of Glebe Lands can be effec ted with 
ish 


trees will all appear between the months of May | out in proceni one, Yet, how ening Se do we find even | pursued i 25 other was concerned 
on e time in the following spring; a moderate collection in the gardens of persons who | some years since ci living was given to him, when he 
is to say, they will remain 12 o ths in the | are otherwise devoted florists The reason of this is to | found himself 
4 at whatever time they may be born, they | be found in the great difficulty of eee the tubers Passing rich with 401, a year.“ 
15th of May. f o Eaves pe 20th of April and the from year to ye ood may be easily grown if | The situation pni beautiful, but his house and lawn w 
3 ye e fruit of the June eae Pine: strong roots are procured from the akot in a plump | so close to his squire’s > as to aim ar one 2 — 
„ Whatever th may hich the and healthy condition; but, after one year, it is often | was no sa ange — r when one party trespassed on 
2 a <r s they will only bud ta the 20th | found there is a complete failure. The tubers either | the grounds of the other. ae agreed that 2 weaker 
— Sagem e 15th of June, a month or five weeks | rot in the ground or they shoot again before they are party should withdra ms agree j 
99 taken up; or, ed away, they get mouldy, een, appointed, pte asked a little more land and 
phei more productive than others ; as, for | shrink up, and produce only feeble flowers. The grower | a good dea re money, all of which th happy 
by the French Lalandes, Marbots, becomes discouraged ; and as good Ranunculuses are“ quire ” was forced ive, and now both parties ars 
tids magad e ee they all begin to grow | too expensiv be purchased every year, the amateur | satisfied. prodana ny thanks for the views 
more productive thee an o make them | relinquishes his attempts, and turns his attention to|enclosed; they a re 25 specimens of modern art.] 
e y are grafted on wild stocks. The less precarious, arnations ar hy matters | —“ Cambro. Brito” o doubt -e that there are 
. anh wat grafted on May-leafing and | to deal with, but there is more air with them than | two kinds of co peat ons reco gnis by law, viz , aggre- 
P ies bud t stocks; in the first case the t h the Pe sda oe e ma owers demand le and sole, to which latter anes aed clergym an be- 
itis same time, and their sap rises at the . svareely = ngs. Now, the parson or vicar tate for life 
an me ee then, to take a b o ut we think re causes of failure intimated above 2 in the glebe, and the freehold is said to be in abey- 
as June-leafing v — For grafting a May-leafing are only such as e uld sily overcome, ye | ance ; nevertheless, at the common law, he might make 
Ast, a branch is e ee y, two methods are employed: | write this paper in 125 hope of stimulating our readers | leases just as freely as a tenant in fee simple, with the 
i > ha in May, and kept for a month vigorous attempt this season, as the consent of the patron and ordinary, the latter of whom 
i for planting has now arrived. A = of Ranunculuses | is in this case the bishop. But the statute 13th Eliz, 
was a grand exhibition in the time of our fore- cap. 10 (explained by others, viz., 14th Eliz., caps. 11 
fathers, but modern cultivators 3 shed upon it still | and 14 ; 16th Eliz., cap. 11; p cap: 29: 
greater glories. process of hybridising has been | enacts that no parson icar shall make any le 
minently successful in producing new varieties, and, | for more than tbree lives or 2l years. But this 
what is of more importance, it has thrown a vigorous | lease will not bind his successor, unless it be made wit 
e ‘id tag or into a plant erg ead liable to de- the consent of the patron and ordinary. The reason of 
| gener d of the old kinds red with scant | this is obvious, viz., that by no arrangement can the 
3 kori and the flowers, althe mgh very lovely, ine t have any o thana | te the 
ave a frailness of stem and smallness of petal oin glebe, and therefore it would not be just that he should 
l tive of extreme delicacy. at of | permanently n the property is 5 
8 amn and how great is the pote It | can have ol over bis actions. It ap 
| like 3 from a plantation of Pines on so hat the rent to be reserved on waste land, and the con- 
ngeia] soil, to the same species growing on their | ditions of the lease, must entirely depend upon circum- 
| tive mountains The foliage is larger, and of a |stances, as whether there is any es ommoda- 
eeper green; the stems are robust and tall; and the tion, &e. do n how any rule could be 
petals N a size 8 beyond ae of the more ancient | laid down such a subject. Forensis.— Apply to 
n | kinds. fi seedlings are apt to sport an eye, | the Tithe Commissioners for in ange 
wae Brin disappears b z cultiv: . Is it not a question- | glebe land, and facility for doing il be 
te, by the which complains of the existence | afforded at a very small expen The bishop, inet, 


T June. 
ordinary ‘one, Sho; sinon the. lakes 


different but fi ge 
pening tree cannot be! porous, and 
penal 


w of flora 
a the sec se of the, Ranuncu 
? 


| rotte 


fe rae * work so exquisitely beautiful 
lu s? 


wild tre nere ossible 
tha o gro the Ranu — e a in ‘ea nd 
y ct soils; for although the i R eee, nt may 5 
te May partly overcome by the introduction of e mposts, it ca 
and their n ne- | never be quite remove ch loc ites de = their a i 
which es awf be sown, wild t will | circumstances droughty and uncongenial, a 

3 the Lalande N in ue, although the can only be obtained by considerable — ek 
28 20th of April to ther s which bud | ledge, and daily wat A moist is indis- 

it han anc cae an dif, 15th of of May. Tr > rs it | pensable for the pioto growth of the et 
denden any difference results! How does and as it strikes its roots ve y deeply in congenial situa- 
Whe and | tions, the bec 3 th of 


this 
of 18 inches below the 8 be m be sy beneficial. 
At t 
with a hea eps hea if it is eo — ea 
—— will n ars 


t in beds which = sean ged 
saad of a soil not disposed to 


t be confounded | N 


cumbent, must 


and in 
tion, 


pita cone, and then set on ae 


hen the 


with wa ‘ yd, Oswestry 
wn nd “This has been . n my 
family for many years past, and, having given myse 
me trouble to investigate its properti fully 
able to bear testimony to the correctness marks 
made . = jc alman,” He wishes that “a smail mill 


of low 


or ten years 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


7 
[FEB. 17, 


iderable number empty each, were planted a t the same time. If afew : 
. pr lt aren rar — — — ra will 9 inthe lea — degree injured gee will make similar experiments the question will ne 
them ot upply me = ee Ai respect to brown bread, | being appropriated to this novel purpose, is about ôd., receive a pen re pr men 
what 0 ore delicate stomachs cannot bear the tin, &c., something less than a halfpenny. Rain in the paris un friesshir, 
j- would * T twill sometimes —— flatulency ; used va = a I have — 1 in 1848. N 
i ttractive than afew Peas, the commonest sor do, 1 F : 
the remedy for ‘his is to pe . e me a a co on a rer. pane — „ an n put into | $ anuary | gogn is | 
family we ater pa a 4m th part of Rye with | the bottom of the bottle with a little moist nd March a October 17 
J ͤ CC as | December 
i Prejudice | been able to preserve S ý X | 
the — ane 1 en ad very ai» neighbours been ee even afi — t qs | July. RERE eee a ‘Bl er nad sos 
j è ts. Th tle shou resse 
amongst that class of the yerr n — 8 three e ors ep fovel ae 8 | — ee SS in you year 21. Last year 
aa Saly areak, — ter likes x little wholesome The mode of constructing it, the ease with which the | (1847), vakadan balks in aa a aa = eae to 27.6l—3 
Pie ibility of their escape 8 u had in London, for 
...... wd ig can slima tE. pan 
mi á i ula.— e interestin 
ketch. I shall be happy to answer any further Piai y b 8 t 
Polmaise K * ee pe ied, 2 — ie will gladly, if you wish it, send one of my | onifers to know that there is a perfect specimen of this 
gone your raper, tos ' en ied it ig ee ah silt or you e William Law, Marston Rec- pans plant at Claramont, Cheshu t, above 14 feet 
— answer i eich 5 the ister as planted out about nine sam ago, and recei 
w . 
—.— e stove was badly placed against a bad wa ie cht prea 
the result was a fire in the chapel ; the fire was extin- only. The side br e 
ed without much injury being done, ve once or twie 
nece rep ere ; not being —— 
ever, that all was safe, I sent for the person who supplied tibility of frost, 155 8 
— — ond the ork was taken oi 
ucted accor g to his or - he era 
e 
2 for ner svn i all was min the 55 . 1 injured. f 
ns as I had been led to foempect 5 a Mate (nothing ma 


coe 

i — discoloured and s j 
consequently detached. Sho zil y — on looking 
more narrowly, I found a ese flowe 

of its tars discoloured an i 
bee-like insect stuck within it head first. 


= 


pro 
— by the wild bees: 
set they im — — if not set they remain 
expanded for a long time.] 
lanting Potatoes.—As the season has arrived 3 
all who plant Potatoes should commence, I ventur 
or years ‘with 
47 


ole e Lindley say 


Explanation of Woodcut.—A, faller and hinge, as they appear when the trap is set; B, pattern bo 
of faller and hinge attached. 

omy 2 or drr — 5 fore Planting rarte = — 

on this subject give t conflictin 


] 
gm * 

outh-cast si a hill, pote: — 
and 
$ 

p 


ents that 25 oe of P 
mstances, er 


; and co 
if | of the clear produce, * 3 se —— of so 
Aga 


eee tuber 
beautiful “Mexican -a A might not pro 
similar ¢ stance If so, how — pi 
attractions pox our ati -grounds be varied i 2 g 
creas y their ~— — tion. William . 
Nurseri ies, mapie 


section composir 
nof pa re n — About this seas 


g set 
Potato has a small eye or bad, from whieh, in — first 


which most families have 


at | 


2 it succes h is published at page 826, 1847. y a weakly shoot proceeds, as the | of me . — skin of Potatoes en s0 
I continued the sam | lasi Ta; and with like | other starts 8 produeing early a eee e. ingly ane that it will not open d 
result. No blight or other ppe y to my | breadth of foliage, supported on a stem capa able of bear- | boiling, the super rabun 
pory — with this note I youa sample. of the | ing it up ght, better i e Potat 
46 i ware now being plan p of the sorts than one w multitude of such.” In the sequence at the 
is the Lady's Finger or Rufford Kidney, an early and | face of this we are told that “whole otatoes, the believe that cooks peel Potatoes at this ume 
productive kind ; the other is Shaw’s ly, a very of a pigeon’s egg, make better seed than cut sets.” | because of the toughness of 
gua nd one known in gaear ee market ore geet Chronic’e for 1849, p. 88, c.) Mr. Glenny, | disagreeable smell in coo 
— 1 r Mangold | in anack, insists upon t e practice, ‘ound that béfore Christma 
urzel, the grown large b pre in an which Mr. Cuthill and others add the authority of their | are boiled in the better, using plenty of 
—- of manure from the ca‘ On other hand, Mr. advocates | after that time, an to the 
2 E ung is used, 3 — — the theory of Professor Lindley, and quotes the latter in to go out, in spri em 
se are — of two passages, which I have given with this preface, | beiter, not with the view of improvi 
mpentions page ; appear a „We will give Dr. Lindley’s own words for the reason | of obviating the smell which arises from 1 
dressing of feuiphur * — is applied. On the fol- oft 5 ee = - sure wil es every one | making this and the following statements, 
lowing sea 0 ing for a moment.“ M. e that I am placing myself in the same position 
Juomia this otation havè been for some years | h has been without exception in das of cut | to.cooks thatit a bea in — 
most f my The Potatoes, | sets, and the disease adds r ee ae reason for their By dab of a wench o 
rv with care, and kept use. It is dangerous to therefore we | Soyer himself, I shall be told that by 
especially for ee Potatoes. I not h ak ps. ust endeavour, then, at t e of year with th 
at 8l. per a to avoid a multi eof diminutive 1 tubers, too small for is impa to the whol he 
5 [The e table, which will often be the case if — whole true; but if I advocate the bane = will also sb l 
free from di apparently =e 3 I have a on le before | antido y plan is as follows: = the Potatoe 
wt E 2 two-thirds of an ounce, from eight of the washed clean with a h; then take a knife $ 
og “ike s” maalt 2 of your ee Peat which — are er pma g. What can the skin through all round the Potato, do the 
A — . mg ys y the be e a _ Ar — ap > Punch “of TERE aes and put them in plenty of water 
their r ve and a tu ow, It will be fo 0 8 
the depredations of mice seratehingup and devouring | w À — a — ultitude of small Potatoes attached to | where ees — t will have £ 
tes, in which | seems it! But my object for writing now is, that the | siderably and allowed t ure to 
daa a * e san 2 ee — a = no by a and — posas of peeling moreover will not wii À 
* je to com- N which is rea e most profit- th hich is 
municatea mode of entrapping them, 9 able er Whether u in \indiffesent-whioh ic used. before cooking, —.— out of the o question deep 
~ 8 years, eat oy I have already planted for this purpose. I have em- by which the most fari part of 
0 a 2 eee of an average see of 4 02. These he hog tub. If a in a ete ing OP 
had been p in a warm room, and every productive | a i inni ishin 
n e h (which h ouelit t MEE | — ing had s forth its Ghana gira an e eee cer 2 hour 
of light tin opening, eld r) closed 45 a or faller ge of eight 3 5 These have been are wanted, and put into an oven, where they e 
eal OF aa. bottle course, in rer into — in alternate row without manure, hot; Potatoes are best sent to t 
_— about an inch, an — pee al which bore a a erop of "Mangold last year, after havin d ckets for the | keep them longer hot 5 
ol dso the top s to another p iani ee ai jaeren oe sonia skins peel oi of y with the 
e a J 
— smeh n Daile a. igoe oF ang or wire Thej araea aas rows, e it une 


‘Regents, from the same. all 
the large tubers, of the average net of half ana — Sees ed my meted — — 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 103 


8 8.99 eties deed, it is considered superior to it for the washing of m the supply of plants in bloom at the Winter-Garden 
Sorte le Tre surer in | wo woollens. J believe it is rightly named the Lechuguilla. | must age an A rob the other m and hot- 
i or Loxpon, Feb —The nd her This singular shrub, which is to be pee et with o n the | ae uses of t ae 3 the plants were never 
Panoh . rions — to the prs = 3 - | prairies, but where it never grows to any considerable before exhibite the same advantage. We must 
ae nd six ne m size, consists of a trunk, very a strmounted by a | particulari ise tiat extraordinary plant of the Hima- 
13 ae bur from Mr. H. Watson, Mr d. fine head of stiff leaves, each of which is shoni 24 feet layas, the Arum cordatum, the singular flower of which, 
urchas, and Mr h 0 00%- in length, and armed at the end with a long Thorn. though fast shrivellaig p, displays the remarkable 
— distinguis i 1 The 3 project from the stalk on ell gts nd set | fro miniature leopard’s skin of russet and gold, 
Ke., were exhibite ted. Among them close as possible, and are of a dark green ype fully. a 23 t in length. Fhe iter te spaces, which 
Hieracium alpinum, with the ane The flower is white and very pretty. As each year’s in most conservatories, are given up to atmospheric 
i i vacuity, are, in the houses of the ia aang Garden, 


kity 
af 


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F 


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8 111 
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species; ae i fire i 
which the character and position Se plied, flash up like pics agi and burn with a bright | water-glass, and worsted sy phon One o 
were widely different from their ordi- light; Our night marches could be marked, by their | crimson Camellia, of two years’ standing, is a thrivi 
d s, which, as the nights were ei 3 ihe plant for such airy quarters. The coup d 
my in — were comfort able), were cheeri I ha y the spacious — parengs, along which the principal 
— articular in — this 5 * 3 ee | | flower ing specim rranged in a stand, beside the 
— one er its many uses—of the leaves ti 1 attorinated pillars of ae iron 7 g the 
or oblong, erect, and natives make their hats ; ; 4 80, when dressed like hemp, roof, forms a magnificent vista. N exhibited 
distantly one below an other, the lowest it is formed into ropes and sacks, 23 ijo he immense tact in facing the tes * hes 8 by 
beneath the e terminal ie spike. 3 tu wn as Manilla-hemp, though coarser. | which means he not only calculates 3 preserving the 
a had grown in Mr. Watson's garden on a root * plants have a singularly provoking quality; plants longer in bloom, but on affording a more unin- 
Carex atrata, brought from the Grampians a few bi from 2 to 8 feet in height, they will assume to aC te Hight to the public arcade, pom glazed oTe 
eye, in the twilight, the most deceptive forms. To with panes of large size, without burning the plants 


e 
i a 1 
ve ae 
TRE 

TSE 

t e 
LESES 
Sra B E 

8 3 

D — 

8 8. 3.4 
meee 
Ogs” 

a Sp 

25 3.5 
PTER 
+g 

288 82.5 
Brag 

ve 8 5 
Bar 8 7 


pi 


re a sentinel they will appear as forms of men 10 and with . glass (as now 3 of n Del in 
Estoworoctcal, Feb. 5.— oe —— —.— exhibits 3 | many a see eee oad has run the chance of England), since the south and other parts of the struc- 
wait A sentry’s shot, ion not answering to the e of ae . whic 1920 sun i raysare to 1255 are = 
Who goes ther with small pieces, ne contractor, Mr. Drummond o 
recently ie: and oie 3 ke erer, a The — of i American Aloe at Santa Cruz is Canonmills, has great credit in his handiwork, as the 
Mr. Westwood also exhibited specimens of different from what it is related to be in Mexico Proper : ; building, fra mies, sashes, &., are fitted up in a style of 
eee : 8 idee “ In order in the liquor from this Aloe, the | airy elegance impossible to be surpassed, and inv ested 
ect cimen leaves are cut off level with the ground, and the root is | with all the means and appliances of modern 1 on, 
dug up. The latter is about the size and ane of a 5 ea ating or m guar 15 te get amane 

l insi uar + bowl and is of a dry woody texture; but, on | three-gable ure on the top o reen kno 
of eo kand D — . avy, ae Nr. ioe piled în 1 kaeni; 5 3 it becomes very | fronting the Fie eo H:I), has a aa pae ls fine 
Me Ws > stated that it was customary for many juicy and te of a sweet taste The roots are | appearance. See n from behin nd the Jo dge, at the 
ater —— to be develope d at the close of the | then pressed, po liquor 3 to ferment; after | forcing house, it appears imposing from its elevation of 
8 cocoons till De ation, it resembles b in appearance, and site. It ought to be generally known, that, although 

Oo ga ve an ome ewhat in tast W G 


ct 


te, but a little sm oky, a and is called on all other ‘days of the week the Winter Garden, and 

Mr. Ha e s It is drunk very extensively by the lower se ed ntal Garden generally, are open only to 

of specimens of Ptinus fur nin galvauie classes. Prom the pulque m is distilled a clear, | m _ ers of the tera Horticultural Society and 
a í imi in | colourless liquor, of a e, rid ane on rning taste, |t 

‘ch the 8 . $ ns which i a ie inne al. It is only fit a Mexican to ay. every week the whole a re now thrown open to 

in 151 i ; i reer ean do it Sica win 3 — t I shall never ‘ t 

Mr. Stainton 1 65 net 3 N forget a glass of it which I swallo Au at San Rosalia, 1 attract crowds ü the os „until the opening of 
and Mr. Douglas, portion of a chest of opium from — 8 and whi ch 7 ee, of an extra good quality. It 

s t half down my throat, in town even on ay in 42 week, Mr. Evans, 

-the leaves _ had been attacked by the larve of a 2 to draw my tongue half way ge 7 Mix. M‘Nab in the charge of this 


and took breath a r an ins i It th win now ats 
een Cas a * first and last shale: of ene I ever dra garden, will, therefo re, have a re sponsible ask before 
and Mr, Gould gave an account of a species o ar eoceus| Agricultural Condition.—“ The gen end pppesrapos him, in sustaining the credit of the Society through the 
jich lives v theEucalypti in New Helland. aid which of the country has not been previously me oned. um of an open 12 d exhibiti “4 3 1 2 W. 


en b parro atu The whol tent of wbat we had travelled —— h, believe, the resources at his command w und 
even by tie 1 es eee 8 ex ani — i the banks of streams, is of the ick adequate to the undertaking. From the Scottie pre: 
read by Mr. Wilson, a correspon Maries of the | barren description, being principally ja e 2 a | cultural Journal, Jan. 3 
Society, Mr. Whit hard yellow clay, so poor that, in most places, Grass F 
spiders eolleeted i * e singular . cannot be raised. I have travelled more griep hundred Miscellaneous 
miles at a time without E sufficient Grass to fur Dy. Mackay.—We learn wh uch pleasure 
y Mr. Dalla, e | nish my horse with a meal, and without aitti with a | that 2 author ties of Trinity — Pee have 
Cimieide Bootan, in the East Indies, and another by stone as large as a pebble. e roads, except in a few | conferred the degree of L. L D. u E Mackay, 
Mr. W. W. Saunders, on the tailed species of Erycinidee, places where they happen to cross mountains, are ex- | the Curator sete Botanic rev oo and 0 3 al 


te 


Were read ; the beautiful little erfli i | cellent, being as Basis and — as a floor. The land Irish a 
the named p are any Of South — iy 8 can only be cul vated just along the banks of the Sale of Orchids.—The following is some account of 
streams ; and dane the fer tility of the soil 3 repays the prices eee by the Orchids which were brought 
the farmer, as the erops do not stem aust ae to the hammer on Tuesday last by Mr. Stevens: 
4 round. Many farmers wor e same per ars | Vanda suavis (fine specimen) fetched 11/. ; Vanda tri- 


Rebiews. 
8 in = Mer ico with Colonel enian, or more, without spreading upon it a particle of . color (ditto), 6l. ; a new Java Saccolabium, 7/. ; other 
2 8vo. Hodson. Pp. 134, and The seasons are also favourable to the husbandman. | plants of the same from 24. to 4l. ; Saccolabium Blumei 
R ‘ne ’ 


a re. > Phaleenopsis pas ora (g 
. Ti Beas 3 3 15 5 foray of Missouri was in January, the inhabitants were Me m specimen), 5/. 5 s.i Aerides mya (ditto), 3/. 3s. 5 am 
i Aeri i t 


New Mexico, f the doings of some sowing corn. I have no doubt that, were the Mexi 2 
upon Pa or 88 — 355 so excessively 1. ca . produce amy tiing free flowering, 3l. 5s. ; a new ava A ides, 3/. 5s. $ 


fee 


5 and of anot r 
in which one major was really killed should, setting to work to remedy 2 they . call e Loblianum, II. 16s ; Angreeeum 
is, therefore, a piece of American fan- on Hercules; in other words, fall upon their knees at gg.; other aie from 7s. to 11. The total eee, tof 
harmless. production of one who does not the altar before the priest, tell hin how unfortunate es was 324l. 2s. 6d. for 154 lots. 


i ut it co i the a blessin m Sa encore an eee Tamer 
S the country and its vegetable pro- in blessedne The inhabitants produce Maize, Oats, Calendar of Operations. 
for which reason we notice it. Wheat, Onion: Melons, Grapes, and several other (For the ensuing week ) 
en little of New Mexico, except from travellers | fruits. I never saw any Potatoes, although, as we) — „ PLANT DEPARTMENT, c mo 
natural history, until the collection of know, it is currently said that the root grows wild in| PLANTS LE blot «mies y 
Fe plants, which have not yet been |the southern parts of Mexico. I have seen as fine | examined at green once a week, guided their 
w 0 


shoo a t l 
dener will read wit ¢ "IPRA í uP nd occasionally tying an, equ A caret 
a ee a ae 0 ry sized daes N N renee interest in his work, will notice 
p The bye can owns the mill and Gare den Memo oranda. 
ing of these is paid in syrup.| Tux Epixn NTER GARDEN, INVERLEITH-ROW. ds befor 
ne to the n assembles his neighbours, an, M‘ Nab will Pits galés the charge of the Experi- r. Another portion of 
‘it 3 the mill, places the stalks, cut into | mental Grounds of the Caledonian Horticultural Soe ociety eae 8. F arid oe i i Oe no mae 5 
n 


behin K 2 ill now be rea 
: a heavy mallet, n breaks his attention to the apni of public oe i for poti ing off, Let them all be put. at once into — 


on them, ents. Boiling water is | Floriculture, in the t Jaa P hich th are to ‘flower, as no family of 
prh apa is put into a| from his or raul designs by 1 —— Demonia, as con- pod pee nmen Shey ad ude itait 
>in trough; into this a plug is | tractor, on the summit level of epotiing. If they ate treated em- 
the — oan le fixed.at.one end | for the first time in ecken fashionable "promena mended, they will tiako growth proportionate to the size 
people getting upon this lever, | similar to the Jardin D’Hiver at Paris. of the pot, and then work themselves into Ea Bow ering 

lee poured into.carthen | this new “temple of Flom lett Satarday, por state One of the effects oi the opposite method is 


rr 
e furnace kept burning tions of the intended quadrangle, 126 feet hiig pe Se eee e tamorphose à *. 
Rho- | small sealy bulos. They are most usefu gr 
in a brisk bottom heat with a =e supply of top 3 
an invitation to the of th Sone rubs, an exotic plants, — we could | 45 they make sturdier, better shaped plants than when 
ty Where they are regaled with h —— have anticipated in the dead sea Mr. grown in a close "n es the . pe sides 1 pe! pris . 
à pee s ex lamed that, with a view to the . ot better enabled to endure the cold curren e- 
We We trat met, on this part of the | the promenace, this pro: fusion. of bloom had conservatory and other places where oe are g rot yi 
ol Palm called by us Soap-weed, | brought on by "a and to this might probably be s oak 1 1 xi unte a N y Fe e soft- 
Al 4 ; buted ont em hi - Waage 
tr e eee . le ats 8 e ee be placed i in a moderate bottom heat for a week or two 


* 


104 THE 


CHRONICLE. 


(Fes. 17, 


et EE 


Petore putung, to set the roots in motion; this will pre- 
them to take immediate advantage 0 of the 


3 
vAN lurking about 
FORCING G DEPARTMEN 
action, having their roots “outside, must be 


A ste 
ntained, as nothing | is more -e 
emn arsan Aron nd 
„be considered befo: 


rete for oring comm 
mand will te 


The iran” whieh roy into the pa 
be al allowed 


y 
5 


roo's and 
27 require; any ct ely ii te 
— after that 2 should be emptied out. 

HARDY eb eee. 


to 
— smothers any insects or eggs which 
them | the 


d there- | 


HEN peser s DEN. 


er 5 e alternate 


who posse 
Onion, should slash! rosa now, in good gro 
8 inches apart ; they are 1 polite me will be 


Any Peaches or Nectsrines cn the open walls, which f 
have any show for fruit, shon 5 be protected, if this for so d of wn Tripoli 
thas not yet been attended mong the espalier Onions should now be sas 6 5 inche 8 aga in rieh 
fruit trees, the flower-buds 7 many of the hardier | “ il, for Midsummer use ; these should be secured in 
Kinds have swelled very much during the late mild their pl by closing the soil about the roots, not 
weather ; protection from frost will ne bout the bulbs, the ageri of which should always rest 
these during the sharp ther which we may yet on the surface of the soil. The small button Onions 
expect, For this purpose nothing! is better or pty which were sown very ikl — autumn should 
than Spruce cr Yew branches, which are a on- | be transplanted it me the ground is 

rable service in Fotitdink tha opening of Aie blos- | 800d without being o ' r these di 
soms until the time of year is more favourable for their | SPeeimens bya n Vegetables, <a for seeding, 
safe developmen e amongst bush fruit should now be plant er 3 it ns, where t 
should be forked over, taking to injure the surface 3 ensily be prote n birds w their seed is 
Toots as little ible, as the fertility of th ripening: the 3 2 ae se will be Onions, Leeks 
depends mainly upon these. The Strawbe e lery, Chicory, Carrots, Brussels Sprouts, or Broc eoli 
should also be looked ver; the d leaves and runners State of pod mien rg London, for the week cong rtd Feb. 15, 1819, 

5 the plants thinned when they require it, a observed at the Horticultural Garden „ Chiswick, nk 
some dry usted in amongst them, to destroy} pe. meal Bano IEE. I, Laine amas? | Wind. | Rain. 
* ae tod duz the spaces between the rows Should ~~ | Max. | Min. N 

FLO RDEN AND SHRUBBERIES. aus | a7 a se 7 2 1 . <0 

Propagatin sykt hardy plants shonld n e going ESIE 2} 19 0 78 | se || da | ar | aaa || SW 00 

on with nctivit . Instead of the old e customary method J PT aver E th ar) a tote w £0 

of potting off the young stuff intended for n the | Thurs. ...15 | 30:519 | 30.491 || 67 43 || Ww. 0 

summer, it will be found more eco 3 Average.. | 20.697 | 90,574 |l 40.4 | R3 | 38,0 || EEI 
A into of nice soil, co — sencya one: Feb. 9—Fine; overcast overcast at night, X 

l (fro old Me'on hed), 2 flaky W—Overeart; clear: alig ‘a ih t frost, (high, 

ery 


kooro overe 3 —.— r at night. 
temperature ‘of the week 4 pty above the avera 
The — was higher on the lith than it has been since Feb 7 7. 1798. 


om 
ing to the sid = the plant and the length of time State of the Weather at Chiswick during rhe last 23 years, for the 
which will in before they are planted out. See 
-r a 12 55 ‘oe sharp trowel down the soil, 22 2 883 ee ve of | Greatest | Peralliug Winds. 
e once or twi Feb, @2| Sse | Ejes ity Toe 
ime, their roots w ented 8 E Žas RE 2a ahea of Rain || Eh EEEE 
each other, and when required for planting out they rf -n7 ae F F 
will lift with nice balls of fibro ir Mon ee 
must nds AET ues 2 9 A 4 5 
: in by timely and periodical Wed. 2] 47 23.1 | 400 13 920 2 : 3 1 be nas fe 
stopping. that these plants will | Thurs 2 63 | 347 | 422) — 0.29 445 — 28 4— 
occupy as much space under a glass as two or three z 2 wa | as laal a | Sok L2 Be 928 
thumb pots will; b 1 am also satisfied that when highest temperature during the above period ion che Sa 
turning out season arrives, one of the pl 1816—therm. 19 deg.; and the Jowest on the 19th, 1315—therm, 16 deg. i 
ended w worth i or 
things N * si piles cite Back 3 8 . 
: ’ NUMBER ARDEMERS’ Caro 
the of wateri . sse ned inquiri es rerpeo:ing — Numbers, the  pabicher be Begs to Wey 
I a ju 4 t} = any of the following may be had. Any subscriber w hb 
8 FLORISTS’ FLOWER hin ne ard postage stamps n e fo ae many mimbers 
NUNCULUSES.— Plant the first Ta vourable 1 copies of the volume for 1847 ure still on baud, price 05. 
Sa p that is to W the soil of the bed is d — — volume for 1818, _ 30s. Gd. each. The 
e are not particular to a week, but the ae ret ate mere ere rete 
eti irections have been followed little will ee » 8, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 22, 23, 24, 26, 27, 28, 
Lep: levelling the bed and plantin 1642.45 Ae ox 12,16. ei 
e ting; 3, 4, 5. 10, 6,17, 18, 20, 21, 31, 32, 34, 39, 
we prefer opening enches in which the bulbs are 4134343 16 47 13.20 
lanted e er — an ineb. Our usual 22 3 54, 50, cite tee 23 41 24 25, eee a 
is to put the small roots of old varieties i 0 
2 ght 2 arieties in a bed 1 „2 8, 4, 5. 6, 7. 8, 5, 10 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 1 
themselves, which will make bloomers for the next 19 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 25, 30, 81, 32, 34, 35, 37, 
our reader 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 48, 4 , 51, 52 
, Our readers who have saved their ` 1845], 2, 3, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 14.1. 131 
gn ing ts during the winter must now put them in; | 21, 23, 25, 27, 28, 31, 33, 39, 40, 41, 44, 45, 2 8 5 is sac 
ey have not prev grown them it will be neces 1846—4, 5, 6, 7, 10, 11, 12, 13, ah 15, 16, 17, 18, 20, 22.23. 26, 
to plant them at least 4 apart; some advo- 20 30, 42, 4 3051 
tate: i k e, 11, 13, 14, 18, 75 21, 22, 
fer | he 9 5 moan 8 N 
A , 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 
5, 26, 27, 28 „ 30, 32, 33, 34, 36, 36, 37, 
5, 51, 52, 
ould be grown in a rich sunny soi 
— during the isons season, "ater 
h the su of water in order to 
either of a e fra bate it req nee 


wed 2 Ke. 
ae 3 * on 


wireworm 


care- 
eal 38 is orth a 
moro wate G pat rh worth a shiling, 
occasions, 


air on all 


ach side of the rows of | 


what sorts of sh 

aay sata stg ef eokgnectlors 
shorn, ords much bloom, co 

— Btn 3 shrubs it — ar e 


Privet, Soe, 


— 
ooseberries, an 
ri Wood Sage me Willow Her 
good goon. Aol a We 


k, gt hanes 


rb. Tt is 


RB 
. — 
swarms into hives 750 with 8 
cannot recommend dealers in bees. 


ax is extracted from the comb: 7a 
— — sufficient water to prevent 3 from burg Mg 
the bag with a spoon, in order to extract the contents’ pres 
he wax into Ae water. $ 


Box, Mezercon, Apricot, 3 and C w, Tree 

Chickweed, Dandelion, an Pia W.— “Goran aa 

taken from the hive may be pemn in the k for 

— way time, provided they ~ squeezed, but 12 
ept in a a lesson fs oh 

taken om. 1 way in which anig is cook in the e hive, the 


= com mbs Sona be he ese in a place which ig 
cold. If possible, try to 
bees in — old hive, 3 Ke tea the swarms from it, by 
will obt ain the benefit of the brood, which yo 
utumn is t 
bees from the old hive, when they may be unite i 
ock. More 8 next pisse Some London dealer a 
— give 2s. lb. for very pur e honey i in the comb, bat 
half that sum fs about the common price. 
Binps: A B C. Thei 
vessels of metal, because of 
apt to form. Oxide of zinc is poisonous. 
and earthenware are not open to this objection, . 
Canary Crash Groundscl, Millet, Quinoa, or 


Chenopod. 
HURCHYARDS ant Yews, Hollies, Weeping Mi 
A illyreas, common Sea s, common Junipers, Juniper 
xcelsa, Arbor-vit~, and Cedars, and all such things are 
owers, but possess a aep ev 


not form gay 
Cy Soyo if they w yo 
= shes, for a reason which your me- tical i eddies will explain 
— 
88 eee If . H.” has any of t the seed of ſhe 
montana whieh he we Had K = a 
un 


1 25 W 
R. — that no clue 


CUMBERS : 
spectable seedsman. e cann t Ne aa 

DISBUDDING: 185 is very long, and has be 
Jite. We by: see what can be done with it. 


F ANN : L. Nemophila insignis and maculata, lin. 
tonia pulehell a, Phlox Apa — (pegged iowa) Giba — 
‘tricolor, Leptosiphon dens Limnanthes 
eas grandiflora, Clarkia pulcella, and perhap! 

The abo or ill possibly ae 1 

on the of the soil vou 

i red e stronger aed “taller in rich than $ 
H. You will find such a list 2 


us. 
however ores 
Ti 


EP, The byeword, Sufolk 
Monarch, and plus eels Pears; and t 
Washington ty Roy rale Hative Plums will per = sult 


— . soil. U 
2 As: A Learner. They should be starting into growth 
ncourage them by war rmth and mo oistu 
. A Learner. We have the very same 
fore us, and very curious it is. Qur plant is perfectly b . 
something t i 


ofa species mille epe ede 
puai — extensively 
ochin 


d of gat, i 
winged fly (Platyura sp. globules 
- W.—Sh Carro 


sec ac 

natus), and has nothing to the former, Gastar 

water may be obtained at gas-wo Lime is better 

han common salt for eer wW . oe 
Ligon Manuas : uid is ee 21 


or, if yen 
charcoal, pak 8 any such matter ; 
compost that ng De ass ca ee . — e 

wherever manure is are the 
Names oF Fruits TH Not known; you may compare, ver 

tree and — with the Dutch Mignonne. D. Parsons. 
like the Syke House Russet. || 2 

NAMES OF ast. 5 Trapa bicornis, a water 
statement you make is inexp 2 


—R 8 Yates. 8 3 
We have a strong | 
the 1 


OTA TOES: H T. The 

the 8 z further information. 

that your case would come within 

proposed, — you could supply 

iad pani 8 ven are material only in a very sr 
Frrir TRE Your let 


A i 
wani to Mr. Rivers 
To Keer RABBITS FROM BARKING TREES: W S 
with milk, or butter-milk, till as thick as paini, am 
| dry day, is said to answ 


—— as a 2 
og ‘thet have 


s In riii idea b the month, however, ee 
a — e guided by the state of the seaso 
STATES pis t aware that there is 


Hasse We are n 28 
83 about ee Gardenin 18 t is carried probe 
pirit and success near the princ leit re an i 
that in England we are n x ance, pe 


5 


We are unable to answer your other q on 
— the plant to which | 


eee is —— 
ra no tubers in this country at 2 


* Theory of of Horticulture” is 123. 


yy 


* 


4 


THE 


ntity is taken 


Pa o 
it to be fully equal dam If a qua 


nials. 


specific 8 arrangement m made. 
7 5 F in apa i 


is Faraid d at 
if requir ed. 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


105 


Tas THE FOLLOWING MANURES are Brion pert 
at Mr, Lawes’ Factory, Deptford C 
MA 4 


CORN AND GRASS MANURE, ... a r ton £9 10 0 
CLOVER MANURE 0 
TURNIP MANI 75 7 0 0 
SUPERPHO*PHATE OF LIM > 7 0.0 

5 0 0 


SULPHURIC ACID AND COPRO LITES ; 
UV GUANO, from selected cargoes (in Doek), 


t 8 
beten -road N — anona 
pure.— 

G U 7 No AN 4 5 
e „ 
DA * AND POTA 
A (SULPHATE OF EIME). 

rg St (win k. DESTROYER). n onl . 
TE OF LIME (made from nly 

e LIT, and all other Manures of] chow 

1 201 — Thames-street, Lon London. 

L MANUR 


OTHER NURES 
of the finest quality, direct from 


n arrangemen 
oyal Polgtechic Ins tit ution, London, 
tain 75 to . ek igi 
ntir rely new a 


B: 
O 


year: th —— ag be ‘Gand to possess far greater A 
will, e g 5 
s hit! herto of 15 2 eg e public, which, 
t. under the price 


thes crops which so fr requently 
from the ravages of the fy 1 other insects are in a grea 
measure ed, yep sata are particularly recom- 
mended to use tog Ryan’s Garden Manures” for general pur- 
8 age free, to any part of the kingdom, at 

- £510 0 


"Por top dressing per ton. 
3 Barley, Oats, Hops, or any 


; 4 o 

n ne Su uperpho sphate of Lim 

Nitrate of Soda, Gypsum, Rough Bone Sulphuric Acid, ‘ke. 5 
tested by their 1 at lowest market pri 


5 Oilca 


MANURE. COMPANY beg to 


Tur LONDON” 
offer as under. 
bart va e sabre 8 CORN 8 


97. 10s. per ton SULPHATE OF AMMONTA, Ke. 
ffice, 69, King Willi 
CHEAP AND DURABLE “ROOTING: 
BY HER ROYAL LETTERS 
MAJESTY’S PATENT, 


M‘NEILL anp Co., of Lami: buildings, Bunhill- 
* row, Lordon, the Manufacturers and only erm of 
THE A tg FELT FOR ROOFIN 
Bu eer tee Bis orkshops, 5 — Garden 
purposes, to pr otso: Plants 
A oe National Agvieultdival Shows, it is this Felt 
on tht been exhibited and obtained two SILVER MEDAL 
PRIZES, adi is the Felt SOLELY paroni and A adopted by 
HE — * s Woops AND For 
HoN NOURABLE BOARD ed ORDINE 
HONOURABLE EAST INDIA COMPANY, 
HONOURABLE 3 
HER Breage ce s ESTATE, ISLE oF 5 
Roya BOTANIC GARD ENS, REG 
And on the E Bs tates of the Dukes of Sutl rid "Norfolk, Rut- 
land, Newcastle, Northumberland, Buccleuch (at Richmond), 
the 


the late arl Spencer, and most of obility and Gentr: 
and at — OYAL PE A SocrETx's Hodin; Hanover: 
square 

It is e price of any other description of Roofing, and 


effects a great saving of Timber i in ae construction of Roofs. 
any le 


Made to ngth by 32 inches w 
ice NE PENNY — SQUARE Foo 
* Sample es, with Directions for its Use, oak “Testimonials 
of seven years’ experience, with references to Noblemen, Gen 
tlemen, Architects, and Builders, sent free to any part of the 
town or country. and order s by post executed. 


The Public is saone that the only Works in London 
or Great Britain where the above Roofing is made, a: 
F. M‘NEILL AND CO.’S 
ene buildings, Bunhill-row, 
h the Felt may be seen, 
ntrance | to West- 


Patent Felt Manufactory, 
London 


The new Vice-Chancellor’s Orte at the e 
minster Hall, were roofed with M‘Nerur 
tw un he Surv eyorsbip of 


cons. Barry, Esq., 
ds and Forests are 


f Pa 
Quantity altogether 3 24,000 f. 
consumers sendin ng direct to the Factory can be sup-. 


their = It. 
No 
plied i ia i best su! ted to their Roofs, so that they pay for 


8 PHOSPH 

m Importer: ores — kere and | 
sum for PEN T Soda Ash for destroying | 
nure 


Guano, direct fro 


Peruvian 
ever, evens Ga 

The London iiye pany di al particular attention 
to their Corn cae re ed Urate, the 5 containing a large 
amount of Ammonia, Phosphates, and Silicates, all so essen- 
tial for corn crops, while the Urate is richer in Phosphates and 


other mineral substances tt grad forr 
8 rs and jp erka warded an ‘application. 
Purser, Secretary, 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, 


PERUVIAN AND D BOLIVIAN * ON SALE, 


ANTONY Y GIBBS ah SOM! 
rA ONS, I 

WILLIAM JOSEPH MYERS an > 60. oTIVERPOOL; 

y their ksenia, 

„ LIVERPOOL and BRISTOL; 

LL, AND PRYOR, „LONDON. 

N against the 

“i uriou oe s Guano, “purchasers are recom- 

the above-named im * hed eh Bilan 

porters, who wi 1 1 

* i l supply the artic 


inju: 


le in any 
delivering it from ihe Import 


mn l 


k-s 
ae d DOUBLE 
i BOILERS, . — solicit the i of 
Scientific de Feat their much improve od of 
ae pe fhe Tani 8 to 3 Propagating “Houses 
Fand er any as well as botto at is 


degree without ih i 
S ii — to state that at eaid of pipes or — 


rm wel i known, sear 
* * them * 1 ospeetuses will 
rene pe he highest ret or 
eries th ut the 155 ty's seats and pri neipal 
p., des to inform the Tr. rade that at thei Manufae 
ee required for enn 


t ot 
as well as for heating * — = = 
cah, . giron oF Wo 5 
* r 2 the most 
ck. ee Conies, r? E Field a and Garden 


PATENT, 


ae Z 
) YNDON yuk Works, Birmingham, 


e of Patent SPADES, SHOVELS, and 
the des will be f. arden and Agricultural Labourers, 


d 
labour found 8 and e oh lat 
3 í bd d 
e 
Auel bright un on the surface = 


coming generally 
rymen, Market-gardeners, 
Tools gained tw two 
Prizes at the Royal Agric 
bs 85 held at Northampton n, 1847, 8 
3 fro 


ls are being nie t aled Im- 
hovels, Soa and 1 3 
enuine un be 
ete = eee 


pattern peeing, Potato, Manure, 


| noticed. the existence of two — — s — in the 


Pattern, and adapted for. every de. 
all Ironmongers in the kingdom, | 


N 


f Roofs, or 


any 53 partindlar l of the F 
Pen ND CEMENT. ~ Testimonials received from- 
all qua s prove this T to posse i Ramis As ro- 
perty of e the severest frost, and to sequently 
superior to every other for anora purposes. sich a bonding 
and linivg of Reservoirs, C s, Fish-pon nds, &c. For 
external —— and aaae a . — it requires nei bed 
colour nor paint. It never — and will carry from three 
to four times 15 own body and. 
1 . By te and Sons, Milbank-street, 

Westminster 


The „Agricultural Gazette. 


N DAT, FEBRUARY 17, 


MEETIN ua gon THE TWO TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
Tursp = —ꝗ— 3 Society of England. 
THURSDAY, Bree ultural Tmn, Society of — 
TUESDAY, 2 — ree ultural Society of England. 
Tu DAY, 20—Agrieultural Imp. "a —. of Ireland. 
2 Cruas —Feb. 22: Dariington.—¥eb. Botley.—March 1: 
Ottery St. Mary. 
As it is satel that a 3 OF THE 
Bocs Anp Mountain Tracts ge ELAND by the pro- 
rietors is remunerative, we re our 


readers one case in partic 
which are of the most rae: cate ee nature t that can 


motion of his object, th 

ore beneficial ‘results would follow from similar 
opestions, undertaken under ordinary or average 
disadva: antages. 
About ei ight bind ago, Lord Grorcr HII, brother 


of the late Marquis of Downsurre—who, Pi 
being one of the most extensive, was also one of the 
kindest * most judicious of the Irish la nd pro- 
prietors—purchased some estates in the wildest parts 


0 north-west of Donegal. The gloom 
of the ner in that district, however attractive for 
ete visit by the painter or the poet, is one 
of the least likely to tempt obleman, an 
h station 20 erana to become 


he purchaser and improver of it. Indeed, excepting 
e western porti of aS, d, perhaps, some 
tracts of the county of 7e think that 
ord Grorcr HILL ave selected, throughout 
Ireland, for his patriotic and generous labours, a more 
discouragi ct of soil, or a more uncivilised 
etched ten of 3000 souls, than the portion of 
the parish of Tudlaghobegly which h e the 
field of his lordship's successful experim 


e 5 ole 
vey,cont 
of Shéh In e tract vee are not 20,000 acres ap- 
of which the entire 
3 Bes 


parish, according to the armes sur- 
la 


year 
s Topographical Dictionary o 


parish. 


els byegone barbarisms, national habits, o 


e his al, 
bing the yenti of Tullaghobegly 2 7 
of the English language, with the usual oeaiei: 


obli ige us to omit 
— ble details, and to insert those only which have 


“pen — beeni compiled from notes by Lord GRonen 


nces with an authentic copy of a memo- 


rial hich } had been forwarded by a country school- 


master, named Patrick M‘Kys, to the Lord Lieute- 

nt of ivelad In 1837. hie 1 though 
not unexceptionable in sty gra 4 n- 
icated as to facts by competent authorities, and it 

a gem far more ee of preservation in 
national archives, than many of the curious, Tyron 
matical, ill-spelt, offic — documents, which, f 

e to tim e, have been rummaged out of old recor d 
bureaus 1 7 ‘the seekers of lite erary hs poet: to 


ed 
8 a case, local destitution and mis sery. fet be 
ot find, even among the scholar-like and kigik 


Sport sof such men as Spenser and 5 Bouter, 
anything m 
the star relict mise 
Celtic Irish i 
a orem — of Mr. Pamir M Kye, who 


re graphic or more in poin 
and sa 
in their secluded dens, 


r for 
— 


appeoa 9 
udi 


ments, and without extra charge—an income by no 
means excessive, when it is taken into account that 
he had seven children and a wif port out 

0 


cat to which we are referring will pr shably bé looked 


aper, a century hence, as of apocryphal 2 even 
in Ireland, as it w 


vill be consi — at this 


d 
of the Ir 
memorialist proceeds to state to the doubtless i 


‘intivek ave nom 


with one rake.” After 

of general es nasi 
“ready to e 
the flesh of ee en 
energetic 
excepting the 
par 


and mistakes in parts of the g 

can yet have no 

was in a dreadful state of wretchedness, that bot 

the moral and physical condi 

was pang Spi in nest aga z when Lord 
ure 


QQ 
2 


peinge herded in one end and the 
in the other), there were acta of dung, 
from 1 to 30 cwts., clea 


that district “ w 


bern which 
proprietor c dol 

pare n resolutely, — ve „ 
duce and 


my grandeur 


who act as agent for 
picket m 5 and w athatagetna: ta no receip pts 


geese, 
stables, six cow-houses, one n 
one 
three watches, eight 
above 3d. in oie; no boots, no do sat 


Potatoes ty 5 * no 


8 
the school-house, the priest's 
the epee 


The pamphlet entitled “ Facts from Gweedore,” 


him to shoot 2 a . tenant 
over the pound wall. 


4000 5 in the western division of Tullaghobegly. 


merating the entire stock“ of this — 
m its heterogeneous charact re, 


s 
ish oats shopkeeper in days o 


ished cage om w majesty at Dublin, that t 
ae s rong their land but 
small, that 


y 
me soul Pomme details 
oor B p r 
e in the j of — 
memorialist bold! 

landlords and lan 
rish, to contradict any part of his s atem 
With a 0 exaggeration 
going statement, we 


Hoobt that the district in k — 


tion e inhabitants 


nd rtake 


ned out once a year. 
melo-dramatic ere of ve prince 

w ade us laugh 
we E prese to the m 
t himself. 


aving the 


irly t 
much to individual e or apathy, as to the sys- 
held i which no one 
he 


ferro was pre- 


d gra ‘le. with 
ek, 


priest, no other resident pe tleman, no 
brass candlesticks, no looking 

fruit trees, no Turnips, 
vegetables but 
than 10 square feet € 

Jass in windows in the whole, wiih the exerption of the op 
n’s house, an 

“None of either ‘wars ied — 
e than on and ae fewest 

n 

£ 


o Carro r, or any other ve 


no Parsnips, 


— rrack. 
married women afford mor 


4 Sad of 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


2 ke t, arr 
es 2 


. c 


— 


gra 

ter, alternately affordi 

te amusement an and s À 
sensibilities, 
1 were of the worst kind, the i 
ds of Seotlan 
anxious landlord, the late Colone 
. Ernan’s, 


t pedestria 


They are Tat alo not only to a £ 

shearing once a year, mt 

partial, ‘clippings’ at all se 

was making up stockings 

and became short of eo» 

sheep or was 
— a 


— would 
er 


racious travellers 


ices in favour of the prevailing mode o 
It is a singular ci 


stance 
arfact which can only be accounted for by the Ara 
ich the natives pursued. Pigs, thou 
and ref 


ing 

the natives—not the a laiak, but 

8 our prese consideration had no 
tions. They ledi + nomadic life of a 


life, substituting, however, for the * tent 
eithe 


fo 


which had n 


~ another upon the 
aoe an island, 

from Ayti 10 — — of these habit 
o the seasons, bans as the 

ted food. 


the 
tations,” ac- 


ears of apr 
case 0 

ng with him 1 
ed. When 


ng us ex- 
rise, or affecting our 


da fein 


p were more e in | 4 
exer- | i 


s. Thus, if a woman 
— mi a th fair, 
is 


nang no sda pas there- 
seri as it otherwise would 


reum- 
t there were no pigs upon the property, 


erence to 
e the cabin floor with their human 
travel- 


e 


„the eno -= piers 


family 
caile 5 requ paer 


e; and in this plight 


sions of 

er (or — — in 

expresses the extent of 

‘ e for or its 
ty 


b rtgage, instead of money 1 on 
— . 7 e people, being left t them- 


hat was 


85 pis pon Ftd the 
ed 


— avery “ ” man t them. On 

of this may be 2 — half an acre . 
held by 26 le 

pres dp es eE before us, which Captain 

v. secretary for the land commission, ha 

l 


r | held ots i 
Roat 5 81 
aai holdings 
ment of a a iape 
seeing what was ‘sor 
r | outraged. They had 


c An rran 
consolidated the 3955 under the dif- 
But 3 * 


een in the habit of subdividing 
pom! anig, * api two, when a pig i was co 
par 9 o as many times tw 
ualities of — in boa poa pena 
equ 


5 onti m X 0, what tever its size or w 
t have his half perches alt 
distant from — half a 
the conviction of 
rsel of 
maai gubris 


to 
me o of the voitin 


2 rches asunder, and that t 
est cire 


would have been nearly 30 times its breadth, and 


xed that the least pi el pn a ae See 
s the 


have a mean length 332 times its bre 

ata cattle, either directly = the 

tenants themselves, under the runda 
of o 


2 
EA 
© 


summer „ rende: 
to any sae at reclamation, 
tillage, except where Potatoes sed 
Bere or Oats, for the. purpose of icit distillation, 
which more than any other cause demorali m; 
horses in farm purposes were so little 8 chat 
one horse has been known to suffice for the various 
services of different families holding la nd in common. 
This horse* was often principally employed, no 
doubt, in taking back loads of Barley to some 
ob ntain nook, where it could be malted 
ion, con 


“we 


or in 
spirit to some private place of sal 
ing a sack of Oa 
one side 0 the animal, or ri let cess : and as t 
often 8 its | distant, and few roads to them, all the 
parts of t erty was 


evi 
oney and 


e immense relief, i 
. and the 


meal, which Pi supplied by 


og eg the — m 


copie. 
ot felt all ther . whi 


. | attaining the 


some parts. The “ Facts from —— 

think 5 in the condensed form 2 

adduced 3 shown th 

less field fi 

regard the gene s people, 

be een meee rae ‘that whidh + we W W 
na in 


5 b nb = | 
number we shall give a 

plans de die — and carried out, 2 a dig ff | 

view will ‘tis presented. be 


EN 3 SOCIETIES, 

ages have lately been opened to 
8 the enen of the agr a 
aud among the methods tha | 
assisting this often locally de ressed č 

1 been made to benei — Tuer, nen 
be — either 

e 


- | helping most di 5 
of all 55 ‘efforte which o make oe 


pon which some of thom 


can con 
our three mss te table 
10s. weekly pay in 
reason, but more eapetially b e hisa 
of 65, will be — 
— my surprize, a lately receive 
the o 
| etary meeting, that n 
be encouraged to enter 
benefit that would acerue 
his weekly wages. Without e a policy 
seems calculated to throw suspicion upon a w 
medical advisers — happen to 


fr a . 
weekly wages at the t 
more than half that sum. 
to the 10s. table for ever, on the advanta| 


f| that are held out to him in our prospectus, 4 
umstanced farms (of about 15 acres) 3 


decide 


ing table, or any 0 
advisable for arial ar 5 ies. 


Monthly payments 
roportion 2 


Rule 10.— Ev 
* of the society, and 
e12.—Eve member 


ith by 
‘and towards the 


This, with the v oluutary e ad 
present, will, : think, oy 2 5 rules! 
for the landlo It may be 1 


ule 37. 
alas meeting of the 80 
attend, decently attired, 
the 


i sh 
d to ch yt rder 
1 0 5 i au still the vernacular tongue in that | divine service, and hear a en. Every mem 
un eE shall be requested to prea uri 
0 80 7 1 Fae on eee 18 imperfectly spoken i In arrive by td tl past 10, and proceed orderly "e 
oot? one of the islands of a fine 
3 in common ; the fourth hoof was ansha, "at ono time Rule 357 On the same d 
under of t Tl one time ade 
parts of mas 90h Sa thoe, ‘The matter came before gl Be er acter ph be 
tS OI | trate on th i 
ardina. as thy |e tadan g Gaan d e . | Hat ag BE a 
i ee this fourth foot to boot boot? oe yet th vege a a penaley of 58. 
own foot. y refused to shoe more than their be Present at the dinner 15 
+ The word ¢; chan t seeing a bull 
3 — AR amongst those guide if he was wicked, received t the ri beg . 
gentleman walking over the hi jhat’s the modestest baste n nall ; 


E — “wk toa 
— 


3 


renn 


FFF 


Wen teat oi 


the 


sales 


ais AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


107 


į 
: it 


AÍ 


difficulty I have oe in the 
eee extreme se verity with 


i 


bey 


rit 
pipes 


111 
È 


si 


£ 
} 


4, 


is existence is simply a 
illness did not dare 


i 


57 
SE 


E: 


— 
3 


member receiv: = 
wrk cay 
— 4 gr 
— 


75 


profit, or benefit, 2 


1 


rgd 
to those — have it in their peee to en- 
The labourer, as well as 
is own affairs, “ this! is a case 
is quite capable 
e has done its duty, let them 
; op —— all, in the name of the old 
let them p 3 the immediate registra- 
Fa 


LAW RELATING TO DRAIN-BRICKS, 
e 

Your report of the 3 t giv en for the crown in 
ease of the Attorney-General against alker ag 

fail tbe gy interes ting aoe oiiaee For th 
reason I ig Nuna to hazard a few rks on A 
ahr i is with 18 e yet in 
e . conception the better reason is with the 


H 


an 
Lahould not be afraid, were T; a drainer within the die 


—— » mg the point again, and that for 


the 
In the first . 
draining the fens is ein and 7 h Victoria, a recent a 
Now, Lord Coke says, “Legos pos * none em 
pant,” or, as Sancho Panza hath it, when two ride upo; 
horse, one must ride. behind. Thou — I have sae 
he Bardney Fen n Drainage Act t before me, I wi ill ven 


drains $ 


2 
Cai 


—— it e drain the level most effe . 
that the best rig of drainage shall run 

clesely ee e to a 
ery deep. If a 


el a 

it bean to be 
out n aid of 3 an Act 

of we 51 epe , “tnfeneed, he wo uld be 

guilty of a public nuisan 

ment in an action on 0 

amage by such 


g that ance, on 
that =. serif ä 
Tonen drai : 

ce to ak a u 
it be found a public nuisance, 5 the 8 
aat even — s su —.— 
to Judge for ion 11 thet it is a 


and that has a 
Tightly, may with his own spado pa 
instead of 


and trust for his an ification to a subseque 
a previous v 


oan an Act of — is shown which au- /ed 
ve 


we hav old 


rogate 
—— of ae ~ safety | 
work o een t of = 
Yes, a very pla 
drainer the necessi that 8 5 shall 
th su su er defences 
ho 


ysical n necessity ; but there is 
tute. He cites no authority 
3 there appears no reason for that 


— 


10 


ineludes 
eee has + built 4 spec 


to the public; ; 
bricks an all walls of the 


f 
4 


leader were to draw an indictment for oe 


cut a wide and deep dra 
a dee ep e wrongfully ne ee 85 raise a 
nee 
ot a wall 
necessary for n physi: 
cally ? when, for want of such wall, the cherif may be 
enjoined by a judgment to fill up the drain. For, I 
ene with eee e and under correction of persons 


ore experienced i in criminal law; Seep: : sens pa sapni that | 25 z 
mak 


ing 


full allowance and doing woul 


t 
is to me ese the act for 


an 3 to ne pa 


e | most wrete 
‘| tbe, See 


t his drain — walls wee 


sance 
| the 8 aud tha 


. s from me to den 


a stata joge kea cae left it s0 — . — want of 
fene 


ancillary means also 
of drainage = the side of the high- 


they have chosen 
puts ae ease that the line of e crosses the high 
asks is a bridge necessary as the Bard ney 
ach the drain may legally cross R highway ; there is 

l not cross a high- 


lahoa e case of a lateral pan 
of a drain contiguous to a road, a 
arned Baron, by exemplifying 


idge ee ca 
y statute, which h 


reat inconvenience it causes 


be no o Hounslow, the court 


necessary W 
peaa either pa to carry the gre 
over the sewer at Knightsbridge, or a ial upie sas 
ae 5 Knightsbridge, was a nece ssary wor rk to a 


sing the | i 


dl- 
e their relief; aud 
t 


e much cars 
hiisi and placed s$ es co ae $ ai ever 


gre fai 
statute were to enact, in a — words, that —.— shall 
y fro 


a 
MNA 


ay 
1.3 41 


i vou 
requiring t them to make a 15255 tere, that the bridge 
as for a collate — purpose, the mere passage of the 
8 mt: not for the outlet of the si a water to 
Tham 


er- | the 


The ee of 3 lock-house and a boat-house, still more 
of a church apel, are more widely removed, a 
humbly 

rpos ose to decide them. 
n law is the perfection of reason, a ould 
ienu 


mposes a necessity re fencing a and bri idgin ag 


ha exc 


eee, not similar, and that there is no ocea- | I 


sion for the present pu ut as | € 
ent 


monn declares may be do s with untaxed bricks. 
rther, the subject is not t taxed unless the 
statuto which —— 3 duty! is so 3 that he "e 
mayre which cannot be predica! 
of of this = splitting w PANA A into i and ey 
Han 


EFE 


ome Correspon 
Labourersin the Midland Counties. wit a number 
al I Han ae a poa headed, The 
en by a tenant farmer after a 
a 


d labourers waiked aa like eee 
arned but 88. . epe 


ients, ae those eee earn 
As such statem 


re half s. 


appears to 
8 countie 8. 
ge | 


me, that the district should have been named where the 
evils whic udes 


Pay 3s. ags 


the pound has exc 8 


for the erection 2 Papei uge asylums for housing the 
l as the able.bodied pauper. In Sou 
Bi to e these 10 years — more, at the 
rate of "38. in the po and during a part of the past 
as much as 6s. Indeed the parishes of England 


101. t e wee 
pa granted 10 millions to “nid — famishing 1 a but 
as sent its thousands o Pe criptions 


impossibl 
— throughout the length 


as no re 
at 2 n 2 — to 
na eee but an Irishman, so long as he 
ort by the hand of charity, vill — minh — 
one over his misfortunes ! , Han 
Box-feeding.—In replying 5 Mr. . 1 might, in 
a few words on ni state t os = is completely and alto 
ge on my si Id wish a better advocate 
my behalf ta: rhe very. ares» table gentleman — 
exhibited himself to be in his letter of 7 (id and 
although I should regret — . — ot — 
feelings by — y previous rem ea rejoi 
tha aused him to beri his my (lotion, whieh 
clearly catabliohes most that I have written ag 
jisa 5 is salio d “bo ox-feeding.” Mr. Fowler has tried 
hogs, qed on the “ Tamworth 
breed 3 the ‘other on the Dev n; now, I am rather 
surprised that he did not know this “Tamworth breed“ 
better am = 8 another ee e upon it; 
why his n von was sure to beaten, and he owah 
to have — soling else. But owler 


Mr. 
tif | ceeds to show, that when the ground is perfectly ‘ty 
8 5 plo cee up a — carne of turf, 


containin 

ick with, and whi ch 8 

y few days, he 
conti inves, as he finds the boxes | become moist the e pared 

turf i is laid over 


rass, f 


& Thi 


box feeding ve I not contended t 

will not abs the urine made hy oxen 7 cows in 
those “living cattle graves?” And d t Mr. 
Fowler’s practice clearly confirm this? He makes a 
ick of turf adjoining his boxes, and as often as the 
boxes become e throws into them a part of this 


olts, o 
what I wrote agin and whi 
uaded, yee both his it 
if no 


dispute 
turf and his s capacious and judicious, * cov 
tank, he would have heard nothing from 

George Wilkins 


vand vi 
pas bt pe 


AGRICULTURAL 

e was held at 
over-squar 

„ 

. Ray Br. 


5 ky 
r. W. Miles, M. P, Mr. Park ins; M 
s0 ; Dr. Spurgin ; ae T. 
Turner; an 


r : 
The e new „ were elected: 


j , Samuel, Mayor of Norwich 
Caldwell, Captain William, 3, Audley-square, «=o i 
herringham, Edward, Sculthorpe, Fatenham, Norf 


enby Grange, Wakefield, Torkahive 
„ Hertfordshire 
., Sculthorpe, * No 


ates, Parkhead, Berens, Mn — — 
Wines, 3 , Faken 

s, Mrs. Susanna, Rocklareston Ration, 
ham-Overy, Nor Awe 
Fakenh 
mbcroft, Guiabaraogh, Lorin 


Nottingham 


108 


x Great Holland Hall, Colchester, Essex 
French, — ge 


THE AGRICULTURAL 3 


— 


Baker, Norfolk 


“alias — ohn, Griston, W 


Cator, Captain, Pestw ood — 5 — pton 
Phillipps, } ir , Tacolnestone, 3 Norfolk 
Spark 5 
Quinn, P. Newry, Ire 

udson, Soh — — A2 


Legard, Ca oy Ser 
William. 4 


Gill, 


nerma 
cham, 
Randall, Alexander, Maids me 


herringham, 


Anahy, Lenton Hali, 1 
„ Bill =i m, No ‘fol 

2 Eont 
Dunan, Fai Fakenham 


nt 
all, Buxt ry Norw 


|a 


Mr. Slaney was perfectly willing 5 nd Bo 
by Mr. Pa efere 


rkes, 


po son, namely, in 


Wease asenh. am, 3 morta 
Town Court Farm, Eltham, Kent 
, Ranworth, Norwich 

r rriak Thornage, Holt, 


Gillett, Rich 


Dennison, Wm., j 


allinson, John, Thickhollins, sidered, — 
ard, end, Nor 


deve ‘oo Manor , Blackheath 


Farm 
Buxton, Sir hri ur 4 Norch. B Bt., M. P., kerek Norfolk 


Bawtree, F., Abberton, Colchester, Bisex, uts 
Stables, William 1232 r, ga cer Cas le, 1 N. B kg 
Beau nont, Joh , Hud ield, Yor b> h 
Ft panna L Frederick omg Bins, Becle shail, Staffs, 
1 Lindow, Work kington, Cumberland 
* . — ddersfield, Yorkshire our, 
Dison Willem Frederick, Birley House, Sheffield, Yorks, 
er, Dr. be mas, Lo wer Se ymour-street, L — 
sds, Thos re, Th cavern Warham, Holkham, Ni rfolk CoKE F 


2 
Atherton, 


— eT. 
= me Ghee, Norwich 


ectio ese 
for attaining all na objecta require, Mr Slan 
quite co gi reat sa of labou 
only a —— cating or out and ~~ in 4 
kind If onl 


0 
. — from each other, and rem 
the soil only to the 


ing by tw 


Mount Alyn, Wrexham, Denbighshire 


lab e concluded by expres 
subject w would 9 the attention ef the Coun 
RAININ w fe Guildford 
sins Russell-square, reported to the 

onomy and success with which A had sae the 


mpetition for their construction an 
might be revived, and the trial conducted (as rig p : 
: : 
r, when the land had | f. 


r might be | o 


N 
depth « of 2 feet, ge 3 
eco 


gr 
sing his hope a this 


hed, was oo al anure * 

t the 1488 of 1700 the disease 1 its appar 
ops, wer destroyed „ ai 

ve. He ha 


per, L. J., Leeds, Yorkshi : » 
ommon coke obtained from coal by stifled combustion, | grea mb f lenty of tubers, 
Boren Daron — Warham, non to the of under-draining, “instead of pipes or ‘About the middle of July, however, they were attacks 
sone rei Geoige, ald Hi, Best Orin: Grinstead, Sussex til = He 1 this substance, which be regarded | by the disease, which firs howed 1 r 2 
1 as enamelled charcoal, to be perder ermeable by | spot where it had commenced the year before, beings 
s — 2 3 , girit water. During the ear! rtof jast sn a ap h had — of the field rather lower an or n i 
Blake, Thomas, LL.D., » Horstead, Norwi [Berks 2 8 unity x putting this mate o the requisite | other n= The pread over the whole field as 
P tapear Aak eraba oa lepty e Newbury, t, and the result —* wee e ae, had done in the previous es he self-sown plants, 
Powell, John Thomas, Easton, Nn WII — re abongh the save 8 stiff e clay, although the largest and finest, suffered most 
Kage, Robes 84 P parda h'Lodge z ram down rg Pints ee: ake, the ter | seve ana ad all the = 'polléd a 0 i 
Jo airlawn, Wrotham, in course n freely from all the drains | before, and sav ery 1a . bs f 
Hanbury, R Long Y. Gy Sah Faa Nerf thus constrneted. He fonnd that 30 lbs. he proportion of bad ones being however greater, u 
bert Blake m House, Norwich sufficient to form a permanent and cient drain sequence, as he imagined, = the greater di 
Barker, ker, Wim, Polo en Seca Bitkenhead, Cheshire | along every 0 nch; and t xpence only wetness in the season. also gro 
ot em 74 Lynn, Norfo one-half of ~ incurred when employing the ordinary | toes last year on a pie of gravelly soil which 1 
e Te ve candidates for election at the next pipes or tile also intended use af oke been cropped with Barley in the year pr 
ig 2s ws were then read, r the p Sipa of ee his salt-marshes, as well as an r the Potatoes. These w 
of Dallington, near e achat ak ae Cuantzs FULBROOK, land reclaim d from the and m eadow Fue ae not planted so early as the others by about a month, 
the Socixt ng en Hurst gu ussex, having favoured wes et for such an opera ea he expected The crop was a very promising , but was att 
r edanen A of he e een ae tions or o effect this object ty of open 3 by the disease about the beginning of August. He had 
‘five w ines om Coring theip evious reno the tops pulled off, and saved about 700 bushels of good 
gr gad mos laid before the | Sroppace or DRalxs. —Captain Ricuarpson, of Sutton- | Potatoes (besides small ones) out of abo cres, hh 
predictions ‘weather ‘mene 75 at his w hurst, near Lewes, transmitted to the Council a speci- | another field of eres, a stiff clay soil excepi SE 
107 he k ae = “nip aa pe men of t fibrous matter that had stopped up a portion | part where it is rather gravelly (it being . — l 
Howard in soars ag DE A ` uke | of his pipe-drains, and impe e progress of the recently grubbed up), he had a erop of P — 
himself at at distance f. 5 ihe — i as by | water through them. Although a hedge of Willows had been planted at about the end of April. They! ra 
Wis thar hed’ sairis ca ie me rat 3 and | had fo areg rly run across the where t rains | not done Very well, on acecunt of the wetness of 4 
comprised by that portion of 0 n ca 2 were lai i om from the roots of which _ —— season, excepting in some parts. At the beginning 
of England, of wh Londen mi 3 id sd na paons proue long — bro thus | August the disease manifested itself, commenchig 
the centre. ? Wie Deroin ughe be coner mo as dene in the drains might probably et had their | spot where some charcoal had been burnt, and where 
Fulbrook’s predictions had y 1333 Dalen hat M origin ; it was to him remarkable, that the exact limit | the tops had more lu ntly than lenny 
directed anks to be — of the 8 was the extent to whie Mangold It extended gradually over the whole field, and ddt 
for r of rzel had been planted on the in question ; eat deal of hesg to the tubers, uch 


Daaa 2 Arley Sica: —— Bewdly, i 


8 


rnal 
resented to the e Society | 
5 


roots, or to e effect t 


eir presence af have had | off. 
on the gro owth of the roots í of the Wi llow 
e 


the whole. ase, a tops 
Mr. Bosanqu eg ai ded his communication wi 

the following observa 5 “J trouble you ee 

remarks u reon am gag 1 


| Hertfi wdshire, reported to the Council irs result pe his | s 
cultivation of the Sou 
se 


& 


nt. 
N Drams. — Mr. G 
success with wh 


rains was 20 | a 
ng a furrow, the depth might 
e conceived — by this ra 


info er ‘the m 
which he had employed a | th 


favour the Society by the 0 g tn 
rom a 5 of Beg lor 


ooh its merits 
n that 

e with | light ri rich ha placed 

payin at attention to t 

of the Men and the p grent a . sic ot * 


degree of Bot 2 
ral, “les the progress sige ft mouiines a 
y degrees, so the whole of th 
troyed $ but it was found that the disease 
every case 2 


not extended in e ot md 
ber 


. 


mpetition oa a implement 
ion 
ve to offer, r, on (ahs cue wn part, 
pendently of the former, —— 
* 


the meeting, for the 


nta 0 ‘eam ee 45), 


ned sound an ed 
digging up the gerund in November 
wae fob | to be nearly 3 qua ; 
a 


3, varying in size from 
erry 


tubers appe to be e perfectly 
eep them “es pam: until the spring, 
and he 


— 
, 


success- | remarked that there 
smallness of the tu 


ts | does 
cory | it is purel 


as that which entire} 


a 
en there i 


e tops| M 


rts, containing | with the 
t of 


san- | p? 


in op 
was nothing extraordinary i in the | be 
otatoes 5 a 


ing of t earful th 


preventing the 
an. It is one 


will no 
ed y of pieis that i 
sperie ein and that 1 commences 
; and exons gradually on 
u e same wij 


. 
E 


sou 
judge by ap ries it is more prevalen : 
$ em char ged wih ae me i 
a ccompan 


ts. The most certain plan of securing & ry ; 
plant ently say at the end of fibers ely for 
nd zip % The tubers will then ai com mpe iy 3 
> = the period when the disease usu 

P k a E cae advoca seu ‘lig 2 


a 1 ene 


=< ji ‘ai be done ata 
value of 1 5 per acre, fs that e sir 
* of saving ae 105 — 


Eni ili pi atashe b he bal d 
ul tha 
m the t Same sea tm Co p 


of seedlin oe 5 i ae 
p. 420) indiesting different 2 of disease iu 
varietie ound 


tmos; 
| that it commences in Kg tuber, t 
eee e to the 80 


in | during the last three y 


of Potato, he had fi 
ears had 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


i h Ki 2 

this was the e Scote 
* btained a e pim from t 

agreed with 15 


M.P., ha 
2 but in 1 and © 
vale of ary planting. 
nd into what wer 


y one — = of it, 
Ao ground while the 


-in the grain, in e onsequence of such Aas being picked superior to that pon by the a lodion stock, when ith a sparred hole in the bottom of eit, you ‘night place this 
up by pheasants an and other game, causing their flesh to | each are equally well got an thé ko of your bullet, 8 
become mcs 7 ae : abs alvert 3 . “ But before I leave ta subject 5 ere om: ae gyre oo 8 Foe ri o April, abo A 10 Tes. of seed per 
| mov mu ea „ es a y ed and well ma- 
ace with = ea e a Dore perties of this species, I m tm mired loamy ssi Tio tobe — ought, probably, to have 
by washing coeds paias 85 itse 9 a mon ve, which 2 en consumed before this; may have been sown 
such washing the grain had been as black as if mixed | never attains full perfection before the second, or, in rly, 
ut became perfectly clean by that process; some cases, the third year after it is in plant; I ute pen . 40 at a ots eile SIS g Pon yee t win 2 
— 8 oe eee — to be perfectly free | have kn the Giant species produce, aus a chalky Mangold Wurzel, the alternate fortnightly diet being Swedes 
4 i of 4 t kind, 885 Bet soil, two tons of ne per acre, so sig t season ioe was in ang Carrots. thelr poten but white and bitter, 
methods proposed to remove smu ut wash- e and very small on Mangold iat ath — ana and 
ing had proved the an! one he could depend upon frei ais Late nh, 8 5 a n. ic aye, | taste, and plentiful, on the mixed food, 7 
M 4 y b pon. of this species but what p odasi i a grea bulk in the | weanow: Inquirer, The Grase would undoubtedly manure 
— Dyer used lphate of copper, or blue second than in the first r of its gr Lia pinta the land; it shou cut e imagine it 
1 pace kyss ond ect success, at th rate of | season was qaally favou cole. rave also known seed | would not have the effect zon the ensuing —— that the 
to the 1 aa t 3 was very subject | sowed in April, without the intervention of a crop T . stad at tan 72 75 sarod 
he in 95 pa 3 3 1 but — peng — a most abunda rop of hay the 3 en e green crops are understood to be gene- 
weed had — 55 s Na . E in it, — Mr. year. It must be admitted that the land was goo d and ATUT ae z $ 
T et wi any a from m arsenic; in high ee avin g been sown where a crop of | PIGEONS : f asks poe e is to form a pigeon colony, an 
U 
it was a e e TONDA remedy in preventing disease Turnips had been previously fed off. I have also known Boars f aids, —— in the Fe —— About t — 
Peas R Lw to have been produced under similar circum-| you had better ee zt tract on the subject by Mr. Shore, 
Gael 8 . 1 the stances, and cut in September. There is also a e 5 which the e bookse seller 3 kt no mee, eee 
ion of a mod or otar RACTICAL INSTRUCTO 8 ned. 
railway, on the nies le of the simple roller, f a% ee e Se = avy character, well | Scoren ProvcuMen : A John Bull. We must decline publishing 
farms, docks, w P tae or use ia drained, which was s in ary last with a crop |` your letter. 
ights warehouses, and other 1 aie where heavy | of ge 3 eis Phos ant only cut with the Oats, but has | Seeps: R N L. 4 Ibs. of Parsnip, 5 lbs. of Carrot, and 7 Ibs. of 
the ail ye to be conv 5 short distances witlio since th d another erop, 8 used for Bani antes ayha na, . acre, are ny 5s seedings. fea lor teed 
oi hno: „ar mer in row nches apa e 
k-y m D 8 Prs 3 3 3 s the working ho ager upon a large far I sha 5 be Gaited 8 Aldbled i in rows 26 inches eee, 
Mangold Wurzel from flat h Se a close my remarks upon the e legere Subr: A Devonshire Farmer will find what he wants at p. 43. 
of she at heavy land, He considered merits 2 g a tro ‘ete ‘oman t so far bserv pre acme arn 
similar cages full fei, oe d prove in these and | tion or be necessary in m si i a ets. 
it would rc tent in its action, particularly as +e y Were intelligible to my readers) with co RDEN, Fes. 17. 
| — eo oe greni ey ready adapt- this important fact, viz., I have frequently kno the The 3 continues to be well . with, a ete 
dein purposes required, at a cost not ex- species tested side by side, but never, during the | and mea T ae ruit. Ake re a = — 2 5 
; in man reign tolera 
DE US COMMUNICATIONS, — Mr. EDMUND perps z have ee ed it sh ld bee ed in cone of Beurré Hance and Easter earth: i supplied, 3 2 
ans C a ee plant, pown an instance wW dea Nuts in gencral are sufficient for the demand. Ora 
tenancy) stables, hen’ de ee ga a change of | decided superiority of the Giant species was not clearly aud Lemons ate plentiful. Amongst Vegetables, Carrots and 
or sheep bave den infeed with übte of un cattles | apparent ; and from others who in different parts have | Turns are poe A 
ee White tie 8 bee = mr e tested them in a similar w ay, I have received e un- and Seakale are plentiful, Potatoe es are rather on the rise. 
Joseph Long, on F} ngst neat stock.— Mr, | cations giving the most unequivocal "aa of the 3 ang other age are sufficient for the 3 
the tear ax Aaa ae Postle, of Blofield, same results att ending their experiment {ushroo N ple nas Cut 1 Flo — 9 of ens, Pe. 
’ ruetic ts. — Dr. Searle, of B T 2 ristmas Roses, Camellias, Gardenias, Cinerarias, 
- Tatrition of animals in relation to the — or of i Fuchsias, and Roses : i 
Muscular Substance or flesh, i Qalendar — 3 FRUITS. 
~ Majendie ree ka 3 z fat : RY, Pinëispples, , per 1b. = ph 7s Almonds, per peck, 6s Gk 
1 Arie rom the iinis, w rapes, foreign, p. 1 — sweet, per lb., 2s to 
ry i T GLOUCESTER a . 10.— When I offered a 1 
‘sae mountainous icts. w mil ET i on Ae e in Pe e ‘azette, and ventu red ito — 8 „. i 547565 to 1 Walnuts, p. ay ra fea 2s 
these Pence having rdered their best thanks for suggest the descri = of information which appeare ed t Pears, . — or dot, iN to * 2 see ah * = 7 he oe 
E on adjourned to Tuesday | more useful and instru sph p oe ens ren fone ars a . half emg 1s i bar Nuts, Bar., p. bush,, 20s to 
4 — of the sec cond year es ly of my occupation of a farri ina ranges, per doz — Filb., p. 100 Ibs. 60s to 1003. 
i 1 in all Lemons, per Ter on 1 in. — Cob, p. 100 Ibs., 2 pie 
pezi transition state from a very low state of cultivation in a er 100, 1927218 L 
respects to one ot gpn Seg — “involving much more af razil, p. bsh., 12s 
labour and pow n would be necessary on the same farm VEGETABLES, 
Prop erties, and Cultiva- | when in proper ae, I felt that the details could not be Cabbages, p. 2525 3d to ls Spinach p. siéve, Is 6d to 2s 
y Thomas Hine. | quite subject for general comparison. This considera- d, p. doz., 2s to 6s do., 9d to 1s 6d 
3 wont operate still more strongly in 1 iag to any Savors, per on, 3d to Is 8 bunch, 2d to 4d 
details of income and e r nditure, I have acted upon the Gre p. doz . bunche es, Is 6d | — p. bush, Is 6d to 2s 
notion of 8! hakspeare, tl — Spa anish, p. doz., Is 6d to 48. 
If ’twere ai . when eee done. 8 p. 1 pie — 1 g, P. hf. Lier e, Is 6d. 
It were well it were one quickly,” roccoli, white, p. bun., Is to 0 3s 
consequently the return for a large austas in repairing roads rov n, p. bun., 6d to is 3d Shallots, per Ib., * ne gë 
fences, thorough cleansing, deep tillage, extra manures, Sorrel p A uf. ees is we 6d | Garlic, per Ib., 4d 
nd ificial food incurred during 18 months can only be Potatoes, pe — : 180s W ae _ Jerusalem, Ui half 
ed for in future years, free trade permitting. This w per cwt., 5s os "4 sieve, 
explain tó one of yoik correspondents my inability to give at r bush,, 2s 6d to 5s Lettuce, Cab., p. se., — to 6d 
the present time the particulars suggested by him, aes Be Turnips, p. doz, bun., Is to 23 — Cos, do., 9d to 
hope to have all the materials for in time to come, Red — ay OE, 6d to 18 Endive, per score, 2 5 2s 6d 
n the oolitic range, which travers es this county, and — aul Horse R p, bal, ls to 6s ohare ete p: pottle, 2 te 
soil is what is commonly distinguished as stone-brash, with a 23 51 00, 285 to 8s mall Salads, p. pun., 2d to 3d 
few acres intermixed of heavy land on clay. It comprises 264 | Seakale, Pi punnet, 9d to 18 6d Fenn el, per bunch, 2d 
acres, of which 57 are pasture. The power consists of a steam- | R ubarb ndle, 6d to Is 6d | Savory, per 2dt 
engine, rated at 4 horse power, but which drives the threshing | Fren h Beans, p p 100, 28 to 38 Thyme, per bunch, ?d t 
an ees pec ney iy the Linseed crusher, and the chaff | Cucumbers, each, 3s to = atercress,p. doz.bun.,6d to 9d 
machine at ame ry z xem si “ae teams, with au seeks, per doz., 6d to ip. 3 6d to 2 
odd horse, ae and 3 n and a , who | Celery, p. bundle, 6d to 1 Is 3d ts, p. bdle. ahta 
0 sive cha arge rot — ating b beasts, and about 30 Radishes, p. doz. hands, Is to 2s Marjoram, aie bun 
rrots, p, doz, Dita 38 to 5s Mint, green, ima no 
erd 


pon ‘emp soil it 


much more buiky in a moist 
> emily bore „ be the season 


moist or dry, it will go to flower at ‘the same time, and 


uce as r more see a dry n than in 
a dripping one, If aeg a second time for hay, it will be 
wer a thir in September, but if say 


d ti tem 

be rea iy fot mang in August, after which it 

ehe 4 eddish nearly equal 1 2 is s gonèrally 

common 3 e first 1 
iant — is ag — 3 

me- 


ant spec uch s The 

will ve ‘ange r sad taller, ä the first 

ea? it is in plant; the reaso hi 
tself much sooner 2 the 

it is true, will possess a 

and, as a matter of course, will 


is, i 


can ke 8 ermine; if it 
equally nutritious, it must be beneficial. egard 
to its nutritiou operties, 1 have no knowledge of i 
having undergo ceu st by a c ical pro 
ess, but I shall be quite ready to contribute my quota 
to the expense of proving eab of which 
I beg to state that I have known, t en bot 
species have been sown side by side, and depastured, 


vatio 
akion als will accompany t ave 
also known vn a party gre A quantity, and 
middle of a lange stack of the mon 
3 preference t to the 


108 cakes o 5 Giant pices whenever i yt rived 
at in cutting down I also cles foie hat the 
fodder arising acter 8 cP it eed, is 


— 
getting in the root crops, several extra hands i 
Our cattle ek boeni kept on the 15 a from the Pen pe] 
it = so entirely satistactory, an much more free from dirt. 
0 nell than ordi inary stalls, yon boxes wer 
hor nat nd th A 
the same 7 for the pigs, whi 
their h e inveterate 5 
their noses into and routing g uP th litter, ins 
teracts our desire to k 5 as sweet an ania ty: as 


pt 
a : and until the: arrive at a] — 
ition, they stir up almost as much offen Mes wi 
ry 


which is followed by Reid’s subsoil r o£ 
horses. This we shall continue until the fourth 1 when ai} 
the lz will h r tha 2 


with one pair of 5 aad a r 0.2 L. 


tices to Corresponde nts, 
AGRICULTURAL SCHOO . The Cirencester College is 
the only institution of w 5 we know that has . at- 
8 to it. There are numbers of farmers who take pu 


H 


CON: — . Can any one state their experience in detai? 
of greaves or grease as food yo pigs 

CHICORY : D N A, If you have — s you should —— 
them, cut them up into dies, pe kiln-dry them, and si 
them to some Liverpool Salesman, That will be far m 

DEopoRisER : J Allnutt. Powdered 

DRAINING ENGINES : Wd P., „From ber asks for informa- 
tion on this subject. J s ma 
oblige him and us ith it. Heasksa rst cost, 3 

water discharged. 


— 


height to which it is raised, kind of m machinery employed, 
and power of engine. He alludes e e to engines able 
to dr ha de acres, 


— but stronger so tos 
Gorse: e dinier ‘of the 


large a he 


them by the machine; rs de 

of 100 fatting sheep, and 200 ewes and ewe rags ; 8 te 5 
bourers, and un older man, ch ployed in keeping the 
roads in good order, 6 women, and 2 s. The 8 
herd, and herdsman have 12s, a week throughout the year, and 
houses garde’ nd them ; oughmen 10 

other men 12s, half the year, and 10s. the winter half ; the 
women 4s. a week in winter, and 58. in summer, Durin Ju ak 


August, September, and e hay and cora harvest, 


OTATOES.—Sovurnwakk, WATERSIDE, Feb. 12. 


The fi Sllowing a od thi meet 3 — Vork Re- 

gents, 100s, to 150s. ; N 1 * Scotch, 

izi, a 8 Scotch Cape; oS to 100s. ; Ppr rench Whites, 
gian do., 80s, to 3 5 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


SMITHFIELD, Mos? ay, Feb. 12 MARK LANE, usar, P Feb. 1 EDS.— 
ne pd the demand bas The report of the past wee mies oe meer OF HALF-MOON 
we have consequently a very slow a oe a reduction of al fully 1 a? ngs (By Offici MAS GIBBS u ; 
24 per 8 lbs, anda considerable . — —— pelow, with little Pal note caning “ROY aL Ae al Appointment) the in j 
—— more Sheep, ¢ sappy 5 — | in yall grain. In some places there is a! Beg to remi AGRICULTURAL S ge 8 tote “>i 
; trade isin such a depressed state that it is dif- | little demand for corn and Pulse, but nothin in general, that bers of oP E 
to effect a clearance at a slight reduction bavet iti g f psc Countin 
fon Calves, they — 1 — ore money - | cheering — the Britis 5 5 970 s at the corner of H 
is slow. From Holland and Germany 7 28 Beaste. 520 prospects become more re clouded: It is n e OT 7 a 
— See Calves’; from Norfolk and 7 2000 aan, known very little Wheaten b read is consumed through | the seaso * Cina 4 — 
er and Northampton; 270 and from Scotland, 1% Í the vast Cont ge | eee ne ee 
Peret.ofSite.—s d sd aAirr eer ee ee er ent, and that the food of the EEDS. — MEADO 
Best Bcots, — „ Bast kos keen . on oe 1 — 7. — ee ee, vegetable; nig bread they WED in-tnixttiien 3 — 4 
fords, K. tte born. s is from Rye, Oats, Beans Peas, | acre, allowing 2 ba tares suited to vations soils, 
F d acer" en Maize perar — probable a die’ Wheat | sowing and treatme ont will e 385 
KA 3 | will find its way to os — 2 * — b — pt eed old l Grass s Lands, 15 34. the sesde | 
Halt.breds ... 4 64 10) Calves 2 22 75 o| Eng The onl ent ee eee W 
Ditto Shora o sne —5 0 giving —— nu aid to the "British en gn 5 List, wich prices, for 1 8 
Beasts, 3516; Sheep and Latte, 19, a “Calves, 94; — 133, to be the removal of the e duty from Malt. forwarded on application, as well aa their C 
Farmar Fe 2 arden and FI 1 eir Ca 
— oaiet . ie Market: to-day i extrem dy dal scarcely anything | Seedsmen, &c., to “the Soa 
dating of — hore Ceaser tun abe i very i le oing-— Evg produce passed over for foreign.— | gium, be. &., 26, Down- — a 
—— —ů— Ia very cbolee Scot ma First price of English. Flour is still called 44s. per sack; ITCH cea London. 
— one, more than 2 a. — bs 2 as the fale aver Ke | French, 358. to 368.3 Norfolk, 33s, on hand; Americ 1 K 701 1A mn BEDS 
demand, indeed Mon 15 — —— A equal — oy barrels, 5 278. ito 283.—In Wheat there is nothing new to | the best kinds „ consisting of 9 
Trade for rather more cheerful, but it is 1 . to quote; 30 li oing.— Barley brings, for fine malting England, Early Surprize, British 1 
Site lower “From lid ige sell slowly ; samples, am to 33s.—Oats somewhat lower > ee e eee Seeds in proportion, of” 
wife à Holland and Germany we Rate io — Ae abundance:—In B 4 = at | sorts, sufficient for one year’s * 
See From Galves ; from Prance, 18, Calves 5 from cue “nae ee Peas not much t | choicest Melons and Cucumbers inclusive 
Scotland, 240 de! and 130 Milch Cows from the home ormer prices — Maize, 9 Oileake o, 2.—Complete colle exits in es mob 
2 111. ay 1600 Foreign, om to 85 108. per i 30 * orts — 
Scots, st Long.wools. 4 Otot 4 — 
fords, ġo 6 h Dite LıvENtoot, Fairpay, Fes. 16.—We bare had tie ~ Thi 
pat E | = 2 d quality 3 — 6 foreign ned and Indian Gora since bag a em s ae — fo po fora sma all arden 
47 ea Beasts 2 6~-3 Ditto shor cine has been quiet. At this day’s market we had a fair attend- A Sentral ‘Catalogue may beh eae N paid to 
n and | n ance of dealers but only a moderate demand, The sales were SELEC 1 HWR 
breda 4 2 1 1 5 0 gene ret spol ob to 2d. per bushel on Wheat, ao 5 = ser = a newest d be 
Ditto Shorn | Piga 6d, per load On Oatmeal, and 6a. per barrel on Flour. — st Annuals &e, 
Beasts, 1122; Sheep and . 2680; diniin Pip, ee were taken slowly at former prices, holders being 8 25 ait ait 97 
85 * Me e one in . Beans, or Peas. Indian Corn H eh collection ‘of imported Stocks eit 1 
i HAY. Pes ren Load of 33 Trusses. 5 8 amed, 3d. per packet. Sent postage tres. * 
SEO, 15, |WHEAT. |BARLEY- i 
— 270% Clov — ve cia. . 605 fo 925 AVERAGES: = |—— | * WILLIAM JAmes E 5 
New Cloer. = Jan. . . 45s10d| 30s 800 17s 0% 26 4d 32s 4 37s 94 | FT XARM = 
2 0 — ri CC — — ene — — 1117 8279 32 2 35 0 T ARMERS’ P 
New de very hea 4. obori 705 Bi 15 . a 1 i ; 28 11 3 . — ? —.— of Cranford 
Trade „ ondove 0 16 11 
Prime Meadow Hay rp ee dag tn ee . Pr A 37 2 80.11 53 0 5 acer Mr. W. Ri 
= — sia 0 8 of Me: 5 
— 2 = 9 | a A ; . „Potato Sale 
ry mata Re | Straw —— 23 82 | Duties on Fo- < 3 29 5 2.27 %% A2 [Bt 3 arden. It is a good bearer 254 0 ee a 
Pine Old Hay Wmrrcnarrt, Feb. 15. a Sarm | reign Grain] 1 0 1 % 1 0 1 O11 0 ba 
n 1 — 70% New Clore’ luctuation 
1 * bel e „ e Pere Tame 2 6 aos announces that he has a very large 
22 ee Straw a 2 2 Fes, 3, F, 
. = 2 3 | “| pin ee 
% . 5 70 | ote 2 Vi 275 bi pe e the lowest 
HOPS, Pamay, Peb 16: e a 8 sd as 5 ford t, 
. Mosses: PATTENDEN and — feet Gas there is 1 A S 1 a vt os [ S poy rect, near S 
Whe wer —— daily becoming more — 45 3 a bia K. rd 5 ETLEY Ann, a a 
ote oe ee — — 5 * 
fully supported 45 1 z 9 Š ers Y y | S 5 5 „ , he varying from 
Tondon tive j ing ll hla EE aaah E A EE rè , for the usual sizes required, n 
el rpool. Wakefiel cae feet of which are kept read 
— — efield. Boston. Birmingham. Lists of Prices and — toe foie fon on 
— . —äjh — — — — — 1 os ha ce THICK O8 ROW. 
an f ATER-PIPES, 
ee 9. Fate! Feb. 14 Feb. 8. Feb. 15. GLASSES, GLASS MILK PANS, PATENT Pl 
gat 62 lbs. 62 lbs, to Janes Barte m ae 
8. . 
6 10 Sg tose 40 04880 645 |5 9 6 “ole 9 6 45 
46—53/46—53|44—52/40-49 |6 2 6 96 2 6 9 8 
8/4580 10 55 e e GEE Te J amns? h irn ssp 60, 116 B 
— ical ithout, have the pleasw to ha their N 
2146—50 £ £ 6 10/6 0 6 10) of SHEET "GLASS for qt gi? “ml 
V HORT „ GLASS, 
In —— ao — 40 inch 
— = Rsi a acke — * 2 the size Ti 
r. OPARE. Bete: — . 2 15.0 je 
pie s. Od. i 
— cs qr. r. 2 : 0 from ae to 
1 95 222222520282698] 23—27 2327 2. 5 1 iA s 
8 1 iaar 27—32 . 30—32 29—33 29—33 . 4 3 [eer 
6b 7 zoot 8 = Oase not . Box 
are * iy 2 SMALL SQUARES IN BOXES OF 100 f. 
3 Squares under 6by4 ... 105 “ed. 
18—30 ous and under Bid X — ` 
17—19 Tr wee 1 
and eee in Sizes not ex 
36—46 aF 
1214 {inch eee „„ : 
5 = Par ROUGH PLATE TILES. 
$ thick. 5875 each * ila, 12 8 i ; 
; = — 
so SEE GLASS TILE 5 SLATES 
15—17 Tiles made of Sheet phone. ” 
Tiat Slates, 20 ins, by A4. 1 
Slates are kept t on stock of the $ 
— S MILK-PANS, pRopacat 
40 pastry Slabs, 10 piu Glasses, 
J 5 an tubes, 108. Self 
wv u s. 6d. + 6 tubes, 108. 
— 18 es. 
RTLEY’S PATENT ROUGH PLATS. 
190lbs, Sere to FARMERS 
13—14 6 | GARDENERS, LANDOWNERS, ani 
per sack. s eae arm tome N ort 


— — * very ee 


Gloucester. 
Imports. 
rs. 
1717 
618 
16 
105 


| Zoa C. Srpngk. |o 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


111 


z 
15 


at 
15 5 


1 12 for 1 o'clock, about 0 


tr ding mostly 
Bates consis! tin 5 of pE favourite old, 
t high 


me 
7 iE 


i 


jor, and mornin 
MIDDLESE = 
Sas, OBS TLEMES, AND OTHERS. 
s of Sorts, Orna mental Shrubs — 
us è- sn ted age Seed! EE Quick 
on transi Stock. To be Sold by 


on TUESDAY next, Febi ruary 2 20; 


N 
me 


TC v 
up the business, =p a 5,000 
m1 to 4 feet; 10 0 Aucuba j 

Irish angot 5 Yew 8, fror ni 1t 


Box, 
and — — from A feet; 250 
; dru s Deodara ; 4000 Rho- 


and will be fra by pos om applica. 
— four pos — nps = — WaATERER, 
Estate Agent, Chertse”, 
MEN FLORISTS, AND = 
ROTHEROE anp MORRIS wil submit 


B rr S 
STREATHAM. 
To Noblemen, Gentlemen, Rurserymen, —— and Public 
an 


very fine Eve ergreens, Fru 
tal Trees, and ae “Surat 


en, J. . Ton r Bi 

BE Te 
ARD owns, — 2 D t signee, 7, 
Old Jew aey — d of he . — American 


e 
h (return 
ctpat Semen; and 
2 — Essex. 


A Bast-TROTTING STALLION. 
oe 


Bi ar Benne ne 
getter, as good a 


ounds. a dark ba 
3 Mr. ott raion — 


d rformer,” 
i vem, wo he SI en ag For aie 
— mks , Hursley, n near Win. 


— — 


WILLIAM HILL'S 
IMPROVED FLUE BOILER AND FURNACE, 


FOR WARMING CHURCHES, CHAPELS, 
MUSEUMS, MANSIONS, MANUFACTORIES, HORTICULTU 


LAL ERECTIONS, &e. 


Registered pursuant to Aci of Parliament, 6 and 7 Vio, 6:65. 


FRONT ELEVATION. LONGITUDINAL 


SECTION SECTION. 


For Testimonials, &c., sce Gardeners’ Onit of Nove 
% Communications addressed to W. Hint, Horticultural Works, Greenwich, watt 258 with prompt attention. 


GRAY! ORMSON, AND BROWN Danvers-street, 

f rine after Gentry, and 
Gar ac rs, to their superior manner of Erecting» and Heating 
every descriy tion of Building condects ed with Horticulture, The 


at the Right Hon. 
rring 50 1747 stille 
rio “hg n will be happy 


y them during the 
of 22 


nswer any enguitien: 
eferred to, as the 


They peg also to say the building” — "is r 
ae Apparatus» was not erected em 
ROWN have also the honour of referring 


to ‘mar oF the nobility a e gentry in the country, and to several 
of y n Nurseri 
ns and Estimates furnished free. 


— — 


weenie IN PRICE OF BOILERS: 


S pba eles AND HEALY beg g respect to inform 
riends, in consequence of the present re duced price 
of of iron, they are ena make a ae 8 tion in | 
the pri t 


New N BOILERS. 
4 — will warm et ‘oy elt ipe vis 
do. 1500 ft. 4 in. 45 ee, 0 
All ers with double arms, up to 18 in., Po extra; to 24 
in., TH 2 all above, the same price. 
120, Fleet. street, London, Feb. 3. 
Patang FLEXIBLE INDIA RUBBER AND 
TUBING FOR RAILWAY COME NIRS” REWERS, 
DISTILLERS. FIRE-ENGINES; GAS ok at GAR- 
DENING AND AGRICULTURAL L PURPOSE 
=| Tios PATENT TE INDIA. 5 
PIPES are 
withou 22 


3 — not 
(but a 2 ways perfectly fesible, 
cation of oil or dressing, — 
engines, d all purposes 
i a perfectly exible pipe is tee Gord man sizes 
chr 


ied with brass taps, 
to hed to 
—— JAuxs 


Pumps, Gas 
inen bore u f any length to 
Valeanised ean Garden Hose, fitted 
nd roses complete, read 


‘Water-butts or Cisterns.—Sole 
ondon. 


RBIDGE snp HEALY respectfal'y inform 

their Friends and the Publie, met are — this time pre- 
pared to un deriake the . — of Hothouses, Ge-, upon their 
superior Syst or Hot Water 2 aip mn 3 refer — — 
under-1 or laces, where they have erected most 
tensive wor KS. 

oyal Botanic Gardens, Kew. 
Horticultural: — — 6, Chiswick; particularly the new 
boilers applied to the latge Conservatory. 


—.— Botani Ga — Regent’s-park, 
Chatsworth Garde 
Oa utlandshire, 


eee eee 


5 aen 


WIRE 
per yard, 2 feet wi 


Galvan. J apse 
13 * ron — ro pers 
11 


Apt a” 3 yy Prt 
18-inch » light ” eee 8 . 1 4 
1f-inch sr rake ae n ” 
1 181155 s 6 rong: 14 
ll the above e an 1 made any width at ene prices, 
If the upper half is a coarse mesh, it —4 pte — prise one- 
fourth. Galvanize — 2 autries, 3d. 
er square foot. Pa tterns ; forwar pos 
. M dufactured by dangled and sis, Market-place, 
delivered free of expense in London „Peter- 


2358587 
RN 7225282 : 


3222 Sete: 8 


Gen . WIRE NETTING, T Two RENES 
` is article requires 


. Kingdom 
12 inches 


wide 3d. per 
24 ” 43d. 


” ” 
” 
Severs: Meat Safes, 

, Flower Stands, 


we å a d Boar 

alvan se 0. 1d . 
Also Fenders, Pireguards Vigra DAs 
Wire Blinds, caries borderi 
2 of Wire 


zi; 
284 
F 


„ Goswell.-Mew 


Rubber; 


—— 


ace Tudia- rubber W Washers ofall —— — Joints 
Steam 
—— 


beer for ali ait kinds of Joints, and 


a full 
which purchasers are 
to make a good set 
to thelr Facto son Nar 
road, London. 


FR 
JO 
H 
N 
o offer K E 
Select a R N * 
yom i N 
i aad 
— 8 
diis 


GE 
NE 
RA 
L 
CAT 
ALO 
GU 
E 
“OF 
VEGETABL 
E 
AN 
D 
FL 
ER 
SE 

EDs 
8, 


HICH 
M 
AY 
BE 
RE 
LIE 
D 
ON 
wW 
ITH 
CON 
FID 
EN 
CE 
AS THE 
MO 
ST 
DE 
SIR 
AB 
LE 
FO 
R 
cU 
LT 
IV 
AT 
I0 
N 


enn, Peak 
maar a 
Per 
5 Ware 1 
Race ie 
ea ms he k =) Plain, 
Mo ae “tf j 
n ar 
s row «9 4 pn fe 
Bias pa 3 ma ing 
Bos noe tai Dv 0 | New Ro So o najd 
1 . 
* ee 6 r 2 a 
. ’ 55 * a. M P 
K T wart ae Ca x Dally’ plants 
ni — or Kont 1 8 1 solid, per P aper. Mushroom 5 Early 65 . 
* ue X 4 Al 17 1 
night’ * b.. 0 9 ew e 312 Cornwell's Vie ria d e g toa 
t 1 i el t p: 
8 — green 1 ne-ai 7 All the five ne e p eps ge, Per 1 
With Tall Green dito 1 pate A 188 sof all the 5 emn 1 ‘tut 
all rrow 1 6 Syo! wap Be be mb 5 6 A pherry barb, E 
Eo 1 5 1 5 Erak 5 Bme 
Far 1 6 & eedon’ ect nag r pi — er dos root, 
— 0 3 ion preron E * a Shag i 
ae f aie — 5 1 te Oxf. 8 ies, 125 p s. 60. ne Heli 
ylor’s ; P Win —4 e Shi sE or pb er d ean 
Green ‘hn * N qt. Mahe An K er u.. r 2 1 Pra d, s 7 1 atoes. per dozen: a 3 
Phea — 8 22 — 1. — Pei te anes arly me, Wal 00s A se 
‘ varie 1 3 4 aia. 2 aved K Prolifi 6 Inut-te eberrie Boils 8. hese ets. 
R tes of 0 8 we sk moa idne 0, 0 Early an s, H. heal r d. 
e amast” 4 1 Melons — ve Ga 1 ot y, behl. 2 Early Nene Y Kid ydrol o Chines s., m à N 
ares: on 4 9 Tre 8 rsa sti Shales ‘rom 10 6 Ki ne shaw Ne ney I r pelea ese ixe eir 
f carle old — r mo 0 e eR st g po a p d e 
jaral 1 5 r Badding a SH a TE mbergia vl 
. We perps E fabs 25 ad he 1 e ae c 0 | Jacoba is elegan 9 05 
or J . „ ” 
=a x ,; caltivated rea imas i «| 1 anne ibs Břuning Ki ate ea bal = 40 4 be axi serichii sated 1 
0 es 6 * ea < do. 6 ae n ine mind 
2 nf curled 5- 06 ü the botigr so 4 rade su er Ib, 23 nives; 2 ‘a do. 0 0 Kavif pubie c ew nothe = 
varlegat per pay 404 near End 1 aris. 6 3 . ket o seed : iste wli 5 ta Selon 
ing ( 83 Be | —.— ive y~ 2 n Corn, Rap as. ” “mello on ) 5 7 kon ~z 
» w ‘ 0 eur per Ms 0) e, oi ” Pe 
* ma a p nna 5 ee cs 1 
M —— Sus ol i „all th "per oz. 0 6 Super a sn terms, 40. fi i x DSOME Penilia r 80 aparet — — 
ary Purple Cas A oeli ea kinds 72 6 12 5 pe ade 1 Se with i 1 8 E oR 0 3 e zi 
~ nape | Brighton Le oe eji prere ze 1 h ieties, eds. wy arte A tail Grass 5 y; 
1 9 — Cin ttu y ‘ Me — — . 10s. in rticl Boies 3 ines EN 
5 ported o goas e i Seas an — — sealed eee a $ “(ia TAL 
: 0 artie edor Tige Tie aeg 13 waa em collection ôs 2 stipa . re's- 
F 8 er Cab 2 ed vari W. T in > 2 al ve s, suit 1 — — 0 
tor w ha leave bag fyi p | Achi ë nes n colours dis per abl ark ata 0 6 
"Londo ved, se x imen jeties of H igri oren tin pap : spur i 6 
Paris Go a W 18 sg Tet pariat- rarities toto ne Rar 1 3,12 dist 0 6 
Dread per ox hite Cos, 0 a ur ock, ös Tee 1 Leto m man va tas 
ath b oz, s, 6 Hi „ . 6d. ee si ix er- 
ogg j 0 1 pr — a k, per Loasas ant 85 s. 4 
a & oth prea | 9 ” indi flora gra 0 0 paper Sha of ens et arf 0 
Tea 0 Pine ¥ ers, E “4 0 Anon ath: carnea S a abe LIMBE = 3 of sorte rosacea es. 0 3 
— 1 1a a y P un 5 : 0 ed 
artes Globe a Wh oz. 1 9 12 * —0 = L ra scandens RS. odd monogyniin us. 0 3 
Seras ie 0 th ste eruen e pac 8 80 pe iff m, 0 
y | D burg P Per 12 canis abablodn ent: 0 3 pelis seab acke Imn al renn oru fine 0 3 
Barly Bat Early 9 ane by Ee oz, Ld owed nis arabieu a 0 3 s erm abe t-s. album zy ne 0 3 
Poako's È 0 W 0 5 eus 4% U 6 Lo x m 0 d. us os 3 6 
Pare D6 —— a va . inum (all 2 - e be e's Lobelia grand 2 5 b 
ba 2 . 0 ro Hendi s n 1 a 
P Es Emperor e. 9 6| look red ste 54 n ne gra the en pela p ndersoni ee voter as 1 0 
e dt et mo 1 on —9 i See mo f » bicol erpa cate 8 N 
Y sa ree $ n 8 “ihe 0 0 ; 
ery ear kei 0 o pe Pot » peng ana 0 ; : pentaphyllun — i 15 1 a Salvia p E 
ly 0 del ri 0 A , sib ulos 0 tr yllum 0 6 A 2 fo 0 apa 
4 ° 75 * Olive-s 0 uricul fine mi 88881 3 | Tp wot 1 an 0 6 iy provingy RN 0 3 Se bic 
: 5 4 
0 ar! ous mew va a fron — = 0 8 _ Brandi el athe lay 29 3 bib prt — 
J 8 a i er t procaine | 
0 Pra per arie Brac fi ari er. 3 „ rub cula rm, anth en he . 0 thu: A 4 
me, paci 8 ty, ase bees pun ra tum, 1 in pl us nia r bi “ie 6 s Hook — 
2 rlet om 0 Balsa * med 6 cata 3 0| Lu Mirette. — 5 ean 0 3 emi n$ 
pint tt LE beri a Thul ea... e a ieties 6 . 
. , s. , u . 
— í 0 ate are i folia a. 0 8 en = 1 os 5 
ac : |B m ne di —1 6 5 lat ‘oth ed — 
0 e nitur is- 00 s 1 ers 1 ” Cruik gu a 
tiela! bachis agg of a 6 urant me con 0 6 
585 ia, hia ADOR 5 c gis Srana nis a kii tA $ 
lesion hia insign e0 i olin relay . specio ath d 0 3 
meS £ tion of Hame m is... 8 sia gra iei 5 Maic es s Jovis new ` 3 : 
Ae bac me a 6 Dani es ope p Wei pA 
Waltherea as. : TE niia . 9 ce E 
late i ale: do. om be De ga sea ; rvel dit A 
I udri : udn ber 9 3 erte of fior 0. 
ye gita nepon oe Her. 1 dis ni ers itf .0 3 td Pe a, 3 
: ve 2 él 0 » dis at — 0 Di tin, um 18 j 115 an 0 
] „ 9 15 Q 0 3 ý eo E tto, ne orL wa: rf 0 3 gold 6 di ad 3 
; vel 9 i 0 3 : gra lor sy 1 Det bie orm ark arf 3 wigs 85 “al ist 
on OA ¢ 3 u ndifi 0 0 fer ie nnia a =e Mi, ryan i th inct 0 3 
; 0| AGRI 5 yi 0 3 0 ndittora... 0 6 ali varieti lano ts G ignone nthem é vare 
Yellow Bul : 08 am (new! ta 0 3 Diant s gra d per , E è 08a atte, um te ue 
hirvis E 1 panula r 05 3 thi grandia; en- M itiv s tri 9 
“Ling Se x ” wor! us, doui ora shoe sitive plan pai 
= | 5 ition d 5 named me e 
| of i mR i R a ' w j 
| Rea R —5 e 8 ina expla : 4 5 e piat 0 : — onic ste m 12 $ oly 
Re 9 t wee 8 6 nt nan spire ta 54 0 6 ” aout ts a 9 ae regia,» stinct 0 6 
8 = ER aa e „ e oia iuri, 
per è Globe 5 w p 4 — 8 er tica new 0 $ Di 1 > ndiar .0 j auer all u aly 6 
i one * . 0 Clintona pa f ebene 0 6 ae Py 15 n 0 e 3 = the 0 
è 0 a h ia, RAY eas 3 ise nis gnis sorts — 0 75 
je bash 2 0 15 Dale — 25 ener : +0 2 55 Cram — an 0 2 
Sage SE Cuphea ella” E ee i d SORE: 1 8 ew) ro 2 
; = a de w 
ar 4 Dart ison W eel Wea grandif 8 . e ee 
8 ` 0 E an an 0 at r 45 nd 3 
ie : 82 sch anglian rum nam 3 Zi 
, Bile estas 3 tenn schio pu liana 2 0 Cedr ent 0 innia 
Cine wle oe —— 3 . . — 2 8 3 
0 a 0 6 ee rior 0 Na * nd S w 
and kinds Say lata 72 ardi Dia aa it D apo hru eparste 1 
— e ecte: a6 0 75 a pi num 0 mos nica bs o te y 
er melin 2 Glo D . name 0 wi Ree ’ fall 8 
per Ib. natio = wa 6 — . d . — ouble 1 e 
F Clarki — — 1 / Genta — >. hich may Aois dai 25 5 
oc" Can as, tis. G e 10 6 Pg oe om ay be pe w nes 6d. to pine 
all 2 . mos nik” 0 6 ** wie P pe 5 5 ee 
dy th 0 3 spi of te 3 21 Pi ie Ran : 
ly ot ar 8 Goran as ie 5 ad 0 8 na ae cote t tiin 
5 a rts ties | Gra hd ens. 5 x tan botter named Hear g 
3 — 28 3 . . 0 3 Riv dara r e nd Pi 
8 ng 5 5 e a nie o pe pies 
Breet . priz Peed ai 425 0 6 der o inia oe the r doz 
ma. sent Humea the new 8 Paxton —— d Clim mams, 1 
jor | Hel ea Beori ew * mn — F im 8, n 2s. 
80. loca fi sorts co 0 Col en g“ p edition Mp: 7 
„ he i H saand 2 rst. rate 0 6 — ott ion 8. e oses, nds, 
W eliot . 3 as ion uld ag of i n > 12s. 
jen ; Hi tropi m Se sui di ers’ the 
dae anth 0 2 sand roi 10 ribut os Rose 
6 ‘i . — nehum aper distrib ora ets Ama 
elio —— Seed — tribu „ er teure 
nul Š ; ‘A os jit of tion 1 gers. hich ! 
Idtii x se eri ecte it 58. 
= — TF cand ntiemen to 
0 1 way pa Ben . 455 their Ten 
ar ew * 2 
ere riv: 2 y a 
abov e ŝa zeala pa 
A? ales feat ay 
ed = or ro 
ends, d. 
to the er acco! 
ae 
tor 
anis alen. . 


Ne 
lly 
dispr 
wholly disproportione 
e sd 
Ehi Tree sort in any 
th 
or 
* e. see ere 
Se sate 
nul of Wi at s to 
set ofiron larg ne : * late d 
Mt be be to time efic 
1 arge enough t rect Gentle, Aare 
Herba — b — the 
* — the p! 
5 . 
1 5 
Pot the n 
a mo prieks 
— ; 
a 


satan — 
ae 


Seed 
of a rites 
ee 


No. 8.—1849.] SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 
= : SSRS. J. ayn H. BROWN’S descriptive ed | 
INDEX ply eye 
124 b | Tee, to F Us | Mc: CATALOGUE OF ESANTA S for 1849, with a separate 
Agi Society of England ».».». 116 e Labourer. . 123 E of Flower and Vegetable Seeds, can be had by post; and — ra 
] — Enta ition inio, Law respecting glebes are also now supp ying the following desirable Hardy Shrubs | 
d e- 119 e| Linseed, as food ... snd other plan 
* . 118 Manure, ta or. 
PS tre for 118 bones 23 — Belgian Azaleas, on a own roots, with 3 
s- crag thd 2 t. Dictionary rev. EH 5 A need fp . 2 Piai 772 
aral sss.. K — ‘ican Azaleas, ditto i — ditto s. 15 
os ee 2 nde a ae ptian 126 e| 25 Hardy flowering shrubs, one of a s y nam 
a | Ponds, concrete for.. .. . .. . .. 125 ¢ | 12 Rhododendrons, ermi scarlet, a Po Ba and rose, 
118 e r prices of ob — varieties * E 
‘phot an ere pi Pota meee | New hardy yellow Rho each 75. 6d. to 10 6 
ae we F N oy tu 6 Andromedas, of sorts, including 1 Horibunda, for ) 
tural condition Raspberry 2 e ardy Heaths, Kalmia S, dozen 
: i. tee. 122 4 Shrubs, spring flowering s... 116 6 Fine hardy Magnolias, ane Er 
f oiin 123 ¢ Snowdrops.... 50 Dwarf Roses, on their own poet one, é sort, nam ed 1 
— AS 6 123 6 | Tanks, m 1 and half-sta 8 Roses, per doz, ew and 15 
aluatlon eve. 120 e Tempera Moss Roses, per 100. . 25 
Dh pja n $ Mr Aod ae Now e crimson Moss and climbing Roses, A dozen * 6 
1 . disbuw Aa “cutting back 17 Tea zomen Roses, one of a sort, per 
„ 125 a Vine bord S, to concrete 18 Glycine sinensis, extra fine 3 in * 15 to 30 ft a, 3 
re 116 e Wilson’s translation of Jussieu's 12 — — Azaleas, one of a ei: — 3 ne a 
Society...,...+.. 119 4 Elements of Botany, rev.,... 120 a | 12 Choice Camellias, by name, ditt 
50 Choice flowering Greenhouse plants, one of a sort os 16 
BLE E ITALIAN 1 typ ROOTS, 3s. per dozen, 24 Choice Ericas, — of a sort, b; 
R HALL begs to advise the arrival of his est Petunias a erbenas, one oft a sort, per doz. +. 
the above ROOTS, which are this | 6 Bulbs of the beautiful new one — one of a sort 1 
remarkably fine, in consequence of their having been left | Double Italian — she 2 
fo the ground a sufficient time to mature, in of b uae Peony roots, new dou te, pink, bush, and 
taken before due season, for the sake of creating an early crimson, per ozen 9 0 
sale in Lab diate Italian and —— Import Warehouse, 63, 25 Choice Herbaceous Border Plant ts, for . 7 6 
treet, Grosvenor-square, facing the o Ch hapel. Fine Standard and Dwarf trained beer Nec- 
B.—Postage — taken in paym tarines goo Plums, Pears, and Cherri he 
bes t approv ed sorts of hens retpective 
Dee ITALIAN TUBEROSE eae kinds, cree 9 name, 2s. 6d. each, or, per dozen 24 0 
bs 0 is most ans nd fragrant Untrained or Maiden ditto, 1s. 6d, each, n 15 0 
jas ed from Italy, at A. COBBET T's Old-esta- Fine Gooseberries, Curr: nts, and — per doz. 3 0 
blished 2 Warehouse is, ” Pall-mall, inii tad Strong Vines, Figs, Apples, and Walnuts, per dozen 15 0 
— a 4s. per doz Also, ex pected, * — the end of Ja- Cryptomeria Japonica, and 6 choice Pin 10 0 
MTO of . Lemon, Citron, an a Shad- Fine new scarlet and yellow-flowering Chestnut, Rosa 
= „together with Catalonian, — and Arabian acacia, and purple Beech, 6 to 8 feet, per dozen . 18 0 
4 ane any of which may be bes vergreen Privet and Beech, 3 to 5 ft., N . 100 12 6 
i Albion vane Stoke Newington, London, F 
` RST CLASS FUCHSIAS AND VERBENAS, RD GEORGE HEND ingt 
y Quint SMITH begs to inform his friends in St Jol . 3 wi ON, Wall t 8 
t his DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE of — 5 ACHIDIENES PATENS MAJOR, at 3s. 64. ebe y 


sendin +f 


* e in every collection ; the habit of the plant is good, 
e flower a rich dark plum co lour, 
ACHIMENES GHIESBRICHTIL, at — = This a — of the 
ost beautiful of the — — tribe, a d quite ; the 
habit i is cl — —+ — — —— The 
length on colour, and has a 
peantiful — appea aran 
ACHIMENES KNIG 5 ro White, se peep dwarf habit, 
8. eal = be forwarded by post, 
BR ROWALLIA JAMESONI I, 58. 
PLUMBAGO LARPENTAZ, nice plants, in free growth, 3s, 6d, 


as „N — Great. Berk- 

1 5 3 White Champion 
Red — — 
Superb White — do. 

or postage stamps from akua corre. 


= en a packet, 


i 1 
22 orders 

: TO MELON GROWER 
£ FE NEW HYBRID PERSTAN having 
é — First Prizes at all the Chiswick Shows of the 
of London last season, needs no further 


e, 
2 leming’s New Hybrid e, der aay * 


t-office orders * petting 

a” NE & — Great — 

RANUNOULUSES, ANEMONES, 
Beris, b Pana — 


8 — 
— an 


ths per 
ebe 


en 
from the best varieties extant. 
e root of _ 50. 


8. to 
vin Bag, 168. and 
208. to 


CARNATIO. ONS 
i 5 pairs 408. to 
3 5 Priced Catalogues for 1849 sent ir tee postage 
csipi of Ate, Ranuncut ulus $ how to Grow it” 


ES, 50 sorts 
S Elec 25 


enclosed o 


Wn SEEDLING STRAWBERRY, 25s. 
=e: — 8 ite arte ——— . 1 
post for 8s. d., 


in flavour) may be had “eee — 2 

AN, Seedsman, 1 124, P d, Liverpool. 
LARCH PLANTS, 

Nurs 


— ale 
very fine plants. 5, and Gates Seedling’ 4 — one 


and at further reduced very 


mmen 

post on re- 

sear 

Labels, — overi 

te ot Pres Sai mo 


Improved 
lane, Charing- 


E. G. H. also begs to offer the following at their annexed 
prices, when left to his selection, and which will be much to the 
8 of the purchaser. 

ANCY GERANIUMS, 125, 18s., 


and 3 
ohne RARIAS, disti net in colours, 125. — 18s. per dozen. 
a AZALEAS, ditto, fine large plants, at 12s., 18s., and 
s. per The list will e — a description of 


. e 130 of the ele varietie 
ERICAS, distinct varieties, 12s., —5 and 308. per dozen, 


EPAC RISES, ditto, 125. 4 18s. per dozen. 
GREENHOUSE P. PLANTS, and Ditto Climbers, 12s, 18s,, and 
per dozen 


1 TS and Stove Climbers, 18s., 308., and 42s, 
e Trade supplied. 


N.B. Catalogues for 1 8 will * eee on the Ist of March. 
ma x will contan tof Sto d Greenhouse plants ; 2, Eri- 


THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


[Price 6d. 
| WOODLANDS NURSERY, MARESFIELD, NEA 
on KFI IELD, 8 1 * 
w™ p SON beg to invite attention’ to 


- cha 8 of TREES AND 


aC SHRUBS, 
Fed a of Ung Paper 
N. B. Seedlin 


at pa: 
„dated Feb. 10 and 17, StS 


and ‘Trans splanted Larches at unprecedented 

low pie à 
| N. & ES begs to say his LIST OF DAHLIAS 
| a r which contains his new Seedling Dahlias, 
Seedling I fhe; Geranium, and Seedling Calceola Also, 


—— The we N nad by 
y. Su rrey-lane, Batterse 
8. For "Private Sale by 1 small 
ue ce collection of about 500 healthy pla — including 
some of the rarest kinds. Fo ae 5 Dr. LINDLEY, 
21, Regent. street, London. 


his mixtures of Grass mete with a 


esatea of the — — tion, & 
unknow . 


88. 
nd old s 
seeds are collected under his immediate superintendence, 
„is requ . 
nce from aren 


LARKE’S NEW LINCOLN GREEN PODDED 


same time ha 
rich Gr 


SUDBURY Sota SRST 


"Bue u 
ER MAJESTY QUEEN 1 11 5 


AND His ROYAL RINCE Bizi 
H. HOLMES, | Pe n E-GARD 
e NURSERYMAN, and Froktsr, respectfully announces 
70 9 4 of ay — 1 of 6 


ut the first week in 
Deseriptive i — 15 a on oad application, con- 


| taining the favourable repent of the above Seedling in the Gar- 
le of 18 


deners’ Chronic 


St. Helier, Je — 
— CAMELLIA STOOKS, fit for —— ho gra 
meee elean, free, and healthy, i 
00. i 


cas and Epac 3, om eA 9 — an 
4, 5 Gad Ger raniums; 5, Select 1 P 
and in April, 6, Bedding plants, 


A 
lants 


— 


OSLING’S ST. ALBAN’S GRAPE, the same — 
— N —— — ven Com — of th 
Ort 


— ected. all 
May be had of — respectable — — or 
ROBERT JosLING, Seedsman, St. Alban's. 


SEED obs 3 
HARLES SHARP 


the grower 


SEEDSMAN, 


ven plo atisfaction to 
a finds al sai are offered at the following 


= mar”: of 56 Ibs, 
en’s per Orr ease „ 88. 
"Soden —.— 1 Kidneys 
rame 


on one nee vee 


Early Manley 15 


8 
6 
.6 
. 6 
<8 
5 


* 
coocoo S 


meric 

r * 72 

entish 5 e va 
-= 

‘on the receipt of a Postoffice Order 

Say toes gane safe delivery. A 


gr. oyn as as — stock can be 2 
2) 
ae R D PATIA s PEE 
OHN SALTER’S S ‘DESCRIPTIVE. CATALOGUE 
Fo 


of th and other New F Fan as tae with 
New Phlox, Fuchsia Corsmbifiora Sage e Lobelia —— 
Heliotrope Gri rysanthemums, &c., is now rea 


tam 5 A coloured — 
nt upon receipt of — — 
èt, North-End, Ful 


BUSHELL, ie 
hat 


may be obtained by inclosing —— st 
of “ Striata Perfecta“ will 
Versailles Nursery, William. sere 


D 7 raised by J. 
CHESS— White 8 ** 
DUCHE wW G: 
growth, First oe bartion tes at Royal S Sae Tendon Fiori- 
ral, the don Floricultural, and other societies ; 
sodalis the va ee during the blooming 
—Plants in a 15. Gd, each, 
"REI 8 e bloomer, middle size, will bear 
's locality not open enough.— —Plants 
in ap fe ay, 7s. 6d 


J.B, hes ciered ih the sna tid 8 aer for i — 
hay. erat te 2 


7 § poco her 
for — na 
best single 105. e econ „an 
for DIMA single mof La eine 5s. 
3 best — pct London Peon, exbibitio 7 
i ABLISHED NURSERY STOCK FOR — 
be ESS OO EURY NURSERY, — 


lly to 
en 2 — 
Business, which he has carried on at the al 

for the last 32 1 and in order to effect 2 


obi 
gg ge of the —— 


ve and valuable 5 of EVERGREENS, 
SHRUBS, — FOREST 


The stoc B Panned, Yews, 5 to 7 2 ce 
* oe to! 5 fee aurestinus, 3 to 
feet; Phillyrea, 6 fost: Variegated Bat $ to b fit Variegated 
Hollies, 3 to ay e to 4 


TREES, 


r Wing Sweet Bay, 2 fiot 


such as is seldom 
A | tations s wil meet with prompt a 
—— a 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


Ek. 94 


biene GERMAN A 
QUILLIAM H. HEALE is en 2 to 
packets of — of this superb Flower — per p 


ffer a few 
acket, 


pokes aa taken first 
* he ay, veo Last year 
Devizes, $ 

ra Tice, ef palo 
are 20 varieties — nih ‘th each pa 2 a 


prizes in the West of England 
was first at Bath, 
; his blooms were the 
t half globes. 
md the 5 


immense . 

ngs, is rmined'to offer them 
— w a furnished on applica. | 
70 O MARKET F GARDENERS, N KURSERYMEN, & OTHERS. 
ENRY M MEYERS, al Boston-road, ä begs 
he has a large stock off Rifle- 
S for sale, also a few ee 


to inform th 
man” 3888 E pi Bos 
at low prices, to’ 


of a very fine nent w i e White CURRANT, a 


EW ZEALAND SEED 
B.F. Y *GLEDHILL, 20, Ola Market-place, | re 
ackets each containing 
—— — 9 


FOREST, MYRTLE, 
— EET e Also = = Parasitical Seeds, col ol 
— ae — n that cou 


08 

‘Aa ZALEA INDICA ALDA MAGNA d 
large size, great substance, 

wple stripes —5 


— —.— 3 ee last May — 
obtain zg, Pla lis. € a few ve ‘ong, 
at 125. — as to J. ond. 1. — ——.— men, Leyton, 


„ who have as to offer fine I ne of Hardy Belgian 
Hardy Rhododen 8 


Azaleas, at 24s, to 30s, per 
including fine en —— and nerd Mente varieties, ‘at — 
per dozen ; assortment of other American 
Plants at moderate — 25 1 is reaposttally 
ted from unknown 
OLES SUPERB TWR RED CELERY — 
This splendid uction, described in form 


prod adver- 
tisements, may still be okt obtained in ‘sealed packets, with direc. 
tions for cultivation, by en — ton 6d, to the subscriber, or 
to o Se 42 don or the — 


The 
discount to — trade, 
Witttam Port —— 8 Nursery, and 4, Tranquil- 


ERICAN V KURSENT, BEGEHOT, n SURREY. 
NN —— 


J OHN WATERER fact to 2 5 
to execute orders for the following “spendia slardy R RHO- 
DODENDRONS. Good s bushy plants, the Re ours of 
consist of clear and spotted Whites ‘Sear let, deep Rose, 
Dark Purple, ed, &., 300. to 42s. doze 
Album elegans ealii | Lyonese 
me Pellueidum Victoria regina 
Atroru purpu- Perspicuum atu 
reum Pictu um 
Catawbiense | Purpureum elegans | Hyacintheeflorum 
„ fora — ormosum 
mays Bellonum Glennyanum 
— N elegans Gloriosum 
Candentiss album Macranthum 
Cyaneum 12 ardii Marginatum 
Delicatissimum | Variabile Maculatum novum 
Eburneum Splendidum Mirandum 
‘Everestianum 
__Nivaticum 


— ee 73. Eck., lös, and Jls. each and 
ande 1 188. to 215. 
pary son weg to 30s, per dozen, 
aiatta pny handsome bushy pd gt t, 
py sa wg to 2s, Gd. Fine — — 


9 
us induced him to offer 
Also the Boning, for GAME 


ee rO 


LLUM, bushy, 50s 1 1 year . — 3s. per 1000 ; 72 years tranepia anted, 4s. — 1 Re) a ah i 3 * lustre of N i quar d 
1000. ear seedling , fine, 13, 6d. 10 nelusive of Fairbeard’s ; 
‘onal es good 3 per 100. Larger Syoamore „ ls. 6d. per 1000; 11 year do. Larch, — i 1000 Englan 23 Ear . e, British Queen, Burbidge’s 11 
PRIVET. S VEROREEN, koun > ears do., — per 1000; 2 do. Scotch Fir, 18. 3d. per „ and all o Seeds i in proportion of = newest an | 
. 3. êd. per 100, 600 ; Spruce’ * bed 2 | Sorts, sufficient for one year’s cropping o Teel 
somes try OF LEBANON, — a pMa , Very bushy and hand. | 1 year — on 2 per 100; 1 — “a . choicest M 5 ucumbers inclusive 5 * 
venues, to 5s., and 7s. 6d. each, „ 6d, per 1000; I Yews, 1 to 14 foot, 24: b A omplete collection in 11 . ; 
IRİSH , very fe ; ; $ foot, 24s, 100; 2 to 2 smaller —_ „ ) 
close grown plants, from | feet, 50s. per 100; 3 to 4 feet, 100s, per1 4 f 2 1 2717 
E77 ß | SEBS Fin cent kea ns gl A | 
ae t z 2 +— n t 
” SPRUCE, 81 VER, an and A 6d. each. Japonica, 2 feet, 6s. each; — Taare, 3 rn Rrape No extra, charge for packin — iba nao — 
TULIP TREES, Weeping and Foo ok Ea edis dto ee 27, 50. 120, Moot Ga. per 100; Beech for A General Catalogue may be had; also a List of each ool 
all in a fit stat 5 „25. ; Horse Chestnut; Elm, A j . 
POREST TREES of ail kinds, suitable for Copse andothy jeer Linas bate tn per B00 ‘the t fet, 12, dd. — 3 a „ do ok cage oon best Anns ara 
* — 4 by nanii ing — e usual credit given 
— — — h ae 
a ng Waited on apy —.— — done by contract, Catalogues for. 2 8 for cash; . ght paid to, — to Liverpool or D Ee fine lesen of impor tocks, ait Asters, 4 
. : forest trees.— — ne med, 3d. per packet. — . 8 l 
D o e eee A Descriptive Flower See ue sent with each colle 
ASS anD Brown's DESCRIPTIVE PRICED Ewenp. n ton Ly cuolosing two postage stamps, 
1810, —— free b t g respectfully to apprize 5 PPS, t. 
We beg t offer the follo y post on ig oe the Nobilit: ty and pese Sin that he has p 12558. y 
Se der aaria SMI in collections, ud m — ha Wat hae one S “SEEDS, in inns stadt various sein doy e 
A complete desde EE Ds. allowed to be by t judges, — his Melon is eure, allowing 2 bushels and 12 Ibs. to each acre. Direction 
Danecroft Rival, urston’s Reliance, £ 3, d. | earliest — finest savour gr grown; th aye nern it, — Sowing and treatment will accompany the seeds. Mixed s0% | 
Queen, and other fine Pens, 20 Surprise, British petition Town ; ie has proved itself by com. | for improving old Grass Lands, 18. 3d. per Ib. Fine sors 
other Vegetable Reeds, 9 in au, — — has been — three f rst 2 It is a handsom own. * Lawns, &c., 1s. 4d. per Ib. 1 
newest kinds, very thin skin, green . Hi nd melting ——y— z —— tne GE GIBBS & Co. beg to notice that their att 
ee Gaerne, in smaller quantities 05 3 3 0 erack or lose its flavour wh kept, * — most — fi st, with prices, for the ensuing season is ready, and tohet 
2 „ 2 2 0 weighs from 5 to 7 Ibs. others do: it | (x warded on application, as well as their Catalogue of ia 
A Coilection suitable en 1 This superb Melon is well arden and Flower 7 GEORGE GIBBS and 5 4 
A list of the sorts furnished ifrengi ei 010 ¢ — free setter, wary prudutta ox — —— KH s Tens Beat han 8 &c., to the Ro; r Department of 
Ts: sy woes ee SEEDS, 10 aming arietes e of 7 seeds, 29, Gak S with alee 888 n, de. &e., 26, Down.street, Piccadilly, London. 
for sowing, heights, colours, wind NER OF LF- MOO 
— besne ee (true) 6 HOMAS 9 0 
Whest and newest Annuals . d. 2 — (trae) . seeds 15. 0d ficial G aa 8 
"to vente fra ‘a, 99 for Bo da, Dte So 1$ O| Berry prize in i tee pet — AL AGRICULTURAL SOCIE: ert alan | 
ties be 5 in 5 rem . 
ede ee n lawns, 7s. 6d., or 12 200, — Cuthill’s (true) y a E è D » 20 ih general, gris ae bers of the Society, an 4 Seed 
3833 edie 0 Annu als, 7a 04. i — 2 Emperor green feht oe H ” l 0 heuse is at th Lone 8 Counting House rn EET 5 4 
B 12 Win is sve ove 0 . er © , 4 
20 vars. choice —— Fe erential 1 — ox 12 br 7 6 p eee fi E ae 18 9 LONDON, as for ithe last Fifty Years. 7 
36 varieties im 1 als, 78. 8a, 15 8 Two packets selected of the latter 10 1 0 the sean, Lists of Agricultural Seeds are always W 
ne Lr mitia packet the Queen ‘Melon rt ‘will be included cason, and may be had on application. 
— with orilers are requested from from nose end. Was LL—The three best y ‘ FLOWER-PUTS AND GARDEN SEATS. 
ew phe wn corre. | W eren cultivation are th OHN M 
21, and upwards articles London, and with all orders | old n Tamworth, a at Is. each per packet MORTLOCK, 250, Oxford-street, T i 
able to Bass and Baows, or sete P ice bridge, Bane ; F — te cles in various colours, a lar —— ; 
Sudbury, sown, Seed and | postage free. A remittance m . — „ Will de sent tion of 45415 ale 
. the pi of useful CHINA, GLASS, an 2 5 
in Id. order; or the WARE ari E at the i> — for cash. 


any s 


Hort. 
Surr 


Oe VI 


ently Aig 


offered. 
Society's Bar ro ns, 


e | allowance 5 the 


F also of GEORGE CoRNWELL š 12 
— . * per 100, or 4s. per doz. The 


2 


iar 
Royal Botanic Society’ s Gardens, a | 
bei 


ing the best shown for 
Garden was 
Strong canes to be had 
W. and J. NonE's, 152, 
ag roen a 
ual 


> 


OBERT WHIBLEY; is now executing orders from 
higi — collection of * HSIAS, comprising all the 
tion. he plants are very fine, well 3 


2 finest 
hed in o pa 5 for shing immediately, and will 


establis 
i 


| give 5 


Term 


Knows 


at CHa 


R; 


12 fin 
Da. 


Admittance Oraii, 


er do 


vari 
atisfaction to pure 


ol er 


Do. do. 
s presented 


planted ; —— — by the 


sonable terms.— Chester Nurserg, envin ngton 
~ SPLENDID NEW SEEDLING PANSIES, * ALBION,” 
AZORE,” and CANARY.” 
OHN S OFIELD anp SON beg to offer the 
above fine SEEDLINGS for 103, the s — = who 
show the Pansy they will be de 9 ary is a 
yellow self, and — doubt the best of its — . = full 
— on see their Catalogue, Also now ready, a fine healthy 


stock of the Le — o Pansies, Carnations, a — Picotees. 
s for o low 


* Single. — of“ “Canary, 
with — aoa on —— ation 


XHIBITION OF * CAMELLIA JAPONICA, — 


3 of these panei Exoties is now in oe 
Sons’ Nursery, W 


and 


2 ae ane non — AND SUPERB 


ILLIAM 
admirers 
erbaceous Plan 

100 Ditto 
100 Select Roses 


per 


ENE LANGELIER, Wangen &e., St. Helier 
Jersey, begs to offer Sever 
worth the attention of the, 


W. 


e varieties, — uite new 
do. 


with all orders t 
— is respectfully requested — the order, payabl 


andsw 
C. and Sons Sane a fine stock of 3 — 2 
ts of CH these planta will make strong Å they can supply at — 


F. H. S., begs 

of the above that. he has provided a large 

supply f for the 3 season, which a be planted from this 
— og middle of April with safet. 


than 400 varldlles, the whole good sorts and gosi 
lants, W. 2 has also a wth, dozens 
ollyhocks, at 12s. per doz 

The Ho oo Nurses pae Yorkshire, Feb. 24. 


A vast quan 
they will require to be on] a ewn onths in 
pivot or tap roots. Price 50 La few months in pots, having no 

or remittance re — — 


5 1 
vior sorts a 10 6 
sorts 


ba fe TE 
sate for carage: 


an be obtained on the ia 


ompen: 


junds tastefully arranged and 


6d. per pep 


. Pansy see 
2 rsd —— — t free by post, 


ds, Yorks shir 


worth-road, Vaux 


owe ring specimen: 


the 


nts, in — sorts, 2 each, for 25s. 
in eee 358. 
— pet 2 i for 30s, 


arieties, al 1 tery and the Roses 


of his very select Dou 


RGREE 
1 Thou 


€: 
y are also fit for potting; 


— r 1600, 
own correspondents 


A — erence 


00,000 PLANTS AT LESS THAN HALF-PRICE. 


WEEKS‘ 


WATER 


ND CO., 


erected, in the Ki 
N ncn expressly for the 


improv 


00. | lating. 
being —— at less than hal 


Plants of the ch 
f ae 


Arpanate 


ments in H — Building, — and Migos 
— and are 


Hornovse Buitpers and Hor 
MANUFACTURERS, have lately 
d, Chelsea, an extensive Ornamental 
e purpose of exhibiting all the modern 


t varieties are g 


CTORIA RASP BERR RIES.— | 


da — month, or year on the most 
d, London, 


rom a collection of | ther 


wee DENYER, e e Loug 


near 


155. per dozen, 2 left to E. D.; 
ots, 12s, to 18s 


— 85 
© 


n great va 

a fine Fr ruit be 
ition. Planting by contract, — on the mos 
plans. A — — pre a of Trees, &., will be 
receipt of two postage 

CAUTION. -E. D. Fospectfully informs his friend 
no oo. of e yry in London, the only establis 
is 4 


nO 
STT 
2 


ae 
2 


— 


~ ISIANTHUS RUSSELLIANUS-— Strong hay 


Gon of we ee at from 28. 6d. to 39 
c M plants a 3 ready. Ve ; 
BERRIES inpowterforelag <io fae. yoo aan stat 


seny Black Pine Strawberry, at 2 we 100, or 1 
6s. for 25. — Strawberry has given gre eat 8 pes fr the 
ught it two ye 


He 


erry, and 8 Sila Is. rie pos 
JAMES ĈUTHILL, Camberwell, near Li 


aoe —— SERY, near GOD il 


M 


—— 
— beaded Quiche of via — healthy descri 
— —.— (which will 2 regulated according t —— 
en) sent on 1 24. 
W. DRUMMOND. & “SONS, Ae 
Stirling, N. B., will furnish, free, on application, 
Lists a 3 and other AGRIC 5 SEEDS, 
N.B. arcels of Seeds above 25 J. value (with the 
of Grin and Vetches), delivered rite of carriage in 
e Hull, — cast —— and m other parts to whid 
* 
AGRICULTURAL "SEEDS, — Purchasers can k 
Supp! ery superior of all sorts of T: 
Man; 8801 n rae Tab Parsnips Cab — 
Grass Seeds, &c. ery 1 Quantities — j 
treated as who — — Haris, 10, St. Martin's. lang 
Charing- cross, London. Prices sent 
AGRIGULTURAL a 
Le WHALLEY 


8 

LAW RASS SEEDS 
solely of the finest and shortest growing kind 
7 and other weeds, Pri 


> 


s, free Ton mos 3 


bo 
P 8 


Pastures, at 
ica required Nr 2 to 4 gallons per acre, according ti 


th 


Carriage fre: to London, Bristol, or Basingstoke. 
ae ae 5 Sons, Reading, Be rks. 
EDS.- 


K. de 


n 
n 


A new 

po 
ries, 

* —— inelu 


p 


attention O: 
5 — which he e 
in 100 superfine sorts, pened £210 0 
er 100, from 7s, 6d. to 
12 50 st 10 sorts, nam 


er 


1 0a TANCE OS NoT AL 
RU BRUN 


Kine or 8a beg: 
No bility ana 9 9 ‘tie. above 
an supply of the best quality at the 


100, fr 


pox , do., 


18 0 
BUM, each, from Is. to 25 6d, 


_THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


115 


es es BE 
ante 


35, 6d. ie 78. 6d. 
do 58. to 218 


Ae 58. to 1 
collection of Hybrid § Seedling LI LIES, $ Korts for 188. 


he continues to s 


say uppity 
ots of Lilium lancifolium aetna for 50., 
a ubbery should be without them, as 


ly lanting in 


ye 


5 EW “RANUNCULUSES &c.—The new 


Juen N 


N have oh genta 1 


thle to the older vari 
RANUNCULI 


50 superb new-y. 


sist of very superior and first-rate flowers, 
from immense quantities of seedlings, 


prolific flowe 


njog and culture. 


med, 408: 5 


4 fine — Bh rarities, 3 15s. 


“GLADIOLUS Ga eA is, large roots „Ir. 2a — ; Brench- 
leyensis, 5s. ; splendens, 5s. ; Bona Mundi, 28. 6d. ; Ramosus, 
184. 6d. ; Poi us sanguineus ox ls. 1 5 2s, 6d, and up- 
‘wards, free by 4 Se er 2s. 925 ex 

a BLE ANEMONES 8. 

F or pe T8 * ae doz., or 12s, per Ib. ; ; Fine, 1s, 3d. per 

per Ib. 


3 100 fine, 5s., or, kei de 


; Single, fine, 84180 colours, — per Ib. 


3 of Roots, ae or § post, 


new Ranunculuses 


£40 aan 


Post-office orders ante arse e to Bas 


‘Stersen Brown, Remittances requeste a 


nd 


ss and 8 Seed and Horticultural Establishment, 


Sudbury, Suffolk 
PAUL an 


‘to supply on the following advanta, 
kinds left to them, 
tandards 


218. to ihe. ang * 


Dwarf Standards 


Dw 


any address 


sssssseso 


D SON ave ‘tll a fine stock of all the 
most bean sorts of ROSES, which they will be happy 
ageous terms—the selection of 


d Co., Seed Merchants, Plymouth. 
rd List will soon be 
appy to forward sees. when published, to | 
we may be favou 


. BG: 25 6d, 


red in full on the back pa age of 
aturday, Feb. 3, copies of which 


? 


ering are far prefer- 


ULUSES, Tee by post, with printed directions for t 


ing our superb 


s oi Gladiolus, me. m 
and Brown or to 


hue akhi cor- 


ready, and 


Che Gardeners’ Chronicle. 


SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1849. 


MEETINGS FOR me a yg ESAR WANG WEEKS. 
Heb, 26 


Moxpis, 


dt 
Sarbkbar, 


Rove oH Phare Grass 


Tris now six PS 


— 


— — 


Sete eee eee ne 
—kᷣ— ** 
FO eve ee ee eeee 


ä —2575* 


Ar 


an 
oun — oon mnterbal 


75 — RAN 


since 185 fitness of HARTLEY? : fw 
0 of Sunderland 


the common shee 


at 55 


enses — rough |s 
and left with 
and 


I persed, and by common sheet concentrated, or at 
kass not nae with by dispersion. It was, 
r, felt e —— session to t 
wad o better ån 


n the presence of a large quantity 

light, among which were the following, v 
Begonias odorata, undulata, a os poe a mea 

a, Torenia asiatica, Pentas € 
vatiéa ane aurantiaca, an dna Kaen dees: picta 
The fou è Degon Calostylis, 1 and Pen 
had been cut close back, and were leafless, Torenia 
was a cutting just struck, ‘af of Achten 
tubers were employed. The experiment was thus set 
in action, yalhont any special care having been taken 
make eed; on the contrary, everything 

was — voces cess, 

It is needless to say that the 3 — of October, 
November, and December, 1848, 
usually gloomy, and 
Febru 


© 


necessary to leave the Aa in the dark at day] 
10 ong, in uns of the 
with froze h 


n z last, at — 3 f the aag 
cultural Societ „to w. the experi- 
ment wa onfided, 520 Tra the Siere 50 named 


in the most bea health, with firm short wood, 
broad, thick, clean, , bright-green leaves, 00 in the 
case of the Ges and Pentas, flo i: perfect in 
colour, size, 8 fie In short, said, 
without the least exaggeration, that 8 pE ex- 
amples of high cultivation were never seen, ma few 


so perfect: It was clear that there had been no de- 
ze | ficiency of any ete r condition eka is re- 
1525 se the most pety hi 


nclusive proof of the excellence of rough M 

plate gika 8 8 es the oie 1 inte- 

rest. It shows that garden 

effectually rms the oe als effects. of the sun 

duri and that 
ri may be i 


only nine months ae this vexatious outlay 
might! have ben —— glass does all that 
no light i is m erc 
that the result of the 197 
erim 


p ent n I 
transparent “i sheet glass in gardening, and that ay 
handglass roof, or screen, hereafter to be 
In many 
h while to 


It is, eee to be — bo the glass: áp 
which is 


In ano 
the pea — which the Poraro Disease made its 
appe n different parts ‘of the United Kingdom, 
and an estilo of the amount of loss sustained, ac- 
cording to our informants, in their several districts. 


In preparing this report, 4 has seemed advisable to 


EA to their — 
ew aoe Sco 
nd, com the — 
southern counties, and anda with a —— northern. 
xamination of the periods a which disease 

showed ‘itself, teaches us that, although it som have 
been, and no doubt was, in som 
8 by climate, yet that its r. us regu- 
lated by. som some dnfiugns e of which we have no know- 


stianal g 


150 ge. 
such as o 


Wut ing e 
ne at Homawerih;i in Yorkie, snd. tw 


others in Sussex 


2 no evi 
mame ome d 


y an experiment than J 
n’s pinion’ 5 and the aloke z Garden | i 
arden of J 


1 
syl- 


s the dry | lat 


e yea. 
substitute 


thi 
ther column will be found a report upon | « 
SE 


e, deter- | 


a Sell PRS 


1 Jane the ‘Called te, ‘the address, iil, sea Liverpool, 1 
ybi it is obvious that, | pursuing the same ain m We have heard of ane -i 


from Sets 52 those before us, no con- 
be drawn as to a fi 


n Ross: e It is, how- 
een worthy of —.— ext although the saris 
had been Jh at in In pent e so € 
the 20th o $ not noticed till 2 es 
terin Merona takings oe Isle of Man, Fermanagh, 
Cumberland, and Northu 
later in Kirkcudbright, eebles, 
. nd Angus. thing was seen of it till 
mber in Durham, Selkirk, and Linlithgow 


ounties 


Pri rices 125 the best Potatoes per ton in Obet- 
Garden Market for the years 1843, 4, 8, G, 7, S, 9. 


1843. 1844, | 1845. | 1846, | 1847, | 1848, 1849. 

8. 3. 83. 3. s. 56. . 

January. 75 | 75 80 160 200 160 180 
ee *. 70 8080160240 190 | 180 
arch. . . . . 75 75 90 170 240 190 — 
October — . 20 80 80160 120 | 160) — 
November ...| 75 | 70 130160 130 180 | — 
eet ee! 75 70 | 160} 180} 140} 180; — 


e bear in mind that, when any common article 
uch advanced in 1 rice, we have an indi- 
nt of loss in 


average amo 
ast a vem may be 


?| th 
conjectured without the risk of any serious error, 


CorresronpEnt has sent us a “ print” of a Pea, 
advertised under the name of Grimstonr’s Eorrrrax 
Pea, otherwise the — ea. It h 
e first name Mr. Gn 

e raised it from s eeds 
“hermetically ” sealed, found in ummy. pit 
Egypt, and computed to haye lain arts about 3000 


ma 


IF 


Pe eople will receive this statement with various 
degr ees of belief, OT to — amount of * 
with which each has bee supplied b 

ee. We have only to deal with such 8. 

w tangi As for the print, we may safely 

y that it represents nothing which has existed on 

sath either before or since the days of me 3 
The seeds, sold by Mr. Gnus der 


T 
afl 
wn 


which ar 


liar in itt 
the rematiabl gua ality of “ requiring no water or 
; „Experience does not, however, 


tatement, for plants raise 
i at 


ee — have no say ur of 
ptian mummy as an n object of either use or 


re pe 
. 


116 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [Fen. 24, 
e eee ä —— 
t ho have been victimised, but we hope our | the blood, whereas, in the blood of the ox and fow), for the table with the least possible loss of 
or twow 


h, and act cautiously 
d 


„ will —.— this paragrap! fried 


n grea’ by 
— well applied to to thei 
acknowledgment of their intended favours. 
— our readers % copy this “paragraph, and paste 


gee 
ho Ouses, 


that the. caution may not be lost sight of. yi 


HARDY AND ORNAMENTAL SPRING- 
FLOWERING SHRUBS. 


C. GRANDIFLORUS.— 


re rote ap in 


Valley, Vio 


for 1 forcing, this forms a neat, orna 

poner 8 and Spartiam-like | ces it 
endl at the same season imonanthus, pro- 
ducing its bright — e a 3 blossoms 


— This is th 
the genus, producing nu- 
as rch papi * ver shaped tamed, ers in February 
ae small et shrub, 
wie l to 75 feet eK. semi-evergreen ha wi 
—— American Panty re- 


RHODODENDRON 8 a 
8 


die 
£7: Mee n dr kee fee — oe 


— a third of the w 
chloride of sodium, = hardly 


urs in e of fles 

rope prenian A yes ipren s also to milk, ia wx salts 
of potass p — ate grea ve chose soda, 
although derived from the blood, in which the N is 
the ease. e other hand, the nee of phos- 
phate of soda, instead of phosphate of potass, in 
the circula d, arises, according to Liebig, 

co n salt, which decom- 


parak pressure, is again sat In other ro 
arbonie acid daplces phosphoric acid from its 

bi nation in soda ; but slight Laverne: causes elie 

to give to the latter its — yom p me — to ea 

its soluti 


to displace t the earhonie acid f 


un nion of carbonic acid with hh the. 


shown © . 


te reason for the necessity of common salt — r 
di tha 


ur when a 


. | insipid, 


up sv sale dos of m 
Owing t 


this by simple agitation, or by a diminution of the atmo- | 
; is again given 


its i 
tained, “On t the other 


i its ng 
hole ag contents consists of | matter, it should be first introduced into boili 
trace of this com 


flavour, that Liebig assures p ‘the 
flesh of a fox thus treated the havent of beef, by im. 
pregnating it or 1 juices obtained from this is latter 


o the Property . polling water has of 
coagulating z albumen, — 
extracted zoe esh b by © 


Lie = maintains to be a mistake, because the 


soups has rto been principally referred ; 5 but this 
too small to exert any a — 


upply the waste in muscular fibre that is at all times 
—— on. 


y 
by istua of the phosphate of soda they co ontaln, oa 
alkaline reaction, whilst the fluid contained in the sur- 


ate ke potass, is acid, an electrical current may be 
created, by which the functions of the system will be 
— uen 

Be wever, as it may, and eres ao alt due 
allowance for the doubts which so tertain 
with re 


ainly the most valuable 


teresti 
pact and dwarf in —— and, wh 
— enlivens the Ame: borde: 


may not, 
generall wn that if half the p ta ant or | 
be covered + soil Yo before the with aay other | found 
attain 


a period be flowers 


This is cert 
hardy Heathe, It flowers 2 is f 


the several ingredients present in mal food, 
the probability 1 r surely be sere that, every one 
of the and that n 
* — 


undimi 
| which fle! flesh aly contains. 


in | us begin wi ae process of boiling, in biaa 
ts | it ed that flesh is prepared for hum 


imagine 
food with the least pin nous of waste, If x 
piece of lean 


material), for 
their a it will — pea to 


i 


this sam 
hy | into boiling instead of co 


le 
| and indigestible, 
raised to a temperature of about 150°, 
viously dissolved in it wi 
ients still remaining as before. 
upposing same cathe of meat to be introduced 


ter, the e separation of its 


bein 
planted in William Wood, the plants being 


Nurseries, York, 
8 
. LECTURE O N ECONOMICAL nities 
On, Taz Mernops eer ne oun Foo: 
81 dar, ae. — 
d from p. 101.) 
THERE must, — en be a constant rh going 
in the relative prop paf niae ton — 
lactic acid is dis diminished or increased, Now —— — 


seems to soda, The 
. mran 


— as well ua 
iad plant mna owa diet, AÑ 
è 1 “Sgr ‘te system 
salts | * 

| sa be sought fr 
parietes of 


in 


ESS Ss 


the "Body maybe teed {of bolted m. 


al be ren imperfect b 
the coagulation of the albumen. 8 * 


n 


l ri 
iquor in which ne eat has been boiled, for un 


a ee x ———ͤ—ů!ͤ a ST 


juices, 

sto the | It is on the same principle that the cook envelops ans, 
birds, and other of og weet 

covering of lard, which prevents the loss of the 

constituents of the flesh, evaporation of — 

juices, which would cause . 


adopted of throwing away am te 


the oe ofthat red bloody a pearance which belong 7 

e | underdone and hence kans which, like 5 
, contains much blood, req requires a lones- > 

i. 2. òo peed 


In 8 


It i is to the kreatine, then, the lactic acid, 5 the other 


food for invalids recovering from illness. Parmentier 
has already recommended it asa res poi for wounded 
3 and its utility in provisioning ship 
ere fres — 
different fro 
table 


tinguishe 
Aae which ace only 4 or 5 per cent. of it, 
but takes up 80 per cent. of the latter. 
Whe e above precauti 


M. Soyer eae to the following receipt. 


R No. I.—For Two GALLONS or SOUP, 
Two ounces èt dripping 
Quarter of a pound of Solid meat, at 4a. per tb, cut 
into dice, one inch s 1 
Quarter of a pound of Oni r of 
a pound of small a the oie wn 3 or — — 1 
ice. ces s Lee me 


„ 1 


Three quarters foden a z f Hour 5 5 
— 5 of pearl — or d of Scotch.. 1 
of — 3 of an ounce of brown i 
„ ae 


ee oe 


uel Es oe 

Two gallons of water. vs a 
7d. 

Dire. 2 ounces of dripping are first put into 3 

saucepan capable of 12 Onions 2 gallons of mats with the meat- 

d ced. These Rg 


Now, it may ie wis aji a quart of this 
not aoii one quarter of the nutritive and bent pr 
g principles, w 


5 — of eat. 
1 de continued.) 


3 ee FOR AMATEURS 
SMALL GARD ENS, 


or | many gn 


th 
2 as Of this red and bloody know 20 little of the 


— — 


are not and that 
Who excel in the ul flows, 


who has bee 


ie 


Tar — OF or Bors miss nee 8 regretted that £0 5 
‘ — K. 


„35 LR ns a ae T 


git 
1849.] 


i a 
H 
E 
G 
A 
RDE 
N 
E 
R 
g: 


C 
H 
R 
O 
NIC 
L 
E 


117 


5 
i 
add nig 
3 ` B mae 
be ha or It i 1 
PPY Er on ino DA 7777 
2 tion this can we rtm “ig edg f th this 
— F RAT o: d 
ool ind of pud ill oes esti 
N 41 any” en tura ati 11 0 50 ers wn 
become 57 ers 75 ion inc „ of A 
bn lee t B 0 a r 2 and 
the u wag pro i an ur res ble ki t 
sata D ma ceed at pe ay os 
ein icti — e eae 9 70 * 2 * 
v ; b i hh HAs £ 0 e tle ec al 25 ra ow 
— Soe: Sion: ast ie = il a 
d 70 Ea ‘a n k; tte: e pre she e ng. 
fran aT * h 8 7 ben n- reese os 
tions, rom ill olu kiii as ak! whi ed Now of the CO 
i. 778 fe ed e he wh: 55 ginn 10 he 
outs £0 is net M ou eed th ich Ea in ss — 
compri is e rs. E dalle de «p te oe — : er ae il 
compre mad sats rs, Brad 1 45 d ahi Pocket W. S ANN = > pe — ee 
teras, 0 e 0 i d a c p e EL 8 h e 
n ebt t de ed is ibi db iter re Aaa et w SCI es e e a tu 
in e sary c ti ts t u ss or K L I d r r 
soil al t is 34 — a a i = mi are ä — — no ae 
0 1 his i olumo 3 171 ea the Bre | Ma appe 2 nag the e da 
t pl with a tor. g. e Th 71 the Tse AL se y2 ara: 1 U — 
ae ‘much ek a 4 n hi olin 
7 d a an ae be al 8 N coset 4 t ce a endin 
0 me rd ull a u a U Wi J 0 : h d d 
obj dica x sper hod ex cu a are Son . sn June Jul ac a 
2 E TH ci se = 1 — Z SEE 25 
2 ri 
> ultatio h- imp iti er or: ion of ntent i Sunne pee say e o July 15 Earl ing to th w. Ar et. 
i * ely a £ tho po 5 8 r Il ts ix ; 855 seen Jun i ly i lat ye the ae 
br. 8 e d r rt cl ti 5 pla 1 b oU . +|¢ 10 t y 6 ro L TE 
a eh t ach pla planis Bank: * n aly 5 sa 
v P * ne in hu nt plane bo in t Mine ES „ A un el wa 550 85 r r 8 P NA —— Fir 
1 4 25 prof ee 125 Pa m denies € = TER 3 me 26 te Tals 0 5 ching z7 Panui A Berra, 
wed Leon an nic e co 15 ost ie l ] XFO L Ju n prea eee * g 7 Pen i tere “a 
rl all 0 rd tr al ny ae apg U 8 Jt ne 0 0 Jul 12 re hi ds e “i see pear 
igh t fe p D ey la h e H CK x : 2 5 3 to 115 wo "a rd $ H * mig July u 
2 e rs and o i 8 ie Hents s u 1 Hanoi 3 n 
tab n e e nd rp ct pil a 85 aon . ly 15 to Ti Por thi u . w. soa as 4 20 ce | 
his, va 1 0 e most i os 10 905 ar SE os nly ] to J l 5 ( of ee R re IN K id 7 ug. e 30 to $ 
i de: sha nt st * 0 e an on ide e 1 LA PETI od 1 to sh 41) “A Ar 8 I EN heel pote Au 1 A f 0 
at ents ae a „ ds — gi ur fifths ber * re 8 = 
ten ? 1 d , ill h of aA Ta ul ] 0 ly 8 Ww h th th D A 1 2 Rag r g 
in’ tio P visit aE po ani 183 as t of Ww E 2552 ale J y 5 A 9 Ano aif 8 w 5 Y EW : . 5 1 age Lo 
i n nd t or it A1 h e nd b he 83 0 —— 8 to ane : hr thi E 3 -3 2 24. 0 r 
fic ka at th of h Srini fo ard 1 aner pach: Ja y À a ree fu S pee * H Se 2 ak 
por ity, i arg attend 1 pla ap info toultan of W RR Z ey J a to ug ; hre-four ihe 28 a b pt. 0 * = 
d Hon, my yat if a f th or * in T AT 2 = ta ae 7 worthird th Fir NL IN al 1 Se 1 One siri 
TA if any s al ure in fits 5 60 lto] rao sora a! to fourt 
2 small a ot ee K pists ae pt. . 
of the, the Wha its ce y icu ma “et ston in Breer FOR Si xt y 28 1 5 g. 1 fl ce 8 8. a aie 4 a 4 Au re ne- 5 
Tans, for i 5 7 y a his e 18. Se oa es als 59 ye Dec 1.. į . L des ate! ay ki e A ‘i 
th mid ric iint 8 on oe a z and i e 7 15 SF ug. 1 bree fifth . ax ws de za g. 15 e e . 
Ne tas, n es o every h Due — oar SS -fifths hi E ‘ ne-sixth 
ve = ames o + whic Nes baat nae = x ais 7 to ily 2 oo ies AN. ce One os 
3 tra d Sia romised b adl ons li R nner . Jul 26 to 17 —— . f. Kines ares 15 3 8 h 
2 seg 5 ise a his ye yi Han een A 1 = In -h If, ers E to n tl h 
yore tun Er 10 ea 1 d 1575 he var ke 80 8 ‘iy . or i — 5 ee real aie ei Se 0 . third. . 
pa ; in ee, 5 den — ofp a = ie E Oa aie 
f in ey ons am a 8 y ts Vin ili 8 t 5 oni -Aa a È ei -for N F “a ee ul 5 18 e-half. ) 
pps to b 55 d : -= Healy Aes its z 53 R a aly 2 to At 7 neh — Jon whee 5 ys Une. 8 ; 
nus o hava 1 Th Aae == rfor 28 z yl. " ug. hal, = w.I ai ae 0 6 1 
soar he Bri ust ractical e die EN m š Ton rmana E ry 8 4 hi : NV OR et July 0 5, ; G th 
in ough may th fe rati al t u 1 5 aur ee a ly ———2— í Two-thirds, id dee Ae Ex -| 715 ie) rav 
ae {0 break ee i 1 Cammina 5 Jane 2 — — 1 ae Sai 1 avols 1 
F ne zA 175 she za EHI lia = mer ae — 
: 0 ts gre 0 ta BE d we f . UT ca ae 3 to io ‘Toei — eae J 1 (mee 15 dá ne-fo vy e; 
ue fi = oe 1 7 thd see = ourthe 
* = on aceon br 75 area A 8 . te 15 t Ju E ee „Su RT E 1s ly nhs 73 0 e- th. 
F N e f — 5 me Pr 185 Car 1 2 1 9. 
— T propagat “numb ofthe s he Sa STER J lyt to Ang. T ie 19215 “JA 8 N Ver urth. 
have ve ot — ot 1 8 in es is b I 201 Eii ul 46 1 À ug 0 ra . erener eae we . te r 0 
“a Ses sing on 8 der aS wees A 3 a E 2 pe a a 
mae than — — rive, |S . ‘ai pcs ae Mentos es July 20 15 os Se Be 0 to A: ittie ttle 
a Ge Ca poi The d go r e supp ery mt € boten eelt 7 . ee ees L 9 14 8 * 
very other, od z soil fo pp cu 1 . i * ul 3 oA tee -h e OR * ate “ise fee: car no or 
eee — “if od black 3 sats e Sees LO w a 5 222 5 ug. One-half 8. a oa Š pear thin 
ant ites a ve at, ck peat Bo aif we w JULEN Ps ane 30 to . 1 5 Larp. sory $ on a 15 
a8 y soi e Al nd ea s — iffie 5 0 — —— u Ss pore a ae ird ND. &S pee So Ones v. 
inant L, roaka 1 rer whioh so ioulty © ANE RE b July 60 wae he: > irdi HE ae next, 
7 “Epes an ps rA d greatest on 1 9 Be u On half T- th r N 
roy ‘00 d b vane th smal lik —— LE NT a uly 15 ept. g. 1 0 e-t x aden On ar litt 
i nyt ut rd sides ey fe ller Tan wae ve bi ly 18 5 5 = respond Hom New ree — 
a 7 the ah fie ies Sof ec ed kit r eee a 3 One hind s ponent — * real 
i he winter fire 5 er ane et D n or $ Aod ic € hali, 15 sage Me 85 hiite : uch 
he atots, of of wor 0 of 3 — ENB eee — to Au —— . a t 12 a hee bat quite ex 7 
— sth i grees ell Er son y — — a th ha Pat mae 0 soils intl 
Stron RA 8 they not K; mod 1 ll Fur ae d Ee 5 ans One-half * 10 i af d Re o H ois. pl and 
W. a e 3 0 cë beai oa on 85 is J ly Bee — half. pl oe - i i te aap i in 
hen pl takin ki eins ey ns. 8, ‘ef * eis 14 3 e hal és pause her caine r 5 es t aid slits 
as a 5 es: tore and in ie aus ee etl a rity r 1 oticin po ttn i 
+ oh E 8 : th mi try Mn L — g an z 20 te 20 on = ie con . to ia Fee groun littl 
al] DE ther 9 0 ei 890 6 yin . e a act of 55 8 the en nds 
by young Cuttings kak 5 ae. Fat á maro pr fe ion p „the e; 
9 into g or. 1 0 thisk OLN {I 10 —— seal s cae Shoots my 
2 1 1 8 : e 0 le ] Fa or ul e wi À * e se n of ri vi 0 c s c 
85 5 . 10 y t t —.— ly f. y al st 10 a t u wW 
a s requi di "them 4 T St July 1 1 0 w. À at the t a th t h. 
== imer — — ad 5 4 vy a 9A Pa 
layers, T 1 5 ent ta and tè care West E a July 15 to 31 Tei A ak t N K oc t this Ph 
A „ Will hë ca the an t yi e R NG . — J fto Sep 1 wo- thirds. c of msta th cach 2 ov n 
list of shi 0 nd r 8 s 0 F t S . a i 8 ali b a s u e g 
cna earn faln Roscom TE 9 0 Sit Se eak e ae fi r- Vi, 
flowers soil * Bag e — to ci 0 om si ir 0 pt 92 one 8. neste kA 9 * me 1 1 — 
ow t fr y a gs ert rot 1128 a J ept, 22 bene 1 sto e i r oo fr dari — 
8 partieu p à a2 ngs to of ne MON . Ju to Aug. 0 e-half, a th d d, e 4 . vag pi be T 55 ved — 
0 7: sorts re otter re ie Ju n i Sa alf, fis. rown : ee 5 r one di a in and 
i th tte t itt tu b Mo eee u y 6 4 1 5 oat s — -up no pt t. rein: e aint 8 es * 
Sha ings pi — d 1k 7 — m Jaly One th utabl ee isp * d 
the —— e off 8 —.— NA J y ae 0 oh tod att og . Sak av e e ud t he Ex 
kno s plants ’ Late ci ile a i At 14 sa ‘eit Am er e to hm = ou +r: = 3 ond count 
i "i lated i 0 wle as Lug, i r —.— In ext oa bl 5 — nd owa sag y 
exed. is h 5 285 "May I 8 9 - d. agree wit 0 te 8 “i press. Bini the a 
“ned ve: Beton os — into Maro > vay July oe Aug. — siano With ‘ext zs hich, n se sh 1 
611 grown 0 vo te mete 1 a ur . 
goni — gi prowa in benen 1 y wie Thre fourt 2 ee er ays ase i r 1 
he: t —— ven, d w. W MA yo. 5 W yn pay be siro nd th af y I e t ces 5 
dee x ea er West ma July se p sat s. up to ie 5 ch in S 2 fon i 
t ar o te ith 0 AN 4 une 14 — 5 150 un 2 hs. tee or ec ab by suppos yi 2 r a 
—— lou ot the I —— aie die fri su — bud, T u P S vigour to : 
r their — th Vo 4 om y to A A Tw 3 It EF ee d . E 
i —— = 8 A 2 2 ND f; 26 to 2 M Ab ther lym ttl ag: 1 8 th ow 3 we ed 0 9 „ 
heir ne ana 0 ‘ His t ris —— u is e: 5 n u T cann b ll c. w ui 
‘ 1 E — —.— m Pig ia “es 5 re a 8 N 
) notice ; our t, thei enn = Taly 20. t Png 3 Svend ds . pos 85 — edn ot beli b xist 8 a as 
: 1 ien this W. — * — is he ih ass wo-thir pon e ig. 555 © ve g * I ci 
= as in Donte, . i fe = K econ 2 mity, of i „e ik por 
— 8 ; Lug. 1 to o Oct. à 22 e er n e d u 
Kin GA nae * g „ ne al te of of rt t e e Ibori 
. al 1 10 É ‘ee a sd 1 15 n -h f. fey pla e all a d ais} 80 c y 
= NSHTI e Ju 6 hore: alf. A A 0 reat oe ced bad ae 
Roe uni 1 July 1o to 1 geen i we eut a upon kinds A £ 
zi 5 3 ly ry ug. Be urth. 2 inde nd ne. nl: ie ould 
3 * ul 2 5 ie et a neh 0 = e w PARI? 5 
i didnot ks, Veke : Hh Jul aay 1/0 et |: . 5 in 4 I frequently e gr than 0 
e, ag ; A y to hi 13 n and fi ne =s ch e we b the it 
„ and a — u s Kia Mae jae ak tain onn hoot en freq it 
cee Pec a. E- s a = * a pu : 
neys, gro E a ET F —.— Uie etk 17 Da ig d ‘wl break u DE 
wing gee e-th eet in tag eà with 7 see a 
y little 5 On -third ia y it stra Peaches 
Eoma sa 1 = 
fe se "on oot . ngth of 5 em. ia bt 
arm ss TE fo h. . as O d 
till he urt and t * ed ou 
the e 25t h ES A ; b 
1 be ith i b of but 
ae Apel, ee al 
he ” 
er, Aa — 


8 THE. GARDENERS CHRONICLE. [ Far, 24, 


id up together) L 
lendid days my bees- have been very busy | terest may soon be pai P g eek oe 
cat a vigorous young stn wg meo d m expectation 7 — on the — which clothes the cliffs, | was — that this money was lent only on N 
— yore mg on t e upper extremity, | and is e posed to the full agp of aa a aap sapie winds, | of la — 3 l y 8 eres tie s look a — with bl wan 
1 ft 2 8 her | and I reflected n ower to bind 5 
— Ht that * 2 m. W ol one “ring 5 ee Big os he a bees very ative cessor to pay his share if I expended 200“. pipe 
. mpon the — gah es fi ®. 4 8 ot be sur- the Laurustinus e — and on some | that [ may hold for only a short period, and W 
bud or outlet * Ar ‘de, odd The iiot ne —— of ge in flower. ve — aien e of | provement might never ‘benefit me or mine, William 
than ae ore: i ha 88 vigorous young | Crocuses, whi howe they acs ot attacked 1 Rector ckham, eat 
Vi . the fall flow of ee sap has been suddenly | The honey of tis district, where there is plenty o w Temperature for Begonias.—I ha ave “ 
reed i * direction only. Vines and other plants Gorse and Heath, is very indifferent in flavour. mapa- manicata 7 after re ng flowere “is in we; 
dawn e : uth. remove e conservatory, taking 8 th 
don 1 eee aa ewig Fig. 1) of training these | caution to pas it in a temperature between the 1 
the purpose of getting a vigorous shoot from a ertas apai = dl = The mode k A bya correspondent. extremes of the former and latter place for a few pis. 
-> . ji s 1 
— oe me 8 2 hare * aa i 5 before introducing it to the conservatory. It h 5 
e rom buds — vertically situated. Where 
rmed roi hence do we 


e strongest s 

— finest foliage and the ak ape bunches of Grapes t 
y, from the most vertical buds ; from these same | 
buds we should also get the ‘stro bat Bor shoots, if cireum- 


observed that one shoot or branch of a et : an, 

— — the 9 sed matter which The uprights bepress 2 ae or three plants are seta tt 3 nas! wo deg sr r Weal ee „ 
another had fairly appropriated.” Very true; because d the horizontal lines, to which the canes. are 2 e e . P they are kept from 
vegetable robbers, having once appropriated the supplies, aiiached, Regios The following. woodeuts, which we rs 8 cutting winds pung Gardener, hore, 
like other robbers, have little sympathy with their weaker | borrow from p. 836 of our volume for 1842, represent 
— and weer it — be 2 true that “they a much better mode of training Raspberri es. The Tee. —Your columns have during the winter contained: 
some good papers on this sm especially ps t by my 

friend Mr. Beaton. There yet seems to be , 


that has been overlooked, and which I sundae to be 

Den to the keeping of ice in whatever structure it 

is packed, and that is, its purity. If the water from 
ich i 5 mixed wi or 


— 1 or organised vad hi we continue to ae 
be en that which by an equitable division of the sup- 
pli t to be shared by their weaker and less fortu- 


nate neighbours, We need no stronger proof of this which ice is collected i ll or 
than the fact that if one o fweebooters i vegetable matter, ass dly hastens its melting, hg 
or even, checked by rs or pinching, the am aware er in some 0 ns it is diffieu 
weaker be ay 4 immediately 3 er it pure. Fro 8 muddled by b ramping d 
what would ae use of sto; ping l't ‘thus 1 85 cattle or = 8 or c are stagnan 
the stron ig not an 2 11 “vig r the c on Potomogeton, or ona fall 
lely by pe a exertions, but gey in — of lately “fallen Palate „e., pure ice cannot be ex 
of a ity which it contrives to vib by con 109 1 will not keep; 
ior st h and The doctrine of a very objectionable to see pieces of such 
branch “ thriv. y wn e s, and ediz the breakfast butter at table. So 
drawin iy 0 3 from the roots which the elabo- 80 po 88 be altog pe Be rea 
rations of its own foliage h the f the old deep-well system, both on account o 
4 upported on the supposition that and expensiveness. For many year x pest I havo mal 
bud ranchlet of a i ent an ice pile or stack out of doors, without 
by its own exertions, and livin but a shallow scooped-out * bile it up toa 
only for its own Selah purpose such a system Ki l 8 r it over with old thateh or 
i ex ; why, if estroyed s at first attempted 
the roots of me ae p we left the po supplement the ice-house (one of the old 
only which are connected | plants are supposed me Pca in rows 4 feet apar echo ool) and the result has been, though made with so 
roots should indicate their de- and about the same distance from one another in 150 little care, that the ice generally lasts till about the 
struction, while the other shoots should proceed row. The number of shoots on each is regulated during middle of September, and Iam quite pers uaded, were. 
in their own undisturbed course. But do we find | the growing season, no more being allowed to remain than it “done up a little it would keep ice all ps 5 
this to be the case? or rather do we not, on the the plant is capable of supporting. In most cases 6 0 : 
contrary; find that if the roots of re are E ent here this method is prac. ment where ‘T said that I had seen the snow remain ratte 
ever so slightly, the who t is simi- | tised, a row. o erries in autumn will have some- | chasms 5 the Ochil Hills till near eRe may Ire. 
larly — | ta tree is a community thing of the a Appearance sveitin nfig.3; the arche 4 fer | him o Mr. Beaton’s paper on ice keeping * i i 
of individuals, all striving for the same object, but some a tied to the stake in the centre being 35 can vind. ur pape 
lesa — apt Se their neighbours in securing an bore fruit las ye ar, and which must be cut do MAN last 5 relating to some goods detained ay thes 
72 share of food whic 1 is provided for them 1 the bottom, and he replaced by the seen shoots of for the Protection of Trade, addressed to a J. Handle 
each branch was an individual member, t g | last summer, traine din a similar manner to th of near Manchester, I beg to state that early this Jer 
— —4 own exertions, what would be the use of sented in fig. 2. TTO a per ith a sim im name sent a lar ‘ rder for, 
the poaa, — T for — ee of 22 ising “ Ha as a 1 1 5 — —— power to part with any i Oi his seeds to a well known firm without any reference or 
the ed would: be 4 * — bother a sig Bec — an eni aljan t yi por 8 Ra w a ra, a 2 
5 man can alienate glebe pro wre sel sending the goods until cash or a respectable rererencs. 
nothing would be 88 But so far from this being | it for his own, and impoverish the li Bo POTN id was forwarded By return of 8 an answer 
1 gather from the explanatory part Fä his saying their reference was He Telby, Melson, and 
in let 1 7 
| letter, whether any clergyman can let for a considerable | Co, Merchants, of Liverpool to whom acco 
bed ag his ap ga exchange a part for | — was m but no answer, was re 
occasion to make man g 


5 
5 
‘2 
2 
So 
pe 
— 
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3 
S 
4 
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z 
ga 
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— 
© 
in 
m 
2 
eo 
Ss 
5 
— 
tae 
8 
S 
= 
— 
o 


ement i a | gars were to pursue the same policy i 
easily caried out, | Soon opped, and obligations ‘oa ue to you NE 
under the REA signature of the patron of the living, exposing these species of rob 3 If you like to give 


— or 1 posely remor . locese, and the ineumbent. Direc- penoy to these facts you are welcome, but 
the first dme, of vegetation, om, andthe. young shoots ear or is arrangement are given in — Aet for fur- names had better òt de Added J. Lewin, 
to the k e act costs ls,,| Concreting. Borders. — I beg to thank. your 
before the absence of the Be, peleo indent | make peg with conveyancing would soon spondent 1100 drawing my * thes ach ta: 0 
— e as Poplars, Akiesi whether: lebe land With respect to the other question | omission in my article on “ Concreting Vine 
have been 3 for 12 or 18 from the can be exchanged and passed aw ay immediately i before the words “ the border de 
> you first * — fer Some more couvenient plot suitable | supply of moisture from below by capillary * 
wal are not to u great extent * of the the same p 8 difficult to determine. But as these words, 4 where only the upper surface 8. 
‘ as rted, If your 


satisfaction, to m neith i , ee see that the me s 
— . r extra strength ean be gained . either for the present ineumbent's benefit nor is it his | rect, and that it will ay apy all Vine | 
Snowdrops,—Havi ne case of his d in 
an ornamental — Seca tim ps placed in pay one farthing towards zehn 
near the windows of an regimer e bosak ia ® I kept the tin | outgoing incumbent has all the paying, the i A 
a ere w e i ; e 
ie burning all day, and f had the Snowdro: rops sicbes ag fia bas 5 2 of 76 acres, part of my | above and below, I find that, unless of more than ordi- 


they wen i i I must pass through seven | nary width, it receives an ample supply of 
pra of the Net wer oe hae row I would gladly exchange aen from the dens groun Bey, ae ad the ed @ 
8 flat, as ean never visit it, e 8 ce ne 5 ee unt of solar heat e by *.. 
1 la alread. s Aan 70 co: naen a 
window sill a little e Ls y y expended on it three years’ rent, | J ; e forms an e 
off. 1 — without the 8 of getting my own mon cellent 9 ie tituting fine 
two buds in di Sible aiiin — are fe operties in more de- charcoal kor a portion of the gravel, in 
uld inform me how | you, When I see in public prints — the conerete, a black surface. 
fature. M. [We never | provements at m, — pe c prints: accoun im- | sorber of heat, is produced. The power of rea 
some not venture upon, the — nilah p gxpence I 8 — heat will principally depend on the proportion. 
„ that we par and contained in the loam of which the border mised: 


— y de — riage hal dina oa 
deen. — ae 1 r lend (on 


THE . 


E RS CEM: 


119; 


r, has your r 
j = + enh of the atmo- 


10 lbs. on the 2 ai tiriti 
aaa st: 
itself into aie 


ections, and 
der cnet as wall as to i p. 
adhering to the being. ae tilly netted im- 
bein so beautifu pok ett 

5 te, yo ut 


t 
will enter and ö 
the Seok with greater facility, by mean 


ret 


ings re which, but for. this n 
been carried off in vapour, and along wich it a 
me — 


oisture, added to th the 
3 consinte just the 55 of things in e roots delight 
Your urther 3 wheth 
borders are to be exempted fro he poilis o 
the — The . A the Vin 


the cen the bo 
a fine e henlihy — distributed equally | § 
1 powder, rai all dir 


ether the Wa. 


it was 


e dee —4 Allnutt, om tler ham 
high, ‘of Camellia; rosea | to 


sent a fine specimen, s 0 feet h 


off speedily by the sides 


some 2 or 3 in 


„gr. r. B 
nice collection 5 Orchids, 
Certificate was awarded. It comprised the 
purple variety of Dendrobium pulchellum, Cyrtochilum 

maculatum, Oncidium lacerum, and Odontog 
pulchellum.— Mr. es sA 2 Lee 
Brompton road, sent c of a 
gonium, called Con we 8 s Roya alist, “which | fo had proved 
to be suita whe ae bes The Hon, 2 


m 
le in my coating of 8 for 
ie purpose. of letting the wind and ra 
‘remarks hay me He make the 
certain points which were 


Sorteties, 

es Feb. masanna nes of Nonrnun- 
jects of js of exbibition, ng the sub- 
my EDS $ the prentast novelty was a 
ed pes ered with eat — 

yeh nent 
5.1 met perma Esq., who preseki 
' land, which had rece 


oe 


oe 


—.— 


Mai idenhen, exhibited “cut specim 
— aceite ia seab: 


nj cumber, was 
ase S last $ the other of a Plant raised — seed 


a 
a fellows 
d 


were cove 


© 
mh 


3 7 
we FS 


hey are now again un 
—Mr. Silver, gr. to 5 TE H. Pole, ‘ol 
wer of 


and it was stated that t 
their blossoms, 


OFF “ui Mr, H 


ieee variet 

. panies Br. t 88 Sir 
A Well cultiv 

Certificate of Mer 


George Beaum 
gua Pine-apple, ‘for whieh a 
t 


6 oz. 


laneous subjects, Mr. Yexley, of Merton, sent specimens. 
of material for eee 1 blossoms from early 
frosts; Mr. Di f Oxford street, one of his 


oc- he po o preven rais kinds 
Mr. Allnutt 5 (slightly) into the | istics, of the b 


Appendix by 
e 


bo 
is one of the prettiest of the” aue = yellow-flowered 
e spike, but rather past its best, from the 
, | large Leela superbien has again flowered in the 
arden ; Acacia ae ies i 
lipe the My rtle-leaved Aca 
ip 


EE 


ied from the Garden, yp wii 
viz., Beur 


fa Lam 1 not, Eat 
mot, also ra 


e 
t yewood, are very thorny w 
young ; but =e a replaced by fruit-spurs when the 
trees become o 

After the ordinary meeting, the Society resolved 
itself into a special general h had been 


will not bear to be dist n the y, con- Shire. It consisted of three so hodo- | laws, for the purpose of elect ew membe 
siderable pains should be taken — indue aie to fil Wa a | dendron, which had received no p ion whatever; | Council, in 8 room of the Earl of Auckland, de- 
given space with their ramifications, ae Particularly © three of Camellia, but nt ples of the} ceased. His „the chairma unced t the 
encourage to surfac uch as climate ; the tree Heath (Erica arborea); which is a had recommended as a d p aa 
possible; by keeping the roots within a ot ne space | reported to — a scent the air of the hof E e tug on. Lor ; mination 
you have them der ter control, and are te space with its fragrance ; tw the more tender Hellebores ing been suppo by Mr. Hutton — Dr. — 
with greater facility, to protect them from cold in, (H. d a Aa olympicus) ; the Itali aures. | the ballot took place, At it Der 2 a Mr 
to feed them with rich water or top-dressing, or to apply | tinus ; a beautiful Floren wip (T jana); a as serutineers, P. Pole, Esq., C. k ey sat Hen Lord 
fermenting materials in the case o ing. I wish it to red variety of Saxifraga. ligulata, and some spri . Loddiges, who reported: that the Right Hon. Lor 
be distinctly understood that I have only used the con- bulbs. Among the latter was the largo flowered Snow- Ashburton had been elected unanimous'y, 
aa nor do I find it necessary drop (Galanthus plicatus), This was not sent as an in- Rebicws, 
y it to anything else, rs 
panik are aware that 10 is e aiffeult 5 splat 4 in size over the common Snowdrop. ie is quite a as hardy 2 into PLS al Australia, By 7 — Charles 
er operations-on scientific principles, although they as the latter, much rE and, therefore 2 desirable. 
hat they are co : — this gh . These were all fro he open arden, ‘A ich it was| We hav 3 ol in these 
the with my conerete. I had to try Ser in that 1 pate. things were sani in flower.— anton 2 finiog v which 5 would be useful to quote in 
timents in order to disco t r. Grey, Beaufront; Northum sent en 1 — — 
thie piem a — — of Chinese Primr „ which, er with several 1 r — ; 5 mor shoal d ve yr — them at all 
was effec i Beau. | had 
aad. 10 a 3 ‘infor. front 1 — — oe discovered by Capt — — 4 dioi in the 


This — bo 


r 
. 88 that the additions 
e plants of Australia 


This sta 

it dees slender justice to 

2 travellers, to whom we owe the 
sno of Au 


was aequainted with 4200 species. 
not ed might as well have remain 
i w Bed in the recesses vot 
his. cabinets. Now elieve that the number o 
species described by — up to 1814 did not exceed 


ron oe I g 
= her Pine Aisha consisted of bas 5 Eu- 
villes, from Mr. Taylor, gr. t f| can 
Streatham. These weighed 8 3 "fos. 13 oz. 
and 4 Ibs. 4 oz,—Of Gra r. Butcher, * to W. 
Leaf, Esq., received a Certifica te of Meri e 
well ripened bunches 
year’s growth, in good condition.— un- 
pee agg pent a brace of the Browston Hybrid € Cu- 
oduce of a cutti 


of | 


or 
of Museat of 8 Ta last | bee 
ills, 


2500, psi ber many had been . published, — 
his pre rs. His Prodromus 
— contain more than 2300 mp — 


U 
sown at the same time. The ey were stated to have been | can ota 
grown in a pit he by dung lini — — — 5 ad ech there- 
5 1 u i 0 
=n aaja mer ne vt DNA ie oa contri y Messrs. | With ere me homero botany of the Appendix to Fen i 
Vilmorin, of Paris. lish g ers seife = hitherto | Sturt’s volumes, we have of 3 to state that —.— is 
istinguished varieties of this vegetable; but it appears much 8 interest, as everything is whi ~ e 
* French have, and that the — kinds | ceeds from the pen of —— author; re . 4 
very different * rties. sorts | find it quite bey each of criticism. For = 
sent, 8 the e eee Seakale; the we are e . the reasons 4 oo 
arly white, as stated name of ea to a new 
am ee = be 10 aay ‘Cassia are also ph yllodineous, * 


earlier. the than che former, and less bitter.—Of 


120 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


7 


ERB. 94 


erstand why the genus Deiabechea should be summa- | cannot be ner it must be sown upon a warm border. 
— 7 in Brachy chiton. 1 Brown A small crop of Carrots for early use may now be 
himself, the genus Brachyebito is known by having | sown, but 1 Min find the main crop do better when 
the radicle of the embryo next the hilum ; that is its | so , or even in May, as they do not suffer 
essential character. But in Delabechea the radicle of nearly so much fro e maggot which too com- 
2 is at the end of the seed most remote f. monly spoils the e sown Cr and although 
the hi re follows that 1 is the 8 late sown ones are not quite so large, their 


distinct 2 Brachyehiton, unless 1 the latter 
the „structure which it has been r 
w 


us seeds on * itd prepared ew 


ced t 
a variety.” Until j 
raeter by which 


word 
a point as this is not pres ba ble of an arg 
2 permitte o observe that if i Mitehellii 9 5 
ink, so 


Swainsona grandiflora and Jasminum mieranthum. 


new edition of Paxton’s Botanical Dictionary has 

a been issued, — “a Supp ement containing ‘al the 

plants since its ap The character of | o 

this beautifully printed gore is so well known that it 
for o state that 


only the Supplement 
— Paia es, or — quarter as much as the 
original wor 
ne de ee, s ype te wo re have dan] 
The is one 3 


nslated by 
ies and gives a cloar r explanati — of the ranger 
modern F t is, however, ill adapted 
tude ho can rarely 


ysiology of 
owever render it difficult ne use except in the hands 
botanist of some experien 


Calendar of — — 
(For the ensuing — — 
FORCING DEPARTA 
Ix making new Vine borde 


n 
ich case it 17 be expun d asa spurious an 
Jelabech 


beds of 3 d Globe Art e 18 


old 
er 


m b 
ſormer sowings should “se trans phate’: No tim 


“4 
fi 
rs — young Vines pay 


and plan ting all the 


n from diseas m 
oy planting N in open * be legis ps, in dry w 
and without ; surro — i the 
7 with e clay, 0 Got OF cha 
any kind, seems to have an excellent ones in 1 25 
e the ters, 
FRUIT GARDEN. 
The unse 2 Ou fine weather with 
been visited | has ¢ — vegetable 
Prog sem we pr desire 
yea any of our plants 
buds ‘which os be sci too tender to e 
spring frosts which we 
between this time and 
effe 


which we have 


do 
and trees are unfolding 
ndure the severe 


those 1 es ibe ground also. This will r- 
ired in damp low situations, Mh the 
lightest frosts do —— ble damage. As a matter 
of course garden — —— 5 ve —— of canvas — 
netting a as far as i 


S an ex 


yer . . cae: — everest in 


CINERARIAS : Minimus. Your seedlin a 
deficient in form. If its habit be od, itis towered 
preserving, on account of its colo 

Ferns: Pteris says that, jses all t the Adve 
ion is made 


found in our columns Pi 
supply Ferns. hopes t this hint will not be a 
FORCED FLOWER on flower s may — 


— have failed, a —— aie — from errors of man 
uch as forcing too rapidly, or havi ng insufficient asnes 
at. We suspect that the former has been y ur light 
3 N eras i Ae imenes hive su cceéded 4 bet ag 
and especially that of hardy plants, — bevey 


Weare sorry t 


[ea 
oO 
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5 
oe 
2 
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(er 
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4 
=) 
5 
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8 
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ts, you This pri 
3 — — admitted by all „ — 
London. If you are in a difficulty, we will rec 
a professional advis ser 

GRAFTING VINES: 4 Subscriber. e open. 
ration just as you would in the case of Apples * 
vided Cone attend to the following pr recautions, bie tel 
— 5 of the * to — renders necessa 

graft may be one or more val 


You may perfo 


site the g raft to grow till the buds of the acion begin fo na 
as soon as the scion pushes into oe A ! 
GREENHOUSES : John Hayes. It is doub whether you can hest 
8 we aoe house any cheaper, ed abd yard, than a lean. 
. If ther a difference, it may be Reali ey, to phe — ton 

— Cincini 
rdet archi wie 77 paid 
tally considering 


way. Paxton’ s Magazine. 
aces = oe 3 toz a Bar 


advi 
We show 


north ought to transfer there the gree 
with rough plate glass, ee will 8 the eee 
ur saifa ciall y if y ou Provide ample mean 


Sander ewig all eg” Grow you 
plants i in tubs, not ta the free soil. As winters are set, 
and — houses * we cannot 2 you to trust h 
Polmaise heating for the whole rau There is a limit t 
the power of all cage, and Polmais 
8 to which its strength is equal, has never been tried o : 

a very large scale, and probably would not be found adaptel 
to it. 

H E, The seed is perfectly good, pai yo deceive your- 
self if you believe that it has been produced in the absence d 
the male. In the mae of the 3 Took arai you, and 
you will find male Hops at least in — hedgerows, or plants. 
tions, or gardens in the neighbour! 

prei rii W B. We shall take he liberty of preserving the 

wo d us; and those to 


particular attention to securin ge. Let) this m 1 
the soil be moderately light and uniformly rich, but let botiri be = ie o months l = aie ant 
no vile carrion or anything thy find its way into the | more likely to escape e spring frosts than those which 
border in an p ; impossible bee bly excited by the mild weather 
distribute it in such a manner as to equalise its power | The moderate sized espalier and py idal P i 
over the whole border, an left in masses its effects | which h p en eee 
» A ic aana t — of flower sale to make 
2 Lock closely aft e Vines and it worth while, may be protected b 
es, to that no insects are devouring the | small poles over them, tent fashion, . nent 3 
foliage ; the former are liable to be attacked by a small tem » with branches of evergreens; so di posed, th : 
of beetle, which commits its a pea s by | for l * 3 i a s 
omen — Apene e ker thrips eee | ornamental 5 
— 
8 es, by i taking im Aar sar 8 8 y a as observed at the Horticulturi Gaston, ris tiie 
them as ha a ‘observ eaches an amie 
liable to be attacked by the Feb. Moon's BAROMETER, || THERMOMETER. | 
Wind. || Rain 
green fly; Aeria if wel | done, will be the — Max j Min. || Max. Min. Mean i 
most convenient 2 royin g 15 these | Friday.. 16) 23 || 30.521 | 20.463 45 27 | 34.0 || W. 00 
ee n "l > 00 
and th If you oo ag oT pot plan g in Satur is} 33 || aoase | sossa || fg s | 435 || SW. 5 
the forein houses, watch them very fae a nine | pay 2 37 30.182 | 30:007 || 50 | 38 440 || SW: || “00 
cases of ten they bring mise along wi em. Wed. 21| 23 29.999 22285 3 2 425 W. 25 
It is very necessary to nip all these es in the bud, | . 39 || 20828 | siess || 62 | 35 | ass |] w: || mi 
before the infection spread to any considerable ex. | e = 120.074 |} 50.5 | 93.4 | 42.0 -35 
tent, as by so doing you will effect your object and p 4 1 5 hasy í clear at night; frosty 
vent ent consequent upon the — ete zhu 
ravages of 8. Thinning x : ne; partially overcast at night. 
forced Boe oct ig ar Se regular attention ; 11 ne at ne: candy ant fae alight rain, vals 
soon as they are fairly net, Caner parent het ee 
liniy be ek oring those that are left for fiture con [ima A OENE O BiZ an, fra 
sideration should stand in such | SI. 
ofa berry at any time shall relieve the proba Feb. and | +A 5 2 FE we Gar 
ones without disfiguring the buneb. The final regula: e e e |28 e | Gitte’ e 
more than half swelled, but no sound reason exists why Pen 5 S| f "3/8 = 
why | Mon. _ | 0.26 in E 
the first should be postponed, as ie fo r m) is | sg faa] | ms 40 
sizo "of case, rs the berries have i Thurs, 1 G7 84 nal x 92 z 3 
i ment n pie ere been e in the Satur 3 2 pay 5 — ` i 
the aay use of the permanent aad -der 02 ed the owe os aR, Piod sare om the aah 
ne NN n i and the Jowest on Ist and3 March, 1817—therm, 2 deg 
should * pair o ge clean, dans. long- N . 
es to Corr 
wi issors, and the roe * ne footstalk should n . or e re indebted 
pit yt 9 with A g ho ver, *. pondents for the 55 of a pa 
— the branch from which it is digest the relating to this eu bject; and as soon as we can 
i snags, left, are a very tertile source | the 8 we propose to avail eee of the information 
of 2 h y n. 
mould, &, when t is ripe. It is nee | Back NumseRs: 1 
to keep the atmosp ewhat dev abou ere | tad 30, 1847 d 23, 1848. . Siren for Nos. 38, 1845 ; 26, 28, 
while they are flowering ; j cat about rries | Booxs ag Sa uty 
keep 4 0 ee eae it will, therefore, be better to mar iy co disipi, of Repton’s . Landscape 
which they may be remove to the hele of dhe fe. OAT Hook aa Woes the Or he Grape may betsd 
0 10 e pri 
bee ho their ns 2 person — ee anot — sig 


During this 
Si ofl manure be very mash’ benefited by" the appli 
KITCHEN GARD 
33 is suficiently dry to allow of 
the Onio 


"Mr Gorton’s a 
of ger m's paper maith — 
on the — 
th anythin 

—— s g 


er, 
dund the least ‘aie at that p part be! the 
pi 


33 
1 
5 


on is ona. 
ever saw e mp oyed. 
. If oa wil « 
the information you apply piy tothe on mg y star 


mills, withows out tronbling i 


astonished at them as we were, considering the holy ge 
which the writer fills, It strikes us that the principle of 
Kaer imsi A 135 not one eee that to which a clergimm 


should a and that who oppose it “ deserv ti 
thanks, not ts vituperation 
ge 1 . Your American garden, 
pa ‘is probably too dry for K 
22525 Loft e 3 Me and dying o: 
: J M. Nex 


under the conditions 
Tgr which is the 


ted Rost 6 
MES OF P ANTS : Busch, We cannot undertake | to name 
gardening 


th g 
oe 


wi 


Popocar S H. ur specimen is under 

POTATOES : JC, Brligeater. Rad. shall next wok amine the 
result of manures. 3 consult "eh the tables 
published by us on ee gene 1 It is page ~ 


ary. 
oat that ash 
while plant instantly. 1 


ith the views 
Prune only 1 5 4 


your question in a leading 


Pecks NG THE QUINCE: Gilpinetto. 
balancing the head, and doing away with very irre 
anches. 
Rockwokk: A Sub. We will treat 
— next week. weather, 
SER, 7 nuine Peruvian Rene; applied in wet Baul . 
is ple excellent manure fue Roses. We presume that i 
Sanz; but we think that tei 5 
f the question. The serpent bein, g 8% 
ia little whether the object seen was Ea seal 
cachelot, or a ai keel. 
Stocks: he a name both sorts. You hal 
Messrs. Platz. See their advertisement 
current — volume | 
J D. 1 — = yee ee in a 


a 


r. From what you state, 
The earlier 2 sow yo 
i 3 and the same remark a 


nurse game, you 
nuisance of wood-pigeons 
be t and 


s 
e silver sobs ee eee 
pote S 

pebbles 


2 
succeed 
heat, 
of water 


MIDALIS : ET 
well in a 


— 


likes ote good rich loam, by 


Tin a pob, irked “te alas 


ne a eg Re C0 ETT Pee ey 


T 
ALYS NEW BOILER.—The 
B were stein of their Boiler N eee 
yega 4 for the wa, ‘From — ory, wick 
“ lus ultra 
Mating it to be “the Xe E= 


observ * 
nted i 

irang for dS Bon “pours 
= age — — put up b at 22 
boi n the sam . 

ALY, 130. Plt ses London. 
RCHIDEA GRO 

2 Y, 130, Fleet. “street, respect- 
g Orchidea 


hey are warran 
7 Au warming large 5 
of 1 has been sete 


„. additions to the House. 
of the following distinguished 


ee — ok lass of plants 
e 
Pre * — L f Winchester, Farnham Castle. 
On. 
Messrs Henderson, Pine-apple Place. 
99 7 


r Ware. 
m. 


1 
INE-WORK, HO T- WAL -WATER mairinn iy 
w REENHOUSE 

T. THOMAS BAKER, MANOR- “HOUSE, MANOR. 
ri TNS. ROAD CH EA, Manafac turer of 
NCE, to penat Grazing Stock, badi ren- 
rainers, Arches for 

ring, Flower Stands, 9 
BUILD INGS, Green and Hoth rake: Conser. 
T HOT-WATER APPARATUS 


untry, and Drawings and 


Estimates free, * for th the Trade as usual. 
Ward’s Cases, or Domestic See 


5 AGRI- 


ESSRS. 5 — 2851 175 — — 


ag 
Mr. pe works — n Arithmeti ic, Mensuration, Gauging, 
Land § 8 English Parsing, &c., are vases by Lone- 
may and Co., and may be had of all Bookselle 
The terms of ed e can be had on — either 
rx 
UA a D ER MANURES. 
— aiai O, of the finest quality, direct from 
NITRATES $0) SODA. ‘AND POTASH. 
GYPSUM (SULPHATE OF LIME), 

RE WORM DESTROYER). 
SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME (made from bone only), 
Meer oe and all other Manures of known 

value, may be 


ga geen peg 


J. S. Sons Sahay extensive growers of vies and inti. 
mat wn to the agriculturists of Berkshire and the sur- 
pin er ste 5 for nearly 40 years, trust that the above 
Safalogne will be read wi with interest, and be ate ond. useful to 

Seeds at 
= prices.— N.B. ee delivered free to emcees Bristol, 
Gloucester, or Basingstoke, 


UTTON can tone Reading 
PRA EN GINES, as RAMS, &e., 
n Improved Principles ; Engines worked by Steam or 
te Fe Dowie to raise from 1 gallon to 1000 por minute to 
0 feet. D 


0 r , hea 
8 and Collecting of ‘Water, e. Towns, ‘supplied, LDR | 


to JOHN ra 990 


122 Ear ER THAN 
OTTERS GUANO is now 71. oak te 5 sand of supe- 
rior quality, owing to recent chemical discoveries, and an 
improved mode of manufacture. An experience OF eight years 
to be fully equal to the best Peruvian Guano, and 
r 1 testimonials. If a quantity is taken 
a specific 5 ment may be made. 
YPSUM (Great Reduetiom i in Pricé), is offered at 
158. — ton, at the works, loose, or in bags if required. 
It has been 2 = by an emi ee chemist, and pronounced 
pu cea! ER, 28, Cl om oad Place, Ken nnington. 
TAE Fc FOLLOWING MA URES are 5 
t Mr. Lawes’ Factory, 12 rd Cre 
CORN “AND GRASS MANURE, `... “ee er sai 155 a? 0 
0 
33 


CLOVER MANURE 

TURNIP M 7 0 0 
SUPERPHOSP 1 Apa My 
SULPHURIC ACID AND C 3 3 


mo B.—PERU VIAN 3 from selected cargoes (in Doek), 

er ton. SULPHATE OF AMMONI; 

0e, 69, King . Herbe a City, Londo 2 

ALKALI COMPANY'S METALLIC 
PAINTS.—Cotours: BLA AND P 

These Paints (the pees of a eaten Bebo 888 15 

ordinary covering quality, and far surpass all other Paints 

in point of durability and economy, two coats being proved to 

be more than equal to three of any other . From 

ly adapted For 


They have e 
asio of Sea-water, and of the 3 Hydrogen so pre- 
valent in Sea- ports and Tidal Harbours for more than 

ears, without o 


Numerou 
te forwarded to the 5 5 eT copies of which may 
be had of the Secretary, or of the A 

Pri 


MARK FOTHERGILL, 201 2 aie Thames-street, London. rice, by the — ae delivered — * or Liverpool, ex 
elusive of packages o be obtained e on  applioation 

WHEAT SOWING the Secretary, ‘ir è WEST, Office e Com. 
THE LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg to | pany, 20, Fencharch-street, teatia ; = p any Oe Ran 8 
10 o offer as under. | mentioned ae others, xfs 38 ye ei: of the ns owed 

, van rothers, London essrs. s 

N zahi — S Boy bees URE. “ee — Perez a, e Erani aad Hodgson, Exeter ; Messrs, 
Jarke and Fili, Yarmouth, lk Sandeman, 


w> PHOSPHATE 0 OF 
mpor tores ishery a 
Salt ey Janti ifor Clover “Soda Ash Nee ing 


any — oy . attention 


to their ure and eats the boner 
containing a large 
“rae of A ; Phosphates, and Silicates, all 5 — 
Tn crops, wh e Urate is richer in Phosphates and 


ile 
other mineral 9 required for 
ulars — = for 8 on ‘application. 
URSER, ary, 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, 
PERUVIAN me aah phat nikne ON SALE, 
ANTONY Y GIBBS Ab ‘SONS, 1 NDON; 
WILLIAM De MYERS > G0. LIVERPOOL; 


And by their re ents. 
GIBBS, B BRIGHT, 8 „ 
erg. m C0; erg tes and BRISTOL; 


1 RT OR, , LONDON. 


s Gua pur ber are recom- 

only to dealers of a established e character, or to 
, who will supp ly. the article in an 

„at Wer fixed prices, dslivertag it Eom the Import | y 


TEPHENSON aw. racec 
D CO., 6 
855 Kaden, and 17, New Park. 55 “aes a 


street, 


degree; without d 
ee, : 2 
to state that a neche aid of pipes or flues. 
ow making their Boiler 


pro 
of the highest ‘authority ; or 
* Nobility’s seats and pri Rolpa 
Ww 5 inf e eiae E 
— New —— the Trade that at their Manufactory, 
rg ating them, m 


erected upon the most 
or Wond greci Field and Garden 


—.— A RUBBER PIPES 


e ate {be oa a 


ord, Yorkuniee Mr. R. 8. Fae 
Wolverhampton ; Messrs. Vint an 

Sunderlan d; Mr, Boner on o Enik en Mr. Tonina 
20, Tregedna, near Fal 


AGRICULTURAL 4 AND “SCIENTIFIC ee 
E k 


18 AAO 
5 


hoe y TION, 
will be FILLED onday, March 26th, at this Sch ool. 


nM 
All particulars relative 1 will be furnished o on e | 
by let the owners’ 


to the Head Master, either personally, or by le 


The „Agricultural Gazette. 


N DAF, FEBRUARY 24, 

IN GS FOR LLOWING WEEKS. 
TUESDAY, Feb. A Agricultural 1 of England. 
THURSDAY, March B ren Imp. Society of Ireland, 
TUESDAY, cultural Society of England. 
ane tg — 7- Highla d and Agricultural Society. 
— 1 È iet ot 2 


amlingham, Ardleigh, 
Wi have now 5 deni the modes by which Lord 
spe or so material an alteration 


awless 
people, who were of sich ute that crab ae 
visiting a fair in the heart of their ge have bee 
t guard, t 


east, 


himself — his agent on t eh property a 
n order to have his contemplated « operations 22 
on * ee personal superintenden 
the real or panan necessity for 
illicit distillation, a large corn store w uilt at the 
p beg, where the tide water is sufficiently 
an 


D gT 
— — distant), was paid there by persons appoin 
for 


nted 
the purpose here was ym ty in getting 
the storehouse erected, as no mason 


ther 
3 in that pree capable ‘of rege the 
and 


8 


© necessary work, and “much manceuvring was requi- 
“ied to get those whe were brought for the ker se 
to remai ntry, 


2 2 
© 


The wild aspect of the cou 
want of — comforts and necessaries of life N 
„baker nor butcher being within a day’s journey of 
t — were so discouraging that many of those 
— ie dese 


wheelwilgttt ta tute 


rted. no lil ai the store- | ©° 
0 e a E A 


THE- AGHLIC ULTURAL €A£7E Ts. 121 
M SUTTON’S LIST OF PRICES OF make carts and barrows, “ as a te there only* two 
Seopa SEEDS is now ready, and will be | carts—no elbarrows on the tate,” and i 


whe 
short time iron and timber w 
And so great became the demand, not only for the 
materials for making implements, S, Ke.., but even for 
luxuries, that a regular shop was est 
which 3007. worth of tea, s 11 tobacco, and other 
exciseable articles was sold in one yeart; and the 


— on hesp terms 2 57 “the n 
w years ago, ha 

bf heard ol ehis which they * consider 

— The Sei ** 3 45 we 


seen n 
essential to their daily w 
a 


that 
barier the, beate 
of 3 the scraps of unenclosed land whic 
—— oce 
es fo 


“ note of preparation ” for the Stee er, system, but 


a 3 E pre eliminar tow rearrange- 
ent of the tenants withou i lapokon any of 
theii; and o . — of citt tenant on his own 
arm, no agrarian een on was offe It 
explained and guaranteed that each tenant should 
have a just share of o at had been a possession in 


et and ae no Sue should be a loser by the 
proposed ot 
Lor 1 Hi though a stranger 3 the 

people of that ioul and therefore without the 
ste t of hereditary associations to Pes 
them in his favour, became popular when ya ya 
made sien with his character, "sid hea 

spéak Trish to th 10bly has he fulfilled his 
— them ‘adrift from the land of 
tenants were allowed to choose 


affairs 0 all. tos was n rach 3 in — American 


me 
is-d-vis, like cou uples in ina SERR ance after 


ot t n ere 's nae 

luck about the house,“ but of Paddy whack, or 

some other melodious air, HEE a fiddler merrily 

played, while men, women, and children praak 
danced and — — daylight lasted, often 

longing the e to , and with little 

other —— — chat which the fiddler (or 

afforded. But nothing would rim them to 

it was de- 


paid for 
fearless wanderer 
tempted at all.” 
the tin eee but the 
very $ 5 by his lordship's on 
witho ut the effusion of blood or any alti 
no were peaceably made a 
an almost immediate result was, th 
of the 


om 
any occupier, he was paid for it, by his landlord, the 
full valas of tenant’ right, estimated by two neigh- 
bours ; and w ae n land was taken away 
from — een * “that sufficient 
grazing ground for his ‘cattle should be eee to 
An these innova may appear we le 2 


to an . aai who can divide 
he 


as not prevailed, there were i 
© Mr. M‘Kr®’s list contained but one; the second was pro- 
ears et com pee ga 1 In 1845, 


122 


— LTT 
that plai aly indicated the danger of interfering with 
old practic le 


es, unless in the benevolent and generous 
by Lord 


heels, drag 
rene ea to drown bi Nu n a bog: “hole ! 
and 4.5 the ruffian let go his 


8 ditectly mji the landlord. Lord Gro 
Hit have acted on the 1 0 le 5 
by Colone ebnen, viz., that 
o capacity of he 
ing th mas ip the right direction, and a 


of affording to the 
ao aa. start- 
iding their 


| bene SET 


| area inclosed under the authority of — Seu eae | 


nd probab 


ar into a gerd * 


! The Rsd. wl 


a ea thought, skilful. 


poe „ a English 80 
reclamations effected by e 
an 


oposed for draining, of 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


& The progress of this great change can eee — 
* traced húk ia th e Statute Book. | r 

r of . acts eed since King Pee T. 
pama te the throne (A. p. 1727) exceeds 


miles 


course of little 
"Even in thos 
nich at the end of the re reign of Charles IL 400665 were 
the — 8 cultivated, the farming, though greatly 
prove vil war, was not 
To this- day no effectual steps have 
by magia ey for the Fis rpos 
panne e prod Dae th 
soil. The historian must were follow, —— 
— misgivings, the gui of t 
cs whose reputation nam diligence pe fidelity enters 
bighes t. g present an average crop 0 
arley, Oats, and Beans is supposed 
exceed 30, 5000, 000 of quarters. 
5 be thou ught poor if it did not exceed 12,000, 
. = Accordingsto the co 


bs 


8 


8 
— 


N 1 
Wheat, Rye, Barley, Oat Bea 

grown n the or a bie somewhat — than 10, 000, 000 
of quarters. The eat, cult tivate 


o were in eas 
kari 2,000,000 Mt — 
ar Ser well informe d, thou 
ician, differed f 


Charles sacar’ an 
a most unprincipled and | 
m Ki 


pe! or iums. 
1842 there were 84 press ts in 1843, 250; 
as many. In o 


several instances the prem unted to much 
more than the e 8 “of rent paid by the 
Mn piana candidates, pe et the largest sum paid 

in premiums in any single year was under 70“. 
The results of the e ompettions (ond general en- 
couragement) xy that reclaimed bog was to be 


seen producing 1 and som o Tu shag? 
wiesa, barrenness —— before that decent 
h separate holdings — been esta~ 
blished — of disgusting villages, “neat and 
comfortable. cottages attracting the e by their 


ye 
well thatched roofs, and whitewashed walls giving 
an aspect of life, health and cheerfulness, the in- 
terior realisi sing the expectations raised b 


oliti 
— — of the acco 
Ba 


on of crops was. very imperfectly under- 
It nown, indeed, that some vegetables 
uay introduced into our island, particularly the Tur- 


e j| mer 


im- 


e of fo 


mee 
cals on oy 3 bern 7 consumed only * those 
estimated at less ow 


me of | w 
unt, but — to aches ‘the same | 
la 


ate My 


oor 

necessit oft residin 

n his.estate, 5 ing wii = 

was the care of his pro perty, aes varia 4 

pa of | aged 8 ndled pigs, - and on — 

made — a tanka 
han 


* 


and Goo —— 


ay. ey stitched spu 
— wine = Marigold and made the erg 
or che venison past "eng 
e clergy also t 


The illed the 5 round. 
in 50 enabled th ne i 


try. 
followed m plough, and his aA 8 out — 


manry, ¢ ‘an eminently manly and true-hearted: 
oprietors who cultivated ai 
modest competence. , 

t less ‘than Seige 600 propicis whi with their 
nmi must made up m a seventh ob the, 
e population, derived thei — from li 

m 


I 
— "occupied their o own Jan 


xcellent nutriment in winter to shee 


e Grass i 
nty, Th e killed in oo numbers, and salted 
at the eee of the co d durin 
months even — ntry 8 
food exce e an which were conse- 

quently much 3 —.— articles i in 9 
than at presen 


“The sheep and ox of that time were —— 
ich are no a 


when com 


esteem, and fetched love 
prices, They were valued one with another, the 
ablest of ge wie c moaz al the national wealth; at 


THE AGRICULTURAL CO „CONDITION OF 
ENGLAND IN 1685. 


“Ty the year 1685 the — 5 of the produce of th 
exceeded the value 905 f 
Yet 


soil of all the other fruits of 


Total 
uthern | Showing an increase of 


or pre 


oping t 
and 
recording the — ok his an ar 


maintains 


8, ie we 
om, Giaa for 1842” 


$ pons breeds were I 
— 0 . great 2 
The 

“History of En 
iy apan 

ancestors nearly two cen- 
It can gard fail to interest your . — 
are a few points in it upon which I wish to 


tu 
and 
That ‘the value of agricul tural produce “ — — 


3 e of all the other fruits of human 
5, 


n people 
But at the present 
of the Populati ion is 


d in agriculture a” 
F little more than one-fifth 
employed in W 


ince then nearly the whole rural population den 
—.— in farming (for there were few shops 
t be about t rae 


3 


and at more than 800 


1 to 20 a in 
ooo” to 25 „632,000 acres, or 1 to every 
What more 3 proof could be a 
e in the 


e that w 
llions were e employed. 


ust also observ 
less than 4 millions out of 54 m 
grow food 


raising food, now 3,300,000 are able to 


tion during that time is very inferior to that w! which a 2 
firet ah 1 4 


y of value over manu- 


volian 77) 
1 Fabie aad 10 282, 800 acres. 
. 15,379,200 „ 


osen by our ancestors w 
hat so much has been 


2 during a 
ation of two lo — 


time not exceeding the dur 

or E; r Exportation in in 1810 was et 227,706 — nspire the timid with confidence, and excite e 
we 183,50 mind. J 
and mi — oe PER 386 S emanen an 126 00 000acres, ee. 
— — acres $ ; ep 5 

and as ge o ee Segre slike yeag 534, wan vation on the 8 not exceed 10s. an 
CCT 

i , ¥ 

. M y ne Listen ere i a half all 40s. per acre, or four times that of Franee (Am 
the land 2 A 715 milliot 
in in England — is, 10% 66,200 acres) was cultivated as ace 8 France Sirs e ee pel j 
qua int classe 
England x 15550 Porters oP. ay sars cultivated. in agricultural — only 1,078,680 of all other ee, 
of the Nation, Ho su uperior is ur agricu iture to that o 7 


tors, and to 7 — or all the world at the 
An Essex 


of our ante 
present HPS" 


"465,800. ae i ON THE SIZE OF FARMS: 
9 rh 6,400,000 a A na Ori in. Tun e — capital to on havin Sry 1 a 
3 and i ood deal ca and having myse a 
is, 3,065,800 acres) must be Abon t 2 8 shies past e arenes subject with increasing ats? 
has, during the same period, been loni: —— tion, I am induced to offer k ew remar 7. — 
k l 
| Sane tilled Arve’ the Proprietors, without any application 9 of ane ee ae to rs enn 
w it is capable in developing ; 
Pi would be: interesting to know:the numberof ] of the soil. In doing so, it is not 80 
N N ] — and the number of | consideration of the size of f. to which I 
bourers in 1685, and to com compare thom, with 3 to draw attention, but those measures by 
bers so employed at ti the presenttime. Per meme} intelligence, and I combined, may best 
often approximate the truth by the i culations, à remunera ook 
: 5250000 s ion of England in 136 Seats to = the be body, opportunities ster? 
55 00 (Macaulay vol. i. sik ic ae of these 5 i > n Ca me 2 mah 
—— +» 530,000 a a er the no 7 are n 
N stole ms as) RSE as ~=- 29,000. | have generally por an: . —j— that they a 0 
CRE 8 meter e | the, aggregate: gre n the mean ct f. 
(Macaulay-yel. L. pp. 385 . 68,00C0 their farms to oe greatest 5 


in adopting z extent of land as 


bia: AGRICULTURAL, GAZETTE. 


123 


i it it. 
ng coup r that farms are in genera 
. for the most 1 am display of indi- 
n 


one 


means and 


this, 
bend 


I have 
ie proved th re 


y ov 
country oe 5 1 


reign growe 


cast their sh hadows 


hesitation in saying, from my ow 
] and capabilities of foreign countries, now anpa ally 
enlarging. by. 1 er ok railways and interior 
steam nay into every district of 8 which 
“hitherto could obtain no vet for their produce, that the 


take to engage, 
a of h is means, 


Aden 
my opinion must be fatal. 
capital necessary to obtain 
quality of the land 8 be the 
the soi 


in a year, or 
+ dry and burning summer, I mowed a bulk 
‘of winter Tares (sown 9 5 E 5 
2 di 
— in the month of May, aaa A 
stock, I i 


ZE 
0 
2 


= 
i 
12 


N 


. 


u my order of farming, b 
dressing of artif — 


FE 
i 


H 
15 F 


1 
consider 1 . of 
oer apor bs Shaw 


8 e 
a Sres matter.to turn 
m 3 e of rete 


i 


i 


dja bu and 
175 trusses of pam. standing bend erect at te all 


upon continen tal s 
f| world. I alw 


protection eeble, leav- | a 
ìng an undefended position from the aR of the free- | i 


nt per ann 
of a 


e prie for sheep 


y the 
cial manure, or even without | make 
Ra 


i h particular 
aap one of which is 4200 200 superficial f 7 65 


n 7 qrs. 5 acre, omitting one 7 Pele: of about 8 be Ds 


8 5 red by t 3 ; and mg Th * 


3 rs, per acre (he 
time of harvest, qoyila g me that could we depend 
mmers we. might almost defy the 
and 24 bushels to 


I always oe broadcast, 2 


the 
Again, on land of inferior quality, although a tenant 


of the im- tu 


i ao 15 marta n inerease 
£ support ock ; but with this 
observation “forethought, 
n hi th erfor, i is another argument in 
r of a e holding 
Ad an ords a subject on which t 
application of sapii]. has of late years evinced iei 
with 15 greatest advantage, viz., in that of se og 


s head there is doubtless much to con 
enefi 


enny for the too sanguine and unw e, ie 
the other hand, as. pr. — has bbe established, ma 
implements of so valuable and i re 
955 . to e he, pose Fe ot e 3 without 
the 
The drai ng . that have so long priseg are 
no doubt fast n the maps among the e 
e | lightened body of Ta armers, yet there still ex bes, ee n- 
siderable want of observation and caleu lation askin 
: e i m 


it OE. 


q ! s too ; 

cannot buy such things ;” ey, Sipe sane con- 

fessing their want of mean 

of their business, 3 tene ‘he 1 

of interest the ele would r An implement of 0 

the cost of 157 r 20, in — — ane e its 

cost in one year, by producing a crop saving a 

season; and in an 8 of 2004. 8 300, „whati is 4 

consideration of 5 t. upon 102. 0 

um compared with the Scat tales Satin 

return of perhaps 20 or 30 per cent. or more from 

their judicious ne pa on a farm of 

a s and up? 2 the s ee is 1 N 9 
many e testify I conclude, I c aly 

forego the expression of my satiation at the ra pic 

ui ry ag and application a 

a ou 


arge amount 


° 


—that t qua 


drawin 
this, a 
applicable. R. G 
e Correspondence. 
erria, 1 steeped in cold water 


Lin 
2 same effect 8 when boiled? What is the proportion | 2 
water to the meal? and the length of time 
? Ho 


— 


each day! 
boxes (which are ete completed) fo for 
they had been pok talls fo: sii weeks be 
= ae Ia say P hat since “they he 
they e N have done — bette 
ied u UP» kept much cleaner, and my m ll as me 
if any m traw for litter. I have 
ing t ios, ollonke, bat, sei ing Mr. 
inseed-meal st eeped in cold bh ate 
will therefore ac me by an 
measure does Mr. 
three handcupsful 


than 


of the jelly, 


that of the other is 


75 feet, Round these yards I keep 69 beasts tied up 
in s 12h in stables, ad 12 beasts in the open 
yard, The 69 beasts have 4 Ibs. of 1. per 


ei 


. | the water boiling u 


ent conduct | 4 


de al the than 
reasoning ee ‘with as the 3 
more painful 


feeding on land, to whieh it is must oe 


e been > the | 


of Mangold Wurzel and stra The horses are fed 


2000 gals. ber. aches is very visible 

re. I have compared = 

liquid re in the su 
th 


ced by a dressing of Pe- 

ewt. to po 1 and I found it neces- 

to make it equal to 

guano was either sowed on a wet 

day or dissolved in water, and spread in the same manner 

as the tank w 
f 


not feel 8 75 
box- -toeding, but i 


ts great 
dington Gran 
—Du uring the ‘early part of Ma 
d 8 fallow for Turnips, with 2 ine! 
d and 21 


et dee 
- | cutting through a considerable spring. 
well laid in, and the water flowed through them ra 
my surprise, however, at the end of ang Ap I 
surface about 
the Paes: in, and Sp tb, the 15 below; 
0 wet state of the weai er, 
e end of November, 


Tom 
the hea ad 


obtain a passage r the water, and a the presen: 
time taking up oe 1 5 j rely 3-inch tiles, one a A 
the other, instead thereof, so as to prevent, if possi 
a recurrence of the 158 The stoppage appears to i 
commenced ring, and to have been carried 
down the pipes for 50 or 60 yards by the remo E 
subsoil is a sandy clay, of which, with a 
contents, I send you a per e = shall feel obliged — 
r remark jec t wette, with 
vice as to the best mode my ati — ischief 
e Mor aera e Alfr wen Feb. 10. 
experience is by no common, A dee 
dr, of enone gy- 2 is the. Teast li 
se soma rema arer 


K 
kely to suifer, 

z “i 
of un- 


— 


is indeed too m 


greater part of them by frien 
| counsel, Forbearance, and ability; 5 and a community 


hankful ; his 

xampl e operates upon the smaller farmers, who will be 
indebted to him for frequent help 5 Wer of need; he 
a one of less 


comers, 
r non- residence of the pri 
numerous beer-shops, needy ee 

h 


b W. nt, 
complain of his neighbour ; y have a g 
preacher oy: a himself to his duties, sap great is 

his reward ; urch is crowded, the people appear 

to be e ‘transformed, orderly i in their habits, 

8 in their behaviour, and mostly well empoy 
ow won village where the clergyman is 


mired, b eand pagar cr of the 
principal — 55 have been of vast benefit, reatly 
felt in the smallness 0 contri — r * 
this parish by the union for the maintenance of i its te po 


* ire where the example 


The 
leading persons in any village. 


Some parishes oe 


124 
rt 
or rather mismana 


— kad wages to few e the poor-ra 
high, 2 — mind, body, and n 
eir 


rance and foreed by These rem 

what religion, benevolence, education, and e 

do, and have done, in villages ; but how 

there is to be done in towns! The ee control or 
all 


worthy and intelligent _ others are | from various soils, or vari trad manured.”— 
he b 


N * work | 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


essor | sought i in vain in the London ea | 
rately 5 sample of Indian Corn fi kee h 
high-dried 3 it is 
a 


Froese or 
of Mr. Spooner 8 


niht chat 


r. Spooner fo 


extend not bey 
this class to 


0 
ner, if his Poet Pr is inferior, his 
emen Agrees and his capital 
«na a far 
to pay of rent, ra 


even the 


ene generatio instan 
but — 


— must Be improved also; the farmer 
any more 


en generally bes the farming labourer. 
This cultivation of the mind is the only antidote that 
— be applied to —— state of a and vice into which 

many of our rural population are 8 
the only lever which will coer the agricultural interest 


pretensions to didir the same rank 


with those of manufactures 
għ. 


and commerce, J. W., 
Peterborou . 


Sotieties. 

ROYAL AGRICULTURAL ol oa OF ENGLAND. 

A Werkzy Counci was held e Society’s House. 

in Hanover square, on n Tuesday last Feb. T present: 
Ir. 


, or 
daetion into this country, attended the Council for the 


t and doing, | name 


thet Salva ot 


e OF pe —Mr. amy C. E., Member 


e | solutely"{unwholesome stoved, it would be 
both of the sweetness 410 softness of the na 
ground meal, and rend Wa 11 
arses S 0 f r 2 


x, having resided | pri 
atten- 


[Ferg 


to enable it to 


f | imported in a a stato; if ear ity mih 
if 


O 


f| culture from the pitti tite seed into the — 
ther 


He ad iy 


purpose of laying b 

a that plant and its seed, as well as of the American 
ian corn, so long the subject of discussion 

by other partie es on both sides of the Atla iti 

Mr. Keene stated that the peculiar kind of Mai 

e by him 

which he named “ Forty-day Maize 

brid, cultivated by himself for our clima ate, 3 50 


ordinary sorts 
— — of its pak te its capability Aw 1 

ariations of tem ure. The stalk bears bu 
abb, and the 


ings from this 
* the Potato erop, 
—.— eultivated the seed 


d Mr. Kee 
d was obtained Pie him 
month of Jan last year. n reference 
to the nest whether the mid-day heat of a 


. 
Mr. Thos. Turner; Dr. 
rofessor ay. The spiel new 
Atkinson, J. R. W., El imwood 
Smith, Colonel John, — * 


G 


rd-Bishop, Rael 
i Great ONE Norfolk 


andidates for eden at the next 
noo were en * 

NALYSIS OF Praxrs.—Mr. Spooner, V. S., of Bonit- 

, conveyed to the Council the expression o 


rant that the 


stale of vegetatio 


Grapes to 1 


in the open vineyard. 
was a mistake, t 
rm. W 


ough true of the India 


nd 
e surround 


which is about 1000 yards above 
are no 


science 

the highest interest and Shane ces 

nomy of cla erop life and the 

. ; and h 

Society’s A mg of ana 
the am 
before 


ris 


JONR a 
| i coa ET 


Wi 
products me Fy 


prin- | t 
now | dry 


pens less 
rty-day Maize is i madi quicker gr 
| sort ihmi that cultivated around Ba aask ; it War gain 


mitted on all hands, that 
god Ue Yama E vaa en 
crop of 
L aa. 


uction of a 
poat; for 1 a 


ease 3 Gear 
3 why 
to the inorganic con 


bearin 
the the a o e and of TE en 


and effects | an 
over | 
the same 


PH. 
8 
2 


igh, 
ilst the beset 
ll matur 


Fr 


being only 


Sad 
half tho k 
He exhibited E the eight, 2o bore sie info 


for cultivation in ra. and b i 
ta 


- | India 


n 000 A 
e- h 


‘owing | v 


with it, 
which — up DEVi * its growth in England; 
n bei ndiscriminately, without gy 
——— r ira er i erat ality, and some of wh 
requires six months of aod hottest climates of the wail 
to ripen them owledge of its culture, the rn 
season for pu tting it into the gro ——— nd the 
ment during the growth, he a to 10 most 


mall scale in Fogli; an 
the sorts sown out — as suckers, 
were 


2 
E 
. 
— 


of May, for a few days earlier or later might preju 
the crop. 
A very —— discussion then ensued among it 


mbers prese n the various conditions 
with the gro th. h this variety of Maize, and the jie 
sumptive evid its successful culture in & 
southern districts of England.—Mr. Slaney, MP, * 
pressed his willingness to plac a —— £ fe 
Shropshire at Mr. Keene’s disposal for peri ben 
purposes connected with the e of the Fat 
day Maize, Prof. Way undertook to insti 
hemieal inquiries 
—— so hen — 1 


ad, as 
e seed obta ned by Mr. Mites from Chii; 
“4 in fra tec 


10 
7 


er, to * 
previous meeting “that he had emp: ut; 
17 dilrio to the sack ” of corn to destroy 0 i 

reference to his memoranda, that ‘hat sab 
nd fee 323888 with success 1 Ib. of 
to 3 bushels of grain. Mr. ‘Blackball, on 


| gto) THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 125 


rs. Youens and Robson, ; had existed both among chemists and agriculturists on these } each — goa “bout” in the mo 
— ees at high preseur ah fi r for Potatoes. Aero The . impression had been that the manure drill barrow, which sows 3 ‘ar ills 8 er f 
mol se powde Tuesday next, the d be emplozed in the soluble state, so that it might be finishes 6 drills, By this time the 6 ploughs | again — 
ail n adjourned to Tuesday really absorbed and assimilated by the roots of the plant, and, | 6 drills, on returning up the field, they cover the first 6 
wW 


rills ; 
= bout 


i sight i — 25 They t 

. - 27th 2 "re, Council th sds acquired; a advantages of the method were cover 6 on their rótari. Hë drill barrow going at the same rate; 
i — — — attended by a corre ioe sie ng disadvantages for the solubility and sowing at a “bout” 6 drills also, A space of 12 drills is 
I. Feb. 7. — At this ¥ hich ented the piant readily to absorb the manure, occa- | left between the opening and coverin „ Whi 

HIGHLAND AND AG — i 3 ell : ihe Secretary sioned its being washed away by the rain, and lost, On this | room for the working of the barrow an 
Meeting, Mr. Hall Maxwell, „account a distinguished 2 rin advocated an opposite | horses. The drills are 27 inches wide, and are a 

Monthly u of the meeting to a mode of pre- — — and aimed at e e nure in a state in which the winter furrows. Part of the land was dunged on the 

called the attention unicated by Mr. James it should dissolve wit the degree of rapidity ee but the part which was not dunged is dressed with 

g e manure, comm Edinburgh. Mr. Black- necessary to afford a supply i 1 — aah as it requires it, and | 4 cwt. t. of guano, sown in the drills by hand, and covered in 

Busch n, Upper Greys t, ur, this was probably theoretically the best method, but it was so | with the seed. 24 bushels of Beans are sown per acre, and 
A that bones of any siz could be red —— into only under theoretical virbutaetantes, It would require a with this force we get over from 10 to 12 acres a day. An ex- 
stated the agency of high pressure steam alone. | steady, in vs a theoretical climate, under which the plant | peditious plan at this yews: is of the greatest consequence in 

a soft mass by À ag ming vessel connected with should go on day after day at a uniform rate, so that it —— we a aah of a favourable seed time for Beans, The 
A small boiler with a stea 8 0 Ib 15 ate require, during any particular period, more — re receivi ng at present an extra feed of Oats. The 
it, capable of ing a pressure of 25 to 30 Ibs. a square food that was to be liberated by gradual solution dur ring i to be fed with Swedes, and 6 lbs. of 
it, capa all that was required, If the vessel was that time from the manure . In actual practice, 2 Oats, and Linseed, mixed. They are all washed 
was anid subjected to the action of ste however, a pest may contina; to advance with uniformity | with soap and water once a fortnight, besides being daily well 
filled with bones, à i Terei p igea for a certain me, but by and bye, a favourable change | cleaned with a “dandy-brush.” They relish their bath ex- 
2 vel of the boi * Ardi i Aah Draw taking place sr “the weather, it P right — a rapid start der tremely, and take to their food after it with increased appetite 
water), at pressure advance, when, of course, it would require to take up a lar and zest. But we do not anticipate such a profit as your Bed- 
the wall become ie dissolved—thus sini all quantity of the elements than the ——— was — to fordshire correspondent, whose cattle consuming not the half 
* y 17 d the sulphur ie acid com- supply in the pain’, pat os growth would be stinted in a | quantity of Turnips, and about the same amount of meal, are 
0 dana le the price of the Wanner which it would never recover from in the after part of See to leave him 10s. a week for their keep. At the end 
used, which amounte oubie p he season. All things Taken into pi ee he was of of the season his accounts will be very interesting, and if they 
A ton of rough bones could be got for 13 that the best 3 ould be to apply t the e manures | realise his present anticipations, we earnestly hope will 

A na in enefi i 


pu 

f ài 8 át nd he was ae cas in this 5 — by the results of some plan which will increase the profit, and at the same time 
sg š ll for f very admirable experiments which had been recently made by — the expense of feeding, cannot fail to be 1 instruc- 

dust would be other 4l., or about 117. in all for n oi |a member of the Society, and which were en to be —. . G. 
dissolved bones, which could, in Mr. Blackhall’s 4 lished i in the Journal, where the best results had been obtained — —-—: 

for a few shillin 8 rend = me cost | from ew. application of manures at “several periods during Notices to r S. 
be as well done or K 1 the se a would not, however, venture to assert| RURAL CHEMISTRY, 2d Edition, revised and enlarged; by 
of bones, making a saving o rly 71. o ery ton | this as a positive ruth, but rather as a point worthy of the Edward Solly, Es 3 F.R.S S., Experimental Chemist to the 
used in the.country. Mr. Blackball | thought that every — attention of practical men. This led him to 8 ae a| Horticultural Society of London, Honorary Member of the 
farmer s who had high pre m engines should | —— which was, perhaps, s ve commo: ong 2 1 Society, and g 5 5 on Chemistry at 
ediately get a * e station this would — ti namely, that chemistry coul give positive wand e Royal Institution, May be had at the office of this 
als 


definite — to all — nre questions, and that it was Paper, and of all booksellers. Price 43, 6d, 

cost — 71, or 8l, and wi so be useful for other | in the condition to tell them positively how they were to culti- | BOOK-KEEPING : Agricola and G D. We know of no work that 

| the — * could ny — an vate their lands, or wy certain methods turned out unsuc-| can be recommended. The ‘ous inquiries we receive 

above water-mark in the boiler for a few cessful, It might, indeed, in some instances do this, but ought to —.—. publishers to Soins ‘Steere this subject.. 

suspended 4 2 certainly not in all. The condition of chemistry, a science still | Foop ror Cows: 4 C. Carr 9 and Parsnips and Cabbages are- 
hours, The ee = 7 id Saad the first subject i a very imperfect state, did not admit of this, and the state- | the best . — food for 

on the n the relation of | ments of chemists were to be considered less as absolute truths | Foop: A Subscriber. We 1 greatly prefer a ton of Oatmeal 

of 


. A an as hypotheses to be tested by careful experiments. Che- to one of oilcake, 
Science to oin in Agr jeulture, | by ‘Dr A nderson mists —.— = 5 — distinctly stated to practical | HARES AND RABBITS: F S. A few Carrots alongside the Lu- 
Dr. Aypenson said, that in entering ee the duties of aes hey pursue their investigations ; cerne will save it, 
chemist to the Highland S ociety, he hey did not ake their experiments at random, but set out Lice: A Young Farmer, Tobacco water, or the ammoniacal 
early period to call the attention of the m fth curacy of which was to be tested] liquor from the gas 8 * answer the purpose, but the 
2 objects . —.— to be held in view in the pr rosecution ors xper iment; and ee enat why one man arrived at good latter is very offensive. W. C. & 
tific agriculture, — the nature of the results, and another at bad ones, was, 3 the former Pias: An Amateur. Mes s. James, of FEish- street. hill, London, 
— which ther proposed to carry on in the laboratory, | abandoned his hypothesis the instant experiment showed it to sell suitable Facing: ko and we have weighe ed pigs 
at — scarcely sa; as not his intention to occupy | be untenable; 5 other adhered to it in eite of experimental in ein, d by aah iad —— machi: ines, bu ti it is a noisy process. 
with hes. rg aes had as yet done in the labora- 8 and en —j by twisting facts to suit his erroneous | Ponp make a concrete which will set under 
1 he ving been in operation for a single month only, | hypot thesis. On other hand, these hypotheses when put water. Ane nas —— — this property, and, if you 1 a 
_ the results hitherto obtained were neither of sufficient interest | into the hands 2 red practical man, in order that they a be perfectly true surface, this must be coated with Rom 
$ 


completeness to render 1 worthy of the attention of the tested by experience, a only can do, have been taken for cement. 
a * trusted, however, that it would not on that truths, and when found 28 be erroneous, have been held up as | SLUGs: G. The —— must have killed it by this time surely. 
ed that they had been idle; on the contrary, illustrations of — fallacies of science. He would impress Salt may be sown at from 2 to 6 cwt, per acre, according as 
turing the ween of January there had been performed between | most strongly upon the Society, however, that scientific the land is clay or orsand, Besure the Wheat is killed before 
_ 2 and 30 analyses, which, considering all the sources of delay agricullene — * never be 2 oy thus placing science s, plough it 
€ commencement of such an undertaking, | and practice in antagoni It must be by the very oppo- Soo : T Starke. It is Dre — bend: in a bushel just as corn 
be considered as a fair amount of work; and now that | site course—by their 3 are active co-operation d. per bushel, 
they were in full operation, he hoped soon to be in a condition —that progress is to be made ; and he thought that it was one THRE ESHING MACHINES, — It is only in the case of portable 
to lay before the Society the results of some inv stigations aA that ¢ k ANN. on the 28 used. — 
which were about to be taken up in the labor: ratory. In the | that he should have the opportunity of referring, on such of as pr are apes in Johnson and 8 's Alman 
: — pas patyia 3 might 1 occupy = matters, to skilful farmers, with whose assistance results might | TILE : W WW. We have “Raat err for our 38 
meeting tes with som ervations be obtained which never could be arrived at in the laboratory ier Witch w ust be transmitted privately, He will 


relations of scienee to praoca] agriculture, os more especially, alone. He felt sure that there were many —-_ men who 2 B chiga us oe giving his address, 
as he thought there ted a certain amount of mi were able and willing to afford him such assistance, and, with | Mrs hould advertise ; the cost will be 5s. 
hension in some mings as to thet cise t mutual bearings. "In their co-operation, he trusted that they might be able to do = 
making this observation, he w ould beg 3 a * 5 — 1 good service to fa — ulture. But he would most strongly im- Mar kets, 
—— * applying 5 i n persons eo r his ction | press them t : t ther 3 ould . at ora rt COVENT GARDEN, Fes 
re; enabled him to see how tly | very nature o * riculture — ude ut they mi r 
their bearings were s appreciated by its — tes how distin of very na anata 107 ine E 1875 iir y * Bat yh kloi e Ta poins to pe tolerably ‘wel soppaa, go 
m to keep before their eyes the errors | series of years, looking — 8 the — — they sferas Te ogetables an nter Fruit.  Pine-apples are ane 
ieai pprehensions i into which others had been led, so as to | able to say, that good — had been made, though, com- s 
which —— either the same, or any others, with | paring one year with its immediate predecessor, it might 
| t 


might chance to come — contact. One of the most | scarcely appreciable. Tn conclusion, he must say, that he dearer. Nuts in genera al are sufficient for the demand, Oranges 


n ge 
serious Fae tens serious ; oth to agriculture and to — Bao the duties of — . a sige some 1 His and Lemons b 4 goons Ga eee 8 1 
expectation of extravagantly rapid or ex- office n important one, e successful opera- 
tensive results from scientific a agricul — — — not nop of which = h depended for agriculture. z felt also T 8 bers en To , Rhubarb, 
and as by the y who imagined that chemistry was at once, suce r Johnston Lettuces a a other 5 saladin 1 3 
f = O a 1 to spread fertility over = done vie "00d. 2 for Scottish agricultar, Sue 1 plentifu ö FI 5 consist of Heaths, Pe- 
i „ o raise abundant crops where notbing | zeal an — were too well known to the Highlan some 
| 8 before, At first sight there ighe be some grou ná require 0 n from him—he felt that m ould largoniums, Christina Roses, Camellias, Gardenias, Cinerarias, 
Which ch, try bad how the 5 eficet — expected ‘fom him, and vari ai no yes ape i “stand in FRUITS. 
arts, ce SL som he other the position which ha n he y one of suc posing sng 3 8 
of 88 instance, as bleaching, and th e 3 could assure the Society, however, that he would use his cae Grapes AE et Ib, e 84 8 Qs 8 La geri 2s to 3s 
Stride raised from e application e science had sA a ros endeavours to perform the duties of his office ; and he trusted Apples, desert. * Gsto 12s Walnuts, p. 100, 1s 8d to 28 
_ of comparative an extremely rude state to that, with th th P. beh., 35 to 58 Tah. Tii to 0 24s 
facts might MS Spgs A superficial consideration of such so should be enabled to assist in advancing | the s pr agricul- Pears, 7 — mete, 28 to 6 3 at 8, x D eck, 4 age 
1 for agriculture. b ectation of a similar arly r re in „ half e 25 to 188 Nuts, Bar., p. 8 to 223 
Eee material dive ee” ant to —.— "Professor Traill had e every reason to con atulate the Oranges, per doz., 1s to 28 — Filb., p. 100 Ibs.,60s to 100g 
the manufacture of soda, for insta A eenas aini A or | Society and n Be in having secured the services Lemons, per doz., 10 70 20 — Cob, p. 100 lbs., 90s to 1508 
him for ME on former case, the chemist had presented to of Dr. Ander: He would not na to the 3 per 100, 103 to 188 Sz, Tg razil, p. ben., 12s to 16s 
ung the mutual 32 definite sand — — — — problem, involv- which iay — 1 just heard, further than to express his i 10 * Spk i m sieve, 18 6d to2s 
a om While, in the art ata 2 b rs, he had t idar | oe in wha eg stated by Dr. Anderson, i te fa oz., 23 = — p, do., 9d to 1s 6d - 
are bat many s connected with the 1 5 1 and his approval of the prineiples laid down by him. Savoys, per potas 3d se 15 ode >. bunch, 25 fe: 2 
too, which were to N ts of his science; and problems, He regarded as most important appeal to the prac- Ore reen at doz, bunches, 1s 6d | — ost k 3 eine a 
Weather and climate, ant d by Practice, amidst the intluence of | tical agriculturists of the country, and felt assured that 028.6 pene p: ep eee 10 64 
extremely €, and many other disturb us Th . ; . gangene P. doz., 2s to 48 6d | — 3 
Complicated a ai would receive from them any assistance which he 
to the chemist ‘ns re of the problems thus submitted i Broccoli, L — 1s to 28 
Contained some 15 fe conceived from the fact, that a plant might uire.— essor Low expressed his entire — bro bun. , 6d to Is 8d “yg oye to ga 
— pai elements, the relations of wbich | concurrence with the Chairman and Professor Traill Sorrel, p. “be Cree Is to 1 1 Ganie, p jes, Teras — kai 
ites, ing the anges = 3 1 ia ot payee ideas | in congratulating =- Society, in mei . the Potatoes, — t, 250 — ee 52 : 
taken int however, the me Sambet oF ibs lasht ns s of Dr, A on, He w n the s 2s 6d to 5s Lettuce, ‘ab, P; rived > 8 
Was stated: we tion, only a small portion of the question — world, — the address he vt — delivered N py bun., 1s stems 
form “ese substances Red Beet, per doz., 6d 1755 + Endive * — T to 2s 6d 
so that gee Compounds of the cities ter into union so as to must make a favourable impression on actical Horse Ra J aril “bal. 1 Mushrooms, p. pottle, 6d to ts 
abore two ingle element of sulphur jie pede aed tr farmers present,—The sarge said he had no o doubt Asparagus, p. 100. — io Small Salads, p. pun., 2d to 3d 
i not less than gears in the thousand of the plants, the meeting would approve of his conveying to Dr. Seakale, p. —— 9d to 1s 6d Fennel, per ame — j 
Amen Of Which itis as essential erent states of combination, | Anderson their thanks for his interesting and valuable | Rhubarb, p. be er ito, a os Thee tor tana 433 
dure dress, P- , + > 
à ad — . Zs to 68 Watercress, p. doz. bun. , Gd to 9d 
FF eks, per do, ; ey 5 3d ren — hf, st 15 sari 
Dele „Pp. bundle, 6d to Is — Roots, p. bdle., 
Calendar of Op erations. Radishes, se ge 1s — 28 Marioren, — — 5 80 
loz. bun., 3s to 5s int, 
BERWICKSHIRE Merse Farm, Feb. 16.—Since last re ort we f Aare Boch nont 
have fivished storing Turnips and sowing 2 HAT. —Per Load of 36 Trusses, 
stored 1097 loads of Swedes, and os 124 acres wi SMITHFIELD, Feb, 22, bic to din 
art 3 bushels, e ie Ti! „ eo 
Wheat, part 24 bushels per acre an 3 bushel We — Prime Meadow std 66s to7 = Clover 
begun this day to sow Beans on fot 5 — land; as the weather | Inferior ditto... 50 New Clover ... 25 7 
has been fine for is in Dag con — 2 One — . 60 ca ss 
man and lantin Turni ey png o. J. ew Hay .. 
of Galzowat * yaaa Fob, 19—8 cle 2 — have penen 5 B Pe. 0 J. COOPER. 
h k-yard the of the remainder of the 
. 3 r provi favourable, the Turnip Prime Meadow Hay. y 706 es Inferior ... . . 50s to S48 
land was — Panag all ploughed — sown with á ope e aner ditto... 50 ia. Clover — eee 2 en 
variety unter's Wheat, at the rate o ushels „ a err 1 
per Taneri TA, sown broadcast; 2 cwt. per acre of guano ola. pl „ BO Josaua BAKER, 


90 
was harrowed i e are now occupied with WHITECHAPEL, Feb. 22. 5 
Bean sowing, — — — in the following — the tenon — en Hay . 65s to 70s : ew Clover ue 
land, which was trenched-ploughed in autumn, from expos a wince ow — 55 | Inferior ditto... . — s 
to the weather, now breaks down before the drill dai plough, with New ae — 65 | Straw. . , 
any other previous operation ; 6 drill wing Old x i 


Clorer 95 100 


TH 
E 
AG 
RIGULTUR 
: 21 
G 


week ATOES. 
por oN waa -50v 
E Herat mane, 
+ ATERS 
in Whi s day's * 1DE 
N * val s Fe 
w es, jo., 1008; 12 to ume = 
. dod —— 2 x 4 cite, past p ee 
articl 5 THFIE igian h Cu ege ent abat and 
A L do., 7 nts ement lot 
2 "Trade is e * . r Oat e m 2 5 still 
eniam Baai TERT > ee ding ea a: 
am. si and 1k ualit glis h an 
Spain, 00 Sorana peek ba al; eon 1 * N pb ag 2 na nt m avera | Lo prs ale —— l z and 4 , probabili 
Ay qu sare of late ws ne — it ae to h verage- weigh ility 
Por st. and Korth — . * y no better, ised. othe —— * > — cam i belag Z 81 EA | H! 
7 See 1 — is be the mum — Eastern ent, Mi eir — d ore favo Nox 10H. Ec 
' Sufolk, 2 and 3 ber of m th ddlese 1 5 iwi urabi ofl Noti DA 
pen ee ee one Sn va 5 
Beasts 6 to er 0 i * Kal re A r 
m $ Gto 2 Dito Shor f com | healt nb cpt counties, Sarry, Sue, é eaeh ot ‘armen . NICAL DEPAN 
— i st en — * i aa ay fe Bale ay oe es 
333 1— enn 14 1 0 s d an 1 e ge N inst C ND EN ` 
2; She a4 L id quality i 7107 — s — red: by 8 ee 8 e 1 itute Inv Vea 
iy wanted. "The and Lam ave 053 = Ae pere of Lo 1 s on r er antities RT , Edi a kabo estiga fea fr 
eee oj 2 bs, Poh eh: 900 8 K mark kind nd prepa b e oli thou w — TIL EVS P orato tions ith ne foo 
the he ipar 1856 . ept et are on, are rati utif ki gh hol for C Y’s 2 fo and m 
te. suppl, 8 os 0 — 1 é | . wool is far mu „areal * : ully. ver PHILL an onser PA Feb. 2: the ‘perfor í 
onr: dea * — 4 $ 15 Nin = worth y from ch more lin favous su tate e Hera rie TENT = presen = 
l „Near Ute sheet Bey Kobe t b 1 Pig —5 b distriets Aw a satisf: e a applying to as etail, s 8 ROU rae fa 
pee met gots — st ad Sh at very Hit 1 s, 220, py A st shearing tin gih 0 y ar-a progr the J AMES Pi = fot oe 8 GHP t 
on ne reduc ts mi unsold, as ttle meat | B to ho “of fav g time, » lc arg GLASS ai pri HIL OR 00 N ufactu LAT 
Bea 3 * . Ser 1 — A tad pe th oura dal ce A at . bst E 
Best S° ney 1A Ban are al tigaia . 14 same Sf improve the 1 Lome circum ithe cn ** E Aae prices 1 Tao a 
sles, Hort e r e 0 is n late, doui ryi 
Sere 5 . . = ne ee ey “uu 
* * 8 
r 2 ik 1+ 8 be os; Ty "rom Hol b. 1 vie om, io Ue ine Wirt thy least y tily Tea monts, a elected 0 a fo. 8] ing 2 
“Ditto Shor TEET Hi E st Tong. wols. Bean vt ce Marat 1 05 Nor 22a from $08 Yo mo iene the aa bi uk t” square, gba 
Beasts, uwt o| Ditto Is. „ 300 1 „ 10s ik ] o 2 0 x st ity o es ot P 
833; è 1 0 22 12 quality 0 10 to 4 2 business ughont p Papay, Pen. = 427. akg Rye 26s oe 51 and an 
e 8 e . Soe 5 1 f. al ger igle 95 0042 arr de 
at late zors, Fam, 200; ea 8 ws s 16 — ey, Donte d ces of n 1 p fow Markot t pe Pony 3 Gi y aria aai 0 
Fi price nd 8 at, F 70s. 208 ; * >$ N and — tand eat, e Asagi his m P roe . — 25 nah 
or MA s, an MITH eb, 23 6; +8 0 chief eas the Oat T buy ornin, TIL NT pee i 
oted any — d fine report ge 2s, fo arti were S, Fl a ers, a gwa GL E ROU and 
ports below —— Cn 560 r whit 44 r 3 ie kee etc een an PLA! 
> als he 8 E, Fr ever d hite A by ô d unal quote and mode the RN ES SL PLA mate 
f ve past tD ¥ om 1 and. d. an tere ed | Oa rate to MEN GL AT TE, 8 
f too Roos nearly al Fe ma ear mixed, can o Is. 4, 4 Ba 8 op ae 1 3 WTE wa 
ves y the of fi uentl down all A alinn ce 2 ere tii round mi p a peda: $: ee th Herer a 5 5 ATE 10K ROY mà 
J tho samo a =< owe mark F — ja iaw Corn, & es were pot 500 n INDOW GLAS “PIPES, arate 
ber Mat 1 Oats mae the worth 5 vii 8 4 4 ats.| RTE mn, and 28 81 2 UMBER , Chronicle, frst ATENT P JPA? 
2 hick ats, R val ; sti il i 2 1 {A 8d 2 . | BEAN , to packed dy ber ne M first o-squar LAT 10 
here n „ ye fW caref 45 2 10 7 1 7s 9 8. P —— or im 2 ELO atur: e, Lo : 
during . and hea’ ‘ul 11 8 10 17 23 di 3 | EAS. ight 5 med an N day i ndon. 
hagr y „ lower Peas, lo t 22 3 3 s$ i 28 11 oN 7 353 0 | parts pr a — alp LON mong each nud 
9 8 wer d th 8, a e B 
—— al weer — A (ee JE 8 liz 2 lže 2 0 3 32 8 —. hed the t Boxes and! Gk 
PRI as ans | 1 9 26 3 8 om and en he ki t d hi 
not n low s * IE. 32 R Iichts Lights 
— | L been er. ts 47 : ya 5 29 11 33 6 eferen ot-hou ights gdom 
rn T | — ieee cof “hor for 12 eae 9 1 2 1 5 4 4 S. Em „t every da 
New K 0 1 _| 8 of foreign ly 15 = ste ee å o| a ad i to the Nobili p 
red Pe 2 Feb. 19 iverpool gn 5 3 lee orn Ave 1 ; 9 — E | 
b. * 1 ages. 
i 145 a N F Wak arte UAN ce — — 17 
tof d. eb efie * a; : 
: i ' i 
1 19 1 15 4 5 ike . = — | 
4 50 — SRE: 7 90 7 Jag où. | 1 
0—58 7 0 e —— 
$67 3 7 o6 8 1 1180 ay Feb Birmin oe Gree MACHIN 
3 7 1 ‘i 21 gha ing tie- 
4 0 5 0 F m : 
fan S eats K S 
em 7 8 44 62 8 8 fe 
2 „ . 1155 404 i tole 5 9 s Feb. 22 azed with 10 oz. sh 
— E — 3 9 6 05 , 5 ends, 
qr. — 2 5044 6 6 2 6 6|5 9 yd to an ct glass 3 
31s—3 a fia Td 4 6 96 2 6 ab Railroad St 
; qr. pial" ae PN 0 806 6 RT jai 
33s 81.— 1 8 al LAN 
n N 22— Bee te 7 26 4 eb ewi ase D CEMENT 
e =e PORE Saye ET ae oe 
2 -aatas 45 Ibs. 2.— ara a Flap ps Oje is CEME! 
23/1 f forte — 6 280.2 1 28 2 ov colar NT. onials 
6— 0d 4 bush. 4— 30— 95258 o fou beg to 2 
28—30 kos m 6 Bac 9 = * Lapasan possess 
y 2 * bs. 9— Bush. pes nee r. me t 1 te - 
21 28 ‘ £ 7 42 0d 3s 42/39—4' ae 32 3—2 Wes nufac re 0 It ne u 
: . 30 ar 6 2 42 2d 2 29 27 T = turers, ee vege ne 
3 378— 42 7 * oe iaig 3 r. HE — J. v ofs egetate 
. ? "n Sa ar 22 men m = ee! 3 MPR Wate | 
lover 3 26— 32 82 2 — 34— W 25 RoE IYD 
Ainseed 36/2236 bi 966 —32 — AUEI 
ins . 30—4 2—36 33 32 —35 ao —32 — cam 18430 fin ith a aker, * j 
; Ce — n — W. Cc 9 
3 itish — ee ies rn aaa a 31 ai am 6 = 115 8 ie nen i 
i gn . S = 33 23—3 Fe . ; : 15 for d ‘of wate 
Indian 111. 1282 rae 3226 14 36—4 J eep w be- 
— * oe yi 1 drla. T er 1 ik newly in ea ells 
lan Corn— 75 op 4 28—31 34 32 2—1 why: 9 9 5 hot of all 
2 4 — ib 31 4—36 3 Pa ll * 3 vnd 1110 water U kin as, 
25- . 2—4 6 34—3 —4 stimates g inde, Douches 
-30 A * 3 3 — — 36 8 T 1 Hr i 
ges 92 32—4032— ad. =| ara a Bit > or the su 
we 2 = 5s 410 32—4 1 Ma 1 — S KINTFOIN 2 75 ows 
2 28 1 — — ; 15—16 jE RASS. = per bai, f 
S- siete — 3 — — 4 
* . of WHITE 
ee i SIKE HYBI 
A 6 90 HY HD 
vi lbs. N. BR DIT 
er. Im 13—14 pA;B. The Ree 
4 4 pts. — j sas b lee 20 
. 0e. 1 
3 2 qr eh see Hale. 1 other Ag 
— 278 ges. e — Wa rs to to B be ces. 
13 1 85 ee —— rehou ad ristol 
10 = 4 d. Im: in os use, droa „ b 
9 ear ON Rea 8 
28 $ 1 qrs. Eon Sire 4 Berks. 
E my i. 12 “write to sin AUS Those 


i 81849. 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


127 


= Sales by Auction. 
ENTLEMEN, AND NURSER RYME 
S is favoured wi 

t ou 


ale, of Mes DDIGES, 
ENS, n ae „street, Covent- 
nings of sale, 


„ WIRE nae NETTING. ail 
er yard, 2 feet wi 


GLYN 3 


STREATHAM 


88 
05 
„ 
o yd 
— 
2 
. 
4 
oO 
— 
8 
' 


H 
by Auction, on the premises, Streatham 
Feb. 26th, 1849, and e days, at 
order of the —— of Mr. R. Neal, 
It o'clock the whole of the valuable NUR BRT STOCK, 
s a bak, a large quar tity of very fine Evergreens, Fruit 
Son Ornamental 8 and Deciduous Shrubs, 
ÈC, — at t 2 oat 225 valuable 
remises, es ising 5 of Nursery 
ran unexpired term of 


; EDWARD EDWARDS, Esq., Official Assignee, 7, Frede- 

— . Old — Vs = of the Auctioneers, ‘American 
Nursery, Leytonston: 

Warsery, Leytonstone, Esse. 


nen — eee ild d Publ 
Gentlemen, Nurserymen, Builders, and Public 
ER n Planting. 

ys. PROTHEROE AND MORRIS ar 
structed 


the finest description of Fruit-trees, ane . 
Planta great — From the adhesive eaters of the 
— the remove safely xtraordinary 
E — ere, 15 7 well l the 8 — 

‘oblemen, Gentlemen, and t oot rther comm 
uous, the Stock being — ar —.—.— ith one of th 
ifnot ee the Trade. 8 be viewed prior to the 
Catalogues be 


1 en ls. each 0 Seedsmen to pur- 

— — e —— 0 e arpan — and of 

the Auctioneers, . Nursery, 

TO NOBLEMEN, GEN „FL Titer AND OTHERS. 
Van G 


public ee by Auction, — 
AY, 


2 for 
şi RS, 
-stracted to 
on FRID Sth | Mare oh, 1849, 


the Mart, Battolomew- lane, 
Feat, 200. choice Camellias, well set 


L liam lancifolium ——— 200 Gladiolus Ganda- 
Rhododendron eee, (1 to 2 feet), 50 fine 

> 2 — 5 * wh ince Ser all the approved 
y LOU t eas, axodium sempe 4 to 6 
5 is 505 Mar pervirens o 6 ft.), 


be viewed the morning of 
8 be he bal at the =— and of the Auc. 


UN D, TWO 
NS, "the pro- 
x, E ; both were shown at York. 
The othes. y 3 pi the hands high, Cirencester. 

r. rie i ands hi sat Ham- 
1 = Pri 2100 Guineas. 


entl 
here is a double Donch hous se, 
d and Flow = ke ra s, Con- 
e Offices, 
— 


and very comple 
bea 5 — re 
gents, Old Bond-street, Lond 
= NEAR CE MARKET 


EN, e ontaining | P 
me Hill, within half a — 5 the 
b 


w the property, app! 
3 or to * Wu. B. Dalen, fone, 


TATO. — The 
— f disease, to be see 
Th Fira 17, Foly- 


> 8 . — 


feet, 
i cient ey, at ite 8 for adi Plants and Shrubs. 


— hi 
. 
Iron. 
5d. per yd. 
„ 
9 
6 


pe 
Galvan- 
ized. 
2-inch mesh, light, 24-inch wide. 4d. per yd. 
nch „, stron 77 9 is 
extra reas ” 12 
ight 8 
10 


one ” 
” 
” 


woe 
2 


ich extra 14 11 
1l the above n ote — any width at proportionate prices, 
he Fas er half is a coarse mesh, it will r the price one- 
fourth. Galvanized sparrow-proof netting — e od. 
at square foot. Patterns forwarded post-free. 
nufactured by BARNARD and B BISHOP, Market-place, 
Norwich, and delivered we of expense in London, Peter- 
borough, Hull, or Newcastl 


WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT. 


y 


Pi 
L 
1 O Oe OOS SS 


RRR 


ox ee eee 


EE neee 
EE AARAA e A 
ELKLIAXXI EEA XI 


1 OA si ae NETTING, TWO-PENCE 

T.—This article * i es no paint- 

ing, the. 7 8 5 = Snot “having the slightes est on —— It 

ustre for many 

years, and is atkupwiedged to be the cheapest article « ever 

brought into the m It forms a cheap, light, and durable 

— for the riren ‘of Gardens and Shrubberies ee, 

e depredations of hares, rabbits, and cats; for Aviaries, 

Wen and to prevent poultry from straying, as well as 
for training creeping plants, it answers admira 2 

Large quantities of the Netting always kept in amples 

of which can be forwarded fires < of cog et to — part of the 

United Kingdom. Prices as follo 
12 inches wide 3d, Ber = 80 inches = ro * ae 
— 
52 


jr 


an 


24 1 


Galva nised do. 1d. oe foot e 
ge Fenders a Fly- proof bee on ers, Meat Safes, 


Wire Garden bordering a „Flower Stands, 
and Reve description of Wire 
Tuomas HENRY Fox, 63, Snow-hill, London. 


STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROOF 
WIRE NETTING 


Onaklxs D D. YOUNG AND e (uate 


D C. YOUNG), 
MANUPAUTURERS OF PIRON AND WIRE WORK, s., 
omen — DERBY-8 SQUARE, 33 2 3 Hren. 
REE DINBURGH; and 32, Sr. EN 
— Faapei to call * attention 7 — — Proprietors 
et Fence, for excluding Hare 


ge 


It is so 9 durable, that when 
—— t of its 


ins. h, 9d. ins., 1s; ; 30 ins., 18. 3d.; and 
36 iik. 151 fd. per inni yar 
a web of 100 yards, 18 ins. —— will cost P 4 0 
Do. of 100 yards, 24 ins, as 0 
Do. of 100 yards, 30 ins. 0 
Do. of 100 ya ards, 36 ins. Sec 7 10 0 


equired, it would be charged 
same ra 


This Netting i is yin arne, adapted for Pheasantries and 
ng athe — — r 2 alen parti As carriage 


has, in man 
tance os uu "is ‘Ne 10. D. Y. ‘and Co. h 
— . they will undertake to deliver 1 itt at any of the 
prineipal ports of $ 2 oe ae England, and Ireland, for One 
nny per lineal 
oD ‘Youna and Co. cannot give a better idea of the great 
Be gin of their Pr eee Wire Net than by peta te that 


at th 


t | acturers, 196 (opposite the Chapel), Tot 


RSHIRE CO cows 
ESSRS. ROBSON AND 


BY HER 
MAJESTY’S 


ROYAL LETTERS 
PATENT, 


3 CHELSEA, 
s for Sale on 


5 


these Ho 


pni anais healthines sto pla 
tion, — 8 Ton 
a smooth surfac 
up in any part, 


dur: 
nts af = 5 — 1 


— formed without wood, putty, or — 
d only about 5-8ths of au iuch of light taken 


GRICULTURAL 8 Gentleman 

a Norfolk Farmer, who hes for y years received d young 
men into his family for the yndi — has Aa ay 

For particulars, apply to A. B., care of Mr. Muske tt: 

seller, Norwich. z 


S Dars CHIMNEYS AND VENTILATION. — — 


unsightly than any 0 
It continually ena the apartment, — is 
okin 


; cure all chimneys smoking from wind, It be seen and 
teste d'a t W. JEAK KES’ 5 1, Gréat Russell-street, Bloomsbury, 

rice, in Galvani 5s. Prospectuses forwarded on ap- 
plication. Licenses ante and the 


BICALPE'S ALKALINE <9 POWDER 
will be fou 


= 


andits —— — ho tends to rte one purity e breath 
M. and Co., from the many years they hav: 8 
Tooth. brush Takers, have had opponents (dat occur to few) 
of testing the relative merits of tho: ee K e t have been 
brought t before the public. They now pizat pro- 
curing the ipt from which the above A is p ed, 
and eee recommend its universal adoption hole- 

sale and retail at METCALFE, BINGLEY, * 60 s, Brush-makers 
to H. R. H. Prince Albert, 2s. per box. 
powder will have the Royal Arms, c 

H.R.H. Prince Albert, on hs lid of the oe, and the signature 
and 5 be the firm, 82 : ‘METCALFE, BINGLEY, and Co., 

eet, Lo 


Pa LIFE PILLS are p 4 1 
Medicine in the world. aig praca 
efore the British public antes a few vider and pe 3 = 
annale on the werld + was never seen success ree — eir 
a virtues — ae Medicine were at once ora 
ation followed re 
tion ; Windvedé dere eee sans acknowledge that PARWS LIFE 
PILLS had saved them, and were pat in their praise, The 
pe tling facts that were I ght before the public 
t once 8 any prejudice whieh s sents may have felt; the 
— which. resulted r ds oa use spread their 
3 carcely a country 
on the face of tie globe which has Het hand of their bene- 
fits, andh scught for Lia pat whatever might be the cost 
of transmission. The States, Canada, India, and even 
a, have had immense quantities — to their respective 
i esult as in England— animea 5 


n 
a es weekly, —— than all other paten 
t needs 


ther tho Pills of Old Parr are the best medicine in the world. 
BEWARE OF — pe oi —None are 
rds“ PARR'Ss LIFE —.— are in White Letters on 
Red Ground, on * Govern stamp, pasted round each 
also, the fac-simile of —+ . — of the proprietors, 
Co., Crane- court, Fleet-street, London,” on 
the Directions. 
Sold in boxes at Is, 1}d., 28. 9d., and family Rikon at ils. 


eac by 
Tull divections à are given with each box. 


( 9 SPRING MATTRESSES, permanently 
elastic, very durable and cheap. 
8 feet Wide. 8 4 feet 6 in. wide . 43 3 0 
3 feet 6 in. wide . 2 13 0 — «ae area 310 0 
4 feet ditto ....,...... 8 5 fe : — „ 18 ee 
f these, with a French Mattress 8 t, sa mos 
ara ft bea. HEAL and SON’S LIST of ADDING win 
1 lay articulars of weight, 5 8 — ever. description i 
b; —HEAL an 
of Bedding, sent free by p 


REAM- LAID NOTE PAPER, ‘five q aires for 94.3 5 


N for ls. ; cream- nae aid envelopes 
tto; ne Byte sa per 1005 3 ditto, 


em. | io iot M teat À 
Rem es for 3 


z ET LB BLA a 8 MEDICATED 


CREAM, the 8 esta, = and s 
Scalds, 


— 2 4 2 9d., by all respectab 
— * een wer Fans, —— 
URE FOR BRONCHITIS.— 
8 LINE SOOTHING LO: LOZENGES 


of their 24. inc 
Tein th the market, the 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE AN 


D AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


En. 24. 


eee Wen Steel 
ce 77. „ Illustrated with Ten Stee 
Nee e ego 5 gs by the Author, 
HE GREAT | HO ARTY DIAMON 
E y W. M. THACKERAY |, a | 
Author * „„ air 
It is a ies ete t 2 eat interest, and | 
which, if w nary man, 5 go not a little way 
Sundi 
os preen hier — E Y peng Ta Bouverie-street. 
NEW WORK BY THE AUTHOR or s VANITY PAIR.” | 
On the 28th inst. gh ot be —— pric F 


bers), No. v. of 
E I 8 3 
PA 18 FORTUNES AND MISFORTUNES, HIS FRIENDS 
57 * ins 9 ENE 


ad o be had of all Booksellers, 
2 wo 10 M hed ae. price 1s., of 
RNAL OF DE 


PR SIGN, 

na a 1 Fabric Patterns inserted, and Thirty W ood 
En wien a Addr essed to en ee Manufacturers, Retail 
Dealerds oo ers, a t- 

E JOU Sg or DESI 
ties of its In this Hatter of Ornamental Design we hope 
to prove ourselves thoroughly conservative o of — beas interests 
= manufacturers, salguors, an ned, We 

dvocates for be tter law 
and d for 2 largely. inet rease 


wit eve: as it ought to 2 p 


r trib Padal to prote ect 
copyr 

constant 
orn ma 


e bu 
all 3 and 


— Author of Vanity Fair,” &c. &c. — 
75. and Wood by the An - pangs ei reati the day when it will be tough aes aceful for 
London: Bsapaoar & Evans, II , Bouverie-street. ns, as itis hel 
day i is published It edges, a Taw be if he should walk into the counting-h rob his till. 
oe 0 * a aes ty S seen me, 0 £ toto are some of the e oints of our ‘political leva n with hpn 
- r undertaking, usion, we profe 

AXTONS BOTANICAL D n 3 2 start on our underts — K ae i aR abate Doge 
— in sy fot with a full re oer of Technical aorta. 
as an instant re tandard of consultation, 

and invaluable to —— 2 of Hor prays in every branch, 

% For the conv essing the Firs 


s poss 
Edition, a SUPFLENENT, Lo = cae "all the New Plants since 
„is published, n cloth, 


__ bondon: tones r Sit Bourerle. street. 
aah 8. 
pD“ LINDLEY" 8 ELEM ENTS OF BOTANY. 
ART III. 

Contain ae ere and ae onomical Plants; profusely illus- 

trated with 
This will compe “he ELEMENTS OF BOTANY, rendering 
that work a com 2 97 of Botany for senior 1 
RY — Erana Whit teiar 


vAr 1 3 in 
ron, Part VI. (complet- 


ADB OF. MONEY. 
Be 2 1 arg le 
Poxcn t-street, London. 


THE Drai SyaT OF B 
Published this day 0, . = 
OS a ra ON N NATURAL SYSTEMS OF 
By Ja Dromsmoxn, M.D., Professor of 
Ar atomy and Physiology 2 he Royal Belfast Institution. 
the same Author, 
fonts ——4 10 BOTANY. 4th Edition. 
LET 9 A ! 1 ad Edition, 7 78. 6d. 
Lox 
a vol. 1085 21 J.: 7 Third Edition, 
wah DICTIONARY OF ARTS, MANU- 
FACTURES, —— MINES ; containing a clear Exposition 
| Practice. / Third Edition, corrected 


throughout, IMPROVEMENTS INARI N ARTS MANUFACTURES, 


tbr U — 88 
to 3d Edition of his Dictionary.” rts 
London: Loyemay, Brown, GREEN, 7 2 


— 
Onih the son TE will — added, 
on Steel by Jons 


ia one 


s to fos 


useful —— ent of ‘Gore ement ac ee ex 
0. 
ADDRESS. 
Rebict of Patterns. 
MULTITUDE or New PATTE 
2 * printed 2 Hindley and sxe : 
and Stone ; ano po mayi kson 
R. A 


Tapestry, mad 
eae , manufacture 
0. 
Abe, * red by Watson, Bell, and Co. 
1 55 


Two Epergne esigned and made by W. Potts. 
greets pa Aaa uria by Messengers, for the garden- 
vilion in Buckingham Palace 

Double Ca ndlestic k, manufactured me 1 

Urn, manufactured by W arner an 
— a a French Paper- . imported by W. 
Cheap English Paper, sold by W. B. Simpson 
Woo o Bowls, carved by Phillip = Wynne, We G 


s 55 the Wood-carving Compa: 

Porr. Statuettes: “ The Distressed Mother, » “Dancing 
Girl,” “ Prince of Wales, in a sailor-boy’s costume,” “The 
Cornish Wife at the Well of St. Keyne; Vase, manufac- 
tured by Copelands ; Two Spill Cases, A Ne d by 
Wed 8 ; Oyster Tub and Dish, manufactured by 
We J ho aap ae 


ugs, 
Ridgways, k by Mintons ; Potted Hare 
d by Coj — 


Tia Pier Y ase, Wine Glass, and ata Glass, 
Mı staat awe a cover to Son 
Original Pa 
COPYRIGHT IN — MIXTURES op STYLES, 
— 
reatises — Shaw’s Booke of sorea — Rich’s 
8 1 ’s Coloured Euclid, 
Enstitution 
Constitution 5 the ** — — ” School of Design—Dyee's 
N ou n s of Edinbu Leeds 
—.— of Desigu— C e Re eport on 8 ty of Design 
anges 


This day is published, Part IV., with 12 Plates, an ae 
THE C EMISTRY OF 47 ETABLE AND 
raiser ny IOLO 
Br Ds, G.J. Meine * in the University 
] Dr. P. F. H. FROMBERG, 
With Notes by Professor Jonssrox. 
Wri — = o aner and London. 


s in Masterships ia in Schools c 5 cae n—Williams’s 
Poe ron Design at College of F of the Church 


Number of the — year i jase published 
N.B. If any Amateur n has = 45 W of 
Camellia, he is invite dt rite — . — or a co wing to 
ALEXANDER VERSCHAFFELT, Nurseryman, Ghent, ry wat who 
gure 
Adress 


. in his work. For the s ubseri 8 to Lg 
mite 
JHE PRACTICAL e AND MODERN 


1 IST 


; Ta Volume, ated, wi 
300 — Woodcuts, containing the present 2 
entific mode of managing he Kitchen, Fruit, and Flower Gar 
By goes M.Ixrosn, C. M. C. H.S., of Dal 
M. C. H. S. Keith Palace. 
Bound in cloth, price 21s, ; and also with Specimens of choice 


hr N 


The labour and and experience of a life devoted to the 
of he pata we „ Made Authors 


8 
upon the most simplo — hago — — 
B now in ul operation. Ee 
Eur ; § kts, Manatate and Co, 
HANDBOOK THE WER- 
. AND 3 will 
of M cedd, This 


ey ee Management, aaa the 
he 

pits = eee And Ronny for ever 1 — By 
LENNY, F. H. 8. To be ed in 12 monthly Parts 
London: C. Cox, 1 William-street, Strand; 

and sol 1 e lers. 

~~ MAWE’S aed CALENDAR, BY MAIN 
LENNY. » 


18 OWN Gh 25th editi ion of 
and Essays 


„ 3 


GEORGE 


ei priya Exhibition of British iauatacturers at the a 


Cable Ta Ik. 

9 in the value ol * Fabrics Blue and White 
Jas anufactures depressed Ta- 
pestry — Ca ese hart ry Copeland — Mouldings in 

— Arts Commission’s Eighth Report. 
Carr ente. 
dark of Copyright in Jennens and S Trays 
Is there an International Copyright in Models ? 
Lo 2 : CHAPMAN and HALL, 186, Strand. 


‘ LOUDON’S wight bes A OF — LT 


E 


J. C. hie, F. L. G. Z. and H.S., rhe: Author of the 


— n ely, 5s, 

same ren Aen 

AN ENCYCLOPEDIAS OF 0 

HORTUS BRITANNICUS. E 

AN ENCYCLOPÆDIA OF PLANTS. 73s. 6d. 

ENCYCLOPADIA OF RURAL ARCHITECTURE, 635. 

AN ENCYCLOP. EDTA F TREE S AND SHRUBS. 155 
Londo „ GREEN, and Lone. 


Just raed, —— 5th Edition W an entirely new set of 


oodcuts, 8vo, 21s. cl 
ENTS ‘OF PRACTICAL AGRICULTURE z 

4 comprehending the Map case 8 ery 7 B 

Feces pe 22 — of th 
Esg, R. SE 
Professor of Wenge * the i 8 of Edinburgh, 
ON LANDED P 
ESTATES. pe PROPERTY AN AND THE ECONOMY OF 
0 ON kg DOMESTICATED ANIMALS OF GREAT BRITAIN. 
Tite’ BRI BREEDS’ OF THE DOMESTICATED ANIMALS OF 
on 


Bas Soe 2 vols. 4 
8 Loxan 1 to, e Peak bak Ren 


0000000 
Tux, FLORICULTURAL . AND | a 
Third Volume (new coil wie im; 5 i its} et tis abe oss 
Work = 3 will a n March 1, 1849, co he s 

k ra Coloured Figures of the New 
VERBENA JUNIUS. The 

— 8 ie publis in eac nthly 
—— Notes on New Plants, as t appear 
lorists’ Flow Ace Im- 


= 


TH 
f | in erate to Hea 


su 
Bracelet, man ufactured for Hunt and Roskill, W. 
Gas aes 


EORGE MOORE'S Works = 
This day is published, = = ae in One Ye pana 
n 


nee 
MAS AND HIS MOT hi RGE M 
5 3 11 ie Royal Arey a Parade, Toon, 
Liter erary 
e tim — r 
d and sa gacious, convin 
inching the hear H Meee 
o, by the same Author, 
POWER of hd SOUL over the "BODY, ¢ 
Ith and Morals, 4th Edition. Poot 
rf ff Usb f the BODY in Rel. 8 
of the in Relation to the M 
Post 8vo, pror 95. . 24 Eat, 
Lon : LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, and Lonemays, 


TOOKE ON PRICES 


I Quart, 
ing the 8 aah anand 


‘urrency Question. By THOMAS Toos 
nga Gontinextion of the History of Prices 


= 


1793 to 1839. > 


Mr. ee 8 admirable volumes are at once the most faits, 
upon q 


1 


thority 


of price. Da ily News. 
ondon * MAN, BROWN, GREEN, and Loxdulxs; 
Of whom may be had, 3 vols. Sro o, price 483,, 
MR. TOOKE’S HISTORY of PRICES, from 1793 to 193, 
„„ 3, BEAUTIFUL TEETO S 
UTIFUL TEETH, 
1 1010 OR 


healthy action of t ums, and ĉa 
— brightness and 8 — indicative of perfect — 
ess ; 8 iar een their adhesion to the Te 
yment and — wa to 2 


— of th 
consequence, obtained its selec 
the Court and Royal Family of Great Britain, and 
— and Nobility throughout Europe. — Price . a 


i —To protect the public from 2 the He | 
Commissioners have directed the he sre See — — 


dress, thus“ A. RO AND and SON, 20, Harro 
to be engraved on il 
h box. Sold by 
mers, 


number to let, 8 . six penny stam 
and Bevan, 38, Red Lion-square, London. 

2 PROOF OF THE erte 
A rel Ed ILLS FOR TH 


ND P 
ille, of Bie 


CUR rs. Mandevi : 
for nearly three years with fearful sores on 3 egs. 
standing the various — — tre — 3 —— 


was made, the ulcerations 
ai was unable to stand ; 
s Oi ills 


e that she is now a! 
garte by all Vendors 
HortowAy’s Establishment, 


ase of Gardening, 5 te n porinan, illus. 
vings, m 


; | Printea 


Qik HENRY HART’ S 
CHIMNEY PUMP, 
THE 
CURE OF SMOKY CHIMNEYS, 
and the constant 3 of apart- 
ments. It has been in successfi 


at Greenwich Hospital "for ave — 
months. 


80 eres 
BENHAM 7 Sons, 19, Wigmore- 
street, Cavendish-tquare, 


and J. Dan, opening to the 
aer  London-bridge. 
ALi coma t to Siagne aie 


as 
Sead pe Bang Co, TEA- 1 
SAINT PAUL'S CHURC HAYA 


RACING BANK AND BETTING OFFICE: 
opposite Theman ers 
thanks fo for the y arabe fn bublic continue to 
eir integrity, and to — that the BETTIN Geli 
the METROPOLITAN, the CHESTER e. and t 
ng.— Post-offi ce orders made yable 
Sam, s at the Post-office, Strand, of whom 4 
pate pr a gag, sea — 


had on application, 


wn 
may be realised by a 


~- superintendence of the 
8251 Pair — t oof thie ii beg Whe : 
atrons of t agazine, 0 
“FAMILY FR RIEND” has already reach eaii Spare 
Nos. 1, 2, and 3, price 2d. each, & form, ma 
cies, , original matter, in nea * azine 
of all llers.—Hobisrox and STONEMAN, 
F ted by WI EIA ESET No. 
A nent Muuter Evans, of No. 777 
county 5 


sens ie 


h 


HE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, MARCH 8. 


No. 9.—1849.] 
——— 


E 
140 5 Kiure, to disinfect -sissi l4la 
140 a — yri of, oe Sree oe 138 a 
3 — and Potato diseas l3le 
Milk 8 sesso 292 222222 20 139 a 
Mouse 8 ot ei 135 T $ 
Onions, Potato 
Pines, ie unnecessary for 185 b 
Plants, bedding out 136 6 
Plant cultivation, conditions 
essential to — Pe ey: we. 13 
Ploughing matches . 19a 


Potaioes, — for 8 
3 gioun 
t 


Vine bor. 
Violets, 1 — Sras 
Wages, labour: 


AGRICULTURAL SEE 
J 6. WA ri E’S PRICED CATALOGUE OF 
Ue sober veal SEEDS is now ready, and can be had 
on application.—181, High Holborn, London 


STRONG ONE-YEAR SEEDLING OAKS. 
A iapa MELDRUM, having an immense stock of 


g seedlings, is determined to em on 
3 terme Prices will be furnished on applica- 
eat Lane Nursery, Kendal, March 3 


WOODLANDS 3 55 MARUESFIELD, NEAR 
UCKF IELD, SUSSEX 
plank AND SON beg to invite attention to 
TREES AND SHRUBS, 11 
82 and 97 of this Paper, dated Feb, 10 an pages 
waa Seedling and Transplanted Larches at unprecedented 


A remas SEEDLING STRAWBERRY, 25s. 
per 100.—25 strong plants of this fi 
British Queen, as to its hardy char: 


oe Potrespondén ts. 
R e is Rew 1 orders from 
col UCHSIAS 5 all the 


iis, 2 
K- 0 
is respe e requested compensate ‘for carriage. 


™ 
8. Catslogu the order, payable 


enn be obtained on the 1e- 
NB y 
45 eee 


aa be ee rounds tastefully arranged and 
2 oe the day, phe or year on the most 
er Nursery, nnington-road, London 


and cin dupa 
i af the Palle. 
T nay be 1 e. 
Planted rs the ber — — re 
each, Post-off 
ITCHELL, ie b order 


gi 
cash: Seed-merchant in London; 5 
es. derhal Liverpool or Gimon aa 


TO GENTLEMEN ENGAGED IN PLANTING, 
OSEA WATERER * 8 following very desir- 
able 


5 ý from 5 to 10 fee © 7 guineas each, 


ese are 8 plants, ) 


(Thes 
5 8 E e plants, from 2) to 3 


CRYPTOMERIA ‘JAPONICA — — se -_ 


ery fine plants, from 3 to 6 feet, 
3 4 to 5 guis. 


12 fo 
TAXODIUM SEMPERVIRENS, £000 stout plants, 2 feet, 84 


1 to 3 guineas vk 


PINUS DOUGLASII, from seed, 4 er feet, 158. each. 
0 638. 


IRISH YEWS, 6t 


r= feet, 218. t 
p MENZIESII, 5 to 5 feet, 425. to a eae doz, 


„ INSIGNIS, 1} to 5 — t, 78. 6d. ea 
7 12 van * — plants, Toa 5 to 7 feet, 2 to 
as. 
a CEMBRA, 5 to 7 feet, 10s. to 15s. eacn. 
j age and ind very handsome plants, 10 to 12 
ac 


y CANADEN sis “or ien Spruce, 4 to 5 feet, 218. 
j nt 0 feet, 2 to s. 6d, oach — dozen. 


arger 
EXCELSA, i z € feet, — 6d. to 
3 5 feet, 30s. to ois ott 


55 MOR DA, or ¢ Sih hiana, 2 to 4 ft., 2s. . 0 5s, each, 
3 ha WEBBIANA, 2 2 to 4 feet, 10s. 6d. to 42s, each, 
” 
j CEPHALONICA A few cf the largest and most 
1 LAMBERTIANA handsome plants in the trade. 
Pe HARTWEGII Prices will be given on appli- | 
„ DOUGLASII ion. 

MACROCARPA 


0 9 feet, 7s. 6d. to 


15s, ea 
„It often 8 Irish Yews are injured or rendered 


“uns sligtly fom their tendency to divide in windy or snowy 
er. e plants here offered are rows from one stem 
only, si Similar to those at Elvaston, which are the finest in 


CEDARS 1 OF "LEBAN ON, 2 to 2} feet, very busby and hand- 


0 eis 
aaa REPANDUS, 4 to 6 feet, 78. 6 
8t 


yp 
Ses 7481 ANA ihe best variety of of pce Arbor Vitz), 


as handsome specimens ; they h have never been in pots, and 


yey Leg poras n. 
s. 6d. to 428. each. 
ie splendid Riante, ) 
10s, Gd. each, 
Nes feet, very 1 plants, 
: to 42s. each. 
35 a 1 to 5 feet, 78. 6d. to ach. 
i$ ley e handsome j Tiani 80 5 8 feet, 21s, 
IRISH UPRIGHT, 4 = 6 feet, 38. (d. A 10s, 6d. 
feet, 15s. to? 
e 5 These two last named ee ought o be planted 
very one w. ace approaching a lawn. 


57 
” 


e plan nts, 5 to 7 feet, 4 
he Abote are all growing W ae —— eat are healthy 


KNAP HILL NURSERY, NEAR WOKING, SURREY, 


[Price 6d. 
Aue INDICA ALBA MAGNA,—This fine 
Az alea has — wers of very large size, great substance, 
olour, ioe 9 with purple stripes aud 
pots, of 3 compact hab t, and very free bloomer; was 
1 oyal Botanic last May, and 


btained the first prize. Plants, 15s. each 
an 


Az 2 0s. per 
including oe scarlet, white, 

per wit 1 
Pla int sat 1 tit prices. Tiy pos 


requested from unknown corres rder in th 

CAMELLIA— “BEAUTY SUP PREME.” 
H, pme AND SON, Great Berkhampstead, are 
sending out plants from 21s. to 60s. — It 9 — 


ing a two. penny stam 


r “HE ering 


—T 
all the 2 Feialdes, aud duri 


mp. 
-LEAF KIDNEY 
his is 8 the most farinaceous of 
the two seasons it has b 


consequently are 


HOSEA WATERER wouid also invite attention to his stock 


Phillyrma 
7 feet, fine Stan 
Be 


of large a 885 dated 3 7 to 15 feet bigh; 
reen and varieg atcd Hollie s, Gom on Yews, 4 to 
dard Weeping Enes Wee ping and Pene 


ina 


ey Collection of AMERICAN PLANTS at the KNAP HILL 
is 


Chelsea, every apr ring. 
shee ENDKONS, best hardy kinds, 303. to a = 8 
KALMIA LATIFOLIA, from 18s, to 848., for large plants, and 
HARDY HEATHS, 


BOX- LEAVED PR 
papri 
per 


ted. 
exon @LISH 2 


COMMON LAURBLS, fine bus 
PORTUGAL SANSA AT 2to3 feet, 30s. per 
Q usplan 


UICK, very stron ted, 8s. to 10s. per 1000. 
FRUIT EES Dart trained Apples 
y 2 Fine trees, 2s. 6d. 
5 Cheriies to 3s, each, 
—— ; 
‘ cots 
; Peaches Fine ed 3s. 6d. 
tarine 


` Goods delivered free to Tondon and to the Slough Station on 
the Great Wester = Railway. The Knap Hill Nursery is within 
an houv’s ride of peats, being near the Woking Station, 
3 Western Railway 


particu! 
„ may be addre 
Nursery, near Wohin ng, Surrey. 


FOR PLANTING COVER. CARRIAGE DRIVES, &c. 
„ ten o PONTICUM, fine bushy plants, from 


2 Red Caged 5, 


ech, Standard Magnolias, Tulip Parke &., alf of which are 


capital state for removing, and wil sold reasonably. 


well pes ae as being the mos A peen in this 
utiful Exhibition i e King’s-road, 


rdy kcarlets, large plants, 608. per à 
AS, "pin varieties, from 18s. to 428. 


As the final planting of our 
= place, we beg to recommend tay orders 


cultivated by Messrs, Surron met the as shown any 
| Eppo rance of disease. A i of the above are aa for sale, price 
= per peck, as also msm other excellent —.— 5. Gd. per peck, 
nd all kinds of Kitchen Garden and wer "Seeds of ag 
prow True Reading ¢ Giant r Plans, ey per 100 
Address, Joun Surron and Sons, Reading, 
Gir packer D ARDE SOWING- 
A ayi of 4000 selected POTATO pom with d 

tions for g, &e., Is. er packet— — 
“BOA CONSTRICTOR” SELON grows 6 fe. ie me 1 > 
VEGE 1 nd FLOW SEEDS, any v 06 
— 2 PURS, 10 varieties, separate z 0 
itto 51 120 mixe 0 6. 
Double BALSAMS, bene doe d 1 0 
NNIA ELEGANS 0 6 
SALPIGLOSSIS, — x 0 6 
X, superfine Scarlet G 0 6 

100 varieties of aonda 8, * ; 60 ditto, 53. ; 25 do., 28. 6d. 

Treatise on Potato Cultur: e, 6d. 
po oe t tamps, 

HAM H and Son, See ed Growers , Essex. 

INAL PLANTING OF ie RANUNCULUS.— 


from perso 
rous to poe Lege pe in strong roots, at the following 
4 


— sonable and se 
tions for — ind a 
— —— did seedii — ig varieties, with ere 20. 

ditt a 2s, Gd. 
50 Fine older venues, 15s. ; or 25 he 
100 Finest mixture, 10s. ; 
post free, 6s, 
bine a AS 838 finest mistur 2s. per doz., or 12 
per lb. er doz. „ or 8s. per Ib. 
N free by post, 8d. sel dozen extra. 


Bas 
Sudbury, S 


ee by post, with printed direc- 


; 100 fine boreal varieties, 5s.; or 


8. 


ss and e ee Seed and Horticultural Establishment, 


OHN B. SM 
ttention of the Nobility, Gent 


RONS, AZALEA IND LLIAS, LILIUMS, &c. 
5 which ma 


Norbiton Nursery, oe Surrey, 


TH begs seps aeo S to invite 

the a Trade to 

ra new and splendid collection a ‘hardy yellow RIOHODEN. 
I , CAME 


ay be Dad by 5 postage st amp. 
reh 3. 


NE SEEDS. 


8 CHARTRES, SEEDSMAN, 74, Kin pg William- 


ondon, begs to 8 his Prienai 0 n 
e pro 


t, City 
Publie > generally t has SEEDS of 7 Teg 
7 ge en Ade eg 


A Catalogue can be had on 9 March 3. 


upwards, 
D a first-rate collection of about 25 of the 
most beautiful Sa distinct kinds, good plants, at 63s. p.100. 
oy 9 Heaths are not planted so generally as the ey 
deser othing can be more interesting and beautiful, 
and — — as they for the 5 part do in tumn, 
renders them still more valuable. 


of species and var rien, so fer dy g 
n Plants, trained and Soudan Peaches, Nec- 


10s. Gd. to 21s. or 

(a and i superior variety to 
the ò 17555 Ev bre ee to 125. 6d. p 
AQUIFOLIUM, bushy cate, 9 inches to 12, 50s. 


15 Oó: larger, 1} to 2 feet, 7s. to 10s. per 100. 

DUL CIS, 1 to 15 foot, 7s, to 10s. per 100. 

ARIS TATA, 1 to 13 ‘foot, 218. * 100. 

n his last is an excellent plant for these purposes, 
na 


”? 


1 te 2 E * to 128. 6d. per 100. 


r 100. 
10s. to 258. per 100. 


ET BRIARS, 8s. to 12s, 6d 
hy as 


arly re 8 that letters intended for this 
2 * ssed, Hosta WATERER, Knap Ilill 


1 MASTERS, 3 Nurse 
og the largest stock a 

rees, Flow 

ens, and Am 


gre 
tarines, &., i * 5 urhood, begs to solicit commi 


for — Shieh he is prepared to execute as cheaply as they 
e 


supplied at any other establishment in the ceuntry. 


5 DWARD GEORGE 1 
road, St. John's. wood, L 

ACHIMENES PATENS MAJO 

w a place in ere 00 

d the flower a 0 

ACHINESES OHIESLRICHT Ml, 

st beaut iful of the whole tribe, and q = 

hat net Serf ha a] Jasa, a rich vermilion colour, and has 
beautiful glo arance. 


election he tabit of the plant is good, 


5s.—This is one of the 
uite “a stinct; the 


k 


a KAT’ 211 ll, white, protare one 3 
abo 


ve ca “Se e forwa rded by pos 
BROWALLI A JAMESONIL, 


tice plants, 


PLUMBAGO LARPENTÆ, in free growth, 3 0 


E. 
prices, whe 

advantage of the purchaser, 

CY e 12s., 18s., and 30s. 

GIN TERA RIAS, distinct in colcure, 12⁸ „per 


Pare: hg a des 


2s, and 18s. per doz 
2 AZ a ditto, Ser large plants, at 12s, 18s, ret 
ie 2 r doz The ription 


ne e than 130 0 ‘f the AAM 
ERIC CAS, distinct varieties, 12s., 135 mi 305. per dozen. 
EPAC RISES, ditt 128. a nd 18s. per doz 
GR 


H. also begs, to cifer the following at their annex ed 
and which will be minh to the 


of 


REENIOUSE PLANTS, —— — 126, 183., and 


STOVE 2 PLANTE and Stove Climbers, 183., 30s., and 42s, 
ronn The Trade su 
N.B. Catalogues for 18205 
No. 1 will contain a list of Stove and cree 
2 and Epacris ; 3, Azaleas, Rhedodendrons, 
a and feraniums ; 5, Select M ‘ 
2 April, 6, Bedding plants, 


ppl 
will be se hed on the Ist 9 


— pants ; 


130 
EYM 
tho first time : mes e CHAMTION THE GA 
ede tems oy I Lasa asa S05, N PION CELER RDENERS' CHRONIC 
* Celery, White m oy 22 gat for ‘COL R S C H 
R a 
F een ed Ma mpio eat Betk- A LEG 3 
. — We poe oy ee The TION OF @ SEAS ONIC 
O* SHIL or postag i -pepr and e follow MENTA RARE gaa LE. 
Saree e stamps Fio 0 cket. clud Co., in ovis RARE AND, HA LE. (Manon 
to Any} — m u 2 ed, and ca . heal m of CON RDY OR ee 
5 y person nkaowa Pinus Ayaca 1 onal D* 
hostel e © m. tsof OR W e s L yac. ge paid t nts in RRi ofi S HLIA 
N. ay b cal aving a n „ Lav o Lo pots, ered S, 
— ear o D3 Te $ — ndon by Y 18 
OBERT melee Libeasy, ya a te h jew good -ai 8 -Pi . — 2 oa — i AR 
2 Hope stree M. Wid 7. eld borr haser. Dees e showy kia anā * poe $3 8 ge in- atia ESS- wite * a ks J CH 3 
32232 treet, Edin bu I, HEAT ' = o P. n „ insi ezuma ” gtr. j al, the class 0 * . BU 3 
he appr ħi nerf ncery-lane. ” $ < @ gnis ` Ory ow urab! 0 ertifi Pie SH 
— a e aly, for th — pleas Fn n oe: Ge Pede. 3 58 x% t To th Soo “middle ELL Ke 
Dean solicits for the SEE — nap ST 22 . Arau eodara = EINE s in Mz eva icultu aya Size, 
seg be bas ob 9 5 deso atimating E: mata 90 aria im mibrica x 178 plants n May 7 ee 2 a e 
. trow P >i r 
—— ee and — ed, a — — 1 . Picea —— entalis (true) pressus poses ditto 3 ay, 70.6. neck J. ad ep eerie sd ware — 
F . e eee — ae seme, miia = 
P Greenh the wa shortly be layin dgehill Yo CEDR oe thir e a ben followi not ope e size, 
Edin Ca ouse and epartmen able re out as — = US DEO Tax — na Da d bes oms of acce ing pria n eng will 
0 e e e — . pe 
RIOR se may be nts , Fi ness 25. per ply fi e mo: attenti M irens for t rd best. om of r. * — 1 
"gE had o! ’ jorists 5 — r doz Ay legant on tó th EED. e sec 10s i Lond e se es: npeted 
“Arrens RN na j 8 shy pl a eir f ond for ess, on cond, A. for * 
riss "iyo rart 12 ASTERS, pplica oa, —" pecimen 1 Mes . pote, sip cramer ey | L ae aa a e ä 
Tae packen Wea beauti You 20 TH e Nurser Bon larger siz ches to — tree T. Thh SHED leren — ond poe j 
„ABA moi ful s “variet E FINE — ize in foot, , WIL BURY NURS tural , 10 
7000 TWO’ 5 5 8 an a eee eee ST SHOW CAR r migo in any quan; | misos for LUMER, Seni SERY STOCK FORS i 
sold A qua Y impa, post free sit cellent | thei D AN NATT — — 1 nior, b Pe Ee 
2 , EARS E Mali flower.” | exten 9 3 ONS, PICOTE 5 e iess, See n gs — SAN 
1 UCE Fi sant it. or Lise 15%. Seo strong, h — 2 — “collection executin = SHRUBS . band, hed — meri peetfully 
LAU BLACK Ti ai nae of the Advertis per 1000.— rita ahh nique cole — T * . — ee = o has reso — clinging 
ARIA K TRALIAN feet H oaks 2 ah lhe 1 n pingi 4 — 5a and well —— — a song — a Arbutus Bh tog ieee © to fet an abon 
tho M fe PoP H to 4 ot h ‘ 3 , the per po „ The nd is risin eet: Phi 0 5 REE stoc ispos 
at et; w LARS DO. and 4 to aving 25 ae wad so of st, at d, if ve abe m g | Holi milly feet ; S, at f e of the 
. y take: red ith *. to 7 fee Stofa 6 feet ; | 9 sh which the ex preferred, are t | fe es, 3t ea, 6 toi Laure rises an i 
ban, No Baraga kinds of Por 1 25 5 a msm br * Sa barton: set; Yucca e sheet egy mmen: 
AUEL CO 5 eash or T 3 ORTUGAL ent keen a 2 arge of 20. ve Laurel ; Rho glorio Variegated Box, Tewa S te 
LC un — Orna- Pin fines dit en 1L. s, per | € pruce” odo sa, do. ox et; A toT 
wade, OCK tin e t t 1 e d t 2 3 A ‘fe: 
Friends Mes Bede os gdon. according to Mo ia 3 — and 21 10 Gilead ae — eet Fe Bie t,t 1 
: a ’ A er di 0 au 4 f ut n 2 
SPE mie the 0 Waris in bt Samani e- frst el Oarnations, 15 miowers... 219 o| Quick: d tb feet; Sco Ne r | 
e 5 — e e 3 e ys ee 
SEED Tk other e ha eties, 12 airs, fi and irch, Sy nglish 0., 2 to 4 ch, 6 t 
ca ATI "SEED. seri s an abu hii 30 t first o 8., 18s. í eet i other yringa Elm, feet; 2 si — 
Ti P. PARSI 2 ditto ; * pach or TURNIP fer Aa of : s show v. NSIES. pends. p Gooseberry, of sort Curran horns ; pe Oak, Be : — 
sy TR * . L . bee r 3 sc ine be 
Glien IGOS 2s. pe E Red Se CARROT 5 Ba en bis seldom 5 co parti AS varieties; I A feet; ia 
giy on fi 1 g — T RN UT 33 . usiness ill mee debout arge 15 
at 1 cura vir 2 ditto; WELL’ H NU don bulbs per pos will be t — offered out to pot genuine i 
Chad ong flo “peerage this — f strong | ik y sort eve LS VICTO zai = = ie dos y As A continued 2 8 T exte b 
| Seedii T * een mente: 8 Ace; . os Society's offered. RIA RA i Balsam, ae 24 spl 5 tion. The na 
Joux Gi Foreign Pine — per 8 oon oh thet BINE ts ad — ye Gardens, Roya were SPBERRI Po rp don 3 oie „IN COLLE bor 
ee oe, 5 Pata ae igs eae, ada Moya Ble fst gg | Ses 20 publ pend faeces | 
Witt Suse Fare y bor stamps ofth 5 ee price thar The fru pp Aaa — — ania ele ene varied — irr i 
IAM M XED smen ade 15 * orest:th at Barnet, yd fie any ot ruit in — agit the lso, a olega ns, 12 varietie lours 128 al T 
AST LAS B. ree allo Hert of ent her. Core t sho and per 12 polam sp'end s , 12 bea i 
ared : 2 wan sa n t nt wn T packe id — | 
for perm — respe . ee do the të t + . — ped W. a rong e was 3 ne e A specios —— iis ul e,, 3 
10 C er r 7 
Ma permanen Nt pastar oy cil soli = 1 = 100, —— 5 n osha had s | The abov rickwordii new and v 
ngold w aw e cro 0. ieits eo AR s. pe arket- 8, 153 Flo: a a n ery 10 ee e 
den urzel, ns ppio mmi DT rd Garden 2, rist, ma ew an autiful, i 
pf ihis i AROEN mis- of the ILEY UEEN-” oz. The 82, — benito d very 
Exotic N Seeds, i t — Lue = “to 10s most stock — — — SY begs nie usu et church — WII pretty ‘villas f 
arse n pac! ty at 3 per Ib „panew ed gr of try that * Se R. reet, L. ram De 
Ty, . éc earlies to . er above special << SMITH ppe — alt 
UG , 2s. 64 prices Kitche petiti t and fi by e the W — y to a | porti the publi E sss T . 
4 — W 25, 5s Collec Lr bas on for — cr ea 11 reel of Melon, eu 9 — d — As PR — astling Spread Bap. 
ora AND DF ve a ast e n m 1 pe xtur n f 
— 12 0. ae TREE of | crack alan three years te 2 nA 8 385 — * fen Latte Seats ae $ 
Gross . trees ve to 8. ei or los: „green rst t prove e seen elon is dese are co awns a rass Se 
Millett’ eM TAN es are off 3 i fle pri h d it it ript lect nd are lo eds, with 
se Mignonne, Red M T nn * as bel — 5 771 savour” and andi Iti ost 8 by the e of er under old Gr —— for! 
erreuse. ignonne, Red RAINE est ow, ry fi perb M lbs, when sa ha k cons e from e soil, his i Grass yat 8s, ol) 
Early — u pan Ray To any yet o — se sah — Ey — T unknown arena a 1470 
Re Re STA Purple, en CHES. on — nine ta — ada as most not liab pe, sa — — N Correspo e., i 2 
saan eee Ne — int ate A n, Teto og vie in pac! acting aud a oe others. —4 > —— g pon > 8 ae 
— ewington, AINED imirable e Ven 1 s: 8 of: aud ri growers, N 1 ngland, * of complete — 
e © Elruge, N and Pok en green 7 seed sipini &e. Bar PE colle N 
5 8 e e e e an a a aurea Fu — 
e 8 5 ES w ze (tru oe .; with 8 than dote er See BÈ Dih of Fai sisting of 20 
DARD * TRA — — (trae) — so the est Melons and vin pr 1 — 
É — — — viu and Viol — Emperor ieee} e) ss 4 pa 5 ye ee e 8 — rety abe oportion, e 
eon fesh ‘r 225 8 mb e 
meme AN — Claude, W et 12 P Snie fesh $y * E 10 55 1 0 = 0. 3. Ditto aren colle ctio ois f nelusi g of a — 
DA — OT an 8 0 0 itt i arge — 
Crown Heart.—Cl —— RD TRA N 8 gree 8 : 1 0 4 — De of d etnalle 
Duke, IN ditto, Bö- ckets n fles pa 2 20 = 1 A No extr. 1 aR ax BY 
Elton, ED CHERRIE La ‘with a packet select 3 4 2 ” 0 Ge This is m 
wW Deli- W of th — . .. 0 1 0 neral ar; suffi 
aterl 8. adie, 28 e Qu Smiter. 10 ” 1 Gatal ge for cient * oat) 
ry, Mare , Bigarreau, Th een’) tter wes ” 0 p — spnb To 
* 3. Wilcove, three felo 2 5 10 1 = e ma ing ; a email 75 1 
ges, aan Frs cae Pa gn atone) Wastin sg I 5 
sam 3 crc at ieties i ii be inclu A 4 of tho news — — s: 115 of i | 
=o ne ior mes = and best Am cachet | 
Id. post or any tls. each med, edonon ot ditt est ‘Annual * 
age stam 8 ach por packet ti — ok be 5 ditto 8, — | 
H. ps. 8 6 ra cate votes en ve Fl et. S ed ditto 9 0 
will cou 5 ILL closin ower ——— eks, Zi $ Pry wre ; 
by ti their M R be sen IA g tw Se ta innias, tt 
a 08 uJ 0 ed Cata gefr ' 
k and guoa rape a ES. or t| OE ATE AMES wo potige e atalogue ae 5 
boy es —— — “LA n confiden artic WOR aidston tamps. with A 
8 dar ee by E le K e, K 
— ds I” it is tly reco DW. s manufactu 8. ISLE. ent. 
fh — suita warts, T brilli recommend Tubs, 3 may tured in ORTH — 
Siron als.. = 2 liant, dis Edging, tion to By be so —— — aa d 
mediat Hybri oe to 18s. der — „ Hot- Oxes, in use at ticulto j > mE 
Nurserie forcing "Perpetual, 1 to 18s. per dozen. roan be ver fitted to b. 9 — tortie TON COTE 
| Se 5 20s. per doz s, est 5 tole, „ cifioations. ven ‘told: Water Covers, Flon lays exe 
D a n y 
call oY, «© t Berkb et pars 1 esses, ne. A lar — iiep F Tan Bi 
se ngs pstead, Hert large pot E pt on sale. Work aa shown upon Dr — yt 8 
Fees Api ” s, for im ANES te Slabs, of alls — i 
— 2 per oz., or y. Ite an Abe ere - | are Peat rie WARRAN „ aire p a 
ceipt of seven t deli See ae turista; e TED GA poe 
robe ven postage sat se oc > Severe — in ade Ga NING AND 2 — nan ans 
N an be inters orf 4 read e PRUN 17 
eros Ne yet creed — mg ngines ING DEAN 
S, Don 2 — — N d end Axe cator: d$ IMPLE: E's è ten ing gas F 
ied Lat — 4 per — 5 vrin MENTS, be du 
UNC, descri B G Y 
AN H post agging G ges, Coal ; 
ae ptio on re Bills H a 4 
8, 3 s, an nof — ook: G1 en 
— St. a Bower’ Vege- Bord s —ͤ—ͤ—ͤ—ö r E eg 
SEED Martin’ sI ers, vari atherers Ares a 
POTATOE sent free, s-lane, Charing, : ous pat- 47 and F Po 
BS 2 4 
t —— eenhou Kai s 
gini — es ” 1 5 
and-glass F Shears ` Al 
Kni in oe 
po 


nd 
rior 
— 
; achine a 
to Earl Fs Barly 3 
= s Ear ong heap ar pote 
d ihe iby rly leaved 
_ mateo the Lag ges al Per bushel of 
acre; o soil, scoona Fer" Seed = a 0d. 
f such —— 3 oc : 
| inion be fares. "80 
1 ing use : 6 0 
3 
ot v- 
4 — 


8 
Machine 


See! THE 


GARDENERS’ 


L anv SON = Still a fine stock of all the 
28 sorts of RO I electing Py 
eae following advantageous terms 
ai 
21s, to — “ace dozen. 


2 the pur seat sat Catalogue prices. © 
2284 on the receipt of two postage 
; Herts. 


MING, 6 miles ron the 
ailw 


ry, to disp 


erber: ed 
ber 1600; 12 10, 000 "ken, 15s, pper 
0 


— . 
Re 7 1905 pa Bo, 285 Pr 1000; 
ry Dit, to 2 fet 2 f d, a 2 a th 
to 150 
Oak, G10 8 ft., 80s, per 1 1000; 
. to 5 ft., 25s. er 1000. About 100, 000 
e ach Fir ine 18 inches to 2 feet, and 
58 0. Anda million o 
—— — cui f the most penis: description ; samples 
. 


road, Brixton, near London, pleasure in in- 
his friends and 3 that he has still a fine stock 


areg cially, E. D. is provided with a very 
— a 42 in 125 that Ay pat Lag d for or grouping 


R. No 1 Loughborough- | 
2 DENYER, Nun peo g g! 
af 
in 


great variety, 4’s. per 
to 10 feet; es Trained . Nectarines, and 
each; Dwa rf Trained Pears, Plums, and 19 


et, perfor 
re Catalogue of Trees, &c., will be 
2 respectfully informs his friends that he has 


no of business in London, the only establishment he has 
is at 


... ͤ—— 
SELECT HARDY HERBACEOUS PLANT S AND SUPERB 
DWARF agers 
„ r MAY, F.H s to inform the 
above 5 he 5 provided a large 
mic the preset season, which may be planted from this 
2 with safety. 
Plants, in 158 sorts, 2 2 for sm 
in 100 sorts, for . . . 


collectio 


— March 3. 


e. 
MAN „ Falkirk, is selling off 


+t 
p 


EVERGREEN OA 
Pee Fuse, &e , St. Helier, 
Jersey, begs to offer bove, w 
worth the attention of Sag public; they e of — 
“having — 


LS 


60 Be, 
Se ae 


Pauses ath HYBRID. PERSI AN having 
2 


ents, 


irst Prizes at all the Chiswick Shows of the 
Society of of London last season, needs n further 
unge New: P 
— Hybrid . ew oo 5 ; 


s Golden Perfec 

_Prom unknown corra, 2 post-office orders or postag 

3 to 1 LANE & Sox, Great eee. 
FIRST CLASS FUCHSIAS al VERBENAS. 

(GORGE SMITH begs to inform his friends in 

FE anne that his DESCRIPTIVE CA CATALOGUE of th 
D P eee 
See 
4 e à pinken 8 aan Da Certificates. 


; Fuonsts, idi pi 
the seas Ea 


for exhibiti 
—.— aan 


on 
r description, see Catalogu 
tamp. 


one e Age: 8 


e SEED 
— g Thurston's Reliance, £ s. 
‘oft Rival beard’s rise, British 


5 ; A list ot er auen fl, 


. if d. 
vad GT FLOWER brea 
; sowing, heigh 


& 
2 
bl 


Ragan A 
F S S co™ 
5 a 


SES, which they will — happy | FL 


of and deposit them in due order—you need 


RESAN Le 


131 


ORTICULTURAL SOCIETY OF LOND 


n the Society’s- Garden, in th 
present season, all take st on oe following days, viz.: 

8A ATURDAY, SATURDAY, Ju ; and WEDNESDAY, 
Ju and that. ‘torspay, April 10, ot the last 8 on which 


T — 


21, ee 
EQUALLED | CUCUMBER. 
He? TILEY be see to state it is 
remark that his unequalled CUCUMBER, the“ VIOTOR 


— Sahad by capping the whole with large, heavy 


ro 
worthy of shou 


OF BATH” has surpassed all others of the hardy kinds of last 
season, and has been successfully grown by ama 


Seed Shop, 16, 
The above <a be sent postage free, on 
the 3 ‘of a ati office order, or the amount in penny 
postage stamps. 


The Gardeners, Envonicle. 


URDAY, MARCH 3, 184 


MEETINGS FOR THE TWO “FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
fBptomologips! 

Chemical. 

Mopar, March 54 Pathological 

e 


British Architects 
Horticultural 
Linnean 


TUESDAY, 


Civil Engineer 
Society of ane <A 
Geological k 
Royal Society of Literature....,. 4 f. x. 
83 Anti yal ian 8 
Ro; 
ro Eria r 


155 

10— 

sfà edical and Chirargical 
Zoological 


WEDNESDAY, 


Taurspar, 


FRIDAY, — Philslosieal,, eee e 
Lys oya nent 

SATURDAY, al B on 

Monpay, 


TUESDAY, 
c AMANO... 0+ 
THURSDAY, 
SATURDAY, 


— e 3 ; 


— 17 


“ Rocxwork ! Good Mr. nares do tell me my 
o make Rockwork ; I am so anxious to have r 
plants anda irockery, and ihat t Herne and Mosses, 
Alpine Indeed, Madam, nothing is easier 
a 100 m men, 50 rela ie erabs ase blocks, 
and stout ropes, go to the nearest ick 
stones of 5 or 6 tons ait: hoist them 


not mind 
their chipping—and you will make a capital rock- 
oa rovided you have Mr. Paxt 0 
vide, — e as 3 elimate.“ 
— you m I am not ambitious. 
ff | do not mish 5 5 the igh and mighty princes of 
e lan nly want what my neighbours call 
rockwo rk, pr ts done. ne not desire to apend 
s | anything : but I should particularly wish to 5 a 
that is to be gained 3 e — 

y good to noo — 
in his ee — Rapin it 1 not be 
ugh to be sure he might do it), to 
What I want 


r 
r 
I 


s 

AES upon his 
obtaining a rubbish heap—covered weeds in 
the spring, white pen in the 1 3 in 
the autumn, dead sti and lea in the winter. 
do not want that Al arned ‘friend of my first 
yora age to describe rockwork as an imitation 
4 Nat 9 


(for I live on the wet soapy London clay), to shade 


to m 


ne them from the sun, to broil them, to — — 3 to 
brin e 


a ; pray a 
his being a oats oui eae can be easily 
‘he onl 


height ; if much broader so much the better. 

in a rugged, con continuous line, stones or bricks to t 
height of 9 inches or — fot s then fill the inter- 
space with coarse soil, s as burnt. clay, lumps of 
— ebbles, 


a 


e 
wN, Seed and 


up within the second ‘ill the 3 is 


l 
e 
a consulted; 


heavy 
ck, whose weight will keep 


. fhe harir 


s of stone or wn 

eee thing in its pla 
This is the formal way ig at od 
zontal lines should bide 

of stone, an 


In short, taste of arrangement sh 
and the wo 


present a varied s cy a5 a varied outline, an 
finitely varied series of aspects, which is, what. the 
rockwork maker wants. 

Materials for, this purpose may be foun 


d any- 
where : the main 


consideration should be to haye 
rs,” or large vit 


of t 
rocks, the worst—except flint, which is 
the worst of ‘all. 


By following this rule anybody may make 
ful brickwork for cultivating rare plants, — for 


agreeably diver- “ity ing the surface of a flat garden, 


provided he exercise a little discretion in the plant- 
— it, meee which subject we shall have a word to 
say next ue 


WHETHER these is any nenn between 
Manures an 185 TO 
doubted ;. and * t be. admitted ‘tha the. con- 
flicting leper tha have. bee e on this 
pobjeci, could hardly fail to Se mi p inquirer. 

ime, as he thinks, a certain * n 

aes —— and, aon his crop worse than e 
is pron to be a 
5 that ‘his Potatoes have a 
it was use 
g 


gon e so 
of the dra -others maintain that their crops have 
been saved by it 

doubt can exist as to the cause of these dis- 
cordant statem . The cireumstances under which 
the trials have pe 


also 
y hap r sá; effects- 
ascribed to.manures 2 nch ave in nee re 
to other and unsuspected ca e have 
abundant. evi re independently of bes roturas 
before us; but it i incomplete that w ceed 
to the examination “of this question with m e more 
hesitation than has been experienced in they previous 
part — the inquiry. 
appears from the returns to stand thus: 


hs 
n 


Lim 
| Svffered much, |Suffered little or nothing. 
England eases 13 r 25 
Scotland ...... 0 | 1 
3 0 | 5 
R 0 l 
13 32 


In Scotland, Ireland, 3 it seems to be 


seldom employed, and only y requires- exa- 
mination, od turns. out that of the! 3 bad English 
| popp 


ga iuixturé of lime and yore the con- 
w 


—— the Potato crop; in ihis insta 

were lost. Another was gas- lime. 

e y) : the 

Somerset, found that 

less anted with lime, but 
wh ge with late Spee although 


| lost 0 e-thir 


w 
ment ground w 


the rite, more 16th, and moister character than the 


rest: this too was planted in April ; 2 Mr. J. 
gardener, Combefield, in the county of 
s that p, “in aa rich 


up, although plante ted i uary ; 
here itis evident that — lime nor or ben plant- 
sec atoes | the 


whole we may infer 


| BEEN FOUND TO BE CAUSED BY ‘THE USE OF LIME; but 


132 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


[Marcy 3, 


—— — v— 
that we have no sufficient evidence of its advantage. 


to say, it is not ascertai: oo when crops 
sn f wh e has bee it was 
cause of the lime; it may have tees because of 
other circumst 


Guano p 8 more difficulty than lime, becaus 
2 = varying Janr The reporters do not all 27 
at guano they mployed ; and there ~ no cer- 

es, they used this substance 


y 
kinds that ought to be used, especially for experi- 


find the ! find the facta to b stot be th 
| Suffered much, | Suffered little, 
21 
England . . . . 21 
Scotland eee eee „% „„ ee 1 1a 
Ireland eee ere eee eee eee eee! l * 
Wales „„ „„ 1 rag r 
24 L ER 


searching through our columns for tho last four 


3 to the evidence, we 


out manure a! se ars to 


| Suffered much, | | Suffered little or nothing’ 
England ! 32 96 
| e | Scotland 353 1 | 11 
Ireland 1 | ri 
Wales n 1 2 
35 116 
And we believe that of the cases of failure on 
— land, the majority will be found to 
wetness, richness, years 0 


cted wit 
er ‘coliivatiot or late planting. It is for Potato- 


much mitigated. The effect 8 leaving the land with-| 4 
be 


LECTURE ON ECONOMICAL ON 
THE METHODS REPABING o os e en 
RER i Wasi TR luy 
y C. M.D., F.R.S. 
(Continued j from p. 116.) 
en we consider that a reduction’ of 2 


weight of an adult may brought 5 inna 5 
period, withou y and even wit a she 
health, it would see ge that a > her a 
vation of fi uld occasion death, if thane S 
other conspiring causes, besides the mere waste of | 
tissues, è 


likely to -o 


sion it. 
that a 8 coni j 


It is therefo 


distention in its coats, and o ihi 
: once most congenial tothe performance of its fynass 
wers to determine whether they will have a and best calculated to keep up the animal heat, shad 
hight crop and sound, or a heavy crop ravaged by support for a time the system, even though j 
an unknown unt of disease. The former seems | to make good its e,and hence, that if the fod 1 
atten r to be the usual our disposal should fall short of the amount 


t an 
manure heavily is destructive in ail the warmer 
į parts of the United Kingdom 


Some papers in our hands prove conclusively that 
m ee sentient who have been fav ot 


| gardeners and nurserymen with their orders from 
Manchester and ative erpool, are not so numerous 
has been suppos sed ; the came worthy = 


as 


aes reported to be good. Whence we, may in _ 
UNDER ALL CIRCUMSTANCES, TWO CROPS MA 


At one time het s Mr. ot 3 — 
A ort, near Warrington, in batie s * at another 


sg 1 APPLIED TO AUTUMN AND EARLY 
PLA IT 18 ADVANTAGEOUS ; but that it is 
DANGEROUS IN LATE PLANTING. It is also t 
y. Agent when mixed with farm-yard 
o increase b 
— * out of 31 cases thus tre 
reporters mention 5 by gt bad, leaving the pro- 
portions as before, 1 
As to Farm-yard eae itself, the reports da 
the whole, more unfavourable eh in the cas 


of at any other manure. They sta 


ated, the | PT 


he is Mr. H., of Berkeley-street, Strangeways, 
Manchester ; on other — mt rejoices in the 
cognomen of Jons ct however that 
although he has a good many 7 runs, the parete are 
t| pretty well stopped by this He dare not 
personally venture 1 the saber stations for — 

orders, upon 


ey, but is now driven to written orders, 
of which he 9 Eight ahaha of seeds, date 
M 


| Suffered much. — little or nothing. 


Eugland „„ „„ 230 187 
Scotland ...... 20 | 125 
Ireland 14 36 
Wal „„ 7 9 

271 357 


n 25 occurred in 
w 


Scotland, 
re disease simpe po little havoc, and even 
there n of bad cases was 1 in 6. But 
if we — 1 = and Wales, we find |? 
the proportions are 251 to 232, which may be 


in an inquiry of this sort. The 4 


bpon as eq 
evidence previously collected did not this ; 


show 
on the wat a cases were about one-third bad to | 


two-thi od, 


arm were those of 
very early 8 or where it was old, and so 
much a 


livered to “ Mr. see Harcock, High-street, | and the proof of this is, that in the cas no 
Manch We are curious to kno ow what sim- | being used, the surface is very shortly covered 6 
pleton supplied these eight sacks. brine, arising f the solution of the saline mati 
in the juices of the flesh. This 9 isi 
Dr. Linvtey will be greatly obliged to those | {ct è particular case of endosmose, > 
correspondents of the Hor — Society who pained by rey es + We publication: "aa 
Ta io ih t Nu t quence o this interchange o Substance is that i 
es contribu 2 salts of whi have stated, p a 
“ Journa the Society,” if — will favour him | ¢ i ded by those of s | 


with — papers in the course of a few days. 


COVERING VINE BORDERS WITH FER- 
MENTING MATERIAL. 
Ir is the nm some — ~ practice of laying | t 
fermenting materi of Vineries is of no 


erfectly aware oe heat 
atural t 3 to ater » beca 
lighter than the cold a 


ed air has 


ers 0 e soil o 
in a pa promi dry state, is pe 
dation. of heat ; 


n | Service, * the ‘ray that heat will bot de-cend into of an 


- | tables, “which by sup — . make up 
r of this 2 a ich had 


evertheless star 

off the miseries, and prevent the diseases incident ua 
me other 

in which increased bulk and a genial — 

1 to whatever nutriment it may a | 


r what 
either overspread ware a layer 
ina strong brine. In either case not only does the sl 


hnt a enrresnondie 


ow it is pretty clear that s 
85 place without a loss of Ste of the — 
ties of the mea t, for whether or not we choose to 

which I she bye: thrown outs 
to sx use of 3 5 = a fie 


7 85 


ciation, 
r cravin a8 foo which c 

the g for food w effects of fresh d 

for the watt 

constituted Ù 


Aale * ng 
the dise. 5 
alkali in the 


principal nutriment of “those aff 8 We might, 


e become little more than a the soil so covered. ore, be led to recommend phosphate of potass as a t 
: 224 3 1 > phate ot po 
a mortuum ; — where it w lied in very buryin a ko I have fre- | ful- addition to salted | meat, = also sugg est, that a brit 
small quantities. There can be no doubt that, Ir quently made the experiment, and I a quite convinced f magnesi | 
USED ABUNDANTLY, IN A VERY RANK ne AND about the aa of the matter, The amount of heat de- | suchas that derived from sea water, w 2 | 
ESPECIALLY IN THIS STA ANT ROPS, | 2 dint a given quantity of manure is undoubtedly | for curing one of greater purity, beet 40 
ITISAN EXTREMELY DISADVANT os ie teas ess : want be obtained if the manure could b ry om phosphoric acid of the of the me insted © 
cerning ‘oth means be introduced beneath the border, as the heat exuding, will unite with these earthy bases and . 
received 2 er ere the information | Which in the forn mer instane cə escapes into the Ta with them insoluble salts. Hence when egen 
wine ax Bigi scanty and im Ashe es— b 3 in the latter and be absorbed rich i potass are eaten al ng with such meat, pi 
— tt — 1 meant by th at expesion— have @ ye : ish t phate otass is b the composition 
"di a mene wa ed by the best success, the n ik was 5 — aAa dhb, di erg the spad * covering | the earthy phosphates present in the food. feo 
cg exper if it were eness © kraut N 
; merely x the d determination of F seen tost | 
EPEE ( / / ( been that 2 eir presence in it of lact d, which we have seen 
Suffered much, |Suffered little or nothing. opinions are correct, Let them force a ieee arly, a impor — $ p e p% 'äigestion, and 4 
+ hava 8 K 4 r cover half the length of border with manure, =a" ak tassium Alien is present in in all “age 5 is sail 4 
aa a = 24 a rcovered ; the 1 will prove He heighten the favour of soups. May ies 
2 e necessity and utility of covering. The | seasoning meats which are rich or ‘ita of ü toe 
e —— — — siderab Tenure roqui r th ose is incon- | with acids, as pr with apple sauce, be connected 
eee — 1 5 a Hotwithstanding the loss of heat by evapora- the same princi ich we 
oo" eree ante nat, 2 TS bo: he heat for a So much then for the process of pee whi ica ® | 
4 ay ‘eit ki * t is essential, however, to have at — performed, is one of the m econo! i | 
> 8 32 cient supply to tain the tempera- well as t ost whol ome m repatig me) 
igre raay py orce dh shed, as the Vines would food. Stewing differs from it chiefly, inama pen 
ot ha att a i ek à pae from the decline | juices of the meat are entirely preserved by awi a 
16 tan i ee a vb er received the stimulus. | thoug state of greater concent: n, an are? 
7 e whieh started i quently not in so digestible a condition as they * is? 
id s. i gmin Ge s covered isi ahis deep ; since that t tate of e. As the ob med stewing jg 
ooh sa n urned over three times, and a Portion of extract as compl tely as possible the Jagden 
ee 3 ee = =o zien, the Inst 3 however, | meat, for vhich the process must be of ¢ perature 
a i aoe e to 60°, it was tion dvi t to raise t sie 
1 ET — L e ig 1 88 over, without the addition the boiling eg whieh uit dissipate the ie 
which we ma we. may perhaps infer that that farm- yard ard! notwiths tae oo 38 since, | parts, as a heat co bly less than 2 
manure, in some “yar thstan pase two last frosty nights, the heat f. dissolving 
er some degree, interferes with the sa safety dung is 80°, t of the soil 70°, at 18 inc ged 2 l that — R ee 
r > ed 
not seem to sane cation, | Sal P by rat do} ote oe — 3 es however, is rather higher than | heat pres occasions in erg ech eile elt certain i 
perhaps are beneficial: but te — 5 > and | m ilies Wan tee 8 The above. | changes, which are rather less aer 10, won 1 
eline to the belief that it te. Pe tm e Me in- can leaves, half and half, Piles which mixture of dung tion. Of the — baking is 
manure to the Potato fields mal tie d apply any heat is produced than from dung alone. more steady | cause in this proces: 
sae disease is | Trentham Hall. o. G. Fleming, | — Saeed coher 


less adapted ie 


9—1 ye 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


133 


use a portion of the fat, and of 


which ch hare acquired an empyreumatic 
latter pe aa to escape. | 


3 se for the dietary of 


only p occasioned during the 

Hence, lecture of this in b 
r th int u discussion, — 

passed ith this one 5 namely, t 
Sharesal braziers, by which the proc 

foreign 


the 
ite Magee 
ee 


8 of 


ure. 
2 an aan 3 
0 


e internal juices ; it is w 


physical geography, we are sometimes perfectly a 
| nished at = in ge e to vegetable life, we 
even temper: In reading “Lyeli’s Principles of 
le I met with emark- 
ch ca 
a gardener in the 
enefits a perus- 
li quote 1 instance of the power 
of plants to endure oii, and tha n in flower, which 


| pains to weaken i 


if a 
flower, we must have taken great | g 
and all our coddling ue resulted in a 
retrograde eather than a forward direction. G. 


the leave 


pen te 


the army, and others who 
many years in the hotter parts of India, 


which they had never ' experienced i in 
the world. From 1843 to 1845 the m 


r 

large fires of an English : tdi ; 

coat of Sayd E * issipate in vapour a . p FRUIT-TREE PROTECTORS. me said one thing and some another ; but what was a 

; ve apr, the juices of the mea HE accompanying sketch will = some idea of my | most curious eireumstan ost a 

siderable ato (To be continued ) protection for pyramidal Pear trees. A stout stake, that i rfect drainage had something to do with it, 
: 8 i ~ nches ound pran e well 8 eee. with a and a nd was up to ha ei 

77 ESSENTIAL TO THE long point, an ven down y the side of th ly d d. But the island is a chain of mo : 

ON Ost RTC COLTIVATI No TE stem, from 1 to 14 foot, into the ground ; if e point is there is very little flat ground any w upon it, d 

“ Nature,” writes an old author, ar eth nurture,” sharp and slender, the roots not any in- | hence the pin which flows from the 5 of the — 
and truly in reference to gardening operations, it is a jury. The top of stake 3 era the height of — rapi own ards t Im 

just xcellent remark—a m that should be | te sae about 2 inches ; ne this nail a piece of inch | drainage, —.— could have very Tittle to do with 

ibed over the door of every ga structure in pe 2 feet lon — 9 orl 0 inches wide, men pro- its unten! iness. 
the kingdom. Gardening in its greatest perfection f Fir wae oung flex et branches of Yew or Spruce| I always e E ` am een the same 
sisi ee neat aws. In proportion as Fir; 5 mail them firmly o o the board, so that they iioa; “that although v. to 
we depart from them, so shall we be wit of tie toal for nearly a circle. If Ae branches of the render Hong-Kong — — yet one = of i the princi 
ich is the absence of trees and the 


correct 
he TE 
tution on which ngA siå 55 be Boe . = a greate 

ce of success i tehan who applies 

medicines with hich 13 k ia a little acquainted ge ae 
stitution of which he knows less; s gardener, ac- 
quainted with the * desl of vegetable development, 
pool the 2 nts by which that development i 
pecan Geass rt, inorganic mass, 
and applies the agents of development indisriminately. 
For plant cultivation is a series of developm 


plant has i 
nature 


bate in ed fact, rs him d 
habi to the globe he in- 
a Åi Š: — eae o the globe he in 


The shown t has 3 5 development is influenced, 


Siaa it is 3 ately d t on, external in- 
— d that those influences, 15 be rightly applied, 
iti erri be understood in their various relations, 
er: completely under the control of the cul- 
Ven š gs subject of garden 
in 3 coed a e based what I shail argue 
vegetable sigh! aies on the 
rare avi a vital principle, it will be well for me, 
to say on plant o treat of "what I have 
that P liminary matters 


den struct 
Pat houses, and structures 


r the preduction of fruits. 


Ita the — on ony the that 1 ‘shall at — nt allude. 
the ere i. e., one of our best eners—of | s 
1 le fo were asked nstruct a building the 
noh to esitati tab roduction of good p 1 
leanto, combining he a sesh uch ne ould be 
is totall aris much that 
a wei o the eras — — of vee: 
lant can flourish, in the widest 


tide ir give this. It merel . 

23 ata time, leaving the Sthen “i 
evils. Por a diminished light, and all attendant 
tages from tha on™ part, conceive any advan- 
of plant ente use of Jean-to houses for the purposes 
Speaki Of ate (it will be unde rstood that I am not 
such a orm — for for early forcing). Certainly 
heat ig quite hot eco space terial, and 
a form e u secondary consi, consideration, if indeed such. 
might presomises even that ill api if I 
s 285 rome en Wo 
Science, so will the importance 
. We shall, I 
at the knowledge of the 

moisture, an 

appear of ae 

light ! 


as at 18 


=: 
oolness about trees, particularly in a hot climate, 
mie is always agreeable 
e glad to hear that the inhabitants gene- 


will be 
ag ate now taking up the matter with great spirit. 
Many of them have the their 
, and some have fo ens. 


teresting p s ardine 

East Point, have also laid out their property with good 
taste, and the trees and shrubs are growing as weli 
possible. Thus you see all is moving onward in th 
right direction. A botanical garde is talked of; 
subject ught forward by the Asiatic 
| investi here, and a committee has been appointed to 
inv 2 the 5 e committee has requested 
me to give adviee regarding a proper site, ea r have 
done wi 


at deal of if 
before th end at . that 


centre, so that the 
take cheap, aubleaced calico, which I thin 

be bought at 2d. i rhaps less. Com 

inches fro of the tree, and bing it 


round the ip fastening i it to them with iron ta = 
1 foot of aei ae of the stake 


to 
tion both to s l fro sts; an e spaces a 
bottom and op ‘of this 4 fabric will admit of a free 
circulation of air, so as to keep the blossomsin a healthy 
tate 


t| fine, mild weather the tree may | have the full benefit of 
the sun, and in weather it can be closed ; for I | 


. will be treated with that spirit of enlightened liberality 
ich has made the 2 garden at Kew one of the 
3 in the world. R. F. 
PRACTICAL nS — ee 
AND ALL GA 


Cars. — According — the awe a association, this 
3 word will be suggestive of po Si and very 
contrasted ideas emotions, accordin our- 


g fe 
—— animal of which it is — appellative shall be in 
favou is confes baek 
fine tortoise-shell specimen of the —— 
ow affections, that I had ber to have 
t in a glass ; 


stuffed and pu death; and had 
even taken down the name of an artist in Red 
street, Holborn, in whose irs there is -pap — 
cat, looking most sinistrously at a nd 
her paw. Indeed, so far had foolish fondness carried 
me, that I began to think it would be for pussy 


a change 
and — was so lately my hobby is now my 
for a which all amateur gardeners will at once 


a 
onder how I ever showed favour to a 


In -pim member 
of this p hateful ca 2A fit only to tear each ot other’s 
ts in some un wilderness, and to on 


therefore is, tha 


rother 
their guard. In “the early — a fer 
had a frame under a sunny wall filled 155 ts ind 


TT 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


I could} mentioned — nane the 


_184 


seedlings in tion lor bedding out, and among 
—<* ee favourite exoties just putting 
—.— Going to —— at these one fine 
eat curled ng pan, I 

* — ete ellog It was vex- 
ou will allow, to have flowers hatched 
— in order to punish 
añd went to look 


ike | 


ve me, | societies 
— — aeda — in guarding the 
er t flow 


[Marci 3) 


trees with — “whitewash brush. But for this, 
not grow ei r Apples, mine bein 
— and 2 “a these pests! Neith 
rabbits will touch the trees in the m 
we Bo the trees have 


nor will they eat out the om no 


The effo 


s from. — — er 


hts fe in 
eaterwauling gave — — x 5 cree a rers g 
d at one 
. — 4 oe as that he had bolted 


outrage, worse th 
This fine fine weather had a brought forward a be 
d I trimmed it up, r — it, 


But were more t — 
fact 


geen a eee tiary power 


directions. Ih 
to all boys and men on ait for, 


stone, execrate, grin — — imprison, or kill all | six 


e cats (white, black, tortoisesheil, or 
tabby), which henceforth 4 ‘be found on the — 
Amateurs, take Lett unfor- 

man te yes wisdom, an — psn you profit, by 
my errors. Watch y rames, close your sitting- 
Toom doors at might, and place briars at night over your | 
choice beds. H 


Home — tng i 
Potato Onions.— When es to us, — how was 
introduced in 
n some loca ates, there — a popular 
it ig beget from the S 
now that if very 


— to seed; replant these 
retain the non. flowering habit, and, 
will e Potato — An 


the 2 y 90 

believed to è been introduced from t, 

and that it is the identical variety which the old pyramid 
ilders once reverence 


much still remains undon 


could be even | 


— * valuable root, the pla 


t gro 
nish | 22 Bloons ‘with the pr phe of a re 


m 
rsons — Potato 


floral pr es ss, sy thev very bane of evil doers ti — 
n A oun AR ti 

I will first delve our 
ould be discon 


as the most v g 

ee, ru as it does a greater annual i 

the universal requir 

h exhibition, which produces confiden w 

5 contributes gratification — 
se y som 


doms“ i 
éredy Discontinue: igi —— of the 
ertificates for 


this, but the . — is known and must > 

wers of seedliogs pro 
A arsin 0 

“t 1 1 


tog ons offer no 1 
rs, —— in no instan 
that more mar “one —— is re — througout 
the whole their 
Cut —— ta 
very cause; 
niums, Auriculas, Polyanthuses, in fact a 
co the plant is shown, a differ 
s is 


Pelar 
ll varieties 
ent version of m 
e wed cae red. The va 5 of 


ery production —— 


ighly au 


many a schoolmaster, or factor, or min 


natural history of the 


d fu 
plants we have in cultivation, which should give a com: | i 


enquirer wou! ve to is 
the twilight of dim antiquity, till he 
and uncertainty ; of other 


8 researc hes 


George W 


1 9 or butter- milk, 
then painted on 


mixed 
it is the consistency of paint, and till 


the — 


su 
. of Pinks, Pan 


rices, rate of 
ae e demonstrate this fact ; thousands now 
to their friends who could not 
— lux at the old rates, 
pene hundred “pu purchase new varieties 
or Toke, against the 
raea prices! 8 oms of ayy — * pro- 
duced i “pata sers will not be want- 


societies, in arranging e= 

take my advice, 1 exhibitors 

— Verbenas, Taaki — icotees 

ions, &, to produce — e; four = six x blooms | 
six than three), of each vási t i 

tated, offer a pecu 2 n il che fe 


of cut 


out whie 
he ruin — elbe Wi 
y.—I obtain a 
| Hope, an 


my seed, never 
I give air on all favoura 
are pricked out, which is 


ost — frosts 2 fe 
of ‘winter, if this is done at the commencemen — rost; w 


an 
rts of some 


able by 16 N . good soak 


n Pinks, . cee and we 


> aia: 
aH- Pri 


E 
da | Chronicle. 


rn 
0 | your friends contem 
ey 


all 
fortheoming poe Sr 2 i to i 
ooms of b 


ich, | i 
a 


‘compost, SS 
inehes apart, P 


on 
farthing towards improvements of which the outa 
ak nt has had all the paying, e. * the 
t he or any other of your 


ing d 
e else — I to have done t ? 
nd a 1 vy outlay was ne 

er. Would 


ae ate 5 adopt a misera of farming W 
e ent of our labourers: fie the ruin of d 
Rect 
ies alton —Permit me 2 te 
ower in the Gardener 


© 
2 
* 


mplate a 

e it in their choice, as we had, to select thet 

3 Wey may be advised to choose Kawak., Th 
ity i ic we had permissiol 

n the environs every day, that 

whi ch we had looked bend to before 

pleasan 


onbury H 


ning his true position 
abiline and e to be w 


tely on mild da apdor w hours in the ipt" 
a or ew á 
pms „ ys — — 40 be taken 1 


918490 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 135 


S too much, es] lly when the wind | snails are found adhering to the slice, suckin with | At the time I write G 
— to mace mee ae are apt to be their mouths expanded like a leech. They in Soy small Plums ar re just . m ere n 2 = — 
was keen ; forin sne to retard the growth of the plants. | holes in * 3 Turnips, not unlike * would be if is at least six or * a weeks too early, and should the 
so much injured — — night in proportion a small scoop had been used. I omitted to 7 — that — prese nt frosty weather give pl "thomi 
— peds and the state of the weather, so — are putin in my Strawberry beds, where many a e had during — latter end of January and Feb 
of at least 60° Fabre: i end stroyed— some satisfaction, when I think of ce many the fruit nares must suffer. seri 
23 to. all bad gone on well, the plants would require of my ‘Adest ripened 3 they hav cked or forward so far at this stormy season. ays 
this Mr. Mason considered ought to be the | scooped out, leav ing only a e “eo the canbe. of the 24th Jan e temperaturo 57°, and 15th Feb., — 
, and e stat trawberry. That it has been this description of mi rature 60°., omen - nticed the e bryo — 
yator should: be —.— er se number of plan nts 72 ee the o depredaion T ofer th ths se RR, zs re a to one ps 2 Art is ee t buds. must be — 
r opu rass around each plant before | weakene e fall o pe for 8 sin two mo 
— purperen might sa ‘able po ‘select the strong- the ee begin to ripen, to prevent the heavy 22 under the e e e of 
in order for such places where large plants would | rains from splashing up the dirt u upon the Strawberries, the same 63° above the one oe, Walker, Mayen 
kind — the more delicate varieties for the but when they are ais se particularly those that were House, git ire. 
be required, conservatory, &c. It was recommended | the finest, I have found them with holes, and sometimes irds vity.—The writer of the articles on 
that ine intended to make large plants should be | all the pulp PENYA or scooped out, leaving, as I have 8 ime which appeared in this Paper, is 
“fred into or II- inch pots, giving a moderate drainage | said, only a part of the outside, and I have wrongly | now collecting materials for a volume on birds, mainly 
— pots js, and covering the latter with a little rough attributed it to — frog, for, er turning up the Grass in respect to their relations with man from the eireum- 


8 
=] 
es ey E 
eae 
TEG 
BES oy 
22. 8 
oes 
® 
Q 
Ze 
8. 
5 8 8 
8. 7 8 8 85 
5 
8. 


„the soil to be pressed ¥ very lightly with the hand, | around the Strawberry pla have almost always | stances of captivity, neighbourhood, usefulness, supposed 
24 20 — o injure the roots. The plants found a snail e eath it; — to this, upon finding ee Ke. Any lady of gentleman Be 2 has 
when potted, it was: said, should be removed to the | some of the plants dead or ina siekly s state, T have taken any bird in confinement, and will take the trouble 


use, and, placed as near the glass as possible ; up such plants, — found under or amidst t 1e roots one E — on pe wW. yy: have observed of its manners, 
night temperature of the house to average from 55° | of these snails ; hence the traps are set amongst the and known of its history, = 5 kindly eee *. will 
to 60 Fahr, with a: rise of 10° by day of solar heat. Strawberry beds, and ther nbg I have caught many,’ g essani — the object in Very man - 
Plenty of air was to be given when the weather would | Lindley Hail, 1 ing fae details in alana xt are lost, — ; 
7 1 é i 
care 


8 
= 
2 
E 
> 
© 
5 
» 
3 
E 
g 
I; 
2 


the p ere i e traps. av ereccived from Mr. Wilderspin, | they — wit aes worthy of being recorded by those 
was to be taken not to let them get too dry ; for, if | gardener, ‘Horseheath Lodge, r Linton, Cambridge- who happen to be coguisant of them. Mr. Dixon is in- 
this happened, the- ripening process would take place, | shire, an ingen po little box eee made of wire formed that many een nicatious for him — been 
the plant would be t thrown into a flowering state before 2 — on a not, however, different from others lost, or sent to the Dead Letter Office, in consequence 
it bad acquired sufficient ia and would n be we hav ve that the spring for the faller is.on | of their r having been misdirected to Keswiek, Cumber- 
of little or no use. Syringing both mor d even- the top j — t the dene They are sold by Wm. land, instead of Keswick, near Nor * This ex- 
ing was considered: to be of the —— importance. Ki nee a 5 ene * ach. plan anation will be . apology to the writers of 
In training, to insure a handsome plant, only the leading je cessary.— Your Leading | those letters for the ope go mele of them. 
shoot was to be tied up, all the side branches being . of xe ne — 8 of the merits of Hart- 25 2 ng Cringlefo: rd. H Nor 
allowed to grow. -without stopping, except in cases where | ley’s patent rough plate glass, stating at the same time oes.—I have perused with much —.— your observa- 
taking more than due precedence of | that considerable. saving might ave been made, had tons and n er nity nran mata pa i ating, Si T 
the others. As the’ 33 advanced i 5 aes ne "a 1 its qualities been known before. Permit me, as an old E A — Bea pong peg fot yet ati 
vised that they shoul be thin ad amateur Pine grower, to state why I think there is no fied by any theory I have heard or read on the subject. 
all the . paw uid ems on ys a i oceasion either to use Hartley’s patent rough plate fer an, pets uarpmangs ye dof ‘early planting has not suc- 
as soon as the plants een to bloom, apes they had | glass (less expensive gla g), nor even to use e a ew. e before February ; nor, again, 
the pots with roots ; if the plants began to flower | any covering to shade Pines and some o'her tropical | May as generally too late. I consider planting between January 
ina small state, 4 flowers 3 = be pinched off. plants which I grow in the same stove, even in the auare 1 Sa oy eg ge e although I am 
o be frequently per- | hottest day in summer; and, in order more clearly to 1 r oo 
to keep eg green-fy. Aer Regen fe tha E 8 show this 1 must observe that some year ago, Being —— Ceai, w 22 -i m mot daly a 
the woul e attained a good | desirous of possessing some of the soil in which Pine- pren alian or variation ns, arise, iam A nn Se the — 
7 1 1 contradictory opinions we so frequen m 
that they would ex hibit ne gag gr are shape, apples are grown in Antigua, I directed the master of rest cen... 7 E = nest with, a an asion of 


n be removed to any situa. ne s rs without mould, 
— and, with due attention tow — it and on their arrival in England I built a small house | the spring of 1847, as soon as the ‘departare of the frost 
d they would continue 105 bloom abundantly until | for the reception of the latter purposely, not liking to allowed me, I planted Potatoes, in the second or third week 2 
e . ongst my e on a of the 


. TY. 
-Slug Traps.—I venture to send you the following |h them a great — —— pres — — Bs whole Potatoes being placed in cold a soil not yet warmed 
j i sun, 


checked; whereas 

those plante ed later, being kept in a 5 5 warmer situation 

with a bien till jroo gm sùo 2 — E pat 3 

N * a contrivance with which of the one in amine: ste up the hous pai ing | In that nes ps 2 my garden m N 
macqu; „ but to show the great danger | no air, and I never saw plants grow so =i Ag ‘twat Potatoes plante so late as the wg t ve 

our gardeners will have to encounter if they are not ad- | is, they were shaded by the ia — condinsed on- the ne te in passing through Salsumyy S heard of the 

ay aah 5 


st 5 examined the garden, and never witnessed 
a ö precautions in time against so de- under side of the glass, produced by solar heat. I may, so much havoc, Upon accurate examination I found the tally 
structive a pest, a numbers of which I attribute | therefore, no -=x owed to assert that no enen h is neces- | at 8 head of the plot marked t sag A „ Oct. rime oX 
and dampness of the winter. As far as | sary. I continue the practice now with equal success, nep oan FF rs the 
. goes, this description of slug abounds | both on the — fha and old bark system, in one failure oE te patom sets planting the ground—never appeared 
055 in our fi as in our gardens, for on | house heated by hot water pipes. John Stoveld, Stedham | above. These observations perhaps may not apply to 
receipt 3 brother's letter I directed my man to Hall, Midhurst. [There is a doubt whether we were | sandy soils, or warmer climate te than mine, S apprehend, too, 


2 dozen slices of Turnips in a field where I | justified in calling this kind of glass “ Hartley’s patent avoided. — — . ee 8 shes pa 
A x Parsnipsand planted Potatoes, and the next | rough plate.” We did so for the sake of saving our | manure is used when the Potato is planted (in 
paea. ag brought me 186 slugs, which had sheltered | readers the trouble of fighting 3 * through the it may per ertain th er 1 est * 1 
“I send under these traps. The letter is as follows: | crowd of little glass dealers who ready to swear fo enrich my plots for ep srai souar Dy Notion oan A 
Send you a —— of a snail which the gar- that there is but one kind of rou gh “pate, a and Pee t the | giving ipin time a rearea * * soil by digging 
| with us find so destructive to their dear kind. We believe = the glass to which at- | itin, and laying the mould thus formed in ridges uring 
pes: ied ae of the traps by which we bave suc- | tention has now been dra —_ made so long ago as Kidney, for instances in the month o C april because we konde 
is herefeal eir numbers. The snail, or as it | 1836, by Mr. West, of 5 genera 2 Fe 
Lt „ the slug, is ery the — a of the Rain.—Monthly depth of rain in inches and hun- | that the later they were planted and stored, the better they 
u in bete snail. His back is of a darkish tinge, | dredths of an inch, together with the number of days 2 mat tg utinued longer -eatable—to the June 3 
ý traps ‘ = of a nce white, or brownish, The on which rain fell at Beckington, Somerset, in the years Fain sons s has affected the early or late sorte. Many of the 
about. * slices of 1845, 1846, 1847, 1848. Lat 51° 24 „ long. 2° 22 W. | early sorts have been eaten — — . — appeared ; 
dm. | when the di y t not seem to make mu 
n | Height aa the eyel of = mea 265 feet O — — 4 — particular localities, Sosa and perhaps tọ 
1845. 1846. 1847. | 1848. hardier, grosser, less valuable varieties. 
7 | we | he Miscellaneous. 
5 8 8 4 Bl g 2 a The late Charles Fog, Esq.— : — Our e will learn 
als ALa ALS AIS ith as much regret as ourselves, : 
pjasi who has ei 0 
e e e tao ae day of sparing ie men 
. * 0.52 18 2.17 11 2.480 24 3 20d ; 
poe aà 1.56 | 21 | 3.57 | 19 | 1.93 3.34 | tion, is For sarem A months he had been 
May | 15 | 1.16 2.04 1.69 1.29 y= . — a mpr of the heart, and at length ex- 
5 oi 3 A 2 S 3 1 m pired on the 28th ult., at the house of his friend, 
—— st 13 301 | 14 | 4.21 | 11 | 1.25 27 4.51 | Robison, of Leyton. Mr. Fox was nota cultivator of 
September 14 4.22 11 2.13 11 2.17 | 15 | 4.28 | flowers, had a most correct eye, a highly culti- 
October . 136 | 23 5.48 17 | 5.98 | 19 | 4.89 and a conscientiousness w noii 
N vember 0 1 33 erg influer This gave _ decisions a value in the 
Jecember 16 . 3 5 8 
ag vie pies 9 at eyes of the publie whieh t y would never have 
Total ... 138 28.28 166 22.29 151 28.74 219 43.16 — der other — r profession he 
OF r 8 the inch | was dissolved snow. was an artist 5 Se high Se me ven 
ig 8 b. Of this 0.34 | wn se w ue 1 i 
rden on ede and the 29 this 2 aa dissolved 2 in that department, and by the lovers of fine English 
3 — food, that e S thie iD wok as dissolved snow ro =. {prints his loos will, be seazeoly lese felt than by his 
or early on Wednesday morning, there The rain gauge is 30 feet frou any tree or wall, its rsonal friends. Alas! poor Fox! ver ba a dear, kind, 
3 morning, in the same receiving surface 8 feet 4 inches above the 47 and good, noble- — 3 who never 
360; on Friday m , 200; on 10 inches square, The ters through a pipe ati benac b 
: 200; and on Sunday morning only 2 feet 9 inches long, and about 1 inch bore, into an Ta Jacund adus, jetate sing ok 
220, T 4 y g. only a pi 8 
am inclined to think the few that | oblong 3 2 pe — to which is affixed a p. Eoee enna 
morning not altogether owing tube an sete scale, with an index which r Calendar of Operations. 
— ee been taken, but also to — ( — he s eas an ight barometer. C. Hlathoay | (For the ensuing week. 
frosty; they are not so much inclined to} Mi/dness of the. Season.—The mildness of the season PLANT DEPARTMENT. 
re the i been the nered of exciti PLANTS in general ar e now about to commence their 
lie and do not move far up to the 20th Feb. — ng ns will 
or traps are raised, some of the | vegetation. into action at a remarkably early period, new growth, an gradually — 


136 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


E ae 


a proportiopa and 3 
e their er p esc — tby aufe 
le to the _ 


them as near as possi 
Admit sufficient air at all times to ensure a circulati 
pene 


— roots os by LT as the later, wi kirar — 
toa 
without the 


wth 


ake ad- 


| ought to be confined to making wood for the production 


of next year’ p. Encoura weak spurs which 
are not to fruit this season, by allowing them to 
„produce six or eight leav fore they are stopped; æhis 


FLORISTS’ FLOWERS. 
AURICULA AND Potyranruus seed should now be 
boxes. These should be filled one- 


to gro 
ing in a corresponding ratio, | 
repared 


sown, in flat pans or 

third with broken material, to effect a perfect drainage ; 

over this we place a f moss, to prevent 
soil running down amongst the drainage. The 


the 
boxes should be filled, to within an inch of their rims, 


| — ye 

Doublerblue bee aod Dah 
Bees: HBS. our old stock d warm 
of June, y 8 better force the. phat ‘fon it int : the 
hive, and take the produce. ies ~~ er to a te 
ee eveni 


te 8 from the stock; if pip 


queen 
Bu 


WI lle learn 


exposed to the action of sag by hanging over 


— — er lants de- 
pends moro upon ters than z 2 the colour or 
— of the rene akbough these last are by no means 

e disregarded, Those plants whi * are required 


FLOWER GA got AND 5 
Keep a sharp look out after herbaceous plants, which 
are now making t rance above ground, and 
snail oe 8 a a timely 
the 


aie te of the 
— of soot and lime sasie of 


e 
re in an iron cauldron, it will destroy insects an 


as before stated, the _ shou presse 
8 on which the seed may be strewn, covering with 
the slightest possible 3 of the compost. The 
pans may thea be placed in = and watered by 
dipping = water ey oie kling the surface. 
The best cro eedling Auriculas we ever raised was 
by covering the gin with very clean moss till the 
had germivated, and then withdrawing the 3 
gradually. Old plants for flowering m 
more water, and young plants an N will oa: betes 


p 

for having t the buds removed from 
maining on ea f weaken them, er any good purpos 
being answered. Turirs.—The beds must be carefully 
gone pail and i foliage which is in the least cankered 

st with a sharp knife. Should severe 
frosts — e the beds by mats, &e., thrown over 
the hoo rote AND 1 m ted out in 


fine weather, covering with in 


under cover, and diligently ao 
it for insects, * 
TTAGERS’ GARDE 
bade 3 wil now 8 rung, pol which 


pu rich soil must be used; Aa few cott: have 
access yi stacks of Foam, pe pe at, & ese pant pan be 
tented with t A anama fa that con 
8 8 e and pers plants 
+ core. celect some rich mellow 


ing stem, which shou 
straight “pi the sex shoot sho uld be encouraged, by 
re their roots reach 


epotting 


the —— this will not only prevent fyf de atp 


at sides of ade 


e plan the 
pots, y occasionally 8 any side-shoot 
ich may be outstripping i ai nae a Pay particular 

this to ing 


things are invaluable 
ts, ke, Pay ex 


are 
the p tion 
of the —— select dung — preferrin . whi 
combine a compact habit and ge e with a 
fornished 3 Seales 


hie beautiful 
ep bla ome? violet © colour 
for a a taller | bed p 'pale b 
is not surpassed 


c 
planting one 
A bed of Onions should 
now 


=E 
5 8 


aid dok 8 nesh rA dafa] 


March 1, 1819, 


— 
Pt Re RS“ A 

State of the Weather near London, for the week endin 

wick. 


as observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chi: 


Moon's Barometer, 
À — — 


| Tusnmomerer. |! | 
Min. Mea -|| win Esin, 


28 
sgel; 
444 


882 
„ „ 


3 


Aw 
= 


aa 


28 
= 
2 


bed 
© 
= 


e; partially overcas 
thing in the evening; densely overcast. 
in afternoon ; constant heavy rain. 


10 


ast 23 years, for the 


State of the — 
1879. 


ng week, ending March 10, 


rage 


No. of 
A Tears in 
which it 

Rained. 


ae 


$] 


io 


—— jE 
of Rain. 2. 


west 
Temp. 


mature the fruit "thie A 


Pat 
ROPT 


— 


ar os oa a 

~ 

2 
A 


383K 


se 


Sr 


— 


» 
4 F 2s 5 
E et 


ng the — 
est on the 10 h, 


3 
2 2228822 
FE 88 


Si 
8 8 


o Corresponde nts, 
— 2 of 3 large and 
Bice 1 


* ag fm allowed to 
maining half 


Beppixe ohr —.— 
mende d fo this 5 


Books: ow is t E 0 begin Botany 
with the ‘com mon Poet deser ibei in Tindle 


this class ar e written by —— perlite tel 
do not sufficient 8 better men * 
CAMELLI ur seedling e d Bruer” is a 
and show wy flow eben aring considerable as to 
Old Stripe. If it be any W on that variety, it iş 
in size. 
CLEMATIS MONTANA : D * R. We 4 cannot * 28 
ba of 
s N. Hodson, Esq., 
be PZT — is no reason why Melons 2 — 


lights, provided you ill n the C cumbers when ry 
Melons begin to at 

EMIGRATION : pŠ ee ins. All sorts of fresh English seeds, of 
good quality, are acceptable at Adelaide. Mind that you keep 
them acca Vehitlated during the voyage, 

FLouR Mitts: Cerniwaidd, See p. 101 of the current volume, 

— zaleas and 3 are generally in. 


last season’s PAE 5 but if you ‘can wait autumn you 
ill be more likely to succeed with grafts of the present 

year’s — 

oss Roses: J IV. It is possible to raise Moss Roses from 


cuttings bat the chances of success are — except 
uch as Princess Adelaide and other hybrids. 


Cannot be named from si ngle flowers 
PANSIES : 1 a Spr t 
i orga IMPERIALIS: C O B. Prune it now, but chs on 
bette 
PELARcoxtUms : MD, They are Ms gr te by the“ spot,” an eril 
d by cold and 

Pr NE-APPLES : A B. If the black circle ‘of which you speak 

fr uit, then it 1 
from watering them over rhead. The question is, 
0 — rr . = 3 do not Ange it 
0 examined your Podocarpus, 
find “he pe bios —.— — to consist A of a thick 
c 
re 
v 


$j 


ao] 


aeae formed of SN —.— with pani betes pe with 8 


awh ite cleus, 


at 
roots ofi many o 3 pf 17 so, can have 
to do with the death of the plant on which they are pi 
Bodies of a similar structure occur, though sparingly, on the 
fibres = Yew, the cells of which abound in starch granules. 
M. J. 
orators: A Clap 


d roots. is method was also r 
mber of your Paper, in the Notices to Corre- 
spondents, whilst in Dr, Lindley’s Theory of Ho: 


hat there is no analogy Eeng the ball of earth in w 
heir roots ad 1 v, and the hard matted masses [ 
n the Theory of Horticulture.” The opinion given in 
— is ‘sith, —— apprehend, open to question. 
8 One of the persed None í 
ross betw n R. e and R. a the 
. “This can —.— done in ‘che “spring, when 

sap is flowing and bark separating fre ely from the wood. 
You wiil ascertain the p time by trying the branches s 
probably April. a 


588 8 aon 
a 
2 
8 
5 
— 
a 
p 
y 
® 
a 
5 
5 
3 
co 
8 
a 
ba] 
> 
4 

HER 
aB 
. 
E 
ES 
© 
9 
3 
3 85 
— 
8 
EF 
2225 

= 


PLATE GLA . Apply to any great ss dealer. 
L. We should use it for all parts of the onset e; cortainly 
for the ends, The roof is, however, the most important, 
Taxopium: F D. T. sempervirens is a tall ev tree, 


rather too tender for me aae counties. 
Tonacco: W — K. Sow the Tobacco — in 2 — now, and 
place them — nh or Melon n the young 
plants are ready, prick them off into ots, 5 anally, plant 
out into the anger of fros 


a him a good p rrow trap. 
rdener. 1 95 * at 8 — 
or 184 


asiani Violets may b 
pla e done flow 
make s capital plants ; go m in May. 
ned place is generally recommended 
Tiot p See re seen it thrive and bloom 
ztrposed si 


pe reais 
itn biy in 


BO. a pone should not be made of this metal 
got 25 to stand in them for the supply of any living t 
whether animal or vegetable; therefore certainly not 
8. 
L a G. Of the 
er the dung 
f you have no peat, 
little loam, will suit 

y your Lau 


a 
ea to remove e 
and Tea-scented Roses in pots in- —Z Y. We w 


o the K hae 
pi ants recom- 
of to-day you might 


that the new mode of 2 pipes to which you allude 
means of Vulcanised Iudia- rubber. ; 


sin) __THt 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


137 


r 
HITE BELGIAN CARROT 


Per lb, 1s.3d. 
NDON 4 W LARG 1 OW BELGIAN PDO. 5 p = ] 
LO offer as under ONG RED ALTRINGHAM DO, 55 
MANURE COMPANY'S CORN. as 5 E Do. ia 
8 ER- HOSPHATE OF FINE LONG R 8 GOLD WURZEL i 
— — om Importers’ Stores—Fishery and | YELLOW AND 1 LOBE DO. ok 
Peruvian Guano, Salt Gypsum for Clov ver—So 8 for destroying | RENDLE’S IMPERIAL SWEDE TURNIP ` ñ 
. r llparticul attention DAINOS M 1801 Sigg? 383 i 
an ca Ipar icular fATSON’S, & AS FTS DO 
The London Manure Compouy™ the form PURPLE & GREEN. TOP SCOTCH YELLOW DO. ; 1 
to their Corn Manure phates, and Silicates, all so essen- LE’S HY 1 
amount of Ammonis, | the Urate 5 . in Phosphates and WHITE, RED. 1 EN ROUND DO.. 1 
tial for corn crOPS, ines required fo WHITE, RED, AND GREEN GLOBE ER 
| other mineral su! and prices forwarded, a ‘application. HITE, RED, any GREEN LS hts DO, ‘3 
Fall particle secret 0, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, BEST T RED AN D WHITE CLOV a 
FINE TREF grins 
| vANO AND Se orn ANURES.| Tange GUERNSEY CATTLE PARSNIP |. 
G PERUVIAN GUANO, of the finest quality, direct from LA NE ITALIAN RYE 8 aS BA GE 
. E. S er bastidi 
ee 5 : 
GYPSUM (GULPHAT: RE NNIAL RYE.GRA 
IED NIGHT- T eia ae Agricultural Seeds at 8 lowest market ryan 
2254 ASH (WIR REWORM DESTROYER). gricultural See ist is now ready, and 10 
ODS PHOSPHATE OF LIME (made from bone only). h 7 hk 
8 Er ULTOR. ALSA ALT, en other Manures of known |? shal be appy y to send a copy 25 any one who may ia 
aini 
“rae, ms sin A, — 5 London. Apply to WILLIAM 25 1 and Co. 
Marr D I Plymouth. 
GUANO ER T e South inh Railway * no o Pi th 
5 ow 74. ar bes pand of su Y — 4 es rent 
PES GUANO is now 7 “a T ö > a (Laira Green), a w enjoy Rai — communica- 
Tree mode manufacture, paeas 101 eight years sed hed pofi arts — — ae meee and have 
has shown it to be fully equal to the best Peruvian Guano, and | ma fl xsi ments with ee pee: eee aen = 
25 per cent. sara le eee taken 855 ys cheap — à of our 1 750 
a specific arran nin Priee ia offered Great Bri Any instance are —— A be 
ae SUM (Grea Ri 1 ae esta fo it is our interest to ow 


ndon, Falmouth, and 


r, LAWES 3 8 Cre 


CORN AND GRASS MA jsi zad 


5700 

N.B.—PERUVIAN GUANO, from —— cargoes (in Doek), 
na SULPHATE or AMMONIA 

69, Ki m-street, City, L = 9 
ERUVIAN AND B BOLIVIAN GUANO ON SALE, 
| NLY IMPORTERS, 
ANTONY GIBBS. AND SONS, LONDON ; 

WILLIAM 8 1 a 80. LIVERPOOL; 
GIBBS, BRIGHT, anp CO., LIVERPOOL Ba BRISTOL; 

ESWORTH, — AND PRY LONDON, 
o protect themse Ives a nst the 
— Guano, poroen are recom- 
alers of established character, or to 
ors, who wiil supply the article in an 7 
fixed prices, delivering it from the Impo 


3 


61, Gracechurch- —.— 


— that at the 


erie 
to any dd with tthe 
4 — 5 egree, without the 
now m 
ch 


me 2 
Wood term on the m 

„ Palisading, Piel and Garten 
—— 155 R ROOFING. 

= ROYAL LETTERS 


PATENT, 


wD Co, e ‘Lamb's wind Bunhill- 
urers and only Patentees of 

LT FOR ROOFING 

Eeg 2 Workshops, and for Garden 


National 5 
and 


F: 


THE 
arm 


London, t the Manufacture 
aaa 
gs, Shed 


tural 3 it Fl this Felt 
obtai 8 AL 


k, Rut- 
weeny 
d Gentry ; 

» Hanover- 


nd, — cg 
er, and most of Ara ela 
CULTURAL IETY’s HoUsE 


r dese 
timber i ia es 
de. 
aean Pen oe RE k 
for its Use, and Testimonials 
to any part of the 
kaes ecu 
Where thoes — —— T Works in London 
nt Pelt N 5 — ax TSD e 
„ Lamb’s-buildings, Bunhill. 
covered with the Felt pina be seen, mnt 
to West- 
hand 00. Felt aaou 
Chas. Barry, Esq., 
oods and Pete are 
ordered the Com- 


e of Roofing, and 
onstruction of Roofs, 


o that — pay for 
e dante of Roofs, or 


“peril pai th 


on 
HE FOLLOWING = Ss are ra tack 
mo 
we 


i 8 consequences of LAR 


5 The Agricultural Gazette. 


the 

moneyed a 

Co 

more or less sori according to ha 

le 8 anx sities awakened a at an 

moment, and o 

extensively — — consequence, are mu 

alike 
wh 

ibati are not only . interesting but of 

some re N 


h w 
dollars the fusha instend of one, and the same article 
selling in England at a loss to the ee and 
be 


two subjects o 


3 different causes, can hardly be irrelevant to 
ach other 


“Ss 
that Hanes and Fears shall rh 
i er of arm: 


— since t 


Kingdom. 
will be delivered, free of 


Devon Railways; or to a own in Devo 

waits or to Cork, Dublin, or Liverpool, by Steame rs: 
ORUE GIANT SAI IEEE; per bush., £1 5 

TRUE ITALIAN RYE-GRASS ) 

3 REM PERENNIAL DITTO 

CoM E-GRA re 

BUCK WH TEA AT; 

WHIT 

WHITE BELGIAN” CARROT 


ooo 
— 


SCH HS re hore e 


M 
rr TO (FOR SHALLOW sorts) 
LARGE CATTLE sar ti 
LUCERNE (NEW IMPORTED) 
YELLOW GLOBE MANGOLD WURZEL 
LO} 


— 


8 


0 
PERENNIAL RED — ae 
2 DUTCH . FINE 
ALSIKE HT BRI D CLOVER and all other Agricultural Seeds, 
owest market price: 

above wallets will be delivered free to London, 
Bas . ne; Gloucester, or Bristol, ai "Pickford’s Railwa 
Conveyance.—Orders to be addressed Bea Sutton and Sons, 
Reading Seed Warehouse, Reading, B 


TURDAY, MARCH 3, 1849. 


MEETINGS FOR THE TWO Ft TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
S 6—Agricultural Society of En — 
AT, — Highland A Soc 


| contrary every abe on the heel of its fore- 


vaguely sublime regions of Imagi 

All that can be done, by a wise , durin 
interval of distrust or uncertainty, is—not to reject 
the w sto a a at a 


e 

att unim sito men of business are 

y aleulatng the pem producible by a fall 
and even one half in the value of 

me Funds, the ee the valu 


seriously 
"j 


id ela ue of 


eration for good or evil. The 

Leaseholder at a Corn-rent would stand pretty much 

as he stood before, except in regard to his other 

es of sale, as meat, wool, ski On the 

other hand the holder under a fixed money payment 

would be a free 3 af the whole difference of * 
reduced valu he Annuitant, again, would 


ee wi the same de 5 
It obalo that in this nomi the distress 

Seeed by the inane ould bear no small pro- 

portion to the bene 


58 WN on home cia 
instan 


a ‘ 
m wW e gain the payment of that 
bg dose of taxation ‘which yields the interest a 
2 Spite ae debt reat et more than hal ile 
which goes to the ent annual e ponse of 
the. nation the fall “of niai apn» would require to 
be made good. 


8—Agricultural Imp. Society of 8 
33 Society of England. a 


gricultural Imp. Society ot 


AT, 


commercial name 
ornia 2 the Corn- tides the rs ded and agricul- 
tural class might vary the answer > calling it the 

rn-trade and California, Men 2 their thoughts m 
and tempera- 


suc 


— more 
in every mind, the modes, or degree, in 
ich they are uttere 
But in fact to the “Agricultural world the two 


on e- 

shore here, at ten 

elow a productive profit to the home grow 

8 contrast that, secs Ton 
d 


e freak of natural law it seems destined 
3 gre in couples. 
se is puzzling hi 


e mere increase of 


auses however Rare 
be presumed woul 
ee for good. One 
and Commerce slick so mu 
cu lates pir ae to a new country, as 
va kp ve de a and reco; 
— ed up by the multitudes from all 
— — of the globe Pome oa a vast population 
t an hitherto uncommercial and almost unvisited 
territory. It is true that Baier the Eu toisi; the 
merican, nor the Islander of the Pacific, Pee! require 
= 33 of life, more in his new than 
n the one he left; but the difference is chat e can 
do f in tha one what he left the other because he could 
a 5 pay for them. hat wealth 
immense 


ee i which i 
ha rih a general and genuine ope- 
immense stimulant to 
uch by the saci Pe 
ctual 
1 pa 


An 
ship p ap mane from 
Sacramento River, and a conside div 
the traffic of the States in that direction nity prove 
no unwelcome relief to the overloaded markets of the 
British ports 


The other reason is of a more indirect and gradual 
nature. It is the just complaint of the English 
Farmer that while the other requisites of life im- 
ported, whether wholly or in part from abroad, are 


s paying revenue duties to! the exchequer, he has been 


sanah 


how the 
met, with bib eat juarter, ae of wonder 
i o Atlantio ‘confirmed and reconfirmed | n 
whose bulkier cargo afflicts 
sof London and Liverpool—reach 
im in o. ied recesses of his country home, 
ineral products threaten 


Exaggerated and ae eÀ 
probably been, it is 

— that not one contradictory rapi has 
the first announcement ; but on the 


between two part es in = sista who in their eager- 
ness to immolate each other, had not time to conser 


n 
article while every elem 
tion remained still clothed. with that co 
advan: rice occasioned by the universal. con- 
tribution to the fiscal necessities of the state. e 
a jumping system of duties, inoperative 2 its 


138 AE AGRIGULTURAL GAZETTE. [Manon sy 1 


he last 21 yora 5 has taken 2, 400, „000 persons, the deficiency x 2 
intended. purpose, bo cere He to the Revenue, | progressive i increase that in t E. an * 
and 2 all trade calculation, was ately | pac in — peos 2 se ign rain imported a iae — — 3 — Jean : * 
ain e 48 
wrong, it did not ae that an N pros on ened i the supply of foreign Wheat and flour in the seven and the deficieney of grain will be be 7 000,000 ors 
: or s À ears ending 1834 amounted to only 7,401,217 qrs:, in in the third seven years, with. a further 

standard upon eve other, was right. The the next seven years it reached 10,319,564 qrs., and in | 2,800, 000 persons, the septennial deficieney pc * 
furious Frank and fiery Hun who fought the hot the last seven years it has attained to 16,410,824 qre; grown to 11,900,000 qrs Tan 
battle of the Corn-Laws three . ago, le fell into During the same periods the total imports of al! To show that Britain -as gotten into the 

that common error which sup s that in a con- foreign grain were increased from 11,634,055 qrs. to here supposed, I bring to notice the advance in 

two e 1 D 


statesman 10 3 h i 
would have found time to reflect that Prices last seven years’ quantity to have been made necessary be given to increase. our home supply of food, se — 
inter communicate. That while on the one side, by the failures of Potatoes, still the pre nay will be seen check as much as poss ssible this growing de 
it is neither wise nor honest to ers = industry | to have progressively been septennially in reasing as | other — The ee imperieet cultivation of 
of one of the community to enhanced - h o per cent. The imports from Ireland into eee d her large extent d land that 
2 produced b Ne i neither E ngland are here included, except for the year 1848 ; panty 25 brought inje cu ltivation, s gely. 
— 7 y j e the returns for this year are not made up, with growing opulation and naan off food toed it, 
ood to be considerably more than in The desire 1 ronment to encourage 
1847. I have not at hand the quantities of cattle and and ar to diminis h our iien — 
y : 


is it on the other id jt to admit at your outports 
an insidious stream produce exempt from that |t 


et 
®© 
"s 
g 
ge 


ducer with the industry of other classes. “Tn nsfused quite in the same ratio, On reference to the account, evil than a cure for it. Were new settlements nts opens) 

through the medium of enhanced pric man’s | attention will be attracted. to the large inerease in the | at home, whieh might readily — effected by the mmm 

consumption of each article pays his ee to | foreign supplies that has taken place in the last 21 years, frequent enclosure ‘of wastes and commons, accompanied 

— ae pn’ one article from the general | and looking to the fact that in 1848 we imported and | by the creation of the necessary facilities for their im 
2 9 ns 2 F; age and other 


contract, its pro must s shop ; for | consumed about. 7,000,000 quarters of gn grain, | provement, such roads, dr j pable 
the general contract still clinging to the cost of pro- | besides, at least, 3,000,000 quarters. left over from the | works, the gr rowth of grain and of employment intti 
duction, whilst subducted from its pri rice, he is under- imports of 184 E can be no doubt that the con. | country might be kept ann ually inereasing in 
old immediately at the outport. This contract, and 2 ae of e wa a. 9 untry has W Bs greatly py ore proportio — to her i ston of popi 
ence attending the breach of it in any 7 2 e pro 3 and is progressively in asing ee 1 e restoration o the New Foresttos 
one Ls. the in able ——— of indirect | m rapid increase appears to me a 8 time of the en would of e do. much to metie 
n promuses ‘tie * 1 0. the —— ratio in which our manufacturing or con. | supply we 
ef in this department of the revenue, the er suming population is growing — the agricultural — an encouragement to the increase me — 
may therefore look with eingle interest and atten- or r producing, an opulation, whose utility 5 orality makes it a 
tion. If the gold of California bear indeed an ised food may — -A valuable one. Why should we iam 
of countenance to the results m of it, its amount to, now that our coins n has outgrown wn our | moors and ie mam d when we are gent) 
effect upon that taxation wih is caused b Debt t, powers to feed it. The compound ratio at which fore n | calling for more and more food, and our 4 
a be to loosen m . ee the grasp of that supplies of food have been advaneing over the 3 annually growing more burdensome. from the war 
rom pressure upo daf which every philan- tion appears ts of something lik — a A de- agricultural employment. Hewitt Davis, 3, Frei 
thropist 23 55 and every wise statesman is monstration, 2 ere er by considering a | ick’s-place, Old Jewry, London, Feb. 19. a3 
anxious to relieve. H. population of 40 miner ta have fi id been feeding Subjoined is a note of the 
— y — e 40 million 9 quarters of grain, Wheat returned as sold in England for the last 13 wees 
OUR IN ut since to have been yearly increasing 400,000 a of each year = 1842, by which it will be seem tht 
9 — — — ma FOOD at the same time that it has been advancing ~ produc- | the returns: of 1848 8 are the smallest, clearly shomi 
tion of food only 300,000 qrs., we shall see that whilst the deficiency of the last exo from all learn, 
Tus i 1 y qrs., y et y > all we can leam 
information the attached account * affords of the | its population in the first seven years will have advanced | threshing is quite. t more so, than uu 
*IMPORTATIONS OF FOREIGN GRAIN, FLOUR, AND MEAL i 
. , - A 
Into the United Kingdom since 1827 ; also Imports from Ireland into Great Britain during the same period, reckoning Flour and Meal ai 392 lbs. to the Quarters ler. a 
t 9 6 
| BARLEY AND || 1 DIAN Tora Imprts. from ys 
Year, Mapes Bu — Oars & OATMEAL. || RYE & RIE-MEAL. BEANS, PEAS, Conn AND Formion | | Ir Bri into Yea 
! i | EAL. Mronrs. Gt. Britain ae 
| |: Annual. || 1 | Anum A ——— — 
| | Average || Average | Average | Average Pr — . 
| Quarters, | * ay fl Quarters»: | Price. Quarters: | e Quarters. — Quarters, Price. Quarters. — uarters. Quarters. Quarters. 
753,398 60° 5 168672 8210 || 166,423 22 6 || 29,562 | 84 2 ||} 73,870 a 
66. 3 305,798) 32. 6 ||, 548,49 |. 22 9 || 67,892 |. 34 10 46,487 36 0 40412 | 36 8 277022 remains 307,244 
64 3 | 132,210, 32 7 513,491 21 5 44,784 3510 16,90 26 1 7 2 1.031 2,406,280 2,215,521 
65 — 369,0327, 38 0 216 25 4 33,008 40 0 22.345 29 10 59,507 41 11 59232 3,535,308 2,420,182 
2 1 | Wen 20.198 37 0 1.68 657,899 2,990,767 
2 7 7 , ; 850 2 15,890 36 5 ‘ 448,246|| 2,737,441 
88.86 29 0 |) 175,026 20 11 10 32 9 47,756 | 35. 8 67,880 | 39 4 227 555,78 2| 2,792,658 
8 P — ; 
| 32 22,080,986 20 7 242,770 | 35 0 257,640 36 4 291,387 38 8 108, 750 11,634,055 || 18,299,403 
4 29 11 113,188 | 22 0 oaen 30 4 ; 2.670.458 
% Bik) TENEAN Hae! | ele Lhe | E E ee 
2 4 418,888 23° 1 30,711 34 9 105,607 38 7 111,26 ; 30,298 
4 2.203 31 5 35.543 22 5 u 27 8 1210 37 6 4,026 1, 318,223 3, —.— 
| A Oo ag gem ay sige reo a op m 4 % Stee ee e e 
; 9 129.418 4305 || 158,486 | 42 5 22,021 3,917, 722|| 2,327,782 re 
130,268 | 22 5 15,600 36 9 || 293,689 | 39 10 148,564 40 4 4,187 || 3,627,350 2,855,525 en 
* 33 4 is | — 
— 2,066,126} 28. 6 211,723) 35: 7 830,318 39 5 490,686 39 1 46,606 || 15,875,792|| 19,568,763 
6 315,037 1 : GURL) eee PPE 
2 * 22277 el, e S28 ||: OLDA | 92-11 || 26,806 || 3703ra, SARER Lavon 
7 303 23 26 „ i 31 1 517 1,431,816 2,721,400 
31 8 691.339 22 ¢ j me 1 : 109,178 33 5 37,119 || 3,034,714 | 2,460,800 . 
22 2 8 1.843 35 0 . 56,38 427,075 2,992,800 
31 16 2244 20 4 298,220 | 4% Oo). 448,7194 50 157243 51 3 4029697 iv 881 re 7865553 é 
po — |- ——| 20 5 480,715 | 36 9.|| 187,454 | 39 1 || 1,645,120 || 7,26 TG as EA 
$ | 4.743,63% 21 11 1411. N . 
622 34 11 14608 20 37 3 801977 | 37 11 || 6,548,013 8 ee Total 7 
1842. 1843. | 1844 : 
1 dee i e | pe a] 1846. 18 i] 
—— Gi the last Thirteen Weeks of 8 | Quarters, Quarters. |- Q 
— —— ee 28 . uarters, uarters. gorm 
— 1,281,066 1,522,100 1,721,261 1,758,942 1 788,093 1,430,234 


produces 12 loads of ae and 1400 gallons of urine, | by 1} the other; and they were — 
—or 4666—I8,666 lbs, almost | the bottom than at the top, being. exe f 
A feedin so that the animal, when 


o: 3 
i 5 wi a | tested: the efficac of the itfals in a garden * 
week, . cok pa, Pearse 2=10 ewt. with the long-tailed field mouse, and have u i 
Plymouth, dent. per day; their proving valuable, not only in such cases ® 
i i 7 
oo on Winter — — -—In eben to J. I. P. M. „o ricks ae be prt Ei ner 1 
season of the aons of miss on winter proof stands. 4. N., Woodside Cottages “ai 
i Year are to be prevented, I aft 7 77 — Baba. aa ee ic 
‘eh — inexpensive of my letter of the 27th Dec. in — agricul e 


Toads and ld vole on iie rots of te tres in 3 ult, disposes me it a 


4 
with one. ings; — 4 ; asking for the money result of Mr. Hurt 
temper 17,333 lbs, pretty nearly | der, in some of the Dean yards. asun- | ence, &e.,”” and the doing £? . 

à Forest i an 3 
. wae cae neon fet 
-n e f K m i 7 


‘6 83 


g—1849.] , THE: AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 130 
sees and hatima manner vot quite intel | when the cows ave to be e milke „ 8 
ie cr lat — ——ů— milked, the pail is set down upon ang — — — — — — — med re his’ 
— a ‘I considered ‘that he could | ground, and the stick is then held upright im the middle | this should be done daily; andiaerwards posted interes 
it, 80 ave afforded any valuable | of it, so that the bottom of the stiek touches the bottom | ledger under the heads of rent, wages, — soarana 

3 


mo 
to the tlie. But with whatever feeling of the pail, and upon its being a fere dadan stock, rates, or oth 
— ae Imay confess’ myself to have | the number of spaces gprs fap e milk the 3 of debtor side will — — of — — 
to it, when it most unexpectedly appeared, I | quarts produced, and the same thing is s done when the | cattle sold, work done for hire, and the estimated — 
turned withthe! Agricultural Gazette, in wishing two cows have been mil — Then, for re — g it, | of such produce = may be reserved for — ue’ 
no balance bad been published at all,“ for | a slate is kept hung up in the dairy (as the stick should home, &e. A third book should contain 2 4 n at 
I think that uo loss to the publie, and some gain to Mr. be when not in use), roughly ruled in a similar manner account of each — eost of tillage, manure, seedin 
have been the consequence of such a to the accompanying register, exclusive of the totals, | weeding, reaping, threshing, and quanti n antity sold. Pe Bs 
having been suppressed. I have not which being on the spot, the person who milks does not | another might be kep t for stock when — 
g . . . — s — 


“ balance 

„ advantage of residi e same county with forget to fill i the time, and i hen copied o ught, particulars of 
Wie. Harne but L have seen something of his farms, about once a month, and the slate ruled af. ws B i 2 re of feeding — — — 
and have ‘heard much more. Various reports have for want of some sufficiently simple means of registering | but the obvious b tha 
— cireulated ire to t ne decrees: I had divided the stick for two years before | ceived to m a contin of l — 
iseredible returns proceeding from the different plans uld any available use made of it, beyond ccea. soon reconeile“ Rough and Ready” to the task; what 
whieh that gentleman has adopted, and when at last'he ee trying the yield of milk myself with it. If farmer is there that does not at one time or other find 


volunteers 80 publicly to expose his “ balance-sheet ” x should consider this a too long to be money scarce? To what is his embarrassment owing; 
t too 


ig-confirmation’ of themy it becomes matter of some published entire, you if you please publish the tie e bought t h $ 
interest, and in miese days; 1 t a think, of — —— — “Form of 7 Register . 277775 res i in — abridged ies teeta c — — 1 17 — 
however ts kind, it shou e iced | sha t thou it wrth hile to fill t i l 
—ͤ— as to put before the publie the true more K a few esi in noe latte 1 : Rp S return: = vii 85 the flaw ve “ioe — rs wtb 20 3 — 
inferences; and guard them against the false ones, that | that are shown might 3 strike ay one as be oad kirad be — introduced a liberal s — of tenant 
of being drawn from it. Such an investi- very small, Im well m hat fi 7 
are capable fr s may a n t he first cow, right — — the country, it will be evidently neces« 
the balance-sheet ” in question, confined to — “ Bossy ” had been wat deer 5 3 23, 1847, sary that every fa oo should minutely enter all par- 
— lor one year, is -a 1 —— ing, — —— W “we she — her last calf, oe calved only on the 12th ticulars of. the t of drainage, buildings, oileake, 
tween xtable and others iming, and man — — confer a claim for coms 
— —— een eue Jor tao menaa — — 
y ur i 
talist. As such, no one stand high — Shoes pn — n Kopii — 7 — " — — — — 
as such, he is conferring an incaleulable benefit u 1848. : 
— te I dea his ever reaching the — — — M. E. M. E. Bossy. Dewlap. 4 en — — e —— — — cf the farm, 
ler arm . . — 7 
ae en and Conslons Header, 6% 7, 1 er We ae we, dete | quarts: quarts: in etend ng or tein i eer —— 
Ploughing Matches.—The annual ploughing match riper ies cag a bees 5 si Figs — 
othe Agriealtral Society of this'neighbourhood took| $; $ | Z | =] =) =) 2) 2 | x young n — 
i 2 a young m who ke ept o accounts, and who not only 
place last week, and as the arrangement of the stewards 3 e eee, ame me ror — | drained ves ie fields of about 20 — each, “© ired 
e de ie ond — the —— — — T, 22 ** pee = si by the —— ry for improvement, but 0 as 
0 e given great dis. . 3 = — much additional land at a very high rent; — whieh 
— 5 — ‘the e — a „ ; 34 3 — (being not in a first-rate condition) he allot stted a 
—_ solicit p pon the matter e S. 30 2 4 33 4 it 113 | dressing of manure due to another part of his farm; the 
selected and measured for the work by the rst breeze of depression has taken him by su 
— se a nearly so, ard the soil a pen Total . 69| 60 | 141g | 182 129} | 273} | 4023 and told him in the plainest terms that his capital is not 
al — 1 of — m —— — — Average 2.81 2.00 471 40 4 | sar 13% large — eee small . — he 
nea cannot buy the stock he requires, or searcely keep up a 
Vork, but no other fleld could be obtained. The ground Oct. mo of labour, and he has no data to vel the 
‘Was dry, and the day calm, but rathe 3 = — a i 
i *** i se m use of deficiency, or to point out where he may seek a 
competitors, 13 in ped — —— to plough two way of escape is about to give up his high-pri 
„ The len as yards, and t wW f= | — | -—] — — — — land, he will overerop the land he has drained; and 
— to be 9 inches broad and 5 inches deep. E 35 1 == — me unless he devotes the whole of his time and attent ; 
— — a ploughed by the di — the ere: . — 11 1 3 3 21 8 1 e ke the evil fear, be hurried to a still more 
fore about one. sev. acre. nee a to- S. 29 1 1 43 3 2 7} 9 ata a risk of 
Ee a eng toring, 1} mi The: f MBH Pe Lee j Á 9 | trifling, I will add, that a receipt should be taken for 
i mt ours. This would give TA! hours for an n money paid, to save anxiety and prevent disputes, 
a —— a $ — a — pie ne p men Total. 58 | 45 147 1133) 205) | 1584 |: 364 —. — is 8 2 aa — — 
were inform 2 o s'arting that those who did = oul written — 
2 their work by the end of two hours would Avoerave| 1.87 | 1.45 | 4.76 | 3.66 3.32 8.42 11,74 al F bargains eee, and all a agreem eements m ade, of the 
aoe ified, Six finished within the time; seven G. W. M. | slightest importance. J. W., Peterborough, Jan. 15. 
e first man to finish did his work 25| Farming Accounts.—To defend the existing race of Stall feeding.—I have seen hundreds of beasts put 
— time; the last man, 25 minutes over farmers from the consequences of free trade, and to up to fatten in curtains or closes or yards as they are 
— of 139 en to inutes eac ut the | secure them t ossession of at lakia much capital | severally t in Scotland and Englan ut we 
yards. Unde tances, as as the n at present call their own, the first and most | ha found by experience and ex ent the stall-fed 
by the the m fficient time allowed them | essential thing e to prevail upon t if | animal prospers and fatten thus best. It is in 
well, — {Abundance.] If a man cannot p lough possible to keep correct accounts, without whieh no cal- | Scotland to have 10 or ts and even more running 
ane nara manlike manner,the seventh part ofan | culations can be relied on, no improvements- even | together in a yard with sheds ; one or sometimes two of 
such soil in two hours, can he be considered a | attempted with any degree of safety, and no advantage |t t are iano ae rest, and why? They 
servant? [He cannot.]° If the horses were | made available or be steadil ed. T. e | pe-goats erd, daily and 


tT 

— unequal to such ot as J of a mile an of the Gazette are not likely to be those who most hourly bullied by their companions in turn. 
— — such as should be kept by a farmer who quire such a recommen dation, but every reader will ‘be prevails in private families, where a son or daughter is 
sitisfactory pay? And supposing that the work was seguna w with abundance of farmers who either said to be the fool of the family; and hence it has been 
— to the masters of the seven ploughs which | cannot keep accou nts or are contented Hag su = se im- | facetiously remarked, “ — families of note in ancient < 
whol 9 was their performance (taken as a| 8 syans as to be unable to determine what amount | days hired a fool, now-a-days they breed one at home.” 

an admitting in work to be well done), such | of profit his business has annua ally yielded, or sons Tis But we will lay aside the fool of the herd, and go on 
 Agrical arison with other the merits of our experience. Not only myself but a 


A him some 
appear — . laid down rules v how far a successful crop or a ha urchase may have | for experiment’s sake, and our et’s sake also, and 
2 25 ig ts eagle Foon He wirewo rprising ; i i ved 
uf meta Observing in your Paper for Connected with this subject is the all important one of | so much, that my friend wrote to me to express his 

set car correspondents, .F. B. H.,“ | education, which may be entioned in this place inci- | pleasure at his success, and this is a man of high repute 
of a milk register, and that no one dentally; not only is an exte of education > Scotland. These cattle — not allowed to 

icated, I beg to hand you a copy | wanted by the lower class of farmers for their peer! ie on as Mr. Huxtable’, and kept 
m 


each ruled on rincipal farme 
contain a complete register of the guardian of the poor, churchwarden, overseer, surveyor | corn was 4 ne put up st 
one year. It was some time before | of the 3 jury man, tax gatherer, a ant I do not together, and see if four out of the number do net thrive 
Tin plan of registering the milk of my | know what e, by virtue of which honours without | at the expense of . 
40 two) that wag sufficiently simple to | emoluments "a 1 — the care if he ro st ‘wel e) of a Wages of Labourers.—1 hty Times,” some 
bet it carried out regularly, but this I great variety of books, an and the collection of a quan 
oin ; i rates a 


h ; 1 ess, | flou many po 
‘ause as the milk-pail increases in | and add to the self-respect and intrinsic value of those stituted for white Wheat, inferior red Wheat is sent 
d be eat boon e fa But millers and bakers there are who will 


bottom upwards, of n the farmer. 
Which represent the q gra. Well, we are agreed that the management of chest both os poor and rich man, and this has been 
w accounts should en joi n | the case fro before 
were to be made on purpose, | the farmer, as- without them he is like a man eam aca Egypt: 
3 they are seldom ee. far| groping in the dark, and will be sure to stumble over | labourer by 3 him hig nor are all his 
is taken out along with the pail | something, not knowing if it be wood or stone. He | expended in the purchase of this food: Half a 


140 i THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Manon 3 


of good Wheat will maintain four of a family o avoid | Tw Slaney, M.P.; Mr. Stansfield, M.P. ; Mr. T. R. below its level. Mr. Marshall, M.P P, nia | 


se of ‘strength ie i Te- to th 
The labourer will ask for Wheat of his master to a Tweed; and Profe ssor Wa ay. inerea: : y re-pumping the 
being robbed by the miller or baker. What wou The following new Members were elected : over ponies hea the ligg | 
writers say of Scotland, where their wages — Whitton, Corbett, 8 Staffor D IN Srock.— Mr. Bra (High Sab | 
of the produce of the f ? Gold is not paid | Tuck, T. G., Strampshaw, Norwich for the county of Bedfo ford), of — pd 
paid out f Sa not out of the purse but o | Chetwynd, ‘william m Henry, Longdon, Lichfield Dunstaple, favoured the Council with a — red 
there every to vale this labour — 2223 — Marwick mode he had successfully adopted in reference ait 
It is this custom that enables the Scotch landlord to Blackburn, Capt, Eier 33 jun., Hale Hall, Warrington | sheep affected with small-pox. In some eases N. 
orwich 
receive a the 1 a Sade A- P, Kea Ke nares, Chislehurst, Kent — se age 3 E pgi o in the Í 
r man f is Mo 4 been gress 
at the pi Apa ask and answer. But the e eann Slade, Lient. Edgar, R. N., Baimon, , Milada 3 the eruption had not — itself on the fees 
a — 9 of defrauding e farm servant ; nor can the Bascombe, Tho hom mes eer he sheep, the throat had been more affected, 1 
ooke, William, Risby . i 
English tenant be r eet: be pans eomas The names of =~ candidates for 1 at the next svalowing ee 3 bara 
where a tenant's wife keeps a shop, an meeting were then read. I >quisit 1 
be ys is compelled to buy the butter, cheese, 3 — FOR — Tio Marquis of Westminster r e ha s pies efs lowering a des 
doing, , he may require for his mye Ep Arz communicated, in a letter to Mr. Pusey, M.P., a de- e eee e » 2 ad been taken to keep f, 
— hi 9. a week is n sei orth 6s. no count s | seriptive statement of the leathern dresses presented by oea 8 ’ w 
bery ; but who can correct it? This | is lo rdship to the Society, and use with so much i cag fi them to close confinement or a heated atm. 
is the — system. x nZ, 2 Di n advantage on his estates in Dorsetshire in 8 ep ees 3 them ian 3 Pretty well. Grad, 
On the Use of Lime. Žins "late Fish a Feo "a the labouring drainers from d injury in the 3 Ti em and salt given them to liek, 
article on this subject, by W. H. er. Srom S| prosecution of the deeper portion of their e — | their noses being sponged three times a day with 
4 i he is not a practical icultarist, | Ihe Council ordered th eir best th be conveyed water, Sir William Burnett’s Disinfecting Liquid being 
ical » And bis opinion, as be hi the Marquis of W ter for these communica- affe 


bat as he him- | 5 
asif says, io so pto the gree neral practice, that I tions (which the * — to the Journal Commmittee) 
write this for mys purpose of eliciting Seter r informa- | , — io rni y n implement fo n H ; 50 | 
ractical my es ch Pak It is of; in drains and for adjusting their position, prese nted by ha sheep. oF opinion 1 among the famen 
83 mp 3 Be ers of 1 “i 2 his lordship at the same time to the Society. ben em 
n ImpLeMents FOR SMALL Farms.—Sir CHARLES LEMON, was taken of th e sheep, it was * Å not to in 
view is 95 As to burning aie ae, that we are Bart., M.P., called the attention of the Council to the them.. — The ‘Chairman — “the — of ‘stating 
* t advar i ord 


that in hi 
fordshire ind Buckinghamshire, there was no 


. | liv smal. 
uni. ; 

pag m D nomial i ments adapted for the cul- | POX at present among t their fl ockks.— Mr. Fuller, M. P, 
versally followed as the best system ; 3 is not e simple 7 thei 2 imple mon 05 — stibject ‘with J made oo Sue n pore in prone to the 8 5 

is the nfidence from being so well acquainted ; were never in 
ca apy oa hero 1 aa ak paky with the des dais of the ae 85 extend the operations — at ey M.P., regretted to state that i 
—— N n a dink of t ciety in avour of e class of practical cul- ae ridgeshire T ey were surrounded with it. Sixty 
3 — NN whilst warm, it is 2 of the soil ‘throughout ‘the kingdom. He wished | ° 78 iting wy 0 pres oot conveyed from * Sussex ia 
turned in the heap * a eee eee ae henge nt to claim their met mem ae for a class far nen trucks, by rai ears to a dry farm near Stn 
„ po ere below the great experimenters to whom the count bottom in that county, were attacked "with the fot 
owes aun so much, namely, for that of occupiers | disease. A striking case had occurred, too, of the 

„ Whose enclosures are small and on the sides of steep b 
hills, For them, he thought, the large implements most each other by two yards, a large barn, and a high wal 
ime suited for large flat fields are quite unavailing, as such | one portion being tied up and the other kept loose; the 
eee sca reer fimen oah not purchase them, and 2 — be ar E cae iad 3 . — 1 
: ; : in unable to work them even if purchased. Sir Charles 5 i 
8 * 2 n Tae pe = Lemon considered that it would be a great boon to the also referred to the case of foot disease taking place tm 
e fa 


is universally s —, on the land, or more commonly 
thrown on to the to haulm, for ex 
thi 


A Sain Ai a RRR ih Nat elass in whose welfare he in comm ye o in two flocks, though separated from each 
ge * e Sh ge 11 Ne 4 3 e ety, so dee interest, if the Society would, on the other by a plantation and strong 
ee ways un t etables | occasion of their try meet on the necessity that existed for greater caution bei 


ha n re- t 
uire a | tity of carbonic acid for their mium for some implements of the kind to which he al- taken by the railway companie: 
. the prosia quantity from | ded, to be constructed on a small seale, and sold at trucks for the conveyance of live stock in a 
the question is, whether by converting | a moderate price. He stated, as an instance of the degree of cleanliness and freedom from 1 ‘Wes 
i small dri 


A rice | `. i 7 í 
insects in the ground, quicklime is very beneficial, also not exceeding an . soe . rows or less, or 127. : pied 800 acres a = d had EF obliged to reduce his 
yi . 


nee very valuable k an 5 — purpose, to be awarde the Judges at the Norwie n it N seen that they were carried into ext 
ee gasses for destroying insects and dissolv- Meeting, if it was thought desirable that a year should | eution yed; and the fact Ante strikingly W 
ing Ar matter, but destructive to ammoniaeal not be lost; but, at all events, he hoped the attention that the Nene trucks were not atten 
— 8 contact, Now, I ol the great implement makers would be directed to the as they ou ht to be.—Mr. C. verman rel 
“shall be obliged to any of your scientific, practical subject, for it was only by them, and not by local instances of the 5 of the foot dis ase by safi 
farmers to say whether A is better to spread quicklime manufacturers of small means, — — construction of removing the sheep to the distance of a mile fem 
upon the land for a considerable period, or to plough it the economical but effective implem of limited size Pasture to another, the exertion appearing 110 act ass 
in immediately, I can readily enter into the idea that | Was to be carried out with the 5 5 — to all Predisposing’ cause of disease —Mr. Hobbs ex 
to chatk, and then convert it again into carbonate | 88 bear testimony to the acoria F with 1 thet Govert 
of lime, is a waste of money, unless for the purpose of Liqurp Mayure.—Mr. Wuarste, of Bulmarsh. court, | ment orders were attended to on the Eastern © 
&e.—In my last, on Potato Culture, Reading, informed the Council of the difficulty _ ha d line. With regard to the small-pox, he regre tedi 


10 
' ; bro. 4 
planting, for the crop of Potato, a second early | Process by which the volatile alkali in liquid conie f in which the anim 
b ene quence of the shallow manner in which the an 
of some kind, to be fully grown by es ee the disease | through iron pipes could be conveniently aus posing that had died of the disease ets pap buried 44 
i pnp appe: the moment it does show an acid without injury to such metal piping, and also 8 heir earcases had been torn up by 1 
tself, to pull es entire stem out of the ground; for in | on the question generally of strengthening liquid ma- te Pestilence again propagated rb a 5 aia extent frot ie 
17 remains on, so will the disease | [UTS by chemical means. He had on his own farm that circumstance., Had the precaution taken by 
extend. this * is eu h lowed, we we — have — tanks, of 1200 gallons each, and another smalle er Hudson, of Castleaere, been adopted, of boiling don 
fectly sound. * Isle of yo 5 email f . 10 n suff eien 5 
n 2 rad have observed that the a . inch pipes, by hose, on the land. Mr. Wheble tation of the virus would, in all probability, have helge 
e su ast, particularly upon warm nad made many inquiries to ascertain the best in vented.—Sir Jobn Johnstone, Bart., M.P., 85 l 
A and that 22 and vet aggravates the * for mixi i i aoe MP., a 3 ing made some obs a 
or anythi or house, or (wh $s 9 ; TE 
. cina piantan | bant maare, Ha he mas enn ,,], ,,,. 
3 . is quite agrees with all the one: mostly Grass land, but that local i indi tituti 
Chron ; e : a ‘portion of it appropriated ocal affection and indieations of cons 
dee. pef . ther rected i to Wheat, Italian Rye-grase, an d Flax. He 25 . ~~ — in the animal, Professor 3 favoni t 
what ‘I am advising, e rows, 1S a 8 ad the means i ome tl ouncil with his general views on the diseases 0 
e on ising, — 4 at least 1 yard, and 18 inches ten. ammoniaeal liquor. He had 9 reference had 1525 made. He quite agree -a 
an 


wy ah een and economical in i 0 : e d 
d Wurzel, Parsnips, C. m „Man 1 economical in its application, or the proporti | of the foot-rot in sh nd the vesiculat iag 
Seward enough T hemia sta and Beet, MoE not Tiki Sè a uld be used in his liquid 9 3 in the feet of sheep 8 . the former being a die 
Teceive damage themselves, E. BEN Potatoes, or ng it likely that the i Se “= p equal interest | in tbe 8 hs of the sheep, analogous to the om 


t : 
a > = ind mot hesitated to —— the — he d thus bee causes, and, in Professor Simonde’s opinion, 1 8 

107 = tieties, Favoured the Con i nha — Camoys | contagious nor r infeotious; tbe Iatter, or 3 * . 
a AL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF E personal neil with a iption, from his own ease, “4 rising from eons stitutiona’ 1 causes, t i 
A Wesxy BEKLY Councit was held segis M Wi — of the hanical arrangement of not only showing Sem lves in the feet, “pal ia et : 
in — on T at the Society’ ` 1 Mr. St —— i wor on his farm ; and ste Way and | month, and frequently on the teats of ope come cg 
Fe ; ! — — M. P., with their opinions on the a applica. considered that animals were ren i 
: Ga ; the | much ins Sa e isher er Ho otha 10 derived the vitiated atmosphere eee thi 

R. , removed: from h 
nee Cherry ; Mr. Christian - 5 cae * 5 — colleague, the late Rev. | their titen 8 we or syste 
mri, Mr. Faller, M..; n e ines of Flemish H usbandry,”| being suddenly altered. This, he 
isher Hobbs ; Me. Majendie ; l, M.P.; Brihta pg right. di account for the cattle of Colonel 
Me. C, E. Overman ; Mr, Pans ab, ME j nure by meansofa cask with uid ma. 80 soon affected, as the other animal A 
ne 5 Prof. Simonds ;| Aisia from the — 8 filled been recently purchased. As an epi ebe 
by being placed in a road sunk | disease affected animals in consequence al? au 


THE AGRICULTU RAIL, GAZETTE 


C0000 
ding over a considerable dis- undoubtedly eee, 3 with the pure fluid and with Cortzces anp Fanus, We are corrected by several corre- 
while an re was a . 
fined 


Gaie of atmosphere, extending < 
atmosphere, — eu 
—+ country at the 1 
endemie disease ar 


f h 
oot a oe ina sing! ded 
ina sin e instance succeeded. 
8 had detailed experi 


sed over i, while Prof. Simonds 
dise ase had its hii in the sa 
unfavourable east (especially of cold, un- 
drained, wet pastures) th Soa 5 it in the 
former All parties, agreeing in the 
of occurrence, bat differing daly’ in their pte to 
ex pate ee 


rous presents having 1 — before the Coun- 
2. their thanks ordered to the — pective donors 

for their attention in transm hem, the Council 
adjourned to their Monthly — . on the 6ih March. 


8. 
How 3 . eulth 4 od xf phe aso and 10 
People vi Tr eland a Let 
t 


ardro rrace, ommon 
THIS is a pamphlet, from the pen of General Briggs, on 
tory question, and its agricultural bearings. 
0 the ne side that life is only about 
page! long in some parts of London as in others 
k here it is p ae being those 


as 1ed out 


PIH 
Joy 
3 


wage Manure Com- 
to effect this by pipes, aud distribute the 
uid form by hose. The Manchester 
vompany take boat-loads of the sewage 
8 and distribute i 


2771715 
i 
3 ö girs 


Íi 
EE 


r the efficacy of pea 
ertilising os aad it certainly | 3 
nily satisf 


actor 


i 
Eg 
5 

os 

525 

S 

c 

8 J. 

5 

R 


JE 
i 


interested in Sanato Ref 
À Tyttelton a the Rev. 9 ——— 


F 
10 


He 


F 
Hp 
= 


ascertain 3 deodorants, with a view 
dy rin ela ive sora TR fluids prepare 
and diluted with W. B t, both pure 
from Peat, on th water er, sare . hareoal prepare 
and adopted e plan patented 8 Ms Jasper Rogers, 
— by the Irish Amelioration Society, w 
Tefuse, a to three ‘kinds of offensive 


f pi 
FE 


f 
č 
SSe 
E 
81 
i 
] 
E, 
3 


able isenga, i 

mie sweetish ema: i gement of a d e- 
Ala the Smelling gas, in each ins t ural 
‘om Present then, g considerably abated ; but 
tensive t thought the ur i ess 
on 


charcoal as a; 


r W. Burnett’ 
8 jat the offensive | 
was applied was | 


the — diluted ; at amount 


the 
E 3 
stantly and 


asper Roger 
already been shese to — this Jou ogs of 
Ireland certainly might be made to N an 5 
less supply of charcoal, fot t use either as fuel or a 
manure ; and the gra adual removal of the peat would 
Me the me ional advantage of exposing a surface of 
ultivable land. General Briggs has placed in a most 
. light the singular contrasts 2 the whole of 
the sanatory subject presents; our rests, on the 
ground eit ither of food or health, being 80 entirely 


as they are. 

1 on Land Drainage. By John Duncan, Land- 
surveyor, and In 2 under the Drainage Act, 
Oliver asi Boyd, Edinburgh. 

Tux cheapest pamphlet senian on its subject ; and full 

of useful, sensible, and e eee inſormation. It is 

a collection of Mr. Duncan’s Letters on Land Drainage, 

which appeared in our last year’s e. 


Calend ar of Operations. 


NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE Faun, F With the exception of 
a slight —— or two these last — ‘days, we have had remark- 
ably dry weather for a considerable ti The land and roads 
are am Py as dry as summer, which ore been very favourable 
for getting on with farm work of all 3 Spring sow. 

ing has partially commenced upon the clay soils 
anda five e upon the Wolds have 3 made a begin- 
ning nae week ma Oats. Itis earlier than most of us wish to 
commence, but weather is so tempting, and it is very desir- 
able to — a meee — bed. ne weather has likewise 
been taken advantage of for sowing spring Wheat, and I dare- 

say a considerable portion has been putinto the ground, proba- 
bly more than usual, Spring Wheat is not pees toa very 
great extent in this part of Lincolnshire, nor do It ink itis to 
ne 
ft 


+ 


open weather has contributed considerably to th 

Turnips, consequently they are not so dear as they were, and 

probably may be found plentiful i in the aud, from the same cause. 
de 


STIRLINGSHIRE CaRSE Fani, — i ae these two 
toamna Ht in 
— po sown 


tinued favour. ire but for these few 
stoner and wet, and to-day we have had a considerable fail of 
now. In last week’s rete there appeared something of a 
fiare ment to offer a premium for a machine to cut drains in 
such a way, that without any manual labour tiles may be laid; 
3 also for e ceed in after oe are laid. As I would 
ish to encourage undertaking, with a view of assisting 
— carrying N aie: improvements of our country, I would 
beg to state that I have no doubt such a machine may be con- 
— and were it worked by steam it would be a great ad- 


klesa 
2 feet deep, = two turnings, and q 
laid, with the exception of a little 
cle from the wo am of the drain; al sc 
another plough for torrie in 1750 I have had it several 
times at work on — tarm, und my present object in writ ae is 
to state that ifa drawing of it was required, with a view of ex- 
Pa ting the one contemplated in England, it-can readily be 
ined. Several prizes, including a premina from the High- 
land Agricultural en, Ty naye been awarded to Mr, A. for the 


. 


f Pe AS in ‘excellen 


weather continues fine 

5 e are now at cm for 2 dure, op. The follow. 

ing is the system we adopt of feeding o which are 
ia We study to have some Rape kE he 4 7 Pate of the 
nter ; the ewes are turned = | Rape two or three hours 
tin day, and put into the yar receive a little hay at night. 
I find on an average they 8 an acre per week. After 
the Rape is done, they are turned on the early sorts of Turnip. 
A fair average crop they consume about three. quarters — an 
acre per week, and hor = now folded o maim Green- top 
n allowance of the lov er, 
it is both food aa} litter; and they inrir ve 
as they be gin gee 


store for th 
ibs ‘better this — — than hey cis, pee two years past. J, 


————̃ F W — 
Notices to Corresponden 
ORNAMENTAL A Pourter, by — Rev. E. 8 


810 
Dixon, price 5s. now ready, = may be had at ee 
ce of this Paper, and of all ee 
Appress: S T Bedwell. We have it 
Asnes: JV B will find them useful n his young Wheat, but 
he had better tore til 3 has 9e come. 
A FAILURE or Ren Drainage and deeper culti- 


bear is 9 a — 5 Road scrapings and any 
mineral matter, such as marl, gak which has e — ex- 


ed to to the air for a long period, are a good addi 


CaPiTAL: T Williams. Neither R. G.“ nor any ne we e can 
answer your quesi It de on the quality of land 
and of cultivation w markets demand. 10l. to 
15%. an on land, and 4l, to 8, on pasture, is 


141 


y s 
spondents as to the existence of icul 
5 attached. There is o a Wh aine oe 
uffolk, and lied 


8 bridge, i in — Both have 
ORN MILLS: Tuesday, You 5 ‘etter pe Dl 
mingh: Parkes, of the mt np aso ein, Alla 


: The — 
cost; at least so most flock-masters will s man is worth dts 
: E S. You will 


ISPOS. : aa = Be 
selling 75 —_ produce and boie manure oo money by 
con i 


n 
erag 
10 — Lcd the less bulky manures 


beyond 20 tons, a 
ou may avoid a considerable naib in cartage. 
8 : A Sub. waggons carrying drain tiles liable 
0 


Eces: A Cottager. We can suggest nothing unless it be re 


the eggs may be stolen. You should p — Mr. Dixon’ 
work on poultry, which answers oe 3 
Facts FROM GWEEDORE: Torbay. It is out of print. Your 


FEEDING CATTLE: Anon. Soak ig a day and a half 2 lbs. of 
Linseed meal in seven times its bulk of water ; 1 it over 
a bushel of chaff; Cust over that 4 Ibs. of Beau. me eal, and 
mix the whole well up * in two p bo give one to 
the ox in the mornin the other at night. This, with 
Jet. of Swedes daily, will be — fare for an = ne 
to 7 ewt. 3 e food y.—Oat-! is the 
2 ſor penn or 

Gas WAT Ht pam soak santu or 2 with it, and 


mpost as contains 200 or 
ain water collected in 


apply e acre so much of the c 
390 galons ofi it. 
OLD AND R PH 
wooden Aeka and se aa tod by 
ggg Lea 

GRASS: 


Anthoxanthum odo en ‘| 
3 ——— hae 
tensis, 2 lbs.; F. rubra, 1 Ib.; 


Lotus 3 tus, ł 
ri atense perenne, 3 los.; T. vane, 
975 ‘Tbs. in pci a Barley 1 — * aere. Apply 
toa ‘respectable seedsman for these seeds, and he will tell 
you the prices, 
RASS LAND: J Smith. If we understand your question, our 
answer is that the succeeding crop will be the better for a 
year’s rest and depasturage. 

GREEN erie 2 Alexander. Mustard, Rape, Vetches, Italian 
Rye 5 will suit to 
ploug hi ta. “Tt is i an economical proces ter 
way is to pass | = em — the bodies of animals and attain 

dou of the mutton made 


B 
— 
© 
ss A 
— 


nditi 
Lime will 2 nearly 
Slake 80 a 


fi 

22 Cantab Why not 1 to 
those who furnish our market reports? You are quite right 
in the matter of thin seeding, 

LUCERNE: A Sub. Twelve pounds of seed per acre are to — 
sown about mid April, in shallow drills 14 ine goss 2 part, on 
deeply, cleanly, richly tilled soil of the lighter so 

Motes: J WL V. Perhaps some one will say whether they should 
be extirpated. Certai tainly 1t it is possible for them e tee 
mischiev R If tbe land were ours we sh 
TURD but not with perfect confidence that 5 were 


P. Excuse our asking if you have applied 


MoLE Proba 
mention of a name has all 


: W. 
to the party you name pone 
the effect of an advertisem 
PARSNIPS: J Stokes. The ae an nd cankered roots are some- 
nine of ees kims sie — yr diseased Turnip referred to the 
as Aubrey, and the cause is probably 


2 B, Le icester. The Spanish breed will probably 
als 8 u better = the Dorking. Messrs. Baker are good 
5 ‘The P en and Turkey are the only birds 


3 Kington. 
KURAL ee A Working . — “We must not publish general 
denu: — ep" of this kind without specifying the locality to 
which t refer. 
So 3 25 I Scholefield. Can any one say anything of the Agri- 
ultural Industrial School, somewhere nea: eds, that is 
ucted on the same plan a — 828 of the late Mrs. Davies 
Gilbert, 2 — . so dee Su 
: H. Every 100 — of e e urine may 
be held to a ain about 40 lbs, of carbonate af — or 
its elements; and oil of vitriol enough — supply about 40 lbs. 
of sulphurie acid to it must be 5 — 5 3 its er yo 
decomposition. That may be perhaps 6 of t 
vitriol ordinarily sold. But ‘ee 8 po is > eee 
into the tank a quantity of — every week till it no longer 
causes effervesceuce; see p. 848. 


rke S, 
MITHFIELD, Rae sewn i Feb. 26, 
nu asts, and trade ve 
our top quotations * — difen ty rea 
13 and son r remain unsold. Altho: 
beep is small, i quite ade 
enoar 1 advance * price. 
nes being maintain late and 
e ee ke ap ahr 536 Beasts, 1070 2 and — $8 Calves ; from. 
8 and Sonys 3 N and from Scotland, 4 400. 

e of8 lbs Per n —s d s a 
Best ge soe de 4 O0to4 2 
Dito Shorn 600 “sie 

— rg oon bee 94. 
rog N a 8—5 0 
Ditto Shorn 3 8 — 
Beasts, 3476; Sheep and 5 17 1 “Calves, idp: Pigs, 188. 

Mare 
We have to-day a heer supply o — Beasts, and a bright 
morning; consequently trade is much more chee ful. Although 
it is difficult to obtain any quotable 2 agi a large 
ones rather more money to be given in 
mber of Shee; =p e also small, and the 


many instances. 


Milch ee ws from — home coun sed 

Best 8 5 Here Bes e 4 2to4 4 
to 3 ; Ditto Shorn 

Dis Shard a 3 1. 0 


serere 


fords, 3 6 to 
Best Sheet nine 3 4—3 
2d quality Beasts 2 8—3 0 
Best . ee ey 2 
ait seats 4 6—4 8| Calves n af Ome. 
Ditto Shorn 85 Pigs È ; 0 
Beasts, 849; Sheep and Lambs, 1760; Calves, 112; 


t.. 


— 


142 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. (Manon 
| k, WATERSIDE, Feb. 28. URNIP SEEDS, & 
VENT GARDEN, Manon 3. POTATORS._Bovtnnane, 
he-market continues to be tolcrably weli supplied with, | The Committee report that oni market is s0 well supped, W. DRUMMOND & SONS, Apia = 
; are s heavy, that a l Re on a 
— — Forei Prat pes — — dearer, | oy fa over esoription of Potato on ey Miir 5 eae of All parcel and other AGRICUL Caen DG 
' ist of Beurré Rance an tions: Tork Regen 1 , with 
— Beurré. Apples are geting dearer Nuts in genera al 4 do., e a ree eee: 3 ; Scotch Cups, 90s. to 100s, ; Whites, 7 * to of Grai — 2 —— a free “ot pl mine in 
are-sufficien and Lem ons are — 90s, ; French Whites, 80s, to 100s.; Belgian do., 708. to 9 ee n and. other parts too 
tifal. A few Strawberries have made thelr appearance . Amo t| F chere is a direct communication. 
Tegetables, Carrots and Turnipsareabundant ; Cau'itiowers an and | A SRICULTURA AL SEEDS. 
Broccoli sufficient forthe demand. Asparagus, French Beans, | MARK LANE. P 175 . nase 
Rhubarb, and Seakale are plenti —.— Potatoe oes are rather on | Monpay, FEBRUARY 26.— Ther appears to be a Mangolds, Carrots, Kohl Rabi, Saren tps, nan oft 
— — s are plentiful. Sut 1 Flowers consist’ of | trifling 2 in the priee of Wheat at Liverpool poco Seeds, Ke. at very low price 
E cg > treated as en DUNCAN ai 
II Pelargoniums, Christmas Roses, Cs Camellias 3, Gardenias, | and irmingham ; with this wegen the p — — re- Charing-orosg, London. Prices sent fre 
7 Hyaelnths, Cinerarias, Puc’ Roses. main nearly the same as last week 1 ie 3 a 
“Pine-apples, per Ib., 6 —— imonds, per peck, | ing, the supply of Wheat from — Kent, and Suffolk HOMAS WH ALLEY Tn 7 
3 . again very small, and sold slowly at the prices of ANNUAL PRICED LIST OF AGRICULTURAL i 
4 dessert, p. beh., — 125 Walnuts, p 100, 1s “ees 2s | this day se’nnight. Foreign met a retail inquiry, and eady, and will be sent free on application. 6 SEEDS 
ea rr 4 2 | Nate — — 223 was generally disposed of at a reduction of Is. per qr. requir iring 1 E at wholesale, 
— — to ae Filb.; p. 1001bs.,60st0100s | —Barley of all deseriptions must be written ie, per qr. and Flower Seeds, which may also ben ws 2 po | 
Lemons, per doz., 1s to 2s — Cob; p. 100 1bs., 908 to 150s | cheaper.— Beans are the turn in 8 of the buyer.— pe * Freight paid to any port ii Scotland, Irdand, Oi po | 
—— conor Soa so — Brazil, p. bsh., 128 to 163 We observe no alteration in the v of Peas.—Oats| 12, rge’s Crescent, Liverpool, 
8 ale at 6d. per 4e GREDS. — MEADOW AND PASTU 
VEGETAB are a heavy sale at 6d. per qr. is -M V URE GES 
SEEDS, tur: ted t 
— paer oaut Spinach p.o ip, don 00 to 18 6d Fray, Manch 2.—The arrivals of grain in ee acre, allowi 2 r e sails, es at 
— = ct te d to Is Onions, p. bunch, 2d to 4d during the week have been moderate, with h thoa cep- | sowing and treatment will accompany the seeds. Mixed som 
Greens, Sy doz, bunches, 1s 6d E ls 6d to 28 6d tion of 20,750 qrs. of foreign Wheat, and having but a | fo n pg 3 Grass oom ae 3d. per Ib. Fine sorts fp 
to Se orem iso fs very small attendance of 2 business in all articles | 1ming Lawns, ce. 1s. 
Caulifiowers, p- don. apne ling, P. hf. sieve, Is dd y dingly flat, but we „ 9 aren —— beg to notice that their Agriculjun! 
— white, p. bun., | Was excee ist, with prices, for the ensuing season is ready, and 
pi bror — bun. ad dois 34 T a — — ate at —2 the value of Boer. ee white Peas, which must forwarded or on application, a as diy; as the ae n e a 
— r sieve, lsd 8 to be written 38. per qr. ower Seeds dress GEORGE G 
— —— 1850s A erusalem, p. halt eedsmen, &o., to the Royal Agricultural Seb 
— per cwt., bs to 9s sieve, 9d 3 Ne Poon FRIDAY, 3 2.— hars ii ium, &. & c., 26, Down-street, Piccadilly, London. 
Tar —— — — Cabe 25 ls . Nt ce Tuesday, and only i limited, supplies. There is a 3 —— ge OF HALF-MOON ST 
Red py dog. dd to 18 Endive, per score, 1s to 28 6d small attendance = this day’s market, Ssa rather a slow AS GIBBS. AND CO., 
— AD, bal.,istoés ` 1 z p. pottle 6d tols trade, but e prices Were ste r both Wheat and (By Offici e the Seedsmen to the 
“Asparagus p. 100 2s to 8s Small Salads, p. pun., 2d to 3d Flour, aes sian were very firm. No Siam in Oats, Oat-| “ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND,” | 
P p-punnet 9d to 16d | Fennel, per bunch, 2d to 3d — Barley, Beans, or see 1 Corn was in fair re- Beg to remind the Members of the Society, and Agricaltanss | 
2 22470 43 66 i oat ch, 2d to 3d — at an advance of 6d. per in general, that their only PITERA o and Seed Wap 
i 7 Thyme, per bunch, 2d to 3d 3 heuse is at the corner of HALF M COA ae -PICO j 
Leeks, — 2 arsle > anion 1264 — IMPERIAL War. BunIXV. Oats. RYE. | Beans.) Peas. Priced Lists of 8 mre 22910 always ready u 
Cel dt to 18 — Ar 0 ts, p: bales, Isto. 6à a 45s 4d| 29s 1d 176 1d 983 4d! 31s 1d\34s 9d the season, and may be had on application 
3 per suno — 27... 45 8| 2810 17 0 28 11 | 30 8 |32 8 — 
Carrots, p. don. ˙ bunch, 4dto 8d | pop, 750" 45 1| 2810 1611 |28 5 | 20 3 [32 6 P oe o P 
Har. Per Load of 36 Trusses, - a 1 5 Pe z — ge 2 — F pt n s 2 perty of withstanding the severest frost, and to be consequenty f 
Surrartyp, March 1. 2 Bie 46 4| 29 8 17 527 8 30 10 32 11 superior to every other for hydraulic purposes, such as 
— 33 How Glow wos ote al ORIGIN] ees and lining of Reservoirs Distouns, Bethy, Fishpond aaa 
nferior — * New Clover. = — i external plastering and ornament shagia it req 
a ee I co . ˙ 
CUNnERLAND > Manxer March 1, — rer. web ei eee eee J. B. WRITE and Sons, Milbank-szwes 
Se re rra * Inferior . ... 0s to 80e — Flu ni tuations jn {he Jast six eek poaa erages. Westminste 
—— eee 63 aoe ew Clover eee = — ICES. | AN | AN. gi EB. 3 | EB. | FEB. 17. Fru. 24. TAREE S METALLIC HOTHOUSE WO f 
Old Clover 90 95 ' Jospua BAKER, 475 y ie er 55, Lionel-street, Birmingham. — Proprietor, | 
t March 1. os Pi | a 8 CLARK; Manager, Mr. JOHN JONES. 
ee: ca 72s | New Glover ... ... 808 to 90¢ | 45 11 i 7 ise Mr. CLakk presents his grateful thanks to the Nol Nobility ui 
Inferior ditto 50 g — S — — 5 3 — -a 3 955 ae ET Gentry me their liberal patronage ne oe — r 
Mew N OS | — sis 8 * durin; riod of thirty years s to state 
Old Glover ... ... 92 100 repeal of. the p on Glass enables h him to offer his Abra 
* 1 Spe ag at Senet 5 —. Thess 122 
i erpo Ake irmingham. azed with Britis eet Glass, = na 0 
| — | — - = as 0 POD | — fiches in length, and of such thickness as to preclude al 
PRICES ) : danger of accidental breakage, gtu st that I 
CURRENT. Feb. 19 Feb. 26 Feb. 20. Feb. 27. cone — itn Feb.28| Feb. 22. March the actio pind oat tered eee 
8 * | mode of glazing adopted. As a ae f =? —— 
i qr. 70 Ibs, 0 lbs, * 62 lbs. 62 lbs. houses, in which all the most recent im | 
„ e, . . . s. d. s. d. s. dl. s. d. combined, Mr. CLARK refers to the Dare om 
6 4 610 15 to50 14 15 8 045 36 t045 5 9 8 85 9 6 “6 i him in the new Royal Gardens at Windsor, 2255 
10 7 6ʃ46—53444— 504048 40—47 6 2 6 916 2 6 10 — judges to be the most complete of its kind 
6 8 7 0042 re yait re 44% 4 6 806 4 6 8 — 
7 0 7 846—50}44—50}44—49'44 466 0 6 96 2 6 10 patent ALKALI COMPANY’S METAL 
40 52 — — 5 4 7 25 4 7 0 PAIN TS. —Corouns: a Eiin rome aps 
| ; — — a eee — a Patent process) eo 
sbi 0 Ibs, and far 8 all 
N ER er 3 — — in point of ‘durability aud econ omy, two coats being P 
Tan — — pane — se be more than equal to three of ‘any dher descri 
qr. qr. qr | their ‘chemi ical 88 . ss — A — 
a s covering Iron, Stuccoed, or Bric ings 
nam 22—25/22—25/26—28 26—28 | 23—27 23—27 — The have been expose n 
318—338 aa —32)\27—31/30— fing ans 29—33 29—33 action of — and of the sulphuretted yde 220 
4—28 24—2 — 5 ek valent in Sea-ports and Tidal Harbours 
ears, without change e attention of the Ship 
particularly directed to the Company 
5M 5 — Metallic Black Paint (the only Metallic 
' 3 produced), waren h will be —.— — most 
20 — i effec ervative when applie ron Ste 
12—20 —— 20—26 | Wooden smetje o forms a beautiful 
: 7—19 17—18 | Stoves. No other Paint partakes in any degree 
17—18 17—19 perties which constitute the great value 


a sesh ood Numerous and most 3 pr which 
8— — — 3 sowie 8725 * 
6—44 36—44 be had of th tary, or of the Age ált 
30 —32 52 — | — | 12—13 | 29—32 Price: by these ai. 5 
—36 — — ann — da 0 ackage 


— 


3 to Seoretary, Mr. J. W 
—35 3731 28 ny, 
rn ae #/S1—33/26-—32/26—32 | 11—13 11—13 — ont — — who we the — 


VV UE 0 


3486 8637337436346 15-16 Ti set ventas not mea 
28 —30 28—31 28—31] sid sau 1114 1 Clarke = Fill, sect x 
fi 


mpton ; srs edo 
$ be — y sb 
x, Tregedna, near Falmou ibi i 
. NEWINGTONS PATENT HAND en , 
saro en 3 3 — i depositors, fo — are te 
r 
n sets 0 cups, 10s. each depositor. 
seed alot will in aps, 1 clear the cost of apy one 0 


THE REGISTERED HAND-ROW-HOE 455 0 
VATOR.—With a man can with ease hoe most 5 q 


1 


ad 
— — 3 the im lement 
e 1 9 


e oe 
t establishment, y 
for the to hee tere for eee. 


— 


1640. THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 1 ds 


2 n.. ; GLASS FOR 2 == 
Sales by Auction. GREENHOUSES, PIT sed = trey, ES,, | WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT. 


N NURSERY. ETLEY anp CO. 
To Noblemen . — eet Salidets, and Public ‘of British Manufa — supplying Wo, Sheet > 2 
0 e jes engaged anting. — £ atth — — REDUCED P 
ESSRS OROT ROE AND MORRIS are in- 8 made on 1000 g ee 
i Smith to sell by Public Auction, on zes 8 Per foot. 
M stracted by Mr. Joia — ONDAY, March 5th, i i Under 6 by 4 at 1 ija. i er is Hyp * 
, i ays, 1 o'clock each day, in rom n 4 55 „ 5 „ . 0 75 1 
1849, and he land being equired by the London and T 88 6 „ A * CAB 9 epeei 0 
consequence of the 10. ock Junction kaway Company, the 8 6 10 8 d. ái f 9 GP po 
ham West . NURSERY STOCK, consisting of 10 a s o 2 9 + 244. 7 : 1 f 1 05 11 * 
first portion of very fine Evergreens, Ornamen al and De- z i 47 15 i 
a ends ide nest deserip ion of Fruit-trees, and Ameri- Larger —— not r 40 inches long. 40 60% i i wa 
—— tu in great variety. From = eens —— ai the 25 oz. from ame o r er square foot, N to size. Mi l 
can remove safely, and from their extraor inary 15 
soil, the plants will re wth, they well dese 26 oz, 34d d. 
ficent growth, they 3 . 1 ” 
sizes and m ‘and the Trade; further comment is : ASNN USED G 
i de Steer being long well known as-ono of the | PATIENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK CROWN GLASS, and | R SQUARE ep wie we EnS, TVORE 
supertiat the best, in the 1 be viewed prior to the ENT PLATE GLASS for Horticultural purposes, at ing, 55 atmosphere not having the sli 5 a rena no paint- 
— Catalogues may b re a each (r (tara to par: A als retued KES AND S 100 2 e feet. was —— at the late Metropoli han Oi . wa 
s; of the — E men; and o LAT ES made to any size tt high i 
— san), oe een Nursery, Leytonstone. 8 er in S heet or Rough Plate Glass. y or pattern, | highly eulogised both for its utility.and pretty — m and 
ge GENTLEMEN, FLORISTS, AND OTHERS ropagating asses, Bee-hive Glasses, ‘Cucumber Tubes, Glass | It — a light and durable 
TO NOBLEMEN, E GENTLEME Re AND OTHERS. | Milk Pans, Glass Water Pipes, a and various other articles not hares, rabbits, and cats, an — a 
70 consigned for absolute sale from M n Geert, hitherto manufactured i in 5 Pheasantries, and to secure -po adap or A 8, 
Ess RS. PRO THEROE AND. "MOR RRI IS = in- | PATENT Bi E GLASS —The p text i it answers adm pois r e y A 
ted to s to public competition by Aucti et price of t hould cause a =e of creeping plants. L ig all kinds 
the Mart, se dean on re RF Sth Mar ch, 1849, a . — window glans iu ina — 8 eo supers No a 75 me, and he Lae ge guan 08 — del 7 — 3 bed 
200 choice Came ias, well se alteration connected with t ash is required, p nsions: 5 
eer Lilium laneifolium ru rubrum, 200 Gladiolus 888255 —— SHADES, as ornamental to, prip me the preservat —— 7 inches wis 2 75 1 — se 
200 eS ndron campanulatum i (1 to 2 feet), 50 fine every description’ of Ka meh go ed of i 2 by ex- 18 git ver" 20 inches ae pa. per yard 
— Trees, 200 Standard Ros — ure. Prices, since the removal of the Excise duty, re- 24 =: — 1 a 
kinds, 100 Ghent Azaleas, 12 Paecitiom m sempervirens | (4 to 6 ft.), duced one-half, List of Prices and ——— g. a 33 do. ld. 1 ” 
300 fresh seeds Ginkoo biloba. May be viewed the morning of spia to James HertTLEyY and Co., 35, Soho- Kiaka, o. “pe foot extra. 
Sale.—Catalogues may be had at = Me, and of the Auc- | London Extra strong Imperial Wire Sheep ‘Netting, 3 feet, 1s. 6d. per 
tioneers, American —— Leytons to soning Pars: if galvanised, 2s. Also every description of 
Kr dann ARTLEY’S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS | shades, FF 
0 BE LET, aN RE RCHARD. nan 11 bout 14 aer FOR CONSERVA TORIE The readers o ar- Blinds, 18. 10d. per square foot with bolts — let 5 f bce i 
Tee Bb Pond Church, Esing- che bh seinen meron A Feb, 24th, must nave observed gany frames; Gothic garden ä 
ie or aden deres of Meadow. E 58 mg- the high terms in which this Glass was spoken of by Dr. Linn- | Flower Trainers, from 34. each; Game: ete * it foot ; 
be Y to Mr. CHANNoN, Baker, E aion 5 8 — ie =e therefore = aprang — = — 8 ss fete Stands, from 3s. 9d. each; Galvanised Tying Wire 10 
ppl ely wi ose of the Patentee, to Which we ants and D : 
SUNBURY, MIDDLESEX. —— a the attention of the Nobility, Ol lergymen, Gentry, — vas Weeviog ft as eoriptiot te Wire. 
O BE LET, and e red edis hors 8 | the M ng, for the use of paper-makers, mieti &c.—At 
w upon imm iately, if re- 2 . e Manufactory of THOMAS HENRY Fox, 63, nbi London. 
6 cule panpa whole, or in separate parcels, A FARM — . the sizes as — — . 6d. per foot. 
173 acres, all Arable, except about 24 z ap e 
be Mr, ne r i 8 by Gandunder 10 by 8 . 8 „ ALERTED STRAE GT aR. 
ni. H. Fricker, Kingston ; ere Ses pee Webb. z4 10 by 8 9 4 bylo e oun ” 7d. eee 
and Chapman, 3, Arundel-s treet, Strand, ” 17 20 e ” E foot 5 $ ” 
” 00 ” ” RG 78D , 7 — 
Fo tt — to rent, from 50 to 100 = of ” h ” ” Eoy 64 + 352 
atl and Premises, by aman of 4 5 25 “ae tt 1 Ag 5 
rent and fùll parti to ~ A = 2 955 24 ” 
„ No. 5, — — ond, Dalston, near London. 25 . 55 1 10 45 410 54 ” - 
3? ” ver 49 
Qua 
100,000 PLANTS AT LESS THAN HALF-PRICE. raging 3 of an inch thick, ani about 26 pie 


: o the f 
WEEKS AND CO., HOTHOUSE Fines and Hor- J — — & Co., 116, = a nna ger — — 
v 


a 
erated, in ihe King’s-road, Chelsea, an “extensi ve Ornamental 
— 2 — — eared e ags ng all the modern I apia = PATENT ROLLED - RUPSA 
i cultu: - f 
— ultural Building, Heating, and Venti proved beyond a doubt that the above Glass is very far superior 
‘discov: r inds i 


— sale teas than half of m4 — varieties are grown and are on | o any hithe: i 
(see Gardeners’ Chron., Feb. 24th, 1849, p. 115). 
ae IMPROVEMEN 1 20. 044 F AND Co., GLASS, 5 and CoLour sol a py, ens ve 
nstrum ERCHAN TS, ish-street, Doctors’? Commons, London, 5 x 
RE y trument Maker (b (by —— — the publio that in Nonsequence. of. the numerous — mesh, light, 24-inch wide ty per yd. 5d. per yd. 
and — me Des public; that he. Shastaken | On rders they have executed in Ireland, Scotland, and the prin- | 2inch 7” — ohn 3 4 "y „ 
out a NEW PATENT for: improvements in in the Va Ives 8 hin —— worries of — they have entered into such arrange- | 15 inch 5” aT fi ong „ E ENT gx) 0D. T 
and Syringes — now 00 sitaple in with the Patentee as will enable them to supply the 15 inch m — s} 55 5 15 “i 
and perfect in their action i. aihe endian Sail show’ Glass in 5 quantity, strictly at the Manufäcturer's 1 “inch st extra strong 85 5 
them to keep —— a rm of the Patent. May be prices. W. P. and Co. have a large quantity of Crown Squares Il the above can be made any width at pro = rices 
worked with two-thirds the — ota any other 9 og in Stock, in 100 feet boxes, from 1d. per foot. Ik the upper aif io — ie any wi it will — the ia one- 
the same power.Manufactured only by the Patentee, 35 “Sole Manufacturers of the Anti- Corrosion and Mineral | fourt aeres 8 waiting for phe — 3d. 
=< t Circus, Piccadilly; where they may be'seen and proved. Pitot tos all kinds of Out-houses, Park Fencing, Farm per neue foot. Batutai — — — Er 5 
.. | ————— E SEATS. „ tree of ee 23388 
15 15 n BREWERS, FLOWER-POTS AND GARDEN SEATS. borough, Hull, or Newea: 
i , GAR- | TOHN MORTLOCK, 250, Oxford-street, respectfully OWERS’ NEW e POT.—An ingenious 


very large assortment of the above |. mechanical contrivance in watering choice plants to a 
PEET ean dis! 


IPES are made to stand Hot Li i 7 
t in o iquor and Acids Every yas ription of- useful CHINA,-GLASS, and EARTH i 
Datan aleeya petit Berib and a Mig sedate no appli | erde dear Bama — — 
5 e g : : i 
oil o 3 — par ecu ae for Fire- e ga See spren nae meek perry oe one 2 0 ie — God- 
„Cas, oses Sarees . 
here perfectly flexible pipe is required. S e ane e en OF ene, —ʃ ni 
V, upwards, and of any length to order. 
Tas 111 r Garden Hose, fitted with brass taps, 
j roses complete, ready to be attached — 
LI I rr —Sole Ma 3 r, JAM 
NB. ven swell.Mews, Goswell-road, Lon 
of Rot. w. * India- rubber Washers — al . — for Joints 
any thickness. for Steam Pipes, and Vulcanised on t Rubber, 
{ay Hishness for all kinds of Joints, and other 


i oC 
pe si IRRIGATOR” ill — permiss of the 
ors, be EXB ED in ‘operation on — unds of 


Fulham 
o'clock, For cards of admission to view the Exhibition and 
the Compary’s 1 alen at the Company's Office, No. 7, 
Waterloo-place, P 


Janes Pa FOR hla RI 8 11. ß . — 
ese LLIPS anp , 116, Bishopsgate-street bt oS ebb FOR THE WORK-TABLE, AT 
P iate e measure to hand their New List of Prices MECHY’S MANUFACTORY, 4, LEADENHA HALL STREET, 
onto LONDON. Ladies are respectfully in vited to visit this em- 
In She of — Winches St GLASS, porium of elegancies, to select —.— a finger- 
8 and pa == beet 11 winders, n eedles, ercers, n ng boxes 
in Cases —.— to the size required, b and all Ghee Fequisites for Ls Ladies’ Work. MECHI 
Bien, Ot „ Buna HBA HE i eee. ae 3 > ost sp splendid Stock in London, of Ladies’ Work- 
vee . 5 Tables ri Boxes, Mache oods; 
2 8 0 Tum d. of iron, they are enabled to ie nako a consideräble 2 2 Iso a great variety of Ladies’ Companion 
T O gid, to Bid. per foot. | the pries of their: ‘will be, eleganfiy fitted up. Splendid Papier Mache Blotting and 
8 wae i, ee 30 71 5 15 0 t rd Racks, nds, Play- 
% 10 rn 5 0 g-card Cases, and Pole Screens, Ink ake 
Boxes charged, but allowed 1 : 0 and b. e superlatively 
t SQUARES IN e 10 0 EAL mp SON'S LIST OF BEDDING, contain- 
— Crown, Sheet. 5.10 0 ing a full 1 Pig Sizes, and Prices; by 
1 108. 6d. £0 125. 6d. 50 0 which purchasers are ena judge the articles best suited 
Tya 14 0 ee 0%16 6 tom make a god n oont free by post, on application 
wa hat — ae i Piae 0-18 6 : a 15 0 ale KUS, 196. (opposite the Chapel) Tottenhsm-court- 
OH aby $ erte 5 23 
100 Piate ss ee: WIND WS, Alb. Boiler ouble arms, up. p to s. — extra; to 24 
e nS ia sizes exceeding 5 feet ows, SKYLIGHTS, in., 102, extra; all above, the same price METCALFE axv'Co.’s NEW PATTERN 
; Sg 1%, Od. Finch — 23. Od. 130, Fleet-street, London, March 3. and SMYRNA SPONGES,—The Tooth-Brush 
— — “4 Ean 1 „„ has — im — 8 e — — — 
a ATENT Ro : U repon inform | divisions of the teeth, and cleaning them in 
jee thick PA — eyes ma B: JE — 8 they are a this time timo ipre- ordinary manner, and is famous for the hairs not ot coming 
oo 5 “1 y | each 1s. 7d. 2 e e e eee e., upon — rape $a An improved: peer: ats de testy 
~ S 8 TILES, LATES. EAEN spea — — — * — — , Tey refer to the — Benotrating Hair. brushes > with, the the durable 1 US- 
4 16-0 26-02. 3202. 3 ee whic! e eommon h Flesh 
; . e ti — erful fri Wel 
ate 8d, pan Ad. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. —— of improved graduated — — ryt ion.) vet 
g ld. 12. 12,44. : | -Horticultural Gardens, wick; particularly the new Brushes which act in the — — . — 


ia sock = the usual sizes, and — to any boilers applied to the large Conservatory. . 4 a Fi of 
. dimen ty ' Reront’ smart e of absorption, . an yer — by means 
Larg servatory g p perties ate parties’ 


NS, PROPAGATING anD BEE GLASSES, 8 
5 i of ire’s, Chatsworth Gard direct import 
late : p — a 
es, Plate and Window G „Shades for Orna- - Earl of Gainsborough’s, Oakham, Rutlandehire. profits and destru ve wo * 
aues, and Glass of bata eee E d atham, Yorkshire. ‘genuine — — pax —— — 
of —— ae Poles, n i o. 's Sole t, 130 B, Oxford-street, one one door frum 


. Self Registering Thermome- Mr. Glendinning’s 
Aud at least 500 other 1 — places. 
f ), Fleet-street, London. 


sins Sol 


4 for trying the quality of | Robert H r near Ware, Herts. } z 
2 5 — dinning? ‘Turnhamegreen, 3 a 3 e 


144 THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 


— — 


FLORISTS TO HER MAJESTY, 


AND HIS MAJESTY, 


[Marcy 3, 


QUEEN VICTORIA, THE KING OF THE BELGIANA | 


SELECT LIST OF CHOICE VEGETABLE AND FLOWER SEEDS 


WILLIAM E. RENDLE & CO., Plymouth. 


ESTABLISHED 1786 


t bei grow some es, and procure the remainder from ee 
ho crest ALET M peta *r eS t mee ne Articles, If, roi d a 8 any — 2 error Afr atany time + made, we shall have pa pleasu 
times te wal in ther Seed 5 and aie to take bac k all thi ings | that are * meet oe he sp ard f. 2 Ses 5 “ea ounid Colleton a een in qua vn ee 
— Testimonials of ‘the highes highest character, if required. 
COLLECTIONS OF GARDEN SEEDS, 0 
CONTAINING ALL THE CHOICEST SORTS, OFFERED AT THE F FOLLOWING P ES : is jaan 
No. 3 8 Ay ag Quarts ve bh ag , and all other Seeds in ee for one year’s supply Kee 1 10 
ong a Collectio malier Quan vt 19 
0. 3.— ste i SE 9 3 
i itto 785 wi ou Wa 
hg T Ditto THE GROWING QUALITIES OF EACH KIND OF SEED IS PROVED BEFORE SENT OUT. 


U the best kinds of Vegetables 
following be the Sorts and Quantities furnished fora No. I. COLLECTION, and contains a — assortment of a 
18 a N 2 known, dor have been selected with scrupulous care and attention, 


— Long Keeping 
— D CELERY —Packet Seymour’s Superb White ONION: : oz., J repe s 
ims Lomi Baniy Prince first 1 Green | BROCCOLI ges Graces vy a warf Cape 1 rc Manchester Red ; „ Silver-skinned 
ack 5 ae ’s Su “White 8 Walnut. flavoure 55 A 
i „ Ve Toci Warwick Pa — L Late Dart White | CRESS—1 PARSLEY—4 oz Rendi rele ui 
2 „ Bedman's Imperial „ True Walch lere CUCUMBER Packet Rendie’s Fine Ridge | ANI 2 b ma 
„ letory : * 
$ 3 Blow i 2 — og Pe ane e5 Improved Willeove Fine Early Frame | RADISH— 4 02. beer s Earliest Frame i 
4 3 Blue ian e Shilling ’s British Queen 18 GREE sh, ” Wh ite and Red 1 
1 „ Knight's Dwarf Marrow 02. Wheeler's e DIVE- qr. oz. Green Cur Aon A. 
ng Marrow i “02, Rendle’s — Admirable LEEK oz. Fine Large Broud-leaved Scotch | SPINACH— by Prickly E 
188 me Dwarf half. o en arl Sam LETTUCE— E -0Z. 26775 15 tee Geib TOMATOES— . g 
. „ La nton OZ. 8 ; 
DEANS ares — Windsor — 13 Early foo = z. Bath Coss TURNIPS—4 oz. Rendle’ e ant Bag weeks Si p 
3 š reia Wond i + Bee Oe tch (pickling) hf,-oz. Drumhead Cabbage i » —— ance 
1 pint Scarlet Run tkin’s Early Matchless qr. Whi 55 1 55 Yellow pete Bes 
10 2 SAVOY—halfe 8 “Green Curled rled PASP To nah a ty 55 ” oks Yella l 
BEET—}-oz. s Superb * bot attell’ aren ur qr. f 
Whyte’s Black Red CARROT— arliest Horn (for frames) E T ib. White 5 VEGETABLE HARROW- r. -o. i 
on. Silver or Sea Kale err Altringham - MELON— Pae — 2 Green Flesh HERBS— Packet Swee pee 
BORECOLE ee 10 2. James's Green et True Beechwood — Savory 
MOUTS foe meee oz, White Belgian ONION 5 "hitas Bias nish ” Th — 
BRUSSELS SPROUTS—}-oz, AULIFLOWER. 7.5 -02. 1 A Red Deptford » y 


72980 
omplele Printed Lists of Nos. II., III., and IV. Celebs can be fo ded by post on application. 
be any sorts that are not iaer in 155 above Collection, increased — of those most desired could be sent. 


CHOICE VEGETABLES. 


e varieties, and will be 3 FREE va Post, at 6d, 
ree ved Willcove 


If there should 


Sat? 


BEET- Bendien $ Superb ` Crimson 


(selected ede AGE—Enfiela Mark ENDIVE—New Large — g ro 
roots of the richest colour) — rge late White variety un- y Co — (a valuable Early LEEK Large Broad. leaved Sco 
Black Red 12 ety LETT UCE—True Drumhead Ca 
BORECOLE "Green Cabbaging (valuable new dorii 1 1 A ee i | SAVOY—Cattell’s Green eet en to k 1 ce ve | 
s Early Admirable (a most the common kind ce 
BRUSSELS SPROUTS—Trne Imported uab! e Early Vari CARROT—Improved Altri — Gon ene, 
r s Late White rs Tacomparab me tk very James’s True Green Top ONION— True e Spanish or Po Pentin 
White (a most sup CAULIFLOWER—Large Asiatic 3 leone ye rao 3 
kind, ready in Shillin, ng’s British Queen CELERY— =a r's Superb White Myatt’s Extra Fin 
bernie age! —. . „Early = omg prea Hed PARSNIP—Improved Gu r 
Walcheren (saved | ’s New . — flavoured TURNIP—Rendle’s Six Weeks 
p Bat re Myatt, the celebrated. Large des rot — * Immense | COUVE TRONOH bas A ae new Vege- Early Snowball 


ta 
ARNOTT’S « T CHELTENHAM SURPRISE” CUCUMBER, 28. 6d, per packet, 


OWER 5 


FL 
We havea very superior Stock of all the Newest Kinds, and as er of the Choicest Varieties a 


re grown un 
SCALE OF PRICES SENT, POSTAGE 
No. 1—100 Packets Choice Sorts, including all pe 
2— 50 Ditto 5 


our own inspection, we can warrant them to be quite new and nal 
FREE. 


ae best Hardy, Half. Hardy, and Greenhouse — Biennals, and Perennials ig oe 
No. i = 6 0 
S reine E c SS 
o 5— 12 Di 7 45250 ; A 
— * 7 Packets Choice Named Imported German Asters 5 2 74 
N D itto „ s S: 4 0 
No. 8— 10 Packets Choice amed Larkspurs ` ii . ee 
No. 9— i0 Ditto ditto Hollyhocks 2 „ 
12 10 — 20 Packets Choice Greenhouse Annuals = 9 0 
2 — > Greenhouse Perennial 25 $ 7 a 
ackets Choice Hardy Biennials and n ; „ ‘= 
A ALL T POSTAG 
useful Chart, giving the height, colour, and mode Sx raising yh 8 — * er Seeds, will be sent Gratis with each order. 
No. I. COLLECTION OF FLOWER sinensis 
Cuphea silenoides Delphinium, fine, mixed 3 i te 
; id 8 
i 8 Erysitnam Perofskianum e" — 22 5 Weener | Polyanthus, — 
— pista — ieee, ocea e Oruikshankii Nemophila st | — 5 d y 
Calli N — . Larkspur, fine German 5 | 8 
ù annia pyramidalis = rysum Leptosiphon densiflora gr. mit rae alba 
cana ee ilia nira + ato tricolor androsaceus Nolana atriplicifolia 
— 4 — — vei SEP Limnanthas s Dougiesii nothera rosea alba 
Ca nan —— — pe Holy ocks $ — Lupinus Har en 2 4 — e aan : 
Catan 1 Boas 
Collinsia bicolor paoksi, new pe Lophospermum s scandens * gracilis xed ee 
Collomia — 1 eliophila araboides Malope diflora Peas 
Carthamus us mœa —— Madia * Pentstemon =f 
Convolvulus major Ipomopsis picta Martynia f ae amm iio 
1 ynia fr 
Dupes Platycentra — * 9 superb, French Platystemon Californicum ee 
eceruleus in 


$ k 
beany oi i le Y N IE 1 Cert typot mynt 


m our 

ws above 21. will be — 4 Ca “aire, which can be had — — 83 any other kinds ‘that ‘may be selected fro 

= essrs, PICKFORD and Co., a any pris ôr 
L Railways; — 8 Cork, Dublin, or 
no way commu: 
Goods to oy, every Peal te ee 
at the lowest 

Kingdom. 


n in e Great Western, Bristol, and Exeter, or South 
het yg by Steamers. | 

nication to all parts of England and Scotland, and 

in G Britain. Any instance of Overcharge 2 55 
tes. Constant Steam 


interest to 
e ee that our € communication from this 


Bl a eee 
‘yee Oza N's Mba eran ag Sue e, Sak 


= : 


WILLIAM E. RENDLE axp COs 


seen Gok Ae mat Mes Ete, sh os 


b 


THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


No. 10.—1849.] 
2 


SATURDAY, MARCH 10. 


NDEX. 
Ireland, r improvement of waste 
lam 


MIXED GRASS S 


[Price 6d. 


NEW 1 “THE GEM,” 


\ U TILLIAM MASTERS respectfully solicits commis- | Y ine aboro to D CO. hav much e p 


Aer of Suffolk, rev.. -++ 153 8—15 6 — 
Society of Enxland .. = — for the above 
a et the notice of A 
Alem, br Aiat a “iain 149 a it 0 a digga 5 153 t a : EO for eee pasture per n to 10s. and m edged PICOTEE yet raised ns bee home 
eben nobilis at 1 è Linnean A 151 a Jar alte — 5 . g aa og 5 exhibited in the First Class wi ands at the 
. 155 armers“ Club—Farm * ‘ 3 n hibit i 
paol rn Man aren ate MERE Te 156 e anna Wier 2 — «ti 4: 17775 à ne, siepi ae Kitchen gar by — leading 9 of the day as baler a —— 5 
e quali A moderate prices. Collection t t he nicle 8. 
Sood, brosn. Ma caer coal ao free | of i ; Flower Seeds, in packs y 3,2 125 25, 58. following terms — sige ag: “gs a m ae 
Cabbage, Pine growing, Hamilto Exotic Nursery, Can A fi th 
a lants, to 1 caus $ 25 52 F and — — of f good — and dimi arkon sand 
Camellia for „ g mel, ME 
— horses Pi — bred. “ia 7 A PRICED CATA Atr 2 PLANT Ts in the | $ vo Rae e for ing a fine crown, without confusion, and 
Cattle, to pe on ng, evilo cramping roots collection of CONRAD LODDIGES and SON RSERY- 
— n ns. sevice H ad Welk established Lag h in tom 10s. 6d. per pair; or, if pre- 
Seinfoctor of ma. * errors 1... MEN, Hackne en der may be had upon — — — ferred g p 
theory per post, Th ual discount to the trade, hen 
PRRI Po 2 to 1 six postage stamps.— Ha b 10. three or more —— are ta sen yi 
Rain near 5 — weeceseacs 150 avai 
H ven ow * CO. have ks otter” as belo ow, at THE FINEST suc pear PICOTEES, 
reo a ral K The trees are of the finest quality, with RLY a 2 d f 
fruit-bearing executing orders from 
N 15 ST D TRAINED PEACHES. their ares collection "of the = comprising 
ae, flowering . 149 Grosse Mignonne, when Magdalen, Barrington, Teton aay omnes, | several thousand pairs of the is the 
> 154 Snail ils, to to ki 11 2 5 Mignonne, Early Purple, Late Admirable lle he plants are very 
. E arrow tr strong, healthy, and well orem and — can be for- 
Seas = 3 Thin reedin g. DARD TRAINED NECTARINES, je arded 8 ety sl ost, at the i charge of 2s, per 
eee Transplanting ,. n, Elrt urray, en pairs, the prices of which are ows: 
: : Scarier Ne N Claremont, Brugnon, Vermash, and Violet — pairs poe fine pakse d, , by 2 * — and 7 : 
s. an 
i Soi i STA DA D TRA AINED PLUMS. 3 pairs ditt newest —- finest first class show ren a p : 
i of reen-gage, Violet ative — Claude, Washin n, Go- — 
ARDENERS’ BENE VOLENT e 1 ION liah, La “an ner White Magn gn num, Red ditto, 1a bell. Fine mixed border A 12s, per dozen pairs. 
is hereby given of an ELEOTIO wo Dia 
SIONERS on the Prods or tics Chari naps TRAINED CHERRIES. Finest first class flowers, 12s., les, and 24s, per dozen pairs, 
of becom ing Candid dates will be required t 5 din sr in th eit Testi- ore. "May. Duke, Elton, Waterloo, Bigarreau, Adam’s Arber. conchifiora, a dean hardy n plant, Lech 
es to th la apron Asen Mare Pra ER * 
inst., 3 time they will b 
ee the Gente. —E. R. ike Secretary. ad OAKS. Fi first cl ri ee BS. blish 7 
91, Parringd Tadon Mach 10, 3 2 -| RENE E ANGEL] ER Wong YMAN, &e. Helier, inest first class varieties, we ape: ed, in small pots, or 


Printed Forms of tie Sec ince by had, on application 


j UR’S = 
SEM ORS WHITE CHAMPION CELERY is 


Warranted a yery first-rate sort, and now sending out for | 


the first time by H. LANE and Son,  Nurserymen, Great Berk- 
next? enti White Champion 
— en chless 
„ upe: hite 70 * 
nish wea postage stamps ‘from 8 corre- 


s. grt pr — 


ER t TH Not PLANTS, F. 

YMAN, akin, a selling off 
from 1 502 15 tock of Transplanted LA nts, in de | 
9 inches to 2 k e ated Scotch 1 Pes from 

F e ce Firs, oot. 
iret e e W, e dee E ree 
: irs, a and 3.yea 


ants, anat. further Hen 


CLPS SUPERS DWARF RED -CELE 

Serre o aaa ata 
„to the subscriber, or 
or the country. The 


Fun rade. 
e Murder and 4, Tranquil- 


sere’ SON N have s til a fine stock of all the 
? rts of ROSES, — they will be ha 
: Kia? Wet following advantageous rms—the sele suena 


D vart Stan Ss: 218. to nat oe WEET 
ee 4 to 18s, 

= sted i by the gitchasereet Fission prices. Ca- 

Nurseries, 


en receipt of two postage 
Cheshunt, Hert 8 


SEED 


a STRAWBERRY, — 
* e F 
tin favour fese 1 be haa om eran K tfu. ness, 
ay by post for Ss. êd., 
y 81. i yi Ags Live 7 2 
i any P88 . a jan Dwarf 
i 8 cut in odd forms and ball shepes, he hem 


yA partic’ Ts as 85 70 fas, 
What sorts ae with prices, to R. M., ; 


Broom Houses Falk 


. 
— 
B EPS 


ite 
yi fine Bo ee, AA stools laid and fit to be 
8 ey are in ag ground late in the ee 
ry 3 has gone to Australia.— Apply to Mr. 


i putt sods a Lawn. 
MRE o Shia 5 
a L, 20, b. Olà Market-place. 
8 Wan supply ckets each containing 
ti eds 
sent free 
stam 


for by, vem in that “sg A packet will be 
brd yep r alte order or postage stamps, 
Jon “AZO 


ages 
1205 pase 8 “ ALBION,” 
FTE 
QEIELD “ax SON beg to offer the 
for 
7 they will ke ae er eae those who 


doubt the best of its class. or fall 

e, Also 3 a ee 
or anny seed, select, 2s. I "pet packet 
* . sent free by post, 


St. 

erse ; begs to offer Several l Thowoands. of the ere 4 — 
worth the “attention of the they are sure of suc 
awe been transplanted sev N mes, and are of fine growth. 
y may at once be with safety planted. where they ar 
3 to grow. A’ m quantity are also fit for po läng, 
they will require to be only a few months in pots, having no 
piv * or tap roots. a 506. and i 60s. per! 1000. A reference 
or remittance required fr an} 


| for 6s. 


men 
i CALCE OL 


l 3 * a higher. price than 5 — * 


N VICTORIA. "RASPBERRIES — 


C. can 


to 
any a ever offered. Prizes were . — to them at the 
Hort. Society’ Royal Botanic and 


de ens, as being the best sh own for 
The fruit in *Corent Garden was 
Strong canes to be had 

5 — er ee 
=r * 


size, colour, and flavour, 


a Covent. G: 
G 


Flee 
Bama 
allowance to the ele 


1 J. AND H. BROW. 


re now 
. 3 — d PLANTS „ carefull 
packed, to any part of th ed Kingdom or the Continent. 
25 New hardy Belgian Aas on thei roots, * 
ower buds, one of b, E ee, 

25 American Azaleas, ditt ditto 15 0 
25 Hardy flowering shrubs, one of a byname 10 0 
12 A including sca white, vag — 

New hardy yellow Abo en drons each 7s. 6d. to 1 

6 Andromedas, of sorts, 1 — sari bd oe 

Hardy Heaths, Kalmias, and oze: os 


6 Fine hardy Magnolias, one — vy — oi 
50 Dwarf App on their own roots, one of a sort, named 1 
a 


Standard and half-standard Roses, per doz., 12s. and 1 
New —.— N and climbing Roses, per d we 
12 Tea Roses for ouse os 


Pi e : 
12 5 cf Rose one of a sort, blooming plants. os “3 
— Choice ee den by — ditto, ditto oe 3i 

0 Choice flowering Greenhouse plants, one ree: a sort 
ice — one of a — we y name ee 
m ant: 


w Japan rn A one of a sort 1 
Double Italian Tuberose roots, per 
re y roots, n tad in eaten pink, blush, and 
1 one o sort, pe .. .. 
15 “Choice Herbaceous Bodler Pits, for 
Ferns, and other plants, for rockwork, per doz 8 0 
U pes Sue a hep aus 15 S & 18 0 
Fancy Geraniums, per d d 18 0 
Best Petunias and Ver — * eof a | sort, pae: ford 6 0 
New scarlet aa oaoa y Geraniums, Pentstemons, 
Salvias, Phloxes, Antirrhinums, —— 
Pansies, and Fuchsias, sain 7 — on „ 8 0 
Strawberry re se sorts, gg s.6d.to 5 6 
25 Papers of Choice F r Seeds, 50 Ditto, 1555 sent free 
by post. Also List — — — and Bedding plants, and 
seeds of all kinds, 
Albion Nursery, Stoke Newington, London, March 10. 


; 0 


1E paint ee es Ba Mt J. 3 Ken- 


DUCHESS ite, eee middle size, very easy 
owth. First class Certificates, — p e South London Fiore 
cultural, the London ural, and other societies ; 

favourably noticed in 2 — N Journals oomin 


season, — Plants in ae 10s. 6d. e 
LA —.— * free bloo! — middle size, will bear 


Ma og wing, 5 B. 's locality not o pen enough. — Plants 
285 
has pe eang the followin 


prizes to be competed for in 
1645 which ee been 1 the soc . . for the 
best three bloo s of Duchess, 21. for the second, and IL. for the 
third best, at — omen . ee e exhibition. 15s. for th 
co 


best — bloom of 0s. for 
the third best. 20s. efor the best er 1 of La Reine, 5s. 
the London FI xhibition, 


assorted to suit any « : 5 s of € 
; a good 


3 —— free, 105. to 188. per doz 


30 vache of newest and — Flower Seeds, per post free, 
—GREAT YARMOUTH NURSERY, 

GAINES begs to inform Amateurs and Nursery- 

will send out next week the NEW SEEDLING 


E 
tained several prie at thè 2 near London in 1848. 
criptive List of the above can be had by applying at the 
tating, — = tare ; i 

FIRST-CLASS GERANIUMS, te inte VERBENAS, &. 
ENRY WALTON begs to his n 
d th blic, that his Be Catal 

the above is now ready, containing 
son, It may be aga on applicati 


ogue of 


been 
down land to 


1 so 
to 0 8 very expense, vis. : 
THE eee oun RTS OF GRASSES — £s 

£ 
1 
0 
1 


CLOV OR 7 coca PASTURE, mix 
8 be the soil, per ac 
GOOD PRODUCTIVE PERMANENT GRASSES, 


GIANT SAINTFOIN, per bushel 
PETI 2 GRASS SEEDS, consisting solely of 
e finest and shortest growing kinds, per bushel 

255, or peles 

SUTTON’S RENOVATING MIXTURE of Perennial 
Clovers yy ne Grasses, for i n old Pas 
(6 to 8 8 
Fresh Lucerne, per lb., 1 

Belgian Carr 


D 
o 
koii 


ASS AND BROWN’S 5 DESCRIPTIVE PRICED 
CATALOGUE a 1849, sent free by pos application, 
We beg to offer the fo! lowing in —— g many 
i orts. 
choice new so VEGETABLE 8 
A complete Collection, including tuding Thurston" 8 agen | & 2. . 
urpri 


a croft Rival, Fairbeard 
en, and other fine Peas, 20 quarts in all, e ail 
e Seeds, 


Ba Vege best and newest kinds, in 
proportion, for for n 
The e Collection, in smaller quantities 3 1 : = 
A Colection s suitable for a iay, gard 015 0 
st of the sorts 9 if requi 
S SELEC CT FLOWER SEEDS. 

Free by post, with full di for 5 
e., viz. :— > a 
100 varietics best and newest Annuals 1 0 
50 varieties for 88. 6d., 30 for 58. 6d. „20 for 0 

20 varieties best dwarf kinds, in larger packets, suited 
for filling beds on lawns, 78. ne 5 0 
20 varieties — 2 Greenhouse 8 6d., 12 for 5 0 
s varieties choice Greenhouse Perennials, 10s. éd., 12for 7 6 
0 vars, choice hardy Bi Dipun sna erennials, 7s. ed., 12 5 0 
36 a 2 Camaat oe 84; 8 S 


“Remittances with ‘ies — requested 


spond 

of 21. par 5 — extra. 
en to Bass and Brown, or to STEP 

Hortie tural Establishment, Sudbury, Suffe. 


all the novelties of the sea- 
L. closing one postage 
W. a 


2 for 
tan known corre- ` 
o London, anà with all orders 
pe Eig 


pera 


wee 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


~ STRONG ONE-YEAR SEEDLING. “OAKS. LUGH LOW anp CO, have to offer very fine strong) (COD TWO YHaks QU Cl a 
J AMES MELDRUM, havin immen: apeg ye . Ted at Od. to 3 pip 0 100--Clapto — "Ma ey 2 by nug yof good si wer is Fes. les 
the above strong ngs, is oon t 2% 6d. to . Cas per — — room to iransp! 2 t ENILE the eien Wto 
the lowest posible terms. Prices et een applica | pv RUE DRU HE EADS FOR CATTLE, at T. WEL-| SPRUCE PIRS. 17 S ber, aH OAKS, Sot 
tion— Dres Con ERG . Wheeler.street, near Godalming, sures at 4s, 6d. | feet; BL ACK ITALIAN POPLARS Sores 
ure 777 t l ide Canliflow 8, 38. öd 00. LAURELS, 24 to 4 feet; wi S, 5 to 7 feet; 
EMING'S NEW HYBRID PERSIAN having per 1000, "era es mas u Cau per care din poe gin Fi all kinds of Pores 
E soen irst Prizes at all _— Chiswick Shows oF MARCELLIN The most delicate in the.quantity, taken. ee, sit eae graduated 
needs . rr its n . stand the and 155 a d Susan Woop, Nurseries, Huntin dome 
ai northern Germany. recon from the 15t theen SINAL PLANT ; ` 
ing’s New Hybrid ee r ade N of Jane, nted in July. It is bigbly e ie Price, ANTING OF THG 
Fleming ev : ee po 35. „ or 6d per packet; oan nbe iorn arded — ost re- K ae the final planting of our superb Collecti 
— Golden pee A ; 1 é 2 of 8 postage stamps. f Vege- | take Tg y b ex recommend early orders tr ot 
unknown comune ents post- o ce or ers or osta able and Flower sirous to p — elections, in stron 
H. Lane & Son, Great Be rhhampstesd. | ` | Ag ent for the New en ere ae as and Bower's Impro 8 ges, pand sent free by H t; with. 
eaer ering-pot.—Donoan HAIR, 109, St. oa i -lane resan tions hg anuting and treatment: 
Wit a = -aod bit aga ia ae cross, London, Catalogue of prices sent fre 8 25 T did ada varieties, with names, 21, 
bury, having the st stoc greates i i ditto ditto, 1 
gretas, aad. and varieties of Hardy Trees, Flowering Shrubs, Ever. yon Da B. Baty TH begs most respect to inin v Fine older varieties, lös. ; or 25 for 8s, as 6 
Ane a the Nobility, Gentry, and the Tra 100 Finest mixture, 10s, ; 100 fine border varieties, 
his new —. den. e of hardy yellow RN OHODEN- post free, ts. Bus * 
— . — i bee as che aply as preg DRONS, AZALEA INDICAS; CAMELLIAS, LILIUMS, ae. N ee finest mixture, 28. per doz, 
I any other establis — n the country. Catalogues of which may be a Had y per 3 fiue e, 1s, 3d. per doz — . 60 eb. " OP I 
-| Norbitun Nursery, Kingston, Surrey March 10, d. per dozen exi 
., a Se ta wed „ , : Bass and Hnowx, Seed — eepe desen Pirie 
achtes, PATRAS MAJOR, 24 3 GUL variety worthy ART anp NiCKLIN, Fronists, . ai — Sudbury, Suffolk. — bislang, | 
44 every collection; the habit of the ee beg Soothe te public the underoam n I DPWAaRD 1 CUCUMBER, 
er a rich da 75 lum colour, t egs to state a i l 
yua FIREBRAND, a seedling o 1.154 7, most brilliant colours, in the 4 1 1 is ow 
ACHINENES GIES RICH at This one: of the | way of Silve riock’s Prince of Wales, price 2s. 6d, ’ 2 setae hat his naogesiied CUCUMBER, the I 
of the — trie a quite dene Ea he foll i for 2 OF BATH” has surpassed all others of the hardy kind 
— ee i a profuse he following unique collection for 20s. : —Attraction, Aurora, | season, and has been euccessfully. grown y 


— 
length e — — 9 sch — — ye Bell, Berryer, epg bin, Suno Clit nax, a ame, open air without fiam es, against a wall, or-traised KA 


Great Britain, He ector, King of Holland, Mary Jane, Nonsuch, | icis a most earing from 5 
AOHIMENES Nati. y Wuite, Samer mA dwarf habit, — "ademas — Queen ot W Whites, Raiubow, Satirist, joint ; length, 18 to 24 idle. dees been DIEM San 
above can id e, lowers tor the 1 r 
" BROWALLIA JAMESONII, 5s. And good named varieties, 6s per doz, joan 2s. a at . Tarva s neal 1 
PLUMBAGO LARPENTA, tice plants, in free 3s. Gd. . e Pulteney Bridg T Shop, If, 
ree eit dee plants growth, Forget rora, Competitor, Hebe’s | in A * go, ee a ove Will be sent nt bustage frega 
G, also begs to to offer the following at their exed u Des es kop 05 l A eee tags: Aor ee ORE KORA GT, OF Hig 
„ y Circle, Orion, Desdemona, Mare | ug 4 
poms, re left to his selection, and which will be much tothe | Antony, and Mustee, for 2i s. Warrante d strong plants e eee 
\eNUINE SUL MakcH Suwi f 
“Bane cY P GERANIONS, iz, 18s., pi — 8 BES: JAMIN R. CANT feels much pleasure iv G packet of 4000 selected POTATO SEEDS, with 
Srana He * yer —— — r introducing the mpgs seme. d to 0 8 a 2 agri. tions for sowing, Go., 1s, Per 
per "in fan Gi — 2 8s., a ‘cultural — and su He onfidence “BOA CONSTRICTO k” MELON, pea = 19 Lb 
more than 10 ofthe pl Sr AAM outa o aag ription recommend the Seeds, as he has ‘used the Greatest. care in his soon ape and. FLOWER SEEDS, a 875. „ 
ny i anr me per AIN seleccion of the bes ae — 3 10 5 popari — i 4 


digtinet varieti 
EPACRISES, ditto, 12s 89, per d s 4 
i LONG WHITE BELGIAN CARROT... perlb. 1 0 Double BALSAMS, Camellia-fi a 
ty yo rapes Ditto Climbers, 125, is., and | LONG RED ALTRINGHAM DITTO. „ 4 o | ZINNIA ELEGANS ae 
1 AN GOLD WURZ* Ps 1 0 SALPIGLOSSIS, fine mixed 
è STOVE PLANTS and Stove Climbers, 18s., 30s,, aud 42s. LARGE YELLOW Gl GLOBE . 9 ms CK, superfine Scarlet Gia 
per dozen, 1 0 00 varieties — met als, 10s, 5 50 ditto, 5s. 2 
e Trade supplied. SKIRVING'S IMPROVED SWEDE TURNIP 1 0 53 i 
1 6 
2 6 


N. B. Catalogues for 220 will be published on the 18t of March.] PIN E HOLLOW. CROWN PA » n Potato Culture 6d. 


— Asn contain a list uf Stove and Greenhouse plants; 2, Eri. 1 CATTLE CABB 5 All poet ee, ‘on receipt of cash or postage stamps, 


s; 3, Azaleas, Rhododendrons, an * Camellias AG 3 ABRAHAM Haxpy and 8. , Seed Growers, Maldon, 
irda ati Oana hha aaa onas] Sone THREE venes eee °° | UPERIOR GERMAN ASTENS 
AMERICAN NUE = DITTO. DITTO KLAUKIHORN DITTO „ 8 0 fu, miXeds see Gardeners’ Chronicle, September 28d, I8 
mE is RUSSERT ' BAGSHOT, SURREY, N.B. Every description of Vegetable and Flower Seeds, 8 Hardy and Son, Your 8 3 un in 
OHN War 21 on, e We stern Railway | Flowering and Evergreen Shrube; Fruit, and Forest Trees, A | bendtton; — ure cee utiful specim hat sen a | 
J AT „ 44 — that he is prepared — n White Belgian Caproni Seed, at l. 158. per ow. 45 aches, I = ra 5 755 nampe, “port aif, 
Splendid Hardy RHO- t, John’s. street, Nursery , Colchest x m Haxpy and Son, Seed Growers, Malton, Essen, 
DODENDRONS. Good pa haaay bere oo ee 
; z mamia te of ATUES, oo 
which 8 ; 
e a A e bes to co, Nussenrnex avd | (XHARLES SHARPE, Nunsenyuax and 
i eaii ” 3 finest quality, at 2 prie . N fillowing, cage to —— —9—— Hee attention a He 2 2 55 
Aiforubrum purpu- Perpicuumn — — * 1 — eas, of the most beautiful oe sea = d. | dueti sry e, and have p. general 5 to spel 
3 - ove os ) 1 ts of 
Catawbiense bicolor Purpuream elegans tyne a — . piants, do. 80. 15 prices racking wee 25 Per abe shel 60 
„ flora pleno Cœles leu 18 0 u’s Karly Oxford Parai . 88, Od. 
osum Albertii, new, brilliant 3 21 0 — id 
> pl > OTE aniy Ashi d — due 4 : 0 
— — — 15 Stove nee rare aud sho showy, large 9 e OO Early ——— 3 p. 3 
— 100 Sies proved ene . Marly — 32000 hf 
. 1 arf in 30 n med ft fF eee see ar J an 
— ps OMIT i BO Fox’s 5 Seedling, fine for fore a2 
Nen 2 8 tra Ro eaten amed . TELL. Second 7 ports for Winter and Big ma use: 
— oe sis ee ea e san Native Potatoes 50 
contort ORES ee eee ; on — s cr e named ower ng, a mä” p York 1155 w i aoe j 
) Rhododendrons, . 16 a i 12 Very tesa artis Ghent Azalea utish Pink, Kidn Th . 4 
3. s 8, ‘on their own Forty. od S; 
ALEAS, ao ixed sorts, 18s, to 2 25 PE pris bushy plauts, 2 tet et high 24 0 Orders will be forwarded o n thereceipt of a pati 
ver est hid in cultivation, 24s. to 30s, per dozen, 2 large codons the handsomest in cultivation, fine. A be gteat care will be taken to ensure their safe del 
ALMIA LATIFOLIA, b bushy plants, 1 f Fine ti ue Altriogh am Carrot liberal allowance made to the Trade 
5l. per 100 Larger ditto, 12. Gd. to 28, 6d. each. Fines — 308. per sto Seed, own growing, 2s. 6d. per ne CHARLES SHARPE, Seedsman, Wisbeach, Cambridgeshire _ 
An ext-nsive soll A stock of trained Fruit * ILTON’S BE e 
uit trees, at un-| “ b.-HIVES — These Hives are 
3. 1 " 12 low prices. A B eto forwarded on 8 U 1 in every variety, for the purpose of taking the 
| goods delivered free of expence on the rai y without “killing th v. 
induced | ence or s way, and a reier- e bees, They are compo 
him to uffer | re spondents The 8 respectfully solicited trom unknown cor- | terials, and may be relied 2 foe 
: , for GAME | nts.—The Nurseries, Bedale, Yorkshire, th. ‘Their simplicity of ‘construetion a 
. Shing Rey fo Des 5 AGRICULTU ensure success, 
cover, being ree: from from attacks 3 — vergreen for RAL 8s BEE GLASSES of all si nd ticle con 
h 09. Gd. per 100; 5 bushy BS anD BROWN. tegip AR 15 Silom all of | the i ae 
2 Larger dose to D the 3 unlity of e 0 
BE e agoirduivu, bushy, 50s. per 1 $o 21s; pr 100. ! q eidh aage L stocks. tage ear ot | & 
. er eee eee Larger 3 Pear Large White Bel 3 SILKE W 
PRIVET E hon aes CATTLE tina ing N Red PLAN TS.— To meet th taste for culti 
REEN, 85. to 12s, 6d, per ; ANGOLD WURZEL, Y e #4 e growing tas * 
CEDARS oP LEBANON, Tab beet very bush b Reel Yellow. ellow and Red Globe; do., 3 m 8 ik, the advertiser has on sale a most healthy 
BW, very ey bases a Sent, êd. each, a WAITE 8 LESIAN SUGAR BEET, p Plants, pet 15515 LJAS 10s. ; 2 years, 15s. ; and 3years, e 
each, and up grown plants, from 8 80 68540 PURVLE-TOP, and other SWEDES;. silk kworms’ Eggs of the best kind, Is. 6d. per 1000 
STANEARD i WEEPING F nim e bi une e. DALE'S HYBRID, and'alt other | § Garnon Baten en e 
very baa de to 10s. 4 e wik TARE Cat e oe 
SPRUCE, ee — each. i TLE DRUM BAD Cane + 
TULIP TREE: W Vò: ping and Purple Be e Lone, | PACBY and ITA N RYE-GRA a JEANES WA ANTE 
“ias r low Atha other de —— gricultural Seed 35 and all interested in Gardening PY 
C 8 bat de are invited to to examine G. and J. DganE's extensive 
Copse and other © also wish to recommend our sel 3 AND PRUNING IMPLEMENTS “ 
to ang extent done by contract, = Permanent Pastures. and ad a ASSES mixed | made Garden Engines and Syringes, Cualbroo rookdale. ss 
* „eee the selection uc Years devoted considerable attention — Garden 8 Pick 
OLD-ESTABLISHED NURSERY ST er them with a confiere 2 . led to | Ax Grape Gatherers and 
m. WIII e NURSERY, MIDDLESEX. SALE, | 10». per bushel, including a proportion of the Tenge vert te Bagging oe 
ILLMER, „ wer aud other 3 vier varieties i Gravel Rakes and, 
© iota Senior, ully to an- ber acre. Also, tine mixed — 3 bushels recommend Borders, various pat- Steves re poe 
i 8 om relinquishing the | Prices to the T awn Grasses, 1s, 3d. per lb | _ terns Greenhouse D Doors Scissors 
the Se at the above Seed Establishment, fs ee ~ E f Botavical Boxes and N „ Shears 
artes an immediate | GAMUEL COCKING, Sun. sean — a ) ow . 
 EVERG whole | 1I wade, Bedfordehi SEEDSMEN. &., Biggles- k ere ee Frames 
TREES, at an immens REENS, | Friends and A shire, has great pleasure in informi Shaft Engines Hay Knives th 
anned Yews, 5 to 7 fom. | Supply of the gricul:urists in genera T Hoes vt every pattern|Sc 
estinus, 3 to 4 feet; 7 ery other of I i dorticultural. Han- 
Box, 3 ee gly 8 * Taleo Giobe 5 n : 
; ng Yellow ditto; la , Gigantic Long Red Denink Tools i Set 
EED, to; large White He ng 00 Ladics’ Set of Tools 
: CATTLE PAR“RIE some end Long Hea ra it Edging ies ens and [Labels, various pat-|5 
em gears via QUICK, at 2a par ane oe wb ke, | eran in zino por | 
i 8 72 Bava” A ae e Wire, ines and Reels 
M 0 high r RHUBARB, Yanga arking ni; 
2 on 'by epicures. es.—W, M. is now ge sending | 8 yo “aes justly. aly vanie Barde ersanı 5 
2 0 vi laut Protectors | ve 
t| Garden Chairs ano 
3. e Ey 
a J. Duane r 


THE GARDENERS” C 
1014489 GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, 10 
— 1 — —' ä— — — nn 
eens ORTICULTUR 4 “itp : Sk LS 
YERGREENS.—Fine young healthy Evergreens] EI ere is hereby giv S Sire able for rockwork; and give-instructions which poss 
E 51 ediate per 100 FLOWERS AND IT, in the Sdelery 5 Gandia, ts OF | se ss local va 
goo Laurels, 2to 3 feet... 20°. 1,000 © Codir of Lebanon, a omo wil take place on the following days, viz, : Ta — the plants after they are selected, 
= foot,- 20 ing ay aTURDAY, June 9; and Wepnespar, | the main object is to prevent their ov 
—— Ditto 1 to oot 200 et 2 tos feet 50 July It; and that Torsbar. April 10, is the last day on which J p Ea errunning each 
! — Evergreen O: 200 Bays, 14 to 2 feet 40 other; for in rockwork, as well as in other associa- 
sears rninn Ito l 5 — ae —— beg moles oa aly — tions, the strong are terribly inclined to bear down 
Box Te em eee]. so Ribes sanguineum « 32 UNuvEASLU o rY COLLEGE, LONDON. — EI. [the ee 7 YA aie ig things a be found 
21s. |. 300. Honeysue ARY COURSE OF BOT or rockwork than Aubrietia, Arabis ina, and 
ree Box, 3to4 d 3 Aan 
7 Pas 10 10 is e and oP RORESSOR | 2 * Lectures some of the Alyssums; nor any summer occupants. 
4000 Ditto a i to 1,000. Tree Violets 16 8 ° clock, 4 M. Subject. The D 382 r e than some of the broad-leayed Sedums;; 
1,000 peek 12 en enk — and Orders Of Pl bel z and the Ivy-leaved Toad-Flax; of 
s weikrooted, he ealthy, young stock, and will be Plora of Bur 85 loin Er ing nei 5 unless ee eee Ther an, i 
The above are don, Apply to Mr. coe AN, Seedsman, The 3 is adapted to persons commencing the me * 8 8 7 cessantly. ey are, 
deliv vered a ree oe Covent garden, Lon Botany. pony m i = a Course to the Senior Class will c «ee on a small scal that curious vegetation 
— menos on u Lat o ich, in some of the West India islands, is called 
sears ee Brad-haw Gardens Middleton, Renzaz EtG M. 1 called, 
2 = r informs the readers of this TH — H. Ker, A A. M. Bias of Faul bake 15 ree i the Scot chman hugging the Creole,” and of whi g 
Paper osar Mine ino 5 large * be sn his being = —— pias nants C. ATKINSoN, Secretary to — Comnell. some noble specimens are to be found in the Museum 
ATIONS. — ako wie n in Kew Garde 
pectfully offers t below. 
e moneda, fine show varieties, 25 pairs, 255 OBLIN G's, ST. ALBAN’S GRAPE.—Fine 2 years-| If bushes are to be.added to eee pe point 
25 pai s old plants of the above, pane e paid to Lond 10s. 6 
Fine Show Pia ge &e., included, each, usual allowance to the trade. F R r-mittan: re ust 4 . on SENM N dayan umbag 
erhebe. Alpines, Polya thu: uses, Le. We ayable = — the order.— ROBERT — Seedsman, St. Alban’s, Whe, iit ge ars foc aa: and lig (imped ding fle 
NEW AND SPLENDID 1 ANTIRRHINUMS, 
ter. 
ie er RE a FOWLE'S CATALOGUE of bis choice collection presenco is inadmissible pie . all e ade 
MES DICKSON anp SONS,  NURSERYMEN, SEEDS * of ANTIRRHINUMS, whi l who saw 7 neee Mh — r ae 
J. e Secd), beg to direct | them at the Metropolitan ‘Bahibidone of last season, is now pausing with them, and, well m ged, they aap 
T...... parca tegen |à, charming eflect, The points to obteve are 
ter piane. Orders to any exter nt wll be ex cuted punctnally | u, F, will have ready Brat week in April, his | they should be placed near the upper level of 1 — 
e St tke undernoted | prices. four seedling: Aasierhipums, Woolerii, Zs, 6d. eamh Quek Vic- | rockwork, so as to increase its, apparent, height; 
aa plants toria, 7s. 6d.; Prince Albert 5s, ; and Defiance, 58. that. if small they should occu ugles ; th 17 
DENAI — Pa : Holland N Nursery, Hoiland-street, Brixton-road, Kennington, 2 n at 
eee ee 12 10 0 Surrey.— trailing they should be placed on the — terrace; 
2 3 EW RED CONVOLVULUS MaJOR— Pocket | nd that, if'straight, they should be associated. with 
n of th bario icular lines of stonework, to they w 
8 ee by 5 43 . — stamps for each packet to WILLMOTT give additional effect. It is also Sarira that they 
3 eet Edinburgh, March 10, and Cavan, Seed aud Nurserymen, Lewisham, Kent, should be for the most, part 3 
— — — ͤñ.ãl— — — — 
ne STRAWBERRY. % YELLOW GLOBE MANGOLD WURZEL, 80s As bushes for rockwork are far less p ARE A 
ery 3 4 1 9 RR, as . eee e — roved Long Red Ditto phat t- 80, Wannen pin nh ay sagako mentio; 
only, anne in this 55 I iis ipie ital. species for various purposes, all the smaller 
Paper of August 26, in which a description will be foun Cattle PARSNIP S n as Giseh FO RADIAS SRO PpO! 8 er 
ne consegir neo ol ofthe too jo prevalent practice of recommending | White Belgian CARROT < 905 paap if Ga and Ber rries, Savins, Pyra- 
eee e, R. T. was induced For Cas anthas, Cunninghamias, Cytisus, double Furze if 
to submit his 3 inf ruit 10 eon inspection ‘of competent| The above may be depended er being — 3 by the most 
3 parties, whose testimony is given as under, respectable agriculturists in Ken will be given on well pruned, Cistuses, Helian themums, French (not. 
— om’s S — St trawberry when in fall | appliva oon a also naan ral —_ tali ogue — Seeds. German) Tamarisks, Clanbrazil Firs, trae P $ 
3 ig our = ee 8 1 2 WM. a PPS, See — aidstone, Kent. Yuceas, Cypresses, eodars and Araucarias.. to. he. 
— — and one of the best under cultivation. thrown away when too large, Laurustinuses, Ma- 
1 inant, Norsergman, — — 9 5 The Gardene rs Chronicle + | honias, &c., and, in short, any neat-looking plant 
? 3 1 
“ @zonck Canbno, of Smith and Cardno’s, Seedsmen TURDAY, MARCH 10, 1849. which is either naturally small or capable of being 
* 8 į ‘ i — kept small by the pruning knife. The disposition 
— — and Som s, Edinburgh.” 1 . regi eee e re selection of species is so much a matter of mere 
ae Ser Strauberry.—W e mus t not omit noticing a nearer eren . taste, chat there is no apparent advantage in du 
pein _ si ~~ 3 they were raised by ME Tinsi, 2 hor Chil e 3 n 8 r. . 71 upon it. 
Ronext Tan, Gardener, Cornhill; and, judging 8 1 ä se ne other rule will N the zania sketi 
quavity of the specimens, are well deserving the attention of the | 12 400 inet ron Ris TE which has thus been thrown off. . The smaller. 
Ra Bae N pne coleur , and the WEDNESDAY, — 14 aa Pe pions 8 p.m. work i Is, the worse it lo 7 8 0 the more aten to. 
Aberdeens e aphic 8 P.M. . y : 3 
ob rry.—At a show of the I N Club 1 ii 9 tam, keep in health, and vice versa. The steeper it 18, 
Sede there was 3 for exhibition a basket of Tuunsbar, — nö h — the less is it 2 ias growth of e 
hey ate a prety Joking variety, of good size, e ee, = ee. . and vice: vers supposing that aby reason 
— — de a remarkably good bearer; their E . should exist for See it 10 feet high, it would: be 
serving. The Seediin fine, * — — hin se —— pre- Monnar, — <W Sean e SEE EARE N 3 P.M, better to make it 40 feet wide than 20, and better 
ine ae ae Judges.“ — een sar Donar. — 20 Hortica Ot ANEN ea m, still to make the width still greater ; d we lieve 
: y a stock of fiue s'rong runners 2 i pty ee aaah a ‘ ing flower garden co not 
dispose of, early orders are re Wepnuspay, — 21 Geological . 897.1 i pi SG 8 8 
quested, which will be executed l 
Mutation, at Il 1a; per 100; 25 plants sent post free for 7s. 6d. Taunspar, — — * 2771 *. ved than one occupying an acre or two of 
low pe to the Trade. Frrpay, — 23—Philological..........cccceesees 8 P.M. ground, roughly p lanted upon these principles, with. 
:— Messrs, nd Ca rdno Seadem ad Wims Satuspay, — 4—Royal Botanic Sir. . 
8 and Co., Seed . Messrs. 8 1 inding walks carried ean low irregular terra 2 } 
Sous, Inverleith — Edinburgh ; Messrs, Hurst and | In planting Rocxworx; the gardener should well pese in every direction. by. masses of stones. 
nan, 108, Eastgate sere Ch Loudon “Mr. George consider what his final object is. If hemerely wishes | bricks, The objection G it would be its expense. - 
sed 105 R. Tom, Cornhill, Aberdeen, will be for 3 spot in which to pew little delicate 
—Cornhitl Gardens, Averdsen, Mar. 10. species, he will take care to admit no bushes or} Wuorver will take the trouble 1 turn to the 


| UIT 0) $ CT GIANT SAINT plants of Une pms n but if, as rg sually be | ¢ Magazine of Natural History,” vol. ii, p. 1 
3 S sate have now =p an a few heneg the c case, eer effect is nji ‘desired, then bushes vol. vi., p. 22, will find eee een of a vabbit'es 
d, at 25s. per bushel. Orders 5 h, f whi > ] d teeth, 
and Sons, Reading, Ber! pen mouth, from whic er ong curved teeth, some- 
3, 1849.— THE ee EET delicate species, the main thing to ob- | what resembling When a gamekeeper, who, 
A eih und one of abe specimens there represen 
egree. The present ap- brick, in such a way as to be shaded by it from 8 brought it to his master, he declared he had stumble 
ey may be seen growing least the noonday sun; it is true that the branches o oss between a rabbit and an elephant! He. 
e accuracy of 


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| rity ad farmera and, otra ner: and, Je pl nant ee Fe sees mosi P probably had a en eae | 
a - B 5 5 5 $ 
visit to Messrs. Surron’s sample | Wherever plants are so excitable as to push very | smaller animal, or a rabbit only ati 1 s 
r Ae early in tho ir ring, the north side of the whole mass he would have fancied that his y was not 80 
various properties they re- | of 8 should be selected for them, unless they very absurd. That an ephant s to one 
1 are Primroses and Violets. When a natural family, and a rabbit to another, would not 
EV . — W eiil M articular kind of soil is required, it should be pro- | have been considered by him a very violent objec»: 
the Nobility and and Gentry’ that — tr ly to RE ote vided by enclosing a space with bricks, hidden below | tion, And why should it? some persons ne 
es Melon, from one of the | th ; plants requiring peat, | inclined to Have we not heard of hybrids; 


| us 
Km of uf England. This Melon is | loam, clay, chalk, &c., may be made to flourish side between the species of different families of plants 
i a $ proved. 8 by side. if little marsh plants - also e. a just as little related to each other as the Pachyderms 
to be the best yet known. It proper place may be made for them on the and 
¢ itis a handsome shape, | Side of the Tes mass by sin i a iow, e of physiology be applicable to sth p r — 
ading it by super- | kingdoms 


inki 
AR melting flavour, 5 toy mae it it filling it with bog-earth, and sh of Nature, why 
ee Saline neumbent masonry. In this way charming little | scrupulous about admitting the possibility ofa hybrid 
— aud 8 eee n like Parnassia, Anagallis fe es 8 being produce ced between a Pachyderm and a Rodent ? 
of 7 seeds, 2s, 6d. ; with also the Drosera, ee sty, and Samolus may be grown | But is it true that two poi of mes that b 
ithin a few yards of the 9 | haa from to very distinct families, are capabl 


w 

3 — 1s. Od. Dover cliffs. W 
10 „ 1 0 As to the plants to be thus employed, it is useless who declares that he has raised a cross between a 
i w 7 1 ` to give a dist of them, because, aft ter all, the power Swedish Turnip and a Dandelion. —.— of another 
WW „ Ase most respectable and int who ins 
103 a erro ag plants will thrive in all their wild luxuri- | sists upon his having obtained a Nea —— D 
. included | ance orcesters ord, and the west, Turnip and a Lettuce. , then, we have two 
in beauty in Middlesex and unimpea tnesses to the possibility of a cross 


o Tanaan ag r parae are —5 
me 1 t e 4 On 
i General Seed- shop, 18 Pulteney: ments, to consult the eremm ra of e Crucifers*and — plants! 

any tho above, will 9 neighb i, and to observe w between ion an an Oak? fi 


148 THE 


i saeco ll 


iante eh a 


[Marcu 10, 


2 is eatable, but not so that of the ee 
Might we suggest, also, that, since the Dan 


the Oak in size) as the rabbit to the slosh 
aa this reason : tre he ve something to do with the 
0 


their porgar to produce their 1 S2 betes and 
to ~ seed 
When shall be sh ach these marvellous hybrids, 
we may then (improbably) see some good reason for 
calling on ae ogists to modify the de at 
ch they ha ved, or else we may (not impos- 
to satisfy our 7 2 — 
are not at all what they 
to A merely prac- 


which 
sibly) show sufficient cause 
that their 


ose who have neve 


— which are n 

fidence in science is W ‘but it often falters i in 
those who are not acquainted with the nature of the 
— on be important scientific principles have 


At rt, there is no good and suffi- 
cient reason for rb that hybrids can be pro- 
duced between 
s aed po 


they had arrived. 
host of creditable sarod declared 
enting, in 
such a conciusion might word 
r else its 


ante 
d be so convincingly disproved 


=e like a corresponding im- 
preciation of what the 


with geology, to 
iron might be:a pet Å 
t showed very Medes e re tid | 


= wing any just * of 
questions science may be expected to 
wi : ut admitting: of any fende, from her 


y fally ee 5 
- the tai 


mother's mouth as she carried 25 oes dello cargo; one 
seen the for 


itself, with a aan —.— of the renden * curd in 
rhe i 


bt e 


wal the tinshe of a tree, if bent or Leora out 3 
n 


would hardly | ineap 


of the sa 


f the young vipers sticking o 


e sort of evidence in 


Bering and a 
believing.“ J. S. 


waged oo 
Tur accom aren 


— 


for that purpose, a n carelessly 
ground without disturbing the tortuous coil 


| formed within the pot it occupi 
of S of pret cal 
, e have 


inadequately fulfil their funct 


the character of its kind, had I 
Asa very large 
terestin: tribe are 


natural inelination 


for a season, w 
retain the manner thus gi 


0 matted and inte 
lant o 
in pa astate. W. Ingram, am, Hatfield, ites ss 23, 


PURPLE EGG-PLAN 


Gros Melongéne, Ia Grosse LANT, 


eeing is 
a proof that shows when “ Veeing i is 
H. 


inserted 


or Vegetable Stun — Esturgeon Végétale, 
by Pro 
Gand,” 


One wite has qa seen 


t of the 
ked 


e e vipers being sent to se ed Hall for 
f. o demonstrate n 


EVIL ARISING FROM CRAMPING te ROOTS 
OF TR YOUN 


into the 
of roots 


evident] tly 


; r flourished, old roots hav 
maiad but could not unfold, and per therefore but 
Vi 


is instance would have imperfectly given 
allowed it 


proportion of the young 1 of this 
occurred to | Che 


and of no 
the ene to disturb the ball of such plants 


x e, on 
case with the Aubergine rte ac "e ey aad 193 l 


of a 
tt ge a them 


| ae 8 and forming a . — fish, 


that the Aubergine was 


as scarcely known by aS 


when exhibited at Brussels in 
ot e seo in els in that year, lee 
extracts fro above work may prove a 8 
“In 18 73 a „ was formed 2 
Belgian agricultural and —— t 


1 

The exhibition was patronised by the ro 

instituted 1 the — of the Minister 

rior. e more remarkable v vegetables 
. attracted the 3 of all the E 

the exhibition. The Belgie entary had ney 

it; the Belgie tourist, with tis 2 * 

pretended to recognise it; — 

abroad, knew it as a eion of ‘des south, a 

tropical Africa, a Asiatic production, 1 


This 
frui s however grown in the 
pith 8 garden of * In 


8 
8 


olanum insanum, supposing 
possess bad re a priemen. wii 5 
y dis 5 ae 


of the 5 0 anap ne bye 1o Teal 
the wulture sy the hon rable = f: 
skin my 
flesh white, With the 


knew the plant. In the time of the latter, they cut 
vated more raed the Aubergines of the size ¢ 
Apples, and of a purple rre Belon by 

m as —— Productions er 

tany of wa ece, the commentators of the 

century pretended to have n in nthe Anlegen t 

Malinathalla o of Theophras ; 


designated them by the name of 1 and som, ; 
tim 3 the Germans, Mela id 
Dodoéns remarks that the V of Belgium vith 

Spain had led to — 3 


the nam iedit erp 
Aubergine p formerly vriten Oberg i is generally u 
Belo ven the receipt according to whi le 


me they are roasting, th 
with fine oil, or an butter, 
, addin 


he is of opinion 
even ene for fish.” In eatholic counties WBE is 

ys, fish cannot be supplied for 5 ta ye 
provinces remote from the coast, a dish E | 


P 

maritima or vegetable oyster, ter, the leaves 
been made to resemble so very much 
Oyaa an nit to. be diets nguishable from 


y 2 

LECTURE ON ECONOMICAL ¢ ICAL COOKER j 
On, THE METHODS OF PREPARING OU 
DEGREE oF WASTE. 

By C. Davseny, M. Dai F.R.S. 
7 — 


10—1849. ] 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


149 


to which gid are ro 


articles 
cach n digesting ber been regarded in this 


0 
E 


ficial state amount of n 
seen how 0 at nature of the ‘climate, 


oned b 
ting physical and mental exertion, 
ues much less 1 rable. 
be less than is 
er = ions of the g 
diet of ag emer 
aig ina a 


uscovite 
N oils constitute 

is capable of consumi mg, 
an extraordinary a 


very circumstance . 

called for in hot climates than in col 

22 f the human stomach i is m re 7 the same = 
parts of the world, and as ee a pr 

coats seems essen ntial ce tthe 

digestion, it follows that rhe ‘bulk er e 


all N 
st the Greenlander digests 


his meal of 3 blubber without the u — condi- 
fi arlie var 


m 

pon which they li 

2 the 5 3 still stronger 
rm of Pimento 


z 
89 


a e 
e plants that grow 
power of digesting their usual 
barred altogether from the former ; an 
so yee 


— both 


go farther 
ye Phenom da stiniulants, the 


to Xcess, 
or the table of Vegetables i isa pe 
that of animal m s n- 


ch as ota Bes rendere 
boiling, in consequ ence of the peer: 
thee by 1 the access of hot water. 


ti f raw 
a to Payen, from the ruptur 
of the cells of which it aka 
under the influence liod 


n ing 
in yeske 0 atter, e, 
„ the dually converted 
Sugar, and the same effect is bats coed by simply 
ar Toasting the Potato. Hence cooking this 
Tenders it more digestible, not only mecha- 

by causing it to absorb water, but also chem 
the insoluble starch into soluble 

For the sam n bread is 


they e — whilst if it be made 
. uce coagulation will 
dhe vegetable. eT to be retained within the tissue of 


d 
intment ensue, 
or uncertain | 


es or really pujsi mg 3 badly 
mateu 


3 shrub, from 3 2 7 feet -P of a ee 
k-green 


grow 
Eve who is an o do justice to his own et-like growth, with d rrated leaves and 
pra a in 2 cultivation of pti , should as aly branch. like racemes * ah ia llow amiak tia 
dge as possible of the habits of each, and | flowers, diffusing a oes balsamic odour. This 

of the results of the experience of the best growers. I e two of the most eea ng importations from 
is aw of co information to regul te our | China by the Horticultural Soc 

i | pasties that so many failures are to be attributed. If Prunus cerasi a tree from 5 to 20 
these could be corrected in a day, they would not be so | feet high, of ne a een timately 
annoying as they are in ap ins pres eason is 

nd a 


a year m bef. 
that m Ae corrected our errors and profit ed by dis- | i 
appointment. 
As ies es become greater oe cor year, their 
2 a matter of importa n the 
37 rs, and we intend to be e 


one too extensive to be fully treated in the ig paal 
allotted to us, and we wish our 5 

ovide themselves with a in 
h „of horticu ork has 
ised and —.— in ey Chronicle 
e recommended with con merge to all 
Saros, whether their panar Hh are lar; mall ; 
we mean “ The Rose Garden by William Paul 2 of the 
Che a Nurseries, a book attractive enough for the 

ti 


is treated with a grace 


eco 
motto in the title Seppho a ‘the Rose, N crowns 
with some ir 


uch interesting information 
rane is s adorned with 15 portraits of Roses 
avery 


h 
, executed in 


e gardens, Englis 
Perel Se: and remarks on their origin and m 
cultu. 


ode of 


to the purchaser of Roses, and the construction of Rose- 
garde ns, our more special object is s to 

o the explicitness of its directions in every b 0 
ane, 2 the preparation of the soil to tlie | i Be 
art of raising new varieties by bybridising. Eve 
ject is fully Soe so that a Spoor will find all es 
ins e gm he eeds s. This is a great excellence in an 
practical work, ‘and | is often wanting fr rom a presumption 

end entertained of the reader a 

some advances in the 


chapter o on a pruning is especially explicit, both from the 
( 


t, ultima 
| ramifying into innumerable twig- ‘ike branche, which 
w 33 in March. This 


| mai 
9 ie roe was emitted, 


and foreign, with full i 


fill 
While this work can be "a recommended as a guide 
w 


sheet of sn sera: a 
m 


A small avert 8 onei 
Pn 11 to 3 feet high ; ; its ovate lanceolate leaves are 
surfaced with a whitish grey nap ; it produces dense 
88 of — white Syringa- like flowers in May. 
inary ops 
ERIS A — .— One of the most ornamental 
warf e vengren shrubs, having glossy dar 
ves surmou y ikes of b 2 ad 2 
in ril. It loves a on 
but has the finest wh, in a tolerabl — bed. 
se er a it should a ere on an sa goes or west 
uch a pos ed from 


* boost like bloom oduce a very pretty 
ect. William W ee Fisher oan Nurseries, York, 


REN e Correspondence 
la 3 of Manure.—In anid to 


d 
e on, jaa of General Briggs’s pamphlet, reviewed at 


page 141, I oe mention the following 3 
2 autumn I 
_— heal: from the coast of 
with water, intendin bone 
i 


„I drew the cork, when a most 
I was pte ess 
gaged in breakin some common e 
with some earth Ka potting plants in, ergi the thought 
struck me that und some and put 
with jo guano, might im prove the char 
useful in the — for which I intended it, 
ordi as muc 


few day 
hing to use some o Oy this Ah ose I uncorked 
3 not the slightest smell 
with th 


o offensive 


e | 
Any amateur who will procure Paul’s “ Rose Garde an 
1 make his course clear for the successful pce 
l e all that it | in 


this ents flower, and will soon save 
hi 


aati im in the certainty of his operations, to say 
nothing of tia satisfaction arising from doing thin 
well. It is 5 ing to find a pı 


a sm 
but t wi 1 communicate its principles to others. 


10 1 
their soil should be attended to 


be done by 
digging out the 5 intended to be fi 
2 or 3 feet, an N bon br of stones at the bottom, 
or 8 inc 24 ing the 
l treatment will be s to 


flourish. H. B 


HARDY AND ORNAMENTAL SPRING- 
FLOWERING SHRUBS. 


rior to the s 
richly erimson- tinted 9 roduc 
and April. n the comm monest dry soils, bu 


shru 
ELA ROSEA. “Perhaps the 2 jacar y * 
to hardy shrubs since the intr Ribes 


ex 
may still be done with safety), t the 3 of 


may 
lled to the depth of | ] 


soil, let it be well | e 
mixed 5 rotted — 3 sore the pans intro- 
ced this carefu 


A valuable psoas: | 


t he, at the same time, Aapa 

me nearly full of asd 4 
having somet arance of dirty white aih 
y ; it had a strong smell, resembling in some degree 
that of sal vol ee that it fo — 


correspondent is altogether 
8 the arched method of training 
nt. According to t 7 E Pa 


the erb plan 

in the Gardeners’ Chronicle, there ar es 
tied into a cds dle ; now, 2 a these canes will emit 
in summer at t 50 fruit-b shoots in a length 


of 5 feet, how is it posible for — fruit to be ee 
the upo: ch exposure 


osed to A hi 
* — so mate ds. en of 
young shoots which must necessarily s in 
order to furnish requisite number of canes 


ws, and 
2 plant. i is a preferable to planting at cane distances, 
‘allow 2 1 r four canes to each roo An 


in length, is 


9. 
Potatoes.— Though this is not the time of 
in practice, yet it is the time to see the 
d therefore I mention if 


the time the 
hours), 


firet ar drawing pii ~~ 
A 


A 
Lands. Rect 
lebe, in the _— of 5 — = Stil age of hie 


is Ceteraeh, 
thar bbe appt 
Pe 


— 
Rain at Goodamoo 
The — of Ham from 


150 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICL 
— z | Maron 10, 
a ; yey abü ou 888 aty cowl “ 2 : leaves which successively have decayed aud d ropped burden his f G 
ge. At first * slight quantity soil will do ;| off. In these furrows often found small ier: bountifal 8 hi i We- — 
but before winter sets in, they e e w ances, which are rudimentary eaf-buds. If 8 section | mercies ? i hi, ought he to se seek tom mt 
6 inches, and — ſern or — — r all in be thinly eut = crown, these rudimentary leaf. buds | becom vals means of * rejolentta if — = 
‘sews tedio is in reality dene as ikl as an be trace mall reniform green spots, extending | ministers of the Gospel! WP the 7 ke bounty to ka 
ing, or very nearly so, It keeps the Potat to the depth of — 4 of an inch, and wing down |“ Rector and also * “R I beg to 
cellent to pe prese $ pa rot bett-r — na into the mass of mead tissue * e tuberous count of the powers — s ae otes | 
ma re en | root, two or th more „ like sciitl-arootiets. |-Tncl ren 
plent ing the last fortnight, and the seed taken out of My impression is, that by the — of the ——j — the —— i 3 — 8 
these earth h — when it first eame out of the | these fibres had room to expand, and tha — 2 rootlets 9 object 1 September 
fa in autumn, the eyes just showing, and the skin | of the leaf-buds, which, in the woven state of the T ovation, ted . contemplated imithe 2 
h, — and bright. My gardener bad great | nip, d lose nie a cellular —— 1 — — company in the ong 
_ — — . ms — pr a ‘om have developed downwards into true leaves, 1 those obstacles i — 3 and to — 
ne ing ike it. elieve | the manner as the roots of a Pe ‘em. if e „of w 
— cs ih to s invigorate 1h the Pota ne age as there is | pended in the air, will protrude e throng tho hole in the — — abt ae — tha we 
8 spro . I am aware | bottom of the flower- t, and be X e Inclosure 
— — —.— rea ago . Kidney — in bearing leaves, from * e ve am caves —— — — * pras —.— ey — — and th 
houses, &c. is plan, is cannot be do and e 
wih a larg qua ee bor Rel cle ie cra mes in . to develop ; J ; and the peii al tendency |o of t ee k s is guara ranm „not only ec om 
—— s keep much better both for — and leaf, would tot it probab le. M. E. — r 31. We 3 ys bat ai landed property in which th — 
* R —— spread in a —— — —— 8 or sere rather inclined to believe that some unobserved — — — n K y be re rey 
elamer t bs rks 
1 recommen dation by the cler ake — ory. | obstacle aes have been present to prevent the develop- — own glebes, now afford — — 
j s no | ment of the leaves o d ; e only pros 
great respect fi 2 — bon a aed that then, the erown clergy of increasing their — — Pi ae wh 
Pesta Breads Wien ba ee — ts n 3 . — — . ity, 8 turned tion of tithes, which has fixed them — 
a baker, when making brown bread, to mix to the formation of young P — — analogous che improvement ex — on the other 
Rour aud thé fine bran pollard, as it is called i otatoes bihin old Potatoes, | their parishes. t may b properties i 
‘dn. aiii , a in some | when atter are accidentally left in a d 1 mam — 
— ould not this method of mixing do as well where, the state of the a neg | ie er 
as grinding t if 20, it would sav cose | nag tatiana ir being un 1 to the and ‘that the “ Rector of Ockh Propet 
a machine; and those who find i t difficult to | selves baek rs e buds teas they for em- his farm of 76 acres would — pare 
cS welt, good brows fi eur, could always „ ne flour — ame ngen it inithe direction o f“ with contempt,’’ tho less — 
as pollard. ca D, which some thin contractors and = — — it thei 
a_i be poate said. naii an if their openim 
only. Perhaps some of your corres i 3 pplied ooh 
' Ri the subject G kind 1 acquainted — — 
would be 5 td ow Traps. — Spann 
pollard and flour, supposing will not go into an C 
— — — greund, for the p * mane they will go — i 
‘ j might then mix to y ound vinto 
own l comme 
— veri you — re! 1 brick trap made of ‘four smog 
to find a difficulty in obtaining meal wherewith to make — 
this bread, and fancy that by getting a band mill th th + par 
grind their own corn : à ey can in t onth of June upa) 
in Lendun possibly — — ped long bench with raised sidest 
getting it from the baker ata — ried En 
$o its being an artiele not in ge ani ce, owing . BE neh should & 
there it may be ined from the miller ai ah p in auen e 
the country there is no difficulty w ? in the it affords a hiding place fri 
SS — — 
5 Sour a when they are in a sue 
for as much more. Thin {iid ay ge — number upon it. The 
` king all th quite as cheap, has practised this plan # 
pa mill. In many (I believe ari many years, and in 
miller‘has special: daya for grindi — v pl ac es) th the his red and white Currams# 
pae derrr daye; at t lensi icin in Norf ae * g u he trees as logt 
steel- mill 88 like m i a e quired se. j 
trial, be fi a de nufactures, will, brick is, that 
— use meal for brown ren 
in my house, and shall be occasionally killed by the 
any of your corre 2 happy to put f ö 
i spondents f 3 the briek, though 
P., Comb e- way of getting it. ll 
whole y on to b made from the generally catches the 
— grain, which | believe to be the most wholesome | jured. The traps 
famil . . ld inform the public that each be fed, so as to let the birtsg 
i A loaf, * ffee-mill, may make an ex- in and out as they please, i ) 
ing t Wheat in it. T very frequently, in order u 
satisfy the enquiries of a little y h A T 
bread-making I se ttle boy about the process them confidence hie 
whieh 18 t hi do this, and had a w made tington, Oswestry. 
greatly p the whole family. Æ ortugal Laurel Das 
The Hamiltonian System of Pis preu ga — ; 
828 page 87, that Mr. „r rcs ing —It i silvery — dying, I . 
ay! stem is because of eeni riera — y experie i 
same 
— 1 er our old Laurels — 
——— aie rnit, and this appearance 
that it is both unnatural and ms I very unhealthy. | 
moi — —— injurious to keep up a e- — woul that 
espeeially for wi — ity old roots had vigou pi 
f ur 1 bave practised Mr. 1 à 
— p Mr. D t a cutting 
having eut a fruit of Black San a ge lly, vya 5 „ 
sucker: months after the first tZ from a eads entirely, but 
At the f first fruit was ma large branches freely, 
— on the — a oo ae — judiciously, does 
approve of Mr. H however, disfigure our 
— miſtou's plan of having fruit in v na es A for Doubt fully Hardy Plants. — Would it Frech — -sueceed, an 
and system have overeome ‘this — ee —ę— Leal bene by means ol your journal, the leant han ——— Se 
ona ripened 200 Pines during 8 necessity. as to climate in the kin “a e most favoured spo J lies plants — be oo . * 
ugust, and from uly and om, for th ir top knots as well as human —— 
, ; suckers i which e cultivati p 
have at ithe ipresent — ng — ore sen stools, 1 Aà sorta 3 — and for those oy: ually wi Rain which fell near Ply 
Binto bloom with the stettedcend!) Cirosu. be dnit Cd ae e ee -guage during the 22. 168 
Oatlands, Feb. 27. — àn Tag, fto has ium Quino ps itm Ar 88 Inches * 
The Representation to know that I have tried this, and f. interest uary 3.47 January 
Zur hich fa — of the C 3 a very good pudd ne ound hen e. February .. 405 245 January 5 
X mmon | 2 r 
ruip the natural size, — od from * eal y ag Hbg many rae ~ pril ion 4 Aeg r 
bamather is chat it. might overeome that sobjection — 1.65 May 
lation spin ho it “very long in ing July e OE June . 
7 t weather than the las ? A a. 6.90 July * 
Earlier planting may perhaps di t summer affor 88 ` 598| august 
but another is, that hich ps dispose of that objeetion ; — — .. 4.93 September 
down, from its — er are very apt to break it | November” | — P paea 
. * / December 


65771 Total . 
moor in 1847, poms 
Goodam 


the 
nage, provided he did not sues to 
of it for the number of years which og me ce of ane and the elevation of Go oor z over hie 
OVE . and DOUI ee Tfr hia ? — “are. aya f. yee ae dpd W 
Toa 101;- t 56; 0 and exchange o s 1 1 have Pol) podiun 
ing has 38. i is and —— Aspidium Tnelypten 
h > 5 Cystopteris fragilis, Asplenium 
mu teris erispa, 
regalis any of cer 


101849) THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 151 


jenium alternifolium or septentrionale, | was accompanied with the models of saga D great cleverness. The memoir is an extract from the 
muha ilam —— e or Wilsoni. Address Mr. Vates also exhibited specimens of the lea and 13th volume of the “ Transactions of the R Royal Society 
arry, Trevoryan, near Cardigan. fruits of various other species of Cycads, a saan of Upsal.” We do not know whether it is to be bou ght 
drawings of many others, and made some Serpia on separately 

Sotielics. the interest possessed by this order in relation to ex 
— b.— W. ER , Esq, tinct floras, Dr. Schaum presented to the Society a Marshall’s Index Ready dy Reckoner isa thin Apana 
ORTICUL Paul * 8 aii M specimen of the Polyphemus Goliathus, from the col- | of the greatest use to all who have the e payment of wages, 
in the chair, Mr. ——— — wg lection of M. Gory. This specimen was regarded with | for it 33 the reader to ascertain ania a perpe the 
l . Rucke sles oa 


-r 
or alpina, Asp 


Hymen 
112 E. 


8 
2 
= 
ake 
8 
S, 
918 
= 
© 
£ 
7 


ost. An engra a da 
Culloch was presented — — — — for 274 days at d. a da 

— — a 22 Sere a pern he Briest ax date sea „Society hy — M Calloch Mr. Adam White | shall’s tables tell you a — sc — of cal- 
Kingi Od iis. rst part of a Memoir on the Animals of me culation, that the money due to him is 4. 7s. 104d. We 

— — e “King vapori eepe: nei Assyrian Me Monument discovered by Dr. Layard, and | have seldom seen a more milly useful — ' 

sum small $ 2 now in t ish Mus 

enough, but nective except „ Feb, 20.— Ne en, ben., in the chair. W. S. A cheap 1 of eee crate formerly 

Henderson, o — —— — its trum pet-shape eq | Dallas, ne and D. W. Nash, Esq., were ; elected | noticed by us, has been issued by Messrs. Longmans 

eizator, so ‘nam i Fellows; W. Gardner, Esq., of cae was elected an | and Mr. — in two thiek volumes, 120 This is 

tase, i 3 i 


emoir he dre pre 
sentations of the fallow deer, goat, an Fa whieh paper. Half-a-crowna volume for s 
were m ; o a v unheard-of price. 


. ' ited casts from the armlet and sword- ekue] = 
consists more in the long pink flor. * —5 e de df the kings, which were Sp wees ted with animals, Garden Memoranda. 
e 5 — ag u 5 to the sculpture of | EALNG- rank, Murch 7. — It may be interesting to 
: : 


b ke p having ú 
large gracefully drooping — tt whose gaiety He exhibi 


on thes m rst 

extinct ire fou nd i a he Stones from which the | showing a profusionof bloom-buds, some of — 7 

monuments were formed. Mr. e also exhibited a | more than a foot Jong. The em was rece y Mrs 

2 0 rest of Fumeworts. fragment of a botanical tea aoe, hyt the late Mr. waite 5 2 10th of July, 1 se s 55 . 18 

3 * James Niven, at the of Good Hope, during his | inches high, and had 11 leaves. feet 

——— Horticultural Society from the north of travels there for Mr. “Hibbert and the Empress Jo- high, 39 feet in circumference, and 12 feet through, 
sephine, i t e bears odd leaves. e have also much 

tis aa on — — re of it h re source of many of the Cape Treng s especially those 2 pleasure in being able to state that at present nothing 

ony onan z. the er of the Linnean Society. The genus can be more re or fine than the whole of the 

nia plants at Ealing-par 


. 
wip Niv named after 455 writer of this gp It 
=r — lee , —— pie pik slight!) — of dried plants, with accompanying i 
l s they ‘should have tions of their structure, &e. Miscellaneous. 


— ed 1 ri w P slowl 7 bright Potato Disease. — As the time has now arrived 
eee eee e N Entomotocicat, March 5.— G. R. WATERHOUSE, Esq., far ; 
ee 2 — seedling Cinerarias were exhibited | Preside nt, in the chair. W. Spence, Esq., the late h of Dee 
T (meg nia salam aro 85 P resident, ee — to — n 500 copies of his | to eee the following plan. which Ideas adopted 
| r ears, and wi f ccessful 


i ‘ . x inute L 

— ama — petals 5 edge : —— in a most beautiful state of preservation, and place, let the seed be cut aaa oo * à, Prather — 

" at "Dek melia, in the way of Beauty of | carefully named (which had been bought by subscrip- eross ways, that some of the eyes of the may be in 
Newington ; a lata, a cupped flower, white} tion among the members, at Vienna, and intended for! eyery plant. la Cho eens <i the 2111 should (he 
Certificate pam 3 s collection), was on the ee ae i made a full yard wide, so e, eee may be 

communicated an account recei al Yar woski Wider cushs 
— ‘sumed w as ed as» ironical 3 — Esq., F. L. S., &e., relative to the N aone 91 4 erz co apine = 7 — — 
to force well. an b aa tated | of the corks in win e bottles, whereby great damage is formed at the shaw, let the shaws be all bent to one 
Ar. Wilmot, of k J 1 15 a 8 Bia e often produced, 17 small white caterpillar with a| side, and let them be furrowed up very high on one 

burgh Gre walle rak ya 8 f am- | yellow head, which had been rega peer that of a smali | side, so that the drill presents the ppearanee 

pees 8 coloured, = gp erwise fine speci- | beetle (Cr ryptophagus 8 which Mr. J. F. ridge of a house, and the shaws grow out at its side ; 
ae sao =e 39; raat 400 ] Sa TN Stephens had ir 3 fect state, and which | and, when the shaws are in this position, the rain is not 
them a sample of te ong l — nien 4 Nerd — her be a mall moth (Oinobia V-flava). Mr. | eo ouducted to the root, but is discharged in the bottom of 
was exhibited at th e 3 West also gave an account of a minute and rei th The process of bending the shaws in the 
3 * — — — — 3 — pa — insect found in ho ods es on Peach trees, at — dere, will cost about Id per fall, Last year I 

A eed: te fruit of h; bade Gove Weges ‘>| this season of the year, inclosed in a white eottony web, | experi n alternate drills, and the result was, 
8383 St. Misi e e called Vegetable chich he re egarded as the Rate of the male of some | that ila ile iat were not treated in this way but 
ichael’s ; they were, however, not | rema — ble species of Aphidee. Mr. White mentioned jeft to the old course, were all dis ased; whereas the 

ut nie coloured, obovate, the growth of a fungus from the scutellum of a 5 drills that were prepared according to the plan I would 


(tural A — eee. — i had there 4 tat his plan 
ago, and died. He exhibited a species of Acanthophorus, a all can put it in practice—and by following it, they will 
edible qualities may be ih i pate, we 1 genus si longior beetles, from South Atrica, the right- not, I hope, have to lament either a deficiency of erop 
require protection.» 3 i * 5 Arh at least hand a which was mon nstrously fureate. Also | or gua. “Dari Martin, Muirhead L ff, in 
i Plants ot Cyrtachilum et s * 3 ciety | — an a or new species of Cerapterus from Port Courier 28. 
Oncidium, afine specime ppa atum, three species of | Natal, He also — deseriptions of three new exotic] Mes eee. edie „Sale. Three hundred and seventy- 
Boronia anenonefolia, i of Epidendrum aurantiacum, species of pag — exhibited drawings of two eight lots of Camellias, the greater portion of them 
Inga puletie + ea sl pe dae gene at er beetles (Dyticidw), ‘from plants of large size, and a few lots of Rhodede — 
8 Zealand and ‘West Australia, Mr. Westwood | and Andromeda floribuoda were broun tothe 
ase 2 — rials ebe. flowers; this | read rite of two new a om K sna 5 last week by Mr. Stevens, in Messrs. Loddiges’ — 
wget plans, has been | Gare aud of four new m apecies f Pro ackney. The hi t price realised on 7 i 
— — san essential point of ee of Aae ian Culeopte eguin to the family was 191. 88. 6d. for Carelli ia incarnata, a magnifi 
‘early, in order that itm pesca eee ee Helopidæ. Mr. F. Bond exhibited a box of Coleoptera, | tree 15 feet high ; Speciosa, 9 pa high, fetched 1013 
The K ay be well ripened before winter. containing a new species of Cerapterus an — . very Altheseflors 10 feet, 141. ; Ch. andlerii, 12 feet, a mag- 


Cytisus ee AD: —— ol rare insects from the banks of the Mundarra river, 400 | nifi tree, 141.3 Myr tifolia, 12 feet, 12. 3 Rossi 
‘Achimenes ficia, 8 canariensis, an of miles north of Sidney, New Holland; and Mr. S 10 feet 94 10s. ; Hable white, 5 feet, 94. 15s. ; Eximia, 
— wre forsee) 5 prety Pale | Stevens exhibited-a new British moth from Ashburton, | 19 feet, 9/, ; and Corallina, 8 feet, 9/, lòs. ; the other 

red; „Diosma capitata,.a fine bush Deren which appeared to be the Phyeita o obdue- | lots fetched from 24 to 8l. each, Rhododendron . 
— ocon vella of Fischer. ricu tehed 27. 178. 84. Barbatum, ; 
l ath it will be 7 e of | Hentreya scandens, — ͤ——— end plants of R. rob from I. on ere Mio P 
——-ethibiced at a large specimen was è i arboreum, 8 feet high, fetched 4} 15s. ; 
4 ower egasi — abe . eb — E — — 17s. eael 
i form ; and finally weil in a smal State as in a larger genera 1 m in ma s Scandin avie cres- — —— 
i Tea, a r ad oe of Thea Assamica, or Assam a. Cc kiaat ges prior Fucaceas Calendar of Operations. 
‘the green Tea ©, ing large. leaved ‘species, as unlike . 4to, pp. 162, tab. Upsal, 1648. (For the wenne week ) 
Which is of een tter is that of the North of China, | Tye interest of this volume, which contains some nice — — — 
Pears demit a nd, Cuttings of the following fizures and good rsh of Alge, is * no m ORCHIDS. re will now 
‘obovate truit, of : Shobden Curt, a middle-sized | egufined to the systematic — though that is Te- | be required for the — of this family: "watch eee 
Sugary fla our: 258, Jellowish russe ich | markable as containing views respecting the value of | carefully, and as they show signs of growth 
the organs of fructification e to those of | in situations which are best calculated to produce a 
Agardh. The tetraspores are considered as gonidia, healthy development. Particular caution will be req 
while the bodies in the so-called capsules are 3 site, in order to prevent moisture from ng in or 
as the real ‘spores, as being produced by a more com- about the young poms as they are very liable to rot 
e | plete metamorphosis than the tetraspores. We do not 3 their early stage. It is mo less necessary 
coincide 5 this opinion, but the observations on the guard against slugs a — woodlice ; the former eat the 
subject will be read with pleasure, though we could 2 shoots and flower stems, aud must be sought for 
„have wished that the com Wal „ by ca 5 or entrapped 2 of Carrots ; the 
as | phraseology had been ene. fur it requires woodlice destroy the young — of the roots, 
patience to read perseveringly where the external mem- re i ene securing itself in its 
brane of a cell is termed Perischizogonidium or Peri- p 
nidium, 


J. Ya 8 ee at „ in the chair. Apart, 8 from systematic matter, 


Sa a model | some very valuable observations on the ola of 
-of the fruit of Encephalartos Caffer, | Alge im waters of abe degrees of saltness. No be 
which has larely fruited in the col- | locality differs more in this respect the several 


rth, “The model ‘of the ‘entire cone | portions of the Bakie, ma ‘the subject is treated with} 


1 
t 
D 
. which 
oa gi ie 
a 3 commen 
— ER th 
v. ure tsa e sun 
n re ; q d growt 
5 e ae 
ose 
me ye : but is inging. de 
a sees 5 foe e tonii |a GARD 
which e til uld e f a inal jane E 
tem obi the b - or e high must erin 
8 will all iums, e ha th gro N 
the — th the turn riera 7 3 gro ast de In E 
cool tain bet eV a one in se, m wth Rae oes: S 
oe GRF eae 5 = 
dee the h i ver of the 5 oy Seas 5 0 — HR 
the e AF J. al kind gota! Ly ge d som hel tina * —— 5 ere those operati — 0 N 
the sun ne we N ring ee ower, shor Foon families * = dint LGh 
bach mus t t mt a e 0 y whi tini 
— y rows, so qiyi be stading e nat ache else —.— very weak suhag “produce fi ction E. 
is cr penetra 3 "emt ae „ti 5 fi d thin cut ak w flo k fi tron; ar 
w not th te: t th: sS or lh ioned or ned aw ‘ood d Tea wW shoo ow g e short 
— EEA wee. in re Been ara habi- wood irag 8 out. ay, 2 ot seta e The Peay sti rt of 
; a é 
coment slo ry y can A ny of t renders |a it the e a h „ mor d jich is nted inds, he sd on 7 
ih which n be gs be 8 whieh the nsu few — of tt vik not Ro as mu ad sates . 
mer * th ra rages hade cal be — wie de ae ew bu buds of short e = . ‘ihe 40 a er that, 5 we al 5 [M 
roots ly . ince are neee by t e rays f on lige ason, pete co tening sho th d Am air Pla Diff i and with he eae b ÀRC 
bat be tnd kare gs — pon fom more in e stro bot and rom 3 bould b oF te B hich e Tels ac may be ' ms Line a 
— — 1 a ho fine gi H . 3 a stro red anythi ox Epa so gene oT Vesh ry ar hous 10 
su t flay d be = —.— ba th it is 8 shoots, for re the o argent aa 8 pet a gene case i Useful i aay, th nc pt th É 
5 mg gin use ne in — * e ve not for v ein 8 e —— itis ge k Japar Kn "aon e's es 
y from ah H d wly gd nde r emo ry | conv a pcr th wea enin AT is generally å g nA 8 unree B nee 
rol appl eat as li eed bi rs a of m ve re enie ich ing ki ve prac duri advice $ Fomes: s Z. f som alm rage fa 1 Botan 
nine “id pind ied ony — — the | kin im gr iant E to A in 25 ng ip forwa e of 1 ob: 1 hey e neces ot is Ti e 
1 k * much coa ith ois nts 5 ali — . — is lea do 88 ith Cor om 0 ga ap na N e 
—.— yo 2 it ir ve the prod 0 e ccessity. Society 
em, shi Whe "3 s yonn eat re, be ible, still. de mn wth ely n th 1 — nes 2 incl ou cat * assi Mar di * ng 
Beben. mi 1 ba oni 8 be oth to to roti arder The e stron . Finches Gan ee mi Re h fe may be 
ws foh pl p! Ša EPA pi sin yo “ a agains pant good and lees caving m it w ogest givers: n of theo ae ihoa swe wi 8 but 18 aie easily 
plied the 2 . ait a lit par this wh deal the w — g the Poi he shoo ope oP et ahaa be Be ped pant i aa June 
—— ro pe as e MENT ittle ne 8 — nt a ree tel be Co fros be be — Wee ug nd: e, 
maon at re st l ip of w a pill will nt al y tte of Uv t th Ani ugd to t 
decli ferm uiti io for qui ill gr on 2 oul pru de sorts l sh the r b vee bante ep 8 p is 69 
— — ‘at of | 1. KN ger. ery gon : or ont 3 pe on 5 henee 12 or east 55 ee * d a it hare 
and e. oa 0 nto on obj ce: n s th e UD in 0 
prev g in mate If m S lar the abe ohn > oe usefu Bes n the äri a Boe: prone Dr te ribs make A, OR KERT ovens. ping x 
ent reb Apne 2 the the st ger tle ints ible tok ote he sh tif uned etc Ha ak >a Po aa aw 
plan y an * ch it w bot p eiae arly of th B ee r in ih trained cial 3 Piast oa d treated exa 2 pa 
ve. exce. eck ill tom ts and 1 e y p th th a m t Ser become da ls vory tend er he * 
as sgt ck the pi pl see that the ‘heat i * shor baer shoot ti ioin rider ene be a of leaves, by of pas eee As. oid be 
— shou f or tion il why oe 85 or that p have © ering dard, on Pint os p. Won ail yo ae: ae 
windy 0 iy he it does n p 8 1 rg t p CRS * opie account Panor T . wv te * Shana s other Ca 
of er nd ghb be n in e- er; uc ur b as e un NC en nn c pr pe an n lin bb: 
little 1 they ve eat an 1 Lan 3 ne S po ence g tea 8 — or Da ts ma "be prevented ge n do is ste ongan Ki 
aira A uy ai are w $ which w Aming veh Gtd not 3 and — 4 e s tovar home| i Aan e ted by di e papers ag l 
t the — 5 oN will e inder e pru Tr e 3 th olm CM. for ip, list ne mate i tendeney ! 
back lor 0°. a or thro ma- Ca de the 77 ud e ue st e sh and p farthes aise H. Pas ii N eh for h hee ften em be. 
pits an Ex anna a w is open RNA r the w B till clim of ould if est 75 heati he E t ae Kaltas 60 
9 ould be * . The * wate 3 ONS FLO erke ee the ace isr ote iva See from t ting. w a 7 — rved specimen 
mo . aie tee or 15 pecan day r, an oy É AND umn a ms ians, A eet ts 8 m the 2 de e will b . ax 
= ist she: s wal te t and wo fro wh 83 f ve Se yrshi gs or ua alle torr poiler nthe ef Lindley’s 
imm prah ty ye it; in ihe 10 tid ayring — havo i 2 — rte. LOWE oth Rose pae ` a singula 10 G1 preven r should revsuch a 3 
i 2 r do rng, er 14 iii, a 8 l aad 2 1 ts 1 a RS. we ta ver. | be 2 event the w 1 at p. di 
t wa, as with ide and , ; lena vi ear rey » ami bh gla rin o Unter ighest, pas 
e. impu 8 i bo: a t C e wil co. e d r ie ns a eo is 
ly ulse „ bu ini topi rd da im en d Biting f lr nse ily ir to efo Tor of a ll t f 2 
side 1 ‘ f the t exa the mg 55 ers i mye so UAN hea advocates requir Sth e pe aphi il white o ia of right; the ei 
2 oe N b bord pos surface fagn re- 8 dai to pas Pp wg 15 hee n ot ong of ESA 8 5 ‘eri 
3 * 18 ee the Ti this w has e soil 8 xy jot ous 11 spr bad . 8 Ease vt species 55 fr eeonom you ray bet 
young shots x a Ma roe 10 is m potti sec ple pte » the pot ep PE — 1 s, and on — E 
— sy —_ — — tering » ee — moss lenty o off. Y rough tho ker 4% 2 ö not in iie fee 
0 ie an a id t i t e an a S i poder. * senate ill 5. k 
oy ` — smi 1 pna wil ape eve ae 2 E ank E 1 
* a g in vo a vill fill ex . giving i "i Pn N r ich a a foll own tha hee * e lean 
be fi be ‘ing ees arrir sho’ th 3 with! „| vint ile dowa it br sa 80 Which & po š eral . 8 . | at bem 2 n the his d 
—.— nochi Daf wi uld e be mi taki er ich n sh nd il att Sh a mei J Tı a ari gv 800 o 
und e mg the excep i abo 58 8 sce t be a g animal 
a in ape x ve ae ha Ming y n ou e bo b 1 0 rie Louise, ari 
— se 1 yt : st cepti re; sii and g th ve t3 ra taki nın, ld t m fo nure se Y ni uise. tie ea 4 
be of ut bad imp his jad il all EE then — of p O pa 5 be pacar y| o re tie pes ea svete 
paid ae rr 2 met sa a sae ‘ue 92 2 fa inch s 1 Ie eel order ox which possess now onare be p ar} ae 
thane they » be rev Ae wo jere „ an s th ove ose ttle the : as on car ept ach; gr of it the ed e indie — * 2 — 
i ‘howe they poe en ood to 2 th ea th ihe cot m to STAIN i ; th Sond th pot s rim + e pe eca Taal api 
be ere a p e| e p e il ue fas ly sm e d e com OF ar ent as es er us out 
— —_ fi ed wo 2 etary ae 90 Bye Bee ten 8 young ape common "Pia likely t 825 ceive e thé Vor 
or ey removed i ailab at ouid ot of weak ig ould sho the pos: the ove =e Aopen ee bay wre: 8 Aigo anythi ni y are kept 
w 108, ne young 5 aden the ect b A some Beil tind Le pb n wall ea d withor Will yo 
eath cece ann Pe eu e au 106 
to me iii nea dong im roy at 3 N g e due ren oP 
s es depe as th e Dk be id P pla S 5 e un th R la * &e. L. nde out sig you th 
sec 1 much ut atte e pro s rà canbe Wenden W lod d th ted, 1 . * ut soma T Favour ws 1 
black x 4 — of ti ak eabl ure in a cea ntle ging e ste R oDpop pres adi 2 y lenium id — ai u 
of — red ges * the! ty paralle 8 1 oe shel wat of “7s ? in expone: 5 ace —.— . 
m and Ahe ed, t of 2 l ust nh i . ee ter L y ines apt Sea beaut 3 
u oist: fal spid usi u 1 e G se U m u a nan 
nfrequet 15 ict N 5 ‘ar At — 5 e Ba we ada za ye 
eye — sen mai ex down, but it Tiga in this — ps from fros cep. dan ios ation n Peci K. e bt e have n 555 mepi 
5 mi el ana ean Stet . 5 elde 1 doses. o a EIA ee E 
: Pana t 2 from — eq ellin is necessary a — i they r 92 Me 2 grated pee wasa: posi wee sepi este. 
ken, * ped apes EUEN a Tn ding M equire i wees 1 8 15 Bis ike 2 ar iy. W a 
int sam E 10 e ri 
«Beas in ‘ery 3 tin wths moderate re A atoms ig March 8, 184 it. ovan on wili n s Fight, see. 3 e woua — 
them boxes bodes — th take hs Tage. jm sy . p auibb — second a tand nin inded, and 
K e o the te M =: 7 8 about e ec 0 e a n. ru the 
towards 0 ` pn e l arc |- H b G on gr ve re rd, T ns.” 
to the which h j an ints Sour no reh 34 lean Win 1156 lin + yt 22 oe “ti he ‘te 
in stop the open : have b G . a må | z 2 — Les Cal 5 i . e atte i * per r. thi me oe — indeed rohe 
a i ARDEN as r fif — 2 — clo 233 | 25 ae S. in. ne ee TE ata aad ce in all 
end oro t. th Oleas u 4 5 e e p el n e! A bude! 
h th 1 — . + ane ast dy; 30.1 1 40. S. W. eer y Th S W Ars and ws four 
we, aud of 8 SON Ta: Ty ty through . 3 480 sw. 00 air, u ined a as n ho ME a ave N ier or fire 
finer an er 8 * raised i 1 Se fue ore, sag ery 25 12 90 en unless oid i n easily er 5 en tine toy * 
Mean y — . m c . 
to keep in lopment w month ¢ vi cer i a Ss oe . am 5 sour apg ty ee 
— its an Se all aa t f the W 55 . he 1 s: Wel waren jeleterious e supply me 
‘dressings ak from the = — inure March. — me hail show P fi 1 1 ve dee T Y us subs de Ben 
iti i: M ra ve ea m svat ears fros' .08 no! ers 3 Di wh urn ou ubs to use sy 
it al mes frui! Ds ico 25 at k we th t. n ene tw. en 1 had tan 0 
em intai t res avoi A out 722 t Chisw ld rs w Liver of t ear swi om th 8, he nce a 
of ri Wi is bar it. 0 tte Es eg. 7 e th 8 or ey &e tte e even lime 
e ith ult id ga gs —— de fe, ee le e a r it 
be ch the a f. but it wil bree. Sunda: ze 8 7 2 end r 17 nigh Loe 0 they all pro sro cass bet tra i 
a 5 pisn E n Eir onl | Mon” 13 A H m arch 3) 2 e pu 
{ene ine , co toads, be ot fi ues 8 5i 258 8 8 a rage hit 25 of ch 3 tio d ati m ore 8. 
d — le onl or ed. 0.8 S 9 3 eee . us 
8 ; — ss difi b Friday 4 201 34 = |e 7,180. tokni: a Tondon a ‘Societies 8 of attempts, 
of i 0 healthy en viday 14 209 rt ch „for 22 — — ; gers 0 7 A ie | 
e 1 quality or. 9 It} mn 10 85 ma | 423 a | Grete | ST me = Hathor country, a — — 500 1 ane moses mt 
i ie b mould. op de a g : 122 ee Si Tay Ba Th 80 It is a it ah fruit 
no toes ta ecordin or te ce 811 nat 38.0 3. 10 " NSP orn (Ora is nd tr a tr 
t bl in b ith and 35 43.0 i gW tre: LA 3 tæ pr sel ees Ys ees On (a 
nck ae a al, oe top IES ae 5 BES = . Lees 
Sai oe sji Sa 8 117 Eos career i 
stance ar i bie can erm. 67 deg i 0.9 5 Z vin 3 ee ee ou will f cle 
rs y S deiig ai ae — 1 EF e tember, rch We ms 3 „e 
bers of iho . vd 855 3 7 7 2 — wa e — oe 
b e es to — 3 ae ie the, wom oe 
d _Sown, Ave d — te 8 in K You Corr st on t 2 — 4 7 0 2 W ot er, Josli eae v ter, 32 8.505 
be ma as Fallow aoe arin pov, he 1h, red on 1 13 1 weeds essary t TEA 5 — enas r, Glendi gabe 
ade, ma ‘cen f moist t ing tale. nde — ii English 3 hg aseadine, ae a nning le 
phen oid, se 3 fli te. — i d et — RE * 
old, — cine ori Th nts, willie in Ci he V er ENH ar anted out 
ge sank chestnuts, wh tothe r Le IND aiea, If D such bo nimaa — none the l 
bes harper tha wh poor tect th Bot beah inform Ti Hist re = — i 3 ar — E o. Biss 
on tae low eaven ich ar ext El . ol 3 him toria P upa — rat mare nite S 
pyari ra A A ue, eu aca oe 3 ders Toe PM! hy ndo ho wh lan un! the Virtuos at Ti 
foe ane f 1. e taru —— . aut Wind 
md place. the the fio i a ce Stoe. moony e ould orei “B 
—.— hi th fi t of loe. G X. w ri b gn ot use 
555 0 8 a ; T F. ther if h e 0 and at 
r ae n hae nd 8 The D 2 obi ns 9 
e hi wg Sapte aa rle H. W 1 — iged n 
ve 7 drawin he ute the ‘The Dams è 40 yt 
u rde na ogi yond and ran ou ma kno 2 an 
ag r 235 ma — Ta e ge will sce wW o d G 
th = fo ez ny — — ard wili find go fn be nhou our reader 
em, b — ye | an lu: — rD 0 liable se mi 
tao Tear surot ate mes of nena ike fruit as in the . 
the combe A — — ‘he Che pat 10 par Om 
re be 1 n h ntion C. t ca 
pre th ot ey — of 
vi cep- he out th are N ard frui 
ous] * pr eS t 
— Scare — Sub. A 
oes nro Fg en — . 
ran 1 17 ate 
y leaves pas — 
h co curi u 
Y rA p. 
U 


Ey 
plan 
ei te pian yoa flow has 
en 
ne st, 
nam 
= pin ai min ti 
0 
alt 
th: 
* 
: As 
usual, 
and 
um 
uni e 
ca 
— ti 


3 
requi 
Te 
nen 
but 
if 
they 


NO OTHER MANURES. 
A Wee O, of the finest quality, direct from 


paee 
ERUVI 
Es 8 SODA “AND POTASH. 


GS 
1815 (SULPHATE OF LIME). 


NIT 

GYP OIL. 
PRIED MG (ing w WORM DESTROYER). 

SODA ASH (PHATE OF LIME (made from bone only). 
UR. RAL . and all other Manures of known | 


1 11 å, s Upper Thames-street, London. _ 
R TH Aha 


A eee arran ent may 
Lieu UM (Great R Reduction ia Price), = — at 
5s, per ton, ton, at the works, loose, tel in g3 required. 
nt chemist, 5 ronounce 
It has e road Flach, i pronane 
22 T SOWING 
HE LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg to 
offer as under. 
LONDON = he COMPANY'S CORN e 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


153 


1 8 (COMPANY'S nae | 
AND PURPLE 


other pelo M —.— 
are pre-eminently adapted for | 
— g pin ron, „e a oF Brick ot i and every kind 5 

e The been expos Shipping to 
action of Sea-water, a “of the suiphuretied Hydrogen so pre- 
Saleni tin Sea. ponsi and 3 Harbours for more than three 
eee ation of the Shipping — 
e Com 


most satisfactory testimonials have 
been forwarded to the Company’s Office, copies of which may 
, or of the Agents, 
e, by the ton, 251., delivered in Lon 

re of packages, 

| to the Sec 


don or Liverpool, ex- 
To be yo org raps gps 5 on application 
Mr. J. A. 


3 ; ca 


[LI 
. i 55 < SUPE HOSPHATE C OF 
» p 
Guano, direct from Importers’ Stores Fiste 
ee Salt—-Gypsum for Clover — Soda Ash for des wo he 
. and every other 1 Manure 

Company would call particular a attention 

ate, the former 


Ja Fo FOLLOWING. 14 Sn are manufactured 
Mr, Lawes’ RI 1 ar 


hampton; Messrs. Vint and Co., E e P a orde 
75 Sunderland; Mri Robert 5 Plymouth; Mr. Joshua 
x, Tregedna, near Fa 


i pu 2 AND HEALY 8 ead BOILE 


R.- — The 


eve 22 77 

B. ble to hake; Ta 1 8 in 
stating it to be the “Ne e pos ultra” for warming large plant 
structures. As a proof, one charge of fi has been kept 


„ 80 


‘uel 


burning for 48 hours without aA addition, and one boiler of | . 
0 f 


They 
otanic Gardens, Kew. 


CORN 410 6RASS MANURE, ... Pe rt — 10 0 
CLOY. E 8 0 
. MESURE 5 i 0 0 
SUPERPHO-PHA „ 0 
SULPaULIC ACID AND 8 0 0 
N.B.—PERUVIAN GUANO, from selected cargoes (in Doek), 
Nl. 10s. per ton. SULPHA TE OF AMMONIA, &e. 
be €9 69, King William-street, City, London. 
ee ENGINES, ee AMS, &c., 
on rinciples ; by Steam or 


Engin orked 
wer, to raise from 1 Pate lo 1000 per minute to 
8 500 feet, el from a depth Ay 900 feet. Douche, 
Vapour, Hot-air, and all other kinds Baths, Buildings, 
onl kc. heated by Steam, Ain, or Water. Ponas, 
Sinking, and 1 &c. Towns supplied.— Dir 
to ree ave, Chats 


Gracechurch-street, 


well 
may be wal at most of the Nobility’s seats and nahri] 


0a Waste m the kin pie: 
Co, beg 


15 ie Park.etreet, ine porii 8 for the construction 
bf Horticul B 3 vo -zo 
obtained pon 


— Wire. work. e. 
PA DCEMEN T Testimonials received frost 
. CEM 


8 T to pos ria ch the rare 
— . e 


x re and to be consequ Ne 
Tining of Res — ‘or hy 7 — as building 
ng and 


Smokes tape Fish-ponds, & c. F 
3 al castings it requires either 
re yell ner ver ve regetates, and will carry from three 
— N B. W 


were am and Sons, Milbank- street, 


Den. ORCHIDEA GROWER 
anD HEALY, 130, Fleet street, respect- 


Houses, n to their metho- of warming Orchidea 
a ros 1 of w warming the Orchidea 
ntion 
— „ 


— ag ers 8 to the House 
the Orchid ouses of the following distin uished 
of this . class of plants. . 5 


en Eed., Hoa 7 — Place. 
„ Esq., Stratford. 


n.— 

edge of Analytical Tn, Agricultural 
ng, Railway Engineer- 

3 . Nessit’s Academy, in 


Works e, Mensuration, Gauging, 
“nglish Parsing, ya are pma by Loxa- 

poy hy cao Booksel 

by letter ool can be had on application either 

1 INDIA RUBBER PIPES AND 

Alen AILWAY COMPANIES, Nika Gon 

ENGINES, S, GAS COMPAN 


r stiff 
flexible), aad as they — on cod 2 spl. 
» are particularly adapted for Tire. 
all patposen 
s A jeri Made all sizes from 
=~ ep an to order. 


; there is a direct communica 


y put up 
Sm ie Feller upon the same plan. 
BURBIDGE and HEALY, 130, Fleet-street, London. 
GRICULYT URAL — Purchasers can en 
a lied w ocks of all sorts of Turn 


„ Martin’s-lane, 


„ &. 
DRUMMOND & “SONS, . Museum, 
ling, N. B., will furnish, free, on 1 priced 
— 2 of TURNIP 2 nd other AGRICULTURAL S 
N.B. All parcels of Seeds above 21. value (with a exception 
of Grain and Vetches), delivered free of carriage in London, 
Liverpool, Hull, mene — many other parts to which 


AGRI Se SEED 
HOMAS WHALLEY begs * state that bis 
AL PRICED LIST OF AGRICULTURAL — 
is now ready, and will be sent free on application. Gentlem 
rng seeds for their tenantry supplied at wholesale prices. 


d holdings confused together, but a 


525 Wee 2 tract consists ue ae 8000 acres 
and bog ngst mountains, 


“ys 
a vith 8 partially and rudely cultivated, but cursed 
it byt 


AMILTON inherite 


, becau 


as 
0 ervations) has 
operation among the lasidlorde too, 


sine es in common for the 


hich affords no advantages 
e patriotic: 3 landlord who 
his means in p his own 
i 7 ee a full share 5 9 65 
* e moral and pecuniary 
and responsibilities of his nel boat 
This is, in short, the rundale $ system in 
About 


part of the pper 
eople g first 2 opposed se 

MILTO — 5 his plan of eee 
bination of steady persever 
which an excellent agent 
attained. Every 


ek Flower Seeds, which may also be had on application, 
1 * paid to any port in Scotland, Ireland, or Wales. 
12, St. George's Crescent, Liverpoo 


Che Agricultural Gazette. 


TURDAY, MARCH 10, 1849. 


MEETINGS FOR THE TWO Ft TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 


TuEspay, March — —ä 8 Aar England, 
HURSDAY, ‘ural Im iety of Ireland. 
TUESDAY, — — — — — of — te 
Tuukspar, — “anu Agricult — of Ireland. 
Far CLUB.— Marc. deen 


e now shall proceed to agen 1 
instance of gr: reclamation, with which we can 
connect more of pecuniary details, as well as eet 

e case which 
we are goin — 0 to AMILT 
of St. Ernan’s, in the on of Senden Donega 

called the Glenties, teas 8 has had 3 (in 
some respects greater than those with w the 
other 8 -has grappled) of an pal nature 
to 2 
Arc 1 to his estate under 
foorita no 
e 


the county in Parliament, instead of 
emulously striving to improve their estates. The 
present proprietor set himself earnestly to work to 
71 r the negligences and faults of his 3 
to relieve himself if he could from the acc 
mulated evils hich had fallen upon his property. 
Instead of leading a useless life of fashion in the | m 
igh class society to which he had hereditary claims 
of admission, and leaving his apts no better than 
he found it etermined to devote all the fresh- 
ness a is hr se nergies 0 
5 . amelioration of “lands, 
urpose of 
3 and iniru 12 multitudes of human 
bein He 
in 


a hie 7 and surveyor 
ask. In one year, aborts gg eh above 100 
cres were 5 ed by the tenantry from the 
heather and bog, with the sti 3 > six or eight 
— offered for the best reclamation. This work 
as going on with spirit when the ‘Piano failure 
ccu nly 150 


bes ught desolation to 
holdings ut of 160 were valued at above 4/. a-year, 
so that under the law al the 


w 
for that tract fell upon the landlord, and a multitu 
of tenants and their families who held those . — 
(often larg oo but small in production) 
looked to him for suppo 

This particular mamie in reality belongs to the 
son of Mr. ee ee who with his f ci eee 
ness and zeal e a profession the rove- 
ment asà this estate, and purchased the rater right 

f ant, who k a little ite inn, whic 
he — into ad * r himselt in 1845, 
and where he has been effecting grees of hois | im- 
ti Mr. HAMILTON 


— to —.— 20,000 acres, of which = little 
than o nth was sort culti- 
vaii; and of ‘which one-half is capable of more 
less improvement, while every acre of the 
ago part required cee 2 subsoiling. 


The neer recommended, i tailed pee 
an advance of 46,0004. upon the 3 y, as cert 
to m mple returns, 2 e K the e depant- 


ments e a loan 
tions and maps were — hon — — was 
bound to complete the — oa he and his son 
prepared for the execution of 


land, contains between 43,000 an ) hey were fully aware that taiprovi ng by drainage 
panita, et its yearly valuation of rental is only deepening the soil of the little holdings of the 
f this union the whole electoral division majority of the tenants w ld be unproductive, be- 

of Fintown aeg to r. HAMILTON cause the iers had neither the skill nor means 
This pro e which is inland, in the midst of to follow up the improvements, and cultivate the 
ntains, has no ad e of market communi- 2 land, to make it repay the heavy 


r 9 miles even meanest v 


154 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZE 


TTE. 


[Marcu 10, 


Tial emie Mr. Hawitron, therefore, determined another * ac., is next added, and Wer or ep park 
to raise a large sum of money to acquire possession the gelatine as be eae 121 2 2 — Í ae saM * 
of a ene quantity of land, aud to remunerate ditiously stir red and worked tog 


Tight; one his objects being to raise a number 


he 
of them trom the condition of little miserable tenants |; chaff, and the ¢ &e.,’” he continueth, “are thrown into 


to that of regularly employed labourers. They e 
i i hat this wo 


8 
> 
® 
— 
LE 
S 
s 
— 
F 
© 
— 
2; 
= 
ao 
7 
= 
3 
g 
S 
© 
5 
2 
& 
— 
2 
88 


Gentle read 
i i i ancy of: that“ ede placed’ 
emigrate ; in Glenties he bought up the tenancy of a} let you and me look into t 

iv f leases and fi and in both aai tub, and turn over with the three-pronged fork i 
consi 5 number of leases and farms, and in b e 
1 of pure water, 3 gallos of 5 meal, 24 bushels of 
Pea-straw, 24 bushels of hay, 24 “ &e.s,” and 24 bushels 


in eden of ‘the expected produce of the im- per week will be increased to 2s. 6d. ; and in adhering 
ved 


lands, had to provide farm-buildings, ma- to these regulations,” he adds again, “I have never | 


chinery, live stock, &c., no trivial 3 for | failed to obtain ample remuneration for grazing, inde- 
‘a Jandlord on the west — of eam in 1846, | Pendent of the box-manure which is beyond all price. 
who had. it m „at hoards par grazing ! and so, after all, this is a description of 


Nad pravena 0 ! But the h ical result of th 
laid by. If this piemin da bá d not felt it a duty to razing ! en comes the practical result of this 
do his best, and steadily entertained the assurance novel — A piy Sats, he — — A tet 
that the giver of every good gilt and 18 of all e een 2 ne toate b 
‘who trust ri oad ould guide and enable him to 

d in h 1 05 he must have let his hands 51“. These h — into his boxes and fed them 


dowu in despair with the precious compoun d; but one, as it was natural | a 


—— she väli, died, an nd had they been mine I should have 
conside: 


BOX FEEDING, myself deid lucky if the other five —— not 
In my letter of Feb. 3d, at page 76, I asked — followed her example; in June 1848, he sold four 
‘readers of the Agricultural Gazette to re peruse some | out of the five for 19“. “or for 760, and ses 
of my former articles on what is called vox: feng 1848, he had one left, which having been fed o 
— as Mr. Warnes, the: inventor and advocate of this | seed, Grass, Pulse, and grain to an unlimited quantity,” |- 
lately generously and gratuitously pu ublished | | was worth 29/., but three weeks before that date she 
for the compounding of the precious article, | was worth 304., as he refused that sum for her; and 


win ying 2 2 — 1 hi c. ree eae. time ‘the favourite was grazed na her 
Jund, eem it to 4 th luab became. i 

be only equal justice that the same favour be:solicited therefore, — 9 of n 

* him. The — 2 —.— — ules for the using of it, heifers 

4 ars, Was first given to the world at n the I 1877 be ht in 6 heife — 1 „„ 

No folk Chronicle, and from that journal megter June, 1 M8. sold o ut 4 0 f the 0 2 — 

ment was made and published in the Agricultural pio ie ie Sl Send r. 105 

‘Gueita of Jun. 27h. 1 might, therefore, refer the | Boughton , — 9505 


therammer.”” 6 It is then pressed down as firmly asthe | 1 
* ik ae unge ye a tears nature of the mixture will allow; and this completes 


rnes 
six Datch ier, she Sarai us, at 8/, 10s. each, or for | W 


— age they talk at sec 
threa en 


8⁰⁰ 
9 falling foul of 
snaps him — mouthful ; 


— Me — of ev 
height in the present decade, 


as what plague is oe 10 
attractive form imagin 


at ease in the cou 


It appeared—from ‘this 


orses were enough t 
de 


P 
eep and the same in bre 


5 rse system, which 
all of them may not . mien te, in — prese . ve . oy ne E 
Ao Mr. W 1 will n 0 9 (One heifer died, but what expense she was at does not w 


appear. 
Thas, the six Duteh heifers cost 51 i 80 
word to use the greatest care and aceuracy that all he for 105/4. or were worth that sum she be ae 1 
yas | wer very much like for some 1 on this 
deere 5 si Ta = novel system, to explain wherein lay the profit; to m 
rms peculiar to that and the neigh- | upon utch heifers, But let us hear wh 
. at Mr. 
bourin eee — the course are en sera thou- | Warnes — says on this subject. “I Pg ub- 
— Agricultural Gazette who | lished,“ he writes, * many similar returns to the above 
m experience that the quickest t generally 
prove the most profitable ” To this J also fi my agree, 
Mr. 


parts of è For « exaniple, i 
po e uaii for tithe —.— of the all spl 3 
“ gelatine (for it bears either name), Mr. 


p idea may 
‘ewan — 2 2 of bo med of the loss—mark the word “loss !” gentle 


I believe, can exactly explain. I have heirs a reader—of fastening — for Christmas shows and 
many men being in their — but I had not the euriosity | er mene! t upon his system, I 


€ h 
am enabled to 10 ke tiá e his favourite heifer upon 4 Linseed, Grass, Pulse 


: gra 
ndin increase 
‘precious jelly, alias reo, namely pu 5 


7 owe —— WE 0 ee eee may 
all is clear ; sbutinentreumes. the — all — purchase as possible, as it is the only pæd iy After they | 
t ‘into whieh Liam not abte even to glance. from ruin if they are box-feeders. Geo, Witkins, 
yet T TA J the East inform 9 
— be ene at it; but of course itis} ‘CHRONICLES OF A CLAY FARM.—No. II. 
Wins so een dats 51 ated, t But why does Mr. Ix there isa elass of mind in the worl mae wliich 
0 make kiiri bis ight ir tantalising ? Tf he profess | native an ntipathy to improveme 1 the bas a 

not write "i ‘the making of his * eom- much more really mischievous, 5 a aa 
j — — 28 which a plain man, | desti to earicature it. As e imal, ho dee 
or to any Ot his d di _ What, i him | noxious, and see eeming ly useless, has its appointed aed 
a on anewer 46 this r 180 do the e natural enemies of all scientific Be An 
nearly worthless ; but still, ond: bate receipt is ment in their own art, ling, whatever 


A trade, or ges 
isi ‘undertaken to or may be, find a [never failing source of triumph 
How to make Mr. W — f enjoyment in crackin the bo 

j * — 1 fatten compound, as TBothasincte who dog the a malted ae 


e ih era 
p ature, over her 
inter-squabbliug and ually-intolerant ch 
aud ‘wonder she interferes mull 2 ee beri 


it is quite r that there was a loss of many pounds Seo 
he 


or 24 in 
Ballons, of the pure element, and 3 gallo oil sey ir il, ot Value only 61. 12s.,'searcely ‘money enough to pay for 
i Shinada Loney i 3 attendance fore, — do 


yards wide 
k for drains, and if 
n the dr 


— 


WI 
— reer about gam 


50 shooting jacket 
Seb As ou 8 


r the During — * half of it, he had net 


did, i was — to put his 


d and 
a former, so that they were quite buried, though oneet 


e ing far at 
a lot of stray heifers; before he could put ae q 


ou farmed extens 


KS 


lve 
l am familar with Mr. 
od 
= hout 2 
pardon ?” 


not much of a 
come—” 


8 


| the Scotch farming then dd you 
» 


th of pro ive Truth, lik an re te 
— — —— — in rofile against | nis — ae 9 eee 
i | Sil Objects, in ev 
in /burlesqued ‘and ridiculous outline. 9 


Excuse my 


account | mean 
of my own; W. 


bso ee che have fee 8 Nein 


measures, to rescue her beleaguered , 

| foes i in front, at least from the fools behind “Fier bi 

about, exaggerating every account, like oa 
n ; dre i 


orgau-grinder does the mee chat his winch watt 


solid E 1 of old-fashionsg 


but the cee lies in the Corollary—* So 
ts | your Seier 
aer m had enough of this, stor 80 
are, Counterfeits of every sort pe ban 


—— every good su Bees 


A very yong ooking Title personage, very 
dressed, having seid — cone? and got ‘pele 
nary 


that sort of abstract which oolboy writes o 
Thursday night of last Sunday’ s — to be shew 
i — 


pax 

was a most interessting — quite in its hinfancy— 

pene com te so. The farme 
d knew nothing whatever about it— 

mis seme ver. The land did not produce e — by a- 
not a eres what it hought to du. 7 

was a shocking waste S time and ex —2 a pair d 
plough the stiffest laud — 
to any th. Every ploughing should be . 
d 


good for nothing. Go- a en was the thing ; 24 5 


dow rain this eal drain the wettest lud 
—— But no‘ 1 

be ae to lay out sm . al in these impo 
—.— 

ch a bee "of whieh after many othe 

„Ke. 

his remarks ; offering tent hem inh in his owa it 

person upon this identical little — 

; The stupid old chrovicler mean tie 

a fore ee i this 


him, passed qui 
address was over that > 


No — ; sere ee t least—not myself 28 
"| but I've seen a goud deal of agrieulture; that 
been over some of the most 
establishments, that of Mr. Speedwell in Ne 
Rev. Mr. i 


wns been over Lord Senn 
— in South Dampshire, with his — i 
nd: MeScufiler’s Scar l 
in Iuthemess shire, N. B.—I know Mr.M 
well, the way I presume, 
r ait 
“Nou would allow | me, I say to take — 
“ A certifieate—oh ! I understand: 


On! no: it wasn't to study: 1 dingo ad 
him: ah! ates farming ! He haen't an 
not a bit r K the hid plot belive tto 


“Ah! well: We goe —< a or 
though, here, 
Not ꝓet wg but ie 5 be. 


eae tuoi a thonin pounds ; "rather 


t trom the 


of these light 
— no harm Socom 


— 


of their own names, and are fain to wear 8 ae 
r an incognito. The aner that has reached is 


. beginning i — infecting 


iar neteenth ce ntury, l 


t 
in the most pleasing and 


diseourse—that Agriculture 


arm-yard man 


o landlord ought to a 


at least, as they have it 
e lecturer cone! 


sowehow to have — 


way und —— 


tensively Mr. 


Sir, you allow a 


myself, but if a friend 


u study long 


u married Mr. 
e 
nee, h 


begin upon. * 


jo— 1809.) THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 155 
a Scoteh plough and four | plan, with respect to seed. will ever be much . in , Péligot read a paper on the analysis of Wheat. “Ths 
has promised © (evel 1 think he calls them; such | this a 8 755 paran st it. T. Bub, I ay paper contained results of various analyses, ee of 

ny ovd be, nished to see the rate they go wets on Feeding.— Do t think esl in hose varieties most commonly met wit th. 
mn 1 visable to — Aeae some 3 — the rd Flanders Wheat, the produce of 1841 at Vienn e (I a. 
+ rot counected with—with Agriculiure— — . ee e Nothing is more common than to hear 2. Hardy White Seotch Wheat, cultivated at Verrieres 
1 3 rs say, feeding does not ae fatt ttening does not since 1839; the produce of 1843. 3. Very soft and very 
ay ſa her toh! so. He n trade: but he is pay, ae. ; and thus feeding and fattening are neglected | white Wheat, the produce of 1842. 4. Mixed Wheat 
opm og with ber ah till lately.“ as a science. ow, if farme a gained any informa- from Russian Poland. 5. Very soft Wheat, sown in 
ments pane ensued : — e youthful ex- | tion of a truly scientific kind, it has e * respect 5 | aoa 1842. 6. Wheat of a somewhat glazed a pear- 
A few ot vif confidence on the face of the speaker | the theory of feeding and fattening. o you not | ance, produced in 1840 in the Department of the Loire 
g earious! with the eee puzzled and | think that i 2 Aye to set about 3 some Pate: Inferieure, 7. Ditto, the produce of 1344, at Verrieres 
aa fal 5 9 by the — eet respecting the best and most economical use, e. g., of 8. Ditto, the produce of 1844. 9. Dito, from the 
ine dik dialogue. we expression how Linseed, it 2 a highly beneficial to all farmers ? | piaig a of Avignon. 10. Very hard Wheat, the grains 
. j m the —— getting up —— ee The proper use of Linseed, in conjunction with other | very | "pa originally 77 — Africa, cultivated 
y book case, pul shore as if in pi ce to th roduce, see b right direction i we at Verrieres in 1844. Wheat from Baeca, 
to the ick qua vol ; and | Should make inquiries, e. g., its application, in conjunc- | gary, the produce of 1055 p heat 


Genese just prnding—a t By aren ; 0 . 12. Egyptian Wheat of 
ine blown a little cloud of dust from it into the fire- | tion with straw and roots for young stock ; in what pro- | small red grain, of unequal size, and horny. 13. Spanish 
and rapping it 3 once or twice, apparently | portion, * its application, in rie sg 7 roots | Wheat, the ordinary Wheat of the Paris market, a mix- 
place plete the purgati , he walked up ‘and quietly and corn, for fattening, &c.; its fitness for rearing. ture of white and hard Wheat. 14. Ditto, very hard 
isid it down, open, “= l ‘his visitor. Again, w iat combination of ee with other se Bd Wheat (Tangarock). M. Péligot t took the greatest care 
Would you oblige 22 by ne one page to me is best fitted for different kinds of animals, e. g., sheep, | in ascertaining the proportion of each of t ores. d 
The other stared—“ Read this! why gracious me, pigs, horses, &e. If you would send out a tabular principles of which the respective samples w 
sir! Lean't! Why, i ivs Greek or oy aa or something !“ es to be filled up pil af th paa much good posed, but acknowledges ihat the exact riar of all 
# Three lines w will do.” wuld be eff-cted, and much discussion ensue of an | alimentary eee 80 owe lex as that of Wheat is 
J can’t, sir, really! I couldn't read a word of it if 8 and induetive ot Tt is is 8 an induetion surrounded with so diffiew Ities om th from the 
d give me the world |” of facts that true knowledge can be obtained; why | number and the nature e of its cons stituent principles, that 
single lin line.” should not farmers unite for so good a purpose in so | the results obtained must be considered rather as ap- 
«J can’t indeed! I never learnt a word o' this stuff.” | good a cause? Philosophers have given us the theory | proximative than definitive. These difficulties princi- 
«An agricultural Author too! His name is Theo- of feeding ; the —— of the principle rests with | pally arise from the inadequacy of the analytieal pro- 
i It’s all about Wheat, Beans—Egyptian u elves. If you would sound the bugle, the intellect | cesses, with ‘which we are at present acquainted, in 
— same you buy at Mark Lane kiln dried, of the agricultural world would arouse an | sen in to effecting the complete separation of those su ubstanees 
and all = other plants and vegetables. Surely 2 a goodly array of faets on feeding. G. 
you can it?” Analysis of several sorts of Whe aoe a re ecent The following table contains a resumé of the result ob- 
4 til ‘it I 3 —.— world depended on it! I meeting oË the Academy of 3 of Paris, M. Eugene | tained by M. Péligot: 
learnt the alphab 


1 


Am 
2 
EE 
el i 
oO 
a 
9 
— 
— 
= 
18 
— 
P 


13. 
14.5 13.5 15. 
1.1 


14. 


— 


1% Thank you, my * friend—that’s an hon est 

answer. Now observe: you are going to pane all you 14 

have in the world, and all that Somebody e/se too au Matters aus ee 

that you 1 2 ou've never rece Ae de ert abet, rm water nn insoluble 

of that! k you see before you in that book | aivam t 

and in. 80 dificult is but the acquirement cf | Solu ble > Mat tter: 

a year or two; the other is the labour—of a life Non-nitrogenous ‘Matters (dex. 

of many lives—and not learnt yet. I'm not e — 8 N 
believe me. Is gek seriously: I’ve burnt Sales 


— 


13. 


16. 


2 
1 * LS 
6 9. 
12 8 
5 


1 
8. 
1. 
0 7.3 7.9 


. * bd 
Dies hobo |. 
— 


— 
re 
wats de o S 


mSS See = 


Neo K ba 


ou 


— {i 
ese sos 


59.7 


— 
> 
lee 


[E. H. Durden. ] 100 0 | 100.0 257 . 110.0 100.0 100 0 100.0, 100.0 | 100.0 100.0 100.0, 100.0 


ari ee without t havi g learnt how ; that agricul- rish Waste Land 383 —It is not improved off to families who carried on the further improvements, 
ture (if you like that word best) is an exception to —.— that Ireland so much wants, it is extended | Nearly the whole of this moss of 2000 acres is now im- 
every other human labour or pursuit, a contradiction to | far ming. — can ibe more deplorable than the | proved, and brings in a return of about 10 per cent. for 
Law, and will bring a livelihood without aren of the landlords, overwhelmed with taxation, | the outlay made. — Wheat upon the elayed 

study, cust or apprenticeship : that to be able to gabble the rates often reaching ne early the 3 of rental i land is good, the Oats in n gen eneral very superior, and the 
‘over the pet jargon a about the ignorance of our fore- = adequate means to improve their estates ;} soil particularly — for green erops of every 
fathers— ithout inducement to e engage in any large undertaking | deseription. It is remarkable that, while the Potatoes 
The old Chronicler was warming up—and beginning for working off pauperism, the benefit accruing from it | have failed on land joining, those on the moss have 
8 . his chair like a —— amg Dutch- | be eing lost i in their too extended electoral divisions. I) | been quite free from disease. Land of this kind has 


clearing ou tbo ur ;—but a look of some- the condition of — ay mm is thus des ce com- | been kuown, in — e the rate of 8/. the 

ingin thers ace jt happened to ails his eye miseration, what is that of the poor cottier ? Forced | statute acre for Pots The moss lan lets 
y 0 a P 

look that somehow er can break down—and into the workhouse, his small ho olding rendering him | higher than the old pa jaa land adjoining. Here there 

oun through a e — bolted door better than unable to har reppi himself upon it, he is surrounded | is an instane e of the value o moss lau eee of 

k e i t situati 


ha It 
a jelly—a sort of look between simplicity and | diseases oe on ‘by improper diet, with no chance | There is no material building on the moss, except a 
8 slight quiver” aoa the mouth like that of his working his way out by re unerative employ- wooden one, erected more fur temporary convenience 
ment, no hope of returning to his cabin, which had pro- than permanent use. It happens that there is a lp 
ee tanned ‘of ee . the safety bably been rased to the ground the instant he had Eecleston, about two miles distant, w where all th 

Valve bad opened of its own accord : that pr re quirted it, he drags on an idle and wretched existence, | piers reside. ese go from thence every day wt 
pie. be the Great Author has pes in the inner | indignant at the past, reckless of the future. Is no | constant toil, taking pieces of moss land according to 

of man, no matter w many rough coats are attempt then to be made to rescue these ple rom | the strength of their fi and shel: of 
he i in 


r eh 
w q g ; i ; 
me, come ! We’ll pei bargain after all. An | useful subjects, to apply their capacities to the welfare | join with each other in the proper working of the la 

early visit deserves to do business. Vau're still young | of the —— a hak “ consider — moment what took | T vim oe —— in a general way, known * be behind- 
head.” in: Lake a w. ne of advice ee an 5 place in the Union of Chorlton-cum-Metlock, adjoining hand with the rent, — or to see — —— the . — 
take you f to your friend Mr. MeScuffler—ask him ce sung e wee a population of about 80,000 =i an individ, without any 5 ary — — 
À N or three years :—it’s svon = one. Wo rk Her of moss land was taken about four at his command, but by a judicious 2 — td 
— or dear life at ipi farm, and make him tell you miles eee The able-bodied were — to work there divesting — — ea = and by 
; » ancy t > is your money instead of uced wages. It thus became their interest to | carrying out his i 
parse buys every ton of manure he expends. Put off look out for —— work. The workhouse was nearly | can effect such wonders, does — not wa strange mse 
— bit: shel be constant if you are: | empty, except with infirm and aged; and a fair return the Government sextet ee S sa ne _ any — 


ee —* ; 1 was TUEN It would ascertain how far such a me 
mons 5 8 You're old as me you ant nee p to poa a 5 eo improved. el a — Ireland? Should not a commission of practical 
dati sg Vij — 1 out t something by that time | cesstul moss cult cota but as your correspondent has | conversant with matters of this kind, be appoint to 
den ch stated that these are on ly to be ae with is a ee examine most particularly the working of this success- 
ta! sot hig of ands. — 5 on both may | ful moss cultivation! ‘Three years — million of 
' powell: mentary flush of be adduced, About 16 years — a Wilen * money w a improve- 


Warmth as 
el amay fr from a pair of la. cheeks like a red | succeeded to an estate, consisting, besides other land, ment = yee — 

bare bough in November as the letters of about 1000 acres of moss land. This was quite in | assigned for this ga 

3 ae to w Were slowly taken up one by one, and | a wild state, pig with Heath, the receptacle of moor | understood that iv arose from ung “the billy i bonich 
3 wich the leaden eye of habitude. Talpa. | — an te ild fowl. There wasa ‘depth of rich black moss | being — —— poset cvernment — 


E soil varying — = to 30 a gay underne w 3 was the land 
“Seg Correspondence kvold bel of day and Daik See Bat ere rote mo pon the ground or unten e 

Thin e. y an e opera 7 
Seeding The advocates of thin -seeding for not only to lay it dry, — o make a . cut, 3 do more in a ease of this kind — what ‘they do in that 


Wheat gener. ite i right 
Plant wit uae lay great — on the fact that the | was to serve as an arterial — — for the mass of water | of a road, a — — ‘They — vod 


* 
E 
d 
3 
— 
S 
— 
y 
© 
1 
8. 
© 
= 
9 
cd 
25 
S. 
© 
“< 
P 


a 
i extent, but it is, I think, | «ne . to Lancaster, about 10 miles en i ee 
on t the plant is weakened b sending out so | the opposite direction was Preston, about 14 miles dis- evitably fall through. If, bowers — 
Tpening. seg the grain rendered very uneven in tant; a two being the principal market towns for to making atrial of the measure gems y a 
Lean an instance ak a 1 1 d ; — * ent should be resorted to or 


Si th ring lan — 
i i other ; was thin, but very favourably read different oblong e enclosures were made with open | raising money for the purpose. umanity recomt 

— re . ct, being a yoi soil, drained | ditches, these being sunk — a as the soil | it ; self. in — cal ai it; 2 demands Pao jon 

i § crop w solid, b 0 en- requires aw. Rawstorne, ‘enworthan ö : ý 

— The W When z 1 Aaa . oe . — p hit va peaa kinds of occupants | Tilage.—A mongst the different Operations of hus- 

err but tillered md aud looked | After the 1 land had been properly drained, the first pro- | bandry, ove of we most sanasa is tillage ; 25 as an 

3 however it was most uneven in | cess was to have it well clayed, to give it — and j art, it is little — 2 

being ready Baga 10 days before | consistency. A large pit was sunk ia a venient | sense of the marh, ist =i — and 3 
them. I think this can only be Situation. The cast off rails of the — — the — at large. is —— ess 1 = 

i happened to be ased at à low rate. olden times, ustom seeding 


to pure at 
gis recommend sowing — With these the whole extent, at first brought into cul- was to turn 
‘ | f seeds (thi supposed to 
— ge the end of Septem mber or | tivation, was covered w ith elay at a moderate rate, at the large fe ip for the de ie 5 x o ania omer 
ot likely 


t E 2 * 3” 


[Marcu 10, 


THE — — GAZETTE. 


of distinguished no 
a pese dh the full. powers of yr that 
be first fully and deeply worked ; to give 
gh 


; that this dryness can 
; and that this d 
the soil into a fit state for being 
e — vg ae 28 off o> 
intro 


15 


trod 
1 yet it is a lamentable fac p how, in many 
any, advancemen made in it, and k 


rses 
which hel at present for dene for me ig 
I intend, I 


pe me 
10 acres yearly ; but if I p hie gpa 
shall not raise dung for 


may be 
ractice is bene ke 
shee, a 2 or Low 

at the roots 


entering in f the 4. 
o this part o the question, it will be 
rally admitted, that not only may the 


27 N e 
r ig toy by whieh “he did 


ce of 


on) to the depth of 3 feet ; and the roots of T 
w. trai 


Saale. the’ Gest 


han | of, invented 


re learn 
- | extensive! 
to | long neglected ites of "til 


3- 
of your Agr retired a ‘iad having se 
ve 


i infinitely obliged to 7055 or an 


ve made u 
each got per vi 36 Tbs, of ay i pruni 
of m 


f | wa 
preced 


ende 
tib 


degree * 


manure. There is no excuse in the resent day for r the | 
al |tilage system not being properly carried out, the facili- 
ties for it bei from the new and ingenious 
ich have ‘been invented, so much supe- 
Mr. eaa the, idea of 


= 
o * 


Garrett’ s horse five 
But there is athe implement very 1 spoken 
by ewington, which 
d with. still greater regularity on the 

d, d, and costs 


En 


dibble the see 


promising rere cannot speak 
but I hope to do so mone year to have 
dibble with 3 it half 


myself, w 
lage, 0 will enforce it in 
such ee terms as will bring it into more NS 
e | practice. Law. Rawstorne, 3 Presto: 


Foreign Wee mage 
KIPPENHOFF Being a constant reader 
much 
II ri 


b ye of it, 12 

of your corresponden 
ho woul ind enough to give any nformat tion esra 
the following subject mea making 
ent the fermen 5 which s place 
when put in sta seat In Switzerla 15 they estimate that 
the hay loses at least a third s nutritive value by 

| pem ee of 3 nae alow ing experime 
upon —Thirteen cows were put u 


valuable information 


e „ 25 lbs. i che 3 got after - 

a an 
ing arr from the They gav 

after the fifth day, 20 Ibs. of init 3 pr 1⁰ days, ni at 

o | and the Jast two Saye, pg 1 Ibs. 

again put upon d gave, after the fifth aay 

18 lbs.; after e ‘tenth d day, 22 lbs. and after the 

n 


* of Leyva 
rvice. Octave Perin d 


Sr OSI it would be 


of gre Augny, Kippenhoff, 


ard, 
pres 4 ‘Diekirch, Grom Duché de Luxembourg. 
ene 


Sorieties, 


ROYAL AGRICULTURAL $ 


e <r 


e | cepte 


7 9 15 2 E . 70 Kg hay of ka part ie 


| element, as wall. as those 
furnish the a rier materials of. vegetatio 
š hen 


? | with the dung as the hesp is formed 


on Aa subjects cee by the Co 
in every e ass of which there w 
of . tition. 
AGRICULTURAL CuemIsTRY.—Mr, 
f 


— 
OF le 


to be p 


—Agreeably 32 kas 1 giver 


D 
2 2 
for) 


of Hambleden, Buckinghamshire, should be 4 
one 
to dy the 


vane 
eve his pride to em, 
3 in his power. 


ren 

cutting-out and filling-in Ta. was unanimous) 

e Council. 

2 tC., FOR EXHIBITION.— The Council unni 

mously accepte ed the offer tie to them by the Directors 

of the Royal See e inate to 1 
models, &c., elongin he Society in 

apart in in that Inston ** the public exhibita d 

| agric ricultural objec 


he Council then ry tea to their next wedy 
| meeting on the 13th of Mar 


Farmers’ Clubs. 
ONDON, March 5: What is pa most efficient, bent 
‘Aaah cand 5 mode viding manure fos 
‘arm 2— Mr. LAWRENCE, of f Cireneestery introduced thi 
ubject, and in the course of his arks 
following ditin on the subject of tit 2 
The plan recommen ed and a d by Mr. 
ham, appeared to me, nene bs fulfil i all’ de 
ted manure, a the greatest 
h an d i otte | 


stalls into boxes, 2 feet deep, 
feet square ; on from my own experience ee he ervati 
other cases in which this dimension has execute 
would 3 any one against boxes of a 1 — * 
re filled in 5 = 8 13 3 when they turn 
loads each of ma pon the 


. Thee 
25 
an 

| 


the box 
—— be ineligible to cart the dun 


5 


Is. 
j, and when 


settled, the quantity in cart-loac 


and apply t this over the surface, an n iiy 1 
ni 


ane Stansfield, M. . 
; Mr, Thompson ; ; Mr. T. Turner ; and 


12 


serve that 
chaff mach 
ie Linseec 

— ects econoom, 

could hard 
the 7 a 


No 
viously to use on land. I should ok 
cut in nn D to 6-inch ingibs a 

ngine is ork for threshing, brui 
. 1 in this system as 
facility of emptying the boxes “(which 


Sch new — were 


: elected : 
ern, Cockermouth, C 
ies See u umberland 


meeting were 
N NANCES, — > Cilia CHALLONER, chairman 
ted the monthly re 
y ; from which it . — 
ruary 


a 


that on the last day of the aag, of Febru 
in the hands 


= 
20 


la PEA he chairman 
2 of 10004. presented to a 


it a 
e . at the next 
1 


itho 


be fluids gi 
vole to the © 
re com per 
ten 

m tne cart 


as it is — . trod), the ‘ready absorp 
. fitness of the manure fi * immediate os 
out — —.— 
the most satisfactory state ; it is s nels 
being wet ; not a drop of flu ‘id falls fro 


4 
— 


| | made by The 


with cattle, w 


orities of Norwich, as well las 2241. 


— also —— the excrement of horses, 


ould by the free 


YP 


nore readily enter ini 


VUGU tU SUIG CA 
e been emptied ; “put ‘thi 
e to the senses on the 


he boxes ar re full, 
tation 


3 the country 


the Society upon the inte- | 


fer me 


Th 
me w erect Ha — 8 eae by 
| each, the whole under e I 


10— 
184 
9. 
T 
H 
E 
A 
G 
R 
1 
C 
U 
UT 
U 
R 
A 
L 
G 
A 
2 
E 
T 
T 
E 
15 
7 


den 
aaa 
ar de = 
seem 
= E 
11 T — in. Shah 
ee 5 
de : 
they ad eae 2 
terr ade 5 as z oe 
* 
= a ! I A ph sit 5 3 
15 as —— aa : = 
ee than th om 
85 5 os e a = 
; 3 . = a 
: i y a Fa egre om vest hat 
71 oe os af y b bata 0 = 
== Ag tea acti th 80 
N 5 i ; E e sir a as 
of 0 upo d whe fi e y a 
- = : > 155 — the: =e 2 ager 
- : ie 8 and >a ere t 8 An yer 
ve lsi pon = appe ae “not 3 d th 
— oe 25 0 Se a = : : : 
— — ‘ard rm n ~ r eal wd 2 1 = a the arro < 
e make = mae — ie z 8 
205 gaa * je a 11 . . : | | 
1 d be 8 0 ter oe 1 oy bo = 7 | | : 
, = a ie 
2 A p 0 a exc — — leh 3 high 55 
! = = S es yn e rap = 
ae EE hat y ee 55 z : 
ae t of yea bu 1 ith z 
ree > se he fe apie md rege 55 = | | 
5 8 i — his 4 = oe 1. tche te otat F c rg 2 3 
f = — p i A 8 
5 N omit 5 a n =i al H. y f 0 tü a 
On . — oo with riet — — ra e Ti PEF 1 or hi 
5 i — = — 0 agh 8 dp x e banked l la 4 h 
N 5 3 = == a =e 14 n n lace -= 
; : = u a ves se = and ‘hal oe d k e e sie + 
= = is = z = 5 f i 
l 8 ar nt =< = a n bests = 
: , , = = «bet = Eo va 15 Th of wi ee = 
possessin, we vat e aa 5 a 0 — 7 fi e alier 0 te 3 ith , = 
8 tid = 9 ge. | e feld; 15 ee =o he pas 2 : 
- : = E p sha yi lis rodu uy ND e rs K 57 
| à a i W. 3 as sos a — prin m T h; 9 
8 ; r w = : oo 
a met ès le — es —. — w 
— EA y 
= s: ac 8 n T w —— 
: 5 em = 5 i 2 1 and Fa = ð it eon 2 reps 
. : = eti 3 : ; 8 = 
i “re ti fet ahs oe Es te a io rd 8 0 g “ 8 
er apat a Suff 5 = ee 5 tee ws ae , | | : | 
: : = : aj a ook, t 2 ead — every et = z 
: i ; 1 arved Bi — 0 0 10 ee i ding ferio 0 
: pi m h h A 8 e 13 ouble ot 5 an * br tne * erior q Phere 
7 : = sor = es e sy = st 
good ie — 0 > 8 ng a — 5 pn ao yi a eso 25 aie — åy | ta rsh t qu 0 ub 
Mer 2 f tig th ah — nd | 1 5 ona E er e — sing ba 5 0 a Bos be brash » 285 a e b 
: : : po ur t 5 sate own oot, p h A n — ir — 
i : 5 se ia aba nd. a wn, 1 wi L im te avei mE ) 
| = t a R ve u * 1 
: | 55 8 a e ar T . Sex and f 
ghlan be X = Av. ro pav an 7 — gh | 8 otoo d to — 15 k is s 1 ifthe e — 55 2 rang sour N ne ; : x 
. i c * tie e d ef en 5 er 455 a 4 oki ie ti e Hab = ; : 
: : : 2 pats for t are the e is tt 8 J e tim aro — ia 14 =o 
thei ie h rine 5 d e eed = d — 5 na = the ga 5 =e ERT E o give y as, a 
| | : : 2 | X re ie * es ng ove en x onis h n 1 2 oe: ie ell, 
= : ee p st 5 ep a jed, a 1 e a to a dee ye 1 
8 jis ri y det l 5 e e 3 de = oe t EE fat : : c : : | , 
gn culture, i Te dint c 2 il mea 105 n- | the a — — en reporte tho fa 2 oo ty gh Er : 
= he not aed it y a 5. foo ally rhe sed itis 8 er am . 85 t EF the we g 
Present instance b 8 pith ata neral 4 hi t b es r ord want 10 1 i oh te 8 at — of d sa — er — 28 oft 2 0 9 e busi y deh sey 
wrt as y ve u guis ie t x y of iong a e 5 ome shoe ex = F 8 z : : , 
: | 0 rey ti inar a r d to b e jader ah k 1 . 8 are S 
| : } | = 15 . ary gi an cep fa n ero ane f g 1 he ep eggs t pare uch Es 0 i. n zing the 
y =e trig 1a) e 125 h De : er stor the | as far r u jood ad en. ARM, t Aa ae a 15 3 
5 3 its y ri ae n ae — vod, TE ment, e th r t = 7 p s th b 4 
f - a on E i ze o a or tt rig uch 25 mE 
: i hz a h ld 5 of a | an: as * er hy ce 55 ae = I h irs a i not Ek r 1 — hing tora n 2. a prais f pr 
months hi r e ve I bad > 0 2 — ro 5 z 
: | a a 4 = ea r 4. ct poo — p- = ih inst * ki: — inim ris of 
8 H d la 5 i u this 1 ae sin pa ra he me Se cs t n more ing a 
- 5 ö it g 5 = ae af vd Sok pli t ox pie e e ss = dé re Io he ; oft 
— nf * 0 t 8 l vi h id e nd al = ae Te 5 8 s n 10 cat 140 ia A 0 br — fae 2 palo 
| | : : = i a c 9 st the haa — e =o f r ie os *. rea 
| , | : | | = 25 Se iy Æ = 15 hae oe ast 55 2 = = . = 
, : : , : : = ee 8 thi h rali -i A ae — Ra 11 0 a = an —— n 
— TI ing ez z z hly f efuse ar re iy a hese 8 == a 1 — 
ok 5 ta an 25 k ti th —— — ay op : See ars z "st of : about 
= ; 2 th ra w 8 — of e on or of 95 a op ae t 
; | : = 5 nd il za 15 f ts ari ea er == 12 — — 7 hed a e, 
in y fı be e h t ha “te ol y bey nearly eo ice g ounde, e ‘oat 1 h t te re TA a > 
3 : = s Ri swero 5 3 of te a 5 = — mb: 0 ‘abo ee 5 5 cat n — — 
| 1 rn ai 8 
l hen ry sa ` Bial le ve ag en w d e = ure vig he pt , — and (i coe =e at 8 ah - - 
| | ; = dics be sae Hitik prese 5 fbr ibe t 1 tapp T ay om 1 a’ i d 
T I y one 5 ae mane ward ae = n oink — den 2 Se = 5 2 | : 
, i : : = — D 60 Ibs ve 8 ae 10 = 
= ot ret ly s aly quarts al ok lo 1 se or extra 155 Wee 5 y gs eo om 0 
> = Et il ad Li f "the l en 125 nE ni am 7 i n oan wis = 
u iT be are i en , E stated m ded cou — E ine — = 4 * . 155 : : | : 
: i E 1 as w 19 are t — Ma —. . ne hen a aden le 
3 3 : a ae J ee E 0 a rei e's t gma 2 R aie 880 di 2 t g a t 
: = ivi sng “alg 0 h re st on ism e's. — m depe y u one 0 OF tA ch * 0 co ER 
, ia 3 25 f. 8 of mi 8 Tan 415 ae ee ds Ga m * “it — ee st 
ig 5 e. b m. i e in A h s cha- ai 72 ey ne ing in — ad te 8 a the r — ; : : | 
: ae a 2 mn il 1 p * A = = of ature m ji q 8 ea b 4 ‘the 
i cs raz jurn e r the yon = a wee 8 wn e ad 
| 8 f 5 ; o, aft i 7 Beir 5 10 ‘and cons ni m- — hic — of as er = div sh sare 
3 8 — as hes 15 9 shee: cipal 7 5 1d wi ze ps , F Ei T es s pales K 1. Y ide — 
X a i ven to w al gin | 15 erat hog a aw a 0 the ro er of e = oe far 7 tas 
thinkin wt d Y in ent nse wi 45 h tie rofl to te calves 2 ae ee s — E ero te ei 1. and a 
: : ; a — 7 rior 1 ibitu ther e i 0 So ae vets T) G aa want ar: — 155 cp bys 8 — 
| . 21 S. re E a Ik 0 ‘on . ndi og ann 8 0 RE m E 81 k 8 t te — ee 
3 : Æ 7 a nat n about comp = dito 8 oe bo n Ia ation pu ze we 2 ah 
as are — tte a an F are i c en e — sh I a me f wa b a ee — 3 nd ink 
: : = T it — p = ch 5 aa N ‘i d — 25 on gre 2 k aie eir iif 
: : : — -n 15 5 15 tthe Ass t I = TA, the ex 1 
: 5 * e 28 y. ext ugi fow 5 cera rs, — ae nB RE of 
E 1 r Re 5 zs — : a nips. hing | Just imm wi usher 10 — a — a arle. 
l te =e | = 4 — g * — ey oy 
8 c = 3 he p 15 in . ash, 3 Gi a that om ediy in rely o F he of [ins 85 7 27 din of 
; . = h T 0 y3 — a 5 ely P last or 8 Turni i 11 aT cae 
? 3 ora an ET nt ny roe PE — = ed Burni E af T Se ur —— 
a =e wn, y 55 state Rag ect t 5 5 li o 
= 55 ce £5 985 ur = tyi self, “eat | 8 r sag : = : = 
: er = 5 ) sou 8 Ps = E : ae e 8 2 a le 
: | ; = = 2 si — p 255 4 riene a oe 5 the sei 21. <ighth 
c 3 Ae y ed * od nd t = rienced, i a a Ba 4 85 M be hi 
= ou * d di u 6 Ea a w wi ou nd April th ly; oe 
| : : z ee — Ä RE Be: — ivators 
ne what a a 8 aste les the 
J a ‘aoc cl Pi) re 0 = —— u * 0 ed ding i provai ve 0 5 8 
aE noni . a 0 ig foin h , FA i we se n v za r n t or 
0 — t ae = 7 5 = to T ei on — ba 5 m ot E th 
= 54 ES = a N SE t bo e, 
. t e rass, = ae si fod | an = rap arket T a ly nok" ou 4 sr 
1 hes. ke h hore ae > yea — Ai rs stin Pa Sa : in inter 1 ark — p = 3 
: == Se E r: hang jon, Y 55 
a 5 na whi hey ie iei ange — o Ya — me 
: , —— se << 8 So =e E — or bli 
th * 8 a 01 pec kin = d 7 ( — pA S 
= ‘ a G 8 e abe h g li 255 0 
| | 7 = hr Son me ge s =) t ree 755 — 
: c z : also: = — rapes, SS > : Pcl 15 = You es d 1 
| = — . — E — rh 4 
arm, it e ae 51 W. — rae r =i = 3 
= ae ee ay 61 z 2 ieman — = tig om 
*. re omg Ey ger haye 0 e 8 rt, Ib., a cient on : 
2 = 8 e nt — lg — ent 0 of re h 
: : : H 7 855 b ah “ib 128 =i é Re — 
4 i 1 c ut = ut 10 1 P ne pa er, r supr 
| | a i Gato 5 — 
loka roar a eae 2 "a ae p : 
- 5 i p . do: 1 — 8. eae n vith 
= : — cl i 0 e as, — Fo — 
5 y am „ w oa 8 1 * an 
= E x * s 55 
: = Tu EE EG Z ats p te 
= Red 1 2 * o —92 6 E py 
Z 3 ca a 18 a, Bs — t; 
| : : = u we T fee il 100, Fu 4 
= ee 1s B B b, 3M Cut 
: 3 te to 6a oe ae ees 
— pri 1 
i Le, — m 5 23 ni : : 
, — d ons, p. p 01 to to 
1 ace fone in a an 5 a 85 i z 
per ne a 1 . = = fe * 
: 2 ani Vi — t 22 
st 5 Pa 
P nál at . n = i i 
a S 150s 
? 45 0 — 
i | : 0 
. F =n = 
arrots, ee Sava 3 
— 3d a 7 : 
` 4 = | 
: = : P. d to „ 
ö i siw p 
Marj 155 = ; 
on eyt 3 ; 
rs Sy 
n P. rE : : 
8 a | 
green, per : : 
1 5 
to le: 
aa 
s 


— AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


[ Maren E 


— — — 


— wien 1 
smaller than of 
an in 


FIELD, , Mopar, 
1 


s. Sd. t 
eg mdi 
d there an 
man Beasts ; 


Ditto S Shorn 
Ewes & 2d i quality 3 4—4 0 
Sto 


410 


kuppi 


— advance. grees 
Beasts, 500 Sheep, and Pr — 
; and 163 Much Cows from. th 


Best — a 4 2 to 4 4 
Ditto Sh. 

iat 4—4 0 
Sh 
mbs.. 


— 


Best Scots, ~~, wow 
Beat 8 — a 1—1 € 
3 Beasts 2 6 — 3 2 
Best Downs 
alf-breds 4 6—4 8 — 4 0 — 5 0 
Ditto Shora | Pigs 4 0—5 0 
—— Sheep and Lambs, 3350; Calves, 179; Pigs, 210. 


H 
Messrs. — and Smira repor 
creased | tinues the s 


are 9 carport an 
difference 


ur last quo 


LIVER „ Fnr 
arrivals since Tu 


OPS, Fripay, Mare 


h 9. 
t that the market con- 


—— the supply = English 
11 


e 
Foreign 


t be wri tten Is. 


ere 


2 
$ 


ut 
confined to sri 


eaper.— 


and 28 Peas, and 38. 


nee at market 


per qr: fo 
rmer value, but all other de- 
uce our — 


a slow sale, tad 


his 


H R. SMITHE, Tania Fives 
the public that his mixtures of Gr 


— a admixture of the Perennial Clovers, for} 
re now ready a 1 5 aying 
te pein ere and mend old 3 est 1s, ber bushel, 
cted under his imm te superi ber Ib. Ie 
descrip’ ion go the soil, situation, * i en 4 
reference from unknown correspondents, q > alag 


EDS. — MEADOW P. 


rsham, Ken 


ass Seon ta 


e that + their A 


griculturn 


„Dowu, street, Picea: dilly 


1 


Ds 
aa Pay complete collection, consistir — 
22 1 ind s of N S. inelusive of Fair ean cha Quarts of 


— 


1 8 

an ts, . reel fae one 5 8 ‘cropping. of a es 
choice est Me lon nd Cucumbers inclusi 

No. 2. in — quantities, 
equally 2 sorts. .. 2 

No. 3.— Vit 1 1 

No. rem i Thisi is sufficient fora small garden 0 2 * 

No extra ebarg efor pasne carriage paid to London, 
ne be ad; also.a List of eache: 


ELECT FLOW ER SE EDS. 
1 = of the newest and best Appu o &c. 153. 
itto os 


— 41 


25 ditto W 
e ee ee e e eg g e and a dull t fire Wheat in some cases was aper 
of 36 Trusses, 1d; per bushel cheaper. Flou Piet 60. ee an e fine collection, of imported Stocks, Zinnias, inom lad 
Surravisny, March 8. more freely offered. Oats Oatmeal were also rather lower, | ™ amag 3d; per fn eade seni pomas ge trees 
Prime Meadow Hay 68s to 75 Clover 603 to 95s | and 3 one may be said of Barley, Beans, and Peas, Indian by evelor ower Seed Catalogue sent with each colle. 
Inferior ditto... ... 2 ew Clover | Corn limited request at about Tuesda, — rates. fion 2 A poo A i gg A 
æ. ee s. ee . > 
New Hay 2 — ae „ eb Wr AT. IBARLE TI OA TS. RYE. | BEANS. | PEAS. Caan MBER AND MELON BOXES anv LIG 
hort. VERAGES, - One - 1, 2, and 3-light Boxes and Lights 
Prime Mead Hay roscoe trie 3 Jau. 27 458 30 28810 d 17s Od 28s 1d 30s 34328 8d sizes ready for immediate use. Warranted best . er 
Inferior ditto... 8: |: Mew Olover oa ... Ser as Feb. 3 . 45 1 28 10 6 11 |28. 5 30 332 6 | packed and . to all parts of the kingdom; 2-light Bon 
New Hax. = ite aw $2 — 10 * 4511 29 3 17 327 2 30 1133 0 and Lights from 1l. 6s. Garden Lights of ory description 
Gi Clover s. cs Joata ‘Basanti en 47 029 8 17 2 9% 28 f e Conservatories, Green and Hot-houses. made and 
Wazon roli 8i ` — Mirou 46 4 29 8/17 5.127 8] 30 10 32 11 References given tothe Nobility, ie 
Fine Old Hay .. 688 to 74% New Clover 808 to 900 . 45 629 1/19 726 11 30 32 11 and the 8 iu most of — counties of England, i 
li l 
: e Bar Aver. 1 29 ff w 5 [38 2 kaca, Lovage P 4 
ne e uties on EY'S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GIIS | 
* Grain 1 0 0 1 0 ARTLEY’S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GL 
TERŞIDE, March 5 uetuations in the last six weeks’ Corn Avera FOR 3 TORIES.—The readers of the 
s ges. 
Pues (ames 20 + deners’ Chron 8 Feb. 24th, — ite oe 
3 I. 27. FEB. 3. Fx. 10. FER. 17. PER. 24. Man. 3. the high terms in hikt Ln spo Dr. 
47s 0d tidy ne LEY; We have therefore — 1 our list ‘of per 
46 4 er 50 pk 1 ae mi taia a with those of the Patentee, to wi 
1 11 i £ Px | iry ee attention of the Nobility, Clergymen, 
| aN e and others. 
7 P 2 — ct BE re 2 In Crates of the sizes as e ase see 6% 
45 pa < r jii eap n Square r 8, Dy, Gr: „ * 
s r fis by 6 hare New 10 by 8 a 
Wakefield. | Boston. | Birmingham. 5 1 — 10 >: gria ET 4 
Feb.16|Mar. 2. — Mar. 7. March I. | March 8. „ ae ee ee í 
all b . * 62 lbs. 62 lbs. 3 S f 1 
e r a E Ale d. d ” 5 „ ” 6 „ 
44 to 818 1048 38 1045 86 4445 9 6 65 9 6 6 me 2 5 . 
16—506—50 404738476 2 6 10% 2 6 8 ee eee 
P 45—47|42—44|42—44|6 4 6 86 2 6 2 Averaging g of an incu thick; and about 26.5. to 
44—50 52— 144644466 2 6.1016 1 6 9 N Faure Ov., 116, Bi hopsgate-street Withont, Lond 
40—52|40—44 hiri 
5 4 7 08. O—²¼ο 70 AR PLE VS PATENT 
ee A — sa for Horticu 
yi ae — — prov eyon ttha 
— — oe sae 5 to any hitherto discovered for all 8 
E qr. (WII LEM PATTEN anp Co: 
e 23—27 3 Mercuants, 20, Old Fish street, Doe — 
27—32ʃ27—30030—3230—32] 29— 29— beg to inform the pubtic tea: in consequence 
4-—98124--26|, — — ee as orde rs they have executed i [reland Sita 
2 Engi nd en re. 
ee v- bush. monts with the Patentee as will enable them to 
9—40) — = — Palas e Glass in any 8 strictly at the | pee 7 
o. have 
— — 0 24 A Stock, in 100 feet bosas 1 ld. per foo “il 
95 1 20 ih i 18—30 ole Manufacturers of the — and! 
om — T7219 17—19 paias for all kinds "of Out-houses, Park Fencing’ 
— — e 1! ESA Buildings, &c. 
30—34!30—39 GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES.. 
3430—32 — | — 6—4 James PHILLIPS AND e nae 
T — 12—13 1213 street out, London, are su 
— — . ities 0 GLASS at prices varying from 14d. to 9 74 ‘per foo ay 
25d to 5d., according to si e ren a: 15 
31333133 26—3226—32 11—13 10—13 3 double eee Sma t squar 
ela 92 — in 1 
E: — sini 0 pat A weil 708. stock of Milk Pans, Propagat 
33—37/36—37/34—36/34—36| 15—16 15—16 ucumber Tu Cream Pots, Ge., Glass Shades 
28—31/28—3] his 11 ments, Lamp .de, Metal-stand Frames, 
—14 10—13 trying the 3 of milk, _ every 
Gone trade. Estimaes and pric 
ee, oaks Brit des — GLASS FOR bee e be. 
32—4032—40 — ne oe — ETLEY anp = su a z. Sueet ° 
2—40 — i a British Mauufac 
— — — am ona D for 32 ‘an 
81.—81. 5 feet of which a p 
81.—81. 58 71. 158—87. cee HE Lists o Pricen aad e 
co Toon Seb 5 ETI n Sr ROUGH paan THI 
— — — — 05 S and SL 
2499) 24-28 1 GLASSES, GLASS MII 
8| 28—31 | 288—293 | . — a 8 1 ORNAMENTAL WINDOW London. 
280 lbs, —14 | to James HETLET aud Co., 5 quare: aaa tl 
r sack See the Gardeners’ ers’ Chronicle, first Saturday 10 
J Be PHEASANTRY, 8 
* by special appoin, 
Albert. — 
— 5 1 of black and white swans, 
bernacle, brent, and lsogbing 
midgeun, sumer a 2 
shovel an — 
d mesticated e inion 
and) Aras Surrey, 1 and e fowls 
LOWER-POTS AN D 
E OHN MORT LOCK, 250, 
nces that he has a very large 
arcs i tes various colours, A 


solicits 
Wakes ice of useful e y tor 


10—1849.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 159 


é 7 FF 7 5 
— Zales by Auction. BEN anD HOTHOUSES made by machine ; 
Sales vy Auct ne-half their usual cost. A Lean-to — 24 G ee ca NETTING.— FE 
oRLBMEN, GENTLE EMEN, FLORISTS, & OT 8. Ms fect | by 8 . two * ends. one door, and 3 feet of 3 rs r yard, 2 feet wi 
TON PROTHEROE anD MORRIS — ont, ; pas with 16 cz, sheet glass, of a large size, and 
12 they will offer for sale, at the Auctio painted three in live to any wharf or railway station 
* fully —— ne, on WEDNESDAY March 14, ip Lond or 15“. 10s., including a plan for brick wor do, 
— Tee ihn and PIC ES, a selected | o., 15 feet by 10 feet, 221. 10s 0 „18 feet by 12 feet, 
— pot 5 eR ses, Lancashire Goose- b et — — Sr yo feet, 32L. 10s. 12-inch Green 
r y be viewed the morning | house Lights, glaze oz, sheet glass, painted three times, 
berries, Auriculas, sa Mart, "and of the Auctioneers, | 1134. pa foot ; er . do., 18. Warranted best „ 
ofsale. Catalogues had asta J. Lew s, Hothous 2 Stamford-hill, Middlese 
American E eho ao ee 
FLORISTS, & OT S SEI 
10 2e MORRIS will aan NER OF HALF, NOON. “STREET, ee. 
ESSRS by Auction, at the Mart, Bartholo. HOMAS S GIBBS a the SeEpsMen TO THE 
petition by 
hen pobli FRIDAY, March 16, 200 Standard and Dwarf LOT AL Aonrountoxar $ Scent or ENGL 30 beg to mform 
e. lane, A tuals, B i $ the ve now fiuished cleanin 
ROS 8, consisting of H, a — rene hes balks of the different wwe of Grass Seeds, which are ae ENË 
„ American Plants, p ; ready for delivery, T. Sia o. be call particular atten- 
&e. ; ndromedas, &c.; 100 Double Camellias ry. g to pi en 
Kalmias, Ln Dahlias, Puchisias Verdenas, Lilium tion to — cer —. — SS NOTES NAN Gnade 1 N 
well set ing of sale. Cata- A ASSES for | 2. 
1 2 g 2-inch me light, 24-inch wide 2 r yd. 5d. per vdi 
lancifulium, Ge. uctioneers, American | laying down land to permanent MEADOWS and PaSTURES, | 94 25 . per "3 
logues bad at the Mart, and ‘ot ta with a Proper admixture the permanent Clovers, properly | 2. ie to 4 ie 95 
Nursery arsery, Leytonstone, Pae pportioned je y inch „ extra, strong ,, ves 1 j 
jarsery. 4S A app — i 
To SEEDSMEN, ae MAREBT GARDENERS, | poses for which they ure intended. Ie 4 strong 5 81 10 si ‘ = 
RENOVATING MIXTURES for improving old Grass land | 14- xtra strong , 14 11 
ESSRS, PROT OTHEROE AND MORRIS w sell | FINE MIXTURES for forming garden wi and Gee pie | An the above can be chi any width at proportionate prices, 
Auction. on MONDA por nd oma Rye Grass, and all other kinds of Grass seeds and | If the upper 
105 2 AGRICULTURAL SEEDS, sed in the Tra de, Clov: fontit: On! 
22 about 2 tons of Union Seed, Cauli. pheasantries, 3d. 
The CA e per rd N Lade tor war “ied 0 — 
donee sot a m Gress Seeds, G.; also a most excel- Large White Belgian M POP 
jent stock of Flower Seeds of all kinds. The Lease of the Large field 9 1 7755 Red ‘Carrot Sa Cee Gah BARNARD and BISHOP, Marketplace, 
all the Fixtures, will be so ~ the same time, if MANGOLD EL, ig Norwich, Ki: 2 soe of expense in London, Peter 
: vate contract.—Catalogues will pe ready ew 
pepo Ss be had at the usual places. Further DN ed Orange Gla be, ph Rng e e dee ee e — — cramer: 
particulars will be duly advertised. Red Globe, and Long Yellow. IRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT, 
BAREEN, FLORISTS, ote =. OTHERS. TURNIPS. 
1 NDER DISTRAINT FOR R Purple and Green. oP Swed 
ene D DAVIS as D VIGERS will sell by Auction, Skirving’s and Lai 2. ; 
ark, Grosvenor-street, Camberwell, on 5 ibbs's 8 = and Red. ep "iw Hybrid, ie í 9 
1 t 12 for 1 1 È ti * reen, ite, an e f me j 
SERY STOCK, e F Green, White, and Red Taukards, 7 5 
Trees ; 86 Cherry, e, and Pear Trees; 8 Mulberry Trees, cAbEAG 2 ait 
625 yards of Box-edging, 325 yards of Privet Fencing, 278 Stand- Large Dru: 3 Cattle Cabba ; ah Ky 
ard Apple, Pear, and Pium Trees ; 600 Laurels, 600 Dog Roses, | One thousan 3 Cattle Gabba e aie il 555 
and pan. ‘bulbs, roots, 8 4 ae in te Also the Forcing Kohl Rabi, Purple and Gre 3 ; 1000 o 9097 
Frames, ts, & o be viewe e Satu urday ore PeR RSNEP, 
A and e had a ve 3 and e Cattle Par 100 ů 6 
of the Auction London, Clovers, Sein h — h 80 White Mustard, big and i 
UNBURY, ADEE ESEX. all —— of Agric ultural, Kitchen Garden and Flower Seeds. 
Jo BE LET, aod entered u upon immediately, if re- ul See r ‘and Co, the ee eager gene: e Royal Agrioni, ALVANISED WIRE NETTING, TWO-PENCE 
quired, — ehile, or in separate parcels, A FARM, | 1, z UAR 00T.— This article re aint- 
containing 173 acres, all Arable, except about 24 acres of Mea- gnomi: ing te Sangha a having the slightest — ae k t 
dom: Apply to Mr, WiuaM e n z, on the Premises ; or to ARSON’S ORIGINAL ANTI CORROSION was pence 2 the late Metropolitan Cattle Show, and was 
— H. Fricker, Kingsto to Messrs. Chapman, Webb, PANT, specially patronised by the British and other ighly-eulogised both for its utility and pretty appearance, and 
Chapman, 3, — dere Strand, Lond Governments, the Hon. East India eee the principal 1 e heer a ee and ere tye ; 
ompanies, most public es, d by the Nobility, nee again e depredations o 
Fen TREES, TULIP BEDS, & GA Gentry, and Clergy, for out-door work’ at their country seats, | Piel rabbits, and cats, and is peculiarly adapted for Aviari 
NETTING, for preserving frui s from frost, blight, | The Anti-Corrosion is articularly recommended as the most NONIE, and to s secure poultry; and by the galvanised 
8 p 
j or as a fence for fowls, pigeons, tnlip and seed beds, hh out door Paint ever invented, for the preservation of 2 iring no paint, it auswers adm irably 1 for training all kinds 
— be bad in quantity from John KING Faklow's Fishing | every de scription of Iron, Wood, Stone, Brick, Compo, Cement, 18, 34,56 plants. Large quantities always kept iu stock, of 
pede: Ea atoy, 5, Crooked-lane, London- 58 wor d by the pra actical — of upwards | dim 24, 36 and 48 i rae a 3 — 5 v. Jsa made to any 
bridge, per yard, two yards wide, or lad. the square | of 60 years, and by the numerous eee Ans d. 500; testi. warded free of expens 
yard. The above is the only netting, being tanned, that will | monia and which, from the baad station in | 12 ae wide Bd, r yard 30 inches - Tid. oa 
— per n + per 7 
exposure to the w mier. Forwarded, same day, on | society of those who have e given them —— ae; never yet been | !8 » 4 4 
receipt of a Post. office den 1 by anythi ng of the kind hitherto 3 =e the A y nai 4 1 
pu otice 0 . A ~ 1d. ee foot extr: 
PERUVIAN AbD BOLIVIAN. GUANO 0 ON SA SALE, the testimonia's, w iil be sent on application to WALTER se eee Ex tra a strong Imperial Wire Sheep N. 3 feet, le: 6a. 
By THE ONLY IMPO. 15, Tokenhouse Yard, back of the Bank of England,—No ed: 8 dae, pire ph oa’ 
GIBBS Anp SONS, LOND Agents . — et, Se ise r anaa oN 
WILLIAM JOSEPH MYE p ĉo 8 ire Nursery and Fireguards, Wire II eg and 
. 12 ae resis LIVERPOOL; 5561 — Lt Fly-proof Dish Covers, Meat Safes, Ge. 
i : ES. inds, 1s. 10d. per square foot, with bolts complete, in maho- 
GIBRS, t igat E EORGE NEIGH BO OUR, and SON res paniy gany irames ; Gothic garden borde ering, 6d. pee in m foot; 
eti announce that they have prepared for — — 8 Flower Trainers, from 34 each; Garden arches, 2is, each ; 
tensive supply o g sea various IMPROVED BEE VES, 1 2 — bag 38. 9d. e ach; 1 Tying Wire for 
ich ar ‘ who are desirous ae N ig he plant Dahlia — — and every description of Wires 


* ien ab 
pi ALS branch of rural economy—the Honey tock? ptm ‘for the use o — esy millers, &c.—At 

The collection „Consists —.— “Nuts Colla Ke al e the Manufactory of — Heney Fox, 63, Snow-hill, London. 
h € 


e, See a 

ese ey ani mproved Cottage Hive,” &c., fro 5 either of which the honey MIGRATION TO AUSTRALIA. — Not 
SUPERPHOSPHATE OF 1 the best Manure for Turnips may be taken at any time wi bout injury to the Bees, and may E hereby given that the Van Diemen’s Land Agr 3 
and all Root Crops, wh anufactured from the Genu — * warned with maty, humanity, and profit, by the most timid | Company are now able to sell their pemn > LANTIS ii 
nd unaccustomed to Bee manipulation. A descriptive paper, | any quantity, and that — purchaser o an 80 


OHN H whch 5 i 
f i gs and prices, will be forwarded on the receipt of acres, will be entit ed t free 

J ' Friends that E 7 = ae oal tons two postage stamps.—GEORGE Neigusour and Sox, 127, High | peculiar advantages 38. e passage to the clony, The 
€ ready for delivery, which he confidently ence — p ee . ab —— lands, are agh detailed in a printed Prospectus, which way, 

for producing Turnips, Potatoes, and all R oot utt on Bees ” (6th edition), now published, vs 1 n i t the Company’s Offices, 6, Great Winchester. 

the Royal Agra ant much earlier to hoe. ey P 7 

satisfactorily anaip gah iy ope BY HER ROYAL LETTERS | DAR s ‘LIFE PILLS are acknowledged to be the 
bes against the fly, t 1 f. A st Medicine in the world. This Medicine has been 
2 Cin 1 . dee Nees PATENT. before the — — public only a few years, nh perhaps in the 


other, brings up the plant vigorous! 
at once aah leaf, alt thus. defies vigor paged annals oa wor 8 never seen success equal to their po 
e insect, while the er: pa ak tof gress ; the virtues of this Medicine were at once acknowledged 
As, far ds Tapps pe a * EE. e. E WORKS, kee -ROAD, Te teen wherever tried, aud recommendation followed recomm — 
i aving erecied Hothouses for Sale on 2e d ee acknowledge that PARR’S LIFE 
fothouses to 1 invites 28 attention of Gentlemen about Lis ar saved tbem, and were loud in their praise, The 

ns is s i 


and wide, a t 
ri gf med * oe “putty, on the face of the globe which has not heard of their bene. 
or r paint, with a st ths of aninch | fits, and have scught fur supplies, whatever might be the cost 


Part. = transmission _ The United States, Canada. ndia, and 50 
3 China, have ha ‘ship; to their respectiv 
Tg Lit Lightest, — es t. and most Efficient Roofing countri: s, with the same result as 8 Engl i 
is CRO 0 Ns PATENT IMPROVED AS-| The sale of 3 L LLS amounts . of 30,000 
PHALTE FELT, A House, 40 * id 17 ray in mie clear, may | boxes weekly, mo Aloba patent medicines put together, 
oe complete, 2 0 ti 17s. of e Felt, one | This simple fact gist ie o further comment; 3 tells plainly 
. mo are foot, i ils . otha “wide, 8 ** ue D ae of O! p Parra are the best medicine in tbe world, 
Sat alle ad by — 5 AL and, t OF SPUR! s ImiTaticns.—None are ponent unless 
ensure buten i 3 and Co., 2, Ingram. court, Tim 935 8 sia pt PiLLs” are in a Letters ye a 
church-street, Lon Red Ground, on the Government stamp, ted round e: 
box; also, the fac-simile of the signatu: e of ‘the proprietors 
WIRE-WORK, HOT. WATER APPARATUS, . a and Co., Craue-court, Fleet-street, London,” on 
GREENHOUSES, &c. the Direction 
T. 3 BAK ER. MAN OR. HOUSE, MANOR. old in boxes at Is. 1id., 2s. od., and family L at 112. 
LA KING“ S-RW aD, CHELSEA, Manu 
IN VISIBLE "WIRE FENCE, to resist Grazing — and ren- Pull directions are given with each box. 
Superphosphate of Lime | dered Rabbit-proof. WIRE- WORK in Trainers, Arches tor 
5 eee x Walks, Boradi Flower Stands, Phessauteis, Ke. HOR- ETGALFE’S r ALKALINE TOOTH- POWDER 
„Aisha. , Lambeth, London, | TI CULTURAL BUILDINGS, Green a Hothouses, Conser.| | will be found o be the best Heme has yet tee > 
vatories, & c. Thes “n heated by HOT- WATER APPARATUS | it nor anything that can injure the 
improved and econemeal principles, mel ; 4 thoroughly removes the tartar pen 11 a pro- 
Pkmn waited 9 in Town and ene 8 n rahe at beautiful white a peara be desired, 
tes free. 
a eo aa 


Po 
nie 


Estim e Trade yg rot fragrant perfume tends to auld apne “purty the e breath, 
uses, 1 1 Co. Byer the many y years they have 9 — 
ooth-brus akers, hav portunities (that occur to hoe 
GMoK Y CHIMNEYS AND VENTILATION, — or testing the relative — fpe ve powders that have 
ates. IMPROVED SIMPLEX WIND.GUARD is cheaper, arago before the puna They have now succeeded i 
durab'e, — eno 3 than —— other — pot. | curing the receipt from which the above Powder is prepared, 


crete eee apartmen d is guaranteed to | and conti: — 3 its universal adoption, Whole. 

e trom wind. y ay — — and sale and retail at METCALFE, BINGLEY, & Co.’s, Brush- makers 

=... as ge W. 8 51, Great Nn U apo Bloomsbury, | to H. R. H. "Pawan Albert, 28 per box. Caution.— The genuine 

‘kinds, Douche and ot Sor balan hen, in br vanised iron, 25s. specius s forwarded on ~ powder will have the hoyal Arms, combined with those of 
5 „Water wheels to ene smal] oa. Licenses ted, ı ane As trade — with the H.R H. Prince Albert, on the lid of the box, and the signature 
pron ror ipply of towns, & c. 1 Wind-guard, made d Bix Co., 


0 a of a moi and address of the firm, thus: “ METCALFE, BINGLEY, and 
iberal disevunt allowed. 130 æ., Oxford-street, London,” , 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


s.3d. 


1 guns RED MANGOLD WURZEL aa 


GUERNSEY 3 IP: 
1141 N as per bushel 8 i 


w other Agricultural 
6 5 Agricultural Seed Lis t is ee 

shall be tar fad to send a copy to a 

to 


„an 
N may seth 


AM y 7 5 a Co. 
aui, n D. Mxs 1 Mayer Plymou th, 
on Rai . Plymouth 


arran; ts with 
yi cheap delivery of ou 
fr ts Britai 8 Any * Py 3 should be 


Dublin, G iverpool, Lon — . ee and 

most of the — e iai the K 
All Orders abo will bé delivered, free of 
~ Station 
th 


ONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT “PROOF 
De WIRE NETTING 


1 00 
1 * ; sre 
HARLES a YOUNG AND “COMPANY (Lars 
ND C. YOUNG), 
o MANUFACTURERS s OF IRON AND WIRE WORK, &c., 
Y-SQUARE, Ltverroot; 128, Hiran- 
a 32, Sr. ENR. SQUARE, GLASGOW 
F naia 5 dall the aon of Landed prietors 
came t, Sair a strong W. ence, for excluding Ha 
s, * 
d 


da 
done by Hares and Rabbits i 
is often so great, tha = t 


Xoung Fi r 

or two will amount to more than the entire cost of 
them with this Net. It is so durable, that when 
s are sufficiently advanced to be in 22 of its 
it can be remov * to other . situ ith 
abou 


Pose, to 
D soar ae 


1 wpe 

and Co, è made 
ich they will undertake to ieri it at 225 of the 
or ate nd, England, and Ireland, for One 


a ena whe cannot give a bett Bere 
their Premium 1. . 


im 


| partly of oRI 


20, 21. BRACEBRIDGE HALL. 


30, 87, WILD SPORTS - ges HIGHLANDS, 
res 
. 


a s al 
13, 44. OMOO, OR THE SOUTH SEA ISLANDERS, 
By HERMAN MELVILLE, Ris 


A Permanent Library hie Entertainment. 

2 tates Ea price 2s. 6d.; or Two Parts in a Volume, 
alternate Month, ae 8vo, 6s. in cloth. 

MURRAY” S HOME 2o sede bh LIBRARY. 

Printed in good readable type, o perfine paper, and 

designed to turnish the Monee | Lilerabire of the day, 8 

GINAL WORKS, and partly o w editions of POPU- 


LAR PUBLICATIONS, at the prey poss By poe 


Par WORKS ALREADY PUBLISHED 
1, re “THE BIBLE IN SPAIN. Br GEORGE Bente 0. 


3-6, JOURNALS IN INDIA. 
7. TRAVELS IN THE EAST. 
MANGLES 


By Brsnor HEBER, 


By CAPTAINS Inpy and 


8. THE SIEGE OF GIBRALTAR, By JOHN DRINKWATER. 
9. MOROCCO AND THE MOORS, 
10. LETTERS FROM THE BALTIC. 
11. THE AMBER WITCH, | 

Gon box. 


By DRUMMON D Hay, 
By A LADY. 


TRANSLATED BY LADY DUFF 


12. ca OF tario rip Neath AND JOHN BUN- 
Y Rosert Sourn 
13. NEW SOUTH WALES, By Mrs, MEREDITH. 
14. LIFE OF SIR FRANCIS DRAKE. By Joun BARROW, 
15, FATHER RIPA’S MEMOIRS OF bare COURT OF 
CHI TRANSLATED BY FORTUNATO PRANDI, 


16. A ne OF A bo steaten IN THE WEST 


NDIES, Br M. G. L. 
17, 18. SKETCHES OF PERSIA. By Sm Joun MALCOLM. 


19. THE FRENCH IN ALGIERS. TRANSLATED BY LADY 
Dorr GORDON. 


By WASHINGTON IRVING. 


22-24, 28 VOYAGE OF A 5 eari ROUND THE 
ORLD. By CHARLES DAR 


25, THE FALL OF THE JESUITS. FROM THE FRENCH. 
26, 27. LIFE OF CONDE. Br Lord Manon, 
28, 29. THE GYPSIES OF SPAIN. By Grorce Borrow 
30, 31. TYPEE, OR THE MARQUESAS ISLANDERS. 
By Herman MELVILLE, 


$2, weitere TALES, 
HOR OF “‘ LETTERS FROM THE BALTIC.” 


33. MISSIONARY ANADA. Br RRv. J. ABBOTT. 
34. SALE’S BRIGADE IN APFGHANISTAN, 

By Rev. G. R. GLEIG. 
35. LETTERS FROM MADRAS. Br A LADY. 


CHARLES Sr, 

28. ROUGH J 8 Wat THE PAMPAS. 
* e 

, 40. GATHERINGS FROM SPAIN, Br B 


41. THE pin SIEGES OF reas ay v fae “TURKS, 
TRANSLATED BY 


9 


42, 45. SKETCHES. OF GERMAN LIFE, Téanstived BY 
8 LE Gorpon. | 


* 


46, 47. THE STORY OF THE BATTLE OF WATERLOO. 
By Rey. G. R. Grete, - 


48, A VOYAGE UP THE AMAZON. By Wu. EDWARDS 
49. THE WAYSIDE CROSS. A Canzisr TALE. 
By CAPTAIN MILMAN. Y 
50. THE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF INDIA. 
By Rev. CHARLES ACLAND, 
51, Sore moh te Tred AT WASHINGTON. 


52, 53. desen. IN vii ROCKY MOUNTAINS, 
Y Geo 


t 
56, 57. LIFE OF LORD CLIVE. By Rey. G. R. GLEJG. 


st and advice wl be ound 
its preservation 


' head 
ins ea botia ot ROWLANDS AÙ 


aine article has the 
; ACASSAR OIL * 


GE F. Rox 
54, 55. PORTUGAL AND GALICIA. By Lorp CARNARVON, 


58. BUSH LIFE IN AUSTRALIA. Bry W. H. HAYGARTE. 
59. aiy e. ON es ROAD TO PARIS, 
Y STEFFEN: 


60, 61. TALES OF A Girinis Br WASHINGTON IRVING, 


62, 63. AN cme ta 5 Ne POETRY. 
Y THomas Camps 


64, 65, eee, pog Br Lord Manon, 


66. STOKERS AND POKERS. Br Aurnon or * 
FROM Nassau,” ? WIE 


67, THE LIBYAN DESERT. By BAYLE Sr, Jony, 


68, 69, LETTERS FROM SIERRA LEONE. Bra sa 
(On March 81st.) 


e orm with the above Series, 
HUMBOLDT’s COSMOS. (Con, SABINE’S AUTHORISED EDITION.) 
Two Parts, Post 8vo. ‘2s, Cd. each, ; 


(Cee CHINA FOWLS,— iP, 
bove breed may be had b ly-laid > 
to wo. faie of e he had e by letter, 


(i 
7 


RNS 
TEEL MILLS, Manajer by ZACHA 
PARKES, 18, Digbeth.str eet, Birmingham, 
1 and Farm pplied with Mills of superior 
r their respective set 
PURE B READ. Tie Domest e Hand Flour. 
ds and 8 ses one Ge . for 
venie nce sof vate Families and Emigran 8, not to su 
“ the honest ne Old Song. 
BROWN B D.— Wheat Hills, to ghna without d 
from 65 108. to 55 Make a note of it.“ — 
OTTAGE ARCHITECTURE. Just Publish TR, i 
TNTS ON — . ARCHITECTURE; i 
a on of Designs for Labourers’ 
in pairs, and in groups, with Plans, Elevations, pacer 
By HENRY WEAVER, Architect and Estate 
London: Henry Pops, 22, Budge-row, Watling.stn 
555 Hottowar, Milsom-street, 
N’S itn 3100 Wrodoute 


a 


FISHING, COURSI: TA HUNTING, &e. = 
One very thick volume, illustrated. Nhe te nearly 600 Engraving 
50s, cloth 5 
N ENCYCLOP Æ DIA. "OF RURAL SPO 2 
comprising 1 8 irb Shooting, Fishing, C 


&c. Ke. By D. P ] 
“Ape recy library for, 2 all Jovi of country sports, iru 
country gentlemen, and for all persons who delight in thems 


and healthy recreations which are afforded to the ii 
of no country in Crt perfection as to the inhabitants 
vs Isles,”— 
London 5 dave a: Brown, GREEN, and Lonauns, 
THE NATURAL SYSTEM OF BOT 
8 s day. in fep, 8vo. 


8. . — and Physio 


e n 
FIRST STEPS TO BOTANY, en Edition. 
PERCORS T TOA A TOONE ig ee ly 2a Ba, 
: Low 


DE LINDLEY’S y TEA AEs OF ‘BO L 
1 


Containing n and Wegen e Plants; pro! 
trated T Woodcuts. 
This will complete the ELEMENTS OF BOTANY, m 
that work a gom plete Manual of 177 5 te senior St 
: BRADBURY and Whitefriars. 


By Erasmus WIISsOoN, F. 

London: Jou CHURCHILL, Princes 
blished, price ôd., 
8 “ON COD - LI 


10 
By JoHN Savor al ac é Society of A 
Pres 1 oo v uf t the Re Ro te Pharmaceutical Š 


With numerous Cases, p 
— of health to the most Yee 


tered 
U BARRY Patil Co., 75, New Bond-street, MO ) 
THE PRACTICAL GARDENE ER An 


In One Volume, 1 psp choad 
— illustrative Woodcuts, containing the 


7 nae 


strat 
entific mode 5 managing the Kitehen, 
ans. Caer 2 osn, ONG, 2. 
y UnARLEs MIxrosg, C. M. — 
Bound in cloth, p 0 with 


“Thel — 


abour and ex xperience of a life fe devoted 
be sc Horticulture, w 5 pres the public. — 


With an APPENDIX, i gy i i and econo 
of producing uniform Bottom from Hot 
pon the most simple plan, * “explanatory 
Reterense to o Buildings n 
London: T. KEL 


London: JOHN MURRAY, Albemarle. street. 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONI 
GRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, MARCH 17. 


E 


[Price 6d. 


No. 11—1849.] 
n 


EX. 
| Heaths, h 166 
Hort. be arden noticed. 167 6 
Ibomœa Learii 168 ¢ 
Land in Ireland, Improve - 
ment o. 48. 5 „169 5 
Landlord and p sescseooso 71 
Manure, Carrion as . 165 e 
Melilotus leueantha . 168 e 
Newcastle a Club — 
Storiag Turnips ...... 155 a 
Pansies of colours 168 ¢ 
Phosphate of lime in the a. 
o E á 
> 465 
s a 
1 ivi condition: 
— b parses: eee 
Plant. 


uses, construction of 1 
“i 3 


Daubeny on 


= 1 


Turnips, to store 
Vine es and carrion .... 
Mr. ig owl ta 

YB, Sir T. Bro 
— _— to — —— 


Shehe T0 


157 ¢ 


(GARDENERS. ERS’ BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. 
—Notice is hereby giv 


en, that an ELECTION of TWO 
PENSIONERS, on the Funds of this Charity, will ta ce in 
June next. 2 of becoming cet didates — 


ey will 
Oe 

of the 9 tee, E. R. CUTLER, 
London, March 17. 


n. y Secretary. 
R 55 Application may be had, on application to 


ge. 
sei — — Rat bi — — e on ies 


ing some (strong 


se, and quantity, by letter, to J.J., 


TUGAL I 
se 
ce.—SusaN Woop, 


| J. ENE informs his 
Petu 


ink and th 
9 of 1 Geranium 


Trade ie 


Fate Ver that his 
verbenas, nias; Cinerarias, A ae 
J — a and can beh baton appli cation, f 
1 e e aE A AND CUCUMBER 
WARD TILEY be ; ully to inform 
1 5 unequalled 


enny 8 
7 GIANT SAINT 
shat have now for “ais a few — 


amps. 


at * 12 bushel. 
Readin 


Tuns MG ONE gp 1 OAKS, po 
n immense stock z 
981 n to offer them 


pe havi 
he above may hear of a purchaser by | 


DWARD GEORGE HENDERSON, ding out 


road, St. John’s-wood, London, is now a 
3 NES GHIESBRECHTI i ae 
PATENS MAJOR 75 = 2 
KNIG TIT e EE 3s. 6d. 
For des scription, see 1 ere of Mar llth. ke 
2 pg e aber rubby, * * — noble 
look ing plant, 7 the 1 eight of 4 feet, and throws up 
fine spikes of yellow owers, a 2s. 6d. and 3s. 6d. per 
plant; or 24s, and 30s. 
ESCHYNANTHUS” SPECIOSISSINUS, 10s. 6d.—This is one 


of the most 1 4 ome seer am 
flower is a fine ora 
— 1 NTHUS LONGIFLORUS, 3s. 6d, each. 
T 


tribe ; the colour of the 


3. 6d. 
Byte UMBROSUM, =m 6d., a distinct and fine 


LOBELIA. ‘AZUREA GRANDI . 6d., a fine dwarf 
and compact deep blue herbaceous —.— 
Ditto, in variety, including the best — — era at 9s. per dozen, 
1 new and distinct, 18s. per 
GER MS, itto 218. and 42s. p r doz 
Ditto, fancy varieties, distinct, 126. 188., and 305. per doz. 
BI & y be had on — 


BASS AND BROWN’ S DESCRIPTIVE PRICED 
CAT 3 re free by post on application. We beg 
to offer the followi 
e VEGETABLE SEEDS, 
— 258., 42s, 638. 
A collection en a small | garden, , of fine and nn sorts, 
for 15s. A list eh ed if ' requi red 


in propor. 


? 


ELECT FLOWER SEEDS. 

92 by post. with full directions for sowing, heights, ae 

nui 

etier s best and newest Annuals . 15 
50 7 5 — for 8s. 6d., 30 for 5s. 6d., 
20 varieties best dwarf kinds, in larger packets suited 
or filling beds on lawns, 7. 78. 6d., or 12 do. 
20 varieties best Greenhouse Annuals, 7 3. ôd., 12 for 
Perenni 430 10s. Ed., 12 for 
20 vars. choice’ hardy Biennials ena Perennials, 78. 6d., 12 
36 varieties imported Sra Stock 25 
20 ditto ; 12 ‘for 


do nnen a 
282882 oos 


0, 38. 6d. ; 


d with a 


Remitt 


spondents, "Geeky „ o London 


of 22. and upwards articles geassnted 8 


b. | payable eto Lag aeg has tal or to 3 Brown, Seed and 
| Ho nt, Sudbury, Suffolk, 


VEGETABLE SEEDS of every 


LOWER 1 


ANTS FOR BEDDING” BoT: orders taken, to be de- | 5 nge 


livered in 12 8 
DAH „dry roots, at 6d., d., each. 
LILIUM LANGIFOLIOM ALBUM, 155 “ea. each. 


Araucaria, Beh elasticus, Aloes, Cacti, Cedrus Deodara, 
constantly on 

LAWN GRASS, Hi 6d. per Ib. 

MEA iad S: where it 4 wished to po abe the crop of Hay, 

sow from 2 to 3lbs, of white Dutch Clor 5 1 gallon of 
Pe rennial Rye or Italian at hes e-Grass vi Gaul’ ill S about 
2s. 6d. to 3s. 

AGRICULTURAL SEEDS at the lowest prices. 

Duncan Hairs, Seedsman, 109, St. Martin’s-lane, Charing- | 
| cross, "las Siok 


CHS] SIAS New and First-rate. — Twelve En the 


show varieties for 12s., fine 
cke i 


pinky newes 
= 


8, as they m 
of land, is mos ng as to 
variety, and farmers and others inter- 

article v do w vail them 


of ) woul ell to avail them- 
z a visit to Messrs, SuTToN’s sample 
: er kinds of Grasses in 


0¹ i ses i 
ir growth, all distinctly labelled, give 
ns of the various properties they re- 


NT feels much pleasure in 
mentioned to the hapaa of his pare 
A 3 * with confiden 
; ; Ahe care i hi 
t best stocka, the gron 8 of which has been in his 
s. d. 
CARROT 887 Ib. 1 0 
HAM DITTO 55 
1 0 
LORE DITTO 3 
3 IMPRO 55 1 0 
LOW. SWEDE TURNIP r To 
ee PARSNIP ; 1.6 
a YE BAG 2 6 
$ 8 0 
2 „ 
er Seeds, 


and fir jt tres ees. 
E BELGIAN CARROT SEED, 


| giving orders for Flower Seeds to 
| purch: 


| postage. 
gl iy SEEDS FOR MARCH SOWING.— | 


GENUINE SEEDS, 
3 D CO., SEEDSMEN, — High- street, 
e ly to intorm their customers and 


will be happy t 


1 ge eee of PEN A ed Ann 42 “a 
16 1 „ 
5 ditto Are „ 5 ` 
am 0 
Now thas + panies diaba is so re: 5 find 


asers do not get their value, i 


cket of st eee POTATO SEEDS, with diree- 
tious foe —— er packet—s. d, 
“BOA CONSTRICTOR ” MELON, 3 6 fa — a : 
VEGETABLE and FLOWER grate 

Double LARKSPURS, 10 varieties, s 117 
Di Ditto Ditto 175 
Double 5 Aa — 


0 
6 
0 
6 
0 
ZINNIA EL EG > 
6 


S222 222 


* 50 ditto, 5s. ; mes 25 do., 2s. 6d. 
Culture, 
post free, one a eaen or ponts 


Want ne wes, Seed diy an E Essex, 


— SEY ESEESE Te 

Hee LYHOCKS.—Gentlemen wishing to get a ool 
lection of the best distinct 1 of the above wh 

can ed 

a . near . — No 

per! hundred. _ Also 


et. 
DE OR Sat ae JAPONICA 

EEDLINGS 
ESSRS. — ANDISH AND NO 


M. 


arge 
abas ve useful and 8 hoe whieh they can supply at 
as a prices: 3s, 6d. per plant, 36s. per doz., or 12/, 10s, 


*TASMINUM NUDIFLORUM, a perfectly hardy, neat, dw: 
growing s —— — flo 8 most profusely in the open air, — — 
with or without the protection Of a wali Undoubtedly this is 
one of the most beautiful winter-flowering p lants of recent in- 
Wodan A ndon Horticultural 

Society was lit bright yellow flowers in 
Decem 3 kaii 
WEIG 


terally covered 42 4 
A plants, 2 
A.— The dee of this pens will erelong 
place it * thet ton most rank of o ental p! * in flower- 
garden jield Strong plants, ‘eh * 2s. 6 
RSYTHIA Meet wa —This —.— png like the 


kde! beg to ibm the fol- | 


last requires c only to be wn to be appreciated. Mr. Fortune 
tells e of the most beautiful plants he 
has ing a bu 4 10 or 12 feet i eight, and covered 
with its 1380 — A Strong plants, 18. to 28. 6d. each, 

YCODON. GRANDIFLORUM " beautiful 
Ca pamir sanh — plant, also from China. 2s. 6d. each. 


814 SUNNING- HILL,“ a large 
sembling Nerium splendens ; ; 
a Aras at ‘the pote Horticultural pene: Ae Exhi- 
ition in May — . ae Meg Gd. each. Also a collection of 
tine sorts, from 
CA ALCEOLARIA ACME. white 8 Pp Pei ma 
coloured en i od habit and fine form, 
Seedlings e best kinds, at 8s. per 
The following f fine MELONS, two anå ines year old seed, at 
18. per packe mpton- court Green-flesh, Ispahan, Cuthill’s 
3 eee Bagshot Green-flesh, and Beechwood, 
pe COS LETTUCE, the best in cultivation, 1s. 
and 2s. packets. 
In addition to the above, Messrs. STANDISH and NOBLE have 
a large and select stock of e and other 
AMERICAN PLANTS, with eral collection of rad 
Plants, Shrubs and Trees, Seeds. & sare ere of whic 
can be ‘forwarded on ewer 275 


M. JAMES EPPS. — 


AZALEA 1 15 A, “GLORY 
k, the flow 


pe 
si marien 
ars O 2 a to be constant &. &e. 
brilliant, rich red, with 


June 10 
“The Florist,” No. IX., in answer t 0 J. E. Seb P lauts by 
the last week i in April, 3s. 6 
‘Trade when three of each are taken. 


nadent 


mi 
“Al the newest and — kir oe of Verbenas, 4s. to 12s. per doz. 
a in London, Messrs. Hurst and M Mu llen, 9 
street. A descriptive Catalogue of Pelar rgoniums, Dahlias, 
aai —— Verbenas, &c., may gt 
postage —Maidstone, g 58 


GRASS 8 
UTTON anp SONS ha aioe for A of 30 years 
been engaged in collecting GRA — and laying 
down | land to „ t Pa 


Ai 


to insure a good Pas te expense, viz. = 


TE L BEST. SORTS OF GRASSES 3 „ 
OVERS FOR PERMANENT PASTURE, mixe 12 
po haba yh: the soil, per acre . "4 
gh “PhoDUGrIVE PERMANENT GRASSES, es 
wh appearance is wee 3 per acre . 1 ie 
TRUE TTALIAN RYEGRASS bushel i : 4 : 
GIANT SAINTFODD 
FINEST LAWN GRASS SEEDS consisting solely of 
e finest and g kinds, per bushel pa 
25 3 
SUTTONS 8 Leder kim WETTRE of Perennial 
* Glow seit and fine Grass ses, 5 — ee ares 
s. per aere require: £ 
Freeh Hd per ib., French Furz „is; White 
$r ian Carrot, Large : a Parsnip 5 Teen Globe — 
other Mangold Wurzels, Kohl R rumhead and other 
| Ca bb: es, at the low west m arket prices 
2 Good London, Bristol, or Basingsioke. 
‘Sears „Re ading, Be rks. 


EOE NEIGHBOUR. g” SON i scala 
ounce that they have prepared for this season 

a BEE HIVES, 

tensive. apay of their vanoor 1 ans that 


and Unnceastomed t 
with drawing prices, wi Ù 
two 8 es a — OUR an 


Holborn, Fut os Bers ” (0th edition), now published, 


PAGATING ‘GLASSES, Ke. 


GARDENERS’ CHRONIC 


oo 
YOGHIN CHINA FOWLS, oe Tags may be had 


by applying by letter; nent W. O., care of Mr. 
Woodcock, Brand- street, Greenwi 
BY HER : ROYAL LETTERS 
MAJESTY’S PATENT. 


TT ae ; 
Ja" r ps, ao Cor to hand their prices, 
as follo’ 
LK P PANS. 
hes diameter — m4 te 20 mae n each * * 
5 a ae 6 | 22 , 
me Se AN, 4 oo es 
18 LEJ ” * 2 
I GLASSES. | ASSES, 
e iag iaren each 02. 2 | 4 inches paa each 0s, 5d 
“a ” 5 „ „ 9 
4 ” ” ” 6 ” 37 ” j 1 J 
5 ” ” ” 7 ” ” ” ; 4 
6 »” ” ” 8 ” Li ” £ 
7 * n * 1 9 ” ” ” J 0 
8 ” ” ” 10 ” ” ” 4 
9 * ” » 4 . ” ” ” ` £ 
10 ” ” * 1 ” w * € 
i * „ ” 
12 ” ” 
CUCUMBER TUBES. METAL HAND LIGHTS, 
24 ed ds. Od — 5 y 0d oa 6s, 0d 
22 75 10 6 7 0 
20 ” 8 16 m t 0 2 8 0 
13 4 „ oe 5 ioe | 
16 15 a + — s z 0 
14 ” : 2 0 
12 r 0 To open k — 1s, each — 
Made to any | 
For — T GLASS, see Advertisement. 
116, Bi — street Without. 


GLA 
E. 2 anp W. H. JACKSON are supplying SHEET, 
. — ewan A — CROWN GLASS for Horticul- 
tural fire 
BRITISH 82 72 ENT ATE of superior man 
for Glazing dwe welling houses, for mhich purpose — — 


“ORNAMENTAL ass ty the newest designs for the deco- 


ration = 1 
E. an ATENT OPTICAL FLINT 
GLASS, Thin ia Glass 11 ami ee F greg, scopic purposes, 
rench Sha 
— s, Lists te of Is 


Prices, and wer an forwarded 
Warehouse, ‘ord-street, London. 


ARTLEY’S PATENT ROLLED ROUGH 
FF 
a t that ‘ar or 
vered for all kinds of Horticaleural uses. 
115.) 
A 1 Leap, 


PATENT 1 thee WORKS, KINO AD, 1 on 
DEN 1 erecte ed Hothou: — — Sale o 


LE. 


9 H. N 
ma 2 — 


fi 
a less than 10007, — 
Rahn, 52, Mark-lane, London 
M PR 9 VED FELON OWER = 
THESE FLOWER STICKS are ae ST 
avoiding — — ang nema 5 es, which 
| injure the plants, 


emen —— 


nce vast apm iy of these Houses over 
others erde peery ngth, lightness, durability, 
handsome appearance, 1338 p plants of every descri; 
a bers Too fsof one principle bei ng formed without wood, putty, 


of Rent take up in any part 
REDUCTION IN PRICE OF BOILERS. 


BW anD HEALY beg 8 to inform 
their F 


of e they are enabled to 
in. will 


e reduction in 


10 w t. 4 in. pipe *. FL 15 0 
12 do. 4 in. do, 4 0 
14 in do. 100 fr. 4 in. do. * 2 15 0 
16 in. do. 150 ft. 4 in. do . SS 
18 in. do. 250 ft. 4 in. do —. 4 10 0 
21 in do. 350 ft. 4 in. do . 0 
24 in. do. 450 ft. 4 in. do Tore 
w PATTERN Bort 
30 in. will warm 800 ft. 4 in. pipe 15 15 0 
1500 n. do. . 0 


do. ft. 4 0 NEN 
s with double arms, up to 183 in., 56. extra; to 24 
th 


a oiler 
in, above, the same price. 
iso, em dd London, March 17, 


Cases of Pruning In- H 
struments 


SUIL th all respecty 
men ant Se re Laer an a "scan 
Manufactured. ands . ‘and deal nat wom 
street, London. 
N.B. Samples to be seen at the the Office of 


\EANE’S WA 


MPLEMENTS 


made Ree en ee and Syrin : 
sents d Chair REFE yringes, Coche 
pees [Gar Ser 
Axes rape e Gatherers and kan 
Bagging Hooks Scissors Pruning San $ 
Bills Gravel en and Bila 
Borders, various pat. Siey a Laue 

t 8 Doors | * gues 
Botanical. Boxes — . i » 


len Kii Frames Re 


i Hoes ofe fevery patte 


Draining Tools 
Edging Irons and 
hears 
Flower Scissors 
, Stands in ss 


Garden Chairs and 4 lathe 
— Machine 


oller 
nd ry are sole ae for LINGHA 
E LABELS, 3 of which, with the Il 


Glass in any quantity, s 
pz W. P. and Co. 
Stock, in 100 feet boxes, from 1d. 
Sole Manufacturers of the 2 and Mineral 
Paint for se kinds of Out-houses, Park Fencing, Farm 
o. 


FOR FOR CONSERVATORIES, 4 bai: 


ETLEY a AND CO. 1602. Sheet Glass of 
British 8 at oh varying from 2d. to 3d. 
uired, many thousand 


r 
57 — Bar, 130, Fleet-street, London. 


URBIDGE AND HEALY —— 
e pre- 
0 oop ong supon their 
aratus. . They r to thè 
laces, where they have qed Te 
tensive works, 
Herticn Botanic da 
tural 


other important — sree 


NO AND OTHER MANURES. 
Pad bean O, of the finest quality, direct from 
SODA AND POTASH. 


ous MOR Tek, 250, Oxford st — ene 
t a very la La sortment of the above 


colours, ts an early inspection, 
2 * — | OHI ag GLA 8 ed 
215 — irg 2 west possi sible — — e EARTHEN. 


NIT 
GYPSUM. (SULPHATE OF LIME), 
DRIED NIGHT-SOIL. 
SULPHURIC ACID AND COPROLITE. 
ODA ASH (WIREWORM 7 bee OYER). 
88 LSALTanda LIME (made from bone only). 
N and all other Manures of known 


er used, 24,000 
rs sending direct to tg 


suited to their Roofs, 


afforded on 


so that they 


the Felt, 


—— Da sup: 4 


8 
* purchasers are to as 
o make a good set of Bedding, sent free by post, on appl 
5 their er 196 (opposite the = Tottenks 


road, L Pe 
ET D 


„ WIRE GAME 
per yard, 2 feet wide. 


Lese 
KHH 12 25 


Ler mesh, light, 24-inch wide ... 


near Hyde- Manx e Mi, fp 2-inch „ 10 
“4 pper Thames-street, London, 2-inch extra stron 
gare WORK 5, ISLEWO aa X re followin N “a * e on Guano, Superphosphate of Lime, Ko., will be | 13-inch Se light j „ 
articles manufactured in Slate for r Horticultural S of Gustto, ae kó reer CA ROSS CR: ‘inch „ strong 
by Ebwanp Back, may be seen in use at WORTON COTTAGE, 5 inch s, extra strong s 
= application Gardener, 8 ys excepted: Orange AP AND DURABLE ROOFING. Il the above can be made will reduce 
ubs, Plant bere, 4 Cisterns, Shelves, Garden Path P = Ki the bay F — dy coarse mesh 10 
Edging, =: 5 Covers, Flower. eS alvanized sparrow. 
Baitata given for A eg — Orchidaceous pien Ke. BY HER ROYAL LETTERS | per T square = on 0e 
i r ors as Shown upon 
Cifications. A se stock of Slate Slabs, pipes cate Spe MAJEST Y’S fn. Norwich, and delivered ie 
thick- PATENT. Hul wean 
, ENNY PBR a 
1 sae — These H = made F . — AND > yet Lamb’s-buildings, Bunhill- Wine serie, ONE 7 
y 2 Purpose of takin > 7 J ufacturers and only P: 
r 2 of ah and may a nm for practi tical purpose: —— * a rom E Peleg Garden 722 Se 
easy management At the Great Nati 
“BEE GLASS diii which has thie tural Shows, it is this Felt 
the Apiary supplied. 4 Sheet of Illustrations of Ber te Faisso; and io the Fore ited and obtained ewo SILVER MEDAL 
&c., 1s. The * Practica Bee Keeper,” by Jony M 122 Urn err's Woon: — A 
CTT e 
e eee T INDIA Com ses 
8 IL K — LO 1 AND WH WH ITE „MULBERRY i Hon E ne or = 588 2 225 
growing taste for cultiv: ting 8 Estate, IsLE or Wie HT. 
Brita Sue advertiser has on sale a most healthy s tock at at And on the’ Beran danese i Sı — 2 
utherland, Norf ; 
ing low pe year, i; 2 years, 15s. - a and 3 years, 25s the “reg Meee. 8 Buccleuch (at 1 olk, — 55 TWO. A8 
— — — — Is, 6d. per 1000, Orde and at the Rore kee most of the Nobility and Gentry ; ALVANISED WIRE NETTING, u , 
ALCHIN, Ga Spring. nS addressed 8 YAL AGRICULTURAL Soctery’s House, Hanover. G? PER SQUA OT.—Thi 2 4 
. T -plac alming, Surrey. = 1 ighte: 
STEPHENSON ann CO. 61. L — 2 — i 17 oe of any other description of Hott ad | wees fan C 
don, and 155 New Park? reh-street, yle ength by 72 imber in the construction fs, apr 
OLN e i owe ie Pieter Pree 
YLINDRICAL BOILERS: — rand DOUBLE| s 5 
scientific Horticulturists — — fally so! attention of | of "ys Samplet, wit Dine si Hd 5. and Testimonials 
e w the Tank Sya * System to much im — 1 of | tlemen, Architects, hee . b 
whic. erie : * e to 
e poe inns ea . 5 3 „ 
o. have ae 01 ea that the only Wor 
T san EEE sat Britain where the above Roofing e 
Patent Felt Manufaeto 8 
» where tea cat" * mer w. 
e roofed N MN bey x 
3 0 0 and a,’ Pek 
Surveyorship of Ch elt abont 


wer 
the construction of Roots, or Works 


rT * — 28 % ͤ˙iF! ] Se CCl, 


THE _CARPENERS* 


‘OF LONDON.—| 
pee d. 3 — 


8. i 
Som N 


a he $ 
‘ nt enson, URDAY, Jur 
za that kee el aie 10, 35 the ‘ast day on 


Joly 1; sued to Fellows of the iera 


> 
URSERYMAN, 


g Scotch Firs, 
plants, and at further reduced 


. 
ee ma may 5 = free by post for 8s. 6d., 
pe tres , Seedsman, 124, Park-road, Liverpool. 
Z 


each Bord 


sin excellent 
st owy flower.“ 


pup e stam; ost free 
— — ox, Seed Gro — 0 1 Essex. 
Broom > Hona Fulham 
opposite the Wa —.— worth rail. 
rods of fine tang! os too laid and fit to be 
ound late in the occu- 
ine — — Apply to Mr. 


turf sods for a Lawn 


Ce. r 
Falkirk, is selling off 


a. We ket-place, | 


Halifax, T 
EEDS. = ti 2 we col. 
jected himself coun A packet wi sent free 
for 66. 294 8 8 postage stamps. i 
AN ASTERS, 20 varieties 
mixed, sa nire Chronicle, September 23d, 1848. 
of tha 


olen: very fine stron 
ASPARAGUS, 2 to 3 1 
Clapton Nursery, 


j anp CO. ha 
roots of Grayson’s GIANT 12 
r. 


EEDSMAN, 


— are e ofero at en fi —.— 
a 2 ** Ibs. 
0 denny 


1e „ e 
S888 SS ο 


or the receipt of a Fest ene Order, 
d taken t to ensure acd safe delivery, 
se made to —— Trad 


Cambridgeshire. 


grey of 9 


1 


1 


1 
2 
E 


aH 


1 % 


. 


i 


| 2 atten The Fl 
be contin l A . he Floricultural 


Tue ' Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
| SATURDA Y, MARCH 17, 1849. 
aue, FOR THE Two FOLLOWING WEEKS. | 


terested about aed 
d to > observe the remark- 
at 


: 


Wi 
ng 


to dispose of the whole | ; 


offered. Applications, personally or | 


55 


163 


ing the p wers for mark 
they were well . ved 
and perfectly well colou 
n the Vines ae planted holes were made 
Sab the e footpath w with a pickax 
0 


r. the purpose 
ch the young — ae hesr, 
h and e 


of 1 oli * 
et; | the dower 1 bud (fruit 
with bloom, | these substances, instead o 


ev wry other ; ad 3 propose that all the Vine stocks 
Se should be brought to- 
ere i 


serye ego mir for the increase of cells, ¿ 
that others cause me development of 


or Grape) ; the actions of 


„by the ordinary 
ean only be — by 


shed that wood should be de- 


veloped, the Vines amasi be placed in a trench an 
3 or 4 1 


nverod 


nches 


of formi n whi 
the soil of the footpath being too rough an 
for them 

As to the footpath itself, in order that there might 
be no mistake upon that point, w 


s hard as the hi gh road. 


red brick earth, o whic 
garden . 5 consisted; with this. 15 mixed a 
large quantity of pounded A ata from the rs 
oles where coke or coal are 


market | t 


i 


igh temperature ; for 
though the footpath in one case was on the 
of a trench for dung, yet Mr. Witmor states that | s 
that enen was — . till long after the Vines 
g made their first growth. 
t although a very e 1 of the soil | ™ 
a badi be take the re by n 


been higher tha 
imagined, even although the sun could not directly 
shine upon it, But there was an cause in 
operation. e Pine-houses in question should 
rather be called pits; for they are sunk. from 2 to 
il; being almost; 


e part of it 


to the surrounding soil—to what extent we have no 


ry 
face of the trench, 8 Ibs. of 
and 1 
This is owing to the ebe of a ane quantity of Hr be in a year 
h Mr. Wu 
order that the fiuit m 
purpose it is nec 
d|a distance of 3 or 4 in from 
for every square yard of surface, 5 Ibs. of a i mixture 
lb 


form 
, | double ppap e of potash an 


certain quantity o of the mar 
— 


arge 
é nich may have disappeared from the tren 
? 3 
atmosphere. Ton ox 
parts o 
ees of 
0 


7 woul 


facets that, although 
who follo 5 


produce, 


e 
S| which have been obtained respecti 
Disease ; and that i ~ ALT. 
inferences which so in 


need of further enquiry ; for the 
cea. ithin 


of earth, with which 
ave been mixed, for eve 


of pieces of skin, leather, ho 
. of gypsum 
“When the wood is sufficiently formed, which 
or two, according to circumstances, 
e roots must be ri i alh of potash, in 
e produced. For this 

* 1 er the trench, at 

ches fr e buried wood, 


orns, tanners’ r 


essary t 


ed of 8 Ibs. of silicate of potash, an s. of 


lime. The trench 


s then to be filled u 


ear ¥ the 1160 of the stools a 


Grapes; 
ining 2.5 per cent. of 1 of potash, will 
estore annually a large proportion of the po 


, cœtera 
measure on the influence of hs 
suppose a Vine stock required 10 
otash to ni enabled to bear fruit, if a 
eat and rain on the stones and earth in 
e could only furnish 5, the 
dbe bad, This danger will be avoided 
Me above system of culture, in which the Vin 
ways have suitable food; but it is em to be 


EE 


I promise 
ope 1 


I can by uality of 
that t produce; for ‘quality — ‘Han aod on the 


temperature. 


Ture is one point still to examine by the returns 
ng the Poraro 
If we could admit the 

e sanguine persons have drawn 
to the effect of ¢ this rent: there would be no 
ey assure us that it 


E cortespondent i in — writes thus N 


124 


oF 
14 £3 


1. Se 


41 41 


kod jaa 
grii : 9 e of si to — prevent ‘= disease : 
The soil too is by no means poor; the path in alae, us to digging the ground, * 
w the Vines with large must be | over with common salt, at the rate $ about a gallon to 
the Mac- e rod, and immediately after planting he —- maue 


an ou ' 
2 5 it is not, therefore, compac the he tos suite 2 À is erop rom sae, while * 
ary, the fragments of clinkers 8 its porosity those of his neighbours, not salted, growing in 
. nd permit a ready pinge to any hea only separated from his ground about 3 feet, 
that e — were — km eber 


In the absence of any useful information we are 
efficac, 


y of salt ; 


the first senate gee that of a 1 tbr 3 phos called upon once more to credit te 
rdly be made the subject of speculation ; for it is | the writer is silent concernin except 
impossible to say where the roots of the Vines in the way of applying 5 and he g: 11 0 
question may We he roots in a all other 1 ous. Ever since the 
athway, near which no Vines could be found grow- | year 184 5 have been entertained, 


of a pe latel Soa to the Academy of 8 Sciences | 
of Paris 


ranslation | — 


own 
at in 1845 tw 


o use i 
So br as Sha fe ew Feriden recorded in our 
columns rE anything, they show this— 


ed of little or 


5 us to 


fferent _countri ries —.— 


methods pursu 


atroduced the 
brick out of the back wall | p 
Vines, p | experience, 


llewed in practice; I — roh ‘hi ie 


peg ti hy fo — 
differs from 


however, is not an 
the case, and, te a who have studied a various | i 
n di 


of tenting the the 
me At e in its appli- 
in those of Tuoursox, in the Horti- 
ultural Garden in 1527 — per centage of diseased 
Potatoge,in ui salted 2 6.44, 50 
but in some instances in 1 same set ofe 


quality of teal indica 


THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


[Marc 17, 


was used, the per centage was only | 
ear an appro roach to the 

rence in its 

ar when the |° 


7 was ry year 
— . salt ‘aight cae Wr de to be most 8 


vantageous. 
The statements in our returns relating to salt, 
and without any other substance, are e: 


much — — and it is to that I shall now more 
particularly a 
When 


— ‘phat house, I mean a structure capable 
of affording every fac ih 


— development; 
to employ the 
iberal manner, 


la regard can possi 
to anything approaching mediocrity. This gives me an 


Mr. M. parcel iy of ay eg in ee 
ewt. 
th May ; 3 


with salt suffere 
that the Hon. R. H. Curve’s early Potatoes, le. 
Hewell, near Bromsgrove, i in | November, with the e gro ound |ap 


the same sorts planted i in Mareh and og gly were 
very good ; this we believe was heavy land. 

Here then we have two good cases on 105 land 
nd, fro which we 


d. 
salt to other substan 


most gardeners have an interest ; 
for whom they are intended will s 
em. I allude to the pode sO rene 
and gentlemen — Sa ut limited plant ac 
of constantly inundating their gardener se io 
tropical seeds, nine-tenths of which can be of 
it yields p 


and I hope that 7 — 
the me y of 
with ladies 


ckets of 
ible 


= 
wn 
. et 
z 


e give 
— plants is obliged 


them, and the space pi inae À wo 
estiny of which, with 
s! 


bbish, the dest 


and gentlemen, to urge u 


Antdral i 


d tion in em 


3 aa 8 


u Oz, THE METHODS moe PREPARING 
t 


atmosphere passing over 1 an 
why should it not be to plan 


wind could an 
modified in erature by mixing with th 
in the Helos. viz., that at the roof of et hosi 


LECTURE ON ECONOMICAL cook, 
@ OUR Foon wit mm lin 
. Nee — STE. 


y C. Dau M. D., F. R. S. 

Co — Kerr . 149. 
AxornER branch of the art ry, Consideredip 
widest sense, as the art of rendering articles of 
Moray 8 — ese baking of bread. The = | 
her 


ender our ur farinaceous food more 


— 
. t 
45 


kagana fad — If Tee come 8 a com- 
n to 


1, Salted Manure. die Cuartes Wake, Bart., 
"oom Hall, in No orthampton shire, | states: that "his 


were ware partially injured, but they seem to have been more 

This return is however very 
— M. ca 2 gardener to R. Norris, Esq., 
of „in the county of Lancaster, used 20 tons of 
manure and 3 tons of salt per acre, lost nearly all his 
arera but a coarse kind, called the“ Farm 
escaped with a loss of 5 per "cent. under the same 


25 


ers“ 


1 
2. Salted Stable rg: forar Lime. —Mr. W. Jackson, 
—— Ea Ne d a crop on light 
ly soil, to vet Fish graye 3 
ration of lime and salt. Planted a 


with 4 
put on in 5 ait vious to planting time ; planted second 
in May ; lost on light land one-sixth, on the stiff 


3. Salt and Decayed 
iliff, C 


panne a des of — says Bt T. 


ire, says that no 


of ar 


have the roof as — as aay restr and if it 
with British white glass, I 
corner of the building should indica 

But I have great a in the theory 2 the — | — 
8 ticed. ould give—no matter w o be 


re glazed 


etal the roofs of several houses 
t | glazed with white 2 
cultivation light is Le agent must be sub- 
servient to it, ona i in proportion as we can augment 
light, so may we increase 


Couch-grass ; there the e crop was 
K have been free of disease, 


n this 
4. Salt, Nitrate of Soda, Sulphate of srg stave = 
— 0 Cromhall, Glo 


RTON, of 


= s tha : / re on i 
ceous sandy soil, manured with 1 cwt. each of salt, ni- 


The 
fterwards | 


— eee Camberwell, 
of soot per acre on | 


entirely rotten.. 
5. Saltand Soot Mr. J 
3 — 
; land, — k in — 
tirely escaped. 
6. Sine and Charcoal.—Mr. C. Jerrer 


salt, soot, and 
without one single | 


7. Salt, Sı Soot, Charcoal, Wood-ashe: 
The Bish of CARLISLE ase, and Gas-tar.— 
15 * ISLE reports berlan 


iscern in these een anything 
„or which shows that it even miti- 


ct. OF 
n is employment. eee e ode is 


CONDITIO 


ESS 


eee SR? Ui 
N ENTIAL TO T 
2 PERFECT 2 No. III. 


of a plant house 


The erop en- pe 
sh 


HU 


A, a fixed sash, 6 eae os the n one. The line B, 
the eable sash ope: 
ariou * ave er to insi 
r is 5 difficulty in the 

| glazed w 

who 

3 1 r 

n accompanied with 

fitful een. of April. I think 


Wüste that 


„ Or 


e to disperse the rays of light on its aitinn: 


aratively unexplored cou BOTs and you have reason to ¢ 
b Ehink — new * be the result, the case is of 
widely differe: i 


T I should employ is a span- th 
roofed one, with the sides’ glazed equally, mo a would | Moses, as 


would tee it iat 5 | 


read-frui 


Islands at lidon. In me 


may be inferre 
the use of unleavened brea 


rise or spongine 
cation of carbonic acid during 
tion, which the action of the f erment upon the start 
sugar tends to excite. The result of this is th 
roduction of a certain amount of ‘aleohil and ew. 
bonic acid, both of which are wasted in baking, aha 
by a peculiar method a adopted in one — 


e 
a, gop 
e- 


ever, it is feared, greater than the saving resulti 
any — the loss of weight aginst by the 

s of fermentation is no less, eltir ~ 
than 17 .6 per ce 
to the lowest calculation 


l 


cent. of the whole, om derne usnis 
much as by 


sun burning 
Now, I see no objection 
lant house, provided 
t 


night perature ; 
bel 

is, I beliewe universally a eee TR 

re alles * ject, I may mention that 

Begonia e N talum m Mackayi and one Ni 


ch 
in the sacar 


ia new crop of its bea 
elegant en de an and this too where the tem 


Sees 


to 
ee pat 


almost 
out in 8 


| ay ia Say a ae he e 


meet 8 aaa a similar 
the food in 8 with it, and thus to renew t 
mentation when taken into the stomach ; hence, $ 


ct to its flavour, tastes of co 
but wit I partook of at the house of a “a 
in the habit of making it, seemed to 
able than what I usually obtain 
ordinary w 


ae i 
honem ee ires tua ö 


wey: 
0 
ne 3 caution, Aer the abore 
J Hamely, that 


to those 
well iey either T 
careful inquiry of a Mest? 
full Soe that the m a 
from -i | 
The mod Adds of manufacturing this su 
action 


we 


the ee o 
by deg io i it; “ would 
ility of tain. 


ger propor 
an they have hitherto 


HUM ABH HR 
15 0 1 


si 5 
a 


i 


IRH 
10 i 


Fire, 


15 
B 
EE 
z 


10 


ag 
zen out of  non-nitro- 
n its capaci 


H 


; determines the fi 
‘they all admi bien or a vital 
instance, themselves to be i 
kreatino, whine eB. the use of 


ity of secreting 
and even as to Marne a the 
ormation animal 


ones, b 


5 of Apios tuberosa. 
C, A string of t 


fi 2 


: V itt 10 Mi 
Ay * 


A, an old tuber, with a double ‘dag of young 
tubers 2 years old; d,d, the u upper and woody 


part of wih — — from which the stems . By a cross section of an old 
tuber; F, a longitudinal section of the same, 


fat 


4 stems, 


“1 found at Neosho a Wee Bei 7 1 re ah e 1 2 5 
I met wi befo 
ab 


The swellings are sometimes close a eA 
form a sort of chaplet, Sometimes they are 8 
equal and at other times tolerably equal in size. 


bers, called Osages tauz, 3 f 
edad i 4 the Potato, 3 a little suid Te do not | ° = 
d end erher 


3 its * 


111849. THE GARDENERS’ CURONICHE. 165 
É less of it, and should, | structure is in all points complete, 

r avoided for all purposes of the te in our own hang will ey fally 7 va ve sald ad paler a rst pretty smooth and even, of a 
therefore, } . 4 4 ry p own colour, but by de they send o 
kind, as it imparts it to acid products generated by | we are careful to preserve in thei integrity ll those | fibres which are often placed i . ms 
E ion, and thence to th chemical | principles which animal flesh nat contains, a arallel to the axis of t 1 T — * 
its hich may be manufactured through the in- submitting it to those processes of cooking, by whic dl Tae OT the Ge ee oa 
products w g, by whi and leave on the s of the tubers litt] 

I i latte this circumstance, | design to render it more di jecti 5 
stromentali — I have just alluded has, within the ; * ie A the pad sania Ig rege ig Tomis mr ae 
friend to w Š on the surfa = 2 

2 few weeks, found the whole of his family and ho APIOS TUBEROSA. tumours, about the size of 1 erer and 2 
hold seriously disord from the use of unfermented N consequence e of the serious results that have nn 50 many eyes or bud ber 
S g s capable P growing into aerial 
4 his cook under his own directions, and, as d by the Po 7 
tread wont ality Gia — 1 0 8 y oF g disease, attention has from | stems. When th rs are ripe they are irregularly 
Tunderstan time to ti n draw her plants, in the h tread ; the largest seld 
perties whieh the bread had for oe open uired, to | that ae or one of thet ight be und capab peor of their pavia on soe es A 
— ge of a supplying, to a certain extent at least, the place hitherto | ingala tubercled. These i 
tech of acid which he had purchased for the purpose. | filled by the Potato. At present, however, it must be either to the egen t o 52 ae ‘of, a le 
is indeed is a serious objection to its use in privat d that `: N 
This the large scale, a orkh a at nothing has been found which, taking every. fibres pidermis cove ted * tubereles is brownish 
families, Mea e ol 3 as een — 5 ing into ms is capable of superseding i eros and ‘lightly er sae in a longitudinal direction. 
hospitals, at vege e the re white col 
who supplied = article to a such 2 The plant 8 1 L would now direct attention ap- | cu ut or broke en, a Wis ub Erig e 
—— 8 e presence of arsenic almost nearly 5571 1250 7 05 e in many Teee pecs ble to any yet | from a quantity of very small vascular bundles 
e merican a accounts e been published | im a circle at cireumfere and wh 
Another e of waste in baking has —f noticed concerning the Apios i a 8 a 0 say value ; | consist of irregularly dotted vessels, dhe y3 yee ed 
in my rea = —— 5 — bread his seer igh 5 to the follow ing. The rs are eaten 8 sed, a e thick, glutinous, and sticky, like 
against ) 0 merie hen cooked th The of t b 
this country, which goes to such a length as to cause (the tubers) taste very like Artichokes. The Indian sisting, and is papery of ieee * Ll * ae, fall 
the quality to be appreciated by its whiteness more t 1 ; ar tissue, 
1 other consideration. ‘To produce this white t ore especially in the om tim grains of starch. The latter are of unequal size, the 
by any = e is w — “0 young oe: ay be eaten instead of! argest are of the same shape and size as the of 
introduced and the bran — altogether se- for th e ert Pg Nort ead beer ey oon 2 die both tae 
pars f rs 2 3 Pe Pde 1 ak or the express purpose of obtaining plants viel nu- | not at all bitter or sharp. They resemble both in sub- 
per cent. Were this all, it might tritious roots, in a letter to me wrote as follow in taste raw Che When steamed and 
2 — trans cut, the tubers of the Apios are v ry like those of the 
— iis to that of horace Potato ; they are floury arly when mary a a 
and cattle ; but it so happens that ripe and not too old, for the . may be the 
2 — —— for several 4 ** without being destroyed. Their 
J aste is sweet agreeable, very like that of the 
— feat oe — Potato, but rather sweeter and with a little of the 
moved, on en 1 savour of Artichoke, which is by no means unpl t. 

d thine ave I have myself cultivated sev ts of Apios 

demiak yanis of ott tuberosa. Amongst them was one that grew for four 
— wy — Ai e years in a very poor soil; it was left alm l 
frame of cular —.—— bi itself; it was not cultivated, it was not 
8 2 bn Bi pulling it up the other day, I obtained more than 100 
higher life, who, Uie the idea “ot tubers a eae sizes, being “4 ivalent to more than 

: a itre. It me to be qu in that the 

— their meng i — — same plant placed in a good light soil, well worked and 
nok beingo aa hip, tsi e properly manu long roots could penetrate 
thst in the ‘two 5 = —— with ease, would give in one year more tubers, 
-thing but starch, which ma cas those better filled and of a larger size. I do not thi 
tribute indeed to the * of 5 the tubers of the Apios would large as those 

xt, but of t tt is nọ why the tubers of 
poe rch mul, . ma- the plant in question should not be improved by 9 
as r Pi tig vation, and at the same time that they increase in 

Me gn i would bs that he enan taste and nutritive qualities should not be 
the also, 

" rea thea All that I ean say is, that in their present state, 

which is very little removed from that 


; in which they 
laced by Nature, the ‘tubers of the Apios a 
to be those which as yet approach the most to the 
Potato, both in chemical composition and in taste. 
I. Payen 


Por ro. Arts TUBEROGA. 
Dry 3 e ei 42.4 
Water ies a! . 57.6 
e 100.0 
Azotised matters 1 4.5 
Fatty matter . 0.8 
h, D Sugar, 
and 1 8 ä 
ectic acid, pectine, &e. . 33.55 
Cellulose “Gndindin g the 
skin R A E T Gee SONG 1.3 
Mineral substances A; 2.25 
Water . 57.6 
100,%hꝓ᷑ „ 100.00 
Thus we see that, compared with Potatoes, the 
tubers of the Apios contain more than double the 
quantity of azotised matter, eight times as — 
substance, ne more than one a 
times as much matter a gine and i vegetable). 


The quantity of sinirin and other 
at least three times in the tubers of —— Apios 
in those of the Potato. 
The cultivation of this plant may be attended with 
in consequence of its manner 


ting with lines of early 
e. — he nts, which grow 
much more quickly than those of the Apios, would serve 
rops, around which the long weak branches of the 


many Ho op grounds, viz.: ae 
of small poles are 


pursued in 
aS | for each of which a certain ni 


with which M. Richard does not 
inted, togeth 


= eo Nr . 
and Carrion.—Your 
e c e . Fe bee I entered 


166 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


i 


[Maron I), 


nm 
my situation in the end of net summer, in jn time to take 
fro 


a most excellent crop m a Vin 
at the back of a 
ear 


you will think w 
raw flesh. Beard, Cheltenham. 
such thing.] 

rning.—In support of the Aa | 
already adduced, both by myself and others the 


[Indeed we think no 


Na a a argument 8 the possi- 
N k counteracting its eff by t za ang 
d 1 


ures glazed wit 
— no doubt, still strive ng maintain 


own, proc Tomot „ the 


or no ow is 


is | culars 


u 
ots. which are io% frequently seen, wholly un 
— plant except weeds, or those 1 thrive without 
of 


tain the Ar of | Yucea 


sam 
. — up by i 2 and ney little i 
hi 


8 n forests of Santa Cruz. 
erefore of a spe 
durin — last two winters uninjured, may n 


which it is grow 
on nearly the highest cultiv tiv 
county. e latter 


was pitas $ pun m would un 


* bad ot 


h rdy, havi 

two winters 
ever. 3 ae nean, Basin 
Rockwo' I have read Kak i 
upon matador and I hope t 
em —— m! 8 seful lesson, 
in be offende d 


— 


any cultivation whatever. I may r 
he Lilies will thrive admirabl 
rockwork, if the ae * properly m 
all require shade at the roots, 
pl 


t 


0 themselv 
ows i y If 


mit of tryi * any experimen ts, but I 
at rockwork made for the p 


w years it genera 
A etre place for = whole garden. 
from k 


Ing. 
Tree Protectors —1 shal 


early manifested 
m in th 


ear his | expensive mode, 
e spring, and, for young 1 | 
; and n th 


| sent to 


and that fruit nigh he bou vaghi in 
markets at a cheaper cost than the 
could be provided for. 4. R 
o Mr, Rivers, he has kindly 8 
55 eee umbrella-shap 


instead of being 
expeet) a lesson for the future, 
the more, and to throw 


in the heads of « 


crop ; the 

aarp 8 or 10 — of th thin unbleached < calico at 
per yard, and four stakes at 1 I 
| re isani 


it; these are 


Brown Bread. — t I have observed un 


en Bread.” “ Steel 
ee 


The following soins 
ecimen which has stood her 


not b 
gether e more especially as the situation on 
ing is one . cons 8 a 0 
and in t 


2 
„1 et 9 pire i in length up to the first of September, at 
st have entered the whi ch time it oubt- 


r growing 


nable them to 
ereep under will 8 repay the trouble of examining 
them i in the mor 


is pyr ee ome 


sta = and materi 
e having been 
the f ollow- 


each. I hay 
Pear trees pea et for suppl 
` PP ing 
frui left 8 d 


l Mills,“ &e., 
am disp, d 


alto- 


ure, 


an 


This | t 


5055 


fie 


der 


time to e 


e. and thins — bine plants, leaving fou ‘four 
shoo 


mental win 


either a miller ; but he 
steel mills an 211 


ee ee bi F Of Camberwell, = Laas 
et 
Dot few 


mill kiM a 


pamek: 


of Wheat-m 
mixing “middling « or pe 
n practice in London 


s$ | commo. 
8 r recommended a 5th or 6th part of Rye wig 


a great * to the flavour of bwm 
bread. Mites 2 
A gro — in Garstang 
chained abundant crops of 5 * rk: 
plan. In the he makes his bed 
fi 


box, which is about 
and 6 *. es deep and 1 it 
till the pla * ene ; he 2 removes 
plants make shor 
owing I suppose to the roots in then. 
. Garstang, Mar 

omas Brown on Vi ers. —That th e young 
iore their way through the bowels of their dam, ar 
the female viper bites off the head of th 


The 
and produce stone 
being co confined 


male, very an 
tho e rice of the fons 


n of Nat 
. 2 are — by the dam, an 
ures up to a sufficiency for themselves itl 
hich i is perverted in es p the young ones 
to break gmna the bell > 1 
; for then the old a 


fright, fo r protection run 
the 
4 
a 


receives aba in at her — Lanich way, 
being ~ ma will return again, whie 
; and al ho 


2 
as Brown, Kt. Doctor of P 
late hed Norwic 
Franciscea Hopean na is a . 2 5 very 
flowering stove plant. 
peaty Joam, with a little sand, oa plenty rot 
after it has m 


zi 
likes 50 


1 in 


eee 


Sotleties. 


CALEDONIAN HORTICULTURAL, Mare h We 
n the 


ie 


om lls ce Rg where such a mill may 


rem ent coy a na have observed that fre- 


ring species | is 1 sim east in ap 
possess 


Made in d 
magnificent tree, the « giant,” of 


the 
* giant,” of the 4 


For my own ho 
with he part, wever, ver, I i 
is, I dare sa 

“The mill I have used for severa 

1 grocers, is fixed to a a pos 

o bitia, one of hi 
wheel. One man can 

ives him ern. 

Wang co 3 


of the — 2 6 it was 80 
some hate 

aptina now pie the bran; 80 

coarse sieve, b 

this part at the „ OY ubbing wih 


minutes for a peck of Wheat. (om 


ve deterio. 
T pass 


. grin 
er, he will do well to name some ‘ia. 
be seen 


per- 
grinding mill. The D 
say, a good thing ; — 1 — 


1 the este coffee 


ran, 
to agree with 
80 used 


chair. The displa 05 spring 
creditable ag: a z ae wi 5 


It 
h is | 


my 


and impressa alba 
hard | gr. to the Lord m th for Wilm 
full the bes 


prize was 
is whose kin 


the latter bei t speci 
ciently in flower). For the two 
awarde „ Young, gr. 


bited large and well flowere 
Lamberti For the bek 15 


.. 


172. 2 5 i 


11-1849. J 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE, 


— 


inths in pots, &e., the prize — 
whose kinds were Gra 


to C. K. Sievewr ight, E 


it yo * 
collection of rare and ‘beantifal piae amt 
Res Dendrobium Pierardi, a fine plant 
z covered with flo 


. 
— 


wered 8 n. 
aay aaa productions the thanks of the — were 
— and an apg K N a to Mr. W 


displa of Hyacinths a se plants ; 
e dental plant of Rho. 
. 


PELIN Bevbiews. 
on ge 1 By Henry Weaver 
Architect and Esta Agent. Imperial 4to. Pine, 
Model Cottage for Agricultural 33 By Th 
y Thoma: 
Chambers Hine, Archite gy 4to. pe an and Son 
at no period in 


tory of this or any 
— af seci has the sin cane of the ambler 


other 


HE 


i 


ef 
d 
3 


which afflict 
vail, which is 
first steps w. 


and disorganise 
anbappily but too true 
hich wisdom and 
duty and interest 


— 
| 1 
ff 
A 
i 


L 


RETIEF 


£ When 
e 3 cottages 


to D. e 
hint, aishongh not inferi 
lasted than those 


moral 
| cept on one 


21 — The — 
som 


made to yi ecessfully to sk perseveran 
| rightly tenet Tig 2 collection exhibited the best 
in peels health, th 


‘for a qaaa more | 


er and ee * are 8 the health 
and morality of the mass of society. It is possible, 
t co — : oe continue to be built ig me 
rehitect, and one of the 
— pi alluded te 5 
work, combini a variety ca 

signs suitable to different 3 and that 
nstruct and aid those individuals 
and of architecture is e 
1 work will, in some measure, meet this deside- 
. His lotions, although not exemplifying much 
e or y, are, notwithsta 

ae pleasing. His group, plate No. 8,i 
and we fairy earn J in his recommenda 


—— j etionable, 
tion of ni * od 


sands af paw 


2 
ffeet 
rnal accommodation. This plate must convince 
what a trifling outlay can produce, and we trust 
that the lesson it teaches will not.be lost upon those 
om thi 


i gel, in TA Tural 1 para alike of e 
and 2 inte 


one of 7 
n we inspected the sag e gi- of 

t the Society of Arts ere 
decidedly 1 in favour 


t th me time ventilate it, is simi 
that adopted i inm baa ane, but we doubt — 


his hea 
cu 


chaste | v: 


erest | venience means, It 
pene ute, about 26 feet 2 fps a a 1. down 
e | the a single 


ro 
to warm the living- h, afi 
wo 


be used with cau ution, o 


year 

— or 9 ‘feet high. 

y Messrs. Hartley, was a fine 
Spiræa prunifolia yaur: pleno. 

— = aracter, as it was i 

proves to be a really . — 

having a cheerful effect at this season 

re Mr. — 8 double flowered Chin 

y han 


nservatory, erected 
ly flowered plant of 
— exhibited in 
instance, this 

rey — blossoms 
Associa ith 


a red — the 


ese Peaches, 
me; 
buds o 


it 8 
Roses, Lachenalias, Nemoph the pale 
blue sweet scented Hyacinth of Cabool, » which proves to 
same as Cashmere Hyacin 
2 Dean of 


ester. Many of the latter — not r flowered, 

but it is eee’ that something ne will 
resu them, Before — this — it should be 
added that it is one whose form offers much con- 
to the amateur of s is 


ted by h 


ach side of 


oo 


— 
e resorted to. 
tho model oe to the notice of those who have 


e strongly eee 


Garde — anda. 
HORTICULTURAL seca 's GARDEN, TURNHAM-GREEN, 
—The Orchids in this 2 — are now denz 
to start N into 4 1 
pase in full b 
bot men wine A tHe qe rge 
bilis, sent to the Society from Manilla b. 

ed i 


. 


r thro 
— ss 8 
en owen: — one of whic 
Thi e of those plants which 2 
* but whose beauty when w wn 
amply repays all the patience and care whi ve 
estowed on it. es Pierardi was like- 
also 


large 
displayin 
playin ae uae 
Be Walch. aan 
peas. vos a fin 
Arpophyllum 

we Ln eee 


occasion from the 
lisson. Masses = eee quinque 


© 


the seg a of 


O. altissi | 
— 8 to 10 feet in 9 0. 1 . others 
flow beauti 


e foliage of the deepest green. 
saw de circumstance 


n he can be his o tal eeg 
l the works ever written 


126 
B 


r| Mar 
60 yards — have 


noticed Mr. Low’ fine 

es’ C. de was — to isg — in yee 

par ig but was unfortunately past when we saw it. 

The E planta of Cestrum aurantiacum, tha — 
V. 


any cases been 
n ee into 
ibaiak less brilli 
climbers, Tecoma W 0 
associate T. jasmin * were in — —82 
grounds, the Peach trees planted under Mr. 
protected trellises were in bloom, as were 


— wooden co ings, 9 inches broad, fi fastened 
8 stone co in brackets fixed in the wall. 


pi 
2 | This is found to afford sufficient — BG but in 
` | to break the sweep of the proverbially cold winds of 
ch along the iy h es of 222 about 


son oh ce ire 


9 of Indian C that 

e ornin 

Method of * ia Grange, in Journ: ie 
is sifted, and 2 grms. 0 


at right angles with the w. 


THE 


G 
A 
R 
D 
E 
N 

ERS? 
0 
H 
R 
0 
N 
io 


L 

E 

[Marcy v: 
17, i 


— 
th house 
3 she 
Ge a 1o, 
itself 
co 
in smm 
— leg ge 
855 — pote 
ê e vo! re’ ak i 
25 ie P sts sealing ing. 8 
p ee th = ookii mn) saer ak 
u e ¥ ury, w nder 0 
Tea Ta ee in viun 
ith ER aa skin of the 25 | future 
ine : urn 
destro 1 ir wal thi sage m taken led rust for w üd W 
i drpen sparati —— Pe 8 22 over, 
sag bl — — pears bro ery and ha 
mist as th a awe 2 sas og "ie it, roken posh d Daid f 
ae ees te — a . mei 
q v The arin val | dey au T 
uan e an 7 is u ti pro ge il 
ha rad here ce, an ee be dis yr planted and ven 4 ogiari af gene oaths 
y * She nd'k ach a the 8 1 o at rin s ne 
. fore 2 ee to th ould b. 2 ut the e gth In W 
to * . — the se — 2 n ese put 0 
e 0 t fon 
* ted * d Hers dhe — in saree aia 2 ohare name 5 with gree fm va 
little ent thei e n itself ; suff Seth | eyed ones omer P “te las is of abon ela wire | >i 
air eir ut u —— ; uffi the r to all 3 t of 10 55 yers =| Is os 
— P l 1 sci, uch e th * u LY 51 a n _ emis it 
bei t 3 e 0 p A a e m 1 i 
Cu h 0 ow t b th a e = ith Tors 
Serger: ore in e eae ntly the ek OW ; — poked ii h pa it 
sess a e dusk s g scorci moist pe ae its some “th Sane E but ws dee ce he oe 5 ts 
u 1 er 7 LS : 
Padang | 8 — . — — mall a pon rariation al pro ek A wet, àh —. 5 — e 
som Verbe A pad ms — hi the 05 p av eye efi And th os fhe rege its rey 
— e a in Cmdr Satie ithe in 8 e 
ale D h see: be 3 use e ese flo nt g th ie New Yor 7 — via 
1 f th ro en plan te ie ill Fi re fl rv we in we Ip ing i ** Y hronie 18 a 
— s0 e , ma; 3 8 ts dir sa Figs ia a c ow we ed rs skein’ OM it. he plan of “bet Ilie 179 
not he bed with Ty i as 8 71 whic lo be od — r a “one c — oi Pr, ist a 
ia not to be ex = l d — greens, ed; and Vin ag spring z ar lieve eral are suit Pi go * e. i th TER 
* J fra sgi e ni ipy flower : pit 133 it. — 4 be ‘Agri aes, 
i e e a e ight, nes n w i edo — 0 u * g p: 10 Wher 
suppose tel placos . — nes fo do =| ed wil be nee ont lower, order that th el, and re E E a POR a 
15 will plants nw ndid d ther e 88 1 he ort ple to at mat Deer ha sprl i e i zt it Ray: 
k oF For be 5 h sa to as eye . essary howe GARDE compl ty oblan or in th 5 F E ies it ie i wee 
whit sis hich rinw yb ware ex 3 0 0 old atl ones ould wk oy oa should b ithe be sae basi — . 
and col vais r y filli — Ae nd ct > see that tho loc ve ts of 15 918 uid be th bog ing of sand tf the borde the wn k 
ore sp . tio oe in h * th t ha ali fro rt eu i are cut dow EREE ue ue ps fe us plan of aa f 
the 60 fi our, re e n ura ar h t ti 0 n n 8 e u thi n r d r borde } 
— lendi 5 — of ble d, in ee th to bloom, nt co c uc ti 3 2 ies tare of pe 
situation . pont J 7 Clar C these er also ; 4 ang so t > Ag eee Mih at hei — ig of A ans of pest, Of dette, 
0 wnt rb omg lar subs in. ma be 5 — g ra th wint it e Tiia nts 0 on ight, ppaki 5 i at po 
aer n w kia e te . hn ADS n e out 18 im cp en 
. nde Stoc tha ; > aid der to — eye! e l dur ions P b owe r 10 ir ered 1 5 
for — — aes g them * o Turkin to th i oe Ging Spat n flowers 1 papers al 
5 — kee —.— chella a , en —— e in he _ Alle labour aig e 8 species, 8» entia nn ches 11 enn in this * 
} 1 * cy Saponaria nany | thi 8 abo the y with ples la pla of il t on ae ween pom eo in width al: Weak, ay 
l aki bat at oinas ith clari vot Yow 5 so | 
tirr thi ba, So Ww ut — clari P a soe oe benas A 1 G A f i tee at 82 
de on ae: for Wi p Esch i al- Redands nil on estruc = opi mes amb sare ter a 9 75 
prad pi peiors anoi V late blue b aaa x pepa reie 0 — ae m Se wel i 100 pang eater perma 105 = 
z ru tlle — beds N dale Le sels Sp st 45 oT sind ie — ook ike ould Bot 7 amen cou na tee 
—.— he * ; th — Reds or 18 TE arm borde — Be er e it A re like D not b P. Johns 8 
, m e 5 8 w J 
i oi mado de — e . sional s i as canoes ae 0 = ts at sinc e pard 1 8 rie 
1 80 e en + Í 
places, i pd ite variet A be — no = fi ee cast qua w . af ti Be 5 . — The ed in a Botan te pl . 
in ou warfer by var 8 wings of l for th E os of he et 
and ing the , thi ty i bit he d tte siy 1 Pras: * sap aden si Dahl 
Brey Fone 8 h pro if raiso by p pong sites dl are fchies do aay ready d “a wing « atoh the ‘no Leg oel, Wh aes * 5 
rat aise b ince a t eggin part . bo of h re ni ee. of x it wil umer White f (ones 1 1 
whi 7 f —— tan — er fo h f ps — Ea Sa will d 5 te de ttl ay 
a list r 8 er | Ir. 0 rk asics a 5 en ch, yo Nr a So Se Y rta e e Ph rea 
not 00 tl z ih ed 97 a n s d fl m 0 1 talli i 
r — out to Po son. ** os ‘kind sr thing hich hi re the 8 nd get ae m mand coe * mere ae. E 
idd iil een a yr d 0 o g on d ne a 0 i bot 155 o a isa 
n eal — à 2 a 1e or up an see Th 858 2 — areal * and i on con the ers NN on n 
nostoma Se l display Pe a egged à 4 ils d frit exa esT at our a 2 clos h ri orch he x utn r a 
{Septem Ja 4 — — w takin t b W priy ~ — nd Led i nk ryt in ot s of $ 
4 b ete het — em Sta 75 us ed sce ar in front > ble dun th h she 
po: w ia te n h a 8 1 ro i a u ot e gre 
aie ae cae iF an ae —— te Ee 8 8 8 T 
5 i T 
: ee Nest. T he | Hert T proun ced; 2 5 W t ord cern ) 
time a mi t he t F M observed — d ti berri pres . “peg * ge tof st feet — 2 
12 —5 bene s should be iddle of ime 5 — ar 2 a caer n a ill kil: the an Fo * 
An oe 3 the y Ju uid be e O ul; 7 fo ee . ag Kum a he „ 0 oul wh wat dt 115 e e b gs aie i a 
g f od M ase inn d ac d Unia, 
hein tioned a Jtet ne. of Juy 2 Mond 10 0 — bo * r an mtr ioh yo ne your pi un tong takes 8 oia 
are 3 ce i T iy tc Wed. v3 15 i= rth in ch y whiel tide se e 1 
gh is h to d as 2 vibe 7 ER ate gs il * u se Irish Cu ot fi oul adi 
g vioi = pretty dwar th i 75 — oar si SENI TE ante be 2 et 
exe he other nate a e 4 4 14 17. * i a 0 en A pi c te de t Ph Potato it Pat Fo 
and relent . ile dwat bedi i le Ch S e is ae 20.9 . des te piek the’ r ase it 1 apare iy he ummer sa Sa 
with be * eee | arch 9 3 a 10 25 1 iswiek foes a or -K B. W se or Gerad 
fi in be ropa 3 uire ; it| 9 — i 55 pd 3 ——— a P e = sca 
0 1 ‘alae B 2 N-a 2 20.050 4 2 Mea 9, P N — r j 
a oe a 55 ‘Sead 28 ? Haare aE Ard | waa == 1 2 N Si 
> si by th . p iflo n ag. e = + S 38.5 i ow atr to e belle jal m 5 
not Fg —.— rei ? 14—Orercas 12 9 53 36 1 N. EEN ae a 
. ae e m 4 jos W. — . oanection ch, 
5 e to r U 0 9.5 N. thi A p e À Si ev 0 
fat f Plumba are This, 2 Sim — 5 they y befor ng a 9 80 ch Be oe ars 
— J. pet : i garden den cilis of np in 5 deg et 36. 430 * 8 Londo y pa dien t in 2 | 
TAER eS = — — —.— sting ar oY: 3 . e 5 5 | 
y. they * a = oft 0 — 00 shells 8 nee ye Š can read en into Ì a 
m ney wl tings, 2 es? oh eae duda; or 4 Lo 1 3 15 si Eo to leaf, youi 
2 an ie rat Ta HUE —— = ae vee eD Be 5 a. | 
. m for 5 5 m HH 72 oe ny rs nursery erefore n ct 7 2 5 ales 
Ba 2 we lat Di 15 75 iu nad keep eres sil oct 
uatio Th | ‘an, > pe H 2 mL “a. a it iam; but jet e ells sists * nea 
y to tf e The 3 * * — Rained, real ba of as il e end ath: uit 4 ea T 
: saad ul highest ted 2 Ga for of atam b hg 8. ed nas pan 
TE eh eat 82 at 4 Nein. —— Swim apaw, a as a1 ise 5 125 ee ee of 0 
than 4 al 7 ther St 46 30 : : Liv Pati its 1e fant i a fow ant sis 
cH péra J n iké n f. n e d 8 
es oon ps í = — N an 15 gagis. 8 spat F unattra setae ae 
| — map 55 3 J veer F Mane me al t po 
' to 3 OKs CA 3 rin 2 0.21 5 = poani as nd ctive t qikat is of 1 ood . 
aoe 525 ie E es y iF tre 2 sr d i in Norem Fane 
a for machi ii ster ot 0 west or * 103 E. 2 2 Boral Mh dam iko sod gr i 
es gest advert — 5 ewer saci sce iE 1 ieee e i 55 
5 le i E occu 
| oe sar — ae DA, tosh ore, — TEE —. nding. e Mus vE t 
e 2 = ac — an TERR nov e He * ae = 
rope P i 4 i ivi 5 k ’ 
de aig sh — EN eT nx axis 12 anna 2 . b 
: tti. ö Trem 10 wt t at tter can As these ABB dd — 8, saat 5 eli 
; me 5 š or! wW en wi i ê no AG H uta, pi sho 11 in BE H tis * j 
. out, 2 WERs, k hile a and 2 Soke 13 J otho 5 inthe m ra n 
== | ie . i on 
nee the fe are be more agement, to af they ns q a — R.S e, a ome er, We a a on 
| TA an N zk na by lini ean time, *. * s 
to be i Pex | oo ih pan ol p ing ras nu . s 2 
m — me cers : ee slater 15 in pots, whic 1. e much ob Reo 
== : providing t — 8 a J fom s — — g be ee vine w dron 
j k 5 i which: yi e ane eee be: aiy arra an for obe 8 ich en d fe be e e ) 
: oa 1 ( ery l e Abe they r on ya. © unli 0 0 req a! ; 
ve rad | You oda th erty} — be no — bon. 2 sn igh bye rat — : rye 
: oi * ci = ie | i Fea senate 85 
: — EERE of em t u rd ti There i ars ori ke lit e plunged dice aps 
. this ne nab cu to —.— 8 We rai 
hat e ee Ver is s ffi l ltu ai s I ed, ew nt to 8 
oe cer se = 2 1 . pa 22 
; s piece of adic te o pi e i 
ANO: Saturday, 55 "a ae is ma perat ider, Š ops oin Asp them jair 
rma aed ‘na DE 5 . s Sse 
č aring gone o ar i ean 5 ZAT 22 : 
30 2 1 2, J e-la A ee vo o much f plant you gi 2 
an We ca St ela on 8 y st -E t 
fil e Apel aes ray wees a i aa 
ater : Ecc 8 8 
ni, Ri 7 at hom i S rable sit = efi 
e om ue bl — 81 ‘or 
some, iberi — ce b. e di si 0 T e 
e. Raia It — di je nurse stoned the 
a} difi sist you ba a Ba . if e se or tio sho 
olia, t you im Rs y Ty — ul 
ast 0 pond ie A but w d 
ry —— c f anato 
befi centre white ur plat e reat Fo 
| “mit E 2 
neato a with 9 45 to the e mre fi 
Eik ile ES 
eh 225 1 
9, aoe 
N84 pean les 
ch 3 bbe “ 
ee 
i , col. p 
+ e, line: 


11—1849. ] 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


oo 
TE BELGIAN CARROT... per Ib 


a HI » 18.00: 
en BELOTAN D L 
ni * gf 3 


— 
` 


on 15 MANGOLD WURZEL ... 
K — SWEDE TURNIP : 

SKIRVINGS ys PURPLE- E ASHCROFT'S DO, 

LAING'S, MagEEN-TOP SCOTCH YELLOW DO. ; 1 


RD GR REEN ROUND DO 

D GR 
WHITE, 1 155 255 GREEN NORFOLK. DO. 
5 waite, DAND WHITE CLOVER . 


INE T TREFO TILE PARSNIP . 
aT ERNSEY. cal 
LARGE RUMHEAD CABBAG 


N RYB-GRA 
2 ays PERENNIAL RYE-GR. 
Pah all other Agricultur: 


per bushel 


ASS 
al Se re at ~ lowest 2 ak 


gricultural Seed Lis and we 
sl ee pee” to send a copy ms ings one ane may wish | List 
8 
to obtai 


vice to WILLIAM = 3 d Co. 
— Fiymouth. 


South Devon Ra tea is s now open to P 
a 


Jr cep delivery nes exs “Goods to y Tow 
Any in “ye ~i overcharge shouid be 


ork, 


an 
Railways ; or to any Town in n- 
wall ; or to Cork, Dub, A ond e by Steamers, 


ASS S 
CORNER OF HALE-AOON STREET, PICCADILLY. 
HOMAS GIBBS a e „ th DSMEN TO THE 


Roran Accent 00 Y OF ENGLAND, beg to inform 


169 


TURNIP SEEDS 
L gegen & SONS, . Muse 
N. B., will furnish, free, on application, 1055 
Lists of TURN and other AGRICUL . SEEDS. 

EEN B. ‘All parcels of Seeds above 21. valu 
of Grain and Vetches), es pow pa of 
8 ies 8 and many 
there is a dire mmu nication 

2 URAL SEEDS 
HOMAS 


ich m 
* ta: ght paid Xs any por i 
12, t Georgos s Crescent, 
` 5 — AN p 
SEEDS, in — suited to various soils, &c., at 328. per 
acre, allowitg 2 2 bushels and 12 Ibs, to each acre. Dirion for 
ment will accompany the seeds. Mixed sorts 
for i imp roving old Grass Lands, 1s. 3d. per Ib. Fine sorts for 
for oniar La Lawns, &c., 11 4d. per "Ib. 
OR 


“PASTURE GRASS 


gium 
EAPER THAN at — 
OTTERS GUANO is now 71. pee to n, and of supe- 
quality, owing to recent chemical discoveries, and an 
sintered mode of manufacture, } 
a 


Per ton, at the works, loose, or in bags if required. 
It ol been ana. alysed by an eminent chemist, and pronounced 
pur H. POTTER, 5B 11 07 road Place, Kennington 
AT SOWING 
pur LONDON” MANURE COMPANY a ae to 


vege ee mse hep oe s ‘CORN te vir 


IME. 

SUP PER. ‘PHOSPHATE OF 

Peru n Guano, direct from Importers’ yee —Fishery and 

Agricultural Salt—Gypsum for Clover—Soda Ash for des stroying 
be ede and every other Artificial — orig 

London Manure wd Gree would call ope attention 


to! their Corn Manure 5 — Urate, the form 


Great Reduetion i in mer is offered at | if 


oi | The divisions in Glenties union in which there 


was no individual exertion j 
d 


ands of acres, and the 
deci of tens of Wonen of 
0 fo od. into wn, however, 


ro- 
pounds sterling worth 
5 


to . 5 pauper list, in consequence Sati the inflic- 
tion of poor rates upon them — 1 proper- 
ties, over which they had no co 

It has certainly been a gen hardship that the 
operation of the law has been to de rive generous 


their at they pe 1 5 ished cleanin uae neral substances required for ro 
their of the diferent tr An! Grass Seeds, which are now ‘ ther min 8 ian prices Tawar iod on “applicatio on. an enterprising landlo of the benefits of their 
pn be by bag to me particular atten Epwarp Purser, Secretary, 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, | exertions, in order to feed the unemployed paupers 
1 5 Hor a a MEADOWS “ eE a ar Er opena ne 
nent A an A 3 i 
e of the t Cl overs, pro NTON GIBBS AND SONS, LONDON ; 
Minis Seta T — cts — WILLIAM JOSEPH 3 — 60., LIVERPOOL; — 4 lan 3 er hold TDN po = 
ey are inten . 
| RENOVATING MIXTURES for improving old Grass land, e OOT NT AB Guid abe ond BRISTOL; | different electoral divisions with © ther proprietors, 
1 i e 8 i e proas themselves agai the injurious consequences of | and though his pro perty is as heavily peopled as 
inane ye Grass, and all other kinds of Grass see san e g AE se — ; a $ piy "Guano, purchasers ee rt t eirs, and though he emplo oys s all his n poor and 
f mende oa on. 0 1 ers OF e 8 c 5 2 
. pno the hove, dammed aera tien ALA pply the article in any | A 8 nu prez of theirs, and though he may 
j Large White Bal Ads an Carr rot PTR ta hd at their fixed pres, delivering it from the Import o paupers, must pay as much as the sloth- 
Ware fi 1] id] ds with 25 he ma oined, men who 
MANGOLD W URE EL. ul landlords with w en w 
9 Orange G HE FOLLOWING soir nes manufactured show no symptoms of 9 nee in the art of 
t Mr. Lawes’ 2 p ord Cree mee ee aupers. With t avy incum- 
te y g paup y 
> ote 1 CLOVER MANU 9715 e va ee és 9 5 brances with which an improve ike Mr. H. saddles 
— tard 4 =p = 3 7 —— TURIE P MANURE ES 9 7 0 o himself. Wee is, however, no realisation s 1 to 
ber” Gibbe’s 8 414. wedes y SULPHURIC ACID AND COPROLITES „ 5 0 0 be expected on the aggregate operations for a long 
` Green, White, , and Red Ck seq cliow 8 —PERUVIAN GUANO, from selected cargoes (in Doek), series of years, and if a 2s. 6d. ò ate should be 
Green, White, and Red Tankards, N a 2 60, Kin e “fog e. charged on his improvements in aid of his negligent 
Large 0 . Hs wee Gia the pressure on him would be intolerable. 
bage, f t es 
One thousand-headed 7 — Cabbage, one division, 10 ir un „Mr. H. 
Kohl Rabi, Purple and Green kinds. The A ricultural Ga ette. | has a small per Meigs “este for which, 
tite PARSNIP 85 URDAY, MARCH 17, 150 though it has not contribu one pauper to the 
e Firisoc e Gorse, White 3 Rape, and poor house, and th ugh he fii expended in labour 
“tom Gas and Go" 8 se ba m, a nd Flower Š Seeds. 25 8 a gand TWO 1 1 . three years’ valuati ere mph than agd hoe A 
‘ural foot Eag lang Gümmer Seedsmen to the Royal Agricul- Tauer, —  22—Agricultural Imp. Society of Ireland. value in these aye), it in the last year he has ha 
alls evade? p = eee goeiery of England i . — — — fn i, a for a ah the 8 
* AGRICULTURAL SEE S say ae e other for 7s. in the 20s, u e climax o 
Bass. AND BROWN beg to offer the ‘following, all of| Tue financial eee e ee es preset upon | absurdity and inequity is, that he is liable to in- 
Trent oye cis oma th and s riced Lists of the union of Glenties have The | creased rates, according to the improved value of 
e . by post o on application. Carriage whole union’s pen ne for the “halt roii grine his lands! Liable in law, “a not practically as yet, 
: Of, an Sra Belgian ; do., Long Green-top Red | 29th September , 1848, was at woah rate of abou t | because, to their honour be t tol „hi eighbours 
4 wu RARE, Yellow and Red Globe; do., Long As 4d. per 20s. 5 1 uation ; 2 5 kM this was not | hay been too considerate Ai insist upon their | 
e BSIAN SUGAR BEE EE cale of the 5 7 misery of ireland, so are Mul- MILToN’s generous mind feels generosity 
JANKaRDS, DALE TOP, S ATRI ana a ond lough and Rulland in the misery of Gle ies, and so and ee —— ae far more 5 than 
Bos Mig to th cir kin would Finto ve n, but for the 9 64 al the mere pecun p j ; 
dul eee ABBAGE. exertions of Mr, HAuILTox, who employe its | besides all his otk er difficulties, endous one 
IAN if 7 > 
a hee a BYE yay pmo Seeds at the| people. While thousands in the other parts of the | arose from the delays of money advances and the 
1 denon de Gkanen¢ wicca n were deserting their 1 per mg 2 and | non-fulfil f agreemen n 15 part of the 
nt Pastures, and adap to different descriptions | consuming in idleness the fruits mens’ in- | authorities in connection with the Government. 
i * years devoted considerable 9 dustry, hundred were doubling and 155 ebling their —— 3 were delays of payments, which it was 
th confidence of thsis gir — ng satisfaction, bled to | industrious means, adding largely to the con sumable | o of paramount importance, in the spring an — 
ie a m of the heavier varieties | produce of the land, and improving in skill, in know- | of 1847, to receive regularly for the support of t 
Rance Grasses ; 3 bushels recommended | ledge, and in physical strength. Yet there was an multitude of —— with —. Mr. Alan 
e Establishment? the Trade on application penditure of 2s. 6 e 20s. in the electoral | has surrounded himself. Wit 
aT himeng, Sa Suffolk. division of Fintown, principally for the staff, the ment of the proper Aale “ts let Hei have 
. FOR Ra INDIA RUBBER PIPES AND) union charges ; if there had not been large gratui- mo nthly payments, he was ke ept mo nth after month 


ATLW AY COMPANIES, BREWERS, 


tous pasts tome to the union, — qe Tate would | 
ave bee 


without money, through dens in the Treasury de- 


a TES P $ AND ARIEL TORA PURPOSES ES BAP ssary, essrs. Hamit~ partment, not in that of the Board of 

08K Teng YU ANISED INDIA RUBBER TON ee hae supported their infire or SBE for their | had the me f carrying on his laudable and 
yen bas p Hot any temperature own sakes, and — the 8 peoples sakes also, at | exemplary operations on the faith of t gage- 
n of oil ma become a and as they require no appli- | a uch lesser cost. And 17 rhaps, nowhere has i the | menit, and was obli in consequence, to divert 
Pum, Saaring, are pau larly ted for Fire- baneful result of kirini entirely gratuito us aid in a to the purposes of ent (but remote) improve- 
jé exible pipe r at large been more sensibly felt than in Fin- ments the sums which he had designed for the cul- 
red rds, Ha and of any length to order. because that system afforded no advantage to ture an cropping of the lands he had already im- 
ranch, and roses oarden N 8 the landlord who boldly dared to 3 be N proved, leaving them waste! He could not lease 
bene e, elt Manufacturer, James Per. Sk pee a road A * 0 time his r works, because he had be oe 

aoe Wr oe eld out advantages to the in der: “Ok aga etic | pay, and all arranged 
z eae els sise fer Joints i proprietor, “and the lay or r imposing poor e Pl ere. Ea renewed the Spee which he had made ad- 
its, and other purposes. f We must illustrate this by facts è | varices, and at length, having received very strong 


170 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Maron 17, 


ade | fire-stone or malm-rock bands, 20 0 5 
10s. an acre,* 9 inches deep; and he finds sp beneath these again other beds of bright oe thick, ang 


t payments would be 
assurances that the cage megane ge y ether prey eska] pira ur so economica 1 and pened ee ee 
aap s 45 9 of the bills, two of which, for circumstances of his soil, and the redundancy o hae band is the gault. The co hate ofl 
2 were duly protested (to the great ad- people, that he is introducing it even in are not so uniformly spread through’ the tia lint 

. hi is . 


— i es, as well 
in with ; d that the farmer willyet find his profit in | as a seam of pyrites, which in open sections 
soign et id ip estar he Eo datom knowledge of em mechanical con- | bro re . in the * de pic e ae 
AAPEEE arene gaia ic i i — — — of the | sis 
was to receive a much smaller sum than that 1 triv. por — e —— soi son — . t Aeg bran ak 5 ala 1 : 
had been granted, and that for the rest of what he | operations, pe i ch rt N iderabl sities along t e course of the North Downs, it by 
i il all his works present cultivation, have iminished co ly neal — 
had expended, he must wait until a z H. and hi means follows that the discovery of phosphate beloni 
hould be changed from under the act under which | on their prereset > since Mr. and his son ikvariabiy reward: “those Aia , 
2 Ji n able to give time and attention to the details t or them 
e ’ along the foot of that escarpment, 0 paee respect all 
until they should be brought under the new land | of work. For the first 18 months from December . islead, as they gina 
a ig act. T an unforeseen communication | 1846, Mr. H. sen. was occupied in trying to-extract | most incorrect representation of the course 8 
7 i i taceous 
from T . * 2 h h d 2 group. f 
ut down to 13,400/.,|in order to keep faith with the bankers who had | Research is already very strongly recommended n 
which ho pee c ö with the supplied him with * sums of money; and a y — — —— this = . — — 2 With 
hi eae and abstracting employment of his | a fruitless — itur witha 
Board, and as regarded his py ra for 252 pug . = ag 8 4 a 115 capacity of clear understanding a — 1 a 
n A nd oth itt relative positions of the various strata along this 
mission and an utter break up of his nipan propery: chairman of district, finance, and other committees. a range, 
And 1 50 pi his submission, and urging all t 


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h i aan 
uld, he was obliged to mi his stall. dition of Mr. Hamrrton’s labourers has been very an the upper 3 8 — 
feeding cattle i in their lean condition, and let much marked; they hold up their heads like men, in days — P y uniform k the be 
f his Turnips rot in consequence, in order to raise when the habit of depending upon gratuitous aid pee oleae 


t le 
avoidable in the management of the affairs of pakont * it is cheaper to keep people, old or young, out | different parts of the series are brought up to the 
ac l 40 a public boar f pauperism than to support them in it, and he of the escarpment—and that the range in 
onegal union se Hax tron has carried would have 8 greatly by his Sates Aes if it enia a series of long 3 With such a stru- 

* improvement nil different farms, | had not been for the Poor-laws. , the extent 7 the series F pisen in 
8 in extent from 350 to 25 acres of arable| The N and judicious tome pursued by section 45 manne * the amount o Kare 
land, besides extensive bogs aud moors, of which | Lord Grone Hitt and Mr. Hauirrox are pra ine * a — whieh ie — pe a Phi 
ave 0 are reclaimed, and others are in course of | tical illustrations of ny fg eb sentiments whieh . — amount, ayas along, the ‘base ‘of the 41 
reclamation. Of these, 600 acres have been thorough | we find in a pamp N Doyr “on the e. r : i 
drained and subsoiled, and the crops have fully Labouring Classes: in “ireland.” While fally wantit te 
era ed Mr. Ha ae expectations. In favour- that landlords in multiplied instances have 
able situations, from 71. to 112. was saaa ept the grounds for endeavouring to free themselves from 
draining and subsoiling moor graveling (or elaying) ytempta- | The reverse indeed is v 
bog, liming and burning a portion for ashes, and tions to consolidate farms for the creation of an gr — amount of disturbance on one side i 
supplying a little guano to start — ed. The crops | 0 orderly and industrious class in their eae. I would | small amount on the other, and thus it happens ta 
of Turni urnips have tt the expense, and this has deprecate the practice =a evicting tens of the old | Some places the beds of upper green sand 1 
been done on land not . worth ls. an acre. | tenants to make way for one new, unless the former exposed, and in others carried down below) pi 


thei n 125 le; but it ould od 

wo 

crops from 7 land valued at from 58. to 78. an fairly placed —.— their reach ; for how does the Gul dane and Se pb ox net a 

acte, which 8 ad pti drained pe G subsoiled, case stand in res to the proprietor of any estate? | Ordnance to oe one to lay down — min 

than from other land which had been valued at 40s. He either vate, oo i by inheritance or purchase ; complicate ted 

an acre. Such improved land, after an average ex- if by inheritance he is morally bound to bear the „All these sean places present o ld pits from from whith 
enditure of 10 operations just stated, and consequences Which have followed from the care- the marly green earth has been taken in former times, 

fencing, 5 lm ga Pity of general | lessness, the mismanagement, or the ney of pines | a for the purpose of amending the land; J 
farm-yard 40s. an acre ; but | who have transmitted bed — he period in some instances must be remote, as he 
it must be added 85 wis land i is within a mile of a general law i i 


The sections here are not so instructive, 


Ww 
of fences, and an unproductive clay soil which the | of th e 1 d the diseases | horizontality of the strata and the great ace 


ie v 
pe tenants would never have improved. It cost of which he complains: and t rchaser should | of clayey gravel which covers the surface ; the en. 
roprietor in this and other cases the eens | remember that he bought with W 1 of living | ceous ee not in this of the Wealden” 
years’ rent to get such waste land into his incumbrances in the s shape of human beings.” dation that srai inclination which sg" | 
j little e BT shall close our lengthy remarks with the |them in Dr. "Fitton’s section, and over the whale v 
ee PEUR PXIEAO that the BOTES Te ion of our hope that every encouragement sion of. the middle group of beds from F 
objected violently to work ag contract or job, a from th he State will be given to the really enter- Petersfield there is a-series of undulations: 
1 Lreland, in order ax N. and 


of I : zing t 
i ails; and this indisposition| them in a position o carry on — tg ucing ridges having gentle opposite 
= fvi 22 pity 3 to 3 plainly, — — ably to themselves a to the Dnited N el = rane 5 aac beds. of 
the pansl.w, nn India Company have deposited, f e 
— 8d. in winter. B e ere ase aff short time, at the Gardens of the Z 9 a fo seribed ing Et Geol. 
to exertion 


roc., vol 

ve them a — p? m in the Regent's-park, a flock of Tumpetan S sented in the strata ee ane in a ge 2 oi 
25 themselves, and to spare bis bailiffs on ee and Lambs, from the mountain district of Ladak, road from Farnham Be Futons 

5 loss which would have attended on their constant | Wich we ag Be have been ed ariet with the view 7 


n > 
i il wh Moorcrort, | is 
me. These labourers—ev omy a 150 à favour- 
us — What- 


NM se i 
Dy perseverance he contrived to keep from 400 er May be the result of the pro 
tol continuall uly at work for above foe years, e animals in question cannot tobe 
— ENE almost every kind of agri- to agriculturists and breeders. 
operation, by which system he a at PHOSPHATE OF LIME IN T 
gained morcithan the ng ef, eein workmen FORMATIONS 8 
more than the same ratio above their former 


ed experiment, ; 
interesting 


j taceous containing | 
capital on we Phosphate of Lime.” By R. A. C. Austen, Esq., 
12 ri 


After reading Mr, Paine’s paper in the 
is for ura! Gazette of Feb. 19, 1848, 1 visited Ge ats 
| neighbourhood - the middle cre- | 
‘the order and 


Jax It is now executed at 6s. 8d. 
fal eee cost from 25s. to 384. pers 
r 


| 11—1849.] 


| 


THE 


eles 27) GAZETTE. 171 


numerous small pits, in the spoil from 
ms 7 i d, dark-coloured nodules of phos- 
aba with these are 
the 


; these 
t of the upper — sand 
These beds ave the uppermos h 
fo. pre: till * 2 beneath the 
and: niay ho" ley Mr. Paine is 


ferru apenas.: beds 
— 7 eer asl ig ht maid 
— * 5 No beds are — for ti het 
this lin : the various spots at which Mr 


stratum, 
according to Ajeg report of 225 e afforded from 80 
to be per ih of aiie si 

r. Raise 8 communication to the 


of a hill or ridge above the village of Wrecklesham, 
second at rather a lower level across the valley of the 


Bourne s 
“ The first of yo 


to the beds of lower green san 


—— L of surface follow this in the line of own 


section; but the gault, decreasi g in 
found on the intervening summits beneat 
capping of ravel 


— — 
h the thick 


on parts of 


tion of the 5 — on the south of the 


IGH 
meee 
as 
s, 
. 

S 
135 
3 
2, 
i 
F 
7 § 


111 
H 
1 
F 
JRE 
3 
LE 


rt | 
i 
i 


„the m 
moulds left by these extr 


~ ye casts, aS are the other 
d 


syst her 
standard liane Torment for high 7 national Fand me is 
urely with it, and m 


insepa onnee 
— se it moves, the full rro vy mabaan which it a 
ma 


The cherty | P 
land ; cold clay ‘soils, corer 
ains, in situ, of destroyed 

dance 


than I believe A ni 
3 — within a 


tho’ level of the sea, admirably adapted for high eu 


t 
— the ca pital —— for them in draining be their land- 


hough the nodules now under consideration have an for permanent pasture, and allowances for manu: 

1 structure which forbids our supposing pes to | which i in some cases a 2 to the land, 

be ert ted 800 have the oblong forms of such nothing is done. d dise 

0 and I a Frasi to think that the = sla 
re ds contain was o riginally of animal 

origin L N matter), at times wi 


the ects rs, assis — 

much by a useful and — A publications 
arguments are resorted 

form preserved, as in 


i arta of our forms of agreement 
ind the movements of that class whos 


the 
should 
n e ad- 
vantages — <8 1 with thos 


bodies may have been | i 
filled by the aoe of 7 phosphate of lime. The | in al 


okies 82 nsider the very 8 cha- f ug 
racter of the substance in — the presence of these hat in our covenants the 
mere external forms seem almost sufficient to warrant | landlord was as willing to be bound as he is d 
the conclusion that the phosphoric acid in these beds | bind; that th 
was originally of animal origin 
society as is here, the ge 
ANDLORD AND st 


ention of your readers has been of late ing varied in application in particulars, 

n called to the very important aaia of leases, That it should be liberal i in 11 general complexion ; well 

lative position o l ant in expressed in simp guage, so as toi Pos- 

general, 5 the view of diffusing information and pro- | Sessor thereof to refer to it and read it frequently with 
g — pohjan which, if is oo not lie at the root | Pleasure ; well anged, so that the ite 

an im em 0 vation, on a hi glance referable to distinct heads, short and pithy, not 

overburden with petty privileges retaine d 


rab 
ter 3 rights, 1 * — P neers into apc To meet all 
ey for draining 


whilst I p 


I venture to d to ask my pide 


e witn 
s on the parto nai 


wo 

to bones, which have been prove 
5 45 value as a to 

nding the landlord to 

cost of the bones aiki 


northe of t 
has been completely changed: 
o good mixed husban 
much abused 


neaster 


qi for G 
eat has been converte allow 25 per cent. th 


and bond fide used 


n do 
agents and that the bones have on applied, and in the 


pipe tile — — ab- nl and e either previously drained, or whi ch, 


in N. Laneashire: there i is not — Now, 
ng Rr San to intro o clauses into all new 


any Im 
which began i in the l. — — slightly raised ‘above 3 
eon agreements on the property mab which I am connected, 
h shall 


PP 

as etched out above would 
eee * re Pied to the whole of this important 
distri 


1 b ROYAL AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE 
pa A 1 List of 1 at General Sessional Examination, 
x E gp ptim 
RICULTURE : Ist, J. W. Howdon ; He E. -Hi 
1 7 85 8 Leth 
side e eh Ist, R. Holland ; > 2d, T. W . ayo. 
1 Y Practice: Ist, G. Nicholls; 2d, J. W. 
Howdon 


8 &e.: Ist, R. e Esa v. Rice. 
SURVEYING AND ENGINEERING ; 2d, ——. 
John Wilson, Pri ncipal, 


good examples 
unded truly on — of — but still on poverty arty of 
rit also. The an nual payment of 5 per cent. interest 


775 


E 
ij 


erou 

tes belonging ce tainly x the rarer 

we nasi suppose the beds in a 
3 destru 


77 
f hi f 


] 
WHE 


ction of s con- 


H 
f 


HH 
int 
TA 
zf 
10 


n 
ese nodules are co — Py Dr. 
has shown tie ese f. soon consist 
3 ul x 27 ay not.the convoluted 
ro 
ihe chalk; this hover es o e lias and in the 
Upper green sand an 


100 
i 
i 


tes an 
led by infiltra | 


Home Correspondence. 
Chemistry in its relation to Agriculture. — Of al} 
sei chemistry is that the la- 


. science, that points out 
may add to 0 the fertility o 
istrict, — of yo . applied to it; 
the case o — — — in that of all other sciences, a cer- 


us at o 


J; 
55 


have 
of the bivalve shells and 
solid casts 


i 
ff, 
Bs 
d 
4 


the man who might 
- | comparison 


use of his wits, 


t have poo: 
with what he might have been with better 
ee e the landlord to find the 


f 
4 
71 
RE: 
f 
i 


ah 


ts place | cent. interest on the — * — this, excepting the | 
occasional 


or the tenant to pay 5 per 


working of a field, and the purchase of seeds 


172 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Maron ath 


ignorant ret they rest, it is so hard, by wee. 

of chemis only follows the practice of his inches on a sandy soil, on a "retentive bottom, and now ng u — 

. ne eighbours ; but while he sneers = er the depth of 27 to 30 inches is adopt ted as the standard quisite application of clean str. — az 

theorist who would direct his attention to the studi f depth in all common cases. This s vey fi Persie a er con a prevail; on re 0 Do ammonia » 

inci i th he and those wise | speaks volumes in answer to the claims of deep and wide ladies who entered the passage, at hi 

E “inde Arinia ai against the frequent system, with a medium | boxes, with apprehensions, have Edr the head 
h; and the su 0 u 


uri 

; N $ rmea vom than the clays o 4 5 ritain. Hence it has been general with many critical intelli 
veo is = all —.— with the ner . — eee nure | perm seas wii d 1 ning, which is only — in into the 3 and arrangements for f — 
ol of intelligent husbandmen, a great want of knowledge | show me! the 8 of l páni a drain into the | watering the animals, and which in point of ding aj 

rs reg g | wi rvals. are pr referable to any stock kept in yards, of which 
‘the best modes of its preparation and application. I St. Mah — Bank aM Savings, 76, Welbeck-street, | I have sever ia the winter season, my number — 
think if we were to pay a little more attention to the | 94% Sheba sh y, 1849.—1 beg leave to i láy before you a| boxes not sufficing for the accommodation dé 
nature and properties of manure before we apply it to short notice of the annual meeting - his wwe or whole of my fatting eatin Of the advantages 
the soi in that imes reap grea some particulars of i unts d 1 the system I am confident, namely, the animals i 
benefit. I think these things ought to be more seriously be beg the favour of your dmg ‘publicity 10 “that very quiet and unable to injure each other, as is sm 
considered, not only for the benefit we may ourselves | noti ou AccouxTs ox: NOVEMBER oral jee on ee? 15 3 8 if beasts am 
i x STATE OF T ied up; are tied u 
derive from/it, ‘but ane the community. af Wien ey Erom Novembar 41, 147 to Novem “ang lg 1945 from bruises than in boxes, i e 2 
aer f exercise, as may be seen when t 
with agriculture can be adduced than already exist in From 1,005, first deposits ` d “Be they are 
the stimulus all parties possess for advancing their in- reopened accounts 9 UE 1 E drink from a watering pond ' adjoining their pri: 
dividual interests ; but of this we may feel assured, 13, cil additional deposits . 68,511 6 4 whereas in the boxes they move about at 
5 s pS A e 

as the end and object of all knowledge in 15,711 711 deposits, in all Gaclyding interest) ...£86,626 17 9 viene to their health, the whole range Of boxes beig 
connection with this subject is to increase’ the pro- Pays ciently ventilated an nd lighted from thera 
duce of the earth, so those who will not avail themselves | To 6,085 depositors, in part 116 14 6 wise by small glazed windows 
of the assistance chemistry affords will be left behind in 1,170 do, in full (includ. interest) 25 491 12 _ | Of the quality of the manure owed al — | 
the struggle which i is going on ; and further, those who 1, 7 255 repayments in all. . 96,607 15 8 boxes I cannot speak too favourably, being mote w 
do rel th an elucidation of the hitherto . | able than that of any made in the yards, and wid 
mysterious operations 1 Natare; will not only derive a | Decrease vs see oe eee 9,980 17 11 when not en, required on the land, is v 
direct and immediate benefit from the application of Dueto19, 019 depositors, on Nov.20, 1848 (deduct) 292,426 10 8 into mixens in readiness when wanted, instead of bay 
chemistry to agriculture, but they will also proceed with on Nov. 20, 1847 (from) 302,407 8 7| piled up to wost and create a stench in the midid 
less di in eet a open 


i= 
— 
a 
oe 
g 
— 
5 
8 
“= 
* 
— 
gei 


are unif in their , and that a 900 K 29.980 17 11 and whereby much of the strength is washed out; 
cause will always induce a certain t. Without a GENERAL STATEMENT, from aly . 1830, to Nov. 20, 1848, if partly saved in tanks, it is not so secured 
trial being given to the opinions of the one or the Rec £. ditional expense and deterioration by rain water, g 
power of the other, the hints thrown. out A the scientific From hgh tape deposits A 9 4 36,698 0 3 am well aware. Last, and not least, the animals pya 
194,028 additional deposits 1,012,673 7 2 so satisfactory, and are generally such cut ; 
— — re rity ee with 3 and their customer 
ore and more clearly that we must find a surer way To 65, 712 depositors, in san 8 that of most “other beasts differently fattened; mi 
of obtaining good crops than our forefathers ; we have 2,640 do. in full Aasi niha int. 5428 1610 10 1 accordingly, I find no difficulty of immediate abs 
the forei er n as a beast is ripe t to kill. F. 


to contend wi ust now look 5 800 i 
to science, not leave i it to the next generation of iaia 88,352 repayments, in all. ay 1,176,945 12 9 according to experience I find 13 weeks the sag 
in the hands of Go- period for fattening the stock in boxes, and as the prs 
fi } 292,426 10 8 ell as * 


I do no 
say a a farmer must be a professed chemis rund Postal, ,019 Pipe ara 291,386 3 3 
epositors, o. of Sir 8 cott, 

master >of analysis; on the contrary, I think * be . 


5 through the boxes annually. ss 
The Balance due to —— en November 20, 1848, was thus | 1 was favoured recently by Col, Challoner, the chit 
gricultural Soe 


or simple bodies which the numberless forms of matter, posed, vie., man of the finance committee of the A 
of which the crust of the globe is composed, are capable | Dueto .., 14,455 depositors, whose respective examining my box-feeding establishment, wil f, 
of being resolved into ; but it is necessary every farmer 7710 Hon alance 555 W 20. 45,573 1 2 bailiff and the feeder (being too unwell myst 
have a certain amount of information on scien- 1,234 do. Sond de 5 85.013 1 3 present); and he was pleased afterwards 
Zr with ees that sp out 367 do. g> do. 150. 44,365 0 6 me his approbation in a manner fully 
vates, and the manures aie on — land. 3 do. 5 exceeded 2001. 604 0 sett 
Liebig says, in his excellent oik on Chemistry in its 18,954 depositors * . 287,248 9 1 
Application to Agriculture and Physiology,“ Now that 54 charitable societies — 3655 16 7 laid dow War — with a disi 
the — which render the soil produetive and C ee re ee ala Toroi to British q ad 
capable of affording support to plants are ascertained, | Noy, 20, 1848. 19,019 cou ence of hom 
‘it cannot well be denied, that from chemistry alone 5 pigu ip 1355 426 10 8 * — the 
; produce, to the b 
in agriculture is to be expected.” Nor. 20, 1847. 18,119 do, do. (rom) - B02, 407 8 7 


S 900 open a, fear r. Warnes merits the applause 15 
wend . to Corres- Money—Decreas £9,980 17 11 | fellow subjects, and of the agricultural 
on Jan. 6, you say that Barley and Carrots re interest credited to de apania during the prar ticular, 1 have only to add that, to Mr. 
a. sia’ E ogether.. Perhaps it may interest | ended November 20, ua amounted to 7272. 1 ves all who feel doubts on this —— ev 
pais: M. A, to find that there are exceptions | of whieh 2131. 83. 8d. was to depositors giving notice in | for investigation on the spot w 
3 — eee b full; and 70591. 3s. 540. peat 19,019 5 panin tion to my bailiff, Mr. John Lak r, Knapp ar 

9 i aatia * nope A ee mix — accounts remained open on that day There was but near Horsham. Charles Marik “Burrell Kup 
R 8 eeply tilled for one account on which the raame ‘amounted to 100. ; 600 Horsham, ee 7. w 

spring a 1847. The E 8 early in the and only 36 accounts on which it even exceeded 5“. I was almost deterred fe 
appeared after a while 3 ety “vel, but i it | The average amount of — on 1170 accounts which say some neal — se by the conflicting accounts 1, 
Oi ona? Carrot seed was then died an pay t 2 been Sneis and upon 19,019 accounts remaining | Paper. I have now, however, _ given tem S 
bao hle Soth slow ined ä eee wen er 20,189 — is 7s. 21d. upon each an delighted with them. I have 


progress s p dam deli T 
the Carrot plants made very — 1 ts una account.: The average amount due to each account, in- | ing cattle, calves, and horses in them, and 
ponte 6d. mals so = comforta 


t th 
pened for charitable and friendly societies, the av ] for calves and young? 
> hoed ; R; ana‘ ‘ iS of amount . dee: tak depositor mea be Tl nde arly recommend them fo : pý 
nearly — 71 dere 07 it S oe ot loads, | Douglass e Secretary and Actuary, St. Mary- animals at two years old than ee. cme ge 
: 0 they were | lebone Bank for eer 70 Welbeckatvect, Jan. 1849. They never ata any disease a 
and 7 eee — Having been a applied to by th m 
2, e- te pep Lewes Express, at the ins 
er * . 
saw, turned out better as to quantity than was e expected. or ween nfor: on the viz. 0 
Euez Man: was not injured 17 the Carrots. An ree ya e ee . . in boxes a be dry, into them, and all turns to 
n. | n 
| Rural Poor.—In the original letter of & S, S. who 8 3 cooked: by boiling or mixed by 
comple 0 st tbe moral condition of the population in boiled 8 . uently to his recommendation of gets in from above or below. W. V.D. 
ms the minis and by Mr. Arn — 


; Sorietes. o 
i orward fo perusa ROYAL wee ee 8 
r for things ian they are. Bg what | Express, wherein Ai . his ee opy of the first A Werk y Councit was beld — t the 
hired to cultivate it absented himself, an 2 the ity of n Tuesda 


Dm pe a urther inquiries- b r = 
a tenth part i spent perhaps tig to:my reply as given in his 1 


meee ofthe wages he received ir in payment of a 


, Mr. 
Burroughes, Dr. Calvert, Mr. 
M.P., Mr. Brandreth Gibbs, ep 
Kinder, Mr. C. E. Overman, i 
M. P., Mr. H. A. Smith th, Mr. R tl . we 
35 T. R. Tweed, Dr. Walker, P. 3 
„Captain ee Waterton, of Grove Hoy 
ere, near Leeds, was elected a Governor, ™ 
—— ombi of the Soe 
Edward Sherlock, 


fra | Mario Winia, Bisley Hall, Nory 
boxes; and as respects the bed on which | Haywood, Henry, Moccan, BES, 


1 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE 
. . 173 


Sere, Tee lag vet Tange fle N noth 
The names of i Jamilton, Holy Nor * ree te Biaiki ld Reedy, — Another mode Pursued b [ee —ßr᷑ —-—-t 
a apaa —— eld: wie ers, is to cart ; y | find that in draining peat land, the tiles choald ae 
i for election at the next — 8 teading, whee tid vas ed piece of dry — * — from why ee ing peat land, the tiles should al 
Meeting were aced in an upri p roots are cut off, near | tained, pest when a 7 a 
The following communications were received, and th stand. Both thess ieee ain n, as close mK mdna — 4 aa sit always fon ao 5 labie oil wi g be red iro b ote 
usual thanks of the Council ordered for them : a acre acre will, by these 2 —.—— ep Turnips fresh; yaran coun] atone aged in leveling ‘and recent Then pen hare si 
1. From Lord Camoys, a specimen of the ‘im * the field in which the Mad contain the growth of 4 o rs e ich ine, d recently grabbed "out of copee, 
om 70 - r prov not ecure from frost inthe grown; but Turnips ar „ winnowing Wheat, of copse, 
Buch success in his dairies at pee oupleyed e se positions as in a store ; dau | sheep, sack employed 2 removing hurdles 18. Borses ate kept 
ented mand ampio with s "ih uae Monee 0 . ep, carting Swedes ving hurdles in s are kept 
syphon, n 8 pe [ain cen mts tak’ them to een | the tanks f es for the cows, pigs, & advance of th 
l ; 8 a proper sto or absorbin » pigs, &e. e 
il fr oot case if myo tin , and thus store ores, or thos — 2 are, compare dto triangular | m 8 es and placing at gg ange ee from the stables, Ee, ashes to- 
effecting a com ie a by th r than storing el rows of hu ere 5 d e has b gry Sige Beogr 
and the least poils ie * 9 — n the stan Turnips in houses, wh rdles, they ar cen removed, and int — — e 
nls he r 8 he t tom, ‘ad oiia votes oo * never fail to | sh ee ds a ended to 5 > Feplaced re the 
en a farther commun | Bape omnis e CCC 
rous —— off the roots, and Artoak ia Ph 0 ent coe lime ‘past, hoewes and 
up the interior of the pipe or tile. stored 10 acr place the Turnips el e one was to cut nots e well for some tim r being fine, the ewe n 
2 — a stared cres of Turnips, in this ose together. He had s er from the foot lame ime past, o fortun: s and 
t of the resul þ- | sec ey kept perfectly so way, on an acre of ons, uve have not sol 958 vie 
p 2 y Sound to the latter end ground ; | being but lim sold above 50 Some: n some past sea- 
Turnips away i o cut off the roots and of May. The for m ited ; some of our Southdown labs * 
y immedi nd tops, and market by Ea aowa an ready 
iatély, and have them built 3 the out well for the Astar. The Turnip erop N E 
p in long havin in this part of s likely. oih id 
g been so fine during the pa the county ; the we h 
past tw two months, hae ca p 
J. B. used the 


wil 1 by French h chemists in the sash eis of the Forty- 
ridges abo: 5 3 

4 * . commu ras pee Be ut feet in width and hei ga 
’ nication on the ques- | They R — to prevent agis, ga a few-bottles of | Turnips to be 
e placed against wall--partistianty ah — USSEX F 2 with great econom 

north | and spri ? .—L 
spring Tares; this week — hey jressowe ed part of Barle 
ngaged in ploughing 


whether moles were 
or were not injurious to — u any, it should be aio — 
5. Ta Ap tain Waterton, a ably well. On uth wall, This mode 
specim fother ? 9 r he had answered for and 
, with a statement of ies eal P Ysa s a yr alkaline up; an ] | piled * = — = Tet igh, [What is a| We Seis at Caa A T Oats, and spring Ta 
cat F in the pA of f piga. eeding of December, however, mt — te 3 a mene ae Potatoes and 888 * a dunged, 1 i — ithe sheep. 
From Mr. ae P aaa en ection. Mr. Steph brats got off and the h ushes and Sed nd, two years a; or the 
x vari e the ad fallen from the 8 enson added, in allusi y were in | ploughing it is e Grass. With drai g0, grew nothin 
Pole Paignton” varı ty of e Cabbage culti Flat | of getting Turnips off the inn that 5 tot at | all our old stock of 801 and works well, We be and subsoil 
with great success, td household pu 3 aise a poor chance of such e landin fine weather ; 5 ell to talk we have bought otatoes with the diseas ave nearly lost 
| 22 cattle, by Sir Charles Burrell Ba art., 1 e em off as well r ust now, and the — ol pa as the Early * — of the earl * s TAT 
. Law Hodges, M.P.. th „ and st | if fine we shall co ; they are sound 4 ondon 
+» these Cabbages . detel ee „good Potatoes, and 
stances weighing no less than 51 lbs ges in some in- Miscell erus i eohiné to bruise corn for cue Lonci sun ave now 
1 ae Mr. H. Bl The Agricultu aneo er —. for the bullocks; and hay horses and pigs, and 
resulting, on a — of hie 3 r report ver the effects has now ce good 8 Atsociattn of Scotland used for 8 culling-stones, whic forms rl hg shed 
from the destructi 8 e Jan. it “ t. On Wednes: d the barn, a proper hei » we have rected the i y had bee 
on of the worm 2 ’ met are)? ay, the 10th a sack. They 2 eight to allow the bruis ey the corner of 
irruption ; aot own death warrant : and. like a soldi It has signed its pe Grives the cir 8 by water power sed corn to run into 
in the same state of fi reached 77 the ses honours, has r ; and, like a soldier full of years and it e 6 . 
while that portion of it overflowed — as formerly, | Carry on the 1 Id, leaving others most useful mills we Fpa ese. This 5 pi j bu but 
: 2915 e e p i he 
Ted thn ple, 2 a great deatresstaen = Se oa oat act indelible in the akar ien al bi It has left ubt but will be profitable, 7 B. very simple, and I 
: of worms ry, and, lik ral histo; f 
; = 3, prived of th 2 , and, like the fabled phæni ry of the N 
viously given to it by the operati e porosity pre- of pel hoe - r phoenix, has departed only | P. otices to Corre 
sodden, impervi perations of the worm a successor of wider infi y | Paxron’s Corracen’s CALE spondents, 
ervious, and ’ t constituti influence and rice gd. each ENDAR., The re 
The 8 — sterile piece of land. the cl chemical de epartment adie bebe allude, of course, to tribution a among their 9 ko sai "for . 
Couneil then adjou and and A management of the Docxs: C can be supplied 8 
20th of March, journed to Tuesda gricultural Societ, e Ducks: Č CM. Se at the rate 
— a a Cal 5 16 meg 1 ge sung ducklings had bet — ster not be cooped, but 
endar of A ast, lest the mothers ch 1 rd for some pa’ 
Farmers’ of Operati wet sward, b ould drag them days at 
rs’ Club ons. out too earl 
Nrweisttx, Ni ubs. RDSH rays. Wet, dam E koria n 
ovember : : M eng a * me Fary, March 6,—O chicks of all old are always fat od ‘bythe 
the discussion On the Stori me — commenced | t ng ge with the Ba arley sowing, 5 pure, e of late been | When, becomi — r — be ye = e Young poultry 
ne the s readth fi About » if they do n amp, 
— N suppl storing — — ise 1. The — and long-eared Nort bushels es the sown sa and if cooped. In warm dry weather the motte her, particular 
land ; 2 wth th 97 reps 2.5 After they * another. The h — ** 3 ed from e! —— * detriment. In ey may take to iv water ter 
goma. 3. The ade; mee, 7 be 8 t the | the oy fall — finishing "Batley and Oat sowing, ou e will of „ to be 1 nan duck- 
een them fi ain in the | hills with ws, and carting sun + be 22 land they mix beiled Nettles. wi three tim ow crams 
bd. en mer n th gas-lime in the state of c u both thri eiled Nettles with their food, upon whinn 
be chosen for th ty Weather,” sa e removed without | li wid essing Grass-land, and ` — bonate, mi sae wie apt is injur ef, om perik Soaked bread o 2 3 upon which 
cleanliness e pulling of Turni „says Stephens, “should | 2 a in tanks mix ammonia wate: | 4 jurious, . Remains of boiled too much wet food 
should es othe T 7 nips, but fr ths, 1 ot — the Bris | — e lani a i Our chief ks, which is also applied to ly se — ae — 7 — vy and boiled Potato” ——— de dry and 
agen ann i — — is of a light description, but has not reccived aay dung _ witness the Hable. To Da rodea down ae d the Jong Coe. 
not phe 4 re ses’ feet will be soot and s ss — dung Witness the b cee 
to make emptied. No a. eeptacles fo ‘or wat be apple when th nd salt, other anxiety and trepidati ut it is _— 
to make ad p agains E Sak. 285 rough-draining as ater, | wood —— at the rat * hele e above ground. est hae Kose eae little ones take eae —.— the poor fos e 
everything AA tare condition ; but clay will 3 lie e young se sap els per acre, will be immedi dont tee Ate e Bonnet, Sow early in A 
deep loan wilt 3 — oa its surface, soil egiye m has lately consisted of ro re The manual labour of a 1 Won n April for transplanta- 
large masses will nde, Penetrated b tted by recent rains and rag new ones ; plantin ing up old hedges, and substi- | „ ere N AGRICULTURE: Carlton 
should, therefore wheels immediately re hoofs, and rise will be ~ planting Turnips for Beans, th eshing and dressing Co ti- Piat bet a ‘lay whi which is me and others. We must 
torts of soll, however we from th chs. coniatin ips . — — spreadi spectively, the labour | cludes th aig 4 
a severe ev er well drai s consisting of th g Corn, ng ashes, taking in em, and ‘the plane of M ne of hardly in- 
rain; nor ed, immediate] g of these | jobs, in : eat a a ae and and thresh- | not embrace the r, Dix ork 
has again bec, hould they b y after or duri „ 40 leon eg „and performing s em, The subject is — at 
to esa become . — 94 e pulled at all until the eat Wheat generally ČO, attendane upon stock, &e 8 wet odd — we should not object b an oct hardiy useful 2 -a 
in as many Turnips a o cart å pE eaer peiste is robpok dente ait and forward round 1 and field operations yo is Detter quliied as i be —— of K tee are any 
at most; as will serve th yoking, to bring | ferred lents misunderstood One of your Calenda as instructor than on it; no one 
much and e cattle for two or three | each for ke Ist ‘ me in my las 8 e taugh 
the Taripa,” Sk pent in ter SB the tops on, pos pann for keap To 3 "Fat me pioba dad bron baat Renan Czar Y, 2d Edition, revised and enl eget 
cattle should ovenly mo waiting for the pulling | or beasts taken i 8 had received 10s Horti vlly, Esq., F.R.S., E enlarged; by 
work of the a providing prov de have been put into stalls on sim Since then two mora heika B cultural ‘Society of Lond rimental Chemist to the 
Turnip ing 8 ea hould be con 8 remarked, goes far to show similar termi, and thi re heifers Bora Agricultural Society on, Honorary Member of the 
situdes of the st nee in winter F 8 advantages c . Pagers on Chemistry 
; s be had y at 
storing . on, independent oÈ the beasts have paid, o will 3 — — Arm on — ga Eager a and of all boo Fri at the office of this 
used whee is can only be obt the viote- would be mere a or will pas Y, 10s. per week each for kee F 
th by | mul cae he p. This often sed after be 
— to iw mindy 1 to be | — of m known at the time of puttin — pre — — of the ani. SEEDS: J M. 8 and soaked again with quid manu 235 
Access state. In stori eat would be : ; and wh x and of ure, 
farm e site of the sto oring, | BERW. prospectively. . Y, atthe| and 3lbs. of yellow T s- of white Dut 
25 Se e ene pared ee per e e an . Mies Sow when the ground i mtn 2 baal of Italian 
the gly simple, and ats; threshing Be rass-land and Turnip- n any one say i mp, early in April. 
ieee nae ares Ma. P . d Fee e f e 
straw and 5 feet high, and | un h nor sow. ost having set in litte lin Lack LEG: Keep th * 
hich wo fastened down With atraw ropes making 8 ss leading Thorns for rl te Svin we e ge or oil onk daily, Avoid ren changes 
out of th w ropes, f. s for the ew 8 ces and Conine 8. 
8 Siren side, and placed 5 5, — Ec. J. B. es lambing ; cutting and mending +* Communications re reaching town after Wedn 
1 H straw is not Bras cope SHIRE CaRSE FARM, — 10.—Since . Mr Pmt 
2 are requisi en engaged so t report we 
t quisite to Bean 
them from frost, which — oad ; also in threshing . 8 threshing 1 Oats 
á sides of. the els Turn urnips pe Pea — for the Stirling . — tn 8 r 
of t A stor ; week we have al 5 rain — gg 
m w e shoul e also — > SMI 
2 755 Fai- st m d | manure * ng. J. ee driving away hay and 8 We have „ 5 March 
ie hey » Se cake | tie ‘Weather has Been Bhie farch 10.—Since our last ficulty n dull trade, apply of Beasts, with mild per which 
fs f in roürnble for a s maintained. rata choicest are with dif- 
Toom, laced — — — — 1 orn age 7 f Febru 8 ‘a. | Siderably more Sheep na remain unsold. ‘There are deg 
an Tecommended po 2 Winter a n. the | of Beans and Pe wing of Lentyraia, planting hie: damana te care Iai aad DA be 
two rows. well for the turning of carts cient | quence been Peas, an Sowin g of spring Wheat , Planting per 8 Ibs. Cal wit a slow alld 2 
— and : — agriculturist, is to pla — — and the farm — aes Paap = ption to the —— phage 1 Gaver and Holland there are 259 —. s quotations, 
— al bet pa ruary — pein apn vomo in January and — very forward | from cotiand, 2 Norfolk and Suffolk, 2500 Beas "a | 
w 
— healthy, but the eee eat regularity, and looks str 3 Porst of Ibs.—s d s d) Per 
looks very badl wn Wheat in thi ong and Scots, Her st. of 8Ibs—s d 
it being too aay, more particularly that sow i upon Tee gro and, B Pa a eis] pe ro. tot 2 
Undi also carrying a v est Short-horns 3 £—3 8 Ewes & 2d quality 3 6 
ploughed and 55 5 yery siekia ia 2| Di Ereg da Aquality 8 0—3 10 
orse labour has been chi g entirely des 825 
efi, A troyed. 1 baer 5 
last report, by carting manure to the deld, and planting Fota- Ditto shorn | Bias — 3 
in pioughing land where during the month of February ; 84 ts, 3650; Sheep ei lamia 2 8—410 
Barley. We have not E yet sown ei have been fed off intended for . 8 5 e, "Calves, 138; ; Pigs, 180, 
es have been coi sE Eg sts i 
Wheat aud Barley to tinually employed in carting riek 2 of | ceedingly slow, and it is is much smaller ; trade is, however, ex- 
machine, threshi o the Barle —— ann po a obtain Monday’s quotations. 
— con for 10 0 12 days ey, and Oats, which ew we eben toni limited nd that ‘Monday's 2 — — is 
n land where Turn been cart- wors ay ave a fe quota- 
) i w 4 
e are rnips have been e, especial! more Lambs ; 
Te are planting under furrow, with early M fed of, which’) sales are dull ly for big ones. Calves are tga 
of Peas Per a = mixed, aout bushels of Benus: os peoia Bootle a have at about late iste ie From Hollsnd and Bar ; 
ploug t nds of the 40 heep, 2 Cal 
in 18 inches apart; in this wax we find they wi a i coun ie atc: — 166 Milch Cows from t yet 
deta, Here. : Best 
n Lo x 
157 Be garn. 4 otoa 2 


come up 
up very regular, with 
s plenty of space for wo 
— ge The advani of this mier e on Best S ae. cule 
is, we find there is less risk in the crop, Short horns 3 4 3 
bligh » | 2d quality Beasts 2 6-3 


will that when the Beans are 
oat te res and whe „ fa Best Downs 
have been employed will be obtained. son bee Ha alf-breds — 4 baei 
EN Sao Ane 
$ čep: Lambs, 29 


* 


I 
CULTURAL G 
TE. 


[ Marcy i, 


174 
The 
tables market ~~ COVENT 
A fow hod F continues GARDEN, 1 
ao ea. aaa — a well 17. 3 
Beurré. s have are supplied 
tiful. bagra ieem eth nt for v - 
Amo for K — eir a 83 — 
= lowers and Bt — geting a woop The 5 — Aroks. 
Potatoes 1 — etables, C ting dearer, ré Rance an ona u wort had many fr een eens 
* * arro a E 
—— remain Beans, Rh Ny m manies — peni — m tf fresh rt that E, WATER RSIDE 
ers t for the dem j Rhubarb, r the demand 8 nw 355 e et to ha rea us id * from e t E, Marel 
of eakal 0., 908 quota! a dow! st ab rkshi 9 
ee vee en ae ae 333 e Je 
3 Tulips, nes — — olen ading are ch Whites, cote 8 te, 100 . and “Sete J AMES P ASS FO 
; yacinths, oh Christ tifa. © 1 0s. to 955. 90. to Os. t ep sed Witho PHILLI R Oke 
foreign, — FRUIT inerarias, Fe . ti essrs. P. HO Belgia 11%; Whi s: ing arer ° f SHEE ut, have PS an SER 
pi Boar este — to 9s rend Fu nues the sam be ai FRIDA n do., 708. yt ye I T GLASS tor pleasu D CO. * 
— want vis SERRAT, March — CRTICI xD CO., 116, Bialos 
—— ae | Walnuts, p. 22 M repor of abon RTICUI 11 
Lem ges, per 2 to to 5s alnu , per 1 OND, t feat j hee ann t 40 LTU ir N 
ons don., 1 Sa ts, p. 100, b., 9 2 ay, M MA P E E 13 0 fi om packed i ieee RAL em Litt 
ie „ per doz. 5 to 28 Nute „bush Is 6d t ry eg ARCH 1l RK ‘ket co: 16 oz. to th n Cas GLA Of Pries 
33 100, eo S hib, „ p. ite 3 fy mples supply of 2.— n- 21 1 #2 oac Dicks 88, 
Cabbage p. peck, 46 to 7s => ob, p. 100 . — ae eines 2 could n —.— Whe again to — 5 1. a. e psc 
fed, p, dor: VEG eal, pe bab, 0 to 1503 per ar. son ba Aoii S ia ag Tea pee etna coed ee 
— 5 don 260 ETABLES 4 . upon the pri of coun nd a . 29 6 inches lng” 
Coal — aon 3 to 1s — rag p. siev 525 eee 18. Forei prices of keas a dè too ki ot charge * 
— — p. doz es, 1s êd * ‘bane Bato ta in 8 ns. i cheaper. Aerea f 1s. to Squ LL SQUARE 
— . See —— ‘2s 6d heavy, in sae Beng’ 23 — 7 8 S IN BOXES OF 
. b 1 in OZ., e turn i as us und 0 8 Or 10 
ot p — rere, 147 112550 Sh . g, P. hf. vas * 4s . l — low sale — 1000 g se 757 5 = 7 OF a returned, 
— perowt s arlic , per Ib, re ax, M ua The Oat apd T EER — eq eS 
Tarai e Articho baat to 8d sre * 1 qualities are icida d eae eaten 3 a 
es to 1 6. th 8 55 124, 
Turipa p. dos. bun a ten — 8d other 8 The arri 64 per is Li den in oar 0 tn 9 16 êi 
Horse dos 18 to 2s „Cab 18 em, p. half market thi ha y — of seals of Genel qr. ineh per foot not exceed WINDO 12 0 1 10 r 
Soakal 2 1270 — 8 2 223 8 pow Wheat} Tin PA mah neh are gruen 
M 22388 — flog eat. ather lo r T th ick 1 rficial, 
Rhubarb, p. bu . — I nt. potti — r 6a li VPN Sp ring oa 5 ieee he attendance at — pinch... staves 3 5 21 rane ch 3 foot % 04, 
dto S el, p p. hu tol nth oL, F mai bmitt | HI AT Mae Si 
8, p.l 1 er b m., e tra o 1 remains wit! g EE = 3 E 
Leaks, por dos, 6 12 6d to Ge 94 Savory, per ba 24 to så ma trade this morning, s 10 without alte diè nat F ölass TI aur t 
rh al 1 | Roe — — e m dois ration. ere| e | ie t 
Carrots, p. six hi 1 ley, Pe p p.doz.b to 3 * ‘ered, a lin othe f gh are ke by 10 lass SLAT Td, 
cf herr gg 8 „ eee —— Mee must 8 1 — 1 deseri ation GLAS 2 Rr ee: 2 
Prime HAY 8st = ey 18 aip was bought continue . ere mae poa ———1— rs try be MILK-PANS, of the: asta = oes an 
— per d n rather ea: = — du 8. pe wa e nts, F H P ension siz 11 4 
Inferior di. — * — re bunch, p Ba i PERIAL |W es te fair 5 2 5 1 chee in ae 5, Fish lobes, Pls PROPAGATIN es, and — 
ny e ne a 70s to 76s | Moreh 33. a eb. Basan HEAT. Ban request, but Y n tubes. SEES. ar Dich ann BEEG p 
%% 60 over — L Ye * nd E 
The trade n 2 oe + der 5 ts a = ert llow | - or Greenhouses 5 — m Glass of ee — 
Prime better » 60 1 1 1 B m 8 ig 
— soe — — Mar. 3 — 0 +4 3 77 288 5a EANS. | PEAS tors, an — pi arm PATENT ROU n 5 Tor tying e Gad 
H ditto. Hay an „ Clo 1. 4 H 3 i ean 
Rv 4 65 nferior . 15, dull sale, Agere 5 9 1 5 2 29 33 to mee PRIEN his 08 s, Gar LASS; 
er New Clo J eae Ay re 29 0 — + — a 30 1 34 f 775 NEW the tim: D AND iene eae f 
ver 50s ies on F 10 1 32 or PATENT se 
28 —— sji 2 2 4 a0 1 1 manure, farmer for n nie NRO a sy — 
s. on 
FEB. — in th 1 30 4 3 oped all pi pas set ter} phone atin £ substitute 
F: 3 ev n ni „ be Ay 
EB. six 1 ery d is, sm in; with for 
io. xx. weeks“ $ now escript soils, a ost sim g equal out at 
PRI Lo 17. FE Corn Av: 0 1 re g, &. „ e of — ero ple and to 10 
ipat i ndon, cde: Man 21M « registered “a is var the Passage. — P Also 2 
1 Liv * d SEEEN IEEE ee, 
S 
ar. 5 less erpool, Pel ve celebrated rofit, valuable ecen ners’ Ha Fara rethod the 
wheat 12) Mar Wake [oe | Minton Fa — — bea 
— wed ch 6 field. 4 ae E 8 rte for ns ace E 
, red s March | B d eir Gra arm, the commen Illman ons for vered 
A ove 70 lbs. 13. Mar. A* oston. 8 9 to an an Graces the ne eras ded by nd'o oa 225 
„ * jt r tod sdis. d 70 lbs. ar. 9. Mar. | Bini st mp: fect of t i 8 tiehmond, P i rice A 
Forei hite X 44—476 6 10 Ssd 3 qr. i 7.\Mar.14 r toes, mpi addressed l bart ers era ad ome of 
N jee — 16—50 5 10 7 ‘66 ~ 6 = is — qr. March 8 SUPERPH = 2 Pa The age piti rn of post, free, 
5 to4 . ? —— os on. Ta 8. 
~ se ie poh 10 a 6 si re 1 to48 36 tod: 8 62 Ibs. March 15. all Root Crops, T Mina the ad =e 
Barle ign meal 4 e as 7 — 238 ; 36 to s d s 621 J JOHN f HU ee when Mai on oan TE 
Grinding 80 Ibs. aa 52 —474 5 9 6 dura bs.. | MA Erlen NT e Manin 
Molting . 85 480 Ibs 40—44 — 4244 —6 2 8 ms as NURE ready f respectfully inf ed from the 
Sone ia 88 2 816 Al geome e best for deliv orms hi 
— z ea um a = 6 5 7 do 0 6 * ee ee EE agi 
ut 28 3ls—3 “Ta N eee os 4 6 3 Raya en So rc ae 
— 2s — me BERET meng ae 5 
White. 328 — 2522. aa — 0 | of thi git 1 this 2 iis val nd a 
N ies TE 25 26 — no deira nce y othe ue in this 
Black + [19— * cee —28 2 — e ate e into ro r, brin; respect, M 
Pa 2420—24 x 1 30—82 — — r qr. 2 eo at 5 — 218. 1. ous Maat and. p the 1 more l 
Peas— 24447 45 —— he 3—27 qr last fe Lt ion Taa any esd the Epe 
Boilers ai 2s Ibs. 403 29—3 23 AAT A anaes ors 
8d 9—4 33 3—2 RR that . ra whe 
Grinding 2 2 i 3s 0d N 29 7 fatared dr ars with great su ; es, who ha 4 
Grinding... [28-3028 SR ae be — A be 1 
+ 27 qr. 82 5 8 — 20— di sn ite bein u! ite in: ‘inferior is neces 
New, small 8 — ot 3 qr. 8 — * —24 20 observed e „ , but th article i 4 
, Sik oi e 24 EA 0S at on, e 
sariin, co —32 koe 2 ka m 24| 18—3 com —.— ae rate a Bowe 2 is the 
Fe i Se. 0—30/20—3 5 9 31 V2 s . 17.— 0 18 e that sa ey Mert nat 5s. 
; oreign | "see rae 26 8 $2 —3 —34 30—34] — s ais pro —.— d 1 — * in those d aoed ioed. 
: 31 =32 5 RT om e fall and its t i, which brought 
Binseed 22—36 27—39 34— 31 —34 Re a 2 easily 3 tow: — eres 5 Guano 
"For “Peed 22—3 1 31—3 . — 6—4 e by ite 5 
> 6 31 -i 33 — 1—33/30—39/2 ae 12—13 15 i 3 ted by Pgs 3565 N uperphosp 
sighs 364 130 36—3 6 20 — 2 6 d A oah rarity, 
British 40 "TOR 40 —32 703 rs 26—32 13 n Jud o ‘which is v 
F 2 0 w 36—40 — 2 40 28.—31 vd — 36 6.3 eae R 2 1 0—13 — pes 20 22 sie td acne : e: 
oreign . ded 3 3 ses w 1 in this 
Indian Hae a rr 34—36 15— 10— Sup ander 5 ret ‘and bew 
5s 40 13 erph g bterfuge net 
61. 71. 40132. jam 15— Guan 08 wie: 1 
corn —8 15 0/3; 1 * phate of Lin e es; 
l 8—81. — 2—40 10. 6 sup He Nitrat of Li plie sine articles 
. s 71 15 ae — 1 15— 2 ed at te of ae ae all th 2 
8—8 16 8 the! oda, have e ingredien 
i gas — J. . — — 10—13 n e owest pep Bhi PR cony 
266. 2 . a eee ee 
* — pe ory! he = —— ‘where none cogs | 
4 sinc prese M i 
333 — ak wes 3 quar ND CEM a 
3 pr 1961 5 perty of withstand ENT. Testimonials bth, Lo 
ea p = to every oth 
4215542 Lw | iste perp ge x for By 
—42 = 18. peng ning nd ng an 
87—40 per l4 1 Cai unt. It nd 0 
37 cack | Westminster. its own body of § vegeta 
; —40 J. B, 9 n 3 
MI — 
Å Glouceste . E GRAT "and Sons, 
verages, ~ j 
` Y. their N FA 
Imports, OUTFIT might m 1 
rs 5 ur neee dend 


= Genc in in-fruiting Plants, Succession, and rent of a Post-office o 
p one, clean, and 1 —May be viewed the 
Sackers, of sale, and Catalogues had, 


TO GENTLEMEN, FLORISTS, AND OTHERS 


URE OF 14 “YEARS COUGH this Month, by Dr. 
184 
Egre 


LMONIC WAFERS * Nov, 5 
0 


D RRIS wi submit Thomas Carter, Egremont, Cheshi „had a cough for 14 years ~ 

ESSRS. * Bano MON t the Mart, Bartho- | nothing ever gave me relief until I commenced taking r. Lo- 

to Public eer AY, Mar ch 22, 184 849, at 12, pAs a | COcK's- Pulmonie Wafers, three boxe w have entirely 

lomew-lane, on 2 CARN: ATI ONS, _PICOTERS, PINKS, cured „ itness, Geo. H. Howell, Chemist, Dale: street, 

choice culate 4e, 8 RF ROSES pola © Dr. aaa. and all give 3 relief ang arapid 

HEARTSEAS hs 1 0 viewed the eure of asthma, Sorders of the breath and 

DAHLIAS, gh ee at 1 5 Sa pat of the Auc- | lungs. To prist = pub: peakers they invaluable, for 
morning of sal Tanes Leytons clearing ag ees ening oy — they have a most plea- 

American t t 3 e Is, +, 28. 9d., and 118. 21 box. Age nts— 


a 
USAND 5 NHOUSE AND ; sold by 
HE F RY HART’S 


IR 
Catalogues S Keo PUMP, 
OR THE 
CURE O MOKT 


e on receipt of two postage stamps. Direct to 


111849.) THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 175 
d — 2„ß„ß•7§⸗ẽ⸗-—i—d .... —?T— 
* ip * Frs TREES, TULIP BEDS, &e—GAR DEN yo Oe: TRANSACTION ea SOCIETY.— 
1 ae 5 G, for p beer ro m frost, blight, rine — * od aes S now r : May be had 
irds, or rag a fence owls, pi eons, sai = seed bed , price ZES to ~ 
J. C. STEVENS i is 3 to announce for pe be had in quantity from Jone Kixe * Fishi — amount of near] ered for he Leeds Meeting, A 
Auction, at his Great Room, 38, 9 Rod, Tackle, and Net Manufactory, 5, Crooked-lane, London for Stock, Implements (2007 — Essays, &. Sheets — be — 
* TUESDAY, at Bate rch, * 12 fo ? * eg bridge, at 3d. pe rr yard, yards wide, or lèd. the square on on application o M. Mu URN, Secretar ry, Thirsk, Yorkshire. 
Coven Goo PINE P PLANTS, the property o yard. The above is the only netting, being tanned, e eeiiy IRMINGHAM D 
in lots, about 600 ri Providence, Envilles, st A DLAND COUNTIES 
— k, comprising — sta xposure to t t —— Forwarded, same day, — ph OF FAT CATTLE, SHEEP, PIGS, AND 


POULTRY, 
Pre esient The Right Hon, the Earl 
Vice Presiden 
The preliminary Cire ar, containing t e Pris ts, Go., is 
Donations. and ponent mih t gaa for the Eablet 
ition will be received at th Bank of Messrs, 
er, and Co., 1 Rinnliekads ¢ and a, e 

ay be 1 


ham, March iz. 
Maion. c ů ů ů E EE 
MIGRAT ALIA. — Notice is 
an Diemen’s Land Agricultural 


—— — ny's 
nted Paise whieh 4 


NEYS, in 
A. Guzcorr, Coton House, near Rugby, T armiokahire, =a = conatent Yentilatian of apart. ee >the 2 the ‘omy * een e Great’ Winch 
TO EMIGRANTS TO THE COLO It has been in successful use 
OR SALE, 23 Pure Merino RAMS tan the at Greenwich Hospital for several REAM-LAID NOTE PAPER, five quires for 9d. ; 

F of the late Mrs. DoNIEN. They are in es condition arge size ditto, five quires for ls ; cream-laid envelo 
and fit for immediate a —For price and parti 9d, per 100 ; ditto, self-sealing, 1s, per 100 ; —— 
and to view the sheep, in quire of Mr. W. cen West Leva SOLE S. per 100; good note 1 7s. 
Parm, near Chi BENHAM and Sons, 1 9, Wigmore- . 6d par. praan i sealing wax ix, 14 sticks for 1 15.; card. plate 

BE 15 “Git LEASE, an IMPROVABLE street, Cavendish. -square, to L Be, * tod iyi 00 cards printed, 24. ae writin = — 15. 

FARM, near Bedford, sorting 450 acres of Arable G. and l. Dea g ening to the ittances for 30s, and upw s sent carr 

Land and 75 acres of Grass, with two complete well placed end at ANE, ope iti x 
modern Homesteads, a comfortable Family Residence, and A Liberal T Discount to Ironmongers TAE CIGAR AND CHEROOT WARE OUSES, 
Bailiff's Home, The principal Homestead and any of the fields d Builder os. 6, 7, and 8, Pudding. lane, Eastcheap, at the back of 
adjoin the high road r- je fi re o St. Neot’s, from i ic the Monument, London.—TOSS WILL and Co. Union Cigars, 
places the distan only five to seven miles, e rent, in- . 6d. ig i 
2 ae fates will be under . per annum. The SMOKY CHIMNEYS AND VENTILATION, sa —— Qs. € n foe. 44. Lew ae oa, Serie m Š Rölnz 
soll is to Wheat, Beans, and Clover, and m may be DAY’S IMPROVED SIMPLEX WIND.GUARD i is cheaper, | FOREIGN HAVANNAH, of all makers, warran genuine. 
ey ae by draining, and there are no impediments durable, and less unsightly than any other Chi ney-pot, | 17s. 6d., 19s., 20s., 21s., and 22s, per Ib. and of British make, 
to the cultivation in the shape of unnecessary hedges, timber, | It continually ventil s the apartment, and is guaranteed to om fine Forei 0 s—Cheroots, 6s, ; Mexicans, 7s, « 
or game. The farm is capable of great nemon and de- | cure all chimneys smoking from wind, I ay be s d | Pickwicks, 7s.; Cuba Cigars, 7s.; Ha s Do Od, + per, 
serving 1 the nece y a long | tested at W, JEAKEs’s, 51, Great Russell-s eet, Bloomsbury. 8s. 6d. lb. Ca . Silvas, — zas, Frag cias, 
Lease will or particulars, 2 pi —— “ag pleat G emote iron, 25s rospectuses forwarded on ap- ia, Principe, &c.— Mes OSSWILL and Co., 


Vicers, Land Ag — &c., 3, Frederick’s- 
= Lon * Š pao above, and also Day's original Wind-guard, made of a more 
ed. 


durable material. A Liberal discount allow 


BEAUTIFUL TE 
RNA ODONTO, — ‘PEARL DEN TI- 
FRICE. A white Pow 
2 recherché Ingredients of 5 Oriental ‘Herbal, 4 ines- 
mable value in pre * ing 
trengthening the Gum 
to the Breath. 
e Teeth 
Garden is occupied by trees ce. 
Tenant’s interest in th the 
above to be taken at a Valuation, one-half of the ee of the 
and the remainder by instalments 


wean SOUTHAMPTON.—TO MARKET GARDENE 
T "BE LET ON LEASE, all that e 
* ae Sah inal containing’ about 31 11. oe 
ate 
of Mey William Squibb, gardener, deceased. 
N Bade on the 25th day of 3 ext. ane 
comprises 


and for cards to view the pro perty, 
Max, Solicitor, or to Mr. W. B. PAGE, Above 


50 1081501 AGRIGULTURISTS, AMATEUR * 


FL efficacy in prabe fep ak, embellishing the Teeth far 9 —.— 

C NISED ? 8, ANIMAL trek A RE anything of the kind ever yet offered to the public, has, in 
HENRY COLES, No. 32, Cranbourn-street, Lei- che Gn: gg fl "Family of Groat Bim 40d a 
„32, 7 > — e Court an oy ily reat Britain, and the 

cester-square, AGRICULTURAL and HORTICULTURAL SEEDS- el act and Nobility throughout Europe. — Price 2s. 9d, 


NERAL AGENT, begs URE (to be and | per 


opez, Regalia, Pri 1 
Mer chants, Importers, “tot Manuf: factarers: have at all times a 
very large stock of Cigars and Cheroots of the finest qualities, 
eee 


eee OR RELIEF MAPPING, As the best 
Index to the Capabilities of a Surface. 

before — ‘Society of Arts, wi 

struction of Mo dels. an 


— EALE, 9. High H 


e 
Just published, third edition, Iams cloth, with 50 8 


U 4s., 
HE BEE-KEEPERS’ MANUA AL; or, Practi 
Hints on th 


Now ready, price 4s. Gd. neatly half. bound (with Woodoata ts), 
HE alate iu 5 Ar 1 a e 
AR 
e Work te: 5 -A Numbers 


niei o ilni eaea N the abote MAN to be had Cavi TION ae 3 ä 8 hago A 2 5 me Instructive Tales, Hints on Ahan oeaiei gr 2051 e 

Sp tei 2 invigorating, and retaining Properties, dress, thus—“ A, ROWLAND and SO „ 20, HATTON GARDEN,” | © ld ms and ian 2 — b . 

sed gg oat trk 1 — ud c the quantity a4 be engra se on the Government Stamp, which is e d on are ld gepars en ASA ociety for Promoting Christian Knowledge. 

us fre Fi a Ben 8 A te owt, iper aer on re eae . = Sold by the Proprietors and by Chemi London : Rivinotons, St. Paul’s Church ard, and Wa 1. 
plants in pots, 3 dan. tee alen for nape O FLOCKMASTERS.—IMPORTANT DISCOVERY. NEW N ro, price 3s. n 

22 HOMAS B TGO, Gaeta, &e. sie Hain e. HE SERVANTS HALL. A Tare. 


Do r-street, B orough, London, earnest! 
the attention of Taria ers and Breeders of 2 to iia valuable 
SPECIFIC OR LOTION FOR SCAB OR SHAB 
be found a certain remedy for eradi 

— 


Caoin tions of 2 the newest varieties of AGRICULTURAL, 
EEDS, the latter in sealed packets at 
a k, 1 10s. an 5 aad 20s., with a descriptive label upon each 


ni of portable Grass CASES, 
suitable for the drawing-room 


for Ferns and other n 
m, sitting- -room, or lobby. | curial no 


durin 


ry, as above, 
3 penti 
and virulence of the ienai i Liam included, 
tid to any part of the ee receiving a 
same 


ts being proved * i 
other die escription. Fro 


Its IS AN UNDENIABLE SAGE THAT HOL- 
FOEREN 


artakes in any degree of the p 
Sve! great value of these Metallic 
tory testimonials h ain 
— 8 copies of “which may ease, however dan are can resist t their i influence ; 3 
all persons pre ers should at this 
Soi n London verpool, ex- n of the yea mptly have recourse to a few w doses, which 
Q Wenn | exclusively on Semenn would effectually í check every symptom, and restore health 
i : e Offices e Com- | vigour.—Sold by all Druggists, a at Professor HoLLOWAY’S 
ned pant Establishment, 244, Strand, London 
. Evang 
Bristol. 


| 


METCALFE anD Co.’s NEW PATTERN TOOTH- 

wc and — e 1 Tooth-Brush 
sth 

p eirean y of — teeth, s and e 


ia te 


8 
leaning $ nie ne 
the haa e 

ee 01 othes “Brush, that c 
yi the ped pap, 
sh 


loose—ls, 
3 Rus- 


TER, STOUT, and PALE 
con COMPTON —— CO. are now 


erved valuable 
ie pound — 
all intermediate 
ve bleaching, jaz securing th — of a 
* Daly at METCALFE, rere Y, and 
B, Oxford-street, one door from 


Edited by a CLE 
London: Rivinertons, St. Paul's — 9 and Waterloo-pL. 


a, 8 EMIGRANTS JOURNAL, 
Every THURSDAY, prios 2d. ; Stamped, 

No. 24 * the Chure in the Colonics. Wakefield's 
Art of Colonisation” 2d N Noti tice)—Plan for a 
arug and Trading Settlement in * ee 

rom a Chartist at Pittsburgh, Uni s—Dr, L seem 

ation Schemes — Extracts from 5 ‘Bishop of Mel 
gratio to the ae of Canterbury—The Land Ronte t to 
California (co 
W. S. ORR and Co., Paternoster-row ; 
and all — ers and 1 en. 
s. 6d.; by Post, 

. [ae IMPORTANCE OF SPADE HUSBANDRY, 

AND GENERAL MANUAL AGRICULTURE, AS A 
CERTAIN MEANS OF REMOVING IRISH DISTRESS. 

Y 


Agricultural poss to His Grace the Lord Primate. 
Subjoined are w opinions of the newspaper 
spectin Wisk * The work * the state 
perally, and how to | sts the * 


ainst the Plough in every o 
— N rid — favour of 


superior cultiv. 

The e pers re valuable practical hints on Sub- 
soiling, Draining, Fallows, Irrigation, Reclaiming of Waste 
Lands, White 5 od fof ridding 2 
with a novel and irable method — — the heavy 
Poor. rate tax. The work will be A ud ‘a n many im- 


rtant matters. aon 8 

„We most cordially recommend Mr. Turz's work to the 
earnest attention of all then pecan in the cultivation of 
the Proprietors and their agents, as well as the 
hum cultivators, It speaks for itself, and 
the marks wl the he high authority which prac 
alon 8 Farmers’ Gazette. 

W 3 carefully read this work, and analysed its co 
tents; we awe then yr: ria eae it it - o public 
— to agricultural 


favour, as 
zette. 
«We cordially recommend the work to proprietors and 
others for distribution. The cost is but a mere trifle, and, 
fos ag tog to be in the hands of every farmer.”—Newry 


= Mh can conceive of 


s0 likely to . hede. 
tress, as succes: E 


[Maron 17. 
Dae 8 SCIENTIFIC. LIB BRARY, for the Up 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


S0, THE CULTIVATION 


176 


HORTICULTURAL ningen AND HEATING BY HOT WATER; AL 
F THE CHOICEST PLANTS, VINES, &c. 


tions are ale plain fo E y the i 

and the Elements of eac ee are 5 — N 

simplest but to their Shortest for ed not only * 
VAMILIAR ASTRONOMY —By Grorce D 

A.B:, 12mo, with Engravings, 5s. cloth lett 

6 1 is a vas st deal of astronomical in nformation 

in a most winning and unassuming manner in this à 
eee vod e, e, whi ich, not less for the noy 


2 7 
N 
| Sara 


TAYLOR, Wa RLY, Bo oksellers and 
C O to University ts 15 e Gower-street, and27, In 
5 Paterno oster-row, Lon 
COTTISH care INSTITUTION 
os 


sg Manchester, and — — — 


J. w E E K 8 AN D 
KING’S ROAD, CHELSE 
J TS, HOTHOUSE. BUILDERS, AND HOT-WATER APPARATUS | 
HORTICULTURAL ARCHITEC ANUFA ACTURERS, 


24 
ee 
8 c 
Oo h 
2 8 
3 8 
2 · . 
a 
2 
8 
= O 
oO 
a 
82 
* 
8.8 
= 
BS 
f 
o 
8. 
5 8 
EE 
8 85 
-a 
E 
hy z gb 
fi 117 
HIF 
aaa a a ee eee ee 


burgh, 
Life Assurance „ with these pec culiar adva 
x i aan by the most WN ilk of premium,” 
21 e Profits, divided amongst the A aet Saarik 
ANN 1215 PREMIUMS PER £100, with Wao 
Age 20 Age 25) Age 30 Age 55 Age 40) Age 40 ae An 


* tal 3 * 


an inspection pa — 5 — Works now in pro 
d on their Premises, he peer: 


Solicit 


J. WEEKS and CO Sitio, a great variety ‘of Hothouses, Greenhouses, Con- 


servatories, Forcing-pits, mea e a of which are extensive, and all heated by HOT WATER in various forms, showing £3 E s oa 5 s. d. E s: d. E s. d|E s dE s albai 7 

the most improved methods o 1 15 “sit 18 02 1 62 6 10/2 14 903 5 94 1 754 
BUILDING, HEATING, — VENTILATING ALL HORTICULTURAL ERECTIONS. 1 Tables, and every information, may be had of 5 
ecretaries fu 


— acct them to grow a first-rate collection of Stove and Greenhouse Plants, 
antitie t LESS — HALF-PRICE. 
l Catalogues forwarded upon application 


The erecting — these Hothouses, &c., has 
hich are cultivated — guch — 
Plans, Estimates, an 


Edinburgh Office :—14, St. Andrew's- square; London Ofe; 
—12, Moorgate- street. 
WII. 


LMER ae HARRIS, London Secretari 


ape LIFE ASSURANCE COMP. 
KING WILLIAM 5 CITY. 


ELEGANT NEW YEAR’S 


GIFT.—NEW WORK ON THE ROSE. 


Just Published, price II. 11s. 6d., in One Volume Tosperial Svo, embellished with Fifteen Highly-finished Coloured Plates, 
and Numerous Wood Engravings, 


THRE -C ROSE GARDE WN: 


Br WILLIAM PAUL, Nurseryman, Cheshunt, Herts. 


CHARLES BaLDW sq. 

9 8 Director solicit attention to their new Prospectus 
nack for the present year, in which the ; 
offered i by the Company to Sp dev are fully explained. 

whole term of life, 7 

the premiu may rem i napadi till death, or one-half m a 
mes on credit for 5 preety Extended permission to ha 
resid zma ed, and a new scale of extra premm 

A 


bie Ai Pact is the most successful Rose-grower in England.” 
His instructious are fall, and precisely what the amat 
„The work is nicely printed. The Plates (of which the 
beautiful and truthful,”—Bscx’s Florist 


abroad i 
for org $ isks i is publishe 


—Journal of Agricultu 
reig Four Artis, or 80 per cent. of the profits are appropriated b 


g 
. Gardeners’ the 
; fifteen) 


onicle. 
good; those by M. Maubert, the French n 


rein. 


London : Surzwoop and Co., Paternoster-row. Edinburgh: MAcrachrax and Co.; and sold by all Booksellers. 


1 are a to Assurers on assignable property 
i also o 


undoubted pe 


WIR RATRAY, Actuary and Sec 


IN THE PRESS. 


3 NDON 
( Establi — by Roy: 


3 CORPOR 


arter in the 


Protaxy, a n INTRODUCTION TO 


DE LINDLEY’S 0K OF BOTANY. fae ANY, 4th Edition, with Corrections and Additions, 


al Charte: nee 
aD 20, 7 7, Royal Exchange, 


vols. 8 ith Si 5 10, Re be 
eure 7 mesk and 1 Plants ; arts illus. | Wood. | Bagravings, pri peice 245 cl oth. Tee e LIFE e Corporat 
to the Assure e Cor oration t 
This will complete the ELEMENTS OF BOTA rendering CTC t whi f 


that work a complete Manual of Botany for senior Sh Students 
London: BRADBURY and Evans, 10. a. 


OURSI SING, HUNTIN 


Ete EDINBURGH re) Mees No. CLXXX.— 
PISHING, COUR 


Apv as a intended for insertion are requested to from 
be forwarded to the Publishers before Thursday next, the 22d, Th 


One very thick whey, illustrated with near 600 Eu vings | and BILLS by Stunt mert the 24th inst. 
N ET, 8 oro, „ 50s, clot iy slit eid London: Lonema ` and Co, 39, Nero or Appi peo’ to cae Pagans POR TRAS 
y A A of siden heat 8 NEW spain E OF . MENSURATION, Pon pl. 
— By D. F. Braine, } 1 Ki » Fishing, Coursing, 8 w Eaton, » VEY ENG, o deere Treatise on Age. ieipating. ficipating. | Age. 
den Perfect library ` lovers sports, 2mo, price 6s. bound, 7 
. 0 21 15 11 45 
“et 1 s And Tor all persons parsons wao dog inie maniy A TREATISE ON practical MENSURATION.| 23 | “2 50 | 2 0 8 || 50 
untry in such perfection as to the inhabitants of the By A. Nzssir E 700 Practical Examples, and | 30 210 8 2 5 11 55 
E times. 300 Woodeuts.— Key 3 212 0 2121 
ested 2 N, and Loncmans, By the same Autor Xer Aton, , SVO, = Plates, 40 5. 50 * e des of 
— nd Field-book, price 1 Prospectuses, contain of 205 
e price 2s., free by post, 26. Gd, REATISE ON PRACTIC ICAL LAND.SURVEYING. Cor- Assurances, and all information, may be had by a 


written application to the Actuar, 
ailway Surv re Fire Insurances on every description of property at 


t; together with inst n Railway Engineering, L ent premi 
A and that sterling state ie happiness o daly | & Fana F ee E T JOHN 1 1 N 8 
ieious Observance of a we: TREATISE ON P PRACTICAL ARITHMETIC. Part I. 5s. ~ RGUS LIFE ASSUR ANCE 
DIAEA 
i by a ne., 52, Paternoster- row; MANN, INTRODUCTION LTO 8 PARSING. 18mo, 2s. 64. cae eee „ 


, GREEN, and Lon Thom 


—!: —. rear merase > Es sq. * 
. . Chairma 
vg a: tep. 8vo, price 78. Gd. cloth, pee oe are TURE. Ju iiam "Leal, Esq., Bepate 
„Just Published, 258. ichard E. Arden, Es J. ph 
TH. ©! — Ta e EUS ON COTTAGE ARCHITECTURE, bein William Banbury, Esq. | Rupert Ingleby 
by Dr. — Topp Tnonso, F. L. S., & selection ot Desi Labourers’ v Cottages, tingly, Edward Bates, bsg. omas K 
“ Dr. Thomson’s — 3 in pairs, and in groups, w wah Plans, Elevati 8 „ ‘Thomas Cam is, Esq. Jeremiah 
— 9 — i~ — found a The editor By celal Weaver, Architect and Estate A James Clif P 
is die on all occasions, His aiiin o d ENRY Popg, 22, > Bulent — t Auditors — Professor Hall, 
The Seasons’ is THE HOOK for ihoa wish to read James ath : Josen HorLoway, Milsom-street, n—Dr. Teatirecon, 3 2, Einb 


Surgeon—W. Coulson, Esq, 2, Traden k 

Consulti eg A. 

Standing Counsel 
ts — William Fisher, Esq 


NATURAL HISTORKY.—NOW R 


DY, 
— . LON INSTINCT. 
miniin mea etaeta oo o that E 
e ELEMENTS OF CHEMISTRY IMPROVED. 9 chbishop of Dine te 5 ey Wace, md 


gia 1 
Tals € 


e 6d. 

eee —— oe * 4 Svo, with 230 2. TH vert OS of ZooLoaY and CIVILIZATION. ADY AGES OF ASSURING ‘ite Policy. 

Nr. 28s, cloth, 6d. In 9 1 epea to a large su 
pues". of CHEMISTRY, Theoretical and „2 THE INTELLECTUALLY. of Sry are ANIMALS, | the s suriy of an Assurance f fund of mo 5 
eee: including the most recent Discov By i OU PELL Wax. Peles mi 00 l., annually incre 

r T lad ee rele as te 
M.., M. R. I. A., President of the Queen’s College, $ e 2. 9 Bon wnt 
Director one Irish er ustry, ë „Cork; WX. S. DAR Co., 147, Strand. Bold by all Bookelicea e Nerd aie — ot tthe pots om this Me branch p (after i 


ms) ; and th 


of five yearly premiu ep —— eta 


: Hens e each, with Illustrations may be added to the sum assured, or 
MR. THOMAS TATE’S NEW ELEMENTARY pentia ah s, Bresding, and Manage. —— prian Fus, OR LOW PREMIU 


. WORK, 


Just The Tal my e i the non-participatin prin 
6d. cloth, GS ; thei re Age, advantages to the assured, not offer 
ed a a SEE Dison we war a 
the Soiuti Were us sin and applied to | to their Treatment under a ee d Simple Instructions a . 
matics me 9 ems in Practical Mathe- | 1 $ assured, a at e — of PE — 
Master or the National TER, Traning C Mathematical | IGS; their Origin and Varieties Management with area arene E T 
; Ba a View to Profit, and Treatment under 
RA MADE EASY. 5 Plain Directions tive e. most TE » Also, Age. One Tear. Seven Years. 
Seated on EAST 0 8 ate NATURAL Curing and Preserving their Pi-. | 90 | £047 8 | £019 1 
“Tamo, with Menger kee er PHILO: | F3 EES : THE HIVE AND THE HONEY-BEE;| > | 133 |. 1-0 
obtaining a considerable recat] — reS i 1 iy 
ee | DAA | 
we mbda pe tes, and Remarks as | “One-half of the Whol o Term Premi 
e Hives | for seven 9 rs, ce fof the 
‘ life as a debt u 
with Instructions for | at an ‘tne 1 . no 
being a — of Plain Directions| Claims paid in one — after I 
eseription of Vermin, 
rinted B , of No, 
thes, Natural History, | Mu Han Ee 


pps! 


> office in P. 
Dublin : James ‘Gtasna 5 don; a1 gpublished by at the 
eee Pte Ya 80m * i s, Covent-gardep 


SATURDAY, MARCH 24. 


No. 12.—1849.] 
— © 


J — Doab, elimate . 


D. 
„„ e 
w . Labourers’ wages 
wn seeds 


. 1866 
= 88 . 22 —. 
1 {tural 1 
Man 45 ay ä s% se 
Mr.), testimonial to. 
ooh 


— 2 


—ͤ— 2 


. —tbᷣ 


—— 


pomological.. heed 
TTT e 5 
5 . — IY 
Teiln. 487 4 
Horticultaral oe 3 


æology 
ver's plan of dite 
— in ce dis, 48 
—— . -185 
er.. q ⁊ : 82 


V. 18 


THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lin 


dley. 


[Price 6d. 


LIAN T. ASPARAGUS ROOTS. 3 Roots of of the 
above may be had of FREDERICK WARN NER, SEEDS- 

28, Cornhill, napy at 5s. per 100, with printed par- 

— for plantin 


R 
— ity t to thank customers for all 
them every attention a be 
WARNER, 28, Co 
Street, Lon 


A 


ZALEA 0 1 MAGNA. — This a 
_Azalea a covers of vi 


iR 2 vr 55 


v mse. 15 ee 18 first prize. Plants, 58 thee a 
. Swind bares . 179 Apply to J. and J. Fraser, Nurserymen, Leyton, Essex, who 
lawns = . 8 AF — es För ange e nee — fin e collections at Hardy Belgian Azaleas, at 
. Iss b Trelitees, iii S ot s. per doten ; Hard ododendrons, — fin ne 
ae Vine borde — to o 182 a rear, ‘whit and crimson variat, at 42s. s. per dozen 
Prot Diek on “189 š Wages — .. + 185 6 e assortment of other rege Pla * ne at moderate 
Bociety ... . . 182 6 Weigel 2 ISL € iel sala A pos ere h i resp y requested from un- 


a y ———— 
POYAL — 810 * 1 REGENT’S 5 
a 


t TOPrm 


nown corresponden 
EGETABLE SEEDS of ev 


nfo 


3 AND Vv ery 
description. 


‘| Ae 
tor a 


DAY’S “PRINCE OF WALES” CLOVE, AND CHOICE 
LLOW PICOTEE 
2 = M‘MULLEN beg to offer — 5 
5 red varieties, and re 
orde * — of each is limited, 
6, Leadenhall-erect, London, Ma 


LACKTHORN.—Any person havi 
well-rooted plants of the above bin 
utiles — of price, size, and qu 
the Office of this Pa sper 


ving some strong 
earof a purchaser z 
antity, hy lattes, to J.J., 


4 J. 00 co OLE 1 and Fonts! IST, „ Rug goy, 
* re, begs most respectfully to inform ca 5 
and —— — rhat he has ready for sendin 
23 plan 
ROBIN SON'S “ DEFIANCE” 1 fi 
9s. cb dozen, ne strong plan 
Other varieties, uch as Ava — Boule de Feu, 1 
Supreme, Em ueen of | 2 Array, Louis Philippe 
Fair r — 2 at 4s. per 
ELIOT MORTON VOLTATRIANUM, fine j 6s. per doze 
Sm per dozen: 
HELIOTROPIOM *PERUY IANUM, 4s. per — Smaller, 
TRIOMPHE DE — . ls. each. 


War 
oblity 


nest scarlet known, 


33 BEDDING OUT; orders 2 to be de- 


in quantities of not — than 


CUPHEA PLATYCENTRA, 4s. per d 
heard IGILLOSA SANGUIN NEA, yis per dozen. 


d ~ DAHLIA dry roots, at 6d., 8d., and 1 GERAN ee blooming plants and good varieties, 9s, to 123. 
Sewan fini ede he pice masa open | LILIUM LANGITOLIOM laden per d 
to the F. bers, and their friends, as on ordinary UG Fic ticus, Aloes, Cacti, Cedrus Deodara, FUCHSIAS, new and dis 19 5 strong, 9s. to 12s, per doz, 
occasions ; but that the Public may have an opportunity of view- 2 o thon ; AtA fine collection, 11 KEA eak a poton. 
i ‘ , 18. 6d. 
a a a naci have reason t] © ye Teen eee wished to improve the crop of Hay, | POTENTILLA MACNABIANA. splendid sare, 1s. each. 
edented, an en ION of these plants P lection, b 
will take place on SATURD Y, 26; and SATURDAY | sow from 2 to 3 Ibs. of white e 3 with 1 gallon of 1 fine collection, by name, r dozen, 
| June 2. the Gardens on either of those days t o | Perennial Has: or * Rye-Gras e cost will be about C. 's Catalogue of 1 Bedding Plants Dahlias, Hardy 
N obtained the same ticket as that provide d for the Gene 2 2s. 6d. 1 5 5 E rennial Plants, &., will be ready early in April.— March 24. 
1 aot tik AGRICULT RAL SEEDS at the lowest prices, — — — — 
t of 
woe holder, 1 ee b * 158 | Duncan Hargs, Seedsman, 109, St. Martin ’s-lane, Charing- HARDY AMERICAN ORCHIDACEOUS PLANTS, &. 
of the General Exhibitions, Je orto one | arona” enger ILLIAM MAY, aving received a | 
3 The of admitting Vi isitors, either b II person LARGE YELLOW BELGIAN AND HORN WHITE e above interesting and beautiful plants, 
$, r br} —2 — — ily be sus g th RIV CARR SEEDS. in a ait rated genera Cy i Oypripediam, 3 Platanthera, es 
; ot June, as upon other na ERS begs to inform = friends in consequence | naria, ogonia, a, Goodyera, Micro- 
ary J. of the above superi rior va rie tie of FIELD CARROT hav- hav- | stylis, Cor rallorhiza, Cymbidium, Se gas Erythronium, and 
By order of the Council, J. D. C. SowERBY, Secretary, ing yielded Of seedi he is induced | Euonymu s sarmentosus, Lists, eaten the 
Re SOCIETY, REGENT'S PARK: | offer it at the reduced price of 2s, 6d. per Ib. for the Yellow, 1 3 kin — EERE 8550 ‘pple - 
2 4 . 
F N 
FRUIT, this seto 


and 2s. pe lb, for the ical iy hite, 
2 lbs. à Carriage paid to 


LOWERS, Aya 
p Toc gens 20h season, will be held on Wane — A Sinus S NEW SEEDLING PETUNIA, 
ION of Plants in the AMERICAN GARDEN Be axo BROWN’ SI DESCRIPTIVE. ERIOED SAR 3 8 s ai wach 
SATURDAYS, May 26th, and June 205 at 2 O lock. CAT pow hide sent free by post on applica’ We beg i ‘out bold and firm; it is . for mal 
w be brained at one of the above. offer the following, d comp bit. The Editor of the Gardeners. 
e Pane he Carden by orders | econ af the bead dons eons tài rope. and ek elon fot done? Saba 4 soaker 
* that day, y, 58. ; or a oe days of Exhibition, 7s, 6d. tions, , 42s., and 6 e will pieh onl a excellent border variety.” É each, or 
ia, for . y have packets of 30 tickets on or before May | 4 * for a — garden, of fine and esteemed sorts, 10s. Satine addressed to Mr, SHEP- . 
AMELII 5 for 15s. A list of the sorts furnished, if required. — 1 
AON DEAUTY SUPREME.” SELECT FLOWER ean N 3 * 
. anD SON, Great Berkhampstea, Free by p post, with full directions for i a OWN have this season 0 
— out plants from 21s. to 60s. each. It w. Se., viz. -— s, d. 488 , BRO ave this season — 
April, à medal by the Hortic Society of London in | 100 varieties best and newest Ann uals „ ie oO following beautiful first. rate varieties, which were sub- 
Most — tan be relied on as a splen ty; a | 50 varieties for 8 6d., 30 for 5s, 6d., 20 for 4 0 mitted to the Editor of the Garde ners’ Chronicle, and favourably 
* Paxton’ shape . 3 a pale rose. See 20 varieties best wark kinds, in larger packets, ‘suited noticed in that Journal of — 2d: also by = apes of 
— satiné” that month, page 71. for filling boda on lawns, Ts. 6d., or FA 5 0 the * Florist; 85 for whic sh, see the Number da ted Octo hey 
may be hed by sending a two-penny stamp. 20 varieties best Gree nho ouse An ue Ta hoe 12 fo 5 0 and 
DALSTON NURSERY nn me en 10s, 6d. 12for 7 6| can be recommended with a confidence of their 1 e approved. 
RSER 20 vars. choice hardy Biennials ina Perennials; 7s, 6d., 12 5 0 Fae A will be ready > send out the first week in April, and can 
begs 3 uence 36 varieties importe n Stocks 12 1 O| be forwarded by pos 
u Pass directly through his P di * ditt 0, 38. 6d.; 12 3 me 6 NT. ae extra ht le- crimson flower, of 
and Plants at reduced prices Remittances with orders are requested from unknown — 1 and fine a ee by the Editor of 
bondents. Goods carriage free to London, and with all o the “Florist” as a ‘deep rich crimson, with dark 
his friends and the Trade of 2l. and ‘lip wg articles presented extra. Post-office orders tube, £ fine in colour.” Also described by the Editor of 
his CATAL in | payabie to and Brown, or to STEPHEN Brows, Seed and] the Gardeners’ Chronicle, as “ a deep ik. crimson, vk 
Petunias, C aoni 5 Ee 9 ä i rene Sudbury, = 5 pu le centre, ai 5 good flo flow: od 
— — e n application, AWN GRASS BEAUTY OF SUFFOLK. Af fine large Jah Some, 
UTTONS 3 LAWN GRASS SEEDS, consisting —— with dark plum-coloured throat, and deeply 
growing, finest kinds wil be fo described by the Editor of the Gardeners! Chronicle as 
1 oe 
) .. Ireo droma wepds ot curse Gramm guleton |. Eo, oop raed wih purple lps and 
ron eptember 23 1848, and at much less expens ~~ other means, ce o 5 3 
nnd Son. Joar Asters reached us in excellent Seeds, 3s. 6d. per g 15 0 oF 25 p er bashed. vens 1 „Ti wa, with rom le veins ; a very pretty i 
ens 0 bi Hh wy flower,” | Messrs. SUTTON also supply 1 TERE. 
: FINE GRASSES, mized Ia proper proportions, for improving | RENOWS.— e dria? Clone desing 
ABLIS pasture o to — ons per acre found very k a tinge of b a good 
: INBRED NURSE effectual. Price, 2s. p it as a “ crimson, aN g T — n. 
10 NURSERY. ee 9 Also, PERENNIAL GRASS SEEDS for laying down land te] contrast to No. 1 = Pas 3 
P nt Pasture, mixed to suit any soil, at 32s, acre Described by the 
0 he Bas ee res i "on an- 8 arriage free to London, Bristol, or Bee ? TELE e £ large rosy se with light ironi 0 
chen he ae Sros oe ddress, Jonn § erron and bent Reading, Berks. well-formed flo —— r, “f Brighte rimson, wiih sake i 
pay a good flower.“ rdeners’ Chron 
5 — 1 — — e BELL, in offering ‘the following new DAHLIAS, seere BEAUTY. —A white ground colour, with 
e i of — — can confidently recommend them as being first rate; they ar oat 3 ins, beautifully "edged 
z at an immen e reduction say only exhibited at the Norfolk and Norwich Horticultural with T mall ower of dwarf habit, attractive, 
rises Fanned Yew 8, Tto T feet; w in Se a — a ed the opinion of the Bromo had mottled, pretty, but rath 0 
warten 3 to 4 es ; Judges from London ng all ro of first Chronicle 
5 feet ; cleas flowers. Hlermions e and Negro we re raised by the Rey. HESPER US.— A large light flower, with purp 
Charles Fellowes. Shottisham m ag and corolla, spotted with purple on the es, ** 
iat bmn eon a salmon, fine and well] white, with dark tube and veins, and with a e 
ed fi g it, very Saree = quite new in ape imson on each division of the — i 
8 heig hi to 4 feet. Plants, oa 6d. each, Florist.“ 
NEGRO ae oe k m ; large full deep | NYMPH.— A pinky blush, beautifully * — 
up in the centre, handsome form, and very edges of the petals wi th bright pik very sh r an 
constant ; Teint 4 $ 5 feet, Plants, 7s. 6d. each. pretty flower, This flower late, an ras 2 
Raine e Fe —Bright — — aie, for the opinion of the before-mentione 
yr er, very constant authori Nodes 
e 10 N The Editor of the . Florist,” in allusion to those haiga 
wk Arneng see Gardeners — Land Stewards’ Journal, | for his opinion, also remarks—“ These are fine varieties, rich 
5 1848, under the word Norfolk. co and g. . 
s be usual nne on the above when three planis of each SEEE eae by taking jhi sih, 
tural | are ordered, ready three plants sort. 
Bracondale Hortioultural Establishenent, Nor ich. on ‘Seed and Horticultural Establishment, Sudbury, san. 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. Manch 4 


178 
EXHIBITIONS AT THE ‘GARDEN a 
OF THE 
HORTICULTURAL SOC IETY OF LONDON 
) 
FOR THE YEAR 1849. 
THE EXHIBITIONS WILL TAKE PLACE ON THE FOLLOWING DAYS :— 
SATURDAY, May 5 SATURDAY, June 9; and WEDN ESDAY; Juny n 
SCHEDULE OF THE PRIZES. 
FLOWERS. 
Class I.—In which Nurserymen and Private Growers exhibit independently of each other, 
Pelargoniums ; in collections of 6 new and first-rate varie- N. 2 Any plant that shall not have been actually grown in D Yellow ee best six yaritip SK—SB—6 
ties, T . 3 e amog cultivated with su ll-inch pots w. wi be disqualified. N.B. ò. ba shown in J only, and 
perior sien pota SG—CE—LS 9 in pots; in collections ot 12 distinct varieties. G8 ap m colours are mz oe Rable really, to bo yell, 
N.B. — eae whic t distinct E Cape Base in collections of 15 
— N. B. To n May and June only, The Judges will p of 15 entirely distinct: 
will daes the here Marea toy 5 that shall be found to contain a N 2 —80 ai 
B Pelargoniums ; in collections of six varieties, in II- inch pots. plant has been recently placed in the pot from the N. B. ted that th I 
so—C CELs open pete on more than one occasion, f bo exh | 
Class II. —In which all persons are admitted to equal competition. 4 
F Cape Hestin; * collections of 9 entirely distinct varieties. T Collections of 6 New Hardy Evergreens grown in pots; Coni-| 6. Bosone N as in the letter FF, vapi i * 
86—0 ir ke 1 5 2 CE—LS—SK Private N tia oe 2 
N.B. No person w i an of „Nothing will be regarded as new which has been pre- N. B Th Tan and July only. If Roses 4 10 to. f 
the classes of Heaths. 8 exlibited, or which has been in the nurseries more bition without attention to the regulations here 
6 9252 _— ur 2 — displaying very superior cul- than three y E 2 oe Sp vi on 
vatio U Conifers, of n j 1 schynanths ; in collections of 6 species, a a 
N.B. No duplicate m — can be awarded in E, F, &, are agas i e growth, in in — viet AT TS Sk 1e 2 terrestrial Orchids, in not tomar Hand six species, U 
x Ks 285 in six — — ar pots. LS—SK—SB N.B. Tand Ucan only be shown at the exhibition in in July, KK St 5 
o be shown in J a 7 Orchids ; m n of 20 species of one culti- IF tatices; in collections of six species. ny 
I Carnations, in pans of 34 Pan varieties, SK—SB—C tion. LG— ‘GK—GB 172 Ate, in collections of 10 species of very, superiat 
K Picotees, in pans of 24 distinct varieties. SK— aoi : th f th LS— WEF 
L Pinks in pans of 24 distinct varieties. SB— E i Ne ee uM NB. 8 Hardy H mon ah Siama 
7 xotie Orchi eti i i * * 
8 pea À . i . = and at ean vega is cae a hd ba ey r ons of 10 species of superior cul 2 jt hd qa rnd tha like, | 
pony. y cate O% ee 7 22 of 7 — Cronian. in collections of six species, SG—CE—LS N sa 1 rtain that 5 are may be effected iy 
xotic Orchids; single displ plants in common cultivation, such as 
front, hd, Te fa = 0 be painted light 9 a itto o e ' = 
— tal be to exhibit in me 7 Vides oaie are N.B. No duplicate Medals can be here awarded, maryllids, in sixes. SG—CE— 
Z Fuchsias ; single specimens ; in July only. LS—SK—SB 80 Newly introduced or Panke 2 — ornamental f 
Mingle "specimens of very 8 cultivatio n, et. 4 een in six z Danis SPECIES, exhibiting superior SG—-CE—LS j 
hich bi T p * 
plants not in Sone. CE—LS— 52 RA; the word acies is meant the wild kinds imported T hee Medals M ai te Soe 
N Stove or G: plants ; 5 88 of 30 plants. the Cape ood Fyn mgd New Holland, tuberous observe that none but new or rare plants can be 
H—L K fected inclusive, rhs not s-breds. 3 ee PARIR Oonan 
x Calceclariaa, Fuchsiss, Orchids, and Pe BB Fancy Pelargoni 2 DE: ae under this rit 9 will be regarded asni 
„ ums are ums ; —— — or Regent. street i 
ò er — more — 1 wt ates can wn. N.B. No duplicate Medals can be allowed here. season, y garden seedlings, hybrids, nor dor 
* 3 plants; in collections of 15 pee agi New Hybrid Pelargoniums. LS—SK—SB varieties of an feu 
x |B, No duplicate can be shown here, B. aan Aing WAA 1 aiy any, 3 that do not belong | PP 3 N exclusive of Ferns, pi 
P Stove or Greenhouse plants; in collections of N.B. Exhibitors under P P will oot het apio 
6 platts. | pp Achimenes ; in collections E 8 fewer than six species ticket Cocke Soleta 1 = 
p 2 ? e, 
N.B. No duplicate allowed here. Exhibit t showi exhibiting superior cultivation, CE—LS—SK quets, 8 with all plants for dan era 
EE Six ye esate of Tall Cacti in flower. GB— —CE are offered as single spe ecimens, a 


0 1 thas one of the classes N, O, a a 
R —.— Azaleas ; 60 thre ee trusses as 5 are ums, of eben ar 
a B. No on 7 am show in both classes of. of rerai E—IS as possible,’ the ha bit of the 1 0 OE "io exhibin afar 
Greenh: Rhododendrons ; six distinct varieties; in| N.B. In July only. No one who 
„ exhibits i 
May cle. 8 e oy A igata baran ths e MA in this letter can 


In DDITION * 
a cin any Medals assigned to the classes E, N, and V, the SK, SB and C are offered for the collections in those classes which shall he, 


N.B, The Society’s Officers, Who will make this awara, will be guided in their ju 
i ent by a considerati: the 
accuracy of the spelling, an 68 y e si not. only of the correctness of the names, but of 


T 


FRUIT. 


No Prizes are ed 
s are offer naanin n cat ene but if any is is produced which shall appear to the Officers of the Society to be of extraordinarily fine dn 
4 


aus at their diser No rules for exhibiting on these oceasi 
In July three. pleas, of the respective O TEN 4 
or in Regent-str ir ph noon on the Sahara 2 ot Fifteen 1 Pounds, Ten Pounds, and Five Pounds, are est Exhibitions of Fruits, delivered at w l 
f oi bs ‘a given for this Exhibition, which is. ef to 2 1 of Exhibitors EA 
Ses vei Aas inp enn 3 w Market rket Gardeners, or Grow A net Fe iterers, fin the habit of supplying the ne „beg exet 
one award in each | ibit plicate awards can be made in case whatever, 
N.B. All Fruit a 2 3 9 except AB, E, K, M, O, P, 2 ; 
ieee ks Sic Spree FROPEBLY waxen by the Exhibitor, as far as practicable; if the contrary, it will be disqualifies 
: N.B. No quel eae, than SG can eens for Musas or 1 bunches st fr Market Gardner for private growers, and siz | J, Strawberries, in pots; six pots tol e * 
B Pine Apples, in single 2. Whe Bus a Prince Ke. LS-SK-sB |M B They mast Bave grom 
oe . ene 3. Muscat es, Sweetwaters, &e, LS—SK—SB 1. British Queen, &c. SB—C 
1 k y 8 4. E ` —— — j Das SB—C show 
Á 12 ' Sugarloafs or Trinidads, &e, LS 2 j$ Other sorta, distinct from the foregoing, LS—SK—SB N prey 1 wes “4 pots ; no one to 
4. Fe ee LS—SK—SB i ines, in > be ga Md NZ. thie clas: s of Fruits is excluded if gathered: i 
es in pots; three k 128 in sixes, SK—SB—C © Meions, one specimen each: ae 
ta kans specimens to 3 CE—LS—Sk K igs, in sizes, ight T. Thehenviest. SK 8K w 
í ang kind. SK L E Wiio, SB P Other kinds of fruit, exclusive iF P apples a aad be 
, a previous year. SB—0 
that the admitted ouly 8 7 Tait, be chained by the. 5 3 
a J Fellows this subj 
of the 3 el up wit vith the Nast No an de be ar, of the Fst Ù Wi vtom hey site ine Sead f 


le regerded as on MA ts Aa Tickets. hom they are The presentation of 
ply, on or before Tuesday, the 10th of 
i Baroy w de a kes e 8. * 


12-1849) THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE: 179 


nN 
= run SOCIETY OF LONDON. LARCH PLANTS, 
ORTICULTT y given that the EXHIBITIONS OF TESS BOOTH, NuRseERYMAN, Falkirk, is selling off 
1 PRU T, in the Society’s 8 in = a very large stock of Transplanted LARCH plants, in n sizes 
FLOWE mill fake Fives on the Som g days, vig, from 1 foot to 23 feet. Transplanted Scotch Firs, from 


disease which may be owi ing to any other cause as 
well as fud that assigned to them by their repertory, 


There e no ant t siv 
t DAY, Ju EDNESD 9 inches to 2 feet; transplanted S i e extensive investi- 

ett May that e — nn! 10 “is the 12 day on which Strong Transplanted Thorn R gation * which has my i into th APTO of 
July 1; jleged Ticke d to Fellows of the Society, | Austriaca, 2-year eae re Firs, and 2 and 3-year Seed- Jacts ee entin a, the. view that was taken of 
r ares A TE RO Te — Parae Bie all very fine plants, and at further reduced | the m the Garı aly Chronicle of July 29, 
. B —Fine 2 years- 4 va å 
poses Te. carriage paid to London, 10s. 6d. | NOT TO BE REPEATED.—PRIZE FOR MELONS, xc. 1648, na y, n Ores ae riance, arising from, 

A ‘ance to the trade, A remittance must n WII. M. Ae lk LTON, Seepsman and Frorist, will give antes, WAB high * n to the Pro- 
each, dsman, St. Alban e best MELON sent to him, on Tuesday the 19th ess of isease, and vice versé the 


& 
E 
k 
: 
7 
8 
— 
3 
2 


fe ory as to 
- 7 iene Biik 4 212 of 12. 10s., and for the second best, 15s, : the reason of this might be off d, but y h 
LES SUPERB DWARF RED ; CEL s 1 i , , 15s. ; the this g e offere or the present 
GY splendid prize Production, described in former adver- nye 2 Judged by flavour. As also 10s. for the best | we must limit ourselves to retical details, k 


his BERS, and 10s. for the best bunch — 
ined in sealed packets, with direc- : „ a! s. for t est bunches of the fol A 
tisements, may stil enclosing 3s. 6d. i the subscriber, or | lowing 12 ANNUALS, which must, be cut from the open border : People are wedded to their favourite diet, and if 
tions for culti e Seedsman in on or the country. The | — Nemophila insignis, Clarkia pulchella, Eschscholtzia call. they wer e not, it mus t be; admitted that ga bli 
to respectable oe pala. fornica, Malope grandiflora, Coreopsis tinctoria, Collinsia Potat li h 8 m 108,10, 
n Arg Brooklands Nursery, and 4, Tranquil- 13 cane 2 Bartonia aurea, Lupinus = 10 ato on ivation as considerable e con- 
shankii, omia ecccine blox D. siderin 7 swe 
piace, Bi a Bisckbeath.— Perofskianum, . ane. Bexeimam g what heavy stakes are sw b 2 


GREAT an To on AND CUCUMBER _ Competitors must 228 188 expense at or before n US VRR As for the Irish, they evidenth 


d 
ARD TILE most respectfully to inform ti D io. 7 : . ? 3 
Dy 1 "e t hehas seeds of his unequalled Postothes ie the following 7 e te “se by 8 the result 8058, for ie = RY, WIR they win, and, if 
s QUEEN” MELON, de rib bed in former. a agrertipamients. in in = mat te rs. GLENNY, CUTHILL, and H : ey ioe e Joun Buu 3 correspondent 
— — seeds for 2s so his super aang s must be sent with the Mel poe 0 
. ol 10 oh oF DATAS? e 5 „55FFF clacaeee aie. and Cucumbers, and nasterevan, veritas onder date of March 19. 
T kapá packat of each of ihe ators 19 Seedsman *. Florist, 156, 2 ide, London. PL oct hays. availed m myself of every opportunity to 
x’s General Seed-shop, ateng -bri 5 oc RP 4 7 inquire, and to se 
saatanan Ei Geer ostage fi free on the 4 of WOODLANDS NURSE Y; MARESFIELD, NEAR ingui Sur n year's chop, of P ae 
UCKF STI SUSSEX. e grown on my land continue perfect] 
order or the eean 5 | penny postage s iibe. j pe 1 1 sound, 
N N bill. ere ye Store spat eee 5 eke 1475 ‘att r va 4275 ae i 
M. JAM * h pleasure in offering Climb Eni € ve and Greenhouse Plants, s ave already p ante acres, , 
W following VERBENAS, — — 8 1 8 . jel iy; — P 7 . * ol 3 E Irish measure (8 a. Or. 3 p. lish). Any sets I have 
as being a great acquisition to this class of flowers. | santhemums, jang Plants adapted for Grouping with aiselee- | Ona are pushing out shoots as n° * t 
—A Se daming and i babis andi its mark don 4 Of He ew and Ornamental aruhe, Sej ; copies of which have n already planted in Ireland is greatly beyond 
, sent to al at I have ever heard of being planted in th : 
: last, and also in the Gardeners’ Chronicle of June 20, licaute, GRATIS, as usual. p ng, planted in the month 
in answer to W. J. E., Tabana, No. 20. “A very pretty varie- B WaW and Sek hare h superb. stock Sha thd Sieh Cones "of March ; all farmers seem to act on the conviction: 
; d colour delicate pink, with a broad that ear] ` 
variety; groun u cate pink, with a broad, | rarias in polsvation ; the strong and coming into early sowings are most likely to succeed, The idea, 
well-defined stripe of rose-colour in the centre of each | bloo om; the offered lant f the tube ‘ , h he : 
division of the corolla, This is a distinct and a very pretty | 12 su a r 135 er: of the tuber. being worn out, and of its, vitality being 
d L perior varieties for — 25 extra fine varieties for pe | lost, has, now a discipl hat. th 
PERSIE ans at deep Fish a retin kal Audi e e Aes 5 8 lost by atmospheric infl es n 
rich red, with very large carriage. uence appears now the 
ip Man s d th s habip dwarf and compact, and g: belief; an opinion in which I concur. The damper the 
ae on in the Gardeners’ land the 5 idly the di ` damper the 
June 10, lens, W. J. E., No. 18; and also in re rapidly the disease or rot evinced itself. 
“The Florist,” No. IX., in e aiid to oa } E. Strong plants by Ene Harden ts Ehvonicte. “T have observed that dry land, if drained or restiog 
glen TRENAR, 2 the Trade when three of each are taken, TURDA Y, M. ¥, MAR CH 24, 1849 AAA ere rt ong pe pda paes d 
poe 1 se sage! crs j oaaae MEE pe FOR p TRE TWO f FOLLOWING WEEKS. whether planted early or late. You ju haw 
ve ndon, Messrs. Het ent M Mullen, 1 Monpay, arch 26) Geographical 815. oy sanguine is the hope, or, I may add, certainty, of a good 
descrip pre, kay Taga of neee ocak, „ e e 1 erop from the 3 anxiety evinced 1 
JJ... March 24,0 Society of AF beben 104 8 =e one. (the abused: oon-agre. ayatam 
Reet arene | ees eee [emma acer B 
ee- Taurspar, — 29 Rar er R Cass 
&., 1 Per acket—s, d F te —.— OBERT CASSID 
Be I 1 rah EN rai 25 1 —— . e * — It is aer to find that the Irish are beginning 
J LARKSPURS 1 7 Patholo ical „ to see the truth of what they were told in ovember, 
Ditto ave Di mixed 0 Tener : 4 a {Linens 5 „„ “Ms 1155 and that early planting has at last found favour 
2 IA BURGAN i 0 n e rempeg *. in their ey: s to the mode of planting, Mr. Cur- 
5 8. TAD AE RTU ane > } ; 
í, superfin 3 ; * Shag We understand. that the Liverpool Guardian HILL recommends “the ridge system, thus, Af end 
100 varieties ganana uals, 1s. 5 ; 50.ditto, 5s. ; H 25:do., 26. Gd. n Nene made up their minds to prosecute the | Section. It gives double surface, double heat, double 
All post free, se Meine bf thai e Bi ia who have been lately e their Ar, id cas protection against rain, double depth of 
| stat Hitoy and Son, Seed Growers, Maldon, Essex cater upon nursery and seedsmen ; of the 110 uld drainage, and it is 1 r supe- 
! ARD 1 EORGE HEND FT ON, Waaa gang, Merson and Moart, have 1 fan sen- The * * Hat surface m t mode e hy: f Are a 
mad, St John a. wood, London, is now sendin tenced to transportation at the Vork Assizes, at the system, in fact, is almost a preven ro be 
— see 1 5 shrubby distinct plant, prosecution of the Leeds Guardian Society, in con- wires Bun icant if the tubers have been taken 
6d, and and, biegming i bl 3 i uence of a re e made to their 2 ie A 
38, 6d. per plant, or 24s, and ; For our pa cigs we see nothing to object to in the. 
adada tary, in January las las t, by Mr. Reay, of the Liverpool e a ed a eee J b 
„r = Guardian Society ; and it is to w hoped that their bed X 8, provided: the. trenches, between. the 
ate CSOBA $ . 15s S Nene variety. n ns wil experi ence the same fate. Par: age ut deep e 3 jay the land dry. There: 
AREN ANIN E ba, , fine and dist 1 5 of the Vork trials will be found in 5 is also a plan of management, ee by Mr. H. L. 
. ga be orange 7 scarlet, 1 MEYER, which deserves to be y kno 
„ a 
e In ‘i hainmhe until the industrious gentle- In a paper read to the Royal Agricultural Mosag 
GRA ? E he made the following recommenda: 
SA "5 17 17 ee oe sah Sn, man to whom we have before alluded shall haye met «J . of 
N. MULTIFL pate; 2 nis with his 3 at the hand of the law, it may be propose a method of protection, which, Ithink, 
alen is cov when only a few inches high, | useful to continue some account of his proceedings. mi be equally effective anh any one of the above 
entioned causes of the dise 25 Whether animal, 


in 8 
FANCY G N, nom aad distinct, 12s. and 18s, per.dozen, We have nge us the following letters: No. 1 
n ioen HORA ahd, distinct, Je, ABE, ang dated March 14, from Head-street, St. James's, | ¥ vegetable, atmospheric, or elec ric, I propose to, 
bel un b. f lr, 5s., orange scarlet, 8 rde of Mr. Hose, of Newonstle-on- cover up the plant with the si TS material at 
aoe be had on application, The Trade Tyne, 20,000 strong Whitethorn, and 180 fruit trees. h ands —namely, the soil it grows in, The manner 
No. 2, same date, from arwick-house Park, Liver- 


IS LE, NURSERYMEN. oc 0 frui e learn. * ö 

respectful] to a ie attention o of f Landed Messrs, Urnquuart and Some, af Dundee, tl that they — tips of the plant 3 F 2 benefits 2 

ornamental Tree, which they can “supply at | have had the honour to receive similar manda view a succession of n fe 

6d, per plant, 36s, per do., or 12 . 10s. from a Mr. J. Tinker, of Dukinfield Hall, Cheshire, by once 0 
a 


wing prices: 33, 


who is not known at pane pas the P e 2 ti sates of — 

Mr. Bowers, of Basbuidge, has also received an 552 pole pa, Over, and in the i 2 
oubtediy this is invitation to send saed h of: his watering-pots to lie Securely the tips of the fo liag ey d the inju- 

"Sowering plant of recent in- rious blight occur while the field remains in 

on Horticultural | one " the party, co — the r esidence and search to thet f the planta N 
geren in its bright yellow towers ia whom we ie the fo ee amusin er ph P» UNS Lobe Q 07 che 1 arg 1 y sheltered, 
1 .— “| have spent some time to-day (the place being | from its influ ad ridges of earth they lie, 
ts in flower- a Considerable distance from Church-street), in en- between. Noth er will be required but to 
Stron s. to 28. ach, eavouring to trace the party mentioned in your aes watch the fal, and continue to so —— the haulms 
e known tobe ap meri. 2 of yesterday, but with little success. Hea: ead-street is from time to time, so as to kee nly the tips. ex- 

Js one, e of ry dirty low neighbourhood, the houses being ee bones The process thus ie is be imme- 
8 


by porters, washer women, sweeps, &c.; after a great diately put in practice, instead of the usual 
* — 145 in es Heath-street, which adjoins 455 “earthing up, and while the stems of the 5 
ea * * iy A 


a 
se for the sam will not require any outlay, and in | of labour 
2 I Tepee. ot tohe” Beten, Ta only stands in the plane Oe the usual method, of 
1 a pf ner ge ss 3 earthing up. . . The best way of putting this mode 
eee that raa 4 9 — r ee in practice is, by laying donp the haulms with 
| vorp, and that several letters addressed to him are hand, and afterwards co ering. them with the earthy 
now waiting to be e claimed,” that lies: between Siloti, pl 
een will pport the G amiin can be attended to, as I have proposed, the less itis: 
e in their sagt io "pat 8 ae n — 6 me — 
soon cease to hear o ection. 5 owing se e presen ae or 
munn ana Noma me A 1 a: — administer lime or 


aie, ge e of, which and we 1 si 
arch 24. tage in reco 


enquiry is now almost exhausted, some other purifying substance | 
ttle left to tell; for we see no adyan : m, It is desirable to lay 
‘solitary cases of exemption from away from the east, as 


180 


THE 3 


9 


buen 


south-west as 
that blights of all 42285 


e 
ptions appear to origina N- t „ Juneting, Junitin en it is considered that 
usual manner of planting Potatoes being in rows . — ning ds the ‘close of the period the spoken language of the higher oan y 2 
only sufficiently ap llow room for the 1 58 last century f ery Abercrombie, who is the first author country, bt = no 5 wonder at our oldest feat 
und shoots and tube vegetate, ritings we so find i Is it Juneating. I ivin ü 1 ere ations ; they rather confine 
necessary to lay the haulms of the plant down have no doubt that this last form was adopted in order | in the belief that they existed in the country long 1 
in a slanting or obli direction, so as 8 let t convey what appeared to him to be the pos sig- the period at T h authors generally haye bad 
tops o haulm reach only to the centre nifleation of the word June: eating, i. e., une, | introd spe 1 -Ñ 8 a therefore, at 
of the valley or furrow, enr gaining the double hnson writes it Gineting = ys 8 ; a rrup- fing . e varie 1 I have 5 aoa ad 
ifyi ne vin el ar 
mh room and prote of Janeton Si 2 e 5 „ A ie A Ther of car ca 8 


with suc- 


tio 
ment was carefully tried in the Garden | been 


e- Abe Var e 


a person 
3 this 983 n of the great lexicographer, I 
ntly. oy pons seri who have 


forms in 


Englis oo in allusion, I apprehend yw GS 


ness of its fle 
W 


arly En 
9, 4, ne juki, Brompt 


ame society numberless times in gy 


th to think differe: 
cess; for althou was e expe ited: 0 k 42 
amo t sit this varie mir) f them lived ata 
t of produce was s diminished be how. he st err 855 en it is oad the s 3 were hotter and} ON 651 PERFECT CU ESSENTIAL 70 THE 
the extent of more than 3 cwt. per a cbt ao st more precocious than they are now—agree fixing M ee C n + aoa —No. If. 
rtional quantity of sound LS to obtained was a period of its coos at the end of July; so that| THE old axiom, to which 0 huga 
ore than seven times t at of the row . 1 conceive Juneating has as little reference the |a liberal application, “that would roe ta us thes 
We regard this as an artificial method of curbing the origin of the des as Julyflower has to Gilliflower, or cpa vailable in performing an 
luxuriance o to, which it ~ | Sparrowgrass to Asparagus. iz., a ri h a wrong, 1 ren 
y: but whether that be so or not, it will be well] In early times it was customary to make the festivals r maxims to which we cling i least inter 
to repeat the trial under varied circumstances, in | of the Church e at which occurrences were to | with wonderful pertinacity, will found in ang 
ord t its true value may e place, or from w. events were 3 and even z very ere n l application EWA 
able of doin > this da nd n ete eople appropriating | be an occupatio C worthy of 
Lr va ime age cece E ar ome operation for St. marty a ý some other ane oe — which society — 
"Another spomen a tried in the same estab- ojaati for St. A iw "t ” Michaelmas, , Allhallow Aran 8 See e ; show hor 
r 


was beaten an 

x Every alternate 
half of each row 1 left for comparison. 
Th rows ran er 
row at the so 


rolled, the north end o 


next, the — ot “a the third, aids so on alter- 


nately. average produce was somewhat | circa i Joannis maturesct yulga us Melo di 

Jess in the rolled than in 75 8 portions ; but | San Giovanni dicitur.” On nent, therefore, 
the quantity diseased half so great in the | these earl ples we To — 

as it was in the unrolled. Joannet; thus we have among the old French Pears 

We should like to hear what the effect would be | Amiré Joannet, the Admired or pinea 1 Little 

of rollin ng Potato to gro round hard at this time of year, John, which Merlet ee e i beca i aa it 

and leaving it to its chance. The crop could not be ews be ts a dir diaaa A A 0 en ee sal e pi 


heavy, but it might be g 
POMOLOGICAL ARGH EOLOGY. 


following 
— 


It is much to be regretted that“ Mayster Groshede, 


somtyme Prenon. of r Barnaby Googe, es- 
rde Maseal,” and thos 


quire,” 4 Leo e of our ancestors | 
who had e ability opportunity of writing on 
rural affairs, did not devote ‘i at en 2 what w 


y passing around them, inst oceupyi 


Varro, 


eee The e of the first 


gra 
on, | also 
it | glish Apples, and 25 e I ‘bere the Winter 8 


ogy, 
long prior to our own, and of which but little 8 
0) 


immediatel ing 
their minds with translations ns from Cato, Colunas and 
8 


these 


e fruits eg 


tista Porta also sa 
i fi 


of Apples, we have Joanneting, S while with a slight 
tra ee, gives us Jenn 
Pearmains.— These ong our oldest En- 
main is the type. is I suspect I differ the 
I nim Boeiety’s Cale ogue of Fruits, aes the 
sell itt with the Her 


al,” in the 
man’s oe full Orchard, T aad by 

Ar find no notice of the Royal Pearmai e of 
better tasted 


It seems Á eet ia a matter of doubt as to 


in tom ignorance of this part of o 


It has been yo that the Apple was ivtroduced to this | 


country the time of the conquest. 

But it is just as ig if it bat not exist before, that 

it Bed introdu e know that 

22 17 aith oug Me. Loudon states es differently 
in Lib. xv., cap. 

geg ail 

annum DCLXXX. is 

CXX. trans Oceanum in Britanniam usque perv 

introduced the Ch and th 


Seeing, then, that they P 
sop it is quite probable that they introduced the Ae | 
accordin Apples were | i 


to the same author, 


uced from oe Apple- 
wners than was formerly +e 


obtained 
15 pk the he Apple was so valued by th 
n to believe oe this w: 
thelr luxuries 


F 


1 5 


We 


ep 


f 


FT F ft 
Fe 


pE 


promot 
po cae the consequence of which is, that we Age left | 
comparative 


| Calville oe all — i 
| iles an er sorts of . do, 5 i ars 


Toiy sha 
| Itwill be observed that the names 


us, gallicised, gave Poire magne 
| Pear), which, — 4 transformed, is dati re-maine or 
Pearmain, The 


| situation to the * 
similar to that of a 
Pi ived from the French word 


1 there is 
another, i I find the te 


applied by the 
| pe ering not only — the phe fatto to seedling 1 
us we find 


w gg 
8 


oui 
the pe thera shal roe also skag 
but the frute which doth come of aen oth alwayes 
| kepe the forme and the tga aeaiia he is 
baga for as I have oe as often as the e apa sig 
much amended.” 
Guanes which the Winter Que 
is the are also among the oldest Varieties culti 
e those men 
* D origin, and is 
corners or angles on tho 2 ah of the frat bene ee 


el 


on th 


e as a Queenin 


of its 


noticed 


bein St. Mar N Oth o ` 5 4 may be one of those pro more. 
the beg or Maudlin, from St. Magdalene's-day, ments over which we have no control —one of th 
the 22d of d in “Curtius Hortorum” we fi nomalies observable in social individual progres, 
te po ened Joannina yocamus, quod circa | Where the act is in advance of the thought, N 
divi Joannis Baptistæ gy iat esui sint,” J. B I left our plant house aerated, it is true; and it my — 
says, “ Es alterum, quod quia here, by wee of progressing in a sy; atic method, be 


sban 
Ralph Austen, we | 
Ren (1665), p b — says, “It is much — and 

kind | 


the origin and signification of this word Pearmain. My t a 

| attention was pls attracted to its derivation * observ- per ps oe 1 5 or damp, the wonder is that ty 
ing that Gerard writes it Pearmaine, and both in “ The latter is due most of thei 
Husband-man’s Fruitful Orchard,” and Coles’s t 7 juries they Save — in some cases h 
in Eden,” it is written Peare-maine. The last syllable | and they only want the ordinary routine of A 


f the Pear is therefore in| where fire 
pe * those — * called, being 
Pear wi 


5 Polmaise 


ts mically s 
righ 
4 vator, with a knowledge of 


the — axioms it p 


rofesses to hol 
mitation. And perhaps it is Wise tht 


advisable to say something of artificial heat, % 


mat t purpose a pl y be appre 
priated, some kind of apparatus for the purposed 
raising th eee must be ö 
structures arene He 4 


ma sands of o 


internal 


during the pas r woul 

an efficient a 5. — would p — been slight) covarig 

I had ceasion, in fulfilling ya 
garden 

t bag it is not 

Most of the plan 


nga 

minum sambac, Columnea splendens, 

pent, Begonia * ee E apri mi 
in the m 


eii 


to erect expensive heating apparatus; the si 
ue for such a purpose. 


men on 
most provoking m 
of boilers, g a great 
and rebuildin 
e mason. 
most efficient workmen if y 
yourself, 
Of Polmaise—poor belaboured, 
othing can be aps 
but an over-due zeal on the on 
prejudice on the other, and ae in 
third, has so m 


ra an i 
mass that — disclose to them, ™ 


ci ig 
own, i —— 
but for the present I do not 
up as a system invariable in its a appli 
in i powers. 

superior i 


I conceive it to be no proof of 


hus 
— means by which we 
—each paroi in its Way, 


t, — . versa. 


may be ri 
sd all 


calls it “ La Dre P 


* 


Jeske, Me l in ‘sedate eg d of the re i 
d'Angleterre,” the Pmi 


n 


PWW E 


12—1849.] THE 
—— and apply his means 


Tn erecting 
err on the 

Let, 
weiples ord let those 
care. 1 


— 


ener's e 
and t hose who, by 
et ow how lightly they © poikien his ber 3 
treat him as N * ob-horse, 
his worth at so airy per hot 
INTS FOR AMATEURS 
aD EMALL GARDENS. 
Taansptantinc BuppeD Roses.—It i 
that those varieties whic 


ar patted on briars are are apt to degenerate unless re- 


every three or four years. In m 
22 been 


2 7 2. 
estimating 


ll known t 


= the case with the ‘on 


vigs and healthy. 
rising from the 
unnatural, or more properly, arti ficial, union of the 

d the little attention Leer 
f hab — wh 


roughest ma 


„that a young stem may pro- 
ts own age, and not from one 
sum 


may | mands 


ar. | to produce short bloom 


the pe 
ch are budded woollen net 
fro 
$ staal 3 Che rr ries 


e | a free 55 of air. 


‘4 sro bid an in gt matter 
oods a 


te fo or grafting or budding, — yr 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


e the wood were no 
2 4 


t put on sufficient} tly 
the superfluous shoots eut out when the 
as the borde 


rve, also, that there is on these tree 
what is not on the wall- trained Peaches, viz., a tendenc 
ave not had an 


= 


er Was 
bed of leaves 
par 125 over the border, in order to give a little warm 

th the soil and climate 


glass is yee 
ound, just omg the 


i a protection against the north 
winds, passing under the ii, not, however, impeding 
And if the Cherries succeed 

even as well a 
net hung at ‘ha. back 
make i difioult p kee blockbir ds 

I think it will be an d t he trainin 


more ne? and motio 


of the 


eaches ectarin ae ma 


may YE forward 
wood at a small cost; 


some im- 


— Rose. trees, taking ca the roots 

1 —4 likely to 5 if they va not well 
with the fork, Prune the head close in 

all about the are of 
. $ etor the -roots, 
as possi e young fibres ; ; 
‘useless and decayed portions, and see 
— ane wounds remain. As each tree 
finished let it be put in its new situation, aitowing the 


Amana du. Xposed to the air as little as possible. 


E 
3 ; 
HB 


4 


8 


5 
eh 


Hip 
SEE . 
FE 
A 
JE 
pE 5 

82 

5 2 

g 8 

3 2 


í 


H: 
i 


aos — ‘and amore vigorous 


17 
i 


coda most 125 continuing too 
ds will be i 


sional 
whole Collection 


lf, choose proper stocks, avoiding 
_ which are so plentifally 


y 1g 
in 5 of properly trained 
t. trees with well L ripened wood by nurserymen, w whi ch | fo 


which are usually sent from a 5 taken fro 
exposed trellis or paling, and not seldom having ra 
an ancient stock, having been cut back for a succession 
of years. ool R. 

N 


etp i There gas m 


bn ee purposes, if e gg et 
carr ff 


s the inside of the 
3 air from 
the outside, and the produets of combustion carried o 
by a pipe throu po the roof, 1 much ear aaki that 

as, though u 


= 


rom 
rather | cote, .—I wro 
n|and pointed out the inferiority, of to Engl 
haat 4 


why might that 
any cases be — employed be) 


necessary to have a smail tube with stopeock a 
to the 9 level of the pipe, 
plying the waste of water, 


ed to town 


gerra r amin gE —In the awa of 1845 the 
pee of Henry saiga se ipa eat 2 a 
few seedling Stra nian y pla 
E] ko “aay in = 8 “of which tan E 
British Queen, Royal Scarlet, and some others, He 
planted the seedlings out that pene and one of them 
of its robust 


as gathered in 1848, and highly prized by Mr. 
aid a good deal of attention to fruit 


neh this i is 8 hardy, it 


ant for window 


hon use, ta kin ng e 
sent á more 8 

Bo Frederick Row 

Hint respecting the Culture of Araucaria imbricata. 

1 5 e was plant 


Wu Fo and require less 


al considered more or less 

aan latter 2 was placed in 
dered a disadvantageous site in 

planted it os looke n ce n 

being ina pa! va where es y ro he arun and 

leave latest, here the powerful w 

along more 5 ctively 1 ye ex 


at the foot of a hill facing 4 — and ded by 


e Paper last autumn, 
Scotch to lish 


ecount a 
i Q 9 5 8. Hants.” I was attacked b 
writers, and m my statements were denied. I re lied by 
naming the farms in the Lothians, in Perthshire, and 
in in eee parts where I had seen the things denied ; and 
y adversaries replied no more, Next to the howl of 
t the misgovernment of Ireland, there is 

Imed upon us than the assertion 


90101 


a ‘age $ establishment ; at rei I eta the < e quantity o k ffi 
the appar i 


gas n nee ge atus re ould re 
it m xpensive than the te or * 
apparatus hese there is re oe risk of escapes « © of 
and conseque — 4 explosi Messrs. ht 
Edinburgh e of gas as a means of ra 
necessary heat required in pras apparatus for henting 
the vitality of s Hav ved a 2 ent of 
ape bul i * pmi te s w flow tthe 3 1 
0 ing an 5 bee È 
eated 957 gas. I got 
old er packing box, into which 1 ‘Placed a a false 
e per distance 
rom the to op. Above thi AE a aé 
mp moss, into which the pots containing ** — 
d. On the outside of the box, a ards 
fixed a small kettle, a little mij 


in 
ube the upper Tart of the 
rn scone fies {round the box, be under the moss, and 
pee again introduced in lower of va 
ke —. — forming a regular hot water apparatus 
the syphon principle. I found the heat thus obtained t to 
basco than sufficient for my purp but of course 
this w ily regulated to suit circumstances. 
only tw matters which seem to require notice are, first, 
k ox Roadie e distance from the 


ing the Lord 


tity of | pits. 


he | appearing, except near 


to adhere and thus prevent the | 
it is 2. 


any size 
the climate, Why don’t 8 sail us up ni i ue eigd 


end Pine-apples? I wish you 
in East Lothian on a farm o! oeiia A * tof 
Wemy their treatm 


as 
or. a Pil I hav. e from time to time 
eard w S Datch forcing | in the gardens of 
Lord Hill, who 1 1 believe, the sa ee 
the late Mr. Labouchere had at N further, 
that he is sionally cel * for forcing "Apricot in 
Can any of oe respondents give us any 
account of this? Dodma 
Airit ies + 8 
r Number * Feb 
an old subject reapecting snow remaining 
the Ochil hills till sar Midsummer, -< 
ice-keeping, I study to 
Mr. Beaton’s tiles ‘that appear in the Chronicle, N. 
also those which come from Pegs j 
n | and, I trust, with profit At th e his communica- 
tion reached me, the bens and sles. “of the oaa hills 
were covered gre snow, but it is now gradually 
near the 1 ‘of 2 veh, ee 
Webs ma, 


the ueg strips called Lady A 
som we 5 have a cold | wane 
before dog-star 


Exposed to 


me to come; but 
the 8 mes all melted long be 
pe re with the sun, The 


to 
pipe, otherwise it is apt k 
4 passage of the heat from the pipe 


THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


* 7 


aud 12 im eamp on an average, and 
sheer down in rocky 


ferring to Mr. 

Ochil hill hat Mr. B. “often a f 
now 30 feet deep, dög ays, with a 

leo ad.“ I would . — imagine it would 

l 


as Tr benefited — it as 
n Mount A 
He F “When ve came t "Men ap of sn 
found more than —. had ioe * for the — Wh was 
about 30 paces in diameter. — every one, eat more 
or less, as we ea end: and, by agreement, resolved 
o no further. This w was about 4 feet thick, 


never tygra to m 
if bad, 2 2 have — 
ourriefort w when he bo 


herefore from ae snow with a 
. “much pleased that we had accom 
d that a aa now nothing f further 


nd, 
— it age * -= very comforta 
Model vigrar, — 


uid 


kr 8 
e Springs of 


eserves — 1 will 
on 


ist, 
to the Bridge of Allan to booze at the sali 
Airthrey ; and as one 


| respondent ques 


wich snow in my wanderings ; | t 


the risk of imputation of r K AAP a — — 
wina 


finest archit ectural effect ' which I ev 
ion 


the courage to 


sé 
+ 
=“ 


they sey me ae look pretty for some years. Via 
alluded to we merely answered a cor- 


[In the passage a 

estion. 
yrian Fruits. e 

pat es and Nee 

—— as . — de 


nn 


f the sweet-kernelled 
ou mentioned last 
y the Duke of he 


n propagated for sale yet? I thin 


on 197 rainy d 
of 


Nort 


.. 34,84 | Tot 
ean year ly te ataa #0 
The Superstitions connected 
e need hardly add that 
and unfoun f 
their owner’s 


andas they o 


8 
5 who co 


es to ‘oer 


times, exclaim 


A pr resent miracle! we shout a 


s ro ted 

acted with great liberality in the matter. ] 

Rain, in roma which fell at — — diving 1848, 
ays : 


South-west ... 
South a 
West 2 
North eke 
North-west ... 

h-east ... 


as 5 
South-east ... 


ess and am A prevailing in 


1 | umberland, bee 
said that the Duke had determined that they should be 


Direction 


Wind. Days. 
* 85 
tert ke 
ies TOR 
wee 
“6 
oe 26 
20 


in) (ix., 17 
Late indignant 
is 


ee if one just, one holy man ve — 


Oe Hoy — fish 
Or s 


ectl 
25 re aa forcing to * the soll the 
perature wit 
e branches are pl 


pu ea 
iti is not Jih. 15 idea Wat ein 
th 


light non 
sensible of what | 


in the 


Hang clustering from ac 
writer in the“ 


fore it is 


e groun 
thought to be a sad omen inde 
the family will die within a year. 


t the ploughing steer, se 
ing “es portending ala to Rome, 
ted 


on 
list of superstitions would n 
omitted that ks, e en of a erika | Soci 


und, or upon the dead À branoh of 


— Satire xiii., 99, 
asserts ‘that 


dome.“ 


e merely se 
tree, i is 
omen that one of 


te. Essex Man 


The Rey, 


è law of rea Never 
1 * of two evils the least is that of 
borders from th oe of 
—1 000 3 | 
. trees for or avenues, | py 
irke) sn a a 
ze, Pinus Deodara. At 


r, Ri aR 
5 am of 


Soreties, 
Horticurturat, March 20 bene 

W. D. seine 
ey, Esq., were elected Fellows, a 


as awarded fo 
amh “tn Aiden l 
Eyles, Besides | 


oe — . a rey inopi as 
0 


tal B 
The was 50° dym — a igh 
of ee was 29,716. John Plant, L 
with Bees are 3 
like d others they are abs 
rof the ħouse dies, it is 
said by the ignorant that the: pon will — also, ee 
eat fo 


sent Camellia Storyi, a red variety in the way 


€P | field, gr. t 


si 


t | this, because it is evident that t the practice 
nd.] 


Corræ e New e 
tralis), ele m trico ee i 
d fo sli 

to ie. pan nney, of Stator, for k ine 
yellow-flowered ium, 
gr “the Duch 


peculiar structure o 
e ep 


es, Laurens 

N Vidette (one w angs 8 A 
double ; Orondates ; 3 ze 
0 


W 


colour, w 


cata, It was exhibited . 12 months 
we te a medal, and w ee a 3 


l 
flowered. Violet, ‘om Patagonia, 
Den d 


Clapham et 85 nly grown — of 


the late } 
MN 8 var 


ristata major.— Mr. Sum 
n, Esq 2 23 — 
of the white e E 
obtusa. 


who also contributed collections of na 
8 


— useful genus 
Notting-hill. 8 or Kendall, of Stoke Ne 

sent a seedling Cin named 
broadly margined with: fache a ~~ cr 

ass of flowers ond, of 


ires. It ist 


iety requ 


groun 


CALEDONIAN HoRtTicuLTURAL.— 


T Tol 


d Po 3 


U 


* 


feel 


3 ‘brief but 
— pie g that, i 


4 A having 

+ hankin the 
5 Sa and ass t he would 
= anxious for the — of ae aiaia. 


to the mem 


rt read the fi portion o 
on The Nad and development compared 


men of 


pew Tehn 


mat 


‘from con 
was also dd i 0 pus § in these lar 
inseets 4 


) than the thorax 
e third, 
Rat the six 


ae E 


for bis botanical eis ge, and his devotion 


fpecies 5 intest. 

ce in their p soson the Sag tee 
ak deere organs 

is very similar. Dutt 

tus is a closed sac, without anal outlet, s 

ntil the pte is fall T 


an outlet snd intestine are then rmed by | have 


its longitudinal axis; a corres 
m 


being at th 


e same time forme 


a species o 
= te provisionally, the name of Niti 


f the and 2 
f ho 
8 5 thophora 


THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


owing inserip- 


uperintendent of 

their sense of his 

‘the Society, while 9 
1836 to he Jan. 20, 1849.” 


ing them 


—R. Brown, Esq., a in — 


the 


ety. 
öp ‘of Norwicn, Presi- 
al ae Sowers ing 
0 


an 000 
siflor 


and instincts of cer 


w that a stöd ac 


mEn rva a 


ace tae is 

ral form and 
earlier of grow 

the pera of ‘feeding, the a 


r is sed u 


The casting a 15 


HE 
w ee I 


aneh: 
and abdo 


pe ie 3 appearance 
of the larva ef 


— were 


Rnebi ee 
sland of Sardinia, oge By J. 5 Tyndale, M.A. 


Three vo 


no business of ours "y criticise Mr. T 


he Dae badet whe to ir knowledge of the | dis 


ews. 


an opinion as to 


b fon porta 

Ph articles of Plate * x 

the e iddn hri Horticultural | that is n 
ae aR S f the 


nom 
eumonidis with snore npg of a 
A rasite ams est 


— n joints 0 


e 
Darjeeling sind Cher 


ndale’s | 


true import of the Noraghi of the Sardinians ; an | 
brie of the eir forests would possess greater i interest 
is i 


hat * si ot 


why we 


mysterio 
sen a government ship-building of Me timber 
xcept Oa K, s the more importa 
political alte on should 7 to dale what t 
acts are respecting Sar n Oak, which the le * 
ee ounce to 
onstruction of ships for her Majesty’s 


the full a 


But after perusing his pages from — to end, 
we are obliged to say that Mr. Tyndale gi 
information about — Sard forests 3 — 
He tells us ee r in on ac ieces 


where, the 


made in French and other docky Ads, where it w. 
found to possess all ret requisite error, for ship 
bu rat is considered equal to any in n Eur 
a A is all chat M 
* one of the most — ek national 
ich he — SW iie ssed hiniself 
ring ‘his visi to Sar a pity it i that 
pentlctien who will 58 books shonla never think o 
learning in the first instance how and what to observe ! i 


Grundriss der Kryptogamen- ~Kunde, von 8 G. W 
eo vr lau Ker 8 vo: pp. viii. 204. 
—.— s be een a certain class of botanists who 


gams, r hie tt 


ugh of mystery to perple 
acute and patient intellect, Nor is kan class of 2 isers 
even yet quite — e ‘ape 
collectors and system 


knowledge of ptoga 
is of a somewhat similar 
that is 


an who 
night K. 2 is much merit about it, and we are 
, prove useful botanists as are 
3 en the language in which it is written. 
Miscellaneous. 
India +g eee Potatoes from Bombay, 


njee 
al "a healthy, af to elle dl 


e that 4 
20 lbs. pe skin of all 2 bre and gai 
rom knots, J al of the Agricul- 
3 2 f India, M T% 1848. 
nor’s — The 45 
A abn: ad e 


every Potato free 
tural and Horticultural 
Mr. Feargus 
occupants of 
Worces 


rshire possess 
allcttbes were fall of hope wen temporary 
are not all Mei i 
One of 


th 
r doors, intending 
perhaps to come bac more 88 season or to 
pose of their End Aden they can find a purchase 


* 


1 their form 


t that — firs 


to be the — foreign Oak — fit for the 


avy. r 
We | looked through | Mr. Tyndale’s three volumes i in 
t 


lan 
ves us no 


a 5 
r. Tyndale says in his 


o, lightly rat Op those who devoted | of g 


Of those who — — on the land many earning 
mp! living by following their ordinary calling, others 
by opening tle shops, and — A of w of the 
families hav away to maah of t 
e 10 ong 1168 waa ba ua D 
rmer trade: 

at they can ever 
support DOE simply by the ce aoe of the soil, 

n ide very 


— — 3 the em, a 

are really in very great distrè 
yet paid any rent—on 
t instance received the sum 


F 


their Tittle 8 of he shold coe 
other rates of the ‘haga though these are 
heavy. Some of e lookin ng fo ith dismay 
to the expenditure of 1 stock of provisos which their 
houses at present oe te that is gone they know 
not how they are to exist. is seven miles from the 
Lowbands bs tate to any 8 town, and the parties, 
m, say that they find great difficuliy when 


of p oni live 


Some 


their 
m 


are 
their hungry —— from day to 
— “so as he — 3 v eat and clothes ? 


ess in een — 


av 
any their + amounting 
He has gone back to his “old situation, 55 — 
d to 


en long to brivg bim to his senses. Seve 
allottees here have purchased the good-will of others in 
their shares, and the additional houses which they thus 

ve at their ee, they let at rather high rates 
agricultural la who ploy to assist th 

the —— of the who have 
thus become ed of six acres, have some 
amount of capital, and a tolerable knowledge of agri- 
cultural pursuits, seem likely to procure a dec though 
homely living, a few years we do not doubt but 
that almost all the 2 will have 3 into the hi 
of this ip perso he miseries and 
distresses which ley of the . will have to go 
through can 


only be — Abridged from the 
Worcester Herald of Feb. 10, 1849. 
Ch l 


irrigation, which is easily pro 
found anywhere e on digging I in the e soft soil for abo 
I have a very good garden, wo 


edu 
uince, Pear, Plum, Mangoe, Peach, Strawberry, ani 
Melon plants 3 they thrive well, 125 eh as sal the Orang 
resent almost all the * vegetables ar 
ver, ie the be, which is ge 3 


are just ov Wich regard to 


r. they thrive here as well, if not better 


| can cut about oe 3 ta for about two N z 
. English flowers 
than in England; 


184 
THE 
ENERS' 
RS’ CHRONICLE 
[Maree a, 
c 
205 


Sweet Pe 
P 
Lupi cas, 5 
108, an Stoc. 
lux d innume k, Eschse 
rabl hol 
Petuni 1 e othe: oltzias, 
N Willen and gremeng aaa 
thermom Fu William and yg rag goreg xa ry aap creditabl 
2 e 
6 a e oy en plin 
Burnett, in , bene elene May) at ice the |ne and to fin * 0 — — adhe a arrange 5 
cul ear 1 en 
tural Society bse of the pyan dry. wanna 4 8 0 ner, before procee it off ina =- Nye ik oo one a ni 
0 eee T . C. with e mana roceeding to 3 work aah $ in hand, ppe S EDS tices to 0 
Par a of Op Horti-| fore ena the bey pg Sig: head ai job. By a i — | keeping : Desse - The follow orresponde 
Di — it a 
As P ensu eration is still to to ed to devote proceeded, d — al anarei.. ada, 8 n Harde 508d ats. 
v _ PLAN in S. be d tho self Alfri For on Raah — 
egetation i T g w 0 re and sto For K 7 Y. 
gress in on is LANT DEPAREMENT J 55 qua ne. To exem wee energy to be ee, 2 a, Mere de de — a Fl P. 3 
quirin rnest, one commencing i nce neatl ers, as the wa that e- | BEDDING P J nage 2 Jumel Nonn l 
g attentio e of the neing it i y finish rec ad which er LANTS : See pa and Ea clow’s reil 
Gove n is, to most im s summe: ghte: tenin ed off, b $ e th ra let the bons kianum Fenella. page 736 Ster Pj Seedling, 
by 7 selves give all portant poi r pro- and ing the edges y rakin eir s: T. T will possi Pacha wine pin.) „ 
plants point gravellii 80 or forki ops, be Garden.” here i ssibl sia Ri last 
for th ir neigh sufficien s re. main w ng the the mg s the at] nat 144. s no che sult yo ecartonii and: 
e exte A t room fro alks in princi 0 paths ground ural syst . The fi eap edi u. and Er 
gardens nt of gl collecti m to m di the im ipal alle , and nd, nopsis,” tem ollowi tio 
p of glass, i ion irt medi eys. clean B Hooke Bebina n of Mr. 
; and, in is the of plant cleaned. y traffic iate vi After t mg ook,” e are el Mr. 
— . eril of “oo largo [amd at lig surfaced wi isnt, which will befree ae J0, N R "cad ete 
the inj to preser „t ey are y all receiv same tim: with ne come, ree eith TION : Ske wee . 's will gle MA. 
jury is rve them eramm re e any atte x e the 3 w grav l ould b b er Morus Th e p uit y you Guy’s “ 
sprin ten times from ed | replanti ti e edgin el, an oth, W alba better 
— — — e e , — 
15 W 8 enson they com commence re Thrift, sod aias p raadios of peiring iai My cither by — tel ie bene 55 r> n ed ae 
ection : m sh : r wit ym season ; i ut replanti i y ing fr all omis a wi 3 
3 Sey it is — pa 8 a rat laced ſew ef aeh a a xg 2 one half prip es Boe AEREN es far beter be too g 
cerned to h more Š ucti P , eve th l be e ox , bet lea -dung lud hp 
8 imes posit a few satis nie ts al the col. d things wil nos epep wn 80 ot pere every andata, ad earn to make s will hold th w-house — E ; 
w m w i ; . y, an ndn an ork i r us ap rat eh balls coal 
amina h will rofl parties brings i negl ng under in a Ga e. e W ands i dust ion 
deal tion. As * the anky etiolated pl an d- own . of are os without co taking, that 1 9 8 Pors: WC hen ma dė, gaan, i a 
8 one spring = 1 Nada not | thin a andar handli auli = of which ev nsiderable | Sarden 5 3 rabbin There is n 225 a tht, | 
where plants to od aan i g oad advane ual ex- top oper ights ducts which gtr year Gardeners thi s think a S Pe js nothing tobi a corner 
by Wr he gli — srid Aeneid halt herd’ hich wer of soil and tances, a winter, 3 GENTI 3 assi differently, fed re ell eee 
room fo nvas, o ghtly protec in the y or planted e removed rotten earthed d be cotta t ry 8. „ but we hock plants 
ananem ydir tected in se open air, oh in good ed from up with glass, en Oat hi serfs — A e 
w shes the h nirivan vero w , | others ; bo the ha re tree n places ad saria at ator 
close een they — 8 ; this 8 r oe of ma th yo should 2 fe ndlights, sho 3 GER 1015 where riad 2 a a» th silver 
as the imity to ill be m a make | *°™ nure w be e uld be $2 Ms: Nov ante will ot te 2 i 
y the glass. uch im plants in atoe as neoura pped, will 8 Y ill not under E EA 
pond come into The improved by heey powes off, wand Capi alice hy 0 by the appli 3 K 5 be overshade y 
2 1 5 heir n n Should 8 plica- | your ease, wil weeks an they would struck, las 
— tem or o, e sown i Ww. you will e pr y Wo stra i 
no time * noe — perature eee e N. . young inch n heat : „depe riet uld fro ls, bat iam 
7 r la Pot, i a autum nd u y of th 
the ter facili ould be Jost Fa not yet 5 3 throu 5 m the Ne PLORISTS! 9 will hë n 050 rich pae ine ye a feeds ihe fan ent the — — 
peas dy — vil her „ 1 Nr b andling. ts 8 ane Lon e "ie bert =, 
gree before th ill have th root with | on that fi ngdom duri we s aboot Wace “period. 8 they sh s required È 
rnad ar 8 . aiia | cr mea ee the to take plae nass SED d:t. longer, and their ould wnt 
urysan , part th eof th . r, Y n exhibiti progre ing season e urpose will oe o teed 
go out of the u icularl e pro e whole ork, an nd ions, j Wha it is soil. A depe nd the planis 
bloo fam wi y of Fu pag De rb eye thick s you - upon 
ose to ripen tiir sor winter display, Ae C tion e renden her = aal e ae a e oe alle lads 
D r A e ° - it nch jat 
sale; Gaika 2 foliage, Saha w weeks key rarias flowers to the great featu be gire Guano: Boa annua an did apart, or effect, sow 
wooded ceolarias, Petu — * partial re- vaki experi svory Diak N re, we * a Babs se co i — 
gentle greenhouse our. See ence ke kaa’ a ere. | E omin ed last oad 
P lants, ¢ pas umeas, an ds of Cine- | f net Ar ae 11 9155 w | ake A ret re drt a mel, to — mixed wi * 
„ Shoul d othe hata’ ful ould er ana, AS: Pot th soil 
_ PINERIES.— REIN d now be paar er sof the e 7 ë hooped ov 4 preeaution — — a —— d. atoes, it 
—— with va — Assist 5 DEPARTME protected 1. il not row m h; if is’ er Š he beds nine pons ne geen —— i scintill 
y kind ed liqui e-apples w 0 the rom hai rawn, bu is suffi wit of * ed phans, ru gloria mun N 
m afte: quid m hos florist? ilsto tth cie its d END bi di, 
anure w. ter tho * ` e fruits ar nue ist’s ho rms, whi ey will be ntly high wits ifferent RONS : She cunda, J 
by » water shou 4 begin ; but give © swell- sii to pot off pes. Car a 3 ; — imum rose dolosa r Meldien regina belgies, 
ing a d be o chan eee find to at ever NATIONS so sadly rui ally] its purple v um and arieties, „ Catawbiense úi 
port ay ge ter of | * th ysu AND yru 9 ari wum; ei eves 1 
ion of mado in a tank, colour. Th 4 have obta eir e ree eal E v oppor ni Sn dea ej. ee iow f ponticum 3 anday 
, or and e an tained 1 un 5 vr: atr werin ; fragrans, i 
* clarified mild, ee ed the hae h s Als parce’ your tes hin Now li : varieties; campant and 
al muc se plants „ Though nd winte en bette shaker of ush, We. s good panniatan a 
„ an a „as well gh the sea: red it, r r kmat BEA Me cloth ar pee a time as 
ny of the as Pinks aon has | ather you sen acquainted any for 
tte „ hav been ligh : T T T. We with th 
r and e suff, ast ee, t, or air ernst e name 
scare ered v than 5 say wh 
er varieties ery Microsc what they sh “ae at ails thek 
a 10 n COPES ouid d have h dryness either 
at vou — * ad. „or by any 
san” "We e should no . 
05 
re than dies 


addin 
Soon as th 
off into e liquid h 
a se as b 
as low cond t ecome arse 
as the bo auk, th clear i charco 
ttom of th top of w it should 3 as 
the other vao gids d ad drawn hardly 10 be! 
= ee yd | keep b met wi 
—~ At- | nye Mh out for 1 Ranun 
* to be i ate blo LUSES.— 
mmediately sa ah wont me partie 
ns the anted ; ev advise S| inot 
ery all, | Na ther arti 
a ay that 7 — or P cles 
bor Trh A 
ite ; Salo: 
3, the Ju ani gs te 
per; 7 BW 1,E 
Sweet * ergrean E j 
ale; 5, Philly S 
; 9, i 


tend 
erodas fe 
ng th o stoppi 
e berrie pping and 
8 
gard to e shoot 
the si s and | the 
ze of y are no 
the Danas —Pot € pi : 
j 6 h 
early st ance of 
-struck t 0 
: cuttings ; pepe 41 media ; 6, 
a 
5 put old f Pale Pramanik: M Ton 
yrea angustif w leaved icera al 
ifoli Holl pigena 
9 a * Corn 7i 2 9 
i ; 15, 


size 
pinana 
y Gi th 
an lar a po 2 
. “iin, from the 
greate ge 
e heat 
1 
1 
I 
ver 
the iip f 
e ully you wo 
uld 
trouble, if t you 
rseif an du 


facili 
ty wi 
sec i erg 
shoul or the tabl they ma 
amp. co e s ge shows eason, the * pa aer aw 
mpensa weight of i should b ong, di e | every nigh 
drils ted for b individu e remo diffuse them h 8 t, me if 
to sof the Vine by fhe. gre pie eA and from fr. ave tw if there is an 
ling to ine are size of th numbe will be 100 ost just n 8 rath appearance 
a ; e r m k er D 
are trees for provision berri of useful made ene e . 
the eee j i of N aay uy ul ade with casional sine. Gua n one; pr rost let 
purpose w in its e to en- shee v on ix eserva of the 
„and sh oe its natural ha enable it Fi P droppin gs with w sere tion dener nearest ga 
all frui eee g cial m bitat, ve ish plan —— 88 bi Ebad aaa 1 Eine et Ones oe" 
t-beari t upon th all ca hac but che: a e high “ay manu gate ps sof bis 0 o doea not or we do 
are laterals ne ta oe Ong ed ir went Plant, and out bi dii iali y n ficial. re e Cyclamen Co face.—. ee — such 5 
rice a | as a u sa 
— N 2 9 2 sag 3 y Stop Deiphinions, a, th — > ami pe rennials f best specimens, ASP @ Maw. At 1 
e them wi i s eb | eof ie mus es of b rom] Lan o det At all tim data 
eee ngs pad gaa Ay . 7 Nan Ee st be carefull including. Hollyhocke Many thank erin ps distinct sp imes, and. era Wa 
Raat xs thet the ee „Manure get too dry, e soil, t, asd ei ar uarded ed Wir eo Beards ee ee 1 
id ov th ag seri fi e Th atterin g o peal 5 Biers orr „ l thing, 
Ara etnan, Sal a's Smit hem nd ania de oe e St acy e 
aa : 7 pe f 1 e 
m, if the peri higher — „ enly tte face Ter Haiii — remains of it ths öt ties 7 J — = — a litt Pants aro va daly eta 
ratu it is ibuted, it the yea ear’: ce | Ra oom $ ub. It ce, and they i 
is “ éaga: re ma, fair! State crown s stem: UBARB : may be shall 
i over the 2 the frui a) be al indulged . hit Ned round Pa we 3 e agree peat soon as it ese 
hould en. sy m ulged | — ar heen e 3 with 
o be be s ost us af tke ee 10 my ma, if it be ert. Y ed. It 8 that i 
too th 7 N r the eful March, | Moon’ orticult the week y | Tea: as earl ou opr s colour is your Rat a 
one sh ieall ston dee BA ural d endin T. B * y as yousa d pro equal t 
f fine he thinned aN EP 3 e T. A ing March 22, 1849, of b Ber er tea is pagate it fur al to M ee : 
oa 2 Aa is 8 Satur... 1 21 ma | 8 b petter r quality so black "produced 0 tik 
ag gi z — : Monday 18 g agel peim Max. Min Meas w Apios tat a notice pr from th The teas fro 
cetions, however, n ine at 8 N e | "We bee ng e —— 
isa defi ever, m * and urs. 21 — 822 Psi 4 30 42.5 r e K a 2 M nquired for ande: rini 
2 , — 22 125 9 44.5 NE — E gs 
AND vrata leney on roe — 7 — 30.109 u 1 15 x 00 any leaves, Wat a oa 1 e 
rener = etes „ developed downwards, the Turnip had been min 
ahigh in mpe re 16—Unif 20.22% | 30,145, 4 | 36 303 || sit ‘ 15 a. ards, 80 time whe 2 
night fine we rature of — Ki r 90.148 | 7 | 40.5 S. W. ‘op | Mis s Cas N me obs n the inner 
tempe be ather. 0 — 4- Foggy, ne aie 510 a |e 33 pwards. acle then existed t0 
rature sh ve clea , close — — with ; slight + at night 40. 0 * Pa Yi nE 1 g $ 
ected giyer sie: a ie Ra ert na crear. eng a nies if w W. We should be b 
ted 4 rr cold b Fr in; een sian ho hab p 
should with a re 80 y RDEN, „ and a — N at night. hazy ; fi pru ee sibl appy to aan 
of thi by no a garden impotent ya oided 8 ean adam ov 3 frost: ggy and dam t ed Let t we did not iy discover your meaning. 
a st 15 be i i ee e ear aud frosi = aed letters them, ne m alone till er it was because they 
consi site i lost si lishment, thi everyt 1 ty at nigh E tania t sooner, the flowers h 
give rable with Sight 0 pe hing — Chisw: eg. below $ dendr ely inco we can This is the ve come, 
an at times quantity which is i 25 g week — durin the average. Mu “gy back — out. td * ER 
ge aud Seay of work ö March. EEE Be. ing en r Y. See pa just when e. Old 3 j 
performed ere. bf such agement | fae | ibe | ee No. Beane Fa topping” me . f 
man ed -A jority somew natu ET OE ane | 3 8 EE aad meee TS dod ans of Ake. means ' Jast year 
age strictly i of hat re Sunday Se | arsin | Grea P endr e finge i 
7 up r power y in 8 garde un id: as to Mon. 25 — which it Qua test revailiv: The ons can — 0 
its quart to wait Season, th ly appear- p = PA Rained. | of ntity I g Winds, The same rem — thumb. — 
wever, ers elsew Bis" em ey do tions mu: Wed. x 543 HH 42.5 Zz ; Sand: ark applies with suce 
ma here for not | ust | peur * 43.8 9 25 W you t to en 
; ui be done 1 eave Friday — —+ pr 9 0 DN = aray T söi 5 
. torre short pe oor — 5a 3 8 ‘12 N od 8 eee e Mr Ri Suffolk. | 
2 y tak 2 1 31. 43 5 10 0.3 E sa the sit Shrubs ails Des 
keepin ry m0 9 latest temperatu 11 as 103 4 0 i wx BS or vation tA 0 vi 
€ g — 855 * 1 1 oa ; h 18-inch o you menti Pass 
= RRA 5 ý 5 dei soil on. 
at all lowest 20th, 1915 hen n last Nas e 5 S| Trine iach om i oe 
2 de eee on —— 21612 } the 3 * exhausted it sb 
mibdeg. 163, read, ft mka 4] would answe ady situation i 
erm MIR 0; nsw sho 
yuan hae corm ode ma neera er i hould ti keep it 
aud 7th nurser read the r purpo you m 
Sa, 1836; th men cost n the 
e peat sh te of pl 
— o of the tex lants sb 
is a ter ture of 
only * * 
e among 


* 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


hoi 849.] 


ROT 
TE BELGIAN C 
HI 129 75 YELLOW Lhe DO. 
Here E D0; 


kem lb. iy d. 
DONG D Nun 1 
RED GLOBE DO, TURNIP . 
IMPERIAL 8° P DO. 

s0N’S, 


1 


5 


Bas SHCROFT’S DO. „ 
. YELLOW DO. 


EN ROUND DO... 
GREEN GLOBE DO 
EN NORFOLK 50. 
CLOVER . 


$ 


= 
882 


R 5 5 GRE 

WHITE, R ak WHITE C 

noe GUERS ‘CATTLE PARSNIP - 
6 SEY, CABBAGE AGE 

RYE-GR es 

FINE ITALAN ASS 

pacar P P RENNIAL nYB.GRAS 


2 
EEE 


per Deal 


3 lowest market hee 
| forieultural seed Tier is now ready, an we 
| 2 to send a copy to any one who may wish 
to obtain il. 


Apply to WILLIAM E. RENDLE an 


SEED MER robin eee th. 


The ailway is now open to Plymouth 
Laira G and we now enjoy Railway communica- 
(e ed 0 land and Scotland, and have 
made with Messrs. PICKFORD and Co 
ae delivery of se Goods to every Town i 
| . . instance of overcharge should be 


Carriage, esera, PICKFORD and C 
on the py Mess Pi r kra Exeter, o 
Railways; or to any Town in Dev 
wall ; or to Cork, Dublin, A abe R 


ENJAMIN R. 3 59 much pleasure in 


any Stat dok 
1 85 5 


4 introducing the underme onee of his agri- 
cultural friends and e its confidence 
recommend the Seeds, as he has used — Tease care in his 
_ gelection of the best stocks, the growth of which has been under 
his immediate i 
LONG WHITE BELGIAN CARROT per Ib. 1 0 
LONG RED rr DITTO 5 1 0 
GOLD WURZEL n 
Lance 125.0 GLOBE DITTO 1 
LARG. 5 
SKIRVING’S IMPROVED SW EDE ronNiv Digest Bas 
FINE HOLLOW-CROWN PARSNIP 5 Ne 
LARGE iH CABBA Hoe e226 
— THREE YEARS TRANSPLANTED 
WHITETHORN QUICK, per 1000.. 8 0 


DITTO DITTO BLACKTHORN DITTO > 8 0 
N.B. Every description of Vegetable and Flower Seeds 
Flowering and Evergreen Shrubs, Fruit, and Forest Trees, S 
sith perom, @ WHITE BELGIAN CARROT SEED, 
_JOHNSSTREET NURSERY, COLCHESTER. 


GRASS 
b Ms 080 er PICCADILLY. 


185 


DRUMMOND & “SONS, “Agricultural Mus 
ə Stirling, N.B., will furnish, poy 
Lists of TURNIP and ‘other AGRICULTURAL SEED 
with the exception 
e of carriage in London, 
Liverpool, Hull, i and shang other paste: to which 
there is a direct communication, 
e AAD SERAN GUANO ON SALE, 
NLY ImporTERS, 
TON GIBBS à AND SONS, LONDON; 
WILLIAM JOSEPH MYERS an D CO., LIVERPOOL; 
And by their AREA 
GIBBS, BRIGHT, AND Co., LIVERPOOL and BRISTOL; 
COTESWORTH, POWELL, cs PRYOR, LONDON. 


n »pplication, aed 10 


n what ground can he claim a larger popora of 
his means for this purpose from one farmer than 
0 


employment of a few, well paid, at the expense of 
the rest Where labou are more numerous th 


if they be 
e do the — — of starving some for the benefit 


of others 


To pee rere Ives rece 
using i and spurious ac toed purchasers are reco 
N to — only to dala of established 833 or 760 
the above-named importers, who wi l su pply the article in any 
Vora — their fixed prices, delivering it from the Import 


Warehou 
ND OTHER 


GUANO A 


NURE 
— — — e, of the finest quality, direct from 
NITRATES SODA "AN D POTASH. 


“ e moralist A 17 — the labourer, and 
he farmer too, is m may legislate with 
useful cae n the ne of E which 
xists bet man and sogas whatever be their 
relative stations ; but he no voice in athe deter- 
of 


Şi Ts 
SULPHURIC “AGED AN AND ) COP ROLITE. muner: ys , for instance, which land- 
DA ASH (WIR M DESTROYER). ö 
SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME (made from bone only). eee. rm by 5 ot Ae i Seep tO ploy 
AGRICULTURAL SALT, and all other Manures of known | a certain number of men and pa t a certain 
: value, may be had of weekly e, will fail of i 1 pi but will 
MARK FOTHERGILL, 201 a, Upper Thames-street, onan not fail upon by it 
A Trentiae, 58 Guano, Superphosphate of Lime, &c., 1 be P a EE in- 
— 4 rded o ceipt ot 8 postage stamps. Free to 3 fringement upon the Nm 1888 of personal 
ot Guano, 


CULTURAL SCHOOL, 38, Kennington-lane, London.— 
A sound practical knowledge of Ana lytical and Agricultural 
Chemistry, 1 Surveying, Levelling, Railway Engineer- 


ing, &c., y be obtained in Messrs, NE SRIT's Academy, in 
addition . 5 Pù od modern education, 
Mr. Nessit’s works on Ar ithm etic, Mensuration, Gauging, 


Land Surveying, Engli Parsing, &c., are published by Lona- 
MAN and Co., and may be had of all Booksellers. 
The terms ae E is ool can be had on application either 
personally o ette 
YDRAULIC “ENGINES, WATER RAMS, 88 
n Improved Principles ; Engines worked by Steam 
Hydraulic power, to raise from 1 gallon to 1000 per minute rs 
a height of 500 feet, and from a de 


TURDAY, , MARCH 24, 1849. 


MEETINGS FOR 5 E TWO Fí FOLL OWING tohime pE 
TUESDAY, 
Tuurspay, 
TuEspay, April 
WEDNESDAY, — — 
— — and. 

CLU —March 307 11 benen e Great Oakley, 
y: A Ba ee’ 3: South Devon, Framlin 4: Furness.— 
pril 5: Ottery St. Mary.—April7: Newcastle, aa 


ERE is a great deal which goes among the dis- 
plés of a permei ah ol for blameworthy se 


ESSRS. NESBIT’S CHEMICAL AND AGRI. 7 


5 fore, increase the 
rin nin 


The Zaren Gazette. p 


h uA 

The do exist no doubt by which wages 
may be perar! and they ought to be known. The 
moralist, doubtles ess, possesses an indirect influence 
upon them by the ‘educational machinery he would 
ring to bear upon the lower — and byt the foe 

with them which he would inspire: but 
ay direct method that can ‘ase adopted is that which 
mproved pte ulture pt — 
in Herent ‘the ergy and in 
and for nae 
and the fund out 115 9 it is keien there- 
of its all be pana Vhether 
crease thus 1 shall be 


in m 
Ives, an 


provement, those men mainly are responsible on 


and ability of the tenantry are chiefly due. We have 
i at our 2 have the 


o hesitation in saying t 
prosperity of the labourer very m eir own 
han nor do w itate to ie that their objet 


is not at all likely to be 9 = es 
attempt 15 enforce a highe 
There is this difficulty nete with ‘the p 


i 
i HOMAS GIBBS a the DSMEN TO THE selfis 
Tion — vae hoi or ENGLAND, beg to inform | ness, which i e obedience to the ir reversible meal treatment of a 3 3 1 aa ice pos sible 
: 2 riends that they have now finished cleaning | laws of our * Why shou ae we condemn in our columns, that the general trut * racing a 
of the eas kinds of Grass Seeds, which are now 1 4 t of thos b its various aspects can eldom be pre ted at any 
8 s der to call particular atten- with ES pe oi i one : and casual readers Pauti by a 
iamas OF $ 1. or 8s. a wee e labourer Atiy give the full one time: an ? Beanie? i y 
laying down present H EADOWS and PASTURES for | market value of ih article they receive ; if they did | portio — 5 8 b a lr c th * s 
e proper admins ture of the permanent Clovers, — — not, they could not procur t is, indeed, very . m Neon OL One mas only t a question, 
pote for which thay ue intended. different soils and the pur- | probable that the intrinsic value of the labour ob- iia 700 Magra = 5 * 
tained is farther 5 in such a case by the re- je s in di ig onr Journ ee 1 5 25 of the labourer, or 
3 


RENOVATING MI Prue S for i 8 old Grass nae 


e iber eee garden Jawns and Grass plot 
Clovers, 


ARROTS. 
Large White —— Carrot, 
Large coi NTE ee Red Carrot. 
ZEL 
Yalow on or * Globe, 
Red Globe, and Long Yellow. 


ES, 
wa Cabbag 
‘One thousand headed . Cattle e Cabbage, 
ry stress Green kinds, 


Py 


5 dee or or —— Whi te Mustard, Rape, and 
re and Agricultural, Kitchen Garden, and Flower Seeds. 
Co., the N to the Royal Agricul- 

onc} ot England, corn of Half n moon- street, Piccadilly, 


oms W URAL SEEDS, 
WHALLEY begs to state 
— il be sent OF a iti We 


‘ais ma’ i 
Ad let 
Lonpoy WHEAT SOWING. 


U to 
SUPER PHOSPHATE OF OF 


Importers’ Stores—Fishery 
for 1 egr for — 
* Man 


es 
Phosphates and 


a rand on on n 


m 
and all other ‘kinds of Grass seeds and 


a priori, 
that = 
i 


N MANURE COMPANY beg to a 


The 4885 pei. for labour— 
pa articular instances, when “ke ep 
fraud” involve no question of duty at all: 
they are a simple commercial result, dependent on 
the demand for, and the su 
they are thus the value. e 
discussion by the political sciatica rathe 
moralist : the latter no doubt fin ds appropriate sub- 
em- 


q 
—. 


w 

o discussion 
those considerations 25 constitute the e 
of the moral philoso 


will, perhaps, be more satisfactorily 


188 9219 is so numerous, cans so 
imperfect, that the amount of wag 36 8d. 

a day, when added to the rent, almost entirely | w 
swallows up the gross produce of the . Is the 


7a 


might be quoted in a similar way—where as 
share of the 

on | poorly pai id. 
other districts where wages are h 
ing for argument’s sake that the moralist has any 
ust pretension to interference in the matter at all, 


* We do not say on poorly remunerated labour. 


0 
with advan 


phe 
Our pees rar might easily be demonstrated | 


of the land is spent on on 


of an adher ig 3 to the economical tru 
ck affect i ut the er ent pon sympathy 
which ought e exercise so influence 
over it wil be all the more 2 rin being kept 
within its own province. It has no business to in- 
eas in the adjustment of wages, whieh stihl 
r favour nor convey thanks, but are the simple 
exprestion of the market value of labor at the 


„ a 
rural 3 Wali pei 
it may best be directed, will. p pinar occupy our 
attention. 


Tue attention of a portion of our readers 
tage, dire 


cted to an Advertiseme 


Es E 
igs, and alte , to be held in 

whi ch — wets be extremely useful, as we 
. — and amusing. The limited class of objects 
to own competition, in such a locality, 
am W850 a network of railways, and with no lack of 
r Sabet ae 1955 expe- 

j a successful 


wanting in honourable emulation to perfect their 
ve stock—which is not like ings can 
doubtless will be sent from 1 a distance, to show them 
ht to be, and 


he 
up Ao “the mark. The Royal Agri 8 3 
cannot do otherwise, from its igh p n, th 


w pro 

we a not, will do so in such an e 

as to set a example to other towns and districts. 
The Prize List is both liberal and com 


aoe. 


ane AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


akten of the er 


e offered to the breeders of nthe — 5 
and , which is right, but not to those 
su gonan * pigs and poultry ; an omission 
hic a little hard, if it is not unavoid- 
able, towe in no domestic stock 
does the importance good breeding at pre- 
sent more require to be insisted upon cept 


Something more 


u 

ck, shou 

matter of gentlemanly interest b 

5 and intelligence. e Birm 

Show at year was thronged, a 

yen more inte eresting: * attractive. Hitherto 

would lay a 1 ogg, an 
ed, would do; and it isa 

rl genus that what had so little 


But there is no harm in striving to 
best of the good, = at 8 there is likely 
e nity for fanciers to =e their 
judgment in eg eo e also. nd as the 
gricultural Society, n the multiplicity of 
‘its avocations, is obliged to al this latter branch, 


Birmingham as good and as varied 
a collection of fowls will be ass 8 as would be 
exhibited for competition even in Loni 


ON LAND D DRA INA GE. 
Tr is now and Aha well to talk a little on te 7 55 


to e our facts and Ricans an 
correc 


dener I am right dnd where wrong in 

as to whether we —— 8 furrows 

and w. — North coun var amas 

me, “ Why dress your land. n corduroy 105 whilst our 

‘Essex farmers we: consider it an act of insanity to 

ey the land flat duri 
he 


ert an extensive failure, 
eget ; I am gla d 

t I did ‘so, for it convinced ate liat t Reet of 
h and — on strong 1 lands is corte at 
my oe opie ère wrod I am alii to 
— sw whitch 4 are to be seen in some of 

our . weed but to the stetches about 7 feet 
yf surface, the ote being 

pad is 


2 


n can filter to the 


to havea sda 
8888 


mu . W e ri 3 ~~ 
nearl eo friable'as the rest field. T he di 


d 
e eatable in 8 


og — have turned out so |t 
ivi have 


mes of rural economy pus aba it is ori 
an 


t and bu 


2 pipe l that were hid t 


n Say to wh 


or clea 
h, affording a free whe 
e to the water iat more falls in a given time 
— 


et 
2 Ee 
— 


the per — soil | firs 


3 to their i — to draining, vn between 
a reflect on the folly o 
be brou 


oe 
2o 


e. you 
— — 


me 
farmer will direet his or their attention to the possibility man 
ge 


y simple obstructions | 


yt 
f | disappointment as to mu 


to discover that on each of 


of the questions his experiments tavet ji 

remain still 1 merely because correct inia 

has not been y 
My thou — are: been led into this 


arry intentions g 
appears im it will yt TE te hag j 
hep’ ed for thei gui idance he Mattes , 


ith 1 inch pipes 
at intervals of 30 feet, 40 feet, and 50 feet, the ba 8 
averaging — — t 4 feet, pc n fact 5 feet in * 
and 3 to t as the NN declined, yond drain being 
2 own Tonda to the open ditch, Three years’ observa- 
these drains convinces me that in our very heavy 
ar yoke 
0 


I thin 
y | becoming displaced in 


had oe n to cut ha intersecti 


gratified 
e 


of aS i, T — 5 oe that fe ew Agriculty 
e permit 


s 
| clay soils has beco 


| of shallow pEi "Will le 


A 
7 


such as should be followed ? ? In the hati 1 


é 
1 ‘ 
will at t, and ‘several wa 

have been lately eRe diseetly ATAA m 
ciples that former communications had liia 
for instance, the practice of growing tw 
erally na admitted to be 
only fort 8 . 


succession bas gen 


be consi iste’ 
om 


high appreciation o on she iy papers, and 4 fes dn d 
very general; and yet tif th 
of the Jour Le be viewed as selected toenligh 


the later communications, which are ‘posit 
ad to the 


ipe ti y | Parkes’s earlier views have been 
the clay. Collars in this rail ae uite e e experience. In like manner, the pari 
sary ; of course the careful — of the pipe is of new land is instanced as an advi 
assu rose growing grain ; and yet Sir Humphrey D 
Some six years ago a oe of mine was drained 2 feet ago, and Arthur Young s 
deep with pipes, but when I found the supposed to have shown the mischief of th 


naf e. 
interv 


factory, | re-drained it 6 a fed at wi als, 


100 feet apart or more, a away the — ings which 
1 10 I found did not 


abundantly. 
mention this to prevent the removal of of lon drains, 
I compare 1 during heavy rai 55 a ept 
et filled with water ; if there 


r 205 ie drèit 


running. water was only poured in as fast as the 


, the three upper ones would 


each 2 it ye chee and broke, In hoein an- 


Fold 
— — r of corn 

n very long lengths, w ith 

utility of water furrows in 

is pierce maro 1 nt that water 

and ace velocity hehe would wash into the 

M N the 

counties was given to delay and — the — 

en den and 


rows 


77 oughin a Clover 
up whole and m N in the flat acre, "vik te on | | 
g the 
difference was eckt, and the 
r roots, 


a considerable fall, the | 


v d carry it 
ot 1 at all; this i is exactly what takes place i in land 
„with 


on 
then only one line of however, is a 
nd not of Wan, although 
1e grain May not take the water so quickly as two, 
lit pa enough if it takes it rid sufficiently quick 
ent stagnation, and preserve the — of the 
a The power of soil, to hans t water t 
paT wi — oe times, must vary wit Se pict | 


J. Mechi, Tiptree — — 13. 


AGRICULTURAL cis alga 
‘WHEN ve consider the ocea 
=f 


* 
d is not the fact unacebun 


sey pov ey 
sin ing; but,on the 
hould exist on most 
usbandry. The you A 
take — gored Bs 
ceedings, only finds himself the more 9 —— 
tends his raging or i 
seek ce as to what should E his 
t g a how conflicting will ‘be 
ions he will receive, H 
that he must be careful in selec g his 1 4 


t, and so on gradually till the lowest tap sho dé — wi 


e above the other would . the land quicker 
drain. Youn 


In fer Sai thus of a w aay fits bh o, i 
money is expended, and su uch pains are b esei 


ap form 
8 an agricultural librar y 
n the wea Mice beany Py sive by the 
for the Diffus of Useful 
desirable it is thas some portion 0 
should be so applied. 


new work on t e 


io rove their practice. Her 
—— Old Jewry; London, Jam 


Wiehe ee T CLUBS. 

I wave been pease lately fee 

A denea al discussions on 

I Ro the 85 Professor Hs 
one o 


ped 

— since 
ge — have had some 

me points I a 


sources e agricu i 
helping himself, or else among beet 
all the efforts which he is advised cide with 
my 
ned P rofessor, bu 


suring members i 


r, to oat: only the necessary gaht ot 
e will be told an error in any of — 
endanger bis crop. But alas! when he 
3 ae x 2455 ription of 

* n 1 10 a 
the best time to sow; a shode af 
of seed, &e, ; he v ised | 


121649. THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 187 


S — precautionary measure applying to him by letter, in which case the 8 j — * a enen by a sufficiency of Linseed, fatten 
ted o 


: den with whole class or re but, if I | columns of the — would not have been the “ „ther 

throws throws suspicion upon — nd of these clubs, it is, how can Ia letter which only proves t at Mr. be ae ‘decidedhy | — —— roe: chaff. en eerd 82 borih Fi- 
. ge good ith a rmanent solvency ! Life | prejudiced against — ing. Surely it — waan no | tops, or what not; the better the addition the better É e 
eeure Sowpanies exhibit, and most ustly, the | very great stretch of imagination for a farmer to say, I compound. It certainly would have been much more 
{ hole community ; and, | will give 4 lbs. of Linseed-meal per day to 10 vetoes in | Satisfactory if Mr. Warnes, instead of saying the keep 


greatest suspicion toward 1 hich ease it is onl 
has gone, they subject every | which case it is only necessary to boil it in just so much | of the heifers amounted to ls. 6d. 
Dr ee to a much more suspicious ex- water as will scald 10 bushels of chaff, of whatsoever | six months and 2s. 6d. sft@rwards get yers nthe quan- 


| a 
ring Beg direet f benefit elubs do — tion Lote to ri hT 
amination than the directors ol de Ms ikes, into whic 2 tops or bulbs cut | tity of Linseed, corn, hay, and Tur 3 
the boys paano ani n n be mixed as the feeder thinks well. There is | sumed by them ; but sill h his ini 28 vin 
f: t decëption and much imposition nothing 1 in the — mentio — Each one of vague as Mr. ‘thins tries to make it appear when he 


and 
there is we which are managed by gentlemen, | them is the every-day food of cattle, and when mixed as | Says he should like to know where was the profit 
see rience proves; and if a boy receives 10s. a | described, the avidity with which they eat it shows | feeding these heifers, bought k time in 1847, 5 
: who earns but 3s., 4s., or 58, by hard they like it, and the way they improve on it shows it | adds, i ; a 
— P iness . y y they imp ows it adds, if Mr. Warnes had bought them one day for | 511, 
a strong inducement is held out to him to suits them; besides which, in feeding young beasts, | and sold them the next for 1 ‘ink re w af have bein 
laboar, kind of subterfuge in order to get pay where Barley, Wheat, or straw-chaff is used, I less loss than he really susta ned. This is 3 
pae E elab, and too frequently he aon Boys, | have always found that, if given to them in its| Mr. Warnes says expre rA tti t he blight m just 
— are fretyuently out of work in the winter, ad dry state, mixed with oileake, Beans, or other corn, before Christmas, 1847, and sold 4th June 18, at 191. 
ce a heavy burden on their parents, they will Lat out the cake or corn and leave the chaff in each, when the fifth was worth the same i oney, thus 
wbo therefore ret gen aye * getting a ve manger Mg Consequence of which is eee are | leaving 75 increase of 10. 10s, per ‘head r n Six months” 
allowance from the 28 Pays lire some 2 vane always — a re food; in Mid and making a continual feeding, a . 3d. per week for Linseed, ow 
heard that a poor w tw sh uproar for more food, in w “at ase they are very little | cattle Reber — say that was very good payment red 
and ber family whould Taka tho winter, 5 5 she could —— ly to make much i ment; but when it is Turnips and 4 (in addition to, or allowing for 
aet ber boys oe, the aged se tag — calded — th the Linseed jelly they eat the whole up | Linseed), even i f gi iven ad Mbit, rd for the Wá of 
My own opinion is, on account of the many im- | clean and go to esides which, when such a plan | One of the lot of six, which Mr. Wilkins seems bd on- 
practised on clubs managed by honorary | 1s pursued, the saving in hay (a very e article | Sider (no one can tell w why), a lucky escape, as re of 
„members, few of them are solvent. It is true all things of food) is very UN There is no theory in them might have been expected to ha ve died, 15 is 
satis- | this, nothing but ea i practice, 1 certainly where neither more than less than might happen un er any 
faction ; but the question is, are the clubs solvent? If the system has been tried it has 88 If Mr. mode of treatment, and could have been insured ; 
they are solvent, then the actuary’s tables and calcula- ilkins is determin a to eco * he e of for about 6d. or 7d. in the pound premium. But Mr. 
were erroneous ; for it is well known that the | injured bullocks, let me ask him 450 r seen a ilkins — —— rd prejudice against box Ay com- 
‘amount of money paid for sicknesses each year in lot of young beasts aitposed to all the e inclemenoy of the | pound feeding, o ich it is evident he rstands 
many clùbs has greatly surpassed what it ought to have weather during four ot the co oldest months of the year little or * ; and though at the outset be pledges his 
í But for an illustration of this, let us suppose in an open straw-yard, with no other lair than wet honour and wo most accurate in tatements 
that a provident benefit club consists of 1000 members, | Straw, and little else 3 eas but perhaps a few dirty | it is evident he “tee not redeemed that video, for he 
. calculated his tables that each in- Turnips ; the hair on their backs and their general | broadly asserts that Mr. Warn es must have lost much 
w 


da r 3 | col m „ 
that the amount in one such club was eight days | food, will improve and go by the a0 in condition and from which he rightly inferred that th i 
Byres three-quarters, and that in another it ached ad when he comes out S th e spring? as he | return is the raed r ble. his fa den Tinsi 
days and a half, it is clear that the out oings from the hever seen a bullock tied up by. the neck for the animal increased in value 10/. in the last six months 
former of these would surpass the actuary’s calculations | two or three months, obliged to lie in one po- and not 6/. 1, Mr. eke states ; though how he 
y 1251, or one-fourth more than it ought to have sition, and the state of his 9 EET showing | Came at the figures no one can tell, e certainly not from 
‘been ; and in the latter case by 250/, or one-half more | that he has no Gols but to e his lair in his own | Mr. Warnes's statement. Tt | is really a pity to see a 
han it ought to have been. Now, it is quite certain | excrements? Has he aevi r seen a stream of r igh gentleman of Mr. Wilkins’s talents 01 station d À 

hat many clubs under the management of honorary liquid manure running out of the said straw-yard and | to make such pitiful misrepresentations in order to put 

inly i an believe 


2 answer ear; it is this— such abe he 58 ald t try to W of them exist in a farce, as any one may see rg visits any well-con- 
are called “ the ae 8 all ” igi reer a properly constructed box, the bullock i is ender shelter, | ducted box-feeding establishm Inquirer. Among 
— on this account solely, the i insuring members exer- | 80 that no rain drench es either him or his be e can | the correspondents of the eee Gazette, none 
no wate! ulness over each other; indeed they | go to lair where chooses, which I hav hee ob- have been so voluminous 

3 practised impositions than give informa- served is in the cle abet place (which the appearance of glad to see in a late letter, after so many discursive 
2 their language to = other being like | my beasts will 8 they being as clean as if in a grass | Communications upon the su subject of box-feeding, a | 
‘injure me.” not injure you, neighbour, and do not you | pound), and he can change his position as su uits his con- | definite proposition for discussion. In his last, however, | 
hs ae And, besides, the Te of such clubs | venience ; in Tast his general appearance will show, what | he seems to have abandon ed his argument on this point 

k over a wide extent of country, and this | every one who has tried it is aware of, that 8 8 and to make a ludicrous attack upon Mr. Warnes, &c. 
ee er and inducement for fraud. For an comfort to a certain extent are equiva alent ood, | Passing over this last communication as more suitable 
` reg shat ure locality a member throws him- Should Mr. W. be inclined to indulge i in ridicule, surely | for a philological than an agricultural Journal, let me 
3 ub, he may be ill, or he may not, but very | the man who expense for | just all ude to what he in a former 35 undertook to 
i ed 
] 
{ 


i 0 
pih, — * is no watchful honorary member near e purpose of making manure, and then allows it to be | prove: he asserts that what is cal box-feeding of 
* is neighbours will not injure him, and so washed away by every rain that falls, must offer a better cattle is the anon H a in an unnatural position, is 
gets his pay, right or wrong. am writing this 41 e than the one who takes care that cr one particle he cheapest method of making them fat, nor is it 
actual ence, making pabula for 


AD 


; as I do not consider my shall be . miea it never can n be fro a box; but most mee ai 
> ine than many others, I conclude it under any e tances that man is a aid citizen of | plants. As regards the first particular, I confess I am 
m many other places, the world 25 rendoayonts to find out a better course of | Not anxious to dispute it—the question with 
security an therefore, that, as the permanent | proceeding with any usiness than has hitherto been |is not so much whether he be following Nitare- as 
things 3 of every club should be the chief adopted, and although h the plan may not bs lea, whether he be making money. The farmer wants to 
kitel at, too much suspicious caution can he is entitled at least to the thanks of his fellow-creatures | Make an animal fat, which is an unnatural state: what 
J be used in the admissi embers, and | for making the attempt. The feeding o 5 * locks must does it matter if he resort to unnatural means to attain 
and muc h een of b i 


— E C E EA 


1, 
ed m 
‘that the 8 place = accomplishment of it on a more economieal | existing — and if Mr. W. says it is not, let hi 
— in sickness should never exceed th the general footing. The most nilah view that can be taken of give us the details of a better. I can only say, as regards f 
‘bers, ie weekly, of each class of the insuring m Mr. Wilkins’s letters and proceedings is, that he has | the economical part of the subject, that I have been on f 
. boys earning but 4s., e. — = weekly, should never 75 a properly constructed set of boxes or the a farm where 60 bullocks have been fatting throughout 
fo: +h mo also s Linseed properly mixed, and before he writes another the autumn and winter—that they have all, with the 
—— ink, e ise, — e 7 letter to 8 those Who have both good boxes and exception of one animal, been perfectly 2 and 
admit any y portion onorary fund do use the Linseed in a proper ot he had better | that they have been grazing remarkably well. Judgin 
v management of the ub; 710 iat it should be | accept one of the numerous invitations he has received | from the absorption of the i 
for bonuses for the insuring members, as no and inspect them, and I feel e onfident he will then re- — — bein ing preserved, and undi! ag 
secure which relies upon such a precarious ‘ier ga pee vay the an ta showing those who are rain is the ne aes ia, ts Oe 


HHH 
1 
A as 
ge + i 
3 
2 
BiS 
H 
ore. 
82 5 
ii 


as an inducement to frau ce many all events ts he w ses, the manure does not poss et 
s try to obtain all they can of it, and he is Which is the best evidence “er * comfortable, in a this is the best nitidi of . — pabula for plants. 
— man who manages to handle the well littered well d box, 10 feet square, although Let me advise Mr. Wilkins, if he has any superior 
he may have 3 feet at exellent ee e under him, | method of cattle feeding, to out with it at once, and not 

ich Mr. will 


1 


f 
£ 


® 
3 
o 
® 
2 
2 
‘3 
H 
$ 
2 
4 
87 
E 
ag 
5 


whic know th n 

5 — Correspondence ees he is told, 5 little. C= 1 4 presence there the Agricultural Gazette articles on Box. feeding“ 

eg can possibly have 8 the incommode the animal. A Farmer, March 14.—I containing nothing — practical ee J. ere 

marked te of March 10, without being struck — 5 aed in 9 55 pie of March 10, Mr. bh red Progress of Agriculture. — On meee the 

respect between | droll and very amusing, but at the same time very | ques n of 
ip 


m 
in 
* of Cirencester, and the other from Mr. some Dutch he ifers, also contained in your paper of f | feed them in 1849,” a little repetition 85 75 i 
first, every man of business must | 27th Jan. psen It is ee much to be wished that excusable in pointing out the visible neglect in the cul. | 
sensible, straight-forward, useful statement | Mr. Warnes statement were more precise as to quan- | tivation of the soil, and in re 
keeping beasts, and, as he very justly tities of different so sorts of food given to his cattle ; for it the wants of the island. 
er, the economical mode of making | must be allowed that b pailefal and handcupsful are rather | wisdom in grappling boldly with threatening danger and 
indi i p they | di i upon the shoulders of those 
to adopt the same p n the | are provincial terms, and mean respecti them 
Mr. Wilkins is of no no earthly use, | lons and one quart. Mr. Warnes has repeatedly said 
* nothing but that he — 4 a satirical | that the great advantage of his mode of feeding consists | force on the rising generation. i i 
Mr. Warnes is in some measure to in the great variety of articles which may be made the | about the wealth of the country, t antages of our 
writers ón i agricultire, for not medium of, „conveying the Li nseed, ) Whi ch is the real ane L the — ws — colonies, and the 
y frescat in his statement of f. rothy n i ts; none hese soft 
which information could have — it; he does not exactly sa)! 80, bat very likely 8 will have any effect « 1 on the bird a the airy oF 
‘Mr. Warnes in a direct manner by | he would say that sawdust (if containing nothing in, inju- deter him from raising his humble voice in 


* 


division h ee ** two h 


188 


—— . 
None are so blind as those that won't pe. “aae 
deaf as those t won’t hear.” ba 


to annoy either high ow Í 8 whi ae, 
urted as a m of promoting discussion on a eat 
ject of vital impo: o the * f mankind, and 
e m- 


conscientiously feel themselves deserving in of 
quiet advice. The diference between land cultivated 
an intelligent indus N and the 
—4.— A. the negligent and idle, is pable, 


er ma 3 distinguish "the line ad 
oldings. Let any perso 
take a stroll into the country, keeping within a cireuit 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


[MaRa 9 


Mr. Brandreth Gibbs, Mr. T. C. Hinckes, Mr. Fisher 


Hobbs "nag E. Hussey, Mr. 5 Ms. — Mr. 
. „ M. P.; Mr. E. Ove psle 
Palit Mr. W. Roddam me Sewell, Mir. Sea 
(London), Mr. Slaney, M. P.; r . A. Smith, Mr. 
Stansfield, M.P. ; Mr. fai aa — Mr. Puan: 

Turner, Prof. Way, and Mr. . 


The following new members were elected : 
Thomas, John Ayre, Ditchet, Rose-Ash, Witheridge, Devon 
* — James, 9 Herefordshire 

Hred, Market-Downham, N Norfo lk 
Stabler Walter, Crossland Hall, wena ee Yorkshire 
Cooper, Witlia armingham Park Far xworth, Suffolk 
Marks, Richard , Quainton, Aylesb „Buck 5 


mes of six candidates r election at the next 
e then rea 


h 
meeting were then . 


Susilo RA prera Ma * 9 oe The following provi naga were received : j 
letter from t rts, in reference 
onward 4 a mile y“ ry Dart teasing I 13 o the hydraulic power of underground field-drains, 
at every footste ing the first stile brings him enforced in a work on that subject, dedicated by him to 
Sits re, An p eld sown with Wheat, looking yellow the Society, and recently a ed, of which he trans- 
í the containing a superabund- mitted a copy to the Counci Maró ii 
m 1 and the footway scarcely passable. 2. A letter and plan from Mr. Henry Clayton, illus- 
Little > ensues i a es of the | d for trating what he con e essential improvements, just 
ge additional supply of w , | completed in his ue ef 15 oni ine ; 


properly trim: air of comfort = panicle 
ance about the. * — a super 
onderin e goes 9 — 
it 


of faeing his landlord on the n is neigh- 
„is mounted on 5 Agni ful — is occasionally 
at s when 1 the fox hounds draw 
urit market and fairs, 
‘or Sunin te ones on his farm ; his wife an nd 
respectabl dressed, without 
the affectation of a using their own legs 0 
the th to em to church, and are fully 


the superior tillage of a the 
ing for casualties, By the Eris our rambler 


it with fortitude, evin rage than th 
pg km the foe in the fever of ex excitem ot bo thers | 
‘Seems more common sense in ao pinkat = 
ing approaching calamity, and using every means w ich 
we of averting it, rather than living . = 
in the hope that some turn the ti 
favour, how ele eee 88 by we 
E brow,” and in England he is willing to do 


the opportuni is mela chol 
such breadths of ne dale, pr a to travel 


2 


Sorieties. b 
notat ann SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. 


be 92 a 


and that 1 had eee 
tive means, a further reduction 


re. 
W. C. Spooner, on the e 


A letter from Mr. xten- 
sion of smal 555 N ** his proposed plan for 
arresting the malady. On the motion 

of Mr. Fisher Hobbe, seconded by Mr. Shaw, that com- 
unication was referred to the veterinary committee, 
nh reques ¢ they 8904 report on the subject ,, 


t that 
to the Connell, at their next monthly meeting on the 
3d of a 1, 
RESEN 2 + 4 i 3 from Mr. Wit- 
ney; an md Ww co s work on cottage 
architecture, hater Ý Mr. Shaw on the A ori T sr 


meeting with some remarks on Reig? 
plough, as frat ahi by Mr. Sli ght, 8 tWo-horse mi 
Dick 
5 pri subsoil ploughi 
ciently elt established, vad ale hing, Tiat aera 
W e the oots of both eran a emn ae 


sing — A re iiei soil i int table for thei 


ht be int 


hortly u tho ota 
provements on the subsoil “plo ough, the 
were so groatly reduced in bulk that their e 

ecame more like those of the m 
tached small 1 spee coy 
origivally invented by 
severing, “breaking up, * 
above a given depth, but with 
Amongst th 


t once admit the Maring of. despening the ive 
; butit might 


subsoil teri where a sho 
sole, h used. Had hi 
ander — hes He g 


steadi 


the share, whether flat or ee. 
case of Reid’s, In order to remove thes 
t 


partial raising o 
was also effected, while ‘its partial admixture 9 
847 that effect which there s goo on for i 
o be the proper and legitimate onion of he opi j 
pe e this last niet sn addition to the 
Slight, from further experience, a * erved a 
defect in it. Stones were “liable to be onus = retain 


* 


author. A paper by the Earl of Lovelace on H 
Tais; n ead before the 5 ie Civil Engineers 
w Commissioners, from Mr. 


rs’ Magazine, from the e Proprietors : 
tise on PI enro- Pneumonia, from Mr. ouglas, 
r Neeson 1965 a from 
ing favoured the 
on e 


various communica de to them, and ad- 
journed to Tuesday ii the 27th of March. 


Maxwell, the Secretary, allu 
method of 8 bones for 
9 l ments, w 


— to Mr. Blackhall’s 
h 


el 
2 r and ree 


ure to the 
inch. They still — te their „nn — Tem 
— so — Ey the harder and more solid 
nes bet 


ient to bring bones i 


coarse: 
bone- dust. y through 
r | bruiser, and, satin ough a sieve, which ease | 
oan to the condition Ami the specimen "pelo fore the meet- 
ng, grea any ordinary bone-dust. 
Slight was of opinion that the additional 2 of pul- | so 
verising might e o 58. a ton. Mr. Slight 
— that Mr. 2 proposed boiler was liable to 
objections. 


n pated t them 


any practi 


< 


ore than counterbalanced b 
ttending its per goa “When there 

team- 2 werk at h ressure, the con- 

ing its boiler wi 


to adopt separate vessels for generating and for steam- 
. Anderson eaid the examination 
dl 


com 
on the — of the economy of the 


ert N h Inl PE e it 


cumstance did occur, the inuplersiont . heavier 
and at the same time much les ective, as it then 
mass of accumulated 2 5 before! it. “The remedy for his 
at once obvious—the t span were carried back 

mene front edges came Path er behind the i 
8 65 e 


with that above jis — = 5 desirable mi 
The implemen horse 
depth of 6 inches 1 4 ‘the poltern of th D 
— urrow, and with that depth the draught mas 
e common plough, taking a furrow of 9 inche 
this 3 _ howe ver, he would be 


m im 
ntroduce 
— ordered aide thanks for the | 


HIGHLAND AND AGRICULTURAL, March 7.—Mr. Hall la 


111 the o pitisi e of tbe hand, | 
Mr. Sight was rentas 5 . — that the mere Ems | 
ing was not s 


1 
| 55 action of the instrument. 
whic 


ot the soil and subsoil. 1 


es 
8.8 
E 
S 
+ 
© 
8 7 
pir 
o 
8 8 
KS 
TT 
et 
gË 
0 
BE 
© 
8 8 
8. 
oe 
5 
D 
. 


—— were parte consideration, sugges 
to ad lapt the 72 ugh to his views +9 pri 

* ore extended 
than ym "generally adop 
had been “ene sie sue 
8 land. is 0 

m Mr. sg ht, fited, e g 
ugh fro 25 d board off 


being 


the ait and s 

and under whieh | prac ctic 

| 338 3 pout 
ordered ond plou 


form 


of his (Mr, Diekson's) ow 
— 1 5 it and z pete . Sioda 255 rather 517 
onghs were taking furrows 0 ¢ ine 
—— in depth, andi the „na ploughs spar 


e pe Poco ponga at t ihe abor 
ir 3 9 0 0 7 Oh. for the two hor that 
il ploug etween 64 and 7 pity 46 
Smith's plough zenon four horses. 
of the latter some uncertain! 
was pee eg 59 to 10 cwt., but in t 
— carried round to 12, 253 the actu: 


n above even that. 


the 1 000 worke d, it sf te paie ia 


hil e pa a seemed în 
as well ritar Indeed, e rmer 5 „ 
rience, who saw the ‘work done, prefer — 


The field a media ip lity, wit 8 
* the d 
ubsoil ; d 

35 teet deep and 16 feet thew 


of which was, that Mr. Blackball had greatly und — 
ice 


pied Mr. B 
Mr. French Burke, Capt, 
Mr. Fuller, M.P.; 


overráted the cost of erushing 

: bone-crusher had not more than |” 

. obtain 
Prorehlxd. — The Chairman said tbat e 

ur. "Dickson, of of Saughton Mains, would aria the 


e 
contact with la arge stones ; 
—— * ee it was thrown ap OTIS. 
aft erwards removed. „ of U 


— of 1 ho: orses, weren, the 8 
plough, b 
mically performed ons 


used at — inconvenience 
a 
caring ad His o 


w 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


189 


publicity to what he cons sgh A jo 
little 


are 


depth on ar or ony essential 
rig 


Ai 


t 


nh 
221341 


i 


= 


Ny too 5 a — 

was of the utmost importance; 

ere Rea a depth of active soil, 

wn experience, would say 

— fron making the — eg plough 
by putting in three hor when the 

‘over before winter, this rite be easily 


gareg 
111 
mri! 
11 0 


| 


the question was, are t ere 
advantageous to pg pete at pete | of 
ty 1 in offerin — remarks 
to the fact, that, on many soils, it would 
rofita 8. , = to substitute for subsoiling 
possible depth it was 1 able to turn over the 
the ordinary plough, and whatever extra 

afford to <a no with his horses let it practic- 
way. He (Mr. F.) had subsoiled extensively on 
byt since he had followed the practice of extra 
1 a — deal of the — 
crops of gr 


H 


ii 
21 


9 


i 


E 


the ner in * that im- 


„ by thorough ploughing, it 
ace; this 2 was of some 


e 
É 
$ 
2 


ES 


Feening or Horses. me Sharpe or Dick 
induced to come forward to bray a 
e consequences 5 from inju- 
horses, which, if made known, might 
and much disease a voided. 
t forward the subject now, because at this season 
were anxious to get on with their work, and they 
their — longer in the yoke, an nd after the 
day allowed them, perhaps, an extra pailful of 
The birio was, by nature, always fe ome His 
, — able a, to contain small quanti ities 
was go , disease was at once induced. 


pre 
Lk 


| 


He 


i 


iff 


f 


if 
77 


: 
- 


no case, he would say, —— —— 1 | th 


indigestion and gorging of the stomach, it frequently is 
found that he is affected with this disease, The Sympathy 


which exis known, 
and appears in : grea easure to direct the course of this 
disease ; tlm of the derangement of — 2 


as a 
gestive process, a degree of sympathetic fever is induc 
certain amount of increased irritability of the skin i is 8 
to the extent, in sighs extreme cases, | of a tendency to cht 
ing off the hai 


the greater part of the winter. Our shee, 
— have still a few to lamb; they are fede n 
angold Wurzel, and a li ttle Grass, * will soon be aer ioi 
We shall be for i 


wing Barley and | Oats, and then gettin 
— prepared. 
STIRLINGSHIRE CaRsE FARM, March 1 
the past week has been very suitable for 


g the land intended for 


7.—The weather durin 
out-door labour, é 


ade 
ae ove anala 


me 
s intention, nor was e time, to 

In the e ‘arly stages “i Lex might be mitigated, “it 
not altogether removed, but inflamm 

k 


einari holding it awhile, and then, inclines towards 
ou, pulling him over; he should thus te — quiee, paying 

attention to changing his position, to prevent him chafing 

himself, opening the bowels gently, and giving — — 

ad coolin og medicine. With care, cases ried Tt 2 — yari 
ven all the four hoofs have come off, the hae om- 

pletely recovered as to have been sold sound and without any 

ease tier to be found. 


Rebte 2 
Practical Instruction in the Art of ele Capons. 
E. Dipple, Holywell-street, Stra 
Tus is a little pamp hlet which will help to remove 
ountable rance which exists on a subject 
intimately rege oro with the profitable management o 
poultry, An uet ory chapter is given on the 
general tresmont of fowls ; and chew ork is sufficiently 
illustrated with wood engra avag: 
Siephens’ Book of the Farr Farm. Second Edition, 
Blackwood, Edinbur; 
WE ought before this to have noticed the — 
ance of this valuatle work. second part of i 
has now a red. The matter has baad 


3 
15 


1 


an now 
of horses thes ses. The horses 
de indulged S e servants y ith an 2 a 
was not ona stion 


LS 
i 
ze 


itt 
E 
1 


Se 
Ẹ 


ree for 
d into thes. portions—the 
m more readily, Eve 


fae 


* 
8 
E z 
H 
Bo 


f 
i 


g 
EE 


1 


f 


BE 


f 


pes 


quantity — to take off a edge Of the 
our and a half th 
n recomme 


jE 
15 
i 


H 
a 
75 


EE 
ji 
H 
3 5 
S 
E 
5 


H 
fi 
f 
3 


rses food of an improper de- 
od of mills, husks were sold 
xed and boiled u 


H 
Efe 
8 32 

7 


if 
E 


i 


all 

ed the po eke of 
which he laid on the table. 
large quan utities. He 8 
and 

as large as those on the table piese 
t have been formed in about six 
never tasted the kind til 


F 
E 
a 
E 
825 


E 
115 ; 
H 
H 


p 
a 


hh 


i 
; 


p appen 
re-arranged in a re 8 er form. It forms, as 
a whole, one of the completes 4 works on agriculture 
of which literature can rican. 


Davies’ aoe a Engine: an Experimental Puta ih 
By W iiia Deen, C.E. J. Williams and Co., 141 


Stra 
pern had 80 som 


t b site ma we are ** better — to acquiesce 
in the praise w edge accor it. The 
principle is admirable ; the advantages it possesses over 

common engines, in the less room required, the 


e in first cost, ai the es eer in nen: 


he absence of this that 
densing steam of the oe 
our farm-buildings 8 or 10 Jaraa 
that = ee period great 
made * d greater skill es 
d | merely mechanical 2 on 
putting them together.: 
Calendar of Operations. 
MARCH. 
_„_ DORSET FARM, March 12,—Since last report we have had very 
ou , and work has been got through in a better 


the 


in consequence we have been va ariously employed. W 

1 155 the N of Beans with ac cap italtilth ; ý Oats had have 
gu 

opening “up tunnels which had been filled up with sand and tree 

ater throu: 

and always require to be kept very clean. We =] 

e drai in- T 8 was norega s ina former r 


sea banks, 
also had í th 


in one 


the lambs in gener s bein 

in rb —— enge mner e orses receive per week — 

. and 30 lbs. of Carrots. 
chaff, J. B. 


senior eee 
— ant to Correspondents, 
r “point” read “front,” Th 
g~ 5 * of the bottom of the box. E, 
Buck wHea nquirer. Drill in rows a foot apart 1 bshl. per acre. 
in mid- ‘ay, on any clean sandy so 1 il. 

Farm or 70 Fy rd oF Lick T Lan è 
adopt the 4-course or 5. — 
suffice, and you will have work Page 
such piece- work a as hoei 


Anon. Bers rn you. 


tock a less sum w 
er, next we se a 

Ma. 3 s Box-Fe Glendower, The pig-sties: 
were pees 15 inches deep, mainly in gohan to the possible- 
flow of water from a n pases * yat that level, 

W xperim arded pigs, 

OsIERS : A. Bruce, See page 46. The —— — 4 not not particulary 

like “marshy ” spot, Itlikes a deep sandy 


a 
moist subsoil, 
PEAT CHARCOAL : A Subscriber, A pamphlet 1 3 last. 
year by an Irish engineer : but — 22 e too much on 
the large scale to suit you. The a Risky 5 the 7th vol. 
of the Royal Agricultural Society's 8 e which will be 
useful. The profits of — plan depend on your means of sale, 
ey Sepa 1 are unacquainted. 
mily Man will — e ee angen 
in Ar. Dizon's 8 work o tal P 
To FIX AMMONIA: p — char — sawdust before 
using it to absorb the ige ms ai bape na fix the am- 
farm manu 


he asks for, 


It i is generally — to name a perd bya 
You cannot often nise 


with all r otary engines, it poss ng 
rotary motion directly, are sufficient to justify i 25 ee 
„ especially for agricultural e 

only thing required is mechanical skill in its manufacture. 
It was t refer a noneo 


of 3 its parts, 
1 


reed of 

. e Whe at is a large-berried 2 ; exhi- 

iting so 25 e mich is, Pe rd excusabl 

is probable, it was taken pripen we Furie of luxuriant te, ia 
hee; 


— Er aa . wine” ey!“ 

t page 5, Ma ar. 10, col. e., two lines ow the 
for’ 22 moss of 8800 acres, „ rend moss of 1000 acres.” An 
at pagel 156, col, b., line 19 from top, for ‘* 30 to 40 quarters,” 
per 


Markets, 
COVENT GARDEN, Mar 
market continues to be 


— Pears 
ear. "Nuts in general are- 
Lemons are 


to 

salading are sufficient 
for the demand, doii are plentiful. Cut Flowers con- 
sist — Heaths, 898 — a Roses, Camellias, Gar- 


manne: peed 


te foe w some time yhta Th e ground, which has been very w 
for a long time, has 1 gradually, and is now in very goo — 
working order. ave now nearly finished sowing spring 
* which oo succeeded a double crop of Mangold penton 
and Peas. We bout 9} pecks per acre, drilled 7 inches 
apart, using a drill 4 ite feet wide, whisk requires — putin © 
See over, 8 an average, 6 acres a day; when not sowing ma- 
We hay e got in about 30 acres of our Barley, 


tity than with less. We had part of our Potatoes planted about 
weeks ; and we _ 1 ets of 
two or three p 


eces, but still a — size. I believe that a foe 
chip is contd 1 2 produce a str — root than a small o 
and although it is recommended by some to plant small P 
toes whole, yet these always grow - hy and — 
and have not the benefit of air so well es — stalks more 
openly | planted, and wi Un ot alten su degree of 3 
weather; an 8 
the e) e, I think it is 
but 1 to suppose that te —— eyes “will throw up 
trongest stalk, stronger than would be produced from a 
all Potato, though all its eyes were cut out but one, which 
a busby form, Altho gh 


would prevent it from coming up in a 
om fof dong nd of feeding is with- | no remed 1 been found for the disease of the Potato, a 
g away with such food | eyen the disease itself has not been 2 yet it is — 
N without bad effects; but some that the mons 


— a — cleus 3 the formation 
ne particles arl — a 
which — —— 8 be a 220 

Turnips, 


d — 
ie ee they are also often plan’ 


vigorous we get the pany the better able it will be 
to resist any blight ; and there is o and mistake which we 


denias, Tulips, Hyacinths, Cinerarias, Tro peolums, Fuchsias, 
an 
Pine-apples, per Ib., onds, per peck, 
Grapes, foreign, p. Ib., “eee 10 3s — sweet, per Ib., 2s to 3s 
Strawberries, per oz., Is to 3s | Walnuts, p. 100, Is 6d to 2s 
| Apples, dessert, p beh., 6s to 128 — £ bush., 16s to 2 

— kitchen, p. bsh.,4s to 8s | Nu . P. bush., 20s to 228 

Oranges, per doz., Is to 88 221 100 lbs., 608 maen 


Chestnuts, p. peck, 4 sto 7s 

bb: doz., 3d 8 sieve, Is 3d to 1s d 
Cabbages, p. doz., 3d to 1s p. s 

— red, p. doz., 2s to 68 Onions, p. bunch, 2d to 4d 
Savoys, per doz., 3d to 1s — p. bush., 1s 6d to 
Greens, p. doz. hes, — ish, p. doz., Is 6d to 4s 

to 48 : — P. hf. sieve, 18 6d 
Cauliflowers, p. doz., 2s to 48 to 3s 
Broccoli, white, p. bun., 1s to2s | Shallots, per 1b., 4d to 8d 

— brown, p. bun. W my 3d | Garlic, per 1b., 24 to 8d 
Sorrel, p. hf. sieve, 8d to Artichokes, Je rusalem, p. half. 
Potatoes, per ton, 0 130 sieve, 9d'to 

3 cwt., 58 emer Cab, ý sc., 4d to gd 

— bush., 28 Tarip B wa Cos, do., 9d to Is 6d w 
Turnips, p. doz. bun. , Is to 28 ndive, per score, 1s to 28 
Red ed Beet, per doz., s sio — ush „ P. pottle, 

Radish, p. bdl., 1s alads, p. pun., 2d to 3d 


3 p. 100, 28 6d eos 
Seakal e, p. punnet, 9d to 28 
Rhubarb, p. bundle, 6d to Is 6d 

iW 


e gr 
have long 3 in, of allowing the Potatoes to chimp long 
a. eg were planted, apie thus prag them waste their 
trength to no purpose. bene hes Eto put them in the 
d early, so that 7 ‘nas at eir tod strength to ans 
in mag too ahora toge! 
to 30 i 


„ while an acre ame ber 
wide drills will admit of of atay er and ea 1 
ws how much 


stones off the pastures, these w. 
— us about 
measure; 

more durable. The 


French Beans, pt 286d to 4s tercress, p. doz. un., d to 
Cucumbers, each, Is 6d to 4s wea p. hf. seive,2s to 4s 
— s, per doz., „p. bdle., Is to 1s 6d. 
Celery, p. arp 6d to 1s 3d Marjoram, per 2d 
Radishes, p. 12 hands, 18 pony Mint, green, per bunch, 4d to 8d 
Carrots, p. doz. bun., 38 t 
an Load of 36 Trusses. 
ITHFIELD, March 22, 

3 — Meadow 3 725 ge „ 60s to 95s- 

erior ditto 55 New Clover — - 

—.— soo saa Straw .. 27 
New Ha ie Nex. COOPER. 
UMBERLAND > MARKET, March 22, 

Prime Meadow reed E F] Inferior ... .. . 505 to 846 
Inferior 4 New Clorer — — 
New ew Hay „ ade . eee sor ee 28 Z 33 
Old Clover „„ „„ 88 94 } BAKER, 


and Grass is becoming tiful, especi ter meado : 
which have had 22 * growing durin = 


* 


= 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


THFIELD, X Mowpay, Mare 
We have a very large supply a of Beasts, 19) K demand co 

— smal! ; consequently prices are lower, A few choles 
Scots may have made 3s. but so rarely that we 

eur, cleo aed tae eep ; trade is 
any big Half- ee my si little * 

ce Down 

Tr ie 


rom 
and 56 | 
1 from 


28 


of * ato . e must be written Is. per 
qr. ean te Peas, and . e a a at 
sale, and | barely yap e our quotations 
s, per qr. cheaper,—The top price of Flons is . — a 
2 
M , Mar 23.—Owing to the confine? large 
ivals of foreign Wheat since the 9th inst es have 
8 fully 28. , per qr. i in this market, which — —.— 


Scotland, 200. 

Per st. — d sd 
Best Scots 0 
Ewes & 2d quality 3 1 8 
128 A 


Calves. 5 

Y ( tereee 

Beasts, 3722; 551 ma 7 77 22, re Calves, lis, Pigs, 260. 
x Ma sion 


The 
ti av 
8 agi ai nce; however, 1 8d. is in more 
instances given a a chokes Scot, an 6d, for a very selli 
The number Ls — 32 is is iage toe atime of year, 


5 e, but trade to 
state, Although 8 1 is 28 


= bave been considerable, the 
5 si 400 ** and the latter to 9520 qrs. N 


requirements. Sp corn has been 
, bu 38 eer sue advantage, r for 
which, during the as been in inereased 
request for Ireland, at a slight improvement. 
is inquired. after at 328., Ibraila 30s. — 31s., 
sorts: in proportion Flour has been much n neglecte ted, 
and the town millers have been compelled to reduce the 
i milar. reduction having be 


Gala 
other 


FO 
5 


ning’s 


150 conslets ¢ th i 
The — a. pr limit A Mondag t quotations represen 
the s s transacted, and many remain un- 
sold, There "he very ted, owing to the cold 
weather; 6s. 8d. is an 33 — ha 8 are rather lower. 
From Holland and Gamin we haye 87 Beasts, 430 Sheep, 


and 68 Calves; Basin Scotland, 200, Beasts; and 150 Milch 
Cone: from ha ao 
Best Scots 1 st Long-wools. 3 10 to 4 2 


Ditto Shorn 
Ewes & 2d quality 3 2—3 8 
ae Shorn 
Tce one's! sedi E 
Calre o pn 8 5 4 8 
e —4 8 
ts, 652 ; Sheep and Lambs, 4015 Calves, 195 ; Pigs, 250, 


4to3 8 Ditto Shorn ...., severe 
2—3 € 
3 0 


Sate 

Short, N 
2 quality bayer 2 6— 
Bes and 


ended, and sales of a en 
of m Ace to rela purchasers, on about Monday’s 


rms,—At New York, on the 7th, quotations of Flour | 
i grain were spot igh t to Pee z exportation to this 
ingdom, and prices ther n New Orleans were 


much the same as on thie aringa of the mail of the, 20th. 


LIVERPOOL, FRIDAY, Manon 


by ho u n 
barrel, o change in Oats or Oatmeal, and the deman 
limited, Barley, and Peas without alteration, Beans rath 


ra 
Indian Corn was in fair request, and Yellow, was 


POTATOES. 1 pa 5 : * “<n 19. s dearer, 
t 
* ne liberal, —.— en pes a supply, is equal to our — again 64, per qr. „ SRO 
t Y à 
an the i mpe 8 y — ie — 2 N | WHEAT. | BARLEY OatTs,| RYE. | BEANS. | PEAS, 
3 100s, to 110s, ; 8 708. to 80s. ; ; French Whites, 80s. | Feb. 10. 4551140 29s 30178 3d 278 2d * bed 0d 
Belgian do., 80s o 908. Ri ssssiccea 47 0] 29 8 1 226 9 29 
aE e 
M P d S h . Je 
anes rx Ping for all — iope: “the St the market con. — 1. 45 1/ 29 0 /16 11 26 11 29 P3 | 
published as to Malt and Hops show an increase in the quan- 17. . e elt Fibs Bd 
tity of Malt ide up to October Tosh “inst of 567,807 ꝗrs., as 
compa th 1847, and a 3 acres of Hops in | Aggreg. Aver. | 45 10 | 29 4 {17 226 6 30 5 32 10 
eultivation up to Ist August last which , 8 3 70 extensive grub- Pones on fo 
biag still goi — ous must ultim 5 have a very beneficial effect we = rain, 1 | bid T H SA E 
n the Hop m tuations in the last six weeks’ Corn Averages, 
2 rn. 10. FEB. 17. FRRB. 24. MAR. 3. MAR. 10. MAR. 17 
2 Marcu 19 9.—The su — of English Wheat “475 oa 
by land carriage samples this morning being small, 46 4 = 3 
8 were 2 10 effect a clearance va nearly the 45.11 — e 8 e z 
same ay last. Foreign met a retail in- 45 : side = e ee 
quiry at Shoat late rates.—Barley, with 1 exception 45 1 5 8 ii ee a, aai 
5 _ London. | Liverpool, Wakefield. Boston. Birmingham. 
CURRENT. Mar 2 Mar 19 March 13. | March 20, Mar. 9. Mar 16 Mar 14 Mar 21 March 15. March 22. 
a 70 Ibs. 70 lbs. qr gm, | ar. | gr 62 lbs. 62 Ibs. 
© 8. Give dis. G a, dis. 8.1 8; My 8 8. | . , d, 3, Als. d, 8, d. 
38 1040 6 2 6 816 2 6 7444 (04844 to4 636 to44 36 to44 5 9 6 45 9 6 4 
1—4744—47 |6 7 36 8 7 3)45—52)45—48/40—46/4046 16 1 6 76 2 6 8 
3.4043 6,96 6 6 8/44 46/44 465 — | — 6 0 6 6/6 0 6 6 
46—50/46—5016 9 7 6/6 9 7 6ʃ51 — — — 6 6 86 1 6 8 
7138—56 T 6 . 3 — 133—51 — — 6 , 7 e 0 
si a se T 2 
1 a „ E — 
20 ni ola — . 25l2225l26—28l26—28 25227 23—27 
Ge —32 8—328 27—31ʃ27— want 9 — 
* Br Rar — . 2 20-3 ig ae * 1 ree 
— E 55 * 
5 we. 45 bs... = g * 
2s “as 8 2 var aS — — 20—24.20—24 18—30 18—3 
TTT 
qr. qr. | 
58 35s— 30—3430—3 4 cial 6 
29.—3 0 29 —3ſ⸗üůʃ⁊)— — — 12 -—3 12. 
—34 | 32-34 — ee pala 
31 =M 31 2 99 30—32 226—32 26—32 10—13 11—13 
8 3 —35 35—3 35—36 34—38ʃ34. 2 DN bai 
Pie: 35— 36/34—36 36| 15—16 15—16 
bead: o 27—30 — | 10-13 1013 
40 —42 | 40—42 [3240/32 4p) — |) 
71. 158—81. 71. 1585—87, | — n pa 
ym | oaol — | — | _ | _ | E | 190m 
280 Ibs, | 280 Ibs, . 
4 33—35 87—40 | 37—40 
Glo ter, 
Averages, Imports, 
we LOL 
17 9. i» — 
boom — 
i be — 


tty g 
| eumers continue to purchase cautiously, and anlel: for | 
their i immediat rin 


he abo 
r respectable ae ne in Kent. 


Nin DRUMHEADS FOR 
LAND’s, Wheeler-street, near Godalming 


1000 ; 5000 fi 
Le 1985 or II., crates i e 


JOT IN SHEEP,— fe | 
wardens and Oy faa, ‘of 
thamptonshire, have h 
Veterinary Surgeon, Market 
ful disease, the Rot in Sheep ; and w 
cured every eep we and i 
aithonat in the last stage of the Diem 
season; and we highly recommend . 
satisfy every inquiry. 


QCHOOL FOR GENERAL AND 
“EDUCATION (especial 
WICKHAM MARKE su Folk wet 
by Me of the Ri ght Hon. 
ir 2 * magne ry rm, Laborato 
the chool. For ‘teeta appl 
Market, Suffolk. in to Me 6, Dy 


E pores s GORSE, OR FURZE. —Fi * 
ips — 17 — 1 50 55 Also Fresh Impo 
per rue I AN RYE 

White . — and goer Carr. re 


The above ar —— onfident recom: a 
ee ang mi Berks ne 7: tg pee 
fre 


per c 
e Long Red Ditto 
Cattle PARSNIP 

White Belgian CARROT 


or Cash 
aia on, 


o London ys 
ern Union Lines), all of the finest quality forgr r 
MANGOLD TR „fine lo 7 5 
w ellow hte e and Red Globe 


Ton 
WHITE SILESIAN SUGAR BE BEET ` 
ARROT, large White Belgian 
large green-top red Altringham 
LARGE CATTLE PARSNIP 
TURNIP, Swedes, fine 8 


t Norfolk W White, Green, and Red round, 1 
„ Skirving’s Improv ane Scotch 
„ Fine Green-top Tallow 
0 s Hybrid K 
w Tankard or Scotch Pudding x 
all =s 5 2 4 — the lowest prices, 
LARGE DRUMHEA CA E CABBAGE... ; 
FINE LUCERNE 
GRASSES, 
The best selected varieties, 


mixed fi * 
suited to different descriptions of soils, Havel 
n to the ser ind n 


3 
33 


manure. The prepara 
able for all seasons, rot 


2 addressed, a 
49, Exeter- street, Lisson- ave, L 


TEPRERSON AND. 1 + 5 67 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


* cog 


TO PINE G i 

í ` sal ar to announce for 

orogens reat Room, 38, King-street, 

E 27th March, at 12 for 1 o’clock, 

a gentleman 
T 


15 


== 


n 
in og Plants, Succession, 
5 May be viewed 


Covent- 
ips 3 by W 
Rôi to Pan nama, Nee the State of 
c 
T r n 

have been received, ane T be e 

h are several quite new and very fine 
amongst 155 reparing, 1 55 farther particulars will 


of the C 
SAND GENEN 1850 USE AND 


March, d following days, 0 

* — tng in — the t of the Marchioness 
4 Dowager of e residence, bir. hae 

aerate oe aided on receipt of 1ps.— 


Coton . a Rugby Warwickshire. 


ES. 
EORGE * GHBOUR fi SON- en 

i enone 1 navo Prepared | pA this sonno a 
al wh 5 th p rm 17 cultivating that 
* r of rural econo ney 
rf of Nutt's Collateral” Hiyo, ti 
if le Box 1 és "the Am ateur Bar Hive,” ‘The 
. See either of which the honey 


A Cox, 


ASS FOR PRESB TAT RIE 
ND CO. supply 16-0z. Sheet Glave of | 
Bri a preg zi 3 var 
per Ripe p i for the usua 
feet of which 


ETLEY 4 


4 
EY 
Tr 


ORNAMENTAL WINDOW 
AMES HETLEY and Co., 35, So ho 


1 the Gardeners’ Chron oniala 
E. D W. H. JA ACKSON 1 5 supplying SHEET 
10 Tan VRARE, and CROW S for Horticul- 
tural purposes, at ve TISH AND 


S SH ADES, 
o-square, Tondon, 
n each month, 


are now Aala 
MENTAL GLASS of the 


upply PATE 
GLASS, Thin Glass Slides and 3 for Fe so ad purposes, 
pe gooey tag 2 E 1 ing Glasses, mates, Lists 

rie 
their —— 313, Oxford. rect, London. 


HOMAS MILLINGTON, 87, Bishopsgate pirot 


Without, ra (same side as Eastern Counties Railway 
3 BRIT <r PLATE GLASS, nearly ry inch thick, 
sizes under „ 15. 2d. per foot; — is the 
= st article for 33 and Garden Frames of every de- 
scription, as nothing can break it an ordinary way. Horticul. 
ural Glass, "in cases of 1 20 sant of a 16 oz., 40s, No. 21 oz., 60s.; 
No. 26 Oy ‘Bis. 6d.; No. each, case included. 
Cu t Squares, in 100 foi b nae Sooper: Be; 16 FC ear 
Sizes under in s. by 4 ins 03, 6d 3. Gd. per box 
6 by 4 by 5 ae . io 
7 by by 6 5 te 6 Ai 17 6 40 
8 by 6 5 


Le to the Bees, and may 
anity, —— profit, by — pe timid 
Ad e paper, 
age recei t of 
igh 


4 on Bees” (6th e edition), now published, 
3 mo BEEHIVES. —These Hiv: ade 
3 „the purpose of taking A honey. 
They arious ma- 
to suit —— and may be relied upon 15 practical 
simplicity of construction and easy management 


ae. 
ensure 
2 GLASSES of all sizes, a 
— — A Sheet ot 3 of Bee tives S, 
Kee 


E 


mit PE * 


dealers in Garden 
ol at H. MORRELL’s, 149, Fleet- 


-d Practical r,” by JoHN ni N, 48. 6d. 

0, Great Marylebone-street, 3 . Londo 
I PROVED FL 5K 8 
THESE FLOWER STICKS are of a circular form, thereby 
ne and sharp edges, which are liable to cut and 

plants, They may be had stained brow green 
_ fait the various plants.— To be had of all respectable Nursery- 
— and = arp and Og hes 
5 
London. 


. Samples to be seen at the 5 70 of aus — 


3 FLOWER-POTS AND GARD 
Joux MORTLOCK, are Oxford: street, 8 
4 that he has a arge as t of the abov 
urs, * * pe * arly inspection. 
L CHINA, hoa d EARTHEN. 


articles in various 

ape 
| 254, Or Lang — 8 
Bec PHEASANTR 


KY, B 
Mane special 8 to her er Mast 155 
— ORNAMENTAL WATE 2965 


ge bee and ee i fowls ; ; White 1 


Sree Toh CONSERVAT TORIE 


jee ee a amp GO., 116, “Biehopagate: 
q are sup piyi 16-ounce HEET 
d.t to sid. Ser foot . 

nt Ro igh an P lish 


ed 
. in 100 feet boxes, 


8 eens 
hades for Orn 125 
Lactometers for 
yor a — y Overy arti e 1 sold by the 
orwarded on application. 


3 e, 
tand F 


9 
5 Glass 3 of by Dr. LIND- 
re-arranged. our list of prices — cor- 
ose of the Patentee, to w e 


of the Nobility, ee Gentry, 

irs as manufacture d . . 6d, per foot. 
8 under 8 by 6. 4 ” 
we € amd under 10 by 8 e 
ue 14 by 10 . „ 
7 1} foot .. .. 57 s 
wy, „ ” 
+ » one . 64 33 
. 55 
: » — 74 » 
L 3”? ee gi, 55 


bie at ofan a. —— 
i k 
P: & Co, lig, Bishopa and i bind i oz, to tne iat 
Pa ATENT ROLLED - . 
Soa ihat for Horticul l purpos 


ROU 
—It is no 

kinds 5 Hortic 

1849 


me the 
* Crown Squares 


into 10 due tie 
a i 


popes hite swans, E 
, Egyptian, n Ghie 
. ad Jau ughing Dg geese, en 9 155 
eal, gad abrador, 
e Tigo 1 dun eoe ducks, Tep 
boa * e also Spanish, Cochin China 


Kent-road, Lond 


the the above Gl Glass rate very far superior t 


Tiles, $in., 10g, ; 4 in., 1s, 3d. e "do. Slates } and 
ick. Patent kap Plate Giss. for 7 Warehouses, 
and FI > $in 1 ae a tin., 8 in 
6d. ; K in., 2s. er foo Pe Po 
icial, 2 Tor sisting the quality of of mili 4 tubes, 
fog 


ts. 
- Lamp 
I Put ; White 
6s, per cwt, Linseed Oil, Turpentine, 5 “Colours, 
Varnishes, Brushes, and Tools in every variety, 


wel. | i 


—— mation eireta = 5 at 
is 


191 
— à—ön.ñ:ꝶ ſ!——..r.rv.rñññ—ñ— — Se, 
Bae AND HEALY’S NEW BUILER.—The 


l 


a, proot one char 
burning for 4 "hours w oe 


Smaller boi and y — 180, Plott treet, London. 
ATENT ALKALI COMPANY’S METALLIC 


PAINTS,—Cotours: BLACK anp PURP 
These Paints (the prediais 64 Pat LE-BROWN.— 


— preservative he ap 
Wooden Vessels. It orm 
Stoves. No other Paint 9 in any de 
perties which constitute the great va pe f Metallie 
Paints, Numerous and most s atisfactory poh — kic have 
been forw arded to the Company’s Office, copies of which may 
y, or of the Agents, 

Pri otis the ton, 251. deliv ered in London or Liverpoo! 

3 of packa 


pany, 20, 


opt Mr. G. Sandem: nan, Dundee; 
ford, N Mr. R. S 

Wolver erhampton ; , Neweaste-on- Tyne, 
and Sunder land: Mr. Robert Celana, „e Mr. J 

Fox, neee near Falmouth. 


JOR AOAN 


i NN OD 2 
L2 


all quarters rove this 17 775 to possess — 
perty of withstan ing the severest frost, and N 
superior to every other for hydraulic purposes, such a as building 


and lining of Reservoirs, Cisterns, Baths , Pish-p s, G. For 
either 


HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING 
BY HOT WATER. 

ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF THE CHOICEST PLANTS, 

VINES, &c. 


= N À 
Se SeSe — — E — 
. — SSS 


para D 


125 


sy s ER 7 
R FAH 
== 
ee 


IME 1 
P ; 

=N 

5 — 


WEEKS anp Co., King’s-road, Chile, Horticut- 
è TURAL p Hornouse Bells 
2 ae 


erected on their 
Hothouses, Green Conservato ries, Forcin 


es, 
pigs of which are extensive, and all heated by HO 
in ous fing ata Y akh Aa e mos oni — a: Sees ed . 
ink, “Heatin tilating Bim 
22 of t hese Hothouse ke. fatal i Kar 
n of Stove and Lng Plants which 
are eee in Pouch enor tay quantities that they ar 
t LESS TRAT HALF- DROE 2 Estimates, and 6 


pa iat forwar upon applica 
— UMBER AND — BOXES anp LIGHTS, 
e hundred 1, 2, ane * — and Lights of all 


ted best materials, 
of the kin oe pie Boxe: 
iga Lights from 11. * 
Conservatories, Green 
parts of the kingdom, elhia given to the Nobility, Gentry, 
and the Trade, in most of the counties of f Englan 

AMES Warns Bi 7 se Builder, Claremont-place, Old 


GUANO CHEAPER THAN 
ores GUANO is now 71. ber rie jand of su 


pure.— W. 


are manufa etu 


to th 
j ors seven feet — 5 It is, besides, peculiarly ‘a dapted 
gH Palin 


colour nor paint, It never vegetates, ay will carry tee three 
to four times md) own hody 9 

Manufacturers, J. WHITE Milbank. street, 

Westminster. 

WIRE- WORK, BOr- WATER APPARATUS, 
ENHOUSES, &c, 
x 1 BAKER, MANOR-HOUSE, NANON? 
ACE N@’S-ROAD, CHELSEA, Ma urer 
INVISIBL E WIRE FENCE, to resist — — va ren- 


and Sons, 


dered Rabbit- popi WIRE- WO K in Trainers, Arches for 
Walks, Bordering, Flower Stands, Pheasantries, &c, R- 
TICULTURAL BUILDINGS, pf and Hothouses, Conser- 
vatories, &c. The same heated by HOT-WATER APPARATUS 
on improv economic ent ples. 


7 — , and. Drawings an 
ha me for. the" Trade as usual, f 
Ward’s Cas r Domestic Greenhouses. 
STRONG 11955 HARE AND RABBIT PROOF 
WIRE NETTING 


Estimates 5 


Cuan D D. YOUNG AND COMPANY 1 
X. 


AN p C. YOUNG), 
MANUFACTURERS OF IRON AND WIRE W ORK, &e., 
CASTLE- e DERBY-sSQUARE, LIVERPOOL; 128, Hie GH- 
STREET, EDINBURGH ; and 32, ST, ENOCH-SQUARE, ete 


t 
Agricultural Society of Scotland, held lately at. Inverness, 
where its Efficiency, Great Stren gth, and Exceeding 82 
attracted general attention, and had awarded from the Judges 


will amount to 
wit ith this Net, i 
15 oth: 


the greatest . ie any la 
Hares 
un rol 


pose, stakes driven into 


i ivag FOLLOWING FOF 
Lawes’ Factory, erat np any 
CORN rer rr ses eat 


NURE ie 
S nee TI OR Ini. „ 
SULPAURIC ACID AND COPROLITES $i 


N.B.—PERU VIAN GUANO, from selected cargoes ( 
91. 10s. per ton. SULPHATE OF AMON. &e, 
Office, 69, Kine Wilion sires t, City, Lon on: 
O ORC A GROW 
URBIDGE ax HEALY, 130, Fled-street, re e 
ttention to their method of w 9 Orchidea 
ho warning the Orchidea 


to the House. 


growers 2 — — 8 class 
7 mo = e wen, Farnham Castle. 


er, , Esq., Stratford.’ 


ee 


g, or other existing Fences, W im- 


N 
being cut up into small 


ious to such vermin; 2 
2 ore eet, a required, it forms a most effi- 
ttle expense, for 3 Tang ang Shrubs, 
S., 18.5; 1s, 3d.; and 


. £315 0 


cient 5 
Parces.—18 — high, aad 
1 er lin 


ar 8 ins. vis will cost 
oo yards, : 24 ins. wid 

Do. of sg ards, 30 ins, wide 65 0 

Do. of 100 yards, 36 ins, w 710 0 
f more or less — a web is W 5 WA it would be charged 
at the same rate ard. 


0 0 


.. .. 


2 
4 a’ * pe, of tha 
ihe Treland, for One 


2 Co. cann poravi —— ** of the great 
strength of their Premium Wire Netting than by stating that 
the weight of one of their 24-inch at ii 4 equal to 
yards of an in the market, the s at 
per yard. les for inspection sent free of e 

©. D. . * Oo. manufacture no descri 
and WIRE WORK required prik. 
sent to all parts of 


192 THE 


or 


~~ NEW Se EDLIN 
; @ CALC 
BABY MAUS, Boe SOUARIAS AND ND FANSIES. | F = 
ias = 10 beatiful X — seeding o out, nee Gres week in to the Syro Bepi DOUBT, by Dr. Pra 
PANGIES at 11 122 r ytan Soe iM London 2 aw à R. E. AUG. VON D 
anales, see Gar: or opinions u Seedling gst others in a Vase PEA, which ORP, : 
Farmers Soares Feet ona sachs cis “aaa | omer Mio — — 
e e eee Sag i, Al e airen cringe er He 
` T ceolaria and Pansy l Seed 2a. 6d —— ap- nie ie 6 2 is aap a OE anes in xd &e., | m erate 2 ern k &e., . stock of 
: 8 > r packet. w years RIMSTONE’ ouse rom his arrantaty 
Span-roo DE BY M work s dwarf, become the fav we’s Egyptian stoc romptly ex 
aah = f Greenhouse to be 80 MACHINERY ulsite taste fo ' prolific, both ea ourite Pea of all the or dire ected at 
lating Rid ond, 3 ft. 6 in. high, id, for 201. 20 f Herba r the table. M rly and late, and fron 
ge, fit with . by 9 ft, ry, Highgat r. WILL , and of ex- the 
8 P: ae 9 pii 15 * improve . joublo Venti — in boxes, — roa 7 fadon 1555 — — — oa, of th BY HER 
* n. * 5 1. 0 Work. iato each, i 8 
15 8. 9 in., 4l. Se hg 3 0 4 h = r 19 One- licht r by an outside „with man F ea in a Pamphlet MAJESTY’S ROYAL LET 
J. i ered tothe Hatiw lazed — Sheet Oha ight Pit, 6 ft. by aled with th ‘of W 4 — * aring a . f this wonder, 5 TERS 
Lewi sa — — ay Stations in Londo s, of a large size. . Gi ons, Her tte, signed, and PATEN =: PATE 
Hot mu We n free, To bes HORTICULTU bary, High T HOTHOUS NT, 
orks, Sta et e Sisust. ICHARD READ, RAL IMPROVE 3 ighgate, E DENCH puse WORKS, KING’S.R 
CHARLES T TURN ER te and P st | to her 3 * (by spec his Premises, Meer Fag erected Hotho ae CHELSEA 
offer thi vs the ay — Sak a i cal Garde: ak ty, begs ac al | on t Hothouses to in he attention ses for Sale 
before the public ; ring. ken g noveltie es to | Engi PATEN ** e publie, that peg mateur ce will perceive the — his Pate of Gentlem a 
the sopi flowers oy and 1 wil 2 ly 1 necessary eo seen mp Regine, Nona and § — apr the a f 4 hat, hitherto neta for streng P: Retox | when — 
j, have gained 27 fi are entirely in C. T > remark that | them n and perfect in th „which are now 80 ti ome appearance, k rength, li piesi * 
on, in add ret.class Cerit URNER’S —— to keep in repair d eir action, that h simple in on, the roofs of health ness t , lightness Over any 
101. om to the cates duri 4. | worked with tw uring the t . e will w or pai vend apn l o plant , 
— — at the Royal die — of 204 The the pase * same minin the —— cf any bod P t. May be of 1 a smoo 8 ormed wc da 
Tonsen, $ — eg exbibiter — —— for the ae Recent Circus. 2 only by ws — of IT upina only about — 
* n in where th atent 
ering to the public. se C. T. has been 22 Ganya ANIZED WIRE, GAME NET n and onl be M This PELL 5 “MINERAL BLACK N 
BEAUTY (Tos iA yard, NE TING for all Farming ep bk aay int K P 
crim en), white, ed Per plant.— 2 feet wide, G.— | preventi N oses ; ended for P — 
Ar Oe Masi ged “and tipped — — yews Barns, un of d rot ‘in 1 — ge 
mae tnae NGS isan, yi pd wih ee ee Wagrama We, pare Hen 
* w 2 
and rei nell re an 7 Amys and finely mih expos Pepe ad Railings r ee he ee AY 
frat clan Certifies — exhibition aye eon 1 as a pre 3 For Brick one Wood pi — — U 
. Pigured ir jbtained t — rees, as, d s hi i 
DREADNOUGHT io in the Florist” all pace Pog preserving ti = 75 Walls in ghi ee 
— ert “erims on — 6 of insects. It Tai to the sun, and „it increases the} 
eon tant, — noble 13 * 7 22 petal — Roofing, &c. 5 excellent — the har heat i 
DR, FRAI A Londen $ mae.“ Certific — 8 at 178. 6d. 3 e asks con Tango 
inet in — — shaded carmi ö Without. and Co., 888 eady for u l 
— oliago 31 auon mad — 4 Firer TRE or the above, 116, Bag 
rtificates ` n aw = ES, 
ge arded three TULI — 
= CLARENDON — 2 bright scarlet x 10 te — b u e. fe -GARN 
riet or e or ro 
oe i, (TURNER), a ant — a, — mr: er 8 wide te zed. phe, ong Rod, x ekle, ‘a 2 y Ge mn Jo fn Kise tip and seal a 
flower, and e 1 cep — 2. 2. inch jd. per 4. ron. ridge, at 3d. anufactory, 5, C 
hes been *. at — a ry fu lt : -inch ” arn: * i a 7 5 * stand Er above. 18 pans 5 “yards wide eg ae La 1 
. , 
South London, — — ie es 1 “inch n` strong 8 » p” AA es e tyi hie ike — T. n 
ndon, and Cam $ re Wrams vizes, Royal 2 extra strong , 10 ” A e order. same 
HECTOR (Te amberwell e Slo * 25 see he * 8 SON’S day, a 
— a orth If the up 0 8 11 ” PA OR RIGIN i 
EL N rk m 7 fo per half is a e ağ á INT, 8 AL 
hich has n (Tomm, — ae Ay n € | pe oe square foo, Pi sparro oarse mesh, it will seduce. th wines Governments, spools porous by A gt -CORR 
and —— ve and 45 effec shade d with lila re foot. Patterns bie deg oof n pine for a e price o 0 Companies, m . East India Co ritish ani 
compact and we — and finely fief orm of peta — ag — BA ERWARD a ed post-free. SOE: 3d. The 15 and Clergy. ba Pog the bodies aad 2 
he 
e ee. the lm n | 25; . Hal or Newcastles NARD and BISHOP, Market pce | even Sars prc ‘ron at thi coun a 
Cer lente at Gravesend ; 1a pet rds: Is — — London, Peter. Ter work, as ha of iron, Wo ee A 
y ee dit g e fke sbu 5 mH , ONE PENNY PER S of 60 rk, as has been * ood, Stone, Brick. e prer 
— the best deediing ge ; ditto Pm class QUARE FOOT 0 A in ey by the 33 by the practical pier Cement 
at Wye , , Teddi ord; let hi ae * avour. ous (betwe of upwards 
South Lon yeombe ; dit ogton ; lst ol — societ , and which en 400 and 
go PROCKTE 4. e it thao Royal iS equalled tt 3 have given 1 and paik 
l 0 aoe 5 ee pincer te 8 —— aa 
rtain nk shadi Aan a ‘Pat (9 imonia rs and Pri ight the 
MISS "ANE substanc: e, i! 1000 10 ce <>) 15, Tok will be sent ces, togeth f 
How. e; a little 3750 7282 yee enhouse Y on applicati er with a copya 
tip, N AnD), fancy fi te oe \gents,— All ard, back of on to WALTER Cause 
and high ce 225 Srat. r, purple, with white 115 ee y SUPERPHO „5 
é NS (Tuaxsn e a at e e 5 RRR, and all R tae OF LIME y requested to besent 
class prize k orange, | all side, Soe 1 Í 22 855 Materi oot Crops, when M , the best Manure for 
PRIA raat Cont zeat Oxford + very constant. 0.6 R nes anufactured 
5 (Cortison), bright é 2 e — 3 HUNT respeetfu i from the Genuine 
RINCESS ! fine ends t u y ger 
spill, aod fin Louisa ( eee“. shaded sam — | ot Arva: 1 ee e, — :his jis gerede 
es re mre ER), dull red, good s om, large, | PER — WIRE NETTI arope, 4 — ucing which he e content 
WIND TION (PROCKTER), ri hepa Pee — — NG, TWO- PEN CR 8 „„ . and ail ME 
ai DSOR 0 SAST 2 e ch violet purple, high — at cyte — * * — requires no paint 3 po mi en satisfactorily hat S er = 2 The’ 
form, uncertai NER), dark 10 y eulogised bot e Metropolit st action o in it against the fi t its value i & 
Strong Heal n crimson, shaded, ¢ | acknowledged to oth for its utili an Cattle Sh mit. I its effects tha , nu n this 
thy Pi - It f ged to be th ty and ow, and throwing i n any oth * being 
©, T. bas y VERBE be ready earl i 10 6 7 rib light and ia pest and Mace are ty 8 bed of idee: Siew once into — seat x e plant 
of 1948, * ser T been fortunate in SNAS. gan May. Dama, and cats, be pen against r produ: H ced. not more 8 in j whi se as thus Taies the 
—.— e . dee o recura, poio a the depredaions of | ea nom a Seated anderen Si 4 
Š . ag at next season cor del nm tions of creeping pl nt, it answers ad try; and by iaki iar ae ori e Parise 3 means. 15. ber 
en e . e eee e . eee, A . e 3 
“ iy ntl for 3 toa correctly mh: nd itot | 8 de ed wide; it 9 he ways kept — nd turists that there eat cri Itis necess anure for $ 
BRILLIANT (Yot me Numbe soured ee ~i A 5 pers forwarde sree Oe age i kat n V ary to cation iet 
(Toone r. oyal Purple” ” r ya 30 of ex ny | 1: ri ead of Bon 
r beddi: a), rich bri Pe rple” is | 24 dd. ~~ pense. ite — ei 5 5 Bone and Guano not becaait 
C, being a ve ght scarlet, a rplant.—s. d ” ” ” e 73d ob: g 0s. per ton, price is thei = 
fine 4. per served e indu 
MORNING STAR (Wr ey fre Dioomery and excellent Extra “ou anised do. 1d. per foc sigh 2 BR = ate of i Goprolite w was not in the mari at aaa 
e, attra —4 “brig runnin nperial : m was arket when Supe 
PRIN Ear (Wr „ bright rosy parple, white i — Tanay tod’ vs e ist 3 feet, 1 vei’ Chaos, and Vitriol, hove days were Bove, © 20 
5 ro YT 0 
f H — fine men), white, deep ‘a — Fly-proof ne s, Wire H v dederption per ns epute. But 1 broug e 
itt versal admiratio of the best cherry centre, + * 104. per Covers, Mea ey Lan of | allow 91 and its pr aracter of Superph 
i ook a first-class Certi jon at the 8 ae Tt ex. — trames: G is ries Tot with * Sa! and | ea. a kere evious reputation ae osphate of Lint 
8 “A te. The Gardener: Vices — Sn Trainers Ph gogo bordering, Its eo pleie, in j Win 8 = — y detected 57 its Arete by this ele ri may 
paiser, Ar, amed Princess Alion, was ex „ h; Garden arches, 20s eac maho- | {advise all consumers an avity, which is very dense, as aa 
Arge rerit ade e at Bocingh Dia hsb tin y hy ahia oe and Galvanised sed Tying W 8 n for them Sae I this 3 at 
with a ndividual flow é tru 1 smog € Manufactory of Trio se of paper-ma eecription of Wire. creta selves, and be 
z irs- ch — her ware of those who ban 
—— Se ne la r division ell formed ; it is white, 123 155 3 F karano Eee iai aana 
8 „Kc. ar ` ere should be # 
1 N 3 corolla, de 2 MPROVED HYDRAUL 10 R TAE | superphosphate of Line wi Teepe 
RPL „ can be E, Foun no, Nit me who edients for 
E 3 yg Oe 7 a Ole 3 dy 2 tain Maker, 70 — M, supplied at — . f Soda, Su —.— eo > convenience for s0 
em ood shape, and “pump fine large 6 mere a fal of 2 -an-inch, . trand, Agents are — Acid, and Bone Manat 
n colour than for beddin ne grower, It The sam t can be and other M wanted for th pric 
Plants y by n any other of i — nd is much 9 out the aid of a 2 with- Bone Mills and M where — N e of Superphosphs ate of List 
a 
E iar ith a fine general colli 5 0) ai Water constituti 2 Jet ECHVS ELE s n presen aps | 
2 cE RICAT A LANTS, Sc. ection. | neath. with the head er a Foun USE 1 the preasant y 555 FOR RESENTS 17 
EAS, in — st A ariet 
CARNATIONS. Sel A He too B Engines for dee Leadenhall. pi ob A ted ah et Ladies an and Genen 
11. 10s, per d elections EJ AON I uildings h vells of all and luxuri „London mporiu ory Bleganc 4 
CEDR Us DEOD, pairs, plants to C. TORNE A, 2 per dou, | POPS ö y hot water kinds, Deeds and Se. tn 30. yp agen l may be su the econ 
CHRYSAN dt o A, is, of which are no — s. and | - A newly- —.— Fstimates . ater wheels conn Baths, | leather Sits ressing cases les, 82. 10s. to 15 , writing 
dd RIAS, see MUMS, 1 the bes kinds, in endy. ae I Vapour Bath, ai 5 s 2 | 4 a ; tea chests TE 185 to fl.; 8 0b 5 W 5s. 5. 
wns ea , 
ER MUM 2 APONICA fro ‘conte ae arietes + variety. DISTILLERS 1 RAILWAY OOM ath, ail complete for A | machê work t bronze, and papie * ee Ge na TEIR 
„ con k a er 3 1 
1 we, GLO of fine varie 6d. to Bt. ENING AN ERS, Fine By ENGINES, GAS COME IPES A AND set; work and ables, 6. 10s. 10 55 maché 6s, to T; 4 
UMB PLA AS, the ne PATE pema net ns, 103. t , 10s. to 4l. ; card zeks, 168 W 
Picothes LARPEN TÄ, 1s. LILIU UMS of sorte wed bes Resend eer — VULCANISED INDE aoa papier mache 1 — rio iB 
1 — — ft to ty: 17 { * 3 — —— to stan DIA. RUBBER 5 leather, ladi es’ compe ions in pearl, $% 
KS. „ — ie w wer, u. t are alwa me ha ot Liquor a chess tal ases, chess bi es’ scent cases and toilet 
PN rü eee Cong gine of oil or ese u fezible), and 6 ee e e ee elegant papier gu 
ANSIES. URNER, Is. „ engines, Pum resin : as the vi rature 485 shes 6d. R- beac in eve variety, 
A fine 3 to : nad 20s. per ee perfeotly yt Beer-engines roe id adapted for Fir 4 — nted p> pipi Fugen pla and | ilver — 
oe . Stocks pak 1 and | V „ 6s, 1 * 8 — . is 8 d all pet diad pas iai ry de ee cot A plate, splendid table outlet 
on applicatio egetable Seed 5 r ade all size es | articles, of on of phe gE res, 
Slough. R ication. Pos tive C s, includi 7. Garden to order. s from iman nuhe which onai cutlery. a variety of 8 
Roy ni Massey, Sloe ic — 8 be — tis ter but, wO mplete, T 2 eied with brass taps — alaa to pues 3 rely on his own 7 Boe 8 ad pa Ppr ar 
isterns ` uni 
— —ͤ P — . . — 5 1 ka | Printed by W 55 Li 
9 nized India-rubber Washers 7 don. ea —+ hob — 8 of No 13, U r 
F * 
ickness, for all kinds of “an sizes for zi 2 3 1 in the Cou ee 
Joints, ona other shee paris m oe ahea oy th ee Cn | Middlesex, Printer 5 
Re t of or Middleseh ihe Ci ie 
er purposes, a aa te gare to e Office, No. 5, charles street a 
tok lo. mty, where oll E 
‘sppansssp 70 57 


GARDENERS’ N 
CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


- 


Baruapax, Mancu 24, 1849, 


bop for Amai 

ng, core 12 PLETE YS 
Trelend, e e of, rev. 
a California. 


8 1³³ 
Phosphate beds of tog low r 
chalk 


Pom vowel 5 a ees 

Po.ato planting 187 
Prison 3 Mr. angee 3 201 
Rain at * 194 


: 
— to protect trees ‘on 183 : 
Yuceas, mnt of 3 


SATURDAY, MARCH 31. 


THE FINEST SHOW CARNATIONS, PICOTEES, PINKS, 
panes. p FUCHSIAS, VERBENAS, CINERARIAS, AND 
OUELL à np Co. are now executing orders for the 

above, in strong healthy plants, at the following prices. | 

Also their. ‘superb new Red-edged Picotee, The Gem,” at 


10s. 6d. per p 
TIONS AND PICOTEES. 2 
— pairs of mT ine eh flowers, by name, II. 4s. and 1 


dit ditto ditto 21. — = 3 0 : 
15 pairs of ail and finest first class show flow . 210 
ditto itto ditto ditto. .5 0 


Fine mixed border Carnations, 12s. per dozen pairs. 
PINKS.—Finest first e show varieties, 12s. and 18s, per 
dozen pairs. 
PANSIES. — Finest first class show flowers, 108. and 183. 
per dozen. 
FUCHSIAS.—The newest and most beautiful varieties out, 
95.. wires and 18s. per dozen. 
ERBENAS.—The most select and beautiful of last season, 
aie to 9s, per dozen, 
CINERA yrs fog tw Agen | plants of the best show 
varieties, 9s. to 1 
GLOXINIAS. mal ost “splendid collection of new varieties 
inclut Teuchlerii, Griffithii, &c. ee 2 and ve per doz. 
FLOWER SES DS.— 30 packets "of new and choice kinds, 
per post, free, for 6s.—Great Yarmouth Nu rsery. 


RICAN TREE AND DS. 

cilARLWOOD, SEESI, &., 14, Tavistock- 
row, Corent. garden, London, has recently Eee , and 
now on sale, his — ual 3 of aie priced Cata- 

logues m may be ha e by post, applicatio: 
2 4 use the opportunity of Lalling attention — — exten- 
ection of Flower Seeds, containing all that is new, 
1 or “wales: — so Horticultural and Agricul ural, 


ETY, Regent’ s-park,— 
OF PLANTS, PED WERS, and 
ll be held on Wepnes- 


in the AMERICAN GARDEN, 
Rin 26th, poc . a at2 by clock, 


14 Obtained ák the Gardens by pjes 
5 a, 55. or on the da: 
ys of Eben, 78. 4 
ie ve packets of 30 tickets until May th 


— 


May 5th, | 


i LONDON FLORICULTURAL | 
t Gracious and having been ordered by every Nurserfinan page Gardener 


including rte Seeds for Lawns and Meadows, Mangold Wur 
zels in all varieties ; Turnip Seed, the — 255 E iie vaiti 
2 Darot, White and Yellow, se d Red Altring- 
; Lucerne, Millet, and all other article 


ASS AND e dig 7 PRICED 
TALOGUE, for 1849, of new en cho 
uchsias, Dahlias, Petunias, Ver beni 0 
Gre y —— aud Bedding Plants, may $e had tree by pee 
applicatio 
Seed a ‘Horticultural Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. 


UPERIOR GERMAN ASTER 20 varieties 

see Gardeners’ Chronicle, Septem mber 23d, 1848. 

n. Your Asters reached us in excellent 
oe iy wy flower.” 

8., or 12 PPE ge stamps, post 

anam Harpy and Son, Seed Growers, Malton, Essex. 


YRES’s “GEM OF THE SCARLETS PELAR. 


tions, and w w 
7 of — Royal Botanic Society in se — 
Jul 1 5 now being sent out in strong 

has been 1 — Both in tt in thie Gardeners 
icle, IV also in the Gardeners re’ J 


sc) iber. 
Chron: 


g produ 
h the Royal Adelaide Cup. 


8, Heartsease, ner ies ral 


; wits SOR A CASTES STL (Tuansa), dak . i 


the t, may = af ly be uuced the of the sea 

e 3 n habit it is ‘the cou! terpart of the Globe 145 ote! 
— pa ouor 3 marked Hirs atge oliage), producing with great 
freedom large trusses of pure brilliant scarlet flowers, of excel 

lent form, ea ower having a large white spot * the centre. 
2% It is confidently anticipated that when well known the 

will be given fo fo demand for it wiil be = 7 as for Geicral Tom Thumb. 

„ ‘John Oakey’s 8 Strong plants, 5s. each, or 6s. fi t, with one over in 
members ery two taken by the Trade. Orders from unknown corre- 


from JohN TAYLOR NEVILLE, 


each member to bere 


ROO 8 AND NEW PLANTS. 


i s. per 100, with printed par- 
AWB 


rome es 2 the Rules 


79 Fine Roots of th 
er WARNER, eig 


pond ents will not be atten aded to, unless ,aecompan nied by a 

i Kerns f. order, m WILLIAM PORT 

YBRES, Brooklands Nursery, and 4, Tranquil-place, Blackheath, 

TE TT 
AHLIAS, pot roots, — sorts, named, in gre 

s , 6d. each, or 5s. per dozen, 2 8 


variety 
BALSAM, very double. saved aes a superb collection.. 
2D, 1 from the best 3 of Show 


0 
GERANIUM Tighe 38 Show Flowers 
PIN *. saved by a celebrated 9 from. named Show 
EE, from a euperb collec 
i y Pecak n — rouge * 0 
25 varieties of choice showy — keron tain 50 as 
a ion of flo adie A 
Florist, 82, pofam aonne iA Lo ndon 


(near the Spread Bagio). 
CATALOGUE OF PLANTS, WITH PRICES, FOR THIS 
HOMAS JACKSON anp SON respectfully inform 


nee 
SON, T eh SUPREME.” 
W 


to 60s. each. 
tural 8. 
w 


rae ne Surrey. 
d plan 


bow 


: reference is 
All Is deli Bag m in London, 
Seiten ses parcels vered frve of ge in 


ampstead, are Orchid 


ing two postage stam 
e 


Commander, | 12 


: —— 
yd É, 
ane, Nonsuc * 
t „Rein w, Satirist, 


their a and the Public that their Fes ə of choice 
chidaceous, Stove, Greenhouse, an erbaceous Plants, 
Ornamental Shrubs, T rees, Roses, &. yer 15 now ready, and 
may be obtained on ‘application, gratis ; or by post, by forward- 
Bot ae and Son invite the attention of parties furnishing Con- 
tories, 
Pleats in Collec 
left to 5 


Gree — e., to the following low prices o 
the selection of kinds (all good) being 


50 Choice mpar Stove Plants .£5 Os. Od 
100 gee ba — exclusive of Ericas 7 10 0 
0 Do. do. do. 315 0 
Do. Cape Ericas we ME i 0 
0 Do, do., containing most oft the new sorts 10 0 0 
Do. Cam — 6 5 0 
Do. E 018 0 
os * „ Te kaa 
a bee es had a heavy crop of their improved 
ASICLEAVED KIDNEY POTATOES, — ore 2 ragger 
e , without any appear at 
16s. por bushel ; oe to the trade.— 


ested from unknown correspoudents.— 


March 31, 


10s. 
f CEDRUS DEODARA, 1s. 
R 


nes 64. 


AHLIAS, VERBEN. 
HARLES TURNER has t the following Toveltita to 
minently 


offer this spring. 
— ee publie; ‘anit will oniy. Park that 
owers (an 58 yin C. ae R Bs i 
pred Pine pat 27 first-class Certificates uring th 
n, in additi t A The ve of 
101. * — the gya South London Show, for the best si 
Dahlias t out by exhibitor, having 0. 


TORNER, — es oy those C. T. has 
offering to the public. 
DAHLIA plant.—s, d, 
EAUTY imagen 22 edged * 3 ae deep 
crimson, very attr: 
BEAUTY OF HAST TINGS (BARHAM), white 


and very desir: 


first-cl lane Certificate tes. Figuredin the “Flo rist” for 


February 8 
DREADNOUGHT (CoLLtson), ‘crimson. maroon, petals 
f fine substance aud and are well arranged, 
vet natant, and noble habit. oe S e at 
Salisbury an South London Shows 2 ei Sy 
DR. FRANKLIN N sh ew and 


aded e 
yess me uct in colour, , ite —_ the 3 —— well 
e the folia age it has been awarded three first- 
pe Certificates 10 6 
SARD OF CLAREN morg (TURNER), bright scarlet « orange, 
smooth well a ea p tals, requires 5 of 
alapt fine 5 7 
GRENADIER — deep ruby ‘crimson, very full 
deep flower, and constant, noble, majestic "habit. It 


has been successful at the following open shows, having 
panig first-class Certificates at each : Det vada Royal 
ondon, i en ee ‘North 
ra lt and Camberwell 10 6 
HEC TOR ge pee dark m 6 
MR. SELDON (TURNER), ross “purple, shaded with lilac, 
which 2 a novel and leasing effect; form of peta 
nd flower very good, aud — arranged e ie , being 
compact an evated, flowers fuil and large, very 
constant, as wili be seen N Uowing 7 1st 
class Cer tificate at pte send; Ist prize, s, as 
e best Seediing of the a at 3 “Ist A 
Certificate, ditto; itto Devizes; ditto U: viio ee Ist 
riz the best Seedling, 1847, Teddington ; class 
Certificate a be; ditto 3 oe "Boat 
South London ; North London. Fine 3 


arr: deR ikR 8 blush, with pink 
tal finely formed, and of unusual substance; a little 
Hay Boe ain sees | ee 
MISS JANE (Howanp’, “Yancy flower, purple, with white 
ti : 5 at 
Royal south London and North Dae Shows . 10 
B „ 


medium 
PRINCESS 1018 (FELLOWS), shaded salmon, large, | 
ve! 
107. Y (PROCKTER), dull red, good shape 
VIOLET — ia P rich violet purple, 


2 
E 
2 s 
3 


Bees Health 
a BENAS. N. r i 
eo in securing the uctions 
lent that Wyness’s Princess Ales“? 
xt season than 3 De- 
fiance” hand uring map past ; cone iefers thos who had not an 
opportu unity of seeing Ta 
in the Florist” for Jawu 


C. as bee 
of 1018 ‘and fel e 


g e, attractive and s we 6 
goodie ALICE resse white, deep cherry 
large and fine form f the best cea “eee 
cit ted universal admiration ae the ptt Rea ow, 
y e 
and very 


3 py the 


8 of it t 
Ver 2 e “Princes $S Alico, w 
r, Mr. pong 


ide l flowers well formed; 
aoe pe — ench division ot o corolla, distinct 


and v 
OSEA( Gast M vane sh $ 
K ; fine Morra, Piep 5 purple, fine large 
0 good shape, and ae grower. Itis 
adapted for beddin 5 much deeper r 
fine seral collection. 


ARAUCARIA IMBRICATA A, 38 


LSA, 218. 915 3 NICA ý . 
AZALEAS, in variety. ANEMONE APO s. per 
ARNA TIONS. Selections left to — Em Ue, “a and 
ete 


per dozen pairs, Plants of Saik 
6d. to 203. 


at e in great AE a ii 
ieties. 


arapa 5s. 
R UMS arieties raised by Beek, 
Foster, Hoyle, &c. GLOXINIAS, the newest aw ‘best kinds, 
HER ACEOUS PLANTS. LILI * 


e, or ae eile 
nden 


PICOTEES. Selections 2 ie c. Tuaner, Il. bon and II. 10s 
d plants © whic e 

PINKS. Se paced left to C. TURNER, 9s., 123 „ and 2 per 

dozen pairs onen. 
PANSIES. Selections left to C. TURNER, te, Pand, 203. 

ection of Flower and Vegetable Seeds, 1 

Ime ed 8 A Des e Orders made Catalogue may be 
had on a ade payable at 
Siough. References required — alt: knowa correspon “ald 
Royal Nursery, Slough, Bucks, 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [Manch 3] 
— Ter T MEETING OF GARDENERS FUNS 


194 
y — a small or 
greens Ack TURN Anz one having —— MATEURS OF SU 11 N 
M VERGBEENS, Five yo young | healthy, Byer: 5 — quantity of the oe. Py 4, y. — held pons Fis shmongers’ pom 2 — AND HENT, wih 
E — 2 ato sale per 100 age, price, ade o Jonn Jeres, Narseryman. Novtbain mpton. Castle, on TUESDAY next, at 6 WP ge S tae — 
19,000 Laurels, 2 — 30s. | 1,000 Cedar of Lebanon, 1 GREAT PEOR Tata AND CUCUMBER | form a branch of the Society for che fe Phe 
4 . rt scription, ls, 

10,000 — —— = 15 daksi m 206 — A 2 to 3 feet 5 TILEY begs most respectfully 5 some titling ae member to show any number of fis. num, e f 
ye a p 200 Bays, Ry 338 0 pt h ae 2 — 2 seeds of his unequalled without entrance fees Janes Pie, wœ j 
Biisi pi S * 3 inches — ö « QUEEN” M ON, described in femmes advertisement. in Winans MARESFIELD, NEAR 

per . w —— iol 15 ge in p VICTORY OF BATH ;” soldin packets, nae Sy. uc „ DON- kavaa, al 
1K 21 300 Homeymuc = acket of e . ished 
4.000 — om, "Fee! cate 16 ** Gooseberries = 16 — at EDWARD — General Seed-shop, 16 — ag pe W. general —.— 105 of Stove a Greenhouse ras 
* Ditto urrants + on 16. be The above will be sent postage free on the receipt ot > 2 also descrip 
* % Tree Violets oe Oe e stamps. —2 Oinerarias, Fuchsias, Verbena 
1,000 Ageaba . 1. W un ve Post-office order or t erthe amount — — ̃ santhemums, 405 8 Plants e for Grouping, with a sele 
healthy, young stock, and w HO = wba wan rnamenta , &C.; copies of 
aren share are are weil-root ted, * y ” 2 Seedsm V CAKEBREAD. respectfully calls the rr and will be f, rwar ded to oibre 
atrect, — «Boy — pa : i Gentry to — GRATIS i 
Great Marl a 1 "a N — eg . following — — „White, W. W. and Son chapa —— superb stock of all dhe finest Gier 
frien —— "E 4 Red.: - Rose, fine Red, and Pink. —.— + cultivation ; — 3 are strong and g 
z — = — 222 of f choisr — — 4 ecu s 25 var colour kept separate. are offered coming ints 
vo gpu Fetanias, Ciner — 5 a gg 2 justifi Sai in assurin = carchosers that a ta the plants, 12. —.— — for 1 25 extra fine varieties for dh, 
la now ready, — ean be had on — cd from the first fiye varieties will produce — * — 12 superb ditto, NEW... po superb ditto for... i 


, Remeg raj 5 and n ional plants — mpens 
SURREY. flowers, as he _ = ag fellow seed for years; l ———— ite forcamiaga 
10 ius Svan i, Sa WOKING, SURE _. ome asmo singto. The — — v — — as | z ENUINE SEEDS FOR PRESENT SOWING Soma 
OSEA WATERER offers the following very —— text generally the most s lendid double flowers A packet of t000 selected POTATO SEEDS 


RUSI p ODARA, fine sbi pit from seed, 3 to-4 feet high, | "Vee Falsed.— Wes . ortham tions for sowing, 
CED — 


„OA CONSTRICTOR” MELON, grows 6 ft, Pe 
‘VEGETABLE and FLOWER SEEDS, anz variety 
from 5 to — feet, 1 2. 7 guineas m — OHN BELL, in offering remy following — _— — * Lane 10 varieties, sop parate. 
e magn — Pt nts e dent ommen on * 
ARAUCARTA IMBRICAT A, — vo plants, from 27 7 aus only exhibited at the Norfolk end Roruich Horticultural | Double BALSAMS, Camelia-lowered Wee 
very fine plants, from 3 to 6 fet, Show in September, A obtained the opinion of the EIN NIA ELEGA ANS iea E 
. . 
ht j poin * > wada "|" 100 varieties of Annuals, 10s. 5 ; 50 ditto, 5s, ; winced 
zaženem — 10 6 feet, 1 to 3 guineas each < Bright rosy F Al post free, “on reel lave panne 
7 it t and quite new post free, o or postage: 
PINS DOUGLASII, from eed, ee 3 foet, 154 iby. each. Seek fone sap Dabit "Plants, Ts, 6 same tla ‘|. Appanam Hanpr and Sox, Seed Growers; M rowers, Maldon, Ee. 
to i 2 
N ery d large 
” nete. — —„— per doz, petal, flower well up in the centre, handsome form, and very . 
Rr — 7s, ôd, stant; height 4 to 5 feet. Plants, 7s. 6d; each. 
ad ahem mien sp reer A PES feet, 2 to * en ja SUPERB (Lovren). Bright —.— foe deep poral 
Jl up in the ce andsom > ; 
” * ote? — 3 — del ht, 5 to 4 feet. Plants, 10s. 6d. each. bss A 
” 2 1 — Plante, 106% 12% L Por desoription, oe. —— and ora Journal, ANSDELLS aah AMERICAN 8 
x tember 9, 1849, under the word“ : HARING 
„ CANADENSIS, or Hemlock Spruce, 4 to 5 feet, 21s, — discount onthe above when three plants:of eaeh; r KINS; superior to Swedes or Mangold: Wursebis 
7 to 10 10 feet, 30s: to 60s, per dosen. Arg ordered, Plants ready the firs t week. in May. — coder properties, k for Gatti, — and Pigs, 
BXCELSA, larg — Pars Ba. Gd. to 108, Gd. saci, __Bracondale Horticultural Establishment, Norwich, y. His RoraL HIGHNESS Prince ALBERT, by whose royal com 
s. pe and, — — a Tast ear, w upwards of 20 tons per 
pt PRAZER, pe ea A E a CARLET PELARGONIUM 8.— 20 acre, at the Flemish see and in several d 
tops. 


>. 
— 


— 
4, 
ff 


e: 
PSA E Ht 
ae Hoe aS 


— 


BINDA; or l Be. Gd. to 50, each, R 5 oe 
” 

6d. to 42s. Conway's Royalist,—In Notices Correspondents, „ With or tails, 
a WEBBIANA, 2 to 4 feet, 10s. each, Ga i Ch 4 i ——— —— ——— 
„  GEPHALONICA Ja few of the largest and || the- above “ SCARLET GERANIUM: P C. Your seedling is preparation as a clean fallow, —— 
new American 
c 
t 


— per packet. 
A handsome tsi the trade. a —— Wahlen scarlet ; trusses large, being about 4 inches in Custard Plant, or the — o 
0 E Prices — e n appli- pasar ir Dis and 2 more — ‘half a globe. On the trusses | — 4 — for the Erst time in. this — 
” UGLASII cation. nt, pen The indini ut 36 ful — — and 20 buds, i growth af w 


MACROCARPA to open. vidual fi ct as GANSDELL received a communication expressing 
IRISH YRWS, 6to 9 feet, 7, Gd. to 16s, each f the older varieties: in gene eral appearance it is, royal approbation, Price.1s. achet, Binom 
*,* It often happens vr > 4 ‘neva, riliant, and a and appears to be a free varieties of American Melons, grown last year i in great pet 
aby Ss Sen mer,” — 2 5s. each. The usual discount to the fection at the — Ps Gardens, — are sufticiently. — 
he plants here when — ure in ordinary seasons in the open air, it planted ins 
pag to those at Elyaston, which are the finest in Conway's Rosy 3 Lane dwarf, and a free 3. d. —— price anng — 
See bloomer 2 6| BENJAMIN n. CANT having made arranzements with Mi 
CEDARS OF eee; — — feet, very bushy and hand- * Symmetry — deep salmon colour, habit of 8 begs to offer the above new. ana. color — 
30 per r dozen. * Tom Thumb, distinct and ome vee 6) he will be appy to forward post free, on a 
OB tn fet 108 0s, 6d. to 42s, Conwar's Brompton Hero— one, 4 the best dwarf | reach pa 
00 St. J ohn’s-street N ursery, Colcheste . 


W B DU 8 fe 22 ita) — Tom Thumb’s Master — a ¥ splendid 

site ean * — ne — —— — Hay 6) JAPAN CEDAR OR ORY PTOMERTE IRFONI 
6 Men STANDISH AND NOBLE, N 
$ agshot, 


21. ts,| . — * Tam O’Shanter—a fine bold trusser, in the 
5 uren, 4 to 5 Ey 6d. to 10s, ed. each, way of 1 but larger 
e pia sepa Bs Utos feet, ate. Mircwent’s Ibrahim Pacha—a splendid variety, ‘strong 
le. 6d. è habit, and —— truss * 
„ IRISH UPRIGHT, ‘ — é feet, 3s. êd: to 10s, 6d, Ivart’s Scarlet — much admired for its fine stocky 
90 i t, 15s, to yo habit — i marked horse-shoe leaf 
%% These two last-named J Jan 5 — ought to be planted | Phenomenon—a splendid dwarf free-blooming vasiety, 
as any place a — 4. a — ‘beds as 


6 
which 
6 the following prices: 35. Gd, Per plant, 363. per doa, of: 
by eve 6 Cosi NUDIFLORUYM, a perfectly hardy neat, dmat 
"THUJA WAREANA tthe (the — rng of — Arbor Vitae), Tom Thumb oe * ‘Pink Nosegaßg growing shrab, flow — raie si- the open ar de 
fine plants, 5 to 7 feet, 5s, t Punch — 6 Lompactum 1 9 with or without: the protection of a wall. Undoubsedip ties 
irene — are all gr. pang in the * — — d, are healthy — 3 EF © one of the most beautiful w tex. flareoni e 


bapi jat 8 — 


and handsome specimens; they have never — in pots, and 


Ros 
olin irable. Out of a n a upwards of 30 named varieties, the yellow, 
—1 IRE would also invite attention to his stock | above are chosen as the mosk 3 and desirable, The set — — ast 3 i 1 bg 3 


rs, fi = mberlast. 8 
„ a Te ogra, j| Raia ca sag an asot EIO ELA 10 8 p- —The Beauties of sis plant will eles — 
meena varaja 110 k e foremost rank. of ornamental plants in 
a het Tally Oi and e China- deep — A 
N eee 
— a of AMERICAN e a at the KNAP HILL | Gem ofthe —.— very y dark e a a 
— bee ting — =. we Ney * — — 8 de e arte. series sone of 
— — ers ee. 5 
— best RE Gisan dia, 
AZ ALBA reais Jarga plat 603, per — ‘Bmpress of Scarlets—very miia free. N 
A ira . 185. to 846., for large . and 4— Superb-—bright € crimson, dark e, very fine yi 


HARDY HEATHS; a first-rate idaan A a — Buperb—fine — F 

mot tras tad itn — — e | White eee e 5 
Seen —— any ms — interesting ead bea may Lady 2  Ruseell—rich r ay purple, fine u 
renders thera still more valuable. — * 


—— ‘Is. acre e 


a bua 
fa — — men 
M PLATYOÙ e 1 ens 
ampanulaceou an fro hina oi 
5 ALEA INDICA, 814 ae P SUNNAN letai 


obtain in May last. tbe La 10s, 6d. each, A3 
fine sorts, — Is. to 5s. each, 

CALCEQLARIA “ACNE,” white, ground, with deen 8 
coloured spots, good habit and fine fori, — 
‘Seedlings from the best kinds, at 8s 

—.— following. fiue MELON: 8, ee det. per alse 

a ee Sow blust ‘ - * oe tee ** Se . Imogene, Bagsh reel- „ 
RHODODENDRON Sicc l. ae eae . . clase habit.” + Gf eae 4 GOS LETTUCE, tho bus i el 
aptivation—rose or yellow. eye, v iB en and 
e very 1 7 kagge and to the grace en TODODENDKONS 2225 


e 0 77 
— ay 


8. 
1 
1 
1 
1 
* 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
l 
L 


St. Margaret—crimson, violet. eye, very splendid flower ON 

: al f RHODODENO T 

on Evergreen), 8s. to 122, 6d. per 100. superior variety to — tess. of Newburgh—purple lake, fine-close habit. 1 0 a dance and select toele of, a gen ge 
mee oo 5 bushy plants, 9 inches to 12, 50s. Desirable ~ — 8 R oe ee Plants, Shrnbs and Trees, Seeds, pen — weile 

2 en largar, 1 to feet, Ts, to 10s. per 100, ean Dhari mara a — ne ee — on naa 

” 1 73. to 1 ` g of a collection of 50 named v varieties, native. and. 15 * 

e ARISTATA” i 1 to 14 fo, 20 rp per 100. wn. and, p mored en Ne und last season, Waben Wu JAMES EPPS va seh ple — 

is * i a wi 


A 4 have en l tinet ¥ good . I. 
: ace ony. eae piant fo for these purposes, | set are now —ů— offered for 20s, — — out at = ; the flowing VERBENA — ead: ' 
arieti }) : ing eat p and lis 
es, 68. p. doz, ECLIPSE,—A. profuse-bloomer, — habib: Te. 


to be more exten- | set, choice of purchaser, 123. The best older v. 


RS, 2 — te ? feet, Ts. CALC 
SWE 3 100. , OLARIAS, Per doz, — deseription in 
b 8s. to per 100, per Amplexicanli ate No — 3. ofan c war ast ‘dao ia gand, p ’ — 
UGAL DARNIE foe busty et Be. per Ag per 190, —— at the e Royal Gardens, Kew, for the first — — J. E., Verbena ‘No. 20. K very Breet ut 
. o | Kesh ere cade tec, | Yain; pouka olau deli pe 
An trained A Apples = d and 1 Pons ie 3 cone . ears. 12 ae prey me E pena Rigi This. colour, in dn and a very pres 

trees ma : Price . 

Cherries p 25. „ a er eat 9 | variety, and appears to be — D— — — large W 


e rich asl 
above are all strong z autumn-strucit plants, © | EPESIL.— brilliant, deep a habit dwart and oompa g 
Pen ches 9 Pine trees, 8a, | TROP BOLUM SPECIOSUM.—1 This e a most beautiful and very superior for bedd iog om Wed by Nor 16 a eS a 
each, ; ' * è colour of the flower be we 
— Mt H —— —— in —— and — the last e in April, "as. 6d, 
— nently e — It is well worthy a con- The usual discount to the Trade when three 
> —— e wer garden. 25. 6d, each, A — from piippaa n da ot Terbenam 4s, to 128. 
„ . Odi per doa; All the newest and best kinds of Verbenas 
. 5 2 London, Messrs. Hurst an 
ee reer, a eee Catalogus of Plats ag 
Pansion Fuchsias, Verbenas, &0., ma be na 
| postage stamps,—Maidstone, March 3 


833222 
ty 
E 
2 


delivered free toT 
2 and to the Slough Station on 
— ride of boada Railway. The — “een Bni a ae is within 
parties — — — 
RA o that letters intended f piam Voltaisianum ; 
— ment oar Woking, Dan — eine, inten Knap = sE Friumph da T de Liege 
ursery, n Parir Conwar, Earl’s-court ere, Ola 3 


Bat 


issued to Fellows of the Soci 


i 1 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE t95 
j — =F ETY OF LONDON.— of the Excuequer having 98 y 
5 TUR r ae appointed a Committee to E 
in the re alow days, viz inquire into the state of 2 
June d; WEDNESDAY, the Royal Gardens, the as 
ii 10, ‘athe 1 day on be ne y ommittee directed cer- 3 
in = 
n 


—— = / 


— 


3 and can 


\ 
= oe me oe 


— crimson flower, of 
shape; d escribed by the Editor of 
a“ ep rich e with dark 
Also described b; À = =e 
wary “deep rich crimson, 
| flow 


in ease they should 
—— in need of — 


ectors recom- 


> sars Wil arge and 
be Paling of de bis aa „ as 4 
rosy purple veins; a very pretty 


: ahetimson flower, r; very large, and good 
: toy Crane dose 


— e of b with a good 
1 Sis No. "6 ARRA N * 
1 Florist” as a rich 


Say: 


le, with ‘light ‘throat, S 
1 erimson, with vein: o |new Kitchen Garden at 22 | 
o — . Windsor should oon - 2 
= veins, beautifully. edged structed in lieu of the 3 
bt sane ancient and unproductive am 
1 — nig 1 ber- 
rge ligh urple ‘throat and Lodge, King’s. Lo. 55 
e the ces He Cranbourne, Maestric i 
on each divisi on of the corolla. — The 1 2 nd rogmore The git 
e om. tin places in — 33 
4 ny Nash, bea bright pink; 5 55 showy = remains of gardens which 18 
flower, Bs flower bloomed Inte as not once bel to ' 
forthe opinion of the before. — tioned h hat -h d 1 
. allusion to those — 14 — . 2 4 3 
| appeare y were 2 
“These are fine varieties, rich situated re — N er 
. . by taking the set, or for à distance from each other | 
that the Royal Gardener it 
GETABLE S ~, | could only inspect them by is 
1 . SEEDS of every spending half the day on 2 
* ron a orders taken, to be de- horseback. 0 ie 
a low, damp, ill-drained, ee 
aked area of rath or à 


4. si ing-house, and 
i Sex N ve the crop of Hay; | with dwarf ruinous walls; 
i 1 45 e 1 piten, Roc — 7e a swam 


“ARENT, 


aftin’s-lane, Charing. ancient 


as anbourn worn | 
08a he lon est prices, place of 4 tet with fa | 
Tiy Vinery ; 
and Lodge little better, | 

y 12 i 

| 

f 


ee AND. PANSI 


[bat it included near 
acres, with a good Aa 


onserva- | ` 
| tory attached. And this 
Was all that the resources 


ee die, 
no côn- | had been able to provide 
for the chief W of 


“and to assu ot o of ‘these 
oer o orders, tox | Places would have satisfied 
Maren 31, untney jane, Cannon. the wants of an opulent mer- 
TELLOW BELGIAN i 5 chant, and the annual cost 
CARROT seeps. HORN f their repai nt 


i shopy HOY sq 


WH 4 
enn ends in \ consequence to very considerable sums, 
CARI 


2 of 2a . the Yalow: the Woods and Forests, 
n es of not less than was thought by the 
mageworth, Herts, ae that such dis- 
~ . | tant places were a dead 
le. 5 9 ae the 
N pu 


tiga in in ouch every one 
he 


= m 9 was seen to 
2 S Pim, F 
W zer, found them unproductive ; 
. rag they believed them to be 
Wa. = Srm incurabil vised |' 
Seo, Š tare their abolition, with the 
ee 77 tion of one Vinery at 
— Cumberland Lodge, which 
M, 2 o be erved, 
i because of-a fine old Vine 
gir PM, ther ich was almost a 
Tin * . rival of the well-known 
Vine at Hampton Court; 
band they — — recom: 


mmm 


+ 


ö Ma 
196 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. = Mancn 31, 
S > the the sii have found their 2 to the > di 
the Sove reign. ` The advice was ‘taken, and the j are ‘repr ane nted as deep p reddish brown, and the otherwise the soil will * „ — 
rose colo i uence, s a general rule at thi 
present Garden at Frogmore is ult. i * anc 10 all i in beautiful condition, and will add bon . en die bates this stage, 
in nen this g a Pio e T some * species to our rich collections. | keep the plants from flagging. They will sufficient iy 
Par e eee a al r tk or * we incline to attach the — at rt- y much assisted by being gently syringed 
> 0 o the Brasavola, Trichopilia, and — and evenings. About the end of May or —_ 
1 jod Si sft S 3 — es t of June the plants which vp shifted in the — 
Workmen's * We can find no mere space at present for notes | be supposed to be again well established in thei 
Boundary walls and ate genes works 9,332 6 11 3 Wa an INDLERS ; but must beg our readers t take | and growing freely ; if so, occasional waterings 428 
For oak-pale fence to 587 6 0 ae of thei g r hi and to par liquid manure will ver much encourage a bead 
and south-west sides ... to us the doubtful 8 which they may | action, and a them to form trusses of flows, 
Works in erection of * Pias. receive. Our waming a e Dukinfield-hall | in autumn. t to old plants, with their pots pretty f 
pry are e - 17,906 16 8) gentleman was just in tim pat capital ra 2 3 li pid manure may i pee a with ani 
k . Ce the 
Metallic hot and Ses 8,921 16 ad been received from bim the vay sas on whic answers n very good purpose is, a g arii | 
Hot-water for heating the our notice reached his intended vict o p's dung, through: A 
Vineries, pe : we ask who and what Mr. Hex r B — applied to the plants must pass * — 
r — agree 3,908 13 3 pri is, of Ham 2 * who wants — wt eiea Ér abeg w 1 
& = * 40,000 White o MOSES perties of the dung he the — 3 — 
w Castle, — — 1745 5 3 Wanixe, Esq., Railway W e . near evaporation in n some degree, will so — 1. 
nected with the beg 2 Pris ; Bolto. oots nearest the surface, that the — at the end ofa 
— beds, and 307 12 1 ae few weeks will gen ng be found matted by them, 
superinte dene 8 APHNE ODO revails of placing 
Plane and oe 2 — xiety manifested now w-a-days for the their Daphnes out of doors, with other greenhoup 
£44,962 6 1 possession or of pianis that are * new, — I fear 244. plants, during summe But means be at 
wud se sold Kensin ton Garden pea the effect of ing rae hand of protecting them from the direct rays of the m 
d 4 2 te 30 WII E The me of our r oe plants, 2 which * . ar e|on the hottest days — summer, and heavy drenching 
groun is ‘atate! i ; w ones are not to be oo t affecting | rains in autumn, no advantage will be gained b 
also been a sum 3 20 received ic old new ones seven, 4 to be indifferent, to subjects ofthe | ing such a course ; as they will be found * — 
materials and other resources, re rons the cost of most recent introducti am o ttention | much better in a pit, where shading can be easily ap 
the Frogmore Garden to 41,5397. 8s. 11d. Ita Nr to some old and eaer $ but — negleeted pl lied when necessary, taking the lights off in the eves 
1 the Commissioners of Wo lants. Ji the. Satna gto give the pani the o bene of of the — 
ests have expended 24, 7s. 9d. i One of this description I believe is the Daphne | putting them o the morning, be 
— my other items, in order to render the | odora, whose claims on our notice in point of useful- | gets too powerful; mee tting plenty of air 2 
old Kensington Garden ground worth 30587 are perhaps second to none. Flowering at a time day, to make the plants stiff and short jointed, 
per annum; and that sum must therefore be added | when flowers are so much wanted to enliven our con in hot, dry weather, red spider should make ip 
i i ine | servatories, or for decorating the drawing-room, renders | appearance upon the leaves, let them be well syringeù 
ta the cost of Frogmore, if the capita — as a good a great acquisition aware that with clean water, applied with considerable force, early — 
pa 1 vale n eae npag ret . ar rer d plants might ag be enumerated, with whose | in the afternoon f shutting them up close for the nigh, 
—4.— epee = iie ee audy D rance this be set in competition; to keep a moist atmosphere about them; 
en stan but among all the winter r flowering plants with which I | the operation for su and tht 
Annual ‘linet — eee —. could not point out me that | pest will soon ar. i 
representing, at 20 ar 2 d more amply repay the labours of the cultivator. | By a little poe paki — r, their flowering seasm 
y — N .. £61,160 0 0 And yet if you go into any place where the uc- ma foe ve -=z onged. This is to be effected 
tion of ne ts is much attended to, the chances are | by setting aside 8 and giving only s- 
Cost ol Kensington im- you do not it at all ; if you ou do, instead of it oc- | partial supply of pean 3 or about six mn 
provements... £24,089 7 9 ying inent place es, you will | check rapid growth, 22 the ripening and 
h i r 
Cost of Frogmore generally find it pushed into some out of the way | act on them in some measure as a season of rest. Ths 
Garden e ee 8 Sapp 16 3 corner of the greenhouse, as if it were an object | induce them, by giving copious » ee weak liquid 
f care or attention, In nure, to mak a 


In this manner has 
of her Majes ty one af the 
most perfect, e in Baio, of its kind ; 
ing a certain beauty of appearance and some provision 
for rerai mi the most admirable arrangements | 
for ect of its institution, namely the 
ts and | 


sickly looking leaves on the top of 1 
d loo 


kin ing altogether as if it w 


~ ‘Give me air or I shall die.” But under the influence 


su ihe Roy al tables wi 
y os Which skill can 
siy we can only space for a sketch of 
—— che elevation and correspon ground plan of 
range of hothouses ; “Hereafter r we shall 
— to supply a short, account of the details 
of the establishme: 


al 
high} 


ig t 
a year, from the re of Sarat ‘il the foe of 


; t remem orcing, 
except the — erer by a Ks 
To th encourage che cultivation of 


this ms old pl t, I would (in the absence of anything 
bette i mod 


A rresu and apinn 88 8 o 
Onchips has been ju A* ved from M 


preserved p opie t thi end 
o this a m 

which we — the following particu 

plants have been negra ‘ang a very |* 

difficult and rous journey with Indians, 

In an 


at that t g, 
in ots, — want of light and 2 be drawn 
8 This ought to be prevented by 


removing 


off. 
f the plants were 8 y attended to the previo > 
— r, and the points of the shoots pinched ou 


n 
fallen owers have quite 


t specimens, 0 


e dri ne a in wers 
Th Spirits, and draw ings of the — plants. 


ar as Ae and another 


g Crease muel 
times thr 


will do well for ie and some- 


I 

t is a mixture ot li ht t 
mat 3 and well decomposed — 
uantities, together with 


wih what i indipepa e to 


rere al 


Sue | 


Maal inage, 


‘Soest ranger the escape of superfluous 
having been shifted and arran 

fs weep resin them for a short time a little close than 

usual, till the anae oi y hold of the fresh 


5 YTA- y 
eS a a 
pi 


af-mould, in — | 


soil; 
till 


2 want 


n Fe brua 


the mar Ba whi 
close 


plants may also 


Park, Arundel. 


of the sae pag 


which: a 


he as, ar 7 — is easily rena Y 
d in sandy peat, an 


p 
ch, from ory 
aroun gos that place 
g shoots ; 


fro mr eras’ 

8 of — ne i , handsome, 5 plan 
ained 

- | Laurel r Serada “Laurel, a a | placing 


—— ͤ — 
NOTES OF A TRAVELLER, — 1 


ravin 


ich 
ng Kong hills. 111 2 pte the centre 
of Vie * and is 


ntifal, but 3 the 5 its beauty 


ear the bottom 
are ne seen on the 


ne of the 


2 


thereby 


g them, l $ 
that recon- 


3 


ee 


in Oe 
Viewed — 
* 


T 


i 


ty is 


WE 


= 
rE 


1 
ue 


THE 


GARDENERS’ CHRONIC 


LE. 197 


f Mr. JI. Nab, of Edin- | 


f 1 be sueceeded most ad- | sen 
rd of M 


gh oor eg cs 
d who is 


55 Ete may expect ‘this 
15 ie fg w ahai Mr. Beale’s was to 


pay 


north-eastern parts of the empire, all of a 5 were 
nt hom the Horticultural So “ern 
ago, ane w. hich have been published in the 5 
the Society and in our e botanical periodicals. 
noticed amongst them ber of my old discoveries 
in the th, such as — one japonica, Forsythia vi- 
ridi rtuni, se rthia chrysantha 
Viburnum plicatum and macroe 

onica, &e. It is a curi 


r two } cant 
of 


have — cut, and you will —. done all that you 
o get a remunerating erop. 


Home Correspondence. 
Scotch e othe and Foresters.—You 
“N. A. D. P? seem i 


av 
i- | spondent = lo 7 — are other reasons, besides 


the Lothi 
of tke alleged “infront, his 
more.” e occurre: 


induce men 


of mild — 
rom 3 


arising from defeat, whic 
draw none 


tions to with 


. | likely than the desire to avoid 8 the lists widi 


ts of Glass or hothouses, you are aware, e rather RE amg e and ignorant oppone Ido not happen 
rapidly with but little care, its foliage eee a in the south of China, „= ularly in Hong n your e eee letters, or to know 
it soon affor ee- g, where it is hot enough I can assure you without i bad farming he referred. I 
rays of the sun, which se of th d. Cool — or structures for r lived in Scotland, or had practice in Scotch agri- 
in a place Hong | shading from the sun and keeping off the dashing rain, | culture, but I h ad frequent opportunities of com- 
tree (Ficus elastica), also| are much more requisite, and it is one of t ng the management of land and stoc he ral 
in the same part of the garden, but it Braine has structed, It is placed at the end of a | counties of Scotland and England, and have been accus- 
the species just noticed. n | pretty terrace, a little below the level of the upp ed to consider the farmi ich I seen in 
observed several spe- | flower-garde lants which are newl tted, or the Lothians, Roxburgh, and Berwickshire, equal at 
elia Azedarach), | others which ” is eee. to keep a long time in bloom, least to that of any er of ties of the same 
vigo rather liable to have | are e, ed h mats are used — covering the | extent in England. Yielding, however, to the superior 
high winds, owing to the brittle | roof, and e 55 awn on or off at pleasure. It judgment of“ D. P.,“ and admit the correct- 
is defeet renders it of less value 1 8 — purpose for which it was designed. ness of his as to “the inferiority of Scotch to 
čani otherwise would be, particularly to a place so hen it is remembered that Hong Kong six years | English farming,” I take the liberty to suggest to him, 
Hong Kong is. | ago wa bat a barren island, with only a few buts upon | that he would confer a gre our upon us English 
found all round the world it, inhabited by pirates fish ; ur- | agriculturists—that he would let us into a secret well 
tu I believe it exists | prising that so soon a Jarge town should rise u the rth knowing—by inform us ho inferi 
I have seen it Gibr , | shores o es mae containing many houses like palaces; | managers in Scotland oe to be able to pay 3l, 4l., 
and i e and gardens, too, eager this, which enliven and statute acre for land which woul not bring 
ar north as the beautify the kilas M d gre atly to the © recreation, urposes, in 


cceeding as. well as could 

considering the short time they have been 
i et with on the 

orth of 


w large, but in a young 
green foliage ai to the ground, 
walk apr the terrace on r 
lt turns to igh 


e hand of a first- ed some sacks of York Regents from a dealer 
o the eee Tondon, on whom I can rely, that all he 1 
des flourish well in an of a change ma ade sure. These I shall plan 
uty will well Sins any care | Sets, having at least two eyes ia each, in rows æ 
apart, an nt fro h other 9 inches in the ro 
bank, which 8 gs =; The general principle that every plant should ha 
ouse stauds, t ther ong room to grow, without pone | its neighbour of sun 
o avenue, which is called the “ Orchid |a he to 


in Silene x umero ts have proved e the soil for 

sloping bank, | Potatoes e ye not "contain rich and exciting manures ; 

specimens of Bam but anything w t- mechanically, by — it 
nias, Oleanders nd open, e y recommended, 


wg pren 


id ont 1 2 On the north side, Mr. 
the f. e Wer nen i in the 


„obtain it as far a 


0 
considerable 


d add 
comfort, and health of the inhabitants. R 


Cortina a ee a 
ALL GAR 


ence 
s| Potato PLA — Notwithstanding all that has been 
said of the adva 


nta f autumn or veg 4 spring pmi 
ing 3 he 38 it will be found that i out 
of 1 . 3 


gardens, * nae 3 this work, on account 
of their space being o ied urnips, Broccoli, &c. ; 
and in thousands of instances the planting of Potatoes 
has yet to confess sea he case wit 


e done. 

myself, with the prepn of the e; 

got in early in an 

experience with this important 8 1 

relate the steps I take in my own garden t 

far as I can, a — rea * In connection w 

the “i deed rem the n Chronicle 

should be 

Articles, exhibited the results of extensive inquiries on 

the subject, 

The first — to be done is to get good seed, rag to 
s possible from the scene of acti In 

my pa yae oy igh ee — are related m 

remotely ; and in r to be fre 


arks, mbers of the 
onsu alted, whi ch — recently, i in Leading | England ; 


ss |e 
e from the i injurious 
‘ge 


more than half e rent, for r mere farm 
an e 


is 
nglish markets, entirely out of the scale. 
satisfied, 1 wit 
culture in England, 
po of pre-eminence, 


rom which to 


oie eof ene ~~ a? onip on our yei 
; “A new bra 


neighbours of the nch,” he 


Now 


8 of this pr in and in” ile — 
ure 


d, which seems to hav 
basis, can ret pe ame with advantage by planting at 


faggo 2 ro I should like a — 
all these 


n tate: tae 


uced in as ie i e 5 the one 
in th As to the 


his strictures o if J 

reset 0 on 

of rural economy, it is is kely that f that few persons w ould be 

fou nd t A take the trouble ert them. is should 

very much like ae Selim raised on the subject 

of * ae e ;” if you can eg oe sp p pte ents 

to pa e attention to this, as a means of successful 
cultivation, “it would be most Pl tarts nt—a 80 cotchman 


EA, is sa 
was ree as an exemple of En glich a8 


tity of old thatch 5 it were available, and then 
terials mixed a woul unexception- | w 
ose parts of the garden will of course 
t year. The fork 
the only tool necessary except in sandy soils. To 
work with a spade, except for the 33 of Pontes 4 
arb ing 


toes than a 1 one, and it is 


that we owe i disease to the habit of using Keita 


etty certain | case 


D. 

wil ill learn in time, that ignorant peop! e are to be found 

in all eountri sad and that there is no lack of them even 

in his Satay 
C 


A Piepel of Helsto 


beyond an average. 
this lonan natura à is, that the bunc * was pare 
m growing from of the Ora rangi a 
1 Helse Jan. 31, [What a pity that this curious 
not be explained in Pei terms, 80 
be 2 fo r purposes of scien 
Ha : Ay c.—" A Devoniaa’s” observations 


u — ee row be no delay in planting, 
as the dan the crop increases with every week of 
Plant real y good tubers in the way we 


r 


on the i ibility of raising some new of hardy 
crossing the Europeia ipai with the 


Heaths, by 


natives of the “Capewar re well w aha of — 1 
some of our gardeners who hw 


0 — gt 
In localities where peat 
no t than the 
or other of which is exter in 
of March to the e 


THE 


of 


GARDENERS’ 


he Court 


‘his letters returned ; Te tag 
piracies Pina r Play 
al remedy 


some on have been just t 
which . will, no doubt, 


le legal offen is different, 


nen 
ve ree Poeony, on my lawn, 
sane about 200 blossoms. 


on 
rafters. All the — 5 
house, show a ——— of growth which is quite con- 


— Wri hve slab bent has 


„ bear 
in the house am? An 
H. Curtis and Co, — syed near Bristol 
leaves sont were u y large, especially a 
— — of health.) 

The Ripening N Pears.—1I = 
j — A Me rringfon (Part I 


the Journal of the Herdern Soci 


dealers have got to keep 
— formerly ; but, — a — gong I have through- 
ught samples of nearly all the 


1 
a sae. a “ike vers ‘of the 
stov 


ra Oh ace Sed he 


"oy Piracy of 
has reached a 
acht to be more 


rete ublications.— 


Almanack of 7 5 
but before he had got 1 


the point specifi fied b 
thie — 


[ The 
t chis require 
— 


a very d 


p — iv., of 


be being 
H hi 


d | Bognor, Feb. 12, 
eee Pim omologieal Arch 
article on 


we want oa 8 


pa seek foi 
reserve 


gar 
and will receive direction sto prese 
m ure 


| cesses o 
u 


place i 
| doubt that 1 ai 
t m 
country prov ided the b 8. (othe 


— This 
and Nes sor kingdom ; ~l our * 


— dee — . — me 
odge, Mare A 
‘alls.— About — — ince, 


eted, as an expe 


favourable to t 
annexed 


three courses 
tion, and then e 

a thickness * 186 
tapers 


23 — : 
an adva 


L 


if 
— woth rth no 
osts, my plan is 


to hang 9 more or less, a 
e inch projection fre — 


was protected, while 
kind of 
ristol. 


Rain. —The following statement may be 
correct : 


—** 


— 


„ b . 04 


— 


ities fro 


ect, in your last n 
from_a — 


Il fault compared 
‘The G ault co p 7 1584 3 


ices, which wees to the class of offences for which 


from the Ist of Teona to 21 = a ag, 


CHRONICLE. 


, and for 


travel the same road. The. 
but the moral offence is B 


1 75 Constitution of —— 3 9 se — Breed. 
bt we have (as kened 


t in 80 
— the gn of ion 


rom ex- 


is this — to be attri- | 


E. Sander 
I had 


hans “to build a paT of garden-wall, which 1s con 


riment, in a 
* 1 


als 
struction is cheaper than the 
ordinary mode of building; it is 


the absence 
tage; and 


er's = be 


an | Correct, the p 
I Protesting trate 3 pae To ward a — 
T 


— 
allowin 
the height 
‘0 — in 


of 
alf was injured by the ot 
frost Side sereens and blinds i in front failed, when the | į 
coping mentioned 


F. P., 
relied on as 


res and 
teward 00 Gardener, Bersted Lodge, 


egology.—In pemen A * the 


an 


/in the chair. 


are 
ish on. Of te to ti 
hat —— Zia Violet P (Viola t — „Nn . apiy 0 a a ait a 


[Marcu 31, 


in — — —— — 


piaco by one of my — 
ing to 

Hes whieh T "had 
ne Mr. their rates from 


— ‘Hee Api the Appel 


„The names of . 


s: Pea Kin e’s “tener — 
W. 6. Wen Neitlecombe, 5r 


Sorieties. 


Borantcat or Lonpon, Mar 


estimating high r 
onditious 145 
k 


care 
be ‘to this r erence to 
r ed, 


. i was 


0 
and physiological relations of the different 
Abeordingiy he would take that as the true exanp 
a 


® 


up inches vat which but, — Hoa 
it continues —.— for about : 
rti 


party ; — — would clear the f. ‘of its ery 
18 a f. 


people in 


tion, a Mast n test in doubifal 
_ | Ought to be exposed to many Grace 


kinds of e 


N 


he relative 


Bebiews. 
se Praciical rnp 54 — Colonisation Itt. 
By Wm. Bridges. re. Pamphlet, 
Duodecim, or 1 — Bee ogres an 
raphy. Newb 325 pp. 
“Tris impossible that Ireland can E on in Se 
Such are the os of eve ry secon nd man 
mes ; 
is phrase 


mouth upon ehm — — 
en 
would con pon Lord 5 — the authority ofaa 


d break up the whole surface of ‘the land 
introdue moreel- 


ce 
ment, a uggests turning the 3 1 
and selling it to Londoners for t 

Mr. Bridges 3 baa È a0 5 


home colonies ; 
ews with im ipe 
His proposa al isto f to Tida in Freland. — 1955. 

college on the model of Sandhurst, 

of the sons of ikae obility 

(say) 22, on 


disturban. à 
whiċh —— — knowledge of ‘the bet 
all others they want most, m viernes È 
a very much shorter- space 
‘would take to accomplish so 
other wa 

t Taking, then, Sandhurst for bs 
i that our ed e 


model, 


e Scare ee e 


uu eps then an estate of 10008 
land to be rented in à spot to 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONI 


CLE. 


West — Irelan 
3 3 and the e N Bades 


hing in solitary banish- 
wn walls every adva: 
recincts 


: sie ‘ristli bayon A 
od i ol the gw 3 military dene 
json would be necessar 


serjeant nearest i * 
i 20 6. use of the fatigue jacket, “ — 
a would give an 
ral 


be ‘respec 


excellent, and may aid other 


T entertain n o doubt that —— 
i 18 i which any solid advantage gl 
isto replant the distressed 8 


> rights, in some aa = was 

Banter the House of “Commo ns by Sir 
N the land from its present 
ue ith ‘a new 


‘appears to be quite 
‘might be worked out, with the 
= to the immense irain of osm 
without costing the Imperial Tre ury 


YO- 
exhibiting the "the best 


F guai 3 
"of tan formed 


— dents introdueed 
a A i ety eased, | August 1826, when -M Ors 
0 practical | some ied unopen 


t in — i 
an is 


tan. (the aber part), 


l 3 whose yearly avera 
With ab deur the: 


stenee of this magnificent tree, was at ‘Rangoon, in 
ward favoured me —— 


e 
n belonging ‘to a —— — — 
fesor only — in it 3 uck me rkab 
as a tree about 20 fee thigh “abounding í in — ee 
—— pea of ‘rich Geranium-coloured blosso 
n lance-shaped leaves 


e 
e Tn his re report of a journ 
— undertaken in March 1827, Dr. Wa lich again 
hour I came to 


herstia nobilis. Th 
the people here nor ‘at Martaban could give me any 


n pa 1 
in ‘the retarding house, and it 


brought to the hammer the other day by 
n | fruitin 


©'| Succession Queen plan 
T, all 


J rd 
- of the first attempts at 8 a pitais the 


| imda aa sh 


Europe. It measures 25 fee circumference, 6 feet 


ese 
placed 
is ho oped. it may 
be kept back for the May exhibition at t Chiswick. It is 


th, in — lo 
and are now beginning to start into growt 


Miscellaneous. 
ne Plants.—About 500 Pine plants were 
r. Steve 
and realised a craig ee 5 lots of 6 plants of 
ing tor 158. h 


‘similar lots 


Sale of P 


cession i 

Envilles, 13s. ; similar Otaheites, 

e above oh, 20 in each lot, from 10s. to 16s., and 
lo 


st means of introducing the 


8 Hite: aa uit mon 
Seas 
asa pen 1683 the 
establishments in n Old California, and 
nown that the coun 


Eu- 


for the first dire it wa 
n 


iting t antages and t 


a 
trious me un e adva 
leir first W But the general 23 wi 


ag ya it was generally s supposed that their a accounts 
were and that they were privately. bee - 
mach treasure. A visitador ae Satis . was sent 
i though he could 


ican friars of Mexico 


the peninsula w 


long upon their n the aridsand, heat ; 
they abhorred all species of clothing, and their only re- 
ligion was a se eaused the tremble 
at the idea of three divinities, belonging to three dif- 
ferent tribes, and which divinities were themselves sup- 
ed to feel a mortal hatred, and to mee 5 war 
against each other. ndeterred by ble con- 


‘dition both of human and of vegetable 1 nature, these mis- 
made 


is ros e fo oa of this 
— — radi istance 
with its > baaa 5 whieh ‘ape earr — S 

F. 


ge Wh whi — layers 
in M 


Lawre 


3 2 — a a h and h it, it is 8. 
0 od 


grace 
as will be see 
the vexillum (a) in two wings (5) tipped wich yellow; ; 


fru 
‘distinct account of its native sage 25 — but chere 
doubt that i —— ngs to 


pim — a offerings * 
to, ** 


imen in Mrs. f 
's garden is — 93 fect in height, 39 Teet in cir- 


ith had p 
| = — in “yew oft 


| important astronomical. observations, and devoted them- 


selves to science, to agriculture, and to the amelioration 
of the condit ion of these w 
pe sage rnia ps missions were un 
ranciscan friars, under whom the 
progress i in civilisation took place, since, i 
wer 30 years, up — £ 33,000 — 
K had en 


a ap isos “the world, Aer 
banish of civilisation, they devoted 


| patience. 


the coun 


ntless. They 
prakan the profuse and elegant fol iage. 
The soil in aen it has —— so well is Epp 
loam mixed with nd, a d Wimbledon 


bulk. . w 
have a — Te and rest, th 
been b in the s artificial culture of the Amherstia. 
While it is ii it likes plenty of heat and Tin 
This, tides — be — conceived when 
arm 


ann l of rain is perha 


depth 
other — at Ealing Park, wennn 
Lene, k J 


than whieh 
— 


ing h 
the most savage and denne parts of 


Paad eee 


bed that maria oods and 
happen pen E> mein 


ad to be sent by sea — ts oe 
is — lt 


subject | 


and a curious anecdote 


things, a case of fine M 
monks, e —_ I forget, 
dried s n process ai rou 
became Sis ines, and produeed fine Grapes, from w 

the best wine in California was made.” Life in Mexicos 


ATTEND h hard- 
it; this 
ooded greenhouse pla pace FÀ y, 


in | operation may 


— 


200 "ay FRE GARDENERS 


CHRONICLE. [Maron 31, 


season when the roots are 


progress, w 
excitement ; bat especialy wi when anes 1 that 
res 


mediately after their season of flowering. Before | severance 


g, take S onre that the old ball is ou sufficiently moist, 
E is potted in a dry state, it t will be impossible 
to moisten it without sou ring an and saturating 


proper 
1 


Par 
a great 


measure depends the 
| success cess of | the s future “bloom. We are ~* to find that 


‘ portion r 
a. of old flow unless 
s eds are an object they —— never be allowed 
t» ripen on any plant. Let various climbers |n 
both Ta pots and 


in various par 


ts of the co untry, and 


su 
that no fa eg flower is more worthy ‘of a 
cuLas.—Seedlings of last year will 
s 


' „and permit no m d 
A than the ahotted space will allow to perſee der th very ass 
thetnsel lants, in conservator. ders (whether | specimens are d orwarded, 
climbers or otherwise), which have been planted in| be carefully covered every night, and fully exposed on 
former years, have as m ch of d,exhau ted | all pr» ys. 


soil removed as can be done without materially injuring | 
the roots, and the space Hed ep again wit ith fre 


sh com- 
$ at same ti any desirable alteration 


— shou d be made, y seru tinisin 


their 
our stoek you will Rreg many plants paia you will 
convinced would Aeae u more credit if they were 
planted out than po wi í york in ota; in making | W 
a — for this purpose, s should 
which are N e for the beauty of 


7 
he 
È 
3 
117 
F 
Hil 


ar larly 
mental in their habit or foliage. Let the m oui pen 
of the soil for these plants consist of roughly-ch a 50. 
turves of loam or peat, pri g admixture of riche 
1 requirements; 
bat, for the sake o ere the 1 er should be 
covered with finer soil. 
FORCING DEPARTMENT 
As thrips have of late years become troublesome | 
upon Vines, &c., a few hints as to the met hod of destroy. 
ing them may not be out of sare in a Calendar, as the 


season is at in whi may cau —— t injury 
and annoyance, if not effectually kept under 
stroyed. trying vario thod-, I find that fumi- 
gation with tobacco, after the plan here laid dow 
If the infested e i 
pots, and of a size, we p together in 
a common plant pit; but when the Vines on the rafters 
any plants which are infested are 
same house. iet evening is selected 
for the operation, when the leaves of the pla 
; h is cov if convenient, and 


: ouse 
with tobacco; during the whole of the 


er 


gated with pure 
roof ae — 5 closes and sh aded if the sun eo rately ticles th 
out, to prev necessit nell Mew air; by thus re- 
taining the fon — the within the house, the 
exening's 4 Moon’ 
they would do if fresh air amie 
the house ; but to make sure of dest g them the) = a a 
house is again famigated oi the se second evening. On| Pi. 8 
the second mornin plants are s am 4 and * tm A 
air as usual, but if the get is very hot they must | Tues... #7] 2 
be attentively watched. I feel satisfied that this will — ee 
destroy all the insects in — at the re 1 
will be necessary to re repeat the process three times with | Masch ay 


mge 5 
tice of ‘te ribbling a ae a * a 
until the soil actually require * am ~n give sufficien 
the whole, 


„ Overcast ; cold 


TTAGERS’ GAR . 
w Prants.—These will now require an in- 
creased supply of water, but do ote on an accoun 
allow it to in the soakers; it is impossible that 


a is made to non 
e avoid 


the plants fill mst 


pots * roots, the Bion Id be pan into larger ones 
0 


ih 
nless the increased size of both pot and plant would be 
eee; it chey are already large enough, a 
present dis isplay more desirable than it would be when 
ers are mo t out of doors, they had better 


ing peat secure 
the 


cu 

the pot 

a good drainage by a plentiful use of i ocks in 
the surface of the 


bottoms of the pot ce 

east inch below the rim ; these two provisions 
will make it less troublesome to give the plants fi- 
ient supply of water, and wil revent any stagnation 
about thei nstant 8 will be necessary 

this n, to preserve th nts the ravages 

in ; ging them with clean water will be 
the chea d most effectual his, particularly for 
plants in rooms, as it will clean away dirt t 
which may have settled upon their leaves, as well as 
— th = few Balsam seeds may now be 


ery showy, and they are easily 


will pins ä 
re 


re Balsams are 
cultivated they 8 hould be potted off in small pots as 
hey w and 


repotted in mode- 


State of the Weather near London, for the week ending March 29, 1849, 
au observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiswick. F 


„ Banomeren, THERMOMETER. 
—. — unn 
ax. | Min. Max. Min., Mean 
30.037 | 29.979 ry 30 | . 
29.986 29.955 44 27 2 T 
29.914 | 29.907 40 33 E. 01 
29.895 | 29.832 43 32 NE. 00 
2.570 | 29.391 45 31 S. K. alt 
29.399 | 29.250 || 45 33 E. -00 
29.335 | 29.343 51 29 je 14 
29.741 nt 44.5 | 31.8 0.29 


sely overcast; 


haze 
— 24—Overcast and cold ; 3 at intervals; ge and frosty. 


g y tion, 
to destroy those which yam — Pia = 3=Slight snow ; cloudy and cold ; 
the old insects. A — be fixed 51 = B Greas aan, den Sees fac 
of the ot, about 6 inches above the rim, in = Selsey, sates ee at night; ali ‘dias 
‘ares iit ome smoke ; i is liable to injure the} iate of the Werther u. Kar x $a dre. below the average. 
J ` comes contact with in u hot er at © ick during the last 23 years, for the 
a directly them in ensuing week, ending April 7, 1839. 
PLOWE atin AND SHRUBBERY, 82 2 Sa 
If the soil of any of the beds or clumps for ari. | Fae | BEE 
renewing or enriching by the addition of — de See 
be immediately don 
. 
„3 —.— Wed. 3 92 727 
successively in any of the beds, | Friday a 
visable once in A ts AE Satur. il sis | 370 
old soil, and to fill up again | „The h 
material ; this practice, however, for some 
searlet Pelargoniums, for instance, 
m Notices to Correspon 
To ovr CORRESPONDENTS— DENTS—May we beg it to wre understood that 


a altivator may make a collection of 
herbaceous plants both beantifa ered i s 
FLORISTS Frege te 


ONS AND Iy, in the pota Swe at peed be 
„they 


30s. 6d. each. 


20 21. 78, l. 
18424, 6,8 


A few cop 
"Price 30s. each, also the volume for 184 


The 


volumes of form 
1841—1, 8, 13, 14, 15, oy 17. 18, 20, 20, 


45, 46, 47, 4 8, 51. 


er years are out of 
22, 23, 24, 26, 27, 98, 99 


11. 12, 16, 17, 
45, 49, 50, ba” 52, 53, 18, 20, 22, 31, 32, 34, 39, 41, 42, 
3—13, 16, 17, 12 20, te 23, 24, 


25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 
2, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 


i, 4 
23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 25, 30, 31, 32, 34, 35, 37, 


4,5, 6, 7, 8. 9, 10, 1 
8, 31, 33, 39, 40, 41. 


44, 


» 4, 5, 8, 10, i * 22 
42, 43, 44, 46 


3245.6, 7,8, 9, 10, 11, 
4.25 25. 26, 31, 28 5% 58 


ae daring winter, aves i behi 


i monden Bivos fo Bs Pe 


13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 
45, 49, 50, 51, 5 5 


6, 7, 10, 11, 12, 
mr me itt 18, 14, 15, 16, 17,18, 96,25, 23, 26, 


51 62. 2 22, 23, 27, 32, 


"i2 19, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 
33, 34, 35, 36, 97, 


not escape from 
8 straw ones; 
boxes might only add to the 


evil. Bees, ‘However, sometimes die Ta straw Ria ai T 


in straw hiver also, 


Is 

swarming late in the — — . — „ pee. weak by 
weather might also have prevented the e colonies — Of the 
a sufficien n of young bees to su the old Tearing 
2 off. Tha would 8 for ay . dead — 
h ng a portion of store, being 

your * is ay ia you had vo not remove Erce 
to winter quarters, — vet extra shelter. — kirg 
Neus recommend physicking 2 with a little salt Emptor, 
in their . but hure gg is the only medicine, 2 
“Balm of Gile ad,” both for famine an and diseass The 
e — honey to fee à with is 2 lbs, of lu best 
sugar boiled a few minutes in about half a pint of bee a 


Cucumsers: J C. Your failure is to be attributed to 
and over richness of soil. The latter — very little 
© experienced 


115 


water during dull weather, such as we have 
of late. as 8 i 
Cu soa PPLE: ricus. In its 7 ee, h 
ard high, and to be grove ae 
ike r s perfection in this country, ity will require at least ag 
s a large Orange tree, or, in other words, . 
n y y lofty toholda ge t from 10 to 15 feet in height, It will 
su ucceed better P anted o than in 
d be kept within a Ikei space, in eae 
to induce fertility. The soil should consist of turfy loam ofa 
sandy texture, rough peat, and leaf-mould. It should be 
wintered ina temperature of about 55° at an or, and as 3008 
as the peer shows signs 0 e amount 
f heat and moisture shou na be a radual ly in nereased till the 
— reaches from 65° to 70° at night, and from 75° tẹ 
0° by day, —.— the e — Ay July. During the growing 
eason the midity of th © een shouid 
tioned to meet mount ar heat, and the roots should be berally 
fi stu 


222 
mg 
3 
8 
— 
o 
oO 
E 
333 
gee 
8 

2 
i 


or 

bud nths 

— and “ies Ret — — ly supplied with water. Your 

plants will require several years’ cultivation before they will 
arive at a fruit-bearing age 

FIR HEA G. Fell them in midwinter, or at the very end of 

a itu Your newsman is right. The No. is out of print 

GEOLOG — aa 4 Sub. Apply to the Secretary, 

Ink For Zinc LABELS: J and A W. See p. 848 of our volume 
0 


Names OF aie : Inquirer. Anemone apennina,— 
ouble red Hepatica ; 3, ‘ingle tae 


Eo 
e 
8 
EA 
8. 
E 


We see nothing new in 
be a difference, you s shoud have sent a piece of the other 
or comparison.— W. Chrysosplenium oppos positifolium.— 


from Ceylon, not Bor — Hinda. A kind of Lichen, called 
Evernia jubata. — Interested oe Lunaria rediviva or 
Honesty. —M J. Berberis dulcis.— & Berry. Ca tasetum semis- 


OR RD DRAINING: — — We have seen v 
results from drainin orchard A feet deep w 


Pa ERS Y 
and send men. in a tin box Zoria 
Paxton’s COT ré s 8 Parties berean: to have copies 


for distribution mong their 9 can be supplied at the ; 


rate + 25 sae for 5s., or 3d. e 25 
ru — — on Ba pagan in 5 — ea at eee ae 
ald. advi manure water 75 aie you 
a ‘apply i it rf pei — der the fruit is ai sioned 1 


PEAR $ . Your Bh ten — aoe — 
en 3 but neglected till the branches 
hos r do ithout breaking, may yet be 


st fo n N u a 
reuovered. Some of the ha a 2 will heal; 
and general] fresh shoots will pus! ow 32 

the rh gg you 1 oan ain, whilst flexible, in the way 
should g ol 

Perancontums AND GERANIUMS: Sub. A et has regular 
fiow 10 perfec saa stamens, A Pe >o um has irregular 
— — gy perfect stamens, 

Potatoes: Sub. We have no ——— suppose that g 
salt will be advantageous to Potatoes. Our * 
use manure 

RHUBARB: J 5. Huddersfield 

T 


- „ TAEE Rosk.”—The price has been reduced to 2 40 5 


rie 
po foo sent free by post for th 


e book at sum, : 
to a frame your 
Vins IN Fra OS. By gaist all in — 
. ri 


£ adua A 
ployed as Malnes, 5 — eos may De piis ler artificial est 


decline, if the season proye £80 hot & 
unnecessar * Russian is sweetest a 


y 
wur 
on that account ay —— for bouq H 
Yucca: Lacy M. It ya rocks ees it grows too fast 22 


soil, P 
well. By placin te oE TERR m RN the svt, 


a is plan 
The 3, if carefully taken up, 
posed sicily ‘Benesch © at the side of the 
e well enough no canst 
Misc: MER. Wash the grea se spot carefully rain rere 
2 and 55 soft s — oy ith p Kodo with youw 
ns have nothing gardeni 
the nearest silversmith.—J W. Probabl n e Br 


FCC 
SEEDLING FLOWERS. 2 
CAMELLIAS: E Lane and Son. Your — ose d 
Supreme,” is bright rose, beautifully ue ita he f 
round, and ofa ee k waxy te 
sent, it is as good in shape, and Te larger, bret rue 
Double White, when well grown. It is certainly a 


variety.* 
Civernantas: G A B. —— te, tipped miih -B 3 
— —— a 3 «gee m urpi i. ashy 7. thin; $ 


self. 2 — parpin d but 3 and bad sier ae ohi 
urple, with 00 tals, t 5, 
— 6, a 2 t Ättle white, sipped with pink, 


th 
and “Tike many others; 7, la 48 lilac, we 4 wen. 1 


3 : 
ditto; 4, Eropht ila vulgaris 5 5, Card amine e hirsuta,—T G. 
- 


— 
s ga pipes, the 
drains being 24 feet 5 t. Fil e dr. me above ame 
wi oing the roots 


r 


RICULTURAL SOCIETY 
LAND. 
1185 ENC ETING, 1849. 
Eo 
j SHOW, THURSDAY, JULY 19, 
35 IZ ES. 
Members 
12 subscribers n 


ment of 3 on esch Certifica 


ge 
oe 
8 K 
2 
e 


may be had on n appiiesdon 
12, Hanover- square, London 
£ ( 


0 
( 
( 
0 
€ 


Pd fed ped ped pd 


„ 


© 


1 a 8 
a 
DO bed et et 


2 
— —— 


i : : | 0 suas ae and essential 
DRAINING PL PLO UGHS, 
ly Cou of 9 held — * om = ae 
s “comp AGLIONBY SLANE 
see ie the — 1 of the 7 ag 
: the orwich Meeting, was unanimously 
Drain Plough, to cut out at one, two, 
om cuts, to the greatest depth, with not 
ur horses, 80 as to Tnn drain 


6 0 0 


ose date 

n for Cer tificates tor Live Stoc k 
he nimals to be — should be 

der Forms of iy be sent 


5 CATTLE, 
tothe Ist of January 1847. £40 0 0 
p 0 0 
ai 1847, more than ` 
20 0 0 
10 0 0 
tee ii — : 0 
8 8 20 0 : 
e vis 10 0 0 
oo ive 10 0 0 
; 5 0 0 
) FORD CATTLE. 
itro Of January, 184 40 0 0 
* en paia 
5 es . 20 0 0 
5 * 10 0 0 
ota oo 20 0 0 
three years old ie a k : 
siar hae EO" OO 
oo Re p 0 0 
4. 80 6 
bee CATTLE, 
Ist of January, 1847 40 0 0 
2 20 0 0 
0 0 
* 
0 0 
0 0 
0 0 
10 0 0 
0 0 
0 0 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


201 


ull, calved since Jan, 1, 1847, more than a 8 vie £10 0 0 
ow in milk, or in calf * 10 0 0 
8 seed Sint ‘ditto dit 0 0 
In-calf He epa N r three years old 0 
Yearling Hei SS PA EE) 
Cow for eaters T 10 0 0 
Second-best ditto 5 0 0 
HORSES. 
Stallion for Agricultural A coat of any age 30 € 
econd-best ditto di 4 ( 
Stallion for FY ogc purposes, È two years old. „ ( 
Second-best ditt ar ee 
station ea prey yt rposes 2525 20 
at 15 0 
hare pam Foal, for Agricultural purposes 20 
Second-best ditto 3 10 0 
Two Paci — 15 0 
Second-best 500 
LEICESTER SHEEP. 
Shearling Ram sè ote á 30 0 0 
Second-best 15 0 0 
Ram of 0 other ag 30 0 0 
Second. best ditto 5 0 0 
en of Five Shearling Ewes of the same flock 20 0 0 
Second-best ditto 10 0 0 
SOUTHDOWN SHEEP. 
Shearling Ram 30 0 0 
Second-best 15 0 0 
Ram of any other age 30 0 0 
Second-best ditto 15 0 0 
Pen of Five 1 Ewes of the same flock 20 0 0 
Second-best ditt 10 9 0 
WOOLLED S 
Not qualified to 1 a  Lateeleen: T3 
erent Ram 30 0 0 
best teste 
Ram oat any other a age 30 0 0 
Second-best ditto FERE: Pi PA 
Pen of Five Shearling Ewes of the same flock . A Eh. 
Second-best ditto ditt 0 
ran 
Boar of large breed is ee 15 0 0 
Second-best ditto 5 0 0 
Boar of sm sieh: 15 0 0 
Second-best d 500 
eedin e S6 of f large breed 10 0 0 
Bree — 10 0 0 
Pen of Three antes aoe ofa large breed f 10 0 < 
Pen of Three Breeding Sows of a small breed f 10 0 


hi the same m r, above four and under 8 a 41 
* There will x no Sale by Auction in the Show-yard, 
By order of the Council, 
JAMES HUDSON, Secretary. 
London, March 6th, 1849. 


The Agricultural Gazette. 


TURDAY, MARCH 31, 1849. 


MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS, 
TuEspay, April s Agricultural Society of England. 
WEDNESDAY, — — Highland and Agricultural Soc 
THUR ý — ae Imn. Society of Ireland. 
TUESDAY, —  10—Agricultural Society of England. 
Tuunspay, — 2—Agricultural Imp. Society of Ireland. 

Anise Bn CLUB.— April 2: Landon, Great Oakley, West 3 
South Devon, Framlingham.—Apri Furness.—April 5: Ottery 
st E Mary —Ap ilze Ne —— 3 pron, York. — Ati 9: Clyde 
prillli N — April 14: Peterborough. 


. C, PEARSON 11 P., wishes to introduce a sys- 
on INDUSTRIAL 


of the London Farmers’ Club, from which, indeed , 
we have extracted the above enunciation of his plan, 
and in = e asks om information on “ the productive 
—.— of 1000 acres of land, — — a ected to the 
highest possible 1 by means of the manure 
from an establishment of 1100 ee combin 
with an amount of active vigorous labour, sual in 
quantity cf capable E being henen employed) 
o the powers of 500 cult * labourers 
wens ing 10 25 urs a iy , W bets , at the same 
of 


time, of expanding 8 Lee the daily suppl 
a labour (as far as whole number me EA N 

mit) and = A ihe 
1 5 per the wt e of the season 


ing reference, been to the eager of spread- 
ing the labour of the 500 over th surface of the 
whole year so far as it can be conv * 


„ h 
produce FaF require ed f for the pes of the establish- 
is 


930 quarters of Wheat, 16,900 stones of- 
ane 700 tons of Potatoes, and 360 quarters of Oats. 
t 2 efore, suppose the case of 1 acres 

of originally d b 


not those o aboar, ar stoni ring th tl 
character which, in the case of prisoners, it is likel 
to exhibit.* The rotation is one of six years: 


1. 166 acres of Wheat: stubble dug and sown with Rye. 
2. 166 acres of Rye — by cattle in houses, and 
sheep on the land: followed by common and Swedish 
Turnips. 
3. 166 —. of 2 id Wurze 
t, and 7 p — of Oats: stubbles 


ae 


5. 166 acres 0 s eee by cattle in houses, 
and sheep on the land: followed by Rape and Kohl 
Rabi transplanted. 
66 acres of Carro 
We have not alluded 88 ‘Potatoes, as they are too 


tio 

„ as — the produce of the land thus 
aid out: The t and Oats needed vided 
.— by he extent 1 b it to vi uarters 
per acre of Wheat, and 5 quarters per re of Oats— 
no improbability. And the following 25 probably 
be the yield of green ons. 
166 acres of a e 15 ve tons per acre —.— 
0 7 ers Warde) af 24 tone 3984 
„ Tares at 10 per 1660 
m 5 pe and Kohl Rabi at 16 tons 2656 

„ Parsnips at 16 tons ... 


tal green crops 4 wee —. 15,936 
Now deducting 3 this amount 936 tons of 
ee equivalent of 700 


en com 
1000 acres respectively, an 
Oatmeal, and Potatoes, ee me for the sustenance 
of 1000 prisoners and 100 0 

The one, it is eet to establish upon manele 
acres of land in pshire ; and the other’ withi 


w ring a considerable 
e Essex Forests, within 10 miles 
acres of land 


uality, which, by th 
we —— d i cultivated, and was recently 
sold at upwards o per ac opener 
Now K i is za t 5 subjec 2 of prison discipline 
that w o direct the attention = our 


e 
eyes of eve 
immediately 3 eee > 


su 
e ante and 
— 


ture, 3 is by mismanagement in 
ar. It is — ossible not tos o suppose that habits 
of abe industry enfore r — son- 
— must strengthen resolut me 

and so ultimately lessen the dat 7 crime to 


how 
repeated paivan may 
on | much t 


ome 5 be cade so as to 


Mr. eee, requires. 
thus ap 
shall 


= 


averag 
time it is pro 
* er spits cultivation, 
a less extent wil 


able for 2 
which is — analy is first, 1 may — be 
realised at last. 
of om now 
acres — cultiva 


the subject of the labour 
ed will require. hen 


on so sm 
21 9 that the day's labour 
very much smaller dat o 

This, however, matters little, as a more War and 

be insisted upon, not sọ 
to roduce of the lan 

5 tho e 

would 


* It might be well, for the larger ropa a ranet to 
in-door wet weather, 


cov get some of the more laborious e 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Manon 31, 


— 1 Time t ha that this —.— is one who is believed to have — 
—— e ‘same ‘timo “thet “ample: Isliour ’ — en but a era ie ‘ transla age of a name 7 — to pps study of the mrt, at have attai lo 

the plant by the French, mene onour of inventing the drill and horse- 
to sere for Wheat will need to be dug in September | given to one species of 45 — Tina work en ntitled theoretical views as to the — * for iy 
vie 5 ll s 


202 


es J 
, a be K Ar ich t convinei f of this, wh a 
i ce > of 40 da ah -onn es you to grow it in pretty most convincing proof of this, when Mr. Hewitt 
7 daya) town in J — 1 ys), eu at atr — Da Fad Pa ainsi nommé parce que, dit-on, of whom I would speak with. all respect, eame out with 
mt H 14 days), and aug and pitted in October and | on le sème et récolte en . jours; ce qui permet the — — 

* — Teens all, the labour of 1 gere of de le eultiver dans des climats assez froids,—Vol. 3, seeding and drilling that he bad 80 ‘Stoutly ad. 
— j o 60 da .) In the French Gardening book, “ Hon Jar- | vocating had gpa Wag, aga practised P — the — 
f also — the la hour of a man for | dinier; — ii edition for 1825, you may find not Tu may be said 

i only this Forty- -day, bu but another = still dwarfer kind | culture — mo — than of any other nge 
r one of Ry spoker of, pme —— Poulet, or chicken corn ; this that “ there is 8 new under the sun,” ſor ere 


lat bein d — re early and more Jethro Tull had been preceded in his invention vf g 
— d hardy than pa Forty. day ——.— (Cette race, due à pan machine 12 ee n „ 
he re de la précédente, en ee my est tion was given by. Evelyn in to the al Soetety, 
Wura — — "r HA a as plus petite * seer — Précoc e, &e. ; p. 203.) ea <o the Italians claim — onour for another 
r of One Man. Days. | I now have some of the Mais à Poulet t, grown man of theirs about the year 1500 (See — 
3 of Whests at 1 35 nys ... Ae „ 6978 at ee — 16 years ago. The Transactions | “ “«iHistory of Inventions 5 3 and the using ~ ne 
at 20 dae 106 3320 of the Paris Hortieultural Society, so stir back as 1829, a horse-hoe is mentioned by the Roman authors, with 
„ TurnipeatSOdays.. ... „ 8300) if — earlier, manifest the great attention 22 by the ps Tull was thoroughly acquainted, as he devotes 
1 Wurzel at 50 days „ 3300 French to the — of Dwarf Maize in the neigh- large por rtion of his work to — discussion on — 
* — and Oats at 33 age 3478 bourhood of Paris, and show how far — cultivation pointa = 2 Virgilian husbandry. i 
Tares at 20 days 3320 must have oxen northward, since the time of Mr. detra m the value of the — lelt by Tal, for be 
— — at 50 days ... 8300| Arthur Young, seeing that the fine drawn by him euts was in ae d'a a light in the midst of darkn — 2 
Carrots and — 50 days 8300, offthe growing of Maize at nearly 50 leagues south from | Stores — gg ete dge Pe: ha d gathered from the Gresk 
—— Le Mans. In a report of a session of the Paris ety; an riters, added the fruits of u — 
Total labour of crops . 50,796 in November, 1829, ‘tes the distribution of prizes to — travel t through the most enlightened cours 
Add for the 3 of meat- making stock, growers of Maize, offered by M. Bossange, the names of | in 
3000 | the Duchess de Berry and the Marchioness de Nicolai} Far be ‘it from me to find fault with the determined 
And labour in the way of double ‘trenching the appear on the list of cultivators, the former lady being and energetic enthusiasts of the present day, Inthe 
land duri er, before — nape Wurzel presented with a gold medal, and the latter obtaining | multitude of the schemes, ideas, and fancies aoid 
6204 the —— prize. The same paper states that this plant on and practically eee it = iy = naturally es- 
‘a 


3 9 


F eres grown “with the greatest suecess“ in the | pecte at some may turn improvements 
Total labour required — 60,000 — of Paris ; while “Mr. Keene’s ‘intercalation ’” the older methods, and though — progress hitherto 
working days of a year are | of crops.( entioned as bein the 


Q 
8 
. 

—.— 8 
2 

E 

* 

m 

8 

— 

© 


‘If we suppose that the ys in 
240, then the labour provided by the ‘farm of 1000 | then IA practice ; as, indee ed, ro Franc, may — of what is to be avoided, it would be well thut 


= will employ 250 men throughout the year, and | who has seen anything of that part of my brother farmers, in place of wasting. their ener 
it will en + den tne the extent to give an ve oF But now, as to the success or failure of “ Cobbett gies in fault finding, would be on the alert to learn from 
ar eaual to > the ne r Corn” in this 8 hitherto. Te is true that this | them whatever lessons their experience caffurded, 
vale Me Pea value ‘the Mite: 6 > corn was not generally approved of, so ‘long as the | tha 2 — usefully followed. — one who has tried 
priso * not gone into the oo was considered Me be “the poor man’s ee 28 the sı sma lest experiment in poas a must be aware dt 

on the occasion of the Irish famine, and the r of time, 


distribution of the About — the year, but 
cing devounced in Parliament ma de radin the noble necessary to fulfil- Pos conditions” aisite for ite dam 
. Ags es the management of these, plant raised its head i r and i -> hier cesar to and very often ns requisite is a 
bs ni $ 5 i 1 so as to apse the work, was looked to with a new — 1 ‘ast me saw a Lime therefore is the pret exposer of —— 
light A events ren a 8 p inns * — dar) quantity of corn at the ae Mr ý eieaa at is sure to sift out the truth; but somehow or other ne 
e 847. It had a Pp ime i 
p , Tespecti ely. appearace of being genuine © * Cobbett Corn,” or ‘a the services of the people living in former times are but 
* z pes p 22 occupying our leading — — It had be wn by Mr. Page, and — little ris aah ve But — undoubtedly. are the ad- 
838 3 s: ‘atin Mh there 7 be no | 80 — that kind. te was 2 jus as well — as a —— ges which the ~ — — — 
Of one 1 ay induce, as we e the corn I ever saw in America or elsewhere. 2 rom thie application of the ski the m i 
a discussion in these — Mr. > type the season of 1847 this sort = to — as I | construction of machinery, yet, it must be 
plans, eir — — bearings: and the informed, in is also, as I believe from the | that few or none of the modern introduetions that hare 
worth lessness wh ich is notoriously — on —— Chelsea, Mr. e oe done so much for inereasing the food of man are alto 
ates in — will, we hope, only t f i > ireland, ass assured me that e ra ini 1 
more successfully provoke, for Mr. ‘Pearson's in- eren it there in moans in 9 Ea the present day, like Mr. Hewitt Davis, imagine rs 
formation, a of | ing 
above. 


on, 
seed” ad And I can answ the they are pr fo ven 8 
discussion of the one we have given fact in soma iaeia in 1847, viz., with corn | history shows that from the cooking of food for estile 


FORTY Dar MAIZI 
FORTY-DAY MAIZE. and been 4 — 
sour Paper ot the 24th of ce Pym, tenant Lord Eastnor, at some 2000 years ago, and that the basis of modern 
—.— aa Mog has L understand that Lord Chichester | ture rests on the discoveries of the Greeks and Romans, 
Royal Agricultural 'S Society, in whieh he lanai, bad ‘exops of it in ‘Sussex, at series of years, and these n — probably Ae pai ol ibit 
new sort of Indian fre. 2 ibes a aud I now have a quantity ef — — ng, | knowledge fro 
the peculiar iiid Gries ren as obtained from a — m I “ —— tne — athers of m 
— we oe information. This is of the crop, Ti think, By 1847 Who, disdaining little vest in a er 
Uia i ears are perfectly r ned. ? , The plough, and pee in aer of es 
oa ey | arg of yh el Baar ng i moda T 
s Corn, American, | extreme wetness and chilliness of the season in u Ireland; des eribed by Adam Diekeod of of Whiting 
this Forty- | but T — the same corn, together he ova new y American 1 | Lothian, and 3 some 60 years ago, (Pome — 
the sharp-sighted, clear headed Greeks and 
— À piirete the great leading facts of 9 .. 
i l Ameriex, | in very bad i i as thei ts d eau 
in vain attempted to cultivate in — —.— are — —— ene —.— es 3 Poa — 
i was ambitious su 


- Pym, above-mentioned cree 3 Aa made 

i t “after the rate of 64 bus xr th ded, in'1848, portant of all the useful arts, was eager e 

8 mea anii 
A Mr — — (P. 5.) 5 reason for Abe name, i by te a ig ere = @. + 

dee who, can do it) to in plain, — —— hat assigned by ough the i 1 t forming the’ thowe 

will give 1) 2 — a | man, Keene tells the farmers that : 3 ney of our present system were well porn a 

au. wit streng ealth at | P es came. in “140 days, yet I by no means desire it to be peg of be 


— 
À yrene 
— _ are at present The Mais d Poule days from. the time of 9 Sinks 


raw 


* t gentiem 
2 e| Maacher. i ae ee Goh a i, 5 . bs egies 
Mis name associated with $ 8 
horwill meris, — — maturity. James F. Cobb. centration, as it were, of all that has been found 


rts that “he speaks — able in in recent ti 
throughout ——ů a tically,” he shows HISTORY OF or AGRICULTURE, its principal as e, and much of it as de 
80, — hare -done mora obser ver. N perusing ‘the Lead rticle in —— — f no doubt, j ee and Rom isn’, 
tern deres uu. the 27th January, s SLY? Tan adk houses, spread or that 
5 © good feld of Epe sen, | With de paueity of the names of farmers — possessed the ly = merings of kaosi s 
ever seen the “ Cobbett Corn,” + | list of those given as the discoverers and inventors in existed; their tenants were safer, and with 
ave seen that it is 3 e also sal ith the cireumstanee than those of the w _ e barons, and — 
itkey growth, aud that it is nn. were not Sone, unknown to some of th e ae in them. 
ae come from Italy or even from | ag money r hither 8 organi, in tand at As the work of Dr. D 2 
Tue Treatise on Cobbett rn,” ane — 81 of our readers, you may allow 
r it here, would have shown | 2 — — Collies, i the Cale Js, and others, I few of the facts and maxims there me ied rig 


7 no invention was understood to have been the men wh that work alone, without mentioning the a 
eorn written claimed by ind bted for wir om we w 2 
about wasa pr ‘product of — Meikies ——ůͤ— cattle er sheep, and 00 — which he quotes. Greek writers on ihe 
wing —_ wi ant 


nowing mac! e n and win- The an 
9 8 a mere name is — om te r a Several pr Pom | subject,* most of whose works have been 25 
But it is 80, rather, in the | of lasting remembrance, — > It is true Columella speaks of 40, — arrogt evs 
eee 


Tull is, of all . ed writers on agricuilt * — ar are not uo be understood 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZE 


TTE. 203 


to be well 88 by frequent Re = harrow- 
ings, and to be liberally dunged, the better 

repared for 8 0 loving crop of od ern | 
practice of singling out with the hoe, does ‘not seem bet 


s. 
the plants where too thick, that the others might ow 
stronger. The Turnip-fly — existed 2000 years ago, 
— Co lumella directs that s. —.— mixed with the seed 
he day before sowing, — red in order 
ite ravages. In Gaul the cattle were fed on this root. 


5 eullir tiv m to st as carefully 
given as those of arnes. The management 

meadows had arrived at a position equal with the e 

tivated lands, and the 4 — zing of cattle was a profitable 
occupati — and a h we do not hear of those huge 
te tone animals — ostentatious folks have reared and 
ed come laughing-stocks to the lean — ree 


8 


—— of the day, y 
their prototype in the —.— 3 thrushes, blackbirds 
nd s, which s 


d 
the 


ing and 


Td heen 


order of sowing 

year, followed with Wheat and Beans, and also allo w 
crop — 
mana * ement o man re seems ave 


da 
of vari t e when boty 2 was he aid in 
d e, ee fo for fruit ees. Nightsoil, msd — 
xt to the dung of birds. 


6 to 22 tons per impe ere, and the 
reading w as performed most ro bei end d the Drea 
e | at once sie it in 


t was recom 
the dung when th was dry, 9 — to 15 
moderately and often, than lay on much at a time, and 
less on the plain than on the hill. Sea-weed als 
collected and used. e mixing of various kinds of soil | 
s also practised, as ligh with heavy, and vice versa, 
zioh with poor—wha ad con ualities in fact, 


ben folded on land for on pur- 
Branches ere also 


* wen riena 
f 


n pense; for 
vation of their Jan 
he 


igh — 

d 

ed, in the cost of pr 
e or 


sate the —.— to be made the. most of. The e 
tn 


when the 3 bt gee to lose the flowers, 


Such are a 
ſew cies ma ping e an * 


and the amount of 
ssessed would form a 


8 n agric e gene 

the progress effected in our o 

have been develope 
d course o 


e, and its Wege ion to 
uture ae at a following 
agriculture must diminish. 

THE PROSPECTS | OF FARMING.— 5 
ALTHOUGH there are few who are unde d with 
| Æsop’ site of“ Hercules and the Carter, 5 the — 

bility of its moral to the present em of * 

and farmers — ing Parliamen xeuse for 
| kare ae << 
6. 


come 
bim. Whereon the — j awe from a. 


r relief fi 
ave t mup see 


re the cart, free trade ir diffi- 
in — l Pernes “hel avy; b but - “that they 
may not be nding f they 


g like past p 


ird 
p the vate “of ‘all they produce a fifth. 


Land- 
the little their 


uce a 
in this way only, it is clear, can 
d be maintaine 
cost of corn is the expenditure in growing it, in 
relation to — the quantity produced be reduced. 
the introduction of better implemen, that 
improvements of the soil, or 
fertili ity, Colonel 
his „that 
ch has lately been doing in both th s to 
‘benefit the farmer ; avy means that shall effect a saving 
uction ee to Is. a quarter, 
increase oduce a acre, 
o more for the farmer than — — relief 
Mr. Dis — In future, landlords 
eir Nn are 
ultivation 


will find it necessary to a 


of 
land must be provided, and their situation and arrange- 


— tenants will — to —— themselves of those 
ge is 8 3 o5 ‘they 


— and the 
effects 


with a 


e Under 
a 

en years (Wheat 10d.; Barley, 32s, 11d. 
Oats, 213. 114. ; Rye, 345 Md; Beans, $ 37s. 34, 


pose s of mamring. 9 4 et b = ie and marl, | 37s. IId); they-have al annem 
ee Laen 8 — s — an nd told. But we shall have lower wagen, ‘cheaper neces- 
mention is — of the land — dug onee in five 8 — and — bag tere a d, . i Barras 
—— e expect to mee — — van SEE make te 
Draini not unknown; the ‘greatest attention | have to look to to let us 
eee drains and water furrows all most o 


was paid 
cleared out ; covered and open both used, 
e the dimensions of 4 — deep, ay ar wide in bottom, 
d laid in the bottom with stones or willow ae con- 
— with the he of a good s 


e 


accessible twigs were to be twisted into a rope, p 
into the bene , and covered u 
y astly, ea 


It would appear that en ometimes 
was recom 


were 


The impleme ents 
r construction 1 2 


opi he covered | © 
eet deep, eae filled with prey stones 


ressed 
with se and, 


was| THE 
A the 4 of Mr. Austen's geological p 
to | 


It is now five years since I 
— lower prides; the first edi 
Resources Possess 

of their Prodace.” On referen 
— — ater ~ — of — da, martes. 

ie Im vel 8 „ 
— — bon ra ith that I wil this 
er can a farmer’s friend select f “I 


creasing t 
they be enabled to lessen 
Hewitt Davis, 3, Frederiok’ 


THE PHOSPHATIC BEDS OF THE LOWER 


number of the Agricultural 

ere escri 
which ning the. phos. 
are found in the he chalk Formation, gives 


the cost of growin 
* place, ve, Old Jewry, London. 


E insertion, in a late 


the position in 


i the subject, and 
ewhat like the harrow hoes, | me pportanity of recurring to | 
ithe the yt, * Hay was gma be wat with | | — such additional in information omaa T are 
the seythe (the land being previously el of stones), | been to obtain since u Va 


204 


in the “ Royal 


Geniale M gi 
1 to = 
¢ Mareb 


of — and oe such I Li no doubt 
that it will be esteem own 


Society | o 


en 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


operation of many fellow- * in this departmen 
icu science. But the means te attaining this 

ough the instrument tality o 

ion, and 


[2 

A ah 

mn 

=, 
— 


somewhat different, being chiefiy i to turn | 
Ag 
ra te give my letters on | 
sonar 


the sub eeta deta agricultura ze 
axious to correct | 


gault 
own miscalculation, and 22 fro 
The richest of t 


3 
ful 
12 
1 
$ 
12 
T 
8 8 


— early part of last year, erroneously informed 
r. Austen, 

The ~*~ p on which I at all difer from Mr. 
— be is with regard 


company o 
last year, I believe that I had not des 
beds, an 


m Prof. 
3 con- 


ion | searce 


2 oeo fro 


se (including 
cartage to my homestead xa of re-sifting 
me at the rate of 158. per 


1 fit for use. 
t last year gave 20 80 pe 
bulag rer gi to 42.48 of bone-ear pha In 

ly remark, ted t Pd that ce nme 
has proved valuable odd 


270 
s pits „several hundred tons of 
N oak 5 in which the = are fossils 
2 ey inte rspersed ; this has been put ee 
sandy gravelly field, now in preparation for Swedes 1 


e | costs to thin and clean, 4 


e- | only 5 per ce 


Seon 
e 


to pieces during ‘their ure upon the surface — m 
arak- i and I infer, there — = it is not necessary to 
em to a v phd for the alternations 
of the vache — 4 pad! rte d of the 
seem to be su — reine fry agents in rendering 
them fit wog i 


e green marl ea a = 
of the surface, its thickness of deposit varying fro 
6 — I place part of this marl, a “he | a 


the 
cent. of phosphates (it really 88 ns muc 
3 —— would give a dressing of 3 tons o 


upper | 


is Lare ble that oe may 
influence for a short 
partial decompo- 


one’s fingers, which are 


common 
Am — t th 
— 1 * A fossil L of bnd Ae gault, 
pean 


are found 


of ammonites, &e., derived 


+ men hye 
liar sou 
l whether 
t from 


farmer, 
a 3 the co. 


ical occasionally e small chasms 


| of the 


as 
tion ; | should 
urce t 


t 
from the 


subjacent enudation of 


the 
n | our fom 7 the den d chalk, Kx Ron 8 | 
n | been go 8 


swept off n marl, 

was — | thie heli 
was aral ap up with r drift gravel (for we find 
i 
riom up with x 
den 


exposed perhaps to atmospheriea influence 
— as to 8 which, ju 5 ing 2 = nalogous 
causes now in action would occa . 
The use to which I 155 
marl 2 principall 
with the ning 


this fossiliferous portion of 
mix it with sulphate of 

— I also empl * vant bl 

0 — prina e 
making a kind 3 artificral 2 mpost ; yee 
smal in my stables, Hi ie the 
et the pure urine, — Ltd into those ann 
time, a mixture of 

3 —. sufficient’ ade 
he com we intend to drill w 
If the os pò of pn phates 


The &e. 


e above sou 
is another inexhaustible 
in the dirty grey marl w ich 


bly 
"That . Pro 


soil and air, 


it 
green Vue 
course of | too 


S, phospho 
2 absorb all the liquid, 
ho: 


eal properties of | 
uniform ee the 


[Marc 3], 
| these 


uumber 


experiments 2 
of the Agri 
mploy ammonia 

21 therefore did —— 


bining the tag 
as my 
2 


m 
d crops of Swedes as g 
cae far etter das those of their — 
waring Pain 


e Correspondence, 
The ee of Field Carrot. —As the 
of the Altringham 


light land distri 
ploughing deep ata 9 ree the seed broa 


engagin gi 


Gite 


yeather in March with 2 
orses, followed by two others with a strong horse-hoe, 
share precisely the shape of the comm 
shape will do equally well if not 

1 

l 


upon 
hori en the 
a light roller 


c of 

en, sia before Midsummer pavone the intervals to 
vn th of 1 foot. The dib is cone ee 
dibble, nearly flat at the bettas om, with a diam 

about inches, or or a wooden cet 1 55 do N 
seed not more 


out by wom n for 6s 
entire hoeing ae out the season will only N 


per acre | 
more certain cro ve am = 


y: 
What lan 
is produce of Swedes with. this light 1 y As 
rr ex ee 

3 mer. — I observed in your N 
a statement that you 


ee. 
“I 


a single known and used agricu 
introduction, or implement, “that owes 
farmer, assured, the: 


r cent. 105 N acid, 
ear 


upon the patience of 
* angen, for I think I have add uced rufficient 


marl and sulphate o 
ined 
—— results upon ‘Batley and Hope: (An teount of 


* 


s rrespo 

seems to think, in the eae he a lludes to, our 

was to prove farmers dull-witted f 
ch 


pigs, and which very please 
inform the inquirer that the plan he dar f 
very simple and easy of practice. ‘The rials ans ors 
operator, having provided himself with 


eet 


to3f ao long; on 


and 

death having been so instantaneous. 
out his kni 

hich will 

this mann . 

minutes. 1 inqu 


be 3 done, a 


K 
* 
i 


2 


i 


Ii: 
e 
iE 


meat s 
and it 


time. Geo. Wil Ixins. 


Eee 
y 
a 


3 
f 


t farmers 


ongst 


= 


K 
i 


1 


wich is paid by 
ca 


re 
2 855 


ers 
ial at low ate, in order to employ it Peda el 
. 


5 soils. V. A. D 
An . Ox, fed 1. 


during 


‘ult J. Prdeaua. 
—Havin 
visiting the south of Ire 


0 years beh 
They value e and “Gra 
isa thin 


e the — 


the 
* oad flat 


ife and open the aorta, and 
and the 


gu 
will on rust, but — sweet r 
as to find Mr, Huxtable 
e delusion 

of intereat on on capital employed in 


capital in every country 
the —— —— neither 
ed 


Mr. aiio, at 


Have we his on record 


ving som po agri A in ceeded 
land, 
ec 1848, of Visiting the: north, in i 1 
reren e real their nie . farming, 
1 
and 


Chambers, Thomas, jun., Colkirk, Fakenham, 3 

Lloyd, Edw. Harvey, Acton Hall, Oswestry, S 

The names of three Koy pees for e at the 
next meeting were then read. 

N Essavs.— Mr. Poi Y, M.P., chairman of the 
Journal Com Slate, ane to the Council the 
2 — decisions of the Ju ges of Essays 

I. The Soc e's prizo of 50/. for the best Report on 

he Farming i age Sig ee to CLARE SEWELL 
wig r Pembroke. 

II. The Soviets prize of 20/. for eee Report 

of Sheep best suited to diffe nt localities 
with re pane to soil, ea elevation, 


on the Bre 
rapan reir: 
of farming, awa ded to THOMAS RowLanpson, 


and mo 
LVeEPOO 
ociety’s prize of 151. for the best 


t Essay 
on the 5 ing Fed Soil with Mineral e eee 
THO Row anpson, of Greek-street 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


| Liverpool s 
onel 388 ae the satisfaction he felt 
the h 


3 


mea 
Society’s ap ondary Essa 
which Col. 
tained details of great interest on particular points o 

enquiry. 
The Belgian Secretary of AR 3 a copy 
of the report of — es 
d yatt 


Calendar ae ee 


3 Farm, Merch roge 
been remarkably favourable for — . 
and sowing are well advanced. gs principal part of our Barley 

s bee 


porn fine weather has 


plo ough eak Our winter Wheats have been harrowed, 
PTE ally looking well, a and 
Barley 2 — also been erat to rG 
jèr ave been dressed with ashes, the stones picked off, and 
> | wards rolled. 2y ermanent pastures sh — be ‘genavelly 
rolled and harr i tly avery good 
effect, — * “ig” ex exists. All fields 2 for 
„ | mowin ng should now be, i 1 8 
from stock. Our horse la bour, prospectiy i 
| co patien GA the cultivation of the tallows and carting s 
all d — “enc next week, after Turnips, Shichi suc- 
eas last sammer. The — — we sow 
pro- 
to 


for sis years ; 


Says 
— nad alluded, 3 they often con- 
f 


reat agricultural | 
M 


| Sonpsime, Emptor. 


for grazing. W 
e as of the hy comes kina. a ae caunot — 


better than 10 or 12. 
a 


ane ee e less. The t- 

d last 3 did not succeed eet a at all events the 

Bo 325 wig 1 Bon s os 
— 


ancestors, 
good land, w — —— any yor * 3 th 
both Oats and 1 er, = 2 case th pede kas 3 nil, 


still pretty much confined 


to Turnips = thelr petal 1 food, and the cattle have also a 
full payi 2 all the pee Wurzel sie 4 in hand as 
‘the umed. Tu s = best 


Some pia 
— — — ca regu! 
change, do much to A sccm disease in yom: 


tices to Correspondents. 
AGRICUL wre oh bee ON: ee EY . He had better learn 
the art b the science, t is, — should make the 
; but he will not 


205 


so mon aba manure.—Inguirer. 2} cwt. of 
$ guano, at 25s., 
what will iire 2 . of 3 will 10 bushels of of 
Gate given to ew the past n the winter (say 
2 Ibs. = head per dle) equaliy i Improve the geo for the 
follow ing summ r? Wed o not think it w ot Be YZ. We 
o with t Bolivian or 


Peruvian guano—genuine 
Hand DiıBBLE: Emptor. 
Hornchurch, Essex, aré 
8 Ho Frant, i in —.— t. 
AND AGE robably Low on the “M 
— E: Ge ie operi” vil suit you. Rieder YE 
yu = man Farmer, It should not be applied at t 
any manure which will fer aout and he same 


‘Messrs. Wedlake and 5 
e makers. It can probably be 


ae “a You had better apply th 
other in spring. enen 
MAN URES: T. Peal. Sow 3 cwt. per acre of guano, and 2 cwt. 


= acre of superphosphate, and 6 ewt. per acre of rape-dust. 
So 


aon 3 bushels of Italian Rye-grass for a crop to dig in 
Moss Lann : M Saul. Woode uts are expensive. $ ae 
PAINT 5 R oe — b i 
the lter or anti-corr 
out-door ‘shedding ng work and ro ce a ir rough 
8 with e hair on 


Pigs AN An Amateur. Pi 
thelr bodi z ar em — — 3 "hese their t tails, showing a 
e tegumental structure. It 
— with g 5 e ay be ner 


a white Yorkshire boar, 

as been deprive g this ornamental ap- 

Inquire Most probably the ater porti 

f the seed would ie: the better plan would be to mix it 
5 vegetable compost; ‘and s spread during w 

SINGLE-Row SEED AND E DRILL : 
sioa apply to some 5 maker. 


Locate ch; Garr ik; or an 

Š y of the 
many machine tanie in rng English Agricult 
Prize Lists, if you are in Englan nd, e 
at the bei — "p. 


answer your purpose. Bury fair 
A . 
or concrete use the following mixture: n flints to 

J inch gauge, 6 bushels; powdered chalk, or —— T 
22 ime; 1 bones — de 8 rd Premier = 
and, 1 b coal-gas- tar; 

: “Level the Bamia carefull 
with led g 
3 inches high on the other opposite sides. 
this Boiro 2 bushels = e. = mix with them gradually 
2 gal f tar, till e wetted, and then sift over 


boy turnin over and 
crete, which i is immediately spread 3 inches thick evenly over 


till y space d, or a day’s work done 
it will 1 it, which: “it thoroughly mixed, is imm 
roll it with a heavy iron — 4. omer sand ard life a r 

ar oozes up fr e consolidation of the: 


be . y chaff is probably the ground a 
&., was are clean oe tha gini. Ti an let you 
ave — tof a cask is ble x 
olute a accuracy ; 3 tepaman are given in 
great detail, according to the particular form of the vessel, 
in Lley’s ** Gag r.”— Has 2 one any experience of gutta. 
percha cart harness 
THIBETAN SHE 


EP: A Four- ears“ Sub. They are not see | 
by the > East India Company t o H.R.H. Prince A and soma 
other noble pat pm of agriculture, 

e ee says, I have —.— a dozen and a 
half roots of Tussac Grass, rais raised from one root. They ars 
now shooting forth fine heads 5 — = 5 I am too 
8 feet) for them to ripen. dit 5 — er seers = 

We and planting * n rows, o 


eee 
early in April; if deeply, so- 


cations rapa ny Bs town after Wednesday, cannot be» 
g week, 


. Com 
1 para the follow 


rkets. 
THFIELD, Moxpar, March 2 
ae 1 sts is rather smaller, ane there ess 
* e favourable weather man us 2 maintain the 
| quotations of Friday 1 best descriptions, but several second- 
he supply of Sheen is on quite 80 i A 


| and there is a pretty 5 od attendance of —— trade is 

2 ently more cheerful, but we cannot higher. There 
are very tew 55 v — offer, and these not peim- prices re- 
main about th From Ge * Holland there are 


189 Beasts, 660 Sheep, sed 44 Calves; from Norfolk and 
folk, 2400 Beasts; and from Sootland, 250. 


s his main Cad ag t firs 
Aa ea a — ne ata z? t ith their | Per st. PN k d eê eee -s ds È 
Fat itn an it nate es a eat Paro — ; et thoroughly without an ‘acquaintance udi ied and es gon, Here- rii Long-wools. 3 10 to 4 2 
l some ual to any i ý equired together. TE o3 8| Ditto Shorn . . . 
; very nice ce crops of — Tarnigs Ananvats: Clevedon No t undertake the work, | Best Short-horns 3 4—3 6 Ewes & 2d quality 3 2—3 & 
Ant had ned, of the l p You should 0 155 m ‘agricutara al “Chemist ry Association, quality Beasts 2 8 —3 — 
poorer quality. of which the Rev. Mr. table, Sutton Waldron, Blandford, | Best Downs í cal 4 — jan d 
ER nd migi be planted orset, is Hon. anan a og ae — 4 4 — 4 = * mae et 
ich would grow i Basset AND CARROTS: A M A. ey are never grown together, | Ditto Shorn, Sheep gad 
ful a regra i In Belgium they grow Fla: iege Carrots together; but no Beasts, 3428 ; Sheep and Lambs, 20, 5350 . Calves, 75; Pigs, 240. 
Fir is eee gs English farmer is likely to copy th 2 4 Fawway March 30 
season f. where OKS aster. Johnston 8 2 onal ‘Che emistry” ne The supply of Beasts to-day is large ‘and the demand lee 
4 eae ete le to eptember. Geology,“ kei ie 40 "Chemistry 0 of of, Pract at at Pas owing to the glutted state ; 3s. 8d. is only 
? to Mrs. n metry; ee ee pie b d for the choicest Scots. Seve: Sar remain sold, 
co * Stephens’s „Beer of the Farm,” Lows ee ene the number of Sheep is not ecu they cannot. 
sent of. i anded e and Loudon’s *“ Encyclopædia all be sold, and less — is taken for those that are dispos 
of Gardeni ing.” ones in heaps of. There is an unusually short — tec — buyers. Good 
> 2 John Horton has be PS | Galves are scarce, and are sold at an advance of 4d. per 8 lbs» 
RAL SOCI damp a ashes © and. for F month o wind per- | Lambs are rather lower. Bhi: ones sell at 6s. From Hol- 
ETY OF ENGLAN Tecil successful, as ‘a method of f reducing hab to powder. end and Germany we have 171 Beasts, 10 it, cad 60 
jis : Society’s Hous BOX-FEEDING : Sir Chas. Burrell reques sts sus to to mention that a Galves; from Scotland, 300 Beasts; an 4 148 Milch Cows 
ast, the 27th of March om m n COPY | the home counties, 
ER, Vice-President, in the oad bein 1 . ad of N 1 ; sr shes Best Scots, Here- Best Long-wools . 3 10 to 4 2 
i e Che t, Mr; 13 — being » from each other, a set whieh aight prove ie 6o 3 sui 3 m E sä quati 3 
F. very inconvenient to any one ex any -feed- | Bes 1 — i — 
Mr an ? — 5 Brand- ; tart li oa at East — 2d quality Beasts 2 6—3 0 Ditto S mie 
mung isher Hobbs, Mr. @ianr SAINTFO ow 2 bushels of seed per acre | Best Downs and 0 3 
Sewell, Prof. Simonds, | across he drills of Wheat or Barley in April, with the drill- | Half-bre — 4 2—4 6 a a4 carter 
sand „B. machine, bush-harrow it in. Ditto Shorn 
members were elected : REEN Giors: , Sow white Car if you havea sale] Beasts, 890; Sheep anit ‘Lambs, 4350; Calves, 192 ; renee 
burg for them. You may perhaps cbtain $ n * rop of 20 tons ed 
, Grosvenor oc tt Camb. acre, and they are, in many districts, worth about 25s, a OPS, Fripay, March i 
3 nham Rougham, N pa TESS Messrs. 1 and SMITH report 9 the market 
orfolk Guano: G ite right; it is bad icy to ones remain dull, 
Northleach, G 9 5 son Ge Fife, You, God a, —— to guano or aay oiber r jim: . all fine coloured Hops ; inferior ones 


Ntt,t,s⸗it nn. mus “Bw W 
206 _THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. FMareu 3), 


a ger easy — N Mare i, 
corzxr GARDEN, i, Manen 31 nF OTATOES. pak tl 3 continues tot be well YELLOW | GLOBE MANGOLD WURZEL, „ 


The Commi report 
The market continues to | supplied with Voge- lied. From the cold weather last week, Potatoes are per 
tables and — — — eee fer — — — * — ready sale, at the following prices :—Yorshire 8 HN Red Ditto : Eo — 
hothouse Grapes have made their a sôs: ; Seo : te me 
a S — Coes. 1505 to 120s. ; Whites, 80s" to 9s, ; French Whites, 80s; | White Belgiar CARROT — i 
2 — — vegetables, Carrots and Turnip areabundant to'100s.; Belgian 29 — 2 . The above may be de epen nded oe bein 
demand. respectable le Heka lainh in Kent, —— Sales 


the 
ds dearer; Preuch Beans, hhubarb, and Seakale are = plentiful Mowpay, Marca 26. be — of English „ere . — * Stas ral 2 Tei ocd of Seeds, 
sma 


r Naw Potatoes begin to make | hy land eurriage samples es this morning was again PPS, 
eens 1 tre pena Cat Power — * small, and disposed of at our quotations of this \ HITE BELGIAN CARROT __ 


caths, 44 — day se’nnight ; notwithstanding t ARGE YELLO an IAN 50. 

AA earn its onor Cam Fuchsias, —— holders: were not disposed to submit to any | LONG "RED en vagaia 
further reduction, and a moderate retail business to | SHORT ORANGE Do, i 

country buyers was transacted on late terms.— Barley, | PINE LONG RED MANGOLD Wonter * al 
Beans, and White Peas a their former value, but | YELLOW AND RED GLOBE Do, oe 
Grey and Maple must be written ls. to 2s. per qr. | RENDUES IMPERIAL anand TURNIP: 
lower. pe conseque. of e large arrivals of foreign LAING’S, MAT SON’S, & ASHGROF rr’ 8 DO. m 
Oats the trade is — at a decline we OF 6d. per qr. upon PURPLE & — EN. “TOP 800 T0118 YELLOW po. , 
* 
* 
* 
U 


very 3 22 


"p 
E 


221 


E 
© 
z 
Q 
© 
feo] 
> 
z 
Q 
@ 


a 


ordinary qualities, ALE’S HYE E 
tay, Marca 30.— We have been shortly supplied WHITE ; RED, ‘AND GRE 1 an 88 
English corn since Monday, but the arrivals of | WHITE, RED, AND GREEN N OL 55 
with nglish Y, À $ a DO. 
| —— p mart rep seen at foot, exceed 100.000 qr qrs. We —.— RED AND 1 Aman y * 
ee Premog e (EANGE e 
ship, where sales have effected a decline of Js. per rers ITALIAN RYB: GR per 
Fa generally acceded to— tom the! saute “wil! apply to PACET’S PERENSAAL 12 tits 
-GRASS * 
— and Oats.— Beans and Peas remain unaltered With all other Agricultural Seeds at the lowest maia hi 
onday. r Agriculiural Seed List is now ready, and 
Livgnpoot, Faipay, Marca: 30.—The wind has been easterly, | shall be happy to send a copy to any one who | may wid 
but several 3 — 3 th babe es have! arrived sincè P: to obtain it. 
— 2 animation etn 2 a * we — ae Ra to WILLIAM pe RENDLE and co 
Flour rra bought on easier te: Oats went very. sea The South: Devon: Rail: seb RANTS; Plymouth, 
and A thera re was eta pole a small aioe for Oatmeal at previous way is no to 
No ch y, Beans, or Peas, Indian Corn was (Lara Green)yand we we now “enjoy Ri commune 
— . de closed: rather h heavy, and without to.all. parts: of: England and — and haw ? 
n.. — arrangements with Messrs. PickPonD and d 


222 eref ean, 
ass 


s 


1 K 


Nr vg * oy od 2 ane ia | immediately communicated to us, as it is our 
— i — z 26 if 30 1 32 11 | see that our customers are charged at the lowest rain, 


4 

6 

11 29 0 is 11 — 11 30 1 |33 
: 29 9 


30 11 |30 
Sah in 4 28 9 31 
x 29 3 17 2 26 5 30 1 32 
0 1 j 0/1 01 0 0 m 
nA the last six — —.— KE , * Great W ester, 1 on ‘ec 
Priors, | Bua: oprint 24. -j Mar. 3. p AA. 17. n 2 CE 


— 


Sjaj ovma 


8288883 


Roy 
eir Agricultural friends that they have now: 
their bulks of the different kinds of Grass Seeds, which 
ready for delivery. T. G. and Co, beg to call particular 
tion to the following, viz. 
wom en og Do SELECTED NATURAL GRASSES ft 


Liverpool. 


with a 
70 Ibs. 70 lùs. apportioned, 0 Suls thes thenature ar oF e different soils and th 
626 7% 20 RENOVATING AS Tn G r old Grass 
76 87 369 7 5 1 ö 
Ne 6 6 866 6 ba Grana =g 
' CARROTS, 
0 2 7 30 * 7 Large White Belgian r 
480 lbs. 480 lbs. Large N ae 
p — . or Orange Globe, 
qr. © qr. 4 Rede Globe, and Long Tellow. 
— -+ 8 2122/2628 2628 23—27 | 23—27 TAAR — 
92 30s—32s 27—3 — 31273103 30— ie Skinvir kaa Laing! 2 
rs Es, = — z ee NE and e Hybrid, 
6 bush. 6 bush — 
45 45 b. ra 255 8 3 
Sa Se. ga a o Beet 2420-24 18—30 18—30 — Thousand headed 0 Catto. 2 
8.8 382 5 35 — a aS pee: iene 
qr. qr. * ; Cattle Parsnip. pi 
35 30— Clovers, Sai F White Mustard, 
27|.: 35i s4/28—-92| — | — | Senti | 36-44 lalaani stn, Fara or hen Garde en a | 
196 lbs, 196 Ibs, Tuomas GIBBS and Co., the Seedsinen to e Roy ; 


tural Society of and, corner of 
ä * 


82 —34 Suse | we it ag — 12—13 


4 Sauk ‘AGRICULTURAL SEEDS (delivered carriage tS 
—30/26—32/26—39 1 ondon, or any Station on — 
f 32 1113 | 1-1 eee e r — * 
MANGOLD W oo fi Shared r „ 
; aoe * oe 
wins Taree Whe ri RG, BEET 3 ee 
1 Altringham 1 
TE eae 55 „ 
peg 1 * 
5 orfolk W and Red adi N * ö 
„  Shirving’s Improved | Purple-top 3 mid 
„ Fine Green- n-top Yello 988 
„ Dale's Hybrid * 
X fellow Ts yth Ft 2 6 
Lapex e other a . : 
FINE LUCERNE 15 1 


@ 5 
54 26 0 

15 2 917 
— — 
ahr s| n 
TOR Fax = 


THOMAS 
WRIGHT. 


All i oo F 2 4 
to the trade. 3 
Bass and ace Seed Establishment, sudbury 


THE 


Auction. 
Ciy IS RBIS: wi will submit 


— &c. 
a y be = ae 
Koai, and of — Auctioneers, 

one, 


o AND AMATEURS. 
: ND MORRIS are in- 

tition by Auction, on 
an Compt DAY, April 9th, 


we 


Three capi 
vases, slate — ate — 
rior to the Sale. 1 had 


uc- 


z 


- © 


hi ane Soom jte Ein 
Vnext, 3d April, 
N OF ORCHIDS made by 3 
‘op bis journey from Costa Rica 
. 
. Hipage Warsewitschi, a 
caudatum, C. longifolium, several 


Suc- | 
Voy upwarde of 10, and Plant ap 


es of the finest sorts; —— water fi 
ito various fc 8 
5 for the e use of every part of the 
urchase money may 
Mr. Parsons, 
hton. 


all the 


— — = postage 


— 


* fs. 5 
22 T beg- to 
— to — 
d Steck, Corn, and 
5 of goo the full ‘particulars 
a d by mps to 


SAND 5 > NURSE RYMEN.— — 


DD, the Manager T at the Lei to ; 
i ge attended chro : 3 


erecting he thes 
| a firs 


their 
of i iron, 2 are enable 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING 1 


HOT WATER. 
ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF THe CHOICEST PLANTS, 
ES, 


WEEKS anp Co, 
„ TURAL ARCHITECTS, Hornovsz 
be ant . solicit an in Be ae their 
w in progress, which will ‘and Co, to quality 

o. h 


King’s-road, — oe 
UILDERS, and 


orks 

of 1 — and Workmanship, J. WEEE S 
erected on their Pre laen, x ae a great variety of 
Hothouses, 3 vatories, e &e., 
some of which are 5 and = heated by HOT WATER 
= various forms, showing the improved methods a Build. 

g, Heating, and dee. all Horticultural eee es. 
e Hothouses, &c., has also 
rote Maa of 8 — aud Gree coal Pla — — 
— ——— in uch enormous quantities that they are eee 
at LESS THAN: eet ECR, Plans, Estimates, and Cat 
ogues forwarded: application. 


5 IN PRICE OF BOILERS. 


ave now 


— ee anD HEALY beg n 2 r 
price 


riends, in gig acy of the pre esent red 


make a con ote i 
the price of. beir 3 The, h prico will Wen now: 

10 ĩ arm 50 Bt in. pipe . Il 15 0 

12 1 75 ft. 4 in. do 2 5 0 

14 in ri 00 ft, 4 in. do 215 0 

16 in. do. 150 ft. 4 in. do 3 10 0 

18 in do. 250 fc. 4 in. do 4 10 0 

21 in do. 350 ft. 4 in. do 5 10 0 

24 in. do. 450 ft. 4 in. do 700 

New Parr BoILERS. . 

30 in, w arm 80 fe. 4 in. pipe oe 1% 1 O 

36 in. 4 1 in. do. . . 25 0 0 
= tioilers with double arms, up to 18 in., 58. extra; to 24 


h do 
„ 10s. extra; all above, s; — 88 
5130, Pleets street, London 


E AND wee Seapeestuliy inform 


Be tnn 
eal ac at s time pe 
aien cao eir 
8 


ared: to undert 

me 
e works, 

he gal Botanic Gardens, Kew. 

Horticultural Gardens: 


Bar of — 5 Oakham, Ratlandshire 
— Hanbury Upleatham, Yor! 


— at least 500 — —— — 


4ication 


Bursipc¢e and HEALY, 130, Fleet-street, eel 
BY HER ROYAL LETTERS 
n PATENT, 
exception 
vered tree of carriage in — 
aud Wan other parts to which 


PALE HOTHOUSE WORKS, enen, CHELSEA. 
4 


; LE ‘* his Premises, invites the — of Gen about 
Y 8 that his to erect:Hothouses to inspect his Patent Plans, ‘shen . — 
b Ust OFA Erona TURAL SEEDS once will — the v — atri of these Hous 
Seat free on application, Gent! emen | others hitherto- erected, for strength, —— "durability, 
I Supplied at wholesale prices, bandsome inde healthiness to plants of ev ay Somme. 
bela Catalogue o of Garden tion, the roofs of on neiple being formed without wood, putty, ; 
had on a application or paint, with a — is surface and only about: — of au inch 
Li uae Ireland, or Wales of licht taken up in any part. 
L 


3 having erect —— — le on 


MPROV & L E K 8110 K 8.— 
THESE — STICKS are rm, — 


using inferior and spu 


OTTERS cio neice THAN EVER 


ot per nt. e. 
a specific poner ae 
YPSUM 1 Reduction i ia ert: is offered 


15s, per ton, at the wor , loos 


and 
a quantity is taken 


D 1 — © ON SALE 
Y THE ONLY I 
ANTONY GIBBS AND SONS, LONDON 
WILLIAM JOSEPH 1 AND 60. , LIVERPOOL: 
nd by their Agents, 
GIBBS, BRIGHT, AND C., LIVERPOOL and BRISTOL; 
COTESWORTH, POWELL, AND PRYU ONDON, 
To protect them selves against the injurious | N 4 
rious — purchas 
mended to apply only to deale 
the above-named importers, — ig a 1 supply — — ina hee 
quantity, — their fixed prices, delivering it from the Import 


PERUVIAN ti 


a | Warehous 
G UA ANO AND OTHER MANURKES. 
PERUVIAN GUANO; of the finest-quality, direct from 
import be arehouse. 
NITRATE SODA AND POTASH. 


GYPSUM (SULPHATE OF LIME), 
DRIED NIGHT-SOIL, 
SULPHURIC ACID: AND CUPROLITE, 


1 hames-street, London, 
A Treatise on Guano, ta —— of Lime, — will 
— on receipt of 8 postage stamps. Free to purchasers 
ot Guano, &e. 


Tas 


FOLLOWING MANURES are manufactured 
at Mr. Lawes’ Factory, popa Creek: 


N AND GRASS MANURE, ... EEN ton £9 10 0 
CLOVER MANUR 8 0 0 
peed — — 7 0 0 

UPE Fare 
7. PRURIGO ACID AND COPROLITE ES, 5 0 0 


e, 69, King William-street, City, Lon 
HEAT SOWING 
HE LONDON” MANURE COMPANY beg to 
offer as under 
— ee a CORN MANURE, 
Ee (LIME. 


R-PHOSPHATE OF 
_ Peruvian Guano, direct from Impo: ter Stores —Fishery and 


wireworm, and Levery. other Artifici 


l —.— 
En 


tə tbeir Corn Mangra oa Urate, the former pee tn a large 
amount of Ammonia, Phosphates, and Silicates, all so essen 
tial for eorn psa * the Urate is W | in Phosphates and 
Bs iaae ubstances required for 

II particulars and prices forwarded o — application, 
e — ee 40, B 3 


| PHALTE: FELT. A race 40 feet we „ may 
ected comple J. — Od. Price — =< Felt, aa 
i es an 


— punctuality. ono 
church- cat London. 
WINGTON’S PATENT HAND LEVER 
heels, for a. — s — of seed 


uni straight 

e the PATENT HAND DIBBLES, Containing from 
ne 8 oe depen one a Ange e implem 

will eae itself in ng of seed alone. 

—— PATENT HAND. “DROP: 2 . ion — and manure. 

STER HAND HYB and CULTIVA — with which 

to the depth of from 3 to 5 


i 
spectus, with testim 
— Knowle park, Frant; near Tunbrid 


EAP AND DURABLE ROO. ROOFING, 


BY HER ROYAL LETTERS 


MAJESTY’S 


F M‘NEILL anD — of Tamb’ buildings, Bunhill- 
row, London, the Manufacturers and only Patentees of 
THE ASPHALTED — ee 

ur 
P atthe . n 
which has von: 1 and o 
E 8, —— e Felt sorEIT 
ae Aus AJESTY’s Woops AND FORESTS, 
amrer BOARD OF ORDNANCE, 
E 


PATENT. 


harp edges, — are liable to eut and 


l „AND PASTURE GRA 
rand pie mao, 5 cee 2s per 


— — Bs 

Apae Ib. Pine — ms 
T thattheir Agrieultnral 
8 etn and will be 


een 


injure the plants. 


They may s had stained brown or green 
respectable 


suit the various plants. — Tobe had of all re e Nursery- |: 


men and Seedsmen, and dealers: in Garden ee 
street, London. and sold Wholesale, at Hi MORRELE’s,-149; Pleet- 


B. Samples to bo seen at the Office of this Paper. 


urch-stree! 
, Southwark, Inventors) 


0 
Spe the Tank System to Pineries, Propagating rd 


& whieh atmospheric beat as well as bottom. heat is 
|- secured to or flues. 
S. and Co, have also to- sense that at the request of numerous 
friends they, are now m 8 * of Iron, as well as 
on p by which the — j These Boilers, whieh 
e now so well known, scarcely — but to 


—— vio, have not. seen them: in — on prespeetuses will 
be oe —— as well as reference of th oe author ity or 
— at most: — = Nobility s seats. and: pri neipal 

urs es —— hout the ki 
Pe Go. beg to inform the Trade ——— — Man en — a3 
h ew: Street; every article regui ecan o 
of Horticultural —— — well! — — — them, may be 
omorvatoriem &., den No- — upon the most 

or 
tal designs, Palisading, Field and Garden 
“Fences, 2 &e. 


a grea 
oul rps ate * length by 32 ine 


L and DOUBLE | 
of seven years’ experience, w 


price of any other enn of Roofin 
ieis b 9 t saving of as in the construction of 
hes wide. 
mre ONE PENNY PER SQUARE 

with Directions for its Use, 2 "Festim onials 
with references to Noblemen, Gen- 
Architects, and Buiiders, sent free to aby part of the 


n 


[onm or counter, 1 y pustexecuted 1 
or Great Britain where the . Rosine i isi made, are 
D 
Patent Felt Manufactory, r Bunhill row, 
London, h the Felt may be seen, 
The new Vice-Chancellor’s aie „ at — entrance to West- 
minster Hall, were — 


with F. M'NEILL and Co,’s Felta bout 
two penne since, under on Serge Esq, 
R. A r M 's Commissi 


A. Her 
so satisfied with — result bat they have ordered the 
mittee Rooms roofed 


at — a darliament to be 
pies r ae Quantity altogether used, 24,000 f 
—-Consumers sen —— direct to the — — 
ied lenge best at — to their Roofs, so that they pay’ 
onan more than they 
Every — aoi on the cons or 


any proposed particular application of the Felt, 


THE GARDENERS: CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. (Marcu 31. 
i ORTLAND CEMENT. — Testimonials received from | PATENT ALKALI COMPANYS MENTI — 


“GLASS FOR “CONSERVATORIES a a CEMENT to. possess the rare pro AINTS.—Cotours: BLACK Axp ErALLIC 
AMES PHILLIES ot pte 116 th kee vo dert of — * severest fros', Ap to be consequently | These Paints (the products of a Patent Bih ys 
Jou Without, have the ple. tof — — — or to every other for hydraulic purposes. such as 234 ordinary covering quality, and far surpass al nts? erta, 
of SHEET GLASS for C liniog of Rese rvoirs, Cisterns, Baths, Fish- -ponds, &c. in point of durability and economy, two Coats 2 Pang 
HORTIC SULTURAL GLASS, |an ires neither be more —— equal to three ot any other description . 
Sheets of a nehes s int. It never vegetates, and will carry rom three : — emical composition, they are pre-emin, 
— 30, and packed ia ‘Cases Cut to the size required, bat iz 3 3 wn body of s — and. vering Iron, Stuccoed, or Brick Buildings, and tart fe 
200 feet, not to exceed 40 inc non ene Manu‘ ctare re, J. B. Wak and Soxs, Milbank-street, — ey have been exposed on Shi cry kind ¢ 
yn atin 6g ppt om ee To pid POOE | en FIRES Aub | ssn Set paria sl Ha ako apa 
r vee * x — en a urs f 
2 — — i 3 5 — 3 7 ” PATENT FLEXI 7 eee COMPANIES, BREWERS, years, — changi — attention of the —— be 
*E*Fͥ 5 200 fee DISTILLERS. PIRE-£NGINES, GAS COMPANIES, GAR- A week Sener tthe nuk: ae Patent Comm | 
Foreign 8 case o Metallic Blac aint (the only Metallie Black 
SMALL SQUARES 18 . OF 100 FEET. DENING AND AGRICULTURAL PURPOSES, &c. EI | value yet produced), which will be found à Paint = } 
HE PATENT VULCANISED INDIA RÜBB R W SAEs me applied to À A em | 
Squares under byt ... 10a, 4. £0 227 éd. HOSE PIPES are made to stand Hot and Aci Wooden Vessels. It also form bra ia j 
Gbytandunder ThyS 26 , el 015 0 simon injury—do not becom eha rd or stiff i = any . Stoves. No other Paint — 2 any 3 | 
a 5 10 Ad ~ — n = (but are always perfectly fi ibl as they require no 77 perties which constitute the great value these the pe. i 
8 * ob 15 cation of oil or dressing, are I ge ted for Fire- | Paints. Numerous and most satisfactory tes Metal i 
ROUGH PATE Liss for WINDOWS, SKYLIGHTS, engines, Pumps, Gas, Beer-engines, Gardens, and all purposes been forwarded to the Compan nys 01 fice, Ar a 
and FLOORS, in meh not exceeding 5 feet superfi where a perfectly Seatble pipe is required. Made all sizes from — Which ma 
thiek .. Sad r foot 1 4. Od. per nach e ik 294 Linch bore upwards, and of any length to order Price, by the ton, 251., delivered in ke ndon or Li 
neh .... 3 O ee seso Vulcanised India-ru — Garden Hose, fitted with brass taps, pm of packages. To be obtained exclusively cream. 
“ copper branch, and roses complete, ready to, be attached — to the eta Mr. J. . WEST, at the Offices 
‘patie nova grits beara Pumps, Water-butts, or Cisterns. Sole Ma 3 * Jam 23 20 Fe 8 — 1 ; or of any often 
len | task „each Is. * Lyne Hancock, Goswell- Mews, Goswell-ro mentioned pasties, aug i the onip AGENTS of the 
ned 1 3 I inch . g N. ulcanized India- rubber Washers — at sizes for Joints | Messrs. Eva’ Brothers, Lond — 
SHEET divas ras AND LATES, of Hot-water and Steam Pipes, and — Bes ag Leonard, Bristol; Messrs. Evans oe Hod Ni. 
Tee made of Shoot Glass * 31-08 26-02, aot any thickness, for all kinds of “Joints, Taher ner Clarke and, Fill, Yarmouth, Norfolk; Mr 5 Mert 
e mace po 3 y 1 t: asgow; Mr. G. Sandeman, Dundee; x 
Biates, 20 ins. by 10. 10d. 1s. 12. 4d. 1s. 8d. GALVANIZED WIRE GAME * ford, Yorkshire; Mr. R. 8. Parr, ‘alnbargh Mr W 
Slates are keptin stock — Baw Sonn sizes, and made to any 7d. per yard, 2 feet wide, Wolverhampto p fiada Yur * 5 
ri d 
GLASS MILK-PANS, PROPAG ATING anp BEE GL — weer a j Mr. Robert 0 Oxland, Con Moren 2 
Pastry Slabs, Hyacint asses and Dishes, oe for roo 
ments, Fish G 4. — ioe Window O — — f every descrip- 


SUPERP HOSPRA ATE UF LIME, the best M 
tion, Lamp § s and Lactometers for trying the quality of >. a t Crops, when Manufactured — de aa 
Milk, 4 tubes — = 6 tubes, 10s. Self Registering Thermome- 

Green 


HARTLEY'S PATENT ROUGH PLATE G OWN H HUNT „ informs his Agricul 


8. Friends 
J ARTLEY’S PATENT ROUGH PLATE G GLASS MANURE ready for — which he oo . — 1. 
FOR CONSERV — RIES.—The readers of the e the best for pro — cing — Potatoes, and all Rect 
„Feb. 24th, —_ 3 — per rops, and will bring to hoe; The 


e pla uch ier 
— of the Royal . — „and oth 


the high terms in which this Glass was spoken of by 8 2 — n, will most aunean attest its value in this 
thereof. is 


LE. We have ure re-arranged our list of prices 
respond 


— with those of — Patentee, to — we ance aga A anure, from being more 
wou d beg the attention of the Nobility, Clergymen, Gentry : * n its effects than any other, brings up the plant 
— throwing it at once into rough leaf, and thus defies the 
E Cratos of the sizes as . „ 6d, per foot. Galvan- Japanned | of this si pt insect, while the crops per acre, at a co 
In Squares under 8 by ster ane i ized, Iron. not more than 21s., far exceeds, under ordinary 
i 8 by ‘Gand anler 10 by T 5 24 — mesh, light, 24-inch wide. d. per yd. 5d.peryd. | that produced — any other means. I have a large number g 
„ 10 by 8 14 510 . 5 ip 2-in 15 ” so „ 6} „ letters from many Farmers, who have used this Manure for da 
„ 48 Me ... 8} ~ $. — ii ane, strong „ 2 » n la a with great success, ne pe 
„5 3508 on ON ee pe li-inch ,, light 5 HIS: B 55 Ep culturists ior arti the market, mans 
“i pee og tae ce ed 12-inch stron 10 i 2 55 1 factured from C. ‘oprolite ins — of Sons and Guano, not been 
3 1 2 e ‘ie A ine „ extra strong „, 1 the quality is superior, but the price is the indu 
7 1 wi E A 1 All the above can be made any width 3 proportionate prices. lite being 30s. per ton, and Bone 85s, per ton, But it musth 
5 ri S- a 2 ve If the upper half is a coarse mesh, it will reduce the price one- | observed that Coprolite was not in the market when = 
p 3 10 13 i fourth, 9 sparrow-proof netting for pheasantries, 3d. | phosphate of Lime was first „ — ingredients 
Qua arvies per square foo haan forwarded Laces è. composed that article in those days were Bone, 
Averaging } of an inch thick, and about 26 oa, pA the foot, e mer hea oe by NARD and BISHOP, Market-place, | Charcoal, and Vitriol, which W this Manors into suet 
Jas. Futte Co., 116, Bishopagate.street Without, London. — und delivered free of expense in London, Peter- | great repute. But the character of Super hoephets ie 
TAR TLEYS A NT ROLLED ROUGH | rough, Hull, or Newcastle. aat. fa fail, sag its peas 9 . be lost, if P : — 
all hemselves e deceive s ru „ It may 
PLATE GLASS, for Horticultural 12 At is now WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT. easily e by its gravity, 5 is very dense, and hasè 
22 —— a doubt that the above Glass is superior cement- like ö 2 made from the Coprolite sans 
any bi erto disco ggg ta all — s Horticultural uses. * * — in this article to Z.. 
( Witt BATTEN Se b. m 1849, p r jr ae 8 se S — REE Works and judge f S beware of those iy 
Mencuants, 2 1 Fish. stroet, , Doctors’ Commons, London, carmon engia and * — 53 * e 
. the Publ gate nsequen f the rous y Fa . oats n be supplie ied witi hall ee — — 
e uted in — Scotland, nad; the pfi - À Treaa a of Lime who have the convenience forso deme 


Guano, Nitrate of Soda, — — Acid, and Bone Manas 
supplied at the lowest ma arket 

sens are Sante d for the iels “of Superphosphate of Lime 
and other Manures, where none are at present 
Bone Mills and Manure Works, High-st., Lam 2 


2228 


Stock, in 100 feet boxes, from 1d. per ata? 22222 


atentee ha 2 
P ty turer’e WK He 
W. P. and Co. have a large quantity of Crown Squares Aan NL 10 aa £ RRR, 
aay ar 
iit: Va 
H 


P.S. sole Manufacturers of the Anti-Corrosion and Mineral 
Paint for all kinda of Out-houses, . Heong — i NEW ZEALAND CoMPANYS 
Buildings, Go. j ET . SHIP. Passenger 
oie CORNWALL, poe tondi now | * 
pW. H. J ACKSON are supplyin SHEET, > -agn ndon-Docks, sill be d 
1 ROUGH PLATE, and CROWN GLASS — Ho ene i < 2 Company's paren — 
Fer ses, very reduced prices. BRITISH anp e Me etropolita e ane ntti pa 3 : 
— ATE of superior nantes for Glazing dwel- high'y eu sed both for i “its utility and pretty appearance, and = = 5 700 de N 9 ae ad Howe; oe 
a d ich purpose these articles are now s „| ack le produced. 
pom. es dele ioe Glass. ORNAMENTAL GLASS bo ore It forms a “one and durab’ e fence against the depre edat tions of te Jaseem er De Broker, he sias Fee, Ha 
and W — —— l PATENT OPTICAL FLIN ff. Ä DARE De Aviaries | New Zealand House, 8, Broad-street Building 
GLASS, Thin . “sides and Çel ur requiring no paint, it —. F ponaos Mane on * 
— exch Shades, Propagatin —— oar Bat timates, Lasts of creeping plants. Large quantities always k # ; ZEALAND Ge 
ces, — — a — for warded on application at — 24, 36, and 48 inches wide ; it can, however, be mane to any 1 A 91180 o Court of Di hereby ra- 
their Wareti use, 315, Oxford-strect, London oe — 8 raisi as free 5 F e New 23 177 * BALLUT 
1 y es w e notice, that a 
erat Teas &e. 01 = 55 x 3 15 a CAOICE or LAND paire ia 
H —.— og from reape — T "Gu — sed d dr., » 1d. 8 re = = Zeal tae * Fah he nee 
. to 3d. = = Zealand House on < 
Feet ol which py ure, prices vary * ay gee d * — strong Imperial Wire Sh eep Notting, 3 3 feet, 1s. 6d. per | ~ next, at 1 o’clock rece en 
re kep: ready elivery. nuing yard; if galvanised, 2s. o every description of d to attend, 


ried on plication, for | Wire Nursery and Fireguards, 55 The full sum of 120. 10s. for each Property, consisting ges 
PATENT 4870 L PLAT, e e Glee ane Shades, Fly-proof Dish Covers, Mens Safes, &.; Window te fa must 22 id either to the Commercial — pero 


TiL N ay NG | Blinds, 18. lod. per s foot, wit smi 
quare foot, h bolts l i S J and Sm 
GLASSES ARER A AFANI E “ihe S, Fanz frames; — L bor 9 r lete, — 2 appre maga 1 e account, onor bAt 
9 — MEX Ae 8 OEE ass SHADES, ceed lirare ra each; Garden arches, 20s Foy) in . ork 111 x and must be ee 
ower Stands, from 3 * 9d. each l ing Wi - i J der the sig 
et — Che cl 17 si in 8 each month, — and trees, Dahlia Rade, and 3 of Wire. on oe Perot aig ‘ate of the Otago a elatio, 
* pt Bhd ign 8 use of paper-makers, millers, &e.— At 1 particulars may be obtained at the Ner 
— Ne 0. pe SON respectfully the Manufactory of Thomas Henry Fox, 63, Snow-hill, London. House, London; and at the Oces of, the ORDE West 
announee that they have propared for this season an ex- | G)MOKY CHIMNEYS AND VENTILATION, — | No,27 South Hanover street Bote Gourt, : 
tensive 5e e their various T non X BEE HIVES, |), DAY'S IMPROVED SIMPLEX WIND-GUARD is cheaper, | e — y order Somas Consent Hazen 
* an r y t 
and rhian jag branch of rural ve 8 g that It continually ö a aa — ge race: os + = ä a 5 2 So Salat 
“t The Single Box Hi x of “ Nutt’s Collateral Hives,” sure all chimneys smoking from wind, It ma gy 3 Landon, Maech 31. 601 
ved Cottage ae ú 0 7 — Bar Rive” S A — — an Franks i 2 Rassell-street, Bloomsbury, ee AND Co.’s N AE gee he Tat 
= ? 0 ch the — 10 58. ros tuses fi AS 2 
* - any time without injury to the Bees, and — plication. Licenses granted, and the rows paiia the | has the! e important pasean of rong . es 
4 ety, humanity, and profit, by the most timid Above, and also Day’ š original Wind-guard, made of d cleaning them in the 
= 3 —̃ — to Bee manipulation. A descriptive paper durable material. A Liberal discount allowed. e Reece dwg pone g famous for the hairs not 
— gen een “Oconee N — n_the receipt of o FLOCKM ASTERS.—IMP e ordinary en An iof Clothes Brush, that cleans oat 
Holvorn, Londo: sigmsous and Son, 127, High THOMAS B BIGG, Cur eule * A part of the usuat time, and mag Ae i 1 
T, Ou he * 
* to a! Rees ” (6th edition), now published. Di D treet, Borough, London, earnestly palate — bristles, whic „ soften like common Bins 
Mitton 8 3 -HIVES.—These Hives are made | SPECIF, 10 On Farmers and Breer pers: Arira oa Brash mproved graduated and ew succes ey 
every variety, for the purpose of taki SHAB, which w Brushes out b act in the ye dois i 
Without killing the bees, The p taking the honey | be found a certain remedy for eradicatin z with its p 
—— g that loathsome and ner. Th Sm mene 
— all climates, — wep de + be taled epon ta tal —— disorder. This excellent preparation oon stain s no = ore ert es SF absorp vitality, “and _ durable ate ty 
simplicity of construction and ea Practica hor poisonous ingredient, and may be s motila to | dirani ations, dispensing inter dar 4 
"BER GUASS 2 W Seuntry, And dort wen b), in any climate or t aching, and eck, Ene 
ES of all sizes, and ng ail seasons of the year. Full directions | genui Only at METCALFE, one doot" 
the 4 every article connected for € g Sm rna Sponge. Only one 
ca tx: Ay mee Sheet of Ilustrations of Bee —.— — ibe, wiih are extrem it the 5 Go. s Sole yrn Sponge, 130 B, Oxford-streeh 3 — 
10, Great M — eeper,” by Jons oe 43, Gd. | at 10s, gallon (suffi * fi TT ont — above = es-stree oe arii 
Sager een Londo ing to theextent and virulence of the dises * heep, 1 accord. Caution. Beware of the words From 
H EAE 4x SON'S LIST OF BEDDING, contain." carriage paid to any part of the kingdom d. n ga 2 . 
ng a full description of W ? - | post-office order for the same. TOORN E No 13, Upper 1, of NO i l 
which purchase hts, Sizes, an T. B. Printed by WI IIIa Brane of No qr Evans 
© — ei — to ——— e beet sultes B. orders or his e oured with a continuance of the much | Parish of St. Pancras, and Fes bee 0 Poe cny 
good Bedding, sent free post, on application esteemed orders for hi lebrated Sheep and ers mb Di row, ington, both in county Watt friars, 
to their T 196 (opposite the — P Composition, for the Destructi f ipping | office -s'reet, in the Precin b. 5, Charles SE 
road, London „ Tottesham-court- | venti Ka F on of Tick, „the pre. don; and published by them at the : E 
= — ly striking, m and the — A pen e Fleece, — u Genn Covent-gardep, im se 2 ro . 
d is gratitied d maint ains ite ts deserved repu: zom — rar og are 


ation. Sarvapar, Maacs 30, 1819. 


GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
RICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


aper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, APRIL 7. 


[Price 6d. 


EX. 

Horticultural Society. 

; Hyacinths, yoa 77 

Im 8, far 
Meland e “condition of. a 

provement spe Tris 


pee „„ 


252 
1 


uty F 
Microsco ical Society 
New Zealand, Handbook o of, rev. 215 
=, book, “J. W. S — : 


22 


endo, 
Statistics, ae de Feral 2 
Temperature at Erze oom 212 
b | Tenant ht, Shaw on, rev. 221 
Traveller, notes of a . 214 
Violets, culture 250 214 4—2ʃ6 
e Walle, garden e 214 


oble, mn Baker, of Bagshot; and other 
il will be ages in the course of the 
Gardens of iety an extensive Col- 
AN PLANTS. ‘This 0 Collection will be open 
copa nds, as on all ordinary 
may have an opportunity of view- 
ewhich the Council have reason to 
an Exhibition of these 
as 


one of the —— days, or to one 


; g Visitors, either by Fellows person- 
orders, will karari? be suspended on the 
the2d of June, as upon other extraordinary 


fti è Council, J. D. C. SowERBY, Secretary. 
TS, FLOWERS, 281 


5 —— siaaa, 3 be held on WEDNES- 
ne 20th, and Jul N 


—.— s in che An ERICAN GARDEN, 
TURD ars, May 26th, and June 2d, . o'clock. 
to admit on on any one of the above- 

* ned the 6 — by orders 


the Society.: Price, on or before May 5th, 
2 or on the an of Exhibition, 7s. 6d. 
imay have packets of 30 tickets until May the 


ee IMPROVEMENT 
hold | PRINCE; oy &e., &e. 
on Topar — No Fruits, Flowers, 
ew Exhibi 5 oo tks e 24t rom 


en in 
; 2 t the —.— m 
eas, — he . — 2 — rs may 
a bea: and will be occu d by speci- | e 


J. C. 8 Hon. Sec. 


ut his FOU 
UMS of 1848, — he can high] 
gots ea Certificates 8 2 


à on pre bre 
-p application, 
Kenningt ‘oration — 
Brixton. ro 


NEW VERBENAS 
RE AND STEWA 


Post-office 
ey einten, 


pale lilac, a large 
arien, 1 white, — 


Trade. 


one person, at the option of 


SEEDLING PELARGONIUM ee 
will be held on FRIDAY, JUNE th 
y between the Slou 

an he D 


A 


rst, £5; 
8.7 aud the fourth, „£1 10s.—to be 

paid in cash imme ly a Two years 
old seedlings, or anak of pain Bi age, but w have not been 
sent out, will alone be allowed to compete fe the ere Prizes. 
5 may be exhibited, but for them no prizes will be 


* 0 that the time bas i altered from the 8th, as 
i adverts bh to the 15th of Jun 

3 following regulations will = strictly observe tis 

tly requested that parties intending to exhibit ‘will pan 

— elves e acquainted with them. 


Any one, whether 
a subscriber or not, may compete; — all may exhibit as ma 
two-year-old seedlings as they please. An Exhibitor must 


be either the raiser of what he shows or the ee of 
the a 2 — no one ma; e part o oductions 
— mself, 


ey m abe ithdra 

place will — —.— suitable — — —— of the plants 
for exhibition. pe their names must t be withdrawn. A person 
unacquainted wit eta ee will receive them from the 
exhibitors 7. kee an m 

each pota 


their a 


| their readiness to go to the Fa 8 sie will each write upon 


the blank card the numbers which they consider 
should tate. the first, second, aaa: car fourth prizes, adding 


scientific hy melee e — 
ed | will 


their eas = the | 2 om. On leaving t * tent these cards 
will be repare ed for the urp 
4 F | 4 9 
the — — of 8 Nasty. K eee. ‘and har prizes shall be 
forthwith paid according rters ve tickets for their | 


admission given them, [mediately af the ballot has taken 
place, u app! wage — eith 
a te ., Clewer Manor, Windsor; or 
28051 TED bior. Islew orth, 

N. — res ragg, I 1 Slough; or Mr. Turner, Royal 
Nurs e place, have kindly offered to receive an 
prepare 157 erhibition plants that may be sent to them for the 

urpose the day previous to the Show, by parties unable to 


| attend the same 
resent der ag to the Prize Fund: 
Edmund Foster Esq... * Bragg 5 
Ar H 2 0 0 Black 
Superintenden tof „The Ar. Turner N 2 
R Ses 5 0 0 Mr. Dobson 
J. Riley, Esq., Hudders- n 
oon PE E E A 0 Mr. Parker 1 

r. Edwards; Holloway 1 5 J. nnan i 

Mr, = e 


33 to 3 are requested to forward their 
ae and the amount to any of the above named gentlemen. 
LOWER AND VEGETABLE SEEDS of every 
description. 
PLANTS FOR BEDDING OUT; orders taken, to be de- 


are ae 


roots, at 6d., 8d., and 1s. each. 
‘ LILIUM 1 0 8 ALBUM, 18. 6d, each. 
lasticus, Aloes, Cacti, Cedrus Deodara, 
ney On. bor 


PAWN GRASS, ls. 6d. per lb. 

abel : where it is wished to improve the crop of Hay 
an 3 lbs. Me begs 8 Clover with 1 gallon oF 
Pe n Rye-Grass ; the cost will be about 
23, 6d. to 
AGRICUL URAL SEEDS at the lowest prices. 
Duncan oe Seedsman, 109, St. Martin’s-lane, Charing- 
cross, London 


25d T 
`] GER ANIUM, — choles 
| PINK, sa 


1 pot roots, choice sorts, 3 in great 
Gd. each, or 5s. per dozen. . d. 

fe i very å double. saved from a superb * soon 0 6 

DAHL 2 ry fi e best varieties of Show 


Snow Flow 1 
ved by a cel smie e Florist, . named | Show 


Flowers 1 


1] 1 

homson a. other eminent growers 0 
25 varieties of choice showy Hardy Annuals, selected so as 
at variety ef colour owering. 

The above may be had of WILLIAM DENYER, Seedsman and: 
Florist, 82, Gracechurch-street, London (near the — Eagle). 


WOODLANDS NURSERY, MARES FIELD, NEAR 
UC 5 Sate wee 


1 582 88 


Ge ve sts * 

Camellias, Gineraris, Fuch . Petunias, Chry- 
sauthemums s, and Plants . for Grouping, wi ith a selec- 
oe of which have 


tion of New and Ovaa Mta] Shrubs, &c, ; 
and will be f. 


been 1 to all customers, orwarded to other ap- 


plicants, GRATIS, as 8 1 

and Son a superb stock of all the finest Cine. 
sities ‘i in piee “the pain are strong and coming into 
bloom ; they are offered a 


12 superior varieties for 126. 


725 extra fine varieties for tae 
12 superb ditto, -NE w . I8s. 


150 ptn ditto for... 


carr iag e. 


ASS anD BROWN’S DESCRIPTIVE PRICED- 


CATALOGUE, for mare of a and choice Geraniums, 
as, Dahlias, Petuni Verbenas, Chrys anthemums, 
Greenhouse and Bedding Plants, may be had free by post on 


application. 
Seed and Horticultural Establishment, ata Suffolk. 


UGH LOW anp CO. can with the e. naaa con- 
ce recommend the undernam 
E OPIUM, ti a aoe DE LIEGE. „This fine 
rst time offere kr this ee 


ri andoubt tedly pri aie 
bengi ee 78. 
1 „— This i is the finest of the dark 


—.—— E. abit `c aoe! and good; corolla violet porns 
beautifully N psepals bright red, of waxy consistence, 
much reflexed as a Lily. Price 10s. hong T 
CHSIA, “ SPLEN] DID A. — This is also a variety of 

eat merit, in — rem 3 pa i very fine 
habit and profusion of flowers. Price d. 

The Fuchsias named —— were — ned eeds by 
oN WILM sq., of eg — and the acknowledged 
superiority of tha n in . by ca and 


finest genera of —— 
a sufficient f those 
ffered. Pla 


Ha 
a flowers in the way of B. pinnata ; will 
pecimen plant for exhibition, Stro ‘ong 


ve, H. Low and Co will be able to su pply 
rowers, including the Con 
rysanth emum: A * 80 


he abo 


h 
General Collection, are in e of ‘publ on 
ready will be forwarded, post ee on applica 
2 Nursery, London, April 7. 


m 


HARDY AMERICAN ORCHIDACEOUS 
ILLIAM MAY, F. H. S., having —— a . 
importation of the above interesting and beautiful plants, 
— kod ripbor agg do Cypripeti ne Orchis, Platanthera, Habe- 
Neottia, Malaxis, Goodyera, Micro- 
stylis, C Corallorbiza, “ Lan ben. Trillin m, „Erythronium, To 
Lists, with prices specifying th 


5 — — vill gee forni 


shed on ap Ficatic 
Hope —— near e, Yor 


7 ARDENS, REGENT S PARK. 
Orders are no longer necessary. Admitance, 912 SHIL- 
LING ; On MONDAY. SIXPENCE. 


2 SEEDS. 
ILLIAM MAY, F. H. S., begs to inform those 
Friends who have approv ved 0 Elletson’s Superb A Ayal ‘ 
2 Mammy: and Improved Wilcove e BROCOOLTES, cage has 
m the original dt ach, 


Whick is pie y select, and may be gers ng orange A boone i 
month, with so e other choice varieties of Vegetable Seeds, 


as below. 

Elletson's Mammoth or Superb, April, White imine te ey 
per packet, = Improved e 7 Improved 
cheren d mperial Ale or Raby warf BEB T. 15. 
Us 8 alete Curled PARSLEY, 18. nes flat-stemmed 
solid R d and White meer ts, Js. The above W. M. has had 
the e public for several years, with 
the e satisfac 

1100 also a saat i supply of the following: Very select 

LLY Hoc K, all waranian i from the vay best double flowers, 
— packet, 2s, 6d. CINERA RIA, from Henderson’s last year’s 
collection, 2s. 6d. PANSY, from very es varieties, 28. 6d.; 

and ANTIRREHINUM, from best sorts, fine, 1s., all post free. 

Nurseries, near Bedale, Yorkshire 


—— J. anD H. BROWN are now — out 
iy — SHRUBS and PLANTS, borne 
packed, to any part of the United Kingdom or the Con 
5 New hardy Belgian Azaleas, a horn — wr 
flower buds, one of a sort, b +s .. 20 0 
— American Azaleas, ditto “16:0 
5 Hardy flowering shrubs, one of a reek name . 10 0 
12 Rhododendrons, inclu ding scarlet, and rose, 
Mose 1 kes . 4 5 10 
6 . masie 2 — orts, including floribunda, for Tee 
Bery Heaths, alates, and og per dozen 8 ( 
6 Fine ee nolias, one „ 10 (€ 
50 Dwar Rosik; ou eir own —— one of a sort, named 16 
— and half-standard Roses. per doz., 12s, and 15 
EEL Moss and climbin s, per do R 


Dablias, Seats 
Cryptom ria geroa and 6 6 choice hardy Pinus for . . 10 
12 Greenhouse Azal bore of a sort, Atay pe plants.. 25 0 
12 Choice 55 ame, ditto, „ 
Choice flowering 05 se pianis, — ofa sort 45 
24 Choice Eri¢as, one of a — t, bs Bong s = 
Pium Larpentæ, good pla 
6 Bulbs of the peautifal n Set J span unaa one of a sort 2 
tees, per oe 
Peony roots, new double, white, pink, blush, and 
mson, one ofa sort, per a oe . 0 
25 ho oice Herbaceous Border ts, for 6 
Hardy Ferns, and Meee —, medet er doz. 8 0 
Cinerarias and Calceola — 5 str eer Ba dozen 12 0 
Fancy . — — and 5 0 
Best Petu and Verbena , one 6 a re he 0 


of a 
New — oaks variegat a bevanloms, —— 
8 — Phloxes, Antirrhinams, Heli koopia 

s, and Fuchsias, ae —— 


e- aa nts; new sorts, 0 4. 0 
25 Pa N — Seeds, 5s. ; 50 Ditto, * 5 perro 
» post, Also —— and Be dding plants, and 


s of all kin 
Albion Nursery, Stoke Newington, London, April vs 


ee 
THE 9 


CHRONICLE. 


7, 


> b. Fe 2 rc — ate y following list of | 72 225 3 s — DRO 
Jess, ST. ALBAN'S GRAPE. 4 i OHN K to 2 45 8 | Gardens, Godalming, Surrey, — 4 ean’ Mite 
A br 7 remittance San He. accom First Class te iri class ; Purple Aan ard, like- | ended „c, . 
rd tal liowance e ee St. Alban’ — 7. — omy aplin, Sunset, and 8 Bains. O a a 7˖ç57«—i᷑iim 
pany the = < i i ave Vic- H i 
EDS FOR PRESEN sy jete 2 the four — arie — nly E e 3 
EN om E SE TO SEEDS with dizes- | toria Rezina inclu tionally moderate argid: 
A packet of 4000 selected Pota r packet—s. Flowers in — pii 3 geen et Nursery, Salis- 
sowing, &e., 1s. 7 1 direct OHN So 4 
72855 BLE and 1 2 18555 * a H spe ee = 7278 ls ANSDELL’S NEW AMERIC 
VEGETA | 8. 
Double CAKKSEERS 1 varie, san ) e OHN KEYNES, of f Salisbury, ‘will be ready to send MPKINS, superior to Swed RICAN e OCHAR 
„ RÄLS 1 ered J lendid 4 — 3 properties, for Cattle, Shas and . Tg 
TA r ö | season, in May, at 73.6d. each. Miss Blackmore, Rainbow, | by His Korat HIGEN * PRINCE ALBERT, pa, 
1 8 5 mixed 0. e Stevens, e rail of whic have eee dernen Jast yonr, gren — ot Sha 
en . 25 do., 23. 6d. — arb, — x and Suffolk, without waste of t 
00 varieties of Teeution — Pota An o dino isj a ae E ERT AHLIA PRIZES. foll the succeeding crop, for which it is — . 
ji post free, om receipt of cash or postage stam Essex. | JOHN KEXNES, of Salisbury, Tr the folowing | preparation as a clean e on a 
a . enin N 
e Amanin aoe asd s 4 le a 2 — 4 a — — e tom Floricultural, and wouGnee SQU SH, a delicious — o — 8 
0 DAHLIAS, VERBENAS, 8, &e. advertised as a * Prize, N.; — do., 30s. ; 3d do., time in this country in the RoyAL 6 DENS, F & 
ARLES TURN ER has the following novelties to 2 do. 5th do. 1 Ate. Open teurs and Gentle- fer the growth of Mr. Canspe cogent 
C= thie spring. T as have 2 prom — ari men's —— No ce money. cation prenin ER MAJESTY’S royal 
l on! — — remark rpa 
2 hcg na a saree one E MANGOLD WURZEL, 7 5 iat fat gen 
— be K — af The prize of mproved Long Red Ditto. > ye peda GARDENS, ‘end are sufficiently hardy 5 matoro inot — 
lek ole T the Royal South a — ‘for the best 2 Cattle PARSNIP 655 30s. | ® air, if planted in a sheltered si 
3 E. dak boon, aw the habit of | White Belgian CARRO Ci * For “3 i R. CANT having made arrangements 
— yea = * The above may be depended o m, 5 all grown by the most ©ANSDELL, bose to offer the above new and cree — 
Per plant.—s, d. respectable — in Ken References will be given on | he will be happy | to forward, post free, on application, 
BEAUTY (Tower) — — a tipped with deep 6 een also a General Catalogue of Seeds > T bi a dirsotione apn eum m 
, n 
very attractive As. Epps, See idstone, Kent. 
BEAUTY OP P HASTINGS (Banani), 2 — TO SHEDSMEN AND OTHERS VUROHASING IN CON-| “JAPAN CEDAR OR CRYPTOMERIA J 
eri 
centre, being compsct and close, fie habit, constant, LGIAN CARROT, LARGE RED MESSRS. sr ANDISH axp NOBLE, Nonsena | 
seat very desirable for vie iin the “ Florist for RINGHAM CARROT, LONG ORANGE CARROT, t, beg ree tfully to call the attention of Lans 
<< — 10 6 LARGE, GUERNSEY PARSNIP, YELLOW hreag „ani Proprietors and others to their fine and large Stock of ù 
e (Cortison), “crimson mar oon. pe fale ROLDE WURZELS of superior quality, b own — — and ornamen oe Sa 2 
— < root ‘ollowing prices: 3s 8 or 
bie habit Mee — ve Certificates at Jonx e ae, e s, Reading, Berkshire, being extensive — 100. ssa ig f 
tant, and noble È Taah 10 6| growers of the above me articles, will sell them at low prices, — in ASMINUM NUDIFLORUM, a perfectly hardy, neat, 2 
erie Caisse) shaded carmine, new and * — not less than 28 Ibs. of either sort, Prices of thes shrub, flowering most an ee 
DR, — fine form, the flowers standing well — soar Seeds will be 3 by post. Re. — yas: — the on on of 
b= eam 8 it — been awarded three first- — or Post-office orders required with orders from un- one of the most beautiful wi — — ae 
clans Certieutes 1 —————— bale 
RARE oF CLARENDON (Tonnen), bright scarlet orange, IMPORTANT TO HOLLYHOCK GROWERS. Scie —— bye ae: ts, . — yellow feet 
— ged ee n DWARD TILEY begs respectfully to apprise the EIGELA ROSEA.—The beauties of this plant will vim 
—— R M uae). deep ru — very full 7. , and others that he been successful place it in 8 oremest — of ornamental plants in Ee 
GREN — i nd constant — e habit. It n procuring a 1 of i, Tethys 3 1 — 2 PS dg N garden shrubberies. 205 e 1 to 2s, 6d. each, 
Oicest co 
bas — —— at the following . — nhows, — ee 1 bcd ye c E AA oir to guar last, requires diiy $0 — 8 s y ae l 
— London, Wycombe, Slough,” North s do not extend mor 1 half an ine ond the centre, is one ee — . 
London, and Camberwell ware n maa forming a Doe a a a a eor Da aoha faae: seoti forming mb ioe feet in te, e 
maroon any part; 8 que, an with its rich golden flowers. Strong plants, Js. 
5 rosy purple, s shaded with lila — ed ‘of iousmarable smooth-edged petals, closely and} " PLATYCO 5 N GRANDIFLORUM ALBUM, a basii 
m Be — neatly folding the one withi Sg other. * sae the true cha- ampanulaceous plant, also from China. 

„aud finely arrar god centre ing racter of the flower the s m by ower |. AZALEA INDIO A" — 0 — akp 
and flower wer very elevated, flowers fall and of it, Growers wishing to g — a ny collection should not | double pink, the much resembling Nerium splendes. 
constant, as the following awards: Ist elay the present 27 A pe 1 seed spoken ighly obtained a prize a —— 3 Horticultura? Society's Bit 
class Certificate at Gravesend rize, 5 guineas, as has been tho ughly proved, and bring the major p t of the | bition in May last. “Plants, 10s, 6d, each. Also a collection’ 
the best Seedling of the day “at Salisbury ; Ist class lants equal to the collection the seed was saved ai. Sold | gne 80 orts, from 1s, to 58. each. 

Certificate, ditto ; ditto es; Oxford; let 2 packets 2s. 6d, each, or packets containing 200 seeds, 58.; CALCEOL meis A * ACME,” white ground, with dere 
. * ot Seedling, 1347, Teddington ; lst class larger packets of 500 seeds, 10s. Parties purchasing the abo ve coloured spots, good ha bit and fine form. 73. 6d, each, 1. 
—— ombe; ditto h; dito Royal | may depend on having the Taa double Hollyhocks yet grown. | 8 eedlings from the best a 
Seems Lauson i ae! North London, Pine habit .. 10 6 E. T. has a choice Collec on of SWEET- WILLTAM SEED The following fine 5 — . ‘year old 
MISS PROCKTER R (Paockz:a), blush, with pink shade, to dispose of, saved f “semido wers of th Is. per packet :'Hampton-court Green-tiesh,’ Lahan 
med, and of unusual substance ; a little co e great er part Pao able “the varieties have 9 —— Bagshot Green-fiesh, jand Beechwot 
18 10 6 bon shown ex the bg hr berber 1 much admired, for HECK FIELD COS LETTUCE, the best in cultivation 
D), fan flower, pu e, with w e las i 
miss Ja JANE N vies s first. 3 at GERMAN ASTER SEED, unequalled for th superior quality “in stations the above, Messrs, Sante and Norge 
i South riá and North London Shows 10 61 of ing that of balf a ball, beautifully quilled ; me 35 3 of RHODODENDHONS — 
R NS (Turven), orange, full size, very constant. borete delna — in packets, 1s, 6d. each. ten AN PLANTS, with a gen —— 
pins, —— prize at Ox Oxford’... 7 6 —ͤ—ͤ— — SEED, all saved from fine striped and | Plants, Shrubs and Trees, Seeds, Bo,, © 
PRIAM (Cortison), bright rich crimson, fine form, spotted varieties; 1s. per packet. can be forwarded on appli ation.— Ap 17. - 
7 6) 24 ce varieties of HARDY ANNUAL SEEDS, 3s. = the be 
i I LOUISA ee shaded salmon, large, 3 a packet of each of the above, including a 3 CY PIGEONS. — For Sale, Euston Sa 
19 6 | of the 24 ‘Harte ——— for 88. varieties, at per pair. — at Sade — om 
VICTORY (Foon taS), å d, good sh ape 7 6| Improved Walcheren Ca uliflowe Broccoli, Wilcove do., Tam- London.—Apply to o A. P., 24, Cannon-street 
VIOLET PERFECTION 1 , rich violet purple, 110 5 kA h do., ls, soak oer pes cket, These Broccolies have proved 
fine form and compact centre the best in cultivation. 
2 — CASTL (Tokua); dark crimson, ‘shaded, ole or any part of the above sent postage free, on the 
, uncertain 0 6 of a post-office 3 or the amount in penny postage 
Healthy Plants will be ready early in May. —. — Sold T 5 TILEY, Seedsman and Flolist, 16, 
VE " Pulteney Bridge, B 


t producti 


— t scarlet, 
for beddi mer, and excellent habit 
MORNING STAR ( raseh bright rosy purple, white 


PRINCESS ALICE (Winte), wh ch centre, 
and fine of hite, deep cherry It ex 


Show, whero 
ers’ Chronicle 
seedling 


ual flowers well formed ; pat 4 is ante 
ropa ae 


i ap 
AL (Kovna), tab ie, 
. e nim ne Brower., iis 


colour 
Plants ready the 20 
LAN A 
A e . * 
18. tol 
ey. ANEMONE 3 APONICA, 63, 
fhe 
CEDRU 121052 is, vr) = wee now Sista 
5 e the best kinds, variety, 
. — A iad 


5 JAPONIOA. from te. 0d. to 5l, 5a, 


8 of 
mee ; Sorts. 
: URNER, II. 43, 
pair aes of "ie aro mow fad 
elec a to C. Tur 


6s., 125; 
m Vegetable 8s eda, inclu 
had on ey —— tire — 


ers 


„Sec, Bei ene cor — os 


ring th 
ess 5 aie Alice” 


138 
UTTON anp SONS hav — — . of 30 years 
been engaged in in 2 GRASS SEEDS, and lay 
Some land to tP eeds 


expressly for the soil, per acre 
4005 PRODUCTIVE PERMANENT GRASSES, 
er acre 
TRUE ITALIAN RYE-GRASS, per 
gfe yr re GRASS SEEDS, sal re ht of 
e fine shortest growing kinds, per bushel 


© 


wo 


feien with a fine peer pa oe hy 


doz. 


» and | 


raised Beck, 
LUM 9 Kinda 
and E. 103 


ER, 9s., 128, and 203, 
(per dozen, 


— 


— selen 


at 


e RENOVATING MIXTURE of Perennial 
ae ne ty ng old Pastures 
) peri, Furze White 
3 Yellow 2 ‘+a Chine 
bi, Drumhead and other Cabbages, 


pric 
* 5 delivered pe eia London, p — or Basingstoke, 
N SUTTON and Sons, a 


BASS ar BROWN S ‘DESCRIPTIVE PRICED 
CATA LOGUE sent free by post on application, 
to offer the following, 


e Cattle 
ohl Ra 


VEGETABLE SEEDS, 
A complete collection of the best and newest sorts, in propor- 
tions, 25s,, 42s,, and 63s. 
A collection for a small garden, of fine and esteemed sorts, 
for 15s. e sorts furnished, if required, 
ELECT — . SEEDS. 
Free ~~ — * full directions for sowing, heights, = 


&e. 
100 — a best and newest a ma 
— varieties for w 6d., 30 for 58. 6d., 
oe best dwarf kinds, 8 larger S suited 
filling beds on lawns, 78. 6d. 
20 Fae best Greenhouse Ann uals, mee 
20 varieties choice 3 — en rg 12. reg 
0 ardy Biennials and Pere nnials, qe ai 
imported Germ pes an Stocks 


2 with orders a 


tor ss 


5 
5 
or T 
12 5 
5 


28888 1 4 4 


arriage free to Lon ndon, — oath 
A. and v upwards ar 1 — — mted extra. Post- o e codes | 
payable o È to ie and N, or to STEPHEN Brown, Seed and 

— — Sudbury, Suffelk, 


APPARATUS MANUFACTURERS, 
various Works now in progress, 
of — — workmanship. 


tim 
ing, Heating, entilating all Ho! 
erecting < — t have Ho Bomben 3 has als 
a firs bp seed of Stove 
te e — oral m 


logues forwarded u 


Wines penes E London, 1 


eee and o 
— New — from 6 to - 
Ikno 
os 4 — — —.— — — n of 
— 4 “Knife for eae honey-com 
improve te ent of Improved Bu udding N50 


AND — ON 
packed and sent to — 
rvatories, 


Con 
— — the kin — 2 £ 
— the Trade, etm — of the cae Cla 
JAM 


WATTS Builder, 
eee Lo sen 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONI 


CLE. 211 


IETY OF LONDON.— 
e EXHIB BITIONS OF 


disputed ; for we look in vain for a 


9; and 
10, isti the last day on whic 
issued to Fellows of the Society. 


CARNATIONS, PICOTEES, PINKS, 
EBEN AS, CINERARIAS, GLOX: 


are now executing orders for the | ‘ 


that in the vegetable world its justice cannot be 


healthy plants, atl > following prices. 125 e preposterous speculations upon this the berries bein an erg 
f “The Gem,” at subject that — have all rearied with, chives et having e 3 a 
oys Aub r Es. £ s. a. conclusively that no just ideas respecting vegetable | bunches when thinning them, to cold borders, to not 
5 wers, by n — sleds au 4 10 4 disease have yet been $ supposes one | being set, hot nights, — drynes , or th fu 
a afi 3 flowers... 210 0 thing, B SEETHE] a 855 rd ; and the only conclusion | sulp in * possible and impossible 
vale ditto n 0 0 en of sense w from their suppositions cause has been s suggest 


- Carnations, 128. per —— pair 
elass show varieties, 12s. and 185 per 


n dra 
is that they are entira 5 9 of the subject on 


which they discourse so stood. So 
Finest frst class show flowers, 10s, and 18s. It is time that an k should be put if possible to | ligent — at the D — ene, sent us a bunch of 
this state of things, an sna serious attempts should | rusty Grapes, of a portion of which the following 
of the be 


e flowering plants of the best show 
— splendid collection of new varieties, 
— e., 12s., 188., and 24s. per doz. 
shy plants of the best free flo wering sorts 

80 packets of new and choice kinds, rt 


t above, — a i extensive variety of n ealt 
e forwarded by enclosing two postage 
Nursery. 


bds. — — most dis- 


tan ud ndid n. rawing and 

e Florist,” —.— — a an inst., 5s. 

* d 2 oa er adv 8 35. 6d. 

ent by t pike. Ad etipti ive Cata- |- 
8, Fuel fas, erben, Dahlias, c. may be 


TANCIFOLIUM, — PLANTS. 
+ he sare near London, by | ; 
í MAJESTY THE QUEEN, 
ES Joya oF Saxony, begs to inform the 

and Amateurs, that his —— eer for 
s ready, and will be forwarded by post 


RGONIUMS,—In addition to those : 

rago of Ton + el — and unusable N 
. they should do — o study the cases of dis- 
3 ervation; to note 


cut is a representation. Some 


rtained by careful examination. 


bryo, 
asce Now „Ber 
certain facts, which establish conclusively miut 
rūst” i ey prove that it is unconnected wi 
any general disturbance of the 7 — of a Vine, 
hat 


the symptoms as t ; to endeavour but is a mere local affection =t confined to 
to discover the cause by fal comparison of | the skin of the oe its —— is to prevent 
ny and unhealthy plants a 2 the cir- | that gradual in which is ne ö 
cumstances; and then having done this ree tejd in order to 1 0 the berries to swell—that the 
Nursery, gat t they have seen, 1 psi — — a istance to extensi is so great that the 
AMOUR: OF PLAJ OR THis | With specimens of the disease in are compelled - — their way through 
ROMAS JACI N HN. N atk tse which specimens gees be re et carefully. 2800 skin, there being no room for the vided in the 
ir Pa fhe Public that thet ir Okeaiogus of shale het 45 5 as they oo way—and, finaly t that the ere is so en- 
— . — Greenhouse, and Herbaceou In doing this a i Sivi vantage will be found in tively local that it does not even ies 
ay bined on applic — ee. a now ready, “ant snaking very exact observations; in fact loose super- | nearly in contact as the — and shies skin of the 
ie 3 : y post, by forward- | ficial observations are genera lly valueless. One| berry. These are the facts proved by Mr. WRTrIxe's 
— attention of parties furnishing Con- certain fact is worth a lo conjectures. It is ee lain. At an early period, 
mais Collections—the selection ot lings aa a pg = a therefore not wished that long stories should be told | while 3 were still young, —— skin — sO 
e — ha 8 | about ae 2 oe sa e. 5 ara- injured, data II growth 1 ee a * a 
do, Greenhouse 0s. 04 grap wo; but that what is set down s no room exist t. W. 
. y tang 3 Ericas 7 — | SHAE, 2 an the pu How little this is injured them? ngering berries do it ? 
: sie of H r o | thou ght of is abundantly shown by the aimless, in- People say, * but the ey produce no evidence that 
the ne new w sorts 10 0 0 | conclusive statements to be found in all horti ae it is so. it be made the taco . 3 
; UE Te nd ural periodicals. of this as well as — 
0 would | be avoided if we had but some tolerable classi- — — dvee We . — say y that 
ind ani improved |f even very im- | we di ee — the possibility of the mtn in action 
, at | perfect. In order to meme —— towards ob- bein ng produced in y 
tis- | taining this desirable obje e have determined to | disbelieve pras that Grapes a are e generally made 
issue, in weekly — — etid translation of an | rusty by any such inadequa If it were so, 
os ian Mir a! — Diseases of Plants, published how does it happen that — — rusty on open 
Ven y iien Pure RE. aie walls, where they receive ne such delicate attentions 
book itself i is 8 — known in this cotintty, an we fingeri ing and rubbing wi is 
ners Chronicle. believe has never enna 1 5 attention anywhere. more probable that this kind ee rust is owing to 


(Y, APRIL 7, 1849, et it is a fair * W and 
the neglect with which it * bee ted may 
be ascribed to its not having fallen >a the mane 
— aes tors, who are alone able a the 
— such an — ing. The Sab a ere 

n it, themselves — tomes task 

ered their Sg pen have allowed it to sink into 


AALER TTT 
tii 


blivion. only —— 7 ee 
Pirie E ones hundredth time } 
which bis been ein csd to . having 15 direct 
bearing u ic service ese 
long since constru with its 


5 lancé 
| pathological system de mi ad be placed by ‘the 
side of works like those of Curen and Goo 
the maladies of 


ies 

If we are asked why we lay before the English 

public, in — —— — w — some 
accordan 
of dou bef 


most important 8 2, 
settlement of such a 
e 8 somewhere ; i 


much clear gain tø the 

poena forin the p anfi oof his book they would 

never ited ; and 4, that - > not feel 
a 


— j or afat 
whole, and not with —— 1070 — of its parts. 


ed experi 
8 denied, 
18 at least c ertain 


streams of cold air, or very re | 5 passing over 


pes when they are young , destroying 
the vitality of the „ and thus depriving 
that organ of all power — expansion, which, as we 


have shown, is the true en use of the evil conse- 
rust. 


f quences 

We shall endeavour to commence Count RÉ’s 
book next week, after which it will be continued 
without interruption until it is finished, 


Tux aces an AT Frocwore will now- be 
seen to be worthy of a gr and ei = 
n | ina aira — of the genius of of Fegland, 

fred to bi 


solidity and — are so meee 
lianey and decoration. 
garded as examples of arckiteeiatal Fall * — 
something far better. —— are buildings admirably 
9 for the 


‘And t there is no ares of beauty in the place: The 


terrace walk, nearly 400 yards long, ranni ning in front 
2 the ae line of — 7 houses, with a pretty 
in the centre, parti itted up for 


ottage e re- 
. of Her Mines and the Princes, and bounded 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [Arai 7, 


ee Cc umber-| penetrate to a great depth, where th kept cool ani 
n by a low para apet wall, decorated with | name ly, Ke nsington, 1, Kew, Hampton Court, 31 * =e during the = seasons. That kia 8 
on the snih by a on Pu pe f flowers, is in itself | land-lodge, Cranbourne, the old Frogmore, Mae tr jan forest, the nobl E 

vases, and 8 by — would, of th ives, | tricht, and the King’s Lodge. The country jg| tralian fo ty 4 whose d 
— E s even if all that b 


212 


es 
peo instead of | she marge d 
: — rocure, at a moderate cost, instea amps I have del Wer te 1 sight 
everything that meets the eye at Frogmore. Those = yy p * supply in the king dom an — . Fonti 8 — a the sigh of the strong. 
where, fron ct neatness is not possible actly enormous, so long as the eee many of the Melaleueas, Eutaxias, and he 
— eg ay en of the main buildings ; | . expense 8 now swept away, were relied upon * On ae pe are 7 
— .—— 2 curious 
and even these are in better order than half the ——— the Acrostichum alcicorne, which is perfectly 
in the country. SUMMER TREATMENT OF HARD-WOODED home on the top of the Casia 2 
It may be thought that a garden meen for T a PLANTS. distance like some huge bird’s nest. Pane d there by 
growing Cabbages and other kitchen stuff can by no] Eygny one knows e danger o of allowing any of | the hand of pays and watered by the hae 
bility wire 3 8 Frogmore the 1 l ei ants Trom A da; d N a dry Looking round on the — — 
s mistake. | g et only for — torms 
shows the greatness of this e rable to flag —— y 3 y esd, the ari in — t eee 1 9 e E captive — 
ti deb and then the test care the | were often harshly treate or he 
— . will not be 12 — recover quently do I see them taken from the greenhouse mang — 
nfi 


m 1 — SI i 
i vouri whose roots are confined within the placed behind some wall, hedge, or hi —— trees 
— in the place = . og tren Eai lee al of the potter’s ame f. Nature the summer months, thus 8 — 18275 
walle, some (ra! successional layers of 3 matter the roots every ray of his light; rey it — 
throwing out — om co 3 — Leva elongated, aad in pot cultivation soon reach * ‘brightest of our summers pot for a moment 
examples of the most exact regularity ; the (ah, | their prison walls, and of course are there ill situated | be ed with those of the countries of which thes 
b aid to mass a foreground, and the f wi drou it, But see similar — in their | plants are natives, and where the majority of thes 
Cabbages are all dressed in line, like soldiers on nativo country, y there possess a luxuriance of| stand fully exposed, ripening and ning 
parade. Indeed the effect produced by these arrange- gro devas te ber —— blossom that calls fo rth the systems to an extent which enables them at the 
e ich —— o ap 


men 
belongs to of the line under review; there] The Heath is a 3 ‘which is well known to would surprise many people. I have often 
may little beauty in the dresses viewed sepa- | pe t, bu 0 re y 
dt en themselves may yA individually | have done on the mountains behind Cape Town, where | on their removal from the greenhouse these plants were 
ill-favoured ; men “the regularity of their formations, | heat and drought far exceeds anything of the kind in | placed where they could receive the full benefit of the 
the 


caused by their uniforms E this country. A witness the vegetation of New South | sun, while the pots might be plunged in sand or the 
duce. 3 know, the most pleasurable sensa- Wales, — A majority of our most —_— greenhouse | common soil. By so doing the roots would be kept coal 
tions, sell although — — not a movement in the plants is to be found. There I hav e Banksias, | and moist ; comparatively little water would 2 
masses to animate the se the lovely Epacrises, Chorozemas, Boronias, Pultenceae, | and the plants would acquire a solidity that 


i i sandy plains ee d defiance to damp and milder ia 
re itted, that place Cab- | Ke. flourish among rocks and thrive upon sandy plains | ena them to bi p ; 
tages an —.— 1 will he are only Cabbages exposed to the parching sun, and for a long period | winter, when they could also bear a few degrees of 
uch skill and taste have without a drop of rain; but their roots are there at with impunity. Alex. Burnett, Gardener, Roby Hall, 
e | liberty to pursue what course they please, and so they [Hear, hear !] 


URING TWO YEARS, 
antage, or in lr em by more orna- e riaa i TEN Tp 8 pa j : 
mental objects of ~ class. he 5 sos one cca — 
with the best effect, by surrounding e quarters has raet tal kiai temperature at Extreme temperature of dey | Average ese 
which are visible from the terrace walk with ylis Montn, an. 9 A Me og ned night, and dase, Ta. gegen. and night, amd date, f e n 
tle trees, trained on iron frames. By this thermometer.) ermometer. ) E 
it ich is insepara 1681 |10th — 4% 8a 740% 1838 17.81 6th | —20°| 22d 84% 13 
bokal | is peaa a penr even in winter, — 19 .08 | 16th 0 | 18th | +38 || ... 23.37 | 22d —10 | 17th | +42| 21.2 
37 41 | 2d | +14 | 28rd | +52 || ... 34.06 | 18th | +15 | 6th 748 35.73 
the branches are bare, a handsome frame surrounds 4663 |10th | +41 lim | +62 || 7.23 3d | +30 |25th|+6t| 47.08 
the vegetable quarters; in the spring nk fra 52.22 | 15th | +34 | 28th | +72 || 1837 50 .00 9th | +36 | Tth | +66 31 41 
* — of white and red flow the 65 .83 Sth | +43 | 25th | +80 || ... 65 66 nih 1 ae — 5 mE 
— ye 8 — — will the 8 who 22 om te —— Mio 65 .37 18th +56 Sth +3 = 
55 37 1 38 | 25th | +76 60 .65 th | + + . 
— in My in the met 48 19 2 th 1 25 lich | +66 45.52 23d 426 3d | +62 46 3 
= d 33 .52 |28th | +13 2d | +54 35 ,32 18th | +24 | Ist | +53 22 
appearance of a green an pal Wak grat hele; 2 19.00 | 16th 2 12th | +39 22.97 7 | 15th 439 20 
in 3 it is * Blowing enclosure of n and = 2 General sve 
rown an 2 3 owing to the altered Average for the year. Extremes for the year. Average for the year. Extremes for the year. 2 
— — the aver an Eo fruit that is 
i | 44.58 
among them ect of the whole is |- 449.41 g it ee 44°,75 —20° +779 
. y. 6th Jan. 25th July. 
heightened 1 ie vistas, b broken s be centre of the 8 ig ee GARDENS. ak — xt the west end, and mention how the se several 
N entering Gardens at Frogmore, are prep Aar as we travel eastw 
n thie, ‘way a truly roy garden has | been most | visitor finds himself on a noble terrace walk 1132 feet mising that all the houses are divided from ol 
ors ay * 33 0 e © purposes, long and 20 feet wide, with the fine range of metallie by little corridors 7 feet e 22 nee 
t may b ed gi —_ oes and | of which is represented at p. 195, ex- suitable receptacles for flowering plants No. pce 
whether they. 3 — nearly the whole length of the walk on the large stove with a in the centre, cham 
though on a more . — On —.— ee th s walk — ets n eet el heme ln en all A ant, among #8 
one hothouse borders, all round it. The bed is filled with p 
* — of this establishment NN itor ae rag ya h —— 8 ere aa . x 0 — 
commencement ishment was | sa verge, running and there in they keep up durin e winter ine 3 
made by the present Duke of Nonrolx, then a high the form of small flower beds, | I 2 Be Aited to flower beautifully on & 
ministration of Lord Metnovnwe ; and all the original dwarf wall which bounds the terrace. Again, at the Bignonia venusta which was trained on aa back : 
designs for the walls and houses were . foot of this terrace wall, which is ornamented at Tt is is pruned here ae a Vine, except that the yr 
his Grace quitted office. No part of the work had, either end and in the middle by large vases on square| shoots are never stopped pack. No. 2 is 
however, at that time, be it pedestals, is the series of rectilinear flower beds, | ing Ping stove, filled with the most healthy 1% 


E 
aa 


tim: eee Was marked 40 in the i 
plan. It will thus be seen that an | which fail to produce fine fruit 
ed for the Earl of Liverroor, when he became attempt bas been made to render this portion of the bso ek ia ae ania ss pots fixed i 
See in front of the hothouses as ornamental as pos- au , over which is spread about 6 

e bed he: 


1 
8. 
à 
tt 
* 


Ln nd w ed 
December, 1841, and the bender * the followi 


tH 
Be 
8. 
®© 
8 
£ 
3 
poe 
> 
St 
25 
> 
ai 
1 
4 
Fe 
2 
ra 
P 
p'e 
2 
© 
i 
8 
z 
> 
3 os 
15 
* 
ae 


1115 
1 
fi 

z 

E 
brs 
E 

$ 

25 

E 

E 
EEI 

3 

2 
betet 


a | 

in Her Masesty’s household, during the ad- into an herbaceous border, w southern side is the | rafters in front, and the same remark applies waup 
| 

N 

i 

l 

| 


crossed whose — ated ust 
5 pes J 
pleted, e deta sections in the centre is a lished granite f p e mEnE and has avery s 
gratitude i the — manner inv pa ich eve of fashioned something after 8 hoed i Tra 3 rhs Staak: 4. eran up the 
licated o 60 falgar-square, but provided with various kinds of jets — the p and 4 feet, aparti they 
r ian oat Of i 5 „ inches from the glass j : 
asa ry conclusion. Iie ight 8 ua d = as g out of a circular basin 30 feet wide, In| pruned on = close spur system ; 
eating a — was supplied by Messrs. BAILEYS, order that a might oo to intercept the view of the second early Peach-house, 50 feet lone ee 
of Holi Holborn, s and that tho — roots’ i bapa Kun tees vibe aoe iene Gee ee ‘Grapery, Se — Park 
: e co i 
~ — 3 a ree by eran . moving them, ments immediatly Pan te of oe pine ei ae —— poa Hall mri we en re Dag = * 
; ; of the two centre re trained k Hamburg he 
— > — Leer (bout ä wit 1 Min 3 at the ends by | d — —— E pue half swelled ieot 


— 


a 
2 
iil 
E 
> 
af 


$ iron rs. i ’ 
matters, But in 5 the expense is below base, its greatest hei i r 
ould VOW | Taatad i eight bein 4 feet. trees are Apricot and Plun 
8 have supposed such a garden could | Pla ited in n the cent aaen up with clean stems to eon (Mesa) wets Calg alf swelled, 
was an — to be remembered that e sei: th Sd Ieee trained | capital crop. The Plums consisted of Victori» 
as an open nex e: = a brick ground, — this i they are found to ington, Greengage, and early Orleans. 1155 
oa | greenhouse, exactly similar to the stove an mi oF 


constructed upon the best princi —4 di But to return to the meag íi range simila: t : nificent s 
permanent manner. Tt t principi 3 the moe d ferred toy i in last week’s Paper, at the page ‘lite. e eal ‘ban en cling ‘of 1 kind adapted 1 
it replaces no fewer than eight royal gard ens, to, lies on eith = side of — central * look lighter or mai or be ey bre — a 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


213 


in Leh iron pipes, 


pans cast on them 
by ais of a per- 


The bojlers (34 


ming too much heate 
per, and che stth in 
b action 


ected, | w 


aac * is effected by 8 — front 1 
„an of ventilators fixed in the back wal 
A bee Ka. the top of the back wall outside the bows 
receives the cold air, whi ouse 


These fi 
h house are “on opened 
y turning, with a handle o 
engine-cut screw or ae 
1 for the purpos 


also given to the lights in front, by m of brass 


e segments working on pinions keyed . a light d 


Besides the above means 
of 1 every alternate top light i in the roof of the 
whole nd down on pulleys, the 

of a 


ose 
handle brings the light up when let down to its fullest ex- 
tent ; oni 3 the handl les the reverse — 45 lets the 


Alen — 


ght- iron h 
bees at the extremity of the house. 


Two ¥evolutions 


ace requi ired 


and arse up. he . ventilators are — course under the 


43 E 50 109 150 200 250 390 350, 
3 : 
— : 
7 p 27 ; 
5 . E — — — 
1 n 1¹ . — 
IEEE C ELLE 
5 . tie: A 
ee e] . 
D — — Pæ D ö 
III II H P A me i 
36 — 
37 37 38 
xz | 
; 37 37 
. 
| 8 34 
. j . = z ee 
— | za a 


10 me — 

11 heron rea 

12 As ros bots, forced by 
wate 

13 Dwe welling. — 

i oe and À ao room 


ushroom h 


m 23 Tool Shed $1 Pear Wall 138 Dwarf Cherries 

17 Seed — 24 Porter’s L $2 Gistedt and Gooseberry |39 Flower beds” and beds 
18 ta alee 25 Principal Entrance Wall at Vin ower 
19 26 Gates and ays ig, Mulberry, &c. hha $ — 

20 Potting Sheds 27 Apricot Wall 34 Dwarf Plum, side of W Sp Som — 45 ok 
21 Workmen 28 Peach ao ore Wall — 5 one is, ide 4 ʻi Compost and dung Liek 
22 — Shed for Vege- 29 Che ears 

88 — 5 30 Plum Wall 27 Boiler houses 


tent 7 wire ones, 
will be see 


Pipes, an 
the stone path are 
erries. 


open groun 
thrown away. They are 


houses are r under gar- 
ushroom-houses, fruit- 


C 
every Sale, 
b 


3 department has Pag s much improved in most | 
t Frogmore manure is almost 
same nea 


se (11) is 


Cherry-ho 
and —— feet wide, the side | 
l sot ki 


occupied, extends to the west = where are 
eed The wall 


| si the succession Pine pits. boun: 
on the north side of t en—the early Peach and 
Apricot wall—is shaded when required with canvas, 
ich is rolled up and down by means of pulleys ; and 
in order to keep can the trees, spars 2 fi 
the base of the wall, and 5 feet apart, fall on to 
the wall at the top, just under coping. This wall 


is cropped. In comm 
8 round the slips, 
through is an 
are everywhere 12 


paren 
high, being covered with 


me 


—— in the first | 


„ Pyram midal Pear-trees, 3 


oa hodp close to the grou 
— thoug 
— 


. 


Currants, The 
he centre with Cauliflower 
whose 1 and 


succeeds th The Strawberries— 
Hautbois, 0 Old ha — 
tapart. The P 


— — pard, 


berries— Bri itish 

are — 2 ft. asunder, in rows | 
— n no — west side. 

t they 


In addit 
A ofa ‘oe field on the 8 ive of the ia 
have been trenched over durin winter, and con- 
4. into a vegetable me necessary 
in consequence of the ition of the kitehen garden at 


By looking at the plan, it will be seen that there 
im area of wall available for the pro- 
to state that it 


g other ces of this extensive garden, 


br 
should be mentioned that it is a well — 


with water, to a pipe, 


is no lack of this useful 985 
bodi- OF A TRAVELLER.—No. 

E Wiyter Frowers.—On visiting some of the 
flower-shops in Shanghae, i in the middle of January, I 
was surprised to finda gre 
been —- into bloom and were now exposed for sale. 
ot aware, until I had this view, that pron prac- 

D 


facility ped 2 the Peony Moutan 
a full b 


think 

hot-water pipes, Polmaise stov: 

things which assis ay 

Europe. Nothing of the kind 

things in — — and 

in the —— and e 
At 


; do 
with common charcoal 


val, —— fruit. 


a 958. . 
1 think — — 
y prized 3 
e winter months. i 


int of easy iif 50 
; ould | 
. all ch — plants of the Orange 

a small state are grafted 


ten — VIOLETS, 


* te that 


at towards th 
on the sides af .| enas oe 2 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


[Arru 7, 


u In your last year’s — panog 
— sist ps at summer is recommended; Tl ye 
to be erienc 
‘has: — been — ‘when planted | b 
ar. I m to remain 5 
two 

iy mea foliage off them — a reaping * 

ct times — the summer, and greatly to their 


y |" Biy seiling, specimens of ee I * ou, 3 
5 g perties ; I foun ro 

Russia mi, Fae R. Shackell, G ae Nu —— 
Read. 


Sion "Bristol R 


e Cor orrespon ndence 


Hom 
Garden Walls. — observations of“ A K on 


— 4 — | 


m garden 
in | and — in these days of horticultural ere 
b ** How 


ma „Aa owers es had 


of straw to stop up the crevices | e 


an 
(Citrus 
grownin pots, is 3 m 


are when in flower, is sag 1 foo 
pear I re them, i in order to give strength to | g 
If | th 


—— I should give — 


are novel certainly, but I doubt 
those built 


Supp 
ping is n the wall, which 5 9 inches or = 


be likely to 
Neither do I apprehend 2 would generally 
i ing either on this plan 


ment take — 
walls. ails 

udoned. common — built 
Is in a short time com 


ea 


emned. 
for the tailor's rag-bag, an 
some with red coats and Hepes i 
consider = anything but inate, an 
a-days to defend the plan, although 


apart, an 


more Le eres trained 9 than 
e ar sei nails r he Glendinning. 
to mention that the 


* Grenlinge ; ’ 
” should be erased, for the * sORis = 
for iie different Apple. W. C. Trevelyan, 
Nettlecombe, Taun 
Campanula —— — This desirable herbaceous 
plant grows rapidly, an y eased at 
E 


ap 
the plants, and to a its season blooming. 
plants are ‘not chia a sng seed — — in 3 
ext aut 


— 


: The 
- 75 a white vanes in ag beautiful 2 plant, pA 


5 — pee 
erary Firacy.— te agree w 
that t these pseudo editors ‘Mould be Pag. to task, an 
none more than Mr, Johnso treatise 
horticultural mat 


correspondent, in your last week’s Paper, classes the i i 
ners’ — ” for this 
men seed 


inserted without your own com 


of culture is, to. 


Ane, and plaut to divide the old roots in 


them 6 inches asunder, in rows 12 


trouble you with this, therefore, em 
charge. 


‘Sought to sustain my own 
ve failed oveasionally in in this, but i 5 simaya ian is 


ojora 


0 Neuer 
ealous 


t. 
edling u 


z known the b 


; | overlooked, = nm 


pe 84 Total .. 
d —.— in Dan 34.50 inches. 


0 
with “ Fair Play” 


7 i 
n- | his 


baai, and always will be, the 
I so ende 


course I endear 
mmuninicate them 
totally uninfluenced by any mamor and p his 
hE pg asad hal oe ae general me 
marks which we had no particular E 


5 
ume, 


N a man eka a whole 
charming plant, intra. 


as been grown here for 4 


gee? ts 


as 
flow varing the shif iing process is performed, using the 

knife fre 
as 


ays alike to root and branches ; all other 
ely rou an, save in 1 „ of an oc 
casional ‘watering of liquid mes Duncan, 
Basing-park, March 21. 
Rough Plate Glass.—In confirmation of the remarks 
e 


ence I ei 


1 
seus it vill 
whether it would be suitable for fore reing, but on 


I was a 
. ker 55 


abis opinio 


ad 
hing ‘of the satisfaction ex 
of a beautiful dark green colou 
vin 


ire i l 848.— 

n 
ayen Banffshi 3 5, 
Inches. 


latitude, 57° 32. ll 


Ouse, 
Bete longitude, 


‘ = 27 

E dS 
w+. 3.02 
. 1.60 

.. 1.88 


s.. eve 


t.. ss 


December 


It vil be “oen — 
lted = fell here during 
h rain and = i during 


y | August,1843, — stands th 
Pe 


of 
. 
s 


so doing ; 


Wa 


blown right in by * 

being in fall 1 and the Vines 
meter in the open air, at 

aay, indicating 29°; ; ‘immediately got some °° 


- 


1 
* 


THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


215 


strong pegs | driven in the ground, 


on the you leaves s ; perhaps their 
often 1 to resist the frost 
— a a neig hbours, March 4 
h trees; found some 
— * poor part of the ground 
| ette planted at the 


— borden, s although the latter had 
the roots of plants, like 
Se lazy die, when the means of support- 
obtained ? —— 


= | 


age ‘nee it 


Mr. —— ng w 


eedlings raised 
atig return See or 


the: reason | t 


‘King of the a am — 5 — 8 ty — 
e de 


to the Pine apple, a spikes of 
pretty ivory- cote flowers issuing from a mass of bright 
crimson floral leaves.—Mr. Turner, of the Royal Nursery, 
ugh, sent a beautiful pan of Heartsease, for which a 
Cer apaa of Merit was awarded. It contained mar 
n’s tellation » Hooper's Mary Jane, Nasmyth’ 
Mrs. ilton, Hooper’s Brutus, Bell’s Lord . 


ye 
S 


eee and Duke of Norfolk, Tarner’s Charmer and 


ommodore, Bell’s Climax, Turner’s Miss 
Bell's Aurora, Youell’s Supre 
rs. Beck, Osw old’s Undi 
son's Duchess of Rutland, 
line, Bell’s Dachess of Norfolk, 
Wolff, Collison’s Perseus, Hooper's 
enderso 


dwards, 


's Attila, Thom 


* 
ms from p — growing in the open — 
tshire, was exhibi es by the Hon. 


for 
ceeeded perfectly in in this — 
he Camellia, it — stated, fl under — 
stances; but 


circumstance t, like the Rhododendron, — flowe 
o | require be s eltered from unfavo — 
weather. Mr. Toy, of Oatla Palae ce —— sent a 


To nds 
well swelled and beautiful $ coloured are of Keen? 
Seedling Strawberries, fi hich rtificate was 
ar — e 


J. H. Berchet; Esq., 0 
Goode Audley-street, 


een 
leaves being of the deepest 


mmr March 28. a Pave K, Es sq, Presi- 
chai dson, Es sq. ; Gideon 


Esq., were elec ted Fellows 


se | 
paper on a new she i Thaumantias, a genus of jelly- | 


thor 
— indications 
in 


with r structu 


usee 
uetures 
isted of a central pbir r mass of a soli 


talline lens k 
that this as" an organ of vision. _ Dr. Lan 


drew 

a rales 

Infusoria and Rotifera N had hitherto been 

eyes. Dr. r thought that what- 

e the ultimate 8 with re to 
er 


in the 


ee pa were organs 0 * x 
M att ibited some youn 
that — just Fed hatched in a mill stream belonging | 
to urney, upon the p rg are by 

a d * ank se 
of structure n these in 


of Mr. 3 
of th 


m Turner’s Surplice and ot 


+ this 


on an expedition through the interior. 82 
w 2 Diocese,’ p. 10 So 


the voyage. 
3 5 Lot Fr Harness Wiis ppur 


T | ing on blankets or a vali 


66 
grown under the 
exhibited the best — its large glossy 
green tole 


uaa which behaved under the influence of be 


e could be little doubt t that n.. rt 


E 
unter sufficient t mats to cover it | de Dryfhou ; Comtes: St. Pro ; Cream: Be clus. a ; 
d by a single old c ue, | Groot — D; Yellow: — San The same 4 a of New Zealand: consisting of the most 
heat Soeh t one — — . — nurserymen also contributed: à nice — of stove 5 41 t. information, comps for. the use of in- 
the other; knew that this . greenhouse plants, for which a Knightian Medal was tendi ng 8 ists. BY a late Magistrate of 
to the flowers over | awarded. They consisted of beautifully grown nections 9 EPP. ae there during four years. 12mo. 
found the of Dil * 

ee 4 4 pora nis book is indispensable to every 771 who may think 
mes eee this flowers render it one ef: the sata for — culture ; Eriste of New Zealand. It contains ample and true informa- 

i homina kaid sath y variety ; tion upon the country, its history its institutions, its 
Bossizea ae — Puya Alstensteinih wit na plant n “ih 3 aie 1 W ol 

nearly relat ree oecupy the emigrant’s attention. The 15th chapter is 


PY 
more e important to hiii: as he will see by the 
following scraps of advice : 
“Tt has not 100 uncommon for persons to engage 
> colonisation fieran were totaly devoid of the slightest 
oe not only of the ich the 
3 0 1 is ——— necessat y i 
and of pr t they w hav 


the i pene of that B 
the of 1812 with the Uni 
tan i from England r the use of the 
1 to sail on the fre at water lakes of Canada.” 
hat to buy and take wi lothes : 

r required for the 
give good information 
able. The length of the voy age i an 120 
da ays ; an ater is a le for mity ‘clothes, 
it is necessary to tage a sufficien or 
time. By stow 
as been used, and e 


S 
— 


h of the passage, sed wi ; 
the tropics ; and thick warm clothing for 3 —— 
in the plete: 


pa „an intosh 2 to apread 
458 prove — 2 on exploring parties. 
oo, has been found useful. The 
i once used one Passat sai while 
nals of the 
as ke 8 of 23 
caps, with oilskin 


under your blar 
A Macki nie air-bed, t 
Bisho ealan 


2 
1. 


urs, ree „as they 

profit, if d' for use. 

fit od with e poten 

ps to fit for fasten- 

saddle or eat o, and 

a set of colt- a apparatus, ‘will 5 ound of use. 
Take both cart harness and gig h * * 


ac uain ted wit 


| 
kor t 
5 
take sho 

8 to the chief officer of the ship, for deposit in 
ek th wi 


attached, is made for exportation 
i and S. fea of 


that 
fra > The — need 
bimself with bi U. hoo 


the 
a It 


d is icked eet fly z 
ed, ye 


m up to f the dhin; vf prin 
until dry, and — restow them 
poop is the best place for keeping 


f all 22 —— in 


and sendy 
h removed 


. — to ee success W 
w Zealand emigrant if, in addition to -wha 


216 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


7 


for fruit, 
rn blossoms are fairly set, the shows — lear 3 te clouds; rain at night, 
Parker's book wili remind him of, he carries out with — 7 to all appearance, not unfrequently prove — a Hemy cloud af 25 in forenoon; dense} y clouded; rain; 
him health, strength, wesc nint = 8 shart A somewhat higher temperature i 1 ot =y 5 oggy e; cloudy throughout; frost at night. ey 
p | admissible but adv geous, t ugh the whole 3 | aks A Fagin A densely — 1 Saler and and fiae at ight 
"9 — tion of | Of starting 1 — pene r. Attend State of the Weather at Chiswick during the last 23 year f thems 
Sale of Orchids Mr. wiez's . ec agg be safe and prudent two onths E da hooti ensuing week, ending April 14, 18 1839 
mentioned at p 196, was bro bs ht 1 ip unetually to the 8 pe training * the earlier See!) See! ag No. Prevailing Wing 
hammer by Mr. ens on Tuesd t. ee eee 1 thinning of the berri ethane Te % 2 . g F A ERE 35 An in Fiers] 
“ gp : the ypripedium maintain a 3 — t y rA i Ee | 5 Se | Se | Yhich ie j 2 
ifolium from 10s. to 1. 7s.; a Lelia from 19s. to where the bede are 8 8 in fine e we mal i 
IL. I.; an ium from 3s. to 4s.; Trichopilia 1 weather, but — ae rA — tied C 125 rT 
from 1 31. 5a. 5 w sis Wr s. ge ees, ais ust preven 8 838 sa | Ho |in is tas 740 
: idendram with the habit of cinna- HES.—Let very vigorous gr Wed. 1| 55. : 57 i FEH 
to 2/. 12s, 6d. 3.an Ep * 10 Ly from 10s. to i n as they have made six or eight leaves ; Tnlday 13] sei | Seo | 46 1 912 i 
3 40.3 * — icosum from 5s, to 14.5 a chin, aoh bet opt than allowing them to make | Satur. 14| 575 | 38.0 |477| 9 | osi EFEN 
„ a. 3 . h 
Cyenoches ith * habit of . ise x 2 iy Reyer se easg e et a high night — a rhe highest temperature duri ing the a bore period occured 2 
a z & new Morm ° ole j S/S — 
to 2/, 2s. ; se 16k to UL 2 a Cattleya like Skin- on 7 * fruit, though 8 — considerably earlier, will be Notices to Correspondents, 
neri from II. 18s, to om ds. an apparently new genus obtained at us sacrifice of size and flavour. Berns: Cymro. Cape bulbs and Brazilian bulbs will not thrive 
called tschia from 10s. to 2“. 8s. ; an HRUBBERY. in * same ee Boon former require a cool, well-aired 
to be wanes Ap tl f 6s MOTIS TERDEE ARD = ti ff, or reenhouse ; the latter a stove. There is a great difference 
from 4s, to 10s. 6d.; a new Hunt 1 „| Beppine Prants.—Lose ‘a time in potting off, E she haba ib of the former ; an what will „ er 
to 106. ; Peristeria elata from 10s. to 143. ; the rare pricking out into frames x — — n «pare te 
and curious Cy ium caudatu m li. 9s, to soon as they are sufficiently rooted ings — . ky Fi Masterpiece, / 1 Ophelia, Yan 
21. 2s. ; a scarce Maxi 14%, ; a new Odonto low | 800m ey will bear handling. 2 . * 1 pan bento ‘eaneplanted 1555 ‘0 me a 
sum from 17s. to I. Is. ; a Brasavola with huge yellow plants become established they should be hardened, by they have done blooming. o-thirds peat a 
and white flowers from 2/. to 2/. 159. ; a new Lacæna gradually inuring them n air. The hardier) joam suits them best. 
or Acineta from 2/. 5 = 6d. The total numbe kinds may be set upon a „or plunged in | Carr anp Tencu: A Subscriber would be thankful 72 
y Ey he best of feedi 
was 200, On y Mr. Stevens sold for old tan, in the open air, and protected at night by hoops pra asto the dee — man $ 14 — - cary tod tat 
annta. Low, of Clapton, 40 40 lots of Praag erg grandi- nd mats. If the plants in small pots are plunged in 1 t deep, w which he intends’ to stock with thee ry 
flora just ived from Borneo ; they fetched from 1“ ld tan, ashes, or some ot! * . sere much of quant 
to 3]. 7s. 6d. per plant. i labear of watering w any deaths | Frowen 8 e eur E "ere ra A 
ee ee avoided, and A p. on altogether be i > a eee — ae eek, in ale 2. nuls, ey pape ki 
Calendar o f Operations. state when plan out arrives. pay for all — broken b them though carelessness what 
] ya ciden ould m 
(For the ensuing w ses — of — more : 8 the hardy meme tr s sho A a broke n ace —— yno care tg ral ithe 5555 
‘4 e 
Heat —— * — more liberally — 2 the 8 beds, and in the edges of a any 22 the 3 s men to be careful nb % qias 
plied to rrt are As the re advances, these | the bbery. — ny kinds expected i 4 give eg 
agents sho dually irereased in — to excellently adapted for this purpose may mention harangues about imaginary: re sete postin solic 
the ing pa sun's — 5 but, in all cases, | the follo 4 Dou r, Poppies z various asigolde bi Socal i 1 better suea io 
voll 0 5 i t this | Lupins, Sunflowe: rican renc Jofds, than to London.—Anon., W sorry we cannot 
ple — iat sheen — — r ern Gendt st Clarkia, Gilia, Collinsia, Silene, — cannot 5 dealers — respectable § en 
The — oh t be principally hseh , Nemophila, Nola Kaulfussia, &c., not can p — sh it. — 6 B e sample se 
obtained by closing early, — 4 so retaining the heat de- forgetting the old fashioned favourite Mignonette. A won Hervar — An Old Sub. Plant them in a straight ling, k 
rived from the sun ; and w res are required, they | sufficient quantity of tings and dlings of half- a trench made for the purpose; and fill in 8 * 
— not be so as to faker it necessary to admit | hardy clim should now be potted for planting out in ipo sall vary i ely, the a 1 poa ot tread domn” be a ee 
currents of cold air for the se of keeping the — Beng such plants beeas, Maurandyas, Lophos- in Octo ber. a a a — . 
thermometer down. nt must be u —— oasas, Tropeeolum canariense, that Paget Disturb the balls a earth — 
with greater than when the plants were in a a — places on the wall rellise roots i Tittle as possible, If the plants are 
dormant state, for the im ion of a : nt of cold air — be co or ade ornamental, which would Horm — — 5 : A Constant Reader. The next meee 
pom A dev the young growth will fre. | otherwise "be unsightly blemishes on the general ap- p is on April PA 12 for th ie o exhibition mat AN 
the tender foliage | pearance of the pla the room 5 hours bef , Which 
223 fat „ the — ja la HARDY FRUIT GARDEN, 3 P.M, poai 8 21, Regent dat the small Men balls 
eurrent of this description is very di from the A. to thin gradually the covering of Spruce | Insect is ties . that ¢ insects, They appear to 
ate circulation of the air which is necessary in| and Yew ion isthe more wall trees, 5 the fruit is 3 on the leaves sent ar e Tjant nt, re sor g F : improper 
i : This operation is a t r, as the ve porn Fst or 
. past Bd es — 3 — leaves — the 9 — longer than usual, thrips: Syringing wit with water — = Ssst, 7 r 
i ects, as 
flowe: plants, according $ the directions given in | owing to a s deficiency sun during the few past weeks. to ery efectivo clinging 1 Sy 3 th quai, 
The late i imenes | Commence the disbudding of Peaches an i obacco water, might be effectual if often re oh 
to flower late in the — should now — placed | by rem a portion of the superfluous shoots now, the plants must be subsequently syringed with reaped * 
ud in a week or 1 s a nd re- The object of the former operati is of course to make he 
in heat. Some of those of w em Oe plants unpleasant to the taste of the insects, and th off too 
be for i for which the 25 longi- gulate them finally. After the blossoms are fairly set e washed 
potted img vases, gi- to be effe: ady, and W. 
flora and cu are particularly adapted. Prefer advantage shoul taken of a fine morning to wash soon ; but oe n is the most effectual rem Ti — 
pans ts for thei - | the trees with the engine, for the purpose of removing | periments have proved that insects die very q — 
syi 2 — . i ted with the fames arising from 
tivation, — y require an abundant supply of | decayed bloss destroying the green fly. The mete! goede impreguated wi ke your plant-houses sufficiently 
kilan they are in flower, let the drainage be | Superfluous shoots of Apricots should also be E remedy, wki 
— as possible, that they may be freely watered | and the rema 8 sh fully e mined in search Kar, PLANTS TRANSFORMED : ed — There seems t The letter 
without stagnating the s in em, neglect somewhe will eng 


are therefore well wants Matis 
ee em in first-rate excellence, A 


a 


17755 


ITCHEN 
Continue ii 


made with strict regularity, 
m from 


The sooner s 
aft ar ih. 


every 
two 0 


T they are sown the be 


State of the Weather n near — 
as obsery 
— 


BAnOuETER. 
Max. | Min. 


periodical 8 
a — pa and e ee 
weeks, wings of 


to preservin 
seanna asa deficient he ta of 
nexcusable aft nth 


hich will p 
e leaders would, if they 
tak 


After the 


carr engin 
eared from the ravages of the cate 
one — from either er ors 


GARDEN. 


roduce a 
had 


as soon as appear above ground. 
of autumn. pees Cabbages and Cauliflowers should 
| be transplanted. 


for the week reg nding Apri 


ed at the Horticultural Gardens, 


THERMOMETER. 
Min 


gs of guarra once 


d Turni in three 

all — ‘should be 
and proper attention paid 
the of birds an 


these little n 


fruit is set 
caterpil 


ecessaries is 


March 30 


Rain; heavy : showers; slight rain at night ~ 0 
21— Clear; fine, bo low whi night. 


crop near 
remained 


nN 
now r| 


ril 5, 1849, 


We really 


was certainly received. 
Lawns bate: Apply to the machine makers, 


: Hi 
— actos de: ag answet 
et. h a are gF lightest 2 
atiesims, 


ae Aviat HC, 
r purp Those Beles Ba gee Delic 
White P Perfection, ——.— Lee . 3 Ne 


Nymph, 


I i 
such shrivelled morsels. It looks LA Kent 
W Young, It is Zichya villosa.—A K. sr 1 7. 
name . certainty two or three flowers 
5. Philipp: Pu be O. Sutto 
num we 85 no — 


M: "Habrochams 


in ary 
tatoes when quite ripe 
Pe, a thea home in a stout woods 


“aise BEB Ebbs. Your Sycamore is a Eo 
many varieties of this tree, make 

Dg, as you may see in an; 
where lates ae = 5 be foun: 
n leafing ma: ~ 

Whitethorn.— 
onshire. not know whose 
macrocarpum is still in cultivation or not, 

procure it. 


SEEDLING FLOWERS: |. sno target 

Onmren Paimnoses: J W. The purple o 3 a 5 

y, but badly fringed. The Tite one 1 coy 

CINERARIAS: J V. Your seedli ie ET pa 

much like many others already ; texture BOO gr 

but small; purple, x a 8 Sho petal ttl Aber an 
costings aren tere is good Te + 


per 


THE AGRICULTURAL ä 


217 


5 J 


re bo. 
ae 50. 


5. 3d 


per 1b. 

ver T] L 
528 L 
g 1 
| 
L 
L 


DO, 
GLOBE D TURN IP. 
DO. 
HCROFT’S DO. 


& sse fen ee DO. 


REEN ROUND 
REEN GLOBE 50. 
EEN NORFOLK DO. 
LOVER 


RYE- GRASS | € 

Seeds at the lowest market 2 
Seed List is now ready, a 
e 0 send a copy to any one who * wiih 
WILLIAM nd Co. 

apply to Maney Machine, I Piym 
The South Devon Railway is now open to. P 
and we now enjoy Railw 2255 eee e 


Ai SEED 
HOMAS WHALL o> to y% te that bis 
Goatees mst 41 44 a OFA 8 ee 


d, Ireland, or r Wal 


URNIP SEEDS 
DRUMMOND & SOND, Agricultural 5 
ish, free e, applicat price 


by another who shall confine his observations to 
a 10 e and watch the 3 as — 5 aed 
am with the lapse 
d, in a better 3 than rds latter for the 
ment of the truth; f. veraging the many 
ins stances observed in ever ys spiate stage he obtains 
conclu usi 9 55 free from re ias of those . 
which 


yw 
ae mislead the man w who e es Tis. alitan to 


is peculia 


AHL UCHLCCU 


irling, N.B., will fi 
Lists of TURNIE P and ‘ne AGRICULTURAL S SEED D8. 
with 3 exception 
ches), d d free — ph brs ge London, 
Hull, ean 8 Logg many other . to which 
there is a direct communica’ 


5 gs Hi 50 


LIVIAN e e ON SALE 
NLY Imp 

GIBBS AND SONS I NDO 
WILLIAM. 308 H pone AND 60. LIVERPOOL; 


GIBBS, ae te ERPOOL and BRISTOL; 
COTESWOR POWELL, AnD PRYOR, LONDON. 


using inferio urious Guano, purchasers are recom- 
mended to apply only to dealers of established character, or to 


h | the above-named importers, who wiil s supply the 8 Bi ben 


To protect shes against pack injurious consequences of sid 


f it tinuance. 
The lessons of histor ry—the rationale of life—the 
theory o ich i 2 getable and 
animal worlds are pe ie acer n and 
i s all be perfectly — 
e.—See ho 


quantity, Eee their fixed prices, delivering it fro 
Warehou 


WHEAT SOWING 
HE LONDON het a COMPANY beg to 


delivery of ou 
. 2 38 should rs 
unicated 


; or to any Town in 
. or ae by Steamers. 


DS, 
OF a 5 STREET, nÈ Ap eeke 
GIBBS anp CO., a 5 = Bled = 
Soci 
friends that we Eo 2 ve — Bubka, 5 
the different kinds of Grass Seeds, aoe — now 
T. G. and Co. beg to © call particular atten- 


SELECTED NATURAL GRASSES for 
| oe MEADOWS and PASTURES 


RENOVATING MIXTURES for improving old Grass land, 
| SESS garde ore Grass plots. 
Bye and all other kinds of Grass seeds and 


tard, Rape, and 


or Gorse, White Mus 
en Garden, a nd Flower Seeds. 


ape A cOMBARY'S ‘CORN ` PANDA 


[LIM 
HOSPHATE OF | t 


SUPE 
Peruvian Guano, direct from GloverSod Sires Fishery and 
— Salt—Gypst um for a Ash for destroying 
wireworm, 
The London Manure eatery would 2117 particular attention 
to their Corn ie and Urate, the former containing a large 
amount of Ammonia, Phosphates, and Silicates, all so essen 
tial for corn — While p Urate is richer in Phosphates and 
orner mineral substances required for roots, 
— cn and prions forwarded on application. 
RD PURSER, Secretary, 40, 5 Blackfriars. 


G UA ANO AND OTHER E 

PERUVIAN GUANO, of the finest 1 direct from 
import warehouse 

TES SODA A 

GYPSUM (SULPHATE. OF LIME), 

DRIED NIGHT 

SULPHURIC ACID AND COPROLITE, 


R). 
E (made from bone only). 
AGRICULTURAL ee dex ‘all other Manures of known 
value, may be had of 
ee 9 201 A, Upper Thames- street, L 
AT e on Guano, Superph —— of Lime, ea oon be 
"| forwarded Meg receipt of 8 postage stamps. Free to purchasers 
of 


HE FOLLOWING MANURES are manufactured 


ied sy: 
oni them, wil 


and the 


no ed, hat an instant ae 
owever full it me is enough, becau 
every nen involves at least a Malai th e 
but we may say here, also, that the full statement of 
one year's E in many localities will have all 
4} 1 1 +] +h a 1 1 


could | possess ; ee that the former, would be the 

better of the two—that the theory of agriculture 

cet better built out of the former—that it would 

tory of agricultural improve- 
agricu 


he: 
better ane the histo 
ent a cau 


ses of cultu ral ikin —that 


eory : in the 
natural history of the subject would thoroughly fur- 
nish the philosophy of it 
And having dice brought this ee 2 on 
intended Sarr 2 
hin pipe 


anomalous t 


at Mr, Lawes’ Factory, 2 rd peer 


CORN AND —. 4 MA de cx ; Seni nea 10 0 
CLOVER MA 0 0 
TURNIP NURE F 7 0 0 
SUP SPHATE OF LIME .... „ 7 0 0 
SULPHURIC ACID AND COPROLITES , 5 0 0 
B.—PE IAN GUANO, from selected e cargoes (in Doek), 


N. 
97. 10s. per ton. SULPHATE OF AMMONIA, & 
Office, 69, King William-street, City, London. 


Che Agricultural 8 d 


ATURDAY, APRIL 7 


TINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 


mig 
ears to — intelligent observer 
tent t bong mt th ~ 
ve been es 


that = — 


improv are 

wholly “neglected ihat overnment, wih might be 
supposed so far interested ds thus to aid sie is con- 

fessedly the 15 interest i in any nation, aban- 

don empt to pass a measure for the collec- 


8 April 10—Agricultural Soci pelety of re 5 
THURSDAY, 12 EE —.— Imp. of Ireland. 
eae — Ta Agricultural England, 
THussp. 9—Agricultural Imp. ety of 
iee, ‘Caves — “April 9: Claydon. — T eedham — 
April 13: Halesworth.— April 14: Peterborou; 


ngs 
Seedsmen to the Royal Agricul-|_ EVERY e among others ri both Aem he iy “ad “He g 
pan Sumer f Halt moon-street ee . * — — student two distinct aspects. It will, we pon ve little’ doubt; = Aasimed neither 
— . AND PASTURE GRASS ma ned in its contemporaneous or in its uninstructive nor uninteresting. 
5 suited to various soils, &c., at 32s, successive me prera the facts of any one moment — EER, AT 
re, Directions for | reg y be collected and investigated, or THE CONDITION OF IRELA ND. 
Fine ted sorts | the facts of successive m may be collected] To rae Riens E 
to notic and compared. It * this way that all physical | Lonp,— 1 a those who have hae for Ireland. 
season i sony fear or es knowledge—all our ce with what And this is my hope —that in in two or years 
eir Catalogue of Kitchen | resolves itself into the two great gem natural | who survive the able to float — the 
Inns and Co., history and natural 3 — ; the one embracing | surge, will see Irelands wg y 
Sahat of Bel- | all the circumstances of instant sisi and the and her pauperism nearly remo There are two 
ther all the t * whose development time is 3 by which this = 12. I ar e amena — 5 
ge. equired ; the former including the rd cha- t. By the salvati of the pe pn pauperism. 
pith nee ce | racter bjects exte man’s senses or his 2 d oi 
nder pony there cern 
os 94 | consciousness ; the latter, the Ne eae every- in the $ this chan e shall be effected, 
2 1 0 | thing which involves a change. At any one moment, h, saving or by e poor. 2. The 
if we refer only to the material vo, all the qua- rat-payers (including — a proprietors of 
lities nf be observed of form, smell, taste, weight, | land The Governmen 
: hardne c., which any object ‘acai ae these It lies with gh een to render x Pamer for 
. simatitate its natural history ; y time | the part avail the their 
: another moment has elapsed an entirely new set of | position and ar zo oe am as at — 
i facts has been 5 on has taken place d, renders i 0 cases. 
1 the pendulum has oscillated—the stone has Allen— mparative nopari 74 e vith Dami Neer rag 
ee „ „ 2 0 10 | the earth itself rset nt: —— vis eae deore the o eal Ey ask abie 
at wor se has bea 11e has : é f 8 i 275 
= ea ‘Si dal a 10 existed; and the laws which have regulated all yee 1 re E 5 = EE doses — 
ties, mixed for Sian eink Paktit these processes make up the province Of ‘natural | piion m y avail themselves of, there be artificial 
of soils, Having for many peri Philosopl difficulties and hin or continued by law). 
ly of | Now it is the 5 of every * of Clare 1 proportion to 
faa 33 ‘which i ludes a successio uniform population than Donegal; yet C h per cent. 
— i, Bt sl or ch anges, or a eae ant repetition of 8 pro- | of her populati: ving relief, while Donegal had 
° "| cesses, that its teal philosophy may be renee only 44 per cent. Fistown di division has a 8 in 


pay 
from its natu ral | history wi ithout that — e observ 


s facts W. 


One Wee 


obtains | 
_| elsewhere. The law wicie gebe or “describes | 


j 


sees them for an instant in all their stages exempli- 
fied in the many instances before him, as they can 


Pp 
„True, the reader may say—‘“ 5 the t the specimens from 
which you draw the — . nel e aro 
nly coins 
. of various dates. pn al 75 once. 
eee 31 
contemporaneous observation. 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. — 


218 

ver through them, and as far as we disguises ; like honourable men, had 
Glenties Union 7 heaviest population o 7 union in =- hag on ko 00 2 pa 5 ae * poe ae ds, | hint against an adversary, they would the 
— — — p weg ear: while, according to o| ‘The first cour ped "of modern times, for there is real names to their papers. But “ Inquirer” ch 
rr e union have pe new urder the sun, was Mr. Curwen, some Wilkins with publishing a falsehood ; he 1 
he returns, other divisions in the sam i Pf pee erted talents, wees and pities his « pitiful ents 
maane ” istha 5 Inquire i”? 


u 
i hown to ground, and were kept as scrupulously clean as Mr. W 
his disciples’ are filthy. In fact, Curwen | ber, 67. 12s. r resents thi 
impoli itic manner in wah ie re = eini 8 os and enes but the others and writes that the heifer increased in — 
* follow the — of old Augeas. The custom of that 1 may make no mistake, I give his own Ol, ar, 
keeping cattle clean com mmenced about 2750 years since, |“ The animal increased in value in the last six 
the accounts we have of this —s atters of 10/., and not 61. 12s., as Mr. Wilkins states.” a Nrk 
lect and continued mis- deep reflection and instruction also, I shal not in jure so ind as to turn to Mr. 
cl 


— bat fature neglect or mi . of other 
persons’ pro 


ces, as those | th i I ied in 
ir cost mainly | present occasion ; but — rve, in passing, that I re- article is date ] j 
i 22 are, there is ferred to it in a former nu umber, when I asked the | The heifer is considered to weigh,” om tol 70 
n Alas! mul- | classical reader “A turn to "Pliny, it being then, as it * stones of 14 Ibs. The weight of the heifer in Tune,” he 
titades are alre e ced, many of N * I solemnly | is 2 my intention to make use of it more amply o beg, " = estimated at.54 ston dete 
estify ve saved, were 1 er 
— et mtron Sit cal ea le hin With this. exordium I turn to the subject nay im- | set a schoolboy to work : “ Tom, subtract 54 frm * 
me by the present law. I am a —— under discussion at the present time. It is and tell us the difference.” “Sixteen, sir,” 
come 


— theme ; : 
i ri ase m sadn this opportunity of informing them that they are entirely | been exactly 57. 125. instead of 6/. 12s. Nom Mr, Bor- 
of these rates, I am — — cease my , ppa if re pi NN a post; it is true he is feeder, on which side is the falsehood ? on my side ge 
i fight i 


„ m 
in Glenties, that most wretehed union, where I had | cation, and men 5 wisdom all on his ‘ie; ‘and although, & Ji Simpson,” he represents my articles annoy. 
in saving my poor hitherto, the new plan of | gentle reader s box-feeders proflant spirare | ance to him; thev, Mr. Simpson, why do you rend them, * 
rate in nid will impose a rate of 2s. Gd. in the p ound | T'yphoéa cre edas, “they — — fall together, become | Should you write every week, you will not annoy me, for 
additional for the aid of those around me, who (with n istory, a memento of the folly of the I generally look at the foo —— a — and should! 
equal average advantages aud disadvantages as my Po the i 23 of 7 are, who, as Hume see “J. Simpson' there, I pass on to others, where I” 
division) are consumed with nforms us, some centuries past, w when a fanatic had am sure to find valuable —— — having time 

A rate in aid! —.— rute in destruction of industry prophesied that London on a certain day would be | or inclination to read everything I may me 

industrious and in aid of the contrary, {swallowed up by an earthquake brought a cart-load of But I am — again and a again to visit the boxes. 
lse I had never been — opposer of it. 1 do not say | boxes of pills to preserve them from the impending ruin. I reply, that Th ave visited several, and I cannot 
that tho alterations in the Poor-law which I have] But since I last wrote on this subject five box-feeders | every will-o’-the-wisp into his dun 8 But I mut 
pa in evidence will save all the poor from pau- have been scrubbing themselves very earnestly and not forget to call gentlemen to remem mbrance, that I 


0 suffe 
ind th that without t impeding th e operation of any other | gret ; but I must, nevertheless, request them not to accounts of visits to four homesteads where 
might be found necessary. The rub quite so hard, and to rub one at a time, and, above | nation was in operation. The two former I never wish 
chief part of — shes is to mev aka effective those | all, I ask gentlemen of education, if bes 4 must rub and | to refer to again, as I greatly respect the owners of 
clauses of the existing poor law which empower a pro- cannot contain themselves without, to rub in better com- them; in one of the latter I stated several had 
oners 


tion rd 
property a separate ratin — This | —if, I repeat, but merely for ei. yp sake, he be | of the other, that is the 4 called upon me and 

— ineffectual, as it now stands; and, if effectual, wrong—he is enabled to challenge all the box-feeders | me that three of his oxen had lately died of diseased 

d be injurious in some respects, unless 80 guarded in England to procure a single professor of chemistry, ret and that he was thinking of iate 
as to prevent the proprietor of a thi pm mme -peopled |a single veterinary surgeon of eminence, or a single | he had . 
2 from availing — of it, without having his physician, who is not wrong with him. Mr. Wilkins is And now let me add, that for several 2 E 

of the present (not future) pauperism charged | unwilling to aim at others such paltry weapons as box- | the subject was a most. important one and not M 

s 


enable the Poor-law to adapt itself to those localities | the name of a single philosopher in Euro urope, renowned | making most extensive inquiries; and I addj that the 
where r rat ~ Shae — necessary, without | for his knowledge and science, who will come forward, information I have received, and most kindly, from 
interfering with the rest of — untry. and, in his own name, publicly — this novel many gentlemen of ae as men of science, as well 
And as it requires t lication — exertion of | system of a ttle, as from feeders a very great exten and from 
to in the Badge, it would hence ut what are the ces made use of in defence | butchers, is so extensive, aan I may say s0 vo oluminows, 
come into — where the — is determin ed | of an aasee anran r two since — 1 that I know not meh ol ay before the readers of the 
a gentleman to whom I courteous writes | Agricultural Gaze rt without injury to 
oor on it: This end he: is only 1 — mainly that he has 21 such boxes, all full of Tn uF that he sab But shes = ult t sal be made — if the 
imself; whereas now — only sure means is the fattens the whole, on an avera ge — in editor will Kindly publish it for ped however a 
destruction of the poor upon the p — — to this Weeks! If that can be done in Sussex, I have friends | it may be to the box-feeders. Geor: dare è 
a pes gears of successfal exertion fen | elsewhere who feed to a much larger — — have must add, ‘tal we 5 5 5 E oorresponde ent will 
2 y the misapplication of th done so for very many years, and who nga a ats dense the facts he posse as possible; . 
pi vere e venir A 1 now be reduced, if the | am be accomplished nowhere else. And t has alr rae 1558 of 2 N ] i 
— ie and not I only, but those also | à Mr. Fox, who, like a Mr. E ina fo Sag, Number, 
are in similar circumstances. Awful as is the tells u us that he places any kin d of 88 boxes, THE RURAL POOR. 
ERONI tars trae punt ence aN — ieee omn eee | inet mnie atter m bjects 
returns g and Professor 8 or a man | anent missionary societies, and other su 
— —— profit, but is cleared of weeds s by the operation | 9f Science, on these 9 aud hear ay ah — wl tell | in my ——— respecting the state of the mnl 
and exposure, so will the Jand I leave be vou; small beer is not converted into ale b oor in the midland counties, that all would have ban 
Ley uite un Somes: a | t ; 
ps 22 — profitable for a time. The Poor-law | into —.— casks, he will say, and rubbish is but rüb- | forgiven and forgotten. But such, I am sor 
— — Rt. pan the —— —ê bish wherever it may be. is not the case, for another knight-erraut, 
be — te * 1 nn —— will. next follows, in last week’s Number, a man who | signature of “ L., has couched an 
enough to find satisfaction in thi — 2 “AF rmer,’’ and who insinuates that tilt, in complaint of my a ee — — 
n in this — and to express Mr. Wilkins is blind.“ Has he never seen a lot of views of morality are as low 
bull exposed to al o ha 


— 
wo 


“Has he never seen ream of ree nae. x roasted Turnip . 
tenn it my — Lord, to — 2 liquid ee eee Soe tin. gee the | re ding Ls” ong epistle, that he has got my sjin 
8 e means to lap nearest pon ene ver seen a bullock ti d — ] ed with “ the barr ppl 
fe — re and the public. I remain, your | by the neck?” These are the u Farmer's’ green . a — philosophy ” of men of . 
Donegal "3 Soe aa —— — ene of — — And 2 heel ine ; for the hu siege aithough I — 4 
> 1 repeal ave a hun times written 40 = in the fi 

ere tg oes geo ie serra aii agt none ea een bee e e 

les. — — w i nster, 
225 o know, — the Dox — — of ia 1 amure him also that Lam mee what pee 
1 ea tents best and — food for pma — — tions in 3 ea 5 ne used, in 1228 
and whet hon keeping — perfectly clean in well-made missionary enterprises and private — cee | g 
uses free | cate clearly the general views of 5 


ts, 
of liquid ex P i 
i q crement in * month, or from 1200 to 1500 abolished from the services,’ to be introduced > abst 


8 ons a year. You will find therefore that — he 4 
Burrell had at Sir hamlets and vies s?” Now spiri 
bis “St — ant to b I want to i a better t abst 


ths, by his o 
c „under hi beasts full 7500 — of inde 2 arise among the rural poo a wt 


— 
D 


i d ive ae. 

box-feeder of whom we first plan Iam writin oe ck § it is the workhouse ! I want more thrift and sel prai 
- geas, who * e Farmer" there is another Anonymous serie Gau | afford a small portion of their ate ge the b 
filthy eaa sometimes w. 12 offspring. Instead of the cat-o~ a} uc 

boxes, but eet have bopi: oxen — his |“ Falcon” do, but 1 ike 8 mously, as “ Talpa” and hole, 1 — to see a good system of parochia we 

above hero hero cleansed ou they would cut off tthe d villages. 
t by {hands rather than attack priva te character heir right | introduced into our hamlets an pie 
er their | schoolmaster to take the place of the 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


219 


11800. 
f bein e master of 
east afraid 0 2 g 1 titer 
t 


many other collateral ones connected, that have aggra- 


| 


1. To allow any kind of grain or corn, except 


gr 
pat be ed the vated the evil. name, too, the mal-administration ong! = be made into malt for th f cattl 

n aiig pall e on th Kaini wants of | of the old poor-law, a a morbid * of 3 ken and | duty f 2. For the meres of 57445 eee 
e e es the debasing dency of undiscriminating charity. These I only n my if . necessary, alt not to be made at 
l s ot b Oe ing in the rural districts of 12 5 you i” write not thisin a Bard: hearted feeling for | any malt-house where pe is malted. 3, To allow 
Slide would make a good and | the poor, who, how degraded, vicious, or ignorant, | it t de on avy farm, y place where there is 

$ mony u dn his allusion to the culti- | are objects of Bd deepest N Your corre- a kiln, upon giving — hours’ notice to the Excise a 
Sale ing of the social tree is again ndent, the “Scotch Far ” justly e ge te me it is put upon z. kiln, that they may survey the 
— a rs, «your practical m ld | superiority of the Scottish e of former days to premises while the process is going o Under a 
Senn, ft — e the more experie d his being imbued with the principles of the o Holy Ser rip- | heavy penalty, no a except Barley malt, to be used 

i 1 et agree with him in this. Quercus, Epsom. | for pean beer, 


emery 1 go 
E of health for 1 155 branches 
ee 


Now, as the “social tree’ r: 
eS irene on bad subsoils, 
„n hen plante 7 
— alen ke eilte able to 4 8 with 
‘with more success than 
neo en years, and never cut down 
e, dense ind the 


0; i ifa tat ort 19 05 a Ba dag I graft it 
less likelier the e bra ne ers» es are to 

» 1 believe arg 
nee ad s 


orthlessn 
ESI pp Have ne ste 
— 


1 . I 
e pae wou, with the same advanta 
| ustrious as the Sco sa. and 


ra à support an age 
a, — destroys or 
ade = 3. Ba Wor . 


8 this 

We cea e is — reat 1 

i s as in the totally 1 5 
and him that the mere re ability to 

e means a — 


ose who are striving to ino with 3 or 
y many of our would bu 2 of coarsely pals sgt ised Barley, with su 
ties, and by other parties | ficient water, and kept at 8 15 to 150° a heat, wil 
and “enemies to the insti- | convert the Barley in three or four hours’ time to 
„ Says “an unwise state in w ich the wort stig k are in a gran tub 
verty, by inviting to idleness | just previous to drawing off wort when brewing, | 
rism has been super- | and with less trouble and expense, ce inly more, 
52 h has exagger- | than is requisite in makin lebrated Linseed com- 
e duties of the rich.” | pound, as the mixture only requires to be kept at a heat 
prevale too true. I attribute between 120° and 150°, higher a 
evils to the principle of | chemists tell us, would interfere with the sweeteni 


are scien stall, 
. of whom h 


tures. 
f 


myself, for I have | eye: 


are 
820 


t of fattening materials, it will better — their — 
d 


Tas àa 


thi 
tate of thing 


| farmers 


ormer, it is 1 
e the benefit of it. 
pe En solid 

excretions of a e 
the fluid excretions (exclusive of zee milk), 
of 8 lbs. 5 oz. nearly. Now I humbl 
3 semt ni oz. of the ip and 18 lbs. 
5 O., than 7 quarts of the fluid, 
were e Mixed 15 > with 20 bs. of straw, the com- 
nd would be neither ait sd, 
pa be told that no such m 
ed to be 


8 


made, nor in- 
made, but that ak layers will be de- 
is o deny that the layer of 


thick in proportion to 


same alty if made use of in any distillery, 5, A 
e ee pe talir p N ire or distillers to have any 
Boa-feed igs * Practic vig dabei pea ale keeps other kind of malt, except Barley-malt, upon their pre- 
his cattle 57 and sweet in ‘thei boxes by adding 20 lbs. | mises, cha 8 would eause a large in 
straw every day. If th eps the stock really dry in the growth of pulse crops on those la hich are 
d clean, spect that r 0 eh 0 yn not adapted for the growth of Barley for malting pur- 
e 


poses, thereby leaving that description of land in much 
Toter y sand ition p for more freque. t growing Wheat. 


is 
agrie cultural invention 


scales, 


greater 
mouths of the 8 accompan 
to 2 985 mins ixtur 


as whe rm 
discussions of pas 


e eee of 


em its effects ts, = t 
re they have plenty of 


icher manure it from the 


is present time ; therefore, 
endeavour to — that which to them would be — 
advantageous for feeding and fattening p 
which the 


2 
E 


es 
the total repeal, re is no hope of 238 
ion. 


Now, admitting that the total re 


5 2 


t w ge e 
m ergs therefore, if 2 an 
with Oat o 


could be afforded the 
ari t, and 


or sheep, wet or dry, at the discretion the feeder. 
Int th the 1d be as little danger of fraud by the 
use of i 


the phe dy 3 in 33 as there is now o 
retly ; it is never 


ir e 
done, the 13 of 1 is 5 great. 


Plan, &. — 


0 — 
2. ue parallel-movem 


g a suffi 


rocess. Although the writer of this has not t trie d the f 


whether of size or pees that ye majority of 
an can ho; 


and des a 
n aed I hav 
for the selection of the im a 
poh ge nd subsequ N. Ag ample enongh. t to deter- 
e their pra Perhaps ment of. 


n iron plou aor i 25 up a plain 
fitted with 8 from 3ʃ. to íl, according to soil, 


NI 
2 


scuffle, 
ined, 2 sets — begr: for 4 1 121. 
. Glas 3. A 3-row bowl drill, zara to 
cient pe Rar a within atan power of on orse. 
will do 


implest possible, t tho 
peli 5 not at all ee to get out of r epair. Price 
5l. ing, „ 3 miles from Alces 
ji miles “from Evesham, Worcestershire. 
engin my own opinion * to Cornes 
ir N effie ot and far pasc aai „Price, 
utting, arg Birmingham . For 
rse 


e cart, 
5 5 er his posi "iel L (Ð, 
to 1 nat Got up, e ver, at home, in the way 
com mers ch less; with 


tion; in times o 
or at all events only to pate wear and 
t lowness of charge seems 


desirable; and I am in the long run the 
mechanie would find it his interes on all mere 
novelties, and to construct the really necessary imple- 
ts third and in some ins t a half less 
money th at present es. In conclusion, I 


business; but to d 
simple but e asa 
and supply the result wre lowest 3 


cost price. 
I am, I should add, aoe to make these few remarks, 


220 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Amen 7, 


ot with a view to recomme 8 any particular | would ri om vad agp plan of improve ement. Or, | Devonshire, and an improved drainin level oa 1 

— r of noticing Sir C. Lemon’ mattis the if this wer ease, a certain quantity of moss | Earl of Tyrconnel, were 3 for 3 2 =a 
p ciple of which is so admirable, ids tention to tend might be. pet to each of the unions, when | practical 0 n at the eekly m 

— voal . prod ive of so much * efit. The praetieable; and the work =e be carried on under | Council then adjourned over Ealing to e! Lich a Apel 


to se e rd. One mis n 
he has hehehe is all left me to do; and if I shall | in matters of this kind has been the constitution of the Farmers’ Clubs. 
succeed in carrying thus mach, I shall be well rewarded | Board of Works. A military engineer has been put at _ Borie EY AND Sourn H ties March 13: 8 
in the satisfaction that others, perhaps poorer than its head, who might have done well in blowing up the | in Sheep.—Mr. W. C. Sro said mali 
mand th i j equire i 


the Variola. ovina or garn po § in sheep is o 
1 dise 


hi 0 y 
between them and — — 8 I trust | agricultural work. ee ern . 7 — of this country. Though? new to Britain, it 
that this fugitive communication may answer its inten- | of improvement mus t from any fault in the . A „h 
tion in Amri tice to the existence of excellent | thing itself, but from the 8 in which it is conducted. | insalar position, and the ap eee 
machines at such low — as those I have stated, and If Mr. Blacker Mek to have the management of an | course of years. , however, visited us in a tevere fa 
that in consequence A tion “of size and undertaking of this kind, or some such person as Mr. = i a proved exceedingly fata fatal i = a district not very fp 
price may be fully in v . e manifest advan- a WHY went oes to improve a bog of Mr. Feather- readily traced to certain. Merino sheep — uly, * 
“se of al — 2 ied in the mae of the soil. J. B., 3 in Ireland, the result could not be for a an t Smithfield, where they woe 
orcesters | moment doubtful. That failures have existed and will 5 Me Be ber je unfortunate P buyers. One of these vessels, the 
1 1 N ri rom a " 
Waste Land Improvement.—Humanity, gelf- | exist, no one will dispute. The ce 7 ** Mr. * de 3 8 E 40 ; 
interest, policy, and justice, require that some enlarged | undertook to improve a large tract t Moss, and |janded a quantity of sheep — Hamborgh. The 
and comprehensive measure should be d without | was ruin y it. How was it likely to be otherwise ? | number of these up ere poor, and apparently 
— — time for the amelioration of the condition of the How could it be supposed that a book-worm seated stock sheep, for which purpose ‘they were purchased 
rish. T an i i r g 


11 


* t ngst his of | le lots by different bene peor sts introduet pa ote 
improvement 5 their waste lands. Objections may be | Lorenzo the magnificent, should produce any very 8 any part of this country. The sy — 

„ an t ones no doubt there are, to Govern- | nificent performance in moss husband moping appearance, dulness of eyes fond swelling 
— taking a prominent part in such a proceeding. | well on the theory of moss formations ; he practised il succeeded — ae piaren pretn — 
Difficulties there may be, and these no small ones, in in bringing these crude masses into anything like a sembling flea-bites appeared, varying in size — 
—.— it into — — but it is no common case, | profitable condition. If a single individual like Mr. | an gane diam merti; in mild a moderately red and ci. 


SaR : cumse 1 vere a of a le hue, and 
o ordinary description—these ob- W. Frome should have succeeded in a matter of this tun — th ged thors are tian aa kinds of the 


H 


75 
iB 


ay = 
0 


jections, — difficulties should be encountered There | kind, why should not others wi e same means, or a — — — the a the tele 
are always a to 8 ing landed | company, or Government? The pauper population in | most se ave The disease appeared about 10 da ‘eat 
are to rise * arket ; | Ireland is reckoned at least from 2 to 3 millions—work | animals a were 4 5 . ie teas anr took s 
abuses, over which there 1 no control, spring up in | is wanted for more than 500,000 persons—where is this 0 rina peee os 
: x g ; thi lation lasted till the 16th day ; vesication 
every direction, a larger share is crea ted of what are to be met with ? Will the petty measures now carrying Ie 19th his papulation laste greet —— J he 
j ee 0 ass i 0 d 


all the 1 e 
characters, who are not disposed to gain a livelihood by | suffice ; fresh land, and to a lar wi extent, must be spre d by inoculation ; and its infectious nates b 
ustrious or honest means, press themselves into the brought into ven. Th at "sth an be a parallel for th attacked in the immediate vicinity of 
crowd to obtain a portion of the Gove rnment money sting ill 5 ; it is due | to humanity 5 : it is neers due to a seanca ones ; and also when, some little time afterwards, 
with little trouble to themselves : this in of Ireland, they had been plade in pens where the affected 
iki hi penr previously been put, Wh t, then, it would be asked, was the 
gency was striking the bited in the lavish ‘expenditare to our welfare as a great empire amongst ‘the actions of nature of the disease? It was an animal poison that produced 
e first year of the oom te the world. Law Rawstorne, Penwortham, Preston. great fever and destroyed all the functions of the system. Ai 
s, whether able-bodie or infirm, w 0 present they could lay down no laws for its treatment. Ia 
child were inoculated with the matter of this 3 as itis 
called, in sheep, it had —— 8 produce 


= 15 
4 15 


E 


3 Societies, 8 
subsistence, except by being emp! ROYAL e jen, boimagan SOCIETY OF ENGLAND, ? d. 7 
ex i 5 4 : apr t er bei ane A montaiy Councit was held at the Society’s House, | and Norfolk, where the ie has been very fatal indeed: the 
3d of A Fe 1 are rte 


. * M rit Mr r rne ds 
sive labour fund, may have deterred the Government Mr. Blan Bramston, M.P., Mr. Brandreth, The — of “the whole . — in this case is 
28th— 

rece coon fe prot Be rye ie likely to ata ors Mr. F. C. Cherry, Mr. ler o ie a onsen za dead nn isarah 

be productive of similar evils, Yet it may be not saying H x = randreth Gibbs, Mr. Of 101 inoculated 555 10 dead .., 91 saved. 

too much to allege that the cultivation of the waste n Mr. obbs, Mr. „ ee cs sm IF 

1 p 5 be Mile , 1 pn (Gastenere M Mr. Kinder, Mr. Lawe The aia ay concludes thus— “As the 27 por has 

rae but to e good N — Y rof. Sewell, Mr. "Shaw hitherto so little known in this e untry, m 

order and industry; and only to give adequate wages (Nor pe A Villiers Shelley, Mr, Manners | wis ne ra in any oder 

for work . A proof of this — 2 adduced 338 Mr. Turn r. T. Turn Mr. ae 4 self again man 

in one of the Government measures themselves. Cap- „ Mr. — Webb, and Mr. Henry Wilson, be e> “Shoal ould. a this enfortuna 5 5 . of the first few 

tain Cragie was appointed to superintend the Govern- gi . following new members were rng tnfedied ones es fail — My its fatal progress, n0 e should 

ment works in the north of Scotland the year of the Gunes. “Willam, Abb sleet i ougham, Norfork be 10 nia having recourse to the on ay snows and most ea 

great famine. A labour test was established. The Dean, G.A., Stratford, Feser. Hintogtonsbire | remedy of immediately pero Heel 75e . e 

moment this was known, erowds flocked in to get a The n names ‘of 14 candidates for election at th t b ge 9 poe ase, fro m i ignorance of ita 

share of the Governm t a e next | the = ‘or so doing my e s were allowed 
ent money. The fisheries were | meeting were then read. ue na ai me Senin the infected anim railing 

abandoned, all other Bet ay was neglected, and the t s Colia CHALLONE 5 — fone 3 amongst the rest a 5 her 

expenditure a 
r Co 
destitution test 


28 
8 
S 
ao 
te 
A 
2 
* 
„ 
* et 
EZ 
>, © 
8 f 
3 
R 
8 
8. 
2. S 
BR 8 
226 
48 
283 
gE 
Reg 
5 


s to rel 
wer ER, Chairman of the Ev 2 
Š — following a | Finance Committee, presented the monthly Report on the on only y remedy I Sonld ae hear Kg ai Bios Jee sku — 42 su 
— dell, R r the other. This the accounts of the Society, from which it appeared that | With some flocks in the neig r Win 
one were i i jest ended: the i with that of Mr. Fielder, of Sparsholt, near Wing Freter 
— be co ance in the hands of the Society’ , b Weder —.—— e Derived also, that after 7 publica jpoct- 
— _ py s work: these were employed 2050/. (ineludin — 5 p me — (ation: tion, I 3 still i unfortunate in pe is a few to attend. 
wi I from t 
dustry, and torti | a0 th rs paid up, and 7697, in 
service. Now it is well — that the — gm . > f compositione s s fori orted, on th 
rted, on 
part of the Journa l 9 the r of the So. 
py A Prize of 50/.,for the best Report on Farming * 
ee | cas ILLIAM JAMES ; isease. 
rade fry reve i where ort is easy | Tower, near Garsta avg, in has teh — 2 8 3 — 5 5 — 14. ge ighboor- 
Ganger in vern-| AGRICULTURAL CHEMISTRY,— 3 the careases, wool and all, with sulphuric ac bowerer 
e or a ar a company engagi ing of | Puser M.P.. the — ela — oe motion of Mr. | ing flocks have all escaped ‘contamination. J st t among 
ind than there is in an i indivi 3 >, e Report of the Che- | remains a mystery how the cage could firs neither 
y other spirited individual. | mical Committ nog, he d ing, and Ihave 
f h dp ittee was — and postponed to a my flock, as they are all of my own breed nE, > nearly two gen 
my 


oe 

KA 

— 

= 

© 

22 
eo 

o o So 

1 

8 

p 

ow 

p 

B 

© 

R 

tá 


— 
2 
S 
= 
eo? 
— — 
7 * 
E 
B 

5 
4 
8 


45 
that it o the TERINARY — previously. only conjecture tha 
i 2 ——— ai — bogs in Ireland can Chair irman, presented the uae: of — POND. —— saat my Hinton farm 1 Yat in Hinton parish st 
Pap : à e lanes in ’ 

large mass of condensed eather — a Havis mittee, which w sess cee ado * — either in a sheepskin or part of a wo where $ 

vegetables an — — — of decayed Norwica MEETING. RAYMOND Barker then | ‘eit dogs with, from the e n 2 

sterili extending „ causing rottenness and presented the Report of the Gen ictal Norwich Com- complaint was then raging, a de ier fevers, so — 
tab c i 


ch was also unanimously a ef This 
— . rt had ee to the advertisemen z of prizes, cannot be taken in insisting on ne “ a 
ve in instan ; 5 railway conve gory entire carcase, in every case in W. » Th 
bowels of — k ce to be carried through the very | of of the piret wid aa an ir SAn ~ meeting, and plans | itself hereafter 0 CODRINGTON. 
0 whole bog As an y — tn i tinue i r. Spooner) was an imp 3 — of one le 
emorials for the | tained practical detail perations in the 
i honour, be i ttempt 
ry meeting of 1850, were pee ncn n, to whose 0 he did not attemh at 
0 : 0, the nt h d the disorder, the 
' by an ta Parliament. But what hinders | and 8 Mer 3 places in the western district ; seli a single seep from his farm. He dese she — 
t from undertak this prelimi m erred to an inspection committee, consist. | thanks flockmaster for Arig Fe he stieg J 
— aes The whole — a be done by bn eue, Be e Mr. Raymond aee. Mr. Fisher Hobbs, Mr, Sing to ghe persons’ flocks, ae ze 8 the bene a 
wha randreth, — Mr. Brandreth Gibbs, — other: perrons omc the a cheep vat Kimis o ne fe 
of earth 8 ing, for 3 A cubi i Lon atth “ae on and at e ring 
pihe wages g might be — blishe ele fo would report to the pent monty Council, on the re. | affording every informatio to in fan the skint ms 
— peetive accommodation afforded by each dn tor ~~ ang use of eas acid, fae 5 iao wesswe, 2 — 
| 8 in es, he recomm is — necessa the 
H o prevent contagion. It wai ighly 
5 oNORARY MEURRR.— On the motion of Mr. carcases —_ — thus got out of the d Auron inte 


torn RAN ned an 
made in the same 3 osures might be | lecturer on “a uh ene Simonds, cases where they had been skin — — 4 meat from 2 
p = eterin: 


= as rt bonomia, gip N any Br taken the disor 
— — w = ve 3 or od 1 College, was unanimously elected an honora rary m —— —4 be another, as foo food i for the her flocks- Cop way of rene 
N companies be — who eee — soil from Colonel been 9 —— Little itw 8 tae ibe = 
 inodorous manure from the Marquis of pense ciroumstancos it mas There wer 


ae i that was deg 
i de. Warmth and shelter, with free | d 
ch a good 5 f 

in wage 


could ly of water, in whic 
en — uce 4 A0 gruel and tonics. 
päises — be advise partial remedy. 
2 gil tbat be adopted by farmers were, ear 


nt 
10 


vy 
i 
Ht 
$ $8 


E 
ie 
* 
— 8 
3 
Zo 
8. 
3 
p 
a 
© 
8. 
Ta 
8 
bor 
25 
2 
28 
SSE 
2 rip 
3 
aS 
Pa 


resisted by the 
20d to their prese ent burden H 
Parliament should be 3 obiiging 
for soa doing 50), e know 


n 
os imito P 
ee 


hof raa dhente ag 
pinea a disease 
s only 


, toe 
very adtsable, ia being P roulated to 
he — — 


i 
d 
£ 


i 


ed flo ck for the 


THE AGRICULTURAL: GAZETTE. 


221 


dis 


the danger of turning a 1 
* ing them take their 1 
the two evils he had c 


per 
covered a hav 


Tuomas BAKER, Esq., surgeon, 
who at the — led me, as do 


Ainarvy 


siready 1 the se kauen kannte 
fou 


ore 4 for 

wail 1 
health ‘that, if let alone, might 
f the disease ; 


nes to enter 


I set to — — on other grounds; 


osen the least. 


it a h 
9 — of flesh, 9 with a great risk of having a 
e th 


or it is certain, that the — 
ted, even when inoculated, which is 


mild a nature, as he 
sid 


declined to follo 
ere 


vo  Droxford „said 
ubtless he aid 8 present 
used = his 


4 5 victims ooner 
ded i A 


in 
have 2 e from 


k than when taken in the 


as repor 
except in the case sot fat shee ep, which may 
the farm.—Mr. NDELL seconded the 
ns,—Mr, C. Ph of — near 
pore hia e dment to Mr. une er’s 
as totally — — and 
ameniment to Mr. Spooner’ s, because 


p 


ii 


I 


ny: 
g 
i 


— for th af A ct 
smithfeld 11 118 Spanish | sheep, aba them 
them with 300 mbs. I at that 
of 300 lambs, wien t a Spanish sheep 
In about a m wanen my flock of ne gre Sage 
al 


T 
ae 


nn 
1 
THL 
2 8 EES 
z 76 
8 E 
PEHR 
124 8 54 
z 5 
8 8 
E 


. 


i 
H 


Fy 
E 
ges 
© 
8 * 
4 
© 
Sa. 
E 
28 
< 
* 
2 * 
p 
Ras 
2 
B 
Kd 
8 8 
— . OD 
— 
” 
g7 
88 5 
me 
OR ree 


Repeat Alling the 
ad ased sheep re — = flock will 

oved toa — —.— a Th 
Saaren itself first on the Anette at the nee, The 


7 
1 
He 
TE 
8 


it to 


zis 
s 


477 
Hh | 
4. 
w 
4 
£ 
s 
p 
2 
5 
2 
2 
8 
2 


Just 


g 
175 
SEs 
Far 
p 
ọọ 
E 
A 
i 


t d talamo : had ra eradicated it out of my 
th 
of 300 at one of m 


VLA HLH ALES 
11 fi 
1175 H 


i 
7 

Fee 

153 


tt 

F 255 H 
e 
pi 
HHR 
SRE ES 


if 


recommend him to do so. I 
not _— my advice, as he 


aes uch a an amount as would be e necessary i 
h gure s tothe — species; 
at a point we ell goed oa rote ary oan of the 
Now | 


b 
9 to adopt, ba i ke a 
t meee 
should advise him to keep 
ticable, and, if possible, h 


at once told me, his ewes being very heavy in lamb, and the 
sease appearing at that 9 Po oa pleted i in 30 or three dozen parts, we cannot yet judge, 
0 which see taken 


er, we have little doubt, can its editor. 
however, it will be 
eg one will deny that character ork which 

ces the contents, without much abridgment either, 
apteka distinct volumes on rural su 


Bulky as 
8 pae 


of s 


ais e kf Se taken before a Committee of the 
Commons, na je to 28 0 into wd 
s of England a Wales 


Compiled ons arrange a by 
k Lan 


we 
42185 which this committee 3 has thus 
s of the 


sen a interes 
has been taken in the subject, for the publication of a 
w ch must both gratify that feeling and increase 


its intensity. 


Calendar of Operations. . 
{ARCH AND APR 
BERWICKSHIRE MERSE FARM, March 29,—Since last report 
we have —.— employed oman Turnip land for Barley, but 
ugh land for 


Oats y — ihe horses; leading thorn 
. and cg for the sheep; three men at the fe 
are feedin g the cattle with Bean-meal 25 Sith 11 


— The weather 


shee ep as ~~ By or as prac- 
diseased sen, 


d, 
and as constantly ast 
the disease, to shift — sheep 
if any 


turn him, an 
away into Soib 3 (whic ich 
diseased sheep). 


— the healthy sheep as w 
source of renewed disease. 
ae during t 


erous, 


he wind whined a Se nbs prevalen 
Ty every asy to watch atten- 


uc 
would infect one or more, and thus 
onside 


the papular stage, and not on ly during 
also 8 the flea-bite looking (where — 


ce of 


nding one sick to 


rie m a chan nge of 

when sown two or three years, it is apt to run more 

— “seed, wich thin fibre, aud less oily. Planting Potatoes, cross 

loughing, harrowing, and rolling for Mangold Wurzel ; per 

Vetches and W 8 eaning young hedges, and repairing 

fences. QOurSw being all co re we have ae feeding 
om 


Sussex F 
sowing of the Lent e corn n her re in general is nearly ‘complete. 
We have finished sowing Barley, Oats, and other 
order, and shall finish sowing seeds 2 
s and 14 lbs. of Chari pe 


in excellent 


can atf it to 


hopes were 


a may be 
hu 


nta 
iter greasy 
h of the healthy air 


r the disease infec. 
that stage, 

: is a small 
of a rash) 


d dot 
— ots, previous ule, 


the pa 
— — 2 ro divisions of t 
e 


e Noch ice stage, 


and vesicular aa “pastalar or 


ae I am further 


the meadows or 
ashes, Ce. J. B. 


— ..... ñ?:? 
2 of oe to „ 
Poo ask what quantity of the crop- 
3 — 
circumstances pa ed, * 


. under the 

u expect If so, 2 should 
answer, about 10 acres, whic f the Lin- 
seed, equal to about å cwt. 8 — 2 of, say, 200 “anys, that 


ens par moras 5 tons 
eing sufficient for 30 head o f cattl 
INCUBATION : An Amateur says he is 2 mmand a 
heat varying from 80° to 100° or 110°, 
ent say if such temperature will answer this purpose, 
erer, placing the eggs in baskets on trays e covered over with 
ry 


FLAX: Nov 
will route. 2 — 


ne. 2 letter has been received, but too late 


E H. Sow 4 cwt. of Peruvian guan 
Sabon you give the land its last —— 


acre, br oadeast, just 
tion previou 
PRICES : will enquire. 
Sawpust: J 2 ‘ai You cannot do better than soak. 
with urine, and apply it as you propose. Some . em 


rotting horse-d — mixed — with it in alternate layers might 
ace celerate the fermentatio 

Soor: Spade Farmer. Sow it over the young plants as they 

come through. Drill 10 pecks of Barley per acre, in rows 


in k, that under severe attacks it is infectious 
dur a 25 e of — wher other circumstances are 
ready for it.— Mr. APPLEBY was disposed to si Mr. 
Fielder in his suggestions. He thought it was much be to 
separate the sound from the unsound than inoculate and extend | 
the disorder. By Mr. Spooner’s plan there was a loss of nine 
per cent., reas, in Mr. Fielder’s case, harii were only eba 
he farthest, out of 3 
sledon, said th 


wo — no 
all that w. 
4 


trouble of bringing i 
— 7 


stated s 


he — of Mintection, 


— of a flock.“— The —5 
lutions and oo amendm 
bers were For anil — 


t fai 
— or that resolution, in mappo: 


r.—Mr, Spo replied. 
d — woot the 
y repay him for the 


tionary measure 
u ‘preferable to inoculating the healthy 
then rea origina 


on a sho 


nt, 15; against it, 5; majority, 10. 


the 
Abridged from the Hampshire Adve rtiser. 


cere 5 
3 

The Rural Cyclopedia, or a eral Dictionary of 

— eE j 3 s Edited 97 ‘the Rev. John M. 


Wilson 

and i 
an libr — of farmin 
nerease ra monthly additi 
only in P, and whether the 


rton & Co., Edinburgh, London 


g, for so it is, still continues to 


The 24th number is 
com- 


ons, 
whole series is to be 


10i — apart. 
To FARM FoR OCCUPATION : Kestrel. You will need at least 200 
acres if pied! are the salary of your bailiff. 
VENTILATION : Wotton-under. er-Edge. In Inquiries have been made, 


+ 
ELD, Monpay, A 3 


Many 
saan ad dull, A la 
wer 4 ae 
a dull for Calves, — a redue 
and 228 are 
Poll and Suffolk, 2350 Beasts; 


Per st. of Slbs.—s d 
Best — ools , 3 


Ditto 

Ewes 8 2d quality 3 

Ditto Shorn .2 

Beat Dow Lambs 8 
— bred 2 


Ditto S 


3 Cee Calves 


Pigs 
Beasts, 7543 Sheep and Tambs, 23, So “Calves, Tis; Pigs, 250. 
sin — 
have, for the ag mber few 
wanted. Monday’s mii — are . erally re d. but the 
business done is small. The supply of Sheep consists chiefy a 

ose left o m Mon mand is exceedin 


of Be nage c very 


ay. Fro olland an 
„10 — — Calves; ; —.— Scotland, 200 Beasts; 
and 129 ‘Mile sh at from the hom 
Bes t 2 Her Bes 

Be Ditto Shorn A 3 
— “horns 3 
24 duality Beasts 2 
Best Downs and 
Half-breds .4 
Ditto Shorn 3 
Beasts, 824; Sheep at and Lambs, 6050 ; Calves 

| HOPS, FRIDAY, April 4 
Messrs. 3 and SMITH report that the 
tinues much the $ 


0 
6 
8 
poe 0 
6 
0 
8 


276; Pigs, 220. 


market con- 


TTE. 


222 
Bi 8 PE ie thas GAZE 
The market 3 T GARDEN, Aran 7. 5 ' 
apples are suiicient f bles and Fruit. Pine- — TIMBER AND BARK.— ( 
t — —.— Hott — ne- Rounp Timsex. 2 GLASS FOR CONS 7, 
Nats eral — 8 and. Apples are dear. | 4 Per Foot e tide Pode Baa AMES PHI ERVAT 
‘ —— ee. Ft ret yon os upd | Malien 10 0 toes 10 9395 5 to Be rey 15 ‘dato — a 2 "Without, hare ten — planar CO., 1 ORIES, 
— = mal Blan. 310 0—4 f —0 88 fo sra 
mand. A French Beech 16 9 2 6 0 2 ae 
Beans, R 10 0— —0 ORT ot 
— Rotators — Beans thar a P, and — are | Lime .... 10 9 — i 5 o 3 A T r i 22 af about ih ape GLASS, - 
— Lettuces an and” other. salading * Oak Bark, per load of 45 cwt., it . ase 
91 odnaies af demand. Mushroome are plentiful. ig porATORS. to 181. T 
denian, Tulips, Hyacinths, — ag paan ae e Gar. N 
ia eee eee . 
8. y winds have 12 0 
lb, e te 9s | Almonds salesmen to clear up some of th the north, which has enabled Fopeign: Sheet, 15 
— Dieta | wrt, per ib 241.38 n Tar at thefollowig | eee ile 15 cans ot 20 fet” 
pples, dessert, p. bal.,6s to 12s | * mipis ee to 2s rench Whites, 90s, to 100 to 120s. ; Whites, 70s. vee? Squares under 6 b. Cro P 100 PERI, 

— kitehen, P. beh., N ’ * + 908. to 110s, 8. Belgian an do., 80s, to 90s. ; Du h. 4 —— 42 oe 103. 6 6d. Shee, 
— — 1 N —7 ib., 1 pected wd 285 10 55 12 6 . * mas 
ri 1 to2s re eae a E s 

per 100, 10 t 158 » „0s to 150s | MOND OUGH P 6 — O17 
p. peck, 4s to 7s Brazii, 5. bah., 12s to 16s aie a ar 2— The supplies of English Wh Bt a Lass for’ WINDOWS” los 
VEGETABLES. b h bein mall, eat t per a — exceedin ng 5 ate AEM 
* y the millers on the term: ga woro 1 ber i p= 
e E eee iva, bpd at ofthis day se’anight, | ieh r S 
Wr om 9 24 * about Is. per qr. below th riday’s prices, being eT oe ae ap BE pr- 
sarge be lsh; p. dox., 1s 6a to —— tion . ot 1 e — ae each 7 | ta 
Cauliflowers, p. doz., 2sto4s ling, P bf sieve, 16d Foreign m rather ids — r | ra — — 
Broccoli, white, p. bUn., 18 t0 28 hallot eas mai ur quotatio pro e.— Beans and KEET S AND — 2 0 
— Brown, p, bam, 6d to 19 48 ta, per Tb., 4d to 8d buyers at a reducti ns.— Oats continue q| Tiles made of Sheet G1 
Sorrel, p. we ba tole — vag 4a t0 84 — ction of ls. per qr. — 20 ins. by 10 — 164. Toa," 1 
Potatoes, per ton, 608 to 3 Jerusalem, p. hali AY, APRIL 4—The arr ivals of f Slates are kept in stock of * 10d. uia ee 
— per cwt., 5s to 10s Lett — since Monday amount to 1 loreigu: Wheat 9 —.— e 
t per bush., 2s 6d to 6s * Cab, 7 se.,44 to bd tion the supplies of h 00 qrs. ; with this excep- GLASS MILK-PANS, P nsions, made to any 
Red rn — Endive, Cony Osis 0069 1o — fai and on ~~ are moderate. Wheat meets meaty Slabs, Hyacinth „PROPAGATING anp BEE GLASSES, 
Aspar fo Fette, | Small Salade p E —— apie werd E dow Gis heen 
Asparagus, 5. 100, 2 6d te % | Fennel ds, p.pun., 20 to3d | Laver alge'of other articles. C of 8 
— — 9d to 2e poe — 900084" | was — — Though the mark eng ch Sone A HSE Qo RA — 
1 Thyme, Per bumely 2d to 4 — ———ů wns — moderat ——— ARTLEY’S PATENT ROUGH 
Cucumbers, each, 19 6d fe | Par p 4 — TE — —. ARTLEY'S PATENT ROUGH PLATEOL 
Leeks, per doz., 6d to 1s rsley, p. hf. seive,2s to 4s A steady sale for Indian he niger on much the sam FOR CONSERYV OUGH PLATE GLAS 
‘Celery, p. bundle, 6d to 1s 3d „p. bdle., Is to 186d at previous rates deners’ Chronicle o ES.—The readers of 
Radishes, p. 17 hands, 16 tols6d Hebes, per bunch, 2d IMPERTAL | WHeat. BARLET. O. the high terms in hi „ Feb. 24th, must have Ge. 
p. doz, bun., 3s to 5s green per bunch, 4d to AVERAGES. Ars. RYE. | Beans.) Peas. — a — * therefore . spoken of by Dr, Lim. 
TETE our list f prices 
HAY.—Per Load of 36 Trusses 42 6 3 8 iir % 8 | 3010 |32 11 Gaon Asus of the Ng tee, to e 
Pri Swermprecy, April. 0 29°1 119 7 11 | Inc ay, 
g me Meadow Hay re a le ‘clover — 60s to 95s — i — H — + 26 11 2 i — A In oon of the sizes as manufactured 64 beng 
Pigg er Clover — N 2 | 30 1/88 1 | „ „l 6 and 3 
New H 58 . — 3 44 9 28 10 17 1 — ps — 11 30 8 ” 8 by 6 and under 10 by 8 E 4 A 
es ci e Aver. 45 8 29 * 2 rR S t o» 
Prime Meado „Corn. Duties on Fo- 3 7 2 26 5 ” y 5 bee e M l 
Prime Meadow Hay To Fia tosta er wn 50s to 80 reign Grain T — a 3 „ r 
New Hay T a a * okai TE Fluctuation 33 1 0 1 1 N 4 ” i „ u s 
-ji 33 Pators. (PEs. 17. 75 24. * 3. meek Con D rier gd # 6 „ ee 
any tne E BEMS e en ae 
: eee ow wee 547 oH > PY — ë e 
New Hay ... ... 2 2 ee dito. 2 sh - 45° 6 * se ti 8 adi Averaging ofan Qua it. ; e „ 
Old Clover ee Straw... 26 30 s 1 4 = 75 a A Jas. PHILLIP a inch thie, and "Soni og, 0 dee 
| 4 9 — 2 1 ee: — ARTLEYS "PAT T ROLLED ROU 
London . s 75 m 5 ATE GLA : 
PRICES | Liverpool. | Wakefield. | © „ 1 | proved beyond a do — Horticultural Purposes.—lt — 
- Boston. Birmi to any hitherto d t the above Glassis very far 
CURRENT. Mar 20 Apr. 2. March ingham (See — for all kinds of 
2. 27. April 3. r n WILLIAM PAT TEN Feb. 24th, 1849, p. 118.) 

Mar 28 Apr. 4. March 2 å Mexcuants, 20, Old Fish-s Co., Grass, Leap, and Corti 
wen zone obe. | qr. 9. April 5. | beg toinform tho — Ok Londen, 
‘New, red j . le ws. I & qr. . . y i they have executed in I — e of the numerius 

white 9 2 8 76 2 % yer ms, T 2 62 lbs. mei counties of England, they have en —— 
Old, red oss 76 9 7 36 8 7 2 Fi 010 {Otol 36 045 45)34 8 s. djs. d. s. d. — Glass in any quant as will enable them to mee 
» White ee eS Ge 4.6 — mae 10—47 mimt a 8 e 
Fereign . 3 — 610 7 66 9 7 ‘ — syed ~ 4 s6 2 6 8 ‘Stock, in 160 fee bot bones, — — as of Crown Squares 
6—5616 0 7 8/5 | ba yar = 666 0 6 6 Paint f anufacturers of the And. Corrosi Minen! 
~— [24—26 24 2 480 lbs. oe e — — r 4 1 86 1 6 8 Buildings. 73S 2 0 Tam 
i a — 05 4 7 0 GLASS 
FOR CONSERVATORIES, — 
si AT 
R a3 — TETLEY anp CO. are’ PIT FRAMES, &e te, 
za — * of British a 9 16.02. Sheet Glas, 
. uon 26 qr. square feet each, at the followi packed in w 
—28 24—26 23—27 qe: — . owing REDUCED ED PRICES for cat, 
1/30—32)26— 23—27 Sizes, Inch 000 feet. 
28| 29—33 22 Inch i 
29—33 6 es. Per foot. Per 100 fe. 
— Sh From 6 „ 4 by 4 at 134. is 20 6 
„ ˙ 2 „ 7 
— ents = 5 re. . ee 75 ol? 
pee 10 š 8 ” — ” 8 ” 2 ” 1 on 
20—24 1418 18. * = eh 9 y . y 1 2 i 
ai 25 TA Larger sizes, nôt i : 
i — oz. from id ‘exceeding 40 i 
qr. qr. — 17—16 | 17—18 eae ee — 
356 2820 — 26 oz. 75 d: - * ” 70 Fe + 
28—32/28-—32) — 3 PATENT e — ” „ 
29—30s | 29 —30s — „ EE 
i sop ede * a —12 ek TILES AND SLATES idé > i! 
30—33 | 30—33 23302930 26—32 — 1 er in Sheet or Rough Plate © o any se or HE 
93 — ee naie nej 3224—30 ilk Paus, Gl a ve Glasses, Cucumber Tubes,’ 
32—84 32 saib — 11—13 11-14 n — rein „and ¥ mr aces 
—32 — n eh PATENT PLA in glass. ; 
40 —42 | 40—42 |32 10—13 10—12 alteration ior window — eee 
aa — „„ — — SHADES, as — — . bene ee f 
7 15—8 e — | posure. P escrito of goods susceptible, qf be bedje 
Eh 1/7, 158-8] = — À E — removal of —— 
roe —_ id, gre — . appli ication Prices and Estim = 
p | 27—313 „„ e — on to Jaure Herrer and do, 2. SOPS 
| 33—35 | 23—36 -hamaki a 13—14 | 13—14 E 2 anD W. H. JACK 
eee 54235 —42 3740 ‘37 an seats ge and E CROW G 1 
1 i 37—40 PATENT PLATE of ——.—. 
wages. | Imports. Aver. Impts. A ing al inferior GN 28 e an | 
„ ver. Aver, Gl tet. agg mag ORNAMENTAL ey 22 : 
at at j = oucester, “eg ae mea e 
* 1 rages. Imports. GLASS oe e apply PATENT OPTICAL, 
10 bar 16525 i5 0 s. d. ports. | Freneh’ Shad lass, Slides and Cells for — 
26 3834 ny 58 13281 War information forwarded — 
25 4 50 0 420 3 1 753 — 7714 their Warehouse, 315, Oxford. street, Lo : 
31 ; 5857 3 9 4337 — m + 3 BROTEPHS 4 170, Ham 
188 CEFN 26 6| 252 = 2110 88775 the improved i 
sre 8| — — pe 10 pots, & c., in — of 100, & Ig, Garden Dorey 
tT UNNICLIFFR. | TUNNICLIFFR, SANDARS 1016 opererad —— their lasting dur ability; ca an be i 
85 2 and DUNNS, 5 Zid is „ Dir se, and, when dry, 3 i 
F Res tions for use sont with each- 
; ave London, G. and J. DEANE, 
ent Warehouse, 46, King G-Filliam-streek, London-brids 


— 
ytonstone, Es 


at the Auction Mar t, B 
— ig 159 at 12 0 —.— 
zee, and 4 PINKS, 


, and of 
sex, 


iewed the Mornin ng 0 of S 
snd of the 


i late troughs, &e.— 
n hand-lights, vases, slate A 
Saturday prior Sale. Catalogues had 
x — the Auc- 


e Auctioneers, America 


bal at the 
— 
ed BY PRIVATE CONTRACT.—A 


nd 10 f 
ng, near Maidstone, contain 
i &.; 

s room, butler’s pantry, 


some fine 


— —— an —— 
3 N the soil is 
Two 


ee of flowers. 


En he 
pr pected w East * Station. 
Esq., 


iy to T. Solicit 


tor 


spat H. Morais, Land Age ent, 


LAND, about 1} acre, a fs get 
in cultivation as a Nurse a 
“se 8 diay in fall bearing, 
Pits 


S with 


miles 


tations of Maidstone and Wateringbury, 
—For particulars, 
8, Duke-street, 


Maid- 


_... GLAS 
MILLINGT 


87, Bishopsgate-street- 


è ON, 
‘without, London (same side as. Eastern Counties Railwa ay 
feminus) BRITISH PLATE GLASS, ye a — eee 
per foo 


‘in sites under 1 foot 
est article for 


Jrown. 
Os, 6d. 


14 
15 


s 


each ; 


Sa oes | — 
per foo 


Linseed 0 


plete. Gl 
ishes fi 
„ Fish Glo * 


17 


2s. each, case included 
No. 16 3 
0 


8 


1 Put 
Oil, 8 be 
in every variet 


20 
n Crown or “Horticultural, 2da. to 3d, 
eat Paten 


ate Glass for Skylights, Warehoutes, 
> Saute 


; White 
Colours, 


BEE HIVES, 


: aes 
“Nutt on 


and ma 
pea 4 


hd white 8 
laughing 


1 


Ph ae 
G 
ishe me eee a 
princi 


or Domestic Gree 


» Wimpole. street, Lon 


Y, Beanfort-st: 
appointment t 
ORNAMENTAL, W. 


k 
—.— China pil 


$8 
DB 


ed on the recei 
EORGE Meramec ouR and Son, 127, È 


one 


; white 


i NEIGHBOUR anD SON arom an ev 
ar have 


SEH 


edition), now published, 


` soe Hives are 
the purpose of takin 
filein e They aro . 


— 55 


uc 


Japan 


gs; and at 3 


nd Ho ouses, 
HOT-WATER APPARATUS 


ples 
oo Country, an and Drawiùgs and 


— 


Paper, 
t of 
igh 


N, 


or, 
ks, d&c., 


` Cochin China, 


ied, 
alf. 


RA 1 
50050 5 1 


TOR- 
Conse er- 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


223 


Q ILKWORMS EGGS. —Twelve dozen wil 

arded to any address upon rece 

by 5 5A peas tae the 4 2 o — j — 
f Min 


pt of 12 3 oe te 4 


WER-POTS AND GARDEN 
J OBS ‘MORTLOCK, ai N stan 
announces that he hanam 
articles in various colours, and solei its an earl 
very description of useful CHINA, GLASS crs 


“8 — 
ssortment of the above 


aper 
a Binh: 22 
YPSU 


158. per =< at the works, 
—— — analysed by ae eminent Prot wig —— 
. POTTER, 28, Clapham-road Place, Kenni 


A largat ure GOLD FISH, perfect gems, and 

adapted for G 
GUANO CHEAPER THAN EVE 
Po ba S GUANO is now 71. iay wosa pand of 110 
ality, owing to recent chemical discoveries, and a 

81 ese of manufacture. An — of eight yea 
has — it — be faig equal to the best Peruvian Guano, and 
25 per cent. ch 3 testimonials. If a quantity is taken 


ngton 


ARE at the esa! poanie] — “hie 
=a Oxford-street, near Hyde: park. 
RSON’S ORIGINAL ANTI. N 
E specially 3 ke the 
Gov ernments, the Hon, East In 


ticula 
durable o out-door Paint ever invented, for the — 
very d erates of Lron, Wood, Stone, Brick, 5 — * 
has been proved by the ‘practical test of upwards 
of of 60 i years, yer by the 1 9 400 and 500) t. 
mt 


STEPHENSON anp CO., 61, Gracechurch-street, 

ondon, and 17, New Park- Jatreet, South ventors 

and Manufacturers of 7 Improved CONICA AL a DOUBLE 

OY LIN DRIC BOILERS, respectfully poio the — of 
scientifie Ho wt ne mat to their much proved method 

applying the Tank System to Pineries 7 Houses, 

&e., b i as well as bottom-heat i 


° 
er 
© 


friends tbey are now making 

opper, by which — cost * — 
are now so well known, seare 
those who have not seen t dem in operation 
— — — 


— n at mo 
—— throughout — kingdo 
S. and Co 


cely — description, but to 

prospectuses w 
of the highest authority; or 
f the Nobility’s seats and principal 


2. 


will | - 


ts apn 3 he rank and 2 in 

7 of those who 1 have never yet been 
equalled by saying of che Kind hitherto 3 before the 
public notice. ioe 1 Colours and Pri wich a copy o 
he testimonies il be sent on pas dee 10 Soca . 
15, _ Tokenhouse Yard, back of the Bank of Englan d — No 


0. beg to * — the 
17, How Park-stre ery a 
‘Horticultural Buildings, as well as — . them 
ained upon the most e 
ap eera serioa &c., ot Iron or Wood 
ornamental designs. 
Fences, Wire-work, &c 


. 


rticle re wir 9 or the consract 


upon the most 
Balconies, Palisading, Field and Garden 


BY HER 
MAJESTY’S 


iE having erected 
his Premises, invites the attenti: 

to erect 1 ote to inspe 

once will perceive the vast s 


handsom 


sion, — rootsofone prine aciple bein 


ROYAL LETTERS 
PATENT, 


PATENT HOTHOUSE WORES, KIN@’S-ROAD, CHELSEA. 

DENCH 2 ses for Sale on 

no tlemen a 

ect his Patent Plans, when they at 
uperiority of these Houses over any 
— hitherto erected, for strength, lightness, durabilit ity, 
appearance, heaithiness to plants of eveiy descrip- 
ng forme ed without wood, putty, 


RAY, ORMSON, Axp BROWN, eee treet, 
Chelsea, —— ma 2 2 =r Nobility, 3 and 
ardeners, to thei ing and Heating 


th He rticulture 


tinues to give perfect satisfaction. 

to show the work and give any or 
They also beg to refer to the yt on bait by th em — 55 

past season, for the Worshipful Apothe ies Compa 12 

—— in their Botanic Garden at 


orp 
of eey —— su in any we 


8 1118 HO THOU SE 


CL LARK; Manager, Mr. JOHN JONES. 


y him in the ne 
competent judges to to be the mo 
world, 


WORKS. 
55 333 8 —Proprietor, Mr. THOMAS 


he action of frost is effectually prevented by the peculiar 
ode of glazing adopted. Asa ple of his Metallic Hot- 
i a are happily 


w Royal ebe at Windsor, 3 wy 
st complete of its kind i 


: ts 5 
9 ill kindl. 9 the work, and answer any pat 2 
ferred to, as the 


of the pone Nurs 


Mr. CLARK presents his grateful 2 to the Nobility and N. B. Plans and — furnished free. 
Gentry for their li I patronage of the above Establishment, 
ing a period of thirty years, stos that the (GALVANIZED WIRE GAME NETTING.— 
repeal of the duty on Glass enables him to offer his METALLIC 7d. per yard, 2 feet wide. 
USES at a greatly re price. uses are 
g —.— lags — Sheet Glass, in pane rom 24 to 30 


— AND HBALY’S NEW BOILER.— Th 
isa 8 of their Boiler (before published), 
modelled. “express 51 the large Conservatory, Chiswick 
Ga pore where — at paei From the observations 
B. . have — able to m rranted in Galvan- e 
aoe it to se the “Ne plus ultra” for warming large plant ized. 
structures. a proof, one — —.— of e Meee been kept | 2inch wak tight, 24-inch wide ... d. per yd. 5d. Pers 
burning for 45 “boars without any addition, ne boiler of | 2-in — ” ees. Seer 4 
the sizə used is equal 5 warm 1500 feet of 4- — — They 2inch „ — aang 2 * 2 se 5 
are also extensively put up at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, | 14-inch ,, light ot ee 5 í 
apre —— on — same plan i inch ,, nto — 10 55 
Bun pan and Heat 101115 swg Rasa ey „ extra rong > 14 11 
U the above — be made any width at proportiona ate prices. 
Bure BIDGE aia ‘HEALY, 130 Fleet street, respect. | If the upper ha 3 ee en — — 2 * 
fully call attention to — — od of w rming Orchidea | our tens Pe 3 se abd — N * 
Houses. They have had the r of warming the Orchidea P atanasaniieed by BARNARD and BISHOP, Markit atie 
e Bote — F mdermentioned pines: orwich, and delivered free of expense in London, eter- 
Horticultural — Chiswick, oe to the House. borough, Hull, or Newcastle. 
the Orchidea — ses of the following distinguished WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT. 
* — of this 1 — eresting class of plants. 
The Bishop of ——— Farnham Castle. 
. Lyons, Esq 
i Warner, me. an 3 — = on. 
Messrs. Henderson, Pine-apple Place. 
chrode E Bidir — 
3 Hanbury, Esq, 1 near Ware. 
. Webb, Eeg., Olaph 
HEI ED HYDRAULI C RAM, 
fixed by Freeman ROE; a Maker, 70, Strand, 8 8 sees 
ndon, can be worked b 328282 
small stream of —— 
where 1 2 feet can be 
obtained, gl * oy — 
out the aid of a Tank or Cis- 
. arranged to throw a — b | GAL ALVANISED WIRE NETTING, ob ty — 
ifr constituting a Fou Bi R SQUARE FOOT.—This article req aint- 
2 with the head of water be- g, the atmosphere not having the * agen — 1 It 
ath, t the late M itan Cattle Show, and was 
1 Engi s for deep wells of all kinds, a aa Baths. Thi slog both for its utility and —— — ce, — 
Buildings heated by hot water, Water wheels sma owledged to be the cheapest and best article ever uced. 
pumps, from 15l. Estimates — — for the — a of towns, &c. it forms a light and durable fence against the dep — of 
newly-invented Portable Vapour Bath, li complete for 4 4 hares,» —— and cats, and is peculiarly iy adapted or Avil ve 
A FESQ] SRITYS ¢ TCA] . | Phea es, and to secure poultry; a 
MESSRS. S. NESBIT'S _CHEMIC aL AND AGRI- requi ‘mg no paint, “ee answers admirably for morm = 
. 1 of creeping plants. rge quantities always kep , 
A sound 3 3 of Leveling, Raiiw ——.— 18, 24, 36, and 48 inches wide; it can, 8 — to 
Chemis gl = "the 3 sre, Neseit’s Academy, in dimensions d desired. Patterns forwarded free of e : aer 4 
PR te Fone mag? sa 12 inches wide 3d. per J imones wide 74d. per yar 
0 . 
a ESBIT 2 —.— — a Ashima etic, Mensuration, Gauging, — et „ „ ” ” A Ae 
La — . — 3 e., — — ished by Lone- ” lvanised do.» Jd. per 
e 5 a 


— 


ines worked by 


bie mo feet, t, and from 
Vapour, — ea other "kinds ge 

Conserva — ke, — by Steam 

Sia king, and Collecting of Water, &e. ‘Towns ‘supplied, 


o JOHN LEGG, Cheltenham, 


— — either 
ere RAMS, &c., &e., 


m or į Blin 8 
1600 2 minute to 
Med t. Douche 


an 


Also every deseri ription of 
ire House — = 


from ach ; 
poe ‘trees, Danita Rods, and every dese 
work Weaving, for the use of paper 2 
he Manufactory of Thomas fi. Fox, 63, Sue 


—— Ke. — At 
ow-hill, London. 


8 — GEMEN ENT.—Testimonials received from | i 


CEMENT to sess 
and t be — ‘tly 


colour paint. It never vegetates, 
times | body of sand. 

is * B. Wurre and Sons, Milbank-street, 
Wes > hae AT a 

ENT FLEXIBLE | "INDIA RUBBER PIPES ~~ AND 
PATART | FOR RAIL rad dpe BREWERS, 
DIS anes. PIRE-ENG AS COM —— GAR- 
DENING A 


AGRICULTURAL Anf OSE 
J 42 PATI — VULC 
made to 
hard or 


. are always =o at flexible), 
— of ae dressing, are particularly 


oti in any 4 — 

san- 

re- 

* rposes 

7 red Aad all sizes from 
th to 


ore, Atted i with brass taps, 
attached to 
MES 


, Lon 
N.B. Aa gara of ed 65 = for J t Rubber, 
d Steam Pi ule: r, 
any thickness ae ail hinds of Jol oints, and o j 
G PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT Tatts 
“STRONG 7 WIRE NETTING, 


ss 
2 pre 
YOUNG 2 “COMPANY 7 
W. AND O, 


$ HARLES D. 


D Livkapoet | 
— and 32, Sr. Ewocn e 
to call the attent aS 


1 at Inverness, 
Exceeding Cheapness 


ttracted 1 1 and h warded Don the Judges 
the Society’s Silver Meda ly commend ations. 
The immense damage . rH ee and Rabbits in Gardens 


ma * r is — 80 great — in the course of 
t will amount to more e entire * < 
t 


> 
= 
8 


t facility, by 2 on} 


greate 
— aud ena — — ae = — N ** ug i 


be unrolled ome all wire 
2 > — — — 
probe It ~a besides, a em ‘adapted. 2 ren- 
darian. Hedges, ioe h w = existing 282 completely im- 
pervious to such v. nd by bein up into mas 
of th q 25 required, —— a mos 
expense, for individual Plants and Shrubs. 
; 24 ins., Is, ; 30 ins., 16. 3d.; and 


200 yards, 1 is ins, wide, will di 
ina, 2145 


cient 
Prices, 
36 nt 1s dae ed. per 


s, 50 ins. * 
— S td ards, 36 ine. wide À, . 
or less * a i 
82 SE eb is require t would be harii 
d 
rate. — carriage 
poe e — at a — 
sy whic th pe et . DY. — Co. have N arran 


ce it at any of the 
d, for One 


cannot give A Sotlar ides of 


0 V F b E > Y 

peak hae STICKS are r for m, thereby 

e whi * e Hadie Te cut an 

injure had stained brown 1 

s the various plan ad — 1 — 
and Seedsmen, “and deale 

* and sold Wholesale, 


able Nursery- 

en Implements, 
‘at ll. MORRELL’, 149, Fleet. 
B. Samples to be seen at the Office of this Paper. 


DE fal temic ahr sone It i is the accession 
ublic to 


the valuable and = worthless 
tions that 
tic 2 claim to their no Th 


the public. 
BALM O oF P COLUMBIA, 
into this the OLDRIDGES, an — 2 y 


has clearly shown q i : 
renovation — —— 1 virtues 
teem e 


— fest the merits of any article — 
tance of one pi gee article, 
discovered in America, and int —.— 


42 
8 
E 
W 
8 
2 
6 
®© 
a 
2 
= 
* @ 


2 
2 

oe we 
D 


: 
me A 


off by nearly han 
ess, in fact, being — “ 
* through m 


. BALU t OF 0 r, Mr. Beach, of this — 


Aresse 
f “OLUMBIA, and ey persevering w with 
which? — now —— my — Da aoni 
ppreh 


North, 
a e ou 
e 5 alm 7 


n-street, 
and never let 
e any other article ag as substitute for th 


ellin 
Strand, Ae 
to use 


h 
such as —.— | 


ANISED INDIA RUBBER —— 


RS 

8 u 

* 8 
— 


e 


e g Sr 
` 
n, 
= 
e 
b 
J 
+ 
8. 
E 

ree 8 
o 
5 
5 
A 
© 
— 
„ 
oe 
S 
g 
2 
=. 
8 
2 


ements.—To 
M — — 4 * to the Black w 
poste seed Mills, Bean Mills, and Malt Mills, 


2 = lose one bushel out of every 
2 4. 4 alf so well.—MA RY WED. 


all Railway. 
in great variety. 


ensure om ae 


rticulars 
e-stre et, 


Og, ; common 
bs. Table 


ity. — a Co, 
church-street, London 


pa Ge 


in hood 
wishes to dispose of his Apiaries, Stocks 
and 7 apply to Mr. MILTON, 
London 


„ and most Efficient 


* 
aoe ypos 2, — ipn a Fen- 


ae EA removing fro 
bourh of London into Tow: 
pete ar of Bees, &c. For 
10, Great Maryle 


PS TABLE CUTLERY has long been famed 


His 
oe 


As 
ey pat en 


“HEN 


equ 
GIR 


CURE OF SMO 
and pe constant 
men It has bee 
h Hos 


at — 
months 


BENHAM — — ‘tom 8, 
street, ry bars r Pa -square 

AND 

ANE, opening to the 


G. and J. Dea 
Monument, 


A Liberal Discount to Ae APR 
— 4 


CHIMNEY PUMP, 


RY HART’S 
T 
KY CHI YS, 
ventilation of apart- 
ma eme roe use 
spita 


l for several 


B AGEN? TS. 
— ey 


London-bridge. 


i 


M BICALYE'S ALKALINE TOOTH-POWDER 


, 
+h 


Ty? ) YOU BRUISE rae OATS YOU GIVE YOUR NEW WORK BY es x 189 OF THE 


rom his news i 


Roe 
2 


M. a 


onfident 


I. R. H 
and addre — ere 
130 B., Oxford-stre 


meas 


— und reall ‘at Mercutre, 2 


Albert, 
powder i will 1— the Koyal 
ce — on the Jid 
thus 


sit Aa emi removes the turtar and al impurities, pro- 
due vel that beautiful white appear 
and its fragrant perfume tends to — pe purify the breath. 
nd Co., from the many years they have been 3 8 
8 Makers, merits of 9 es 83 


o much to be desired, 


r to few 
powders ve be een 


ommen * 1 ersa l adopti on. Who 
INGL 0.’s, Brush- 8 
nb gy fy ' Caution —The — e. 
Arms, combined with tho 
Bo e box, and the Amerie 
FOLDES, , BINGLEY, and Co., 
— tan don 


PORTER, STOUT, and PALE ALES 


and — 2 when 
elivered * 


upwards d 
packing included, 


at the Bloomsbury — ce to 
mpto 


Vaults, Southam 


packages charge 
3 * Quah tities of one gross es 
ithin 100 dative of my bottles and 
at 35. oar zen. 1 5 e Orders paya able 
DMUND C 


[Arrt 7, 


* 
Te., Mus. 
Yy DOUGLAS JERRO Ey. 
London: bens URY 1 . Ans, 11, — 
— 
R. LINDLEY'S ELEMENT 
D PART I S OF BOTany, 


— m 
This day is publis 4, in — oe 
trated with — — s 2 Steel, > i — 
MA 51. A MON 


Con 7 — —— and — Plants; 
trated w ’ profusely iles 


This will complete the ELEMENTS OF BOTAN 
that w 2 8 ete — of 1 a r senior Students È 
: Bra and Evans, Whitefriars, 
JOHN HE REL 
In April will be — ab? ished, in 1 — 1 
eS. OF ASTRONOMY 
View of el 
departments of Astronom 
— tary 


2 Steel 

. 
the severa) 
8 Pio 
PI anetary 


0 
b 
tune), Pre aratory to, 1 = en — — 7 Ke 
Bir Jof x F, — 
a te 


peg 
on: — pag biasan — — — LONGMans; 
on. 


OHN ame 


MRS. HEY’S “MOR OF FLOW 
15 Tuesday, April 17th, will be published. 1 * uniform 
in size with ‘ Thomson's s Seasons illustrated by the Etching 
Club,” price One 


TRE ORAL OF FLOWERS; or, Th 
er from the By Mrs, 
Bein new edition of tthe Mora wers; * and con. 


ga of F 
sisting of Poetical Thoughts on Garden a Field vis 
accompanied by 83 beautifully oh in E after 

London konatan, BROWN, GREE d Lone 


eben 
ESSOR SCHLEIDEN' 5 P 
In May will e ‘published, rt 1 vol. „ with Copper 


5 
pRINCIPLES OF Youd Engravings, BOTANY as av 
Pug weeny i SCIENCE. By Dr. M. J. SCHLEIDEN, Pre 
n the 5 oe of Oe a nslated by 
F.R.S., F. L. S., Lecturer on Botany 
at the St. George’ s School of Medicine, pEr wy 
London MAN, BROWN, GREEN, and Lonomans, 

A New i Wew Bato, —— d, in One ve F Volume, 8v0, u 
above 1300 p with upwards of 2000 Wood Engravings, 
price 32. 38. ¢ slota. 

A ENCYCLOPEDIA of COTTAGE, FARM, and 

5 — — eee CTURE and FURNIT URE: contain- 
ing n 1 fo n 0 n 2 9 — om Sia AL. to the 

Otga an 3 the Far 

ee Re nace Agricultural È Buildings: 8 gah Publie Houses, 
Parochial Schools: with the e S , Fixtures, 
arden 


— opro riate Offices, 


„ HEY’s “ DS.” 
On ican. April 17th, Sil 85 1 in one vol. uniform 
in size — by iy pe son’s Seasons, illustrated by the Etching 
Club,” p 


YLVAN MUSINGS ; or the Spirit of the Woods 

By Mrs. HET. Being n New Edition of The Spirit of 

the Woods 75 — N — “ere Thoughts on Forest 

Trees, ac com d by Draw f Blossoms and Foliage, 
— E coloured after Pe 

Lonoxan, Brown, GREEN, and Ene. 

UBBLES PROM 


— Wee BY THE AUTHOR "B 
THE BRUNNEN OF N ASSAT 
This day is published, post 
5 1 AND THE 
H, or STOKERS 

255 the Author of“ Bubble 

ae The republication of a recent dashing article in the un. 
terly,’ 
by the author.“ 
London 


Piece TELE. 
5 


Jeane Howser, — caer 


street, 8 


ERMAN SPRING MATTRESSES, permanently 


elast. 


CHAN 


8 

2 

88 
c 
8. tz 


eine liberal pat 


affords 2 best tand surest proof of their merits. 


* very + kay le vy chea 


— 


FT 


FORD'S EUREKA SHI 


get the New 


AIN, 


tantly recei ived of their efficacy, 


is SPURIOUS seg 
implied sanction o; 
si 


ronage 


rid, together with nu- 1 


0 1 — — 1 p Bordeaux, 


iog their f 
surin 


ACLES, 


PASSE ES, BAR 
mors SCA is, 


RACE GLA 488 


— that, — had er of eae ex = 
hey may rely that all articles submitted - ence 


cee LESCOPES, MICROSCOPES 
SEXTANTS, QUADRANTS, 0 
ETERS, SURVEYING ae 
33 of every description. 

i, Ludgate-street, St. Paul 


im 
t perfect character, and at economical —— 
ERA 


3 5 


fter 
By MAS SHEARMAN Rar 
Par $ LEGUMI NOS, com plete, 
pr ut 200 Fi maar 4to 168., ex 
ne : Wurf PAMPLIN, 45, 5 — 
s day is publ ished, price is, = by post, a aai 
ie save Por; with ample — for as men, and 
self-m ent; together with instructions for securing 
fect health, gneisa and that sterling state ofh — 
— — through the judicious observance of & 


a et r and RICHARDS, 52, Paternoster- rom; 
39, i 


hed, 5 
5 oF „Fires s and Deserip- 
th A manner of GME 


"containing 40 Plater, 
boai 


Mass, 


ady, Vol. I, 6s. 6d., cloth, I tered, 
HE COTTAGE GARDENER} or "Amateur and 
ttager’s Guide to Out-door Gardening and ade 
Conducted by Geo RGE a Jou 
W | al who eat “Almanac ck,” 1 5 
who cu a eir own bos 
wares r fo r profit. In this aay will 
i — 1 15 — ook 188 — 
tchen, an ower Garden, and on 
Gardening. o Articles on Allotment H sgae ng, the 
er 4 


The work 


tion. 


oe Cottage. 1 
a and 147, Strand. 
00 . 40 H POWI 


Fane em — 12 2 
nd ma 


Publi aad, Second Edition, Price 


0 ASA A oat 18. 
* 
"Pa FOR FARMERS, 1 5 tis 


„England. by WILLIAM Keene, Engineer o of i : 
LoxdMax and Co.; — — 
E. ne — SHABLAND; an 

of all Booksellers, 


Printed by WILLIAM Br ech 8 
Parish Sf At. Bra — Eu 


oce in * — rd-s 
don; — published. we * at the 5 
parish of St. Paul's, Covent- yarus, in the sai 
Deti and Communications to be 155225 
SATURDAY, Ar RI 7, 1849. 


of | No. 1 3, Upper W 


2 5 
Epiro 


E GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
CRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


ner of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, APRIL 14. 


INDEX 
pets Society’s members.. : zi 


OUELL Asp Co. are now executing orders for the | 
above, in — healthy plants, at the following prices. 
N Also their superb new Red-edged Picotee, The Gem,“ at 
i | 10s, 6d, per pair. i 
CARNATIONS AND PICOTEES, 3. 
7. 12 pairs 2 very tine show flowers, by name, II. 46. and 1 10 6 
. 25 itto itto 2%. 10s. 0 
— pairs of newest one finest first class show 8 das 0 
hae -_ z 0 
55 Fine m ixed worker g 11%, per doz 
PINKS. — first class one varieties, 128. Ler 185. per 


E . 


dozen pairs 


ir, keepin 
con 20 ¢| GLO 


* 
Pee CA 


—ͤ— 


Cat — — 


1 


GAINES 


N. Gat 
Pelargo! — 


vid 
it admit eae (tike at the option. of 
non of the above-mentioned days, or * one 


above 
ornamental — will os forwarded by 93 two postage 
stamps.—Great Yarmouth Nursery. 


descriptive Ane can be had by applying at the Nursery, 


[Price 6d. 


| THE FINEST SHOW CARNATIONS, PICOTEES, PINKS, 
Ia. doe FUCHSIAS, VERBENAS, IN ERARILAB, GLOX- | 


PANSIES.— Finest first class show flowers, 10s, and 18s, 


ozen, 

FUCHS IAS.—The newest and most beautiful varieties out, 
9s., 12s. 3 A 18s. per dozen. 

o ER yen 485 most select and beautiful of last season, 


OINER ARIAS. Fine flowering plants of the best show 
be ess" oe to 18s. per dozen. 


> 


S.—A most splendid collection of new varieties, 
Teuchlerii, Griffithii, &c., 12s., 188, and 24s. per doz, 
—Fine bushy plants of the best free flowering sorts, 


3. per ——— 
FLOWER a GCS packets of new and choice kinds, 
per post, free, f 


* Ang ariety of highly 


OBERT WHIBLEY is now sending out the fol- 
lomis first-class VERBENAS, &c.--Countess of New 
urgh, 98 1 E of Sea rlets, St. Ma * Robin. 
2 — 8 eine eames, 3 of Ailsa, Coeur de- 
Ma 


Passing 


“io Beaulieu, 8180 
erland, 


Leeds, 
exa, Hailstorm, Versailles, Exim: a, 
ey Re 3 Beauty of D. Isto, 
Elizabeth, Great Britain, Matchless, Other varieties, 10s, 6d. 
pe 


CALCEOLARIAS, per doz. 

Kenti . is a 3 + theo E var. 12s, to 158. 
ed var., firs r bedding... 15s. 
Albiflora. white, blooming fi in spikes : te A 
Viscosissima and Kayii 63. 
vane 5 ee Ro. EERE this is a 

i * g plants, 5s. each, ae i Scarlet, much 
— oli 


splendid variety ; $ 
age and habit, 2s, 
— = od. 


admired — 
Cuphea 
Heliotropium Voltal 
— de! Liege 
from 


prea doz, 


ase 


1 oa. to 


berger ee DAHLIAS, to ea 


's Delicata, 10s, 6d, GainEs’s Goldfinch, superb, 10s. 6d. 


GAINES’S Elegantissima, 10s. 6 


s has a few good plants left of his new seedling 
ms — 9 which he can recommend. A 
urrey 


bago Larpentæ 
— — e 
Salvia — 
Pentstemou gentiancides (true) colour blue 
33 


57 


— 3 at “Gs. per jinn. 
8 Hawthorn, Athlete, Antagonist, —.— 
Admiral ae Aurantia, Bion tta, Bathonia, + 
Bee, Berryer, Beauty of — Rossing, I anea Bridesmaid, 


er's 3 


— Sare ites, Essex Primrose, Essex Triumph, Goldfinder, Gloria 
ng Visitors, either by Fellows person aor cranes a — — OUT. ndi, Globe Crimson, Ha d 1, er, Hero of 
necessarily be suspended on the ASS an ut the follow- | Stonehenge, Hero of Meiuh Jones Hanly, Lady Bs aur, 
f June, as upon other extraordinary ing 4 yrs og ge 1 DESC in: lend Lewisham Rival, Lee’s B 4 7 9 1 is pian 
CATALOGUE may be had on application Lady Stopford, Lord St Maney ka ale, * 
eil, J. D. C. Sowunsy, Secretary. y Abbott, Mrs. Shelley, Marchioness 8 “hee 
GERANIUMS, s. d. Madam Bavais, Melanie, Madame noe ue Non- 
SOCIETY, nt’s-park.— | 25 Superb Show varieties, 21s, ; 12 for —. 12 0 dess 2 555 Nickleby, North Midland, Phenomenon, Prin- 
OF PLANTS, * and 25 New and i ph tto, 50s. ; A 12 for oie OD iville a al Grand, Prince of 
Season, wi held on WEDNES- Fi so Foc to 9s. per dozen. “og gree “or Trumps, Queen of Sheba, Queen of Roses, 
‘th. Rose d'Amour, Rosy * * 1 —— Oa ane, Sir 
in the AMERICAN GARDEN, | 12 of the following superior new varieties of 1848, for 15s. John Richardson, Scarlet Gem ames Stew dson, 
May 26th, and June 2d, at 2 o'clock. 2 pes bn 208.) : Smith’s Ne plus ultra, Dr. Shaded Lilac, Springfield Riva , Sir Robert Sale, Unique, 
one person, on any one of the above- ith, and Esteem; Salter’s Hercules and Pius IX. ; Victoria, Village Bate Victory of Sussex, Virgil, Windmill 
=i a ge cg he a orders Miele" Flavescens, Prince de Lambelles, Roi de Rome, Queen. They are very distinct and good, and ean be 
fore May 5ih, and mph; Knight’s Heroine and Ibrahim~-Pacha ; recommended. 
: on the ¢ hays of Exhibition, sf 50 Turvilles Beauty of Chelmsford and Fountain; Tiley’s CHRYSANTHE .—The following, for distinctn ess S, 
e packets of 30 tickets until May th Jenny Lind, Barkway’s Brilliant and Lady Bu R freeness of bloom, çolour, and habit, are not surpassed, at 6s. 
Sheriffs Scarletina reflexa, Mayle’s Enchantress. per dozen, or the set for 10s —King of the Crimsons, 
25 fine varieties, 10s.; 25 superior vars, i .. 17 6| Föggi, Comte de l Sphinx, Isolier, Campestroni, 
$ FONDON FLORICULTURAL | 12 fine vars., 5s, ; 12 superior vars. 9 0| Phidias, Duc de Conigliana, Fleur de Marie, Vesta, Formosa, 
of her Most Gracious | 50 varieties, in very fine and choice assortments .. . 25 0 Lucida, Invincible, Templ olomon, Annie Salter, David,. 
EXHIBITION for the *PETUNIAS. bund Pi anes Marshal de Cirque, Duchess D . 
S TAVERN, Kennington, | 12 superior new varieties of 1848 Ae 0 2 5 re . qar, umale, 
Open to all Exhibitors, | 12 fine varieties, e 12 aus ditto ta r 
eee, ‘Cincraving, ‘VERBENAS, tu HONE e "for, borders, extra fine 
sense, ; ran i 
e Royal cui da 12 8 e jor ne varies o ~ s e plants, Ss. per doze The following at 48. a i 65. Pea dozen, 
r, will be Poke aA argar aret; A. Captiration and Vixen, fine plants, 9 Scarlet Geraniums, Petu 
alter’s pit ac a Ivery’ Emperor of China; Ro- 
binson’s Defiance; Edmunds’ 8 Vulcan 
Superb, Perfection, White N and Marquis of 
Douro; Gill’s Duke of Norfolk, 2 bin gy and 
Gillmanii ; Banes. Rosa Talenes au 
1 . and Arethus = s Rubra multiflora, Beadle’s Di- payab 
cmd Fruit, vorsity and A | eat many thousand plan 
out m Plants, So one varieties, Bs. 1 125 superior varieties. 47 ; purchasers re fame respectfully requested t to pay a a visit to the nur- 
lone for * 12 fine varieties, 4s. ; 12 superior Mon an aa Revs! FB, ULA ead ia ; be 
sOHRYSA NTHEMUM 8. and kept i in order, by the day pss sah * 
12 superb new varieties, as 8 r 15s , viz., Amadis, Chester Nursery. near On 88 288 Kenni ng 
Diamant de ea bing Be = 3 Sahni of apa. 
11 —.— elvetius, ein 
Chariere i mond, Polar Star, Reine des — \UTTON AND SONS ha pete 
been engaged in peg ae 
25 “ane varieties, 10s. 6d. ; 25 8 or varieties „17 6 | down land to Pe: ermanent Pasture, x 
| 12 fine varieties, 6s. ; 12 6 tto . 9 0] assorted to suit an he vari 
GREENHOUSE PLANTS, i 2 ee GRA SSeS: AND 
50 fine and select n ea and e its 50 0 CLOVERS FOR T PASTURE, mixed = 
7 ditto, 288. ; ; 12 ditto ... aes oop LOD bes for thi P soil, per aer 1 
2 extra choice s> y he ot 25 0 b PRMANEN ASSES AND CLOVERS, 
GOOD PER — 
STOVE PLANTS, 12 fine and ‘select varieties S i O strongly recommended, per a * 42 
*ACHIMENES, 22 — and seleet varie rag th 7 6 TRUE ALIAN RYE-QRASS, ae 0 8 
new varieties for . ca 2 
briata egane , Ghiesbrichtii, Kall Pa FIRST. LA md GASE 2 er casi solely — of 42 
GLOxt ae 5 @ fine E 51 VATING MIXTERE of Perennial e 
NIAS, 6 fine ‘vari ; ATING U rennia! . 
5 nf SEREA CEOS r 100 tine and i select 1 SUTTONS RENOVATIN fy sh of Pe 
showy v noluding 17 6 ( to s Ibs. per acre required), per Ib, 
50 44 ditto, Boeke 25 ditto dit 150 17 6 Fresh Lucerne, per! ed.; French Furze do, is; White 
ROCK PLANTS, 25 varieties, 12s, ; 12 È varieties . 9 0 | Belgian Carrot, Large Cattle Pars snips, Yellow Globe aud other 
1 CCC 10 0 Mangold Wurzcls, Kohl Rabi, Drumbead and other Cabbages, 
x ~ 8 | J t price 
DY ORNAMENTAL CLIMBING PLANTS, IE ear DT hey ood de — â fee to London ie aka. 
GREENHOUSE CLIMBING rea a 8, 12 selec =i z 28 
ee eee, pi if de dink, wi without 8 er 
— by post if desi ou s e 
“Those masked — gion be sent t ne to London; and for | wa oop, ‘Ck xk zó Ha MAJESTY, * 6, Hay 
long carriage of goods of 40s. and upwards extra pisats an 3 London, deen 
ratis. Particular attention is paii — 5 king. Nurs erymen nd others, that he ha daras ce : 5 
—— ackages provided for plants sent to long distances,— Entomologi c K ea from 6 to 12 inches, in square and ov 
„ Post och — payable either to Bass an now Or to | shapes. It is well-known t trat eve * asp caught in 2 
STEPHEN Brown, Remittances requeste ed from unknown cor. | part of the season, is the d struction of a whole nest, 1 ; 
rties De. respondents, j? e Knife for cuttin — êy- 4 imb fr mi uners, 888 4 
de above, I Seed and Horticultural Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk, |a ved Buddi 8, Pr AEN 


wan G GEORGE HENDERSON, 


13 AN 


Cl 7 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


BROWN 


besutiful and — . descriptions and | 


ny a ee 1 . AND CO, 
ow sendi io | 
7 HELIOTROPIUM 1 S 


— of May 
read, Bt, Jobafe-eged, Ronse. wall on fhe i in the Gardaners’ Chronicle of i variety, now for the first tim, 
M Ts. 6d. opa characters or = are given 
3 out joe * T piat o at 7s. 6d — — Sith ond Sak A a possesses the great di — age of lowe 
ture, on — 12 Í in cultivation, will he ni as soe acquis peaaty of Sui 1 75 Lea r 5 2 = —— * — 
i a, aan a ETT de van as also the t 
eke rme patapl mai pka new class for 1 itis * Ren — . č 7 wine, © flo 1 Are aipin. — — high 
between P. Drummondii apd one of —— pes pas parae H re raph usual allowanceto the Trade by taking the set. The habi t of the ath vg is — Amar and compact, ang omy, l 
3, * be — = 4 par ae diag and producing Seed and Hortic vultural F Establishmen nt, Sudbury, Suffolk. long undoubtedly — 2 — ring, ar and À other — fnat, 
* * eig í r SS large corymbs of bright 19 5 ile ry TURVILL, FLORIST, &e., r Chelms- beddigg or pos 8 Pe z > — le acgufsiüion T l 
flowers. É. G. H, will at same time send out the follo ow iris * ford, — hor most respectfully to return his sincere than — FUCHSIA, 8 THE RAJAH.”—This is the titter 
GAILLARDIA SPLENDIDISSIMA, at 10s. 64. 8 o bav e favoured him with their kind will varieties, Habit compact and good; corolla sn hedat l 
y point all wily Ga ar 838 ures them that all future orders will | peautifully cupped ; sepals bright red, of Vick pune | 


T * 
know h val oppere: e of ant when bedded 
out i extremely fine. In habit 1 is dwa — —— aud 
aderfully tree throw ing up mass — 
the peta * al — 4 bear an equal — of deep golden 
nd rich 
rela and ri RLEGANTISSIMA, at 5s. each. 


—A finely formed 


mee 1 — mmends d ccd 

t with, 155 strict tion. He now reco much reflexed as a Turneap Lily. Pri a 

notice the following List, including his unrivalled White FUCHSIA, “ SPLENDIDA.” This is yok 3 

Fuchsias, & c. and i * dark 
10 


7 


LI | ha 
©. —— — tip with bright purple roun e Fuchsias named above were obtained 1 
well —— 2 — nigh e bail 


ood outline, and ver, —— Joun WILM OR, Esq., of Birmingham, an 


this is the best Dahlia | superiority of that gentleman in imo Ju 
ient: carefu 


— of a clove oad dwa — T. TUnvIIL has no i 
poor y s a 2 2 paaur, rosy purple ground, deeply veined, | — — pee ed; it was a — — from Standard of Perfection ; | scientific hybridisation, some of the finest genera of tag 
and b — and 1 12 the fine babit and form, with high centre at all times. This | will be a sufficient guarantee for the excellence of pan | 
SALVIA n! COMPACTO, at at “ Cae i foot flower has been seen by most of the first growers, and pro- d. Plants of the otrope and the . 
A very pretty dwarf and suf azure ues 2 clear white nounced by them the best light flower they have * n ads ready to send out i ay. The usual discount to the tan” 
bali The ag all s Season y to ove one of the most | — 1848 it took five first class certificates at the Metropolitan | BORONIA TETRANDRA (B. microphylla of 
CES er Jip, ant p nd other open shows ; the early frost prevented it from being | very fine new species. Habit compact; a 32 
useful b ing : — — more last season. Ww rue 103. 6d. bloomer, producing the flowers in the way of B. sates a 
122 7 45 Frontsr, SEEDSMAN, &c., Quee NEW FUCHSIAS. wall e ande > a, =t excellent specimen plant for exhibidea, tts 
rhe EL — —Pure white — and sepals, * ; 7 
aperies, Park-sireet, Brighton, bega sespes ‘ctf — n addition to the above, H. one 
that has taken — above ex- show "hee bright rosy vermillion corolla ; f Co will de able 
tenslve 2 altara) Establi A and purchased of Mr. from 6 75587 8 le N — vessel to the he tip of th of the nor all — 5 8 out by oth — including d N 
Cheeam tensive and choice stock of GRRANIUMS, and is allowed by’ a who have seen it to white tine Phlox i oo 8, a . — 
FUCHSIAS, VERGENAS, CINERARIAS, bret rato collection o ve has a most beautiful foliage, y ve re — ; mire Fatal alogues of 3 co! & 
in N to, whic h E. 8. h added | grace eful habit. the “ Florist,” for 9 aud the Gar- General Collection, are in course of publication, and 
DAHLIAS, w l plants for | deners’ Chroni icle for 3 st 5, besides other floricultural works. ag) eh a n rded, 8 on application. 
bedding out, Lib d d | —Plants in May, 10s. 6d. eac 
$ ros T to tollelt a share GEM.—Very white tube and sepals, with a bright violet pur- 
—4 is ‘tay. the Nobitos 555 Klee A — D peuss is of ple corolla, the sepals extending boris hal ave so that he © povolia HORTICULTURAL happs AND HEAT: 
— and to © patrons rade, who h well seen; a ev wi vaga 
him with thoir damanda in — Dahlia trade during bis “to ong | in flowering, ond ve ery 8 ts in May 2 an ALSO THE nea aaa >| oF thet CHOICEST PLAST: 
residence near Hungerfor he begs to tender his grate- BB ING.—Light pink tube and sepals, 8 expanded, 
ful thanks, and 1 nn iy, ie ntinuance of their idu a of the igant scarlet, fine, and vivid in colour, excel- 
termed favours , Catalogue sof Dahlias, &., may be had on ieni pedis, and er weeg in May, 7s. 6d. ? 
pepes a Sere Lip ar “fine s: 2 fom vith light pink tube and 
S. regrets = —_ to the failure of the — of 0 stri stou a sy crimson corolla, sepals 
Ceok’s “ Flora” Dahlia, it cannot be sent out this season short, —— p r — — ome; a 5 3 
FRG | menton Beauty of Leeds.—Plants in May, 78. 6d. e 
— * — have been pone y selected = several 


Tuouas ‘BARNES 7 —.— to the late —— MUEL | 
— will commence sending out on ae 30th of April, 
the following novelties, the whole of which he offers with the 
* greatest confidence, 
FUCHSIA, REV. F. W. FREEMAN (Barnes’s).—Blush, 


th ousa 


p 
PRINCESS ALICE.— 


white tube and | sepals, crimson scarlet, corolla large and fine ; — 


lant, Ts. 6. 
"5 RBNA, B BEAUTY 2 STOWE (Banwes’s).—Pale blus PRINCE OF | 
with bright o pips well formed, and the 5 — y sha 


1 
e. EXQUISITE (Basnzs’s).—Silvery blush, new 
colour, and very distinct ; 3s. Gd. 

VERBENA, UEEN OF SUMMER. —Pale pink, with cherry 


rc kla, rag reg Or RUSHBROOKE (Banks’s).—Light 
ground beautiful e with lilac o penis, distinct ; 


PETUNIA, © ULESCENS 4 bah ground, 
veined with key throat, distine a fine ; ag 

PETUNIA, Tespi LENDENT ” Ame RNES's).— Purple, 
crimson, flue shape 


LOX ALBA Pi Bt PLOTA (Baangs’s).— Pure white, of 
ms ae AD, 3s. Gd. 


A (Basyes's).— Lilac rose, fine form and |t} 


hab 
PHLoX, tose ELEGANS (Barnes’s). — Bright rose, of 4 mpletely outv 


fine for 

The 1 ‘mostly no noticed in“ Glenny’s Almanack,” and 
will bo segale 

T. B. has also a ealthy stock of all the leading sorts of Ver- 
Denas, Fuchsias, — „ Phloxes, & c. &c., descriptive 


logues of which are ready ‘and may ‘be had on application 
` enclosin two postage stamps. N. B. T. B.'s splendid tater | 


“STORY'S” HYBRID FUCHStAS—“ ELEGANTISSIMA” | 
“ NEWTONIENSIS.” 
Ww H. STOR RY, Esq, White Hill, a Bushell, 


3 — beg to inform the Public “that 8 will re se to su upply 
es oe on and after Monday, the 7th of May. 
vodcu * are given 


| ee ig, erie aae Va ATE Onan es woe e 
Editor of The F te Be ian — ; RASS, 6s. 6d. per bushel, 
are very datnct in colo — i 0 no 1 es Ma ngoid W — br Gona; Yellow Globe and cher 
1 n | nips Saintfoin, and all other 
the ree and rom their ec peculiar am enges, ind deep ziele, | lowest market prices. The above are confidently recommended — 
coloured — — tee a — et and deep violet. by Jo on Sprrox and Sons, Reading, Berkshire. Corram and HALLEN 1 had experience in the An ft 
ae: abn t scarlet crimson, e* Carriage free to 1 — Bristol, or Basingstoke. HOTHOUSES and CONSERVATORIES — 

e ISSIMA,” 100. a 6d; * SEWTOSTENSIS," 10, sa pa ZORTANT TO HOLLYHOCK GROWERS, drekes ca on vit oglas dence undertake W 
Heben's u GEM ( OF — WEST,” 5 bd. coe ench time to offer TE nobility, gentry, is siia arp 5 the | erect such 5 N economy and dis iu 15 
which they have ‘ in procuring 3 i nasa sful HOT TER, APPARATUS for h sod upwards d 


to W. Daubrey, Esq., Tes, T and which they believe 


n ew 
be the best white Fuchsia in e. The tube is long, and handsome—th 
pure white, without any roughness or co: 80 usual Is do n extend more than half an inch bey ed 0 1 — 
whit hsias, Sepals sym: 8 „å ll reflexed, — a perf t circle ; itis free from indentation or curl, in 
utiful, well formed, violet purple corolla. Ha ; the centres are unique, and form that of half a globe 
and f qopal Messrs, Verto e of innumerable smooth-ed petals, closely and 
above three varieties to be u nequalled by any in existence, con- | Neatly g the other. This is the true cha- 
them, believing they will give perfect satis- racter of the flower the seed has been saved fro by r 
— usual discount when three of each or either of it. Growers get a good collection should 
— 3 7 lay the present o pportunity ; the seed spoken of so hi hly 
— unknown correspondents a respectable reference, | has been thoroughly proved, and bring the major of 
— — cr 4 prepaid, ial be — without which plants | Plants equal to the the seed was saved È Sold 
can iar = paskoo of 60 A * packets containing 200 seeds, 5s. ; 
Gt REENHOUSES AND HOTHOUSES, Warranted ay dep riage Heed double Hollyho mony 
— Materials. A Lean- to er 12 feet by 8 fee . a Collecti 2 WILLIAM SEED 
i — : „ door, 3 feet of glass — front, gene with to dispose” of, m semidouble ers of th 
IE n pe g Ins of a I size, 1 times, and de li- ee producin e great art d — * — hive 
5 AF, mig 45 eno in London, 15, 10s t the different exhibitions, and much admired, for | _ CoTTam and Hate have on show at their “fe 255 
= i 12 meu 5 m . 10s. feet by 12 fet, the . — ra poe Sold in packets, 1s. Gd. cach. W anley-street Oxford-street, a great varie 
—— q Made i Twainek Ligh e BA includ a pi 1 a <i ieee superior quality | ar ee for GARDENS, &., at Greatly RE VOED 
; ormir a alf a ball, — ti frames, 
— oot a pe o foo Shad with Hartley’s Pwo above 20 distinct vadiaties in packets, Is. bd. — e "Ga den Roll Hand-glass 
A Laws, Mas c |  ANTIRRHINUM SEED all saved from fi aei Paine Stak 
-en, Machine Hothouse Wor ks, Stamford. hill, M Middlesex, | spotted varieties ; Fe per packe F soe S Flower Bordering, 
M PR D STICKS 4 choice varieties of HARDY ANNUAL SEEDS, 8a the N Flower Stands, 
n FLOWER STICKS are of a circular form, thereby bf she'd, n pacias of eaeh of the above, inoluding:a packet Garden Vases, Gorton aha 
rena ak Angles and sharp edges, which are liable (0 cut an — ie Mowing Machines au 5 
suit the e ations They may IN tained brown n to mproced Walcheren Ga Ge Broccoli, Wilcove do., Tam- veces aer of W Work, both 
and Seed. dealers in berker i Nursery. | thebest in cultivation. knee Brocoolies have proved | wrought and east iron, for Gandeng, — 
s l 
Manufatura and —.— at H. Mosreni’s, 149, Plast e por Conde Aer, the a — ys nos Ron ch eal ii ENTS of ali kinds, e e Wire aa 
i e amount in penn ta ined 
2 — ů 1 penny postage STRONG IRON HURDLES, stra soy see 
ples to be scen at the Oftice of this Paper, Pulteney Bridge’ Bath. RD Tiker, Seedsman and Fiorist, 16, w Rooms at the MAN UPACTORY, . Wasi = 


SON SERVATIVE. u Some pretty, self; een distinct, 


F WALE 
TA lpna 


good outline.—Plants 


T.T. can with eines say they are quite distinct from 
yet out, having — st -e ys — grower 


of the Petunia. All o 
be accompanied with, 1— 


rious Wor win 
of 

FUCHSIA SPECTABILIS; OR, QUEEN OF FUCHSIAS. erected on their 5 for ins era a great variety of 

ESSRS. VEITCH anb SON have much pleasure Hothouses, Greenhouses, Conser rvatories, Pore 

in offering this magnificent anew ll 2 — public. It some of which are extensive, and 
has to be seen to be admired, being 
beautiful ‘of all hitherto introduced 8 Whether we look at | ing, Heating, and Ventilating all Horticultural Erections 
he exceeding beauty of its blossoms, habit, and foliage, or at | erecting of these Hothouses, Ge,, ha 1 bs enabled them to 

f its ete the parent of an altogether new | a first-rate collection of Stove a yess ouse Pi per 


only 


pleas 


new and r: 


185 d oat 


further particulars and a 


oer 


de on every thre 


1 throat.—Plants, 38. 6d. each. 


3 ae . esd pi 11 70 os It was a at LESS THAN HALF-PRI Ua * ns, Estimates, and Çais- 

eè Horticultur ety's Rooms, in Regent-street, on the | 1 fi d 

22d of Ap o exhibited at R had — Large Silver Medal awarded. It eee ET 
s-pa! 


— A woodcut and description of 
ata- i Hy given by 1 — Taten in No. 20 of the — nt Chronicle 
so figu 


2 Florist 15 for une last, on reference to which 


Monday, tho Tt — will — ready for de — Bay — after 


ay, a 


ree taken. Oran will be — striotly in 
the rotation received, and a list of such of the trade a — — 


ETUNIAS, 
Fine formed flower, rly ric! h lilac 


Large bold flower, pale blush, — 
with black throat.— Plants, 


J. WEEKS om Co., Kings road Chelsea, Normen. 

TURAL ARCHITECTS, Hornovsz BUILDERS, 
rrespondents must | APPARATUS „ solicit an inspection of 
— aa so siege —.— eat Chelmsford. 1 


: 


all h 1 10 
oubt the most | in various forms, 8 the most tin proved e 


ere cannot be a doubt but that it are cultivated in such enormous "quantities that they arè 


tram tape eon eel COTTAM & HALLEN, Enarxzers, Inox orb 
&e., No. 2, WINSLEY-STREET, OxrorD-STBEET, Loses. 


red in ‘‘ Curtis’s Botanical A 
ìl description can be obtained. 


218. each, with one over to the 


Hj 


unknown corr 


prepaid, will be required, without which plants cannot be 


esponden 


sen 1 April 14, 


N. B.— ee colour 


inclosing is postag 


Fre H 601 


sa 


respectable reference, or the ae } 


ed plat Fh * be had by 


RSE, “OR FURZE 


ug a quantity of the above seed, saved by a gentleman | other bui dies (of which they va e con 
ec 


— 
bloom is Mot J symmetrical 


orld — 3000), fixed at greatly redueed price 


5 three doors West of t 


| 


5 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


227 


TS. 
FOLIUM ww NEW PLAN 
i r London, > 


5 ee the most dis- 
AS, See drawing and 


descript ive Cata 
paneas, Dahlias, & c. may be 
‘Maidstone, Kent, 


“BEAUTY OF ym vise setae 


to inform his friends the 

e tof 
'RBENA, which has been seen by 
ad Colour, : 


sagan SEEDS of every 
BEDDING bur, + orders taken, to be de- 
at 6d., 8d., and 1s. ach. 

LIU! ALBUM, 1s. Gd. each. 
elasticus, Aloes, Cacti, Cedrus Deodara, 


“Ib, 

ished to improve the crop of Hay, 
Dutch Clover ae a lion of 
ye-Grass ; the cost 


EDS at the lowest prices. 
109, St; Martin’s-lane, Charing- 


anp STEWA RT will have the 

T =r 20th of April, the following 
i ve VERBENAS, = of which have 

lass 0 a don 8 


har ged 
imay i be nad Bt te per plant. 
ly purple lake, with a rich velvety 


our a fiery rose, with a broad ray of deep 


MBERLAND—colour a beautiful 
— very large 
i lat deep rose, a noble 
our ra 1— 05 pale lilac, a large 
: ful pearly white. 
eo 3 is Trad and habit 
T f: 


T having mad ts with Mr. 
t shore new and « choise B i which 
p * on che — plica 


—.— — 
Chronicle. 


Y, APRIL 14, 1849, 
in TWO P os y 


2 8 r 
kKER ERE 


* 


thoes 
besss 


Lian 


BERBER RRR 


Se 


S Cee eee er er 


k RKRE 


tast 
d be | Bat 


and “herbaceous plants ;” — —— world 
prefers gaudy tints to varied for s; m r has 

ven away beauty; and who shall venture 10 doubt 
whether the fashionable 4 is right, or that ag be 
change in taste is permanent ? 

Nevertheless the Joolers. -oñ who speculate pon ja 
the Pitia of the changeable crowd sometimes 
inquire whether a red cloak is really so deni as 
roidered shawl ; or a floor o se a 
fpa in all respects as fit an ornament of a a 
9 10 


happens it that those who so 


a How 
i —— delight in nch brocades, gay — and | offe 


n their 
aring ill-blefi ner chou j 
and bald uniformity 
may be unexpected, but 
its Sasis will T acknös W “ All that change 
arose out o garden A race of unskilfu 
gardeners W i io ‘what should have been 
. and drove their employers to adopt the 
esent style e, whic their successors have seldom 
tho ught of abandoning. 
ane a flo ower-garden containing a gay mixture of 
all manner of flowers, of all forms, colours, sizes, and 
appearances, will be more permanently interesting 
than one decorated, here with a yard of red Ver 


peg Mae tt — > 
far rdens with few 
8 eng the ohjeet i in one, a 
the r!“ Ou 


bain now 


ben nas, chere succeeded by a yard of w a Verne 
interrupted by a couple of yards of scarlet Pela 
oniums, followed by a patch of white Petunt ias, sal 
probas not be denied, Bat such plants are preferred | € 
ctice because nothing can be easier than to 
3 the gaudy 8 which they 1 — 
while to preserve the for in a state of beauty 


demands great skill, watdhfulniess, and forethought, 
— na or a Pelar- 


and co 5 8555 the gar 
A er-garden should be and can be always well 
docked, let the season be what it may ; ; not in ra 
at all times with flow itt at least with what 
5 as s pleasing £ y "effect. are ee oa 
ristmas Roses, and Violet Grass for wint ; Cro- 
cuses ad. their ki nr species for the 
Hyacinths, Anem e, Walldowers rs, and all sorts of 
early Alpine plants for the later spring; a pia 
hos to decorate the summer and 
e dead season of the 


—— ‘the 


F 
< 


thei r great intrin t; 
portion of the ga 4058 ami not the crowd itse 
some months since with the 


and 7 there was = in it one plant for which the 
amateur would have given sixpence; Fuchsias, 
Hollyhocks, old-fashioned Dahlias, endless annuals, 

forgotten herba ums, 


med the larger part of the display, 
in small box-edged beds, every one of 


ane 


and ne poer of the p ace, it —— there was, con 


mer is at tho 


er spring 38e 


the w 


— needed as much, but to 


commonest its rank secure 


e 
f| colour, season, duration, &c.; and then, when the 


sist 
for vases, pren other sedipturell ot quasi-sculptured 
a 2 = as necessary to a flowe 
a drawing-room. The of them 
better "the effect, st phi ‘ley 4 are sets with 
nd arran nge ith skill. 


22 en as furni- flow 
the 


me all this I shall never succeed.” 


* e must, therefore, be excused 
into all the matters included in our cor- 
t's string of que and we venttre to 
r him some general advice i in their stead, 
The fist point to be remember 
garde that ugliness is ahli 
Everything erence’ A ma utiful when in 
t perfect state, but i y be rendered ugly by È in 


management or by hlari Aeh accidents. There 
not amp in our fields which is not at some tite 
of its life beautiful in one Way or 


mistake — 


Wers reat — netor 
this t Pelar 5 abun aui prove, for 
e pe — the worst of all foliage, 15 abel 

mployed in flower-gardens, While 1 
foliage of Radula, quereifolium, grav ele bal- 
sameum, and thei ir allies, is entirely “ovetlodked, 
except by those who stand above the crowd. 

Beauty in plants is dependent upon A kilil a 
vation, and it is because ate rdening is n 
at most of ou 8 ait 


— 
2 


thrive upon. Bad ne eners drew a ring in the 


e contents of a 
inium 


death, and what fe 


worthy of the mighty name This 

with all annuals, and 5 the cultivation 
of dikea has almost eit in ag gardens. 
What should have o .treat each 


and é 
— plant with the . care b W. would be 
upon a pet Gera 


nium; not that it would 
ave given it all the 
a indeed, its be at would 

maintained 


care it wanted ; 
have become manifest and it wo ould havi 


estowed u 


the summer 8 Pt "iling in the 
autumn and 8 spring ; ; but this is the very 
time to set about pec er what to put into it 


inquirers’ er. s, mean 
recommend the following course to 
as many of par cheap 


—size, 
season comes = stocking your garden, you will have 


all the advi 
teers all things Fà will have Jearned Phat best 
ts your means, wants, and ta 
"hither week we will endeavour to add such 
other suggestions as may put the new adventurers in 
wer-gardening still more 3 in the trae 
that leads to W success. 


Tun epiphytal character of certain Inpian Ruopo- 
DENDRONS has been unexpectedly confirmed by the 


discoveries made in the Sikkim Himalaya, by Dr. 

OSEPH Ls Sig gh who * just pole 11 2 
ostly which one, R. ousiæ, the fines 

1 all haf! es yet ee seen, . on trees. Thus 


ee ũ m...... 


228 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [APRIL 14, 
— — — the Botanist as well as one side, as represen nted o athe upper parto ts nfs 


- -— 
9 — Skim 8 —+ pod 2 3 erer caw ah are —— interested in the inquiry. | 1 ee Gin — in — Shape of a — 
one , ` 3 , Cionus serop 

epi in a genus which, a few years since, was The fol the t family of the | one of the most elegant of its tribe. The whieh ig 
1 — to contain one. is is not, perhaps, a — or beetles — the species of ik so are black and horny, the thorax is Peis and begt 


y ising thing, for after all the only difference itherto deseribed, confine their attacks to plants the elytra are black, each with several rows of tat 
ery surprising m 8 * hitherto e ed 5 des — of bia, | 
ows in soil, on the 3 | these two genera, in the 3 — of botany, are | suture a little below the scutellum, followed by a bag 


of drainage ; the fo 
her water can lodge, though much the first belonging to the class Pentandria, | dot and another black dot near the tip of the | 
pide fall ‘md the latter in soil w ich is liable to ma f a agva ber i to that of Did 12 and no one would | which the elytra are united together w hen the wi 5 
ole ing water . It would be a curious ex- | ever dream of their relations hip from such an arrange- | clothed. The icsect is very comm 4 
iment to “a ow the common Indian Rhodo- — + but the insects of the genus before us long ago is shown by the insect 2 aa — w 
* would succeed as epiphytes in damp diseovered the Natural 3 * es, by the fact stem of the leaf. J. O. W. 
gr 5 oe of their sometimes indiscriminately feeding wet ge no 8 ESSAY, Ce 
Fi that these plants were in tru osely PRA 
Dr. Hoon, whose beautiful À. book, on 3 oe — 1. Nature, ind I have now to record the HE DISEASES OF PLANTS, A> 
. 2 eee h th near bei f of the relationship of these genera with “that of * re Pena rece! 1325 ny an 
a bes the climate tana 2 aie Celsia, having reared specimens of Cionus serophulariæ DUCT on, ae 


warm and p, with mild winters. “ A certain from a plant of Celsia Arcturus placed e A TREATISE which ‘should — a systematic an. 


degree of winter-cold and perpetua umidity is) i. garden at Hammersmith, no other plant of ofall tied a 
2 summer heat is quite tropical 9 or Serophularia g in ans vicinity. —— history oa a a aon giving in deii | 
where so genus prevail, and sno y| On the ‘th 5 — I obsery 4 number preventing or of curing them, would eertainly be 40 l 


of e 
falls, and ne never rests, on several of those peculiar to | of small sl bs on pper surface of the leaves atest utility to agriculture. Unfortung 
Sikkim.” | This will servo N ogg 9 pee t IER contented themselves ih devouring | eyer, this cannot be accomplished til after the Üp 4 
i e experimen e cu e leaf. In their ordinary long series of years; that i til b i 
however, anticipate that thew epip tes will 4 — pein seth covered with slime, these larvæ were of a pod aren that is, until by the aid of sẹ 
better in earth, treated in manner, than —_ r, an : 
rown) of the three individuals represented feeding | constitution of the elementar rts of 
when str de * pe prt aif icultie thera uneasy tes | upon the leaf in the above woodcut. They are desti- | their various functions, and of th he fred an 
— ry ars a more seeable residen — yo ut are nevertheless able 8 move ve they are exercised in 1 state of health. Until u 
evi y preter A Ar- 3 pe — — Se their it as fore legs to cling to happy moment shall have arrived, it a to me that 
appear to confirm the jus le opinion exp bitats the a ich A have protruded the all those who have at — the saſe an 
by the late Dean Hau that natura p ita aed the hears: wr hengir draw forwards the | ment of the n art, should par 2p 
i re that ) - en agraria c y study the 
of plants do not necessarily prove zur Piee | hind part, retaining their | — y means of large | causes and symptoms of the diseases of v 
them ; natural localities only show that plants fleshy tubercles on the under side of the abdominal | search “a deer remedies as may be best 


ee others 2 not segments of the body. The head is small, oblong, and | the different cases. 
able. In other words, he did not believe that | black, and the first segment of the body is marked with | "This study is not a new one, it dates from the 
a plant which shoots from an old wall does so two aya $ — of ~ following segments, as will | times, Without referring to what Hesiod — 
e $ hi work r 


because it prefers old walls, but because it is capable | be seen maga r 3 5 i — ak a 
1 — ix such places; therefore it would be of the woodcut, is urnished with a transverse fold whieh, | which Pliny speaks of as having been lost, we kus 
healthier and better i ae kes the ground. as we shall presently see, is of very * importance that the diseases of plants are treated of, and ther 
The book which has led us to this — is a in the economy of the animal; at this period the larvæ | principal causes adverted to, in the treatise “ De Natam 
most beautiful example of Ps aa rawing and skilful are of various sizes, from a pin’s-hea ‘to that of full Pueri,” lib, iv. de morbis, attributed to Hippocrates 
colouring, and the letter-press furnished by its Srowth. and which, if not his, is at any rate of pa 
talented author esses very high interest. Of the os eign sa is the a — of those authors 
whose writings are preserve 
goa ot Rhododendron which he has found in of the diseases which afflict trees, in the fourth hook @ 


his adventurous journey beyond the mountains of 


poorest a, some bi 1 De Dale ay in mag- his “ History of Plants,” speakis 


3 attac k the Cerealia, in the end 50 his third book “ De 
white Aail Upi vi with pin pink, each en forming | of 


a bell as much as ny inches 5 and not less across especially of those produced by meteoric infiuences; 
— menin; 2 op pti sweet-scented ! and he —— himself with t precision to the 
the 3 of the Lem N. Faleonert — of all the . nown to him. This 
. close heads of pare white flowers, and ee writer onsidered as the one who laid the 
] ns foundation of monan pathology. ent, er has taken 
on a brown one R, argenteum is only istorine e the two wor probably 
to Dalhousie in its flowers, which are pure white, with me in the opinion that Theophrastus mest ið 
via far handsomer its foliage, = al at the head of wri ru y, although 
which is that of the broad-leaved Laurel, but much modern authors ra ite him ee — 
t. and silvery white beneath; t whose works are preserved to us. He fully 
? : a the praises bestowed on him by V: vo Columella, 
as being from 6 inches to a foot long, and 3 to 5 has have ba ts frómi t 
d when young to be envelo k 15 in who have borrowed many precepts fro 
„an n young p When full grown these larvæ enclose themselves in a Latin writers on agriculture have said ‘but little on 
scales, so closely imbricated and so 3 so large as to | globular semi-transparent case, the construction of diseases of plants, At the most they have indicated 
resemble the cones of some species of Pine.” What which has attra — . notice of several of the best certain means for preventing the de vastations of insects, 
a brood- Rhododendron * would be! Of the others, entomo observers, but its real n sag has only | and have chiefly confined themselves to preseribing the 
which are less handso „ Many are fine things, but | re cently been deseribed by Pierre Huber the ]0th | rigid observance of certain rites for the propitiation of 
not remarkable. 3 — seems to be nothing volume of the émoires de la "Société de Pei et | rural divinities, and especially of the goddess Rubige, 
but R. barbatum without its beard, the latter being, d Histoire Naturelle de Genève.” ” 1843-4 Pliny the elder alone, in Book xvii. of his m 
as was remarked by a tleman well acquainted ` Réaumur, who had otserved some of the larvæ feed- | History, devotes the five last chapters to the diseases 
with such subjects, a a “ mossy ” | 28 on Mullein, burying themselves under the | trees and their remedies, and in Book xviii 
the former. R. Ni and Wallichii woollen covering the 3 observed that they in detail of those of the lia. t in this portion of 
are also fine thin 9 deep rose- coloured flowers, “ filent” a kind of cocoon of so close a texture that it his work the Roman naturalist can only be ps 
bat too — 4 the rose - coloured R. arboreum. appeared rather to be membr aoua than apr of | as a translator of Theophrastus, as ‘seal me 
are small mo 8 species in the not actually seen the — the er of priren bea Tie preda y Bodæus z Stapel srr _ = abe 


5 of R. enge the from thei guage — 

eir mouths “but aes that he had “or 
Upon the whole, it is 1 lot of novelties observed the spinneret (or ap s n the een the 5 0 3 g= Passe tien 5 i 
to have been gathered out of one Indian pro — heme geen vd spinning), and ear that he e was con- | and of Salmasius on lin 's e interpretation of ceran 


and we recommend the di ict to the nurseryman, PN did n a consist of the t skin 255 has not rendered Še 
Whoever could bring home plenty of seeds o ‘an the caterpillar, as is the case in some species of 3 true b e N the a ee 4 qu t writers @ 
things would require no better foundation of a little — Be on the other ‘hand ‘thought that the cocoon _— till the a at of the ho eighteenth sar 
88 [zener ee pnd, the mucus with which the larvæ is| did no e than e Lati ea d 
y cove i 8 je arate notion 

As some of our readers may be desirous to possess} By careful observation, ipei. r ascertained Serr, ped rea Taps y e be singled out from 0 
a souvenir of the late Mr. Fox, we make no apology | that shortly before the larva ts full growth it | crowd is our J. Baptista Della Porta rta, who, in his die 
for mtioning in this place, what is announced y Sraduall E ils on the 


es — — “which or is in- ( Villee,” lib. ot only enters into -l 
t elsewhere, that his books, valuable clined to believe the” its skin. | eases of 1 adds some observations of his 0°% 


y me ý — 
prints, and other remains of an artist's atelier, will 2 met with a a sr suitable 2 Ser : rý i 
i going its | yet constant] ting Theophrastus an 
be sold by auction by Mr. Sornzsy, on the 21st inst, | P2788 (which is generally on the leaf or stem of the In 1705, tha erkenne Tournefort, in the volume we 
pan) entry etl ea fsa black fæcal matter that ear of the Mémoires de l’Académie — 
ENTOMOLOGY, e intestinal canal was filled. Soon after Sei » cf Paris. recorded some general 0 
A Cronus ons opal this a bluish white matter i “the di — er nts, which he ascribed te mene 


Tun connection existin g between the differen t mem- | especially accumulating on the anterior part of the body philosophical and more simple causes than the e je 
- whi h 


of plants, hen os doch inves- 8 that the insect at first sight 3 as though the ancients, that many of them proceeded rom 7 5 
as it wns for although it may, at firs ront of its body was inclosed in a bag. y various | fermentation, He, however, only spes 


detail, and i movene e l t 
ip of two species of plan rel etail, and in which the folds of the dorsal portion of „ whi itten in acco b 
fact that two Seut but allied pa Fas es of insects are fe different segments perform the chief part, the cet! theories of the time (1723) yet derts 
known to derive fr noutishment | ively from Pere mac te a rise this matter into a. globular pers h aking off tb 
: coon, which shortly afterwards hardens and dri t afters ; 
: in * les f last a 2 
reacts ame TT 


h P 

not perhaps find it sọ unavailing, or, at ] east, 5 Y | subsequently the instinct to plaster up b mings 
2 p by applying por- | most 5 rene s 
ps as tion, to tra + 8 relations 3 eean 3 3 Ware, * 3 with fis Jaa hypotees at the ass 9 in the gee of Nae i the 

— eee ele at the extremity of the body. the 
i See the Journal 555 Horticuttural Society,” vol. iii., Havin "E undergone the pupa state, when th the eriod ar- „5 „ d of the ret 
* ais 9 i ododendrons of Sikkim Himal, sya,” rives in the autumn for p 8 ar- ose pe of the eee e In the. 2 of eH om 
es ea 4 
5 sect breaks through its cocoon, making a cireular slit 5 _ celebrated ioe nae ats found many 7 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


229 


49.) 
Bak the frst, 35 far 28 as I 3 been able reasoned 3 may be. 
N ral system of pathology, | explain 


I shall, therefore, proceed to | 


a ae show of Orchids, = would be very múch 


ex á to produce a good stand of Carnations. 

is classical W work entitled Familles E What must be understood by disease in a plan — is sgt there is Bo ges h of per Ren 
tes 23 species of disease, 2. 0 0 are "the causes of disease generally laid 55 in the growing of Orchids, as there used to be among 
two classes, according to whether | by au e growers of Carnations, Auriculas, &c, lieve 
al or on external causes, eigh 3. rs the N analogies between animals and om we shall soon find ee the more easily cultivated 
to the former, 15 to the latter class. . . ) Orchids reasonabl Ps and well exposed to light and 
article “M ladies” in Rozier’s 4. upon which : = established the classifi- | air whilst growing, ind giving them a g rest, will 
ulture,” following in Adanson’s cation — piranti disea make this class as common as they are beautiful. The 
ja specie of disease y 0 2 5. Classes into which 15 * divided them. follo g is the extract to which I refer. “Speaking 
Both : w To be continued.) of the rarity of the tr the difficulties and 

8 athology, = 8 . expense attendin their cultivation althou h the m 

no ee vegetable Sad PRACTICAL HINTS FOR AMATEURS A ii mbar of keie tiita, 


{ a" 

A 

Se 
2. 


: alt 
1 


jan 


ij 
H 


ler, 


i 


— 


Mosch etti 


L 
. 
8 P 
IE 
gf 


f 
- 


8. 
S 
bs 


addi 
1 treat of ly 
* 
chem 


the lets wl whick mode 
i wight, I have yht t that somethin 


ign $0 
ai, a by the cultivator. 
in the “ Mem 


nstantly k 
ee . 


here I m 


mati u 
: fixed for publication. 
mber of those who 
agriculture, well versed in the 
0 Ut 
* a dis 


N 
© Ae 
aE 
E Epe 

8 8 

$ 

A 

2. 

S. 

ge 

mw 8 

4 


Ttalian) a, Givanni, Fontana 
Giovene, 


m 
8. 
— 
e 
9 
sÈ 
8 8 8 
er 
= 
555 
8.8 
B œ 


— 


m- 


ni, 


istry has 
g firmer 


— 


ee Soe 


ase, and to 
An 1 now redeem this 


y question of rural 


work, = as it may be, to 


f 
me to hasten the 


seein 
occupy 


practieal 


theory, I have — 
iseases by 


ed. 
know 


e les 
d tel successful Anenii aa de i 


plan. 
f 


Aamu 8 ene ee saws, IN — 
— The commonly ca lled aby the nam 
of. Cactus belong. t the 3 nee Cactaceze 
nists and scientific garden ners 
various pag 4 5 more or ae tinctive of thee 
= ric eee ; as, for farni the ‘Epiphyllum, 
word signifying upon a leaf, in allusi ion ae 
—— flowers pace 
leaves; and the 
plia: 


AND 


8 


ng St. ems, y call 
Cereus, so called from the wax aa 
nt nature of thes sr of some of the species ; 
atin mare ee mean ing actuses 
common in this country, on account of the 
ment ber. will ce 185 although they are natives o 
hot climates, as Mexico 


© 


they pre sufficiently hardy i to allow of their general cul- 
Th ey 


tivatio 
conservatories of the we ealthy, where pc startle mid the | to 
inkled | ¢ 


contrast between their gor geous nd w 

unsightly a ; they als 
tage window, an 
the floral collections of the m 
with 3 gen ogee 3 to cultivate them, few 
plan understood i eee habits on which 


you would look 5 my orginal said a lady 
to the 8 the other day; “it is ery fine plant, 
owers.” On being 3 to this un 
produetive secant r of pot and window room, a 
of vegetation indeed presented itself ; 


ver 
, but aro pr 
in 


Bra and Peru, and e same 
quently are ‘soon tilled by fr sen yet in o 9 ee i 


will at the same time tend to strengthen the devotion 
of such as have the courage to encounter and the means 


pursued with the same ardour in 

that already, in 3 umbler sphere 
tion of man the beautiful varieties of the Tulip, 
i ie a 


o 
ch 


by the latter, Bare be 
ance of the 


** 


mean to — any fault wich Mr. —— rom ire 

Iam willing that his enterprise and liberality, i in the 
introduction pen a tion ou this beautiful tribe, 

os uld hav hon e must hay 


aie ma Ww 
high, as green as Grass, and every flat stem as plump | maintained (and some even now who still m 8 
as a traditionary alderm . en said the that the Fine Arts were essentially aristocratic, an 
writer, “ you feed your plant too m nd in order to that the opinion of the man A ey not to — cared for, 
it you ust at c tai ae re adopt the 3 their A not sought. I suspect that there 
m.“ He informed her that he had one of are numbers 


who could tell a di — er and at 
wh 


eek same kind, Pees called Cactus 5 enkinsonii, not 5 t n 228 ‘eel other wise, when the most 
oe and very inferio mbo and | patriotic donation of our, or any time, is a collection of 
eneral eT which yet bore above 100 flowers | modern es brought together and selected from 
last season. inquirer expressed her wonder at this, | the studios of livi rtists at a princely price by a 
and received the follow veg account of the met thod "respectable 1 1 nne een 
adopt to produce such a result; it is now submitted | eccentially an ae of collection, 
to those readers of the Chr ro nicle who sh to make | and yet the rarest and finest Fe ever brought to 


as and green Cactuses bring some tribute to their floral 


emple. 
In the natural home of the Cactus, there is a moist 


° | and a dry season; during the former, 8 cares 


a surprising i mpetus * the latter it fla ags 
appears almost bur and destro, a 

be seen shrivelled ap 188 ar heat 
to this 


ee: 

sun an 
circumstance 
The wet or 


no cessation in their , but they fo 
Let Nature be followed, aud the desired result is sure. 
actuses were put awa, the n into a 

770 ae vie — ve had no water cae until the 
were then brought o out 


5 in a sunny part o 
gain to 


ed not be 
a fresh 
be 


uld is best for them m, and nee 


n 
Reg are about to flow 
The pira should h 
ed, cor N bera should be given for 
ards. Such is my simple 
Experto crede. 


e Correspondence 


Orchids om rth “Million —Having an opportunity of 


d“ well 


ntil cold wea — comes and con- jeaf of which 


be 
p onpa sed of brick ‘rubbish mixed with |F 


g ere bages I became a . 


the hammer in this pes ae was formed by 
Oxford-atrett 
Impressions 2 77 sini In pF la 
respondent inquires “by what s he may o 
skeleton leaves, retaiifing their beautiful networ 
E art — 15 preserve the tissue of the leaf elf 
e taken b ich every vein is 
perfetly 3 with little trouble, a eee 
quan- 


e number a cor- 


er; then havi 
slightly moistened with the ink and 2 rubbe 


paper, la e 
eas the eral will be 
ression as pe 
after the: the first time ies very little trouble. 
the leaves inside the — 2 of * the under 


Wilmot’s Muscat; at least my p 
difference from that a either in foliage or 
On referring to Mr. son’s report of it in the 
Journal of the Horticultural 1 Socisty, I find that it agrees 
with that variety in ev articular. No one can have 
a higher opinion of Mr. hompson’s pomological er 
ar d it was solely on his reco 

ye et one would 


3 nistaken for a new w variety 5 ; its 3 
es ri 


ree 
Ta 


Sper 
Joslin’s St. 
more glossy on pee un = 
selas Musqué 

Musqué had * 


THE 


GARDENERS’ CHRONIC 


+ an early ‘Grape, ih an tue Bt. 
4i 


2 


bo * it may.” Mue n said K Serg 
ame have Peres its a being distinet from 


— rape. 
the White *— on althoug ne has smooth 
rag aud the other bas sot, A faw 2 will proxe 


not been * praised i in the Journal of the 
Hortcultarsl Dugiety is showing fruit in the Royal 
Gardens at Frogmare ; we bave seen it at Mr. Bevan’s, 
— Howe, A a te me — Shans 1 week ago, an 
to be an 


it appears 0 ex 1 1 

ing F's uit A Troes to Wal wis . — methad 
7 Be — aig rees to walla, has be 

rdens * — benen ; and 

— to succeed 

tched l vertically 


armen (gio HY pails ; 


which are simply small 
iron, phont 2 aehos 1 


bal ` an lash 5 ng 


EF 


required — 
— be pint or, west! I believe is beter, A wren n 
To these w can be tied in any direction; 
the e ‘ns by Wi — twigs, the smaller by 
strings of m 
— a 3 — my neighbourhood com- 
th 


f an acre, the garden 


y 
method of eatehi 
are cut inte thin slices and laid on the 

g the gardener goes round 
little quiek- in in iy and into thi 
from off the Turn nip al ices. Whie 


ery 4 ; a few Turnips 
j every 


gas- 


nefactora, consuming 


ndon and provincial ome 
this season to be 100 pe 


in ad advance Should this be a fact, can any one fur nish | the moment when there is any nt of the 
reason uch an extraordinary rise, seeing that ac- | appearance of the disease in this eo ntry. Having tried 

cording to the same papers mo timber Mes be | the treatment proposed by me i Dva ways, in orde 

felled this season than has hitherto been known to st conclusive result, I am desirous 


cut = H. W. ag roc mag April 10. 
Sticks. —Having la ately een the hazel ree 


— able 

. as ve “ima of es will only 
one or years, i. e., of any wit * am 
8 — among them. C. 4, 4, Lloyd, | 


ago, w 


SIM UU 


the true 
uit trees warm 


— s dono ta 84 — ~~ matter. | aaa 


mh ad 
But we are wr — in knowledg 


the bran 


th 
* — protecting glass —— 
as to hav 


yae in | of erecting 
lit Dodman. | th 


tis the most economical. m ode | 


adopting 2 


‘respondents ca can say W 
such a 4 or give reasons for not 
Mr. Meyer's Pian of Growing-the Potato, wg a 
Disease.— Having seen 


= 


Potato plant, a 
result of the trial made in th 
cultural Society in 1848, ; 
more recent observations, a 

m the appendix to my 3 82 
ots o 


parts o ‘ound 
pan Ser of Sal <a it thus treated, and the other half 


left to = po chance in the usual w way. 
of Augu 


usual manner, as on the expos of 
id down in my new method. Thus matters 
remained until the time when my earliest sorts were 
ripe. = digging hem I found, among the rows 
treated i common manner, that many tubers, 
— — i e largest size, d toa great 
extent, in the proportion of half a bushel to th k; 
whereas, hich had been planted at the 
same time, id down according to my method, — 
: sub- 


erop, and more, while still — one of 
those treated in the manner recom — was t et 5 
oth in 


in the tuber, and the . pe was oe 
regard to size and ace pr 9 b the 
success of m * “In my pamphlet 


in June, but rages sn perienee has proved to me 
that the laying dow ith safety deferred 
to a late peri , 2 by no diminution of the 
| crop is experienced, but as large a crop is obtained, 
both in regard to si nd number as can be p 
duced under any mode of culture whatever.” I have 
stated — the laying down the haulm ma 


my metho a” 
[ recommend that the ieee shoud be laid —. — 


w tor that the 


. | either when the 3 have 


— when nd 
and * Rivers built long Some 


to the th 
v, warm en and of — the roots 


the © operation is (provided 
ght does not show itself previously) | o 
reached their full size, or 


pt 
=. 


y 
the disease or bli 


of backing my pr =_— as to when I have found 
the best 3 for laying down the haulm, &e, 
the results, namely; oe the Potatoes had ‘attained 


their full size, cena — Pr ae be Ke n tos 2 SHE e Ha 
of ripening, at the 
in 1848, those rub were 


* those et were left 


s that were — 
3 wee attended to t 

ee. equally rn 
or four days after the 


2 7 


22 ‘own 
oa gr or 


ection ma 


ble sp,ta — = 


at present it is scar 
trees as not to have to cut = 


ro m 
es across, and I should think ‘hat 


young and rigorous plants would be much finer 


n 
were made 
— over 1 
It is probable Poi sgl 


and a 3 seems early Pa and Pears are in 


ben utiful; they ; all 
ex. like flowers, — 
A with white 

er- buds, just 4 


has a $ straggling ms aera me w 
in 


LE. 


3 inches of whieh is eatable. The that i 
adepi in growing this 2 He be, tint Tea 
autumn, to 22 
the 


amongst 
might — 
A enough 25 
would then — green Asparagus s entable bla almost a 
m Richmond Hill the 


arrived, it 


could distinetly, with the naked eye, see the flag 

the breeze on the w — the highest turret of Wake 
Castle; not t * ag, but the 

finest he —— of the trees were 
leafed half vay — while on the other half 

were not burs 


3 
—— Sheet Glass to ravens burni — 
me to suggest to such as are 71 — hav oe 
burnt, from their houses be ed with — * 
the probability of the evil ve Be 2 by 
the inside of the glass wi sparent varnish (s 


as a mixture 
put on ro 
is well cleaned and 
by pecking it with a dry clean dusting brush just as it 
A 2 spe roughened surface would be 


would oth ensed into a focu 
tney’s ae oein pans might be a good varnish, 1 think 


it should b transparent as possible. Whether sue- 
cessful or not, the plan is worth trying. G. W. 
eading. [The idea is good; but Canada balsam 
t carry t. The h must be of 
which dries quickly, es not soften by solar heat.) 
eeping Properties of Sno d to Air—Ona 
former occasion, when t you i 


sen * the 
inutility of deep pit “ icehouses ” (so. called), for pre 
corroborati an 


our corres 
in daily, ne to. to say hoary sight 
of these hills, 3 9 ay he had n tnessed the 

thing ? i 


5 attention to Mr. Beaton's ment of a 
kind to ape In 4 lage Nuker (page 181), Mr. 
Mackenzie found snow on — Ochils, 


though he had ee them at various periods of the 
wishes to be . ee I 


w tha 
refreshed by the 8 of that "celebrated mount 
seems, in an in , to lay 


sions for these as 40 years. 
Sussex are amiliar to me now 

„nevertheless, I have as distinct a recollection 
esterday, of 
e Ochils, 
r peaks, in the early 
(not far from Midsummer), w when the ou 

miles fro 


© 
i=] 


: The 
highest state ; white Cos Lettuce 2 


full blossom 


is just Vining | cert 


n | beg toexpress my surp 


ured to 
that the mt pei 
y anonymous party 
columns of the Gardeners’ Chron 


80 should. find P i fom 


— — 


THE GARDENERS? 


CHRONICLE. 


231 


tora o 


. ‘for that p 


thought that you would 
Sy * 75 “for inserting them, ] Ma 
—— 


ler 
eo i "the funiculus, which if 


r integum 
d — ex 


unde 
observed it repeatedly it hard, or 


ver the larva 

ecta e ata, in the 

poe he v — 
tng 


— — 
e 


alike 
eens 


aL, 4 


but in this is he 
as the . — 


m AMI GR 
i schal. 2.—G. R. Warernovse, Esq., 


nit r. 5 kom. the 
former — = — 
believ the 
was bn. see for 
= 
he colour 
be material a 
b 


thus proving 


Perfect inse 
P$ ee 5 Soe to which they belong, sah 
at eir habits, feeding on 

œ of bees. — Mr. 8 — — la pe 


i 
Upon to on the waves ep ne ae . 
5 erred shores at such retrocession of the tide. He proceede 
| w mis stl in eee ma a epe aper of his a consider the contents of the cesspools of London alone, 
2 i reading, and as it has calculated cannot yield less than 46,500 
i 21 tesia — perfectly dry 8 annually, a quantity, accord- 
larva state on the 12th 2 rere, i the analysis of Liebig, sufficient to fertilise at 
med Mr. the ey * least a million acres of land, and the monetary A of 
as he learned me ol e | which cannot =- stated — — an l. ing 
— from Mr: | next allude which have hitherto “bees 


or | he 


per | Linnean cabinet of — still in the . 
S. had bee 


h 
English 


and mal- DESEE of — generie 
n 


t flour obtain 


eve 
in due 
lo 


a A soil, it * — — 


ance of the insect in the perfeet state rpg the end of 
peeimens * Necrophorus humator 
also exhibite r. 


which had been 3 confused b 

ontnental writers, 5 to the ae 
By an examination pi the 
the 
‘nated to 
innean 


ö on of Linn 
iety of . on, Mr. 
to prove "that 
cies was identical with the insects A, named by | 1 
h Lepidopterists, Mr. Westwood read a paper 
re taining descriptions of two psec ta . genera 
of Coleoptera, to — he gav Erichsonia 
ales and Cossy phodes lee procedir 
deseription: a the i 


his 
s by some — 


cific n 
5 CIETY OF Arts, April 1 


to the scientific ile “ae of eee for some years, 
It is a tu culture of which, however, upon. a 
n li ttle 5 this tuberele is 


sess a lar 
the gt aoc ~ i which form 
food in our clim e total Leight of the a pro 


2 of the plant, hich may be wice a yea 
an be eaten as a salad or spinage, 90 ot all ofa Bes on 
ained, which pe pesi 


ed from the Oxalis 

to that 5 N from the Potato * s or Buck wheat, 

s it makes an excellent light bread w hen mixed in the 

proportion of one-fon rth with corn flour; this i is not the 
e with Potat r Buckwheat genoa! y 


* 
5 

= 

ST 3 


uth America ; 2 
by change of tem 


1 ebiews. 
ree om of pinata Amateur? 


Yli 
and insufficient 


15 
ntroduction | . 
and the 


eo 
11.—The Vice-President in 


ment of the —— 


ass of 


pio — orie acid i 

associated with the gases are pletely destroyed; car- 
bonie acid alone passes t the fire unchanged 
All these gases, with the exception of ammonia 


apparatu 
— — of modifi 
eg desired 

dr 


Bar- Hive, with 

rections “i mbridge. 

t of 22 pages, be N 
uth “B 

contains neat Visa tne 

its cor 


ing the upper 7 — x, as on the stor 
utility of this hive is, however vs geen 
the 


their own i a 
n the box was full to have turned it up and pr out 


bs. 
re is no ere in lopp ee 2 s 
combs in bar hives and thos common it fol- 
a that the space of 2 — we the extremity of 2 
e of the bars as oft og age 

I it must be so, fi be she te A ctitor 
imo — the combs at the floor of the _hive, and not at 
the to 
or bar- 


„ ASC WIE. 


hive into notice in this country, and, like Mr. 
brood 


com u 
y | bees, even although the ‘operation e perform 
fine weather early in pee ring, before the breeding — 
commences t is, that pe bee-keeper has little 
chance of hitting — me with porto 
stocks, and less certainty if the operation 
at the season the author speaks of, w 

on filled u with ine 
wou i 


ut reee tbat the operation was pe 
the Ist of February, even then the bees would suffer by 
the loss of broo R of the hive, 


take the colony half the 7 2 recover itself. The 
doctoring the brood 


: £ 
* i jar 3 ead a paper on the Importance of ject to zine feedin ` pans, and to 

. a at the: nide-of 2 mn Re — owns Manure, — the methods any ‘ant of metal 2 — hives, mong: being much m 
= * me hg z ut | of —.— it available to agrieultural purposes. The ily acted upon, both by heat an cold, : than wood a 
vered z a 1 — the ho hin pape alling attention to the | straw. This remark rik $ to Mr. “Tayler s ventilators, 
this = a e to 497 “A * e necessity of preserving the a refuse of towns, and ſ i ich put little faith ; and also to the 0 ine 
not a vestige . We e importance * is attached to it in China and a employed in the improved cottage T et ad 
ull fed, remained in anders, in many dep pane ments of 2 e i ed to the 0 | 2 e e. 3 hy not place the whole hive 

i ie e | under 

hen they became pupee ; and also to the various forms in w — sapp — p — n 


given, is on the storifying z ected 


for fencing off the w 
Calendar of Operations. 


pote r the ensuing ae ) 
7 * Pai phe 
Let a supply o * ient w Brai the plants 
from eating: be administered tó the roots of established 


lan, and is well constru 
wh 


any pl 


As 
o be in this state, they should be taken 


oùt, re — in * — soil, an e carefully watered 
for the future. If this operation is to be of any service, 
it must be rmed without delay, as th ts of 


pots to those 
in n order iat they 
table 


to rom 
in which they are intended to 2 
be furnis ; the 


h — — 5 their roots 
1 nden they re to flowe er; and, during their g: en 


ew to equalise 2 stren nail of the 
ig ssary, 25 prevent 
ye 


mpleted, 


nse eee, is not 


27 2 N E 
. TH A 


without int ee Sage eee, ID 
3 interfering with the profusion of ‘their r thems. T To produce this excellent veg 
ex 
— DN DEPARTMENT. ion, it should be grown cellent vegetable i in in perfee- The a autumn man transplantation 
be t the rods of Vines which posi, as as the flavour i e and quickly as All Camelli may be i inc on bas done the misc 
flow . — * = across the rafters. are Just | mil der. The Leek is * “the ereby 4 rier yA much — it E not aa ee fond mende ngs, but E 
i e moisture, and its or graft thet en T finer 
induced to 2 a d, and the whole of the buds have a natural tendency down a I ; n eni on. img: Von a he best 
to keep down . = * aaa ban the re — . Py their ee 2 ont 5 3 Th 3 2 —— ma 
attentio * T spider ; 2 ac. walt EER thos e follo 
83 r- 2 in houses 5 thie | gro — mod for this erop should be 6 double. ‘ug, 18 3 ose which | are Known owe 0 he mt patire counties g 
main i inches si ifo 
oa account of tho sipating of riina | one, nd the manure laid into the bottom of the hie Hadsone Bay var 0 Con ae 
n fork. Of the planti previously ves p ay. ‘Taxus nucifera, Ching P 
time, little dificul my in check to this e planting we will s i rely names coriacea, West Indies. * P 
has been ser will experienced ; but if this Nom r. From this time 3 in a future M ee plan ts by. ndies. 2 
mocks 1 bara” = gardener vil will sand a chance of 22 to a, the drills shoul 1 a should select the posers 2 mere choice 
course be must ex ruit, and of | 6 a and a for seeds: dro vn, 10 or | garvaxisen Wir 2 
oer eee cea neal nts Mie oer [ae ft om a 
gue ney dodged rls rop. Applying | tuces in summer i de Pant. Tranerlantng Lek | material to prevent burning we coating F 
e these have a tmosphere allitive gets broken’ in the a very bad plan, as the tap root subetion is, whet is bar ning a d be advantageous fx 
gat as 88 — * supply ot 5 * >the leaves uch | therefore o depen 4 i for thee and the plants have 1a artes —— exper — for the purpose} but 1 
il, whi support on the surf: the un. Be so good as s 
alleete: supply | soil, which for this surface supposed salt, about half 
3 te watering ring during th owelling of the fr fru liable ing es tenon of sun vay ty wind a pant ae to the bya ete 94 % n rence The fearon 4 
per rae the later successions is account t e more | the ol . It is usual fi “ 
ain geal at frst, ia a temperaturo b Transplanting will on here weakly and run to seed. 7. > mum 
2 25 io 58°. Non In y P ndm nly succeed in hot summers a where ground all wint y. They are hardy, and 
ihe g iy of fruit to be mature — Parel oist, asin a I P Bat If f be loftin f 
75 * — each —— * ex ey shoal be sown in drills about 12 inch te cad, und to tor edie 9 you 8 you want then fe 
ropping a few ine t em 
ie mads size, and perfection rira on then ape Bolton os ap * age ie t> planting them okt ta, under glass ia ag 
should i arten somm. The Tormes Sardis aaa 
rest removed ; as those 3 ; Vas ardly roqua an at — 
NU ag GER: Ironmonger. We do not ryss 


© roper of 0 Man r 
of aka de j 
pend upon the plants i 7 v 
: being neither over i rowth every alterna 
ti which are left advance in g * It te pl 
nd Surveyor must permit us to 
decline 


cise as muc — tion 
as you would in regulating a erop | gurl is distinguish 
rfecti inguishable the 
aa a be we be ted s best plant in each group 
commit á e if the latter faul e d h Patil ‘oe Sa "of sowing the ye could be a 
Admit air freely during wa a second erop is injure ould be removed, and the ground — 
a moist atmos 4 g warm sunshine, and mai alternate plants, t ground forked between offering any o sini 
aintain „to ene e 7 7 on a 
phere by means of evaporating pans, and prevent ili: Vitali one their growth, and thereb manures. As to Kir N 
„ Eo pegs my eee . 1 E in giviag: Bri for hime 
successi ast wi $ i is ge e them to d a character 
m ad fumigation or syringing — for forcing 5| the s — with us, and where there is a 8 on sadly Nas o proie from Goce wae public, ae in wit 
~ = 2 w are i y all aphides | inter — or. om unused, it will be eat W's —— i Se ipat re On dee vareouee ae the 
rogress ; san o select ted at R es; 
the juices out 2 ‘ra “i these little 8 k Dik wall; and if the mA i Gal under the shade of a 1223 Bama wich agree b Tegent-street a month gp ago by ie, 
of course spoil its —. in its young state, aud — 1 n are encouraged by| Pampestris et in nothing ee habit rely. Bre 
2 * ithe vour is a — be porta prevent its rval between the last of the Brocool „ — 2 tl 5, Sherardia, ar esel; A — a ote; 
wi Aker. t use too much liquid m * t pat oa Sow Peas um Hess GERS’ G ARDENS. 3 — Moore: 7 is too bad t ane teola ; 5, 
0 n once s once in th e commones lant: o send us 4 55 rmfal 
the fruit will b r a week — x ree weeks fr fl st plants, some out of a of 
N 1105 17 sufficient, 7 ‘the ling of draw a little more ey are 3 inches above —— e. 2 es, which an Do e 
ows GARDEN AND SHRUBBER them as soon after — — up to the plants, aud stake 1 unreasonable and, —ͤĩͤ an end to 
moss apee and som — re major, Tro- | by an object to you inte athens h f economy is net $ Photinia, piratet 3 ory 33, ophod | 
sowing them 3 3, dO not waste F nista candicans; 6, i 
sown now 7 N tw to four seeds tes 2 a: enough 2 — ews 3 or 4 inches is quite 9 kauen. da — 10. 3 8, Erioa ears bod 
forward enough for planti 2 Taid will be A p esger Runners may — Some — early sowing of 5 — iee 3 16, Hea x — 
ay unflowers for this crop unless y e; do not use stakes lanchier Bot imie es 18 8 ae 2 
transp! ers | if ou can procure 1 tryapium ; the 1, Ame- 
anting ; ; but in ito bee, Pgs y do 2 like | ru = to themselves, or with 1 very cheaply; * r fo Ruscus hyp in flower, and "pardly in 
s desi o to rs which are outstripping their J: stopping those fae Whew: Lowrey. Peach —— — drop be 
aaa td ae Nae ee these sé me ing ok 2 shore 
OW 
ers nor fruit will ar ong ; doing oe 


will form a iow hed e abo 
2} feet —— x itin 5 fi 
r Pr = base of ea for — 


the 


be if m 
B merely sown 45 + 0 and. Ab 
done bloom of the Polyantl s the r 
af ahi ing Oe should be phe a if family have prsa Seri 0 Ah over its neighbours is, by th Rue 
8 e lately been the S, | shoul pinach, Turnipe, Lettuce. is method, | „right season, 
plants wh 1 d for the s ornament, fas the | Should be sown periodically ; —— ee e ee 
. taken up should . made. Cauliflower: ing of Parsley should doubt, but there is nothin — of health, no 
me nice | 1 1 be parted and pl planted out, if rs and Cabbages sh oe of sheet g to connect their eon 
and shaded with olay one garden planted | these, with not done already ; and anoth ould be | _ too damp and cold oe on look as if they had been kept 
Ss; han tanar ir ed, 8 with Walcheren Broccoli — W i Stocks É B. Your question wi and too dry at another, 
selves fi Pp this situation they wi their roots are ry prouts, &c., should be made wi hin Savoys, Brussels that only question was overlooked; such 
mh or a repetition of their hey will prepare them- of Celery should b within the next —— ik ee the  shanking off” of yor All that we can say is 
o do not 2 uties next sprin a 4 light e eee te} d j| to too much wet and 10 your seedlings is probably 
ommence a * “ig of these useful hauls 2 ght or on a warm ely made under — * doubt arise ve 3 light, heat, and fresh al : 
H time. ants cannot State of the W “ti amen eena —— probable one. S Sioa ses, but this is the most 
Hoth hocks, baute, ‘ee sho ee of biennials, a the Weather near London, for the week ending A water among t anking t caused by the accumulation 
th rve garden, and a 0 of w be sown in the T ser nhs reese Chiswick. n> 5 presence’ of oe Such accumulation may 
baa kinds which 3 th r especially of mer 3 | Basoniris. |i THERMOMETER. civ wiki MADEN of a plant to ie rid of of 12 15 has rè 
sown at once ret the 1 5 Max. | Min. Wi cu ! i Bright ligh and 
j in sui nj atter | Fri | - || Ma M ind. || Rain. rrents oft air are the ght lig — warmth, 
and clamps of he bassona plata about the | : © || 2 4 — | em Verben Ss water e agents naturally employed in remorisg 
FLO anday. 8 1 514 | 28540 55 50.5 S.E. || .00 A Lad, 
we ec herbe tel. PLOWE i 7 we | "sll, and place chem on a greenhouse Aba aur de cen 
3 ou Er Wed. 2.684 | 29.53 42 | 47.0 * 02 n a close pit. 
ain; el f E 
visable to eee ee 1 Well if ee e | ar | 8 | des NE |] aa enough to be handled Paier men wur pots, and Ke 
A p e-li — — s 51 - E. 3 g Pe till 
a eile Ih mash ght over thera, giving them | ei f He e be EE #0 | _ then be planted out, ana trode like ober or ara 
i i 15 | 44. — 
enjoyment to OLYANTHUS tepid water when| — T “Hine aove h — . iye — = N — at a very se —— the ak di T no — 
R Sed ; shy 4 3 ave bec . 8 w 
gs. who has raised od oli Z ena howery ; cloudy ; bazy; slight frost, T hung long 
bl i i this q ty of 10—Hazy; cl densely o ust be soug 
an e — n-e ; densely ove : our let ; 
gg, Beal gh oer quantit several hundreds — HG a oaar 2 Sak bila to explain dee Some Grapes a re more 
a dozen that w y we have not F frost. rs. Z. Not knowing 
: m | emperat ercast; cloud under wh 
tee fresh faces i e wish to keep. e State fan temperature e 34 de. below the clone say. what Reston’ a 1 — . P freed i imposible 
that N whacks to wre iaa unfortunately | ensuing week, coding Apii ai 160) 7 rhe — in prin Brie - robably 5 — have been er 
R 0 r 3 ature too hot and insuficient 
e erfect 2 2 ventil AD 0 mois 
pe the piov kae diffen our small ee Sou 2 5 A F gf eect | Greatest lapis Winds, Sameno totic 1 “especially water-rats, 0% 
rent in colour from th : me A * which it | Quantity 8 is een 3 of Viues pee 
colour, the i Wa e centre stained with e lace | ——— Rained. | Of Rain. E = | Mis o You coe advantageo 
y of the Cowsli ith a darker Sunday 15 160 58.1 | 39.4 2 as this ape r question would require an a 
anth auias 1 „others are 8 mail. e FFC — he nearest en 
wW J 35.6 0. p thin 
tiful lacing, co: organ ; to view instead of | Thurs. 19| 8 25 Ai 922 ee Joa min learn t ny iie 225 
because e Katam; and some with bean Thurs, d | 36) | iaj 3 | oos 5 n 
j x! 9 0. e 
ments of the 4 too great a a tate condemned | — 48.2 z —— he Lilacs, roublesome, — Ivy, Holl. Y, Ten Laurell, 
{to use ola, makin ce between the seg- | '*~ — and; you must * c., will all do very ry well in 
a word g the flowers“ Ti ang und thélowemtoe there es 1 to liv rain it if anything better is 
but sufficiently ex not found in John n’s 83 or Oweat on the loth, 1si;-—therm. 20 dez. n nee the Regent J. z s it quite reasonable to ask us 
* * áj 8 
be en, rg Parime. Ae soon ao pour te tion which the secretary would purpose of at edad! 
in annuals can be ‘han Poa! oe 5 8 as — aa Alber 5 “hg es 3 a ene ni 5 04 
he: 0 i nowledge 0 e m 
your greenhouse „ 0 pots, filled with at bet. non au) ; Te is not the crimson ododendron # 
e — near the glass pti Tali 1 ace them on The N inferior rose-coloure variety.— 
n danger of frost Graft © you mention look like the effects of bed ! 
: Cornwall. P, b griehi borde 1 glabra on the commo! Whitethorn. qw 
the openings, or a h urpent thei a H. z be pruned in with advantage no 333 
JAC 7 P sh in som r runs, and sto „ Frogmore is a private garden belonging to be 
7 p up Majest * p g gi 
p r a 8 p. 491 of our Ve olume fi turpentine, iow Lti B. You may prune in your Veronica with safet] 
Sa re very like that Eh 3 Wiang and at present, that we kno . It is not open place. e is hardy ; plant it . — 
la g each will A oh your Pancratium peciosum 
Rondik 1846 140 Jef and full 1 or Nos. 3, 5, maryllis; ripe seeds of it may be made Prgorminate-t 
ola’ fi but oe Ws. We do it Bond what, * duis Cac SEEDLING FLOWERS 
be protested at Aut ber You intend mine 3 cruses: J W. A b ; f toad 
wh s, you will nerals by fossils; | rou - illant aes: pe perth gos 
en there is the least £ at ali 5 nia, “Covet at night vane oe s mall ibrary. x able > ods piana or fanii 01 4 petals. A great impro t in sb 
8 ames 
Those who hay seal GARDE w 8 out to you the me collection, the kee sag ser of resent be to ende Cuisese Parmunas: A M. A fine keel e. . 
cording to for “Leeks in al of organi ae of prosecu'ing a ich could then eee Å our ; its ragged ge i is its worst fault 
transp mer diredhai ame erai If 2 š is o of your researche m s: P Epps. Our 2 ie aay are 
* should now get ) Boe the 3 — * and og lente. “then yout difficult of —— ig — eS as they are when rece nd not gi 
n’s “ Fossil F] must procure | *s* what they were or vans they — realer 
the ground ready lr dire E Fe ib ast e | late, aad diene a Aeneas have est fara 
a that about ‘whisk eae. mplete.— othess are unavoidably reer till the n! 
you enquire. of those We must also o bep fot ion indulgen 
numerous „ ele tion of 


AMELLIAN ; 
l MEA, If you destroy roots, flowers will fall 
off. | interesting contributions is aan dela, 


THE AGRICULTURAL: GAZETTE. 


233 


25 
— 
© 


ee seeds. 
tment Will en 5. 34. per Ib. Fine sorts for 


y bg omotico 
Eene 
od 8.— Sonas GIB — Send Ox, 
j “the Royal ne a of Bel- 
1 Down-street, Piccadilly, London 
RAL SEEDS (delivered carriage-free 


7 


rn Counties or East- 
stock. 


r lb.—0s 9d 


Green, and Red ro 


— ——— 


n 

at the lowest prices. 

go e N „ * 2 3 
5 940 


ard or Scotch Puddin 


ED ) LAWN GRASSES, 5s. Deg Bek, 4 
*. 5 


Kk. 
18.5 


ag Ib. 18. 3d. 


* CROFTS DO. „ 
nae YELLOW Do. 5 
GREEN ROUND DO... „ 0 
D GREEN GLOBE Do. 
WHITE CLOVER. 
CATTLE PARS. 
HEAL ) CABBAGE Sie = 
GRAS per ental 


ss 
the lowest market goes 
w Yy, and w 
any one he may 5 


n to Ply 


or. 
on = 33 and 
Kingdo 
will be delivered, aoe of 
S 


which are now 
beg to call — atten- 


TED NATURAL GRASSES fi 
ae, 2 PA STURES I. 
Clovers, properly 

ere of ie manen different soils and the pur- 

; ng old Grass land. 
Ei —— = 8 pioni 


sat 


38 | Y ELLOW GLOBE MANGOLD WURZEL, 70s. 
er cwt, 


Improved Long Red Ditto 
Cattle PARSNIP See 


per cwt—70s. 
White Belgian CARROT 3 8 


” 
* For Cas 

The above may be depended 2 ert all gro 

respectable agriculturists in 


* icatio: on; also a Genial Catalogue of See 
JA s. EPPS, ee Maidstone, Ke 


n by the m 


UMMOND. ke : SONS, 5 Museum, 


¢ Stirling, N. B., will furnish, free, on 1 priced 
SEED ë 


Lists of TURNIP and other AGRICULTURAL 
N.B. All parcels of — above 21. value (with the — 
of Grain ŽA 1 delivered pine of carriage in London, 
Liverpool, Hull, Newcastle, and many other parts to which 
ere is a direct ne ion. 
DLTURAL SEED 
HOMAS WHALLEY begs w ‘state that_ his 
ANNUAL PRICED LIST OF AGRICULTURAL SEEDS 
and will sent free men 


UANO AND 1 MANURES. 
1 GU AN z of the finest quality, direct from 
mport warehouse 
NITRATES SODA D POTA 
GYPSUM (SULPHATE OF LIME), 
DRIED NIGHT-SOIL, 
SULPHURIC ACID AND COPROLITE. 


YER), 
E (made ee —— only). 
RI CULTURAL 4 — all other Man of known 
value, may be 

MARK len en Gu 201 4, . Thames-street, London. 

A Treatise on Guano, Superphosphate of Lime, &c., will be 
6 of Gaano 2. receipt of 8 postage stamps. Free to purchasers 
of Guan 


JHE FOLLOWING MANURES are manufactured 


at Mr. Lawes’ Factory, E Creek : 
CORN AND . — ESEN a m 


CLOVER mi — 0 

TURNIP 7-976 
SU PERPHO. PHATE OF LIME 7 0 0 
8 Ass AND COPROLITE E aes a 


N.B.—PER ANO, from 
91. 10s. per mmaa VRULEHATE® OF AMMONIA, &e. 
Office, 69, = Wiiliam-street, City, London 
HEAPER THA 
OTTERS GUANO is now 77. “per He and of su 


Ifa * tity is Takon 

a specific arrangement may be made, 

PSUM apte Reduction i in Price), is ee at 

i s. per ton, at the s, loose, or in bags if required. 

= — 55 og analysed 4 E nies chemist, and pronounced 
H. POTTER, 28, Nie ornin road Piae, Kennington. 


5 AND CO., 
ondon d 17, New Park-s 

and prp ann of the Im mpro a CON and DOUBLE 
CYLINDRICAL _——_ respectfully solicit — attention of 
scientific Horticulturi thei steal 2 f 
applying the Tank — to Finertes, 2 — k 
ao b 8 


Gracechure 
18 ark, Inventors 


—_ — heric heat as well as — heat 


605. art, and commerce, the membership 
Os. 


amg par ‘will be 1 oa | 


n | its progress is sought to be effected ? 


o be fully equal to the 2 n Guano, and aloof, and lea 


ch- street, 


of ole: number. In most other Societies or 
Associations formed for the improvement of sc cience, 
consists princi- 
pally of scientific individuals, artists, an 


erc 
respectively—those ; are professionally 
interested or activel engaged in of these pur- 
ts. ney 1 societies, on the other hand, owe 
their origin to the generous feelings and charitabl 
sympathies of the affluent, while those for whose 
benefit t ve been established are usua yi 


t—by Government grants and the con- 
tributions of individuals not directly interested 
in its welfare; or is it internal resources, by 
the great mass of the 


rming community, ‘that 
We shri 

from the supposition that the tenant-farmers of Scot- 

land regard the Hi 

a = Lai 


very page 


fa 
the published list to 
which we have alluded, that gh a farm arming 


althou 


ety of farm 
the s to be wondered at if it be recollected that 
the firs sie 

owed is origin—not to men of selenide nbs 


and operations ree 


en so ay oughly pati ical a their t 
dency, and why e oe he Highlan ad 
i ko pris pra tical ‘aa scientific 
in its ee do the te — ers still stand 
ee mem 3 > gle as they 
agriculture, and 


may with the one g dem of 

ead onerous responsibili imposed upon oe Ree) 
hold and pro sey tees se of i 8 in 

Scotland ? That teti — 5 a 

e prosperity of the Highland aed Agricultural 

Society i is negatived by the fact he 

one of the Shows to triennial, 

nnual periods, as formerly, was generally r 

by the whole farming community a 3 5 

morial to t 


5 3 id deep disappointment, and elicited a 
22 to egree, without the of pi 2 nur n 
and Co, mate a 0 78 state that at the request o us he 3 a lar arge — 5 of influential tenants 1 rae 

*. they are now making th 3 of ied: — e as l ot pra ying e old pian o arly 

opper, by which the cost is be e. ter gga a 25 exhibitions of live stock and implements might be 
are now so well known, scarce nage uire ription, but to A 
those who —- not seen them Bn Me i operation prospectus 1 | cont Had it not be h 5 petition the 
be forward well as refere the highest auth ; or d the p might have very — ly 

they may be 5 5 tthe k of the o Nobility s seats and principal | inferred that such exhibitions had either lost their 
pirer ag oe 2 attractions or usefulness, and that the tenant-farmers 


S. and g rm the Trade that at their Manufactory, 
17, New ieren e. * a 


icle required bie r the construction 
veges ed as siat = vl 
a 


eating them, may be 

upon the most 
ornamental ” Balconies, Lallsading, iad and Garden 
Fences, Wir é work. e 


PATENT FLEXIBLE INDIA RUBBER PIPES AND 
TUBING FOR RAILWAY CORFE BREWERS, 
DISTILLERS. FIRE-ENGINES, GAS CO PANIES, GAR- 
DENING AND A AGRICULTURAL PURPOSE &. 

cast PATENT TERMETES INDIA-RUBBER 
PIPES are made = d Hot ng re Acids 

1 10 —do not become r stiff in any perature 

1 ane always perfectly flexi ble), a and — 9 2 require ko appli- 


of Scotland were willing to te eee without regret 


what they were wont to regard as a yearly reunion 
t of all that might se — 805 al, useful, and 
suggestive in their a. owever, 


w 
East. ian 
utterance to the feelings 8 ai brethren through. 


out the — EERE of n compliance 
with this memorial the 3 have intimated 
lding a Show win 


their énténtion of ze 
1850—it being inconvenient now to hela one ashley 
s as 


cation 5 or Gas, Be are pa 4 de a. ga beat — far all i fe it shoul a A 
engines, Pum as, Beer. , r 5 there that the 
—.— a perfectly fi xible pi required. ——— from | the question 5 bi a ieee és ‘conlinue 
}-inch bore ina deasg and of any length to Society will e, however * 
„„ 333 el. age efit with 1 fas, the Shows yearly rwards ? It never been 
ne ses compl 
Pan, Water-butts, or 5 Sole Ma nufacturer, James | concealed by irectors that a of 3 8 27 
peek. Hancock, Gosw ell-Mews, Goswell-road, Lon the cause of triennial Shows being propose at a 
N.B Pireu ized Tedia: Washers of all sizes for Abe Now, unless t. ere be some f permanently 


rubber 
= Hot-water and Steam Pipes, and Vulcanieed sheet Rubber, 
any —— for all kinds of Joints, 


The Agricultural Gasette. 
SATURDAY, API APRIL 14, 
MEETINGS FOR THE TWO E TWO FOLLOWING 
Taan ee . 
— 3 ele ig. J 
Acricunturat Socrety’s List 
org ished i 2 last = i a 


Turspay, 
THURSDAT, 


and adequately increasing the income of the Society 
j the exigencies of an annual exhibition, of 
ive 3 = same difficulty as formerly must be 
con i e tena rs of Scot⸗ 
jand ses E not rest satisfied that their duty ar 


system o: 
right in stating that nly € 8 pet 
members are c composed of in- 


Cartii rly Journa * ori 
ardin the constitation amount can be uted e 
2 = — 5 eee 2 dou bt s surprise | rived from the — subscripti 1 It ae 
many of ou 3 Out of the 2658 members, or | scarcely be compatible with ot inal so 2 : 
thereby, of which the Society is at 2 com- | the Hi d Society, 1 pwd ot 5 2 ay u 
posed, there are only 220 whose names and addresses stituted, to 3 de armers ron iti * 
indicate that they are tenant-farmers, the large ship, 5 iian z — a les 0 
inder bein i their agents 
merchants and. profess — fl, aas an — — n the absence of correct wot dala, w we e are amable t to 
than 


an 8 per cent. 


say 


234 


THE AGRICULTURAL: GAZETTE. 


[APRIG 14, 


taking the arable land at five millions “of acres, ea 
the extent of individual eccupancy at 250 acres, we 

obtain a total of 20,000 farmers. This is but a 

rough guess, but it is sufficient to show t the disparity 

between the whole number of farmers, . that very 
nem 


of me T 
ighland. — is decided 
farmer w 


are aware, „or 3 membership, a 
12 ineas, and these rates uniform, 
whether the individual were landlord or opani. 


n this 
ruous that the 


a year. 1 
nails contribute the present subscrip- 
of or 12 7 — for Lie there are 10, 
555 
but wh t willin e disposed to 
22 p but who migh K. The | t 


* 


menced 


to contemplate, — 5 e 
* retrograde movement, ah either N om seientific 
of such a nature w 


Y and 8 h N. — 

under the eof the hig est rofessio 

sa m ek = the directors 
neces- 


oubtedly be the d 
exhibitions of stock and implemen! 


ments w 


These remarks om not be misconstrued as in = 
eoar degtee attaching blame to the Hi 
pres Nad r its oP ss they are made simply — 

earnestly to draw aia | ‘ne an incongruity which 
could searcely 


where the 


er. majority of the 
ucated — inteligent men, 
nahiy: be 


the |t 


e 
elapses between 


; is little — kanong $ — ar auma l 
er the body, J the parts free 


ould | beco 


ve been expected to 55 in a an 


to an but it is probably 2 previous to this. 


cattle ; and our atest importation of this kind, un 
SMALL-POX IN SHEEP, h we — desirous of 
— the particular attention of ou ers. 
— for = noment be disputed that this . 
existed ak 


merous c 


nat oc 
infected cargoes fallow ed, a. “aly i 
lso into some of the ot 


tular secretion takes ic 
man as to nee ` distinct ‘tage of f the disease. 
ay nifo . in the period that 
— contagion and the N 
earance of the er Aen. ; whether an sniinal gets it 

y inoculation, or by e exposure to diseased 
ee thi p ‘period is about 10 days. Bina 

on at this pular stage co 


mees, t 


woo — Thes © papule ar nt recoded one or 
yi — spots on the site of the papul 

x days, vesicles or bladder rs loins on the 
ny contain a ea ath * Sey per afterwards 
a x days mane 


In the recat all the external * are 
and the animal soon aug whilst in the 
i s from — 
wh e . are of a 
ng into each o ome 


gi much so, indeed, that-it might be 
possible to et 1000 sheep fr from one havin 
48 5 well ll developed. Of course it is not til 
t 


separation . examination a as 


ex > 
; beet _ Rar 5 1 just previous to 


? 
inoculation— 


r, bee 
The 3 is decidedly both infections and lu 


but, at the san 


our ety ex ations we shall ha 
oculated cases oa fay ourable lym 
t 


app select the most 

4 5 a r for the . and in the oie ofa 
weeks are free from further anxiety about the matter; 
the utmost care can be taken of the flock during the 
period, and the greatest vigilance exercised to pre» 
vent the spread of the dise sease to other floc 


ong a per: 
urning might de * Besides which, 


mistake to suppose that ; 
the ci of 2 “the infection is inereased by — 
—in fact it is lessened, for the disa — 


the utmost -vigilance, and necete 
e the sale of sheep from * teenie 


phe spied entails 


sarily pre 
a given pe pe 


reasons in fayour 

* td e We p 
to consider the best means of staying i. 
or getting rid of-it a r merely observing here 
— t if the rav kin of thi slanog 1 are = ; 
yed, farmers. must as cis ee 


gelb denig 1, . to consent pi the inea 
dividual interest should succumb to public 


DISEASES OF „ 


Divist xiv: Nervous D1 


sheen Croop. Th 
m 


n infection actually begins, 
but we are disposed oy ‘ai ide 


er that there is danger 
as on as an place on the — — 


3 
F 


r, should b 


Amo: 
up, ù 
nion 1 ‘ont 
fects both cattle =a 
as proved so 


» 


monia, after s some experience and tate 
sro as pi 


There are several important practical r 
5 it is is most — for a . the 
de 
i. “What chase w den the first 
a he 1 S e on ebe 4. 


„assisted wi 


sy 
being 
to the following mention 
our classification, with the addition of 


* How can its ravages be stayed ? 
3. Can it be got rid of altogether ? 
san decidedly oro to the plan of — 
pyas a means of prevention whilst a flock is quent co N. a great measure, with 
pl ho, disan, by this means we propik = centration a Se ihe Mine and oe iis ' 
an infectious disorder though in a mild form. | unable to 3 g this Two 
í , however, a flock becomes aff it 8 — for cramp eye rheumatism. ce 
the owner to determine w sh be more doges of the mixture by Ciater, T ave f 
adopted. In al it has been found | be relief if 
that by careful separation and daily examination of time. Two parts — = 
the whole flock, and the destrueti ginger, and one p ol, 
the disease has been got rid of, and when we con- OF three teas 
sider that the infection is gen two days. The casto 
| compensates for the oth 
the syrup of poppies, w 
z ative, and the gin 
| patient should have the 
y | side or in a warm room, or, 


ee ee 3 


. W 


in 
e from off 
Of the several kinds, 
birds are e lab ie. 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


235 


Often there are none; 
— “amag drop 
uses. ment 


only diso 
ong in st 


sed y d of 
with 1 moderate diet; the second by 
hitun artem, or 
nape 


is been found upon the brain, also water 
J have found the — and adjacent 
with coagulated b 
Cramp and . often te 
in paralysis, and ve fatal. Prevention is the 
s and shelter; D. S. : k 
2, 1848, p. 803, in las paragrap 
Mpa Dison,” Jor “Dizon.” 
eee 


CONVEYANCE OFP PHOSPHATE AND CARBON- 
475 0F LIME IN THE ORGANS OF PLANTS, 

ina — INFLUENCE ” uer 7 — 8 
Tas influence of earthy . on the develop- 
cereals h n established by 


panis is very easily ex but it is b 

y no means 
5 easy to see how —— principles, such as 
which our attention will at 
be confined, pass through vegetable — 


—. and it was for the pu 
p purpose 
the 3 ented | on senis 55 


e ae y Dumas 
Y Lien to the / ——.— 
G ted with —— acid at 
4 ary p 
4 — in 
eh vo —— of 75 to 100,000, 


bie sale was e by te 


with 
oe same salt was solu- 
in water charged with 


of lime t 


s salts, of which th 
Freemont composed, can, 
8 ranks int in the soil, b 


Into the 2 and 
18 proportionate to that 


m 3 2 ng ye this purpose fous 8 


ie phosphate of 1 c 
it 5 some ex eee 
baring both boih fresh and pa: artly d ba me uet, 


y fu lif 
3 Proportion of — 1 B- 


ce wit 
rienced A bes close of Sunda 
e 


ig | activity 


facts to examine what effect this “solution of phos- 

aami and a yi = lime in water char 
bonic acid would have on germination and 0 ion, 
of fine Wheat, of the har 
est of 1846, sown in two glass vessels, the capacity 
of each being 200 eubie centimet etres, and each contain- 
50 grammes of siliceous sand, well purified b 


having been washed in — acid, Each vessel had 


4 
@ 
2 


of carbonic acid, t 
oldi ing i * on 
83 and carbonate of lime, 3 d from bones 
which h being buried in the 
ground. “The two glass vessels were pae cedi 
s covered b 


decom posed 


t might be floa . in the 
94 placed on a wooden 
ear a window 
un at pleasure. 
kept as nearly as possible at 
ade. All the see 


e mae om pe of the 
s placed was 


pen 
s of a be autifal gees colour, whic 
tolerable size 


e 
a lenget, more veiny, 
s after germi- 
the 4 languished under these 
e tu 


nation the vegetation of 
d yellow 


usual conditions ; 3 
extremities, and this in 9 
ed At 
e seeds — wi 


calcareous salts of —— were from 0. 065 m. to 5.070 
0 


arged with car- | wa 


some |t 


i 
ould be qili 


e 
the e e. m 
e harte 


. who the following y met each other half- 
shake hands and settle by a little mutual 
‘eon See some troubled biod that had long kept 
m wide apart. The remark was that “ Selfishnesse 
pao but its own sunshine and is by nded, lookynge on 
the light archer, turneth his 
and letting the light fall upon the 
ste urer aym : 
wn happinesse consider w 


n your own interest with your 
oes a 
you n best appiness in truér light 
+r leisure, by taking your neighbour’ j judgment in 
council a. í 

he o frequent Practico is to do the exact reverse : 
to 5 * and m 
fiction and ah ` upon the 
soil, 2dly upon the shea tsi on 1475 on the publie wealth, 
wherever this taken m has been ges 
operation, = 1 5 — rm en a cou 


Tim sa untry, a 
been the arena of 


F : trict, or ev which has 
0 spectively, that is to | pure unmitigated ee on the part of its Owners 
say, the height of the latter was the greatest by one-third. | and Occupiers, and me between the two. The 
e sm lants arrived at this stage of development — are t e sity ‘a mae ble z— beg „ beg- 
appearing to suffer, the experiment was stopped, and gared labourers, beggared parish-fands, beggared 
they were taken ses — 4 vessels, their roots were public finances can be recognised They reach every 
washed, i er nse them of the sand which | sense: the eye can see it, the ear can hear it, the n 
adhered to their ae — and the whole plant was dried | can s it, the hands can handle it. In time the 
in a steam ý sof the plants watered with | perception reaches the inner senses e ming 
a solution of the calcareous salts weighed, after having | begins to understand Seg this corruption is the work 
.193 gr., whilst the others mistaken selfishne £ 


baalt 


which 


take he Laws 
Society he gently 2 agreeably around man, till he 
ends the selfish notion 


ig pre 

In 2 ht of the world theyare simple enough, 
hen every man tilled his own field, the duties of Land- 
lord and Tenant needed small definition. But advan nce- 


absorption t 
in * soil, or of — —— enter into the composition 
of the organie m 

These facts help ra des * è point à in eee phy- 
e caleareous 


beings are in a state of — nden 
other, as all natural phenomena fully prove. sp a 
rip hea Jan. 15, 1849. 


CHRONICLES OF A CLAY “FARM.—No, III. 
To people of that mappa . mind in which 
the hope and the faith mo rogress of kase 
own race, and the san er ain ie of its 
creeping evidences, furnish a continual, albeit a See 
— whose e pat ient and far-reaching charity may 
pon 


. 
uu 


truly s said to air, promise-crammed ;” 


8 5 


ethin * — — ney to 


e best remarks ue the edd 


er 
k z ma $r furnish an vasa, 5. not infrequent pang é 
h of like witness 


ntain-side 
point at which cultivation would 8 that bit, 
beie earth and i an on ne 15 
as the balancing- ey the gii KA e Tt 
ge; and n 


he offers yo eturn—uo Redden 

—in moder Engish, no 

Here then is the origin of that curious thing whose 
de finition pig sorely — — the Political Economists. 

And well may it have puzzled : for it is the basis of on 
of the most Reg csc! liar relations that has 
come to exis | man. Mutuality of 
object, pes. we of în upon same ground, 

p 


> 
4 


in one | element which = said to attain 
art when A watch is 


philosophe 
practical mieni 
enter into, or flavour ough a 
tions of men in the working-day routin ine of ¢ business“ 
e word, the excu 


— 
8 
8 85 


t is as the days of "Charles II. that in one 
of these same ‘S e ay sermons a remar rk was made 
t which has not ony e aei safely to our — con, 
but enjoyed the more remar 


c- 
par 


able truth-stamp of instant | betwee 


an 

aro * ne paty "of a dead soldier. 
In yoma nd-mortar 9 lath- and- plaster 
Gis, 8, . floors, and marble chimney E are 
dead t things, the fitting subjects ofa , dead con t: but 


sle 
it is yet the active 
eto ma 


sot the ot > is, in the ead mi 
— 29. the Earth is he 


possible. And eu 
the first conscious w of a breach of the duties she 
devolves 0 * those a cultivate, or i 
her as she was of ae earliest wrong commi 


man 
most miraculous organ ; — tells you the 


in its 2 in 2 carried away by two 


lite gxdbß emcee 1 


236 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [APRIL 14 


— — . 
d gold ngled, and the } the land for cultivation. There would be 

= Pompea < 3 5 8 5 te " ~~ “T — et. a abi * i the prize at in doing the whole of this by the piece, ray 

Take a 2 through an Allotmeut ground. To an the Royal Agricultural Improvement Society of Ire. moving a cubic yard of earth is well ascertained The 
with i eye, does not 1 little — rig Pad» sx 75 ba ms tee 21 x 

$ condition, | by the . l „M. D. „W., ia 2 , 

“The Hamburgh breed, which, from the belly and thigh | houses, the same as in the Chorlton Union, near 

tell its bea te dawg aa i f the y phe were othe d . 4 e z soft, black, velvety * is Ror. ama, itho 3 then ensues, how is this — 

int out the unfrequentl med Velvet Breeches.” 6. Dixon, Rev. | effected withou 2 ng pauperism to a premi 

1 — ra a several — {Here there E. 8. 1848 objecting to the erya of Richa without causing the people to fly to this as a 

a came, ee 8 5 


rdso 
— y task to reconcile the rather ys to avy on their own resources, it is 
; i i b lieved that t ht b id 
labour, without skill or 1 $ t ere you have ex- | synonymes of this breed. Richardson gives the name | believe iffe = mig ¢ pers peer s the guardians 


perimen despisi tablished practice over | of Hamburgh to the gold and silver Polands ; 
tal 4 A : here p is toil 5 — variety ; which is also erroneously called work by the piece rather below the common wages in 


ithout ung-fork—a vain and hopeless | — or laced with black or dark brown.” He have any eats whatever with the work ia hand, 
stru 1 there 4 manure-heaps, but waste- further says, “ Dickson is right in asserting the breeds saerta. s ould be almost sure to fail from wang of 
r : here again is loss of time | to be combed.” (It appears to me, that if W. B. nagem il The v ole concern should be entirely 
7 a minuteness and pettiness of culture, | Dickson be right, above quoted, and Richardson ander the control — superintendance of an 
darin ich risks t 


d, border , i 
stems of En land, large full pendant top-knot ; the wattles are small, and | pulsory powers beyond what is usual in cases of 
3 — n sr te A under 1 gt: on the throat is a full dark |similar kind, such as the making of water. 
* coloured tuft of feathers. The general colour is golden roads, &e. A though, if — could not be — 
To 8 wide Field, with, its many . f til. or orange yellow, each feather having a glossy dark elsewhere, it might pay us doubly and trebly to lend, or 
age, its various kinds of ‘produce ce, and equal! varied brown or black tip (not white), particularly remarkable | even to gr the money wanted, yet, if possible, is would 
0 0 è rom Ireland 


t well 
winded, and Imagination itself to be more fanciful than | C)clopsedia,” “ Farming for Ladies,” the “ Poultry | to eee that Ireland 1 remain * same 
usual even with the Chronicler, when —arrived at the Maid,” the 4 t Naturalists Library,” and the “ Bock of | miserable country it has so long been. The poor-law 
end of the last of these missives and the questions they | the Farm.” D. S. E. has consumed all the opia of the 3 2 
„ e —h Irish Wasi "Land Improvement.—An attempt having | owners are a p from their 
threw his eyes up at a many-coloured epen ical Map | been made in one of your former numbers to prove, | many cases nearly equa l to the amou 8 75 the po 
of the United Kingdom, hangin pictured | from statisties quoted, that the Government measures | from their rents being ill-paid or not at all, and from 
to himself the possibility, r the value, of jst such a | for Ireland were totally doimi to their object, I | many of their best tenauts having left the country, 
i ‘ i ect i 


ap, 
414 2 icultural customs’ — further sub-divide its of the waste lands would afford ample employment for monte reed to suppose that though a wealthy individual 
geological outlines, The curiously contrasted interro- all the hands out of work, is 8 practicable, and may be found here and there willing and able to lay 
gatories supplied by the letters 2 had waded through | free from the objections frequently alleged against it. out money in R that, with a proprietary 
—for questions are mostly fertile in self-disclosure— | One principal objection is, that it would cause an endless | such as there is at sent, any improvement can be 
would almost have furnished 8 the outlines of abuse, such as occurred in the works going forward at going forward such as pe meet the urgency of the case, 
such a Map. Perhaps, thought he, before the century the time of the famine, and that the same evils would | To remove by emigration 500,000 paupers would be a 
is out, the dream of 1855, may become a useful | attend it as was show, case in the ps in Paris. But | hopeless task, and even if this could be done, how could 
reality. Talpa. the two cases are by no means analogous. France is| the remainder be employed by broken down 
renee e r in a high state of N 9 free institutions, wiih- | heartened proprietors? In such a dire emergeney, 
e Correspondence. out any great number of hands h aving been out of work, | Government must deviate from their general rule, and 
T H — Breed (See No. 6, Feb. 10). with no very redundant population, and the me EARE become the prime agents in a pelore system, if 
Another characteristic is the comb, which is very small, | found is only like the “panem et circenses” of the they wish Ireland to be raised to a degree o 
consistin 22 of two or three upright points, resembling | Romans, for the purpose of preventing the people or even to the enjoyment of the commo 
the diam a eminences round Kine, David’s | rebelling against a new formed government. With life. Law. Rawstorne, Penwortham, Preston. 
crown, ba be d this a Page all pendant top knot, also a | Ireland the case is different, The people there are| The Reading Friendly Society offers a striking cot- 
tuft of 8 sa; muff N derivable from a | sunk to the very lowest depth of misery and degradation | trast, both in its management and advantages, to many 
wit e Russian some assert, | possible. uld it be believed, if we had it not from | of the existing friendly societies. One important feature 
there is no comb or muff at all, The Wattles diminutive ; our own knowledge, that such an orep number of | is, that the members themselves are the managers the 


r ; the 
spangled. or N. we with yellow or orange with should have been fakes to prevent the recurrence of | addition of the honorary members thus sec 


bred wit 
black streaks ; legs short and bluish, generally ; body tion as then afflicted, tint unhappy oars eee it| In the admission of members, the strictest serutipy is 
2 and compact, much after the shape of the green is that the Potato failure has greatly aggravated the undergone, so as to admit none but of good health and 
as said to be the test of beauty in fowls. There is | 2 evil; but it is to be 5 that 3 character, and resident in Reading, thus Providing 
a breed with a few feathers down the legs, but | to t reland was, and had been for centuries, in i is * pose 
e ee perhaps any other country in the facility and inducement for fraud offered in 
— ped 1 mews f your e is a | known world; and all this procee as pret n$ pm aya gien pe are spread over a ** . of cout- 
z 2 poin 0 at wt i another 2 the cause, the want of employment. here ther try. The weekly pay of insuring m 

as anit ows -n A in future publish | some hundreds of thousands of paupers either hag is not confined to the amount of their r general weekly 
Ie ait ce exhi ye for pies the idle or only employed in useless works, half famished, | earnings, as in the case of societies not under imme. 

— * — 9 28 every breed to be con- dependant on a poor rate which can ill support them, diate local e and therefore liable to greatet 
> — e finest capons and poulardes | surely it becomes a wise, and what should be a paternal | imposition. Its tables of rates are constructed on the 


* stability 

: could — B ani easy vy m ae on ? | means to apply the only effectual remedy tha t can avert | fore afford the surest guarantee of the perfect rary 

fie 2 as named by 00 years | such a dreadful state of things. The main question | and permanent solvency of the society. Its h gement 
ago, is fa so called “ pheasant,” gold spangl Hamburgh, | seems to be—Can the G 


1 overnment, with any chance of | fund defrays the expenses incident to the ma 
all, the 3 erin z y his ten aol ny! 4 o sucesas, or N producing g reater N engage in a of the society, so that the payments of the mo 
due of the moult. till the last old kaik i nd expensive undertaking, such as the applied entirely for their benefit. Lastly, 1 its advall- 
pa tooo thetail ; they come e ao eet f the zo lands is supposed to be? It are held apart from a public house. Among? 1. The 

Cidignation posà lasting 1 ayer 50 pe mid chica 4 expected that they should e these lands tages the following may be enumerated : —l. 
— ee barbod “ones seido ah ren ma; but ine cannot be the least doubt that | assuring to persons of both sexes a weekly 5 
possess, SE tangled of this 13 de ae = 8 ohars either eran nien which 8 sickness, by the pan of a are * medicis# 
en called & E but th Pht idu r companies, to|the member. 2. Medical attendance 54 
Pe mi to of panera 0¹ the following 2 w arh in ya wich wit def rodes 25 p by the Pees, whenever eee, 9 monty ehe 
searcel 0 dero ight attach | 3 pension, commencing at t : 
2 e on dead = 2 bere — eld Goal 8 ane 8 ak In continuing durin the remainder of ile + ar 
is his The only solu tion is, beeau . . s on, the method p m payable at death, by payment of & 
principled | tain Cragie on the Government works in Scotland, that i I hip, or other ends 
‘ola are in the habit of f selling one breed for another, of having a destitution test instead of a peng 5 at ee barg ift to a hild, pyb 
ee e kept in view. it answered in that ease, at any age between 14 and 21. J. H. n ef ade 
with eit l t answer in Ireland?! In conformity Gra ands,—Now that the conver ooi 
with this, the following plan might be ado opted. A board, | land to pasture is becoming so freque ntly imed fra 
heres of five persons, one from each division of the | few practical hints may not be co onsidered ill ti subject 
Tale 0 nd a president, should hold their sittings in one who aid particular attention to the f Grae 
r p peri ould be persons with a ow- mon practice of sowing on] one kin onside 
k= e ge 0 7 it which relat — but particularly of that | the Clover, is very defective 1 a ent 
P ich relates to the improvement of moss abl iety i for the complete an Couch 
— in that fora 3 hment ag and. 2 his board should make an inspection of the 80 sing atl f Ps J e the exclusion of the > dapted 
comb and w a mere Sage se W rent bogs in the kingdom, and report which are Aon silat come ele ; and these should * for 
fowls la ri ies’ Doai, ho Spanish | best best a ere! for improvement. (It is believed that | to the nature of soil ; us Prat would 
2 » with the ittagong, i is a very | m 8 ya ernment survey of this kind, example, of the greatest value in me few ool at le 
Be fat all are more or less allied to the Polish M any years ago, costing ga 3 40,000.) | be thrown away po others ; the 3 in 
family. chardson, 1847, 4 ave a hae, whole of “thse, rses should first be made through the | to the careful seedsman. The land Ke s 
e 3 with very comb and wattles. are done and. then the minor on s. When these | measure freed by "fallowing from such 1 ig so den 
3 d, to prepare Thistles, Docks, and Couch- — which 7 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


11849. — 
zZ bre from pasture s annual weeds | crops pieticis ne * overdose, The next question | in front, constructed for th 

o e the field Sow Thistle (Sonchus to be considered will be, How does lime 5 when | boxes, would contain 100 Erg eee 

' pr perennials — n G may applie 7 2 lig ui 8 — bow 3 fire have much additional buildin 
15 S to shoot UP, then if desirable removed | Chu 2 1 — drawings and a description af 4 man formerly on the green ap ys z 7G, ig tore naively 

A hrd I consider the spring most shinier that i is not generally known, in many localitie: at) ote Canes Fan 1 ave been for 
seythe. i n sowings some- | least, and which I 4 aI S ; 
prs yon bleak spring sowing can recommend as of practic we have had several rachael reiguiy as the weather sulted 
— were put in a number Lars ago where their levels were 


ti 1 


ds; the 
t the following year, a a a 
t Se alone 


i 
i 


l 
1 


e it, ee a 
odden 


& 
© 


Hie 
n 0 
PERAE 
5 3 ie a 


a 


n, or an increased 
ir cuftivation, — 


Wi) 


„ 


| 


ANN 


lee 


=y 


encourage 
Smithe, E. Fa akan. 
Plants.—It often occurred to me that, in 
continually increasi of ma- 
e 


ie the Nettle, Thistle, D 
E ende which ure a very tough fibr re, — 
* — for such a — — rpose 
de added the roo 


enn perhaps be gers 


uc 
fitabl 
othe Continent, 2 


they 


eff 
F i FE 


4 K 


F 
. 


a 
8 
8 


{i 
oe 


0 


for 
d for the purpose of yielding 


eel 4 
contain i 
coun 


wee | of o mia 125 they had 
and some another, by t the — 


san 


may require 


hay, 


could not s 


ow sown 


mplete 
e mich had 


plant the 

harro 

it were 

the ploug 
w Gra 


boxes, 


han usual ease an 
indebted to 


| 3 a 


moved, and e 
taining the set 
thoroughly scalded out. E. S. D 


5 ME 


e been yed p 
ing Ay delivering Beans ; threshing Barley for seed ; vom 
ra e pa 


dun — —.— ir ~ Bre n the coals ; three 
repair anda feeding the cattle, they 
have 1 ray allowance oi of Peliced Tarnips, 6 . o 

each; the w r has been wet since last — ra ‘that 8 


ALLOWAY Farm, 4 9.—Th 
— for putting the spring 3 ai the 2 "All 


2 than ae year, 
leted, and after that we last week sowed a fow acres of Apel 


considerable breadth this season, i 


having then nothing 1 to vag men to drill up the lands, 
the Tae 
ing 
«ploughed from“ with t 
mould-board, 
re done a 


— 2 * 3 operation wells: 


re unsa comparative experiment of box and stall- 
feeding 5 perce ay be mentioned. Six 
in good condition, were gered 


prima Galloway 8 
ivided in the beginning of October last, three of which were 

pee tied up in stalls, the other three 

Two wi each lot = been sold, 

still inthe byre. Th 

the two stall fed cattle for 511. 

rec seived | preci isely the s 


TT 


a, 


1 


ay all 


— = sf — 
B 


N 


a 
J een ae me we oom e 
N= 
NS 
Soze 


\ 
N 
\ 
N 
N 
: 
~ 
N i 
: 
Ñ 
sÀ 


tity o mall. It is called the Suffolk 
. 5 bal . ri that county in dairies where 
only two cows are kept. A churn of the dimen- 
sions given is capable of churning ue 
four pi f butter, and as small a quantity as half. a- 
pint. 8 Sora pint i y Sopa ough to weigh 13 Ib., 
i. e, 20 oz.) be enlarged 
those —— Aea it. 1 at 2 is that it is easily 
cleaned, and that it makes = butter “come” with 


For 
to a very intelligent tra trades 
Hall, of Swar desto, . 
who made churn w 


. the lady who at — — 
acts as my housekeeper. 

A is a moveable i er 

hinges, having 

moulding inside to at t the 

handie, 
moving ii d; 
the handle screws into the 
frame, f f, which carries the 
dashers, by means of the 

iron a, as shown in th 
— eee * whole . 

paratus thus be 

ea ned E ly, a Se the boxes con- 


marked gi fe dotted lines 5 


eee of Operations. 
1 


April. — Since last report we 


seh’ = = 70 ilow land for Turni ps; thresh- 


sow „Bas Të ey. J. B. 
e weather has been 


lis 
t in six weeks 


here 
3 


xcept Barley. 


The e “of 8 


me farms already 
e commenced in the firs 5 week in March on land 
d been dunged on the stubble before winter, and 


Potatoes, sow 4 cwt. per acre of guano, and cover up 

the work was vay Vightly got over. Previously to 
down the Bean ae 0 55 Pri h col N — 

e the 

. admits of the plough "goog P voor than A 

e harro wn. — 

hs thee a a, 1 with m wh at 

r seeds among the uae “Wheat. 

market, but the returns 


a ut in men shall — — 
of each remaining 
eae 8 by a — in Liverpool; 
e two box-fed, 30l. 10s, They 

ame food, ‘and were so 


rye 


day. 


ment, £0 


land 
1 stom of 


T her © 
stall. fed cattle consuming as much food 
portion of the — byre was Denk ae off for this ex bas 


antage 
rotting and consuming straw, so that o 
very — box- feeding should be encou 


t muc. 


loose ones 
under which be 3 all fed 


eratur 
heat of the 


would have as g Barley with a in au 
another in spring; but the s would not be near = bee 
with one furrow in g, and we for the most part all 


w 
usily 
engaged preparing seed Barley, to 7 a 
last week for a wee! large len, to a F. F. iaus e 


ices 1 1 dents. 
OX-FEEDING : Hibernicus, 
: — gal Fring all form the subject of a Lead- 
HAFF ENGINES: An Essen Man “Your correspon 
H. E., West So a being Farm, “ays (p. 157, b), ‘the = 
sumption of chaff bein; ray A farm, it is cut by 
one of Cornes’s engines, oer I ds > 
Would he be so kind as iy say which of t Gorn 
u <4 it will 7 71 
a 
t; what the s oni costs ; and 
whether it is ve table, roa meek out of 
Disc: G SR. The 15 allu ded b e 
cul 


it need not be dug deeply. a 

‘ood spit deep will cost =. 27. per acr 
DISEASE IN CATTLE: D i A san isease ongst your 
cattle arises, no doubt, from gestion, iea affecting the 
rain, causes the violent s ene de — 4 — Powerful 
pargi, such as Croton ae oil and 
given with stimulants, pari as the sah cone of ammonia, 
hould be given ed animal. But better far is it to 


ti 
rts bran and one part 2 p 1 
sapattute —4 r portion of — stra w. TE 
Guano: A B. It will be 


Kon — aoa: : R R. Sow in a seed bed now, cultivate 8 land 
2 for perau 1 and pions pup in end of M 
may have a erop in Nov 


G —— Dom 8. 
Dixon, price 5s, 6d., is now oat and may be had 
Office of this Peper, and of all 

Prices: A Reader. Can any one ee. sit er "by e to his 


sions during the pa 
one 1 55 3 such information is to 
should be exceedingly obliged to any 
3 what he — of the subject. 
Pumps: WL, Probably the best pump for liquid manure e 
taining muddy codinent is one of which we do not know tie 
me or address, in which a screw propeller fixed in the tank 
F disd to force the water up 


obtained + 


Se 
cov RDEN, 14, 
The market = fg ‘pid weg Wace and Fruit. but 


al | trade is very — su . for the de- 
aa iera 2 —— nore plentiful. 
uts in general are sufficient — the 8 Oranges and 
Lemons are plentiful. Amon es, Carrots and — 2 
are — Cauliflowers sli’ sufficient for the 
mand. Aspar h ns, Rhubarb, and Seakale are 
ple 3 Potat remain stationary, New P. 
to earance. Lettuces and other salading 


their 
are perian for the demand. Mushrooms are plentiful, 
Flowers consist of Heaths, Pelargoniums, Camellias, Gar. 
denias, Tulips, aeinths, Cinerarias, Tropæolums, Fuchsias, 
and Roses. 


UITS, 
Chestnuts, p. peck, 4s to 78 


Pine-apples, per Ib 
ek, 68 


F 
0 98 
Srey 2 d. is. tolis 
1s 6d to 3s 


b., 1 


0 Ibs., 90s to 150s 
* bsh., 128 to 168 


ie sieve, 1s 3d to 1s 6d 
wit 2d to 4d 


25 42 do., Is 6d to 4 
ing, p. hf. sieve, 1s 6a 


Shallots, hg * Sd 


2 p. 2 zd to 1s 
„p. „28 to 6s 
Savors, per ig 3d to 18 
Greens, p. doz. bunches, 1s 6d } — 
Caulisowers, p. doz., 2sto4s 
coli, white, p- bans 1s to 2s 


where it is a conomise straw, 
of stall- ASS yar probably tie found the oat. Ther 
h conomy of labour by the box- feeding, 
be Deva daily, as with t 


d one 


’ 
compensates for the extra of ‘dun nging. n regard to 
rapidity of feeding, this —— is, so far as it goes, in 
favour of the stall-fed cattle, A very material point with regard 
to economy of e capi al in starting either syst m a farm, is 


on g 
more spac e than one box-fed 


r and Seal all the stronger 


e 


py no 


Thati is tọ say that a building vith a feeding passage | 


— 


U or ele 
| 98 p. 12 hands, 6d 
n — Carr 
: 


— — p. bun., 6d to Is 3d | Garlic, per 1b. o 8a 
Sorrel, p. hf. sieve, 82 Arti 1 , Jerusalem, p. halg 
Potatoes, per ton, 60s to sieve, 9 

— per poo 55 to 103 Lettuce, Cab., p. se., 4d 

— per bush., 2s 6d to 6s Cos, do., 9d to 1s 6d i 

urnips, p. doz, bun., Is to 2s Endive, per score, Is to 2s 6d 
Red Beet, per doz., 6d to M ushrooms, p. pottle, 6d to 

orse Ra p. bdi., Is to 68 Small Salads, p. pun., 2d to 

spa s, p. 100, 2s 6d to 9s nel, per bunch, 2d to 34 
Seakale, p. punnet, 9d to 2 ch, 


cress, p. tod 
Cucum v, P. = seive,28 to 48 
lacks, per i 4 an 186 
ery, p. e to i 3d Marjoram, As bunch, 128 

Mint, green, per bunch, 4d to- 
8, p. doz. bun., 3s to 5s 
HOPS, Fax, April 13 

Messrs. PATTENDEN and SMITH report thai t there has been 


| more doing in a the last few days on speculation, at rather 
loose cattle je require t 55 improved pric 


— 
ES: Souruwakk, W ATERSIDĖ, April 9, 

The Committee report that 5 * during the past week 
have been very limited coa 5 K Ae conti mae to roe 
supplied with foreign Pota ya, m ich prevents prices : 
market going up toanyextent, The na owing are this wy 

8.; 


quotations: 5 ee Regents, 130s. 

110s. to 120s. ups, 110s, to 1205.3 2 Whites, 80 803. to 908 

Fr ue Whites, ‘a a 1008, Belgian do. » 805: to $ Dated, 
100s. to 1108. 


Oxford-s' 
near H. 


l 
| 
l 


aB ooo 
The 
sapply sM 
tha seas 
22 to IEL 
Baste 706. D, 
ES can ueh decreas T 
mi sare = ee ee — 
. Zins AGR 
ein ; is e i 
Scie Poupa anng tou 
24 ae het 2 25 nd, at . |* y Fas LTU 
Bes 3 s 8 es full des in te qr. 
arent! r - 3 8 ah “WY R 
pitt $ breda 25 121 „ oan 1900 1 no high * — ie ani AL 
The 71 -$ 9 10 ree Zag 3 3 — 4 . è tra als af Oats th Z E 
se ea ; Shep 121 ti res $ 70 3 161 Se os * < — 
ee ° 2 123 ° afte — Ha 25 h Wh a ars 5 E. 
Bot vary mits AY, 13,3 3 “ft 1 4 . alr „at an 4 At mor d th Te 
gen 1 e. hale, 21 $ | tati “ie the eee on anne 18 
N e i BRED r be ce ap pA AMES? 
8 1 2823 E iniba pg $| me a ; oth te Pe tter last. of ga cot » ite ket ES LAS 
2 paoa — e h Ani 0) a food s ek are term F Is eiw aa ish there chat ithou S F 
sae bee — dern her toe F sorts s e th (EE t, h OR 
1 ra ingens ton thar cheerful, otiee su in d B sm ear entl In 10118 LIP c A 
Dest 52: ay Ao mg — fa clear Aich non Me ' | re — * apply off ere qr. rivals by 30, am 2 gert . NSE PR 
Best — From f 3 ae inatt 2 hel corny 1 4 PEENI: — ape for Cash 00. RV IL i 
24 — T TE 3d d for the same —— 0 de Eien A 1 
‘ , Wal" Aye rad 8 to t “nb 16 on sid é ult. ‘or Oa ë entre oa 21 È to ut 10 168 ee TOR 4 
ere ae e T aena s eee oa 3 — e ou = 
* gin Bes ok tion no th ndi uo- 2 ee L N 
— . 6 3 2 Ma vor or | bu 5 —+ ian Corn 2 E — 61. ew 
Ke — 2 9 itto . w B $ — in the he ase rn an i a 1 * Cut to A List 
sis 53 sf — have n ge hey dad the heb Abet = A 9 not m, Of Pries 
i 6 4 4 2 5. e neral, lie lin in — ts 8 L Sh 5 7 A om to 
ean ont t jet thes sera ies, 12 * 8 0 ere 8004 us — 192 — 92 
— 8 4 ba otu ns 10 high Black a weg latter 18 m sof foreign 150 paros o Šet, 16 oun 3 24d, z 
22 sian pi pie — : ipa ma dg, tal ae ote pei sei ie ere — 
. ee e $ t $ 1 W ee on vee — | ani FLOO 0 3 i by 5 . cer arg 10 =) 
12 rar — 30 ao , Pig 0-5 405 be im ee cat Whe tthe ee 15 Ae OF 700 5 
“b . s A ri i x 5 n tt tme 00 
Old ‘ty Hay but [ieee : vert iy ms Wheat at a 2 ce Tuesday eee e = Mer p= 8 5 go k 
over w 7 i re “ n 0 co: ra bi t e e ex t Sheet. 
2 ; 22 equal ae * 23 Nt ay — 4115 1 e suffi ntin nean Lache ae re: tsi mats F 
M 5 e o „ tod arer, qu r anc s market ae rese cie ue ch ese 197 0 15 
tims an 2 5 wa poa e i ba oi si tl ee HE 
* hi eer 
extreme Arai. 9. . e 1 d. 1 — meal dd p 1 b ae e len Pe ny ar 6 4. 4 . ta airian, 
— 9—The 2 a and an edt iness wan. > per à pie i pr ae in 5 | SGP. 0 
an rates — The ANE. 74 4 50sto 1 siege 4 etry az ae GL kept b TIL . 3 — 2 
8 . of su Josho: ate ben M * W. oo ot te t of el es Pas AS r 155 * ES 113 ES 
tained 25 Gay 8 ppi i — ar, 3. Ee bin of 0 gn tne Yor try SM Aii 1259 87 . 
f. à * hes A 1 h tensi at: 8 d for en 81 1 toch x 16-0. D * 
qr. of da fiven of E — 9 4 40 id ed. 5. maha 3 44. pe Floù tion, 1 7 K-P k of th 8d si each 
eee — — 2 t — April 45 — se em ho per qr. wa bares, Be 2 wa lamp ait 7 5 oe a 1 
.—English Beans Lt * $ —— hea 7 2 H —1 Bd ws * s as, a tor Gree — bd Gl OP! api 
oi 5 R — 8, G 3 Wipers 4 sis 
foreign — Forei sale er 58 1 A 44 4 29 1 Hiru YE. | B: ed. for io Greene, and be es an TIN 155 l Ia id, wi 
PRI wW 3 ign at y greg. A 33 34 a EA LE 18 ia He 
hite wi th ah Ee ver 5 ge s 8d Ns Y’ eee ay au 
ĊĠUR CES P must be — — ry rig Ps — 14 0 241 30 „| Peas | Pi 43 S PAT pi 15 w le 2 n 
RENT. Lo eas, wri ay. te plata 4 10 17 0 23 11 - 8 3 RO W. xt š for N. 3 
ndon. continue t 67 ations 23 = 9 2 A Lad i 2 PATENT — = 2 be ihe oa 
New : unali 6d. 463 Fen. 11 ais aH 21 Beane T PL JACK UG th 
3 red — to be 1 ia 45 24. in We ies r 18 1 5 28 11 33 1 n din 1 ATE, an E80 H P e quality 
old w rhe pi Tier ing 1 45 6 a ae 1 |25 28 9 4 8 owon ih Ss 0 -= ON LATE d 
ld, — aoe — 9. Liverp tired 2 S R. . — 10 1 + 6 tae * — ‘ike yf supe d CROWN E GLASS 
b 1152 | April 2 a — Enni DK 15 . F wi de 
wee — 3. 4 y : 1. 5 8 ti Sha in G ii 8. e th ss 8 5 — 
Sins ** Pe rider 10100 4. 0 Ibs. A S | Wak 7 * —1 a 0 1 eir War — ‘Gia Si s s 7 a arr HEET, 
cs 46 340—4 8 . ë E — 12.2 0 areh d ro lid uppl; ration ME 2 oy fr A 2 
N „3 5 — 476 2 1 10. fie 5 4 F ou . esa y NT es Glazing 
F Pore! 91 7 s 4 83 5 — D ae tla HOM se; 315, a eae — KN 
* Bea in 1 5 1 TE ane — L vee TE 
Foreign.. 705 21—25 i le . * pr. 4 We a Eiga INGTON, $ Londo 
wari Roy ae 5s | 74 180 Ibs | 2 192 (3 604 58 Jae Birmi 3 ie fom, as not 1 foot ame sie d 15 
3 . 98 2 vata è pm pa 34 tof. os A — .— Jui Sou ay —— poea pr Ba 
earl Pca mr mm e ) 30—45) Es Fare oi 5. . y: under 13 10 an bre ud Ga is. ASS, 
pa 26 1 pat Téa. fa — 1 5 d. Ibs. April * iv * oy itin 12 per y 
hite 8 oe * * ey gas Squ 2 A N aw 155 ria sats ' 
_ 2 2 qr. ay Saar — — 6 2 6 * d Ibs. k ares g — a i one is 
— — 305— — . seek 0 is 10 li fuses bove 10 Crown 7 Nod E 
16—21 I 3 ome 1 4 6 4 — yerme by 12 iy — 
Boilers 14— 3 — 88 — 5 4 6 6/6 26 4 cee 8, i 14 nic een 
iol 13 3 134 . ie kae k 78 
Grinding... 2 4. T 2 12 —22 — 015 1 6 4. Gd. ; — in. i in-s, 3A x 0 per 
1 6 2 6—3 2 a oe 6 i ac 2s. th SS — r Horti 17 
oreign ` 2 45 b 6 11 4 ee — gy —— tier 3 
21— 1 us 21 1 7 9 in t > o Gist: it “ty 
ew, i 26 3a bs. 39. — 51 26—28 20 úi 0 aga ng een t n., 6d.; 7 od Pa 0 á. 
8 8 2 m Tey r ae . — . . ile com “yer Like ct 15 Y: i 
E ARR 21 28 ae 6 . 26—28 iat 5 Lead, 2, 8 prs reta 2 ma f wt 2. 
Rag ++ [20—30 —3 bj Ea * P r pon — as por owt LÀ Glasses. tre — 1 ar tinch : 
a 22 20—30 32—36 ; e a 14 a er 2 — E be sl — 7 .— se Bie veda 
i * 8 28 14—18 . — 11 S ond seed nt Bulbo e 
22 92 —35 30 —3 — —32 . 14 ae 9—35 per square fo a PORO d'Tools in e xe Plants 
—36 oe ee d 1 aa UR — big — List 2 co CON pasponi P en 
sae | = 9 85 55 muani ot — 
223 --3 P eo ni Tr - GLASS "Prices and are, a$ ATOR ns 
at 1 18 —.— 3 ee Be Pade IES 
32 29. — — 18 * — “and S 1 PLA asua] sizes wer 
—34 30 — 1 Jamz MENTAL oll PLATE, T y pack 05 N 
ee: e a 1 it 3 —18 ee th s HE Pa M TH ed fo ed, Glass of 
302 196 — hy ee — — 1 2d. t0 
|35—36 24—30 re 6 Ibs. 15 iare won 114 05 Bea a 
27 34 . e ae 196 2 WOR igh ee ä 
2—40 4—36 ee e S , lien — SL * GLASS * 
* 36 1 he an 0! E 
dito . bt (a Sg g 
Pre cifi a 5, G $ 
aaa — 1 1 1— mates, sa ard in fi 
paia ER aoe on given ‘hold 1 5 — W The 
ie a — N k e istern ORT O 
—. 4 in R 10—15 BORG bed pe oe dane exceed 
ay ee = s —.— 
r — — A TE Pb | 55 —— 
* e = Ga peaa supply of their GuB , of all 
Tents 32 k 1 Th Fus — Ou! sizes 
h d d y H 
pts. 8 l4 = 2 — po tò have * 
Ars. Aver 37 13.— maz De ingle teeta Ml who ar arious T p, S SON . 
34 -| Aver m —.— 7 — ie Box Hire? P 2 
so „ $ . per ahel 14 | fre ene en at any . a ERVED MEE : 
8 25 5 Ars. Gl. Hi wi ae ari im & e “Nut! . : Ty 
1 hing 3 — ety, hu à t's í 
12 82 ceste ges nd um: withou teur a 
= 20 sd ster Mu ee at inj iher Collate a 8 
27 845 8 mport ino tt on — i eo by fa 
* ae 23 Mag the E-H edition on and 
, — „a to sui ety, for I 
was ens — h pes Bh TER be VES: ), how P Son, 
e eS jee 1 ain lina, ano i te 
T Pat . 210. 1s, ei Privy § 3 2 
C. 8 sa J rest ariston 42 haben : 
eee OHN * isen sa 2 
> G. an al Bee Keeper every y 
E. ae Kors me 
w 108 8 4 » by 
A ¥ i 
‘eseription 9 he K, 250 xD GARD Jons iona of oa > 
ate e 
W a 
61485 t ol g 
K. Ass, y 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


p Au ction 
hon atret A, 


8. 
begs to announce rhe Sale by 


T i ty — a Gentle 

j es vill include 5 his Sa le’ on 

2 ja small fi COLLECTION OF ORCHIDS 
thy, and com 


LORISTS, AND OT 
11185 AND MORRIS will Submit 


Mart, Bartho- 


FUCHSIAS = VERBEN 
— f sale, Catal oe — at t i 
= American ae Leytonstone, 


00 LLECTION OF ENGRAVINGS, MODERN 
ba WINGS, &c., of the late distinguished 
p 3 Fox, Esq. 
S LEIGH SOTHEBY xp CO., 


Auc 
and Works Illustrative 9 


orks of Modern 


et, As fas diac, W. Carpenter, acs 
80 KS. To be viewed o 


15 177 
Mann tlt or 


eadow 
2 ne, * on the en 

e.; on the ground floor, entra 
y, dining-room, 27 by 19 


11 


* 


aa — ts, — — P 
ll on 1 oor, four chambers 
fatal “pe two coach-houses, &c. Ned 


Duke-street, 
orto Mr H. 3 — "Agent, Maid. 


e of 
r particulars, and to treat, 
and-agent, Haverfordwest, Pem- 


— Mr. Epwarp Ryp 
ac ap r Measuring and. Valuing 
any years connected as 
iy for several 0 Saspenson, of erpi À ae 
own accoun 
ie a reel announces that he will be 
ite al P 


ertak superintend 
Surveys and —— 
provide for ee 

osure 


ondon, 


tock, — and 
he any the fall particulars 
ree Taat 


f postage stamps to 
A AND FTA 
y> D BOLIVIAN G GUANO ON SALE 
2555 AND SONS, LONDO 
ias ee masa ČO., LIVERPOOL; 


HEAT 
t MANURE C COMPANY beg to 
COMBA 


der, 


ANYS A ppa MAN 
—.— ee 
8 from Importers’ Stores—Fishery an 


> rey 3 — Clover—Soda Ash for — 


Ttificial Manure. 
erie Would call particular attention 
"Sha ca sey a g a large | 
; tes, tlicates, all sf 
Phospha 8 0 essen. 


WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT, 


185 10 
108% 


ee! 
Wega ait 


06 i i 
y S ji 44005 Dal ji 
16 53 dpi Ugi 3 


SONY 
if 10 10 00 f 1 22 
ditt „% 10 te 3 


10 ! 


0 rA ALTANISED 8 a RESTING, TWO-PENCE 
SQUAR OT.—This icle requires no paint- 

ing, the atm opie * aving the = 3 action on it. It 
at hg fae Metropolitan Cattle Show, and was 

highly . —.— both for its uti li ity a and pr es appearance, and 
produced. 

It forms a ‘light and durable —— against the depredations of 
hares, — and 2 Aviaries, 
ric ae tries, and t * “poultry and by th e galvanise d 
ing no paint, it r admirably for training all kinds 

of c 5 piante. Lar f 


terns ee e of ex pense, 
12 inches dide 105 ver pe 30 * a 557 125 yard 
18 36 5 
24 os . ee 


anterns and 
* 5 or ater 


20s, e 


ALVA ANIZED WIRE "GAME NETTING.— 


7d. per yard, 2 feet wid 


J — 


—— 
— neh mesh, light, se wide 1 per ya. 9 ere vi. 
— ong sis 

24 — os ae strong ,, rr á 12 70 š 
1}+inch ” light s tee 8 35 e » 
li-inch „ Soet nes 10 8 r 

1 nr 14 11 

1 the —.— ea he iste any width at proporti ionate prices 

If the upper halfis a sona mesh, it will reduce the price one- 


nized sp row-prooft netting 18 -phann antries, 3d. 
Patterns forwarded pose ir 
Anneke, and BISHOP, Market- ges 
expense in London, eter- 


fotr th. Galva 


3 Hull, or 533 
REDUCTION IN PRICE OF BOILERS. 


| BUR UR 5 AND HEALY — 2 to inform 


239 
BY HER ROYAL LETTERS 
MAJESTY’S PATENT, 


6 feet ae jes. 
50l.), invises ‘the attention 25 — — 


pod ge age 
— once —— perceive the va r of thes: 
any others hitherto erected, ‘for stre 
handsome appearance, healthi iness to 
2 


n the ey 
e Holness over 
gth, lightness, 10 
“plants ofe ry des crip. 
or pai d only about 5 st 
of Rent yo 501 Rot in ma part, i 


„M. 
A Farm Laboratory, &e., attached to the oe a For terms, 
sip to Mr. G. . DOWNES, Wickham Market, Suffol 


CHE AP AND 3 Ren 


BT HER ROYAL LETTERS 


PATENT. 


Houses, 
At the 


which has 
PRIZES, and LA — 3 


ional A 
been ex hibited vate obtained TWO SILVER MEDAL 
d by 


Great Nat gricul on ee Shows, it is this Felt 


A Maos 
Hon nase hea OF — — 
Haran tnt East INDIA Company, 
LE Co 


D. Forests, 


re 
L BOTANIC hg oa A Par 
A -= the Rotates of the Dukes of Sutherland, "Norfolk, Rut- 


and, Newcastle, Northumberland, Buccleuch = 1 
the late Earl Spencer, e st of the Nobili d Gentry ; 
AGR TURAL SOCIETY’s eden anover. 


r Friend 
of — they are 225738 to make a considerable reduction in 


squa 

Iti is S half the price of any y other description of Roofing, and 
effects a — saving of T of Roofs. 
Made to any length by 32 are wide, 


* 5 s Use, and Testimonials 
rience, with nl noe e fe Noblemen, aa 
1 ett, and Builders, sent ebe o any part of th 
town ox country, and orders by pos st exec 
The Public is cautioned — the only Works in London 
or Great Britain where 17 ray sofing is made, are 
ILL 5 00.8 
Patent Felt Manufactory, Lamb's s-buildings, Bunhill-row, “ 
London with the Felt m — 2 be seen. 
The new 3 Courts nee to W 
minster Hal oofed w. 


oods and Forests are 
have ordered the pon 
a atte to be roofed with 


= 4 


1, 
| two pen —— * — the Surveyorship o of Chas, Barry, 
ers of W 
atisfed mi 


5 25 8 Pip seit 
K 


3 
their Falf, ee tity alt 


— pr opose 
ak aie BROTHERS, 170, Tampon tee , Birk 
ngham Manufact bray 

ZINC | MENOGRAPH, or lg for Garden B 
& 
eee — 


0210 
The om Tates $ are “highly 
urabili 
8 
2 — 


bottle of of Metallic tn 
Sole agents nag nome „ G. and J, DEANE, Horticultural Imple- 
ment ase tie 46, King William-street, London- bridge. 


1s Lightest, Cheapest, and most Efficient Roofing 

1 y re 5 . — S PATENT IMPROVED AS- 
PHALTE F House, + vee by 24 oot in the clear, may 
be erected — oe 171. 17s. 10d. Price of the Felt, one 
penny per square ree in cin 32 inches — Sa amples and 
details may be had by post. ae Large stock, always on hand, to 
ensure punctuality. TARA, 2, Ingram-court, Fen- 
church-street, London 


N and Co., 


the price of their Boilers. The Fed ce will be, PANISH HENS.— The Eggs from Mr. Lao 
—— r yeri e 4 — pipe z s Ba RBER’s Andalusian breed may now be had * * 
14 — io 100 ft. 4 — * y 215 0 and c r packed and sent any distance without detriment to 
16 — — 2 180 ft. 4 in. do. sodio o their hatching. —Direct, 7 — wings = na Fame en don. 
18 in. do. 250 ft. 4 in. do. 410 0 N.B. A Speckled Coe with th 
22 K VERYTHING FOR THE WORK TABLE, AT 
: A — ILERS. Fonts Manufactory, 4, street, — 
30 in. will warm 200 nay i és — r : Ladies are respec g inieed to visit ee nk. 
i 22 cies, to select r bones and —— 
All Boilers with double arms, 5 to 18 in., — jo Md to 24 hi 8 eedles, pins, p xz — 2 
in., 10s. extra; all above, the same price n ladies’ d . bles 9 — 
130, —— London, March 31. Lame stock os . — e — á — are iyo ladies 
BURBIDOE awp HEALY, ² J.... postete at elt eard cas ard ska 
their Friends and the Public, oe Ht at this time pre- | Pa e playing — 2 — ; Da sca pea 
pared to undertake the warming of Hothouses, &c., upon their | Watch s s and — — a — — 5 
— —— — — of owed Water olaia They refer > — — 1. ce — 
under. med places, where they have erected mos ean 
tensive works. PTICAL, MATHEMATICAL; AND PHILO- 
n SOPHICAL INSTRUMENTS.—ALFRED BROOKS (from 


Garden Chit iek; particularly the new 
bollas a applied to — large € —— 
Large Co: rsa atory, Royal otanic Garden, Regent’s-park, 
Duke of Devonshire’s, Chatsworth Garden 
— of — r d. Oakham, Rutlandshi 
rl of Z 9 — 
— 


And at least 500 other important p 
Bunge and HEALY, 130, Fleet-s . —.— Le 
ORTLAND CE — 8 received 
T to possess 
— 1 be con — 


= — 

superior — oth 

= Haing of Reservoirs, Cisterns, Baths, Fi sh- -pond 
—— — 


nei 


Dollond’s) begs respectfully to thank h his Friends and pn — 


— 


fay to 
r for hydr raulie — — as to oe, Fa 


“5 
—— 


le the Urate is 
Teq 


i dance and Mired for roots, 
From, — on application. 


ridge-street, Blackfriars, 


and, 


— 
to — ar times its own bod 
aeturers, J, —— TE and Sons, Milbank-street, 


Westminster, 


It never vegetates, and will carry from three | 2s. 


ing their future favours and recommendation, feels 9 — tin 


uring them that, having had upwards of 2 ears’ experience 
in Dol s, may rely that all artieles submi him 
shall be of the most perfect character, and at economical charges. 
PEC * TELESCOPES, MICROSCOPES, ERA 
and RACE GLASSES, SEXTANTS, BUADRANTS, COM 
PASSES, BARO 3 SURVEYING INSTRUMENTS, 
RULES, SCA regen very description. 
te-street, St. Paul’s. 
1 tear Som PAPER, five quisa i u 9d. ; 
ON e ditto quires for ls, ; cream-laid e 


tto, selt sealing, 1s. per 100; black . tto, 

= sf sd r100; FE A 5 4d. — 3 cop 8 
wax, 14 sticks for 1s; $ 

à ; writing “cases, Is, 

WILLIAM Lock woob's, 75, New Bond-street. 


| Re mittances for 30s, and upwards sent ‘carriage free, 


240 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


[APRIL 14, 


ROYAL AGRICULTU RAL S SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. 


PRINCIPAL DAY or * F THE SHOW, * 
[MPLEMENT ANI AND LIVESTOCK J PRIZES.— The | PRIZES pooh snes — Competition. h Certificate. 
privilege 
ag 4 ` 
I.— IMPLEMENT T PRIZES, | Senend Sess dito u. 
— i pui — 2 — Yearling ler — o 
Ail Cer 
Banover-cquere, i 4 8 total HERE EFORD CATTLE. 
oar ct tee te som by wach Eh anand Bull ealved previously to the 1st of January, 1847 a f 0 
the space and must econd-bes Ei 
y A eneg — — or before the . Ar, 1849; Bull calved since the lat of January, n more than 
the Council baving ds p that in mo case m „ aitto — 6 
aining nciation of Cow in milk, or in 20 0 0 
28282838 and the ainn Geos enter which the — hastens ditto 10 0 0 
for them will ta ity, acre may — ae wet — ie — 1 — 7 Irea et — three years old = : K 
to Secretary of the Soctety D econ 10 0 0 
10 arling Heifer 
pavzi 4 J best ditto 4 500 
es 9 VON CA TTLE. 
Piece pets ore at o Bull, calved previous ty 5 tbe Ist of January, 1847 . 40 0 0 
— — one 0 Second best ditto 20 6 0 
Drill for general purposes 0 } - ) : Bull, onivo jð since the 1st a January, 1847, more than es 
Toraip Drill (om the fat) wie 0 t ditto ditto 10 0 0 
Desp build and mane e 10 0 0 
nure bie 5 con 
Manure distributor os for arene Ten Hel Heifer, snot ot exceeding t three years oid 20 4 0 
broadcast any kind of — 4 or hand-tillage, 
8221 * and. — h is satiy, from 11 Yearling iter 5 * : ;: 
ment t very -r - , from Secon al 
bushels per acre, * 0-9 
Portable Engi 1 . LE OF ANY 1 2 — 
Ka bea W ‘is ‘i 25 0 0| (Not i qualified, 15 derne as Short. s, Herefords, or 
r — Devons ; Cross. red animals being En ) 
Mealgrinding mill =. au 10 Bell, eabved reviouly to January 1, 1 o Rom 
Linseed and Corn Crasher 75 5 Secon 
: Bull, calved since Jan. 3 1847, more è than a year cidelo 0 0 
Chaff-cutter 2 3 Gow in milk, or fart, w 10 0 
econ st ditto * 
— Cast |... i 18 aoe Ihe, wet —— three years old. " : A 
Harvest Cart ` 10 ling H 
1 Cow for N =o 10 0 0 
Denil tile machine a0 o Second-best di 500 
Dral tools 
pen w : 7 — ee te for For gente? 2 Sr any wet a 
t Harrow econ: ea 
Rowen Harrow 5 0 | Stallion for A Itural papas two years old.. 20 
— oie 3555 =a 
ator, or Grubber y purposes EA 
Horse-hoe (on flat) 10 0| Roadster 55 15 
Horse hoe (on the ridge) ‘ H ` Mare 3 for seins i purposes 
e one eee . Second-best 0 to 228 
Horse Seed-dibbler * 8 0 Twe 0 tag ly k 15 
Hand Dibbler 2 ee j ve : < 4 cond-best 804 5 
Barrow Hand-drill (to work w cu. ia 
Liquid Fare pn Distributor ups CET cs, ek Shearling } Rem LEICESTER SHEEP. 30 0 0 
Hoy-making Machine 15 * „ & 00 Ki 9 Ps 150 0 
* l 1 
econ t 
Sliver Medals for mis erben awards and essential 2% . Pen of Five Shearling Ew Ewes of the same floek 20 9 0 
-g * estim * eco 
DRAINING PLOUGH sovrapowx SHEEP. 
At 4 Monthly cil of the Soci at i held on ~ hong of March, Shearling Ram 30 0 0 
1849, the offer of ROBERT AGLIONBY SLANE „ M.P., to | Second . 15 0 0 
— heh * posal of tb e Society, 8 oa other age ie te a 
unanimously | Second-best di 15 0 0 
Pen of tia Shearling Ewes of the same flock 20 0 0 
ra tng with not Kioo hint? 0 
more than — — 80 as 
* so far for = 10 0 (Not qual fied to ipar as Leicesters. A 
II. Fr pi t, h, to i Toer Shearling Ram 000 
sai * an o an Second: best Pi “a 905 tes 15 0 0 
0 and not n co 10 0 0 Ram of any e è e 30 0 0 
of i. -LIVESTOCK ‘PRIZES. Pen of Five She Shearling Ewes f the same fi ck “a 20 0 H 
F Certi cation to th 0 e floc . 
a —— en — Aue crtifeater for or the Second-best ditto 10 0 0 
Entry of Implements, and the space required for their bition “ries. 
in the Show Yard, must be returned, filled up, to the —— f large bre i 15 0 0 
on or before the . — or an am rd all other Certificates by the seen Boe ditto. 8 5 0 0 
FIRST or JUNE ; 2 Council bavin d that, in K Boar of small breed as 
that, 15 0 0 
— Renae po fon on be recet seis’ | Sa le E 500 
a r ante mire ged — Sow of nat weet 15 ° 0 
Certificate may be sent, — hree Breeding Sows of a large breed 10 0 0 
SHORT- HORNED CATTLE, en of Three “Sows of a small weeds 10 0 0 
Bull, calved . a dee to the Ist of January, 1847 440 0 0 us There * pd no or Ae by Auction in the Show. yard. 
Bull, calved caved ane the 1st of January, 1847, more than rome * AMES HUDSON, 83 
one 20 0 0 London, March 6:b, 1819. k 
2 T EN Wi 28 0 * If the cow be in calf, and not in milk, the prize will not be 
best ditto ditto“ 4. * 10 0 0 given a she is certified to have produced a live calf on 
y =. 20 6 0i 408 ame litter, above four and under 46018 — old. 


NORWICH MEETING, 1849. 


THURSDAY, JULY 


NE 
A 
OURT or DIRECTORS, 


AND COM 


Governor—The Hon. 4 


Deputy- Governor Henry A 
Dm 


ANY. 


PA 
BY ROYAL CHARTER, A.D. 1841, 


glionby Aglionby, in, MP. 


meim 


John Bilerker Boulcott, Esq. Ross D. Mangles e M 
The Lord W | Alexander Nai Teng, Beg. > 
inder Curri . the 
John Robert 1 
The Baron de and Alderman Sir J. Pirie’ Bart, 
22 1 Smith, Esq., M.P 
* Robert e Mah . the 


dors The 
Archibald Hastie, Esq. 

Sir Ralph Howard, Bart., M. sta 
William an Es, M. F. 
George 
ier À 


Tal 
Mama a Thompson, 
a3 Pred 


2 1 and a * — 


1 a ati SON’S ng — 
s are enable 


a FOR TENDER FEET, AND A 
CURE FOR CORNS AND a 
pAcE's EVERY MANS F 


Fa 
Pine EVERY Manni FRIEND, whlch ive 
plication. Paul’s tery Man’s F. (Corn 
be the best emollient t 


i o be had, with fali 
al wholopaie and retail Medicine Vendors in wat 
AN County. 5 of “ JohN 22 0 on the 
cot OF DIRECTORS OF Ann . Scamp. Poke ex cures the most o — 
: s Ev gi 

a 32 TT they “Sold by Barclay and Sons, irog Mowe x it; agiia 67, 
Purchase ini Pas generally, and 2 Paul’s e Butler aud ng, 4, Cheapside : 
— 5 — astursge a — St. Sutton, Bow Search peek: ; Johnston, 68, 
The Terz 32333 n 1 ni Nee 
cation at the New ZAAT ANN House, E order of he —. 5 45 — i al Oxford jut 15 Sk 
; and retail respectable and 
New Zealand — be ote Berne: r e in every town in Eo England. io 

and Co, rae fi d 3 nd, Messrs. J, and R. RAIMES 


BOTANICAL WORKS BY PROFESSOR LADET 
2 BOTANY; or, the R 
TS nee, New Edition. 400 Ilus — 
HE VEGETABLE KINGDO 
Cla — and Uses of Plant $n ; or the LEN 
Natural 1 Second Edition. 
308. in cloth, 
+ Sate ELEMENTS OF 1 BOTANY, Structural, 
siological, and Medical. With a Skeich of he an 
be had separa price 
* e . — 
e e 
ae i blished, = in 
T y is È A amengan Br —— Ki cloth, Bilt edges, a Siw 
“DICTIONARY, Com 
Planty 


AXTON’S BOTANICAL 


all ulture — ag i 
For the convenience ntalning a pos 
Edition, a SUPPLE 2 2 — all the New ber 2 
ts 9 is A 21 — ae : 
on: 


Tondon: BRADBURY & EYANS Il, Bourerieetret. d 
A New Edition, corrected, in One very thick Volume, d ; 
above 1300 pages, with upwards of 2000 Wood ' 

price 31, 38. cloth, 
AN ENCYCL LOPADIA of COTTAGE, FARM, ad 
ILL 1 e igh en and FURNITURE: re 
ing vent Designs for 2 — * the Villa to 8 Fig 
Cottage and the Farm, inc ouses, Par ; 
and other Agricultural Buildines, 1 


Remarks. B 1 J. C.. 
By J. 0. 

ondon : LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, 
Nor Edition, 8vo, with ral 1 10,000 8 Zl. 13s. 


NCYCLOPAIDIA PLANTS : including 
indigenous > . 3 into * 25 Britain. 


y 
76 8 most useful and — i botanical work which 
appe pom in the English language.”—Jameson’s 


By the same Author, with numerous Woodcuts, 
HORTUS BRITANNICUS.. 31s 
AN ENCYCLOPÆDIA OF {TREES AND SHRUBS. 
R YOUNG GARDENERS, 2 


Just publish d, i ed, imperial 8 with five re copperplates 
lit 285 . engraving, and 8 c 100 
price 30s. cloth, 
N HISTORICAL TBEAUIY in 4 into the 


Je e 

ture i idee 
ty * He has apprehended a great 

that progress throu; 4 aggrega Son of experi 
Paling every rean uing epartment of human 


its relation to and 

worked it 2 a oiis full conclusions. 

expound th life of art, in ‘its great pri 2 I 

relation to t the 2 conditions ¢ — for the 

of the truth—as it 2 ot yet unded; with a ; 

and — ang ‘integrity, whieh inv not yet hitherto i 

Review. a 

Lease : LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, and 


Yolum e, Svo illustra tr d T Share above 00 
n Wo price s. 6d. 
IA of CIVIL ENGINEERING, 
Historical, Theoretical, and Pra 5 
CRESY, F. S. A. 
“A de gideratam in the history of engineering 2 j 
suppli this i volume. There 
is not a member of the community, from the highest s 
to — —— n *. — will not find h mn i 
ind and extend his — 1 frieh Rail. 
on: London: Lonoman, BROWN, GREEN, an and Lenne 
TH HE (THE EDINBURGH REVIEW, No, CLXXX; i$ 
just pub 
I. THE VANITY AND “SLORY. re LITERATURE. 
Il, THE PHYSICAL ATLAS NATURAL PHS 
HET T ORA EYE OF THE CONQUEST, 
AYLOR’S EVE 
10. MRS. JAMESON'S SACRED AND LEGEN exDARY AR. 
V. MARY BARTON 
vI. MISS STRICKLAND’S LIVES OF THE 


VIL DUKE OF ARG@YLL’S “PRESBYTERY EXAN 
VIII. UNIVERSITY REFORM: CAMBRIDGE aD 


IX. iE poutsiear PROSPECTS, 1849. 


In one very large 


QUEEN 


MR. HOARE’S WORKS 
Thi a dl ion, 8v0, 
TREATISE on the 5 pin 
- GRAPE 8 — ue MENT 
A DESCRIPTIVE TMe UNT © 


1, 12m0, 58. i 
WM 
"of a NE APE 


PLANTING and MANAGING the 
kion for | — N, Bro 


i | tions. By 
ES aes mag 


cig = oi 


EEE in 1 vol. mS = 
AND FORMULA FoR 
ET OF LIFE cores, 

amples of Annuity, Assurance, an 
Porn Skat sion Associate of the 

Great Britain an an 
don: 2 AN, Baon, GREEN, | and Lows 


Socr 


Lon 
3 c oF ublished, 
CONES CARPOLOGIC ; or, 

tions of Fruits and 8 Seeds (after the manner 

B: 41 7 AS SHEARMAN ren, A 
wa in igre, or uta boa 
with a ut 2 way * ; 

1 PAMrLtN, 5, Fri 
re ae No 


vearenick Mu 
— nuas Newivgtou, both = Preeine 
oe 


REES of 


in Lo 
i at a 8 by them 
risi of St. Paul's, Covent- garden, im the 
— bin and C unicntious are to be ADD 
Sa tote Gooner . 14, 1849. 


GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
RICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


Rensa ee 2 


i "Seek soe 
———— —— 


Roses, bedding . ses 
Royal South “Ss 9 Soe. a 


owing 
Walks, — 


e. 

. 

. 

2 

e 

. 

. 
8 


| Walls, studs v. nails for 


nC SOCIETY, Regent’s-park.— 
S OF PLANTS, . pil and 
held on WEDNEs- 


GARDEN 


that day, 53.5 or * 2 of 
} 1 of 30 tickets until Ma ay the 


HIBU OF AMERICAN r 
Saine 79 ROAD, CHELSEA 
TINUED THIS YEAR, AS USUAL. 

KNAP HILL NURSERY, WOKING 


eal EXHIBITION, 1 9 
dom, on the 18th 


ital * cars Charita- 
of Prizes, with ru 

3 GILMAN, Esq., Bethel- le 
Norfolk and Norwich Horticul. 


stara ore 


11 


ported species from Pata- 
— ie ha SS ae was 
eA 


“ates Ban — 
established. — 


re. 
ady for dations 
y, the 7th r uy, at 5s, . or six for 25 


PODIE CAT 
e pls ante ches hse eac 
Sali ressed — 


ele * te „ EPPSIL.”— 
dy. 
P 


oni, AND NEW PLANTS. 


ear Londo 
TY THE QUEE 
, begs to inform the 
soe hte for 
by post on applica- 


Sax 
that his 


3 AND VERBENAS. 
Nash A and 3 
oi cy 11 is ‘is e 
! “ie aber ABE 
w 01 mr pertes Di ig 
‘operties, 
above. 
KLEET; a 
geand 
‘hr taeda 


D and “ 


vat 
ht 


1A again 


ue, the foliag e 
of th 1 g amiga reen, 


Esq, 
every collection the sand 


at beginnin 
t Berkhan K 2 cee 


[Price 6d. 


STORY'S 1 FUCHSIAS—*“ ELEGANTISSIMA” ARD GEORGE HENDERSUN pia 
; > 


DWA 
E road 


| 
| 
RY, Esd., White Hill, Newton Bushell, | r renee, Wil, on the Ist of May 
W. u r having placed in the hands of Messrs, Veitc 4 eop E 40K EHE A vs e following— 10s. 6d. each. 
varieties, GAILL y 
they 1 — to inform the Public that they will be able to supply PET ON Ta SPLENDIDISSIMA, E E supplied for 21s, 
My eter ae plants on and ee Prag ie ay, — i Tth of May } SALVIA vides COMPA AOMA; Bea 8 nd 10, 02. 5 
om sis given e first number of ‘ The! 
Florist ;” the larger flower tele “ NEWTONIENSIS,” a 4 Beh teas 3 Paper, page Ss 


the one most refloxed 5 ELEGANTISSIMA, 2 
exhibited at Regent's Park in June, an 
tificate awarde 


NIE 
The latter was | 


RST CLASS D Sure 
had a first-class cer- 


Jj Onn I KEYN ES begs to submit — following list * 


7 First Class DAHLIAS, at reduced prices: comp: 

The — cet — ie The ae 8 in describing them, says, ‘ — 4 | — Standard, the bes tout in its class ; . Purgla Standard, like. 
are very distinct in colour, with no poverty of bg kind oo rst. rate; Lae ies haplin, 1 ony and Victoria Re 
them, but m ah — The texture smooth and 5 5 P th rst. n 1 ariei 8 will i Be Ti ic. 
sho surface, — from their peculiar and elegant | | oria — laded without Skage All the most approved 
‘ m o the eatest advantage their 2 pact and Eo tolet- | Flo in cultivate at nea Brees © moderate ry, Beak 

red doriai ; their sepals are right scarlet crimson wa 1 to JoHN 1 reet Nursery, Salis- 


and altogether they are TT desirable varieties.” 
“ BLEGANTISSIMA,”  NEWTONIENSIS,” 10s. 6a. 3 te aitent 
Messrs. VEITCH and H- Pars off 
Heben's GEM OF THE WEST,” 
2 they ha 


108. 6d. eie OHN KEYNES, — Salisbury, wili be ready to send 
out the oe splen nstant flowers of the 
N in May . — Miss Blae more, Rainbow, 
Miss Stevens, ad Sunbeam, all st rag have been accorded 


pure white, —— any roughn or co certificates at the prine spa al 1 1155 


r variety 


for imm 
may be edt araf 
r 50s. | 


gan 
white Fuchsias. Sepals 8 sinoati 2 well reflexed, 
showing a beautiful, well formed, Are pu urple corolla, 
scapes 2 unexceptionable. Mess 4 57 5 
above i b any in existence, con- 
rose —— aa believing they will give perfect satis- 


1 KEYNES, 15 N ‘fers the — 
for the best Six Blooms shown from the nine Flo 
e e as abov ve, at the Salis bu 3 Lo —— Ploricultural, sand 
3d do. 


sede 


faction. The usual discount when e of each or either are | South — * 4 cieties. First Prize, N.; 2d do., 30s, ; 
taken. —Exeter, April 17.; 4th do., ; 5th do., 108. Open t to Amateurs and Gen 
men’s 5 No entrance m 
or the amount a will be — mem whiek —.— 1 OBACCO 


O PAPER — Tad is an excellent substitute 


cannot be 
for Tobacco, fo 


5 BEES TABILIS; OR, QUEEN OF 
ESSRS. VEITCH axb SON have ariy ple atts re 
in offering this a FUCH 
s only to be seento bea 


and at less t ost, 
Tobacco along with it, say + he eee weed | Tobacco paper, it 
urpo i re using all Tobacco, 7 
very ee saving will be effected, Tobac: 
; pape? of ihe Jak 3 may be obtained for 1s. 6d. per Ib. o 
hs to J. CHESLIN WHEELE 8, Kin gsholm Nursery, Giou- 
the certainty of its becoming the parent of an 3 new | ceste 
race of H — wb ene og SEEDLING VERBENAS, PETUNIAS, & ANTIRRHINUMS, 


22d of Apr il, 1848, a 


= — for new * rare pla nts. A 
s given by Dr. LINDLEY in No. 20 of — ron 
of last year, It is also figured in“ Curtis’s Botanical M 
— sg yates 5 bee 3 oy 2 June last, a ‘eforence 
full des scription n be ob 


ent’ pat in Te and had the aot Te | 
cut and descriptio: 
zurdeners 


dbl e asd with a 
— ge a a blackish — very novel and neat for 
8. 
PETUNIA “LA REINE. ae A peach colour, the throat 
ver TUK yE of great substance 
PE e n = 


K ach crimson, with black 


the 888 3 an st of such of the trade as hve We * ik 
ordered it will appear in Ars next week’s 1 From ANHRUIING I Bull. LIAN r. "Tube red, upper and 
unknown correspondents a respectable reference, or the amount | lower =e bright crimson, extra bro = flower and dwarf habit ; 
rapes will be ite ape without which plants 3 be received a cer iges te from South London Ploricultural So- 
sent. e ge 4 ril 21, 1849, ety ; 5s. 
N.B.—A beautiful c ett late of the ab be had by 1 RHINUM “ OBERON,”—A 8 ground, thickly 
nelosing a posta e ES tudded and sp lashed with a bright carmine ; the best flower of 


RTANT TO HO LLYHOCK GROWE 
DW ARD TILEY begs Di ie to 1 the 
nobility, gentry. and other H — 
n a high coe — pork 5 aved by a gentlem 
mateur, from one of the choicest collections in the Tee, the 
dio is very sym eu ay ana handsome—the outer or gua ard 
etals do not extend more 2 1 half an 2 * tee! the centre 
$ rming a perfect circle; itis free from utation 3 eurl, in 
any part; the Sitis are unique, “ia for 5 en hat of hal a globe, 
8 ihe sed, 5 apa smooth- — pont. closely ard 
ithin the other, This cha- 


N “ah general Cat Catal lation, including all the novelties of the season, 
* 1 eckbam, near London, A pril 21. 
G TURNER is now prepared to 5 5 for 
* the following New and First-rate VERB 
1 —s, d. 
1 See dee Ra to scarlet, a 1 vā- 
riety for beddin y free bloomer, and 
838 habit 


0 
ee * ieam iaei rosy purple, white å 
showy 


PR N CESS, al LICE ‘cies white, deep cherry centre, 
larg 


datas the — nt opportunity; the seed 3 ok the prone raised, cad excited 

has 1 Mero 7 portani 851 bring the major of the — Ay K mineta at the Surrey Show, w he it took 

plants equal to pie . the seed was saved pat © Sold a first class Certificat The rdener 

in packets 2s, r packets containing 200 seeds, 5s. ; i eaks of it thus: ua new and very pretty seedling 

larger packet x of 800 reeds, 10s, Parties asing the above erbena, named Princess Alice, was exhib e 
to Her Mavsesty at Buckin; 


n having the fines t double Holly hocks yet grown. Vree Mr. Wyn 2 a à 
á 7. vans K 888959 ollection of SWE rita SEED ham Palace, and . k L the truss 
dispose of, saved from semi-double flowers of the finest] large, and the individual fl well formed; it is 
colours, producing the greater double ; — —— have | white with a rosy spot in cach division of th corolla, 
en shown at the d nt itions, pan much admired, for preie Met Bo: gory ma ; 8 
e last two years. Sold in packets, 1s. A (GREY)—fine shape, ro 
GERMAN AS TER SEED, anequalled fort 5 ROYAL PURPLE (Toowd) — deop purple, fi large 
of the flower, 8 that of hal ball, 1 quilled; flower, good habit, yard sh and fine . a$ — 
above 20 distinct varieties, in 1. 1s. 6d. each. particularly adapted for bed , and is much dee 
NTIRRH EED. 5 — saved from fine striped and] in colour than any other of its class .. 0 
. waitios ; Ts. per — > 
1 _Tatleties 25 HARDY ANNUAL SEEDS, 3s. the | GERANIUMS, FUCGHSIAS, CINERARIAS, VERBENAS, 


b packet of each of the above, including a packet 
of the 24 Hardy Annuals, tor 8 
Bib mproved Walcheren 5 —.— Broccoli, Wileove do., Tam- 
rth do., 1s. each per packet. These Broccolies have proved 
the pei in cultivation 
Sirt of the above sent postage free, on the 
Bray * a 1 order, or T — in penny postage 


CHRYSANTHEMUMS, IRIS GERMANICA, AND SELECT 

CHOICE PLA 

G. E PARSONS, Frorist and SEEDSMAN, by appi 
ent, to Her ee Western-road an 3 

road, Brighton, begs to inform ape e nobility and rent that 

spring ee of the above is ready, and will be io 


stamps.—Sold gt 8 TILE ae ann Kiore 101 TR he same time begs to offer N californica 
Pulteney ate — < —— — ber dozen ; Dalecolaria Pelee yy per dozen ; Cal. 

1 15. VEGETABLE SEEDS of ev laria “Kentis h Hero,” be! A — dozen ; * Larpentæ 

» 
description. 125 per Verben Robinson’s Defiance,” the finest 
PLANTS FOR BEDDING OUT; orders taken, to be de- scarlet for . 68. oa tho a 
ADAN TAR. a roots, at 6d., 8d., and 1 — S. — ME AND 1 PRANS 
LILIUM LAN IFOLIUM ALBUM, 1s. “ea. seen SEEDS, in mixtures su poet care Tivections fue 
Araucaria, Ficus elasticus, Aloes, Cacti, Cedrus Deodara, Losi allowing 2 bushels i accompany t Deets. Mixed sorts 
“LAWN GRASS, 1. 64. for improving old Grass Lands, 18. 3d. per Ib. Fine sorts for 
MEADOWS: —— it e to improve the crop of Hay, forming Lawns, Ko., 1s. 4d. per 


ow — 2 to lbs. of white Dutch Clover w ith 1 gallon of & Co. beg to notice that their Ree 
Pertini al Rye or Italian Rye-Grass; the cost t will be about | Lis ns — 
25. 6d. to 88. r acre, 
AGRICUL URAL SEEDS at the lowest prices. 
CAN Hatrs » Seedsman, 109, St, Martin’s-lane, Charing- 
2 don. 


. 


JASS anb BRO 
1 T a sent fiee by post on 
VEGETABLE SEEDS. 
A complete ee of the best and newest sorts, in propor- 
Ne garden, of fine e garape sorts, 


A collection i for a capa aan 
for 15s. of the sorts furnished, if req 


THE GARDENERS’ CHR 


= ̃ ͤ ——̃ K— 
ATIONS,  PICOTEES, PINKS, 


THE F 
e. S DESORIPRIVE | PRICED | * FUOMSIAS, V 
application, 


10s, 6d. per pair. 
of = tine show 
a mit” dit a ato 


ARNAT] 


ow 6 
FINEST t ERBENAS,CL 


NERARIAS, GLOX- 


OUELL anp Co. are now executi ng orders for 
32 3 poa at the foll 3 ice. 
w Red.edged Picotee, The at 
41 AND PICOTEES. £s 
ers, by name, II. $3. — 10 
ditto n 10s. a 


CARNATION 


+ 


SELECT FLOWER taba.” 


12 pa 
| 25 


= by post, with full directions for sowing, heights, re 


— halen ra best and newest e > 8 15 0 
137 ma aa 30 for 5s. 6d., 20 for H 4 0 
ies best dwarf kinds, in teger es 
beds on lawns, 78. 6d., or 12 g7 
mane. jomis og 76. 6d. ? for .. 
o Perennials, 10s. yia 12 for 
— and $3 rennials, 73, d., 12 


ane we eat 19 for ‘ 


j- 0 
0 
0 


i 
i 
5 
3 


o 


or 
* 


4 with orders ure request 

te. Goods carriage fre e to London, and with all orders 

$. and u presented extra. Port. tice pote ye 

sate 00 Bass and Brown, or to nig or ee Seed and 
Prr: eukera ral Estadis bment, Sudbary, 


“PO PLA 5 EXHIBITORS, 
Bris 9 
K wae 


r of the finest 0 ih ga 
—.— 


+ of all size 

Kope gs 8 — 
ndens, 

g +7 ; Aza iea variegata Sable red, 

$ ora ndiflora, miniata, pul- 
Nidha 00 — on cuspidatum 

seabra, — bent Holla 3 ke e W — nde ersonil, 

0 


aphelexis, ape eta bile 
xora 


1 Lu ullas; eee aces 


of y. are to be see! Bower 

Nursery, Maidstone, which is withia five minnar ‘walk of the 

Maidstone ains leave * 
and afternoon, in — a mn tw 


me — IMPROVEMENTS. 
trument Maker (by special 


PINKS. 2 Hirst class show 


ag * 


* 
0 | P PUCHSIA 
6 | 95 125, and 18s. per doz 5 
VER RBENAS. — thet select and 
65. to 9s. per doz 
CINER 


varie 


stam 


has t 
shiek is very select, per a 


CHRYSAN ee — The most 
| choice 1 9s. 
INIA 


9s per 

FL 
ee of of we ‘above, 
| ornam: 


her's Exquisite 
id Red and White 


0 
* 

0 

s 9 0 


ditto 
Fis anA border ‘Ca a y 1, per dozen pairs 


eties, 12s. and 18s. per 
A8. Pinest first class show flowers, 10s, and 18s. 


281 


8. — The new — and most beautif ul 


? 


Ken of last season 


Fine flowering plants of the best show 


, per dozen, 


ARIAS- — 
9 

areal Mery oe of the new and 

me pA aided “of new varieties, 

i, Ko., 12s., 18s., and 24s. per doz. 

nts of the best t free flowering sorts, 


own wear? 30 packets of new and choice kinds, 


40) hh 


with an extensive variety of highly 
y enclosing two postage 


tal plants, 
stamps. 860 at 1 Nursery. 


SELEC TED» SEEDS 
LLIAM MAY, F 


inform those 


his year, from the of eac 

during the present 

me other choice varieties of Vegetable Seeds, 

moth or Superb April White BROCCOLI, 

7 aten ty Wilcove Si 1s. ; Improved Wal- 

Im msa 1 Crimson or Raby Dwarf BEET, 1s. 
Sed 


h, with s 


NEW PATENT for im -p 


and Syringes, which ar 


è now 50 8 2 in construc- 
tion, and sparr d in their — that e will warrant them to 
in repai daring the m of the patent, N ay be worked 

Keep ta ther ins , 8, Hee of the same 

———— only 8 the 2 35, Regent. eireus, 
e they may be en and prov x 


RLET PE BLARGONIU MS.— 


CA 
— . s Royalist 
nes’s Gem of the Scarlets 
2 pri 
ITCHELL'S Tam O'Shanter — 


'Scurlet 
pyare n 
om ‘Thamb’s Master 
war's Brompton H 
G Tbrahim . 
5 Is. 6d. P 


TERG: 


32338 
3 


ie a 

t Twelve are re TAN 

For description of each, see 

Paper, March 31, page 194, 
— 


m 5 
ally Maps eee ys for 21s., or the set of 
Advertisement in 


15 


1 
5 t 2 vi 
very da 8 extra fine b. 

2 — colour, ex 
oe purple, —_— centre; 5 one of 

best in it 
. ben, extra ott 

Empress E len, brilliant, tree ‘bloomer, and 


> 


Valcan K crimson, dark hig very fine 5 
unon—deep lilac, very good . 


—— Superb— fine rosy 
striped, rou purgis 
fectio N best white 
. Frankland Rassell — rt fe ini 
Scarlet e- riet 
Madame Beatrice triped 
ee att blash, pi 
— — ee K gto 
rose or lake, yellow eye, v 
St. — — violet ver 
Countess of Take e, fine y? 


wee 
oon 


22 et ee — ——— pi pd pad pa SA 


3 
K: 


3 2 
JS: 


carmine, good habit 

j aan are close habit. 

splendid flower 
h sinp 


SAMAAMS 888 — 
a 
= 


Ie 


the greatest s pame tion. 
e has 
LLY HOCK 


1 15. Ran flot-stemmed 
CELERY, 1 8. The above „ M. has had 

l ye 
small supply of the following: Very select 
j ze ay at m the very best nee flowers, 
ket, 23, om Henderson’s last year’s 
— 


ac 
ction, 


— 


and 


now & 


Is. 
prov: 


The Hoy 
OBERT B 
especially MA 
lenges — ion, 
warranted of the growth ofl 


per Ib.; Red a 
ed Skirving’s Biwede,: fod, per 
unknown parties will be alae 


ears, With 
A, fro 
ee very select v * 23. 6d. ; 
HINUM, . sorts, om hig all post free, 
pe Nurseries, near mr Erdale ae 


ANTIR 


TURA 
AKER, of Writtle, ‘having for upwards 


ONICLE. 


MILK PANS, PROPAGA 
PS & CO. * T 


eo PHILLI 


uches diameter, each 


24 wae long 


20 
18 
16 
14 
12 

Made to any le ngth 


FOR CONS 
ners’ Chrow 


1 GLASS 


CUCUMBER TUBES. 


Address, 116, Kishopsgate-str 
HARTLEY'S PATENT ROUGH PLATE 


. 


6 


2s. 1 


Kue 
S S g S 


eet 


de 2 . N Feb. 24th, must Py 
** 2 a in which this Glass was spoken 


Wasp Traps, 


To open at top, Is. each 


BEE 
inches diameter 


— 


n 
* 
” 
» 
” 


” 
* 
35. 


oF 


£ i 
EE $ 


F 


pes S 


HE . 


Without. 


The readers of ¢ 


and other: 


Squa 


respond precisely with those of “the Patentee, to 
would beg the attention of the Nobility, Clergymen, 


In Crates or the sizes as 1 * ee 
In 


8 by 6 and under 15 51 $ 


AND W. H. 


cee 


of 40 years devoted his time an 
improve pry of eee see ROOTS, and more 
GOLD = RZEL, which for . 25 7 

o acqua oy friends 
with Seeds at — following —— one 
848 : Lon og a Warze l, 

ditto, 8. 3d. 


Im- 
pint. 


supply them 


ri nd Orange Globe 


2 — fro m 


N. 


and th 
Jau 
Ken 


Lists of D AGRICULTURAL SEED: 
‘of Grain and pesca 
Liverpoo! 


Hot-houses 
parts o ‘of he kingdom. alc given to the Nobility, Gentry, 
Englaa 


DRUMMOND. & s SONS, 3 l Muse 
* Stirling, N.B., will furnish, free, on 2 cake 
s of Seeds above 20. th the exc 
Hal, 5- ); — 2 of — in Tete 

ewcas an to whi 
a 9 — many other parts 


— 2 3 oy — AND set eo 
— One 3-light Boxes and 


B. All parce’ 


ries, G 
e de, is ost of ae counties of 
Watt Habe Builder, Clare sien Old 
merry Toata 


G eee ih 


tmo postage stam mps.—GEORGE NEtanBOUR and Son, 127, High 


ES 
NEIGHBOUR. anD SON respec ot 
that red ave prepared for this season an e 
of their various I VED BEE HIVES, 
that 
ey 


EORGE 


tħ drawings and . — will de Wr reed on the 


dekas 
gee 8 T 155 
GLASS, i: Glass, $ 

Fre uch Shad 
of Prie ces, an 
their Warehouse, 


me 


B 
= squar 
eet of 
Lists of P 
— NT ROUG — 
TILES and 


rage pee 


ATES, 
ares GEASS MER SANSE 3s, 

RNA ENTA oye NbDOW 
5, Soho-square, London. 


ckSON are ce * 1 
1 ae. and CKOWN GLASS 
at ped 


t, for the usual size: 
. — jr 


art 


F BRITIS 


tion, 


HOMAS MILLINGTON, ; ae 
. London 3 side as rie 
GLASS, "early 4 inh ai 
a: ee r toot; this 
n Frames of 


PLATE 


ermin 
ia sizes pu e 1 foot giai 
bet 1 article for Gree nhouses and 


d our list 


8 by 6 


on 


: 


. 
` 
9 


eee 


„ „„ „ „ „„ 


vee tee 


Qua 
Averaging } of an inch thick, and ee 26 oz: e 
Jas. PHILLIPS & Co., 115, — Without, Lond. 


: 


BRITISH 


uired, many thouss 
aer ; 


s HET 24 0 | 
See the Gardener? Sa oe 


No, 26 oz., 87s. 6d. ; No. 


6 by 4 
7 by 5 
DN 


by 6 


39 
ares 


eties, native and foreign, 
eames last season, the above 

stinct and really Sood. The 
or a dozen of the 


2 d proved on our ow 

Eee roe — as 1. Se 
are — otrabe off E 

* ser, 12s, 


of one sort are ven. Three doen, 

ý 2 vari- 

doz en ia 1 fogan yari. 
for turaing oat. 


RIAS. 
7a 


. . 


Sahn tE 
bed of which 


d. 


ert ew, for, the frst 
e on 12to18 |i 
bedding out 8 E 


1 iere eai and every de. | 
S manufactured ii 
e 


“Nutt on Bees ” (6th edition), now 8 1 10 


MPROV 
THESE — 2 3 are 


ED FLO —— ST K 8. 
oe och Pie m, thereby 


— 


con- H. R. H. Prince Al 
consisting — 


U Cornet 10 Her amar 56, Hay- 


ee BLE STO ON 


a circula: 

B 210 are liable he cut 

re the plants: They m may had s stained bro fre re 

the variou be had of all ri respectatté 2 

a 8 in Garden Hebd tect 
d Wholesale, at H. MokRELL's, 149, Fleet- 


B. Samples wes seen at the Office of this Paper, 
CATCHERS. 


— te 


of Ga N ORNAM 

E and sold 8 i 
ces by, Egee anà oo, 60, ra 5 End, Bo 
I. J. Croeeon, of Goad 


AKERS PHEASAT 


] 


Glasses of plane 
Lead, pinis — i ig 
Va rnishe u bes, a 


announces that 
8 various e0 
very deseriptio 


25), Oxt 


N 


1 foot wide, 2-inch m 
eas, Str e ue 


road, Chelsea, by s appointment 
ORNAMENTAL “WATER FOWL 
“and d laughing 
Molded an and Eo divers, Čaro! 
pari + al 


sANTRY, 5 ing ge 3 


Sheep Neti” 
The Nets A be Tanned 


Fishing 


8 Glass, i in cases of 200 fe 


Cut Squares, in 100 feet age 
Sizes under 1 ius. by 4 1 
, by 5 


8. 
aud Moss 
eee “Fish Gl 

i Linseed 


Flow: K Tors 


OHN ‘MORTLOCK, Aae 


of aiena etal OH 
WARE at — lowest eeng prie 
Hyde-park. 


Irre OF ALE i 


— — 
hy, ditto 


of: He. 


32 oz., 1128. each, ease 
Crown, a 
10 


eady money 


ts of all 


10 125 8 15 r 
nor Took, above 10 by 8, i n Crown or 
vot, aecording to size and 2 


INA, olite dm a 


* 
see) i * 
od. 


aati 


obes. - 


è, for cash. 


THE 


de by taking the se 
hem ating t Sufolk: 


: hate 3 5 FOR 1849. 


the late 
e . the following 
plants of which will be ready ear 


— Blush pe new 
s flower; 


i sever ds. is 
k, one Cabinet, ” also in tho 
in Oct. Tth and 14th. Height, 2t 


= margined with rose; petal, 
15 — 2 and 8 =e i constant, 
from their bei one bloom- 
sent to Mr. Noville, and abe by him 
ber 14, thu ur seedling, 559, 
properties, peal g hort, beau utifully 
close; ‘centre s b, an ost promi- 
in the ent Gnas.” Height, 2 to 3 ft.; 
[DENCE.—Bright glossy crimson, shaded 
n mE habit eres (8 prang noticed 
He 


with- 


Constant, 
o be grow 


TA and NR mottled; 
aM outline good, and habit 


Height, Price. 
in feet . . 
i ce 8 10 6 
Deep crimson or 
centre prominent, 
ih} 7 6 
i] ck, with rosy-white 
reur de Maroc, with 
ed and za nati fine. Noticed 
he “Florist” of Oct. 14 7 
TRIBUTOR.—Lilac purple, tipped 
and habit very fine, rather 
Rieck: a ii 5 0 
00 N. — Rosy purple, tipped 
aai „good ceütre and out- 
3) 5 0 
Wh hite, e aged w with 
very constant, one 
5 0 


al Collections of the Wet approved 
ws 8 e 
had 


w- road, Chelm 


S- 
ncere thanks 


future orders will 
w recommends to their 
E his unrivalled White 
i DAH AH 

* tiful white, 25 . purple round, 
» food outline, and constant. 
i N saying this is the best Dahlia 
kion aandag of 4 tion; 
This 


tnt 
9 ad vented i it from being 


3 
ee ** tiful gy and ve 
ctober, id th — 
Na aides other tober, and the K atg 
3 sepals, with a b 
8 th fal? pid 


t violet pur- 
at the coro 4 


are quite distinet from 
of . 3 Kal grower 

co dents must 
Payable at Chelmsford. 


very | green 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


243 


H ORTICULTURAL , SOCIETY, 21, Regent-street, 
April 21, 18 
NOTICE IS HEBEBY GIVEN, that ms ANNIVERSARY 
MEETING of tre Society, a tion of E ae 
Council, and Officers for the Sas 8 and for receiving 
the Annua Report of the 1 ae ‘take piace at the 
House o nt-str ects on Tuxspax, the 
~ t of May next. n precisely at "One 
„Clock. There will be no Exhibition of Flower, &c., on this 
— 
UGH wot a AND CO. can — the greatest con- 
1 the 


HELIOTROPIUN, 
w for 


"g 
any of tho: ne Previously introduced. The individual 
also the , are very large and highly fragean at; 
Cola pa violet ann $ "yellowish tinge towards the 
The habit of the plant is very dwarf and compact, and Hott — 
long continuance of its owering, and other good qualities, it 
will undoubtedly prove a ye 1 4 acquisition either for 
Price 78. 6d. 


bedding or pot culture. 
Ah agi ‘THE RA CH, 25 Thi f th ihe 
arietie Habit compact and py few Pip violet purple, 


besutifally capped; eens . 5 red, of 1 consistence, as 
much reflexed a urncap = ly, Pri s. 6d. 
FUCHSIA, “ SPLE ENDID T This is ini a dark variety of 
ae 2 remarkable for its very fine 
of flowers. Price 108. 6d. 
Fu en named above were obtained from seeds by 
Joun WI E, Esq., of Birmingham, a a the ackno: vledged 
superiority E that gentleman in improving, by careful a 
ntific hybridisation, some of the finest genera of pla ats, 
tee for the excellence of those now 
ias will be 


great mer rit, and 


h 


8. 


ah 85 _ speci 
plan 


Ta addition he abov 


vente 


T Fein. 
SA TURDAY, A} APRIL 21, 1849. 


FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS, 
e (Anniversary) 


NGS 
Antiquarian (Anniversary) ) 80 E 
Monpay, April 25) Meien ei 
Geograph 
0 Tarai 
n Gr * ngine s. 
Tuxspar, 2 3 and cee 
Zoolog 
enaurant ere ical, 
WabNMTSDñAT,— 23 REETA À ‘a P 
To. dow Paati ‘= ia ye ir M. 
ion cniver, 
cass ‘Ro: 53820 6 of * Acn 3 . 
Tuurspay, = os) N matic e $ 5 : 
Royal Ar 
„„ hilologi call. 1 „ „„ 8 . 
Frrpay, ae SMB eer pe er apy eee Sde. u 
SATURDAY, — 23—Royal Botanic . 347. 
Monpay, —  30—Bnitish Architect 8 r. u 
ern. e, e 
WEDNESDAY, — enen, iciced restig oiire: Sr. u. 
Farpay, — 4 Botanical — 2 
Sar ny 5 al Gardens sesoses: 
COUNTRY Suc -April 21: Handsworth. and 1 8 
Sea May 1: “Wake oa and South Lancashire Tulip.— Wednesday, 
2 Hortieultur 


We * to announce, with great regret, 
the frere a Professor aan R, of Vienna, the 
oder 


| —— a 


la tree 


japonica, together with herbs of 23 habits, 
calculated to bear severe frost, such as Asters 
Ponies, Solomon's Seal, Pinks, ea, In the — 
ground of the oe representing ‘ ‘the Vale of 
Tombs” is a specimen of Fanebr 
— 


only ted i paper- 
1 . — 3 is — the — species. 
e seedlings in the Bagshot 2 were raised 
from cones la ond procured by Mr. Fortune; while 
lace 200 miles to the north of 
rel ave di received a dried specimen 
of it, which enables us to 2 that it must be a plant 
of the gr wees beauty. y be best described as 
like the Weeping Willow in growth, with . 
— — of the 2 but of a — green; it 
uniper, as the Savin is, but a 
É enuine ee it has long been subject of regret ` 
that the — 1 — cannot e to endure 


our climate, r — : but 
we have now a — tree, still better adapted for the 
purpose. 


Tur gardener who would form a beautiful Frown- 
GARDEN, from neglected and unfashionable plants, 
must pursue a very tog course from 0 t which 
satisfied eee 50 years ago. The world h 
grown fastidio * know ing what 8 may 

o keep up to the possible 


ways gay, either e 

ents ais. season ie 83 which it 85 
o call its own. 

ut t i s seldom, indeed, that such a garden is 


reason is, the opinion that ground cannot 
le occupied ig bales aoe crops at one e 
me time. We admit the tr pn the proponos ; 


possible that if half-a-dozen crops cannot be had at 
one the same time on the same ger yet that 
5 may be made to succeed each other by some 
provens tha that os not demand an Barak, amount 

of ingenu 
What we 3 8 suggest, > ie absence of a better 
be provided partiall 


pote h same . incipl bein 0 in far- 
nishing a flower-garden as in embellishing a drawing. 
room. Suppose, for Rae the . to be laid 
ont and permanently planted evn ae se and 

uch shrubs as are intended to remain immovable ; 
the fixed found of the widen ere this be 


laid without — trouble than 


most ee of m 5 A a Astri riani peg te į | manuring, from time to = h sie ith 

ane 8 has just reached us in a letter from tha 2 the a and suffer in consequence. And 
on es —— — may be done to a cate: extent than is su 
Tun bee ed of a new hardy evergreen tree pied r example, thrive best at the 
into this country is an event — -á seldom noticed ! foot of or bushes, provided they get sunshine 

at rst in the manner it This arises in the first six months of the year. So do Violets: 

from our being in general inhiperfectly acquainted | an the blo f Primrose’ and Violets is 

with the history of such plants; and the result is| gone their foliage has its ate All sorts of iets 

8 ulbs, Dogstooth Violet 


survivors is, or 
8 


ou 
prehension We allude to the 


ars 
uF 
hn 
le 


‘or 
UNEBRAL Err 
This plant wa . fit mentioned in Lord Mac 
owing in a place called “ ‘the 
a, nest the wok of the thundering 
hol; Which is 


chan is ever known in Engl The plan 
in this province consist of hardy n 
Eii, Ashes, Willows, — 


Elders, Sophora 


become almost extinct, — * constitution of = the 
the 


t, a 


aja 


mall e 
orthern — one reo? — 


ay stand between, and when their foliage is dead 
= ete neigh bonrns plants, if annuals, will do no harm; 
xha 5 but e manur- 


ing wil Lage sp tha 

Winter, when kaa . Rev gone; must be 
provided bor y well-grow . 
ated or otherwise beautiful ‘oli se ners 


flower-garden is not their Santas station ; they 
may be removed by degrees in the spring; and when 
finally gone the whole scene is changed. Violets, 
white or blue, single on double, sweet or ecentless, 
may be wn in the e pots, and Wi always 

in the pest placo to 6 tea the vernal sun. 
ust ecora 


and must be just 
it is transfered to the borders. The skill to do this 
is sma 21 no more than every 
fortunate Poth 
o possess a small aa of brains in addition to the 


244 


LHE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


Tittle e rs is to 8 55 clove 
sho ald be so 


expensi of 
few landed ‘tower ones 
le 


moveab 


will my a fek ee 
require — more than the 
cannot un er 


this in purges: 
answer no — end. 


curious to the 


tanie Garden,” 2 books 
e Nes in which nee will find a a pe deal of 


informa 


ki nd 
we — no “immediate intention of doing e 


wri 
whic e 7 y — 


looked upon 
applied. 


x edging is commonly used, with gravel walks 
between but many prefer cutting out their figures 
n Grass. We i 


ave 

— in that way as 

substance, such as 

sandstone, an 
to 


ook far 

Landes the same . ect as a frame 

a picture, proni always the — .* of which 
n edgin 


of which — Temple 
familiar exa 


[Wira the 
2 ele ver — and its accompanyi 
ſrom e number of the “ Florist, 2 8 ee eal i in}; 
praise of which too much ean har ‘bes said, 


ve passe 


Ji 


of the arbour ; — k will therefore confine — + 


28 
1 
3 


ſace the chilly north, or 455 1 nort 


set, 6 if your 3 Sa one, to fis passionate | 
song of the ee. in a bush hard by 


s to 
| rod: 15 — edging of small pebbles ehiti about a 


8 
a 


and the avers eritie n 
craft upon the 


If y 
arks 
tortion; you will gratify. 4 — Mets: Mach 8. 


and which are sup 
Sapes age — the secon id, 
Pi eee tw 


which Nat 


ase, 
— er gaen — 
tables. 
it will presently be seen i what are ha.i own — 
5 


e — e hav 
a Mar pas been “rial mons 
bring it 


t leas th 
| respects their yt pst 
Translators 


Ar 
A OF 
(Continued fi . 


f 
| Nature, b i the general la 
at | dhe Moe economy 
pec: y 


in which mae 


n the 
hough | the dere, of the kre r 


THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


245 


small twigs, until the 

a risen fe wette high to be tied to 
the plants in 

truck 
en, 


5 ot off s 
to hard 


useful a tim 
ed 12 few days 1 — recovers them 


rn 
oo aw yielded their firs 


stems, plac 
other A oa lavò — blown 
je mottled and healthy appearance of 


a bunch ; this weakens | 


a | divisions of the roots 75 gen Valet, to form good 


* vanity vi 


a mass of bloom en Tonia the bed, without injuriously 
crowding the p -e and about the number just 
sporna will 40 th 


ing fixe 
the soil a little in the spot each was to be place 


n firmly in 
work was done. 
Around the 2 cuttings, or 
plants by next spring. H 
SELECT SPRING-FLOWERING BEDDING 
PLANTS. 


HE foll ty are well adapted for groups and bedding en 
a By Fi udi icious management they are capable of pro- 
ducing * 


een A dwarf, compact, hardy herbaceous 
b — sone — 4 4 it Monson its white flowers 
clear above wane m March until Ma: 
ARABIS re eg 
distinguished from it by its 3 tinted flower. s 
A dwarf, compact, decu 


ec th ardy 


9 inches high, It flowers from the middle of April until the 


eek in une, 

18 SAXATILIS,—Similar in habit and character to the 
preceding, but ~~ — smaller and neater growth, with an equal 
ae IBERIS 5 
genus. 
blossoms from the third v 
comparatively scarce species 

FRITILLARIA MELEAGRIS ALBA, 12 inches high, with conspicuous 
white nodding bell-shaped flowers, 14 inch in diameter; it 
forms an esant 1 from the second or third week in April 
until e middle zE 
Cro ‘QUE 


cona 


in Apri 


N VICTORIA. 7A neat dwarf Seu 


HRS from 8 last week in February until the middle of 
arch 
E DELTOIDEA.—A dwarf compact hardy herbaceous 
perennial, from 4 to 6 inches high, of greyish 1 it orm 
forth its "ively purplish-blue flowers from the last week i 
March rae 2 eos une, ‘32. cy pics suitable for 3 3 
Doronic CoL — À 


e 
n the Soupa of the < pans, I trod 
ide 3 


ay. t 
ote ration § 0 ae 3 2 readily z 


white-flowered evergreen herbaceous plant, growing from 6 to | care 


A nh but the older wood from the ground is as thick 
with these pes) as the 3 can stick, and a 
t nts. 00 


of 
and the atmosphere too damp. "Consequently the plants 
o the air instead of the 


nip 
of the Highlands this spring, surplus pac 
seeds, or bas f 


nt-street, Lon 


53, Par 
= oo. to understand, that, i in consequence 


— neatest and smallest species of the t 
It produces its numerous clusters of mi sioi 
week i il until June, It u 


neglect o 
iok 5 


districts is deteriorating, instead of i roving, ail and 
nless ver. ere es adopted, an 
ben THe crisis of ee will shortly arrive. 
Rhododendron O. Prun m like Laurels ; -< 
now is the fight Pic ae ieee 8 ardeners? 
nicle. A lover of colour and subseri 
thinks the above cruel and impolitic. What, cut off all 
25 beautiful heads, which are now ful pro : 
ity mouth, — 7 Ce gad an example of 


J. D. Ly 
criticising wis 4 t unders A 
any knowledge ei “the: 7 to which the answ wer he 


of 
ee ee ee flower, pr obably th prs at of its — — i'a dwarf com- ology —D eiat Se E A 
. e — 3 
it 80 vd to ** — — — light 5 herba sola D ant, 6 to 9 e hight; observed a letter or two in aper on ye subject 
ut of the bloom fro m the fir rat w n March until Ma the names of App! d the derivation of the plants. 
the al age, euch as that om SAKA San oraumental dealt he ardy y aink it must be unkn orrespondents on 
flo wered ih sete plant from 6 to 12 tukos high, in idiomi this * that our public records contain good proof 
from the last week in April until the first week in June, Suit- that uff Ki Henr ree who was hE AE 
able for rockwor t our 4 ing 8 1 ; 
Iy R AMATEURS EARLY SCARLET VAN Too. Torr —A neat rich crimson- | epicure, eee ear trees f 
sc sen Benes Fata 9 inches hig eh. DETTE a brilliant eff effect 4. France to the N E aa in England. Many a 
asma oup or parterre from th as 3 : 3 3 
ho de- * ub pront — upon the old red one . be found in his co a ing 
s, So as to have ER (Early Tulip).—A neat rich dark crimson va- | 2Mbassadors in France on this subject. o not know 
so by pur- riety, p rather 1 ye —— the last. which of our now wel trees may there be 
t rav Torte. A handsome early variety, mikasi but I have heard a gentlema ply 
TOR E 3 i ne white — colour, heavily | . St ió that a 
esenting great eo Ha aie rich rose. In beauty from the first week in in our Sta ers > 
f the pleasures de- | April until May. aturalisation of the Pomeroy (Pomme du roi) Nonpareil, 
have e INUM “habe: — — The — . Sorters band po of ae —(name illegi (Pair de M | most of 
f season able to compete wit s a nea : . K 
„and have finished planting a dwarf, hardy evergreen, from 6 te 1 12 inches high. In flower the Pippins (Pepin) to this royal ga Z d 2 
ch — 5 from the second week in May until the middle of June those old Pears that nch names. Z. F. X. 
edur YOSOTIS SYLY 18 JÀ (Fo rg 8 oa 3 yeli erred Cotoneaster Hedge — The A year apg is readily 
riments or 33 hardy biennial, producing a profusion of brig ue flowers | increased b ttings, layers, an seeds, ‘ er- 
8 age prea p mariang ee een sorts, microphylla, marginata, and rotundifolia, 
e with no flower-beds to NICA TEUCRIUM PATENS (Nana) —An ornamental hardy | are hig namental, tandard 
desi 


— aus 
ape for receiving an 


“aged Be 


2 VE 
nial, 9 to 12 inches high, 


C. 
a | statement of the 
nable h 


perennis al he rba ac 
spikes 
he — week in April — . last 3 rae 
Ronica caucasica ?—A slender hardy 3 peren- 
producing semi-e —— * -flowered | 
spikes of light azure-blue blossoms from the latter end of 
April until the end of May. It forms a — effect in — sm 
group or parterre. Wilian Wood, Fishergate Nurseries, York. 


nt, 12 — 4 a Bat sree 
produce 


Hom wl Aid Sa, nden 
heap Heating. = beg to N bein your readers a 
i manne 


d from 2 z 


C „microphylla, on account o 
The Cotoneaster i is natu 
easil 


s all that is 


a year, 
The eee is the reece tm - an n iron- fou 
a meat in 


0 
for the growth of 
my collection under the 
r sur d my expe pareen 

nt should interest an parties, 


attendant on eee the 
othouse 
, Royal Cornwall Hort. 


-| H. S. Pow i; Hon. 


me a * earliest Grape = 
e lst of Febru 


nts, 50 
use plants. observation m 


which I cea in the pods o 
has this | On the 29th eat 1844 a sal quantity of le above 


p. A strong | 

well prepared E agi tg to their bein 

a the kin ure a plentiful supply « of t 
carlet era ould be planted on 


end of spring, 

of a smooth leaved 

e corner of a sn 
e 


the plan 


disturbed or 2 we They all p= vigorously, but 


was 
uster of six or ei ight plants 


a win red b stake. Th 
ned we, ‘he end of, July 1343, and was all — to 
he stalks until spring of 184 44, 


h 
were taken from 
bg at the aeren — 

the cou 


une t or 


— en of teal 


246 E 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


[APRIL RL Al, 


% . = not be dieting wiched hom The rea al 


Turn Tue Kale plant vee furnished the 
that I 


aware of ; it | gre 


Concrete Waiks.—1 


have seen several receipts in 


Varntshing Sheet — to preven 


num ber of plants fr 
6, 8, or 10 12 into dibble holes ; but in 
was there t udency 


instan 
to bulb. tn "he latter 


could bav et iga tion, as be never called my 

o the paiet, = do I suppose he ever wa 
er ai le hole, In fact, he was a 
— tos of litile or no science, but honest and 
$ — i A 


t rå Swe pg 3 should be called 
e Kohl Rabi is called T 
Baga 


Maring — the bing acci- 
7 aas ‘tbat the p not sunk v wee — 
Can —— 8 e brought to Kale 
ng a number of them in a dibble hole! 
e don’t, ] 


denta! 
m the 


ve 


of the sun 
Hardy * suitable for 1 — The following 


— As 

r this — 1 think that 
ee oil and a liit wet acetate 
all piece of cloth, might 


wer ; it 5 quickly 4241 is not softened M rt heat 


s for 
on 


to 6 inches hig 


4 vulgare, fronds 8 
12 inches high 


P. n ay ron 


1 s 8 to 
— — This "had 
form 
d Brit ish. 


e evergreen, 


P, phegopteris, fronds 6 to 10 


inches high, B:itish. 
P. dryo 
ep ches S high, 
P. calcareum, 
inches high, — 


pria ea 
— 


ine? hes high. 
sia ivensis, — 


+ British. 
1 Lonchitis, ike 
Ane nches high, e 


3 fronds 16 in 


to 2 feet high, evergreen 
British 3 2 


A. thelypteris, fronds 6 to 10 
— e high, British. 


fronds 


=< * ab. British 


pteris, fronds 6 to 8 
8 6 to 8 
virginianum, ae 8 to 14 


. 8 6 
to 9 inches bigh, British. 
0. 4 — on fronds 6 to 10 inches 


ergreen, 


10 to 14 
8 
— fronds 10 to 14 
ne 
B. S. Williams, Gardener 2 C. B. Werner, Esq., 
Hoddesdon, Herts. 


= purpos 
A. — i 6 to 8 inches 
high. 
ses septe 
fronds 3 ag high, 
green LA —— 


trionale, 
ever- 


alte — fronds 3 
inches died, British. 
W manes, fronds 3 to 6 
winch es high. 
3 fronds 3 to 5 inches 
bi h. 
A. 888 fronds 3 to 6 
hes h. 


ine es 

Adia nigrum, fronds 
6 to 8 in — hig 
| 8 aeons, fronds 
14 inch high. 


* A 


to4 


‘idaho — 

Blechnum boreale, fronds 
— aa Ay Soer with — 
eme pra 

er rgre 


ds 6 


ches 

rispa, fronds 

Onoclea sensibilis, fron ds 6 to 
10 inches 

Dicksonia pilosiu: cula, fronds 
6 to 10 inches high 

5 a german ica, 


| -fronds 10 inches high. 


Bulb 8 — It has cecurred * me that gutta 


cha mig 


of prote sting 


eomnan 


yards of w 
W.. 


Peach 
yo the nails ou 
sharp rap 
— walt “ewe no injury. Facts are against studs, | ¢ 
e stubborn things.” While Mr, 
50 sri to studs, I ania put > 1000 — 
pinion, and 1 have t 


wom oberts, G Gardener, Hatfield Hall, Wakefield, 


the Nursery — round London. — 5 than in bea 
ee give a person more pleasure than a- visit —.— rve that ind 
an old * tance, or * 8 but 


o, coming sagt un on b des 


the ends F — — can 
Holm 
Ge — 4 and B 


— of at once a garden and b 


33, which * was turning over the 


so vey be guiar up. Samuel 


s, 14 Chater: piee Cit 
.— Rapin s 4 (a of England,” 


other day, con- 


written by some 

after, 1 could not avoid 

2 — — 
Ther 


ine. § ng 


wer in one’s possession mr is pa agi in Wal 


are partie 
por , with 8 


and havi vin ** 
d their time s wad A ka 


h co & ; 
. 8 3 than he ex 


o give a friendly hint to persons who ent 8 
al ie. ry E 
on 
any of oe the oo j 
g les on th 


. in a homne of pit or pie heated * 


Polmaise ove. 


with the view of killing time, as they b 


— t collect som — 

all the ensuing revolutions o 
mt fio ow — hia such i nee can extract provision from again nst 
t exi ies 


w 
n a proper 
any thou 


will te tound the 


faults 
which have been be the largest ores and 
t—which most mi 


auty a 
ustrious Sony 
| examines into n that co 

are 


sweetness, nor can one 
with which the bee 


one does 
may support o one 
n 111. 


SPPE E r cultivation of a flower garden Í 

pe discipline k he ae that it is almost im nthe 
ih ae that any er 

to | 


a that eae a * > Attention 
at care 


most 328 to 


We b 
d the ne sca and ied 
ce 


ne pala 
t tota, redeunt ten, mane, 
um cum 


ove Cæsar habet.“ 


core for 1 lon 


“At length, one 


12 in 
W 


— 6 to 10 
I 


h 
A goig Nur l; aa failed. 
N. W. 


the seed 
V: 


a very indifferent poet, had the im 
which gained him great favour a 


npudenee to own tag T 


This being a great m — s to "Vi 
the same gate these words, st he het — 4 
os, non vobis? I glb “for others — l 


whic. having attempted in v 
— line prefixed, thus filled them aie 
* N 


vata 


= are attributed. My reside S.W. side 
of the parahin, — with the 1 Mendip and 
z W ent. M limestone 
incorporated ane iron to the apex forms the base, 
etween the valley 


uently eny 
tol 8 ina direct ling 


ina 


h 
field tee nearly 
salin fro 
di asail out 6 n 
underwood, rising perha 


gh 
abies a quarter o ps 200 * 
lower in * valley, a r rich sandy sal, in one of 
the coombs of t e mountain, I obse: dense 
fog slowly 1 
which I { 


were several sorts, and by its slow progress it hung 
about the trees, with an abominable stench, offending 


ent ‘to — tenant, who was in the 


bes upon search 100 yards mei oA iem 
= me: ne pong — 22 if they 
been bur * 5 field a paa 
the 8 was ari akin and the 
During this season we had many such fi 
toes were worthless and the Oats smutty. The 
a 


erim 
1 jov Gb Mi E i 


apart, between 

$ eab 

ws dug, and planted th 

tatoes, papanje 
n as 


ree 6 tons of 


day in July, I got men and too 
„and, as it was 


owth, and left untou: 5 
esh planted rows, ris ‘Diep ba 
hers. And no for the ni 


uenza, and I 
ppe Cottrell, Rhodyate Lodge, — 
FFF 


ocieties, 5 
Sears 
mh 


Few aner 30 


fellows. 


THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


247 


1 produced was a re- 
amen pe ETPA from 
e some 18 


. a 

— This being the height of 
a various groups of this useful 
ited. Mr. Henderson, of she 


a 


tii and Andersonii ; and along with 
1 of the red-flowered Heemanthus 


3 
„ but 


— n looking s 095 of 
Potatoes, e tree f 

— ree from ty Soh 
Torbron, n, gr. n 


e the dead leaves They 
their soil sow their balls, and 
ince. 


run into the 
that the Auditors’ Account was 


2 3 s Gec 


dling o 


named Hun 
ch 


rser mong 
acer wavioties were 
ll 


dæflora, t ily g 
e- Hemet — small 3 = snowy globes of t 
rming a fin rast 


Young, of Camberwell, was second, and 


Ham 
third. i 


in He Numer apes 1755 neh ee Paley s 


9 ‘lant k, the pretty yellow flo. rered egen 
brachycer Of specimen pla Bruce sent a 
profasely: blossomed Erica 3 for which a first 
prize was awa r. Wood contributed an inter 
esting collection of We 

up of CINERARIAS was sent fr 


of Rhododendron campanulatum, one of the best of che 
bard 5 kinds. To in 1 
ninjured, this, — others of the finer 

either be moved under glass — 


co or it must be protected by 
it grows, amr 


the flowers u 
Rho ede endrons, must 
the blossoms be egin to 


— 


ith 1 ie 0 in skis bee 
sveci nens of f Cereus agelis and Malle soni, which, 


The best gro 
Wellington 2 Nursery, by Mr. Henderson. 
prised Rosett purple; Consuelo, blue ; Alboni, white 
Ww 


e best flowers ex xhibited ; Em 
crimson $ and 2 Vernon, purple. 
all nice dwarf well- — 
— spoiled by tray eg was su pli ed by Mess 
rset aio upe Besides aei groups of a er 
Messrs. ee Pond, and Mocket. 


the 
awarded to Mr. Holland, of Middleton, near Man 
rge Beauty o of En ngla. 
and Pearson’s Alexan tard 
fae pair of AuRicuLAs, Amateur’s Class, Ist * e to 
Ginger r, Esq., Maid ail with T aylor's Glory a 
J. Chapman, Esq 


of Eur 8. 
uke of Welinston, fon, R ing- 
o Mr. gee for Unique, 


and Alexander ; 3d,t 


“er 
ne 5 — . “Duke 
r. Bushell, of Kennington ; — 3d, to 


Nurser 
lane, for Unigu 
lington ; 2d, t 


en’s Class, Ist piane 8 
or 


of 2 ante Za — , Op 
Model of Pertect ion, Sup ess — Norfolk, 
Commodore — Princess, "Example e Mrs. 
— — The ver; 3d. Bragg, 
— ih rs’ Cheat, 21 ee se prize = 2 
kann, for — Mary Jane, Mrs. M. ton, 
Miss Ed warde: Constellation, Sayre, ines | 
P ore, Alm 


LS o 


Over, 
Harms, Esq., Bri —— poii 

— to pane atest Bs and Son, for 

a ——— named Conqueror, a clea 

variety, and one which — to be a ‘wie l 


Stre at- 
to H. 


n flowers, but no 
o Mr. Ke 1 of Stoke | 


— — 
e le 


Car 
variety, white 48 5 re pa 
also 5 rde 
Abdalonymus ; = Mr. 
oe lilac tinged white, with a 
— wit 


a 6 


Gai 
which no awa 
Kendall’s Queen of we 2 — == et and a Pansy 

. shown by Mr. Bragg, a 
owy 45 . — and purple. 


Garden Memor 
3 Nursery, Kin 


a 
N.— Since w 
- visited eats stove 


ates, on which the 
ined from 4-inch hut- water pipes, which ru 

* se under the This house is gers 

re. |oeeupied — aie — are pretty ay a y cul 
another Age oe . house, besi: 

g filled ionable tribe of paar 

doubt 


sla 
obta 


th 
in blossom, 
lants of. 33 
managed and pretty 
he 


ink fi flowers 


ciall arked several 


and an 


se 
rpad bell flow 


nd, e. ess 80 
n 


ickson, e. lane, for Aurieulas, — p 


but it i 
fine 


h the 
| eart 


as to tops. Am 
this pensable, and, in tee 


So 
f 12 il ry pg 


plan 

1 were grafted ov ei stems, from 

ot C. speciosissim 
= on pce 8 


uses, 
ô Ta high 
ported by sta 
horizontai trellise 
stem 4 C. fngelliformis, — 
ava ay, whether in bloom not, 
easing Pe — which is moreover heighten 
ing on the o top x all a little ball « 
é € 


t increased T 
t, and even these are often lon 


ursery. replaced by 
larger and much finer house, which is now 3 built, 
and re aa mb ad ing 
2 one of the 
whose ie 


that 
n D. Tee for this Daphne, the 
latter — apt = cank 
n grounds v we — d fine plantations of 
also of 
m 


FE 


s, many nice your “plu of 
“iv i is found 3 strike freely 
d remov 
ares emcee ‘call callo 


is the case, 
thes sucker is 
s way as handsome plants are 
eed, 2 plants of this 
rsery v ere much browned 
weatier, and the same thing Be ns, we 

believe, in other 1 opini 

ut Londi 7 5 


rfectly hardy ab 

Of spring-flowering sbra " few 
Ribes sanguineum, and in the 

1 mis 4 


. t4 
paard 
12 
and v 

„deserves especial u 
ts compactness, and for rock work, * 
recurva is suitable, on account of its pendent habit. 


Calendar of tions. 


Opera 
(For the ensuing week. ) 


i 


StovrEs,— moisture 
in the 


inere 
se structures, f pe 
powerful sunlight 


note 


of new growth, a it is oe province of oe gardens to 
be so dire mak 


take care that fuas uld 


each indi» fe 


en 

a proportionate degree, to 

lay down more than general pri 
e 


the present. = oe 

tuily potted in suitabl 

important point is situation, e temperature m which 

should of course bein pr n tot ocali 

ties from which the plants come. 

tage, ofa m deat bot 
ari 


The: sty points out 


spee, for every p 
n the error is nine on 
e plants are at crow 1 it is 

8 deen 0 
ended to in Ather ee 


if he. 
sible T iake 
well they may be a 


* 


duein 
, n> as the hes 
tee u war 
ac 


m, any in ant whit 
5 a moister or 


one form h the round p 
of the 


hrough. 


tion = the pa a the 

grow 3 

on calles will require daily a 
t the w 


andely ce be 3 
a) ten 


G > 
248 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [Ashi wt 
U 
D ows. On the other band, we do not misshapen which will often happen, they must Oe ra oon Notices to Correspondente, 
lan to the tender young grow out with a very £ inte eee | er urge en bes l te be und 
11 . —!T! dy ra ya We 
f them and preventing their progress ; and | other, a l ball of cotton wool, the size of a pea, may but we cannot consent to the Ta — ot me ‘our coluna 
the pleats, expecially of delicate species, toon acquire a | be p tho upper @ stem ; by which | Azanis: F @ G. Arabis a very pretty pink Sowers 
stunted appearance. We prefer allowing the points of | means they will bekeptseparate. Where seed is an object, caper rs bienni * we never sa w it in cultivation — 
the of kinds to keep from 12 to | the flowers may be cross impre ated. It is not advisable 9 — 8 annual frean the — oss 
19 inches in advance of the tied-in portion, taking care, | to cross a grey, white, or green-edge x 3 Ann of Aubrietia 2 mR pe, with the 
t ly bug, scale, | self-coloured one ; it a an to have Alpines, Boo No boo give you the informati 
ane one plantgat 28 . N 2 or Auriculas with ellow centres and shaded margins, — Martius’ pend po „ — Natural — 
with frightful rapidity at and it is ne ith the gene lection of sorts; as they are apt jn Rivers and Suoni k A A asa: phe ed 
: rig gr a her al to keep them in | to deteriorate the offspring or seedlin OLYANTHUSES. | volume. nm 
2 —Save any extra fine seeding br, ie be and) en g f geg orc e Bal 
FORCING DEPARTMENT. cross them with the finest named sorts ; keep r mals EEEE tree eee r 
mnn lb DEP ancing pera- | and frames free from slugs, which at this time of the ts h — en — — Bord ig r ee — — 
ture may from 60° to 65° by 0 Take | year cause m havoc amongst the flowers. hey —— 1.— 1 OC and He diner: They like warmth ah 
weather to close with d heat, entra with a small quantit 8 bran placed — 3 3 eunshine when th 
advantage of fine weather a goo may pped q y ood, that is made, and thete ower bude u 
90° to 95°, and apply copious syringing all P under a tile, supported at each corner small stone, poe eats. te gradually hardened = by Placing them are set, 
is b ripening their | so that they may just crawl 3 1 cooler situation under glass. afterwards b 
fruit. the s of the frequently, and H Y FRUIT G@ plac gesida ut of do ors are weeks, to hort pe tae 
see that it is sufficiently moist beneath the surface, as] Disbudding wall trees wi yá be the principal work in 8 pce 1 t up and mix cant 
the frequent syringing will give it a moist ap nce | pnas uring the next few weeks in this department. | obun IN CABBAGES : Wend eek E 
without ting sufficiently deep to moisten the ration should be patentee gradually, removing | bonate of potash are largely used a against the club; bunny 
whole, Viventes.—Attend 1 ng, and in foreright and back buds only at t the first exam ination, | are not acquainted ‘with the effect of nitrate of potash or * 
* onal houses, g W ere| petre; and your loss of 2000 cer ae — s by 
pei = grym — — to ke p | the walls are furnished with projecting coping or og a ene ea “a opr SS — 
o as much use 0 * e 3 
aa n inadha the ten Pgo posse size of Pe eas, | weather-boards, the soil at the foot of the walls is | Panne Sre KORPI kinds ‘of Damsons. The ong 


BACH-HOUSE.— 


quantity to set, as it is 35 nn 
after danger of — ie 
as soon as th aii ts e blossoms 
to expand than 5 . — fete — females 
Frencu Beans.—Let hav 
water, and ongs 

lar favourite 


ee 
pa bee used * it as a i 


; cn, ply 97 — 

— ee is in the — of of the ho 

to those . u —4 which the sun desi | 

; the fumes arising th 
nnn 

LOWER GARDEN AND SHRUB 

As the planti — 

attention should be 

st 


rom are destructive to 


and 
to it tales saa veh 


prove | workin mem 
„ a ea 
mo- 


n examination it is 
found to be so, it a 
a 2 affords an excellent harbour for 
e tw ose 
it. en isbudding, or otherwise 
t wal mgm avoid as much as possible 


ed along a 


‘gn tig work a en 
ir | compression of the sm and 12005 no 0 litle to 5 comfort 
be of the workm s we ow commencing 


—.— — waspa, 2 cannot te — hin commend the 


others ; we pay ld. a hea 
caught i in ee — — this time to the 
in every one of whit = = oiy of a nest is destroyed. 


the various 5 5 4 T g S ground the soil 
Weard them should be loosened, to allow their roots to 


some time on the 
st which the soil has 
sie uce, as a ey, 
n the 
— 


roceed 
ery trench di ete e 
leted, and the walks &c. put in respectable or pieri Sow 
der for crop 


60.0 
tatur. 28) 60.0 | 37.5 | 
The highest temperature t 
or ——— on the 25cb, 1527 —therm. 25 dez. 


i 8, 
in t temporarily planted in frames g plants of 
of t be an advantage to give the ca- er sowings, to preserve them from slugs. En- 
sional watering with liquid or guano-water, to | courage the growth of a toes in a warm frame, and 
p them in a healthy state till they can be put i repot them as soon as they require it, that they eee pe 
open ground, If are permitted to become | strong forw plants for turning out as s 
stunted in their growth, it is not sy to induce | season will gom; with our short summers = sis 
inds to n, specially if much dry | searcely too early . these plants. Repot Capsi 
eurs at out fr and | cums, and do not allow them to flower till they have 
snow, within week, show precarious | — good plants. Prick out Basil, Savory, &c., from 
th: nee fill- | the seed pans into boxes or frames reparatory to their 
ing the the future occupants being plan a 
of ts beds will be much benefited if the i in Sine oa — este wid cae scp anal aoe 
terim be employed in turning the soil over again and | to t T si vanta; i 
gain and | tot ; the advantage of raising 
ie new surface to the influence of sun and | the sowing the in the open air, is 
that at 
for reg in pots, should now be planted in a good | according to their sizes, inf dy this method the df. 
be rao ar — n, where the so po Agere’ rch hone 3 rthing up plants grown on the old method i 
e muc i 
cee E — to form their gro the open plant Ay 9 8 8 re 
ground, and assisted in summer liquid ure. In j near 
Se ie rm localities, N iit À é 5 W 
autumn flowering plants, if turned out tate of the Weather near London, for the week ending April 19, 1819, 
against a south wal: | Hare g dy ann 8, „ observed = the += 85 
m. ie. be pricke d out into fe om fran on to ï Moon’s AROMETER. THERMOMETER 
stren shen a hi before are removed to . — Ee 22 ee, e as 
“Hower t _ sowing of annua nless | Friday.. 13) 19 29.341 29.218 51 720 S.W. 22 
already done, should be immediately attended to, if they Sand, 1 ¼ Ran |228 93 | 32 | 33 || sw: || i0 
are required for ing; it is a good plan tosow | Monday . 23 || 29385 | 29-719 || 50 | 34 #20 || N. 20 
a Yow patei of eet 3] 1 „ % B j| 29776 | 29.718 |] 47 |23 |360 l| N.. loz 
7 patches i y ring kinds once in three | Wed. .. 1s} 2 29.921 | 29.461 }} £O | 32 | 41.0 W. -28 
weeks to theendof Jane, by whith & sucecssion of  gniety Thurs. . 19 2 DA | 29.204 39 | 32 |355 || N.E. 45 
will be produced t the sanimer and autumn, | Were: r | asos I| wes V0 | 398 — 
X WORST PLOW OWENS. F 
18th April, co othe Seedpeer! e ‘groin is now, the — . — — 7 * night. 
ght there has k appar IW All . = 1 Light e st clouds, wit th cold dr {with em in afte 3 . — 
hay geod frost. 1 et > ite wi tr tags 5 
e taken care of their Tuli nied well sewing 3 Wind, meh ing ans aa they fel y fells cloudy 2 uae 
€ ended 
with mats, or in fact anything to counter- State of the Weather at Chiswick durmg ae 57 5 mare ene the 
rost ; $e Sea froth the ensuing week, ending April 23, 1839. 
so weather, that F 
ay have yet it which, will seriously | An Hi FEE if Years Quantity | 1 
risi : ty weather it is advisable | ee Baines. 855 ; 
not to be in too Š 
Tali —— 1 Nen $0.3 | 305 | aog) 12 0.32 in. 3) 6 11417 
0 S; as » 38} 699 | 39.3 49.1 13 052 11405 245 
by thawing i Tues 3) $39 | 37-4 | arj 10 055 |32 é 2| 1 
awing too quickly, | Wed. 25| 88% | 39.9 4% 10 140 2 2 6 12 
require more | , far | g4 | is) a dor Jaaa mra 
be | *atur. 2s 375 oo 2 


he al —— se ea the Fath 


mon,* 
wee JC. A nice dark flower, 
e me 


: MB. Th 
9 cultivated about London is roundish, mi a 
obovate. The figure you have sent corresponds with 
= 5 1 
Long Damson. In escriptive Catalogue of Fruits 
published by the Horticultural 3 ana of 


if w = 
the Damas prunes of the 2 9 both 
and colour, Any small „id Plug 2 be ealed a a 
or, if round, Ce — e. The name was fi a Dat 
Dam scen wot them had pee bly been raised ori. 


ou value, the fluid will kill fungus, i — eggs, and 
at is a ire fungus in an herbarium! We 
of the Primula 


ar vo. 
never saw MUA thin 


A friend of mine used to 
fatten. aarp for table, res 8 Pen flour in pore: 
which the fish will — and thrive upon, oa the 
pended by a bit of stick, or 

GREENHOUSE PLANTS : Young Amateur, Next w wak 

Guano: John Fryer, jun. We hav 
5 ah are adulterations 

stalline masses 
plasty of 8 se aud 


were 
cogadh — the guano beds. If you deed Tarasi — 
tion you st have the masses analysed, an office we 
undertak Pug 
Kew: —— We cannot 5 


: One-sided statements carry 

conviction to our minds. Th 5 of fines is 
equitable; if the principle is bad carried out, that is 
another Gen 


: Questio vexata, Frequent rolling is not injurious to 

rass lawns on damp clay soils, The oftener they are 

lled the better, except in frosty weather, 

LEAF-MOULD : R P, Wa fe ut tree leaves sem make as 

mould as other one provided they are suff 
What is the differ 

Liquip MANURE : 
in small — 
use wi ith c ution, 


leaf. 
rotted, 


Bae -Allow it to clear itself, and then ute it 
Fowls’- dons water is strong, ‘and must be 
Tr 7 effect first on some pee which 


ronia semat 3, Boronia. anemon 
NURSERYMEN: 4 R T. We ha forgotseh it, and thank 2 
the e er, which shall be —— by neat week. 
* : mastic: Freche and will be 
‘noticed next wee 
POTATOES: A = Dr. Klotzsch’s method is a failure, as mè 
anticipated w. it was made known. 


OTATIONS oa of the People. idale deaa ‘a rre 
are essential to the meaning of an auth 2 . 
ated; if wA roe — embellishment, dane is 


o be musical becaus 
r for 
Garbe: 4 Conse tant Sub, Ceylon seeds, if of — 


nials, may be treated as Balsams or Cockscombs. 
Bandekoi? Alligator Pear is a great — ree, 
either are 


—.— Are Bee 


and the Custard Apple is another = 
trouble of so 5 u aa 
e ta ot 

STRAWBERRIE er V. Pla cing them on shed had 


r 
the evil; they have gone blind because they 
touch bottom- heat. 
SWINDLERS 
vehicle “of 3 


whether there ies aes ig Feng 
as du — ng the last week for the — 
es of frost on the 18th inst. at 


Larch should be 


point 
1 t the aon 1755 
e ciation 

Topacco: r view of the matter W ce m 
of our volume 810, to whieh be be fee eh 

hod of cultivation has been often expl — ane 

page 656, 1844, and page 660, 1845. big doubt 
tagers of growing obacco is open han ih. them 
— 4 can — buy a worse article than “ 
selves prepare. $s. ôd 
REE Rom, The price of this work is reduced to $ 22 
ree), to be had at the Office of this Paper, 


: Emma hs 
on without 8 and then ck ig S 


to adopt the aie of clo 
winter — Ke and then Mid u may console y 


or no dama K 
ina 
SEEDLING FLOWERS, ho colour ver 
— D R, Much too small, an — 
shaded i 
1 ' 


let; good in shape and 


P 


Ae seas ot allow this Paper to be 3 fh 


here waf 
ee 


ou should have allowed a ever oe es a 


The p can a 
as 


: Inquirer asks “We sho E eal 123 = : 


55 


TAN | GUANO ON SALE 


NDON ; 


3 — 
is, 10 
ee 80 SONS, LON IVERPOOL; 


» 60. 


prices, 7 it from the Import 

ee. 
MANUK URE, z T er 10 9 
marx OF FEME i, 700 

1 COPROLITES »» 5 (i 2 Dock). 
3 


97150 =p TH 


AN EV 
GUANO is rent chem per to and 6 


Sr 


—.— 
coe ne bent Peruvian Guano, a and 
. Ifa quantity is taken 


a road Place, Kennington, 


bi 
basen ae le, Cpt Gapha: 
ND OTHER MANURES. 
. a OUAX 0, of the finest quality, direct from 
hates SODA AND POTASH 
tx SULPHATE OF LIME). 
ee 


OPR 
(WIREWORM DE R). 

PHATE OF LIME 7 — bone only). 

corny SALT, and all other Manures of known 


Ri 4 5 Upper Thames-street, London 
—— lil osphate of Lime, &c., will be 
ens 8 postage stamps. Free to purchasers 


1 

URBIDGE anp HEALY’S NEW BOILER.— The 
) above is a modification of their Boiler (before published), 
for the large a Chiswick 
i, whero it * now at work. hi m the cone 
a, been able to make, are warranted i 


and b 
Acco bd 1500 ot of 4. ach pipe. They 
—— — oan Gardens, Kew. 


130, F ee W 


EALY, 130, Fleet street, ee 
ll atte to their method of warming Orchide 
have had the ned place of Waring the Orchidea 


teien, wee — to the House. 
ouses of the follow ing dis stinguished 
of pass of plants. 

) ester, Farnham Castle. 
; „Ladiston 


ae 

e-a le Place. 
3 Us Atratiori. 
8 near Ware. 
blapham 


as referen the highest s —— Ref 
eia of the N Nobility’s seats and pri 0 1 
form he Trade th 

le that at — Manufacto: 
every article e required for the construc — 


. ir ne 


TOL Iron of Proud ere erecta upon the most 
Palisading, Field and Garden 


is URAL SEEDS (delivered carria 


Station on the — —— aan 
quality for growth and stoc: 
r lb,—0s 9d 
andRed Globe, 
n ae e 
„ a 
tee ” 
ij 
120 N 7 T 
aK be 
Green and ies aie” ae 5 5 
— Scotch „ . 0 1 
otch 3 
191 
N et Meare rices, 5 
Fes CABBAGE, 35 2 6 
N H 0 10 


for P. 
ve ane ermanent Pas 


Soak 


RASSES, bs, per peck, 


Pea ore 


6 cna lowest mest prices. Our 
s. Our gr 


| | Box-FEEDI DING, 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


249 


PE Bee tise . CARROT ..... lb. ae 
E YELLOW BELGIAN Do. 95 
LONG RED. ALTRINGHA DO. 3 
LONG ORANG „ 
SHORT ORA NGE 90. 55 
FINE LONG RED MANGOLD WURZEL ... „ 1 
i 


YELLOW AND RED GLOBE DO, 
RENDLE’S IMPERIAL SWEDE TURNIP ` 
SKIRVING’S 3 TOP DO. ; 


LAING’S, MATSON’S, & ASHCROFT’S DO. „ 
PURPLE & GREEN.TO0r SCOTCH YELLOW DO... 1 
DALE’S HYBRID 75 1 
WHITE, RED, AND GREEN ROUND D vo 


HITE, RED, AND GREEN E DO ; 
WHITE RED, 3 GREEN NORFOLK 50. 
BEST RED AND WHITE CLOVER 52 ( 

FINE TRE FOIL 
LARGE GUERNSEY CATTLE PARSNIP ; 
LARGE DRUMHEAD ae AGE 
N RYE-G per bushel 3 
COMMON RYEGRASS ae 2 3 
> 
h t 


e lowest market prices. 

£ ist k now ready, and we 

to obtain it. 
Apply to WILLIAM E. RENDLE and Co., 

SEED MERCHANTS, Plymou 

e South Devon Railway is 
(Laine 33 nd we now 

tion to all par 


RD 
yY Town i 


rE men of education, and men of wisdom, all 

n his side.” Now if he e that the first 
only of this long list of auxiliaries "justifies his oppo 
sition to that system of cattle T which, wi 
such rimed pertinacity, he has 


li be happy to send a copy to any one who may wish in $ 


b 
not in the least add to the strength of his 
But o not admit that the truth is with him: 
we believe that the student of his 83 has 7 
to search for it—has, indeed, yet to learn the tru 
method of search. What we want is the fact of the 


enc . 

s this, it is not in so far as me 
5 and “ wise,” but in so far as they pos- 
ss perfect senses and honesty, that they are good 
witnesses, Those who have superintended abstruse 
and laborious -calealations, 3 justly preferred 
assistants wh oul tract, = — 

„ and divide, eh 5 little in 8555 had no other 
” | than rightly to 8 their task — no ansioty abot 
— result of it and n 5 of analogies aris- 

oh 


i=} 


that our out of oe knowledge t elp them to an 
onstant Steam Communication from this Port to Cork, | en aa and ther ge we believe, i in e the 
Dublin, Glasgow, Liverpool, Lon 22 ee, and intelligent Agent 6 atural phenomena will also 
most of — Pane a Ports i in the onably prefer the laches this: senses 
G2” All Orders above 24. will > — free of GE perfec), to that which has, perhaps unav — * 
ge, by — Pickro and any Station ed by a pre- judgment, however accordan 
on the Great ee Bristol, and Exeter, or South with erent —. ee A 33 ledge — 
evon Railways; y Town in Devon an - nie” to of ts oak 
wall ; or to Cork, Dati, or fbi ae by Steamers. 3 


ORNER OF HA LFS MOON. STREET, PICCADILLY. 
HOMA S GIBBS anp CO., t —_ TO THE 
Roral AGRICULTURAL Society OF 2 D, beg to in nfo rm 
their 
their 
ready — deliver ery. T. G. a 


he different kinds of Grass — which are now 


nd Co. beg to call particular atten- 
tion to the following, viz. 

MIXTURES OF SELECTED NATURAL GRASSES for 
laying down land to permanent ME ADOWS and PASTURES, 
wi — — 2 admixture of the permanent Clovers, properly 
oned, to suit the nature of the different soils and the pur- 
p fete roe which they ure intende 

RENOVATING — denote for improving old Grass land. 

FINE MIXTURES orming garden lawns and Grass plots. 

ae Italian Rye — — all other kinds of Grass seeds and 
c 


CARROT 

Large White —— Os arrot, 

Large field Altringham Red Carrot. 
G LD 3 EL. 


Tong 1 5 Orange G 


Red lobe, and Long Yellow. 
TURNIPS. 
Purple and Green-top Sw 
Skirving’s and Laing’s Swed — 
Gibbs’s — een and Red- a BL Yellow Hybrid, 


Green, White, and Red 
Green, White, and Red — 
CABBAGES. 
ad Cattle Cabbage 


One thousand-headed Cattle 88e 
Kohl Rabi, Paes and a kinds. 


Large Cattle Pore 
Clovers, Saintfoin, Furze or — White Mustard, Rape, and 
all kinds of Agricultural, Kitchen Garden, and Flower Seeds. 
HOMAS Gries and Co., the Seedsmen to the Royal Agricul- 
us | London, Society of England, corner of Half-moon-street, Piccadilly, 
L 


ROYAL LETTERS 
PATENT, 


¥ 
BY HER 
MAJESTY’S 


PATENT peat fen wouka KING'S ROAD, CHELSEA. 
| E. ara 5 nt Hothouses 


for oe s prem: ae — T 
nches wi Fan and: 28 feet jong, bi, pe 27 21.97 
roof, 13 feet wide — 28 feet lo ne ane 15 Teet = ins; 


1 to inspect — Patent a — shee 
ât — vill perceive the v: of thes es over 
hitherto erected, for tere stre roe hakie s durability, 
andsome appearance, healthiness 70 plants of every descrip- 
* 3 2 bei — formed without wood, putty, 
d only about 5-8ths of aninch 


a England. 
— — En zi . d. 
—. iti 4 ngiand. 
1 55 — Imp. Society of Ireland. 
Dr. Newrneron’s HAND Col 
the use of 
e like 
h ar 


MEETIN 
5 April 


May 


ATOR 
it to . son sbandry farm 
nged rake—the t tee 55 of whi 


he | fo . nem so stir it to a var f 3 or 
one which shall pare the surface and so destroy “its 
wee ra third which shall mark a succession o ofi? 


s—o 

drills in the land for the seed rows. except 
stiff lands, and on such we have not — it, we can 

safely assert its power to economise labou 


Mr. Witxrws, in his recent e we 
asserts that he h 


“truth, Natu 


th 
wants to know vieti his cattle lie dry in in their Hir 
a reputation bin Hs bares © wever true, will not 
help the only i inquires into a pas st fact ; 
— as, whether this and that food a nourished. 
t “ Nature’ 5 decision be read in the farmer's 
pers; science“ of he 4 subject 5 
gathered out of its heer history : we follow 
we 
ature is 
sciousness pres 
is just the systematised de edge of that truth. 
Neither of them ave any existence indepen 
ently of FACT ; sid far less in defiance of it. When 
e talk of a e use a word which 


f ere declarati i “law 
of Nature ” describes a num š not 
govern them ; it is a mere formula expressing the 
ptinriestion Pt a a a set of kindred occur- 
rences: and if “ Nat and “ Science ” are to be 


appealed 3 as thagh ‘the evidence of — senses — 
— of mere fact were — 
well at once abandon 


d analogies e School- 


-| lying in a space of a 


which misguided 
men of old. 


If any correspondent then should wish through 
instruct his brother farmers further on 


should in is—the allowed to each of 
his ca tile, ce “waite of litter daily hena to 
them, the quantity and kinds of food they 3 
e 
and 


Z 


and comf 


eet, an 


ani mprove m 
| read the e Andi if any one will 2 evidence 
such as this, let him endeavour that 


tful, 
ent’s cause; but s as he 
— k with appealing to “the sk = 


particu 
te cause 0 
“ Tf I know that my pie 
daily with from 15 to 20 Ibs. of pr sem and fed 
daily on lewt. of Mangold Wurzel, 4 or 5 Ibs. of 

vely, fi t the are 
employed merely y to convey ey tne rah that acie nee or Nature is 

of 
min 


ce 
ea ess 
ot, like 


ation aa a bodil yi ä — 


enpable 
2 
for neither of C as commonly used, be regarded 
= 3 more than an expression of the mind of the man 
vat al rea 
7 furnish such i 


wW v is n we w 1 r tim a a 
iil le — e * ‘his d address, e ar 


tabular form in which the questions requiring 
„ | arranged, 80 that their ans ay admit ofready 


250 


ee 
THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


[APRIL 21, 


— 
— — — — — 
meal, aud & or 10 Ibs. of straw * peg rapidly , of rent 


keep a 
3 1 Bitter be 
N 5 2 é 


in flesh, are 


Bai £+hoir rental 


hardly 
ore in ‘amount iy the ls. 6d. per bushe lof their 
* per Ib. of their 4 which they 
l i y 


grain, sit the 1 
have lost! W 


— is awanting, or 
well as to the 


are 
o believe 


— 2 
2 


Scien 
and the ene 
“4 they ar sche get mjane sly, 


és iden of what 1 
ase in olden tim 

se men did not compare 
but the Wo 


* 
ed becau 
and works together, 
noti is work 

in 5 matters still; and n be ex 
the Pin 4 experience of its 

d to the wale science of 

I to 1 — its th 

It i N not those w intain the inviolability of 
pose cas 


art can 


it ist op false p 
tion of disputing 2 2 ye scientific man 
receives 
uses them to strengthen or to 

be, those laws of Nature under (into) which his pre- 
vious apasia are arranged ; he reads the records | ru 
of exper han vidity, pa: readi 

every Mack phy e, whatever b 
gap oys the ath or laws expressing previous 


wledge as useful 


Wer cience is 83 tS advaneing , correct- 
ing and enlargi jing i tself b new ret which 
e reveals, it is ae p Soat omir 5 a better 
guide to the im mprovements sA which practice is yet 
susceptible. For sc e rola ine 4, * in- 

not 


Mient farmer 4 the highest re 
is 


he not inconsisten 


es all facts most gladly pe e and m 


. | the 
| e is 
an 
do — 9 — to meet their difficulties 


— 


We 
ex 


yt mi ape- 
n for land a general reduction of — will 
8 fall upon the 8 rather than u 
the farmer, and, by t creased competi 
eral increase a receipts will ultimately | ` 
r than o 
= mere cultivator 
n this may be, every 
any alteration in receipts falls at firs at pon 
; it is he who benefits, he who s 


uninjure of his 1 1 05 Who n 
then pa occupy ‘the position in was 
ined, because the market value vi that ‘position at 
which he wil 3 it will then have diminisbed to 
h the usual — ap are attainable. 
tless 
x . as price pe — ‘they 
? depends 
. the r What is the most e age 
pe — is because their of 
— admits of s enue 15 io 322 
chat all rem not despaired even though W. nate 
ot sell for more than 5s. per bushel, nor sic! for 
more than 5d. per lb. 

Nothing can be more certain than that the farming 
We she — = "r with higher prices will not 
t alter the m 5 ds which then 

cost, and w 
then w 


a 
st eae their 
who 


must tak 
mples thos we iedig rich, while 


15 Wya 
e | 1848 compar ed with the Eaha of 1788} 
ld of mine, the 


as | doctor, w 


he pinag on taking a house in the scanty, fig 
benefit of his health; it stood immediately 
e 


r d for farmers; but | is 


e for 18 


mediately brought into play, to work ont 22 
ents, and the increased dema = 


improved since that Uae 

sa pois T 
ahei er tow. 
ever staring u 
well known in town, to 


other day, that when in practice, the end of last 


n the neighbou 3 
. ms the pretty as ‘non laws which enable =n 
calculate the increase of our pe »pulation ; it is a popu 
0 brought from e e, an able. bodied 1 
ing in from all quarters to sup pply the 
which, when trade n * 1 „ 
far labour. Another 1 poudet j 
taken from a compar rae japit alae of of 
She imported into hie 3 in 1790 it 0 
to 31,447,605 lbs. ; in 1835 (L cannot tera ha yt 


pet Sjan when he firmly opposes the doc- | we . — a getting poo 1835, 52,333,278 
e, falsely so called, which may con- And here we must drop our own illustrations for} I will not bri ing forward any other 1 
tra vene she evidence which his experience daily lays | those s anot the er. Mr. Cairn, of Baldoon, a tenant | prove our position, these will suffice. I might have 
before h farmer of Wi hire, has lately published a brought forward statements to pio the several amas 
——— — a hlet entitled, «H : at work which brought about ise, specifying 
* k, must take things as we find t them.” It is not 85 5 eh run Rr An 3 oy — the different improvemen ts as the ey occurred, heit fe 
ar a to alter them ids cite is not a legi-| which we st tfongly peters our readers to procure. It sult, Arkwri r improvement; but this, 
timate 5 ; 
or to eee a dh ee con we to enjoy is not an anti-corn-law performance its title just ee ni ge? es. the P The same 
EA mc Ela ene ahh ganna Se 
€ | have dt Ogress 
9 3 t here. “et aon an ar; 9 8 8 5 oaks advantage at 
ia hain ¢ — — rot mentatve e “ts sole Scat is to describe every imp ent ; science ill 
take things | © eo which has = ractised for | provements ; energ competidor ee 
— -that — em ess, and highly remune- in carrying out the improvemeuts, at 
1 8 ent- der id * New the caus fore us a result nt of the 
modated to them pha more frequent] we Bea th 8 ingle example for whas:part.of the knows: world: hiren a 
to it. farmer has long Sate Marys they ae rie A best nate — for a faithful snag? penetrated And all this not jain 10 
he is surrounded by influences which are nearly, if faul don of details, and thus most likely to be fte fe, bus the work of yesterday, within we 
not altoget her, beyond his control, and all he — found instructive and practically useful ; and a 8 
r himself is — to regulate his conduct with = pot comparatively moderate exten b sen : „ e en ben 
ion to them of the lence of its management, n ade waan met wah a er ics 
Whether the price he obtains for his produce be de the cuties pemer Deity pf e comparison ith | ver. 8 consider the vit in 
these influen eyond human on, Se average o of fi farms in . 14 7 5 h It is g the subject at issue, when 
nagar Sao. of ap rm, and of the methods | statistics been in existence mu 
blaster i pay. Want e b her famine and death of the past two 
I ry upon it this week, but w vise farmers and | avoided, by enabling Govern: 
andowners to es it for hone and study | the ascer.ained deficiency, an 
its encouraging contents that the machinery in existence for collectyg 
genre, POSITIONS OF OUR AGRICUL ditional 277 5 this 
- | ditional outlay) to effect this, I 
RE, AND ie OTHER MANUFACTURES. to tax n t, who are set up to 


w — 
nufact 


my principal Eenh 
for | 


— 
— the ca assign 
position.of — ieulte 
rst, with ‘respect t to_the iron a trade. Na . In 1788 the | = 


their own capital are 

— ith his hare and rabbits, this 
8 would furnish us with. all 
every one, landlords would soon 


* This paper is an mnt or one e 2 


’ Seances and Soxs; Edinburgh and London. 


Manchester. 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


251 


reats bis customer, each 


— 8 of our _ (a ride along any 
12 7 5 evidence); look at the ae oe 


in well ventilated buildings, | rapid rise of our manufactures was unlimited capital to 
ring t nter | take advantage of every improvement. In those districts 
Th nly | where th re no leases, and no tenant right, we have 
; this, ever, | seen that unlimited sapii Top he of little or Ay value, 
l other improvements | for where there is n uri e return capital, 

ar on undrained land, there is little chance of it besides under 
are many other | present circumstances, Ey the. farmers in in these dis- 


ee 


At 
ene 


tural distrie 
of the ate) 
me of a count; 


er 


nt t ten 
he welfare n. pe other, in the ? 


p 
many thousand pou 


ant. I wrote toa fees er who was suddenly ejected jo 
under thi 


him for inform tion 


ei ood te 
g the capabilities of 3 


get retur 


can furnish 8 
n 


n he me e t 
impediment 1 this can — found t e progress of 
ae is is not an isolated 0 every county 


is just 


over physic cal 2 3 ands 
cce 


2 igoe 15 r analogy, if the 


the 

it was thought, a 
in the family not so bright as others, — N at leads 
do for a farmer, 

I will, — wever, just state, in age the state of 
erkenne in the better distr Th 

in d 


ilar 
eae of pasture land in our e 
S no’ 


ount 
of all t re 


e great 
the consequence oak 
outlay in labou 


make u 
nd, again, they destroy the amount 
r seed, the n labour, as weil as what was 

rent. 


intended to pay 


answer to all this may be referred to. Sinisi 
su — as Lincolnshire, Norfolk, and some oth our 


n 

n een tenants, w 

the custom of f the co n and in the absence of 

all agreements this cu 
her 


ancy, I am supposed on 
enefit from the 14004. I laid = and the 
incoming ar is obliged to reimburse me the 13 
and so in proportion w ith all other improvement 
building, 21 years’ interest; liming, 7, and so on. This, 
n fact, amounts to a lease ; it gives security to the o 
— of enpital. 
The next reason I brought forward to account for the 


e 
capita e in the large farm were employed on a 
aller 


ital (which the 


+ 
2 
Ta 
© 
> 

P 


* e shes they have got t 
se thei but gi ve security, a and there wi 


— 
> 
E. 
a 
co 
> 
B 
E 
— 


packs of hounds, in fact, constituting ry gentry o 
reference to capital, it is very 


e a surface; there 
whereas, if the 


ried out—a much larger per centage would be ob- 
‘ning I would j as toth 


| demands, 


certai of a rious 
3 nts of silat ay Sii still m 
fys 


ere; it ce 
ricul. 


quire 
ture in England in 
Then, with reference to 
duced for the rapid rise of our manufactures—the s 


the assistance rendered by men of science. Fine te 
has with justice been termed the most ancien 
yet the mosi ern of sciences, It ha n 


in all nations as a men nial | me 


employment—a drudgery. a un civ vilised co! 


y La vg bow and arrow: s,and take thes 
cultivate the Maize or m ees so that he may have a 
in instead of a pre istence, which the 
rious, m Ia pu — 
thus degre me poa tw 
This is TEAT ane mooted n Who 
tages has flown ee that 
The —.— on for instance, 
manuf; 


will 
first with respect to its alaia, as it pre-emi- 
ec Nn and com- 

Morton, Manches 


Let me recall to 
what on former occasions I had noticed, — 
that the disease first affects the 3 or rather 

from the eed or set, and this is to be see 


yet last year 
55 Davis. 


Maize.—A letter i fae a late number, from 
Tr. Tames s 8 ett, seems to demand some notice 
fro * ven 1 ise that a letter, 
stantially — sam m the same gentleman, appeared 
in the Hamp: shire Kaner: 0 Mar reh 1 17, to which E 


o say now, therefore, =i like Mr. Cobbett’s 
as a tale tw 


a- | fou in 
pee om * 80 . in this last i 


rom of 

though these sorts of 
= at, they are ig sure phe 
some ears 0 
aoe in Artois, in 


pen 
t fro 


ies of these prints, that you may co 
the * vou — 1 the Forty-day Maiz 
this latter has no such pretensions, his it bears 
and it is rare that is 


sida, erates have some of the plants been, that we 
have found m very many ears, each 1 a small 
rom the 3 or rather bo of it. 

small e ears growing thus; in 
n one instance, at Kensington, 
in one instance, — five; and in 


tance 
clum out re one an 


wh sa e grou 


of a new eren ion ‘actures. 
with the 


effect 
day familiarises us- science 


| that — sors 


und, o 
suckers. is a characteristic o as 8 * 
an one head, and as rarely 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Apni a, 


ment of cavalry a yf and their Tails.—I see i in a SS 
w ruled by the | your P. er an article signed “W, C 87 number of 
cause of pigs loans their 2 is 8 
ss; I 8 self, 


ns 


said to cost 30,000 a year; are 
great deal more. If Ireland were now 
il people, — pr by 

suffici 


other day that Bas 


; pig without a tail, 

efect. He replied, “Oh, the 

3 there is the e stump a nse a 
me off either from weakness or, owing to siel 

* s been — s cut off by the doctors,” Bat f 

eing him, and he 


es, yet it is still overwhelmed 
with a deer ber "whic he — d cannot one ere are 
to be found ru pro oa tors, tenants defrauding their 
e landlords, and clandestinely quitting their holdings, and 
n short, vi aay 2 
rse state now than it was | co 8 


e | been an inch 3 in A K* but not more a 
I quite agree “W, that crossing with 
more hairy ani the more certain remedy to slept 
to cure this defect. A Subscriber, 


he has — 

Parete 
ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIET 
<Ly CouxciL was held at i 


h his ideas were very un ——— 
of 2 for he 2 betw 
a o sure observation to 
u doze see ed i 


(e 
— 
© 


ceived with lukewarmness an 
a | often had to s to almost empty ben 
plausible answer that was given to 
by the — 3 for Ireland, who stated, that 
i lan of that kind, | į 


e Chair, Earl of bY bin Sir 
>| Bart., M.P., Mr. nshard, Mr. B 


John 


but by judicious management, and by a plan 

i d, Bot m evils might 

tatesman thinks ev re tine is to tai. Laycock, Mr. ‘ 
ense r. Roddam, Professor Sewell, Mr. 


reign this countr tas perhaps kno 
f tem i 3 — upon this prineiple, e ate pa 

— is not pep sedan as is generally the case on part of which we are — 
south of | day, leaving o out at the — ame time o 
— 7 been — 1 trom time immemorial — — part, that e o set — idle — unem- 
hig —.— ployed to euitable work? The Chinese pass with us 
an ony 8 correspondent the for barbarians, in their laws and institutions they 
the ph ok of a ready | have many thin which it would do well for us to copy. 

; put out of i 


by —f Hee cr pw ie piat witnesses | 


yof practi 
theories of bullock feeding, he turns with And 
to the art of i 


n country on 
— to inspect the ee results of the dif 

systems of drainage adopted in England, took his seat 

at this Meeting of the Consells one of the life-members _ 

of ie ety. 

he following a ee were elected: 

worth, Bakewell, Derbyshire | 


ous country, o 


Kitton, John, 
pe John, jens; S karon House, Exeter 
n, George, Be ecles, 2 
arm, Potter's Bar, Herts. 


mes, George, Brooke, Nor 
Vilson, William, Scarning, — — Dereham, Norfolk 
ohnson, John Godwin, Norw 

teeve, Ji — , Snettert aed Hall, Larlingford, Norfolk 
Seaman, 


read, 
ys.—Mr. Pus re M.P., Chairman of the 
Journal Committee, 8 o the Council 2 
ing awards made by the Jud 2 es 3 of Essays 
. The e Society’ s Prize of 50/. for the best t Report on 
955 Far ing of — warded to JOEN 
of Patriot derea right 

. The Society’s Prize of 20/. tor the 
of 128 Breeding and Management of 1 
Tuomas ROWLANDSON, of Greek. stree 
Colonel Cu 


If no attemp e ma ring more land into 
ry of - | cultivation, the only alternative left is to promote emi- 
ed conditio yr ration 

tenantry, and teach landowners how to be thankful for 
possession of their d 


but there are many reasons why home coloni- 
y 4 best account 


the awarded t0 


them- | tralia, or any colony capable of supporting them, w 
‘tenants equally be enorm 33 sal, 00 — a familiar —— 
whether such a thinning of the people takes place, it usually a 
ee safel — Tike the thinning of = Se see ties other tees 1585 
fae so much the f Lae correspondent, already | i 
— s to. o, says, ‘that if. insti the far: ning avr rted h 
n districts, these were left to themselves, the 
eril wo vil would cite its own — ; 7 es e wo 
either b tion. the 
on of — which die" soil ges ratory yield. r 
his argument seems rather to belon me member | pea 
of an 8 ommittee, or of s elie company of 8 
ers, than to a legislator who consults the wel- to a very interesting discussion and detail of facts 
piness o! i i 
Gene — aa see enqui iries about Gorse in your story in heaton lore ee pn Miden Saind Pas 
: am so R 3 ges at T fel ho had ani which he bound his 
from on this poin t victims; i 
bound to give the results, I dibble Eyy grer oh bed 
years since, and I "E jra I havo a 


Chartists. 


the 
e The only way” he says, 4 of oat dea agricultural 
by red bt—that is, s, by! 


on money, and — enabling both 
pital at low 
e on the culti- 
words, plunder the 
the landowner and his 


mineral strata 

citing the fact that the purest _ ee as 2 

d | experience extended, was deri 

to eee and Mr. Fisher 10155 facet 
tanees un which common chalk shot 

— ntities of 2 or 3 tons, into wells ay 

pregnated with iron, was — 

e 


ne 


2 oe 
sh add, , that mine is a light, 
growing hay. uring the is a most 
winter months I cut a cart load daily, w which is — 
steamed straw, I d horses 


with cut and 


which Professor- Way regarded 
and corp accordant with 8. 1 
mpo 


2 
z 
© 

Ey 


to work 1 5 
— a the waste lands of tbe 3 and thus 
stiz and ith wages, but mpro 


l habits. Pats 8 


-| with a e that 1 


| bone, submitted 


che aa 


with a detailed report 4 any re 
in the application of the man 


om 
8 phosphate o 


Calve 


Imm 


saih applieable a 


eir roots 


THE AGRICULTURAL G 


Miscellaneo 
Presentati m 


with a 


more pailfuls of a weaker Py 
e Coun 


cil these 


* 


n of their 


HARDEON favoured 
to queries, suggested 
a the Council by Dr. 


ipes, as a v very 


n Sunday rags rout 6m 
ment t fron rom business, deeply la — by all who knew 
him.] Bristol Gazette. 


Calendar of Operations. 


tog! MER r re 13.—We have finished 
ing Barley ; — land ried 5 urnips, threshing Oats for 
the so gree tnteshin ng and delivering Beans, carting dung as 
tbe land w H the oe pnan the 
well th 2 ta 
1 12.— 


expected, this has h 

generally, especially on ewes, 

indeed they hay atc 
night 


fr o be con- 
fin w days. 
mitigation; k although th 
hills exhibi 


or another in the black-faces are being 
remove k, when we also take the op tunity of 
branding form “initial letter on their horns. Another year’s trial 
of the ane ets has greatly raised our opinion of — get 
wee 


AZETTE. 


—255 


the oye coil we u we use a 4-inch arch tile with 
ipe tile wi 


ay. We have not yet — . — * southdown 1 
the fall of lambs nior been later than pa 41 spas 
rset lambs are near 
the 1 


3 


purposes, we consider 
the, chore produce of Wheat, and the large quantity not avail- 
able for the miller, it se e a rise in prices 
before harvest, pocket there be i any diminution i in the foreign 
supply. J. B. 


No von to Correspondents. 
rmer, We a ole es in Beans or 
sing t Rus in „Urbe. “The — ats course, you try 


inte: ter er- are none 
ur com- 


wn earlier than S Se er. ee 
y be spread after the first cut of omen if w. 
suits you, that would be the best time you cou 222 
Compost: N L. We know of no 1 pi ee ia in which 
edients are to be mix of th 


the i ingre inure, 
with about 3 cwt. of salt t per ac re, the bette bbe — 5 will 
be a valuable addition or not, 2 ing to its ts qua 

CONVEYANCE or WATER: C M S A ditch with — puddled 
bottom and sides, will 2 it for a short distance without 
loss over a us subs 


Marr Coomss: Inquirer. They are the dried sproutings.— About 


orsetshire terms we have inquired. 
REAPING MACHINES, We poh the history of reaping machines, 
Will any one, 2 nted with any of siti kindly name and 


describe it for us 
Rent CLAUSE : nn 
fore, yearly, 


the value of — quarters of Whea culated fi : ch pay- 
ment according to the seven years’ n rice of Wheat, 
published in the Lon 3 — the January i poe ediately 


h p 
We have — — quantities of it as an 


SPENT B 
absorbent of ouid manure without injury. The Wheat has 
suffered from ged ie than this, we Been nl 
STABLES, &c Room will be 


needed on ioa — of ‘and ant 18 — W 7 which will 
leave ‘Space 1 for harness, r dressing and th 
in a, ah and 4 . by 20, for about 

Youne Cx S “Some young chicks which had 


— fed ¢ 7 — — i ‘ine 
fell sick with a disease whic 
rd 


Pept 
tru thé I 3 3 : 
4 are For 7“ esgarda y young ch 218, col, 8, Une 40 from the 
top, read bought.“ 


cient for mand. 

ut Flowers consist of Heaths, 

Tapte y — „ Hyacinths, Cine. 
rarias, Teopesohinns. "Fuckolas and Ro 


IT 
Pine-apples, per Ib., 6s to 9s Chestnuts, P pemen un Ts 
Grapes, hothouse,p. ib, N toris Almonds, pe 
foreign, p. 1 38 — swee oot ghey 26 to 8s. 

strawberri es, p. 5 3 6d Walnuts, p. 100, Is êd t to 2s 
Apples, essere pets beh, om to 128 ush., 16s to 248 
kitch: 8s ute, ar., p. bush., 20s to on 
— Filb., p. 100 Ibs.,60s to 

— Cob, p. 100 Ibs., 908 to 1508 

— Brazil, p. bsh., 12s to 16s 

VEGETABLES. 

. p. doz., 3d to 18 shee bunch, 2d 4d 


~The Earl at Ty 18 
RCONNEL favoured | T ng of corn was completed on the 26th of March, As d, p. doz., 2s to 6s ush., 4s to 
the inspection & very accurate and | we find Barley to be a precarious crop, sown nothing Gies p thinches , 1s 6d 1 575 22 1 ad 
bebe made under his 1 hip’s | but Oats and a few Peas. The wet weather having prevented 4 hf, sieve, Is 
i = a T skei us from to the fallows, men and horses have been em- | Cauli flowers, p. doz., 28 to 48 piokling, P 
optician, residing at | ployed in carting home wood for paling and other farm pur- Broccoli, white, p. bun., Is to2s | Shallots, per Ib., 4d to 8d 
i had “himself employed with very | poses, in re ds, and carting earth and rubbish into — brown p. bun., 6d to 1s 3d | Garlic, per Ib., 4d to 8d 
Operations on hi heaps for compost, and in other odd jobs. The plan of rrel, p. hf. . ve, 9d to 1s Artichokes, ‘ Jerusalem, p. halé 
isted of a baki 15 t . 8 -_ will engage our earliest attention, A Lammermuir Potatoes, r ton, 6 osa. — ves TE 
3 — 5s to Lettu ? * 
ith eross-wires in the F i R Cos, do., 9d to 1s 6d 
spirit-level, embedded ou whieh commenced with re mont sips e had sown Turnips, p d Isto2s | Endive, per score, 1s to 2s 6d 
its tube. Th ] nen land which was cleared of the Cdak 3 — — ral z amne oe ao a per pottle, 6d to 
3 ois is te cope Oats, also a few acres of Beans and Peas, a dish, p. bdl., 1s to 6s 
am i l Joint, on a very kinds of spring corn were sown under the — 1 — 44 ote Small Salads, p. pun., 2d to 3d 
te a — = — spirit- | circumstances, and that which is come up carries a very pro- Seakale, p. punnet, 9d to 2s Fennel, per bunch, 2d to 34 
The ing appearance. The dry weather of th past mon barb, p. bundle, 6d to Is 6d | Savory, per bunch, 2d to 2 
F d arch seems to have had its usual effect upon the Wheat French Beans, p. 100, 1s to 2s | Thyme, per bunch, 2d to 44 
y gra late adi ff, plant, and any instances the Wheat, which looked sickly Cucumbers, wes © = 5 zy 6d Water s, p.doz,bun.,6d to 
book of instructi 1ons for its | and bad before March, has now a strong and vigorous i | Leeks, per doz. P. hf. seive, 28 3 70 
that dhe cheap ra indeed, the Wheat plant in general, at the present time, ma Celery, p. — * dt to ti 3d $ 2 aay 
and the Satisfacto said to pro mise w for a crop. Th e labour upon the Radishes,p. 12 hands, 6d Marjoram, green,p. bun, 9 ito : 
ts, would vende: de. — p Pr —— be onde oer tittle time — do em 2 Sate ws 6d * n 
a €- | horse | —— is very forward state gen 5 pinach p. sieve, Is 8 
in the most imp rtan — been lost w ree weather since the commencement of — —ä— 
and drainag, e. The 18 “lard the —— ar. Our 10 ave been e oe — sin aa Ou. — re- HAY.—Per Load — * 
n e port ploughing and pre fon arley and Oats, ea: oan a a k 
xpressed ord Tyr — — — — — — Sre and subsoiling land prime Meadow 1 Uai Clover ie ase ose GOS tos 
"Hon and e: planation. A | inten ed for Carrots, w uld ha — na by this — Inferior ditto, 60 ow Clever * * me 
arnock on the advantage but the groun ndis rather too wei when from w Rowen 50 — pha ie s M 
dn deen fi = ing on the e horses have been n employed at 8 threshing New Hay n. J. Cooper. 
of mechani — having threshed out t eat lately, a ND MARKET, 00 ais 
means for carted t 1. horses — “Sept mi lly at w Prime en Hay öst 755 to 808 Inferior ... ... 50 sto 
pe ing * in advance of T mai ing —.— 4 Inferior ditto. 1 — Clover one 
nt and cows, carting manure from the stables and cattle boxes, | New Hay 
— 3 2 1 Our Clove A and pasture land — = been rolled s | Old Clover . ... 90 Josnba Ba 
w oes, good effect after the late rains; the Kiani waa bós -  WEHITECHAPEL, April — 
ithout į í 
mn et A to the nad of | with Italian Rye-grass and Hop Gober — and rolled Fine Old Hay . 68s to 72s — Clover 
then their best than in during the dry weather in March. The manual labour b Inferior ditty’ — 60 erior or ditto... F 
* been, dr: raining 3 soil from 8 to 10 feet in depth, pe w Hay i o aoo EE 
draining in clay and gravel subsoil from 3 to 4 feet in depth, In ne 35 100 


Clover. Weel eee 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Abii W 
1 quote an advance of Is. per qr. on Barley a ad eyontEY, ROWE tase TA TE. — 
— A screen 8 than on Mon Oats ts to 28. on white Peas.—Beans are the 1 n fate ROWE anp CO., beg to call th 
Beto . than 8 oad nd the | dea: rer.—The top price © of town-made Flour is raised yaluable MANURE, which they continue to — tthe abon 
quanti boom Ay nee gp bere Roc rat oh i lower poe 05 r top 28 — | she inspection of an eminent agricultural chemist, — 
a obtained as of late. The minbir Faipay, Arat 20.— The arriv vals of grain from Sayiti equ o any now fered - ertiters 
of p iè rat 4 still it is small, Trade is more d; those of English small. This ca Of Aefa vot köle tosti ana te 
but prices are very ittie higher Lamb is ip Toini, abroa d continue goo ; - g i quence e dere mb, teeta e 
ke 2d. 4 Ibs. more than on Friday ma 4 a |, a ers e n a mambe 
Pare only a fow Calves on offer, and they are not of first of Wheat confine heir —.— to ae immediate part a condilion.” which they can supply M. 
i oi Beann, 810 fin aman 7754 Holand . about the terms of Monda ast.— Barley, | P R. aud Co. also manufacture BONE W in 
8 Beasts, — ail Peas hae rt that day’s Ace the last and fine Tau wurranted genuine, * te will ise ny 
oper et ed lb. d „ 4 Best a mentioned being in good deman d.—Oats conti 10 ith 11 Be 5 reek Sore 9 5 a 
— 8 e S ARa 
Chirana il 


= 8 
hort-horus $ 2—8 6 3 


d 
8 
4 
8 
0 
8 
0 


to 
— 
— 
— 


e 


3 
3 
3 
21 
5 

: ; to quar 88 ana sorts for vari 
i — to follow i up Piet, dung Drak 4 Re, Piya 78 aud soils. 


, 


Wa : i 
Ditto | = om ni4 0—4 10 | but buyers are ot eee päte 
Beasts, 3892; Sheep and Lambs, 7900; Calves, 90 ; Pigs, 250. | to the rena opinion t ES w ety 4 5 a i 5 III = an DON MANURE COMPARE 
Farpar, Apri! 20. will follow the raising o e blockade by ë $ the present time, call particular attenti 
mand. is day" — 2225 59 Wh dy * —— * — but if this be not immediate, and supplies decrease, the MANURE, which they —— as attention de 
* * remain u e consumption may enable |f Crops. 11 i 


Monda although there 
apee obtaining the highes Trade is very | very large Tequiremen’s 1 T price of | phosphate —— 
dull — Sheep ; tye number 18 not excesive, 2 scarcely | holders to maintain e advance, ric Price N. 75 Per ton (8 owt. Per aoro). For 
any reduction is su The supply ¢ 3 Flour was raised here 2s. per sack on the 16th instant, Warzel, and Carrots, they would urge the use ps ter 
bat the cold par pindeng in 7 — — the supply. | and a similar improvement has occurred in French and | sup th containing an in *. 
10 uu Calves, in consequence | American. Barley, Oats, and white Peas are each Is. 2 A 7 of pase and other mineral substances, — 
trade is heavy at a 4 — 1 2 hoer EA m Hol | per qr. dearer. Indian Corn continues in good request | “tne following MANURES they supply on the best tem 
= 950 — dnd 130 Milch C Cows from the home at the late advance. Per nyan Tur ie ot Soda, Sulphate of Afiimoiiia, Soda 
* 


Ash, Tovi ng Wireworm, Gypsum, Sulpharie A 
Liverroot, Farpay, Arrt 20,— We have had very cold cid, Agr 
Best Svots, Here- Best Long-wools. 3 8 to O| weather with much ‘now, hail, and rain, since Tuesda Aani eh Fishery Salt, , Charcoal, dez hail 
fords, “gs 8| Ditto Sharn 3 2—3 6) Supplies continue moderate, bat the seas has been rather 40, Badge stret, Blachfrire; London coretary, 
“hie Ewes & 20 quality 3 i 310| low, aud at this day’s market there wa oor atteridance s z ) 
4 


Lats 820 
Caves 


f 3 a poo s5 ; 0 a 
3 2 | of dealers; uie. ber a were ih rata at s decline of 1d. ORTEAND CEMENT.—Testimonials yin we 
rters prove this CEMENT to ine thie rare 


wor 
| 
x 
sa 
2 
2 
A 
“oe 
4 
82 
= 
5 
1 
8 
N 
52 
— 8 
a 
8 2 
2 8 
28 
— 
-d 
15 
7 
A 
= 
® 
— 
© 
5 
— 
© 
[z] 
as 


Pigs es ood Succes — peck 
Beasts, 856; tami; 5450; Calvos, 285 ; Pigs, a Dailey, Beans, or Peas, 
sale at Tuesday’ s prices, 


20, — | 5 
Messrs, e e — that the market con- ImpertAL WAEAT. BARLET. OATS.| RYE. | BEANS, | Peas | to — aae its own body 


Í 4 
tinues abou scarce, AVERAGES. oe ee Sear: & Wn Soo “and Sons, dune 
RR Mar. 2. . 293 e nt 30s 481140 Westminster A 
aÑ, y 29 0 |16 11 |26 11 30 133 1 
5 ey = ype Ahari pe $ 9 — * 29 2 17 0 23 9 30 11 30 8 0 YoU BRUISE tne OATS YOU GIVE re YOUR 
di with Eo P piepie supplied 28 0 17 1 26e 4 28 9 31 ES? No. Th n you lose one bushel ou 
appien forel At there is: not much. adeance in 28 19 |16 9 |26 5 1 |29 6 | three, and your Cattle do not do half so well,—M 
The following are thie day's quotations :—Yorkshite Regents, 28 6 |17 0/28 1 28 5 30 11 | LAKE anp AT BRUISING p: — 
1508. to do., 1208. to 1408. ; Scotch Whites 90s, Engines, simple in construction, doing from 30 to 300 
8 French Whites, 80s. to 100s,; ; Belgi an do., 808. to 908, ; 28 10 16 10 25 2 29 1 31 4 da ons 9 tien — at 1: respeite Coachmasters a and Brewers 
use hurch-street, 
Dutch, ions. to 110s, — Oh: T. opik o opposite Mark. — 85 to the Blackwall Railway, 
Flactusitions in the last è Averhies, N B. Linseed Mills, Bean Milis, and mat Mills, in great i 
Monpay, Arntt oo ithe sup English Whea Prices, | Mar. 8.|Maz.10. r Tas. . Ark. 7. Arx. 14. AR SON’S ORIGINAL NT1-CORR 
I. 1 | | | i ANT, 2 patronised by “ British and other 


at this morning’s s market 2 small, which | 1 64 — 8 the Hon, East India Company, 


* | Bs 1 2257 Fer 15 Dock Companies, most public bodies, and by the 
9 ore | 855 ey .. ` | Gentry, and Clergy, for out-door work at their fates | 
cad * wep oem ; The Anii i 0 


4 

ay ce of be i be e 2 c is particular! wended as 
ni must tten „per qr. 44 3 u one * -Corrosion 8 par cularly récommende ; mos 
dearer, but the sale was less extensive aa | last week. | 44 8 peg pee a 3 8 goer D R e tor eae 

: ; a &c., work, as has been proved by the practical test 
Liverpool. 1 Wakefield. | Boston: Birmingham. of 60 3 X by the na ch 3 yo 4 — 50% 
urik ; 
PRICES | niais in its 5 ‘ha Wie Ve pave 3 yet been 
CURRENT. April 10. | April 17. Apr 6. Apr. 13 Apr. 1 Apr 18 Apr 12 AEN 19. pa Ae by earthen 4 oe kind hithert o brought peia 
70 lbs. 2 8 * K qr. qr 62 lbs. 2 Ibs public notice. 1 — and „ ba 
a 4 8 + | the testimonials, will be on application to WALTER 
8. & RE Re a Safe. 2 8. d. 15, Tok ‘enhouse Yard, "tacks of the Ba of 

New, red A 6 86 $ % 10 421046 18017 38 to45 41 to47 5 10 6 46 0 6 Age All orders are particularly requested to be sent diret 
white 610 7 47 0 7 7\42—47\45—51\40 0\6 2 6 806 5 bit E Cheapest, and mow Efficient Rosta re 
pte yes —50 0 6 HE Lightest, Cheapest most Efficient f 
0 red ner 6 6 8 6 8 611/44 41—4342—44 TAN N „ CUSTS Material is OR e ., ge PATENT IMPROVED i 
K whi 700 10 7 67 0 7 8| 4% —50% — | — 6 1 6 916 4 7 0 PHALTE FELT. N use, 40 feet by 24, feet ot ha Fa ot 

20 Ñ 38 8 ‘ te, fi Price o : 
‘oreiga 0 ee 004 4 A 038 —50 39—51 — — 5 47 05 6 7 2 ee —.— f spare fot in roils 2 725 nae ae 

barr details t art A stoc 
Rye Ne oy — — — — — n — — | ehvore 88 noca on and C 0 2, 

F Forei — Ai — oii — See . — = chureh-street, Londo *. 
oreiga meal =- — — — — — — OHN YOUNG. p SERER and NUL WIG, 
Barley— qr. qr. r. r tfally to call the attention of Lauded Fraps? 
= r laSa] avy | oe (phan ene ae 
3 ae t the op 4 ‘ 

Foreign... Simoes | SNES 2 25830 — 263 26—25 28—30 29—33 29—34 and Arena * ety Show in Edin 2 
ee ms 3 cly will suit with the — nary prepara’ hich i 
8 6 bush. 6 i 3 hand e k Po wa = R, 2 pote — 
58 — — ::. a gli e aaa — tever bei ed; and, wi I 
reat ae fae or et: Se ee er 
ats- ite. 323s 0d!2s 4d 38 0 85 — 18181419 1830 > ay.— er particulars, y 
Black... we x <= 9 18—30 18—30 Green, ae 
Foreign 22 2 12 3 2 „ 17—18 | 17—18 R. FOUNTAIN, VETERINA 
: E . JJ aoe Eaa 
a 1 . . h t n 
* Bo 348— 34s— = 28—32 — . 36—40 33—38 without dressing their feet, t and Di S 
8 : 961 Beasts, and an Oil for Shab or Boab in Sheep 
onune.: r . ee ee ie | |e 
Foreign ... 24322433 31—33 aa aep er Gea z =12 |t 
i — — — — th 
20—30/20—30| 27 —32 | 30—33 29—3029—3024—30.26—32 11—13 11—183 


—3¢ | 82—34 3—3085—364—3634—36 14— > 
6 30 —32 | 24-32 |25—27\25—27/ — | — | 1-13 | naas 


& 


i = oe aay = in Messi 
7s |71. 15s—87.| 7l 12s aid = 2 = — : aerate l 
30| 283 mi ce | oc | ee = 3 
| 285—31s | 305—335 | — e — — 1 Co., and may be had o ant 
| 280 lbs. 280 Ibs. b ki wou |as 13—14 The terms rab the fekos can be hid on i j 
3: 5 32238 33—40 14—40 TE BBER P ES PHS 
TUBIN 4 NIES 
e 1 
oucester. : HE PA 
Aven Imports. pEr e PIPES are 
8. Ars. thout vat ig on 
=> p m — of — or i aan 
* 6 1 . i pipes fs 
h exible 
Fa e cae 
= Vulean India- ae bber @ 
1250 and roses complete, rès 
LYNE Westen ot ie 
THOMAS | J and C. STURGE. 
H ater nd Steam Pi 
. ä OE OTE GI wi pries cote aE 


FHE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


tion. 


, 38, King-s , Cov 
j ‘apr at 12 for 10 ook, ANOTH 
CZE BWI OZ! 8 1 
ai. Tricho 4 volas, eee oy 
eam ribed), a Lacæna, paan t splendi id 
of p fine Be: feria „and some terrestria 
wes cimens = ited.-May 
r star e and catalogues had, 
8, the property of a Gen tleman. 
will inelude in his Sale o 


— some favourite 
), Den iums, Mil- 
; many of 


drob 
aie Patiora: &.; 
£ meme be viewed on the morning of 


LEMEN, FLORISTS, AND OTH 
501 EROE 50 D MORRIS will submit 


— rican Naaa — 


will be 4 a ONR aeae e of Mr. 

, Epsom 

ARTHENSHIRE, 3 WA 

at Michaelmas, areas 
pa 


’ t ä Homestead. 

hes U ill w nted to a re- 
tenant. Langharne is of 3 aaa to several 
hi shipping and 5 far distant ti om the line of 


RYDE 
e), Surveyor, Land 
s the favours of Bieri . 
T Fa 


Fer particulars, and to treat, 
apply i Mr. — Tiad irent, Havertordwest, Pem- 
5 ‘PROPERTY. — Mr. Ep stl ce 
(of the late firm of Sanderson and Ryd 
soli 


sale, Landed Estates, Timber, Farmin 
aluatio ns, and the inro 
Registry of Farms to let a 


ing, particulars for insertion are in 
ve-place, Eaton 'on-squar 7 


00 feet. ehe 
Baths, „ CA 
Rie, or Wat Boring, 


neat Water, 28 Towns l — Direct 


E PROVED HYDRAULIC RA AM, 
| 3 el oy a Make Maker, 70, Strand, 
T 5 


of all kinds, 


Douche 2 other Baths. 
y hot water, 
e 


Water wheels to work small 
a for the supply of \ avg = Ee. 
apour Bath, mplete for 41. 


WIRE - 
eg yard, 2 A: wide, 


ME NENG, — 


27 272 72 55 9505 
Soe © 40 


8 al van- 


J — 


other buildin 


— this season —— Been considerably r 


HE SUFFOLK BOX-CHURN — First s size, 

mentioned in the Agr E Gazette, Ap 

— ‘packing case, made to er by Jawes 1 
des ston ear Norwich, for 725 êd., h, prepaid from u 

Larger sizes at a 0 increase 


fas 


3 


of price, 


OTTAM & HALLEN, ENGINEERS, Inox FOUNDERS, 
0. 2, WI INSLEY-STREET, OXFORD-STREET, LONDON, 


82 


Corr AM and HALLE having had experi 
HOTHOUSES and CONSERVATORIES made of Tren. or 
of Iron and 


255 


STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROOF 


WIRE NETTING 


i 


SAN ie ree 
as 8 
— 


i Ú 1) 
(J HARLES © D. YOUNG AND COMPANY (LATE 
ND C. YOUNG 


p ANUFAOTURERS OF 5 AND WIRE W ORK, &., 

ARLI. TREE ESTMINSTER, LONDON; CASTLE- 

a UILDINGS, DERBY- Sop ead LIVERPOOL; 128, HIGH-STRERT, 
EDT RGH; an $ ENoCH-SQUA 


erness, 
T ' ding Cheapness 
attracted gener: al Ora a had awar ed 8 the Judges 

i ati 


have made during that time, can fid dertal 
erect rach buildings with é re ony ‘and dispatch, 

HOT WATER APPA 5 for heating the above and 
ugs (of which they have constructed upwards of 
3000), fixed at greatly reduced prices 


to 


0 nd HALLE have on oe at their 
Wins let Kerien e a grea 
> Spa for GARDENS, c., at 


tr pository, No. 2, 
variety of the following 
Greatly REDUCED PRICES, 


Daia Rollers, 


d-glass frames, 
Garden En ngines 


Flower Stakes, 
bo 


Every erwin of Phage oth plain — Ornamental in 
wrought and cast iron, for Gardens, &¢ 

HORTICULTURAL TOULS and AGRICULTURAL IMPLE. 
MENTS of all kinds. 

siae G TRON, HURDLES, strained Wire Fencing, &c. 

Show Roo eMANUF ACTORY, A PAE E A 
76, Oxford. meres: "ieee doors West of th s Thea 
BUDDING’S PATENT MACHINE FOR CUTTING LAWNS, 

PLEASURE 8 bldg GREENS, &e. 
AcTUR 
OHN FERRABEE per SONS j „Slice Iron Works, 


r Stroud, Gloucestershire, 


ing, the ving 
| was exhibited: * ry 25 ep ne Cattle 


* Young P Plantati 
a year 


t e entire cost of 
protecting — with iis Net. It is 80 da: abie that w 
advanced to be indeperident of its 
otection, it can be nave . other 1 situations with 
the greatest oe a Fen 
and Rabbit: 


by a labourer, ce against 
Hares aving only to 
be u belle and attached, ao wire sent. for 32 par 


= yb ing 

et, required, it forms a most effi- 

cient — t little é eho for 3 vidu a jyan and Shrubs, 

PRICES. 8i ins. pen 9d. ; „ ls, 3d.; and 

36 i ins, 55 5 per lineal yar 

Or f 100 12700, 18 ins. wade will = i% 5 r 6 
S 100 yards, 24 in 0 

of ad yards, 30 i fis, mids é 5 è 

of 100 yards, 36 ins. wid 
Jf ate or sie than a webis r caraka, it would 7 charged 


This N 
P 


pervious 
pieces of pict 


yard, 


etting is 


ake to deliver it at any of the 
and, England, and Ireland, for One 


ak 06. gen give a better idea o 
| strength of tlicir Bh race. Wire Netting than by a 
of o 


the great 
ting that 
the wei ight 


ard of their 24-inch at 5 is equal to ge) 
at 9 


y article in the market, „the same width, 
per — Samples for i 

C. D. Torx & Go. m ‘acture every description of IRON 
and WI 0 


8 N 
122 ii HA 


HORS 
X ae 


R? 
22 82222 
E 5 ORION 


NISED VIRE NETTING, TWO-PENCE 
e 1 02 ka e 1 
how, and was 


gayan 


double the q ùantity of work c e tba the. 

i 9 87 of 3000 of 2 — eee are ow a Bh They are 

e of various sizes both for hand and po e L e and the 
educe 


ine ized. M "a Ransome and May, Ipswich, are General Wholesale 
ng h wide 5 ee 5d, versa Agen S r London, Middlesex, aoa the adjacent counties; —— 
strong |” = 6} for Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire, Lincolnshire, and th 
$ 9 Ea Countie 
3 3 : 6 5 ‘The M Spee secon es a by the followiag Ironmongers: 
1 xe * eee W. Drury, Castle stitit; dike books T Samak ee ge 7 — 
il oak: street, Manche ce — applebeck a ve, 
* ete miy wi width at proportionate prices, Bull- ring, Birmingham; n and Sons, 47, 9 5 
r ee — Price on gate, Leeds ; Mr. T. ee 1 Messrs. Youn | 
f . ot netting f — phei antries, 34. Spence, Shrewsbury ; and Messrs. Santini & Haywood, D 
e 
RD * BISHOP, Market-pl D. —EXTR AOR- 
place, | ryn ONS PARALYSED. &e. 
tien Of expense in London, Peter: | | O „RL CURE BY HOLLOWAY'S OINTMENT AND 
5 5 Copy of a letter from Capt. 5 — Ferris, Commanding 
0, Hampton-street, Bir- re Forces, Rohileund, “Tata, 15. 1849 oP 
‘the improved WOOD and —— Horrowax, Sir, deem that Eee wonderful me eines 
100 or Ga aes Borders, Flower- i known aid I take the liberty o hs pehe By 
5 The Zin us Labels are My ing a miraculous cure unde own eye, Au o = 94 an 
ee written been for the last two years quite bed-ri aving — 5 y 
a permanent — lost the use of her legs from the hip J Her limbs ie 
whe" ne each box, including | apparen'ly quite dead and haiti the slightest teeling, but by 
the use of your Ointment Pills 3 pons 0 
8 Deas, (Signed), E. F. Ferris.” Sold 15 all vendors dicine, a 


| 


lon, G. a 
46, : Hortieultural Imple- 
Rog WA William-street, Lon don bridge. 


882 85 


; while, with the peng . of abour, more ` tha an | 
n be don 


a: Professor HOLLOWAY’S Establishment, 244, Scrat, London. 


highly eulogised both for its utility and pretty pene — * 


Tag + th 


It forms a light and d 

ares, rabbits, poe pep and is ar adapted ag pee al 

heasantries, and to secure poultry; and by the galv 17 

equiring no paint, it 48 ‘admirably is training all kinds 

f creping plants. La qua ways kepti rye S 
24, and 48 inches wide ; 


4 desired. Patte gate forwarded ree of ple Ary 
12 3 20 wide 3d. per inches wide 15 per 25 
1 8 43d. ” ” 
my 92 6d. 5 ” 
Galvanised do., ‘oot extra. 
trong Imperial Wire Sheep Netting, 3 fee 6d. per 
Panti yard; if galvanised, 2s. Also oe 
ire Nursery’ n Fireguards, Wire House 
Shades, Fly-proo f Dih 8 — 75 a hey w 
Blinds, 1s. 10d pees re foot, w 
ny trames; Got parities n : 
lower Trainers, pl 3d. each; oe Tehes, 20s, each ; 
Flower Stands, from 3s, 9d. each; Galvani Tyi > 
plants and trees, Dahlia Rods, and every description of Wi 
work ; Weaving, for the use of paper-makers, m 
the Manufactory of Tuomas Henry Fox, 63, Sno 
EAM-LAID NOTE PA , five quires fo 
e size ditto, fi uires for Is. ; cream-lai 
Jä pee 100 ; dit -sealing, 1s. per 100; black borde: 
Is. per 100; good note paper, 7s Pp am; 
6a. dozen; sealing wax, 14 sticks for 1s 
* | engraved 2s. 6d ; 100 cards printed, 2s 6d.; writing cases, Is. 
to 10l. 103,—At Wittram Lock woop’s, 75 
Re ttances for 30s. and upwards sent carriage free 
ETCALFE’S ALKALINE TOOTH-POWDER 
5 ound to be the best e has yet been produced ; 
it co ids, nor anything that can injure the finest ena- 
mel; * he roughly removes the . — and all impurities, pro- 
duces thar beautiful white ap arance so much to be desired, 
and 5 grant perfume ten eeten and koy the breath, 
M.a Go., from the mans years they have been celebrate 
Tooth-brash Makers, haveb . onde p tpsa ss few) 
of testing the relative merits of ders that have been 
Mooi before the public, They h now succee lak: 2 — 
ing the receipt from which the above Powder is prepared, 
— confidently recommend its universal adoption, hole- 


4 Binary, & Co.’s, Brush-makers 
sale K. K brie = Albert, 2. per box. 8 * rhe seg 
powder bi Bog the Roy rms, com 
H.R H. Prince Albert, on 1 jia of the — got the je signature 
and 1 ager firm, thus: „ METCALFE, BINGLEY, and Co., 
130 B., Oxford-street, London,” : 


256 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


NURSERY MAN, 


ROBERT COOPER, 


+ 


SEEDSMAN, 


SION NURSERY, CROYDON. 


A 


See 


* PELARGONIUMS. 
Bate nst left ta B PER, 6s., 122., and 18s. per do 
each—s, d. s 
Ackb ar 1 Foster’s Nabob . ion 
Anais „„ 8 5 — 2 
Beauty of Crogden ie a oati ps 
"s Admiral ... ie 0 Selina AN w 
"E „ 22 6| „ Shield of Achilles... 
5 T 27 6) yg WE Nd. 
n Oleopara „ 0| Garth's Black bert 
3 „ 24 % m Coronation. 
eg ae ee © ea . 
be — Lip a Ee 2 Waara á 5 
» Lay i. one io. „ Wonder w! We 
„ Mare Antony “2 6| Gom of the West.. 3 
„ Meteor pin „ 1 0 Glorianum 
„ Musee .. „ 1 grand Duke Constantine } 
” Circle... «2 6 Hector „n ie 
te . 4 ae ; 8 
‘ Pou np eee vn 
* — e „ 1 0 King of Saxony 
„% Zenobia ae Lady Sale 
Ceres whe the 14 0 | Laneii ots 
Celestial =... . 10 Madame Taglioni 
Columbus obs m 0 | Madelina ... ‘ 
Consort 5 7 0 Masterpiece 
Cossack od 0 a a 
Duke of Cornwall 8 i — 2 
a be 
Duchess of Lelnster 1 0 Orange Perfection 
1 sve 4 —— a 
P Princess Alico Maud y 
beset Ti | Soe sat 
air Maid of Devon ...1 0 Queen neon Victoria. 
Fairy Queen „ DL 
„ —.— . i pe 
ter’s . ye Jane en a 
„ Armada... oy 6 8 k 
„ Conflagration . 0 
pa on 0 | Sir Watter Scott 
5300 iu hes Spartan 5 
„ Gipsy. . sig Ns 
„ Medora 8 1 @ * ae oh 
js MRG Oe | 6° White Perfection 
SCARLET eyo 
fo eae” han je N: Crona, Ps, Se „and 10s. 6d. ee 
Brighton Hero OO) Mrs. Mayler 3 
S 1 r 2 
4 fe — 0 
=? 3 Perf i 
1 6| Prisefi — a 
„ 0 9} Queen Ep ggas 
we 9 — 1 
0 9 Smith’s Superb 
„„ 0 9) Tom Thumb 
Lucia rosea, ee „ 0 9 Waterloo 
GER S FOR BEDDIN 8 i 
Bagshot Park 0 9 3 1 variegated 0 
4 e at 4 — s Silver-striped |., 0 
air Helen * . OE — — ye ae 
— variegated ... 8 55 A a 8 
Vy: . fHower tee 5 nee of Ora e wee 
aa? ” 0 9 ai oe 
„ Purple „ 9 
FUCHSIAS, 


Selection left to R, Coo 
Acantha, Dickson’s 
‘auntie Schofields 


5 . 8 


Duke of Vor 
— Keudall's 
en, Cripps’ te 
Enchantress, May i's 
Exonfeneis $ 


< 


Printed by Wittram 


RADBO 
— 
are to 


10 Heroine, Knight's a 
1 gory Li eed 


A 6s., 12s 
N 


, and 18s. per m 
| Hailstorm , 


| Jehu, tin, fi 3 
iley's 2 
e g ve, 


AH — J Peat o. 

Madame 5 . X 
* Pele eee vee 
Moot Shes Konda“ 
on 

Napoleon 115 i 


. 
OS p —— 


engaged 
Sen My 


each—s. d. each—s, 
ultifiora... 1 6 Victory, Manley’s wi 
St. Margaret, Barker’s... 1 6 | Voltaire, Salter's.. a | 
Valentine de Sa F A AA u can superb, Bells 1 
pa, u acl Gi Youellii ... tee we 
RENTNTA OTT 
grandiflora ) 9 | Mimulus cardinalis ) 
lis grandiflora . 0 6| Nasturtium, double ) 
pee sraa fponica — . 0 6 Nierembergia filicaulis . 0 
Antirrhinum bicol 128 j | (Enothera — ) 
45 ophylloides Pentstemon excelsu 
„ @elicatam . be 5 . album i 
delieatissimum 75 
” 
Fowilii, super 20 Ga 
„ Ibrahim Pacha W Ne 
„ lilaeinum ia . Price Helena 
H ely N . O +» venustum We 
220 a Petunia alba superba `. 
w 4. m Delight Supreme 
superbum 45 elight 3 
be variegatum b — Fa 
, Youn oe ragrans i 
Balm of Gissa. . „ Patriot ) 
— latifolia „ Pet Sup 
row — Serr 10 Princeet en 
— 
a , splendens ns rosea ae 
e t ylla r R. a 
che amplexicaulis 2 Vangu 
eat, Phiox dbaj Tubus. 
” Fend nero 55 — ) 
color 8 
j p Polyphemus lon longifolia ) 0 . ax 
) eopatra .., 
—.— — ) „ Coldryana .. 
bæa scandens ` „ Cordata grandiflora 
One — = = — reg ; F 
strigulosa ; i aaa i 
Diplacus puniceus 75 è 
Eecremocarpus scaber 75 3 esi bi 
Euthales macrophylla € „ Newmannii... oe 
Sael pra. 2 „ omniflora ie 
e a rosea 
Gazania uniflora $ icta... ae 
Heliotropes „ Rive rell ren 
Souvenir de Liege... Ay — — 2 ee 
* Triomphe do Liege 75 Van n Houttii . 
Hatala e — 2 “es Salvia alba s a * 
—.— — fa 5 angustifolia 0 
utana croce ee a 
15 formosa oo 2 Daner 
7 — — a 25 faigens yen, 
‘> — cherrima en See 
Linum flavum ... = : arie egata p 
Lobelia fulgens ., 75 eieriaflora ) 
„ Chalmerii .., „ Graham coccinea... 
1 2 ive ý — 
tens x 
Lephorpermum Citas a ge alba oh 
es Redes “3 se ra es ra BS 
. a 5 Les 
8 A iSite elegans pleno 285 
grandiflora Solanum jasminoides ... 
— ndya Barclayana . Stachys aurantia 
„ alba. Tropwolum speciosum . 
AURICULAS. 
—— rce. 2 0 | Page’s Duchess of Meo 
— s William IV., 2 0 urch 92 
Toten’ s Earl Grey Page’s Lord Hill |. 2 
Gabel's Duke of Welling- Queen of the Alps” ag | 
Hofley’s I * | 1 Britanni a 
elson rincess Cha lotte . 2 
Hughes’ Pil Pillar of Beauty 3 12 Taylora Glo — 3 
l mpson’s Rev 2 
Metal calf’s Lancashire ae Waterhou use's Conqueror 
8 8 
Moore’s Jubilee cE e Watsi Gr 0 
ge annin 2 
Oliver’s Lovely Ann 2 0 Wood’s Lord rd Lase ner 2 
Or the Collection, N. 23. 
CALCEO 
Adonis 8 id Hebe = > 
Apollo owe eee eee Ee Juno * 2 
—— e aes 
— ù $ Lady of the Lake, ea 
~ i pe 5 Pirate ea wer 
elipse rik së Sir H. Hardinge. E 
s re Sir H. Gough 88 
1 udishii .., w 
Or the V7 14 % L 53. 
i AZALEA INDICA. 
a es ener ee E 2 4 
» pleno... Op a a arty Pee 
Aurantiaca, i Pran“ 3 
daa. * cen 5 tes 4 1 
Doubie crimson `” 2 si » elegans. 0. 9 
boa Do : we: vi 
ae oa o, ma ETE ane aa ear 
aber e : — rosea 1 
Georgian = 8 1 wee tee 
` — W sie Se 
stra gris Splendens .. 5 
nearnata 15 Si E IR 
Jenkinsoni... ae Fa — ey | 
4 5 Woodsii 2 
“Or the colation 2. 103, 
ELLANEOUS 


belia rupestris... 1 


d 
0 
0 
6 
0 


eeo 2888888 


— 
aig fuchsioide 4 
ocotilifolia TA | 

8. be 


BIE 


” 
» 
” 
” ee 
„ semperflorens 
Boronia serrulata 
Bignonia Tweediana 
Brachysema platyptera... 
Burchellia capens 

actus s 


Clerodendron "fragrans 
pleno ... 
— 0 2 
Clematis azurea "granai > 
flora 4 
Sieboldii 
smilacifolia 


” 
” 


Dolichos — ve 
Diosma fragra . 
Echeveria — obs 
Epacris oe 
autumnali: 
campanulata rubra ! 
ceræflora L 
8 ns 


” 
22 
” 


Pitas repen aes 
n 8 SS 
Franciscea augusta 
Gardenia Fortuni 
Gesnera toni 
Su ʻe 


zebri 
olosinta candida... 
Car 


speciosa 
phones sh 
agg 


You 
Gnidia . — ‘bis 
a bbertia grossularizfolia L 

Hibiscus sinensi s oT 
ow 


ROCK 


Arabis albida 
» lucida 


8) 
Cherleria * 


— fra ag 
D stylos: 
big enn 


lau 


ontanum 
Lotu tus corniculatus pleno 
Lysimachia nu 


iene Sposa 
| Œnothera pumi 


— . — 
8 — ies 6s. to 12s, 
of Chrysanthem 


sa 
of Hashased 


* 


SoS 


AD 


r — tridentata 
1 en 
Ran s amplexicaulis 


of Roses in pots de. Ke. 
8 Seeds will be sent Sie 


7, Chureh-row, of Middlesex, P. 
TENCA RESEN a 


- A 
[Aprin 21. 
== 


AND FLORIST, 


=a — 


ed 


” Ray 

ndifi * 

J agg onre — * 

Einsen 3p ne 
— 


eee, e 


Phalus e 
Platycodon grandiflorum 
alb rg i 
Pl mbago capen: k; 
Porphyrocoma lancevlata D 
Primula inte si eg 3 
„ m 1 
” pur pa 
„ rubr: 7 
Poinsetti che ; 
iteairnia puni 
Pleroma elegans ES 
rostranthera violacea... 1 
>se 
Ruellia en „ 
a sarmentosa MEE 
Sen eile macrantha...2 6 
Siphocampylus 2 
Silene Schafta N 
olandra grandiflora - 1 
Spiræa lanceolata... 1 
pr oli 5 1 


” unifolia pieno 
Statice armeria la 
„ pseud-armeria 


Vinca rose: * 
Violet, Double Tree 
Weige'a 

Tehoa rolando 


coded kebaben 


Saxifrs ne ‘aizoides 


S551 8 mon 
sero Lee 


. 
us Plants. 


‘que GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
\GRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


R Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, APRIL 28. 


[Paice 6d. 


EX. 
If Glass, flint, colour or tint nga 3 
. 20 ¢ | Heaths, se select 4 
„ ¥0 a | Hedges, — 2 
264 6 | Hints to Am ) 
„ 226 | Incubation, — ported for. 3 
ji Ireland, Tipene ration Of eee 268 
260 a a 1685 ve tows; S67 
253 a E fatten Dg of „ 
258 4 3 3 
254 b 
ass 263 € 
. 269 a 


) ETETETT 


33 


2 2 
2888 2 
Fase SATROEARA SEAR E OOS 


= — — 1 261 mE 
Plant houses, rustic , 


in 
pene 8 Grat) 3 rer. 
Vines, 2 85 we 

Weather, t 


LOWERS, an nd 
be held on WEDNES- 
une 20th, aud July 

Plants in the AMERICAN GARDEN 
e te aaa oth, and June 2d, at 2 o’clock, 


rice, on or May 5th, 


the Society, 
Pe vos. 111 or on the days of Exhibition, 7s, 6d. 
have packets of 30 tickets until May the 


1 PLANTS 


They are 8 bs 50s. 
from unk known — 
L117 


R NEW SPRING CATALOGUE OF 
PLANTS is now 0 and can be had on applica- 
tion to WILLIAM E. RENDLE and Co., Nurserymen, Plymouth. 


(CHISWICK HORTICULTURAL. FETES. —] — Parties 
attending this Grand 28 nal Sho 
„ at R. SHELL 


excellent 
Pack Mates nd Tabet 7 urn- 


reat Russell-street, Covent-garden, London, 
; OHN KERNAN begs to inform his customers that 
the e present, and up to Fixe beginning of grt r brad 
| ite time for 2 ANNUALS out of doo he more 
the fear of the earlier sowing baring beent ont oft pe Bog 

— — frosts. Catalogues may be had on ack 
A "a oo of § 2 eee ish Turnip r lb, 


most 


reen. Beds, erorii Luncheons, 8 Pin — 
— A cold collation relaid thr the da ay. 
charges. N.B. Good Coach-houses and Stabling, 
IOLA LUTEA.—An imported species from Pata- 
gonia. Thislov e ‘ht yellow VIOLET, was 
— at Chiswick, 9 May, en it h * e Ban 
0 medal awarded, cb 1 Moa ali a essrs. lease 


do. 
Purple-topped Yellow Bullock do. 
Dale’s ii ete 

Red and ite Roun id do., c. &. 
Yellow Globe Magot Wurzel os 
Red Glob yia 
3 Red d. 5 5 
per bush, 1 
per lb. 


‘ Me dow Gras se 
Finest varieties of rass mixed for Lawns 
Clovers, Trefoil, &c. &c. 


1 
1 
1 
1 
se 
a 
0 { 
an 


oe * HENDERSON, 3 
ad, St. John's Wood, London, will, on the lst of May, 


mone in Catalogues, which will be sent on receipt of one 
ostage stamp. 
= * 5 to be sent out in 


out — A “Q 


ti am 
7 Baht e ever "exhibited: 


GAIN — “ Delica d.; 
10s. ; GAINE >" a —— — 


eag 
1 obtained a prize at Teddin; n, 
3 “Goldfinch Superb,” 


N. Dawes has a few good plants left of his new Seedling 
PELARGONIUMS and CALCEOLARIAS, which he can re- 
commend. A Descriptive List can be had by applying at the 
Nursery, Surrey-lane, Battersea. 


PETUNIA ELEGAN SIMA, 5s.; 6 plant s supplied for 218. 
— AZUREA COMP ACTA, 55 and 10s. 6d. € 32 > Orsaee at Ma fm 221 1 teh Sete sates hice 1 
x Chronicle, Apr. 14, New Hardy ciimpers i in i pols, including — . 
OHN HAYE BEDDING PLANTS. 1 1 4 S Ax — k TA 3 
AYES, FLorist, Farnham, Surre urrey, begs to ea r gre — Ar eofa we 
up wards o of. 100 distin ae varieties of Bedding Plants Dablias, best show varieties, per dozen . 98. and 4 
14 — of Geraniums, including 1 Pag eet Shrub- vk Pinus for. 
land Se sig and Tom Thumb, from 2s 94. t 6d. per dozen, 4 3 0 rt Bealeas, a oe ditt ort, blooming plants.. 25 
14 varieties of Verbenas, from 2s. to 3s. 6d. ; 5 ot oice Camellias, by , ditto, 


FUCHSIA SPECTABILIS; 58 QUEEN OF FUCHSIAS. 
D SON have much plea 


splendid variety 
+ 8 10s. 6d. each. 
rders addressed to 


APE.—Fine 2 years- 
= to London, 10s. 6d, 


ts of his 5 of Ten New 
oan strongly — 5L. the set. 
price 253. Des — Cata 
Nursery, Ren 


D 5 48. 
= ge RYMAN and FLORIST, 
respectfully informs the 
ait it is his Segre to let 
ey MON “ISABE 


plication 


on 
null PETUNIAS. 
i > now sendin 
varieties 


58. Od. 
: 6 
eee oes 0 
Trade by taking the set. 
poy Sudbury, Suffolk. 
ERARIAS, VERBENAS 
TRIS GERMANICA, AND SELECT 


SEEDSMAN, by appoint- 
and i: 
: nti Montpelier. 


gentry tha x his 
ready, and will be krna 


3 


aliforni 
dozen ; Cal. hat 
— 2 Larpentie 
the finest 
—The Subscribe ber, after 
class of Mf os ona has . 
ety g in 


the discount o 
' and N fies Me Pike Mörlen. 
M Mutlen’s, 6 6, Leadenhall. 
dn Tiption of of the other five 
to the > or to JoHN 


noblemen and 
22 men ahd | in 
i Apton ; „H. Waterer, 
i h > 5 ‘ 
ah aunto 
» April 28, 


it is given 12 DLEY in No, 2 e Gar ronicle 
of last year, It is also figured 8 T 
whic 


m x 2 ager n n Florist” for 8 ast t 
r particulars and a full descrip tion can be obtained. 
Well established plants will be Sret for delivery on and et 
ve Eik i — — May, at 218. each, with one over to th 
trade taken, poe will be executed strictly i in 
the rotation — and a t of such of the trade as pare 
ordered Fro 
un nknown corres spondents arespectable reference, or the oiii 
8 will be requ * without which plants cannot be 
— Exeter, April 28, 1 
NB A beautiful coloured plate of the above can be had by 
mps. 


1 — 1 3 


E LOW anp CO. ua sig the 1 con- 
den 1 
DE 53 „his fine 
he first time offered in this country, 
ntage of flowering 3 ar early, 
js r a much grea of 
i The individual 


` HELIOTROPIUY, 

w varie ty now 
8 e great ee 
—— also continuing 
e, than any of — 

— as also the 
— me violet ad hg 

The habit — the peg: is very 

long co ts flow 


Cah eal 


t bc “atid gi corolla violet purple, 

beautifully — sepals ag) 5 2 ot bags consistence, as 

much refiexed as a Turncap Lily. 
4 4 + “SPLENDIDA.” “This D ares a dark v ariety of 
articular remarkable for its very fine 
habit and p i profusion of rhe a 

hsias named above were obtained fro 
ngham, and the S e 

an 


will be a sufficient guarantee for 
offered. uen of the Too 
8 d out in May. The usu to the 
B RONTA TETRANDRA ee 5. microphylla of gardens), EK 
very fine new species pact; a most abundant 
bloomer, producing the flowers tev aa wi way of B. pinna 
8 an excellent specimen plant for exhibition. 
pla 


2 


; wil 
Strong 


ppan Collect 
General, b en are in free, on 
Clapton Nursery, — April 28. 


arene J. AND H. BROWN inform the — 

Gentry they can jar all the most tne novel. 
ties of oe ne both Exotic om for — nhs 
25 New hardy Belgian n thei 


n Az 4 wine 3 
. buds, one of a sort, Pog ame os . 20 
Hants ne Bese pe ditto * 15 


„ NET] 
each 7s. 6d. to 10 
6 Androme Re of sorts, including floribunda, for 

Hardy Heaths, Kalmia as, a 3 per dozen 8 


50 guate for ering Srognhouse puts poe ms a oe 
ort, b 


++ 45 
4 Choic nas one of a 18 


pot Fong arpentæ, ae pla sis 
HER speciosum and e Californiea, 
6 Beautiful new, J apan Lilies, one ofa i ee 12 
nd Picotees, per „12 
8 e 8 — white, 755 una, and 
r dozen A 


25 Choice unh. Border Plants 
and se gam for röckworks per doz. 9 
d Cal , oo pna 


dozen 
h Pinani . ; 


Fern 
Ciner arias a 8 


a: S 
ee SS FOSSSSSSS SSS coe 


a Mya Ph 
es, and Fuchsias, 


8 
sure Pan * 0 
25 he gg of Choice 9 Seeds, 58.; 50 Ditto, “10s ; $ crat fis 
by post 


Albio ry, Stoke Newington, London, April 28. 


SELECT BEDDING PLANTS. 


at 
* WOODLANDS NURSERY, MARE SFIELD, near UCK FIELD, 


M. 3 AND have much pleasure in 
one Bane Nhe rags ing desirable plants : 
„SALVIA PATE S ALBA, 2s. 6d. each, and 18s. to 246. per or- 


truly be on of be 2 — a will rh ga N in ee’ 
w TA Eperera beddin is owers are 
of nS —.— with a small ; 

wet of tight blast * the lower lip of each f 
e stock of — det pres VERBENAS is int the possession 
of W. W. aud 8 d the varieties are recommended as the 
finest in cultivation. 
coU 2 pt OF HAREWOOD—French white, bright rosy 
eye; av , distinct, and 3 aa Mae 3s. Bens 8 
HONOUR ABLE MRS. LASCELLES—bright e, clear 
white eye, well adapted for bedding ; 

WATSON—most brilliant ES 5 ee 


eye, habit compact and dwarf, flow in great profusion ; 
this is — the An est 4 in its class, and will 
prove one of 95 best varieties for grou * 
ROBIN HOOD ermilion lemon eye, * 
and superb; 3s. 3s. 6d. 


The usual discount to the Trade. 
following are highly aunak” N he ca 
2 japonica 
Balsamina latifolia .. 


* 


es 


2 
23223 3 
m 
DLL 1 5 


5 & @ 


Bs 
Š 


beautiful blue, 9s. and. 
— very fine 

TERT 18s, and 2 x 
— ie californica, 125. and bee aa 
en, Sot scarlet vacates, N name, 63, and... 
show varieties and 
1 ts sors erly We PAT 

scented leaved o sorts 
Cinerarias, 5 5 splendid named named varieties, coming 
to bloom, 9s., 128., 

new varieties of this season 
Fuchsias, pg de kinds, by name, ag aan 
erbenas, the best in cultivatie To te, 12 
n 


8 e 


alba, 


— 2 


— 
s: 
* 


wee 


” 


Feral Ane and ahs w, 


Ceres 


SSeecee CoO SBeceoooooosooeo SOS 


ARS pas 1 


mittan 


je or reference req customers,’ ° 


THE GA 


LVA FIRSH-C 
ted Bom REN DI 
de 

wD 


ASH G Prog 

tee ARP fa or 20 

22 for G. Nars “nine Pomana — . 

SEDDING FLA ANI 

) beg to inform the Nobility, 
d ock 


estp eas 


al E Irsa 


RDENE RS 


ZALEAS, CAME 
Ee a CINBRARIAS, 


ge ILIAS, 

. as, PETU- 
a CHR Aye NT HE 

» p application to WrLLIA M E. R 

pasate 


Our new Plant me is ey ner rae — * had 5 


pplica 


Mi 


and 64, perdozen. 


a de 
urseries, nat oad, rend Welling on-road, Clapham. 
eTr ade supplied. 


Le gree 8. an z ‘DIELS 
— 7 75 following, in good plant 


ch variety, 30s, — basket an 
on. 
ANEMONE JAPONICA 


1111 1 95555 
* 


Geraniums, 46. 
N 


if for 
STONE beg to to offer 
E 


eral fine seedlings, 


ag Tom 8 b. and others. | ¥ 
a TOP J, in va — 
ae uding alba, gigantica — &ë. hastet 


12 85 23 finest double and o 
Mss po NAS, 


selected 
neluding Robinson's Defiance, and other n 


100 — Herbaceous Plants, in 59 varieties, for 


sill, poe correspondents 


© CHICORY GRO 
at reaso 
basning erop. A to R. Cunisriay, 24, 
TURVILL, Fue. &e., Baddow-road, Chelms- 
ous frends who — diigii him with t — an nd 
og support, 
eet kpa 7 “strict — r 

ce th 
Fuchsias, 4 


Si . gate 
T. TVs v bas no h 
raised; it was a ar 
—. habit and 1 


e firs 
. by them the best Tight 1 they 
and 1848 it took five first class 
d other o 


ew | Shown more last seasen.—Planis, 10s. 


305. 
EGA 
* 5 she * ntad te — ering Fe 5 — bowing the fie bright rosy 2 corolla; 
m 6 to 8 in 


nable ces. 
pe Lime-street, City. 


his 


CHRONICLE. 


an 1 si Ce. low- | 


Fae t Foreign Seed 
— entered into for the 


Fur SIX-V SIX-W SEKS TU 
D WHEPE TURNIP et = 


early 3 A feed off for W — 
lso Skirving’ 
Mangold Wari te 
— on transplanted e ne 
and 8 8 — Berkshire. to Joan 
* 0 e free to Be 1 and Ba singst 
Stat UES, eee u eS, . 


| 


ore 


B 


t all e aj eee 
recomm 
unrèy 


them tha 
He now 
lowing List, ineluding his 


pa i 8 
NER.—Beauti ite, tip with 
ery high poche’ yaaa outline, wat very constant. 
hesitation in saying this is the dest Dahlia 

from Standard of phage E 
high 2 at all ti This 

growe — 
have seen. 


and assu 
pase pleround, 


been seen by m 


certificates 
2 


8. 
sepals, va — 


open shows; the . frost 
NEW 
NOE. — Pure white t 


f the 1 til, 


ro 


Post office ore 
able at Havert 
spectable T 


n the novelties of and ‘is allowed by’ all bag 


vessel L 


o bet 


551 ia PL 
Powis _Gaitdtord, rw send —— 
w prepa send | ple corol 
Robina’ s Sa REEI is we 
carrisge paid te 
for toring a * beds ridlar atie 9 15 
. This erbena is 5 4 


8 


ment on 
em ariet, ig thousand 
2 r doz Scar 

— 91 the: iin kinds’ 0b u. of eens x 
amdi e co ed, each, Da per doz, Warranted strong 
TWEVE XE * FIRST CLaSs DAHLIAS 


» RENDLE’S CATALOGUE, for 18s., 
32 a pl 
2 — Aon — oe finest Sewn of the day 


PRINO 00 


Catalogues on 


ragetul habit. 

s’ Chiron 

Planks 5 May, 105. 6d. ea 
ca 


EK 


uty 
These Puchaas have been 
edlings. 


PRINCESS ALICE 
colour, darkly veined — deity and fla amed 
p 


B-OF K SRAN paper 
ly shaded 
ON SERV4 TIVE Nearly e pretty, self; quite distinct, 


See the = Florist,” for October, and the Gar- 
for Augus det besides other floricultural works. 


white tube 1 sepals, with a bright viole 
sepals extending * — that 
dsome . ariety, with full verage 

or very graceful.— Plants in Ma 4 

NG. — pink tube and sepals, ‘well k 

<a fine, and vivid 5 rena 1 

foli Plants in Ma eac 

go e stout flowe er, with lig be’ 

pr v ands 

of Leeds. — — in 

arefully 


ink t 
coroll 
ome; a aarin, 
May, 7s. 6d. each. 
Selected from several 


see 

mas) NIAS, 
ne formed flow ex rich lilae | 

and — with 

‘ose, with dark purple throat.— Plants — 6d. e 

bold —— pale nie, pioa 

with purple, with black throat.—Plan 8. 6d. 


eta Champion of England and Star of 
to WILIAMu E. liewpne and Co., 1 Ply- 


—.— nee say they are quite distinet from 


with 
yet — having purchased the stock of — successful grower 


All orders from unknown 


TRE HYBRID D FUO4S(A8—* ELEGAN TISSIMA 7 


W. 


they beg to inform the 8 W then will ed et to supply |. 
well esta blished plants 


Y, Esq., White Hill, 1 v Bushell, 
. Döne, | pei placed in the ha nds of š, VEITCH 


$ 


323 


accompanied with post-office 
SELECT PLANTS 3 


ing choice Selections. 
CATALOGUE may be had on applica 


rrespon —— 
at C 


ats must 


order —— msford. 


— —e— ng out x follow- 


‘Ther ee PRICED 


ane 1 Te nday, the 7th of May 9. $ 
cuts of them ane e first whens ver of “Tad 25 Superb —ç— ire ae ous! 5 K -12 
* the 8 32 "bain ne NEWTONIENSIS,” a 8 25 N New and 12 for aè vas 30 0 
; spn pes reflexed “ELEGANTISSIMA.” The latter wa ee or to On, per dozen. 
sean arded, Ys Pi tk in June, aud had a firs cer- | 0 
ate awa 
12 of the following su ors new varieties o f 1848, fi 
The Florist,” in describing them, says, „they pe er 
are very . E — . no poverty of any kind — | aih. A en N 99 . he ultra, Dr, 
ied, ge F ossy on dg 1 age de Lambelles, Roi de Ro me, 
an um t’s Heroi d 
pee srk 9 * e 8 3 | Turville’s Beauty of Chelmsford s ad Puntala Tiley 
and Gropper they are very 'desirab" e varieties.” i eA nie Mu ih Sida Aage im a — 5 Buxton, 
LEGANTISSIMA,” 10s, 6d ; * NEWTONIENSIS,” 10s. 6d. 25 Bus varieties, P 
* Sox Bave Also at e, time to offer 12 e vars., 58.; 12 superior vars. ss . S pd a 
* js * see 5 
ee the raker, ue ‘Bathe: danas (50 varieties, in very fine ne Na 49 7 assortments `, 25 0 
; Truro, and which they belie *PET 
e 24 — 12 superior new varieties of eite ics had 15.0 
ss or aero 80 u * fine varieties, 46; 12 superior ditto. 9 0 
aifuai, med, vor ple neo H —— 
purple e a, Habit 12 of the following su varieties of 1848 for 12. 
aw fl three except pi 5525 —.— 8 in existence, As EnaA MARS 16s), vin Capti — — the 
ot Sigi d them, believin 1 will give perfect satis- | ` Harle 3 — — 3 
taken = The usual 4 discount when 1 of each or either are] binson's — Da nd — — 
tae — Su Perfecti : 
Prom unknown correspondénts a respectable — ö ils stion, 8 4 —— — 


or the amount prepaid, will be req 
can nt be sen 


uired, without which plan’ 


i WARD UEY a 1 Pt a gg perior varieti 
in one 28 . su r varieties eve ‘ 
ie ai W ae, wg tind ihe o rnis 21 12 superior varieties 5 15 6 pen 
in — 25 a on on the ubove weed ved by a j — n sage a ANTHEMUMS, 
am mateur, em 80 es, as follows, for 15s., viz., Amad: 
srt ® outer org the || Diamant dn de Ve rsailles, Gem ot 
= n inch beyond Versailles, Hector, He Ivetius a Reine d’Ur, Madam 
ga 13 — er it 16 * * indent viere, ond, Pol lar Star, Reine des Belges, 
any part; erg — ota ue, * 8 that of half a globe, —— 10s. ea; 25 — 5 
merable suouth-edg setals, closel; —+ — be 
dinz the on ithi * T — is te tres — 2 fine varieties, 6s. ; 12 superio 5 9.60 
ower the seed has been saved from by the grower ENHOUS 
pee Growers wishing to get a good collection bee d not and species HOUSE PLANTS, 50 
y the ee opportunity ; the seed — en of go highly | 25 ditto, 289, ; 12 Aas > . 8 25 15 0 
z oroughly proved, and bring the ajor of the | 12 extra choice and sel 177 
ants equal to the culjection the seed was saved from. Sold | STOVE PLANTS, 12 fine and select vs . 
— ne ach, or si — soe a el 200 seeds, 56. | *ACHIMENES, 12 fine and selec 5 17 ali 
a eae Packets of i seeds, 1a d arties purchasin abe 55 x fine new — 7 155. sie . ri. 6 
nest double Holly hocks yet riat nda 2 Í 
ET h has a praza Culleciion Ty TuLTaM SEED tens major, and en ta — e ek 
Sir pr treats tin feo LOR E grea 
; the varieties have | RBA EOU 8 PLA Í 85 
shown nn —— — eh for | showy varieties, including 22 3 2 7 tr at wa . 50 
MAN ASTER SEEL — | OOK PLANTS, 3 25 za at dinto — 
> or quality | varietie A ; 
i 7 that of bair a ball, pes fally auilled | *PALOX, 12 fine varie tiè : e Ta rapea ii d 
et varieties, in puekets, Ix. éd, saoti ANTIRRHINUMS, 1 „ 68.5 12 ‘superior ditto. 19 
b — A saved from fine — . 4— ORNA AEN Tal CLIMBING A pis) 12 vars, 9 
et packe GREEN AOUSE CLIMBING Q PLANTS, 2 select ect vars... 15 
oef HARDY'ANNUAL SEEDS, 8# the pee SHRUBS, varieti = 
each ot the above, including a packet . si * ean a beent = 8 1 
pan yry ler w 


Caulitiower Broceoli, Wileove 
1 These Broccolies have 


the above sent postage free, on the 
—Sold b by Ene 22 the amaunt yg ‘Pitan te e — B 


— ERE, lorist, 16 


do., —— extra charge. 
proved | gratis, 3 attention i is 


Douro; o 8 

timanii ; Barnes’s y= — et 

— an — s gbt’s Beauty of —— 
ity and A 


Rubra multiflora, Beadle's Di- 


8 free to — — and — 
8 extra pla ants sent 
acki 
soap. aah el are pone s either to Bass and 
Rows, Remittances requested from u 
and Horticultural Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. 


ends to their 
— White 


at the Metropolitan 
ted it from being 


res 


h e bèst white 
A Bice 25 beautiful — and very 


t pur - 


ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF p THE + oon 
0 


ä > 


Ta firs 
pe ——.— in guch enormous n 
3 


Coade’s, Anes 
3 GA 


examin E’ extensie, 
ARDENING AND PRUNING IMPLEMENT best Lenn 
Garin 


82 Garden 8 and Syringe 
and Chair 
a 


— 


Seats 8. 
r Garden Scrapers 
= gelasan Gatherers and 


avel . and 

1 — various pat- Sier ves 

Greenhouse Doors 
— — N 


l 


xes 
Bagging Hooks 


Dae Boxes 
a € p, 4 T. 


struments 

8 2 
Kuives 

* Rakes 
Paes 
Dock Spuds 
Dramiag Tools 
Bdging irons and 


iamai Aa Frames 
Knives 


* 


* dier et = id 8 
ae Mr pades en 


Flow — r kondi odini 
a Sand Te in Wires Lines and Reels 
arkin 


ron 
š 2 
— iË and M raphs 
* — — Metallic Wire 
Garden 8 and ui on Hatchet 
eats Traps 
Mo Swi ing Machine 


Matto oka 


„ Loo — 

8 Roller 

— — J. bang are sole Agents for 1 6 0 

NENT LA : — 3 which, with 

of Horticultur ools, can post — to 

— A fest MANI 
nent, 46. King William-st., 


of Tas 


ths’ Set 
— 


4 — lo we 
ord-street, near Hyde-pa 


8.3 T SEES ORTE. TH.— The fliowing 
cles man sia n Slate for eer i 

ea ba Beck 2 in use 

upon app cation Be the ee Sundays ex: 

Tubs, Plant Boxes, — 2 She oe sci P 
ging, Hot-water Ta — Ge 5 

— en fitted to hold Water for Orchi . s 

a timates given — Work as shown upon Dra 
fleatio ai stock of Slate Slabs, of all sizes i 

nesses, kept on 


BRE HIVES, 
EORGE NEIGHBOUR anp: SON. ‘really 


which a are desirous 

pleasing a “profitable branch pe! rural econ 
ibe “Nutt’s 

— The lateu 

Improved Cottage ive," &., fro 

time bi injury to the 

bs" te beg with pa! ety, humani 

and unaccustomed to Bee mani — wt 

d prices, will be pede: on the 

two postage 8 tamps.—GEoRGE NEIGHBOUR and Son, 


Holborn, London. 
“Nutt on Bees ” (6th edition) ee 
HERS. 


WASP CATCHE! 
NDERWOOD, CUTLER TO HER Meritis 


m, 


Entomological Tongs, from 6 t 
2 It is e ariei that e 
of the s is the Sistrastion ae a 
eee. Knife — cutting honey-com 
assortment mproved Budding Knives, Pruners. 


1 boat test, Cheapest, and most 
Material is —— it~ 
| tape teh: FELT: A Hou 
erected complete, for 


i 
32582 


ome foot, in 

had by post. 5 Sete 

tuality.—Croeeo 
nice, 


And W AND 
BY HOT TER. 


pope giras 
Hothouses, “Greenhouse, 
| some of which 
in adh roaring qo 
ing, e and Ventilating all pape oy 
erectin ng 0 ses, Cn h 

f Store K antics 


rb a agin ag a 


at LESS THAN HALF-PRICE. 
— forwarded upon a 


8 — DA Y, the 5th o 
plao on Sar Office on Fr 


east past, Eight o’clock, A. ., 
to vis . 
ociety. 


neee on the days 
1, Regent, street. 


4 — 


SHED 1786. 
Ee de, AT VERY LOW 


. have much plea- 


et ail the hewest an nd best 
a led to offer at the following Low 


—— 
haser’s Selecti ion of 12-from the follow- 
for 30s,—Lyne’s Mercury, Lyne’s Star of 
Nack Prince, Lyne’s Sir Walter Raleigh Gil- 
i e's Nourmahal, Lyne’s Remem- 


h Jan — Titus 


; Hoy! 
"Catleugh 2 — 


ines s's Duchess of Leinster and Kin 


THE GARDENERS? 


riday | 


are 
ha paad — at 2 — — 
sy heen me Exbibition, at 7s, Gd. each; but 


pyr s Queen of Beauties Bech 8 — 
Bee's iio. poets Desdemona, Beck’s | 
bi „Beck's Rosy Circle, 


k's Seong Verb 15 * are a to yy Beck’s | 
Perfection, Gaines’s Mary Queen of Scots, | 


Purchaser’s Selection of 12 from the fol- 

ne’s Duke of at gate Sunrise, Rosebud, | 
ni: s, Gipsy j 

f toks Othello 


CHRONI 


s da to 10s. per dozen. 


AS, 
s selection of 12 from the follow. 
lant of Tom’s CHAMPION OF 
RO EST. 


ardener, Tamerton 

3 — which bid fair to one’ a pro- 

stands, named Tom’s Star of 

ing every re ttaite ! fora Show Dahlia, 

Which is a clear bright yellow. The 

ngland, a flower of fin i 

otly unique as to its petals, which, 

talin this e variety 
ardi 


a- 
— von Gera, Alexandrina, 

cess Wellina, Pantaloon, 

e Tikan Clayton, Madame Dres- 

elina Lady Sengsver: 

* atra, Batho- 
„ Walner, Harle- 
ary, Štandard of Perfection, 

— 

ee of — o feom the following list for 12s.— 
Star of the West, A llo, Ro- 
7 D 

in the Ring, 


. tanesii 


ee erry bette 
Ad- 


S: 
6 — Gled- 
ptima, urea 
Danielsi ied. eee 


Rosea punctata, 
Splendens, 


8 POTS, 
js . — and TEA. 
— 


Artois, Fulgid 
ur, Piah, No” 


F 
orks 3 eg Ma. 


fz etland, 


Phillis, 


’s) 


"Semi th h ten 
folks delight in. Such sprin 98 only force into growth | 9 


DON. — Mont Blanc, Gem, Barke erii, Harlequin, Lord i. bn R i . 
Cœrulescens, Striata occinea, The — Emm B oule 4 foe enduring a are far more advantageous us À 
| Rabaid, Para 1. 1 Boy, Louis Phillipe bilap pet tivator than the brilliant da ys in ich holiday 
£ vourite, Fulgens, Miss t, I 1 
fecta, Bicolor odorata, and Ibrahim Pack, k MEP? | folie, do 8 4 fa 2 hap pens in cold Springs 
Purchaser’s selection of the follo fi G 1 List. o N ; 4 eiae 1 Ki ia te ya 
lowing from our Genera . 14 18 alwa 
13 Chajoe Wee piani; ar class 16s, ina T 1 ” amidst s oft iad ey 5 
r 5 e 
as sf " 15 15 most c 15 of enduring such cold as they ma 
H Choe Miscellaneous dinaa Bat oan £ 16 e to bea * 
20 Choice Herbaceous plants 1 i uch is the case in the present spring. The Plums 
100 Dit to want i beg Che ies have suffered no great damage; Pe 
e inums 5 will, for anything that has yet happened, be a crop, 
12 Choice Achimenes, Gloxinias, and Gesneras 1 and as for Appl y are as safe as if we were at 

„20 8 Chrysa anthem nE ee Christmas. Of 1 we sp of the neighbour- 
12 Ara Camelias, 18 inches to 2 a high a hood ondon because the flowers of 
20 Dit 52+ | Standard a are le, pad 15 good many Goose- 

Dino 10 erries rishe mow, we hear men 
** l Orders Peery 275 ei be delisived. Sun of | cryi 1 Th ' 
ca lk 55 17 ssrs. Pickro Co., to any Station P the P bey ae ruined Ere 
5 } of the Pear blo 7 
on the Great Wester 3 Bristol, eH Exeter, or South | the n 8 1 aga oe ae Fiaa i 1 
von en or to any Town in Devo rn- occurs to them that th er 
wall ; * ork, Dublin, or iy ig by Sieamers. th 77 fl e destructi 20M 
All orders 15 8 will be se by, BERR D and Co., z aps Te die t-fifths of all the blossoms that ever 
unless ordered by any other convey appear is indispensable: if t re not carried off 
; y frost, they must, pre er and fall, from 
18 is par “pa re requested ee auy ni iole nee —— 2 4 the impossibility of the trees that bore: them ey 
tes 67 inattention to orders, be immedi ately e brin ngi ng up such a prodigious roo 

4 se us. 

* To caster —— — hope that all oyini n lik er, there, are, those who anticipate 
will be se as EARLY.as Possknlk- we shall then 1 2d but failure on the 125 of the exhibitors at 
be able oat allt —— in rg 2 t meeting in the Garden of the Hortigultaral 
bats ifthey are delayed, we fear that we shall b Society, 5 . be held next Salur Wes 
cient i nere, having only a Timited eae no cause 3 interesting 
of some peers „ ie held at Chiswick en bee n early in 

r May, as the following figures will show 

Great attention is at all times paid to careful packing. We 

have sent a great number of plants to the North of Scotland =. 

and Ireland, and they 2 arrived in most excellent condition, bj Š 2 

LLIAM,E.:RENDLE and Co., P. the Date. Morning. Noon. |= 3! Wind. 8 
unting-hous «tite n- road. ae 2 

| a ame the Piyinoaih — s Me) aa of the South 37 * 

on Railw 

_| tie 6 d re e e wef 

en ar energ Chronicle. May 10.......|Fine.. |Fine, 78 Little, S. W.] 1402 
TURDA A Y; Y; APRIL 28, 1849. 1315 sore Fine, Pine, 71 Brisk, S. W. 1908 
MEETINGS FOR T THE TWO F TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. * Pine. Very fine. 72 Brisk, S. W. 4858 
Zoological (Anniversary) fh er Ree, 
Monpay, April 7 . ee ee 8 Fx. n all these occasions the weather has bee 
i i 
3 Roya al ost ‘ara: 8 477 nificent, and the show superb. Lon dime the *. — 
* 1 Linn a Sra, is but four or five days earlier use 
abina, = 2 Geological . Hine for eee at the wea caine is eee The 
T r 2. 8) at a tah aes Me ä 2 * 3 5% plants e from under glass, and w shall 
i ee not —— —— a Englin Bo gen have so lost 
Fatpar, 1 Se M. their skill as to 5 w cold , Which 
Satunpar, — 5 om Pines 3 ZM their ou * „at least, is cer- 
mo ee M, 
r =) a ee Sas idea, that the exhibitors have e all the same 
Tonin. = 8 Ar. and as the . nc s Garden eng 
1 e. y g 
E i Li 1 7 7 are ii and comparison, the 
s Graphic 8 em, result must be Cha este same a “thee who sian for 
Taurspay, — 11 Sekt af Literature é P.M. p izes 
777 K 
Saruanar, — ee Roni pirin ee ee 


Counrry Sxows,— a — — ester and South Lancashire 

Talip- Wednesday, ie 2: Meath e Walsall Floral and Horti- 
—Friday, May 11; Cornwall Ho: 

© Whar weatHer! What wretched 8 in 

April! Did you ever know oe are 


sent, and so quic 
Foro lee we neither 


pra 


snow avy 

rains of April 1848, especially since re voter fell 

e| by night, and the former 4 saat 5 by day. 
doubt there has bee w 

pera rature in this easton) ‘month "of April than we 
always have; the season itself is backward, and 

May 1849 will resemble April 1848, So much the 


Nothing is more 1 to this — 
der 


a delicate race which the first cold night cuts off. 

It is delightful to see on the very threshold of 

is dreary tent, the pcr itd 
the 


ODE. 


OME 
| Nurserymen “ withh 


15 but, upo 
ever er so keni 1 bby 


of our acquaintances complain that the 
old all 


information as to the 
propagation an — of en Plants pur- 


—— 
n the as, orserymen are a 
most —— and shrewd o adesmen, and they 
e too wise to kill the ee which lays the eggs 
ve nt For ourselves, we have always found 
them extremely ready to furnish, for public or pri- 
vate use c i 


emanded of them. It is their 
so, and they are not the men to neglect their interests 
o | in any way. 
As, however, we cog eure from the complaints 
e reached us, that e dealers 


aunt rig * 


r that he sekr 
th tiv, and rewar 
re has gre that. it possesse 

y rms ps ow 2 entirely 
the work of good ator; 
not know what good eden is, is, the eller howi 


owers, and rchards 
ith Big de licate h harbingers 


painted white and pink wi 
ane 


et me eee fruit, and to feel the soft w 


tis 
a charming . — realize tho old poeti "s description: pane 


his shoures 


The tendre ee. 
Hath in the man 
And smale fou melodie, 

That —— A nat with open eye, 
So p rike th hem nature in hir corages; 


-J 


N dii ng can be more n 

such pleasures in their tra 
fair pro e ames: sping is too 8 
May. There can be no 


en 
doubt that pan oe. whole 


such springs as we are 


Th 
ot unfortunately 
the 


: tell you whist to 55 
r him, I should have given up gardening 


to- 
geber. Of course he would ; it would have been 


260 THE 


less to persevere against — disa 
— was no chance of s ss unes 


and 
amateur wend serve an apprenticeship to 
have been m 


pointment ; | centre of each ; these are 
— * with the poin 
part 


was eq 
We can assu 
opinion on * e 


ning names 
Tis the p ey “vel, — short iail 
a * a pe manage 
3 — 

We an with much satisfaction — ae 
Court of {Directo of the East India Company 
nvarying liberality for which the — * 
the distribution of = 


Garrita, FALCONER, 


The distribution will take lace under the — to 


YLE. 

ms have already been p 
will be immediately issued to those men of science 
among whom it is intended to divide them 


araga ANNUALS. 
haps the most economical mode 


of raising annuals wht regard to certainty and uli 

effect, Before proceeding, however, to detai 

system, I feel i uced to offer a few remarks on the 
ral e 


— either in the parterre or for the unassuming 
— border. Our present —— — a, as it is 
termed, has had the effect of fi 


parterre, 
— elumping system; m their 
00 often — Ba character in such a 


ith 
the soil in wach 
too N 
ee and high keeping is at an 3 
E pruning k kite be — — then * to the 


that annuals should by any 
be allowed to —— the lovely pipe en 9 
irrhinum, &.; the 
tion ether they e made combine with 
— or ‘ther er any other situation ean be found for 


dy beddi 


, | this 
than his Ae 


— and | close 
timate | Snails. 
the | 


these in- | Í 


the annuals are smothered | P 


GARDENERS’ CHRONIC 


scooped = ing great ease 
t be tak 


serve to 
retain the necessary 

he next point is to subject them 
oist or dry, as will at once 


ie s strong a hea 
— not only all 


eath 
e and Healy’s boilers, which heats our 
the s which contains this, 
to a permanent supply of eg we have 
established our ‘epi — the turf pots 
hen sown, in order chime in with a 
watering 2 exists i that iga 
lect can tak 
— 4 we 
Placing a 


estroy vege 
ning over slightly, —— by — maae, rae 
nd e turf pots remain in 


—.— to another lot, als re on. 
adv 


f 
olə ash-bed, when completed, with 
infusing as mu 


taken in | man, 


re p 
a system of or e 
ion ; and where of 
P 8 
in the bottom for —— out the 


co 
8 it ‘th 


ch salt | procee 


as stated by Tournefort, wh Lined — A — 
W. 2 would be A nerd 


ion of se lant, such 

Bar! I 2 chat sd must look in the 3 
reviously healthy became thus 

i cannot consider the 


by 

sap by evaporation. 
But who does not see that all this is the consequence of 
the — of heat, which has at lated beyond — 


n 
tar if the same plant, by ane action of sold, we 


a paa of the 
ns, by that loss of a 


8 
d its perspiration will be checked. But the weak. 
ss, that is to say disease of the 1 
ceded this deficient perspira 
ione 
from external causes 


that I have sought fo pater, in this division, 
They say, for example, as he article “ Maladie,” of 
Rozier’s “Cours Complet d' Agriculture, that the 
sudden death of a ing to internal causes ; 


coup de soleil 
them up, or from the bite of an insect which, pasah 


and to cover can 0 — soil, —— to give — whole a 
ose the soil about the seeds. The 


h 
a single blank in the 
wer borders, 8 enough of the turf 


oye. 
dressy things of the May sowing, AE 

removed to a cool aspect just before they blossom, will 
ecome so retarded as to be of much service in October 
for decorating the shelves of the greenhouse. 

will be found to have rooted slightly through the turves 
and may be taken up and inserted in small pots, filling 

e 2 a a soil; such on 
wee 


e made the flower garden 


pe rag 


— the ay thing on the face of ‘the ‘matter r which 


Ta pu ——— ose I would recommend 
se a orl Collinsia Moor, Clarkia 


y impediment is 


difficulties | 


Celta, 


hizopetalon Walkeri, 


concern ; by the 
W 1 de the season what it may. 
For mixed character, which are in their 
ver, t 


in early summer “by the 


Tages florida, Campanula Lore, 828 ila elegans 
de. These I su ee eee, 


taste. 
ye endian. I ld 

. would point to the sig die of these 
socious | System of window ga rdening ; 3 for although su 


ds ; | those which attack only t 
— 


ng out a 
ch persons | b 


n the same article, — is classed ner — —— 
—— ioned an al ca But let 
candidly, do with certainty what it it is 1 that 
produces this terrible malady ? 
e distinction between local and general dis- 
orders at all satisfactory. It should first be ascertained 


de generated i 
the want o 
shows itself i zx in the lea ves 


have * . 
tive green over their whole 
S ove to designate "certain diseases 


to particular species only ; 

3 itis 

ividing very u uncer in 1 

m being precisely e ned what we 
es rstand a an epideny, or r py say at 

epidendry. So a as e number 0 

5 and we re have or 2 studied the dir 

eases of a ver — — cies, it is 

to assert that only this or 2 ‘plant is subject to re 

or A this would vane > 


classi 


r fro 


8 tems of a eta tale athology 
* opi = so oe ersally Pe eared, 

— 5 the somali and 
iseases peculiar to the former have 
ter ; and even 


floral beauties, the plan will be Tai ligil = — will have 2 ir Pelargoniums, their Erieas, their Camel - times the wee rr 
i - same names have been given 
for the mere 3 border. plan is simply using | lias, Azaleas, and even, as your correspondent “ Dod- | of both, as Pliny i- 22 a ried: 2 
e minien . a very 4 ir representing | man ’ suggests, their Orchids, yet the — of these | quoque cum hominum is therefore we 
~ 8 en * Se ut with this difference, | can and here he be con s character ; | be wondered if some 8570 ap tee of adopting! 
there — — xX pense — —— ing, — in ere how convenient would be a little re reserve ground | o of the en ed Hoei an deriving A jai 
their carriage, and three wings at prope . 
pan will 3 against blanks in the most ex May to to Decem ber, the propri 8 can, fore breakfast plants; . — . — — — has boen eof 
Lassan —4 „ to say nothing about their | any Morning, bring in in half. a dozen of these little turf voured to n y to the 2 system he toss 
The first matter of ystem. b ts, just emerging lossom. Such might either | medical . introduced by Brown ; and t 
inches thick KA aa to procure turves | be inserted in a 5 inch pot, called 48s about town, or a degree that they would adopt the Brownian 15 
strong and tough uae a land which possesses — might merely be laid in an ornamental — and the practice of agriculture. Thus it was Pn 
to very old pastures. Ihave, | I need y point | immediate] with fresh moss, pouring a | suppress “ the system of undigested wan d 
n a a f » however, seen turf cut little water in the saucer. Robert Ervington, * more dung on the fields, but to resort to the by 
4 to bo extellad ee re. mixture of earthy substances, this erga ig 
eured a lot of these in the sally peeved hie — es N a be the whole soera ae 
ebruary an 


ee OF PLANTS. 


thin to ’ 
i indrance to oth iness, t —— ED — ued from page 244 
as I must call the b andred the C D 
pag 2 few 3 e oun nuh m the | admitted ty W Wri riters, 2 20 e e | ab 
ut will work. It is best to pl n t be considered as diseased where 
the floor of the shed oe 3 —— of their n is in any way impeded, but 
CCC 
ze of all others for the purpose, and i dhe diele ficiency of sah was the origin of all diseases of pla 2 
r length, b 1 foot in width, anal and this was the opinion of th riters lamit 
tarf will of course make 27 of these little squares, a great number of the infirmities of vegetab ble 


Sho bas the next cing) is t cut little hollows i in the | 


either by its intrin sale 
nor its unequal distribution, as 


secre 
hateauvieux attempted al berg 
ice. Their e e 
rtunate experime 
e of the Topi entertai eir Ai 


z 

PRACTICAL HINTS FOR AMATEU 
L GARDENS. 
— Severa 


ae — — 


views = prac 


present pig or at giraal 


261 


p in a square foot, and th ere they 
ed for want of a 


22225 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
may Be ao * 4 haga of | on the living eg exactly as in the ee S genus oo allowed to come u 


rari a late 
f them late ; 
be vanar by prun ing orere Th . 7 2 as 
den shold leaves are developed. e severe of the species, Podisoma macropus, Schwein., was pub- Can fine blosso 
first his y nipped many of the | lished in the Volume for 1845 of Sir W. J. Hooker's or png they 5 yes pe oy 
ii r “London Journal of Botany,” from a sketch by Dr. Ter ell. 
ie: Cut them in, 2 ir buds ae we who was so fortunate as to observe the germi-|; 7) eather.—It may be in 
experimen <a activity, and these wi -aiota oodward forwarded to me sketches | after 4 aii 
which are not so treated. Moving | illustrative of germination from Cirencester in 1847, 4 — of ‘iw te ‘the gras et is, coat Seal 
woah ne will have the same effect, although it | which confirmed the curious observations of the Messrs. | currence even. in the midland pidii C. H 
Ene in for this operation. It may be done if Tulasne on the 9 of Urediniie: published in Botanic Garden, Birmingham. — Last nig 
or e 


management ? 
James Cath, 


resting to know that 


— are less Saeed now ass, si 
umerous ; at the same —— doch tn myse self and Mr. Bes oome to rde the They are pny y that 
te may wish t to prolong the flowering of | germination s and to secure sketches of the various ay Gardens, VRE N. ar Ni 1 ras 0 17th, 
for en have not this late habit. We have phases whi ch were exhibited. Professor Gasparini has | was cold and drear, with northerly wind. About 4pm 
that old favourite, the common Provence Rose | lately published a memoir 115 the subject, which has not a heavy shower or rather storm of snow lasted two 
a : 


= — to . Rose tree before W rd obs ions, re; 1 eep. 
3 ret that in the A further fall i 
as to A e positio hk nehes | multitude of avocations I have ne kina 3 t an ich was red „ won 3 r pe ers 
likely to take when Daj are laden with the full earlier period. Th pores vary extremely in different | 2 inches in the g. Th meter at night, before 
e have rts of the same tremelloid ass, being sometimes | m ig . Wedne y, 18th Hight ste stu. 
dur n the tendency d down to the ground, of strongly pointed, sometimes perfectly obtuse ; the | duced a total th llam w came on fi 
some of our best bushes which w t were stron inted spores, however, seem the only ones which have | ev ning, and fell heavily, Thursday, 19th : Snow com. 


e 

to retain an erect position ; and when stakes are | the power of germination, Each spore consists of two | menced about 11 A. u., and ti 

we thatlate period of growth, the tree can seldom | cells, both of which are furnished on either side just intermission till nightfall. The flakes wee oe 
made to assume a natural appearance. The best a 1 


jus 
ove the point of juncture which a single pore through | thick, and about 6 p.m. the snow w 
uae go round round the garden and stake ‘up all „trees | whic ating thread protrudes exactly afte eep on an an average, but had drifted much hae ne 
ee Imagine them as they will be in Jul . ee fo accumulation of snow, which i 
7 ey W e u ly, pores are fertile, but more frequently one or two only upon the trees, threatene er i 

sben “washed in a shower,” rhad when “the plentiful protrude the cotyledonoid. The cates of the two cells, beanaliel were 8 nite es 20 me boii r 
moisture” will add so much to * weight, and act | it should be obs — correspond exactly in positon: caught a vast quantity of snow, so that the limbs 
accordingly. the stakin d tying up be per- In n no case have more than two been eto Reni + ach of Oak and Elms bent under the unusual weight, 
formed with taste, so that “va pak xoria in bloom shall | hemispore. M. J. B. and the crack and crash of falling branches was 


nat 
Insects be pind after in in the. egg state, or, at 
pears. The 


1 the surprise and annoyance of the 
aad wp t :. by John Gilpin when he lost his 


and 
all events, when the ca terpi first a A e Birch and Willow 
pab nieh bury thera ae — a the folds of í are torn up by the roots, so = Ae aad es 
a Hase eat ? 
tbe egg to a gradual maturity; if therefore their habits Fi 
m oh they may be caugh in time, before they 7 hare e pie u 5 * 7 
bave made many meals on ec ight 20th, presented en with lasik 
be of ie use in searching ou these pests, when i r ch continued falling as 
sag between those whi : care injurious ut were not all detached till 
e of an ichneumon paras aracter though less ee A bad 
in former numbers of the ‘Chronicle may be the therm ometer 
consulted on this subjec 5 snow melted ra idly A- 
of Briars must be arranged for budding, werful sun siding its 
mig in — r — Their united ‘elke however, did not di 
y forme t 6 pm. I 
— by stakes reaching up to the budded as I could —— Peer 
2 bah them. Without i ae It is too early to judge of 
eantion, > Shes away the whole py N 
| 


walls ma may have J. By 
th of April a fall of dry snow 


Si 
SELECT gp —— occurred, and conti: W without intermission x 
SPRING N PLANTS FOR drifting ioe eaa, up 16 ds throughout the country ; 
, ing Te 88 th iit h; b the > eldest inhabitant” has steely 
( uesday the 17t e est 1 y 
VELA dune (Y. rom p.2 d 
pret — en iota) CA ne Minke 3 Ae idee of the season. The weather is still stormy and cold, but 
Seats Bironta, 4 in March until May. Figs. 1, 2, 3, 4, spores of Podisoma fuscum natin the snow, which was from 6 to 10 inches deep, is much 
oie of rich mari neat hardy pran 4 2 7 l ia with — 5 shows. s clearly | = ee of the W gde from ma the wasted-on the low every hill has its 
Salt wek in February seat 3 eee 1 ; fig. 5,0 rr d pe of in the shape of 
à e . 2 
: bright arate the last in habit, ond larch small which h 2 hed which re 6 — Bito. melted snow, for the week ending 21st April, was 1-51 
4 p ANENA 4 —— ara 3 cotyledonoid thre | inches, mean lowest temperature 
0 u d. ber dae a — — as spikes + Tich Blue —$$————— in garden or farm is at a stand-still, H. Walker, gr., 
ia, week in May until the second week in Home Correspondence. Mayen, Ban fshire 


E A Mixed Flower Garden:—Abou ye 0 Blister eaves.—I am inclined to think that this 
Nek dopant 
Aach mitt shaped pi plant, | rage commenced for having each clump filled with one | rap Soy Me efor i is partly owing to frost injuring 
alae atin ossoms sort of plant ; the gardener, of course, had no objection | tender I have heretofore attributed it to red 
i i could see | spi 


Towers, aa . b the n 9 to abate 
umerous comparatively that it would not be near so much trouble to him as acarus, an phur app r b 
5 te Apel ede griah òa * old plan. The beds once filled, the summer’s labour as it; but this year the Peach and Nectarine foliage 
$ regarded them was at an end ; such 3 ba a 5 gape 2 early, has been e in- 
— to the flower garden an appearance not unlike that jured, and its present appearance 
; read ene high, with dark exhibited by one of General Erani Legion men on their | traordinary amount of blistered leaves. I call atten- 
; s. In bloom from the 13 of return from Spain. The old coats of these worthies tion to the sajas now, because observation 
* ad once been red, but they were then amply patched | phenomena of the next three weeks or month may 
lively — Aa rdy herbaceous | with yellow, blue, green, black, Ko., and were bare and | tend to settle this question. The fe hes 
the middle 8 thin; such isa Dutch flower- er- garden. The fault gene- | — much in wl and if such injury ev a 
NOI SUPERBA, Ah : Any y “committed in forming a mixed flower-garden or if on blister, it 3 almost prepa . 
8 inches aan JA hardy herbaceous tu tuberous- | border, too thickly; the plants ought to If, contrary 
ee In fed ties a mane starry stand not less — 3 feet apa art ; the roots and foliage it will be pretty Cosas Giit frost is za its bat at 
Ta pune. © Second week in | vould then be clear of those of ‘their neighbours, and | Insects always harbour in blistered — er 


— Nossen A hes high, | room would e afforded for wintér manuring and : 

ee ‘be last week ta bt April wasn — {x diameter digging. I nting — 15 the plants should range injured let, or — 227 ge y themselves dition. the in- 
7 as-rooted | nicely, the highest being in the centre ; and in borders ag! doubtful. J 78 usi 
— It old — be cut “sa May and Septem 

ion a — — — — eee ee fom front to baek, tis vs es the resin of a all Pines is indurated an å concentrat ted 

8 7 : ter. s the preservi 

A hardy annual, from 4 to 6 inches and rearrange them, and 8 gives _an opportunity | in winter, gg es May and September the new 


ri 


valuable timber. 


er e., betw 
and G of fungi, consisting of the | May. These latter ra a tittle — 75 * exposed tot = rg collapses 
m, and | selves, quite la enou render the a 3 

Tesemble eee Peers which, in interesting without the pain to the eye attendant on look- | years since, eut much * ‘to bene 4 is ee 

v exactly the 2 masses ing on a large mass of 5 colour. The flower-gardens ieg it for the sake of selling the bark, w BA, 
in 3 early | now-a-days may be to regiments formed alf the — — a bark. the bodies 
R v ffect ile off, but — e split wi N board 
i e singular part — rt pyre me producing a + gaudy e „ a mile o re _ they id only do do 
; forms ‘discoid patches | ann — — onesie aiid; a hundred are | for poles or beams, and w uch deteriorated for 


THE GARDENERS: CHRONICLE. [Arr 28, 


th with m 
a paap ar Wis T patches r ve 0 2 eria this year: beryl has d hile th A 
r of the bark was dearly purchased by eet rr year, ye ST 94 5 erecto 


ot in, ured, 15 soon 


g : d i 
in pages by Poesy Se Petia! with à mat when the nights Mts ely to be A Gon 
2 i it with | but thi T think did it neither good nor harm. on- 
Take the crumb of a loaf a day ol , and moisten it 27 rek prh e 37 23 Nee n u 

in say that a climate in which Box and Holly are re killed, 


* 
. 
& 
* 
cz 
8 
2, 
a 
2 
o 
3 
F 
gs 
22 
aie 
2 
ER 
13 
A 
7 
— 
> 
4 
3 
=} 
o 
P 
2 
E 
2 
8 
2 
o 
> 
4 
© 
D 
2 8 


A 
‘ints rab viridissima. —rbe pena oy hardiness | 
just 


May, 
t ason m as literally ere pe! ‘nit starry 
Statements in last'week’s Gardeners’ Cheeni. 1. In flowers, so that 460 a Tittle distance you could d not s see a 


fi 
0 

specimens in our gardens, and Rowering last May. In the autumn I too whole 
me plant seems rapidly 2 into fashion 17 The 3 49 v the roots, and planted Sat in patches on 
Cypress in this damp climate is apt to grow too fast and | roots and ro . ae’, are now com 3 into flower 
too succulent. To correct this, it ought to be planted eat a “It I wanted a gay flower garden in May, 


8 
dive ane o the tree, which, like move the Stellaria to any open places in the shrubbery 
a . Confers, 15 apt to divide into after flowering, eat Hea then divide it into little 
fee ers sar * root, is to trim it up con- patches. These eady next February to re- 
8 Da bare stem to the ‘height of 3, 4, and 6 ft., move ‘into beds for riian — following May. D. 
after which it will go a-head and run up toa point as Beat 
well here as in Italy. The mistake our gardeners make | Rain at Cobham Lodge, Cobham, Surrey.— Sno 
is to freat it A. a bush, branching from the root up- at meh on the 18th, 19th, and 20th of April [1819 pi 
wards like a Thuja or % a n beer ought | This has n ot happened = 2 April s e eg at file — 39. 
t j nches. 
3 i 3.44 
gee a ndent igri among sprin nts to m ai= 8 
bed out, Linum flavum. This 1 8 5 ne» A a — En 
t Li 1 80 1 ri „„ „ eee #01 fee ber 855 ase OL 
May 87 * .. 11 December. 2 w AT 


2 
> 
= 
= 
D 
> 
got 


— from Flo Nieren enen Wi, tender, 


but easily e te 
— be a hardier plant (as to cold), but much more re a 


ril- 
cult to manage, is, as well as its variety L. serrula-| Be kg — Allow me to correct two or three |p 
list 


tu 1. e plant in gardens, It is not suffrutescent, errors of mek un in’ the 0 ses given by 
but herbaceous, tall, bearing handsome heads of flowers, H. B.,“ p. 245. The Bourbon Rose, Pierre de St. Cyr 
urpli; i 


ub- | Roses is n 7 the 
S., Dorsetshire. [Tt is a variety | winter, they should be — in a bed by pron Ses. 
e osa. 


w. 
2 
5 
— 

2 
> 
— 
8 
Es 
— 
= 

= 

-4 
8 

7 

72 
© 

— 

F 
D 
E 
Q 
=a 
® 
ER 
2 
o 
im 
> 
“ 

— 
G 
5S 
9 
& 
= 
EN 
E 
3 80 8 
>P 


roun an 
C. microphylla. I have a plant of it here, 12 years old, ‘the Dryandras and Ban ksias, in fact, plant: 
3 2. 2 s hî h 

the finest I ever saw ; it is 10 feet high, wit a stem quire N dpi ry 25 ght Riese’ of . in 
r «4 my wrist, and feathered from the grousd His idea is to form a house of tall Larch poles, with the 
toe e side branches falling gracefully, like ems on, and he would ‘feel peie. 120 — suggestion 
hose of W Willows. 1 A of as sides, which, as ses to have 
ste nk ot the poorest sandy soil, over chalk, and | very a Tittle glass spans (the cides at Teast) be made to 
in — 1 Pe eit + . two h it, one on open with faci lity, an to be taken away entirely in the 
W A na et de) but with a south si summer, o. * Pl: be seven or eight months of the 


t year after planting, I drove a row of year, the poles only ith « g 
r. e po 1 to be left, covered with creepers, | 
and abi Hae * along the yei 1. A each a doa de ee and durability, eombined ve warmth, ts oF 


n these co 150 5 
Trained tke iachpia bene wee + $ for 4: ae * D Which * 5 h Pla i 
át N 
“4 2 1750 of their stays, ber l hey promise tery all vell. would have. b. 7 0 i 
Vines. wi Ked Calendar writer pei that “the ei d a 


of Vines „ 
A w provision of Nature to enable them we could obtain it as cheap or near y so as sheet; for 


t6 thes support in their nat 3 
ane ey are of ber vise th 2 re ‘ural habitat, bat struggling, as we Se, — verb competition, we want | Fr 
3 


above the í 
the shove: 3 i to be agai 3 lled out into plates of 10 feet by 5 — sif 
that Vines deprived of their Ar t e any difference, it should be on the side of 
$ 4 * 3 fixed to the small squares, m sng d red eo 
iker the following ye i 
were less f i a + g year, them. rtley, in a lette 
— 1 e stopping the e for 1845, says, “ What ; ted is $ a . 
by the space vacant Tr irh a r m st be gu weighing not less than 16 to 20 Z. pe 00 t b a 
Fuit to be matured. Constant Reade d the quantity of | 3 r foot.“ Now, in this he is right; an haats 
* tomeria japonica is ald 1 23. duced the article, I Wre or will descend to the 
Mon Spruce Fir, but I have not found Wi pd wet eo Mag 1 1% 8 uch larger quan antity 
‘Place where I live is very cold and satan ls pen apprehend that the Majority of g] 
several times in t 7 unkind, I have E 


ears buyers look wiehfally l 
Laurustinu 0 seen Laure y at plate glass; but, comparin 
n a e ees China ls, 24. with 6d., gh b either to wait or put up | mith 


vite, and even comm e 22 reg 

stood singly Oa he Grass co : 1 bich have A al agin. ‘Bar E observed in last 
moves 38 „ Kl 1 whieh T Pii ând I wee conga a review of Taylo or’s Amateur’ 1 Bar 
the lawn has share, be viewer co ives, 

Yate until the frost came oe — 1 5 oat chet on a the F plea that bens emo Dare in snper hives 

March the fog at ties 1 ant heavy here, d To | Et hiv othing is said against bars in 1 


the mornings the leaves k eiie ept that the bars 


‘ed, while the sprue | 


a we is, will 
severely tested. A large best understand 55 way in hte the Stellaria will Ta 


cells in the lower parts of the combs; i, e the aL 
honey- ne Bine to the bars s weal ek é. the deep or 
llow or 


T ive.—I beg to — remark or tro 
— —.— — $ 308105 of my bar-hive. I 5 e 
srepresente 4 myself, * ip Sine is res little 1 


arison with the evil of laadia hough indirectly, others. 
parison wit di o mu 28 ave e dittered for centuries, as to 


— e compar: ative merits 10% bee hives and bee man 

would indeed be arkable . I succeeded in an 

sundry poi in com ispute 8 too © 

7 wranglers— aF wie 3 hold in recollection 
story o 2 hes vellers —— bol chamelion. eren ot 
every the f acc — ae 
have occasionally offered ae — 
with rome kind of reason 8 — — — — — Se 


9 | and; Í believe, at all times without e e As 


e — [Marre 
num flavum, which Jul 2.36 o oc Oe 


our mo 
— mere opinion. As to my particu ar modifi appli- 
cation of it, I bave given this for me it is wo 


ly a licable — an answer once for 
all to various inquiries ong al ian 
regarding = 2 tere that. certain deale 2 

—I hope ering to the rules beamer most sf- 


at novel, 1 li rpo 
ve. 


Ahehe 8 Ning by 17 I presume, à reg i 
The poor cottager, to w the ‘matter most nearly. apie 


5 — p this destin ve the same repl i 
15 g him a 15 ia 801 ‘place is 1 2 a 
4 N to Stafford house, 


wood are often coated with combs would 08 correspond y 8 8 8 8 n i 


5 be “depected that I should add a line as e 
viewer’s ne pata to the use of zinc or other metal in cert 
parts of bee apparatus. Man is usually the - 


ee 
i i] the chair, 4 
mao april} =e Walken in — 


e io Don 
museum, The. Rev. te Tandsborcugh Was t 


is 8 la ee was read from J. Woods, 


_ The author remark ed n the 


ave an account of parte 
Eu forms, more 2 those thie! 
British. Mr. Babington, who dt te 
Mr d's opinion of the great difficulty e 
| investigation of the cies of this ow bite, beer 
letter from Linnseus Rev 7 — E 
of Gilbert White, acknowled ig some 

of J. Gon 


igin 
natural history, in bse possession 


b 
by the Fellows as 2 sally itera and ev 


9 155 
Ein Same . le 
er i plantations in in the H de, the black was 


3 April 25.—G. Buse 


Mi 5 . tthewso es 
in * chai essrs. sel 


Hu eg D, 194 D. G Cho Sirit 
Fellows, ‘Mr, Shadbolt ng a a d “fos! 
ture, of the Hairs in a speci 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, 


it is arp involved in much T, It h 
analysed by Dr. An i and is 
large amount of suga 


263 


súil, assist m reudering its con 
ble as food for gr owing plants 
of Plants.— Germination 


The rs were 


ea. s been j their 
e fae Portion 
those at 


und to contain a 


action on the 
Stituents availa 


Growth 


Ss 
5 
fej 


s 
hout. phere matter, which becomes blue b by the addition 
brate animals of iodine. The hairy 


r | is rate 

J patil f de ry ro jt eig la- carbonie acid 
chrymans) on a plank array feet in 1 taken from 

a cellar at Holyrood Palace. S. Cobbold, Esq., and 
H. Broadbent, Esq., were elected Fellows 


heja 
ultimate 


brill of muscular tissue. 
s tissue were much larger than kaia] 


ebiews. 1 
Sy yllabus s of a Complete Course of Lectures on Chemistry, 
ine! ‘uding i its 3 to the Arts, Agriculture, and 
ining. By Professor E. Solly. Longmans, 8yvo; {5 


pp. 185. water, 

Tus object of this work, as stated in the preface, is n 

„present to the stud ent a sketch the science off ou 

n Chemistry, and its eed h to the Arts, Mining, a 
Agriculture. This object has b 

t | ordinary degree. a | plan 


cota deat that oa tint or adde 
3 i ene 


want which wep 


substances which are alien ing of study, and mete 
to the important er of those substances. Wit 
the present work W . 3 A 8 longer 
be uncertain rth ex 

0 lo sleet be 0 Ace to pa his 
remember e ing, that 
e; but 


brain wi 25 Amins 
he m 


ested. 
the . work is in 


Lime and Phos 
The teibasie phosphate, 3 Ca O 


e e 


2 to 
ants; * they exhaust the soil, when constantly 
cultivated i ro 
er is and v ed, or 
the soil is left Bei or 2 — fallow, that, by the action of 
e air on the stony particles it contains, it row! Ae im 

a enoved.” supply of the salts, &c., have 


phorie Acid, CoP gies of ‘lime. 
ive in 


remove 


PE 
~- 
+ 


pain and other i 
in bone, and may be obtained from bone- 

re or sire ve tape it is a white solid, almost insolubl 
water, t more Fare in 
carbonic 404 5 ; the nat 
. 


S e, different from tha ere e er ad 
of treating first of i prong x dies then o 2s 
bodies, the author -plae soa immediately a 
h at bon and before the metallic elements ; 

n improvement, 


by acti 
pre he acid, a n of lime 18 oo i 
whiċh i is much used as a manure ; as sold, it appears to 
"phosphoric acid, phosphate of lime, and 
5 lime.“ 
hole we think the work before us will — found 


metal | thew 
first, | extremely valuable, as laying before the studen 


e purer the 
the 8258 ; but although all the | m° 


thirdly, organic bodie 


study of 8 is worth 
ae and Berge ba m 


e fr e pre- 
AROA rea 8 in 


th he — — THRE and 
opinion, more convenient than that i in common use 
As a specimen of the w Mr. Soll ; has 
3 his subject, we extract the are passages : 
arbon. Symb. q» native, 
— as the 2 nearly pure in 
me forms of stone coal; as carbonic acid, in the air 


Miscellaneous. 
of Dr. Gardner.—A letter has been received 
— Torrington, Governor of Ceylon, 


i Death 
in town from 
announcing the 


and other forms of organic matter; pure, as Jampe: | 
ere — 58 mina combustion o pi koa 
ties.— 


in his * Travelsin 
No. 1012). He aoe is occas 

he tributaries of the Amazon, and from near the 
ag to the 23d degree a south latitude. 
om Brazil, about five years since, he was 


— brilliant, colourless or eme 50, |? 
N solid, infusible, fixed, combustible 
white — as charcoal, 


metallic 
the 


— 

times yle ooking, brilliant 
lustre, welle, Mad aoohangeabl gg i: 
air at a red hea or eve Some forms of 
~ | cha possess —— tkable —— ‘of — anal Garden at K 
— condensing gases, in equ 2 gi which they are 

a d as purifiers and disiufecto D. Uses.—The | th 
o diamond, as a gem; for cutting ‘tools, as 

dia a = 


dg 
x 
H: 
Ho 
2 
3 
a 
ga 
8 
c 
ga 
3 


‘m 
oO 
O 

= 
— 
E 
a 
2 


c 
rary part of my — ” says 


lazier’ ; 
— — 5 etter 0 a correspondent of 
ials are 


hat Pos to — be the 
. the colour or tint of 
i TOO manufact 
apr re, purple, am mber, or other 3 
metal; he brought — 4 
to proye that someone the colour 
oxy ee eas te Pog —— . Ke.” 
reki tal, gives no 
; TLA b et Carbonio acid ed air, choke- damp—C 02. —4. 
x — by the oxygen it —.— — Exists in the atmosphere, formed by combustion, 
“in “te 5 ot e * tion, fermentation, and voleanie action ; exists in the 
g i mc eats 2 


a - . r 
Tennent en the interior of the northern half of 
the island.” The loss of so and sound a 
naturalist, in — prime! of life (we believe 
sol much above 

ong co e Fhe p 


more powerful aei 
ss gas; sp. gr. 15 


"| a carbonate by a 
A trans: 4 aan 1 


x ie | some most inte he Vegetation of Brazil, 
s 27 3 — err — 
soluble in Wa cioty 


published i in the e-Journal of — — ltu 
His ł 1058 19 wees 


f Ce yið n as 
s death he was en- 


„for at the time of b 
aring an element — work on Ve 


pect in sate KAEA adapted to the wants of the 
K 


as to 


roduced during its si ‘vapors n. d powers 
at 5 ly reddene —.— come 


h the gl D Ven d With tease, p e tabd | ancl popu 
the our! A lengthened | tests. Combined with pe ene 5 Sale o rehids. Another consignment of Orchids 
~ h effervescence from these nds of O 

Me, thanks pape „ eoliseted by Mr. ewiez, was brought to the 

P, Pellatz of the mee by almost all other acids, — a high temperature, 

ss ting were mted to | °Y alm hammer on Tuesday las Mr. Stevens; also 97 J 

— | carbonic acid is deco several of the metals, ay last, by 
— : unication, 7 415 oxide being formed . ee and sodium of established plants, chiefly Orchids, the property of a 
48 8 — NBURGH, April 12. — The Pre- it entirely, carbon being se — r- private gentleman. The est . T Faa the 
2 aa 2 The e communications | bonic acid is essential to the growth of ae It is 0 . i s s 6s., 3 2 * — 

ntales, f car riety 6 ars 
‘ot 2. On ae Litany of ef the fe Style of y ar men the manfactar : Psat >. ced of | didissima, found at an elevation of 7000 feet above the 
of Gro Rc i S. Sanderson, Esq. 3. Plants The: Soil. A mixture of silica, alumina, lime, | level of the sea, fetched 1. 11s. Other lots, in all 197, 
in Nost tochinese. By J. a m ia, organic matters, oxide of iron, 8 small ranged between 11s, an nd 2. 


damon 
quantities — et ae , sulphates 


'en- 
aR: made | and of the alkali ts mechanical pein Calendar of Operations. 
itip, a peculiar, | varies greatly, and iofiuences its nature almost as sins (For the ppe week ) 
the leaves of Eucalyptus | as its e l Dopa on.— n contains PLA ah DEPARTMENT. on 
Newport-as ie Su j ammonia, moisture: there Onchtns.— All the species N are comme EPES | 
The nature of | things are not oily Santee direct by plants, oe: by | their growth shvuld be carefully examined, and 


264 THE 


at ES 


ae 


or Surlaceu, ac 


ing to their respective requirements. 
Let the old stuf on picked away as far as is possible | an 
The 


for the protection of fruit trees has just présente 1 

to me. Some rider Apricots had been planted agai 

che east wall of a dwelling house about 18 feet high, 
this was the 


[Aprit 28, 
is 8 cial matter into which we cannot ca, =n uue 
advantage. ich we cannot enter with any — 
re rrhh a E Purity, One in the Ring 
apoleon, Cor Exoni 3 
Criterio ne, n — 
ARDE EF L will be thankful 
respec! he best wa; of kee for — a 
frota the ravages of — 2 ping worsted nets when laid oy 


ES: RF asks, with reference 
of 9 Whether the e setting of the 1 


* 
impo the cultivation of Orchi d to only protection they had, but as they were thus ke to 
a iet climate while the bl ; 
potsherds should d b ectly dry, neither the leaves nor the flowers (just off ap we high | B — ha) until h 
the soil, except in hopeas, for the latter setting), were injured, although ex e Å ended] but intervals of dryness are considered e — 
flower-stems through the bottoms of the | rays of the morning sun. The blossoms of choice Pear se shed g of the hood-like calyx and the a, 
ets, which for us should be consider- | trees should n thinned, taking advantage of this GEN no ic, Tp bank and chien st material 
ably shallower than emispherical ones recom- s of balancing their luxuriance, taleulating the ing greenhouses and hothouses . — 
men tor ge pu k liberal supply of | — of each, and leaving sufficient to prevent a too- | g enke pos iad as Spee Roses, is glas 
water must be pre 1 San plants which are t ne hand, oving enou pre — "triph. * riostemon inter. 
in an active growing 5 a warm moist atmo- | to prevent n À stunting or mutual impoverishment, re- Pimelen 6 tabilis, slin, B. piama pu ur n miniata, 
sphere must be hen Far 1 che day, part ieularly | sulting | from a superabundance of flower buds. It 5 Torenia asiatica, Podolobium staurophyllam, and Poi 
in and especially amongst Vandas and — mmon * re fruit to set on Pear 1 * 
their congeners from mg hottest localities, ard Den- | the — ro d in the fi l fo ee Mant 
: y properly support, and in the * 2 e — held in — Itis — 
drobia, which are in a growing state. Shading in existence, it “ee tly —4 K that m mbryos anniversary meeting for the despatch of bus be 
bright strong Poa Fo is indispensable, but the abuse of fall off than * only to be prevented by | Insects: JF. The insects sent 1 _Danach are ~ 
this is as common as the use of it. The canvas should | timely thinning of the blossoms: C — 1 
sed to feed upon dec i t 
fow — 7 che di — of —— or — raia State of the Weather near London, for the week ending April 26, 1819 healthy — "Oan 3 a See Dred 
in i 8 g, asol observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiswick. 5 hat manner the plants were attacked? W.—A We 
many instances, prevent the necessa punctualit — 1 give you no advice res e black beetle w hie 
in this matter, CI in conservatories should now | apn, en - 2 || Tuzamomeren. || fhe Cucumbers, without seeing a specimen, W.—F P, Yor 
have a portion of thei oots pruned in harder than Age. || "Max. | Min. || Max.) Min. Mean 24 as — The: — eae j 1 or hae 
rodace shoots for late 3 flowering. T Friday. 20 24 30.806 | 29504 || 47 | 2A 2 N. 01 scraped, and the scra iar pr a e —— bay Be — 
training of the young shoots should have regular atten- Sandy. 8 Sos | eres || 2 | a9 | aas w, || 0 | should be washed over with any soapy ot gummy misture, 
tio hat t they m ot all tenes have N 2 1 ty 8 3 as EY. 33 which will form a scale over the scales, and — 
ei avoid the sf formal a. T | Riel sae || a | R 495 || N. || 00 Young ones (which will now shortly hatch) fro 
b P-| Wed. .. 2 2 29,745 | 29.728 63 44 33.0 W. “08 escape. If 3 do effect their escape, they may ioe ar 
* 5 — by tying in the shoots to their ex- | , — | 30.194 ‘9 | 44.5 || N.W. || .01 | | by hot water. 
7 i the bere . a ntly lofty, climbers | Average “pean | sare |! s30 | | ano | tas | MELLOCA : Que rous. See p. 828 of our vol. for 1 
never so graceful as they do when allowed to hang | April 20-Clear and cold; snow and Ames or Prants: An Old Sub. The jelly-like fungus on the 
down in 3 en the falters. En P Ghear and frosty; cloudy s clear and frosty. ‘lear ana frosty. | Juniper is Podisoma Juniperi, concerning, which 
— Hazy; overcast; rain at night. its curious structure you wi d tice i 
8 ae SHRUB rer a-a in througbout ; — aes night. We know of no cure for it. The other is the Boe Maple, 
ev ns which w placed in * 12 beds ne S — te poopy ae viini —H T. Senecio Petasites ; should be grown lite 
before 9 he 0 — ed to the reserve| aan temperature of th front at nt Pur C 
A ean temperature of the week 44 deg. below the average. Pulmonaria latifolia of gardeners is a broad. leaved form 
garden, in order that the ground may be p d for —— — f P. officinalis; 1, Gnaphalium uliginosum 32,7 
its summer occupants. e beds which have been mee e,, bat Se ytin fr tae nigrum ; 3, aap eale ; 4, mosses have nothing to do 
ayi with Crocuses or other winter and spring flower- —— ba pipen i- 1 T So nica scute ey t; Iront a 
ing bulbs are generally prepared for this purpose 12 g Prevailing Winds gipas cpa posters 14. 
ared i se alg 5 1 orydalus cava, alias nine oF 7: — 15 F 
taking up the bulbs about this time ; such a practice, ate. EF H 11 Years in Quantity E E M. Cerastium arve 22 
however, is very objectionable, as the foliage is n Se | S36 | 76 | Rained, | Of Kain. E > , lS pii FoR Taon Hospus : — See pp. 719 and 755 0. 
sufficiently ri ; and if the bulbs are left in s 2⁰ 7 ens: Tottya - preme, White 
the ee until properly matured, and then taken up, N 25 a % ea 0 jergeant eure „„ Noel Optima, 
0 he 4 1 te fne or as t Wed. 3 a3 4 75 ; on 3) 2 §| 7407 p Candidate, Duchess of f Rutland, nd —— of Perfection: 
would have n if they ha en left undisturbed. | has 3} S 423 525 11 0.30 181 alal tia | PAx7ON’s Corracen’s CALENDAR, nt is now ready, 
1 . p : : 2.4 | 3. 7 2 i i 
kei- y be ma d by laying a few inche of fi h Satur. 5| 62.9 42.1 23 ii os = 3 2 AE ; ; : 4 pation among fheir — a ies 
W on the be planting the mer flo in it. The highest temperature during the above period oc d on the ath ot 25 copies for s 
en the latter operation is p ed, the | May, 131. —the E of April, 1895, 1048, and Sth of F mg Nor, Brill Tottyana Minima. Hege Lip, Pearl, Forge 
leaves of the en e brought together and ti — — t, Orion, Cassandra, Cent ie, Mount Etna, 
nots, to allow the tu mselves with 
a : out Notices to Corres Sie malaki P. Good Pines cannot be 
ng with their succe — remov ANAGALL — cumsta have 
lants in “he 8 it shoul borne in mind to AUSTRALIA | : 78.7 Monet —— — mi rp bs “3 fal i for nothing. If mpe —.— nd t he w — web i 
w them, n ot dig them up, gh the bulbs beneath ustralia ; A a all kinds of agricultural — suitable to the 3 and can afford the expense of an efficient 
be in ora" thereby ; at the same time a portion tly: fiat ls a atd ta 8 We cannot answer letters pri- Abidi gms gua Orit you — pny os z 
spring top dressing shoul moved, sufficient | AZALEA s: Tottyana Mini Lat arge supplies of hot dung; but then you must submit to 
to leave the Crocus bul 1 two or three inches fulgens, and Old White. ateritia, variegata, optima,| some cost in labour, Your question would have bet 
from the surfaco. By the method here described, wo isto and Hon : Pall price will be given for Nos. 27,95, 37, for | hood, who knows w "intelligent » gardener in tbe ey 
—+ 4 to display gorgeous ma“ ses of flowers, both | Braus: H. The cause of di : Am dea nnes for winter os, 
d ithout the plants of one season| n. the ground where plants are preat Men — 8 regen, J T. Th — . — is not a hg 
con- e ke em you recommen 
— with those of another. gba sgn n thas enables a judgment to be formed. — and econ nomically applies. 
FORCIN ne them microscopically, and mention the To the 5 second question we a 4 ; to the 
8 88 E again next we — 5 ‘ T Mr. Kendall, of Stoke Newington w has taken . 2 2 
fermenting mate waterial, it must tom heat f a by | en in thet ag 2 — 3 — Endlighe — Bait or of 3} — —— vi ie impose iv aod 
u 64 s 
old tan shou! of a decline, the Ae of 1 the — randaige” ie £ good book’ = 8 pu — ey a from i pro ee sional — . E, If you will forward us Yes! 
pan 1 J ose who wish to study address we ma ssibl * ble to assist you. L. 
yo eae inches of h — and Physiology. — C W. Hooker's a BA ois Ruoponznozons a aT De nima. Arboreum, Rasseln 
AAT iow obleanum, s N . — — 
2 55 — fo oe — As th but most espe- oe . — pk 8 Holm seat eer Seren: Ke — k rs We eu ‘oa ot ike! ie Jour b. eae 
in , i Y; nothing is more like cause the 
a powerful saxillary in kee i the heat u will now be O Wiat the im AEA, is not in the power of any man to say Suckers. If, ari exa amination they are found to be too deep, 
pi ng | ea rey it will not a — of disease “ie a Toon: e y ANE ‘by replant them in the autumn, taking care to keep 242 
rally be sufficient to aprh 3 coe pees * bd a ber yon to hnt ate ‘the matter yourself, ton jay —— “om 8 — the m „ * fr sources 
a n by 5 . n ht, g the — er W r than that of which 5 pull them Z if possible. Young Roses are ‘al i mere or ie 
8 . g W, pe ent look they had been dis uce suckers, but if the | —— be 
sphere during the day, and inl wi i bong teed by sav gat "Caan ite hae ht thay are | e Tor a yoar or two hey wilt ia mow cs tA 
a wi : yana Minima. Candidi appear altoj 
very bright —— Viner When ihe my 4 T harr erii, Arrn Fimbriata, Imbricata, Bealii, Duchess STRAWBERRIES : We see no reason for altering 0% 
fully ripe let ture 1 to ° by nigh 5 —— a, and Donkelaari t ana superba, Old White, Cars- pinio 5 papers 
gire ake ol ait ering the ay Rae nates crvxanta Tol . HE 1 a Swinpiers: O ine wil h put 2 85 COR- 
‘ . ’ ew. èj columss 
foliage “te ng as possible ; p — der 3 eel, Sapphire, m ry re ee mo 0 af the parties ; bag we ann 22 put the 
proper n een id to pre m oer es Aa eparation, but it moves urther 8 e Se said eno e 
establishment of insects e Vines, this will ¢ me the somes" — “emo el of making it accurate, had i tally: ei expo — 3 å By tee 
DAR id 80 8 em, an 
wil derive and the advantages wh ich the Raine crop raga H. They are perféct, and may be expected gor —- is 5 arch ? e 
an am recom hea PLANTS 2 ourse gy ire 
the pains which have been taken Painia — > green fangus — we ee how eyes differ; what you call a and everybody can expect E 
Peaches s early ia N x ' e| Mucor mucedo, There ho everybody else —— blue mould, | tn money. yellow a53 
pr hing maturity, 2 Liles ovember will now be ap- men. Wah With torrente OR tho matier witiitha speci- —.— Litres: A W. None are hardy except the 
air and J less WI 1 require more _ Mould will disappear, with R 2338 and the ii rizontally #2 
moisture ; but in all cases avoid sudden | E ens Tottyan Minima, Prona a. Wine Tuarnens: C S. Stretching the wi ended in 
eu Bergiana, Aristata major, H ropendens, Metulflo ora bicolor, answer best, unless you adopt the pian pirap 
HARDY FRUIT 6G ntermedia, Cavendishii, rn — 8 . 1 do as well fan mpi gis 
Apricot walls must be fre — spicus nana, Savileana, Troe randinosa, Lam ber. other method. We are of opinion that rough plat 
‘aterpillars des troyed ; and cite over, and the 7 different varieties 5 Ven trico! = waters. EE ite. 2 i suitable £ 4 al I gardening pur posee:s oscberry! — 
rui LOW 5 shad 7 
thickly, a portion of those w they are * 1 rf but E ora 3 E Certainly . Shrubs are indispens.| the common ‘Physalis you have nothing to — nn Joe 
0 rr ones Set ak = efowiled |- e i, neat, gu not disposed to ser ent ie it tike a tender e annsi —.— oo i dongs u to the 
A re n 15 a . ere flower- man a warm wa 
8 * would constitute a fair crop should be left difficulties 3 . sealant lines, or Whee a z natural ade 5 Verbenes (Verbenace®). 
N — . Disbudding of P have proposed m 4 t neral bd then which 
ectarines should be procee with; and b: into play the taste and s shn * WERS. 
these and the A ; oth | ously mask — doce 5 FLO 
should be washed on ask what he cannot exclude lilac ; petals St 
with the engine. The remains of th week | garden “furniture” may be h n ent bushes an d nn 88. Large bright rosy nat iar. 45 
shoul duall ains of the evergreen branches ave seen a square garden encl ployed efectivaly. — 8 fall, e lpi 1 nit 
h gra toa where the fruit i laid out that the squareness i enclosed in walls so leverty sirably vaner to bree rked 
eir presence is no longer useful. Notwithstandi P all noticed till afte Ruopopenprons : R Rilott. 1, Light rosy purple, ma 
verity of the weather w within the ly t fo ing the lawn G might be thrown into a regula ould think that the eos d ith dark brown spots on one ° 2 : eet 
inelined to that it n fortnight, weare| circle, or some tolerably regular figur ar half oval or ha shading off towards the centre to a pale bed on the 
has not don ueh d E and D. A ar figure, by a little shaping of — — k ros le, finely mar aod 
to the fruit as man h i amage ; As to bays, promontories, and alls e Bias “4 25 verg oe 
y, fared — would, a the | “aca principle, they must be d h deviations | . upper porals sith 3 — E un. 
3 tre * had only sli ght protect y hav camped ought to be avoided in an at gar 9 88 ane 1 ee eg E ee, er ei ye 
injured ; and in i ey should be provided i i much care as tions bave ecessst 
— 3 — > — the poeta ing branche 1 i 1 8 ate say casi etained 2 — 
, all er-garden fit gracefull e possibility ——— can be made — beg for sertion of whe 
romontories of a plantation that surrounds it the bays and] of these numerous atid nro e in 
urrounds it. But all tis] intere i aged. 
sting contributions is still del 


— —— 2 


THE AGRICULTURAL 3 


ani SEEDS, & 
i TURNIP SONS, Ag Agricul ltural Museum, 


„on AEN priced 


— 

EEDS. suited to various soils, &c., at 32s, per 
h acre, Directions for 

Se 12 Ibs, to eac irections for 


r any the 1 
n 1 34 3d. per lb. Fine sorts for 
bro Lar 4 5 tice that their Agricultural 

no 3 
4 k Co, beg — is ready, and will be 
f 1 their Catalogue of Kitchen 
te ress GEORGE GIBBS and Co, 
the Royal oi meee 8 of Bel- 
= be. be , Down-street, Piccadilly, L 
WING MANURES as enean 
LAWES 2 Deptford 
MANU. * ize et —— Ka 323 4 


ATE OF LIME H 
ACID AND COPROLITES , 5 0 0 


5 GUANO, from selected cargoes (in Doek), 
ONIA, &c. 
Aad AMMONIA, & City, London. 


NDON ; 


1 
of Iron o Wood er — upon the most 
"Balconies, Palisading, Field and Garden 


ant places, 
Fleet-street, London. 


coo AND DURABLE ROOFING. 


ROYAL LETTERS 


PAT ENT, 


’s-buildings, ator 
and only Paten 

— ROOFING 
Workshops, and for Garden 


ulturai — it shone this read 
VER MED. 
by 


— oom unicatio th 
= ps -MEADOW "AND PASTURE GRASS 


well ra in 5 Saas se Westminste 
as er of the ta i 
GE e Nobiliiys mats and prinsipal INGHAM BROTHERS, 170, Hampton-street, Bir- 
kin; —.— mingham, sole Manufacture p and 
to inform the Trade that at their Manufactory, | ZINC aaa oe or Label for Garden Borders, Flower- 
every article required for the constrastion pots, &c., in boxes, of 100, Ke. The Zine Labels — 
1 as well as for gt them, may be approved of for their lasting durability ; can be written upon 


of — 


Trent, 3 — Mary-—May 4: 


subject 
to get rid of the disease, self- deni. 


265 


ICULTURAL SEEDS, 
1 Axp WOOD, SEEDSMEN TO = NORTHUM- 
— * agree Society, beg to inform their 
agricultural friends that their large and 1 re t d St 
WELD TORMG ge and well selecte toeks of 
rnip Seeds, 


8: ge’s Dwarf. top, — 
top; Laing's (from aing’s own stock); Skirving’ Pome 
Fettercairn, @LOBES : x White, Pomeranian, Red, and Green. 
Tanxanps: Red and White. 


MANGOLD WURZEL, CATTLE CABBAGES, FIELD 
CARROTS, and FIELD PARSNIPS, e sda Onsen of 
AGRICULTURAL SEEDS, 

Tap — be 82 JP application, 
A remittance is re e rom un 0 . 
E 108 N. B., Apr a EEEO 


.* . MAN URE COMPANY would, at 
RES . ll parti 

MA NUR which th yee —— recommend as a top. dressing 

for all corn cro ps. It contains a large am amount of ammonia and 


2 2 


Ps. 
The following MANUREs they supply on the best terms: 
Peruvan Guano, Nitrate of tg vee ange of Ammonia, Soda 
Ash, for destroying Wireworm, Gypsum, Sulphuric Acid, Agri- 
cultural and Fishery Salt, Charcoal, Te, 
DWARD PURSER, Secretary, 


rm, 


ncomplete and ye nas 40 00 the other. 
r ard to the first, Gove 
5 at the e ou 


With 
ent has already appo ointed 
1 ty duty it is 
xamine all sheep and cattle arriving from o er 
finies. It has oiii asked, with sabi reason, 
whether this inspection, without a quarantine, will 
e sufficient to pr pee oy small-pox bei 
imported? In pi 


ti 
for the proper eae on of the an 
before stated that 1 


before the 


at like 
will expose their sheep to 
ection for some little 
to a en 


o at least some 
„ by the time they are submitted to 
doub t 


B. wanes and Sons, Milbank-street, 


THM Rand by their Age > 60. LIVER? 00L; 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, London. shipment so that 
1 VERPOOL and BRISTOL; Je N YOUNG, ENGINEER and MILLWRIGHT, begs inspection, there is scarcely — t but aa 
a0 0 . PO NW. pia PRYOR, LONDON. peoi to sall the attention of Landed Proprietor: ors of the e sheep will exhibit the er in the pular 
—— 1 the heeds reign agama 4) and Tile Manufacturers to his Registered PIPE and T stage. But supposing this should not be the case 
spurious Guano, purchase * MACHINE, which gained the Silver Medal at the Hig th — well-fo di dd 4 
ip only to dealers of established chara d Agricultural Society’s Show in Edinburgh in 1848, All there is Now such a well-founded dread o md 
3 . who ago supply, i article i any Clays will suit with the ordinary preparation which is required foreign shee eep, w farm will be found t 
auth, at their g it from the Import eee nin no 8 3 os speculate on them, and if they do, there is very little 
aS anp CO., 6l, G Hari it will be warranted to make from 8000 to 9000 pipes or tiles per : t but w eve Bre will be used i 
GTEPHENSON anD racec street, day.— — 5 particulars, apply to Johx Youna, Newton dee them 29 rt from others, so ae in fact they 
London, and 17, New Park street t, Southwar entors | Green 
en of the Improved CONICAL — DOUBL 22 will be placed her e he purchaser. 
BOILERS, respectfully y solicit the attention of PORTLAND — Tes i „ from Under these circumstances, we think that the 
prove MENT to possess the rare i 
Tank Sytem to Pinerie es, Propagating Houses, | perty 2 withstanding the severest frost, and to be consequently pointment of com nyo willhave the effect 
eric heat as well as bottom-heat is | superior to every other for hydraulie purposes, as buildi = of preventing the ee of small- pox. 
without the aid of pipes or flues, | and lining of — —— — Baths, Fish-ponds, & c. For how er, will be ery doubtful ben 5 


| Some stringent inbiri are at the same time ae, 

| with reference to the spread of the disease in this 

country. 

We have before . to the causes 8 hay 
The ignoran 


, & permanent nt insertion 


with the greatest ene and, when dr. 
is sec — Direc s for use sent with each box, incl 
bottle of Meta 


Hie 
Sole agents in Landon; G. and J. DEANE, Horticultural Imple- 
inant Warehouse, 46, King William- street, London- 8 


PATENT FLEXIBLE INDIA RUBBER PIP A 
TUBING .FOR RAILWAY COMPANIES, BREWERS, 
G , GAS COMPANIES, GAR- 
. 
ED INDIA. RUBBER 
Hot Liquor and Acids 
without injury do not become . or stiff in any tempera 
(but are 3 3 mone —— as 5 require no appli- 
—— arly adapted for Fire- 
engines * nes, Garand, and all purposes 
where a a perfectly fe flexible T 45 required. Pore all sizes from 
-inch 


, Gos , Gosw 
. Valeanited — rubber Washers "of all sizes for J oints | 
and Steam Pipes, and —— sheet Rubber, 
any — — for all kinds of Joints, and o purposes 


URDAY, APRIL 2 


MEETINGS FOR THE TWO 3 WEERS. 
Tvespar, May 1 Society of England. 
WEDNESDAY, — 2- land and Agricultural ety. 
Tuurspay, ultural Imp. Society of Ireland. 
— of England. 

y of Ire ee 


0—Agricul 

Ardle 

— ham —May 91 Tav 

WE closed. our last observations (p. 234) on the 

t of the SMALL-Pox IN Sueep, by stating e, 
1 

„by N 


Im 
yea — i : Burton-on- 
Winker Luss. — tt x slesworth, Deben nham, m. Alay 3: Jork, 
London, Great Oakley, Clyst, M 
9: Tavistock. 


May 8: Framlingh 


— "No rfolk, Rut- 
euch (at Richmond), 
on d Gen 


0 Duoni 


a us, — 
of Planer ‘vote of. apra and 
Winches wide of Roofs. 


to Noblemen, 
t free to any part of the 


cdg is ms Works — London 


cised 
Such i 
with reference to bar 
with animals. 


the 
of its infection 


2 Foor, 
and Testimonials stringe 
„Gen- 


gent m es to prevent the ad of 
ady, for the superiority and the greater individual 
value of our sheep renders the disease 


res. that sanitary an 
effectual, must be o 


is the case with — * measures adopted 
e rule du 


Boar 
to | posed existence, of the sal pom 


The Agricultural Gazette. to examine the 


oo prt it. the nitive 
and symptoms, Pie att of its e and the 
sale of sheep from ee ed flock. e removal 
of these causes will, wi „get rid of the evil. 
To e the fi ie ti inci of these 
seme and to accomplish the others we deem it 
most ad that an Act of P: be 


sable n 

passed, containin ng the following thes os erg 
f an Hien apr by e — of 

rvices shall be paid for re the 
ager 3 by Government. 
died owner of any ased 0 
ock, whose losses will be en wut 
diti onal urden. The inspector only t 


sup- 
sheep, 
and any wè} J concealment of such know edge 
should be pun ert se certain peer ri to 2 re- 
covered before a m rate. 
On the e of this information to the 


e 
extent, and so it ought, for individual benefit 
should never so * d to stand in the way of 


eadfa —— of 
ruinous consequences cons entails, and the virate 
y aff 


chara 


—.— where 


the i 
1. the prohibition of the sale of infected — 
— — 


ntroduction of 3 sheep from a 


nm eu 


well as those act — ‘idles 


e diserdar.* Either of these pa ans must be very 


existence an A ament, sub- 


‘actory can be su 
so that they pay for 


the 
ba e en e 


in an ote 4 — th the o symptoms have Sipe 


in 
fride of 


aire ‘imal affected with the 
ven 3 having tl ecm 


—— public (aen Fa he same time, it nb — 
party wi as Sor advice and assi 
er * may rae rid o the disease with the — 


Bes ides 


aad- 

e prophylactic 

m e may observe, in 

favour of the plan, that it involves no new or ex- 

jachinery, as it avails itself of a Board 

ly in existence, and the members of which are 

the parties most interested in the evil they are called 

upon ard against. There is only one officer to 

be 5 in each union, and he is only to be 
paid when his services are really required. 

so decidedly 1 

8 that = 8 very much Mig be 

pagated in 1 


is and in- 
is eyer 


any other way alth in many in- 
stances, it is difficult or npossible to trace the 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE.. 


jon. But, whilst this is the case, 


of the e infection. 
Bouree o bots that when the disease has 


‘we have numerous pr 


not see 


what Legislation had to 
r 
Furniture ks, Horse 


do with the price of Corn, 
h the price of How 


to make we ~ mee e 
d the so, interest ans 


‘extinguish h this forei N also o for the future 
“effectually * the 


To an Do an bi d the calmne 


reason, or the 1 
the i 


early 5 may 
reana and 7 0 N 


ine fortune, or the misfortune, A seiri 
the jam 


poison him 


can hear the sensible and outraged nurse exclaiming of ac 
i ivility.: tno violence bii the part 


worn-out patience and civil 


wade through all 5 
Acts that 8 it, first against 

ation, then against Importation =g fen nst 0%, 
then to regulate them g then 


12 ene, be our shores. . C. S 
was 


r 
e to 8 . ned with, roa 
nfluence of a low Corn-market, and | to be howled 


ought. 
3, within a . — it has been 
ure, in this 


„and largely, to an 
é 


— 
che 


| dro; 
ones fected on — —.— 


life-blood and sinews of labour, or, worse still, 
ridd mboth sides asia ‘ Fixed- 


But when the — is 1 voices can 
ubject n to shew 


nd of Huspanpry rete ta 
ong-continu e, ks it was to 
expected that during its ua "t that qui 
eared a i Carras should betake 
itself to the ps e e. 5 the soil, as it would, safely 
— se not bein ng 
ilts, had vies to from, and was 
its true, 10 its fictitious, 
— which confiden 5 assured 

if the du ity on 


pped u 
babes according 


the Pamens “that 


+ 
EY 
0 


same u g ery w. 
alature. a as framed with ‘the rakidan * 
acting upon the price of the article, raised u 

art of the conse, 

uncing all duty whatever upon it, even for the 
ea purposes of the State. The recoil correspon nded 

to the impulse: and the best o 


exac act am oo aa: 


a Rai canine lavin 
a bone. into pa “deceptive stream. ‘that re- 
l 


rsevering attempts to regulate the 
it eg of farming produce by Acts of hohe pi 
i sagen mn —— —— Magistrates a 
arter sion t curious 
8 of our Statute — 2 a the earliest times 


— aaa have astro 
ti stomach ‘the 


e present. The following i is a list of the 

Acts during the period when England was an 
orn. 

34 Edw. III., bat (1360.) Exportation prohibited. 

17 Rich, IL, -, (1803.) Exportation wen, to 

to ‘the K siete sp 11 ——— 


accordingly when a pod . Prices came round, 

the er was set bea Boating the mi n a tn | 

‘man’s-buff exasperation to get at them eens 

long — wound for so man 
is | 


an opposite, vi and 
g mankind to 58 delivered from 


A 


thes aking poe Sh since the 
mane 


sot ota 


uyd our own genera 

of each a state —4 
around the subj 
ce of Corn? a po 


t for that 
es around 
ssible that he wot uve taken k 


fy under aa. 
from this country under a 
fully as bj 


oe 


place of shipment. 

3 Edw, IV. fs 3 2. (1463.) O Importation p 
* at place of impo nder 6s. 2 i ir. 
—.— VIII. . 2. (1533. ) Exportation So ied 


with exceptions. to 
— — . — ee? known b, 


1 


has — 2 sup- Joo 
FF thin things s Tias had 


re. 
anti out, under penalty of — double the 
4.) Exportation al 


é to be set in — Pillory; to auric their 
d be imprisoned d pae hg 
Farmers buying eorn for seed, to an equal 


2 


E Ar a 
lowed wh a pne (155 


ot above 6s. te 195 ds., 


— — — 
“To day that you could abc 


cargo, and im 
to the port named i in the 11 


í — as her r Majesty 
OF 156 


arter ; ported 
| | license, not under the act, duty to be 2s, per ag 
35 Eliz., e. 7. (1 s — — 
Poundage 


ren i 


f all protection which | to 
e | the Se, i “could have re 2 —a fair fi 
So 


s the the 


t 
was not above 6s. 8d. at 


| al 
rohibited. when i 


at the price f 
2⁵ mig vie 13. e No renting F Farmer to 
more to rent m of 


[Apri 28, 
tioned in the caw a 3 of treble the value fig 
The * only to be taken 
5 Eliz., c. 5. (1562.) F Allowed to Rye 
only when under 10s. per 2 

; Barle oan Malt ed. 8d. Bure only frome 
might 


5 Eliz., 2.) No one to be 2 


Licenses ty 
s meaty a 
market. 

c. 13. (1571.) Average . 
be settled once a year b 


Wheat was s above 20s aa. 
_| portation, 2s, ie qu | 
1 Jac. I., e. 25. (2603.4) Importation ot Whe 


prohibited tien it was under 26s. 8d, per quarter, 
21 Jac. I. 23. 


be pent pore 4 
arten j abe 


5 
15 Car. II., c. 4 


iL, + 13. Gerd) Exportation permitted 
* 535. 4d. per quarter. Pound 

age to be fr per, qua 

About this time nthe tide began to 

a lation was nee topin, 35 Tala 

an Jmporter of C For ae 

Statute-book presents a state on utter 

between Pinde and. Importation, oe 

late S aai the other by 

gruous misture of duties 4 85 

— — other with a 

tot il 


eto tur ‘nto 


. by a bin- 


‘shall give - an 2 8 
middle period ’ in our next; falle 

ta 1 00 of the Statutes p assed afte aft 

ce fell entirel 

established. Of all tha 1 — can be a of pee 

lation’, the 3 themselves most canous 

875 each at the same time sup the best com- 

ry upon its predecessor, 7 


c 


ä OF FARMING No:7 > 
ct farmers’ fu 


ve in ae DEL | 


— ̃ — w — — — 


W c p . A 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


267 


a been improved, and i 
7 pil advantages that 0 
nd yet who will say, 


w a 
0 
ele 


185. 
, the ‘ighter and less ey ae 
e been introduced ; a change 


m 


11 


VEESTEEEE 
100 


E 
45 
te 


t 
waggons now 
= 


i 
2 
i 
: 


w 
* 
7 
225 
a 

PER 

2 8 

E 
Es 
< 2 

85 
* 

8 

bo 
= 
3 
88 

ic) 

. p 
H 
J 


eek I aah iy a distan 
Beans and 64 = shels of 


GUTH 
ERE. 


w y 
Tnt of lower Kp at the 8 


e seen to be changed fi 
f th 


of the grounds for despair by showin 
ent posit e farmer, under a return of 
the prices of 1771 ied fe good as it then was, when 


not only did not 


ee ee of beggars kad eean. be. Sear 3 ki 
rit 


acre was m less than one-half of what the farmer pays 


per atre n 
BROOA Da al 
e number of pauper show 

about 450,000, which would lavei 880, 000 as 9 — 
of 9 7 who live oll t certa 


ng. 
population sik the 


n 
by vagrants 


was yöni 


and re 70 wor 
n wa 


first offe n 


n ine t; 
felons, and ge 25 third az 
tute 39 ot Elizabeth, c. 


most straight way to o ae pore? lyin he was bor 
to 3 himself to labo bject R 
* e í Cyclopedia yi Poin nee 
3 wages 


appear 8 have bee 


a da 
10d. The 


pendant 3 fo or 8 
= reel the Sig the home 
consumption, Davis, 3, Feidovidh’s. lace, Old 
pe eg w 


plu 


E 
pen 
Boe 
88 8 
FS 
a 
8 
oO 
E 
12 — 


agri- 


7 


17771 
Fre i 
ie a 


these two statements ‘would 
Baat in 1685 rent was generally 


ted the whole income of the 
clergy at only 480,000/. per 
ee only 544,000“. ae is certain . 

times as grea e larger of 
that an 


x TYEE 
10 1 e 


only two-thirds of the 


uantit: 
the tithe must have - A 


öd. per averaged 
151 the rej 


a Year ; th 


The oe — ey, 
third of v. ation was 
ie ti aed tn * it now 


— 
S 
ve 


ms to 
of the English coche: “which 
St have been larger than the 
relief now.“ * the pro- 
3 mber who received 
in 12 of a oai hardly have 
whole e Í 


and much less ttha. 
— &c., to be assesse 
t Probably the rate. goe 


trade, Estee was actually 
N n 


e | are these age A good old time 
ain this, ane illustrates his meaning 


ed i 
the conclusion that | 


h are under a 


ign of Charles II., amounted to | se 


IEN price of Whe 
a quarter, and a great ses ke 
— obtain Wheat, lived u 


f | ding and 5 were dearer, an 
This bein e case, our ancestors 
off in the good old ti 


proceeds to ex 
with much hae and poin 


ain season 
he proportion of beggars to the whole 
e number of | ri 


pg sel labourer 


5 bricklayers obtained 2s 64, 


t w 
ity of Pl ede. 
le 


t and King both estimated the 
3 


Sai] 


ig 
. 


arly this number, 
That the 3 
The 


rea- 


a thousa 


d | wilfully into the o proved 22 fatal e 


the ie to ane bisan. 2 make sad ha voce — 2 
the Coffee plan What was to be done? There 


ay — 


this W ee 
nds 


man © system c 
orea 


of the g 
of its great author, 


n and wisdom 
ould n ae ee pa 8 pre} jadian. in agricultural districts 
enacted that « all er ons whale, and mighty in body, argum 
she sin ‘or suc 


such a. ts have no weight; neither will I attempt 
to picture the gered vith which I have wi ed th 
amiliarity with poison spreading like an evil . 
among the beautiful oS eg works, I will 
say, that if t f Engl eer — blindly and 
of the Coffee 
mit ang band the 


planters of Mad if they pe 


very 8 to 5 che erops Soft this countr 


pii do.“ 


rey 


“In spite of e many will 0 awe to them- 


selves the Tapani of the 


country than the England in w which is i. ae 


pamai 
at 


first t sight seem oie dae that 23 1 constan 


r speed, sho 
ie th 


our impatience of the 
That impatience, while it stimulates us t 


ceding generations, disposes us to im i their 
It is, i 


e past. 


the traveller in the Arabian desert. 


tantly 
d be coat 
ese two 


fe 
unable | 4th 
nd Oats. 


y growth 


nd this 
8 0 mes amarey if they annihilate. insect 
they 18 5 nly effect their own ruin, 
ae front national calamity. 
ay Tara a #13. 

n:—I have read. i letter from: one of your 
ts dated West Somerselshire Farm, (in 
1 ch 75 in which the writer says :— 
rtieu- 


aving been led by m 


in an 
—— ae heg, through the medium of yo A 
in such w 


be 117 to ee o'a 
lf < 


of Saintfoin, and 
asked respecting it ee those 
rience in its culture, I should pt dente o obliged b iy 
your obtaining for me the inform 5 abo ntion 
Richard Yo oung, Milverton, § Somerse 
r. Hawkins, of et. a ee occupied i in 
fariniog, and Tah ae ged in land-surveying 
and drainin me a — substance which oa 


s pre 
i 


th, we 
that which’ misleads 
the cara- 


an or is dry an and bare ; but far in advance, and far in 


is the s 
ilgr we — — ae and find 
where, an hour before. 


(Macaulay, Vol. i. „p. 426.) An Essex 
. om e Correspondenc 


—I take the liberty of preieig “i that in the 
y will be | 
e 


You saa not be 


rn crops at all! 
startled ata 


works upon Natu 


mete of grakles, and every b 
zt wily ape All went on very well fora 
when lo and -behold, the insects and — — 


bold as 
ex e by a — statement a in 
ome Natural History upon the very best 
Coffee pianin in the 


emblance of ay ing waters, The | 


will pre- 


rakle, a 


ear or two ; 


ec having | deseribed by Mr. 


A ease ih 


tion | proto 


escribed as 2 ginh and 
localities. He refe: 


on Land Drainage, 


tance ts £ pa. 
es considers it to be an aggreg f peroxide 
m the ch 9 solution . the 


the 
anata told Mr. Hawkins that I was satisfied “this 
was of vegetable origin, and I showed him noer 
composed of e ly 
t was e evidently — 
t to 


res 
Mr. Thwaites, ot Bris whose aa 
eoveries among th hae groups oft this family òf Pae 
8 recently been eens g: ney uch light 


d with which gli R a 
burnt it in an open er lost p. cent. o 
oa left a residual Ps 5 per cent, 


med i lace 
— niera opic isn 
of exper urate observ 
1 bouid. = inlined 15 think that e. evils complai 
of ah t be a oide ed if sand and sam se atone — 
care 10 


“a ad 7 
12 off by 
current, 
in it. If the * light floceulent . little “passes,” 

Parkes, p. 70, were really: compote 


288 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


[APRIL 28, 


of of peroxide of "iron, they would have “subsided by 


laws of specific gravity 
which ste pa 


subdi 
a diminution in in the bore of the 


Se y cause “a more 
be directed — them, as 


ii) 


id as it 


asd 
rom that by which we comp: 


the 


er ae ceed the particles of 
diern — —4 hint, (not ) th 

tatics, | a hint, (not again 
l hare od — Ne E. statement ook: dme dishonest, 
anonymous writer ten 


are 


4 really did misrepresent Mr. Warnes’s statement „and I 


more readily because I fe 
has no 3 whatever to question the integrity of any 
e no wis consider Mr. Wilkins as an 


a 
calculated to create 


bation ?—To this inquiry I or I 


some at the top, and placed the therm 
laced them in a flued pit, under 
n 


‘the soil, and left an ope under an 


lar, for after the fire 


ept regu 
at — A — ner — hears above — in the morning ; 


but after 
— AI 
— — Fw 


ong enough, to dete 
ra Wust in, — ar Ph had not, I exam 
d hiar with — (or like ely to 
2 ould here remark 
— meai stolen, T was compel 
chance and I set a hen at the 
and Boos all bad 


À bet 


of days, no birds 

ce, I — r Kea an — one bird 
been — aai 
but would hav 
heat, to ewes I attribute — loss, for 
heat on the 

being 3 in one corner, an 


— 

‘more than 95° to 100°, P that if T ean procure some 

pe mra meam 1a eee — x ng 

* 
and if it 

command, but 


of servi 
t let — an — be dise 


the altered bes Sots t 


heat varying fiom 80° to 110° answer the 


may 


ined | 


be), the 


that 


but one) e) and at | 
making 


had 


not so forward, 
ad not odi í for inequality of 
e fluctuation of 


a heat varying not | 
eggs | fisheri 
bed, 
hea ng an and | | may * asked, how come famine and disease to over- 
ice to you it ‘al be be at your 
‘ouraged, but try 


‘his luck ; let him cm a re A nae of heats and give the 


RU 
#5 


longer, her yal 
uz N How; 1 Moat ask 1 m 
— lainer? In June the ani 
seei 
was only worth 7s. gl — ‘ 


Wi 
have 
in his stk — 


ath 
h1 
is not this 10% for six mon 


5 


4 
ths’ 


ave 
for the 8 ous years, wa ot eting th 
Ca 


| its favour to 
—— — —— never 2 — 8 ok others which 

ve 
Is the N Sitios "for Cultivating t the Land to be 
useles ssion on the im- 


t the regenera rs Trelénd 


can only be 4A about by the —— of plenty 


rs ridiculous to ring 
Te cannot be denied 


of work with fair w 
the ch 


It appea 


=3 


pulation half as num erous again, as at — exists. 
hat has been ac Mr. 


advantage, and for K* benefit of their 


knows better than Mr. Wilkins that the re of A e 


sp 
mails if 


wimi so bright an | amoun 


. expensive eee but would introdus aa 
A eep drains at interv: 
ording to the s prep 
a favourable to the pla 


— 


advice is to Ng on ‘the f 
the d 


— — a 


rule in strong land management, “ That open surface fur- 


—— The . 
dealer land abundant, water powe 
to be had in large quantities; : 
. of — ‘for head makin clima 


— 


Fad 


whel a coun ell may e sg express | Tr 
their astonishment at thousands starving in a country 


to bring pestilence and des 


olatio 
wey oors ? been provo — Sn Providenco 
vouchsa ine that our  contimaed 
diso 


error v 
art of the United Kingdom, of 
and whose interior economy 
—— so widely fro om that of Engl —— — dis 

e human — — sove 

— applied, to s 

which would not — admissible i in the 

an earlier 

recourse must be 
labour and ca 


e from neglect, 
* — — life, 
treatment of the 


now tired of contributing to idleness, Falcon. 
ong the communicatio 


cases o ee ere drainage 3 M. w 
s alrea 


ut by consuming the fruits of | utmost 


isease | after the same preliminaries, 


ed with the 
As | whole, that I thought it . mentioning 


eth 


John V 


in operation, obviously a 


As — the 3 preliminary to the actual drainage, 
and strong soils we = r of 5 
in breadth 


— — this Teor 282 p are i 
e dryness. Neverth ‘ion a ale 


Bs 


t the 
— 


pose the drainage mob 
comm ai e, 


ma i 
nie off shows — drain in the bottom 
: of a land, and 


n the other two; 
— the 9 in 
drai 


a cutting really equivalent to 31 ar 4 fee "fet 
e 


ga 
land into two . — lande, ‘ut e alaye ee keep 
all 


final —— does no 
8 be raised so high, and, 
ur 


eet, ave 


cing 
18e 


sc 
8.8 8 


most sat 2 

this plan there need = nt 
inch of 3 nor need 
Worcester. 


Societies. ENOLA y 
LIUOS, SOCIETY OF 
A Warxty Coun as held at the . 15. 41 
nH a es 
anover. pe Hon, R onzat mess Aer r Gure M 
„Sir phin, 
Bart., bar. — mond 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


1 — ] lonel Cbal- 
in be, Go Co 
pi Evel n De M.P., Mr. G. 
, Mr. Mr Gaussen, . 2 
Hobbs, 


Mr ö e 
, Turner, Prof. Way, a 
II. . 1. 

T. B Web new Members were el 


ected : 
1 Hall, lng “Hinckley, 1 ee 


ho, Rago, Ha —— 
f 14 —— for election nn ‘the next. 


ti 
A 
1111 5 

: r 


2 ining 
n it was 
R 


rait 
Ane 
S 
11 
p 


Essays, 
if he ‘thought rm oper 
vette bore the motto, Without 8 


Diseases OF —The CnhaInMAN took that op- 
i of stating his conviction that the 
N red to confer a i 


o to 


the 935 . of farmers, with a c- 
cn detlo onld to the ci 


Colonel Challoner, Mr. Fuller, Mr. Overman, 


that as 


of the with a request 
on the et to the Council at 


natu 
1 700 ee 
m 
blue, 
ope 8 from 
t it to ana lysis, 


to 
Earl of 


Ne Conse — itte 
Sera aco t 


of localities in 
The Agnia a —— of Paris 


ar 
e 


hiag The weather of 


— pa —— f late has 


team mes, Dung 


——̃ ——-— — 
remains in the yards, or any other species of carting to employ 


and prevent the horses from working the land when 
ea —— 


0 e 

is of very little consequence her 
golds are very suitable f. where = cannot be 
he wn to adva y sheep. Mangold Wurzels 
our cattle and 


sume * 


| ü half for. meals, 


F allowance, The cattle con- 
755 to 


0 Ibs. pot ty he Tatag’ sheep are folded on the poores 
— where some „fog exists, with a view to 
otherwise e improve the condition of the land, 
aily allow Oats 


first f more suitable for keeping t the 2 in o When 

our roots are 3 e giving the “tating. atile 

Gries, ye, or Tar straw as a 

We usually sow Ap al pak 5 ot Tank kard Turnips — ‘a 
iddle ay, for sity consumption in September, The 

ih ge E opene, „up to hay-time, will be chiefly 

Pari h Turnip sowing, hoeing Beans, „ betwe 

the row: manual labour will be filling and spreading 

dung, M AE n 3 threshing and dressing corn, attend- 

on ge ge stoc og corn, &c. The hours of labour with 


2 6 o'clock to 6 o'clock, with an hour and 
- wee 


prion mon 


rom the 
e crops look promising; but t 
ertainly, on the whole, very unprofitable for inea 
— R. 8. 
_ BERWICKSHIRE MERSE Fary, Apri 20. .—Since last 3 5 st 


ies animated discussion on the subject, be" e eared, 25 "feeding 


part 
t had received | and ihe rest will be laid up on the Ist of Ma. 


allow land for 


‘diets 
ailed to a considerable as go Pona has been so stormy that we could not plough’ 


We e been threshing Beans anå Oats, and cleaning 

etalon ds, leading Thorns sind: —— the fences; a — 

and a woman 9 = cattle with sliced Turnips and 10 lbs, 
1 

— e 28.— 5 

wanes has been very un er abl 

has fallen 


e 


ng. 
useful at the 


and hay, with 4 Ibs. oilcake — 
and iambe a are esting down the water meadows, 


fields has 


e horses i oe 2 tae petites e idle 
d when so wet, 


—— 
n as possible 


hen Man gold Wur Se Carrots, and Turnips, 


time, which, with the m mothers’ milk ar A run before the 


— 2 will — them thrive hg 3 rA 
: A Sub. See Mr. Keen n 
LE Cow 5 Inquirer. Cows 
letin Dor- 
1 fr pote m 24 3 pre 8 ear, 0 . from 
at about 1 ee “the ee ~ 


rougbly was h, and 
OxALIC A * prone 4 * 
ALIC ACID: Aliquis. The oxalate o 
is the oxalate of = — is insol er e 
PHOSPHATE or : Amateur. It is never made; our natural 
supplies are 1 t in bones, — 4 are half 4 te of 
lim Pinon give from one-third to 
im 


every part, WC. Cs, 


2 
Gypsum er pre- 
‘hae are great otis of it w the — of 
tone. You cannot make it cheaply as 
2d Edition, revised and enla s5 
y, Beg. bs mag be had at the office of 

sellers. Price . 


cia ally: 
the new Pe sande 


by 
Paper, 


. Tha k you. We Kai not the original 
ibat the inference Geant would — that the de- 
cimal 1 point s been misplaced, ue that the figures should be 

“fro 0.065 m. ta to 0.507, and from 0,0 080 mete Ld See. 
P. 235, col, b, lines 38, &. 


Markets. 
COVENT GARDEN, APRIL 28, 
f tables ; but, ras th 
upply of sume v 8; u e 
| | Suticient =a the catia Fruit Na 


A 5 nso 


— Ac in the months 
2 | comm 


meie — —— the land for these be, * 5 — a 8 se 
are sown among our Barley, the Rye „ but 
only roll the Clover, thinking 2 aie suficient f fore covering 
them, for there is I think n ef cause o 
—— failure is the seed being bust vied to p. We have top- 
sed pa ur Wheat with soot, k 7 rite of 30 bushels 


—— weather for some 

win, 11 to these hard 

has been very 
therefore have been 

going on giving the fallow land a seed furrow, it being very 

advantageous $ plough Tadi 7 — — for fallow as 
. ay poss sible, both for the ing of an; s that may 

in the land ; and, as soon as ths | is done, th 7 ‘eat enriches by | 

lying a week or two between the 2 ng and weeds are easiest 

of April, May, and June. We have 

enced to-day to give the land intended to „be sown with 


| is — far advanced, owing to the cold 3 weather — hav 


| minae D 


they 
88 Mr. Rayn- 
— Thanks 

ur of these 


cultivating the | 
ng the | : 
Demabled to finish Barley E weaned Lames: F J. Youn 


— =e cor — 


y sowing in this district 
hat 15 


n the labour afterwards. Barl 
had of late, yet the labour of fallow land, as well as 
e Tarh ira — a a ded as us a 


w engaged 
Mangold and n crops ; also 
f to burn lime, bushes to 1 eain hedges, and stones to 


invented for — as we 


mo 

be obtained at 28. Gd. a e and Carrots at 1s. 6 

roccoli are sufficient tor the deman 

Beans, Rhubarb, and Se 
so de 


elargon 
rarias, Tropæolums, Fuchsias, 


— p. peck, 45 to 7s 


Bron Almonds, 


per Ib., 63 to 10s 
Grapes, hothouse,p. ib, 108. tol28 


2 
2 
1 
— 
S 

< 
a 


ba doz., 9d to 1 * 1 — bunch, 24 to 4a 
2 b . 9d to Is nions, p. 
e — p. bush., 48 to 6s 

doz. bunches, 1s 6d | — Spanish, = gy Is 6d to 4e 
4s — pickling, p. hf. sieve, Is 6d 
Caulifiowers, p. doz., 2s to 
eg = iy Bama 5 > ls er 


to 240s 


Pota 
— per et., 


Sorrel, p. be sieve, 10 tols 
toes, per to 
3 aks 


1s 3d 
Asparagus, p. 100, 38 Small Salads, +, 24 to 3@ 
Seakale, p. Poach 28 to 3s sd | Fennel, per bunch, 24 to 3d 
to Thyme, 


wedes we should have lo 
tices to E 
Esse. 


st many. ; 


No 
CHAFF ENGINE: 
n 


heel is 
with fodder and clear away the sam 
; but the 


of new knives, has not cost 10s, for repairs. The 
steam s apparatus is under the oo loft, and con: 


ity, an 
wi he straw, and by mixi latter becomes more 
— together it absorbs the flavour of the hay, H. E. 


g animals 2 be puot 


pryeri ised food, and Peas are found to agre 
m 


of 
e well with 
A little Linseed cake should be given at the same 


—.— 8 Sato: 18 
arjoram, green, p. 
Min, green, per bunch, id to 
Spinach p. sieve, 1s ëd to 2s 6d 


HAY.—Per Load of 36 Trusses, 
SMITHFIELD, April 26, 
Prime Meadow ny — 8 Clover 
Inferior ditto... New 
sus Wes 60 Straw 


New Hay 


Cum ND MARKET, April 
Prime 9 Hay “last to 08 Interior 
Inferior ditto 66 
New Ha: . tak 
Old. Clover ... %.5 

WHITECHAPEL, 
Fine Old Hay 
Inferior ditto 
New Ha w 
Old Clover ... 92 100 


oo 


7 


HOPS, FRIDAY, April 27. 
tinues the same, 


Messrs. mag eh nd SMITH report that the market con- : 


* 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. Taran . 


trifling deeline. 


5 a goede} at pt gpa af 


S FOR wD C00 Ne TORIES 


L 
AMES PHILLIPS axp CO., 116, 


SMITHFIELD, Mowpar, April 23. | RE pee . | 
ly of Beasts, bo Sa country buyers, usiness in foreig | 
In —— od plot magia tl 22 2 y vor. Chole email | cp, $F — decline of 1s. to 2s. per diy H ley aie thout, have the pleasure to hand 8 ü | 
— Te, are not plenciful, and it is only for such ọ or — À supports our ns,— Beans are —— turn dea of SHEET GLASS for — ve List ot Fh. 
quotation * e i bho, Beary Beasts and the | Peas are — in value. The Oat trade is slow at CUT TO SIZE UP TO “0 1 
— — i at a reducti 2d. | last week’s pri INCHES LON 1 ARES, | 
ee eke old weatber has ¢ aused a deer ay FRIDAY, APRIL 3 arrivals of foreign corn — oz. from = to aie per foot, | Under 6 7 
of mb, an „ av n or some m 3 * * 43. . 
of Lamb and snc ee N lawer rates | ehig week have been less than for some time fes s S° fy E br dna E 
afa tayon de Ir uenas 772 Be 80° Sheep a 44 * having a thin oh spiritless attendance of 2 1 br S and TS Dr bbs. IE ge 
many snd Holland there ae go wees aad Bein; and t this morning’s masket, — eed-| ROUGH PLATE GLASS for WIN DO wel Soon 8 | 
Calves; from Norfolk and lk, to — rs a 33 erative and FLOORS, in sizes not exceedi hy it SKYLIGHT: 
pages hye’ d s àj Perst.ofSlbs—s d : a ingly mer 3 N * re at te Prodibio of i — 5 en Ho h ‘per 1 
Best Scots, fk „3 8to4 0 hasers were inn 
Lee 4to3 6 0 8 3 0-84 — — — although holders — 9 were not dis- inch | tosh — 3 
Best Short-horns 3 0—3 4 Ewer & 2d quality 3 721 S ress sales. English ners is unaltered i ad, PA “yon yË ROUGH PLATE*TILES, 
aa queto a? 4—2°8 yee ip a 5 8—6 4 value. 5 Beans, vat Peas r * main as ap age ay. eT | ts mekt. iii. 1 7 
Halt-breds 1 0—4 2 2 3 R 2 ilo in good demand, a f: te kpas ss sup SHEET GLASS TILES B AND e 
Ditto Shom . 3 4—3 K Galves, 132 Pigs, 2 of Wheat throug out the coun 1 e 
Beasts, 4149; Sheep and 1 rao: Meclined | Is. “= s- per qr. since the 20th instant, and ` Slates "20 i A 1 155 — 1118 14 1. te an, 
the ty of ‘Beasts left over from Monday, business has bee n generally of the most limite of the pava) sizes, nal eal aoe 
yis t ut small; it, however, exceeds the de- p — oe — al othe erd ti f corn. In the a eto 1 
mand, and our quotations of Monday are taken in still ng busily engaged in the K-PA PR ZOPA CATING awp DER GLASSES, 
fi tances. There isan increased su nd 5 heep ; trade on f prea 1 been wary eee. Slaba e San and Dishes, Shades for 
is d late rates are only main for a few of the las, supp ay 0 set TE veh va ments, Fish Globes and Window. Glass.of Gree. 
ney eS tly about s Stettin the tion, L every descrip. 
t selling Down Lamb is tiful; eat many are of onsequently abou tion, Lam Buia aud 1 Lee for trying the quality of 
quality ; there make but little molly" ana * best —+ demand for consumption 3 re — them even ei er — 4 tubes 78. 6d.; 6 tubes, 103. Self Registering Thermoms. 
T of d Wheat varies from 36s. to 38s., f. o. b.; bers for er 


ta, d 
land any we have 113 ate Ph 100. Sheep, ve 14 


and G 
if rance, 12 Beasts ; from Scotland, 160 ; and 122 LI 
a Ht SE the home counties, ha 


Boots, Hore- Best Long-wools . 3 6 to 3 10 
Ditto Shorn 
Ewes & 2d quality 

tto 


706 eee Calvos, 362 ; + Pigs, 250. 


"| POPATORS.—Sourmwanx, WATERSIDE, A A 
‘The Committee report that there have been: howe als 
since our from Yorksbire, pend Low he on 


98 
attributed to as — abe was vas lat — find 
the time of yan. * ar — — weather 2 X 
affect demand ng are this day 

j =Y iy ret rd i h, . b; 
fos. to 140s.; Scotch Oops) 10s, to 1308.; Whites, 100s. to 
Ii; French Whites, 100s, to 120s.; Belgian do., 100s. to 110s. ; 
Dutch, 100s. to 120s, 


LANE. 

Monpay, "APRIL 23.— This morning the Wag l of 

2 Wheat by land — 
ex th 


milder, a 45 pari 


F 


uli or mixed, 37s. to 45s 


neo ye: pa 


10 teed was oo 80 
0 


FRIDAY, ÀPRIL 2 
e have h 


was N active. 


| WHEAT, [BARLEY- 


ka- 27.— The weather since Tuesday 

s been very fine ad a large arrival ot 3 sorb 
but of para articles 1 the import has been moderat this 
4 attendance of dealers 8, f ar Pathan 


| Oats.{ RTE. BEANS, | PEAS 


and GLASSES, gpass MILK PANS, PATENT P 
NTAL WINDOW GLASS, 


-29s Odl16s11d}26slld| 308 10388 1d 
29 2 17 0 23 3 


28.10 |17 1 26 
28 9 {16 9 |26 


28 6 j17 
28 8 16 


TLEY’S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASE 
— — 
GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, &e, 


PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK C GLASS, GLAS 
TILES and SLATES, WATER PIPES. A PRORA 


ORNA 
1 ETLE 2 and Co., 35, Soho-s Rana — 
See the Gardeners’ > Chronicle, first: Saturday in each 


GLASS, 
D W. H. JACKSON are supplyi 
. 4 ROU PLATE, and CROWN LASS fy 11 
tural Be ee a at very reduced e . 
Sig eii a oie Shine eie man cee * eye 
h or w purpose thes are now super- 
seding all "inferior Glass. ORNAMENTAL Pek of the 
ewe oo signe BI AP decoration of © 


Aggreg. Aver. 44 6 438 9 16 10 |24 28 10 |30 7 
pene on Fo- 
Grain į 0 1 10 
1 last six weeks’ Corn Averages. 
— Man. 10. 44.17. MA. 24. Apr. 7. Arz. 14. |=. 21, 


i 


45 l— — 

44 9 te 
5 a 
5 


it 3 


—30|28—30} , 


| Wakefield, Boston. 9 
Apr. 160Apr. 230 April 17. April 24. Apri3. Apr.20) Apr.18|Apr.25| April 19. April 26. 

qr. qr. 70 lbs. 70 lbs. qr. qr. qr. 62 lbs. 62 Ibs. 
d. e, e . d. 2. di dl . d 
41 to47 40 to466 0 6 615 10 6 4 
45 —5044—48 6 5 611/16 3 6 8 
— — 6 2 6 86 0 6 5 
— . — 16 4 7 oʃ6 2 6 10 
— — § 6 7 233 2 7 0 

r. 
24—26|24—26 | 23—26 23—25 
2/28 


or per I 
-| Fine 8 acey Rye Grass, 


and W supply PATENT. “OPTICAL 
Sand, Thin í — — “Slides and Cells for Mie 


their ee 315, Oxfe 


Paus MILLINGTON, 87, Bish 
without, London (same side as Eastern Co 
Terminus). BRITISH PLATE G GLASS, nearly } inch 
in sec under 1 foot su — 15. 2d. ws —— ae 
ticl G ses Garden es of è i 

ston: as nothing can! break] it n an rr Neu ri 
tural Glass, in cases of 200 feet, No. 16 oz., 40s. ; No, 210m, f, 
pu 26 O., 87s. 6d. ; No, 32 O., 112s. each, case included. - 

ut Squares, in 100 feet boxes. Crown. No. 16 Horticultural. 
Siz izes nodara ioy prti 8 10, * ah 11 
Msg by 6 Mester % F . 


gale by 51 611 th 

uares above 1 E 8, in Crown or, Horticuli oi 

er foot, F a to size and quantity, Patent Rough | — 

iles, 4 in., 10d.; } in., 1s. 3d. each; do. Slates, $ and È 1 
thick. Patent Rough Plate Glass for Skylights, 

and Fio h tdn, 72555 6d.; I in., 18.; 1s. “i jiis 


By oas 
8 oe Soe 

on 

8 


` Pin 
8 and Bee Glasses. Fish Globes, Gas and 
Glasses of etery. description, Linseed Oil Putty, 8; 
Lead, 268. per cwt. Linseed Oil, Tu — * 
Varnishes, Bru — 


EEDS (delivered 
to . — shee aint on the Eastern 
aan 600 ens fi 3 De 

A L ne long r 
90 . w Globe png Fae aie 


2 Le 
ore SUGAR BEET 
ARR te « 
green-top red Altringham 
LARGE CATTLE 1 a 
TURNIP, Swedes, ’ Skirting’ e-top eee 
75 ng’s en . 
„ Norfolk White, Green, and Red round... 
= ie s improved d Purple-top Septet 
” Fine top Y 
” 8 ite 
7 Yello or Scotch P uddi 
And all eo 1 at the lowest pr 
LARGE DRUMHEAD CATTLE CAPE ANE „ „ 
FINE LUCERNE as m 


kapg 
$. 
5 2 


A 


F ' 


he best se 
Bhin to y t 7 ne 


ptions of soils, Having aud ag 
maa — je attention to 5 ‘ale nage a confi 


rasses, with $ 
of the their giving entire oe Prios, y por base "i 
Sittion Lhe a 7 of Clover and “heavy g 
s. per bushels and 6 7 — a 


THE FINEST M IXED LAWN e + 


per bushel. - 5 
ye ipm pal per bushel . 4 21 
A rai Seed ad He pi h 
— —— Deia 11 be forwarded on app . 
i A 
“Bass 3 and Broww, Seed Estab blishment, e E 
N sun = apt Aer SIZES aS F reat d 


t 
* 
8 

E 


inch h 5 — ie we uw * . = 
2$ inch — etin p e. ne of the above 2 
Waterproof N. the price , 
las with care. : j -E 
7% abt — 5 
Nets, as for for exportation, 
Weser ab bo order, 


ORISTS, AND 0 


Auction, at the Mart, Bar 


ar, May of the Auctioneers, Amer 


000 Tons, 


. Rucker and BENCRAFT, 
. Mineing-lane, London. 

SEA, about į a mile from Portsmouth 
4 RY PRIVATE CONTRACT.—A 
LD LAND, about 1} acre, which has 
in eu iran mas a preety. ey a 
of large Fruit Trees, in full bearing, 
in length, two Melon Pits, ‘a, with 


ietor is declini 


D SEEDSME 
ca Private Contract, that old and 
Nursery and Seed Business BROMPTON 
V carried on —— — er N N GRAT, 
the situation is fir t-rate, and the c con. 


5s . sprin 
old, IT hands high } Harness, b 
I. T., White Hart Hosek Bromley, K — 


M, in the county y of 


N e, 
good repair.—Applications to be a 
Agent, Henley-in-Arden, Wa . 


TE. 
CO., beg to call 72 attention 

Agriculturists genera ally 

they continue 


letter just receiv 1 5 

pril 21, 1849. — Gen „Hav- 
a competition with ere fered other 
in A ved 


ANURE, half-inch 


ane 
» Which th 
ee — — eh deliver fre eto 


rig ONTEY, Corn- 
ar E a e alte relative 


OE AND MORRIS will submit 


3d, 1849, a first. rate collec. J 


at the New Corn Exchange 
e April 30, 1849, at Two 
PERUVIAN GUANO, imported 
The greater part to be 
Catalogues and further 


isis situated in the healthiest part of 
b ess, it 


THR AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE; 


mit | GALVANISED WIRE GAME NETTING. — 


d. per yard, 2 feet wide 


271 


U AN O THER MANURES 
8. 

3 Ae of th uality, diregt; 
18 arehous RA IR? asa pm 

TRATES SO POTASH: 
GYPSUM (S ULPHAtE, OF L 
peep NIGHT-&0O F PER; 

LPHURIC ACID AND COPROLT 

ODA ASH (WIRE we ORM DEST 1 bre ). 


À F LI pi 88 ssh b 
hag a os LT and all other Manure: pe Psa 
& 


8 2 
— 


í Galvan. Japanned 
ö ized. Iron. 
— 7 en. ess wide Id. per yd. 5d per yd. 
9 25 6 
2-inch „ ame spag, 15 12 š 9° z 
lj-inch ,„ light 8 15 6 m 
lš-inch“ „ h 10 5 8 
13-inch rong, 14 11 
an the above c eats re made any width at 25088 5 7 prices, 
ody upper half is a coarse me sh, it 
ou 


Galvanize 
per square foot. Patterns n zaf 


heasantr ies, 3d. 


— 
E WIRE. NETTING, TWO- PENCE 
OOT. 


E e by BARNARD and BISHOP, Market-place, 
and delivered free of expense in London, Peter- 
8 Hull, or Neweastle. 


WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT, 


Sag? 225 5885 RRR 
2355 R 225 
8 atata 225 R 
0 a 8 88 


PER SQUA 
ow, and wa 


—.— bo th for! its utility and pretty appearance, and 


pr oduced, 


| the M Manufactory of THOMAS Henry Fox, 63, Snow-hill, London 


| prices this —— on have 
essr 


Eastern 


It —.— a light and durable fenco against the depr reda tions of 
hares, rabbits, and cats, and is pe e 3 for Aviaries, 
Pheasantries, and to secure poultr 


eq 
8, 24, 36, ty 48 12 * it can, koaren: be made to any 
itai, desired. Patterns forwarded free of ex expense, 

12 yeu be 3d. per ve 2 es “ie Tid. por yard 

18 3 bri pe 

; = 

70055 anised do., 1d. re 3 ee 

Extra strong ee e 2 77 Neston 3 feet, 1s. 6d. per 
8 5 m are Hs ee? y description of 
an 


Nur 3 — Lanterns and 
Shades, Fly-proof Dish Sout Meat Safes, &c.; Window 
Blinds, 1 er square foot, with bolts complete, in maho- 

y —— = py aed garden bordering, 6d. per running foot; 
lower Trainers, from 3d, each; Garden arches, 20s. each; 
Flo ig ee „ 9d: — ; Galvanised Tying Wire for 
plants and t s, and every description of Wire- 


Dahlia Rod 
work ; Weaving, — the use of —— — millers, 1 


BUDDING’S PATENT MACHINE FOR CUTTING. LAWNS, 
PLEASURE GROUNDS, 5 32 &. 
AND so 


ACTURE 
QER demic perenn ad SONS, „ Iron Works, 


roud, G tershire, Engineers, ) aiai es ts, Ma. 
aue pea — Bras s Founders, and M anufac turers of 
ricultural Implem 


Marx Fortsnatn, hig: 4 r a 
aå RTT a Gi Ipper Thames- 21 a Pee be 
orwarde 99 Tebelßt ote — 4460 stamps. Free to purchasers 


of Guan 
OLTA 

ox une, 

ONDON, 


M & HALLEN; ENGINEERS, IRON Founp 
» No. 2, WInsLex-stacer, OXFORD-STREET, 


Cottam and Pe: e, had experience 
HOTHOUSES an nd CONSERVATORIES 1 — of icon” or 
of Iron and 
have made during that time, can with eunfidence undertake to 
erect men 8 ngs with ec onomy and dispateh 
HOT WATER APPARATUS or heating t the above and 
other boildings (of which th ey hav 
3000), fixed at greatly reduced prices. 


e constructed upwards of 


tr 
Win 


and HALTEN have ons 
reet, Os ford- -street, a 
articles, Te GARDENS, &c., at 


show at their repository, No. 2, 
great variety of the PRICES: 
Greatly REDUCED PRICE 


tie 

Gar u Rollers Hand-glass — 

Garden Engines, . 3 oot 

Gergen Syringps, Fio 5 

atering paidat Stan 
Garden Viens Garden is 
Mach Garden Č 

Every ee va 2 n and ‘Ornamental’ in 
wrought and cas erin a — 


HORTICULTURAL 148018 and AGRICULTURAL IMPLE- 
MENTS of ali kin 

STRONG IRON HUR DLES, strained Wire Fencing, & 

Show Rooms at the MANUF AOTORY, 2; Winslet anes — 
76, Oxford.- street, three doors West of che Prin vess’s Theatre, 


ate CE | 
— — 
k 
— 


— 
Siaa 


RAY, OR MSON, Anp BROWN, D 
Chelsea, 8 Te a — the Nobility, pono | 
Gardeners, to thei E ; rio of Bree recting and — — 
eve 9 puon 0 Bull 5 „ 
work. done by them at the — — Hon. the e eni 
which they have had she hop OF of ies 
is act 


This EPE may be worked by persons who se a 
y be adjusted to cut any Jengin, al leaves nai 


to show the work 8 ive any ini 
They also beg 8 to tha a bui 
past 3 ae orshipfu ot! 
Curator, will kindly show the work, ek, and an 
Curator, 7 naly ¢ building pe ag chen 
grok hem. 
o the mar of ——.— 


Moore, 
swer 5 — 3 
ed to, as the 


3 Kent, be 
1 


cU ULTURAL INVENTI ONS S, they are now in a pos 


so ars, Itm 
n and — — surface than can d — the mo 
skilful mower. The Grass may be c gm pid ihe d may Se 


collected in rd 

the most convenient time, and rendering sweeping afterwards 
Rechte the es while, with i Wa amount of labour, more — 
double he antity of work can be done than with a a scyth 
Upwa 73000 of these ma — nes are 2 in use. pes e 
made of various sizes 4 for hand and horse power, and the 
arar considerably reduce 


Messrs, Ransome and M y, Ipswich, are General Wholesale | 
—— for Dondon, Middlessx, — che ad acent e unties; = 
— Gee shire, Northamptonshire, colns hires and t 
Cou 


The * are also sold by the following. e e yb 
Mr. W. Drury, Castle-street, I srs nd Lees, 
Baling, Hem (Manchester; 7 Mappleb 
Bull. ee = 

A raag 
Spence, sh N Messrs. Haywo 
and Mr, Jobn Higglesworth, th, Market-place, No 


5 Lowe, i 


eck 
1 a and wg 47, Brig- | is 


ere n the See of Grain, and the After Cultivation 

of the rep: 9 with a nd den of taining 6, 7. 8 
W e, con 

andod on ores al also the — — Sie e, aod the i How 

d ed on application, 


: price 803.5 2 

Eur 8 DESKS, 88 — and 

CHESTS, 4, Lea street, Lond m 

is superb and cheap, — 

by himself, man 3 on his own pre 

seen some o ms in the — 
maché goods, cone at bagate 

eae chess- boards, 

thi 


17 
Ho 


pi 
ie str. 8 d paste, the pe ecu liar 
ale Ne tables, and pro a inp 
and dressing-cases combined, 


272 


REDUCTION IN PRICE OF BOILERS. 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


P F ey six TO BOTANY. 
J on yas . “tee with Six Co el and 
Bi. pae 2458. rk th, 


[APRIL 28, 
WORK BY MR. CHARU 

On the FIRST of MAY wi * 2 
price One e Sulfat af 


NV. PERSONAL HISTORY, ADVENTURES, 
E Pr Pee sn AVID COPP 7 J 
th Corrections and numerous Additions. I HE YOUNG 

rout te ne ie or’s wish every subject that D 8 ROOK KERY : (which be aie ae OF 
has introduced down, as ne ene to the state o be published o 3 — 4 3 S DICKENS. 
which it ia found at the present 1 1 so, he has added With oy Has be completel 
sov nsiderable a — matter, especially in | in Twenty Mo nthly — 
— — to V ble Anatom: and i Physiology, that the p =~ Lo — : BRADBURY and Evans, 11, Bouy 

e Tondon may be considered, in th 1 those respects, a new work. NEN WORK BY THE AUTHOR OF 

° ed, 


ew Edition, corrected, in One very thick Volume, 810, o 
mo 1300 p pages, with upwards of 2000 Wood 8 


31. 3s. cloth, 
Y beg respectfully to inform A N ENCYCLO PÆDIA of COTTAGE, FARM, and 
BUKBIDOE m — HEAL LY ag paced tir Wy ned price — A: VILLA gmp id E and ee ae oa contain- 
77 — —— to conte —ů—ů— e reduction in ing gs, fro e Villa to the 
the price of their Boilers. . ge and the Farm, “incl — armeries, 
10 warm 450 ft. 4 in. awl 16 @ and other — — Buildings ; 9 — iblic Houses, 
12 in. = do. 75 ft, 4 in. pe. „ and Parochial Schools: with the requisite Eitings-up, Fixtures, 
Min. do, 100 fr. 4 In. do... .. 215 0 d Furniture; and appropriate Offices, Gardens, and Garden 
léin. do, 150 ft. 4 in. do. .. 3 10 0 Scenery: each Design accompanied by Analytical and Critical 
18in. do. 250 ft. 4 in. do « 410 0 Remarks, By J. C. Loupon, F. L. S., H.S., G. S., . &C. 
21 in. do, 350 ft. 4 in. do, ... 510 0 n: LoneMaN, BROWN, Green, and LONGMANS. 
Ae, ee B. 55 Jast published, Gro, wih 12 Plate, Tas, plain with the plates 
coloured, 
ie in: ar 4 oe 72 4 ; 1 BRITISH FLORA, comprising Pheenogamous 
All B k lers with double arms, ; up to to 18 in., — extra; to 24 x Flowering Plants, and the Ferns. By Sir WILLIAM 
E loon 5 — Londen ge N.“ Fifth Ed “Edition rth Additions and IA. and L and iis Figures 
= a il 3 of t bag * — s Plants, the Composite Plants, 
pisue NETS, SHEEP NETS, &e.—Dou uble | the G 
Trammel s, 3e. rd, 6 "feet p, l-inch Vol, 2, ý 2 in 12 wo Parts, completing the British 7 4 — e 
mesh, Drag Nets, various len 4 — 5 to 500 yards — London: GREEN, and Lon 
each, Carp and Tenc! Nets, ogg Mare Lake my New Edition = aia near i 7 000 Woodeuts, 31 
Poena Shere Nets: nearly d fect high, 41d. per yard, Eben OF PLANTS: including all 
will last six years.— osent Rien or N, Net and Tent Maker, ine troduced ag ie are ta 


21. 21. Tonbridge. place, New. road, London. 
ARDEN NETS.— oe — Net, l-inch mesh, 
yard ; 1 W 


was; 
r reenhouses, exclud 


ps and flies, ~ per — 
uiring — rollers, 6d. 


; Net 
ing suficien 
square y: janting, Sor 8, &0.— 


OBERT — — 
and Ten Maker, 21, li onbridge place New. road, London 


ENTS Cg LAWNS; RICK CLOTHS, &e.— 
en 


822 


eq 
meter, 6 feet a. — the low: 


dia t parr, 0 — 
— 4t. Tents — i ak, 6 feet hi h in th 
west part, or made e (3 greet a vantage 
for convenience), 51. ie, p iste, poh ented in proportion. 
Rick Cloth for 30 tons of H feet by 30 feet in size, 5t, 


— with sidelines. hae ag 8 Net and 1 
Maker, 21, Tonbridge-place, New- road. London 


WIRE FE gg ig hs less than Two-inch mesh, made 
0 


at "Doss, à he 

aye — * 3 an 64a. ; 
or git a 1a per square fo ot. 
Well 1 for “enclosing owls, Pheasants, bea —ROBERT 
Rıconarpson, 21, Tonbridge-place, New. , Lond 


and Rabbits, 
high, Bd. “4 feet, 9d. ; 


ever a Journal. in the English language.”—Jameson’s Philo- 


By same Author, with numerous Woodcuts, 
HORTUS BRITANNICUS. 81s. 6d, 

N ENCYCLOPADIA OF TREES AND SHRUBS. 508. 
SELF. INSTRUCTION FOR YOUNG Eg mg Ts, 6d, 
AN 1 OF GARDENING. 

EEE 3 * AGRICULTURE, 505 
„ GREEN, and LONGMANS, 


AN 


TREATISE of the 

GRAPE VINE on LLS. Ry z LEMENT HOARE, 
Also, by Mr. Hoang, 12mo, 5s. 

A DESCRIPTIVE 400 OUNT of a NEW THOD of 


r and MANAGING the ioe of GRAPE bena 
AN, N, GA and Lon 
R’S CA 
In 133 vii; y4 p gi vo, with Vignette: titles 
sm Ms ABINET CYCLOP EDIA ; being s a Serii 
Original Works on HISTORY, BIOGR HY, 5 
URAL 1 2 — HIS ORY, &e., 
L 
Be —.— in itself, — is sold . 
The b adapted 40 Arts have 2 treated in and the — * and a 
t igh r 


the _— reader ; — 
= thors — — 


— ‘affor 


2 SHEETING ior Sen Fu 
gatin —— 
12 


pie N . —— * ustre to os — of Herechel 
—— of Dr. 3 rdner can hardly 
vats | pase’ Mon high f for the clear and full 2 of — By 


og opens 2 and the accuracy of the 


ents. em it 2 — best in the English 
ISTINGUISHED a ER the accession oon — "March 

useful 9 = me re 1 Sir Jas. MACKINTOSH iNCPAL AUTHOR 2 5 

between valuable and the worthless p y 
tions that lay claim to their notice. Three or four — will, oe — ae Boat, — a — 
in c: Sagun test the m any article e Bishop eum 4 = ers 5 
DALM re l. dues err 2 7 0 pomen 2 is the | Mons. J. C. L. "De aun Capt. KATER, 
into — 5 ap unequivocal success ‘of of | 2 ovr Pori Ti Jonn Pair RARE Esq 
upw. r wn its ex con È 

3 1 he Dai sir, it 1 i 5 Esq. WX. Swarnaoy, F.R.S, 


gthen 
esteemed. tod aes — t, Sept. 6, The Rev. G. R. GIEIe. 6. eh. F 
Some three months vad my 1 ow Fo “4 The Rev. Dr. Stessine. The Rev. J. S. HENSLOW. _ 
ad 3 on the sides, 1 W. D. Coolux, Esq. - WALKER, Esq. 
my hairdresser, Mr. Beach, of this place, A zy, Esq. T. C. GRATTAN, — 
ALM and 3 persevering with HENRY pet ch Esq. 8 haa e i 
your I found anew cones £ 
produced, walsh Kas now restored my head to its former a -| The eg YE E. E. Crows, Esq. 
ear Salm of a pea ien had One of the — ale contributions that has ever been 
13 g : 33 is the ere the cause of general knowledge and 8 
person who used it gore t ilson’s case, 
wks 4 ma gy a Lyming- „A detailed Catalogue of the Cabinet Cyclopedia may be had | 
N ve * eat edn te ough for the ing-| * 1 — <s of the — d all ae ellers. 
a 4 ondon : . 
To Messrs * tice he Odri ril * Yours, Le. Ko., H. Rice, 8 pe e, oo ’ ONGMANS ; and 
ers tationers, Price 3s. and Lis. This day is — 
pe bee l Xo other prices are genuine Ask for ÒLDRIDOE'S = dere ver ghd Re page illustrations, 
l , ngton-street, ellington-street, A-SIDE E B 
Strand, London ; and never 1 let the Shopkeepers persuade you Í heh 3 OR ieie" an, Titroduotion | to 
A any other eas titute for the Balm. var, men M. R. I. A 2 at A ike thie. 
E eee ee m 
— x N bo! 2 
EVERY MAN’S 9 London: Van Voorst, 1, Paternoster. row. 


tal W 
yet mily, 
EVENT Hite 25 2 . relief on the 
e Paul's Every rn Pl atone le 
liy admitted to wo be tos 3 for 
ron the part of thos 


and Su of the 
1 
po gt * 
this v 
. b ones 
use, of all 


the greatest as from many 
gentry on and esr and nearly 1000 rg 1000 private letters letters 


ind he ha, Manai A or three es small 


— hee th 2 name of i Joux He ea. 


é and R. Rames 


2 


This day, prise lg, with two coloured : 
1 ee FLOWER lates, post tree, 1s, 4d., 


WER BOOK, with additional 
By Authoress of r tting Book. 
THE TOROUHET The Flor š Knitting B Faaa 
— beg — — ° Laburnum, — 
x erus: inerari 
and Fancy Viewers for 8 ox 5 ON 
aan . end Ameri can Marig are * Rose, Sweet Pea, Pe- 
1. THE FLORAL KNITTING BOOK 920 15. t. 
2. THE RE BERRIES AND FRUIT KNITTING SOC Hae: | ey 
8. THE . RAISED CROCHET BOOK. Price 6d., 
— GEOOMBRIDGE and Sons, 5, Paternoster-row. 
This day is published, in post Svo, with Four Tinted Litho. 


hic Vie 78. 6d., 
reed CAL L'R ‘ SUSSEX ; 


BLES 


IN 
per — Catalogue of the Birds of that County, 
* 
MA Pee 8 e by A. E. Knox, 
"A Esq., is wi ocated on our southern coast for 


observations on the 9 
— Ya 

tion. 

London; Joun Van Voorst, l, Paternoster-row. 


The most — and — 2 botanical work which has | | 


birds, and bestows time rane 
rrell’s History of British | 


On bet pa mad in T ka: Ld 2 h 


er PR 
Y FAIR. 
price ls, 
Numbers), No. 7 oe * 


P umi 
HIS FORTUNES AND MISFORTUNES; 
B W. 1 23 22 nun 
fe ee uthor of Vanity F 
With Illustrations on Steel and Wood by the Annee 66 
London: Brapsusy and Evans, 11, 1 5 erie. street. 


B XS 


ls. each, may be had through all booksellers, wien 
of the Work on eres Vols. 1 . bet 18:3 


cloth boards.—3, M ead- paet, 


hed, 
Looss CARPOLOGICA: ; — Fi 


Part I. LE GU 0 taining 40 Plates 
with — 200 5 
_ Lone 


— iM PAMPLIN, 45, Frith- ae — 
; stampe 


very Thnrsday, price 2d. ; 
S7 S EMIGRANT 8 70 U Mbt 
— — i Fand—The 


Voluni 


85 the People of ne = South Walewte ett ers — a Farmer at 
ted Sta — om a Labourer at Port Natal—Let 
ters from Te exa: 1 na Emigrants—Land Route to 


ippa : W. — "On ‘ea te., Paternoster-row ; and all book. 
sellers and New 
TARTLING NOVELTIES. — Ae only correct Sam- 
r Fashien in the LADIES’ 1 2 1 ETA. 
for May, price — 5 1 . 
agi Dresses, 20 Visites, 60 Bonne 
t Plate of Fa shion, 8 
. — Family, gratis. scriptions, Sights of Lo Hier of 
= nh — free for 6d. tia! 
: G. BERGE m Holywell-st., Strand, and all Booksellers, 
SSOR BALFOUR 
On the 125 of ee in one vol., sect 8vo, codi 656 pp., 
illustrated by abou 1+ 800 woodeu 


London: Jonx . GRIFFIN and Co., 53, Baker-street, 
Portman-square. Glas : R. GRIFF IN and Co. 


1 ARDENERS’ CHRONIC ICLE FOR SALE, Zai 
the Volumes een osar i ier uncut (the first spa 
a | boards), may be h to Jon GAATTox, Post- 
office, Baslow, — r 


BOTANY AND HORTICULTURE. 
HODOD DENDRONS oF SIKKIM- — 
n — of the 


Price 21s. 


CURTISS BOTANICAL Aian FOR MAY, 
ocx R, F.R.S., Directors of isr tm. 22 
swith istory, cultiva 
3 he 9 ALS, Curato 8a zer of the Royal Gardens, 
Plates. e 
BRITISH SEA WE 
PHYCOLOGIA BRITANNICA; or 
erbari bags Uni — Hable. 
erbarium of the Un 8 TA we em Cal 


x History of RE 
2 


e 


they ath ather one of them" 


st 
tory of the lovely va wails 
will find in it the faithful portraiture of every 
Annals and — of Natw — i . 
Published | monii, in parts, 
plates, cr "Fart X 2s, 6d. 
$ 


0 ne Shilling, 
HOOKER’S 10 8 OF Ì BOTANY am : 
1 ess CE. sir W. J. 


F. 5 — 
ker's Botanical . 
— e on Anatropal and 0111 E 


ki 


3 
* — Genus Atropa— 


— Grass Cloth “Ralphs . agit 

—.— CENTURY OF ee Pi. 
from the Botanical 00 s r 0 

F.R. S. With — 5 wa colour 


r Culture. yJ. 229 ged. 
or, Fr — 


Royal 4to, N 
1 5 egg i þrawings b7 


Printed by Wrnuuam BA napao DRIE 
arish of St. Pancras, an 1 Coane of 3 
ecinct of 


8 
128 by them at the O! e 
ments and Comm are to Yo be ADDRESS 


SATURDAY, APBIL 28, 1849. 


UAL OF BOTANY. 5 — ant 2 i 
he 3 of the Araon, h aiology, and Da ERS, 
tion of Pla By J 2 
F. R. S. E., Professor of og University 
of Edinbur urgh. 


ae 


GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
RICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.— The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


No BJ SATURDAY, MAY 5. [Price 6d. 
—. INDEX. F INDIAN AZALEAS, CAMELL IAS, FIRST a S DAHLIAS, 
Horticultural Society ........ 278 DWARF KONBA, VERBENAS, CINERARIAS, PETU- Jon s KPY egs to submit the ‘following list of 
Larch, to cut in May. 2 tee ae NIAS, and CHR a cng, be obtained, w the low- \S, at reduce ices: comprising 
anid ö 279 4 e st prices, on app lie ati on to WIL pos <a Lilac Seater the best out in ite class; Purple Sta rege like- 
Maiz * 98 n, Ti. wise first-rate ; Miss Chaplin, Sunset, and Victo egina. 
M Our new Plant jA is now ready, —— can * “had Parties ordering the four first-named varieties, will have Vic- 
lication. toria Regina included within t — All the most approved 


Flowers in cultivation, at pro ilona. —— ch 8. 
Ta WELVE Finan 1 GERAN NIUMS can Re Orders directed to Jonx Karnes, C 5 stle-street Nursery, Salis 
ected from RENDLE’S CATALOGUE for 20s. ; or 20 | bury, will meet with immediate a 


b 
7 6 
777 b 
e 
e 
e 
e 
a 
e 
Ba 
5 r 80s Twelve 8 d-class do, fe * 38 1 7 
for x welve Secon o. 172 5 wee oa lye on ci 1 ANCY DAHLIA 
a e 
b cation to WILLIAM E. RENDL E and © OHN KEYNES, 
catio sof Salisbury, will be read to 
Se F ED POKER | 3 
è a e e 278 5 TOP ; this cee oe 2. een carefully selected from Skir- season, in May, at 78. 6d. each. s Blackmore, Rainbo 
e | Potato crop 5 278 b ving’s | Liverpo Price 40s. pi per bushel, and every other kind | Miss Stevens, and Sunbeam, all of whieh have Deets — 
growing, Count Le Lieur’s ds in cul eration and moderate price, | certificates at the prine ci 11 5 
5 — S 276 bat J. G. WAITE’s, Seed Merchant, 181, High. Holborn, London. i 7] 
9 88 wels e. e BEDDING PLANTS OHN KEYNES, of Salisbury, offers the follo 
SE SU oe - 0 ee 8 e followin; 
è Beem of fe i ia 2 OHN HAYES, Fronist, Farnham, Surre ey, begs to Prizes for the best Six Blooms shown from the nine ti 
p empervi — — —.— of 100 distinct varieties of Bedding Sanne advertised as above, atthe ee ee Flo nigra al, and 
a 14 varieties of Ger: vo 1 erona s Superb, Shrub- 3 London Societies. First d do. 3d do. 
b oes land Superb, and Tom Thum o 3s. Gd. per dozen. áth do., 15s. ; 5th do., 10 Oai o amosa sa GUA 
978 a | Viola lutea......... sees ae 278 14 varieties of Verbenas, foun’ bt to 0 Bs. bas an nd other T varieties aan Ga rden = entrance money, 
ay = i Weal theta, to tastes saini 5 ‘ ee n Catalogues, which will be sent on receipt of cne DLING PELARGO 
MDG Levi seisvesewss 5 postage stamp. 
285 b | Weights of pi e e,204 
eee I EXHIBITION OF AMERICAN PLANTS eee has, still fine poe of £ his set of Ten Nes New 


n SQUARE, KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA, le of r Miere Bel Set of Eight, price 25 N Čata- 
WILL BE d THIS YEAR, AS USUAL. „ 
50 l l LONDON FLORICULTURAL HOSE ATERER, KNAP HILL NURSERY, WOKING, logues on application.— Providence Nursery, Ramsgate. 


* 00 the Patronage of Her Most Gracious STORY’S HYBRID FU dens! aS, “VIOLA LUTEA 
‘Wee EEN, THE SECOND EXHIBITION this | SURRE Y. ESSRS. VEITCH axp SON will commen 3 
e at the ROYAL 1 GEORGE HENDERSON, ae Apt out plants of the following Beautiful Novelties, on 
SDAY the ry, St. John’s Wood, Feri is now sending out— | Mo nday next, the 7th inst. All orders will be ex ae the 
when Prizes will be Phlox depressa, at 7s. 6d. and 10s, 6d. each, Of the latter f rotation receiv 
iscellaneous and | size only four plants are left. FUCHSIA, STORY'S “ELEGANTISSIMA ” 10s. 6d. 
eaths, | Gaillardia splendidissima, 10s. 6d. each. «“NEWTONIENSIS” u io 6 
r ee elegantissima, i HEBEN’S “GEM OF THE WEST” 10 6 
offers 107. value of Tulips to Salvia 3 compacta, at — and 108. Cd. each. Of the latter The u li t to the Trade when th f each or either 
— and the Rules of the Soo Societ 1e e — Pass be | size only three * are left. For description of the above | are taken, 
Ta YLOR NEVILLE, Secre see of April 14. “y LUTEA,” = each, or Six Plants to the Trade 
Surrey. Salvia ort —— 2s. and 28. 6d. each, and 188. per dozen. for ‘Ma Exeter, ay 5. 
HEARTSEASE SOCIETY.} pr C ar ee ok earl pnd ae 24s. per dozen. N.B.—From unknown correspondents a respectable reference 
The Society will hold their First Prombage Laren ih each, a nd ot per 3 5 7 0 8 prepaid is required, without which plants cannot 
DAY next, pee 9, at Mr. Soccernet 5, Calceolaria S a new shrut 2s, 6d. and 35. 6d., 
when several Prizes will 


1 and 248. per 
and Nurserymen for Stands of 24 and M Calosolaris ‘Kentish Hero, 1s. and 1s. 6d. each, and 12s 
. P. doz. 
Seedlings. The Flowers to be in the í Amplexicaule, aa. _ is, each, and 9s. per doz. 
— nkleyana, 28. a darker piei A than 
ng will be given by Mr. Walte, Fuchsia serratifolia mult fora, 2a cach. [Kentish Hero. 
the best 3 Heartsease, Pentstemon cordifolia, a 8 eae, 38. 6d. ary 5s. each. 
ARD, Secretary. 58 2 6 or Balsamina repens (prostrata), a beautiful 
< c 


OYAL pea eee eee 
trong ao LIAS goa for 


Fp: low, 3s. 6d. ea ancy 
are n wf Te Werben Jo n Salter, scarlet orange, crimson centre; a Fuchsias, 9s., dozen. 
ge 8 plants o splendid — To desirable best i 3s. 6d. each. Chr . o Ai 68., 96., a nd 15s, . dozen. si 
een E. aristata Pale ge Anemone japonica 5 per doz . Geraniums, 12s., 18s., and 24s. * bia 
i „ hybri WFO tunias, 6s., 9s and 12s per 
6s., 128., and 0 


: ARNATIONS, PI PICOTEES, PINKS, 
TCHS AS, VERBENAS, CINERARIAS, GLOX- 


koges aeii c: 5 
riage m ; A wards, plants D „e. 
sent gratis for expense Parti Y ELL anp Co. are ecuting wile for the 
NTS, Fe. will be sent free that all pans S ie 4 nd and sent y above, in 8 health y planes, ako AOTRE ESTE 
ce ico 
and Horticultural Establishment, | and a n A 
CARNATIONS — 5 PICOT EES. E . d. 
12 pairs of very fine show flowers, by name, II. 4s. and 1 10 0 
8 ditto ditto "ditto 10s.and3 0 0 
$ rd pairs of 9 8885 mi Soet first class show fone si 10 ° 
ditt it ditto 


A POL ANTHA, 

PH in 3 Abeer ig yi í Fine — ixed rais r Ca rnations, 12s, per dozen pairs, 
GAILLARDIA, an * Ty ARIANI . PIN KS.— Finest first class show varieties, 12s. and 188. per 
er ee fe A 5 ; dozen pairs. 

55 , — Finest first class show flowers, 10s, and 185. 

N e 

5 3 GR 
„per 

PLUMBAGO V LARPENTA, 

Arr 1 

SALVIA, in 6 —— vars 

OPPOSITIFOLIA . to 188 


5 v r doze 
per ab FUCHS SIAS.—The rag and most beautiful varieties out, 
AND! LORA 220 Í OONPAOTA 9s., 12s., and 18s. per d 
VERBENAS. mg . select and beautiful of last season, 
18s. bree or 2s. 6d, each. 6s. to 9s. per doz is . 

bar dozen, CINERARIAS.— — Fine flowering plants of the ! 
; Patens alba, 2s. each. | yarieties, 9s. to 18s. per dozen. oe 5 
per doz. ; each, 28. 6d. CHRYSANTHEMUMB Tes auc lect of th 


August St 
Salisbu up. 2ith ; D ZAUSCBNERIA CA cow ORNIGA, — 6d. each. eautiful varieties, 9s. to do 2 
: South y — -Sin es se: FUCHSIAS, in fine se i and 9s. per dozen, | GLOXINIAS.—A most splendid col of ni 
it the North Doiio; Sept. superior 7 vie of 158. per dozen. including Teuchlerii, Griffiaii, &., 12s., 18s., and e 
the usual discou 9 and PETUNIAS, fine 100 select, 43. to Ts, 6d. ERIC AS.— Fine bushy plants of the best free floweri s, 
from unkno 9s. per dozen. 
pitts it of 1848, 12s, per ne FLOWER SEEDS.— 30 packets of new and cho 
CHRYSANTHEMUMS, fin vp or] a select, 6s. to 98. Gd. per doz. | per post, free, for 
fois to Ditto, su bed new varieties, 15s. p özen. atalogues of the the above, with an 
is now reece alder 3 Seed- p: GERANIUMS, fine and select vars., 83 and 98. per dozen. ornamental plants, will be forwarded — wists two o postage 
i tared from fine fine varieties, in parcels tapab show varieties, 12s, per dozen, stamps.—Great t Yarmouth N 
p. DAHLIAS, i tain abo et BS sae Boe PLANTS, strong * T — 
ANTIRRHINUM, in „ 68, per dozen. „ — . . 
e i. p per dozen, Heliotropes, — and Voltaireanum, = to oe < 
. RTS T ENON. 8 om 7 NI e mend patens „ 755 6 0 
Pond direct ** n ; Roses, Teas and Bourbons ... 05 vies ee ia 
Ena to the | “PHLOX ame ao — Eo Fuchsias and Petunias, 4s, to $ . : a 
This v 12 erbenas an Ageratums, 38. to : 
8 years’ * 5 ROGEL EET GREENHOUSE AND STO rove ' PANTS, Climbers : Lophospermums, Maresi Eccremo- te 
oe, ve As 1s. Od. gn ACHIMENES, fine and select, 73. 6d. ; 6 fine new 155 r carpus, Scabers, d 0. ra — : 
. 10 90 GLOXINIA, in 6 fine vari Verbena, Robinson’s Defiance, ” extra fi b. 5 
S1 190 vars. . wg GREEN HOUSE PLAN TS... 50 0 Mimulus e and Scarlet Geraniums 6 0 
. re ” 1 0 5. 28 8 15 0 Zauschneria californ 12s. to i ee 44 
wa e oe ee A 12 Select G ie CLIMBERS . 12 0 | Dahlias and Pentstemon a E e we 8 
w Boge Our P. seriptive Plant Catalogue will be sent free by| Phlox and An 2 nam 
pet Oo 2 t, Pansies, the best * 6s. to 10. 0 
55 8 on ‘aplication P i 
Š on 07 ce orders ies bo mote payable to either Bas and Orders of 208. aad ‘upwards | will be sent carriage free any 
Tondon! m unknown ttances re Gostei froth it eeding 100 
aioe ai aier wate „ reads, Wi 


Seed and Horticultural Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


EST SBIES 


„ DARLIAS, 
RENDLE 2 OD. haye 


Monday the bigs of Apei las las 


Wepesi to Pi 2 


SHED 1788. 


RICES. 
much eder in announeing that 52 Soa 22 err was. 


e 
luding culti- 


‘hak and which we are 22 to offer at the following yey 


Plant Catalogue is now,ready, and should be obtained by all whe have Gardens. 
n up wae 


Our New 


GERANIUMS, 

8 os gaol 1 aare oA — tion of 12 from the follow- 
ing 4 he Lyne’s ts ad Lyne’s Star of 
the West, Polley’ 2 Hack Prince 297 PA Sir Walter wane Gil- 
ir Robert s Nourmahal, 1 


osy —— 
eck’s Mare Antony, Beck 


SECOND CLAS8.—Purchaser’s Selection of 12 from the fol Cyr, 


Cornwall, Sun 


Champion; 
and PI Rn 1 s Duches 
* n aye eae from 5s, to 10s. per dozen. 


Prices pa RLET GERANI IUMS, pe 
lants of good varieties, including some of the follo 

7. — — ol St. John’s Wood, Hendersonii, Tom “5° 
oe 2. eer Eclipse, Britannia, Surpas 5 


’s Orion, Thaurtell’ 
Leinster and King ef Saxony, 


nF 


DAHLIAS. 
FIRST CLASS.—Purchaser’s selection of 12 from the follow- 
—.— 18s., including one plant of Tom's CHAMPION OF 
‘ete th and o ane — — Tom's STAR OF THE WEST 


ere shown at the pain — the 
ym Danie | et aby n the 28th of 
and won the Sliver Medal. The following iain is 
lymouth Herald, 27 * 2 1848. An ex * 
Toms, Gardene 
hich bid 


Stand alter * 

ock or, ace o of Engg Fire 
lorence ce Dombey, A ndromed f 
de 


lowing list for 8s., or 2 for 123,— 
Duke of * en — 1 2 5 rper, Prin 
ville, Star, M p ehe Ludwig, e 
Bijou de e — — ern en 5 Erfurture, Lady Fea- 
peng s 1 Adrian de Condille, 

are . 


Ito 

Eu, Madame Zaphi Mis: * oh Babel th we be Batho- 

ugene e n, Miss — Jose o, Cleo 

= ed Sir — — ine * e Mrs y ra Harle- 
se, Marq of ylesbury, tandard of Perfee tio 

ita, — and | Mrs. Keyn — * 


ICHSIAS. 
1 20 from the foll list fi 
Duke of ‘orn awe bg Star of the West, oll 13 


Magnet, Sidm thii Ny ph, Gi 
ou ym: a 
niensis, Lowreyii, Fulgens, and E se 


INDIAN AZALEAS, 
selection of 12 fur'20s., or 20 


— sar Beatty, Ese 
Eleg 


Purchaser’s ‘or 303,—Gl, 
— be Moa Flammea, Nymph, be sr Pink super, Rosea 
ing o of 8 Ad- 
. Glory, rare. So Sunbeam, * Ae Pompeii 
ction, Sappho, A 
rmosa rosea, “Standishilsemipitas Alba striata, 


PULIP LIPS.—120 ROWS OF 
Tu LOWERS for © sale, 


E? 


WARD GEORGE HEN 
—— his SEDGE HE P a el 


2 5 consain Greenho 
Bricas and | 


pains 5s. per dozen; 
including basket 
aca 
M. phe OR several fine seedlings, 
ERAT CALCEO 
1 gon LARIAS, CUPHEAS. 
„Scar 5 SoS om Thumb, and others. 
. 
— * varieties. 
arlatien of ea, China, &c, 
ie T 115 S, double selected. 
RBE — Ke 


Robinsons Defiance, ad other new 


Fed Herbaceous Plants, in 59-varieti 


able a E at Haverhill ag unknown n correspondents a re. 


— ; also all 
Sturmer N ursertes, Reverb a Fain "May 5 


se 
of 
1% Sarah J ane, tae Gipsy e 


28 Fan at 5 


erden 
| gium, &. &e., 26, Down-street, Piccadilly, Toni, 


| ROGERS 
| ob them pratade s $ 


or pak pa plants, B fi 
and carriage 


orders are respectfully requested to be 2 


the novelties of 


Puchsias, &e., i 
‘BIC! 


Liane Albert, nan Addisonii, Refulgens, Smithii Magni- 
Aer — Aiba ‘xia =a 1 — maculata, C= 
ne Bp excelsa, B ma, Purpure: 


DWARF ROSES, IN P POTS. kois 
Including the CHINESE, BOURBON, OISETTE, an £ 
ye ‘ SCEN 4 — ate RIET TIES. 
urchaser’s selection r 18s., or 20 fe Souvenir 
del la As Bouquet ea flo re, Prince Aer, Pierre de St. 
9 Austerlitz, aalen eie, * pra 4 ae — sreg 
Thea perfec 


Theresa Isabella, 
ie superieure, 
Phillipe d'Angers. 


TE Madame Laffa ‘ay, and Loui: 


CINERARIAS. 
rchaser's selection of 12 
1 4 Lady Flow, 


Bion Favourite, and M 
3 A8. 
n of 20 for 10s.—Defiance, (Robinson’s) 
ee. Gigantea, Hermoine, Satellite, Coronet, 
Barkerii, Harlequin „ Lord John Russeli, 
Cœrule —— inea, The Giant, Emma, Boule * 
Excelsa, weap „Minstrel Boy, Louis 2 Mac per- 
fec — 2 Favourite, Faigens, Miss Hare ta per- 
fecta, Bicolor odorata, and Ibrahim Pach 


Purchaser’s selection of the following from one nee 
2 Siw ap n E abn hans ta 


Ditto. 


Pure 
5 
Mo: 


oice Miscellaneous Climbers, — . 


» 


3 


Li 

1 

eal 

5 Biers 2 
29 Choios Herbaceous planis 1 
100 4 


4 Cha 1 i tirrhinums ae 5 iis 

5 G2 Petunias vie 

12 Choice — Gloxinias, and aue ee ia 

3 Choice Chrysanthemums ee | 
* e Cactus ios 

3 Rine een, 18 inches to 2 fort high M 

a 

4 pito . 10 


285 


* by Messrs. PICKFORD and Station, 
Railways ; ‘own. in 
wall ; or to Cork, Dublin, or Liver 
All orders by Reiley will be sent 25 
| 2 ordered ny other c 
Goods not th — ved of, 8 exchanged; 
d * 1 dete that defici: in 
“and s — oe a dy requested t a 9 pci i gnats. 


— ne. 
* ving fet ty ha SP, we nope that all orders 
as P. 


* eee 
8 RD and Co., 


OSSIBLE—we shall the 
all oe sae —— | in this list; 
layed, we fear that we shall be defi. 

instances, having only a limited supply 


| ORDERS WILL BE oe sapi i STRICT 3 
h — 0 * — , 2 1 5 N 1 
ave sent @ g to oe ig 1 Scotlan 
and Ireland, and ae oe a arrived in most excellent. 2 i 
» RENDLE and Co., Plymouth. 


Counting-house 
Terminus of the South 


arbata, „Opt 
pleno, Gledstanesii, Eaa. — 9 —— Maio — M 
Smithii_coccinga, 


UGHSIL 
ESSRS. VEITCH oy eta Biel 


8 
SON will 4 
out plants of thi 
Tth inst., at 2s. each, when cnad P re 22 
11 Orders 7. 
wing "Nurseryinen mh ag 
wieni 


Bee will be 3 re Supply Tita aaoi having 
Clase w „Jackson ang Ca, 


Messrs. Austin Aslan, 
Mr. W. P. Ayres, Blackheath 
Mr. 4 Allen, Totness 
Messrs. Big 


— 


r. T. Bunyard, Maidstone 
le urgess and Kent, 
* 


T. Barnes, Stowmarket 
F. I. Buck, Shacklewell 
B an, Grantham 


Messrs. ‘Dickson and €o., 
bye 
r. Darby, © irenceste 
Messrs, Drysdale — Co., 


Lg o 
N petila 


z 


D, Clapham 
d 
Mr. J. Fowler, London {head 


Messrs, Finney an Gates 


Mr, Fuller, Madingley . 
Mr. Gregor zs: rene ester 


Mr. Glendinning, Chiswick 
pier sg Battersea 

G Bath Mr. C. Turner, 
Jill, —— Bondo T 

essrs. Henders: 

r. E. G. Henderso: — Tan 
rs. $. Myrar and 2 an 


Mr. Ivery, Peckha 


1 Orders olon. 27. vil. be delivered, fous of | 
Co., 


on the Great Western, bogs and Baeten, or fa 
and C Perfe 


Per Chi 
gated | Rival 2 sae ne Date, IE ee tae 
ival, 5 uis guro, 
8 22 9 Bainbow, Tam Rising — A 
. aret, Tricolor, 
White Perfection, aba” 


uit. 


AND PASTURE GRASS 
various ngage Tor | ua 
ons 


yt a GIBBS. & Co. beg to 
Lis w nen ee beg potina A* 
e a palication, as: ae! las their Catalo 

er Seeds. 
men, &c., to the Royal ae i pa ye L 22 
ERS, Foust, Ko., Uttoxeter, | 8 a large 
strong bloo i blooming plants of € of GERAN LUMS, ing | 
begs to offer them 


charge for hamper, da, when the ci ct dara 
9%. to 12s.: 12 

— ods. 12 extra a fine dita, inetuding 
irto, ali lant yee, Op. 


|| low prices. No charg 
remittance, 


i? extra 


18 Aiteo, H 
1 72 ko . las year, a i 


aa 
sotis azoricus, 1 
um ‘superbum, 
Zauschnerla Calif 
he set of 6 for 105. 
3s. 6d. ; 


iia Jameşoni, 
20 6d.; Wei ela rosea, 
Male son ca 4 er ike to.2s,6d, ; 
Trenfield’s santa TED 4 
Band „Horner, 10s, 6d, - 
Salter’s Co: A 
ood Be sae i na s re wA 72 555 
9 — anew f iB? 
— 


e. ine ail the beg 
— 2 North Staffordshire Railway may bohai on aril Dae 
Speedy delivery of ali goods sent from Uttoxeter, 


1 hes 
H Heal e 


Mr. G. 


Mr. Hartnoll, Yeovi 
Mr. Josh, Batri pon, Richmond | Mr. 
ondon Mr. 


Mr. Hamilton, I 


m 
Mr. T. De Songe, Brussels 
x N 
e » VERBENAS Be 
H ENRY WALTON the following 
Choice Tasi 


FUCHSIAS.—Atresanguinea, Alb ano, Bonnis 

er „ ord), Corallina, 1 2 
Dread 0 nchantress, 28 Eulalie, 'onntain, Fla- 
ee 2 Reflexa, Great tain, Leucanths, 


2 — ount de Paris, Champion, 
œur de Lion, Robinson’s 1 5 B 
— Desirable, 2 Edm Emperor 


8. 
. N 
8 Cheplet 181 we N 
er DZ Pe 
n, Lady B 
rege ig Hebe. 1 femelle, a Beauty Su ‘Sur, 1 1 
as above, "Pur 
ie W.’s, 93. 
CHOICE B Peppi PLANTS.—Verbenas, 
ones, ds fg. bo 2 pe Best Petunias, 
spring, 1 33. 
ise aaa 5 . aig anar — 
Varieties * temons, ; 
Moodi, 33 ie. 24 Per dozen. Stachys 


C: 
be ascom Esra near Bure 
TUBNIP S ke 
mt DRUMMOND & SONS, 
B., X-B., wi farnis ‘free, a 
5 of Seeds above 21, value 
free af 


y other parts 


Li erpool i H — d man 
y 
ther ii ett ion 
WER-POTS AND GARDEN SEATS 
OHN MORTLOCK, 250, e 
4 geal poms that he hes « e 
l 2 
Every des 3 o GLASS, 420 


lowest po 
"a Ostord. atrop Me: 


leasing and. profitable branch of 
Bee. The ——— eae of “ a 
* Box ve, oT By 


E with e pa hi 
ed manip 
and prices, will be for warded 
2 . eny GEORGE NEIGHBOUR 
Holborn, — plished. 
utt on Bees ” (6th edition), now 


LHP GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 275 


RAL SOCIETY OF “LONDON. 
ES ON HO RTICU 


—— 
ver Six Lectures on 
e lows ar y ep 4 the months of | w 
tha 2825 0 oy appointed th the following 
— 


‘ibe Lectures wi 
terial S — e their Foop. 


11 obtaining food, and its other 
; 
oes 


d their importance in the general eco- 
— . wen regarded as as timber, or as a 


zs to which plants are liable, and the 

them ; so far as existing know- 
ae forming any ju ner 

Lectures be A nan oll explaining 

= —+ who have any 
anes sae te of the day 

aa must, however, 


to y kegen streets 
ot be —_— ved one 


Veeder such objects c 
12.0’clock on t 
no one can 
enters and Fellows of the Soc eae: 


and — specially introduced by 
2 — cere and vis g Members of the — 


be f kastan 
be day of Lestar to ao Meeting 


noo and evinced like 


of F amt i naturally very, 7 
r length of 
dual 


ers, as also the truss, are very aud hi hly fragrant ; 

yar pure * with a yellowish towards 1 tre. 

e pl ant ped dwarf and compact, and from the 

i a P 
. esirable — 

Price 78. 6d. 

good; corolla violet le 

ht wax — ab 2 
ly. Price 108. Gd. 

dA. ee T also a dark variety off 

—.— — for its very fine 
d above were 9 

rae and the ack comin’ 

g, by careful and. 

ion, some of the iest n genera of plants, 

for reo + nce of 3 now 

The e usual rp lead 


RANDRA * — t of ge aeg 
ir 1 Maomp the pee B. pinnata ; will 


yD 


LTURE.— 


cause 
* oti ether with the ‘creumstances 
3 asten or i de er its 3 by decay. 
Pi —— Fruit of Plants; the circumstances 
aay 3 contribute to their perfecti on or imper- 


RAJAH, This is the finest of the dark ap 


s less known, has few agnor sigh 1 but 
baat of many powerful enemies among those who 
patronize its rival; and it 9 with it the good | w 

rishes of most of the true ‘friends of Horticoltare. 


ricans, continued green and was bearing fruit, gree 
iey planted byd 5 1 produced nothing, an 
s dried u ted our convietion that 
the climate of Bondiecund 0 of the Doab was too 
wo | dry for the culture of American Cotton wit ithout the 
aid of artificial elion. "We find tha 
i ee was of the sa 
out two waterings ought to be given 
early in 24 Season, before the vg are heavy, and 
three repr waterings ‘after rains cease, at 
proper d tervals. r this * a ent, I venture 
ra there will e n no obs vi found 17 e 
atek i culture of American Cot of the co 
mon though most Se arg aiden 2 Cotton Papers, 
age 113. 


will fia ve 
it concerns. The details of pr ex- 
hi diane e are re given in ane eolumn. We confine 
„ to ge rig al fac 

Firs he denden Society, poor and 
little fended Pe with a good and a sound 
Ca “ee Bayies having Say, wena that the 
n planters, far fro ing disheartened, 
consequently - | were Landen t that they 904 maned not only in 
produced, Tik credit to the | introducing the Mexican seed, but in improving the 
indigenous Cotton, so as to make it a Leet ah and . 
he of exis n| profitable Cotton; the Agra Government autho- 
only be “toes d to worse and a 8 them wisely. rised whatever was thought rect for yone af 
In the words of an eyewitness, “the . were the success of the . e 1. c., pp. 113 an 
numerous, in good condition, and in som are But neither land n on 0 

and valuable. In stove and greenhouse planis thene 
7 re 7 which indicated good cultivation 

rica 


Engl ish Show. ‘They exhibi 
in getting them into conditio 
ewise v well exvdllent culture.’ 
rain was however incessant, and the . of 
W scanty. 

imac, the Royal Society, with a fine day, 
40 a 3 hd some 05 f beg 2000 paote, who, 
malicious rumour says, W 
ern with “tree tickets. What t pw prin folks 

except each os nobody could 

tsa angen it bi the Lord LIEUT pyak with | was toò much, for 


1 > 
3.8 


during which the de their experiments, though 
it is doubtful whether the climate in eneral i is ever 
„suitable to the successful culture of American Cotton, 

e | without the aid 05 a artificial itrigatio n as may 
be supplied by & Mr. Auten, who succeeded 
Captain BaxLEs, Cepoi, on the 19th of August, that 
1008 aeres of land 60 krri Cotton culture 55 = 
part. of Gove e beginning 

season was decidedly W though father late; $ 


+ 
2. E 


his suite, a: of LEINSTER Í in a mud, in which it was impossible to work, and the 
four. The « exhibition did not ute a sigle plant | low ‘lands were flooded. Since the ‘25th of July 
whose cultivation could have been spo well of | we have had no tain, and the plants are conse- 


quently beginning to droop for want of moisture ; 
the 


t pe that it will have taught the | the season is certainly now anifivontdble: gt 
authorities of this fashionable (?) association that | planters eee. Mr. Me nenn states his con- 
public opi ted with safety, and viction Bundlecund ways will 

j uce 


o dry and une 


looked to as Ache ce out tof Ireland’ s regeneration, | 


t specimen plant for exhibition. Strong mi not support a public body. in which self-seeking | other recommenceme 
H. Low and Co will be able to su è most conspicuous feat wind e 8 which will always i in- 
R t by other growers, including the agir? But While we look with satisfaction Mg * fall of evitablly ea ‘it short — erops, and deteriorate ite. their 

mined, Cat Pl ey Dor ao] the nigh rise of the uld not quality.“ Mr. Finnie 222 40 “the grand characteristic 
election, course of publication, and when | ene e fora 233 bed 8 vib, a Hi Se which | of this country. ap e—a flood, a drought ; 
cians lication. has sprung up in If cont inued it may be | the ae greatly n Mr. Buownr ob- 

* fatal to the Pont a an * a and we m with both candour and good sense, “it will, 
RING CATALOGUE OF repeat, what have often urged, that one body ne doubt, N trange that we should complain of 
am E. seh — e f deg eg only, zealous, united, therefore powerful, the d of the season, as we have always asserted 
NEWS LASS DAHLI 5 Vaney serve the public 7877 in such a that C tton does not require a deal of rain. 

ma Af as that in question. Dublin is not London, re was no rain after the 26th August, 

and it is incapable of su Aing 15 re than one and this season bids fair to be like the last, as it has 

*. iety of Horticulture, at one, 152 it what it now + 25 days since we have had rain. If such 

r oo strive to establish: how, it | are erage seasons of ee vou will at 

; CAMELI ! is 28 for ** We have ob) once pai that the ngs are not i prey ient, 7 

: a to Royal in lan sufficiently explicit, can planting operations be commenced early enoug 

1 e A gaa Bra erat te reasons suffici * ots ; but A as to e a good crop of Cotton. There is no doubt 
h a Das. —— en The, its intolerable management that the = yas si but that Cotton will grow in this part of Bundlecund, 

from unkown cone Tet Ease Pearly l ad not to the body as a body. ere . 28 cen produce, but ap ae eg 92 a = 

. ourab n seen, to 


eg 2 — Chronicle. 


. 


be the public instrument, has done its work eh. — a model farm at 
e 


ht in our objections is anda peo Fe 1 than 
the che —— to Wich the framers of it laws have at 3 mare than one maund of oat Cotton’ from 
last been driven. At the exhibition, the singular | the best lands.” 
terminati 


tion of which the c jubli These letters, embodying — apo of three 
witnessed, the Council, Ist, ded the judges until | of — — on the subj ableness s 
the plants were all ready for adjudication, d ne undlecund to the gro t 
* 3 2d, they at: Sar — mbers of the of American Cotton, Were forwarded mh . ALLEN, 
cil judges, @ new ; they invited | with ani at t think that Rohilkund 
mone as but practi ) very same k y answer. The planters seem to 
— selected by their rivals on the previous e — — — more poaren -ie N 
esday ; så 
ban ompetitio 4 k 5 i Ay mane oe f 4 14 3 — a favourable soil.” 


fa favourable climate in 
ubsequent to 


also @ new pr 
they silently porn ace in the justice of four of the to his, Mr. Finnis was directed to —.— 


complaints that have been made, may à tour th oo Doab to — 1 capabilities 
they have at last hauled down their ‘fag. with its more and r — pro- 
senseless yer of Laide NULLA RETRORSDM. But | ceeded to the south and east, through a 
it may be too late : it may be that t heir countrymen and the ning districts Ur. Mercer, who 
have lost all contidenen in those who will only been 1 Bombay, was to —— 
mend upon co ion.” That is, ng a on the capabilities of the country in the Sangor anc 
question for Irish 7 to settle — hem- | Nerbudda — — in which he would pass. i 
selyes, For ves, e plainly en os mond Mr. Fixx having perambulated a great portion o 
che exposure, of * we Tas had the hon -west india, applied for 5 a to esta- 


ranted, 
ed 


r 

Is article on the Currurs or Corton tn | “that the ry a oe te 

Inpia, we 72 9 ribed the result of the experiments Cotton on their own lands, according to Mr. FINNTE s 

e by the American 8 n north-we in receiving fromthe planter seed, ploughs, 
India da ring the first year of their being in that and such advanees (af money) as might be a 

country. We —— at thou they laboured under 2 necessary., But the model farm was 7 

N ason was unusually e ailure. Want of rain, when 
a bead > yet that ie p roa a os cultivatio 4 — 3 mis — = ee, stated 
NIE 


to that pursued by the . by Mr. 
d b 


ae pe that — me 
ty | for even the Indian Cotton, a 1 y the Ame- | portion of the cultivation, ide w P 


276 


3 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


. 


chant an 
osed to the local Government (Cotton | 
ea) to cultivate the best kinds of native 
a with the ryots, and 
** state to market. The 


Man- 


sen 
chester spinners did vm however, approve of this 


veng from the shortn 


s staple ; the ex 


experi- 
was, therefore, erien after the second 


anans 
We have seen that 


the planters when settled in 


the Doab and Bundlecund e. for Rohilkund and 
Dae 


Goruckpore, as well as 
Mr. Terry wished for 


and J sai * 


effects 


angpore 


Ru 
the moist climate of the latter, and of Dacca, we 


ts 
-= g . N at Gokuskpare. 
rrival at this place, in S 
“T 4 not e to 7 * 


character of the rainy se 
this district will 2 
duction of the A 
one of the m 
ected 


the absence of hot 


for we bp out the ob 
so Mr. READE, Jollector of — district, writes "i 
e e time.“ The humidity o 


winds, the abun 


‘state the 
medium situation 
Mr. per a 
1843, writes : 
my wng, that the 
and m 


w proc oceed to 


eina 


an plant I think this 


and “ 
ost 2 — b that could be 
of Government ;” will be 


ast * 


dews, the 25 wera mould, the undulating sur- 
face 


ugar can * 
were in cultivation, N e eng 
es in all Goru 


were no 500 


e first 1 we hear are, that 
n had leie 


to the 11 1 Late 
son, and t f the 
Ea portion bad 


en while M 
EADE oe that “ the sil of this place i is count- 
whose aici AN and agi 


ites 


unsuit ted to 
to matu 


now putti 
on bad, which may 
result i is s scarcely to be 
Notwithstanding 
Mr. Brouxr 8 


“the pla 
been: entirel i y 5 
yet “ daring the month of October 


fruit by worms,” yet 
jas ee forth new shoots 


itious 4 that Vr. Brount had bee 
* to lant his — until late 15 the es 
80 


et to 
the face sama al ope lant i va an an entire ens 
le 


these unfavourable 
Dece 

the rains of the lch September aha plants | 

throwin j 


org the invariably = enteous 
anti 


= 
of 


up 
eg: het 


= ive Cotton sown, the 


come up ; 


ity in over- 
ate to 95 cupidity 


plants” H e 30th o 
reporting 


fr 
8 Cotton, but such 


on the Ist 


that 


comntaé, 


climate of | num 
highly favourable ts the pro- | to 


due to hi 
e 


sul p 
Ir. Potatoes he can fin 


| sound ub in the course 


ing their 


eee ance, | ir 


a aed sagem had recovered from the A 
pa 


says on the 8th 
without doubt, the best I have 
been in yë country ; the plants ar are gioca down 
with the fruit, and the pod iy quite as large as 
they attain in ne United S I can secure 
this ay gine thefts, I think 11 will yield 300 or 
400 Ibs. 
It is to be regretted that 
Raid, nok 6 
f | peate 
to have been pre 
failure, as neither “the soil nor the aha best suited 
to the ‘climate, nor the causes of failure, ha E been 
ascertained. A horticulturist here e might as 1 
ably oibehads that Fuchsias could not be successfully 
owered, because 
bers 


D 


cupas per ac cre.’ 


is improved information ; for it appears 


? er supplies sig the ase while those ‘with 
ied i ing a 


e] outside in adding to 


Mr. nt | U 
expired, the . * was not re- tn 
maturely consider ed to be an entire ned 
ason- | i 


full grown buds fall off i in su uch 
ord 


aw and d 
not Arrar finn the 1 fact, we have no doubt that the 
i * 1 85 bolls, 


5 92 which ree 


rom and citer moista re, 


room. Though Mr. e does | iss 


ted wit ange of m 
ae at the st of the je 


[May 5, 
which are in different es of progression beh 
newt fo barga than baer a When the 
the co ve i 
pen ge e of — — * below. coal 

now an ect, the laden 


n cutti the inside 22 
aly in order to make room for the 
th e comb: 8, for their 


— 
Many of the ae — are also nim nimbly 


peri The 
working wasps must be great, in order 
pape: city capable of holding 3000 inhabitants, the 
prog ne one queen, who about three 
= 2 
t may * worthy of remark that 


harnot) 


MULES h 


ns. at is, 
with a cloudy 55 5 to a bri 


of and powerful st 
wit 1 — . 


then to e pe 
ew. It was at thi 
time “that she 3 were 8 to revive and bear 
a crop, though T were supposed to have a ive 
hausted. A little or as Log in many 
i uld make the ination 

exertions and 
hiere. ya ta k 


TE 


y 5 ‘uss 
zeal were undoubted, for Mr. READE 
im from me that. I should obse 
and attention ae ould have insured leaa 55 


have succeede 


dust 
298 


Ir may interest the Experimentalists in ae 
Growine to know that Count Le Lrevr, of Ville su 
Arce, a French gentleman of gre orti 
eon. al has hit 
pet which he e us has pro 
lants 5 a greenhouse the soundest 
when the stems are well 
Pree he laye oints. 


parent w 
n ground, te later if possible t than the mont 
une. lants produce, re 1 Fal 

of the and the 


fre 
e few Pop 


the experiment to immediate t 


WASPS. 
Tux time being at hand when wasps regia to leave 
winter q account ir- histo 


ess 
mention thet however 8 a colony of wasps may be. 
they are offspi of one solitary 


trong mandibles from the fibre 

Are the fo 
ticated, —— wit 
ous substance similar w that of t 

the divisions of their co 

de on in a Dilation ee or — to a 

in the case of the tree 


bees, except in being eur ved a little at th 
- | order to hold in the l e larve, 3 8 2 
downwards, as are . by mouths oft the cells. 

ed by 1 


rrounded ar d. ese are 


VVI PICLE 


defen 


eas his 
which diaii serious “tanti, — we eee 
rial, of 


Š If the destruction 
P 


wineglassful of 
t 


ise their 
were for after the real object of the fo founders of 
colonies is a ting eggs makes 
— fem N to rearing of workers F 
n the upper or first-formed combs in which the latter 
rei useless, are cut off and over 
again with vg ari ones below, for 


abroad late in — in search of food. 
workers begin to desert 2 T 


eir shifts. 


wasps e 
their — gee following year. 
tain 100 queens, and 


„ | queens in spring, 8 a thing perba; 


rofessor Henslow — fo te 


spring, 
Earl "of "Tanda and o 
would be much fewer in our 


Wight. 


__DISEASES OF 7 st 
Continued á 


— 
5 


pathology, T ] 
Por „nich it 
. — beings of the two 


> pran eo: 


The quee 
is as yet the only inhabit lays an | egg in each of the 
ous! 


half-finished cells, and which is curi 1 én 


— near > the bottom. The fe ae hed in a few 


days, and the Shireen bs are carefully fed = the 


scarcity o —.— an 
„ the old plants | 


and end again, and in 


with their 


ses from one 
cet 12, built one beneath another, alto- 
ough to fi a sma 


H 


n, who of 3 | 


y | power of assimilating, 


in Is it not true . the 3 of 
i t 


denied to hirni ? hey aae 
nised substances. They 


— 
Bearing i ie 


med ge u me pee 


of feeling 2 
8 by 


unorganis: 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONI 


CLE. 277 

that are prepared for them, the mo- j each other. When once we have a 1 eee only taking the precaution to 1 

. Animals, of all the oa concerning bi life of both p and | to 1 dyed, 1 * the whole . 
or fast, select their | animals, y then be better 3 to "eel upon its moorin I ow wonderful. it t 
nised substances ; | the ez E they bear to eac its branches among the Laurels, and up the Apple trees 
ugh it may have been erge 4 strong * has su e ag * that one of in its vicinity, and be g on the verge of 2 is a 
po the ae ant why vegetable * its i 
admitted by all naturalists, ated 8 t ay lite thee oh oo 


th 
may, . Fe, be 8 
bstance. In good conscience, if w 


same time, to our 


may admire, 


i trial 
ei their full share of praise, but I do not think — 
can derive from them an argum — in favour 
raftin 


ji 


or a we see any "3 
indeed, it is, 


than myself venerates 
But it would be no diffie 


ey pone 4 upon 
But 


and, 
to it 2 el uence 
Sat mind, we oa 


infan the 
strongly Heated that it must be stu died according to 
ent. m 


y 
idea, so 


n 0 
e therefore, en an ardu 


- | jadging from the aaa 5 — T have 
its 


f 
ais 


ee Adelaide d' 
with i 


g ula 8 But not 
of the difficulty of the thing, I saw that even if I suc- 
aaa it ies be of little practical use, especially to 
y perhaps read this essay. 


hemist, who m 
vegeta able analyses, and may be well versed in all 229 
sical and therapeutical 2 — relating to plants. 


NOTES OF A TRAVELLER. No. V. 
TE “ Sacrep Bampoo.”-—SHan AE, JAN. 16, 1849. 
—The Chinese New Yea 


15 is the 

e quantities o ofi 55 
branches are brought in at this time from the try 
and hawked about the — 


vate 
every house ean bii 


The Nanding is found in English gardens, very 
seen at hom 
no idea can be fo 


and there is wer appea 

mu ach! lower. We do 

s the piereing . 
through one’s clothes, 


e very fine ; 
October a eters ber passed with scarcely a cloud in 


. should have the space of 4 or 5 feet 
T 


have found little favour 
to speak | 


planted in a bed b 
- | his o 


oats 5 
has its —.— 2 hence kis nae of“ Sacred Bamboo, 
fpr I 
o 


h obserya- 
and we can only suggest, leaving 


merable, 
— i our rea aders. 
Dahlias are often planted in rows, 2 


c 
allowing vegetation to increase 


by nehes 
s length every 5 what is done H pe were 


eturns his * to “ Rosa” for the 
corrections supplied of his l eek 
e last. H. 


ts 
likes some of that variety mixed w. 
will be as eas e the 


wn case, without ent ty. 


me Co orresponde ne 
ibai to Walls. — 


me rat 
wire, and, puttin ri it N a small iron staple, or over 
the — of a strong nail driven into the wall i imme- 
-| diately under th 


th over 
joints mr erage the bricks at — equal distances 
each other. Then with the 8 of an old arts 
kn — cd — a gentle turn of the enced a of the folds 
wists of the plaiting 258 opened 
quired t to asten a branch, and into oy opening à a 1 a 
8 nserted. By fixing in — — 
t proper intervals "along the 
fasten t 


the sky, an ad not more than three i four rain: 
R. F. 


days from — to the end of December. 


8 r ie AMATEURS 
ND LL GA S. 


commonest 


n ee 


on t 
which it is 


— bee — 


ep reap * benefit i in the resu 
o find a garden filled on the principle of the proverb 
“ first t come, first served ;” habit, colour, and si 
not taken into account, and thus, however expensive — 
collection may have been to its owner, 
effect is b A gardener should be an . — 
of the Horatian rule 
eddere person seit convenientia cui 
of tall growth should be kept a 
— edges of beds and borders, that position being 
—.— varieties; a 
ich is pleasin * 


Plan 


rved for 
preserved, w 
as major Coaveltaies and t may be | 
wn with beautiful effect near the stems of Labur- | 
nums and other fancy trees, with 
their foliage and flowers. To do 
attention m 
ften poor 


— 


two years ago, an 1 


een Anii d | wall 


are | it. 


h Glendinning’ system of stnds, in sic 


The trees in question were 


em to 9 inches 2 — are 
ge found the larger 


7 oad wae 
trees 


als to the 
already very ray * ths l to be 
better for betes or such parts of them as are in the 
course of t g. The li wee I first used was com- 
position ee twisti the ends round the copper wire. 
This makes good neat tie; but w use 
is | tar-twine, and fin well, of 


d — answers very w Ins 
e piece the whole height of the 
dies easier to plait it in two lengths, 
fastening them together to a oy oe in- 8 middle of the 
wall. I consider the m yer hod I e endeavoured to 
explain to be superio ehy Penti 
3 he less pr sir but miik neater an 
rding the trees fuller benefit of the heat of 
the wall, — their branches being in contact with 
I also think it a better plan than that of stron 
—_— vertical iro’ g 
use the 


tied. 


a sin 
their sliding, an 
| painted or gal 


former 
so think m 


in the dire 


greater li ction of aa the branches, 
for it is — é —+ for fan ontal 
which studs cannot be ma 


e 
garden of the _— Massey S Pm Hagges 


Northumberland, Constant 
be 


Spring Frosts are — so injec to the blos- 
saps Hot even when not expanded, Hist the 


t to a Fir pole 12 2 feet high, aad then DÀ it to itself, | 


soms 
| following extracts from tay onal na 
ticultural cen nay bo of ers oe ae 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE: 


1877, April >: Sever 


16 cmometer regis 
tered 22°, or 10° of rte 


-buds of Pears 


e frost; the 
the blossom 
they injured !— : No Marie Louise; 
mef = . Mads an abundant crop.” 
Sharp, severe frost; thermometer regis 
of frost; Louise Bonne Pears just 
Capiaumont and Marie Louise 
nearly in full bloom.—August : o Mari 
this is the fifth season of their failure. 
Bon Chretien, very few of Capiau 
ther kinds ; not the twentieth part of a 


arp wind, 2 with light sh 
in d place 
e of a tree its usual situation, registered | 
25 post. Plums in — blo ei the 
rown ; Louise ears r an 
, nearly in full N 1 
san ed.—April 3 rré Capiaumont, Williams’ 
2 and most N in full bloom, th 
— pays ter than usual, the petal 
as usual, the anth ers 


ore backward, it 
ped. On t. it was mu 
than on ane ‘6th 1847, but not so in 
1848, with a sharper + T in a eider of the 
above 15 "he result I look forwar 
interest. Thomas Rivers, beta: anya 
Effect of the a Mas Glass,—I_ noti 
ks in your last Number * a subject I atl 
brought ard . "the Society of Arts; “ Th 


ced 


e pre 
sumed influence of oxygen upon the r of glass.” 
That of the subject of im ce = 
readers your reporter has 8 I mean the 
change of . which takes place in ain merely by 

mosphere. The colour of 


oxygen from the 


which * of man d, becomes 
urple. I am of — that the colour of all glass 
mes altere to the atmosphere ; the 
particular 7 E nding upon the metallic base of 

the original colour, F. Pellatt. [The remarks allud 
mere report officially sent us from the Society 

of Arts. 

Transmission 1 Seeds from India. A friend offered 


* various 
well as pats 81 
them to be sent in brown 


ether with a lot of Pine seeds, as 
berry 
n paper, avoiding 
which favariably enveloped my former packa 
seed 


irected 
oil-cloth 


n canvas was wra 
never . e or seen 
** beautiful o ry 
aa the 3Ist January last, and the Junipe 
k as if they * 


p pre 
ries loo = 
or 


1 in tw 
; al the others aA well, ‘4 
Constant Subscriber, 3 Yon see the advan- 


e 
** laro are 3 and Dr da ft for beams 


I co 8 
As. 
s until the autumn, Jos, 884 vn soa 


spars, posta, an 

to prevent the sun 12 
in my w 

Wetherby 
them in 


ards be 


C. A. 
hough F Plate * eg p- 262).—Permit = 
cost of production does n 


to inform 


have thrown off 2 scales, and are jast bux bursting. Are | makin 


if (p: 2625 speaking of Stel 
49, 


tly all on 


The package 2 abe d 


| taken to avoid applying th 
n the 


that patent * plate is but in its * There has 


not yet been e to discover the ch 


si va 
| 44d, (an 
| d 

‘ edut- 
be expe n our jae ea pit 
L. is unreason 


le.] 
n Bedding Plants—Mr. Bea * 
— 


ut a to the manufac- 


turers of t I used upwards of 
13,000 feet of it in rep * mage done by the 
hailstorm on July last, eid that up to this date I 
have not observed a leaf in ith the exception of | u 
a few Fig and Peach leaveso trained on the baek 

l. The injury is, however, so g that it is not 
deserving of notice—not a twentieth p o mu 

to happen under the best quality of crown glass. 


The job was ‘mag sag p: Ag 
ge of Fs e glass not under 16 oz., at 4d. 
ene D. 


mal Charco erg 3 the Potato Disease.—I was | ast 


harig particular care to e porous and light, 
as from eee I had fou 5 to be best for Ash- 
leaved 5 4 other frames in sue 
at all d 


bed ea wit 


ase. When 
all the Potatoes were calles ted I examined ry 1 
sets, which atisfaction to 
tony | shrivelled, in consequence, 1 3 of the pes Bone 
of the animal char I have n 


a. Richar 


iola lu ie alent advertised under the 
name of Viola lutea, but 15 am much at a 
for suc 


nurseryman 
sufficiently cma “ts bei 


er the immense 


be 

two different 
de department of of florists? ‘flowers $ there is 
is. 


be glad if some plan was put into 


po 
e N which ad systems could be 


an article ca - 
be 


ay Vine Borders.—My 


Vines are pl 
2 outside EO and 22 oa 
the c 


what is worse. 


to 
Squares (taking the avera; 
T think, to gardeners, & Sng ta thereby a boom, |1 


not reeoile 


. L. 


oes in sharp frost, when a little light litter Wa be 
d | the border. 


„material should be used in small quantities, P 


taking out the old putty, 
of Council, i 


r ‘Auditors on the ensu 


t 
y 2. those w 


d Syme, Gr. ek pro 


5 yal tint ; but really | 
0 


h knowledge in the art of cultivation ; 
and eovered 


ut ill adapted for h being 
5 re sufficient light to show off the plants to siren 
. da 


ch co. 
ecked, pro 
ctor, w miek a —— 
my An 20 — Sa 


ts itself. “th mee 


20 feet of each other. I am convin 

with ‘light litter i not retain heat p pe 

time, but that it affords a preventive acai Ara 
i had 


ower ts temperature, 
p 


17 


weather; this shoul 
time previous to forcing the Vines, when 


9 
it, 


Sore 
y 1, Anniversary.—J. J, 
M = ad Vice President in the chair. The ann 


— p — and J. 
The President, Treasurer, and 
and Messrs, Gray, Hob an — Loddiges were — 


Roya. HoRTIcuLTU RAL IMPROVEMENT, or IAEA 


This Society held — spring m -e in the in 
Dublin, on the 24th ult., and, as the first 
of the year, much in excited, 


xious to promo 
erity of horticulture ; — thero are many 
societies of this kind as great 


de 

3 

=, 
E 

@ 

A 
E 
S 

4 
BFR 
285 8 
Hi 
pr 

8 
pul 
7 


p 


J. C. Lyons, Esg., 
ficent Orchids, loaded with — 1 in 
d | remarkable s specimen of 1222 .. 


of bloo 


riotily — — rn 
e first plant of th 


on, being th 
ablin; Hi 


TTY 
15416125 


FE 
gee 
ifs 


. 
ee 


cultivated group of Cinerarias, 

exhibition, — collections of this plan 

Good culti n was well displayed in 
th 5 


g 


157 


ii: 


as 
, also, were excellent, and indicated 


ee 
Ẹ 


— 


8 
ine 
ea 


15 
i 
72 
‘ii 
athe 
ʻi 
i 


oining room. i 
| the exhibitions are generally held, is a spacious 
i £ displays, i 


moters 

there, One of the military ban 

. — and yates ‘cubis 
may peat 


vm wt 


Roya. n or ĪRELA 
has established 


S 
$ 
y 
ay 


& 
a 


aH 


„ 
ce 


l 


t, together with AE 
een | Society vans their 3 
adjoining the Rotunda w. 

mili 


pany, pia a m 


| 181849. 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


279 


— institution had ever thing in its favour 
gamma parage — glor ious weather ; ; but here 

0 publie of Ireland had 
fe choice pianis, seag unique and 


—— 
2 


Nin 
We 
15 i 


r oe ate april 
n Cov ent-garden 

cl ot Ba fetched 4d. e 
as a to Bui 


27 
0 


EES 


Ẹ 


i 


ia 


5 


z 
F 


any. 
exhibitions to use 


FE 
757 


indifferent plants m 
cannot, however, quite admit — ‘reasoning as this, if | s 


It must have been evident to every one who witnessed 
Royal se Samy that the whole assemblage 
lants worst 


was a etd 
1 -9 1.—The 1 in the chair 
— Dr, Dt Mr. G iM 


1 in 1847. 
is supposition to be ground- 
be 1 he Society, r was 
as read, 8 whom 

cated the fact in the — 1832 


ij br M 
mM e — y com 
W ; 


* 


of the larva of Monodonto- 


paper 
Galoi of a 
Parasitic genus iscus, the 


segments meeting and 

line of the dorsal pen — 

the penultimate and anal 

à orwards to — 8 in 
k to enter 


ve apparatus of 
c during the 
Srowth, and — the g . 


fees mode of ges of the ee of the canal ; 
or 


or le 
ntel- 


| of 
Zee wit wr 
Mr. J. O. Wes 


Esq. 
e a goodly ple. “We 


pa Gentiana verna; 
8 len 


; Bebiews. 
Flower- Gardening oe boges 13 


a mistake he had |i 


eas is nal in effect 


wn, | for plants whic 
e which 
m 


showing that i less ea 


— sont a short paper on 
subject. 


Sho 


iana; 3, 
imbers : 
olum Jarra — : 2, J. Buckle, 


1, Lord Howden f hig Trop 
lematis azurea 


259. 5 for 


E andiflor: 

ta | Backhouse, for — e —— Orchids: 
1, 2, 3, Messrs. Backhou 

Maxillaria Harrisonii, an nd. e Phe 
endrons (Presi sident’s prize) : 


o- 
for R . Albertii, R. altaclerense," ald R. Cunninghamii. 
Jeraniums: „J. Roper, Esq., for Camellia; 2, H. 
Baines, Esq., for Sylph; 3, T. W. Wilson, — — 

ke o — . Greenhouse * l, 5 
se, for Boronia pinnata, a 


. Dawn 


— 
8 
3 
£ 


q., for two seedli 


omas Benson, e> 


ap 
of the objects mentioned.— 
the same | The 


or Dendrobium fimbriatum, 
odo. | w 


Ivy-leaved ping aon = variegated — 
the first class we have not se etter vari 


the Huntsman, w 
modern sin 9p 
a dark mark o 
shoe. 


oes are distinguished: 2 
ſorm of a horse 


this term are 
from Pelargonium zonale, an African s sp 
known by ee s as the Red Ho 


r our purpo e Red-blosso 
which has leaves . with white, and deep porn 
all flowers 


Mes nurserymen, 
as- bright & scarlet flowers, and 
reat acquisition to this tribe, if it 


en several scarlets of very, robust . are ak 
of w 


ayes 


aceous Plant : i J. 


Rhododendron Alberti. T 

ed, but as we have only received à list of them, 
without the names of the subjects. which they 
were given, they are not worth re sonra 


mo. 


es, 
Verbenas, and other popular bedding plants. The follow. 
VI., will give some idea 


tod 
so many methods p practised of adulterating this valuable 
substance, th 


pot of w: 
ingly i nutritive — * a Tui, ‘eapectally adap 
e filled e or ots with roots, and 
not he ‘de Aale re. pot. 


It 


Given in | pott 


autumn, w. 


varieties may 


the e ha 

— Variegated bear this treatment best. 

class, designated fancy agro has lately beco 
ular. T 


popu he best for bedding are said 2o be 8 
atu m, Di e m rubescens, aie ir, and Queen 
Victoria. These, with such other mab an as are found 
succeed planted out, wo nia fo rm a novel and inte- 
ting in a warm situ 
The little book befor arm-chair 
tion ;” but the result of the  experiene of one of our 


best gardener "We a 
mend it to all who er 2 
r-gardens 


. 


Calendar of or nie gma 


5 ae T DEPARTNEN 
tove or green ouse plants 


jects : flower 


it r 
ion 


to which we bare seen it applied but caution is neces- 
dose would 


is occasional] y used 


broken small — sprinkled thinly over the turf, just 
eig the Grass begin ng.” 
ELARGONT . This genus furnishes a number of 


ade — plants, which are n 
known as Scarlet Gerauiums, Horse-shoe Geran 


with which they should be th tale a a. unless 
flo h their In 


ringe Pelargoniums, 

re the sun a a off it, 
ts, also, whi ch hav 

8 benefited yee a gentle 

e same time. During season, 

e plants is in active 

requires more warmth and moisture, 


28 
0 
T 
H 
E 
G 
A 
R 
D 
E 
N 
ae 
2 
H 
R 
0 
N 
10 
p 
E 
[M 
AY 
5 


those which | 
b, ose 
y wi 
3 hic 
nel ar 
li b es i 
enag d 3 ed fl 
out by they g e — 
the y ally s 1 
— = es 
e em ner issi blosso 
ae nh ar rp io ke 
1 A 0 i 1 n ms 
une = . y = ean a 
the to pos and prog Ta ae 
cien eh —.— zee x ly uri ey 5 be | 80 

e ts ares 2 ag i m 
sa he e ö mye 1 8 = we 
adopted » — — 9 secure a goo oes ga se “ani — and la gop od tha 

al n eae 3 * 
fter th wt ci e m of afi 

1l th p ont * ne ze — a make ee ahd at th 
heya du ants t po ain e to nose: pay 
e ue is th spac ndu wh y 3 e or re wi 
In requi tak oe nage be 8 ced en the e ning Kii wil be ind 
fa F ired n u in idera h an and ne ang it ane the 5 ind 
y aw vourab ap P = owing oniy s i the ‘hea 0 ist ari ez — 
Won — te i eats pa only lev egter s x put ace in — 
Ww 1 r n er, shon at 1 tin ust be soils have y 
e be yo Nr 7 au th 1 1 e . g il, h sm 
w f D toy Pip =o 3 5 
abe —.— ames asp $ ao an e FF —.— mals 
= se . à 8 er ie, “ig pre: — fered be com how not 255 ear. by « p dro — on 
w mn: t, y ? t 0 H th w m e li ~~ cir mgt 
nd pl ely consi in p 3 a pes = te fro nplaint w colons, D — a me 3 oy ings. h, matiou 
n ide * ape ram “ey ts A sone ii sta den 1, 
as re 1 in ar e „ di of d u use n I e dr 0 
gi ou e of Y s A ise: th t if in c n ang n 
wel e fi red , 1 f t e p 1 ci 
in ore * 5 8 1 t sh 1 th ase. e ut practi dise reg sas Tool oman idi 
— — 4 th a 3 urni ae * „b flower ti y = — fook injured i ium 
at to in Sa “ think ie x w ng heme b shoo ro er b ce ov. or ng ured by i 
thios the! ph o risk . A 10 b <a | plan 2 v 
thee ar eg ale men 52 * t continue oat bes T ght uds ha th Ses — se ae va —— 
—.— sh y nen in s frs p 0 s eo ut hybrid th ne ree 
— ed av d fi 0 ue to HE n havi n soon 2 d S i 
pan b 3 re * +”˖́vẽ— nould ow al 2 1 — „ av ly anand ‘hut we se rder a pec china 
we sharpened a ras rate aia shar ent o cg 1 5 eg ha sure | ape i ve or 5 
le. mongst re es m . ti situ to P m ff, Siek r it We ye gine there ELARG ee no re Aui Fon sent. i Epi 
‘Ate t co tak e t 0 ati re- ich e be th eas 4 1 sp on fi oti 1 ene t. —— 
. vi gei 10 8 1 3 te e It en 
pian fte a e st bra; ra —— at n: tri 8 th seas Moa * * $ suf. L ot UM pry on rs wW j pen 
is 9 by eire pl uck fro th t co) 8, le ctl It. ay. ey 0 0 ge. Ov — 5 8 Th tta wh not pe k — 
2 bardle Dg > m slated gro ny re, lea er fas tia Heis ANA 
is whe h . in i t — pro- he at 1 $ av gh ea ara eh ye n 152 = laity. . Th it shoul nid ad Rhoda, 

I ar cost, a 22 shag n the u e ay v gu ipl c t isteria, if 
1 ich n diest 4 in| 1 10 ther Be nd nd re be ak . 8 yo 418 fe R e eri he até pe ithe 
ime m 2 t l isi yi z ange, a ed to 2 fork al d me Shier i The . — ane 

ema, in ve t ume di hi leaning tr we to 1 š used al 3 aini 8 8 ig ati from t ity Y oppor it e gent 8 — 
= oes e a ee it ae 5 5 SE —.— os a 
— n a — = A eer „of t k 1 eon Nen d iola ed d GA Bm 180 ve, 1 — ity en font aro do 1 
5 f 5 esta vill method | vhi Sian on — 5 * Lbs tae 7 a coal of then 8 ve dreck „ 
m i 0 Å 0 fM i ge 8 c 
— —.— i he on mgt 1 er i . e rs Epi fea a 
— r nd get lace ed ons, de; a hich are ou d he fats s te conge eanl oul with umes Kni an opin pea esca ss it. of ied bye 
sary with w tti 8, of 1 A ld ifa ds mig nd eni 18 lin sigh 1 ngon scape of — 
qu work n ve oth th | in be suffi n „b m al e es a sh 3 se pyro tter, 
ana g thi coe s by shootin tender l 
by 2 — dean the nat y little Opal g of fa prepen . yg s eee as ating the, stren; i ms not but 
wi firs th sea wed rie tle a n Sta Pao ws W S505 gsl ages sonally 1 ad 8 
wil oee hi gelen E pl 1 ws fo = A2 uce i Kri o slices or fo ly : pare pip 

5 l — y an it te er : a silve 0 aach! ew 3 j — ra caus a 

la — t, of tsi b m a onl aged sm of ri th h wi of en bo e * place 
transi Te th aa e a tt ard na, W. a 1 wil s a) A by trap “ very 

ma the Dak each kind J be pra els Fri ay. 4 perveda È ver skinn = TE * 55 4 app min . 
late . — tlie ode prepar tention p oe — 2 q4 at te He be fo rineip ntin ot bee shoul i 
annu nili e d st be 3 Ber ae 2A - Ee Sick e g 8 aoe them yaa 
hes als, wil b peer end d no. 30} 5 i eee lin ery: ed. ose wo — 
Saat ill wh ar 8 ed for the — 1 ? 5 “Max. J Min. |l mirei g , mod e into 
13 cara hair — ate neon z seve 9 79 255 = Marine dens, Chi Bs Hien 
likely to È à solid, and hiy ct fl eng mad b aya g 4 25 zl — a ey | ae 
Sa ey ad tof —.— — — . * 29:797 33 27 3 e ay 
i thi ied, at di 8, le 1 1 pare all ta in wit Eca BN 7 X — Rain Q 1 9 
besides E for — Boe or 3 tet 1 — oes. im 52 {| — A i 8 
‘i 1 * aba 5 A ry — 8; 4.1 5 wW 
pues s 2 d inch oa e 888 ae 5 oer | 55 . = 
= ing other hy as meth per edi coarse sane of May è Wes ERS 52.3 ny > 
it ae . sian er, ne z o6i and ; il | Mor FA 8 vung wee ear sudden - a 
is 725 io — 14 — . 8 7 — a ial 0.42 
its omni tho n n ue hee h 2 
2 ha a pian en the —.— WEF 128 35 se Ee aist 

lin in ‘ante roint Bart — 115 k 25 i a: wet gay 12, ty rain x 

all ng wil EEN wex s of ma e day D 45 23 5 5 5 ant 2 mae 
ot — cheir berali e practice. 4 ret ae 11. big vg years, JAS 

of e ta po be ir — 11 small pots, roll wee od d, Qua es fo 
r ver — reine yin > and espes | dizem 4145 475 10 Quantity Pr r thi 
is vid 2 pae eyon kes pplied — re 1833-2 5 sn $ ity | 3 e 
funt a ht ep ure e 3 e. No wn 920 . rapa ps 
grow 8 free e 3 . mie — re a0 b , 
grown b asing 0 exhalation. th cor hou al — es t and th 0:40 “am or 

eS f ala: — 4 are ap o ae 40 t re ived as et i 
on ey Wine ke be X | ae 0 otr thah — 
on hich V her aie epi — plant pion ENS —.— orr e period 20 st a bor, 9 
—— _— & prt ng u —ͤ g b: t of Sores DE se es nll — ce ong wire s in th 

j re pl te pl ak ri = 0 e a ed p 4 occurred * of or 3 
In or . od n ant ae gi hat cult th i d fr on 183: 3 do lin we fr ù is 
5 : gru ip a aeo z F ; a ften th SR oa and ao Bet a act of 
half ‘ Teal, — e =Y aaa See fora — — nt erm. 2 82 toe 1000 Cor Sivas sp 

dding no — 0 17 e n the eas S. poy bagi aE 
r z "shoots ot g, thi ps ACTI: 4 Sa on in Ak re case. 7 dae, ti a . 5 ch z 258 ngi 
niga ad not TON 0 zind in rui wit! wo 9 . 1 . these —.— lose t ; th necte se t ‘Oss side, ing 
Melons in this his wi e the aa al a it that a al — . peri FE th tiller a, on r th the of eights secured it from — 

E li tg la „ an Noam! 1 8 e ve b st cuir ar std aa ona aii 
— A 5 c2 Some Soe T Eaa 5 pirhe 15 0 eat 1 1 
See e an pl — — ee er ae kilt the w 55. Gar sare re 5 P point atia keg ‘ be ets, emo ached i 

_ 8 creat the 2 Pp e d 7 * mit nite og on’ Horta —.— ai ie a ba to 9 is pal refered 
them and ot ae t 11 sp be S, t * yo e H 3 ch 445 ott is t b it sire and — 1 
be * as Ma: vhs amio ld now bre at — e a ol can — — ie bn f ae jot Ca 3 8 ine oe KIA PSE 7 re * 
x ar Ee 1 be me ses on the Cn he acter’ ws i ea 5 p sipian 3 tla 7 
— re 3 the he tee E fi — kin and keep them the pla es atp thee poured ove: T me — ce, and — GIB. ny bro ae sps it fir mua 2 is 

on thoes 100 al rf or tain sh 8 x rea, and gone ki aud“ pt eg 2 — 8 get os med i oe ere 8 
che i 0 lso or ne 7 Dave ; 1 ee me do ya ov in to Souri 1 iou x’s ere Alet Ry cate “een te da 
To thia the xt AP ywi an pots eth ap n er to he pe: 18 P e, th t p — 

. . 3 gro by mo — | si HNE fob shen 15 fl — i the ea co 1 * s Prin 1 . g 7 975 —— 
the , sho won ‘ould pat at ere ift ; — 4 them, e néi 12240 dpe ce etay er, verte 1285 
ale =a aoe —.— ae eae Se ee me is oe ae —. “Se Sa fi oe 
r ri fi e no ad. n T 

ps th e e — TR frke 5. 2 sme’ fa pla at tht ng cat of or * Bae t cu ł t 3 nglan 1. d seats 
nis oir 2 : p ye s fö t 62 3 N 2— ants . 8 sev. ——— P LTU. pru ourite Ta J 
os ed to ag EETA 885 a ee ES ote reese om ieee r 
. 5 * a i 
"7 3 they PLO wea. ves s the Gua: auso g * cree ——— 5 be = they: sli as dagas be 22 exh bac 
— . — nt. hav sho pei sere se oh omer ard 7 and oe they see shily al pe ut pe k now * 
for find iS —— — be deter 5 t aed 3 eee cam — ae of the po 1 — — wi 
— 555 i ’ p tue ian im by way 1 tis e ehquiry a use, — than — oye à si st hag but ae eee 
* —.— ake “le s im y 21 D. pe ger the 1 dee tu — 97 
=a | ul x side verry na extrem our iry about fo hers sho e = Bocce 8 er, aitis hee pot E 
. po e e tremely I you mention at Font foul ai in 27 gn leaves “bes 121 moan anit, 
N 2 — —.— b Prol experiment : in} — beati k H oe er e : 
ow i bi Sere 2 2 hiá; lat be am A ae ein 
2 less 4 ran ably it ish for 8 2 n Time Aer ring sh Sa as orale 1 
1 — los nd yala re zis 1 toy gar ting the ee oa aght not to i p — N * mys 
st s * e e e a — 5 
18: Jon, h s able. sto 8 gg oes he —.— 5 to dic — * a 
— ca t first wi me on ERS: penr mip 
om 3 i ee k poin ace t . kt ne first joi Secon oa aire 
Ly speci a eg Ne nts mus at eari Te A Lady, Ua ond 
ch is, allude — e e an a Vi — 8 ry ofr 
= aia 4 65 15 Soe = wh ae 
i t vi the y i Dane R a h spurs 
e i n M 1 
0 pei . 75 3 ana Fuc wie . $ work ” c till 
x e RAN e clear w rae — re ar oa 
d dene p ear white ‘Horde on ray 
ata et * rpl 2 = SE a. Se namen, Tris 0. aor 
85 ene: Ete it Ele N ae i Society, sail 
very p 5 H F s FL ofour 1 1 
8 pret soos ow oy welas 
ee 20 $ OWERS y yer , 
ei 8 i 155 
ot uli “ap we 9 fon l 
or ay the it j 
rge jestics Tiare fe, 2. 
e entre 7 
ety i an 
ac * 
, nic 
ely 


be 
ob 
8 
us 
bi tha 
to 
thease 
tha 
t rere 
es of 
eli 
A ripe 
will be = 
sta 
1 5 R 
wh 
iat aes 
fled aD 
a Jaisi 
' Tasei 
e 
» oo 
structure, 
on. 
3 
y a 
deep vi 
ki S 
„ — 
l ie smal, pale 
ly vi v 
247 8 
2 
a distinct looking 


E 


T HEALY’S NEW BO ER. —Tne 
— — of their ee (hear —— 


i — the large Cons 9 pey. —— k 
a : t work. predi e observations 
where it Artig = N — n 


gn the same 
x, 130, . London. 
YERI GRO 
5 ALY, 130, Fiect-street, pee 
. g mih metho of warming Orchidea 
have had the hon ur of war car the Orchidea 
ibe andermentioned 7 — 
Kew. 

—— chiswick, i ee to the House. 


Orchidea Houses of the following distinguished 
interesting class of plants. 
of Winchester, Farnham Castle. 


anD CO., él, Gracechurch- entons | © 
New Park- str eet, Southwark, Inven 

12 e CONICAL and DOUBL 
ve a 


heir m uch 


as refere: ighest authority ; or 
een at most of the Nobili s seats and principal 
A bel the kin 
f. to inform the Trade that at their Manufact 
New Park-street, every article Nun for the e 
Buildings, as well as 5 he * them, may be 
obtained upon the most advantageous 
“Caner, e., of Iron or Wood pare upon the most 
. ee Palisading, Field and Garden 


Fences, Wire- 
(HARKS etic HOTHOUSE WORE, 
Birmingham.—Pr tor, Mr. THOM 
Lionel-street, — oprietor, Mr. 


Mr, ees his grateful thanks to the Nobility and 
liberal patronage of the above Establishment, 


of fro 

and of suet —.—. as to preclude — 
danger of a akage, hat which arises fro 

the action of frost is effectually prevented by the petot 
mode of adopted, Asa — of his Metallic Hot- 
houses, in which all the most recent improvements are happily 
combined, Mr, CLARK refers to the magnificent range erected 
by him in the new Royal Gardens at Windsor, admitte mra 

to be the most complete of its kind i 


UANO AND OTHER MANURES. 

PERUVIAN GUANO, of the finest quality, direct from 

har SODA "AND POTASH. 

4 1 — RATE OF LIME). 

IC ACID AND COPROLIT TE. 

(WIREWORM DESTROYER). . 

PHOSPHATE OF LIME (made from b nly) 
TURAL SALT,and all other Manures of known 


— — London. 
Superphos on mat „ &e., will be 
postage stam; * — to — 


MANURE COMPANY would, at 
call particular attention hai CORN 
y strongly recommend as a top-dressing 
a lar arge amount 5 and 
cellent substitute for guano. 
acre). For T 


a ing an increase 
and other 8 pe Diane so essential for 


URES they suppl 

y on the best 
ae age prum 5 of 1 Soda 
Witeworm, alt Sulphuric Acid, Agri- 


Keren 
Tae 


N i eee aa 

LLOWING MANURES 88 

at Mr, ure p A —.— manufactured 
URE 5 tee a, ton on 2 10 s 


n Secretary. 


92 8 5 
üble 5 
a 


gents, * 
wes Ler and BRISTOL; 
en, — tr 


recom- 
chara 

the article in any 

it from the Impor 


Hothouses. Conser- 


T-WATER APPARATUS 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


M re NESBITT’ S CHEMICAL aND AGki-, 
HOOL, 38, Kennington-lane. London,— 

pipet siimi knowledge of Analytical and bation tural | 
ne 3 Surveying, p bevelling, miy aar er- 
ing, &c. y be obtai ned i cademy, in 


„ 


Mr. — à works on pert a Mensuration, Gauging, 
Land Surveying, English Parsing, e published by Lone- 
MAN and Co., and may be had of all Booksellers, 

The terms of 74 School can be had on application either 

erson nally or by 


PATENT FLEXIBLE INDIA RUBBER PIPES 
TUBING 0 PANIES, BREWERS, 
AR. 


E PATENT VULCANISED INDIA. RUBBER 
ide are e made to foo 2 Hot ape. or ids 


do not 


without inju stiff in any te 
(but are A . flexible), ee as they require = ap + 
beens of oil or 8 are particularly adapted for Fir 
engines, Pumps, Gas, Beer. engines, Gardens, — all purposes 
where z perfectly flexible > pipe i is required, Made all sizes from 
ł- po bore ee eg y length to order. 
Vulcanised Ind 


, Goswell. Mews, 5 road, London 
N. B. Vuleanised India-rubber Washers = all sizes for Joints 
25 5 and Steam Pipes, and Vulcanised sheet Rubber, 
y thickness, for all kinds of Joints. aha’ ot wend cea 


LZ Inneren 2 Ir 
1 


RT 
* quarters prore this CEMENT to possess the rare pro- 
t ith eta nd 


L. 118 
— to every open for hydraulic purposes, such as 8 
and lining of Rese oirs, Cisterns, Baths , Fish-ponds, &c. For 


bc ature | 


aga from t oa 0 estat it? Mr. WIRINS 


e . 
3 versus ee t Science ” versus Truth 
e Rev. Grone Wirxıns versus Box-feeding—to 

the — of the sales. 


. CAIRD’S PAMPHLET, 


w ol educated pat one 
act with persons 
a 


* nor paint. It never r and will carry from three 
o four times its own body 
eae ufacturers, J. B. . ey and 2 Milbank- street, 
Westminster. 


The Agricultural Gazette. me 


AY, MAY 


—— May A E — Engla: — 

THuR 10—4 iety of Irelaud. 

Auna, — RA He 115 2 of England. 
17—Agricultura ety of Irelan 


W Chena: —May 7: London, Crest Oakley, ‘Clyst, ac Wenlock. 

— Framlingham.— May 9: Tavistock.—May 11: Hadieigh.—Alay 14: 

In an adjoining page our readers will find another 

ue article on Box-rerpine, by Mr. WIIKINs, which 

onfess we should not have published, even in 

the 11 ged form in which it appears, had it not 
, dedu 


been eo Jt in — long i sone 7 ct the 
very c tary allus ’editor—the 
quotations illegible by ordinary 3 
passage on the v Aus of Linseed as s od, whic 
eally hike no othing to do with T ion of Box 


r 
versus Stall—deduct the allusions oat oo with 
its cattle-feeding “soon after the Deluge ”—and the 
len — — announcement of intended e by 
the and we really can find in it but one new 
2 of any e e * upon the sub- 
ear and there the er is in 
ta 85 Whatever the 0 2115 ority "i its favou 
suppose that so large a quantity of manure would 
be poe independently of mg litter, y. Sir C. 
Bun as Mr. WIIEIxs calculates : but, 
‘ecm on pa he “Tight | in his "calculatiogas iá e 
not see pnd 455 2 the 3 more ho; 
less the n his mind as 
fewer ele ae een the ‘fact tell against 
m! for their kee was ae or by the 
rt system whicl 
BuRRELL’S statement on this et E 5 172 


ace 


a 
irate: to to 
and yet 3 are 8 
ought to influence us. 
o the deduction of a poss 
; let us always try | , 
cts 8 isputed ee. 
re that, a Wig once they shall hav 
been correctly determine, on will prove capable |; 
1 gers ut no- Mr. WIxI8s is 
vinced o fetta: general 4 that otka. 
appease his hostility to a practice by whi 
the least contravened ! 


* 
igon . to 
sibly imper- 


0 
both inculpates and degrades 
oil and 1 iee ma nutritious 


meal alone *—the t Sir 6.1 Doek 8 
cattle weld ‘comfortable aiid id healthy. vis oa nhs 
KINS j er 


this fact : 
ree years have been dar that is, they ey re 
n at liberty, each inas f about 00 square 
feet been daily littered, the manure 
being allowed to accumulate under them—and they 
ay 


have been dry and com 

growing rapidly in fat and flesh amid a wholesome 
air, and ir. There is the fa What 
room is there for such adjectives as pestiferous, 


f jecti i 
dismal, putrifying—wh should we talk of “livin 
cattle a of the 3 “ cadaverous effluvia 


$ What thich ee 


+h pr + 


of the 
rant, and ve the wavering minds of men 

at — eens tin 
see ee that amidst the general gloom and 
darkness at be nt shrouding = _prospects of the 
so depressed as 


oe 
e 


hat b the mind itse 

to be almost ee e of the ne . e to look 

= danger steadily in the face, to ascertain beer 
ause ôf o 


or not, it is quite haila tha 
land a be cultivated independent of chad prop, there- 


fore it behoves the luckless farmer (if he will style 
himself so), to set himself to work to ) discover the means 
of walking alone therefore join y i ib 

gid in earnest] i ending, every farmer in 
this kingdom, aye, and every l rd too, and every 
lan 5 a this v desirable 
end—to pr peruse Mr. ae ; 

|! is 


gently 
pamphlet on “ 2 5 drs arming ;” the 


already, but such wre ver the case ; some saints 
l not be convinced, and e they are 
ignorant of the premises! One would have thought that 
a cautious canny c ielas Mr. 


any statement from suc 
Caird would have been „ but no! he 
has sought admission. into the copartnery of the 
2 ci 

red, like them, t 


are a-t 42 


ope- 
ds the comfort of | time 


ope w ii n his green crops; let him 
himself with al “his oak to produce heavy —— 
crops, and the corn 1 vill take eare of themselves 
apon the good po 
comes the ery “ 
crops e — we Esg pot pan ; and this I understand 
as the re eng Biggs 


profitably i a 8 e 
ere, in this dilemma. E 
o step forw rind, on, Dan een a — 5 Decl, the 
3 some others; 1 themselves 
build, or give ants of capital, 
in nce, and skill, as shall induce d them to expe end 


= 


has not himself tt 


The tale the landlord | 
„of ons eee will no se be of ary. 2 — — W has 
becom 


tional question, and a remedy must be 
wners of the 1 have themeclves produced 


„ mischief m 

~ | will develope. But, ha 
atch, to ascertain r 

ment is “ Fel 3 cripple o 


r as wise physi 
ving done so, they are 
the subject. of the experi- 
ah ondriac ;” even 


in the latter case, 2 “hima a little stiff, from in long 
continued use of the ment which the; 1 ne 
him 2 


, as much own purposes as 
they a are morally bong to 4000 him support, An yee 


im till he ean plant his foot firmly on the ponai, In 
2 the landlord has not the means of 

rendering assistance, and spaad ** vastly ae 7 
on cases, the same remedy must be applied as Mr. 
Caird suggests for — who hold too much 
land for the amount of their capital. c eneum- 


F High Farming Under Liberal Sr pie Pest 
g for Protection.” Blackwood and 
and London, 


282 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


[May 5, 


bered estates bill” be brought into 1 and the 
i 


argument, even at the reduced upset p 
tional interest will yield as large a — 


I sat down down for the mere purpose of uttering a 
2 for the distressed, to invoke some good Leg to 
rmers’ ai good 
phi ilanthropists who evoted themselv — eee 
study of the laws and science of —— for theso 
purpose of paridas. the present degraded positi 
the farmer, to come fo rth irom apay hiding — an 
e “cer rbe 


er 


betray 
the — into the act of wielding my own pe 
mger than I ought to have — tough I have some- 


sey sa subject yet. 
Before concluding, permit me to give expression 

the tifteation and instruction I —_ — es = he 

number of be Gazette ; peers e r good things, it 

laces box-feeding in a better light than ss — * 

. T. C. Mor s for 
thanks — very — daa of ya — 

E — Slate, Chislehurst, April 24, 


—— MAIZE. 
* 


eo A.” has requested me 
ti some particu ing the mode of — 
me Not it I 
r. Poynter, and 


— 
Paving time to attend to 
asked him to do it in my stead. 
The following! is what he has written ; and aders 
ma on his correc 


r I h 
He tells me he i never was, 


gardener to the pran a —— whom I 
P. Cobbett, | 


a history of 
ing, 1 . with you 
a few seeds 


use, 


ces, | the 


ee 


cobs were well formed, but on 1 ing 


t wo 
w 


stalks. Larg 
cobs, it w 


by my ol 
a = « fics youre corn, 


whether English or failos. I mi ea 
arkable cireuwstance attending ate semen in 
quent yaar, of this“ Chicken corn.” Iti 


darker sh 
4 of ripening an: the“ Cobbett co ” but not by 


one-fourth to one-third of the quantity of > veight. TN 
* only — —— oile — 2 bree | — 
8 oil e th sere s before t is bed 

y own par * Ga oikani inary valdo dri 
seed — 5 in tho fattening of cattle; ; but, E it possess the us 
h box-feeders att vala 


o, and T 
FE 


dis te with 
en they are 1 ‘with 28 — 

the original receipt, the —— "intse * o ibo in 7 we 
otherwise perst the ype nature of excrements of cattle 80 
they would run — wake robably be los A > for 
agricultural purp! be bo 
2 _ cattle graves” 53 equal to, or better 
by cattle kept in tural wa ay? I 


pp À — all the aay vantage — a, South, 1 dhe oe 
— that in o — and d 


n 
almost any other plan. I cannot, of 


cou 
=. of thi is kind, give the grounds for this ie it an 


assertion: ; bat, 


at of my first growth of it. „These 
ircumstances — me conclude it is onl 


wil be published, the public will be enabled to 8 
t Jam advancing will be bérne out by the facts 


my 
variety of Philip Papa s Zea Ming hy which “ ipsa e 
certainly is. My opinion is that these species 
oe corn will succeed W in any of the — counties 
f England, o r or b 


rth and a 
his “ Gardena’ s ‘Dictionary? 6th edition, printed 1771 


what 
thorities I shall thereat produce 
In my lectures I shail show, in order to ey ‘die 
I have adopted, that Cael 


built soon afcer the deluge, were 2382 a ee in order 
ean liquid exer. 


estimates that his 


be as ea ay as 
weather on perm A I once planted some on the 
2d of June, whieh $ cceeded as well as any I ever 


TER 
3 F833 83 
T Q 


E 
222 


grew. T. Poy 


A A > 


— rive 
— 


— aA 
j ó poss 6 ” but the 
Raitor’s ee a ke feed ine hen ea a 1 in that 
admirable work — vividly to my —.— — , that I cannot re- 
—4 — inclination it has excited within me to refer to it on the 
pre 


not bape 


eu: 

ot room for an analysis of eed satire which Mr, 
The 1 so far as gi rminates with | 
of Dr 


Pe tae 
Wilkins — 
the conversation 

hi 


art st 


, thee, have never seen a patient ali 4 twice 
active isa sound ere — wonderful 
=% efficacious ; van, 
m it.’ 

L may atire upon 
the follies of men than that which i is ¢ tained i in the few ree 
rad — empirical d 

ed 


reflec 
1 —— no 
riend, the Editor, has a torts, 4 ave 
Pa “living o — graves,” and 
he ae 


correctly.| h 
yself the cause e 


an of e every en id 1 

it, and sooner or later 

T shall pod N . thet for the most ohr 
miversa 


when 
ill destroy it 
auses this is 


28 5 
EF 
B 


would not, or could not, understand the 

Strietl speaking, Ne, manure, or manure 
ptice, as Mr. Warnes 4 aptly 3 paas stuff 
| his compound, and cheap beef, have o 8 — 
subject. 
tie animals can uot de con- 


Ie. oi of eatin 
eam-engine or * 1 wished’ fo aoe that 
nigh — Brera oe pe food of man 2 a natural 
r, and with much less inhumanity, 
believe t hae is: Pe noe untable t 2 Supreme J 


Er of the inferior N . which 

sted to him for his use but not for i We 
pe baiss rselves Christi 8 55 and boast of . be 
=| ere beat st thet has read the s 1 . 
| heat „as we call them, can yen p feeling h now 
| we — et py il these —— to many of 
For exam nie, compare the box-feeder, he reine r ho conte 
his on * months N io 2 full of their onn 
excrements, with the buted to the heothes sgh 
15 


— = licet c cali riai 
5 ts 5 00 adiit, et et ae pasture ng si 
> 
* Christian he who lived 
ss 1080 abet ps birth of the 


se 
500 years before, 


mere ma 
e Ch 
bess "thoughtful J clare between t them — nd 1 thank 
have yet in this though degen erate age, many such 
living amongst us. 

In taking ce of — — so far 1 
cerned in 3 al Gazette, whieh In 
3 — ium, to thank hea those gen 

‘aie ‘to me, and kindly eupplied me with 

valuable —— and I — — that the 

unica shall be in n in the 

being — — — T ‘have ‘stows 7 

—— containing the: whole — be forwarded to 

who has so favoured mi — — 
quested th the W 


a 
er 


2 8 
i 


int 
aE 


110 


E 
Ẹ 


reserve stock, I b. 
m that period till, F think, 
Maize grow 


growth. 
a — — cut — 


t ut one 
i pe age grew from 5 to 10 
of green leaves, an and 


ned. They, with that 
feet "high, a large mass 


5 
dismal — * 


* 


8 
g which I can bring 
will so clearly exhibit them. E Pier 
> movi ng spring in 2 se al 
w fror 
êr bow. This pte Raves cupidity fo 
r and illitera te first whiots h x} Pe e wealth, bat 


And last the ve 
— like this Has 
feeding; it began first in t 
-_ and then worked its way to 

art 7 of the Agricultural Gazette 


st draw —— — to Sa subject, and descend into 

2 making sens my on ie — 
istle by sight wee W ass through ch 

sing, commencing in the following at strai ng h TETA T wouid | 


as I descend, but as I 


ebr First, then, was not born a poet, I procee 


to dash at once into medias res, I T inform 
admit, 
at o 


n plain 


4 


e ‘retary of 

whereat the lectu — be — 

men whose names shave appeared in the A 
— with ubject, of the * get the l 
be held, and likewise that — — will take 

. 
ät as the su san 
Lier: T have raadi Ot medica 


22721 
A] 
th 


re 


nees —— ie p — ‘a I shall 
— a opens of feeders, 
analytical chemists, and 7 oh — animal and 
logy obje 


— et bei ing, as T| 


In sii 1 on W wrong. n e also 
out of the four box-feeders I some: — since r 
them, the third, now denounces f his 
myself Ja and the ae teers lost three © 

e 


cattle 18 pain 
ke let 


aie * poni 82 th 2 
state that the 80 excrements of a 
erement about 32 lbs. daily. "Now, with th. these 

ke Sir C. Burrell’s 21 beasts a poo 
hy eattle house, and d the — 


oF leak s gery thas — 


ugh T 
ed 


ce, is 
| for me contain 
The quanti 


ow 

re, when notrestri¢ted 
; the sa 

ed nothing more than crushed . a" 

ty of oil, I also inform cattle e feeders, varies from 


Solid —— every three nn. 
Liquid excrements, ditto... 


Total quantity of excrements, saa an n 
fermenti 


“ 
oe 


sa To 
1 ae 3 wa 


J 


a properly co ard, 
manures. made pae the 0 1 
* See Agricultural Gazette, M 


ae Fr, pee 7 


i 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


253 


n of 50 cattle 
talls.” Now as 


— 


a feeding: passage in — constructed 


ng is 


ir ad 
aasin 100 — oe attention, I am —— = 


that the qu 


e pr 


e 
e 
p 8. 


vals, a width of 24 feet 


estion of e 
gs for * rival —— not 
mple 


ber feeding . 5 so simple as the 
— Those who 


6 ine 
at 10 feet 3 ites for each box, including the 


them, would be 102 fe 
to out, 105 feet 


(feet 6 inches in the span of the er] — extra roofing 
a 


— a paved in 
Sis 1380 ) square vim of pit itehin 
fl 


„ the 


ag 


i 
| Si rin ke ls dung men n 


same number — 
bein 


houses, each 
not be 


1 
Hal 


carted 
‘Wheeled out 


<2 granary 
earts & 


pathwa 
versed i 


if. 
Hie 
121 
aH 


if 
af 
i 
r 


e 
HGHH. 
Efir pE 
Hig 
ie 
3° 3 

4 

E 

pf 


est 3 inches in 
inches 


r, and — 


itional 


her 
— in 


oor of the stalls 


~ the — plato at 
walls being co 
ii I believe it 
though a — a 


constructed on the 
materially —— — 
great additi 


value of 
partiele, 


3 the land, over 
of stalls, 


and le 
fertilising properties by the 
r — ce ofi 


curred 
5 . the. double 
n them, ops 


t of against the 
— the ae I ho ope 
t their 


use in 


hastily formed as Pe 
. 5 


ess if 


will be the — 


of Thornton's 


I send to 
to some of 


wer | eee with the ater air moon © 
a r end into a 
e 


5 ihe following ir reao ions, 
and s 


3 or 1 seg tig tone The 
“ Thes are fine large beasts, of a uniform 
slate ‘olor, sth gH males — hoo e 
sha ; and it strikes yen me 1 in 
into this Neate wo 
graziers.“ bor cus. [About th 
bookaller eg is published by Blackwood, Edinbur 
and L 
Cot — „ Fentilas alion.— [I We have been favoured with 
the imei from Mr. Slaney, whose reference to this 
ta pe E. N of the English 3 
the en 3 of a eo 
a cheap plan for 


ale 


ing a cottage, the a of which should of 
the level of the soil (and the pe e soil should i 
drained, to be p ropery ary), lay some common drain 
pipes of an ine n diameter un bde er the floor to 
the wall ; baths 
small air chamber built at the 
— 4 a the grate generally used, “either separated fr 
it ym an air-tight strong iron n plate or b brickwork 
oke is air 


flue open of half 


ro rs, you can easily ba 
one opening when you ‘pletee, and throw the w 
vag ch room you like. 
e 


and dries 


bee 
9 are 


‘gentlemen s or 
eap, practical 
ood plans for cottages, with wood plates, and 


laney. 

ifi Gyp meeti ing of the 

Fr omy Central Sa 2 Agrioulture, M. Moll spoke 

antages g from the employment of A 

in those skoé in wliich the nature of t 

tr or the 2 to be ney 1. Bre a pn 1 applica- 
of this manure; but when the land to 


B 
8 


p 
artificial gypsum w rites ssk of 75 í send 
Take t. of w 


ed 
and add to it n} 1 of iai 
4 r th 


E portion 
common chalk, which has not been transformed into 
a e, but i instead of being a disadvantage, is in 
reality of great efit, as its admixture with the gyp 
r, and prevents 


much e Spar edie x te to 
for its employment as 
ure, E. urden. 

reference to this gel I should 


author says, 


e — * M, paars to a 
urgh 


205 of the chimney eve 


42 | powers ? 
a „ by hastening 
et 


| of that fraternity in = whole of this pm world who 
does not know that what I have 3 
H.“ mus 
between what he has called a“ knock on 
a and striking an instrument into the brain. 
ns, 


—— does we act when applied 2— Regardi ing — 
have bee 


except ty soils, 
in which the dee quality peculiar | to "them retards 


them inoapahioe of supplying s — — to any of the 
cultivated e n these ted d 
position tte 


—_— origin, sme — esteems on v 

another. Does ly them in order to re — 

his — more tertile, m not or one season only, but for — 

rm of years? And does he esteem them 

in 3 to the — nature of their fertilising 
? Surely he does. w then can he suppose 

their decom 

cial ? 


evaporate, others ee soluble faster than ag —— 
assimi as food, liable, to be 


S 
5 


E 


w aceelerating 
the decomposition of organie me prun lime, from a mode 
ober nt from I 

$ y 
ists that if earbon 


a. t is own all e 


; this par 
— 


1 to say, I 


a ured, dae. organic matters decompose 
rapidly enough wile the aid of f lime, else there would 
not be such a lack of manure on our as there is. 
I have to live by farming 8 and a hard — job 


f . it, but if — one could —.— me how I might 
. rd the too 1 


racity — t 


— hum 
to be applied for the purpose 
vegetable matters, in any save — 


tte aes against it, are so decided — s0 emphatic, 

that many persons may be led to — — ine that he has 

17. grounds for the strong — he . the 
way 


and keeping 
Accordingly, I had it littered down, 
. The floor of this loose 


h be 
illed in the gg . eee piace — up, no b ell, the cow was always cleat 
to me, I ou a motley coat. anony- and dry, gave an abundance milk, and from 
i t | sleekness of her coat gave ——— pfa we of good 


suppose, and especially not to.publish, that pigs cou. 

with ce ty be instantan y merely 

°| knoeking them on the head, te no such thing as 
i Ithough I t ha is 


taneous ee ‘of the life 
ne which I have se may write hundreds 
of times. 
struggle ris this any n 
the whole medida’ profession, if my 0 
not rendered it unnecessary as far as 


novelty ; J could 
n experience had 
1 myself am con- 


8 
cold, or uncomfortable, and that it is 
caleulated to improve the condition of cattle y keeping 
them warm, 2 and that is 

is attention on the part of 


beyond a the at- 
tendant in the — of litter; and as is always a 
t man kept to look after and feed tup to fatten 


nse giving an extra supply of straw, 
5 goad — by this 
of the I have 
— questi Da compounds" for feeding; 

as 5 that isa separate — W. Hoc 
To those — bones in 


ot who 
ethod I bave 
success, 


it is no extra expe 
as the — — quantity 
mare stem 1 pays th 

t touch 


Season, 


| 1 acid, I "m 
cerned, and I feel quite confident that there is not one now, for the seeond 


to communicate a met 
adopted 


284 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


Dir 5, 


whereby eby I make very short work of “i —— 
troublesome job. Under cover, either nure 
rt shed, I make a e 3 or ‘rough, 


hours complet hga wor eave the mass for 

10 days, w when 15 the addi dition of sufficient canes ti 

bring the whol e consistence of a thick gruel, 
V. S. 


nutritio 
cient supply of tho mine inerals necessary to the growth 
ek ve be kept in p soil, without the application 
Id 


vegeta 
be "quite u in vain a K 


doubt ab pm acid, oxygen, ammonia, perhaps nitrogen | 


in pa 2 en, or else in the form of nitrates, 
from the ates and but the silicates, 
2 h 5 


aso 
- | been frequently put 


present, 7 Earl of ben; v. P. in the Chair; 85 
Ds. B. John „ Mr. 


= degree of force, that a current of wind which would 
ork the m ode l would not work the full-sized machine 


ouncil e 


what propo: Sitia 
to the tive weight ? 21 1 t you the bee 
those I have s d this winter, fed 
ey- 


m feed- 


"a exhaus 
ive and a TS yE “ta Fatting Pigs sold from 
rm, 1849. 
¿Liv 
wW Weights. 
wt. Ibs. 


2 


Sn 


rj 
i 


| 


21 four smal! 7 


RO RD t te e OF CD BD te te tS LOND bI NO b9 b9 


Lapland 
ee Aon 
== 


Fra FEIT LENI TE 


S o 
S 
: 


* 


Societies. 

tg 4 AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF E 
A Spzcrat Councin ve are at the Society's s i | 
in Hanover-square y, the 30th April : 
Sir J. 
pee T mte ymond Barker, 
Mr. Bennett, Bra core Mr. Burke, 2 iy 
| Challoner, Mr, ‘Childers M 

F., Mr. oe 


c: 
M.P., Mr. Milward 
N ns sé Mr, Shelle 
Stansfie 1d, M. 8 
The e Report of “the Ch e Committee, referred a 
the last Monthly sane e the special consideration of 
this N 
amendments, dopted, red to be re 
day. 


Leg A 
ad‘ rted to 
the monthly e of the Sllowiiig 


E Montruty Councit was held on Tuesday, the Ist 


its growth. Now, here ek 
here ia is no danger of l rng 88 of pe 


vegetable kingdom, decom = 
e in water, and wi 

d sp them in the Ae o 
l plant, or lay them at its feet, when 

bed, s thing, it picks —— 
ily, n the cheerful 


umber of your Paper 
myself that the one I have 


a handle m 
3 to it; but I have 3 bound plenty of wind, 


f May ; present, His Grace the OF 
| K.G. , Trustee, in the Chair; Earl Ducie, L 
-R HYG 


(e 


| Childers, M.P., Mr. Hen 
Garre 


Finan 
rt 


. | the occasion of the * country meeting in that 
e- | | was adopted b Coun 
Coun 


on, M.P., 
Mr. Burke, Colonel Challones, Mr. 
ie man, yn 
E „Mr. Brandreth Gibbs 
X Hillyard, Mr, 
udson (Chstlenere), "he ‘Kinder, 
Mr. Pen 


„Miles, M. P., Mr. M 
M. P 


Underwood, seph, Blaskhenth, park, K 

Fellowes, Richer omer a House, Hood Berks 
ig 2 — ot as 
Mier 


. 
“gta ilies ing, E — ki „ Norfolk 
Abe, roe sing, East Dereham, No 
Harris, James, Plumstead Common, Woolwich 

Blyth, Robert Jo hn, Norwich 

Benson, J., 

Hoa ste Rog Earlham, Norwich 
| worthy, D 

The — 
meeting were then rea 

Finances. * ‘Colonel CHALLONER, chairman 


cash- he 
t date was 1653 ae 10007 on 
= Norwich erp account, and 653/. belonging 
o the account of life com oe fot ‘overt 
of the Commit 


requested to act as the iety te 

city, 

y the 

NTRY sam OF 8850 —The a of Mr, Ray- 
“M dreth Gib 


sion ar Mr Shaw 
e 


in 1850, | 
veral 
deputations, composed of so 
beer in the counties of Devon, Wilts, 


d Lin 
12 on e Manga Wurzel rech, * Gebete being | t 


pest and, with certain |. 
reporte i 


g pou perfect 


riz 

Arundel Calmady, Cleverdon House, Brad- i 
| com 

re = een for election at the next | 


sev 
me of the most influential | in 
set eee o 


33 


be 


ts 40,000 inhabitants, - ore 0 

r the oses of the 

3 d the 10,000 vistors 2 5 the northern 

southern E of the county of 
t the’ success of a 


arrangements of the Society 
welcome would be given to the 
Ex 


3 Nottingham, 
Rutlan d. and be designated the“ East Midland 
mem. Si my Chairman 
pated 1 Com 

ed ale had — — the S 


as account of the best method of increasing 
oH d the sealed 


e Society, at 12, 
Isto Meyn: 


2 
athe 

A 
ea 


the Prevention of — 


Pam 


Thee 
Cov 
The Dis 


ng of Linco! 
ng of Somersetshive 
auses and Means for 


s 
eases of Live Stock occasioned by 
— . enen of Oa ats dipi 
e Rearing an anagemen 
The Clim 288 the British Islands in its Effec 
vation 
The Deb of the Wireworm 


— 


AQ 
zs usse "e 


vi, 


AGRICULTURAL CHEMISTRY. n the motion T pi 

l of Ductz, seconde 

following Report of the Chemical Commi 
RE 


BB. 1 8 3 
PORT OF THE CHE HEMIOAL in coxa dure the 12 
Committee recommend that 


as to 
“the akot —7s. 64. 
could be formed by 


2 


opinion as 


2 


AGRICULTURAL GAZ E 


TT E. 285 


a but is 2 een, to 
specimens, 

peal a applican 
ilcake for instance 
put will not touch the gaoa 

e as a pure specimen, Suc 
ee to e m arket articles, as 
. muperphospha'e of lime, sulphate of 


common salt, C. 
A determination of th 


ck the same a d of the earthy phosphates, 
The following is an instance, taken at ran- 
dikan analysis = . 17.95 
— ial salts : = Ob 
ai pai: 1 ist 
owphate ly phosphate of lime ... 20,98 
e e pt „often 
— salt dc. a su Soe 
. all that is needed to give the agricultural 
15 d ar. a ias a 


20s. he proportion 


| phe be due to minute ingredien 
4 or gra including ped er 
and magnesia, with sand 


4, 
= 


L . 11 s. 

8. or dung, a any animal products 
(such as cheese or Riese in Ik), nitrogen, and phos- 
phorie acid.—1/, — tisinding nitrogen, oil, and 


Bist gd z 2001, a- ea be paid to oe par 


be e this purpose, an P t the Committee 
ower to expen à Ba not exceedin 
prr {chemical i 
RARE. made by the 


That, in —4 to insure a regular and efficient 
thfollowing 1 aber be added to the Com- 


T, LAWES 
Mr. Hupson (Castleacre) 
Mr. Barnes M. P. 


. THOM 
Mr. DET (Strand). 


cIL—On the moses a. Colonel 
ously 
of the Council, in n the 2 ce 


4RD—On 
iM Hira 
wanimous] 


themotion of Mr. Brandreth, seconded 
Mr. Charles Stokes of Kingston, Notts., 
a Stew: in the 


bet neral Meeting on the 22d inst. 
udges for the Norwich “Meeting: 
for Stock—Lord Po M 


* 


e Stock exhibited as 
. of on a 
. to adj tinal upon which they 
Council agreed 
Tequired by the 
8 General 


Acne that occasion, 
Shay Mr. Cotman, one of the 
attended 


so from a y the Society, atte 
e ae visit he had paid to 
as by 


be 
= 


Bye-laws to 
Meetin 


i the is recent visit t 
Adan that while the Noe 


ie fie many purposes; but in ampton 


characters of st 
b 


er, transferred to the class of 
sis 


_ | the 
e 


cla 
by Ballot to > 
W 


eat i 
ting at 5 
The 


. 
80 e ka 
se 
made by mae New | ‘Yor 


the — the enterprise, and the publie marae of | 
3 Society of En pend formed the 
ation, the cultivators of the soil 


fa 
communicat ip s friend Mr. Pusey 
ing details connected vin such re and should be 
w nd them consi worthy for the 
na Se. New Yo 

State Society being already on the list of . 
societies, the Council, at the suggestion of Mr. Col 
took that opportani ty of adding the W ee So 
ciety to the li 

Verertnary Rerorts.—On the motion of the Hon. 
R. a CLIVE, M. F., the "Veterinary Commit ttee were re- 
quest 


by Mr. Clive at the previous ma 
Lecrure.—The Rev N Sip ea ee —— 

m k Eppesin to deliver a Lecture e before th Mem 

of the ensuing Norwich apan ar as 1255 


J oD 


fl. 
OMMUNICATIONS. 7 . 
rs were 


The Council then adjourned to Tuesday _ 


PuysicaL oF EDINBURGH, 


Roya 
Profes sor FLEMINxd in the Chair. a 


ro to the hea e re- 


arked — fen 3 


abi of we ig 


be visible to the 


s to 
atei eye, and contain er 
Mer Me whic 


villi on h they are moulded 
ir lower ne are filled by a white 

e end of each villus 
as pes all the essential 
itis agglutinated into large masses 
yan intervening S seg so arranged, that, whilst 
their lower away by the friction to 1 5 pe 
they are exposed, their i Pa 5 
co 


They are to 


ass, a 
ould be 8 by the fico 


found is con- 


s of oe layers, year 
e fro 


rly fore be received, as it oug 


eg and subsoil ploughed ; excellent buildings, of 
|w pecs sige is given, have been erected on it f 
llit isreclaimed from peat-moss. The details 


Ba 


county, the ra 


ravages of game were very gre 
everal instances — sums were pali to the 
—— ts for the damage done eir crops. Much dis- 
conten felt - 


situations 4 
but as e 


ved 

to the landlord, the work is much more effectuslly done, 
and the res sult, it is believed, has ted every respect, 
to landlord and tenant.” 


owners r to give afew 
work in — section of 


readers 


etie se 
ts of f. arming, and his ju vigan will there- 
t, with the greater confidence. 


Mis 
Important Experim — “Metropolitan _Semage 
3 ure Company lately tie the third 
experiments with a view 
venient and e 


as that in use by the Manchester Liquid Manure 
m a hose directed by 
i tion 


sowing. 


cen 

attached to a revolving stand pipe, an 

round, es in clined plane bon peep ie: o depressed 80 
as 0 yards in diameter. 


ral surface of the 


ly 
of the frontal 2 e its production is 


most rapid w en the hair 

body is in 2 growth. 

ee z various kinds o 
— 


er interes 
horn were exhibited 


resting sec- 
under 


Rebicws, 
High Farming, under Liber By Covenants, the gore a 
stitute for Protection. ames Caird, Farmer, 


Londo 
WE E again to this pamphlet, in order to give our 
read its contents. Our object is just so 


sincerel 


out a persona. experience to 
appeal to. The lowing i a a irant EN f. the farm 
aboot which the pam air 
he farm of Auchness, * ge h Mr. ge ee 
culloch i is the tenant, is is iat S “a ‘the bay of 
Wigtonshire, — e of the southernmost 
h-eas 


lar 
Glasgow, and about two ies pee 
gee 2 viens for Glasgow or 3 aa | 


im 


The ae oxen where natura'ly dry, has all been 


0 
jot application from a centre 
se, and 1 it would be — ti 
0 nine successive centres direct 
krom the stand re . 
n Peevil.— Some pen ago, 


Baldo ag W. Blackwood ei Sons, Edinburgh and | 2 
that 


its the house in 1 


e Cor 
ee ais overrun with weevils ; 


espect perfectly dry 
time the weevils died off and disap 
adopting this precaution, we > have not had 
3 ma have only been reminded that 
when an 
pei ccf oe generate them 
therefore 
istu 


rees to be felled in various 3 


countr, . ‘the reports are 
* There can, however, be little doubt ibis the 
from 


| — this 8 1 
ni, to 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE! 


[May 5, 


s if we have an average nr genni r 
resent high continuing, but we expeet im the 
poon ae mn el ied gry we D 

the of the past 


delay ; we are 
getting dr aw ings made, w ill be engraved. 
siderable len 
Sau Crusner : WDF. Mrs, Wedlake manufactures one. 
An Original Sub, The pe has infi: of tbe throat 
gop — 


). It should be bled, and have 
a dose of salts and sulphur, half an K. I. ofeach, If an 
ter an 


Deains: FAS. We — — song o tiles, with collars of con- | 
B 


—— forms, — should be o pened. d White’s 
works, if a late edition is proc ured, eet 
TAA 5 Give the pig 6 to 12 of ‘‘ Hydrargyrus o 
„ aecordin ts age and size (whieh you have — 
. third day till the 8 are removed, 
— apply a li 1 Arif & ent to the scabs. 
* C. . 
Beeps vor N, LATITUD: We are 
session of such informa ble us to say what 
the is of 54° N. lat. and 100° W. long., and 
advise y ake enq e 


be relied upo: 
not not vasiy — Thane > aan, itt may be worth 3 * 2 . 
of so neo winter, ad aT has og? ge settled by 
others, m ieh» you can piem scertain 
similar 


e writers on pr on 


yourself by | 4 
— r in which 


atte wast 


to * D. S. E. 


year. Kent 81 


* fourth Artie 


Zur 
32822785 


are la uantities of ali refuse 
esia the neighbourhood oi sit ufacto- 
998 


pasila. E 
ile —.—.— 225 1 this wasio 


ter — 
ual pro- 
not pay to + camer the whole of 
gypsum use of a sufficient 
ge of vitriol to convert the carbonate of ion pr —— 
calcined refuse 
placed that it -Ai 


' the 
i product would be 
ing, and in large towns wh d is 
Lec m tothe Jand, * thus 
ve intended 
be, a benefit. . 


this day se’nnight. Fo; 
4 ilar reductio; 
peri- chased at our last week’s 


e 


| Aver. 
? jnis 
1 Pog md My er 
OATS.. 3 
a 16 10 
RYE 114 S 


SMITHFIELD, Mowrpay, April 30. 
We — 2 Beasts than on Monda: ay last; im — 
also smal Buyers are very cautious, owing t 


but trade is decided 


second. 
1 — are 237 Beasts, 430 Sheep, and 74 Calves ; from Norfolk 
and about 2³ 00 Beasts; 


from Denmark, dt; 

d Per st. of 8 Ibs.—s d 
Ses oy e wools , 3 
o Sho: 3 0 

E — K 24 l quality 3 
| 


horns 3 2 
Ditto eee 
Lam 


26 11 1 ia 2 
Best and 
agi s $ per j 


ABO es ots T? 3 8—4 
Beasts, 3576; Sisep — 5 ae 23, A cares 141; Pigs, 285. 
RID Ax, ue 
* + is a large number of good 
w purchasers, owing to the glacea state of the dead ad mar ets, 


— have wi Beasts, 160 Sheep, > sein 58 C 
00 Be: and 128 Milch Cows fro 


3 2 
0 

—2 8 Ditto Shorn 
412 0 


. 1 
Beasts, 398 ; Sheep andl Taika, 100; Calves, 248 ; Pigs, 270. 


aP * Dar, May 4, 

Messrs, PATTE d Smra — 4 5 that 

— at “hate ‘pr 2 with a senders fo advance, a 

unts from the plantations bya 
2 in many 


— Ged from the 


*. Far 
N i Sei oy 2 Yearling’ Kents . 40 — 
75 40 — 56 
26 20 — 35 


Yearlin ng Sussex 
— 65 | Old Hops 


Monpar, APRIL 30. The. supply of of English Wheat 
from the neighbouring counties rni 
smäll, and with the exception r a + of the finest 

ite, which realised last Monday's prices, was 
sold at a decline of 18. to 28. per q 
oreign me 
n.— Barley, 150 and Oats 
must be written 1 — maz Non $ 
n ls. r. 
unaltered. * e 


a few choice Scots make 38. 6d. The number of of 
rse 


0 avery choice one 
9 vr 4d., and that r. — Fron = — and ey 
nd, 


4 


t the market is 
s the ac- 
he bine as being very 
effects of 


son offer, and but very | to 4 


pen 
. ality 2 8—3 4 
as 4—2 10 
0 


«ap. owt. gr Big 


RIDAT, May 4,—The N 


FRI 
the week have 


The weather duri 


a “alighs dec fine i 
— been cone 
rd. Pri 


Liver 
supplies since Tu 
Pygeum ge 


qe oe. 
ere 


RIAL 


VERPOOL, FRipay, May 4.— W 

bap prices ; 

more extensive transactions, 
qu 2 


T 
not — and 
per q 


| WHEAT. 


dma 
w of English 


3 the value 174 Wines 
ad to have effected ı 


uesday. 


in 
t a small reduction we 


and * ferior 
22 


BARLEY. 


Im 
Arenas. | 
Mar. * 


298 2d 
28 10 
28 9 
28 
28 

28 10 


45s 4d 
44 
44 
4 


28 9 


Fluctuations 
Prices, (Aux. 17. 


1 9 
the last six weeks’ Corn A 
Man. 24. 


is 1- 


44 
“44 


ina 


London. 


Wakefield. | 


Boston. 


PRICES 


Apr. 23 Apr. 30 April 24. 
| qr. | qr, 


S 
0 E-r ES E- F 
SS DEN 


— 
2D N 


© 
— 
a 


— 
Ne Oo 


SEGAR and 
TUNNICLIFFE, 


Apr. 20 Apr. 27 
qr. * 1 


8. 
400% 


144 


pred er 2. 


40 1040 


23 24—26 
28—30 


** 


1 g—1849. | 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 287 


= Sales af Auction. 


A 
STEVENS 
at his Great Room, 33, Kia 


HIDS. 
— to announce for Sale by 


GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES. 
AMES PHILLIPS ano CO., 116, Bishopsgate- 2 
ithout, have the D to hand their New List of Pri 
of SHEN? ‘GLASS for Cash 


r —— 
EANE’S WARRANTED GARDEN TOOLS,— 
e 


amine G, and EANE t 
GARDENING AND PRUNING Iarf EBEN TS, best Stock of ot 


J. C. ng-s street, Covent- HOR RTLCULTURAL GLASS ~ mode a — Engines and Syringes, Coalbrookdale Garden 
esa. May 17. at 12 for 1 0% im. | CUT TO SIZE UP TO 4 SHEET SQUARES, Averuneators . a 
gris, on arri Java, comprising three ne four quite INCHES LONG. In boxes of 100 feet, 8 en Scrapers [Pi ick 
portation i Aerides, a few strong plants of Saccola- 16 oz. from 3d. to * os foot. seme Goby tai 12s, 6d. Ba ng Hook: rape Gatherersand Potato Fo orks 
der Blumei, some dine masses OF Grammat- |21 ,, 3} by 4 and 6} by 4ġ...... 15 0 gging Hooks We y Pruning Bills 
biom in dem, a very fine w Calanthe, Vandas, and |26 , 40 i 5 and 75 by 54...... 17 avel Rakes and | „ Knives,varions 
8 condition, t paying been b ht ee 94 Z y 6 and 10 by ...... Borders, various pat- n Bieves » Saws 
paid ae be viewed t y prior and morning of ROUG PLATE @ for WINDOWS, SKYLIGHTS, PR ser al B Perechouse, Dogra 1 rg 
Callaalogues ha and FLOORS. in Bas not exceeding 5 feet supe somes poh: tie PE et ca nn oe Tor riety, 
ne ipte ROE anp MORRIS will 5 x 12 t 1 t 23. * ot cement 8 H pare Kae, glass PPRS Reapin ng Hoke va- 
HERO E AND will su * E . aff Engines ay 
sis PROT oa by „ at the Mart, Baftho. Finch .., 3 — ee eee Chaff Knives Hoes of eery pattern S Seythe | Stones 
v at TUESDAY, Sch, and THURSDAY, 10th of $ 11 9 7 = aisy Rakes Hortic Ham- Shears, various 
QOTEES and PINKS, VERBENAS, roe 9 ee aay nen . each 24 Ditties pers and Hatchets Sickles 
TSEASE, CINERARIAS, 21 — rr Bi OD p< | GMMR cs. cecedicescacus ock Spuds Hotbed Handles ws 
iA e IUM other Pilanie in bisg SHEET GLASS TILES 3 SLATES. — Tools i Pea ies Set of Tools Spades and Shovels 
3 ues had at ree M “4 21.0. 1. * 22 ging Irons an S, variou uds 
— —.— oS ale. a Nursery, Leytonstone: Eise. ‘Tiles made of Sheet Glass . 84 104 s.4d, | „ Shears erns, in zine ber Wr 
Auction Slates, 20 ins. by 10............... . 9g aa 5 8d, | Flower Scissors | in, de. Thistle Hooks 
rig oF DAIRY STOCK —There = be Sold by | S are kept in stock 2 oe usual sizes, and made to an;, » and To re Marking 1 Reels Transplanting Tools 
tM astle Douglas, mensions, r | g 
b rspat, the 15th day of May) Text, the followin ASS MILK-PANS, PROPAG GATING anp BEE GLASSES, ors | cks Turfing Trons 
mi 1 — ah pret J lersey Cows; 2 pure bred Alder Tenis Slabs, Hyacinth Glasses and Dishes, Shades for Orna. GalvanicBor dersand Men aa Wall Nai 
y Heifers ; 1 pure bred Jers rsey ments, Fish Globes, Plate and Window Glass of every deserip- laut Protectors Metalſie Wire Watering Pots 
Ra 3 Cows —— — y Bee by a Jersey Bull; 10 pure | tion, ades, and Lactometers for trying the ganing; of | Garden * * jion Hatchets Weed Extractorsand 
bred Shetland — the bov ee en Dri d from stock om ior Gre - 6d. ; 6 tubes, 10s, Self Registe ring Therm Loops * — ente Bn — 
the owner e annel Island S, and are remark- ers ior Greenhouses, ” arrows 
Sh frst metry n niking qualities. Castle Douglas ARTLEY'S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS, ony, basin * sole Agents fi [oun Set of Tools 
a Carlisl m = gents for > 
0 to Carlisle, 81435 FOR Col ERV A TORIES, NENT" LABELS, cs vo of which, with the Ilustrated List 
SALE OF A — 5 7 3 GREENHOUSES, ty. z “4 Hortieultural gom can be sent, post paid, to any f 
-y . FORREST » to he of 1 ETLEY anp CO. a re supplying le Biod Glass, Š United 3 a s Horticultural Tool Warehouse, 
in TUESDAY, 29th 12 he Ane ion, ritish Man eg packe s containing 100 Bere onument, 46, King William.st., London-bridge. 
a GREENHOUSE PLANTE 11 — 3 N square f feet each, at ihe — — PRICES for cash, YDRAULIC ENGINES, WATER RAMS, &e., 
¥ n Im; d le 
stairs House, — 2 = seca may e from Sinan 88 Inches. Tay! 5 hr} 100 Fag Hydraulic 1 3 e agreed 3 k 
— 1 n ene, 6 by 4 ijd. fe. £9.13 | a height of 600 ioak and trom a dend er 809 per Douche, 
Pomii 4, 86. ha ade Sate fo" coke rom 6 „ ” TE Uw i 3 Vapour, , and all other kinds of Baths, Buildings, 
mence at halfpast 12 o'clock, in order to suit the 11 rte: „ * 246. ” 91 9 Conservatories, &e., heated by Steam, Air, or Water. Bering, 
train from Edinburgh, per Caledo cee 8 ne, 1 000 Sinking, and Collecting of Water, Ge. Towns supplied, — 
pe 3 i 10 111 pa; 
Andrew-sq Edin 2 — !!; "OOE Onm To 
3 ANDED PROPERTY. Mz. ED WARD } RYDE 18 2 a my not exceeding 40 inches long. C Am ~ gai N’S > ORIHINAL ANTI- CORROSION 
+ rom to 34 ad, per squa ry $ * ae g + AIN troni å 
* va n the fools 8 ” d. + 55 ” ” vernments, the "How, East ladia Company, t the principai 
har ‘for Pu pi * 26 on. ” ad. 55 ” ” Dock Compa Companies, most p bodies, and by the Nobility, 
2 1 ESTATES, TIMBER? or desiring to Fur Gentry, and Clergy, for out-door work at their co seats 
* ’ 3» e 
7 . enay of Estats. and | PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK CROWN GLASS, and The Jarly recommended as the most 
Collection of Rents by early o r ee i PE T cag PATENT PLATE GLASS for Horticultural purposes, at — out- door Paint ever invented, for the preservation of 
ae Sore elgrave-pl, ‘af joa sq. 257 ee reduced peu, by the 100 square feet very description of Iron, Wood, Stone, Brick, Compo, Cem 
PUBLIG Ses i 2 GLASS TILES AND SLATES made to any size or pattern, 7050 oe, * „ by ( he 3 test 22 
pos at the New Corn Exchange | „eit Plate Glass ) » ous e a testi- 
arer, Mark. Inne, Lo sata on MOND M . ating Glasses, B — Glasses ‘Cucum Tubes, Glass monials in its favonr, and which, from the rank and station i 
ei Tons PERUVIAN GUANO, 3 ane pik Pats Gees * e jarious other articles not canal 202 pave e of tho kind m ea . 
bs and 8 ` F itherto man 
bape — . eke 8 2 PATENT PLATE GL A88.—the present t extremely moderate | Public notice. Lists of Colours and Prices, together with a copy of 
in due time from J. A. RUCKER and 1 Brokers, . — ‘ £ he superior article sh oe te: —— sede 10 15 1 rn r 7 wed „ eee “No 
Commercial Rooms A other infe; s res 
5 2 = 7 Len alteration connected ie: gen nts.—All 3 uested to be sent direct 
0 BE 85 SE a 12 0 a S SHADES, D and wer the Soe a 80 00L F ENERAL AND r FIC 
— e Ye- of eve of injury 
Dots ah compact NURSERY A| posara Poe ae paan Pamore at tis ‘Bache . | M ED e eee 
ESS, the former foe pred i ked with Trees ae to se read ton * Right. Ron. toed ab nord ham, conducted 142 
ree and other buildings situated app 3 to James HETTRT and Co 35, — = 2 
T us in the vicinity of one of th Lon = AF 12 es Dos . 
ee * Downes, Wickham 
Iogear sonar pore tie end Grass, ns 
: FPV 
don, Seed-merchant, Tavistock-row, Co- anD W. H. JACKSON are su jing 3 SHEET, Se VASES, FOUNTAINS, GARDEN OR- 
: ° ROUGH PLATE, and CROWN GLASS — W een NAME NTS, Coats of Arms, and Arehitootural gens 
70 purposes, at v ' 5 
BE. XUR RSERY AND SEEDS ae Bae PATENT PLATE of superior 22 . 2 dea, n IMPERIS . STONE, ae a n. 
S bi VauGHaN and C 0, Stone's nd, Bee 0 
In establisha’ Nr rivate Contraet, that old and ling. purpose these articles are now super. P Cr per late of Coade’s, Sup 
i pirate ursery and Seed ogrir BROMPTON | seding all lass. ORNAMENTAL ELA of u _VROGGON, late of Coade's l nt, 
E on for many years by Messers. Gray, newest designs = piso decoration of Con howe mnt a JOITAM & HALLEN, į NGINEERS Inox Founpkns, 
tnd Hoog; th ie 4 ! 
Becton good, Poy? e situation 3 a crate, and the con- E. an H. supply PATENT OPTIC AL —— * No, 2, Werren — Lonpon, 
Nursery 8 i me, heres a r, JoHN Sanester, | GLASS, Thin Ae: Slides a Cells for Mic: copie p 
si eran, ge on Batt, onion Mr. Ropsar French Sha 2 Propag pagati — rae 2 wt Es mates, Lists 
Solicitors, 6g Conti Sor — or to Sol k an UBNER, rices, and every information forw. on application at 
15 5 ury, their Wareho ouse, 315, Oxford- street, Lon 
enna a VILLA Peony CE, 


3 
188 

EE 

Fie 


J yea HOMAS MILLINGTON, 25 — 
upon which cent COTTAGE BESIDENOR 281 Pay wA T (same side as n Counties Railway, 
atten ni health an bas ores by the presen les- | Terminus), BRITISH PLATE GLASS. nearly Fi — thick, 
gland, 100 of whieh ren re from it. in sizes under 1 foot su perficial, ls. 2d. per toot; this is the 
Een, in — rae Sani. —— seoti m chewy best article for Greenhouses and Garden * es of every de- 

tie highest state of ood; 45 Grass; 3 the rest under crop, all PERE as nothing can — it in an ordinary way. Hortieul- 
Aue fl hour) — Landen ation, close to a railway station, 30 lass, in cases of 200 feet, No. 16 0z., 40s. ; No, 21 oz., 603, ; 
Would make don Bridge, nt proprietor No. : 26 O., 878. 6d. ; No. 32 oz., 112s. each, case includ 


a se 
aay 15 Bulle 118 ce toa . tenant.—Apply to 


Cut Squares, in 100 feet ipani Crown. No. 16 Horticultural. 


Til be sen,” » London, and full parti- Sizes under $ tas An y 4 ins. TA * 12. 6. . 
PRE LET, ig tas 20 BE LET. mos ee SH 5 3 = 
M. No * rhood Leue 1 oe ” — „ 
Be tke Dard apply who cannot ‘ae in| B above 10 by 8, in at to 34. 
— of the Ger enge e * — oe the per foot, accordi of agen: ee quantity Patent R Roug h Pla aM and HALLEN. e 
$ Strand, London Upper Welling ton- Tiles, & in., Id.; 4 in,, 1s., h; jates, $ and $ i — HOTHOUSES ond | -LORBER VAT ORES (made of Iron or 
*ORTICTERY war BS acu Hoag Paio 135 r Bers . Wares, ot inne: aus i anal tome va 
., 0 $ u., 13, $ in., | have at time, can w. undertake 
0 nt BUILDI 11 AND HEATING 1s. + in., 27.; 1 aXe, is sizes under 5 feet super- | erect * Rei rae with noe 4 
me Toy OT Vor 4 5 ‘for the quality of milk, 4 tubes, ft WATER ARDARA ‘TUS 2 ea above and 
A tHe CHOICEST PLANTS, | 79- 68; € tubes, 10s. 88 pene, Fastey Slabs, (of W 8 — upwards of 
Ro oss Dishes for Bulbo lants. Pro. 2000) ae at — 
| pag es, Fish Globes, . . and Lamp. 
2 1 every description. Linseed tty, Bs. ; White) 
WWAN Lead, 26s. per cwt. 8 — oi Tu — Paints, Colours, 
>n w Varnishes, Brushes, and Tools in every variet 
oa PHEASANTRY, Bea ort-street, King’s- 
ad, Chelsea, by special appointment to her Mai est: 
H.. H. I, Prince Albert. ne y ir M WAT 9 
consisti y white sw 
ar cle, brent, 4 bale «nee be d a pent 
geon, summer 
ame, gol aha e a lacke, ke, 
0 a 
Malay, — Dorking mia Anp. J aid oat pied, ) 
— — — 4 Corr d HaLLEy have on show y their era 
Win — me me Oxford-street, a great the follo wit 
—.— ms y ee nie THE HE EESTIS E REDS ANEH 10 RAM, E for GARDENS, &., at Greatly REDUCED PRICES, 
RS, and HOT-WATER by Freeman Roz, Foun Strand, 
inspection of their London, « 4 be worked by a | Garden Rollers, j —— y valaha frames, 
ip. 7 W hich wit attest as to quality small ream of half-an-inch, Garden Engines, 8 
: — SEKS-and Oo. have nom where a fall of 2 feet Garden Syringes, Piewer-bordering, 
ection, a great f o | Thi same RA Watering Pots, Plower Stands, 
Consery same RAM, 
al) „ Porein &e., out the aid of a Tank or Cis- Garden Vases, ' Garden freien, 
mot improved methods of rid —— «Fon pony dee Motoni x, both plain n and Ornamental in 
tilati 3 cons a Foun- 
; Ultural Erections, The} tain with the head iit and dast iroa, for Gardens, eat 
n af Hany — 1 neath 2 HORTICULTURAL TOOLS and AGRICULTURAL IMPLE. 
enorme usati ants, ich nes wells of 3 D ea vat Baths. | MENTS d 
, es. mer nat sold | Buildings heated by hot water, 7 small} STRONG IRON HURDL set and 
Application. Cata- | e stimates given Sei the ae 8 Rooms at eho MANY ACTORY, 2 
A newly-invented Portable Vapour Bath, ali complete for r l. 76, 


288 — ed HOCE FLOWER SEEDS.—Many Flower 
m W GAILLARDIA ts tae Ebb, LN b Bristol . a g . Oleg * 4 % Many Flower Seeds 
— de, B FLORIST EEDSMAN, ; 
G rpc . bay ed, aad sab sub sneak 7 appointment 8 her i 1 begs z T e T a fo 0 . a list of ey 20 
essrs. hi AL CA OG P 0 5 sowing in Proper 
Wg uber ine. Ths following e . | PLANTS, „alarar eg of Go iums, Fuchsias, Dahlias, Chry- 1 5 — No. 1; Reo 1 * Eo — — dower ‘ext 1 
9, 1847. | hemums, nas, Lilium lancifolium, Camellias, Or- No. 2, and Green eds, see 
„Pear Sir,—The Gaillardia is Fine APO vory Dre — 7 chids, G eahouse, Stove, nad othe New s saro Plants, is mor S Bete. » iA Schizant oe retusus’ e: ge 
v l u a posses a 
t comes t quile tras, si — — x. 1 ans large hock 4 ne sation ing, he begs to offer | All fo rwarded prepaid, fo the prices menti: s. Gd. per packet, 
the one now sent ; on „as nently late = mo E. 1 p z oe z r g. Z WER 228 oned 
i ‘ 0 1 4 tron: ants a 
never bm a Fase — oome — 283 3 * Mitchell’s et Gera "fom Fa Mian : = 1 ea. be p-doz. . — 9 be yy d EEE a * 
dition to this family, and worth your increasi = . e : um 2 aster, 25 2 » Aster, 24 fines . 7 See 2 2 5 
“Mr, E. HI. ta, Florist, Worthing.” —— brah * 124 ” 12 aa. € tea akes 5 
bove opi tried the Gaillardia Zaaschn ris ifornica 2 ase ee ’ ” . ” Ares 
t Saind, ant bloomed it Ae arh trae a — preon Calceolaria, Kentish Hero bedding 9s. „ Balsam, 6 ext a fine 6 | Picotee, white 13 
and can stro ly mend it to the favourable notice o Amplexicaulis sarc ad * ” ganei D a6 50˙ yellow ae ae 
Florists and Amateurs. Strong ants, in 60-sized pots, will | Plum 8 ate ves e 68, and 98. „ ” 1 ote , 7 separate J 
ent d week in May s. 64. each, and may Chrysanthemums, consisting of all the leading Brachyci var. ixed Carnation 80 
Nen Pine-apple Place, Edge- | varieties serrer 155 „588 Délphinian, 
ware-road; Mr. Hamilton, 156, Cheapside; and Mr. Denyer, Verbenas pan hag EE l fine var li à : 
Po chia . 15 5 Š arkia, ne var. elianthemum, m, 
a See tie itl be rent out a seedling pier 4 1 ianthus, 6 finest Hollyhock, dou, m. 
named “THE HERO OF MOULTAN,” at 10s. 6d, each. yon aoa venusta, coccinea ` “superba, 3 elegans, Gaillardia, 6 do. Lupinus, mixed 
is a fine showy variety ; large flower, upper petals ve iar, s. por doum, 4er Ta er 1 speciosum 
and spot Thi a will become a good Trade flower. The Do. Gniesbrechuii, * 6d, each. Godetia, 6 fine var. 
usual Trade . — when three plants of — 1 are taken. Post- office orders posted from unknown corres- | Jacob 6 do : Phiox, | perennial, in — 9 
Orders will be executed 2 he rotation, —EDW H. FULLER, | pondents. Ker — M 1 5 N „ a paureta a a 
the Ploricultaral Groun k Cres scent, Worth fog 0 YOU T BRUISE 2 1 — z OATS ‘YOU | GIVE guan wargold, i tides Stock, Brom, 1 
OTH OUSES anD 50 NSERVATORIES made le and HORSES? No. ou lose one bnshel out of every Mesembryanthersu „3 ave 
H fixed complete in all parts of the Kingdom, at a con- three, and your Cattle do not do hale so so * H. MART WED- mophila, 4 finest o ` 1 Tah mper ial, 5 =N 6 
siderable reduction. One, two, nd three-light Cucumber | LAKE AND C0.˙8 0 9 MILLS; superior aff N 20 extra fin Sweet Wil 2 
and Melon Boxes, and Lights of all sizes, kept ready for use, | Engines, simple in construction doing from 30 to 300 e We donbig 3 es K. 
packed and sent to all parts of the Kingdom ; warranted beat | daily, and more. All spectable Co — ee Pes and Brew Phlox Drummondii, 4 ngle, nied is 
material, Garden-lights of every description, at James Watrs’, | use these Imple t be Fenchurch- — Poppy, 12 v 7 dhi os 
Hothouse Builder, Claremont-pia ace, Old Kent-road. 1 pposite Mark-lane, (lose to the 3 1 ay. ‘ortulaca, 535 
may be had to the Nobility, Gentry, and the Tr ade, in ae B. Linseed Mills, Ve n Milla.am d Malt Mills, in great variety. striatifiors, new No. 111. GREENHOUSE 
of the counties land. BUDDING’S PATENT MACHINES FOR CUTTING LAWNS, Salpiglossis 5 SEE 
B VALVANSED WIRE GME “NETTING.— PLEAS penny tebe e ee 1 &e, Se higanthus, Ae (ee eee, — 210 
ND 80 : aria, pie 
eg argc "| you FERRABED anD SONS, Phænix Iron Works, sien Gorman, 21 5 | Erioa, 304p . „ aad 
troud, ge sto e Engineers, Millwrights, Ma- ; 1 =l en sete 20 var. 1 
5252 chinists, Iron and Brass Founders, and Manufacturers of nti’ or ag a 24 ) Panaon , Si 
22 égricultural Mie 2 e- sh 8 igg a —1 
25 Ane ann nuals 3 Ixia, finest M 
No. II. —FLOWER NEXT Lophospermum, m. 
YEA Maurandya, m, „ 6 
92 Alstrœmeria, 1 g is, fine m. 0 
— Wee 4 sp. Thunbergia, 6 var. 
25 he above, and most sia Flower Seeds, to be had oi 
aso JAMES 8 8 and yee 238, High Holborn, 
9 25222 London. Sixpe packets, mixed, may be had of the seeds 
oF ne SS 0. 1 
e KNIGHT’S TALL MARROW PEA, warranted of supe- 
2 rior Paran ea ble K proper for present sowing, — per 
quart; aite's blue King of the Marrows, extra 5s. per 
n + A Catalogue of Bulbs will be published in the autumn, 
2inch meih, igh light, detach wide ... i d. 5 F un 108 8e PLANTS. 15 15 
Z.inch 7005 jA ” D EEDSMAN and FLORIST, 
1 . 25 25 4 55 * ” chapel London, can 1 i e now Dalias econ 
* ee ” * At very 8 a erbenas, 
1 e B „ Pansies, Geraniums, Fuchsias, &c. this season, in- 
1f-inch trong , 14 11 p eluding I FUCHSIA SPEC Ta BTS, 21s. eac pos rola bates be 
All the 1 Theses nee be made u any width at r nate prices. AN S FOR MAY SOWING in pac ackages 0 re 
If the upper half is a Coma mesh, it will reduce b price one- ry. > 
À pps Wvanized sparo oe nde lag for ben n 25. ed. ; ee free by post 6d. l 
fourth. Ga We quality. R LILIES, 1s. eac 
paa ease) terns 1 by post-fr X 
1 fac N, BA 8 and BISHOP, Market-place, orm Ph so Ea eke CART et De i 
Norwich, end d aot oe London, Peter- houses or Fram 3 or other flow He per yard, 
borough, Hull, or Newcast ewe . Vegetable seeds, & 56, Cheapside, Lon 
-STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROOF SELECT BEDDING PLANTS. 
hakr NETTING WOODLANDS NURSERY, T Te near UCKFIELD, 
a 8 
w 8 may be worked by persons who — use a X 
; 0 55 Py may be a 1 any — and leaves a more M. ON have much “pleasure * 
d u — an rface than 8 be produced b Ta ‘the mos N fering the following 4 pmo ag ler g pr dot. 
p Ower, e Grass may be cut when and may 4 2 ea ` 
; inthe box, enabling * rdener to at his 9 at This trüly beautiful variety will prove a deu einer 
| the most convenient time, and rendering 2 after wur lz the in lection of bedding plants; its flowers are smal 
| unnecessary ; while, with the = amount of labour, more > thet? a patens, and of the purest snowy ee A 
| double + 1 of work can be see “that with a <a. g of ‘lig ht blue on the lower lip of each — 
| Up f 3000 of these riage are now in use. The The stock of 27 a 25 25 ed be paraa wo 2 — athe pose 
made of various sizes both for hand and horse power, and thie of W. W. and 8 nd the vai 
j price os eason peor considerably reduced. finest in cultivati OF we WooD—F e, bright wd 
essrs, Ransome and May, Ipswich, are Gen eral Wholesale 8 —French 
Agents for London, Middlesex, — — adjacent counties; also | eye; & very large, distinct, and superb variety, 855 2 
S Northamptons incolnshire, and the e Min LASOE HEI —bright p 
0 hite eye, well adap or ing; 98. 5 
B. YOUNG! axp COMPANY (Lare | _ The Machines are also sold by the following Ironmon MRS. ON—most brilliant scarlet, bright pmg 
ge s 
W. AND 0. YOUNG) Mr. W. Drury, Castle-street, Liverpool ; Messrs. Lister and Lees, | s, habit compact and dwarf, flowering in great profuse 
x : OF IRON AND WIRE ` WORK, — Cateaton-street, Manchester ; Messrs. applebeck and Lowe, this is ii pga ably the fin st Verbena 1 its clas a í 
23, ESTMIN Loxpox: Castte. | Bull-ring, Birmingham ; Messrs. J, Nelson and Sons, 47, Brig- | prove one of the best 1 for groupin 3 
' i, Temon ger 
Pot geet evs ‘ HIGH-8TREET, gate, Mr. T. Johnson, ee, Messrs. Young and KORELA BOR. —bright vermilion sear! 
DINBURGH; | z * GLASGOW. pence, Sheet 8 essrs. San wood, Derby; and super s i 
respectfully 'to call the 5 g of Landed — beg and Mr. Jobn Wigvle-worth, Market. place, Nottingham. ck The usual discount to the Trade. 
others to their str ence, for excl: Hares The foll bi commended f 
and Ra G young Plantations, N g e fo! stolen are highly re 
; , Nurseries, Nc. Anemone japo per 
This — — at it of the we o and Balsamina ee ai p, deep yellow, fi fine ” 7 
where its Efficiency, Grea’ „ and E Bad Ci — BE Calceolaria amplexica r a 
attracted general —— wae ad rded from 22257 ” ‘ete 
— — . Silver Medals, * * 22287 > PORA “unbidomed, from 22 
se damage done by Hares and 0 75 
nl Tonng ng Plantations is ofa 60 greek: Scat ARAN OOMS] Cuphea ee vie. tra 
a year or two it will am more than the entire cost o 35 
l them with this Net. Tt is oo daratie, thls Wile Heliotropium eee 6 Liege . oa 
— ently advanced to be ind dent of its WS cat E 
ed to other ations with Lobelia mage, aller eya — 
„ an; 2 nst i „ 
Hares and ait 0 of itself quite ee having only to Niere Beh nak yo a a de Sap seth 
t ead soe we pe Jue, 93, and. 
pose, to wooden stakes een * he Plumbago Larpentz beautifal blue, 98. n 
. Tits, betides, peculiarly ‘adapted for ren- GALVANISED y WIRE NETTING, TWO-PENCE | pk „ ee f Sa Gi 
pervious to such vermin; and N Tai PER SQUARE FOOT.—This article requires no paint. „ Ade, 18% M e 
pieces of three or more as ing, the 8 not having the slightest action wte h splendens reg 
‘ Aan t fokok a — "effi 
ia er pa a nel | Ch ti th a Sy a pr apy Sd . 
T 12 : = u 4 and a ce, and , i 
36 ins., 1s, êd. 1 30 ins., and | acknowledged to be th k risolani 1 Ayal wed rom by f 
Or a web of E Sa 8 15 0 It forms 8 se cs 1 e fare against the depredations of aia 
z — — e oon 2 0 = ae ah fe ts, and is p pore rage for Aviaries, nted leav 
5 one l T 
1 ards, 36 bee * : a 3 requiring no p nit * aus wers s admirably Og 2. 2 all kinds 
* z : arge quantities always kept in stock, of 
an a web is N it would be charged 19, 24, ” soa 48 bea. CE. ; it can, ho sg 8 de to * sity 
mensions desired, tterns W of expense. 
“he same 7  Pheatantrice and 


„ cannot give a better idea of 
— 57 Netting than by — 
nat 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRIC 


jettles AME 


do., 1d. Nn 


amet if 3 


Also ev 
et Dis y 


ULTURAL GAZETTE. 


[May 5. 


12 inches et 3d. per yard | 30 ma - 74d. ard 
18 si 26 94. poal = 

i 
ent Wire oe Netting, 3 feet, 18. 6d. per 


description 
si 3 ey 
nd 


” 


N.B.—Catalogues of the above ee r 

8 additional * s presen á 

e or reference required from new 

ea 11 Ae ane 
row, Stoke both in the 

ba day in Lombard- ‘street, in in the E 

bondon; ue t Paura Covent at on 

„ 


chee a Wane Wy 


su 
* mae 9 
Saru bar, May 


a stamped N 


SATURDAY, MAY 12. 


INDEX. üs 3 G a ROW? extensive varity, very tine and strong, 
eee sees 299 a | Hints MAteUrs . . . . . AND 'S Stock of their e of | 
. a Horticultural Societ 5 VERBENAS, FUCHSIAS, PETUNIAS, enn 8. 
E. 145 —4.—9 E bels Trt Nad „ eee e 8 pr mil aac 
oa 294 abourers, agricultur is this season particularly strong and fine. Big er 
| . * = — 14 —— — 4 ee tive e = free by post on application. 
Society of Lon 5 295 e | London ag ra Club—M and Horticultural Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. 
7 mae cultivatio e, Vor ee 
— HOICE FLOWER SREDA- Many abe ie Mt —_ 
2 ving estroyed by severe 
= totel . 1 7 J. 5 ER begs — to enumerate a list 4 such as g re proper 
i ace fo (ae eom any time this month, 
Me i soneseeseeoers — 5 e | this se * of such as flower Sp wae 
. iaoee 292 e 294 ġ see 3 yki ial n 2 No. 3. He can also 
rier 209 4 . 299 a | supp y. e beaut ant retusus seed of 
Dail f. — Ale —— nere A ond ii mies is exclusively in his, possession, at 2s. 6d. per packet. 
— ee. 2s b reais 1 201 2 z FLÒWER SEEDS, | 
cad of er a — 100 + 
= tee ot dep omitir- o | Snow e exposed to ai si” a3 p | No. IL— ANNUALS, be s. sd 
— n 293 5 aae hinum, 6 var. uricula, Alpine... ‘ 
„ re P T 4 A y 4 
Le pad 2 7 Trellises, Der — 393 e 5 4 or š sei 11 berg rae 1 y 
Varnish for glass.......-++-+-+ 293 é Balsam, 6 extra fine. Picotee, white é 
OAL BOTANIC SOCIETY, ,REGENT’S PARK. „ 2 1 
N First EXHIBITION season, in the Gardens of Brachycome, 4 var. * A a 
this ian hen take — 0 Wenn ESDAY NEXT, Calliopsis, 4 finest S : 
Gates to be opened at 20 clock. The North te Nee Chinese Larkspur, 6 péiphinium, 48 * 
with the Me „ Tickets to be obtai at the | Clarkia, 5 fine var. lianthemum, m. 
bo — oo Fellows of the Society, 5s. ‘tach, or on | Dianthus, 6 oo Laces d dou. m, 
i rdia, 6 upinus. 
ULE, SOUTA LONDON FLORICULTURAL BEN See vat E pe ee 
SOOIBTY.—Under the Patronage of Her Most Gracious | Jacobæa, 6 do. Phiox perennial, n . 
Majesty, THE QUEEN, THE SECOND EXHIBITION this | Larkspur, 12 finest Ranunculus, m. 1 
of the above will take place at the ROYAL | Lobelia, 6 dwarf Scabiosa, 20 v 
W00LOGICAL GARDENS, on THURSDAY the igold, 4 finest Stock, Brompton, 3 
Ith of May, 1849. Open to all Exhibitors; n Prizes will be | Mesembryanthemum, 3 „ Queen, 3 ( 
for the —— 8, iy dere a mophila, 4 finest „ Imperial, b: 824 
oniums, Azaleas, Cape Heaths, Petunia, ey extra fine ... Sweet 


ts, 
5 and Vegetables. In addition to the e 
* of * eae 101. value of T ulips t to 


a ton fon Tart Tarton 1 Secretary, Ebenezer 


LONDON FLORICULTURAL SOCIETY 
— D, ee N for the 7 


ING’S ROAD, CHELSE 
ED THIS YEAR, AS USUAL 
a KNAP HILL NURSERY, WOKING, 


2s Stewards : who have kindly consented to 


: 
— Hon, the Earl . — 
wrens it Hon, Lord Visco oo — 2 So , M. P 
8 er : ; exander H i M. D. 
= Lamont, R.N. — r ioma 
Mgr GW. Jo hnson, Esq, 
f iliam Jones, Es 
Thoma Esq, John Lawrie, Esq * 


j mene ua SRE COMER 
2 a ECIAL GENER 

inate ate this Institution will be 

sa on WEDNESDAY 
the Committee 


“sione) ners Who. is — * 
tt Charity from ing TWO . 
0 rom among a — 9 


er 


. 5th 
„ 4th 


f 


pa 


A 


F 


if 
3 


ENEVOLENT INSTITUTION.— No. 


iis Solty Wl e plac nd 
seer e 
| supported by the: followin 

and Gentlemen, K 


m 
William ase 
single, miz “doable, 8 


” 


Phlox Berno di, ie 
1 } 


Poppy, 12 v ave ” ” 
Portulaca, 5 
striations, new ... No, III. pe hea gl 
Sa alpiglo a 
Schizanthns, awa £5 — wieda 
tall, es ee 
Eri 


Stock, German, 24 
” 12 


a, 30 5 sp. m 
N Gladiolus, * var 
726 larger packets Hibis 


> 
Zinnia ele * 12 PORE ate — rete agian. 
6 2 0 „ rubra cærülea As 
25 fine ann 5 Ixia, finest m. 98 
No, II.—FL. LOWER NEXT hospermum, m. 0 
Maurandya, 4. % 0 6 
Alstroe 8 5 ra y Sparaxis, fine mm. 
A es . hunbergia,.6 var. a 
e, 5 most reek Flower to be Bad of 


9 Seeds, 
Jauss CARTER, Seedsman and Florist, 238, High — 
ondon, Sixpenny packets, mixed, may be had of the seeds 


„„ KNIGHT’S TALL MARRO Ass PEA, warranted of supe- 
resent sowing, 18. 6d. per 
58. per 


LLISTONE beg to offer 
e fo lowing, 112 tied ‘plants, 5s. per dozen ; or 100 plants, 
portions of each variety, 30s., including basket and carriage 


to Lon 
t ANEMONE JAPON 
ANTIRRHINUM, — several fine seedlings. 
AGERAT UMS, GALCEOLARIAS, CUPHEAS. 
DAHLIA, fine show and fancy v * — 
8, Scarlets, including Tom mb, and others. 
GATLLARDIAS HELIOTROP 


PES, in — —.— 
PENTSTEMON 8 alba, gigantica elegans, & c. 
petit ls AS, in fi ine v. rieties. 


HLOXES, in fine Continental varieties. 


GERANIUM 


n = 


GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
GRICULTURAL 


ewspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


GAZETTE. 


[Price 6d. 
URRATANA. 
HOMAS  JACKSO; anD SON are now 


by A. Ta 
* * it. It is figured in Paxton 
N of Botany » Vol. II., No. 124, and was exhibited at 


the Royal Bota c Gardens, Rege ent’s-park, and a awarded their 
Seedlin tage 
Plants, — 6d, each, Sparen one 1 for every three ordered. 
rot ar 
IMPORTANT TO „ GARI 


KING oF THE CABBAGES, — This TES ae 
is the cario and best in cultivation, and can be had in 
2 Walrz's Seed Establishment, 181, High 


8 ate TURNIP SEED.—IMPROVED PURPLE- 
Brees variety has been carefully selected from Skir- 

aay A Price 40 s. per N and aray other kind 

— Seeds r cultivation, ‘of the best quality, and moderate e price, 
J. G. WAITE’s, Seed Sirhan 131, High Holborn, London. 


EA * SIR seat se eta ag This is one 


Public. 


we u 

of Fuchsia they had ever seen. Bl of it were sent to the 
Gardeners’ and Florists’ J al, and spoke of in the manner 
as above. Fifıy plants of it were ordered last summer by 
parties who saw it in bloom. Fine EAR plants are now 
ready to send ott, at 108. 6d. i usual allowance made 
to re T h are t 


Sahi Ter has much pleasure 1 
Seedling bena, so much admired while in bloom last season. 
It is a most profuse bloomer, and a very tive variety. 
One plant not more than 15 inches in diameter had above 65 

ses ooms on it at one time, besides The colour 
is a beautiful orange scarlet, wit primrose eye, giving the 
flower a very striking dh ndsome appearance. This also 
was sentto the Gardeners’, and Florists’ Journal, October 7th. 
“E. T.—Seedling Verbena, scarlet truss flower of m i 
size, form t-rate, the petals are broad, close; ap- 
proaching the shape of a Polyanthus ; ose, very 
circular ; a fin pcb variety.” was sent a 
ved the like = oie ts ar 


es are tak . "Postat = 
ost-office order. 


5 Epwaip Tiieg's aahi Seed pe Pae, 
DWARD y — 
Noblemen, Gen th nem 2. riends in that in 

his Rose House, which is 1 ‘appropriated for wth, 


rs he has no Seed 


B. E. —— — to inform his custome’ 
Shop in London; the * 5 he has is at *Loughbo- 
rough Nursery, Brixt —May 12 


ROSES, 8 of 8 1 ` UGH me aes. 2 N with the greatest con- 
* ane — Suman and other new _ HBLIOTROPIUM, | SOUVENIR J DE LIEGE. — — 
Post-of sas eae € raced taeda pe Epe apee don for a much gr gar ea 
able at 7 from unknown correspondents & re- — than any of those troduced. — 2 


spectable or prepa; 

Lists may be had ty 8 15 4— 
the season, fae at the prices sent out e raisers. 
averhill. Suffolk, May 12. 


serong Plants at the annex: * sais 
Mitch Scarlet am o Shan > 8 

do. do. Thumb's Master, 2 24. 54 
0. — Pasha ea 2 14 ; 


all the novelties of colour pure 


P et 


wers, as also oth 
violet with 

— of F 

ce of its floweri 


„Sturmer Nurseries, Haverhill, Suot, “ay  ____- 3 e a very ~~ le acquisition ee for 
Ew anb, MITCHELL, Bristol Nursery, and 59, pedal doubtedly prove Price 7s. 

Marine P heg ioe Frorist and SEEDSMA) 2 by FUCHSIA, 10 3 nai aii This 15 . — a the dark 
1 t to her M “a o inform the Nobility and Habit rolla vi LE 
Gentry that 3 GENERAL AANG pE CHOICE beautifully cupped ; repais brie! — ed at waxy 00 

consis Fue ahlias, Chry- ý 
— —— 1 , Ve ; Wee | ancifolium, Camellias, Or- 2 15 “SPLENDIDA.” "Z This i is peo a dark v of y 
ck enhouse, Stove, and other Ne — Select 3 great merit, —— for its very 
mom randy, and wil e forward RAN habit and n of fo —.— x 


Fuchsias named above te © 
Joun WILMORE, onal of — — 
ntleman in improving, 
bridsation, s — of the finest genera ts, 
ee for the 228 those now 


hi page om 
read oa a.. 


to the 
— 2 (B. microphylla of —— oe 
8 ; a most abundant 
8 


scientific 
will be a 3 


for exhibition, St 


Ha 
the flowers in . way of B. pinnata; will 
pecimen plant for ore 


| BENS NEW SPRING CATALOGUE 1 NEWEST FIRST 


SANTA is now published, and ean had on appliea- 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. ~ [May 12 
| 
| 


LONDON 
1 KG o a tion to Witt 1 E. — Le and Co., Nurserymen, Piyme: uth. he W inga — ‘tne Cha: 
TH 

1. To Mr. May, Gordener to Mrs. La 8 F. H. S., for a col- offer upwards of. 100 * stinet varieties i Beddin 3 ELECT PLANTS i 
To “i — ee 2 by Gredi ome T voribed in . — y — 7 be ‘a. s receipt of o visge =e to Londen, with oras 5 — 

for iv specie g of Exotic “Orchids EDLING PELARGONIUMS. Ar Attention is å 

or à collection of 15 Stov e and Greenhouse Plants, 

888 ARIA, in 5 fine 9 — a 
4. Te r. Smith, G 28 to ee Esq., of Norwood, at 21s. —— For general Advertisement see Gardeners’ Chron- GAIL Tar a 
THE GOLD BN MEDAL. 


290 
mpio reg 
ARD OF THE TUDOSE = 1i Pot TILLI SAE DING PLANT t West, two of the finest fona of the day. € 
s d Co., N 
lection of 2 12 and — lants 14 variation of Geraniums, ine uperb, ollowing are now 
Tom Thamb, 
1 ered ta, 
rticular 
and name, and sent 
D KNIGHTIAN MEDAL. HINE has still fine plants of his set of Ten New BEDDING PLANTS. ee. 
* Vari ENS, 
. ‘a Mylans, Gardener * Ruck er, Esq., jun., F.H.S., Also, of M Müllers Set of Bight, price 25s. Descriptive Cata- BOUVARDIA SPLENDENS, 6s. ng r dom; Pla 
P. 
3. To Mr. Carson, Gardener to W. nG. Farmer, Esq., F. H. S., OBERT WHIBLEY informs his patrons ci friends iF: HÆNOSTOMA' 'POLYANTHA, 9 doze 95, per dates 
for 15 varieties of ak of ae | * _ —Chester Nursery, near Walcot-place, arne e VOLTARIANUN, 5 to'e ee 
8 of 15 Stove and 8 TRIOMPHE DE Like 
1, Te Mr. Carson, for a collection reenhouse A ZALEA INDICA.— This beautiful tribe ean ves LANTANA’ ROE A, vn to 99. E, 98. per donee. 


Ff OR MCOLTU RAL SOCIETY OF J 
CERTIFIC L OF HONOUR. Jom. HA AYES, — Fa — Surrey, hae to mouth, 
d from 2s. 9a. to 0 55. bd. per dozen. plants; any may be ha 
e 1 Ver 3s. 6d. other 8 extra e Ap 3 those mar kod p. a fiee b 
e Upwards, 
2. To Mr. Williams, Gardener to C. B. Warner, Ted. F. H. S., postage stamp. — gri — 1 plan 
and — packed for travelling to any di 
Tee 8 9 : which he can strongly recommend, 51. the set. ANAGALLIS COCCINEA SPLEND 5 
for 20 species of Exotic Orch logues on application.—Providence | amen A Ram BALSAMINA LA ATIFOLIA, i — per au 
S of FUCHSIA SPECTABILIS, CUPHEA, 1577 per de 
5. To Messrs. Rollisson, EAN 
per dozen, 
ad, fine blooming plants. l LOBELIA ERINUS éRANDIFL 8 


2. To Messrs. Nn and gan af munen. on application, ——— of the stock 7 a arg BA. al 

3. To — .. Schröder, Esq., F. H. S., n A — — yeti el — —— PLUMBAGO pega par Sos, or 26 Gd, each, 
for ty 55 2 3. to psa 

4. To Mr ec for 15 varieties of Cape Heath. WELVE FIRST-CLASS GERANIUMS for 12. Sia, in 6 fne vars., €s, per don.) Patene tas ag 

5. To Messrs. Veitch and Son, for the same or 30 for II.; est FUCHSIAS for 12s.; 12 of OPPOSI ITIF FOLIA, 12s, tose. p Baa z utd. 

2 r a of . N varieties of gorsi 2 1 — ee AB for te. 6 Gd, to Ts. 6d. See HENRY Wat ZAUSCHNERIA CALIF ORNIC » de. 22 

7. To Mr. G reen, Ga tll Antrobus, art., F. S., TON’s Advertisement in the Chr onicle of May 5, page 27 FUCHSIAS, in fine — dn 
e Azaleas, in 15 varieties. Catalogue on application. superior 8 of 1815 a i 

THE LARGE Fa 3 Ed Ma r Lancashire VERBENAS a and PETUNIAS, fine and select, 


To Mr. Green, for a collection of 1 5 n 

2. To Mr. Jack, Gardener to R. G. Loraine, Esq., of Walling- their . KBO SANGUINEA J JAMES BACK- CHRYSANTAEAUMS, fine -$o ps Select, toi pe 

ton, Surrey, for a collection of 6 Stove and Greenhouse | HOUSE anp SON can onfidently recommend the following. Ditto, superior new varieties, 158. per 

. Mr. Beck, F. ll. 8. for 10 speci LOXINIA EXQUISI ITA. 1 baer ae rose ie P. GERANIUMS, fine carers Bis de ya Se 

|3. To Mr. Do Gardener to 3 species | vivid carmine blotch ; er than sanguinea, P- su 45 joa 

Exotic Orchids. beautiful. 105. 4. * p. DAHLIAS, fine and seiect, 1515 e dozen. 

4. To Mr. Jack, for 6 species of the G. DELICATA, — Clear white, with pale lemon-coloured HARDY BEDD 6 Phi 

5. To Mr. Hamp, Gardener to J. — Esq., of South Lam- | throat, margined by a crimson li ine and blot ch. 10s, 6d. ANTIRRHINOUM, in fine ane vars,, 63. — 

beth, for a collection of Amaryllids. G. LABIATA. — Lowest petal clo es all over with rose} ANEMONE JAPONICA, 5s. per dozen, 

8. To Mr. Cock, P. II. S., for 6 new varieties of Pelargonium, | colour; the others white: rich blotch. 10s. 6d. CAMPANULA NOBILIS, 9s. per dozen, 

in pots. G. ALBO, SANGUINEA SUPERBA. byt and finer in| LOBELIA, in 4 tine varieties, 9s. per dozen. 
7. To Mr, Dobson, for the same, every W an G. albo sanguinea. 7s. 6d. PENTSTEMON, in 8 fine vars., 7s. 6d, per dozen, 
8. To Mr. Parker, G — — J. H. Oughton, Esq., of Roe- ie above are J, B. and Son’s Seedlings. PALOKX, in fine — — 98. — dozen. 
8 or 6 bg eae eth Pelargonium, in II inch pots. —_ i 
To Mr. Dobson, for tue 6. WO ORT LEAS A (?) or Violacea alba.—Clear white, p. ROCK PLANT 2 vars., 18, 

1 * Mr. Gaines, F. H. 8., for 6 Fancy Pelargonium a pale lemon-spotted throat, which is nearly encircled — a ELECT GREEN EAUBE Akp STOVE kaun 
2 Slowe, Garde ner rto W. R. Baker, 2 F. H. S., for | violet crescent, 12 *. tine and select, 78. 6d.; 6 fine new 15 
varieti G. CARMINATA SPLENDENS har surpassing G. rubra p. 6 GLOXINIA, in 6 fine vari 

12. To — Lane ano Don Gt, Berkh wore ge forthe same. | in size, form, and richness of colour. 50 = — and soleet GREENHOUSE PLANTS. 

18, To Mr. Cole, for 15 varieties of Ca ape Hea HAKEA VICTORIA.— — a f this plant, To | P. 2 igs ES 

14. To Messrs. 4 — Lea- bridge- road. — for the same. this, the most splendid v vegetable production Ihave ever beheld, p. 12 Select GREEN HOUSE CLIMBERS `. ži 

= To Mr. Tay 9 varieties of the same, in a wild or cultivated state, I have given the name of ou Our Priced Descriptive Plant Catalogue will be seat free by 

16, To eae Moy for a collection of G Azaleas, in 12 gracious Queen.” It bears white, yellow, — „ and oe. post, on — ion. 
es, A red — from 4 to 10 inches across when 2 years old. Post- oflice orders may be made payable to either Bass and 
a7; To. Mr, Carson, for the same, in 6 154. to 21s. Brown or to STEPHEN Brown, Remittances requested from 

18. To Mr. Green, for Tall vey oh flower, TRITONIA AUREA. 10s. 6d. unknown correspondents, 13 

19, To Mr, ——— tw — ee meee sx _ The usual a to the trade.—York Nurseries, May 1 Seed and Horticultural Establi 2 Sudbury, Suffolk, 

EW ACHIMENES. — 3 Teg a 1 INDIAN AZALEAS, CAMELLIAS, 

THs CERTIFICATE OF. EXCELLENCE. variety in 7 way of Grandifiora, with smaller foliage DWARF ROSES bag loc CINERARIAS, PETU. 

1. To Mr. Gerrie, Gardener to gh Catheart, Bart. „and . pink flowers, v ey diskinet, A Certif warded aed — CHRYSANTHEMUMS can be obtained at the low. 
zi H: C8, for a collection of 15 Stove and Greenhouse oe it by y the r Society of London, August 1, 1848.— 2 — Wm — E. Renpie and Co. 

rice 5s., pe 

2. To | Mr. 'Slowe, for a collection of 6 Stove and Greenhouse | LONGIFLORA MOR The flower is half as large again | Our new Plant eee is now — and can be had 

Plants. as the Longiflora, and of a deeper blue, the foliage quite green application. 
3. To Mr. Gaines, F. H. S., for 6 new varieties of Pelargonium, — tne or, the under surface of the leaf being without 2 ai 
in 8-inch pots. the rusty appearance of Longiflora. It was exhibited with the EEDS, — m AND PASTURE GRASS 
4. To the 8 vw 6 varieties of Pel mium, in 11-inch — 2 above. They were N to us by G. W. Skinner, Esq., and SEEDS, in mixtures suited to various soils, &c., at 
5. To , Of Hertford, for 12 varieties of R may be relied on as worthy to be in every collection, the meet acre, allowing 2 bu: 5 a — Ibs. to each acre. 
i ig being large, with — foliage. 1 per plant, 5s. per p sowing and treatm ecompa seeds, 
— H. Lane and oe: Nurseries t Be — Her om for improving old —. . — 1s. Sd. per Ib. Pine sorts for 
0 
EO 


in 12 
v: 
. To Mr. Gerrie, for the same, in 6 varieties. ’ OICE — 5 PLA their 
5 * for Piinelén 8 ectabilis, J. OLDER AnD CO. beg to . cd Nobility, List, with prices, for the nad is ready, and 
E LARGE SILVER MEDAL. Gentry, &c., that they have on hand a large Stock of forwarded on a pplication, as well aa their Catal of Kitchen 
1. To Mr, Pawley, of Bromley, Kent, for a collection of 15 | strong 2 Lea Plants for bedding out, consisting raden > Piem nar- Booda- Adin Ins and Cos 
Store and Greenhouse Plants. ablias, Fuchsias, Verbenas, Petunias, Salvias, Alonzoas, Seedsmen eer to the Roval Agricultural Department of Ba 
2. To Mr, Bruce, Gardener to Boyd Miller, Esq., of Tooting, Calosclayias, Antirrhinums, Pentstemons, Cupheas, Scarlet gium, &. &c., 26, Down —— London. 
ka a — 1. 4. 3 1 ums, e., which can be hag at 4s. and 6s. per 2 $ i 
Io Mr. May, for 10 species xotio d 7 
y. p 0 0 reh urseries, Bedford-roa 82 nd W 9 3 road, Clapham TURNIP SEEDS, &c. 


4, To Mr. Iveson, Gardener to the Duchess Dowager of North- Trade suppli s 
umberland, F,H. HS. 4 foe Dendrobium Wallichianum, a e e eee W. DRUMMOND & SONS, Agricultural ge | 
S. To Mews; Farba of Clapham, for for E Erica € Cavendishi, | NEW AND SUPERB YELLOW DAHLIA, “GOLDEN CUP e Stirling, N.B., will furnish, free, 0 appli 
6 pacris m ASHWORTH begs to inform his Friends and Lists of TURNIP and o ther AGRIC ULTURAL $ 
7. To Messrs. Veitch and Son, f for ~ tac ay 83 * Florists in general that he habe urchased this su N. above 2. e y crag oa 
8. To 3 2 25 hrubby ©: laria, from Peru DAHLIA of R. GRUNDY, Esq., Park Hills . i Soong of — A Vaches), 8 a 
9. ming, Ga rdener to the Duke of of Sutherland, | send out strong Plants at 10s, 6d. each, with the usual discount Liverpool, Hull, Newcastle, a arts to 
— 18. 5 unch of Black Hamburgh Grapes, weigh- 2 the arene Tissing last —Sept. ba: The Second | there is a direct e — — 
rize in its elass, at Ostrich — Rooden-lane, near 555 
10. To E. Davis, Geren ener to Lord Boston, F.H.S., for three | chester. Sept, 6th: An Extra Prize for 6 Bloom, "at the POTS AND GARDEN a 
Providence Pine. apples Botanical Gardens, Manchester. Sept. 8th: The F bat MORTLO C 250, Oxford - street, hee 
THE SILVER KNIGHTIAN MEDAL. in its class, at Ashton-under-Lyne. Sept. 22d : 4 First Class announces that he has a op ate lange stn 
1. To Mr. Malyon, — T. Brandram, Esq., of Lea Certificate for the best Seedling of 1847, and in the First Pan | articles in various Caa 
Grove, Blackhe 2 a collection of 15 Stove and | of 12, at Cheetham-hill, near anchester. oe rs and Every description of teal iia, GLASS, and 
, arp 


reenhouse ee armers’ Journal,” Sept. 9th, ine * “R. G. Golden is a WARE at the lowest poss 
JEE i Steal td | “2 ston ta Bob 
an ouse: substance of florets first-rate; depth oF dinto b : ` 
cfr Bendro F. H. S., for the — ere a beautiful eilo» 12 meee araras, t; puk WA ö GA Cine 


ortioul 
— ag for 2 r Æschynanthus speciosus, | "]’ TU Lt I P 8.— 120 GARDENING 33 IMPLEM K 
— real Pea Syringes, 


wih r. SELBY, 
221 ! of 1 ington N. St. 2 rn — —— 
erson, Wel m Nursery, St. 
for Boronia tetrandra, JOHN RIU Eb — — Bi | 
nia tetr ‘on ot 10 RS beg: — — attention to the Borders, EEEE L 
3 i f var 


c — 

ases Ham 

4 Providence Pine-apples. a H 

1. To Mr. € e of 1 Pie 

1. To Mr. 4. ales hybrid, superior Dee 5 
or wood, for a collection of and Greenhouse Rivers’ do., reep i Wie, ie . a 

Common w oes 55 

"Barpe-top do. 


aan 


Od. 
0 
o 
0 
0 
q 
yj 
7 


A refer n corresponde 3 
— paid to L je sequent for Se and above. ng 


| of insects oy le, to the great dnjary 
7 , shoots of trees 8 
e (b 
Y special 
inform Amateur 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 291 


RAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. or THE Horricurturat Socrery. It is needless to this kind should receive all the support that the 
HORTICU LIURE. — say that the present spring has been, and still is, public can give them. There was not a person at 
owl Bes: saene N orn most unfavourable to the growth of plants under Chiswick on Saturday that was not, or might not 
ö a 128 5 ba Honorary Members and Fel- glass; so cold that Gele was often impossible; at some ie i 
ge or ae Corrospondl specially so gloomy that nobody could calculate how long it garden. No 
a ae e interested i in n studying the highest known standard 


ould take to bring hig flowers out. And hence w 2 

ety. Bene p eard on all sides the mos tions cellence in this necessary luxury. And ey 
BAN s 855 AP 4 * of what was to befal the e Prhihitben of of ‘Satur ay. 2 — ans felt that ais 3 could od 
T eag 3 * remittance must accom- “ Nobody will have anything to show, said o ere who would not go awa 2 his intelligence 
N seat JOSLING, S Mrapen St, Alban “I know for certain that Mr. S. won't have an Orchid —— ced, and his emulation excited by the admirable 
LEE. FIRST-CLASS 5 GERANIUMS ean be in bloom,” cried A sec cond ; “Every great Rose- productions of his brethren. This would be 7 1 

6 y eelas d 8 for 20s.; or 20 grower must stay at home,” quoth a third; “ For more felt if it were known to everybo sy? tk 

Secund-class do. for- ie Sev eave m aani- my part, wb | ee “T have been to Mr. to ourselves, how appar 20 n ae 


Dat mana. am con nvinced that they results are the means possessed by several of the best 
sig near UCKFIELD, 3 not fill a caravan between them.” sad far n and at the finest of the plants in some 
ese 9 870 forebodings were verified, those who cases came, n m great rn and palatial 


1 pleasure in had the good fortune to see the late Exhibition best | establishments but from places whos intenance 

‘ tet 4.2.64. sot yw 0 246. per doz, | Can te i is not beyond t a of many Score lf 

ariety will prove decided acquisition For selves we have no hesitation in 9 75 ng, that were known, the remarkable eer whi — orks 

e ehe n a maak that, the most favourable spring could not have pro- out such great results vith m odest wad 
duced more real success in everything essential. be better appreciated t 


“the lowe ower. than 
joined ERE AAS is in the possession Their productions did the exhibitors the highest} The day of this exhibition. was Tae in bya 


hon Azaleas were the finest yet beheld; warm 1 75 brilliant morning, preceded by a ao 
—French white, bright rosy mer od ler . and ine more and worth y of July. Up to half-past 1 e 
er em every season adds to the attraction of fair and favourable ; but at that time a thir 5725 
bedding ; 3s. 6d. . this “gelightfal part of a May flower-show. If our|storm came up, driving to the tents the part of the 
* ant scarlet, — — j English gardeners produced nothing else, their crowd which was in the Gar en, and home 
ogee ese 1 i class, and will | Azaleas would place them at the head of their pro-| those who were still on the road. After an hour or 
i tet arietes for grouping; 5 fession. We should like to see the face of Kry-1ne, | so the rain ceased, the air cleared, the mine degree 
"rn 00 trisht: vermilion scarlet, lemon eye, large or Cuow-Fa, or any of the great Chinese lovers of rose, and presently the bands were playing, the 
—— Trade. 1 papi by electric telegra oh lc visitors promenading, and the new-born foliage — 
’ y 7 ng lag 
sallowing a 7," e Azalea gardens of Fa-tee, which the a | the trees glittering in the sunbeams as if nothing had 
ing. 8 2 ey f g ag 
* 1 paradise to our Chiavi tents in the pa fom season. | occurred to mar the scene. The number of visitors 
ETS itede ood Azalea growing may be taken as a eg of the | was however much curtailed by the storm, the total x 
a 9 0 gr g may a 7 
wo fe) ae eee 6 0 highest skill in greenhouse nt, just as number 3 2054. In the early part of the day 
8 from first-rate va- og Orchids are the test of hothou use ea id and this the Exhibition was age red by the inspection of 
ee ee y Makes the 27 of Saturdays Exh n the more their Royal Hi ghnes a Prints ALBERT, the Duke 
1 35 salable! Tot not merely the ses Bin beauty of and Duchess of 2 5 1 50 and other distinguished 
. 9 0 | the plants brought 1 Wich de 5 personag 
* it is the unmistakeable evidence thus afforded o 
oe power being resident a iong Ea exhibitors e We lately ventured to express a hope that so 
6 0 | will ensure egual success in all they BF eee of our nu ith th practical correspondents word 
n . 12 take; which gives s things real public interest. favour us wit the 1 1 their experience as to 
17 Men of intelligence, bred in gardens Whence 2 the Fer Tinge! 
—24 Pants as as — in question were obtained, will never | May we venture to repeat the request. It is neces- 
wn know how to grow even a Cabbage plant 9 sary that we should soon give our own views upon 
15 the subject; and we are anxious to know how far 
9 0 Well fist the Council of the Horticultural : 
18 0 Society, in their late R ort, assert “that up to the thay agmo ov ahi a A pepatihe 
en 5 85 25 glish H ep Hy ce oe: make foresters. We donot want dissertations ; but shoul 
P much gard short ham, ae for publication or 
p .18 0 steady progress.“ The late event entirely insti for our own gnidance. It is a highly 
tq 0 9 |their other statement, “that the pre-eminence of GAE, 18 
bestir enei Ben ai ys 1 : modern English gardening is, in a great deat, ae ct; greatly in want of rational discussion, 22 
. . 12 0 | attributable to the eee ent it receives from ON THE CONDITIONS ESSENTIAL TO THE 
eee n 12 0 pan capacity, bukas pe ety, not only în their eor MOST PERFECT CULTIVATION. de. 
a dn _| porate capacity, but as private indiv Amonest the many faculties of the mind ing as 
= resented” ia aaf $ 1 Mg g. ae at the Roses. Of these plants the 1 they 0 i in 2 if not in . and ee, = 
requived red from new a Ph n in pots was once deemed hopeless, and i them as phrenologists have hem dow 
M bos on: e via N attended by difficulties that, some men | sharte of ‘the human cranium, 7 is is perhaps 97 one 
ants now rea y tor de- cannot conquer. And yet they were on occasion ides garden 
E E dieg faultless examples of the highest 1 9 5 and a ban that 


15 ._ Also ees. the selection of which | much better test of it than a Pine-apple. Roses 

us, anes, par ome: be depended on : been a little more in bloom they would have divided 

Bs., 125., 188., 243. and 205 per dozen. the interest of the Exhibition with the Azaleas aud 
Orchids. As i 


' or page 
1 ‘ 
depends upon i its right appropriation, Ep ‘thie oma z 
i that which can 


44 t ig had no lack of nger ad- | its disposal ; hut not off till to-morro 
rers. “ Really 1s waned interesting, Lady be done to-d y,” becom case 155 t oiy a moral 
none Mi eter ie ng was heard to say: My gar- | precept but a physical n The mechanic may 


Bra 
dener positively must grow eka charming things. fling down his tools by the agar of his “half finished 
J like them much better than the trees in summer: work, lounge away a week, and on his return n 


nation of the present day, and have no necessity 
placing at the head of the column of to-morrow’s cares, 


l 
— — FOLL in the whole Exhibition; although, upon the whole, | not 20 with the gardener every day and hour has ita 
— of the beauty of Roses in pots, grace forms but a| spect demand upon his thought if not his hands; 
II A. x. 


— 


small porti to-day is but the preface to to-morrow ; winter is a pre- 
— We es no intention to ma into details in this paration for summer; operations this year are neces- 
ræ, place ; they are amply given in another column. It sary to bring about desired results 12 months in the 
ee * u. 18, however, only right to — that the stove and future, In fact, the present is the only time for ~ 
i greenhouse planis i in both large and small collections | one part of his operations ; and this brings me to se 
i aths emish ~ seedli 


s.s.. 


| —— v animal life, much of the 
| male on the fall —— in the adult depends 
2 creu WI 1 
re more interested by perfume, variety , beauty, eee in — — 8 1 Mion pres fe 
and elegant nene than by brilliant colours or moral philosophy both afford abundant evidence of the © 
great masses 0 The only striking novelty | ¢ fact, that the earliest impressions, from external sourees, 
mo m W Eas i ng W. are the most readily received and the most difficult to 
the genus may be expected to produce hereafter, | eradicate in subsequent stages of progress. And this is 
when the specimens acquire greater age. It will equally true 5 a etable as of animal life. Circum- 
i general favo “a ised being. in 


io te bn tn to 
N 
KRERERER 


pi 


14242444 


eee eee eee 


5 toip 
wg a ee) 
REEEEE 


—t[„— 


ret tee eee 6 


77 
kkk 


i and one that offers a wide region for the 
essrs. Verres, Although not so research, gio 
new, yet rgd as interesting, because of its clever labours of science to expose, jad in it will be found 
> ent, Was an ancients. decora, produced by| I feel it necessary to make this paren heeii, 5 
„I had al t t 
Mr. 3 front the garden of the Duchess Dowager . „ ee Stopes, 8 — ren a pat” 


of No rthumberland, W pop tA more par- | dener and a labourer in a garden; and I 
e | ticularly because it appears to have a ob- ; 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [May 12 


292 
— —— ae ’ 
bears f the scientific “ay first, was set, while the upper tiers were searcely 3 into the 2 trough, which h 
me y ae na ger 5 be 1 pinched all off but the lower row, consist. in the centre o of the woode en bench. When d. Paai 
to t 1 pe te eed he 
ce b 


horticulturist. To discuss the subject here n flower. 
out of place ; relating 


to a ca yet 
anifest to me that with such | a 
a crowding of blossoms, all ran oy a great risk of being 


alon Bu sowin 
oa “oy shouldered out of their p places. 


stances our 
simple 3 but it 8 involves m 
kable 0 


AP PLAN — eee, 
Ix your —— for 1846, p. 5 
k 


c 
l, you gave a deserip- We have = the 28 formed, iat: — pla ai 2 
stove. I used then to place I manage as follow 


tion of my brick Arnott’s st : 
part of the subject, m applica- a pan of * on the stove, to give out moisture; but he pam w whether of zine 
tion, The young gardener will find the he former fully observing this water alwa ery hot, I thought it are too w weak 8 any weight; therefore on each gg 
explained in any n botany or might as well circulate, and accordingly I had a stout of them are placed bricks o edge, ving 2 
vegetable 1 copper boiler placed on the stove over the fire. is „ ches space between each, and then the slates 
0 enable a o produce a healthy plant, a e. rs acted remar well, but in a year burnt through, | “ Duchesses,” 2 feet b ot, are laid across 
supposing the seed to be perfectly organised, an I a boil i their extrem resting on the edges of the benek, 
have received no mutilation in its co s, F naw well the opposite ends in the bricks on edge; if the beset 
at air be present, light excluded, and that he is e will fit exactly ; they may be 
uniform amou be s the emmes, has only pes toe — om =d —.—— that 1 slightly lapped without mortar, then 132 sani, 
moment of the encement of germination. It ind „ wdust, and the tank is complete : the 
thus the latter pr uced, and mois hot air and s circulate freely through the spaces 
ithheld immediately afterwards, that much of ill success left in placing tte bricks, and the hollow W bench wil] 
in raising seedlings may be attribu d always be filled so as to heat the whole of £ the surface, 
often destroyed by over-k in sowing them in a e joints of the bench need not be Watertight but 
too finely pulverised soil, o; 1 in a soil nti- they should be tolerably el ise too math 
fully prepared that it becomes a nse mass, impervious team will escape; a slight edging of J inch board 
to air; under su 9 the in their added t nani ro k, if requi 
cay, from that agent being -i for plunging pots, so as materials usd, 


germinate, deca: 
-= Seeds A quick germinating powers are Thos. Rivers, — 


soil moisture of which is sufficient 3 the ————————— 
plant till it attains a tolerable size. Mechanical 9 — OF PLANTS, 
of be employed to retard — tinued from p. 276.) 
Cordat are often called upon great quanti- § 4. Bases upon which 1 pea Sounded the division 
ties of seedlings without any proper structure for the of Diseases of Plants.—The greater part of the deus 
results can follow the most anxious of plants depend on the disturbance of their vegetahle 
a : 


the 
As well pire 
2 28 


Man 
ring ihe process of their d decom 
A, iron plate ; B, flow-pipe ; C, return pipe ; D, door over the | Conversion into soil, owing to the grea’ 
a E, feeding door; F, ash. pit door ; G, How- -pipe, made of | ised substances in a state of pred aera oxygen, 
* | — a lode iron, ri at in so that it can be turned in an y direc- they attract that element which the plant requires fo? 
th great paresi a his g its prosperity. 
i he 7 — L 2 made 0 ook 


The stove * pri in the house, is, as you All th 
wer stratum of cold a nomena of v. 
rg: 


E. 
So 
Lag 
F 
< 
* 
= 
® 
2 
gè 
8 — 
= 
— 
BS 
© 
73 
© 
2 
oO 
F 
© 
— 
12 
E 


es may render abortive trees | p 
now pm Ae with beautiful 3 t The heat from this deseription — N is — genial, 
may yet commit ravages; blight may make ie young unless a pan of water is placed on it; but | they receive from those 
maturely ; heated by — boiler the ——— is imi 
stove of the — ** 
„vil hea concur in pro o organic sie 
— The tank w But it is certain shite caloric, belt, on even aa 
deus thes I find zine oe 8 inches wide and 4 ins, | are th a pa i 


© 
65 
2 


on the 


ble organisation 
though ere is no peep s0 o young but he hs that 1 
When the fi wishes to lone te 1 er wise they heat t increases o does 
horticultural exhibition, he allows only a few to grow on dim N cost here 8d, | heat, as well as excess of co 
ive which woul Biante of life. Iti is well ows that that p * 
nsation of heat, that 


when too many are set to allow of all to 
fine. z 


n 


per foot; the village plumber puts them 
he small quantity of y e boil holds, prod plants, 
circulation 18 most rapid, and the quantity of fuel (coke) rai calorie, distends the vascular s 3 5 
mall. It is, i W. * 
“ > 


This 8 generally well — a acted | 
thought o; in reference to an overero 


ces in ourselv ves 


reases their vital energy, rarifies their fluids, 
lation, on ilitates the exercise d 


x heir circu i gi 
all their functions, perfecting their solids and — 
their fluids. It favours the absorption of readily 

more 


rminate 
pat in colder countries, ot cf 
g over these expensive processes, Iw imate. en 
e s lie conire, and 10 or + ge wide, with 8 Some are of opinion . ene 
ce 


t end; 1 ‘the middle of | Vegetab ble econom eat itself, ros: 12 
the gpr wall, a bric 
ow, 


Fg ee 
reas 
Pack 
5 


cf 


it 


e, 
©, commencing | = Galvan sed iron, “gauge . 
8 ‘ a 


H 


* 


i 


eles 
ee 8 


E 
ii 


LH 
10 


È 
7 


achon 


lan 
myself 0 deny the extensive influence 
— ow have on —— i 


same time, not 
; I allud 


eai and resumi 
— in stu, stops entirely or 


ide i 
~ 


Bad aip e — but 
pserve the coun 

pee memory pny 
1 der their 


8 
3 
— 
* 
> 
85 
au 
7 
Q 
8 
ao 
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— 
5 
B 
& 


cannot but take — — what prosents — ae to 
observation to th 


are of 


uence in promoting the, 
aan consisting in the — 
ma w and this exereise eink 

trength of 


number and 
uence them, it follows that the ex- 
agents m disease 


with the 


THE Cir ENEE 


minds of those 
who are 


I would only beg 


ts in pots, 
them 


eg 
are vigorous, 


aware that of lat late Gene — physiolo- when 
throw 


uch doubt on the 


the avy. Of cour rse any branch which is 


ain shoot can 


+4 


he syste: 
rally adopted, though I think 15 propriety doubtful in in 
ofo d habi 


p E a TE iraa unless i in some 
ery f ceptions, where ight b a proba- | 
bility of t het tree splitting. any visitor ay Kew Gardens 
ple of “S. s“ syste an Ara 


r 
| imbricata., I think it is about 1⁰ or 12 2 feet high, prir stan 


ba a 
ima 


largest Araucaria imbricata there. 
have ducked him. I hope that “S.” will give 
idea of a good fi gur e, and — opinion as to the propriety 
of staking 5 1 toons subject should be discusse 
va a South of Irel 
nishing Glass w Tuben t Burni ing.—Boiled lin- 
f 


should be laid o 


freckled or rane appeara 
urning. etic 5 e ‘sheet were cleaned late in 
autumn, the ather being too opaque. 
The top lights * weit left uneleaned ; but this season, 


my first houses of broke, they told me in 
th 


. re 
the = bore ne = also, and since then in 
we eturn of burn rning. | I realy begin to 
think, “beim 


* MT a 


iA o 
A 3 P 


last 


At 
ial Llectrieity, 1 


uantity of electricity, 


myse self 
opinion that electricity 
func- 


the organic properti 


ust produce 


en 


Epes 


the r 
Italian Cas 
8 an 


ndence 


d similar erer 
by “ S., D 


apt to —— —— tw 
a to as it up contin 


3, 4, and 6 feet, alter sand not 


Shack dewey foci e 


mt — of eho two: James s Roberts, Raby 855 tl April’. 
the s it 53 feet long with linseed 
— two tot nth 


painted part o 
. done . however, I allowed to remain, in A 
see whet inside or outsi ide was best; but 
first {bright « — we had in the morning, a great poeta 
of the moisture hun oH eo rakor small drops of water, 
here there was a drop. 
ur Vi eaa so ~ reed last year that I thought 
com this 


* — th 


ned 3 man co 
ot require eer be i 
the rain effects that pant of the busin 
G. Urquhart, Wimbledon 
Go I have had a fountain these last four years, 
supplied W che water-works of the town, 
old and silver fish, and three or four 


most as soon 
and it does 


cw. 
Blistering of —— Leaves. 2 ter Bh 
f. 


rost is the cause of this evil, at | t in 1 direct way. 
in air 


8. 


ther 
length removed it 
not had one leaf inj 


The Pears here, notwiths g the 

of | ult., seem to have set pretty freely, although 
icicles 3 = — inches long from some of the 2 
bunches. 

Snow on . Ochil fo Knowledge that & that I had 


ven sap 
is likely to hak | 


ee Gee 
those plants which re- 
winter, in dark cellars or 
regular greenh 


i] 


is much longer and more 


and Italy than in this country. 


si et en ee. may be some miles from us, as 


CHRONICLE. 


as | mountain. 


e | ing to theo 


is | the decrem 


e was the peers at all on 


n the th 


in which are | coul 


a 
g to F at the tim 


t think that bark. 


e | till 
that “ it is as tough as cow ’s-horn. 
f 


„ Quercus” i 


s, be from “Quercus ” when he looked upon it. d it 
may, after aa have been some eld ie crept carie of a 
hoary locks, that he had seen, looki 
ted the Horth west shoulder of the Ochils, that hadd e- 
Pga it is no 2 on thing for aoa 
ag mista range for another. We are told by those 
who seve studied — subject that a greater degree of 
4 681d prevails in er regions of the atmosphere 


up] 
rs bir at low Teves thie is 5 by the snowy cover- 
mmits l 


of the elevated mountains in all 
direct ben tage had been made 


mperature that ese, how- 


ing above the 
least as can be reached, has not only been fully esta- 
blished. but the! as + nenn Pee 


place determined with considerable certaint y. A 
eory, the decrements of heat, in ascending the 
higher Snr should follow the same proportion 
ts of the 4. but on law is 
1 bý 7 peculiarit iati 
= yey nt altitudes is thie oi 
eral causes: 1, the a aden m of rays o 
light i in their passage through the atmosphere, which is 
much Age in the dense strata near th ace of 

e th 


mit of bea. where the 
3 snow 
that are elevated, and where 


0 
st his 


Ochils, and is seen from — plains 7 that it will 500 
hasms; and I have still my doubts whether it 
which he saw 7 during the 
er Mackenzie, West Plean 

a mE Trellises. It is A, ia the Appendix to 
e seco . olume of the T of the Horticul- 
ty (1822), that "M. M. Noisette, of Pars 5 

found ‘Peaches an 


Number, the peeling of Larch, 
covered with tops to 8 . a good plan, if 

peeling, but i prat 

in . gen e prac- 


t to both entlemen, 
2 pin tanding, an t to cut 


ir Larch s 


and cutting 


t the situatio —— — 
he saw it, for he —— see yp i season 
mistaki tain for another. 
that it is it 80 — long 
told in the Chronicle that we should 


uestion. 

— within few feet or raat tas at 
be required when J 

snow would likel, 


How long 
| | queen’ s life ot" 
a known 


He will a — by the oiber ese 
ago that we were even known the 


y . 


er been 
15 four or five | 
dro * onl 


294 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. | May 12, 


I have cut a fine dish for — day, and I these we remarked Weige ela rosea — 
| a pink-flowered shrub, not pra — wan 


into the air, and there wheeling and sporting and good 

mane@uvring in the sun. Taking advantage of their | could if I liked cut nearly or quite 100 more. la dvise | 70 ia, 

absence, they spread a fine net over the hive- entrance, all e r e who possess j Semanas us beds, to 
i i bee ra own as as they can in theautumn, with- "Collections of 6 Srove and . 

u Pug 


2 


h dm 

would exclude the drone.” This would not be a bad out exposing the pirk too much ; to fill up the valleys were numerous. The best came Fusa Mr. * 

plan for the English bee master to adopt; but he should | between them entirely; and then cover the whole well | R. G. Loraine, Esq., of Wallin ngton, — u 
wait till tlie bees themselves have be to g > out | over with go nure, which has been 22 yoa melea linifolia, Aphelexis humilis, iis RPT a. tained Pi 
the drones ; for surely they alone can judge f the | salted. Then, in the spring, when the m has | Ixora coccinea, a well-managed Francisces A 
roper time for this harsh measure. The drone Labs. been raked off, let plenty of salt be: Bagh td k le and Azalea 3 next best „ 
Das serves an important purpose, although we must | which, in wet py er, may be y thrown on with | came from Mr. to W. R. B 22 whieh 
ipti in dry Mice e it shouid be pizat vat sisted of Dillwyn foribunda, Aphelexis hu Esq., . 
says, “He is a gross, stingless bee, 1 spendeth his with water oe put on with a watering- pot. | cris grandiflora, a blue Lesche enaultia, Boronia umilis, 
time in Ss ronal and idleness. er he brave it | making of new beds, I advi ise that they never He. aise and Pimelea p 22 alas an pitt, 
wi round velvet cap, his side gown, his full paunch, | higher than the surrounding ground; and should, of | lections of sixes came essrs, B anaged ej, 
and his loud voice, ye but an idle companion, course, always receive the same treatment as ie Cut Glendinning, and Hamp. Amon ng these 
livin D the sweat of others” brows. He worketh not hill has advised for old beds, and then the owners of markable plant was a neat, compact varie 
at all, either at home or abroad, and yet spendeth as them will be astonished at e largeness 15 quantity | zema venan called Ch andlerif, , 
m eo. Wilk March 3. r 


= 
& 
7 
— 
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o 
— 
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2 
o 
2 
2 
E 
— 
A 
lea 
8 
B 
Lag 
8 


S 
sfefl 
a2. 
pi 
7 


ch as two labourers; you shall never find his maw | of the Asparagus. 3, Wie, ment on the old C: varium. T 
without a good drop of the purest nectar. In the heat Transplanting Potatoes. L We hope that all who have | of Mr. Bruce. 
e flleth frees aloft, and about, and that availed themselves of the oppor tity £ raising Pota- RCHIDS.— Fine as the different T 
o small noise, as ‘though he would do some toes as s preccsities, or before their natural time, have | undoubtedly were, as we shall pres ntly sh 
t net; but it is only for pleasure 1. to get him a not lost sight of the necessary . of the ground | cultivation, all of them 7 short t of the 
stomach ; and then returns he presently to his cheer.” 5 their receptio n. Where this important. operation | 20 pant from the gar of C. 7 
The life of the common bee is busy and short. Those | has been overlooked, no time should be lost in effecting | Hoddesdon, These were —— roduce obi 
which are hatched in the spring of one year die before thie object, as the time has now arrived for the removal | and did eredit to the ‘skill of Wila 
or g 


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r. ece: . i 
toil, or suddenly destroyed by one of a thousand acci- | Plants in pots or turves should now be hardened off, drum crassifolium, with 15 bie 
dents ; snapp 1 pe tomtit, interrupted in mid re and fully established about 6 inches high ; and seed- | Wallichii ; Oncidium sphacelatum, with 12 
a a swa 1 ong into a pond by the bois- | lings should be ready to be plunged into the well pre- | not sufficiently advanced ; Dendrobium nobile, 

, trampled on 5 child, erushed Oy the | pared ground, with their roots entire. Plants thus high, and as mu ti rough 5 Lycast i 
Sot of of hi — while sucking foley, from w hite Clover or managed are s supposed to have tubers already formed, | the yellow-lipped Cyrtochilum filipes ; Zygopetalum 
wild Thyme, overpowe y a hornet, wounded in and about a fortnight in advance of the general crops, rostratum, well flowered ; a goo Dendrobium densi. 
n a e orrs ven of vast importance under present teenie es. | florum ; the curious Oncidium phymatochi ; the 

i ing, i we illari ifoli 


‘eis 


a. e ground, bur ected by thei Pi ** rd d oie ; ee plants 
nt or neglected by their turves, the intended secon crop of Potatoes; and in| bright yellow Oncidium bifolium ; and 
2 killed in fierce batt le with the robbers from | like manner, a month hence, the third crop ; in the Galen Skinneri, Lycaste cruenta, sol ane 
ane ghdouring I live. An ese M, atter case, however, there need be no recourse to arti- | next collection, in point of merit, was shown by Mr, 
Cytisns canariensis,—This beautiful and free flower- | ficial heat. Sufficient plants may be raised on one | Mylam, gr. to S. Rucker, Esq. The gem of this 
ing shrub is exceedingly well adapted for conservatory | square yard of ground to transplant a large garden, and | was Vanda suavis, bearing two glorious spikes of Aas 
owe sociated with it were 


‘ h; Epide 
* 71 subject for asl = — "| densiflorum, with 14 bunches of yellow blossoms; Vanda 
signis, ies i i not so hand. 


1 e e wa 

wi ay May 5: GARDEN Exutsirion, — some; the rare rather than beautiful Hun Melea- 

Camelias SRA Brian ene 8 like ; The lead g features of this great exhibition being | gris ; Chysis bractescens, well flowered ; wal 

of Myrtle, lint the Heats in of ulead, and sprigs fully — in another column, we will at once com- bicolor, forming quite a mass of purple and white blos- 

Hite’ th bottomle * ** ed 3 * It is grown | mence to describe the scene in detail. om. A third group of 20 plants was j 
By tt ; P par i bs 185 = sae * las 2 ra 30 Stove and GREENHOUSE PLANTS, 8 Veitch's Nursery, Exeter. This collection also 

e Certi of Honour, the highest prize the Society | contained Vanda suavis, but not so bright or so fine as 
moderate I and 1 5 more freely when grown offers, was awarded to Mr. F rg m 123 —.— Mr. Rucker’s Pic e gi N 


seldom present for any lengthened period; the plants E : 1905 R 
thondover reed 5 p pacris grandiflora, and, supporting it lees si Aes of Cattleya Skinneri; the small trans t blush- 
= adily removed when re-arrange- Podolobium staurophyllum and i lag the former | Dendrobium uncum, and — 
b 


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kale pot, 9 45 Ate ther 1. inverted Sea- shoots richly clothed with short spikes of brown and | little waxy purple flowers, looking i like so many shells 
border, which measures 12 feet in hi Sie are ae yellow flowers ; the 3 Dipladenia crassinoda ; a beautifully arranged round an upright flower-spike, 
i and e he bee small Hovea Celsi, Chorozema Lawrenceanum m, a pretty | The plant in question was however but a poor repre 
ahs aTa hissed the ye * flowered Gompholobium barbige- | sentation of the wild beauty of this species, Associated 
: the genus; a pretty Adenandra with it were Brassia maculata major, Phaius grandi 
plants of not more than from 2 to TAk Th fer 10 Les speciosa, and other well cultivated plants. Of Azaleas, | folius, a a sanguinea, 8 ornamented 
blend their flowers wi of Cine: 1 2 the collection contained Old White and ne hg the | with deep crimson blossoms ; a capital Cattleya Skin 
poe Ma ee Te 28 Reach parsen be salmon flowers; and of Cape | neri; the brown-spotted Acineta Humboldti, with 5 
ler subject to the attacks of red spider, and requires, | 15 together w Eres s poetiy fastigiata „ 
— somewhat free n hen 3 with Aphelexis humilis, A. purpurea Burlingtonia fragrans, and Maxillaria tenuifolia- The 
out of flower, an occasion drenching with soa fe d an Ixora coccin inea, 15 med the chief n group w. 
ee of iber are a never failing remedy against the fatures ofthis fine ealleton. —Another group of 30 J. H. Sebréder, Esq., of Stratford. It contained god 
to ascertain that thie take terial is care is however | Esq., of Dartford. de r of Phai ichii; bear- 
is not too dirty, or of culti 
with potash or 0 3 cultivation, but all much too sm mall to compete | tifull i ili ilis, for 

dient, or the 2 would have a S aa rig is r with the a and fine plants produced — — 3 ad e ee per ig other Or- 

wae cousiderable time, James Duncan, Basing Park, of Mrs. Lawrence. Mr. Cole’s best planta | chide -Oth iaa of 10 plants were shown 


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wero Pimelea spectabilis, Aphelexis bamilis, and the finer Ma, ob ae tc Mi Mr. May, gm ® 
Asparagus.—Permit me to add my testimony to the Sigh ii 1 a, several species ‘ xora, small „ 7r che 
3 of the plan 1 growing this ve le de. fen 24 
; . . n e. since I took pos. the pretty hi as 
a garden in which was a small Asparagu Pretty white-blossomed Sphenotoma gracilis, Gom. Jack, gr. „ obtain a silver git 
ibio dwli: 94 parts long and 31 feet wide, ine echt an polymorphum, several Azaleas, a few Cape meddia 4 uae mnir Esq, obia 775 speci- 
an ane, u ears, and when Tirs i ya popular stove and greenhouse plants, mens, Mr. Iveso -i peA 8 P . D 
session of it, the garden had belonged to the same pro- | were papa “a 115 STove and GREENHOUSE Prants | Northumber erland, p Rar a well cultivated 
ö ole of that time, who advised me to dig by Mr. T „The 1 was 55 Wallichianum, and Mr. Bruce, D. fimbriatum. ii 


i ? bone Bisag pyramidal Eriostemon b 7 í speci 
aiid inntitighhet what I could do with it ; | spectabili ae ied uxifolium, Pimelea | these made a magnificent display. Than three 
ont — v i yitie Ware raked rA the earth I 17 * off it with- nell, the win dole * N ce niga we mens produced ie Mr. Cheat, who obtained the 1s 

100 and th fol 8, a i 
abani T eet Pree by Mr, Cuthill. pen fully blossomed. and well cultivated Ixora: coccinea; | The varieties to which we allude were 
man e 5 ie th 


t 
r f Azalea, and a pretty Erica Li : r to ; 
; Twards ‘ pretty Erica Linnseoides,— 
salt in wet weather, or by mixing 1 5101 Ag plenty of | second group in point of merit was irodueed by Me za * +i re er p 2 7 faet aer ; and 
The gg it on with a watering-pot.in periods of dunga Carson, Fr. 10 W. F. G. Farmer, Eeg. It contained 3 the ot Rigi, ai te © Oot 
a b i ; ught. e W macrophylla, the Anemone: eaved . Spine 0 * 
perfect; for my bed i iiic roma, Oxylobium P i i i 
Twas in became all T could wish ito W. F greatly, | yellow globule hea leads of flowers s the Viole tones | ere optima, brilliant rosy ge Lene as 


n both of i from 9 3 
i 4 eir large beds. An piein, Aaa 
79 I have cut for rn and could have man 8 Gompholobinm splendens, which few Frasers oF Bie bridge, iov ient on? edanen med 
at all, and the other only a ery ma ese * * yet eut = 5 4 89 ** Aa pileh by have lateritia ; sinensis ; — $ oa ices 4 aisits; 
L yester- | p Other 11s, and other a very bright red; Fielderii, a ; 
. i a | ain mga te a 
5 


1849. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 295 
er by Vr. saw it. It isa “worked” plant—probably on soe from ree Providence 


Pine-apples, w 
Collections Mr. Gerrie, gr. to Sir John Cathcart, | cussata, Mgr forms a good stock for = species.—The | some fruit. They weighed, e a Tbe. of on 
22 s plants were, Smith’s coecinea, a next plant in point of merit was a large Epacris 8 Ibs. 54 oZ., and 8 Ibs. 3 bys Mr. Davis, of Oak 


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e red 3 1 Hisson. wei ere re- 
exquisita, a beautiful 4 ke got the name of — a shy bloomer, but spectively 6 Ibs. 15 02., 6 Ibs, 93 oZ., 6 Ibs. 74 oz., and 
Mr. Gerrie produced such character pen not apply to the plant under con- 6 lbs. Pror M oea also show: ed an Enville, weighing 
i a, variega — for it was literally . — with pretty red 3 lbs. 4 e grower sent, moreover, some 
small Azaleas were also shown by Mr. | and white flowers Messrs. Veitch showed a new half — Black Hanburgh and — water Grapes. The 
of bridge; Mr. Carson 8 howed a fine shrubby pale pink Boronia, called spathulata, pretty, latter were, reat ys reps ripe, Beautiful bunches, 
48 2 single speci and pri edt; a profuse ae, but still too dingy in for the season, of Black Hamburgh Grapes were pro- 
Gli of tall Cacti were exhibi ted, the best zeneral appearance to rank above a third class plant. duced by Mr. F . gr. to the Duke of Sutherland. 
: ; but they were both insufficient] tly One of these bunches, well coloured and well swelled, 
veing fna M€ t account made but — . — Mr. Slowe produeed a small but neat Tremandra ver- weighed 2 Ibs. 5 0. Mr. Turnbull sent Black Ham- 
in dower mÀ rhaps, has there been a more un- tieillata. Various other single specimens of more or burgh Grapes and May Duke Cherries. We observed 
— br N forward the 0 Queen of less merit were exhibited, but we have only room toja dish of Pelvilain’s Princess Royal Strawberry, a 
pi than the present, and never, mention the following, viz., a good Stephanotus flori- | large and fine pea: variety; but said to be far too 
have we seen the task —— bundus from Mr. Turnbull, gr. to the —— of Marl- acid. Mr. Suo w, gr. to Earl de Grey exhibited dishes 

i T Messrs. Rol- iti i 


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dowers which was quite delightful.—Messrs. Paul to the Duchess Dowager of Northumberland ; and a raren May 7.— The Present in the 
2 the Gold Medal, with admirably-grown speci- | large and well-flowered Weigela rosea from Mr. Gaines chair. Amongst the 8 received since the last 
trained according to the plan laid down in“ The New asthe were but few. That which commanded | meeting was a corked and glazed cabinet of 75 drawers, 
jive Garden” The tallest shoot was brought to the | the most attention was the new, shrubby, clear s yellow . by F. Bond, Esq., to whom a special vote of 
plant, and around this the others were | flowered Calceolaria, from Messrs. Veitch, mentioned int was given for this handsome present. Mr 
disposed, gradually pee in . — as they reeeded ene, umn.— Mr. ee e . K, a third class r- Douglas exhibited the cocoon and empty shell of Ela- 
venire, till the lowest branches were fixed | Boronia, named tetrandra ; Mes isson, a small | chesta rufo-cinerea found on the outside of the stem of 
horizontally—the plants — ng alike on all sides, We brown-fiowered Hoya, from Java; and Talauma muta- the common Dock; i 
the heights and and widths, t ter semai at the | bilis, a pale yellow flowered Magnoliad ; and Messers. lineola, which inhabit moveable eases found on 
ai es omg this * n :— Hybrid | Veite d their yellow owered Violet. Some other | nigra. Mr. S. Stevens exhibited the larvæ of Oncocera 
ee. 8 ffay, Ag endid bush, 3 feet new plants were exhibited ; but they were not con- | Cardui, a rare Tinea, which bores into the stems of 
ge 


green, and there was a freshness about | racemes of delicate pink flowers, from Mr. Iveson, gr. | Russet, Winter ** een, and an unname 


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ion zeneum, feed i 
and 3 ft. vide. Bourb — osa, | campanu 5 — ne from Messrs. Jackson, of within the * * of the — ollyhock, o whioh they aro are 
ft. high and 34 ft. wide; Ceres, 1} ft. high and 2 ft. | Kingston. It is a good trusser, the flowers individually oceasionally very destru Mr. Stain xhibited 
. — s, Bosanquet, 24 ft. high and 4 ft. wide. large, = white, with the exception of the upper petals, | a series of the late Mr. nce typical se specimens of 
Tea-scented : 


Madame Lacharme, 2 ft. high . 2 ft. wide. which are deeply and distinctly spotted with erimson; minute Lepidoptera, belonging to Mr. 

Madame de St. Joseph, very fine, a catia variety ; but it has more to do with ponticum | were very valuable in determ mAs the nee of 
2h high and 3 ft. wide; Niphetos, 23 ft. high than campanulatum.— Mr. Gaines also showed a thickly | these insects. Captain Parry exhibi ery 
ad 3 f wide; Safrano, 3 ft. high and 2 ft. aer light-coloured seedling, popr mpact heads, bat beautiful Coleoptera, chiefly. fro from the west hes of 
wide; Comte de Paris, 14 ft. high and 2 ft. wide. small and inconspicuous compared with the above. Africa, including various new iene and Mr. Hogg a 
Mr, Lane's plants were— Hybrid Perpetual: Baronne | — Messrs. Rollisson produced some erimson and pink large and curiously formed British wasp's nest, 
Prevost, blush ; Comtesse Duchatel, rosy pink ; Duchess | hardy kinds ; but nothing striking or remarkable. the neighbourhood of Stoekton-upon-Tees. A 
of Sutherland, blush; Edward een lilac crimson ; PELARGONIUMS.—These were deficient in number, | was read by Mr. Dallas, containing the W of a 
Lady Alice Peel, rosy crimson ; Louis Bonaparte, rose; | but some of the groups were well managed and nicely | new genus of Cimicide, from Boutan, in 
Robin Hood, pinkish lilac ; William Jesse, crimson ; ; | bloomed. In confirmation of this statement, we would | Indies; and Mr. Douglas read the pares I e 15 his 
Due de Chartres, shaded crimson, Bourbon : Armosa, | point to the ee fag 2 ee Pa 1 and Mr. Beck, ane on > ‘hg * of minute moths belonging to the 
tan Rubifolia: Baltimore Belle, white; and which were both, a grower’s phrase, “well| genus Gelec Mr. Westwood called the attention of 
the Yellow Banksian, Tig fatter u was fine ely grown and | done.” Mr. Parker's amia (new W in 11-inch | the ars i eg i "the deser iptions and notices which he 

Mr. Francis, of Hertford, showed | pots) were Lima, Superb, Duke of Cornwall, Hero, | had published in his “ Introduction,” and in the “ Jour- 

4 third and go collection, consisting of—Hybrid Per- Zanzummim, and Rosy Circle. Nurserymen (same nal 5. f Proceedings” o of the Society for July, Le of he 
petual: Aubernon, La Reine, Baronne Prevost, Duchess | class), Ist, Mr. Dobson, gr. to Mr. Beck, for Forget. minute but singular Hymenopterous insect, 

d. Bourbon: Souvenir de la Malmaison, | me-not, Negress, Gulielma, Blanch, Grandiflora, the nests of mason-bees and wasps, to which ig 38 

id Bourbon: Charles Centurion; 2d, Mr. Gaines, for Negress, Prince Albert, applied the name of Melittobia A uinii, having at the. 

: Elise Sauvage, Comte de Emma, Cotherstone, Ackbar, and Queen of Bourbons. | same meeting 3 8 of the insect, and 


the rs | Ne rieties in 8-inch pots, lst, Mr. Coek, of Chis- | drawings of its struct The facts and cha- 
ro ali — wiek, for Painted Lady, Hebe's Lip, Pearl, — — racters given in these n were ent to 
which the Ist Lewisham. In Mr. = s group, to | Bertha, and Forget-me-not, Nurserymen (same class), | the insect, and distinguish it from every known speci 
de Flore, som 8 wer ani het uque èt Ist, Mr. Dobson, gr. to Mr. Beck, for Refulgent, of the family to which it belongs. Notwithstanding 
Belle Hymene, Elise — Triumphant, | Delicatissima, Rosamond, Grandifora, Gustavus, and | this, Mr. Newport (who was present at the above-men~ 
Emile, Safrano, Caroline, Mrs. Bosanquet, Arch- | Blanch; 2d, Mr. Gaines, for Brenhilda, Sir W. R. tioned meeting) had recently nee moir on the same 
4 actolus.— From Rowland came Gilbert, Ne rockii, Caractacus, and Mrs, Brock. i efore the Linnean Society, aud had given it the 


Mr. N 
Safrano, Augustine, Mouchelet, De- | Mr. Beek also showed eight plants not for competition. | name of Anthophorabia retusa, the 2 of which 
Laffay, William Jesse, Mrs. Bosan- Of Cape Pelargoniums, Mr. Parker was the only | was, however, perfectly aaintelligible, six out of nine of 
Baronne Prevost.— Mr. Noble, of Bagshot, | exhibitor. He showed well managed plants of Cam- | the characters laid down by Mr. Newport (see 
of Mr. Fortune’s Yellow China Rose. pylia holosericea, Phymatanthus elatus, Pelargonium | ante, p. 183) being 2 Mr. Westwood's 
TISA but is more coppery in | bicolor ardens, Blandfordianum, and tricolor. 


“ MELITTOBIA, 

Fancy PELARconrums :—Mr. Gaines showed 6 pretty | Westw., 1847. Astnornonsnia, Nez 1 1849. Female * 
dly the best collection exhi- plants of Mulatto, Anais, Lady Rivers, Nosegay, Ibra- | 1, head not broader than the ; 2, antenne ei 

— Sah, gr. to W. Quilter, we him Pacha, and Madame Miellez. The same grower | jointed, pilose, the 2d, 3d, 4th, and 5th joints nearly 

Was altogether composed of fine | also exhibited the following seedling fancy varieties— | equal, a 6th, 7th, and 8th forming an oval terminal 

d 


„ however, more ticular! dint | viz. Gem, a good shaped rosy pink, margined with white; mass; J, thorax and abdomen of equa length 
hi ich was N of its kind It and Dianthus, pesos deficient in shape.— Mr. B ined as in the typical Eulophi, without 
t 4 fee eet in diameter, — orna- | exhibited a pl f the curious varer: 8 Harlequin. bifid nervure or vein; 5, 
le, e branches hung SEEDLING PELARGONIUMS :—Mr. „of Reading, 6, antenne nine: jointed, 
manner as to half 3 2 pot. ja four, named Nonsuch, Christabel, 8 of 88 dilated, and excavated near 
as his „a Species more | a o and 3d joints small, nearly peia Sth, and 6th, 
if Hartnell too, was Y grown, Gin as There ere several collections of these | very small and sub-annulose, 7th, Si, ha 9th forming 
3 and so were niti white- 3 ; 75 t with one or two exceptions they eon - an elo val 3 7, eyes mmata wanting; 3 
icua, ons Sprengelii, muta- | sisted of pl to make much pine. le 8, wings abbreviated ; 9, length three-fourths of a line. 
er, Esq., | Ivery, of Peckham, showed a group of 12, the best of t ime Mr. Westwood entirely J 
ae tion, It con- which we te, Ce: eer wean d having doubted the fact ot Ne A ve pig dl 
ae cate pink- ind, in | —Mr. derson, of St. John’s , Sent inse „or Of as make 
— P 8 fone a pee po Fair R mond, less valu- | it appear t * Ne { _knowledge of the insect 
pot ; Hartnelli lii Pond, of Bath, exhibited a nice group, deriv ation o 
elegans only equall by Mr. the gem of which was Sir C. Nap er.—Mr. lso | Mr. Westwood likewise that in the re 
major, —— and a small showed 6 nice plants.— Mr. Kendall, of Stoke Newing- | of the proceedings of the Linnean So ny. ahs the Ist 
rose. The gem of Mr. Coles’s ton, produced weil grown single specimens from his Pôl- | instant ‘Gee, E ERA 1 New = had stated that 
i me Tren third, was aristata major; maise house „of New wington Beauty, Richar „aud Mr. antenne of the arva of 
sah atha —Collections | Queen of the Isles, ail good sorts.—Mr. Henderson, of the ene ei pig A the fact Ae g Uat 
a alen sent by Messrs. Rollisson, St. John's Wood, exhibited 18 seedlings, the best of | although De Geer e cerca d the dark points 
ly ney In the first group we noticed the | which were Flora Mc Ivor, Amy Robsart, Carlotta Grisi, | question as eyes, Mr. twood, having in view the 


Heath called Sindryatia, a variety in and Wellington—Ten seedlings, the best of which was diructure of the head of the larvæ of the saw- 

Messrs, Veitch sent savers new | Vesta, — from Mr. Poem of Bath; and Mr. | aculeate hymenoptera, had raga guarded himself 
Story. These were named san- Salter sent 2, one of which, Amalie, is large and distinct, from determining their nature, simply stating that they 
— — and — — all White, tipped w ye nh pea mikate showed | resemb/ed ocelli. ` Gee 

one another, suf- | One e-in-the-ring pink, ANI of Lonpon, Aprit 13: PRESID 
Ege be which is evidently one | the former "the — of the pond in u dhape. Finally | in the chair. Dr. Mitchell and J. Dickinson, Lag. 
— Pamplin’s aes oped — = Busby, of Stockwood Park, produced Grand Master were elected members. Mr. H. Taylor exhibited spe- 
os apaia 45 r e alba, two large and y varieties, more eimens of Anemone ranunculoides, which he found still 
own 4 gaes 
8 . Ea, of ws town by mia ee me — Mr. Gaines showed well-flowered ——— yt Ra a Desf. discovered 
i were a huge Cavendishii, plants of Miranda, Duchess of abeat Gem , Con- by him at St. Blazey’s Bay, Cornwa'l, 1 e con 
r. Fairbairn; a fine spicua, Goldfinder, and Cid. There w re also four | of “ The Flora of Gloucestershire 
y mutabilis from e exhibited, but all of them inferior to many —— — 
cultivation. bos sige of Ope ratini 
y far the best shown was the huge YLLIDsi—Mr. Hamp 8 a small collection, (For He.) 
“ribed at p. 199, from the garden fue er eee er git E PLA ; 1 
Was not quite in full bloom, but Fnuir.—Some was e ee As all the principal potting is or now 
of all who of reward. Mr. Davis, gr. to Lord Boston, produced completed, the routine work in this dep 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. [May 12 


wil Consist in watering, airiug, and py amd, j training | planted out, the soil, as a matter of course, having * ty out . othe hive as eee ‘are in good en. 
the plants = keeping them and the houses perfectly | been prepared for the em. If this important point has] ill entice the bee 0: e — n e combs 
clean. e pots * e been carefull . and the | been neglected, leaf mould rotten, very ro ung sooner an if the 1 were empty. i en Dak 
ts — in o soil water may be freely ini ould be we oe orated with the - Le gta to] dark ou lane out, except a few in the centre, near the pat? 
— to which are wing and rooting freely. planting; the plant may then be taken the pot 3 —4.— — % regards he sige ives, ee © bottom, 
Sufficient air should at all times find admission into the be mig Leng ge, 2 ball of soil, 0 carefully set, at ‘ane is on the best cojo Peat oe 
uce a free circulation, but during the be requisite to * e the main stake e, cannot recommend dealers; g= nt if economy is an object We 
most active season o wth little more ers this should 4 ygi 1 to i — re the roots K dela ayed to a later tab’ dopitving a ai tim = pr bap id te ware og 
be admitted, unless for the purpose haa tem- | period and fine sorts, which will be an ac W rpose. Its dimensions should be about 1 — Suit your 
ures down. As a general rule, haan ould een | sition to 5 collection, however select, we may m 10 inches deep, flat at top for the cap or small — 
. trong sunshin er er- and should be e following : Collison’s Dreadnought, deep m Pena upon, ann thore, ae ahole left for the bees to ascend p 
that it ma 15 easil oved. AN atmosphere 1 23 s Beauty of Hastin ings, white beautifully tipped ane oan — 2 Imbricata, Chandleri, Florida, 
indispensable in paf arr. with a high temperature | with rosy crimson ; Grenadier (Tur r’s), fine deep Carr Burns: A Subscriber. Po be ie 

for pl in a in te. Where bottom-heat is | crimson ; Turner’s Mr. Seldon, splendid rosy purple. them like spring bulbs, keeping them in frames or a' treat 
TES s house until their leaves are formed, and th green. 
tan or other fermenting materials, be care- | On referring to our notes we find these amongst the en turn them int 

p on z 7 H ll the open air where they are well shelter ed, Crinums ang 
ul that it ng decline , that is, before the | ery w last season, TULIPS ow fearfully | true bulbs may all be managed in the same — 2 


uso plants, 


nstant attention 


w 
in training and occasional] 3 young growths, 
te 


——— of high 


best w . 
N N ale endid fiowers suffered in many localities 
from the late severe frosts and cutting winds. Those 
| who have had coverings and have been unremitting-in 
attention have been unable to escape. Various beds, 
th 


however, that we have seen, and which were early 

shoud have suf. covered 2 very small meshed nets lace have 

1 y unhurt. Cover with the awnin 

as 800 show colour ; and if memoran- 

t stakes. In the | dums are <i be shade of injured flowers, it must eain 
be y oon over. e amateur 


n wa ering 


be necessary to plants 
free from . of Shish all — trouble 

some kinds ae me rapidly at this season, 
ranthus, and — — tender — 
d should be 


Cockscombs 


uired for —— and autum 
shifted on progressively, using vt — soil, 


R GARDE 


— 
the groun oe per uld 


possible — the plants, by w hich — 2 will 


ha no 
the next three weeks, every preoaution will b 
the 


to husba band the 


ve un muti 
are left ap yard in a very unsightly manner over the 


boundary of r box, very much to the injury of 

the latter. which have been recent] — 

must not be to suffer for em water. 
honky DEPAR 


i all lan t 
those which are grown = Vines. ie plants, = 
a mperatu 
e e der . 


or four fruit to sill oad on — 


Whenever the 


moi sture of 


4 


FLORISTS’ F 
weather will 


revented, and the 
ts hav 


th. The distance 


sg a e wate 
etting the leaves 


LOWERS. 
Permit, 


seen masses too thickly pive 
ces have we observed beds ted 
i 0 the 


planted very 
esired effect, 


ne, as the s m 
recollect the importance of cross breeding these fine 
Ran 


re 7 m ora heat . 01 á 
RIED : Llewe ue them neatly 

sheets of. foalseap —— use good hot . half 
pom — 25 ae e they are quite dry was em with Pe 
lut of co ve sublimate, Each 8 sort should ee 
half shes Fi paper: The directions cared given n by a contem. 
porary set * to be pte atl quite the contrary, 

Fucustas e are able at — 
you Fu wha ong! ‘let out thie. nig pee “i — 10 som 2 
best whites, — 5 omr and F egans are 

ood dark va: 

diass: HEK. "Both suitable ; take the cheapest, ¢ 

GREENHOUSE PLANTS ’ Cytisus racemosus, Oxylobion 
Pultenæa, Eriostemon thas roides, Coleonema rubrem, 
Epacris grandiflor and Kennedya Marryatte ; the latter 
trained on a wire trellis will possibly suit your o old-fashioned 


3 


flowers ; but more on that woes next week. 

CULUSES.—Attend to these plan by carefully stirring 

the surface soil, filling u all wh in the bed, and 
vie 


r 
ecasioual . weak li 
ficial ; and these, as well as Carnations and Picotees 5, 
should immediatly 1 705 _ m Š eray to them, 
HA 


p APE 42 ee with the 

foal äisbudding of these Deterling 10 no more shoots than 
ean be laid in without crowding. Where K young 
shoots des — —— 2 eere be stopped as 
as h ade from rom 


| advantage — constructing walls and flues, and fur- 


lation, or else Word wenthien): i and over these the canvas, will gene- 
w sa 


7 — and can be readily made to pull up or let et down 
roper — — of lines and shales are 
well — that th rather 


1 par 
gained, we think it worthy of . — If it is worth 
while to build walls for choice fruit trees, it is worth 
while to be at a little additional e expense to render the 
p certain, 


. ——— rseereennseness ee} 
State of T Weather near London, for the week ending May 10, 1819, 


beds by addi 
plants on whick| 
r, give i 1 the 
es, om the 

off yi 


Dahlias may be 


served at the Horticultural Garden s, Chiswick. 
Moon's BAROMETER, THERMOMETER., | Wind. f 
ge- Max. į Min. Mar- Min. Mean i : 
11 j| 29.840 | 29822 || 77 | 47 | 620 || E, 
12 |} sio] 20761 || 74 | 45 | 595 |] we, |} 28 
* 29.843 29.813 62 45 53.5 N.E. 00 
[e] 29.989 29 55 36 45.5 N.E. +02 
15 80.015 | 29.994 55 39 47.0 N.E. 00 
16 29.992 | 29, 4 40 | 47.0 N.E. 06 
17 29.914 | 29. 4 46.5 N.W, Hai 
eon 6 29.875 51.1 142.0 715 0.49 ).49 
May ber —.— — — 1 
— Clear ue; very fine; thunder, lightning, rain, and hail ~ 
— . eae cloud ; Overcast. afternoo: 
— F Overenn as d: fine; cloudy. 5 
= savy el e Rar- and cold; 3 cloudy. 


ite clouds, ervals ; 
10—Overcast ; 1 — 24 ae oo 
Mean temperature of the wee 1 deg. below the average. 
State of the Weather at Chiswick during the last 23 years, for 
ensuing week, ending May 19, 1839. m 


2 
87 2 92 8 ad Poot Prevailing Winds 
May. Sua | ses | SE Quantity iE 
1 88 [se which nit Rai 2 
ARS | AAE j e, Rained, | Of Rain. 121p 
Sunday 13| 64.4 39.8 | 521 9 0.22 
Mon. 14] 63.7 41.4 | 52.6 ,8 0,66 vs 
Tues 15) 65.0 | 41.7 | 52:9 6 0.41 
Wed. 15 66.2 43.6 54.9 d 0.34 
Thurs, 17 65.5 42.3 53.9 8 9.58 
Friday 18} 64.0 44.2 54.1 8 0.17 
Satur. 19} 61.3 } 44.3 | 54.6 9 0.50 


re el to — 
an highest temperature d during the above cased aoe 
therm. 86 deg.; and the Jowest on the 15th, — 2 


Notices to Corr ents, 
Back Nomatas: Full price will be given for Nos, 1 3, 8, 32, 


for 1846, and Nos. 16, 18, 26, 30, 31, 34, 35, 38, — ‘a 

pa win be given for No, 46, 1848, with the Nowe 0, for 1847, 
sats AS W., No book gives or can give — rth 
ha 1 g the soil h every separate plant re- 

quires. If there were such a book wt Be —.— t 
read it. Sweet's ! Hothouse Cultivator od 
t. We know no more — 
we 


ouse. 4 
8 JC X. The caterpillars sent are a colony of the 
th Ilithyia sociella, a species of comparative rarity, which 

ae said to feed on the honey in the nests of the h 
Can you possibly obtain any further „ ro searching 
the tree from which they were or do L. ra 23 
similar colony described by n the « Mag 
— vol. ha . 528, . 

Lasers: @ B. It is difficult say what are best for plants, 
The . — are the the Rie, but they are * pr 
aprig correctly 1 Pai nted lead lei well and 

cheap ; or lead m steel moveable a 

and then paint ed w the sunken places re eryn 
the brush, the — appear blac k. Th is i s perhaps the 

best, but it hig 8 ne 

Leaves ; Leyton, The ase 5. seat look as if — had been 
burned troigi sheet gli; —— mode of remedying the 
evil ens sey found in another colum 

MISTLETOE: BA C, It may be e propagated from seeds or by 

Ka Ey The seeds should be posi ate n r March, 

but if -Ki — 1 get ripe berries } you ht try them now. — 

the b — — . say of an A 

Hawtho et, g the cut quite down tothe — 

e ba — rs a toot rs — insert the seeds fresh]; 

köm the berry, press down the bark again, and yg erea 
—— N It may be grafted any time in May. 

and insert a thin aie of — ua oe and 

we ‘leaf a the end. Lou non 

Sn bias ceeds. “The Mis it grom 5 7 

Hawt Apple Black Italian. Tolar eos 

Acacia, Laurel, Willow, and with — 

N We are unacquainted 

nkia at po 8 home by Fortune. raion 


P 


E 8 F e 


eit 
whiten h you eter was oe ae from Mr, Lemaire. 
be easy for you to e e it from Van Houtte, — L It is 
Bedum dasyphyllum 4 0 . We know nothing of 
Bandekoi or Carbury, nor can we —— anyone who 
1 ou will eve us koy names — shall hare 
ing in 


y um rae 
apparently.—F Amelanchier ‘Botryapium, white of 
Amygdalus nana, pink. ohn Smith. A parently a mor 
Corydalis glauca, but the specimen — for d 3, 
—Mareelly, 1, — 3 Pas Melilotus oficinals 
Teucrium Scorodonia; 4, rmannia Blasia; 5, Cet 
taurea nigra; 6, Ge alate —— 5 qj "7, Scolopendrium vulgare 
8, not wee 9, Geterach officinarum,—Z, Fuchsia 
rica læ 


Onanaes : M H L. The ww will succeed in fibry loam, leaf. madd, 
sta 


Paxrox's COTTAGER’S CALENDAR. The for dis- 
rice gd. each copy. Parties wishin 7 have copies ho 
: ——— ka their tenantry, can ed at 1em 
of 25 copies 
Pear Trees: EV i We do not pg you cor 
round round ae with straw r sla 


PELaRconiums: EH. Sylph, Rosetta — 9 Duke of 
—— — Flora, aimee and Orion will perhaps sait yot 
circumsta btained 
Porasz TW vs. The pearlash of the shops step 
from iati 105 * — and W It is 2 
If you want to use it, mix it with some ferm 
for a short time, a dung-heap for "example, an 
ou m ix 1 


ome plants require much . hak 
TREE Rost: The pri price of this pue is reduced to 3s bags 3s, at G. 
free), to be had at the Office of this Paper, or 
seller, in a partially 
Misc: R M. Plant your Rhododendron robustum a will de 
shaded place, — behind a north wall. The rmoj 
any open rather dry situation, 


SEEDLING FLOWERS. irregastl 
CALCEOLARIAS: L MO, Flowers "apon a yellow ge or Prato 1 777 
— ema ga chocolate brown upon a also sig 


pretty va ety, but yorkie small, The flow 
indented i the Rey 3 
EARTSE Y. No 


ptt we onl 1292 bright 30%: 

with u etals — ur’ — ower o 
e ee po l 2 of of dark meg con- 
the eye, and slightly feathered ; a very g t edging 
stant. 8 l, —— 8 with a slight. viole in outline 
dark o erumply an and irregular cals si 
No. 2 2, pale yellow, with dark eye and appi pe 

violet; a fla ent, 30 3, 


but — —.— — —— the fl 
v e 


pa e. 
outline, but tolera gone ta in 
good in outline, size, ‘Gea colours, but t rather and texture, — 
even at the edges. No. 7, good in cage ape an No, 8, erung 
nicely marked, but ah nent rather small. the 
shape and texture, but slighty. d indented pen too small. 

tal. No. 9, good in form and nicely 
ko. 10, good in — . and ud colours, m aT aan 
— the best. Nos. 7, 8, and 10 are the best 

our seedlings ; No, 11 is imperfect.* 


it. J 


-EHE AGRIOULAURAL GAZETTE. 


297 


= WING MANURES one: maneten 

Factory, ey gaat 
1 * RB, ... 235 ps on 25 10 10 0 

aoe ” 

are . HATE oF L 
ID AND COPRO ES, 5 0 0 
1 2 NO, — 5 miSi cargoes (in Dock). 
TE OF AMMONIA, 


SULPHATE 5 . “City, London, 


ofe, G. 
OTHER M URES, 
G A 3 of te finest quality, direct from 
21 fae n 
er A 
0100 ND COPROLITE. 
0 4019 A 
en WORM DESTROYER). 
SDA ASE OHATE OF LIME (made from bone only). 
JGnIcULTURAL SA and all other Manures of known 
alue, may be had o 
ae 4, Upper e haii London 
on Guano, Superphosphate of Lime, &c., will be 
— postage stamps. Fee to purchasers 


a Guano, 

Eee 

LONDON MANURE COMPANY would, at 
tf call particular — to ee CORN 

strongly recommen top. cessing 

for all . a large amount of am 


cwt, per acre). urnips, eae 
Pan E oon qhia would urge the me of the Ura 
— 37 th containing an increased pod 
ets at tke mineral . so essential for 
A nnr th y supply on the best 
ree ele is ur Soda, pee of res ir Soda 
Wireworm, m, Sulphuric Acid, Agr 
pr I, Ge. 


amt . — PURSER, Secretary. 
— — Blackfriars, London. 


AND BOLIVIAN GUANO ON SALE 


pared to undertake the warming of —— Fig upon their 
— soa ea aes tus. They refer to the 
v g 

Te e have erected most ex 


worth G 
| Oakham, Rutlandshiee, 


is, Upleatham, Yorkshire, 
in “Sq, Poles, near ts Herts. 
am-green, 


3 — 130, — 
van ih ISLEWORTH.— The following 


uses, 
i Shown upon D and in Spe- 
Slate Slabs, of all sizes and ve 


‘stock of $ 


„ 61, e 
wark, Inventors 
10 . en DOUBLE 


we 

to have not dcm Sca description, but to 
ied, 4 5 on prospectus 
be seen ost df nee — — authority; or 
i 3 the Nobility’s see ts and principal 
nform the Trade that at their Manuf. 

dinas article required for the e . 
ngs, as well as for heo heating them, may be 


Palisading, erected upon the d Dirin 


— Farmers may effect a 
will have th —— 
© article, x 


. | 12 o’clock, 


i hiswie 
ge Vonservatory, Royal Botanic Gardens, Regent’s-park, 
otis, Chats een | Deri 


attention of Aga 
f 


ills n reduced 
5 which lay oe r behind the growi 


BEE HIVES. 
on to W anD SON papay 
y have prepared for this season an e 
nat — of thei — IMPROVED BEE HI VES 
which are offered to all who are desirous of cultivating that 
leasing and profitab fe branch of rural econom Pe: Honey 
ee. The c cr te Pe of abiri Co. lia al Hives,” 
„The —_— 2 — The 


ater: 


Holborn, London. 

«Nutt on Bees 13 s” (6th edition), now published. 

ane CATTLE. — Just 
d, a quantity of very hand. 


landed, direct from Shetlan 


some small = NIES; size, am 83 to 12 hands high. Also 
some very h 33 es ll COWS and HEIFERS, down 
side, and in milk; also some smal 


(0) Feedin ng. These Co 
quantity of milk for 5 size, — is very rich, similar to the 
er e-, and wt ty e very hard y and suitable to this climate, 

To be seen at THOMas ORTON’s, Salesman and Importer to her 
Majesty, 69, ‘Wappin k 


ROYAL AGRICULTURAL S SOCIETY 


AN 
The MAY GENERAL MEETING 0 he Members will be 
held at 12, Hanover. es on Tueeday, the = of May, at 
ee , — the Council, 
s Hup 


London, May Ist, ist, 1849. Dson, Secretary. 


TURDAY, MAY 1 


Tuxspay, May 15—Agricultural Society of 9 

Tuuxspar, sti 7—Agricultura] Imp. Society of Ireland. 

TUESDAY, — 3 of England. 

Tauks par, 24—Agricultural an vi of Ireland, 
FARMERS’ 3 l4: 


Claydon 


is 
ows give a large 


The Agricultural Gazette, 


closure of common or waste lands, and a growing 


diversify 5 progress of f the 
of heat ae seem to 
in sus chang fy: ts of a 
river that ripple up the slice gaint tie stream 

while the 95 unde eae rolli in below un- 
istur bed, — same mino the 


more or * — 
s 
ever in vain. 


asons 
a Gale courses . against the petty —— 
sp which thin re ti o be wiser ber Nature strove 


system) ird extending — the latter part 
of the a pears entury to the present time, which 
may be designated as the 


| grating 


+0 
®© 


ree or retard th 
ually but weer from far a pa 

bene this country has become a 75 mport 
and n has the old sto f the Danish 


5 zor reveled the puny alt: of the legis- 
ator has been planted at the water’s edge, and the a 
vain mandate given i 2 tide, So far shalt thou | 
it and aie have the 


co 
legislator and his chair ai driven back and com- 
pelled to take up a new — rs find the same 
order similar rly regarded. 
e but two ways,” says the 
Historian of the middle p radh “in which n 
an kee win 


with the wants of a popu- 
lation, one by bringing fresh sand into cultivation, 


ost | the other by increasing, aid 5 5 the 
produc hat which is W sed. The 
first of these resources of a thr © peuple has 


have vari 
ieee exorcised a. sti vk pra effect upon e Loven 
and succeeding cycle of good harvests has 


na Tomu ult 
breadth ; but the m 
pke pon 


ration. In the reign 1 of a pos amy 
Aten „ Acts were passed; in 
ing reign 2 8 were 226; 5 — 
acts durin rst twe 
amounted fo 585: ata tater 
to 1814 the number of Inclosure Bills during 
ounted to 1084. Durin 


e — add such 


I 
Il (from 1804 


the 

g about 65| space ears amo to ing the 
pnd gives | whole reign the mum was of 3000. 
for the samo But even and as is the course of those 
great ane by which an exporting 


BY THE ONLY Merista Ir is a fortunate circumstance for as makers, aa Harz, to condemn to death hundreds of poor inno- 
ANTONY GI SONS, LOND 3 
FILAN JOSEPH MYERS pp 60. B ERpOO E; eel as the subjects, of human la aws, that the most | cent wretches charged with witchcraft: he 
ents, wise Acts are the least perman oh ade but the instrument that carried into execution a 
e wai, sire PAYO Bay Sth The history of the pe al Legitlati n of this popular 1 of the day, which he on self shared. 
injurious consequences of | country aff a strin ng of widen nce mast s of Lord Kenyon did the same in carrying out the sen- 
cu jons Gua 8 character, 5er to this truth, Wich if, instead of being distributed over 3 of the law Pode e 3 eee. ayr 5 
the who will supply the article in an ny many centuries, it could come before the expe mmon vol 
Fara Prices, delivering it from the Import | rience of one generation, wou d have been sufficient publie then ‘denounced 25 the enemies of mankin ad, 
z cure the mos rice-· regulator that instea 


speculation which however self interested i in its per- 
„operates in fact as the 


an mediate object 
aaeei e, -valve which relieves a hey nd pre- 
vents Scarcity from becoming Fami We smil 


8 now at bres oreo sev sere against poor old 
wretches whose i ns had ‘ dried 


and ma 
branded the early gro 
with the curious nicknames of x Fors t alling’ f “Re. 
and Corn-badgering: but we ron scarcely 
have * — the right to ine until we have, as a 


ey. 
ET (16933) , ‘An Act for 
f Corn? A Bounty of 


This i is the e Bounty Act. The markets, 
had been lowered by a series of good harvests, and the 
object of 2 ypes was to encoura ge prices by promoting 
the a of Co A cycle of bad harvests however 

succeeded See’ ra seven years it did not come into 
operation at all 


18 12Wm. TLI., c. 1. (1699.) Bounty Act Suspended. 


*11&12W 1 e. 20. (1700.) All duties and 
Poundage on Ex abolished. 
* improved harvests, at the commencement of 
, now began to bring the Bounty Act into 
* An immense extension of tillage gradually 
took place, and in spite e exportation of 31 millions 
of quarters of corn (on which up of six 
lions sterling was unties ? from the public 
revenue), ually falling, Wheat 


prices kept i 
from 56s. 6d. in 1700 to 29s. 23d. in 1751. The average 


of the half century ending in 1765 was only 35s. a 

quarter.] The t i 

and surpri hibited at the haling — and a 

supposition of i etness in rage returns 
prices. 


2 Geo. II. * Alteration in the mode eak 3 
the averages, 5 re to be settled in future by 
the Collectors o 

5 Geo. II. arse.) oe act for — = 2 
4 fraudulent introduction of foreign eo 

uarter Sessions to make enquiry a sarya presentment 
eit oath ai * market p averages 
to be taken 

6 Geo. re 01766.) Proclamation, All 2 

suspended. The laws 1 restallers and Regraters 


to be strict] 
harvests had turned. From 


country becomes an Importer in spite of now in- 


who 8 7 3 had —— only one deficient season. 
For the next 20 years they were very frequent. ] 


298 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. | May 12, 
nded. reasons for the adoption of single-horse carts e the past year, — languishing, in consequence oF a 
“7G Se. Ii 110 ) Expo 5 Ave- | the hills. From ohiit tever cause, however, one-horse | unusu ally rotracted wet weather er of leet’ — — 
fess —5 Me i be made wee ts are, and have ever been, since the days of p which his e ve Sus r 
EEF Geo, III. 4771 1. y: Exportatio niversally used in the Cumberland —— injury, rendering a gr reat it de unfit for the mar. 
Geo. II. ©. 71. (1772.) ) Importation pent Duty | — as might be expected from the circums 8 bove ; has „ accelera — the introduction, re 
8580 mentioned, they have been — at geo 2 spring, ere er A 1 2 compete with; and 
18 WI appea. 0 A 80 
ing me gh or es 4 ternal Corn rao the | be t e 7 a of Scotch — and to the samples below that at which, under the t and bes 
on the ne 0 y Flour 22 Ke.) they dis- prize givers and winners of premiums for single-horse | s stem of husband Y, — 
com 1 -> nhanco rape a Ar e same | arts at our great agricultural shows. A Cumberla them, € n if he have a favourable season for hax. 
courage the gr nye e n the inhabi itants of 5 pee rse cart has never been Pr ted for compe- | vest. I believe, however, that a may be 
Seth of ki Tangle ” on, and yet if one of John Hogg of Tae > he a W e by bee —— — their — 
- Portenscale's best ma no : e instance, ording e means : 
[The 4 — ending in pad ren from 2, har Jobn 3 oat’ ighig A Bt ty aie Ye eir land thoroughly drained ; and this, im ry having 
in 1751, 6 * for oy 10 e — in . The old mistaken if it were not be acknowledged by the 18. — as 0 one veirin landlords, and t 
Bounty of 168 d 5 to be ipet prine _ | per-centage charged upon e outlay to the tenant 
ce He unty epeat * sus- The following ane will perhaps bear out this| The temperature of the soil being thus very consider 
ded. “ From 1766 to the present year,” says A opinion — ht who have not yet seen or y rd of | ably raised, one material — bes 12 gained toward 
ouse, “we have had a pe etual shifting — 1 in = Cumberland one- . j Lee ie ne — 1 A rer’ 1 r the 
* 
which nothing has permai a | 1848), you recommend in No ices rresp s m 


states that it had been ecessary to suspend | 2 
— * of previous Statutes, and that a trae | straw vell | ed.“ n, of Benton near New- 

nent Law on the Corn-trade “ would afford encourage- | castle, in a very capita | paper on one-horse carts, rea 
t to the Farmer, and afford a cheaper and more | at the Ne tle Farmer’s Club ommends the carts 
constant prey to the Whenever the price sony | he himself uses, 8 ewt. ea the — I observed 
Wheat was at or above 44s. ah a 3 in a report of the York meeting of the Royal Agricul- 
and the Bounty, w —— ural Society that many of the members had pressed 
of British grain coastwise. At or ——— * ya — | great surprise and gratification at the lightness of the 
Duty on sixpence a carts—8 cwt. and = b 2 the best are 
warehoused Bond (in twenty-five | from 8 ew 8h or 9 e hundreds 


under 
orts specified in the Act) might be re-exported | weighed at t 
mou ntains, 1 am 
reach 7 ewt 


Foreign Corn 
British Ports 

[ 'ader this Act the home market was opened to 

supp! a favourable term fo: 

* was re consider: ais ; but the 1 
prices we: adier for ‘the eager —.— years than a 
they had been = a long period. A gradual ex extension 
of tillage too 

a half acres. 1 av erage price ren the whole period 
was 45s. 6d. a quarter. Abu Smitn’s opinion of this | co 
Act was that “ 15 not the best —, * 
was the best the he —— e 
adds, “it m he way for a ny fay 


an 
verage 6 


try n 
— pa p kiln. 


he sll market divas p ‘= Cumberland 


cwt., an 
Very e y jastan, —— roomy carts, 


y no means an unu 
carts and light — — F 


at a very small number 


N 


With tig Act an sae is the “Middle Period. How 
Apam Sutrn' fulfilled, — mn will just passing, one is 
eseen events po 
i — — 


en ein 


1791, the 
disastrous teaching of War, the great disorganiser of 
Commerce, the deceiver of pet and the punisher 
of succeeding gener; erations. H. Ash, beams of “Oak, 


$e 
and they hav 


is 6, one 6 ; the horse 


a no doubt 
ally of 


and the boards of Birch or or Alder ; 3|a 


CUMBERLAND ONE-HORSE CARTS. fice from the lime ; 


apt to rise 


horse carts are on 


otally unknown, 
lation of the 


š the „Scotch cart 


turists — the hills, 


essential qualities to o the c e palm 


it, in * probability, was first generally used 

there, and because the best forms of it are to be found 

in that co persons recollee ct this. 
were eee to the markets, of the 


the mountain market carts of the 


and pr 
believe the choice 
ly to be fi 
eck, on the outside shoulder of Skiddaw, the 


arry o 
I * it would be a rea 
interest if the merits of 


neral 
exhibiied at Norwich in June, would be the 
y t The Scotch carts, 


ihe! 5 of this wo ot hace one 
oo veal inflamed. 
3 of the Cu 


e found 5 the hills; even 


aher by Peg men ace or the worthy agric icul- 


would, unless I am ugun mistaken, 
all E gland an 


-rate specimen 
readiest | 
the — 


2 
fatuity is, that 8 — 


t 
last no end to “o ” thathis best | quantit 
mberland one. | to 


ven in 
miek = Beara agi of peti on p 
is | have 


tate t em; neither is it of any use 

vy ing e to starved 5 — 
land; but when, by 38 d th P 
the land is brought into a proper state for its bow 
then should the tonic, in the shape of good manure, be 
applied, and that with a liberal hand; and there came 

a question that u such treatment the farmer 

ew le existence 


* 
upon 


: 


of re 
Does not — 1 alone — to us that 
e mene’ A 1 is insufficient, and that were the 


ntent themselves with farms 


7 
osition to ae a living, an 


raining) must be again 
w farmsteads which afford sufficient 
of beasts whi 


wh 


ains 
the afferent statements — — ch have bee 
rae 


=r 


towns, 


F mot 
on — without side pieces, 3 ee 5 
over Whinlatta, Cartlings and the Ruise ; 3 80 that, said 


tha wat snapte È 11 


in 1 Sera of bad r 
land s 


0 
on again. Much, one would - if 
i conside: 


those eo — 6 to 64 ewt. 3 core masses 
idered 


eaen j 


. 


100 Ibs. Coal rime se 
wing Bid. 


i recover hime 
vrg horse in ia passing weight of carts are 
ent lanes of Cu LEF 8 
ee extra- L. V. F 
à passing ` HIGH FARMING, 
g sss ima country — — that (prevention is better eure,” 
The ge rae — f y is not applicable to the coadition in which 
groat t farmer finds himself placed at the present 
his own 1 — freehold or junetare. The disease under which he has, daring 
copyhold estate, and the pana tie RET E — — 
farms, even a single horse as of the Nation.“ ” Fractional ports and 


land is omitted in the 


| of feeding two 
bullocks for 31 days, on prepared fod 
e the increase 2 
wilt merel 
the four 


3 
for boll es we 
k 


ari 
Extra Pots gh (a per yay for 20 Bullocks, or 2 to 
er head, sa; 


We Cost head (would 
ay e 223 


—5 
Now 6 stones of of Beef for 31 days is 1 st, 5 Tbs. per wer 


gained, at rasoi p 
. which deduct “the cost at ‘the 

per week 

and 44 lbs. of Turnips weekly 


Then 5 stones of straw, at 
r dates" poe 


i 
And there remains wpa et J 


— 
Ak 
* 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZET 


TE. 299 


e Lr. a crop of | ground, that i 
the farmer 8/. 10s. per | physically — 3 
** 4. per draining. The 


may operate in its various ways, ex 
This explains the theo 
should 


101849. 
e found < 2 N 


tons will 1 


au 


4 
È 


e 
Hi 


5 
— fo feed . — beas — 24 —— 
r he aid ge of feeding, i: 
ver Bgl? a a se! ay that 6 on 
aot Swed es y 
mas ol be consumed by en 
per aere, acre wi 
besides the con 
that the sdb be estimated to 
the farm) 4d. nee stone 
ol be put = 00 ste i ‘ia 28 4 
22 stones, a r 
7 1 4 #0 


your a nu 


121 
gt 


n land, * ther 
— ace ri a lower level, 
i perhaps dis spute. If land 


à great 


Showing saving in the 3 of e bullock nit 
And, — in the one i By Tur 
for 


o throw 


Home Corresponde 1 


Prospects of Farm wiit Davis’s 
letter in your valuable Cent, of ‘the 28th of last 


T 


to have been, in 1771, 4 about sesh rt of the 
in his o prove his 


eagorn 
we great quantity jd ae — has been same land has — lain all wi 


red with o 


with 


beyo ich is the pest — 2 for filling 
t has p the drains? Some light — — 
it is tself e land; the top of the tiles such as brushwood, — è. 
J er, n no stock ane be ken en d is now recommend at the — should be filled up 
d which was with | with clay, e it —. — supposed, if the —— i A may 
1847, half of whieh w umes fod bo made -ie-remnoval of the water from it ; 
The plant on that which tae? — irred, ex to the waren ere, 
i oe broken into — „lumps has a e of 
ee so. Thus much in 
o a 


better chan 
regard to the science of drain- 


ure Mr. Richard 
off his young | 
ided 


n OU ang 

ung that he ma 
— any — s tough, provi 

he d t pen heep back upon it, in which case 

they v will a — plant, by 2 out the head of it. 

All cattle are fond of it, and t 


begs to 
A with safety feed o 
de it become 


8 


We sometimes f t pron is too bitter for 
the butter, a ath is best, and the cows always 
in their butter 1 Ib. or more each, on being tur 
into it. For horses, n ee ee it is a 
common saying, that Saintfoin hay peg gr 
any other 2 corn; and in the sheep 
having the ‘scour, this ig ge as p or hay, will 
n a word, ex 
aay do not e to nk it the most 
valuable for the earth produces, I 
generally stands six or seven years, and the only incon- 


- | Yenience attending it is, that the ground gets stocked 
of | with wireworm, an evil atten old pas- 
| tures ; it will thrive on chalky soils. 3. Dy May 1. 
Pigs.— A corespondent informe ns that in 
ake | parts of Hampshire, nothing is: ö 
e | see several pigs in a large Sip — 


A fi e 
a light porous san * i 
but 


A thus 


is oyance 
by the conduet of of the l 


work, thro 
t | as to leave it almost w 

low wages ; 
t 


ut at | grow 
It wi 


not born without them, but rot off in the course of five 
or six weeks bo 


a 


n the A Labour in . market, compared 
with t the able-bodied men, depends in a great measure 
he good con of the low er classes of society, 
may be truly said that idleness is th 

ischi It will be 


pes 
60 


ù Now, is the case 
n the event of wet days Being pe from his time ? 
2 ng t 
cannot live, unle ess he 


00 
erally he foun 
trying, which by 

armi 


iety at 
pon the age "ite wales 
would, by j joining together and carrying out 
such an — ion, add to the — and r 
ty of the labourers, and diminish the — of the 
i one quarter of the sums thrown away om 
(by the hands of — kind- 
donors), was applied 
ocal improvements 


labourers in neglecting 

* it in pee a slovenly manner 
han undone, the result of 

an feeling himself I underpaid, scrambles 
over his 3 Although this e lamented, it is 
not to be wondered at that t be discon- 


or goin 


+ 


ito | tented when the (Comparatively — rich grind 


them down to the lowest farthin 
h 


t 
nt has bron 


3 0 
a things i in the mate. Bh 
isagreeable 


— a toe pet * 


300 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [May 12, 


Webber, Samuel, Ipswich, Suff « «The total cost of E in Ir 1 
ee aay revered —— place to place, but a peasant and his 5 s: ohn 283 ‘Tuxford, Nottinghamshire to stand thus per English ae eland may be said 
: , George, Haydoc n-le- . 
entailing on gen them an almost ruinous expense ; should he Lndgater, John, Stiffhey, Wells, Norfolk en ge ey 25 me . 
go alone he has to pay for lodging and washing extra, | Mumford, derge m Cockfield, Stowmarket, Suffo opening and rolling of the drills ee, 
absorbing all his and on his return to his| Barwell, John, Tormi 3 Ren £210 4 
he finds himself in worse condition than 23 8 oodbridge, Suffo Hanne trom the planting to the curing 1 process 2 is $ 
when he went away, in the hope of bettering himself. Case, Froderiok, . — House, Fakenham, Norfolk Tithe aust Asseantbents hy “a 2 . 
k „ Josiah, „ „ 
22 . ae a f ee. claims on anr a. ome, 22 Dibam, eso ei at pie oriak N $ 
, arman, Peter John, Scarning, am, Norfo 7 16 
but when men have health, strength, and inclination to Batterham, John, Terrington, Norfo «“¢] find, from my farm accounts, the * 
yit is policy not to giv Pillans, William * ola * ee oe charge upon a tobacco crop may be estimated at 30L & 
th f Pung dent, and free Gidaey, Jeremiah li ast Dereham, 30 guineas per ris acre, which is equal 10 
* 2 ons si mination of private chatty n he union, The names of 14 ca andidates for 1 — y next | 1g guineas per English acre, where the * is 5 
both of whieh should be reserved for the sick, aged, and meeting. TES, thee * 3 Brurrox, Secretary ` er e But in — an of Wexford, where 
the indolent will be a 270 ; e sp as been employed, the expense of plants 
— one; put it our country, under the blessing of God, | wo ‘the > Lo cal Commi ttee at Exeter, having been g preparation, and labour, is estimated at 50l. per Irish 
must be accomplishe d,s nd the anoni we | POTT to the Council, on the me, hg the authorities of | sere, or 307. per English. It therefore follows that 
1 usly Brig tit cine: diet ee 3 that city, of their agreement w h the Soe ciety, uly tobacco can be produced in Ireland for 4d. per Ib, 
Perhaps some of your readers will take up > this subject, | © pape sue under the great seal of the oti = 4 aad which is the price of tobacco of ordinary or mi 
and suggest plans for creating profitable 2 the signatures of the mayor and hag MSE i 12 quality imported from America. But, at thesumetime, 
is hall alee a, « nok da i n Council level a duplicate agreement t sealed in | 4 higher rate of remuneration is required for the Irish 
7 There is a pra answ wer nAn Sny Jo all their presence, with the gas, seal of the Society, and | and British grower, to meet the casualties to which 
lill has done. signed by the President and Secretary, under the powers | this delicate exotic is liable in our northem and 
The Scab in Sheep. gy e is held to the Charter of eee ri variable climate.’ ” 
discreditable to the r = mange or lice in — osacco Cuuture.—The Duxe of Ricumoxp pre. | MISCELLANEOUS Communications.—The Earc of V 
But as it is infectious, the most careful men are liable to sented to the Council a ae ecimen of the dried eee of | BOROUGH ot ted, on the part of Mr. Culy 
i imes fro the Tobacco plant grown at Chelsea e also the statement of a new mode of treating bones fr 


s 

m favoured the Council siih 7 following statement made | manure by vere alkali instead of acid. — Mr. Mi 

= : a kurt y the party from whom he had received the specimens teal le of Australian Wheat ae 

their rubbing ge a post or gate in passing ina road fen submitted to pes ewe e 41 bama e 3 55 15 EP eat, on the part of 


0 ae = 0 
“Every person klinita fruits, y egetables or flowers, Lieut. Sim pkiont R.N. Mr. Majendie stated 
especially in the forcing department, have bee 8 plagued | Potatoes were wn River, Van Di 


arm to a 
animal iously left the virus; or one acciden 

may sow this fruitful source of ev vil. It is far from 
being confined 


jec 
* without injury to the tender plants under cultivation, 105 his report en the growth of Potato seeds from 
but it occasionally inoculates the finest flocks, and if the tobacco is, at present, the only known safe and suffi- | Chili, and of Wheat from Australia, both of which ad 
shepherd ie unskilfal or dishoues is irre. | Cent resource, and there are but few who have not furnis t his own Pea 
erably dam or lost. Gates “Cattle Doctor,” 3 it more convenient and safe to make purchases of seeds had — . lle a 8 alan 
published at 6%, contains a "oy — 7 of the is essential article, notwithstanding its costliness, than the Chilian seeds to their having had their viseous pulp 
and prescribes a method of eves to 8 remedies, Among this number the washed away from them; his own having been left with 
ointment ; but in this neighbourhood, adii Lincolnshire, bid oa is obliged to place himself ; oa not until he had | that natural covering attached to them.—Dr. Royle 
the preparation of the ointment is left to the druggist | ™*°° yon ee save or lessen an expenditure presented, on the part of the East iy Peo 4 
who is also rejuired to be skilful and honest as well as so unsatisfactory. Thus cir reumstaneed about the supply 5 2 Deodara my be from the Himalaya 
the shepherd. öt culi ill 1onth of h, 1848, a gentleman, living in his imme- he thanks 5 were ordered 
ý diate neighbourhood, who had been ata to attempt — — cbii 
ion, but a good dru gis will mit: these -anticles the 8 tobacco for his own 3 The Council duit a Tuesday next. 
fü — E EET 


re consiste 
enn. Itis called sh — and as well as being : - 7 bs. 
i e for the purpose of fumigating his plant-houses ; and, on Farmers’ Clu Mazon 
: for the scab, * by many farmers, wat the ee a trial it was fund 2 nor valuable Aries for oe April 2: On deep Cultivation —Mr. 


eeks before going to Coleseed e tivation is necessary 

5 lambs, at the — — ar the score. * had TO before ormation as to the mode o wears — ted: 720 tare herself has ord tis neces Py 
re dressed i belies the flush o e anà the particular vere was fully, ob- disintegrating the surface of our globe, using the 

E and a rmination to cultivate a sufficient r and of water, and clothing it with vegeta by 

uant ity for all 2 purposes resolved upon. Ani in- hEr Almig hiy wisdom to the or to the barge — 

2 is applied to | quiry was made for the sort required at th perishable material as a record of his skil; chemical ui 

he ont rubbed in secundum artem eral | at TART of the eee but all to no purpose; _ the by the ultimate action a heat an a osii of air and water, 


PEETS oe 


bs; Niem fo ee Lon t architectural — of antiquity. It 22 singular fact, tha? 
8 up the follo 150 oan care is A nee 1 arely do t wi er who would deny the benefit of 
taken to keep them about a — en ois | 3 the cultivation of; bat at 1 1 succeeded, as I | a long s mer-fallow on tenacious soils—I mean 4 frequent 
spare food. I should have stated, however, that if en supposed. A florist and a friend, who hi el ploughing z of the surfac soil ; and yet, how fen * subsoil! 
fe infected animals are very bad, they first re k require had cultivated, as he vid the biaa An sort admit the advantage of a similar op 2 wondered at 
“ knotting,” that slightly smeared on inquiring after, gave me a ‘small packet of his * This seemin Sarto — Be avy and dere . 
dis tore aad pow places which would soon extend al =~ thus the first difficulty was supposed to be over- | kingdom is 3 or drained too shallow to Mt pre- 
over the sheep; after being dressed with a nearly equa’ e, and its cultivation proceeded with. The number ions dralnlug 18 1 has F M — lande the 
quantity of ointment to each sheep, in a few days ae of er prepared was 160, which were for planted | open draining is most t injurious. On ed soil; but when? 
ully examined, and if no fresh places have ont the first week i n May . As the ts grew it | subsoil is broken up below those furrows without 

ho’ 


ob 


is shown on the | tion Pe 850 the rr. rae e 5 bee $ 2 9 upper soil, 
2 Š mass, into which the horses’ feet force the 
— acting more is = but this close | Ji a irgi it 8 of the inert description, and th pa 8 bed, very much to ite injury. Tn fact, 5 is a grent Arain 
watching must continued, and evi means adop repare. to cultivation, an ; z 1 
to improve their health. Tf after a short ‘time a“ knot” in 3 continued E ER the chilliness of | must precede subsoiling. There are man rigor?” 

d 


culti 

w 

very i ri rface 

e September a second gathering tagnated, undecomposed subsoil, we shall 2 „eee 
D about 14 Ibs. ; and abont- the teginning . EArt — Laer, ditches has been spree, 

attention will seldom fail, with good of October, a final gathering of the young leaves was : retell 7 —— 1 a miserable bed bed and is most eK 

su 


25 

ES 

8 
115 
a at 
5 i 
ei 


pr 
E 
2 
JE 
57 
1 
g 
: 
H 
HE 
‘i 


of dr 

shoal than any mere 1204 application. . an ves dirtied from proximity to the 
eterbo 

a -L 


ion emak governed 
2 h ° th inferi o 
“According to this statement, the e per — obtaining subsoils w ate ies of Time, chalk, 15 


Societies. | 
-ROYAL AGRIOULTUR ALS acre, would be in the followin roportion, allo hic to take a greste. ter liberty mith 
GEE Situs, wan held at thes diny o Hise 6000 plants to that space; tile a 7 patie ie . soll, Twill . — what soi soils T eo consider require 
00 e avy, 
: the Earl of CHICHESTER, Presi fpr Best UPON A CALCULATION, OF 6000 or the treading of many horses es EA ag 
i : pone sce ee — value 1 gh — a subsoil, being ops an — 3 
ys, Baron Mertens, H . Cli Tep e way Š . 
G: C. Agar, Me. Almack, —— Darker H. ig 7 i 1 6 evening dews ; whereas if done when been, 
Cocke’ a Dennison, Mr. lingwood, Rev. J. ha c ne 
e. 8 N ; : 1 hard bottom of iron sandstone, or formi 
Mr. Brandreth Gibbs, Mr, E Greenwood, ir, E. at firat sighs, and I S01 por noro wil ones staze fre eal s 
2 ? i : | * A 
n Fisher Mr. Kinder, Mr. Neil | cover any mis mena in the cman while it should be *Pting water, headed back by eran i by pressing "P 
Professor | remembered ti experiment w 8, and a | soit } 
Mr Ha Mr. Robert Smith, Mr. T or, and | more unpropitious season could 1 not be he The depth of 4 to 5 inches, rg me crops 3 roots 
i ai ee green crops, a L ae 


iy 
1 
ai 

18 
aa 


qe 
By 


3 

32 

Penal 
ih . 


2 2 
it 
8 25 
3 
cee 

3 

= 

(z 

d 
2 
£ 

$ 


E 


eeper, and are consequent 1 less 
vicissitudes of extreme cold drought et 


Buxton, bni inns Shadwell. „much sum per acre might be ari d. Th 
x mi; realise 8 
Thetford, Norfolk , ere. John ina e of Hen- penses af cultivatt il in e ex i 

The ir sed apania were ore Gaal H quiring principally to be kept clear from subject, for before I drained and sw 
ed: a 10 > U as our 

— bete Benuchamp, Langiey-park, en ee repeated hoeing during the summer, aodig stupa ves often injured, as cng of 

par Richard” , Norwich have re no hesitation in asserting that it is not an — Wheats, 1 have traced traci of W : 
Mallet, So ‘Trenchard, Perridge House, Shepton.| ing erop, One man would superintend 3 or 4 acres; 10.18. ae i DA a iri tre 


n 
00 


a tion parison; the | secures them from stagnant wat psoiled my lead py 
roots in an, 


P 


g—1849.] 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


much more labour and capital, and produce 


ae ult of ‘deepening the staple is | when we must 
for versl Teid, but more P erfect development of the 8 much eee peers of pes from the present space of Notices to Corresponde nts. 
ran caase a less wth is prolonged, an ‘ound, This can be effected only by greater depth of cultiva- | AGRI. CHEMISTRY Society: Alnus * . Huxtable. 
— Their prematu urity asa inferior — of shallow fon, and largely increased supple of manure, ree and | BOX-FEEDING : Inves stigator. Tou — ust 
ist to heba and unpulverised substratum le ted | more Jive stock will help us to the latter; but t cottage- declined. It states no new facts : vine at gt aot E 
with a nent a * that iron ote power gardens and allotments on our heaths and 3 give un- animals be unhealthy ? must 45 not be mise t 
n ie snd other eminen the mosphere whioh, contains e ae soils &c., placed on their own excrements ? ser rable 5 
j : 
1 seractiDg — ly; if so, this at a accounts for the | under th ae = ’ is no necessity for any such ones „ 1 
e e and exposing to ar, i ee eren eden eae 0 id to receive eatement of 
tenacious > iro d with it. ould b 
en enen by analysis nea PS pee cent. of peroxide o Lonpon, May 5 Monthly ele of the Com- of any correspondent who can furnish u e 
my beary sil sdvantage of subsoiling is the destruction — mittee of Management. — Present: Messrs. J. Bead l, | of his cattle during the past winter, wh Ae ſed in —— 
ion : I know of — es where roots of Thistles W. Bennett. W. Chefiins, W.F laist Hobbs, W. Hut- nan r yards, A 
oie was ms thick ber} copies eige 4 mi sturbed ley, C. W. Jo n, T. Knight, J. J. Mech C. N I Dm: P 75 See Àa page T . 
py the fork bog ordinary plough, Dressings of chalk, marl, bit, W. Shaw (of the Strand), Robert Smith (Devon), fidence in an opinion foun d * mere ee Aii we. 
prased N Sis sink down in stratified layers, and in a few R. B. Smith (Edmonton), J. Thomas, H. Tr hewy, J. should be inclined to place the dea ains 4 feet d pind 8 jor 
aod DT ow the 3 of o —.— ploughing, z. often restore Tyler, and Owen Wallis, T. Knicut, E in the chair. a 4 ge the prio and Gallars sh 45 hould be 2 much longer 
ene the land by “Tf we needed an argument against The minutes of the last meeting were read, confirmed together Common Bort, 80 as to hold the line of pipes rigidly 
d er jands, s often met with i er he mid- | and signed by the chairman of this day. ort following | Foot-ror IN SHEEP : EH. Pare the feet so as to o permit th 
ch es, te impos bility of cross-ploughing them would gentlemen were elected Members of the escape re any confined matter, and dress every two days with 
Jaså counties, still, being so formed, a little hydrochloric acid. Make the sheep w l 
dee, to alter too suddenly the relative position of C. R. Cundell, Weston Farm, Andover, * m, laid d ind 4 
duagerous indeed to subsoil, M R. F. Jennings, 88 Devon. from the weather: to yenin, 17700 —— a place protected 
ne ls; but we have evidence on Mr. H — E. To oo M lesa. * — Sussex. powdered * al. T e e 
1 cwt. 
Paris's Surrey Raa especialy in destroying or. AS oe . Panou. North Stoneham, Southampton. = 4 Hot tons 4 ght horses may ea p of hay a day, that 
chalks is highly ted weeds. At the farm of the Royal x Raper, Chichester, Sussex. ood Grass 1 land, | 4 may grow on 14 or 15 acres of 
ge growth of eker. si alow 8 75 H. Self, Martin Great Bedwin, Wilts Mar: E ks where he th 
agricultural ae taltivation, v p the tate aed aa | H. Wolf, Park Hill Farm, Andover, Hants, hë tens 49 without success, Sot the Pyrenean Maize, as 
been derived by hion: 1 R. E. Yellard, Bideford, Devon, Spi ono eminent “seedsman, 
management of Mr. Wilson : the soil there is mostly mds is afraid of the on for sowing it being past before he 
tone; the breaking up of this by me other names of 8 Le aem We e an get any ? * 
n and n has oos oisy, and ged for the first time. The following works we ted o are rode tg * PouLTEY, by the Rer. E. 8. 
per Ams rattling effect. ave s genera ya Brest A et for N ixon, price 5 ready, and m " 
the practical experience of agriculturists ; but vane oe mittee or ord 40 Bons Club, and the err of the C Com Office of this * — of all Nn an 
thet on the chalks and —— custom bas permed reered the donors em: 5 Pre KILuine : C says, a correspondent of the 21st ult. dis te 
ben practical experien ot — deep cultivation would b “ The Rural TE, Parts in continuation. By| the truth of pigs eS quickly killed by a blow pu 5 
. There are some which subsoiling or * rs 1 the publish head than by being stuck with a knife. Stoppi the ye pon 
cattiration is, rarely requis, except to remove deep. | 4 „ armers Magazine.” In monthly numbers. By} day at a blacksmith’s shop, to get my 8 * Aer 
weeds, from neglec arming, or to recove hen th 
= dressing of mar! or o chalk. — — . ose, hot, — ache. Sporting Magazine.” In monthly numbers. By| Bis opini e said, “T have just killed €i — oe 
: ose, rich, friable ve; 7 Joams, itor. ever th e ali b. 
— ved — all these soils air and wa r have . 4 “ e author. for Farmers on the Cultivation of Maize.” By Pres: L LT T The Yo rkshire l — Vis larg and Py ew 
a very free passa i Bare ee know that ny in wis Iof National Di „ s er ge illage on 
— EE 15 Aeren matagi Ay co ro) Surrey an — 
mie mia eep Å tiding, te by 8 rolling, the (Moen Pablished in 1527. By Mr A. ‘Boots, the author. Roration cr Osor? A Phor 3 Ma pe Beaten by writes 
absol: lute ly 0 arly superseding the 6. A Pamphlet ‘On the Agri gricultural Va lue of Sewage and thus deri ı iara farmer, and of s 
common me. Wie eee caked oak and cost of deep other Drainage Waters, — Mr. Cuthbert Johnson, the author. years’ standing, I shall feel ees obliged if you, or your 
ee . "that where bane labour can The following Members were chose ub-Com- readers, can direct a course of cro ing and stocking my 
e plea ays — td oie as = nd a — 1 5 mittee to the . gements for the — to enable me 5 —— > — ar of the times. The 
comparison wi : istance from London is 15 miles, an uarte 
the relative power, In recy strong clays during dry weather Anni W er of che Club, to take place at Green- mile eh az — station. Below I re che lang 8 
manual labour is almost er so also in hard, con. wich on Tuesday, June 5, being the day following and t it— 50 acres of arable land, light and 
Tocky bottoms, mode of subsoiling i. as follows : | next onthly Meeting :—J. , W. Fisher Hobbs, gravelly; ; Bry do. ' en meadow. Rent, —— aa ; taxes, 22%. ; 
A ar to ity three pres 5 — . u. C. W. Johnson, T. Knight, W. Shaw (of the Strand) 3 rate, hers Bore 8 [The su w — 
plough, . . Ti 
equalising Scotch 1 iron whippletree, Smith of Deans- and Robert Smith.— th : of . Fisher | beh deserves the attention of agricultura! tural ia 3 a. 
poo subsoil plough foll the track of the first plo . seconded by Mr. Trethe w lved, | Rusa Cuemrstry, 2d Edition, revised get arged; by 
— tong horses, bre breaking 1 77 e ches Dy the sub- | “ Tha Secretary be requested to make out, by the Baward So ye "Baq , may be had at the office of this Paper, 
‘ie he > son pe Tno cos ed. pe is again | next “Monthly Meeting, a list of Fore Members in arrear! Seps: JAP Oats, per 3 21 1 Sadan ve 
iors at 2s £018 0 of Subseription, in order to enable the gd to Wheat, 14 bush. ; Beans, 1 e to 8 Bean: 3 
men at le. 0 take proceedings for the ee of the sa 2 * bush. ; . 5 4 — — ; Rye-g ss, 1 to be 
. PANES alr canes over Wi Ou, 0 £. 3 es 3 


#1 
. bad six-eighths da per 
Of course the 2 chain ns and 


Miscellaneous. 
Spade ineo e society of 75 
taken eight · ac 


ATERTROOFIN G: J L 
Goswell „Lon z kee 
Misc: YZ. We do not undertake to answer enquiries as to 


ore pecta 
. Communications aching town after Wednes cannot be 
wered before the following week. * 


Markets. 
COVENT GARDEN, May 12. 
easonable weather has 8 — 


ce = atoms by e 5 k s ady, and The cold uns 8 
. wedges itself am t th . . . t d dear. Fruit ha tered littl 
tageonsly empio, „The fork and the spade can o Ae d . th hird. There is hardly a village within 7 8 nt. Pine apples fetch from 6s. to 1 0s. per ‘pound. > 
more woke Te, during the winter months, in soils of a | miles of Huddersfield but has its allotment Bears or Hothouse Grapes are good an 8 Nuts in general 
clung and in wet than some of mine, which are too industrial farm, Leeds I — 8 for the demand. Oraret and Lemons are plen- 
— * ; Weath a more friable field fal, t V Danie may bo owed at 
a cost of 425, per — h, seven acres with advantage, at H from anton be chal nch, and Carrots at from 9d. to 2s. Broccoli is 
a this to be explained 10 ing plo ighing, Tleave the det Calendar of 9 sufficleat tor the deman , French Beans, Rhubarb, 
paced in this matter, and Me Whom ans 2 iene 3 MAY. — mg 2. “Po toes Sane" lek — a mci 
much labour he h. seeing | DORSET r May 7. — Since last report, having had e their a ee 
r as employed, i vin — of spade te last week. New Potatoes fetch from 28. b. Let- 
...!... E | te "aa oe ee a rn 
aun is, d : e, an if ti fi le fo th th as it has y i : 2 
Pere Alte in over. tricts during the winter and ont <a p ik e To or mE mon thane has e Tioga — : vein nnd Roses Lily of the Valley, Cine 
But even with the most favourable weather we sha ave no r 
inches an Common crossed and intermixed ù h 111 h rarias, Tropæolum F 15 
long, and ng teeth or spikes 18 | time for resting on our oars, for much has to be rectified this 
3 f ial four horses abreast, the driver fectly done last ; Pine-apples, per Ib., 63 t — ws. peck, 4s to 7s 
* to a po ye aac poosi s oe | cannot get protection from foreign grown 3 one anon try to i * ae 115 cl 2 ord ghar} 25 to 3s 
— protect ourselves from home grown weeds, allow other 2 
— : 8. = to the surface, to be | nations the monopoly of them if they will. We have got in all ar ter a * 1 123 Walnuts, kas ag: is 6a ee 
í at pride u, he = "ot aubsotling, (cone) — our Grass seeds, ad have a few ag of — 5 all in Apples, war is Se Nats, g 15 ya — ky ate 
8 ; 8. ve ood order; an by te we are ng in Mango urze Ti : “9 
— j Ee n soils to settle down, and N ise the drills for them at the distance of 26 inches, — ay a pA 9 2 5 . . 100 lbs., 608 to —.— 
De ionnd e in trench-ploughing our then apply about 20 ate of good dung pe r acre; it is spread pee Wy, 1800 20s 3 ee ee 
armes ds l n the bottom of the drills, then the dril 3 rs ta x 
M arranged, ; this I| the dung, and th 
Rot to plough, | previous to dibbling the seed with . — s hand , machine (a BLE 
Ot the f The atta machine which 8 —.— — * its work very satisfac- Capers P doz., —.— — 6d Onions, p. Leger vd 
‘ed Reale? ws in the | torily). We have been ing our Wheat and red, p. og = s og Py bos mag . 
e oard, arley ; some ofi it with Cross clod e crusher, and some with s, p. doz, bunches, 5 
at to e, and itis a] plain roller. The Wheat round this place looks very well; to 5 r 
s ted team ; the same ma; be — of an Barley; ; — with recent sunshine, Brocoli, white, p. bun., 1s to 2 ! : 
nston’s powerful | Grass is begin ass tare dark delowk had We mat per bundle, 6d Shallots, per Ib., 6d to 10a 
moy „say srw present appearances himn n due time abundanee | ki va RH ro M 
to require power Sorrel, p-b ve, 9d to 1s Artichokes, Jerusalem, p. halt 
5 on of Mr. Smi Y in which both fo man and b beast, Our work tor some time to come will 4 per 2 * 15 24 sieve, 9d to m ph 
N on oot cro K tf per cwt., * y P. se., 4d to 
STIRLINGSHIRE CARSE Farm, May 5.— The weather having | — — per bus dan tiot 3 3 N Qs 64 
become very fine for — time past, we have been nnu em- | Turnips, p. * in to 28 Mashiro per 7 6d to- 
S ployed with out-door ur, chiefly engaged with p — Beet, adhe 0 — , po 
aay land for — and uay it, oat A although —— ~ „ 100, 1s 6d to Small Salads, p. pun., 2d to 8d 
deal t tto a fi l et it is paragus, E =» 2 
3 3 3 f i. — “pods 88 ; manes cob pee TS 4 Savary per banc aoe 
r Pi “ped sn 5 Bean eans, p. 100, bag = 38 to 3d 
W: the 0 ns an 
1 each, 4 . to 
3 Oats, are coming fo hatin Tg A a pretty stalk, and it is 7 s 
Ce g dent that none of these grains have been injured by the late | Leek peo ao is tots. Parse , p. hf. eive, Is 6 to — 
at ; F y Radishes p, 12 hands, 4dto sd | Marjoram,green,p.bun.,9dtols 
2 3 : * 
a princip ates rina iy 68 nite now S part of our | p. doz. bun., 5s to Mint, greea,per bunch, 3d to 4d 
ns exertions al, | Mangold l, and we are at present employed in planting the Spinach P. sieve, 1s to 2s ; 
om, deeply regret ainder, and preparing the land for Swede crop. The HAY.— = A of 36 Trusses, 
Blass, p 20 many 1 et in the We are har- Sur Dr aa 
t rar Iy cay inches ing, Wheat and Oats, and hoe t and Prime 7 te: 758 to 80s oe 60s to 95a 
7 an we fin, The 1 ree much, but in many places it is Inferior 55 70 — ese oro — — 
i ition, wha n — * e 2 2 
tivation + 8 roots, but the growing of green crops is very | New Ha; 2 . 
mer ue n much neglected in * M air proportion of y > MaRKET, May 10, Poo 
that’ our land with green crops year, and we never find the dif- | Prime Meadow Ha e Inferior ... . . 75sto 848 
8 hich ficulty our neighbours com ain of, ¢ —_ when they grow a few or ditto... .. 50 New e over se . . 
` for con- Ga rea ap do with them. Our neig! —— — — | Str a „ 
9 e ye tae ot onda anpa Aapan than catt la Clover S 5 ` Josmua * 
it, Some fallow their land for two years, and the Wheat crop ae en 
year is below 10 bushels per acre. We grow Wheat 
after Turnips at the rate of 34 to 88'bushels per acre, and our ee ·⅛· and Sure see 
land is not of first quality as demand for all Hops with colour and 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


$ 


[May 19, 


302 — 
— i — {ILK PANS, PROPAGATING GLASSES 4. 
OES.—S WarunsiDz, May 7. aps be written the turn —— Beans and MIL GLASSEs, 
The gora 4 — tee report Souraw tanz —— arrivals during | Pe saper ot inquiry, and we advance our JAMES PHILLIPS & CO. heg to hand thei Ke. 
he last week bave been very extensive, and bave met a — 2 saray paid nigel the latter Is. per ar. Oming to t rices, as follows 
= ata considerable reduction from our fo r 2 44 3 1008 e i thoitende is dull, ona GLASS MILK P 
the warm weather has checked consumption very much, and quantity of foreign S owing, the diamet h 2s. 0d | 20 inches diameter 
afi: the value of every sample Prenton * 4 10 2005.5 | prices d. per qr. bs ft J Mas 2 6 i a 8 
ay’ oOtations :— ks went 608. to 200s, oy 3 ” a 
pn nag — “Ba. to Hon 1 Beoeh, Whites. 906 to oa 008 = soe fs hi be for 1 — e This ee ‘ bed „ 56 
8 Whi tes, 1008. to : Durch, 90s. to 110s, ; Belgian | good ave not much in pRoPacatiNe BEE 
Prene! ue 101 m pe ago was 1 mo and many holders GLASSES. | ü 2 : MBER 7 
firm e ess transact 3 5. 24— | 24 es long 
MTT, OS, we A but there was more to pu. ’ 2 22 * 
The number — Beasts is rather less than on Monday last, was not l bal arger u os pot as 1 ap i A * ee ” 10 
oO Pond able ane 4 ver ood, ase üs 25 8 * > iy 
sil itn e * at f bu, ayer apd i the weather where ite — done at any reduction in prices. T 5 —0 10 18 : 15 
being good a fair N is 1. e ttle more opp H y is the turn lonir. ons seg p pa 43 ig ” is 
sia ere of pth pe frar is emeten. a 5 ey es altered in value.—The Oat trade is firm at late quota- -3 N ie 5 * 14 
ado sined. The weather is cold for Lam ns, — T de of the kingdom since the 4th | ; n 5 sF + 16 
A fal nt prices are not 2 8 55 “Calves ee gu 11 st. has ed in an inani state, wh e attri- | 1 75 e — 8 12 » 19 
— mi — —1 1 Ben s, 800 Sheep, and 79 Calves ; | bute chiefly to nett continuation of very large arrivals ; — on Ma — 
from Norfolk and . 2000 coke ; and from Scotland, 500 ese in a ure are owing to the prevalence of pea 55 tsing te wá SP TR T. 5 
Per st. of8lba.—s d s d Pery 2 3% 0 the o Tils strong pra winds, se +n age py all that | Adress, 116, Bishopsgat eer Wits ut Lond ‘a 
Best Becks, 4 A orth and Bal as at once. 
fords, Kc. ...3 2to3 4| Ditto Shorn 0—3 4| was afloat in the Ne San E A te 
Best Short-horus 3 0—3 2 Ewes & 2d quality 0—3 6| Wheat has fallen in price about ls. per a holders TLEY ign ee = 
2d quality Beasts 2 4 — 2 10 Ditto Shorn ..2 4—3 9 are indisp _— * 5 - uction, Delish Manufanines, 41 PAO A 1 
Best Downs. and A 4 homie 6 * arrivals may now ecte: ore moderate scale, — square foot, for the usual sizes required, many Nang 
21 3 0 84 sand consumers 8 do not hol largely. Barley 5 ; 0 an are kept read packen — immediate 4 
Beasts, 3279 ; Sheep and Li 2 “Calves, 137 ; Pigs, 220. and Oats are also rather lo pees and Beans PRTENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK CROWN. 
We havea * . the demand, owing to the Nene inguired alia, and the” turn eare TILES and — WATER-PIPES, Pk 
8 good. — pane — GLASSES, GLASS MILK PANS, PATENT PLAT 
buren pe rable, 1 ad. Lrvenroor, Faar, Max 11. winds still limit o ORNA AMENTAL WINDOW GLASS, and GLASS 
rrivals. To-day there was an 1 average aon e 0 or. . s HETLEY and Co., 35, Soho-square, London. 
Brno m 2 Wheat was taken to a 3 yi Tuesday’s rates, and a — Gardeners’ Ch ronidle, first — — 
— walise a be enquiry, 8 roceeded more easily 
2 @ at the 1 * that es Oats, hel for a small advance, 
898 tmeal w. maro only i retail ee Barley the t E. 4 np W. H. J ACKSON. aes 
2 ‘ were may be said of ee * — anne ° e a, 2 CROWN 6 ASS 
ere int pe — of an active demand, recede t tural 8 at a peier 
Holla PATENT P LATE of su manufacth ture, for 
from -houses, for whic 5 575 these articles daps: y 
— BARLRHT. OArs. RTE. | BEANS. | PEAS po a 9 1 nferior 8 ORNA agree GLASS 
3 10 2 newest es: s for e 
3 3 „3 2 $ 6 M 2Q8sl0d|17s 1d 26 44 28s 90 31s 6d | E. an H. J. als iapa 4 ENT 01 
t horns 3 3 0—8 8 5 | 28 9 16 9 26 5 28 1 20 6 | GLASS, Thin Glass, Slides and Cells for ae 
* ; Beasts 2 Ditto $ wed B= 3 2 3| 28 6 17 0 23 1| 28 5 30 11 | French Shades, Propagating W & e — by 
aud sam 8 5 4—6 0 5| 28 8 16 8 22 4 28 11 128 9 Prices, and every information ed on 
4 0 — , 4| ales. 8 8—4 6 — o| 28 10 17 2 7 5 29 3 29 9 | their Warehouse, 315, Oxford. street, Tondon, 
3 63 10 Pi BE Baek. S] May Dirc 9| 2811 |17 6 25 4| 29 8 30 1 
* Sheep Lambs, 7 ; Calve 304 8, 250. 
83 i adds Pigs Agereg. Aver. | 45 0 28 9 |1611 2410| 28 9 30 2 THOMAS MILLINGTON, 87, : 
— Gadi nu. BRITISH PLATE ee 1 51 
i 10 inus). „ ne 
Moxpax, Mar 2. Abe he supply dee, ly aba Sani 5 jag Be ipo ha nra E in sizes under 1 foot superficial, 1s. 2d. per foot; this is the 
the at | me — n ai eo} 7 * s best article for r 125 e of ne be 
small, and eptin 7 ICES. PR. | PR. PR, Y iption, as nothing itin an ordinary way. 
only sae — 40 25 T 17 T | | | | | | — — ass, in rope te: feet 3 16 oz e 
; ni : -m | No. 26 o., No. 32 oz., 1128. e c 
upon the of this day se’nnight. of — a A nc Cut Squares, in 100 feet bet: No. 
foreign amount to 43,875 — aud — thes pime- ong — cot „„ mor san 4i m ae . per box, 
ance was larger than week, bi confined th 44 5 Ja y p PREA 
2 3 4 6 af i ods $., 
purchases to retail — at the ise — pa — | 44 3 1 | aes 25 0 be 8 2 3 0 * | 
London, Liverpool. Wakefield. | Boston. — . ee by in Grown ar Hoa = 72 
PRICES Meas rait i Tiles, 3 in., 10d.; I in., 1s. 3d. each; do. siin 4 — 
X May 1. May 8. Apr. 27 May 4. May 2. May 9. May 3. ay 10. . F e 7 H 7 2 * 8 
70 lbs. 70 los. qr. qr. qr. qr. 62 lbs, T lbs. 7 ed. ; fects in., 28, in Be. D ; i sinse nador saon 
d. 4. d.ſs. d. 3. {ei e. (8. d. 5. Bis. d. cial. Lactometers, for ond 
New, red 5 a6 pe 3 6 38 to45 5 10 6 3155 9 6 25.64. . at complete, ass Milk pans, Port 
2 Rolling po E s for Bulbous Plau. 
m White 9 7 46 9 7 , | memes aed dine Glace. 1 rap ee pess Gus ani Lanp 
Old, red + 6 6 96 6 6 — 6 0 6 505 10 6 3 —.— of | every 8 Linseed Oil Putty, & ba 
a Wi" ae. Ph is. Ra ae i — (6 2 6 916 0 6 8 Lead, 26s. Linseed Gil, Turpentine, Paints, 
Foreign. 6 8 8 44 6 8 — 5 2 7 05 2 7 0 Varnishes, 3 and Tools in every variety. 
480 lbs. barrel PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS, KING'S ROAD, CHELSEA. 
Rye—New fae 3 . 
F NER 3 . BY HER 
E Z7 6 MAJESTY’S 
per ara ding qr. qr. qr. LIL E 
Malting... 1 e ine E. e PENN a offers for pec Patent H morao 
i PE reg far amet perio 5 22 in mig 
f 2 nae . 12 oof, 28 feet 6 ins. boy 
sot adie feet 6 ins. long, 16 f feet an win Mirik 
oan tti — 
ae — cs 184. and Sy FO | 
17—30 18—30 
17—18 17—18 
196 lbs. 196 lbs. re 
1—1 1 | pottle at 
e of Metalite In 
po le agents ii Led ion, G. and J. DEANE, 
ment Warehouse, 46, King William-street, 
11—14 11—14 
1 . 
13 11—13 aa 
the 
Hoc 3 55 8 es, 
— — mental Poultry, Foreign Bire 
Fign. ibea onai Pi 
* or UBING, for Railw page aero) ani 
13—14 13—14 
per sack. | per sack 
34—39 36—38 
Gloucester, 
Un 
eg pe to be atta ched to pumps, water-t 
n 4 —.— James LYNE Hancock,’ 
18 10: James Lene Hancock invites the 
my 3 2 7 long lengths of PLEXIBLE CARD 
We 2723 ACTING HOSE-PIPE nents which 
I and C. STURGE, 


EE ee 


13 
1016849. 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


* op a 


a, comprisi ree or fou r quite 
wn Java, co a we strong z plants 3 Saccola- 
a very fine = Goa nthe, Vandas 2 

condicion, i — 5 bead brought . by 
b ere ed the day prior and morning of 


bad. 
r AND OTHERS. —— 
PRUTHEROE anp MORRIS will Sell 
Bartho on 


M Ess t, omew-lane, on THURS- 
2 2 at Mole i st-rate collection of 
Dat, eres, VERBENAS, HEARTSEASE, fine 
p. plants in bloom.—M ay be viewed th th 
had at the Mart, and of the Au 
— 
er e FLORISTS, AND OTHERS. 
had ROTH: MORRIS are in- 


. pa 


7 —— r on 
the principal See oeni; 2 of the Aue 
i Nursery, Leytonston , Esse 


stock, for the purpose of addin 
— — 
~ DALSTON NURSER 
r Florists, and N 
ND MORRIS a isr 
by Mr. J. . Smith, * sell by public Bae alias 
esex, o n MONDAY, Hay 21st, and 


— r ee 3 7 — 
E, 1 indica —.— 


pes, Cactus, Geraniums, C 


— 
Heliotro hrysa 
Verbenas, lar; ge Aloes , Mesembry — 
Duns, Wistarias, Roses, Sweetbriars, Clematis 8, 
— ble 1 &c.—May be 


5 had, 6d. each 
at shop, 
of uc- 


u s BROMPTON 
many years — eau GRAY, 
s a the con- 
one SANGSTER, 
Dowazp wae 5 3 
Vieh, g, or to SOLE and TURNER 
8, lanbury, Lond 
Pe Ra ge GABENcKOUERS AND OTHERS. 
min OSED F, a SHOP, HOUSE, and 
Eent rate situati premises 71 id a of lease 5 ina 
msive. Coming-in moderate. 


pr teat: 3 e 
— sae, post paid, to Mr. Moon, 21, King- 


Hionta, 2 


9 conveni 

ric who has 

principles his study and practice, 
gener: 


in the general 
. The Advertiser 
f to the owners of 


ee PIGS, POULTRY, . &e, 


303 


4 & HALLEN, ExcixRERS, Iron F OUNDERS, 


&c., No. 2, WINSLEY-STREET, OxrorD-sTREET, LONDON 


REDUCTION IN PRICE OF BOILERS. 


—̃ — —— 

COTTAM and HALLEN b having had experience in 
. and CONSERVATORIES 7 of eey or 
Of iro 
2 3 during that t 

ye buildin ngs 


time, can w h commence undertake to 
with economy — dispate 
R APPARATUS rop — dee 
— paildtuge (of which they h: 
00), fixed at greatly reduced prices 


he above and 
ave constructed upwards of 


and HALLEN have on show at their repository, No. 
Wi tnsley-atreet, Oxford-street, agreat variety of the 8 
JE for GARDENS, &c., at a REDUCED PRICES, 


Garden Rollers, and.glass frames, 
Garden Engines, Flow r Stakes, 
Garden Syringes, Flower-bordering, 
Watering Pots, Flower Stands, 
. Vas Garden — 
en 
* 


ing Ma chin Garden Cha 
Ev — — psi y n of — both plain — —— in 
wrought and cast iron, fi — &e. &e. 
HO ORTICULTURAL TOOLS and AGRICULTURALIMPLE. 
MENTS of all kin 
STRONG IRON HURD DLES, strained Wire Fencing, &c. 
Show Rooms at the MANUF A 3 th 2: 3 2 ey-street, and 
76. Oxford.street, three Theatre, 
BUDDING’s PATENT 8 -e a LAWNS, 
PLEASURE 3 9 ARERNG, Ee. 


MAN 
D bose FE ERRABE BE a see > SONS, P x Iron Works, 
ar St ge N Engineers, ‘Millwrights, Ma- 
chinists, Tron s Founders, and Manufacturers of 


Agricultural Be th 


his 3 may | be worked b epi persons who cannot use a 


a 1 
BUR BIDGE anp amay beg b ame A to inform 
their Friends, in 


of iron, they are enabled $ ble reduction in 
the price of their Boilers. “The see will be, now: 
0 in. will warm 50 ft. 4 in. pi . EI 15 0 
12 in. do. 75 ft. 4 in. pipe 8 
14 in. do. 100 ft. 4 in. do. 215 0 
i6in. do. 150 ft. 4 in. do. 310 0 
18 in do. 250 ft. 4 in. d 4 10 0 
21 in do. 350 ft. 4 in. do 5 
24 in. do. 450 ft. 4 in. do. 5 0 
New PATTERN BoILERS. 
80 in. will warm 800 ft. 4 in. pipe „„ 
36 in. do. 500 ft. 4 in 0 


Boilers with f able i 18i angie 
— e arms, u "bs. extr. 
uN 10s. rn: 1. * e, the same » price. in ne 
130, Fleet-street, phe 75 May 12 


ODE’ 8 PATENT IRRIGATOR & CATARA 
Working Models of these Implements may be seen in ope- 
ration me from 9 A.M. ae M., at 473, Oxford-street, Blooms- 
bury, where particulars m: e had, 


TIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT, 


EN 
—— tlt an ne ig y 


125 


ry 5 sie ERR 


ihare viaris, 
S p iiam — try; and ag ey “ys 85 
24 Wa pai int, it auswers 2 i yowe — kinds 
of 4 creeping piante- faai ge a always kep ock, of 
18, 24, 56, a os s wide t can, hov beássa 4 jobs to any 
dimensions d ga sickened sion arded free of expense, 
12 PEE wide 3d, pr psi » —— wide * me 
18 aia. 


24 „ 4 ” 
8 do., Id. . foot extra 
strong Imperial Wire Sheep Netting, 3 feet, 1s. 6d. per 
running yard; if eur anised, 2s. — eve ry description e of 


reguar rds S, ire ae 
Fly-proof Dish Covers, nae Safes, — ; „ Window 
Blin — pee per — foot, with bolts compl maho- 


T 
8c: the. It Aua E 
even and uniform surface than can be prod d by the most 
skilful mower. The Grass may — wile: — — — and may be 
4 in — San enabling the — to baer his lawns at 
the om ent time, and ren 


e. 
Up 00 ow in use. They are 
made of various sizes both for hand “and horse power, and the 


Adv r, with e capital a 
o! joining in P, n HIP with 


Messrs. Ran and May, Ipswich, are General Wholesale 
Agents ‘for London, Middlescs, — — adjacent counties ; also 
Northamptonshire, Lincolnshire, and the 


à in a few — “ng 
ah 15 to 1 R. „at Mr. Coop 


L. RES — COT- 
115 b See or occu pati 
— ExOR ios AGENT, 
—.— Sale, by Private Contract, 
D PROPE — Ty, situ 


e 


— ximity — are 
pe way — 15 miles o 
is —— for the Survey, stad 


— ot Property, 14, Upper Belgrave. 


** a 
es = durability ba tous 
Mark. 


lor 


Easte rn Cou 

eo —— are also sold by the following Ironmongers: 
ER Drury, Castle- 

ateaton- street, Manchester; Ae „ Mapplehe ck 2 Low 
Baling Birmingham; Mes i, Bri. 
gate, Leeds ; Mr. T. 2 eg oe N Yo ed 
ae Shre ws bu ury; Messrs. Sandars * 1 Derby 
and Mr. Jobn Wigglesworth, Market-place, Nottingha 
ETCALFE anp Co.’s NEW 5 TOOTH. 
MYR * SPONG . — Tooth-Brush 


divisions of the teeth, and ‘dentine — i “the ost 
ordi anner, d is famous for the “hairs not 
l An im ed es Brush, that cleans in a t 


ls. roved Clo 

part of the usual 1 and incapable of in injuring the finest nap. 
Penetrating Hair-brushes, with the durable unbleached Rus- 
sian bristles, which do not soften like common hair, Flesh 
Brushes of improved e oat powerful friction. Velvet 
ras which act in the surprising and successful man. 

The genuine — Duse. with its preserved valuable 
bsorption, vitali 


es of a ty, and durability, by means of 


— 1 ti 
profits re dastructive 
genuine Smyrna 8 


8 s Sole e — 


ent, 130 B, Oxf ford-street, 0 
. Beware ofthe words From MercaLre’s” adopted . 


street, Liverpool ; Messrs. Lister aad ees, i 


some houses, 


S; Gothic den bordering, 6d. per i 
an Tre 8, * 50 ; Garden arches, 20s, each; 
Flower Stands, from 3s. 9d, each; Galv Tying Wire 
pleats aoe trees, Dahlia Rods, and every deseription of Wire- 
eaving, for the use of paper- ers, &c.—At 


the e ar of Tromas HENRY Fox. 63, Snow-hill’ London. 


ALVAN R WIRE GAME NETTING.— 
d. per yard, 2 feet wide. 


Galvan- Japanned 
ron, 
* mesh, mnt 1 wide . * per yd. 
aoe * 3s 
2 “inch 4 gree Samal 4 7 J » . 
i eo „ light ad j 8 75 e ” 
ljip ch ,, strong i 10 » * 
lj-inch „ extra strong s 14 ù ” 
All the above can be made any wi with 2 at pro portionate prices. 
If the r half is a coarse mesh, it — e the price onè- 
— . — netting for pheasantries, 3d. 
warded — ae 85 
y BARNARD and BISHOP, 4 
free of expense in London, 2 
Hull, or or Newcastle, 5 


304 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


~~ CHEAP AND DURABLE ROOF ING. 


BT HER 


MA JESTY’S PATENT. 


Ce So. 
M‘NEILL anD Co., ri Lamb . - Bunhill- 
K only Patentees of 
HE ASPHALTED FELT FOR ROOFING 
dings, Shedding, Workshops, and for Garden 
hn ultural Sh it is this F 
t ow 

gan persi — SILVER MEDAL 
nd adopted by 

AND FORESTS, 


Paizes, and ist 
Her Maszsty’s Woops 


It itis half the price of any other description of Roofing, and 
ects @ great davidg © f Timber i of Roofs. 
Made to any — ig — 32 inches wide, 
Pri — — PER Sau g Foo 
ons for ite Oe, and Testinonla Is 
mith age nen es 4 giana Gen- 
. 


troction 


part of the 
town or coun — — 

ga” The Pub ic ve 5 that — fore Works = London 
or Great Britain w 


D RE. AND 588 
Patent Felt Manufa — ee Bunhill-row, 
roofs covered wi seen, 
t the entrance to West- 
. M'NEILL and Co.’s Felt sot 
Surveyorship "of Chas, Barry, E 
of Woods and Forests are 
d the Com- 
Rooms at with 
their Felt. — 
Nors.— 
— in Tengths b i best ot suited to 
more than th 


, 24,000 feet. 
sending direct to the korni can be sup- 
eir Roofs, so that they pay for 


M avery 
— 


mof me Felt. 


informa’ tion afforded on the construction of Roofs, or 
— particular aj application 


1 


_ Gia. 
Gara 


em at er — — Hon. e ag of nate — 
sec had the h : 
2 * E; perfect satisfaction, 
to show informa 
They al so beg to refer to the houses built by: them 21 65 0% 
past season, ote the Mes ond ful A p 
don, in Botanic Garden at Chelsea. Mr. M 
rt wil e Ne the work, and answer any enquiries. 
They Deg al he Suling only — en to, as the 
atin 8 erected b 


gentry in the country, and tose non 

—— furnished free. 
STRAWBERRIES, FLOWERS, e. 

Re BERTS’S HORTICULTURAL DOUBLE 

TILES.—A saa in seer Coe registered, Pastor 

ww Stra’ 


by the Horticultural peas, m who wish to 
berries to ye 8 — should purchase the 
speci may seen, together with an im- 


TERS’, ! Seedsman, 74, K William. street, 
London, who is appointed Agent man, Stott — 


HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEAT 


ALSO THE raren 2 rane CHOICEST PLANTS, 
VINES, &c. 


i are extensiv cae rvatories, Fo HOT Wh : 
e, ea! W. 
the m n ost im . 


at LESS THAN per 
logues forwarded 


$ 


ROYAL LETTERS | 


drach be 


FO 
TAYLOR, W Mrd AND MABERLEY, 


28, UPPER GOWER ye: AND 27, IVY LANE, PATER, | 
OW. 


NOST 


babe 111 on Natural Philo- 


Ae Agricultu 


E cts the by eae ew AR be KELL new * 


ane Ke. in the 
with 43 er 2 24s. cloth. 
ld wtha 


my 

„All who seek 3 tion shou. t Young is not 
mere r writer, but by far oe most popular of those 
whose accuracy e in a vast range of subjects, 


and who haye actually written throu -y that range.” — 
Atheneum. 

vial Chemistry. — 
rth Edition, 8vo, 10s. 


fag 


“Tt is not 5 — to say, ‘that the puii 


sor Liebig’s — anic 3 of Agric 
era of hese 3 ees $69 Pap isd agricultural science. 
Its accepta dable ; for following 
closely i — the, straight pach ‘of — philosophy, the con- 

clusions which are drawn from its data are incontrovertible, 
— — 5 — . 

k infinitely superior to its predecessors, and t 

very 36 extent unlike them.“ - Gardeners“ Nl 
[Notice of Third Edition.] 


Liebig's n into the Motion 
ES 


Liebig's Animal Che 


Turner's 


Parnell’s ‘Applied Chemistry ; > 


Instruction 


The Singing M 


This work 
contains, in connection with the rerai remarks on the 
ellis of evaporation in N his opinion as to the origin 
of the Pot — Disease; also a very — 1 +d a Ger- 
man, for the protection of the Potato plant from disease. 


OF THE JUICES IN THE ANIMAL BODY. 


mistry; Or C 
MISTRY IN 9 APPLICATIONS TO PHYSIOLOG 
and PATHOLOGY. Third Edition, almost wholly 5 
3 en. 8vo. Pen Ł Ge PE half of the work) 6s. d. cloth. 


“ The 
ing matter as as must saist him that we have mea on the 
nd that the industry rad modern che- 
ts has been most 8 tably employed during the sae eriod 
mich has Pasig since the os pane — of this. k ap- 
red. From the Editor's Adve 


n g the Work, 5 pach ady very s 
> — 8 delayed for the results of important 4 


and 11, each 138. cloth, 
n Ma- 
ES, ARTS, and DOMEST zp — 85 
Engravings and Illustrations. 
Preliminary Observ pupae Pe Tum: 
nati ion— = Preservation of Wood—Dyeing bid Neer 1 5 
Vol. II. contains: —Glass—Starch— Tan —Caout oe | 
—Borax — — 3 — — and Sul- 
phurie Acid and Soda. 


VI. 
arnell's Elements of Chemical Ana- 
LYSIS, QUALITATIVE 22 ei en ake Second 
Edition, r revised enlarged by the addition of 
200 pages 8vo, 14s. cloth. 


VII 
Elements of Chemistry. 
Eigbth Edition. Edited by Professors LIEBIG and GREGORY, 
1 vol. 8vo, II. 10s. 
The present is, | in | short, the most complete and the most 


we know no one in Pekan Germany that comes near it,” 
—Edinburgh Medical and aha Journal, Jan. 1, 1847, 


>gory’s s Outlines ‘of Chemis 
Second 


try, for 
Edition, fcp. 8vo., 12s., copu 


ns for Making Unfermented 
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—.— PRTSILCIAN. Fourt eenth Editio 
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mical, as well as a 
ere ey great servico to the 


ch , the ke introduction w wove 40 extra oa 58 L 10s 
little E combines tite Reduced to 14s., peal at ! 
over sade octet: 25 EPTON’S COMPLETE WORKS 0 


[May 12. 
st published, price 
ILLAGE HORTICULTURAL $ SOCIETI 


sails of one ES. The | 
with re 


tablished in — - 


By 85 Fi PARROTT. Price 2d. ROUGH Y RH 
RO 9 H RHYMES, for 8 
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London in an and — 24, Pa Paternoster. 9p, 
SAVINGS’ BANKS A D FRIENDLY — 
* 4 DB ished, fo e dist ae SOCIETIES, 
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ag oel Saji pi sitet * aj 
“ This is a useful little tract, intended for distribution 
those whom it is key to benefi viz., th amer 
icultural Gaz > pir a 


57 ft abor li 
Copi of th t supplied for circulation 
of 6s. per 100, , delivered f freo in in bap pe! * fe: 6d. for — 


. Parmes 


This day is published, — 8vo, 2 — 128. 6d., with numerous 


llustrations, 


soram — 
Published at the request of the ig oe 50 

Esq., —— the Members. ae r WILsO 

London, and of all bookseller: 


i S POEMS. New beta LF i 

OEMS. By > ae . | 

with evidence Fi tende 
ye ‘graceful and care 


“ The Author is a ve ery good translator. Bell: í 
„The Author pp mo t ha 2 in his rani oe 
cially on from Lam fiine. — Morn 
The transla an “4 pat a ps cult of ot Baya? we think, 
ite Gaze 


“Its pages abound 
—.— K accomplishmen 
nd 


pads 


Revie 

— —— and OTLEY, Pablishers, Conduit-street, London; — 
and sold by W. Mason, Chiches: 

. ͤ . 


In one thick 8vo volume, p: 
HE HORT: CULTURIST 3 ora ee 
the Science and Practice of the 
= 25 Kitchen, Fruit, and Foreing Garden . who have 
ice in these of 
„ H.S., Ke. Author of the 
of Cottage Farm, ge, Fare, oot 
Villa Ae ee c. ustrated wii 
perin on Wood. 
ondon: Wm. Poa 
ORTICULTURAL SOCIETY'S i 
CHIS Now ready, price 2d., fll and inp 
Report of this Exhibition, with III — 
ME INT to the pA fad ts! GARDENER. ae 
3 An y book seller, or direct from the office forro samj 
tage Gardener” free), if three penny P 


enclosed with the 1 
London an and Co.,147, Sond 


SCAPE GARDENING AND ae 
TECTURE. New Edition, with large 
Rode — * 


cording to its O 5 serving a 
Hi of Animals, and an 1 1 85 
parative my; the Crustacea, 
obs yeti translated 3 the 
Plates. 


ee and Surgical Journal 00 Sheets of Coloured E Mee pee 
“Wer p tion of tases This celebrated work e “the 
the publie.”—Times, Natural d is the only on one es . ert 
poston The plates are engra eon” upon ee 
oloured, compri —-* 4000 figures 


x 
aster. Cheap Edition. 
No. I. FIRST LESSONS 155 ce 
0. » 
PIOR OF AE AND THE NOTA 
No. Tne RUDIMENTS OF 


OF HARMONY, 


HOROUGH BASS. e 18. 
No, — Fii FIRST CLASS ee te Thirty Sim- 
ple and PI Airs 
for Young Children. P n Ea 
No. IV. THE SECOND CLASS TUNE-BOOK. Pag 18. 6d. 
No. V. THE HYMN TUNE-BOOK. Price 
-| Greek and wae sap y and My- 
THOLOGY, a Dictionary of. By i Writers, pes 
by Dr. Suirn. With Illus on Wood, 
medium Svo, 5“. 15s, 6d., cloth. 
XII. 


d Roman Antiquities, a Dic- 
TION. ; 
m EAE OE Ouest 8 
* A List of Publieailons wi will be sent 
any one writing for it, e 


ing 
Birds, Fishes, Insect, & 


ablished at 14h Sia ga 
Great or cakes 


ll 105. * 
ows GENERAL SYST 
BOTANY, taining a ` soription Os 
Petey Bide their an “ Dore 
f Growth, Culture, and a in — 


conomy, be., 2 
and —_ * the 
Wood che ong Mi p 
* The E are respectfi y infi 
the: above works being very limited, 
h — dat the fall prices = of S 
* pad 2 at the 
n all branches 
9 OI OF BOOKS i i d. hand, will bè 


e 


fr of Noys, U UPPI 
lid 


and E 
7 — ei 


E GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
\GRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 


A stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


No. 201849. 


SATURDAY, MAY 


19. 


[Price 6d. 


DEX. 
Ireland, May-day in 
Land, to summer fallow 


Leases e „ 313 6 

Lime, . 316 a 

pect D- 315 e 
an 


—— 
t stealin g. 
Plaut po a AA 18 . 
re ato —.— ase of 1849.. 


ria. e 


312 < 309 
w 2 + 310 


maculatum 48 
Whe late . . . . 310 e 


robberies... «s308 2311 4 Beinn ts fed ssn 300 
* 317 6 | Stable os, Oke 
Meese B10 e Stock keeping. . 316 
haces 3IL 6 | Sun di sé + 312 
Dablin » 310 a | Tobacco growing 307 
imeen fet ot duese: 310 6 Worms, to Kill... ... . pee) 


Ą FLORAL AND FANCY FETE will be — at 
n the 21st and 22d of JUNE 
pod hed — Royal Asylum of the St. Anne’s ‘Boclety, 
and exalted patronage. Programmes will be pub- 
8 with the list ae 3 sses, &. 
2, Charlotte-row. E. F. LEEKS, Secretary. 


TATERER'S EXHIBITION OF FLOWERING AMERICAN 
Hohen WATERGIC ARE, KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA. 
He ERER begs to announce the Teer 


— 1 in She * — of fine ne 
4 these a "age ab worthy a 
nap-hill, Woking, Surrey. 
‘amis OF TULIP 
M. Clapham Rise, Frortst, by 
ment, to ‘to Her joru the QUEEN, and to His 
P SAXONY, respectfully are that his 
3 is aN in flower, and may be 
k unti adat s excepted), 
saat; Charen, bale . — 
Re — ! WHIBLEY 1 his patrons and friends 
i Anta Tor CHSIA SPECTABILIS, 


ib of e see Gardeners’ Chron- 
ae Chester Nursery, near Walcot- agen, 


ai eNEVOLENT lg eth 


ante ant 

Agena take Sellen: 

A eng AT, the ist JUNE next, . G. Farmer, Esq. 

Tol Surrey, in the 3 — supported by the fo oliowing 

ris: Gentlemen, who have kindly consented to a 

ptt Hon. the e Earl of ELLESME 
Lord Viscount Beacktey, M.P. 

tyme Cage pi M.D. 
William Hills, E 


eorge E. Tilbury, Esq ‘ 
Chane Baring Wail, Eo: „M. P. 
ohn ilm 
cheb Wilson, Esq., Alderman 
John M. Wrench, Esq. 
rder, E. R. Cu UTLER, Secretary. 


BENEVO 
Ell LENT INSTITUT TION. 


_ this Tost L GENERAL 
this [stitution we be 
eee Ludg 5 AY 


à Repo 
; — is in the Taal ng parochial 
purpose of, ‘Bling g TWO PENSIONERS 
Doai among the following Can- 


examined and approved 


Application. 
Me i 


.. 


h Ist 
tere li o'clock, The ballot 
been tha 2 o'clock, a . No 
Whose subscription is on 


{i 
15 


EEDLING PELARGONIUMS. 


HINE — still fine 


J 


lants of his set of Ten New 
* Varieties, which he can strongly recommend, 51. the set. 


Also, of Miller's Set of Eight, price 25s, Descriptive Cata- 


se 5 on applicatio: — 


J. H 


Pisao N Werz, Ramsg 


5 
HOMAS JACKSON. AND 
out, in 3-inch pots, w 
tifnl ERICA, 
coccinea, r 
Gardens, 8 


It is a tear bet 
aised by Mr. 
the Pe it. It is figur 


ween E, arista 
Turnbull, of 


whom 
Magazine of Botany,” Vol, II., No. 124, and was exhibited re 
anic Gardens, Regent’s-park, and awarded their | 


the ee 
Seedling 


vee — at 4s., 6s, and 8s, per 


has a fine stock of healthy 


now sending 


SON are 
well established a of this beau- 


Gone 1 
red in Paxton’s 


kree 105. “Gd. each, with one ag for every three ordered. 
May 


, Kingston, Surrey, 


AZALEA IND 101. — This . tribe can now be 


fine blooming plants. 


Catalogue of Prices will be sent 


on application, et an inspection of the stock is ap ang 


A lar, “i es collection of strong plants for bedding 
NURSERYMEN 


AND FLORISTS TO Y 


SE 


Fuchsias, 


DING 


Heliotropes, 


Miem ryant 


is now ready. 


and Son. Nurseries, Great 98 Herts. 


HER MAJESTY, 
THE QUEEN. 


a ear 
5 5 50 PLANTS, VERY STRONG FOR BED- 


Pentstemons, Patunias, oa —— Lee Tree Vio- 
per 100, 


| lets, & c. &c., 30s. to 50s. 


ge FINEST SHOW CARNATIONS, PICOTEES, PINKS 
a a FUCHSIAS, VERBENAS, ‘CINERARIAS, GLOX- 


TOUELL a D Co. are now also executing orders for 
the above, in * healthy plants, at oy pa id pon 
CARNATIONS AND PICOT . £s. 
4 pairs of very tine a — owers, by name, a 4s. and 1 10 
ditto dit itto s.and3 0 0 


15 pairs 0 newest and fines first case show tomers * 10 
ditto ditt dit io si * 0 0 
Fine mixed border . s. per vie 
PINKS.—Finest first class show wi 2 128. — 185 per 


dozen pairs. 


PAN SIES.— Finest first class show flowers, 10s, and 18s, 


per dozen. 
FUCHSIA 


S.—The newest and most beautiful varieties out, 
| 9s.,12s., and 188. per dozen. 
VERBEN 


NAS,—The most select and beautiful of last season, 


| 6s. to 9s. per dozen. 


Fine flowering plants of 
8s. per dozen 


cI a ee 
ieties, 9s, to 


the best show 


EMUs. he 7 3 3 t of the new. and 


T 
beautiful 4 98. to 
LOXINIA 


in pe | Teuc Steril Griffini esc 128., 183., 
ERIC. — — Fine bushy pl — of the best tree 
9s. per 
FLOWER — 
r post, free, 
"Catalo ogues of — above 
rnamental plants, w 


, with an extensive 


and 2 


variety o 
will be Nee by enclosing two postage 
| be amps.—Great Yarmout 


t, free. 


12s, per dozen, per pos 
—A most splendid deen of new varieties, 
i, & 


4s. per doz 
flowering sorts, 


R SEEDS.— 30 packets of new and choice kinds, 


of high!y 


—— ROSES, & ae New Be 

bloo 

= 3 Azaleas, 
2 Indian Azaleas, 


di ditt 11 de 

12 Rhododendrons, including scarlet, a te, a 
— each 7s. 6d. to 
„ per poe 
lag per doz 
. strong 18 8 n dozen 


New — ‘ui Rhodo dendrons 
170 * = 


p 
ette Roses, ' 
Hardy bay exc $i 
White Moss an 
Alstrœmerias, 
— 8, 12 best as 

naga’ 1 bius 2 red, per dozen 
a, per dozen 
f S — r dozen 
Cupheas, in three varieties, per doz 


2 gos Go 5 oa 


Lobelias, scarlet, crim mp gee — 8 


Calceolarias, shrubby ye — 1 
and 


— A Cal ifornica, ‘per doze 


Eschscholtzia Californica and Crocen, str ong plants, 


per dozen 
Plumbago Larpen nts, per ‘doz 
Petunias — 1 in choice — 
Chrysanthemums, new sorts, per doz 
8 best show varieties, per Pring 
Geran mixed, Merge crete 
4555 s. to 22 


Gentiana 
yF at other 
25 —.— Herbaceous Border 


p lants, in a * variety pe — olours = 
ditt 


18 
P doz, 4s. and : 


and gk Age 


5, 


elgian Azalea 
d 


— jad DO iet 


„ 
AWOPanonwawnons ues 


ee 
.. 
ee 

7 


coco 


er do 
spotted, 


— 
wow 


9s, and d 10 


8 
T 


Bae pene re Lophospermum, 


Thunbergia, Cal 


per doz 
Salvia — scarlet and variegated, * new 11 


Fuchsias, choice 2 new Heliotropiums, 
Sorts Potentillas, 4s,; 6 Sorts 


Medan, a. H. BROWN offer the above desirable 


which they and forward to an 
kingdom.—Albion Nursery, Stoke ke Newington 


empelis, Clematis, and Mie, 


0 
` per doz. 6 0 


Pentstemons, 4s.; 8 Sorts 


plants, 
y part of the 
3 May 19. 


EW ACHIMENES. — ACHIMENES KLEEL, a a 
een in ne Bagge be of oo pose wit h 5 3 age 

y pink flow very dis Certifi arded 

to it 15 the eee e kodi oe London, 3 R 1848.— 


pper ost, 
LON eee MAJOR —The flow 


BEDDING PLANTS.-An 3 and strong. 
pen anD BROWN ’S Stock ~g oe Collections of 
BENAS, FUCHSIAS, PE MS, 
HE MUMS, and other ia cing of Bedding 1 Plants, 
s this season particularly strong and fine, Priced Descrip- 
* Catalogues sent free by post on 3 ion. 
Seed and Horti — Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. 


PLENDID NEW LOBEL 


qu n 
and an early application N necessary, as the stock is limited. 
rymen e will 


The following nurse ob es r plants, who alon 
be enabled to supply them 
Mes M 
J. 2 Lee mitn Wm. Wood & 8 Son, Woodland 
rops and Sons, ; Birmingham Raddsabery, Bristol [rond 
Moore and Son, Perry 72 E. G. Henderson, — 1 
Knight an R Chelse E. H. Fuller, Worthin 
H. Ronalds and pen Brentford J. C. Wheeler, Gloucester 
H. Lane & Son, Be N F. Warner. Lon 
J. A. Henderson & Co., Pine- | Juo. Cattell, 8 
apple- place Chas. Turner, Slough 
.B.—J. M. has also a fine stock sot ee fulgens, fulgen® 
multiflora, fulgens multiflora praco: ape pyramidalis» 
Millerii, Salterii, serratina, violacea ear Ore &c., at 6s., 9s. 
12s. per dozen, in collection, left to J. M. 
BLE DAHLIAS. Sane plants a Pris: bg 
flow 


3 sorts named, all sho 6d. each, 
ozen. Theabove, reth hage 9 List of 
Dahtige, e all the new and best E may be 
of WILLIAM DENYER, Seedsman and 3 „ Gracechurch- 
street (near the Spread Eagle), London 


Cot Kin ng’s-road, Chelsea, have a 


, WEEKS AND 


J. WEEKS and 1 Co., Horticultural 
elsea. 


ROFT SWEDE sie denig — myer 
the best of all — — very la 
better — than the Liverpool Swede, fi om eich it was — 
ginally selected; zit: is La rege — — havi 
oldest parts — 


* ss SSS soo 


| Fed b 


other kinds were destroyed, and — of a quick and strong 

onde bett on poorer soils than other 
bject 
E sown pipra it mill Bess 


Swed 


geid of this sort at 
„ Was decided aby competent ju * i 
ough in competition with other very 
fine e crops sown much e The colou 
ple top. Price ie 64. sar 15 or 8s. per gallon. 
SKIRVING’S LIVERPOOL SWEDE, 13. 3d, per Ib., or 78. 
r gallon. 
P BARLY ah or ge TURNIP. 7 Lors White Turnip for 
o feed off for piem oe ga ioe re — gm ; 


ing. Price 1s. per Ib., or 68. per g i 
Priced Catalogues of Turnip and other Duck bow, 2 
may be had by Jon SUTTON and S 
ing, Berkshi 


* Goods daei free to London, u, Bratt, = 
F! INE NEW GLOXINIAS.—To those 


who admir 
2 ALBO SANGUINEA, JAMES BACK- 
ROURE une 80 confidently recommend the following. 
1 EXQUISITA,- 3 2 white, with rose s streak and 
oS mine ; larger than G. albo sanguinea. 
8. DELICATA; — — Clear white, with pale l lemon-coloured 
ya = 2 line and blotch. 10s, 6d. 
t petal clouded 1 over with rose 
and finer in 
n G. albo sanguinea. gm 6d. 
the above are J. B. and Son’s Seedlings. 


alba,—Clear white, with 
is nearly encircled by a 


every way i 


G. WORTLEYANA (J) or Violacea 
a pale lemon-spotted throat, which 
violet crescent, 58. 

G. CARMINATA SPLEN NDENS.—Far 3 G. rubra 
and richuess of colour. 


size, form P 

HAKEA VICTORI 2 is plant, “To 
this, the most splendid table production 4 have: oes beheld, 
in a wild or tivated state, I have given the 


I Ad E e of our 
aciou * beara white, yello dg p k 
8 4 to 10 inches across when 4 1 
15s, to 213. 5 


UREA. 106. 6d. i i i 
3 bent to the trade.—York Nurseries, unn. 5 


THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


306 ENE 
i NEW AND UN ALL 2 
. STABLISHED 1786. RVILL e por ai 
„ j. iy a AS veny fow PRicks. K kaoi a 1. A Elegenet“ aa sil te 2 
von 1 way as 
i . T niuch pleasure in announcing that fre ‘South De Roya a,” S 
wet 42 PPE aby oh co apa . dle terminal sta being a ad jo inin g our Nursery Ground E The usual discount when nthe etl raid ot 1 
. very large stock of fa ranium ablias, Fuchsias, d&c., Ne all the e and best kinds in culti- _ Baddow-road, Chelmsfor ord, May 
AB — and which we are enabled to offer at the following Low BICES. om ASS — BROWN’S PENES D Dra 
„% Our New Plant Catalogue is now ready, an. and should be obtained by all who have Gardens. "Ha TAL SLO OGUE g 5 G R ANTONS, ED DESCRIP 
2 PPI S, G „ PETI 
NIUMs. Fase Albert, Minerva, Addigonii, Refiilgens, Sthithii Magni- ORE ENHOUSE a d STOVE L avrg e 
ERANI > he folldw- flora, Alba trifiora, . Grandi pal E lata, Gled- Py post oF applica be sent ie 
FIRST CLASS.—Pur : reaver § ms Mer Ga, — Oa of | fokai excelsa, Ro pesa — 1 a * eed aud Boreal ential saps shrhént; Su | 
7 ure — 8 ia a ARS 
— Lie for ie, 0720 fr Prince, Tends e's Sir Walter Raleigh — | pieno, Gledstanesi, Exquisit endens, Danie ’ W. ELV E FIRST-C LA sAn 
bert, Lyne’s Sir Robert Sale, Lyne’s Nourmahal, Lyne’sRem age IN? 36 wr MI. 12 of ta newest FUCHSIA ue 
brance, Lyne’s P. Lyne’s Queen of Beauties, Beck’s Sit augen à DWAR F ROSES, * POT TS 4 Saat VERBENAS for 2 Š ts, 
382 P p. . // 
aret, Beck’ or a, Beck’s o > J 5 . 4 
ters Orion, Bec Lustee, Beck's Mare Antony, bec Purchaser’ s select on of 12 for 18s. wb 27 8 r 288.— Souvenir Edgend, Marsden, near 08 Laneas! 
12 5 Standard of Perfection, Gaines’s Mary Queen of Scots, de la Malmaison, Bouquet de flore è, Prince albert, ah de St. ae ie wil 
Prince Alfred. Agee — les, Austerlitz, Camé ora, th’s Yellow Noi- 
an SECOND € CLASS.—Purchaser’s 8 of 12 E faterre, Thea perfection, Felton, General Vallaise, pe Seah patel. R begs respectfully 9 
lowing list for 102.—Lyne’s Duke 9 ah oe * oa Gips Bae ponte eyband. Delphine de Gaudet, Belle de Flo blemen, 15 Ne aud his friends in ian 
et, Apollo, and Sidon r man s Sar 1 Ws 1 y „Eugene Beauharnais, La grande superbe, Duchesse de | his Rose House, which is oo y appropriated 
and Cbampió: —5 * se es ’s Orion, * Lan Bhi urg, Rubra, Fairy "Queen (Red), Ma arjolin, Fabrier, | ROSES in pots ee ow be seen in full bloom, 
and Piato, Gaines’s Duchess of Leinster and King of Saxony, | Theresa Isabella, Moliere, vie de Luxembourg, Henry the Fifth, | to 20s. per dozen, Also Geraniums and 6 
and Foster’s oe ramoisie superieure „Sewperflorens, Madame Laffay, and Louis — pen a A very large stock of plants 
Oth sorts from 5s. to 10s. Ari dozen. Phillipe d' Angers Flower: Boeders, vis, Gi 5 Fe 8 sts, 
oT ET ¢ tropes, e C. &c. per dum 
LET GERANII MS. CINERARIAS. to the amount of ast sent carriage sie lOmin Sat 
20 plants of good 3 88% some of the yg ota Purchaser’s selection of 12 for 15s.—Maid of Artois, Fulgida, 35 055 50 . = e amount of 5l., 100 miles 
for 15s. x A eauty of St. John’s Wood, endersonii, Tom Thum Eminent, Delicata, Lady Fe porer, Rae Seymour, Flash, Mo- . app i ha 
Vivid, Compacta, ae” Eclipse, Britannia, Surpass Fr 0g. — Nobilis, Pe sirable, Cram Pro matt Queen, B ENTER begs to inform his customers — — 


more, and Cottage Mail. 


DAHLIAS. 
Purchaser’s selection of 12 from the follow. 
Tom of nee ae PION OF 
s ST ? THE WEST. 
hibition of the 
200 of September, 
the poe? 4 — The hollowing S is 
a Prize 
ton 


FIRST CLASS.— 
list for 183., moses A p 

AND, a and on 
These two perc tte ‘be 
outh Amateur Dahlia rae on the 


Tele, and won 
the 


Superb blue, 23 Queen, Duke of York, Com Ma- 
Roret, 8 Countess of "Zetland, Phillis, 
d Mar: 


donna, Red 
Bijou, Favourite, 
BENAS. 
Purchaser’s selection of 20 for 10s.—Defiance, (Robinson’s) 
S: nea, Rubra, Gigante: ermoine, Satellite, Coronet, 

Mont Blanc, Gem, Barkerii, gap my Lord Jo 
Coerulescens, Striata coccinea, The Giant, Emma, Boule efeu, 
—— Iba lutescens, Minstrel Bo oy, Louis 8 Lilac pe 

fection, Paroa Fulgens, Mise Hi carnata per. 


arc 
fecta, Bicolor odorata, and Ibrahim Pacha 


* 
lace in future winning stands, ed Tom's Star o — ae nee 
= werk a flower possessing p ery requisite for a Show Dahlia, | Purchaser’s selection of the following from our Pyare List, 
an rivalled in colour, which is a clear bright yellow. The 12 Choice Miscellaneous 8 first class 16s, 
other, Tom’s Champion of En d, a flower of fine crimson, 20 Ditto J 15 bri 
faultless in form, and et que as to its petals, which, 20 Ditto Me second class n | 
instead of being as in other Dahlias, each petal in this variet — e Miscell Climbers, first class 1 
is ig that is, there are two petals to one.”—Cardinal Fer- 0 Ditt “ aks 2 
y Lind, let, Yellow Standard, Walter Hilson, 20 Choice Herbaceous pihti 1 

Feliz, pee few Shylock, Toison d’or, Que f England, Fire 4 
King, Boule de 7 N Dombey, Andromeda, Queen of s — ntirrhinums 4 
Sheba, Lud ady of the Lake, Mrs. en Arnel, Nell Gwynne, 6 Choice Pet s 
Belted cee Commander, Box, Roi de 'Pontiliy, and Amy. 12 Choice Bobinet Gloxinias, and Gesneras 1 

SECOND C! CL. re — Purchas er's seleet 2 from the fol- * Choice Chrysanthemums 15 1 

ng list r12s.—0a 15 Se ier, y Sale, Choice Cactus 

Duke of Tork, 5 Captain Warner, Princess de Radz- 12 Fine — 18 N to 2 are high 3 
ville, Star, Metropolitan Queen, Model, Ludwig, Hanseatetsin, 20 Ditto 5 
Bijou de Colshauic, Essex Ros, 1 on Erfurture, Lady Fea- > ry 10 
a A oe — de alge red Princese Wella, Pantalon * Al Orders p Se = ei be delivered, Ta of 
Prusser, Prima om na, Ma — Geor me e Cla, — Madam carriage, by Messrs. Pick re Co., 3 
ser, Madame Zaphler, Qui a Adam, Lady San 2 2 on the Great Weitern, Histol, d Ex 25 ‘outh 
Eugene s Dijon, Miss Vye, peen ‘Balmio, Cleopatra, Batho- Devon 3 ; or to any Town in Dev a? Corn 
nia, Sir d Antrobus, Multicator, Mrs. Walner, Harle- 4 A 

uid; wall ; ublin * Perey ool, by Steamers. 

ictori — 9 and Mrs. Keynes, All e ty 85 j will 56 5 nt by PICKFORD and Co. 

. unless ordered other teh nce. 


pirez 
ia agnay, Princess Alive, 
Magnet, Sidmouthii, u Gig: 23 ie ea Exo- 
niensis, Lowreyii, Fulgens, and ‘Formosa Ele legan 
INDIA N AZA ALE 

archaser’s selection of 12 fur 20s., or 5 re “Seat seater 
aea Vivid, plamman Ny Nym andis, Pink super 
bicolor, Attraction, Coq ette, King of Saxony, 


ble, Sirins, Glory, ¢ Ca cens, Pom 
Pink Perfection, Sappho, Jenu Cleopatra, Apollo, Semi 
rosea, Formosa rosea, S semipleno, Alba striata, 


All Goods not thoro vitals pproved of, immediately exchanged ; 
and it is particularly requtated that any deficiency in qna nti- 
ties, or inattention to orders, be immediately — — 
Phe; us. 

«* To Beat ws Sad dite ae we hope that all orders 
will be Y as POSSIBLE—we shall then 
be able = 8 all the paea enumera sine in 755 — 

but if * are Ne we fear that w 
cient in ces, having only a limited pine 
of some oli 

ORDERS WILL BE pb ba to TOIN phe ba e, 

Great attention is at all ti emg to e 
have sent a great number 07 * s to North of | Scotland 
and Ireland. and they have arrived i in hótt excellent condition, 


| E. RENDLE and Co., Plymouth 
adjoining’ 5 3 Station and Terminus of the South 
Devon Railway. 


FLOWER POTS AND GARDEN SEATS. 
oo. MORTLOCK, 250, Oxford-street, 
e has lar, rtm 
articles in various, colors, . el — — ve 
description spank GLASS, and EARTHEN- 
ash. 


WARE at the — possibl 
Groter w NEIGHBOUR N 5 SON 
eee — oy ‘their various  TEROVED | 


r 

an e branc PEE 

Bee The. ie msists of e, — eee „Hives, 
“Sin Hive,” 


ull: 
the ane 


e forwarded on the r paper, 
ABOUR and Son, 1 27, igh 


"aN, — 


N 


I P S.— 120 1 OF FIRST-RATE 
or cap at the of igi 
— Catalogues, 8 pri * F 
oxton, Y 
be obtained of Mr. era e iind, a 6, — 
man’s-row, Shoreditch, Lon 
TURN 11 3 &. 
DRUMMOND & SONS, A 


tural Museum 


ri er parts to which 
AKER d PHEASANTRY, Beaufort-street, Kin 


t to her Majes 
H.R. R. H. 1 Da e Abert 2e ORNAMENTAL l WATER 1 
consisting of * white 


bernacle, pia oap 
and winter P adw 
1 gol vel and’ dca: tan zadali i a 
omesticate 
Malay, Poland, Surrey , and Dorking fow fowls ; white 3 pied, 
common pea- 
moon-passage, — me 


and pure pigs ; and at 3, 
. F HOTHOUSES = mie 
* 


—— 2 — , now published. 
H ERVATORIES made and 
siderable reduction. One, two. un a at a con- 
aod Nolon ee or taes | O 
 Packed'and to ali parie oE O i ih; warranted best 
Hothouse Builder ts of every dese n, at James WATTS’ 
— road. | Reference 
‘of the counties in England. 


by 12, 282. 10s. ; 
f an aah 27 tent rough aies 15 
z t 8. 4d. 
1. b eae Works, S 


2 L ae FLOWERS, &e. 
OBERTS’S | BOMBIOULTURAL DOUBLE 


Shop in London ; the oma hao tw ore — a 
rough Nursery, Brixto r London. 


a is 1 


1 
RHODODENDRON JAVANICUM, OF BLUME. 

OR THE ape ho x 5 8 705 

W ROLLISSON anD gp 
ally to inform a Nobility, Gentry, an 

intend outing out, on and after M 9 

ram pia ied the pale . 4 

the hole 5 or 
ddvertised 4 ie agi Gardeners’ 10 — 
W. R. and Sons beg singe 

arene on the seed from- which pa st 

of th ys spott ted w 

seen d 


n flow 
and Goin can 5 warrant them to 
ribed, This most beautif 


ably adapted for planting ont cos 
s in a greenhouse or in 
n Java, 9,700 feet above the level of the sea, ani 


every — to believe that it will prove a bardy plant, at least 
me part of this country.—Tooting Nursery, near London, 


HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING 
BY HOT WATER. 


ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF THE CHOICEST PLANTS, 
VINES, &e. 


ae Da 
rH 
ial fe 


WEEKS AND Co., King’s-r gee 
„ TURAL 1 . Bote 
APPARATUS MANUF ERS, 


of materi se 8 workman 
erected o ir Pre 3 
Hothouses, e 


e the mo 
ae. Heating, anh Ventilating 
erecting of these e 7255 has 
a first-rate collec of Stove and e 
7 cultivated in den enormous n that they 
. THAN HALF- PRICE. Fuels 
gues forwarded upon application 


* 


and Dealers in British and F e e 
St, James's S uare, m, and 
ET li orders with waich i ag 
merit a of pai ge old gabbit 7 
Useful and Ornamental Poultry, Foreign Bi ae 
Te BE SOLD, an ALDERNEY BU 2 a 

greatest beauties th that 2 siba 75 e es 

. blood, and the ee 


th 
soe and dhg omnet onnie palered 
HETLAND PONIES AND 
) landed, direct from Shetland, 2 
i 600 


DLE’S CATALOGUE, for 18s., 
a 


LEAS CAMELS 
— — CINER ARIAS, PETU- 
P 


est prices, urserymen, Plym 
Catalogue is ben N and can be Rid 
marae on applicat 

—FIRST CLASS 

gs 3 submit the ‘following list of 
DABLIAS, a t reduc prices: comprising 
the best out in ite class ; Purple Standard, like- 
“Wiss Chaplin, 


t, aud Victori a Regina. 

hare Vice 

cee 3 eee charges. 

ong i e ele, eet Nursery, S alis- 
ji meet with immediate atten 


: which have been accorded 
; exhi bi ions. 

7 by n PR 

f KEYNES, of 5 “fers the following 
Te izes for the best Six ms shown from the nine Fl 


LE and Co., Nurserymen, Plymouth. 


THE GARDENERS’ 


rast FIRST CLASS DAHLIAS | * 


entrance m | 
SPRI ine “CATALOGUE OF 
fA 2 and can be had on applica- 


CHRONICLE. 


307 


FPWELVE _FIRST-CLASS GERANIUMS can be 
selected from RENDLE’S CATALOGUE fer 20s.; or 20 
Twelve r do, for 10s, 


cation to WILLIAM E. REND and Co. , Nurserymen, Plymouth. 


ERI 


AYES, Prope, Farnham, Surrey, begs 
wards of 100 distin ct varieties of Bedding Plants, 


14 varieties Sof Geraniums, ineludi — arom * Shrub- iti 
fro Lipide amare 


land arm Peg and paer Thum b; 
4 vari of Verben s, from 2s. ng apy sd 

deseribed i in Cptaloguens which will be sent on gent? of cae 
postage mp. 

08 f Vig SOCIETY OF LONDON, 

1 ON HORTI CULTURE. — 

UESDAY NEXT, May 22, at 3 P. x. — * 3 ROOT, its means 

of obtaining food, and its other ropert 
can be admitted except. om ary Members and Fel- 

ee of ne 92 their wives or sisters, and visitor specially 
introduced by them; or the Foreign and Corr mpa ng Mem- 
bers of the Society. —21, Regent-street, May 16, 184 


Ene Gardeners Ehronirle. 
URDAY, MAY 


MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK, 
emical 


j(j 373333333 


Monpay, 


eee ee eee re 


Turspay,’ — 

20 e . bY. Ae. l. ee 
WEDNESDAY, — ie Gee 
Linnean gen E an SEa 
| Royal ce of Literature 
Tuurspay, — 244 Numis 


ern: 
| rian.. 

| An Bonded 79792 
| FBIDAT, — 2⁵ { Nopal An pice) (Aut Anniver 
f Royal Bonino Gardens (Amé. 


tion to “ate 
— A “SIR 


uc ed to — 

its — habit pe paea 
of great nierit, The 
1 


i Fis very much superior to 

which has been so much 
la aha summer by numerous. 
EY’S Nursery, and who 

g it the pes —— * 

e s of it w the 

d spoke of in 1 aus 


can Plan w) 


e 


Err May 24: Liverpool Floral and Horticultural. 


ABOUT pa ‚years since, a Committee of the 
House of Lords complained of the legal prevention 
of Topacco 755 ATION, as being a burthen affecting 
real property. The absurdity af 15 ab Bop it 

that 


pointed out at the time,“ 
the e public had . 25 ineligent ie ae a Go- 
vernment to assist them in doing that in England 


in 
757 sa only be en profitably in a italy different 
Men micht as well ask for Acts of Parlia 


In igo, 2 Cotton 


e on appli- 


ATUB 264 Bri 
COUNTRY PAE T A May 3: , Midland ie a aat 


re bloomer, aud a attractive varie 
than 15 inches in Liddieter had above 65 
it at one 5 besides buds. = colour 
scarlet, wi thil; ge primrose eye, giving the 
d handsome appearance. This also 
and and Florists ee October Tth. 


4 


5 baader 2s. 6d. per packet; 


r Antirrhinum, Is, do., still 
Advertisement in 


, 6s. per dozen. 
; Flava, 9s, per doz. 
r to 98. p per r doz z 
eties 9s è 
! POLYANTHA 63. per doraae zen “ -per aa 
rh Anette 0, 

; e 6s. to 9s, per dozen, 
MPI anu DE bike, 9s, per dozen, 
ANDIPLORA an and COMPACTA 

* doz.; or 2s, 6d. each. 

1 8 . ae, 

doz. ; Patens alba, 2s, —— 
each, 2s 


50 12s. to 18s maree 
CA, oy Gd. each 


and 95. per dozen. 
vars, of 18, 153. b 3 
, fine and select, 4s. to 7s. 6d. 


Superior new of 1848, 12s, Lab 
at 6s. to 93, 6d, per doz 


t this we refer our readers to 8 place above quoted. 
a 


j E tobe 
* — Let us next examine the cost of f obtaining eo ges 
-Ricumonp’s corresponde 


The D rds’ 9 instead of proclaiming that 
the illegality of Tobacco cultivation is a burthen on 
ee the a should be 
rigorously maintained, fo s growth were per- 

mitted, they would soon discover, in their e 
fields and ney erished tenantry, that they had 
mistaken a plague for a For the proofs of 


Duke of RIHMON D 


mS 


ts that Sirvan 923 
75 fer . 


e Irish grower, 
The process zi 
orth al 


result is an an 


ing, 
e of what AREE yas 
est in our pos- 


is not produceable ý He may grow the 

: d flowers, but ut the quality i is ot a 

id . Lirtix’s sample are now 

e finest leaves from Guate- 
f 


tained. Nevert 
at 6d. y 5 for the best part, and at 5d. to 2d. for 
the rema r! 
The Satna int of his 1 consists in 
ass ta To bacco crop will yield 2625 Ibs. 
7 e is no reason to 
can ka . It 
estimates 


or “about 600 Ibs. per acre, and 
crop is not estima at more than 

2 Ibs. gus the first of these quantities repre- 
ts what is marketable, and the second what is 
2 the land, whether marketable or not. 


The Duke of 


4. | smuggling are enormous, 
1S | travagant duty of 9s. 6d. per bei is notorious. We 
Lips 


what an extent the frauds in 


theless, Mr. Lrrree values his crop: 


himself 


| of the 


TO one man ntend t 

four acres; and he i AG “with hesitation, “that 
Snot an pahaneting cro are curious to 

s | learn how Mr, Lir asce alt? Ly fact! he 


rai 
probably means that | his crop of. Tobacco, consisti 
of 160 plants, ee not run out his pae at Chelsea 
in the very first y t if he will ingnire into 
the SERERA of Tobacco-grow ers he will find 


that 

much mistaken in this as i ry other 

5 concerning w which he has written. The esti- 

mate of t t per of alone is in 
it is ren that in Vi 


eeded ; š 

authority, 750 . “Tobacco hushandry, ca 

continual labou weeding and e g 
BE i in n constantly stirring the. earth a 

oe 929901 se labours must be Dipak in thro 

the whole 888 of the crop.“ In fact the Irish 

een on which Mr. 3 5 5 adil t t 


15 co labour is 13. 15s. per acre; it is pro 
b ore, Wherever labour bears the Sn 
Eng is Bane, 
These amendm of Mr. . calculations 


will hace, the at “af Tobacco growing in Great 
itain in a somewhat diferent point of view. The 
account will 1 stand thus: 


Š 


Cost of labour, rent, taxes, &e. (Irish esti- £ 8. d. 
ma 8 6 
Manure (Flemish estimate) 2 25 0 0 
£44 8 6 
Return from cured 2 1050 Ibs. . ; 
Lrrrrx's estimate rides 12d. 11 3 
Remainder at nil 00 0 
Loss per acre Hai N J 
Of course this caleulation would be altered if a 
1 20 5 protecting duty w ut on Tobacco from 
abroad, and no duty were levi ifn upon that of 
domestic c growth ; but we cannot conceive „that an 
Leno 
o take such a course. 75 t would be as reasonable to 
ee that an act shoul be ed for the = 
motion of Cotton cultivation in Great Britain, by 
prohibiting the importation o 1 Cot 


f foreign Cotton. 
What the Government should do, for the sake o$ 
revenue, as much as for the pecuniary advantage o 
the public, i is, to reduc ol du 1 on Tobacco, so 
as to render smuggling a ade. That in 
one branch of the 1 REN date the frauds fee 

in sequence of an ex- 


allude to cigars; and as means a of ring to 
must necessarily be, we aes it a the ‘abe of 
ustration 


A 


75 quantity of ae, cigars which pay duty i 15 
this country average 
28 millions -annually.* But Cuba 4 3 . 


rlia eturns and t m 
enormous additional quantity brought here 
further sources. 


© | exported 10 oad pe cigars to the value of 4777.5 
in 1842 so rte orts from 


among e 
Mauritius ‘and de presume that small We 
whic ntioned as 


In the returns of exports from most cigar m : 
countries, H e is 8 5 spe! those sent. 
aiid: elii 


to Great Britain appears that 
the quantity exported from the “allowing places was 
as follow OWS: 
rman Commercial Union, Be . 604,898,200 
Belgium — 1 45,101,500 
TV 1843 140,673,000 
Manilla... ws z 1825 — 42,400,000 
Venezuela 5 a ee. ROE os 167,692 
In round n these pe alone export. 
annually a aa 830 millions of cigars, 1 N 


only 100 to the Ib., instead of 120, Which is 
the tru 
Bur it would seem that Cuba alone . its 
pa t 


iahtity of 
probability that a 
ortion of the 7 de lions . 2, foi 
uropean We on our coast, am: 
iene 2 doubt can exist 1 the mik: 3 1 
è Ted is the ber ki 
cig as ae at me acy sino. tanta about 
pos to about 75; intermediate 
are not sold, we imagine, in 


THE — — CHRONICLE. 


consumed in this country is sm ug- 
heard x Corey me that = more 
and thus it must 
1 diarie e of fl 
We suspect that 
e very similar 


cigars c 
Fy 


e reljef 
solicited fro 
middle and lower pug consists not in permission 
to seek destruction by e g in a ruinous and 
worthless caltivation, but in a large 


r, and bene 


rely agree with Earl Grey in the observa- 
— the other night, in the 


co ; ee that i injustice 
was done to the farmer because he ‘was not allowed 
Tobace i e 


climate of this country was he [u 
f that 1 gr — e Tobacco were 


and 
ng bolstered 4 y the —— that a duty 
vied upon foreign * while no duty was 
imposed upon En — Tobac If there were any 
ibility that perso —— in this country co ald gr 
with the foreign producer, 


h 
oot sugar, which 
was ed i in this country on 


ying th 
F it were 3 


nt o 
vegetation as to unable to 
wy tential crop, demanding much 
ur, cannot rofitably in the North 
of Europe, where labour is necessarily dear 


In the London papers of za 1 is reported a 
case of STEALING Orcuips by a of 
Snow, who is stated t 7 
magistrate, “that he indit d the t 
consequence of an applica 050 made to him 
of the Duchess of SuTmERLAND’S 


tee 
here, is anxious that 
should be clearly explained that he knows s nothing 
whatever of the adr and that he does not e 
know a 9 of the name of Snow, 


eben 


e are at all near the 5 in these pe la- | bea = 


reduction of | § 


i h impoverish the exchequer, press heavily | u 
duties, hh ** . Si fit nobody except the bier 


House of 
Ricumonp :—* It had | in 


charged upon it | 2e 


| different things.” aem applies with equal 
d * 

“R por be adm ergani that ‘the mode of filling the 

wer beds o aid must be su gn ee re- 
idence = the family in the country ; 

quirements md — to pass the de lightfal mo onths | 
he 


d refinement which the . antie ian 


In a garden 


aud associations and icu 
. with the long horizontal lines of balust 
ociety there will be foun 


as a reasonable being, to think as to h 

ages are consistent m a 7 2 of “et — 
and; — ie myself o I will d to test 
modes of flower 333 by our sav anced 


SS 
a 


ar 
Ornamental flower gardens are in een Lome 
ndages regular 


ut gag 


that fashion in these matters is too often mis 
for taste. 
“ Despotic Fashion, in fantastic garb, 
Oft. by her vot’ries, for the magic robe 
Of Taste mistaken, with ill-guiding step 
vs 
in gar rdening matters eannot be too 


be 
highly developed d the ground ine oer surround- 
8 


t forms 


nap 0 


ae 


uring, the 

I would extend the princi * — of — + Bower in 
rer 1 eee grids sam 

an ra 


t grea ety i * ed thus 


| , that roduc 
hee old method of mingling together shrubs, reeset 


Earl De G 

We Hieke i this statement n Mr. 8 8 3 
N ourselves we shoul e taken 
noti 


go ne ink a situa tio 


~ “hei 
ing t 


MIXED 

fe chives tear ok ‘OF oe COLOURS. 
am sorry to find 

Mr Cail 2 to ren pate the revival of, | 

frittered flower-garden- 

will not be ‘fended by 


ar 3 of the subject is not * with his. h he. 0 dhe 
in 


Was . sọ well understood a few 


2 


my taling the li 


ese Ip as it non now is. 
apt 


ed flo 
— Gre sie (the uniformo of the the 
at Repton, > speaking of plantations 


es in 
many things exactly similar ; 
clump consist of the —— er 


is A walk, 
— i for 


| Shrubs to kiss 


bbs VERSUS BRS 


© | variety which tute 
In the gracef 0 


special 


us plants ranged with the precision of 
de plants in in our old greenhouses, there is monotony 


it is in- 


too, is pita ai = work of . 
aud 55 


hum man comfo 


garden 


eral 
may be | secure 
, and other works of design, | t 


sid 
the Fre 


the 


5 


a | poor 
found preferable to — poe ‘the stables. If po 
be n bro 


used, it 


opora 
1 
quired 
to 


E, — to avoid real or | a syrin 
apparent obstacles, or to ‘land: 40 


ee ney. Nor have I been greets dae 
ons; and as I kno 


s0 
roots eae during pein 


the s same perio 


e bs injure tie 1 a 


e nine in motion. 


the earlier forced 
ed to 


strewed over 


ers can spare 


ne 
years 

of E mapping ee 

n my expecta, 


it is med 
— 


pro tection ; 
it from needing Pakean of — ua 
be kept in 
garden unti 


ich its leave a wil: e required, and 


of its ® blanche d fo 
n adequate 
en bord er 4 should be chosen for this 
. guano wikis | 


en it is really 


as a are P particula arly L. of Cony, 
g, it will be ad- 
over the beds as 


ather * 
s little as possible e during this 
85 a fortnight home the blanched leaves are re- 


for * * quantity should be removed. 
are of ike ushroom-house cr 


r | similar place, pores they oe have a little me They 
er. 
o | ma 


be planted in old tan, sand, or some a 
rial which contains ra — — to 
p * crowns 


mov 
the sak border, 
their pey” 


en 


they il et 


be rec rend bes 


ities, and allowing 
the turf without the intervention of a raw 


roper place a 

to be Pather | in the transition $ fiower ter ar 
usuall rvenes betw: ansi 
the 


© 


sat or —— 


variety 


| gar 
be produce of map > our 
bedding plants, by vari 


and ent is 
the — vil be their effect. Henry Bailey, Nuneham, 


HICORY AS ee SALAD. 
t the b 
uring the months of J january, 


and Endive. 


tree they become 10 Lettuce is very useful when — . but ‘ow at 


plen — the minor tr 


ress, Celery, | 
it be, we were e still at a loss fora p Sreem for 
y Green Hammersmi 


supply 


le 
large e 
in ae 


jepin it 


you n = 


second time, and will produce A second ¢ 
towards the middle or end of March. 


„ but will 88 ve 


n easy an 
lanching Chicory leaves is to have a few ¥ 40 ine 
u ut , and 


r creer 

the plants in may b ge 
. equal facility, if it it is kept 1 
ire three weeks to produce 


is limited. 


of 2 
at the same time an e effectual 


12 or 14 inches 
Each bo 


0 


of exce cellent salad may 
pong! to hold three of thebe 
one 


Hi 


5 
l 


will req 


pb 
vat pat in at onee in once 


ea taal 


in, the firs ore ready to cut, Under 
ES roots chal not be removed, but | r 
a second pat i ; and by takin 
my) | it will not be necessary, 
ks, to bring in a fresh supply 
nce in a a fortnight or three weeks, 
inches asunder in 


n the 


aber means arenot convenient. G. Fleming, Trentham. 


HINTS TO FLORI ISTS. 


which I am acqua 
2 ohn 


— 

— gai AND Pow 
through two week, in order to ay 
T disbudded, and clean. Prep 


or these should be 4 55 oer 
e planted o 


e pot bound, ai & Beck 
mle ad pane, ee this time, to “take 
1 in what sorts you are 


3 OF ie 


aM Clase into which 2 
Hints on their Nomenclature, Methods of Treatm 
on the principl 

ned 


all known 
ties and 3 it has appeared to 
e be established, 

e h the above- 


man 


cultivator of 

than any one called 8 sae to ee them, | n 
to their i Prevention and for with 
‘rod ctive cultivation have 

nya Bivens than their 33 1 
—— 


result of injuries inflic’ ted i in 


e „Observation and researches 


THE GARDENERS’ 


| magpie 


eve 
e been generally put on 


ad 8 require to be gone i 


T káve distributed Diseases, be! 
ent, 


are ed plant. Th t be placed | diseases 
jured plant. ese must be pla 

à Separate class ; they ~~ — truth a called diseases 

More 
i aber to 


have e, and becaus 
ren 3 


w bee 
wall ai rn that i 
* n 5 
peame N do not please so 7 Po 
Ins the differe: . ‘kinds of vegetable isease 
defined + . „ it has a red to me that very fre- 
al pacar A the symptoms of Mies have been confounded 
with disease itself or its cause. Thi 
from the universal mania a giving to them t 
rs which his 


e I was unwilling to have 
3 the terms in qu 


oe 
= 


ek giv 
appear n 


any one from reading my book 
ho thinks he can cpa ie any use from it, for, after 
a disease he will find a clear 


know relative to the 8 aid err ot oak p A 


re known 


125 different 3 may y th 
cases, to avoi id repetition, — 

their details, the more 

| convenience of ee th rA at all times as brief 

P 


Eve very 0 ne who casts his eye on the 8 work is 
requested to wpe in mind its title. It is but an essa 
0 ast extent, in the treating of * the 
or offer 


9 5 


e 

5 "species 3 S 

meration cannot but be incomplete. 

e who have "studied agriculture, rather ihan thos 

0 toe versed in physiological and chemical e 
tended to vegetable pat g N They h 


CHRONICLE. 


invari 
is | immediate 


er 


have many times instituted comparisons, and the result 


roo the 
made chiefly to seedlings 
remarks fae. in agreat measure, 


n y- 

ent result, the plant becomes extremely eee 

of external influence, its constitution i is attacked, and i 
of plants in this state pe 

ian who prescribed a 


a mut 
moisture is equally ropes for 3 is a great analogy 
gg hase: beg an 

E lant possesses y within delt the requisites of 
Proite! R its own existence reasi 
bulk, without aid og ex urces, provided 
I it is surrounded b medium sufficiently 
charged with moisture to prevent evaporation from its 
tissues ; and a tilated plant should be 


a 
them to the o air. 
wit e 
and the 


ring system im 
. will not bear e 


ture con indies mt 


ave 
5 ay only Ss directed their i 5 uiries di 


i eden indigenous 


uch cut down certain 
ies. IfI havei iadesi done so, my motive has been 
urs, for 


rps to t hav 
I claim some indulgence on the part of the public. 


appear- 
eir health is much more 
o can say how much of the re art 
cellence of a are re apse n the treatment i 
ceives when you 


PRACTICAL HINTS 5 — ont paar 
RD 


AND SMALL G 
AHLIAS.—In the directions of a 388 3 
book under the article “ Hare,” piece of advice 
is, * Catch your Hare !” to give 


addi ig i rece 
fo! lowing “list of 36 really good flowers at a celebra’ 
r, and can ee eee. them, W 2 
sa in party „to th 
eash in this arti Miele, 
which designate the flowers, refer to 
raised t 


$ 


8 names Pari aie 
to the parties who 


aan’ (Barham), White, tipped with rosy crimson 
9 an Renynghe), Deeg scarlet 
ro Tapeet: 


rare egg aha 3 Louis . . 5 
reason as far as I am PRINCIPLES o: 4 7 85 Whale), Blush 
1 have preferred r a ON it es aa DOLLY ATION.—No. archioness of Worcester, in: ee White — with pink 
under a name which HERE is so obvious an jógy Í rive a i didnt Miss Prockter, ( Frovkter), Blush, with pin — mas 
the eas of all theory re- ints g when removed from hat may be — Rane rb A 
Gein to ne are here de iseases of plants, ry, and placed es 2 — (Collison), Bright * . 
Doane constant] ste 1 ied inio fve diaos: enable either to develop itself as an independent indi- 5 aor tipped pea an à PT with bright red 
1 y stenic (arising from excessive vidual, that remarks 3 to on Fer ke. hard Cobden, (Stei), D Dark 
pate cometas i the other. er indivi Rubens, (Turn e 
„Š Dean Sea tly astenie — from — in i gel distinetions are not admissible ; but as | Scarlet Gem, (Turner), er), Extra fi : = orm 
“ani soetings from e 3 metimes from neral principles are only aimed at in these pa —— outs, hos ), Fines Te 
5. Band. fate, such need not be sona to, or in way affect the Victory, (Prod 0 
Thatta : line of proceeding I intend to follow. Violet Perfection, ( (Pookie, Rich violet purple 
that who are so ult almost any pent ipin work in which allu- | Yellow Standard, (K e best Y 
_the bey perea to the system of Brown, ion is made to the subject under consideration; peruse ing aro Famer Danaus 8 n 
e one single term em- the «calendars of operations” in the numerous peri- Pachess Or Sutherland, (Turvill) Rony par with whi 
w asido the i that repeats it, di «a to fioriculture, and ten to one some | Emelie Lehmann, (D egen), Rosy scarlet, with white 
ace 1y con passage to the following will meet your eye : Eu x > ), Red pel BS ee 
in contradiction with my- ed off,” or “ ; ora, (Hooper), Yellow, 
mig enn | tree eae c's od rig | eee Se en 
medical system, I seem to | f0 settle the soil about their roots.” des of departed | Madame, (Wachy), e, tipped with whit 
I beg the reader to seedlin cuttings rotting with e hopes t hung | Mias Jane, (Howard), 2 
he will find many dif- u yo a destiny, how could you E> the lie to the | Miss Stevens, E r~ oon Rosy purple, white centre 
* 2 Accord- | ciency of that Thousands of seedlings Points, (Batteur), Maroon, tipped bite : 
w t excep A el cuttings have been killed od by the “cold water cure.” | If you order any or all the above of a respectable 
or from ast But Now I know no argument, eith or scientific, they will come to in small pi 
us principle. If I have of this practice. 1 * ; — 1s 
nti that can be advocated in favour is p well rooted, and safely packed in moss. aa 
astenic, it is only be- tka stl wr wehbe tie or glossary of | pleasure to observe the skill and care displayed in 


n DD 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [May 19, 


310 hel id f th a 
S — d the money to the other. such clear evidence of the “ plague.spot” Visible 
such delicate plants as “young Damar “@ome many plants go to tos — — -iry Tele nd, where | thi nk it worth while sen ding’ you r 5 ples: » that I 

pa may 7 

renr ert “Each plant is tied | 8 “and lest the — 1 of os en surely — long continue to 8 . a = garden, in a bors y add that 
inj frail stem, a piece : < at rags of horticulture | 5 

baa should Bn the fra 2 iin y their oa weet 5 a * — * + Pya B., Brenchiey 


t 
n is 
; | h as those were gra : i 1 CHarcoal. Ob 
fully, the tie unfastened, and the suc tieultural Society’s meeting. nima arcoa serving in the Chronicle a 
must be removed carefu A nase 1 60 Royal l iieo rara te ertheless a | 5th’ inst, a “récom mend ition ‘Of * 
attende 


lants from a ubjected to ais os eedings cà - — 
Brin . forward ; and. vn soul they sagt iti ite — o other “offe — 2 to" int gak gardening, ad with a wart is seen on the stem, open it with the 
— a 2 the dark N a 
p and —5 improv — po 2 È * 
ne the weather may b a 8 & — * jetin grievous inju ey upon ntry a. If is ied ha ad place, 
accustoming 8 . the ted. which rere nee 00 the Go-opieration of all senses to roel ay = a tif ough — * a ane 
will be and vexat i ossible way. is i hi 
The Datla loves moisture, and bin soil oria | —— —— —. 3 — Ap successful | surface of the beds prevents the eggs being N 
be ; eo zk d. Thè gardenérs, by showing what plants when the latter are in a tender state, bat tiis 


ry. 
ad. 
tum of ro w-dung, a foot below me surface . ati ld be effected in a small way, have not to be depended on en tively as a remedy, C. &, 
‘will be beneficial. The soil should — a as of | a vad ae 11 1 gitrflar * of competition, and hav a „ Riddings Park, May 8. 
leaf. mould and v n rum n en nie ve been The l t—At 1 that 


Céad ge plant low, 80 that when watered | brought out men's energies, which might E | ae stan ee dee wam 8 a 
peor pm tid 4 0 10 d not pen till they were ex tinguished i in the churchyar 7P T ; 1 


IN, E PVAS è vidently — o week which . then just mas, ; but the , 

Sas dart pear" A ß 
i i ither and blight the smallest germs o — ul ar- 

ve — the ath ver May 57 boa De ill fated doting in Tein d. No liber ae, or 9 period of o the yonr 20 gl: frost . fo i 
timo ted to submit 

time for the Pa to attain ele N T the — N very en Be p . Sre 5 Bro te tought this 5 the dopa’ of hum ot our coldest winters 4 Ma. 
9 ae fI ciety, ea — bitten, k "Be the jest of even 


J 
LE n carm lf told by one of the — Sparrows Fed by a Robin. —In hokita 
STERF SPRING ld GROUPS, 60 O VARING a that the” flower show had beet ‘held two | last year I had occasion to head down 


last yea wn a great number 
18 5 hi GROU days previously, a wait outside, becatise | of Filbert trees, which were bundled and ara 
78 r t 2 i { 


ed from 1.) i ot for . * . The y occasion 

mers Fay are tne a lg |e tS 

in p erect puro white blossoms, from the third n May to tlie Royal Society, attempt to deny that the exhibi- 4 vay all but “abbey” iied 3 1 

* sgan Rin 1 7 . K adapted for rack works, tion was other than a miserable failure. On the o ong t hedge sparrow’s my wi Pr bers 
— — te e 12 inches high, 4 a hand the Improvement Society gave convineing evi- ones car one egg. Not wishing to estroy N nest, 

slender hys — s ale bieo; bell shaped flowers, from | dence that there is material and talent in Dublin to I — always considered these kre ao ata 

the it 1 in a April unt — th ast week in May. Adapted dalita 80 OH e xhibition ; for if properly encouraged, | in : bel p than 8 N sade os veto a bundle it 
Semra een — in — — =g last, —— the spirit of improvement manifested on that oc — —— a ald P Duith * operation my — 

having erect spikes of snow-white bell-shaped It for will never slumber. Many of the plants were small | tio L g 


n was 

A p close by, 

an elegant object in small groups or — ‘from the : ood management ; | attracted by a robin perched on an Apple tree A 
11 ee ip April kirta the seeond 8 Pre er rapt 1466 thet Penit — —.— . r | apparently much concerned at what T 
Mrosoris SCORPIOIDES ATA. A dwarf compact plant, which | and every ye eir Ys id 1 What 65 Aa 

uces a profusion of small clusters of clear white starry | them’ more fitting objects for exhibition. The compe-| could not imagine — 

Biossoms, from the last week in April until the first week in titors were numerous; in fact, as f — = exhibitors went, matter, for I knew that the nest was not of hi building, 

2 rete snag Ee 25 sings or yd Te: g | they embodied all that were worth r ning. I am con-| or the contents of his kind. After I had Pree | 

P + CRISTATA.—Har ‘ : i 4 

— high, with large — ous — . blen ni vinced that no one who possesses ee lihat ‘knowledge of | job, I withdrew a few yards f h ker pasti 

in on from the first week in April until the first week | the subject will be bold enough to say, that with the ex- ee intended . re eal in the matter; and, 
the cam 


a.) 
2 5 
B 


se, he e down 7 0 kiii 
pi ception of the specimens from Glasnevin Botani ] 
spicuous creamy whi Rowers. ar Wedi : fr 205 a vok r any of the plants at the “ Royal” could tive looked @ atthe young 1 and seem s pi 
in 7 kin May had other than a damaging = <a bes the exhibition | He then flew off, but soo returne ae "Now 
—A hardy herbaceous piant 12 ind; Fap the "pal mprovement Society. o warped is the fed the young birds, which he con 
ni i mi ate tile t fore, ein dene ly. oa innat een tha | 2 mind in Dublin, that the highly respectable dis- | the question is, how he gute in pospe the ssion : 17 17 
. 214 Oma NDIFLOR a end A. monT and. — —White-flowering play made by the Improvement S ‘was scarcely | family, for I am quite sure tha youn 


Tapie herbaceous plants, which grow from 6 to 12 inches high. | noticed by their own press, while, i. 125 contrary, the | the nest are those of the 9 sparrow. n. Hun 
N herbaceous species, 12 ins, 8 ave birt i i C 7555 ni. that a 
high? ‘of neat habit, and having — conspicuous light | the presence of a multitude of witnesses, had ‘teeming| Corrosive Sublimate.— Findin ae ap civ 
blue flowers, inch wide. In perfection from the middle of | columns singing their triumph! instead of a funeral | dilute solution, of ospa su a7 3 45 asa 
“7 9 irge ; apy in justificati headed- | worm Eid 
irge ; apparently in justification of that wrongheade 
1 — = P 4442 

i „ pirami S high, and bearing nu N ness which has reduced their exhibitions to farces. protection to 8 &e., bet have 1 deterred, from commie 
long densely-flowered spikes of rich marine-blue blo: ossoms, from It is to be hoped, however, that there is good sense the fear that it might be TORP: A ae 
the third week in May until the first — in July 1 ‘of purpos g ‘il N 
88 ir at 20g A h eoi — 12 inches land wipe away and extinguish this national sin there pong be no sort of danger m APPS s 
blossoms, In perfection from the first week in July until the | and disgrace, which clogs so heavily the wheels of im- crops eas or Beans, be epee it m 
first week im —— sp | ment, and presses down an abundance’ of talent, insoluble by albumen, and so detaine 


a — 3 to 24 inches ** 
ets ga 

flower 12 the Inst bo in June — the middle of Se of Septem- of cess Fr. = employing sp : 
Der. A suitable plant for back. ground effect in large groups |  Onéidiwm altissimum —A 1 specimen of this plant | mentally, step by step. It kills s 


ty som —— — oyn reland on some final termination but we cannot advise you to take 1 25 er | 
or bed arge 8 WPa z Pl k 
as been finely in flower in the conservatory hére for Zino Cisterns for Aquatic Plants.— 


85 
x 

— 
nii 

F 
1 i % ¢ 
S 

5 

8 

Š 

®© 

5 


8. 
. lke clear ron pom 13 many weeks. It produced 22 flower stems. As soon | stated that zine is injurious to y 
22 ie . hfi Week in June until as the flowers began to open in * stove, I had the serve that Limnocharis Humba S 
7 d ï i in the hothouse o 
MıuuLos COLET —A hardy herbaceous Har 18 inches high, plant — to an intermediate e, e, with a view to in a zine trough in the ho 
with numerous rich pirr A n blossoms, In N from insure . > ; [ver fish 
the first week in June until the last week in July.—Win, Wood | inure it to a cooler temperature, in order that the period | will inform m if gold an nd silver ahs 
bol blooming might be prolonged as much as possible ; | lined yer zine, the water being th 
Home Corr rrespondenc i after a considerable number of the flowers were ex. à8 Seh use. V. S. H., Bury . 
Dublin Horticultural Societies. The. ‘Ga rdeners’ | panded, it was then placed in the conservatory, whe to inform your oral the $0 
h * a 5 


re ; has : * = 
Chronicle has been estly endeavouring, for some | it has been an object of much interest, nor does it seem | this i the common name in the who 
months, to induce a nee’ aitem of management in the to have suffered from the low tem emper —.— to which it India for the fruit ib seulen 
or M i 


evera 
Society reland.”' But it appeared to me, on a occasions did not register more than 389. 4 great aid 8 1 do not 
recent visit to Dublin, that the attempt has been vain, in matters of this kind is to wi thhold water as much as a 
supposing always that an opinion can be formed fro m possible from all * 4 when exposed to alow | Munro, geen. May 13. wih 
their last exhibition, when, as was publicly’ stated, the ió | temperature. James can, "Basing Park, May 1. Rabbits. — am finishing a paling, 3 fort 
most strenuous — were made to erush the second | Arrival ofa Fli 7277 of Tiset, —The east winds, which | my outer jl 
ee: i i th i were 


7 com 

ö Cit een of d coverin 

nth both Pann 8, T had an opportunity of formin g | cliffs, and so filling the air that a lady here, on looking | Blistering of Peach Leaves.—Frost 
ame opinion n of the Tie ch belonged to these two out of i ti ily. They | cause of this m 


of Dub lin, . may also state, dying. The Men which I send you were captured | stances ; damp 
ve bee i i 


with im à 
3 den of te 8 inted wi th this insect. One 7 after Know- | duce Ne leaves. 1 7 5 
dge, Cromer, Norfolk, May 16. [The insect was the a Nectarine, I was struck wi p- PAT i 
pectability a Dublin i xen common Bibio Marci, and a similar r phenomenon was every leader produced blistered leaves; i 
in a popular condition by the | observed at Luton, in Porp bag at the bottom of the ASA were 
] ociety, because it Potato Disease of 1849.—I have Just come out of m a eae e is a 1 10 wel roots 
e ma w I have ‘beaut e 


l y 15 
"in funda ar bps produce, to sup. 8 Kido bat Syd ree E: 1 thi ink) the ee a es 5 5 
; , ey, now about 4 to 6 inches ab in ee pee Ys 
rt two. On the late ocean it was eviden? tia te ground, and which ‘were’ plan ied Feb. W. r 8 “is is portion e 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 311 


Two years ago I lifted two 


y or how can 
posed effec ct 1] 
a Food Plant.—I beg to call at- 
* of this very common Britis 
jally now, because it is just coming 
y therefore be easily found either 
is 


th the roots. 
f food in the isle of 
junds) for many years, and there- 


its culture in other places may 


belong to 

ate order, is so very acrid and para- 

ea the size of a e Die . 
3 mb. I c swer for 

ort to — ss from — With a 5 

ant Bal w we adh do anyt thing with this 

ry article istine 


e in subraittifig the nea 
the plant will be gen zay 
7 re gulaiy a 


Ke 
full 


tuber is fou 

e old one — — as t ann new 
To out of at least 100 cases 

ng offsets. To plant them on the | 


flat shallow eng would assuredly prove a failure, 
The long beds in which it is said to be so successfully 


other culinary crops, and thus secure a 
white 


table, 
o pure, so white, and so e that the ‘Potato i in 


8 
its best of days never equalled, and all this in the pre- 
sent uncultivated state of the Sloe, whilst the first 
samples of Potato read from their native wilds, were 
rer ag in size, and very inferior in quality. 


to the leaves of Arum being eatable, 


In re- 
I “he not pre- 
Sond to say ; and even if they were, they would not be 


Fe Ds.—One of the the ‘most ati attractive ‘features s of the ex- 
hibition of Orchids was a most beautiful specimen of Camaro 


rea, from Mr. Holford’s es Basoett. It formed a 
P — at least 5 feet high, richly mented with flower- 
spikes from top to bottom. ep saat k give this fine speci. 


ore Mr. Bassett did not receive the credit he deserved for so 
meritorious a pe dieat tion. 
Large Collections of OxcntDs were contributed by Mr. Mylam, 
gr. to S. Rucker, Esq.; Mr. Williams, gr. to C. B. Warner, 
k. ; and Mr. Rae, gr. to J. J. Blandy, Esq., of Reading. In 


oe am an Violet blossom i Orange-flowered Lelia einna- 


mass 
— aie plants of Yanda indiga, one so much brighter than 
the other that it closely approached the 88 ae 2 


the buff gegen a Dendrobium Dalhous Odo 
toglossum 3 cineta 9 and stapėlioides, 
Mr. Williams bada t oa pat of the som e Den- 


drobium Ruckeri, D. macrophyllum, a ripe 0 okes: and 
the yellow- e ae hm Mr. Rae sent fine examples 
of Cattleya Skin Phaius Wallichii, the ylos ia 


W 
I need not state how y. 5 
acrid taste 


e generally Robin met, bat 75 B 


when 80 many other good greens are at command. 
after 


Should any of the liquor be left with t 


he tubers 


g, or even moisture left about them, they will 
not need pe to season them; for I w they 
ill prove warm enoug ch, wh * 


dried tubers are decidedly a delicaey, and fre a 
ri 5 in I would be for experiments to 
made, is eA now to get roots, a taste is as 


old by one tuber of an ounce in weight as by a 


well t y 
metw and, if these experiments are recorded 


in your 


colum ns, a 1 time will try tè value of the article. 


Alex. Fors 


Garden Reker ies. My garden was robbed on — 


nesday morning. The thief elimbed over the walls, 
lected ahont 300 plants just ready for bedding ny 
ts in id touche 


ason for miting; » 2 5 
at 


H. May 
Cheap and invaluable D antifrice-—Diteglve 
f in thre 


cold, add thereto one teaspoonful of 15 


and o oe en e. — 8 She ba 0 


when su sy ch 9 — es are frequen 


two oz.. 


a e for wine-glass of 80 A 


arar 
duces a belly action Sy the gum er 


eally an admirable preparation. ] ; 


9291 ieties. 


. ULTURAL, M 


O 
E 


3 ‘Shelburne A f: r, J. G. S 
tes 


0 
eee of starch, gum 


c pi R. Hurron, Esq., 
The fo 9 P. elections took pinen? viz., ihe Earl 


the 


A. Cut- 


ubject w 


the removal of their water; 5 rand nde forma formation of sc ef 

4 next per 
g Food, an 

its other Properties,” was announced for Tuesday Lr 


hi 1 . 
ture, on n * the Root; its means of bial 


at 3 o'clock. 


Royat Botanic, Recent’s Pars, May 16,—This Society 


was fortunate enough to have a fine day for 


bition this season. True the morning was v 
up early, and the afternoon N cloud 
show was a very good one; but 


n the wh 
than that at Chiswick on the sth. inst f fo 
>y 


was no lack of Orchids, Stoye and 

the Azaleas were not near so numerous nor $ 

wis on that occasion, On st e hina 
15 


eri ia 
féte, Falling so soon after Mo Ch 500 meetiug, this s 
be pas was largely composed of plants RONEN on 


that occasion, nd a, thae were fully re 
we shall not re-describe them; but con 8 
what was not then aint 


by lections wef 8 STOVE and ng AE PLANTS were shown 


NETET Bh 
our r 


rs, Lawrence, Mr. Col to H. Colyer, Esq., of Dart- 
In these groups, 


td, aril by eases Pampli ‘ane Pawley. 


whic e all in excellent condition, we did not rem 
ping strikingly different from what the same SEA shanga 
Aw. 


show, 


its first exhi- | 


as 


A Py 7 2 


Ark a 


w 
vation 


Mormodes . 8 cerina, a nd other nic e plants. 
pres of 15 Oncutps were * by ae Plast g r. to 
J. H. Schröder, Eeq., Mr. Carson, gr. to armer, ee 
and Mrs. Lawrence. i the first group a 3 Cat tley 
intermedia, Sobralia macrantha, and h — mach 
r. Carson had a pretty Barkeria spectabilis ; but the chief 


lle bea 
tifully grown and flowered. Mrs. Lawrence had two Saccola- 
biums, with 1 long drooping racemes of pink and white flowers; 
and a nice Ca ttleya intermedia. 
Groups of 4 G were shown by Mr. Jack, gr. to R. G. Lo- 
1 sar, n Mr, Beck, Mr. Bruce, gr. to B. 
ck 


um major; Mr. 
— Mr. Green a good Phaius Wallichii. A pretty Odontoglos- 
m, m, with green, A pve gay and petals, and violet 
lp, Pe with ie was sh 
eee E Hea ATH ther was. an admirable display, and the 
— 4. Nase the la tte T, both 
from amateurs dad * en, were highl the 
respective exhibitors.— Messrs. Paul's group was again pro- 
uced, in better eonaiion as regards bloom than it was at 
Chiswick. His William Jesse, Aubernon, Baronne Prevost, Au- 
gustine Mouchelet, and Ma dame de St. Joseph, one — the’ best 
of light salmon Roses, might he 2 to be perfec * e 


Among ores eee ee, Mr. W 


|| Dowager r of Nor pberland, had a mant. e — 


e Gardenia Stan! 


pl 

New PLANT 3 Veitch had Mite 2 cocci nea, 
wooded eng with much inflated fannie’ scarlet flowers, 
a first class species ; they also sent the handsome 1 
sanguinea, and some small species; and a p mere Heath of — 
Story’s raising, ge . — Regina.— —Messrs W 
showed Eriostem medium and Rhododendron Gibsoni; 3 
Mr. Iveson a little straw e Hoya; Mr. Gai a good 

yellow Rhododendron; and Mr. Turner, of Stout $ per of 


r. Parker. The bast groups Sof “fancies” were contributed 


d, |i 
eli- | by 
vy Ur. Moseley and Mr. Gaines. Mr. Hoyle 83 gre same 


| Calceviarias. Several groups of Cinerarias were also produced, 
but these, with the exception of a few plants from Mr. Kendall, 
were poor representations of what wastage id be. 

We had nearly forgotten to mention that some tall Cacti 
| were 8 but they were not finely p pree d. There were 
also one or two nice groups of Ferns from Mr. Williams. 


in 
first one was ie filled oth stove and greenhouse plants 
from Hokies. Cole, Pamplin, 3 Young, Hamp, Hook, and 
Pawley, whose respective exhibitions were = produced in 
capital order. In one corner of ‘this tent was the Tulip and 
eartsease Show. Tuli ips are in general produced i in consider- 


resent occasion there were very few, and what were 
pad rath se not generally sufliciently expanded. The 2 0 
sta t ze at. by Mr. Lawrence, of Ham mpton. We 


- pres — good stand was exhibited by A. Lass Eam 

of West Wycombe, who obtained the Ist prize in the Amateurs’ 

Class; and J. . — of Holloway, had a nice second 

stand, in which we ob d good hook of Platoff, Cerise 

Blane, Polyphemus, 4 Da —The best pp erei of Pansies 
ed by Mr. 


d. 
a Ts. r 
Negro, and Mr. Lane for Emma, all seedling Sa gn Mai 
e 


mark any: 


he 5th of May, We ‘ita observe, however, Mrs. 


— conection n, a beautiful little plant of e 


noiobium 


4 Poe 7 1 
These were 1 s of 1848. He likewise exhibited a 


olymorphum, which should not escape notice, on account of 
he wae ini Wil ual to lead the tiny 


of a 0 0 ers; t then the plan 


formal appear: _In iy instance it was trained o 


Capital groups of 0 970 
contribut 5 que Green and 57 6 A 
plants was a (G.F 

flowers on it, Meki as large and as doubl 


mong 


easa 


Mr, 
ortuni), E ith 10 open 
good si 


edling of 1 called Pontif, a — howe of very 
. adhe colo utile Gaines received Certificates for Hero of 
wo“ — e » Pelargoniums.—The third tent 


zed 


Rose, of snowy whiteness, “and emitting the war abs 
Bog 2 


most 1 vga of 


us 


In collections of 10 Stove and eee Prants, the 
nen i 


Campbell, Slowe, Malyon, Stanly, and 


T oung, 
duced groups of well 8 Plants. Several wore tens 


who 


were also staged, but they were all inferior to the a 


Carson, Jack, 
1 


all pro- 


was filled with Roses n pots from Messrs. Paul and Francis ; 
also with Cinerarias ra% Calceolarias, the latter from Mr. 
Gaines,—The fourth tent was occupied with Pelargoniums, the 
— of 8 came from Mr. Beck, Mr. Par fg Mr. Foster, 

nd Mr. Gaines; and with Azaleas from Messrs, Bruce, Cole, 


— 
— — Pii May 9. —The flowérs gy e produced on 
this occasion in = llent ee Class 
ee ms: lst prize to J. s, Es sgo of —.— with Al- 
x, Addison, 2 Hamilto 4 Constellation, Miss Edwards, 
Zabdi “Hainbow, Bellissima, Duke of Nortolk, s Blooming Sieh 


75 
+ 
ie 
2 
PEF 
3 
Bee 
FE 


** „20, to A. 
Norfo Ik, La * Sale, Great yam 
Rainbow, Blooming Zi Constellation, Exaui sie) Marc 
of Lothian, Aurora, Achilles, Lucy Neal, Model of Perfection, 
aate =e Milton, Excellent, Superb, 5 —— 
Disracii, Lord J. Ruscell, Attila, Baroness Wenman, and Mrs 


CH 
RONICLE 


312 
Sot oni 3 
prize d, to M 
Dr bio Me. r. Seo 
ho he N 0. ace 
Pizarro, Aur ie ae — ee T 
Ratlan are, Mise Edwar Juven Ro; Nurser, H 
Ratland, Great ‘hap — ry men, 
2 f Bria Sono ath ar ene GAR 
s „ id 3 
ine = Atila, E a, Mtr cpap tough, with | tow DEN 
ae coos Saeni sate Addison, É k, Climax, [towards us ot ER 
J ellat en ir u * ax, 
e aat P ah ims of Slow ey se . ut bein . to — 
e * * * * 
Ju a 1 No 12 — with Eucli „Fol Model sui ng mg o the wors an 
us piter, J 8 lis M R d yni ta plan vi diff 4 1 
iver abd, isa ——5 G e autumn nts of fro saree par its trag 
“ag et reole d te, M 0 isr * bat » | Vi n fl m 3 um n 7 
y 8. Wal Oase 3 and A — eli e March nang» of Kau lfuss took. ol —— 5 y e e 2 ee 
ar (Lau Gertideates Prise to io chiowess of | ' should b ode ‘Silene, * ears old a able 3 
e), th r. 3d ,M e N en g Mi e u 
ip ai a wnt bate sc Cu Te W * 
—— io * far “the Ros asa, Sweet — ae ae Layer IM 
De Ai ais f | them the r caref 5 Parti a ophila. N pd 25 I ìt in J AY 
. e e 8 5 oe ean | te eae ae 
na , 8 h imi n e ch a an € 
fon d ier: y Prodromus ews, ~ Pin “ i * best a 7 cae a: IND Pas 2 8 
‘vl w ing. ived thi Vol. ERIES, FO oy th t rested | this they — ia en be s ay less, 5 of r 
4 J whieh is It isn 13, 0 RCIN e ca y is pi . e er. mphin EN uir Be a f obtaining 
68 and P is t sat we ith * GD ter i to tal t le ora : J. aal very di in by m: y 
468 pages oa ce part at the ue EPA pilla; exa ess HB You ye iff it, 1 
3 Pn pear ne De ad eerie “sigs Sera * e a ss species The muy diss arent 2 ating = 
yetagos a eom The ereafter Ca 9. w 3 est 5°, ui th 8 Biblio Ma — ‘treatment: ; 
me b d A prehe pre T , the aes! and ain a ee Ppt Feike Ap wry lve i a Cactus 
— Mier thal haan nds ae Ania th ye nse an atte a stea vty rey pede of bl t in pure: and 
0 the ta hoisy, “ti Phyto Yoli the Ni the the — T. ‘a into frui ts will 3 nd to ady b 8 N abt Aare e (See ack fii — ther, 
vane Pace ch-w, and th re exte ight te pply ze and t prem recei e the ottom le the h J.” 2 d o Gard. bel Phtha 
of 9 Sa us is oqui a 0 ee £ bunch 22 5 ke the Pe uali alur 1 oi N E E nas age ded. Rear: 2 Chron 8 te 
ittle een t Tandon, od . Mr, will pn d Vine d we wii. A i mae ee ae destroyer is 1 ra 
n d „ and pur or 0 uri eou w ry rem eof ts cat 3 — 
Sale and eta mm nd ose pr NS.— re i heki rse il be oL EO i erp "The ie 
u ils en fo m eser A ui he Th at b an eh ith illa 
3 n Misc * belonging i table, ar ba lett 1 e he edie ee phere numba bees ars oft of Se 
It was lots, chids.—A ellan ged M ging pla 13 in left thiek se ge-sized ulating utu s for P 9 sa hich anales iik * Bisp ` active lar 
5 vas n N i a a . 292 et a 1 ie a — which ax moth 
diy tpar ne * A collection fro Send erop leh size ich are inten 5 regards 8 — ca- 1 
n of ) + J. The 
plan wes vursd rom ore ean a eserv sal ew ended ot ri aoaia nee pane eee sf - Comme 
e hi t peci ay J th ed and in mo hi fo: 8 wi ro ak eets ec salcat pe Ai Lerich 
an J es 50 last av. e her h g the st ch r thi ill w in ol cat s. W 
— * 0 y soms accol — 0 z ee, —. oui now a si 1 2 * ree a much an 21 5 a toes he tr cree 
3 realised o rome Nx. rie rt nani at | >a good, 9w be ot which 3 "her of tae a obje ir nder plants g water e 2 aa Ca Ga 
* 2 
rom 14 — | auras th lee s. | bed, 6 ae en red for sa Reg prod arl Salt fally sto poses 128 1 8 5 
Tries nyien ay of Wines 2 let Gite Sc Tate 3 tee ha tense Phe pped. Ado 2 fal dova, an by 
cee pe T ery hd th bak a ó. Maldak a L ec the b re ges 8 to, —— 
alend are 10 nda were. bi 8. * he lat eat N ermen e ae elons been 3 the — Aead. a 1 in 50 e vast t must 
or of —— h tricolor. O larl the cede 3 so tosi 3 pipes and if Let yellow, an 72 — — e of u each. Pha 4 
xf gaiza 3 PUANT e Opera —— Now have d f ing wef -s “Beneath the zul. a 1 raea 55 5 0, Ab Ini raining ae to 
8 d ~ DEP 19 85 5 nyi and fast 7 N * e! Me art w n 1 ee oum —— our ransplant hs it the te 
t TM . siati g apere t Lon — n assia wil ane 
A beset ahh NN hey a r a qui plant the alt Was nder i Ran he ha avait plan — n Mil irine 
full a for e t re sii oil th it UN p N all. ts e 5 
fall of oot ston rae 1 80 1 gui bt iam il wih a hee en pation TRE aia cs 2 8 
find i e and ey as of s em d I 5 filli nce par ti C rium x PLANT Anagh you ong as yas a ymn 
wth itan od, ‘wt ly lar eir plac go ii mall dli ore tr pro hand ng ev amaz ie Tamo m offici m ars to “tp fruit nal butet 
root hac agers II not ha ones, wh ed in ae intruders m m pB ouble till h ly pr und th azingly. moht. Anth s. Gen pport it; posal 
roo e re- a whi a e soi 3 e vi h M ed 
one, 8 set er pla pot w * hich wt Soil; sharp- l ould l pared the ne ice, Si aii Si sta an possibl: to set 
— 3 aie dower ay luder ich received —— ; by Les a 5 pc ate they w -Ag a5 alle ver . glicn. J. y hiram 
a ing in ut row w ispe 8 one s ss 0 sei 8 WW wil © sur (M Iri brar 2 Ss n 
to Se th er-bu w such nsa ts th wh P ns cl eiss to ee E an us anu: 0; 8 olia, a M termin; W. 
n l afi pte wil ds ble ; 81 en ced ose ors, wi d . — N - 48 1 
aw soil so t, kar — „ l aliy without ma 5 and of tight tals om Sal hae" the yo ae 1 e done Bos saxatile. ; 5, — — e 
maki tu supplie place — 18 * the be a additio er 8 y sun, b th ir ull ung bd su ich the vane “ahi Ewi gh Caan Sanicle, venusta. 2 
to a 8 . —.— 5 ina Tae anger of 74 5 ut let th rser n = i Tagus pn of robably too 3 bis ot pale al 
i nti ive 0 e — em ei 8 a 77 wt Mec ya atic i fl tris 
mee v rogress r, inu th thei — ther al ighb lants reese too lu M 3 ta aa . 
1 in 1 eee ie Ea ved at the k binet eti pA con 3 n * 
e th pr ae 2 P * at th 2 avi 8. es pric s Co ns, iant ri m eeds nS, — 3 
and 0 f the 1 tops; px ogy e my e N = 1 e the ar algen 5 y ane th For a 1 ie 
pie olour AsO , the and, ts, bu aind e | Sunday’ * 2 1 nefit Sux =~ goi amo copy. CALEN will chee Fo for plant 
. Th whi of th n he »pl th ¢'without Monde) 12 19 3 * * Soda ies aor Bal: Purtion of Peer 1 aidan 
1 ough ich h e flo h ants hout Monday’ 1 20 30.1 in. HERM e aT N, in gard C 5 6 The ly 4 um is 
ee gory ave been pe = Wel. >; n| a — . to ate 2 set, the dens as $ aey, eat 5 b wih yan 
ad and ary Po =o gs 1 ia vigour ; E J6 g . — ion 5 Mia a 7 pd = something o 8 yer Fol have fmi In; 
17 y . ean t n 5 
3 da a amal ied inthe a cena AEAF = — mae cients ama T 
the — mi r . a —.— a ordin x mis “| la 25 s: 37 5:0 N. | pA 70 F y pena 5 ona 5 but freq 
* those who ox porto be) = es e ELIE „ foe e a ve oa 
— „as th expe “oe ai of ett: 2 $ iai Ekose — 634 || 62. — 59:0 N. | J nike Gs 3 ent plate of th 2 22 
abo : B nse pro P eaf. 15—Cloud vine A ai unde 55.5 . 0 ey i erh to th phy ee case 
) tha splen „ wil cu - pee Aig om lowell sh gy 43. We W. j- git dial, eenw aps ridi em idian. the 
peat A d l re a H dy e] and col t ’ SW. 37 ud i ‘a ia a R 
in half a id d W nd i7—Cloudy ; fin i ne; id; (53.8 | W. 02 ev e of allowi ich ti Å b n. T gne uide, for Tia dan 
er is perfi it mbl d Me loud dite Be fine ar at n overca 8 05 1 ery d vou ing ime f. og he tic north, 
3 an = am Seti to e- ah tae in ote Bay st W at egre r fo. ma exten 
die es ple ion thei Sta ly showen għt; ale econ at tO th er if w ahs ot ong e: tha. o tent of its more thas 
5 ee o ne A ‘tbe ea ate diy 15 e — > 
the al Lr and meter, y those ent. ch 3 eather = n aE e, o e; cloud Aahe Ag thin ae 1 cari r at the nan Hs toob 
oe chew — e Si Via n . | -3 = = = = = 
e water i erce t — 888 R 8 ve th ercast. youc it ele ag ly, “aa —— a 4 serk 
is t. B holes he 8 HEE 82 8 1 e average stile. an see 3 a We guess nd gardener —— for 
WER — this so mad bal Sunday 20 aA 25 ge ay 26,1819. ito 5 n 3 wich, 
‘oun Be — ed sim wpe Is — 31 235 43 yet 1 som ght night, 2 t 3 At s Plac 2 
EN into ple ine W 21 65.3 £ Years in for th the etime ight. rticul ame aight-edg ome aea dial know 
AND all th ed. 22 65.8 44 1 — Great e it pla aeo bilaka ard on 1 edge istan as nearly 
8 od 23 63.8 4.3 it oe ae s Vici ne b, r irect ookin W 
thi HR parts Fri 68 45.0 54 d. piy vaili thr cini of the it, rge ion ga ntaily, north 
is U da; 2 4404 8 ug Wi ou t e „ yo lo 
1 = E | SP 41 1 ain. | 3 Winds straight T appen meridia 8 Pedr og tt 
e > 45. . 9 5 z ~ s t ma 55 orr e Serve, the 
75 15 eker HE 1 0 E T AA * e 
st temperature 536 A oa * mark Sas Aek rae corel serve — ey — 2 
Mar 3 92 H — ending an 7 ag —— aitis ju is Just pras 
we Not vest on t 13 1 dub’ és Wea 1 ct the sta seen under 
— e beg our Couns t 82 ors period 4 fhis poi cries her plumb 1 * bel heer 
75 il A 
— eat a o Co —— 1 — 5 h fro A th oman 
in reply to qu * weer to beat ‘9—therm, 29 oa E 1 enti od ad ‘the | ë iiy — . at — . — 
° rposes e deg. 4 | t of 5 . 
. o gentleman which ope re a we believe, an will t f the plum a point wae 
to par his se — ai thie sine e ub. D o as toden h which 
ndle Ss soother Dini toi 8 jo nal nd ana having 3 oub exa tersect the 
11 of eedsma is ae 0 this journal enden ag a a have, of your ti ay Oxli etly i n the moved $9 
dec 5 : „torn to hole vig 
take Ge line zs . w 5 — t wo ea n- to pie g seale . your taal e plane 
fibre b ED icing mosses, a to know tm aterer to to it is | © —— ~ 5 * e e 
: 8 A we 
— e l such and ] 8 he fi her e LCEOL down with it into your This is 
A F A be h i fi er d en col AR m thi 
— rar — — i the’ St is in a colo were: SE — 2 wpe 
wits Gees ce till plas a dea „ Für an Banke helt T 1 of a 
is a deca; shoul plan e go r the — re ell gt ee 3 ZEL aport, tg 
whe as yed v ethene uf, 8 in sume fut ibe ile tome reef led when flow: OWER 
Anemone. D uoan a light d the roots l hady satin 9e otagi lemén-cloa in shape be het ee 
on ne u r a es u w ur eckle it.“ 
P. of 8 8 Wi ts i nd ati tin 3 ed pee: TAr and 
3 e 1 ae toler ma i dt bromt fem 
— may hve in fe ina es tees: ture, soil 1 bri k = in ale ye ra id 1 apiha a n. — 4 * ; 
AR Pans fir tiny tr mes in contact a — a colour. 4 AREN . e 
e see a exe Cees 
— itate 2 boei 3 a proi with a tion h . it u 4 and n A —* wo; aig pre mee ; w 
3 cs pron r n ai co! See oe 
s to long ub. pinat 7 — 8 an the co 4 t disti otted b d 5 irregular! 
top it 10 ou bei anted of fl e lour, sh r, ne wi 
pit u had ir well do 1 ae esti the T- 9 n * : — 8 
shan ter his s ongl oA sain eed diate ly an * 233 any —— rather 
glass. ar ng. W. pring—all hie ead a a isti e w ers 
Med se: r ark n irr S ith 
u 1 en marked wit le; 9 2 
ca nee on ad i wi Dan ar wy: k bro 
n er „ in ith „ ha l 3, rown 
per Sen bac dots. outli inple? n y bese y pale : 
= k; bu dots, and ci e ee dark hear araeir 
1 % be you thi colo’ circul 2 —.— 1 
don 7 kly ur- arm ocolat wn s 
ne „eh m arki b pots 
tum cri ape very n 1 4 
m. 8 mso t v han gs of 
„ fl. on, wil ab th d a dee 
— ly oa taal 
ers la a fe good, n varie el 
rge ew light 8 ; good i ty 
» pal ht in sha 
e —— m er Pe, 
, rather 


en a 


spots ; very 


pales f 
ira 
w 
estou hin 
y spot 
ted 


Ber 
s 
er ke 
— 
fr nir * 
. 2 te for F 
W bi the rties os, 
1 bat ay Cael: Sal * to 4 45 
— mg ens is taken . with anger 
your lotari en fumi wn 
colon, you old į 9 We to 1. 
y e bea 8 Hagin 
may rec hae Flags ay the Gas 
it itself ng m'o ita one| Fath 
R 5 
tion alone, IMULU! 
of e, 
the 
aa. 
$ 


— an 

os. 3, 5 25 

yrat ees yo, and 
„ 


1849.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZE 


TIE: 313 


MANURES qA 3 anD CO. Gracechurch- street, 


26 aor oe. 


» 61, 


FOLLOWING, GTEPHENSON 


Lawes’ 


house. , reference of ? the ‘highest authori 
TES SODA AND POTASH. , may be seen a ‘ae of the Nobility’s seats and pri cael pal 
SULPHATE OF LIME), Nurseries — utd kingdom. 
( HT-SOIL. S. and Co, beg to inform the Trade that at their Manufactory, 


D AND COPROLI 17, New Park. street, vei} article purge a the construction 
aT EWR teh OYER). | Horticultural Buildings, as we ting dans, may be 
AS E (made from bone only). | "Conserva upon the most adv vantageo 
onserv 


RAL SALT, a aan other Manures of know. atori es, &c., of Iron or Wood, erected upon the most 


orna Balconies, Palisading, Field and Garden 


Fences, Wires . 


e RAULIC dee a WATER RAMS, &e., 
on * — Principles ; Engines worked b 
wer, to Gales from 1 gallon to 1000 per minute to 


er Thames-street, Lon 
Treatise on Guano, S uperphosphate of Lime, &., will be 
* ry on receipt of 8 postage stamps. Free to purchasers 


Hydraulic 
Far LONDON M ANURE COMPANY would, at 32 height of 2 feet, Bere fr pm a depth vd oud 5 t 
12 tant apow ot-air, an other kinds of Bath uildings, 
the time, call r sr a their COR) ef Gamers tories „c., heated 2 Steam, Air, or Water. Boring, 


ng 
Sinking, and Collecting of hg 
11 to Joun Leca, Cheltenham 
MESSRS. NESBIT'S € CHEMICAL AND AGRI. 
CULTURAL SCHOOL, i 
A sound practical moomia dge 
hsm Geology, S 


r, Ge. . — supplied. Direct 


ton (3 r per acre). 
, they would urge the use of 

of ime; th containing an —— ace 
mer and other mineral substances, so essential for 

alr h ly on the best terms :— gy y 

Tene MANURES they supply pe — to à good mode ern edu 
. e 11 of Soda, Gypsum, Sulphuric Acid, poy Mr, Nessir’s works on Arithmetic, Mensuration, Gauging, 
Gyps el aah Land Bares Sis, Eng glish Ei on are published by Lone- 


23 Salt, Char l, Ko. MAN and Co., and may be had of all Booksellers. 
‘tue WARD Purser, Secretary, Th d 
e terms of the Sch can — ad on application either 
r — personally or by letter à 


WIRE-WORK, ENO USE APPARATUS, 
USES, &c. 

T. THOMAS BAKER, , MANOR-HOUSE, N MANOR. 
E, KING’S-ROA EA, Manufacturer fod 
INVISIBLE WIRE F ENCE, to resist Grazin Stock, and 

ered Rabbit-proof. WIRE-WORK in Tr: 

Walks, a iosa Meee 
9 


— Very z crops of TUR- 
and MANGOLD WURZEL h 
. ure. Price 


58. per ton, an — t 
sot ooops, either used alone or mixed with 


effect a 
fon | have w satisfac- 


— — Farmer 
om ere he wn, wade 
en aree ey — a pure art 
Me, supplies Bone-phosphate pa about 65 
peri pre Psp te of Li , and gives 
and practical directions for making the Superphosphate : 
. —— FOSSIL PHOSPHATE, for ame 


M ut 60 per cent. of pure), in Hie —— ben 
10s, per ‘Mew 


"E Porter, 28, Clapham-road-place, 
ks 3 775 e oo ON SALE 


— cal he ciples 
Parties waited on i Tole and Country, =Y Drawings and 
3 free. Work for fis J Trade as usu 
Ward’s Cases. uses, 


ORTLAND CE MEN T; 7 etre received from 


pe 
superi 
sh-ponds, &c. For 
— — it requires neither 
Sepa nor paint. 1.5 3 er vegetates, and wili carry from three 
| to four times its own body of sand. 
Manufacturers, J. B, WH 
minster. 


1 ag O. IV ERP COL and BRISTOL; ire and Sons, Milbank-street, West- 
a R, DON 


POWELL, —— ERTO A 
or) 
| Che Agricultural Gazette. 
e article in any 
8, delivering it from the Import Y, MA e 
MEETINGS FOR THE E TWO Fe oe ee WEEKS. 


d —The r May 2!—Agricultural Imp. Society of Ireland. 
tion of their Boiler (before eh, ip 
e 


EE Ea hn n Societ 05 of England. 


d 17, New Park-street, Southwark, Inventors 
E 


z i 120 10 0 and Manufacturers of the Improved CONICAL and DOUB 
con AND. GRASS 1 i 0 0 CYLINDRICAL . ele ng aranana ths attention of 
“ty RE y 700 og Horticulturists their ved method o 
: M SPHATE OF LIM Too — 70 in; 1 Tan 8 to Pinerie Pr noite g Houses, 
a ‘ACID AND COPROLI TES, 3 00 &e. ich atmospheric heat as well as 1 is 
SULPaUR UVIAN GUAN 0, Sem selected cargoes (in Doek), sectired 40 any requi uired degr ee, without — sno of pipes o 
-p B-PERUVI OF AMMONIA | 8. . ve that uest of — 
40 55 W illiam-street, “City, London, frie PEP hey are now making tl their Ballons of Iron, as well as 
Copper, be Toloi the cost is reduced, These Boilers, whi 
INO AND HER MANURE S. are now so well known, scarcely pi, ne — ‘ription, but to 
ce PERUVIAN GUANO, S a finest quality, direct from | those wh — not * them in tion prospectuses . 


parent, collect „ for her from the a ‘ed 

the etre and the winds 3 ven. Every 

kas t of mind an ape n pressed 275 T 
ervice of aver, and still or periodical exhi- 

bition of distress now asserting that and 

non i. opposite—never herself f—as the cause of 
mis 


To a escend from the e to e real, to 
learn from the past a lesson for the 


r to the principles 
of practical e Should be 
guided, but W tien attention to that important 
element which forms the groundwork 


en 

between landlord and tenant. Fortunat ly, the 

olitical relations of a re are now fewer and 
simp. The fata morg, 


eyes, run little risk of 5 the false for the 
real, the N for the substance 
Wha 


northern pa = of 


ri 

increased pro 

duce is itself a eMo k of o 

liberally but judiciously expended, and la 

fully directed, must precede improvement. But thes 
ents are not pe 1 75 to Scotland, far om, it; i 


age nd, fi 

nA is not natu pki nor its climate fav urabl 
o vegetation, its propriei ers wera no 

originally ee nay, thelr pmi was EA E a 

neither was its pop n halfa cen 

pa N n for industrious habits, 

possible to assign an ade equate reason why Scotlanc 

and some of the border sgua on the ki side o 

the Tweed have, in the face of great natural disad- 

vantages, risen so rapidly oa a comparatively low 

agricu 


E oS 8 5 F 


is a modifica 
pressly for the large Conservatory, Chiswick 2 1 Pn tag of Ireland. 
a oe itis now at work. From 1 a Fab 10 2: W. Here Newcastle, North- 
; 8 i 
stating itto be e to make, they 


ROGRESSIVE —— is the work 3 every 
Pi successive age has to help forward. Perfection the 
° The ey knowledge is slowly 
Kew. but 
ca 


Aree e plan. 
Fleet-street, an 


Buse ao TO OnE GROW S1 
sth HEALY, 1 130 N respect- | for t 


— on, and on 
put up at the Royal Botanic Gardens, 
130, 


uman race bee 
g class o a 8 Se ward to a poi intl — e in the dim 
future—with which all men in all ye 1 ve asso- 
ciated the idea of Perfection. n which 
each generation has 3 contributed to sa 4 Tree of 
d in the history of 


t t—the . nan tension s he | Co 

ft 5 and the 

7 5 md a . — mae and has yot tore witnessed. N Some bygone 

is and Aae peri 8 been nary or retr t 
eee ISE 


D| and anew have ings, still — tree was yin: 
long wholly e frui 


state of ulture to a pitch of general excellence 
her country, either in Euro 


or out of it? The cause, wi e believe is 80 o obvious, 
tha y ; and can 

c ed 5 superiority of 

or climat 885 the early adoption of a w 


Tace, ol 
liberal F n of letting land, founded u aunt 
recognition of 5 a al rights and ioari of 


2 to their method of warming Orchidea from the ai arena al 15 their 9 5 are occupie a | landlord and te 
herrea the e Honour of warming the Orchidea from tho ar aa ena, „an pla 0 E 5 5 The chen of the 19 years’ lease into Sai 
ion of athletæ 2 * e ra of ve For some | land after the un 3 England, and more 
p Chiswick, additions to the House. 6000 years have truggling on- rag 0 sin eg Hon of erica was on seated 


or agri 
e feudal siem 


tis prin 


mpensation fo ee 

at the best but a house-renter, a sq 
t | pore, e independence z pas backwood’s 
pioneer, whose pry is at wn disposal; 

the eee e on the contrary, is is really and 

y bound to the soil of secured 


msd ormer 

4 ver the materials of Nature; improvement is ad- 
vancing Nae quickened and ever quani velo- 

r, earth, water, 3 and the “winged 

lig ining” are h o the chariot of human 
knowledge, and hurry it ph with a speed which 

day by a newer and 

better discovery on to-morrow. How, we ire rs well 

ask, has ang culture 


mes 
or cisterns, e ci 
lee, 3 -mews, Goswell-road 


* 
COCK invites the attention 
IBLE oreo 5 P to bis SELES 
PE readily din und a 


ES, is ci , man’s earliest occupation, pro- 
wre mpe is its paige condition It may 


ded as 


E BRUISE za 5 YOU GIVE YOUR sprung ; 8 3 as such, we might naturally expect a 
lose one bushel out 


wn sed 1 
from r closely — wiih the affections of 2 p 


— . . — possession. The ] 
1 so as he is himself concerned, is on 


same time strict in enforcing T 

rvance of mutual giae then may 

tenants, to the third and fourth g ie pe continue 
and atta 


ts object, 2 


the e present, and also with the aaa of th 
Iti = this feeling 


J4 


Jo. 
La 


dinary — saction ; and if it * haat 
the foundation, not merely of a legal document, but 


ontrasted w 
and foliage hich rere her, | 
in great variety. and which, — — support from their 


of moral obligations and mutual interests, aceom- 
panied with an enlightened cultivation n of the soil, 
then have we all the exactness of transac- 


* 


> 


314 


T 

H 
E 
A 

G 
RI 

c 
U 
LTUR 
2 
L 
G 
A 
2 
E 
T 
T 
E. 


Dirag 
1 


— 

es 

no! 
t 
a 
p 
propri 
iate 
1 
wW 

ill 
be 


ti 
oe 

e wi 
SIV! 9 th 

e ou 

yea 
co new. , thei 
z 
n 8, 1 se as 
j aa At „ it e wi peri 
Tre ane 
c ns obj ot i a A 
interest ases ofl on Ae th lead 5 2 9 8 oe 
2 aar sts 7 1 agio 9 nergi yar os vay 
arise 1o p 3 aoe |expe 
pan e n 
jst to n tne re presents 3 isto al Pos 
— to and, e fo fee 5 nts 29 11 88 ee of po 
pn? on 05 = cl e sys fe of se 5 2 

5 hi e or its näed tha by ystem o 5 ulti- Mr aly 1 found ae 
í ha u 5 a 
. d ‘other cing oF that by shorts ‘of granti of d em kos B ily I cula 
The i duration o $: Tot Scl n ranting ft. p . Ta, 

e ti fia TE r ess of in by mploy of 2 5 

gh d 4 a 7 jura- nif É — Ades 415 al pe hen 
h t of ape ite nu Th at ce it plus Pie d 0 ra bl wh ri echi m 
el ene ere of re 15 h TE h ad 

set e aed) 5 int 1 —— i the pr 
— cheat t =a wel, sae 3 equiva 1358 „b 
of th iy toe ch oan opr ye y the 25 ig bat Jy Tai aida bea 
ele ae oge ba ie s inet t 5 k pf onm: voleni T endon I iet nt ef syste al i 
are p h the b me dare e fo th ear th wicks * i rg he taki of 

in sc s indue =. ts „ 0 of tev for whom 7 ee 00 for herefore, yar 
‘ — h 0 induce En no his See va ee 11 Mave — 

sedi 0 0 h ulti e — 8 50 n nt tm gh 1 om b 1100 men i 

stem e sat ad Vat t 0 Arg 3 5 os th ot cupy ci ta e rior to mA ere 
n * r b la 9 e ow a anlat l aa © th th iplin in 00 t ac 7 tm S, 

re neces 37 bo ut 3 of 4 sa to — re sabi 25 e * h Mee ee Cab fene 
* or e, and eon th 9 7 he . dis m e induc * aut bey TADE at pile eer 
a 155 ya x hg ü th Ca wo mic e remaner 50 en ee of 109 hi lar a y to 5 es, 8 

ay Pgh 5 85 vi “gp ak vla 1 d 7 in th ‘in Mr. the | — = 4. as 

eer 462 an Een ea fen f an 5 2 1 Ps Pg are sa Pe pe ú ur- Ea Pr mag — 
ge a t 8, th iva ] nd onl kil * acr dit du e 45 di 80 erti t least su riod 1 ws IR p. ap th th -i 

n t ate T aee a es 225 ci a) ret 0 2 75 aoa ST le tho se 

er h ch h igh he iti rf "| ren Nr 8 rope ca 2 ich t oe] 7| b. 0 the sed 
n Rate tee hat a 1 dai 0 id fe d vould et abit of iie to of 75 rand ae eure th 4 75 ere 2 Ti RS his trips 
t u „e — is t 1275 wner Ç ud ppl 7 = A — of c ii ae Se auent ati aptr Romy at é 15 Atie Plani TO oo agg te 
at anki wate a ala: ii r’s 2 ‘ad by ‘und afte ch ho ee tion wi nt acti 7 8 Ditto ye — LE t tw 
je an i aaa of sla a pe or nu she ve e se th ns of ce sti oe tt 7 15 32 tin N og een 
d 8 8 ] c fi ir n 7 i 

Wi sa “ate ed 2 te la af bras or ala | nace 55 e i a as rin the 8 : Wheat Ap E CROP. Brosh k 
100 and opi 3 5 ight no read 125 r erin x produton w conti > 0 tation 1 5 È sar oe 
oe a 3 “a 
Pie wind, th land 0 * ree ti sed "ithe 3 alt ent w 25 ae nge oes 4 ns Ditto ie Ditto we 

at f l ne rel 2 tr y de le si e on era n i K An on ucti vil. ' itto a Ditto kiti 
w t th t e ati Eat. E ee ora 0 i i 

ner l e 0 t d 1 whe an ra ila hs’ io 0 n cro 8875 ion ] T Di one 323 
be a his mily r 1 25 5 "E OnE * ed d — ; S redu ihat ma A l p 3 0 im itt — itto March 
hope =P the Km oct ere 7 so ana t 2h e — baat offered i int we ona a Ditto. N Ditt —. 
fabs ec e abo ed em f an dé nt 192992 uce 5 0 oo er ero pos or ae much n * ter ore 80 lan tto on 0 — 

t te t hi b h 8 d il i fi its b v t Di par. 
aay arate nest hace = ate M it r. January 
p x — ant- be 22 h 1 t as ten e t earl ata inish gee Ay y 3 May 8 = * Cah cont 

dlord hous danh Call eTo T ghten 1 85 | diti i tat oa ih E Aaii uliar ee Oro ECON iy Wel previous mik 

ye the de hi vats hi che gric d of arg pia 4 d ¥en’ —.—— unt e pe, 2 D en — 

1 e th è e ac ul 1 1 er p du tw th ; e oil. action er É oe CR iti gla 1 

8 willi 18 h of T v t Tl ] d I in c 0 e 1 e 0 n r D 8 to | 
prov: is al ie best, 471 e suppi br ar pte Juce prod rs “ed ag “comp er Apt 2 Time — 
bal and 3 ae A 15 "aid wt 77 of ab ve vac + id ia a terline ei dec ae to éz = p Dit dac ry cl Fog 
ood 45 et 0 ca ea ie sacs, 155 AE ee Ba have ie oy a th 10 1 ae 4s ce 
pai inet 1 ti et of hi 1 75 ail found ` A 5 Dot I wi “ey own ifie h and gold W 8 i : 
que wi ten pre d eh inten 0 oi at 85 d 4 k derer 1 7 very RI S berde azal Onions A — 

<i ad il as 8 l 8 1 feat jt a gu an M 0 & Dal ob z 

v nt a re ecti use a i WF 3 dril 22 allo du ; 2 lly 12 a on DS Dale's = Bere = 
totaly ee — 1905 0 or th 0 ay October te 
oi grievously te Te n 1 ep cit ger 8 F ea 1585 or 
Wiking 5 1 ul te 15 y pict e, in his ra Ripa ing very I b e * 5 Jan Us 1 5 Disa 
va 5 an re c rti u ron me op i I ery ba ac ne ua IN stops Dis 
ie try e 1 th tar cultural 2 5 cul i oe ae whi of T as ha ‘len ge w h o 3 ry ac vember Wheat 
in Sect roe 190 à S tt ag Jhih ô ware: 9 252 Ar n a Feb ; Cro RO Ditto as 
e. be it tte ay fre b $ pa È gei ar pn p vy m ly 2 pro- rua R p. P tto ear By 
11 of e cite In 0 d rs ed nd y P A 2 gr Hy in i cr yee yaka M ry ‘Abs: » QU j 

Fah the nd, as a ition 0 2 that i er uk dios in eee i X seal N A Dita 
not the ee i im 8 abt on t Ei 1 t, f dog efici on supe si 1 it en R Fda ye -n 
] ear: th ery cl 0 u ly th ro ers 18 75 eri ve © a wide š * en pa ae Ditto 
ae s a favo ppa fo mix u — k ae aor bi A vt ape a Y 1 8 

e dan v pr or em tu d x n av fa h r 2 PAs} le . 8 te pril ue 80 epi in tonis & | 
xis ani E ihres ad toa b all B rr 5 us 2 
its ti t tere ma a chea nt, l desde rod fi ity yo ea at ay vi e Ape M — ae ; 75 skera W. 
im on d ng ysm > c ap 1s ar st pan it ee a e wih ads ro o May wert ay me ree i 75 p. ons 
p d has m Alan f a 8 . a h ad dee y a noe 15 tin 
qu roy nd ond 5 Powe ar 1 teat e- | % 125 Prd 1 oe Peel de jee por 1 75 1225 m. = | 
5 be ii th * A Ny 705 En an ripe Š or ard s 4 5 $ AE zga Jun —— Mee 75 Mri — 
et apical e es, 2 Ta ban. 0 for 15 wet > co age 20 3 3 boji ee — 
a to of cu n 8 err * hing a tr b ere wh th per 4 5 panie lisons: sap Early : z; 1125 — 5 | 
ah), ye at Fera had: eee 5 ook N vehes to ne ul a ay oe 5 
Ë the o be 2 ad t be eae t a e tur ex were da ineo or b id TET Aba y E s abb ee f — 
* k ie Sr Sher bd í 17 5 ö 72 2 io yet iti —.— Gras Md 15 1125 m5 
Ard ca th pti then dener átu Pane gh 550 peg ue erty’ k> z 2 id 5 5 
ited at de tem ti a n Ne jis i Ae on tive le tee gust 2 8 o abb 150 900 

I ur. very si it =E SEN figure er ge , y legumi- 8 i — A = 255 
nie . and ery sy eit as roto! K be * th * K 53 ar * ep 5 “are. * 

0 7 * ote pte 5 r a ri 20 pel E (52 155 7 ai E more 3 s and temb 3 oet $ 9 125 1500 1300 

y ofthe eit ess ò buten a Se onel Kig mand t pee 15 1 on er ba ee 250 
I A he in ress at m ti t epas, ay bo lüde oe n rs so or ob : ge 1 
my, wi J. 3 pre ees w ng ut, pid the in 2 70 he ae 3 er a 00 93 
n re: g! ose ro tha 0 3 S f t n N 15 b aoe 
upon 4 dlor ro rover 4 feat 3 rro te he ar f 34 ce ovem 1 gabs pry N 
10 on tout F rds anc * zent and 1 25 ng mm a Be met sie N e — en 22 Pf 
Ta 2 * i or other cc » requi th as ait 5 el a di ecembe y 5 85 et 100 na 
5 A ‘oy | for Mi A be ant ch. d nog cages n th or r in fi e er — angold : 
i rye ae the leading In ny wan o 4 1 o maeh e ro: a K ips ld 100 2050 j 
aes ork a e veh m ma nade 
ath of ei oe 1 u eo p d e ch more is o jek Ae Ala 
i agr eneh 1 is reeks * N fhe wide u not or full il M ee z 2050 
ecto r en of 1 fed 8 onl ite. 75 F: 
ras Seale mal with . fetid ro to y devi Ro h eee * 
far, 175 the g cae 2 bag Sinte pah cae elo oer $ ave P 14 Wu: | * a0 
ha rn 1 ty ANN 4 or 2 | 
east, Fo ound, to 5 m th a 185 125 li mm mo the ide oe N > 2 2005 
to Sd this to th ng 804 E oe ee Ee o this calon 3 
divi ‘this pu es . Pe -us cae M patched pea ti ene a en 
ide 08 trips pe mr in 107 ne grin, 5 anid 4 sates re 
e left 3 n cont of rli ry. m ? 1 90 ton Ree P at 130 7 
* tant i ait 15 a ae. 5 e 
test nasg ips 8 tthe PA is sov is obja aur fond, ncies, 1 7 
a 5 N ary a = : 
ng distan 2545 ne sd from 5 ia rn ; vecko 
way on 180 75 made = 30 Ja ma aj fe ie Me toad’ be n “of un 
ek: the se Doin th 4 Sine Th cast i e 
5 stri eh thence irds wide, — aed ihe by Ea te 
JEA 5 ista oe 1 80 ap 7 45 
- res fi TA apart 5 che three ety, oy of of plus of 
28 1 wu e pan king th Scher 
whieh on th of Bre fourths of f a i 
e a is 1 om th of eng Bros aso 
I ha 000 e th or l e f u unt 
I jit ga a es 1 other ae 
Propo u oa i 7 Fae 1 21 1 full 32 to 
Pee pees 54 iie’ uso pera a 
to of asses; Par aR R eres 70 eq at ta 
0 0 ro ye. e u * ke in 
> dat Penge pee ih races Wh 
12 aa rod ‘s ok Whe 
ollo eay or 682 of at an or 
ws es he K. qua lus iro 
(th 900 | q paj eat 04 2 
DA I See u ac a 
20 n ns of rte res . 
0 | wil a fut 19 2 5 Phi T 
pvid or i 5 
fabon Byes 55 Te 
It way gti i 2 ast £ À 
Tn ilar ac : 
re cuia Ti 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


Sa evenly through the year, 
l be found fully to ee amount pro- 
Goodiff, Granard, VAprit 


AP MANURIN 
“at, ere of Wheat on the large 
' have as 11 


+ a 
. — * ammonia 
th 3 nitrate of soda 


. 
. . answers, and 5 W 
ae — a 1855 also con- 
e quality of the 
uit * 


sie 


from Mr. Lawes’ experiments, that the manure and — 9 
to contain 5 times as much nitrogen as the 
1 25 bushe ls may average a 
ve, an this quantity is contained in 
on 
of ammonia, about 120 . 
aan F 


PE 5 


un of nitrogen, 2 85 cheaper 
is the m 0 t 


matte 


| 9985 715 to the soil in somes 


s | surprising 5 af „ as before sated: 
| 9 te of spa A i 
nt 


>) fram Inh a #, 
qrs bush. 
333 oS barb < soda and salt 
ER 9 0 —— 
. 8 6 gu 


Oats.—Of Oats I have two recorded crops of 10, 
| quarters each. 
and 


315 
Marco Wunzet, Carrots, AND CABBAGE.—My 
eports of experiments on p yet sufficient to 
termine the best practical dressings. They a 
all to like salt ; ay, therefore, do better with the 
acid preparation ha L that by fermentation; and 
I should think t nip dressing, No. I, likely to suit 


Here sulphate of 23 ia has the 5 of ni- them all. J. Pridea 


15 of soda, 3 3 f guano ; but upon com- 
aring a grea ber of experiments age baer of 
nitrate of 84 “with sulphate of soda agne 
has been 3 E 7 e ee may any of the 
hers ms to a4 uncertain between the 
two en e per 


SMALL DAIRY F — 


s 20 cows and three horses ; the ex- 


tent of her farm is not 40 acres. Her bill for grains 
this quarter amounts to 607. She gives to each cow a 
ushel of grains a day—one-half in morning 


ie., 3 ft. 43 in. 


Sulph Sulph, 
Bone. Acid, Salt. Ammonia. Magnesia. Pearlash. 
80 Ibs, 40 Ibs. 40 lbs. 2 ct. T cwt. 1 cwt, 
Mix as for Wheat 
No. 2, BY FERMENTATION, 
Sulph 
Bone. Gypsum. wdust. Magnesia. Nitre. 

80 lbs. 40 ya 100 lbs. 60 Ibs 13 cwt. lhe —4 

To be mixed as the other vou cepa bone dressings. 


Beans.—The best crops detailed 


6 from nitrate pnp sulphate of soda. 
5 from gypsu 
3 from a 1 dressing, consis ting 
. ac sulphuric acid, sulphate of magnesia, salt, an 
8 t oda, 


The latter dressing was much like what we — 
infer from the others, except the waste of o 
er in charring 3 for su . of soda is n 
the action of er acid mn , and nitrate of — 
is often se the and stalk, and not * 
seed. paring * “results with the Table, 
before, we s should say per 


Ph. 
pone. Salt, pce. Magnesia. k cariash. 


as cht all the dans Š in the straw, which i is deer to 
her. 


R (AND Har). Of red Closer: ih ki no details 
of recent crops ; they are e vi 
grass, which contains very geren t 
ary Te a rhe mos 
grass appears to be | 
and gypsum an 
well with Clover. Of hay I ha 4 


avy crops n 
5 
. 5 160 — a compound manure, something like 
that for Beans bd — 25 
2 3 10 from sulphat 
Aan — ni — N 
„ — n of apes 


414 


ere is a passage between the hats for feed- 

ing them, about 3 feet wide, and a des the cows 

from their food ; the hay is put down on the sormi their 
The 


grain and meal is given — ils. ws give 
** > * 5 quarts — milk daily, say 1 * Winter and 14 
in and it i 2. at 26. 6d. ve por ‘dozen 
quarts in in winter, and 2 r dozen 1 5 l “If 


2 qua aber a a day. all the year 1 it is 
po e but ‘this is seldom 
20 cows, say 10 quarts a day, — upwards of e £ 8. d 
608 


an uarts per annum, or, at 2s. per doze 0.0 
© — 

* oe .. . £150 0 0 
N és 50 0 0 
| 200 0 0 
Grains, 41. per week 208 0 0 
Meal, 40 Ibs. pe pe per annum es 4016 0 
2 Men „at 125. a week oe 62 8 0 

531 0 0 

Profit £77 070 


— a ve ery great per centage on the capital. 
n 


The cows a 
be seen ; $ dagit 


the hou 
dust, every part of it except sral the dung and urine 
- | are dropped. J. M. 


P PERNES, 
Zea Mays ee and Dascorora, Vertus Kor orty-day 
oR ill Mr. oe kind e enough to inform me 


fro 

hybrid smh Forty ‘day Maize. I have 
comp: ains ‘of the so called i bon, ares 8 
varieties 8 of Mess 

So called b 


Compar and 
constituents of the ‘plant, will gi give a mixture pa like 
of No. acre 


a the at, at vA ee compound manure —say per slightest ere in > hybrids 3 
nm it is generate Sulph, ` Sulph. Pearl- api cage . 12832 in a more climate 
either batk, peat, nor ah ae hand, ashes, | Bone Acid. Salt Ammonia, Magnesia, ash. of England. 2 
bet vil abe earth will promote the ferinentation, 1 Ut a CWE Aant 4 uy . bur 40 day S his never failed to ripen with me, 
palsy ‘Dot miake 80 good a — e am- Poraroks.— This is a * subject to treat of. rora ripened with me last t year which by 9925 
d waran pob a manure a addition | Very hea eavy returns of Potatoes have been got from a will be ee wn an extremely unfavourable 
Pt the weight of the baie, will help i in both W but to dress with salt, a putrescent manure son for ripening Indian Corn. I was informed by 
Ein dhe un fermented as yet been | a plant already ing of rot, seems cont: to the M P ; s been grown by 
adi found tp t is more of the nat of guano, | reason, The est products per acre, in my notes, | them for 20 years, and never in one instance failed to 
Vater wih fer as well as bo th acid, would with portable i ee dressings, are Tuscorora has not been tg Sele ee by them so long, 
marin the nae to prepare. Salt will prevent its| No. 1, 428 bags from nitrate end sulphate of soda eres sufficiently long to to say that it is'as 
— Ne; w. Old porous bone, — 5 2, 360 bags from nitrate soda and N magnesia certain as the other, 1 ed cobs, and 
We dot 80 good for fermentation as fresh bon 3, * bags from sulphates of soda, and ammonia. 1 gns of ity. have no doubt that 
* a Stor Say, 1015 and 2 resisted the 475 beger * big uh a oon dae abel ¢ skill in producing * 
; Vo. 1. rrn Aci, ddir pon? 5 but in many uch t ° | hybrids, oe my impression i is that his Forty-day Maize 
* Asia, Sùlph. © Pearl- Sulph. leaf. Soot an es appear to hive been ‘he best pre- | will prove to be the t sirietios hamed, I an of 
ats Magnesia, ' ash, Ammonia. | servative dres 2 3 and deep and 3 would ke po rattise my system of 
me fe ewt cwt 2 cwt 4 3 Th eg At 
1 ed oc oe . * | early planting the most effectual precautions. e soot cultivation, I will be pleased to send it you ; by one 
he! Seta, sane Nitrate Nitrate and ashes are best a i. w over the Potato, siinple process the maturation’ of the erop is adt 
: ~ = Wet, naenin a a, Ame but with earth bet acid top-dressing is t least a fortnight. H., Hants. [We have altered the 
8 2 1 ewt. much less putrefactive men a fermented one; an signature of this letter, it being extremely inconvenient 
bith . to be fermented t * the E i ag ead of t ml eth chr 8 ik pa a that the same fictitious signature shoul 
mage bone n quantity. -~ | different 
rates of soda a Hp E wih tbe inorganic conten ts of the May. d 2 “a a and.—We have certainly had 
they will I hardly ferment i in jira Reid the essful experiments, will lead us to severe weather, and I fear the early fruit 5 will be scanty, 
Probably not ~y than 2 or hing like the “following 5- (The sulphate of soda but as to this ny; certainly I never saw a more 
1 ients in proportion. ben formed from the salt an 3 acid * Iphate | tiful May together with the number and — on 
peat, or bark may be mix Bo Sa alt, Acid. Pétash. Magnes: f flowers, it seems to i e old p de- 
Aeon for a bed la it, and to 2 ewt ; lje byt 1 . seription. Is it not sad to ees A lature is r 
it ero catch all stray ammonia. ` very eee in potass pota profuse, that m > 80 oh ed fortilieg, 


of Barley of which I have 


ground ; and the experiments t. 5 
ars. bush. ars. bush. nips, reem to show that the ses . of potass our peo in a starving condition, while every 
1 1 in the ash of green crops are not necessary in the month spän the number of large “districts, not only 
PAN ed green ero manure, n 0 thicker and thick Y 
Potass and galt] each 7 3 e e our doub a 1 People are absolutely oe after — and yet v we 
almost universal manure, con- | Potatoes, it is otherwise with . 05 ae we have a better America Look at the mag of 
ni or X and | have su rprising crops, up to 60 tons 2 acre, with bone bone | summer and of wi prei while here 
but little from this, further | and acid only, in ad dition to what w in the soil, and there is sel one day on w cna 
d may be e best for | ground dressings. a t cànnot, or, rather, would not = — liked, be n 
we been so very useful | are so large (see 4), Mr. Law 5 recent experiments | and pray emp loyed ; and — 
but as it is the cheapest indicate that they ‘ind it in the soil, without g so us employment,” while those vaio pers to be Tir 
r omitting it ; and as h in plant ing. Bu dian ae e give employment cote i e ruin of 
we may use be supplied liberally. y come quic: into rough | coun e are suffering from an pote a : 
Juse nitrate of po cher leaf, out of the way of the fly, with bone and sulphuric | ne cause, but a landrad, PEE tk, 
P | acid. The addition of salt seems to retard the rough | than four: the Potato, 
800 leaf, br increase roduce afterwards ; and the ed), complicated ten and p 
Salt, Magnesia, | bone, fermented with sawdust, &c., or with sheep dung, ‘chief wants of man and his 
l} cwt, 40 lbs. answers almost as well as with acid. Say pet 8 —— oct praa — ; 
psu zum d aw- cw. an not even 5 
m in m sa alli ‘Boas Salt. = Anat. unt creatures a chair or a bed, ot the 8 of mastiea- 
iments are, however, | 3 cwt. (1 quarter) in 1° 3 tion, and it * ki — 4 
d it would be well to try . wre. re + eot race a ae — 
peat ty fer-| Bone. Gypsum, dust. re Wen 2 
IA quarter. low, 8 1 4 arbitrary and terms; in wins 


This is - A 
chiefly in 20 yoe and leaf, which falls back a “the 


Lawes with Tur- 


an 
lanted in a large island of unexam 
„ hardly be said ive, for fully ne millions of 


316 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


seldom included. No wonder these proprietors, middle- 
men, and who were generally v 
should be poa with pride, and infected w 


ife, and 
multi- 


Ti — me Nex 
religion, a delicate subjoct to touch upon, The Gatti, 
. me the a ig cause it gave the 


two es 
ressure. e com 
from competition for 
Land was arasy elevated on a pyrami 
Potatoes; and, while otatoes were sound, the 
pyramid had a — Took enough ; and the several 
ces of O’Con N O'Briens, O'Gradys, y tgar aed f 


do e 

many hav „and many a 
struggling with slender hope, while the old — of the 
Potato made a general rush to the r- house, or by 


that 


speec 


have to say, at least, is my conviction, that, if land 
is freed 


rom its vexatious incumbrances, and that 
peels are allowed to purchase and sell it as they | besides, som 
wish, we shall soon see what Ireland can and will | if the seller has had 
do. Every one has his crochet, and mine is to open n 
books of registry in every county court in Ireland, Wheat 
where poop oi Eo an under a simple regulation, gloss imparted 
buy and sell mbered Nothing else 
should be 8 — ait would soon Irish | from the stock of 


3 


with our old court rolls at Diss, how well we used to get 
on with our ers of co copyholds „though loaded with 
y absurd I want something like this, and that 
a small bit of parchment, — at our ceme 
tery, for 6 or 10 or 12 feet und in perpetuity, 
should convey equally well from 6 to 600 acres of ey 


I am told the Menr es pag (equity indeed !) are look- 


and in 
wonder that their children — be mu 


* 


small. u 


0 
d Tem ‘that 


- and in all probability the e organic matter ‘contained will 
But granting that there 


is a consider. 


be 

“osm a ty, if lime accelerates its decomposition very 

and undoubtedly it 3 the ory must ere 
austed, and afte 


o the soil 


wit’, ve land sould sot molio 
except what m th 


t 
ory which om i en 


e beneficial on account of its accelerating the dec 


ore ; | the howe bie ee 
e calvin the industrial training of youth, 


t| Blam 


osl sition of 


hoped that no one will understand me to mean 


already excepted peaty and 
made, viz, in the 3 e composts of 
Aliquis. 


weeds, and like mate 


uyer is in want 


re 
| quently afford an pemn -Marr of 1 it in 


viz., that samples, from their sm 
proper criterion for testing the condition of pas ahd, 
etimes give — a false 

oceasion 


accoun 


that 
rs of lime to mye iby eo ee 
Ih 
Po i 
terials. 


t admit of a 


ect! 


detail, 
cause of frequent complaint, 
allness, do not afford a 


— op especially 


with it near his 


rin 
trade, arises from his havi rech ity of com- 
paring the different qualities eden placed beside each 
other; but t so be t it need not be en- 
arged on. Another important consideration to the 
farmer i is, the time 


thi a ooa eee 
time or 


ing very blue ; are in the 3 of rats which, 
having un 9 an old prepare for a general | those with a 
per when they hear the timbers mene he | requi 
Irish bench and bar have got t gos a | si i 
a bad ae pe 2 the very t wat f the| receive” (bags 
wheels, move of Ma, and orkes must | them ; where 
be left a or ele as in the 0 of a 3 ship, | are not always m 


what has escaped the wreckers m out. Ify 
my Shadows, as I asked you ri do, published i in the 
People’s Journal,” Dec. 1, 1847, and two followin 


Uther 


other 


arves 
having their — ‘command zav 


r day for the deliv very. 


nen “al Stir 
| drys eld, Waa sive meet); this is 
mine the intrinsic rise o 


— saves by doing bis business in 
of in see 
east it is found bine that those 

much readier than 
the latter ee ek r 


and, bes 


Pa enabling him to 
average 


irling, where 


r fall in it. These, with man 


u! 

gneiss in very considerable quantity, — 

: soil, more or less. uelin states its 

analysis to be, silica 64, alumina x potash 14, pr 2. 
it; it is call 


sina 
ilation kept up. 
1 of the chief e 1 eal 


new fertility, greet the the admising 
Af 1 
which, im teen ang — 
cause, not! t moss eoul 
flourish A the was of A be 


E 


ones, pg 


Ward, Ro 
he 


made to for pi use of od 
the fue _ When in such soils- were tn bene- 
ot oa ste aay come per 


conside erations “whieh might be mentioned, show 
of 


stock markets over sample 


cieties. 


ROYAL AL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND 


in | immediate ere eee on 


by me pr payment a 

ade at the specified time. 

tage, also, of — 1 is, that the . — 

thereof has positive dat 

g give, not ee the av — but the 

measure abs te 8 in all 
grain fro 


se, 
in pari tò e imp 


e drains. From 
of Roydo Nora on the 
Zabueajo ‘of Brazil, and the Ara 


the grea tages ery sewerage manu 
reg children in wor unions ; from 
a’ ahd valine of water re ted with lims 
— on P grog lands Ae the ashe in hot nn. 
mers ; fro n 

gon in 2 with dra 

n his lectu Arad 
ral, vol. vii. *r 

4 


er in the administration of alesbol 
certain state of dilution with water, to —— l 
with pleuro-pneumonia 1 to the V 
Commit ttee); from 
on the singular exe 
disordered animals 
in Anglesey, from the epidemic ne in that pert 
of the coun the only instance of attack | 
the Alderneys en, that of a 
which recovered, g | 
in which the A Aval —— cows b. dying (referred | 
5 ae bap ere sh committee); from Baron M 
enqui to the 3 hardiness | 
7 she abort horned and Hereford breeds of cattle, 


tio eh interesting 

discussion and detail of practical experience, the 

embers present. Jay presented a copy of 

his work on the horse’s mouth ; e Chey, F.M, 

d'Orgebray, of Pari copy of his work on agricul- 
tural cultivation in connection with . 

cil then ered “their usual thanks for 


these communications, and adjourned (over the week 


hat | of the General Meeting) to Tuesday, the 29:h of May. 
a — — ̃ —— 


Clubs. 
nent Stock Keeping — The 
e propositions made by Mr, 


Fa 
Burton-on-TRENT : 


Lyo a lecture at the T armers’ Club, should receive 
the attention of f. The topic of was 
“what is the most profitable plan to pursue wich respect 


8 * 
g 
amount 


— Young animals grow more quickly for a 
of food fan older. By high feeding iam 
down breed (not a large sort) may be 1 or lôlbs. a 


quarter at a wad old; at the same age a young 0x may 
fro produce, 


more largely of milk, ny of well reared 
improves from gene n to generation, 
al is in good condition it yields a greater 
for its food than when it is poor and lean. | If 
animal be first fed on good pasture till it is 
nd then removed to poor keep, 50 as 
ee not only is the a wholly lost on W 
declined in flesh, but all the good food w 
ns for time hacia has J 


like the fattening propensity ; 
n the cessation of the mil 
mo 


5 
Boxted Lodge, near 
Socie Oclety. 


berlain, Robert, Sheriff of Norwich 
Pike, Llewellyn — a Chute, Wiltshire 


ystone, Watton, 


Busk, Joseph, Little è Berkhampstead, Herifordihiro 
erick, King-street, Norwich 


Gloucester-place, CON London 
t. Austell, Cornw. 


White, Richard, pomer. 
Feeder E 
ast Dereham, 
„ orhi 


candidates f . ti ait 


T 


— 
is always pro fitable to grow on lan 
nutri _— ous food for all aek kept on Èe y 
wh roduce of the 


THE AGRICULT AL GAZETTE. 317. 
the advantages peculiar t end of his tack, against the wish of the proprietor, h 
mT sball briefly quote a spins of o. up his farm in disgust. Mr. Binnie, an opulent grazier, , pee 1 3 „ by R pe 
whose | got the f. on lease, ith expedition laid it down would not have been worth more than ah 
pon the point may ju 5 hee them. pasture. Nothing could exceed the produce of Grass, | acre for rent, on which the following p ~ pie 2 
m others of an opposite character are and when noe — up for tillage, all the fertility which the first year after send laid do = rder 
. „without his predecessor had experienced was fully realised. It is proper G waters 0 er with 
d unattainable on all | alleged mat lead is left in infinitely better condition after =e ing e re bought io 
p: 


and * erery ate y on a close or re- | summer fallow than after any other preparation ; that it is the March at 15s. ea ach, ss oh were disposed 81 2 as 8 : 
whose name vA familiar to | best preparation for Wheat, But upon this point, as upon | 13 Lambs and 1 ewe sold in July at 21s. 414 0 
“On svah Ee the uni- | many others, ers are at bis. a were natural to suppose | 19 Ewes in September sold at 20s. e ach © 1 * 0 0 
. fallows | that when the fallowing of land was carried to its greatest ex- = to pasture from eeks 15 
hey ait ee the — tent the Wheat crop must ha ry abundant, and that „ 5 0 
The following opinions are reco | the land must have been kept remarkably clean; but the Rev.| 7 Tease attic i in October 5 % UE eS 
= “Husbandry of Scotland,” from agu Mr. Rham tells us a very different story. In his ctiodary 
& inb „ Summer fallowing is undoubtedly the | of a broin i will find that 8 times the seed bien Profi wok * 28 0. 
“improvement i in clay soils ane fh e point | full a e for corn crops, and the land was overran ith | Deduct for ewes bought at 1162 each £9 12 0 
chief source — in n Scotland. hey rectify wen | after 4 a singla, erop.” Hence, * was not an 3 F pate value for rent at ll. 5s. per acre 5 4 0 
t have become hard isdi impervious practice to weed allow every other year, and this + was consi- | Taxes 38. per acre, or for 4a. 2r, 3p. . 0 13 9—15 9 9 
ed wet w winter, They | dered a superior system. Daw, 15 — the late Mr. Loun 
E Pee than half the 2 3 15 most excellent husbandry, and preferable to Clear profit above £138. 4 8 
; Lane seer | ng Wheat t on th e bare summer fallow, which does better The New Husbandry, by Law 55 
afer Beans, and also 2 ae farmer to get two pro oh 
dant than after Beans. % crops instead of one.” Cha rios 11 near Edinburgh, h yee id atching Eggs.—The } hatching. 8 was 
abled to pay a high Si during 1 s, never SD d recourse to summer ee uilt at the side of the cottage, and was a of long 
foally, in consideration of naked fallows paying ring that period; he ronsed foe erope of Potatoes, three | Shed with mud alls, and thickly halal as straw. 
0 * aed e pot om 1 Beans, and els per im of a, a Wigi poe te 2 the ends and down one side of the building area 
and to the heat of the sun. Also, b speech at Drayton, a r ee toi de stead the com- | uu r of rou ats baskets, well plastered with 
g core — 2 of the pany how very essential green eropa v ween to the growth of corn.” mud to prevent th m taking fire. In the bottom 
e excrements of plants. By Another person of - nee in t icultural world said, of each basket there is a tile placed, or rather the tile 
summer to cultivate, tirdi Tendering me- | By all means let u as heav $ . — — L ud . forms the bottom of the ket : a this th 
and so forth.” Professor Low | plants, for thus, most assuredly, shall i ch e the Wk 8 asket ; upon this the fire acts, 
8 fallow on permanent fertility of our lan — vind a small fire being below each basket Upon the top of 
- st preparatiod for Wheat, | already quoted f land fi 8 the basket there straw cover which v, and 
yaluable of our cereal productions.“ But aid, a That the land may » oy 0 lenned, under drilled Beans as | is kept shut i 
ught forwa support well as by a fallow, 2 75 the crop s by corn; but if the | of rie sh wait ih Pre eee ger the centre 
tom, I cannot think the arguments & this saltate ls insufficient to cleanse are a number of large shelves placed one 
their inence by any means conclusive; I “hee 288805 ae pr drilled Beans amy ucceed, whi above the other, upon which the laid at 
ere show you, from the practice of ap- wili me per abs gp poe ry, and cannot fail to bring the | certain stage of the process. When gs are brought 
from m; observation, and from the | land order. ras naked ratios paying better than they are t into the baskets. the fi 1 8 
1 bare summer fallow is ad the most drilled or pete T erk 70 any reason why such should be th h 4 skets, the fire is lighted below 
epari f : corn hat it case. The same author, in his direction armers, i rca 22 an uniform heat kept up, ranging as nearly as 
cou 


of bare 


summer fallowin T sta 
mm 


is deriv 


0 


a 


R 


$ 


3 


: 


un 
151 


H 


t is when depastared 1 ? 
in better heart after 


me, the spot will 
of corn in the 
ne — must not 
sang ridu stones, for 
ced wher Te, inadvertent, sar old 
fallow duri he 


of stones be suffered to li 
pera 25 reve sg 
ure ti 


25 
be attri 
— bated to 


[ysis 


s 


- ing s to decompose an 
that Now, 9 whe 
Rid are ovo of th of the at d carbonic 
the ing the degradation 
1 — e that Mr. 


J 


th it. r. Ba ile ey, in bis 
3 —— renewed fertilit 
e alleging, ‘‘ that experience 
of Turnips of L 
t equal, if tain 
iked — "the 


2715 


— ugh 3 and 
sobsoil ploughing—hav — d out, and this 
as me to consider, in the second ata, whether = unpor 

nd t of in- 


ea account by the aio. erpiar: 
j in 


ther 

we shall consider what ge 2 — 

es from the alkaline 
3 and the obj 

ere is one fallow cro 
me, which seems to have been nearly [ah 
Upon the Se Ce gee 1 ges 
f this 1 
7 be far me fur ore ore fornidabl be befo; 2 farm 

tome tion. Last film 

— growing in a field cuter the 
ed, of Mr. Jame es, of Wylam. T 
were d må 

field crop, they 

ested, mixed 

the Turnip slicer, 

hing food for cows, 

ops for strong land, 

» Of introducing a row 

be pursued, I fancy, with 


days, fallowing for Wheat an 1 le 
practice 
his N eae, bul rarely Pe Mr. 
per cg little treatise iad. Tat rms, says, Green crops 

are more profitable than corn crops when oe by cattle | 
house fed. Another little more 1 


. the quantity o of m e is required. he Rey. Mr. Huxtable | 
opinion that an should, as 5 as possible, be "thet 

self-supporting + eg I think that gentleman * already do 

much to — 7 — hey may be ome e 80, acker wrx 


thus . 
l af pasture, 


breaking up a sve 
erops, rte nine times the amount of man y be obtained 
upon 


most A 
1 that shoot out from 
ho 


ide they — 
— for the “hy community might be obtained i 
ric i reat profit to the 1 
improvin n this fav had 2 
farm, the erde, p the ee ively 


afra “the well Grd husbandman will, after 
to. Bla inh 


ve er 
5 that, by covered over with 
and d subetteating —— which 


’ D mplo. oyed. 
€ S thet, 8 G aad five 

boys. On ev. Mr. Huxtable’ s farm, “after completion of | 
3 the labourers constantly employed were in- 


; but the Chinamen 


ill of course vary e 
after the eggs hav. 
they 


$ 


large an capable of 
and when the hatching takes place, 
urious. The 


the sight is not a “Title c tives who rear 
the young du i ing country, know 
the day when they wi ready for cating 
d in two days after the shell is b the 
little creatures 


urst, 
are sold and conveyed to 
uarters; Tale, Wanderings in China. 


creased four-fold. On these farms I fancy you will have some Calendar ox Operations. 

difficulty i a sre a fallow —— os ery the bare fallow Y 

affords for furth the under notice 7. 

join geen e e ee ee sg Tae log as o r 
emand of the people, followed by importations of foreign cwt. of g o per acre ; threshing Beans a 88 Oats; and pre- 

%%% . which the weather is most far: 

to pp. 17 and 18 of Mr. Huxtable's lectures on manures, you will | a Et Tof sah he oe “ied Th market. J. D. a 

2 r 


find a very ingenious caa aeon, the result of which is to show 
the oe value of the a 
gua money—and i 
. — be saved. But, 
the value, we shall pu ad per an 
take, in round n 10 sheep to a A bul ock. I si ve taken | 
no notice of either pigs or calves, which properly ought to have 
— re 
My We. vee. £62,949 

Prin 104 to a bullock... 13,652 

5601 


ay 
Or, dition the oe 


fraction of .. 3,399 for pigs and calves, 
Making the total ......... ~ 80,000 000 oxen, bb ng at 5l. per head 
5 for manu 


“its r £400,000 
appear that, in the me — at the lowest average, 


Makin 
that 3 sum was lost in re alone, 


ve 4 owe of “Peruvian guano, and 10 bus! 


weather, From the same cause Grass ha s made little 
co 


OWAY 
land is is te actively prosseded with 
very 5 rable 
green 
posed — the cold dry weather, tt works 

— of Mee 


and 
Yellows, all 7 eariy feeding to the dai 
porn ag 


same, 
eat is king also early sown ~ 
sown are not looking so healthy, owing to the continued cold 


Turnip- 

r having been 
the nth pns of pre; the whole of the 
, being so lon 


seri 
ing on with carl Hybri 
wot fe 


failin Se a The fi 


bones sown by the hand on the top of the 


the same year, 9,436,677 quarters of 1 gtr kinds 
peo were imported. From ‘the Newcastle Chronicle + 


ee they have now a full de in the —.— 


ese pastures during the day 


dung. Te cows are now on 
it. They 
vi 


which adds 


re getting Bean-meal and cróga 


Bebiews. 
Stable Economy: a Treatise on the Management of | no 


orses, in relation to 1 Grooming, Feeding, 
Watering, and Working. * John Stewart, V. S., 
W. Blackwood ~~ Son 


much to the richness of the 
clipped in 


e. — can 2 in the —— ed dung e 
Tus is the fourth edition of a 5 5 originally published | refuse of the —— 5 carried. The grain — — daily con- 
in 1838, and put hee to remain a standard 1 eS on | sumed on 2 As r 
the subjeets of eee eats for many years nee . 
The cave will find in it full instructions 2 stable —— an 92 
conomy in 188 its depart ents. construction and 


e 1 
ventilation p suha ucation of 


e soil by the too 
crops ; but whether 


n 
length gave way, ‘and 
» became more and mo: 

made his 
the evil, and at 


£ 


{ 
= 
I 


b- |s d bo ~the nat f their work as re- Besides a 
ys—the nature o r - 
treatme ultry. I have not time st aes reply to the remarks of your 
hien mo e groo rooming, decora tion, and gen h sss Letra dent as to the relative expense of box 
as | Of er habits and vices of horses, and the acci- | or stall-feeding, but will probably do so next week. J. C. 
dents to which they are liable ature, composition AMMERMUIR Ss Farm, May 14.—The lambing season is 
and preparation of their foo ares fitness for or work, | n pag Drbe 22 Terini severe a 
and the moe: method of keeping them i ge the best po work- f. the arg week « of the hill lambing season of 1849. Fortunately 
ing conditio N at ao othe she be bd dag rans been 
ctive 3 as eo fully e unusually green in March, Ss able to o ain 
though some oi the assistance of hay. 
The. 5 book for the instruction of the groom. — y wag — bes them required the assistar lost condi us 


1 ndeod, we 
eee n 1 Grass is 
e e from — g Sul 4 aol winds which 
mproved G ce may be mentioned | for nearly tl thes we baving greatly — 
of ‘ldo tm Lr 55 f thin e pein e which | as rain Begun to fall, we expect abundant 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


soon, Ü č hir Cheviot lambs were cast ated 
docked ‘nis ya . ith. the exception of the black-faces 
and the ver youngest of the other breeds, we purpose having 
all the «est operated upon this week, weather permitting. Po- 
tatecs W | plan 1 k. This is ch later than wi 
jatended, but the snow melting had so thoroughly soaked the 
d, that we — tr ve with safety begin ra We are 


i rE grou 
dinst. The dais 
12. r Farme 


es 1 4 o Correspon nden 


T 
olled. | coastwise, we hav 


HOPS, FRIDAY, May 18. 


— must be written | 
fully as i dae. —Oats are a slo 


Messers. PATTENDE 
in Gemma d 


prices. 


_ WATERSIDE, May 14. 
ithstanding ‘the * arrivals 
onti- 


TATOES.—SouTRWARR, 
mmittee report that notw 
ves such an abundant supply 8 the © 

| nent th rices than las 
following are this day’ s quotations :—Yorksh 

220s. : Scotch Whites, 90s. to 100s. ; 
100s, ; Dutch, 90s. to 1003. ; 


PO 
he Co 


ups, 


Cu 
28 Cups, Belgian, 808. to 90s. 


inks _ 
cre higher,— 

our quotations. but we do not not alter 

FRIDA —The supplies of f En 


y, May 
ek 2 been seal but we have glish 


2 Mon 
write 52 value of ail actin 
as on that da Tota 


N little by 


A WasH ron — An Iris garor. Biggs’s pl E for y G * 
dipping is very useful, expensive. You cannot —— 1 Moxpar, May 14 the coast is in demand at! Hal 2 say 348. for 
expect to rid of a pets Beh a and . . disease e eee in Sig supply of Beasts, and Barrel Flour is taken a 0 24s, 6 
without some trouble and expence. You find an useful | as 9570 markete ein ar, trade is brisk at an advance of to quality.—Since.the 11 . od, 
le on scab in our last number. W. Ç. about The —— of Sheep i s, for the sk as the ee "the temperature 
eee aan gi ae sects = your; af — a; a — however, having palhe A o be conside 54 oy vay io 3 the latter .ppea 
ugh we e ence, the trade is ac vanced rates. Lamb meets with d cla, in 
may safely experiment.— I hitwillensis ur criticism | sale at fully late quotations. Choice Calves are ra ather pec. in Scotland, but here it is believed pat growing erop 
is Jvaj baty under the circumstances, we thi 8 11 need not but middli — are a heavy trade. From Holland an Ger- the Wheat plant Supplies both be mjurions ty 
many there are 170 Beasts, 820 Sheep, and 75 Calves ; from Wie Th 7 pp'ies both of home aud forse 
cute, JH — 9 It is a pa — = all — orfolk and a 2 om Scotland, 200. Pro ape 8 fallen 75 ich has given more ont. 
wi ux will not suffice for Per st. of8 lbs.—s- > L Per st. of 8 lbs d d Gence e e, and former prices have ben 
the Turnip crop, unless the lan erwise enriched. Mix | B ts Best ? : i pepe 
Go ean ey 9 . E fords, Fhe ee 4 0 tos 35 ported with an improved demand; T 
ae acre, an the whole broadcast, before drilling the | Best Short-horns 3 4—3 8| Ewes & 2d — 3 4—4 0 „ rather more money. has ain 
aro Canta” P E Apply to Mr, obo 1 1. 55 1 8—8 0 Ditto Sho 210 —3 4 The Bega markets are inan ina and ices nomi- 
n est Downs an Lambs —6 o vally unaltered. In Holland the ; 
Falow P: ly a 155 pegs Half-b 1 ra ey are b 
wich adn admit of of the “and righ by thor r cultiv —— d Ditto 8 0 peti 5 8 — . : — ri 2 appears to have occurred in the Hack- 
Tok, About iho pamphlet, pa ng thas — e — Beasts. 3002; siicep We sales 21,020; Calves, 180 ; Pigs, 230. d por 
bookse! We have more Beasts than ofl | e eee a a 
FENCES ; F A. We have in a similar case to your’s a roached, epos an of late, but not so many as was | moist growing weather, and good. 
within 7 yards of the but of a large Sycamore without any | Monday’s 3 the Sees vn ta of fully ois apd A moderate attendance of b ates: ‘es ell was a 
ury to the tree, and, in doing so, number to market consequently er are Pre oa, baile ap stent for Wheat at 1d. per bushel advance, Fiat 
at erat an Jee 22 pe ay s amame the | and they cannot all be sold. Lam rade te also worse from attracted little nod lior Ma palos, mot, 20 epaima ee am 
roots trees n A arı ý otice, bu ti 3 
from the stem before they decreased to an inch in diameter. — middling 2 E Se wegen apply of x eg 8 withou change i in val a Eset ae 
Those trees are a! et in circumference; and, if i rae 145 aken in retail at full 
wars — of necessity, we should nat hesitate 1 cutting elie fr 42 pis Pp pn ih 74 middling avery bari pied less active, and not tee oe Py a 
pace, 2 20 — 2 ha 70 readily hadba el 2 iat m Holland and Germany we have 31 Beasts, 210 In eep, ER parti en — the interim being 
2 Usa trees by a mulation o veto: its roots. 7 *. . rae rom Scotland, 200 Beasts; and 130 Milch Cows | IRR WEA 
m 4 HEAT. B Q R 
e Bahe sac gly ab oy ag pe more rapidly if all | Best Scots, Here- Best Long-wools. 3 10 to 4 2 — 
or thrice, than if you pakai lime. Lime may be n th 1 TF sat 2 = we 3 5 5 3 ality 3 2 ar 5 15 ate pr my —— 4d 
S aiad wit pre p iiie A g ep Agl sel 2a ality y Beasts 2 6—210| Ditto Shom ..2 8—3 4 3| 28 17 0 1 ; 
Boggis boxes for r publication ? i * Hale Lambs 5 0—6. 0 5 28 8 (16 822 4 
N RYE-GRA The R altogether depends | Ditto S — eds 4 MEg 8 4—4 „ 
n the season 2 een, In wet seasons, where the Beasts 10863 Sh 5.30 Pig 3 8 — 4 8 9 28 11 17 625 4 
land is muanered A pe: * ae am ‘a veal 8 easts, and Talibi, 10, 780; Calves, 412; ; Pigs, 260. A 
cuttings hav — in the season, y obe ighing pro- — ve 45 0 28 9 156 11 24 10 
bably 5 or 6 tons; and a quan nity 25 35 tons of aim food is MARK LANE, 
equal to the maintenance of three or four oxen, according to Moxpax, Max 14.—There was an exceedingly small Grain 0 0 10 
1 size, 2 3 supply of English Wheat to this day’s market, an Fluctuations in the last six weeks’ Corn Averages. 
RURAL Le 2d Edition, = pron poco by scarcely ae spring corn, The value of the former re- Pals. Man. 31. Arn. 2. |APR. 14. APR. 21. Arz. 28) Maré 
Tavare i Solly, ys ar. rage Bd be had at the office of this Paper, | ™ 4 A tered from last week. Foreign meets a 463 94 | — 
abe een ar aah 0 Thero is no work of sufficiently Salting. Batley fully supports te ee rae 46 0 ee —— S 7 e 
subject A hl 4 ces ae 1 ssi ss j a a 
eee JA N noted 2 an authority. pamphlet by Dr. mand for grinding q e veing limited, a slight con- = 2 3 = j “ — 
HOSPHAT er cession tee vee A ae æ 
Teis sed a th ra 1 or Coe dite e page Bec ssion was nece where a clearance was required.| 44 3 i k 25 n w 
ng the land up for riia k : : 
TAE Best MANAGEMENT A, We s. jä London, Liverpool. Wakefield. | Boston. Bini 
larkets, CURRENT. May 7. May 14 M “ 
. . ay 8. | Å‘ 11. 
ENT GARDEN, Max.19. 4 p 70 le PS May 4. May 11 May 9.'May‘l6| May 10. . 
— The weather having become favourable, Ve arahi are more t— s. 8. ; d.\s. d. = d N Pe * E z d 4 a 
1 L . . 8. ie . . . . S. Se F 6 * io . G. 8. 8. 
Few Cherries have made their apt pon nce, > Pine-apples fetch ew, red .-- (40 to42 40 to426 3 6 86 3 6 38/43to0o47|4lto47|38 to45 381 46 5 9 6 25 10 6 3 
from 6s. to 10s. pound, Gra e good and white ... 45—4645—466 9 7 3/6 9 7 3)43—48/43—51)42—48 6 6 66 3 6 8 
plen Nuts in general are 8 for the demand. Old, red 424642466 6 6 916 —48)45—50 1 6 
ee option avo pry ah 2 ongst Vegetables, young hi 9 6 6 942—4442 — — 6 10 6 3606 4 
T be obtained at from s. a bunch and Carrots 1 —. 48—52 48527 0 7 67 0 7 6 —50 —5 wor ats 86 2 6 9 
R 12 Popo e tor the 3 Aspar. Foreign... 36—56 36—564 6 8 3/4 6 8 3/39—51/39—5] 7 73% 
Rhub: anas eakale are still dear. ‘afew 480 lbs. „ is — 2 
en madet j 
New Potatoes fetch from 6d, to 2s. pe I. Tet mpana — |22—24/22—24 ia sa oa — — ag — * 
salading are sufficient the F oreign. . |22—23/22—23 . a a We. Pe rS 2 — 
Flowers consist of Heaths, Foreign meal |6/,—7//6/.—7/ — — — — 2 
enias, ey, Cine. ley— — * E3 
s, and R indi qr. r. r. 7 
FRUITS, N er Grinding ... aged 5 sts — 22. 2322—23124—26l24—26 23—25 8 g 
p. pec 8 a ing. r — 28 . 2 j 
31000000 
È | -m ö 7 8 thy 3 eon eae 2 — 42 39—4 
| Nu ar., p. to 
Oranges, per — Filb,, p. 100 Ibs. | i Ibiá. f; 45 Ibe. 
AN Fi Be Od ia fa ees | OAE ese JAT np igoei2a Se Se Oas 9dsa Od} — f — 
ECN is tos Brazil, p. beh., 128 8 ST 8 s prw 
oe oreign 2015— 202 7 = 
Cabbages, p. doz., Jd to 18 6d cn : r. 
— red, p, doz» 68 tó,12a Tar A = Peas—Boilers |26 32026 32 348— mE 8 
4 p. doz. bunches, 18 6d it “doz, 1s 6d to 4s PRRs eget tase 
Broscoil, a K bea 1 hf. sieve, 1s 6d . 23—26.23—26 27 —28s 27 —28s | — 
8 per bundle, 6d Shallots, Pin 6d to 10d oreign ... 24—3324—33 3 233 mo 8 
ee p ardehe Tig, cei bl 3 
Potatoes, per ton, 100s to 2808 1 p» half Longpods, Bia: 21—3222—28 30 —33 30 —33 29—31ʃ29—32 
— per ewt » 58 to bin its Lettuce, 8, Caba 5 .se.,4dto9d Old oe 4 w — 
to 28 eee aoe N Pens, 2 34 
8 Toa ea | Foreign — |21—36|/21—36) 24 ; = 3 2 — 27 om 25 
s %inseed—Feed i 
to Small Salads, 2 frre — 40 —42 29__ An 
nthe Panne, ste 4, Fennel, per bach, Zito 34 Foreign . |37—42|37—42} — = Ki Pon vee a 
French — rty mote “ee per bunch, 2d to 3 ea SHAR SEU 
4d to Ee pi ma wd da Tonen =~ (90. 75 ol. 7s | 7h. % | 72, 12s 
Leske lt . ghe e (Paral E 3 Foreign 71.6. os 4 
Celery, D, bundle ws ge hag te to e | ilia 0 26—30 x: 
= e., 1s to 32 ; 
ere bun., ped Mini, cacy pee p. sack p. sack 280 lbs. ma lbs. 5 * 
Spinach p. — reper bunch, zd to 1d Plour— 36—4436—44 32—37 f 


THE AGRICULTURAL 8 i 319 


GLASS FOR „ ek 
Zales eeu JAMES P HILLIPS anD CO. 116, Bishopesate- street 
paesi 22 — erymen, Florists, and others Without, have the pleasure to hand their New List of Pri 
Cort EROE un MORRIS are ie of SHEET GLASS for Cash. 


Peay atte GLASS 
. to sell by public Auction, on 

2 0 e jdlesex, 02 o MON ND AX, May A088 and dia INCHES LON ONG “aad 11 1 
a 2 © elogi, precisely, i ae or 8 ben en 16 oz. from 3d. to 14 1 j foot. Under 6 by 4 12s, 6d 
y 3 33 d y and 63 by 43 15 0 
„ a a | 1c 1 2 g 755 5 and 75 by 5}..... 17 6 

m Bal? 9} 8 by 6 and 10 by 8 ...... 20 
uber] “ROUGH PLATE GLASS for WINDOWS, SKYLIGHTS, 

and FLOORS, in siz * not exceeding 5 feet superficial, 
ł thick .. per foo 


18. Od. -inch ate foot 2 Od. 
1 : 1 inch 0 


TE NRO Sn PLATE TILES. 
each 128 11d} ...each = 2 


°” SARET GLASS TILES AND SLATES. 


-0Z. -0z. 26-0z, 32.0·. 

Tiles e of Sheet Glass . Sd. 10d. 18. = 4d. 

Slates,: 201 in 10d. Is. 18. 4d. 1s. 8d. 
Slates are kept in stock 7 ie og sizes, and — to any 

usion 

GLASS MILK ANS ROPAGATING AND BEE GLASSES, 
Pastry Slave, Hyacinth’ a and Dishes, ** of for Orna- 
plants i in eee May be poteg the | ments, Fish Globes, Plate and Window Glass of e ry descrip- 


es had at the Mart, and of peed Lam p Shades, and Lactometers for trying the "quality, of 
ne. 


ilk, 4 tube 78, 6d, ; 6 tubes, 10s. Self Registering Ther 


YHE IMPROVED HYDRAULIC pin 
cage! k FREEMAN RoE, Fountain 

aioe 4 n be worked by Maker, IA Stee 

mall Pes ream of half- -an-inch, 


es for deep wells of all ki inds, Douche and other Baths, 
puid heated by hot water. Water wheels to work smali 
pumps, from 151. Estimates given for 8 supply of towns, &c, 
A newly-invented Portable Vapour Ba comp’ 


Sot a ducal ̃ Ü.. Bo OTRE ae vay 
A 5 ON’S ORIGINAL 2 . 
the 


T, sp ly patro: 1 ah 
Governments, the Hon, Eas 4 Company, th p 8 
Dock Com mpanies, most public” bod and by the “principa 


durable out. Fe Paint ever 9 for i 3 

every description of Iron, one, Brick, 

&c., work, as has been proved by the N tert 101 f upwards 
0 years, and by the numerous 00) 

monials in its favour, a ic from the rank rer — 

society of Fa Who have given them, have never yet been 


equalled by anything of thé kind hitherto brought before the 
8 “Lista of Colours and Prices, ther with acopyof 
the testimonials, will be sent on application to WALTER CARSON, 


ters for Gr 
D MORRIS 1 bes to HA 18 PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS: 


HARTLEY'S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS 
CONSERVATORIE The readers of the Gay 
15 P the bi ee of we 2 Feb, 24th, must have eee 
the hig rms in whic pe e oken of by Dr. LI 
N 
. by ihe bene of the thes EE e have re. a the | ged our | 0 
ll by Auction, on the premises, Paradise. oiadi? with those of the Patentee, to which we would beg the 
UESDAY, 29th May, his epee collec. | attention o the Nobility, , Olergymen, sien ry, an 25 te 
, TULIP- STAGE, — BINETS, ee 8by6....... d. per 
at great expence ofm ney and ti 8 by 6 — 10 by 8. 43d. 10 pe 8 ae 10 by: = 5d. 
pt al attention of Amateurs, li ee and 7 2 “se 8 wines . Bad, 1} fo 775 ..6d. 
and Morris invite their friends to a oy 63d, 4 fe x — 5 — 
] tock, for the pe po i 75 Lis en add every ee may be had by 
heir collections. May applying to Talkie PrfLLirs and Co., Horticultural Glass Ware- 
gues 1111 gon a premises ; veer ss house, 116, Bishopsgate-street Without, Lo 9 5 


AND W. H. JACK KSON are supplying SHEET, 


ROUGH ogee and CROWN GLASS for Horticul- 
reduced RI 


3 A 
near Chelt enham, PATENT PLATE of ‘superior manufacture, for Glazing dwel- 
ery Choice Collection of ling-houses, for which purpose these articles are now super- 
A Rori 88 


TULIPS, a very great variety, and of the best sorts, | seding all inferior Glass. ORNAMENTAL GLASS of the 

whick bare jai the proprietor 20 9 to collect. May be newest designs fo = ” decoration of Conservatories, d&c, 

viewed The Tulips will be sold p and W. H. J. also supply PATENT OPTICAL FLINT 

G LASS, Thin Glass, slides and ions for . ic purposes, 

Sor oo A Propagating Glasses, Estimates, Lists 

Nasse. A Pp EGG th e of Pri and every in Aera forwarded on application at 
* adap ggs, on the Cantelonian | their Warehouse, 315, Oxford-street, London 


5 who possess a Farm. yard and a good run for 


5 . . e eee ee eee COT- 
ou nnu y pply by p ce 
South Lambeth, London R. “EDWARD. "RYDE, Survey: GENT, 
1 A 75 is lable FREE 5 2 7 e 
LET, the above valuable L Y, situate in the 
jy in the a en of Fe. in vicinity of good roa n close proximity to several 
** Addr 4 be lotteri Alvi of the | Stations on two Tikoni 11869 0 of Railway within 15 miles of 
“Chronic 2 Le r ine U pHs, ” Wellin to = Londo; —Full dea at his office es for the $ Survey, Valua- 
Gardeners’ „ Upper Welington- n, Sale, or Purchas néed Pro pper Belgra 


5 A. 

— a e 

Een back or a SON.—Haymaking Machines, 
i 71 or reversing action.—Manr WeEDLAKE, the 
sat g 8 E an . begs to eee the 

ettensive manor y ; nobility, pee and the public generally, that those HAY- 

eet E ET a mpr MACHINES, 3 the — of WEDLAKE’s Patent, 


fice, Gal directing a line to H. M. W., Post- anufactured by Mary WEDLAKE and Co., but are 
i ce, 
* 1 compare wi with the genuine 


1 gars and, although somewhat, like in Appenran 
PSLEY PELLATT AND Co. (late PELLATT and 8, Fenchurch-street, opposite Mark-lane. 
each; 


Gari), Falcon Glass Works, Holland. street Blackfriars, ata 
Gana a di on hand, oe 1s. 2d. per r Ib.; Cucumber Ta Lightest, Cheapest, and most Efficient Roofing: 
; Milk Pans, 18-in., white glass, 58. 6d. rig ef = CRO pcb 1 IMPROVED — 
white, ‘Is. per ib. ; do., green, 10d, ; | PHALTE F A House, 40 feet by 24 feet in the clear, ma; 
; Grape Shades, 1s, 6d, to 28. be erected ie for 171. 178. 10d. Price of the Felt, pit 
ane ; Wasp and Fly-traps, 40s, pany per A foot, in rolls 32 inches wide. Samples and 
hese traps fruit | det 


etails m bypost. A Large stock always. on hand, to 


INGHAM BROTHERS, 170, ganhant Bir- 
mingham, sole th and 
ZINC MENOGRA APH 0 sh for padre Bord te: 0210 ow: — 
pots, & e., in boxes, of 100, Ke. The Zine Labels are y 
3 of for their lasting 2 can be written upon 
, When dry, a 3 — — 
is — a Directions — use sent with each box, including 
bottle of Metallic Ink. 


Had of BowanD Lacey, 
— Birmingham 


F ²˙ J ee eee 


Sole agents in London, G. and J. D ANE, Horticult ural Imple- 
of | ment Warehouse, 46, 75 Williamcstreet, London-bridge. 
arying from 2d. to 3d. RIOPHOSPHATE. 


3 porter, ROWE ax CO., beg to call the attention 
Eeey; their e generally to the above 
ASS valuable 3 whieh setae aina to manufacture under 


L 
f the inspection eminent agricultural chemist. This 
par Age: Manure has been beate, tested ba aaua 98 8 to 
SHA DES, pir it is equal to any n onse- 
quare, London baat of. the favourable testi aie monials 1 receiv ase irom K 
„ fi x X of gentlemen who have tried i pez ave been induced to | 
— — E pare 8 are a large stock, which they can supply immediately in 
growers prid epig 


87, Bishopsgate-street- | g many other communications, the following has been 
2 Counties Railway H ea 
SS, nearly } inch ack. * Old Newnham, Plympton, April 21, 1849. Gentlemen, Hi 
sed your M uriophosphate last year in competition with sever 
| other manures, I have great pleasure in informing you it proved 
by far the most L e n e kank- 2 cwt. per 
peat ashes, and su superiority of the 2 a Lop, Turnips, 


er foot; this is t 


petitors ! a riod i ee 
the poorest land, as Fi c i 
soils Ishall panite considerable c ` 


inc 
tepee 


or Ezer 

S babe Bait. Pot Tithe; Pe- 
c plica- 

Mr. PoNTEY, Corr 


feel rE relative 


that it was N ra prin at — South D Agricul- | 


15, erji se Tard, back of * Bank of England, — No 
equeste be sent direct. 


BY HER 


MAJESTY’S PATENT. 


DENCH offers for sale Pat HOT-HOUSES, 
Pe he will war superior to all others, in every 
opoo „ Viz., 1 Span Ro of 2 — 6 ius. Tong, 13 feet 6 ins, wide, 
401. ; Thain te; 28 fect 6 ins. 10 16 feet 5 th 
best 1 24 groupas pes * lar; ange 2 Pate ot Lights for 
Pits, Frames, requiring n t, 7d., 8d., and 9d., per su- 
per — foot, pet ba to 5 e. 
HEATING BY HOT W 
AHA AND EFFECTIVE FANGE AGAIN? 
By: pps ND EFFECTIVE FENCE AGAINST 
AND RABBITS,—Iron Wire Netting of various 
patterns, 1 exclude the smallest rabbits, in coils of 50, 100, or 
any give mber of yards, at prices varying m 4d. to 18. 
per 28 run. _ Aviary 05 at proportionate prices. None sent, 
out withou the best anti-corrosive paint. 


ha CHURCHILL AND BEANE, of 
Wells, Kent, having been appointed Superintending 
Agents for 2 sale of Dr. Newiog:oa’s Agricultur 
be info 


nts, beg t rm t they are now in a shan 
to supply umber, either of, AND or LEVER 
DIBBLES, or the HAND-DRILL-HOES, CULTIVATORS, and 


B rel to 
cae 9 8 5 Botn. mh as fo ah 


CONFORT 9 F NDER FEET, AND A n 

EE * nea FH 

AU 1s “EV EN D, 

Patronised by’ E 28 Pats as 2 ee 

PAUL’S EVERY MAN’S FRIEND, which gives r 

—— application. Paul's Every Man’s Friend 7 } 8 18 

enerally admitted to be the best ra ferne for 

orn of those 


mo { 
and Su o of ell an, pee eee 
8 2 both Army and Navy, sae sgt 1000 Pere aa 
gentry in town and coun king in 

oF “his valuable remedy. 
Prepa ared by Jo ohn Fox, in boxes, at 1s, lid., or, three small 
9d. ; and to be had, 
use, of all wholesale and retail Medicine Vendors n Town and 

Cou 


overnment tamp. 25. 9d. box. cures * m 
corns. for ** paati Every Man’s Friend,” 
Sold arclay and ale and rre e 67, 


el With ; Eade, 55, Goswell- street 

229, Strand; Hannay and’ "do. 63, Oxford-street ; rae 

Ed dane 1 3 by all respec nes 3 

Medicine Vendor ry town in 

re ry for Trend pag Scotland, dealin, . and B: Smis 
„Druggists, Edinburg! 


IR HERI RY HARTS 
gare bt ad 
CURE OF SMOKY F iiot 
A i Ae in succeseal use 
ments. “Tehas — i ul use. 
at Green Z- several 
months 


SOLE AGENTS. 
BENHAM and Sons, 19, Wigmore- 
street, Cavendish-square, 


of testing the relative merits 
brought 3 publi 
receipt 


320 THE GARDENERS’ 


AM & HALLEN, Enarneers, Irox Fouxpers, 
No, 2, WIxstxr-srakEr, OXFORD-STREET, LONDON, 


Ce 


Corrax and Risse havin had Tii ce in the erection of 
HOTHOU ES and n nate N Iron or 
odd combined), and from many improvements they 
made during that time, can with contideace wadertake to 

ont 8 buildings with economy and dispatch 
ROT WATER jh da . ms ng the above d 
other Dells (of w ustructed cowed of 

3000), fixed at sarge” ph 


am and HALLEN ae 20 Ped be: their repository, No. 


Corr 
bel my primey Ox ford-s ariety of the Zisi 
rticles, for GARDENS, ping 8 Greasy. REDUCED PRICES, 


s os 
arden Rollers, 0 frames, 
Garden Engines, Flower Stakes 
en Syringes, Fiower-bordering, 
Watering Pots, Flower Stands 
Garden Vases, pe gg Arches, 
Mowing Machin Garden Cha 
Every — of Work, both plain — Oranet in 
writhe «Mi east iron, for Gardens, &c. &c. 


HORTICULTURAL TOOLS and AGRICULTURAL IMPLE. 
MENTS of all kin 

STRONG IRON HURDLES, strained Wire Fencing, &c. 

Show Rooms at — a * BY, 2, 1 and 
76, Oxford- street, e d — he of the Prin Theatre. 


5 HARE AND RABBIT PROOF 
WIRE NETTING 


4 
r 


‘ 
: 
I 


1 — we ae 
(CHARLES D. UNG anp T s 


3 
xp C. Y 
MANUFACTURERS OF 1 Forres seit WIRE wo 
22, PARLIAMENT- 


BUDDIN 'S PATENT MACHINE FOR CUTTING LAW 


8 PROFESSOR SCBLE 5 
PLEASURE GROUNDS, BOWLING aay wigs &e. Just published, in teen he vol. Sro th Gop 2323 . Ne 
MANUFACTURED AND SOLD vings, p cloth, ates and 
= FERRABEE anv SONS, Pheeaix = Works, PRINCIPLES C OF oSCLENTIFIC ‘BOT 
* Stroud, Gloucestershire, Engineers, Millwrights, Ma- DUCTIVE ANY | 
alaita, Iron an rass Founders, and e of Eatrasrdi ry eee of Dotai — the 
abs cg by 


Agricultural Implements. 


Bortpine 


be E — atta 
e, n stakes driven 
or sev 2 rt. It is, besides, 
dering Hedges, — or other 


nt a 
y any lal 
Hares and Rabbits, it is 
tached, —.— t pur. 
ground abou wai six 
Decale adapted for ren. 
ting Fene 


ual Plant 1 Shrubs. 
30 1 1s, 3d.; and 


=: 
— 


100 yards, 18 ins. wide, will cost sh e 0 
s of 100 yards, 24 ins. wide 0 
100 yards, 30 ins. bom ee 3 


is r required, it would be 8 


— for Pheasantries and 
th 


undertake to deli 
pe cipal ports of Bosan 
ete! per lineal = England, an 


ver nit. at 8 — the 
d Ireland, for One 


3 lhe = alae e great | 
ft hein pe ked , stating to 2 | 


str 
the we 


This Machine may iy. be worked by persons who cannot use a 


DWIN 
ate St 


How to enjoy a Country Life 
Author — 8 e — adi 8 
21 Mrs. N, 16mo , Price 
II EUR GARDENERS, CALENDAR? 
Guide as to w what should be avoided, well a 


ce 78. 
as whati 


RY; 


0 
Or, The Popular papa of Animated N 
900 Woodcuts atare. “With 
E K sun, 


History; separate Histories of every Na een 
THE tram ober TREAS * 
8 i ogr. aphy ; comprising above 12, “000 — 
Lond : LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, and Low 


80 * It may be adjusted to eut i f- — and leaves a more taining ample Descriptions of all the fine et 
even and uniform — — than e produced by the most of Roses, regularly classe ; 
skilful mower. The Grass may bee cut when d may be | History and Mode of Culture. ae 
collected in the box, en bli ng the 3 r to cut his lawns at “Mr. | Rivers is the best authority on the cultivation of the 
most convenient time, and rendering pee ot afterwards 1 Gentleman’s s Magazine ' 
unnecessary ; while, with De e amount of labour, more than ondon : LONGMAN, Browy, GREEN, and Lonemans, 
6 2 rk = be done than with a scyth WORK ON GAR MAN > ACTURE. 
w 3000 of these machines are now in use, The 
— arious sizes * — for ie an horse power, aha are | “or published, n —.— pe ren (one cola re 
rices this season have been considerably reduced. 
and May, Ipswich, are General Wholesale Ji MANUFACTURE OF SUG in the i 
ts for Lond on, Middlesex, saa the adjacent 8 also — and at 1 me chemically — By J 
— “Cambridgeshire Northamptonshire, Lincolns and th OFFERN, M.B, Lond., 1 1 rofessor of Chemisty at the 
Eastern Count: of Medici 
The Ma chine sold by the following 8 ers: Lenden: Locman, Bugs, GREEN, and Lonomans, 
Mr, W. Dru y, Casiestreey You pan Messrs. Lis da er and Lees, ISH COUNT LIFE 
Cateaton-strect, Manchester ; Messrs. Ma applebeck and “Lowe e, The Third Edition, medium 8vo 
ao ring, 1 jehai: Weiss S Nelso on and Sons, 47, Brig- 15 . U j F ENGL AND, 
e, Leeds; Mr. T. ohnso on, Leicester ; Mess: 3 and xH Third Edi 2 
. 8 Messrs. Sandars & Haywood, Deri; it on W 4 8 N and re. 
and Mr. Jobn Wigglesworth, Marke st pines, Nottingham vised, with ‘lustrations ye ary * 3 5 


(GALVANISED WIRE — NETTING.— 
7d. per yard, 2 feet wi 


bree EY 


Japanned 
Iron. 
2-ineh mesh, light, 24-inch wide va bers. 5d, 2 5 
inen „ 105 64 
2-inch „ Perey strong ,, 12 ğ 5 
13 2 „ light ” 8 ” 6 ” 
15 „ strong N 77 S yy 
inch „ extra strong, j 


11 
All th be made — + proportionate prices, 
If the upper half is a coarse deen’ it a reduce the price one- 
fourth. Galva age ete -proof nett we 9 pheasantries 3d. 
per square foot, forwarded pos 
and sear Market-place, 
expense 


aun 
of ex in London, Peter- 


ee ufactured a a 
Norwich, and 8 — 
borough, Hull, or Newcastl 


WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT, 


888 225 88 X 
b 
25 2 


. 


R SQUAR 
g, 2. atmosphere 
was exhibited at he 10 


| of nt 
o 3 8 plan s. 
18, 24, 36 


g tha 
iole in the m —— — etn 


— the sam 
ren freg of 
nu — 
WOR RK — pany this and f 3 of TRON 


yal 
en 


P 


a 

a 

5 
2845 

$? 

So 


ices, of every des ri 
y Post. —Haal. aoe y e —— 


Bedding, sent fre Son, B Bedding. 
the Chapel), Tottenham-cour 


pe ay 196 (opposite 


— ae vide Tha. 7 per yard 
— 


12 pva poar 3d. per vend 
18., sia 8 8 5 


aa ac” 1d, — tobt extra. 


is 
y | Monthly record of the new plants introduced in 
thro sa — te ubl: 


VISITS TO REMARKABLE PLACES, 
London: LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, and LONGMANS. 
MR. ENCYCLOP AS, 
New Edition, improved, with nearly 1000 E pain Wood, 
One large Or ** 508. cloth, 
AS ENCYCLOPZ: — GARDENING. 
By 

„No Gardening book so comprehensive and containing such 
an immense mass of matter, has been s ubmitted to the 
public more free from errors of the | pen or the) press. —Monthly 
Revi 


By the same Auth 
gpa lon 29 a Catal 
o or introduced tate . — 
ENCYCLOPEDIA of PLANTS. 8vo, 31. re 6d. 


io of the Plants Indi- 


eee and LoxduAxs. 


ct 
$ 
gr 


‘lines Ey 5 Edition sent free for on 
by R. SUTTON, Publisher, Nottingha m, who has 


Shillin 

a few 8 . ane N ee IONARY 40. 
DENING, at the reduced price of 5s. nt free to any part 
of the kingdom fi 


Now SEBS a neat pocket volume, 5s, clo 


A® 3 BOOR os BRITISH TEND ‘tended 


mpan. n Fer 5 an 
prising. * in joala descriptions, with wood 2 
ings of all the species indigenous to Britain. By Tomas fA 
F. B. S., Curator "Of the 2 4 


ecaries, and author of “ Theory and Practice App 


i jally to 
ently recommen 
the cultivator, of this beautiful tribe. „Sir J. V. Hooker, in 
ae Bota tany. 
oa + Ee . tet RIDGE and Sons, Paternoster-Tow ; 
d W. A Sea * Soho. 
We ON TH 
Just Upe ‘price ll. lis. baal with 15 RO S etifally-coloared 


wings, and nu us Woodcuts, 
pi ide SEGA RDEN. By Wirun Path 
Nurseryman, Cheshunt, Her * 

„r. Paul is the most successful Rose- ane in England. 
re Hts iten iy what the amateat 


ure. 
“ His ins aosda, are full, and precise 
requires.” Gardeners Chronicle 23, Paternoster 
NE. 


. don: 8 GILBERT, and Pires, 

and all Bookse llers. TA 5 27 
URTIS’s BOTANICAL MAGA 

Dives By a eh ere 3 OOKER, | 
doe of the Royal . sof ew. 

the Cult ture of each Species, by Mr. JouHN —_ 
Curator of the 254 6 l Gardens. oni 


CURTIS’S BOTANICAL MAGAZINE 


rough 9 5 nee ic Bota 


f the 1 gee ication and ex 
— with ~ habi bs of commun equalled facilities fof 


Plates, 
Extra Sey sheer eep Netting, 3 feet, 1s. 6d. 555 8 8 d in Month! Numbers, 1 
—— yard; a galvanised, 2s. Also every description of price x: Oc, coloured z aad Annually in in "Volumes, pries es 
Wire ursery Fireguards, Wire House Lanterns an d pet ge Reeve, BENHAM, and REEVE, King 
= Shades, 5 tern Dish Covers, Meat Safes, &e. ; ndow | Strand, 
— . — Od. per square foot, with bolts complete, in maho- er Woburn. ries 
ny frames; Gothic garden borderin , 6d. per running foot ; | Printed by Wiuu1am Buapsunr, of No. 13, Upper ans, Tee ek 
— Trainers, from 3d. each; Garden arches, 20s, each: Parish of St. Pancras, and Funůnmaaten Murueta Erawat, y, Printer ai pof i 
—— er Stands, fro sel 9d, each; Galvanised Tying Wire for wads in ini de padega the Precinct of of Whites mre ee 
p — and trees, D Rods, and every description of Wire. London; and — ap by them — bona No. 5, C No ey, where — — 
1 ; Weaving, ' —— the use of paper. makers, aia &e.— ' parish of 2 — 8 — 2 mae ADDBESSED 2575 70 5 
ufactory of THOMAS HENRY Fox, 63, Snow-hill, London $ arvapar, Max 19, 1849 


ME GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


INDEX. 
9] a | Grapes, to set de 
essee = . .. 36 
325 Hints for Amateurs —x—Vx . 325 
Horticultural Society 555 


p. prospect of the | was 
Rabbit f 205 l e 
Ripiphorus paradoxus . 


pore party ate: i Cornwa 827 
Rough p'a! e ue 
Savings“ — de. rev. = 
Science and wh 331 


cultu 

Timber, en ent to fel 305 o—326 
Tulip 2 =: ow 827 
. 327 e 
Weasel, 8 Fo ‘the 326 
Witham Farmers’ Clu b—Cattle $32 


— — — 
IC SOCIETY, 1 PARK. 
BITION OF P PLANTS E AM zeas 
June? 
obtained at the . — by o oe pm 
raf the sega price 5s. each, Posies 1 the 
1 be 55 oe ach. The G: 

ds of the 
1 9 ce) will atten 


eet SOUTH LONDON i 
Pg CIE 


= 
Bosal Horse 


the Patronage of Most Sede Majesty the QUE 
15 poh ip 0100 ees of the above Soela 
RY 2 


the ROY. OOLOGICAL GAR. 
| mas 0 Torma, the iiih June, 184 en to all Exhi- 
ws when Prizes will be awarded for the following pro 
tions, viz, Miscellaneous a idaceous Plants, Pelarg 


u 
5 0- 
niumt, r Pinks, Ranunculuses, Caiceolarias, 
and Fruit, In addition to the above, Messrs. Paul and Son, of 
Extra gated m 


blooms. y Br 
Amans for Roses, in si in nga trusses of one stem. Also the 
’ Rae 8 Wood, vf Norwood, to 


SATURDAY, MAY 26. 


1 GARDENS, REGENT’S PARK 
On Whit Mon — aa nd Whit Tuesday, ADMISSION SIX- 
PENCE each Per: 


ICA AN NURSERY, BAGSHOT, SURREY, 


n gratis by — 1 


ELECT ‘BEDDING: PLAN TS. — 100 5 
BEDDING PLANTS iie . > e for planting out i 
the open one: uch pe 1 w Ver- 
Salvias, yr e atums, La peg 
i Anagallis 11 Scutellaria 
thee tomas, Calceolarias, E ana 
m securely packed in n dam mp moss, 
carriage paid to London ; siaha quantities may be had at 
6d. per dozen, post free, on receipt of the amoun 
with — ordie from BENJAMIN W. KNI poe Florist, he 5 
Tivoli, near St Makinat, s-on-Sea, Sussex. ted directions 
for treatment wi 111 be sent with each lot of pianis, 
HOICE eg PLA 
HOLDER anp CO. beg to — the Nobility, 
e Stock of 


Geraniums, &c., whi "E me at 4s. — a per dozen. 
Nurseries, N * , Clapham. 
N.B. The 12 sup 
RHODODENDRON JAVA 1 OF BLUME; 
OR THE BEAUTIFUL ORANGE- COLOURED RHODODEN- 
Wee ROLLISSON 
, Gentry, ana trade, thas they 


ger Monday he 18th Jun * 


anp SON g respect- 


hea Ithy pl ants oft ‘the r ee Rhodode ndro 3 vani- 
cum, at 21s. per — the variety wit e 8 
flowers, HE advertised i in the 3’ Chronicle last autumn. 

W. R. a beg to remark that their Collector in Java 
Seed nee — from which their ee was raised, off plants 
of the orange. Coloured variety, spotte with red, which ae gre 


Amatears, for 12 Alpine Pl — wer, in pots. Lists of 
jas tara, of the Society may be obt ained from 
a, Secretary, Ebenezer House, Peckham 


DDING ‘PLANTS.— SERA ate ss 


Thumb, Colling’s Superb, Shrublan 

11 out of pots : 

22. 64. per dozen, and NAS. at ls. 6d., out: of pots, 
i plants, on the receipt of one postage 


en Jenn Haves, Ratet ny fect — * say he has a 
4 . ee r 


and Sons í can positively warrant them to be the genuine plant, 


S BENEVOLENÙ INSTITUTION.— 


| 2 ANNIVERSARY DINNER in aid of the 
house, on Fa, roar nens We ta 1 ce at the London Coffee- 


à M.P 
Al ranes ‘Afenderson, M.D. 
or Hills, E 


G. W. Johnson, Esq. 
William J ones, Esq. 
ohn Lawrie, Esq. 


harles Palmer, 


iful, mea oe pd and arer 
gromi g sh 2 
servatory, 0 wing 
and = Gollestor having found i e of 
mountains in Java, 9, 700 feet above 125 level of the se ea, ge is 
ast 
in ‘some part of this 5 —Tooting Nursery, near London. 


NVAS FOR hee 


2 FLORIST, — 
Cheapsi tags respe: ANTAS: to make i 
kn . — = he has a large 8 of C AS 1 ‘for 
Gr se Blinds, we Flower Beds, 
1 at td. gil N 
inform Ree Public that he can supply 
Bedding Plants ote every 1 * as also all 3 new plants 


BEREVOLENT’ 7110 TION. 
the ne given, that a SPECIAL GENERAL 
will on 


this Institution will be 
gate- DNESDAY 

consider a 9 78 ‘ gaan 
n the receipt of pa 


se of Electing TWO 
. from m among the following Da 
d "appro 


eaae 


4 lic: tio . 
London Thi 7th * 
5th 


Quedgley, Gloucester 
Ciptane $ ** 
Dartt 

Clapham 


Andover 
ae on 


. 
wee eee 
** one 


5th 
4th 
3d 
3d 
3d 
3d 
3d 
2d 
2d 
20 
2d 
lst 
Ist 
Ist 
lst 


65... Bath 
5 abi Blackheath 


3 Tat 
Sipan 1 o'clock. The ballot 
— rng oek 2 ’clock, e No 

3 is —— on 
— Si R. CUTLER, Secretary, 
arringdon-street, 


97 F 


AHL Lias, including s 


na 


6s. per dozen; FUC 81a S and GER ANIUMS, rag! „per 
dozen; HELIOTROPES, VERBENAS, PETUNIAS, and 
ALOX S, 6s. per dozen. The aor warranted strong and 


N —— 
. H. has ordered from Holland a large stock, in great 
5 of BULBOUS ROOTS, a — 4 ae of which will be 
ublished 
ge 156, Cheapside, Londo 
ART AND 


NICKLIN, Fuon Guildtord, can 


Ant 
Othello, N 8 8 


Isabella, R ele, 
Pluto, 8 yen healthy plants, well set with fl ower buds), 
10s. per doz. - 

RN SIES. — 13 of Lothian, Zabdi, Queen of 


Whites, 58. the se 
VERBENAS. obits s 3 scarlet, 6s. per doz 
— t Blane, white, — — 


smaller sized plants, 4s. per doz, 
doz Pe Emperor China, 


„; White ection, 4s. per 
Vulcan — Orpha, Felix, La 
ls. each. 

Per doz.—s. d. 
Petunias, of best sorts... 5 4 
Phioxes 5 
Salvias, vari 
Anemone japonica, very 
strong 


r doz.—s. d. 
Dahlias, in good varieties 6 0 
Calceolarias 5 0 


variou eee — Geraniums years 
nsies 


ede et eee eeeeeceeente 


FERNS. — 12 DISTINCT SPECIES OF HARDY 
BRITISH and 


ERS OF A 
ENJ AMIN. W. “KNIGH’ 65 Fromet Eon Tivoli, trus 
to ca 


ttention 


2s. 

Fancy "Flowers 
and strigillosa, 50 i Heliotropium 
tairian 


. de Tig 6d. k 
each lot of plants. 

eet sae be de obtained on prepaid 
postage stamp. A remittance or referen 
Faceted from unknown — 


Villageoize ( pated 82 | that 


on ha n For 
a h. 


[Price 6d. 
DOUBLE DAHLIAS.- — Strong plants now 
6d. 


ready, 
eac 


or 5s. per dozen. The above, together with a eriptive List of 

Dahlias, containing all the new and Det 8 may be had 
of WILLIAM DENYER, Seedsman Tenn 1 8015 82, Gracechurch- 
street (near the Spread Eagle), Eagle), L 


S egen ERICAS 701. SA LE. — About 500 
beautiful large young plants in splendid condition, and 
ut 5000 small I bushy rare also a fine collection of Stove 

— Greenhouse Plants, d Climbers „ at very low prices. 
The fine, healthy, dwarf, — plants ‘at this Nursery, fully 
3 the N ay teh ments of the — — Build. 

ings and Hot Water Apparatuses, &c. 

J. Wrens and Co., Horticultural Architects, & c., King's. road, 
Chels 


Trasir 


SEED. — For Sale, 60 bushels of W 

Gree Yellow TURNIP 8 e growth of 1848, 
3 selected and warranted genuine. For price, rth pin 
o Mr. BRYAN CLARK, Farmer, Tuxford, Notts. Any quaa 


NEN VERBENAS SENT OUT IN —— 3 
RINCESS ALICE (Winne’s), white, de 
arge and splendid flower, 18. 6d. 
18707 AL . (Young’s), deep purple, large flower, fine 
ar variety. 
RD OF 9 7 5 1 deep rose, fine large flower. 
er + Sy gprs . 1 
tripe R 


in rA centre ot t the sola, const: 
— 55 (Barker's), yr ee white, — shaded with rose. 
e HESS OF NORTHUMBER LAND (B . beautiful 
bt rose pink centre, primrose eye, Jarge truss, fine. 
P EPESI (Epps), ‘brilliant veg rich gs dark ak, large bold 
truss, profuse bloomer, habit dwarf and compact. 
a (Barker’s), purple lake, nes crimson, centre, 
MISS THOROLD (Barker's), 8 large truss. 
EYEBRIGHT (Barker's), fiery rose, ne centre, fine 
ived first-class 3 at the 


The set 
of purchaser), t for 10s., 5 luded. 
ished 


Arg went oe leading v 3 of last year, all very distinct 
and de as advertis o ariere of April 21st, 20s. 
They are fine bushy plants loom. 

SCARL ga PELARGONIUMS, 


Royalist H capes es ud? Fi .. 48.64 
Symmetry phen men ee Sa 
Gem of Scarlets 3 6 Brompton Hero + an Q 
pe Morn 2 6 Pink a 1 0. 
om undes 3 “Master 2 6 | Mrs. May . 0 
Pane 17 Sprang Superb 1 0 


Tne set of 12 for 188. 
_HELIOTROPIUM * ‘SOUVENIR DE LIEGE,” colour pure 


violet, with a yellowish tinge towards the centre, and said to 
ə the best. of all Heliotropes for bedding and pot culture, 
ice established plants, 3s. 6d. Messrs. Low’s Adver- 
— of April 7th, front page. 
Phlox depressa (Henderson) . 
Salvia azurea compacta (Henderson ER . 
Calceolaria, species for W (Henderson) 2. oe a8 
Tropœolum speciosum oie ge € 
5 Calitornica at 1 
TR laria amplexicaulis  ... splatter 1 6 
2 Hero, 18. each. si doz. 9 0 
25 viscosissima, ls, each 9 0 
Kayii, Is. 0 


PETUNIA, Cox wax's BEA AUTY SUPREME,” g „tbo, 5 
= the Lat snip 7 pis culture or beddi 
ow in bloo en ground and in AN Ti 
m Patr Conan, Farbe Court Nursery, Old B . 
ix: r London, May 26th. 


—— 55 ‘SIR CHARES NAPIER, Bree = I is one 
tothe 


corolla to the greatest a 
we a ‘Fuchsia, “ 


i were mm 
parties: who saw it in bloom. Fine healthy Bo are now 
nd ¢ 6d. eac ca The usual allowance made 
UNEQUALLED VERBENA SORE 
EDWARD Tex has much pleasure in offering 
Verbena, 50 ogee admired while in bloom last season, 
use bloomer, and a very a tive Mere 
than 15 inches i in rei ib had above 65 
ne time, besides buds. T 
is a beautiful . aber with large primrose eye, giving 
stri and handsome, appearaace This also 
> and Florists’ Journal, | October 


second time, a 
now ready 3 saa out, 5s. The usual allowance made 
to the Trade when three are are taken. * and ee 
free, on the receipt of a Post-office ord 


Seeds o 25. 
8 William i (double), I be pm 6d. do.; —— . ae 
particulars, Advertisement in this Paper 


Sai. at Epwarp Titex’s General Seed Shop, 16, 1 ult 
bridge, Bath, "a 


CHRONICLE. 


322 
5 HE GARDENERS’ 
YA 
L BOTANIC SOCIETY 
EX >» REGENT’S PARK Bae NG P 
XHIBITION, MAY 16, 1849 ad — 45. PLANTS, de acd cq Se 
3 1 r doz, nd 
e e e eee k Peruvia Verben 
- AWARD OF. THE JU Volt rian 4 J ag t 
ar} DGES Do. gesneriflora, * 
— TE 7 Is, 
1. E EXTRA — 1 Do. ful a Ah Rae best 
eer Mey, Gardener to 9 x MEDAL. 1 gens and patens, 68. De des. last year, i 
2. ToM tive ta ee Ealing Park, for 6. To Ivery, Florist, Peck Fuchsias, 6s A best: old 
3 3 r. Mylam, hy rd — Ra Mr. Iveson, . ham, for 6 Cinerarias Petunias, 43 7 2 ente Gon. varieties, 
; er ucker, Esq., Wandsworth, 7. T o Mr. Mylam 1 Dowager Dus Duchess of North- | ye spermums, Maurand nd alten gigantes a 
«ron oat MEDIUM GOLD NE . To Mr; Rickwood, Gardener to — L sp. Mexio bar de pee. d | era od 
i ner ‘or 6 22 er to — . . 
2. 1 — and Greenhouse 1 ioe „ Warth, for 30 . T° or Ö ee in 11 inch a s, Esq., Roehampton * Gi. bo. de per don, Dahlias, g in pots, E 
ji m Tor i Stove a Gardener to Sir E. Antrob — 10. ral — on, ne pacri Plants will be added to . to 128. per d l 
3. e ireen Gaani us, „ Cheam olme, R ener to J. A may be had on — a 
4, — — 1 hat 5 Heaths. ma : i To Mr. Sa 1 eRe for rian —.— 9 Rugby, paid application, W Catalog 
for 15 Orchids, ener to J. H. Schröder, Esq., Stra . To Mr. 2 elargonium co. E 
. tfi Calceo 0 K. LEC 
z 2 art r. Williams, gt to C. B. W š ord, 13. To 15 Ta vl NER Esq, Sidcup, for 6 out — LANTS.—The followi 
for 25 Ore a arner, Esq., Hoddes. ior, for 6 Heaths. extra ä a any may be “ny g are now 
HE SMA riage fr f os k ree by bende. 
E L e d 
2. Te To Mr. gag dh s for OLD MEDAL. un, 2, To ms 8 teas 6 ‘to Gua * chat all -a expense of dist ord riot a ane tard ce 
. , 3. T 6 Cinera 15 at all plants ance. Particulas a 
—— in 8 ardener to Mr. Beck, 1 ine pote, o Mr, Green, for 6 O arias. and sec true to arkey 
‘ To Mesar May, iy, baling "Park, * 10 Azale mentee To, Mésers Henderson, Pine Apple N AN e BE travelling to any distano 
“ à Son, en 8. T ursery, fi AGALT 
Ros Nurser: . To the sa , for Pimelea LIS COCCIN a 
n po ymen, Cheshunt, fi 6. T , for Eri ostem BOUVARDIA EA SPLEND 
- To Mr. "Smith, Gardener to W. Quilter, Esq., N ye 7 K h Batikon cading, fer er Seedling Paia Pelarg ni p. P OALCBO INA LATIFOLIA, ro — r don,” y r 
6. To Mr. Ta 4 4 „ Norwood, for 7. To the sa onium, of 1848, LARIA, in 5 fi 8. to 9s, per dozer 
20 Stave a — — o J. Coster, Esq., S Orsnge. me for ditto, with scarlet fl d ÆNOSTOMA TOT AN THA, ee varieties, 9a oo 
2. Lo Messrs, ‘Velte 2 Plants. q., Streatham, for S- TO > Messrs, Lane nie owers, “Prince of | GAI UPHEA, in 3 fine taeda ba gate dozen. see. 
Heaths. Son, Nurserymen, Exeter, for 12| 9. To 3 Mr, "Mal on, for a seedling Azalea, “ Alba re LIOTROPT UM " VOLTA ties, 65. pe ~ dozen. 
THE LARG you, Gardener to n AIRE l. 
1. To — on tig sae s Ger 3 GILT MI MEDAL. 10 To Me, Be, 10 Stor x T. Tiparas, » Esq, „Black- LANTAN 1 si 3 UM, 6s, or to 93. per donee, 
x g Park, fo A’ CROCEA DE LIE 
ik Tot tho yine Stove and oe armer, Esq., Nonsuch 12 o Mr, Mylam € r6 LOBELI — 9 GE, 9s, 
3. To Mr. ame, for 19 Orcbid * 13. Je Me Kos Roten for commie 5 ÈRAN DIFLORA and tee 
5: To Me yf aac be Nu reeryinan, 1 — or 12 Roses, in pot for 8 . — 59 83 to J ee sp. S. America. PLUMBAGO LAREENTA da and COMPACTA 
$ r. Gree a-bridge-road, 2 ~ 14. To M » in pots, ry, Esq., Streatha CA 18s. per d 
6. To the same, f all Cac torig 15 r. Slowe, for 10 8 » Streatham, | SALVIA, Sepsis, 6s, t OZ., OF 2s, 6d. each, 
2. ToMe Jae tor 10 1 I To Mr. Turner, Flori tove and Greenhouse Pl in 6 fine vars., 63. pe 72 per dozen, 
for 6 —— to R. G. Loraine, E 17. To — Vei 1 for 24 ö P 8e 125 toi, ; Patens alba, 2, exch 
8, To Messrs. Lens den 1 „ Esq., Carshalton, 18. the — 2 epenthes — aria coccinea, FUCHSIA CALIFORN ICA, y je doz. ; each, 2.44 
oses, urserym 19. ora each, 
9. iy? Mr. . p en, Berkhampstead, for | 20, To 1 same, for 8 2 2 Fictoria regina,” VERBENAS , Superior new vars, of ci ae per dun 
Greenh seryman, Walthams 21, ms, Hod AS, - per dozen, 
7 ToM lr. Rae, O J. J. Bl tow, for 30 Stove| 22. To the same, for 30 B me gn for 12 Exotic Ferns. Ditto” 2 ditto fine and select, 4s, to Ts, 4 
chids, and, i g HRYSA s 
. To Mr. Terry, Gar — Be : man, Norwood, 2 12 Alpin — — 1 eee 
Roses, in pots. dener to Lady Puller, Youngsb 1, To Mr. — — = RONZE MEDA TER a GER NIUMS, fi fi rieties, 15s. per 45 — oe AROR 
4 , gsbury, fo pirt ardener to ne and ; 
10 Me, Do HE, LARGE SILVER ME agate 2. To Mr. Br ‘Caniarotis purpurea. 8. Holford, 8 D ARLAS. fine Superb show var babe, a yr dm 
k To Mr. Gaines, N n, for 6 s, = r. = To Mr. Gaines, tie & Seodina P > fice 558 and 9s. per dozen, 
~ Nurseryman, Battersea, for 12 P b ets. a we A g Pelargonium of 1848, “H ANTIRRHINUM, in fine s ING PLANTS. 
„ To Mr. Parker, Gardener 15 elargoniums,| 5. To Mess — . Heaths: ero | . NICA we OA 6s. per d 
or 6 J. er : n. 
e be e eee mont | Fil YOS . 
r. Stains, Mid- net, Taosi 7. To) ursery, for Ne tah he in 8 fi * 
Sine dlesex-p , for 12 H 2 ir. H ao , emophila | PALOX, n 7 
* » for 12 Pelargoni — 8 . Lorle, for a Seedling Pelargonium of z rae * p per dogan, 
eee 9. To Mr Iveson, for of 1848, « Chris. | P- BOOK PLANTS, 26 vars. a 
1 — td T MEDAL. a fan ee * SELECT 6 GREEN yars, 2 2 vars., 78. 6d, 
2. To the = tove and 8 — wV hill 1l. To Me amplin, for —.— tae een i. lo COLAU toon = AND STOVE PLANTS, 
3. To e, gr 6 tall Cac ts „12. To Mr — Rollisson, for R pate ls, Class IT, >. 50 LOXINIA, in * fine 1 Ts. 6d, ; ecard 150 04 
> oe Mr. ole, or 6 Hoa in fee nly, for 16 Stove ae a vars, fine and s elect nee 60 
5. To Mr. Debi ‘on, for 6 Orchids 14 12 Me er for Correes and Greenhouse Plan Cain, heim E PLANTS... 5 0 
833 ner, Gardener to A. Palmer, E 2 . * 5 Class I. p. 12 Select ; GRÉEN HOUSE CLIMBERS |. ape 
uin 
2. re bee Tervei, > Esq; Cheam, for | 16: To the satne, for Veitch h and Son, for Boro e eee eee 8 Catelogue willbe soul tee by 
* 6 4 for ni ost-ofüc 
s. To the same, for č kes tty in Tach pots, 12 Heaths, | 17. To Mr. Young, Ga for Rhopala Gorcovadensis — Brows or ce orders may bo made pasa payable $ diha Bas ont 
10. To Mr. — ve and , Esq., D nown corresponden tances requested from 
ToM: — rr een Ree e 11 , Denmark-hill, | Seed and Ho — 
e eee Fede it Pom — — See 
1 12 si nerdy for ad Cape ie = ¢ E el — 1 To = Carson, for Cor Corr w tae nes ite BUILDING AND HEATING 
Plants. miey, for 30 Stove . 42 o Mr, ole, for Correct Labels Ci lass II. ALSO THE C ATER, 
15. To Mr. Smith, G ve and Greenhouse & To the 1 alconer, for Leschen Cle ss I. ULTIVATION OF THE CHOICEST PLANTS, 
16, T y 15 Orchids. ardener to Mrs, Lawrence, 7. To Mr. Galtion, for double aio VINES, fy 
oMr. 8 3 Ealing 8. T y or Rh 1. 
8 peng Gardener to W. R. Baker, Fark, . To — = en, for Cryptoliptas Jon „Gaines's Aureum.” 
. To Mr. T. W pots h Esq., Bayfordbury, | 10 ¢An p, Garden rine. A saxty 2 
lias, Gardener to Miss To M „ Esd, L 
18, * pry dete ohn Traill, Hayes-place, | 11 To erso: » Lambeth, for 
Soar 15 Heaths, de, 12. To the sam cme . psy pr Nia na mutabilis, 
1. To Me. Ambrose oe SILVER MEDAL. * 2 B. 3 
brose, Nurseryman . Be į Ye 
2. To Mr, Bruce, for Batters, for 6 Fancy Pe- a. a His. Tver? at nera purpurea macrantha 
4. yy Stove and Greeuhouse eg Huggins, Esq., N. T0 anes. Paul eT ania lene 
a ee ng ES orwood, | 19. To Mr. T r 6 Yellow Roses. 
Esq., Stamford | 20, Te Ir. h d, for a for Rosa sp. China. 
GLATE WORKS. To Mr. Wood, for 24 variegated Fuchsia, * Ele- 
by — cles An aa, fo Penis, R pe a Works no 8, solicit an probe boy 
upon applic — — llowing . MARNOCK, Tanase See J. W. . 
Tubs, "Fant Boxes, Tanks, Cit maxwroutox conten, | W DRUMMOND © SONS, ås se, — — wertende a great varig d 
Hot- 7 8 G »» Stirli e of its, 4e, 
Shelves fitted er Tank Covers, Flo Shelves, Garden Lists of TU N.B., will NS, Agricultural — anne are extensive, and all seh ` 175127 
Estimates giv a for W Wbter soe — — — 8 | of Gra All parcels of Seeds AGRIGULT: LTUR eee Priced | bn ae — —— er eee met ot Baii 
r Work as shown Grain 8 of S b an SE N — oa ; t 
upon Draw y eeds above 21. * erecting of these Hortleal f 
— — e in e cultivated in sue Greenhouse Plants, l 
SPLENDID NEW ania y other parts to which | lo t LESS THAN HALI. quantities that they are so 
J AMES MACINTYRE one bbs 20. ROL” 86 n MEADOW W AN AEA At 5 3 ‘and Cate 
Wee Ea th he utmost ge e acre, allowing 2 bushels and rer od oP ye ag ely GRASS 
variety in Soe ing and treatment will and 12 tbe. teenrn — io» wt S28, per GEORGE BEE HIVES. 
. superior to any g Lawn 8 il accompany the teed wens | eee NEIGHBOUR an SON 
E 4d. per Ib, per lb, dew — ly of thet have prepared for this 
— thai are offered to 1 IMPROVED 
) ensuing — their Agricultural Dee and profitable are desiro 
as well Season, is ready, and will be | “ Th ne ele o aea 
. —ů— tone TAE Seen e Single B ection consists of “ Nutt’s 
IBBS and Co., Amateur 
Department of 


ik 20, Oat ARDEN SEATS. 
= — Holborn, io 
useful ane GLASS, cant an “Nutt 2 Bees ” (6th edition), now plished 
: GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, &¢ 
supply 16-02.. 5 Sheet Glass of 


GLA anà SLATES, WATE 
to dau Herne od Co, GLASS, and 
ce 


— from ad 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE? 


323 


OF FLOWERING AMERICAN 
* STARE, KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA. 
me to announce that the 
ox ge ay, 


e 


May 28, and 


exile is but a poor termination to the anticipation 
of prosperity at home which the young, honest, and 
industrious gardener may well have indu Iged in 


. 
— — as the Exhibition will this year 
ens 0 of the most desirable kinds 
of fine spe- 


a aay —— ery fine and strong. 
RANIUMS, 


IAS, PETUNIAS, 
SS an gl in Plants, 
i 


other varieties of 
and 


GE 
* 
fine. Pri 


ants of ‘his — ip * New 

he set. 

e Cata- 

J. H. has a fin ealt . 

ias, 3 Verbenas, Aungallie 

hig — — Antirrhinums, 
and 88. per doz. 


8 
CLASS GERANIUMS for 12s. 


Tex pir iph he newest sarve for —4 12 of 
somen e for 3. 64 3. 6d, See 
see rertisement in the Eor of May 5, — 274. 


1 Burnley, Lancashire, 
oh om SILVER CEDAR OF 
CEDROS rT ATLA 
GLENDINNING } birta Wen in the spring of 
number of seedlings of this new and beautiful 
— tp from cones imported direct trom 
them to ae ts 2 at the following reduced 
22 


vin T Set raf Bight, price 258. 


8 


i prem. SOCIETY a. og a dsi 
y — — 

me „the 9th of 

— Ba elan iA at n Saron 2 on Friday 

erm 23 . half-past Eight o 


A. M., 


h Exhibition, tha 
be r visitors at One, p. — Ti 2 are 
jxsued to att none, — 5s. each, o 


at the Gardem 


in the afternoon of the da: as of Exhibition, at 5. 6d, ek but 
ellows of the Society. 


s from 
will be issued in Regent-stree 


— . 
The Gardeners’ Ehrontcle. 


SATURDAY, MAY 26, 1849. 
MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. 
(Anniversary 


t on the days 
egent-strees, 


WN’S Stock of their Collections of 
midsu 


before the a realities of a struggle with the 
ri espec aging ng now is, 


o hop e for 
If to that is added the pera a o of 
success sa the a when he has 7 those 
— where Christmas is summ , and 
er midwinter, a poor 


of advance i 

For ou per sb we are never desirous of recom- 
6 ron ants, not wishing to 3 

so seriou 

Reyr whi oti a tage’ atal 

at onal who 
el any tru 

gp Te fou aah 


Seen. A 


ney 
man of high 


co prorina Aa — 5 poe —— loost —— 
and 


of t may add, has 
pe ses op ‘his is pie n ito serve, "ty prove a useful ait 
o some 8 are unable to come to any decision for 
themsely 
“Tn case Pict u should know of gardeners desirous to 
eee or aged nd employment, 
er 2 ther dearth of them 
of s Baty i with a fair pee A of | 4 
Ii in their callie but for men of unsteady or in- 
temperate aoa this is a very bad plac 0. 
without pone -eg from | t 
persons E3 ape e, * gardeners. Wages 
om abou Fags annum, with board 
are ara * is equivalent to 


the bee are better wages than ma 
to be to people in England. Aldona wey article of 
se thing is equally as cheap. Hard and en- 


Flour, 10s. per 100 lbs. ; beef, Id. to 14d. per Ib. per 
quarter; tea, ls. 3 er Ib. sugar, 24d. to 3d. pe 
Ib.; ana bes rican manufactured, 3s. 6d. 
to 


Am 

4s. per Ib. 98855 is 1 ip ; Pps seg 94 
nial 2 5 retails in quantities above 2 gallons 
to 4. Look,’ saa a newly arrived Sea 2 
other day, in my hearing, to a shipmate, as he held 
up a fine leg of mutton, ‘Look, I bought this for 


fers yd 
“M 


gardeners is. not a little 
1 intelligence 
has been con- 


ssed | 
years in the ye 
4 This mind pager gt pa 


delin- all men, 


er 
to know 


one or two 


a 
ractice of common | farm 


arge familie experie ore 
difficulty in in "fading sitaations vith — families 
than single 1105 i 


Maren 
the kind of fay. 


market 2 
much m gr. 

the — of e apr va themselves and for 
their children, as e old reg 5 g 


an ty m 
character, and qualifications, as amp 
should be brou ught by every emigrant. 
spectably signed, 2 greatly facilitate early 2 
tions.“ 
are the 
colonies as t o d. 
Pi swil e ee an mer ae 
kno oc cropping o 
knowing nothing occupation. The colonists 
learn W to grow Tobacco, oni Vines » Figs 
Olives, — all sorts of Mediterr: 
rmer knows no ieee. of these 5 hich an are 5 
> yaaa r acquai ae of gardeners of intelligence, 
may becom Books enough are to be e 
es dowht, calling Laer} 2 crops are to 
wi ut men learn g 
than ‘Hen making 75 Pis > hoki Personal experi- 
‘ence, manual dexterity, and routine ssn 3 also 
| indispensable, hat. 


: 


d 
therefore proses recommend 
the attention of those whom it may — 


In another co 
= beautiful 1 ee called an some 
Without offering ae its — 


m be quite as valuable as the most costly barometers 


whither to turn their steps. To become a voluntary | n 


man se “ti dread | w 
p. | the venture and 1 hope on at home till all 
pme 


: dig a ng powers 


y | lette: 


good beds, no pd no gravel an 
very men to increase rapidly the prosperity ** 1 | 
A Australia w Zealan 


ow in use; and with reference to this point we 
think it desirable * give the following statement 
by Captain Maneres, an experienced officer of the 
oyal Na t was “has for many years as. gi 


avy 
himself with stading meteorological phenomena 
„ hasten to giv an 


all these 
iran at 10 os night, and at 7 in me ‘moraine and 
arly insert their movements in a diary. For 
the. ‘ f Aneroid, at the beginnin 
a tr col 


ero as as pi 

fare cite numerous instances of this sensi- 

tiveness, but that of Saturday — oy 5th, 
ck, o 


e| was ais remarkable, I was much stru 
8, 


dow while the sun s shining bright, 2 
5 was every appearan a fine day, to find 
that my instruments stood thus 


Aneroia, e 


: |Sympiesom, 


| Barom, 


May 4, 10 p. x. 


29.82 29.78 
9 8 A. x. — 82 — 78 


29.875 29.75 
— 8%, — 1% 


j o 
Here we ie the‘ Aneroid,’ in full 3 with 
a bright sky, and every appearance a lovely day, 
still uncomfortable and in doubt as to what is forth- 
coming, while his companions say 3 Feo I confess 
that, looking 5 appearances, while I wrote down 
my register, I apa doubted whether this time the 
€ Aneroid’ could be 
came convinced 
add that, at léist four or five — since January 1 5 
1849, this instrument has given me milar evidence 


on of our readers that 
uld this instrument prove always to possess 


rs attributed to it by our corre- 
spondent, it will become of no little value in an 
thi... 


r | uncertain climate like 


“You SADLY NEGLECT US LITTLE GARDENERS,” is 
laint sometimes addressed to us, and baa 


way, hint nts, Pr ch en 3 were fre. 
qu sent, ish in ou meet all possible 
ants. We now Tois. 1 5 we va N and 
how ; a correspondent having sent us i he following 


«There is a class of amateurs 


ng 
5 T ng by 10 yards. Much engaged in city, 
and very fond of horticulture, I find LN relief from 
the anxieties of b ee e in the cultiv little 
and, with 
prm the habits bits of flowers, and, with: 


tical man. 
wretched-l 
Th 


ant to house, pit, 


mn will be found a short notice of — 


ear | n. 
— E. Or 


friends. ak not quta hing ee My flowers 
come nurseryman, and 


Thave no green- 


look to you. But I trespass on 
— vee shall be Arp — 
, and submit it pot nen 
Meantime, I am, sir, your ol 


We ar = ir or these hints, and 3 5 
taken means to supply the wants he 


324 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


ee a corner of the paper will be devoted 
to the N — 8 for the present en- 


trusted th of that corner to one a our 
most chrpa co 1 who will cultivate it with | 
all the success 5 — 1 and 
local „ however 


observe, that to do this, ot 3 "else of the 


those 1 for whose guidance such papers are p esia Pr 
If th urban gardens will supply 
h 


hints 


note serves for the 1 as a supply of hints, 
and as a declaratio: f the course by whic 
steer. 


OXALIS FLORIBUNDA A BEDDING PLANT. 
Tuose who have only seen this Oxalis treated strictly 
ant can form little conception of 


5 
ag 


is necessary., Avoid any situatio 

pn of high trees or buildings, the mean — the sun 
d be excluded from it during the greater part of | m 

N for its flowers will not expand fally ' in 2 

weather. From its eat 


situation 

raised beds among stones, o 

— of beds 3 taller plants, where it forms 
ging summer. t must be 

admitted, however, that ‘this pretty little * is not 

propagated with 


+ 
> 
24 
s, 
4 
. 
8. 
E 
® 


no 


advanced for the flower 


n very nu 


can be made avail- | 


; atidium. 
one species Of the eg 


bits Crioceris me: ra by Linnzeus. 
An ag 8 — to the same genus (which 
ntly ascertained 
Wheat), — itself with a slimy nari and it is 
i i i C. merdigera that 
| we are led to believe i its s slimy £ secretion to be merely 


a solid excrementitious umbrella-like 3 belong l .— Plants 
to b 


med genus | | 2 1 which are 
ee found upon me white 7 and panied from its 


feeds on the leaves of | rou 


ex- | 
hun 


bs. There is is the greatest 


of ee e 


tue SUI 


| en of be a 2 the end of June, 1848, we observed a 


epidermis of the | yw his time gene- 
rally covered with thick black fluid, looking like. an oval 
black and very shining body, and quite unlike an insect. 
One of them is represe esented in this state o n the leaf in 
i its rar arance when 
wn in the small figure on 


pale 


1 
"1 "i pth 


ceed 1 
the 88 let 9 5 d into the so . their whol 
len atered, in ord 
them ; aad | if placed in any close pit until they emit 
roots, ‘the orm an excellent stock for planting out 


tand our w. 

t protection, e it i is by 

80 itnpationt of a low som 
in 


rtion of the larger stones to — up above the 
resist all vicissitudes of rs i 


enn whatever, unless 
Projeeting stones can considered as such. And in 


inch in — (not including hik 


lanted on a| st 


, but — pe 


mov 
the 


Mr. Curtis, — has found this de on — leaves of 
l one as 


Oats in Dorse 


r 
occasion 


this case its condition was not such as we frequen ly 
witness in half hardy plants under such circumstances— 
a mere existence thro retina me aree. 

so much injured as only to — fit to be thrown away; 
for these, in the interver mers, flow the 
A. Bye dD — Park, Arundel, 


S 
-+ ENTOMOLOGY, 
CR — MELANOPA 
Amonest the various 


over the whole of the 

oquallp ae? species in a less fluid state, or 

fm i at first, it hardens quick] y and 3 al 
the 

en tn sing lar examples may be cited in those of 

illustrated in 


in our pages while the 8 which form 


P — 
ereeping up the stem 


oe ar OF PLANTS, 
‘ontinued fro m p. ag 
Crass I. — Disses Constanti: 


may in any 

* — on the plan 
e 

bane I.—Bursomanta, or excess 2 bulbs ;* single 


in Journal of Royal Agricultu vol vil. p. 81» 


Cionus serophu recently 1 


i Mr, Curtis gi 
s gives it correct], 0. 
| thus g lapsus that it was iin 
us confounding it with the Lily beetle. 


eee we 
C. merdigera by Linnæus, 


X | cotyledonous plants p ilbs 
ia | oriei ones, they are much more frequent among. 
the latter. 


number of seeds, is the only example I 
seen. y example I lare mpa 
There is a considerable number of plants 
produce themselves not only by aay seeds 
means of buds, like : rees, but also by 
roduced as 


rv 
monest plants, the 
instances the vegetable is strictly speaking, out of 
natural 3 although i it A 
must be observed that p 


to induce it to form them by ry applieation of manure, 


ee the fourth year it produced several, In 
few months it perished. I have ob- 
er 9 that wh season 


put fort y or roots 

stalks, suffer considerably. Lastly, I have often 

the plants of the Garlic of our ki and have always 

observed that those which produce little bulbs amongst 

their seeds have their undergro bs smaller 

and worse conditioned than us It has 

to me all vegetables which p 

bulbs an ds p uously, or bear them on their 
m m aller number of or 


| mport: 
| oy a of 
practica 


Truly, po n of this species of disorder 
fined te a small number of plants, cannot be of much, 
8 9 for the turist, or for the 
botani 


of | ad 
Wy Sing, and is magnified on the left 7 


of m 


a 
8 8. 
o 


a 
A 
BS 


y cure it, or rather | th 


adds, by | m; 


FE 

11 
: He 
224 
47 
8 8 
a; 

1 5 
RAiN 
piri 
ace 


e disgusted at seein 
— him. 
e 


f 

S 

5 
N i 
100 
i 


E 


Hil 
8 
ne 
i 


00 


none 
names to the things we treat of, 11 ao 
0: nd chemis e 8) “ki 
S c aru." And roo 


THE GARD 


ENERS’ CHRONICLE. ` 325 


would, CALCEoLARIA KAxI.—A pretty yellow variety, rem fiowers , fective bunches. The same complaints are frequently 


ALC 8 3 MULTIFLORA.— A neat Willow. leaved 


Here 
acer. of an 2 8. the ant week in May —_ — middle of Augu ‘nade by other cultivators, and the sorts of W 
been di d 


groups. 
male organs 


perfoliata ought to have but eight; I| CALCEOLARIA “ 
October. 


hardy a 


dence into Į saw the remains of a quantity "a dung herbae , as border a 
r. 


it : i 
near & country house, in the garden o which CALCEOLARBIA 3 SPLENDENS,—A remarkably neat PaO: 


any | ae w flowered variety, wal adapted for small or large — have been discarded by many, owing to the failure. 
mr paw 


ill you favour the writer with an explanation of the 


: CALCEOLARIA VISCOSISSIMA.—AÀ broadish leaved variety of P 
the case of the 2 Derbi good habit, and bearing rgi, trusses of very bright yellow cause of this defect in rt es of the Grapes, and 
have but six. I have one in my her arium flowers from June until Octobe su of tre 


gest any mode 
KENTISH HO. A robust shrubby variety, 5 of the house — been usually from 75° to 
° e . 


gathered the Tulip producing lar rge trusses of rich Say flowers, from July until | 80° during the time of blosso ing, with as much 
2 y wai 


wh dwarf ba ous trasse Í being 
ing = Where I gathered | golden S — — * October. Parts ond that period, air being freely admitted. Nothing can 


A neat hardy herbaceous species, | Of mand ef, 15 ‘years’ growth being as Jarge as is usually 


the spot. The 
bee on our hills; I have always found | of — habit, 9224 5 aving remarkably large bright — found at double that age, great attention having been 
pundant stamina in places not | 3A alver-shaped Bog N (4 inches diameter). In bea srt from | paid to the original composition of the border, which 
h 


the second wee 


Bos exposed to the sun, but in very rich soil, and single group or 


until September, and forms a fine | has since been largely supplied with decomposed animal 
Seni Fawn : 


be 5 

always the flowers that grew on the summit A TARAXACIFOLIA.—A hardy herbaceous biennial, | Matter. Clericus, 1 re. moisture as 
they en e I could adduce numerous other in- Hinir nan habit, and bearing remarkably large e 7 3 ible ! There e mischief, Vines cannot set 
s 2 ra wW — cil 
ot is ws * 


i The —1 latitude, 
Ad no 
-ned Tulip had also ten petals. GAILLARDIA PICTA COCCINEA NANA ; G. conoNATA 52° 54’, 310 feet above the sea, and in the month of 
mentioned Tulip 
abore han ay we have 


A 
yellow Chrysa 


mier 


herbaceous variety, 18 inches high, with nu: okies oa ar E 
nthem 


than the cul- 
This d 
rator, the same reasons which I have a seek = a rich ree ag crimson cen In flower from the mi iddle of 
l rom the account I have given June until September. Very 75 p 5 ay 9, 293, some Potato tops . 3 May 12, 30°, 


o 
um- —* 1 6 inches diameter), having | t had the “thermometer at 20°, as 


4 


itis clear that it is owing to superabundant } W 


| GAILLARDIA WEL 
prevented at at will by diminishing it, to which | taller and s stouter 


I shall return prese presently. | and forming an ornamental single g 8 or bed. 


r beds, the Potato tops received no fresh injury. The Potato 


A.— Sim: — to the last, but of rather zn; f 
n ut having brighter c Tt ea lovait; pre injured on the 9th have since recovered, and are 


— — PYRETHR >" A neat branching | the three days mentioned in the month of May. The 
PRACTICAL HINTS E — AMATEURS — — 12 * 24 i tastes hi * maid Apple trees lookin vay i I bees Pa, ar 
ich mar 


g 
SMALL G ENS, fasion of clear white double Ranunculus-like flowers ( inch i 
Dimus—As lants —— in growth, they | in diameter), from th i i 
Se 


1 ae 
2 2 2 
CYNOGLOSSUM LINIF — A compact annual, from 6 glass, where there is no eee and i find that this 


* 

gl 
must be tied carefully to 1 e arran shale as 25 i to 12 inches high, of whitish aspect, and bearing numerous thermometer rg not fall so low by 5° or 6° as one out 
serve a natural appearance ding, on the one hand, | white salver-shaped blossoms from the third week in June | of doors. C. A. A. Lloyd, Whittington, near Oswestry, 


broom- like fashion, ane eat tthe other, an awkw ard | until August, suitable for a small group or edging. x 
a tight and, as it were, bent n of hë branches. | 7Ţ7MALVA MOSCHATA ALBA.— ardy biennial, or annual, from May 22.—Fou will oblig orrectin 
tai 12 to 18 inches high, of branching habit, and producing a pro- in my statement regar arding the severity of the 


ter, from the third week in June until Oc- 


Unless regular tying is attended to, some unlucky wind fon, of transparent white compact salver-shaped blossoms, | in April, Instead of 20° of ront, it should 33 
a frost. 


will tear away a large portion of the plant. Pruning It 


rms an excellent — ag bed, or large group, 


td oe stood at 20° 


* lected, i t d tober. It 
EE one. 1 oe 8 ee Ad and it n the — plant of its co = escaped my notice at ss time, ee I thank “ A Meteor- 
' itl in if th 4 Pa CAMPANULA CARPATICA NIVE m ae, ompact, oiogist” for s pointing © t the error. A. W., Mayen, 
knife must be ue miren u h ny ie ear t h hay | her rbaceous pen, — 8 to 5 inches s high, oe aroga | B anffshire 
flower diminu veness, it ma a wit rofusion of clear w. 3 K -shaped flowers (upwards o 
yie y PP" eh inch in diameter), from th middle of June until August. P in, arch. I am 
Asitis of 1... | Adapted for a select group or small of this practice cat ad pees a market be * 
is of . t MALVINA.” — A 


* root, mu ma tahy 18 reco ommen ded in us compact white flow ‘ets, “delicately” margined with a 
weather, ie. from the time of planting till September bony y tint. Adapted for a select group or small parterre. 


or nearly through the whole season of oh wth. I have | l, 
for several years been foiled in my attempts to st 
proceeding too r sanii by the birds, 


i dete gh 


ee uch 
our of t 
eat dwarf variety, with | found for the bark, I would invariably adopt it, not 
nly as riod when la 
the 


im e espe- 
e Correspondence cially if it is allowed to harden under partial protection 


h Plate Glass I have just been testing, | fi y e 
1 A head ae cs pro aae oah the med crop of Strawberries, the split and rend it considerably. Par few years since 


a 
k 
$ 
3 
l 
8. 
l 
p 
i 


ka th re 
* istur so far, favour- 

1. thy 3 Ev vegetable growth. 
growers recommend 3 waterings wi 


a fne rose over the foli larger and somewhat flaccid and o: a paler green colour, | to 1 
plants s besides * e. n the sun is off the d 3 


3 
ene, it is said „that the stiff 


moisture prevents, . # as in the other instance. 
The mention of that b 10 ene. F are alluded 5 has taken place ar e 


— of the disappointment so often fe elt, w when, has there been 


e 0 
guarded against! of gard 
acquaintance with the habi i valuable. Jam 
its of the insect, and a more 
diligent warfare agai it in all 


7 : =p glass in this particular. pos va Pi opini Si en a 
ruining in a ni z d probably most of the general purposes 
] g in a night the finest specimens w can the eee g the Probab Arnee glass 23 be found in- | in their tesis, although — N it ean be used 


other coverin of a : i 
Eee covered the mulching wi plants from merits pe this article for horticultural purposes, in com- : considerable quantity of Larch thinnings was cut 
Some | ari 


cription of crown glass. Two | donn here and peeled ; the trees, however, were some- 


known as ber e arkab > cause 
* ; the one pit was covered with frames glazed | workmen to complain much of it when cutting it into 
‘water, The principle to be remembered is, that with rough plate glass, and the other with lights glazed board and scantling; 
; watering i „|wi ar 


advantageously in the production of some light articles 
re the period 


raining resse. mA ; 
But as this 1 ii its stages of growth. were only meant to apply to Conifers of the Cypress on stripping, the Larch will be found to run at least a 
i d of upright m 


“looked for e pest is not to be 
their pr 3 


of . 
we can only indicate the modes of erage: emt ecg Cedars 


er they i r — — Fi EAS im 
i been 2 i f throw their : arms to so short nee, and acquire . 
pathic sufficien : ipie prea Sr a resemblance to the habit of the upright being well ripened. It —— excellent roofs and floors; 


Pans, or b : ; hat ie | Variety, as searcely to 
coor ihat r A — the Stone Pine Pari 
: 2 * 2 $ si 
helt Nae ee e to pew ae while young, an over 3 of 1849. 1h a 
* iow ‘down on the stom; ; it is to prevent the growth < eave d Kidney 


rve n a n, also u 
Stone Pine, and some other what 1 objection. James Duncan, 


otatoes under a frame with- 
On the a ‘took up "aor, and 


: Power may be v 
I have been nor even preparing for flight, although | £” 


h branches, that at for a few years = ; 
and wata but in the ni tri mmin ng system is s necessary to secure symmetry in ave amp 
incline tt their —— D iapa tediy, the fut ing tree. A Cypress is a tall, graceful tree, and | ca aa either in y Foot or in — eben to ae 
and t think the faculty of flying is but rarely used, not to be treated like — Arbor-vitee, = a Juniper bush, | that at they were * y 22 in di , Saregep disease; of 
eh ore ian traps should be laced pa | Sarowing up 8 e .. =m i en — 5 one- ei ye A as bad as ever, thus 
their amada aT d also P Srevent it is as little to be ne to dain) 1 : 1 8 eee goa Be of 
ö ; ; or uercus 
— e which — 8 _— oh pest 9 5 of the 13th inst. J. S. Bvenden, Wrotham, Ken, May 22. 
5 Substance ns perhaps * rrhinums.—lt is often asked, can capabilities 
— Ped Wool qoute ry ‘ied Tightly around ai te Fisch 8 ecessfal cultivator of the Vise “3 these flowers 1 basg them to enter 2 1 2 — 
Possible parent the stake, so anfreq t the fail setting | flo: ; and if so, what position 
3 ini pah ov <y we of a of Grapes, aach as able to elevate themselves to among these — 
a : er f. H. 2. Park Muscat, | ov led and rigi ly-diseiplined favourites. reply, 
oe $ I would state that the flower, as regards 
FOR mar colours, is reser with powers and capa- 
ge 2 à 3 2 ar portal * ref ‘the a aro itan osed of ing ng and — — its right to range pro- 
: — from the middie June 9285 e poe be oe wid $ vn 15 a single one minently ste Bt fF aati e A very 
aa in several ‘tae since been observed, as for | sw a the > bun * to be placed brief 2 * i jae to th 
tow, Sarpellary number of hothouses, where, t the upw r lass. Aa unusually large crop of 3 3 3 rapid adv ance- ‘tin 


y of our ies of 
mt tire; Translator Si TO has been increased to three, ig ai S likewise composed of similar de- | ment ith better and more attractive properties of 


326 THE 


GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


flower have made in this short space of time encourages 
mie to hope that ter distinetness and | 


in diferent 2 of nog. ne en, I did not 
— any o aoe an owers, which, however, 
eans e 
old — good a the varied * like — 
Pasha, will sustain the same fact with regard to 
riability of marki A right — d of perfection 
by which to judge of this — is yet, however, a desi- 
derat 


eratum. 
i —That th is insect, a 80 


inere 
the intruders out of wasps combs myself ; they va 


the 


Tam at lost to know how ¢ they ca 


subterranean vespiar: 
the notice o 


ms strang 
t be palmed — them i 

rub state, however, they may appear similar to 

that stage, and they are afterwards shielded 


As the 

may conclude they retire as soon 

ra Wigħion. [The parasitic connection —— Ripi- 

phorus ar anp ae the aranana asp has —— 

ascertain e precise m which 

lives i in the — cell has not — described, nor has 
Latreille 


conjectured that the larva was fed the wasps in 
mistake for one of p own brood ; but it seems more 


ions in N to * Ruricola re- 


2 ecu uliari 


as for specimens of 


$ 


ifferent ages, J. 
—— “latifa ifolia .— Two small plants, from a 
cutting pot, of an annual, were pin 
sented to 


re. One 
it to be as safe for “a child to play. at “the 


a the same 525 por iy 7 — W ay 4 remember) go 
a ings, — T 
s in the chair of the Society CEE — mt Set 


th ave that M: 
icks will be in | I was present at the ting, but 2 
n his insects, which, nevertheless, 
althou ugh, now that hea 


lish off one-third more sticks in 
n he could have done with the 
e 


round and 


be printed 


eading of 
keshave on- prodat tof Moy fix weeks atte er his ok on aaa at 
the evidence referred to ck è 
r this pu rpose) 9 about t the su urprise of those 6 that Mr. 
ls. 6d. I prefer them, after four years’ 2 etiee, n both 
out the brass sole. ighter deseription of stie ra 
t P 
— for —— Cont nations, &c., — making any N se throws 
cheaply and uniformly manufactured from thin board | ever plaia , 
p at jd. the superficial foot, and then with a Sesi 
small plough cut into sticks. Wissinggam. 
Calla æthiopica. e a specimen now bearing 
e sca of them, |1 
uncle 


Ample oppo rtunity was afforde 


e qu 
as to w 


A are opera lle ned entir, a intai ia 
seems ry he ps ifted oF “attack to another soei bat è 
t > x 
t shea a one 6 1 the oo, 7 spread in stow Pe Sed — oe and at the me which 
opposite afra rai ; and as the inn —2 is fur- |» w made 
ge 8 a padi, — other —— Tike x to 


escripti 


toa 
would no ye x be considered. ' Stop stop!) Bot 


its larva 
h 


caly e des 
it, which, S taal tele “at lowering, it w for a first Ane areas 2 hisi a (although, by 


onal 2 age this ° a des cription 1 


erer 


n, and t e effect of the whole is — 
or ‘as * usual single flower. 
the nature of 


E 


| somewhat misshap 
nearly 
dise i wa mee and n 

pho ih *. chat alluded to by him in 1847 
Melittobia, a * quite distinet; in which 
the q 
Thus t 
neither compoun nd 
four- jointed, wi 
h 


12595 
a 
Bea 
re 
2175 
2 5 
TH 
388 

ef gis 
[a 

TE 


eig [This i is a curious monster, 
ig misunderstood. 

Rabbit Fence.—* Cav: 
fact that rabbits wil 


by th 
case there 
have been 


ii 


is 


B 
£ 


vanensis ” 


H 
J 
NER 


any —— Part as desoribed in 
tae gt erts that the two — 
— pg tos support this porate: fal another, 4 
eser iption is erroneous! a possibility certainly. but 
think, from the details abo given nd i — 


an 4503 th 
4 the iron rods, 2 
all secure. William 


r an probably ha 
affinity wich! mine; ar | 1 22 pele s ‘aa 5 — ya 
done — ps fu rther, I quoted also the fi 
— de t erwards he 
pear 1 I must — derived m my know 

| from his verbal statem 
|B a jumping over it, ane father m a en I a 
infested rabbits 


not more than 3 fee 
123 ards, will 


pes ar 
weather, wher 
question — 12 n He mentions 
— t eting the mandibles and 1 lips, À 
par Eene Teen either in innota o or text, with referenc he eyes 
i hi 


e hou 
The O ntroductic 
— “after ards —— the appearance known as | f urnished wi ith two distinct — er in those 
1 1 


E i 
my peer when N this 
antenne. Pew „I thin 
error st ated, a 

notice of w 
I regret muc 


but Aintinguishabla from true rust in being more gl ossy 
character. James Duncan, Basing | a 


took + +h 


Linnean ge sigh 


May 16. 
Helling anes Timber 


Suggestion i in refere 


— “tor 


r y I immediately 

pots, in light san sandy material, and 

then placed them on the front pan of a cool stove, in 
w the thermem tly fell as low as 


stems are Hes, of 0 dull se addin 
ing — 
Jame 


make 
intonation I have had occasion 
pce Westwood has touch 


sig = the Thawed 0 


e to y 
as to the proper period ri felling ? — Einans 
appears to me that any inf that ean he collected 
in England must w of little authorit y 
f the com 


0 
of — T ar won ed 
please da 


3 g beco i 
d, 9 that the facts and 7 
—— an me ot Melittobia en are re wee for the ide 
of my insect, t (ev n 
been p onions nt — en my pore — and | drawing 
to have satisfied him of its scenes with his own insect. 
on reassert 12 identity of the 

zerland, where the ferences the 


desired 
lo 

» who I shoul ine k * to ao 

Fiet timber er exported from the Baltic is felled in summer 
‘gnoram 

Anthoplorai 


you res 


ci lets. 


retusa.—I am sorry I have occasion to tr rouble “Bo 
ting some of the statementsi 8 rt | Horticuntunar May 22. 
5 Socie 2 e report of a meeting MP. in the 4 D Lindley delivered 5 


3 ety, printed e 295, ser igri I re- * 
‘et to say are r epo of his six Lectures on 1 ture 
subject was “ The Root 


bit, but 
seize 


d port 
e instrument. A little 
handy workman tọ 


wn myself, and ceased 


gical S verbally, if 
e end of last t year The in which roots are 1 
an I 


3 — the meeting, h 
a member of th 


* 
ety in gour 


e | plied to you by Mr, Westw is da 
and its other A ananga ‘On tBis 0 3 oh ma 
wate 


gentir ely 


m a tes th ti 
Of this inse 12 2 = bi paai a divers ill tie iy 
ect ( Anthophorabia) in 1832, or of having ende in i i re illus 
to make it appear that Mr. New ort’s knowledge rae — — aN oe we o a's “sent * — * 
. Westwood.” And d p 
fe havin a gardeu 5 the 
k aving Į nes 
which he now ( Messrs Veitch’s eer Be arg), a 
his, Site, E multiflorum, 
Zealand, iat pyrenaicum, Nenopila p 
Tropseo edule, Erica Cavendishii, and 
lav aa 


and Düben“ 


ing of the second part of m paper, No al C H — The wiih a 
to say that Mr, Westwood most i i iy £ pge se ti dete, a i 
imc after the „ ot the Arst p ot ott Gn ti 5 

swe a ba — mts sages — to m on 

owledge must have n derived fro hi janis in 
— 4 at the Entomological Society, in 155 1 on the eae apa shrub Greenhow P P and 

* The guides — the high Alps are commo 4 ered to 
al ower se izes were offt 

ligent persons, who must know all about the manpas, r) intel. ; over, spare Pi each — among . 


pence — 
2 — 


— 


be eee ee 


B 


w. 
r | Esq., Dr. Walters, —.— Endlicher, ‘of Vienna, With 


Ay W, * ba te „ for Lady 1 3 
W 


CHRONICLE, 


r. collection of Azaleas, £ splendens, — as, indica 
as 


e an owering plant of ram ‘triphyllum | © 

— J. lo 

um — — — F. 
oe, May 24.— The Bishop of Norwicx in the 
ir. nniversary meeting was h day r 
Forster, the treasurer, being deceased, the report on 
the s finances was rea e tary. 
ring the past year the Society had received 8142 d., 
0 


D 
28888 
E 

5 


uring the past year: Sir John Barrow, Bart., 


. 


. Bosa 22 uet, "Baronne Prevost, Balle Allemande, 
best va ot ofc 
a 


dward 
orster, Esq. — of the Society, Dr. Gardner, of Smiths s Yellow Noise ette, Carol 
V. Roger ed from 


Ceylon, a "Gor , Alexander — a! 
Pilkington, wegg r. R. J. N. Stree W. H. Lloyd, 


: of z an attack of AN and that there was no truth in 
d 


t that he had committed suicide. The two 
associates who had died were Mr. MacNab, of the 
Edinburgh Botanic Garden, Mr. ron, of t 
iverpool Botanie Gard A collection of dried Algæ 
from Norfolk Island, was presented by J. Couc 
ew species of Luzula, from the Isle of Wight, was 
presented by Dr. Bromfield. full-sized protrait of of the air, called t 
Sir Joseph s was presented by Sir Everard Home. | the pocket. 
A lithograph of the Bishop of Norwich, an ee 
ing of Captai olman, the blind traveller, were like- 


d 
wise presented to the Society. The fo lowing officers 


j 


of = en „ W. Yarrell, Esq. ;| he 


R. Taylor, Esq. The following five members of 
ouncil were removed: J. S. Bo nk, Esq.; W. J. 
Broderip, Esq. ; the ae Rev. Dr. Buckland ; W. J. 

Burchell, Esq., D.C.L. ; E. Forster, Esq., deceased ; wich, 


— the — five Fellows were elected : T. Bell, 


y y Berle of the Royal Observatory, 
„Taylor, 


— elected for — 2328 p President, the Lord the » height of the inienn pilen 
hop o 


man 
wel explained —— peg cart: by an engravi ing 
: e barometer 


u 
also various . tables for the nece 
rd 


Bad.; F. Boot ‘San ken J. Gould, Esq. ; J. Hogg, Py require to be made i 
3 


d, Esq. ; and R. H H. Solly, 


Microscoricat, May 23.— The President in the | tometer” * to 
rie 


chair. J. Bainbridge, -ag and S. Gurney, Esq., 


sq. 
were -elected members. Mr. John Quekett read a | examp 


moe on the structure of cartilage in es Having 
ferred e Socie 


rt the mercury fall with the wind at west, north- 
west, or north, a great e men, of — erature will 
12 re fro 


re for ty, 
— proceeded to point out the difference — — per- follow ; ; in „we E 
anen i old rains, 


in the ears, nose, and bronchial tubes of most animals, | Sout 


th ind is men followed by rain in 5 — or 


the latter was developed as a preparation for osseous | less quantities.” 
ran ed e 


ces eee by cartilage 


d structures. 
cells in the — the myxine, and other carti- 


i unsteady d 
eather, it denotes that the air is in an electrical 
ill follow.“ * 


2 Tam)y 
y liginous fishes was described. In ou of these fishes, | State, an 


ba t 
out, w. cribed. The internal | atmosphere. 2 -s 
—— of T 6 imp aaar 5 — latter closely resem- song overhead rere. any — of the ee ee ; 
is case a reduc o uly 


bled vegetable cells, and, in the early stages of their 
across m, closely fo 


way that a bottle w: — — held — a the 
whale 25 


rugated 
Mipraxp Counties FLORISTS, DERBY, May 23.— First action be 
n of Tuli . Lakin, with Pass 8 Gee 2 | wees is moved to eee on a 2 * ene 
ment is 


pa lips, 

White, Heroine, Triomphe Royale, Eclipse, and 

Bien Amie. Second pan to Mr. Jno. Gibbons, with Nay- |f 
lor’s ae Capt. White, Heroin ine, Lady Wilmot, 
Great Western, and Lord Vern i 


The table of corrections to be pe ied for tem 


Roya bidii 
h f the season. The followin awards were mad ve every seco 
Fr 34 est ‘Pine-apple, dito? 8. C. * s Esq. Best six | editions it would render the work sti 
ese co 
Best 


e and Greenhouse Plants, 2 omar 


Rev. T. Phillpo ne amental plan ant, in fi ower, not 
od SER ly catia, Weigela rosea; Bronze Medal, W. —. — other 125 climates 
E 


p= ae 0 Fox Es Mr. f 
hea pren centra, € . ee A C. Fox, Esq. ; hadt rourable to a ine 
ix | faet 


ý — Cuphea — tra, 6 „ Esq. ; 


varieties of ditto” Cyrtoceras a — Siph * ae ved, 
neus, 2 asiatica, W. Daubuz, —+ oa Tetra- are terly wi pe and lat late oe aton which we have ex- 


theca verticillata, Balsamina latifoli Mr, F assingham ; 
- | third best, Sinningia floribunda, Pimelea spectabilis, Cleroden- 


dron splenden s, H. S. Powell, 2 5 = best, Gardenia Eien ot is fovea aug? 


florida, Euphorbia spiendens, d. — — ons, me best speci- lon: 


men Stove * Cyrtoceras W. uz, Esq. ; fi I we have ever seen A 


second best, Torenia — — — T. dene ie best, 


Ardisia * Mr. singham ; bests = Pe 
house plan orozema varium, Rev. is 
— e ndifolia, sis 0 be fo 8 — — driven the * bande out p, bioom; 
thera rotun ia, Sir C. 2 
lection of Orchids, C Calanthe veratrifolia, Oncidium ampliatum, | lowing favour 
H. S. Powell, Esq. ; best specimen of ditto, Phaius Wallichii, condition 
„ T. Phill 11 rey : Len maculata, Sir C Angelo, 
L Bart., M.P. t co. „ 
8 enes, iggy oe grandiflora, picta, patens, | of — g 
Gloxinia aged gh Gesnera Suttoni, W. Dau- | Vietoria Regina, Wil 
Esq. d best, 8 — picta and A 


loxinia 3 lands, Catal, 
rr i, 
E wee mac — — 85 — . ‘a , John Russell, Lou 
Eag: Bent Best ahs of Balbows — six Hybrid Amaryllis, | Cerise Blanch, Nourri 
Best argoni 


el of — Magog, g, Albont a ere 


sec wa ulielma, this Nursery, we remarked 


Not, st, 

Salamander, Brilliant, Zelinda, Lyne’s Duke of 05 Fane W, | flower ; anda 

Daubus, Esg. — . — Fu pen 5, Mr, F. Pas- | tum, 2 
This fine Lil 


ingham; second best, a agp A Esq. Best six 
Din, depressa, intermedia, Ha: dena Me. A 


best specimen of ditto, ¢ 


328 THE 


R 


CHRONICLE. 


Calendar of Operations. 
( zor the ensuing week. J 
ARTMENT 
geome their growth 
early in the season w be about rig. nl 15 
and to mature it more will require to be 
to stron, 


present Sun 

should be e inai with an 

and moisture, apii py shading from the scorching rays 
Wiel 


dark months, especially in low 
In the autumn, these 


oose * b id 
less severely thinned; but 


ch 
f those which have been 
dvantage over them before 


1 will show a decided a 
| the r is pas 
FLORISTS’ FLOW 
nxs.—Disbud ; i 
n 


tilisation, each is properly fert 
ve more real sati 


their present state, te, h inuous rains 
have a most projo judicial effec 
DY Snort 
The ORS f. used for protecting Hee ssoms being 
now remov ved from all descriptions of fruit trees, the 
gst wall trees 


an occasional wash with the syringe or garden- 
gine, to destroy aphides, &c. = t trees of all kinds 


th plants still growing, the = 
moisture, S d be in 


8 


upe. 
o assist this admi on 


hould be examined, and where 
e * ing to e ee without injuring 
lves, a port 3 ved; ma a g 
pria must . upon the purpose 
he fruit wall | be appropriated when ripe. If Madad 
y should b 


e+ 222 
FE 
5 


E deser b 


e left thinner than if required 
at 


as they vill not arrive Perfection, 


* Ear * ing, 


8.8 8 


high night tem 


es, All dead flowers, "cobwebs, or other rubbish, 
trees a neater 


hic e been 
days have started plants which 


ing the 
, and have 


ted durin 
were previously planted în into ahi a growth 


ur shoots, lest by 10 doing? the 


0 


stakes, they will soon have grown out pe, and 
many tender thin tech about ry th dand 
broken, If „ Clov „ are not | 


&e 
staked already no as Should be los t; they are charm- 
ing things for the flower-garden, and invaluable for 


ced into Pend g 
readily kn 


— and instead of 8 a shoo 
a bunch ef from four to seven le 


of it. Riot 
p. 117 of our 


of 
Birp TRAPS: 
should * any 


tha dhr 9 
3 “directions 4 praa 
we 


If you will have 

8 volume, you will 

what may be aera —— the work in 
15 recommend 


— —— 


Ke nda, the various groups of Ciner 


ren make one 


finda 
— So 
d trad 
280.t for you 
y think to the 
‘of a — plants 
shown a 


F 


E 


al Bota: 


endall 


cultivation, of what Cin 


8 of six ae contain ed ‘seedlings, Si on 


catei W 


bad soil 
2 SEEDS 


HORTICUL 
being present at Dr. Li 
Socie 


y: 
HYACINTHS : M E. We ha 
in a warm and shelte red 


INSECTS : 


— and Se dum 


the perio 


maa, which will — 


tA 1227. 1 
n the present — ao t 


are past recovery with a w 


yualified 


eports are perfi 
ean. s to re Gardena Chronicle. 


ee 

1 
E x 

HHT 


n 


him, had 


g 
HE 


Fg 
i 


ectly consistent with 


a case of shanking, 


r 

ndley’ 8 lectures. 

oa a written order of admission from some Fellow ad 
t 


last week’s Answers to Corr espon mane 
d when the insects are — their 


the i 


a, or „a mix 


roots. 


legs (see Gard. 
of 7 — 


he 
Thorns, a at reas, which is 


n guano is 


e roots having got 


into 


. They can 1 3 pe 32 eating the 


it ove 


it aet 


2 
roaches attacking nee ‘Orchideous planis. are quite different 


xotic £ 


orhynchus ula See 
Moreover, as this is 


o smoke in 


ants with brine, nitrate 


ees Pied the soil isk 
— a2 


the ght ded thus obtal ined. The 1 residue is not 

loses its activi ity, — — be used like any other so 
MONSTERS : 8 are in a Gee not 

uncommon ana, wich the calyx growing in leaves. 
Names oF PLANTS: Rusticus, . vulgaris is 2 plant mis- 

named C. cœspitosa by Smith. Indeed it is impossi for 

to go on naming little miserabl worthless 


mediately ‘they open, 


supplying cut flo vase uets, Annuals A be the true loxen: — 
which have been sown or pricked pi into frames — K the tree. Stopping ood is very different and 5 5 afford Nase e means of form a judgment 
beds require planting into their final situati from stopping r the purpose of forming fruit buds ; icult a genus. The box has en received within these fe 
and biennials into reserved f 1 m3 * 3 latte ose it will time enough to days; a thousand thanks; it is not yet opened, 
ri si ting out next | shorten the e th e d carefully examined.—D B. Epiden alatum, 
spring. Spare lights and frames may be plac d. * month hence. Gooseberries an um leve, Cirrhæa saccata.—C M H. Ele cyaneus; 
in sh ation e of for propagating i ts should have their young w ood thinned out by native of New Holland, not of America.—# TP. deep 
double choice aoe Pilas Thora] immediately stopping at leas t half the number of shoots Padus, the Bird Cherry.— K A. Gloxinia Priestleyan®, 
pase pr ervirens, select herbaceous and | to allow a freer circulation of air into | I bases other ty ean peg o w T- fata 
Ci $ iruli 5 1 
shrubby plants. rr a NN aid Tr Violets paste centre * the bushes, oo the peana. — the 2 apparenty. 3 ais Maden quercifolia, a Cape, 
have not yet been ed to, they should be imme- | should be ng sabe ee ua conte ingen 3 pepe ia Seems to be Oris 
rhage wet a frame of rich leafy soil shape of the x l his a wild plant ien Helen for aaia 
ona shady borde 8 vio! “ow Po ane specimens are ins ir j ; 
pe m May 23,1849, mination. Do the flowers always grow singt y 
Wh Pi ORCING 3 as observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiswiek. —.— intermedia, true; th i oe Wx a . 
ere ira wn lan uscari moschatum ; 2, not evalia, boch - 
should be be remembered that the sol p mao . aan 1 | eee Wind, — e The purple Hower 2 a charming rer 
Max. in. in. Mean . te rio- 
time for this operation must be left to the einni 4 e n ea 47 | 55 W. o — an —.— —. e 1 ; 
the cultivator, if if other circu! convenient ; — . a. 2 29.821 39.731 56 30 b. SW. rs) ps fe ocr T hich th Talipot is . e hege 
this is an exce time of year for such a purpose, but Toes; 2) @ 20.366 20.743 15 4 H sW. 2 nich may 8 e phre ae —— in London, 6 to 
: favo e opportunity is when all or nearly Nr, . % 2 39203 | soose || 76 nee g 20 | That length —— 8 than h 151 
! all of the older plants in the pit have perfected their | irena - | — — | - en or being ze they 
fruit. The fe y) remaining ding Average... 29,969 | 29.805 || 66.8 | 46.8 | 56. I | mistake; the flowers are quite sma oll, D oki 
with a small arth š May Overcast; rain; cloudy, masses of considerable size. The writer bunch 
eon about their roots; and the| — Bense clouded; cloudy and fin t; rain speech, taking the for the arn OE 
plants which, one 3 Aarra A have been — — e ee. night. flowers for a — flower. ould require 1 
— og afie 3 — 2- Rain; fine; showers in the evening; clear. Misc.: X Y. Kitchen — bench your f. 
lifted with —  %3—Fine throughout: clear 7 at night. depth of soil than 2 feet. You had better w 
T ground to chis at least, mixing the a Try poco 
State of the W. — — S aed e loam — eras uk Si E * wa 
ensuing week, ending June 2, 1849. as ne FLOWEEE 4 
22 2 ga Fe | Greatest Prevailing Winds. | AvnicuLas: S B G. Flowers much faded das 
ay. pag 558 35 oon Quantity | sl iel le judging toa them, P rour seedling is ed usin 
and June = | 256 | ZŠ | "Rained. | 0f Bain. Ale Pile ; 122 e E C. Your flowers reache pe ; 
ition ; judging — peg 
Sunday 27 68.5 | 45.2 | 55.8 11 0.41 in. 18 aad: ae interior, being e — mall or place oul 
Mon. 23} 68.6 | 45.7 | 572 7 Ose. EAS 2/1} _ outline E. Try — 2 common- pinion 
Tues % 66o | a7 |559] 9 * | 1/8 3 — | CEREUS: JA. oat when ee PP 
Nate 31} 888 | 465 24 7 8 2/2) de fo of St, 0 large 
Friday 1 704 | 469 587 11 0.7 34 4| 1 CERA RIAS: Hy H. A shaded purple, e colour 
Satur. 2| 69.8 47.4 | 58.6 0.33 —14 Hi in outline, but cB to 3 ai the sam t varzely; 
The highest temperature during the above occurred cab | in cultivation. A. Macki wager 
— 1847—therm, 91 deg.; and the lowest on the 27th, 33 d le flowers,*—S E. Sin, and 100 and 100 
V Fuchslas: J 23 s tube, 
ERIES,—Let these houses be abund- Notices to Correspondents, ers 
antly applied w with air. In finally regulating the ber. | BACE Nummers and expect | HEABTSEASE: G R. ‘Your seedling, named 
of the latest crops, which are expected to hang to procure the other in a day ra, and expect | n shape, textur ana maa comman ia 
through the winter, Tath oe: borri Ants: TSH —— — 1 kill them; but it Ra — but nt 
ben ton rries should be cut | also e Grass. Try its effect on the latter, on a mall puch like many ates re aiveady in endy in es, of Wb 
Dii a i for earlier use. i pered 3 3 1 85 ane hardy, a8 far de P 
re save them from damp, which is > Specs, La ” Botany, by Dr. Lindley, will probably | so many. the flower. 
answer your ; there is à large and 8 N fret desi 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


329 


offers fo oe Patent 1 


— mr n eve 
E. Roof, 28 feet 6 ins. long, 1 3 fee t 6 in * wide, 
ee long, 16 fe et 6 ins. wide, 507., with 


25 Len, glass of large 2 Patent peta a 
— t, Td., 8d., and 9d., 


3 GUANO. — Ve y large crops of TUR- 
p% N LD WURZEL hav eg peang by 
“asa 2 anw Price ih Also, 
first quality, 15s. per ton, an ex en M anure for 

other 


root-crops, either used — or mixed with 
TE OF LIME — Farm may e 
ian . their own, and will Save the — Hog 
rticle. 
taining about 


about 60 per cent. of pure), in fine powder. 
W. H. Porrer, 28, Clapham-road-place, 


HE 2 MANURES are as pete in 
Te ; 
SD GRASS = ee rit 
con 0 OAS 8 0 


pal See 7 0 0 
SUPBRPHOSPHATE OF LIME 1 090 
„ AND COPROLITES , 5 0 0 
N.B—PERUVIAN GUANO, g Doek) 
SULPHATE OF AMMONIA, & 
Office, 69, King W William-street, “City, London. 
OTHER MANURES, 


e a a 
G Wade AND 
PAN QUAN 0, of the finest quality, direct from 


SODA A AND POTASH. 
GYPSUM (SU. tre OF LIME). 
DRIED NIGHT-SOI 
SULPHURIC ACID TxD COPROLITE. 
50DA ASH (WIREWORM DESTROYER). 
SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME (made from bone only). 
: e SALT, and all other Manures of known 
may be h. 
Mor GILL, 20 14, U r Thames-street, London. 
A Treatise on Guano, —— of Lime, &c., will be 
ee postage stamps, Free to purchasers 


bole hen ooo 
1 MANURE COMPANY would, at 
* * nestor to a COR 
ongly recom a top-dress 
for all em crops, It contains a large amount of 8 ing 
45 will be eee Se — substitute for guano. 
be ton (3 ewt, For Turnips, Mangold 
0 they would urge t urge t the use of the . or 
Lime; containing an increased quan- 
“tity a o phosphates and other mineral substances, so essential for 
asi aE they supply on the best ha mT 
2 ete einai olin mmo 
ireworm, sum uric ‘Acid, + — 
n Salt, Chareoal, K. s 
Torten PURSER, Secretary, 
Bridgestreet, Blackfriars, Londo 
Pam AND Sivan ‘GUANO ON SALE 
Y THE ONLY 


40, 


ČO., O MIVERPOOL; 


me C., 11 5 SRY ior 
ARTH, POWEL LL, anp P. 

es agains oe eee of 
1 — — ures 
established charac r to 


only to dealers of 
— who will supply the — fee any | 2s. 


Prices, delivertug it from the Import 


À SON anp CO., 61, Gracechurch-s street, 
ae yA New Park-street, Southwark, Inventors 
E ' the Improved CONICAL and DOUBLE 
ue respectfully solicit the 3 of 

the Taft dn their much improved m of 


ty; or 
the Soar r 
io inform the Trade that at their Manufactory, 

í ding artile required for the construction 
be » 48 well as for heating them, may be 
al — ay Wood erected upon the most 
i Palisading, Field and Garden 


28 ernten Gazette. 
SATURDAY, Y, MAY 26, 1849. 


TOR THE TWO fe TWO FOLL 
e wenes. 
k 8 Newcastle, N „ York.—June 4; 
: ————— bam, South De Lt 8 
src two Sop of those three Periods 
f review, the history o 


dino 
s ngi 


tof a Eating, pni industrious | y 


S | passed in 
on shoul be allowed wa 
e 


h beginning | 


with —5 Bn 
oh sical ient t to fix and ETE 


the nursery king, a law that ‘everything shall be, 
cheap to everybody — comes gradually to wave its 
magic wand ap other way, to regar 
consumers as the en ts of its -o al bou 
patronage ; arid 8 9 ing, ff the mon ru 
transition, from 9 into the prt to issue 
its august ‘ Be it pe, that prices shall be a mare 
good, always stead y, always r remun Hav 
decreed that it shall be so, the nett 220 “of a 
nipotence, was in each case, to proceed by express 
make it so. Legislated | w 


and detailed enactment, to 


cheapness had de 
right : but 


oa an kappa arance e mos feasibility 


141.7 


says Lord 
9 ELTON, “the more numerous the laws.” 
other words, the further you depart from that sim- 
plicity . is the test te Penge Truth, the more 
trouble n to maintain ee 
tangle thickens y every step. If 


ti 
e to everybo 
ty ok the last century is the burthen of this. 
The six poem sterling paid by our grandsires to 
the corn-exporters of their day m forms a portion 
A 15 Agi ie debi Hd 1 he fi 

with t of the Mania 8 

The stimulant given to predet aki ultur 
which v until, as we hav seen, the 


fro 
d of the half 
3 Ainge a te exact — of its 3 
effect now survives, in its taxation form, t on 
edge ths ‘teeth of the generation sg <i ate 
the Grapes when they were 
The Act of 1773 with whith: our second Period 
oncluded, was 3 5 by the advocates 
of the Bounty System. It coquets, in the preamk le, 
with their e and was framed with the vi 
a 2 not "i abolishing the Bounty KH 
ether e harv 
the ds W its e and put 
ve upon the admissions of its preamble. 
Bounty died a natural dea 


final nega- 
The 


se 
188 15 trade and Pa 0 had begun to produ ce upon 
the 8 trade in Corn from this cou Com- 
erce whose memorials . back into hae. anti- 
aes and claimed an from the very days of 
Roman pe when Britain supplied Corn to the Im- 
and was called ‘the Granary of the 
Wigton 1 ces; and in 1791 another act was 
passed by the 12 to revive the Export and 
a Bounty, and to stay the — — ae! pens 
ing Exportation so Joiz as the pric 
465 higher than the F point 


hahit 


ard bee not 1812, to 1538. the 
unty and 
ule of 


was rais 
fied the le of the magician, out- ha 
the opposite and succeeding oo pre- 
Bu 


In| the 


e that to 


m fifty- for 


s that su 1 2 out 


from 49s. 6d. to 868. 2d, : 
‘and five 


three middling harvests 
very deficient ones brought it, in August 
e quarter: Fine Dan itzic Wheat 
was sold at Mark-lane for TE and Oats at the 
nor 17 price of 84s 

A couple of mee hary 575 813 and 1814) again 


reduced the price t 7d.: and this, together 
with the cessation Pe war, produced another 
fasg law, that of 1815. aeg law the home- 
price at which foreign imports were to be admitted 
ed to 80s. the quarter. Three deficiait 

rvests succeeded, and in 1817 1818 pr: 


g prices, so the Act of 2 
— pa 6 from the opposite c The 
good harvests of 1820 and 1821 pro 4 8 a b 
glut, and at the end of 4 nag in the latter year 
the average price of Corn i gdom was 
388. 8d— 5 418. 4d. Sab a A calculated 

on by the existing Act ; under which ssid “pmo 
ok she amounted to 200 per 

Under the joint influence of so 01 dl harvests 
since 1791, and fei tae fre and in 
during a nis of general war e N in 1810 
to from 30s. to 50s. the quarter from the Baltic 
Steady p average commercial value of Wheat bad 
becom it were, forgotten. ears — a 
he un- 


1 ha 
rudent —_ which had m 
steady poeni for the twenty ua pas pr -A 
tracted the rved commendation of Anam Sur 
ie free- Aae rl 1 ee age. the quarter had 
raised successively t „ 548., 63s, 6 
(72s. 74s. *) and finally, by 5 Net of 1815, to 80s. 
the quarter: and this, it will be observed, duri ing & 
period for the most part of ae, high prices, 
and with no practical operation except that of lend- 
ing additional delusion to the blinding temporary 
influences Mid : 25 with an extraordinary conjunction 
of bad har 


* 
consumer from a scarcity nor t the 


sie 


5 A aggravating, in fact, every ee by rigidly 
onfini 


makeh became 
ars of its 
oreign 


] 26 (the f 1815), a 
of duties should be * viz., at 
be 17s. 


the corn-trade to the 2 
suficientiy apparent t during è soven yi 
ency ; as suspended by an 
in 1 1822 which deiki that p e — 
admitted 


d to Prohibit 


per quarter (2s. 
by the previous statute of ae 
duty of 24s. er when 


agit ei by a a quart 

the home price was under 50s. ; ; but, above t 

price, and oan 805 „ permitting it under a duty of 
Ait oe 


5 tial potoi, edel. Nev 
the > inability to rier or sires difficulty of Spanne l, 
foreign supplies, to ur own defici 


n 0 
ncour ormer and prevent the latter. Three 
bad harvests in succession hha — er — Aai 
a 


hat | 


der 
e Act was passed such as _ out any prospec 
„In the year 1826 2 


t 
oo 8 
5 
— 


uring the 
anted, and acted upon in 


on 
22 cAnDo, Mr. 1 
E e for a more elabora 
t to te t 


British Government. T A i 5 — 5 “as eae i ihe ewes 

o 49s. 6 in 17 x : 
bat in the price to serie it r y 42 15 a duction of foreign iy a system of gon 
price 134s. 5d. the A in spite of a renewal mort , 2 eat le : n H 
..... age snr), of a ec 
adopted with the view of obtaining nippi and and dispassionate consideration; an of ge 


reducing ERS Hy and in March 1801 the price 
of corn reached 156s. 2d. the quarter. For one 

pee of the quartern loaf in Lon dae 
0 


Better harvests foll during the next three 
zan, and the price 3 fell to 49s. 64. in 
1804, The Act of 1791 had of course never come 
‘into operation at all. e seasons had laughed at 
the Law- sagt 5 
them 5 heir 
1804 the N at whic Import- 
s raised t when 
as below this the prohibitive duty of 24s, 3d. 


to 66s., the see was 


615 


rom 63s. up 

. the quarter. No sooner was dhe Act 

(June 20th) than another bad harvest ie 
which raised the price before the end of the year 


jill 


bring to a close our review “a rse o 
haps une: led for ity 1 contie and 
annals of financial 


perha 
tenacity of opinion, in the 
Legislation. H. 


A WINTER’S 3 . J SOUTH eee 
THE ee ro the 


general features 
menti tioned have 


posed of Commons (March 1815) — 
of * defeated by large majorities. We 12 5 son as 
ustrative of the principle. 


— 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZ E 


TT E. |Ma 


Y 28. 


‘you. 1 wish what I am about to serve up limit your depth of soil, you reduce the a ve of 


let me 
may be hal as palatable, 


Cireum to 
sarene to here, but involving an atte! 


of health and strength, induced me to undertake a to the wall. I have often examined half. perished roots, 
pat ll to, and make trial of, some of the 3 | that have turned up like fish-hooks, in the struggle for 
1 springs in certain districts of S ales. life on meeting with the hardened subsoil, 
My starting point being the he neighbourhood o 7 Glou. In conclusion, Mr. "s well remar 


cester, a few genera 


ct, 
— there usually jissa may not be ween o comer; is is likelier to attest the last grand and crowning | o 
ing. The soil in ppo immediate vicinity of the 
teep, rich, friable loam, the greater part o whi 


| uce; for the roots, forbidden to deseend for food, 
more than briefly | t 


arks : 
system of | spade is perfect, the plough is re Which, if 
m- engine? Which can say that 


may well be called its transition state — 


garden, or little short of it, It offers 


raged; and last, though m 3 


it never 1 or damaged, or gave a — — Meri a of commodious cottages not — 
elegance than f 


pe 
al h 
culture, either as — market gardens or as | name to the subsoil, when all the time ‘ Behold i for their eleg or their adaptation 
vd 


unter band 

oe the produce of which finds and 8 
at what you would 95 cal prices. neces they are; I “T ofer no pege me — ee, y these quotations ; 

oug in mind th p rent at the importance of su the workmanlike tion 0 of ou 
which such lend slate Jets —8 to 10 guin r acre | manner in which it aio tied, il amply justify me `> actuated, and which leads rather to p 
being by no means uncommon, The aas tillage reg directing to it the * of ‘the r er. I shall o ild 
f the trench- | add, by way of finis on su . — ng, that since wi pr 

H 


but then 


these lands receive, by the constant 

ing-fork and spade, atfords a striking 
superior quality orn amount of its pr 
the immediate neighbourhood, under 


urface 
vet per L of the defective culture to —— I have any n of the subsoil Ben oA Of the interest 


the work with a 


ese , pe Their 
arable cultivation, when they —— add so eno n culture is not bad; at all events pere r to that a gr. 
amount of this very of t their Wheat. It is mostly by “the dibble, but in a ti 

ere to that pursued i in perp 


post, for 5 benefit 107 all heavy land farmers, 


he 

have always € — — that the quantity | did, and should have been very anxious to mare heard 

io to the number | his opinion or a re so admirably adapted to carry | ri 

of horses attached to the plough. Well, therefore, may out his own comm 
i inst the expenses m 


a ready sale | v — 


field t 


contrast, in * | appearance of Mr. Hoskyns’ letter, the ee ble „Re- the necessity of the case, arising but too often from a 
Joseph Pau i 


„to that in -volving Subsoiler, of Mr. Josep nef — ieem d f 
b as been p 


port 
— . — —— at "the York Meeting by the exhibition of the 


nse pri 
Ror t to return to 7 * e Gloucestershire farm 


beyond a given the other they deposit a Bean in each aye as fast as 


: ey 
l } ö $ ious not to made, from a bag ames before b them. The dibble re- | Par 
merit the serious consideration of every clay | sembles a gardener’s, and the work goes off quicker 
farm . oe Esq., on this than might be hen 01 pai where only one han 
e 


own, or, if | instead of two is emplo The best criterion of the 


sh 
— the gre real burthen 


and — ee — involving both —— 
= employer to the 


ns | venien paged 


| system, a — feature 
bee en left untouched; as has also its numerous 


72 
D 
= 
@ 
ct 
— 
E 
E 
or 
$ 
Q 
oO 


efere 
supply the requisite 8 


n which you 


id and no 


is not ular e to admit 
itted by The soil of the Vale of Berkeley (between Gloucester 
s. No- and Bristol), though various, according to its good or 


the may of our venerated friend No better proof need i è 
plough,” can be compared wiih, the pn rod; the aes 2 ae be re, of +* ay ape — 
wisdo this admirab) i 


“The roots of delicate plants,” w 


s Mr. 0 
Hoskyns, “ will not travel through earth that has never str 
e tha 


seen daylight, What, then, must 
face that 


re turned and torn for years lanin. manufacture from what the 


—1 y a lazy stri of some 6 sacha 


il beaten in toa hard road by the annual tread of — of the panny that — — which soil This 


16 — — ae et, by a heavy ee panel alone can impart, sseur in such |“ 
å polished such as you | matters so wW 255 r — Before 
eee the track of a locked waggon-wheel, that cestershire, I feel compelled to say a word 
the 1 — steepest hills. If on of their neral wi nagement 
at oy ola hard as a brickbat, intractable to the | of sto Nothing can wo: ortion of 
r BE angie’ = cela in the ram) fe be 
Hook on six horses to a plough, two abreast, stick the 2 1 ee oe be a both 
3 into S e has been trodden bat eee, aetna policy| 


ther 
the horses will unge an 


ange * say, the Ameri 
ur- are excellent for toasting, greatly improved in the 
pe A 


s shallow, over a| and in size perfect giants; still they want the fine 


ibs 
lighters, Whats quietly awaiting “the 
waters, may be seen tossing and tumbling 


along a a oe 3 
Strange 


ey ae sity to the point from whence 
sort of im tide is known 
‘the Bore.” it is 0 


nd try to turn and lodgi 
Then 


g no T 
pat what 3 hoofs ha ie | for t 8 x to be e actual prohibition against eattle-feeding in 
tress * spat 


y . The poor things | are therefore turned 
time for themse 


to this want of atten an ts 
of the amy on — part m the — and tn pi h | 
non i i 


F: arm,” * — of Lord Ducie, Marae Sn 


tion. There are un celts d = brilliant Aa | 
to the interests and comfi 


uence, As h 
— As Je |p public in Mr. E araea 3 work on soils. Here 


a complete picture of the farm, in 


whe 
e | necessary 
e ons 10 car 


has been completely remodelled, and new buildings 
after the Scottish fashion, by the | i 
„ All the 


a nd. In fact (as be 


rtain of he 


what | back much of 


ender’s Ess 
published 3 the 1 of the Royal Agricultural 
i that work will not fail w 


Though not immediately connected with the subjert 


orth, 
stream ; and a — interesting sight it is to 
Asal hold the advancing mass 8 ee i lashing 
known, to have received that attention it so well de- | expedition of the 3 =x its usual cost price, 7s. per | the banks o l 
serves at the hands of every occupier of stiff, tenacious; acre: of course, like most dibbling elsewhere, the 
e ho h 


f id 2 ~ 2 a 
There — = 8 1 nt of it by the e Royal | work i on — a rapi bene 


undetermin — whether to sink 4 Som, but soon be 


ap 0 — , if they escape the 
: ns to overwhelm them, they are borne 


i 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


331 


believe the most profitable, to use a potass 


< where much vegetable matter is supplied 
When nitrate of potass is used instead 
75 otass as a 


‘ef soda, it gives about as 
f of Pe 

wig mixed with sulphate of ammon 
1 pr ut ma earth or 8 
mmon 
; bat bar k refuse, or any of the other substi- 
iour Gth, m . used instead; or some 
them mixed * if handier — d cheaper. 
rn may go 


plant requires. 
of magnesia, it is better sheen im 
ested using, with sa 
urtful to 
on of the fixed air which 


te 
ve said nothing about, because > uni- 
$ — verybody now w knows how o use, 
— varying in strength and e 
4 117 our object is to . nt out the Ae me 
uniform N TOARN 
. — — dressings, of which 


9 5 — in the ye a Turnips, 
— dan waa ended, rofessed 
object being cheap owe P The e qua entities directed 

each crop will su; oly | ne products than we can 
* without du nd Sie quantity 


-5 
3 


carriage, isa 
being at une g 

mot ; and has been found very me mixed with 
alt, for Carrots and P. 


ddition — salt 
Po tato 
e, and stronger, ` the higher 


8. We need not lengthen these letters 


b 
ate * 


enlar 
of differences of we and climate upon the 


fix a 
ans mad, in 4 sa nash way, to define the | cedin 


„ &e., | co 
many plants till rendered 


mpo- | soil w 


cheap dres- the 


arging | lan 


but still whatever there was of goo as his.” The 


wherever I have looked for it. In March 1 en the 


system of Tull seems direc ted to — e „ rusty symptoms, and in April the canker was re 
ation of fag by means of tillage, and he g far | and now many of th young Potatoes show wy plainly 
as to say, tha seco. i now before me four sampl 


e 
common plo 2 5 bs 
rather serve is prepare t 


f cropp 
shown in vad “New Husbandry,” p. 187 
nt day some of our bes 


hose w e disease in an 
— stage may find it, where it exists, by taking up a 
Ota; 


2 oes; this root will be moog ia aoe 3 have lost its clear, 
colour, a 


w 
Be rains will have so 
ef ce the ticks me nd A* the small 
will hav o luxuriate at 
be present tillage system, as 3 |: 
cientific men, i a great step in 


ce by the 


hy 
Let it be considered or 
custom, w. 
part, r perhaps by far 


alone will give no straw for manure, a 
quantity of plou 


‘dressings ; 1 mello knowing, better 
dressi to t 
It may be just 
as are eee. 
be 9 in dry —.— : 
light anl they are often best composted 
vegetabl e matter, 
bear in 


than the writer, how. to: en K their 
stiffness or lightness of thei land. 
aid tat saline manures uch 

in thew letters, should not 


225 


Manures 


wee genous 
sulk; the phosphates ipo ts to seed the 
and lito give solidity ; and potass to healthy 


may also be ee on the dressings 
Whea 


* 7 
Soot) hav 


is no crop that 
an Barley, when —.— 
n in these counties ; and yet 
50 few r to guide us. Soot 
have — — a suit Barley. 
manure 
* t generally gets, the 
. i 5 


the getter ve given. | adoptin 
thing occurs 


mind, generally, in adaptin — 
— 8 y. mig r P 


profited much | a 


the 
1 


- | the 
. pne oa poor, eee 2 


g ai ap 
e | system, las the follow wing this 


eanliness 
cable, and a fallow 


y bea 
would not gre ally aber. 
It is on this a Pt that, i 1747 * 4 

man must be fea 

of taking a a farm of this er 
without his landlord 4 consenting to 
ha n has the result of 88 pen of | tio 
this dasto T Does not the dismal appearance of 
f the marks o 


effects ? 
poverished, has 
utter ‘impossibility of its being made bg under 


up. a good "Going 7 guano it 

would give Ager a very rg! crop o 

soon as these are carried, let it be cross-ploughed 

and double rede * there ji 00 

brought to the surface ; age iste ‘tf 

had the benefit of the 
fo 


ere 
improving yearly, and mot scaring away the love 
by its hideous aspect. The desription h Dini 
seem 


ak dark side, bat i it is by 
exaggera It may be more ugt 
So to pain at a brighter side, and to admire the 
change pee any cases n made, in others 
ought to by the 1 * of the Deanstonising 
with 157 Tull's ad 
will Ap seen 


2 psig viewin g 


mirable 2 of em 3 
paper. Law. Raw 


ing inf 


These valua 

estimated too Manly. yet 
attention of the . blie as | di 
to them late 


ve or four eg tar, 
I ba 


ih 9 


the ‘observation not 8 0 
od be, the comi Posto e an me, fr m time to time, 
to The comi get o op a l I have done so in 
different —— J last year 2 the first symptoms 
of disease in underground shoot, or rootlet from 
I found this es hire and can- 


the size 
e end became apparent, and ye 


hese 
ich has been the 


— | wate 
he already so light, being generally decom 
Tey 


that if the 1 — learned 


f Oats. As Bem 


ke he wo 3 


ave already 


On the Use of Lime.—My former 9 on 
use of lime was not for the of provoki 
controversy, but solely to obtain information fo; 28 
and others as to the most scientific + of applying it he 
the land. Unfortunately “ Aliquis’s” letter giv 
light on the subject ; all 8 * know that Tine 
5 the productive powe why e soil. 

whether better to plough it into "the 
land immediately after | being slaked, as Mr. Fisher said, 
ead it on the surface fo 


te. 
ime in killing ins nsects, &c., it is quite another 8 
No ve ubt it is most . in this prt ; but the lime 
own by the rain, when first spread on 
Eh ce, will this purpose; and our land i is 
omposed cla: 
that inerea: sed lightness is not 


of 
understand it 
system of deni 
simple 
still remains un red, and 
any a — who would eupply the informa- 
with a good explanation, Isle of M 


les. 


Sotiet 
ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY ne ego pre 


accounts w 


were examined, eog being found correct, were 
sho accordingly by th of the 


e signatures o 


pom Spectat Council for taking into consideration 
pc Hao peri: to be perg Counci 


REPOR 


governors, 178 ann 
4643 annual members 2 
They think — however, right to remark that, in the 
list of names — — 
the Soci ty, r — not 
ei eee — har have signified 


. the 


8 


332 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


Barker a Vice- President of the Society, in the place of 
bot, de d Mr. Henry Blanshard, 
G 
created in that bod 
name to the list of the Vice-Presidents. They have 
k. ey r Simonds an Honorary Member of 


they 
with 


i 


an 
nsuing 


e Chair 
Committee an i a tind previously to the e a 


| 
and Profe: 


fitted up at their own expense, for the purposes of th 
ciety, and of the Council Dinner $ 


| must 


very respectable eee Mr. H. Dixo = 

called to the chair. The Rev. Mr, WI RIxSs athe 

Whoever passes through fog county, and cast his eye 

the e and over the buildings conti a 

be struck with the 8 of ao and the want 

sign a nd o joir der of the whole. H on 
farma begat of the very worst description 

the pel sg for which they are 1 

cart- lodge: 


ate to the 

thoy are 3 The arm-yards thems purposes $ 

general still much worse, if possi ible to 
g them. Thes 


Country Meeting, 5 Committee wa be ork prepare 
in detail the 


Saye È 
Messrs. 
they 1 received from th 
Cc 
C 
t 
1 


to report in result o 
the whole — condition of pony 
which pox 


ety, both i 

reference to poin 3 ys be 

submitted to * control, a aw measures ich 

the income of the Socie ha may M relieved 88 he in- 
aid arrears of su 


uncil 3 with the highest satisfaction che 
ce 0 of the Jour- 


ry 


convenience ar 
The 


the spirit of inquiry thus aroused on so many 1mpo 
topies of practical interest will lead to that continued 
e 


, phy ‘cia 
- physiologists, a ‘all hini — that 8 ald ee 


0 
waving elemen so much 
them through geen 755 our winter months. 


chem 
ken pnn animal stomachs, E a 
fro 


arted fro e homestead to the fields — 
it cannot be assimilated 


may 
hen ¢ may 


successive ‘districts of the ingdo m 
ans for the extension of 2 knowledge they 


among their 
the ultural commun 
cided that the price of the Journ: 
‘hen — ard be 10s. for each 


The ee, feeling the essential oe ele pe eas g 
‘in the direct of ope for the pu 


soon instead of 65 as here- 


der of im 
t 


confidence on the ndly 
an i 


ose who depend upon it for beset support. 


esday in each m 
official badhe of ae 


oO 
i 


ca 
inte personal privilege i is conferred by it on the mem- 
‘bers of the Society, a decisive step will have been taken 


advantages ee from a well-organized system 
chemi: n questions connected with the mu- 
tual relations of of the ‘pint and soil, and from analytical in- in- 


com ók 


promotion of the se stank objects of the S 
By order of Council, James anion Borri. 


produced pi the farmer, or employed in in his operations. 


OF THE CHE 
“ The pawn ve recommend tha 
obtaining eno be of manures, 
soils, at the fo * 
anembers of th 


vilege of 
agricultural ra oi s, and 
ng nec rates, be made a privilege of all 


8 May 18 
. of Mr. WLANDSON, of Aa eae 
cient oore of Apply Leicestershire, 


f the Fi 


ya 
simple confirmato: 
— esa = — — alated to —_ materia 
en 


iano, = oileake for | 
ill ouch the 


nA determi 
e and o 
phosphates, &c., II. The following Ta ai instance, 
sis: Water, 17.95; 


it. No. 3. Limes 
on of m 
15s. 


effect may 
or e including ar bennine 
Mien — and 
sand, 


milk), arenes: and phosphoric acid, II. 
. oil, and e 155 eel 


de 
The authorities of Nor- | Rev. 
s Hall, 


respective 
Darp T es 


35 De nison, M. P; Mr. F 


| pay ring the e period 473 ee le 
| balance in 5 of 5981. Colonel Tha lio 

itt the members the qua ny statement . the 

of i and 


0 
tee; and o 


P 


by S 
voted to the Fin: ommit otion o 


ce n the = 
00 | Sir John Johnstone, seconded by Mr. Hillyard, to the 
tural value of Auditors, for their care in inspecting and reporting upon | 
a a, the accoun 


Mr. Raymonp BARKER, secon pets 
Earl of Dacis the Marais of Downshire 


y th 
° | unanimously elected President of the Society for ‘the 
ens 


ge ar. 
he mo k Mr. PERKINS, inne by Mr. 
Little, of Lima, the trustees were re-e 

On Mr. P. Pos, e . Dyer, 


CO- | fro 


ind the Pg es H i 


sent, as waits as to. the gradual a 


nance Com- neit 
it 


nto the 1 7 - 8 system whilst it remainsiaa wid 
words, until it is converted intoa 
gt all a 


ow we know from ex 
om the deductions 8 science, that — all vegetables ob. 
of their nutriment from the 


escape, 2 be lo: 


Now. thi is sec 
animal and noes ri attat of w ait 

id solid excrements 4 their cattle are the mos 
of ee e be by them the 3 
aos 5 is — rst requisite 

mp contrary, frequently se 
fa ia, tothe on ike sides of t sloping 8 1 as I ban 
all the rains which fl from 


Q 
Q 


pond or 
rom which 11 descends toa 
rried to and lost in the _grea sea? 

of 42 


t 
€ 
also re oer d 52 
I 
1s 


his peace 
but a change must be ma TH by 
each is tert e in these 
will be unable 
now 80 Ton rfull 
I proceed, therefore to give an opi 
erected and formed, s 


uired, 
one yard be sheds for thot 


yo 
he yard there ee be wide 
h 1 d ne si 


— 


a eight shed c 
as plates of on, so that 
psr but rathe 
t space, shoul wh 
of Tosun r kind from the f 
3 e which 
s far a as 


i 
1 hi ance 
ox stalls, and Pigg 
there | ee be 
struct Sa 
uired. 


examinat 


. 
1 Sir John . B. B. Johnstone, 3 M. P., 
f Lov velace, Mr. W. Mil 


ba Strad 
e Turner, Mr. ná 
ie e Henry W. Wilso 
n the motion of Mr. Prcuin of 
Pole, 5 Bell Crompton, ve ‘Duffield Hall, 
an auditor of accounts in the 
— Turner, — elected on 


Wilson (Stowlongloft), and 


ne 

On the motion of the Earl of Ducie, seconded by Lord 

8 the thanks of the meeting were voted by 
acclamation to Pi t, who * now th 

broke 


rgo for compliment. The meeting then 


an =i F > rs’ Clu 

ITHAM : flomeste alt padinan n 
ilkins, of Wix, delivered 2 very interese po 

ing lecture at the Witham Institution 


Whitemoor, seconded a 


req N 
late, nor 1 in an; 
red over tank; but 
rmitte remain 


ar 
convey all the liquid excreme 
and the 


loss to the large tanka 
wheeled th The 


being great accomm ommodations for oa" 

— it than it 15 hitherto net 
all 

e say for a 


required two, or a double r 


THE AGRIOULLGRAL GAZETTE. 333 


Sor SS SE Eare aen: eed 
d a double row of ox stalls, so that ntly have eos to tiio m heap, make a large pae covered with zinc, and so p: 
‘at in them facing each other, and be fed ee pick up loose grains and that store cate 0 nothing could run away in the shape of liquid ch ee “We 
j — the t asts. I need not add | have access to it, to tread. it dowa and consolidate and that | was quite sure that in these — there must be a great deal 
j 3B be quite closed in dur i g the | poultry should have access to it, in order to — it about, | of ammonia 2 and decomposition going on under the 
} — bricks or 1 during the mix it together, and with the pigs pick out -i 3 er: ties animals; and what Mr. Mech had said as to the cutting the 
1 ur Jonses should be lofty, and all of | and eggs of insects from it, And that this is a pla ich | straw in Brdy wi s the most extraordinary thing as to absorp- 
3 2 3 or 4 papra above their | every wise farmer will acknowledge to be * — 1 have ab —.— et He did not 5 z r hows a — * because he 
ba! ts of air, the stables and | whatever, otherwise horse-dung would be carted Ania one eal on | thought he did not carry i was right, but 
pots 2 greatest possible purity of atmo- | of a field, the dung of fattening oxen ‘nto Ant er me was extr ee pat Fig ‘ ye he 2 ki cutting straw 
ab able kind 5 yee ed be toil the — ot p pigs into another part, or into ou; and thu feld. “id ea —— chaff i it would not gre aa = a — A straw 
fr m accumulated heaps of ex- | the dung o r, and so on; an ould 

we veer fl in which cattle are confined, From anure yond be cee, poor manure there, h hot i ne ace | feeding, —when any watt es ie —1 1 Fa no ef lavia, no 
ements Me said, you will have perceived that in the 275 cold i another, 4 and so all would * in — it and | fermentation, he could not be aware of two facts that must 

piber f cattle, and to secure as far as pos- st , besides, seeds of all * 5 would be | create the latter ; ener ney = and warmth would nec essarily a a 

— a0! m those serious losses to which they are | carted into * Ee on the fields, 23 ntation in all vegetable matter. There m 


R consider three things as indispensable. | land would soon become overrun with all kinds of weeds and | be fermentation bedis putrefaction—the first process nike 
can be obtained, a uniformity of the tem- | insects, to the dismay and disgrace of the farmer, and ruin of rnin oes e the ne me . was whether a wa 
i sts are confined ; an at- | his . “go MEcHE begged to state that he entirely con- | injurious to a al life. He uld not but think i 
ae ioh are always curro ed wi r. Wilkins in his general principles, which he | they aleeiy 838 into ais. poner 4 of 3 z practices, h 
evolved, erie perceived by mau or 4 yie were based on observation of nature, from | — 1 refer to gentlemen vice said they could — al 
nting or putrif; animal and vegetable which we aba never deviate. He entirely agreed that it | fatted ma and safi est eee to the cect 
a deep a pad well littered 3 These three uld be e exceedingly y wrong as. to ng — they should be | sphere. “th ect of earbonie 4 
ensa their own excr , for roved when the | which all poste ie gave out, was prejudicial to em, or 
heir owners scoured, as far as 9 was allowed t o be * ud to their health ; | expel it?—and if animals were shut i eip ed 13 or pit 
go, from disappointment and | but in speaking of ee foodie, plein aa managed, did that discharging as they did this carbonic acid: gas, he was satisfied 
to obtain the uniformity of temperature I before | really take P oot He ventured to deny pang it — — He w if there was not a free access of air, it must be igana t 
should | qui i ing man ima 
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EP oe BERGER RESTS 


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t the escape mals—that which decayed produced life eaea and a 
sun's rays in the summer, should be phaced and he begg d to state, that one of those cases was (Mr. | animals she ee for the life of one another; tor, as the 
and that the building should be closely | Mechi’s) oan. When he began the box-feeding system, he | poet had s 
with bricks. To obtain perfect purity | used Wheat straw as litter for the cattle, and as he occasion- * Sor 83 there are that live o on ers 
cine should be lofty, and orifices made | ally grew very strong reedy straw at poi from thin While other oon bite them agai 
over with perforated zinc or some | sowing, he found it did not absorb the urinary excrement of These 7 50 3 have — fleas t that bite ’em, í 
e escape of the carbonised at- | the animals ; he found that the casing of “the N oh glass, oe flea bit a ad in nfinit 
as it has passed through the lungs of the | therefore the internal Le a of the straw was hérmetically | (Laughter.) lik or though some were 
thermometer always be sealed against the iduo vere — was found that when the ar ar at it, he ied ral aea roc "Te he was an animal 
tle houses, and especially as they are traw t quor rose up between, and | he e, lixe the air free; and he did not like protection, 
fo ga so cheap. 1. 3 Pon far as possible the atmo- | made them foul and 1 5 dad. they might infer very un- which called a system of boxin ng. (Cheers and laughter.) 
within the buildings from being als healen, T fe rc ig Therefore, when 5 ard r —— Wheat fl that it Tornen 
er gases nox 3 to animals’ health, I strongly i re ponam for animals ia as essential í + 7 
e no be made from 1 ngs hot the | shou a by cu int nto vhaff, so * — the he guor r could at — bea — Bebiews. 
the solid 1 shou e removed at — the pores 0 po ps ey would observe t at A Plain Address to the Labouring Classes on th 
nde th 3 e 
oa an N put mae — ei i nstantly absorb all t ald F ies 7 of Savings Banks and Friendly Societies. « 
J. Hatton 


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e them to lie down — | liquor, and by occasionally renewing t me straw chaff, it w woul 


es sa ines e whale e on the sn — the an a ths re importance of saving banks and igro forme 

rom muc vation in early life, | whole question hinge w - 

especially where the tank for the re- | mitted if t ey were n a — t it was 3 wrong and in x ot, in 5 1 estim ation, be over- rated, Next i in im- 

s down the —+ ad ne the yard as I | jurious to h 1 26 contended that by using | straw portance to education, and what education is above all 
cent from the ae ‘chaff in the way he bade — tioned, th calculated to encourage, is a habit among the la 


on ag 
i i an and that the condition — these boxes would be sweeter and ] j 
stalls raised above the level of the yard, it “le mae pure than stalls, from whic Kaen ni was constantly Ther n c 1 3 3 oe 9 er en 
„I must not forget to add, | escaping, from thelr boing swept. (“ No, no,” from Mr. Hutley.) ey must learn to look upon parochial support or aid 

be tied up, but every beast should be He ractical seh Se this was not so. Th e | as the last s 
ee nis * pits ta the è pe of ees feeding, | floors of their stables w 1 ith br ae to" thera — epee drive the helpless and infirm, and not as a fund to 

in t rth, at least 3 or | the uri nary excrement foun ts way i t ey : 
Cray nd eking n Wa Tht at White they are | anapi remedy th appointed consequences of indolence, ex- 
months gg — "their own liquid and | smell rising up to the nostrils, — in — morning, and travagance, or imprudence. Let the wholesome custom 
i at s, has, „ Wi =< the avin 1 intro- yt was nop Pca to go into the m witho — — ammonia of saving be once begun, and it will generate that 
it has its a zeli "bat d believe it other gases. urine came 
ee, Wane a — ia — ‘confident od — ti o be 8 by the cut Mien, which was a — ct an ab- 1 which is fe Janse o Sage dhr ’ industry, 
pecially if they used, as they ought prosperity. 8 n 2 mention an 
er of history, o alto . — ** 3 A — not wari re. to do, salt, gypsum, or some 2 fixers, which were useful to interesting case which h ‘the sane oe ows what 
ie r 1 have form : of what | the animals —— I. — to the — ea and — arapi ais — may be effected by prudence and e even out of 
t elty. m aware , however, that some agricul ture, as they might be 

other respects of = judgm nt, both 1 from teig f price, persons not being sensible of their value. He the wages of a day W ey man began to save. 
> as experie and | had noticed that th effect of the 3 of the animals on at 20 years of age. r married; and saved 
at ty otour race, —— ey is nothing so — oxes, was to make acious and hard 58. regularly every 1 Sigs to say, as nearly as 
d s will profess to believe and | mass, as hard as that table; 121 there ‘was T7 a — — the possible. He had however no savings’ bank other 
rif For example, I —— heard it — by gentle- were de il e free | Fo -5 a Hak bli 5 
Tespects quite sane, Sint a man by means of a few —.— ee’ —.— or stall, Th 1 — of “fact ; institution to assist him, but was ob to keep his 
had a sufficient sum “ to put 


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ee — the hand made over and up and down | and 1 his Mal had ssid to the loss of the antorals in money by him until he 
— e brick wall, and even | these boxes, he (M a erg to his own practice and | out,“ as it is term to interest. This was evi 
16 m 


m 12 
m ing cattle i in their living grave s full birth to their death by the knife, not one had in any degree by 
a y suffered in health, much less in life, from amy he Ae no | whereas the ‘savings "ban 2 2 about 3, about 
and defend i But permit briefly t ingle i re confined in th 17 man’s peri commen 
— — i e year 1770, l P 
ts merits, Sati in do oing s o I give you of | these i A and therefore his friend s rmed a an Bey ronis 2 5 per cent. could bi pe a ay obtained. Thus the party 
N * 


which — opinions are 3 kad “these too one-sided a conclusion a what he had h 
Ebates, Professor 9 and br. Ca: tioned s a he wa aid his practical farming friends | began to save at 20, and at 65 he on an annuit 
oritie . 


i s, and I ald give many m as — had not remap ong found oat at disea 1 ee etim 1 . of 20.a year. At the of 65, then, the man in 
there joan bono accumulation of animal ked their catte that had a wider range, an ey knew that | 
td ral substances without ie processes of fermentation 228 losses had been sustained. There was one point relating uestion went to his 3 a most respeetable and. 
cak ng on within The; to boxes to which he would refer, He thought sufficient atten- | ek, tor e English farmer, who is lately 
cade mentation without — —— “acid gas being gene- tion was not paid to the feeding of the sale Let them | tated that he was now 
arene fom it “ee poea with the ee at- | imagine one of themselves shut up, tied by the eck, and fed penden 2 ER same time should be miserable if 


that when mal 4 breathe | with the most 8 food, without 3 E to take ex- 

h carbonic — ith sul- | ercise—what ould be the result ‘hy, dise sease. And the he —— left . work. He Was 80 attached the i 

gas, the —.— of which Soruya price oe same took p! Fick e with regard to cattle. They place, to his master, and the family, that it would have } 
g animal and veget table Sacr unnatural position, they we e gorged and glutted, without cor- bre his heart to leave either it or them; and he 


a re 
too thi k, the. wae “aig of the lungs, and x , 
Fe Sein bree and will a 5 = ane N 2 wn -i had ‘been his board and lodging, and to be allowed to do as much 
willbe related, w am 3 are such as cannot deceive us, u i k as he p A i 
8 that cattle cannot be confined food, aud ‘appeared cage rere 8 110. of ordinar y — wo were worth very nearly 1500/., which, we need not say, glad- 
we var their 5 . 
ing tha bee or destroying their health. It is true of feeding, and ‘the circulation was sluggish, he 2 ‘his dened the hearts of his next of kin. Two ne hews were 
visible inju dose of salts, t them feeding, and made them | hi ad mea heirs, and received 450/. each. Seven nieces, 
has I have describe 4 ee the) lively, — —they got in better condition 5 his removing that whieh an A J. each. The rest 
— ike not to rest on mere opini would attack 3 ponm — a : — 2 pp te o SeT — i 
and I give you a Naa examples. lar situation. 2 ngen eman who too 7 5 
ary m, in a letter which he published in mother, tied them upa me away till they the different members of his 
M in boxes ix Dutch heifers, and put hich he sold at 207. But hes said— What might instance many other cases, more ordinary, pos- 
s touched with this novel 1 his „ 2 r 92 T always sessing greater or less interest. The freedom whick 
; l and t i 855 h Ni of Cupiss’s Con 2 l 1 a $ R _ 
some tin and $ ed ies ee i — é m to havea large quantity of — als did better than those which | domestics in particular, farm servants, 
r 4 — : : Kaen ; 


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beas wn i 

afterwards sIp de ice 4 at and ont te Ka —— 3 owt set ake watt a 

cattle lookin 8 roe oer pe 2 to make beef in the shortest time, a » A g i i many 
...... . 
k may look "said he, dayi 25 her cts; and he had no dou e neglec sd 2 : 
“bat = lost se —. — s 5 ings es * co cause of the losses spoken of, Now, he agreed | economy which a judicious se ele — by a — 2 
die alm out tactantly, un og kih sa m. entirely with Mr. Byenke his ob are all 83 
he built — tne buildings, of mixing the different manures, andin practice he carried sons in wisely providing, during a — . kaa To for. 

s frie 


ance 
„ and put cattle | it out, for he piia tank as large as that room, in which the 
nd, snd I — manure from these boxes, — stables, the Piggeries, and the | future necessities. 
were — = in 2 mixed with a} mt The ng provident habits, however, requires to- 
valuab 


* be more and prominent 
n the importance of *economising manure, eng TS aad non of the above Address, 
pe ; er 


that the tales wo 4 
fed cattle died of — ugs, fa 
k thi mM; 180 

velty say that the — remade 
so much in value that it more than 
ed , Warnes 


th 
mall tock seen on x A 
8 9 but he able disproportion in umber okt baiting 
me was coming when the farmers would take less | classes who are able bat do not 8 5 p those whe 
a repeat, a a vast n 


9 


q te e 
tain A t cultivated, and moo esse! at 
ten ti kè ‘ i i 
e, and this and p the 8 . which tended to raise rents rather too the poland classes w a 05 hes they have comparatively 
being the impene by which — ly a and injuriously. It would lead to a better system wages, out of which they might spare something, 
N least doubt whatever that ther, There would be more profit for the farmer, the pd never lay aside anything. They are content, year 
* 4 e more . . 3 eee a "ig er year, gene ernten generation, to go on in the 
ere in fact the consumers of the beef, pork, and nea called “from hand to mouth,” and being liable 
o best mot which the animals | mutton, which the farmer 1 ; Z e — She any day vf — out of work they . sure to 
meth prepa g at chain, and could not affect oni n chari this there m be some 
tes for our guidance an ad- whole.—Mr, W. Horney said he certainly felt indebted to Mr. sea 81 5 hi Surel * 
—— 3 Blacktie, in | Wilkins tor his excellent pon t there were some parts | r 
of man made | that he did not at all agree with the Sora gee of stock. 2 a of the — 
t tha Sy pr . 9 He thought when he talked of 3 the buildings he had e do not all- but how many might, 
oga described for the cultivation of land and the fatting of stock, 3 oo rag * friendly 80 
a tha pigs should con- | the best method would be to have the entire yard enclosed, and | institutions as gs’ y ; 


jee. 


à 
5 


334 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [May 26 
up aga’ ainst sieckness—might provide for the d decline of POTATOES,—Soutawankk, “Warensipr, May 21. FRIDAY, mar aa —The supp ly —— 
ihe might I keep themselves independent of the p „, The Committee Fotoni that the Continental arrivals continue and foreign, during the ig y of aig both English 

z » * to b un demand, which has been heavy k has bee 
thus S ty—migħt assist themselves in during e past week; and wit me samples lower prices the attendance thi ing was al oderate, buj 
7 ways . out in the t referred have — 3 a The following are this day’s quota- | sho ing a general disinclination to ll, buyers 
e home more happy— and might place | tions: :— Yorkshire iy 200s. to — Scotch Cups, 140s. was limited, an 0 purchase, business 
themselves in a more a position than they too | 1 15 Wh hites, 200. te, 100s. ; Freno Hg 808, to 308. ;| with sales, excepting at * could be 
Durch do., 80s. to 10 NOs. ; Belgian, 80s. to 9 > pting at a reduction made 
— pa are at present, for becoming kind husbands is a slow sale, unless at 6d. per qr decline ev. 
ul servants, exam ache Peas are unalt i i Beans 
ns ae — tł. Henee the duty of pressing o 2 1 0 Monnit May 31. and Monday’ orod invalao. The Cii trade is — 
$ The number of Dasi is large on Monda yoa Trade ays rates obtained with dificul 
the pet ae poor = eee of connecting them- is very heavy, owing to the warm 2 —4 mp w — attend- Corn arri i good demand ty.— Indisa 
selves with these ins [ance Ki bayers is, however, considerable, vod a fair cae is| readily taken at y E fre A nd fine Galatz iy 
neue ee EE of anen? ar | Foma the 180 to the 22d inclanivey bary ea a 
A Lixcotnsuraxz Rorariow: P P says, “ As — are making in | ower, but there i tio e ri A "of fat polled to have been general, but the last d 1 
Lincolnshire a wretched price 14% per qr., can yen t tell me | Sheep. e eis pons at Tate rates. The demand | Although we hear the 1 Aer two Were fine, 
of a good te. for another season often sow Oats | for Calves is Aine’ small, and our top quotation bob beg — of in f th < EVS spoken 
on a Clover lea previous to Wheat, but what think realised. m Holland py 1 there are 2 some of the heavy land districts, general] P 
Beans? C vious to Wheat dents say if they bave | 600 Sheep, and 128 Calves; from Norfolk and Suffolk, 2100 the erops are reported to have Y Speaking 
— such a course, Viz., — drilled, on a Clover — the goth from Scotlan 2 . ie co j te weather, and looking well. 9 
d i order and to be follow y Wheat?” [Do yo 3 —s s and th 
5 — in fhe fen — 3 y s Soots, ue HE: est Lor nel g 19 tot 2 n the L tAn — ten fa, » and although 
ARLEY © e are not aware oes ways turn < ane i . —3 6 
llo der such cireumst m 4 17 7 1 Best Short-horns 3 2—3 4| Ewerd d quant 8 0-3 8 the scanty su lie s occasioned 
2 ona 1 and ie wili soon > green pen nyo — 1 1 2 6—3 0 — Sho a ity E 87 tie ae ams + the provincia markets, yeg ig 
ertainly, rience regarding li d guano i est Dow ambs .5 0—5 10 ‘elromships 
certai: ly , Jour experie ne g lime and g s quite Half brods 1— . without accepting a decline of fully ls. per 
Box.reepine : Hibernicus. | Plans are in preparation , but lest Ditto Shorn 3 10! Pigs 5 6)™ illers s being unwilling to accede to late Tn own 
2 should ae Beasts, 3350 ; Sie anil i Lambs, 25, 5070 “Calves, 171; Pigs, 310, the competition 3 sustain from F n to 
of a set of bo this Tae.. It was very cheaply erected ay "lie dow se cling a 1 Ten E Flow, 
—— = and Ae = perap about 6 feet hig h, — — Pinks ve z9 being supply of] Beats; buyers * . r iced 3 in value „ pring com i dot 
— — s. e e subsoil is a svi elay. * o Supported one a choice Scot occasionally 4 shaken k 8 The — 
the wall posts were plan 1 eto —— n | number of Sheep is paa th LIVE 
on a level with the top 2 the wall, top of —— per 8 lbs. mor * Ma onda; ~ ay ats pi hinds a sup plies sinc Nag. e had very modent 
with a set of strong m top . — uared at the | demand at a little more mone ay. — 8 Pa — tiful, but is in hawk 10 ce — i * gs weather continues v fine, and 
ends so as to rest, and admit of being r nailed, *. the uprights, supply of Calves ; tr a 5 4d, thet bi Arent yas — — i fm i mate, 
jx bog from * —.— maps shew g pole ole on pus . Ibs s several remain 8 — Fan Holland . Ger. — 3 but rather lower for Flour. No change Pt 
* 2 * fo 
* ewe o y p eakad mailer larch — persa — ang 7 yg dd and 151 Mile . ld “for 5 rather | wes money. ‘wena aa small ore ea m 
w 00 3 0 es * 
wise a is of fa . ya ch are thatched — This was — fords, &e. 3 6 Dias snd 1 1 3 $ J Corn, which fo wie at am advance of Gd. om Yellow, and 
nto boxes, one in each of the intervals Best Short-horns 3 2—3 4 aes 2 
poles, thus: From each beam there descended | 2d quality Beasts 2 6 — 3 0 Due Shora 10 2 9 — H 4 Wueat. |B. 0 
two uprights to the ground, in which they were sunk to est Downs Lambs ier oo babiel Pma o 
depth of 18 inches. One of these uprights 8 feet from breds. 1 2 4 Calves 5 ae at ae 0 4 oge 94167 9 — 
eee Ma 1 „ 
was an u t ut 3 feet from each * i 5. ts, 7 
from the front beam to the ground. These oe ond coe E e ms ewa Lambs, a550; Calves, 585 ; Figs, 270. 3 5 E 16 8 22 4 2331 1 
formed the framework, against whieh three or four horizontal 4 % „ % % % „„ 
being nailed, 3 the sheds née separate box RK LANE, a — 2 „ I 
— A — one of the Nr that in which is — Moxpax , May 21. —The supply of English Wh 80 MA alte 1 
8 uprights 3 faat sig Ao either side of it, stands | this morning was small ; nevertheless, owing to the Aggreg. Aver. | 45 3 28 8 ff sja 1 
and from t to —+ e — — , tinued large arrivals of foreign Wheat and Flour, Putten on Fo- 
8 * ‘which is i dilea to pa height of about 3 feet | little progress could made with the sale until a ions of cae Y wis ee oft 9 
= ow san —7— = n bo ore ae 2 * ig . cline of fully Is. per qr. was submitted to, at which the Fluctu apea in the last six weeks’ Corn Averages, 
three months, if put in — — taken out t fat, — 4 soem — late hour. Fine foreign an rean 2 shag Bo 3 ce — — — 
after e o va commands last week’s| 46s 94 
are sr 215 el of the ground. The whole labour here need re but ortini ary quali ties — white were difficult 46 0 
ce 2 2 Merthyr. Urine may be applied undiluted in dhe 2 — at some reduetion.— Barley, 44 
wos wether ; ba bat t ir th * — pe 1 — = im our quintile ms of last k. 2 8 
Ar ual tity of ‘i sga ing held for | be — =f 
gang a and 2— LA r Kaw — ty 2 ven * the g a as alight advance checks sales, 44 
slr : 5 ams London. | Liverpool. Wakefield. Boston. 
cov vant GARDEN, i „ May 14 May 21] May 15. May 22. M 
F A Drag n 3 sre phèn ar. ar. | 70 1b 70 lbs, 2 4 we 4 so May 23 
ered but ince our N 
few Cherries have made mito m eee aie New, red S &.| 8 S. |S. 4. s- djs. d. s. dys o . 
—, Nuts in 3 are — — bad the demand. 3 red ges 45—4 9 7 306 10 7 4(43—51 13-51 45—50 gE 
2 de obtained at from 9d, to 38. a bunch, — — white i 3 a pe 5 7 oe £ 7 a 3 
from 28. Broccol ffici : 8 —50 —50 — mart 
1 rg Be A 8 Fereign.... ... — 36—55/4 6 8 3/4 6 8 039—51ʃ39—51 
from wall ha their appearance. Potatoes are 480 Ibs. barrel „ ee eee ee be 
dearer. New Potatoes fetch from 6d. to 28. per pound. Let- Rye New 22—24 22—24 — 
tuces er salading are sufficient fo be mand, Forei 22 S TE 2 RA 25 mae 
Mushr are plentiful. Cut Flowers quiet Re F gn... —23 22 — 23 * * = a — — 
Pelargoniums, Camellias, — . Lily of the Valley, * oreign meal |6/.—71}61.—71 1 0 ig = 
varias, Tropeolums, Fuchsias, and Roses, Barley— ö 1 pe 25 225 
n 7 r T — faz o3l23 931049612496 
Grapes, hothouse, p.lb,5s.tol0s | — per 100, Ts to 14 ting. . 25—2925—29 30s—32s | 30s—32s |27—32/27—3: ; 
. À s Foreign. : 2|27—32|28—30/28—30} 
— P. on., — ap vip S * eve [I9—29 19—29 — ii 428 24—28 
— kitchen, p- beh. 4 to $s. | Walnuts 18 6a Malt—Shi e al 
Gooseberries, green, per pottle, | — 1 Ship. | — — — — (39-42) — — 
ee 6, 4, 16 e W fg P bush, 208 t0 228 | gargè Whi 45. 45 Ibs. 28 
. 6a To ie Gob, h. Moim, 90s to1s0e| Black... 1926) 1926/28 923s Odi2sl0d3s 3d) — | — 14201420 
SuPer . bete | = Brazil, 5. bsb., 12s Fon Pea CCC 
P. peck, | orega }15—20/1 4 7 F 
Cabbages, p. doz., 9d to 18. Gd Peas Boil m r r. 
— a 2 — 8 ers 26 32426 34s— 348— 28. soles 9 or 
to 2s 6d a A „b. doz., 1s 6d to 4e Grinding... 232623 i 
Broccoli, white, p. bun., 2 to4s oer ee Foreign |24 —.— 27 —28s | 27—288 | — | — | — = 
— brow, p er bundle, 6d | Shallots, per Ib., 10d to 18 30—33 | 30—33 | — | — | — | — 
j - 
34—3634—36 
a 
2- — — 
ne. 1 — 
By 
Carrots, p. don. Bun., 5s to 66 = . ‘ont 
Spinach p. sieve, 9d to 18 P; p 
— |(32—38)32—38 
i 
apts.) Aver. Aver. | 
A qrs. Se d. 
11597 |44 11 | 2142 
5 — — 
2277 14 3610 
— — 
1400 31 10 270 
443 i — “itn 


i 


ES 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZ&TTE. 


Sales by 8 
LEMEN, FLOR 

HEROE . MORRIS wiil aal 
ez art, Bartholome w-lane, on THU 


, Essex. 
— e e TOL 
pROT EHE 
favoured with 


ROE ano MORRIS are 
instructions by the Executrix of the late 
Auction, on the Premises, Paradise- 


: sell ESD A Y, 29th May, his superb collec- 
3 — CABINETS, * 
i made at f money and time, 


| 
* 
8 
S 


2 en to thei — the premises ; of the — 

Catalogues } ad on 

been; and of the Auctioneers, American Nursery, 
HED ORCH 

W STEVENS begs to 8 that he will 


at his Great Room, 38, e e = 
o’cloc 


P. 
are ood varieties, most of the favourite 
— land cn Wednesday, and Catalogues had. 

TNERSHIP.—An opening i T greenen in an 

1 ES : „to any Gentle- 

experience the will be required to 

— ee eal to “700L., or advantageous — will 

be to any party who can take a — ~ manage- 

pos ae ith a view 

— a hi will be 

6. Hl, Be eg prepaid, care 
Firs 25 th, 


e bod a Pa 
ARM. No one need apply who cann omm: and i in 
Stock and Money 25000. nar lg b letter, prira care — che 
— — Chronicle, 5, Upper Wellington 
street, 


10 NUsERYMEN, GARDENERS, AND OTHERS, 
Lee BE SULD, on Advanta agegjis Terms, the re- 
made othe LE ASE of a small, e 


e is well worthy of notice. For particulars, 
tor-street, Chancery-lane, London. 


tol 
IMPORTANT TO LANDOWNE TENANTS FOR LIFE, 
2 i008 OF DRAINING AND IM. 
THEIR ESTATES. 


TH TORS OF THE LANDOWNERS 
ENGLAND AND SOUT 


LK PANS, PROPAGATING GLASSES, &c. 
JAMES PHILLIPS & CO. beg to hand their reduced 
prices, as follows : 
GLASS MILK PANS, 
* N . each og 82 i 


33 s: 
23% # » 3 0 i 5 * 
ee BEE CUCUMBER TUBES. 
ES GLASSE 
2 in. diam., each * 2d—0 va 24 inches long .. 2s. 
3 —0 22 3 oie eee 
4 33 ” 0 5 20 1 8 
5 j 0 23 eee eee 
7 z „ ET ET: S chow 
è 0 10 —1 
8 b ne they K 
9 ” jk WAL Sf z . * 
14-20 
it » : Piece eit 55 
12 2 0 —3 6 Made to any length. 


PEA ACH GLA SSES TRAPS, 3s. 6d. p. doz 


10d. each. WASP 
LACTOMETERS for Ging the quality of 3 4 tubes, 7s. Gd. 
Ad , London | 


dress, 116, Bishopsgate-street Withou 


ARTLEY’S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS 
R CONSERVATO 


eb, 24t 
orms in which this Glass was spoken of by Dr. LIND- 


p 
+, „each 48. Od 
4 6 


would a ‘the 


LE 
cisely with those of the Patentee, 
att nee, Gentry, and ae 


paie Nobility 


squares wader Sby6 ...... 4d. p 
8 by 6 bandes 10 by 1 neg 10 5 8 88 14 y 10... 5d. 
14 pits „ 13 foo 15 fo 35 3 feet.. 6d. 
3 feet „ 4 fee 1 te. 4 * 5 5 feet. 7d. 


A full List of Prices and every information may be had by 
applying to JAMES PHILLIPS and Co., Hortic eg Glass Ware- 
hou e, 116, Bishepsgate-street Without, Londo 


335 


2 khia: RUBBER PIPES ta 


8 8 
n 
4 


, and o 
any length * n Hose, 
5 with brass taps, * — cm ta neh, and roses complete, ready 
o be attached to pumps, water-butts, or 8 Sole Man 


5 r, James LINE HAN cock, Goswell- mews, Goswell-road 
ond 

Jam E Hancock invites the attention of parties using 
long patio of FLEXIBLE GARDEN RORE to his yek 
ACTING HOSE-PIPE REEL, which will be found a most con. 
venient machine for readily winding up le conveying away 
the hose when —— ai syne By it ae liquid E is easily 
distributed fro — N. B. kee = sed Ind a-rubber 
washers of all siris, Tor. join nts or hot-water and — pipes, 
and Vulcan ised = ae any daina for all kinds of 
jo oints, an and other ihis — 


ty AND DURABLE RO ROOFING. 
BY HER 


MAJESTY’S | PATENT. 


NG 
House m Buildings, Shedding, ream ops, and for Garden 
purpore, 2 protect Plants from Fro 
t the — eat Tauon: al a bt Ke Shows, it is this Felt 


GLASS. 


SS MILK 


HOMAS MILLINGTO is . — Foreign 
Sheet Glass, very seinad to any other nt 2 in z . t, 
= be cai nd 200-ft. € of large dimen 16-0 
, Or cut to size ia 8 not — 40 ireke, pe 33d. 
per fost. British Plate Glass for Windows as well as for Hor. 
icultural purposes, from 18. 2d. to 2s. per foot. No gentlemen 
should — a this great additional improvement to their 
reside! 


which 
Prizes, — is the Pelt SOLEL 
AJESTY’s Woops ND FORESTS, 
HONOURABLE BOARD OF roa 
mom ties — — I 
HONOURABLE COMMISSIO: 
Her M 


obtained — * SILVER MEDAL 
adopted by 


n 
land, New , Northumbe 
the late Earl —— 

and at the ROYAL AGRICULTURAL So CIETY’S 
square. 

It is half the price of any other description of Roofing, and 
effects a great saving of Tim truction of Roofs. 
Made to any length by 32 inches wide. 

Price One Penny Pex Square Foor, 
Sa amples, with Directions for its 1 and Testimonials 
of | seven parde EU 1g p — 5 “hg 
tlemen, hitee 


— Works in London 
or Great Britain where the above Rootes 4 is made, are 
F. M‘NEILL anp CO. 8 


WEST OF ES LAND Patent Felt Manufactory, Lam b’s- bu aes, 9 
DRAINAGE AND“INCLOSURE COMPANY, established 1844 London, i 3 be con 
pret: pr by Act of liament, are prepared to u A aide a new Vice-Chancellor’s Couns, ; at the en to 
dertake all works of Drainage or Irrigation of Lands a nster Hall, were roofed with F, M. NETLL and 00.21 Co.’s Felt abi 
general improvement of Estates, either a fixed price per Estimates 87, Bishowrg of Prices forwarded on application at the — years since, under the Surveyorship of Chas. 2 
We Geniale on the outlay, the landowner having Warehouse, 87, t Without, London. R. A. Ber Majesty’s Commissione: Woods and F. ard 

— — pas through his hands: They are so satisfied with the —.— that ghey have ordered | 
at a a Mortgage or security of the property URNIP MANU mittee Rooms at the Ho of Parliament to be roofed with 
the improvements. ITY OF LONDON PORTABLE MANURE COM- | their — Quantity ö used, 24, 000 feet. 

— 204 owners of limited interests in lands PANT. —The Managers of this Company beg to call the Norz.—Consumers sending om to the Factory can be sw sup- 
heb mi gee . charge the — 4 of * attention of Agriculturists to their “ COMPOUND BONE AND — in lengths best suited to r Roofs, so that they pay for 
farm and ae — ent improvemen n ng 1 ma LM d Swede a 8 W ee for pod . 5 — of n th m £ Roofs, 
Whatever their wenden nd all owners or — of land, | turnips and Swedes, ded ble fertiliser, unlike the in : T the Fel 5 * 

, for the purpose, contains not elt. 
Permanent ren na 2 — this Company, obtain a ganic T ende 7 i 
üt of outfall, for urpose of Drainage, through | only the 3 and sulphate of lime, but a large per- 

— other person, ‘paying for the — thereby | centage o 5 characteristic principle of th 5 pouriann D CEMENT, — Testimonials — pws 
the Inc) in case of ‘objection only to the decision of | and every other constituent, organic and mp which all quarters, proye EMENT to possess rare p 

The Commissioners, enters into the composition of that roo tis powerful | perty of withstand p — — T aaar 
the kingdom, ae cienco this š> Company has had in all parts of | vegetative stimulant, — advancing the ro at atthe earliest 8 r to every o 
dertake work aa P large extent of its staff, enables it to un- | period of its growth, thus placing it beyond th and 
by individual of any extent with facilities seldom attainable | attack of the Fly. ICES: or nae 

—— re tors, For Turnips and Mangold 1 n my paint. 
— Tomas Ae obtained on application to the Potatoes —4.— a 1 a aI E 
Še Company's Agen 1 9, Bedford Circus, Exeter; of Barley, Oats, Rape, e, Ge. 1 
Surveyor, Watford 1 ap C. F. Hommert, Land Agent and | inclu Pak packages, delivered ety any London ` Wharf = Rail. 2 
2nd Drai ger, Copmantherpe near Torn. | way Station. Quantity per acre, m —— ETCALFE ano Co.’s NEW PATTERN TOOTH. 


FE 


Pr yard at prices varying from 4d. to 1s, 
. — ps oa — 

t sive paint. 

Fe highest and m most 3 character, 

asto the o ears, enable the advertiser to k 
. e article. Apply to 


Gloucester; gay bert 
atthe Maontuotory anon? Stoke Ferry, y 


m ORTICULTURAL DOUBLE 


e e and remittances to be sen TEVENS, ELLER- 


AN, COLEMAN and Co., at the * s Works, Queen's in 


Choreh-street — End — 3 For particulars app 
the — * W. WEITE, ricultural a — ee ordi: 
Chemis lo Hon, .. < She York ers’ ib, | 1 


author ot — — s True Wealth, or gece 
relatio and to Mr, C. F. ELL 
‘Sanita — — — — 
N. B.— I. — proprietors and farmers are invited to 
the works. 


Matters in their 
N, author of 


BRUSH a — A SPONGES,—The Tooth-Brush 
has thei antage of 
t | divisions 


enetrating Hair- 


sian bristles, which do not soften like c 


URBIDGE ame HEALY respeectfull 
their —— e Public, they are at thie ae ne pre 
—— of Hothouses, & c., upon 


Rae 5 * 


0 6 
dirt, purchase th 
growing 

im ed prin- 


e ikust 
EDWARD Lacey, 


a BEDDING, — 


erior system of Hot Water 
— ea places, where 
orks, 
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. 
Horticultural ma gen 
the large Con 


lers 
Large Conserv. ey, * Botanic € Gardens Regent’s-park, 
Duke of Devonshire’s, Chatsworth Gard i 


the new 


Earl of — 
Earl of Zetland's, — Yorkshire, 
— Hanbury, Esq., Poles, near Ware, Herts, 


A tus, They re 3 to = uine 
they hare Co. 


am-green, 
And at least 500 other important places. 
BURBIDGE and HEALY, 130, Fleet-street, London. 


qua 
7 A bapi me — COWS and HEIFERS, down 
yo r side, « in milk some small 


Hampton-street, Bir- 


35 — —— 17 0, 
mingham, sole of the —2 — pg se — 
8 


their lasting durability ean de 
in 1 
seat enue, and, when dry, a permanent — — 


** Eth 3a ec N. Af. „ 4 a 


COMFORT FOR TENDER FEET, AND A CERTAIN 
CURE FOR CORNS anD BUNIONS. 
AUL’S EVERY 3 FRIEND, 


by the Royal F core bility, &. 
PAUL’S EVERY a seh why gives relief on the 
first application. Paul’s Every Man’s Friend (Corn Plaister) is 
ally tted to be the — emollient application for 
— and is worthy of a on part of „ 
who are with such unpleasant companions, Testi- 
have been received from upwards of 1 Physicians 
and Surgeens of test eminence, as well as from many 
officers of mazes Army and Navy, and nearly 1000 private — 
from the gentry in town and country, speaking in high te 
of this valuable — Pox, 


39, Gosw. 
pegate Hannay and Sag a Oxford. stree 
— @ 


ding 
en inde; 133 and C él, 
p Whose Bs dere er 


ee Ta tein agin: 


336 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


REDUCTION IN PRICE OF BOILERS. 


URBIDGE anp HEALY begs 3 to infot 


their Friends, in consequence of reduced p 
— iron, they a enabled to * ake a ime “bl e "reduc tide 't 
the price of th idles. rhe orice will be, no 
10 ahari ita 50 ft. 4 in. pipe es ps 15 0 
12 1 do. 75 ft. 4 in. do, .. „0 
14 in. do. 00 ft, 4 in. do. 2 15 0 
16 in. do. 150 ft, 4 in. do. 3 10 0 
18 in. do 250 ft. 4 in. do. 410 0 
21 in. do. 350 ft. 4 in. do. 5 10 0 
241 do, ed n, do. Ot eK | 
New PATTERN Berus. 
in, will warm he Cn —— pipe 13 15 0 


36 in do. n. do. 25 0 0 
All Boilers alts Pa. — uar 17 to 18 in., Ga. extra; to 24 
t 


in., 10s. ga bove, the mos pn 
ibo, Flee „London, May 2 
ALVANISED WIRE GAME NETTING.— 
d. per yard, 2 feet wide, 


fr. G. Dow 
BUDDING’ 8 1 MACHINE FOR 9 LAWNS, 
PLEASURE GROUNDS, BOTETE 23 &. 
MANUFACTURE 
RABEE anp SON 8, "Phonix Jron Works, 
roud, N aipa Engineers, Millwrights, Ma- 
Brass Founders, and Manufacturers of 


3 —— 


Eeg on an 
Agricultural Implements. 


ae Machine may be worked by persons y who cannot use a 
8 


and niform surface than can be produced by the most 
kilfal mower. The Grass may be cut peiie dry, and may be 
collected 3 in the bor, — the garden 


t will be publis 

completed in Twenty n 
E 

HIS FORTUNES * I 
AND HIS GREATEST y 
By W. M. THACKER AY. * 7 
N 1 on Steel and By 
Lon : BRADBURY & Evans Be, — 


vo 


[May 28. 1 | 


75 17 77 ENTIFIC, NEW WORK BY THE AUTHOR OF pone 
GCHOOL FO R GENERAL AND SCIEN TIMC NEW WORK BY THE AUTHOR OF « VANITY Paine 
g 


1s. (tobe 


N 


E3; 1 
thor of “ Vanity Pair,” 


e Author, ie. de, 
— — 


PROF. 1 INTRODUCTION ? 
Just ge re tte * ay Beat 8vo, h Six 
00 5 on 24s, 

NTRODUCTION 1 
ofessor ate, 


y Pr 

Fourth Edition, wh 5 and n 
It has bee 5 —— tho 3 — 

* introduce 


ai Tolaki to Ve 
sent Edition 
blo 1. n: MAN, Brow 


TO BOTANY, 


‘loth, w 
Be 

that be 
State ig 


egetable 5 and Physiol 7 ia 
e be considered, in — ba 


RK ON enn aise 
Just published, pe 8vo, mih Illus sran (one , price 


1 


—— and at 


HE MANUFACTURE. OF SUGAR in the Colo. 


ome chemically considered, 


By Jons 


M.B. Lond., late Professor of Chemisty 
Aldersgate College of Medicine, t the 
ondon yemem BROWN, GREEN, and Lowcxams, 


PROFESSOR SCRLEIDEN’ 
Just published, * one vol. 85 po 


S BOT 


21s., cl 


N’S ANY, 
ag 1 Plates and Wood 


avin; 
a OF “SCIENTIFIC BOTANY AS 
AN I 


ae PAs he shake By D 

mises ot! Professor of fo 

Translated b y . LANK. —ä— M. D 

urer on Botany at the St. George s School a 
London 75 Brow 


SOLD, t 


r, M. 
R. S., 


J. 


ee — Bene of Jena, 
F.LS,, Lee. 

Medicine, 

, GREEN, and Loyomans, 


— POPULAR, TREASURIES. 


nlarged, p 


ompendiu 
TIF 


1 0 sU 8.90 


an Outline of Universal 


at — oe it — of the Belles-Lettres. 
E H 


THE HISTOR 
istory ; separa 
THÉ AORA PHIOAL. 


r 1 52 on. 
a 


REAS URY 
Universal e 7 88 above 10 12, wy 22 
ees ndon : LONGMAN, 


Galvan- Japanned to cut te PANA at | 
ized. Iron. the oct ore nient time, and 3 ‘sweepigg aft 1 85 
2.1 ~ in . Ce 7d. per yd. 5d. per yd. ee Ae" hile, „with the n abour, Enah an 
2. inc we grar Aas s merma E 9 N 45 65 e double the quantity of wor n be done tha za with a scythe, 
2inch 8 ng, 12 i 8 Upwards o 0 of these 8 are now i fas. They are 
1 light 4 1 s E y made of Aian sizes both for hand and 8 Sovak ad the 
: =a 2 prices this se have been l reduced. 
14 11 Messrs. un ae May, Ipswich, 5 eneral al 
"ite ide any width at proportionate rices, | Agents for — Middlesex, and the adjacent coun also 
If * dar. be ma 1 ae will er the ert one- | for Cambridgeshire, Northamptonshire, Lincolnshire, pe th 
TheM . 1 d by the foll I 
per square foot, . tte f: ded post-free. e Machines are also sold by the following Ironmongers: 
— toot, ay atas Forwarded ‘BISHOP, 2 Mr. W. Drury, Ca 1 Nee Messrs. Brot — Sess, 
Norwich, and delivered free of expen „Peter- | Cateaton-street, Manches ssrs. Mapplebeck and Lowe, 
borough, ] Hull, or Newcastle, Bull-ring, Birmin; mesi crab 2 Nelson and Sons 8, 47, Brig- 
n - te, Leeds ; a Johnson, Leicester; Messrs. and 
AYMAKING SEASON, —Haymaking „Machines, Spence, Shrewsbury ; Messrs. Sandars & Haywood; Derby ; 
8 at reversing action.—Mary WEDLAKE, t d Mr. Jobn Wigg esworth, Market-place, Nottingham, 
e eee a the RANDE’S ENAMEL, FOR FILLING DECAY- 


egs 
Akard kA r e the public generally, that t 
2 ia M oa eae ag aisha onma o of Wace N 
RY KE 


EDLA e Co., but — 
peat Benson 7 4. * 8 a x somewhat like 

cannot compare are with the ae ones in durability. 

Ms, Fi op ite Varti tine,- 


ING TEETH, AND RENDERING HEM SOUND AND 
n has, from its b mi pee 7 excellence, obtained 
pat po} ty at home and ab . Its curative agency is 
2 RY of the use of Tooth-ache, and 
cays nl success, Sold in packets, pricels by all Chemists. 
ufactured e~ JOH 


Copes PATENT IRRIGATOR $ & CATARACT. 
1 eee 
ary, where pa —— may PHEN 


LAND TAS 
greene 


i Gavia, Cabin. Steerage. 
14 * f Guineas. Guineas. Guineas. 
$ and u 45 25 18 
1 Year old 1 9 A < 2 
Under 1 Yer che old 1 100 z 
AN oe ed Surgeon is appointed by the Compan er 
Medicines, y. 
oe each 8 ical Comforts, and an am * Dieta ry provided 


Cabins are provided for 
assage in the 


ns paying i 87 full for ‘their own Pass — 
New or Freight, P House; or to Ee. Josera Sra ton, appi y ate 
Fenchurch-street, London. By ader Pn 0, 
Tuomas Cr 
cad Zealand House, 9, Broad. — — 5 


London, April 27, 1849. 


D CH EROS a aa 
CIGAR AND CHEROOT WAREHOUSES, | 


; Nos. 6, 7, 7, and 8, Pudding lane, Eastcheap, at 

¢ Monumen ; London -TUSA Mi toy. a Ga Union Cigars, 
5 — to 12s. 6d. 6d. per 98 : 

igars, 9, 3 115. 04. r “Gen 
FORET Hi f all makers, 
17s. êd., 190, 2085) . per Ib.; and sae, 
from fine Ehreti, 63. M N 
Pickwicks, 7s. 7s.; Havannab, 7s super, 

„ ees, Recompens cias, 
Lopez, alia, Ke. — Messrs. TosswILL and Co., 
Merehants, Importers, Manufacturers, have at all times à | and 
very large stock of Cigars and Cheroots of the finest qualities, 


London: Man N WILLIS, 24, oss 
aan Meat i 


Temple Chambers 
Bell . buildings, Salisbury «square, Sold by J: ekto nd 1 
son, 89 r Within; G. Colk, 29, Flewt-etrect: 
G. S. Pedler. Fleet-strect ; D. F. Watts, 1 fasort H. 
Burfield, Poceo, 180, St rand; Pyne, 333, T 
— * and Co., e Regent. street; <in ad n III ie 
treet, oe ingto Dempsey, 87, Whitechapel-road ; 
F Markha W. Monmouth- 
n, Fring 92 "eo swell-street ; 
Walters, Chemist,’ be age . 
Bell's- building W. T. Bol 


Fins Oxto 

there paa any dicheultz W obtaining it, it, enclose 13 st 
w Joux WILLIs Las Footy T and y e the genuine 
post. Foote 8 au — — ats 5 nials, with 
as: each packet, which contains 

enough enamel to fill several Teeth. Observe that the nam 

of taco ae is on the packet.—AGENTS WANTED 

UTION.—The great success of tbis preparation has induced 
unskilful persons to produce spurious imitations, 
N as gilt E ENAMEL Advertisements. It is 
guar 


sed therefore, h b 

that a name php ads te pril si re e K one 
EAD OF 

8 MACASSAR oik, 'insinuates its bal- 


d ; oe pes rishes the 
embryo z nei 8 "i pest cleanses it 
— and Dandriff, š Ea en it in maturity, and . 
— nae ey to tho Ia a lthy E 1 5 apa =y 


growth 


and rendering the use -comb * small 
pamphlet accompanies each bottle of RO WLAN DS! MACAS 
SAR wherein important hints and a 


— Family bottles (equal 15 four small), 10s. 
and AE that = 21s. per bo 
E e of the p tae eat article h ae the words 
ANDS’ MATAS SAR OIL 
Engraved in * lines on the W. er; and on the back of 
Wrapper nearly 1500 times, e 29,028 letters. 
A. 5 rem at 2 at %0, ES atton Garden, London, and by all 


RYTHING 2555 re fai ge AT . 8 


ae 
2 UFACTORY, , hag at te 
‘tooth, esh bri 


fittings, 
Ware, Ladies’ com 


and poci 
ied,” ak Dasha De — — cas 
. e e . infinity of 


Dictionary of 


TANT WORK ON BLIGHT, 


Just published, price 6d., 
Uustra el with wood-cuts, the 


The om 
each — — = tail pieces, after t 
Bewick, are scattered 
ook. Jerrold's Weekly New 
„The most charming — 
— days of good old Gilbert White. 
y of consultation by all gardeners 
sino the ow ema ed of these 
ing 1 
den January, 1849. 


6, 1849. 
“na 


lleeti f: tå 


ations À 
i t rio Kis Sette are es nn. 
i Arepa fain us eg x, ae — 


ETERS OF j ut sme of the ON BLIGHT.— 


through 5 delight — 
ary 6, 


N, GREEN, and LONGMANS. 
cloth boards, and beautifully 


facts are perfectly 
observation, Vana 


pocain them ~ strongly.” ond 
Farner? Jow r nuary 20, 
„A very amusing and lostruetive volume.” — Chamber ie 
urgh eee mcrae ef 3, 184 extant of b 
his work contains by. far the best account extant by the | 
insects which 5 injurious to vegetation, and and knows $e 
name of blight: the descriptions are no — 
their er than for — pop pular — and graphic 


An 
Tandai JOHN eo Vooner „ Pa 
CHEAP COPIES OF 

nly 4l, 4s., publish 
va aha S ARBORETU 
BATAN 

Native and F 

tion, ara 


above 400 Plates and upwar 
u a 
to 14s., published 
| T ageet 8 COMPLETE W 
SCAPE GARDENING ae LAN 
n, 


„ €x 


at II. 


ternoster- ron. 
F VALUABLE BOOKS, 


105. 
ORES ON 122 


„ 


po rative Anatomy ; 8 “nF 
ö „ from the last 800 
heets of Colou red Plates, 8 vols. 8v0, 


py ® 


as when sold A1 the 
A eee ap se 
; ISTORY, 
une, * 3 Covent-g2 
—B — 
Pf Fane aaa x a 
Newington, both in the County 


1 
z 
— 


: "Beats and Max 26, 1849, 


© aie 2 3 
KS 2 d. will be 


ert at 141, Bo 


ME GARDENERS’ CHRONICLI 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


1 ¿d Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.— The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


e, Mes 
— — w — — for 12 new Roses 
blooms. Mr. E. Denyer, — — —— ditto. to 
stem. Also 


f e ght ted 


repaid application. 
15 8 assurance that all po a they may be favou! 

will meet Mead strict attention A reference or remittance is 
unknow ene: -V. SCHEBRTZER and 
Sons, N in Hollan 


ULUS RUBINUS. 
n., NURSERYMAN, Keighley, York- 
r. Clapham with plants 


OHN CA RER. pe 


SEEDLING PELARGONIUM 


Gardeners’ Chronicle of May 19 
terms. 


ih ce lants of is pee t of Ten New 
which he can strongly recommend, 5l. the . 
Set of Eight, price 25s, Descriptive Cata 


0 . H. has a fine stock of — 
Fa sias, Petunias, Verbenas, Anagalli 
Gaillardias, Pentstemons, — e n 
Ae. dc., which he offers at 4s., 6s. and 8s, per doz. 
DD Ramsgate, 


XRIITION OP AER RICAN cette at the po Botanic 


Be, 
—Your seedling has flowered, and proves 
It has by far a 1 and hand- 
somest flowers w ever seen on any M 
5 C. will . a ya plants to dispose of — ue aes * in a 
ort eet 1 gaan due notice will umber | 


plants wil y limited, an early Spplication j is necessary. 
Orders will be executed i in the rotation in which they are 
ceived, we ittance is requested from unknown ps. Seka 9 

ents. * om yes ade allowance of one plant over for, every 
thoes 


5 BEDDING PLANTS, —GERANI 


1 0. Gardens, ine tan 2s dozen, out of pots, good com: and 
J. LEE re respectfully rm their friends and | plants. Verbenas, eight t varieties, 1s. 6d. per dozen, 
iara = in an a ied sith h Free! ig ckets ne visiting | Cuphea pa Nierembergia, dou bie dark 9 Lo- 
belia, blue; scarlet Sal 
- „H 15, Mia — pi ts. Catalogues 8. on tho rece ‘of one postags 
- Hayes, Hank, 
ESR in x TAPONIOA & 5 INGS. 
M TANDISH à D NOBLE having still| QELECT. BEDDING -P ANTS. — 100 CHOICE 
beg to pe of the above splendid tr BEDDING — ag for II., suitable for 
e tong plants at the annexed low prices :— open er ummer, such as A inume, ves 
nn each, 36s, oe Sesame: 127. 10s. per i: nas, Petunias, Salvi nec Lantanas, 
a am 100, each; 18 to 24 inches, 7s. 6d.; 24 Cupheas, Heliotropiums, í llarias, | 
Tho jia bd. a upwards, eibet to size: Agathzas, Veronicas, Chænostomas, Calceolarias, Fi 4 
ery von a iinit 8 le time go planting out, and | &c., too numerous to enu erate, y packed in damp moss, 
— Sent out by Messrs, S. and N. W ats handsome, | carriage paid to London; smaller quanti may had at 
*pecimens.— Bagshot, Surrey, Jun 25. 6d, to 38. 6d. per dozen, post free, on receipt of the amoun 
na. with the order, from BensaMIn W. Saag IGHT, Florist, &., 
VERBENAS sent out A Tivoli, near St Leonard's-on-Sea, Suss Printed directions 
Anne, A cer, —— ae tome B 8 y, pci treatmen pir om . N oi plants ‘ 
> , Burgun = - a Ears tars e 
Duchess, Giantess, Lady Ru — Monarch, (A UPER ERBENAS 72 7 1849.— 
. Shape Lady, Princess, Queen of the | O PRINCESS ALICE, white, deep cherry ce 


Maid, Wynne’s Princess Alice, 
al urple, following six 


The 


BEAUTY OF STOWE, blush ground, bright piak centre, 


eep rose, 


2 
No #1849] SATURDAY, JUNE 2. [Paice 6d. 
j 2 i CEDRUS ae ed 15 5 148. CEDAR OF EORGE BAKER announce his i 
34% ¢ Hints — eurs è of AMERICAN 3 i — 2 ow in bloom, a 0 de 
. 340 b | Hoe-rak e eee eee 1 d, un e spring ring of | s een Gratis. He has 
349 a | Ireland’s s regeneration s. ssepe 342 4 ts P 
* 341 6 | Iron hurdles, paint for.. . . . 342 e 1848, a number of s of this new and beautiful —— s Park, whic “ier. oe 
4 343 b | Lime, use of.. . .. 3:7 e species of hardy CEDAR, by 7 “alae imported direct trom 1 of the Soc: Nursery, 6 
p e | Magar sage a of ... 348 5 | Mount Atlas, offers them to the trade at the following reduced | Surrey, near Staines Statioh, Windsor Railway, June 2. 
dr ena. . . ...er, $42 e prices. Strong 1 nee 5 Are REDDING PLANTS M . gerd 
2 b Paint foriron ses... * 342 0 per dozen.— 
3l 6 Eees for — . m x. — $11 6 Scarlet and other Geraniums, Verbenas, — „ Fuch- 
za c | Plants, diseases l. eee 12 „ sias, Cupheas, rong seer cen 
343 c ARIA ue p TTT “oo r ts in pots at e- per dane 
‘ota’ „ 4 
; 15 — sen, origin Of . 38 5 ER tt Rede —.— ee NOx DISEASED, 
350 a e hoe . 1. op N LOWERING 1 PLANTS, QAKLEY-SQUARE, m 
300 è Tee Ta Soa ye 3 an — KIxad's-ROA sEA.— This Exhibition will in high per- = . WARINGTON, of th w Corn 
4 340 e . 5 . 341 e | fection during the ensuing week. Admission One Shilling. on, has a few Sacks 44 * or“ 5 WHITE E BLOSSOMS * 
348 0 Trees, age Of . . . . . . ++ 339 The Exhibition this year contains some Spoons Ere er —— 20 T4108, which h some a 
32 Tulip Show, Amateur ` 343 2 | of the now justly admi ein TRIBE ; thes of thems tleman of ape oy m Norfolk, and they. have 
ge Whoa ba ten ames ` 348 i 1 y one who is — — — exhibited the slightest symptom of disease; the grower 
1 e Turni ips, = 
< 342 ¢ | Verbena peg gs . . 342 © | SOME » of the finest plants ‘that can be purchased, * has always Ps them during the first and second week 
deutete 340 5 Me n ML ATERER is also cipal contributor to the Show in the | June, and they have yielded excellent crops. 75. 
. — 8 Ww * ... 342 a Regent's Park, per cwt., including bag; and — 3 fi on of 
sont verbena. hen * The ma ao 5 So thin th Western ale 8 post-office order, or cash, for the a 
ing near the Wo 1 2 5 st Rai T Terre r OQRASS SERDS 
Nor 80 SOUTH LONDON FLORI CULTURAL American Plants there are n their best, and may be seen | NATURAL SUTTON anp SONS "PERMANENT PASTURE, 
_. SOCIETY. aily, Sundays excepted, gra A ere n ving fi en Bk years. 
Tader the of Her Most Gracious Majesty the QuEEN pai pot a 4 2 eee oe suit- 
THE ITION this season of the above Society SCHERTZER AND = FLORISTS = et able — = aying d fo. Fe ermanent 
will take placeat the ROYAL * ZOOLOGICAL GAR- MEN, Haarlem, in Holland, beg to inform thei | Pasture, can * excellent ee to Er 
DENS, on 1, the 12 e, A xhi- — ‘he Trade that — . Catalogue of Dutch Pike wane = at 25s. per . ixed 3 Boo to suit pe e solh o * * 
bitors, when Prizes will be —.— for the fi uc- out, and can be had, o They | mixture of sorts — $0 : 


weed 218. per acre, 


*,* Carriage free to London, segs or Basingstoke. 
Reading Seed Warehouse, Reading, Berks, 
PLANTS OF CABBAGE, SAVOY, ŒE KALE. BROCCOLI, 
CAULIFLOWER, AND CELERY. 


— 3 p 
mat and package in 

e, Savoy, pare Kale, rim 

All the of autumn an 


NURSERYMEN 
AND FLORISTS TO 


SEDIS, PLANTS, VERY STRONG FOR BED- 
aS Sat nxn the finest varieties of V 
hinums, Calceolarias, C 
Heliotro, 


rg ete) 
een 
THE F 
-PANS — 
. F 
YENEL AND ow also e executing orders 
“the above, in strong —— plants, at the following prices. 
1 aay ob AND PENI £ s. d. 
— pairs — very fine proc "n * — and 1 10 0 
s. and 3 0 0 
iz pairs of 3 and — first class che Rates 4 0 0 
it ditto ditto ..5 0 0 
mixed border Carnations, 12s. per doze airs. 


PINKS.— Finest first class show varieties, 12s. pe 18s, per 
doz 

OPANSIES SIES.— Finest first class show. flowers, 10s. and 18s, 

r dozen 
pe UCHSIAS.—The newest and most beautiful 
9s., 12s., and 18s. per dozen 

VERBENAS.—The most select and beautiful varieties sent 


re * 


and can be su plied in „beautiful flesh colour, t this year, 6s, to 128. per dozen, 
singi dne dozen , purchaser's selection; or six | BURGUNDY, light purple. ex ER RIAS— Fine flowering plants of the best show 
Defiance and — bd. », post fre NAPIER, bright — white i os, splendid. varieties, 9s. to 1 Pegat 
bedding, 43, Gd. per de mg of the Lake, two or] MONARCH, rose, white eve, surrounded with scarlet, CHRYSANTHEMUNS, —The most select of the new and 
N dozen, with every other new | GIANT ESS, very large, lush ‘white, beautiful varieties, Os. to 12s, per dozen, per free. 
> HART ROUIN: 55 AR EAGLE, dark scarlet, centre dark maroon. GLOXINIAS. Ae ost splendid collec of new varieties, 
three splen se (Smith’s), the best out, 2s. OPTIMUS, glossy blush, extra size, in nelu ding Teuchleri carmini a, 
the Lake an ` che EAIN IAS for 4s. 6d. : DUVAL, mulberry, very large, white eye sanguine 3 elegans, ru bra superba, Passing- 
ested vd PAINTED LADY, pin let centre. — pulche wih any are fine varieties in strong flow 
with or orders, payable at Burnley. ROYAL PURPLE, deep purple, very fine. ering plants, 128, 18s., and 24s. pet dozen. 
4 * d, Marsden, near Burnley, Lanca- JOHN SALTER, scar range, oe — EW nts, 123, 18s iI Liege (Makoy), and 
is LADY RUSSELL, oroli Wil bek oe „Sens (Salter), 2s. 6d. 
OHN Kpy PANCY 5 1 AD 1 rosy purple, shaded wi ee AB —Fine busby plants of the best free flowering sorts, 
e ace The e are strongly reco nie — ae —+ second to 9. 
— l e ple Ys y, will be ady to 2 0 e. The set of Eighteen for 1. 2s. ; Tw Ive for 16s, ; or Six cetaceans ‘of the above, with an extensive variety o f highly 
1 1 nstant lowers of the | for 9s. 6d. All other varieties at the same prices ornamental plants, will be 1 by enclosing two postage 
Miss 8 at 75 6 
Lues — aa . n which tay een The following superb NIAS of ey at 2s. 6d. each; i Kod stamps.—Great Yarmou' Nurs se 
W. 3 hat 9 accorded | the set for 16s. All other varieties at the same es. Ele- | —— RHODODENDRON JA ANIOUM, OF BLUME. 
oo gantissima, Brilliant, Beauty of Sufolk, Renown, Telegraph, | op pie BEAUTIPUL ORANGE-COLOURED RHODODEN- 
— KEyypg tPU spotted Hostii; Hesperus, and Zhe eee em X AVA. 
of Salisbury n ie Ae S Pik wose | YY TELIAM ROLLISSON an SONS 
ae err , offers : r : Royalist, Co — csi 9 oe ose- e Nobility, Conteg, ank ana 
London ort at th —— shown from the nine Flowers | 897, Barthonis, Fr ore (Royals int — out, on an — Monday the 18th June, fine 
Dis — Fir Prk . and Heliotropium, Souvenir de D888, 85 Phlox — healthy age — the = Parley with be — Ja A 
X 1 azurea o see lis posi s 
$ No . Saia 5 — w tke 8 — coacta eolaria a flowers Gardeners Jast autumn, 
FIRS et . h, 9s per dozen ; G. Kenieh Hero, 18. each, 98. per W. R. and Sons beg to remark that their Collec Java 
ar hats KEYN T CLASS “hg IAS dozen; Zauschn californ „ each ; Jasminum nudi- | 9 the seed from which 5 sed, off plants 
a nt Class NES to submit th foll list of florum, ls.; Gaillardia splendidissima, 3 ulus 4 * 5 varie tJ, spot 2 . 
4 utea, 38 - ; I 
i ABELIA x cag Of | lequin (good), 1s. 6d. ; Viola lutea, 3 td 222 cordi- seen in flower some time previously th . 
the best out in e duced ar ke folia, 3s. 6d. : ’ azurea grandi: am- | and Sons can positively rana them * ——— plant, 
Miss Ebb 3 nae? iP Parle Stand like- | panula, extra large blooming plants, 2 — dozen; ako fine — above described. This Le a ga —— 55 an — 
Re incinsa 1 Cucumber and Vegetable Marrow Plants, 42 gr —— shrub is e n ina genhouse g 5 
u cult Aded witho Sage ic-| All the pl Scarlet Pel tory, or gro 7 
etaa Fation, at ut cha All the most pest can be — t. A remittance must accompany pas — and o — 8 having foun found i the volcanic range of 
‘4 rhs, Conn ch in Java, 9,700 feet case the level of the sea, thereis 
OHN KEYNES, y moderate charges. | without which plants —.— be sent. ava, 
With immediate a Castle-street N Salis-| Roserr WHiBLeY, Chester Nursery, near Walcot-place, Ken- every pase believe that it will prove a hardy plant, at least 
x ention, nington-road, — . f in some ason tp bel country, —Tooti — Nees ane near London, 


338 


THE 


Omran OR STRAW TEY ‘his e 
variety will be found a valuable addition to those alread 
in cultivation, ‘being a op — anes of delicious flavour, ane 


ay 
Lag 4 N H csmith, 
ge ursery, Hamme 
unknown old orrespondents, The 


GARDENERS’ 


Ds. EADOW ane PASTURE GR 
SEEDS, in mixtures sufted to various soils, &c., at 328. per 
— 2 bushels apa 12 tbs, to each acre. Directions for 
ng and treatmen 


ASS 


Trad e. 


OWERS OF A 
Be JÄMN W. KNIGHT, 1 — &t., Tivoli, 


St. nard's-on-Sea, Susser, begs to — 9 attention 
elect Plants, which sendin " p 
* at the 4 57 prices dozen, he distinct va- 
rieties : Verben s. ; Fuchsias, „ Antirrh 5 
s. Gd. ; Pansies, 4 . to 6%; Petunias, 3s Dahlias, Show or 
rag eso a Mo Ohry santhemums, 4s. ; Cuphea * | 
strigillosa, 3s, ; Heliotropium Porat m, 3s.; H. Vol- 
— Salvias as, various, 2s. = 8 for 
bedding, 6s. ; ra lue and scarlet, 33. ; , for 


pplication, enelosing a 
is respectfully re- | 


lowing are now sendin 
t, N lants; an — without 
extra charge, ez cept p. azs 8 ca 
to ponai or with orders of den. and upw rar’ 8, plants 
nse of dist: we Particular ration ie is 2 
Fr rue to color d name, . 
and securely packed for travelling to A dis 
BEDDING PLANTS. 
ANAGALLIS COCCINEA SPLENDENS, 63, per doz 
BOUVARDIA SPLENDENS, 6s. per doz, ; Flava, 9s. — 
P. BALSAMINA LATIFOLIA, 5s. Ko 9s. per dozen 
P. CALCEOLARIA, in 5 fine shrubby varieties, 9s. ver dozen. 
1 7 5 1 r és. Ps A pea 
cU in varieties, 6s. per — 
GAILLAT NDIA, 10 5 varieties, Go pee poms 
RELIOTROPIUN PERUYIANUM, ch M, Gs. to 9s. per dozen, 
RIOMPHE DE Linok, 98. per dozen 
n OROCEA, 6s, to 9s, per dozen, 
ar N GRANDIFLORA and COMPACTA 
À to 
PLUMBAGO LARPENTÆ, 18s. per doz., — fy each, 
AP hr 65. to 9s. . 
SALVIA, in 6 fine vars. 

OPPOSI TIFOLTA. 123, to 18s. per don 
ZAUSCHNERIA CALIFORNIGA, — éd. eac 
FUCHSIAS, in fine select assortment, 5s. aud 95. iy dozen, 

superior —4 vars, of 184 4551 155. 
VERBEN AS a and PETUNIAS, fine and select, 4 8 to 57 êd. 
per 
new of 1848, 12s. per doz, 
eren ane „ 5 to 98. 6d. 2 per doz, 
Ditto, su per . 
p- GERANIUMS, fine std select vars., 63, and 9%, per dozen. 
superb show * 127. 15 r dozen, 
P. . DAHTTAS, fine and seieet, 5s. and os. per doz 
BEDDING Aag aps! 
ANTIRR 1 My fine s — dozen. 
ANEMONE S e 
2 PAN 4 


NICA, bs. pot he 
BILIS, 
OBELIA 


penea 
* 2 795 — 
PENTSTENON, . 8 an Rig Ts. 6d per doret, 
‘PHLOX, in 3-4 per dozen 
“20 exe Se 
„n PLANTS e i STOVE PLAN 
P T 
1 pase ere e and select, 78. 6d.; 6 fine new 
p. 6 


— —— ine wb select 2 PLANTS... 
1 Ars. ae 
pidas 12 Select 45 Kose SE CLIMBERS 
Our Priced Plant Catalogue will be sent — by 


tees D 2s, each. 
ach, 28. 6d. 


CHRONICLE. 


Without, have th 
t will accompany the seeds, Mixed sorts | of . anne 8 vt Ca at their Ñ 
for improving old Grass Lands, 13. 3d. per lb, Fine sorts for HOR RTICULTURAL 
forming Lawns, Go., 1s. 4d. 11 UT TO SIZE UP TO 40 SEDAS, y 
GEORGE GIBBS & Co. beg to notice that — y wre INCHES LON d. — SQUA : 
List, with prices, f ensuing season, is ready, and wi 16 oz. from 3d. to 35d. xes of l 5 
h 4 application, as well as their Catalogue of Kitchen 21 „ r 33 * 4d, per foot. Mf oy 6 by 4 — i 
arden and Flo Seeds.—Address GEoRGE Gipzs and Co., 26 „ 3} 7 2 y tand 6) by gg E 
Seedsmen, &., to the Royal Agricultural „ of Bel- 32 „ 4 9 2 and 75 by nae 11 
um, & c. &c., 26 Down. street, Pic 1 Lon PL p ahd 8 — 
FIOWER POTS AND G4 7 —— d 
JOHN MORTLOCK, 250, Oxfords iog respectfully lee ‘per foo 8 finch per foot ay 
l d solicit 1 pection, Aer i ~~ 
articles — — colours, and solicits an early inspe PATENT R 
Every description of useful CHINA; GLASS, and EARTHEN-| = 3 thick . each os ‘oven PLATE TILES, 
WARE at ee — possible price, for cash. 1 — tach IU 
250, Oxford. street, near Hyde- park. London. SHEET GLASS TILES AND States? ; 
AKER’S PHEASANTRY, Beaufort-street, King’s- 16-02, 2102. 28.65 
B road, Chelsea, by special appointinent to nd r Maje yy nå — 3 * 8d bd. Ie ss 
H. R. H. Prince Al — ORNAMENTAL WL, | Slates — . nei J 11 44 ke 
consisting of bl d white swans, E 3 Cina, China, Gun izes, and made 0 
bernacle, brent, and laughing geese, sheildrakes, pintail GLAS mensions. 
widgeon, su d winter teal, gadwall, Labrador, |p ; MILK-PANS, PROPAGATING awd BEB G 
shovellers, meen, and dun divers, Carolina ducks, &e., eae, 3 laba, Hyacinth Ml vet and Dishes, Shades for et 
. an oned; also N Cochin = Bees es, Plate — 1 ndow Glass c 


— — — & Grace chure h-s 


r- | TO HORTICULTURAL AND FLORICULTURAL SOCIETIES. 
N 


AMIN prar GTON, ea e ke the 
ch Chiswic k, and t 


B nee 


Horticultural Botanic 


cliri. rs, 75 post, 
JAMIN ae 
208, Pice: 


Ware house, 


E POULTRY AND THEIR E 
OLAN, ot the Noah’s Ark, 33, Bachelor’ s-walk, 
u ow offers for sale sone superb Cochin China, 
Mala alay, Pork ri E Spinta, Spangled Hamburgh, and Polish 
ate ye Oh — their eggs; Carolina and other Ducks; Chinese, 
use, and other Geese; 2 Pea and Guinea 3 
122 an and 3 Hn “has had to w 

37 ae d 


öm, at a con- 
and Hite ee- light —— 
Melon F A 5 I of at 580 — ete ady for use, 
ue and sen ; Wa 
material. Garden tights of 885 e 
Hothouse Builder, CIa , Ven 
may be had to the Nobility, the. rade, in most 
thie England” 


EANE“ S WARRANTED GARDEN T 001S.— 
and all arry 


. DEANE’s 1 Stock of 
MENTS, 


to either Bass and 
emittances requested from 


Boos ee ene wow peblisbed 
HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING 
BY HOT WATER. 

_ ALSO THE . OF THE CHOICEST PLANTS, 


| WNE.: fi 
f 


"j fine 


SEE 
er 
II it 


MeT 
i 11 orhi 
li III LOIN 


19 


sted in Garde ee pursuits, | 


hogaen, 


FOR e reader 
oe te Chronicle of Saturday, Feb, Ha must 
d high t er ms in which this Glass was en of 


LE ur list to correspond n 
2 with those of the Pa atentee, owe we would a 
attention 9 re Nobility, Clergymen, Gentry, aud * 


uares under 1 by 6 
er 10 by 88d. 3 
“ea 


8 by 6 10 2 8 
14 by 10 sh Sa 1 
3 feet 


A full List of 8 wad every i 


ee Glasses, R 2d. pe 


b. Milk Pans 

* 
Ran TEA 
use of these traps fat 
reserved from feram E ioa 2 destruction, 
UE PROPAGATING GL SSES~ 
sin. omnet ge per doz, | 6-in. diameter, 3s, bi, per d 

S. 6d. ” In. ” * z 

bane 43, ôd. 

belot proved both theoretically and ‘practically that Bte 

grasa is by far the most effecti ting plants und 
germinating seed, the above are altered a prees wi at 
i nN 


ARDENING AND PRUNING IMPLE st London th l ad 3 
mado Garden Bngioes ad Syringes — — — — * — — a — — —— be had 4¹⁰ | 
ea 
* 5 Pick GLASS FORS CONSERVA 0 E 
Axes Grape Gatherers and| Potato Forks GREENHOUSES, PIT FRAMES, &e. 
Bagging Hooks Scissors H ETLEY anD CO. are supplying 16.02. Sheet 
Bills Gravel Rakes and} , Knives, various £4 of B ufacture, packed 4. U. 
Borders, various pat- Sieves Ms square feet each, at ts following REDUCED PRICES for 
terns Greenhouse Doors „ Seissors A reduction — 2 0 feet. 
Botanical Boxes and Frames », Shears [riety.| Sizes. I Inches, Per foot. Per 
Cases of Pruning In-| Hammers Rakes in great der 6 by 4 at a 
ents Hand-glass Frames | Reaping Hooks From 6 „ 4 ) % 20g ae 
Chaff Engines nives es T ght ay & „ n 0 
Chaff Knives 5 : “sn 8 ogy 3 w aD ie 7 1 
Rakes orticultur: am- Shears, various 1 Ad. „ 
Dock Spud Hotbed Ha ads Sickie 84 bee ae non Sea Mee 
ock Spuds 0 andles ickle S. es, not excee 40 it mel 
Bazar Lone Tools 5 Ladies’ Set of Tool 1 5 snare and Shovels qe oZ, RO 0 to 240 veer’ poison >$ co o 
* 1 oz. ’ 33d. od, 275 W iy í 
Sh terns in zine, por- Switch Hooks Tue * 
Flower Scissors _ . ks „F 
” "Stands Wires Lines and — Transplanting Tools PATENT ROUGH * 2, THIOK gage CROWN 
* = — — -R . — PATENT PLATE G 
— — jail Nails — ez ibn Square fet 
Plant Protectors Metallic Watering Pots Oe tient T D ae 
; either in ugh Plate Gi prin 
Garden . — — Hatchets Weed Extractorsand opagating Glasses, Bee-hive Glasses, Oucumder 
; Wheel Milk Pans, Glass Water Pipes, and various other 
Youths’ Set of Tools | PATENT PLATS G88. The present — 
- ATE GLASS.— 
ER 1 n for va 2 8 PERMA. price of this superior article should eause it to supersedes 
T LABELS, sapies tS — th th 1 other inferior window glass in a gentleman’s residence 
— 5 e Une a ah hee 2 — 5 x Paid, any part f alteration connect wich the sash is required. 
ng W the Ones. ANE’S tural Tool Warehouse, | GLASS SHADES, as ornamental to; and for th 15 u 
S of every description of goods susceptible pea e 1 
BERTS’S HORTIC RAL porate. Srian -gaba ste no bo —.— 
> duced one- st ices 
add 7 5 e CULTURAL 3 FEC an e 5 
by the Horticultural Socie 42 — Those who wish to grow Straw- = 
berries to perfection, and from dirt, should purchase the | ** : 
above Tiles; specimens ma her an im- NLY IMPORTERS, 
poras Flower Supporter, also Tiles and Socket for growing ANTONY GIBBS. AND SONS, LONDO ogh; 5 
el Cucumbers, Celery, &., on à d 7 ed prin- WILLIAM JOSEPH MY 9 AND CO., L tae 
ciple, at . eo ARTERS’, Seedsman, 74, King W ä And b. and BR 
is appointed’ Agent for the sale of th GIBBS, BRIGHT, AND b * 
coves Wont o ente ax Moy YO 
To pr pied ves against injurious cons 
using inferi peal — ts 0 


F. 
ass in the orci 


—— 


. e 12 
„, Bishopsgate. street e sen W 
i 


a . 
mended to 1 only 5 dealers of established 
the above-named im rs, who rill ac 25 l 
quantity, at their fixed a prives, deliv 
Fern 


AL SOCIETY O OF LONDON. — 
THE bere ARDE 

abet ta 2 place 3 TURDAY, the 9th o 

Be ition Peat — at t s Office on Friday 

. half. past Eight o’clock, A.M., 


pera 
e visi ee Tee are 
nay * at the Garden 

sas pi die, pri ibition, at 15. 6d. each; but 


ws of the S 
Se ta in y minge on the days 
21, Regent-street, 


eady to send out of 

Pelargonium, of which he 
a 

cul Society of 

admir bi; Hason in profusion, and 

n gro wnin pra itis well 

first-rate bedding 

a tae de 10 thé — — for every thre ee 


Fursery, near London 
Pier, FUCHSIA, “SAPP 


iSt 
785 


shly-desirable new Fuchsia from Mr, 
E whom it 1 25 ey will pond. out, 
strong healthy plants (which 
— TE beg at 10s. 6d. each, with one over upo 
(by the trade, The ae coral colour of 
Shay rela which are broad, and of such 
febstance that their fully-re — — i to the 
an thereby to great advantage the dark blue pür- 
12 the neat wr e and graceful free 


ij 


i 
1 


a 
S 
H 


to very c 

eall attention to 25 Following et 

Blooms having been sent by M 
itor of the Gardeners’ Journ ak 


Ma head 28, 1848.— 
ourseedling is a first-rate flower in its 
tae short Wat wel — toned, of bright 
t both Lanan and out broad, 
of this flower sur- 


4 
of Charles James ne aor Esq., dated Hands- 
= „Ih repeatedl y seen blooms 
1 K. chit srg x Sapphire at ae and off 
bright cor: sepa —— road ; 
omega MI e the corolla 


er bright ; 1 consider it one of the 
i is v very n whole habit 
; it blovis prota nap, producing 
Y ” 


oedceivaral Society.” 
Exeter Nursery. Exeter, 7 


“To Narri 


— Bin, i i Co., 
PLANTS.~An extensive variety, very fine 


B's am BROWN’S Stock of their Co —— ns 0 
2 FUCHSIAS, lun las, GERANIUMS, 


re of 1 N 


etn — — 
lishment, Sudbury, Suffolk, 


rs CH ronicle. 


SATURDAY, AY, JUNE 2, 1849 
MEETINGS 


THE GARDENERS’ 


g eee sae — to an 
3 70 


- | plants of this species, and Ae them 
rbres). 


ü trees (beaut a. 


CHRONICLE. 


339 


8 Chelsea, planted in 1683, are pronounced 
years ago: when 


e in some respects o r —. so far as they 
once ro — oe second 
ee volume, me, will be found the ri A sen 


“The anti of these eh — Tepti sinks 
into insignificance when compared with the cele- 
“| brated Baobab, or Adansonia E in Senegal; 
taking as a measure the concentric rings 
counted on a aer í incision pee for the p 
in the trunk of that enormous tree, it 18 s proved to 
be 5150 is old; yet Baron Humbo: nsiders a 
Cypress in the garden of Chapu — $e be still 
older; it "had already reached a great age when 
Montezuma was on the throne of Mexico, im 1520.” 
It would b book such 
7 — Baobab having bee 
ë 5150 yea s surprising state- 
ent, borrowe Afto Roane the well- known Fr rench |“ 


— 


In 1 


he African coast som 
fine 
Two hundred years later 


1555, THEVET saw 


t 
urpose 


had, — arb enlarged a 
h und 7 ear 


“Of 
the followin 


whie h si 
to What is 


ADANSON found that the same a pale had obtained de 


o have been “mentioned 600 diameter of 6 feet, and he supposed that they m 
ext ain’s Abbey is called Fountaine, Fortingal have been 4 feet in diameter when Twever ae 
Fo i il Welbeck “We lbec, and Chapultepec them. Upon this supposition ere — ee the 
Chap ullepec ; all in less than a ‘couple o of duodecimo | age of Trerver’ ave been 600 years in 1749. 
tna New vertheless, as the public is very apt to pin | His words are (as — by Professor re 
their faith on an author more than on a nal ex- | Those whic le la 
amination of statements made up in ascientific dress, | Madeleine, near — ve — with inscriptions of 
we cannot do otherwise than expose the errors of a — names, sg as 


Re rench 
r dating from the fonteonth and 


the form 
the | latter from the fifteenth century, which i inserip- 
tions I renew 
newed in 174 
These same 


ed, mer erely adding below them, re- 
9, were then about 6 feet in diameter. 


—Familles 405 Plantes, Preface, 


f ‘this 5 A ig late M. Dr Canporr® gave 
ng v The Baobab, says he, 

is the most eleraite instance of keane 8 
ee. has 3 been notieed with a of 
racy. its 
ities £ sand years; “na, contrary 
usual, this name expresses what is in 


eke reality short of the truth. Apanson has noticed one 200 years; in a . of the ays it would be 
Son, a the Cape de Verd Islands which had been ob- eovered over by the new ove it. M. 
fon, A — by two English travellers three centuries | Pxnnorrrr, who was well oo with this past, 
wu — 3 2 — — trunk the inscription — 3 on the Isle ee, . 7 a a t. Loui sis 
— a whic ad engrave over e very tree spoken o DANSON, 
‘er intodaetion three hundred pier ere and thus was enabled — the antici — which in this plant 
‘aw into of a dissertation on the Ace or to estimate the bulk by which this enormous plant | overlies the 3 trunk, as “ bright green, very thin, 
Nn edition of so popular a book as had increased in three centuries.’ !! a rdity and full - ; at the least t discharges: 
ts da ata À Geography,”* obliges — this was long ago o pointed out by the learned 3 a Preis a kind of nutritive sap, which 
erence cd ine (can a oe r ay te ride 
i h ents u i and has since upon ae ber * ji 5 y 
3 tem aah ‘nich those w oso mames age cn nest pr i hs M. Dr Ca — 5 for po 1 — — — — e the 8 ar 
|, enture Which ordi: ee née” NDorLE informs us, a It is incredible any ~ 
1% the mo a Pte, No do it trae — — table by, —— the age of trees of Baobab 30 feet f runk should remain visible for 
FS; v donp watt living monuments of former in diameter might be ng aaron and . 4 — done — a few years. Parnorrer says that ADANSON’ 5 tee 
n pig really do, in many instances, mathematically by M. Ducussnye, the number 5150 ji — is 
ie who ate Which must appear marvellous ea as the result, — * — taken to sa not a word of the inscription renewed: 5 7 
Aber Vitale acquainted with the means b — ae age of the trees in be — Now the | traveller ny 2 75 even when he was in the Isle 
A that he Maintained. But it is equ ally nly that we are disposed te . are de Sorr, only 75 years later. Even in this country, 
ne to Which is said upon the sub 8 facts; and the only facts in A tale, fréed where vegetation is comparatively languid, a v 
“hg and migi derture of imagination than | from the improvements of De CANDOLLE, are, that a | brief space e of time is sufficient to deface all 
on of an have 2 endered in the — becomes, in 3 ye i7 gh it. inea —— as it i is to hide all superficial bt. Some 
now refer d to ; ce French ever 
Mi 82 BXANDRE 1 1 or a ee t ed ees —— — — in 1 —— — — 
from the 14th and 15th pedir rt which ‘inscriptions Oak tree, felled, as we were info in Windsor 
he e will take the last fact first. It | forest ; when the t By a A pub found 
seems ee occurre ous | that in the interior a apparently 


never ingeni 
~ | Frenchman or his readers that it was not atogather 
possible that others might have “ renewed ” the 
inscriptions before himself, and that this — have 
hap — than one occasion, For ourselves, 
we entertain no doubt upon the Ske th It is 
cally im pone tat str Bk G e Baoba 


f 


12 


d d been e 
in Cromwet’s time (1649 903 but it bad — ee — 
e d was buried s 
inches below the 

A still more st xample of bees was given 
in Merde volume for 1841, the woodcut illustrating 
wW 


ich we now reproduce. 
Such evidence as could be found in the specimen 


kd 
340 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. b 
8 e thickness of the annual rin ts to] —a fungus which someti — 
, which was an Ash, er ere that it ond ps only from b ae pasit Nall a Pay asian | lin tent, and not only attacks the leu a >; 
been 55 years old when the inscription was made, which, i to the large English specimens the young shoots of a v. large ves, but em 
d that about 200 years gr $ ormed | mentioned above, would A double or treble their age. The | sequence very injurious, t is I and u ip 
over it. er er; to the proportions in the draw- thickness of gs, however, he same time len t, not only in Europe but = extremen 
ing, the w. und closed in perhaps 100 years, ious in the different individuals, that in Nos. 1 and | we kasi aimee 3 f in AW 
perhaps in less Now, if such a rate of healing is thirteen lines of difference in the diameter corre- confine à to younger tidis 122 It is 
observable in our English trees, we may reasonably | sponded to 99 annual rings; whilst in N d 3, „ allied 
assume the existence of a ap a greater rate of sixty-three li oe yaaa co m e only tr er which 0 attacked, and n aspa 
ing i ways growi results whi arm wi e average thick- 
and filled to 4 marte — Basa a the stated above, only inasmuch as that | quence known under the name. M 


rsting with the organisable matter or 
“ sève re from which new wood is incessantly | 
"Tie in 
e 25 tions provin beet, let us next see 
sein ae mathematical calculation 


wn 

is multiplied by 12, 

, Therefore the trees 6 feet 

old, not 210, and 

30 feet in diameter ase be 360 years old, me 
5150. We e taken 

precise conclusion, but no reasonable doub — 

entertained about its * cil the truth. Possibly 

the first year’s diamete: a Baobab yp pases fp 

resentation of oo average rate of 


among 
taken a. eo » differe 
s | the same 


1 were estima 


Locality. Diameter. Thickness of Rings. 


1.10 lines 
0.19 lines 
0.27 lines 
_0.75 lines 


3.8 lines 
0.39 lines 
0.54 lines 
| 1,50 lines 


om i in these four stems the thickness of a 
praaki ae N n 3.8 lines and 0.39 lin 
the same time, i in Nos, 1 and 2 twenty-two lines ore 
i nd with 173 annual rin 


..| 50 lines 
72 lines 
84 lines 


Place u 
2 — at 55 0 feet alti- 
3 rg 5000 feet alti- 
tude, ta 
4 2 — feet alti- 
e, tall 


sss ers 


84 lines 


may be 


3 rate 
— to half * inch of rp 
still arrive at no e “annals ahah 720 
ears, instead of 5150. 


nother N nstance 5 is 


respo! 
eS No. 4 the eighty-four lines of riin c 
of in No. 2, gen TPA lines give more than | 5 
that 


difference in correspo 
but between Nos. 3 and 4 and No. 2 the proportion is 
ter diameter 


56 rings, 

number, or 18 

Similar anomalies are 

Larch, and also by Pinus se statements, 

however, suffice to prove that conclusions as to the a e age 2% 
at 


1 
to acquire in 
rican une ion, and in 
In the church- yard of 
Santa Mania DR Testa, 24 leagues west of ee cit 
axaca, there still exists a tree of this kind, h 


or . more than w feet, or 39 feet in diame- 
o doubt a tree of very 8 great antiquity. 
According t M. Alrnoxsg De Canvoute it may be 
estimate 6000 years old, or, pr all events, to 
be one of ib most ancient, if not the most ancient, 


the of gro deciduous e at 
—— in Pane “which gained a foot 


for which we 5 


find, in a specimen of 
in che grounds of Syon bee 
8 8 | 
m 


debted to the kindness of 


out actual counting of the e 
which in this respect are dined by climate and soil, 
may be seen from some exam examp 

“ De CANDOLLE 


* 
< 


Bi ie 8 


— — 
— Unes 
69 lines 
132 lines fa 


prese 
tiny. drawn with any, or with = — probability, — 


8 which he saw in 
y 


ion: _We 
co. owe erty uals, 


| into our garden 


‘peas the growt wth 


The accuracy of such a trey can be borne 
with t l 


rings. W 
presented by the Spruce Fir, 


(W 3 besoms.) 
To return, howeve r, 
in 


str 
rons accurately noted. 
arefully co a8, 1 ig lead M 
and the larger the scale 1 yea 
ducted the better, as 
error would be e over a — 
not 9 affect the 


any in 
anit 


e prese 
very proper pt 15 commencing the o 


— DISEASES OF PLANTS, 
Continued from page 325,) 

ALOE a an 8 of pelali, 

—Corollas should all aa 


naturally consisting of se 
happens to almost all 3 
Personates.* Sometimes kee i 
anA of the Pah by 

at other tim times it S 


out 2 er one conversan rees, and should | , 
be a warning to wri 8 iz indulge in fancies 
iat; matters concerning w we have no suffi- 
cient ETH 
read o waste of time to TEn 
wi Von 8 whether the colossal Locust trees 


th 
Saviour. It is sufficient to know that the antiquity | ci 
of trees may be, and often is, immeasurably beyond 
that of any other living thing. 


attacks of Para ASITIC Fun 


ral pec i 
8 and w raliar W, alkane so far 


so 
efficient, ai tei ures, uspicious 
son, are foun 5 25 wholly she agg If, how: 
ever, there. = so fili ch difficult 
immensely Ln ont with plants of 
ae dars, where the dise: ase pervades, like 
cancer er ry part o ee the structure ; and its effects 


last t year 
ed tie = 


of 
o the — 55 
Grits. 8 3 Was d 
uly, with t w of ascertain- 
particular species was infested with the 


nt 
ora — — fall a sacrifice 
of Grass affected by 
last J 


what 


co 
o ® 
< 


of sease, yield to an 
t, it does not follow that whack a! 


most 38 * ö e cases that we fowe 


es 
1 are constantly applied a for remedies . — 
We know of o ma 


and a not over manared 85 may be 
edial m . 


in the case f 5 
lan 


| He G9 bo et 


21 
We have altered M 
as to amn K. 


i ers 
neither a anthers nor pistil, but 12 prera or 

Thes o ape tee n the greater 
ere are only petals very similar to! 


KEA natural to the Pal and of iche same colour and $ 


but also in the centre are to to be fo 

2 of the female organs. In N 
ly called a double one. But when vine te ; 

* the flower is seen to rise leaves, 


ound the vestiges 
case the flo 


that the double flower arises from 4 
stamens, which take t 


Monopetalous flowers coll forin 
= es Rose (Viburnum N 
increase corolla, at 


explaine 
m 


classed ich — 
is obli te o Aai 1274 a age 
a * as it cannot perfect its 


a 


Third Species. nee 
nott 


ve nauc 
observations i in consequence of the transmission SF 
e | specimens of a Pine infested with- Æcidium Pini 


=o 
It occurs — ; 
—Translator’s Note. 


] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 341 


number. The flower neverthe- take up my pen, and before I proceed further it may be was put above the swarm, the position and shape of the 
ensures the uction of the | well to define the limits of my task. branch forbidding a very near approac Over the 
many semi-double flowers,and| One description of villa garden possesses a little stove | whole was placed a tablecloth, and before 5 o’clock 
in perfect have appeared to me and greenhouse, a few frames and hand-glasses, with a | every bee had ascended into the hive. As soon as it 
snd better filled than usual. These | limited amount of flower and kitchen-garden. j was dusk, the oe was placed in its destination, and 
* H 7 a — 


soil, NN his man wi 
on, will often rossi to their | apron, and is dubbed “the gardener,” although he The experienced will say there is nothing new in all 
ee become languid and 3 i in reality little about horticulture; he therefore this. Granted: but the yg tener of another man is 
esa hag — may requires my advice, and he shall have it. Other villa of no use to me unless ow how to act upon it. 
. gardens can only boast of a small greenhouse, or what | “ Necessity is the mother of invention” and while if I 
een. or THE Necrary.—| Londoners style“ the conservatory,” which is attached had had help at hand I might never have known how 


to ot extend plo 8 ma n 
Tee to any appendages not strietly finds it necessary to call in assistance, in the shape of a that bees are less disposed 25 — Sie -s they are popu- 
1 ort fower. The red variety of the Colum- | jobbing gardener, to prune the trees and shrubs, dig larly thought to be; and if ssary noise or 
LJ appendage to the petals. This and scrub, and make all things what he calls tidy. This disturbance is made they may b 2 vile handled with 
br sgap and the number of petals in- — — is, however, not overburdened with safety. Not a bee — on while w 
of the Balsam is often doubled or | skill in his reopen his employer t therefore also moving oop branch, kar -i armour, put on for 3 
i I them. A proved a of ‘ann tead o 


luteum do not ripen n if the nectaries | third class of ee eli describe ‘E. í ar Sanii T Virgil's — of having a swarm n À 
260 should verified, w oi conclude that have very small gardens, aiid cultivate damn e worth 3 8 2, 50). In his day the pots and 
m ri th shall also pans 


e y care. I 
of fertili fon.. But W con- | ever, beg that all will minutely describe their wants, 10 65 — — et Matris quate cymbala circum.” 
. t not | order that I may prescri Let| H. B. 


es, — — — 
least theoretical among writers on rural fruit trees Crabs; whether Hyacinths flower badly, Home Correspondence 

Biss admit that double or semi-double flowers become | Tulips rot in the ground, Cabbages club, or Cucumbers | Calter of Tobacco in England.—I have no o doubt that 

; : * i " : 

a 


a iling the 
Simes also by accident, in which case it is owing to | different ills which rob you of nearly all the pleasures| much in price that the quantity of manure and labour 
equity of the atmosphere, to the nature of the soil, | you so — seek for in your favourite pursuit, which would be required before it could be brought to 
of the exposure. 1 flowers are indebted for it and I will endeavour to secure your success. Pharo. market would eat up all the profits. But I assure you 
Holl — in thi 


` nd : . 
ster of splendid double and extra-double flowers 0 105 Al HINTS F R AM up to recent period when, for the sake of distant 
wel may be owing partly to the peculiarities of the EAAS — n : NS. — ee iti "English h Government thought it right to de- 
Šmite, of which they know how to take advantage. Hivine a 87 OF Bas The rs baring met | prive Ireland of the privilege of growing it, the culture 
Tere are some, however, who would Serge —— with an adventure in connection with b eels dis- of —.— was wel understood, and was practised b 
p 


5 ng 
tt Hyacinths imported among us from Flanders, so | the following simple recital. Many more persons would | and the profit was larger. To show 77 at I do not 
t the first year . into single ones, so as keep bees if they knew how to make them profitable, or exaggerate the price of the crop, I say I was present a 
Da more than the w the worst of our own? If we even to manage them with anything like success. the hearing of two suits for tithe for ‘Tobacco, brought 
i i f this diocese, 
e 


mons 
cies, These should be | may be relied on as an example, as far as it goes. here the tithe demanded was 101. for — acre, being 
permanent, unless you would believe that one thing can| We have kept a few hives for some years, having the full tenth of the pedina amount of 1007. ; this 
itself another, The flowers they b but 


that the 

Sh an exceedingly dificalt task artificially to make a| could make more use than of common straw hives, for | naturalised to this climate ; foreign seed was by no 

fever produce even semi-double flowers, | which they have been used as substitutes. Every | means so su ccessful. Wexford. [Yes; but what was 

tir very easy matter to bring — double flowers to spring, our man has amused us with a most elaborate the amount of import duty on Tobacco of foreign 
i n 


gro 7 
vould enable her to reclaim her rights. his head being enveloped in crape or muslin, his sleeves| Ants» — Boiling water will kill them without any ex- 
——— —e— and trousers’ legs tied tightly, to prevent the ingress of pense; but it may, as well as turpentine, injure the 
rrp * FLORISTS. a bee, and his hands covered with 3 ps rass. ables Beverley. 1 
3 


T ame ce b n 
oud these planta 5 i it be adviaable a “ha sate tongs, &., the ding-dong of ina was believed to pro- | Upon n the question whether ant adders or . leap 


asse: ; ess true, 
* Wii — reptiles cast their skins, they appear to 
out 


der nen quarters und n P nd 
under the ordinary treat- of their mouths, and that so comple ard that 


0 

Season hardly re and $ ; 

M dem for exhibition for their tine 3 =e m: laughable and partly romantic. However, ~~ result | I —.— say how often vipers renew their ski 

i fras the metropolitan meetin 5 at was in all cases that the stock was safely got in, and |t parce path — 

12th of June (show PH ` | the matter then rested, a — season brought — manner in which the ne pie — Ia ski +r + 
. hle season, and on the 20th the co | about the same exciteme pale 3 tpn 3 te eee a 3 —— ar 
inasm z } 

“upelled to exhibit ~e adama — 1 = saed — hy the 7 — ae ht ast we eB ph a a at the mouth or lips, and that t the reptile — itself by 

— — m 923, >y to bees, or the megea! Tas in such a 7 — gon fixed itself between two wigs ina 


f being prepared for their s ing 5 un- ‘ pe 4 
— . — SUBURBAN GARDENING. prepare wi as we were, our little 2 ughter — running June in such rew „ e e the ene 
ition, Tts y taken as the barometer of | in and a «O Papa, there is a large sw arm of which is espec y apee- re 
1 sy tes the diffusion of bees on the Apple tree by the old hive. oi Sure enough; — — ob pena ari oxi wees — g- — — 
i oi - ion hangi ke an invert ve 1 
Which >d = gretam ined social re- | there was a grand mp ene a. Tae — | opening below the beliy, ba he this is im be — 
the i 


Pith evidentes —— wh ne w 2 i ee f ur. build reptile — . its backing out, if I may ora term 
i of ef we een. meet | ques estion. e sent to e neighbouring farm-build. |! ‘ever d it is 
! its remote a art, whic | ings, but no man could be found. In! the interim 1 rum- — The operation is aff y the — and 1 


existence 
monl e sl en the lettered of the times. The y astonishing to 
* ase not only of individuals, bat | of cobwebs and dirt, with the old — to it onall left off by the ay toe : 
tade Dy the A Vast communities, may be de- | sides. While le the man was being looked for I cleaned this | feet long, — about na 
a among them, * which horticulture has spider's den, and well rubbed the eread with beer and | mon size See 
happies t diffuses peace, contentment, | sugar, made thick like syrup. This he extent of | was one 
es the all classes, It stimulates and my knowledge, and what to do further 1 e T could not — 


Fy 
E 
E 

æ 
5 
pr 
435 
S, 
oy 
= 
i=] 
O 
z 
= 
a=] 
8 
. 
5 
N. 
0 
1 
* 
go 
5g 

Bae 

o x 
= 

85 
p 
bai 
A 
42 
— © 
7 
= 
4 
— 
pe 

A 

p 
5 
m 
E 
E 
E 


a 
ler classes ; - some i 
bunt and places within their ti nd there I read that the bees should be swept 88s, some 
De the wean een wine — reget 85. UE ko tree on which they hung into a hive, or, if oh 3 of hatching is — July. raan an 
y alone a few years ago. The | branch was r it might be eut off and laid on a clot oblong shape; others were like Barleyeorns. From 
* pater 


F 
gy 
8 
5 
E 
4 
E 
23 
. 
—— et 
2 
i=] 
g 
8. 
3 
A 
03. 
3 
f 
z 
3 
2. 20 
2. 


=æ: 
5S 


be dating the count} I could go u 
the ess numbers who are being molested, I — I did not fear so much being J eg i 
hours of business in our denal 8 as losing the swarm by unskilfulness, I then A Mixed Flower-garden. — — ee 
Wa, Teereation and Seek in 1 1 sawed off the — — — feet from the bees, * y | of flower-gardenin i he, e bed, is but the patel 
Ry alone can that intellectual am ent | wife, without the least protection on hands or face gém flowers of the same co ou, in on * ? 
afford. It a a Ada this clam ported the other end, and when the cut was complete work quilts of our x that the 
Smployment that I have ventured to — e together, laid it on a cloth on the Grass. The hive to the Grass-plat. I agree with Mr. 


C THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


a pity it 
ple, especially 
of the lower orders, that they will often suffer from the 
want of a real comfort, simply because they will not 
abandon some ag ish prejudice or break throug 
their usual habi his has been i 


8 8 


They go 


t This reccipt i is i. 
portant, because the skins of the Haricots render the 
sdigestible, ] 
istaria sinensis. On as of the rafters of the 
roof tory here, is trained a 
t, the flowers of Which are 


n mass $ 


E 


People Ate ge yet so cursed 
emigration, Why do 
and intelligent of the 

emi reland 


nature 
employ 
not the in 


ysiskilfully wail tect them, 
A ego fat 155 


would strengthen the ties of the United Kingdom 
the — squandered uselessly in the time of famine 
lie out 


flows, 


ul ual than 
e or the other separa tely. Accordingly 
teeth the length of the pa teeth, 


the co 
va teoth me length of the long teeth 
ted very well where the — A were 
se but left t the small ones untouche 
idea p 
ined. We have ha 


eci 
n -E pasi A it 95 the s 
them better on the surface, and 
leaves the ground more level. 
weather it w. 
amongst erops. 


n 
ossesses the raed eae ty of leaving 
the soil at bottom as well as at top open and porous. I 
will only add that this vey sie of hoe could be is 


of any size or co so as to suit the different 


Berry, F oreman to 


em | 


S| common hives ; that is, 
side structures, w. 


70 | an ad in this 
| om oto atthe to 


“have looked 
at e 
; bees” about midsumm 


yment, and the 2 of | under co 


and Perry, phe aie Nursery, Battersea 
* * and report.] 
If some apiarians were to study the 1 of 
urage, and our fickle se mo 


diid 


in his “caps or end boxes.’ 
Seer e eons be loss of time ; rie it 8 — 5 
small caps seldom a but pate in the end 
differ but little in constru 
honeyeon 


system, 5 4 — 
vt 2 it a part of the honey- | | 
the combs below ** 
into — books on te 1 FOF. he 
* than that of « 


Had well 


A few weeks | mirable 


e properties of | mo 


in the! 5 rod 


as to attend to 
e 


resin, 
*. 1 7 for fencing, wi 
- Northwood, 


wil | class wh 


p u have onl 

of these ite n ric b 3 1 5 
they w none to answer perfectly, 32 
of twi ick end in mata ha preserve ġe 
1 until ea are waite to be cut up, 
bask ab 
for a large garden, for about 64. and if you make ti 
he will probably ity of nice white pes 
5 for tying up pla Ca 

Oxalis 3 5 to — plant we 
garden e 1 » however, that 5 


trea 
in the garden tore foe a 
years at least, without any protectio 


n, and in 
wall or shelter of 11 T 
earli 


onsiderable trouble, and enco 


urage 


ho have fe means ambush tender thi 
2 the winter, to p ase this delight 
J. G. Nelson, Winterion R 9 pm Yi 
e | [We presume this garden to be sandy, aud 
danad 
1 5 Disease. A crop un 
having 


of | escaped 
moas rack, has be -s dare 
bat a this as bas pe t heen ‘the fact, 0 u © 


eens yp te | 
ka 


se is not 2 to Pia eer 
2 n to * solved is, wh 


S. 
4 


3 


— pag a plan only fit to be Gonna 


8 —.— 


* would a — bi tter to 
js have let the Brod hahine thas to ha 1 1 


of the fog with t the 


1 th weather, 
— te ed to make, as 


the production of moisture causing powers 
afterwards, through its non-conducting Po 
. ame ones | 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 343 


— . 


its form; the broader end swe Ils, as does also the emar | gives the details of a process by which he Mapon to 
— en nd, but in a less degree. This comes in e — a spirituous . free from an e 

with th e embryo sae seated at the base of the aii e,and | or smell, in the place of the ordinary brandy 3 
gradually —— it, whether by Nenn. of the — the distillation of the mark, which i is often tainted 
an 


mem G 

The — — whi ích has penetrated i increases in e, and | greatly diminishes its value. Instead, too, of using the 

soon loses all connection with the broader an the | remains of the distillation as manure, M, Renaudot 
ithe 


d | in iate par ering away a d separatin e | proposes to obtain potash from them by calcination, 
end of the pollen grain has now become the embryo, Comptes Rendus, No. 11, 1849. 
y | and, after it has been completely amalgamated with the SSS 
axel embryo sac, sends out a root from below and a frond Calendar of of Operati Operations. 
isimin aar you have quite lost sight. ] from above. It will be observed that, contrary to all G gor the ensuing week.) 
. observations in Phsenogams, the radicle end em- T DEPAR 
Sorieti ies. bryo is in every stage directed towards the base of the Now that the “general potting is over, the principal 
A a embryo sac, and not towards the micropyle, This operations in this department will for some time consist 
pee : a ae 1 alone would cause one to hesitate; but Wigand's ob- in watering and trimming the plants, a in 1 
ths took place a orns SANOIN: | servatio t very doubtful whether the young | sects p in flower should now be ke cooler 


. : ns ma n, 8 
: hteen stands of nine blooms each 23 . is ae developed from within the so-called | atmosphere, or sa to cooler quarters — those in 
m pen Be 1 n ah Ieee |° 3 vule. The subject, at any rate, —— P e E inquiry. which they have been Sue and carefully shaded from 
ern 4 i sie. owe Th The theory of apne ier itself has oe with so m gleamy sunshine. Strong currents of dry air, unavoid- 
highly re net int ie- ing. — e s quarters, that this still moas able in hot weather, Saai be counteracted by keeping 
award o 15 be. Judges <- Nb eee marvellous in of it will not and bees not 1 75 shan y | ae Ronee and walls moist, or both plants and flowers 
rap ath Primo e ise of all due es ; 


d Marshal Soult ; 2d Mr. ne: : d occasionally syringing it ; this b d cools 
iiion, Ambassador, anc Mes picion because it comes from the hand of one who | an y syringing DECREE. Ad G00 
Canterbury with Hogarth, Triumph Royal, | i f : . : -_. | current of air as it passes through it. In pu or dam 
a Rose. jrilliant, Alcon, Princess Charlotte ip, no, ene aanib Put lee of. ita eee weather, however, a very different mode of pr — 
an 2 be pursued; moisture th 
ic ebene are themsel than doubt b m Pee ; ye. is then. een 

Mr. Crook, of Peckham, with Vivid, a o best Parnes of Europe urope. ee a SONME ee must be carefully avoided, and the plants should stand 
75 ming, Lachesis anA A halle Since the above was written, M. Thuret’s paper o n | Sufficiently far apart to secure a full and free circulation 

» and Crook’s Princess | the Anthe ridia of 3 has appeared in the “ Ann —— of air amongst them. Let all blossoms be removed as 

n 


Polyph Bd — 4 A ed to make large 
Sheba, and . ia fa oc 8 oe 2 eitung,” and mney © net with 4 a. Cae He Éis , | Specimens in the shortest possible time, should not even 
was awarded to 113 to ee or an elegant rose, however, extended hja research æ, on 3. the latter sho 
e this season, named y the Cotyledon: ich he ia 3 d Aniheridia, picked off upon their first appearance. All specim 

examination of ————— and Lycopodiacese was Plants should À have plenty of room, and should be occa- 
try Show. prevented by his being unable to get their spores to r turned round, in order to prevent them growing 


Coun 
— ae coat on eee Son germinate, We are not aware that any one has yet | 019-5192 ORCING DEPARTME 
of use plants. For the best pan of 11 Tnlips : been — . raise the former from seed, hthey| p ; 3 
, with Surpasse Catafalque, Charbonnier, Tra- | frequen e up in houses where they are cultivated, Feds ype ery a [neh Showing or bee Shek 
7 Bienfait, 3 N. ‘Magans, ea p 7 „fruit will be considerably benefited by receiving liquid 
am, King, Triumph Royal, Gonta g young. ing ti fruit begins to 
E A 


l 
i Pacha, Pelopidas, Favori de unacquai i , to be exhausted in producin d unless it i itivel 
. . cha 9 x ted th th G Count's dis 8 Se produc seed unless 1 1s positively 
— , Brilliant, Gloria Mundi, cquainted wi e German Coun k 22 coverie r pe d — 8 


es, Bel ebe; . 
pet, Sami, Albion, Garrick, ge v Garden Memoranda. showing, are in pots, it will be an advantage to shift 
lady Crewe, Roi de Cerises, and Adelaide; EXHIBITION oF AMERICAN PLANTS, Borawic GARDEN, | them immediately into larger pots, or to top-dress them 
with Charbonnier, i e Captain REGENTS PARK. — The Botanie Society having announced, with some rich turfy loam, unless they can be turned 
nme, Algier Wade's by advertisement and otherwise, that there would be an | out entirely into the soil, which of course would be the 
jolet Alexander, Matilda, aAA Tertius | ox hibiti 1 k 3 W “ 
—For the best atols ie meee * 


Matilda, and Comte de Vergennes, mark, consisted of a brilliant deep crimson en- | ing. er potting they will require a closer and 
Mr, Martin, with 7 Ales oli Bague 5 saa 4 ray named Blandyanum, from Messrs. Standish and | moister atmosphere for a few days till they 7 5 to 
r, Archer, with Abercrombie, Bienfait, ond Noble, of Bagshot, and another Rhododendron, named | root into the new soil. in 

11 ; 


3 d, f vy. W. T 75 3 ith } 
ß T 
i „Mr. Martin, wi overeign ; od, e — apple 
o, With Lord Mansfield. For the best Biblomen: blossoms, and is evidently a late-flowering and valuable | | means sof rollers that it can be applied or removed at 
f k Ab Me | ha i We apprehend this will be very inferior | pleas 


ith Sable Rex. For t : í 
ia i as an exhibition to the admirable collection next to be RISTS’ FLOWERS. 
dat; d Le W. Dolon. eee 8 noticed. As the bloom of "alipe i is now fairly over, the awning 
Doan may be removed, though in the case of much injury 

Revi w M . Warerer’s EXHIBITION of AMERICAN PLANTS; | having been sustained, it will be advisable to ve pene it 
le ws, KIxd' 8-ROAD, CAELSEA.— This exhibition is now open, till the roots are ta taken up. We hope that am: 

tg 04 ee der Farrnkriiuter vom and we cordially recommend all lovers of gay-flowering have made up their minds to discard alt I inferior shaped 

May uminski. Berlin. 1848. 4to;| hardy plants not to miss the opportunity of . flowers, as well as those which are disfigured wi 
it a i 


sa y N discolo’ base, Weare a for 
: oie have been made to discover the male | formed a eee pk gardon in three igi ents, | in this beautiful flower, and we are glad to find that — 
Ferns, as by Hedwig, n di, Link, and with turf mar el- walks ang among splen endid judges at the great York exhibition have taken the 
+ with wala 3 pas success till Nägeli pub- re — of . Azaleas, and broad-leaved mgA in disallowing as much as possible all flowers 

n ce 8 on the under side of | Kalmias, in such a manner as to torm them ine = — or discoloured stamens. Tulip seedli 
N aS young Ferns, which contain | clumps, the effect of which, when viewed from a should be kept growing as long as possible, the larger 
10 3 endowed with an active motion, like raised stage at one e end of the tent, is or once strik- the foliage ua more bulky will be the root. RANUNCU- 
anniæ, 


sie Mosses and Jungerm The ing and elightful. Besides the enormous mass of zyses.—These beautiful flowers have been seriously 
e ese bodies and of their peculiar contents | flower of — * which is here .— e | damaged this ¢ e Our reports from various growers 
confirmed 8 spe amt observers, but the most promin: feature is the extremely large plants | | announce considerable loss. We are confident that the 
the first to in the “ T Botanische of Rhododen iron, which form the subject of admira- | fewer nostrums that are tried, confining the compost as 

„18 — ~ ais Count Suminski had | tion of all who see them, We remarked a specimen of mo ia ay to brs cayed vegetable 1 ber 
180 i ol i 8 


n Ne qa cada spumaria, 

situated higher on Nas frond, | yellow, and pink; and there are a few magnificent its frothy envelope, is also very troublesome, and should 
8 e had ob- bushes of Kalmia latifolia, To this fine assemblage of | be destroyed.—Attend to directions given last week as 
pean. of the ry, the cor- | gay-flowering plants Mx. Waterer has also added a small | to Pinks, which, should the weather prove dry, ought 
confirmed by the tes- Pine is represent a lawn to hav lacing, 80 
in miniature planted with the —— „ kinds of| a point in their beauty, ‘gill be defective. 22 
-| Conifers. Among these we remarked Cryptomerias, culas and Polyanthuses from drought, and cover — 
between 7 and 8 feet high; a “ well-furnished ” Pinus | the sun with light awnings. 

excelsa, at least 10 feet high; a pretty P. Webbiana, 5 HARDY FRUIT GARDE ee 

feet high ; together with P. macrocarpa, Hartwegii, 2 will . cae hing, with 2 

and Douglasii; Abies Deodara, the dwarf A. pumila, | clean material, for the double pome eeping t 

S, | Ar ia imbricata i vire a uit free es aig n a — 

i ja a and others. These, as well as excessive 4 ummer. 

th the Wein’ penis gathered together ty are part of | The The old-fashioned practice was to lay clean, 5 ight 
Mr. H. W tensiv 38 j he row 


aterer’ 80 dee h 

oot a visi ially | its name; the unsightliness of the plan, however, has 

whieh, we bra dh aes is wel w — Ag agh b d long since condemned it. The material most generally 

S MR 5 used, and which answers the purpose very well, is the 
X the law 


Hiig Or ave a a consisting of 233 lots, | lsieni for the purpose, and even in preference to it, 
Ad i e hamm er the other mee we would recommend a ro of plain, dark-coloured 


-i 
i of Dendrobium 
Other lots, 50 one s: two exceptions, fetched | the 1 and ripening of the fruit ; if laid with the 
slightly h y i 


n 
ika 3 has sent a paper to the . clean and dry. Before the mulching 
tly developed pyle c of the o 0 A but one Academ of arsi Paris, relating to the means ring is put on, the ground between the rows should 
we ere ur ont wither. sty a mark of Grapes ma may be employed much be N with a ag te if of a dry ated pore 
eS cule or pollen-grain soon changes ep | moro, eM te N is at present, M. Renaudot | be be well watered with iquid manure, which, by ie. 


344 THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. frowns 


a — 
the mulching, will generally be all that is required 
80 he aed, At the same time a good dress- 
ing of rer dry soot under the leaves and amongst the stems 
of the plants will stimulate the growth of the fruit, and 
s 


-B hase; — . — e ae 


? 
May 25—Cloudy; 11 — with aphides syringe them 


— the sleeping oo om of s and other vermin Mean temperature of the week, 41 deg. above the a 
Thin out the young m — a 
Raspber ing three or four of the best where State of the Weather at Chiswick during the last 23 years, for the 
the shoots l — stren but whe ensuing week, ending June 9, 1549. 
e are only o , 
they nge Aparen eight may be left ; these 214 884| aa | Noot | Greatest Prevailing Winds. 
will form fine strong canes for tyin 7 —— * the zune. FE 22 5 EE Years in Quantity | -ai Jla EE 
"2 1 Any young inisg up 5 As Se | Rained | ef Rain. E E ind zis 2 
stoo to furnis ——}|—| — 
gia Ar To kei Sunday 3 70.9 | 463 | 58.6 8 0.91 in. |—| 1} 2} 1} 5} 7| 3| 4 
plants for ew plantations if require Mon. 4 408 | 46.9 | 589} 10 076 1 312 6 4| 3 
caterpillars should be destroyed ; hand picking is the | Wes , f | $$ S7] it jog [ahaaa 
most eal se mas gl es | galee e Le EI 
HEN GAR y 8| 70. pa 
Marro Satur. 9| 71.5 | 48.7 | 60.1 0 230113080302 
Ridge Cueumbe ers, Gourds, and | Vegetab le iios an ger . ported Sovarred on the 7th 16H 
should now be planted out; the for 1 the usual | therm. 50 deg.; and the lowest on the 3d, 1537, and 8th, 1838, therm. 35 deg. 
way, on prepared beds of rich soil, with the temporary ee 
— — of hand-lights, and the latter i in — places Notices to Correspondents. _ 
on the fruit walls or espalier trellises. preparing | Mar we beg our ConnesronDens to bear in min hat 
: shroom t undertake to make chemical analyses, — that it is 
the beds for ridge Cue cumbers, sal piece sof Mu for eign’ tS 7 the purposes wbich ia journalendeavours to serye 
spawn may be laid on a stratum of half-rotted dung, a to reply to questions having no relation whatever to garden- 


ae Aer from = . — He e 1 that the 


lea mbers 
ov er “the bed, the Mushrooms will — — ae 


Mus 1 or 2 let the old beds be No ome 
as soon hey be o go out of bearing. If, u 
novia he soil, the dung appears decayed or ex- 


n hot weather 
sible, without “throwing it open ; in order to assist in 


quently vith ‘cold water, and the evaporation allowed to 
top. Let all the ho reir oppi ngs Lobe ay aig 
to r te ex 


pea = strongest pan 15 early sowings into their 

pro laces. Basil, Savory, Tomatoes, and other 

things raised in hotbed’, and Onions and Leeks, prere 
now be transplanted. Continue to sow Peas 

and Kidney Beans in succession, as soo as those ote 

last sowing Fa i e ground. Stick Peas of . 


sowing of Endive should now be made — the white 
Batavian is the best for early use. Sow far e in pots 


bage, „ for late mn use, a Broccoli 
Kuight's d Broeeoli for late e spring fuse. 
ick 


require much ing, for in hot dry reer consider- 
able 3 is t thereby am to the plants which are 
re d. ature 88 
ould be sown pang thin: than would have been 
thought n a month or six weeks back ; this i 
allow them a longer peri grow before they will 
need removed, and in order that they may 5 
be ifted with 1 Do not 


consider it too much * to employ head and bias | 
to prevent or destroy birds and insects, which are 

very actively at sai f robbin you of seeds and pi 
2 unless timely checked give you a barren wil- 


1 After the late 
rains, ween tchen garden crops should 
be loosened with a fork, in order to allow a freer action 


0 
with the destruction of weeds. As the earthing up o 
Celery soon require attention, let all the fine * 
ashes be carefu ully preserved for this purpose. We will 
Say more on this subject in a future number, 
sie ar ober Hegele Garces Ce. 0 


Moon’s Banomerss, THRRMOMETER. 


One gentleman begs to kaw what metal he finds in a 
oe pit, another is anxious to know whether he is bound 
to pay his seedsman’s 4—5 : third asks for the names of a 
—— of sea-weeds, and lichens. For the future we 
ust decline noticing al ‘tush i inquiries. 
tes :NE oe 2 week 5 Number, p. 328, and also a 

. aph in r Hom me Correspon ndence” of to-day. A 
toad or two on yee border will assist much in clearing it of 
woodlice 


BEES : Dogo. Catch the large ground ih which injure your 
greenhouse and hothouse flowers with a pair 85 ntomological 
forceps—or ges them with honey ‘sad arse 

Booxs: M P. There is no book specially on jet —0 C. 
Parnell's B British Gr — Sa 11. Waterford, Neill's“ Fruit, 
Flower, — Kitchen Garden 

Canary BIRD: — wood, 1. doubt Millet is as wholesome 
a for Can nary birds as Canary seed; the former — 
worth 5s. or 6s. per — f ina nee latter about 20s. to 2 
per bushel shows that bird-fanciers have not received — 
name for nothing. 

: 2 Permit us to acquaint you that neither 

the matter nor manner 7 your communications suit the 

ticle. 


CONIFERS: Balland Never prune Conifers when the sap. ted 
running, any 28 tuns wilk io: non- — evergreens a 
quite l ire Apri or early in May is the best season, 
Fill up the chasms in may — nk of oar Yueca w Foie 
ture o: ual — fine rcoal dust, clay, and Patton 
and then ied up the schon with a eee — — sucking. 
—— will propagate these things by suc 


L. 
‘radiation when young, cause this disease. Praning oe 
will diminish their power of flowering, by increasing their 


vigo 
Faurr 1 TREES : Constant Reader. With the exception of stone 
fruit we think it anz not to shorten back the branches of 
a of chatty rd tree until the e year after planti ng. 
Go —— : Sub < They like gravel in the bottom of the cistern 
ch they are — and, if — water plants to 


fork 
— — under. 
GoosRBERRIESS: C E C states that Gooseberries are going to be 
plac og athe yon goes. Perha 


some ets aq! correspondents will be kind pono to give their 
experience in the matter, 


w 1 n 2 f you will be kind enough to favour us with 


specimens of the insect in rete name we will name it for you, 
and we may then be able to instruct you how best to get 


ch opera- 
tion with c In the absence of the 


da ikea * — for 8 against which 
see Answers to o, Correspondents Pec the last two numbers of 
the Chronicle. The ot of Pinus insignis is bur. 
rowed into by 23 all b. beetl tle ‘ia d Hylurgus piniperda, an 
account of whioh gol pe: anna 8 the Gardeners’ Chronicle, 
1846, p Raspberry buds are gnawed off 
small el titer rs tomentosus). They should be 
caught by shaking the plants when the insects are S 


and streng enin ng, though erroneous opinion aon — = 

formed in . wom Sm 7 — left to th fa i are 

more like fran n than sober-minded mer peer men, 

Fo or o ourselves assure you great sincerity that 
t bet 


erea 
coolness i on 7 that — shmen are not to presume to do the 


8 To disinfect your fresh slaughter-house 
manure, mix it with bog earth, fine charcoal, — 8 or 
A ot wi o 


should add to uis from era o time, charcoal dust, peat pri 
m, leaves, sawdust, or such substances. A little vitriol 
— pa) — Vill! improve it much, 


A Names oF 3 Constant 
DL. An 


Reader. Lantana Camara, — 

Acacia aon but such plants — be named 

without flowers.—Mac I. 1 Ilex I 
RS F. 8 hastatum,— whi Too much b when 


Ww 
other plant. 2 2 3 are quite unfit to — questions 
about, — W „ Apparently the yellow —— 
ne 1 Ash. —J C M. Armeria maritim mmon 

te 

Nets: EFL. The best way is to send them to the near 
tan- y The proportion will depend on the quality o; p 


Paxrox's —— 3 — eady, 
each copy. Parties wishing to — “a 
8 their tenantry, can ‘be ae sopies fre 
for 5s. 
Peace Trees: 0 H. The curl is more unsightly th 
nently mischievous, If the blistered leaves become ned 


quite a failure this year, — asks ** — Rhubarb cannot 
aps 


PEL tiie petals rosy lower 
centre; ersey 
dark eri mson gent spots in the cer 5. Pride of oer; 


water engine so much — biae. 2 he leaves 2 if wid, 
* 


and be 
Perancowtoms : T D. Pel elargoniams have i 
EC. 


I — PRESER Tou wil 
for at p. 732, „ 1847. find the receipt mnk 
RANUNCULUSES: C H, —— ir flowers ma 


bouquets, &c., with advantage to the bm y be ty 
blossoms before they — = pt Ci 
better and creme bloom : — zies likely to ! 
REPLIES oF Co — — 1 
meaning, for — o not know whet a you irt. Pray — poy 
SUMMER >RUNIN „ The most fo ‘orward 
generally hed: on the upper parts of Pear and ot Ri 
may now be stopped by pinching off their points Pium g 
of Gooseberries and Currants are yet too — tug 
thinned and stopped. The shoots lik for 
in Peach and Nectarine trees may row be cha — 
regard to stripping the leaves off shoots ts hereafter ia 
t be at: back, in the case of Pear-trees, ses, You may ao aiai 


tr 
ee Bub. See p. 200 of the eurrent ear’s volume 
— * old cut. back Vine ps as doubtless ; 


earing wh Mr, too 
of nsec rh est thing you can do is Vente 
scope. Permit leaders to extend without stopping at — 
Ot shoots m ed whe tween 2 and 8 
length. Sub ably your Vine-border been 
8 by 1 late — apa your ho very 

: the two together have brought on 
dew, oh is as much > di ease fit of 2 
Worms on Lawns: Sub. Lime-water wi them. 


— think, me favourable Heroe 
n the way you on. 1— price should have 
rot we have — — you 7. * 


Wann te cK 

Aguitecias: J T. like yours are 
by no means uncommon, and — wo and v 
striped double ones.“ 

AvugicuLas: JR. Your Alpines are very pretty. Select the 
larger flowered kinds, heres those with entire petals, and re- 
* — — -eved one 

AZ Al. M M. Your yellow 3 hardy Azales is 

, and a novelty in its colour; 
but the “lowers are, we fear, too small to be attractive,” 

Ca 


crimson ; 
inferior in saie = 9 an chocolate, lens pe 


— and SAA put rather fate 7, shaded purple, with s 
few irregular 2 — y buff e „tolerably good in out 
line, and colou: , crimso tly with ; 
good in oldar eo size, but Bowe cy i — „ 
late brown, with a few yellow marks; good in size, 1 
and colours, but a little ‘indented in the outline—one of 
best. 10, chocolate and yellow; bad in shape. = pale buff, 
marbled with urple ; 8 outline, fiat, 2, 
ar 


ellow, irregularly spotted with brown; tolera good in 
shape, but a little indented in the o tline, m ey 
pretty. 15, pale yellow ground, spotted "e dark 

small, round eno 14 — 16, pale yellow, thinly 
with shaded purple ; inal k ad in atine, 1 — 
marbled with crimson ; W good, ou 


thickly 

eye too large, and flowers sak eres A very 

1, shaded crimson, — be arly 

slightly indented in outline, — be eye rather 

wise a very — variety. 3, cri 

finis 1 with straw colour; shapi 
mall. shaded urple and e 


E 

5 

a 

105 
Far 


3 STIRI 


: 
4. 
it 


iy 


we 
1 5 i 


very handsome and sh gi ty. 
thickly aor or 2 with d 5 
ene colo kings; 
— Apei ‘pale pon ae aa 5 
8 : T P. Not worth Tonen 
violet ; good in colours but very 5 ect in shal 
filling up.* xture and markis% 


HEARTSEASE 3 reg good 


— Centre; e ue god 
e 2 
— 12, dark, with yc 2 110 cent h. 


purple, 
3 eye; a fine, la well-form 
8 38, upper petals ople centre, 
th vio — 


= texture thin 
— er iene crimson, margined rT deeper 

lower ones bright rose, faintly veined, wich a well 

and white near the centre; petals 

edge; texture and colours good. 


1849. THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 345 


- EFFECTIVE FENCE AGAINST | worth, must have observed the peculiar 5 state of things to which bil idl 
i it m Wire Netting of various | and luxuriance of the winter Beans, which were In England, Ei evil has bee Ara or § Pe gn 
beginning to flower the first week in May. In can hed its * ht, by th t . 
, t0 t prices varying fro 4d. to 1s. reached 1 el a aÀ ste itation 
mec at 5 prices. 1 sent cases, however, all is now changed. oe * which baffles 155 kill 5 3 vis <0 
3 se reaped h though covered with flower, exhibit a mass of and by which a wise and good Providence is working 
ese ering the last 13 years, cr of the 5 speak — ease, 5 rapidly er oe. and erro to | out his designs. In Ireland the change, though good 
excellence of the article, Apply estroy t ole The is that there is | will ultimately arise from it, is attended with 
| pire hee afactory, Stoke Ferry, Norf no possibility of checking Gra alihi for not | intense present suffering, vated and prolonged 
Teer at Ts e, e ORT omiri is the task as hope eless as that of a physician | by the desperate fidelity with which ae opulation 
LANDOWN. pop 
. p ESIROUS | AS; DRAINING AND IM. Who is called in to a patient in the last stage of | of all classes cling to that treacherous r 
ESTATE con alle small-pox, but there is every reason to We have before us a letter from a ooi 
ORS. OF “THE, Lapel at believe that they arise from changes of temperature | on whom we can Gly who says, “ In Donegal, every 
OF ENGL KUN MPANY, established 1844 n a 1 the agriculturist has no derte, acre is planted with Potatoes. In Ros- 
ment, are prepare un rt 
e . A ly sonlonpey 
, t 7 Š 
ope of p states, itera landowner havi ing of the exterior tissue of the plant, eae very has stated, on the au athori rity of Lord e 
——r . e a Iperf 
leg improvements. ar edgin elr last resources 
Cer br e eot wad o wners of limited interests — a neither consequent on the attacks of insects nor plant as large a enih at possible with Potatoes 
— ee verse Lips improvements, including arising from fun and that when asked what will be their position in 
— ney hah . vet ee —.— l, = 5 5 of m dane is “ey 1, te edad of mah a failure of that crop, the answer 
erer their 5 1 through or less affecte e blossoms Meg 1 12 spotte do nothing but 
— iar 1 paying for th ainage, through and the root itself more or less attacked. The | and die! 4 When it was 1115 to them that a 
— subject in case of objection 6 66 5 decision of first b ip is that of oblong elliptic specks, better and oa return from and might be ob- 
the Inclorare Commissioners. 00 er aiei hed A paris of pretty clearly defined, of a rich sienna brown , but ned by of Oats, Bean a Peas, ant Turnips, 
the kingdom, and the cage opi of its staff, enables it to un- | paler in the a tre, in consequence ofa a tendency of the: als A was 5 they had no seed. If seed were 
—— xtent with facilities seldom attainable the cuticle to rege. itself even at first from given them, they would try those crops. As if the 
he ‘oformation may be obtained on application to the the subjacent tiss The spo * soon increase in same resources which procured the high-priced Po- 
Serva ar THOMAS 2 a —. ooi — Benti number, and W become confluent, the cuticle | tato sets would not have procured the seed of other 
agents, ar. J. H. osing i inclinati e 


CHa ABNOCE, Land a 8, 1 re ha 
ee — m r Vor lular * which has acquired a deep ferrugi- energy to resort to them. This is the old cry, the 
NESBIT’S CHEMICAL AND AGRI- nous tint, and has a rough, slightly mealy K impossibility of cropping the land without the assist- 
TURAL SCHOOL, 38, Kennington-lane London.— | ance. his is especially manifest at the crown | ance of the Government or some other extraneous aid, 
practical knowledge os of Analytical and Agricultural of the root, and on the thicker portions of the | of which the inspecting officers under the 


L CULTURAL 
eying, Levellin a ineer. 3 > Tempo . 
—— Ags en Mes srs, 1 ben ore in iat Bee and the leaves, meanwhile, being greatly im- | Relief Act heard so much during the famine of 
Aden 
Mr, 


ed modern ae atio g K 1 a their g-gn ns by 7 5 seased state tS the | 1846-7, a cry which proved to be utterly unfounded 
s on Arithmetic, Mensuration, G g, | greater portion of their tissues (the spots, in this in- | when it was seen that such aid was not forthcoming. 
— 2 haa of = Rage oem og by Long. | stance, penetrating from one surface to the other), it If the cultivators of the Irish soil will persist in 
chool can be had on application either | is clear that the juices cannot be properly elaborated | gambling in Potatoes, and if the landowners will 

y etter, in the leaves, and that their downward course must | make no efforts to restrain it, and to introduce a safer 
TORK, OR — APPARATUS, = shoots are impeded ; in consequence of which, and more rational s 3 cultivation, both parties 

the s — are now + a great extent perishing, though | must abide by the consequences. The former 

8 ene 'R-HOUSE, MANOR. | e disease is quite superficial. If a section be made | must not be surprised if they are overwhelmed with 


IVES WIRE FENCE, to resist Grazing Stock, and ren- throng te spots, the cells 5 7 two or three first | poor’s-rates, nor the latter if their estates pass into 
—— — — * layers, but not more, are found to be affected; they other hands. One hing is certain, that to pay the 
Aae SUILDINGS, Green and Hothouses, Conser- | Are unaltered in form de e p is for the meh 5 them in case of failure by grants 5 the 
1 by HOT- WATER APPARATUS | most part 0 or changed into a gummy mass, Im 
pete — — ae entry, and Drawings and but sometimes adheres to W =e in ve 1755 of e and that the LEY classes in Ire 3 are 
ee Trade as usual. brownish granules; the disease, how pears | convinced that they 
‘Ward's Cases, or Domestic Greenhouses. 5 to affect the cellular heas aE Which sources, the sooner they learn the necessity of 


— L ͤ ͤ —C —gUi•ö ñ— — — 
PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS, KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA. | aeg under the microscope of a dee rae: red, the 
ec 


ROYAL LETTERS other, and ex ibiting every shad 0 1 observation, we ats e happy to observe among the — 
ess of the disease. An inspection of the leaves | tagers a greater disinclination for the Potato culture 

PATENT. alone would have induced an opinion that they were | this att and a more extensive planting of Beans 
affected by an abortive state of Uredo Fabe, but and Peas. These, however, and more particularly 


DENCH offers bor 8 Fab: HOTHOUSES, | not only is there not the slightest trace of any my the finik er, are mere summer substitutes. A winter 
perior to all others, in every | celium, but the appearance of the stem is quite dif | substitute for ait soa is still a desideratum. The 
et 6 ins. wide, 501, with | ferent from anything observable in the case of the | best we have seen on the table is the Haricot or 
cae prin e size. Patent Lights for fungus. White Kidney P Well boiled, a little butter 
foot, aceordin riag uo paint Td re It has been observed that where plants are at-|stirred among them while hot, and with 
| De tacked by parasitic fungi, the tissues in the neigh- | pepper, they form mace gl dish. ey have = 
OYAL bou ume the sa ic and c 
FF OF themselves do in decay, or when they are injured |a about 6s. the bushel. We are not recommending 
opkeare receiving Tenders from Innkeepers r| by insects. A disease of the chlorophyl and cell the cultivation of them in Ireland or the north of 
he ensuing 5 — en A ae following suppl ies, membranes is induced, which, in consequence, decay En land. e fear they are too tender for field 
nee g ofthe Society, to be held and exhibit the usual appearances of languishing culture, even in our southern counties, but in the 
drew’s 1 for 300 Persons, in St. An- vegetation. The same ruby tint was observed in aoe 23 wherever French can be culti- 
orwich, on Wednesday, the 18th of July, the case of Tares alluded to above, but it does not | vated for their green pods, there seems no reason 
Aurich on Th 2 Persons, in St. jAndrew’s Hall, at | follow that the diseases are therefore identical. The | against shige "ebltivation for their ripe seeds. They 
on e uin of July, — j eat point is now to observe whether all winter have the advantage of being a crop which does not 
— and 1 must be returned to’ 1 ee Bean crops are similarly affected, and if not, to occupy the ground long, and 3 be easily 


22 


da Hande, 16th of June, to the 58 Office of the Society, 7 ee e the peculiar circumstances which mi ht be | It is even yet not too late to plant them, and we 

deere kent London 3 the Society not binding iseit supposed to make a a difference. The lat ee would ur gs ee who have any inital with the 

tain ancl Council, James Hupsow, Secretary, Beans, as far as we have been able to ascertain, | cultivators of potas gardena to induce the trial of 

ES exhibit at present ab — appearance, but are pecu- experiments in ting them gyi aS scale, 

liarly strong and healthy, and the farmers hope and to introduce a piers article of 

tural Ga ette. once more, after three years’ disappointment, to see food, ins distributing some of the imported nak, 
a good Bean harvest. M. J. B. with directions for cooking them. 


var, JUNE 2, 1849. 
a en an TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. Ir is evident that af Potato is too praciri . ON TROE d AND cog agaa e 
tee dan geen lee c ciety of Ireland. * be yey Mew — so am aes 1 food. Be I wouLp bring to thenotice of the Society the result of 
Tunes.” G n ing. must descend to the ra a garden luxury ; | ; 
— Mary, Gont- ayes nes: ae what shall we substitute for 111 ow sre are the Ian TA yenis for a err made 0 1 te = 


are contin Nr i 0 p el: returns, 
— and w. y receiving 1 sane of morgin | chiefly on that root to be fed without it e | for from these —— and my example there has 
e may expect that diseased affec- | answer is thus far obvious, that they must be fed — 5 resulted to the nation a saving of food, growing 
Shes of plants will "y extremely pre- | either with imported food or with increased produce | to be of important consequence to the community ; and 
— of temperature, n raised from our own soil by means of improved | I ka the further gratification of knowing that the 
be ae direct solar lar ight for veil cultivation, That our own soil is — under an | attention I have called to the — — 
A every erie ce a improved system, 55 i cage “increased Tt — — 2 improved practice 
ion. w. . to| quantity of 0 would more 
i Which nergy was * 1 pens or the loss of the Potato, may be sir op ba 4 s ot an inquiry into t into the Eorpa 
seated ‘tted fact; and if that loss shall | gie proportions of Seed — — and e 
such stimulate cn proved cultivation, it may be| “Fe be . 


vocate, bein will be but partiall 1 
hailed as one of the — beer which could | py my exp And that 2 Á the quan- 
ve Ead ù upon From the Potato | tity of corn . which I have e pore my practice 
have flowed the — — ‘of those evils which should be > sown, and that w 
„are now desolating Ireland. The same evils would | in Great Britain . 
have resulted in and from the adoption of the supply of corn which this country, 
|P Potato as the sole fod of the labouring classes, a importation of the last 20 years, —— 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


r 


| Jung 2, 


346 
amo ounting in money to 10s. per * or a total of 5 1 
Were I to rest the 


ounds r annum.“ 


—— that ‘te was — no view to a tong 


ns first comm enced, but 


fere 
e | for ‘he crop by fin 
and had 


ractie 
ena seeding has been successful in producing larg 

we are 222 uy | Brow n on 1 —.— land, and by 

expen syste rm no more than the 

public tentimony affords that — . * have given me. 

confusion which allusions to various 


a 
T 


y m 
ar the Gol Gold Isis Medal, I will allude only to my ex 


ae with in obtaining the 
the p Meada 2 
a 


poor uires very muc 
Having alluded to that — if what I am about to 
should be considered of sufficient weight to in 


would support | 
pry by 88 1 wit also ee ss the crops that 

may seen upon ay * f my far om thin sowing, 
the syst advoca I hope 15 o sufiiently vey = 
with the conditions of ‘the Society by saying that 


of growi ng poh 

clay varyi wy in stiffness, but also of a 
very ordinary N — ty, The arable land I 
div ide in rtions, o 


drilled, l 
poera and the quantity of seed I| 
ears adopted is 3 


d 
e poorest land 


noticing 2 at 


i wi m from 
the turning where the drill deposits double seed, the the 
ellow shade ma 


young plants in the spring acquired a y 
w slower, with a owe spiry appearance, 
ifferent from and 


thinly covered the afte 
vigorous, ponnoos ears of 
or r. ob- 


is 
gone on graduall Lap ote 

rs Sage 8 of seed, until in 1840, when 1 advo 
cating 1 bushel per acre, a cas 
I was still poral ws much. I 


wal a 


Ti tir 


mherson mer ee 
a shouid be y prs ade — 


force in my fe nt that no more plants 
ian there will 1 3 pay frnd to 
pe lows that on poorer soils there should 
ł The practice very general in Britain in preparing 
Wheat is to po a pra fallow, or to grow a previous 
four plo 


carry to eri it 


for 

ound = hings, with pro 
ing of — ier Pepin fr —* crop by the w 
expenditure of Gd. or 7l, per acre, re 


s grown with 
er | and Poe they 1 N contrast thicker 


grain 
returned at harv 


annually | a single grain of 


for which I had opropt 7 bushels of seed, the 
drillma 


less than 3 b 
— * ‘to hide it * 
e | seed, h e rem twice as thick, so t 
one half of f the field had — abou 22 peeks — acre, 
. the other ha ot informed of this 
ter . * 

ding one p very thin and inferior ; | 
whole Tooked — bad I show's — 1 
e field. In the spring 


ey 
3 


e I 
ed | ver y fast, iea aei, so as to get Burs yeu hat. — | am 
f und 


became the 


v 
o 
=] 
8 
2 
— 
5 

R 
E. 


uble allowances par in the fields sonje 


headed ; e time 
covered, the — tillering of the thin sown having | 

filled all the intermediate space 
Having — shown what has resulted in my W 
from diminishing the quantities of my sowings of se 
I will endeavour to ree why 3 of Whea: t per 
may be expec yield more than a “larger Qu 


tity. Wheat, that is.to say, one 


An ordinary 
s takea from paepe as usual allowance of 15 or 22 bushels | 


yields more 
than about 30 gr — 
roduee we one ear, 
and it lik ws that if an 
pave of Wheat proton only 30 bushels when more than | 
bushel a been of plants will | 

d first — 
maturity, — after growing throug 

there was le 


has been pats seems to me unan 
does occur and occasions much mischief will be seen by 
looking at the sickly 3 in the spring, and the 
lage p roportion o arf e and barren straws 


harvest which are ever found i in a thickly sown. Wheat. 
I may be to have made no 
— for tei loss of plant by birds, insects, the 
mies ts haye tend with ; but 
that aaa — while considering 
grain to yield but one — and the yield to be no m 


eturn of 2000. fold may be realise 
hence it is that t to p 


d,* and | 


and 
sowed upon half the "field | t 


dif- | ca 


y | day. 


the means of ä 
; cotch 


umerous ing towns. 
to these iea 7 by — it follows as a natural 


consequence that high fares should be the order of the 
An appeal your Bradshaw will avail y 
nothing. Ali that your time-tables wi i 


that for less than one-third of the mand, you sce 
whisked nion ng an equal distance in about of 
ee e time, the announcement of which fact i in any coach 

ffice will be received by the clerks with a sort of half. 
chuckle, soloed bza a significant 
it!“ Findin 


ing th 
resignation to the ill and pleas 
be, we committed ourselves to the custod; 
of one of she Hereford day coachmen, a very 


which line the 
in this stage, little to interest the 


ith th 
road ad sides, there 


short, the traveller perceives hat d he is pay 
who are up chemin vo gs the chorpais 
5 to Herefordshire is highly retreshing, and 
ell for 1 ee of lee latter in the 
i here omit, 


owner of which told cost him 
he would not be without it for 1001. 1 fa avowal 
is ee —— able to anist an 
uld so well appreciate the merits of f the 
is but trifling, 


machine, 
yet bow 
national 


pendent of the bannia of its locality 


great natural adva: 


to multiply can 


is exposed to, no provision beyond this self power 

be necessary when so much as 3 pecks 
e ana hich vege- 
dening has long since 
of haying too erowded a 


age to 
the whole crop, ving, I trust, said enough to induce 
a consideration wi the waste Fi seed, not with a view to 

Pea ving of — — rather 


tha 
pleased to 3 my a 


against failure, and to 
en faileres 5 and they 

will occur under every system „ care will be taken 
trace them ight ea and no one will forgot | 
t is often too thin 


7 


often in 
Davis, 3, PrideicPe-plats; Old Jewry, I — 


A e TOUR IN SOUTH W WALES... 
N 


za help to progress by means of r 
rough, „ — seers rosin is ‘etre him, 
* Notwithstanding this fact 
the seed sown in Britain is only a a 
© are far more 


ceders, and realise about 30-fold. 


1 5 b a ibe 3 


o Nor 
pe private ‘charity, and Pages 
of the 


8 at rere 


1 


A |i 


d from thew 


tages, the stra 
it without feelings “a reverence, as once 
the benevolent John le, so well known 
e d The Man of Ross?” This was 
ne of his dene labours 
9 


to every 
the chif 


er o’er his cuana 8 pa 
Nobler teen kings, or king-polluted toras, 
Here dwelt the Man of Ross! 0 Corelle hear! 
Depar arted m nerit e aims a reverent tear. 
rie to th 
2 generous joy he . 
e heard the widow’s heav’ 
He re Jaigi spy shelter’d orphan’s 
Or, where sorrow. fags ivell’d e lay, ae te 
Pour’d CA right blaze of Freedom’: W 
2 bene aor? exertions pras 
almsgiving. The healt 
witness 0 
by his "philanthropy pot elegant ast ; he 
pa day, the grounds he enclosed, th oi 
ared, an the nume 


which the oe 


ray.” s 


d; all appropria 
publie! And the lapse of 150 years bas salje 
the enjoyment of “ #08 Max of creg s high re. 
But to The 

2 Bee 
— 15 A es 5 
the course iver is so 
ing, as to render the frequ 
thereto neither le nor 


features of the country are some’ 


99-1849. :] 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


347 


— fat in les right place, a result not 
Santo bay on the s ; Soe h beasts. 


introduc- | m 


ould be 


no se 
the comforts of the Green Dragon, just | W 
p gp mete to > s than any lion we were likely to 
meet with out 
Next dat ei for Builth, our . head- 
oe tt a but how w to get there 
a point unsettled an unknown In 


sshould on 
E mr only ho pe was 


i 

l H m 
more drag it into light and useful- 
| rec rough 
ch of it as wou 


‘ m 
appear and off we 
t picturesque ade I have 
Our 


likely to 1 

nil 

Three 3 
co 

mo 

set 


dions phaeton soon mado its a 
» Along one the mos 


soon 


4 ln fa ull shar 
er | ever va e 


y | town, 
by t the 
lls 


antageously plante 


of the y 

Installed in comfortable quakers, the exploration of 
Like many other Welsh 

agination. 


| 

| “hich, berali amalit of e Bist 
— e vids) hes lately ah a consi 

| e Peia altogether an object of attract 

Galen he inhabitants, especially the y 

their I always found either Bi . rp 

lind ee 


gfir 


tenlateg” po of them to be 
del un mong the members. Who shall say what 
ensue from this “ Diffusion of 


z 
S * 


. re advan: „ b about to 
ö — * effect, 19 above the level 
of Welsh 


seful | wi 
wi 


in their rough wi dresses, and I have had my wee ! 
I re seen the phe ap mountain stream, whi ch in 


Adel. the Welsh tenantry 
uired as the 


1 Talk to them of the 10/. an. 
capital of a a Norfolk farmer, 


As a specimen of splendid scenery, I know of nothin 
equal it. It 
er 


E 


in the pieturesque iy at of North 
What, for mance, can finer than the 
Beacons of Brecon een at . — the ved 
from that town to Aberga r t Ungin men n but to 
often cross the seas “ in search of the picturesque,” 
utter Bs apen of Ha beauties ey have never deigne ed 
to e hud hom f whic v ry few ho 
wait proso t to a the full e poison 

3 ee 8 ad pe to the Prin 
of prai its innumerable and 
ms 0 mountain scenery, Ti m obliged 
to confess * at these metim 


s I have stated, rendered 
‘filthy pe vt Raat) state of the . Topy ai 
roughfares leading thereto, amounting at certain tim 
to an 3 einn to ah but eposini i fe. invalid, 
pe edestr carriage road ther Tai 
bute the partial i 


of ‘the . in 2 own veg 


to the Biscay iari Bea ills Pai ies from roads ankle- ure 
mud a | formed 


Hi 
* « beautiful ee uf 
ha 


Ours | 


tice 
t Builth I removed, by 
medical friend, ‘0 Llanwrtid, the sulphur 
0 s 


If is 
some of the neighbouring valleys 
is a min witzerland, 
e in 


p 
masters alone will make e good servants: and these, as I 
have ehonhers n of rare am 


mounta 


ha r, 1 e o proceed home a8 big bird 
Llandovery ; and the road 25 was wild, barren, and 
in the 


b 

which, oe , will amy repay the trouble of a journey. 
e th 

uch enhanced 


the multi- 
inthe to for ope Rant receptacles 

í 18 doubtless favoured by the . — 

of the climate, had there taken root, and 


oe ian ie to 


an addition not less no i 
ornament to our 


complain ; and “here 


8 


d long and loudly * $ 
might almost eh indelibly, eee on my im 
m ard as d 2 107 their 


at all is n 


f: 
Ei eet 


not pat 3 up af 


ure What is so pe the province of 


the 4 11 but I trust they will 


ost is made of the live stuf, and I often wished some 


hat 
¢ our pre wie 1 see and yes pattern by 
e in all its 


Welshm rms they are 
completely e pegal the ne, oni oe they have of 
lieving the surface o „is by channels or grips, 
some 9 to 12 inches Af yes of one bold ditch 6 or 
uld eff ly cut 7 5 * > s 
and many a 
the v 


comes 142 question, ho 


are these 
carried out with np n limited capital ps 


vg ot a tag 51 eluded 


* Apropos of these Builth Springs, it may not 5 generally 
known, that the la —— e Lady Hester Stanhop: 

at over the pump- room for a co ag wap ie ti 

of abode. She divided the sitting a 

room, 


as her only means 
ed ladder 


ject 
vour | with dees 9 a pion * e ma 


I fancied nature nothings is lost! 
life an 


Į | valuable id 


pph. 
s, I aami, AnA e thus to interfere | mun 


beauty of 
hake a and way-side paths the Pu 1 is always a 
e botani 


object te, nect 
ny of which 
etted * poe were in ent stages of decay, 
hey were À ubly e ae and Were ting. What's 
beautiful thera oe Apm th of the maxim, that in 
he ruins of one plant furnish 
o ESE, and vegetation thrives. 


I 


re apt to 
Fakie balks basin ” ‘of th Wales the 
eap pre ene pippi of of this po 
of life; a position quite 
applied to all within reach of its r but not 2 
a certain radius from the ee 
The cost of A raising the price from 19 r ôs. a 
mouth, to 36s. and 40s, at the 1 
anwrtid. h veia now in 
ever co ompleted, effi 


rogress will, if a great reduction 
i ; but iti is rates to conceive 
ade re- 


in the te of this article 
of 2 oa in . E e 


p oana Meantime this 


mt Siler p 


advanced l therefore 
merely state in conclusion, that passing by | Abergavenny, 
R and M 3 we completed the circle at 
Ross, by rejoinin 
. out; 
gratif: 
Wales. 


of even a winte tour in 


e Vorresponden 


Hom 
Action of paa In a 


action st 
materials of the sail more capable of Satie assimilated 


* Rom 


tically miserable ;” IA somewhat 3 

m the absur oo f ; yet not so much go as it appears ; for a 
village may be vert roman en situated, yet very miserable 
n testify in ces. By 


e bye on sed “2 
pn essed by trave * and 8 
articular places, The townsm 


— — favo 
L 


chamber in ze 

out E rp of the o Pen in the 2 
retaining rambles 
broad-stay: 


„ for 
the comforts of well. stored shops, and the g smokey” at hi 
nst poor Builth, Llanwrtid, or 


rugged potion nan “seen 


mountain stream, cares not ere fa wae he 
essential to his v very existence, 


348 THE „n GAZETTE. 7 [June 2. 


y the roots of plants, and even goes so far as to assert | f a remedy for the present depression, seems | and andl ripened ; 4, that the manure is 
Be it cannot benefit 2 0 organic portion further than | to have picked up uncommonly high ideas as to the sum | better in contact t with the roots of the Plants, and thug 
process of oxidation bv en g the compound bodies | which a ton of Turnips leaves the farmer. He estimates | less is a requited 5 * that t 1 erg 5 ae cleaned : 
2 + 


inso 2 k 
s Aliquis” any positive grounds for thinking all the all cases of the manure). This is, indeed, good news to | and 8, that the crop is more 5. — grown, and thy 
salts of organic acid incapable of solution? Mulder, a all engaged in growing Turnips ; and certainly the plan better sample is produced for the market, Innumer. 
celebrated Dutch egg, has discovered, or rather by which this can be re pied one ear with another | able instances might be brought forward of heavy 

worked out, the history of seven organic acids, in the would be worth knowing; and if it did succeed would | having been produced by the drill system ; but to have 
soil, derived from 2 or f er KA vario | x more to to shut t me of all those bawling about the work well executed, intelligence, perseverance 
stages of oxidation ; and this action is muc sed, ultural Aten ¢ n anything Government could capital are required, and it will not succeed unless the 
and in some cases entirely brought about, br qui Wi do for them. My own prt hee so far as it goes, is | soil be well pulverised. Facilities for this pulverisa. 
The bodies thus Aona are them, mor e or less, | that from 6s. to 7s. per ton is the usual average re- | tion being obtained by the crops being drawn i 


thereby more or less soluble salts, just in proportion as a given weight of Turnips varying in different situa- a friable mould for 
the base contains much or little of the latter ingredient. tio ous from quality of land, manure, or climate, may | which, as has been shown, extend much further than ig 
this circumstance is very possibly dependent on | account for the viper state r. Tuke; there are | generally supposed, often from 3 to 4 feet or more, By 
the presence of carbonate of lime; for when one of also various ways of making out the sum left. The hoeing a em) the addition i nourishment 
these, and the humus for each is formed, a partial oxida- | cattle may just biv been valued when put on them, | given enables it — send out innumerable additional 
tion of the 2 eg takes place; carbonic acid, water, | in an easy way, ard sold out at a full price, or perhaps | fibres and roots, and, by the new pasture it te. 
humic acid, a arge excess of nascent hydrogen just weighed at the commencement of the trial and then | nishes both fo ‘snd mouths to trey and it is for 
bined, > bydrogen 3 liberated from i i i i i t I ht to their 
This nascent hydrogen has the power of | tributed to the food given 9 — that period, whereas growth and perfection. Such being the advan 
perea with the nitrogen of the air, thus forming any one that has had much experience in feeding must | the drill system, if properly carried out, it cannot but 
ammonia, t which a more valuable manuring | have observed that cattle after * for a time on one seem — nary that it has not been brought into 
substance does not exist. The reaction just de- deseription of food, when that is changed make a rapid more general use. The Scotch, ot all their admirable 
scribed bee roved by experiment, as far pro ess for some time, and ijai 7 5 — it NN — farming, with their splendid of Turni ost 
as it were possible to do so, by decomposing water remain in a stationary condition. Cattle are often without a weed, are still very — in this branch 
with the purest zinc, in which case a piece of to thrive unequally during a given period, although still of husbandry. As a proof of it, there was only one 
red litmus paper suspended over the liquid detected | consuming the same amount. Now when observations | implement of the kind shown at the — mete i 
the presence of an alkaline body, which could | are made on two or three animals, as seems to have agricultural meeting last year. 
have been nothing but ammonia. Thus it is evident | been the case in the trials adverted to by Mr. Tuke, | Barnes farm, I found only one field drilled, nich had 
— the Presence of lime in soils containing organic the result is not so trustworthy as when a large lot is| not been horse hoed, and which had a very indifferent 


B 
= 
= 
5 
p 
8. 
© 
S 
— 
R 
oO 
08 
+ 
* 
a 
2 
2 
m 
= 
B 
. 
= 
E 
5 
5 
ow 
$ 
„ 
8 
© 
= 
8 8 
8 
et 
=] 
T 
8 
aa 
= 
na 
E 
p 
z 
An 
8 
* 


i 


T causes t a very v f | taken, and se carefully attended to during a long crop of Wheat. In addition to the advantages already 
salts soluble in water, and which must therefore be ab- | time, Be seems ave been the case in the other in- | described, from the ground being treated in the manner 
sor by the spongioles of plants, since the latter | stances stated. 1 would be exceedingly 1 entioned, the thin sowing system ma 
possess no discriminating power. There i d and d much to the diffusion of just v This has lately been brought into much notice by the 
but the lime acts very advantageously upon mineral | to the actual worth of a ton of T when consu ice o echi a r. Hewitt 
masses, but its office is not entirely restricte this | by a feeding animal, were some of your numerons corre- a publication of the latter in favour of it, and b 


point. As a practical proof of the above, we see spondents to state their experience of not only the past Mr. Mechi in his series of letters. The principle on 
farmers choose very often that portion of the rotation | season but of several by-gone years, so that landlords | which it is founded is the same as that laid down by 
immediately preceding the Wheat crop for the applica- | may not have their opinions of the worth of land unduly | Tull, Liebig, and other high authorities, but as 

tion of lime, for then all the soluble portions of the | oa or — 284 where Turnips are not much have been quoted in ant Mhi Husbandry,” it is unne- 


$ 
4 
È 
Š 
B 


cessary to enter 
and nothing remains but a brown mass of insoluble | adopti ing t he readin available means of improving the | say that it can never front 
umus, which is only capable of being roused into ner condition of their farms, cA" giving food and labour to where it has failed, the fault has rested more with the 
and energy by the presence of quicklime. J. C., Fenty a greater n N of people. J. M., Ratho. undertaker than the system. To carry it out to ad- 
7 * . Practice with Science. Wine culture and application | vantage certain requisites are indispensably necessary, 


w om ts 
particular department of it, but somehow or other the 4 that the whole of a farm or district be under | has established beyond all doubt that the horse- 
individual experience of each does not always agree the plough, as is the case in Scotland — dale being a 3 powerful instrument than the hand- hoe, 
with that of others, and in no department does there to Berwick, and roun unse, for a distance of and penetrating deeper into the soil, is more efficient 
see e a greater diversity of results than = the re- | about 100 miles „ but in the mixed husbandry which is than the other; and that, even though many of the 
i 


turns feeding cattle on Turnips. e have Mr. more common with us, a large proportion of the land roots may be broken off by it, yet this is no damage, 
Mechi, after making a searching investigation into his ought to be arable. Mr. Stephens, with all his Scotch | for they send out a greater number of roots than before. 
i finding that his root crops had left him | prepo ions, says ( andry,” p. 105) t these new, young, multiplied roo e 0 
little else than the man ave your Gallo- the mixed husbandry possesses advantages over every lacteal mouths than the older ones, which makes it no 

he Gazette of the 10th June, other. It will never disap he farmer’s hopes. | wonder that plants should thrive faster by having some 
1848, stating that he had, after deducting the value of His reasons for the preference are then well described. | of the 8 e hoe, for as roots do not 
the eans, and Oats, with the cost of attend- | The proportion of arable for a farm of this kind he enter every pore of the earth, but miss * * 
ance, the sum of 3s, 23d. per ton for the Swedish | considers to be three-fourths. It is certainly the most | the pasture, which is left unexhau sted, 80. 


Turnips emma by his cattle, 30 in number, during onan style of farming, being the least laborious, | roots strike out from the broken parts of the =o iey 
th | and li i i red 


- Ar e liable to the least risk, as being not so entirely de- | meet with that pasture which thei 
June, 1848, 138 Lincolnshire correspondent, de- — — on the seasons. The — system e besides that — asture which the hoe raises for them; 
is ex e, which, brio after deducting resect a consideration how far a milk or a cheese | and those roots which oe hoe . — * * 
the poe scape outlay for or Linse seed-cake, c., and the manure, | farm is compatible with the whole land 83 — plough, and co covers again, are 
2 11 done e fo fp case, the sum or whether the natural are for | broken and some unbroken, all 1 e ge te 
7 0 y 2s. 114d. per he for Swedes and Mangold | bestowing on the yield of a milch cow W — and —— ts. Law. R : 
urzel, and this too from the feeding of 60 cattle | exuberance which is required. Certain it is that in| Ma anagement “of — e farmers in this part 


from the 12th of rares 5 ing, and in the most the cheese-making counties the — 1 are of the country ( Warwickshire), È have a practi, 1 
box ferred. i hees to require | turning over the manure heap in the yard ; after hill 
k instances, — of. them in England and one the rich fields around peg ob iid: Melton Mowbray; it is usually carted out an made into a dung: 
in Scotland, where there was no desire manifested by and in Cheshire the large are composed | in — field for which manuring is requ 
rag of the parties to make out a case of small return ; chiefly of land that has lain for ages in Grass. But thereby two more turnings over into and “out of the 
or, eydis arin K 4 E * whe — — mixed or the totally arable system is to be | carts; even after that they frequently turn 3 
shire correspon ine ue of the | pursu e in while i reaso "E 
arne ma made, rera rge SE 9 — „ the same art and e enterprise is we smi — =o while in the field. The n they gi jas di 
i en eavouring to imitate. Now I throu y the means of thorough drainin and con — adv me, ge was a 
must 8 that with no higher returns from feeding | t — This ‘tillage ean in w o ways p properly and rich back 5 * , oe 
pend ne the above hold forth, there is little induce eff ectually 33 unless it is accompanied by the | better than a heap of dried straw. News if the ere 
pst strive 7 5 for the inerease of the cultiva- drill system ; a system invented by Tull more than a | be applied straight to the land from the yard, Ww 
5 Turnips; but I am rather inelined to think that century ago, in many parts little ere in others the straw being rotted 
e actual average value of a ton of Turnips is more not at all, and not even understood. I 
od 


2 
22 
E 
5 
& 
8 
a 
+ 
& 
8 
3 — 
5 
$ 
oo 
> 
© 
5 
oa 
© 
2 
2 
= 
= 
tn 
H 
5 
a 


hen 
mo e ogee By n, interesting, | covered it. rely rot fast 
tattle “ane bought in during October last, were bought | that it Gan, be well to re DEUS wot thse itself, edited wy then. Ther is anther practice (a saat common 004 
of feeding 1 we K GL por sling — ; i A 11 = who Bock ron — 7 that it was not the mere as — probably are aware), connected with this espias 
, 5 offal, wou 25 ing of plants in rows that was taught by Mr. Tull i 
ien been req uired to have Wr instead of whi ch the reasons for doin i 4 peor etic f 
-hi i 


S 
8. 
5 
af 
8 
g 
8 
8 
S 
ia 
1 
a 


land 

' H e inventor of the first is dri i the air and 
Tu at at lll z dl 3s. 2 ton ae poo — ; but that which entitles him to our — err pears 5 
w as much as cou | admiration and gratitude is, that he discovered and ex- | th i is a fact 

m quantity ot aber even had they received but a small — to us the reasons far inventing t the drill mashine. — CA aoe a 

hes food, an ( 5 Kew Hus a — 6) y be — med as follows in 

ew Husban p. = t the seed may by obse considers 
can the soil with er exactness as to 15 A field (though it frequently lies # has 
i of land where : i 

top- 


a0 
Gazette of Mayl, Br. Tukey when beg of high Fer distant f un protect each ao en geld sy sia — 


4 * 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


349 


Farming of Derbyshire, to which the prize o 
e n, President 05 2 North Derbyshire Poa 
ultural Society had be 

“The Council | ordered their be best thanks od the favour 


k, by pr a conducted experi- 
that have come under 


in s0 
— effects of it, though = Wier — 


process. All man 
may be ploughed under in its * and strawy 
dition provided the land be clean, but spring- 
in 


» in Rutland, at 


uesday next. 


Calendar ndar of operations. 


N Farm, May 14.— The . of April weather 80 
. k iA the growth Le! Tares — Clover that they were 
ips 


a peg “ — sabes 2 

ACON : e su n exha 

numbers of the Pa; "n OaS ty ytd 
Beans: A B. It is believed to be advan’ 


ose crops which 
nd of course leave it —— a for 
ar in this se at Mr. 


any of your 
of l 3 ae a 2 


p 

g horses. The continu n of Thurs d sub- 
were 5 rt mild en has do abled the bul K of he T * — and a 

moderate portion will be he 2 given regularly to horses 
and cows, with ¢ a sufficiency and cake.. We shall s 
be able to — Clover — for fodder as an addition or a N 

rvals of t e sowed 2 acres of Tares broadcast 

appearances are grog bes * 
first and t t lots 


others h ers drill t 
ot ig 


thin Wheats d on 7 land have much im 
moist weather seems likely to 22 the ravages 29 the slug 
ti 


— 
n 


to take the field under Protec 
t Bosto —.— other places, where they seem deter- 
p, but * * of it i * n ely 
o driv: e talk 
agree wh are pore on agp game: 2 
ant of security 2 and taxa 
requisit * g 

spi ability to fo 


loss during the rotting p by covering the heaps 
ith earth so far as chat is 2 The use of cut | 
———— of straw.] 
ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. 
_ A Weesty Co at the Society’s House, 
‘ind last, the 29th of May ; 
Ee ARKER, Vice-President, in the 
, Hon. Capt. Dudley Pelham, R.N., Sir Matthew 
White Ridley, , Sir James , Bart., Mr. J. 
Mr. Er 1 ; * — Burton, jun., Colonel 
u G. 
i r. Gurdon ae 


ae 


Mr. Parkins 


| ake A too many in sta: 


much homage, show pay dort 
spar —— — to be "the little gods of th 
at their crue and —— as 

arded as men also, 


"Sorra Haursulnk Farm, May 18.— In our last report allusion 
was made to the then — 3 ma the 


grea 
which 


plant having been completely “destroyed by the — — have 
amage young 
— lant, just after coming up, but more 2 where 
—+ ad been sown amongs bea he autumn-sown 


Whes t in thie county o— 


e best means 
B t My Be Beans ma year were much in- 


1 m, and I tri — Piika 


suppose th be Curculio lineatus, as descri in 
the 8 Agricultural 1 sJ kpala where it > that 
of them is dering their 

Pains gett Fy — the plants 


w 
E 2 AND — J R Pearson. The smell — a 
f fresh , and is owing to the decomposition of the 


are said to eat them down. If not, 


atable by 800 


nimal pa 
been EB. Ge 


u must break up the 1 —— them; but we would 
— nfm asturing for a year or two firs 
CHarcoaL Powp CJ A. It is a for any 
crop, but you will not succeed in growing Turnips on it alone. 
i wt. of g . — — — and 
u will have a gs in 
CHICORY must g Falowly — dried. Tou will 
find the whole details of og cultivation and preparation in 
past nu op ye of the Pape 
Cuugns: CB, Kutla: — an's churn 


is something like the 

inding machine in a paper mill ; 4 — 2 one half of a 
om round which it sends the mil g it as it passes 
paddles. About prices, you unak — to the makers; 

Pot them of any standing wy Pony estate — t well 


clear 

5 “hi » . on 
0 x churn, 
respondent, or 


where th 
Mr. Ane 
— H t —4 


ough. [We are asked 
butter salt, recommended 
cap eee is to — ae 
y apply at the address 
2 o Stratton" 8, B 
Hay O. Having some 2-year-old hay, not very good, and 
but a small quantity of Grass to mow this sitan ou will dọ 
ther green, and the stack 


C. You will at all events do no harm to the Turnip 
won, and it will be as good a plan for — Big lime for the 
succeeding grain crop as any you could adopt. 

W H, Hants. Will you be kind enough to give your 

8. 

Ox Pr NG: D S. The best food you can give the cow is Beans, 
or 13 Bean aa i which — both act as an astringent, 

se the production of milk. The — — 

— — — Bow If this does not succeed, give 

* * if the purging continues, give the f toh 

mtn —— Ti ; prepared c 


halk, 3 oz., in 
thick W — * ay . C. &, 
Roza 3 2d Edition, revised and enlarged; by 


an 
— 
hay in 


Edward Solly, Esq., 3 be had at the office of this Paper, 
and of all Book kselle rice 48. 

Wueat : J R Pearson. The idea you allude to isa very common 
one, and if true it ‘it may be owing to the greater shelter which 
the land has received, and the g 5 rowth of the roots in 
consequence. 

re | #8 munications wee ong town after Wednesday cannot be: 

co ARDEN, Goin 2. 5 
The weather being very bygone ae ble, Vegetables are plen- 
ul. - Fruit h little siise our last account. A 


— J, B. 


sor Sowell Mr. Tw eed, an were the e i 2 tion i de their appearance. Pine-npples fi 
oe Ha Hoot de Velen, Seretary to the Royal | eae ei ai bottom, atd the Fains | ented, “Nats Er general are sufficient for the demand. 
f AN , was present at this | of the pan 1 ane likely to prevent — to the — shoma | 5 4 Lemons are — areplentifel. A Amongst Vegetables, young 
pava an introduction from Sir William J n | dry w ucceed, as we „ are now within three weeks of th Turnips may be di ok Creu: © u. 6d. a boned, ana 
“seed the aor Gardens ws wen, bee e. — k in of Swedish Turnip were gener iy — * ben se — a: Seele. 3333 ficient 
1 9 Rg ears | nate ae — weeks earlier than usual, in ~ 8 f which and | Poa Peas tech from 68. to 10s, per aif sieve, 6a. otatoes eee 
oroit ten: s, thes ocks w aper. New otatoos ronliso from to Is. Let- 
— 4 — Batty Cottage, 105 ge Road, oe W. lond an — <i an diminish very ma eri ae loots à n 
De Winton 8 arrington, Lan of hay in the canning season, The labour of the farm since 0 lentiful. “Cut Piera consist of Heaths, 
20 zd Priory am Brecon niefly preparing for the “Turnip ie P niums g Lily peed the Valley, Cinerarias, Tro- 
Harvey, Sir Robert Jo our last re en o — preparing Pelargo i 
Marryat Moushold House, Norwich sowing Oats and B Bariy, which was finished May 7th. g ums, Carnations, Pinks, Fuchsias, an: end Hasek. 
H = ale Manor, Norfolk Carrots May 4th, both on — 1 un . we being desirous ot ze 
Hotson, i ae ascertaining which is the as we can Pine-apples, per Ib., mons, per doz., 1s to 28 
0 n, Stratton, Norfolk ridges nearer than 2 feet with advantage but on the flat we can, Grapes, hothouse, P- 1 — A kp — per 100, 7s to 148 
Harvey, Ro g 
- Palmer, A John, 2 Norwich of course, drill at any s distance between the rows which may | Strawberries id to is | Almonds, per peck, 68 
ball, Robe; 2 gham Lodge, Es Dereham, Norfolk | p desirable r Carrots 20 bushels Apples, dessert, p. am 88 to 128 — sweet, per lb., 2s to 3e 
oy akenham, Norfol of nase and ashes mixed, and 6 — of superphosphate kitchen, p. beh., 48 to 88 Wal , p. 100, 1s 6d to 28 
Gowin 2 ak pplied by the drill, which we found answer well last ooseberries, green, p. nf. sieve, | — p. bush., 16s to 24s 
Trowse, rea We ‘drilled a piece of Swedes on May the pur- | Nuts, Bar., p. bush., 20 
Scott, J. B., y p 
Bor, Rad 3 pose of early feeding cattle, &c. ; they are come up well, aud * do., do., | — Filb., p. 100 Ibs.,60s to 1008 
Boileau, John Buckingham weather seems bel to preserve them irom Oranges, per ‘doz., M to 2s — Cob, p. 100 Ibs., 90s to 1508 
8 Elliot — ig — ae Park, Wymondham, | the fiy. We have also been engaged horse — Beans and | — per 6s to 168 1 p. s és 
N — ae an Peas, Potatoes, „e., and rolling pasture laid up for mowing EGE 8. 
1 9 iliam, jun * . ast tee weg Ken fter being fi 4 by sh Our f l shorn, Oaboagis, p. doz., 9d to Is 6d Onions, p. bunch, to 
Mercer, — Glextall an East Pee — 7 iding a strong heavy fleece. We shall delay shearing our ed, p. doz. ” 68 to 128 1 p. bush., 78 to 0s 3 
i names ouse, Hunton Ken jocks of breeding ewes for some time er; we derive an ns, p. doz. bunches, Is to 2s | — 8 „P. doz., 1s 
The of 26 candidates for . at the n vantage by so 1 more pi ularly with our Somerset — 1 — p. doz., Ja to lis be „ P. hf. sieve, ls 6d 
» Pas, were read, horned e as we find they offer to the ram much earlier in | Sorrel, p. hf. sieve, 9d to 1s 3s 
N ZE —.—— P th their wool, Our a pope ith the ewes April 26th Potatoes, per ton, 608 to 180s Shallots, per Ib., 10d to 15 
Journal r. Pusey, M. P., Chairman of the which has pa our custom for many years past; up to thi r 5s to 148 . r Ib., 6d to 1s 
Wy the J, ogg the following awards made | time we have a good hamber likely 70 prove: — lamb, Our 45 to 78 okes, Jeane, p. halt 
i ge of i of 2 ratte have all been sold for a past; we are Turnips, per bunch, 6d to 28 6d * 9d to 1 
— Prise ot 8 506 for the best Essa: with the sale of Southdown Red Beet, per doz., 28 to t9 | Lettuce, Cab. De 80., “a to 9a 
i as or the best rice than of late; we are Ra. p. bål., 18 Cos, do., 6d to 
Sonstructi lam Horse 
T on of La y Cot award * — . — fo — a price for mutton than | As ho, 6d to Mu 5 per potti — 6d to 13 
The DARD, Are — — Surveyor, Lin caver A some months past. The wi ork of the farm likely to en- — iin 16 to: Is x Small Salads, p 4 2d to 3d 
et o's —— oe 20 — se second- best gage our attention d t will be preparing | French Beans, k 100, 18 4 to Fennel, per bunch, 2d to 3d 
on the co è the land for Swede Tu nh, — drilling them as fast as the | Cucumbers, eac 4d to Savory, per — 2d to 3d 
awarded to J Co 2 land can be got ready; ps of Beans, Peas, Potatoes, | Leeks, © hs to 22 Thyme, per bunch, 2d to 3d 
Wragby bays * ems pre ad Tasit House 1 ** eing when the weather is Celery, p. bundle, is * Parsley, p. hf. N to 28 
Mr. Pus i colnshire. oa dea J. B. 12 hands, 4d to — ts, p. bdle., 18 to Is 
mended * May 21.— At present the weather is very Wate oz, bunches, | Marjoram,green,p.bun.,9dtols 
wed the — o_o Judges had com- ing, wit fine 12 ad raim, which — be of ——— Ad to 6d in „green u, per bunch, 30 to 4 d 
Motto “Omega » Y, on the same su ject, o the hay and corn crops, as t land wet to orked. | Carrots, p. doz. bun., gapu Basil, green, p. bunch, 6d to 8d 
Communicati We are — trees to zun , 1 ae Spinach p. sieve, 9d to 
ains; but as soon as the — — — 
Vegetable 8 on the Forty-day Maize and — — Wee siren 2 will engaged with preparing th HAY.—Per Load of 36 Trusses. 
Teceived and meu ing the flow of drains land for and sowing Swedes; th der h sagan up ve SMITHFIELD, May á 
N dir James formed the subject of interesting — well, — 4 Wurzel and Carrots eg 8 rei — — = — 5 — rai Hay te” ok Glover, i: a 60s to 95s 
rofessor yp a private copy of | have sown some Fla x seed and 80 viden Plessur nferior dit ee 2 2 
ancient — i or tri nuch e fattening | Rowen uk. „ BD 
Classica] y e e — hure of the for tial the la — — and look well. — Pes * | New Hay “i er an J, COOPER., 
i prin m the ctionary 4 lain of baree. i — eas an rade still heavy. 
Messrs, J and Antiquities,” published by — — — te vend, "ine cottagers a suffered ERLAND gr, May 31. 
College, ohn Taylor and Co., Publishers to University | very much, many of them have had iii vegetables in rc r | pasea — Hay ae Inte vc 50s to 808 
“ London. É tour Peas a ans look very well, | Inferi | New over * 
European a5 Mr, man presented a copy of his and ens entirely eat up, by pa fora —— not to be troubled with the | New 2 — wine | 3 „ 32 
We of — Mr. Bullen, Sec. to the R. A. I.] snail. Some say this is bec meer one. land uP — A. Old Clover 3 5 x “i Josnva BAKER. 
5 y before P : th inion of some oth ers is, because w MITECHAPEL, May 
5 1gig, etre — e on = 2 a large 2 Lime has b mieg om ed, but oo tan Fine Old — vy 72 Glover 808 to 88s 
3 o 7 werd — has cal show — it has had * little effect, “Could inferior ditto : os | laferior ditto... 50 60 
; r Rowthorne, near them without injuring the New Hay 8 70 | Straw. w 26 30 
his Essay on the Clover 90 100 


o 


350 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. Jimia 
OPS.—Friwar, June 1. lower,—White Peas are 2s. per qr. cheaper ; TURNIP SOWING. 
„ Parrenpen and SxrrH report that the accounts from other * „ -The Gal da b dull, at HE LONDON MANURE COMPANY 
th 12 plantations are worse gr morning, and there is every adapted the URATE” more Particular} ; 
2 ofa severe blight. Prices have advanced con- ll Root Crops, can recommend it with the e grentes Turnips 
siderably since Moi aee Be last. "Fine Weald — — Anye arae sex jii RIDAY, Juse 1.—Since Monday e arrivals of Té selagmn fails, in the driest season, er — 
ren enen English Wheat have been small, those of 182 mode- | to produce a heavy weight per acre, “More, Would call ach aad 
PA res ee z to their Superphosphate = — — ich is attention 
1 8 WATERSIDE, aioe rate. There was a fair attendance at market this greatest care, and s y fine, arya the 
gn Po 4 „Ee Sa to be ‘gem morning, and some inquiry for Wheat a wnat 1 vents, ‘Se, tin A The gree 5 ma “ mpany hae 
* i isineli i i arrangements for a constant supply of 
nd with samples less prices have besa submitted to which 288 2 disinelined to submit, and little . cargoes, * wilt RA n Guan made 


supplied 

to. The following s are this day’s quotations: p toks hire Re- business resulted.—The show of foreign Barley and jim mporter’s stores. Dian Nitra Ship or 
ts, 180s. t ; Scotch Whites, 80s. to 30s.; French do., Oats being large, both articles met a slow sale at a | Agricultural Salt, and every other Artificial Menn and 
n tri ns and Peas al i artic ure, on 


n 
FIELD, MONDAT, value.—Maize afloat or arrived on the coast is muc EDWARD Purser, Secretary, 40, Bridge. street, 


SMIT eek 
Our supply of Beasts is tolerably 200d, although there is inquired after at 33s. to 36s. — per dëu cost, freicht, QTATUES, VASES, FOUNTAINS, Garden 0o 
8 a 
and a cote faling coffin in weight ng stds * rather dearer, and insurance, for a Galatz i ecording to its — S ments, Coats of * * and e Em Orna. 
number of Sheep is — 1 e ng has also in- — The corn * nce the 25th u t. has been inanimate in Imperishable AUGHAN and Company, 60, — 
ereased, aud prices have advanced about 2d. per 8 Ibs. There throughout the kingdom, and although the —— of end, e — — of C s 
now being very few in the wool we only quote shorn Sheep. iet des enabled holders i . Te Ee, _ ` ORoGGON, late of Coapr's, Superintendent, 
— * k = * at rather advanced rates. Trade is still | Englis en olders in solitary instances PORTLAND CEMENT. Testi 5 
a fg alves ; 4s. is quite the top price. From — to realise a trifling i set foreign, nevertheless, has n 0 estimonials receireg, received from 
. by he are 280 gam 1060 — and 105 Calves ; been a slow sale, barely maintaining its former value. — — 2 — — ——— T to — the rare Po. 
Pee Denmark, pees trom Seot se E a s d In spring corn or Flour no alteration of moment has superior ' 1 every other for hydraulic —— such as building 
Best Scots, H Best Long-wools occurred. The French markets for Wheat are firm, a and li of Reservoirs, Cisterns, Baths, Fi sh-ponds, de, For 
ott SS. 3 3 4 efi : —— ez alit 41 8 and purchase at late rat difficult. In Holland, — nor pan It never vegetates, and wili carry free 
24 dual —— 2 323 0 Dine . i 55 nas 3 2 | Prices have declined 1s. to 28. per qr.; 61—62 Ibs. Red, | to four times its own body of sand. from three 
Beat D y 3 1 5 4—6 0325. to 408., f. o. b. At Antwerp, 62—63 Ibs. — oe me al J. B. Wuire and Sons, Milbank-street, West, 
Half-breds Calves .3 0—4 428. 6d. to 43s. Prices in the blockaded ports are minste 
Ditto Shorn Pigs 3 3—4 6 alte ntly - 
Beasts, $199 ; Sheep and] Lambs, 95,360 ; Calves, 312; Pigs, 230, | tered, and supplies have apparently ceased. sss. CHURCHILL anv BEANE, of Tonbridge 
FRIDA Jane 1 bee avi eee Eep ye bog to inform the public fel have been 
| appointe i — ending Agents for the Sale of Dr, NE 
*. coma 8 supply of n * see gh Mare oL, Fnibar, June 1. — We have had only small TON'S Hand eng Hoes, Cultivators, and Scarifiers, ith vai 
erally We are well supplied with Sheen, but the Supplies since Tuesday, but the trade has been dull, and |a man c — stir from 4 to 5 inches deep, two aeres of 
1 — not having much on hand, 7 are Snes all sold at | having a poor attendance of dealers at this day’s market, the | land daily. Price 30s. A prospectus sent on application, The 
about Monday’s rates. L choice ones | tr ti f Dibbles En wala at as before. Notice is hereby given that 
scarce, are the tarn dearer, alkh Led a A pee ansactions were of limited extent at barely former prices. actions have been instit — e those persons who who have 
cannot be obtained. Trade is rather more active for Calves, | Indian Corn was 6d. per quarter cheaper, the demand being | imitated the em implemen 
and the very best make a little more mon ney, 1— 2 1 an less active. ODD’S PATENT PROTOXIBE a 
ata 
prer g — So ki e at “fo 4 700 * * ind re — — reduetion of price. This ar 
ves; from Scotland, 400 Beasts; and 130 Milch Cows from IMPERIAL Var. BanERr. Os. Rye. | BEANS. | Peas. rented 5 — Railway = Gas Companies, a and by 
the home counties, AVERAGES, iders and others for painting Stucco. It iron from 
Best , Here. Best Long-wools. ... to. April 14... ., 44s 3d] 28s 6d 178 0d, 235 1a} 28s 5a/30s11a | rusting, wood from decay, masonry from damp, and the hottest 
fords, &c 3 6to3 8 Ditto Shorn $4 3 8 0 44 5 28 8 16 8 22 4 28 11 28 9 sun has no effect upon it. Manufactured by a. e 
Best Short-horns 3 4—3 6 Ewes & 2dquality .. — — 28 ener 46 0 | 2810 17 2/27 5| 29 8 29 9 | and Sons, Cement Works, Nine Elms, Lond 
— * a; bdii 28 11 6 * nT He Z 
Best Downs and e e. e CLUB, 1849.—The Prize Sheet and 
Half-breds 1 aoe E CAE OT oe 44 6 27 9 17 9 26 0 31 332 4 Conditions g * on in December next can now be 
Ditto Shan ...3 §—4 0 Pigs. .s ... 8 had — Bas she T. BRANDRETH Pines. Hon Sec., 
Beasts, 993; Stivep and J Tabs i Tio; 110; Calves, 445 ; Pigs, 285, Age: =- 45 3 | 28 6 17 4 25 2 209 10 30 8 Corn Half-m — Piccadilly, London 
uties on Fo- 
reign Grain 1 0 | 1 01 0 | 1 bk 6 ba 0 HE A ASHCROFT SWEDE TURNIP, — This is 
Monpay, May 28.— The sa 155 of English N decidedly the best of all the Swedes ; it is very large, and a 
by land sunatles 8 i Grin was ex Fluctuations in the last six weeks’ Corn Averages, better shape than the — am 8 —— from which it was ori. 
t which inet factors Prices, Arn. 14. Ar R. 21. AR. 28.) May 5. Mar 19. Max 26, | ginally selected; it is perfectly hardy, gen Es ie — last two 
small, = tors to s. per ae. 2 ‘| ‘| | | winters in one of the coldest parts of Eng ere several 
vance upon a few picked samples, but upon ‘the ordina — 463 9d a "s a = ve Other Kinds were destroyed, and being o Py ‘s pe a strong 
qualities no improvement could be obtained. Foreign te 1 * pm | an | 2 „ Ton e RE eee 5 
firm 8 ail 5 ie 58 à a wedes, and is eat as to be much less 
n 1 in tally i-ai » but the de- — e FRES Miili 520 ik 175 1 | to suffer from attacks of the 5 If sown immediately it will be 
is quite in retail.— arley is altered in v. value. 5 * * m is ox ae — for feeding before any other sort, and it may also be sown 
—Beans, owing to large arrivals — Egypt, are the 44 oe ee ‘i ye Yh bii ater than others, as would appear from the fact that a large 
— — — i aan of this sort, ‘sown after Peas, was decided by competent 


judges to be the best piece of Swedes in the dis 4 
ö n with other very fine Crops sown much earlier, 

1 also succeed well after Vetches. The nye ep oa 
with wil ee A 8 1s. 6d. per Ib., or 88. per gallon, Car 


riage free to Lo ristol, or Basingstoke, 
SRIRVINGS E00 SWEDE, 1s. 3d. per Ib, or fi. 
ai per g 


allon 
—— SIX. WE mes S TURNIP.—The best White Turnip for 
early sowing to feed off for Wheat, 9 a 2 py dy wd 
it is also mon for table use * 

sowing. Price 6s. per gallon, or ibe 
Priced Onlalogues of Turnip * other . 
may be had by post. Address, Jonn Surron and Sons, Read- 
ing, Berkshir 


E ᷣ X  a 
GHETLAND PONIES gue — rere 


Ou aLD 
& = 
3 


landed, direct from Shetland, a quantity 
some small PONIES; size, from 83 to 12 hands l. Als 
some very handsome small — — * donn 
Calving, some with Ca E fa side, and 


23/2223 0496/0496 SF Thee Gowa gire Similar tothe 
. Se 28—30/28—30 29—33 29—32 Alderney, — they — vr hardy and — ve to — 
: ea tik sis — — sages “grag at T =o OgTon’s, Salesman d Importer w 
3942, = | — — — CLARKS “METALLIC HOTHOUSE WoRS 


© 55, Lionel-stre ham.—Proprietor, Mr. 
— 14—2014—20 18—30 | 19—30 CLARK ; ——.— Ar. 70 | JONES. eel 
— — — 17—18 18—20 r. CLARK presents his gra thanks to the 
= pant eee . Gentiy = their Sy rie 1 patronage ran the above 5 
* duri — at thirty years, and bees to state 2 
Ar. repe — Glass enables him to off er his METAL) 
28-32} — | — | a340 33-40 |HOTHOUSES ala t greatly reduced price These Houses are 
6.2 le | Baie: a e Sean canotieees as iy renee 
H „„ N danger of 5 e, whilst that pian ara fi 
— — — n frost i 
mode of glazing adopted. As a sample of his Metallie Hob 


New, small —. 2228 22—32 
. * 


Foreing 21362136 


eff y 
glazing adopted. a sample : 
Beso 83 | T114. | 12-14 | comuated, Mr. Crank roes bo e mag een fangs eral 
34.— ed, Mr. C h t 
| 34—36 14—16 | 1416 | by him in the new Royal Gardens at Windsor, 254 A7 
"e ane 10—13 10—13 | competent judges to be the most complete of its kind 


world, 
40 —42 40 —42 32—4032—40ʒ | oa -i 8 BunBIDü AND HEALY’ S NEW BOILER —The 
ss — — — — wis above is a modificatio tae Boil er abe — 
modelled expressly 1— 5 Con 
71. 128 71. 128 (ee 5 ie = Sai 8 Gardens, where it is now at work. 
Lin — — re B. . have been able to make, 
a — “i — Stating it to be the “Ne plus 


4 f fuel has 
32s—36s | 34s—37s | — — a 4 13—14 13—14 burning for 48 nour without any addition, and one 
pir 280 lbs. P. sack p. sack | per sack. | per sack | are — extensively put up at the Royal Gardens} 
2—37 | 34—35 — [32—38/30—36| 32—38 31—37 Smaller boilers upon the same plan. A 
BURBIDGE and ALY, 130, Fleet-street, London. 


O ORCHIDEA 130, Fleet-street, 


Averages. | Imports, | Aver. | Impts.| Aver. Aver. Gloucester, BURBIDGE av» HEALY, 1 
2 rs, d. ; al attention to thole method of wara nage 
“a at 105 , 6. qrs. |s. d.] ars. a K. Ars. Houses. They have had the honour 
28 11 0 70 43 11 | 1570 | 41 3 349g Houses at the undermen eee: 
7 e > — Horti Gardons’ aiw näditions to tho HO y 
1 8 — * 1360 14 9. 34421 Gg 626 so the Orchidea Houses of the following distiagh'™ 
= 8941 po 8] 108 ian 7 88 — * 7 5 — e 
yay = Í 173 — — — — Zz. + a Hoddesdon, _ 11 2 : 
Messrs. — o Place, | 
E. ARE |> THOMAS | J anà C. STURG —— 
and D * „ R Esq., Pi near Ware. 
INNS WRIGHT. W. Webb, Ee Poles, 


a9] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. dit 
Sales by Auction. pe YOU BRUISE run OATS YOU GIVE YOUR ä 2 


EN, FLORISTS, A: 1 0 * SES T 5 5 Posed you lose one bushel out of every tum long wi ic 
EM 8, three, and your Cattle do not do half so well. MA WED- 1 i 
10 OROTHEROE ax pM ORKIS wili sub- LAKE awp COS OAT BRUISING MILLS; superior Chat ee ogi to be mado ac equainted wih = * meree 
ESSRS. etition br W e a e Auction | Engines, mors in construction, doin from 30 8 300 bushels of th t i i 
it w — vew n THURSDAY, June 7, 1849, at | daily, and m "AM g — | o tog te 3 gained in appearance and com comfort by 
Mat, n gt rate collection 10 8 n use these 8 —To be seen at 118, ee, Gazette, May nn 
2 TSEASE ; žy so a choice assortment of | opposite 3 5 to the ‘Blackwall Railwa ix vë eri ; 
H ABENAS, nd oer 1 Plan 5 n bloo 4 tee! —— tog variety of | N.B, Linseed Mills, Bean Mills, It Mills, in cides variety, | in Coloured ‘Shirts, Shirts he i: Pwd swt “tetas “agen 
gERANI May be viewe i ' 
— 2 ding —M Ad of the ere, HE i MPR 0 y ED a YD RAULIC RAM, 2 dee 5 ot T art ae 
fixed by Freeman Rog, iapa Maker, 70, Strand, = 
| A FREEHOLD ESTATE, Land- | org. cata of aeaa 
ed, he county of Surrey, 27 miles from where a fall of 2 feet can be 
a station on the South Eastern Railway, con- 2 2 same RAM, with- 
500 acres, with Homesteads and Cot- of a Tank or Cis- 
gentleman's Residence capable of accommodating 2 Pare 9320 to throw a Jet 
te, Or the House, with portions of the Land, will | of Water constituting > . 
e farnished, by the year, from the Me June pert, tàin with the head of water be- n 
hed 8. C., Thompson and Co. 's, 2, Cowpe neath. curf, &c., clear it from every humour, pimple, or eraptien: 
Engines for deep wells of all kinds, Douche and other Baths, Mid. by continuing its ap! ey a short tik: the skin will be. 


ORD’S "EUREKA SHIRTS. A com jortable 


Atti 


AR CARAT 5 
e EXTRACT OF ELDER FLOWERS 


1 Ana te 8 improving, p- 


5 SEED TRADE. Buildings heated by hot water. Water wheels to work small mooth, and the complexion per. 

S t mediate ri ia con- | Pumps, from 15“. Estimates given for i t i supply of towns, &c. | fectly clear and beautiful. —sold i in bottles, pri . 9d., Wi 
of the proprietor retiring fr rom the business, an | — "¢Wly-invented Portable Vapour Bath, all complete for d. | directions for using it, by all medicine vendors and pe umers. 
r London—For particulars, a apply CARSON'S ORIGINAL ANTI-CORROSION | HE UNFAILING SUCCESS OF HOLLOWAY’S 
iter, prepaid), stating g real name and a NT, specially patronised, by the British and other PILLS AND OINTME IN THE CURE OF RING- 
bla r, Bo- roa ee the oo went mae omging, pod Tobie, . —— AND — DIS ISEASES THE SKIN.—A medical 

ompanies, most public bodies, an y Nobi | gentleman, residing at Lima, whose child had 
FARM TO BE LET, Rent and Clergy, for on Soot work at their country sea ats. agtlicted with rin A for upwards of — 6 
BE LET, in the 0 of London, a The i-Corrosion is particularly recommended as the most | known oa 2 y i eure this dread‘al disease, — ma 838 ed 
FARM, No one need apply who cannot command in key out- door P aint eyer io aie Ce for the hs servation of | it was 0 inveterat it bufed h nin; 

stock 25001. ps hee by letter, Al ha, on of the d * 
Money —Add nige, 55 a ph 5 every , Stone, Brick, Compo, Cement, | himself — other 8 ast resource he was 
Publisher of the 64 s Wellington- 40, w ork, a heen proved by 2 ractical test of upwards persuaded to use HorLowax's Pille on — Ointment, these 
street, Strand, London. of 60 Tears, oud * * (betw and 500} te M having obtained — celebrity in South America, 

— — . na 5 whic w * t 3 in in — Be pare § se the happy effec * of soundly curing the child 
N0.— Veer, 8 crops of TUR- 80 ocie sty 0 ose W 0 ave het them, have never ye radicating the disease from the system.—Sold 

equalled by anything of the kind hitherto bro ught before the by all ‘Dra 3 = at Professor Hottoway’s Establishm 

the use of this od A . e oy N. pert sage 5 5 by public notice. 8 ee and P e * with 8 copy of 244, Strand, peer x * 

t 8 N, — —ꝶ(—»Sͤ—t᷑ Ukũ—ꝓ 
cS first orange 15s. per ton, an 7 Manure for 155 pe eran ee e Yard P * yr Laapio óf CRSP e he ipl, 5 SCOT RACES. Great Western Rail w way.— Extra 

root-crops, either used alone or mixed with Agen nti A — fas particularly requested to be sent direct, Trains will run between Paddington and Slough. . 


ances are vb tangs: ae convey Passengers betw 
ere a ka .— Farmers may effect a STRONG PABRIK HARE AND RABBIT PROOF A don tb the Booking-ofices nt Padding- 


5 n, and a have the satisfac- WIRE NETTING. ton, tickets may nf —— on and after the Ist of June (Sun 
9 — tig Bat a pray ta 2 8 . at Messrs. Tattersali’s, Hyd — ark Corner 
t the 


— ny peed Bone-pliosphate (containing about 65 Com: 8 29, Gresham. street, Bank, and 449, 
2 1 f Lime) for pte se, and gives „ pull particulars of the trains, &c., are in 
7 directions fo “spe the Superphosphate, ——— — which m on application at the 
3 FOSSIL eno paro) E — the paes on Station, May 29, 1849, 
— (ality als per — — ure), in fine powder. — — EE 
at l. Ley a Mi ry LW, * gia 8 F VISTINGUISHED SUCCESS.—It is the accession 
London, å of reall — seful k — ledge tee enabled the public to 
iscriminate between the valuable and the ubed rees re a 
UANO ANO A ND OTH ANURES, i tions that lay claim to their notice. Thr pie gor lar 
PERUVIAN N of the . ead direct from TEL in most — adequately test the merits of pie N offere 
* to the public. In tl ular article, the 
NITRATES SODA AND POTASH. 7 BALM OF © COLUMBIA, asra p in Amerie, and introduced 
GYPSUM (SULPH ATE OF LIME). it o this country by the OLDRIDGE nequivocal success of 
SULPHURIC. ACID. 2 2 = ; 
RIC ACID AND COPR gat ARLES D. YOUNG anp N Lark | and b> for the renovation and — — of the Bair, it 8 
. —:!:. cor] E cea thee — 
ME (made from bone only), 1 818.—0 emen, Some three months since, findin my air 
= — er in and all other Manures of known % i sib kon S AND. yf Babe * I | — off 1 by nearly handsful, and my head approaching ong 
May be 2 3 2 -ST ness fact and on the sides 
* 201 5 oe Thames-street, London. Birmos, ae ge ee Bye oe, tee was mündet through my hairdresser, Mr. Beach, of this place, 
on Guano, Superphosphate of * Tae „ will be respectfully ‘to call ‘the ation of handed Proprietors and — your r BALM OF apenas and after 8 = th 
í —* 8 postage stamps, Free to purchasers | others to th g Wire- Fence, for éxclu r our bottles, according to your directions, I found a rop 
5 Gee ae 8 „ Torgen &e. 2 wroduced, which has now restored ty head to its for mer appear- 
NURES are manufactured This Net was exhibited of the Highland and ance. As * 1 my hair, Fog it 
— Fact, Peper Os Cr reek: Agricultural Society of Scotland, held lately at Inverness, due to the virtues 8 whe — 1 ber ong 2 * 
GRASS MANUR per ton £9 10 0 where = 1 — — ee and 2 —— Bag ess came p uaa aan wae 2 E n poe A ae al — 
À attracted general attention, and ha m the Judges 
` 12 0 iH the Society’s Silver Medals, wit h — — op op 1 7 4 8 len rr Ne, B, A f <i 2 
5 E OF LIME 7 0 0 The immense damage done by Hares and Rabbits in Gardens 33 n man e el native 10 1 rie e 4 ie 
15 URIC 10 AND COPROLITES , 5 0 0 and Young 8 is often so great, that in the course of | f * in = re ‘Ola id 4 N ts “Sold à by Sit tinct kin ae, 
N.B—PERUVIAN @ NO, from selected cargoes (in Dock). a year or two it will — 1 to more than the entire cost of | 7 tte pn am — a respec 2 
T cine AMMONI Ay e. Pianta ing = ah tl a Tt ds so durable, dent, * its — battle. No No 98 noes — gen wine * for DLDRIDGE’S 
r William= t 3 antations are sufficien vane — ent of i : : 4 
e bn enn JJ. pit | BALM alg ae at Ca Soa 
Most th perio Fo acility, by any — 2 
important to Pro 2 Farmers, Graziers, Hares and Rabbits, 4 is of itself quite Suficient, having only to to use any oth bstitute for the 
NEW ee others be un wo wie and attach ed, with small wire sent for a pe COMFORT TOR TER DER- FEET, “IND x “CERTAIN 
A A ranures EXCELLENT TREATISE, THE | pose, er ooden makai driven into the ground, about every r 40 Ls aS oon SBS a2 AND > Boios er 
A COMPANION ; » showing | or seven feet apart, It is, besides, peculiarly adap or ren- 
e tte meet imes, and e Money, by intros dering Hedges, Paling, or other existing Fences. im- oR Ae edp FA gee e Argeria i i , 
* geen e a Aang aay most | pe A 2 “such v vyr i and kci ero Beate cut ‘up i ne PE Sine te ication: P 5 ie — m mich gives relief on- = 
a cturin ew Patent | pieces of three or more eet, as re — 4 very an's Frien orn r 
bee t „ ani San be be manufactured | cient —_ at little expense, for individual Plants and Shrubs, generaly admitted to be the best emollient 2 for 
— . Farmer, as the preparation is most 11 115 —18 ins. ‘high 9d. ; 24 ins., 1s. ; 18. 3d.; and Bunions, 
p, en for all seasons, soils, and | 36 ins., ak 6d. per 1 yar 5 en a — with such unpleasant companions, 
of 12, pet acre, warranted equal 055 a web 4 i. 00 yards, 4. ins. 4 7 ed will cost. A 500 ® |monials have been received from upwards of g” i) Pasicians 
: tant anda ect substitute for all 0 yards, 24 ins. wi and Surgeens of the greatest eminence, as w mm 
„Ale wri how t to Patten every deseription Do. of 100 yards, 30 ins. wi wide 5 0 gem, of a kmga and N Dif ee and nearly 1000 private pron 
; ät one-third the cost now adopted, the best Do. öf100 yards, 36 ins, wide 710 0 ntry in to try, speaking in high terms 
of Draining, &e. — valu able Treatise | » If more or less than a web is required, it would be charged of. this s valuable rem 
ng, registered aud entered at Stationers’ at the same rate per yar Prepared by John ee in boxes, at 1s, 1}d., or three sm 
‘Collection of 150 of ‘tie 28 valuable This Netting is also admirably adapted for pages om and | boxes in on e for 25. 92. ; ; and to be had, with full bb mgd for 
d in Agriculture for profit, &t:; with | Poultry-yards, and is charged at the same rate. cog use, of all Tndlensde and retail Medicine Vendors in Town 
by the late celebrated agriculturist, has, in many instances, been — obstacle to pa — at a E 7. * nuine * — name of “Jonn Fox 
rs, and patro and highly recom- | tance requiring this Net, C. D. Y, and Co. have made arra: — Gove unh, . box cures the most 5 — 
tince Albert, at Windsor Farm, the ments by which they will — * to deliver * at any of the w k for «Peat ; Eve ery Man’s Friend.” 
of England, their Grades the | principal ports of Scotland, d, and Ireland, for One 2 — be Barclay and Sons, Farringdon-street ; Edwards, 67, 
cy td | Bedford, de. de. and | Halfpenny per lin neal yard. St. Churchyard; Butler and Harding, 4, Cheapside ; 
ut fail, b urn of post, free, to an C. D. Youne and Co, cannot give a better idea of the great Faron, St. Paul's; Sutton, Bow Church-yard ; Johnston, 68, 
ny enclosing 15 „or 13 postage stamps, strength of th 1 n Wire Netting than by stating that Cornhill; Sanger, 150, Oxford-street ; Willoughby and Co., él, 


to Messrs. Tayor aud Uo., 49, Exeter. | the Men of one yard of their 24-inch at 1s. is equal to 24 | Rishopsgate-street Without; Eade, 39, Goswell-street ; Prout, 
wisn wind the address, yards of another article in the market, te same — at 9d. | 229, Strand; Hannay and Co., — Oxford- street; Prentis, 84, 
; G SE ASON 5 r per ins] en sent free of e E ; hemi 
a -—Hayma Machines, | C. D. Youre & Co. manufacture e of IRON Medicine Faber in every town in England. Wholesale 
reversing emotes, van nt — the we WIRE WORK required for this ‘and —. 95 countries. ts fo sland and Scotland, Messrs. J. and R. Rares 
ae 3 9 tentee J tg he act cquain N Workmen sent to all parts of Scotland, England, and Irela nd. and Co., Druggists, Edinburgh. 
sn Dit miifa eS? under Me nadie T 5 c Patenty | Pippen ag Since: a area, Peon Bir TOOTHACHE PERMANENTLY CURED. , 
— red by M Mary an are mingham, sole Manufactu the improved WOOD an nd O YOU SUFFER TOOTHACHE? 15 so, use 
4, altho ough somewhat like ay Wan ZINC MENOGRAPH, or Label 1 for Garden Borders, Flower- BRANDE’S ENAMEL, for filling decaying teeth, and 
th the genuine ones 2 Ae pots, &c,, in boxes, of 100, Ke. The Zine Labels are highly rend und aud painlees. Sold by Chemists every- 
IIb eee es site Mar approved of for their lasting durability; can be written upon where, price 18. per packet. n Author’s Testimonial.— The 
ont) ae with the 2 ease, and, when , & permanent inscrip near Newtown, ontgomeryshire, December 25 
a mip aC ENGINES, WATER RAMS, Ke 22 eee >i ie x 
Idraulie — 
het 


ciples: Engi 420 5 is secure ie s for use sent with each box, including 1848. Having — t 3 tooth, of some years’ stand. 
h er ri ; Engines worked by am gmk of Metallic ing, which was periodically giving me those excruciating 
= of op * cone from 1 gallon to 1000 per minute to Sole agents in 3 G. and J. Deans, Horticultural Imple- paroxysmis of t torture which ‘scarce the firm philosopher can 
Are ae all 1 — ag or 900 feet. Douche, | ment ‘Wareho ouse, 46, King William-street, London-bridge. corn, I, by ch few weeks back, purchased of my New 
1 1 
EN , heated by Biain, Air, aie E “Boris, ETC ALFE’S ALKALINE aver hitters town soe town druggist (tr. Moore) a-box of your valuable Enamel, , and 
tae, n Walen of em Ke. Towns supplied. — Direct wil found to be the best that has ye = he — tena“ mente = of aches, —— tooth-ache. I am, Sir, your obe- 
eeg or = roughly removes the € z= paer epee — — dient servant, G. R. Wythen Baxter.” Author of Humour 
t thoro » ie iles,” d 
Eri TURAL A? AND ROCK SALT, apply duces that bean waits a n desired, a GAUTION. Ane Book ofthe Basie,” oa n has i 
Salt Merchant, No. 10 Wharf, 0 and its fragrant perfume tends to sweeten an nd the breath. gre 0 prep: las in- 
— vs ty- M adi Bo. from the many years they have been celebrated as duced numerous 2 persons to produce spurious imita- 
0 T soti biii Makers, have had opportunities oe occur to few) — bey and to e copy * Bran nde e’s Enamel” Advertisements. It is 


EMEN ra T 
— ate, for internal Stucco, instead of | of testing the relative merits of thos beet t have been | ne to g against such i coe pee | by seeing 
OF ite aplicate? Unte d i bake th e public. Jonn W 


that the name of “Jonn WILIs“ accompanies every packet. 
ath room i sa Tagih i They have now succeeded in pro- don: Manufactured 
8 to the : he: he above Powder is prepared, | Lon nufacr only by JonN Wrens, 24, East 
cam May be rendered — — —— use w Eom the receipt from whic — ‘univeréal a — 2 Whole- | Temple Chattibers; are aa Fleet-street. Sold wholesale 
Sre than at dii 8 to dry, worked without | sale and retail at METCALFE, BINGLEY, & Oo.’s, Brush-makers | by all the here be any aul . 
ti man With any ohen ur being easier and less expen- to H.R.H. Prince Albert, 2s. per box. 1 genuine Should there a culty in obtaining it, enclose thirteen 
peered toe ‘stucco whatever. A finer quality is | powder will have the al Arms, CO ed with those of stamps to JOHN s (às above), and you will insure the 
* de, Plastering, for Encaustic P R H. Prince Albert, on the lid of the on and the signature | GENUINE ARTICLE oP — OF POST. Twenty authentic Tes- 
Š Po which m in at the Works of and address of the firm, thus: METCALFE, BineLey, and Co. timonials, with full Directions for Use, accompany 
BANCIS and Sons, Nine Bim, London. 180 B., Onford-street, Loudon.” peer cones enough of Enamel to fill several eeth.— 


k 


352 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [June 2. 


GZALVANISED WIRE GAME NETTING.—, WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT, OTTAM & HALLEN, Encinesns = 
per yard, 2 feet wide, 


c., No. 2, WINSLEY-: STREET, 2 Lao —— 
if! 


8 iaie 
o 88 


22225 225 5880 
222 2 


POR 


282822257277 


Galvan- Japanned 
d. 


ize Iron. 
h mesh, J ht, 24-inch wide 74d. per yd. 5d. per yd. hi hly eulogised both for its utility and pretty appearance, and 18 
(sien me — a 5 gma g $ ae ghly eulogis y pretty app produced. Corrin and HALLEN h —— had experience in the 
2-inch „ 34 strong „ . » 3 It forms a „light ‘and “durable fence 1 the “depredations of | HOTHOUSES and CONSERVATORIES S (made 2 of 
li-inch „ light m flee 8 » 6 » ares, rab Aviaries, | of Iron and Wood combined),and from ma ny im provements or 
lj-inch „ stron oe — 8 tnt — to secure pou d by the galvanised | have made during that time, can with confident undertake fy 
1 * + extra strong , ” 11 requiring no paint, it — see aia for gory all kinds | erect such Ae p with economy and di to 
width Teer of creeping plants. Lar A nem ners oni kept in stock, of | HOT WATER APPARATUS for — the above and 
If the upper half is a coarse mesh, „it will reduce the price 18, 24, 36, and 48 inches wide ; it can, how ns — ade to any other buildings (of which they have cons structed upwards of 
fourth, d atterns Sore — rded f tree. 8000), fixed at greatly reduced prices, 
ware foot. Pa — forwarded pos ot free 12 — wide 34d. per ne — 2 25 wide ia. per = 
Manufactured by BARNARD and BISHOP, Market-place, 18 „ „ 
— — del — free of expense in London, Peter- 24 „ 5 ey ag 
borough, Hull, or Newcastle Galvanised do., ld. A foot 
222ͤ GEE NE ERA 5 Extra strong Imperial Wire Sheep Netting, 3 feet, 1s. 6d. per 
GERMAN SP. SPRING MATTRESSES, permanently ranni ng yard; if galvanised, 2s. very description of 
e. very e Nursery and Fireguards, wire wise anterns and 
eet wide 0 4 feet 6 in. wide ..£3 3 0 — Fly-proof Dish Covers, Meat Safes, &c. ; 
3 feet 6 in, wide 213 0 5 fee ditto...... 310 0 . Is, 25 er sgae foo — bolts ae in maho- 
4 feet ditto ..........., 218 5 in, ditto...... ga ny frames ; Gothic gard 1 — ring, 6d. per running foot; 
One of these, with a French Mattress on it, is a most excellent Flower Trainers, rom Garden arches, 20s. each; 
and soft and SON’S LIST of B , with | Flower Stands, from 3s, 9d. prot — — Wire — 
full iculars of weight, size, and prices, of every description | plants and trees, Dahlia Rods, a nd e description of W = 
of Bedding, sent free by post.—Heat and Son, Bedding-manu- | work; Weaving, for the use of — 2 8, m miler . 86 
facturers, 196 (opposite the Chapel), Tottenham-court- road. the Manufactory of THOMAS HENRY Fox, 63, Snow-hill, London, 


and HALLEN have on show at their re repta 

Winsley. toad Oxford-street, ne) hina variety 5 
baggy for GARDENS, e., reatly REDUCED PRI 

Garden Rollers, Hand-glass Frames, 

Garden Engines, Flower Stakes, 

Garden Syringes, Flow A 

Watering Pots, Flower | Stands, 

Garden Vases, Garden as — 

rs Machi 


nes, Garden 

Every description of Work, both plate aud 0 Ornamental ia 
wrought ana cast iron, for Gardens, Ec. &e. 

HORTICULTURAL TOOLS and AGRICULTURAL IMPLE. 
MENTS of all kinds. 

STRONG IRON HURDLES, strained Wire Fencing, &e, 

Show Rooms at the MAN 17 ACTORY, z Dab er Eo e ag 
76, Oxford-street, three doors West Prin 
FLEXIBLE N 1055, 7 AND 280 

ee LYNE HA 


RUBBER TUBING. These articles are made all sizes, 


Be io grant , are not 1 by het liquors and 
23 ss we s, are permane ntly flexible in all and are 
a — adapted for Watering Gardens, — ies, Liquid Manare 
x umps, Gas, and Chemical pe kc be they require no 
tion of oil or dressing. an ot become leak 
out of use, rendering them — icularly suitable ror Fire ge 
and all e where a permanently sound and le pipe 
is required. 


VULCANISED INDIA-RUBBER GARDEN HOSE fitted 
with copper: En „es, and jets, complete, for attaching t9 
Pumps, Cisterns, & 

A, represents the Union-jeint, for effecting the yw 
between the Hose-reel and the Tan k. 8 Reservoir. 
B, the Box, for containing any s tools required. 
— 


EAD’S NEW PATENT GARDEN ENGINES, &c., &e.—This Engine, which contains about 28 gallons, 
will dis e water in a powerful stream a distance of 50 gys It is — to all Horticultura 1 = oe particularly 
for cleansing Wall and Standard Trees fr — Insects, &c., &. e value 1 this E y the ei ve that — 
its utility is er Nr to the Garden; from its power an nd Five — will be found of the most essential service in case <r 
of fire. Lik e HAND MA sage and | SYRINGES of every f Pec Se upon the last improved principle, Man — T 
y — D READ, 35, REGENT CIRCUS, PICCADILLY. 


AnD DRAINAGE —An experienced Agricu Price 7s. 6d., cloth, 

ng: d for a few months), who has had 16 years’ ee HE HISTORY OF FRANCE, from the Earliest 
pres practi n Draining and improving Estates, offers his ser- | Peri By EMILE DE inte osB. The two volumes of 
vices ; to la: ay out and — 2 4 tend, daily, the Dr rainage of Land. tHe reden edition comprised in the one of the 3 
Tes als erms moderate. — Address (prepaid), ao Tunas is the history a approved of by the — dl of P 0 
L. A., 14, Great | —— London. ne ucation 8 where it has already pas roug — 

e — n D. Boeur 
Fon PUBLIC SALE, at the New Corn Exchange — street, 
Mark-lane, DAY, June 11, 1849, 


RUCKER an ROFT, s Brokas, 26, aa Sale 2 
Mineing: lane, ‘Lona 


J. I. Haxcoox invites atceuuon of par 33 cena 150 ne 
of the Flexible Garden Hose to his SEL ient 
PIPE BEET, whieh is “found y the er 1 

t 0 w 

aea and Warehouse, @ well-mews, Cora receive 
London. All ierti and Letters addressed as 
immediate 1 1.8 A nee of the 

e 

2 0 TH E LADIES. —The powerful in sera a 


the skin at this period of the y uty. 
| cre — attention Fin eee — pes oa desirable object 8 
| most pleasing an ctual specific eee 
Oobpes! 8 PATENT IRRIGATOR & ene ROWLANDS KALYDOR, so deservedly erte 
king Models of th be seen in ope- | and public favour and estimation. Its ap er healthy a% j 
| ration daily, from 9 a pf till 27. t, at 473, Oxford-street, Blooms- | the effects of the atmosphere, aud induces ee jea 77 
bury, where particulars may be had. | of the microscopic vessels of the skin, Py kta Tan, ame 


i j 5 OS} deat 3 1 moted. 1 
(Ç OTTAM AND HALLEN, 2 Winsley-street, Oxford- Pimples a. pie ‘fy before the este 
reet, London KA OR a m 


parency of complexion, Ladies . or taking rete resis feeling» 


RAY, ORMSON, anD BROWN Se 
I. 


Chelsea, solicit the 3 of the Nobilit , Gentry, and exercise 90 ve lat 

— — — iptio of Bi aa —— ith eee 1 peen a belive Stine = ‘neo ; taining 
cription ui w ortieulture 1B een acknowledge co 

work done | by ien 4 the Right 2 yen Earlof f Kilmorey’ s, to pe ae * Beware of spuriou us K the done 10 g 
8 ch they hav the honour o tring so long, still 5 miner tringents utterly ruinous v, n. The words 
inues to gire perfect satisfaction, Mr. eee beh Chale venetian action endangering health. th 


f the gen, 
LANDS KALYDOR” are on the wrapper 8, 2% —— 
d Row ment ey 


hey so beg to refer to the houses built ‘by them durin the article ; and the words “A. LAND an 
p me Season, A for the 1 3 Company 212 gard . are also engraved on oe Tor old by the 
— Botanie the on each bottle, Price 4. 6d. and 
Curator, will I kindly show the work, and answer aa eng t Chem sts and Perfum rin n te 
Heating Appar sn ed 3 Printed by WILIA Brapsury, of No. 13, 1 2 22 Ne . — 
byt 1 ten Moristt EVANS Trine g Og 
Gunar, Onmson, and Brown, have als the | honour of referrin HAYMAKING MACHINES, of the best Parish of St, Pancras, and Farpenick Meg Nideggen, 
toma manok the nobility and gentry 3 country, and to — — wholly — = ron, and embracing all the latest improve offi ee 8 mie ree ie ` the Precinct, of eet ns si apie 
of the London Nurseries, ts, at ped ticed price of 122, 12s, now ready for | London; and mblished by thein at t e, 45 wa 
N.B, Plans and Estimates furnished free, delivery a at, Corran an and Harzen's, 2, Winsley. street, 8 parish of St. Paul's, Covent- garden, i mt the 2 575 
849. 


Sarvapay, Jux x 2, 1 


‘THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


SATURDAY, JUNE 9. 


34 
—* ** 55 i: 
4 — K 
td a — dead weights of.. — 
ceptive Beings, by 


tution — 9 S ti 5 d 
ͤä· 55 societies, ardian 
iiia o... 363 e | Tar paint. . .. . . 
Tet Farmers’ a Timber, resinous, to fell. 
Lymer Abney sale oe C oe 
355 $ urnips, to put 
S . 357 6 Vegetation and clima 
Society’s Garden se = va gardening é 337 a 
asn . ights of pigs. . e 
les pieces o.. . What. twiu-headed ..,..... „ 363 
ROYAL B BOTANIC SOCIETY, iep A PARK. 
d Exhibition this season PLANT — AND 
FLOWERS at crea: ion, will 9 n WEDNESDAY, 
Jone 20. Tickets to be obtained as the 8 ir. ‘onde? rs 
kom! anh 85 the Society, price 5s, each, or on the day of 
Exhibition 7s. 
The AMERI ERIGAN portion of e Garden, where the Rhodo- 


e are still in great perfection, 
— 1 Fellows ee their friends, The Prome. 
days as u 

1 

TO THE SUBSCRIBERS TO 

G iw tende BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. 


. — e nsideration of 
t they will be pleased to 

theit pollin lly reques p 

ben À Polling papers to T. Grissell, Bsa. Re Palace- 


as kindly undert aken the 


ARDENERS? ae Nt INSTITUTION.— 
G Sabseriptions an d Donati s at the Annual Dinner. 
on 


- An — 
Sub 
£s 


“Proprietors of 
Cottage Gardener 5 5 
1 5 A 
Esq., 


2 

2 

a 

nw 1 

1 

y Esq..:. 8 —4 
Countess os of Mans- 

1 

1 

1 

a 

1 


ER 8 
om among the following Can- 
have been examined and approved 


ae Application, 
London : 8 7th 
London na 5th 
Brixton A 5th 
Dulwie i iw oth 
Leyton 5 
Clapham ... 8d 
Highga wow 
Scone, N. me æ- od 
—.— cen ae 
Guede : 
ue Te » Gloucester 2d 
Closter a 
Dartford 20 
Clapham 5 
_Andover 5 
don ANER 
Blackheath whe t 
a 5 
ast 11 0% The ballot 


P 
at 2 o’clock, shy peaosi " No 
whose subseription is 5 


e tae a CUTLER, Secretary, 
à Farringdon. street, 


SEEDLING PELARGONIUM _EXHILBI TION 


rst, 5U.; second, 31, 10s. ; third, 

and the 83 rth, 11. 103 to be paid in cash immedia ately 
after the award is 1 

Two years 8 | Seedlings, = those of greater age, but which 
have not To nt out, alone be allowed to compete for 
the above p oe wean, may be exhibited, but for them 
no prizes will be off 

i epee to the 3 * Pelargonium Exhibition, there 
wi ll be a ral Sho ow for any other te , Pansies, 
goniums, in towers and 3 in . Pinks, Ke. 
N worthy of merit will be rewa All 
t te 


tor 


G, Star Nursery, Slough; 
wer Man nor, Windsor ; or E. BECK, Esq., 


ARWICKSHIRE HORTICULTURAL EXHI- 
BITION.—THE SECON 3 3 a atom 
EXHI ap he 3 de ed to take e place 


ick, xak Prizes — wa 
warded on the most liberal — for Stove and 
„ Balsams 
a. benas, 


an subjects, 3, Mel s, Pin rapes, 
and other fruits. T ull 2 in the“ Horticultural — 54 
zine” — July, and Soau to 7 obtain sates m Owen WHITE, 
Esq.. Hon, Sec., Jeph 95 da x. gton. 


eria 


MEETING ais be held n the e Georgo Hato, en | The 


Square, 2 
at 1 o' clock, p. 


4th of Jun current, 


2 
es 
7 
© 
WB 
2 — 
E 
E 
on 
Fn 
aps 


rri 

umer, and to the detri- 
All Sen are respectfully invited 
to attend. — Glasgow, June 9 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


[Price 6d. 


T AMES. CUTHILL, Frorist, Camb Camberwell, London 

will be glad nag show the “ BLACK PRINCE” STRAW. 
BERRY, with fro 
now quite ripe, to ee 
visit ; showing that it 2 ‘the very pe Tog ia this 
count Ripe Fruit of it can be sent any distance a rail, it 
stands tra veli: og so well, They are now 6d. per ounce, bu tia 
10 days will be much cheaper, 


A H peg pas p FANGY FETE will. be held at 
nover- Rooms, * THURS 

FR ml — 21st — 224 ot June. 1819, in 

AS M of ST. ANN’S SOCIE TY which, Ad . 

tributions, affords Home, Clothing. aoe duca- 


tion to Children of Mose Pas in pro 
NT vee 
Her ame st — Majesty the QUEEN, 
er — |S ict tar ADELAIDE. 
Her Royal en ge e Duc a Feed pee 


= Grace 
of Zeth 
The Right Hon, the Lady 


eg ver nage 
The Rt. the Viscountess 
Palmers 
a Rt. Hon. the Viscountess 
ungan 
Tao RE Rt. » Hon, the iiaii 
eres 


The Rt. Hon. P Viscountess 
* Combermer 


ae Grace the Duchess of 
Buccleuch 

Her Grace the Duchess of Leeds 

the Duchess 


Suther 


De Wey 
The Most Hon Mar- 
chiones der 

st Hon. the Mar- 


The Re Hon. the Viscountess 


the Re Hon. the Viscountess 
amden 
The Right Hon. the Lady 
Charlotte Guest 


chioness of I 
The Most Hon. 
chioness of I 
The st on, 

0 


VERBENAS OF THIS SEASON, at reduced 


p 
Ivery’ 8 ee 
Union Jack 
es’ Exquisite 
— of Stowe 
n of Summer 
d an exten- 


Wa 
Cardinal 
m Jaai yebright 


d of = Isles à 


for imme turning ou 
ntof last set 4 pade weeks. 
and Brown, Se: i ad Horticultural 
K. 


e see our 


NUNCULUSES IN BLOOM. 
YSO to inform the lovers of th 
ne collection of pu apres of his Seedlings | 
and other named “an nat the shop of Mr. F. 
Warner, — 3 London, o on Monday, June 11, aan daring 
the ensui of whom 12 
Catalogues, ade Wallingford, B 


may be had descriptive | botanical specimens 
fully 


Hon. the Lady 


enema i 

he Right Hon, the Countess 
pr ersey 

The ee — the Countess 
of Dela w 

The Right . the Countess 


* Right Hon, the Countess 
of Harrowby 
The —— ani the Countess 
er i 


Bathurst | 
Right Hon. 2 — 


Sud- | The 
ent, S er 


Donation 


—The unrivaled GERANIUM, 
obtained of J. WHomes 


e str ta 
in 32-sized pots, corrag a fico bend 
bloom. Also strong — of all the dea sorts new out at 
moderate prices.—J. Wnomes, Pelargonium Nursery, Windsor, 


| NEw 
Hor 
Painted det N 


and Champions Gill's 9 
Edmondiana g ees Best. The 17 


6 for 5s. 5 17 a wa Pos 
2 3 p “Harlequin, for 18. + “gd low. 
PET TUNTAS es Sh pi g and Admiration for 2s. 6d. 
as Vei sag = — e., 1 
alceo! tal — 
‘with niin oan T e payable at 
Wa — ER BOTTERILL, Lob lane, Marsden, near 


for 12s. ; 12 for 9s. ; 


— 2 bys nr 
Duval, 


Bar ker’s Lady of the Laake, | iwo of the ‘est for bedding, 4s, 4. 
wW * arie plants, „ post free ee. 


stalls, with with detailed 
in afew days. Tickets, 2s. 6d, 
= had — the — Room, 


; he Office 
hil o WD. Eb. LEE EKS, Secretary. 
; Life ditto, 101. 108. 


» 
each —— ys Asad 
Asylum, Stre 
sion i House, of 
al Subscription, IL. 1s. ; 


ow. 
es will be sent on 1 | 
bl urnle 


V ELECT BEDDING Mo i sable pane Sold 
r duri mer, such as hir 


pt of the amount 
Kare, Florist, &c., 
Printed directions 


_ SCHERTZER anp SON S, FLORISTS a 


er 
he abo 
for de, and Sons, E — inpo 11 nd. 


nd SEEDS- 
in Holland, beg to to inform their friends 
the a toe oe their Catalogue of Dutch Flower. 
out, and can pe had, ou gel applic 
all orders they may be favour: 
attenti A reference or remittance is 
8 correspondents.—V, SCHERTZER and 


ats 3 RUBINUS. 
OHN CA RTER R, Jun., NurseryMan, Keighley, Y 
shire, has been hindly p presented by Mr. Clapham with —.— 


per dosen, Sith er EE 8 the above unrivalled MIMULUS, which was so highly spoken 
SANE UIN” (Smith's), the best out, 2s. of 72 5 oe 4 ghly spo 
ho owing ree splendid ne M A T —— page 312, 342 (5 the following . N 
a 
Briliant „Lady of te Lako, an — 4 ers, payable at Burnley. A. Clapham and Co.— Your seedling has flowered, — 
—— WALTON, Gacend, Mi Marsden, Burnley, Lanca- —.— avery fine | thing. It has "E far an largest and hand- 
shire, = E omest flowers we have ever seen on any Mimulu 
ND GARDEN SE J.C. will have a few plants to dispose ofi at is. 1. each in a 
ER POTS AND 6 ctfall short time, of w hich due oo gel . be given. the number 
Ja OHN ‘MORTLOCK, 250, Oxford-s treet, reaps ally of Pyare wn be very limited, an early Sppllontion is necessary. 
— mg — a has sampah heo large | eigr r S of th the ee PO U be 3 y vag e Fotation | in bea they are re- 
p es “in ‘vat various col solicits an early in n, —.— 1 reque 
= ne — eful CHIN A, GLASS, and RTHEN- ents. The — 5 trade allowance of one — ‘over for every 
at west possible 
250, Oxford-street, possible price, for cash 


THE GARDENERS’ 


OMPBTITOR STRAWBERRY.—This excellent 
to those 2 


ie be 2 a valuable addition to 
in 14 on ing a great bearer, of delicious flavonr, an 
beautiful appearance. fri is a first-rate early forcer, each 2 — 
ucing 12 to 14 well ripened fruit ger 1 3 are 
pow ready, at 20s. per score, from which a y be ob- 
ned for next season’s Lann —Apply to 3 sy 0. LEE 
Ham mi 4 — 


Vineyard “Nurser is 
from unk ~ The, usual allowance to the 


own — — 
EE D POTATOES, NON- DISEASE 

R. THOMAS WARINGTON, of the Wow Corn 

Exchange, London, has a few sacks left of “ Pht 
BLOSSOMS” — POT — which have 

some years by a gentleman of y ealth in the oe of "Noctolk, 

and they hare never — the slightest sympto: of disease ; 

the gr — always planted them during first and 

a June, and they have — 93 crops. 

g bag, in — of 

ded o eipt of 

ice order or — for the amount, or satisf. — ef no — 


EANES WARRANTED GARDEN TOOLS.— 
wh nt in — yt . in Gardening — 
are invited to : . Deant’s extensive Stock of 
GARDENING AND PRUNING IMPLEMENTS, best — 


made Gard — . ngines and 3 „Coalbrookdale Garden 
Seats and € 
erapers Pick Axe 
— — feale and! Potato Forks 
g Hooks Pruning Bills 
Bills E — Rakes aud „ Kn alta various 
Borders, various pat Siev „ Saw 
terns — Doors 1 Scisso 
Botanical Boxes bere Frames , Shears (riety, 
of Pruning In-| Hammers kes in great va. 
struments Spree eet Frames Reaping [looks 
aff Engines Hay Knive sythes 
Chaff Knives Hoes of — pattern Scythe Stones 
Dais es Horticultural Ham-|Shears, variou: 
Dibbiles mers and — — pe — 
Dock Hotbed Han kle 
Tools Ladies’ Set a ‘Tools Spades — Shovels 
ae. Labels, various pat - Spud 
. | terns, in zine, por- Switch Hoo 
Plower elain, &e. Thistle Hooks 
„ Stands in Wires | Lines and Reels Transplanting T 
and I Marking rowels 
Fumigators Mattocks T Irons 
@alvanicBordersand — Saa =m Wall Nails 
Plant Protectors |Metallic Wire Watering Pots 
Garden T and Milton Hatchets Weed Extractorsand 
Mole Traps ooks 
Mowing askie Wheelb: 


arrows 
Youths’ Set of Tools 
@. and J. Tai are sole Agents for LINGHAM’S PERMA- 
NENT LABELS, — of * wit} ih the Illustrated List 
of Horticultural T n be sent, post paid, to any part of 
the United Kin —.— > Deans Horticultural Tool Warehouse, 
opening to the Monument, 46, King William-st., London- me 


NEW FUC 


CHSIA, “SAPPHI 


d out, 

plans — will 

= — red b; wh as “thet * 5 

yth brilliant ee col f 

Gror thre reflexing — whieh are broad, and of such waxy 

substance that they retain their fully-rec 
last, there ay’ 


FLOWERS OF ALL H 
| BENJAMIN W. KNIGHT, . 1 sr, &ey 


nard on- Sea, Scher, begs to call ‘attention 


to his select Plants, which he ns . ng out, securely p acked, 
post free, at the anne ed prices per dozen, fine dis doct va- 
rieties: Verbenas, 2s. 6d. ; — 38. Antirrhinums, 
3. 6d. ; 3 4s. to 63. ; Petunias, 3s. ; ; Palias, Show or 
Famy? wers, 63. ; Chrysanthemums, ; ’ Cuphea a play tycentra | 
eliotropiu uvianum, 3s.; H. Volz 


| amd strigillosa, 3s. ; 
tairianum, Pentstemons, for 

paeme * 
* s 


vias, Various, 2s. 5 
ee blue and scarlet, bs. ; 


: Ve erbena 


bedding, 6s. 
bed — 4s. 
— Be age Take, per doz zen Pu * — 

; Antirr - 8 
— de Liege, s for treatment 
will be sent with each lo 8 2 of his cals ct 
plants may be — on prepaid application, — a 
postage stamp. A re ce 3 seo dl we is respectfully re- 

unkn rres 2 8 


quested from 


HE LONDON. "MANURE. ‘COMPA NY, having 
the URATE” meee particularly for Turnipe ane 
with the greatest confidenc 


84 


CHRONICLE. 


8 . Ho 
GLASS,—Consu of the 
will find a 2 sek pine and very r reduced ecco 

Soho Plz og alt — et, and dran S cat 
HARTLEY'S 7S PATENT ROUGH kia N 
ARTLEY’S PATENT ROUGH PLATE 1 

R CONSERVATORIES,— The 
7 Sat 


e re-arranged ou 
cisely with Wee of the Patentee 
of fg Nobi 
squares under 8 by 6 ....., 
8 by 6 undes 10 rsd 
14 by 10 „ X13 foo 


4 fo 


The d call attention 


he zi “the London M 
ments ** a constant suppl 
‘oes, W. 2 


ificial Manur 


im 
g e 
lowest terms for a genuine artic 
Epwarp Purser, Secretary, 40, oo apa Blackfriars, 
8 


TE ee e wo 


rticles manu oa 


Ortik, Fi 
elves to hold Water for Orchidaceous 
stmates gir a given om 2 as shown upon Drawings aad} in Spe- 
cificatio k of Slate Slabs, of all sizes and thick- 
nesses, — 


VES. 


and Soars manip on. Kerken paper, 

with drawings —ͤ— will be forwarded on the receipt of 

— stamps. —GEOndR NEIGHBOUR and Son, 127, High 
olborn, 


— Manuf. at pric arying from 2d, to 3d, 
pees re foot, for the usual sizes uired, many thousand 
ara oË y which are > kept ready packed for 3 te delivery. 

Prices ates forwarded. plication, for 
NT ROUGH P PLATE, THICK CROWN. GLASS, GLASS 
TILES and SLATES, WATER-PIPES, PROP AGATING 
GLASSES, GLASS MILK PANS, PATENT TE-GLASS, 
ORNAMEN —— WIND GLASS, and GL nen AnE®, 
ETLEY and Co., 35, Soho-square, Lon 


Gardeners’ Chronicle, first Saturday in — month. 


: Fis 
per gr oss, or r 35. 6d. per dozen. By the 
may be preserved fro from (ot ise tale 


AND 


— ed to under 


tens iv ve — 
Royal Apis —. Kew. 
Horticultural Gar ens, Chiswick ; — 
` . applied t Aes = * 
arge Conservatory, Royal Botanic, Garden Regent put 
Duke of Devonshire’s, , Chatswort 8 
Earl of Gainsborough’s, Oakham 
Earl of Zetland’s, Uplea atham 
Robert Hanbury, Esq., Poles, — 1 Herts. 
Mr. Glendinning's Nurse 1 755 m. green. 
And at least 500 other mpor ne 7 
BURBIDGE — HEALY, 130, „ee London. 


REDUCTION IN PRICE OF BOILERS, 


URBIDGE anD HEALY be 
5 Friends 


B 


K PANS, PROPAGATING 8 &e, 
— Co 
ces for 


aie SO — to hand their 


ed 5 
33 is 3 0 H 
— — nee. ee Be 4. E 
a9 2 seon ses from 2d. N 0 be 
24 a bright cor sed, the sepa on and off Tubes Id. per inch, Peach Glasses 10d. each, Wasp Traps 
. * — — — 3s. 6d, per dozen, Pastry S, Hyacinth Glasses and Dishes, 
isa deep purple ar and very bright I — 4 it ae of the 2 n escription, een’ gp Lam 8 . . 
—— a — — A a, ti 15. — 8 tk, 4 tubes, Ze. 6, f Por 10s. Selk. 
its flowers in ha every eye. 8 tis- Glass 8 "n ™ 
faction. (Signed AMES PERRY.” x 
e Hon, See. 5 is =r stare and List of Prices forwarded on licatio 
Fa Society» | Lozells | their Warehouse, 116, Bishopsgate-street Without, London. 
Pince, & Co., Exeter Nursery, Exeter,” GLASS, 


ALSO THE OULTIVATION OF Se 


VINES, & CHOICEST PLANTS, 


ize List N. Sekine neler ication at 
87, Bishopsgate-street Without, —— 


n, they are enabled 
—. price of their B 
10 in. will warm 50 ft. 9 
12 in. do. i 
14 in. do. 2 
16 in. d 24 
18 in. do. 4 
21 in, do. : 2 
24 in n. do. 0 
An ef {TERN Bo 
80 in. will warm 800 ft. 4 in. pi 1515 6 
3 1500 ft. 4 in. do, 25 00 
All Boilers with dow arms, up : 
in,, 10s. extra; all above, the same pri 


130, Fleet-stree t, London, May 26. 
S2 pe oly 
ondon, 17, New Park-s 
and Manu piia estin of the 5 ed CONI 
CYLINDRICAL Be on zepo — 


AND CO. 
areata 


upon em — kivan antageons 
servatories, cord of Iron or Wood Feed 

ornamental designs. Baloti Palisading, 
ire-w 


Coopers PATENT IRRIGATOR E 
orking Models of these I 
ete a from 9 A. M. till 2 P. 
bury, w particulars may be sat 
8 CEMENT, for internal 
tering, may be painted 
20 hours of its applion on to the bare 
which rooms may 
com 


i 


the slightest difficulty, the ca oa 2 
red for 0 other stucco neg 
Plast ering, 1 


[ 
a 
7 


5 ON ORTICULTURE,— 
e LEAVES and their 


e — nt.” 
ee. eeting Room except Honorary 
e of ites their — or sisters, and 
— introduced — em; or t oreign and Cor- 
r the 5 
pg Members of oe 

sn. 
5 'P SpA RLET.” | 
has pane ready to send out of 
argonium, of which he e| Ww 


of 


“PERPETUAL 


KBF 


Res. this new and a s 
exhibited before t the ene e Society o 
“hen ex ing admirably, flow: n prof 


Pianis 7s. €d. uch me one ‘cided to the trade for every three 


migel -Chiswick Nursery, near London. 
Hoses WATERERS EXHIBITION OF 
— PLANTS. 
—— A x Sittin will b 
— agi 
gs year co 8 unite 2 — 4 ent specimens 
— ee these of the . 
2 to obtai 
finest . ak an me ao —— 


wil ss 
ran also a principal contributor to the Show in the 
oat Pat 


ursery is within an hour’s ride of London 
A Station, porh Western Railway. The 
Plants there 
ges W 


ETTU JAPONICA 7 
x STANDISH à 


weer 


urrey, Jun —— 
RHODODENDRON JAVANICUM, OF BLU 
en THE BEAUTIFUL A oP RHODODEN. 
-DRON 


tion. At the 
whether the man who wilfully 25 needless] 
es 


alle: slightly the wile of 


the Minister of the Interior to —— of provinces Nan 
nd when t 


n 
i le winter ; T 2 nin pots itis well 
i jaod he mbole and itis also a first-rate bedding | i 
r R. G. feels — Pelargonium will give per- 
R.G. — 


ripe. . Tom 
eet hese by 9 
ance of the diseas 


NECTION BETW 
eir best, and may be seen 


ca iting a 
ee of the sande. of 


aces 
for ‘Wheat y „Certainly 


e same time we cannot avoid asking tempts to and opie 
sly fires | roots, such as ara, Taniers, ay y sa, Sweet 
i say: explosion, Potato, in the col, sunless fields Eng 
y simpl Ir object is merely to 
tten by the Trish h that pos 
the most noble of moder #3 


grow 2 4 and ‘Tobaéeo, : 


a powder 


must n (to ea plants might 
inly 


can. in i our — 
e but e that one is calories for its 
che : ath : th 


oly 1n all cas 
uc 


e thor th of the 
“They plant ed 3 Nee torn ome nd they ble ed: 
T3 should have known what fruit would spring from such bound to int 
es t impro bability of any j attending 
1 — at their introduction. e 
valuable propetties of which —— a upo 
y damp but pervious soil Fa iHerb aniti 
he 4 8 E full of alkaline matter, a n excessive 
shortly after | w. i 


BELLE-Lompa, a farm Na ; 0 0 
this plan, e are | the migm at cultivating Tobacco profitably in this 
co f ate were f i 


his 
ery year as . as A were before the appear- 


. n for 
On a fu tu ure occasion we shall endeavour to de- 
n monstrate in another way 1 undo yu fact that, 
in the presence 5 sufficien physiologist 
d. can state with ce rtainty a the iat of cultivat- 
° | ing a given plant in a given p 
For that 
said to 
wie Lacs joxurianee, but never —— 
id to have a climate fit 
not, if corn instead of hay is 


tivati 
m cale, in a climate which 
physiologists, pronounced to 


e persons, not 
wholly unsuited to 


the object sought WARMING FRUIT TREE BOR RDERS. 
Wise uui sutra Wats A 25 ER 0 elimate can — to suit a plant when N” (see 
d after Monday the 18th June, fine that plant not only fetdids its general health, but is be: 
syn the truly siy with be Rhododendron Jasañi- capable of producing its flowers, fruit, and peculiar 


ast autumn, 
thet Collector in v. 


ne plant, 


are w 
E e “rl ian — anc x 80 d they will be equally f ig + ere under 
Ory, or growing in m a greenhouse 0 — a frame, he same eircums is to say where Soil | en 
x 1 Java, 9,71 K Were tke e oF the | seh, e and atmospherical uten especialy jan later, | cess border deser F 
Senet ove a hardy pla ant, at least | are the e; t othe The influences | early forcing tig Je) The soil of t ha of 
— —Tooting Nursery; f ar London, which are most importan t consist of solar ‘light keping supported apo cheqi š S 1 Eee, having a 
The: 3 aa eE R ee ee intensity, of heat di i mber beneath them 2 feet 9 inc es deep; and in 
rs’ Chronicle. manner, of ai heii 7 1 we of mois- | front of ae per a a a eg, ihe ground, aed 
i is ul 
SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 1849, = lar amo in the atmosphere at certain far tight memar ye wil te slabs. The chambers © xtend be 
MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK heat, atm os —— mois- nes e border to e front wa of the house, throug 
timur FENN M Berai Sonta anos — W ture are 2 will wate cad identical also, which * drains, in the shape of 6 inch pipes, enter 
wan, — 14.8 a Tira as vegetation is concerned, and ti — — 3 
i ; ey : SER: as sre ~ forces alters the 
N 3 Bion eae Nr: SRR fe equally suitable forthe growth of a y r and tree : 
ot Society of Litota . plant — of dwelling on 8, ich during the fermentation of th 
“Tei, ee (Anniversary) f por. are perfectly understood- ie physiologists, | the open brickwork of the arches, are abs 
à . let us further explain our meaning by afew examples, the soil and roots and by means of the pipe EN PE g 
an Sx0W.—Monday Jung il; . ubarb grows in the hy ulthy manner in | a portion of the can be admitte 75 r, the house at 
N — ngland ; and therefore o reli is said to suit pleasure, to circulate amongst 3 55 lage. Fae 
Was to be antici ted, from ihe excessive wet- it. And so it does if the object is merely to procure 3 over the ae of orto the 8 k 
i the ring, SA 8 DISEASE leaves, flo owers, and fruit. B real value of | or ammonia, excludes rain 


ney 


manure, 
the presence of ce and gives a neat and tidy appearance to that part of 
e 


; e 


a eg nto i 


tions which render it a potent medines In the 13 “Dodman’s” doubts, I beg to say, from 
plains of Siberia and hinese T experience, ‘that the system does any con- 
| sun is far brighter and the summers far ane hot, sidepable amount of labouy ; that the 

and the winters much more cold than ours, it is le | used is aiall in 

to produce those secretions. But in England it and, lastly, that the heat i 

forms them so feebly and a n, that the roots conirol, an with pro 

705 little peyote ie climate of Ery the u t exac 


therefore 


manner the ca mp plant thrives perfectly | 
oducing seeds in abu d 
i 


it is he a 3 
nerally 


1 
yn sn oe = es pap used it for warming Vine 
do not consider it to apply — 
: ficial heat to the roots of 1 bmi if an 
s to to try the experiment 


us one for 
as to give me 
dence in 3 the plau 
of pro is to fill the trenches an 
e we 3 tree leaves in — d 
be mixed with mamali quantity of 


We 
grown Hemp. Theref mix in the proportion of one | load of litter. to. eight on 
lebe, upon the whole, such ten loads of leaves, and i ess are pro ‘operly shaken 


$ lant requires. 
iderations ee a ve led us to A eee 118 
i _uñfavourabl to the | abou! again in 
* would pad cl She pes | requires. shaking. up, but — the 2 ; 
— skill in e — 
N 
| removed, and a couple of loads of litter added to the 


2 1 p. 308 d. 


THE 


GARDENERS’ CHRONIC 


15. | 


(June g, 


356 
8 ill be so ful of good manure for immediate use ina bringing | The“ —, * tes one consists of Camellias, Ana 
remaining Lanen aey this the Vines n mn e 4 jae | ay the walks at inconvenient hou 5 fe Roses, — a A aa hard-wooded pan; ias, Auen 
» proposes usin ot water tan — p argo! niums, &e anothe, 
Lege rg Alter this renovation pa nothing is required | his 5 borders, an : a seat ink rmation as to as N Violets, Pansies, Gren, &e. Thus e g 
4 3 or a fortnight, and occasionally adding aai e of e cting such a tank, or else | qu ah is 1 a Aa o uncommon thi an inne 
af 1 of fresh ma ; at the end of this | for reasons swt the ‘adoption, of the plan. I have = of these li e gardens 10, 000 or 15,000 
— * necessary to remove the most decom- above my reasons against the adoption of hot r- Crassulas, 1 1 
— “eu to substitute for it some agen or water in any shape as a 3 of warming fruit-tree ‘at are that for Midsumme 7 000 ray 8 be de St. dea a 
wi r of C 
and litter, which mus t be well mixed through borders ; but if its tts e dete on, either 3 1 j 9 planis 


eb 
— or without chambers, I should rr recom 
ks, a 


e latter are 


m ure of the outsidesoil | eapness, t 
proportionate aby ag he" . inside. With and the liability of sare dis ey es 
very early forced Vines, even after the fruit is ripe,| be more than 3 in nches in 3 and require nothing 
it is necessary eep up a m warmth to the | more than fixing on the hard prep ttom of the 
roots, or they are liable to receive a icone ut if rder, and covering with a few inches of gravel, on 
be prevented, they will continue longe an active | which the soil is placed. To v pos- 
tate, the leaves will be preserv ved and — to per- | sible their liability to get out of pe they should be 
form their functions to a la „and the youn s this will in the 8 


being lost, is a de e, 
sufficient to set the roots gently into motion, and a8 


e re very li 
water to e, are ore difficult to repair 
than pipes; and as the water circulates more freely i 
the in every way preferable 


8 ced to burst their buds, the roots wil get in 
advance of the tops, and consequently the latter, w 


they are excited, will commence their growth with e — 


n from this statement that the amount 
that 


in a yard, t 
expen n the same ange) of —— to convert 
it into solid manure without allowing it to lose any of 
its va valuable cans i 


24 2 
that it is a 


mistake to sup- 
requir as the 


ired, 


and 

nd as decomposed manure m 
vegetable ground, it is far more 8 

manure in an unfermented wore and appropria 
heat and ammonia to some useful „than to ord hae 
ts to escape into the atmosphere 
out benefitin an If the supply of litter oiai- 
abie ar the proprietor’s own stable-yar . is ce 

e purpose, it will pay well to procu 

as it will be worth at Seat all it cst 

after it is into manure; a 
will have —— benefited by the genial 3 
moniacal evaporation from it without any cost, ang 

ital in buildin 


g the 


> daksa ‘cx: the the 
the 


with- 


* a y 
_ As the toner Melon 


is 
in — times a w ntain a regular ev 
| rature, and this — involve an expense in har ed 
labour, besides the nuisance of smoke from an addi- 
tional chimney, 3 which there is gene 
able abun arden. For su 
Do 


| 


Furnace- re-ba 
Brick peaks. fixing boiler, 25 


| 


Extr: copy 38-inch DENE Pipes, 
220 test, at ls, 4d. ae * 4 
Elbows, cement, fixing, e. 0 i 


Excavation and cartage not included. 10 0 
In the case of heating 
pipes might be — the boiler provided — 
—— the atmosphere, which would furt arhi er reduce 
of 


the first construction. G. Flem 


FRENCH tt ber 

Tue Marchand very numerous 
and thriving fraternity in 1 In “all principal 
streets, and particularly in mare 
oer the Lee atres and places 


x| 


s to 


Aa 
every day of the 
hum ri ‘class, sell in 
Roses, Viole 


owers either gi 


so universal is > is, th 2 
— Riendiy homage, and the meanest Aerie t3 a 
garret feels neglected 11 + insulted without it. 

meet this demand, there a distinet and numerous 


Vine border i in this — the 
s 


ost monopetalous flowers. 


o | themum, especially rety oe white Anemon 
w la argely cultivated for 2 
e Rose du Roi (erimson 3 
almost the only 3 sold in the 8 
it in bloom during dee month of t 


1 


common flowers o 
ne v —— tye 3 
Most decidedly > Prenon a 


Chrysanthe emums. Paris Corres spondent, 


D OF PLANTS. 
(Continued from p. 341.) 
Genus IV. Prout rande. füt is the production 


a 


— 


a branch issuing om a flower or fruit 
see another Row 


from a 
ruit sends ou pore or from the 
one or the other springs a tuft of leaves, a de ba 


ae guish four species. 
isting USNESS.—Å | flower 


and fi ruite We may th 
ts centre 


merate all 
* 


ions o 
to ats the — of ev 
Rosesand Ranunculi h 


menon was not to be seen the seco 
were plan — it 
Another variety of floral proliferousness ood oat 

, of which Je ssamines, 


amples. They 
— other, but vm not an, 
in the case before men 
bela? such 8 the Datura, have three or 
These ar 


oth 
ee eee It is 
rousness both flowers are fertile. 
almost . gee rendered sterile. 
Ranuncul wer has some 
instances of fe 
seeds if sown woul 


er. 
Tn th 
sometim 


ning a. e da à 


sense, of using hot wa ater, is — where the highest | 


required, and i is mirenda ne ely 


the vegetable en, it is a handy reserve 
from which we can, at any time am i is handy eer |en 


other 
Á | Pars and it would mot answer 
ö fire heat. 


— 9 St. r- 
and St. maiis wh 

clon of these flowers; ; b each has his “ specialité 

c 

mal x cheap rate: . erythin g is 


paes by any means; fuel is very expensive 
their 


. 


‘energies may be 
and, at Sena what they Ning at tine 


to one acre of | — ‘adjoining — ae in the ev 
5 Ma 


sole occupation is the 
at 


aid 


in centre 
— five eee without 
it had only —— 


ae 


m Imperialis Petro- 


THE GARDENERS’ 


the there 
: by it the nai * be — ho; — 


| sayah ina -e cire = Pie the rar 


absorb range = in or are TEE, the 3 of | 
the spaces be rows, 


| 


CHRONICLE. 


357 


— —— — 
| out of og ay with a ek and now have my 
in the open It is safest, 


very atter, in common with vegetable 

ealtare, —.— not T lost sight of—by applying the 

ts individually, 
far in searc 


communicated by by uice of the Apple had, 

the action b piir assisted the deve lop- 

Species. s PROLIFEROUSNESS.—It 

asimple tuft of leaves, or orm 

se of the ome itself in appearance, ors ter- 
fe expansions, o 


We kn 8 
abe Par moving pea fort esh 
—.— givin 2 viii which it was 

joaded, the coun 


3 


—.— h med, 

3 — Lof. the laws of nature 
nomena have n. the subject | n 
y part I adhere 


© 
E 


rthy of his e while e s | 
are 1 of f his. re ed Phar 


1 8 3 

UNGI IN erat 3 If there is — new 
under the sun, when great natural prinei 

sidered, this is far from 

en. = Mere 

nomena 
gardener, ‘cade probably to others, yet entirely novel to 
him. For inst writer has for 12 yea a het 


ungi springing up in the fram 
disfigu red all his plants, and if the 
_— ae oer 


e rests was made up a 


ve this 


* It may also happen when Serei Fuchsi 
— as prevented the ordinary development of the 
season, Garden i 


—— 
provided however r they d ls not euler has om the 
— e of our climate. An ultram e writer, 


< vicinity of 


rece: 
r infection still spread, the whole Soek 


having relate 
ots at the spec ecial 3 of — to give birt th 
pe productions which prove the natural O 8 
Soil and the sot quality of her climate. 


But 
Dutch Ranuneuli at least show a remarkable ee 
such a a rule. 


— —æ ́ää—ä6ä— 
. AND SUBURBAN GARDENING. 
QUID manure. 


in promoting a 
rt ai — — take two b 


eds of Cabbages 
eed — — one ee with, e 


consequence weakly. culinary d 
culinary depart- 
— tage oa — similar attention 
meh licna — md &e., can 
service, 


` pre- 
than this—the crop will be 
application, and the quality 


on Peas 
its 
Rind that du TeMired. 1 It should alwa; 
Mire most in eTit ey ee — 
r at the rot a dry warm a If the 
tome deter bot, therefore, is not kept up, then they 
lessened, m quality, and the produce is con- 
water in, The common practice of pouring 


fs ‘oh 


e gre 
ch and soe orien | 


z collected, as the turf ee off from 


&e 
with 2 a little ordi- 
be borne in 


h ago, and consisted of intent three parts of G 
weeds, on 


5 of cuttings than usual was 


iven to t One sad the 2 left home, we 
all was 2 but the next day, on looking into 
a most eee change had taken place in 
f the plants. The whole collection had 
a adult . look, 8 strangely e be ee with the vi 


of the Tae ou 
he fungi was more distinctly marked 
scarlet Pelar argoniums were of the daai green — 
eee to black; the Fuchsias and Chrysan 
ums were not quite so bad, but yet much altered. 
Th he o fungi were immediately pulled x up, pe the plants 
a good ae ringing, but as found ‘the 
pee removed, 
e into the beds intended for them, and the remainder 
iis another frame. 
The fungus which has ee 5 this mischief was 
the PRE comatus, It d that the spores of 
5 ungi are the cause of the ———— of the 
eaves of the Pelargoniums, he. s but igs is the 
33 the . fi saree d has ost rapid 
_ vexa — 3 a fected seats put "Out into — 
e colour and are osed 


aE 
ze 


e fungi “had been 

solid may be of service 

by agate amateurs from a 5 25 catastrophe. 
The mention ‘which has been made of 


iduals h whe 
tinually being developed to the N 


ds, Da 
went on prosperously, 


vigorous | 
It is impossible to } i 
e in th 


hot-beds re- 
i is 


es Douglasii, 


mnanth 
erent varieties of Gilia; and close on their 


will a abl t to keep st a dary of golden in ges 
garden of May 15 the = yi J 75 
in their course all- 

iranthus, Mimulus, Golden 
e will present patches of yellow that he will 
in his part 


m to supply hims 

— be easily p prope ted in 

open a 
8. 


may be, I will not 


in 
ig gas tar and 
bk a series of a 
anti- 


4 Stockho 
ments, the objec 
rrosive — 


more EE unctuous nature 
s want is Supls d by Stockholm tar, and I do not 

think it likely that lime an 

adequate substitute for the latter. 


I 
ce which was tarred about seven 


a large amou 


be added. 
best compost for all 2 pemn 
the smallest possible expe 
e Correspondence. 
rban Gardens.—It may be of —.— 


autumn be well 


healthy young 
ayi leaf nN they cut off ay strong shoots, 


the winter, an 


| cinder-dust, many 


7. 


0 pecan so tho 


ar, SoS the year | i 


EPRE 

will strike root, sup 

| plants for bedding, e., next yonr I have succeeded consequent, 
night-scented Stock during t 


— pene ae = well as ever, 2 
uch lon colour is 


mu The 
k, kad ual if i — to ve k paint, and ‘ean 
d inodorous. It i of 2 1 is ready 
rife the moment it it boils; in hi — time 
een an fuel is saved. 

om 
ter 


F 


| grea 

| the alight ai saving in the cost of the | 
than coun terbalanced b by the additional 
ing the 


ticularly interested in „allow 
Nees ” to tivo — publicly or e with 
ming 
cond paragraph in my note, pag 
342, about tar paint, is wrong. The com ition fof 
lime and tar without ‘ida is for Soong: i not fencing, 

as ae iti is printed. N orthwood. 

Destroying Slugs. s —Knowing that sulphuric Mis isa 
violent caustic, producin taneous of 
i of water, I was asa to 


THE 


8 


CHRONICLE, 


immediate effect med when 


the number of these 
ut an inch deep into the acid 


will imbibe one-third of its weigh 1 — the 3 | 


in 24 hours. 9 ‘une 1 


osea the 
33 * an sl ey the bottles corked as speedily 
as and when co with double bladder, or 
phaser y over, an and kept inverted position, 

cool 


dry place, he will Bad thie Rhubarb at Christmas | 


or.—For some 


cut and peeled, as 2 tarts. 
** de C. E., June 5.— 1. the 275 “dire 
ttended to it will be found scarce 
rom the fresh d 


- 


ing 
lipping in two, &, and as eee | 


in; 
i the berries 


trons. are | 


would, in a great measure, be gradual! y ualboded. H. Pa 
Yorkshire. [ We cannot acquiesce i in this vie 
rum maculatum a Food P 


cepan them, took them 


wishing to. try 
to ‘the hail, buen as it happened, 3 me than 


returned 
eaten 


no opportunity of atom first. a soon 


joked. Mr. Forsyth Hell erin Lage ee that out.] — 
lat arge tubers of 

1 8 very — for informa- 
dints :—In what way is 


full 


8 


nd them very deeply sea 


and ti rden space, and the will 
tor try 8 to cultivate it — If attention is not paid to 
the iam pant in a ve 
will E extirpated, G. C. O. [Perha orsyth, 
whdee ‘subject this has 3 Ne shortly answer these 
inquiries.. In to is desirable to save all 


for 
Size and p He of Pieces of Ice, which fell ow 


eaten by boys in 


when — — 26 

condition, but — instead of de ae 
them 
undisturbed, i ins 


sized tubers yielded the first year in ‘bee natural state? 
Tt : 


;| By this practice sufficient eyes 
rene 


—— wan pig-nuts.] 
—A corres — 

to the sinee, 
liberally, 


ult 


and * ] 
t be setts but — 
for which pur y 
. is * — 
ttiv oe he beds will 
strong enough ~~ table ; bat by 
is 


pi 
gre 
11 
MTH 


ge done 
ee species. 


j 


. 
f 
REF: 


next Ww. 
luxuriant shoots 
continued 

Beds are rendered gappy, 


9 
E 
i 
a 
È 


“My 
2 8 
Pi 
Ar 


insec 
radually 
an excellent apply salt, which will, of course, 
prevent this evil, and will very much keeping 
eeds. 


cover the corks ould ne of the corks ʻi * s 
5 seed b = 8 of simmering, oy bottle will od rate dressin, on o abou 1 ib, pieres 981 
- a une may be applied with advantage, at intervals of two or 
N W Soart D i Rose of this kind three — g the su — cheap 
á pag leer qa 111 — * Pe i i material, and as it answers — the 
bours, urite ' 8 ome uble poses of e and a destroyer weeds, 
— d fall, pai these three last years, being I consider that it pays w .. * outlay. The beds 
likely 60 fall’ altogether . the * — Pace „ an — 
p been injured, h. i 
rage you, by the late fiai or have I exhausted it ie me _ not. wel sti to 3 out of 
= —— hollow casing : 3, lens-shaped ; ; compact, uni- ae NEN aha purpose, as many of tho 5 — 
‘ rozen ane Ane g i 
ortunate than j snow. sm if — appearance the glass eyes made ees 1 ae. ae Gunga fee ite 1 
; ly. 10. or R. e een OMPR y“ sure into 
ne voice > spring fr . eltuce or Corn Salad A anaaga he oat wa Picea the rich particles of the manured 
t to a too free us 1 8 will oe otc Li r that the merits of this homely the h, and in spring the greater par’ © 
ably bl arte N rig 1 eet — kiowa aoai“ Bes i readin should be drawn off and carefully i 
is well ipened, runing moderated, you may forms a irot rato ingredient pu'a ely and 3 1 beli the patha., Heaping. material. upon: te il on, th 
expect a fine display of flowers next year. 70 of ties Being a native of r rsh 6 surface 
Felling Resinous Timber: The Lar A Britain its very hard y, and, if sown in July, August, crowns is ample. Frequently stirring e da 
a quotation British eediay” which (if | and September, an excellent succession of it it will be kept to keep it open is = et anal 
of your readers who may be able to complete the up during the winter. Then sow again in g. must, however, be very, carefully performed; 28 
facts will do so) may tend to throw some light on the | */#78* be spared the best plants might be | *iderable injury, may © nay still ba made, bat 
best mode of cutting this timber, with respect to dara. | taken Up with balls and planted thickly in it. The cul. | Plants. Late as it is, new beds mayni he 
bility : “ In 1809, Larch timber, Wa Dots Duke £l tivator then have it a mmand. I have er 20 More time should lost. men OS 
ao hl oo his eh a | na and Eeay Wisth harold | ade oto zoma de. 
olwich, in the building of the Serapis, store-ship, the improve it or not. Sow in a t's | Parts aths between the beds should t geg d 
ile frigate, the bottom of a lighter, and for piles PPT “TOv OE pa Senn a 
had lcm mei a et . and U Guana P — rades et James W e o ana by pan. and replace i 
New Po ? —.— out Haulm.— On 9 with re good material, for aged aftel 
at my Potato —— work, Tfound Wag dere eee th eee 
ney ridges i wards, will last a lifetime. Tk e 
kind of Potato was planted and, tak in which one aa agus is two parts ‘loam, of a sandy nat 
that the Pe e 3 ing it for granted p: y a d manure. 
—— seS was jed, I desired my man to ex- One pa of well reduced farm-yar * 
. may suxpriso-E found that spent ip Pirota. to. Are 
er stalks, but were i g beds l 
Potatoes in — pri. tareni and which will ries old plants can be obtained, have them 
e | to maturity e say a month before those of which | Planted with the crowns 3 in 
the plants hav — . their appearance, and I expect a 2 aded with evergreen 
‘ood: gr 22 — ea of great moment if time to make à good gr aia 4 
produce a without year alter nex! 
appearing above ground, as the > Produce n 2 peeo Sey mA a 
affact-themn. John Ls Poalen Cast | tH ars old. G. Fleming. 
worthless. } 5 5 
iwed Ame Food in Trelund.— I ene vou a Beviews. 
tey here call Briskane, whieh th ing people | Nanna. oder über das Seelenleben der 
à tno botanist, and know not its name. I have ; Leipzig, 
oiled, it tastes | » Parsnip ; it is in March i first be 
g before the top 18 grown, 3 — under- 


under 
a Cele: M spa 
a a serin —— — in iant . 


— 2 2 


bens his fai 


Enjoys the air vit breathes.” 


Tag 


100 


it 


ii ri ] 


10 | 


Hi 


0 


—— 
former 


"5 r 


7 


ELi 


— tc. 
independent oe, Signs of centralisation, inti 


penetrating every part of the crea- 
endowing 

vital ene nor sim 
“Soar as without dani the words 
to be implied by our honoured 


— re will sac those —.—. powers, 


e new- mee" flowe 


with his views when he | ™° 


that every flower 


twigs — out their fan 
breez 


cateh the 
—— think, do an T on 
Sht That there wa 


was ple easure there 


to prove this, the 1 000 author goes 


variety of matter without striking out 
: z fhi 


most attractive wh e least argu- 

is to be observed, e t he 

clear t ysterious analogical 

is sọ common amongst a 

i rings of light often become 
when tricked out in the s 


a 
w 


— — analogy 
at 3 and e 
n profitable us of pets but if 


. it becomes a dan- 


loving summary of the argument will at once a 
ws, a 


of the 3 vie of — 


to be expected by tho 
‘fountain head for Wesel; > 
s original conceptions of Nature, as well as 
characteristic and “pg impression made im- 
plants, ar n favour of their 
endowed: with penn ‘tha of the popular 
notion, derived fi rom t of education, now 


tone ition 
— whole — us less than beasts, 
Sees son P 


— — differ 
with . — A iat Be are pies d sui 
denying them alto ether 
cf a —— principle, - knon 


not justified in 
sueh as that tl 
* the gap which the con- 

ss i faculties of man and beasts 
have not, like beasts, nerves 


ugh requisite for a 
of sensation requiring dear, — 
organs of sense, 


of animal nerves and o: 


red as a whole is much more satis- | S 
tion is granted t to vegetables than 
— sinee many re 
{ ts exhibit in such a 
Meaning, which e tie 
mere s 
— mea kingdom i is subservient 


not irreconcileable, 
is subservient in its turn 


considered as perce b 
P pe —— eings, seem to 


£ 
11 
$ 


of view, the difi. 

ee life in a 
relations, More — 
serves. 


ntary 


animals, or expect some- 
which i snid = 10 d be found in the 


y Speaking, it exists no 


one another b * 

D er by an intermediate 

i differen of are ambiguous, 

a gdom moreov ining’ the 

Plants as well as „ we cannot 

—.— 2 lower than the 
cs contrary, it begins to 

intermediate kingdo ee 
and the cireumstance t e 


that in re: 


conclusion, in the de or- 


that the German 
s s 
RRA ense — —.— —.— 


ion, “body 200, gag 


THE GARDEN ERS’ 


the ree stones oo our 


mm Hor TURAL 
the — — of ris the 


mind |. 


ati —— of 


much half hardy annual, whose o only fault 
ers afi 


: — — 
ia = . hich | r 
fectly appree to the ts which 
h freedom 


‘Associated with es 


used in ona 


nism, as the condition or expression of unity and in 
vidual of — either do not take the right oct 
what we do not fin 


3 that the — of 
ae purely sensual than 


ts, instead of 
hose of animals, are pro- 


Garden Memoranda. 
Soctrety’s cena —This is 
r tor paying this gar 
visit, gro re in r t order, the large 
in gal biss (ali) s — on — conservative wa 
full we 


7. 


ey — 


Se 


— from plants d to 


consi 
obseure to some of 


Miscellaneo 
Gardeners’ Benevolent Institution.—We are happy: 
—.— nee that at late anniversary of this 12. 
ion the donations at the dinner 


on i tie 


8 to ev ge temperature and humidi 
they are liable to suffer, and this in proportion to ihat 
luxuriance. attention, there be paid 


reat a 
to the state of the a an ving 
mand ample means of p ucing an — of heat 
or en the one to — the 
be in excess. 


foli 

beautifully in flower, as are er — different peeps of the air and the aioe of its motion when 
Crateeguses' and Horse 15 p air, or ng moisture of long continuance, 
(Asculus carnea) forms of the handsomest lawn would be detrimental to the plants, for it is absolutely 
trees of its season which our > gardens possess, and necessary to health that the process of transpiration 
it is but now and then that one meets with it. It is | Should P freely under all circumstances, In a 
certainly n ll known as it should The | confined atmosphere like that in which pyres grow, it 
Orchid-house, at all times worthy of i inspection, is ie might be found beneficial to the health 
cially so no — of this interesting tribe a small quantity of ammonia or carbonie acid were set 

loom, The shelves of the adjacent greenhouse dove fres in the air, or dissolved in the water syring- 
gay with plants of th flowered Oxal flori- ing the plan ts, both h these substances being very solubles 
bunda), not the plant which some of our ents | The latter might be waer to the _ by placing — 

e reco d bedding, but a one r limestone on the shelves, and 
producing a profusion of loose bunches of rose-coloured „ aaa diluted rh — 


uncles branehing off the main 
stem, = 2 than of the — — alluded 
to by our correspondents. Two species of Oxalis, very 
different i in m aspect and habit, appear rto be known he this 


Jar eni 


ame, 


stove, as as — 


0 
54 


atrosanguinea, on account of its a 3 is 
— dark red. In the flower garden we 
bed of the * white starry-flowered e "Violet. 
grass, figured at p. 239, 1848. It form 
ed, and isin flower nearly the whole year round. 
the small conservatory in the experimental 2 we 
with a bush of Philadelphus mexicanus, a compara- 
white rose-sha 


e 
elliptien test no 


ell 
jar properat on o 
fore 


ul 
| 5 and when their bloom buds are se 


interesting 


pour 

3 » filled d with Oats or Barley he ng to vegetate, 
also prepar to Sa confined in a warm 

prison ere. 

of the Horticulsorat 8 Sooie 


Calendar of a Operations. 
65 or the ensuing week. ) 
PLANT DEPARTMENT. 
PARTICULAR attention should at all times be paid to 
wint ter flowering p 


eee, 8 ee in the Jou 


should be set out in an open ha 
becomes a second nature, these earliest forced plants of 
rse come in for the same 


It is 


this . was gay with en 
ich was a beautiful specimen of" 
her 1 the 
g Aquilegia fragra a hardy 
species, and Heliophila trifida; a . pretty blue- r 
t is that of shu 
— ig — and in — 
— in 2 this house 
ossomed Californian rene has Sonerii 
opoe with a Pretty, blui 
amed also one of Mr. H 


the latter may be me P. Benthamiana, 
a noble Pine, yei 5 attain p" California a height of 
200 feet, w 


feet in — 
radiata, a specie somewhat mblin 
signi ae i ety o reach a height of 10 100 fect, —— a 
straight adi branched y aa aim P. muricata ; 


an — been named P 1 Mr. Hartweg, tb 


weg supposed tha 


retary. 
of C. Lamberti ; but is stated not to 
vot more than 8 or 10 feet. 1 ange 
Brugmansia 
in blossom. Then white one is sweet seen 


q ou = 
of the lower lobe of whieh i is tacit giving the flower ace 


1 
ylin — besides giving additional aa eae 


may be started again, and w 

er h pots. The forcing-pits should no 
mployed in forwarding Ac 

— mbs, Globe A and other ts for 

immediate ae autumnal. Shading and went 

lating must no winded to wih a ati - anxiety. 


S ormer, 


B tifal 


* Nep is the same with the German Knopf and with the 
English — which occurs 
description of Solomon's. temple. 


several times in the Bible in the 


trong sunsbine. 
a ony in to GARDEN AND SHRUBBERY. 
gardener can be dissa dissatisfied with the beau- 


We se however, be —— to see 
the season 1 70 — for the eee of 
— sm 10 a little 


ag) thei 


Sariyog this 2 on the heads o 
be turned towards the 


360 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


[Jung 9, 


Bligut, 
an have been exceedin gly 
* che late . scat have been 
the plants, and rly 


the beds will appear well filled from all sid 


troublesome, 
beneficia 


— pings or cuttings taken a m 
sides ha he advantage of a vere 


well-es abli —— ants in before wint: 
RCING DEP. 2 
ERIES.— If the fruit is posi 2 in the — 
i hould again i y 
— 2 prier ‘daily, to — insets | 
d to keep the foliage in a state as lo 
— Grapes j 2 uring should be assisted by 


2 * — — 

ave sown e Anemone seeds as 
e with ae — success. The 
immediately, — gom beautifully 
It is by fi hea i np Single 


wel 
planted 5 Oeo 


ripe 


n as the roots are removed from Ranunculus beds 
should be dreased with lime, 9 them up in — 
—.— and — turning them during che autumn 
Ti 2 at difficulty in getting rid of t 
4 their 1 and nests boing, . — 

e p — nto the nest or 
But you po — 


Us 
ith tai a few hours after it is ad- 


a 
PH N Roses: J T. Get rid of them by means of Tobacco 
e es ‘oe tho. E EEEE described at p. 459 of our 


— 


: F J and Subs. See a paragraph in our “‘ Home 
Correspondence ” of to-da; 
ack NUMBERS OF TH HE GARD ENERS’ CHRONICLE : The publisher 
ny of the following back Numbers may be 
0 i 


9 wi 
g= few — par ht the 3 for 1817 are 


1 s.—Jo. Ellis. Aerides ? not di 
— — ably 1 Bag mediterranea, S bya 
Roses * aes 


and Anthris 
3. ‘Sis — — trivialis 
Uredo een e Galls on the 55 of piae 
We will te — next week, if w 
Gardenia Stanl 
ORNAMENTAL — wii SHRUBS: Lady M. 
folia, Philadelphus 8 Pavia mac 
leya globosa and Lindleyana, Hibiscus syriacus 
Hydrangea —— and 1 2 ora] 
PAULOVNIA IMPE Lad ectly 
ith afet 


— 


MATTING: Amateur, 
Many thanks, The plan has been recommended at p ia 
our ee 47 1848, and again to-day in our “ Calendar of 
Oper 
—.— — zA r them better in your brick 
frame near the glass than ay — old-fashioned 
under Vines. Of that there can no doub 
advantage in plunging the pots 
roots would be le — to sul 
POTATOES: R 


: n r leaves look as if they had 
baer nee of Mirjani iia a mod still 5 —.— e 30s. each, a —— for 1818, price] injured mA. ae at hight rather than attacked by duana, T 
heat in dull or cold weather. The grea 0s. 6d. vars Prhe volumes of ors r years are out of print. symptom e latter, so far as we can bes n 
litter now ved from the front borders, 1841—1, 8, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 20, 22, 23, 24, 26, 27, 28, 29, | the — — mee — Unt ess something really new 
1 Pi t 0, 31, 32, 31, 45, 46, 47, 48, 51, and important can be stated about the Po — we are not 
leaving a little of the nome 5 34, 39, 41, 42, 45, disposed to occupy onr columns further with the 
8 , and to be forked into the soil a wee es 6,8, gh ia, i6, 16, 20, 22, 31, 32, which is perfectly threadbare, New facts or new views ar 
two hence. Inthe late houses where the fruit is just 1843—13. 16, 17, 18, 20, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, wont acceptable to — — are w 
set, t t atmosphere, w which was discontinued bop 32, 33, 34, 36, 37, 38, 40, 41, 42, 165 48. — no : you i pe 1 explains 
hould now be revived, , 4, 5, 6, 7, 8,9, 1 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, anything, o you —.— o say tha 1 e last 100 
the flowers were setting, shou 19, 20, 21, 23, 23, 24, 28, 26, 27, 28, 20, 30, 31, 82, 84, 95, 87, | years we never had a conjuncture 
ee should be taken, by the neil sa ey sulphur, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 1 13, 4470 45, 48, 49, 51, 52. as 8 = every year . krae . de 1819 — In. 
N deen spider and other 1845—1, 2, 3 7, 8, 9, 10, 1 13, 14, 15, 17, 18, 19, 20, | deed you ong in - ering o m 
tho health of the foliage till the fruit is pale cut. aope no 736, 25, 4 5 si A — -t — ai i ed — a n ‘a rational explanation o a — * dane he 44 
6—4 : . 
are _— — the Vin the later W x summer and put them on — in autumn, when the 
be allowed fo extend themselves as long as they do not 2184712 4, 5, 8, 10, 11, 13, 14, 15, 19, 21, 22, 23, 27, 32, | are becoming cold and damp. Th not need 
shade the principal ves. PEA r e 33, 36, 37, at 15 43, 44, 46, 47, 48, 51, 52. tection, as far as we at present understand the — 
— ho soon as the cro’ is gathere „the 1848—1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, | these contrivances, A 
— dee pee e rie i e rs ringed | 19 20,21, 23. 23. 24 25, 26. 57, 28, 30, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, | Ruopane : Sub, Ask for Mitchell’s Prince Albert. We cannot 
d be well washed with the engine, y 39, 40, 41, 44, 45, 51, 52, 53. recommend dealers, ae ie 
daily ; the hot-water pi m sal ad tho house BAROMET. ursons. We do not mnt tradesmen, Tie — censis, The tschia is new to us; 
hich is affected with red spi s e sulphured,| Apply to philosophical instrument maker 1 4 
and if the soil is dry it s ca be well e seg these | B —— PLANTS ro —.— ie f ‘the sia Amero —— — mith inthis county of Arum. It cannot be 
directions are given with a to prese he leaves, per ame a 3 He 3 — 3 TreE Rose. The price of this wide’ is reduced to 3s, 6d. (post 
to N in a aiii 8 growing state . 1 — 5 free), to be ha 4 * t the Office of this Paper, or of any book- 
seller. 
this means the accumu- and Pen 
an lang on : void Bees: A TH. Tou t shade your ppe aae by some sort of Vinss : 'F E. Stop the leader, but not the lateral immediately 
late an extra ae of 2 sap, and avoid the — 
inj ar TTE e ad ecelte r a small hive < cap wi ns ag ell. i sa not ne- a | Mig, ‘Sub, Crewe, See p.34, 1847. Mr. Cattell, Westerham g- 
“|  cessary for the cap to be upon your hive except when you r, a 
which are generally experi ienced during autumn | expect the bees to occupy it. Protect them from rain by som 2 2 2 advertisemeny, per ahead pe “blige him wi 7 
in our variable climate e n receipt for m skis sorte "beer — m fresh Pi 4 — 
go early to rest. N the early house the Gan yy sia we J CL. To be of real use the coping should He To begs To day that saad k 1 10255 i ed, 
second crop will n w be ‘advan cing. Abundance of Hintscus escunentus: P T O. It is not worth culti tivating in bar a gael y E e Shae: for 8 econ ol ones ae 
water must be "t be supplied to 4. plants, and, to to dees them 1 Ae a n 88 8 i pion cnty — — ö ania ao ‘4 Seakale and Rhubarb plants att 
free from hey rer bout a ma y Syringe and moistur are, Te is called Bami ian not Ba a. ur rike strengthened by cutting off the blossoms before seed. 
a TA ble rom e h ipe pa era 
As weeds are advancing rapidly. must by some be mit “Propagate 1 g Fent as by layering. a from ne ee ae pi thc, e 3 
are 5 raised from layers; Kage. may be int rom | ALSTRŒMERIAS : . Your see 
conan O bo deniro yed. and. 15 e — 2 ring ihs so seeds, like other oo — if the seeds are ripe and pári Mr. Van Houtte, and of which some ee ‘has ‘has been giren 
the pr a hee esops gue baniicisi to them, InsEcts: GS W, G he T by the late Dean of Manchester, There is not thing remarkable 
let this method be prac A Cutti Arye = 4 The red bree one, Cercopis “yalngrate ; the out it,* r your 
discon tinued a from a po) ortion e Aspara; bronzed and blue ones are Donacia Proteus; and the AQUILEGIAS ‘ovice. There is nothing remar 2 
= especially fro m those intended 5 ToS cay fly is Ceph — pygmezus, all common, We shail . obliged for | double striped Columbine, The Bean appears 
3 ome 8 oriona of the larve from the wine W.— some Phaseolus, and no doubt tender.* 
ter. ia few rows of Cauliflowers Cabbages * marbled with 
4 , Bes, 7. rescences on the twig are scale ins 8 and the | CALCEOLARIAS : „ No, 2, dark shaded purple, outline, 
and autumn B d at intervals kts aur whitch i they were surrounded were sucking up the| pale yellow, p — Bee ———— e pees 
from 10 days toa a n fortnight, — which t ey will come | saccharine fluid which they e emit, he appearance ‘cf the| and size good, but slightly crump ; 
i he sp 


strongest 
deren apes 


aS | LAPAGERTA : 


Laurel leaves hiy proba seat 2 ta arp influence 
before they were bruised. V.— We found some speci- 
—— of the red spider on the 1 sent, and would recom 

end you to fumigate well with bruised ‘Laurel —.— first 
closely 5 the glasses and doors, IV.—J G. The insects 
foun e roots of the Ranunculuses are a ale eem of Mil- 
-3 which we * not me ard as the primary cause of the 
apit An. — oon. . — to sound vegetable food. V. 

r hea ~ 


a small beetle, Byturus 
ast week’s Answers to Correspondents, W. 
ou are misinfi his plant has not 
eae a in ——— It is m that. = is figured in the Bo- 
al Ma ngana but aisi yes there are Pre from 
broad. 
reasons we invariably 
— to inquiries concerning the law of anything. 
business to satisfy mere curiosity ; * 


ts. 
seed to as 
to handle. A small Ser ‘for 
use may now ted, ng the strongest plants. 
ir of Parsley now thi : 
for the present it will be sufficient to leave them about 
4 es , retaining the fin led ones ; 
the increase in size, intermediate ones may 
be cut away as they ired for use. is 
and Lettuces sh be sown on very rich moist 
ch eat rc soil is of a hot and nature, it 
will be better to cultiv: the 
of a north wall during the summer months. 
State of {the Weather — — — re week bane June 7, 1849, 
THERMOMETER. 
— Wk 
Max. Min. Mean 
te fae awl R 
7 47 61.0 W. 00 
7 | 51 | 63.0 E. 00 
8 57 69.0 W. 00° 
g: 57 710 W. -20 
6i 51 58.5 N. E. 07 
7 50 | 6i N.W. 00 
29.996 || 75.8 | 51.5 | 63.7 || 0.27 
and fine; clear at night. 
at 


overcast. 
fine; hot sultry; between 2 
— — 2 apd 


6—Overcast taroughou 
7—Partially — j ; ‘tons overcast; 
i Mean t emperature of the week, S deg. ee 


“State ofthe Weather at Chiswick daring the Inst 23 years, for the 
— — — sa 


ensuing week, ending June 16, 1849, 


be — — such inquiries the 
viser in the usual professional 
way. All we 2 do with —.— to your peep is to 
tain 2 tted leg . 
ccm b 8 oF — s planted in a gar — "an 
oved by any tenan — so may young 2 — — an 
shrubs in the —— — Se ves whom 


— Barke 

nless a 3 or 3 or other 

nursery ground, no tenant can, as 

ween him and the landlord, remove = 
a 


f any de- 
cannot, either 
n of his tenan ancy, a and whilst t they 

the 


expiratio 
are likely to continue pi b estroy 
same, 7 8 oye — an 2 ae the s to the 
— 8 ant.“ —1 Campbeli’s Reports, 
“te Ph ‘legal fora — to remove roots or other 
(peren ennial) pianta growing in the soil, or to take away green- 
t the consent of the — unless some 
regres — shall have been made when the occupancy 
842, p. 681. 


: Sub, Takea 2 of fresh burnt lime 
over it 20 or 30 times its ure of water. Stir them 


T 


F 


ow 


I lecseeee| 


> po 
well 
— 9 then let the — — and — — — . clear ai, 
ater. It kills slugs and and does no 


J. The most useful s simple mires is 
cannot recommend deal 8 n tte We 
t | 
Same aud address ws will pont yout nn bat it you wil ge 


maritimum. - D F, 
Your 1 — Laurel leaves are overrun by Lepraria viri is 
Species of other Cacti cannot be deter- 
22 by mere flo A is perhaps C, —J RI, 
Montia fontana. 2. ( 


t 

€ 

£ 

shape and outline 

dark crimson, mark gE h på 

shape and outline tolerably good, bu 
colour, marked ith, 
outer edge ; — 6 a shape rather 
€ 
s 
T 
2 
€ 


1 1 on spotted wil 
18, pa e iemon, 


ye; size — — 


wry sana 19, 


itll talerably goed, Dat t00 6 EB 
dutline tolerably good, bu ae 
rettily mottled, with irregular hong = 
size good, rather y near the eye, 
ellow, marked with somewhat L 35 
wn ; outline bad, shape flat, very large. 
irregularly marbled or stri with ch 
rably good, shape rather flat; a fine l 
mson, ularly marbled with bright 
size tolerably good, shape rather flat, Tgi 
CJ. I, crimson, slightly marbl with thg 
line and sha medium size ; 8 
faintly marbled with pale yellow ; shape 
but e ly near the eye. 3, h 


in the Te colou 
small. e lem niger th 

and 2 dera 1 9, yellow 

light brown — rather flat, an 

—— tely dot 

low, with numerous sm 

and —— = much too small. 
and spo th brown ; shape 


and — 
HEARTSEASE sE: Upper petals 
wer ones, deep violet ; centre, 


when the flowers us, 


— 3 : 
Epi J Law. A fine fine high coloured ? saith 
being a late flowerer, is a desirable 


ag 


reached us, and were raced kom 
gaid 5 

—. in such a manner that and were iibe . 
paper, each sort a 


ase) THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 361 
— ANUREs are manufactured to the nutritious matt 
fee vs at Dept tr Fer * anilysid) to 200 Tbs, weight of Sw ole Sg —— must of course be eee by any other 
; s Me RASS MANU BE, Den m£910 ni be =the -|mode of feeding adopted, and the manner in which 
800 ns e ing. about the quantity which an ox weighing | the food i 
MANURE 55 eo rial wi ni consume per da Have wi) eee gr d. Orer feeding is, no doubt, ex- 
e OF LOE iig” 0 0 e e eee, fee gance and ose—tibra 3 
a use 0 ee 1. 
í 1 He from selected cargoes 1 Doek). crops e to assist aud liins — which ru 8 e d stinted feeding, 
0 AMMONIA, & 
N e ng = See ae 3 nu a TABLES OF COMPARATIVE FEEDING OF FATTENING CATTLE. 
NO s a 2 
05 ede of the finest quality, direct from 3 | TURNIPS [OILCAKE| — 3 Bran, BARLEY, Oars, | Beans. WREAT. (CARROTS piina ——— 
50 SODA AND POTA bi é 
1-9 n 2 . - 
GYPSUM ULPHATE OF LI FEEDING, | & = 8 a 8 3 PA a 3 r à 
DRIED NIOM GID AND COPROLITE. 3 2 3 23 3 3 2 3333 33 
e (WIREWORM DESTROYER), „ E . s a 2 8) 2 22/2/24 2 2 2 2 2 2 
SUPERPHOSPHA HATE OF LIME (made from bone only). 2 — * 
AGRICULTURAL SALT,and all other Manures of known 7 - e te 8 ate oe 
— — oe one eee hw x a! 
malae, may 20 A, 4% Upper Thames-street, Lon Ee 6 5 ie Ase pir ih 95 
1 en usb Su — m copa amna e of Lime, &c., Geil be oe 4 * os sales lags 085 
a ‘on receipt of 8 postage stamps, Free to purchasers 4 — 14. 4 p ee jee evs z 
O O 7 a n z 5 8 * — 
LZ MEADOW AND PASTURE GRASS Si 4 7 s : 2 it 40 
SEEDS, in mixtures suited to various soils, &c., at 32s, at ah eee {dees 1% om 
aaron in o wie hedera acre. Bs te td 7 885 E e Sg ok . 2 
improving od Graas Lands, 1s, BA perl, Pine orte for ons ve 74 Cae T i Wa on 
oe Co. ber to notice that their Agricultural aa 3 eee rig ee es | K 
List, with ensuing season, is ready, and will be S w J vee | te 117 pe 
. ra ir Catalo f Kitchen 17 7 wel. Cots Rue $ 5 ane 
a Seeds.—Address RGE BS an Co. 5 o 61 * | oe 5 5 
Seedsmen; be» ., to the Royal — —— Department of Bel- wiht Fh hay 5 3). ve 
gom, te. de, 26, Down- street, Piccadilly, London 2 7 epee . 13 sei 
IAN SAND B BOLIVIAN GUANO ON SALE | 3) i 1 55 a z 
2 — ; A 5 s sas Rigs E 
ANTONY iss anp SONS, LONDON; 17 4 4 2 2 2 a 
WILLIAM JOSEPH MYERS —j— ĉo., LIVERPOOL; ve 5 z — * Te ae an si 
inp C0., LIVERPOOL and BRISTOL; z e 2 5 2 2 1 
e —.— Ano PRYOR, LONDON. „ aes sid 5 7 me : 1 
e njurious consequences of vie ‘2 15 4 o 2 ; b. 
aie and 3 „ purchasers are recom- e 3 ef #] * 1 * oo X 11 
ee en. of rentablished character, or to “fee s nts gh 4 8 2 ea et Fi 
o will supply the article in any Ai 5 6 * oe 2 . 2 7 
b at their fixed — delivering it from the Import | 53 ie ¢ 3133 oe ott „ 
33 1 ; . 8 5 Al ws 
PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS, KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA. 5 stafa À on 4 2 
> Sa 2 4 . 5 a 0 7 
BY HER ROYAL LETTERS | 38 6 4 ts oats PY x 2 a 
hs ti 9 5 5 4 ee 
MAJESTY’S Z PATENT. Fi 15 eee wv re tas MP sak 5 ETET To N55 ö 1 
i ~ = s91 7| 4110 e 
E. oie offers for * Patent HOTHOUSES, N. B. The Weights Imperial Pounds Avoirdupois—St 1 — eag | a | sea — 
+ which Teja i Hoof — superior to all others, in every 3 i 
pam A —4 A dng = — oe . 1 The average weight of food per day of the fore- is, that 121 cwt. per week, or 200 Ibs. per day which’ 
timber ai lass of large size. Patent Lights for | 80108 Tables is 53,3, Ibs., containing nutritive | according to the ve calculation; would cost 4s. Sad. 
real rey i Pq og tl rap Tda Sd., and 9d., per su- | matter 84 lbs., or about one-sixth of the weight of per . is more like the quantity than a per 
a HEATING Y HOT WATER. the food. Supposing the cardinal Aei to Tejo: week, if the farmer is to have any profit at all from 
- sent 40 oxen consuming the pi pear of the several | his investment of capital in feedi for 
The Agricultural G ase tt 3 of food stated, and estimating the cost at no other purpose than 22 the straw of the 
. 3 e. verage prices, the value of food supplied would be | farm into 1 3 is absolutely necessary, in 
SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 1849. 1.1 — 9d., or about 93d. per day per ox, or 58. 6}d. | the case of mos 
wee “ The mapan pis print comes to be, how is this con- 
F m hae ke . EKS. “ The weight (60 imperial stones, or 52} stones version to be most profitably accomplish 
— —— — : Society of Ireland. Dutch) is, perhaps more than the average at which | tainly not by supplying a ton of Turnip per week, 
Vrli dd ilustrste 4 15 3 k farmers in general stall, or, if the term may when 12} cwt. would be sufficient; and this can 
Paw retired nm e need of be used, court-yard their oxen, but it is not above only be ascertained by keeping a pretty correct 
Faming is just like any — busi: tone th nt. the average to which they feed them. Supposing, 5 of the supplies issued, preventing waste, 
pod ing ness, so far as this | however, an ox weighing 40 imperial stones to be an provement of the 


; g rving the 
oe be expected: to succeed in | stalled or put in the 5 for feeding, it would We vos: to say ar very few farmers 
80 n 


s become a simple case of proportion, and it would be by the m d. per 
for the erer to Judge, from the breed and condition | ton for thei eir roots, excep i and straw 
of the animal, or 1 circumstances, at what rate alone are given to their stock. When high feeding 
of feeding he should ee Say that the ox is is eae ed, an-meal Linseed are used in 

t 4s. per ton, besides 


an 

-in such condition that he can be put upon two-thirds | quantity, we believe that abou 
the allowance of an ox weighing 60 stones, fo for the | the cost of the bought 8 is all that in general is 
fir nth sixths realised. But to adm t this does not necessarily 


St. th 
yoo. 
fiv e-Sixths 


Le Sst 


the third month, and ‘the full allowance the of the require us to prefer the former — as er, = 
in the e (taking the average of case manure of a poor quality, and in the other 
= must be few and distinct in their Tables) 348 5 — spr — ood, yielding of nutri- | manure of i that 
Ve must first envour kö chii ive er 56 stones. Esti that one-third of | to raise the value of the one to that of the other, 
| dee sia ie tas ify actual money i i i 20 f kari | fa t, the the money returns from the former would have to 
i ‘sti connec with th dik a distinct record weight of the ox would then be, by four m onths’ feed- be largely drawn upon for the purchase of guano, 
bm thine a e different branches of | ing, 582 stones, being an increase of 1 182 —— ne and other concentrated fertili e 

6s. sto . Ponn's 


i Saen refined 4 — che 3 we should | a a stone, would allow about 78. 4d. a eek But we must a forget that it is 
l whee of field, or t i shall bring out the | for feeding, outlay of capital, risks other ex- ' system of book-kee rather than with his i 
n ee e e pam ing about 33% per e t. beyond the actual | of catth that we have now todo. And our 
T actual money — t —— of capital, as feeding, as estimated from Tables, and | opinion of it shortly is, too | a de 18 
12 8 who, 2 “pad 3 wel little pom considering the hazards to Which] made by it on and skill of those who would 
do not need our | farmers are exposed from disease and deaths among adopt it. He follows the good plan of arranging 
mblish ie Futarroy, of Edinb eir cattle—the fluctuation =i markets—failure in | the different accounts, in which he would classify 
l Wen of Wei inburgh, 3 lately crop, and atmospheric influence —- and . in parallel columns instead 
Ane as ih ume in explanation of a 50 tones | of on different pages ; but there are so many ot them, 
| ods Y aro prepared to iss to — r consume a ton of 1 per wee ete tini: 3 — 80 perd — 00: pr spoken of 
"ail ter vin 14 its wei besides. e work of keeping them appears 
2 oo the ferent rot of ore haok “o with — bt mane oe pote’ can | more an farmers severally would like to upe in, 
he opens f farm man sa i any profit from 8 — for the It is surely possible to devise a method of arrang- 
ag butcher? For the sake of testing the of | ing all the expenditure in labour and 1 
f ~ w te Pecimen on the feeding of this assertion, take, for e e 5 the e among two or orice 3 * 
13 2 Ten rin ment of roducing an acre of Turni 20 | such as grain, live stock, and ord, an eep 
1088 Senken ad nf Practical farmers ton son the rent y sal "30s. per — ex- an account by means of cheque books against all 
tirgo © clusive of 8 burdens, and throwing aside interest goods delivered or received but not et paid for, 
so | on cap neration for professional skill. tera any such 22 al myo 2 
its OND endeavour here- 
Totes manure — $ 10 o after to point out such a method 
2 lbs. seed at 9d. ... 0 1 6 ——— 
Rent ... ed „„ i CONDITION OF IRELAND. 
In 3 — our proceedings for the two years and half 


— — 
—— — 47 10 0 he 6d. per ton. van — — the formation of this on of ut 
The inference to this statement country, the convic sa raintally Semel oi on us, that the 


been their 


y distributed through us, as well as the relief, ment, 


e propriety of making such a statement of our views 
has on goat at occasions been urged upon us, bat we bav: 
of 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


ave 
bees 7 at. J eye acres Rape, at 12 to 


w k ira a res 8 ns, stems Andre Mes 
i = ae tons e s 
misery, . Our convictio ency of t arried to . : 
A — oe a ly —— — — — 4 — — rs —— which a affects — Ireland alone, Drawing dit ait e fos — ard ia tra oe a 
5 l ire. Paupers our western distr ruc — |. 
5 in this country = in Great — cin * it os of 10 Britain A they do those of Ireland, Diggin ing the ewe ows and — f 7 
penn ra — —.— — 1 es and and are even now depr the uring population by a for Potatoes, 6 men to an acre Hf 
also by the citi f the U ary d Seaton t d with | undue competition. The distress — onward day by day, Bringing from headlands to yards * „ 
a — cence s unparalleled fa “the — * of benevolent exer- r- | and unles — 1 mà beret aiey ultimately to inyolve both 1 tami bak of 57 N an aa * raip 
countries i alamity ns saat i 
dachi ap — ea. i ipmens A g We have 1 felt ‘that . chief e K. of hope, the main man — hen 
malt amo al , | [ouros of impro — on the im ; Ordinary work in yards and "houses a. 
— ent from om indeed been large. | and that the surest m of effect sak by affordin e &e. „ 
We have ‘els — * bility th “ee — and our | secarity to the — a0 a oes not generally Drawing manure to headlands „ 
t t arcely a $ 
—— Ter e have/Deen given foe for thelr Ju Judicious application. exist in Trelandis admitted n this poin arya "The 3 y s | Fenny any —75 acres Rape to headlands 4 2 i 
qui o yards oe 
—— 22 parts wih o “South : ad west, i 3 to 12 n so as to LN 45 utmost freedom to its ‘ale — Forking rows for Parsnips and working ¢ wal ssal | 
bett a a — —— —— for, and ob- transfer —80 as to pass those — whos 1 (Ea ng 5 * 
d t n sons in all parts of d, into other ands TTO G nable aiis e who oeing Bere a : 
—— “Wh md appeared — to form local | ar rtia ee e themselve 3 r diff- Carryiug and dice ail Rape of No. 7 ore 
t : ountry. — it ane pea ch ans; culties, b z . of part of their landed 8 "Until Drawing manure to esa nds, — mh | 
— — mim — * the | this be effected; until the soil of Ireland ier by a clea’ soang ones 8, Ge. * w 
z mar —— title; until the owners be ena to sell t 0 ng, Se 
— a 5 1 or any part of thet property digg the at he coe and a | Ordinate work i in yards and houses * A 8 
z heavy costs which now prevent them; until the creditors of 2 E 
— — aib ean Mee the — n 2 — lau downer have those faci lities for enforei ent o — s acres Borecole to headlands E Ki 
WED U tit les o yar 3 : | 
apr ate gang 2 amber by au 8 — a in — ion wi we are > convinced, and we feel ourselyes bound thus publicly t to Digging Parsnips ditto for Swedes age ie re x 
men of all ranks and all oe s, whether soliciting our assist- | state our ided conviction, that it is in vain to hope that este ee 12 
ance on behalf of the poor around them, or engaged in Brrr | land can raise itself from overty and degra — iggi rae ages, os and — 
envours to alleviate the 222 Gratuitous — — e may grow again by its assistance our country Planting. ditto re 000 plants 9 
issues of food have been made to the value of 130,000 “.; be enabled to escape — the 9 Pb ee of its Hoeing Ber d Whea i 
clothing has min distributed — . 10,0002, in value; and difficulties; — without those gapa in one — Carrying pet ‘digging remainder of Rape í 
grants o of mon — 4 m o amount of 20,0007, | the ure and conveyance of l — * he prowess — a free 1 i * 2 = E 5 
of ts has exceeded 11,000, Feeling the i — the — te ment a its capital and its industry, and rawing manure o headlan 8, ke, 
dem 


oralising roe wh 2 suo 


h extensive alms- giv — e 
endeavoured, to encourage indust 


stry, We have m 

— supported 8 ‘angels, 
8 for the — ar of fisheries, 
y gratifying results, In order to 
een crops, w whic f- gh prove some 
tave distributed early 200, o — 
ursn ip, — and o ther 
K t e altis 


hév 
— advanced money in loan 
and in a few cases with -y des 
encourage the culture of 
substitute for the P. 
ee of Turn — 0 


3 


alse 
—— 


give ample security to the Sey | of the soil, we cannot 
— sa — = permanent improvement, 

pendit itu ey has failed to relieve us. 
pe were opened to the — 
of the — — s The pared remedies which have wine en applied 
hears served but to — hte ~ the net which tram els the e exer- 

ns of the great mass of o — ation. 

— re decided pre ween — necessary to produce any perma- 
— 5 — — The situation of ker? i es is daily be- 
co! ming now suffering 


y Ly 


2 
about 30 
But * contribution 
proportion the w 


on 
he sh pensed 
. ed bution by o relief associations may "be 
estimated at fully 200 000. The. collections ay 2s neg! ang meres bg 
in Ireland exceeded 360, 0007 


of 


priva pointe ian: — — a 
— rom emigrants for the relief of their friends 
gregate m4 be safe 
Th 


must still be 3 for —— 
purposes, du —.— the interval nea = elapse before effici 
measures can be b ht saie pe . operat — 
m sb — ies c3 8 he removal of 
ties which prevent 3 capitalot Ireland from 
being applied to the improved 9 of its soil, an 
supporting its poo ages of hon 
We believe th 


1h 
ate eber secret designs 


e | 
ely estima àt one million and a balf 
pp 3 e advances by Government were nti 
scale, amountipg to nearly 10 0 t — 
8 


ge amount of relief was 
of great distron — many persons were 
a time at least, from that starvation Ba h, 
without: — 
saddened by the er that, with a very fe — 
no — t 8 n done, ih — that ¢ the — 
of our roved, 3 are even 
worse, 3 3 —— les 
most cr the in! —— 
allen victim 


y 
e of 
the logal re Toii? ee 9 thrcughoat a large 

sf the low 
class, e * V the la ing pop a ave 
— pl Taio ane their crop of 3 . lost nis and Hk 
es and hopeless pauperism. —— 
hops ptt i 


ande 
age gents are 8 
amity fe 


Wita 
n veme privations, the in 
nd. A second ‘alle of the spe 
e increase 
n those districts which w cat e a able to 
wn many who w. 
und 


efined. 
amount of capital applica bi ~ rg ‘the employ 


ment of lal 
The The landed proprietor, in order to provide r th 
as been — to leave 


ven, — is sti 
— to 

1, to 
scope The 
er, dapen fd the crow bac 
ding on 2 relie 


' physical —.— 
co rind "Pal psa en 
offer no hope 


raded "they ate 
e to their country, e 
horrent to humanity and Ct en 4 al — — 2 
extinetion on by death. Many families are now Extr: 
ge gees Bene enio the: comforts. and re. 
and admin — — the necessities of th 
— "w e hav 5 of — 


ouses, og 

but their 

huge ning ae their 
acter i 


e class after another, | 
it threatens, in 2 some i 
all ranks and all classes 


) engulâng 
— its nd moro, on society, unti 
8 ‘swallow 


tery eh, land — 


i at findig employ — W. 


— 
N e 
ormerly cultivated 

gy ila *. 

Wages ; —— to 

use the owners S gro 
and the-dresa onde ng have not money to pay 22 
Tapura vent oth 


lying. waste which was 
—— of =; aad wie is 


on, and uncertainty as to t 
taking the land on lease. 


ers from 
as we do, fo: the most 
the comparatively prosperous’ TE SS large 41 it 


Gate the pone on of our countrymen 
— — K we riage paws . . e 


; we wits es ss the. 


3 — be 


au! 3 with v 


balan into one 
ad. j 


eac. 

5 2 Ly 
2 2 1 z 
in 


Hi we may without — — regard the 
dispensation with which we have been visited, in 
— blight u — the “Potato, as a means permitted by an all-wise 
So nee to exhibit more strikingly the unsound state of our 
The mome nts which have been. 
— — — us, have drawn t publio attention to 3 of 
those evils which have long 
5 not Spam we are 


encouraged to hope that this 
may, in the Divine — 2 * over- ruled f 

ood ; ie that darkness — unds us m 

— the 2 de 


whilst mg to 5 er of 1 
l bo a 
— ing 
mo ne Reier f Association 4 ithe * af 
k month, 1849. 


1 
& 
© 


vde ei it 05 
members of this asso 
ON N. PRISON a II. 
* close of my 


— of the — 


on Mr. P 
PPP f. priso: 4 15 would e r 
ithe quantity and distribution of “the labour of a pr 


the ero 
the same cale 


be | lands on sae Sela. the mediam 


a litt ttle more than 


oanien ling 
or manure is ae on 
about 5-8ths of 


time 


whi aun te average 
ear at 9 —.— day, 27 ews. 
in the day; but I have 
or 


each truck to 
tery time thro at 8 
be carried 


i Por 
‘wheel 


hand oa — same amount of produce to the yard. 
Ip carry by hand or wheel in WS, 

with “high as sad: broad wheels, as may answer the erop 
to be car crops to the headlands, fi 


taken up in ra mp — i 
ards, N 


y the: man be 
be 5 in the 
il „ having, premi s much, give 
an estimate, which I think will be fo approximate 
of the monthly amount and distribution of 


ued by us in the administration 


have had with. ali a show the a intercourse we 
us. afforded us offi es 7; 
state, * — ‘correct atea. of its — P 


dar on our safer. 


and 
crop and its | 
ulation} 


rina of — 7 where 
mae 


be 1} mile, whieh may ' 
for: ; 
I have supposed | 


rr 


— — 


APRI 


MAT—150 — * —— to ee 
raught diminished Pi 


JUNE—125 acres Cabbages to — 


ards and hou 


L—75 acres rennin: to mansion 
ditto to 3 

jigging rows ditt o for 

reparing 7 — ser a Mangold Wurzel 
* rows ee month for Swedes 
[oe Bere at 


Ordinary work in y 


3 


— 


wing manure to headlands, Ko. 
hreshing, &. 
ordinary work in yards and houses 


om 


1 
J 
I 
x 
I 
Dr 


$ : 


. 


Li i Annen i 


Dig —. — Drumhead Cabbages 
Sowing Eeoa ar ik Nos, 1 and * * includes a 
previous stirring of the grou 
Hoeing Wheat vand digging Dore at intervals `. 
Carrying 240 tons Gra “ 
— 75 ng 100 se Drumliead 1 Cab., 540, oo `. 
wing man o hea 
9 — yank rely —— ial 


ue 


Ditto to yards’ 
Digging rows of ditto for — 
ring for and — 
Car 240 tons 
Shorelling or hoeing clay to Bere 
ging between Whe 
Plantin — 50: — Drombead Cab, , 266,666 pi 


iiir: 


a, f 


Š 


Jor 


| 5 ner Cab, to enn (Di 


| SEPTEMBER—100 acres mer drawing ** 155 


Nov 


liogtons) i 
Ditto to: yard * we. oe 


rnips 


Prepa aring:f for ands 
Cutting, binding, eK carrying gtohenalaas i 
acres. Bere, 1200 ton: 
rying to yard and wou ditto 
Mandt 300 acres — Bere 
the same, 10 tons re per acre 
Planting 150 acres Borecole, 1 1 aiai plants. 


=: 


i Lt i 1110 z 


7 


* 
ie 


stubbles, digg 


—— 


ory 


Carrying 240 tons Grass i 
Ordinary house and yard work 


— 


Ditto ise 
Digging the the rows for Bere ae 
o 
Paha Pindin and carrying to baia. i 
ae acres of W A e ; 
rrying to yard aad stacking dito 1 
Mandring 300 acres Wheat stubbles — ren 9 
ditto * 
Planting 3 300 acres 1 3,000, 05 plants 1 
Bringing in 2 cari — — 
Or — deo wor Cart eal i 


an 
Ditto to yard 
Digging above rows for Bere 


wing 100 acres Bere 3 
aping, di0., ing to headlands ae" 
acres 5 ito j r Sakit ents coed 50% 
Manu — — ard, an = ' 
— * s Wheat stubbles „ 
Plante 73. acres Rape, 750 Bon lants, and 2 j ad 
acres: Early * plants 
ous u e, 


—.— oon aoe ree e 


> 


a one 5 cage : 2 al 15 
bove rows for Bere a 
Digging and carrying to storehouse 75 a 
‘ota 
ea off Mangold Wurzel tops ; anā 
carrying: them to yard, with t 


t a 


vs 
i 


owi: 
Sowing 225 acres Whea 
Stirring 150 — dug stubbles 
Planting ditto, with Early W 
or — 975,000 Ls anil 
Ordinary house and yard 


for Cabbage 


Pato 


——— acres Turnips, di and pittedin 3 
150 — 22 ove 
— — acres ie Whe Wheat 
Sow! aeres.of ve 
tervals in — we, 300-9078" 
ican and yard: Wor work 


SETEN 


EMBER—75 acres ben! +A carried to yard. ip 
— — 


ee 


p 


41 


300 
— 


* 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE: 


—1949.] = 
5 Month: | cultura, Gazette the last few weeks, 7 
- Men. Iy total requests hat those | gone to Glasgow had taken u erop of Po ; 
* pape, drawing to headlands...) 480 aed 8 ence of the 3 — eding system, oti a ree. coil sana — withthe — 4 Cah — ze 
x wile j as to its ks; &c., which it i 
from i n io Hoa, I cannot N. answer all the — is year, before —.— om — 
í acres Turnips --| 960 atent K p A ak I ate i not bg pima much for e] of 155. for Potato drills on a ne g farm, and 
iy Rape groun 2 900 cattle ave kep wig es now for two | al had a good he fi i 
f rant 5 Wheat, 60 900 acres: ,.» ö 300 | seasons, | d I can tru state et never had my teams in had fully — 10 — — 
i 11 Welder u, | they have Wel only r 
1 3 5 — 
z Tables it kappas rs ps 8 to 72000 — 1 xes, 10 in number, with a gangway down the have the be of — improvement 
* A epera ori a | middie, well ventilated at the top ; the sizes are 10 feet in Two years before, he (Mr. Munro) 
or 500 a day ir by 9, and er 2 feet deep. I find it necessary to clean had planted his Potatoes on a fa s land, 


TY | kept ongen — dung, 
© | heats. 


them out abou ee. — 


ungent 


once in six or 2 
which is 
I have 


— 


e never, pote ‘uma the — 


eee the blight, t, he lost seed, — — 


and rent, 
by 5 E winter ‘erop, and there were 
o had 


these k : rel injury occur to f th ; 
the threshing, preparing, grinding, &c.,| s able swee ng Bs 55 e be found but who mig mi hi 3 unfortunate, 
and the carrying the manure from the y ght; by taking — — . y, in 
to the headlands, have very wide limits we — Ea many horses are kept. s —.— 11 cattle boxes | future plaee themselves in 
i Bons wilt afford facilities for whic sually devote to my you ek, as I find this aot vo and Dead Weights ers Pigs, Martin Farm, 
desk en n pen ay yan po eyond all 7 I have tried; oe East Langdon, near Dover 
sising th Book and I have this- winter thro Live Weight; Dead Weight, 
whole manufacture of the grain should take — together and put ome of last year’s calves in the Cwt. pam as Seores Ibs. 
jate inthe gaol, which pa afford to means, by the ve just turned 12 of these to Grass, and ap 5 3 1 1 2 u 
u mill, or ott MA Ce ering | wish anyone who doubts the healthiness of the system „ 26. Four Ditto ae 3 
aboar compulsory, reli reap cr could see them, as their dition has b the E er May 2. Six Diti ae e 5 0 14 i 15 
d ehastising offenders; vale ie withholdio wv pie arg tion of all beholders, considering they have lived o M. Sandford, 
ist hope of rewar i Eak ainai E dria ment trau, hay, and roots ‘only, and of the latter sparin stp On the Use of Lime.—Lime may be said to have six 
pento, ep Ber onld apps tho fiad of late find the combini h and protection, W uses vel its Sp pigen by the agriculturist, 
$an the dread of punishment, 1 . with liberty and good ventilation, of essential advan 1. In bein consti : 
bisined by the surplus produce sed he reward of good y 8 9 tago E aiy of. the > 
— and to provide the means of gaining a liveli- pees pon Neve 2 if n hastening the e decomp 8 . 
A m rSMNire. utr Ing a et in the soil: 
ee. x — pevids — om : e specimen I now send you, + decomposing. various 9 beg ~~ 
j 25. Hine 1 ee ment and of which I have prepared the accompanying sketch, | bone manure, Ko, also — 2 urious 
F Eey further inducement to good 9 iven to me an inert oxide of begets * Frequent $ acis sahe 
. . 3 te the other day by | part of “ farmers’ friend, v3 when b 
PEs ak pear: to: the bes Ee men „ Henry Tre- | destroying a portion of his crop, or if applied le wr aa 
aast of the 50 and, indeed, 1 — 7 would vaseus, of Car- inh. . a Fan; tlys 
Peete — uations. J. M. Goodiff; ane ee Oo e 
= adjoining this | mechanically u upon 0 clay” anda by ma ly assisting 
i Granard, May place. I ir tenacity, To effect the whole of these 
ider it a re- | objects t must hus driving off 
Home C ple pro- | carbonic acid; then it is & slaked, when it i 24 45 
I observe that Mr. kn ra duction, and the combinati water forming a. 
wom he i $ about to answer it be eing a 0 tforwar only instance in | “ hydrate.” Now comes the point) which the “ Isle of 
oe pa that he 55 ar had tbe answer ich I remem- | Man Farmer.” ules uss ber. of 
4 1 aske That varieties he er to have seen h 3. He evidently is not ignorant of 
2 new hybrids, and ‘at th same time I two distinct ears | correct scientific principles, but on one or two poi 
sated res r ady in cul f Wh appears to hi 2 To be —— 
' A cui- 0 eat grown © nave a ` as brief as 
ration, No reply being made, I con e that my on asingle stem. subject eee ye give my own experience, bry a 
tion ca red in a satisfactory manner. It would a | exa my soil found as 1 f lime, 
ə asked for the same information the first valuable disco- | I calculated gow proportion ought to be ptr 
— * of the hybrids, but I feared very if pe- | acre ; this quantity is put on the land in the shape of 
—— rom trying them. My culiarity * in qui and spread over the Clover brush for. two 
ess is 1 to the subject. H., Hants. [We remain, reasons ; 1. Because I wish to the Clover 
2 in t. a he has expressed. ] sown R tee roots, that they may have a ci upon the 
7 one man SeA Sr 2 dibble line. By the grain by way of 155 p which — and 2dly, to destroy any 
aie — r workman may-be taught in experiment, but | Slugs a Glover len is y to harbour, It must be 
the line without going — am very doubt- mentioned, in ng, 10 is 
Ri todoso, whether in used as ful of the result adopted, and thus the lime is applied at as distant a 
simple hand dibbes; or the lever dibble on Hebi anything | period as — from the dan ard manure, which it 
„ P y z% 
is immaterial wo line h ay st yards than the would of co — much too ra pidly w ere they 
N an e oe quired 3 variety brought into im te contact, although 1 have ages 
9 dade I ee wallet — or 8 of from 4 — rother farmers of the “old se hool” put 
f and stump Age t * 24 ends at t which it ori- 1icklime and manure on the aie 
2 BOD are the four s inated, and of Por time. But why do T plough the lime in: hot i. 
Tt Serene b * a rt of lu m 13 i vale 5 eee * in ite of 
. B ~ regarded as a pr 0 sus lure. I ey ene 
etree AK D speaking of ee rai mentions a kind | bä ig it in, it will soon bagr Basle A into 
gi Daran 2, of dubs oiire Wheat, — 5 4 Triti- ee [vegui m sag 5 See g a 
e to B, I then ain "e 08 eu iplici spica,” it is like the soil contains uivalen carbonic aci 
145 fae he m D to hit bearded Wheat, but diffe: Ae it, in that this kind | be added to a eee of it; it is then immediately dise 
whieh = hath many short, small ears comming forth of one t solved, and henceforth can, if be pA Py 
0 ae 


most convenient, spee 
Mangold W 
nd drawn by Be — ey, un 


h I have found to 


ly, and ec 
ety ze athe wits: 
under the | estimate 


uragement, and I | 
opaze wih Sakae s machine. | 


may mention. ae! mode of | a 


— deal of work can be | 
Pe 5 ` ay get da set BTS 
— — — im the: Agr} 


possessio: 
ey a laborer to trench t 
in- would be 


reported 
. Hat meeting of the Inverness 
said he had fo ui the ed loti, 
20 a which he held, prove very remunerating. 
d the labour at 155 78.; man „and 
at II. 19s. 8d. ; EPS agg > 31. 6s. 8d. 
uce, Po ions, Carro 
er Cabbage, Turnips, * 


Aro Peas, | man 
de., with x the Value of erop, | „dried 


your soil. My plan is to cart th t 
part of the straw-yard (which is in the form of a basin), 
here they become. saturated i 


leaving a a profit o of a t 12. 10s., 
valued 2 bolls 4 stone so ‘excellent early Potatoes at 16s. 
rably un the market 


E 2784 so much of 


4 


bn lot at spare ae 


account 


* 


as he had oa li 


5 e Takai 10s. derived ; 
observed tha 


ly 
more, and that i i 


one who 

meal. 2. Every practical man k 
dency to descend in the soil, aa get out 
if 


oari aatan 


364 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


icularly in these days of 
be afforded for the 
A most liberal 


no account to underrate, parti 
small things, when money can ill be 


paper on which su 3 is nearly completed). 2. A 
t exceeding 1001., for an account of analyses of oilcake 


5 
sum no 
reference tothe nutritive — of different 


and Li 


m not exceeding 1007., 


_ seh in — dress A 


In reply to my request for a re — 
party me, who, not ong area > 
ot the sort wanted, o of course the order n- 
executed. In plain English, the 
for this escape I hold 8 aey. 28 
the Manchester Soeiety. 8 the leas 8 
under such circumstances, to recommend it to the 
attention of one beraa friends, 8 


—— 
derers, w r open or conceal 


windle aia + dat + take, | 


tural. All who 5 5 the risk of 5 
ga i 


or 

commi ittee furt Tha n Mr, Wa 
əd to for an analysis, Te shall inform the eer ofthe 
—— pon gph. of * — of any 
be * — d to make such 


and hal * 


specime up, 
analysis N the amount due shall be sent him. 
“ That a printed copy of “ts resolution be sent to every 
member applying for an analys 
DISEA ATTL qo D BARKER, 
man of the Veterinary Com mittee, prositi the follow. 
ing report of that Committee, which was adopted by 
uncil : 
nary Committee have had under their co 


e Veterin 
tio cine suggestion of the Hon, R. H. Clive, —— to them by 


ugh 


facturing, 
ray . “plan De 


whether 
ciple, to contribute to its funds. The m 


the Council at their last monthly og “cg 8 * That a 
* t of the 


t losses whether by fra * or 
Seer 


disposed to bear w willing — ny 
Barnwood, Gloucester, May 21. 


Sotieties. 
ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. 
Montaiy Councit was held at the Society’ s house, 


ne é 
Bra Mr. Brandreth, 
Mr. 7 Captain 1 Carr, Mr. F. C. 

Mr. ENP, 


ward, M Pusey, f. 
Sewell, Mr. Shaw Catia). Prot. Simonds, igs 'Sta ans- 
field, MP., emes G. Tame, Mr, T. Turne 


anery; Norwich 
cue Ban? fat, — 5 
» Haverhill, 
Court, Uxbridge, ' Middles 


wig Egham, Surrey 
Holmes, — Tibbenham; Da Y 
Steward, R., The Arm 


bl; * Norfolk 
Serer Sel Stow-on-the- Wold, ina 
2 He AA Op Diss, Norfolk ire 
ayes, 1. 11 ope Farm, Iltringham, Aylsham, Norfolk 
White, Thomas, Elly Hill, Houghton-le -Skern, Darlington, 
, George, Ayls ham, Norfe [Durham 


1 
Hall, Bury St. Edmund's 
„jun., Newmarke ny heey Norwi ch 
ames, 1 Norfolk 
Charles, ey oy at Basie Norfolk 
— Rev. , Dis eo Yorkshire 
psec vit John, jan » Guto on iali, No 
purling, a liam range Farm, Woolin worth, Suffol 
Lovick, James J., ‘Thorpe, Sordi S = 
The n peg 
meeting were then ead, 
FINANCES. 


an 5 ‘he ennui year, to be anangle. The two 


ociety, i ft where ‘tis Mit e y kin 
may ral — among we live — of — ben 
an — — to se veterinary surgeon that he should report 
to the Cou aa of his personal examination into the 
isease, and into the local cause of its 


| oc 
than Samuel Taylor, | recommend for arresting 


-| Norwic 
satisfactory pr pr 


d Mr. ap 
h 


andidates for election at the next; 


currence or aggravation, " well as the measures he would 


pans and preventing its 
fu rther outbreak in other dist 
The Com A ge have bm p re recommend to the Council 
— adoption of measure t far, that a sum not exceedin 
N. placed ow the disposal of the Committee, who shall 
ut Pthe proposed plan — reporting, at a future meeting, 
che e detail of, their further proceedings for the confirmation of 


the Co 
H ee * CHAIRMAx reported the 
rrangements for the 3 
country meeting of — e at Norwich, in the w 
ae "aday, July 
Jopdks.— The CHAIRMAN also re eported th 


pro 

made by t e Judges’ Committee in their 9 of 
|J prai = the 3 meeting. 

ee s. — The Council agreed to a pre- 

— of the schedule of Prizes 


Ey 
4 


d 3 m of showing them t 


G.— em ee. General Exeter 
l :—Earl of Cuicuesrer, Chair- 


f Mr. Burke and Mr. 
2 Farming Account 


were added t ap ee 
f Mr. E Denison, M.P., to — Veteri. i- 


Twee 
e N. po — 8 

ary Commi 
RAINING. Lond Portman, the Hon. R. H. CLivx, 

sW. and Mr. Mi LWARD, favoured the 
Council with NN experience of the effec ts of water of 
different quality on t urf and stone dra rains; and the cases 
which the earthy matter impregnating the water 
in ee detente impeded, on de position, the 5 of 

while tur on Lord Port 


— 


Sir 


stone drains, 


for an account of 
nga, ] 


ay | templated by Mr. Colthurst, and e 


nsidera- 1 


formed one st 
and, com 


successfully, was to run a 
0 


all p 
t, a model of 
and 1 shall c come at once to the res 
0 * ms ac 
15 ht ae It was ta 2s. an aor A or 251, a 
the fo owing a re the ENA cost, a results 
rom this i st OF can ent, e — t 
* cost of canals, water. g surface drain 
and rrigating carriers, “ie uding 

di ainage 5 45 21. 108. abe acre .. e uy 

Homestead for premises ee, — 


i 


down under irrigation, say 5}. per sri to asi 


Estimated cost of reclaiming the entire and wa 
produced in three years by crops 18 


Tat + pit 1 1 has: my ar 4 “i 
-at 5 per cent. a An 
Original rent 


Interest on capital of 12501, to be repaid by 3 crops 


I now 3 to give the probable value from the 
and I call upon Mr. John pb gi. if he does 

rans in thinking the farm wi orth, w. 

pa ae age anite agred a wi 


These 250 2 will b be worth, p3 year „ 
Deduct head- rent and capital laid out * eee 


Which leaves a profit of over 400 per cent. 


The entire bog can be traversed and made available 
carriag e of produce by a flat-bottome d boat. 


Price of a common flat boat, to carry 5 tons 
Price of bullock collar, and towing rope is 


Annual repair of noai mya with pith a and petis 2 
Intere st on 101, 


Gos f5 25 at 124. each 
Cost of 5 carts; harness, &c, 


Annual expenses of 5 horses’ ae, 
Repairs carts and harness . ae ile 
Interest on 1001, sunk for horses 


Four men at 107, a year, saved .., 


Tota 
0 — e 2 of making navigable ble canals 
peat by the 8 feet wide, 23 feet on ae 
little or no re — 5 if carefully cut out of the ing 
can be cut for about 2s. 6d. the „ * making 87 
through dee pie oe avel at an ny distane 3 
perch, and requires constant oy ori? 


Now I 


A model was exhibi 
senting the pte a of the land, its levels, inclines, 
d b 


and undulations ; 3 the several canals which had een 
nstruc such expe’ by the intelligent owner; 
the drains and cuts through whieh the wa p and 
the land ; and the various sluices to back up 
or allow the water . Two cocks wi 
in the Nhe wens the model, and on these b turned, 
ter, and 2 the u . Portion of the 


consisting of 200 acres of was 
In the centre canal was asluice ; on Mr. Eras 
acres, was 


the isting of 5 

The model resembled 9 of land terminati 
angles u 

land were entered by two N ee mod Loe, 

mana. Originally, as described on the 


d.] be 
tn | 


these same velocity and distance 38 


On 
—Mr. Raymon Barker : ain n’s pr of 251 ! 
CCC to the | eny, unde uch cesses | sea ioman Hance bay Tind ins bn seta | 
— hibit fi; from which it ap 1 injured during a period of 40 years, his stone drains g, and} ever this great tract is fo undertaken by ales 
that, on the 3lst of May current 3 ce having me pije sippe up. Mr. Clive’s | panies to improve them, 5 — Prom . 
in the „tho bankers was 17437 (including the | fuform the Goa remained perfectly free, and he would oaaao Je Hilt will mow lay Dolore you, ad La 
N subscription, an e compositions for invest- th e Council of the 3 of the wing | conclude without calling your attention to as a 4 
ment). This report, and the report of the House - ae ts eey be * connected with a 2 ouid employ aii he surplas labonr in the union h 
mittee, ted onel Challoner, were Saeed tae given to the ——— api wet, but rich ln 
i 8 I allude to a great part of wet, 
the con op 3 „S te 1 Journal of the Socie be tween i Kilerea “Abbey to the west end of 1 ae 
md eet Me Pony Mr E er ae | Sema ea ae | 
win, A : ita — rate that is . r 
—— of that Committee, was also adopted re Islands, intended to be p at the Council ete | the —.—.— = ing, A g a erushin poor seen a — 
the Council: leeting that day y fortnight 1055 ane vat for the . of | works in England, Wales, 2 and gece, of ut | 
„The Chemical Committee have the charges for ria the m rsonal experience of the —— Private, but he n a work —.— would be . 
an: saree ene see 0 seen no reason for cultivation of the T — Grass 5 1 is] nds, xtent carried on = ne private e individ — pended on it He 1 
Fo. 1. A p E 3 VEGETABLE wee IN Dra Rip „ ben yg Ao st gy i one ofi the most scientific seat 
market—7s, this is meant such an uld be | Bart., A shee aa py of the Í 8 of les Northinn clever egricultarists in the county of 2 Me oe 
formed by a c person, by inspection, with a fe le | berlan: —— rane for the current year, con- Blarney, who, in spe it to him, said work at Mia 
confi i ents. [It will protect from fraud, bnt is | tainin e sto £ 4 undertaking. » Toa pro ofessional man the shehr? 
not calculated to Al ars materially in the choice of the best — ret drainw: by vege ee oe and be place what he oiie 
specimens, : , th 1 è a the th t treq * 
— — of guano, or — for i instance ea 105 The Council then adjourned to Tuesday next. the most complete system m of bog draining and and per” 
— — — lg h the question of its relative . ever seen, the nerve to commeno — energy em the r 
value as a pure s Such an iy Only apt ance to it out, He wo ay before OM the mets 
lime, sulphate et icles, as guano, sen rl only apply t of Farmers’ Clubs. of some calculations he had made, and if they gare [es 
„sulphate common salt, & No.2. F. Irrigation. —The following i is a —— as much . — as it ga — him in a Miess 25 
of a meeting which took took {place some time hens . 0 would be vei ery great i es 250 statute en 
ord ake e ago „in — had informed them, co This oe 
7 to make E =% results of Mr. Colthurst’s of which are capable of being irrigated. e Jei 
= ee i ted, | Tivers run into it from the ( dis 
e , ie! 


THE AGRICULEE Eo 9 


365 


happy, and that we 
ao we are * “a reproach to our 
and derision to those that are round 


— (— 
eer Mee gene — in the 
n this oc ccasion 
nee W ben he said that thi 

Jr. — ntinued the 
$ bushels for five years, and 
in favour x the 1 bushel 
“could not lay down a general 
sure that the quantity of 
eo deep, luxuriant soil, 
blowing soil ; 


experi 

— — this 
e 1 bushel and 
exention the advantage 
He a ‘rm 05 


IY 


1 
gi 
be 


1 
3 

Aa 

1 

= 
& 

= 


è 


2 rein 
i ber 


a 
TE 


n 
BE 


7 


z 


& 
i 


3 

2 * 

HFE 
E 
+ 


* 
E 


nH 


s 
EE 


ng 
1419 


rl 
0 be taken a ik 5 o 
adleigh Farmers’ Club. With 3 to 
= present who had 
wh on this point. 


111 
ae sa 
B 
e 
Ar EE 

E 

8 

8. 

2 

B 

BS 
2 8 f E 

ao 

EE 

E. 

5 

aq 

E 

ø 

an 

g 

E 

EE 

Ts 


bly ; es 3 wen 


i 


deep, 

40, 50 feet upon 
S und 30 feet the best 
—— 


aintness of the crop in ng arose 
r * Fus — found 
r, and the result was 


wth, 
to the cultivation ind the am cm of manure, but 
m there was a = spring; = was only 
e by great cracks 
knew 


other 
stitute the 2 pledge “of their yey 8 and eels 
i The 


20 acres, the grea eat expense 
E costly N is dispensed with. 


eee vantage them; and 
cade, and t e "liberally, may be worked — 7 

x hours a day without injury to her m 
reat —— umstance. On large 
farms it may be h aye that from a fourth to a third 
ted 


F 


3 ja 


public. 
d 


À beginning has ma i 

work at Newcastle, and —— Tu of ashes 

we believe, have been and bed 
ard. This 


| northw. é vas measures ee ngl 


expense 

portion, leave more for h umption. 8 

uch may be sa id of the 2 results, still more 
ral infi 


and —— 
house or land. 
— g classes 


2 8 
& 
— 


in 
e. ite or 
guarded 


ar 
of 8 ‘question. There 
i this matter in 1 respect | to 


cay a of | i m 

scarcely a single _ to 52 seen there which is in 
tate it shou 

ur 


We 
rv Club „ b, whioh 2 alread 


that thus val hogs necessary local, practical, and sei 
knowledge may be brought to bear upon it. ‘North lam 
South Shields Gazette. 


Pasture Land.—In sip dara into the north 

whole districts 
— and 
eo at there is 


e 
rich lux- 
To improve 

ess task. 


when compared with the 
rass fie idsi in the — counties. 
W e wou a ho 
Much, no ‘diab 
penta — 2 of manure; 
rmed for draining, an 
t and then ill laid thom it ge 
adhesive an 
a 


82 he 
The persons 0 al thers least likely to engage in pro- 
jects of jey on certainly are those whose propert 
must in pra be endang ie 2 such revolution ; ` 
peor are 7 — = a 


unie 


seni 


ne place aoe es n- 
more erty is divided, the 
it is is ; held, or rather, that it should be attainable = =m $ 
ual ity is there for the 
ts of in th 


SE 


h ‘der i in 1 e 01 2 


Aisa 


us than —— this quantity of 
ag 3 
ure the 


ould prudent measures 
ot say 


OTHE 
357 
2775 
ii 


FER 
EEE 


rti 
ae There is, ‘therefore, the strongest | 


GAL 
* respondent, in your fos. Som ‘of 


after bein 

drained, to stir it 72 ane: deeply with the — to 
have a lar arge mass 0 both o 5 and 
enriching quality incorporated in the —. of the 
soil ; rent at , should it be necessary to h avoit —— 
r state, it cree be well laid down 2 with 
the diet pout 3; The New Husbandry, by 
Law. Rawstorne. 


Calendar of Operations. 
MAY, 


— Stall or sae ig ag 
May 5, 
of April 14, as — the greater cheapness ss of a house for stall- 
feeding than for boxes ; and he gives the dimensions of a shed, 


way Farm, May 2 A cor- 


to good conduct ; — the benefici 
this condition of things upon the character 
ch 3 i cannot be doubted ; Colman’s 


ial 
mical accommodati 
| fe eeding puue up the centre, 


neiples he can devise, for the econo- 

ion o 20 cattle, in — rows of — with a 
The inside ed of such 

describes as 102 feet 3 888 in h, by 21 feet 


` | experiments to be made by Mr. Can 
m 


ain, and so injuring the | 


European Agric 


ommand 


h is equal to 110 square Fae 8 nimal 
uite a common n thing to 


* 


harine — bre Sea 
ell, at the Flemish | 


g 
E 


al 
is stock - he e 


m 


S 
2a 
12 
SE 
Fi 
5 
2 
+ 


8 
0 
ae 


ren 
hen 
ty of stock, and bought 
E 


H 
H 


roportion o 
and an under —. of tthe aom 3 
b quality and quantity any he 
rtion of which 


| pene 


P 


3, if kept free fro 
2 i clean or pio fallow, 

iiney sono a good Whea 

o follow 


d box 10 feet bine 
| traversed by th 
O | to — 25 a ee row of s 


erop | good 
bu 


ach a 
construct — house 
of cattle and a feedi assage 
3 r re feet —.— 
to 70 stones imperial. 
* is sufficient may be 


r stall-feeding with two fous 
up o the centre, and in such a house, 
mple room for an 
That such accomm 
every feeding house in this 
would be 111 feet Tong and 28} fee 


stalls are 
4 from centre to centre, 
a all post divided thus 
Cleaning passage, * feet; 
sadi : rib, 75 fe On 1} 

fee ing e eet; š 
feet. Total, 283 fee Gaps An 

ngs . 


e, the space — by 
ges, — a 


Bak e than three es the be 

e feeder in 8 a with what he would have 

So much for the n relative expense of con- 
t 


tion 


3 fee 
1 
ents th rence in the pro- 
and in the Lr oa of food 
speed ig org if a i 
The o only * aia 


H t 


the nor of litter 
I riem that box feeding may 


ing working m 


migratio n to the 


is much more easy 


oe „ 


neglect 


emage. Tast nstead of a e Ape to help the | mu 71 
worki r these are | econo 

Neweastle to the Antec key 
i 


reservoirs, and be thence, by of barges 

umps, distribu ra 2 the ra adjacent to the river! 

f this system und to at Manchester 1 at 

8 where the pot * greater, w 
f m 


reac 
from barges on the river, 


to prove that it can be . profitably to on 


sa fia id m 
i i mi ht it not be ne in vantage — it; gus all concur in saying that es i in boxes- 
openings into the Tyne, why mig at ti 3 rthan in stalls, J. C. 


msume m e food an d much more litte 


Notices to Correspondents. 

AMMONIA : Sub. Quicklime will — k from any of its 
combinations. It should not be added to hes ie however 
th 8 


English fa 
Diseases or CaTTLe, &c: 
Society for the Diffusion of Useful Know 


_ 36 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. Ting 


a a . s are — EER 
EAT Ggren Foop ror Horses: Const. Reader. r. We haven HOPS.—Frimay, June 8. — — caer in Value. Oats are Gdity Je 


diffen! and, Carrots and bay, Rye and hay, Mes PATTENDEN and Sx ‘ero eport that the accounts from 
egen and then Clover, form the gradation from | the u plantations a generally s bad as possible, and there re- erar, June 
winter to keep. Italian Rye-grass will be atits best | mains pen little hope for the ‘safety of the crop. Prices are still supply of Engish 
fera in the last mock of Mag. Je should be sown in spring, | advancing, and the duty is at 90,0001, to 100,0007, since Monday h y has — pio. and Ve 
r — E E E A | 3 — bert t aur Wege ert Jun 8 i vg vn 3 the foreign arrivals m 1 = 
— €. k We have had no experience, But we know | The Committee report m Äe arket — $- be su up- for several mo as d 
„ rina i followed of mixing 1 dried har piia mihun fore: — Potatoe x 3 than 8 to y oo re very ears attended, and tl 
i h sed a considerable reduction 

with old hay or straw in the rick, and s m why it Phjch bae eng N a i gure. The follow. | 2cted trifling ; holders yenerally were not g 

Wi 


should not answer with Vetches. [T give way in price, but w * 
d are this day's quotation nach — shire Regents 1608, to 5 , 
n "Wo wouid have applied the | 220s, ; Seoteh Whites , 808. to 90s. ; Foreign do., 50s, to 908, | vessels, the greatest difficult 
letter om the stubble in 183 and the dung in spring, © A 8 ELD, Monpar, June g rates. — Bar 
vice versd, if you could have had the latter at the former | supply of Beats is larger and of mproved quali — P —.— uppo — “on 
ather, Trade is very slow, ani Friday’s prices — scarcely pa onering being considerable 
5 R ey pad TS. Apply it diluted in wet we p tained. The — ps f Sheep is also larger; small selling heavy, and sales ean on! be 


— about the same as of late, but big fat sheep are y 
MANGotp WORZEL : Ler It twi fae be — ton g eee he — te Mb amb meets with ready sale at ig — ito ratos. ae 6d. ae qr.— We observe no v 
— of May ; — — — 8 cultivated land, in a wet Trade he aul honeys an an wey choice one is ely of Flour, dian Corn is much 
— — 8 only « other crops ure hae ased advan m Holland and —— Galata w ould command 37s, pe 
after Bi Ma a N Ne tg — 4 eng ec men d sprinkled |t ; * 331 Beas sts, 960 Bihan, "eat 113 Calves ; and from nsurance —Although ina few e — 
with dilute Aube acid, will be found Cy contain boch Scotland an SoS ere Sidi n i pauity of — supplies in the provin 
Phosp oras bad aü t 5. ts, Her Best —.— å enable ers to realise IS. p 
On Peseta; ag me y he best fo ne, ar 2 so aaa patarmes 4to3 6/ Ditto Shorn 8 4 fo 3 81 the fine weather, combined 
Fer, Neun. — uction of milk. The n food et Set- or 3 2—3 4 Ewes & 2d quality z 85 e eee 
ana diso increase the’ producto does not succeed, give sweet bd quality Beasts? 6-3 0/ Ditto Shorn 2 @—3 25 8 >And BOG 
he —— — if the pu i es, give the fol- | Best Downs and Lambs . 5 4—6 0 8 (exceptin ng on the clay 5 have 
lowing : Tincture of 22 be 0z. ; prepared chalk, 3 o., in Hale breds Palves qe ie ime SB ; ~i $ $ duced a very inanimate t trade, 
h k Whe t-flour ay Shorn” Pig 4 of superior quality or old, h 
te ey Bal * Sub. We should be disposed to letit dry in a Beasts, 3566 ; — wind i Lambs, bs; io 410; ; Calves, 276; Pigs, 240. 10 oe prices — ty © as. 
FRIDAY, Jun 
meer a and before k eA sli = i — — —— —— The supply of Beasts is jatge au aud trade dull. Monday’s -_ 
Jand 70 which you apply the compost. Add 3 or 4 cwt. of e with 13 A 2 he papi brig and eee Fripay, June 8.— The wind has 
arge, e average quality indifferent; — and we have had all ies si 
eed hy er acre, and apply the whole in autumn, on your nt) are not muc 4 — other kinds a Weather could rae Bn arn 7 F perky. 
TH 2 AF, The work wen o Society for the Diffusion of | with difficulty disposed of. There is an extraordinary supply. dealers at this day’s market, the business was: 
Useful knowledge is as good as of Calves ; a large proportion are of m dalia quality; these retail'transactions, heat declined Id. 
Tues ee Mac CHINE: R B r. Cipbarn, Uley, Gloucester- Sis. 1 85 lower, and. the ‘nite ee: 1 4d. pale pet change in w value of Flour, Oats, Oatı F 
ad vera! remain unso! rom gitan ermany A di 3 
A Stroud, Ditto; . — —— e 77 Beasts, 460 Sheep, and 276 Calves ; whe Pree day" scanty Supp y of Indian Corn meh Ae | 
‘Messrs, Garrett, Leiston Works, Suffolk, 2 and — — 350 Beasts 3 139 Mileh Cows ene home * * 
reputation Bes wools, . to 
K r doubt, W fords 5, en, „ 2 4 to 3 6 Ditto Shora * 3 4—3 8 stan 
hels Best Short-horns 3 2—3 4 Ewes ad quantity „ ‘ 
dee een A Farner, A e tat anes e F 
tumn, and 3 cwt. of guano per acre in 1 —— Best Downs an m —5 , ee 
a good E Half-breds  .., Pea 2 8—4 0 BY 3 ee. 
n you will has SAPE, CFI dite Sher ee a a e. 
Top-parssixc von WHEAT: J Barton, One cwt, of nitrate of | Beasts, 927; Shicep and I — 13,800; — 702; Pigs, 270, 8 
soda, and 1 ewt. of su vipato of ammonia per acre sown „ DARK TANE or E TA Acoma 
broadcas eath t 
— e ‘and promise of of yield. Pere Mornay, June 4,—The apply of English Wheat | A N Pe. 
URNIP SEE No doubt you may reproduce any well- | by land carriage — this morning was again —4 9 * 
established variety, , such as oed e equally well from the and met a dull sale ati 2 the prices of this day wee Fiddi in the e las: a y” i 
the matter to require à good deal of attention in detail; The at tge, and the demand for 5 a s * 1 
more, perhaps, than large farmers generally will give. — Wheat limited ; fine qualities, particularly | P#tces. AY 19. Mar 26, 
Warre Mustanp: WJ. 81bs, * 5 Ibs. of per aere, o a i late rates ut out of conditioned | | 
are generally sown. e smaller quantity, with er 1 diffi f dispo t og 7 
2 Ibs. of Rape, would answer ai purpose; though we S were di Or pp ata 33 
doubt if the latter, in the mib yor o rapidly-growing a plant — of Is. per am Polish Odessa afloat was in- 5 85 
Sema — WS urn them into a good pasture, you ean | jor eerie — e seal te 1 ie eni a E oe 
do = better for them than that at present. In autumn, prs PET be wri  lower.—Beans and | 44 
u can begin to give them bess pi and then Swedes and 
E wW along with a of hay chi „ wetted London. Liverpool. a 
bas salt, linseed 3 ea — owe r with B meal, If PRI — w - pA 
u have no Turnips, then they must rte — in winter pak 
vith the! hay alone, i, e. without green food in addition, CURRENT, Mera June 4 May 29. June 5. ay 31. | June f, na 
— qr. 70 Ibs. 70 Ibs. qr. | qr. | gr. 62 bs. 62lbs 
Market ts, Wheat . 1 8. 8. 8. d. 8 d. s. d. s. d. d. . 
COVENT GARDEN, Jue New, gh 40 042040 to4216 4 6 916 4 6 ‘ z 
‘The weather 88 Venen Ble axe very len-. „ Whi +++ 45—4645—466 10 7 41610 7 ; 
atl raie bas altered bl ines seh th. Notentss Gade: 8 nn . b 
are cheaper. Nuts in general are su . for the demand. p? white oat 48—52 48—52)7 0 7 77 0 ae 7 
and Lemons are plentiful. Amongst Vegetables, young Foreign. 36—5336—55 5 3 8 304 4 0 7 
ipa t e- at from 9d. to Is. a bunch, an 80 lbs. 4801 ts 
Carrots at 6d, Rent 4 8. 6d. Cauliflowers are sufficient Rye Ne 4022—24 a 
Rhu derb aud „ plentiful. Gre F Se 
Peas fetch fron 65. t oaro 105s; per bushel. Potatoes are a eign... 12 —5 22—23 — 
cheaper. ise from mêd. to 1s. 6d; per fp. Let.| _ Foreign —7/|\61.—7/, — 
— — i lading ro AE ern cient for th d qr. 
ushrooms are pleneiral consist of 1 R 
Pelargoniums, Gardenias, Lily of the he Valley, Cinevarias, Tro ina. e n T 
2 8 Fuchsias, and 1 Roses. Mal j 
. per Ib., 68 to 10s 
use; p. lb, 58. to 8s | 
. —— — j 2 . to 18 
e 2 19—25 21840 E 
lack... E 5—2002 2 
2014—20 
FA 


aei 30 34s— 


23—25/23—25| 27 985 
24—3224—32 30 —33 


2 
{223212239 30 —33 
3 


tp 21—36/21—36 23 —32 


— 1374913749 
91. 78 


L 
ete — 15 h 
Hee on Sta: Stamford Bridges, with arailway stat 
this valuable and improving property within —— 
. s 


ISTS, AND: 0 “OTHER 
0E ore 3 will submit 
artho- 


S is neared to announce for 
, 88, "Ring 2 
— for 


— The 1 


orta DRT 5 
N a tithe fois, “splendidly 
a only five E from York, and eight 

sx rich bank of the Bete bey whic 
boundary for néarly three eee 
statio 


George Hote. Yor 

ck (unless previously “disposed of by 
5 er . — = the late Otti- 
and attractive 


in the 


P 


E ro =. this CEME: T to possess the rare p 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


S.  } F|FORTLAND CEMENT. — Testimonials received — 


NG SEASON ee eee 3 


f withsta 


bapao to ev ery ‘other for 1 purposes, such as dullding 


and lining of N L . — — &e. — 
ex ring and ornamental e tings it requires neit 
colour nor pai nev — vegetates, ond wili carry 
to four times its own body of sand. 
= 


a bag J. B. WHITE and Sons, Milbank-street, West- 


min 
Far INDIA-RUBBER HOSE, PIPES, anb TUB 
AMES LYNE HANCOCK, Sole Licensee ani 
Manufacturer of the PATENT iiie fom INDIA- 

RUBBER TUBING, * — article * are 

-inch bore and upwards, not i 

acids, are 3 ‘dexible in S temperatures, and are 


| well 1 for Watering Gardens, Breweries, Liquid Manure | mu 
3 aud he emic. cal Pur poses 


s, Gas, a 


rom 8 


1 
or reversing action. Makr , the 


bac 
Widow of the Inventor and Pate 8 oa ac ‘ound th 
nobility, gentry, and the public e generals — = HAY. 

B's 


ING M er n the nam 


Patent 
are not manufactured by MARY — — Ges, but 2 
5 ‘a and, although somewhat like in appearance, 


ot 8 wich the genuine ones in Saraki 
18. Fenchurch-street, opposite Mark. lane “3 
bebe FEMALE P PILLS, Price Is. 1}d., pre- 
expressly for Ladies, and sold by all 1 London 
Wholesale — 11 — Barcla ay’s, Sutton’s, Drew’s, Sanger's, 
4 d Go. 5 Pron see Ped! ars, &c., at e Fe- 
ng-street, Cove tG 
all established Mediene Vendor rs. ee 
xs. timposition and disappointment, purch 
neat y ‘LOCOOK’S Soman nan. Pik 3” — nie 


FE 
28 


on nat oil or dressi 


3 realty 5 r ng outside 


= of use, th i 
— all purposes where a name — — — pipe 
is require 
VULCANISED INDIA-RUBBER GARDEN HOSE fitted 
with e ane 0d r branch, roses, and jets, complete, for attaching to 
um e on Ke. 
K invites attention of parties using long lengths 
of the Flexible Garden Hose to his SELF-ACTING nose, 
ER 5 fou — most — — ent —— — e fo 


PI 
winding u the Hose when out o 
<p es and Warehouse, Goswell- mews, Goswell-road, 


BEST REM =F POR * T 
Non Oni to 


N's CAMOMILE P 
mmended as a timple bute 
suffer from Indigestion, Sick Headache, 1 Biia ayel — — er co 
plaints ey act as a po ntle 


posu 
» diate B „g. Winde * each, by A. 

indus) ishopsgate-st 
ithout, and nearly all Medicine Vendors. Be dae e 
NO — PILLS, and donot be persuaded to purchase an 
imita 


eee All Orders and L 
atte 


mediate ntion. 
Cie 


pony poo AND EFFECTIVE FENCE AGAI * 
AND RABBITS. —Iro n Wire Netti iog of 8 
—.— — in coils of F * 
any given — of yards, at 2. — varying from 24. to 1s. 
per yard run „Avi iary net at p rop orti ec prices. None sent 
out without f the best anti-corrosive paint, 
2 i the ee and most respectable character, 
ved during bee ve ae . yore. ee the ws the er to speak 
with cotiiideace sto cellence of the a Appl — 
r. SAMUEL Rares Bar ay — 8 or to Ri 
Woodcock, at the Manufactory, Stoke Ferry, Norfolk. 


and . for Keepers a 
dlands 


ARRS TIFE PILLS are “tus Maa to be the 


bes n the world, Medicine h 
2 the beach Publio only a few nd 2 
never se eal qua th TOs 


blie 
J ; the 
their use 1 their 
at this moment there is scarcely a country 
not heard 


ign 


stored . fits — have s t for es, Whatever d 
— interesting plantations call of "i| GHETL PONIES AND CATTLE. — J Po “a of tra ehe e alae! me bees — 
e apes and shrubs, intersected by landed, S direct from onic a quantity of very Chia; have had immen se quantities s their tive 
scalar extensive scenery, | some small P NIRS ; sine from gh to 12 han pie ep. 45 countries, the same result as in E niv: N 
ie «bald ou p the distant 2 some very h — * ee The pale 6f “Pane’s Lire PILLS amounts wards of 0 
viewed yS N to Mr. Johnso pa Calving, some ies ra and in milks a all boxes weekly, than all other tmedicines put together. 
5 particulars, ER jeg may 1 OXEN a ben 0 de — amh Sie * ee rge This simple fact needs no fur minent ; it tells pl 
iene ah? 3 . and Lightfoot, — ntity öf ee ‘lar to the that the Pills of Old Parr are the best ne in the world, 
stree ester-squar ondon Mr. Nass ey are Sipain 2 — d to this 21 BEWARE or SPU 8 [miraticns.—None are uine unless 
York ; ee A of £ Messrs Das ie ry ane Sox, 5 be seen terre Onron's, Salesman and Importer to her | the = * — “4 — — Pints” are i hite Letters a 
land Agents, Waterloo-place, Pall-mall, London. Majesty, 89 . Red Ground, on the Government stamp, pasted round each 
; also, the facsimile of the signature of the proprietors 
PUBLIC SALE, M ze New Corn Exchange 3 THERS, 170, Hampton-street, Bir- « T. Rosats and Co., Crane-court, Ficet-street, N peg 
aver, Mark-lane, on AY, June 11, 1849, at Is mingham, sole — ine img roved WOOD and the Directions. 5 P e e 
4886 . 250 0 Tons damaged PE PERUVIAN ZINC MEN( — oe . “The ‘Zine 3 3 . in boxes at 13. 1jd., 2s.9d., and family Pare at Ls. 
f essrs. ANTONY ots, &c., in boxes, o e. e Zinc Labels —. ig 3 
Cstilogaes, and and further parti ticulars from Re Erin a proved of for their lasting durabil 1 upon Tull ‘directions are given with each box. 
Bayonort, Brokers, 26, Commercial Sale e Mincing- | with the greatest — and, When dry, a — a ee a 
London. i BEAUTIFUL TEETH 
is secured, D s for use sent with ah pony * 5 
LEMEN, AMATEURS, Fe. bottle of Metallic OWLAND’S ODONTO, or PEA DENTI. 
) BE 80 Lb, . and reall Sole agents in Lo: London, G. and q. DEANE, Horticultural 3 FRICE. A white ore, compounded of — a o and 
tplendid collection of J| ment Warehouse, 46, King William-street, London-brtige ost Ingredie 
1 — 700 3 CHEAP AND DURABLE ROOFING — — — 1 — 
7 i trengthening the Gums, and in 
which are, say 40 Echinocactus, 40 sp. i the Breath. It 
sp. Cereus, 28 sp. Opuntia, sei — — Aloe, Gas- L f 
1 vil, Ia 
— 8 healthy plan and may a a aoa ercise a highly beneficial and saluta 
— ——— might “pe greatly multiplied, | MAJESTY'S A rare, a a e E rg e te 
Seer and tho = e have been collected. at 2 vd 
h d col dicati £ h 
x ‘Any gentleman commencing the eultiva. M*NEILL ann Cos of anib’s-buildings, Bunbill- | ness ee ge en, th he eir sa ee parh he round 
oy wearing ellen — find this to be an oppor- F Lond: Axo Coo t < only — 3 tees of | they unlimited enjoym as 
— —.— Le ie be neglec ted. —Address, : “THE ASPHALTSD PELT FOR RO ROOFING petite, Sr Sete eiecti gre . 
Hou Farm Buil din s, Shedding; W orkshops, and for Garden aE cue tat etors oF — 4 oe 8 pledge “themselves ri — 
urposes, to protect PI om — 
TO BE sour SOLD, OR I LET ON LEASE.- —Marshfoot 7 AL the — National Agricultural Shows, it is this Felt e pit 
i rita one mile — che — eerie to * hton, | which has been exhibited and obtained Two Sv MEDAL the Court al Family Britain, and the 
fafa — — ane of reat ith, PRIzEs, peas is oe ree . — r — a by 2 ref * * 
17l. 16s. per year). To view, appl ; per 
Úe ` „ apply on ‚HONOURABLE BOARD OF 025 8 CA o protect 
Wal. at ke. to J. P. STURGE and Sox, Land — ’ Commissioners 5255 sete {ie put = re 9 de Fon, 


Tose ten, 


ORs, e t ae 


abont 250 ac 


D 


Hem LTURAL SOCIETYS or LOND 
TON, Manufacturer tz 


77 


Sona, Cement anufactured 
Works, N 
Te: ANROID Ba RoN ‘Elms, Lond 


‘is 
liable 


to error 
Thermometers for 


Seht Barometers, II. 10s., 24, to 


-SOMERSETSHIRE, 
from Michaelmas next, with convenient | 
are for Wheat crop, — meee 
FARM, within a ring fi 


to M. T. O. BENNETT, Land-A 


at the . — — AMIN 


ed to BEN- 
2, Duke-street, Southwark. A warehouse, 


prios Ran O; Rakes, 
prices.— dened —— 533, 


NRT Tools. 


ompanies, and by 
g Stucco. It preventa iron from 

» Masonry from damp, and the — 

by & ARLES FRANC 


MHOID BAROMETER pi i 


Ra 


fect upon it, 


i. 15s. and 


ering 
struction, — not t Hable 
ometer for steri 


iy eas Sole Establis t 


by some houses, 


thus—“ A. RO 20, E Harrow GARDEN,” 


3 — a SON 
mp, which is affixed — 


Par 
And on the Estates of es of 1 n. Rut- 
land, Newcastle, Nor th sic per Buce h (at Richmond), 
> late Earl Spencer, kad most of the Novi ty and Gentry ; 


at the ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SocreTy’s House, Han over- 
ily i 
It is half eae price of any other description of Roofing, and 


ects a great saving of Timber in the construction of Roofs. 
Made to any length i. 82 inches wide, 
PRI nak Penny PER SQUA 
% Samples h Directions for its Use, and E O 
of seven ears! experience, w ich references to Gen- 
tlemen, Archite aud Builders, = free to any 
town o 228 * ders by post executed. 
The Public is cautioned that 
or Great Britain 2 * the above F 
. M*NEILL an 
Patent Felt Au Lam 
London, where roofs covered with 
The per Vice. Chancellor's Pour 
9 — 5 


rig ng | is ma 
* 


o West- 
tabout 


b 7a-buildings, Buni 
the Felt ven be seen 
s, at the entrance t 


orship of Dass. Barry, Esq., 
ds and Forests are 


the en per in London | gags S 


— box. Sold by — nw thor and by Chemists an 
Perfuiner 8. 


E anp SON’S LIST OF BEDDING, contain- 


to make a Bedding, sent free by post, on application 
to their Facto: mga 196 (opposite the Chapel), ‘Pottenham-cotrt- 
| road, London 


EW ZEALAND COMPANY.— 
EMIGRATION. — The Court of Di- 


Compe nyt 0 from 
Further 3 and forms of 
at the New Zealand Houte. 


New Zealand House, 9, — Buildings, 
London, June 7. 


were 
wo years ines, under th 
Her Majes 155 "s Commissione 

t 


he Com- 
oofed with 


or direct to the “ima ean bes 
o their R 


very information afforde d on the construction of Roofs, or 
any proposed particular application n of the Felt. 

—.— * nae s NEW PAT ‘TOOTH- 
. — A SPON GES, TE Tooth-Brush 
BaL * hem 


Es 
2 


gan 
vith ts preserved valuable | tha 
3 


y 
ntermedia 
— secu 75 chin the luxury of a 
at METCALFE, BINGLEY, an 
— 75 Oxford- street, one door from 


tive * 
tine. Smyrna 8 


get * 


READFUL WOUNDS IN A LEG SOU! SOUN DLY 
"D HOLLO 4 e 7 2 PILLS. 
sed tae mont.exs 

mos 


‘which b 8 
his leg in — b'o rit, and although he 
lotions and ointments, yet all were found Derteotly a u: zeless. 
was then recommended by a friend : 
Ointment and Pills, * e did, and in six hours he was 
n abou it eight days the wounds were 

undly healed.— Sold by all Sn s eats at Professor Hou. 
rowate Establishment, 244, Strand, L 


LowaY’s Establishment, 244, Strand, London 
Ds LOCOCK’S FEMALE WAFERS have no ge 
“eo 5 i mmended t 


He 


aT 
resembling these, m to m 
there stri 


also Sole A 


PEHEE 8 4388 


CAUTION. 


110 


a 
adopted 


Asthma, —— r and Colds, Price is. 28. 
and lls, per box. Sold by all respectable Medicine Pilon. 


1 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 


> 
Ties 


il Te 


READS | NEW PATENT GARDEN ENGINES, Bens &e.—This 


0 feet. 


= cleansing Wa ll and Standard Tree 


s from Insects, &c. *. Be 
d to the Gard from dr ee and portability, it 
of fi oe are 2 sot restricted Pra SYRINGES of Zar CIROUS, upon the 13 ee principle. 
RICHARD 35, REG 


eee ego WIRE ita NETTING.— 


on 2 by READ, 


per yard, 2 feet wide 


8 
ized. Iron. 

2-inch dess; . — ee wide. d. per yd. 5d. per yd 
2-in — 5 5 6$ 

in h » 2 strong » » eve 15 70 

N t ove 

i s > ong ae 

— mi ened 14 11 

All the above — Te whe any width at proportionate prices. 


11 


Japanned 


If the upper ha If i s a coarse mesh, it 
fourth. 


per square foot. P atterns for war ded oe do 


Wanufsetared by re free of and BISHOP, 1 


Norwich, and delivered fre 
boro borough, Hull, or Newcast 


expense in Lon „Peter 


WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT, 


GALYANISED w me gah TWO. ZENER 


—— ot eis e leh ction 4 it, It 
was exhibited at the late Metropolitan Cattle Show, and was 
highly eulogised both for its u and pretty appearance, and 
ackno wey oe e cheapest and best article ever p 
It forms a light and durable fence against the depredations of 
—.— deters: and cats, and is peculi =, a ty di for Aviaries. 

tries, and to secure po he galvanised 
— — no 275 it answers ie for training all kinds 
1 “ee ants. hes wide ay 2 Ne r n stock, of 


— 
— des 


— a wide a 4 pe yn — inches iers — per yard 
” 


” 5 
24 55 5 


. do., Id. oa r foot 


— HS yard; if galvanised, 23. every de 6px 
ursery a and Fireguards, Wi — 8 anterns and 
Shades, Fly-proof Dish Covers, Meat Safes, &c.; Window 
Blinds, 1s. a per square foot, with bolts complete, in maho- 
gany Bernini emim ae „ 6d, per running foot; 
lo ers, from 3d rehes, 20s, each; 


» for the use of paper-m 
factory o f Tuomas Henry Fox "63, pee: hill, London. 


7 — OW: 220 


x 
Extra a Imperial Wire Sheep 1 3 feet, ls. 6d. per 


COTTAM AND HALLEN, 2, 2, Winsley street, Oxford- 


The value of this 1 enhan 


En 8 which eontains about 28 gallons, 
It is applicable to all ee pu We particularly 
— 


t will be foun 
r 
T CIRCUS, PICCADIL 

TAM & HALLEN Enancc, iz 3 
OTTAM & HALLEN, ENGINEERS, IRON Founpers, 
&c., No. 2, WINSLEY-STREET, OXFORD-STREET, LONDON, 


Cor 
erection of HOT 
ron or of Iron and 7S 


other buildings (of which t 
3000), fixed at greatly fo 8 


their Repository, 2, Winsle — —— 
variety o 


MENTS 
TRO 


8855 
76, Oxford. 8 


rau and HALLEN FE had 30 yearshexperience in the 
HOUSES — CONSERVATORIES — s 

od ¢ * ad), and from many impro 
d ri me, can with — 

BoA upwards of af 


- 


. 2 feet 6 inches, 


—— = each. 
A great variety of Cast- 1 Vases on’show at 
Oxford. street, also a great 
of the fo ollowing articles for gardens, &c., at greatl 
uced prices, viz. 


Garden Rollers, Han nd-glass Frames, 
Garden Engines Flower Stakes, 
Garden Syringes, Flower-borderin ng, 
Watering Pots Flower Stands, 
— ors, Garden rhes 
Mowing Machin Ga 5 Ghat 

Every 1 ‘of f Work, sca pua and "Oriental in 


and cast iron, for Gar 
5 TOOLS pay AGRICULTURAL IMPLE. 
f a Inds. 
G IRON HURDLES, strained Wire Fencin ng, &c. 
es at — = AN za ACTORY, 2, Wissen tee and 
me e Princess’ s Theatre, 
Seea E eot the Princess's Theatre. 


EWER 


sioners 


purpose "of 


[Jung g. 
NE 8 


RAY, OKMSON, an AND 
0 


ve any infor 
The also ber to the —.— ball by them 


gi 
past season, for the Worshivttl a 2 thec ar be 
don, ry their Botanic Garden S Obaba Mr. 
Curator, will kindly show the pn and answer any hed 
They beg also to say the building only is referred to, 4 
ae b 


them, 
Gray, Onmson, and Brown, have also the honour of 
tomany of the nobility and gentry i in the country, and — 
of Bg London Nurseries, 
N.B. Plans and Estimates furnished 
R ublished, Second Edition, price 27 êd, 
HE GARDENERS’ RECEIPY BOOK, ‘conus 
ing methods for a hone! on kinds of Vermin 4 
injurious t to the Gard en ventatives and cures for ty 
diffe 


of 1 fruit trees, he. 


Lon : GROOMBRIDGE and Sons 


SUMME 
Second Edition, much enlarged, with hinges po Ca pe Ar 
i kerh BOOK OF SOUTH WALES, — ag Rion 
ANN wg banca A THSHIRE, a | 
B BLES FREDERICK CLir hres > 
„An excellent cite to a romantic region very accessible ie 


little known. a — one Ba to be 5 —8. 
London N, Apaus, and Co. B tol: H, Outi, 
ORTICULTURAL OCIETY’s 8 ‘SHOW. 4 


CHISWICK, this m — be fully reported 
TAGE GARDENER of Ju e lát 
The COTTAGE GARD ENER is issued every Thursday, 
rice 2d., or stamped for post 3d. 
F Londo a: wee S. ORR and Co., 147, 


ed in Gro 
| and lithographed — PREA TWINING. 
| four e Specimens 


Now ready, in one volume, imperial 410, Il. 115 u. 
pes Loney in three tints, and sli, 941 66775 
To CITY AND SIEGE O OULTAN. -i i 
ries of Sketches taken before, dur es and after 
Siege. By Joun DUNLOP, M.D., Assistant-Surgeon 1 L 
32d Regiment; with 8 Descriptions, giving a com 
lete History of the Sie 
N The Work —— contain Views of Moultan from various poiat 
— and afte sins Seene vot the pre es ‘ot Vass 
A or —— es's Troops 
on Artiller of Moo a rm — 


Magazine — the Great Batteries 
Trenches, 
Honea: Wu. 8. 355 1 Co., Amen-corner, Paternoster 
e thick e, price is * lettered, 
HE. HORTICULTURIST 5 


arena 9 9 The Vi ie Garde dener, DT 
Se th P £ e Villa Gardener, 
Cott Š 5 and Villa 1 ” Kc. &.; 
E avings 
5 ui erous 5. Óna — Amen Corner, and 147, Strand 


— 


arly r ani for publication 
LLUSTRATIONS OF THE Natl ORAL ORDES ORDERS 
OF PLANTS, arra roups, wit Part arc —— | 
ołoured p 3 folio, price 108. 6d. 
may be now se 
London : 3 ConpDatt, St. George 
street ; and Davip = 86, Flee 
HNST s rer ar Si | 
Publishing in Monthly cae p . the 
‘HE PHYSICAL ATLAS, yo n- 
1 folio. y Kert 
Edi eo n in n imperia oi at Edinbargh 1 
to ae Majes 
PP dea 


si II 2 — in, are published, containing th? 
I. Geological Structure of s Globe. of 
8 of la Atlantic ries III. Mou 
and A ier Systems g 
N I. Pen pacer 0 of Volcanic — a“ 
r- 0 
à aan the 3 ; aibo we wish, an a1 ber H 


ge . 


treated ot in it; but Mr. arias t 4 
the publication of a ne w eado of e et d 5 
reduced s ata lo 
have ae; appeared, the project was aa rah 
= ief that Mr. 4 — 0 —_ A : 
le Illustrations to this work. L 
N — — and Sons, Edinburgh an 


Th is day is published, in 8vo, o Priel xe. By 


SS irrigating arable — i ted mead now desirous ¢ fogs on by W. an na A. K. John nston, 
receiving proposals from the ow wt T 2 —— of lands dred — wers 5 anston. 
DPR Pireo — tien n say 50 miles of 1 who are willing in Seo, price a» Br 
contract for a supply of the liquid Sewa; 5 = in Ntities iilustrations in ov: 
acre if for ers 10 E irrigation INT TRODUGTION TO METEOROLOG wees 
and at a of 18 irrigat om; at this rate of 5 D. Edin. A Systematic Tagge gre & 
Š supply it Pigs Pa ate: at the Biog of the Metropolita ee y e rtant branch of Natural 
se districts is fully equal to the + mpre of Mens 000 acres of water the e eee interesting fac facts, ™ methodies! 
Meads ; it is proposed 3 give the prefer districts Plained by panei and London, 
where (as in neighbourhood pied warning or the alley of the | und familiarly dese and Sons, Edinburzb ja w 
n peach, in Boser, ot r *. — river Dar W la Kent WILLIAM BLACKWOOD =, of No, 13, Upper 224 2 
or of that ; h P by w uet, 11477 Bye — sta 
4 — acars, of the jatt éo — made Widely dispersed, and the — drainage, intern 8 Parish o of St t Pameran, e de ene a a in tbe 27 | 
irae embracing latest improve- | falls into it below L n. Pa expl 5 — Precinct of . 2 
deliv very “at ‘Corran and Barem, 5 y ae street, | “Oxtord. 8 may be ha by application to L. 0. p Sred . Lombar ae by u by thems at at the O! 222 e 
street, London e street, — 1, e Soho, London, to whom | parias ol St, Paura, Covent garde, . Saaana 


Sarvapax, Juns 9, 1899, 


; GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
\GRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


ed Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, JUNE 16. [Price 6d. 
NuEX, CEDRUS * 755 SIHVER CEDAR OF NEW SCARLET PELARGONIUM, “PERPETUAL 
| Kohl Rabi, 15 som 3 E. UNT A SCARLE 
om R. GLENDINNING bhava — in pring of GLENDINNING has plants s ready to send outa 
1848, a number of seedlings of this new pied 8 . this new and splendid scarlet Pelargonium, of which he 
‘ species of hardy CEDA N cones imported direct from | po It was awarded a Certificate of Merit 
Meadow, ö oy Mount Atlas, offers them to the trade at the following reduced | last t January when exhibited before the Horticultural Society of 
SR OLAV eris a T 381 7 | rices, Strong plants, in 60 siz ed pots, It stands forcing admirably, flowers in profusion 
Melon house at ae = 25 for iss „„ — a 8 the whole winter; when grown in pots it is well 
at 3 50 for ae oe - 11 6 adapted for the greenhouse, and itis ees a first-rate — 
N 100 for 0 0 variety. R. i argonium win per- 
n ax 3 ChiawickWarsery, near ‘London, June 10. fect satisfaction, 4 1 therefore can confidently 9 it. 
. 375 ants 78. (d. each or every three 
Roars. 373 4 — owt Whe AOS Eg OR CATTLE, at THOMAS | ordered. 3 Nursery. near af pienia 
Plants diseases ot. 72 8, a er-street Gardens, near Godalmin iE 
valtry di peepee ** 8S1 Surrey, at 4s. ag r 1000, crates included. Delivered to the NEW AND Se PLANTS. 
Pumpkins, Amerika. +++ 373 € | Guildford statio Dane, ca Oo. are now sending out the under- 
haa e i gee 575 d in strong healthy plants : 
ee e e 3917 8 JO HNSON begs to announce that he has just NEW FUCISIA, THE. 47 ESIDENT.”—Youett and Co, 
. 381 received z depict uantity of CINERARIA SEED, saved | have much pleasure in offering the above fine variety to the 
5 ex from a first-ra . — ction grown by a private gentleman, notice of pone bey of this 5 tribe, being a flower of extra- 
— which te can with confidence recommend. Is. per eee ordinary s uty, e tube and sepals are finely 
76 e S.J. has also a quantity of Sweet William See d, saved from reflexed, aod oft a delicate transparent pink, contr; sted with a 
a fine dwarf dark collection. 1s. per packet. ‘Aico & a rey deep rose-coloured corolla; the plant is of fine hat t and most 
of first-ra git inum Seed, saved from named varieties, | profuse bloomer, 5 8 be pred rai recommen? ed as being 


is. per packet. ore ne of each of the above, 2s. 6d., 2 — best o Pits clas 7s. 6d. per plant. 1 e newest 
| postage stamps or on Dieu Nu Dover. 18s 


r 
LOWER SEEDS —Choiee Biennial and Pereanial -NE 42 SOF $49, at 12s, per dozen, —— 


rp à 
, fo 
Mimulus 3 — sent post free, at the following prices: 12 Junius, Duchess of Northumberland, Eyebrich K 
i of very jiona h 2 3 Leet high; ar 74 flowers of | varieties for 13. 2d., 30 ditto for 26. 6d., 70 ditto for 5s., on re- Isles, Mi-s Thorold, 8 Ven ay a 
A pr atl “nerd — ponr d J, C. has no doubt | ceipt of the amount with the order, Also the best 3 s Vicomte de Sourval, wi oth 
L ` a 25 i 
the 5 Chronto es 19t » p. 592, | BENJAMIN W. Knicut, Florist, &e., 3 near St. 8 s- NEW CHRYSANTHEMUMS. —Fine plants for autumnal- 
folowing high terms: “ Your seedling has | on-Sea, Sussex. Catalogues may obtained on prepaid ap- | blooming of all the new and b:st varieties, per post free, 9s, to 

d, — to = a very fine thing. It has by far plication, inclosing a postage sta 1 p. 12s. per dozen. 

N fe . ERTFORDSHIRE ROSES.—On and after Jun PANSIES,—Finest first-class show flowers, including ali me 
A remittance 


e is respectfully re. LL the 18th, E. P. Faancrs’s extensive Collection of ROSES beg 0 the new kinds, 10s 3 R 
wn correspondents. will be in bloom, and will continue for the season. An early includiug Teushleril Griffiaii carminata splendens, Fyfiana, 
Phe ul 20 101 to the Trade. inspection is re- pectfully a Trains direct to Hertford. | alba sanguinea, rea ea elegans, rubra superba, Piatra. ‘ 
2 ENT INSTITUTION. | Hertford Nurseries, June oscar pu omy ia, 3 m a vai: varieties in strong flow- 
_—Notice is hereby given on a SPECIAL GENERAL LEY’S EARLY ann CABBAGE ering pian S., 18s., and 248. per dozen 
TING 1 . —: to this Institution will be | ‘DWARD TILEY b 1 = Rate ens major, Jayi, y ven A 
g ate- hi 


ESDAY 
] 5 gentry en : and the public rally, that he 
fee recipe of paren e out he PAREY MARON CABBAGE SEED, | culta 
-which has proved th >. best yet in e and five Y 

lecting TWO PENSIONERS | earlier than any other sort Bt f for table, and equal to young reer A ‘ret 
om among th o following Can- Asparagus for tender — _ — “Th i equal to young of td So ae — rade E TEE sp incied is height, ta . 
| een examined and approved this over ote i: abbe ges a 1 or wis 9 et Shae 0 LARPENTR, Ts. 6d. each ui 

ie any ri is very suita 177 rocky or windy situations, T piy i 77 
F = w LARI 7 Saren Application, as it is acy shor — the leg, and hag none of the i ab Dee a bee hire ig 1 hang 
one oes oo í * 
> 8 s sh |e 


ejr al 52 
outside leave A large n anmber of. the plants have beer Wie Fin ns p a i 


E 
33 spite in difere nt P eai Poi ag vè thoronghly proved the š * . 
m character given of it, and'also given the err satisfaction toi) 95 AON SERD, saved 2 a is bow being 
* arties who have grown it. hare . condition 
— r Lp T. wai rrants the — not to run for a twelv Nia SUR 1 6d. — 1 — 
5 [iai wil be. neten to ‘prove’ tothe; e fuperior cient to sow a bed of 12 or 24 yards. see — 
$a” quality of bis Cabbage over all others. packets oa August it will afford a fine dis diepidpthpough the autumn and 
winter months. 


zee 


34 pars ing 1 oz. 2s. 6d., 187. packets Is. 2 “The — will b. 
postage free, on th — order, or Catalogues of the above, with an extensive 2 8 

24 the 3 in Id. postage stam ena olana A bo hik 

T sa y Kataas T, at his General Seed Shop, 16, Pul- sams. Great e Nb 6 ey seg wide 

20 ad win rn en NE'S WARRANTED EN 

oe on LUCUS E 3 AOHIENES, : 1 arden g pul, 

st N SALTER (from Versai can furnish a fi are invited to examine EANE’S extensive Stock 

— lst plants of che pa Yn Esculent ULLUCUS TUBE. GARDENING AND PRUNING IMPLEMENTS, best London 

Bi . Liga at 5s. each. Its cap — ities as an — of food, in | made Garden Engines and Syringes, Coal brookdale Garden 

— —. ‘ — of the Pot ato, were parti * ris, Brussels s, ts 


F 


air: 


8. 
ugh ive experi Averuncators Garden Scrapers Pick Axes 
s facies 2 aes ee 
= commence at tak en a at hhaltpas t 11 deck. “the ballot are now in progress in yaaa parts of — Continues He can | Axes Grape Gatherers and a 1 
Da Til be allowed to close at 2 3 4 selx. NO also supply the 1 e ee A. atrosanguinea, | Bagging Hooks Pn gd raning Bills 
vote whose subseri s unpaid on 15. .; Baumannii, 5s, ; Bodmerii, 5s. ; Escherii, 5s.; Ghie * ravel Rakes and „ Knives; various 
By orde: brechtii nova, 2s. 6d.; Knightii, 2s. 6d. ; Tonina ee Borders, various pat- eves » Saws 
1819. T, Se R, PRN — 2 | grandiflora, 2s, 6d.; Longiflora superba, 18. 6d. Also the new gee ye Doors „ Scissors 
$ . Farringdon- street. mpon and other Chrysanthemums of M. Bonamy, at 3s. each. Botanical Boxes d Frames „ Shears. [riety. 
„ REGEN Sr PARK, His new Fuchsia “ Corymbiflora alba,” and_Heliotrope .“‘ Gri- apria of ee In- Hammers r | — akes in gress va. 
of TS | 3 » are now in bloom, and those who may favour him wit i 2 a ass Frames | Reaping 
e place on 8 5 isit will be convinced of their — — ee chait Engines Hoesater every R y 
tained at the Gardens, by orders * a near Hammersm rnpik Daisy Rakes — Bans BAMA UMI. 
1 ee! ee and Hare lende Se 
EN JAMIN. R ohn-street ursery, Dock Spuds 
in great pe agg tha B Colchester, begs to offer ‘the following select plante, at Barat 1 roe Ladies? Set of Tools Sa one Shoyels 
P ORo ranyin 828 8 prices. Baer rons and Labels, ae pat- Switch Hooks 
chimenes Kni N | Fuchsia 2 —4 78. 6d terns, in zine, por- 
„ patens — n é Lobelia azurea Flower — celain, hana Lo 
: chti ee in Wires 2 and Reels ne lanting Tools 
v, begs to „ Ghiesbrechtii 1 ` a Marking Tak 170 
soni = = mbago I LarpentW 1 ols . —. . ae coli ii 
Calceolaria, new shru ox imbricata.. 
i zi embergia š ioe te ` species from Califor- Pentstemon cordifolium 1 GalvanioBurdersand — 1 Ta 
le. ba. Per doz, on mia 2 . e chironia’s! glutin Valin T i 0 Salvia 3 nee cht en Chairs and Milton 1 Hatchets Weed Extractorsand 
Cytisus filipes (strong o. per dozen... Seats Mole Trape | ooks 
rafted), 1 „ Loops Mowing Machine Wheelbarrows 
— Lou 


a 
ree 
3 
7 
73 
F 
8 
HF 
E 
ee 
ERS 
ss 
3 
A 
E 
7 
F 
a 


elbe 3 e, 1 
ane, 99 St. Helier, 8 japonica, Spiræa ——— pleno, 
offer extraordinarily fine plants of the| strong plants, 1 ft high 3 6 | per 6 
itul orange. coloured Do., per doz Tro peta spesiocum, ea 1 
is a plant that re- | Cedrus africa 8 af 9 
8 for a very long 3 — odorata Weigela prs ns per dozen, 
toilette tables. Also a very rubra, strong. 1 6 63. and 9 
* which has been in bloom PP ce dln ‘specio- e californica, ‘ 
larger in every respect than | sissimus. — — EOROE NEIG HBOURL ~~ SON respectfully 
DESTRUCTIVE ANIMALCU anno — 4 that they have prepared for this season an ex- 
eee BAD'S GARDEN ENGINES | AND ) MACHINES. | tensive supply of their various IMPROVED BEE HIVES, 
inf =a and aaa egg te — of bn MORE eobootey—the T 
in er their patrons tally 3 pleasing and profita . rural economy—the Hone: 
thai maasi. varna Collec- sit as —.— ge to ee — “injury ee. The 2 consists of „ Nutt’s Collateral othe 
in d ’ an 
h hobe 


Sin 
Improved 8 Hive,” Ker, from * — su a 


NE SE tan 
R; ee, kp e 


G. and J. DEANE are sole Agents for LINGHAM’S PERMA- 
NENT. L45218, samples of which, with the Illustrated List 
8 Tools, can be sent, post to any part of 

7 1 —Deawe's Horticultural Tool Waretiouse, 
pedian the Monument, 46, ma deene London-bridge, 


* 


8 
8 
E 
a=] 
5 
£ 
— a 
oe SS ‘asoecocoo 


E 
7 
Rd 
nF 
— 
* 
7 
ici 
2 
2 
Ts 


may be taken at any time without injur, o 
be moa = with safety, — 2 = prot, pi the — 
the Cambridge Line and pta — Garden „ that he has saan considerable | and unaccustomed to manipulation . 
mile from the 2 improve sta ea ers, . and Machines, which are | with — and prices, will de forwarded o . of 
3 from the Brox- | now so perfect that re will warrant the valves to keep in repair 1 S tamps,—GeEorcE Neicusour aud Son, 7} 
hunt“ the trains at Waltham, during the term of the patent. Manufactured only at 35, 
Herts, _ | Regent-circus, Piccadilly,—Established 25 years. 


north cma da Boes ” (6th edition), now published, 


or 12 
8. 70 ‘Messrs . Paul, Chesh 
25 ma — Gerrie, Gardeuarits E nA ohn Cathcart, Bart., F. H. S., 
e oes — ang: Cape 
10. TaM Fendi Vei p Bregs foe the same. 
11, To Mr. May, Ga ardenet o Mrs. Lawrence, F. H. S., for 9 va- 
eties 
12. To Mr. Stanly, oo o H. Berens, Esq., F. H. S., for 6 
ies of Cape 8 
13, to Mr. 0 Cock, F. H. S., for 6 new varieties of Pelargonium, in 


44. To Mr. 8 for the same. 

15. To Mr. Parker, Gardener to J. H. Oughton, Esq., Roehamp- 
for 6 varieties of old Pelargonium, in 11-inch pots. 

16, To Mr. Dobson, for the same. 

17. “er bl — Battersea, for a collection of Fancy Pe- 


onium: 

18, T ome Faleo r, Gardener to A. Palmer, Esq., Cheam, for 

Fali Cacti, in flower. 

o Messrs. Veitch and Son, for Escallonia macrantha, 

tal CERTIFICATE . a ih 
1, To Mr. Bruce, Gardener to ler, Esq., Tooting, for 
a collection of 6 Stove and —— Plau 
2. To — Loddiges, Hackney, for 20 * — of Exotic 
3. To Mr. Carson, for 10 Species of the same. 
4. To Mr. Gerrie, for 6ispecies N the sa 

8. To Mr. Dobson, for’ coll 
6. To Mr. Francis, of Hertford, 
7. To Messrs. Pamplin. oa — Lea-bridge-road, Essex, for 
s aioe 15 var a H 3 

. To Mr. 


9. To Mr. Par 3 fur 6 
10. a a Deos, F.H. 8.5 for a collection of Fancy Pelargo- 


— of the same, 


. To} Ar. Robinson, Gardener to J. Simpson, Esq., — 
imlico, for 6 new varieties of Pelargonium in 


. ated Gaines, for the same. 
a Mr. Cock, F. H. S., for 6 varieties of Pelargonium, in 11- 


14 10 5 , for the same. 
15. To Mr. Green, for a collection of Greenhouse Azaleas, in 6 


P be To Mr. Cole, for Aphelexis purpurea. 


— 
of Achim 
for 12 watietios 6 of! Rosis, in pots. | 


* of —.— enthes 


essrs, —— h and Son, for Hoya be 
Mr enson, Oxon, for a —— of Ranun- 
cu 
T: Bo > Mr, „Saa, Gardene: Esq., Stamford 


o T. J. Lenox 
k Lodge, New- at “for two Seedling Petunias, “ ez 
— 4g “t Prince of —.— 
ew Odon! — 


= miis} 


— 
8. To Mr. My 
10. To the same, for —.— nopsis —.— 
3 the ane = y third best named 3 ae Plants 


HORTICULTURAL L SOCIETY - OF LONDON, 


EXHIBITION AT THE GARE GARDEN, ON WEDNESDAY, JULY 11. 


The following FI shown on this occasion 8 ALC 
The Exhibition of Flowers is not . 3 
g the Rules to be o in the Exhibi : 5 
1 rizes, of the respective value of Fifteen Pounds, Ten — 8 y Pounds, are offered for the 
a ibitions of Fruits, delivered at the Garden, or in by noon ON THE PREVIOUS DAY. 
io rules are f 3 A in, 


In addition, the following prizes are ffered, for whi 


in the DURE YN the Market, — Private . 
FRUITERERS ARE NOT ALLOWED TO 
ean be made in any case oe 
O 


a5 


except in A, B, E, K, 
be sufficiently 


ete Meme WELL 
cable; if the 7 
a. No — 
Guavas. Oranges, & 


; B Pine aa in single 


Epvilles 
* _SK—S 


r than SG ean be ven for Musas or 
— © 


LS—SK- 
es, 3 neee Trinidads, dro. 18 


1. Pinch Saline Black Prince, &c. 
2. White Museadines, 8 Sweetw . 
a aters, Eo. 
4. I Sane 1 SB 

5. Other sorts, distinct from the foregoing. LS—SK—SB 


LS—SK—8B 


Market Gardeners, or Growers Nor FRUITERERS 
exhibit independently 2 other. s 


exoept iii. — — aa one 


7 


8 and PROPERLY NAMED by the Exhibitor. far i 
it eee = 2 
F Peaches, in six 
G Nectarines, i in — B 0 
H Apricots, in sixes. SK—SB—C 

Figs, ins 83 
sy in dishes of IIb. oe : 
Black. 8 . White. 
L R aaa in ta 


N. B. They must se Bavo 
g . aron, 22 SB—C 
no one to show more than 
Fruits is oo if gathered, 
2 The one speci Re 
2. The best flavou SK—SB—C 
: Other —.—— of * exclusive of Apples and Pears of the 


Pastry Sl 
ments, Fis: 
tion, Lam 
Milk, 4 tubes 
ters for Gr 


Somerse 


and kee 


SHEET GLASS TIL 


HARTLEY’S ‘PATENT R 
Copy of a wes from the 
tshire, 
Mn. JAMES "defer Sir. — 

ar e, 


— seen any so goo 
erandah 9 a it . 
as 


imes te most happy t o bear 
— of your Glass. „ 
(Signed) 


5 
370 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [June 16, 
4 HE ANEROID BAROMEP 15 
HORTICULTU | y OF LONDON. T 
ORT IC LT RAL SOCIET - - e | Pediment or Upright rometers, 1. 1 i str — 
XHIBITION, JUNE 9, 1849 aromieter 4s decidedly!the best construction at Wi 
. being less liable to error than any other, and is ` 
able. hermometers for Greenhouses, 2¢ 1 80 mirta 
AWARD O F THE J U D G E:S. 3s. 6d. 3 4 Tanis 2 Hot Water, in Jag a 
e e e eee, e s o7s Self-registeri 
for Heat and oa | of the-best ey 
ICATE OF HONOUR . To Mr. Bruce, forthe Kory 7 est constructign, 
1. To Mr. Mar * Mrs. Lawrence, F. H. S., for a col- 18. To Messrs. act an "Son, for Tistanthus pälcher, and 2 ake ; ornate br w ! 
, itto fo iT 
lection of 39 Stove 95 915 1 > ME -yrn 1. To Messrs 9 5 or a collection of 15 Stove and Green- er * Sul hae mie ibs. an — ae 1 he 
: Š Dartford, for house wing the qua — milk, with instructions, 3. ue ir 
1 To apace, Or 43 Bey eerie hen Ro ae Clarke, Gardener to W. Esq., Muswell-hill, of superior r manufac ure, the lenses are — de 5s, — 
å Nr Myl ardener t r, Esq., F. H. S., for oa nd ction of 6 Stove and Tomtom Prena. 1, 31, 12s. ; No. 2, "iss, No. 3, A achromatie, 
m — — Exotic Or rchids. y To Mr. ardener t 805 Ri ao aine, Esq., Wallingford, | deseription’and prices of Microsc <, giring iy 
ome THE G GOLD KNIGHTIAN N MEDAL. por sane AN of Exotic instruments, sent free by post ribet s: mo pag 
1. To Mr. Gr Gardener to Sir E. Antrobus, Bart „ F. H. S., 4. To Mr. May, Gardener 10 E. raced heart, — 8 „Langley Park, Lc dering from the e country or may rely 
. for a * of 15 Stove and Greenhouse Plants, Bec — fo 1 9 3 of Cape Hea ame care and attention b-ing paid as = E 0 
2. To — and Son, of Exeter, for 20 species of 5. To Mr. any Se Garden r to Mrs. Lawrence, . H. S., for Erica prosent t to 7 for themselves. Were personaly 
: e Orchi — : vesti ea. ustrument Manufacturer the Boag 
3. ph Mr. Plant, Gardener to J. H. Schröder, Esq., F. H. S., for | 6. — Staines, — Middleser place, New.-road, for 6 spe- Kamivglty, 30, "Hatton. garden, London, 1 
cies of the cies of Pelar FLOWER POTS AND GARDEN SEA 
“Te ties aths. 7. To the same, for Ga — varieties of the same, in 8. Inch pots. TS, 
A To CAE iy asha, Aim ren — 8. To Mr. Wiggins, Gardener to 8 — Esq., Staines, Jes MORTLOCK, 250, Oxford ist 
THE D BANKSIAN MEDAL. for 6 varieties of the same, — nch pots, o 1 — he ehas a — 2 cits an eat 
to J. Coster, Esq., of Streatham, | 9, To Mr. Gaines, F. for a collec of Calceolarias. , solicits äi — 
** aes Taylor, Garder Sto and Gree — 5 * my Plants. ’ 10. To Mr. Robinson, for a collection of Fancy Pelargoniums. Every description of useful CHINA, G 
2 To Mr. ams oo to C. B. r, Esq., F. H. S., 11. To Mr. Glendinning, .S., for a collection of Statices. . at the — . e price, — — 
"for 30 — of Exotic Orchids. 12. To Messrs. Veitch and Son, for elia 0b, F. = ir Pii 250, Oxford-stree r Hyde-park, London. 
3. bah Gordan id n, Garde: — aie ie: Beck, F. H. S., for 10 species | 13, "and jagrindifors. o to Mrs, Lawr rence. ‘or Port- OTHOUSES Ax oo) ATORTES waa | 
t Berkhampstead, for 12 va- 14. To Mr. Ivi uma Rose i ned comp/ete in alt Parts Of the Fh 
= * — of — ag —.— n 15. To Mr. Davis, Oa Min, East Barn — for Noblesse ha 8 á 1b. of at Bo a three. x ee-light Cucumber 
i 1 k, fi in es. sizes 
5. oe — varieties’ ‘Garner to to ms Quilter, Esq., Norwood, for 16. To J. a: 8175 G ee lAN Seon e-app iti sent . pen ne yea, Kiagzon e 
6 10 Me s. Rollisson, Tooting, for the same. 1. To Mr. 5 mley, Kent, for a collection of 15 Poe al Sanaa of every description, at Janes Wis 
7. To Mr. patina for Tall Cacti, in flowe — and Greenhouse Plants. othou A i yei en ace, Old Kent. 
: Mand LARGE SILVER-GILT Bnin 2. ack, for a collection of 6 Stove and Greenhouse | o — A nean: ility, Gentry, and the Trade, in 
n, Gardener to oo Phen 
* * N = 1s ela and Greetitionse aH ; 3. To Mr. [r Malyon, Gardener to T. Brandram, Esq., for the USV. 
2. To Mr. Kinghorn e Earl of Kilmorey, “wick. sa aiki FREEMA N, ‘Homann Burner and He 
a, enham, be denen 105 6 1 and Greenh e Plants. 4. To Mr. ke. Bruce r Oncidium flexu 4, F. k. s Apparatus Manufacturer, Triangle, p Hackney, me 
3. sy ta — 9 8 J. Blandy, Esq., F-H. S. for | 5, To Mr. Knott, Gardener to the Rev. * ` Pritchar ¥ Binaon, — to call the attention of the gentry to 
4. To Me Sm posit, om er to Mrs. Lawrence, F.H.S., for 10| 6. To Mr, Taylor, for 9 species of Cape — — . ide, * 17217 st oo N a 
ies of t . To Mr. Staines, for a collection of Faney ary 10 wid a 11 Eiet of Conse —.— 124 fr 
bag ane 2 species of the same 8. a — . Ak Gardener to E. Goodhe » for Erica | Pis wi * 3 * a — iron hie 0 48 DUA 
E 20 aion Gardener to the Duchess Dowager of North- | toa pa — as 5 ranch in e bonia 
“ami — 5 “te a „ e of ob ee 9. o Mr. * * Echium frutico ato ih Wod 50 r iron, or for, ok 
7. > — eed of Streatham, | 10, 70 Messrs. Veitch a nd — for Tetratheca verticillata, Lines 
*. ba ce . 11. To Mr. Smith, Gardener to Mrs. e, F. I. S., for a ox AGRICULTUR AL an 


o JOHN ory Salt e ph 10 
London 


e 


12. To Messrs. derson, Pine Apple- place, for a collection pad Basil sa in 
of iaaa 4 — 
13. To Mr. zak, e ei longiflora. RD AKER’S PHEASANTRY, Bean 
14. To Mr. Gra Gardener to Mrs. Smith, Bersted Lodge, DD road, Chelsea, by special appoiti ment to her M 
Bognor, for r Violet Hative Nectarines. H.R.H. Prince Albert. — OR ENTAL ‘WATER FO! 
15. To Mr. j — er to W. Herbert, Esq., Clapham- consisting of bl and white swans, Eg Canada, 
common, for Black Hamburgh Grapes. ternie, — d 1 oms geese, sheildrakes, | 
ł6. To Messrs, V — a Son, for the best-named collection of y idgeo and winter teal, all, 
Plants (no error in 20), sho ovellers, ‘gold-eyod —— ‘een ogy Carolina 
TAE eee _BANKESIAN MEDAL. domesticated and oned ; also Spanish, Cochin 
1. To Mr. Glendi for a collection of 15 Stove and Malay, P Poland, —— aud Dor king fowls ; white J 
Greenhouse Plan ea-fowl, and paro A pigs; and 
< 17 r. Stanly, r : odiledtiðn of 6 Stove and Greenhouse pea er ta „Gra ceshurths street, 
ants, 
3. To A. Rowland, Esq., F. H. S., for 12 varieties of Roses, in wes Lass FOR CONSERVATORIES. 
po A AND ” 9 
4, To Mr. goo His for 9 varieties of Cape Heaths. J Without, have the phase to hand their New List of Prits 
5. To — 1 , Pine-apple-place, for Pimelea Hen- | of SHEET GLASS for Cas 
6. To Mr. 2 F. H. S., fo! on purpurea grandiflora. + TICULTURAL, LAs ‘SQUARES. 
. . j r > UP TO 4 ARES. 
s; — = a3 —— r — or a collection of Ranunculus, 8875 an * 8 
o Mr. Glendinning, sf iali F per fi Under 6 by 4 sina yii 
: To Mr. Cowell, Gardener to F. R: Bedwell, Esq., Waltham. 3 from 3 ae Pes ee 1 1 1 
i ¢ Hamburgh Grapes. [Fi 26 5 3 7 3 f by 5 and 7 e 
10. To Mr. 105 ener to was Marquis of Abercorn, * 0 8 by 6 and 10 by8 -nn aa 
11, To Messrs, won Garde for the second best named collection "ROUGH PL cee GLASS for WINDOWS, ‘SKYLIGHTS, 
** pee fini); and FLOORS, in sizes not exceeding 5 feet superficial. 4 
ERTIFICATE OF MERIT. } thick Bi Fae 1s 94. h per foot 25. 
1. To A. Rowla a F. II. S., for a collection of Roses, in e p h mne 
25 varieties. 
To Mr. Green, for 9 varieties of Cape Heath. 3 
3. To Mr. Malyon, for — veutricosa superba. 
„To Mr. Epps, F. H. S., for Erica 8 


Tiles made of 8 Glass 8 5 i 1 
sepik 20 i ses bereits 10d. me’ awe : 


— 

h en Pl ate and Wi —— 0 

mp Shades, and Lactomete 
Ts. 


6d. ; 6 tubes, 108. 
eenhouse 0 


re, to James PHI 


12 


AS MILETN NGTON i 


ES AND, Star. 


CUCUMBER TUBE. 


. Estimates and List of Prices 
Warehouse, 87, Bishopsgate-street W. 


GLASS 


UGH derar 


. — Londo jo 5 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE, 


7371 


VERBENAS OF 


Larpentæ auschn and an exten 
ofall the — penta PLANTS, — — and 
—.— urn ing go for which, see our 
d previous w 
— — Establishment, Sud- 


for imm 
of last 
BROWN, 


* lowing for 28. each, or 2 
price. E atx of Sh = — paid f in hamper — London. 
~e seg Wyness’ Prine 
1 Soa Napier mandy oung’s Royal — 

i ó i Brilliant 
2 — Epps's Eclipse 

; ae — 1» _ Eppsii 

18 Nun, Ivery's prone 
3 3 ios 

2 1 : Barnes’ Sguid 

| = | eee 
u 
„ . Miss — eria Californ 
| 
; 


AS — Psyche, Beau 
Ne Burgundy, Da al, Queen of the French, — 
perpek 


—.— Captivation, Desir rable, Gem 
bas, Gill's on wee, sang soa Defiance, Belt’ 
at 25 Joulsot’s 7 for 12s,; 12 for 9s. 

ee 1 fer 13. 34 Free b by 


MIMULUS, Pca ne 1s.; others low. 
a, and A miration for 2s. 6d. 


„low. 


: larias, &c. Ca — will be sent on appli- | h 
Sart, with prepayment, m eons at “erga 


WX. — BOTTERILL, Tb. 


begs „ to inform the public 
true sorts of the ee parok be for- 


i ‘that to order on receipt or postage stam r post- offiee 
atthe undernamed prices, mat and package lalaa. 
all the sorts of early Cabbage, Savoy, and Kale, including 
: —— per : 


no mat or package is requi 
ad upwards delivered free of carriage to the Edenb: ridge 


~ ORYPTOMERIA JAPONICA SEEDLING 
. STANDISH anD aie LE having — 
stock in Europe of the above s 
strong — at — — Oe 


I the 
offer fir —— 
38. 6d, ea ES y pacai 127. 174.64. 240 100; 


„S. and N. — ig . 1 


urrey, Jun 
1UMS—The u —— — 
„ HOTLE‚Ss CRUSADER,” e obtained of J. WROMESGU 
r Als, cash, Fine strong plant, 1 last Ei pag „ 
2 pots, carrying a head of 
Also . — iy ‘all ae gre —— esa out at 
moderate prices. 


the Horticult Society, has kindly dire 
—— — re to be matte for the ee 
Gardens at t — next Exhibition, on 
85 the llth July, Ticke issued to the order 
af Fellows of the Society only, at this — — price 5s., or t the 
afternoon of ey altos July at 78. 6d. gaci, 5 then 
orders signed no the 8 But 
N in 


Sasi ntry, 


é 83 the Vice . —— 21, K. 
Y, ent-street, 
; “MONDAY. the n 0 Jukx, ma; e 
on this occiiston, oficial 
— —.— that day. 
Yo Tickets will be issued in ne on the day 
— O 


5 Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
| SATURDAY, JUNE Y6, 1849. 


MEETINGS FOR THE EN THE ENSUING WEEK. 
Romir, june {Chemical 


in the daily papers of a 
of the Metropolitan a il that 
ON Sewace is about to be 

the land within its 
a upon ‘yond authority, that 
to those to be put in force near the 


4 e from — 
ee e Mont 


(u ³ AA ( 
5 ae aE N 
a Sg eer aa : i 


wars 


en 
report itself, but some remarks 
de of it are now call on ac- 

— e tn Public, 


e e at a more t 


3 i le. ar of wealth. The means 


THIS SEASON, at 1 


RYMAN, | 


Es, Pelargonium Nursery, Windsor. | 


‘town 4 75 source atli 


2 for many years 


and five minutos per ac 


t these. th 
e 2 Z ‘obj 5 — re 
8 J i 


London —_ 


démoaphere instead of the n 
itati r, and — 


3 would be or by the operation, 
duum would b ass of material so — as not to 
be pees its na aki 

t has long aoe clear to those acquainted with 
— peor. of manures’ that if sewage is to — — 

t must be done — — it in — flui 
that * it is a liqui 
n 


m of inealenlable 
value, as all good liquid — 


a state of growth, 
it reaches the roots it is abs 
the system; so that it is no exaggera ation pa sa 
d manure, applied over-night, produc 
effect by the succeeding noon. 
s different, e soluble matter must w 
ti 11 wee reach and dissolves it ; the gases 
which it gen e are formed slow wly, and its 
action 0 important, 5 time, during |, 
which the * — season clips a 


ait 


if by natural evaporation, no 5 “ steam power 
eii endure so prodigio us a nuisan e effect of v 
which would necessarily be to poison the Londen 


orbed and seinille i 


lid {SO tects 


Cultivators who know nothing o 4 manure except 
from the mice z ve solid, = sometimes not very 
useful, duced in farm- yards, cannot be- 
lieve that dale crops a rass per annum 
possible, heavier the preceding. 
Nevertheless — crops are aitained A car re men, 
and will one day be e quid m — 
— the wonder it —— like’ — overflow o 
the Nile or the Indas. Where such ‘periodic 
oak the land wichen mre reach 
ingredients 4 aer. or suspended in 


except where liquid 
antly a 


begins to grow; it W ed uid man 

-raez the crop, or the land, but rapidly irii 
n abundan it is cut. Ins Dean 

the ee A ism aire of liqui 


made e good bya 
ers | manure, whi 5 neoa fertility ae something more 


up springs t ain ; again it yields ar, to che 
8 S ae Pe antly than befor The 
process of liquid manuring continues to be repeated 
with the same results as long as the season permits 
of feet ah and i myy, Bee for ever. 
Cabbage ain 6 & Uy Pe 
gus, and all kinds of garden stuff. 
of economically securing the fert 


to get so bulky and unmanageable an 
e land at a price which could be cm apes! m 


zappear 
e that shes a ery 


25 
T 


— pany 
gous 


ed with The high pe 
hg fs agg of bs land itself, 2 on vegetation |; 
one 


rarely cee 
is] Of th 


Cuapwick | 


by ire aiin it could never be sold for its “ pensive. Of the modes r yg 233 by pipe and 


more her To confine them m- 


92 ee 


versant with ene t 
7 distributing a top-dressing, 
ia 5 of est torn of stab 
ing of 15 loa iquid ma 
1 “ (applied sist by jet and a. but by 5 wiles 
art) ‘would cost between and 1 The 
Sfeddagiion of the expense ‘ot distribution ad pa 
«the an one-sixth of the nse any f 
“method would -give mit “important Randes i 
“ the application of manures on a large scale. 
“still further reductions might be e 
“ 1842 he had obtained. the results of some examina- 
“ tions made then as stated in evidenee 
“ that, with pipes cattiell into ‘the field, 5 properly 
$ arranged, o e man might w of 20 acres 


xpected. i 


now reported a 
“ pressure sufficient to produce a 5 to 
nd with an —— spreading the water 
“ like 0 ower, a m a boy could 1 an 
aE ‘acre of land in about 45 th The qua 
of liquid manure which they applied was Pott 16 
a ilies and be ground was generally watered three 
e times. 
No — 11 the right principle of applying the 
sewage is that whic Mr. Cua 2 10K recommends. 


the cost of conveyance ; we canno a net doubt 
that he must have satisfied himself upon that point 
be fote” bringing the project forward officially, and 
we shall look with we interest to the explanations 
on that head which he promises hereafte 

If the is car ried s out, the im ee in the 
1 of much of che gro und near London, 

when drained, will be incalculable. We are not dis- 
sed even to ‘question the estimate made upon this 
who believe that some land may 


ome in mind, that this 


3 Tti is, the fore, a question 

i rable that 

s to relievi 

their districts of a terrible nuisance, even 

a vg obliged to sell it at a loss, which is not 
roba 


A sunny day, cloudless and cool, enabled 8839 

visitors frou among the higher classes of the London 
world, to witness ¿ and enjoy the pa ECOND 3 
t 


or 
e ney and delicate 
characteristic of early ve 1 of 
ododendrons in 3 tents filled wi 
less profusion of the 
together with a crow 
nome 203 appy faces, 
sgn tome witnessed in these gardens, a 


e Exhibition, a st report will -be found dat 
The circumstances which struck us 


AL 


4 


Ha 


manures x 
“the town, and of distribution afterwards; 


. 4 redaction of the — of the removal wed of the 
must dep 


tion of | gr 
nse of removal out of 


as most: satisfacto were “the es iety which 
oa eB into t collections, cm 


an 
vators, and the ere 
health of species which, 20 } 
almost -uncultiva by pm 


years ago, o, were sre out 


Engine 


z «the demand which might ar 
and Mr. C, Jou 


„ should be known 
18 as 


cc 


present insu 
“conve eer 
T applicati 
direct sso St to 
offi , Donatpson stated 


of the com 
il that the 3 quantity supplied was 110 tuns 
“per acre, and t 


sen time Mn, one hour 
e cost of lab 
E its a 


ication 


Pe 


ee 
$ 
“ respects they must tie 8 by the direction of ei 
Lo on | È 
ild 


vate 
largoniums, in a new and better] — — 


fu ae maintained their . 
gained one 


— 
A 


engin les 
respect, howev the cost of | stain 
er U ibution on the field, he would 
kad — of trial works by the | w 


our in | mani 
as 18. 14, and — so of pump-|t 


ere, exclneive it 


“ing _ „making ajelis Is. 3 
“of the cost of its conveya veyance | 
“ was 2 present by barges, ne ce e ex- 


F. SLADE 


372 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [June 16 


brown, pone 000 with 2 Was brought by Mr. rinni era varieties which might be introduced or bea or By A . r 
igre” gargad eere grka li| Fig. 2 represents a porti ; 
f ears cultivated extra double Ranunculi ig.2 rep portion of the 
At the next on t the lth of July, p 4 e with my own hands. Some gardeners | the same scale as the plan), which shone Sra fy 
Vision ve be made for the exhibition of fruit, , which |an e roots every year, as soon as the leaves in the front and back walis, and tom N 
is then ted in considerable quantity, and wil — faded, aiino the flowering is over. Others 22 roofs, The span of the pediments is 6 fest irw 
123 rm the great feature of the day. We take them up every alternate year. That was my cus- | to centre, and the rise forms an angle of 2249 5 
venture Ae request the particula perms e those | tom — pais ears, gos mea Hyaci I. teieni their paag 5 3 5 are 2 feet 3 * 
who o intend to enter into competition on that occa- | character with tolerable pe ut having subs 00 inches in the clear, and are 
zion, to the rules which are advertised in another quently neglected this daat pe followed the more | centres, on the pivot and socket principle, — 
column. These rules have been carefully made with | usual course of taking them up every year, they soon | communicating with the ventilators in the — 
reference to the true interests of exhibitors, and will | degenerated into single ones. are 2 feet 9 inches long, by 1 foot in 
not be departed from upon any pretence. It would] Let not amateurs rejoice at seeing their Roses show] Fig. 3 is a transverse section of the house in wig 
if all were to deliver their fruit | symptoms of producing some proliferousness. If they | are shown the tanks, pipes, pathway, in, and 
Mina A yg ibiti vel] | suffered so to do, they will perish, or at any rate that are vacuity for ventilaticn, in th ad the 
fi he Exhibition, as well | sufere „they p , ny r: The 
by noon on the day be ore the E 1 i for the part of the bush which i ected will be much | wall is 3 feet high to the top of the plating : kr 
2 1 . . x injured by it. The gardener should therefore be care- | angle of the rafter is 32° to the i 
ed to é 


80. 
* 
„ again opened to the visitors in July, > 7 
will add greatly to the interest of the scen of vicissitudes in the seasons, every pr a 22 5 85 lators in the back wall is as follows: in bay 
5 be taken to eber, the plants te too h from roof there is a ventilator, raking at the top 
DISEASES OF pS ta them. Thus in proliferousness some of — rer buds the pediments, and about 2 feet 9 inches wi 
should be taken off, and some of the branches bent back, | feet in height. These ventilators, or openi 
ny ity i ack al fo 


v. Pes eee th that is, excess in 0 

Paris deere eee calyx ; a single species. — 5 thx: Ore ‘eection), “aha A 

calyx sometimes produces a num mber of leaflets forming) DESCRIPTION OF THE MELON-HOUSE AT openings shown ti the DA pies Tha venta 

a series of i ttle calyces, an is tself oce. casi onally de- CH HATSWO RTH. E sinters 3 sina Gade to slide oad ian 
balanced 


ly occurs i pcm which 2 a double calyx, espe- to 
cially where the outer calyx is in fact a collection of f pits 
bracts. The variety of Joey is well Known, spicam fru- |°! Pits an 
menti referens, described and figured e * E phawe- f x : k ll ke 8 10 7 : 
ature Curioso: ront pits and front wall there is a vacuity of wi seen by the section e tank at the bak 
3 a rf t 2 e year 715. pr inches, also to admit the free circulation of air from rt of in fa 
pdeng K oe ale of 3 i: hada ant peed of luxurious | the ventilators shown in the front wall, and to make pis is in 525 r “sa pe pipes from the top of the 
shoots which bo re at their extremity nothing but a long room for the hot-water pipes, shown in the section. | boiler may escend from the back tank, pass under the 


ive ca YX, 


? 


ben ee it a resemblance of an ear of corn | Wil 
This variety was 


ha it 

would induce me to conclude that it was originally | br! s = $ . 

Se: ; built against a garden wall, 1 foot 10} inches thick. | face, gerne a small space between the surface and 

a So, Winta The front and 1 are built of 9 hich brick, and | tank co nit Magazine of Gardening and 

Gr re of th she Diseases Belonging to. the five preceding the pit walls of 43-inch brick on bed, plastered, with a | Botany, po June 
ject of 


MA 
E ~ 


asa n and an 2 to his art. 


Z ING) 


SY 


Kg 9 


rr First he must remem- Fig. 2. Fig. 4. 
that plants which present these Y if 


anm WUN Num AN O pame 
WÀ O A 
A i 


splendid eriam aag their existence some ti 
the o rse of the life they would have 
run.* He must in ope next place call to mind the 
need he may be in of procuring seeds of a plant he 
wise v or 


A 


* 
cannot otherwise p If, moreover, his trad a 
his pleasure make it i double We 
flowers, for instance, he may, even then, derive fı i 
these pages hints which may hi j 
In as has mentioned, an over-rich soil i 2 Zp A 
is one of the primary causes of these aberrati It is — 
indeed very seldom that double or proliferous flowers N 
occur in a wild state. By carefully avoiding the appli- Nige s =e W 
cation of manures, the plants will generally resume \ W W W AN a 
gradually their natural appearance. Prolifications are E 
of themselves not constant, as far as hitherto observed, | Scuxx, 1 inch to 10 feet. 
d occur but in few plants. These also will cease 5 
put forth their a i ; working Mec AND SUBURBAN GARDENING. the plants are grou 
them is neglected, and they are deprived of that super. THE egree of beauty whic e amateur | stakes all over the beds and shad 
abundant nutriment which has probably been the cause —.— under considerable difficulties, can display in| piece of canvas. e moment the 
of such productions, his little flower-garden very frequently depends on the from his occupation in the afternoon, 
I am aware that no one wishes to deprive himself of | Success attending the planting out of his annuals and | have bee put on sho be em 
juble flowers; but if hie that should be the case, ht other decorative plants. The failures, the blanks, and | must be repeated for a few days, ge 
some ones of ind be placed amongst other disappointments hich mark his early progress, | planted plants shall have rooted in fil be 
them, and the former will soon be seen to assimilate | often n him, and occasionally drive him from | Should a dull or moist day occur, this 
themselves to the latter t Thus we see double Neapo- | his favourite pursuit, because he imagines that t they are | able opportunity of exposing 
Titan Violets gradually degenerate into single ones by difficulties beyond his control; and that only unlimited | weather. Before any attempt, 
the negligence of who allow the latter to means, presided over by reny professional gardeners, | move any plants which have been 
indiserimi i the 


The same chin The ee them. is is, however, not the case. they should have been previo 
ag A — a — a ae may be — mi suc- the full action of weath 
often happen where it is | cessful with the gent eman ener, pro harden them for the operation, an 
desired = e seeds 5 flowers mhere the e sesses a hand- glass eo or a small frame and a a Tittle. is given them for a week or so then t 
i ay obtain ee litter, which always abounds near large cities.| Such plants as Ve 2 hlox 
the same On the latter let him * his glass or frame, and in tunias, Heliotropes, Anagallis, an 
male organs are in flower, by gathering this way a great number of plants may be raised or pro- growing plants, should be pegged do 
and Aer them to the double or semi-double | pagated. Having accomplished this, the next difficulty | being planted, and others of 
flower in ion, This process, now common in some is to get them 5 with success to the various beds as Balsams and Lobelias, 
countries, has ee of late years the of and borders to be decorated. will require stakes 
Flora by many most beautiful productions; but with Not otbing i is 80 ee as to see newly moved plants, for if leſt to be blown about in 
ns it is very seldom practised, and we are thus deprived amera. a watered, languishing and dying. This happens | collar of the plant gets bruised before 
* This may be true in many cases, especially of proliterous in consequence of the her being in some aea i Aana strength, or has taken sufficient hold 
— ee produce double flowers, instead of | Unfavourable for tio oyid ion of transplanting. If the this means an i deal 
prolonged = 2 swam co ara lives rather — are moved gpm Seg se weather, arid this is ——— er mea ae 
ra oa ten iheir necessary, ne in the evening, an iances are limited. in 
pon e and ake the of of the d able ones 7 them be well Sab afterwards. On the Following difficulties of “ Amateur,” and others sin 
Place empty pots over each little patch, or if | stanced. Pharo. 5 


_THE GARDENERS’ 


5 


373 


and men seem 
. 


eet 


i 


emag 


the wee — applications to to the rier 
the disappointment of t 
wee, sometimes, 


more is 
sei ; an 


Hint 
1 


ayu 


1 


ee 


8 
E 


11 


H 


cd 


n do ts rules mus 
ill to — attended with the rer 
15 l is only acquired by experience. 


al 


* 
8 


ff 


11 


theory will do him little service. He will 
will not bear liquid manure, but 


may be applied to 
receive only 


3 himself ee st this subject, 
= — 
which h 


easu 
man who is becoming a gardener 
nil desperandum. No plot of ground 
can be considered an Utopia. To grow a 
— is an operation of ma ga $ 
ei ted 


4 


if he 
anagement, kee clearly the 
Ye Fefe of his pursuit are set before 


esponden 
Sou o 5 — —That Mr, T Mundell’s 
seth mbe is inco; 


wall nine 
"the n ines 
d well be planted, the: N 
ok the ground. e tree 
is some years older: — 
ted—so deep i 
it in a srg manner 
he present ti 


r the other | 
curl and basa some to such 
inj ost 


e 
ing i 
m a donti we to the colour a4 the old-fashioned pink 
S; magnes me- pap: 


e 
— gota ont the right 
th 


ired 
“Villa and Suburban Gardening ” = st | fo 


men, 5 to mee 


beer any one have the kindness to tell 
ody Ege 
hove 


again, will keep rom my experience of w 

ron tanks se ie 1 fear it will get to smell badly. 
Will charcoal or any other substance tank 
cistern tend to keep it sweet? Ca 
the result of his experience in any adira case ? 
Such information would be doing me the most essential 
kindness. C. R. D. 

The Hawthorn.—Although it — not uncommon for 
common cote to ee a pinkish 
s year 


aripa 


stono: Etoraoensi is, Doncaster 


treating Larch for arg: is as follows. Cut down 
July o roe ands e tree is full of — 
Entirely 5 if in runnin, 


e sawyers will 
ond the hing proof of the 
rving jui 


observe that your correspondent “ 
arrangement of flowers in 
ot thi e 


mass 

8 forward ma Py ucid argument, or very cogent 
reasons in suppor his predilection. has bee 

said, that “there is A accounting for tastes,” 


practices 1 1 which hav 
supported b of pro pnn 
without Aaii a ait ient r 
sofa “e 2 50 t, in which 15 colours are “ well 
l he i o tell your readers 
definitely Witt he aai the baki ideal of a 
oes he mean that they should 


explain what is to be 
ferent-coloured flowers ne disposed? 


3 * 


e are many fine places 
of water, and consequently 


rs and a picture, by which I pres 
Ar. | landscape painting. While I admit that the colours of 


rpet adies 


r = quarter of an 855 


eee 23. 
g Larch.—I\ believe "that. "the best mode E 
esca 


e been adopte 
d 3 and ability, 


“E.X.” da 
s, or on the other side li 


W., Jes 11 


ders ss — ale 
of the varieties of ae very much, especially Abies 
A. morinda, which we find it 
to fumigate several — . the summer. 
enz t a 


“J.H 

are we to sug 

for their destruction than the p 

oe 0 think the best rt would be t to Pee, a a kind of 
to throw over the tree 


What a deal of — 5 is Lg 
than a doze on "the 
morning of the 4th of Ji une, though it isa 83 
saying chat certain conditions of gs dhe = 
tion, i ave been 
ave the ee 3 
use of by men of intelligence on other subjects ; but in 
the 3 of cold N or swarms of visible insects, 
receiv 


the earth 

n throughout the 
als), looked 

moke, seen through 

a win 3 were of * 8 appearance 

— indians a of electricity. The 

temperature at 1 fe was 74° at half past 9 p.m thun- 

17 T and the therm 


and 2 in 


E 
8 


0 
der w was heard in the 


in 2 65°. Between the morning we had 
a very heavy th men, whieh lsesed OH @ pay 
I cannot 5 say whether there was hail or not, bu 
quantity of rain gaf ell was great for the ‘eae 2 
lasted. I have been on the t 
instead of being blighted vers appears 28 
greatly invigorated. Perha of your scientific 


to adopt colo 


m, and | n 


sho ald be governed by the same Apar og" of design as 
a well arranged flower garden, to the distribution of 
urs, 42 at a loss to trace the 
a landscape painting and a flowe 
Rept 


er paper upon 


a form 
ject, I endeavoured to expla ain in| m 


correspondents + will state whether deen 8 is in- 
jurio vegetation in What way it 
it. H. S. 


what way true variety is produce 
sequal PEA rity, "that it is a thing apart 
n Mr. Alison a en ays on Taste, 


from 


rmity and v ow as 

— * ebe; and convenience 
e not less objects ood taste than pictu 
” 


I think 


res 
further and more potent arg 
| authority, I res x giad “ to live and learn,” and to 
join triumphan shout of iş 
| tra ir axioms is by s means estab 
| Henr reer | Nuneha 
ma od Glas s 2 be cheaply imitated, and tb 
ieee a the sun’s, rays y insured, 
means of glaziers’ putty. Taking a a lump of weli- 
ere A ogg he oor gently dabbing it against the glass, 
l- be resembling 1 


ear. 


g Rhubarb.—Cut it into pieces about 


*| effect : ” and as ear and not eT a > Ma: 


bet 
by the 


u not require renewal | Pavet 
ust be done when the ee 3 


d inch ince — peeled (which spoils all good things aes 


paring my weather table with 
the one kept at Chiswick for last week, I find a differ- 
an sagged n of a low tem- 


perature at ave had during the 


season, 
week, I am sure g not " s uninteresting to 2 re, 
Win 


On 3 

stood at 43° 5 

å had 1.01 inches 
Inst. T. L. C., Assington, Suffolk, June 14. 


Sorieties, 
CULTURAL, June 9 (GARDEN EXHIBITION.) — 
or some account of sis kaiia features of this 
rdening skill we canis refer our 
ther 


wi 


bush of —— coronaria, a pogen riera 


THE — 


CHRONIC 


LE. 


- 
374 
bloomed and luxuriant Pimelea sema well- 
and 


managed specimens of Cle elias splenden 
Dipladenia ep the Jatter be get 88 than 17 


tivated plan h 
Mr. Cole’s alete which o w 
aps 3 the best of which 
rpurea macrantha, also Pimelea 
Clerodendron 


remandra th la 


aai of 15 2 8 arg PLANTS were 
was produced by Mr. Green, gr. 
It contained a or ee 


o C. arne 
| third, produced the clas is yén 
A. 


r, Esq., who was 
fine 


Mr. Williams, gr. 
ides m, in 

maculosum, insufficiently in bloom ; 

ichi auch | 


so 

a splendid Dendrobium Wallichianum; the muc 
mired Saccolabium guttatum ; the better 
varieties of Cattleya Mossiæ; Lælia majalis; with two 
the vera- 


; nthe v 
ces; Brassia verrucosa 
major, the pretty Oncidium divaricatum, and ot 
Oneids.— Mr. Rae, gr. to J. J. Blandy, Esq., se 
among other things Aerides maculosum, a small ae 
ociabhim premorsum, Dendrobi Devon nianum, Ca- 

anthe ver atria, a 
rye olabium gut 
ood Phaius Wallichii “Vanda R 
Cattleya Mossiæ.—A fifth 
Messrs. Loddiges, of Hackne 
was a utiful Brazilian 
ain 


n 
oxburghii, eg a small 
d was pro 
2 


Catt 


d Comparettia falata, ee 
m,Dalhonsian num, the c 


ro 
2 
Azalea Minerva, and two o gene Sh 


tion ; the by variety of Aphelexis purpure g mrs | 


Rondeletia 


SUILOW Ie 


wo ne = n — 


ha down, but in thi 
t pright po sition, phage 
moscha 3 


H. ee Bourbon: Belle 
ong Am 


BRE ay 


— 
ae 


a large ——— ele 
coccinea, tricolor, Lee H — 
Mr. Ger ate 


flora, delecta, fl orida ( 

blossomed Cavendish ii, and a 
“alin; — 
saya 


PY 


super $ 
8 


estphal 
Collectio — of 9 CAPE 


a, 
ith cae a nice variety of ventricosa 


Caren, ve 


a ‘he tuleeflor ü 
8, e me 
— — | 


llisson. sent well-managed sole of. ven 
mall 


HEaTHs. were 


ramidal 
roduced 3 


lants ciety — cubica minor, 
tricosa, slobo tricolor elegans, a pretty 2 


4 9 


Paul Per: 

i : Louis Buona- 
2 eri piuk ; 
Vibert pasè it B 5 ee 

n N ] ar | uvier, cherry | 

iy Coupe d'Heébé, pink changing to silvery ei 
tea Franeis clean looking, specimens 

— = = Blairii,, No. 2; Flora. M‘Ivor; | 


ustrian Briar : 


—" China: 
"ea: Devoniensis, 


id Perpetual: Madame Laffay, Mrs. ing about as 
Abbé 


gr. to the 
8 


praamid — were Ming ta tam 


tion was contribut to wa. by Un. 
Farmer, Esq. This somewhat irregular. group co Mens a 0 Lawrence, Mr. Cole, Mr. May, gr. to E. ark, 
r of Ste otis floribunda, Clero- | macrantha, with two open flowers; and Saccolabium » Mr. Taylor, Mr. Ros an ; 
dend mpferi, a fine Allamanda cathartica, three | guttatum. Mr. Dobson’s 10 plants, which were in slate | Lawrence had a fine plant of the om 
varieties. of Azalea, a beautiful Epacris ta, pots, consiste Barkeria spectabilis ; Cattleya red-flowered E. Be „ two. large specimens d 
Mussænda: frondosa, covered with large white floral | Mossize ; a beautiful Aerides 9 e violet and | vestita coccinea, perspicua nana, ventricosa pregua 
es and small yellow bl s; Leschenaultia | brown-flowered aa ndr ou beg: eum; a noble plant and Cavendishii. Mr. Cole sent specimens of 
formosa, Polygala oppositifolia, Franeiscea acuminata, of the large va of Maes 3 „a mas =o splendens, eximia, tricolor rubra, and 
and a neat plant not more than 18 inches high of Ixora | yellow ee ~ tes oth 9 ide 8, and Phaleenopsis r. May had vestita coccinea, 
coccinea, ing l ge heads of scarlet flowers,— | amabilis.. Mrs. Lawrence’s lan 3 4 5 were all small, a distinet looking s flamm 
The Nurserymen who exhibited in this class we ere Saccolabium Blumei, a beautiful species; two | pressa,- and at ni. Mr. Taylor sent Bere 
Messrs, Pamplin, Pawley, endinning, to whom plants of Aerides sine. 8 Cattleyas, Phaleenopsis giana, translucens, retorta major, We 
prizes were awarded in the order in which the names | amabilis and grandi Burlin gtonia candida. | elegans, and pulve lenta, e 
8 Amo r. Pamplin's plants were Stephanotis Mr. * had a aie. g same pur rene asic te vestita coccinea, hybrid and odora rose ; and. Me, 
fioribunda, two Vincas, Coleone m, Dillwynia 5 the — ng 85 ecolabiu 2 d lata tricolor, 
ata, on ventricosa super d others: neidium yg pesa Aer Larpentæ, mres and its varieties, Wilsoni Leeana, and a. lange. 
Pawleys m plants were Aphelexis. pur- — aag hasi deen bin bicolor, pies a Cavendishii. Of 3 Lawrence 
Nr. 6 ee i and Stephanotis floribunda, In variety r Cattleya Mos produced a beautiful vestita coccinea.. Mr. May, gr. 
Glendiunin ing’s group was BARG plant of the pretty Collections of 6 OR cis were contributed b E. Goodheart, Esq., a capitally, grown and 
Fuchsia - like cage flori 1 so Erica splendens, Kingho: errie, gr. to Sir John Cathcart, ear „| ventricosa alba. Mr: Malyon, v. superba; and Mn 
avendishii, and other p together with an On- and Mr. Jack. Mr. Kin nis plants were Saccola- Epps, of: Maidstone, a capital 
cidium, the * 3 mall Pimelea Hen- | bium guttatum, Phalænopsis amabilis, a Stauh 7 and 81 ig E Spec E — The best were a, splendid: 
Azalea ee, Wo Wee b r. Bruc e as a single speci- | Aphelexis purpurea, m Mr. Cole; n 
EN LANTS were men, Onci: pe exuosum ll 1 bl : :Messrs. Veiteh; 
by I, Mr. Kinghorn, gr to Lord Kilmorey, | soms, and Messrs. Frazer, Cat 8 age an Mr. Mylam ya 3 8 — = i old Echium 
B. Miller, Esq.,| had a new Odontogl ossum, with a tall br 3 e ee of | fruticosum, f 1. n, gr. to the Duchess. 
5 wel. ee ye pa — ad bal blossoms with iam en-tipped Pamase f berl ‘ : 5 verteiluan 
j 3 — "i alænopsis rosea, ra t essrs, Veitch 
. Malyon, gr. to T.B = — — = but not striking. Mr. Plant bal an Aer idbs phasis: eat a 2 — it — Hes of Pine 
Berens „of not new. urea 
; le- 3 grandifiors, 
Some Pie clea 1 on 8 of tall Cacti. were exhibited, one suey E _ 2 men — Larrenm 
endishii, Te- by Mr. Green, the other Mr. Faleoner, gr. to A. sent a la Sollya linearis; Mr. Epacrs d 
4 Mielas i 5 — = : 2 ; Sq-5 0 22 These consisted for the most miniata; — — ra is humilis and the mÈ 
arge nts, i i i ia: Rollisson, 
us 2 ſorming a lit Mr. Green w, an Epiphyllum T 2 a — isl iflora; Mr. Malyon, Aphe 
depressa, Pimelea 5 feet high; a Cereus 8 a „Similar . lexis ie hamihs; Na. U ay beautiful Pimelea a 
nilis, — —.— jakais, hu- Epiphyllum rubrum uleum, a i; Mr. Me y;, ditto ; 5 Kempster, P. dees, 
humilis’ and purp: 8 el 8 teen i wa pte Mr. Jack, Cyrtoeeras reflexum; Mr. rese 
Humeana, Polygala acuminata, and Erica. Cavendishii. old s asy a large ; A Falco sa ner, variety than: th ‘the 3 3 
Mr. Jack contributed. t Everlastings, Erica tricolor, | an 9 pale variety; C. W eraaas ee e . ong nae 1 e 
a enap sa finely flowered Cereus speciosissi us, a Epiphyllum Jenkinso ‘ : — Pog = 1 p stalk flo 
bushy. Clerodendron Ix croca } acran pre tty rosy p 
. Malyon, came. the cil 1 ache = . nie en showed a.c 3 of Azarkas; but their 25 green leaves, from Pata gonia, 
flow over. They had evidently suffered, from also Lisianthus t 
ulitia, ea Cavendis lue Lesche- the the bright v weather: ews. 2 had in the early part of | 5 witha a few. 
tricolor. Mr. 7 — 3 esa flowers at: its: tip. 
mantis, a, Vives, Clea ere again exhibited in tolerable ating | flowered ai of P 
kite Aunia tee — oe ed Aph nanum, a my, a lange > | notwithstanding the 2 ura eu Pap l A Mr. Jack. the. whi 
and aama paini perspicua plants, which i k 70 e atep ese i sic ey car ntly = adde 
ine as were the different 5 ; yy bre ss in flower. In. : 
tise in ie Mig, the, plants produced on the presen 2 e rang 2 5 feet high, and 2 feet vide; were sg krmi the judges ſor p: 
They far surpassed them, number foim — * Bourbon ram rs ebe 4 feet ree fest eh | le a 3 
i i 8. hi 
them, and eri d „ th h Teng 10 ins, wide; Great Western, 2 feet 10 | Hagel, ‘som Me, 8 a 2 were! 
doa GP thier aih y always 5 e chief attrac- | high, and 3 feet wide; „2 fee 5 * 7 i 
bition. Mylam’s plants were de- | 2 feet 6 ins. wide; Paul 3 4 feet high, and 2 3 feet. 
: were some match. | 6 ins. wi ge f Queen, 5 feet 10 ins 
tion ; his Saccolabium | high, and. Abed 6 ius. wide. Bourbon: Toi de la 
a „ as w. Malmaison, 3 f igh, and 3 feet.4 i 
e _— — : ina: Abbé Mi 6 ins. high, and 3 feet 
; nguloa 2 ins. wide; Fabvier, gb, and 2 feet 9 i de: collection 0 
zæ brown spotted yellow | Prinee C . ˙ A | Ste at ed ey 
t 6 — 
ae ee e — 3 Ginehes, wide. | c cifolium punctatum and album, Mr. 
—Hybrid China: Madame. Plantier, pure other from Mr. 
white; Belle Marie, rose; Blairii, 2, Th 8 6. Beck, the other fi Mr. 
pink edges. Hybrid B rions Ravage t gg ‘Pritchard een of A 
$ ine; Duchess ae 


b; 3, Mr. n 

and Rosette for Pericles, Norah, Miss Holford, 

Pearl, and Chim borazo. Six varieties, 
1, Mr. Par 


to J. Saunder „Es — 2 Sta — for 


N s, Rosamun 
Centurion „Mr. Gaines, of Battersea 


ib 
and 

— Dako of dlz bees, Forget. me- not, 
Salamander, and Mar 


an. Six varieties in 


f Mr. aes Trentham — wenn were con- hibitors; persons are to be seen mo 5 * out in all 

tribut ed by The is an oblong, — with choice specimens under and 

- | yellow fruit, stated to we “of reren quali ty. |a multitude of gardeners, not exhibit aba Salki be 
| id he diff t pl 

3 Sopek Japon FLORICULTURAL.—The third 8 * eee ii that tiny ps 2 

ting for the took place in tue Surrey oe ane e and keep out of the exhibitors’ way, It 


i ES Gardens on = Tai st. The exhibition w. a | ig 


TOE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. : 375 


teresting sight to watch how all the con- 
good one, as far as stove and greenhouse plants, Heaths, 4 fo fasion e bay ar, Nee assumes the most admirable 


* er, Roehampton, for the latter, indeed, were numerous and eee ; 2 salad that the smallest difficulty exists. Each ex- 

* Sir — Peel, Orion, A- paige “aba i orists’ flower show, it was a failure hibitor, as he gets his collection arranged, goes to a 

M argaretta Cock, for e wing to the un avourableness of ns season, only one place appropriated to this purpose, where several clerks, 
Hebe's Lip j once, mot, and Sylvia; ar two stands o s were produced, and these not of in answer to his application, supply him with cards 


first-rate 1 The best 2 of the latter whieh the necessary letters are written, with which 
I 


came from Messrs. Norman and s, In Mr. Nor- returns to the tent, where a wh orms this 
man’s stand were Beauty of Bath, ‘Captai n Tysson, duty tacks them down upon the stage in front of his col- 
Hodge’s Mellona, Jenny Lin ardst er 's Albert, | lection, It is to be remembered that all the plants are 
Reubens, King of Purples, Elise dher Be vid, <= secured for travelling safely, and consequently that, as 
Turner’s rage Sa egg’s Prince y are ged, all extra supports have to be ree 


the arranged, all 
8 Mr. Ellis had Beauty of Bath, Bells s Benjamin, moved’: cotton-wool 
niels e pén. King of N r Mary, Wi 2 oved ; cotton-wool, &e., that has been 41 to pre- 


7 
5 
ct 

— 
2 
i 
oe 
© 
2 
© 
á 
®© 

a 
— 
— 
® 
— 
* 
d 
D 
— 


Talisman, r. — 7 r Cru Star, mer's rr’s Harriett, Win Rival, | away, and everything that detracts from their beau 
l, c 0 8 z d Cassandra ; 2 Ar. olmes’s Consnation, Hodge’s Mellona, Bells Henry, The litter bites, in dein th pt up and 3 
‘or Milo, Negress, Miss Holford, Orion, Xarifa, and Jones’s Huntsman Nice stands of Ranunculuses | py persons appointed to the service ; and the exhibitor, 
Dake of Corn aney varieties: 1, Mr _ | Were communicated by Messrs. Keynes and Betterid e. | after arranging all 72 Taste ing a look to see 
‘ot ess, Anaias, Jenny Lind, | Among the blooms of the former were Henrietta, Cale- | all is oes in search of ‘the Doctor. 
alle. Afrique, Queen Victo and Defiance; donia, Dion, Pri 0 , Delicata, Reliance, Or- Professor Lindl ey, Vice- Secretary P t 
Mr, Gaines, for tatuiski, Lady pheus, Lord Eldon, Invineible, Hampden, Belmont, cultural Society, i a n ground, and, mo 
: Pole, Man of War, Anti sant FY; Harold, Ellen, 3 pr in all directions, sees that everything is going on 
i diffi. 


‘and bicolor; 2, Mr. Barker, for- tricolor, 
ö i i „aud ardens; 


Seaton. 
— Boautifal exhibitions of these in- | Fuchsia name 


in some instanees hardly suffi- 


2 j bl 
mes of his seedling varieties named Vasant, En. 
et, Emerald, Arbitrator, Pleaser, Delectus 
ibitor, Deedalion, and Edwin; Lightbody’s | 


Some of them were remarka ble ies size, others for 
ofeolour ; of the former description may be 
Beck's — Domo, and of the latter 

one range and Beck's Rosa. 8 
is 8 tnd Somer of 18 1 and ong ee s Maggi 
fomi one of the best of 1848 shown; but we need 


on this portion of the exhibition — 


—— he acecordin 
amg Stow at Upton Park, —— will be duly re- 
à pe to decide the merits = seedlings: a 

m The beat Calceolari 


seedling were. Bar 
g shown by Mr; Gaines, a dark seattle d — 
pee colour, and a lively one by Mr. Henderson, 


named“ Enchantress” and “ Prince of 


again shown, and was considere 
2 215 aibe Medal 3 Z 2 


8 
A 0 H. B 
(spotted 8 cone 2 reniforme, | 2 


elle tor, Patriot t, aud Captivation. Stove and Greenhouse properly; be is also 255 hand to refer to in cases of di 


lants. were ree ed by Messrs, Cole, Bruce, Young ulty respecting the arrangement of plants. As the day 
Mess 


c 
“ae Hook, and Pawl Cape Heaths by dene a Serke takes a place where he is readily 
Fairbairn, Bruce, and Cole ; ; Orchids by Mr. Beck and found, The exhibitor goes to him and asks for tickets: 


Mr. Bruce; and Roses in pots by Mr, Francis, of these are of two kinds,—the one for breakfast, the other 
e ayh 


] e ek. Regular and w 
ibi ga ee 2 Gaines, n hibitors are ne with both forthwith ; * others the 


portani 

(fancy) ; to Mr, Ambrose, for “ Donna Inez; and to tickets are not granted. 4 m ime all iani > plants are 
op, | Mr Hine, for “Striata coccinea’ 9 8 a Mr. | arranged, it is full half-p: and 

ur a * ro and for a sweeping out all the tents hile in i together 

'uchsi 4 Pale a large bold Sawai, with and 3 13 and Be eather ering oh. eee 1 
violet corolla and bright crimson calyx ; and — r. have had a look at the general Siete of the wholes it 
Gaines for a Calceolaria named “Ne Plus Ultra.” Mr. | is 10 Oclock, and a body of policemen, commencing 
pe ag! also. showed the seedling Pansy “Mrs. Beck, the further extremity, courteously say as much, request- 

a Pink named “ Forget-me-not. ing everybody to leave the grounds; and scarcely have 


Miscellaneo . ano rection erfor 
Horticultural Society’s Exhibit: If there is| But we will go outwith the party with which ween A 
ne — of these great exhibitions s that is more | an in doing so, outside the g within the 


e r 
e bad effectsof the contrary gratiae at country shows.: | book, and then take their place at a long table, where 
subjects admitted after the hour had pas sed for their they are at once maea Ta 7 or coffee and cold 
reception; tents not — of ‘exhibitors at the time | provisions, all of the very best quality, and in great 
appointed ; and everything thr into disorder, pozad abundance. The floo —— is pro 3 with Pan 
want of carrying out, at every ty the printed laws for | soap, towels, and all “the other a nts for 
their regulation. If the committees: would but act firmly chan anging A working face, han * ee T a holi 


n every case; those exhibitors who, from indolence or day su we believe w sense of the 

neglect, were properly excluded, would be more careful whole 33 of 75 exhibitors at Chiswick gina we 885, 

for the future, and would make: their arrangements | that this part of the Society’s arrangements is valued in 
i ut to our immedi ipti common de having very greatl 


y. B te work,—a deseription | no e gree, as 
of the pr . hed the Chiswick exhibition, The their comfort and enjoyme 
’s Chiswick | si e have also 


Gardens are he Duke of Devonshire’s sions, W pleasure in stating, that we 
estate, and ¢ mg t of 33 acres; the portion occupied by | understand the Council 1 entirely satisfied with the 

the exhibition, and laid down in Grass, planted with an | results of this arrangement, Let us not forget to record 

extensive variety of plants and shrubs, is about 9 acres. that many of those 5 5 — this refreshment have been 


t| Lo the Garden there are three entrances ga principal | travelling all night, after a cds hard day’s work, 
T 


one from the carriage-road, leading from Turnham pa acking and preparing 5 ; ind 8 me are come as far 
4 ion ; ther from off the | as 2 ours 
f| Green to the Duke's mansion rae er B * agin 7 Florist, a 8 


d and a third, the carter’s entrance, by which alone all reine * June. 
j i i we 


the objects for exhibition are received. As en — — 4 
-apples, | the, Council-room, we pass the great consery: atory, as Calendar of Operations. 
bes lohan {ibs kozy lb * — in the right of the woodeut (vol. i. p. 180), (For the ensuing week.) 
4 Ibe oe 3 OZ., an reach a — 173 feet long, and 33 feet wide; PLANT DEPARTMENT. : 55 
3 Ibs. 12 125 0 — * in vai to Pe len of that another is erected, * 2 long and In addition to = 2 ary routine of watering, 
r. Davis, of Oak Hill, for fine 3 wide; 3. aud immedia at the of this is | syringing, and giv it a point to enforce 
Noblesse Peaches, Silver s the iron tent, 100 fest long — thoro ough cleanliness in pag e peg and amongst the 
- Bersted Lodge, Sussex wide, runnin a part of its length, and then | plants. Nothing conduces more to a d p 
* Dit : to Mr. vide, rinni atk a, pg ae 25 fee tradis, for the ex- a the machinery than. negleet of this point. The p 
Herbert, Esq., Clapham, for well- | hibition of the large.co collections of mi pal operations will be tying and cleaving. In tying or 
Grapes, Silver Banksian to | At: right angles with this is the ere, tent, 75 feet —— ene avoid formality 5 study in your “ mind’s 
— E. Bedwell, Esq., WN Pan long, and 25 feet wide. All of them are divided down | eye” the form or habit which the plants would assume 
amburgh G Ditto. to 1 middle high partition to eal in their wild state, and our train be directed to 
is of Abercorn, for a dish of — e suitable back for the plants arranged on either side. | assist Nature by giving suppor and symmetry of shape; 
g fruit, to which no prizes were usual tim being at the plod aes ut ee instance, the Passionflower e shows Paes: to 
ited ; ueen e-apple, | 6 clock A. M., a e ente t such 
one o from Mr. j BES ro From the different roads leading on ee Green, | graceful festoons from the roof of a lofty conservatoryy 
3 pay 3 lbs. 10 oz., from Sir John | of various constructions, with as various coverings, are for 2 . A aie 4 — 5 
g- P Prince” seen wending their way to the general rendezvous. | plant. The towerin 1 ay be 
— p, whi — Pines Each are as he enters, signs a declaration of what retarded by pinching. off the earliest flowers, thereby 
ileox, E n the Earl of Stam- | he is intending to exhibit, and in what class ; and until hashandine:t angi strength and inducing them to make — 
Min the pardon. tated to have been | he does ae 72 productions gre epon or allowed è to a longer- sea h — * priis: ia 2 same result may 
— considered —.— , Rochdale, Lan- to the of unloading. e a be eean q 
enter ah Mr, T to be between i i was _— — — ſor a ee 3 bi eyi A a 1 8 y SHRU 
des can B ir himse in wi stren $ 938 Pi 85 
came f ane vile fair ; and of Elruge Necta- er 8 the lists accordingly. We will, e. afford full occupation just now lag a 
— Dutch Sweetwa N leave the van takii foo rou advantage eae taken of the 
oan from Mr. Davis, and part of the gardens containing the glass erections, we go 
i im e Muscadine, and Muscat | reach the tents. Here are to be seen plants standing 
| al in all directions; gardeners busy arranging them 
in out by one of the Society’s o 


p . a — 
pointed to this duty; labourers with hand-barrows, Dahlias, Del 
les | carrying the. contents of the vaus to the different ex- ex- | plants, must no 


. 


kd 
376 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. (June 10 
2, Iris variegata 3, Iris i ’ 
neatly tied up; by this is not meant bundling up like so This poinis out another advantage of mea gS over Grass 4 ata; 3, Iris sambucina; t, F 
many faggots, but tying in such a manner as to sup- w, as the latter materials form harbours for rey wait for Pan agg we til ane the — 
rt the shoots without Rr ate them of light and air. | insects, without affording the means of pan at them. | Qax-ap : 4 Sub. This may not 125 a 
1 tying the Hollyhock, it is mon practice to bind gree —̃— fruit of the tree; it is a diseased — OF the the natong 
up six or eight shoots to one stake, in hich e the State of the Weather near London, for the week ending June 14, 1849, pont. x the leaf. buds, and is caused — 
flowers are nearly concealed 8 but if the — .. cram . — : H W: Itis the perennial on 
stronges st shoots 0 p lant are selec and tied to Moon's | BAzomerer. | THERMOMETER. wala of our correspondents for bedding, T recommenda yy, 
separate stakes, sufficiently distinct. to 7 light and] une. Age. Mar T II- Max. Min. Mean = me geet hg’ 1 1 * DAR, The reprint is 
ES EELS eee . arties 
air, the flowers are seen to advantage, and have a truly Friday.. $| 18 || 20950 e || oe | a2 | sin || NE. || 00 tribution among thelr to e § to ia ona | 
app 10 19 29.918 29.792 65 | 43 |540 N-E. = of 25 copies for 
29. : 51.0 || N.E. i À 
NERI Con fin x ry ecb ae be few Tari of different Monday” J i 32 235 2923 || sr | ao | ase || New. 0 os pees BB Bey are, attacked to it cones 
‘at 22 y 29.923 3.5 . e *. and had bett 
= : Wea. “ne 30.118 | 29.92 6. 34 | 50.5 || N.E. -0 moved. All 
aa as Pee a te oth for moving roche en CORTES Roe. gp i73 | ao:i || 72 | 40 886 NE. D very eu Hoty but well & care 8 * 2 
— * * i nni ty 1 ren es D ó * Average... || 29.9594 29.973 || 615 | 39.7 | 562.1 0.01 beten en FT a dew, "F 
t ‘ e following are 
2 J ae, t throughout. 
allow too many main on the larger plants, | e S- pine pur cold: fue; clear at night, odes Mig’: 4 Gronec ae ez 1 in rather her alates 
for they injure each other’s progress and the swellin —  10—Overcast ; lear at night. lotte;3 Malta, S Neb ee ae 
f the fruit; three should be left on an CCC F 3 Bellegarde, 2 e 
of the fruit; n or n three sd — 12-Fine; 0 — ast. Czome situations. Admirable. Nectarines : 2 Violette Hative, 2 u 
plant. Gills should always be removed from the fruit — iin: el pea * cog mnt old at night; frosty in| maston Orange, 1 Balgowan. Elrage, 1 fr 
as soon as they can be detected, but ny ac Mean temperature of the week, 9 deg. below the average. Eas: F Z. To preserve green Peas for winter 
ba’ bo mutilat If Pines be dried in a coo n, and hung up in p shoni 
X COTR 85 wii ff ts f * State of the Weather at Chiswick during the last 23 years, for the PELARGONIUM LEAVES : Sub 1 are unable to sa s 
abundantly supplied with air in conjunction with heat ensuing week, ending June 23, 1849 matter with them. T 1920 k as if the been w 
the fruit will swell with moderate sized tops; the! 8 It is not usual to syringe the plants before the ear 
cabbage crowns are produced by a close damp atm 528 S24 38 | yenin | Greatest nt teenies 3 * will be gained by cuttin, g them down betas 
a 2 a À : 
here. VINER -— Late rop quire partial dom EE 2855 =e sae I Hain E Anne AND AZALEAS: Susan. They should 
a tention in tying and thinning ; syringing should <n | < Al | (er |e 3 in spring. 22 * 
reg: nasil with others which are nearly half swelled. Funda 7 2 Roses: A Lady A C. Roses get 
. yu 74.0 51.6 2.8 14 0.86 in. 1| 4| 2}—| 5| 6} 3| 2 this deformed staty 
the Grapes are quit t should b Mon. B 171 = as — 947 3 2 2 2 3 48 2 sy apa expecially Aud prt Sg are sadden and excessire hei 
shaded from strong sunshine, in order to prevent the Wed. 20| 73-4 | 513 82 10 oa fi 5 111% 1| hereafter, E. — Caleta 
from shrivelling ; or, sake of the Vine, they | priday 2 73.2 | 493 | 612] n 2 12 2 i 201 5 7 9 us a is often g Tobacco, if hem cured, will dy ke 
may t off with a small portion of the old spur, the | Satur. 23 7.0 | 49.9 | 61.4 6 0.44 CCC of Bag ph fk The cheap 
i 1 1 R 1 ý — 
rath 75 a eget be ante up, to re evaporation ;| _! occarred on the 19th and y Rtubarb le leaves, Dock! . — Sat ete y 3 * Mixture g 
en nded in an iry room. : ce INE Leaves: F G H. They are not di T 2 
MELONS — Keep d tt heat of from 80° to small, pale gre en excres ee fes pie — 
85°, and let the operation of g be very carefully iph alia nea to aa ondents wi by growing them in a ng close atmosphere, They dp 
` : P GUS has various names, as tian, 
ormed. If the plants are orly intended to produce Jerusalem, and Buda Kale It is a winter vegetabl ie, and Wares fo :A 3 WF, Nymphwa alba, white; N, I. 
one crop, y shoul ver watered after the fruit should be planted out in July and August, the second planta- mian ; N. cerulea, n bie and Villarsi arsia nymphoides, 
is fairly swelled, as the flavour by that means will tion being neceseary only yellow. Pi iant "the above in the water, and in Summer place 
very inferior, Do not allow the ares rature to get too . treatment should be the same as that for winter Greens. latter Ta your patent i dn dae vodia iN E 
2 e cannot recommend dea sta 
cold at night — Water freely those which have | Beans: J z M. The leaves a A r to be attacked in the same | Mise e have only one of the Numbers, the others ap 
produced their first crop, and H : liberal use of the| way as the plants mentioned peg pte 2. out of Car ower 5 are not in possession of any des 
or wicker stands, 


pr 
have the advantage « of a greater amount of li ight, 


Books: A ‘Cobian Sub. io = gchar ye so with the book. 
Herbert on Am oe contains goo vice, but it is mixed 
up with much matter of 85 interest to ae We can 
find no fungus in the earth contained in your letter. Lime 
an water will do n 3 


consult the basket makers—an ingenious race, 
to act upon — N Meter Ma: 
and Peaches have been 3 into the Cape Colony fom 
Eur urope. They are natives of Persia and Cashmere. — T Th 
inquiry respecting Pawlovnia will be 2 in 14 


F ee iy arena t in fover, and Buphorbia Pa. 
not des 8 7 
i the ves. Continue pinching the points wekno irer. Cynosurus 555 Sian 
cher ual nt ts, and especially w minable. Sisyrivehium. =P) Virtue, Itis Tussac PC. Salvia 
y are blig 8 š S sis, e yo oot to spare ?—H L. We an 
x 55 d; it is a very aS . =a obliged to say that we cann cannot de to — 4 
: ants, too valuable for su 
necessary p ; chlearia anglica and Juncus 3 m 
tiles 1 7 a fk eepit t “ipa pad 4 PRA om 3 Z. 1, A pecurus 
$ + 2, 9, a apparently N vi 
thea oa ote JJ 
a con SC thoxant 
snails, beetles, and other injurious insects will be — W Mad, — en a 1 of £ Oneidi mes 
name, inclosed in a square paper bor, 1 » Libertia formosa ; 


bro 8 shape, size, . 


RISTS’ FLOWERS. ROCCOLT : Broce are affected by “club.” 
TULIPS, =- ashes > lagay st against it, and some hav - Article next week.— Epor. 1 aye Ok Been 
one UL fea Offsets, a 5 aad 8 the s la theis te mended nitrate of pota sh or sa — — ee ane thus bos Cotte = ering ou taht a pod rset at the heh of 
guea of t atter, and 1 7 
ees places in the cabinet or boxes. aper is be on a small scale Pe Si i ally. einige Cornwall De ie td pts +4 8 eat of : 
proper to fold them in, if the amateur has not the con- a as: J W, What sorts did we recommend you last? Answers although short may 47 
: 2 š This information is necessary before — can sideration.—W B. Permit us to say you 
—— before mentioned; do not divest them now of fist. give you a fresh we were content to give random answers, you might ares 
either roots or loose skins, but allo them dually to EMIGRATION : J H B. We should much advise you to take some reply instanter, But ma ny ae er egy and —— 
dry in the shade, Breeder Tulips may be allowed to mba gh je colony, ‘in n preference to the United States, in your 8 . hich w sa 5 Bho red bare 
lie exposed t action of sun, ait, and wind in| pt3 of h ee Nen, Zealand would be best in that respect, | more than an 5 — Air . 
some sheltered and convenie e; this exposure ae the, . bem l ide 15 mash 3 re lng frogs — 3 valuable in London. now “find an answer in the 
has the singular effect of s peedily causing the whole to shingle, if that arrangement suits you a bë est. 85 proper place. —6 P. We 3 ; purchas the two Numbers 
become rectified, or. aprts tht fate speaking, to break into Insects: C JD. The 3 which have attacked your Ras Jon tele ae 2 set — 
thei 3 P 8 = rry had are the omnivorous Pikes bent tae y lcat — DLINd FLOWERS 
ir er + variegate y Ps us. su'catus 4 
1 4 yh eg character, e-year see various remedies agal sinet which H e been suggested in our | ANAGALLIS: H W. Fringed at the edges, but ‘ether nil 
ings, if the as turned yellow, may be placed o rrespondents. oly-| prett; beddin variety. 
a shelf, out 95 ‘the way of mice, till the season com drusus Mali, another kind of weevil, Wen (su, Your reptile Carercbaglas: Y B H. Flowers all withered. when werbe 
for again ting them, Rax UNcULVsESs.— Shade with is Filaria or thread worm, the history of which is very ob- AS, All Ae ooms aoe up — received, therefore 
a light calico awnin g. “ li Sabin’ pik z seure, Besides the vulgar notion that it is onl a vivified r eiaa ae ble.*—G S H. pu L. 
painted Sibert wht . ch P ste th pes saner > itis pai ims] Py any * — to a th * is not yellow; _ pood, shape flat, ‘outline inden — — 
$ c e J. -A Constant Su eitbe er 
111 ²Mf . , ̃Üdͤ 
ce to eseription in a memorand bok: rs 1 bo a . serviceable insects, _ devouring other sA or small, and 2 in 7 4 gelion, 
i aded crimson; shape, outline, and si „ 
15 hs pi 55 Se e are by no means partial common millepede (Julus pulchellus). We should be glad to —.— 5, shaded crimson, with a circular se of be 
nstant ablations which some growers besto be informed if it really be the same insect which has eaten —4 yellow; ‘shape, size, and outline m erately good eee 
ee theo mmend it to be 3 ing the tuber. If so, your observation os ae emetic of large, 5 e age — g roars ahr a 
ws 4 ? ine 1 
taki 85 ee s pout of a small water- >| planting cut sets, the shoots of which are allowed by Tko ape ia 1, yellow marbled with — — crimson p Sage 
a en exposed to the sitions ot insects to grow (they being engaged in devouring the set and outline bad. 2, yellow, spotted with dull brown ; shapè 
the = va ied rom a well, applie soon as 1 3 ong dificult 5 and outl LW H Mi. No. 1, earo i — 
pumped, is so cold as to have a prejudicial i t is difficult to say from such fragmen irregularly shaped yellow baud near the eye, : 
the past aliogether, "Pus e coming nto | Waning nai s “Shs It doos small but | marked with the tame colour outing A Sop 
: s 55 comes warmer, d, sh ther flat, a very nice . 
5 ; the carefully tied with thread | MELON Leaves: J L. It is impossible to say what ais: 3 — ze n dens pi ; plis H mson ; om 
which has been ver of bees’-wax ; after 70% gg all the cir — * ted with their rather flat, outline indented, eye rather large, colours, 
it round the bud several ti f owth, Personal ORAA of the ce in such cases is 4, bright ellow, . e with dark erimson; 5% 
twi bet the fi times, if the ends are absolutely sep eyo and oe Sond, a handsome 2 
se Pip ing 3 Sessa „they will remain “applied eariy eno agih pE _ Srini: b kill it, if it is only straw colour, spotted "ith. deep purple shape potted wil 
3 ; s may now ro- pE 3 e middling. e irregul 
ceeded with ; when pro e, ve 7 „„ MILLET SEED: VA. Apply to Messrs, Wrench and Sons, Lower 25 gia mst tis aunt 8 ood, outline = 
hü. Graios wP F , od pte i to deeb pate Fors London Boti 5 . price given is 18 quite pe rather flat; showy variety. 9, pale straw, 
2 . al water- if purchases are ew ale. h crimson 5 y E 
ing with liquid manure will be beneficia 1; tie up the | Monsrans : Ely. Thanks: we will examine them at 3 enkt „ sith ere ee — ca pre 3 
pres a stem ; ease those which have bi previously cane pamens appear to be replaced by carpels united by thei 4 Mag ligi purple; an , 
tied an 0 h ddl outline indented; 4 š 
d have become bin Names or Praxrs: F N. 1, 9 lobatum, or it may be tae i pr 5 n, irregul ly marked ¥ 
If it is the d ee of ik h RUIT DEN. P. aculeatum, it cannot be determined by the specimen, | yellow; shape — 8 sa ege i 
i ie e desire ọ the cultivator to carry out the ee a Joan g barren frond of the “The rene roup of shaded’ deep pupa a few ‘ireeg 5417 cee s, 
principle of pruning with the finger and thumb in- y gs saat a iota Lastrea | ongea, This pu's on dif-| ma oe shape to evil, moutline slightly 
stead of with the knife, th t 1 sun * 1 e Ker situation come age the pretty variety, but rather small. 21; 255 — crimson. 
must now be made. To a reflective mind it cortex helo fr 5 ra e pudens from such a morsel. It is 2 95 marbled with — a colour APs fat, ott C0 
8 Pir — ee cng 3 > nese be ing British may . No. 1, bright — marbled , apii 
appearance Very ow wo 0 8, 2 leni al crimson, 3 4 
be produced which Filix. 2 If hs pla 5 of this 82 of N ri 9 bro 10 hag Hee end et olerably good, ee 
produced w cut off, but which, position fav able t na with yel ow ; shape & jy mar bs 
“during its growth, is materially damaging "the portion v erent charac 2 we eo an found to rgd Bone adea oro — e uber flat, and outline e 
i 1555 of a few ae. eee a 7 
‘which is to remain, The demands 5 J Moore. It is Gardenia Menle eyan. All are —— bar large and showy. 4, saa 
attention i Oneidi oe Sotto! rg? ize and shape 
im nailing or 2 lum erispum, with the exce ot of th low; size an 
g walls, as bel “es P e pink one, which iia sensed aie right ye ; ariety. 5 
ol wall trees very much di en sation —— .—J 8. 1, Some Bouvardia, inde. line slightly indented; a very pretty Y s 
P mart. 5 upon the shoots being terminable by thë men; 2, Mimulus r — ro E kr Sanit marked with yellow ; size good,! w 
tol ote aisha Wera yung. Cons ⅛⁰ sind | Sem et” eer cay nk a 
2 wherever insects 3 3, amina mus europzeus ; pare ith yellow near J with 
thei ; Orat — p: marbled with ye de spotted with? 
J. - . e deen e e ely eh a 


gularly e. with 
a nic 


n on; 

ood; a oat vari 5 5 y. 10 1 a vi ] 

crimson an ne and oat 
in shape and ont 
irregularly shaped 3 spots; bad y oe 
12, Jello A th large brown i me 
defective in shape and outline. : 
gular pale straw-coloured marks; 8m 
ae; AN ube 


Na iiki JS 32 Upper petals 
violes o te shaded bi ae, Pele yeg 
etals brownish pu 

2 entre, and aud high yello w eye, size 

texture coarse, shape to Rilcrable, 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


377 


ANURE “COMPANY, having 
LONDON — r Turnips = 
ith the pn confiden 
ecure a good plant, 72 
ey would call attention 
which is bas pared with the 
age ne, dry state, perony 
e Company have made | 


e ondon 
constant supply 


f . > ts for a € h they will Acliver Arey, ious tb the no, from or A 
1 res. ek 2 Nitrate o 4 sage and 
Fi 


$ Salt, anå every patner Artificial Manur the 
j article 
e tary, 40, UN Blackfriars. 


ers are recom- 
a character, or to 
who will supply the article in any 
at their fixed prices, delivering it from the Import 


THE FOLLOWING MANURES are manufactured | 
at Mr, LAWES’ tt a. ye 
288 A 1 N Ea 1 20 10 0 
CLOVER — 2 0 0 
` TURNIE MAN h 1 
PRIO AC HATE 1 1055 5 ; 
D ” 
Pech ACID - AN oo 


F AN ONIA. 
444 5 Ber pits stret, “City, London. 


ae 0 AND MANURES, 
PERUVIAN SEARO: of the finest quality, direct from 


ATES SODA AND POTASH. 
-GYPSUM (SULPHATE OF LIME). 
DRIED NIGHT-8OI 1 
D AND COPROLITE. 
SODA ASH iw REW ORM eee R). 
8 ‘OF LIME (made from bone only). 
AGRICULTU LT, and all other Manures of known 


2 es London. 
Piisi 


—— 
= AND HEALY’S NEW BOILER.— The 
modification a their Boiler (before published), 
ly for the large sea ory, = 
TROA it is now pian ork, Fro ati ete 
and H. have 3 able to 1 UT. — Sane 1225 in 
— t pes s ultra” for e Baga 2 plant 
on charge - fuel has been kept 
L! il “one boiler of 


ti eres put up at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. 
boilers upon the same plan, 
Bunsipee and 10 00 130, ono London. 
DEA GROWERS, 
Brent — ‘HEALY, 130, gien AS respect- 
tion to their method of warming Orchidea 
å they have ad the Honour g warming the Orchidea 
— — undermentio — E 
Botanic Gardens, 
; 7 3 Chiswick, aoaiina to * House. 
e ( ea Houses of t a Scag istinguished 
_ growers of ne Eeng clase of s r 


neheste, Farnham Castle. 


— 
; m, Pine- ik Place. 
i — = = ie 
n a 8 o — near Ware. 


i ame, -= KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA, 


ROYAL LETTERS 


PATENT. 


cars $ 
‘Bae offers for sale Patent HOTHOUSES, 
; arig s, wide, 
» with 
int, 7d., Sd., 


antity, &e. 
NG BY HOT WATER. 


. -M 

; pny Chaff 
from 30 to 22 
pectable Coachmasters ei Brew 
he, close to the Blackwall R 
"Bean M Mills,and Malt t Millsin a great variety, 


tural Gazette. 


SATURDAY, JUNE 16, 1849. 


. They fra 


an 
e Fo ter be ae at 118, Argia — 


some method which, tae ou 
the ‘tials to the home market, as the 

(thereby substituting a à omo- EPEN more fata a 
than sige a 9 from abroad, in exact proportion 
the e dis 


yet suppor 

a a — point of 
oe prices. 
ine of Popu 


e 
y, yet 
iene fallin ng. The bee of the last century 
d ed i 
produced by extended tillage at hom 
policy which had before ig a ‘a preminm 
upon Exportation, was ane xemplified in the 
prohibition pi Impor and with precisely 
the same results. less gaion 
uality, krosā: into ne ited its 
. oh the glut of = 
at the est net retu e peer 
same Eu was the first to fal i in a bad seas 
Perd therefore fell at a grea 
tof Price: and the natural Damnation of 


The 


by the . r yield o inferior soils. 
ccumulat ents of aal distress were 
thus l “inheren t in the very principle o 
Restriction by which it had been attempted to re- 
lieve it. Had the new 5 taken into tillage under 


ts experience “4 low alene: 
The same i 


le ntifal harvest, though |t 
d 


bath had fixed, led naturally to the attempt to devise apoplexy or 3 that carried the sufferer beyond 
absolutely rae | the 3 of it 
ey had do 


so it. proved with the 5 ingenious-looking 
adaptation of a Sag g Agate — rn cae — 
bs as 


ho deer en opinions 
ouble of examin 


ng to the programme induc sell, 
— very i ar rly, no doubt, but somewhat 
en EEE be actly oppesite effect of inducing 


o hold ; Po the falling duty, especially as it 
rattled -i wn towards the end, three or four shillings 
un mium on w 


to get out tock as quickly as hé 
Weny before the evil grew worse, and thus induced 
him to po r his pon a i g ma 


> a 

ina m EA con — to a in area,. — 

a question of nice speculation n to the dealer, whether 

= realize now, or wait till it gets hi Los 
ehou 


t 

t 

climate would s 

alternate glut — — ndance; 

rior land is dragged into the euniet, it pulls down 
Bs 1 of good land e adequate remunera- 
tio n cultivator 


f arti 


nterest, warehouse- 1 = perishability of 
cle, are the se s ‘ per-con by, w which the 
1 7 of Speculation is sicklied” o'er with the 


oo 


of each Vicisitude ! in tara. 
his inevitable and g pe ae e was 
u 


upon t 
the Legislat Bill was . 
8 1 Parliament, =o Sa of which were 
neiple of which was 


Fa Il, 2 an nieve Under 
wou ould, <2 essit, at some poe fall to its lowest, 

the minal duty o Mr. Can 

int 8 


á. 


NING’S “Bi ll this 

and for every shilling 
the duty was to 
occasion presently to observe ig — re inh The 
Bill was howev — ae e follow 


first by steps of three or four shillings 
subsiding at last into a regular gradation of 


ach sa 
q| Starved Prelate, me It comes too lat 


pale of Pruden nd — under the silent 
Influence of those b ati Laws. which press the 
of indiv sep ne * est ae the arapa 

ervice of t munity—the carly sale is sug- 


m ested, nd. violent re rapid iuetuitions of the 


public market, are as far as . avoided. t 
throw into the ’scale pened r prem n the ‘ wait- 
| a-little-longer ° side wh Randi erir is 
8 Per Pr ‘donde beam at 5 and 


wY iced into pada, fe n 


— —— ‘the ri 
the dis agp withhold sa 

5 if the du —.— fall ove 5 a eater 
price rises, as in Mr. 75 Scale, an 
violently still at r sires aa o 

all chance of intermediate ne is 


t eye, not the foot,— 
a piatt n might FA in the warehouse, Hie induce- 
l the last 


ment still remaine > to : and 
when at last the ae sa come, the dealer and the 
consumer might say, in me ords of the 


—for nothing is so crue 


| theoretic as the attempt to bauen te Natural Law 185 


"e 


shilling. 
n a comparison of the two scales, the 


Corn Law 

Duty according to 
Mr. Grant’s Bill, (the 
Corn-law of 1828). 


2 according to 
anning' Bill. 


Average Prices of 
Wheat. 


We subjo 
latter of which a sed both Houses, and became the 115 


o 


and which, it canno 
every promise of such results, 


succeeding 
the price of ag at the close of the year 1835, to 
35s. 4d. the quarter. The 23 conditi 3 — 


rng; FOR es 
Ee = er e Englands, 3 prospect of rices which sion could have le; 
Tavna 25—Agriculta ral Socket N Eee profit on their cultivation. In t more years, 
m Pasea A iental np p. Society of reland. e — be more med by an 3 however, = pio cat 1839), 2 x d pea pe 
mri es many of the 9 Lnolsra- little piece of mechani: n ; o fit a ft p on- 5 N inary] a = the dich 
re reac form upon Nature's 
et, Point in the Third Gr Tm porting”) ) he N bers the Markets keep ‘the happy 1 yea 5 be Pen Foy changing 5 
ai gested by the ‘high’ and the| medium’ by the very action of their own eternal 25th, 1837), 900 qu of 2 ‘iad 
n in several former statutes, the oscillations! It reminds one of a certain ts troyed (being thrown into the Tha b 
3 constructing a running invention, a chair for refractory subjects, in whic J. * of Customs), the loss of the 
Coins and falling inversely with the | the more the poor patient struggled under the hands | article being a less saerifice to the Impo 
om shown by the gene rage of the operator, the more tightly it fixed and th ne. otitis de p 
“SU * failure of the act of =- 5 n —.— —. But for the perfection of seri e payme ty. * 
n ate ti cml er al ator] imminent the consideration of Whi We 
more and e io: ina’ little kickin p | struggling were after all discovered | imminent ; 
of the Standards of p manifest inap- to $ , than the fit of | shall proceed hereafter 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


[Jun 


2 


A SO rn HAMPSHIRE FARM. 
Ext a 124 

% Position * prevent is Apne plentifal at = sea- 
sons, although i mspas bee e dūri e con- 
struction of railwa, It is — ‘situated with regard . 
to markets, both for corn — — and within an easy 
9 of a large t 

Soil. — The ar i Moi is for the most part h 

— the soil differs — in every field, the upper — 
being san upon 


land has requi e deal of drain 
— done “gre the las 


poo 
g and pe hiss e, within ny 
d. r and daes. er acres Galle ng 
manent meadow and pasture land, and 6 
h. 


es 


1 
Erie + Rotation r adopted o on this farm, from the y 
1833 to * year 1 1as been strictly the foun. course 
out of Clover lea once | 


mhi 
pomi mixed and irre — r system, viz 
w 1040; 


acre 
fi 
7 Barley after 3 fed off, 36 ‘bushels per — eee to, 
hite Clover 
8 * N — fed off, 52 bushels per acre, seeded to 
— ring Turnips, fed off, 44 bushels per acre 
3 Peas. after, Turnips, fed off, 12 bushels per acre; much 


5 Tares — gee 


—— 
and and sown with Turniy 
13 Clover cut e for Ehag twice, produce 2 tons per acre, and fed 
sheep w 
2 ae — of and sown: with Swedes, 19 tons per acre, 
0 
2 Swedes after Wheat fallowed, 21 tons per acre, fed off 


57 acres 


ROTATION 1846, 


g0⁰ 

r — * Aa and Swedes; 36 bushels per acre 
over an d Tares, 36 bushels per acre 

ter 22 
te Clov 

Paraoa, 8 sown, 36 bushels per acre, and 
— Clover 


4 gy be after 8 
= — Swedes, 56. bushels per acre, seeded to- Red 
27 2 after Swedes, fed off with hay 
24.8) 2 seed much pret sown with late Turnip, good 
3 Tares and Trifolium, cut 
15 — pna l be 
Clover cut for acre- 
20 Swedes after ae 
54 acres 
Acres. Ror. 
ATION, 1847. 
4} Wheat, after ro rep Turnips, fed off with Eaa a 


allen portimao . 40 bushels. per acre; 


els per a 


a afte 
TH Barley after Swedes ‘fed off, “0. bushels. per aore; seeded | 
3 2 nies Wheat, stubble . fed off between, 40 
3 * 
gase um. 
5 one 3 ble Turnips fed off between, 28 


m 
ingis m, gee the yay 1844, md leaa cultivated, 


e 
r Wheat, cut for soiling cattle 


an 
— — 36 bushels per acre; sown to stubble | 

t 
es, ‘pring sown, 30 bushels per acre, and 


es, 38 bushels per acre, seeded to Red e 


ficial 1 
He said 


ani 
‘Wheat fallowed, . 


off between 72 q 
make 


15 Swedes after Wheat, fallowed. 
and Trifolium, some fed and some 


T 5 es after 


Tare 


ate. 


t for soiling 
6 Red — to be — for hay. 


9 White Clover, to 
94 acres. 
ost of ma 
the a ive ge 
above the 
well situated, sellin ng o 
ich e ae 


land for Te 
abour - 
tity ol ma 


wee 
J. 35s. 


wome n 44 per 
. renta 


ton of straw s 


be cut for hay. 


nur 


old man 


nip 

‘the quantity of animal and the quan- 
ual labour employed, 
valent in the neighbourhood, Four 


with 
cart- 


pera 


Hom 
‘win-headed Wheat (p. ane —1 — — 
sy | exactly like the one figur 


e 
‘Prien multiplici apici arises from 
f. 


he 
Wheat,” 


ape — Trifoli 
2a Deans after ate Ternig fed of orop much blighted, 


after Swedes fed h 
per acre ; pi ee: with hay, produce 22 tons 
22 tons per —.— 


res. ROTATION: ron 1849. 
Fheat after Clover, s October. 
8 Wheat after Swedes, * ma, October 
hay, aown in in December and and January, 

2. Wheat after Hean 8 sown in 28 
1 — to be sown in February; seeded to 


Swedes after: W — 
for hay, produce:1}. tons tho 
rm after Tares anc Trifolium fed = and ‘some cut 
soiling castle, crop crop 15 ous per acre season, that he could not help 
xpe 


the 
3 toemen, 


| seen. men 


, a first-rate farmer, s 
s havin 


— 


rs m 
monstrosity. 


throu gh a 


— There is 


nan average 


Mr. Booth. 


sapprehen 
— apne, noticed in the Gardeners! 3 ole for 
13; 


uae carried on where ure- in 
tised, and the in 


e purchased, on the average of | of 
„ bas ute 102 


s. per ton, in 
ures an: acre of 


the. wages. pre- 


horses are kept 


sold, the remaining | th 
t for stock to bring — the following 


y 


alluded 


mer. of 
nsion of its 


p Ton nger any 


be soti 
5 Swedes after Swedes, fed off with hay, then sown to 
2. Early Potatoes after $ s 
nips; then sown to W 


ster Wat stubble Turnips fed off between, % i 


es, fed of with hay, late Tur. |t 


— 


now ; be bought for 


it; n per ton im 


or 104. The bes 


n 
o | successful, fras pag dibble will si a 1 ſor 
r, in iable 


f 
bei ing sown on the spot — — transplanted, there 


s of Turnips he had gro 
obtained 2 ye ar from Jan 
of Per 


wn for — 


* 
* 


£ 


i 


£ 


5 


2 
on 4 


improvements o dern times, sdie 
its inventive faculties in 75 di 
ee of sowing used to be 
culture, as a ee act of 
could not 1 


E 


i 


eh 


i 


r 


bbling at 
iefly — * 


= 

. * 
2 

42 
F 

oe 

D S 
EES 

AE 
TEA 
E 
FPE 
oOo 0 
8 2 HE 
JR 
. © 
ESR S 
Eee 
N 
Aa 


Pe. all 
ere r P as beco nsolidated 
atural tenacity, with continued 8 su 

doubted whether g Process. 


ih 


b 


which t eed will be 

esb to dbb ling ag T 22 . 
That only one ploughing, in some 

. the seed is —.— de 
flag, where it feeds on 
underneath wit 
3. That in co 


? 
li 


158 


Hub 
Hil 


© 

i=] 

a 

D 
-5 
“oe 

iJ 
Sg 
. * 


g 2.2 
= 2 05 
og 
= 
Pe 
oO 


ractice no i with. ii merits.. 
process itelf, after the old method, was slow, — 
d 


and expensive 

ployed 

and thus the business was slighted and im 
ormed, It is for the present 


omplete, it may become a apanas 3 even the: 


drill wen, may not in superseded) 


grea 
by it. s by poise inventions, ry Wheat can: bae 


70 wh wit 
vn =. E 
ofa 


“Dy. he: 


gro 
other leering 


There has | long: been 


8 


appears nm le pe tan: in 8 size and * px 
transplanting syste slow and 


more 
p 5 if a dibble b be —.— wile a cross vee lel 
fe r five the labour 


four 
l 


wil = be 


une, or even la 
tage, should the weather or othe 


. Newington’s excellent aa 
vigorous eee as it were, rising 


the o 


Law 
High Farming. at have 


t perusing the pamphlet of James. 


1 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 379s 


. I agree with me 2 A e. onally be made, unless this aig. farm is confined | pinch of guano: mixed with ashes soaked in tank liquid, 
ae manufacture of hom mal ma- to a wholesale supply of milk only? I may be wrong, What I want most is a small drill as general purposes. 
mises, and with the eee of a wa I imagine if the details were complete, the would br will sow Wheat or Beans at wide intervals, to 
Pred with the same intelligence to the | only show how necessary to the profitable occupation of aioe w of the free use of the hoe. te ou recommend 
as to mercantile affairs, tillage ought to such a farm, it would be to have a portion of it arable. me ia Sta of the: sort, or tell me where to look at 
ration, and nothing e else will kaap Eight acres might. be sufficient, half for grain and yr. = publication of your request may- 
food. and absence of prote ection, straw, the other half fora variety of roots. How valuable ahii. help you.] 
of reduction of rents to any great 2 705 t then would be the 2 how much lighter would be 
of low farming, for many of that class felt the expence of horses, how much better would the i 1 
y live were the freehold given to the labourers (and a greater number) be employed! J. W., * AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAN, 
mae soil; whereas the landlord, by improving Pete rborough. A WEEKLY Councit was held at the Society’s House, 
to give facilities for. housing a. larger he. case eof Ireland. A circumstance connected with | in Hanover-square, on uesday last, the 12th of June: 
of cattle, also by lending the tenant a capital at the famine in 8 and noticed in the Times news. | pre parar, the Earl of Caicuesrer, President, in ir z. 
“+ would lead to rearing more cattle, purchasing paper of the 23d of May, i is of such a a revolting nature, | Lord Camoys, Hon. R. H. Clive, M. P., Hon, 
a] manure, raising more green crops, and it wou uld be impossible to — it, it not authen- | ley, Sir M. W. Ridley, Bart., Sir Francis. Lawley, 
Saua enhancing the average yield of Wheat, Bar- tiented by a clergyman of the chu a of England. I Ba at. mt * ond Barker, Mr. French Burke, Mr. 
nd Oats, Mr, Caird gives a plan of the premises, will not shock your readers by a repetition of the horrid | Burt: Dr. foan Capt. Stanley Carr, Colonel 
leg, the of raising | recital, but call their attention to a remedy which may Challoner, ‘ie, Copeman, Mr. G. Dean, Mr. Dyer, Mr, 
ley, M 


e year 
Mr. Dick enson’s system of raising repeated oon dreds of lives during the next winter. In England we Mr, Hip rd, Mr. H 14 5 Rev. C. E. Keene, Mr. 
i Grass by liquid manure watering, which, with | can sow Turnips and Cabbages till the end of June, | Kinder, Mr. Marsha ll, ML „Mr. Milward, Mr. C. E. 
; — food consumed upon the farm at Auchness, in with the prospect of a erop; in Ireland they might be Overman, Mr. Rodwell, — Sewell, Mr. Shelley, Mr. 
we, ol Mr. David M‘Culloch, who, it appears, put in later with every chance of success, the Slaney M. R. Mr; Stans field, M. P., Mr. 55 Turner, 


130 cattle. and 150 sheep, in one year, upon a being milder. The value of all sorts of Turnips i is well | Prof. Way, Mr, B. Webster, and, Mr. 
form of about 250 * . stall 3 in covered known; raw they will feed cattle, an and pigs, and | Whitm 


paildings. (for cattle and ure), a r detailing | when boiled and mixed with any description: of meal, lacks William. re of Downham Hall, near 
the contrast of his high fusing with = former tenant’s | they become excellent food for human beings; and ‘so Brandon, w a Governor — the Society, 
lew farming, shows the following results do Cabbages. If advantage is not taken of this glorious The es mbe eted: 
Old Farming. 5 Hi igh Farming, sa to cultivate the i e 5 * r ose 1 o neglect, 8 N 5 as ardo, Be eto Mae Torquay, Devon. 
. or one Ye their uty must not say t at rovi ence-has brought i ifra, Stowe Park, Bongay, Suk 
133 103 ` 9 Re paid e he 0 8 the affliotion upon them, without adding, it is a just Bulleny Shae eed Churston — — Devon 
Paid for Manure, none. — id for Manure... 526 0. 0 judgment for their neglect of warnings aud utter dis. Allen, B. Hai aigh, Longerofts.Hall, a. Staffordshire 
- regard of His commands, who says, “ Man must till the ewing, Avena i a ae ter Reg 
shinai dite 8 3 1215 3 8 ground.” To witnes — bringing certain — — * ob, Bast Winch, Lynn — aster, von 
emp, Ke, ender) 2 o o stock and crop; | 2318 9 9 upon themselves, when t is in their wer to alleviate Hole, William, Hannaford, — 
the old system 5 —— a visitation, desolating a luxuriant country, is beyond | Brandford, Paed T. Godwick, Litebame Norfolk 


t itman, — House Exeter 
ei — — 


th ension of g lagran 1 
Thus (upon a lease of 19 rea in high farming, | instances of idleness come under daily observation, but ] er Pit n, — — ullard, B 
although the capital expended is four times as much in then there is a prospect, where the great majority are] Ingle, Thomas, U. D., Wood Hall, BUSAJ. Norfolk 


labour, rent, and manure, as under well off, of scraping sufficient together to allay the illifant, John, Ca ombe, Crediton, Devon 
the old system, the produce is quadrupled in pi éta » | cravin ngs 20 im — . ee case of fire rish is different, end: Shomer! nas, Ley Fields, paige n 
so that both landlord — tenants advantageously profit | they w t put a hand to the spade, although their Voodcock, John. G., Briston; Dere orfolk 
— creased retur owever, —.— and folly call down upon their —— heads Davy, Joseph, Kelling, 1 [Molton; Dex. 
(as e farmer of about 100 acres The Potato disease has existed Paine John Be . — Piian 2 
‘of ad that | the cast of cattle, &e., „is not stated, 8 for some years, and will in all probability continus, but The names of 16 candidates for election at the nent 
other grain or vegetable has failed. Is it re- | meeting were then 
a ion profit, who would embark capital in high fore tempting a beneficent God, still to — for sub- WI BAT anp Maize.—The Hon . H. W. Witson, of 
sistence on a root whic s wisd as smitt all, Leicestershire, transmitted to- the 


en Keytho L i 
is shown more in detail (especially when the with decay! The want of sense aud common prudence Gosncihthe gardener’s report of the trial he had è 
— its 3d N one is too apt un- as a guide to those who are suffering in Ireland seems of the last Australiau Wheat, presented to the Society: 
coun i impki ea 


something marvellous. In this try if a crop fails by La in and Lieut. Simpk The Wheat. 

we immediately substitute ee so as not te allow | Was sown on the 2lst of May in two seed-pans, ‘ 

falteost, expen ditare for animales: aril food, and the the land to lie idle. However, in some districts of placed in a Melon-house. They came up on the 25th, 
prices wich th the cattle, 8 have realised. I our sister country there: exists not the — idea and were planted out on the 30th. The height of the 
disposed to follow Mr. 305 Uoch's practice plants was 7 inches, and their number 478. One half 
although bor feeding might be substituted (as ad opted of it brings death in its most excruciating fo form starva- of the seed was steeped in warm water, but did not 


in 
by the Rev. J. C. ** ag 1 28 of Tg stad Hall, tion. The Parsnip is more nutritious than the Potato, come up so early as the unsteeped * * f 
— coren nd and more hardy. The former may remain in the Rodwell had obtained most beautiful — 
many other Essex high farmers) when 1 find his Bese! ground during the severest weather, and may be dug up | from Australia, and had cultivated it om 


P 
j the incentive munerative returns, and with. as required for use, the latter must be stored in October. | Suffolk for two years with 2 3 but ri — it not: 


aa no tenant ot 1 —.— habits will be led into Again, raw Parsnips will fatten all animals, and make ex- to be adapted ur climate, but to be subject to 
8 of capital. P ps the author of | cellent bacon and p experience, What gradual deterioration in — I W: 
perusal of whi interesting pamphlet (the extensive | hundreds of acres of Turnips migh in Treland | had grown 2 and W in Northumber- 
remarks, whieh I strongly eaaa) pes see. these | during the next six weeks, and what thousands and tens | Jand on strong flat clay land near the coast; and as the 
esamas, the supply, through the of your of thousands of Cabbages might be planted out before | crops: had proved fine ones- and the — might be 
— required details. Nur pare Staines, August! With these facts ro mk their eyes will men regarded in e measure as acclimatised, he would 
Mangold m refuse to assist rape mg f they do, they can hope for: = an opportunity, at a ene ar 5 
Mangold Wi ursel. —I have just put in 23 acres of no aid from above. y of it 
nher a novel way, w whisk: | think | Steep v. Level aes 3 on land surveyi ng Dr. Calvert — 1 the ands — 
to publish economical, ~~ it might perhaps suit you | by a a French professor of mathematics, at a college of two years in the North Riding of Yorkshire, 
it: 6 cwt, of Peruvian guano being sown Blois, the lecturer informed his audience that in the sunnah it came early to maturity, the ears were: : 
the field’ was ridged up in the usual way; purchase of hilly or uneven Jand, its — is eee. the crop scanty, and the q ty was found to be- 
f us made a mixture of 4 ewt. of superphos- or m measured, not according to the area the surface, | come deteriorated, as in the case Mr, Rod 
7 Wheelbarrows full of coal-ashes, and 7 ditto of but ae l base; anne ause, — Colonel Challoner had this year the finest crop of 
to dibbla i stone wall lately pulled: down, I set he added 6 it isa a well known facet in agriculture, — spring Talavera Wheat that he had ever seen, 
Í todibble, in the seed with the following hands: more can be grown on a hill or —_ than on a hori- seed which had been grown at the Horticultural ; 8 
! 7 2 women to drop the seed, 2 women to . piece of land equal to base. Now, as this Gardens under — with sulphate of ammonia, and 


. fre holes ase of which I allowed a teaeupful to | “well-known fact” is not — not ven known, but sown in the second week in February.—Mr. Rodwell: 
i Tis would not are been ees all with a garden rake. | even — though in my opinion absurdly disputed had been a cultivator of Talavera Wheat for 25 years 2 
i or favourable tõ- 


n cessary, but a good deal amongst many of our Yorkshire farmers, perhaps you he had — = mire season more fi 
— a fall gon alt ea bas sak in. aoli T wile Med ‘enough to give it vc e your next: spein gW 2 e. Tala 2 ermer: onni — 
— pot used were of blunt form, — ~~ size of number. Perhaps of moss and ow or creeping | y especial 2 — e vi 

pot at bottom. The 2 ants, eee eee grown on a slope than M. Pt * ook that e 


en and ma ii e thus | plants, a A 
R in one day, using 5} 3 of. pee ae | 85 a horizontal piece of land equal to its i a with instances he h ad heard of — ihe ira trial — 
Pon yha e: regard 


® As . 48. Gd. rass, corn, or trees, it appears to me that the — former meeting of „„ were 8 
| E 2 : Professor was perfectly correct: [And so it does to us. an) seed, in every: casey was growing and doing well, and 


— Agricola. vi j — 
n “Small Farm.—I have a small farm of 50 acres, half | cated of it. He:partiealariy- alluded to. one of the ‘isles 
=e in my Swedes the same 3 WP. C. ” Grass, the remainder arable. On the arable I manage made in St. James’s Park.—Mr. Raymond r À 
* q his 


%3 
= 
3 
? 
ee 
BB 
4 
8 
gee 
g 
E. 
: 

di 

SE 

45 
sft 

— 
8 

8 

7 
E 
£ 
8 
* 


i x —The article of “J. M.” (in | and the unsparing use of the hoe. My stock consists 
| — does not convey ay ction i ö 


imme 
the 
—— 
ig wheels drawn by my bull, dresses the greater part most essentia whether, if found susceptible 
of the. Grass land in a way that astonishes my neigh- of cultivation in this country, it would furnish a cheaper 


— and 3 of Italian Rye- and better erop than other grain.—The Earl of dn 
I shall im a day or two begin chester had spent two summers in 0 — 
for the — time a piece was cut about t Pyrenees, in which this variety of Maize was- — a 
eeks since, and i well from the | have been „and in — . — 
. My implements ist of a p a of in the southern distriets of England. At = Pe 
y or, three cart roll sojourn in that part the Continent, e was 
nty of Dri Yellowley forks, whieh I into the aware that th variety of Maize in question 
ighbours w 18 none there, 9 been 
lough horses car or carriage ti r. Keene, 
— — plan I shall adopt with my the he the Couneil. He 
As fast as tbey come off, the bull takes on the 3 oily ie all — 


which T dibbled in at wide similar to our owm the i 
— — ia — — Until the 


__ 380 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Jone 10 
Forty-day Maize, the ee Corn of Cobbett was pig after paying rent and taxes, as and with a ployed such manures in a highly dial 


— variety with which his Lordship was best aequainted; per centage on the pert draining, &e his profit | Hillyard said his system was to have 5 State.—Iiz 
and he had er found any — ow N — is attribuisble chiefly to abour being performed by | he thought it best to have all the urine Ace 
nor was there any trouble in emp Se well i e the e boys, aid not charged, ‘and from, the abundance of | absorbed by the straw, This yea 1 had the, a 
garden; the difficulty he had found was * get — on liquid m th f the house, the stall ,andabout20store-steersinkins 74 oxen j id th, 
the farm that would = sufficiently good for rere se, ont pigst ies, being preserve ed ina tank, and on straw. He considered that all exe 3 feeding 
AmenRicaN Piovcus.—Mr. Love, of — , derer 1 bi the lan d; sometimes to the growing | ought to be conveyed away — the Ses of rein- vu 
Northamptonshire, 1 to the Couneil the re- vege The erops grown are Carrots, Cabbage, | conduits or gutters placed under the aa dings by ope 
port of his trials of the American ploughs presented to — Warzel, Potato oes, Turnips, Rape, Italian Rye portion of the yard ought to be made 2 > and thats 
the Society, in comparison with the best ploughs of our Grass, and Vetches 3 following in quick succession, so | He allowed that liquid manure might phe wi = 


own country. n the motion of Mr. Shelley, the that the land is never allowed to lie idle, except in the who bred cattle as well as fed th 
thanks of the Council were ordered to Mr. Love for the dead of winter, at 3 a plenti ful a of | self, His great object had been Pyle. 9 
favour of this report: and Colonel Challoner, as Steward liquid manure is given to all the land not having a crop | he possibly could on his farm. He applied mum 
e department of Field Implements, at the 3 upon it, and being t roe de bag it requires but poi feeding manure,§when trodden down by the calle te 
meeting, was requested to take measures for the further | in the spring to enable bear the next crop. yard, to his land ; but that made near the & 
trial of these ploughs on that occasion, provided proper | implements used are ike en fork, rake, hoe, liquid generally containing a quantity of seeds of 
shares could be found adapted to their use. ; manure barrel, and cart, the two latter shift and go always had thrown up into a heap for the ona 
Porators.—Mr. Penttanp, a member of the Society | upon the same wheels. undergoing sufficient fermentation to destroy red 
residing at 3 ef eee. 3 the The = nig is a “Bi. of the leger account for the | tative pons of such weed-seeds. He applied le 
Couneil e crops in tha 00 most pro- | year ending Lady Day manure to his root-crops ; and th 
— Potato disease having, at the date of his com- QuATT SCHOOL FARM IN ACCOUNT WITH 0A SH. he drew off for stall-feeding he bone of them whi 
hat a euriou, insect kad attacked ihe Boech leaves | To cash from aale of Potatoes” p, 1848, e I9: e, | De, Calvert, Mr. Whimore Mien Mee 
‘Fis: arigi ee . 7 „ e . AD TB % [rom Gibbs, Mr. Foley, M.P., Sir F. Tavia 
0 a eS | To cash from sale of Butt swe æ 41 4 63 | Chichester, and Prof, Way, then di the ens 
— become ae peter ge hecoradl ee = as — ee sale of of Live Stock x” = " 7 6 of the exhausting nature of Italian Rye- a asa ema 
e e the particular variety best ad 
P rons 218 ight Prof, hin —— the opinion of Prof. To Stockin vob p 8 1 1819 ri per n. 6 ye 6 po p die ws whue te y bes = sa epi op ta 
Lindley th ubt, from external pre- 9 stitution of Tarn - 
monitory evidences, that the Potato disease would again Expenditure 4 ge Lady-day, 1 1848, to FESS oy 1819. W. 2 5 ht Ay . Potato e 
prevail this year—Mr. Wolryche Whitmore, of Dud- | BY purchase of Foo #35 9s. 10d, eee ste “A ahi: advantage of liquid mamas 
2 4 r 3 TER h fS od: ses . adin e whene ired. 
maston, near Bridgenorth, Shropshire, related to the By Vaveliage of 14 ive Stock 5 61 11 7 proper place for manure was in the soil, wh 
Council the success with which he had grown Potatoes | By purchase of Tools, Implements, & 5 4 10 am or deterioration could take place whales 
on very poor light land, that had 8 pae 2 By ee . Sue 5 ..... .. 6 o 0 quantity so deposited.—Mr. Rodwell remarked fa le 
managemen crop By purchase of Sun 2 9 11 | own example in not having manure heaps on h's fer 
trial in 1847 was so decided! 5 that in 184, By cash, a Year's Sant including Interest ex- had induced the greater part of tb sbi 
‘he was induced to plant 28 acres of the same land wit Rates, ed be. the erection o ee Drains Bee Earl 0 Chichester pet 
Potatoes i e «Polson asec |< 3 3 
peangi sit paee sorts, e small ee 5 planted By Profit and Da E va aces oe Oe 17 10 — coe tom Rayment Be a oad 
5 arger one up into sets. ey wer „ : bor 
lanted about the end of February or the begiening of of £275 10.9 santas “at nae male — 55 mate toe SE E 
d manured in the Arills with half-inch| LIQUID MaxURE.—Mr. SLANEY, M. P., in fu ully corro- 7s m — Mr. Hyet 


„and manuri though 
applied in different doses to “tbe parts borating the statements made by Mr. Clive and Mr, ee e a 


to workhouses, 2 on the eculiar of 


of bone-manure, was very striking; the highly manured eee e the . of app iy 8 
land yielding 125 bags of Potat the other porti agricultural crops, Experiments were going on, under ili nie ; 
80 g 5 The tops of +, Soe empha’ the superintendence of the San anitary Commissioners, retried i os bho TANT 4 1 1— Professor 
only 80 he to : 2 koka i a tisfactoril th i atit was not, but that all manure, 
affected in July with disease ; but, upon ining MD the} Vaen Won n anA is eS i, a are might be app 8 in the ie 
affected. * whole enn ronoral of the ag in his tanka— Dr. ‘Calvert thought f AAMA iia 
ONOR ia Daai, as the light makse Lr poor ef towns, the fertility of the country round was in- ptem tanks.—Dr. Calvert 10 it advisable to have 
quality of th che soil, and the gradu al manner in which the | creased ; and a boon was created for the agricultarist, poche mts BAe 
‘pewerful bone-manure would be supplied to the tubers, at the same time that the health of the people was pro- 
were circumstances that might probably account for this | moted 


successful mode of cultivation.—The Hon. R. H. Clive, | of the Successful employment of liquid manure, as * 


gher . than that o green 
Earl of C to which a pte ere to be applied. —Tbe 
th i 


M.P., was last autumn in Mr, es neighbour. | confirm Mr. Chadwick’s report, presented, to the = 
heod when he inspected the crop of Pota if which | Council ie his lordship (on the ee of the Earl of Pense, it would seem the most desirable course to 
he had referred, tape he never o — gaien t | Carlisle), for eeting.—Mr. Whitmore thought on) liquid manure on a Ik h tanks 
growth, or a finer produce, than on that oceasion. That | the greatest step that could be taken at the present time | Were 100 feet higher, he should certainly adopt that 
instance of succesful cultivation on bad light soil, — for the promotion of agriculture, would be the devising | C°UTS® —Colonel ae lluded to the 
the result of e example set, by the Guardians of the of means for the application of liquid manure, at all pointed out to him 1 . a 5 Boek: the 
oor near itmore’s residence, of the industrial | times, to crops, as occasion might require. He alluded liquid manure on a f: pum 
f the children of the poor in farmi g | to an instance in which Mr xtable’s plan had been 60 feet —Professor Way t saat ng such h simple 
oecupations, clearly ed to hi there was n pted, of lafi ooden bored tubes for dis. | elevation of the liquid manure was preferable to an 
knowing to an extent the poorest land of this | tributing liquid manure to a field of Italian Rye Grass, arrangement in which og 
county be made to be productive when its culti- which a wonderful crop was obtained, computed to level of the farm ; for, in such case, all the produce to 
vation — 8 mate er the influence of active amount to 118 tons per acre. It had gon a five be housed, would have to come up- 
intellig times in the course of the summer, and would have Mr. aney, M. P., remarked that the cost of conveying 
ret Roamer e Tenus had | kept 5 cows during that period. These tubes 8 be | liquid manure on the land was the mai mh 


Mr. 
in detailing to the Council the parti- laid down at from 21. to 3/. per acre: and seeing the Pipes bored, had been referred to, but 
calars of fahe industrial employment of children in dale of managing the disteibution of liquid manure ie pent fie ts 
a i ose, i : = 
— The school-farm is situate at Quatt, order, and not distribute evenly, he was inclined to sonduits could now be made "cheaper than brick 
d belongs to the paih. Ses, the children | believe that its distribution by tubes under-ground, and | the pipes having lipped orifices, fitting each other ans m 
being separated from use at Bridgenorth. water-carts, is the best mode of application. He did peeve! —The Ea arl o of Chichester HPH thes ae 
t is managed by a ae 8 in the double capacity not depend solely on urine, but also on the solid manure difficulty in getting cheap earthenware pipes, nor the 
of master of the house and schoolmaster, and his wife mixed with it in the dissolvin = » This tank was | °™P Oy! wr 5 3 
-k matron, Their united is 50/., with rations. separated from che lower tank by means ofa perforated level to carry away their conte y 
e house is capable of accommodating 49 children : 3 ows acted asa a pereolator, s seive, or grating, whether earthenware pipes would} eae 
rere are now (March 25th, 1849), 32 boys and 17 ae e dissolved manure to pass throu h its inter- —Mr. Slaney replied that the subject was a 
girls ; of these 19 boys are above 10, and 13 from 5 to free k from resting one, and that experiments were in pr P 2 
s of the girls 5 only are above 10, and 12 under Giek it was pum ans count red, by means of a forcing: | the point referred to b 7 by the 
19 boys 1 10, S sade s them N 1 7 pa ss T i Of the | pump into an upright pipe, N)similar i in form to au arch, 2 suggested that a pae ada oat advantagents 
a cripple, and unable to or invi : r an essay or re : i 
the spade. The 1 ie ind PP use = of whi-h the top of the curve was some- | 10 nea e applying liqui d manure under different cit- 
mstanees. D: 
à orwich Meetinc.—Mr. barge =~ Gibbs, 97 
rector of the Show at the Norwich Meeting, — 
that, having examined the certificates of Stock enter 


Q 
iz 


t , the number of an ualled tho 
entered for the Society’s prizes at mea m 
ohn Martin, K.L., (the celebrated ias 
ented a series o reports and plans M the 
: san ade in & rar : see apc the Roy: our 
rest; Such as butter, pigs, | depended on the nature of the soil in reference to first Volume ra their Reports Matas! 
like vA <— sold a3 The ildren, ree the strength of liquid manure.—Sir F ae Rodwell, a cop oe Welt ota 8 0 
fed by the union ‘hee time te are clothed and | Lawley remarked that as no ordinary application to Relation of Landlor and Ten #5 itural Society 
Tiso at half ‘past ö in — : : vegetable saath was more caustic than strong liquid of the T ations of the ee 1 f the R. 2 
z jege a quarter | manure, especial] t day, i important T. Buien, & Copy o of bs 
9 till ae os iy 5 she u 10 ad from the proper 8 eee eee Soe. of I land. ak: me 8 Tbouretss 
work site 0 to. ž mploymen shanks > 
Tne eu he el and gardon an e gi as ema ote Me Hart rale, wc | far ai hy ge Canal oneal ee Danity 
and sup at 6, after which they We? leave work at 5, stock, but to dissolve in it all things in bis farms of a . The Council then adjourned to Tuesday nes 
* the weather perm A 8 E? me E l d Huf natu nature, and 3 80 to pare the strength of 19th,of June, mam 
y practise the psalms 3 urch, manure by dilution with water as to render Ts 2 
Sunday, and the dy kasa chants for the following | it most suitable to the plant.—The Earl of Chichester Farmers’ ono y passed 


fits of the farm are carried pith prayers. The pro- had known the use of diluted s-water turn a Clo Daritneton: Tenant Righl.— This cu" i, Thi 
they amount to from pov ag tag Ae cat amm om ae crop brown, early in = — whisk wher wards | the following a gg on, the 2 ial 4 is 7 
1 Proved most abundant table. He ah - | legislative 
as e always em: int, and which wil Halfte bis ere 


Hi 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


381 


or damage to be bag oso py 


gms ee and whic h pa enable him 
whatever description, of his own 3 
need state of hu eee, abso- 
Tnat 


the advantages : ie oe rar : 
P amants in general, power to grant an 
— a evactmen t on this point is 
wers e as ears, 
Aae hope and believe that the spread 
will ey parties to discern and act upon | 
— interests by private contract 


oO 
Bebiebos. 
5 eview. No. CXXVI. 24, Norfolk-st., 8 
s ue to receive this ‘interesting and a 


the 
jostructive matter, with sporting information proper to 
to the season. 


Miscellaneous. 
As to the use of Sawdust, i is more or less easy 
as it is the sawings ard wood or Pine- 

trees. of the former is pikes absorbent, more 
easily fermen more easily charred, With this 
J. Saw-dust may be charred with quick- 
by e into a compost with it alone. 2. 

It may be smo ed, as it is called, wi t 


gound y Sy man p of a 
say kind, or may be used as absorben 

drainings the stable or the f 
4, But 2 995 may also b 


sat deficient in vegetable matter, 
de very valuable. Or, it may 9 — em- 
as an absorbent for liquid manure by spreading 


stables, byres, or pi ggeries, or in 5 neighbourhood 
re „and then mixed w 5 i 


form a valuable manure. Whether 
any of the above methods can be p o as tob 
wely ul, will depend upon circumstances; but th 


method of mixing with*earth into a com i 
post with m 
er less lime, and with or without liquid manure, 
a ew 


3 3 


air to rush down the tube 

aud oF i a commotion she, eis 
began to come = edia 

ms made th the milk was as sweet as ee 


While 
himself » the head of the family may be 
prs the butter to eat with them [i 5 
. 


Calendar of f Operations. 


SEIRE Far 
Wann M, June 5 oy 8 “> geo 
e bree n crop, whieh 
romising 
Sake Wes ie? ra ath 


: weather permitting, for 
Band d bein red 0 
eee as than 3 suet i da day, with 81 


on the flat by drill 


manured with about 15 tons of dung per acre, with — 
addition of 4 cwt, of Rape-cake, mixed with 10 bushels of burn 
ashes, drilled in K with the seed. We usually continns 


win 
n Tares, with half a 
week. 12 oxen are soiled i in yards 
with Grass and Tae. che fatting oxen receive a onder of 
green food, with about 6 lbs. or erties The fatting 
sheep live chiefly on Tares, with Aer 1 lb. of corn per — 

We sow salt over rr e geo a. oe 8 be 2 hove 

te 


are now livin ng o 


and pr 
oven sheep t 7 season, — ay 3 To thriving — 
fast on pane succulent wee 7 “neighbour of peo however, 
lost 22 sheep from inflam n, p ding from eating too 
freely of 2 aa N i 


acre w. 

make ir p“ ont, Wo pene turning. 

out 1 by 3 = 5 turned and made by the 
machine and We seldom employ any men in 


CABBAG 


: A Little Farmer, The Earl York 
by — Dramhead : y York may be followed 


if your soil is loamy and sheltered, you 
a 


Arps are removed in May, tr to 

every 4th place, so that they may rine 4 feet apart e 

Sow in seed- recy in August and in 4 8 

Dary Propu Sevenoaks. A cow will yield from 1 1b, of but- 
ter a day 1 according to size, age, foo ason, ti 
ofc calving, breed, constitution, and health, Soma 

: 1 often render a dire ct answer 

question in farming impossible. Ayrshire cows ha: been 
found to yield a 2 large quantity of — 
milk than those of Kerry. 

70 C 


EMBANEMENTS : Consult Lo e 
3 re, nm a 
Kout RAB Sow in rows 12 inches 


. . a seed- bed 
j Piare your field as for Swede — ee tadaa in 
May, at intervals of about 2 feet, on good Turnip W * 
ee’ is the green or — 4 7 
nothing of it as a 8 jase for table 
e Trefoil. I 
well a 0 


Uley Cultivator od 
The selection in no case should be between England and 
— land as if there were any s distinction between 


shows w bove p 

slight shower, which would e beneficial to Deny — G 

but after such a oe ll be almost afraid at 
Som he 125 is getting very hard 

— the roller has to be 

We use it both 'before and after the drill. 


8 inches apart, with 3 bus — of dissolved — 


is very light, and few weeds in it, or it would 


small cost. Hay-making has began with ay A piece of tri- 
folium incarnatum being the fir " 24 tr sg aa the autumn 
after W , and hee stood t it looks at 


making, Our other Clovers are : zy fair e e hav 
ad our Po eaned, ni en — ary ‘by 
forking out the weeds where * strong, and ing 


hem. They look very ro pve so far as I can ascertain, 
P 


There has „ no = * bee h kent 
be expected to — sheep were shorn last week, 
We shall 75 busily employed Re some time canr and pre- 

t r the Turnip s and m aki y, clearing weeds 


N 
Sussex FARM, June 4.— With the fine weather of last week, 
8 Me — 1 coe about 


of this 


We spall | ous 


hink this pe vil — 
acre, I think, not exceed the cost of 


for it per 
1 

T SOMERSETSHIRE Farm, June 10.— We began dibbling 
Ma angola Wurz el the latter part of Ep ak and by ridging our 


best way would be to rick it half 
dried, in — — with old ha fi 

1 15 — half = half of 4 and a 

r. A little carbonate of 8 5 er milk 

a A Sud. 
* at Satisfacto; 

quantity of butter you 3 obtain — ofcourse, 

ne nd — the quantity of milk saved in t er You 


ropos 
bare DISEASE 


* We es, bladders arge 
r fron “the nostrils. — nd dimeas of 
reticent All these sad * . ly arise from vio- 
lent th cy irritation, or “ incipient roup,” if of t 
gin. It becomes “infectious — ” when neglect 
y produce partial blindness. This ‘diref 3 
found treated at length at 06 of our v. 1848. 
warm fomen ot hot) of -head, 
applied, dabbed over the head an ~— , 80 as not to 
touch the eye, which, with the nostrils, should previously 


washe d and clea nsed with a little wa 


imes a day. G 1 of rue, bruised garlic, Occa- 
sionally rolled in moistened — fi — a day. 
The patient must have a dose of castor-oil occasionally, and 
be brought in-doors pe in a warm pl n the kite 
and fed by hand, if unable to eat by itself. Newly purchase 
wls from = kets often show ent in a — 
days, which 


= ieee indicated by — ANN. 


endations as to 
d lie a 5 the —— 


pro Among the intermediate si 

are drainage (if Read sary rm make ms man ied — s 
able for the plants, 2 the employmen 
88 rt the food into meat for sale or con 


kep ur cows, house, 
pas e L Ws. 6 6d. 


land u 

rapi “os an , than last year, at a cost of 

8s. au “acre, th "chase respects the same plan was pursued as 
given in my report, each plant * 5 half 

a pint of manure, 2 of superphosphate of lime, rotten 


missing (wh ren not putting 

aan pig seed ), we transplant; a light roller was passed over 
the drills after — 5 was com apare which keeps the 
ood finish Drilling 


S 

so successful in the gro 

1 3 . the laud on which we hope to su 
a Wheat yg pisses * — 3 e 


ED ES: J D. Sow La aing's early and Skirving's 1 or 
latter will be ripe first. We do not know — is maak E7 
r iiaa purple. wes 195 

R Beans : A Little Fe do nothing with them 
— We do not knowif —— 1 Kadim has ever been used 
as food. If —- before dead, the haulm is good food for 
8 and c; 
2 N reaching town after Wednesday cannot be 
"ans nswered zdr same week, 


HFIELD, Po anit 
We havea Bn pasa of Beasts, 
and AF, ; the weather, however, being 


June 11. 
numbers 
cold, trade is active 


eross-ploughed in spring, then worke ags, | at rather more money than on Friday, The number of 
3 lod-crusher, and scarifier, and, when fine, ploug up in and Lambs has considerably increased. Big Sheep are a heavy 
e dung laid in the fu nat and immediately covered sate but sizeable ones are selling quite as ear as of late, 
The soi N s) was drilled by is still v d for Calve cannot 


sheep. 
menced * pr Saintfoin last week (for 
t at present the weather, 

uch agains hay- | 


= 
8. 
O 
8.4 
a 
S 
re 
2 


aking. e 


ex 
on the heavy soils; ours (which are e dr. ry 
stony land, and which soil we consider most —— ke foe 
particular 2 are as yet not mi gerei 3 and retain 
healthier ur Pea 8 
most beautiful, and will vg’ 
a W very fine, 


ever; : 

quantity of f of feed, navel of all descriptions is seiling better, shee 

in particular, but the corn 1 still remains in a most langui 

state, and it with difficulty we can turn Wheat into 
money, H. E. 


Notices to Correspondents. 
A ToN oF Hay: Inquirer. It was asce ertained to remove in the 
( Acids : car- 
121 Ibs; sulphuric, 60 ibs. 0- 


bonic, 163 lbs ; phosphoric, 
rine, 58 n Lime, 401 ia 
lbs; Soda, ; Sili 


that the question may be as pr — to answer 
would be 2 ee 1 — ion be 
point f the thing were 
ment, Fein would 8 altogether on the state “of the 
cob whieh ‘forded it, If w the general requirements 
ong run, in’ — with the . articles 

of rari * oo neg respective market values 


nish the answer re 
BARN- ROON : A Sub. p. There = be about 500 cubic yards of 
Wheat, ı ice ta lanas 


33 Constant R ie it? It is very rarely 
3 of extirpating ego r weeds occur, other than 

ose erance in the use of ord 
And proba in this case, if hard — of the land does 
not remove aps „early“ weed, your only hope may lie in the 
wet or — But we do not know to What you refer under 


iber 
| pu on Friday last; it is, however, 


From Holland and Germany — are 227 
Calves; and from Scotland, 


Per st. of 8 Ilbs.— d s d 
Best — U 55 


li higher. 
Beasts, 1710 Sheep, and 143 
300 Beasts, 

ua T Ree E 
ord 


tto S 
* 2d quality 
Ditto Shorn 
Lambs 


Calves 6 288 2 10 — 
Ditto Sh: oak 


Pigs 
Beasts, 3306 ; oe Pa Tiambs, 29, 840; “Galves, 356; Pigs, 250. 
Fripay, June 15. 
The supply of Beasts is 8 Trade is scarcely so eyo 
on Monday, but the weat —H sr bni a there is n 
able difference in price. W. ee aoe mon —— supply of py of Seep 


nnot qu her. 

we have hig Beasts, 700 Sheep, and 

and 127 Milch Cows ey the home n 
t Lon be wools. 


— . * a T1840 is 70 Calves, üs. ; Pigs, 265, 


san —Per Load of 36 Trusses, 
MITHFIELD, June 14. 


| Prime Meadow * isto i r 08 tod. 
— ditto 50 New Clover er oou — 
Row 50 E 8 
New my J. Cooper. 
The. supply E ra and trade very heavy. 
D MARKET, June 14. 
ot nga y 103 t0765 Inferior ... ... .. 758 to 805 
— —. 65 New Clover „ „ a 

w Hay — „%%% ys Oe 

oia Clover. 80 90 HOA Bake. 
i PEL, 2 1 ae 

Fine Old Hag to 72s | New Clover .,, ... 808 to 90s 
Inferior ditto... — 55 | Inferior ditto... 45 60 
New Hay. e + 63 z% „ 20 
Old Clover 95 100 


— 


+ 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


ficient for the — re den Cut 
consist of Heaths, Pelargoniums, —— Tay of the Valley, 
erarias, Tropwolums, Carnations. 


Cin 
@endrons, 


a, 
Apples kitchen, p- ben., 
rries, green, p. he — e, 


ener. — d d 


RD EN, 


Suns 


tuces an z er 


and. Mushroom 
ern 
o 10s 

6d Alm 

e i — 


„ Pinks, Fuchsias, Rhodo- 


inode; — 
sweet, per 1b., 28 to 3s 
n 100, — 6d to 28 


ese GA 16. 
ing favourable, ‘Vegetables are very 
ce bee last account, 
. Hothouse Grapes 
berri! 


UITS. 

“Pine-apples, per lb., Oranges, per 100, 6s to 16s 
“Grapes, — p. w. 55 to 8s | Lemons, ee doz., gs to 28 
Braw berries, p. af a 3s * toss 0, 78 4 


peck, $ 


Nuts, har ost ie ‘bash 


„208 to 228 


pie 
Pine. 


and 


d in considerable — OM dur 
a, are 


uf- 
. — 


68 to 248 


Monpay, Jux 


of Is. 


the ey finest qualities 
FRIDAY, 


and the 


is held firmly at late prices. Saale Barle 
uired 


Peas ar 
at our quotations —The Qat 
e rates of last Monday, excepting | 


— The ‘supply “a TET peor: 
0 and 


l 
t trade is heavy at a decline 
r qr. from 


15.— The arrivals of foreign Wheat 
en small, of other articles tole- 

his morning's ket was badly 8 
transactions in all sorts of eni sm aye Whea 


UNE 


in 
— and all other desriptions fally as dear.— 


— Peas oer: unaltered in value.— Fine fresh Oats 
cy a 3 ut of e imad, ETEen are forced 
ff with difficulty, — something under Monday's ra 

pr Se a. Corn is in less active request, there being no 

| cargoe i —We.observe no altera- 

i past week has 
h 


offering near at hand 
tion in Flour.—-The weather during the 
n 


— 2 


pot 

ARAE of on their 2 

with the greatest ease, an E dra an 
is secured. Dir 
bottle of Metaliic 


ment 


LEHIN BROTHERS 
mingham, —— APH or Label ia 


8 
G e improved W 


he Zine Labels 
can be are 


—— 
100, &e, 


s, &c., in 


» When 
= for use 2 


ica 


a permanen 


Sole agents in gp n, G. and J, DRA ANE, H 


and to 
i v 1 — drauli t 
and lining of Reservoirs, Cisterns, G purposes s ber 
external 1 pnsas namental'castin os it ne 
— Tan nd will i carry r 


ago’ nor pai 
o fou: 


minster 


also prepared for Orn 
ing, 


the —— CHARLES FRANCIS and Some, „Nine Elen ane 


ANDOWNERS’ WEST OF AND AND. 

SOUTH WALES LAND DRAINAGE AND INCLOSURE 
COMPANY. 5 3 Incorporated by Act of 
liament. This Comp pan ared to Contr uc wit Ag 
owners for the Dra image, 8 Irrigation, or 
ment of Lands in any part of Englan d Ireland 448 
Owners of 5 — Estates in England may, th 0 
— ny, DRAIN, Inc » BUILD on, or bam 


Mr. Tuomas May, Secretary, 9, Bedford — Tea 


Warehouse, 46, ine William.street Tinie 


ees CEMENT.— 
Pia arters, 2 — CE MENT rere 


ys deter Se Ma 77 of 
anufacturers, J. B. Wares — Sons, Milba 
— 


een CEMEN 
. aie i ba 5 Stucco, instead g 


ring, m inted and 


namental Plas tering, Pe * 


be., 


CLOSE, 
charge — 5 with the perma value 


8 
a 


Sinking, 
to JohN LEOGG, Chelten 


3 to 5 1 
— do do., 5s to 6s Eo — Brazil, p. bsh., 12s to 16s The crops generally are well spoken of, but complaints 
Oranges, per doz., 1s 5 . Barley and Wheat increase from particular districts. 
i ys trade has been steady throughout the kingdom, 
~~ — 3 eee — thout ‘any particular variation in prices, e 
Cauliflowers, p. doz., 28 to s — Spanish, p. don., 1s Gd to 4s Oats which have a tendency to decline, owing to lar 
rrel, p. hf. sieve, 9d tols Shallots, per Ib., 10d to arrivals, 
$ ton, 60s to 180s Garlic, Ib., 6d to — ls 
, 58 to 148 rtichokes, per doz., 3s to 6s Liverroon, FRIDAY, June 15.— At this day’s market the 
— h., 48 to 7s —— „ per half 3 —.— was good, including several millers from — 
oP ps, per bunch, 6d to 1s siev. and we had an active demand for Wheat at an — of 10. 
Red Beet, per doz., 2s to 4s Lettuce, Oat p. sc. 4d to 9d — bushel on the finer ees other ore ‘being ‘folly = 
n bdl., ls to sanss “sees Flour was brisk, and —— —.— Oats an 
— „p. 100, 6d to 48 P. Pot., s to 18 9d eal were about the same in p 
Rhubarb, p. bundle, 4d to SmallSelade ee “2d to3d There was — — retail demand — —— and oo Indian 
French Boans,p.100,1a6äto2s6d | Fennel, per bunch, 2d to 3d — was rather — and fell Is. per qr. Supplies 
‘Cucumbers, eac Savory, per bunch, 2d to 3d y 
— — ist toe bs naan pee ry hm fama WHEAT. — Ars. RTE. BEANS, | PEAS, 
. M a an OAA taolad | APEL'2S...£..0 | 466 0a] Beloit 17s 777 4 29s 34/295 94 
l 2 4 % 2 ohir % % 6 7 
arrots, per bun., 8 Basil, green, p. bunch, 4d to d 26. m 6 28 10 17 9 26 : 31 3 32 4 
8338 f 7 10 6 6 31 733 4 
HOPS,—Frivay, J 3 
* e. PATTENDEN and Sauen report tha aie Govt’ from ive pill eile al ee olin Ti 
antations continue to come unfa N alt h 2 $ 
the market is not brisk, prices — "Bem; he — 5 Duties on Po. Da e Lae isle 8 
— aie adv: — — duty is thought by many to be reign Gra 1 oi L OLI 1 I 
much overrated at 100 i Bi uotuatfons 2 the last six — Deen Ave cade 
ICES. 
ue Bong 3 7 ora ane, Warensoz, June m 8. Arn Ax 5. Mar 19. Max 26. [JUNE 2. |JONE 9. 
that the s of lish Potat is | 46s 94 ae 
„ ĩᷣ , 
not, be morti while to g to a his days a unt til 44 9 a 8 85 25 T oe 
— ie — ay’s quotations : ea ag 44 9 aa : a 85 
— erie agg es ee | a s 
airain T PEE T EE A i orae m ates mal . 
London. Liverpool. Wakefield. | Boston. Birmingham. 
CURRENT. June 4 June II June 5. June 12. 223 1 June 8 a June 7. | June 14. | 
qr. qr. s ne = lbs, (| + qr. qr. 62 lbs. 62 lbs. 
Wher i 6. is, , d. . A. e. d. 8. d. s. 8. 8. is. 8. e. d. 6. d. |e: d. 6. d. 
New, red *. 40 t042 40to42 6 4 6 96 4 6 piney 43 314038 t045 $8t045/5 6 6 25 6 6 2 
” oo 6610 7 46 10 7 444 0 43— 50/40 48 40—48 6 0 6 46 0 6 4 
red . 42—46/6 7 6106-7 E NASE — — 5 8 6 15 8 6 1 
„ hitte. 07 67-07 6 —50 —50 — | — 511 6 6511 6 6 
„ 5535—564 4 8 24 4 8 6039—4539—51 — — 5 0 7 05 0 7 0 
480 Ibs, 480 Ibs, 
Rye—New .. 2412294, — — K — ii 
Foreign... ia 23 — PA — fiend 
Foreign meal Duin — — mee oa 8 a 225 
—.— qr. r. 
2 222312223104 96/24 20 2325 283—25 
Malting. 732 27—32ʃ28—30 28—30 | 29—32 29—32 
n 24—2824—28 — — — 
6 bush. 6 bush. 
3 39—42 — — bii 
— 14—2014—20 20—28 20—28 
— — — 18—20 19—21 
' D nA r. 255 af 
Peas— Boilers aoe 34s— q 28—32 on uae pe pe 33— pe 
Foreign . . 24322432 i air ay atta | 5 ae 11—12 11—12 
New, ‘small eee, 22—3222—32 ‘ 
: e 28 —33 29—3229—3230—33.30—33 12—14 12—14 
Na 32 —34 32—34 35—3635—3634—3634—36 15—16 15—16 
621—36 23 —3 23 —32 26—28 28 a — 13 11—I3 
j * — 
40 —42 | 40—42 |32—40|32—40| — | w — — 
. 1 W ee —.— 55 
-35s—37s | 34s—36s | = — — * 3 . 
280 lbs. 280 Ibs. p. sack p. sack — — 
i 34—35 34—35 — (30—36/30—36| 32—37 32—37 
| Averages. | Imports. | Aver. Impts Aver. Aver. Gloucester. 
kä P 4 í 3 
an om 17 r 42 :9 | 1786 — 4103 
17 7T 18 5 f 14 3 — m 
26 6 “ona | pallid | 366 20 74 4406 
31 7 — 7 an pr 8 5 nee 
1 8 1227 29 0 44 — 
Of 1. = 
"ORD SEGAR and =| SaNDARS as 
Sei)  DONNICLIPFE. | ma punne| eee 


8 and Clergy, for out-door work at t ae 
The Anti-Corrosion is particulary recommended as the W 
durable out-door Pai 


ety 
equalled by — 2 ot ‘the And 2 itherto bronhi ar 
public notice, Lists of Colours an d Prices 8, together 
the testimonials, will be sent on or bh dan 1 
n the Bank 0 
uested to 


Compan — f ae 


tever invented, for the . 
ood, Stone, Brick, C 


ote 


s,—All orders are e y req 


i — — ooden mis ‘small 


‘has, in many insta’ 
tance teatir this Net, 


— y 


WIRE WORK equired for this England, * 
and WORK re e ie 


STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND°RABBIT PROOP 
WIRE NETTING, 


a 
"o oo WE gy 
es 


$i 
N 
b) 
t 


* — 
* 


BUILDINGS, i 
Epinsonen ; em ST. í 


api, 
others thal strong Wire-N e, for 
and Rabbits from Gardens, young Plantations, 
2 his Net was ex „ a nid 4 
ultural Society of Scotian 
th, and Exceeding: 
Agron its Efficiency, e prir. À, rded from the . 8 


— — ee oe al attention, and had award 
Medals l f 
2 by N 


h this 
ae are —— advanced to be 
pome 

nS aden atest owen — 


pose, to w en into the g 
or seven feet ap It is, 
dering Hedges, P j 

such 


OD. a have 
will 1 undertake 
Scotland, England, and Irè 


than 


ments —— . uy 


—— yard. 
e eats Co, cannot aim 2 


C. D. Wire 


sent to all parts of 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


383 


NURSERY MEN, “FLORISTS, AND 


GENT OTH C JARVIS begs yoa — ce attention = araa and 
PRO HEROE í MORRIS are in- the e — to the ufacturers 
ESSRS. Mr. T. Streacy to sell by public Auction, on ing made a farther reduction of ab — est ge is enabled 
structed reet, — USE Miers avai z supply all descriptions 0 „at pees considerably less 
premises, GR NTS, con- an C. J. having a large ntit 
J. Mih, 2 — > es, Acacias, Azalea indica, Gar- mall Glass in —— will dispose of it ph less A S —— 
taser of Gera „ "Fuchsias, yore „ tarai iglaste: Observe the address, 38, Great Castle-street, 
— Crassalas hree capita 0 „ 2-lig egent-stree 
mems, Catti, — — — Hot-w ter Pipe and iler, a — 
Fans Range, Stoves, Fender, Capboards, Copper, 8 SHEET, AND HORTICULTURAL 
— es, Water ots, &c.—May x be wed prior to th $S,—Consumers of the abo pe pes gary of GLASS 
rues E on the premises ; ne principal Se . will find a large stock and very redueed scales of prices at the 
. Catalog" of the —— eee Nurs Soho Plate, Crown, — and Ornamental Glass Company, 
men, Tandon ; and 26, Soho.square, Lon 14 


PSLEY P LATT AnD Co, (late Piatt and 
REEN), wien Glass Works, Ho iland.street, Blackfriars, 
2d. r Ib.; mber 


— — the Seaso GR 
have always on hand, Bee 1 Le. Cucum 


» MORRIS will submit 


a FLORISTS, AND OTHERS. 


at the Mart, Bartholo- | Glasses, 15. 6d. per Ib.; Milk ans, wo . glass, 5s. 6d. 
— 218t, at 12:0’clock, a first each; Propagating Glasses, Aras ls. per Ib.; do., gann RA 5 
Nals, consisting all the newest and | do. S er 2d. per Ib. extra; Gian e Shades, 15. 
kinds. Fuchsias, enas, Heartsease, each; owls pena 6d. each; 2 and Histon 
ozen 


per gross, or 3s. 6 By the u 
may be preserved fr from ( otherwise certain Olf destr 

8 OR — Te 
ear, Glass 5 


a 


Auctioneer: 
— important MA po of 
all = ho — =" ‘tithe free, splendidly 
miles pans er and = 0 | 
ican fal ank of the 3 wW. ~ 

its fine picturesque Bou ida ary for ne early © 
— soe ae te Bridges, with —— — 


and improving property within seven 
1 * Eia. 


—— SMITH “pat ob will ioe’ 4 
Wood, Esq., t 


OF stones, 
nsid 


from 
forms 
— 


to James HETLEY and Co., 35, Soho-square, Lon 
See the Gardeners’ Chronicle, first Saturday in each month, 
PA AYMAKING SEASON tion Many. N Machines, 
—Mary a — 


Eum 


Wido 
nobility,. gen he 
MAKING MACHINES, under the 
are not m — tured by Mary Wenak KE — a, ef 

imitations y, and, alt though somewhat | like in ‘appearance, 


118, ——— opposite Mark. lane. 
reed AND racechurch-street, 


river — divided into six 

ae tantial, brick- ‘puilt houses and 

tages for keepers and 
h 


, scientific Hortic 3 to es ir mprove etho 
— a drives, com — 3 maive gam the. Tank Sys o Pineries, Propagiting Houses, 
a i eat as 


— a bold mou well as ai etme a 
—— — aad 5 appli e 

Seoreby; and escriptive — 2 with pla may be had 
Ae d of Messrs. Lightfoot, Bona — Lightfoot, 


cester-square, London; of Mr. 


friends — vit making 
Copper, by which the cost is reduced, 
ell known, scarcely require desc 

m 


iT 


HE 9 — 2 RAM, 
nd, 


tern, anged to throw a Jet 
of Water patel te a —— 
tain with the head of water be- 


neath. 

Engines for deep wells of all kinds, Douche and other — 

Buildings 3 æ otwater. Water wheels to Mtr small 

3 from 15ʃ. timates given for the supply o 8, &. 

newly- — — Vapour Bath, all — for 4. 
WIRE- WORK, HOT. U WATER ae 

GREENHOU 
T. THOMAS BAKER, MANOR. HOUSE, MANOR- 
£ 


red Rabbit-proof. 
Walks, . — — Stands, — 
TI CULTURAL BUILDINGS, Green and —— Conser- 
vatories, & c. The same heated by HO T- WATER APPARATUS 
on improved and economical principles, 
— — — — em and Drawings and 
he Tra 


rd’s —ͤ— ae Domest tic — 


— — 
sun has no — upon it. Manufaet 
and Sons, Cement Works, Nine Elms, Lon 


WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT, 


aerate 


885 


i 


. 


i 1 1 05 5 
900 100 940 
a 


1 pein 
170 


UARE FOOT. 
ing, — a-ha ters not havin 
was exhibited at the late Metropo 
highly e eee both for its utility — . appearance, aba 

acknowledged to be the cheapest and best article ever produced. 
It — X Aight a aada durabit ence against the depr redatio ms of 


— Le 
des York ; and of Messrs. DANIEL rr and Sox, 
Waterloo. pl ace, pd ri. Lond 
f N "FRADE. 
5 in con- 


ut the kingdom, 


N urveries throughou 
m the T Trade that at their Manufacto: 


eg to inform 


a — — apply 
prepaid, to Mr. road, Lo aden. 

: “SOLD, SA EREEHOLD I ESTATE, Band- 

— — county of S 7 miles from 

i the South — Ale Way, con- 

— “with Homesteads and Got- 


obtained spon — adva 
"Conservatories adc, of Tron 


Fences, ris indi. 
ESSRS. 


“upon the most 
b, Pield and Garden 


“OE ae mington-lane, London. 
sourtid ee © of: —— and ‘Agvicaltaral | Sp 
Cs Geology, Survey Railway Engine 

e., may — ri — 2 — $, 2 


aS 


NESBLDS | — ch AND AGRI- 


poultry; and by the galvanised 

— — ‘a irably for training all kin 

Large quantities! a always kept in stock, — 

wide; it 2 however, be — to any 
r 


neasa wares — 
re quiring no paint, it 
í creeping plants. 

8, 


A desired. Pa 
2 inches wide = per yar 


tf —.— men wane cig garden hep 6d. per running foot 
a good modern education i 1 h; Gar es, 5 
pee BE D DISPOSED OF, nad very little more ue. —— worles on ‘Arithmetic, Mensuration, Gauging, Flower Stands, from 3s. each Galvanised Tying Wire for 
unt ka 8 0 ae in hand, Fixtures, &c.,.a Land Sur — — — — gent by Lonc- — a and trees, Dahlia Rods, and eve description of Wire- 
SEED 1 SINESS, situate — 5 the man and Co.,andanay be had of all Boo ; Weaving, for the use of — s, millers, &c,—At 
week, x “Thoroughfare. good. ent only 108. per The terms of the — be ha a — — either na 8 actory of THOMAS Henry Fox, 63, Show. hill, London. 

702975 by letter; to Wipow SNELLING, Brighton, personally or by lett AN IR Mi 
NUKSERYMEN, GARDENERS, AND OTHERS HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND: HEATING [(SELVENIBED “WIRE “GAME NETTING. +- 
BE DISPOSED OF, an OLD-ESTABLISHE G EPR T 


ALSO THE . OF THE CHOICEST PLANTS, 
VINES, &e. 


A 
- ASS SSS 


RM, MIDDL 
L e — 


. 


2 


For 
‘Kon, — Edmonton, or to 


apply to Mr. KNIe 
rz gene e T above is partioularly 
ang busines in London. 


o BE — mary —.— sassen FARM, i in a high 


ince merene dad een T ae fen sa Good Res <= 
N * n 
880 Marsh, 72 Meadow : and Pastoro, a Fa 15 are WE AND Co., e e Chelsea, Hoxsrcvt- 
+ Homest 4, wae. A Lea f which m may be TURAL ARCHITECTS, Hor — pega . * — 
geous -circ — APPARATUS MANUFACTURERS, Solicit an inspoo 
C. and H HYDE, 33, oro 8 p POT ous Works now in 5! , which will attes ~ to pas y 
TO NURSERYMEN AND FLORIST: materials and workmanship. J. WEEKS an . havi 
— — LET, a C ANE ected on their Premises, for i — a . variety « 
F AGE and: GREEN NHOUSE, Hothouses, Greenhouses, Conse 8 &e., 
i T WA 


F 
— all h heated by HO 


DYFFRYN HOUSE, 
LET, a ma —— 


a firs 
ki cultivate in such en 


ved methods of Build. Per sq 


= | facturers, 196 3 ng Chapel 


alvan- Japanned 
ized. Iron. 

— ap light, — wide s.. 4d, per yd. 5d, per yd. 
2. inc strong 93 ae » ” 
2-in h „ extra strong » 75 „„ ” 
bie ber 8 * ” 
age ” ” 


„ Strong 
„ extra strong y 


ade an, ee NG 1— te prices, 
If Ai he a half is. wpe Eade ny wi it — reduce the prot ge one- 
th. Gal Proof netting for pheasantries, 3d. 
— <r forwarded pos — 
Manufactured eK. as and BISHOP, me ag e 
wW — and del — of expense in London, 
boroug 


Hull, or Newe 


borough, Hull, or Newoastle- 
Ga: SPRING MATTRESSES, permanently 
tic, ry ae and cheap 
feet 6in, — Pi 
5 eet pene 
5 feet 6 
ress on it, is 
S LIST of 


eae vores a 
BEDDING, with 


— 
— rir 


AR COMPLEX 


particulars of wei 
of Bedding, sent free by p 


ELDER FLOWERS 


table RESI 
of three at LESS AN HALF- 
goatee eee Sitting-rooms, five First. floor Bed rooms, —.— ee upon applica’ 
— es and suitable Out-buildings, ETAL 
ne runs at the f round. An excellent Trout = 5 NT aT 6 COMPANY. —M - 
Wales Railway oot 11 the lawn. Swansea, to which the ACK AND — — PAINTS are ap- 
Silar will be — in a 3 months, is within plicable > ae ind of Iron and Wood-work, F — nd ee 
AWFORD, Solicitor * ah re-eminently superi 
Agent, a — South Wales. 5 agren — Shipping, keu of — r red lead, or so-called 
Au be A COTTAGE, with convenient out- Mineral Paints,” in point of economy, durability, and —. 
— sagen of f Grass L Land, nót more than br 8 K el, exclusive 
„near a Railway de sirable, | Rent | brown, > ' be refilled, free 
me Mr. $ of packages, which are not returnuble except to 
Stat e e — to the — — Brothers, London; Messrs. Mat 
— * . 
ed, direct reet fom — — — aE Just en rei — Bristol; Messrs. Evans — Hodgson, |ti 
an uantity o kJ baod. Exeter: Mr. Samuel J. Fill, Yarmouth, Forton ; 
q —— PONTES ; ‘size, from’ 83 79 12 hands igh Also on. i au, Dundee; Mr. 
t 1 Sandeman, Glas Mr. G, eman, 5 
. e smali COWS and HELP ewby, Bradford, Yorkshire ; Ir. R. S. Farr, Edinburgh ; Mr 
and SHEEP, 2 55 by side, end: a ae A — — — wail iley, Wolverhampton; Messrs. Bryant and May, Tooley- 
i en 2 thelr feeding. Th e Cows give a large | street, London ; ‘Messrs, ‘Vint and Co., Neweastle-on-Tyne and 
eir — * hich is — rich, similar — Banta an Mr. Robert Oxland, Plymouth; Mr. a Fox, 
very hardy and suitable to this clim. near Falmouth, To be obtained also, w es of 


— 


regedna uth copi 
Testimonials, on application to ahs Offices of the eel. 20, 


Orton’s , Salesman and Importer to ree x 
| Fenchurch-street, London N A. WEST, Secretary. 


ODFREY’S EXTRACT € pie 


tifying, — 
nd charming appear 
— and delightful connate 
sunburn, red Ko., und by i 
qualities render the skin ‘soft, — and fre 
scurf, & 0 wa — umour, Hire 
— d and smo ‘a and the complex 
pon ý 
— — — l. — Sold iu bottles, price 22. d., wi 
directions for using it, by all medicine vendors and perfumers. 


the Natural remeng 


384 THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


EN, 2. aon sley-strect, Oxford- | 
et, London 


Cor PAM AND H 1 ALLE 


FLOWER SHOW FOR THE ROYAL L ASYLUM 


21, 1819, under the patronage of the 2 
— yong Dowager, and other members of the Royal Family, 
and the principal Nobility 


IZES 
ill be awarded for the following productions : : 


9 7 — vest Meme m 12 EPRE vba in . — T 
16-inch pot é 
‘or the — 8 do. . | 
or the third best 0. 19 0 
For me — nena yp of Pelargoniums i in S. inch h pots, | 
* not e — 13 pots, in on a eties 82 $ 3] 
] vor th — best 12 Roses (dissimilar 8 in pots 0 
Tor the second best do, Sh Nae ea 
41. best collection of dat Flowers in Showers’ ow HAYMAKING MACHINES, of the best construction, made 
almost wholly of I 


ron, and embrac cing all the latest i improve- 

ments, at the reduced price of 121. 2125. are now ready for 
deliv very at 1 and HALLEV's, 2, Winsley. street, Oxford- 
street, Lond 


0 
The Prizes wil be paid a at 7 0 felocke on the day. Ail produ. 
tions to be in and ready 


uested to sen r É 3 , Bri 
hill; or to the Secretary, E. F. LEEKS, Esq., F. L S., 2, "Charlotte, 
F) w, Mansion. house, hege M be received at the rooms on 


"MHE 451 [CROFT SWEDE 558 h IP. — 
decidedly the 1 of all By Swedes 
better shape t e Liverp 
ginally elected ; i 
45 — 
— 


If sown immediately it at be 
1 sort, . — it may also be sown 
n others, as would appear from the fact that a large 

er Pea deci 


field of this sort, sown aft eas, was ided by competent 
judges to be the best piece of Swedes in the 3 22 $ 
competition with other very fine crops sown much earlier, This 
— elsea alii me attention of the No bility Gentry, and 
ill also suce xl ‘val A ta tic Tes Ol The zowa is yellow ers, to their vice tanker GF Brecting ana H amen 


erat ag da LIVERPOOL SWEDE, 1s. 3d. per 1b., or 7s. wh 
on 

SIX-WEEKS TURNIP.—The best White Turnip ibs | 
r Wheat, form ming a large solid bulb; 


they N 


Ta 
EARLY 
early sowing to feed off fo 


of sowing. si ae at for tabi le ueo T pek Weeks from the time season, for the Worshiptal apothecaries Compan y of Lon- 
Prie 2 of Taraip ón nd other Agricultural Secds | pirea al wil kindly show the wor wA *. vote 
may be had — 1 st. Address, Jonn Sutton and Sons, Read- Ther be , atag 7 ths building 55 is “referred to, aa the 


ing, xe — | Heating Apparatus v was not erected oh Be 


an 
| is re 


8 COPIES OF VALUABLE BOOKS. 


Q 4%. 4s., PUBLISHED A l 
; of the London A ea ey 
SEDA. —— ee éa and — F — f 3 N. B. Plans and Estimates furnished free. 
j i T 2 Hardy and Half hardy, Wits aby Propa- n Oe, ee X HALLEN, ExGINEERS, Iron FOUNDERS, 
a A Plates ate of 2500 Wooden Tr ta of i &e., No. 2, WINSLEY-STREET, OxroRD-sTREET, LONDON. 


' Shrubs, or 
RE TO lis., PUBLISHED AT 11. 10s., 
EPTON'S. ‘COMPLETE WORKS ON LAND- 


â 


T 8l. 8s., 
OM, arranged 
ording to its Or, anisation, 2 as a Foun dation raj 
* als, an 


arative Anejo — 3 and — 
by LATREILL t 2 — the last Previa edition, with 
800 Sheets of Coloured Plat 8 vols. Syo, half — gilt 
tops. This celebrated work embraces the wot Sey f 
Natural History, and is only one suitable f “ Home 
1 The a are engraved 2 steel, a ant early all 
oured, com: upwards of 4000 figures of Quadru eds, | 
Birds, Fishes, 3 ae * $ e = 
ON'S ED O II. 10s., PUBLISHED AT 141. 4 
$ T 
AND TANY, containing 2 OF GARDENING | and HALLEN Pinal had 30 years’ experience in the 
hith i ga ription of a tants erection “Of HOTHOUSES and 8 Manas = 
ar et 533 it r Gen 4 Us and Specific C 8 Place | Tron or of Iron and W ood combined), and from m mpro 
— * uitare, and o Ises in “Gar — * na 5 mestie ments they have m ring that time, ca with 8. —— 
4 a’ 8’ Dic asoa | undertake to erect such buildings with economy and dispatch 
and arranged isso, 1 the Natural System, Numer | WATER APPARATUS for heating the esad a 
vols, pards 
*.* The Public are respectfully informed that the number il 3000), 5 r = 
the above works being very — an kerin y applica _ p de | ae. 
sirable. They are quite perfect, a respect 2 feet. 
„„ / T ERROSE aS OE rence Oh. cove E E A EE 
A CATALOGUE OF BOOK URAL PFY EY 


course of this both new — second-hand, val an ani in the 


This day is published, price 2s., free b t, 2s. 6 
THE SCIENCE OF — se Slew to Live 


ppiness oni; 
the judicious ——— — ‘ aly 


— * —— and RICHARDS, 52, Paternoster-row ; and ma 
—— oom of Mann, 39, Cornhill ; ; and Hannay and Co., 43, “Oxford. 


8 BOTANICAL MAGAZINE, 


= Wittram Jackson Hooger, K.H., D. C. ke. 
ee each Gardens of 1 With — son 
by Mr, Jonny Sars, A. L. S., 


thly aan * now the * — 
ew t 
througtt z — of piani — nen ed in o this 


€rymen, and the position =r ig the Editor, 
e largest per ion or of Plants in 
nication and extensive cor- 

respondence, furnis 3 him with ün 
ees: so use fa atone val aa equalled facilities for the 

* Published in Month} umbers, eects containi 

6d, coloured ; pre gr Annually in gh containing 6 pir 

8 London : REEVE, BENHA AM, and REEVE, King William-street, 


Pr eS ach, 
st-Iron pte are Vases on show 


great variety of Ca at 
Winsley-street, 3 street, also a great 


A 
their 5 2, 
variety of 


the f l articles for gardens, &., at greatly 
1 8 publishing, a neat pocket volume, 5s. cl reduced pri prices, 
Asoc nf Comps a tee ema: Mamde] ici onti | Fonigi 
re; and com- pri i 7 ? 
0 f ali sca ad and —— — with wood engrav- 8 3 
. By Taonia Moons, |.. Treasa | °” Garden Arches 
les, nak a Botanic Garden Practice Applied ie) Mowing Machines, Garden Chairs. 
Lulture of the Cucumber tn the Wi un Pp ia yeep ition of Work, 3 oth plain aad Oona in 
e confidently recomm iron, for Gar ens, & c. &c. 
the al of Bol of this beautiful pe atti and especialy to | e TOOLS and AGRICULTURAL IMPLE. 
lournal o, * inds. 
R. GROOMBRIDGE and i ; 5 RONG IRON HU DI. ES, strained Wire Fencin Ke. 
and W. PAMPLIN, ent * — row w Rooms at the ‘MANUPACTORG. 2, Winakor Aa, and 


16, 988 three doors West of the Princess 's Theatre, 


S voy FOR GEN 


r 5 


tion to Mr. G: . — Wiekdiam m Mariet $ eee 


OODE’S PATENT IRRIGATOR ARAC 
co ku Models of these a R & cata in ope 
bury, Fd par ticulars may be x at, Oxted ee a 
FLEXIBLE INDIA-RUBBER HOSE, PIPES, TUBIS, 
JAMES LYNE HANCOCK, „Sole — 

2 vanr of the PATENT 
RUBBER . 


tion uF il or e 

cad Co eee Shem pera ais 

equire 

| ith conga bane ors, Roa ee cau, Mia 

Pumps, Cisterns, & e. 

* “i ent ef the comme 
the B all tools required. 


ox, for containing any sm 
— 


= = 

NCOCK Se the attention ot pate wing nei 

5 the Flexible Garden Hose to his SELF- — aoi 

PIPE REEL, which is 22 3 n pr 
winding up and con 8 a e w 

Menges etory and Warehouse, Goswell mews, dende 

London. All Orders and Latter rs addressed as above will re 


2 
NE HEAD OF HAIR. its be 

OWLANDS' FMACASSAR OIL insinuates 
dakai the head, nourishes the 1 


samic properties into the pore growths. 
Hair in its are state, accelerate: and continset 
from Scurf and Dandriff, sustains itin ad ioien 


its possession of healthy vigcur, 4 Ss softies 

redundancy, to the latest paion of 

of Whiskers, Eyebrows, and M 

in its eS ae operation. 
ended, 


Bester cos iiss 1 e 
eus bass dr ͤ besaitet 
fi omb u 
s 8 bottle of ROWLANDS wu 
e 
105. 64 


—— bumait 
— Family 2 se small), 
21s, 
Je has the words 
— Bach bottle of the genuine artic 
: SAR OIL 
ROWLA DS MAC os R O h the back of ib 


rapper . 1500 pokes peta me a n 
h them at — Ra tton Garden, 
Nesei and Perfom 


—.— included: 
Cabin. 
For each Person. 7 w 
14 Years old, and upwards w 15 1 
7 Faas 01d. — under 14 + 10 : 
1 Year old, and under 7 . 
Un = d — —— old 


ced Surgeon is appoi in 2 e cont ta 


New ZEALAND House ; or to Mr. Jos es 
Fenchurch-street, London. By order O CODBEET . 
uildings, 


t- 
New Zealand House, 9, Broad-stree 
* London, » May 29, aes . 
of N 3, Upee, Jua of N ieee 
saait a Pa tery 22 
i No. 5. odcr iat — 
said SOU 10 ms pairt 


€ 
q” 
8 
z: 
72 
“5 
J 
2 
zi 


pace ol Communications 
Sarvugpar, Juns 16, 1849. 


HE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


a Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, JUNE 23. 


[Price 6d. 


yo, 251849. | 
an 


INDEX. 


Leases . 9 2222 2 393 G 
12 use of. i a 
ame we Society. „ 390 


the Hayward's Heath Station of the London Coast 
Railway, from 3 onveyances to ‘the Nar ob- 
tained.— June 
ANE A SON, Gre ak “apiece gener have 
the ho ee ing those who are interested in this 
peautitul tribe = — that N “splendid * — col- 
lection will be om after the of June those who 
rnips, value ofa ton wish to see the ane — shou pvt si re i eight nes si the 
Vegetation and RA Nurseries, which commence within a few minutes? walk of the 
Villa Berkhampstead station of the London and North Weste 
1 Railway. T itor will not be disappointed in extent and 
Water rain. rae beauty. Ornamental Trees and bs are also in great 
Xylophaga quantities. 


WOODLANDS NURSERY, Maur SFIELD, NEAR UOK- 
FIELD. SUSSE 
. WOOD anv SON have much plea in an- 


nouncing to their friends —— the public, rane — superb 
d r collection of ROSES, at Woodiands, is now 
coming i loom, and will aert to be very attractive 
during the Rose season. Maresfield is 12 miles re from 
and South 


Zurich Botanic Garden 


TUNBRIDGE WELLS. 
‘GRAND HORTICULTURAL EXHIBITION will 
Le ag aed f Hotel, Tun- 
„on 1 Arn * $ June 2 h, 1849. The Band of the 
will be in attendance erlig ik ay. 


naan — 
3 AND LOZELLS FLORAL AND 
HORTI 1 S 

the Patrona e Neighbouring Nobili ity and Gentry. 

SECOND EXHIBITION this san n will (by the per- 

Samuel Wilkes, Esq.) be 

* late residence of Colonel PE on TTES- 

P jane 26th. The celebrated Pro — — from the 
—— is enya — an will Sartori 

from 2 1 il 7 o'clock. penance 2 „ — 8 3 
: z CHARLES JAMES PERRY, Hon. Sec 

Birminghi m, Jan e23. 


AND NORWICH ee ae 


ESDAY, — 
; — — CHAR 
ö street, — June 23. ta 
‘bea GRAND D HORTICULTURAL. EXHIBITION, 
hith 


wit ulations 

tained on application to Mr. C. S. GILMAN, as above. 
Fe eee TURAL I- 
BITION. AND HORTICULTURAL 
10N = 23d Aug. 
: t nder the special 
of the 8 y of se win 1 
; en Prizes (highest 
warded for 3 an 
Cockscombs, Annuals, 


Plants, Cut Flowers, 9 Roses, New Plants, 
r 8 2 * 
fruits, F ull particulars in the Hor 
rand Schedules to be ed ston Beer 2 
Jephson Gardens and Parade, Leamington. 


21 
London E a 34 
Quedgley, Gloucester 74 
ee, BS 
Dartford ... 46 
Andover 81 1 
; London —. 15 
„ eae =i 2 
| posacme] 26 
2 5 1 
r i — of Scon 
Bn, rof this 
13 l WARD R. CUTLER, Secretary, 
97, 18. 89 Gn street. a 
82, Gracechurch-street, 


zs to offer the’ re ii 
. . 
iri mag ” 
tic Stock, splendia, 12 ” ‘ 
vind 4. do 
od ingala o i colour 2 ; 
n the receipt of 43., 


—— mg nec 
ques 


R — THE COLLECTION AT 3 — } 
TH will be in bloom on and after the 23d in 

wards ofa a thousand Fee 5 those fine brilliant new — | 
GEANT D ATAILLES and CYME D'OR will be 


ARD DENYER, an Loughborough- 


seed wien in London. 
OMERIA JAPONICA SEEDLING 
ESSRS. “STANDISH NOBLE — still 
f the above splendid tree, 
p 


8 


The pres sent is the most suitabl 
a, plant sent out by Messrs, S 
ell-grown specimens.— Bagshot, Survey, Jun 


mari 
1 230 sie 
ieis pr epar red to 
TMULUS, — Ts. ea. 
wot gro 3 feet 


form, 11110 ia a and 1 


flow ers 0 of fin 
that it will supersede all otier Een 2 — 
e Gardeners’ onde for. ta 19th, p. 392, 

“ Your seedlin ng has 
ae by — 


sary. 
ested from een. correspon 


TURNIPS. Bare. s rot Swedes, ls. per Ib. 


Fine Purple.top — — 2 per — aa or 468. per bushel. 


a Green, bebo and Red Rounds...... . per Ib. 

Skirving's Impro Purple- to, p Scotch ... 10d. „ 

Large Green-top Yelow Set "dog 55 

Yellow Tankard or Scotch Pudding. . .. . . 10d. „ 

Red and White Tankards Scl. „ 

Dale’s sr apg 10d. pr lb. Earl 8d. 

he above may be bas do ob yao e and gen stocks. Price 

o the trade, for Agricultu other Seeds” sent on 45 
tion Ba 1 “abet Seed oak Horticultural Establishment, 
uapu 


J 


are ae vari —— colours, and so 
Every descriptio 
WARE at the — possible price, for cash. 


ER POTS AND GARD 
OHN ‘MORTLOCK, 250, Oxford. — — ull 
announces that he has a very * assortment of the above 
eits an early ins elite. 
of useful CHINA, GLASS, and EARTHEN- 


250, Oxford-street, near Hyde-p 50888 London. 


FERI 


tensive supply | of their — 


GREENH 
ENRY FREEMAN, — a BvurLpeRr and Hot- 


W pparatus Manufac urer, Triangle, Hackney, near 
London, begs to call the attention of the gentry to his low prices 
for cash. Good Substantial-built Greenhouses, fixed e 1 
42 ft. long, 13 wide, 901. ; 21 ft. long, 13 wide, 502. ; 123 re wendy 
10 wide, 3 arge assortment of a o_o —_ 
Pits, Melon and Cucumber Boxes, Iron d-lights, Summer. 
honses, Seats, &. Estimates for any ‘ranch in the above line, 


either in wood or iron, or for park fencing. 


HE wey BAR OMETER, price 2/. 15s. and 
l. 3s po sg tae 1l. ee y 
ters, 8. 


DW | - 
a oad, Brixton, Surrey, “hes miles from London, informs | Pediment o r Upright Baro cons wot vena bo = vinnie 
his 8 and Admirers of ROSES 15 * that his un- be ng less liable to err nr — any other, and is also more port- 
rivalled collection, consisting of above 8 rieties, s now in | able Berne or Greenhouses da 29, Gd, 3s. 
biog om, and free to the inspection of all. visitors (Sund ays ex- | 33, 6d. each, Ditto, for Baths or Hot | Water, in Ja pan c oF c m zop- 

ag Ar apet A pees FF ˙ E TA Tin — ent na O 1. fhe i constr tr ction h and no not t labio 
Y D. is desirous of informing his customers that he has no 88 ak pir srai 185 pore Ther — r ring 
ofi — 


0 
ame care and attention if they were 
5 to select g themselve 
HENRY Baker, instrument Manufacturer to the Board of 
miralty, 90, Hatto arden, London 
FLOWER STICKS.— 
10KS are of a circular form, thereb; 
hich are liable to cut and 
i wn or 
bl K 


3 OVE 5 
E FLOWER ST 
avoiding pert es and sharp 
ho at the plants. They ma, 
t the various plants.—1 
nd Seedsmen, an 
anuf: and sold W. acy a H. MORBELL’S, 149, Fleet- 
street, London. . 
N. B. ä iad ma 
VES. 


A NEIGHBOUR anp SON respectf 
that they —— aire for this season an ex- 
IM se st ear BEE HIVES, 


— 


3 all who — des peer ge tin; 


9 — 
The usual allowance to the Trade. 
GENTLEMEN, AMATEURS, &e 
LD, an — * 


a f è 
ammillaria, 26 sp. Cereus, 28 sp. Opuntia, 76 sp. loe, Gas- 


e tribes yo End th this to be an oppor- 
eae rar — occurrin <> o be neglected.—Address, 
N. SHALDERS, All Saints, N 


goiko . — 3 che ice Biennial and ae 
F Seeds, for flower th 
followi Nas 


2 
varieties for 18. 24, i do aio Ka 5 


2s. 6d., 
1150 


f 

Cabbage Seed, at 3d. and 6d. per pasket, 8 1 from 
Ponti hn N W. aan Florist, it Tivoli, 3 St. Leonard’s- 
on-Sea, Sussex. Catal be obtained on prepaid ap- 


plication, moon a 8 ean 
OW CABBAGE. 
to inform the 


TLE? Te * GERANIUM, 
: eE ned 


tat of a the best’ 
Homes, Pelargonium * oe 


oers 
t, postage 
the amount in 1d. 3 —.— 
d by EDWARD TILEY, at his 
n Bath. 


vi 15.6. The above 
. e of a post-office onder, er 


General Seed Shop, 16, Pul- 


bree ere en 


Fed — 
* 


“The Sin e Box Hive,” 127 Amateur B 
Improved Cottage Hive, & c., from either of 1 
thout inj ury to 


— eet = — ne most timid 


and unaccustom pulation. A descriptive paper, 
with drawings and prices, will = forwarded on te tof 
two p ze 8 GEORGE NEIGHBOUR and Sov, 127, 
Holborn, London. 

utt on Bees ” (6th edition), now publish 


— e AND HEATING 
OT WA 
ALSO THE CULTIVATION = THE CHOICEST PLANTS, 


af 


aii e 


DWARD TILEY fia respectfull. 
gentry, nobility, and the public generally, that he is now 
ready to send out his EARLY M RRO CABBAGE SEED, 
which has proved the yet in cultivation, and five weeks 
earlier than any — — — fit — * d equal to a 
Aspar: for ere and flavo 
— 0 — ther Cabbages are, it grows rocky or wind with 8 A ern Norns e — — ies — — 
. 8 of the 7, coarse | APPARATUS Hise CTURERS, solicit an inspection of their 
as it is very short in the leg, 3 of the plan rad adhe basn various Works now wid progress, . > quality 
outside leaves: to a ituations, and have oroughly proved the of materials and workmanship. J, WEEKS — att <= 
Sharacter . it, and als also given the 8 satisfaction to 5 on their Premise „ 4 —— 4 2 
bare grown thouses, 8 pen y HO WAT ER 
eT N lants ‘not to run for a * One i e of which are oe 15 Betbode of Bul: 
trial. will be suficient to . Lid in —+ in r Henting, and Ventila all altural Erections. The 
= his * over ‘a ara = 1 packets will be bh 5 se uses, o., has also enabled them to 
first-r 8 


386 THE 


GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


J TAR EE Sp a hk aat 


* 112 i 
Bee Glassen from er ae 
ubas at id. wae 
H i vr dae, sry Sinde, 2 ae, 4.— n ao 
ter Ovecsitnte, Fish G and Window 1 
— av daseription, and comp 1 Lactometers — 
rhe quay of Witte, € rubes, Ta Gd; @ tuben, Ln. 
img Thermometers for Greenhou: es, Bardem 
st of Pricea forwarded on application a 
Shoir —— wn Dishopagste.atreet Without, London. 
ARTLEY'S S PATENTA — PLATE 82 
1 ron go pape 7 Meck On — Tho readers o Gar- 


eC 
high ! 
We have re. —4— Vw res to a pre. 
ay — hone of the „ to whieh we would beg the 
attention + Nobi and others. 


bility, eg Gentry; a 
by 


of Prices and every informa’ tion may be bad by 
— — to 2 Tutti, 27 Cen, Horticultural Glass Ware- 
Bouse, fie, Hiehopaipate street Without, Lindon, 


1 ro & CONSERVATORIES, be. 
Les aso CO, supply 16-02, Sheet Glass of 
varying —— 


ATEN ent i “nova 4 tok Show rhe ot 
Grasan: in 2 va e iis 
a —— gra L 


frst 2 in eneh month. 


0 LASS, 


HOTLES SEW 1 2 
ad MESS. MAYLE asp Ca, Fro 


4 — — a 
Lord Goggh a m e Lord 8 niey . 


Thowe marked 
frat class Certificates and ler Medale, 


thure were awarded ie May, at aise am 


New- 


D. ACHE asp geen ae amg ty VOGT, | 
Haarl 


„ 
te in em the Esgiisb Nobility., Sentry, 24 — and 
Pm Sg me 17 e to obtain n again 


Holland, beg fA 0 — 


at Ameter n the nning of March 
a est collect 


have 
Gold Medal for he 6 
Forced renn and Early y TULIPS at the great exhi. 


last, — 
F 


Coasres, Florist to Her Most Gracious Majest i the 83 and delivery at Corr — 2 


flis Royal ee nese Prince Albert, 8, Grand Hall, 
Market, London. 
Ust SOWN 


adapted the “URATE” — 61 particularly for 


use andre Company hare mad iain, $ ee 4e. cedar 
ready for — in y — Gul: ade an s ordina 7 description 7 2 
the best cargoes, whieh they will deliver — from or — or point 
inyporter’s stores. A neg hoa Med 9 A » Fisho ry amd — nn ig — : — 284. per tee; 
— 4 vmi oppe a N ee ee of package 4, which are not returnab’e escept te 
8 ieh ABD POR irn, Secretary, 40, Bridge.street, Blackfriars. | Of expense te to the O Com poor 


Sten HENSON awo CO, 61, 
and M 


—— A pri — r 
Sri ba kesl. L oil Ene fully solicit the 
entific Horticutte: T mie 


0 š „ tt 
In Par and 206. N. ‘cases, m —— —— — at re 
per f, or = hw alge in ranges, not exceeding 40 ‘inches ‘at sja. 
— ish yok te Glase for Windows as es A aa for Hor. 

on 

this great t additional their 


Batimates uae LOSA ot Fetes Seats — application at the 
Warehouse, 87, Bishopegate-street Without, London, 


pikete, — * HORTICULTURAL 
a d 
tnd arg vk 1— 


HE LONDON. MANURE ‘COMPANY, having eed gare dag se Sg 


11 * * Dep .. with the * * a 
t soaron, t 

32288 ee acre, ar woui sail attention 7 PATENT ALKALI COMPANYS Mite 

to a : 


CONICAL 721 BAN e Sandeman, Glasgow 
tention why, Brad. 


* 0 
applying the Tank System to Pineries, Propagatin Houses, | street, Lon Messrs, Vint and Ca., 


them 
be forwarded, as E a reference of the high — or | used by the — Rallwas Om 


F th t 
atteation shall be paid to the execution of os Log commit'ed 2 
to their care.— Apply to their Houve 21 a Holland. almost wholly of Tron p mng of the ire 
Further particulars mar be had of aa 2 * ENET | ments, at — cea" price 2 a 
d Harris's, $, 


Hungerford- street, Lond 
8 CHURCHILL am BEANE 
on han 


some tretrete 
Implements, made New — 


Turnips an péctus sent o n applying to Messrs, C. and B, 


è 4 — AND PURPL r — 
a able kind of Iron and 
u 


1 ae ard, Bristol ; 
„Inventors Exeter; Mr. Samuel J. F 


f| W. Bailey, Wolverhampton ; 


— * which * heat as well as — mts is | Sunderland * 2 Robert ae Piyasa, 
to any requ degree, without the aid of pipes or flues, | Tregedn near Falmouth, 
s. have to state that at the request of numerous Testimoni 2 on e to the Offices 
aE a abe art agg Bonn Roe Mgt A ned BS ench treet. Tendo Jons . Weer, tom 
which cost aced, ese — — 
Gar ewes a pea AR N Tebbs PATENT PROTOXIDE PAINT n 
those who have not in tuses will of ptice, This 


ND OTHER MANURES.| 


UAN 6 
G bare. feen of the finest quality, direct from 
port wa 
NITRATES SODA AND POTASH. 
GYPSUM (SULPHATES OF LIMB), 
DRIED NIGHT.SOTL 
ent RIC ACID J COPROLITE, 
i PA AS i WIR onu DESTROYER) 


Tand all other Manares of known 


paiva ae BOLIVIAN Ey ON SALE 


TONT 
WILLIAM 308 hna by 0 LIVERPOOL; 
ee ia anp TSTO 
COTES WORTH rORTH, POW BLL, WELL, avn Ont RONDON. 
afo t themselves de injuri 


inferior and pied ng | 3 


7 F LIME (mada trom bone only). 


IL. 
URBIDGE anp HEALY — to aiat | ee 
me es og te ced price CHEAP AND DURABL® ROOFING 


they may be seen a of the Noviy’ sents and pri — 1 and others for pam Stucco. 
72 throughout the the Minedo rusting, Wood from — ge T $ 
Üo. beg to inform the Trade that at their Manufactory, | sun has no effect eet it, Mann i 
i, 1 — Park- street, — Aag article required for the construction and Sos, Cement Works, Nine Elms, Low 
L. "| PDARIAN GEMENT, for interns —— 
— An 12 w 
es, Bot Iron o Me od erected upon am t 1 1 cat t ts 
natal donigas. Halonen — resp — A. 
— IN PRICE OF BOILERS, * cee ne pE 


i an care 

PORTLAND CEMENT.— * 
perty of —— r severest frost, 

superior to every other for hydraulic 
and lining of Reservoirs, 

tour nor jina; . 
co 
* rere J Pg ht ee — 


their Friends, in consequen th 
of nen, Seay ate oben’ tormake a — — reduction in 
Tite 10 in. will warm 2227 Ti 15 0 BY HER wi 
. 75 l 2215 
H in. i TI. „ a 215 0 „ MAJESTY’S i 
* WOR. i do... i 310 0 i 
Bw 3 ‘ EILE Go of Lamb's-baildings Be 
Min. 40 1 Saas * * 7 7 5 > i aa nab —— — amd 
Nre Arran — 
in, will warm 800 ft. 4 int. pipe . 1515 0 g “Tae ASPAALTED FELT FOR ROON 
in do, 1500 K. din. 28 00 — 
. up to 18 i., Ge, extra; to 20 
ih, Pleet street, London, Jase 28 


‘can Hanson, and B ha honour 
ROWN, have a am 
tomany of the nobility and gentry in the country, — 


OF NDON, 
LT RRB. 
STEM, whether re- 
tion 


nay, Jess Mih, 
j 2 cae its 


THE GARDENERS’ 


with rule should be to starve it and roast it by such 
~ : e 


— 845. 
* . — 
. — FOL LOWING RARE anv CHOICE SEEDS 
| — Season, at Si 
* 32 Emperor 


xpence packet. 
v large Valle Emperor 
, blue 
Hollyhock, 12 sorts, mixed 
A red 
Primula sinensis (mixed), 
and white 


D intely been received from 5, ana 
E * — 2 Tarnips can be had in 
— 86, High-street, Borough. 


SyERTPORDSHIRE ROSES. — E. 
* wp ap d is now in 
season. early inspection 
direct to Hertford. 
June 23. 


SATURDAY, JUNE 23, 1849. 


Breet, 
* 


een able, to see, except a few w o have 
d to be present at its blossoming in some 


roundish 


is hardy, 


size 
the noble clusters of oh. «saa Chesnut, 


Calceolaria ; better cannot be 
German 0 


wo 
P. Francis’s | summers 
bloom, and will | j 
is respec T 


Fie Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
irm jat 
gag meters ica ot | 


e 
impossibilities 
and 


trees and bushes, as a ion of a shrubbery, can 
only tend to increase ail tho orile of its nature. The 


n it 


iis at all events is certain, that success with 
Paulovnia will amply repay any care that can be be 
stow n it. 


Tur RELATION BETWREN 
is a much more important horticultural consideration 
an many imagi is study not 


Paris 
If this were more — borne in mind 
escape the blame imputed to them 
y unreasonable persons, for not performing ical 


t if the attentive study of this important and 
most interesti j now what is 


of the northern 


2 
5 


result from it, | 

tion of the leaves will of itself afford 

e employment to a in the 
m 


ts, but f 


3 
EP 
Je ES 


CHRONICLE. 


of Hmi 


Vrerration AND Crimatn 


the | 


OF | opinion with what I was at the same 
and 


ve a 
tions, as 
n- | {pre, in valleys elevated from 


387 
of India, the of a successful cultvation of 
Tea in the Himalayan Mountains, and incloded it 
cifically in a report which was — 
| Government at the latter end that year, stating that 
It does not appear by any means so deli or so 
ted in distribution, as is 


to the 


ii 


i 
55 22 


* 


é 


JE 
i 
117 
ride 


E 
g 


ore. Not having baf an 

ng my reasons for the 323 
— mod, | did eo in my * 

Himalayan 
At the 


Q 


Botany,’ pp. 107 to 127, publ 
time that the above pape 
W, 


printing in Kugland; this without any 
cation of ideas, for the two essays must have 
soa,” woods 


th 
i 0 2 — ———— arrived in Calcutta in 
an 8 nunrous which 
| woro dispatched to dhe dist wire i had. Torn do 
j to 


ende 
h, Deyra Doon, 
000 to 2500 feet; Almora, 
n, and Sabathoo, at elevations of 


he whose end I have 


resemb the purple Fox 
weenie As tree is reported 


command. 
with the plant are not 
r, gravelly, or sandy 


aid the wood 


is to the Court of 


exaberance, a warm and sheltered | 
place, will 


The tations were thus 
— with all the 


„ an 
To provide employment for people like these is 
the frst duty of a civil government, and was no 
oubt the cause o Haapinor’s earnest advice 
Directors that the Tea plantations | 
should be aided by the whole power of the Indian 
Governmen 


of | * 


Dr. Jameson, then in ch 


arge of the Tea par A- 
Sample was * 


1835 to 1847,” has been 
to whose 


of 


These Teas, notwithstanding the injury they had 


bis contrary, 
English gardens, and a position amids; 


the deep and fertile soil 


t. 
the year 1827 that I first | 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


from unskilful packing, eer “reported by | 
t — 3 „ to 3s. 6d. per Ib. 


even if of a quality inferior to what 8 “aga been 
produced in the Himalayan mountain 


o figures on 


The tw the r 
cut represent the Chelura tere 


ood * of the g 


— deseri in 1839, in Wicgmaaiie 7 Archiv 
ENTOMOLOGY. more recently by Mr. Allman, in 
HE GRIBBLE, AND —— Sus E XYLOPE Natural History,” for June, 1847. 
Tar destruction of submarine wooden erections, such able animal belongs to the Amph 
2 2 jetties, constructed in r, has within ceans, an the fam ay Gam 
the las more extensively noticed: | the body not 2 „ the 
h eer de and its win tennte shor pairs * 
in differen of | th cks of 5 inute insects, searcely more | nearly equal opie with the first rte rid rs 
latitude wt three of longitude, and ,000 | than an eighth of an eg in hogin. ane destructive 9 5 . He body is — 
for the purpose rs of the Teredo navalis has been known from very rn, the al omen s 
. pareng in the Deyra only, for the purpo oi siete. od ia i ian the at the sides with a pair of large foliaceou — 1 
In July 1846, asale, pai eh - 8 at Almorah, request of the — e e eee cause dages, and terminated by a pair ot war 0 le L 
? ock 
The e destruction of Oak timber in the royal dock-yar g —— 
“ Phin 8. nside nage iting d ime o of it The of Sweden, when it was found to be produced by the iy it is an active little animal, — wal d 
€ price pim a, 5 bein attacks of t æ of a beetle, Lymexylon navale, but and employing its thoracie legs to adhere 
as „ that 3 5 * 3 j E has been reserved to our own countrymen to discover | which it has select its ravages ; phei 
than b , without any doty ; ore insidious enemy than these in the shape from the water and pl upon & i — ; 
further ‘saying fact, that most of the Tea had’ been | small crustaceous animal, represented in the two figures | bends the se en under the thorax, surface yl 
80 y nativ on the right-hand sid of the ee woodcut, of the terminal appendages between the antenna, and then 
In A e Dr. Jameson wrote from Paoree | natural size an ed. This is the Limnoria | suddenly eraming = straight condition, spri — 
another sale of Tea had taken place on the 9th | ter bra Dr an Isopod crustacean, known | considerable distan Its habits are truly x 
August at Almora ‘The amount oa a for | on h ngland under the name of the as prove A ‘examination of 2 
Tea varied from 10 rupees 8 a. to 9 rupees 4a. Gribble, belonging to the 12 Cymothoide and a se Soe hee : pos ae h s booi subjected to in 
an 9s. and 10s. per Ib. Yor black | two pairs o nnze, and seven pairs of shor erent appearance 
ee “amo an realised was a "rupees Sa., 8 simple feet; it is when atte of an ashy colour, with te we has ‘sl aa bs the Limnoria, In the 
18 , 


s the minimum.’ ”— 


rupee 


maximum, 
the 4th e ie — ae = just recived ve 


Government lantations o 
the whole of the hilly districts of 1 e Nort wert 
frontier, from the Sutledge and new country lately 
— west of that river, to the Ravi; E that 
he Wr mediately towards Kangra to inspect 
and select sites. The Govz anoh-GENERA „ to D 


ever drank. Dr. J 
conviction that Tea will shortly become a most im- 
rtant article of production from the North-west 
apg ns 4 
amount of success is the more remar arkable 
when it is — sidered that only the inferior species ig 
7 Thea is as yet cultivated in India, — chat. the e 
of ufacturing Tea, like the of 
or tobacco-making, can only * n w 
les of the Teas which 
n, al 


coasts, Fir, Birch, and “Oak beng 8 equally injure 


etions of the 


essentia 
4 bez Aaa fomm trond fa 


our salt water rivers, as 


with 
of of Hull, “Liverpool, Bristol, Ipswich, &c., where it might 
than he 


with experience, 9 a better dooce 
r. Fortune is now sly dare 


a trade 


mpire. eady a matter of offici 
record «that, t hough the ene black) T ea sold 
average ra 6 rupee p. per seer, and 
that — least ial the quantity sld was bought by 
the coa ea was we and sold 
to o the ef 4 a price ring rupees to 
It has 1 “purchased by 
it. across into 


rtary is not prohibited, 
afore that market is wholly supplied from the 
British provine 
The quantity of Aie manufactured in 1848 i 
states that of this, h h 5 dës Dr. Futon 
e had just despate 2 8 
of black an d = 


season 
to upwards of 2,000,000... From the planta- 
tion ona! Da (Kolaghir) we shall be able, in the 
pene st 10 years, ake raise a sufficien t number 
of plants to plant the whole Doon.’ 
heartily 3 Dr. Rovte and his 
Indian coadjutors igana the success of their great ex- 
ese marks 


n ost 
ere prepared, and w! 
consequently those ahi in use by the sear 
that any kind or cheaply în the of Tea may be prepared as 
ey and as Himal 
For we pee yg 
with ch pony 


— 


expense 
Bu 8 India itself, with 


carriage 
o ther a large quantity of 


parts of A 
Tea, when it is en at a moderate price, and 


hemselves in a piece 
to the Oak, and had in set short period, and in w 
too, bored many cells in i 


The immense numbers of this oe and rs seng 
8 powers, reduce a piece of wood in a very 
ears toa state of perfect . 


represents a piece o 
dotted 3 showing $ its 


former s us 
have sted for the destruction of this — 


us than common tar, 
saturate the piles with the gas- -tar, 
ve subli 


3 fon April, 183 
mpson, in same Seanad: 


by 
— January 
1834 0 a Limnoria and Teredo may also be consulted, 


be consulted, 


— — on alt ae b 


tention to its pro- | 


y 
in a 


lans | 


in the enr New | w 
per 


action of the sea, and the 


mile above 
m 


ie by the hohia J 


be administered ei 
t! 


ive of the United Ki 


all kinds of piles, piers, wharfs, 


undermined 
these destructive animals is be bo washed 22 byt 
are exposed 


whia ity 
5 p forated 5 the dan bat 
J. O. W. 


VILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENING 

One of the first conditions esse 
management of a garden, is that of korpit a te 
and porous, in order that water, which ma; 
time ini ither — À 


ssential to 


natu 


mep 
soil ope 
rom time t 


account of its obstina 
and much application, to k to 


character, 1 
ker i in 


a 


- 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


389 


ntly requires twelve months, and the ac- 


=p, it freque 
frost, to 


will be no c auge to regret the extra labour thus 
P 1 
DISEASES vr POANTA, 
* inued from 2. 
Sers VI. * that is sonn 3 
Fruit ; single specie rural economy, 
so to adapt their 8 to the intelligedes of there 
trees. But, 


distinguish fruit trees from 
geaders, distingu "this division i 
as herbaceous plants, Sac 
of the vegetable king 
tel us lan, if we may trust to the most 
3 These fruits are frequently what we 
5 seeds. What we are more especially accus- 
io eall rit i is generally only the substance which 


i 
* Ethe shell of the Walnut, or 
z panor or = AS tom Thi 

er to explain that an exces- 


11 


nature of the nutrimen 
focality in which it is placed, o 
the season. 


itiscertain that this superabundance is ‘the cause of 
the fruit — 41 inferior = ae milly ; oe often their 
external conf pple tree 
overloaded with f. hat gee Fl of a very 
small size. 

Cultivators usually care little aA = en of a large | 
number of plants are well form As far 
concerns them, all ley look for i that "the fruit aoad 
‘be externally well formed, and that their flavour should 
be is rich as ra ible. Yet it is gr! that they 
should preven to the tree of too 


preven 
ayara of these “fruits. Te 15 well 5 
p rop of fruit o 


Pe 
ent the branches 
«ps ewa ght of “the fruit. It w 
1 ag wa buted 5 5 in 
es „ Iw ore disposed 
to the over production HA fruit. Peach 
ears, a aoe t all 8 — are 


FEE 
2 2 
11 

175 


1 ji 


top ment fen m must be used in this process of thinning; 
haste in = gsr must be avoided, as 


Winds and and insects ca 
>on _ nerd per fall, thus 
— the 


follow 


F 
Hi 
ah 


17 
: 


r silently a circumstance in the 

e Vin which I — ve often sag stag 

as been scanty e year, the Vine is 

Poel te overload te with a in 

tage ; but t then 

A and the Pa usually suffers 
akness 


Srsgege se 
He 
177 i 
5 


B 
E 


S 
E 
ie] 
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— 
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ys 
— 
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2 


ten ae the 


1 


E 
— 
HEE 
of 
5 
E 
2 
8 8 
4 
9 
ER 
oe 
oe 
oO 
B 
3 
oO 


hat ca 
of fruit, 1 Weakness following the over-produe- The tan 
3 and manuring the roots, not 


orkin ing a 


to reduce, it into a friable and kindly | 


! of some continuance, where it is very | rall 

: 4 lant out or sow either culinary or flower 
p 

or plants, and where the space is limited, 


ith 
is to li 
z therefore can recommend it to all our readers. 


extremity of the bunch, as is 25 


immediately round the trunk, according to the ogee | 
practice, but over the ultimate fibres 
are those which su 


is covered by the branc 
where the manure is to 
overloaded with flowers 
im 


Herbae ceous plants 


0 
; and, 3 


eee of vegetable wen es agt x Hader o: this 
e sap is always m 


lateral branches, is then more 3 ed, am add 
vigour to the seeds which are formed. 


. aor due AMATEURS 
DENS. 


Lig ister oa ay od ideas 
advantage al leading article in 

week o roposed aat karin ent of the sewage o 
London’ for agricultural purposes. The immense benefits 
derived by growing crops from a discreet 91 of 
and we 


e of a sont Es garden, of peer an? Let- 
den stu 


jig ages which | t 


ich | in 
— re | 


n the 
ches, and that which, T left at ‘Tiberiy, me 
would go to form the upright shoot, is forced into ro 
use 


cistern above-ground might in hot weather be abov. 


water is m 


unsightly boxes e always meet the eye when looking 
at the -n e i ing effect 
h trained 


pot 
uty and elegance of A. longi- 
own in "this way. Instead of plan 


way. 

employ a all Herero of this kind at once, so as at the 
same time to benefit their crops, and prevent the exist- 
ence of a nuisance. 


remain until a still greater 3 
erg for removal; this is the 

4 5 comm e 
It is obviou 
highly 3238 nod are capable of doing muc 
r gardens, and we have for some time 


— 
7 


past 3 ay they are produced 
pon various horticultural productions. The pails are 
placed in a fix by the housemaid, an e gar- 
dener applies the contents, either unmixed or diluted 
e req co of the day. All the 

Roses have had a 55 2 pe ah erag teat this 
Asparagus, ve 1 10 


. at he 0 Bio ye 
he same principle as that indicated i in the leading nh 8 | 
above referred to, in relation to must quo 


1 
fcalty i in be- a whether in boxes 
w| 


manure works th 
subject, whatever 3 
aS | posed o of in the most expeditious zró 3 way 


deep. After covering the bottom with a few I 

| spread a layer of ver , on place 6 or 
7 roots, and cover them slightly with a little leaf-mould 
or well rotted cow 1 sand. As the 


y good season they yield us Re little plea- 
ate tat ie profit. We had no last year. 
trying Various plans, I have 22 to the con- 
t be adapted for one place is 

seless at another, and that great mistakes are made in 
Aren that bees will e simply as the e va of 
careful management., ood seasons o dif- 
9 
If If the weather 4 unfavourable 
in scarce, it is v 
Shing the economy and ‘habits of bees, 


fachioned 


recording. 
ing the hives for the fi first 


he door, 9 7 4 


lese 


and 
tions app y to pang f. 
never allow 


ome Gorrespon 


o the same manner, and quite 


to inform . R. D.” that Ia swar 


e wall into the garden, mgr on a shrub, 
T 


ever, to a i 
stroyed on iner in the course ye 
boar 


> 

* 
o 
8 


would not be at any ti 
J 


ell, grae will be doubted 
them 
and although the tion to this, and can show such specimens 


settled without any Ke to the * e 5 s 
i absence the ladies * perform is = diy in 
82 d s well. This 


ing more is necessary n to place a hive 
ing them as little as parue and 
ves of the shelter it As 
kling,” I am a sure that it Gaii to be 


where we had los 
as the tinkling 


w minutes. another swarm, = 
same stock, has come out, which seemed to 


? „ N 
: j inkling, when the — 
until the children N 2 2 y I "Black Rock. 
the attention of 


jection to amateu 


seen 
urseryman has really lly turned his atten- 


T as may be 


‘oe 
= 


390 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [June 28, 


rivate garden (say the Duke of case. One trying to be Patient, [You may get rid of men both in the small and larger towns reportthat 
asedia d E Chiswick), it would — his 8 slugs with lime-water; but all earth introduced into | 8 Turnip — oneal th ere ear than SDE : 
to avail himself of your advertising columns. Your | Wardian a 1 ld be „r y baked or scalded, as A st scm sate — p> aiti complains that he 5 — 2 
vermin and their e wit quantities of 
on i 8 — t ae 10 i a 5 they a n „Ars mo ra naturam,’ — A correspondent, 5 7 ee 2 as was so in your 2 a — — 
half. a- dozen naked — fe r half standards, which = 120 ago H Y ot odd . giving some advi “ 3 Fot ota atoes th than BE. ught, = insist on a cher — Pract no momp 
| who su as to the - andlords are now much mo Ip 
tim aa he named Pi Siler Roses 2 K went "of ‘their annuals, “and telling them to cultivate | CEN than nas to do n ad 
Botanic 28 Zurich, Switzer seas —Having been | them “ secundum naturam,” advises them also “‘ to e p pea powerless, and pea ae eee ee — work for 
on a visit, on May 2 = Bed employer to the above- | chew” the “ars Baileyi. This of course implies a my eyes which I w would stop if. I could. Land i ry day 
mentioned kr of what I saw, although good natured censure of the opinion which I gave in a — om ha than ving helt own andt — me pien can prevent 
ing, may not ra 8 The gardens are former number as to the arrangement of flowers in — ee W. . J., V 18. w is 80 weak 
to the 80 


ted m 1 . m, or ina 
are agreeably laid out in walks and shrubberies, com- tached formal flower-garden. I did not, in that article, ee 
— sa a beantifal view of the town, lake, and distant | intend my remarks to apply at all to the gape of sma Sortette 8. 
Alps, now covered with snow. In these gardens is the villas or suburban houses, because I will at once con- 1 June 12.—R. 3 


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its si i ith i lants in sufficient quantity without adequate | “ Leaves and thei rtance in the genera 
athe the ramparts, its 9 now covered with procuring p in su 4 ‘hes qu of a Plant,” thisday, The principal 10 0 $ 


r the ex 
on its top are some fine Limes, | would not suit the pocket of the small occupier. In this occasion were, the nature of lea 
i upon the r vitality and varied forms; the p 
to the public—a privil not and propriety with which the gardens of the nobility | carried on in them, by e exh austion, abso: 
abused—a system which I understand is generally | and gentry of this country should be arranged, I cannot lation, and nutrition ; — rationale of vent 
i ication o secund h ts thus e explained 
m 


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ot | 
otherwise possess. The curator, Mr. Regel, is allowed | turesque beauty of unadorned Nature. I confess myself | mue ronata, Abronia — Philadelphus me 
by the Government 2000 Swiss francs, about 1102. ster- a devotee ye e shrine, has at the same time I should — incisa, Wulfenia Amherstiz, and P. 

r ann i ign trium 


1 


phan a „ 
sum fall upon the curator, who, to meet them, has per- garden. if; as a great Rity has said, “a garden LINNEAN, — Dp. Hone p in the chai 
mission to sell plants. The consequence of this is, that should be an object detached and distinct from the Rev. J, 3 tk pa eri Bowerings specimen: E 
the plants are crowded together without regard to general scenery of a place,” and if it is * be an accom- garden at Highgate, of Ceanothus thyrsiflo % 
health. In the e stove was a good specimen of paniment to the elegance and luxu of a modern species was gee ught 10 Mr. Menai orus, 
Pandanus utilis, a large one of Astrapea Wallichii, but er why should it not bear the i impress of se nines Ae, California, Ej is closely allied to the N 


its fine foliage was comparatively lost; fine plants of | and design, apta of our gardens, but is s 
Dractena Braziliensis, Cycas revoluta, and of Rhapis tion of means. to an end?” Sure ely there w 8 be an aha: Tilley exhibited a a series of leaves of th 
flabelliformis, In the conservatory there are several n passing at once from the elegant draw- Sycamore and other plan ich the 
Oranges and Rhododendrons, but all too crammed | ing-room to the rugged and romantic paths of natural | had been removed by maceration, the vascular 
— f a fine Genista Rhodopneea, Acacia ruscifolia, | Scenery, or to the lawn which liai. been treated for some alone afire M Lithogra hea ortraits of John 
0 u : . im s 


conservatory, E on t ever a n 

— 1 noticed * Ficus a which makes a pretty garden should be perfect in its kind, in fact,"a specimen | were 
covering ely a stone wall, which must be cool and moist. | of its order, thus showing the presence of art in cultiva- HE tan cee » e ri. el ye the 
Three feet of the front of this house is,partioned off for | tion; and to indicate this quality he coined an expres- | Structure and Habits of N ‘atropo: 
striking cuttings, Small clay pipes are brought up sion, “t Varley exhibited a series of drawings illustrative of the 
through the sawdust (in which the Ae are plunged) It is T fen r, from the want of a proper conception of structure and circulation of the various species of Chara, 
from a tank Maer by the flues, GA wey urpose of sup- | these e sons ga 3 1 so many absurdities | and gave an explanation of some of the 1 — 
plying moistur eenhouse mitted in ing gardens, The whim of the points in the morphology of the family Characee, 

were some “healthy young Azaleas arr Camellias ; and piney is too afte 8 acta 8 pri reflection, 5 Amongst the books presented to the Society was the 
in a frame some very fair Calceolarias. In a small getful that last part of Von Martin's reat work on the 
idee of stove and orchidaceous plants is Zygopetalum Tis ics poi. of parts combined, P — oe VIIN 

illare in flower, and in an adjoining greenhouse Must please the sense and satisfy the mind.” | Entom ai gl noe 4.—G. R. WATERHOUSE | 


ai 
8 


is a good Araucaria imbricata and Pinus Cunning- maey Bailey. 

hami, b bu — tows pees 7 — are miserably grown. All ig the — P ————ůů ee — — 

et rubs have their names written distinct] A i two sub-geners 

on zinc labels attached to them. The herbaceous pisila fa - ~~ — — if not 2 equal to t Macrus and Coleoce 155 0 ich, C. excitator, is 
8 


n me of wh 
Wi le m, It may also be made so given as British in Curtiss “Guide.” Mr. 
s of rare ies of 


a — es 
we a heavy fs fe Iti we > * va ‘Mr Westwood 

| ej all ] i r cone in Hy — ergoes its changes. . 
... TT. tenes ae | reg or distribution among the eae ea 
d et ae” The|® now just coming ring bot ction. The — australe — 4— eag socicila 2 1 * 


Apricots have suffered most. We h 418 vil not be ready tocut . „D. Ver. is vers } y ee icated 
Peaches, Nectarines, Currants Raspberries “ Goose: | * 8 1 taining overal “unde — also erh 
e 4 4 N À 1 , x article on, the Pot Potato disease in ‘your Paper of the 9th inst,, you him Mr. f Bermondsey. He 
d P Promise of Apples may not dislik district. On the very edge of | specimens of Ptinus — e of which 
5 dne Thomas Godfrey, Gardener, Chateau Hard, | the Skibbereon Ur Ünion, wi thin two miles of it, there is no doubt | heen found 2 in open jars ag fluid mats 
at s 
onstance, 2 8 nearly a month ago Gust. before the . tions, used as a galvanic battery. Dy 
-—A_ plant of this was received | May), an nd T have heard of it in half-a dozen other places | Knightsbridge. Numerous instances 
of the Horticultural Society, in the in the er paces besides. It is increasing, but very | of the same insect in water-j &e run ae 
‘autumn of 1847, and 2 in the conservatory at this slowly, much more slowly then: last year; the plants affected jugs, &e., m e 
“place, 1 House, t n the orig, of 1848, trained are only uched in parts, 2 8 — —— insects in the galvanie apparatus was 
an . h parts seem to shrivel in the para 
=P 2 Mares for climbe: 8 = Mag whole of t 50 ap instead of spreading rimto 1 1 oe w dey 7 2 — Mr. Westwood also read descriptions of ‘two $ 
e, Fait — months, pe xn 5 d its healthy rer., To all appearance, the crop depends wholly on the | ©*°tic species of Coleoptera ; one a? he 
appearance at which time it fi Y | weather ; and should the next month be as fine as the last, a and the other a species of Taphroderes 
began to show fi þé i: es e it first | large p: of the crop will be safe. So far, in this district, — male of which has one of the mandibles 
ower buds, but they did not expand * that could be fairly deseribed as the disease elongated and distorted. Mr, 9797 — ' 
2 r even s * 
as » — as ever,” unless the expression be sri i limited . containing 5 C 1 
ature i „ Without refi chu 
h it grows has been frequently during the ee, garden crop is affected, a fis 1a crap Tem ve ‘sh ‘ntl pa 3 „ ee ier, 
0 > oP Ty ightiy (a | injurious to the Sweet Potato 
Was 35° Fah T i n Jurio i 
ahr. he usual te ew plants only), oe aoe crop at my farm miles off, is iat 
8 generally ranged between 40°and 50° Fähr. | Union, the extent ds vet in I oan he ear, too, in the Sk ibbercen 2 ze (a new rer Binet — 
1 ; 
feel ce doubt but this valuable plant Pit ae found to blamed by you ae te much | bium and Dorcatoma) 


i 
i 
27 5 
Ale 
8 


E 


Are 
e of Potatoes planted ; ; believe the | Mr. Weir exhibited a box 
s e pera which | extent pe hat aa er things, has been 
it is lante consists of a strong loam-peat, and a san sandy | 2 — T — ae Tunbridge Wells and Lewes, 
soil A into a pond from the higher land around ; am cue, t he qanri + is much below that of the years nem Species of 1 nage Saenger? E f 
these three deseriptions ; | before the famine, and T doubt if it is not much below last phora polye The death —— ; 
The pr ph ean soil are in nearly equal parts, | year. The labour oe scarcely a and I hardi: E — College, Oxfo rå, formerly 1 8 
8 from the pond had been expos osed to theaction farmer who hes not less than “he ured to have a itis not 2 e Corpus is Christ < r to ir 4 i 
of ‘the atmosphere for some time before being used. as fes fate suppose a iot member of the Society, and a contributor to 

JJV 


dian ag ases.—[ have ardian . 2 — ey ast chance, hoping eee 
À € if 
„ would 1 ie ease in which „ harvest priy w, and meaning to run Royan Botanic, Reagents PARK, June — 20 art 


do n 2. Our t big t 
but tk Ree and carefully extremely well, i year was miserable, and all th 1 rvest | was ia many respects not different from therefore, We 
: it, I have the | w f pils y. crops of Potatoes on the 9th inst, In the following sro shown 0 
Yexation of finding that the mould (wh T ofthe disenso, + heir corm a high pric, | omit all notice of plants reproduced here whieh 
with san i à A f . casion 
these intruders ee erry By small centipedes, and sar Sages ara see cn 4 3 F ea i much Collect ‘of 80 STOVE AND GREENHOUSE 
— of Anagallis tene ai’ Pini flourishing = 7 ha any grad year. T I believe fully r half the rop was pe AG e wet 10 
roay a ula farinosa, hose months, and the chie 7 ; 
: also some je ete — N mould, but I know the 3 — ih bit geen have been e paai Taylor n 3 Costar, of 
j foe en | conren th, d grown bere, You will see, therefore, our | Mr. ; : 
urse h * » r. Bruce received equal 
— them sm withering T 1 opened th the case and 3 2 x been atape arrea cr pursued from any idea | E, Goodhea: , Esq., a tbird, Mr. 


selves o I eet in Case OF ahuther year of inéraductic 9 fa few plants of 
roots ; the ‘are also eating off the lea mnie recommending a eel . — „Dan ene found santhes, and the beautifal late-lowering 
e 1 han TURAN under ae and speaking of th the dseage as he does, p. 18 | these collections nere not materially 

) hmen may excused A 

ad my eee could Hope more than is quite prudent from a crop which, . name occupied one side of a er? — — 
5 292 in late | produced oa tin ae al exhibitors. Peet a, 
tand and the — a 4 rae 3 sis ane 

roup contained a love | See 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, 391 


Esq., sent gore fo fine As eee eee The vegetable Fand m contains, anA , — oil Jf Cime in the shops, a common remedy for the 
i dad pendroni een “macrantha | dU ante cot ae W 6 o known i importance n, f carious teeth. It is frequently u w f mixed 
ei * r, to, 1. Piss y, | Var 57 a cet — in medicine, 57 a ith olive oil, as a stimulating 1 against bald- 
in fifteens, and a 5255 His 2 or in ati A pii. branches of domestic ceconomy. The ness, in | rheumatic complaints, and against sprains an 

plant of Aerides odoratum in a wire | principal part of those which can be brought by teachers | bruises 
sof this kind of Aerides indeed formed E d h f d 1 
features of this department of the Sig in Europe under the notice of students, or „ rom e sa NDRAGORA. Tournefort.— Corolla cw 
“fo J. H. Schroder, Esq., who was first, their great importance, deserve to be among the earliest | laited. gyi eee eee i t pages | 
Sceslabiams, and a Sobralia e of study, are peptone j in the following pages, | Pane, g fi „e — in 
1 it. — Mr. Beck's gardener Sa x 


tube of the calyx, spreading. Berry 2-celled, — 
lyx 


On 
e 
i ice yell 
xuosum; Mr. + a tall ape onan |o of matter 3 pion om in a few ins . when it masi °°.” 1 Miller. Atropa Mandragora 
Green anhopea grandiflora, 
$ pre Leg plants.—As new Orchids, Mr. believed that the convenience F younger students would | 


i 
A stemless plant, w with a p forked fleshy perennial 
- adin 


le greenish yellow species | be consulted by doing so. The author trusts that this 
Ap; ne, 7 51 “a handsome purple levered selection will be found to have been made in such a as. 5 g, grey; flowers hidden 
of Skinneri; and gic s. Veitch a distinct | way that all teachers ag possess reasonably extensive c rd aBilat. Bont of 
of Cypripedium ba ans of ng their lectures, Bota X 


x i Europe 
i 5 by Cape Heaths, | me illustratir ‘es, an n * $ 
— sof tall Cacti, “and we r remarked elsewhere Gardens, may furnish the larger part of the species er Acro-nareotic, ` purgative, ansonthetie, 
snhouse Azaleas ; but neither of these exhibiti which are mentioned. A small selection was indis- | P 
0 


— & rin ‘fim old ies in es dangerous and 

P „ Paul, in n 
anr a Rolan, homp br 0 woe ont yellow bee —.— the reach of the majority of purchasers ; ed Lo professe r Fodev € avait — na n piel 

r. Francis. The latter had `a nice | and — — Ta because experience shows . 
n i who 


en us that those 
have to ‘stud science of — — such as gon 
t 


© 


0 which has since appea ach species — 1 81 

uty Of in its due position in gi clasieati — = its v : ulgar Or, J. H, se 
on; or officinal name, as well hich it bears in 

e | science, and, in a few words, _ — in whence it 

comes, the quality it has been said to possess,andthe| “ ASARUM. Linnaeus. — Stamens 12, horned, distinet 

ne uses to which it has been found applicable. Very short | from me “other and from ses style. Calya oam- 

looms measured 5} 8 phrases are also given, for the purpose of showing how | panulate, 3-lo 

us were plentifal and fine, more Ee the ex: the genera or species are to be 2. 44 from each 2. A. europeum Linnzeus.—(AsaRapacca.) Leaves 
er Epps, at Maidstone ; Menara. Tairhairp, o other. The whole plan of the work is, in fact, to poini | reniform, obtuse hairy, in pairs, 


i he 
Trall, o of — formosa, from Mr. Williams, employed with this view. In many instances the dis. 
ay 3 


inds 1 — exis, Which deservedly 5 | tinctions may not be absolute, but they are sufficient for 
ind in public estimation, ordi purposes. T 0 wi 
ith the exception 3 ow: equainted with of 
ora, from ne, Agalmyla staminea, | í Vegeta ingdom’ of the author the subject. of 


-blue flowered Pentstemon, not desire to do so, references are made to that work 

P ee all the appr pages.” 

mus, both art and others ware exhibited 

condition. They filled one side 5 of a tent 120 feet he main o ject of the ng ing = point out — 
d, perhaps, the most striking feature of the — uses, and proper voy Aea briefly, it has 


pota, she, Jat igen put into p. purely tec popen 383 as the following . 
r ec. or eat- 
poeroen, — Loveliness. . * show. 
ve, Star and Centurion ; 2d, r. Mode of ä 
. * pate teur 8 a fo 0 nS Cooks, fo . “The Prane i planis are perry, # 
É ? U 
„ 5 de Juliet, Hebes! Lip, Aurora, Pic- I, THALLOGENs me» genes, and no distinet 
„ to Mr. Foster; 3d, to Mr. Staines; separation of mn and le 
0 ve plants : He to oF: Harker, for] “IT, aon ENS 5 2 ttl 00 sexes, and distinct stems 
gi me-nọt, an enoola ; r. 
„ Junii, Dorcas, Aurora, Negress, and end leave h d li 
Mr, Gaines. Fancies : ist, to Mr. Ambrose; III. nee; aving sexes, and a mycelium. 
e were also two small groups of Cape „IV. EnpoGEns; "havin t and stem, 
endogenous wood, and parallel-veined 8 
r te —2 10 eee were Ay ge «V, Dicryocens; havin g sexes, a roo and stem, 
jad 10 Mn Hoyle, for Canora ah 13 A . e endogenous stems, and netted leaves. 
etl e aps a 195 0 ce 5 and to = “VI. GYM pome; having sexes, a root and stem 
agnificent, Prince o i 
, Major ene and others, were 550 e wood, an naked seeds. 


to cel bore, the bere was also pro- II. OGENS 5 We root and stem, 


ch di nese r less merit, of | exogenous — and se eds in pers 3 
VRR IP eive 
“mvolections ot oa were produced by Messrs. lion end Desori d 
y, and G 2 N 2. . tf nen iption. 


— „ 9 hed, vith vers. 
remark applies to the pA 5 ing, 4. ‘Calye Fyre equally 3- 
sacra See, eae tea | gn tan Spiker ioe mh boned h 
. O. vulgare 8.— 


WIID — > 


. << of Royal Nursery, Slough, for ada 
F E i 
s A i - mae ; 
Ms. Bragg, of Slough, was. * 857 ; ANS 7 N Oy A ER “ Quality. Acrid, emetic, purgative, diuretic 
eas Mr, Turner's, with the, n of - MS 15 phorefic;; expites ses 4 ERA 
ckheath Rival, Warden, Duchess of Kent, TN 9 55 U j Uses. As a substitute for Jpeca . * 
ry S Mr. Norman, of Woolwich, SSO | irritant in affections of the ey es, brain, & „ heada 
owed a stand of B blooms o ot toun 8 | toothache d pone in the south 
hey were finely d 9200 ? 
ens. a | France use sober selves by pei: the 
h ul on 1 85 Ast, Bloor Tamer, „o Slog, o stomach. . Sis e bidaa f Ce; phalic snuff,” 
ice > PRD 55 tan Aurora, Commodore, oi, bis is understood to be the last of the series of 
| ene, D ast. ack ‘Royal Purple, works, for use of aaa which * 
Bc Dr ' templates. here is now, j “ 
ee Wa ud. and two seedlings; 2d, — » fon more aean aiealeah the Elements of 
3 1 ibited in considerable quantity, aud Botany,” with this * Medical and Œ Botany — 
F of Horugcss and Barsa F an pagan the “V. omy 
geen, erg O. B Warner Esd and ash 22 ME inquiries into details 
i Mr. a remarkabl must, of course, e eg ba 

pina een n as are destined for s satisfied with such general 

2 ` y sla smal) dime eusio 
n ang pthers, a small Asple. | facts as can be it a works a d ig 


Garde) moranda. 
f his Stra ery, i Nursery, Frorr 
Dl fe * plant in a pot sie al Saded A correspondent who has lately visited 
ee ů establi nt speaks of i : 
„ Bebiews. which it contains a fine election, a 
' ts, now present a brilliant disp 
R Bionomial p a ns * John Lin — ns being in b t jl 
E leona pp. 270 4, able are noble plants of Stanhopea 
enusta ter wi . oad 3 a Brassia 


„the lat À 
oii with 12 spikes, and another i ' 
spikes. In addition to-beautiful plants of Aerides, amon 


T eses by botanical students 
mga inary — pA of the 


exotic and other 8 by WILD Manzoram. which A. affine is producing 10 lovely racemes of pin 
preparat 1 “ Leaves ovate, acute; bracts without glands on the | and she flowers, the same collection contains flower 
L Habitat tat. Chalky pastures. labium guttatum ; bub what perhaps ranks above | 
“ “ Quality. Tonic, 22 ulant, rest in inte: is C] 


d 
fragrant. re iyenoches 

a seasonin pow d two spikes curious swan- like flowers, 
| en for „ Ai plant picks ape 8 called [aio bee i fully expanded blooms, — 


7 7 
392 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [JUNE 93 
U 
* a f 2 Gna hali 

h these were also in blossom Lacæna bicolor, the KITCHEN GARDEN a 3 kreng 25 hings. ty Ona = 
— c er and the almost ever Phe — * * 8 Re Geranium pratense; 6, Some Thala n aa Mal È 
blooming Coryanthes Albert may * a d upon land which has a Ae Lithospermum atropurpareamn: 1. woe officinale 1 

Miscellan cleared of its former occupants, or intermediately | Cerastium ing 2 13, Esc oltzia californica: a 
„Sale of Plants.—176 lots of Orchids, stove, pan amongst other crops which will shortly be a a od Sage 898 ro om — 
house, and other plants, stated to have been the p Plant out also Cardoons, Leeks, and Capsie rises were withered up wh we — — dr 
rty 0 lately deceased noble oe a re pg by | last sowing of P uld now be made, selecting * — be ord lags Lae at ey open, otherwise they ‘ost * 
a tion on Thursday last, by Mr. What sort ties which come earliest into bearing, of a hardy con-“ Proa T H B. E 4 B. Apparentiy 1 
of a e 2 will be ge from the follow. stitution, and not liable to mildew. Sow bages for tensis or Foxtail and Poe eave 22 Alopecurna pt 
or statement. Cattleya 22 oy 11. 3 ; the eworts, Endive for main crop, and make the usual} Vincetoxicum.—W P. 1, On cidium “dived L, eke 
bevtifal Ar oph llum squarros in- | sowings of ney B , Radishes, Turnips, Lettuce 5 — 3 ifolium.—J R M. Muscari — oa 

igni ; 1 Pa wat Sta 8 Chervil, &e. Do not allow any crops which are cultivated FEE PED. ties 3 
tigri > 1 ditto; a fine plant of Leelia for the sake of their roots or leaves to run into flower or | merly, at the desire of the late Dr. Graham, Nat Nel 
super * * 10s. ; a 3 a good Lycaste Skinner, 21. 6s. ; — „ as Onions; pe goon Parsley, Rhubarb, Lettuce, recorded in son, Sooteh p philoso phical "oR 
ditto Cattleya eens 31. Je. G pod . 178. 6d.; Let the whole men of every plant be directe pri, me ity of s0 me ox sat pure, e, with th 4 

1 nopsis grandiflora, 1% 8s.; par insignis, 21. 10s.; if possible t to tio perfeet development of that part for | paksxir TR and Son. ‘We kes p% 
Aeri ratum, 1.5 168.; Acineta nee boldti, 2/.; | wh soe 8 pope whether be Sect — 5 X a Your description rea 9 like that of H — 
ium nobile and Epidendrum vitellinum 1.25 ; any plants which have passed the : ò — 

cae 90 um grande, fr. 10s.; Vanda Roxburghi, | are useful should be immediately removed. Attention a e e Thomas’ ie re ib ang u made was tale 

Dendrobium cæru ersa Eria densiflora, and a Catase- u otatoes, using the renne 


esce 
tum, 2/, 2s, Among stove plants 
the Demerara nan Saath ee fetched 11. 28. 


Calendar of . 
For the ensuing week. an 

WER GARDEN 5 sun 
— pressing work 


keeping the place in order. 


— is that of 
of the — will be 


, good specimen of 
wh 


e —— 


chee 
rs, and assist 3 the — 
ment of the roo 


| RAIN: 


poses ore gt x pares if the old 1 erust be slightl 6? 
z s State of the Weath London, for the week ending June 21, 1849, 
scarified ke, and a 7 5 * of se ave ol an observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiswick. 
; me 
clean gravel ell over the surface ; the — Were — 8 — 
peration is when they in ium state be-“ zune Sw — Whe ff] ake 
tween wet and dry ; the roller is t i more effective in Max. Nin. M Min. Mean || 
ring the ches f smooth surface than when the gravel | Friday.. 1 21 99.999 | 29.791 || 70 | 48 | 59.0 E. 00 
x 77 75 68 46 57.0 N. 00 
is too dry. In connection with the repairs of the walks | Sammy ! 2 || dears 15 3 | 40 260 Naw. || “oo 
M 2 0.066 0.038 3 r . . 
Hy —— Tai s oip —— 9 — be whee Tuem. 19) 23 || vaos | 292s || fo | a3 | sis || sw. || 02 
uips 8 è 30.139 | 30.036 7 5 2.5 - . 
5 8 5 — re jor estan! T 21 o 30.118 | 30.050 75 42 58.5 S.W. 00 
It tis a common practic o throw away t the old bulbs | Average 923 || 70.7 | 44.3 | 57.5 | 0.02 
which have ags 9 ee to stick them into some June 15—Fine; cloudy; dusky haze; overcast. 
f 16 — Overcart ; fine; bone o LAR 
out-of-the.way border, an ke no further notice} — 17 —Fine; cloudy; dusky aze; cloudy at night. 4 
2 22 They ar . well worthy ele — = 19—Fine W ri fe. slightly clou 
egree of attention. If, a ripened, they are —  20—Very fine throughout ; slightly overcast. 
r g -Very fine; clear; sli at] louded at night. 
taken out of the soil, ar stored. during the AA e tues tye wees ton. Glow rA D 
se of rest, and replanted in autumn in State of the Weather at 0 art last 23 years, for the 
of light rich soil, a stock wil tablished in a few Se 
from whi e largest and soundest bul gg. leg: zli er revailing Winds. 
; 28 8 Za SA ly, 
each season be selected for forcing. The best of the] June. | Eds | E tE 85 Years in Quantity e 
inde a in the flower-garden, where <n] | 455 |AS | Rained. | ° Rain. E Ei ei los E 
they are highly ntal during the spring months, ——.—— 
. 2.2 50.8 61.5 9 0.49 in. — 1 
besides preparing themselves at the same time for pot- Mon.” 3 S o 50.0 94 | 13 0:73 PTA i; 31313) 2 
. 26 1.5 . d 1| 2} 4|—} 1) 8| 6} 1 
culture in future gen therefore let all the old Wed. 3 1 835 
ul have in or o the ground be carefully | T 28| 723 | 504 | 613 0.65 2212 8] 3| 5 
taken care 1 ys . . season arrives, when the Friday 33 . 1 
subje ect shall b The highest temperature during the 2 period occurred on the 27th 


‘FOR RCI NG DEPARTMEN 


new tan 
rim it may be laid ow the aa ee; 
evaporation it will economise labo’ 


ELONS,—Co 


rings, 
are ripening g thle er pass 8 vil : uire 
less water and a drier atmosphere r a 


Carn a large 
portion “of, * e aphis or green 
fly infests the —.— it anal be fetid off with a 
camel hair brush ; by no means destroy them by erush- 

ing « on - plant. Remove laterals, and disbud, 
to as much 3 e into Toite 
intended l for exhibition eep the surface of = pots 

rege hep m wits y ery weak sheep 

pagate by pipin 1 
the latter is the safest way, but they ioe — 5 
ormer, Wilmer’s La 


ay —AURICULAS are apt to get 
3 the colleetick Bes ore be 
wa s, with a large camel-hair 
NT nia be shaded foi the sun 
ept moist, a they are liable to attacks of r 
e to Dantras as before directed. 


a 


i deg. therm. 93 deg.; and the lowest on the 25th, 1885, aud 30th, 18i8—therm, 


otices to Correspondents. 
Ar HES: DH. A eee 1 and — placed 
over the Rose bush, so as t smoke, affords 
the best means of sted ing — 


Books: — = op is no work specially on the propagation of 
evergree well-in form ed gardeners know how to deal 
with pees KS. “ Rose Garden,” by Mr. Paul. 

CONIFERS : Amicus, If you will consult previous — y 
will find that they contain the information now sought for. 

ore especially 8 and 104, for 1847. 
Fie Trees: J B. Close pruning does not suit the Fig. tree. 


The principal 2 should be laid — 2 thinly, in 

order that th eral shoots proceeding em may not 

be reel 1 laterals may be stopped when they 

are likely to grow too vise i otherwise * is bet = not to 
meddle with r Rem t-form 


the firs fruit m the 

— ung sho 12 Evilin in the e present season, * it 
will be too far paused Ain — — over the winter. Straw 
but early and 


— frosts should also be 
overing. 
Pion T Tenni : Cav We — doubt 
— their r pruning in ia A hands 
gar 


forms the best protection against pti biisii 
e guarded t, by some slighter 


the wisdom of 


hould — size 
without coarseness ; 2d, b . ae contrast of colours ; 
3d, ees ve expanded sepals, Mr a large and regularly 
bell-s haped e and tu pve und in proportion to its 
— 
ENS: Alpha. We consider 1 the "Tulip, A nemone, Ranune 
— and some Nareissi ming under the — of 
plants “usually taken — rate one season of the year, and re- 


planted at Jy ag dg 
t is A to ae the water occasion- 


ust be — ond water. You — feed them 
read crumbs or fies; — if RSA are in the tank, and 


Tr is supplied with proper water, it will breed food enough for | 


Haxicor BEANS, 


ugh 
í Porong a sae dee savon 
i 3 ur ene s the Otiorhynchus sulcat 
night-fee 3 manner S "Goaling 250 which is —— 


2 i It is a great enemy of the 
and can only be kept in check by nightly care 3 md 
perseverance. . 

LABELS: We have received from Mr. Geor 


e F, Morrel 
— of his 5 flower- labels; th mo aga 
ti 


si ; they are capable of 
— of the on ant va be read gre having 3 
e 


of stoopin —.— to read the J, and prepared canvas is 
substitute ard or paper, in order to oran e incon- 
venience to —.— common labels are exposed of becomin 


defaced by the action of water. These labels oh cheap an 

readily used ; — bon ey are not so good looking as is desirable 

in such contrivan 

Common apeg 3 am 

oss is some hypnum; the other is Care 

ins — — hispanica,—F R M. en s deltoidea escaped 

=n —C L, Co nage argi , ful Epiden 

won —— a species ve eee — JW. It is 

Nostoc 8 we aid Ass 3 the wretch in sige shri- 
te —R H T. Gladi — = aam G. by- 

zantinus ; Polemon e cæru. Sw 


. a MY e Willa 


The nearest gardener’s apprentice could tell you the names 


i 
is 
our PA is ue reasonable. 


refer to it fu 
POTATOES : G 


lies with the oe not with the Society. 1 
J. y thanks. 
but it is uncertain how far it 


The 3 is yı 


will go. ur fi 

than our hopes. As to Ireland, it en be dag pme 
crop should again fail than that it should succeed,’ Succee 
will only annihilate the wisdom which last four year 

ave been instilling into the people * Bee are flattering 
themselves tha is no = ger, and the daily nm 
peats their hope ths. We hope or * E 
the weather remains dry and cool there is hope Hi 


PRESERVING PEAS: It — only — — (p. 370) that 
the mode of pres ekat green Peas w 
he ayera; F A “of Sko which fall; u 
eae 7 May Po 1.82 inch. The quantity which fell lat 
—— Ag’ ches. 

If by Spiræa japonica you mean i 
potica thea: it is a half hardy herbaceous Bodie in SA te 
Apply to the Secretary of the Linnean Society 


poppe FLOWERS. 
CALCEOLARIAS: C 
crimson ; j gaine a i ape, — ~ ing 
mall, — tm — . 
— u e good, size rather small, 


: * and dotted z 10 
eye very defective, ee pretty. 16, yello! 
crimson; s ax size, and outline tolera 
good. 17, pale straw, self-coloured ; outline 
flat, and fluted, size 2 colour ra 
crimson 5 8 rregu 
1, yellow a SW 
rably good, 12 775 — : sa ve 

II. marbled in the centre crimson ; 
lin neg crimson, marbled with parm 
— shape vlog 8 ne 7 — defective. 6, pale yellow, 
Pel FS a 3 size 


A Tg 
1 se. 
fi 


size 
witht shia ded crimson 


“gre FE 
Ease ES 

8 
8" $28 
ReSreere 
a He 
8b d 
bib ictett 
es ithe 


dull purple; shape 
sma all T pale ot ear 
— flat, ine 9 

nape ba d. 


s. There is : 
r Fuchsias, e either in 1 
the 2 —_ in co 
ot in state for 


i 


Flowers large, UPP 
sg eo and having Bard 
ture, 


3 
1811 
Aan 


ts 
aw 


A 
* 


o 


white margin, fe 
petals pure white, 
colours well ee f 


5 . ce peta aa DE 
ive lars? 


1849.1. THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZE 


TTE. 393 


o f HOTHO OUSE WORKS, KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA. 


iy ROYAL LETTERS 
PATENT, 
$ i Tr’s : =. 2 
1 
5 ENCH tem for ade Patent HOTHOUSES, 
j E p he will warrant far superior to all others, in eve 
s bich 1 Span Roof, 28 feet 6 ins. long, 13 feet 6 ins. wide, 
m., © OP s. long, 16 feet 6 ins. wide, 50l., with 
: Lene 1 e glass of large size N . for 
i reg Se i sg 9d., per 


1 
f undertake the warming of Hot S, 
mer Apparatus. 
. Ea he ey have erected most ex- 

. works. 


i ick; particularly the new 
e lar; rgo Con nservato 
Ro: val B otanic Gardens, Regent’s-park, 
— 
ae Yorkshire. 

. near tha ~~ 
l — — — hig 


. London. 
tural Ga ette. 
8 00 Sa On 


R THE TWO F 
En June my e RAN Society 


EKS, 
2 Las land. 
2°—Agricultural Im oan of 1 
q July S Agricultural — et. ge 1 
pen 5—Agricu: ociet — — d. 
2: Great e pens 3: fa Devon, Ard- 
ae jy : Debenham, Halesworth.—July 7: New- 


some minds the selection of any an T 
au illustrative of a principle 
3 le is, at the shed: Po Frequently 
f hostility, or, at least, it is criticised 
a spirit of ironical incredulity which confirms the 
of any system, however bad, because 
to = A par of 


ads 
3 which a better could confer. This 
mimus, bad in its origin, and 5 — in its con- 


un 


a wide 
10 * and a maliplicity “a com- 


Sirens for all 


parties to have reduced to 


1 
rsity of 
and misarrangements which 

no small 
ance. | of a 9 —— 


tages 
n ‘atroduction of free-tra 


bound “a Pe pons which oot is at liberty to applied in its absolute sense to any agricultural 


infringe to the injury of the 
ohie yor Amt are tlie er xcluded, 
culture can never possess the same expansive power 
that en given to commerce her present imposing 
positio 
In En land the of pct or * 
equivalent to them, is not now rare, e prin- 
ciple is every yest ‘gaining ground, so that although 
there is still m 
en 


2 


tenant-at-will system, its provisions are so 0- 
rary that little impediment is 3 nted to thes in- 
If, h n to 


3 


ference can be 1 iscovered from which to 3 or 
orderly system. The relation be- 
d and prika is, to use an Irishism, 
too frequently one of violent antagonism, where | 
ere is neither confidence on the one side, nor 


P 

while the — — an, by his i 
tually ee pret efort they make as ‘approach 
each other n the gri aoe He, 
Jew-like, naal a exa ‘its his “p flesh ” 
from both, and has not the fear of erotik" 8 pa 
a nt before his s eyes. No system can be 

tive of peace or prosperity where a e lets 
his land with power to subset to the highest bidder, 


er, and from which 3 is a 3 


o great h 
0 abe cary on eH EH, had they t 


er; but, rar gona eth o 
, there are som mpr ovements of a 
mane nt character shat others : thas, draining is more 
. in its effe — than 1 and this again more 
than f 


rva 
ent improvements a 
pute vever, where the eff 


at which he 
demand is so obviously ju ust as 
- | illustration nor me 

founded upon a ana laws of common sense 
an age 


rising farm 


ary se mmercial transaction for thei 
expenditure of timo per capital; forit has frequently 


the privileges of a 


een the present piv 0 d had 
ean of letting land s milar to that of Sootland |to 
ntroduced a centu ur t is pain- 


e com pa 
1 5 ‘which land is occupied that country 
her arts and employments, 


bsequent proceedings ; | 
a wrong principle vitiates and renders nugatory t the 
aa of the wisest practice 

ould not wish in these remarks to be under- 


d | tenant A with f fresh pers pi andi in the confident 


expectation of raping abundantly where another 

— — liberally. But his, ote is often but a brief 

t time, — as — as he lets go his capital 
t what are admitted as per- 


capita uld fi y where its repayment 
pended de the skill and industry o of the farmer, and 
where the value of an —— ent was teed 
to the improver by a ten agreement, gas. de- 
fining the tema era which compensation w be 
pare e in the t of his being disposs: — of his 


at its true value, 
porinan, of whic 
1 uce, 


nd a syste 

Hik: would id depend apo ppa the im- 
h it was capable e aed of 

is the case at pre- 


climate s : fertile 3 75 


especially, ing 
the object of ‘whieh is to obtain a better security 

ital than w e present form of lease 
lease, as generally drawn, 
of occupancy, during | * 
that the tenant has 
both to improve his land and 


1 
for 


moment's 1 
learing 


a phantom to search everlastingl 

causes and Acts of 

which fo gre their a of pro 
0 


$: 
8 


S occupancy a 
"gain, while tenants ioe as often 
to 3 it on th humiliatine | 


atter 


5 ofall shoul nce ; and | ris 
of all men, 828 have seen that it 

y 
P po | 


ral Braio ive 


and tenants 3 view theis] 
as that of contracting parties | 


ars of hi 


pancy. 
mprovements and h arming to the end of 


n- | im 
e | lease, either the lanlerd or in-coming tenant reaps 
what justly belongs to another, the other 


whereas, on 
hand, if he cease to improve, and merely ploughs, 
sows, and harrows hi accordance with that | 


can touch it, althoug ongs 
them by the strongest of nat ware the law of moral | t 
right. The term permanent improvement, when | 


a easant 
can never be underle 
ma 


not, as 

t the expectation 

taet kas Of rea tei of his re 

4 Ja outlay. The oc of farming is 

too ever 2 5 itt — and land 

so long as there continue to 
ts as well 


dlor 

tation for t er ae, . and they 
may look forward id coidas to afu i 
for their re they have no = to, and 
any less can only be ‘the result of an unwise and 


rtant change, and 
apie ies It can a 


illiberal mode of let 
But who — 5 teci 


e general 
the country, is essentially a farmer’s question. The 
farmers ought, therefore, to define their es 
rly 


a to 
tse i is rae reall in qora ration in several coun- 


six a warning ; but the tenant, secure 15 in his 


— 


394 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


[June 23, 


ht to compensation, goes on improving with the 
most perfect confidence in his final repa; yment, A 
-d o 


2 — — WO 
es "of, existin 
— such other renten as will — to * thems 
greater praelio effec permanency. 
stance, the tena nt-right pr Tocco slight 1 
— to the lease of Scotland, and the union 
be productive of all the ulti mate and at an any time 
available compensation of the one with the perpe- 
tuity of possession» which, comparatively —.— 
fhe. 2 affords. If thes ws be correct, all 
otland appears to require ( Ge i re to 
armers 


quit o 


— is the old rn of ten e geen 5 
e time, some legislative Sr, Patrick 
must exorcise the middlemen who haye lon 


ed the mf, 
all this is much mo y 
oubt Ireland will be, as 


on property, but are mer 

with a pow — noni * mhi ch herh have ae 

themselves (a s t pern 

the difficulty is ea 4 pe * 5 r right 

to j the land to under tenants i 
writ 


this permission 
4 voluntarily make 
under. ae if it were in his power | 
to hold 8 — ae real proprietor 

n order, to effect s such changes, the farmers 

of the United eh sould bestir the 
to give 1 defnite pr to their o a aame h 
n 


orms a subject 
n the effort to place 
* : 2 iiom either 
Jae opas ‘om without nor tammelle al 
-by antiquated customs from within. J, 


A NOTTINGHAMSHIRE FA 
! ce of two or 


as I can, but I a 
e-tedious, as my 2 sad not t been altogether 
the rotation our's 


d for; and I 
ey after Wheat as after Turnips. 
I à Turnip land, full 
of pwa ; * end rather pes, pak orn in ned mi Bist Bowe 
since. 
one field. N Pee 
Wheat when I entered, after two years seeds— 
p 3 qrs. e J 
. 7 acres qrs.; 1 acre Mangold 
42 NEOR 2 3 1 acre P good root crops 
1 7 ed; . stubble sown with Rye 


ips an and Swedes, ve 15 
Spe the Turni T urnip cro eff 


s of any), | turn 


«| now eight or ten. 


her 
raid you swil 


i has 
Barley, two yeas nestle grazed, — = 


nine acres, one of five in a Bian W 


debted to the Gazette), 
g repea 


Mangold Wurzel, good; 3 acres Swedes, good; re- 
mainder, white-top, very poor indeed; it was manured 
with farm-yard manure, and the Turnips drilled with a 
m 


great mistake ; have never repeated t 
1840. Barley very good, 4 bushels 7 jae drilled ; 


1841. 42. Seeds good both years (grazed). 

3. Wheat, part drilled part pressed and sown 

op, — much down; 

48} qrs.; grain very fair, but rather e 
lait. Barley, onge ploughed ; a little 


8 say 
seven one- horse never manure heavy for 
this erop 5 dried. 33 bushels per acre; produce, 


2 qrs.; du mer patches all over the field, very 
short, only a foot 1 ; other parts very stron ne not 
much sell the field burns in patches in dry time 
Ne ear half t he field was well cleaned, and drilled with 
1 qr. Tares 3 got a nice stack of fodder, besides mowing 

what was wanted green 
1845. Whitesop 1 Turnip the fallows very good, 
Tare stubble very fair 
1846. Barley, 563 ars. 3 bushels per aere drilled. 
r — sailed “7 this ine ene 1 year 
. Seed 


1840. 63 acres Barley, manured, 52) a pee 
s M wid ee 524 gs, 


acre; 2 acres Mangold pag el and Carro 8 
1841. White Turnips an volte sak ts, both peg 
1842. 33 acres ipe — 11 bushels „ ramon, 
5th Mareh 6 2 bushels 
Pre 3 or 2 ; 
of ain 0 
94 . grazed, good, 
Wh hast, ‘November 28 z 
drilled. ‘part sown, 5 qrs. 3 l, rat 
1845. Red Clover, on — “side v 
ares, very good. ‘ A other al 
1846. White ranit; very great crop, man 
yard manure en heap of com ost, — with 
Couch as + p * “h 
1847. 3 drilled 19 bush 
March, — great crop, 44 wagg aa ben ane Sy 
qrs. dre esides two — — ria 
slender, 15 —— 5 Ibs. per sack net. 
s, only thin 2 spots, sowed 
ty and Italian n Rye-g g a 1 2 
This field sega the fis ‘fist pow side) 
side, 93 acr il m 2B W 
natur rally rhe ‘and very — — — = * 


moo 
1827. White Turnips, and 1 


s good, and to be grazed another yea ar. e Swedes, very 
The first 10 or i2 —— 15 fetched a arent. ‘eal of night- | manured, 3 = bushels of — per . 15 
nli one year 100 loads, all sorts, &c. ; have | farm was limed at the same 


sed a goon deal of lime, burning iton the 5 bought 
: good deal of cake, malt-coom, bran, Oats ke 
soot. i 
e 


an make plenty 2 
purposes, except p set the Turnips 


e re 
other pot given to the eattle at home, of all ages 
ves reaved annually till the year 1842, — 
the — 1 was en or nine annua 


nd 
with, chiefly, ewes and lam 
— 


1828. . 45 qrs. 3 bus 
1829 and 1830. Seeds grazed, v 

a 336 3 ang 
1831. Wheat pr essed and sown, 3 bushels pera 
n 23 waggon loads mown, 4 ꝗrs. 
1832. 


anured, 31 d. Jag 


1834. 73 acres an Ase and Swe tal 
re 7 a0 otat s and st Sey 
Turnip land only ist 3 not 
13th to 16th June, white-top 17th 4 uly. 
835. Barley 


4 


Wien, deal of stram,37 


1839. 4 aeres Darley m manured ; 15 qhi — 
e 


20 ashes per 


bushels Couch ashes, very cro 
T otatapn 130 sacks of 10 pecks . 100 14 aa 


er a 
p 81. Barley, too much wn 593 qrs. 
842 and 1843. Seeds, grazed, good, 
844. White Wheat, drilled Vath to 18th 


233 bushels, 5 qrs. per acre ; very dry summer ; 


urnt in pa Ces, 


on steame hile 

e farm was only 100 aeres (15 years), the n l n 

* was about 4 ton as near as 

All the tail corn is pent — oe 

on the farm — * er the manti and a goo — 
deal of Oats and bra e been bought for the cart 


ng, sometimes 
e yards during minek — sometimes mixed 
om the fields a 


ings, 


o | St. Ernan’ 


845. Barley, manured; near 24 24 bushels, dril 
h and 17th April; 4. pea . 
846. 7 aer — 
with seed, IIth an mn 7 g pores 


Pota ld Wur rW 
arley 194 — — died 27th and ies 
Seah 63 ed m gs. 


15 


33 192 
1848. 

a —— ů — ů ů — 
MEOR OF IRELAND, j 

[WE make the following extract 
G. Poulett Serope, Bag. M. P., by Mr. 2 
ä we called the attend 

our readers at pages 15 169.] 


At first the sean, of the sogeation J the 
one ae J 
ce bern by 
eer 


Poor-laws in = on the 
great ‘and expenditur a 
those fearful EET peri ave 
south), was, — oe oyide 
vent the taking 571 8 

ed or. rates, 


e farmer 3 lost rope fase 


— 
everything I can for the purpose, mixed 
lime and salt (for Abich idea a —— — — — 
p ich, after laying — years 


Üh 
There is 


ven at the pres meg ene ‘on 
fair rents ; and Pe Set of gro 


and having nings, is spread on the firs 
year’s seeds, F 8 


Wheat, other fallow, and sometimes a slight dressing 


The following is 
to | acres, south side) the! 
nb gue, Portes cath al 2 L TE EON ph the 


1827, Wheat stubble, 5 acres drilled with Barley, 


acres | 
es eee amors Onta out for horses y 1 on Bapo dasi | Sa 
erop, very wet season, nearly | 1828; Whi | pa: a ; 2 
— — up for 3 this 1829. y, 4 e . e eee 
— e Barley; I have 1830. 53 acres Wheat, 18 qrs.; 3 acres Qats, light, no actual profit, wat 2 7 im 
cut; Wheat, pressed and sow. a, half drilled, the | paren and exposure, 8. 
P were the * 0 


ured with yard-dung, 


TEAN Tags. pec 


the account of another field of 8} ae tale 
Ir 


thes 
„ : 
e ee 


I have eae een in 
i e has 
omen: ms effect : on 
materially tended to pae 
an effect of the sys pan. 
moye, it 
Ira cet Fat, t Lor 
am 


n no 
he o e , the 
ency 


e a k- 


9, 


eland, — this is my 
who survive the crisis, le 
will see Ireland's ulin age 


earfu 

jersons have, in num 
themselves barely: 

Their last can, their last sak 2 


mga j barri a 


az 


i7, 


THE AGRICULTURAL BAZET TE. 


a96 


chimney, „has often been since 

If these go to the poor-house 

mee re LE — das , and they face 
doso, Many 9 ihe 


by in the e 
spe crook pate e gen 


7 
2 and des ra th to all tenant 
i three last seasons to all tenants, 
ment during these ising aid, are now, on acco 


ring ai 
ishda requiring ` e to continue this 


t 


y 
E 


— 
i 
te 
Be 
des 
aE 
eee 
Si. 
c 
So 825 
888 88 
Bg 
Ba 
pE 
ag 
. 
BS 
F 
Re 


cannot under — 
ement, exc on 
Late English pea toto our position, they 
ich would, under — gt save us— 
of money to thrown awa y in making roads 
ed while the 1 land lies uncultivated, and to be 
t 


LS t 
pilini 
daskagk 
Hi 
Ar 


i 
: 


at 
ih 

5 
va 
a ESS 

ce 

Fh 

8 

2 

= 

p 

ke 

a 

B 

G 

B 

8 

Z 


s 
ai 
8 2 
g 
®© 
2 5 
88 
E 
5 8 
** 
g 
8 8 
— 
5 
© 
8 2 
© 
<4 
© 
rt 
soe 
h 
on 
ao 
z 
i= 
S. 
ic} 
7 


law as 
2 2 or at least leave that 
such a modification would be both easy 


1 


mean time the harrowing is going on, the 


K 
E 
E 


is doing he poor, tu A UF by law into 
4 — on ated, and 
oa them. They th ig oer see their fate, — xield 


— 


a 


1 
108 “ Blessed is the man that considereth the poor.“ 


west ? 


we case be so here, in 2 * seem ad cia dis- 
— n part 


tiet, what must it be — * 

fa —.— in this = See dis- 

feet means of improvement, aa “the mass of the people 

n trious when they have an opportunity re- 

te erent profitably. Our 
is 


; but it is by the — ofthe poor. It 
en only so under the present system. It need not a oihua 
the present system alone causes the fatal nec cessity. J. H 

A SUBSTITUTE DUNG- HE AP. 
a long hindered, by a oe 2 interrup- 
Gons, the sul t of cheap manuring ever — en 


ea Ad I avail myself of the frat lei 
b draw it towards a termination My last sondaki 
rt. . green manu 

No, 1 was shown how the dung-heap may be 
rr s from an acre. But this 


— 2 the 2 is just printed. 


Gover grass, 
tes), fed 67 cattle and 10 horses fiv 

to October ; except the Oats and s 
280 bushels of — boiled with chaff, 
» In the whole there are 105 acre 
otatoes 3 an si 


ELEF- 
7 


a load at two-thirds of a — n), from 
urine, enough to water 
Rye. 


40 
3 ee of an — four times 
0 


Srl be 


000 Ibs. 3 
~ “kag ‘hi 8, e to the 
‘tong ns, from 140 acres (or 
tly Mb acre), c of very rich manure ; N 
— en or Soap than, f peat ; ; and if W 


hal 
25 tan 40 (as A again in gi No. 1) would 


F 


a prac ctica 
rs’ — 


F 
T, 
1 0 0 

tH 


i 


Substitute 


for Protec » 
: y James 
* — Published by Blackwood and Co., 


7%, 
Hip 
HI E 


ourishing without 3 
n be cutting, if farm 


F. 
F 
71 
ii 


the dung-heap, without the 
homestead ; and of 2 
such a compost 


unt | from 


n | and bulbing, will be deficient, and m 


0 vad 19 of come and streams, and s 


3 * t SOURDE off E . — from 


oices are w. 


condition as a dis- 
at ee time o 


os cheap — for the dung-heap, and 


| venient, say pipan: 


n | ammon nia. The heap 1 will need turning over a . times, 


must of course be vegetables ces ego on the gro 
but as vegetables ferment on there 
correct the acid ; and as there will be — an 


otass and salts required for 


vegetable growth will be well supplied in 
matter ; but the phosphates. 


the o 
for — aging seed 


nitrogen in some form, 
is necessary, to give 1 tthe — of good dung; and 
the e pan is to effect this by the cheapest and 
readiest m 
1. Of the 
not be altogether superfluous to remind the farmer of 
roots harrowed up, hedge clippings, fallen leaves, weeds, 
fern, heath, moss, rushes, vegetables — in and 2 
weed when 
fine, every sort of — substance, 
{pe ves, stalks, or roots, burning none, except in extra- 
ordinar ry ¢ pi 
The 


E 


— and turf from hedges, ditches, and 
baten as paring of the soil; sawdust, spent bark 
the tan pit, urf and bo og , mud fro 


e mixed with coal as es or 
ith AE s — 
he spo 


rrels, and mixed w 
pent bark — m ingre — 
even with e 
panen its clotting 

3. 


be —— without bone; but enever bone is 
required it — he 3 be better applied to the soil, 


ar sie fshi is to be had cheap (say 1s. to 2s. 
— it is the cheapest and readiest supply of amm 
nd carrion, or any animal — is little inferior. 

as work i as liquor is excellent for 
e carried in cas 


937 
Ff os 


may be made up at any time by sulphate of 
te of soda, di ed and sprinkled in 


the ground 


ng. | 
cavil by the fact that his farm, consisting of 4 
or 10 acres 


ces ria matters, to form the basis, it may | 2007 


2 the rise 
h, to ve es it through “the heap, — 
ether. an 


hen there is — of fish the phosphates will | 
wh 


us in that branch of of 


to th racy of tl 
3 only is it be 1 5 one of * 2 gentlemen of the 


island, Mr. Thomas Priaulx, is put . all 
40 Guernsey 
vergées, equal to 16 Englis i 
is worked on 


to add 
a report of the p e cow, belonging to Sir 
William Collings, of this island, which from the 14th of 


July, 1843, to the same in in two years, gave 
04 lbs., English weight, of very rich and handsome 
2 Ses ir, hy id S.G., May 21. 
attempt te agricultural wages. 
by —— 9 is * out of f the question, 
nd would only lead t ntent and confusion, with. 
out in the slightest degree benefiting either master or 
van he price bour must in a 
epend upon the supply in the market here 


as commercial pr i 
the case of requiring strength for the tillage of land and 
the usual domestic econ the „it is the wisest 
n to go to the cheapest et, thus grinding down 
0 n to the lowest farthing who prefers toiling 
— small remuneration to tr g himself and family te 
tender mercies of the lere two 
points to be red. Are we doing justice to those 
dependent upon ur 


in 
terest? With e to the first * 1 can hardly 
be said to be an act of justice to take a tage of the 
misfortunes of our yp eres ores Iti is “fully to say 
i e land, a man is not compelled. to 

toil unless he 1 if ‘he dislikes 
y decline acceptin 


it, and suit himself 
y, as it is well 


„ by trees or walls, an both rain 


salted stalks, Ly — e. , until as high as 


eet. 


). — > mony bag 1 1 out of 


3” hem content to receive a dail 
ai for — — toil, not sufficient to 
etably, starvation, or the workhouse. A 

ry alwa be liable to times 


e heap c 
are padaan Pes nig the pe Bg of the layers 


en rags, gas tar, or gas liqu 
(4), should be applied i in aes la — — the others, 
but always covered by m 


e 
tion to an . count 


ot feel a deeper interest than m 


ove said, 
if neede aps a sti 


Home Corre — 
e of — Cows,—I ea kiad 
of uce in 


Produc w atten- 
b —.— of five 


M 

One fat bull calf 

Four — ee calves, valued 153. each 
Churned milk, valued 1d. per gallon 


— 
In drawing your notice to this han ja 
ere local I it 


2 the returns 


necessary tte to p 
Brittany cows E. Channel Island cows have, 
on 


arme: 
made on the spot capable of |i 


England, Ao reproduce this article, not alone in the in- 
5 terest of the — y breeders, b but also in that of the 


- | knows that at the end 


if men with — ney only thin 


increasing their sub- 
e ugh ; | stance, with the view of self eatin and forget those 
and may then be used as Tien with the addition of 
| nitrate of soda i sulphate of ammonia, as a 
e per easier and cheaper p i 
| method of enriching jire ba $ * is 2 manuring, 
| of which more 


whose health and strength they on en an enor- 


fo 
armers, mere 3 
men, and all above want to rue —— 22 
arning. Under 


force. Thus indolen engendered amongst our 
try by a — 6 economy, ees E after all 3 
— expensive, introdueing à habit most difficult 
vercome, 2 pe uci ing — — bo — 
— In m ence, I have se found 
it advisable ot — — yo a wages to the lo at ner 
men, 


4 


EN 
= 
& 


n 
been profitable to himself nor his master, It is painful 
to witn — the efforts of the labourer to keep his head 
above water, and how many of them struggle through 


* 


396 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


| Jung 23, 


Bror complaining. The 


„ has at nt had a ein effect 3 as what d 
it signify of the q rn loaf is t had for 
two-pence, -pe are fortheom W 


to fill every cottage with that dese 


The Agricultural Labourer.— There are few subjects 


deserve more a i 
agricultural labourer: t a farmer be provided with 
the most improved ements of the day, and pos- 
sessed of the er — ractical and scientific know- 
ledge of his calling, he cannot turn e one or the 


nd | other to 8 pana ee he possesses active, i faithful, 


be clean and r 


my calling e te ae aks 
with which weeds.:between dhe AANI — 


there can b 
ceed ste adily, 


12441 a 
1 


y 
bt of his success. His work will pro- : 


ird question, “ what is 
ame n If it = . bo peeled alone, I should prefer it 
a 
spisas 
sa wi 
Scotland “ dra kit.” 
ason api sony applied in this 


company with one of the members. Professor Jo 
lectured on the lime formations 
5 


e lecture a con- 


& drackit ” state. The fessor 

read a communication from a gentleman in jes- 
advocating its being allowed to become wet, and 
giving proofs from experiment of the benefit derived 
m so trea t. This certainly coincided with my 
own D par seemed also to cide with the 
general opini f th ting and of the Professor 
himself, though he did not attempt to account for the 
Fact. Itis ly more permanently efficacious, from 


er of decomposing ae 
it acts beneficially. When 

finely N state, it must almost msd 
assu e form of a erecta 8 so become nearly 
Fo vam it exists in , itattracts 
re slowly, and 3 longer retains 


ei, and two of peat. 
1 


cha 
th a double ps of so 


ger ae osts should. be form 
eir 


ts ought to trea ards 
regar 
a dare in the a same way 80 . for 


impelling power, and on 
nn . That the peter is often kept bac 
Hen, Rare, is, I fea 
fact too sea to require ge ad ‘practical 
ve had himself satiefied | a this But 
gat that the evil —— won as 
t a cause, we wou — to 
inquire into the source  Whenc i it arises. wil 
uble. One of the chief i is the ‘little 


interestedness in 


the best method of applying | and 


re efficacious, than if applied when Aer ma 
1 


his 
of the north of England 


roportion | Whe 


encouragement that is pas to those that a 


deservin Su 
f: 


cannot be vee because the m 
must be supported some way of other, and as 
i as otherwise. 


Jess than taxing on t (the active 
and industrious) for the support of the. slothful an 
indole „ and, in too m There 


in the ald with any fair chance of comfort, 
ing his energies so that he will only follow the 
same stiff and careless course that his predecessors | a 
eof the 112 a clean farming is the pos- 
sibility of well har Wheat > sea seasons.— 


to carry much of m 
nig fo g bad as the season prove 


r prices th ave been 
generally realised through the polite of England, in con- 


ge 2e 


wind, and alter dinner these are taken up i 
Pine they have been cut. In this way, comparatively 
e of my Wheat lies out 24 hours; but I must not 


r, a; use 


ts wor 
that additional space aa: the = to = 
ment to feed i n by its m reer) 


pene w 


. * to blush 


d). Lincoln and 


o | knew 


e | Howar 


before | son 
et up, but are na with the butt- gey to ; 


then the 


it, are giv eans, at a cost 


omit to strongly iT prose that to be able ta da aa 
25 be able to do * à 


attention than the condition of the m 


inquiri 
e benefits arising from quid manure ar 
— aa oe aga k of feye or 2 Nor do the 
public roads, pas as they do 
allow the pass age tranger to se 
well e — that are not few i in the 
e notice of our one-horse carts, I 
nnected 


ractise othians. 

or e 1 on 
any of the sow T 

drill husbandry had È been 2 pace 

first introduced into the Eas 


8 
E 
. 

2 


rse ploughs w 
any other in the county, 
than one-horse eo 
district might be 
revolving Together theme 
fancy non hav 


and bran 
of the present Pasa tiles and pipes. 
e the first tile kiln 


in culture. A 
t eh a I have e; enough s allow me to state 
d I am At the last 


h a 
and at 
for fatas, pari and pigs ; for Turnips vas 


mium 
held there, the ayo pre Hod 


gson of Low rst 


What is a 
| cultural Gasak ry Mayi 
| much pains to compare 


E 


ACEI CDSS GAZETTE. 


397 


of the results of stall- rues by agri- 
d that I h 


an important means for keeping down weeds, and 


0 Thomas, Aylsham, Norfolk 
= ton t ** Copom T jomaa, 5 yish am No folie Tower, 3 for putting an end to the destructive ravages of insects, 
differ but slightly in minor detail from Parmeter, Robert iliam, Aylsham, Norf The latter, because many of these innumerable tribes of 
as regards the quantity of food allowed | Sage, Edward, Furze House, Romford, Sere the Turnip fly, for example, are angi 
increase of weight, &c. ; and a = N hurniu Hall, Norfoll Norfi from the full-grown, or perfect state in one thos to the 
ced 1 ade in the The —— of 11 ge, for election at the next een Y : Ibe p the next, and if dist latter 
S. ang 5 — meeting were then r 8 K emen 9 to 3 = 1 egga 
four bullocks gaine plays ri sep h €| Captain Moopy N the Couneil with a highly d n 10 a 8 e or ar, 
stones each sg po 350 * * 0 interesting detail of his personal experience in 11 3 r 5 soft, pulpy "jal or stem rot the Aa 
) a fact, or 6 Hi * calculation | tivation of the Tussac G of the Falkland Islands, a se le th ain time the ground, and inter- 
= Bene o a * — 4 which we shall be enabled in our next week’s Paper to 8 e 5 fu S Tas Chika 
. Your che Dia n a e be farnish 4 complete r repo ort.—His Excellency, Sir Ha a opas ie Ps uence. e ‘Sisters cold instinctively 
leased to er sarcastic in 418 | Smith, transmitted, from the Cape of ope, es them to seek shelter. in 
on calcula- f : : the soil (entering through the 
yed ste 


em 
e 5 . — value 0 res erefore, disturbing 
erop at 28. 113d . 3 and a way man 8 their retreats, by own working of the soil, the 
e, over and above The D z 1G 15 iL winter’s exposure, together with being enveloped in the 
wil tte that his own ex- 5 ste ngineer an By John pee k PP "CE subsoil (so new and foreign to their habits and nature), 
e average value of a ton a 8 Wor 5 By Dubli mehan, ust tend to their annihilation. 
Turnips. How 20 3 that “J. M.,“ so far T e ate 0 ee Ate ui, Tt is full of ‘ bsoils, in their natural state, are more or 
a akening aik coh aol goes to strengthen urs is ely to 3 olume. Tt is full of joss impregnated with acids and secretions, which are 
3 ’ as he, his on — gv Fy it does not advoca ate 2s but | most obnoxious to eful “a weave te 
od ey Mr. Ne, e practice ; and if description is e r able to lant, in favourable seasons, progress $ 
pe 5 the place of it must the | Piai E eter eo 
and Ga Boer — who only make takt place of experience, i mus in 9 ; b ner do the tender 
; . ign th f | case ka volume which, like ilag methods an pproach th — aa of 
š plans, : 


infer (unless all improvement be supposed to 
ue rindi with “J. M.’s” conclusion) that 
between two parties, iscrepancy as 


statement of . 
— — 

James H. Leigh, 3 She from the Journal of the 
Mr. Leigh there gives the Jar 


iety. 


oc 
ing 27 beasts for 63 days, and states that 


sufficient, 


IEH: 


£ 


nin 


tie {We sien 


“oil consume the 


Societies. 
Rate AGRICULTURAL, SOCIETY OF E 
| i 


ind * as be weiglit i is borne out b 
lyr who, writing 
art 


to show, that how 
to doubt the possibility, except in l very mtn 
being ace 


of the we ch eferred 
by feeding bullocks, 1 5 that enepar 
. of 3 


on the 


wever 


eight to which I have r 


— 
esults of stllfeediog 
-quoted from the Tournal of the 


£ 
8 
Pi 
er 
> 
4 
© 
4 Seng 
E 
=: 
s 
et 
p 
oO 
B 
— 
8 
Z 
5 
©. 


shall be happy to s, to any one 


em on the ee for on less.] 


LY Councrt was held at the Sosiaty’s House 

n Tuesday last, the 19th of June: 

CHESTER, President, in the Chair ; 
y5, 


3 
Ashton, ebw edge. Wilts 


888 Park, Bs Bridgwater, Somerset 
Junfallan 


H. Clive, 
— 


ch the hill’s side — top, as we 


the sweat of his brow. 


— re Nie ae Suffolk so 
to 


fallandy, Pitlochry, Perthshire 


that passes through the 


specifications, — estimates and 
e Mes 


3 employed 
nature to interest any but those mi our eases likely to 
following extracts are 


d that a 


rock or clay (which is always, in 
other, inclining | to the surface), the far ther ppm of 
the water paons partially or ic Ma ecked, aut 
na body, forces its to —— 

in the manner of lines of springs 


the bed; f spring w 


"e Rr on the w 


ere- 
er sien ‘of injur 


tö > damage Ke, rot the 
er provision net Pit 
905 tbs of that most essential pao 


e, to man, “2 exte — 
can have his bre: 


the same 
employment, fon which h 


Bsort Provenixe. —“ The great benefits ea 


f ng 
to act on the 1 s, ferrugin 
eretio ; und in the soils of most oie raged. 
will secure 5 nefit from every d 
atmosphere. 4. Will the ‘hued 


7 life. * Therefore, the 2 principle of subsoilin 
up 


- | place, until prepared to 


~~ boy: 
—— il t * ey oan og an 
euch 3 suddenly and 
must neutralise its 
ing it still in its 
roper quantity to 
the plese ai gi soil, by subsequent digging or oo eep 8 
Su gene eres ra ould be don 


that which subsoil, esi 


ut stiff, 88 pe 12 

n ma done eee, to or during these opera- 

ions, as W stones may d from the subsoil for 
drainage, and expensive quarry rtage, &c., saved, 


Subsoiling hater to the proper depth 
as in werd 3 4 thin, impervious erust of subsoil, 
resting o rous stratum of sand, — 
Ko.), will het quite. N without farther drain 
OST AND PROFITS OF [RRIGATIO 


more convenient, 
and to work Be and form 
und (into bed &e.) by ff from 

banks, &c., and lay on aor surface 24 again, a ean 
receive the water immediately, 8 give a good crop of 
hay the same aoe case of forming 
on this plan to cost, per statute atte, as follo ows:— 
N 3 leer sod, 12 men (per statute acre), “ns 
Ain 0d in handbarrows half ‘bed t to each side, : 

oomen —.— e., 18 men, at 1 
2 5 spade work, forming a n and 
men, 


Rei turning and and Jaring sod, completing open drains, 


Cost per statute acre 
Rate per Irish acre 
At the end of the s econd year ar the 
i n bay, of a 


say, of 
owever, to cost double, and even treble this sum, 
means of irriga- 


e commissi: 
= id ont in permanen 
J. 28. 10d. (see 
pee in September, + pete e 
1 back in five years al I this mae and 19/, 17s. 2d. 


ae ——. — hay sold from 1835 to — j 


Sea in favour of Ù. Colthurst (end of Sth year) 619 27 2. 
839 


£899 17 
89 9 
. £816 


Deduct head-rent for 11 years, at 7l. 118. 9d. 58 an. 


Net balan 
George Colt urst purchased d, in 1846, ` 
l oe 20 years s purchase... . £80 2 o 


y 
Deduct head-rent 
e 


£72 8 3 
1448 5 0 
et profit on 20 urg * e 11 years 4 2264 13 2 
7 7 Tii I have seen i stances to be the case, 
from brni up . wo Targo 2 quant of the arene 
subsoil : such lands did not recover for several years; 


398 


THE AGRICULTURAL 


GAZETTE. 


NT GARDEN, Jone 2 


— 


ht, but out of condi 
55 urst's steward COV day se’nni gnt, con — 
© fis the: yous 1946. St George tle this small The weather re favourable, Vegeta ables are plen- * = spe the of — t da; T Parvels barely 
I the E for r m — er claim 250 | tiful. Fruit has a ahora Giep since our last account, Pine- Y, JUNE suppl of 
4 Lng Seng to spare me _— ae bee — 1 Cana on and * 1 K glish pay foreign 2. es d x ame Ai 
ones TE TP bog, „it itp d eae but I shall make tiful and cheap. mA fom Peaches and freetarines have made | man hs past. tak Wt eat fully wen 
till the get 1851, I have no dou of head-rent and their appearan Nut 751 neral are sufficient for the prices of . ais and . . : 
this farm w 400, a year, clear ead-rent and | demand, Oranges and Lemons are plentiful. Amongst Vege- advance, but pu rs confi 3 j 
adi tables, young Turnips m ren a obtained a t from 6d. to Is. a n x ne themselves tg a 
e IIE T aonn Re whe — oand As — — mers are suficient for . ally 1 Ba l of that day are ag 
i he d d. Rhubarb an S paragus yo 5 .— Barley is ; E 
Calendar of Operations. Peat Teteh from 2s. to 4s. pe us shel. atoe oes aros — quotations.— Beans and Pe y 1» in. fair eine 
0 toes — 0 a tered 
T LOTHIAN FARM, e finished sowing the 8 have Deh sold in considerable quantities at Oats meet an improved demand, at an — 
Bead ridges —.— Globe Ñarnips, “noticed Tast report. We ona about 188. — oun: ettuces and other — are suf- per qr. Barrel Flour must be itten 64, da 
likewise, i a grubber ploughs, been — oy q | ficient for t ushrooms are chea Cu — — rer.—Maize is less inquired aft d. to U 
ongst Swedes, hand weeding W a Th consist of Heaths, 3 — Gardenias, Lily y of the V rather reduced terms.—The er, and is di a 
Oats, threshing g Wheat "and carting the same to pea rather Cinerarias, r Carnations, Pinks, Fuchsias, Rhody. tow dasi iaa len Boe during the lag 
‘weather for the past ten days has been ungenial, and ra aon 5 . ew days en fine, and somewhat Warmer; { 
low temperature for the ora iy ao aan RUITS. pearance of is improving, and Wheat 
sequence, made but little progress, being partially at- Pine-apples, per Ib., 6s to 10s ranges, per doz., 1s to 2s pretty generally coming into ear, Sho is n 
tacked with the fly. Mech es f Grapes, hothouse, p. . to 16s the agricultural markets, an 4 
Sussex Farm.—Jw weather still continues a Pe aches, per dos. 10s mons, per doz., to 28 d gı arkets, and om the i 
able for the workings of the fallows, but part o —— ast week w ts Nectarines, — yite 3 a per 100, 7s to nent, is giving a firmer tone to th trade, and price 
cold 0 i frost - — ate 5 1 Strawberries, p pun, + § 94 to2s | Almonds, ag peeks, 8 heat have advanced Is. to 2s, throughout tl 
0 ` $ 2 eet, per Ib., Š 
: n — — and sowing various sorts of Turnips. "e Che e i . 2 n 93 W Aiha 5. 10, 18 6d to 28 dom; f. o. b. sales have also been made to some ext i 
Fri all with the swing plough ; the drill is made u — — Appice kitchen; b. beh., 4s to 85 p. bush., 16s to 24s at 44s. 6d. to 47s, per qr, cost and frei to the eas 
the » — 8 A m ot danger nere vith “a Goos * green, p. hf. sieve, Nuts, | — p. bash. is 22 22s | coast, for 61-62 Ibs. Louva Wheat ; later, oe 
apart, and apply abo A 3s 6d to 5 il, p. s t ice, j Jansch 
iit ee a g rand that gaano as a war | yeaa do, ao. 33 to 4s — „ 2225 60 and fea | 
e tae i TABLES, : ’ 
if. We h — nished — abot EGE 
Pr ppe bedahe Dra — Cabbages, an 4 to-day we shall finish | Cabbages, p. doz, 9a to1s.6d | Spinach p. fan Is to 1s er ~~ F Seny improved from the gy 
mowing s a good cr f Ryegrass, but the Clover is thin. | Caulifiowers, p. doz 0 68 spank —— on „18 6d to p 
Da first poet 8 a geld of 13 aer at —2 com . egu- | Peas, per bus 
larly, and Ye We have now timed p fthem, gi 3 Bore p. hf. — -T in Shallots, DE i 104 to ls LIVE RPOOL, FRIDAY, JUNE ave had pretty 
R vages of e fly. Aspe of —— —— lime: Potatoes, per wn n to 180s Garlic, per 1b., 6d to 1s # a — 5 since — ree tho eather oa — reo 
men, wi — — basket, walk penp the drill zam — Red r Art — okes. — doz., p 2 fo 30 386 s day’s m arket dwa — io 
d al — 8 rnips. 0 pe ke no change Foy 5 ie. Flour, 
ole p hac Carrots ahi Nang! Potatoes, Ee. 5. B. Tectia 1 — 1 — y to 18 sieve, 9d to being ‘firm, Oats and e pet ue dull or i Token 
Red penne — doz., 2s to 48 . Cab. 4 È ly r to 9d — mt „ tell Beans, and Nara 
to C nts. Horse — bat, ss i Cos, do., 6 the 45 Indian 
h FARMIN ae ponte’ nae a — have written . pl aie, a = 5 Spe p. bet “a tos — — ys — — a fair nen — a deer of — 
ny bu e; — a ads, un., 
en -M Mr, Caird cannot be expec a a ib p. bun 9 a = aaa a Lil ages 5 à but white, from scarcity, w. qr. higher, 
Eon Orie 60 bushels per acre is a moderate, and would gene- oe scumbers, ei bade ea att — — pads perm ar Wurar, Baxter.) Oana.) Rre: | Beans, Prt 
r cane respecting soot and red f, p. bundle, 1s to 2s ea he ae Y be, 4 9d] TETE r 587 f 55 1. 
brickdust is reasonable, 7 I thought I ħad exhibited in one 5 per 12 = 3 — si 2 J Fann 8 ee 7 a 19 Seen 44 9 28 0 17 8 25 9 907 4 
isan etc a aa T| “ares” oe | Meese’ | = e al a ee 
a ou! ? Fete rete « n k 
is a Very ancient remo — mmend 8 e vehicle, but for | Carrots, per bun., 6dto 1s Basil, green, p. bunch, 4d to 6d mma ie 44 26 11 17 7 195 ab 1 
their absolutely „ proper oot acts as — 16. . 41 5 18 0 26 3 80 3% 
an aperient. Our fowls have had f for 1 the pades amg A Av 44 8| 27 8 17 8 (25 8] 0 f 7 
hold sifted co n, a e re ver. b 
— — tie chimneys, th invariably Monpay, June 18. ~The a supply of English Wheat Duties on Fo. s i Si 
scoured, Red brick. dust 7 me ects, x roA ge samples this morning was exceeding! reign Grain | 1 0 y 2 1 $ i 0 À 1 0411 
n e Ters eee small, and quickly disposed of, fine qualities command - ations in the last six weeks’ Corn Averages 
e i oph di; 8 ? 2 5 . | May 19. k : 
pebbles, Lette as dispersion of 1 p on ee bone aly, ing an deus rf per qr. orei met a moderate | PBICES. | May 5. Mar 19. Mar 26.) UNE 2. JuxkE 9 ‘eh 
matters this kind of anima es. —— been rs sale at the extreme rates of this day week.—Bar 46s 9d id oe = 4 ee 
are required for the 5 pep excretion of ti the material | js in emand. and fully su ur quotations.— 44 9 a 1— 5 thy pi w 
a npo isan if deprived of these, birds pine away a inally unaltered jn valu “4 9 i = | S: Se . 
an 2 D ee ee ad 4 one y Lii 
Aland, Ao: do not know, Such information is | Oats a better sale than at the me of last week, |. 44 ¢ $z 225 EN. 2 
only to be obta ained by advertising, or from advertisements. and — — fine qualities realise rates of this 44 2 yi 15 — —— 
About Dartmoor, you have been preceded by a ge —— — 
who is cultivating successfully. We hope to obtain his syst London, | 3 Wakefield. ia. Boston. Birmingham. 
ae a a io or oon 
“3 1 * — Ge 9 The sA fo 8 cr PRICES | pans 
en ore lighter, sho ass a e highest poin A. 
and ti hó pie * air, bein ng he ating. Ww will often ente fat the CURR June II June I8 June 12 June 19, June 8 June I5 Junelg June 20 cate 62bs, 
place, "a draught twill be © — — eld be rentoved à qr. 01 70 lbs. qr. r. r. r. N 
—— 7 mel * 8 is given e N 2. a. d. Gi Re Ait: Kpa heer 0b) ee r : = - : i 
r eet from the ground in another j 5 615 
pec ak the stable, it will tend to prevent the downward New, red vee 140 1042/40 o % 4 6 siy — 7 n 3 * -a 3 8 6 0 6 46 16 
t. po carrying the pipe through the loft, „ White 5—46/6 10 7 4/7 0 a iy si 6 16 9 6! 
with a cap at ss tans is free from objection. W.C. ld, red pS 46 7 61016 8 7 0j42—44/42—44) — — Be 61 
Bowing Macht A IDES A T oe Son gow = „ white 07 67 3 7 81 —5 mg 8885 5 11 6 4 : 11 
made . e, of Denholm, near Hawick, and we à | 
ve there is no better. Its price is 71. Mangold Wurzel Foreign. 4 8 6/4 4 8 6(39—51039—51[ —— j 0 7 0 
we plant by hand, ng | blunt hand.dibblés for the purpose 480 lbs. 480 Ibs. a 
We have had no experience of Newberry’s for bun purpose ; Rye New i 4 . 2 — — — p W fi 
and do not suppose it te ‘be suitable for Turnips Fore 5 na He sa atk — 
Foreign meal — — E 
Markets. Alter . m rete Perl Gem Gauge ee E 
SMITHFIELD, Monpvay, June 18, ey . . ; ka cgi f 
The number of Beasts eae s than — Monday last, Grinding até — — 22—2322—23.24—26.24—26 23—25 n 
pies make considerable effort to advance prices, but only Malting. 30s—32s 308—328 27—32ʃ27—32 pia 3028—30. 29—32 S 
n few instances. A slow trade is the equence, but Foreign “j ae 4—28|24—28 abl — |} 
— — offered. The supply of Sheep and Lambs 25 h . 5 
is! , and nd v pa ion of about : 3 bush. j a 
. 8 Ibs. is submitted to, Calves are plentiful, and but | Malt—Ship .., 39—42ʃ39—42ͤ — i 
an aa difficult to m — 2 te quotations — — ; 451 45 lbs. i ; 28 e 
middling ones are lower. From and an on a 20-2 
290 Beasts, 2160 Sheep, and 136 Calves ; | Oats— White... 28104 3s 3d|2s10d3s 2d) — | — j|14—2014—2 2 J- 
8 1800 Beasts; Scotland, Black... a2 8. 87 J — — f a. 
Per st. of 8 lbs,—s sd Per st. d Foreign y 2 42 6 SRN ie ant =s K — „„ 
K .. 3 6 to 3 8 8 4 t0 3 6 il qr. qr. 2 - 
Short-horns 3 4—3 6 Eos 2d quality. ... | Peas—Boilers 345— 348— 28—32ʃ28—32 — 1961s 
2d quality Beasts 2 8—3 2 3 196 lbs. ii-i 
0 zim eds 5 ae. 3 —— 28 —28 27 —28s 29 —31s | — | — | — | = pur] 
Ditto Pige as was eee 8 Foreign . . 24—3224—32 30 —33 | 32—34 — — 1 — l 5 
Boasts, 114; s Siac andamos, 800 "Caly es, 282; Pigs, 
e New, small . . 22322232] 28 —33 | 30 29—3229—3230—33 
The of Beasts is —— but quite to the — z „ 
F ee e e 
rge, — — e very hea A e «r+ 121—36|21—36| 23 — — ae 
Bic O 
* many remain unsold, ê ti eed— 
er Tower. We have again à plentifal -Feed | — | — | 40—42 | 40—42 240240 — 2 
i rates are yr ty obtaine re! Wi—ALivi——4Z2 — — * Atte 
6 ce from $ scotland ie 57 3 
ves; from a an iti — — 
from the home e Forei ol 7 27 75 71. 128 71. 128 — a 
st Lo g-wools , . * Ob Fe} Olen h. — — — — ae 
| Bite Stora mis ee 
Ales quality me aes an Corn— 30—32ʃ30—32 35s—36s | — 8 a 
ee md fod p. Sack|p. sack} 2801bs: | 280 Ibs, p. sack p. sack | I 
a a| Calves. 2 8—4 0|Flour— 36—44/36—44) 34—35 | 34—35 | — | — |30—36/36—40 
Pigs .3 4—4 4 * . , 
Bae 742; Sheep — 13,920; co 634; Pigs, 250, Weekly 
1 te Brg 2 Trusses, | Averages and | Aver. | Impts.| Averages. Imports, | Aver. Impts.] Aver. Aver. 
Prime Meadow Hay “eae to ts Glover 5 805 to95s | June 19 i l l 
Inferior ditto... .., 65° | Now Clover oi sn m= 8. grs. | s d. qrs. „ d. qrs. |s. d.] ars. 
iow eg" 3 — * * 2 33 | WHEAT ... 146 4 | 2410 44 6 4037 1 66562 43 9 1268 
_ ÜUMBERLAND MARKET, June 21 * | BARLEY . 46 7 1080 26 11 202 p11} 454) — 2 
7 ' p OATS. 17 
— me Meadow Hay äs totis amp mee „ 50sto 75s RYE ote he be 11 į 4950 1 H 6005 7 462 12 61 1 
New Har . . FF i sm — 5 44 — m 
id Clover . . 8 2 ES w Seales = 29 4 — | 31 722555 71252 29 0 7 
OPS ax, June 22. 1 30 4 550 ) 4] 119 
Messrs. PaTTENDEN and Surrn t that the 
the —— ter ae — come 1 — 8 | KINGSFORD) SEGAR and SANDARS THOMAS 
Duty, 80,000, rr 


boun fi 

25 pictur ford Bridges, w ith a railway statio 

Feen Kes J Juablė and improving property within — 
l Fes benen of 1 K Lond én . 

RS. DANIEL SMITH ‘are SON —— ten Ag 

TESS Sale, at the George Hot York. 
at 1 o'clock eve Si previously —.— i 
) Treaty by i di on 5 — — of * late Se 
Pa rood, BEG. 


TATE OF stones 


msi 


very v sabes 
f, ae a ‘capital — —— 
considerable 


embellishing — "estate, w ith a 

c ut 1310 acres of hi highly. 

— a nd admirably en- 
erfect ring — between the 1 

en ng * river Derwent; divide 


close, Hull — — an — the 


ton and 


a 
veral and interesting plantati 
most rare 4 ays pia ants — an ——— kf 
walks and drive ma in nsive scen 
mount aino wolds. 


a 


Charles H 
Land A 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


FLEXIBLE INDIA-RUBBER HOSE, PIPES, AND TUBING.) Q 
AMES L 


anently flexible in all N and are 
wall adapted for Watering 3 . 25 Manure 
Pumps, rag an nd Chemical 1 Purpos 

tion. ofo ito 


2. 


Sa dr PONIES AND 


me very 22 

Cal vi ng, some with Calf = side, and in — 
0 en SHEEP, for feedin Thess. w 

13 ity of milk for their size which is very rich, simil. 
Alderney, and they are very hers and A his 5 125 


— y all purposes ae a — e pice 7 5 pipe 


A- RUBBER GARDEN HOSE fitted 
with copper . 1 and jets, complete, for attaching to 
i 8 Ke. 

COCK begs the attention of parties using long lengths 
ible Garden Hose to his Set eye A a 


e seen at 8 OkrTox's, Salesma d 
Majesty, 69, Wapping be a 
it (FENCING, less than Two-inch mesh, 
Wire, and painted; to 1 ares 
and Rabbi Cats, Dogs, Deer, Sheep, &e., 3 "sce 
high, gd. per y ard; 2 feet, 41d. ; 


6 feet, t; * any width uired a d. square foot. 
Well adapted for enclosing 5 Fowls, A yell erent ote 
RICHARDSON, 21, Tonbridge-place, New-road, Londo on, 


HING NETS, SHEEP N 


13 ETS, anp RABBIT 
NETS.—A large stock 


of Drag Nets, Seine and Trammel 


ie Casting Nets, rum Nets, and other Nets for Fishi 


winding up nd conv ving away the Hos n out tof ay 
anufactory an ouse, Goswe l-mews, Goswell-road, 
London. All Orders 
immediate attention 
ALVAN ISED WIRE saree NETTING.— 


7d. per yard, 2 feet wid 


a 
GLOUCESTERSHIRE, within five miles of Sua and 
three 


les from a rai — stati 
IL. BE SOLD by. AA Caniat, all that compact 
and prr prend — 


— ii — E, comprising t 

* eh — a chief rents, - eg 
ts the = . — —— 3 

acres of oo oe Arable Pasture Land, in near 
rel propa tioi er Man r Farm, now win the oc- 
of Mr. J. F. Pencey, ‘tie — gree comprising a 
stone- welling: 3 newly erected, — — 
family, surrounded by 
pleasure- grounds, Albert 


— 
js well drained, and 33 good perie ro a — le- 
sheds thereon, which iie adjacent jin a public 1 j 
through the centre of the e The pasture land is and 
fertile, There = oo three good cottages for the — 
,, Prescott i is free from all 
The highway and 


of Cheltenham and fi s by rai 3 from 
in a locality 3 he inden ty of climate “and beautiful 


a co i 
centre of a favourite sporting district), or as a safe an rov- 
ing t, estate offers peculiar advantages, and has 
‘tor of half a tentury been in the possession of th 


MITH, „ Solicitor, Winehec 5 
NURSERYMEN, FLORIS TS, AND OT 
OBE DISPOSED OF, a NURSERY & FLORIST 
_ BUSINESS, tnd Page J establishment, on very mie pana 
‘terms. Itis s onable ne ig — 
chase at pent tenn b ie profab en il "a 
req a — 000 or fu — — apply, 
‘Post paid, to J. R., Post- office, Stamford- hill, near London, 


coe ee 
7. TO LET, South of London ; size, abou 
ü t, 3007. — one r house and bui ld 

good ordir. Adress , for particulars, to E., Gardeners’ Chro- 
5, Upper Wellington- street, iriak London. 


FAR 
. BE HE LET, M, MIDDLE 
oyi cane! — . 


pand entered u rag 
With all necess 
s from Lond 
and within 14 ay = onie allt ay s Aer uma a the Cambridge line. 
cor, jun nha highiva — 
‘Mdapted'for a g meen irgi 


140 


+ Michaelmas next, 
s of 


owe 12 particular rly 
mng ae in London 


with fiumodiate i ae ssession, a USEFU 


TO BE LET, L 
int STOCK FARM, containing 335 Acres, with suitable House 


2 Tring. 


Sa Buu 


591 AN SEW ERS. 
=, oF ag atid —The C 


ven in TRG the popula- 
atural drainage, if into the | 


alue of Sewer-water may be h 
4 0. oats ae sd., Sewers’ office, 1, 
all 


» to wh communi — 
9 BAR. AND DURABLE ROOFING. 
see Rily 


atid. the 
t below kenden. 


ENT ASPHALTE eee 
, Snow, and frost, an 
N in all el: 
quired for slates; can be 1 
y, farm.sery vants, or un —— e 
8 PA cm 4 CON. 
es and lers and Pi s 25 per 
8552 loons sent 90 post — appli. 
5 Dowgate:hill, Lond 


1 long and — 
alf the timber re 
oi 

"y Cocoon f and 


ings large, and It 


Galvan- — 
ized. 
2-inch mesh, . 24-inch wide a mere a 3 
-inch . 
2-inch 25 Pans strong ze 725 12 ” 
lg-inch „„ light 55 4 9 0 ” 
1 — „ stron — oe 10 » 8 ” 
lj-inch „extra 14 1 
All the above can be made any width at proportionate prises 


1 
If the pore half is a coarse mesh, it will reduce the price — 
fourth. Galvanized s parrow- proof nettin aad 8 
m square foot. Patterns forwarded po: 

Manufactured by te 2 2 and "BISHOP, Market-place, 
Norwich, and deliv ont! e of expense in London, Peter- 
borough, Hull, or New 


WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT, 


9 en a 
: „ ia, 0 
. 
i 105 
S 


5 


225 
SRR 


(GALVANISED WIRE NETTING, TWO-PENCE | m 


hares, rabbits, an rec — 4 
Phe 


i however, be 
dimensions desired. Patterns of 
12 inches — E pe e = 10 inches Te 77d. oir yard 

—— sa. ea 14. 


” ” 92 ” 27 


very description of 
ey Ae 
Sales 


from 3s, 9d. each; 
niente ana trees, Dahlia Rods, and eve 
work; Weaving, for the use of paper-m 


the 1 of THOMAS Henry Fox, 63, "Snow-hill, London. 


ATENT I ATOR & CA enie 
king Models of these 8 may be see ope- 


Shee 
doe t fibre, nearly 4 feet 
* 50, 80, ene 100 9 
bri ridge- place, New- road, 


i 
t high, bit per yard. Rabbit Nets 
s long.—R. RICHARDSON; 21, Ton- 
don. 


ARDEN NaN Tanned Fishing Nets, 2d. 
- per yard; new Nets, 13d. per yard, 1 inch mesh; *— 
4 inch mesh, a Wasp Net, to protect blossom of tre 
4 fruit from 


asps and flies, 6d. per yard, much ap — 
ICHARDSON, 21. 5 — d, Lo neon, 


c.— Rick Cloths of 


propor r Lawns, 

feet —.— 6 feet high à in lowest part, 

izes in pee rants’ Tents, ‘of very thick canvas, 
“Rosekr RICHARDS oN, 21, Tonbridge-place, 


N. B. Tents ath Marquees on hire for Fêtes, &c., at a very 
moderat te charge. 


METCALFE AND Co.’s hl Biba hie TOOTH- 
BRUSH and SMYRNA SP ooth-Brush 
has the important advantage of ecarchiog * ** = 
ordinary ma of — 8 * * ning th 
ous 5 


for ani 

sf rush, that . a third 
pa are “tof the at time, she papa of i injuring the rA nap. 
Konea Hair-brushes, with the durable unblea ched 1 
een which do not soften like common hair. 
mproved graduated — powerful panser Velvet 
Brushes which a re in the most surprising and successful ma 

The e Smyrna Sponge, with its 5 valu 
pr operties of A sorption, vitali 


able 
and du rabil ity, by means of 
ir ect importations, dispensing with all inte ate es” 
— and seated g- shed bleaching, and securing t the luxury of a 
crag 2 Only a t Mer K Y, and 

1. 
Holles-street. 
f Ca oriox.— Beware of the words From Mrrcatrn’s” adopted 

F 


fablishme — 130 B, Oxfor x erie 0 


INGHAM ipa tees go the 1 Bir- 
of the improved WOOD and 


— 
atest ease, and, w dry, a Lee 
irections for — "peat with each oe 


ents in London, G. and J. Deane, Horticultural Imple- 

ot Wareho use, 46, King William- street, London n. bridge. 

AN LIFE PILLS are acknowledged to be the 
best Medicine in the worl This Medicine — been 


before the 
annals prt the world was nev r pro- 
acknowledged 


galvanised 
by it answort ers admirably 1 = training r —— PILLS had saved them, an 
de eae yar — made to at once 1 — 
* 050 continual 


per foot extra. Chin rym 
al Wire Sheep 1 3 feet, 1s. 6d. per — pt t 


tion N 

and were 
ts that were con 

1 u 


far wide ere is a country 
on the face of the 222 
fits, and hav oor oh for supplies, whatever mig e the cost 
£ tran e United States, shade, Th Ta Ma, and even 
hadi immense „ — —— to their respective 
result oe —universal — 

The war f 


sale of Panwa pte = Press — 
boxes w a 


2 


1o Ns. Non 1 a 

— “ PaRR's Lire Pius” al m in “Whi e Letters 
Re “Gro und, on the Govern mp, — round pe 
box ; also; the fac-simile of the i 4 of the proprietors, 
“ T, Roperts and Co., Crane-court, Fleet-street, London,” on 
the Directio 

Sold in boxes at 1s. ild., 2s. 9d., and family 
Moq by all respectable medicine vendors througho 
Full directions are given with each box. 


THE BEST REMEDY FOR INDIGESTION. 


\7 ORTON’S CAMOMILE PILLS are confidently 
e but ag opel ert — — = 


ackets at 118. 
out the world, 


nt 
d composure to the etree 


r 8 0 ch 
e Sold in a at ik id. od 28. 9d. each, by A. WIL- 
LOUG nd Co. (late B. G. Windus), 61, Bishopsgate- street 


Be sure to ask for 


ation. 


T° O THE LADIES. —The oo 3 of the 


calls ie tb 


* 
„ 
® 


creased a 
most here ga — effectu 
ROWLANDS KALYDO OR, 


7 Consumption, Coughs, 
0 af Sold by all respectable Medicine Vendors, 


an 
the effects of the atmos — and induces that healthy acti 
N dally 23 2 * ua E y Blooms- | of the microscopic vessels of the skin, by eon ts delicacy and 
—— S particulars m beauty are 80 — promoted. _ Tan, Spots, 
R. LOCOCK’S 1 aof —. ERS | Pimples, and Discolorations fly before * 4 — 
f Medici ded to KALYD i smoothness : s- 
mia mast r 2 75 and lis —— z 5 parency of compl exion, Ladies 9 ng out-door 
rate 405 rind le persons counterfe this Medicine exercise will find it to diffuse e a grateful and refreshing 2 
* or of“ Pills,” de. Purchasers must therefore observe — — of — rn or Stings of Insects its virtues have long 
ut“ Wafers,” that the 4 oe “ scat en ackno g 

dooce Wala” a » * the Stamp outside ea each box. al ee sen spurious —— thie ow a. ¥ — — 12 
mati gr inti as to mistend the un ary . urehasers must their repellent action en angering bealth The wo ds “ROW- 

8888 ‘icy observe Ag — ANDS’ KALYDOR are on the wrapper of the ge 
Sitva and Co, Bride. ny Fleet 2 oe article z and t the word Beha 1 — . 
also Sole irk for Dr. Lococx’s PULMONIC WAFERS fo garden,” are also engraved on the 8 3 

and Colds. Price 18. 14d., 25.94. bottle. Price ye. more —— i. 6d, 80 y 


on eùch è 
tors and by C 


400 THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE AND 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


[Jone 23. 


This day day is published, Part! I., Price! — to be completed i in Five 
Monthl aE 
ee: BEAUTIES OF 
were hi of prot = seats — the no ry and gentry, | g 
urrey, comprising all t =e s interesting in the departmen 
in Surrey, compris a ulture, Arboriculture. Pane Park and Plea- 
sure- * vase made in the spring of 1849 
By WILLIAM KEANE. 
London: R. EVI Paternos x 


: being a particu- 


HE EDINBURGH VIEW, No. C 

ADVERTISEMENTS — for insertion are 3 to be 
forwarded to the 7 blishers before Tuesday, the 26th, and BILLS 
by ape iat the ns 

ondon : 22338 and Co., 39, Paternoster- row. 
R W. J. II 
A New Edison. in 16mo, wi 
to the 


price 6d., sewed, 
EW GARD ENS; or, a Popular Guide 
Royal Botanic Gar dens of Kew. By Sir W. J. Hooxen, 
K. H., D. L, F. R. A., and L. S., dsc „Director. 
London: Lona MAN, Brown, GREEN, aud oun 
NEW 2 — 7 SUGAR MANUFAC 
Just edie’: tn with gs earns 2 hind; 
ot 
Te sane stones OF SUGAR, in the Colo- 
ba and at Home, chemically considered. By Jons 
M. — da — e Professor of agg a at the 
pip wee College o 
London ag 70 no 


Just publisid, in One thie 


dein ee and Loneman 
numerous 


Wood Engr fora 7 1 I8sycloth, 
A TREATISE on the THEORY and PRACTICE of 
LANDSCAPE GARDENING, with a View to the Impro 
ment of enii Residences : comprising Historical Notices and 
Sensya! Ba es of 95 rat Directions for 88 out W 
and arranging Planta srao and bag a n of 
Hardy Trees, —— yb Is. * the N. 


Grounds, the Formation of 12 rel Arial Water, 95 lower 
Gardens, e.; with * e — 5 
Dowstna, — uthor or Cottage R "he. 0. 
7 torent 
PROFESSOR SOHLEIDEN'S BOTA 
Just published, p Bim a M p ‘Copper plates and Wood 
IESSE OF OI ENTIFIC BOTANY AS 
Marah ES A SCIENCE. By D J. ScHLEIDEN, 
a ssor of 3 in the Coiversity y Jena. 
aoa LANKESTE , Lec- 
turer on 3 at the St. Kara. if s Fes of Medicine, Udon. 
London NGMAN, 1 , GRE and Lone 
E FOSSILS. 
This day is published, in adh vo, p rice 23, 6d., and in royal 
dto, PB oe nk 46. 6d. sewed, the first” Decade, comprising 5 
piss — oe aved on Steel, of Figures aud Desc 


pansa o ‘ORGANIC RE 2 — a po 
r the eological ey, and ni 
lished by order of the Lords ds Commoners of A. H. M. Treasury. 
y 

i. oe OIRS of the GEOLOGICAL SURVEY of 
GREA . 8 and of the MU 1 of 1 

GEOLOGY = LONDON. a I, and II. in royal 8vo. bac 
= arge Plates (7 ‘coloure 2 21s. clo K 
ith 63 Plat loured) aed 


. SIR HENRY DE LA BECHE’S REPORT on 
the GEOLOGY of 0 Fat DEVON, and WEST S0. 
MERSET. penz RR . loth, 

3. PT TLOCK’S REPORT on the GEO- 
LOGY of * hi Y of LONDONDERRY, and of parts of 
TYRONE and FERMANAGH. Demy 8vo, 248. clo 

PROF. P 


VERTI ICAL SECTIONS.- The Maps and Horizontal Sectio 
iw coloured, under the Superintendence of Sir H, 


pe a Published for her Majesty’s Pao 39 by 
Messrs. LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, = Lon 
THE e CLUB ON THE S K ENGINE 
New Edition, in One Volume 4to, 8 cy Steel Plates and 
349 Wood En 


Ap ion to Mines, Mills, Steam Navigation, and Rail- 
ways. CLUB. ted by Jonn BOURNE, s 
The ition of Mr. rne’s excellent work on t 
Steam Engine has just issued from the press, and in it man 
been introduced, which wil r to the former publication hae 
u which render it of still t 
interest." Mining see — er utility and 
owen Brown, otal and Lonemans. 
Just Published, iors Bo gL AE 
ust Publis’ ates and Woodcuts, 18s. rane 
UTLINES OF” * By Sir Jou 
F. W. Her L, Bart., & c., &e., 2 
e take our leave p this remarkable worl G which we hold 
to be. beyond : doubt, the most rem: 8 of hee! works = 
which Astronomy an appearances of th 
a — — 


d to those aie are — mathem 
observers, and iiel — — who are.“ Athe 


introdu Ia ira porter gor rtion much new matter is 


e > revision, correctio : 
treatise ; numerous the addit ons toit; ands 
— new new trains sd aeia 2 up.” Eram miner, 
, GREEN, and LONGMANS ; 
ha ie YLO my 
THE M T RESENT GENERAL ATLA 
Just com a A Bag ¥olame, co = 
in russia, 


G IDNEY H. HALES GENERAL LARGE LIBRARY 


ATLAS 0 WORLD 
(ize 20 in. we Ponce 
en 


Railways laid down, and aps re-drawn 


Edi on, — throughout from the best — — with 
ait-the many of the 
re-en raved. 
— AN, Brown, GREEN, and Londa 


on: Loam. 
MAKING 


8 
R 5 > CORDIALS, AND LIQUEURS, 


BRITISH 
By 
complete manual ever published of the whol 
piah iaee 1 nd dials, and liqueurs, in the e greatest 
— a ary es find Mr. Robinson’s work a m 
ame Author, pri co 4 3. 6d, 

The AR CURING, L 1 

wae Description of MEAT — pets PRESERVING 
London: Loneman, BROWN, Gn REEN, and a 


rk— 
d remodelling of | least thr 
of 


VERY = or pas Ne e ER. s r 
Seventh Edit ion, w an oode oap vo, 63. 
NSTRUCTIONS IN GARDENIN 2 for L DIES. 
r of 9 — ons ti Every 
Mrs. Lou 
Also, by the sam s, with 8 fcap. 8vo, 88. 
A POPUL AR INTRODUCTI ON TO THE NA- 
TURAL SYSTEM and CLASSIFICATION of PLANTS, 
London: JohN Murray, Albemarle-street. 
~ CHEAP COPIES OF VALUABLE BOOKS. 
4l. 4s., PUBLISHED AT 10%., 
OUDON’ 8 ARBORE TUM ET FRUTICETUM 
BRITANNICUM; Or, the Trees and Shrubs of 3 
Native and Foreign, Peet and Half-hardy, with thei 
28 Culture, ä and Uses. 3 vols., ov. 
T 44 ates and upwards of 2500 Woodcuts of Trees and 
Shrubs, tra cloth, 
UCED TO 14s., PUBLISHED AT 17. 10s., 
EPTON’S COMPLETE WORKS ON LAND- 


SCAPE RDENING AND LANDSCAPE ARCHI- 
TECTURE. New Edition, with large Additions, by J. C 
— 90 a Engravings. Thick 8vo, clot 

s PUBLISH AT 8 
UVIER'S. "ANIMAL KINGDOM, arreoged ac- 
servi ng a Fou ndati on for 


, 

the Natural History of Animals, and a 

ay spot ; the Se Arachnides, and Insecta, 
anslated from the n, with 

880 She Sheets ot F Coloured Plates. 8 vols. “Sin i 

to This celebrated work embraces the white Th ti 

Natura e Hi sto ory, and is the only one suitable — Re 

i ste 


el, 
S — — comprising upwards of 4000 figures of 3 
e. 


Birds, Fishes, Insects, 
REDUCED TO II. 10s,, PUBLISHED AT 141. 8 
ON’S GENERAL SYSTEM OF GARDENING 
AND BOTANY, containing a Description of all Piants 
hitherto 8 their Generic and . Characters, place 
of Jrowth Culture, and Uses in dicine and Domestic 
Ed aomy, o., tounded upon Miller's“ 8 ay reel 
an arranged according to the Natural System. Numero 
Wet deuts. 4 vols. 4to, boards. 
oe Th e Public are respectfully informed that the. number of 
the Love works being very limited, an early arli ae ion is de- 
sir ble. gn 5 N and in every respect as good 
as hen sold a ll pri 
A CATA orm oe F BOOKS! in all branches of NATURAL 
— Aged h both new and second- — 3 be published in the 
e of this m onth, gratis, sag 
WILLIS, Great Piaz = Gorani par rden 
DDING, contain- 
by 


pe EAL anp SON’S LIST OF B 


to make a good set of Bedding, = free by post, on application 
to their Fac — 196 (opposite the Chapel), Tottenham-court- 
2 London 


PROF. Seen tea INTRODI 
Recently ‘published, | Cotiox To BOTaNy, 
umerous Wood augusta nice Copper 
TION 10 
By Professor mua 
in University — 
re aad ge 


perience which a lo li 
struction h ec 

The Author has begu ith w 
(Book I.); or an expla — of oe exact 


a bran ch of the subject comprehending 
f which veg 
or to the external appearance their ele 
ation. t is exceedingly d 


roe should be well understood, 
ger oier parta. of the science. 
executed through the agen cy of 
— an 5 yh epend npon char. 
sideration ; and descriptive Botan 
cision until the principles of Or 
A differ opinion exists a 


1 pond purpose of satisi 
acts and reasonings u 


To This succeeds Be smokers mpar: 
history of t the na pn t have 


T cher ; 


according to the price the 
r the N e Oc ospectuses and Forms of 

may be obtained of ‘the Agente in all Market Towns; 
rat oe Office, 316, 92 e 

M SHAW, Managing Director. 

3 FIRE — 9, Regent-street, and 
3 Royal Exchange Buildings fae Bae ee 1807, 
It is N lly notified to — holding policies in this 
office, Pi renewals of = h fall due at Midsummer that the 
same should be paid on 


5 


Agents. The 5 Of the bounty 7 

ageous to the Tied 1182 have secured t 
public approbation. 
= aoa lit ty. 


t a large 


d office, or 


appointed in ae the principal 


or UMONT, os Director. 
HIRD SEPTENNIAL NOL, 
ROWN LIE FE ASSURANCE COMPANY, 
33, New giers Blackfriars, 5 


GeorcE H. eee *. Chairman. 
-= sam Kirk LAND, Deputy-Chairman, 
soem hapm 
Charles Chippitdaia: Esq. 
James Meee ag Esq., LL.D. 
B. D. Colvi 
Re ir AGMEN Dundas, C. B., 


Thomas e . Esq. 
Auditors. H. Gos 


Esq. 
chen, Esq. George Hankey, Esq. 

-= Mitchell, Esq. 

orbes, M.D., K. C. H., 23, Argyll-street. 

Eio. F. R.S., $ St. Helen’s-place, 

Sie Ellis, Es sq. 


inbow, Esq. 
On HIRD ee INVEST {GATION i 
affairs oe this Company, t 


effected for the whole duration 


To Suila egea the foll: 
former DIR owing Bonuses were declared at 
On the ave Fi 8 rd ik garcons inte 
rage, bs ae s of 26 per cent.on the remium 5 
"SECOND DIVISION, IN 1839. ee 
On the average 33 per 3 on the premiums paid for the pre. 
ceding seven years 

T Arai SOF THIS 0 OFFICE, among others, are: 

1. A participat septennially in two-thirds of the gos 
which may be applied either in reduction of the pre mium, or 0 
augment the sum assured. 

2. ay bs paid in a limited number of annual 
sum ead of by annual payments for the whole of life ; — 
po — continuing to particip 
such 8 has ceased. 

3. nee or 3 
0 hango for Taterest to Proprieto: 

ermiss 8 to pass to e Port 
ace ie . e 85 s between Brest 
ties Gene Officers bed the Army, Navy, East India 
Shears m -y Merchant Ser may be Se otat to reside in | Se 
proc all parts of the rene. at premiums calculated on 


sie: three 


4 — their policies to the Company. 
8. 


— ums m 


Fund is not subject to any 


or 
8 oath . 
' laims to be 
T. The assu Bedo tony Glos 
8. No charge but for 1 
5 Prospectus, Tables o 
in London, or of the Com 


mpany’s ts. 


G. Conyers, Secretary, 


$s of ‘the several 
ee ice age highly advan- 
f 


n par 
of — organs — pe o igr 
which has the most direct bearing upo 
laws, however, ni 


the e more fesat 5 cane r whether 
or rejected a as erroneous, * 

xt fo — e ssoLOST (Boo 
„ TERM OGY ; 


explain 
tth 


the volui 

It has been 5 author e wish to 
Baa introd ane d down, as 
is foun 


ery ¢ 
—— to * Anatom: 
Edition y be 17 e 
e same Author, 
THE THEORY OF T HORTICULTURE. 
SYNOPSIS OF THE BRITISH FLORA, van 3 
np = —.— 8vo, 18s. 
: Loneman, Brown, GREEN, and LoneMAns, 
WGiNEERING SCHOOL CLASS. BOOKS. 
In crown 2 5 48. 6d. bound, with 220 Diagrams engraved for 
the Work, i 
eos ELEMENTS OF PLANE GEOME 
Y p- with 8 Appendix and $u 8 
Propositions nt — ise. Adapted for the Use 
r Self. in 
8 W. D. — — A. B., Author of the“ er 
and Inland Discovery,” “ The Negro- land of the Arabs,” 4. 
M 


correctnes heir re asoning,’ — C 
we 
peared, "n ee, 3 clearness, aud 


ate in profits after the payment of | 


mp 
. to be had at the office | 


matics, as 3 for che elegance aot their e 
Journal. 
is This is is Sf 3 1 of the Elements which has 
cannot be easily sit- 
passed. — lin University pri 8 
“The editor has done al ail st = sould be done to make Baii 
asy t hr 1 — 


a 10 
rae ne ms. aachen 
“ Wilt be fo — of F value as an aid to 

the Mathemation an Monthly Magazine 


eee eee ie 
In fcap. 8vo, price Is. 
OOLEY'S FIGURES: OF “EUCLID; d 2 


Diagrams — atta Se. 
ti 1 ir in 1 — ne Class Room. 
A printed — . 21 00 Co., Ave Maria- lane, London. 


OOTH ACHE “PERMANENTLY LY CURED $ K 


e of which are permanent. 2 105 
in the United Kingdom. Twenty really auth e. Sent 
ompany each box, with 520 Temple 
by return of post, by J, WILLIs, 24, East turn for 
Whitefriars, Fleet-street, L i of this 
stamps. TION,—The grea 


ilful persons 12. emen 
Ad ott 

imitations, and Brandes Enamel 
— — needful, therefore, to guard ag 3 such ae g 


ing that the name of Joan WILL 
OR INDIG ESTION, STOMACH, 1 1 8 
BOWEL COMPLA E HOL of the i 


— Per ring — 
N or the oo Sa of D 
HOLLOWAY 


peedily cured 
Sold by all Druggists, and 
ment, 244, Str: —.— London 


> i 

Printed by Witi1aM Brannon, of No. =a 
Pariah of st. Pancras, and FREDERICK bry tote io tbe oF, 
— 3 


Upper 
Ae Pa te 
Yo. 


Sarvapay, Joas 3h. 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


— Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, JUNE 30. 


[Price 6d. 


Atr, bruieed. se. 2 412 a 
Orange — — about Lisbon. 405 ¢ 
Ornithol gical Rambles, Knox’s, on 

ovnja imperialis 405 
Peach —.— Pinter ngof 
elargon show, seedlin 


TO ADMIRER 
A Pods AND SON beg to inform their patro 
„ COL so ee bon at the Cheshunt Nurseries is no 


after 3 he Au 
They to show them 
be Picante — nen Perey to the collection. 


1 


ROSES. 
ns and — of ROSES in — that the a nal 


perfection, and continue till the end of July 


Every novelty that could 


will continue in a till November. 
o any lovers of this flower, whether purchasers or not, 


Cheshunt is on the Cam om the B rexboura of the Samen Counties Railway, one mile from the Cheshunt, two miles from tke 


Wa thiam, aud three miles from 


e Station 
Waltham, and — the Nurseries.—Cheshunt, Herts, June 30, 


ELARGONIUMS. — 2 unrivalled N e 


Sea. side Doak, — rev. 
Ww ͤͤK (v. 
— N * 


Timber, e 
kasak — patie 


ions 


va 
rr one 
— * M11 b 


y Ciut ple- 
409 a—412 b 
rg Wheat ricks on a rail 


asvsaesess 411 e 


> HORTICULTURAL AND 


Schedules ma may oA re of Mr. 2 — OSEPH — 
50, Briggate, Leeds. 


VARWIOKSHIRE HORTICULTURAL EXHI- 


ts, last year’s struck, establisned 
head o 
alice sorts now out, 


eties, 1s. to 10s. per packet, 
James WHOMEs, e SS Windsor. 


EN DEN VER, ne Lougt orough- 
e arg Surrey, three — 2 from London, informs 

1 Patrons a mirers of ROSES at ome 
ivalled e 1 acting & of pr mag 


ms , and free to the inspection of all F as 88 a 
Sa e d). 0 eri taken for plants now in bloom, and executed 
November nex 


D. is desirous 2 informing his customers that he has no 
seed shop in Lo 


| following varieties, ineluting 
Tw 


aved from the best 11 | 


| =e — — —— be m 


ji Hoyle’ 8 


Fin Sk. -CLASS TRONES, FOR EXHI 
BITION, FOR PR 41 


will be sent out for 
and kea for 


ade mjn Pest alles oF ween on are ready, 
ford. Priority o ment to ensure first selection. Aurora, 
Blanche, 9 —— r, Forget-me. not, Ariel, Cassandra, 
Cavalier, ie Gustavus, ee me Grandiflora, Junii, Ne 

rese, Ros d, Sundown above, 


mmen 

above Wel e except the three 2 
winning collection E. Pea — 
varielies is in f 

issuing iminediately after the eshibiticns are cl 


ay NURSERY, MARESFIELD, NEAR UCK- 

2 SUSSEX. | 

D SON have much pleasure — an- 
super 


ae ba TUNIA, 8 “ * BEAUTY. SU- 
E.”—This splendia variety seen before a 
t The hal habit of the 


plant is 1 itself, forming a proc s close bush, studded 


I 
all ores from the ground upwards with a * ense mass of the 
mos — 8 "deep purplish crimson flower ar 

4 inches n dia * and of a good s g plants, 
i ach, free by . 48.5 the u Wa 3 to 


he trade, „ when “three plants are taken. A few plants, in pots, 
of the white are intended for exhibition at the next Chiswick 


ined, meeting. 
ROSES. NE W AND CHOICE VERBENAS.— The set of 11, sent out 
picasso 5 rah any sont SEs eee e T Seog iri 
and Schedules to be obtained from OWEN WHITE, * the hone ted in this | viz., Lord of the Isles, Pronto ‘tite 2 Purple, D 
Lee. srra — and Parade, Leamington. utiful feng lants, that their splendid and extensive Northumberland, Junius, pse, Eppsii, Miss wat 
105 N ONS AND PICOT DEES. Thè Allowing collection is now in Soot, and those who wis the whole | rold, Eyebright, and C 125. 
8 z he 10 aa 8i eight hours at the Nurseries, which com- | The two new HELIOTRU de Liege (sent out 
tall Englan, will b n on TUESDAY, | mence * n a few minutes’ w the Be d sta- | by Low), and Grisau (Sal s. 64. è 
tion of the London and North-Western Railway. The visitor | ` PALOX DEPR (ienderson), SALVIA AZUREA 
egg ern 24 .. £210 will 25 æ disappointed in extent and 4 Ornamental COMES OT. i ar mee 2s. 6d. eac 
+. 3 y and Shrubs are also in great quantities, ALCE aoe AS. ee u showing £ flower, in pets, 
7 55 r Mtn Feet br ll — . 9s. Z. * is r do.; Viseosissim 
* 9 15 N — THE COLLECTION a 5 os per d in Si sired potn. Soin: Wh stood Doi Oe a A 
see 210 WORTH will be in bloom on a 23d inst. “tno — fan r, in 182610 ot 9s. per doz. 
* 10 wards of a . plants of those tne brilliant’ new 1 FA SPECIOSUM.—A few strong plants left, 
. 10. 0 ~| Roses, GEANT DES BATAILLES at CYNE AN, will be td, a 
.. 010 0 in fall bloom. m ada the Roses, ala1 ; RORNIGA, bushy pl: 
ey 10 coleetion of Hardy Orname ¢ d dozens TF, 
` .. 05 Trees, occupyi Pe rah spectfally re 
„ ee 1 interesting. e co! e of cor 0 a 
. +. 010 . — up-train will call . the 5 ‘ Court Nw 
is 10 distant, at half. past 5 r. 1. T. R $ 
Tiimit” F ä 2 EE. ED FLOWER 
nn NOwARD GEORGE ON, Wel THESE FLOWER R STICKS are of a circular 
ee Cards -s „St. John’s Woo now supply avoiding anglès and sharp edges. are liab 
— tuts Ea ibitors’ own Box RARIA SEED saved this season from varieties At 28. 6d. ojere the lants. They = be had stai bro 
3 e recommend imme: | ui the rarons plants — To be had of all respectabla Naren. 
i ish to haye r s i arden 
Ct to the most minute examina must Aae ert ine be or ates, ee 2 lence case ate ell go sk, E 


ofthe ( 


52 
ŁAN] -p ORTICULTURAL a BITION 
A in the ious Grounds of the Erith Arbo- 

ToEsDa: DAY 
tds 
a 


July 31, 1 wards of Fifi 
s s upwards of Fifty 
Prizes will Weis n e wishing to exhibit, 

by app Mr. Macrbnx, Erith, 


EDSMEN'S ASSOCIATION. 


TIFUL FEW ef HSIA— SAPPHIRE.” 
CO. are a pent to send 
3 FUCHSIA, 2 
ac 
ais They beg to refer j o ikeir Sere in the G 
deners’ Jour cal, and in the 6. icke, of the 2d — 
— of this month, for a dese ription of ie 1 will be 
eral favourite, — — 5 tto be in every co 
— Nursery, Jun 


ns 
23 


ILEY’S EARLY MARROW CABBAGE 


any rib to it, a 
as it is very short in 


appointed to ar Rules and Regula- 


Society, and to take measures 
Association, 


obtained on 
ER Sors AND GARDEN SEATS, 


on prepaid ap- 


Oxford-s 


all parties who FiS 


tamps. 
Sold by Boe Tr, “at his General Seed Shop, 16, Pul- 
teney-bridge, B 


S OF 5 SAVOY, KALE. BROCCOLI, 


2 — ale, at * Pieet. 

— London. 
N. B. Samples to be seen at the Omee o 
H AND dat 9 t 2 
omplete in al 8 0 e Kingdom, 
siderable re eduction n, One, two, and gee Ayah 


and Melon Boxes, and Lights A = zre: ka 
pac 


acked and ee chap parts Ti nted ae 
ights of ev cy ee at bps, y ATTS’, 
the Trade, in most 


material. 

3 Builder, Darmont ose Kent-road. 
may be had to the T ity, — i — 

of the counties in Engl 


ae ft. 1 13 wide, 5 

t. 10 

3 2 * ter io E 

Hand- lights, —— 
ch in 


Boxes, Iron 
* een 8 


&. Estimates for any bran 
iron, or for park fencing. 


Pits, Melon 
— 1 Seats, 
either in wood or 


PTOMERIA JAPONICA SEEDLINGS. 


be; offer fine 

6 bai 9 ome high, 35 gd. e 
12 to 18 inches, 5s. 

36 inches, ar a nd u 
Fette out, and 
a handsome, 


uitable 
every plant sent out by Messrs. ae 2 95705 
— 


D AKERS Pe 
ad, Chelsea, b 
LRH, Princo Albert, — Ol — ORNAMENTAT 


ioni CAULIFLOWER, ited aS TERO E 
OHN TTELL, SeepsMa a‘ 
Westerham, Kent, Heng = respectfully y5 inform the 1 
that plants of — superior tra orts of the above will — 
warded to o receipt 8 stamps or ce 
order, at the u 8 pri at an peckage included. 
All the sorta 2 early Cabbage, N ale, includir 
— Toae 4s. 6d. per 1000. All the sorts of autumn an 
and white r 3 e 
Hower ste Gabb ite, and descargas per 1000 les ess when no 


du waras 
— or package is required. Packages = 1000 and up 
mat or package 2 carriage to the Eden the Sı 


bernacle, brent, oo 25 

widgeon, summer an 

3 gold-eyed and dun — 

domesticated and pinioned 2 Spani 
ay, Poland, Surrey, 


Mala fowls ; white Jap 
and commo a peafowl, an and od veal China pigs; and 
oon pana 


. . 
m * 
Pte ih 
5 ci 


n 
e 


402 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
ROYAL. BOTANIC SOCIETY, REGENT'S PARK. Js miasa è ci 


SHEET ASS for Cash, 
IBITION, JUNE 20, 1849. or ET OLA ne GLASS, 
SHEET SQU 
AWARD OF ENE JUDGES. yon SORES LONG. o | In bores of 
ENIRAN — — 5 1 To Mr. Robinson, tr mal o J. Simpson, Hsq., Pimlico, a * si 3 a le bya 2 6 
To Mr. Ma TER} nerto Mrs, Lawrence, Ealing Park for for 6 Fancy Pelargoni be ” 4i ” 7 by 5.and 7 
oe “30 Deen cll Greenhouse Plant 2 Td Mr. Gaines, sae ie ae 6 Faney Pelargoniumss - 3 EF * Pa = and 
Wandsworth, 13 To Mr. —— tor 6 Calceolarias. 7 * 
2. ze is Ores Gardener to Se — Es q., 14. To Mr. Robinson, Gardener to J. Simpson, Esq., Pimlico, | and FLOORS, in sizes not exceeding 5 fet repent 
y E MEDIUM GOLD MEDAL. 8 for 6 Fuchsias, i) fen In Roses; in pot] finen, P., 1964. |. dinah paroa 
1 57 To. R LI inch i 
1. To Cole oy oe ardener: te s 9 16, To Messrs, Paul and Sons, Cheshunt for 100 Ros Ros sen: a E — 
22 e and Greenh doa — 1 Tonis Es , Lewisham, for 5 
2. To Mr. Green, Gardener t 4 cl Edmun 1 Haak, 40. 3. To tts Terry, —— ~~ Puller, nee T 50 i thick 1 1 PLATE TILES, 
2 toye an reen. . 2 774 46 ach 
3. N ag ardenet to S. Rucker, Esq, Wandsworth, a THE SMALL SILVER MEDAL, | oe pestle | bine . vin — 
for 15 H Olarke; fi Stove and Greenhouse Plant ASS TILES AND 1810 = 
4. To Mr. Îr. Willams, Ga Gardener to C. B. Warner, Esq., Hoddes- |" £9: at Sei rma K ‘Orexford, Gardener to H. H. — Esd., of = ‘is intake Ion, 21 Lon on, M na 
r 25 Orch chréd Stamfor ss 
5. To Mr. Plant, — dener to J. H. S *. 3. To Mr. Sahh g a specimen plant of. Aphelexis purpurea Slat D by AOE a 10d. ls, — red 
green, for 15 roids, grandifiora, — are 3 in stock — the usual sizes, 
THE GOLD MEDAL. 4. To Mr. J. Bruce, for a specimen plant of Aphelexis sesa- | GLASS ‘MILK-PANS 
1, To Mr. Taylor, Gardener to J. — Esq., Streatham, for er Mt. "iray, PEE E E oare PANS, PROPAGA! 
25 St 1 ments, Fish Globes, Plate and W 
% To os . ä Collyer, EE e e 6..To Messrs, Veitch and Son, for Cypripedium nova sp., from “4 Lamp Shades — =) — 
Heaths. Mount Ophir, 5 . 6d. ; 6 tubes, 103. Self 
2 To Mr. Epps Obiswick, for 12 ——— in g. inch pots. 7. To Mr. May, Gardener to Mrs. Lawrence, for Phalsenopsis | ters 2 8 
le- rosea. 
in * — . — Po sare — nt 8. To Me, Williams, Gardener- to C. B. Warner, Esq., for ROWN 5 
a Cattleya s 5 
6. To} 2 15 Pun and —— + oneal — Berkhamp- 9; 10 — Veitch and’Son; for Nepenthes phyllomphora. GLASS.—Consumers of the above d 
10. To Mr. —, —— to —— ph —— Esq., the will find a large stock and very reduced — 
THE — —— MEDAL, Holme, Regent’s-park, for prints Soho Plate, Crown, — 5 and Orna 
* ae ere Pampiin — Lea-bridge-road, | 11, To Mr ee 8, New road, for 6 Cape —— 26, Soho- square, London ie 
for 30 Stove and — 12. To Mr. May, Gardener to E. Good art, Esq., for 6 6 “Heaths. K 00 NSERY 8 2 ; 
2. To Mr. T. Williams, Gardener to Mi ist Trail Trail, Hayes-place, E To. Mr. a Gardener to C. B. Warner, Esq., for 12 ETLE EY a 2 a 0. os iene N 
for 10 Stove and Greenhouse Pian f Exotic Fern 
S To Mr, Gre Green, Gardener to Sir E. Antro bus, Bart, for 6 Tall 14. To Mr. Willia ms, Gardener to C. B. Warner, Esq., for: ‘30 | * . — — * ee 
i British Ferns 
4; To Messrs, Veitch and Son, Nurserymen, Exeter, for 25 13. m Mr: Robinson, — to J. Simpson, Esq., for 12 Pe- Sa of. which ar aor kepian 
i niums, in 8-in t 
8. To Mr, Rae Gardener to J. J. Blandy, Esq., Reading, for 16. To — Parnes: Florist, Slough, for 12 Pinks; 
15 Orchids. 17. To Mr. Turner, ILES- and SLATES, 
6. To Mr. — Gardener to Mr. Beck, Isleworth, for 6 ps To Mr, Brag, gie e ye Baron de Goldsmid, St, John’s esti a ME ae ee > 
— hunt, for 12 1 egents-park, e ee Sao to — and 005 85 Sanasana LAA 
8. É 
7. To Messrs; Paul- and Sons; Nurserymen, Cheshunt, for TE To Mr 4 — are 6 Pe ade oses, in po’ * — ors Chron ‘ele, 1 — ma 
8. To Mr. Terry, — to Lady Puller, Youngsbury, for 8 21. 7 — s, Gardener to A. George, Esq , Enflelé, , ate 1 St eee a em, 
Roses, in po 
ear LARGE SILVER MEDAL 22. To Messrs. Paul and Sons, for 12 new Roses: sae ARBON) ISED Aa nn pon 
— To Hr gr Fairbairn, Narserymen, Clapham, for 12 Heaths, ig 7 for 4 Cleroden. ` Ga pa ere an bios alpesi = Lee 
ZT 2 y $0 RoTa Miler, Esti, Coltzer Woodi 24, To Me. Taylor, for correct Labels (1st class), ‘assuredly will, To be had of H. COLES, ‘ 
3. To Mr. Black, acer to E. Foster, Esq., Clewer Manor, 25. To Mr. Plant, for cor —— Labels . va —4 — sale by spec — eee — one 
. Lei square, in tin 7 4 
near Windsor, for 12 Pelar soniums, in 8-inch pots. ester-square, Ph ; 
1. To Messrs, Veitch, for Mirbella Meisneri each. Also supplied for Vegetables, Pleasure 
4. To Mr. nog — 8 attersea, for 12 Pelargoniums, 2. To — Veiteh, for Agalmyla stamineas 3 at — per cwt. 
ener ghton oehamp- 3. To Messrs. Vei — — Balsamina repens, ess, for — — tu 
* To Mr ante, Gardener oJ — — teas n 94. To Mears, d Son, for ——— longiflora major. | ton, ‘half a ten 3b, 10s., five cwt; 2h: 
t 5. To Mr. Turner y Gardener to C. Williams, Esq., Upper Hol- | and packages rged 
THE SILVER * —— AL. j rig for 12 Alpine Plants. ; ‘cient application fe 
1. To Mr. Jack, 1 to R. G. Loraine, — Wallington . To M ~ May, Garden er to Mrs. Lawrence, for 6 Heaths. accompany: each canister aud p: 
Lodge, for 10 S and Greenho 7. To A reen, for 6 Hea „„ eg ar geal MA 
2. To Mr. Brace, Ga Gar — ty Boyd Miller, — Collyer Wood, 8. To LA R i Gardener to J. Anderson, Esq, for 90 a ANO 2a Ax 25 e 
for 20 Stove and Greenhouse j finest quality, 
3. To. ne 2 22 to W. Block, Esq., Muswell-hill, || 9: To Mr. Bra; orist, Slough, for 12 Pinks, import warehous POTASH: 
ll Cac 10. To Mr. — for 24 Pansies 1 SODA er F LIME) 
To Mr. Pa arker, —— to J. H. Oughton; Esq., Roehamp- II. To Mr. Gaines, for 6 F uchsias, GYPSUM (SULPHATE O . 
6 Cape Pelargoniums, 12. Re 2 Lane and Son ‘or 12 ne a — DRIED NIGHT. Oe COPROLITE: 
5, To Mr, T. Wallas — Miss Traill; th 52 N for 12 Rise with siog gle blooms, 5 ACID 
Kent, for 6 Honba 1 so, Wallingfor anunculuses. LIME POTERS uai 
Gardener Bart, 15. itt] „ Chi for 6 Hume ans. b —.— made 
8 oe N Antrobusy Meee F Tole 5 tis, Gardener to 10 Oldham, Esq., — —— ene . all other Manures dan 
T 3 Gardener to Mr. Be Isleworth, for 6 Pe- | - — for a tub of Clintonia p 17 8 4 value, may ‘ 
iergeniume, i in 114inch pots. * 17. To. 3 6, Albert. terrace, Regent's- Maus k Boraman ne on ati 
R. — Esch, le- 6 faney Pel ark, for British Plaats. eon —— 
s g . r * 18. To Mr. Cole, for correct Labels (Ist class). | Vorparied on receipt ol 8 postage stamps. F. * 
9. Toh Mr. Ambrose, Battersea, for 6 Fancy Pel 19. To Messrs, pins — plin, 15 0 ree: 1 5 oan ot Guano, &c. 1 
10; To Messrs, Henderson and Co., Nurse rymen, — le- r 
place, for 6 Caleeolarias, % p 1. To Mr. E. G. Hender seryman — 3 for N DON HNO COMPANY ir 
11. To Alexander Rowland, Esq., Lewisham, for 8 Roses, in pots Pentstem mon sp. HE LO 
12, To Messrs. Lane aud Son, urserymen, Great Berkhamp- and C. — 8 for Ar- ; 
stead, for 6 Yellow, Roses, in 


m 
3. To R. Ao Esg., Prie Cottage; Garstang, for Lo- 


Esq., for Lonicera 
: , 1 To 1 a for 20 British Ferns, 3 

| ants, Seedling Pelargonium, “Gipsy e” 
f 5 ; m 7 2 oe $e t 5 

, Gardener to Miss Traill, for a speci || 8. To Bick Pr for Sendling Peironi Constance.” 

Pelargonium, ‘ Som 


T) 
arra kpmo Sraa a constant supply of 
the beets 9 — which — Manure, Nita ot $ 
- | importer’s: 


i 0: To Mr. Hi 8 Pelargon 9 — — ; 
5 re Mr, Mylan, Gardener to S. 1 * Cœlogyne 11. * Mr. Do Pica Seedling Pelargonium, with scarlet 
aa owers, — “Incomparable,” : 

6. ~ — Veitch and Son, Exeter, for Escallonia ma- 12. To Messrs, Norman, Woolwich, Le 12 Pinks, 


3. To Mr. Francis, fi 


$ 3 w Ros 
L 20 —7 — “Gardener to J. Coster, Esq:, Streatham, i b Ze in y — ef seedling px hag: a $ 

15. r. Turner, for Seedling Pansy, “ Mrs 
8: To Mr. Jack, Gardener to R. G. Loraine, for 6 Orchids. | 16. To Mr 5 : 1 » 
9, To Mr. Staines, New. road, for 12 Pelargoniums, in & inch 17, 10 Mr. Cuthill, 9 as — Hale Masi? 
— Mr. Taylor, for — t Labels (1st class), 


9: To Mr. Smith, 4 — — pesay (Ist citu} 
To Mr, Smi ith. fo bels (2d class). 


— PELLATT anD Co. (late 

——— te on Glass 13 n BL 
20 

— isses, 1s, 6d. peel Milk Pansy 18 


METROPOLITAN now — T 
EWER FLUID IRRIGATION 


* GLASS MILK PAN. 


MAS MILLINGTON is 


R ; CUCUMBER TUBE, n 5 
Waitimates and List of Prices forwarded x 
3 87, Bishopsgate-street Without, Londen. . the 
a ie i 


1640. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. i 403 


E CULTURAL SOCIETY OF LONDON: — | would nrg inton or et in the summer. Per- surface of the ground rough at this time of year than 
haps some eader may rg able to turn of ra raking it fine and smooth f course his adviee 
r the reception of | to em of : authority on | this s subject applied to the effect of a rough surface upon. the 
ext Exhib tion, on ent practice not being sufficiently 3 health of plants, and not upon the eye of the looker ` 
* — price E, or atthe We gt 2 ook to the nature of timber and to the on. That he was right wherever heavy land is in 
th July at 7s. 6d. each, but then known causes. which sten its. decay. 1 question there is no doubt; it is only by maintaini 
by F ig, ail ell — ong, those causes is moisture. Timber absolutely | a rough surface during dry weather that air — — 


— n the our 21, Regentostret, dry would be unable 3 undergo decomposition at its — freely to the roots, or that 
Ar a the Stir of. JULY, may obtain from: that any appreciable: rate. e have now before us a the ea the surface bein — — 
e ee after that dh San: ee piece of wood found at the back of one of the friezes — all fluids will run off, not in x 
Tickets will be issued in — on the day | whic rd Ero removed from Athens. It is But it is a — easy with the common implements 
2 as sound as it could have been in the days of of a garden to secure a rugged surface, without 
ON HOR TI CUL UR a Te Pamias: Even animal matters, rapidly as they injury to "ti lants that grow upon it. Hoes, 


E as “The FLOWER. and Putrify, are preserved for centuries in the ab- | whether Dutch or English, may shave the ground 
Limar, the cirgumatances . sence of moisture. Travellers assure us that in but are incapable of ae. it up, rakes 
or imperfe — 3 the arid plains that stretch northwards beyond the more use ess; the com n: three-pronged fork. is 
Fellows of the So Sooty, t their wives-or sisters, and.| Himalayan range, the corpses of men and the better, but a man can — but little progress with 
jally introduced by them ;,or the Foreign and Cor- carcases of animals dry up instead of 1 a it when heavy ground is hardened. by: the “The 
Members. of t “the —— aucho hangs his beef in the sun, and i in dry most useful tool for the purpose one which we 
* IV. REGENPS PARK climate of the serene ——.— as 80 — i the DINNING’S 


oe as well — — — pea araar dryness: is: sufficient to arrest t e As it bears’ no 

will take decay: o 5 — matter, how much more effectual — we may call it 

ekets ma sea maarok Fr the Gardens, by g . — Bir - 

EEE 8 Society, price ös., or on the day er must be its action upon vegetable substances in the Pick-rore; be- 
Which a . tendency to rot is —— less ause it fet fh reality 

MIMULUS RUBINUS. inherent: Sawdust is but timber broken o pieces; a combination of the 


— | damp sawdust’ rots rapidly; dry 8 will all 


tt 
arpea veunrivalled MIMU LUS, at — 6d. but last for ever. Charcoal, one of the most un- he ee- 
rubinus.is of vigorous habit, 3 feet high; the en forms of vege le matter, is only timber fork. Like the former 
— A — i ubt from which the. last, trace of water has been expelled it is fitted to a handle 
for May loch, p. 392, “ re is therefore the gr ut feet long, and 
fine thing, ng. cause of preservation, as its presence is that of decay. is used in the 


— . — „ fon Complete: dryness ess: may — to have been 
1 the number — ‘plant i is — lined, an . ——— of the durability of ancient timber. 
pe ne respectfully, re- least; in present state of our —— we 
correspon. 2 i . 
—— Trade. can refer it to nothing else; amply | 
<= | sufficient to account for it. In the opit of one of | 


this, allowed to drop on 
hronicle. — most e PE need and philo . apg of modern nd, is fore 
AY, JUNE s, the late Sir SamurL Benruan, dr ryness was by its own weight as 
| _ SATURD 30, 1849. the prak object to be attained’ in wince timber. far into the soil 
#MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. for nayal purposes.. Drying, houses, were recom- r for — 
— e . — mended 5 and during all the period of his e — 
III employment as. civil architect and engineer of the — = the ‘matings 
Su az; Wednesday, . — micii Horticul- navy, this distinguished officer never ceased to 2 end is eae into play and — the clod: 

A r a n re. 8 indispensable necessity of securing: the d va pplication of the two ends of the imple- 
* e in our columns, but have met with n mber before all other things. To the men i. border 2 be broken up and brought to the 
/ ‘ely, Since we have. referred Wie’ winter th artifici — ae available for this purpose we need | requi te degree of roughness, without being left so 
oo nts without success, we must now not here allude. What we have to deal with is s the | ansieht ly as to be unsuited to a flower garden. Th 
Siamu to o deal with it person a Ny not in the natural — of bringing it about. Those natural ra this a little practice is requisite buta. 

E that our views will bua dopte d by every- means are much more effectual than any others e have placed the 17 15 15 in the han hands of an an ac ve 
mth we 


and it is a question 3 they can be super- 
i wil give tha 1 5 a who hoy, — th 3 


whi ay 
; “ees foliage is a very powerful. e apparatus 
h it. Considering the ali drawing: mbismare: iran ee rer 
tru tt 


y: giving it off It is the same 
=n aes dap tad 2 . action which produces a discharge of fluid from the when i 
y: In an absence of certainty surf at certain 


effect of again charging the ria ran with more fluid, aths, When ; 
zami 8 anr many, years been turned to replace that which is thrown off; but this Happe: DERIT for 
tial part of the inquiry, and on tai In the, spring # isi fall’ p ent, especially. th kol part 

* dae points. The pro- only at certain seasons. In the spring } all F 10 vill ‘de 

or force; the roots then draw fluid from the soil, the should 23 ia etch well steeled, or i “ rapidly 
trunk draws it eater. roots, leaves draw it from wear away. It should, in fact, be made upon the 
| the trunk—and. waste ik; and this goes on so long same principle as those best.of — ee 
as tha soil is filled s wich the rains of winter Biene — . of — = eight, an — to 
| vanees the | accor o the wor 
ee of bch oride of | 28 Vitality is es ong But as the summer ad — igs —— rh Ibs the handle included the mate 


oe Eine; ar 3 and ath vegetation slackens. The ee 

ee gr in however still go on, pump, pump, pump; till at last, fork is 6 inches long, an — 6 wide next a shank. 
understood the 8 75608 —— tor rpid, the leave s draw off all the All these details will, aaa be easi settled 

le, as is sufficiently | veni Mh that the trank e ontains and when the last by the 3 when nev the nmi comes 

a Pi ente, supply that it can yield is ee they perish, into general use, as it 8 when its utility is 

a ge peor At that time the trunk, by natural means, is dried | appreciated. I 

* 3 Ait t degree; the free water lying in its cavi- ANTS, 

er whose directions conning 85 15 Ea the whole fabric acquires. a hard- To piei a he 3 ; 

nuch um aes muski ness it did not know before. Until the leaves are Geyvs VIII e Zit excess f 

thei ste — = papie Fenewed in th the succeeding- spring but small internal vigour in plant, which, * of i, e te 

ras: S sound: as when it was put toge- change occurs; the roots are torpid and will scarcely | neither fruit nor flowers; a single species.— 


aks 
g 


act ; the — are broken —5 — more erm is phrastus, Book ii. cap. xiv. “De Causis Plantarum,“ 
Re preme ti me that te one will dispute the tiot introduced into the wood. Hence it is obvious that} alread —— — — 
bing lasted longer than modern, ‘That fie Period when the timber ofa tei s natal 2 Cleeve it in We der of thei 
we o ascertai from moisture, and therefor * one to decay, is plese < p saeg j 
fat he an wiej can: have poe the fall of the leaf in autumn, and the | of a remarkably luxuriant growth ; . this is not com: 
no change ewal of vegetation in the * and the nearer | 

i of ma the “fall of the leaf the most free. ae Piho; anni, A rieher gre 
wilo], In this point of view, timber sia ss intended to than that of other individuals of the same species, the 
i zas — should be felled late in the — or in ‘tine all . e the pla plant, its greater ele- 
i A naas THAT gn ©. the signe: of: this” disease. 
oi moist Nature has provided. On the other — out ‘rapidly, and produce nothing but woodi 

5 i fluid, branches; the occasion must be 


11715 
= 
i 
8 
F 
í 


in rtificial 
| methods of exhaustion are capable of seasoning it 
properly. We say season, because the removal of 
Water, as is its importance, — not the only 
object to be attained. There are other umstances os 
| to be considered, but they. require ae space than 


was 
n,| Our correspondent ae 8 other | ‘ 
{day upon the greater importance of keeping the 


THE ital a 


CHEOMI GH: 


404 
There are various methods for compelling t he trees in| 
cases to cover themselves with flowers and fruit. 
The most certain is the withdrawing fro the 
as possible the over-s tial nutriment. 
Plants suffering from excess of vi are generally 
be found on deep soils. these are 
by the incipient scarcity of their flowers, show that th 
mischief ready reached th me- 
times the roots are 8 at the ey of | 
winter, the soil which covered r 
laced by some other ‘can fertile pa still pa 33 to 
the nature tree. Another mode of rendering a 
e fertile take it u sper replant it, shortening a 
little the roots which may have suffered in the opera 
tion, and thin out a few of the branches. In most 
, however, this 0 


odu 
roots with a hoe for a n tim 
not grow in too dye "soil — sinfiy by lightening 
the that co 
The above remedies are specially —— to 
standard trees. ata h are trained to espa- 
liers or kept 3 tg 


esult successfully in one case 

For the prodhoi of “ speci- 

ants we generally seize upon some remarkable | 
i 


e pei 
ery 8 

f the real eh of the 

in e face sof therapid advances 


in its infancy neces- 


arily exercised “ — e upon its 


leaving a greater length to the upper branches. Many | § 
of th — aking branches are then pruned out, so after existence: =. 

as to sap into the fruit-bearing on But in as fe t there amoun 
cuttin yi out, the upper ones must be spared, other- of care, of perseve of never ceasing w. tchfulnes 
wise, following the common practice of those who thin en in 3 treating a eee oak. 
they nee bring a tree into teres ah — 1 it of the lection k plants, than y aega ing large and well- 

of its — ner es, dh 3 own pecimens, In the form e we have to follow 

— an inereased num of barre en 9 and the tree natu — term it. e have 
—— er by over pruning would yeh 3 o cramp and confine her efforts within a prescribed i 


most experienced cultivators force trees 
ey have 


anent sta 
d a —.— poi a ra these trees, 
s. they were 


y 
occasion to speak of it with ae ò detail, 
am of opinion that the Lai egress mentioned 

eith 


| operations — ust be 


me most cases = er not be readily ap- 
plied, or fail i duci the nek red effects. 
scarification, applied with. judgm 
V rea will be more surely rea 
With a ned pruning- alte me 
i 3 dia piin een 
hol 


howeve r. should not be — équally in 
pals with fruit trees that 


ot gummy, such as Apples, P 

157 jepini much caution in applying i it to py trees, | W 

such as Plums, Peach ecessary 

every day to clear the wound of any gum that u may ad 
there, m.. vi might = ted tumo 

Iti sie even better 


By b 
e cultivator’s 


f the ra 


t 
ears, and such like. 


wearied, his grea 

able to see into the future in “all that relates ree his bus 
ne ound to no system 

ii is no rule in m 

must pursue his je — 


E 
0 


a general collection, a prin 


by any for 9 reumsta 

in mind that results never exist without causes, and tha 
whether we fail or succeed in any one undertaking, 
that certain causes pie — or not as the case may 
e those e e fret 


an 
peculiarities, modes o th, an 
ure of the localities which they natu- 


this, we must 


© 
8 
D 


re 
means employed. It will be 
well for r us not to overlook the fact, that it is the multi- 


15 


e best dans for nearifieation 25 the 
lid 25 begi 


Bin pring lee ; the gum my ones, 
* 


parts with a little cow- 9 


inter. . 
ir at all, w 
themselves — — readily 


they assume previously to the mbin 
plant. And we should Fe do cali to recollect * all. 
ant- 

are only so many aids—so Bag media 

the constituents of vegetable life are to be 
3 that, for the most part, they ar re arti- 
ar 
of the 3 2 


not 


ust be paid to the 
10 imon a a cultivator who had a 
tit was barren one 


1 surprise, he saw it 


covered with ‘tore ami as Fem 14 
fruit, 5 


hall say hereafter on t on the 


ON THE e e u ESSENTIAL TO THE 
MOST PERFECT 

anak cultivation a a ATION,— . VII. 
divided into o distak 
8 


os 


— eg but a distinct moi 


= 


ed that. 
13 af planis 8 for the decoration, of our gardens, 


with the t — sgh 
of plants, in any other light than that as bein x 8 


oe ga ina subsequent 
cg to this 5 int I conceive to 
cause w. 


g plant, some promise i 


Then 
| shoots ta be atte 


1 ceeded 


as Cri 
of another's s 


time. In tion 
A mentioned — following have done 


uence ; and, | o 


in > aagi pa — the 3 or Places shoulà 
made poo 
= s Wan pod poe ie 


s growth advances, trainin and 
nded to, not only 4 
over bord 


see im 


wns his pow 


Boin with the i kite, “iada 

enable the operator to proc ea — 

tious in the — cemen * 1 a little 4 
and regulate shoots a appear necessary, n 
order that the 3 24 object ppe diu it be to covera 


HINTS TO FLORISTS, 
Pısks.—The poppis of these had better be pto 
th 


at planting out 


season, Viz. aa ath Riv 5 pa 
Harriet t, Lad y M ilda may, Lor 

lona, Prince Albert cant) 1 

England Ruben 


Pie — 


on 

ee en, generally m 

From pre appearances a ae er -a 

— atont the 20th m 
e C 


fly, 
and pods, while the N ord a com 


to earwigs. 
DauLIAS are grówidg quickly § ; let their. sie vmis 
If the 


in watering, 
vigorous these e 

but a sorry ap 
. June 30 


1 1 
on account of 


$ FOR Sure 
PRACTICAL HINTS FOR ee . 


NGS.— 
e ‘Roses BY CUTTI 
beauti 


Pro 
who give their attention t 
in the wor 5 
pains. All kin 


on the virtues 5 in this or 
15 | upo pag that nye inay F Wee — 
t of some 1 7 
‘ion to be Nr n its Sal as to fitness of em- 
eo pation base, is not so much its 
constituents as its mechanical texture, G. 


t 
for the deve- 


„yuta AID . GARDENING, | 
be imagin the bedding out alone 


e proper crite- | but 


others. 


ter facili than 
8 apn a will be 


the o 


more sure me 
principles of the method w 


be applied in various | 
thp inclination or dh r the ava vai means 


u, Masterpe | 


a Sh" a I TS ONE ESS LIE c 
iain ai 


rr 


— ] 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


405 


it, and it is estar that dirt and a 
— — in many plants. One fram 
; Sa bold be cuttings as soon as Lara are made; — 
to receive them in two or three weeks, when 
coe re formed a ris and are ready to emit their 
y d on 


r 


J %˖·Ü c PP et ů s! ðÄT[%ꝗ69' 


mber of 2 75 or 


d, d, and turfy loam 
to be 3 ara s0 y fixe 
ut in = eid the close 


a 
in the 


the object not . 2 to exclude light, 
the direct solar rays. ame must be 
daily, and all leaves hich ‘fall removed, — 


examined 
they will generate mildew, and a moderate moistur 
must be maintained. 

In 


e 
Blislering of Peach Leaves.—I will not 
wim that the direct ca 


15 
i 


r 


0 


Ja 
Al 
755 
BG 
p 


. 


ca 


fell 
He 


will be 


the number suc- 
e labour will not have Sar thrown away. H. B. 


Home Correspondence 


2 a slight poin 
at were trans d 
blistered leaves upon cae 

have had none but 


8 


e trees in a 
that they must st only ha 
on to 


Sa winter and spring. G. Thom 

ialis.—In a gg article, p. 387, 

t Mr. Malliso fe. mont, had 
This i 


J 
ore Johnson, 


years 
, the superintendent of the Royal 
at Hampton Co 


tres appear in all or nearly all my 
Ck that have been carefully pruned 
Mr. Pauls directions (see his book), and 

n 


arf Roses where | e 
n weak, and the plants 
ntre again ap appears ; in borders where 
much looked after, merely cut in and 


a 
One or two kin 
What do ) you eaa or 
P aul, 


0 1 


e 
through both sides 
as 


eep 
the other 


urt. Edward Jesse, | 


pipes, which SAET with o pipes 


under-ground. e pipes all meet in the centre of 
the quadrangle in a adail slate well, about 3 feet square, 
and 4 deep, an ence arthenware pipe 
con e water into the large hk l deposits 


ater cannot be injurious. 


ut Flow ommonly said that smd taps 


the best ; 
u are desirous to try rh add a little 
nitrate of s carbonate of ammon 
Greenhouse 

which the accompanying i is a representation, 
rn a building which acts both as reenhouse and a 

othouse is placed over the whale of the uo on 
i — stand, rawn up and down by 
an three ropes, which are represented in the 
ketch. The ‘stage is 20 feet long, and the shade covers 
the whole of it. The strips of wood or laths 
as : i 


re plac wise, as 
own at C, have — a hinge made by — a strip 


= 


of galvanised sheet iron over the end, as at B 


runnin through it made of stout wire. A trian- 
ular deal box, open in front, as at A, with notes bored 
kinge. 


is is nailed on a block, D, a e block is placed a 


beer g — 205 her 2s. 6 
m 


—1 have 7 finished af 


table, and covered with a sheet or table cloth. The 
usual time for a swarm or hive to stand in this part of 
the count 


ry 
lie amount of honey, 
i the whole 
colony being killed the tion. The honey, 
obtained in this way, is sold for 8d., 10d, Is. 
Many of my neighbours pay my hives, which 


destroying the bees, ee ae w 


laces 
e trees, been literally — 
with it, and instead of swarming, bees appear to have 


been st meram À up honey. R. H. 
Lime v. the Potato Disease. tid ived a letter last 


ved in a aaa 
season. William * Hii 


Foreign — 


n (bold as I am, and used 
ra) 1 thought “of geting out of. the 2 The 
like of the loveliest of Ma 


in par 


helves of the siand — a 


-i e 

3 
te with opr apes 
wise again canvas, 
to them at “skeet — . nts 
direction. The upp 
upon the upright bearers, may de 
stance. I have myself made it of eras same, and stiffened 
essure by a capping o 

i secti 


to + on 


the latter be ated 


fro mathe aul part the shade and sa 
—— at the end are secu’ 
h les. 


nnot give 
Worth about ei} ; so that I red the 
from 30s. toa guinea and 
— should be disposed — eo e a shade 
des 
ns. C. W. M. 


a large rain-water tank made 

lons, collected from the 

ie of offioes, It 1 the 
is conducted in 


e 


n 
sticking it, it is of Bean 


heads o t flow be tem 
vents the loss of one ae es 5 be . Aiton ew vd ri | 
above head bet the Grapes and t 


rd s 
y away right one et i in honour of 
rd We 


to the back wall by long paces 


cription, read ee e find any 3 d I shall be — 


d when 


wil w-dung. | t 
3 to be e nne after 
with a 


Hn 


the hip at the British ships in 


E 
n 
24717 


were to visit — before 
55 fine fellow who rowed us 


I had a donkey to ride and a boy to drive 
much garlic that 22 


cream, and sugar. It is then held raster the hanging 
swarm which is shaken into it, put fora time upon a 


496 TH E 


1 


CHRONICLE. [var a, 


—, in their formality ; 
laid out with low Box edgings, 
Ox ew I call them, and dou es 
They are so sia ts — like vse of the * e 
inter or summer, with 
t 


22 


t 
e Bo y shape the corner Box trees of the 
rter A more neglected place I never saw 
ore enjoyable one could not be desired, and I should 
prefer it to Cintra, as being e the „ and be- 


ir — n nin, * 
f steps r the foun 
returned to the gardens along a high terrace dnt over 
looked the grea groves, ‘real .gar of ihel 
heir fruit brings go gy 


ig n to m 
gave us poautifal views of sea and land, & 


Sotieties 
og egy June 26.—E. Br RANDE, Esq., in 
chair. = J. W. Ramsden, Bt., G. Harcourt, ka 
ig et Bys eat W. W. Saun nders, Esq., and 
Mr. Hurst, of Leadenhall. sme were e Fellows. 
Dr. Lindley delivered: a lecture ont Senge 
regarded as timber, or as a “tia 5 8 . 
ther with the circumstances 
tion by 


ues tide to turn 
key. me Ral perk: 


which æ oo or defer its 


umerous instructive 
on of the effects upon timber of 
— e meeting. 


NEAN, June Maze —The Bish 
d 


bited 
dee ee gathered- nea near Selbourne e; they exeited 
on from ‘being covered with fi 
— of a sporangium containing — 
large ‘spores seuted on a slender s Mr. 
Westwood a paper on the family Paussidze 
this ‘paper ‘the ‘author ‘described several new 


the unity of 


2 Lonpox, May 4.— The hora — 
. Thomas — 


to be quite 


W. 


nd White Stocks, the Silver Medal w 


ae 3 — a Mr, Handasyde 


n these Sra the-author — 
„ usually regarded a 
r 


let * ‘been set up by some botanists as a spe 
distinet f m V. odorata, 
amir ted, 


L CALEDONIAN HORTICULTURAL, —The summer 
he 


Roya 
ede m 
leith,on the 7th inst. 


competit ion and part! 


Partiy 
— oareful i by on committee, the following prizes | 
—For 


2 varieties of Dou 
Oliver, E 
M 


inbow, Optimus, Supreme, i 
din e, Si Robert Peel, 1 3 of Rutlan 
Superb, Blooming srt Argus, 

Satirist, Douglas, Marchioness of Ailsa, Ova 

tate, Cypres del = Perfection, geed 
Bri tis a age d Ber * ond pre was 
awarded to Mr. Rutherford, and a third t 0 Mr. ae. 
Roses, Bybloomens, and 
class 


A 
‘Ap 


aden e gem 
egg Duchess ‘of New 
n, Stray’s Seedling, and Baa = 
cond prem vote 
oy — a aplond ial 
than 17 0 5 
these flowers. For t 
awar — y s firs 


dapre 


| Ath aa, 2 


| 
or the prizes offered for 


|| prize, to 
Lauder, 


unro, and a 


t pans um, 
econd prize was voted to erde gr. — 2. it. Mac- 
1 ea. 

a prize was voted 8 Mr. r. to the Lord Advo- 
cate, for Ne plus ul i 


the b 
h mell, gr. H ermitage 
Park, for a large and ade 3 aps 2 8 re e 
t trellis, h Alpine 


® 
=) 

— 

N 

© 

97 

= 

= 

2 

ou 


pestris, Primula Scotiea, a 
For the po 24 heads of Asparagus, a yn aioe" was 
awarded 3 Pousty, gr. M. es, Esg.; 
second to Mr. Bes dell, gr., * Abbey. 
The prz of “One Guinea, offered Messrs. 
o. (through the medium of the Society), for the 


3 


sent a — 


Alpines, with fin 
Dow 


a 
Specimens of -both — 
id 


e 
51 new 


teresting Alpines, _ includ ding ‘th 
| flower. 


re ; 
— of a fine late — ; 
eae some early P 


n any form. At this meeting no fewer in 
members were added to the ae 


Roya e Improve 
show of is 


gr. to G. Burns, Es 
neta it measured about 3 fe 
e than 2 fee igh 5 E. ventricosa 2 in 


sie, Dake | n 


e best = 
5 

r sec 
For the 4 best Red Stocks, the Silver "Medal. 

<i bas awarded, a and a 


For the —.— varieties of Ghent Azaleas, |8" raped 
‘Sleigh 


1 . Clerodendr 


o Me. “Ma 3 a oni 


the 
le seats E. v cata eae 
gemmifera. The former about 
3 feet in diameter, Aa from w 12 to is 8 
Mr. M 


=e bloom. ong athews’s gr 


naultia, about 1 
Statice ative 1 foot high, an 
Aphelexis humilis, 2} feet in inmeten a 
cordata, ne conditi — Among 
obtaine d — 2d 


Mr. Gannon, g. 
th ng ‘Esq. „ exh e Hoya a Pottsin 


5 5 . a small specimen of Henfreya 
{J udge Cram exhibited one al the 
ſinest bloom juncea 


7 
5 


ſormer N were 


ere Leelia u 
1 


& 


— 
8 


of beautiful blooms. 
competition. gon 
benas, Caleeolarias, Pin, 
Pansies, and Roses w 


several fine Heaths and a double-flowe , ; 
aay aerar with mw Sonem eigela — ; The act 
the open ground. the garden of J, eron, EXHIBITION Ar Upton Panny Ae pian Taira 
Esg., were two fine ———— of Clerodendron Kæmp- | this meeting was = — ateur growers of n, 
feri. From A. Symington, Esg., was 2 Sarn be of 2 — 9 3 widerab ot Ee oe 
beautiful Ranunculuses. Dr. Neill’s garden “whole, of very fine char . — 
J Cis Camaonaand | at el Sara 

tortilis. ifdl Ranune atest amount o i 
he from M, Ehun d Frome Trom e ee . 
in Falconar's garden. C. K. Si r was for an ! 

sent fine Cin 22 i 2 Esq., spr was too mash e sight 5 Thea 24 a 
‘ collection of Ferns and British Mosses, Per ist out to the public — t0 
[in pots; nd Lady y were tuo baskets.of n, upon tables, ach ‘pl 


. 


geet ert a ee eee 


hey {examined the whole, aud 
of the plant | 2 which they 
g the point; 


of, they e same b 
ri was giv 

gar eet ee ony, 0 Foster’s Gipsy Bride, the only 

1 — eel s, except Constance, that stood the 
that gef receiving any notice. 

ages 


d stout : 
he 2d prise — 21. 10s., * to 
— — caited S morits 
ada Tilo“ 8 Tapon, that 
constitute a first-rate variety s werd indispensable, 
en passed ov r although it is 0 
colour, ken dark die “43 vein 


ugh ; 


—.— tal, wants refinement, and is 
8 b Hant addition to an 
winner we m 


find space to noti ce tlte 
without saying that, in our opinion, the 
— 2 — should have a ne * the 
down fixed whi — flower must 


amine 
of — 
before it can er — and there must tia a an 
ot faults, such as we have —— oe it should be | what is comm 
stoace 


‘Had such a standard been laid down, and 


ure ; for we 


ea p ean also 
om 8 ron. — it resembles in 
babit, but is — differen .— Plants, 


Esq., — Bo nd, 
— Dobson; — a fine 
— — trom Mr. Tyso, of Walling ‘ord. 


ten. —In our account of the Royal Botanic — s 
last Bxbibition, 1 to state that — Lan owed 
zie specimens of their new Moss Ros e Lan 


t 
3 by W. H. Harvey, M. D wo 
ae vit 8 woodcuts. — Orla 
— 


y A. ni 
-250 t four i — Van 


by inter 
— — . — ar is sei because 0 aff, 


ich indeed are 


15 


lent 
Mr 


e class 


at a 


i 


| 


works of the 
M Knox haxeithe. ew, that 
— both 
* —— ane: and 
m: subject and its s 
ee the J € 


775 
F 


ma 


ni 


'reader 
— to b e the natural history of our 


f 


11 
1 


A 


ceptable: to those 
erg — —— 
most ‘attraetion for the visitors to 


everywhere 
have 


T 
z 


rn eee never been able to com- ped 
5 visitors to our watering. aan contrive | from one 
— tine and — days 


during th 
— 


8 88 


wang a 
is bathing, an 


even the: 
tmin, an hardly ‘fail to bring tedium * 
9 as Dr. Harvey's must then 

ki a E inteligent 1 being inva — for it 
Jet ormation, SANY 1 
applicable 


a | 
“The u 4 


lis, 
~to the — — 


ing o 92 
strong habit, and profuse rara 75 ie k p 


ink ‘Aurora’s Beam 
+ ‘citement which ra 


ere red i “in for another t 


N se Lor 1 ‘the sake" be drawing attention 
Dr. an 


cope. Whi le 
the elementary į 


a | Overy ag 


THE GARDEN —— CHRONICLES 


the year ought to “suffice for these amusemen 
the summer and sea-side preserve their native ie 
5 ed. ee, — 

ea-shore when the opened to the 
afforded 
anted to 


i est o 
Sungtandy 3 


nding his time 


Tas tead at hang 
ease | heavily, he will Phin 3 how 5 the long 
r. da e he been occupied. 


summe flown by, w 


1 the study ó of natural histery, that no other h 
kee e visitor | h 
| he 


Galepdar of Operations 
DEPART 


w 
Tux climax of "day-light and sunshine for this 


He is is — 
i a physician from receiv 


‘rest unemploy 
ood to rouse im 


If o 
n for natural 


faa 
a 


e of body, an 
guing — mind, give it that * dt ex- 
en suffering 
It matters — — 
y sciences he d 


by morni 
| ing letters th that require thought 5 his mind is too aetive to i 
and t neighbour- | Was 
pi 


ade 
der ; syringing 
ipes with lint 


1 of — 
Poppee 
| 25 to — a portion of two: year-old wood | along with the 


ther each in turn enga sar 
valetudinarian will find most relief in 


ther str onger than zh required for growing them in. 
; | Many other weak, puny growing, fine rooted, stove and 


Those e who —— thus and feel thus, can never 
oon distress of n to-do. 


permanent enjoyment, ha 
fascination, that every fact which is revealed by the in- 
5 dey ; 


quiry of to leads of necessity to nore gees fact 
soug on orrow, and that the farther 

he observer .advan n his Ea with the 

wonders of the ereation, t re anxious does he be- 


0 
come to exten 


visi acquaintance, and the more able is 
he to enjoy it when found. 


3 those who shin ag we do, there is no work “te e. p 


can recommend with more satisfaction than ‘the 
«Sea. side Book”. of Dr. hie vay 


e l 
H HOUSE, THE SEAT ITH, Sar 

t has few vee Maes nated — 
o grounds are well wooded, and Ted- 
he rank 


e grounds are well e | 
th walka of consi nsiderable tent | 


e | these w 


w | Stronger-growing species of the same kinds ; amongst 


it. will, however ivis 

the plants in small pots, for flowering daring autumn 
and early winter. Old — — fe pag j Someries 
should now, after their n care- 


ir par 
fully out of the old soil, repotied i in b light hren — 
moderately rich, and pla ced iu a frame for ~ few 
. — 2 roots peek 
moved nea 
„and . close till the pla — a o thoroughly 
ished, se plants succeed best and a 
ul in — — zed pots. 
HARDY FRUIT GARDEN. 
The stopping, ee and 2 = the yomg 
Peach and Nec e the most 
careful re 3 ats to secure an 
42 supply of well ii ripened rita wood of mode- 
pany 
— res 2 yee account of the 8 of tlie wood 
ere also that they may not, by monopolising 
he sap, — the fruit of 2 necessary —— 
0 ots stopped, 3 to era. “sae in 
former Calendars, ote have produced s 
of which as many should * — as are e required for 
1 in, onger of the 
more moderate sized ‘shoots should — be stopped, at 
lengths varying from 12 to 18 inches, according to their 


w days, 
ee oe 


esponding in ee with 


onse 
nn of ‘the building 3 : ve ican | this the 
by a colonna 


— for 
7 


igh eultivation than 
pathway is through the centre: 3 3 part o of the 
tages and planted out, others oceupy conical- 
shaped stands; various ereepers are trained over-head 
— another; the diferent v —— of 

well man in 


PEN 
i is ventilated h by — are — e = ps 
ted bym 


st l cause many laterals to be produced, 
bat ef hese oe only should be allowed to grow at or 
ear the point of each shoot, with a view to a 
and to secure an 
sap. This actice is alwa 
cold localities particularly so, by 
e plant to be early directed to 
nd the formation of fruit 
allowed to 


important point is to allow no more to remain than 


Te- 
be “as — to fill up the portion of wall allotted to 


each tr 
FORCING DEPARTMENT. 
NERIES.—It is no uncommon 


P, but alsoto to future: © produce. 


e — — thers 
range of glass houses here, 1 principally to se for sing 
fruit in. The house devo 
culture of which Mr. — is — is oie 

of remark, * well for agra as pals abundan 
ero Muscats and Bla are 

gro e and this slate usually affo — o Grapes for table 

in the y The Peaches in the meaty house | o 

were par tly g gathered. _ Cherries, A priesta an — 


is entirely a —— to the cultivation ef the * 


K 
| fruit trees are growi 1 in the form 


‘kitchen 
of dwart —— by the epo of the —— — 
J. H., June 1. 


y 
e 3 2 an evil not only injurious to the 
— 

es ge 


the sorts | ten 


the morning, 
— vapour 
e night. To prevent 
back air should be left 

indy eren only 
recaution has been taken, there 
kanoet the: folia a of 22 is too 
te 0 n at the 
this is 


ordin 
bserved, 

. be — a inches; in 

wires of all t ein should be 
they: —— — lowered at ee, During 
of th u advan 
the — he as ihe — of the! leaves increase in 
length, and the obliquity of the sun’s rays decreases, 
it will be an advan lower i 
b 


Perh 
hardier Linde of > a tees, an * 
Their beauty and fragrance not only e them 
3 . t —— heds, ut render them 


408 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


[June 39, 


invaiuavle ior glasses ouyucts 1 pl p ings sof theim 
e taken off a bout this season they 3 strike as 


ks, but if han are set on a slight 


with weak collars should be earthed up betore they get 
& 


blown aside, and Carrots, Parsley, &c., should be 
thinned, as th 13 of such p “re greatly de- 
pends on the seyh o A aafe ually. This is 
the s an 1 ar he best use of 
| liquid manure, iy 7 ily spel 115 ag it to every plant 
which it is desirable to stimulate into very vigorous 
growth. Thi of course, particularly applies to those 
ops which are cultivat the sake of their roots, 
stems, or leaves, as it is the object in the cultivation of 
such plants, by exciti ng a luxuriant pai , to prevent 


State of the Weather near London, for the week ending June 28, 1849, 


llow tinge ; these 
np (oron u cone “ough ù the’ other part of te 3 is in 
End 


it will do them no good to remain in 
— 5 ine 3 of 
the best s fertilisation; large i- 
double ‘varieties will often give abundance of poll 
Messrs terstone, Kilgour,] Reid, Lightbody. 


0, 
and others, have: lone very much of late years in — 
y, and have 


KITCHEN GARDEN. 
_ Leeks should now be transplanted. The method “ 
en 


holes — plants should be made 
with a dibber 2 inches i in ose and 


laced in the most 


* 


itehen garden. 


crops 
133 Sprouts, Cabbage Ä jok winter ee $ 
well manured readths 


ane” ‘Soe , Endive. 
Ko., for winter, p Endive, P 3 co Cross, 
lato autu Kidney Peas, and other crops 


ardens. 


as observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiswick. 
ee ee aE 
uals 2 8 Moon’ BAROMETER. THERMOMETER. . l 
should now be thinned out or transplanted, choosing | zune. pei ; || Wind. || Rain 
moist weath r the operati 3 s much ti - Max, j Mi [a -- — 
as possible shou! w be devoted to king iday.. 22] 1 {| 30.165) soon || 78 | as | 63.0 || W, || 20 
tying plants, which, if not early attended to in this re- | Sadr. 3 || 20.904 | 20-800 || 39 | 48 | 67-3 || Naz. || 00 
spect, soon grow so much ou shape as to spoil their Monday 25 ‘ 29.979 | 29.907 79 3 | 68.0 W. 00 
appea' for the season. d hedges Rel.. D |] 29.969 | 29.943 || 78 | 47 | 625 || S.W. || -00 
and Privet should be clipped; by doing it now they | uu. 7 |} 30.076 | 29.992 || 78 | 43 |620 ow. ||. 
have time to make mature a second growth, which | Average 30.002 iF 29.924 || 80.0 | 49.3 | 64.6 || 0.00 
they will do e growing out of s shape, Watch = June 2 Sie ow a 8 ee, ioniad. 
different annuals as and mark — 2—Cioudless and very fine : igo? Aero clear and fine. 
ose which, from cha superior habit of growth, size of} Z a eran, aaa aude = 
fonie. or brillia y of colour, it is desirable to procure — 27—Cloudy ; very — aad fine at night. 
ed from. As cy Pelargoni s are a at A ean temperat ture of the week, 34 deg. above the a 
adapted for pl in es, attention should be Chiswick 3 last ‘enum pr the 
directed to their propagation ; and by commencing à — ending July 7, 1549. 
once, th or of a few plants will be iy to fur me 25 85 aa | Noor revailing Winds 
some of his beds, while those who already possess a] July. EE HE EE DaN Quantity ea] clei] isi 
quantity ought to = a splendid 3 next 3 AE | 258 | “= | Rained. ain. E E | a5 = los 
yg a FLOWER 50.6 | 618 9 0.80 in. |—| 4] 3| 1/4] 5| 4| 2 
CARNATIONS Pick yrn Continue to disbud, that — i 717 52.1 | 62.1 12 0.38 i| 2| 4}—1 af 5| 5 2 
is to say if the flowe wers are requi red of a lar e size they Del. 3 | et | sz] 1 | ozs |1321 ao} ala 
had bet The u * or crown bud Thurs. 5| 773 | 534 | 65-4 5 93 |z 1) 4) 1) a| 7] = 
rally produces the finest flower. Wate e e rom 7 76.5 | 527 | 64.6 9 0.45 131 4| 8! 4 E 
oosiv ning for the ap lication. Pipings ma: The highest temperature during the above period occurred on the Sth 
om b 5 i Paty if refully ma d 5 ate 1846 therm. 95 deg.; and the lowest on the Ist, 1837 therm. 37 deg. 
good pact plants, and are generally preferable N 
: i otices to Corresponden 
22471 ee foul m not gosir readily 5 3 e Pink, AsranAdus: A akg A will find gap practical “direction ari 
2 a 8 a the management of Asparagus tp. 35 r curren 
lings it will sometimes happen that some which are not] year’s oan -H W. Give your weak 1 ey and then 
very double have, < tigrene 5 od and desirable] good amen of lata crn Be med of the 15 
properties, and which , though to o thin for exhibition, 0 8 eee nt = © W 86 on for Nos . $o 
might still be an equisition . get pol or or 1848.. SEM Y. Wo have pia f the 
from to impregnate 2 s s with. ES: . There is no practical ma A ot, preventing h Beis from 
this vi — in bell glasse ecia the heart of large ones, 
e TERS 118 large, me N in which t ey arrange their co k as in the hive. ao ad 8 
formed 1 0 J p perfectly smooth on the margins, and the usual, however, for bees to breed in glasses, pied gst 
lacing beau efined ; and those of our readers happens, the brood should be 9 to hatch a wanton 
may sei inks of this deseription that oe cells — aeia rds filled bg = ney, rhe 
br ood and honey cells are readily recognised in Huber’s lea 
e en preserve them for the e e g hive; but, u eee, it often eee that both are con- 
allu HLIASs.—Some will no showing | tained in one leaf or comb. The taking away one of these is 
early buds; these should be removed, so that the "mi emer 2 comb fr Sad Sen ous operation tan the 5 
energi > wap 2 none ar-hive, or even placing an eke 
* of the pone t be unnec ssarily ta 5 — the timid apiarian, however, = 
Give 5 = ter in dry wea T, es blow a weer ort pots of ¢ obacco . 75 N e bese, © 
‘Wigs by s pots, some moss placed in them, In- | Crops: WRT. We really are oblig to the rule of 
verted on the W of the stakes. Ranuncu.uses.—T not giving an 8 —— legal subjects ; . — although relat- 
y 


T O. August is perhaps the best time 

them, ‘they eo consist 5 well ripened shoots 

of this year’s wood, and should be struck in silver saud. 

Place _— at first in a cold fra ame for five or six weeks an 
art them 


then s on a gentle botiom-heat. Layer hardy 
An mre 
CONSERVATIVE Wa B. comply with your request 


A To 
d be to — 4 fe e The 7 has been often 


woul 
illustrated in former volumes, ~ a ust beg to refer 
you. As to the border, ma t 3 fest ie ep, thoroughly 


rained. Cover the bottom with i Peh of pieces of brick, or 
fra — fill it nd turf 
if the latter is burnt so much the better. 


from — } 
Keep it loose, 2 
Drobans: R T P, One is dying, the other is ‘unhealthy, It is 
impossible to say what the 5 is; ya sh = ad be suspected 
t 8 roots have forced thei way in uncongenial 
—wet heavy clay? We have — no 8 If circum- 
5 — will N * it woni be desirable 18 dig down by 
and as certain the si 


the side — . nd * 
of the 

EFTS : Clio ¥ will preci some of our readers to inform him of the 
best 3 of destroying efts, which now infest his kite men 
and cellars, 


Exuisitions : Eboracensis e plants were shown entirely 
wrong, 5 ae. is a hardy shrub, ess Nerium 
splendens a greenhou Such mistakes ought to dis. 

q yg ee ag ee Winebiater or Royale Corn 

Horticultural Society, No shows will es bag there 
authority somewhere — put down dis he names a 

gardeners — always to be 5 if rii can be ascer- 


Fives: 4 2 C. Clay ap will draw very well, and if w 
will stand heat; but if 

. 

must be taken 


to 

Graves: JK. T ed, and that very badly; but 
they may y * — ‘the effect of sul hur on them, 
one il the — if it is applied early enough; that is 


— all the joints, and some precaution 
to secure cleaning them without pulling the 


Pheip oik tji PONICA: Anon, Its treatment is n 
from that of De pir — ast a pt 
INSECTS : JJ . Th ee g is bu 
every directi rit to the — by workers and hon Sea 
females of the minute den omestic ant (Myrmica domestica) ; 
en oo the best modes of deetuylng it by thousa: ands is to put t 
1 bits of liver into phials and lay them bes its tracks, 
plunging m phial into hot water when bey insect s ha ave con- 
gregated on the flesh, W.— T C. The bla 


urrowed into in 


citor is the only person whose opinion | 


made | 
hey are broken it is difficult to repair l 


illustrate 
with a i einion of ie 
portions ł pint of lime, 


ł our 
of se W.—M VK. Mix 


ture, "and the joints o 
burn it. Fill all | crevices 


eas or bugs.— 


having, while bo 
and midrib of a 
= 


ton iensis, 


thurn. L Le e 
The acorns belon 


Whi, 
Diervilla. 


acquainted wi y pa l of 
and Deutzias, they merely require 10 Sa back; 
comes from Ilva (Elba), where the species { 
—Devonian. 1, Fernet ucronata ; 2, Anagaltis 
H RJ. Astrantia major; with ii, nehusa italica; as ti 
it is not 8 ‘without leaves,—R B. T The Tinas 
Gra 


Potato 
yet s wei 


the Isle of Wight, b bat it 
All that you 

STRAWBERRIES : 
neither doe 


a 
s goo 7 — 
of youn g plants s 


— 


INE LEAVES: Magistrate. 


black 


beds. 


d by 


* — on 
— fa you © 


tomological articles, 
sulphur, and w 


in the pl Pe = 
wel 


i 
he flov 


18 


. Anthyllis 


Prt rache 
Vala — Oe 


and — $ T sort — 
r dis 


This 


easons succe: 


ly.$ 
The price of this work is pet to 3s, bd. (post 
free), to be had at the Office of this Paper, or of any book. 


The small pale green excrescences 
on their rien sides will not harm them, It results from 


Pata t 

0 k 

er-stalk 1 0 8 
th were very young, grown 


1 
85 and = to ‘the class g 


o Quer e lane 


od 
at the office of this Paper, 


“may be had fi 


equire them.t—Anon. Plant om 
m 9 e kar season, and obtain a fresh stock from 
abies success in 1 2 the latter tha 


to the face of thy 


a bella, 2 7 


cus Ilex; we are are 0 


enlarged; by 


m 


keeping them 


aa ge. „ 


r lar, 


Carogonanras : 
ize goo 
— rked 
with af 
tive, col 
line bad. 
shape 
preity a 


with brown; 


le, — als marbled with a fi 
shaded purp reg y tine ood, 
26, pal 
e spots 
pale 


and o 
me pasta bet . —5 
gular-shaped dark 9 
size rather = 


3 mson ; 
urple centr 
out — indented. n 


ee it no 
1 star ME A very — 


in culti 


Patancomtas Cant 
ith s 


argin goo 
N Giles, Some Pelargon 
very distinct ree fow 


ofa 8 
both should > encouraged, as — . ah other hurtful 
es. aa 


The ee history an 
. — 
i bat Tan produced f froma a ä 


a sag deposit its 

8 rm or larva of 

segetis, a — No 2 is the large black M Millepede or 

| Julus, roiz The climbers are infested with the | 
bug, a of Coccidæ, which we intend shortly to 


though in other vari 
of different ge ‘oon 
rs sent very z“ 


the edge. 
rather ene in 
Perunia: J IW. Colour 
bby.* 
RUODODENDEONS : $ 


H C. 
w in cultiva — 2 E S H. 


8 but what ar 
these points much of its 
plants produce larger he 


few irregular yellow — hee 
lours 3 4, — d . — self; 


yrka 

and — 
are under-sized. 
been mispla 


å, pat not sufioionii d 


may have 


arge, with g 


d bro 
jolet, the outer ones ‘i orange scarlet; 
1 


vile crimson 
d, outline tolerable, oe flat. 2, yellow, 
h sha outline bad, 3, crimson, 


ape al 


ape, and o 


5 


— kin 
on.“ 
Upper 2 
d dar 


— 
tinet; 


H. a im inchs 


Meet H. It td 


crimson — 


3 
on the same 
ther coarse an 


t not 


e al 3 N 


ad petals; the 


1 it is too 


rosy rin ae 


1 7 


and a nee 


is 


T AOA ̃̃/Rwq ? 


i 


j 


; Steam-e 
* i st of the additional labour 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


409 


1 SOCIETY 


NORWICH: 1849. 


cence ot 
yY, Jur. Last day of receiving Implements, 
1 to be bleed in th omplement be and ar- 
J nave inspec 

e Stewards hector’ as: te in the Sh Show Yard from 
ill Four in the Aftern 
jeux 18.—The Im plement Yara open to the 
in the Morning till Six in the Evening ; ad- 


ae 


in the 
DNESDAY, 
from Eight 
to ins 8 
after all 


0 


judges 


E 
Ẹ 
3 


a 
n, at the Spe Wouters 


$ 


K 


yi 
8 
fee 
35 
as 
p 


Fin ssi Depar artmen of the Society 
sa Notice will be posted up over such grobem pon 
have completed their awards. 
e Rev. Edwin ‘Sidney, M. A., to deli- 
“On e E ara ‘Fungi o of 
e afternoon, Pro- 


Ra 
5 


each lecture, 
w’s Hall, at 


e Cattle and Implement Yards 
a fa on. Six poeta in the Morning ai till ae wo in 
z admission 2s. 6d, ; and fro m Two till Six 


r the Society in St. Andrew's Hall, at Four 
t half- past Three. 

FRIDAY, 2 20. 1. General Meeting of the Members in the 

Guildhall at Ten o’clock, in the forenoon, 


The Cattle and Implement Show Yards are situate, 2 the Old 
— 1 — = gus mile South-West of Nor w: the 


ME 
R, Mr. — Mr. STO 
oron LLONER, Hoh. Capt. 


Cattle—Mr. 

Inplements—Mr, 1 gi — 
UDLE 
ene 18 
Sale of Tickets Mr. HENRY WILSON. 
Receipts and Admission to Show Yards—Mr. RAYMOND BARKER, 
— pai Dinners—Hon, 3 —.— 3 * 5 
Arrangement of Show—Mr. Br H GIB 
By Order of the Council, JAMES Rosson, 8 

London, June 5, 1849. 


y the Regulatio 

— adoitied into the apo Tarde. < or ae places in 

the temporary occupation of the Society during the Mening, 
shall be subject to the ee; Orders, and Regulations of the 


N.B.—Sale of Tickets wi the “phe Dinner, to Members of oe 
Society, at the Guildhall, from Tw 


e . 
each, for Wednesday hr yal * Members of Council and Go- 
vernors, at — Boca Wednesday the 18th of July, 
between the f Twel vi nd Four. 


rs being admitted by "Tickets, i tol be pur- : 


u the labou 


there are instances enough to prove that so far from, 

diminishing it below the amount of * small expen 

to be i our e of 
ntl 


5 2 


rm 
doubled during the period of these eke e 
ofitably effected we t for the acknow: 
ledged greater cheapness rot the steam-power 8 
a s E grea za results. 
eeg o such entire reno- 


eshing machines for 
nished a involves a saving which 
he case af a a man energetic 

a step, is not likely to His idle in hale a m 
. roe ugh seats tion yi the land—a pare . 
— more 
the 
other in 


m that 


those products, 
ir — Ú nd thei 
is to give i . scope for the 
our. This is a real chain of cause an 
it is worthy of 1 confidence than it i tse! 
recel wal Steam-po nd machinery having 
cheapened cotton 5 have La ee together a 
Nantmor and a Glasgow of labourers 5 meet the | s 
enormously increase et demand for thes - 
: A what is true of dress is tru 
indivi 


$ 
a 55 result of that 


k for bette ; 
ct grounds on which to 


increas e the labour of its actur here i 
ried labour employed in a the erty ‘than in the 
iate products of agri ca gee shilling’s 
e labour than 
and while 
will meet the 


h of beef or bacon Pie ig bee 
a shilling’s worth of Carr r Potatoes 


d f etter quality. 
* cy of b e cheapness, give occasion for 
the larger labour bills of an increased manufacture. 


Srverat parties having expressed a wish t 
detailed account of the 
the Stock and Crop on the 
mentioned at page 24 of 


F AUCHNESS 


x AGRICULTURAL AND ROCK SALT, apply 
1 Salt Merchant, No. 10 Wharf, City- 


de Agricultural Gazette. 
? SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 

R THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
e 
July 13: H e = Peterborough. 


Pn Tay” 
rA — — 
Fame Cuuzs.—J 


Bo that. 


* 


London Farmers’ Club have again refused to 
Sines forthe T OF MACHINERY IN Acri- 
r the advan the farm labou 
EE once Dale. engaged inir attention, 
esting discussion upon it has agai 
aken Stace in their rooms. It terminated in 
Pig of resolution, very similar to that 
Previous y 


Se-pow 
though they. ‘have ni ae to | Ta 
uch introduction 


farmi 
at. g arming, arm or 
hed with litte -energy is ta 
he] be ubsoil 8 limed, and r e on 
i manured and o 5 t 
> are erected for their n security or consump- 
ngine is 1 
ome 
pal diminishes a cost oun, would have 
these im improvements unprofitable ; 


e | drainage, was a 


t aj 
is | farm naiai. Often when en riding over the farms 
nd — pa 


extra 
| si e nzas, Tre 
remember ! 
but | 


Mee High Paging, it is here subjoined, 


1350 — — of Oste at 28. 6d. A 
1980 bushels of Wheat, at 66. 
£762 15 0| 

EN Crops AND GRASS, 
378 tons at 40s. 2 
Differe ence o ofp 


Produce of 
150 sheep, oe 125 each, for winter 
feeding. ee 5 
. r ann. 
3 young horses, at 5l. eac y pe! 1,756 0 0 6% 
£2,518 15 0 0 


In reference to questions put regarding any pecu- 
liar advan the farm of Auchness, 
fit 


following information, e take from 
Agricultural Journal.” 
Port 


Logan is a small fishing — with a 
ee . 120 ma 


from em e 
n 


which rm et shar a 
i m the coast in 


ilway a 
lord’s expenditure = improvem ents, other than 
007., laid out in the erection 


and nent of his buildings.” 


FARM ACCOUNTS. 
I am glad to find that whilst on the one hand the 
ical men are fully awake to 


ts, and to 


haps, is 


modern improvers, a 
of fathom-deep drains, peck 


alterations, we repeat, 9 fogni could not Per 
e Pro 


attle— vm 3 additions 
natural conse- af 


Ma 
en by the |f; 
of the resolu- 

f 


nd we have thus dis 
expect 15 * ike — — the c an of 7 we char 
a 


8 
Annual ae rags Proises of 
Far 


ne 
Mr. Cato" ee e on fate 


rnished the | tw 
pared 10 


by — yards, het 
ree balance £ 


the im importance | # 
to the sere union | 


es Small Trade 
10d. 


useless to the many who farm for a living, and not for 
mere show. e heim ag. errors must be based 
jon ey Sho he who, by bis mee al i in- 
uity and careless pater a to fill instead of to 

em apiy t the purse. He is the mentor for me. His ex- 
ments may be safely followed, because they lead to 
better than 

mere vain glory. e 


te remote for low prices, but o 
adequate savas 


n 
r Ee stocking and cul 
silly wor 
Whys Fete man having enough, and not more 
than enough b take 100 Mp . at 200? Be the 
times ever s half so well as he 


to 

quate capita tal? Whilst 

(and 5 8 myself of this class), as not too 

sum k on 

wales y 

perhaps a wba the money : making 
N 1 peer ue each of the fo loving 8 siz a 


an 
eh on 


£1000 


Nay, ins instanc nces = have occurred of advent bern ‘of more 
heir capital over 
ult? Much 
ing ma dress 
e it over five acr In both 
these cases my returns would probably correspond with 
the yor 4 whether of money or muck. In other words, 
400 a the starving system would yield but pom 
if my, 3 than 100 acres well fed and made t 
of. 


obse eee are prelimin ary to the ob- 
ect of this which is intended 85 exhibit tand en- 
force the eee os a arose system 
2 t especiall system as will show ata pow 
he balance at the end ofeach year of or loss on 
mit that to look rad a state- 


surely in 
certain the —— of F Jossy p pre 
a ruinous Co: 
to look nt one’s own 7 5 how much greater 
be to ex to others? This, indeed, amply ex- 
p Bs arais tho soareity of athe entie statements 
of farm accounts. farmers are but sorry ac- 
i = pl eg will ll may want the 
-= those who have the power 
t their private affairs to public 
Whenever, To an instance doeg 
arnished statement of farm 
me attention ; for, 
— the — on which side it may, it must do good, 
either by inciting to imitation by its excellence, or 
2 i its inefficiency. 
I eee wrt 


loug 5 and 
ak Of 
— 9 
5 i in the order in which they w 
‘ATEMENT year]; average out-goings and in- 
ken 60. the yearly ar it poari them 3 
826, to Michaelmas 1837. er at Michaelmas 1825. 
Obr. oo 


ek — gy 15s. 5d. ; Sheep, 2531. 1s. 80. oe 
Cow 4 cm 5l. 2s. 5d. 5 Pigs, ll, 88. 2d. s 


Hay, — and Straw ditto 5 
j orde, RS, and 85 n ditto 
Maii 


re ditt oes 
Tithes, 6 511. 125 10d. ; Poor-rates, 981. 113. 1 cig R 
Chureh-rates, It, Ms. 10d. 5 ‘Surveyor's hd Ba 8 
Insur ne 
— — (ne ew) ons 
3 = land, less 1001, as landlord... 


Thate! 
d Miller 
Sale — hives an 1102 is. Ba. 


= Dew 
| Wheelwright, 151. ise 5d. ; c 
. r and Sundries, 


one 


os 
ee 


* 
ro 
—— — 
© m O 
— 
> 


6 16 


27%. 168. 


! for unless ‘uch improve- 


ing of sodani” 
ments will stand the £ s. d. test, they are 


ore 


Balance for Rent 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


and necessa 


v * Income, The farm so full of game, that reckoning the damage i 
& d. — only oomb an 2 re of Wneat, east and Oats, the continuous! ad ‘oka 3 
Yu. 1 Dr = 2 bushels Wheat sold (II years’ average average loss would be 2 per acre at then prices, on y ale what 
ce, 78s, 5d. 571 18 6 | the lands under those emia Tu _— also . inju jared. The | poison, More especially as 
Oc, 2 b. 38 bashels Barley sold (a average price, 16s.) 370 8 10 farm in a bad state, from want of draining and ditching. | subject, there can be given no 
Beans, 161. 3s. Td. ; Peas, 141 183, d. 2 Labour 2s, 6d. to 3s. a day. Seed Wheat 2 averaged 558..| of the imperfection of the 
1 — 4181, 15. 1 Sheep “ditto, per coomb, Barley 35s., and Clover 84s. a bushel. are and dt . -System 
3171. 1 735 19 10 — bought at this farm auction Michaelmas 1812 — t 750. porone ti an the effect produced 
i ia, A. 44. in operation, even i 
——— tek soi » 231. Tos, Ba. j Pigs, 00, 10 Qe. 4d. we — k (1) Whe — — s, blacksmith’s, carpenter’s, harness, coals, and yres — — timber 
H old g | malt, meat, and insurance. : z 
Milk. Bu , Butter, Fowls, and Eggs — : 6| (2) Rent the ast two yearswas 5251., or 338. n-acre, but knows that from imperfect 
Stones, 2. 18s. 2d. ; ‘Sundries, 5 is, 8 16 2 afterwards reduced by valuation to 4501, or * 28s, 10d. and lathing of roofs. 
Sian I. 6s. 4 Wood, 2. 83.1 3 10 5 an . o rottenne 
Allowance for keep of extra — horse 40 0 0 INcomE. t na: ‘re rr action of the i 
3 eam. much is this the case, that itis — 
02 3 2 growth, £ s. d. thing, in the course o age — 
Deduct 10 per cent, interest of capital, 350 6 c. 3b. 2 ples, = . pema of Wheat (7 pe 5 ecessary to re- roof a b ome tint for it toky l 
out of which tenant’s — — average, orth pub j employed. Now, thi 
family expenses are to be „ 350 0 080. 1 — = bushėls of Barley n years! average, pee 9 “his action nti 2 
7 * . 44d. per coomb) 281 6 to carry off the i ure want of 3 
Æ Beans 36. 18 Peas 11, ST TR aoe ‘the 
No, II.— STATEMENT of the yearly average out-goings and in- eans 8. 94. eas 75. 48 6 
come of a Farm for the onan II years. from Michaelmas| ‘Potatoes 241, 55. d., seeds 171. 55 Sa. 2 “iT degree; to the ales 
1837 to Michaelmas Dairy, fowls, Mc. . 64 2 2 | Clweumstanees, that. 
Ger oon. £ s. d. en — 32 rands k 18 19 1 are alarmingly on t 
Out-goings as N MA; . .. 1882 0 5 ae e be a 4 
— — k 222 7 6 Grazing lens) ‘account : . 138 lead others to contribute thei 
— Sheep d = 138 important to the 
$ £2104 711 ie em „ 40 12 submit what has 
i INCOME. Horses ii 18 TDs tion. The proble 
I years 6 we, at least 
gro „di 1508 0 5 oe 
"Bc. 0 b. 3 = 32} 8 Wheat sold (11 years’ Balance 2 * =. 7 years, or ned for cattle at present 
s 22 . prea on a CS Sat 18 2 108. 6d, per . 105 175 12 10 introduce a syst 
8. 
0c, yt ma 405 ushels Barley 80 (average gage PEE FET, 3 quantity of wholesome 
undry other receipts, as per No. I. 338 4 8 The above statement ineludes da e = om shall 
2504 7 11 and maintenance of the tenant pi his fa ami a then whole — 8 or the investi 
Deduet y ze, ge interest — —.— p 1 being so inter woven with the other charge on the acquainta nnr 
cut of which tena sie ping farm as scarcely to be separable therefrom, Nor is H 
mily expenses are to aid *. % 9 0 there is anything unfair in this; the servants are em e ove * ppr pe 
2104 Ployed on the farm, and mus paid by its produce; what 1 ha oa 10 meena 
8 8 of the yearly average ent gene and ti their 1 refore, is a legitimate item in the add a suggestion or aadi A v ‘tusk ik sy a y 
1826 to Michaclaras 1018. 8 accou lam ret. counts like the above nee ae . 1 be wald i 


4 £ s. d. may be ae at. dicating defective management 
Out-goings, as asiper Nos, L. ia . 1743 2 0 that the 30 usb ys eat ough — be 40, f ubjeet of my experime * 
Balance » 157 13 7 the cattle and sheep .aceounts nearly doubled; and, in 3 lo ng SAS 28 the height of the side walls being 
£1900 15 7 Short, every item of fa e very considerably, ee tiles. Tf atic’? on pee 
X Income. increa do not preten assert that the receipts 1 i a f ouad Ah niato ofn * 
OY gon from each and all of these several sources have reached Pal tm Pees a ‘ood falling, which 
70 40 Opks, = 31 — Wheat sold (22 „ s. d. their maximum; but I do an terial 5 rotten by the ‘condensed breath of the cattle 
j years i : ’ ty Material in continua rat it. I first raised 
—— price, 293. 3d. 652 8 4| crease in the produce of such land, will require a cor- i the side 
9c, 3 b. 1 ke. = 39} pene, Barley “sold (average respon crease of capital, and ‘wher thes walls 2 feet. At the head af each animal, I placed ay 
price, 16s. 64d. 401 17 0 times, is Such to F 4 Oh 1 a í air slit 2 ine deep, with 1 foot of horizontal leren 
Sundry perl 3 per Nos. I. and II. 1221 1221 10 3 for hich — —— — eae tie Hi externally, and widening till internally it had a hö. l 
i=] ? > * 2 
2275 15 7 7 interest to uphold the system. He cannot do Gtherwise manh: “Tega: Ot ta atten: Extern ly, “this slit wa 
P Si oc goa ping amà —— than assist in a work obvio —— about 8 feet from the ground, and it rose pg 
ofw ou epin mil 2 : insi * k ‘ 
expenses are to be paid 5 8 4 375 0 0 ad ntage.” ith deference, this ut sorry advice til — —— 1 aed ile 8 hed 
; sate a t the landlord has the means (the pro- ergin 15 ee een 5 “ih Mae 
15 7 bili . j 
In Nos. II. and III. I have not thought 5 i saad ie Z, oe 525 ze ek Saini e plast r from end to end of the byre. The well imow 
. TE ms of * , but himself o ose eans ? At all — — the tten ipropeniy-ofheatod.air:to eee 
remo to refer to No. I. for the different heads, which |, egeta serious consideration, Every pound b d cold air to descend, suffieiently for both my 
rett same in name, though not in must in 1 ‘Sd 8 7 3 asoning and adopting this process, and for its effets 
— in each of the three statements. The grand hae o utter nt 8 . te 5 he gradual rise of the l ai gh the slit fr 
chad Pfr 5 3 th to believe are correct. One |farihing. It is so much added to the rent, scat of Geet ‘ — —— — son — — ene 
with these accounts cannot but to the risk, of 1 . ated air passing from the animals 
attract tlie atten tion of all practical Beem and that is | capi i as : Sane einen Pest 3 to petore, it should strike Sige: roof, and prevent it en 
left for rent. 1 r 'p ying “al = which ‘is } trate this in a familiar manner: I have a given capital, -whieh it -eontained, By the ' 
— — no yo that nis farm would | sq 20004, which I-fancy I can employ to Pi — slit being gradually x widened, Taimed at 3 
rl i tenmi -an 100 acres of land; air over S poss 
surely “mat be ‘suppose that so marketable a com- acre to wt cam 1 eee g 1 * 201. an introducing too e cold 5 ving the most de | 
— p bene. or, calling to mind . hundred acres, with a capital of 1000 % e ote war etna 8 
+ toon or an acre only; but H iri ‘i k : 
1 .. . tothe ge thea 
Wes a pro act upon 3 xim, 5 and if stock and crop amount to 20“. an “acre why Whether I L 
give, or agree to rhe rent, not exactly erp upon should not his? Simply because my stock is al amy 5 lage K ile — pratend to sa that 
8 — t, but pen ‘that of our fellow com iora an and one-half of his belongs to some 1 he be n most —— ot ful; =n The ai tame 
ors ; use, i we do not give the as run in debt for it; and he has this additional 10002, — > 
„Smith, or Robinson” will, Well, the farm is | Principal and interest, anging over him to the end of — oo — 
hired ; and, for a time at least, is paid, on the bis term. The f what has been here said is this: ee a palpable 2 — of the — a 
5 ed upon; but how? Not out of the real, Rents are higher than figures will justify; for if paid in — em, ‘the -weod df ‘the roù 
2 of the concern, some hocus, full, they are paid out 3 The 3 entioned, gives way soon in all 
pocus, not exactly comprehensi ourselves, and of high farming is well; bue iei ai thisunoment, as clean, white, 
ly incomprehensible to every ide. It is Plies an adequate sil at: ‘own. ee day in which it was put up ‘two'years 
more nor less than out of capital—here TO recommend increa fesur amn b i * 2 ee hens the 
a ams P — there a little; till, run, we eee and still binn inishing m eans, appears little an apparent exception. If a pe 
: Pes Mo cruelty, Much on a par with an inji itoa draw. to the 
And . little makes » i ‘go the “eas lies: space between the 
Sato en ee Seen e ‘hole in the |i# — — swallow; the modus nou- | that d strike the roof and the 
dur Pocket, through which has oozed a. to how he is to eome tee them being — in evidently keel thus poms 
' wand, i back-ground. Still the system of ‘high farming ó 1 sapa e us ae 
landlord! judiciously begun, and carefully ‘persisted in, will in that spot only. el eae 
who always time tell tale; and, as water poured down -a 4 pump —.— — pee 
is soon con- rai ithe to submit a remedial plan, on 
* « equally buted freely, Jet with dieratios on a — wpe Ep myself, and which has been tested 
predecessor, and 1 “ profit to the-dist iba Bat thisi oh factor on the estate of Ballochmyle 
y 25s. an a time not the mere whim isimp in model of the p. 
er for a year or two and then Ad eee yen fit Highland Society’s Agricultural £ 
ng is no great catch. of — „ perhaps as ill rene aa 1 mischievo n August last ees: Bogte 
of a ‘as opposite extreme’; but a regul — O ¿possess dis, that it is applicable 
me county of Norfolk . of good husbandry, implying a Liberal, a 8 ings, whether slated or tiled, 
tish loam and gravèl; e may be called a — conma 8 os at | be very inconsiderable. The 
f mp iming the amount invested 7 7 S Ways | consists of: — Ist. In the 
and income ofa duality of the soil; so that, barri i wae as the most eco 
lani pasture, and 62 oF other uncontrollable causes, the returns may be | te ating By 
—— ae upon with tolerable i we 2 that fro outer edge of the wall, 
the first to to the last year of a long lease inch between The 
— 3 a E a ere, kres ourrent of air. 
: m “4 3 5 ‘ON THE VENTILATION | OF STABLES, t 
2 opaa a late meeting of the Highland ‘Society Mr, Neil —— 
1 7 6 Ballingal „Farmer, Seggie, — *vean read the apertures are n 
- #1 12 9 following paper on this ‘subject :—The of in the case of slate rata, 
„ ; both as — — : 
m 8 7) that nothing has great „ proves the second row: 
175 0 0 tn the treo ha wc i be removed for the space of about 
21781 14 1 — — — ordinarily end. This kee board 


is naturally ' slates 


— 12 pte aes, naa 
— es 3 with a a ‘condenser’ Tor 
Rinia the vessel, having free 


‘the seams of the slates. 


In 
heads to the gable er "ar a 


case of a ile roof. 
f the —.— ip = plaste r 
psi 


lath, a will 
the nal and wh 


d w 


lath a ter 
dere i is thus provided a sufficient aperture 
escape of the heate 
fx be unnecessary to to aay one word of the great 
vides, be it noticed, two 


iribation to the improvement o 
— has hitherto been an much n 


Home Corresponde enc 
d to — one of the 


engine consumed m 


r of an ine ch 


` 2 
read the Polytechnic ee! of Liverpool by, o 
I. E. Woods, C. E., from which I learnt that, pre- 
vious to 1836, all the locomotives of the Liverpool and, 

ide valves with — a e of an 
dh lap aud ‘the consumption of eoke for a train was 
la per miile ; 3 Since then the lap has a 5 
ú increased s of fue 

en every — ne belonging 
company had an inch lap given to the valves, — 
put an inch o t the end o 


flour mills in 
„there was one of Mr. Re 
Working wit} Steam. engines, of only 10 inch cylinder, |. 
i pressure of 38 Ibs. on the square 4 


Mr. Beale’s en 


— ‘ie ‘to = — 


gere but from r travelled about in my writing- 
h d off; enough remains to be 2 and ro vineing. 


curious 
E 


that h 
at 148. m 
; ‘the fault I found ela to 


reat, 4 As al 

the pei al bg and due things, a are better understood 
and a 1 ow i 

r 3 i ien for page| ricks ds 


1 ae 


. ents of hus 
f| has bi 


of the society at O 


1 


mans e ued, and giving as much lap |i 


e had 
slide ee ie he wher that |g 
e 

; close of the last war, pri rices w. 
a 


X height. A chan not su buit gradually. 

: ig mge came on A 

Wheat fell from 120s. = quarter, to Sy Robert Pee s, 
Yet 


pri 
states. 
e een were va to lower tinei rents, the decline will n 
in th — 
in for 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


through the pipes of the condenser. There were 62 
we pipes, 64 inches lag, and 1} inch diameter, open 
ends, — a steam- tight circular sheet- iron 
— and ir ead of the steam puffing away into | 0 
— hither and fully condensed by 


ack into the boiler r by a pump with 
6-inch stroke, and thus 
h 


the 

boilers, e 

inċhes diam 
our, and o 30-horse | bable he may, 


t 
examined the is an 


rst mau, 80 
Poor 


cylinder, it is then e man i „it 
labour, and att 
s la 


after which the stenm is condensed in the usual manner. 
the 8 8. Of coal 


tiveness of 


supply the pipes of the condenser, it would be more 
suitable for the farmer; but it should have large ports u 


c 
The middle 
cer be of the same length but double the ine l of m 


vor as much as r 


tation . t 


a 


athered with an e 


being 
— 


2 —7 and 


case, part has been ru 
show this curious sport of the Wheat, [It is a very 


ase. 
h Aki ona —Mr. Arthur Young, in his 
e Farmer s Gdlandar, spubtiahed i in 1804, — 5 . 232 J 
t suppose any person 3 no o the 
nes, "en 
ê 


cut into two 
by horses (he says four), as each rick is wanted, ens a mee sta of 


of Agriculture,” vol, xxxiii, way 


uch cheaper now than 
wheels and rale instead of his 
nee of the practical applica- one o 
4 sheer ye and, apparently, 
very u and convenient suggestion ? T. F. va 
ieie with Science. —Of al ifthe ivetka of science, |’ 
there is perhaps none greater than what as been 
displayed in t 
ur mechanical contrivances were for a long time con- 
fined to our manufacturing operations. The Royal 
Agricultural Soeiety gave a new impulse to economis- 
ing the labours of the farm, ‘by ves prizes for ee Mr. 
band incen s held out in a g 
e reverse of a fail — e mne 
xford, there were only abou mple- 
ments shown; on the last at Vork, 1500. The spirit of 


o,you know of any in 


een 


from 

in every 
e — 
land 
— bed, sell — 


now zone 
department of ‘farm 
have been given for the tim 


e — a 


In the 
l ‘kingdom, and i tland, agri- o0 
culture may have —— a higher — than aes i 
us. In the more northern districts cannot 
í he uce from land — Á be a a, | 
nt amount o 


* 


ings 
of a — i 
rei should not fg 0 about the 2 Ch 
an extra- l 
— 


ant, 80 
aer be held out. 


what ma 


naea 
o been expected’? On the sever since, a 
as well off now as they and wou 


They set their wi 
improving the If from the fall of sible 


me ame ends. fas ape > 
re 


woe . 
ingress and 


— (8 the boat went along) to go 


a politi ussion on fe ee ay 
— iating cire 

| Ba — ko ot uso — mot expedients, by whieh the rah it s 

evils beard dread some may be avoided. Firs 

2 Da by ei . Let those who,|of proving i 


of coals per | farmer will never 


lent man, it cone 
most noble, and it may 


the implements 
facilitate farming — 


he forward movement of th 
with the ever reverting triennial fallow, is 
li 


att aren — w 
— to multiply as the Cou 


will suffice. The great man alluded to, w 
y be Juir ealled ver wt go of ‘tillage, raised 


Mechi —.— a sew plants 


arden, 
yield 140 bushels The common average 


in rich hall-bur 


make gains. is very p 
in the early part, — to a 15 but Fus 


may 
ention, he wi 
arger ‘produce o 
The ae ingenuity, and éffee. 
the ‘prese 


n rise higher le, and out of 
plements exhibited * ork, a 
ill enable a judicious eultivator to 


— is not to be taken 
n this is is d — as 
Lien in — a bad crop of any kind 
ood one. If the land is onee made 


dere ae eren, is no great — in keeping 
shed their 


the weeds to grow, to 
-Grass does, When it ‘is 
the plough, that 


pulverisation 


What would agi — 


have sage $ it he had all thie — antages we possess 1 If 


e 8 n asit probably was, he — 
roved ones, if he had 


which at the same rate 


otions of . capacity of soils? 

ive—I have 80 plots with the 

org first was sohn on the 9th 
nt sandy ‘loam, with a 

coal in it ; . rotted manure was put 


to the M. lu 

it would not readily give it u 

ious of the space it occupy 
prevents the grow wth of every d 

being an ee of land, I have no means 

excellence on a larg can 


412 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


~~ a4 


therefore only recommend it to those who have 


“King's Cliff, June 25, 1849. 


se — th bst 0 
. aa . am certain they will not repent . | here is not the eo cont 15 ‘the fibrous wee | E 
plan oth Souta ar tissue most clearly in- 
ai ‘that it is no fungus, oF of the 
Br e Daini am now giving bruised Oats to my iodi nth Tt qui certain 1 
nature of the 8 like: bodies which a nes. 
b 2 t be sufficient to give tham the s a 888 It is e without an pp ‘of inspecting the WN 
m ure Q E br ised as heretofore of whole ats; in situ, to say to what phen gamous plant it is attributable ; 
the weight is between one-third and one-fourth less. | but I a “objec yo t 5 eing the e fibre of Mao gold 
. k dt Wurzel, thou re eet-root from my garden ex- 
When moderately : but not ~ ys * f hol hibits rather Sanilac than nn tissue. The. one, 
ive them 3 feeds per diem, o 8. each feed o ole ho iver 5 oe t : modification of the other, and the fib 
ats. now heap the measure a little, and it gives | gro ing water may be e — ebted to neo om 


better on 


man 

dung sios . none 

there t this t 18 ck and even crop of Oats, 

coming = the atta ig sac along the row 

‘001s. — Rape 2 opened by: og goai 
Mr. Apei 


both , hortioulturaliy an a agriculturally 
m 


the excellent one of — È t of has 
achieved nearly all required of tha pe = 
impie negi.. Still Seay cs alt . by re 

of th ving an even and polished subsoil, beneath 
the lag dge, instead of a broken and porous one. 
And they have this further n that toes only 


hoe the ey between the 


very admirably ag paid a very considera 
untouched. Now I have contrived, and had 


ry purpose, 
esigned (I mean on flat work), and which, hesides, does 
away T with the disadvan 


re- 
ki fad fioo carrying the sal 9 with — and stones 


— the winter a spri weed may 
both betwee d alon gf hy drills. À ne x 
hardly : 1 that this — stirring of the surface is 
of great op. you have an 
implement palea ing ‘aes = Se purposes. Ist. 
y re-inserting the single tines, a corn and swathe 
rake. 2nd. Arakehoe. 3rd. A very excellent, I may 
ave another descri arinin 
rve 


Frederick Phillips, Hall 2 pita Prac 0 


> 


Sorteties, 
ROYAL soe arson SOCIETY OF E 
_A WEEKL as held at 


rowne, Mr. French Burke, 
"Mr. Burton, Colonel Challoner. 
i Es Mr. — 1 


5 
— 
E. 


. E. shops by th 


unn ma 

slight “difference. I; received, not long: since, a somewhat similar 

g pip pes in South 

Wales. It came from Mr. Dillwyn Llewellyn, and a substance 

identical with the last from Mr. Moggridge, of Swansea. In 

both cases it was clearly the er = of some phenogam 
. had found its way into the 

e Council ordered their hints é Pos oe M. J. 

Berkeley for the favour of this e e 

Mr. Keene transmitted a ee ee of the 

the open oman on the 

n St. James’s e 


throu 


land.—Mr. ney, M. Pa reported 

favourably of their trials of the "Forty- day Maize is 
country. 

LANSHARD stated to the Council the successful 

result of 1 


ing machines (on whi ch 
ected that Mr. Garrett should be re- 
quested to repay. 
The Council then adjourned (it being understood that 
the next N A Cou ncil would be held on 475 10th = 
and a Special Coun 
1. = ay i probable that 


ld 
quence of the holding of 8 r Dugi ut 


soil the e county, on that day). 
e 


F Fast Clubs. 

Loxpox, June 4: The uses of Machinery as ny on 
> agrioulturo, sae the — es which would follow 
eral adoption.—Mr. James Tomas 

of ‘Lidlington Parks Bedfordshire, s p 
ertion and eco no nterprising 
n 
ch m e ex- 
—— Eve octor 
a prescribed for 


given these nns 


ts of almost every e 


oduc 
s e ingenuity of their machi , and he ch 
„Mr. Parkin 5 f. Sow ell, ig pom (roei. power of steam as applied to i 5 ontinuous is this 
Boson Mr. vi illiers "Shelley, Mr. S M.P., thirst for vement in this essential point, that every day 
F. et rare ae laney, leads to som enc lapel alee gop by which manual labour is saved 
P. 8 Mr „ Tweed, 5 as the article produced at a yet lower ate, So far let s 
alker, rofessor Wa; 2 Henry Wilson, ana iis, hether we cannot e my ett them 1 enuity and eco- 
G. Wood. 2% — nomy. Ther — skill which the — sae are ha rawn forth 
oe fo : wing new members were elected : source of 5 and ele plemente, must keen e | no 
Ives, Perdi iam, Peckfield, Ferrybridge, Yo — nessed it. The stubborn clay receives the tilth Turnip 1 å 
Jones ane St. Catherine’s House, Norwich under the pe ive : rosskill’s roller; «aa 1 
— dre jaa ehby, Bart, Hall, Fakenham, Norf. | wild sands of Norfolk and sag heath find t ‘ pea 
— P — 1 8 2 puler $ stope — es influence of the manure son — 
g orse. e scie 
— — Sane — ing E Hall i Hole i us is sti | ma akin king rapid strides ; we no longer i hee in th the 1 
y, 8 oo -road, Blac! 1 Itivat e ‘wasteful, and laborious mode 
Roper, Samuel, Croxton, Thetfor of separating the corn mom traw by the use of the flail hata aro 9 
orth. mode attended with e disadvantage, 8 bject at least to charity. He said, “I employ a 
= nstant — — Tiable 2 lying * ong on the floor to be- manufactory ; but if, through my o 
ome raw to the touch an to the smell ; added to w achine- maker, I could pe 400 pairs 
however honest — “te vom the labourer might be, it was | amount of work, 200 would im the 
impossible for him to extract the Prey "3 the abandon. | and why,” he added, don’t —— . we 
ment of this tedious process and the substitution of the | pointed out the difficulties u — r evil 
threshing mill, one of economy was achieved, The | of the poor rate; he replied th ms istress 
wor tter and more — . ied, the sample was | tain extent in Manchester ; but —— 
drier, 2 could be taken of the markets, and that | for a time in consequence of the court! 
once me — oft tha labourer performed far | yet the saving of capital gn" we 
better, bette, either by ponpa r. How cheaply, by the | would facilitate the erection — Ofte 
, can 8 ormed lat the fleet ssed under such circumsta 
—— show: Steam threshin achines the editor ment elsewh wn non Hap 
E Messenger), Ury, N. B., Nov. 28, 818.—Sir, ob- have prepared, and lenvo it a ee 
— ing in your Messenger of the 15th that a Derbyshire farmer | for — z eg a 
puzzled to understand how grain can be shed with steam | that steam power may be in 
Power at 6d., 9d., or 1s, per quarter, I beg to to give him the fol- ‘than it is at present, vih moih 


[Doy 30, 


u; ey, as 


lowing statement, taking a rick 
posed by him, although he has 
grain to thresh. I ha 


and a * ee i re perience of thre:higg a 
appears, lt 
2 e e 
and wear woe wend arm Bote fe 
33 ttle = dar cea a ad pan 
including an hour for bre kfast tot 
spre dnd here 


— by — 
one-third of the c 


2255 


i —1 

pow r, if pus * thresh 10 quarters 
closed is the usual rate of speed.” Not of e 75 
fie ar era Wee 


Fir 
engaged fee ediog, 3 
forking the —— 3 hours, 18.; 
shea „ 3 hours, 9d. ; 


oe, 
4 
© 
E 
p 
p 
g 
333? 
57455 
"R 
aa 
oo 
FE 
© 
oe 
— 
E 
come 
a 
FEES 
15 
REE 


REE 


pos t cost 
g out 2 0 ars te Barley. I should aad the 
apt. Davie ene g= letter he ha Pri —— his ma 
a winnowing m and the sep 


ibg is saved, and thee cost 


a 


: 


ii 


i 


ove quantity with horses : Three pai 


= 


rs of W 
At the rate of Is. per hour for —_ gi 
One man, 8 hours 3 5 
— man fe ors ng, 8 hou 


i 


$ EN, 
SSS SSS 
— 2 ——— 2 
- 


men ha pa sr Aa . to the feeder 
Total „ El 10 8 

uring an interesting visit which I paid a short time sine ia 

talented. embe r 2 this hey ee I pelos: that in 


to add tha of this splendid mai 
erected by the indefatigable Mr. Ciara, o of bag sane 
amples might be —— ied to t length, but 
that I have alre ady pr ved — fir st proposition wih 4 
establish power 
z, than that of horses Fe that of WAA 9455. 
and 1 earn 


— as phe of thes Bas — pare shat 
sede each other, so “poo moy bea 
me to allude to those difficulties — 
skilful and . — a ae iculturist 
— of those improvements in * thie gee acy i 
which the force of 5 the desire 
the proper attention to ec in tim 
to him not only as sortait be 
8 which obtain amor 
improvements are known to me 


ied. Itn reat , 
t now 


edu 


n the =i 1 il 


the farmers of a 
5 to nr rove 
banished from the s'age, 
man 


pers at the introduction 0 eg fos 

dis -arrik an 

th 25 its ng an is simply to n ‘diminish, Tabone in in ine aie 

accomplished by th and that 

crease of human — ry 

cation of it. 
—— ne th 


: Gentlemen, 


aN England ; that sack h introduction of steam 
et nok eventually displac 


* 


e any amount of manual | 


loyed in agriculture. but divert it 
hat — power is far more econo- 
MEC I said, I do not think 1 
0 di splace la 


erecti d in 
ion of a steam-engine, an 
— iments, the grea 


t sessed af steam- 
25 os management me to say 


able to compete ap patea, 
but which he cout — touch upon cursorily, was this: if 
they plac ced the farmstead at the lowest point, _they ought. to 


That 


which 
er would remain by = 
weather $ in which at arm 


was drained f rom the far 


m-e 
and to the 5 — of —.— — —— ced a 
5 pees it ~~ 4 N pay a farmer 
and hav m-e if for no other ‘purpose 
watering the ri rops i a 
the advantages which it ue 


cost have but faint "hopes on ae use of steam extensively in 


that unless very 


en gars in this T n yee end Mr. mas has 
1 Seotla 


8. 
P> 


own land, 


g c 
their present ee without evincing an 
r the welfare i ee es and their gnaet 
my steam-engine whit 
“eg is then an etal “of 401. for fixing; ee 
also requir ib ae = mill- — 55 1 “crusher, 
achine, a dress arg ing- 
Eee, en 3 all the — inciden the 


33 


any 
roperly managed, the operation would do more even to raea 
es 


a 8 
thas “abe of | 


THE 3 GAZETTE. 


quarter, he had no hesitation in saying that the thing could 


not be done for three times that sum. Ifit could n 
r. po t 


ot be done 


| of Dy rata wer, it certainly could not by s g 
I beg to say that I o oy Pope the cost of t kf ing 8 
sing, and sacking Wheat when I stated it at 18. per uarter.— 
Mr. GARR said they must not forget the smallness of the 
power of the engine required. In the case of a six or ight 
horse-power , he would be happ do the repairing for 
ls. a day, or about 181. a-year.—Mr. MAS then replied, ith 
regard to the difficulty of inducing farmers to lay out their- 
money in improvements, under the preseñt uncertain tenancies, 

ake such a 


etio 25 of steam-engines 


had * r. Lawrence of Ciren- 


cester, that gentleman sommes — that "the labour — 3 


p 
pa nah 8 laaa 5 — ¢ e * . m Pre EEE 


3 

ntlemen, who ee Fa Soi ee, 

ng preparations for it, He was sag * pra a house for 

768 ai ks—a house which was ger se * sate ventilated 
n the most perfect manner. He w layin n pipes over 

the whole oF — farm of 700 acres, ni he 1 to raise 

cattle on those acres which were near 

1 crop of . 


mers, and in 


read as 


amount as it had been previou 
of settlement, he would obs 


s follows: ‘ That 


use of machinery was three ti 


sed 


eeting is of opinion that steam 


a a 


P 
prese poiga 


— llocks per acre on that ground, and to manure the whole 
of ‘the ined with the Maula pod. olid 
the animals. The pores — to be tied up in ie asua way, 
in dw 


Present, 


than 


ture —— oem pana shat — pore is far 
wer.“ s by 


toan it is 


with much — — into the operations of agricul- 


to have no litter. 
t up and passed through . 
. eer 


agricultur: 


f labour., , The Club 


poses was not the 6 c 
Aividea +h + A +} fai" 


Agric Ttural Journal 


working, You gana iy, gamete the whole ex ton at good, why at case they * 

Jess than 500l. Thave k ces—for ex ee bags is —.— — itsel f, which thus converted the stra 

the case of Mr. Bateson, of K 5 n ieh the cost in the best possible way for the land, ey ‘then let both the 
not exceeded 400/.; but from 4002, to 6001, * ‘the averag dau and the solid manure go into the tank, and, after stirring 

amount invested in the engine. Now, gentlemen, to come t up by means of the steam-engine, the whole would be 

the working or daily mses. I find in practice that 5 cwt. of sent to the land liquid — solid ether; and thus they 

oe is the average consumption of 10 hours’ working ; — 1 the best 1 they co possibly desire. 

and is confirmed by the statement of our friend Mr. | Thi Menge not a new ching : it was done in Belgium and 

Thomas. That gentleman mr. pr t6 — will do in 15 Sage shea in 3 Ano — peculiarity of the plan to 

of the country with the bes of boiler and flue; t, is | which a referred was an inclosed square, arched over without 


sufficient for ordinary aH th i ge 
at 20s, per ton, 1 5 that is 5s. a day for 
coals, Then you nae to ay T al aat Aag 3 a day for a man. 
s. for wear and tear and 
lso ae 18. r grea and 4 per cent, as inte 
e total expense Ped working the engine, for 
gen 3 1 


ntity, acks of | 


windows ; 
— of er 


a tunnel was brought into the bot between the 
ery nd a wall, 2 inches in diameter, 
bullock, and ease: him at . times 
a plentiful 3 of “tery air.—Mr, BEN a the event of 
a we * “Hark when the straw is not fit for fo any pore 
alay u make it pass through the e MITH : 
painii — tity might be destroyed in that ce Say mn the diffi- 


arpa FARM, June 


11 +h 
te 


Calendar of O Operations. 
NE 


25.—With a continuance of fine weather, 


hic e have me — * 2 farm operation gone on 
well as * have ed. The making of Clover hay is 
now all but 8 “ana t in the best order; and we may say 
that both quan in and qu raed are satisfactory. 17 — new 
bus y making o 83 which is also a good erop; and 
pe des h good deal —— yet vty te — 
3 doube O peta r that the money will pro 
ave been well laid out. e have about 70 acres of 9 
fos e w hay to make, of ich we have now about 20 cut, but 
iene any carried. It might not be out of place to give an account 


of our method of hay-making, but there are so many circum- 


culty * ee that might be remedied by steaming and washing. 
—Mr NGTON —.— that yin repedt to * 5 
ure, he 


a sack — >r prind; 
But 


n factories. 


the Linseed, 
a. as I purchase 2000 sacks ‘ 
senti 


and was plwaye. within the ‘space — 100 yards ; 
ic paps yie far , and had refer- 
pera ation In af 

ed up for a pardeulne purpose, 


me t 
ling, — oti — 
ploughi ng, a 


te 
— 


mean to 


abo a 
oe e is now doing, I 

gly walle tr Po i irrigation of land. When I first had my 
steam-engin d what may be called the miseries of 
yea ted remarkably well, er by-and-by 
re stoking 12 


e nt 
the back of a breastwork, supposing that there was some- 
k Mhare found two barrowfuls of fine, very heav 
t w 


een g 
corner, where they were deposited, and th 
the free action of t the chi m- 


mend all who br jok- 


3 
2 as, in his 


Wee be a perfectly free dra 
mical thee’ as shown F steam- if 7 is ouch —— eco 


and so 
ines, if 8 orke d, o 
— — — i = Ab 
8 al than that 
e had 


would prove very u 
pac 2 = of them w 


be possible ; — instance, 
opora 


us 
and tha 


down theories that look 


of t ey a : 
that can 5 done is to tee 


what the 
ear 


ic 
tw hich 5 can Pract 


255 
E 


genera: 
gets yellow at the roo 
of the swathe is a 
. n s iter over the ground for a short 


2 
E 
05 


th of turnings 
perience 2 it depen — on the state 
r reer — en of 
it is fit ge. in 


f hors Hay: 
d 0 


t be effecte 
ve — proverio s in machin 
n drills, The depositing of ih the 
rover the field, a the same Tétel wasap 
ance iù farming. “They now had drills of 287 eri 
* for almost anything, except the light seeds, 
0 and Mangold Wurzel; “and a drill applicable to 
the 3 ca d be very beneficial. a 
statement that a te had scarcely any m 
fro 


2 

a 

8. 
4 ß 8 8 
4 5 


m that being corr 
hundred. fold nie extensive than that 
1 rf Oh ) Why, the 1 farmer 


but n soak — k rera 
S 50 88 — toes get out the many 
that got — established — — that 
t all hurt by 
But a 


check 


weeds as 5 it, and this will ps our gener: 


Las 


a mistake tos suppose — farming ' was now carried on without 
that though 


orse-power, hat 

tience, P at is et out by my own expe- 
pinion an imployed cai por before I bud formed any | 
Mote work in e engins». I now find that the engin ill d 
horses. will 10 hours, at a cost of 103., 

ee een omplish during the same period. Mader 
and we now er. ely be kept at mill work for 2s. wale ay e 9 
I must orm See whole operation for 10s 


rehend 
ow, he con cab. igh that it wi displace 
increased m 


fa 


on ve 
employ 
Mr. Sara, of Deanston, syd ‘allusion had been made 
la Te h this country had entered into with 
e was sure paesi intelligent farmer would 
0 more his duty that, in 
introduce 


EE 
F 


machinery b 


Ea 


ee 
EF 


t, that — must call mechani sm 
Po —— ment of f. 


H 


 “LAMMERMŪTR SHEEP FARM. 


ince our last report, 


ne 26.— 
the weather has been dry, but 98 y colder than usual 


—Mr. y 
Section of of this subject ty ue Thomas, ater! also = "the good 
effect which that circumstance is likely to produce, inasmuch 
he ical farmer on an extensive scale. Herecollected 
ago „ —— the subject of Mesity in zetting machinery 


+ 
255 
p 
oe 


consequence, 
most observable upon 


ward in 


| finished 


m engine, oot a ured, he paid no additional | 
4 bane = 8 8 on coon of 3 ngine. His build. | aF this seasca, with a want of sun ; indeed, for a fortn ight past, 
ings were bricked and nena on QuataMan remarked that — pai ene 1 — 
ee . 9 tra. | necessaril y had an 3 a ne upon t e pastures and as fol 


upon the sheep also, i 

the lambs, 
—— as —— were last year. 
abou! a mo onth, a nd ber ee 5 


which are — — so — 4 
honam has been 
a very full 


reeye 
agree to 7 resolution th 1 it was ae toem 


p 
advancement, and ev 
— . — to direct attention 


that by the use 722 
ne „„ 
; but the prejudices 
groundless and they 
matters than 75 — 
— ii 


s. It may be ‘perfectly 8 
erially lessen 


E g 
. 
1 
HG 
ped g fat 
$ a 
+ F 
285 


7 


2 
0 
4 
5 


H 


ae chaff. cu other 
vantageously E in 
of farming, t this ore the — stion of a 75 


Point; 30 rmstead ough ht to be le 


for a 
| displace a gre 


| ore Cork. Apply t 


t 
national rate, and 


id eee er. 
—— “ane s ofthe pr present bailiff, A. on 


Weth 
BREEDIN 


ther. 


loss — — pode os or ewes, 
egin 


RICULTURAL — 


n Bel. gium the; 


usuall, 
Those keep wedders are n 
to shear them, and in the course of the next fortnig 
ep on the hill 


weeding corn and hoeing Potatoes, 
— are e not — forward as — — have been expected, 
s yet there A Lammermuir 


3 * Correspondents. 

: A Country Gentleman. Many thanks. 

hat the subject of those articles if treated 
— discussed just now. The series 


ther. 

t no 

practice. 

Fia es, it is a common — to > dibble Beans in 
For Wheat, — 

o and 3 cwt. oË 


erby, Yorks! * 
NG Eren 8 = Four or five sheep per acre will be è 


rehased or hired, each year, 


general practice is t 


and Pi pod — x the sheep, ad 0 


eam- — the payment for \ wages amounts 
to Sd. per wee (Hoa Ay ear) Mr. TURNER said he 8 
to haye very good — pore for the threshing of corn ; and 


I 
been the * 
hat, as regarded the carrying out of 


as for the statement that Wheat might be threshed “for 8d. a 


mad with red paint 


orth th if they 
f 100 emplo 


4E. No — their labour their wages, 
ked ahh gain by ying 
leg gd mn- 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


30 32130. 24 
30—32430—3 


414 
as Took after him, t tells- ten same aort ye — OVENT. GARDEN, Jone, 30. Frinay, Junm eles 
owing, in which, a fair. estimate is made of their. valne|) vegetable —.— continue plentiful. Fine. apples fetch vals 
br not superiutended. One boy,is l ee boys. are, — Oh és tol 0s, per Ib. — Grapes remain unaltered. — eia and fore ign, since Monday, have 
half a boy 3, and three boys are ne'er a bo — and Cherries: are very plentiful and cheap. A Oo day's market, altho not 
Croy. In YOUR ‘answer to Conran few. Peaches and Nectarines have heir + Nuts visit y several country bu 
spondent, who e enquires how to extirpate. this weed, you. sag in general are sufficient for the demand. Oranges aud Lemons: trade dull during the 
you do not know it under that name. Nor * 15 Yet I I are plentiful. Amongst Vegetables, young- Turnips. may be hut tow, ra th greater part 
have no doubt but that he refers to Centau a, — d at from 6d. bunch. be prone the sames | 5 ards the close a fair business. 
„Black Knapweed,” (a common name i Essex for the Cauliflowers are very * fal. gp ramonar Ean & W rr 8, prices, —Gyj 
plant is hard: head,“ whose head rese Clover.) same. Green Peas fetch 4 2s. to 4s, per bushel, tatoes | quir — * ia at lat 
At this moment, a boy under my study windoy „ who. oO N Po realise: from 3d. to 9d. per Ib. korad ivali The 0 
is —— 4d. a day, is palling, up aa e hand this trou- Lettuces and ot > salading are sufficient for the de — 3 — the Oat trade is 
Misoa woed; andia an clear a considerable b of land | Mushrooms fetch from Gd. to 18. 3d. per pottie. Cut Flowers uotations.—Forei 
ina very ‘attentive to o the weeding of my pastures, — of Heaths, — Gardenias, Lily of — Valley, prices.— Floating 
— “nd all Tocher res 1 — aS d find that every, year the Cinerarias, Tropmolums, Carnations; Pinks, Fuchsias, Rhodo- 328, to 34s » cost, freight, 
Gar ant aie CO A A slide „anslo 88 * dendrons, and Roses, 22 instant rain. app „ 
We Whig instrament mt m —— 555 2 e weight in Pine es; kitelien: parts the country; but: t 
perial stones (W) is indicated = 3 to the Sürth (f), — hothouse; p. 1 ib, rane Oranges, = dons s~ to — d inperat — s 
And length ( (Li of 38 5 (Pao — 3 doz., 108 to 24s per 1 Country markets have been ba 
es, per ro 10s to 248 Lemons, — —— * to 28 pas j 
Danrmoor FARMING: E Hulme ain dry, Work the land — . od t per 100, 78 to lis Vals) at, 
deep. Apply — ime por aere, —— after wards manure — per pottle, 4d to 1s Imonds, per peck, 6 y well. 
freely, Your best plan is t those there who are farm. | 0 — = 2 to 98 . tb, 20 to 38 pint of the 
ing stand P. I to 18 juts, p. 100, 18 ne clay soils 
ENGLISH AGRICULTURAL Socrery: EM D. A list of the mem. green, p. hf. sieve, p. bush, 168 to ay, ` 
| Agrieultural Society is published in the 35 6d to 5s Nuts, | songs bush., 208 to 228 the his Jsi. 
áthior Sth volame of their Journal. I ney My ARE Currants, do., do,, 35 to 4s — Brazil, p. bsh., 125 to 166 and its imp 
— ngaben The — adaa lata ar 2 LES. not sep ma ny alteration in vali, Hate Ma 
forced by the necessities of the printer: p. doz., 9d to 18.6 — p. sieve; Is — 6d co 
RTICHOKES: O S. They make good pig food | Caulifiowers, p. 2 — Oni pay a pr 
wi once pige bare “ taken.” to them. eas, per bush., 28 to 48 — neato Ao 
Hout Ras: W. purple we believe to be the more common Sorrel, p. hf. — 9d ~ p 18 ‘Shallots, per th 10a — ls PAG 
sort, and it is a.good. It will grow i und, and | Potatoes, per ton, 60s to 1808 arlie; per Ib., 6d to LryERPooL,, FRIDAY, JUNE, 29.—We hed good. ams 
_ likes stiffer ground than is suitable for common Turnips. — per et., 58 to 148 — aia doz; 2284 to 3s6d,| and highly ‘fir ourable weather since day, supplies 
POULTRY: DISEA: : of feathers eluei h., 48 to 78 — Jerusalem, half 80 much activity in the trade this morning, yett There wag nh 
but the facts stated in ac iment speak for them- | Turnips, per bunch, 6d to is |: sieve, od to 18 ported for both t and Flour, the 1 i 
selve3,, The qu is important, and its answer confirms d Beet, per doz, 28 to 48 Lettuce, Cab., p. se., 4d to d | former a business w 
what has already been in the artieles on Diseas Horse Radish; p. bdl., 28 to 66 — Cos, do., 6d tol ee ty te at Tuesday’s prices, and —— 
Poultry in our columns, evident cause is, their food b p. 100, 1s to 4s brooms, p. pot., 6d to 18 3d or Peas. Indian Corn de 1 — 
n very hot to induce laying. It is unnatural, and highly Rhubarb, p. bundle, 4d to l LSalads, p. pun., 2d to 3d — of 6a ad. — per quarter, on y. i 
i health, — has once acquired a h p.100, 2s to 386d el; per bunch, 2d to 3d and quite as dear, i 
ted, or got dora ben The yo mapanis Leeks, per-doz., 1 — n —— 4 LE 
ra or rid of a altoget er. ere is no other cure, w Z, Is to yme, per bunch, 2d to 3 wi 2 
a fowl has a bid appetite for blood-feathers. Fowls t | Leeks, per, doz, is to 2 to 2s Parsley, p. doz bun., 33 to 4 ee Wuear, r Pt 
lucked in this —— acquire a sort of distem Radishes, per 12 hands, 9d — Roots, p. bdle, 18 to Is * — | 
fafecting the blood; sometimes gen ga peculiar in — — 5 per doz. bunches; Marjoramg — p.bun., 4Adtosd MAY r 2 e 175 ra sgh aa f 
which infects the roots of the feathers, the new feathers be- ad tolse Mint, green, per bunch, 3d to J range age = — = 9 17 ö i 
-come lf; and often or Carrots, per bun., Od to 1s Basil, green, p. bunch, 4d tod lune 3... at %% 7 2 
rounded by matter from a sort of tumour or eruption on — „ „ „„ eG 25 11 17 7 i 
i several other causes fortheseinfections a E.. 4 2 2 5 jis ‘en 4 
the i apr a Ae —— = K LA | 23.. ` * 6 $ 26 5 18 9 25 ; È 
t „dirty wat fected : — 
— — Ces, long si — — 3 JUNE 25:— The — of English Wheat |\Aggreg. Aver. |! 44 6 27 8 f u jès 11: 1 
acrid destroy the stomach and generate d carriage sam morning was very small, er on Po. | i ä — 
‘orders, sowill food very hot. B. S. E. —— ng i reign Grain 1 % 1 ofr oft oir ulie 
FEEDS: — 'at whioh you cam safely get amo just former was at an advance of 28. 3s. per qr. Fluctuations in the last Corn Averages. 4 
: your Wheat to hoe it—that is late in April. * son the this day se'nnight. Foreign was taken Prices. Mar 19 Mar — 2. ps 9. | JUNE 16, I. 
-sown, but not with such certainty of success, at an improvement of Is. to per qr., but the latter p — errs 
Sainfoin is sown early in April e| being rel y complied’ with, a moderate iness) s 9d =j- 1 i „ ee 
ready for use in May and June of the following “They nl 9 oes es „ 
are as good food, or better for milch cows, than east only, resulted, — — Bice, Beans, ad Peas support. our i 82 5 te: 5 
Cabbage. You may safely feed cows on this green food quotations.—Oats request, and 6d. to Is. s. per || 44 — SANE A pE 
STILTON CHEESE: S W. See page 214, 1845, If you cannot) we T 14 2 P fii, © ‘i 1 — 
will republish 7 : z : pony 
Sucar Rerne REFUSE: IV TA. It is capital stuff; obey | _ London, | Liverpool. Wakefield, Boston. Birmingham 
U—U—ä— u — —_ ust, with pa — animal matter dis- PRICES F $ reo. 2 1 
sipated except the reoal, Whether . 6d. i i : * 
.tom on the field depends on the- quantity of water it contains. June 26 Sonels\Jan 22 Jun. 20 Jun. 27, June 21. June . 
Twm: A Friend to the Dairy. Though twins of different sex 70 lbs. ; 62 lbs. 
; cdi rise. 0; 3 ve likely hodi s 83 aoa} 
i 1 l — 5 a 35 10 8 
7 2 566 36 
5 10 26 9 6 | 
6 76 2 6 
1 6 ob 2710 
4801 ) 
qr. 1 i t 
— 22-—23/22—23|/24—26/24—26 
30s—32a 732 — 
ota 24—28124—28 3 
6 i } 
39—42/39—42) — 
45 lbs. 4 5 id 
2510d 3s 2d. — — 14—2014—20 
Sy ae se ee e 
h $ t 
2 1 426ͤ 6 — 
1 qr. qr j $ ! 
25 aplaz 30 7 + 
aut bes aia | | 348— 34g—_ i 
g i 
23—2523—25 29 —3l1s |: 29—318 s 
24—3225—32 32 —34 — i 
32422:-32|: 30 —33 f: 30—33 
— | 32—34 | 32—34 
Best Long-wools 
— — t Ditto Suern 1—36/21—36| 23 —32 —32 
t 
in — i 40 —42 |: 40—42 
wee * A ‘Calves 7 42 37—42) — — 
Shorn 2 3 z 18 ene 3 32 4 * 
. 8 4 4 N ! 
Beasts, 1067; Stay and Tay 1980; À Gat, it Tig, tn, Den «ea fDi 7a: |i 7 12s; |} 7%, 125 
= oreign . 61 f/ — 
i 4 7 


i oe 
ie 


] 


12 I 
pan 
‘with Two Advows 
RS: 
favoured with instru 


at Garraway’s, 
contract); 


— ee 1684 acr 
= —— e Ma 
Les ON 


— to offer 


— — * together r wita three fulling mills, 
Ba our ur mill, — of Frome, driven by water- 
and a #0 whole ien — in the-o oe pation of highly 
ear to aa with the re of 
me old life, a tremely 
p 


rents, — 
samt sà tei — 1 of “the —— 
5 ` Lulli! 
e — —— piera — —— u, the vana olè 
f ass inin na or there- 
A 0 a „ 
688a. Ir. 38p., being 5 — “of Lullington 
Geri t the whole Z which, if let on leases, 
f 40001. per annum, with 


ari — 9 
fal very superior — is 
gra 


th The 
EN "beautifa ly undulating, — 5 — 
ble Oak, Elm, and o mber of the m 


fis hy and on the margin 22 
ais —— erection, designated the Temple,“ 
13 for the enjoyment of fishing, and com 

manding $ — y rich and enehanting views of the adjoining 
— scenery. The park om each side of the lake rises in bold 
relief, 18 8 clum ornamental trees and 


nod e through the park extends three miles, 
u laid ca as. to. comman every — and turn 
of its serpentine course the most rich sad 2 scenery 
wood: wa that well be con- 


e bounded by the 
and on its banks are several very ; valaableirrigated | 
meadows, A considerable 1 of th are of 
recent erection whole 


ubstanti 


on to 
pened to Frome in a few mon 
. bring. this property within 1 hours’ ride 


— 
P 


10 
* 
. 
Hee 
2 
x 
ug 
PE 
#8 
ow 
3 * 
ma 
rs 
> 
8 
JH 
ra 
os 
4 
Es 
5 
— 
5 
R 
E 


W. D 
and . — . and B 


The — san o om — viewed by cards ot — 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


415 


acres ; rent, 3007. a 
in good order. 
nicle Office, 5, 


ear; hou 50 und bui s large, 
= Addres ss, for r particu lars, to E., Gardeners Chro- 
Upper Wellington. street, Strand, Londo 


26—1849. 75 
PORTANT AND VALUABLE FREEHOLD ARM TO LET, South of London ; size, . ds AoE 


OL 
blished for pa neral, Practical, and Scientific Education, 


Hoddesdon, Her 


TO GARDENERS, FLORIST 
O BE LET; a small ‘NUR RSERY, ae Maida- 
hill; Paddingtom;. coneiss 
a Forcing = ouse, 
— — — t uation, 
to be agreed u at — Apply to Mr. Warr, Floriet and Seeds- 
man, Lyou-place, Maida-hill, near Tondon 


8 
ondon, and 
and Manufacturer: 
——— — B 
entific H: — en . — 
— the Te Tank 8 Syst em. — — , Propagating 
c., by ieh ospher —— is 
secure 42 ang required degree, without the aid — or fines, 
S. and Co e request of num: 2 
friends 1 are now m ae Boilers of Iron, as well a 
which the — * ‘reduce. These e which 
well known, scarcely require dëse: , but 
33 — . not seen them 
be Dn ae = 22 
they 


N AN Pay 1 
r New Southwark, Inven 
he Improved CONICAL — ‘Doubt 
OIL, res — 
thelr 


f 


tory, 
17; *.— Parke. street required for the — 
of Horti as well as for — them, m 


treet; every. ar 


1 — | 


—— at | 
—— 


most of the e seats ‘and principal | 


THE: Session: 
THE — HONOURABLE 2 LORD DACRE, 
— Haap M AST ER: MR 1 woop, 
ASTER <= 
COKAYN 
An GESA MASTER: un. l Aba 9s E, 


f 


MR. I. LUPTON, 
FRENCH AND 


S. M. C. C. 
Carle PhysidlogyandiPathology. Mn. 
Botany, Geology, and e u. Mn. 8. 


Histo 
Practical Mechanics and Natural 
Philosophy MR. LUPTON. 
Practical Surveying, Levelling, at. HasEtwoop and 
and Drai BR. LUFTON: 
This Testitution ‘has: bee: t seale of 
efficiency, and will be found —— every department. 
Applications for the admission of Pupils to be — to 
fehe 44 — Master of — er School, Hoddesd 
be tai ned: 


every inform 0 
NESBIPS ‘CHEMIC N = 
ae eran ar K AL AND. — 
— a practical — 
try, Geology, a — Leve 
ing ., + be obtained in a ers. NESBIT’S s Academy, in 


, CHEREY, 
ete Hie 


obtained upon the most advantageous ter 
onservatories, &e., . — — upon th 
2 designs. Balconi es, Palisading, Field and — 
es. Wire Ca 


r: Nesprr’s- works- on Arithmet 
hand: Survey — English P — —— — 
MAN and Co., and vagy = had of all Boonies 

The terms of the ool can be had on application either 


IZURBIDGE a AND. HBALY’: S NEW BOILER, Pie 


modelled expressly, for the large Conservatory, Chiswick 
capper where it is now: aty work. m the observations 
B. have been able tọ — y are warranted in 
stating it to - — Ne plus ultra” — large plant e 
one — ag fuel * bacon kept 


personally or by ag 
— — o for internal St 
oer of it its application t — to the baro 


only — — ted lose —— to oa *. 
the | slightest difficulty, the labour y 
— 


with and o 
to warm 1590, feet: of go vote — They 
— — up at the Royal Botanie Gardens, Kew. 
Smaller boilers upon the same plan. 

Bursipeg-and — 180, —— — 


ORCHIDEA GROW 
BURBIDSE + anp HEALY, 150). — 
fully call attention to — arming Orchidea, 

Houses. — — pim had the h oon — the Orehidea 
Ho mee at the entione 

oyal Botani: — 
Hortienitaral — iaai A Chiswick, wage ste: tha pue 
o the Orchidea, Houses. of th 


nguished 
— * this interesting — erat 
sow J gons, be of 1 Farnham Castle. 


J. Warner, Hoddesdo 

Messrs. 8 — Place. 
y ESq., Stra — 

R. Hanbury, Esg», Pol 

W. Webb, Esq., Clap 


also prepare Jor Ornamen tal Plas 
ns, 5. C., &c., specimens of which: Megetteassueas at the Works oi 
he . ae FRaANCiIs and Sons, Nine Bims; London, 


RTLAND CEMENT. 


HE PATENT ALKALI COMPAN YS METAL. 
LIC BLAC 
plicable to every —.— of Iron 
0 s, Shi e., — are —.— eminen pys superior 
red lead, or s 


ws Gad Leonard, Bristol; M 
— 2 Mr. Sam — s 2 


— Troie 
ua Fox, 
pies "4 
Testimo * * 
Fonchurob-sireat, on. Secretary 
ARSON’S: — ANTE CORROSION 
* patronised by t ritish and o 


3 ** a Ae ee — 
pamineti 
Tregedna, 


1 DISPOSED OF, i 
init in a first-rate position in 
e London, a NURSERY GROUND, with 
one, ood —— 4 wed pln a s 
— | n 
rg Q ihe 39, Holborn Hill, Condom: or 


Govern rnments, the — East India company 
Doek. Companies t publie benie d byt 
22 and Clergy, y for out-deor wo ae 
The Anti-Corrosio: 8 ele met A as 

ever rig Te for the preservation of 


TO NURSERYMEN, FLORIST 

S, we E 
TOBE DISPOSED OM F; by Private Contract 
E-NURSER — —.— on the 


— 0E and Monts, 5785 fonstone, 


To E r STS, 
iake one SED mae 2 old- established | business 
ne, is i 


Ki 


y. It has 
all expenses, — 
nderstand ity the seed business it 


and 


* 
this 
— puii D 
was: covered, 


E] 


72 
7 
FHR 


F rers, and'entered upon at 


t of WOTTON, in the Parishof 
of a in the ti 
wt the Arapa inn i sre of ork tl — go 15 
l e e Md, riuctive.of Beans and Wheat : 
venience, There is an exten”, and is, of the richest fatten- 
and the Farm. ent I every con- 
beasts in and arranged for fattening ran 
— aes 
api, t the — and one mile from the Pole- 
dr. Jonu Mone Hastings aitas, For 7 
er 8 


tract; the | moni 


ee 


orders are particu 
- LIGHT, CHEAP, AND DURABLE. R 
. Centr pn PATENT ASPHALTE, "ROOFING 
perfectly impervious to rain, snow, and frost, and 
— erens a long and extensive —— in all cli- 
— mage — half — — — ‘i jme —— 
with great facilit ‘arm.-servants, or unpractised pers 
Price las pores tne Se CROGGON’S — — — "OON: 
DUOCTING FELT, for Steam Boilers and Pipes, s 25 per 
t. of fuel. Samples and —— sent by — 
pation to Croeson and Co., 2, Dowgate-hill, London. 


— Testimonials received 

all quarters, prove this CEMENT to possess the r: 
of withstanding the severest frost, and 
pee tow th every other fo 

— lining of Reservoirs 

gsit requires neither 
* will carry from three 
Manufacturers, J. B. — al Sons, Milbank-street, Westa 

minster. 
i HE IMPROVED a a a 
| fixed by FREEMAN ROE, 8 Maker, 70, Strand, 
—— can be worked by 
i eam of half- ann e 
where a b= 


alor 2. 2. = can 
‘obtain RAM, w — 


for wells of all kinds, 8 8 — 
panies hot.water, Water wheels. to 
A newely.invented. Pos ortable Vapour B 

5 ILIC ENGINES; | WATER RA MS, Ge,, 

on ior 1 — by St wom = 
to from 1 

ah 12 5 “of 500 Paci rie irom a depth of of 900 feet. De Dousbe, 
Hoteair, 4 of — * Buildings, 
—— Air, or . — 


— pam) 


so mell MARI WED. 


YOU BRUISE THE GATS. 
— eer yango half 


— 2 — 
be seen at 118, — — 


Linseed Mills, Bean a great varietꝝ. 

WIRB-WORR, —— gy — 
GREENHOUSES, 

THOMAS BAKER, MANOR- HOUSE, MANOR- 

ACE, hg CHE LARN, Mor — * 

n 

baiia “WHEW to resist Grazing — 

tries, 


iB 


; To 
$ — close to —— Railway; 
ts. Mills, and Mal 
most 


PL 
VISIBLE 
4 * — ORK in Tr 
IU * and Hothouses, Conser- 
URAL 
‘ema oo by HOT. WATER APPARATUS 


Saas 
me heated 


— BUILDING AND HEATING 
ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF 2 = Te  GHOICEST PLANTS; 


PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS, KIN@’S ROAD, CHELSEA. | 


PATENT, 


ENCH —— for aah Patent en | 
— 5 feet 6 ins. La 13 feet 6 ins. wide, | 


no pain 
tity, 

HEAT vanity, . WATER. 
Lege PATENT PROTO MDR PAINT 
of pries, 4 article is — 


ao tee as pan 
Builders and ——.— tor painting Stucco. It prevents atten: frou 
ng, 
sun has no effect 


—— masonry from damp, and the hottest 
it,” Manufactured ty CHARLES av 
and Sons, Cement W Nine 


niri 
8 


ROYAL LETTERS 


AP 
Lights! — 
0 


Hoxricvn- 


WEEKS avo Co., Kingiarroad, Chelsem 


„ TURAL ARCHI 


J 


— 
i aE ti The 
—— na kur eee rections, 
2 omelet 
— ‘aon 


a 1 
ereeting of —— 


a first-rate collection of Stove 
preeu cultivated in enormous 


n such — ities +— 
LESS THAN come — 
forwarded upon application. 


416 THE GARDENERS’ 


WIRE GAME NETTING.— 
per yard, 2 feet wid 


G }ALVANISED 


Galvan- 
ized, 
2 a ** 


Tapannes | 
Iron. 
2inch — Nght, pom wide 5d, per yd. 
2-inch 88 
2-inch 


-inch 
15. inch 
1}-inch 14 11 

All the above can be m ade any width a at proportionate prices, 
Tf the upper half is a coarse mesh, it will reduce the price 
fou a 


” 2 strong , 35 
as ht » 
” 


s, n 
eae » 8 


square foot, Patt terns forwarded post-fr 
Pat erais b NARD and BISHOP, Markot plase, 
Norwich, i pe Amo — pn of expense in London „ Peter. 
borough, Hull, or Neweast 


WIRE mae ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT, 


ENO 
respectfully to call the attention of. Landed she 
others to their s 


Nu 

T : 
Agricultural 7 os Scotland, — lately ¢ 

gth, a og 


AM anp HALLEN, — L street, Oxford- 


street, Lon 


cor 


Re 
To 
vi — 


ae vv. 
` stars 88 


H , made 
— =o = —— and embracin g all the latest improve- 
t the — price of 121. 125. are now ready for 

and HALLEN’S, 2, Winsley-street, Oxford- 


AYMAKING MACHINES, of the best c = ruction 


STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROOF 
WIRE NETTING, 


CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL ee 


day is oE 
OURNAL G 


+, Vol. IV. of 


eTICUL TUR 


oily 3 


CONTEN 


the Du 


collecte di in 
from 


arden— 


28 * 
UNG AND e adem (LATE 
YOUN 


(Q HARLES D. 10 
MANUFAC RERS OF ge poy WIRE WORK, 


22, PARLIAMENT-STREET, WESTMINSTER, LONDON; CASTL 
BUILDINGS, yo a SQUARE, . = 128, HIGH-STREE 
EDINBURGH ; 32, Sr. QUARE, GLASGOW, 


be eg 
prietors and 
uding Hares 
ries, &c. 


s Effic „Great 3 Cheapness 


n the Judges 


rhere its iency, 


d Exceedir 
arded fror 


— Societys N 


high 


—— Ledals, w 


The imme ts — — — 


hly eulogised both for its atiy and pretty eee ee and 
io = be the cheapest and best article ever produced = anung Plantati tions is often so great, that in the e of 
and durable fence against the de epreda inns l 5 ose it will amount to more than the . pr 
rabbits, * cats, oor is pecu ea RES ar ye Stebina E ith this Net. It is so durable e, that when 


ape by the galvanised 
ly for l all kinds 
lw 


w 
Plantations ar 
oh ection, it = 8 


greatest fa As a Fence — 


~ MESSRS. NN PERIODICALS 


. wage No. COCCY 


CCCCY., fr 
9 BOREALES No. eT eo pren UNDER Cig 
THE ISLAND OF N 


THE CAXTONS—PART 
THE GAME LAWS IN SCOTLAND, 


DOMINIQUE. ALOZZ ZIANA; 
THE CROWNING OF THE COLUMN. AND CRUSHINGOP 
THE PEDESTAL. POSTSCRIPT, 


THE JOURNAL OF AGRI ICULTURE, un mm 

TRANSACTIONS OF THE HIGHLAND AND AGH 

CULTURAL Wen E : 
ric 


ICAL ATLAS, Reduced from 


. 3 
n in Imperial Foli 


PLATE ron PHYSICAL CHART OF THE INDIAN OCEAN, 
VII PACIFIC OCEAN, 
A ” Hydrography, pp. 33—40, 


5 
of creeping plants. Large quantities alw stock, of ity, by any 
a ever, be made Hares and Rabbits, it is of itself —.— sufficient, having only to 
3 = 2 re ee 2 to any be unrolled and attached, with s t for that ng oe HE BARONIAL AND” ECCLESIASTICAL AN 
pe a t every six TIQUITIES OF SCOTLAND. 
n inches 955 Ba, por per ren — rege * + p p ‘yard or seven feet apart. It is, —— peculiarly adapted — pa Part XXVIII. ia T T AN TA 1 CASTLE, e 
— 55 de pia ; Hedges, Paige 5 = existing Fen Ditto COURT YARD—Dit THE SEA-KI 
24 ” Bes „ : — eing e eut” up p into small NING ABBEY—T HE LADY CHAPEL OF GLASGOW 04- 
bok di, ld. a foot more feet quired, it forms a most eff- E 
perial Wire Sheep Netting. 8 t, Is. Gd. per | cient Ne at little expense, for 1 aoe and Shrubs, 45, George- weet Edaburg —5 at Tais 
running yard; mt 55 23 lso every ‘deserption a Prices,—18 ins. hi igh 9d. ; 24 ins., 1s.; 30 ins., 1s. 3d.; an nd ndor Orders . by all Booksellers, 
ire Nursery and Fireguards, Wire House Lantern 36 ins., 1s. 6d. per line al yar rd. 
Shades, Fly-proof Dish Covers, Meat Safes, in ; Wind rit Or a web of 100 y rey, 18 ins. bin will s ey 8 = 0 HR SOLDIER’S PROGRESS, in Six 
Blinds, 1s. 104. per square foot, with bolts complete, in maho- o. of 100 yards, 24 ins. $ 0 b a og t Ley Words on 2 War,” 
i. S Gothic garden ge 6d, per 2 — tests o. of 100 yards, 3 vide y Elibu urritt, pric d the HEADS of the PEOPLE, 
lower T from 3d. en arches, 20s. each; net cee yar ins, wide 8 by Kenny 8 w with Illustrative Essays by. 
Flower 8 aga from 3s. 9d. 5 Galvanised Tying d Wire for If more or — web is required, it would ie diana Jerröld, Leigh Hunt, William Howitt, and W. M. Thackeray, 
plants „ and — on of — at ties — sate > price 6d. e continued monthly, will be ready with THE 
work; Weaving, for the use of paper-makers, millers, & e.— This Netting is ek eee adapted for 1 pn PEOPLES JOURNAL, Part 42, for J Price 8d. This part 
the Manufacto ry of THOMAS Henry Fox, 63, Snow hi, 2 | Poultry. -yards, and is t the same rate. contains The Seven Angels of the Lyre,” a New e 
s; in many {aeta ‘ g ty — pine Nag 25 parties at i dis by Charles W and 15 other original articles, with 


ange- 
ver it 2 at * Fer the 
nd, ont Ireland, for One 


a better idea of the great 

m Wire Netting than z4 ua Sr 

ne yard | ‘of aa 24-inch at 1s. 
arket, 


w Engla 


and Co. cann ot giye 
strength of their Premiu 
the w ight of o 


Danvers- St 


de 0 superior manner of Erecting and He tin To be seen at THOMAS ORTON and 
a 8 of Building Pegg with tng and Heating Majesty, 69, W. Petts . Pe re 
work done by them ig on. the Earl of Kilmorey's, t 7 x 
Tanos ogi perfects icdon” Mee Ridtart ME | CCT. 
to show the work and give any infor e happy Females, Price is, I}d , 28. 9d., — lls, pind box igp on 
They also beg to refer to the hondas 1 by them Seg the II ATIoxS.—Unprinèipied 8 counterfeit this Medicine 
t season, for the Worshipfal Apothecaries Com of Lon. in the form of Pills,” asers must therefore observe 
„in their Botanic Garden Mr. oore, the that none are genuine e but Wafers, and that the words Dr, 
Curator, will kindly show the wor Locock 3 Wafers,” are in the Stamp outside each box OBS ERVE. 


per an Samples 1 for i ster ae 


le in the , the sam 
3 free of dijaka 
C. D. Youne & © nufactare every description of f IRON 
ane. WIRE W WORK. —— for tl 
orkmen sent to all parts of Scotland, England, and Ireland. 


5 Sod 


0 for feeding. Th Cows give a large 
gan ty of milk for their size, which is very rich, similar to the 
1 er, ha rdy and suitable to this climate. 


E the 


not ere 
Gray, ga othe’ honour of referrin 
many of rhe nobility and gentry “ty the country, and to seve =a 
* a mdo eries 


PATENT IRR 
eg py! of th 


IGATOR & CATARACT, 
45 73, Onto mM ay — in n ope- 


Coo 00DE és 
3 dall, Koni M. til? 77 5 — 


mbling these, as to mislead the unwa ry. Purchasers must 
nt: 


therefore strictly observe the above caution, Agen 8.—Da 
roti and Co., 1, Bride-lane, Fleet-street, ; who ar 
‘Sole gents for Dr. Lı — cx’s PUL) 


Ke ors, 
Gai SPRING MATTRE ESSES, perm 3 


stie 


ve 
ve 


3 feet wide £2 85 * 6 in. wide 43 3 0 
feet 6 ini ide... 213 0 5 feet ditto . 3 10 0 
ite 18 i feet 6 in. ditto...... 18 0 
One of these; with a ate Mattress on it, is a most excellent 


nd soft b EA od nig LIST of B 

| fall parti ieulars of weight size, and prices, of every 5 

of Bedding, sent free by post.— HAL. and Son, posing man 

facturers, 196 (opposite the Chapel), Tottenham-c 

CLEAR COMPLEX 

COMPL 

— — 55 EXTRACT OF. ELDER — ogo 
gly recommended for sn 4 roy 

Ern and preserving the Skin, = in givin 

and pooner ng appe arance, bein 

fume and — 8 


EDDING, with 


osmetic. an, 
sunburn, by its balsa and healing 
mates render the —— eu gry hace free a dryness, 


bury, where L particulars s may be had 


e. Sold in bottles, 
tions for | using it, by all medicine vend 


ors and perfu mers, | 


peer os alg 
London : 


9 and Co. Warwick-lane, 


and all done 
FLEXIBLE INDIA-RUBBER HOSE, PIPES, AND TUBING. 
AMES 


L are permanen es dex 
well adapted pee * 1 ns, p cae 

à d Chemical Purposes 
Ron of do 9 leaky from 

urposes where a perman 
is requ 
SYULCANISED INDIA-RUBBER GARDEN 
I om — nch, roses, and jets, complete, for 
, Cister ra 

A, represe 


rgi the Hoek: a and the Tank 
B, the Box, for containing any 8 
— 


E fiit 
HOS $ 
e Union-jeint, for effecting the commune? 

or . 
small t tools required, 


* 


Aua . 
x sity iry 
U 


sing 10 tool 
CTING 
+ machit ¥ 


out of use 


pore mile 


ancock begs the > acrention cage i 
tine Flexible Garden Hos 5 ‘aol convenient 

PIPE REEL, which is found a ne Hose when 

i _ Gosnell mers 
dressed as 
mmediate attent 

Printed by wr LLIAM Br ADB 


2 
ae of St. Pancras, pirg Fuso 
8 


b 
bai 
aren Lf them at : 
2 40 be 8585 
1349. 


SATURDAY, JUNE 


A 


HE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
“AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, JULY 7. 


[Price 6d. 


INDEX. ATES PLANTER OBERT WHIBLEY has fo 
a r sale fine Plants 
ma Pauta (Messrs) Nursery, , |) yyy ip OSBORN, of — near Lox- R FUCHSIA SPECTABILIS, at 7s. 6d. each, The * 
n iin 47 1 ie 170 iy aged Sp SHRUB 23 Extensive Col- | valled collection of Fuchsias, Verbenas, 15 — are now in bloom 
=a 433 a Pints, , Spontano i e ne , rest sponds as far ag — 2 every n both English and Co has been 
is ¢ | Pat ice otrie sint 8 a | practicable with that of London's « Ar bore and for sollee. | he plants in thee e e f oie 5 coming year, 
ee = 3 P 2 . Donde ta n e tions, the advertisers Sabet t the pH cath i adres of of pric — 3 — are pry or hate mack shea a — on ike 
aie preserve, waeren ei 05 21 e 1000 dit species and varieties for the sum of 2 very pe Axa 4 ose who may honou with 
427 po m 5 ditto 5 — 4 — r Nursery, near Walcot-place, Kennington- 
— 30 ditto 12 .... — — — 
e ONIFER. cys 7 ES -CLASS PELARGONIUMS FOR EXHI- 
r 485 PRESSINE, AND TAXACEA. BITIO OR PREPAYME — Y.—T wel 
r aie on 422 these, 150 species and varieties supplied 2 the sum of — following varieties, incla ding "he 4 83 
Tenant right For any Sane number, o or — ———9 plants of the above, Will be sent out for Two Gui pera in s 
Tree 8 * 2 s will and for ml immediate shift 88 r 
Club qpa, raoe otatonof ...... 428 4 | the selection | 55 left to WHITLE BORN ; but if p~ wa booked: * — — — N tne 2 
: — * s... — 
liasons ise 2.420 a Water ra rain 5 chaser desire to asks the be ais 2 will vary in pro- | When remittances may be ma ost-office order on Brent- 
4 Whea portion to the sorts required, ford, Priority o oa to ‘ensure first selection. Aurora, 
FR lanche, Centurion „Forget-me. not, Ariel, Cassandra, 
AL SOUTH LONDON on An the approved kinds | r TREES. true to name, are | Cavalier, Cruenta, Gustavus, Gulielma, Grandifiors, Junii, Ne- 
SOCIET ove 80 Ferrer and Denen, Foote’ Rosamund, Sandown. Or, Nine of bove, and 
der the Patronage of HER MOST GRACIOUS MAJESTY, | Also sTOY Tatas “ and HERBACEOUS PLANTS e's Crusader, Topping’s Brilliant, or F 
e dos f the above Society, will And — es ieties, e: oep the | ag tter ave appeared in 3. his 
o. 0 the above Society, | a- ve va ex e a „ have 
e SURREY ZOOLOGICAL GARDENS, stein Se es of ROSES—Standards, winning col beer descriptive eat 
when varieties > ie, Sonres 0 reparation, and 5 
ima ir sored * al Vin, | AGRICULTURAL, HEN GARDEN, and 2 issuing immediately after the exhibitions are closed. 


ng productions, 


* , Esq., for A 
Cut dane ‘Plante, y 
= Pring oe Regulations for 1 
LOR NEVILLE, Secretary, Ebe- 


ig 


lal 


on the 18th and 19th of July. The Profits to be 

the Hos: — and other Charities. 9 Schedule 

Prizes 200 l.), with Regulations, may be obtained 

N, Esq., Honorary ee of the Norfolk — 

Horticultural Society, at t Nor py ade note train 
for, to allow — 5 bit Carna- 


‘The Fete will be o a s 
peters . 


were, Verbenas, Ros 

Tan’ miscellaneous sea at, Pines, Grapes, 

n the ‘ ultu — Maga- 

or iy, and Hriste — he Waris, 
ephson Garden —— ; 


; but all Arne s (i 1 o be 
n the 


New Plante te, 


Ag 5 * AND FLORAL 
Meeting, ag E, daring the — 2 the 1 e e 


— ons the lowest prices compatible with their genuine 


PH BUCKTON 


EY’S EARLY Manno, CABBAGE 
LEY begs res y rm kans 
and the 1 cae nerally, that h 

ani A aaa v SEED, 


ines vantages of 
oes — apt ckly, with scarcely 
— rind 3 y or mindy situations, 

one of the large co: 


The abo 
a the remittance i of a post-office order, or 
t 225 mano r stamps. 

Y, at his General Seed Shop, 16, Pul- 


f = JAPONICA SEEDLING: 
STANDISH anp NOBLE having — E 
stock i above sple 


most suitable ti ti g 
by Mesers. hems. S ime or "planing out, — 
. N. ri be h 
— Bagshot, Surrey, July a 


Well established in small pots, or per po free, an all orders 
— ra directions will be sent for a successful and e easy 
e of culture for exhibitions, 


CAMELLIAS, 

Comprising the finest varieties, well set with flower buds, 30s. 
to 42s. per dozen 
ANE oe he ‘SED, saved from selected sorts, is now being 
FLL and Co. in the finest condition, and can 
post free, at 2s. 6a, and per packet, suffi- 
cient to aed — a a, per of prey = yii. Sown at the present time, 

a fine ay through the autumn and winter 


— of the 
— plants, will be fo — cg by enclosing two postage 
amps.—Great Yarmouth Nurse 


above, with an extensive variety of highly ae 


0 Stat * . í NEW A VERY CHOICE PLANTS, 
— of the a on applicati and 
N . EY and Osnokx think ‘it goy to latd ras to pn ay com > sel = i 1 + es ’ 
very article 8 — rein is in their possession, and m U. u ae a so haa ment of that 
bs — L. their establis we cd ie t, * cw mye She of Lille (France), the 
first-rate ability 0 character are waiting in this — 2 onan ou being dis mt — si offered, oni Saul 
establishment for appointments as Gardeners, or as Gardener great beauty, * any o 8 ction 
ARNATIONS AND Ny flee —The —— 1 (Miellez).— t m known, quite 
par ZES, 2 7 to all Eng perfect, very good habit; inside of the calyx — outside 
July 17, 1849, ‘at Salisbu rosy red, corolla — and li Price 7s. 6d. 
CARN ATIONS 1 best 24 42 10 0 MODEL (Miellez).— Larg e and perfect bloom ; ; calyx of a fine 
Sec 1 LAG a white, orange — t geoi Price 7s. 6d 
25 0 0 EA 7 * — ee — Very large a and perfect 
ane 1 ne “oe bioom e tube of 1. e ee 
= ; x 35 
dat ~ ho best a 5 110 0 | “GENERAL Seien 2 large and perfect 
Third ditto i Gee 1 4 — ou 8 3 with white, wa 
oe 10 0 
AT * ELLE (Miellez).— Lange bioots ¢ tube rosy lilac, 
CARNA TIONS Seen, The best 2 5 z ; Pts i s blu sh white. the inaid y Hias, lil olla; 
irda . = rs = 0 0 tle Manin Pri 8. 2 r ae 
2 ˙ E on ea „ tube sepals 
ric EES The best 12 En a . 210 0 tipped mare, $ t ooruil 5s, 
Second ditto ro a ie T 110 0 en the set G inten, Sree be charged 30s, 
Third ditto a es “a 0 0 CHRYSA EMUMS. 
E q * 010 0 MADAME MIBLLEZ.—Pale rose, large petals, very fall and 
To be show in Cards o n the Exhi tors’ own B Entrance * extra fine. Price 
to each Clases TA — Eoy first Down Train will b e waited URNE.—Bronze yellow, perfect shape and habit, the out- 
for, to allow wers exhibited side 2 the petale carmine, very bea’ Price 3s. p 
De subject 88 — r ina tion; and must abide APO ETTE — penr yellow, the ‘centre peach colour, 
the f the 1 a ations, Certific: eri ape, good habit. Price 3s. 6d. 
will be sauce s. Three blooms of a sort required. scarlet, good habit, spherical 
‘Three days’ noti J. KEYNES, — be S ii ee 
MIRERS OF 2 PETUNIAS. — 25 
‘SON a ‘their LOUIS NAPO! ON BONAPARTE. — Ver — 
e lov A aan in genera that the Ex stems — — . poem — Pg with 
tion cultivate e Cheshunt Nurseries is now in perfection, 
rea rg "PERFECTA, Yat 2 perfect shape 
—.— ~ —— — 3 r 2 — À — e wl be and habit, li the and 9 violet and poe blue 
to any lovers oft eeri flower, w and black cheat 
| purchasers o or not. novelty jeens 3 5 obtained b — AMARTINE.— Very, large and perfect bloom, fine habit, 
een added to the dotor: bridge | lilac stripec and mottled with violet. Price 2s. 
1 the Eastern Counties — —— ati oe yt the Che >| BERRYER.—Very large and perfect ggg oe habit, rose 
hunt, two miles fr altham, and three miles from the | striped and mottled with red, violet t * 
Broxbourne Stations. meets the trains at Wal- a E Wen! ery large and perfect bloom, purplish lilac 
r T Nurseries. Cheshunt, Herts, Jal 7 CONSPICUA. a —Large e Dioon , perfect shape and habit, rose 
stri and spotted with c 
TO THE pee ree Be” oe SPLENDID 1 is taken, the hey wil te ie 
HE C 5 RY tae ri 5 HE wht U nk GENTIANOIDES aitai ga carlet m. 
Yo OUELL anp CO. w prepared ecute | with vermili d spotted 8 e. d. 
rs from their ee — very 8 od ee GENTIA opan paer DIDUS. crit 
aboye, , comprising all the new and fine continental varieties side pore white perfect is 3s. 6d. 
the followi bee OLDE Selig hybrid 
— 25s. light 8 the inside blush 
i — white, — and 3 habit. Price 5s. 


NA. 
LOUIS NAPOLEON — — dark erim- 
son wiih — 
Kingdom. Post-office orders oe 
unknown Tü — 


ARBONISED. ANIMAL MANURE, — If aay, 
ur seeds and plants grow, 
blossom in perfection, this Mai — 
of H. Cotes, Seedsman „ (Agent 
cial peet er 32, 
nisters, at 1s, Is. 9d., and 2s, Gd. 
, Pleasure 


. 


and packages charged ee. 
| — application for a Sak 
—— pe 


we Moreh DENYER, enen Lo 8 — 


N 
8 0 . unrivalled GERANTU 
FR 


d of JaukEs Waomes 


d, Brixton, Surrey, 1 
er ROBES IE, proin that Sieen 
sting of al bove 80 varieties es, is now in 
e inspection of hed — — ex- 

in bloom, a ecuted 


ection, | 
bloom, and free to th 
1 . for met 


accompany each ca 


FLOWER POTS AND GARDEN SEATS, 
OHN MORTI 


T 8 Oxford-street, res 
very 


large r e above 
iicits an ye 


. 


THE 


NT TO HORTICULTURISTS, 
RACTICAL L RESULTS OF REGISTERED ] IN- 
4 doy Tue following is extracted from the 
July 
* BITTON ob THE ROYAL BOTANIC SOCI 
EXHIBIT hibited on Wednesday last by the Society Lin 
splendid, especially the Stei tee es. ee rapi 
Deptford, calle ritis neens, 
pas were als Deptfon or Tag e ol Camberwell, = 
the M and Som p ‘Deptford, a fon a un 
contributed = the p tter were all from see 
hich i is the highest rew — * 
ea 8 pot pal 2 = st berries raised from seedings: 
the WLY- 
S, 


ing 


ets 
s, and 
the So- | 


t being ro 
—.— and growth of the fruit. 
fi itoy Mirt and 
oF TILES can — be 1 if ; at the Inven pit Ay Depot, 34, 
Fastchesp, City, n N 
£ PANS, PROPAGATING 2 &e, 
beg 


Jas PHILLIPS —.— io to hand their 


MILK PANS. 
1 maps diameter, ach 2 2s. * — inches n each a 2 
33 3° 
14 n 3 0 » » 25 5 0 
18 » 5 3 6 |26 ae 
Propagating and "Bee Glasses from 2d, e Cucumber 
Tubes Id. per i each Glas . e Wasp Traps 
3s. 6d. per dozen, Pastry Slabs, Hyacinth Glasses and Dis 
des for t Ornaments Fish Globes, Plate and Window Glass 
every description, and Lamp Shades, Lactometers for 


g she quality of Milk, 4 tubes, 7s. 6d.; 6 tubes, Tos. 

tering Thermo meters for Greenhouses, -Horticultura 
3 c. 

Ae and List of Prices forwarded on application at 


their Warehou uso, 116. Bishopsgate-street des Rondon, 


GLASS, 


GLASS MILK PAN. 


Tous 8 be supplyi Foreign 

Sheet Glass, v. very sup — — G — the market, 
in and apr 12 srg dimensions, 16-0z,, at 3d. 
per K or eut to size pat 3 not acer 40 os at 33d, 


foot. British * es = for Wi or. 
l T purposes, fro to 2s. per foot. Nog ö 
— be without ane a2 nal improvement to the 


k biat of 5 8 on application at the 
—— Without, London. 


SERN ATORIES, 


GARDENERS’ 


ATLET S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS 
ONSERVATORIES.— The readers of the Gar- 

deners’ Chronicle of Saturday, Feb. 24th, must hive observed 
the phish, terms in which this Glass was spoken of by Dr. Lux p- 


aoe — ss of the Patentee, to which we would beg “the 
perro nl of the ‘Nobility, Cler n 8 80 ad vhs ers, 


squares under 8 by 6 ...... 
8 by 6 sadar 10 SA < y "e — 1 — pe re * 10. 5d. 
14 by 1 25 14 fo Id. 1} fc 72 feet... 6d. 
8 fe pth 4 nang 4 fee — 5 feet. 7d. 


ban st of Prices om every information may be had by 
applying to JAMES PHILLIPS and Co. erap yey niga Glass Ware- 
house, ite a met Without, London 

3 LLATT anp Co. Pr ELLATT and 


lat 
EN), Paleon Slane Works, Holland.street, Blackfriars, 
e Glasses, 18. 2d, r lb.; 0 mb 
ilk P i 


tr raps, 40s. 
or pe By the use a these — fruit 
may be preserved from (anata certain) destruction 


Aer Ht s oe ang CO., 


much impro 
k System to Pienios, Provan ati 
which “atmospheris heat as well as bottom 


e. 
‘hese Boilers s, which 


are now ell known, sear re equi re description, but to 
those who have not seen them in operation 1 will 
be forwarded, as well as Ee of the pi ighes uthority ; or 
they may sega at most of t rincipal 
Nurseries ut the kingdom 


w Park-street, eve 
ural Buildings 


tained upon the most advantageous terms. | wo ight Hon. on. the EATA Ki I 
9 e., of po = Wood fm ected upon the most which reg. pee had the honour of 8 t 
poagn — ns. Balconies, Palisading, Field and Garden | tinues t ve perfect satisfaction. Mr. a ea y 
ces, — Q: show 7 } d give any informati — 

They also beg to refer to th houses built 


REDUCTION IN PRICE OF BOILERS. 


agho 
8. Frs Co. ber’ to inform po ‘Trade that at their Manufac 
ry artic 


actory, 
le required for the construction 


ri 
e ‘ble 
eir B $ ce w: 
0 in I. 50 ft. 4 in. pi *. 1 15 0 
in. do. 75 ft. 4 in. do. „ FES 
14 in. do. 100 ft. 4 in. do. „ BIS 0 
16 in. do. 150 ft. 4 in. do. . 310 0 
18 in. do. 250 ft. 4 in. do. 4 10 0 
21 in. do. 350 ft. 4 in. do. 5 10 0 
24 in. do 450 ft. 4 in. do. TEOG 
NEw PATTERN BOILERS. 
30 in. will warm 800 fe. in, pipe 15 15 0 
36 in. do. ae in, do, . 3 0 0 
All Boilers with donble arm s, up to 18 i in., ‘be, extra; to 24 
in., 108. extra; all above, ** same price, 
130, Fleet-stree et, London, June 2 


R 
rki 25 FRAME 
ps stg * 


Harz * 


ish 

square feet poms ae the following 
A reduction made n 1000 feet. 
Sizes. Inches, 


PATENT ROUGH PLAT 


PATENT PLATE GLA eae — 2 


3 

e present ex 
superior article should cause it 
r window 


tremely moderate 


reservation 
ex- 
cme = 
forwarded 
a Soho-squ 


of goods susceptible — 

P "the removal of the 
of Prices and Es 2 
a Hari 


3 — — 2 
; Bua 0 
H enny FREE AN, HOTHOUSE BUILDER and Hot- | 
water Triangle, Hackni 
5 Veen to iaei ia ree En — — 
Ei — cai T aag, 
Ses) ae Hand-lights, Summer. 
Seats, 8. a branch in — 
her wood or iron, on fie park fencing, sey = 
0 $ LOWER 8110 
, STICKS wiets e wth 
i the TN bad stained b brown or; — 
2 -To be had of all res ble N ursery 
er . a ile, at H. n is ee 
N,B, Stl bam athe Os dn rue 


PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS, KING'S ROAD, CHELSEA, 


CHRONICLE. 


gs, — well as for he age them, may be | evı 


TE PATENT ALKA 
C BLACK AND P 
plicable to every kind of Ir 
n 17 deen 
all Cin 5 a cri 


8 quale: Price 
brown, 221. per ton, 
of package 

p ria — : Messrs. Evans B 


thews and Leonard, 1 5 
3 Mr. Samuel J Pill. 


AY MSON, anp , BROWN 
a solicit th 
Gardeners, to th 


„ Dar 


s and Estimates furnished free. 

—— — ———ñ—ͤ k —p— 

HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING 
T WAT 

ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF THE CHOICEST PLANTS 
VINES, &e, 


BY HER ROYAL LETTERS | 
MAJESTY’S — PATENT. 
3 
E. — L offers for * P aleni HOTHOUSES, A 7 
' arrant far superi; all others, in every a * quantities that they 
respeot, _— 1 g — E 28 feet 6 ins, 41. 13 are aimag 5 N rn 
40 l.; Lean- to, — long, 16 feet 6 5 8 Baake parang — je 
Fins Pee age glass of large si Patent Lights for l n, applicall 
ni i ; * 
foot, according to quantity, de.. . 4 Shs i ATILE, 
HEATING BY HOT WATER. 222 ies e from 3 hands 
some smal. N 
C LARK’S secs, vlan HOTHOUSE WORKS, | some very handsome small COWS. ant 
onel-stree .— Proprieto al RAMA TIA 1 
CLARK; Manager, Mr. JOHN JONES. tor, Nr. THOMAS OXEN and 41 os 
Mr. CLARK presents his gra tefal 2 — the Nobility and | quantity of milk for — 
Gentry for their liberal ge of the above Establishment, | Alderney, and they are very hardy 
durin period of thirty years, and eee a o state that the | To he sosm gt 2 y 
of the duty on — e5 lm to offer his METALLIC | Majesty, 69, Wapping. 
lass | HOTHOUSES ata hese Houses GAME 
British Shee —.— in gois from 24 to 30 E ä wide. 
nches in in length, = of such thickness as to. preclu 7d. 2 
— of aceidenta ; „e, whilst that which arises 
— —— is effectually prevented by the peculiar | T 
mode of g adop As a sample of his Metallic Hot. 2222 72727257 
— — t improve are happi 5 8 55 22272 H 722 
ri to magnificent 22 
97 bia in the new Royal Saraso at Windsor, admitted by BORRAR H 
aga udges to be the most complete of its kind in th. as 12782527225 
al INDI Ü 12272 
A-RUBBER HOSE; PIPES, anD TUBING. 22227 
AMES LYNE HANCOCK, Sole 555 . 
anufacturer of the SATERT vu N 
RUBBER TUBING. These Ade, . woe a: INDIA. 72252 RE 22225 
| Pine h bore and pwards, are na injured by hot liquors.. 
are 1 les feriala n. all peratu: and ar 
well adapted for Wa — Breweries, Liquid Manure 
Pumps, Gas, and Ch * poses ; they require no applic. 
tion of oil or š do not become l aky from 
out of pas. 3 ee 3 suitable lor Fire Engines, 
i regard a permanently sound and flexible pipe 
Vv LCANISED INDIA RUBBER GARDEN HOSE fitted 
— ghia ses, and jets, oc eee 
Feng E 88 ngle th 
to | of ine Blane Garden Wose to ne Se 18 ab 
winding a whi a most convenient 
er up and conveying — ws Hos el when migs 
|, Manufactory rehouse, Gosw. 
i London. All and Letters nsi mena ation, ; 
ion, borough, Hull, or 


U forward 

lp Soret ack 21, —— 

* obtain from that 
occasion. No oficial 


AURSERY, MARGSFIRLD, NEAR UCK- 
FIELD. 4 — pe 2 
in an- 


continue to ihe very 3 attractive 
d is 12 miles distant from 

nd So on Coast 

be ob- 


d the Potato crop 
But as all is still 


have save 


after flowering, a 
and then 13 the . with eart 


e of about 1} inch; e top-dressing | 
tot at being di sturbed all the Potatoes 


iscount Tomren that 


ddressed 


THE GARDENERS’ 


into inso 


n | hav the 
t the all that they do is to aap ach the matter out of which 


| ee having eee 4 in Sige N mi 
w it a 


* y cool weather which we have enjoyed for 
the last few weeks will 


a is has 
res be the case. The Engli ish minister at | word 


has returned 


CHRONI 


undergoes its final change, and from a soluble sub- 
stance is gradually converted by their vital — 
nsoluble flour. To that final operation 


ve no reason to suppose that 


the par generate thei 

3 Ag obse ok that T TomBELLE Lompa 
doe off the stems till after flowering adus y 
aiia tat — oe ae the aga of the Pota 
have don s tubers are con- 
cerned, — — iheir farther duty i is rt nourish the 
fruit. If so, we have an explanation of the result 
of which that — ntleman bs positively speaks. At 
ll ev 


fine art 


CLE. 419 


eases of artistic — we must dear in mind 
that — 1 are 0 to be avoided. In 
it is by no means necessary that t things 
meat og on: be of the —— size, in order to ‘their balancing 
eac 
the e up fo 
want of eee at only by its relative hs ier 
colour or light, but by its 3 a ining in 
n properton as it is farther removed from 
which it is intened to influence. It 
becomes attractive by isolat 
There 1 eee: bee. whioh, we of eee by no 
geaen — arama requi attractive 


ents, 


masse: ith or 4 1 


ther nothing in i with pos 
ity, or even probability, it is certainly one that fas 


bilit 
strong claims upon the attention of practical men. 


An inquiry or rather requirement of one of our 
correspondents respectin g 150 e sagem 
* in a group or t” has — so 
su —— to us oy general principles pals anim to 
ing, he light of 


on such question 
pages by Mr. Bare and other 
g pen ents 
Although ha“ bouquet ” is obviously one of thos 


fine | s 


and br 
ci of attraction. 


By the w 


the masses — li: r dark i is i 
0 


ne ou 


s lle 
Al we i find that by opposing a small 5 
e greatly en 


of dark to light w 
bri — i 


things which do not a it of adequately definite 
which a 


—(Sir 


YN ed 
gra andert compositions sof Rustys sa 
remind me of a 


and gove 
the same. 


uality which results 
arts as shall make them subserve the 


ment of the 


0 Mr. Tompett 
m which th the follo ing is an see 
N Pa most t formal: manner, tha 

$ with a a 7 


ir growth; that they ame attached 
until they are ripe, just 1 if the haulm 


er a: and that uire as 
— Potatoes wi we not 
a often observed 


Corp — er — sli 
7 ghtest interrup- 
Soia 5 — * which I have recom- 


„ to our present purpose), 
the most obvious and most important . with 
light. Our first — i then, in the posi 


secure a = salad 
bt with this we — have 
ariety n the tints of the component 
parts, ris, and variety i in the outline of = general form ; | 
but in aiming at variety, we ware of 
* spottiness ” 
readth. 


attracts 


wers by Racner Roysen, of 2 blue. 
Rungx 


co 


as duly 


t breadth th 


and confusion as 35 destructive 
that 


to like mass 
‘sul is 3 a conflict — the 
g and me to the eye; for 
re positively in- 


pis oer intensifi uence of 
oran withstanding this, bius is the rigħt 
wps to — Sfo the purpose of e the 
value of 3 and — 


| colour i 


teri 
neutral gine equivalent to shadow, ch Magee are 
only denominate of colou 
distinetiga to tints. It moreover obi 
om what to 


an ig sa porti 
acting colour, taking care, however, that its mass be 
proportioned to the degree of influence it is 
required to exert. 
A considerable degree of knowledge of one of 
e — important ie dail on rag the proper 
may be obtained 


com pleteg. 


: y 


f ALT 


a 
dein shall ae, foc: a eating bi pe light, we must next attend to what we may call our 
so sharp “middle tints” a oa is in them colourless light in the prismatic spectrum; and any 
s | without 1 the —.— toate — chiefly that the beauty of our colou materials is colours are said to be complementary to one another 
ats). to > e, and as light is always subdued by the | which produce a when combined. 
A stems should be removed of colour, -i i that we may most| We are qu are ig these observations do not 
liately after being cut off; — hene and th wi possess tha rA onian give our . y, what he asks 
of * no time be lost in covering the common faculty ni feeling. for * may let here eir for; they comprise “neither he “definition of a 
i * with a Si of earth at least = satisfy i itself. Then come our deep tones? ’| tastefully arranged bouquet,” nor wh 
ites n to full depth of our colouring mate | dently intends. by an ex tion 
fly ends in all parts of the eksib “ hot or cold,” and it is with these that our | unde 2 by a mixtu low 
1 iment in the manner so rich green * should have its s mostimmediate rela- | posed; but we attempted to 
is Belgian Hane F on of fol sige — "r whioh ban! if rightly applied, 
as he confidently predicts, that the ful 558 paan greys, aa in defining thin r nat 
ly will a K 2 » of Pinks and Cornations, r — by — or at that p 
tivation have been solved, but into composition with such light tints as those of the infini te variety, and altogether er d t upon cir- 
will arise, ich Blush kose, or more sweetly 5 with the rich cums „The success, whether of a bouquet, or 
been sufficiently directed. It is my white of the Gardenia, 0 that tohef d νm of art and paliko, a Fall ava 
— be . formed Although we have divided the consideration of lady, depends much upon the circumstances of their 
| of leave ss abortions | our “composition” or arrangement into three, viz., | position. A nosegay or a dress which would show 
Stone’ ot feed “upon titei: parant tuber light, middle tone, and dark ; the result we ai at | to tage in the white-and-gold drawin 
wi 8 2 2 are mere abor- is one-ness, at, be it remembered, with the | would 1 ook poor and weak, and prove w 
es are thus tmost possible degree of variety— iety of a kind, | ineffective, am amid the rich ‘appointments of the 
3 E wohan moreover, which may fairly z considered infmite| boudoir or dining-room. He c 9 . 
hes can only of ; — =~ duch can w 3 — = “models, . the 
l i — with w. case of bouquets and costume, the process 
ng arri Baa — ai — aioe to sye p works of art. | reversed ; the backgro being a “ settled thing,” 
the power of continuing Turner works with it more — and therefore the artist or artiste, however humiliating the 
and 8 potentl any w dealt in the magic 1 must needs up to it. : 
re bable by of art.) As with colour 10 also must it be with art which has beauty . its rt oon is 80 
which gives form, both must be so that the aad shall far peek to be regarded a needs no 
tly | be equally remote from — and confusedness. 1 to show that the 
ne In or to . reconcile, an ce, | as applicable 2 as to — or 
some other fluid organisab and asses of hot and ar colour, r, |painting. Bu But =f 2 0 
H. and sent ma or of light . dark, we may take a porti ble, that 
aving reached the tubers it each and transpose them. But Ste, on in ale €6 — az 


pletes mpone: 
| blue, requires red to complete the cements of 


420 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


* . — give rise in the er to the 
emotions of the eee. s the bae or of 
Subli wrought out on 


n agreeably pl of ground, judiciously 
divided and appropriately disposed, furnishe 
beautiful and interestin Loess S, 

of a Garden or Pleas 


23 his attempts at composition or taste: 
is. attem 

= Let ue ask we, Is this 

3 

he must do in all c with reference a a 
w cut flowers, the t 

. — of groups or growing plants, o 

tion of such groups w rubs and trees, or o 

to otal design, includin ease and grounds, in which 

consists the comprehensive idea of a fine place. 

We may possibly ee to this subject. M. 


be e 0 to the growers of Carna- 
s to be made aware that, at = 
aral Exhibition advertised to cea 
Norwich on the 18th and 19th of the prient — 
the Carnations and “elo will not be staged u ntil 


un Mr. C. 
Bethel-street, Norwich, es or ago i the lach of J uly. 


seg, aye TREES. 


Tun TANK Oax, Cu uve.— —This Oak is 
0 


e 
The bole, at a foot from 3 gros, 
In som: 


graph of the known species, with a more detailed notice 
a new genus belonging to the group which we have 
at Hammersmith. 


more- | St 
and architectural abelian, | win 


ill, 3 one canno Š 
sects, which m certain extent 
feeding on particular species ¢ es on 
must travel in quest of them e the 
ws e they have ‘Ba bred — nade 


n 
c owing that notwithstanding the 3 
. “difficulties of the e 


ther 
raining of a single ee ony 
of a aa 


r modes of ge gor among the 
— prevents us fro 


3 


s of developm 


any 


of pianti 


in small colonies, individ als of ar size — found 
together, even in t iddle of winter. The senator 

an Heyden Frankfor the first author who 
particularly examined these insects; and his thr 
genera, described in the memoirs of the Frankfort 
museum (Seckenbergianum, vol. ii., 1837), with several 
—.— ones since discove vered, are characterised as 
ollo 


mentioned but not 


wings wanting ; 

tute of the honey-appen . 
‘Rhizobius paan. Burm, — sulk 

an inc, 3 d o 
er stones. 


hi hiz 
ascribing their appearance to | i ie. 
fou 


w te powder. 
. Tue e legs are short, with two- to joie u 
d 


and two claws. 
Smynthurodes Beta, J. O. W.—Len 

of an inch ; colour greyish, covered with white pon 

with the pianos of the 


d together beneath the s ipik the root. 
— sluggish in their ee, J. * m 


x Dae rin PLANTS, bfi 


is 19 ka 95 s inches i in circumference. 832, Genus VIII. l . thas i „ extraordinary 
d by the strict and sitive su eil- abundance of flowers, of which none remain fe 

lance of the koopere ¢ e preservation This disease appears to be generally con wit 
that part of the forest, out of revenge, mutilated th another, by which the flowers at the of expand: 
fine tree by cutting over by its 3 its m ing, or shortly after they are open, fall off. In Poly 
Stems, so that only fi remain. anthesia, the flowers are not only excessi 

It is yoy it aa of r Ri 3 the | 2 „ti 
bases of these four stems there is a regular, deep hollow s, Van T tenbach.—Antennæ short, 
1 3 1 or tank in * bole, in í which water jolt, Fay last 7 small; wings want ing; abdo- 
remains, e ree OF ae his flat, without ‘app pendages 3 honey; legs o 


cavity is 2 feet ‘in 


es deep, and has doubles pns 23 
"oe 5 


rise to the name kr the tree ki 
f 


eous j 
3 inak of * w 
this water, always of a brown 
notable * of tannin, 
aseribed to 
Its age be ee oes but a satisfacto 
exactness obtain 
bsex 


containing a 
pat possess the properties 
y be 

0 


e average 
th 


TY f. 
ed by the application 


11. —One-eighth — an 
in the nest of the red ant, Form 


—Antennæ short, pam ge 7- 1 
; wings want ng; 
Sane: 


3 5 
icum, Cnicus arvensis, Sonchus 
sativa, Hieracium pilose ae al 


ea Germar | © 
—Antennze 


00 years old, grown 
This was found to be 20 milli 
nch. age 0 
m the centre pce a4 ayy 
radius of the foie. 


verse 

ari — ana this divided by * thet thick. 
yer, gives 477 ; 

to this an, i the tree ri at ay 477 e ears old. 

Extract from Notes sur I. Accroissement des Arbres 
Exogenes, par M. A. Dubreuil. || 


e ir 


metres, or 37.5 
ness of th 


3t 


isily per- 
— 


kin: 
of different L (wh 
ceived), a — harso theri ah committn 


the nests 
fi 


seen; ing do ca 
3 the aphi aphides, v 3 were ——̃.— d together = little bits of 
olor tesa ae ch — been broken o the ground, and 
2 See by - bers — ants, u the ants found their 
a jeopardy, they drew ana 
root tage carried them still further into the * E < 
t Our corrections of the characters of this ios nus are made | 


from 7 


wo claws. 


n er 8. 
Forda vacca, Hartig (Rhizoterus V.)—Al 
nests of Fo ormica rufa; possibly — with 


an 
Here probably also belongs the Aphis radicum 


It is pro * to this species 8 Rusticus“ alludes in his 
0 


e that grew on an ant-hill and th ; 

17 7 colony of these white aphides. ahaa oon n 
reat — which ants mes on these little beasts, 
of — from the Thistle root 


be Be ; 
an 
Kalt. 8 of 
the 


* 


Pecimen fi furnished to us by Van Heyden himself, 


Í secrete the honey so eager 


Stig, IX, PHYLLOMANIA, or 


= 


Firat Species. UNIVERSAL 
on ulture have consid 


another rem. marie circums 
these insects that s0 m any . — £ 72 
des 4 
nests, jeva pe they are ly ite S ao 7 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 421 


rs or f To the careful observer them ere, room, however, to develope their petals = a judges of the land, with the assistance of ma 
will appear to have produced an | in. 8 eme to de fine = the gentlemen 5 
of small ets. In this it is} P. 8.— — E. 0.” should have — a insects with his . of Commons mean when they pass 
n that case the tree eueren fe plant. Is it wire w Heartsease, if |an act of 8 1 3 Mr. B. will not be 
mber of branches. | ex the full action of — un, are extremely over severe upon me if my opinion is at issue with his 
the anci speak o this 9 of leaves. liable to die off during June and J — near the atmo- on this point. He asks me “ to define what I consider 
agree t that it is owing to an excess in nutriment, sphere of London. Florists find it necessary to plant | to be a tastefully-arranged bouquet ;” but this is a task 
sof the methods recommended fo * pressing them in cool situations, and to protect them from | which cannot be well accomplished on paper. I may, 
will be good also eal ae one. 8 Ea often scorching sunshine. Lime-water, or a weak solution of | however, mention one or two things which make a neat 
+ especially wh oo much manu In | salt in water, will destroy worms; but then it must be | bouquet. Take one scarlet Geranium: I say one, for all 
I have been 3 to prune tem i in a pare in — weather when they are near the surface, bright colours should be few in proportion to the more 
nud have often had flowers even the and frequent] chaste and neat ones, which are required in quantity to 
2 = i to i n take 


) fnakirstors of the Orange tribe, and of some other Home i Aa white Geraniums with a dark eye, a pink one, or in fact 
og kept in pots or tubs, have a sure means, Green Centres in Roses are more ee e this year any colour you have; a Pink, a Carnation, a Hearts- 
ease, a small Rose, 


* 
g 
4 
B 
5 
m 
B 
= 
© 
5 
° 
5 
S 
2 
E 
Bs 
-g 
2 
= 
Gu 
E 
8 
3 
an 
2 
© 
= 
8. 
1 
8 
. 
+ 
8 
E 
p 
— 
2 
EA 
= 
— 
8 
* 


r pots An O 0 an abun th 
tree in too large a tub will luxuriate in foliage. nights have cheeked i in the leaves, many having fallen | duchess, My ideas respecting the proper distribution 
2 one, and it will soon load itself | off, whilst the absence of the sun has also preve ented the | of colours was beautifully exemplified in Mrs. Law- 
botanists, even the least experienced, flower-buds from maturing the extra quantity into | rence’s magnificent group of plants shown at the last 
lesser Periwinkle (Vinca minor), wi h | petals, and the unsightly excrescence has grown under Horticultural ee at Chiswick. With florists, 
leaves, will bear no flowers if left in the their shelter before the a is disclosed. I know of | massing may answer, for by that means the merits * 
io i ds of 


N 
Fe 


| awd; to make it flower it j5 e put in a pot, no preve ms n, and adopt the plan of cutting off, x different kin 
] er one. From this may be deduced the soon as the e is visible, all the buds it can never have: the effect of mixed beds, a es the 
E tha bse room to plants, especially to R Sometimes ba j “pea, —— tree must ne object is to “ set off’ x the mansion and grounds to 
+ A k sacrificed, when the blot in the remainder is genera id that 
7 kar Species. PARTIAL PuYLLomania.—It some- so much reduced as to be no longer a en and or expensive » flowers are not required. Every separate 
ies happens that plants have a larger number of indeed disappears apa The flowers retained, as | flower-bed should possess individual interest, and if the 
ves than they ought to have, without nevertheless, | all Rose-growers are aware, are then much larger and | minor details are well carried out, the whole will express 
feir general economy being <li by it, at least in | finer in all 8 a if 'the whole blooms had been both uniformity and variety. r. Bailey appears to 
* Th Haller bserved t the verb Paris | allowed to open Rosa. imagine that no further improvement can be effected in 
Ten quadrifolia) h ave or six haven: when it} Naturally grafted Elm. — The following curious | gardening ; but this is a point on which I should agai 


it 
tonly to have four. I myself, have often observed | natural graft occurs about 4} miles, or rather more, differ from him. This is the age of 8 
nts with compound, or with verticillate leaves, vary from Tamworth, on the way to Ashby, in the road | ever old-school eners and farmers think, i — 
number; those for instance, which ought to hedge on the left hand side. The trees are the common provemen 1 continue to advance every maira Of the 
three add a fourth, as in the Verbena citrio- | upright-growing Elm of that district, the English Elm, | authority Mr. B. speaks of, I know nothing. Matters 
i t 


others, inste a flowering branch, will | I believe. About the middle of the limb, between e e, | of taste are often as well understood by the peasant as 
hoot out a tuft of It ap that these to 5 inches, h arked (about two years | by the ewe I do not consider that t men 
again are all attributable to the rich of | since, I am told), and the wood—at least the exterior | are t st pe stor ings in every 
the sil; although we must not exclude from the | part—is dead. There has also been a branch about as life. There is generally too much enthusiasm in the 
umber of promoting causes the peculiar nature of the | thick as a man’s thumb cut off opposite d. The junction | nature in seg: ath of their own parti views, E. A., 
The more the weather is favourable to vege- | above fis very perfect, a and the trunk of a — Brainire 
tation, the more does it koiote partial phyllomania. tree is oval for some distance above f g. W., Ji Rain Waler. — shall feel much indebted to“ T. W. T.“ 
Third Species. PISTILLARY PAYLLO A has for a description of the d contents of his filter. 
been already said that i e lled extra-double I have had considerable experience in catchin 
fowers, as in the Ranunculus for instance, the pistil is ter, and using it, both from the cistern where it was 
* n leaves, and that the flower is there- caught, on the roof of the house, and fro 
fore This disease is owing to the same causes I fo filter unneces th cases for keeping 
and requires the same treatmen 1e water sweet, SO ere was a reg 
. er GA Rin tion kept up; but having gone to town one winter, after 
g mp, which was not mended, and of 
NDENT seems to think th y pap course the tank —.— allowed to remain s 
under this head will not meet the views, or rather sup- my return, the tank in the interval contracted a smell 
1 of villa gardeners. = shall e explain their s0 and that I found it impossible ever after to 
and then 2 to your as to their cleanse it, though 1 it with lime and oth 
prey application. In lumns of the Gar le materials. If „C. R. D.“ therefore 
25 onicle there are ges weekly 5 contin on, I think he will keep the water 
— — ctio rarei be gathered, not h without a filter ; but if he wishes to the 
— Sis — k hi gh in the seale, but water w 8 find a filter indispensa . The 
e than the villa a gar z I have experienced has to the water, not 
Lee Appl = ~ ese 3 pee qualified from the sediment it contains, but from what it dissolves 
T 0 otherwise, as It is not intention nd holds in solution. Soot, it ll wn, 
give a weekly ater: In the body of the Pap swept from the roof into the cistern, carries with it a 
ot the man 4 — — good petal expositions quantity of salt, md it is no = adorm to extract this 
ubjects connecte ith n From wan a spring near my 
* ad of 6 N S to Correapondents” house, I am obliged to act on the fact that every man’s 
mae 7 useful hints to supply immediate in- roof, supply all beneath it 
Gain. E ir. object, 83 . e. ms steer clear with abundance of vater; I have accordingly erected, 
* buti = daeu ow je r Aang if 
ptin 0 ‘this, I ‘shall — — as Igo s m Across t l length. Sate 
jects which y your correspondents ave found wo equal co mpartments, tw o thin wooden boards, per- 
1 with; where ney have failed I will — with holes, are placed about 6 inches apart, the 
Au point out the proper mode to pursue in order to outsides of w are to be e red with fleecy pen 
ons * act as the sponge in Robins’s filter), and the insi 


their future attempts. They will ci reumference. Feet ins. 
ta i 
owa practice, detec where they have erred. 6 

personal inspection, it is scarcely pos- at © 
pret the cause of all the failures that at 2 


5 3 ins pa to pack with an nimal charcoal, sand, and arn 
— i well mixed. The water is caught t from the spouts, as it 
eight from’ ground comes from the roof, in the one side filter, 

= . eg h which it passes, to the me pare aR the latter 

lit ailures are communicated at 3 aboveh 15 oe ee compartment all the ap 8 pipes issue. I be 

acquainted with gardening, and whose Mixed B Beds v. Masses.—The difference between the | obliged to KEW can give me > me aor 

them ust obviously be | beautiful and picturesque, according to my idea, is this ; | mixture for my filter. R. Ta thin rae 
repeat that the observations under | the beautiful takes one’s attention at first sight, omg the | coal will preserve water sweet for yara As tk 

be = sp applied as yr more you examine the m ore beauty you discover. The carpe has grim a 2 globe, 

tances admit; they are 3 o be e takes one's attention like the beautiful, but | sper yee? other ae ved 8 of 


-< 


oe 


9 
4 
0 
A 


my best to remove the cause of their | remark which ies to massing. Let Mr. Bailey take | infested by efts, he will find it a ready and 
most | ing rid them. 


— th on 

te 9 the Dahlia, from the cutting favourite flowers he is fond of yo 2 3 the 8 easily = wat a pinch slr stp eee of 
attenti ering plant, may at some > time | vases on a table as he pleases ; then fill another half- re] I 
to * All that „ E. O.“ can now do, | dozen vases with flowers of different shades of colour = Salt will also kill toads and frogs. 4. D 
g stem about 2 or 2 feet trots form, and arrange them in the same manner i e ; 
adi jae Port the laterals with — ae stakes, | former case, and if he does not prefer the latter arrange- re al is equal to eal me 
T in this manner ly to these as the Sup- | ment, I shall give up all hope of making a convert of him. white 
that 


peel them, and 
y adder! poy, aaah 
ston ras i the kernels, —.— slice the — into the stew- 
à storm. Each of manner they are erage ‘liable oe be ‘broken I admit that the ee at 3 and peis coloured 8 UE ao peel eut vey ; 
* e Lord Ma 


thereto 
the late occasionall 1 Show; pan, 2 
Searcel y possible to: oa to —— but who shall say that either ae or the other is 1 quart of Rhubarb cut fine, and from ee sa 
ze done, that will depend upon their lux- beautiful? Massing Bi followed by many not as a matter A a ae 
N in this operation must in of taste, but because is fashionable. . tastes diffar, as for other r . 2 May prick from the 
e ag are TES = so do opinions. 0 55 . te | seod beds the Lest plants 9 inches asunder, an a by 


ae aig E abe ik with great 98 
sah a time will be ample for for each | preands often becomes ridiculous on a smaller scale, | main requisite dal their destined 
are round s pep and promi- | Mr. Bailey quotes Mr. Repton in support of his opinion ; spade, mark 8 nare rod. Take all = 
anced footstalks ; and as they begin to | but, as I understand the passage, it rather bears out mine esch tn wide and bia 


them Ane ligature, allowing | than Mr. B’s views ; and as it requires the talent of beach successive place, 


0 


422 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


Mr. Blac ck, gr. to E. Fos 
F.. ß 
— 0 As ings, t £ 
of genuine — guano, or or a cup c 2 x er 3 wE aga al tithes 5 kage, ana — sorts, 1 1 75 Laber „ Tadias 
The refa * in oe h ill then pass — the tube | Conspicua, Marian, and Phyllis Rookh, Ariel ao | 
— a Aole weil broken "p. — —— — — 9 — our. pas The glass tube should also come rom Messrs Cock, Gana ae 1 
ith the f. for th: ase of a tog the | into wes 8 a and Mr. Parker and Mr. Gaines sh 1 
222. ͤ ͤ—— Oe tn — aan S — 
‘ ts entire, | way, and the entrance e 0 e ’ an 
eet SONS eee Sing of | closed with glaziers’ patty, linseed-meal, dough, or any | _ The tent next this one, and par Parallel with it, | 
and give them a little water. In autum sing of . be has | different exhibitions of Stove 1 G a, Contain p 
ano should be forked in at the rate of 1 lb. to a square | similar substance, after the other end aS | Cape Heaths. The collections co p; — 2 | 
— å ł v fine benda m be obtaine 7 — rted a va a flask be not — hand, a thin were again contrib Mrs, Lawr — TSCELLAN Bony 
This p eaer — jae sts o all the green — jea may be use nstead of it. The operation must be by Mr. Cole, gr. to gd 88 send 
nae ome Son, Ma iden, — erformed in — evening. Subsoriber, 2 taple. miia iga less E erence te teat . pas 
pate time than formerly. True Mrs, L Soups 
ee er roas 2 —— oa spear a Foreign Correspondence Stophanotis floribanda, Sollya linearis: — 
i mg Canada balsam, —7 assist in Sr. Prrausguncn, June 18, 1849.— Rate of growth Mr, ‘Co 17 — dda 3 — —— 
giving a fait trial to a solution of copal as a substitute. in Trees. — Having just read chapter on the age with Mrs. Lawren hoes a gh ine Hat 
autam year up speeimen 1 Exogens inthe 4th edition of Dr. Lindley's excellent | — tg better — was ve 5 = 
4 Spects he mo 
balsa m, and specimen 3 in copal, and the result | “ Introduction to Botany,” I enabled to furnish a 4411 fia am T e 3 Fi . * eee Rss 
is equally a . The tage the copal | few supple y observations, which may be not d mentioned, he had a good Cler 
r the Canada balsam consists in the latter not re- prived of all interest. The — on ie — — floribunda, va 
niring the tion of heat. A thiek solution can Garden is ossession e a tra cut axodiu xis, Ca 8 Dip SE 
2 ing by apinan it in aleohol, but this process is e- 8 (Sequoya En a> we mea ty 42” in dia- ene’ 3 dron Fee — Saat 
tedious, and apparently unpromising 0 mi er, . in the neighbourhood of the late Russian | noble panicles of flowers), a blue — 
at first opake. The ion, however, is finally — — B „ and having 1003 very distinct bush, well „ an — well unn . pan 
effected, — the tran 8 zones. At the time of à la r. Khebnikoff's re- — o e 881 Canang ane aq 
specimen is immersed, pum ubbles are — to | sidence at Ross re was felled another Sequoya, gr. to J. Canter, Rou. ek Me Pampa s Bart, 
whole becomes opake during the which had stood in the very colony, measuring 15 feet sy a ar ad considerably the N group. It 
cess of drying, 1 oe sr gre however, 8 vliet, at the place above the ground where it had ni Pe ame: — we: ‘ 0 Wich chess. 
2 5 > ; A 
and for the are 8 ent; pyr 3 has seen himsel basis phanotis n HS pie e ict ae 
progress of consolidation, or — eseja oa — — —.— of this and stated to the truth | #schynanthus pulcher, a Showy plant Well manages 
men towards the r part of ll in which it is of the size which had ‘een indicated to me; he — mag 1a e Meg 2 
N CHIS a; 
ed, and the — gradually becomes to pe dered a — ut of this stump to be cut out for me, ial a 8 pubescens, a bonatifa * e 
In specimen 2 (put u o or ee weeks ago), I p in order to ascertai = — of ; but unfor- | flowered ee crassinoda, Allamacds u. 
ly retained a large 4 of bubbles round ‘the tunately the sailors, * not surveyed, took this | thartica, a small but v very meat — waa 
object, and you will ses they have eee into nt fo ommon log and burnt it! pe — ae — — lants of i Kalosan dues, $ — “| 
large ones away fr it, 17 I had given a little — small board of 7” 5% — probably from this * Stephanotis. Exhibitions NOt iy Greve eek Gn — 
ance, by slightly elevating t a r the - | tree, has 286 very distinct and well m — Mr. Williams, gr. T 
„ DY slig ng y raill, of Bromley, E. 
0 8 in the same muse ai gr B. Mi ler, Esq., of Tooting, and Mr, Jack. ‘The bat 
ts in Miss Trailles group were Aphe 


arix 
Sitka, meas in di — sow 


ployed with suecess as a 30 zones, the interior ones a Si of — wi 

wW. I found that it might be just — — A trunk of Pinus sylvestris, grown in Finland on aam 

in rec rectified naphtha a as oe a can be in round, measuring oat > 2 gga 412 zones 
e tubus medullar very n centre of 


is factin Ure’s Dictionary. 
or in any — se — Ai have at hand. Que 


to which the 
sort 


useful substitute in micrometers! J. S. 
Henslow, posse ay July 3. [The preparations with | 
whieh we ; favoured were quite as good as 


wr y ` 


Toe not se 
and 


— The da 2 


s 
— tree); whilst another tree of et same > kind, grown 
near the firs but on a moist and low spot, mea- 
sured 28 jock =A showed but 100 genes. F. E. L. 
Fischer, M. D : 


Sokieties. 
TURAL, July 3.—Sir P. DR Ma 
e e Leeture to-day, 
5, ~ prine ipally eonfined to the 
the constitute the 
are m 


ALPAS GREY 


e 
favourablo or unfavourable 
tion, its alteration, its See 
fruit, ‘which i Production 
ence of a The | 0 
— of flowers fal Žigu es, 
of. similar accidents, “together with the history of 
monstrous or _ uits, were amon 
—— ed on this occasion. 


oraL Botanic, July 4. ieie was — — exhibition for the 
d the show a good one, althouga, 


evil ; 
to iayer or relay 

time it has been all 
thiek from the 


spike o 


pecte É mf k aos than on former 
One — 2 together with che end-, of the first 
i 0 P 


by Mr. Mylam, gr. to S. Rucker, 5 

gr. to C. B. War „Es. Mr. 

a magnificent Aerides odoratum of large size, 

> 2 most lov blossoms ni 

d Sobralia, 

— ak 8 ns -lutea 
plant of the sma 

small Barkeria seal: 

of beauti/ul 


d 
had a nice variety of Kalosanthes, ———— 
Aphelexis humili E iatica, 
matanihus bicolor; and Mr i Jacke” Gash cast Fs ae, 
endron aff a Kalos 


the _—— aoa ‘the best puy 

gr. to S. Rucker, Esq. Among the 
Sie i and eapitally managed plants of infu, 
re gies p paek A eae 
vent — Bothwelliana, spa speciosa, 
rosea, the latter — — eae * 
ä — the Nur ie 
was first. His casa eie “ter bloomed ihan 


bairn’s, who was ond ; 
i ae . 


scalar 
ne o Others, were 
t. . Epps sent beautiful 2 ts of pa 
tricolor, inflata, retorta major, tricolor a, Parmentien 
, 


ising 

Gan” — 5 of ee next Seat s whioh sts stands at seme — 

from the two we have just vis ae ore that 241 
with Ferns, contributed Wishams, gr. 

Warner, Esq.,and with alpine plants. ae — 

of 2 for ie which there 58 wee A 72 pal 


st, wi 
p 46, and SP , 1848, seedlings, Queren Victoria; 
ing — Paul Pry, ‘Taylor's Loed . tr 8 White, 


Aar rrison, Criterion, — „ 
— —2. Mr. Keyn 
th Mes ard, No Pius. 3 
. 3 5 
J — Beauty dliag; 2d, Mr, Norman, 
Mr. ä of T oom, seut two seedling 
Juliet was the best, — very promising, 
pane sa Pink, Bizarre Carnat 
shown but not in good 2 — tan eai 
ere the Seedlin — 


oe oe d from Mr. 
d light 888 ones, and 
rosy upper pe petals an light had also a scarlet 


rantha 


sum 
with 
ice Bras 


H rs fi 
Phaius albus ; Barkeria specta 2 e spikes; ne 
huge _ Aerides erides odoratu 3 and the Holy 


la į U 


ensely 
r ad 1 75 next the walk, rising 
outsi e growth 5 


at one end of the shrubbery, 
ith de 


i. e., any that were also 
ad w 


— 2 Mr. Plant, gr. to J. H. Schr ser, 7 and Mrs 
Lawrence. The former had 7 plant of Aerides odora tum in 
the most luxuri ant health, 


Indeed, , large plants of this kind of virescens 
lilac 


of the 8 hibition, The same exhibitor had 
nicely-flowered Rectalabions guttatum, Mrs, Lawrence 


— „ W. ors 
| a strong growing Indian Lycopod, of the colour . 
As Simane dee ee ns Mr. Green showed Honda 


Mrs, L 


sent a large and — Sobrali 
— canons — macrantha with 10 open flowers 


y of 


From | on 
were made for — 
er A part ing 


ers; and C 


with a charm- a 
— aay L indley 


ce Elwocarpus Some 
5 22 six flower-spikes on for ‘such c 
oe in this tent; but the seas 
2 ze. 


a oan det into he he ground, Previous 
at the 


3 pas 8 
3 ds, oan 
Suitable ces, lorming 
i —— — Laurels in the | os 
„and winter, with inal seem anes 
the opera i 


Winter is the best time for the J 
a ag 8 Honey.—Put | f 
a small fiask of about 


In groups of | ues — gr wf go. on lay between Mr. 
ager gr. to Mr. Beck, r. Jack, gr. to k. G. Lorat aine, 


E 
dram vitellinum, Fg 8 Cattley 
a variety of Aer — . ee and Barkeria porate in 
Mr. Jack sent the same Vanda teres eriy shown, still in 
e soda pia it Oncidium altissimum anda a niee 
tu 


Mr. Mylam had 
Page x of 


y. 
e As new be dee, 
* a — 


collection : 
fo: 


de of the last or — tent w. 
in all ‘i classes of which Messrs. Fare 
— poses and Mr. Fran es, $82 
arded to Messrs. 

. ia pier the names stand, se 
was filled with Feoir, about which it, 

ve © t 
Coe state that, with oor — gg 

able * uantity than q 
hibited; = tinted — — 5 Hamborg — 

3 —.— 
Straß 


A speci 
pec 


were 


Baa 
ero of pond ý ” and as 
ance, aem aie 


sa 
ere Wa 
o which the 
appl 


not — eee 
N e exhibition na 7 adage of 
tt se | ue ae s y, £0 largë 


0 
nd | Bath, b bition 
— ago eo in ae ae 


ps. Det : Queen and 
a nose * of themselves, so meern Were * with 
— collections of 
Beck, and 


1 
ere sent by Mr. Sits gn te ae 


Kiya 
bites to a — 
and 


ses 


„ bad pe exhibi 
own by M 


py Mr E. Lousada, 
PINE-APPLES.— Bray, g oF " of two M yh 
. prize for a co e cots g 
eighing 3 Ibs, each; a handsome — ies 
tow oid Queens, 4 lbs, 4 lbs. 7 025 


THE GARDENERS’ 


For fruits of this 
to J. J. Guest, Esq., 
8. 14 oz. and 


Queen Pines were numerous 
awarded d to Mr. Joves, gr. 
two - + 

h 


z 
P 


7? 
Mr. Bray, aad —— Jackson Mr. 
bs. ; Mr. an Enyille, 


W. 


4 
r di shes — contributed * 
20), hese lots = — rised 


— — se Peaches, and Elru ruge, wny, an 

b arker 

r dara aay. Some good Cherries — sent 
— — ae sford (2d). 


s, a prize was awarded to Mr, Nor 
eeu Vigra, naan yee # for three handsome Vines 
o of Black Hambu 


Peach 


apaw, Nutmeg, Gamboge, Clove, 
ude this ee of the fruit without stating 


i ig a — t one; for, owing 
1 with dcheuny that we could get near it, 


Í 


AN BOTANICAL AND HORTICULTURA G. This 
oe was establi n Sydney in 1848, chiefly 
through the 


tor of the 


of M 
ave — 3 
progression o Society 1 in — Aen and 
confidently at anticipated ba exhibitions ae 
— well a A 


Aa 3 seen at the London horti- 


* 


well grown, and cont 

allota purpurea, Erica vestita 

purpurea, the “wax plant,“ aud a = phyranthes, all 
chsias oods, gr. 


Ps in the 8 in such 
. —— rg ort, 8 70 
unuals (6), T 


8. A 
Mor 
mo beatiful Paes, 
— 
3 go — — zi 
hness 


d eyriehia villosa.” — 
. „ brilliant and — "Roses ( 

* Wale SOE b 

ditio eriums J. 
admired, 3 

ks 


These 
ad 
rgh = one of | rare 


r f. v — — Mr. |. 
hess Dowager of Northumberland, sent | ing 
P 


lished 
— of Mr. Charles Moore, who | m 


show pee were 3000 f persons —— as la 


a droo ant 
Baptist ; beautiful end 
Mort 


and many of the samples were excellent. The first 
iven to a white wine manufactured from the 


- MeArthar). The judges also r 


exhi- 
m the Muscat Grape, which 
eae a medal ; they were not very sightly, but ex- 
in flavour. There were also 

0 


ibited. reeled silk in hanks, 
id 


Ofe s 
months 
rop 


this exhibition (March, 
n i and 
alba were — beautiful flower in the B e Garden. 
are found to stand better — any others 


1 Memoranda. 

M ae P, D Son’s NURSERY, CHESHUNT 
Half an pir s ride trots London, by a fast train on the 
astern Counties Railway, brings us to the pleasant! 
situated Me of Cheshunt, at the north-east end of 
whic aul’s Nurseries elebrated 


prese very striking effect. 
fr ent ‘growing of the hybrid Chinese, and a few of the 
Noisettes. The size of some of the trees is truly re- 
* the — 4 are of a —— —— sg — 
with flowers. 
25 feet in eireumferenoe ; 
Belle . — 17 test; 'Cocein nea superba, 20 
Riego, 17 feet; Blush Hip, 20 feet; — agg 
18 feet; Jaune Desprez, 20 


newspapers say, „m be s fu 
ciated.” These are all old — 0 known . ; as, 
of 


shire: Ruga, Splendens, 
Hybrid: Wells’ Gar- 


a brilliant erimson Rose, drooping — a stem 11] feet 
* ear ; it was the Beauty of * standard of un- 
Entering t s Rosetum, which | 
na — * 


re brou ae t together, — —— among new Roses 
Pii : Adrienne de Cardoville, rosy crimson, large, 
5 — f good form. oss: Princess 
emer), flesh — of medium size, full, and of — 
m; Lanei, rosy purple, large, and full. French: 
Panaches, w with clear red stripes, very 


distinct ; General Jxequeminot, 


CHRONICLE. 


some samples of } seed 


um- | their 
stan — 5 floral Por — we are doubt 
„informed that at the tim 
ed | 1849) 
r 


s are the 4 


ong hibition in * au 
ho 


the gems of — collection inte 


Genista tinctoria pleno mi 
of fore 5 ada this establishment we must 


Provence: Alet 
oulin 


De 
— Mrs. Siddons. 


ardy, 


Goze 
Per- 
nz Sydonie 


As 
Felieité Par- 


mentier, grep and others, we could not hel 


ing Roses 
a brillant and ‘well-formed i hybrid Bo 


September and 
— 
ood pale moss, 
Bourbon, and a 
Green 


nt res, which are so abundant in ma 


ny many places are but 


little known at —— this year. Mr. Paul considers 

one eause of their production ( though not the only — 

to be giving t a ants manure i too fresh a 

(See Appendix to “ Th 27 on 

the Rosetum © examination of the young plants 
nursery—where aeres 2 — ex- 


the n 
elusively, we had an of see 
ced by Roses of different — fan 
and we are certainly of opinion that in 
one colour make a m 


ustine Hersent, pin ak. 
Laffay, — crimson, 
Le — pale yellow. 


nd June have been 


p Africana, a 
4 — cata, heen brevifolia, 


nica, and other 
embrace nearl 


Abies bs — 
Cryptomeria japonica, 5 feet; Tax 
s ad d 


pi wh potted — 4 


hen well rooted they are plunged in 


e po n 
into small pots during summer. 


— en masse, 
this case beds of 


Hybrid Perpetual: Madame 
Noissttes Miss Glegg, white ; 


ot Roses whieh figured at the metropolitan ex- 


transferred from 


use is now filled with 
Conifer ous 3 among which —— 9 of 
Af u 


Araucaria 


— 


be 
e 


winters ae ; Ilex 
f too numerous 


Roses, where it 


the open ground. 


and full, ve Hybrid Bourbon: ov Ricaut, iscellaneous. 
vivid crimson strikin and fi These are all summ t for the Proteine C 
oses. ng the autumnale, we noted Damask Par waits y acid liquid which 2 di 
petual: Julie de Krudner, free bloomer, and i mii ae 
e good; Poupre Royale, a fine rose, but of an objection- sateen dato reagent for 
able colour $ ; Duchesse de Praslin, pri pale as | and for a large 
| ing the characteristics of the Alba Rose. Hybr to ther, | 2 these 
Perpetual: Louise Bourdillio — istinet aad ‘ eep red colour 5 "and in this manner 4 one- 
retty ; Reine des Fleurs, rosy pink, dull now, but said even 
to be ‘fine in the autumn ; Cymedor, brilliant red, las may e 2 o give an idea of = 
fruits = ere pes, striking, but not too double ; Madame Pepi rose, | delicacy of 3 and also of its probabl in th 
uscious fru A special palit and full, and of good form; Gloire d' Angers, study of vegetable 1 may “ge tol 
‘to Sir T. “Mikal brato collection lively rose, e a small; Comte de Montalivet, violet, | starch, and gum-arabic acquire a very ae 2 
superior Melons, recently in- very large and showy, ‘put not very double; Géant colour in contact with it. Urs are nes ys — 
the colony. Messrs. McArthur ob- des Batailles, brilliant crimson, a ; Duchesse | them oloure after the nitro-mereurial * id h 
the Zante Grape, from which the de Goblins pale 2 * r Ge 2 been mixed with thom, eee En 
This was the first time ithad sim — last but larger ; Pins IX., the he albumen of Te eee 
appeared very luxuriant, and if it er — ee e — — and last but not tab] aseine, gluten, legumine, ei, wool, 
extensive cultivation will teen least, Scleil d d anetarit. as good a Rose, though not s0 | featbers, horn, epidermis, gelatine, chondrine mo 3 1 
article of commerce, The e of | brilliant in r, as Géant des n — crystalline, vell-washed at OF . 
i it be envied by any le arlemagne, silvery and full the soluble Ter een, it pa with to + iling Meroe 
ee ised Caroline Marniesse, creamy es like Folicité Per as well as meng gy gonad t 222 
i — Pumpkins, American | petuelle, Tea-scented: Vicom | more or oboe * y red. E. Millon, in C we 
Ten Beans, Turn ellow, variable. : : K 
u Arti Globe — 3 Beet, ar kinds less novel, but F 8 ly Calendar of adar of Operations 
i kes, Celery, and Rhubarb. The | known, we noticed t the following.—French : — 2 Wher — — — f 
5 r excellence an * tout, a Auver mour, baie 2 6 D — Vincas, Bay 
è a wines to publie competitic | Cout a Fille Dido, + ISCONTINGB — and 
Were principally of vintage 1845, | Belle Pi : Presque partout. Hybrid bias, Poinsettias, Gesneras, 


424 


THE GARDENERS’ 


— . . —— ę.—⅛— — 
D . — — 
plaus ut shunar habit pi -o are designe ed for autumn 
in in by es attention = a in A 
and m mois „assis 


pum th — ith — aterings of liquid 
ure ; the will apply sx — ts in 
(en of ‘Thuobergia, 2 Glo , Gera- | 
niums, ias, &e, the beauty of which iti is desirable 
top eg dongs possible, Pelargoni f th 
forcing kinds, which were cut dow e tim siuce 
and ar w com i wth, should be 


trimmed, should be repotted in sandy soil moderate 
rich, placed i ina close frame, and sparingly y ware, till 


of t rts form more beautiful objects, or are better 
9 -e r forcing, eny the fancy panee and for this 
quan f healthy plan sho = s 


atte ended to 


e a 
the app i. 0 nt will be spoiled, and th 
production of useless suckers encouraged. lants 
which were planted out for the purpose of layering, 
should now have the points of the shoots down, 
preparatory to their being layered i all pots a week 
or 10 days hence. propagating by cuttings and 
offsets of choice Caleeolarias should be no longer de- 
e: A e of Chinese Primul 
should various greenhouse plant 


covered except when 
wet. 2 — the plants they shoul 
as to shade the pots, and only 
those behind them. After ee ir g 
the pos ality of greenhouse plan 
without any kind of EN a it is therefor 
to place them behind a north wall during — y port 


Season, to plunge 
— te care seme to place. them at sufficient distances 


FLOWER GARDEN AND surdpeEey, 


Ar, F 


— a good crop next season. Let this be kept il 
il 


ala satay two- thirds of ‘strong, turfy loam which ap- 
nd one-third of 


we a 
he other hand, it is is dus 
m 


houses, of a sub- shrubby or herbaceous che racter, 
Salvias, Cinerarias, Begonias, aiarra Calecolarias, | 
Veronicas, &c., may now bat a out on warm | 


the whole should be well i incorpo e some time before 
wa fo summe N must 
regularly removed, e growth of the plants en- 
e i iquid manure. As 
St 
— lier tha 


e pres ear's nners, and will 
of course be better . bor an er, excitement. 


Proceed with the e planting out of the various autum 
sat winter crops, selecting the most favourable ae 
the purpos ound has 


anting proceeds, 
quantity of Potatoes, of first-rate 3 planted early, 
witho ut manure, on new gr round, and w ich do no 7 


tubers are now about as size of 3 i ym: to 
ties the growth of " z the g 
re laying a ring o 
tr pean Geeks phos.“ em, 
and, 8 e a ite quicklime about the base 
-i the , to cover 
will be useful 


heri 
the manure will for at tubers 


manure water e effec 
. on observer in the 3 
s, many of which are already more aari 
eet high, and the strongest growths will be m 
Sow Cabbages in a frame 


rsley, on ground richly manured * 5 with 
80 — for late autumn and early winter 


After ing the — —— of Pinks and Coe Bt — State of the Weather near London, for the week ending July 5, 1449, 
by nag pams 7 pr roceed with other hardy herba- as observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiswick, 
0 nts, as xes, Pansies allflowers, Antir M Banomeren. || T 
5 —— Tax 3 3 the old Linum flavum makes and Jay. 2 Max. | Min peel | TEAOR 
a good yellow bed, continuing in flower during the | pmp 29 aaa et 
whole of the summer, and i fectly hardy; it will Satur: 30} 4 || 3o16] 25470 43 | 3 % wis. 05 
strike freely cut before the wood | fert: 12 f| tsa] 2921 || 79 | 37 | 6x0 || sW. || o 
gets too hard, Sow Brompton and Queen. Stocks for Wel . 12 |) 29.745 | a9.667 || 73 | 53 | 65.5 || W: 91 
spring flowering, and Intermediate Stocks for autumn. — © 29973 28.77 7 4 60. N. E 
A sowing may also be f some of the hardier | Ter, — — =< | ; : 
nnuals for late autumn ing ; sorts should be — 20 3 4 zane |i zo g ros oag 
* E ai fine; 
selected fi pu which come very quickly into 30—=Clondy s and cold — aajn sold tee the perloi 
a flowering ery much done towards | zur 1—Clear; quite cloudless; fine: cloud : 
ula wth of weakly plants, and 7 ting — 8 ‘loads very fioe; slightly atp ded. 
ja — s 
the flowering of Base 3 by frequent waterings| —  4-Overcast: cloudy; ne ‘clear ar night 5 
Aipa d manure. Itis expeditious and imm edi nediately 8 am 8 E free dees lightly overcast at night. 
effective mode of in — the fertility of the r 
State of the Weath at Chiswick d 
: — DEPA a entuing week, ending July 13, 181, 0 ee 
INERIES, —If the heating appara‘ of these m 
tures are in any way defective, this is e season I FARE 3 5 Yearsin | Greatest eee 
artificial heat can with the least risk be dispensed wd, Es EGE | Sa | which it arene i oe a 
and therefore the most proper for making the n ry : - 8 9 5 i Bl 
Iterations. is very annoying to hav Id boiler | In- 8 213 2 n 0.46 in. —— 3} 1] if 9| 6| 3 
‘or a set of or tanks give way in middle of wo 10| 742 | 524 94 5 5 036 15 1 shai 5 3 
winter, and with duo tand careful observation ff, fl | Sa Sa) e | Ht amaaa 
5 1 8 y 13| 747 | 51.9 |633 9 00 — 2 i=} 4 
vented. From plants which are een their z * tne ur 1 764 | s17 | 60} 9 | 146 I 871 
bse be we rip 8 ru highest temperature during the above periad occurred on the 14th 
. b — 3 the soil should e fre- ———— and the lowest on the 13th, 1310 therm. 41 deg. 
xamined, to see that the constant gings do 
not make it too endangering the health Not es to Correspondents. 
of the roots. which are now flowering Booxs: Alpha. Mackintos h’s work - e forcing and Po. 
i garden will probably answer your se aw E, á 
Medical and Œconomical 8 r oe actou oa of 
most of the plante used by Kap ners.—C C. There is a trans- 
lation of some of Sprengel the ts works into the 
Englis sh 1 , but — “of those of Sprengel the chemist, 
The former can only be found in the second-hand book-sh y 
Cacti: J P, There are no such colours as blue or grey among 
. but a the = ites approach towards yel t 
RATION : We ormly declin advice as to t 
p! where emigrants ca paag n If we had . — 
. bons g: Ai te New Zealand—rather | 
pea, soc | Pan: Sub. T 2 the Maiden-hair Ferns are hardier than 


nsid 
— are x a much 3 
necessary for 


8 


2 $ r donai Reader, A large part of your seed is un- 


Some should have grown, Perhaps it was . 


too deep. 
raked i a 
Try „Pin 


It should be scatte red o ground 
All wild flowers liking 1 8 
s, Sweet Wil illia ams, Horned P. Poppy, ana wil 
the 
pe (ieee Gard, Cont fhe larva 
e lon). As the grubs mn 
syringing the leaves will rar ee 
k it would be useful to 


ier, 


amen 28 The <n e lea 
aw ay Tenthredo Æth hio 


ote 
— 


i=] 
p 
2 
ry 
4 
n © 
™ 
© 
— 
2. 
Q 
D 
— 
et 


ans 
MELons: 
Melo 


ni Pht are far 8 high; 50° 
take no harm at 45° 


weed. Ing 
should be taken up after the 
yl he: 


a 0 
thagi Nen any thanks ; pi wi examine 
3 a wall as on the es 0.— HOT and 4 andy 
Holcus lanatus ; 2, Trisetu — 3, Bromus è 
and 7 , Cyno surus 3 6, Alopecurus pratensis: 

10, Lolium pea II, Poa 
1 and 2, both "Poa pratensis. 1 
ate 


OW. 


criatatus ; 1 estuca pra 

12, Dactylis glomera a; 

perenne; 4 and 7, Alopecurus pratensi 
2 and 3 and 8, Poa pratensis; 6, 

14, Ranunculus hederaceus; 


muricata ; 17, Carex tomento osa.— M M. It 
sidered, but we have never — ge 
canno ot answer for 25 58 opinion. 


better not meddl 


la - u — 
or more, in either Peach or Epari — 
you cas, . . — will doubtless be the consequence 
PELARGONIUuS: R C. They sometimes come semi-double, 
yours is, we pres rem a case a o e sort. 
RHUBARB STALK :4 C. If any pamphlet has been pob 


lished = on s subject your — can ma 
f he 3 


3 


andsome m 
ame Desprez, pink ; A 
For bedding Hoses suitable for pegging down, see “Garden 
Memoranda” of t tey . Ground bones and guano are are boh 
es 


T de Rose, of this work is reduced to 3s, Gl. (past 
free), to be had at ‘the Office of this Paper, or of ame | 
seller. 
Mi ca 
Sat 
WALL 7 K. A sandstone wall is as good as one of brick! 1 
haki isn ld studs into the joints. The nn 
should be long enough and close enongh toa 1 
to be tied to them. Wires are unnecessary ; see 
— remarks upon that subject. Do not point the 
at 


FE 


2 = Clarke. The Sempervivum majus is the commo 


SEEDLING FLOWERS. ~ 5 i 
CALCEOLARIAS: G W-H. So pe tia pte 2 —— eae 
es 
3 ani wita "bright s scarier Howem e 


large we 
hav 


round ct ; in other 

ELIOTROPE J W. So wither 

opinion could be formed of their m 
Inis: J. C. A very fine dee 


Xiphioides, of which there 


kin e Euphrosyne,” gp] 


1 Tor organ, Amateur. 
shaded, dark crimson, fadiug 2 $ pe 1 8 
htl base; 


2 


4 bom than it o 
ne air. 


— 
— 954 very fine large al aa 
well Alea in the coats, 2 

t very distinct in colour from m 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


425 


= AND OTHER MANURES.}the seeds of the Clover; the farmer did not sow place at the a pointed time r tar moss tribe, whi 
ente. GUANO, of the finest quality, direct from | them, nor could the combinations of the soil and |i R ofa . der; then co a gradual e 
AES AND POTASH. lime, or of the soil with the ashes, or any other of Grasses and othe: plants, whe nd a suffi- 
ATP SULPHATE OF LIME). such combinations, have directly aro a them. | ciency of earth from the decay of preceding plants, 
an —— AND COPROLITE. The coarse pre-existing plants co ould not e pro- and the island rock becomes clothed with a verdant 
— ae SH (WIREWORM DESTROYER). ced them, because it is an ackno “lod yi in | coverlid of plants; their seeds, formed for such a 
SO PERPHO OSPHATE OF LIME Ne! fron ome? nly). | Nature that all plants must ha ve had progenitors | purpose, having been wafted thither on down 
n ALT, an anures of known the same kin then, did the Clover i through . d 
m ; x pinions gh the air, or floated distant 
2 pa — „per dete cette’ ke, wii b a plants originate ? y be said that cattle and | islands by currents of wa ; and ins of 
eh laa lamp F 2755 e. the n there * that seeds adhering transported from one place to another birds, are 
. o the feet of men n passing from stables | notorious matters of fact. eeds on which birds 
TURNIP SOWING. or 1 had been deposited upon the bog, where have fed will retain their powers of germination 
LONDON MANURE COMPAN aving during a long d. Birds 


“ 1 ” more particularly for 5 an 1 
— — mend it 2 75 the greatest confidence 
secure a good plant, dad 


prems season, t 
rps ca Tse the "They — — a 
hi red with t 


ANO ON 


ANTONY GIBBS à DON; 
WILLIAM JOSEPH MYERS 750 80. POOL; 
; And 111 A 


SALE 


rig eiei ‘consequences of 
uano, purchasers — eee 
only to e r 5 charac r to 
importers, w supp! yt the pay 12 z 
2 their fixed ie, 9 it from the Impor 


And this, to some extent, would be true, and suf 


ficient to accoun 
Grasses in man 


stre 
account for the 


some vegetative 
pera Aad 5 a 


5 ber the ee of weeds 
s on 


clo. e and 0. 1 of the 


Ms 


ea unknown 


ot very N when itis considere 
that yiri are trees 


which will not abge 2 to 
two 


ETROPOLITAN SEW E 1 themselves under their shade, 

FLUID EE TION — The Commis- only xcepted. oppy exercises $ gti l 

of nopo litan Sewers proposing "Channels of i thie on other plants; if it be r d fro 
es and appropr „ lis allt 64 their Pn they will reappear, revive, and flou 
and being engaged in various pre- | rish. Plants will also show themselves a the first 

x 5 5 intending — chet 7 Jarge time after the Poppies have been pee Wh 
aud permanently employed for the eE EE 1 1 fri e their seeds previously but in the ea oil ; asleep, 
ee he re- as it were, 1 the pecu aliar influence exercised 

20 e or Gee 0 i 18 over them by the e Poppy plan 


miles Of ‘London, who are willin 
S 


nth, 
ire) the popil a- 
Sia P pa if into the 


yi the Vins ‘of Sewer-water may be had 
HERTSLET, Esq., Sewers’-office, x 
—.— on, to whom all communicatio 


ar anD HEALY respectfully inform 

oe and the Pub, they are at this time pre- 
— the wa dea of Hothouses, &c., upon their 

of Hot Water Apparatus. The eyr 

places, where they have erected most ex 


one Ke ew. 


Chiswick ; lax Puc the new 
lied to the large C Can serv. : 


er important places. 


and HEALY, 130, Fleet-street, London. 


= SATURDAY. JOLY 7, Ta 
MEETINGS 

p, e 

s- fre in. 


EKS. 
* ngland. 

— N of Ireland, 
3 of —.— 
: Hadleigh.—July 14: Peter rough. 
e to reconcile with the pere laws 
ei the su sudden gr 


Ae uring circ 
will placed aus mae e 
It “cae be presumptuous to den 


clothed it wae it with y ES Power i 
vegetati 
the ligro simis 


Nature’ 7 
e, or the after the operation of burning 
the application of lime or other sub- | i 


*pplications could not have contained 


refer to the 
vo 


ltural Gazette. 


other 
this seed from ee seen powers w 
it ri -n vegetation and dec 


a 

the familiar and undoubtedly | 
springing up of Clover on 
time i rial will | Fe 


y be objected that sds could not remain 


It 
unde er sed in 


o- | moisture or other dissolving 
| possible 22 
e by c 


ertai 


se seeds, but 
until they be ac 
such as the li 


copp 
t 


as it happens 3 
opper 


pos 
tam o ilion 
hand, may 


w, too, 


with the e of 
time and circumstances for their 33 
an 1 seeds, and grain fruits 


x 8, S, 


fenced on all sides 


(whilst the seed itself is rudely handled, tossed in 
sacks, shovelled into heaps) the sacred ale, 
urt wonderft 


and, as soon as it 


1 8 
mies for thousa 


t a suitable 
its 


p may be p 


to shoot out as e aee as if jus 
of Wheat, 


ro 
olico of precursor in ve egetation, the lichen gives 


the earth, surrounded by excessive 
age neies. But is it 


one ? The tannin 


med hazard the following | 


ble and, 

e . metal — while the 
8555 hear much of analo 
etable e; ; an 
ity with another ina 


by external . 


t 
gravel walks or eee 
art left untrodden ; but will a. causes alone 


see 
_| fibres a the woody 9 and the 
produ 

0 


r soil borne to the 


her. The seeds possessing 
N glue — a “to the By: rk of a 
the roots springing from the seed 1 * 
Plant is 
3 on newly-born is 
partly produ 


lands may also be 
ced 8 seed contained in particles of 
c sir 


| account by such natural means 


a 
2 they 


cor put 

stated are es Pie in circles 

2 converging tow 
"o 


are so ee ry discovered, runs 
a rapid course of decay, ‘peu s Aaea p 
reproduction. 
y on our shores fresh accumulations 
of sand held Aer e by ee, ee of plants 
(in the manner related b . Mirenett in his 
str. to bind an 


mitting our inability to 

for the topa 
ance of piantei in such localities, and in oth here 
have hitherto WE 


of of notice, that I will j 


1 0 8 that they spring up 8 
from any accidentals combination of inert atoms ? 


exemplification of our ing. Ships, after long 0 TLE FEEDING. 

yages, used to lose thers - copper NIE =: from N looking over ace 1 e of Comparative Feeding 
the corroding e sea-water ; but it was dis- of suse Cattle,” in a late number of e Gazette 
covered 4 this 3 to rust and decay in the (June 9), some points e me so strongly as worthy 


to me on 2 


t.; that is 120d. for ite, ile 
above a per . The price inseed ce y varies 
nsiderably ; it has been to be ee of of good qutiy, 
within os ‘two years, 
56s., but if we set it at 508. a oe it is b 4 ful re 
uch -Linseed should weigh 
wn it for the 


ot the or ashes applied free 
which had kept 


y? 
that seeds are ee furnished 
self- preservation until the proper 
ae 
„are 


had acqui 


ired a So port pert 
if thered from | ° 


preserved in mum- 
have pre- 


extreme case, that of 


ears, are said to 


o shut u up and: protected, that a 


N cost something above 6d., there w 


à 
a fatteni 
t 


. ha 
and the first ol ed it weighed u upwards of 
5 lbs. ; but 
be considered fai 


inseed it if it weighs 
+ thos the ro Mondi of a quarter will be 
00 — 400 lbs. of sari for 50s, ph cond) makes 


last two years 
60 Ibs. er bushel, 3 
bo = 
50 
j 


à ogee 
hate” sea 3 Ibs. of 


6 Ibs. of oil-cake will 

l of oil-cake w 

wil cost önly 4) U te ak lene ast lid. 
5 


ie 2 same wherever oil-cake is 


0 
the hia ess 
It appears to me that, in all the instances given in 
the sprees artificial ial food (and I consder Swede 
Turni nd given at in s in 
1 have a st i le conseq! 
3 upon this scale would be that the ani 
ire so much hay or straw to fill up their stomachs 
| and assist digestion, that would be too long upon 
nd cou the re that is 


* PALET. 


be growing as we as 


426 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


= I would sugges 
ractice to any o 


the exact amount of nutrition contained in 
Ibs. of Turnips (for which amount, by the way, I 
ould su 


„ in coarse 


3 tended ; for in an open 

wet weather a bullock of 60 mae ill eat fully 2 ewt. 
of Swedes, and a deal w or coarse hay 
* nd, per — 8 stones Swedes. 


recom 

and given at four Wears 2 lbs. Linseed-meal 
oy 4 ibs. of B 3 — up together, and given 
at twice ; 4 lbs. lso mixed up with the Lin- 

moea and der Kere The cost per week will be 
as follow 

T a of — at 7s, 6d. per ton 
14 lbs. d-meal, at 6s. 3d. a we 
28 lbs. erer at 248. pora 1 


28 Ibs. Hay-chaff, at 28. 6d. per W-. . , 73 
h beas e: 

dd grinding and attendance on eac t, 
34 — wee 15 where a number are kept. 0 5 


Though this amount may appear great at first, Iam 
that if taken together with the res sults pro 


The 
and weighed at in 
going on, till the ꝛ8ch a of May, taking the — of all 


ya when iar times put a little p 


: — safely 1 — 


seasons we may r 
y feeding our eh ay wit 


o besides ; 


LE of increased weights of 11 Beasts. weighed at intervals. 
. from Jan. 28d to May 25th, 1 1849, l 


ng in , were put 


Iw 


2 lbs. arley-meal a da 
as necessary. is Ba 
view to nutritio 
the 


e meal ; 
a3 


in Dee 
on till ux br were 5 ly —— 


mode of feeding which I have recomm 
which these animals experienced is, that the latter had 
of B d 


— —— — n 
Barley-meal, as it — 3 eg 


mber and went 


an I have mentione 


Linseed, 1 have t bouti that 2 retrenchment 
made, F as 4 be 
and w. 


aff is 
e some 


and that, in ordinary not thrive any better mie: t 
peyi expect to make 8 s. per ton | R. W. B., Alnwick, June 


air in 80 
t 


| [ms o. of stones of obtained near the sp ut there 
No, |Jan.23|Mar a 5 Ap. 27 ye increased w eight, and | the quantity of such matters at hand is 
n what time gained. would require considerable expence of 
| gt. 10 st, 10. st, u, st. n st =| st, It weeks days. eap. In these cases, 
8 | 8 2 90 O| 96 10/100 0 Sold. |j 1912 in 13 be, to cultivate cheap and quick 
4 3 67 0 72 0| 77 0j 80 20 äi 3 
5 75 0 84 7 Sol re 
675 0 84 7 88 0) 92 0 
7 82 0 91 1) 93 0 Sold. 
8 |72 0| 78 7 83 0] 88 0 
9 64 7 70 0 74 0 79 0 
10 68 0f 75 7 Sold + 
5 67 0 78 477 5] 80 0 
71 4 78 0| Sold 8 
13 A Steer — at) 
had dis g | 
ep mang 70 7 76 6 
tumn Se 4 
winter. 
and also f or cla heh, 
The weights are, of — the live weights ts of the eee _ clays, which, however 
These 11 agai were a portion raat 1 Mee the subso 
of the second set fatted off in the season ; the first set —— 7 a ‘cad » Spent bark, sawdust, 
were put up in November and a principally in the lan 5 ip Tai Pi l 
first week 1 dance Y; ” 4 i 2, which are eg. > 
wanti 


anie d 
to hel 
"so promote their Bhras other ma = thee 


8 grown for this purpose should ln 
— tt prope: — „ they should 
. n poor 

dequire le labour 01 cultivation ; 
lav 


3e ‘of quic — ure growth; 
tand all weathers and vermin; 


Ran their P 
ring up what the following crops require 
and 


their increased 3 ——— and taking also their properties ; — F „am : “ser am weeds ; 
— numbers o s together, is 148 — of in- ; a reat quantity of blag 
creased weight in 124 weeks and 4 d It is very | °*Pense, 1 — none of the beasts F put up weighed so e ‘the — — 
true that a very unusual fall having taken place in the little as 6 The plants — known for this R 
price of meat si ani were bought, and since We find, ae that it is — object to boil the | concisely de 
the Turnips and other things with which wg were fed | meal when the animals are fed with Swedes, as they do — Seg in a table, 
ere valued, there is not mu r profit er 
year, excepting what arises from the accum f TABLE OF GREFN MANUR 
an immense quantity a ‘the beat kind of manure, Put * 5 gis 1 gis — 3, |100 para contain 
this is an acciden mstance, and probably will Pranr. 25 | BE 27 3380323 SE F 4 3 3285 F 5 5 
not bappen to extent SEK 28. 24 8 2 TAFE sel esi eel g £23 Eg $3 
Comparing this method with that of feeding with an £1) 8° ee | de) Reje JA | a Petes 
unlimited amount of ay in an open court, -Spurry, | poor | little oben ü. 9 | 25 | ajau 
I am the latter method, 2 ewt. of eatable, and 2 ering = f baiar 
— a day rae least that will tent a bullock of 3 P J dry | 
sto and t besides that i | a forward i, 
— hay; a 3 aor consumption 1 aa good dear badly ten- | 3 s or t | 34 3 4.3 quick Gypsum will often for 
am i persuaded that he cannot reaso | 2 crops a year.| | SS Bees 
pected to gain upon an arunge n i k stubble, pm 
the whole e pocion of Rane G per week through p plara, — little dear wen | not 2 | or 4 not | 1.5 | 07 2 sowa Aam 
days > — a. 8 in which he i A a igi 2 
perishing winds, and l Rape, od | ... ch A 1 
in wet straw and half-rotten —.— it will N eatavle, g anii 5 12* god a pe 
very ample al if in the 17 weeks and 4 days fro RDE S 
the 23d Jan, to the 25th of May, the period during Rye, eatable, | poor | little | dear | well | well 6%! ... | not | very | little} 4 
ao mgY S Bave alladed to above were ging | wine Len, an a n | well wine 
his ke — ep per wee im 13 stones of increase. The value of ‘yneatatie. 3 listen, caching. Supe ihe de) aca? tees * 25 
wt. Swedes, 1 — SE top Bay TE oe 58. 3d. 4 
— at 26. Gd. per ewt, ......... 1 1 104 8 good che ap 8 23 ft 4 | 13 | 84 auick 
ea 
I should be really glad of information if there 2 any White Clover, h 1 |35 (quick 
in pa 2 Dore be aay — gier cheap Bor 416 in. 6 5 ja 
of of — feedi E ater han the expens H 
that which is called hig ** ; nt, the resu t not — nag at one view that Spurry will — Belgium, and upon poor d 
nearly so satisfactory. am ak 186 2 0 3 a year ; oh eatable ; will oot best; but on peaty gro 
do not generally give their ating cattle * in the — soil, with litle labour, tle cost ow | better. Tares and Ve 
o not tands weather and —— t | than either; but require r. 
it requires two wth, and yields about 3 tons | care, more liable to vermin 
per acre ; its roots runn i Pe ee That | can be after harvest, and will grow 
re | every 1000 Ibs. contain 9 of 1} of ic through; but Rape must have good * 
- phosphor gh; pe 
he | acid, and 4 of nitrogen. That it decays quickly ia the | so well bear vermin as Rye. k 
soil; and that it may be sown on stubble, after harves est, The white Lupin has been 5 
fast, or ( enrich a poor s three times” in 5 this country ; with what success, in our 
is to keep ploughing down crop, in May, an wing not yet seen. But in Italy it has been exte 
another * —— the same again in July; ; and so of | down from the time of ancient Rome, 
TiU i in the others, helping the farmer to judge, at a glance, | ado th great success in Germany” 
rse totally which — most likely suit his p purpose, ides these, Mustard, or even quick-growing © 
to divide t — “ery — ena ing athe — k C niso, on soils it 
to divide the as possessing the properties above | outlyin „ but niso 
h intervals bet enume Borage is said to throw up a heavy. = 1 * when 
1 part of th e of f j and so does the Bokhara Clover, which, | requisite inorganic dressings 
. 3 imp and very — Paice f seems liable to suffer from the The | given, in y 8 y 
sh chances a it on the part o aly to — frey has said uce tons of | by such a — lan 72 
. hitherto been N These re. mie ARTE ae th 
: ted v 
of what is called “ high P be divided into three N * — ae sik, oo Ý 
1. Those which are "to be ploughed — where they — green manures, their race 5 ; 
grow ; — rapid 1 annua —.— supply a valuable addition to o 
2. Those which are — poor knowledge. ora 
not worth other cultivati g and carting to 2. * the 2d mS me fields, 
| the better soil adjoining ; in which hardiness adjoining fel, i 
uce are chiefly for, and perennials best * 
T. ug Bo 
3. Those which are to be eaten down by animals ; and | with poor hungry soils, stand all 
the latter growth and roots onlyturned over by the | f Vermin, and grow through the 
| ‘to rot in the soil; which must of grea f 2 ae 
me- and , snd require further considera- E 2 to 4 feet d 
a ons, ae our present limited subject of ‘Cheap | easily cultivated ; last 10 years 7. 
haa | 4 and will so selves again 3 


> TOF he Best elass, am u extensively used in year, 


1840. THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 427 


ion ches co ee 
: igo years; oF Koop 4 aeres teres soil in e. con- neutralises, and fixes in the form ot a slowly soluble were very bad. On the 12ih, seemed a li 
i wer Bat so this acre themselves, not | compound, that 3 and progressively can be dis- | bette 3 I dressed them the 1 3 
ge ike Sparry pay rhe ate between harvest solved and absorbe db ad 8 roots of those plants which were pons well, but I — thom slightly, — so gan 
— ion. quick growing plants, | constitutionally requi I allude to the humic acid, | the cure, Iam say I succeed 


and soed deo wast pi f | tail i i 2 
which flourish amii upon the * e places, may be the produet of that — —— of vegetable and tail is lost. It is my opinion that had they been —— 
E by ese . helped by 1 Are dress- 3 remains which converts them into humours. | dressed when the disease first — Ares no more 


9 e land is under crop at | brown. By adding to this small portions of clear lime- | to complain of rea pigs, and i more easily pro- 
2 time, they can be hea ped in compost, for the sub- water, or some powdered lime, it will speedily appear | cured than the boarded floors — C. W W.“ suggests. 
i de duvg heap j ; =! — iti is bare, they can be ploughed | that the fluid becomes arg loses transparency, and | Aliguis. 
once. But this will, of course, be a question for finally deposits a quant ta — grey flocks, leaving Wheat Growing. — ] once saw a report in the — — 
al 43 convenie the supernatent fluid almost devoid of brown tint: the | Messenger of Lond Western’s —— of Wheat, and 
3. The third aun, “which are to be cut for fodder, or | lime-water forms the best an mass conclusive experi- | I had always failed in getting my n eighbours to — 
een down, and the roots and latter growth only used ment, as it is free from doubt or ambiguity. The de- book with me, I took the pains to take it out and cor 
for manure, will, of course, be regu “wake by the cha- position of humic acid in the form of humate of lime is, | pare with my on; and I must say that it was a sati 
"afer, rom te the na ature of | the stock, erefore, one of 8 most valuable results of liming faction to me to find how near my growth was to hi 
oo 1 i i consid too 


inclose i wi e up ti 

foin, * years’ — ach, 1 y may ae — black manure are thus vitiated to a 3 1 aecount to 1847. T have lately grown — 
6 tons. Rape gives stout and heavy roots, but I | “ Aliquis,’ in his second paper in col. a, P. 284, has Belgian Carrot, which I like much for feeding, but ti 
‘faye no e-timates of their weight per acre ; they form | announced another great chemical fact, when — cultivation is — ve. Iam now feeding 120 pigs 
Herd ul and p chat the silicates (i e. silex or flint in chemical union and my 4 teams (16) of horses on them, boiled. I find 
is 


111 
e 
2 
8 
8 
a S 
Gr 
22 
5 
13 
og 
13 
H 
F 
H 
$ 
8 
8 
2 ¢ 
E 
5 
& 
8 
og 9 8 
— 
È 
— 
E 
8. 
8 
4 
te 
2& 
"és 
jii 
8 8 KA s 


3 letters are not the mere result of my own with the 5 5 ue — a plant till they be dis- stock of every description like the food better than 
upon —— ere but comprise a very | solved in water,’ adds “ there then is the key to | thing I can give them, and the uced from it 
k summary, of an attentive comparison, of the | the benefit — 4 — lime. It acts on the rocks (or delicious, but whether it will be firm and boil well I can- 
=, ical experiments published, during the on the loam) containing the mineral ingredients, de- not say. ve a team of 4 horses for each 60 acres, 
_ last five to seven years, in the royal English and Scotch composes them, and renders them soluble in water.” this is more considerably than is usually kept in the 
_ qgrieultoral journals, the Gardeners’ Chronicle and | In doing this it produces a double benefit ; for while it | neighbourhood, but I have made scarcely a og 5 clear 
_ Mark Lane Express, and several other agricultural —— the alkali from its vitrious union with silex, it fallow: my Turn urnips are chiefly grown after — 
periodi In the course of another year (unless any- also acts upon the acid humus indire rectly, or by | some after Tares, Trifolium, Rye-Gras ke, part of 
_ thing to the purpose comes out in the mean time), I | secondary affinity. If lime be only applied as a rapid — and Mangold I grew after Rye-Grass, and had 
_ may probably publish them in a fuller and more sys- | decomposer of vegetable e matter, its action is, at best, a fair crop. For my Turnips, I a town manure 6. 
tematic form, in six or eight plain practical lectures for | questionable, or very limited. But viewed as the cart-loads, mixed with turf or field ashes, having dissolved 
_ farmers’ clubs, to be read by their own secretaries ; | powerful agent which we now have fom it to be, few a month 2 wen weeks before usin 3 or 4 bushels of 
with chemical and explanatory notes and references at | persons will question its real value in in agriculture, | bones in the compost per acre ; oan I sews and mt ce d 

: 3 lay open the principles on which the prac- J. Towers. the drills, ans find it sueceeds wel h the 
tice is founded, a. supply materials for profitable dis. ACCOUNTS oF CORN GROWN ON — FARM, moisture of the dung it soon — 

cussion after each lecture. Meanwhile I shall be glad om Michaeimas 1828. Duke of Richmond, Mr. Pusey, and others, having 
a day practical apogee in your columns or any| Total Acreable Pro. |*Peken of using dissolved bones, I had found great 
z i er | Extent. dace.. advantage by applying them as I have stated. 


individually — — much more time 


Taveto spare, J. Pri 5 LORD WESTERW’S GROWTH OF CORN, 


wis From “ Bell’s Weekly Messenger,” Jan. 5, 1841, 
Extent. Total Produce | Acreable Produce, 
FE Qr«, Bush. Qrs. Bush. Pecks, 
1832—1833 ...... 101 0 485 0 6 
1833—1834 4 0 
1 
0 


— 
a 
A 
P 

R 


— 41 0 44 
AN EAST SUFFOLK FARM. ee ae ee 


wlent.— 1833 

b. Sh Se pi icultura e e hb.. eal 
tion i ral; 12 miles — rom market, | 184·ͥͥ·(ͥ( . . 
: e. The character of the soil. a spea 2 ay subsoil, | 183 7 . 30 
5 w acres which fall on a small r CCC 

“ot the whole, 170 acres —— arable, —— 30 acres | 1839 ..... areas $ 
enten low m meadow and upland pasture, 2566 

ý 1 each alternate Jur, gne- Average of the 10 years, 32 bushels 6 galls. 1839—1840 

bar — 1 —— e qua —— ACCOUNTS OF CORN GROWN ON — FARM, BE 
ban 1 ton) somewhat lesse ing to che Total quan- Extent in 
l tity. Acres. | 


quality = growth M. Sandford. 
A . 
ee mat quantity, 1 ton improved e yield . — „Thick and Thin Sowing —This subject has been so 


1834—1835 ....,.) 103 
1835—1836 ...... 83 


S 
by 
8 
8 
8 
Å . 
ao — 
8 a oo = 
~~ oor © 
— 
e Ste OS 


re e 
% DM Se. 


Wado m | wom om 


Yoo 

— a 

2888 

0 

— — 
* POO | pe e 
Ss u| wow 


it, that oy most of your readers by this time are 
hearti d of it; and did I not attach far more 
mesia Altes than the mere saving of seed, to what is 
termed thi ing n 


S 


— 


( ² 1 Leg Oo. on BE Toe ee 


SSS 


A Barley is — I use it for feeding 

bres, eit ev tows, fc. Ge. When so used it is 
: hours, then spread out about 1 foot thick 
Pia 96 hours (turned over ee in that time, viz, at 


ho oo S 


using 1 coomb per day, feeding 16. 16 
and hal r 8 


cooo „ „„ H See SCHOHOKS 
y * 
we 


baha BF oe A o A Awa 
“ooo FF Ohm & D a SAOND 


238 o 


— 
anaes a 
0 -om bo Ho wo © — 3222 


don Beans and Peas J, 4 R year d | draini ing, and cleaning the 
s quarters per acre, I lar that the last of the second | draining, trench-ploughing, Sr i 

on farm, Clover 4; in a favourable season the prsa r singular onè that the average reached | advocates no extraordinary calls 
ps yield 3 tons per acre, all consumed 


Ww 
little manure, — 10/. per annum pore, A Kentish Farmer. 
ost average for Ra ; : 0 I have had a pig about nine 
‘star rl — Po Conn eee ne A ay el ee the prevailing distemper (whi 
fiaj ae hackney | ffected with a| 1 understand pm 
and jobbing bur work — and 3 oa : soe Baka cc aba) wee ail dar eee a pmi y so | head and limbs, with every appearance of —— 
ea 


n for weedin 5 oani | para "E 
pases 3 rae os nds of the erent aro min — — eane „ cet and 2 on, I discovered -e unfortunate condition 
except in * Y | did not think of ee, to cure it, not knowing the my pig x 

a theears and tail; on the hilo wii morning, not 
A e et, den | OH not hin of pa 3 wir ite oh a tam eh 


merrurial 
decay of vegetables, hastened quantity of lard, They w were exactly a week old when 
ly reject the agency | they got the — 
8 0 acid which would be too late, as on two 
simple form of lime-water, at | the tails have lost Nl vita 


i 
15 
43 
1 
E 
1 
d 
£ 
7 


428 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


very difficult to deal with, and it pasigis pone y happen, 


supposing the bill w assed i that instead 
—— k a boon to 8 ulture, it might, on the con- 
trary, prove a fruitful source of litigation ; as we not 
unfrequently find such to be i t less 
complica the subject of tena — Now, 
although there may ifficulties to with in 


all descripti of soil, all cireum ; and 
although we may for the present disappointed in 
obtaining act of parliament, which many of us 
— s most N have secured our 


in so far as security of 

without taking — — eare . th 

ourselves, yet as we have been isappointed, it woul 

ill become m m — "handled or the 

farme ssly la 

— bil * eee 
e turned o 

appointing t tho pad and — gt 

its warmest supporters. Ther 


the miscarriag 
epee all, had it arrived at 
ut ‘but a spoi ilt child, dis- 
he e expectations of 
can be no dou — 
he prese 2 eral syste N upying farms 
Nearly tenancies, is very defective ; under such a system 


ment to improve his farm, nor security for the invest- 
ment Ba his capital therein ; he has in fact no interest or 
in the 


d 0 
t to ther ſu iy 
developing its capabilities ; 3, which would unquestionably 
takin * 


= 
© 
= 
— 
+ 
> 
© 
4 
© 
a 
5 
o 
© 
+ 


evil except by r 7 of parliament. 
h use of,“ God help them who cannot 
be inappropriate here ; 


prices, 
t appears to AM oe dae 
mber 


In like 
both — tenant farmers, an: 
in the prosperi si of agriculture, t S aa hag 
counteracting t he in 3 effects e 
British =F por 8 * ree importation of provisions 
— ttle, into this country ; and in order s 
this, aija. = woe gmi 
interes 


secured, all which, 


oa 
F 


8 


Let — tee e ee and ten 


interests inseparable, le 
each other’s interest «a 
will be no need of a “ 
ixon, Land 
What is a Ton 
remarks i r Paper of 


I 
effe — poema the 1 
a m agre t for a lease 


gent, Darlington, June 
of Turnips 


thin as 
of an bellen 
with such protee 


8. 


views = the 


eae ‘muita p try to protect 
own, and there 
landlo rd ie tenant bill, ” Thos. 


Wi oat 
the 9th June, as to the value 


in your 
of root a a and psa offer of your own Turnips y much 


10s. a 
super 


= t 


hae 
of Mr. Tuke in the Gazette of the 25t 
a class in whose 


ne period gained a 


on to be consumed 


and, it 


eeping much r ower for — 
emarks 


—After the me 


erts what I never denied viz , that some cattle may gain 


wil 
3 thrivin — anim eek zr 
in weight it is the beef and tallow —— — does so, 


=n y? ente ve | 


| for the whole ae participating in the ch 


o de 
made for this 


echi, —.— ewe 


ange. 
whole I do not pretend 


cattle to the bargain. 


ut of — ah os him to adopt “ the — judicious 
h 


oe approved -me 


of con that the 


d 
mple may not be lost to 3 a neighbors with 
the exhibition of his balance sheet at the close. J. M. P. 


AND AND AGR 


tary read 


singed at the time in the repair of z A Tr 
g which is so commo 


the — copin 


stones bored 3 ine 


wire 
the whole was the following, ‘viz. : 


—.— asphalte, en fioi het 15 inches lon 
Tw £ 


— —.— —— 
trained ihr 


7; the 
fence of 229 falls, between the Marquis of Bute ; 
—— last spring ; ; and during q st phate aes . com- 


nce ba — falis, No. 
stone dykes 


nay 
Hic RICUL 13. = 
Ann 3 of 9 Society, h held this is doy 13 ie Seere" 
n 


: ity ‘rnc 
To accomplish desirable en end, ¢ one of the most likely | s 


an 
far as possible the d $ 2 


et as 
however, m price. This, 
of a proper and com 


understandi og be 2 
anding between Dans rd and tenant 
each may d icbereht ta 


pers 1 3 — more 
y be produced, 


have 


— eee but with 8 

eet high to the — 
a superior — 8 for boring 2 — 3 
abundant the — — to one 

order to — —.— 


small), 3 


— —+ 
and 
the me mi 
3 inches in the ston 


is that the e wire may clear the sto 


e 
uild d 

8 in 
of 12 fours 25 


r ala te Bar 


[Jury 7, 

the top as is consistent with st gth 

are an inch in diameter, to allow tae ne in the stim 

$ iron, and in borir ug them t ontractor to maii 
th have T 8 

n order to bore his holes s 80 the miei huleshe 
Indeed the dyke builder shou 10 te pagr eamin wil rage 
ane — 


h thes 
. to te placed dodde i to < other, È 
fenos a good general average, dyk 
end to this, nor 


sometimes, also, in abrupt h oll bag 
„ ru re 0 

and they make excellen on 
ee FE ered of a long — hadley! 
ES of then wire on the top of the 


“Wood is . 

required, i 
gate is Tie ee 
Post. 


required are, the usual wire 
file, an auger to bore the w 


3 
not adhere For this reason, 
an — season, and the 


a stone or 
h men | proceed to the rim * and so 


5 — 


to the e pla * e 


is run care efully t 


e the iron- * ainted with a miret 
of coal-tar and rosin heated together, and applied by a 
a woollen rag. The rough rosin giv 
the coal-tar, ht to add that * 


o. I. was 3s. 6d. per fall; n 
No. ~~ — = fall, according to the feiii a rio 
stone at nor the cost of carriage of a 


* 5 i FENCE, 224 Faris or N = 


ad 
sit ie standards, cut and bored, 13 2 
at 9 lbs., at 12s. 6d. per cwt. an and bags 241 
wire 1 cwt, t. 2 W at 128. ae bundle 
of 63 £112 0 
6 8 3 cwt. 2 qrs . 16 lbs., a s. per 
Satie of 63 lbs., 588. 4d. and pai 


No. 11 


Asphalte, at 5s. p 
Coals for fire, — pte 7 5 rosin for painting, say. 
A ewa oog ooden posts. 


wif 
out 
921 


ii 


Boring Stones — —— 322 holes of 3 inches deep, 18 
80 vb ; 
n oles lacing straining posts, 
ainting the whole iron work E 14 
— per . k 18} feet, atls. g” Er TE 
. II.— r Marca Fence, 239 


t 12s, 6d. per 7 


£1 8 0 
0 t 9s. 
9 Ibs a * 112 


— 


6 wire, 4 cwt. 2 ars 
ae ndle of 63 lbs., 738. 4d, and bags 


Asphal „ 
Coals, ee and rosin, say ‘ 
oogen p por 


2 
T 


Boring 3 352 holes 3 inches deems ba eh - 
Fix standards, & e., as abov 


Cost per fall of 18} feet, at 1s. Bde we 
III.-LowER MARCH FENCE, 185} Fatis. Pe 


No. 
27 25 a da hes long ; 
4 iron standards, inc A j 
t. 3 ars. 5 lbs., at 1 7s. Gd. per ewt. El on ; 

Paid blacksmith pun —— —_ 9 ose 
100 standards 11. 111 

8. 9 A — 95. N 
„ a wrapper 2 
echt 


6 wire, 3 ewt. 2 q 
a of 63 lbs., 2l. 475. 8d. 
No. 6 do., 2 cwt. 2 ars. 3 lbs., at 15s. 


Asphalte see 22 i 
Coals, coaltar, and rosin, say > + i 
— 


274 holes of 3 — ae ne 
on aie — 


10d. per foot 
Fixing Wand ard, e., as above .. 5 
Cost per fall of 18} feet, at 1s. 5 
5 stones bored were difficult to 
No. I which were chie 
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granite boulders, which are com 
more easily bor 


. 6d. per „ but the ho 
trouble, and he said the contract i aia Te- 5 


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blacksmith 2 2d. oe, 4 wired 


t No. be 
should hive “bai wholly a ia 1 
1 2 rers all that de — 
lower wire, and it mple 


97—1849. ] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 429 


shelly of No. 6 gauge. The harged in No. III. at and lose the erect appearance which they at fi a 

fe percent. was S annealed, but all the reat was highly tem- | But now, from the 0 to the — T I — — — cleaning ae af ae 
Boek, sod required the — — — — ends. For this reason, attention, as I hope, to the more pleasing part of this pa r; — 3 e 
m t 


but as | ut of ten 

ewt., at 5s. per an sufficient for | tak n the preparati 7, edges are 
2 of 21 (about 4000 yards), that 21 ome is not 72 uch im- useful plant. 57 — nie teas toe ground intend —— — pe A singg <4 . 
— f. Hn wa og ii II., for a line of new fence should undergo deep p j or | is certainly a very useful 4 
fence Sime ‘a s), “Tanning thro roug bog, | trenching at least 12 months previous to p!antin; — oes Pe m vam 0 . 
ou made of turf = we ae yn a — — was | the weeds and rubbish as n —— as possible eradicated ; a als whic à F * 
7155 ry koani made on high De = measer — bo — lime migh N very M — r fon, y, gentlemens cannot 8 
— ae sten Dii is was | nad consequently p y prom note te and +s le matterw hich may "anal, and scientific way in which that cutting has a 

sie n pla 


been don 
Tho — — A tay on reat advantage which has been effected by the method 
2 Th — e — 28 of 8 this e — s n adopted. T 8 Ae of the knife or 
LK 4 a cast or — artifi wnup. The opera. | after the cutting, is certainly a great im — 1 
= I <n mado last autumn by a n accustomed | to | the Thorn . The front margin of 2 har! alen — menial * — “th "a 
at sort of work, Aaina The = — 184 f fet, Re = 3 thought advisable to be 12 to 15 inches from the e of t F the — bo sone bans ud method of ountin e 
je made good wages at 7 $ 0 get was e as m ditch in front of the quicksets. I — met with many who o in order t jek 
ps ble amo, an erefore the Daildin, re turf is only | ject to page — Fi ee of the space, or what is commonly object. I have fou ad t ckest growth 
feet 10 inches big m the na groun hi: de — a a reri — 7 — shieh apt to encou the uc- | February to the end o t most 
weeds — n that w. is planted * upon | vigorously, whilst thos tro 

of the ditch. It way do so, but I think the pea February ha e be E mek Saran on besloning of 

„ — 00 ye been much more tardy in Feo forth, and 


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nd — — by the foot or the | Shotley and Derwent Agricul ‘et inde the 
5 — I have stated jz 5 fig cost of — the peed of * thus n epost, the aib 5 cael, ys r eiry it 2 nou whe beg member. “Since t formation ot at foe — 
33 two sot, Teper Ras r fall; but or about seven to a: ard. A eld d s. n Of the And awarded ts anaon] days for competition ia hedge-cu 
— down ** the spot, ditch is then he beina * ee r ` portion of the | and awarded suitable premiums to those 
cost 24d. — me . nition for . — 0 a upon the roots | most skill on the day of the trial. I attended 
a charge which will v m from draught, or from | meetings a few days ago, and was certai 
1 . * = cording to | any other oe The ditch is now to be cleared out to its | the performance of the work, The ire t mu 


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tarf is — only N in any n is at com- pressed by the foot, m re mould 1 to fill the ponding fence ah turtle wonder en — cae pone — M 
— abpa moaiend gnai 2 0 — = ng * as 2 sharp knife is used = cutting off the stems close by the surface, | dead thorns or brushwood of any — . 
P are against ERv 7 nes panty Fe — pth pode : baw 4 matte mean these * —— — = sprinkling of —.— hedges have been ruined by dead thorns havin cn oe 1 
i rost, ey come awa auti- | gaps ning 
See fe lat ae * pig writing | the above, — ——.— aa after being planted. One advantage of this | t a wore sirm i pyle “ty thon an 3 — gee 
5 — anting is that much 3 room is required, as — s or clippi 
pate | ee a — ee account of the ex- — me can cultivate — r 2 ban hedgon ani thus proving — see one — 
m iid. realised. The miine cost of | crop your . nearer to the Tii This mode may be | which the workman just been by E aa Tee 
arroch er foot, or very nearly 4d. | objected to on moderate tng zaad, oi pa on what we m rn ree 
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r. their failure. The soil and other earth taken out of this o charge the tenants a b a 
— thi i ditch will form an excellent compost, of great advantage to tbe | Those fences a conde deena 12 ty ert erty, 
2 he had an 2 : E and land. In dry situations I — my — is the — Nes. of will ultimately — the landlord wel, Whee a farm —*— a 

‘ e ea a s a suffici md dicious ten. 

Pleased with its mode of working that he | tained to promote the growth of the | Ia this mode of | bad state, he immediately mak 1 
in, 328 Garrett's, of a 4 capabi: planting, the roots are put into, a n in, the earth, | and takes írom his offer an annual sum wi be tony wi ts 

* lia sear ng us ~~ n pee By io D — instead of being raised out of it. The pr coe . for plant- | required — — * of those fences. In recommend. 
“4 pi sa sfied with t he | ing is from about the middle.of October to the end of March, or | ing this m am not acting from profession, but hem 
aor hie — Ne of i during the inertness of the sap. The Thorns being now planted, 1 ä I have raised during the last seven years bo- 
“a 2 e ay. a aka ed ges re d ie te and Bo in — — pare = be pro- | tween 3000 and 4000 Quickset fence, and cut and — a 

é injury by the trespass and sheep. The | very g o. How 

if if and other a agricaltu rists. He had for | best protection I have parare. 8 is that of — I | of those h i — . — ee 
= andl of — nearly the whole | mean wooden railing, Thi aution should be taken imme. | they . never T- planted ; thatis, around the stac yard. 


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mt of crops which he was able to — on the completion a the * or, at least, — any | This fence ought alwa a st 
* artly from the great expense of s have access to it. Another mode of protection is 8 ought nev er to be plan spe, he Forn . . Spe ti — 
nap go a om the impossibility of getting a eked and rise fencing. These stakes being generally placed | d NE to their growth; neither is anything more reju- 
of e; nds capable of doing the = db sey upon the top of the cast (or, in most cases, too near the hedge), | dicial to the adjoining cr crops. (Mr, E saree Pine his pa 
wh e ho be | and filled with borage I have always considered prejudicial | amidst marks of general approbation.) 
ee es m ocup ed | to 5 — 222 € * th ~ plant, by — Resi . the air, by the — — —— 
nt, a | continu ‘opping * 7 er írom the brushwood, and in aleno 101 
hoe 12 acres 7 ‘day, — he | snow storms, by be ces —_ immense quantity of snow, c ar of rations. 
amg * with the | which, Salting do up pon the yo young | pint, causes considerable JUNE AND J 
the hedg: — y breaking o r tops and twigs in no] BEDFORDSHIRE Farm, July 3.—Th 
ficiently 4 — ed than when th all d degree. I acknowledge that the protection of these young | highly — for ‘ic operations 5 a 
— — 2 minis ahing the weights o on oe hedges by railing is 2 but yet I —4 sare hat the | hay-mak x, which ariy over, and the greatest par 
* e or less deeply as the con- | young “hedges s come to ection much s when thus pro | stacke ae * — * ndi on. Our crops of Grass were gene 
A iabea ay seem to require, Therefore, | tected. The hedge being — planted anh “Protected, I will | rally asia jha especially where liquid m du 
ce for interest of outlay, and tear and proceed to describe the manner in ee it is to be managed. and ammoniacal wa er mg the gaehouse were applied, Th 
i by Garrett’s ised in opening out es thorns which | strength of the liquid was so gre — 3 make the Grass loo 
e been covered up. This is best done by loosening the earth | brown in the 3 yond this h 
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expensive implement, he considered | this way to the buds. Neither a spade nor any other sh 
ges nie y . i y Sharp | more beneficially applied to — land than in wet weather, 
fally 2 em Ta — 1 22 f pe — srs he — > red in ae gs por The most | as soon as possible after the first crop of Grass is mown, that 
implemen or the price he had sory eep the plants clean and free from ~ pan — —— oe finished sowing Swedish Turnips last 
Phe ag his is — — — done if commenced in good time. ; thes after Tares — 1 fed off h 
Farmer t mode of w at the plants the first year is by the psec pya siar giak s drilled on the e flat rows 2 feet apa 
3 — The wee ding: an — * the hedges should | admit of horse-hoeing. The grou — cal once 7 
wd ofthe Ms, Row D Martinson, of | obstacle to nt 8 — ‘be n e pruned — Ot mined 127 aber and in good condition, a th was 
t 2 
e Towneley estates), read a paper | the second year, in order that it may get thick and bushy. This laine Tarde Ge ana ck similar description oF — 1 
a very easy operation — formed with a hedge-knife 1 2 ar description of deere 
blen ry easy ope y per nife, | grown to r taen tage to Turnips, un 
ch I shall call your attent on is one familiar, I dare say, to you all. I would — have mach hesita- — circumstances Jast men The v. p 
cod ne reco llections of my 2 are asso, tion to perform this operation at any time of — * — I | Tares is by no means to! . Turnips, and, 
ce, made with ba H one — in fact, mnan the pany to be . a an a * aed * likely to prevent 
e prepa u 


the height of about ri 
4 fee ye —_ 

* its height is eat and’ to prevent the beginning of — — In fact I — follow — e of now being thinned out, and are doing well. The Mangolde 
5 ake form and 1 into | ver intelligent and 3 able gardener and nurs an in Fee? also brairded very regularly, and promise remarkably 
e When well and | Scotland, who, when asked this question, „ When is the best well at present. Carrots look well also, and have generally 
look extremely well, time of che ie to prune Thorn hedges ?” answered, When- | received their second hoeiog. Ours have e 16s, per acre for 
1 ever your knife is sharpest.” | It is of great importance to have | hoeing, and will require another looking ov „ at a cost of about 
, Which | 4s. more per acre. Potatues are as yet freo reek — ge ao 

must wat; be done by an . — ba the hand. I do f and at no corresponding period vta looked be Whea 
h 8 es with shears. Barley, Peas, and Beans all promise well at ordeal A little 
h] th fore more | rain would, however, be —— tor some of the crops, 
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ann e reared w liable to thts poe d by wet; besices, witha switch | which have ather prematurely brown, We shall have 
stones. are a. this ae dn z T sau seih, who is an expert workman, will Pm 3 e quantity poi << realy fe for E dating very so — B 5 to all ap 

the most substantial ; And, besi n a day that he gon a. fond with the hedge shears. When two | the general Aron 1 cannot ce for five or six 

> 3 time in switching the same hedge, | weeks, “We Dabo o ry — er, 1 which can be 

Z., one on eac sid — he fence, 1 — t to begin at aif- | foreseen, so that nothing may interfere with the cutting and 

—— rent e i and = z down 3 wi 2 corn. — here — are generally doubled 

Aayer Api sa Tue Thorn hedges I would continue tọ prune year, after | in h t, so that whatever can be done previous! costs much 

2 a E Seen x ention, or at least Fety Hitle’; waa they have attainéd the h sig ht aioe about 44 “ep . — Ido any 2 for ‘iabour, and is far — F of, R, 

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— een which epai on They ought to be pt feet pda at the nd base ‘finished sowing Turnips, pious filing yen 


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to repair it. E oap 
bee and prove or other rubbish h, whi — uch taper away to a point at the heise mas the height iter stated. and will finish hoeing to-morro — is dry; the 
taz g Th 80 obnoxious t nq | Eor wa . of attention to the pruning and dressing of hedges, | Swedish and yellow Turnips are — — n: the White are 
n "ide at the b Stone walls ought not to be — we are called upon repeatedly to look upon na aked tur ror later. We are busy ploughing, harrowing, and rollt ing the fal- 
iy , OÁ feet ‘ottom, about t 15 inches s ‘at the to ob, open, — A fences. if some of those have got any | low land, to get it cleaned for Wheat; two men cleaning hedges, 

2 Is dressing at a cutting Thistles, &c. We have had a gent! 3 

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l 
Middle ap more to j + Nothing in d t 
A esaa e wall weli, ane ch and durability than fitrin AE ; À 3 
is neglected „and throughiny i it effectually. When of scouring should be commenced about the third year likew Bere: — tiie ng the re seria r When at, and car tii 
4, you Very soon see the walls bud shee Planting the hedge. This will be found requisite, as the | the sa — to market. Although we —— had several showt raot 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


[Jury 7, i 


430 


3 have made but little progress, 


orb GARDEN, JULY 


k, the cro —— i 
= 2 in de rather 10 low 2 for the season during the] In cons pe uence — the 5 po . — w Pend paar Mond y has — to a fair cn but moderate fing 
d. t — ly 0 € „ „ Vheat 
ge oe BE 3 Farm, June 30.— We 1 ished the n * — ss a nereased during the last few days. Pine- other articles. mornin s market * 
e a furrow with a plough, drawn by three | apples, too, are T aper. Strawbevries-and Cherries are very attended, and business limited, b but hga 
— * ly do at this Ane cat 5 vear, plentiful. A f. Apricots 3 — 7 : pa ponia = Odessa, of which the late arrival eee 
— the soil a little, which is o preas ll as ripe Gooseberries and Currants. uts in i uotation "a ma 
for he perp aot dee ning 3 crops, until it comes | sufficient for the demand. Oranges and Lemons are plentiful. 1 oe pan! wa Tally 2 3 this quaii — 
to be fallowed again, and we nsider this deep furrow costs Amongst Vegetables, young Turnips may be obtained at fro rn cheaper.— Barley is : — 
little more than one given with a tw plough, as well- | 34, to 6d. a bunch. Car = the same. Cauliflowers are very ore mone eans eas are una after at 
ors 11 nd t regui a driver, although yoked three plentiful. The season for Rhubarb and Asparagus is nearly Oats are held for a slight advanee ltered in 
abreast, e than from the th required to get over. Green Peas — from ls. 6d.to 4s, per bu * Potatoes e fred F s is 
reenn t p rarab N pen will nearly plough as much in à are cheaper. New Potatoes realise from 1d. ye et F y > even at 2 g decline 
day at fallow Bot, with two ploughs drawn by three horses | Lettuces and other ale are sufficient for th emand, value o lour remains as last quoted.—§; a 
— ig as you w ith three ploughs drawn by two mc ans ushroo g — — 18. 6d. to — e — 5 "Valley ultim re veral days of nee we 
t i an saved; and plough! consist of Heaths, Pe —— enias, Lily of the Va 48. y 8 5 
by — mare, — ribed, we have been employed grubbing | Cinerarias, Tropæolums, Carnations, Pinks, Fuchsias pe gat but rain has been partial. The eropa — 
th a heavy five or orse grubber across the ridges, and | dendrons, and Roses. rally are represented > the A 
nds not on to bring a y weeds that are in the land to FRUITS. mplaints are fro 2 Prince 
surface, but = th mixes the new soil — is turned * from pine per Ib., 53 to 8s — 3 . bsh., 48s to 8s must apparently be a late one. T the harvest 1 
the deep farrows with the soil you had befor Grapes, 2 e, p. Ib. 28 to 6s | Orang er doz., 1s to 2s sau on h . e Wheat trade bag 3 
vantage. W. J Peaches, — aie. 6s to 208 — ee 100, 68 to 16s y 9 ough not large; the dee ; 
ussEx FARM, "July 2. The dry weather So late has been fa- — 3, pel er doz., 6s to 20s L. — Per doz., Is to 28 supplies has neverthel bl e holders d 3 
vourable for hay making ; ; and we have now got all our seed | Straw — p. pun., 9d to 0, 7s to = rkets to obtain ls. per qr. advance. in some j 
hay into stack in excellent order. We are — ‘Suan engaged on ttle, 4d to 1s Aimonds, lag peck nidri annaed ks . w 

— g dow in general is good, and our Cherries, wall, per Ib., 28 to — r Ib., * to 3s 8 y ed rather more money, also a 
teams are ploughing and preparing the land for, and sowing, dy — Ib., Ad to ea Walnuts, * 100, 1s 6d to 28 80 stances Oats Peas; inst, 4 
T ps, and in horse-hoeing and carrying hay. The men are eee p. hf. sieve, — p. bush., 16s to 248 r is con to one or two markets, N how $ 

gaged in thinning Swedes, makin g hay, Siew ops Wheat, a 3s 6d to 58 Nuts, Bar., p. bush, , 20s —— & moinen occurred id ie O alteration — 
cleaning hedge mae we have some rain we shall plant | Currants, do., 5sto 88 — Brazil, p. beh., 128 to Io; ed m French. Dateh, @ 
out Mangold and Marl Cabbage e — 22 ts rope > VE GETA BLES. — . — pte nar last mentioned "4 
but the later sown are very weather will * ry oe 4 co es, p. doz., 6d to Is Carrots, per bun., 4d to6d inable Is. per qr. below the extreme rates lately p -e 
kinds look well, but the dry de wil make Oats set. ID — p. doz., 6d to 3s | Spinach p. Powe" is = Is Ay te i 

ead per bush., 6d to 48 Onions, p. bunch. to 6 POOL, FRIDAY, Jux 6.—W: 
Notices to Corresponden ans, p. bush., 15 6d to 2s — Spanish, p . doz., = 6d to 4s | mand p> Wheat, e 1  Mediterane ind 5 ko 
Prax: . our co oe gn some in- Sorrel, p. hf. sieve, 6d to 9d Shallots, per ib, o 8d were fully 2d. per bushel dearer ; prime white was scarce 
formation about dew retting? When and how on is e Potatoes, per ton, 18 cante F ego o 1s es ey ok ~ | : 
to be laid on the Grass land for that pro — per cwt., 5s to P. — s 6d to 3s | bush, higher. Flour. at 6d. per barrel advance, didnot 
k upon the land? Is dew retting a complet i * 1b — per bush., 4s “ese M arrows, Poke 6dtols | Oats were firm at Tuesday’s rates, and there was no 
for, or only an auxiliary t steeping? Is hae Iter tppred rnips, per bunch, 3d to 6d Lettuce, Cab., p. sc., 4d to 9d good Oat declined Tuesday 
before or after dew retting? Does it require king and | Red Beet, per r doz., 2s to — Cos, do., 6d to ls Is. 6d. per qua was nearly recovered te > 
seutching earlier than Flax which has been . — 2 Horse Radish, — bdl. er rit = 6s Mushro: . 13 pot., ik sd to3s | Yellow being * — off at 34s., White not 
‘Horse KEEP Po ou cannot make 700 square yards | Asparagus, p. 1 Small ds, p. pun., 2d to 3d | bought at 338. 9d. to 34s, 6d. for good. 
of ground port a horse: unless it by ng more va- | I thubarb, p. Fandze, sa 10 4d Pad | — bunch, 2d to 3d 
articles than horse keep upon it, and selling them to | ] ‘rench Beans, p.100, 6d to 1s Savory, per bunch, 2d to 3d IMPFRIAL WHEAT. (BARLEY.| OATS. } 
buy Oats, hay, Clove arro If this will not do, you | Cucumbers, each, 4d to Is Thyme, per bunch, 2d to 3d AVERAGES. 
had lay it down to —— = farm it well. This Leeks, per bunch, 4d to 6d Parsley, p. doz. bun., 3s to 43 ay 19 ; 44s 9d 28s Od\l7s 8d 
wilt keep your horse during summ a great measure, and elery, p. bundle, 1s ae Roots, p. bdle., Is to Is at G 2 Sur aa 
you Oats and winter food Radishes, per 12 hands, Ma joram,green, pban. oe „ 9 27 10 7. F 
ORNAMENTAL AND Dom 0 POULTE TRY, by the Rev. E. S. Wate — per doz. daes Mint, greeu, per 44 6 286 11 17 7 
Dixon, price 5s. 6d., is now ready, and 8 be had at the 4d to Basil, green, p. — id tosa 44 2| 26 5 18 0 
Office of this Paper, and of all Sorn — 44 626 5 18 9 
RELATIONS BETWEEN Foop AND Constant — 9 
We have little experience — — ae ewes or cows, Monpay, JULY 2.—The 8 of English — Bete o 3 44 6 27 3 17 11 
nd cannot s er th more rapi attening — . 23 utie 0- 3 
tes for the — quantity of food they eat. by land carriage — — b this morniog 3 reign Grain 0 olro 
s.c s reaching town after Wednesday, cannot exe small ; the prices of this day se — wore tü hettie last sie , 
red before the following week, exceeded in very few instances. was hel Fluctuations in the last six weeks’ Corn Av 
firmly at 3 k to retail PRToxs. Mar 19. Mar 26. -| TONE 2. June. 9. ee 
quantities. Some descriptions of Barley realised an ad- tis 92— . 
vance of Is. A 2 3 ~ 
SMITHFIELD, Mopar, July 2. — pa ede gy apes Ye Bee oF 41 6 + 
The number of is much larger, and trade m : at 44 8 } 
‘ingly dull; prices are not much lower, but the r| is steady, and for fine — a slight improvement in| 44 : 5 
makes buyers cautious. The supply of Sheep is shorter; — is obtained. a 2 5 
trade * — — * in some — ather more 2 
money tained. e of Lamb is very inferior ; r 
— Mim whole: is worse, 5s, A Uoi ak: — London. Liverpool. Wakefield. Boston. 2 
fd Germany there are 3 1 — no deare —— ollan s r i 
* ere are 30 asts, — Sheep, an alves; " j 
Northampton 1700 Beasts ; aud fon Set., CURRENT. Jun. 25 July 2.“ June 26: July 3. Jun. 22 Jun. 29 Jun. 27 July 4. June 28. a ; 
qr. 70 lbs. 70 lbs. qr. e . | qr 62 Ib. „ A 
8. i. Gd, hig. do &. Gils 8.58. 8 5. 4. 3. 8. d. 4 de. d K 
. 40 fo4 4 42 to446 9 7 O16 9 7 0044 to50 44 to50 43 to49 45 to50 5 10 6 855 II oi 
— 473047507 2 7 67 2 7 644—5244—5246—52 4836 3 6 H6 46 
44846, 10 7 2% 10 7 24345434 — — f 9 6 45m BO 
= e 67 7 6 Z Ma), 52) 2 — | 2 . „ 
Pigs 36—58036—58 4 6 8 64 6 8 6ʃ43—53 40—53 — — 5 2 : 
9 — — 30 — “Calves, 515 Pigs, 746. 480 lbs. 480 Ibs. f 
RIDAY, 

The supply of Beasts is by Piin coe , yet 0 Rye—New eos 22—2422—24 — sin . . saat pa | er 
quite sufficient for the dem nit is — ly diffi- c soe 22—2322— 23 == — — — — — = 1 
M a Pie jegai Monday’s quotations. The improved rates of Foreign meal |6/,—7/|61.—7/ — ree si 8 jul E — 

y last have much increased our supply of Sheep, and the Barley „ 
weather being warm, trade is dingly heavy, especially for “td GE- qr. „ 

Sheep. Prices a lower for all ki on — Grinding soe 21—24221—24 — — 22—2322—2324—2624—26 23—25 | - 

are pl ae 8 Pome — of very indifferent ; Malting x. —. 22—27 22—27 30s—32s | 30s—32s — —30 2830 at k 
Calves ; trade is very dull, at late rates. E — „ OT — 24 —282—2 2 =. 
> 9 e rates. From Holland and 6 bush.|6 bush a 

10 B. ? 710 Sheep, and 232 Calves; 1 6 bush. 6 bus 
— — 300; and 125 Milch Cows from Malt— Ship ... — — — 39—4 — 
Best Scots, Her Whi 45 lbs. 5 Ibs. 

fords, e. . 3460 3 10 nern e. b - Nh. |1924)19-—24)2610¢ 3s 20s 10d 36 2 — | — |14—20)14—21 
Bet pero mar 2 Ewes & 2dquality ... — ... 3 15—2015—22 2 5 2 8 2 5 2 — — — 

oa ae —3 2 pas 2 3 2 oreign (14—21 14—212 4 2 6 2 42 6 sages = ape 
= Downs i DODE o inks —5 i "R A = > 
Ditto Shorn. . 3 6— 10 ene 2 8—3 10| Peas—Boilers |25—30|25—30 k 3 bes ao Ab all . 

Beasts, 893; She „„ a ag ee dom 28—3228 — 
+ ; Calves;.647 ; Pigs, 213. 2 
— — Grinding „ 192. 94192. _or N Z 
ENGLISH TIMBER AND B — [23—25/23—25| 29 —31s | 29—S3Is | — — — — 
ROUND TIMBER, Paa a eee es Foreign . . |25—32|25—32| 32—34 | 32 „ | on oe 
Per Foot Cube. Per Foot Superf. | New x 

Od. to 5s, Od. % GOON | 6 „small . . |22—32|23—33| 30 —33 | 30-33 29—33029—33 = 
9 —2 6 Uer — 2—34 | 32—34 (35—36|35—36/34—36|34—36 
8 21—3621—36 24 —32 1 —32 (26—29/26—29, == | — |} 
6 —2 6 

— 1 Seat da 40 —42 40 —42 32—4032—40 — — 

ann AD ý 
for coppice, but is fast declining in gp aces mai 22 — pry — — an 
from 130. . per 
— 79/91. 7s | 71. 128 | 7% 126 — fw ' 
l 7 
— 36 Trusses. F — — — — — 

July 5. J 

x s 30- 34 30. 34 35 6s | 33s 35 — J 

„ * 8—3 —358 ae — 
— eed p. sack! p. sack} 280lbs. | 280 Ibs. iP. sack | 
4 oe. 36—44/3 44 34—36 5 i 56—40 36 40 ö 
Straw .., July 3. Impts. Averages. | Imports, | Aver. Impts Aver. | Aver. 
- July & — rs. d. 
patie han : qrs. 8. qrs. 8. qrs. 6. d. xs. 
Inferior ditto... % 50 4 [11130 | 44 6 | 17557 4 4 10950 % 6 | 1667 
„ 25 0 1550 27 3 5 w f t= — = 
* 19 7 4660 — a 1356 is 6 700 14 11 376 
ia — a u 00 tee pee — — 

Messrs. PATTENDEN — Sete 6. a 6 

activity in the market m osim — 6956 33 4 655 31 3 156 
: sing. The Pk Wi — 57 ß—ß | fo 
Been done as low as hymen ee 6 
: KINGSFORD SEGAR and 8 ; kas 
(ANDARS | 
= and LAY. TUNNICLIFFE. and DUNNS,| _ WRIGHT. 
sened 


97-1849. ] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 431 
CCT Ly. NEW SOCIETY or PAINTERS IN WATER 


f years, and entered upon at 
yy BE LET . the Farm maw WOTTON, in the Parish 


present i r. Sho oeni, 
of SE 409 acres of Meadow, "Pasture, “and. A 


It 
rable 


ad is m 


Farm 


14. —+ and Meadow land is of the richest fatten. 


A F arm.bulldings are large and a 


d for fatte — ala 
— fie -houses, stalls, — „and yards, 


feeding 
sos bet —— four — from Hailsham pee Eustbou 


modious 


3 
rze 


market town, and one mile from the Pais: 


i miles from Lewon we wes be mg peor Railw ay. * eee 


10 TS, AND O 


BE DISPOSED ch abou t 200 2 — orn of 
RNATIONS — * PICOTEES, by e of the lea — 
ge comi Vair k iculars, apply ti 


R Paseet, — — road, Dalst 
Wirt ine TO RENT.—A — an, with a 


income, oe torent A GOOD FAMILY RE. 
id 


southern 
parres — — n of —.— woul upon the highest 


4 dane indispensable.— Address to B. 


LIGHT. CHEAP, AND DURABLE ROOFING, 


Ti 


Z 
Ca 1 3 ROOFING 


BLT is * s to rain, snow, and frost, and 
siv 
i b 


quired e la 
oo with — arm-servants, or unpractised persons, 


foot. CROGGON’S PATENT NON- es 


by post on ap 


square 

Perrine VELP, for Steam Boilers and Pipes, saves 25 
Sampl Testi 

333 and Co., 2, ——— Londo: 


PORTLAND CEMENT. — Testimonials recived fom 
all 


coms, fg the severe this CEMENT to possess the 


frost, and to 2 
meng — urposes, such as b 
ee om Reservoirs, Cisterns, Baths, shee h-ponds, & 


of 


—His Royal Highness PRINCE ALBERT. 


PATRON: AL 
PRESIDENT OF THE Bement Right Hon. Parl or — 


Vice PREsIDENT —Right Hon. EARL D 
en paL—John Wilson, F. R. S. E., F 
BAA and First MASTER— 


infi tetp are — rch more and — extensively ackn 


— . pert er vegetates, and 1 carry from three 


nor paint. 
times its own body of sand. 
g — J. B. Ware and Sons, Milbank-street, W 


2 boars of its application to th alls, and by the us 
whieh 


F 
roms may be rendered habitable Before the materials 


est- 


eot 


ako Enc i 
SS of 3 mek be end at t the To 
ES FRANCIS a ms, ondon. 


CHEAP AND DURABLE ROOFING. 


PATENT. 


ROYAL UES ERAR. 


MNEILL anp co, of y Lam 3 B ee 
* row, London, the Manufactur 2 8 


. THE ASPHALTED FELT FO 2 
due Farm Buildings, Shedd i 


= 


Felt SOLELY patr: saam jaar a by 
i Staged AN. 


DNA 
AST tanta CoMPANY, 


F WIGHT, 
a i E eais — 
— the of the Dukes of Suth Norfo Rut 


„Workshops, miey pe Garden 
ro 


st. 
reat cultural Shows, it is this Fel 
— bas ud teen exhibited 4 obtained Two SILVER MED 


Tk, 
» Northumberia * Buccleuch (at ‘Richmond, 
— Spencer, and most of the Nobili 4 Gentry, 
ROYAL AGRICULTURAL — IETY’S ag — a Hanover. 


eed, it can be obtained at all w t for th 


COND MAsTER—J. D. Pemberton, C.E. 
RESIDENT Paorassons Agric iar ts Wilson, F. R. S. E. „&c. 
Chemis: ‘aah 
Natural History Botany a — Buckman, F. G. S., & c. 
the maties and ‘Natural "Philoso phy — —— 
Karisa t : Joh n Robinson, M. R. C. V.S. 

Surveying and 23 Pembe ype C.E, 
The object ot this 1 kuren is 2 * rov vide such a course of 
instruction as w 1 be sefa l t to = Agriculturist. The 
nefits lieation of scientific 


ledged, while the means of obtaining 7 information, if, in 


ithou 
a due attention to the practical operations of husbandry, a 


ca tte red and costly as to be wi ithin the each of very few. 


ner 3 hi 12088 4 3 111 ae: 1 2 21 p 
science, it 


and ex xplaine d. and their gb errr A i 4 as fi 


possible in the sp racine of the Co Pra ege farm. The — 
the whole is 


— practical instruction go hand in ha nd, and 
mbined with the adva ntages of collegiate discipline, 


order of the Council, PaILip Bowes, Secretary. 


London Office, 26, King William-s treet, West Strand. 


— will shortly close, badd Fifteenth Annual Ex- 
Society is now ope * 
k till dus — — u 


— — r ee — et RS ck 
PAzes bi LIFE PILLS are acknowledged to be the 
best Medic ahs the world. This Medicine has been 
wea eae British publio ae afew years, and A pan in the 
ual th 


recommenda- 
tion; hundreds had soon to —— that PARR”, 
PILLS had saved them, and w o load in mir 


ise, 
y brought bef re the public 
at once removed a any prejudice which some may — felt ; the 
continual 28 whi ney en esulted from their use spread their 


t es, whatev ight be 
8 ina, have had i he United States, Canada, india, and even 
mere ave ha immense quantities ‘shi pped to their respective 
es, England amis il good, 


ntrie — g 
* Lorne pre Bhgi of 23 Lire PILLS amounts to to upw ele ne 
boxes weekly, more than all other paten t medicines | Pat togeth 
This simple fact needs no fu rther comment; i lis Piati 


that the Pills of Old Parr are the best medicine — — world. 
RIO y 


t a 
Red a, on the Government stamp, pasted round each 
box so, so, the fac- On, ten of the signature of the ocean 


EIGHT. HUNDRED Pou NDS PREMIUMS, 


WO HUNDRED ee FOR IMPLEMENTS 


are offered by the Y hire oe i al Society at 
— e en 


applicatiou to Marruzw M. — Secretary, Sow: — 
ire, 


Thirsk, Yorksh 


WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT. 


On 

f 1 Hi 410 0% hi 
hi 0 80 10 4 

t 17355 $ Hh 5 uth K K 
1 610 


ones, 
1 5 1 
. oo 


228225 


* ‘Howes and C aue: court, F leet-street, London, 
CCT boxes at Is, — 2s. 9d., and family packets at 113. 
each, by all —— table — nang throughout the world. 


res | Full 


ETCALFE anD Co.’s NEW 22 TOOTH- 
as BRUSH and SM SPONGES. —The Tooth-Brush 
| divisions of the teeth, es, come im the most extra- 

td Á manner, and i amous for the here a 22 
loose An — Brush, that e 
of 4. capable of inju e the Anket: nap, 
Rus. 


Clots B 
time, and in 

Penetrating Hair- brushes, . e dur —.— cag eg 
— bristles, ' which | do n — like hair. Flesh 

du e friction. Velvet 
brates ; which act in the most surprising and successful man- 
nge, with Fus 
— es of absorption . and durability, by means of 
direct importations, —— with all intermediate parties“ 
Profits “oO ee ive bleaching, and securing the — bee a 
genuine 8 ge. — at — Bixorkr, and 
Co.’s Sole — 130 B, Oxford- street, one — 
Halles. street. 


FER E TE W 


ds Es adopted 


a some 2 


rs, millers, &e.— 


2 


T FPOOTHACHE PERMANENTLY CURED BY 
using BRAN ENAMEL for filling decaying Teeth 
sound i ice ls, g 


s Lowden. | it siars ll, ont 
Witz FENCING, les thaw Two-ineh, mesh, / Y 


is Balf the price of any oth ion of Roofing, and 
a great saving Tir y be 


¢ ts U. na” Te 
wren 1 An 
— experience, with refere 


stimonial 
Noblemen, Gen- 


made from Iron n painted ; to exclude 
and Rabbits, g „Sheep, „ &e.; I5 inches 
high, 3d. per yard; 2 feet, 41d. ; 3 feet, d.; 4 feet, 9d.; 
6 feet, Is, or any width required at id. square foo 
ing Pheasants, &c.—Rosert 


Fow 
21, Tonbridge- sinha 3 London. 


s 


aron nd builders, sen sent ry es to any part of the 
emt and orders by post executed. hs 
of The Public is “re that the only Works in London 


Where roofs 


ry, Lamb’s.buildings, a 
covered with the Felt may be see 
— Hail, 3 Courts, at the entrance t te West- | 


[FISHING NETS, SHEEP NETS, axp RABBIT 


ETS and Tra 
Nets, Casting Nets, —— we and other — for Finbing. of 


ver Sheep Nets of New Zen * cord 
nearly 4 feet high, 44d. per yard, Rabbit Nete 


fibre, 
on Cords nd 100 yards long. R. RI — 21, Ton- 


br hes anak asa London. 


or 


pay 
"7 proposed afforded on th oofs, 
| Todos ——" nded-on the of — zog a 
| ATENT PROTOXIDE PAINT ata very 
the Princi of price. This article is extensively | 
a 24 hens ia Pang Ses ee 


nry fr 
Mannfactured by HABLES FRAN 


nit, 
1 EAL ine orks, Nine Elms, London 
H ie — 8 


wig 
* Purchasers any te ts, Sizes, and pri 
van à good set o ar Bea abled to ge the articles. — 


2 
trike 


tlenham. e 


75 
J 


I 
Wi 
140 
1 
Git 
% 
H f 
TA 
H E 
11 z 


ag EKA SHIRTS. —« A 


appearance and com 


T 
z 
S 


2 
if 
FF 

775 27 


27 
it Detailed Catal gu 


— OF BEDDING, — 


ing st treo b. 
$ 196 (opposite the iy ten on application 


Celebrated Establishment. — Musical 

for 303, ; also all the new Patterns | 

gues, with | 
free, 


l 


es, by 


8 
roofed with F. M. NEI bout | 4 
since, under th ry, | 
oh e Surveyorship of Chas, Barry, Es +s 
We satiated 9 Co sioners of W and Forests are | R 
ordere 0 


inch mesh, 24d. Wasp Net, to * coe of — e 

ripe fi — fram wasps and flies, 6d. per yard, mu — 
71 1 N. 21, Tonbridge- place, Newer“, ad. 

ICK E CLOTËS, TENTS, — s of 


ck Ti th 
us sizes, 30 f-et by 30 fect, suitable to cover 30 tons 
pat hay, 5“. complete, with side lines; larger or smaller sizes n 


roportion. Tents for Lawns, Gardens, or Cricket Clubs, 
t round, te gay lowest part, 5l. ; larger and — 
— pro Em 9 Tents, of very thick c 
= feet square, ber Rone T Rıcħarpson, 21, Tonbri ——— 
w. road, Lon 


X B. Tents — Marquees on hire for Fêtes, &c., at a very 


mod rate charge 


An experienced Surgeon is appointed by the 3 — — 
Medicines, Medical Comtorts, and an ample — — ae 
St e provide 


for each Class of Passengers: teerage-Cabins 
for Persons paying in full for their own Passage in — teerage. 
For — — er i — apply at THE 


New Zea House ; SFPA Stayner, Broker, 
110. — — — London, 127 —— — — Court. 
as CUDBERT HARINGTON, 
New Zealand House, 9, 3 — 
London, July 7, 1849. 


R. LOCOCK’S. FEMALE WAFERS have ne taste 
of Medicine, and are the only remedy recommended to 
Females, Price 18. * 28. 9d., and Ils, per box BEWARE or 
ImitatTions.—Unprincipled persons — this Medicine 
in ie — * corer &. Purehas 
uin 


— Wafers, „ are box. ÖBSERVE. 
The counterfeit Medicines: have words on the stamp so — 
resembling: these, as to mislead the unwary. Purchasers mus 


haee strictly 8 the above caution. Agen = 


T 
88 
2 
8. 
$i 
11 


— Medicine Vendors, 
EST REMEDY FOR INDIGESTION, 
oRTON'S CAMOMILE PILLS are confidently 
. mended as a sim i 


asthma, beg yg ve s P" hs, and Colds. Price 1s. 1)d., 2s. adn 
and 1 


= ee LADIES. 5 Le influence of 


* 
tue 
on the skin at this e year calls fur he 


n in preserving 3 e alieaey an — i beauty. The 
5 — specific for this des 


most ed attentio and effectual — ect is 
deserved], 


R WLAND’S merce! te so edly Aloo x rae in — 


and public favour and estimation. Its — carion neu 


tral 
the effects of the atmos eae induces that healthy action 


uty ure so essentially promo: reckles, 


vessels of the skin, by which its . = 


— 


sen lh aud Discolorations fiy before the application o oft 
— ö of comp Ladies travelling or taking ou 


lexion 
perio will find it to diffase a grateful and refreshing — 


—— ases of N or Stings of Insects its virtues — 
f yery 


us KALYDORS for sale, conta’ 5 


3 of sp rio 
mineral 8 utterly ruinous to the complexion, a 


ng 
their repellent action ring hea — The w “te 3 RO w 
— KALY — 


” are also engrared on the — —— mp affix 


Sa — bottle. Price 30. Gd. and 8s 6d, Sold by the proprie- 
tors and by Chemists ‘erfumers, 


and P 


— Sick — ge Bilious and Liver com- 
— they act as a powerful to e and gentle aperient, 
parting stre to the stomach 3 
5 — Honey in 1 at = Lid. or 28. 9d. e ach, by A. Wine 
LOUGHB d Co, B. ind 8 61, Bishoprgate-strect 
Without, and — all Modioine Vendors k for 

cee "S PILLS, and do not be pers * 853 an 
imita 


A »! DANGEROUS LIVER COMPLAINT EFFEC- 
w 


i iy cured, at plea-u ing publicity to 
reg re ‘Sold t by all druggists, and and at Professor Houtowaw' 
Establishment, 244, Strand, London 


432 


Just published, Part XIX., price 1 


THE FLORIST, AND GARDEN MISCELLANY; 


Con ED UNDER THE SUPERINTENDENCE OF E. BECK, or IsLEwortH 
outa A kr COLOURED D TE OF CINERARIAS AND TWO WOODCUTS. 


—1. 2. On the Philosophy of Florist 1 —3. jana Tulip Society.—4. Fancy n 
. * „ il Storm and r — f Ive. Beart Mills.—8. The crag Page.—9. Reviews.—10. Ro 
8 
London Floricultural Society.—14. Calendar o of Ope erations we r aly. a > correspondents 


Advertisements for this work, which has now 4 ent to the Publishers by the 
22d of every 2 


4 — — 
London: Cnaruax and Hatt, 186, Strand ; and to be had of all Country Booksellers. 


is popu EDITI 8 
* ‘FOURTEEN 1 0 ED 
N SEVEN, WITH GILT EDGES SN 
la me Seve 4 "(comprising V olumes 1 by. 
separately, uniformly heads price 16s 10 
Orr E, 85, Fleet. str reet, 


oya 
The Se edling Pelargonium Exhibition. —12. Open Tulip 5 — —13. Royal —.— Tür 1E EDINBURG REVIEW, No 


publi — THURSDAY 105 SUXXXL, vil 
CONT. 
1. TRANSPORTATION AS S IT 
SHAKSPEARTAN CRITICS 
3. DE TOO QUEVILLE’S LO an e eran, 
4. DENNIS’S ET 


ZE 
Messrs. BARRETT, EX ALL, AND AND REWE S FH 


PATENT SAFETY HORSE GEAR. 


7. SIR E. L. BULWER LYTTON’S KING 
8. TYNDALE’S SARDINIA— ARTH arate, 
15. AUSTRIA AND HUNGA RT. HOUSE OF savor, 
. MACAULAY’S HISTORY OF 7 
London: Loneman and Co. Edin 1 8 
HE COTTAGE GARDENE 
hi Guide to Out-door G — 
tivation. — ucted by Groner W. EE 
the Ply n r's Almanack,” Modern 
ry,” 


The COT "AGE GARDENER has been ENLAR t 
TEEN PAGES, without increase of ra . 
The COTTAGE GARDENER now forms the a 


BLAS. age e on Wood 
H. & hc ans hi 
ner 1 e writer happily og with bis 


er flow of narrati 


CRIES 
Cur, OF C CREGAN, 28 
E and Steel, . 


8 eas 
m familiarity, br a yet more offensive unti does 2 


us than we find in Con. Cregan.”—Atheneum. 
— ready, Volume T 7s, 6d. cloth, 
0 and i „ Amen-corner, 


London M. S. ORR an 
PROF. LINDLEY 8 „ TO BOTAN, 


E ton as me MONTHS’ trial of “ap above REALLY VALUABLE ie ig hated a suuni it a standard | Just published, K 2 955 ols. with Six Copper-plates mi 
2 — = — = — a and * e oF mei A eye extant, Upwa En 160 8 ravings, pied Wi 0 

ow been so e most flattering Testimonia 88 of their hi 3 and — A ‘hi u, 1 

be obtained on application by post, or at the NORWICH MEETING *. number of then, X over — rary rete * 1 ps RO 55 v C'T pi pfni BOTAN, 
exhibited at S 8, together with a large assortment of Pasii and — THRESHING MACHIN S; CHAFF CUTTE . Fourth Edition e Ge weed t £ ari a wa H us A 
GRAIN MIL LLS, "a KATESGROVE IRON WORKS, READING, JULY It — bee 5 every s 


> — 7 
rs. STRATTON, HUGHES, 


d its 
MEss AND Organs—3. Of the Epidermis — ofa 
Compound Organs—5. Oft se K Se e Stem 
Respectfully invite the attention of Agriculturists to their Stan 3, AGR ICULTUR , Inn? pade—-8- the 3 Of Food an Secretion, 
NORWICH ee the AL SOCIETY S SHOW-YARD, b a th Jower-Bud-1 © 
CARTS, WAGGONS, woo TRON a exhibiting a Large Collection of 10. T — Motions 5 of K „ e tt Of 

Of the best st construction, and and at prices — the 2 nt depres —— — EGIAN HARROWS, &c. Mal O nea th OF he Disk—16. Of th on 3 Gi Fe 
—— 2 n especially invite 17. Of the Receptacle of Torus—18, Of Seed—22. of Gerais» 


t 
the high — on of the Judges at York. The Weight is only 54 cw t., and the Pri 


ART for distributing Liguia ore os (as shown above), which received | tilisation—20. Of the Fruit—21. Of the 
on—23. 


ditions, 
that be 
has introduce down, as ne Rah 2 II. 


os Ax, Brown, GREEN, 
BOTANICAL WORKS BY PROFESSOR LINDLEY, 
1. 
CHOOL BO OTAN Ei or, the Rudim ents of Botanica 
Science. New Edition. * Illustrations. Price 5s, 6d. 
HE VEGETABLE KINGDOM ; ; or the Structar, 
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Work is issued also in 12 3 Monthly Parts, price 2s, 64. 
HE ELEMENTS OF Nona Poy 
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S. H. ; 

i „ Leet nt —— CATALOGUE may be had at thei r Stand, gratis, or wili be forwarded to any address ti —— gk — e. sexual Systen , 

= a Method—3. The Manner of Stud me ossary. i 
„The Elements of Medical a ta, is now resif 


R W. J. HOOKER’ 
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. tra x street, 
Just published, in 1 vol. war with Co London: Brapsony and Evans 11, Boot is 
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a om a Pop ular Guide to the RINCIPLES OE SCIENTIFIC ‘BOTANY As | et Patient Re Cn ee 7 
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London: Lonamay, BROWN, GREEN, and LONGMANS "| Extraordinary Pro piem fonsor of Botany i 5. oth 1 2874. Jena. | Experimental Chemist to the Menue boo ee, 45 
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pendent periodical, flattering pă and iess er 2 an inde- 3 „ ate A — of —— cir- O their History 9 e bee 4 ra eh Keswick 155 
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besides an issue of 30,000 = md vol ae, pepe fe es ers, yship’s 12 — eat Woolston, near ane ornwall. 8 rar ra is — from 48. 64. 1 — 6d. (e. for is 
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that great good yet remains to be done possible not to feel T HE nes ; its HISTORY, BREEDS, and Tenantry, (delivered anya plisher, JAMES mare PY 
i 3 made 
enlarged s 11 


EMENT. B 
MIST 3 for future and The Supplement may be ved y Wintam 3 
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3 ch are closely printed, com- is Grace 
— = 2 the public | —— — and highly illustrated, comprise every in- | By JoserH PAXTON, 3 r 1 9 
Y Economist consists of Original Articles by the ormation which can be required on their respective subjects, yr, ayoni. AbT werken, 
nomiy, fadbaaie os on = — departments of Domestic Eco. 10 AGRICULTUR AL IMPROVEMENTS. Reprints from the Gardener: as wih se veral wo 
Household Maus uae E 1 511 Dress = Clothing, | 11 By ta Wm. Jonson, Esq a mi be J. Mart meer ns Us r Welli A 
à Ne m N 4 
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‘AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


[Price 6d. 


a stamped 
No, 28—1849.] SATURDAY, JULY 14. 
A — 3 ROSEE. 
of England . Heating, new plan ol. . 436 D 3 OLE has much pleasu ouncing to his 
agi oie and Prince Aibert i Herbariums . 440 e Friends and ta Public en ‘bis pe collection of 
e of Edinburgh 43 page soe oe Society’ s Show.. * ROSES is now in — — and will continue till the end of | 
Capes. . ͥ at 3 d Clavencon’s eter a July, after which t saan will — e in bloom till | 
3 44 ee ret November. Ru pes kshire, July 1 
L stee — lk 
p S08 e treads oa = AND PICOTE 
0 earth UD . . ere Nebe Park Gosia TURNER'S Extensive Collection oft chem interest- 
Geet, Stilton, to Was . . . . 4% Pergo pre ° ing flowers, includi: 2 some ana utiful seedlings raised by 
— * the Rev. J. Burroughe es, J. L . Pux y, Esq. Morgan Ma . „ 


esas eee eane 


e 
and other successful g 


reg? a visit ; ursery being wi 
e Slo ough Station on the Great Western 1— te 
the Datchet Station the 


Wall trees, studs for. 


——- 


OYAL SOUTH T LONDON FLORICULTURAL | 
OCIETY 
"Under the Patronage of HER UREN., GRACIOUS MAJESTY, 


e Society, wil 

L GARDENS, 

hibitors, when 
viz. :— 


‘ourth Exhibi a Ai season abov 
aer HOY 1 ooLoaieal 
25th, 1819, open to all ex 


Eine: Me d Mr. E. Denyer, 

Roses; Mr. W. YBa asc for Fa 5 Mr. T. 

Pawsey, em age Or ved J, Chapman, — * ss * Antirrhi- 
eedling: 


Cc 
€ | above, bg “established in in 


orist, 
1| render any further comments unnecess 


Po i gg plas South Western line. 
een, rate of growth of. Royal Nur 00 Slough, July 1 

. PELARG N1U M— T OQUETI’S MAGNIY Nl. 
Villa gardening — „9 E aiser intends sending out plante ts of t 


Post- 


Chr 
ary.— 3 Maian 
WLLIAM FoguerrT, Shide House, near Newport, Isle of Wight. 


Eon ane SEEDLING popes pet dy rf of 4. 
4 — p CATALOGU 


a be had on mia 
paid application, — a sing — 3 stamp. 
Worton Cottage Islewor orth, J July 1 
ARDY ant 


p SON, SeeD- GROWERS, s, Ma ildon, Essex, 
* 1 Ag! and August sowing, A NEW YE E 


of Esq. ” Hon. Sec. , Jephso 


4-inch pots, in the middle ot betover i 
next, e A. 28. each, ne Seg package included. | 
prep: ; and a s the is limited, no discoun * * 


WV ARWICKSHIRE E HORTICULTURAL EXHI- 
TION.—THE S egi aaeei gt fe, 
210 fixed to 1 


“Gat Flowers 


Gree e Pla 
Specimen “Plants, Ver Roses, 
* plri pinke subjects, Melons, Pines, 1 


wers, and 
a pintat fruits. Full particulars in the Horticultural M 
zine” for July, and Schedules to Mag 5 ned fro tirs Wane, 


* d Parade. 


Rebe WII IBLEY mae ‘supply any more Plants 
of . be de each o n at 7s. 6d. each, For the 


Ken rae ed Londo 


C UM. 
OUELL à anp CO. are now prepared to execute 
orders from their extensive aad very select collection of the 
above, varie! 
the following prices. 
en * sorts 
425 


‘ He 


Well catablished i in — pots, or per post free, with all orders 
— 3 ap tpi — * sent for a successful and easy 


of eultu r exhibi 
AME ELLIAS, 
8 the finest — well set with flower buds, 30s. 
8. r 
NEMONE. NE ‘SEED, saved from selected sorts, w being 
— a by TourLL and — yr the finest ‘conditions and can 
„ 6d. and 5s. per p 


of 12 


aised froma erg ‘suppl ni Soure | 
L. it n 


and Cut indigenes Plants, by by a friend in Van 9 and, 1848, w 
N. T. I. 5 1 —.— and Regulations for Exhibiting to run, nor to eat strong, in = Leg “and “oe ng-cont — 
may m Joux Ferg NEVILLE, Secretary, Ebe- d fthat country It roved so with us; 
nezer H Surrey. Thomas Langford, of *philberd’s ‘louse, “Maidenhead, ~ Berks, 
| who received a portion of the stock fro N 
pe OTANICAL SOCIETY: — The tried your Turnip against six Gihar — at the end of 
second EXHIBITION will be held at the Garden, on August, and none is to 12 compared to it in excellence for 
Thursday, July 19th. All specimens for Exhibitio winter 712 alf. or postage stam 
at the Garden before half. past 9 a.m. on the day of Exhibition, N. best varieties of Cabbages, large catia each, Is. 
The oe Nor at 2 o’clock, 3 2 5 TN A ie u oe 
Bagbaston, choice biennial ss Yaa net a 
te 3 Kwownes, = scr = — Scarlet Giant Stoet, superior ai . 6d. 


AT y ATION AND PICOTEE' EXHI- 

ON (origin ed fi 

pas, Haste 8 of July x — * — om postponed to TUES- 

pope Peference’ to this Ann Si Meeting of the Prov 

25 Metropolitan growers, may be had of C. TURNER, Royal 

„Slougb. 

E DENYER,” e Loughboroug 
three miles from London, N 

7 ont and A 8 morn ot 

tolled 0 e. 0 * ES in 1 porns pia _that his 


re 


8, is — gr 


1 r pap. 
* to the 1 of all sietina” 7 et. | “= 
rs taken for plants now in bloom, and executed bing 


ko e 
us of inf 
eed shop in London, orming his customers that he has no 


Ips’ JAPONICA SEEDLINGS 


NDISH 
did tree 
es: 


Se, 
deliver genes Ar * 
— ee to the 


E>. 
wma 


1 
Packages of 1000 and . 
e Edenbridge station of the South- 


val EARLY MARROW CABBAGE. 
LEY begs r ully to inform the 
5 nnd the public generally, that he is now 
na. MARROW CABBAGE SEED, 

best ion, and tive 


AT 
mic har 


e 8 Satisfaction to 


t, 

not to run for a twelvemonth. One 

to prove to the pee the superior 

Over all o Sold in packets con- 

ioc packets Is. 6d Verbe * will be 
the remittance of a post-offic 


e order, or 
stamps. 
Y, at his General Seed Shop, 16, Pul- 


ules of Prizes, and any | 


TET 
| tipped 


an triped 9 spotted wi 


free, “ 
ety s CHOICE PLANTS. 
URE LLa D Co. have the 


plea: n te announce 
Forte received from the ishme: 
„ M. og MIELLEZ, of vod poe. D 
a highly desirab ts. The 

lied upon as being 8 to any yet a at 
| great — y, invaluable to any collection. 


PERFECTION (Miellez). —The largest bloom 
perfec 


t, very habit; inside of hg calyx 
y red, corolla 2 and lilac $ 
1 (Miel 3 and perfect bloom ; * of a fine 


lez 
white, orange scarlet Price 7s. 

CHATEAUBRIAND ee 3 om and perfect 
bloom e tipped with yellow, 
orange Pan: t 3 Pri — . — 

GENERAL 8 a 2 — 2 and perfect 
bloom ; outside calyx ro th white, inside 
orange, Pri ice 7 78 

GAZELLE (ale -Large bloom; tube rosy lilac, outside | 
of the sepals — ee the inside rosy lilac, lilac ‘corolla ; 

e5 


JULIA GRISI (Mielle eZ).— bloom ; ae blush, sepals 
ed with green, rosy scarlet e rolla. Price 5: 
When the set is taken, — will be charged Bie, 
CHRYSANTHEMUMS., 
MADAME D rose, la a petals, very fall and 
large bloom, extra fine. Prie 
SATURNE,—Bronze yell ow, perfe 


yello 
h: goo 
oF crimson 1 eu habit, Mairin 
hape, v. full bloo Price 3s. 6d. 
When the set 1 taken, they will be charged 15s, 
TUNIAS. 

-LOUIS NAPOLEON BONAPARTE, — Very large bloom, 
perfect and habit, blue lilac sy y and tipped with 
black ; the tinest 7 575 nown, e 2s. 

ECTA.—Very oe bloom, perfect shape 
ottied with violet and rose, bee 


and habit, lilac teed = 
and black throat. Price 
LAM ARTINE.—Very jarge 2 and porot biose; 
c striped an: Pri 
BERR ER.— Very large and perfect — fine habit, rose 
striped 1 75 motile d with red, uan throat. Pri 
AMEN te | large and perfect bloo 
sped and mo U Large bioom: perfect 22 pe and habit, 
00 ee a 3 
carmine, Price 2s 
1 they will be as 10s. 


oe mottled 


When the set is 


N FORMOSUS.— Crim 


Mac Euwerni, large bloom, light scarlet, the inside blush 
white, robust and dwarf habit. Eyo 


LOUIS —— BONAPARTE. a dark crim- 
S 
above can sent 
Kingdom. Post-office orders — egg 5 3 
unknown Nursery, Great Y 


nt of ne | 


ber 
be, confidently 
and, from 


known, q) ; 
x crimson, Ort. iet 


1 — 


be forw N = post tree, suffi- 

4 yards. Sown — — ab — 

A e afford a „ fine display through the autumn and winter 

"Catalogues of the above, with an extensive variety of highly 

ental plants, kirl — 3 by en enclosing two postage 
kamang s,—Great Yarm 


HE LONDO (DON ASSOCIATION] FOR R THE J IE PRO- 
TECTION OF TRADE, John-street, | 


BLAKEMAN, Secretary. 
HE COLLEGE, 1 


joann Pte TS the ARCHBISHOP of — UBY. 


President.—The e Rt. Hon. the — of 


— application to the Hea 
amare 2 NG 
DRUMMOND anp SON beg to il the attention 
Le es ere, 
laying the the swathe so 


that it can be easily garnered into evenly sheaves and without 
Price 9s. Gd. each, three or more 


fine habit, | —4 


| 


cues. on — for carriage to menr 
throug hout the kingdom will not 


of the railway stations 
more than from 1s. to 1s. 64. 
without a 


Stirling, N.B. 
PRACTICAL RESULTS OF REGISTERED INVENTIONS. 
n OBERTS — een TIL sg ate og 


Morning Post, 


12th 
= ate SOCIETY’S EXHIBITION, Chiswick GARDENS. 
great deal was excited at the exhibition, held 

Elay, about a yery novel, Tile, which the Council of 
— ve caused to be adopted in their 


the 
Messrs. Myatt and Sons, 
ish of this fruit, also 


Tite, Me Melon 
the attention 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE, i 


HORTICULTURAL 


EXHIBITION 


THE CERTIFICATE OF HONOUR. 
1 To Mr. May, Gardener to . Lawrence, F.H. S., for a col- 
lection of 30 hog a Greenhouse Si 
THE LARGE GOLD MEDAL, 
1 To Mr. Cole, ain 5 to H. Colyer, Esg Daere for a 
collection of 30 Stove and Greenhouse P 
r, Mylam, Gardener to S. Rucker, Esq., T F. H. S., for 
20 § ies of Exotic Orchids 
3 To Mr. "Dobson, Gardener to Mr. e ys 4 H. S., for 6 new 
po 
GOLD | KNIGHTIAN MEDAL. 
to Sir E. Antrobus, ag bo EN. S., 


© 


BANKSIAN MEDAL, 


SOCIETY 


AT THE GARDEN, JULY II, 


AWARD OF THE JUDGES. 
. May, Gardener to Mrs, Lawrence, F.H.S., for 
uchsia “ Corallina” 
7 To Messrs. Paul, Cheshunt, for a collection of Rosesin 50 
varieties 
8 To Mr. Parsons, 8 to A. George, Esq., Enfield, for 
the same, in 25 varie 
9 To Mr. May, Gardener os E. iaai Esq., of Beckenham, 
for 9 ee of Cape H 
10 To Mr. hl H.S., 
in 8 
11 To Mr. Robison, Gardener to J. Simpson, Esa., for 6 fancy 
Pelargoniums 
12 To Mr. Glendinnin ng, F. H. S., for a collection of Statices 
13 To Mt vote ay, Gardener to E. Goodha rt, Esq., for Roella 


„Wüna s, Gardener to C. B. Warner, Esq, F. H. S., 
for a 5 of Ferns 


fo ve 6 3 varieties of Pelargonium, 


THE GOLD M 
1 wae Mr. e lag Gardener to J. —— ä for a 
k, F. H. S., for 10 species | 


3 To * Smith, Gardener to W. Quilter, Esq., Norwood, for 
5 varieties of es ee 
4 To . 1 lapham, for the 
E LARGE 8 MEDAL. 
1 To oon hata Bromley. a ent, for a collection of 15 Stove 
Greenhouse Plan 
2 To Mr. Jack, 3 R. G. Loraine, Esq., of Walling- 
ton, > Surrey, for a collection of é Stove and Greenhouse 


3 To e Rollisson, of Tooting, for 10 species of Exotic 
Orchids 

4 To Mr. Jack, for 6 varieties of Exotie Orchids 

5 To Mr 21 “oe Gardener to H. Colyer, Esq., for 15 varieties of 


6 To Mr. 2 — Gardener to ae E. Antrobus, Bart., F.H.S., 
for 9 varieties of the sam 


7 To Mr. Stanly, Gardener to n Been s, Esq., F. H. S., f. 
6 di seve _species of Pelargonium, "exhibiting — 
cultiv 


8 To the pores * Tall Cacti in 

9 To yoo — Middlesex. mae New-road, for 6 new vari- 
f Pelargoni um, in 8-inch 

16 To Mr. Parker er, Gardener to J. H. Sugnton, Esq., sees sgt 


ton, 6 varieti: ium, in 11-inch pots 
11 To Mr. Gaines, F. H. S., for the same 
— e same, for e 


. Veitch, Exeter, for hes barbatum 

14 To = Ivison, —— to the echoes Dowager of North- 
mberland, F. H. S., for a collection of Uncommon Tropi- 

a Fruits 


THE ace OF EXCELLENCE, 

wee d a Seon Tooting for a 
nd Greenhouse — 

2 To the sam 


ie nids 
3 To Mr. - Dobson, Gard 3 to Mr. Beck, F. H. S., for a collec- 
of A 
and Son, Great Berkhampstead, for a col- 


Roses, in 50 varieties 
5 8 Taylor, Gardener to J Coster, Esq., for 9 varieties 


4 To Messrs, 


1849, 


OF LONDON. 


o Mr. Hamp, Gard 

j n Speri for 2 — sa eF to J. A. Thorne, Esq, i 
o Mr. Foster, Bdge 

varieties ‘ geware, for a collection of 


To Mr. Woods, 23 to F. Wigg Esg., St. 
, bs i 


the same, in 25 y 
Wiguelin, Esq., of 


23 
Simpson, 


of Yellow 
to J. 
N 


same 
Hs * 5 Francis, Hertford, for a 
Robinson, Gardener 
° Fuchsia „Sir Robert Peel“ 
r. E. G. Henderson, F. 
. dae exhibitin 
To = W. Ambrose, of 

ms 

To Mr. ee 


H.S Six distine: 
g su foe l Speedas g | 
Ba Tas rc 1 


11 To Mr. Ward, of t 
15 To Messrs. 3 and Bon Exeter, for a variety of Cypri- | 12 To Mr. Norman, the —— a a 
pedium barbatum 13 To Mr. Wooley, G. 
16 To the same, for a collection of Conifers for Daa N N H. B. Ker, * 
17 To Mr. 3 Gardener to Sir J. J. Guest, Bart., F. H. S., 14 To Mr. Green, Gardener to Sir E. An 
for a Queen Pine-apple for Aerides odoratum trobas, Bar, Ft, 
18 To} 8 Gardener to hi Graes iha ak of S 88 15 To Messrs. Lane, for a collection of of Achimenes 
or a Providence Pine- apple, weighing 16 To Mr. Ivison Garden e 
10 Ibs. 4 umberland, LS., for “te ng the Duchess Dowager Sarg. 
19 To Ar. Smit a Meses r to S. Ricardo, Esq., Titness-park, | 17 To the s et 
Sunning-hill, for 8 in pots 18 To Mr. 
20 To Mr. G. Hayward, G ae G. Goodman, Esq., aod ro aon anak ce — for 3 specimemgy,, 
mn , neal 1 for Black Hamburgh A 19 To Messrs. Veitch Son, for a new C tomeria 
21 To ng Oa, South Lambeth, for the same 20 Mr. Masters, H:S., for a collection of Ferns 
22 To! Ar. Fleming, for Muscat Gra 21 To Mr#Smith, Gardener to Mrs. L nee, FAS. 
23 To Mr. Toy, Oatlands Palace Gardens, Weybridge, for the 2 0 N named collection of Fash (no 
22 To Mr Garde: 
THE SILVER KNIGHTIAN MEDAL. Queen San 225 R 
1 To Messrs, Pamplin, „of Walthamstow, 3 a collection of | 23 To Mr. Jones, Gardener to Sir J. J. Guest, Bart, PR 
ants + Providence Pn 8 7 11 1% 
2 To Mr. Stanly, a — to H. Berens, Esq., F. H. S., for 24 To Mr. Dytch, * James Taylor, Esq, F. 0 
the — Black Ham h Gra 
3 To Mr. Smith, Gardener to Mrs. Lawrence, F. H. S., for 10 25 To Mr. Lus — 55 E to J. i Esq,, 
species sof Exotic Orchids Black Prince Grape 0 
4 To — om of Hertford, for a collection of Roses, in 50 26 To Mr. Turnbull, Gardener to the Duke of 
H. S., for Muscat Grapes mee 
5 To Me, ‘Ten , Gardener to Lady Puller, Youngsbury, Herts,|27 To Mr. Spencer, Gard nis of Lanse. 
ome sath, 1 in 25 varieties à T F. H. S. gy Beathes e = 
To e, for a — of Yellow Roses 28 To Mr Ferguso 4 — prone, A for the same 
7 To — . for the same 29 To Mr. Turnbull, 
8 85 Messrs. ons —_ — for 15 varieties of Cape Heath 30 To Mr. Ferguson, of W — ort same 
9 T eee sq., F. H. S., for a Fuchsia grafted with 15 3 Sno — — e 
ack Tar 
10 To = . — Serdar to E. Antrobus, Bart., F. H. S., for me 


a naultia formosa 
Messrs. Veitch and Son, for Nepenthes sanguinea 


1 To 
12 To br a Gardener to J. Coster, Esq., for a collection 
13 To sang“ Veitch and Son, for a new species of Ruellia 


14 To Mr. —.— Gardener to = * Dowager of North- 
umberland, for Oncidium 1 
15 To Messrs, Henderson, for Kalosanthes nitida 
16 To 7 — eren, 1 for a — of Carnations 
f the 


17 T , for a 2 — of 

18 To * Ridael, 7 a F. Ashby, Esq., of Staines, for 
ection of Achim 

19 To ES — Gardener 


0 H. Colyer, Esq., for the best 

ection of Plants (no error in 15) 

20 To Mr, Spencer, Gardener on wmi e Marquis of Lansdowne, 
F. H. S., for a Queen Pine. 

21 Tothe same, for a Providence | e weighing 9 lbs. 9 oz. 

22 To Mr. =, bull, Gardener to —— n ier the Duke of Marl- 
cn ugh P H's S., for a bu West's St. Peter's Grapes, 

eighi ort 


7 To Mr. Green, Gardener to Sir E. Antrobus, Bart, F. H. 8. 
for Tall Cacti, 
8 To Mr. Ivison, Gardener to the Duchess Dowager of North- 
umberland, F. H. S., for Leschenaultia splendens 
9 To Mr. Robinson, Gardener to J. — Esq., — 


bank, Pimlico, for 6 new varieties of Pelargonium 


pots 
Bragg, Slough, for the same 
11 To Mr Riddell, Gardener to 2 — „ Staines, for 6 
arieties of Pelargonium, 
12 To Mr. Stains, for 6 cy 5 
13 To Messrs. ooting, deros polymorpha 
14 To Mr. Gardener to J. B. Boothby, Esq., F. H. S., for 
a of the Musa Cavendishii 


THE LARGE SILVER MEDAL. 
1 To Mr. Glendinning, F, H.S., for a collection of 6 Stove and 
2 To Messrs, H lace, E 
5 pop ine Pine-apple-place, Edgware-road, for 
3 To Mr, Knott, Gardener to The Rev. C. Pritchard, F. H. S., 


E. 


*,* A prize of the value of 107. was awarded to Mr. Fleming, Gardener to the Duke 
!— ᷑ ee a A AT MEADE ̃ ̃7˙˖ ͤñꝓ—ꝛ—y— —— ——t — 


HORTICULTURAL, N AND HEATING 
ATER. 


102 
23 To = Beret 2 Oatlands Palace Gardens, Weybridge, for 
9 Muscat of Alexandria Grapes, weighing 


1 lb. 6 
t To — Holmes, Gardener to S. Garrard, Esq., Putney Heath, 
Black Hamburgh Grapes 
— To Mr. Toy, for the same 
6 To Mr. Rust, Gardener to J. Maclaren, Esq., F. H. S., for 
Muse — Gra Wr 


— To Mr. ull, for West's St. Peter's Grapes 
8 To Mr. — ( Gardener a rto the Earl de Grey, F. H. S., for 
es 
29 To Mr, Parker, Gardener to J. H. Oughton, Esq., Roehamp- 
ton, ectarines 
To Mr. ro, Gardener to Mrs. Oddie, for the heaviest 
Melon, ee G ” weighing 7} lbs, 
To Mr. Betchworth j for the second 
Melon, “ Cantaionp,” weigh 33 Ibs. 
32 "e Band Dynevor, for the best 


d Melon, as romhall” 
nT HE SILVER phloem ig MEDAL, 


1 To Mr. Williams, Gard B. Warner, Esq., F.H.S,, | 


To the same, for "Elton Cherri 
— — 


33 — Mr. of Brentford, for Black Orea Obes 
34 To thes for igarreau 
35 To Mr. Elphinstone, Gardener to the! the 

for British 8 nd Eleanor 


To Mr. Lydiard, of Batheaston, for 2 83 
To Mr, Bruce, Gardener 0 
2 be voured Melon $ 


HE CERTIFICATE OF MERIT. 
for a collection of Boss, 
in 50 varieties 


maes, L j ardoare ty W. R. Baker, Ban, FAS 
es 


weg for a collection of ia 
er Garad to se Esq, oT 
Eri 


To — Fave ree ca Cephalotus 

To Messrs. Henderson or Achimenes 6 

To Mr, Glendinning, F. H.S — 
are nd So 


To Mr. Salter, F. H. S., * 
* Epps, rie for 
lants — error 
15 To Mr. Taylor, Gardener to a me: Esq. we 
o Mr. Gardener to the Duke 


ming, 
H. S., for the same 
17 To Mr. Bassett, Gardener to T. B, Herring, Esq, HI 


18 To Mr. Ta Turnb an, 8 to the pareot aes 


23 — Whiting, for the best-flavoured | 


for a collection of 6 Stove and Greenhouse Plants 


eee IMPLEMENTS will — 


ted at the w, Stand 16. A prospectu: 
fea oe. 1 


1 


to be obtained from 
bridge- 


ALSO THE cULTIVATION op 5 — CHOICEST PLANTS, 


, Me Wines 


Log Fo . aL 


A 
. 
L 


air aki 
TERN H f 115 Aj 822 1 I 7 . — 
a | 1287 ; 5 K GATER 1 332 
ee eee 


WEEKS anp Co., „Aaga cont, Chelsea, Horticut- 


quantities that they are 


enormous 
at LESS ¥ 
I THAN —y 4 ile 


of Sutherland, F. Il. S., for “the finest collection lection of rr. : 


N Kno ole-park, Frant, Tun. avoiding re 


° 5 eee OTHOUSE Bor.oens, and and HOT-WATER hea 
from 151. 
— E ps i ly-invented P. -i 
p soma AND ag 
HETLAND i , quantity © 
direct from Shetland, > 373 ands, 


reen-fleshed.” 


ROVED rLO WEE st 
SE 3 STICKS are of heh 


1 


i 


M aka and sold Wholesale, 20 K. Monis, f 
ee Ser, 
PROVED HYD RAUL pei 


Freeman Ros, F 
ed 


THEIN IM 


281849. 


THE 66 


58 


435 


5 . TURAL SOCIETY OF LONDON... 
sees ON HORTICULTUR 
15 ay, Jory 17th, t 3 P.m.— “The em n 
* are liable, and 50 mode of alleviating 23 80 
— wledge offers the means of 
o the Meeting Room except Hono 


be admitted t rary 
sn Fellows —— the oie ae — wives or sisters, and 
d by r the Foreign and Cor- 


The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 


1 JULY 14, 1849. 


oo EN yi 0 ky EEK. 
1 3 tura — — 7 S 
3 tHe nd Thursday, July 18 and 19: Noriolx and 


Tas Loxvon Horticutturat Season having now 
closed with the ge En on at Chiswick on 


Thale last, th e has come for making a 


Ei in — of e years. 


than has — before; 


ant is the fact that 
80 lit tle. appeared of inferior quality. 
7 song as rare ae, ap eee. plants in 
i as was to 


20 years 
ashe of now. 
i alteration adm ted to be immense 

pin; ros hat be 88 may in som 

wrt it is 
vigorous an on 

Nor can 1 now fall } hack In the onward flow of 
bb 

be eddies, and rapids, and bars, and 
es may for a moment force back the 

but such e are soon onan and the 
glides on with a force that accumu- 


me 


employers o 


whi — the publi nging ; 
as well to point out what direction the 
55 os large collections of plants have 
Admirable as have been the [E 
ee e een no 
the 


ees lost Wier interak: The reasons 
little or no to be several. In the first place the 


forming any a 


n | the Horticaltkrál Socie 


upon the whole in But 


advancing 
0 


h 
ms on to think u 


Was admirable. 


es, 
oni n of the — is 18 a that a 
ignorant of their nature mi 
len: of the clipped hedges af our Pabedan In fact 
a row of finely-grown * Heaths is like a in 
of Hottentot Kraals. 
plants exciting naik t emotions in a e, of 
* on 

use they are so entirely the reverse ai 
this e the Orchids are everybody. 
they are, and where Roses are, the crowd is eee 
it is thither a the e visitors eee 
resort, and there they linger r find 
the tent i Orchids deserted. Men 100 chat it 
is because of thei Meg Sg form: their 
e believe that. the ex- 


o give sameness to 


f Orchids as it is to throw oars into a line of Cape 


New lants are becoming less numerous. The 


. y 
s scarcely appe, "E except from the great house 


of the Ver of Exeter or from the Garden of 
But, on the other hand, 
there is z ibaba. of ee every now and 
then the reappearance of s oe p as pe as 

new. Let us hope that 
such cases. When, at the si oft the eee century ma 
beginning of this, the pogon 2475 egan to 
tell upon the Englis peo <a not grow 
the 3 that merchants” br 
were flowe 


ae creations, "the names 0 
0 so many records of eee, e 1 
Be use they pee ed anno Dom 
ings,” and, like . 


in which thes 


e plants are 
— 4 — the attri 
er, give 


tary o opinion. This s shown’ ts. Lav 
charming Relhania squarrosa, oa although born 
near London in the yea s the youngest and 
3 5 in * lady s Brebei on Wednes- 
da rselves, we ineline to class old 
. with old w ne and old nobility. 
ése are aan which exhibitors would do well 
upon. 


Concerning Wednesday’s 3 e what is for- 
mally alerted in another 3 y 

r | that the day was beautiful, the . at Chiswick- 

oe delicious, and the exhibition of fruit and 

rs the b hi in July. 

rank 


wW 
garden of the Right Honourable th 


d ever p en 

The number of — — was 7 
e able to state that — arrangements for | th 
e ensuing | faan i 


ll who have sug- 


0 
magine — to be 


lj an 


ore|The ships are 


They in 


ibatan of humanity. We can, |and tha 


admitted by the ee judges that no 3 British — of the trees in fut 
and Eleanors ha n before. | sure accoun 


N is a profit which might be satisfactory even 
to a Californian gold-di 
This fraud cannot be etected, a by chemical 
analysis. But chemical analysi 


pay five guineas to escape the cheat ; and the 
reason fetes ne this N „ that, if an article is 
paraa they have aed wn away their five 
neas! Such is the 8 of human nature, 
— Sa ng that the fraudulent dealer securely trades : 
knowing, by experience, that for choo of 
— there are er of — es — stur 
For this reason, and because we bart oa buyers 
are 21 55 o helpless, bl boas when a 
re hav 


aler the — 
wth given before e, t that ni no 3 755 hé tied ught 


di 
from pers 


8 ee iyi is above suspicion, 
who, r, can prove that they pairo e their 
supplies livect Tia the — r thei d 
Guano now receivable 


w to proceed in an Ferch e 
t Matter bet ng i Hee ship the Guano 
comes, for the sam ie e all as nearly alike 
in quality as is required ~~ prac tical purposes. 
all loaded from the same beds, 
8 (m the same manner, od the same birds, 
umstances: and we do 
believe. that there is the diffe 
argoes — im 
os G 


worth in pa market 16“. a ton, when the 


ood, use some e value 
Perot ai Hage aing i what should be noel 

an be don th no certainty whatever, 
unless the means are re hi which we have so often 
pointed o 


mae STUDS AS A MEANS OF TRAIN- 
ine TREES ON WALLS. 
4 . inced i 
— of traini trees on walls, I 
dee n oe have practised for 
these — six years, and which I — found to answer 


Pertes 
The da method somia in 2 the trees to the 
and shreds of cloth. The nails 


prevented, on 


g 
3 
$ 
i 


— and 
sightly, in some ie they receive a coat of 
oceasionall t this practice o s 


* 


mended 
mu tod sh at thre ae 


place there i 
large collections.” | activity. 
leviathan: A ? 
next place heen 8 ** Wall the minnows. In| than in th 
us fp 


the 
a de evo ethane for = 


p seca kom wi 1 behind the wires, 
oe — ce at which the trained shoots 

wall, thereby depriving them ina 
` 7 walls is also 


` soga <a d 5 8 
ence is manifeste year t 
Te are in themselves hideg tht most 


nh aie 1 ick ; but thin the 
= there is no sort of ears I have opto nd wish 
to either of the above 


f a graceful | seen et ons, 
t e diffculty them. ifty shillings a a | recommend as e methods, 
last reo tons of P thet which í is e — 8 is to drive permanent studs into the ete 


THE 


GARDENERS’ CHRONIC 


LE. 


436 
i The studs I use wet r in the ash-pit door (which is ere 1 sya the | retain its juices within the 
sho ppt rig a ype wot ils with | most perfec a al d over the fire as the open to themselves new courses, and 
and the expense of furnishing the walls ire is lighted, the hentes air ascends bom woe plate to | the germs 22 new branches, cause them 
with these is little more of the new w ceiling in the p in a manner utrary to the 
required during a few years in or i pee there is a 1 ‘the porch. Over this | the plant. The second cause of 
1 i 2 the studs 8 glass door a head- light of om pom swings upon T believe is them frequent one with 
inches Bi 4 ine course of bricks ; dar for 1 d lets the heated air into t enhouse. Under the the defective mode of culture of fruit 
ained horizontally, 525 are sufficiently close in | threshold of the door is a cas grating, communi- | of stone frui riole secret is 
s. The studs p d by heating | cating with the air- aaen under the floor of the house. | sist in prunin is principle h 
them till red hot upon an old shovel, or some such ap- | This in has a regular fall 5 several ene out the 3 — e i r measure 
pliance, and then precipitating them into a can of boiled ~~ and the 5 boi over the me ur wi t mercy, Wan and fruit. 
Oil: in W c revented and durability | nace- It consumes very little a and pienie eee e The tree suffers — 
s f the w. is at once supplied eae agente above twice in and-twenty | recover vigour, shoots ’ 
with studs, a little attention to inserting them in straight | hours. The contents = 0 fuel-pipe will per t 16, 18, | know — eal that in this 
lines and at istances gives a pleasing appear- 20, or 24 ho pci according to the draught give by the nee o und, 
ance to ts of A to . kee 7 ches have not means of tlie damper 55 ventila to or. The atmosphere | amputation, but I have thought it 
yet yet extended themselve way of proceed- | of the house circulation of hero. to avout repetitions in speakin 
procure a pelea PR oa y 44 inches wide, and pe air is geny stopped by pera the ingress an w persons are aw: f the 
as long as the wallis hig igh ; after the first perpendicular | egr There is always a 0 ‘undulation among | (in northern Italy) to prevent the sad 
inse: in the alternate courses, one edge of the the ‘eae of the “Vines and plan I do not know what resulting to our trees th 
is pl inst them, and a straight line drawn | jt is to suffer from mildew or p in 125 I have Italiau writers on Rural Eco: 
down the other edge as a guide by which to drive the never cae the yale oro noticed l fungus upon Vine * pane on the subject or speak but vi 
second row in quincunx order, an till rk is | which I am incline g n the means of preserving ee Pam] 
a The upright 3 eee be proved with the m maladies. We 
plumb-line once in four or order to prevent k ir 2 the N * — 
any deviation from the eee tion on this poi * 
By this method the walls are kept good, all harbour Pratique du Jardinage nun 
for insects is avoided, and the trees are train sulted, or Labreto leh a, 
less expense t ey can be with nails and shreds ; Jardin fruitier. I will plore 
cost of the shr early ces that t t i 4 
required for tying, but the labour of cutting them into 
suitable sizes is saved, as so that of straightening E B È 
and pointing old nails, and after the first few years the S ? 
cost of the nails themselves is * A good workman 
will do twice as much t as he would of nailing; S 9 
W. e ap nce of E bandage ed with n in = FER s 
is not e compared with that of za z 


‘ o b 

neatly trained shoots form right lines at paian paei 
— 1 and which exhibits no ornaments save leaves 
and frui 


“The w =k at 2 had become so battered 

that it was necessary to repo 

plaster up the ee in the bricks, in order to bring the 

whole to kok wee 3 
the walls 


paint. lowing hiana shows the difference 
in cost between copper-wire, iron-wire, and p 


of wail will require, 
nd Sead eyste system, ete, 9000 cast. iron studi wt. £ 
e with 1 600 . 
ystem, ) 
1 5 r het 1200 wae. iron wire 
(No, 1 . at dhd., 328. 2 
a ‘Copper Wire (No. 13), which is much 
n appea e, but will cost 517 6. 
d 60 of the 
d the saving of en, effected. „by an outlay 
due 


8. 
6 
ron wire, 


. 


dust, — or escape of 


8 de e, e eee a the plan. wi 
add that many have the ad- 
regge short of their 
expectations. Mr. Fleming, in oe 3, Vol, IV., of the 
Journal of the Horticultural Socie 


i ECONOMICAL PI PLAN OF UNITING THE 


inary 
| am . others of 


5 


FUEL 
RIPE 


DAMPER = 


COPPER BOILER 


L 
oo 
a 


— 


0 5 


2 


IN.! 


on and I have 
ery or crying the atmosphere of ny 
ouse, wh 8 feet by 13, at pleasure. e co 
bais, pon a three pints (), and is set in T — 
per, ed, ha 


— of mo oist 


bunt eg Sd ocured, copper oy a iron 
there is no sediment in in the ike or tank. C. P y 15. 


* DISEASES OF eg hes 
‘ontinued from 
Genus X. Rank SH 2 or — te —- 
n ee e ool distinguish those 
luxuri * shoots whieh may be recog * * 


anp TANK SY STEMS ~ HEATING. 
hope that followi 


principle is that of uniting the. Po 
systems. I have given it a trial of a whale a 
‘it has far 


inued 
5th myn — ji 
y put it out, Dr clearing the espi 


and 
T circular cast-iron plate, A, of 2 feet 
diameter, with a hole in the centre, £ B inch hea dia- 
meter. B is a fnel pipe, rather wider at b 


from 1 b 
is very 3 ie. The a 


hese are 


at 4 feet and 7 
top, wae inches in diame ster 


> n the 
rege all the trees beg eu 


yt eed themselves 


oppa 
Branches gourmandes. 
drawing the nonrishm 
have only met with — 
may: „ 


rom the weak 
on but I 8 they 
pew upon herbs, or at ome 3 on a 
a Ronn care- 


hon A injure the N by withe 
r parts, 


em n me, 
hivae none is more 


ia 


WCQ PIPE 


a 


ex- course would see 


y | ous, 
ain their whole e length, . sige coppery red | i 
the ex ence of | retain 


~ 


RETURN 


others do, who, o, seeing these 
hagar 1 Mss gr that te 


-- 


3 FT- 


2 to the great injury of the plant 
It is best yof * 


4 


On the contrary; i 


The on spared t time 

8 hare cutting off three or four of 

Fina al] yi third portion mi 
fr the lowest of 

he fall of the leaves will 


the hole, by means of the handles E a 
peers A e 
‘ 1 the top bo Ala re of | to them than the Peach, it has o curred to me to derive 4 culture of fruit trees we 
(Aja ‘inch Ale © 10 Cast with the The nee the cheng: this first us remind- | much to e 
n 8 with Ramsay's firo plate. and ing the eultivator that precious tree is often liable Second es RoBBERS OF re 
covered over — top with 9-ineh ian, mn h from the e of these shoots. This times these branches will shoot. out i 
— — — hollow is = of 1inch larger diameter be owing to two causes. Aa the first place to the over- | This is an onen u l s 
bet inn p not set in — In the enclosures, where Peac to that part 
round its edge is enn of vigorous gro cou e 
to the top of the fillet, so that 80 much to favour the al sched of the pie that of | the moment they first appear. oe: 
tpl bela nny sn as op otc the more lucrative crops cultivated, with | been suffered to shoot, the „ 
without the danger of them. The Peach, abe * rng rern 2 eee that they may 
When the fire is mig rapar Wa placed stimulated, v such vigour, that i 
n the furnace-bars, and Bpis a filled with |, Both these words 1 — eee 
W. may — — aterm 
cle By means of à dampar in ef and svat Fer et nea nnn Sie es Boe a 


. 


9g—1849.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 437 


De deners, n ay be advantageously) 1 never use liquid manure until tue fr on 0 — Pelurgouiums.— Have any of ‘thei 
ö market a ; — any of your readers lost their 
í — by e E gardener, Coleworts, which con- | I then give “aeee applications of soot, and so es | Pelargoniums in a most unaccountable manner this 
| t article in Covent-garden, are | a — * e but I discontinue the. quid | season? Mine are * grown and healthy, but a few, 
f 
. 
| 


a el found elsewhere as they deserve to be, | m as I see the fruit changing colour. By | both in pots and planted out, die off most 8 
l one of the most profitable crops grown. All the following t the a — method of 3 eee, , I | In some of them the stem, above nd, looks dark, as 
var market gardeners grow t eir 24 variety, the | have e as fine fruit as I have n. John if decaying. They really appear as if they had a similar 

fwhichis saved with great care.“ Atkins's Match- Middlomiss, — Hill, Tunbridge Wells. disease to the Potato ; others, in the same house, and in 
8 


the very rr ͤſ— 
* Coleworts, ought by this time to be coming Home Correspondence Erica Cavendishii.—It may be interesting to know 

+ put unless the bed is kept constantly moist and Garden Gossip,—I beg to second Mr, Duncan’s that our noble, and now well known, Erica Cavendishii 
poled d ring the dry season, there will be but a poor recommendation of the gay sprin g flow wering shrub has produced 15,915 perfect blossoms, which we have 
success, especially if we have a continuance Cytisus canariensis (vide the — rs’ Chronicle of | gathered, and I am happy to say that it is now in the 
of soch excessive dryness as we have had, and are now May 12), though my experience of its beauty is as a most robust health, promising yet to do valiant service, 
Ei y i 


plant, b lived and | J, and J. Fai n. 
should be well watered after — dug, and the e for years, and is now 6 or 7 feet high; it grows Newby Park Gardens.—These do much 

seed sown thinly when the ground is moist possible, | under the partial shade of some Larch trees, a situation | Mr. Paxton, who planned and executed them. Fiv 
letit be otherwise until the plants are sufficiently — unsuited to half-hardy shrubs, for oak it in the | acres are walled in with a 14 feet wall, the latter weli 

strong to plant out. same border are equally vigorous Australian plants, | covered with trees bearing c of 
Ground which has been cropped with early Potatoes | a great number of which can be successfully cultivated | young Peach-trees are each producing from < 4 to a 3 
sad Peas, comes in well fee Coleworts. All the Cab- in the open air of South Devon. I ee, an extra fruit. The garden, though 6 made about two years 
bage tribe requires the soil to be in good heart; in fact, prize for more than a 2 thus grown, at the May and four months, i is well cro pped. The on nati eberry 
ss abundant supply of manure is requisite, which exhibition of the Devon and Cornwall Horticatarl trees are rendered both useful and ornamental by being 
gould be well aug in; and take advantage, if possible, | Society, including — bulbous plants. &c., among trained as standards and summer pruned, and in this 
of showery weather to plant out the crop. This opera. them, the old, but shy flowering Iris susiana. My | way they bear abundantly. Four ranges of glass stand 
fon being so simple and so well understood, I shall Banksia Roses n were also thought wor thy of a prize ; | in the centre of the garden, one before the other, and in 
y state that as much soil ought to be retained at ut alas! the plants front a half circular wall runs from one end of the 
the roots of the plants as possible. The distance from pees and the Fighting green fly, which is absolutely i in range to the other, inclosing a yard for compost. The 
plant to plant should be about 9 inches, This may formidable abundance this year, so that my poor trees | gardener’s house also stands in front, and commands a 
appear to some rather close, but as soon as Het, bagin are necessarily pruned closer than ever Midsummer saw view of the whole garden. The Pine-apples are strong, 
y be them before, as th i h m appearan e 


there of Cab her g a 
period of growth the grouud nes be ee al rein brillantis its hue. William Jesse is with me unusually | on the ‘ik pee and are . oak I rs seen 
weeds, and well worked with the “ pick large this year, but strange to say, I can never get| nothing equal to them in orkshire or Dur! The 
Where early Cabbages are desired, * should be La Reine or Souvenir de la Malmaison to perfect one Melons and Cucumbers, traiued on wire trellis, 5 5 inches 
treated in a similar manner, but of course worsen at a of their multitude of flowers, the petals of each huge | from 1 * are very healthy; many of the leaves 
er iuches bud being there is fruit 


e 


required, The first ing shou made the told is a very fine one, “ Pourpre de Tyre, is in the | with excellent wood and fruit. ‘The Vines, two years 
— — will N . Coleworts same condition. Among spring shrubs, I mast com- | planted, are very strong ; many of the leaves measuring 
the second sowing in September, which may remain mend the beauty of Ceanothus divaricatus, which, | from 15 to 18 inches across, and I counted from 12 to 
the seed bed wot Febr —.— or wye ay Faty out the when 9 or 10 feet high, and bushy in proportion, is 14 bunches on each Vin e — bunches from 1 
same season a third s may b Thes e | highly ornamental, when cack with its thyrses of | 2} lbs. each, well coloured. All are trained 5 inches. 
. vith the Coleworts, will ome a god flowers of a hue so rare among plants; against a wall | from the glass, and no s ades are used; on the con- 
Ta of Cabba and one variety it s4 * my opinion, almost worthless. As a late | trary, they receive p the light and sun they can get, 
el he p purposes — Vie table 3 flowering shrab nothing can be more striking than a and there is no appe rance of Lubre or burning; 
a good These remarks w afford | large specimen of Ozothamnus gs ant hs which, when d well. James Wood, Stockton- 
— * Villa ee ” Phar in flower, looks as if covered with the finest particles of upon- -Tees, Durham, July 5. 
ete — snow, which gently bend its branches; against a wall Rate of Growth of 22. —It may not be uninter- 
STRAWBERRIES FOR FORCING. this is also valueless. Weigela rosea deserves all the | esting to your readers to know the yearly sh ce of a 
Ptants iatended to be forced next season should be praise that has been bestowed on it, proviog, when the | common black Poplar, in a favourable situation. It 
strong, well-rooted, sa well-ripened before — am plant gets large and bushv, pre-eminently lovely. | was measured rou va Fro at 4 feet from the ground, 
notime should be lost in 88 ~ ruaners. No i he icu i 
à month hence would do, but I prefer the present per China and 8 and the introductions of the ; feet, inches, 
or say within the next fortnight, The best runners on! Messrs. Veitch fro atagonia and Chiloe, wit — nnn neta | 12 
pan ou year and not permitted to fruit | ness their new Esca lonia, the beauty of which can 9 1 — 
should be selected. The plant produced at only be shells sopra ated by seeing the flowers oe » » 
Mitra: a, wi to 


— 
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B 
— 
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2 
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3 > A u- tee É 
succeeding Joints should be pinched off about a growing, a amirini in a few years—would that| The tree is 12 2 or 13 years old, and stands in a moist 
into the ter potting. My practice is to pot at once all revolutions produced such results! Now that the situation at Rochford. George Wood, dae. July 10. 

pots in which they are to remain; I use 6-inch | beauty of the American beds is over, it woald have| Plants hardy in Devonshire.— Perhaps you will have 
i I all g i o i me how far 3 


er d, spring, aud 8-inch for late wo f| been well had all growers of l lowed the ad- | the = t Frer i 
could be given to waterin ay 2 5 y oye Ss asi’ Kal Manchester, and plan - | fasciculatus is consi 2 t is hardy 
8 for = ly and 1 an z bat the f the ‘ varieties of | near I have two i which have 
the 5 145 more an g- inch pots, and I disli hybrid, zielen whioh are rapidly advancing in beauty | only stood unprotected through the last two winters 
h vines | flower-pans under the e pes. value ; min n fall bloom, and render the beds|in an open shady situation, but are now 
kong, they were ot 3 since, with oe cer- | with bloom; her 


re as 75 oe 
‘ preferring stones to pegs, ‘as the former prevent tainty of a prolonged diio play of colour, if the late | failed to throw t them into flower. Against a south v 
7 evaporation, If the stones be lifted u up in the varieties of f Gandavensis flower well. Lilium lanci- | Tacsonia a mollissima not mags stood unp 
fi d in 


d wi r, a ni but = which set in the 
> ce moisture will be fou ium, I conclude, would succeed equally well a the last — r, but 
4 a The soil which I use is three barrowſuls similar situation. In making preparations for the en- autumn has stood the win er also avd 3 on 
dag. M one of leaf mould, and one of good rotten | suing winter and spring I would recommend a large | mediately i in — of this i is st ve ee 
time, —4 practice is to have it prepared in the winter quantity of Wallflowers being aised for filling the | high, ich has been pla al ct tid 
frosty two or three ti to sweeten ; in he Geraniums, Verben: OSSO s constantly, but has not ye i 3 
Weather I remove the erust, and thus lay bare snare Ea are 3 and injured 1 * * A | sameřvicinity Capparis spinosa stood at =e 5 a 
Puta handé, I always flow under m m | wall, flowering most freely for many years, n it was 
the ul of soot in the b pot over windows hough e gay enough t 0 * cold ae the destroyed by accident. F. H. * es 
his an excellent plan, upants, y blank app pe Bulbs.—Per og yo will 
6 wg out insects an he i i ii winter and oady — till I filled many of who have had experience iu culti — Cape 1 
man in a I never pot more than one the beds with Aucuba japonica in , and stro so good as to state her they 5 
N R Ip quality to q y: ts of German Wallflowers, which answered ad- ent menti: in ie 
| aad removed o plants are rooted I have them cut off, | mirably, rendering the the d ronicle for 1847. Having received a large number 
| Plants will bear y p and as e , and and deliciously fragrant till it became of bulbs from the Ca) Tri 
ina: the sun without flagging, I place them | time to plant out the gayer exotics, when the plants | Spa manthus, Hesperantha, Ixia, sa — 
0 1 | — were n away; my gardener, however, has struck Vallota, An yan Gaon Pen 1 
never ting on the sides of I a vast number of cuttings, for many of the new varieties | no room in juse ung 
tem ber hm fer for the = =h 1 8 and k; 28 art ore all = of odd colours of mixtures, which | them in a es asadvised rt magn othe mai- 
proaches 1 ftom weeds an ap-|are worth preserving. Next winter I trast to see no | correspond * 
ö the Pots a them = temporary pis end p ung e | more bars aee and paralle elograms. For the present ject will be highly acceptabl ee a of potatoes" Ras 3 3 
is Purpose their ri its ts for I conclude my gossip, trusting that other amateurs will Cutting off the y epik of the a praeis tis 
l eee esis be made wa Pees * record their . e . which means we shall all ne ang existed i in ae 
at outline of a pit, eae ates: 2 feet wae benefit. 
| Adi denl 8 18 inches at front. To these, slabs or Natural Seele dee, the instances of what 
l With turf op a nailed, and the latter banked round may call ese” union in trees, a case of ee 
Ae across 10 U any description, Rafters should be by me, you noticed in 
l de shape of joe? , which might be made in Chronicle, are Tess rare than 1 had supposed, At al | 
du the cea and ith painted canvas, | events, I have one in Holly, not 20 yards from my own 
Aber. ee always be removed in fine door, and of which I was ignorant till I was shown it 
eng quarters, ds tun i removed to their | quite recently by my children. e | 
Se ee pis wil be found very hardy for reason to think, of about 70 years’ growth (T can re- 
dun in that mn zumner stuff, or to — half. hardy member them above 50), and from one, about 2 feet 
1 Wan this me. 7 be re he greenhouse | from off a branch 4 inches in circum. | but invariabl 
A heie forcing The nearer the vino ado tae ference, diminishing to 3} inches, and again increasing | 
Stand swell quarters the to 5 inches near its juuction with er 


. i fer allja from the ground. junction is as | Hi al 
gee hem ‘oni houses for forcing them in, and I | perfect as possible, and the branch, which is without | think two) 
| Me keep in viene worthy of a pit for themselves. If or one or has gone off, 
Wut an air, an that Strawberries delight in plenty of | two some time), is 6 feet curvatures. | peal 
i aux one may construct a pit suited to them, | IV., Tamworth, July 8 | Th 


1 
: 
3 
i 
5 
i 


438 


$ 
THE GARDENERS’ 


lightning, which was the cause of many an prone — 
but the Potatoes looked beau 
ue to do so still. J. B. Warren, Warren s Gres 


pursue 


layer "e der over the surface, a practi 
ii re remove 


value. 
firs 9 ce of B 
3 I have N 
I am satisfied 
atte: 4 d to no 
or print * he oor so 


can see 


es in this par 


rring to the 


ll in Jun 


tiful next 


off my e 


e disease 
. oa 


t of the county 385 e south of 
at present a very healthy appearance, 
ter of my rain ga 
848, wh soa in June 


50 1 el 
1849. there was only 1'5 inch; added’ 
10 d 


and mine consists in putting a 
ce ia * 1 

the hau u the 
n the undersides — the 


auge, 1 


were exhibite = ear Wood and er Each 
d specimen h a six b bunches on it; although 
tolerably well rs the black Lade — not well 


aulm coloured. 


| 


sorts, a 
1 experience, that if “this i is strie'ly si 
= ar t either in 
Wandeworth Com- 


wet 


auses of 


the 


the 
we 


disease, 


aneieties 


: (GARDEN Fae ie cas 


1 July 
Bite prizes of the 


Pine-apples, w 


value of 15 


. nad . and a dish of ripe teks o 


Aeris, — Amon 


these 


AR eie 
certai 


wa 5 


f Alexan: 


there were some good 
Mr. Jone 


11502 


es, 


0 rn 


Mr siete gen 


ail well colour Then, Mr. 
H Spe lane had fin e of Roya ee rge and No- 
hey w omewhat spoiled in the aaka 
good spec cimens of Early Purple 
Ir. Ferguson, 
o did Mr. 


all well cultivated fruit. 


The heaviest 
j gri * Mrs. Oddie; it 
weighed 74 lbs., and was called Hatfield Green flesh 
Mr. Carson, gr. to had 
Oliver’s Hybrid, 6 lbs., and Mr. G add, a Cantaloup. 
eig The best flavour cages was * 8 —— ” 
d Dyne 


by Mr. Bundy, gr. to Lor an 
| mev best 3 proved ea fleshed, from Ur. 
ruce B. Miller, Esq. 


N gr. i Mr. Whiting, of the 
ene, had an . green- heals which ranked 


iof hia in regard to flavour. 
G. Rushout, 


RRIES.— The _best were Black Tartarian, from 


ne. Perhaps the 
oduced was the 


r, which 
r. 


ish of E 
avelling. D 
m Mr. Whitin ng, and Keens’ Were. 
r. Monr Mr. Smith showed six pots 
British OR 

Of Tropica, Fruits, Mr. 12 er. to the 
Dowager of Nar humberland, 
25 oves. Papa w, Allspice, and Vanilla, 
to J. ree Boothby, Esq., Musa Cavendishii, in fruit, 

ripe. 


There were two 1 w 30 Stove and GREEN- 
on . Lawrence, of Ealin 
m m M 


showed a good . 


Gars. e eee 


of both 


93 oZ, and 7 Ibs. 123 02. Mr. Mrs Torapa! “also 
small 


black and white! 
upon the eee the former 


ee were numerous, 
Tie tae —— ameo! the Muse 


* Ham to J. Tho E 
we 2238 3 


st 
a 
f en in i a 
condition ; two nice Ixoras, Aphelexis purpure 
been shown „ rantha, about which too much could hardly be said, 
— beet so finely was it grown and flowered; two plants of 
re also —_ by Allamanda—Schottii and e pretty 
oe 1 Taylor, Esq., Æchmea fulgens formerly exhibited, the brilliant Kalo- 
The best Black Ham. Santhes inea , together with 
These ere very Sollya linearis, and 5 varieties ies of Cape Heath. 
next best were fro Collections Pe 15 Stove fe GREENHOUSE eee 
and good specimens | contribu Mr. G: 5 Antrobus 
Messrs, Dytch, Taylor, Bart. ; Mr. 1 aylor, gr. ys . Coster, bot and a Mr, 
gr. to J. ill, Esq., awley, of Bromley. . Green’s group 0 of 
In the Dipladenia atropurp lamanda cat 


in pots | two 22 8 florib 


linifolia, 
Pawley had fo Heaths, 
fonr Capo lenin 


CHRONICLE. 


D, — it was stated that}! 
our. 


They | flowered B 


Duchess les 


— guloa — a good A 


e. 


o Achim a Genista, 9 Vines; 


collections 


HO 
PEACHES De best dish of six, and a most excellent aine, Es 
o Earl de | ca 


e Aerides 


w 

r, Esq., first ; and b liams, p, to a 

arner, Esg, sheds Mr. Mylam 11 
high,i 


cos at 12 } 
Odontoglossum grande, the gram 
flowered Ganis chlorochilon, pars cas Vand, 


u sof 10 


nob 
of Miltonia spectabilis, ene. 
the variety of tigrina 
S. 


Collections * 6 8 nis 
ruce, former sen 


“99-1849. a 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONI 


CLE. 439 


| es were also sent by Mr. Smith ha Mr. Cole. 


Ps s Class Mr. Epps 


usual, 
SINGLE — — The bes 
very well bloomed, from 
Irs 


son had Pini ge tg and Achimenes sc 


„ hybrids, 


by Ur Williams an d M 
2 og fo 


growers, ni 
— of 1 


r. Taylor. 


ticed a 


wn. They co 
— 5 io xi sal nots 
i 


mare did not ea reg ora 


essrs, Veit 
seh Pin | Winchesterian, I Fs 


Taxodium 


BS, 


y were 

Ceanothus 
Californian E 

1 olesofolius 


even and — eatery than 


coccinea, 
specimens of a new variety of Cry ptomeria, fev Mess 
; Mitraria co me nurse 


ere Produced i in —— ty, and the 
sisted of the k 
with the enen perhaps, of Back- 


8 his 


ae Premed 


‘this season 


1 


were * 
Mr. Ivi 


agnifi 
cote. 


8 3 ted 


ea 
panicle covered 
of ae ‘managed F Ferns were shown 
e sorts did not 
m those oe . Ahr 


ecim 
y Siion tie . —. 5 Se 
Co 


ta 


a| of England, es in, Dia — 
urner 


Mr. ee ae of Si. John’s- wood, 


8 5 


we cann 


with nearly the same sorts; 3, Mr. Parker ; and 4, 


own, bu nnot say |f 
specimens of cultivation. | 
h ry | 


The insects found were the small workers and the 

0. temales, which latter would adele establi 
resh clone, so that their destruction at the present 

ae esirable. e also read a note from 


; the 
lant 2 with 15 different eo snail ia ten 


iddling 


re em ing a good co 


luxuriant h brid i in 2 — way of folgane. Of white kinds, 
n, 


we oe: for amateurs bein vo:e paged, 
n somewhat “ backwa ing fi 

: Ist, Mr. Ward, of pate — 4 — ig 
Rainbow, Martin 


d with ery 


8 


Hero, 
oe — Pau i. Regulas Millwood’s 
neer, King o ý Brutus, 
Vilage Tiid, Se H, we th, Barre 
£ Woo 

Wales, "Sin mi e Freder 


New- 


n, Wm: 


„Mr. Ward, Mar Albert, Sarah, 
Pagi Perfection, eae auty, Lady Chesterfield, 
Agitator, Desborough, —— Mrs. 
Norwich Rival, Ward's 156, Mrs, Barnard, — of 
N 


fees best was a Pane about 


ood 
| Michael exhibited a a fine variety y of Deilephila Galii, cap- 


e 
The same —— had also a |a 


ard,” ani 


Lydia, | tio 


correspondent relative toa swarm of two-winzed flies, 
Atherix Ibis, and extracts from bega received from 


w f the station at 
r. F. Bond exh pia of the 

wehi sed: perloe Chrysomela kee Which had de- 
troyed many acres of Tare ambridges Mr. 


read, containing an account of iioa on the tor- 
pidity of Vinsa Urticæ and Io, as affected by changes 
mperature. 


Boraxical, or EDINBURGH, June I4.— Professor 

BALFOUR, ge in the chair. * ® following papers 

were read: — Messrs. 

ontin ee of a former 
sete 


Rem 

n of 525 nts and Toe Physical and Geo graphical 

Distribut of Species. By the * Fleming. 

ap eae 1 that it had been assumed as a first 

with an extensive series of 2 

any ret ol gy, 51 n had s had 
the 


and tha indi vidu rod 
a species eould be tra a single 
D 4 1 two, according as . sade ae 
Na r distin ct,” an d hence the o ie 

ae n opposition to this Poor 
it was as stated, 2 bem history of the * race traced 
to their origin in a single pair, 
analogical argument of any val hil 
of the carnivorous — on 
ong with gave 
unds to con . that many “individuale, of 


from single centre 
ra fro 


wih 


farnish an 
* ae pendence 
n 


d 
thor, furnish a demonstration of its y 
Hooker, while admitting the identity of the species of 


's Prince Albert, Princess A 


Young’s X 
(not for competition) — oy 
certainly a very desirable variety. It was raised 
Rev. J. Burroug It is a fall a 3 white, 
with a well- defined light red ed may me 
nd the same grower also ede 

amed “ Madame Beauazod,” a French trasi 
| pale — with a rosy eye. 
veral ral Prruxlas were shown by Messrs. Henderson, 

ter some 


chy, a medium-sized variety, 


7 


ati 


inds 


ning had a da jasat 8 of — among 


u had a group con- 
Gordo ae Thuja 


rsfieldii, 


Plum 


mistake 
wed as such 8 8 whieh 
in consequ dis- series 


Z Six i in 8-inch nee 5 Mr. —.— 


having a white centre dune by 3 oe m 
This came from the rsery of Mes enderso 


S Splendens” was also a grees flower paar 8 sho 


Xquisite, „ ways 


arge rich violet, 


ENTOMOLOGICAL, Bas 1.—G. R. WATERHOUSE, 
n the chair. 


7 
ee al ca 


De ess of Sutherland; Simi 
by the 


Henderson up con: | 
aga gh but better; 
e Carm 


inata 
— a great —— on rubra; and Passing- of 
ham 


pa plante, even 
he ablest a a is 
r the identity, not as indicating a 


ies, 


for identical with 
e comparison and with ti 
uelined to ) consider 


non ge of which must be sought for “in some 
ofessor E. Forbes disposes of the 


Pr E. 


| 
je 


1 A very extensive colleetion 
the 


ted ocie i 
S. sets a exhibited a fine 

at St, Osyth 
ies of Lesen 


prese 
Somme 5 F. NS. Mr. 
ol Microlepidotera recently = 
on x coast, inclu 
Glyphipteryx, 
— tor the e- pas 
which the enclosed 
nd 


— * 


Dobson, 
* Seedling 1848, Painter; Princess 


| species of El 
me “sembling ” habits 
ood, exhibi 


MS,- jsi 


Mr. Stanly, with tricolor, | 
er pi, itn 


of 3 not mi — seen. 


Ect 
coast of 
2, Lauriston-terrace, was elected a Fellow. 

e GRA 


by Illustrations — Natural Gators of e, arranged 


een with Desoriptions. By eee 
Part I. * coloured 


ra 
stone with tas nd ex 
show that the diiieoltis Vee 


553 table, where’ 


e 


THE 


8 


CHRONICLE. 


440 (Jury l4, 
TEOSA ooseberr: d other busk Notices to Co 
E suen, ces ot moisture, they ar are lll a rr. 
ethan from a want of it it; ; therefore sphagnum | fruity or as eee et oy ry sides of leret, the Buss: JW 5. Yon are not Gia iy oud et aes “á 
rough fibry peat should be i Bs a * swarming by, allowing them more bees may — 
3 placed about the roots in the centre of the baskets, be gathered ut g “off Us iks. Budding o on ae We have fm 
order to retain sufficient moisture when the it should Ne immediately performed, and d neither being the primary e, eats 9 bees to swarm, be 
1 i; The blocks on which the | attention ara ld be paid to netting Cherries, Straw-| in Bs phere statement. In your case, } — 
Wee grown should be those kinds like the Apple | berries, Currants, and son fruits which it is wished to akan SAE colony haa o 
or Pear, with a smooth , and in a fresh state | preserve from the ra ravages * of wwe ©. followed their owa we 
w 5 plan fastened upon them. The fasten-| 5 ORISTS’ FLOWERS. if 2 ener ae rel. e 8 Bi od Ing for Toii 
y ‘a F d NUNCULUSES ler Will Tender eners — eeswin y. e io Bee,— 
ings should 5 aare T 8 pte bad, | these roots in a 3 by remove e e Aud whether Fh doen word se at R ay 
Das wek roug — ee dry particularly the collection is v —— or otherwise, they should be 8 ir 1 opposite ete But W. em f 6. 
om eren air canily blade he , rbs | taken u uyut rain, or — will inevitably make another settle it between you, arrels among Gt you had bene 
N "jie mendje em especially in wth, and should the Dee 2 ah fibres, seriou inj ury are always fo henna) oide a 
pa 4 baskets igen dare Ee oien. in the "e will be the town Take of the seed, T ere destroyed 5 bh ne 8 dern 8 dat do net 
f cases, best for true Epi i ris 1 Orchids, fea st s impregr “Cat t ith a hurt Vines by standing under them; but Vines her camna 
jority o „ DE “! Pip yta ne ois- | Small portion of the stalk attached, put a dozen or two Camellias by hanging over them, aolen Hage leaves i 2 
these they require more attention, $ Stan. | together, tying them in bunches ; these may be inserted | fined to rafters or vertical trellises, The laa 1 2 2 
ture, n n grown in pots. se 0 n- á d graved, and waits only for an hapaa Ea $ 
hopeas, however, it is absolutely requisite to grow in thin paper bags, and hung up in a dry airy room or Jike it, inserting k 
opeas, , thei we downwards dfor a week ys, they e stored Danas: JJO. Do not water with liquid suai 
them upon were * 4 all poe air plants having away in a place of safety, till the period of sowing | | are coming into bloom, Unt thy 
hi sal coat ts nee = place th CaRNAT Picotrrs,—These, if intended gr ae Har ea a sonden faves is fit t for r 
= in baskets, and to suspend them from for exhibition, should be carefully covered with hand perience rot this tn ee early Vin 
* * thad thoit Boots e grow freely , and the — round the pod should be Gzapes: J 4 C. They are attacked b — 
siege an ere, for if rf der the soil E examined occasionally, to see that all is right; as the mildew, the nature of which was fully explained in Ur 
atmosphere, for if confined under the soi Af A columns for 1848, p. 523. Sulphur, applied early 
perish moss, or sphagnum, when | flowers open they must be shaded with muslin caps ora certain remedy. y angh, ig 
e i * ts. i 4 i ar at this time excessively mis- | Hrrsanium: G L. By all means use half sheets, loose: 
chievous, getting into the pod of — — and eating can be * bad as a krim d bo 


pv edie 


s; 

a small qpa ot moss, forms — — trap for — 
arauders. Some people place tobacco pipe heads 

the te e top of “the stick, Put if they have been used, the 

insects will go anyw — than odes i in so unsa- 

ke chef rst opportunity of planting 


ok, unless yo hn 
enough o hold all known plants when 5 an 
then it 15 exceedingly i „ Conii f 2 
(13 inches by 8) is large enough for British plants, 
want to economise peng you may put on the 
different rome of the $ x same half det 
Insrcts: E e Miesen from F Fig trees in Sir ©, Litte 
rde raved females of Coccus 


have e de Soe third AT in > 
summer, k in winter, to see if they want out roo 3 5  pipings and Pansy cuttings ; after rain E Ne us e. ra 
watering. This must ne independently of syringing will be ad en GARD ing ot ut at Does the tops in tobaces 
it. ave OOd e —. 

por Fart aly 1 ha esate igen ba 1 Some time since we 1 all the fine ——_ very young laden alia Pat ee * 

3 ig l L 28 mnot remove Plantains except 
Gordon’s Paper in the Journal of the Hort. Society. coal saben from the furnaces sho uld be carefully pre- 3 a you cars soars | 105 2 hp 
Cale 5 we ti of the erop wil now need “this attention, we fulfil the pate th ogy ie the je wound. aon salon oe eg 2 

8 0 pera ons. 
he ensuing week. ) 
pt G DEPAR 

P ESs.— Give every enco! o those plants 

which are now i d mai, ee means o 
moist high day hee P good om es 

gis 1 


ing “this excessively war 
2 "of fruit which has already 


l 
winter, ‘restrict the supp T ke 2 
G 


requirements 
for a short time to a portion of those plan 


made to recur to the subject. Owing 
ure of the material, it popra 

t also 

he appr aa of 

eee it answers the 

isfiguring th 


e ** 


ut ** the use 0 es or 1 

ch clean stems are produced that it is never necessary 
to remove more than the smallest outside leaves. Our 
thod of proceeding is as follows. Of our earliest 


es page ens a A eee in single rows, we tie the leaves 
atting, and s 


straight with b und the plants 
a zinc * ae eee calibre to 8 a cavit 


k y0 

So as to ensure a free ula of air inch ro between it and the stem ; this is packed 
berries, that their skin and footstalks may be better fall o of finely ‘sifted ashes, and after the common so il is 
matured, and less liable to decay during —_ way, the 

; 3 oe =I ny prevail în i oh ed drawn out and moved forward in the row. But 

Strict the late crops, which are planted i ` anage b 

partment, by muing, sweeping, mowing, &e., and — commeneing at one end, and after tying the leaves of the 
tying or Pegging d own half-hardy plants as they advance | plants, we int h side SS TO 
in ot allow ay of these toextendth hemselves | ; 


so farin a lateral 
whe 


berry plantations are destroyed e every 
order 


e — 
diately prepared, 
plants, which should be yh 


1994- therm. , deg ad the 


a kp sheet of iron ; the space between these is packed 
of ashes m ed against 


n placed round oe plants. pii use 
of ashes is not 3 when the soil is very light 
or sandy. 


for the week ending July 12, 1849, 
tural Gardens, Chiswick. 


State “™ Weather near i 
as observed at the kti 


THERMOMETER, 
Min, an 


July. 
Max. 


| 


eel : 


2 e 
BP pas" 2 


io 
2 
is 


| 


Ver — thoes t; r 
fine; vay th aze; — 
11— —Exceedingly fine througho 
J2—Very fine; pas at nigh 
Mean temperature of th ree 


State of the Weather at Chiswick during the last 23 years, for th 
ensuing week, ending July 2i, 1849. . 8 


4| Prevailing Winds, 


ddai i 8 


3 
which it 


2 85 
£ 
Ae | Rained 


p 


be | ANTIRRHINUMS : 


P pene OF Prants: P B. Phytolacca, and probably in 
dra.—A M M. Arrhenatherum peoe Fe 50 aa 
ceria aitans, i ts Poa FHS, 
—H B. 
PaxTon’s 8 s CALENDAR. The reprint is now ready, 
price 2d. each copy. Parties wishing to have copies fords. 
— sme tg tenantry, can be supplied at the me 


. Remove all the Larch and 2 


n our seedling 
ake from its size aaa appearance, is Barei: ie 
bie tes :0 TE. Your pena is 8 * 
sists in 5 


rem If 
you can save it, you had | better cut its branches i 
or cloth, = hich 


pase p 
ry might miak buds begin to a ppear o 
8 — must have ys ay and, 2 the Cor 
should substitate » hagnum, tied over 
ri ane Sipho is the most — 


a where you 


Thalis 
de sna — 
cakes placed in aà 


E 
TSA. A very 
larly Nos. 3, 5, 16, 19, 18, 24, 25, 25 aL 4 
bat weg 


8 t 
ticularly Nos. 5 and 42. No. a very the 
serow, and 36 is og nie me lar ifferet 
3 e Tare fe 38 . chance; for 1 uate 


the: 
run a one kind to another, and are 
seasons, soils, and situations. 
from dotted 


Se. 
cen W HH, 20, shad 
yellow or "ie size, shape, a 


shape, and texture 

T 5 r stained with 

centre; texture and shape toleral 

pei h rim and 

1 ; , tolerably good, size large, 
1 5 1. oye pet 

showy ; a nice variety. 2, aud it 

oes overt mode a e 

novel in colour, by Roe 

= 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


ie BY HER 


MAJESTY’S Sep rg 


E DENCH oer 1 Tor ea 
* rege h he Mie 


155 SODA AND POTASH. 
F YPSU SULPHATE © ) 
5 MAGHT.SOIL. 
MMIC ACID AND COPROLITE, | 


PATENT, 


HU 
SODA EW YER 
— 4 E OF LIME (made — bone only). 
SOP ERPHOSPHAT y r sale 


1 
NO OTHER MANURE a PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS, KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA, for i ua eS 
hee a 3. A the finest quality, direct 


ROYAL LETTERS 
os 


. u HOTHOUSES, 2 


in every 


of 
sy ase! A om r 
ns senso 


ing to t 
And 2 agrees with our aggregate experience of 


= pect ; viz. 1 8 = he 
Fork kn $ g 014, Upper Thames-street, L 401. ; ean.to, 28 aer ins. long, 16 fee t 61 ins. wide, 50L., 
on ane Superphosphate of Lime, 3 ‘i wil be | best’ Too and 16-oun 
A Treatise receipt of 8 postage stamps, Free to purchasers bien Ma — &e,, reqnirii o paint, Td., 8d., 
reared on Per 


eq 
cial foot, according Hoe 5 Ee. 
of Guano, Kc. ATI 
—— TURNIP SOW 


HEATING BY HOT WATER. 
LONDON MANURE “COMPAN xs maxing P4RIAN CEMENT, f far internal St tuceo, „instead o 
. RAT re partic cularly for Turnips a 


n pla painted and 3 
— 4 Crops, can, recommend it w ye Aa payne e confines 20 hours of its parme mian -ar rs the Bare walls, and by th 
whe in which rooms may enti 15 — table 


AGRE ee SALT, and all other Manures of known 
— 


uld 


is worked wi 


ppl —.— Gua pe ano, in $ 
cargoes, 1 they will deliver direct from the ship or 4 
. stores 5 Corn Manure, Nitrate of Soda, hp nd the Faten 
Agricultural Salt, and every other Artificial Man on the 
jowest terms for a genuine article, 
ARD PURSER, Secre: ioia 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, 
IAN AND eeh ee ee ON SALE 


By THE ONLY Imp 


ing, í 
which may be seen at tthe Wor 
ES Fel and Sons, Nine Elms, Lo 
ESSRS. NEDE CHEMI 
RAL SCHOOL, 38, pa nn amare 
A sou SY bbl knowledge of Analytical a 

88 Geolo 
may be obta 
ar r — to a good modern educa — 


ined in Messrs. NEsBrt’s Academy, 


any ore es, delivering it from the Import 


0 THE LOVERS OF FLOWERS. MEETINGS von ara TWO Fí 


WEEKS. 
O ec fl ANIMAL MANURE.—If any-| Prnzgeger 2 eee 5 
thing will make your seed ants grow, display a Tuuxsps 
of foliage, and blossom in perfection, this Manure Taken, — W gcgen Im p. Society of Ireland, 
Tuxspar, 4—Agricultural 1 le e i 
assuredly will, To be had of H. Cotes, Seedsman, & c. THURSDAY, 26—Agricultural Limp, Šo of Ireland. 
for the sale by special appointment), 32, Cranbourne-street, Farmers’ Chun. un. —July 27: Market. 


cient application oi = acre vod ee 
each canister and 
THE PATENT ALKALI COMPAN Y’S METAL. 
4 SAC CK mer talai PLE-BROWN ene Bt ap- 
and ie 2 a Farm other 
and are pre na — superior to 
eben of white or red lead, or so- 
ec y. 
2 


ull directions for use ap 


can be A ee e, 1 . 
Fifeshire, ” says 

“Its bond — dee 
rae 


ndon; Messrs. Mat- 


Lo 
bod Leonard, — . Evans aud 8 
i Mr, Samuel J. Fill, Yarmouth, Norfolk; Mr. D. 
Glasgow; Mr. G. San ndeman, Dundee; Mr, R. 
. ford, Yorkshire ; Mr. R. S. Parr, Edinburgh; Mr. 
h Wolverbampt ton ; g rike Bryant and May, Tool 


; Messrs, Vint and Co, 
t Oxland, Plym 


m 
to the average wei a of 
Sunderland; — Mr. — 5 if ho valuo i 1 
— Falmouth. To be mt or i also, with cop 
„on a to the ert di 
Jou es 


s of the crop for e is to — 
ee ompany, "20, rees foni 
Secretary. 

EIGHT HUNDRED 1 PREMI lou 
La sega POUNDS FO 


u ), Linseed, Beans, saat 1 sae Aeir DE AO ei 

Chiswick Coals, cooking Linseed .. Reasi 1 2 

observations Attendan 0 16 0 

us ultra” fi — 3 17 0 
ra“ for warming la ant 

ue 125 Dish Kopi Deduct ...... 210 0 
and one ee of 


ving a loss * per head, of £0 | 70 


peri 
— 28 feet 6 ins. “long, 13 feet 6 ins, wide, 


mee of large size. Patent Ligita for | | about 4 
and 9d., per s 


wi thin amounts to a 


before the materials 


wta | 
ICAL AND AGRI. 


London 
4 
Surveying, Levelling Railway seo hs 

in 


Plots, ke. at 12s, per cwt, ; and pr , iff - | has cog dissed 5 * length lately Es our 

cess, for Agriculture, to suit any kind of r soil, at 67. 8 ri? 

ial aton 3L 10, ve „ ; the a it has received differ as 
extra), Six owt. is an amply sufi, nothing but fa ag experience 8 Sut The ollowing | 


of the matter as 
B. D. 


| stand have 2 
de 


Leavy 

Or, as each beast 8 er we bee of Turnips, 3 

yellow, and partly Swedes, urn of minus Is, 

Wel E obtained he pin season, how. 

ver, viz. 8s. per Dutch stone as A instead of of Gs. 7d., 
creased ret 


7° 0 ORCHIDEA GROW 


— — 130, — respect- | € 

à, have method of so ae I wo uld have had an in s. per head, 
N oe — honour of warming the Orchide the averaging fully 50 1 rr a profit of 

fen additions to the House. the Turnips, a return of 11s. 53d. per ton. Mr. Take will 

Houses of the following à 
ting elass of plants, according to the state of the markets, and that 127 is 
Malina. EE Vaie: hardly justified in reckoning so many stones of beef | © 
e her, » Hoddesdon, d as so much money, as the markets may fall even 
| Semasa erson, Pine-appie Place. r than his animals make ere- 
i R N Tel. 5 ar W. fore how a satisf: answer ean be obtained to the 
ip Leg, —— ee original query, from the results of cattle feeding. I 
q STEPHENS think the better way would be to from 


foe r years, for which we can vouch, involving 
expenditure of about 60007. and the consumption of 
| tons of green * r * jey of which 
u | there appeared at the 
rer ge: of ane ag , after the Heere, d bou ht 
es of ag, fuel, &c. 
6d. per ton of the food 
re with 


food, and ex 


would forward to us their 
names and addresses, ve ‘ould A gig na a series of 
questions, the ich, thus obtained, 
hit oad no doubt be ‘held ‘ince of the whole 


ANTONY ged —.— SONS, 1 DON Mr. Nrsnrr's works on leit Mensuration, Gauging, | n Irisa AGRICULTURAL krak oii 
WILLIAN JOSEPH rie -= 5 ax 60, LIVERPOOL Land § 8 English Pars ming Ee oo by Lona- | as. 5 ere of prey: differe int 
MAN an 0 may Ad ota — Tsellers. er from t. e ear 0. Ww p 1 
GHT, T 40 a Mang Pp 2 BRISTOL; 8 | ay Je n 
CEO e POWELL anp PRYOR. LONDON. 3 n eee oe e k pia to fa this 33 at the time. This 
protect themselves 5 against "the inju 1 consequences o of and e courages . while that — 
and spurious ano, purchasers — 5 = * d py i 2 For thi 
— ye oniy to í i ert of established charact T ope we g5 e ive of e is n 
the — moe who will supply the article 1 ng he „Agri icultural Gazet tte. + 1 to vindicate urge e attack on 
er 2 14, 


in 
r things e 
n such opposition to the well- 
and patriotism of Lo 


eeg Pip is now e Pegas 


ee 


e extravagant rents that a 
to cultivation and the reckless 2 
pree 


n fact, the whole social system of Ireland has 
11 Sided Pass the tenet and the failure of that 
y 


onar} ; it must go from bad t 

the means of improvement are al 

and the national resources gradually 

anc evoh K Ma tato w e n * 
lasses a hope), i 

Ane under cs the 


that 1 hang 
a ics ete c e of 
e tenure of land, 


phew onl bine back t 
untry peed been so long la 
0 It is manifest, then, 

s 


— 10 tons 
ut chiefly yellow, g 
gives a return of s. 6d., and adding ls. 
ure I rec — eos aes ae alent to the 
market value of the hay and straw consumed, its excellence | 
bring attributable rather to the ae ofthe Linseed, &c., than to 
consumption of the Turnips, 


nated 


unn 
dee 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


psn eg Estates = is s passed, that T re 


ma; into the 
is ir reg ea 1 Be "ee unde i * i 


litical e ent is at an en 
outrage, consequent a he competitio 
e, and xiety of the peopl 


grari 


t 
e eri anxiet) e peo 
means of emigrating. 


„agrar sti 
n for land, 
e people 


rt 
e latter, ey, should | pou 
I rule—not w 


sale 925 * unless at a price which will not re 


of grow 
to caution the 


leaving for rent and profit, 4291, 0s. 3d. The items of | 
varying ow, 1 beg 
from believing th 


may be divided into two rem es, one class 

of 1 the other 

o the same 
m 


— 
= 


stronger, and, as 


125 — would 
8 14 takes place in aekting bee? 


in former ti ng the occupa 
or four acres of land to become a — for money 


J may add to that, on 
adhere to their old ys vicious system of — — 
but are eager to learn ar teful for uc- 
In short, from a concurrence of . —— 

in the wor 


1 of their 
ould produce “contentment and confide ence, 


aes rector that these opinions will exert far 
wider influence a body as the 


is likely soon to dp into the market 


THE FARMERS’ PROSPECTS. 

ie owe a debt of gratitude to your cor 
for valuable letter on “ Far 

ly add 


a rey Stale: spell teh ; h 


present prides are as follo 
—— dressed — fom 985 to 401, 
. N 3 
— 


= * 
P Let me endeavour “aie pre acai 
ng, mor uen i 
eap applia nees, let me these people who — at random, and of n n 
hat Ke cosy a6 a é pose of, whom fi È 


nage Be a 


a 


n ee | Messrs. E, B & 
and Atkin nson, d John "izes debe y 

af do Bolto 

zenyon and Co., ‘Ryland, & Sons, . 
Houldsworth - 72 do. an Paana 
sobbey an „do. 
Latham 2 Walked. 
i. Walke 


8 
ger por 
animal to co old or wet, the portion so lost will b 
e remainder of the food Jonii me 
hen iss wrenceSpenoat Mi di, 
„ In. Dewhurst & Co., do, 


John Buley . 1 


J. Cawood a 
J. Morfatt, da, & Oo., d as 
Ww. 3 and — do, 


0 spinners <7 Flax i in Knar 
piar a 


3 Sage 


be done 
¿ 870 when 


w ane pe more an 
purs in the wae at the more it is drawn upon 
ARRS i beco. 

The farm 


in his power to shelter them from bat 
aes his is buildings, puttin gh 
—— of on a ridge, allow 2 all urine to flow on to i oe interes 
i gre eara returning it | could 
pope r | 


arryi ag i 


n to 
n crops; setting is 257 een ally, when 


average 
oat S 2 as as the capi 
of 350 acres, deseribed in 
letter op ad correspondent 4 F. se ing 
i instead of 107. 
capital was employed. 
* farmer’s 8 2 hi te h 
ene his fixed ex na 
divisi co 


years, w. 


methin power 
Will he 2 us how apes ma; 


eee 25 ä i ran 


in 
the pe gol HO ti Sl to 
the hor. How 
—_ a te Wi wou aid n 


ent. ! And now is 


purpose the 
tres farms where attention to 


Dain: B 
ease the returns 


and t 


ee shouldbe 
the | chi 


| Spreading it ** his root 

me, in conelusion, to observe = 
should bt be content to cover his mi 
liquid manures with la; 
on a small o 


or the 
the farmer 12 ig how, let me ask, 
and e he beef, mutton, 
not a earth ; ia him w venture the 1 
in Londo: 


utlay in —— which, in 
most counties 


ch ton of gypsum 
rming 24 cwt. of sulphate of ammonia, 
a manure, upwards of 20/. 


PLAX CULTURE AND THE FLAX TRAD 


siens himself „Verax. 


gross produce, on 11 
Epor 3s. bales a avenge ot 16134 2s. 11 


PONDENT of the Hereford Journal, 5 
rax,” says: 


28—1849.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


jerash in i giving encouragement to the chem e= ba the Bean-land is I have an ome importance may be drawn from this ve — 
. ie Mos purposes. Wha Wee of sowing * ue — Barley after Turni practice of General Wemyss. The growing of Turnip 
a Verax” could Messrs. Cobden and Bright — — on pared and burnt lands, where the seed is sown on the 


the other © 170 don pa s as the old women Hom e Correspondence. 
in Manchester if be pe won 4 e old wheels and Siesn v. I ban Land.—It is not much a matter for | renni 
ig require a de i i it, i 
weave it by hand ; vl 4 ma On no dti in surprise that your correspondent, “ Agricola,” in last 3 or . — — eee —— ae 
machinery kad- thie = eam po wer. owever, week’s Gazette, should not succeed in convincing his which the plant receives at-thie'sarfaes of thee 
Pant ade o farmer so green as to risk 100“. Yorkshire farmer friends, by mere argument alone, that induce the downward progress. Hence, if clay lands be 
om a al,” Eaten ately for the agri deia pro- they could not grow more corn on the long slope of a pulverised at the top, and the manure Gian applied, the 
pest there are in my opinion too many farmers like eg hill, than they could on the space occupied by the | tap. root will go downwards, and the bulb will be formed. 
Apen, if not young still „ green,“ and too many | base of such a hill, which to their eyes appeared to be Clay lands may be wrought in the usual way as finely as 
| ids, all of which would be greatly benefited by so much more limited in extent when compared with the possible, say to the middle of June; the dung may be 
sound instruction and proper pulverising. The follow- | Very long line visible in the slope. Some people require | laid down and spread in broadcast. ‘aed the land then 
ing details refer to Lapa Tile of my invention connected | to be taught, not by elaborate, ea by easy lessons, like | gathered up by one ploughing into ridges of 6 feet. The 
with the prepara tion of Flax * ildren, a and even hen se lesson must be visibly proved | surface may then be harrowed fine by means of harrows, 
By the six Fose mill I e erected in Skinner- | tore t er eyes by som e familiar amare or t ey | attached to a maintree stretching over the ridge, and 
exi i rrows. The Turni 


p 


sieet, Bishops London, six men have redressed Yorkshi 1 a 0 l 
Egyptian h —— ee Win nate a 10 stones can A a4 olds good also in this county, and numbers seed may then be sown in three rows, by means of a 
unti 


n si i 
sold it for 38“. per ton, the tow and 34, Suggest is to request them to examine the staircase, | usua way ; and as these wet lands do not N sheep 
pan paid the expense 5 5 leaving at the whi 3 


ch they descend | to feed on the ground in winter, and being soft to 
week e 1 this fact can be in the morning. | allow carts to carry away the Turnips, horses with creels 
—— by my manager, Mr J. Greame, as he weighed and ascend in the on their backs may walk in the furrows, 
the Flax before and after it was — This then is eveniag 5 the roots in ampers, or into carts 
my answer to*Verax’s ” insuperable“ objections to Flax th sug- | This me may prove very useful, after clay lands are 
cultivation.” I consider his ideas of Flax culture as gestion to examine | drained. Every vegetable is be uality that is raised 
green as Flax is at this m t and unripe. sım case | on clay soils ; any farmer is of this 
It is vaia for any one to attempt to write Flax into may effect some have observed elsewhere,“ 


disrepute, when it . 80 eroen * has much, nay 
everything to learn on the t. J. Hill Dickson, 
23 


se 3 me process 
good, if it only exist than the present Mon hare laborious — pire ajoi 
ubjec SJD 
Phenix Hotel, D’ Olier. hen Dublin, June 


induces or leads to of raising the fruits of the 
a habit of think- Practice — Science. 1 — —— review of some of 


— — ing, the only down- the mos 

A STIRLINGSHIRE CARSE FA right requisite that . . riety in ict ee — 

a. The exten: m is 110 acres, e pea is needed by farm- giving a slight insight into their modes of operation. 
b. .—It is situated within f a ver ers to make them Some remarks on their principles and may not be 
good market town for the sale of grain, where plenty men 125 meen | devoid of interest. Pre-eminent for its celebrity and 
of labourers can readily be had. The climate is pretty again usefulness stands the drill machine, distinguished by 
good, and lime can be laid down by water carriage on ing 5 0 that vail the efficiency of its movements; and its complicated 
the make the farmer| machinery seeming, as it were, Save = y the regu- 


now-a-days, not larity of its practice. Mr. Steph éns says that the 
money. The golden o original invention of it is due S the Hindoos, and that 
age has passed with | a model of it may be seen in the museum of the High- 


¢, The character of the soil is good, consisting of red. 
| dah and blue clay for the most part, and some parts of 
-fields are more earthy, inclining. to ene but it is ali 
| Ops. 


t g all kinds of grain er em, never to re. land Agricultural Society in Edinburgh. Be this as it 

d, Itisall regularly cropped, exe 2 a small slice on turn! Sterling mo- may, y clear it mus become obsolete 

A afiverside, which runs round the one side of the farm, ney will — sade | like the compass attributed to the Chinese, and i to 
— . and kept for a ag milk cows for i return Tu may be assi the merit of originality 
| pas Wi rid Yoho ae 0) BA, ok CELE] temid thought in this country (“ New Husbandry,” p. 167). Jethro 
e. It is eropped with hay each 6th year, aud the e will, invariably. Tull tells us that, for the purpose of saving seed and 


tl ely th there is a good after-growth, in value sertion to a nicety, more especially if the poate compared 

> per acre, from which a large quantity of j ave a balustrade, or railing such as i is 

mde, by cutting and giving it to the work-horses, | Sketched. Suppose there are one or two rails (whieh 
i l 


rop 
runs not far from 200 stones per Scotch acre ; | This staircase will prove your corresponden ats as- | depositing it wi greater regularity, he examined and 
all the ideas that had ever entered 


into nation, and at last pitched upon a groove- 
tongue — spring in the sound board of the organ. It 
amed a 3 used to sow 


and some young stock kept in the straw-yard. atter number I have represented) resting upon each | was n 2 when farmers to 
F of cropping consists of a six course step of the staircase. These rails may be taken, or sup- Beans and Peas into channels or furrows in land, they 
pr fallow or Turnips ; 2d, Wheat; 3d, Beaus ;| posed to represent two 3 or rows of Wheat. If they called that action 2 ee Alt! i i 
| ide ; 5th, Hay; Gch, Oats. Wheat about 40 measure each step (supp to contain 2 drills of was invented so far back a as by“ Tult iu —— and an 
Eo per acre, all sold e wha’ sed for seed. | Wheat f 5 and then counting the his own i p 
8 per acre, all sold except seed for the number of steps composing the whole | of staircase, | fully established, not only for ne a ioe 2 
| Baste £9 bore and a few quarters for meal and horses. let them mark on the base or horizontal line, the exact | the quantity o sown, but also cilitating most 
| 1 bushels per acre, all sol xcept what ept number of widths or steps, and they will find the base essentially the quent ae tillage, yet it does 
y afew bushels for pot Barley, | line will ee ount = bya (alias drills of | not appear i 
30 ushels per acre, all used on the farm except Wheat may by a more sit ce. 


acres Turni hod 
; ar in feeding stock for the butcher, and | on a hg oe line, could be also grown on a muc 
feeding eo seo in the 3 ard, and a shorter horizontal line; let them e a ruler and the Tull 
pent é 3 8 


orses and 5 cil, and on this ving continue the lines, indi- 
17 * as urchased in 1845 was eating the rails or drills of Wheat down to the principal cause of t 
dung, 1500 bushels of lime, 60 ewt. ee, lines. The line of ascent in the staircase looks infinitely | progress been th 
* bruised bones, but I find bones a | longer, and is much longer, than the horizontal base line, | ment. In the “ Book of the Farm” there is one men 
carse as for a dry-field s oe Thie | but neve rtheless, however anoma alous or — it tioned, “ the common o thian drill 
made on the farm, which would might appear (at first i Á n drawn b 
— me n a long ascendiog line (like that of the side to 1 
lan nd manual labour on the of a hill) t a mu er lineiaa or | Another, called 
flat position. B., yore 4 rows, varying from 10/. to 184 
Raising Turnips y Lands,—The alumipous | kind of 

base of clay imbibes 15 times its own weight of wa depth in every coulter, and either al 


té particles of the soil, and denies the admission 


f water, b 
and retains it with great obstinacy. The cold cements | pod with equal facility. These 
of | the seed i ner 
‘caloric ;” which would dissever th | effected by broadcast aee but 
i ich science has ma 


—— nd porous and _ permeable. The viscous tenacity | implements in whic 
that is thus p and de fies | as in the 
the reduetion of the soil to the tilth | not only sow — —— 
| for the growing of Turnips. The land lies in clods that deposit differen manure along wi e 
| are beyond the power of bei netrated by the tender 2 New S p- 173). F For effecting these objects, 
tars en grain is dear, as it N by roots of young plants, the 9 between the the machine of Messrs. Garrett ugh ex- 
I : s are open to the drought, hich kills e vegeta- — is a most complete implement, and is thus 
motel ata that t all the lime, guano, and bones tion. During my frequent visits to the Royal Farms, at | described by him. It will drill corn or A wi 
e put on the Turnip crop, Windsor, that are under the management of Major- | t manure, in any required 3 at any 


vith ag À queries were pu 
ag. carts to the acre of farm-mad e dung, the General Wemyss, I was much struck with the methods distance apart. may be conducted do : 
i in of raising Turnips on these farms. Sowing on the flat conductors the man or ipes. 
y | beef nee is preferred to the drill s system, as it does not so Asa Turnip — manure — it may be used to suit all 
in w i . i 


ma 
and reversed | The of it, thus complete, with 11 coulters, is 
in this the processes of being formed into ridgelots rev price — * 5 ers, 


not so sure of its paying well, ari to cover the dung, and the flat surface keeps moisture 471. 7s. 6d., carriage pai 
In the — is a good better than the raised drills, be abe e Wind- | generally made use of is guano, mixed either with some 
MTOP, owing to the expense it takes to sor are wrought by ar : ie other ingredients, such as soot or salt, or . 
a fine tilth, early enough for in the usual way; ross, te aid down and spread | substance like sawdust, for the purpose of reducing the 
2d. The land is often cut con- broadeast, and the laud is p r . into "izes of 12 or | maybe i wi so 18 a 3 — * it 
off, which is very injurious to 14 feet. On these ri t ps are toe bas d + . 
we often get a bed dd for by the corn drill. vat paira laiii pah and e arid st ate, or there will be a danger its not being 
While I state these things, I do not | hoeing of g^ done in the usual fe On th z 15 i e —. a crop 
give over growin rnips ; stiff lands on which Turnips are grown, but which are rnips cone A men- 
an . ot — w shift the not — lana as fi be used, it shou be equally d sted $ cap — 
alittle. And one who writes | possible in the usual way, and the dung spread it haps it may be from the want of 
er would point out a cheap and | in broadeast. It then gathered up into ridges of 6 or | ia sarine 5 
Cestroying - 8 harrowed, and th eran eee | extraordinary, a whose ave: 
i district to * eee e This method 1 pasee — i being 9 inches 2 
ald do a Now that | to drought and the loss of moisture. A corollary of some | drills 27 asunder, will give 25 tons 


THE 6 GAZETTE. 


4 seems an 1 jow 2 i 
1 r that a Turni y be 

and spears we ery ey 2 St 
Where guano is ees. i it | 


il 


experiments which h 
valuable manure can be readil 


rE cl 
made for cove ring the manure ge 
n of the seed), by merely eh ac 3 
and 


Hav 1 rough . arrived at the 


ce of his lordship's steward, an 


op 


comfort, a 
corres esponding, bounded with neat trimmed rma 


rops, 
in aahigh state of — likewive bonatifal A 
ull stocked with flocks of sheep, grazing a 


n spate assing 
of ma any of the t 


3 ewt, per acre, an 


horse power, and it "y costs about 3/, instead of nearly 
204. ie Row 11 wstorn 


Hi be, 8 1 ane ee Syasi 


Braid Society? s 
favoured by Mr. p aes ofi Daziington Y — a ee — a 
a correspondent of his on the ubject, from which | 
we make the following e “ Feeling z se ee — 

re we are depen 


mare — 
TE that the presence of 2 a been patron 
iculture amongst us must have had a . 


of . present e 


e we eae 
naturally look for 2 


mnarativa sori 


ere must be something wrong. as the soil appeared 
o be the same in nature and quality as the steward's 


s in winter. 
oa. ‘the phe trees = 8 eee 
the — to be equally genial and mild, a use- 
and equally Wee of groning “al ce 


as | Bart, M. P., Sir Robert Fiat kan iS 
Raym 


Sir M. W. Ridley, Bat, Sr Toba V ENEE 


ines 


mond Barker, 
B 


. Law 
Milward, Mr. C. E Gece ae 1 si 
(Lond.), Prof. a Mr. 4 . 5 1 — A 
2 ob onas veh eb 8 Whi 5 r 
wu, of Rostingtoa, 


Ai 
We a sf Res Bes of ‘the Society, 
ane ap mg tes. naw embers 
Simm hn, Messer, Killigan 
Blomfield, Hear 0610s, Necton 1 He 
Sandby, Rev. George, Denton L 
6 


8, Beighton R orwich 
kappie, William, », Jen tee ne 
Stark, prea Norwich 
Co oke, Joh , Fle mston Hail, Bury St, Edmund's 
Ives, Noone Norwic 
aot tou, Purefoy, Norton, Woolpit, Suffolk 
heale, Al exander r, jan , Uckfield, Sussex 
on 3 Hall. orwich 
M. P., Underly Hal -Lontialy 
ar 55 D. , Norwich 4 A aly 
roughton-Astley, Lutterw Lae 
Hales, Pity — rt, Hillington, Cas tle-Rising, 8 10 
Sayer, David, Norwich 
Burcham, William, Booton Hall, e. Norfolk 
Dalton, Rev. W., helat 1am, Norfol 
eae 4 Lynn, 
didates — — at the neri 


e knew 


sarie of croppi 
two years in 
noticed, he om were 8 the second = r’s seeds, 
In re aa query this course of 
cor gh a fe gone on, he could not state the number 
of years, but aa that è was e in the late lord's 
time, and it then so well that he h 
in hi 


la 


may be in 3 pare tase yet with 

ing, it 

will stg y completely ebene nd ads guy i in 
this case o must have 

diffie calty i in ae i, 3 . Bg a 

ess they have their farms very c 

d my surprise that his. lordship aid not 

error, in not allowing pres changes in 

reen crops, so that the land ae a e kept in con- 


at 


— 


perco 


r a produce 
experienc of ou 

mers. kosi are now 

established or ching (or. I look ss agricultural 
associations as cultural schools), will 1 
be one means of attaining this desirable end; 

these may be said to be of three classes, the royal, the 

farmers, th 


Albert, an 
by ihe majority Sa the nobility of 4 Brit 
ire, we look f. the t of 


e W 
practice, without which our best practical farmers 
at fauit, 4 agian napad professors in uncertainty. 
To the third l farmer we must look for the 
general e. of all all inf with th 
ds of cul 


he that he mey be see 


uce full e —_ of seeds: ie hen 1 


2 f table 
pended 

informant said that h 
lordship had some reason to complain, oat 8 he left 
; | the management of his e to his steward, who con- 
sidered he was doing his duty in continuing the rales 
aid that he cou 


i cality mainly i 
on a 


ara ply 


ir ‘bit his reply was in the negative, and so the 
conversation ended. i I 
circu 


as ance o 
one moment clashed 


seen riding ove: tates, an 

in to his steward to ie proper 9 whole- 
| some chan raed in the course of cropping, or in eee 
cases = {tg Be ei hpi tenant to us 


ing this 
it t had 8 
was forcibly pororiving tiat of an incident that pee’, 
to me me whilst travelling betwixt Thirsk and i Sear 


aa siog bans Mati 


d | judgment in schem 

has And I have no 5 Shee these beneficia 

my | developed, 
tification when he rides 


t rest of 2 


of moor land to pass over. 


me of management 


come into full operation, and their meri 


that it will greatly add 
over his 


3 as 
he will then see his te improving their farm 
e | comfortably, and ee eee 


ing at the great aud e isg i 


we 
a | his asphaltine 1 ze e Sik 
; fron 


to | Bouse, 


In my | i 
e had understood of a, N 5 his 


- | improvemen 


and | of 
iving 


— from Mr. D 
factured art 
>| experimonte, ¢ on he Forty-day Main, 
with mg rape “4 a growing Plants; and Mr. Woie 
oe int 
and from Me.. Hillyar 
breed of Sheep mi 
cester. The Bisho 


10 


mati n in ever 
t de 6 ney, a 115 ie his 
i Mr. Nest, 


tural Chemistry ; 
on the — of 
Bullen, a copy of t h Number of the “ Agricultural 
and Industri 2 0 for all which the usual hanis 
of >a Council were ordere 
SPECIAL the transaction of te 
3 business e Society, was then held, the 
Earl of CHICHESTER. ‘Paula being in the chair, 
arde en Memoranda. 
Lorp 1 S STATE aT sain 


STAFPORD- 
res rom the appl 
il aan- 1 no matter of 


Having 
simplicity and a aan. 
upon Lord Hath s farm 
the eg a of 
ts, 


masuara 
A large pro cone: Teddesley 
manor extending over 2586 acres 


Hay, 
of land en 


aes — and compri 


I a pie e, = the peri ie a 
port of which we hav to thank his Royal Highnets 
Prince Albert, as a pues and advocate, as well as fo: 

na pee culture to = proper 
| national prosperity so much de pends,” 15 
to Individual Interest and the Public Good, near Thirsk. 


ROYAL AGRICU Sot i 
R LTURAL SOCIETY OF E 
k A WreLY oe was held at the Boelie Hons, 
A ees the 10th July: 
the Karl 5 chene P we „July; 


2125 Bridport, Hon. R. H. Clive, . B., Hon. 


A Well Wisher| i 


589, the other 200 acres: 
pin hagas — Hatherton’s 


Gaia Hon 


Dyke Acland, Bart., M.P., | 


| 
ö 


T 
H 
E 
A 
G 
R 
IC 
[CU 
UR 
A 
L 
G 
A 
Z 
E 
T 
T 
E 


— 
Te 
Ape the 
the first * sub-so 
4 flo e il be 
. eye ured 
u ed in 
* A dioan ch 
th ders ee 
71 e cocoa TE. 
10 wm em ish 15 mal p ea 
* ns W. es 1 on 8 dra 
. m inche n and fr ding 
* land, be ced o 5 1 nin an 
a Het eat the e Sal wi in diam om whie e 
how nt manne, det, eee fo _ ae siei 
See fe di ti TE s 
i ig , an ils a re ees ve the Quan l se i 
stat po ly ten df rivanco we ens sou titi E in 
ca t hi b or a se oa t es. Valu the 
wai vd this syai ee Ze ie N 
Fina —— nd in aah 2 — $: 870 aun 
. nage 22 erwa ei 8 jet in 19 1 ÈR —.— ual 
— ut e Si — in a rds ined 0 = 3 „ ray | val 
entire g as 2 th — bes get ter A 30 i 10 | son e. | ue 
of 2 on, in t co tin in the e — F 2 | p 
ine iht € aa of e e — gr th 3 Å — iss emoun rod 
n 3 n ki e in i e 6 2 6 3 £ u 
gece — g Bae = ich id of an 3 1 H 4 d. pended ced 
1 “meg es 3 1 0 1 a Val b 
to b 8 f 1 w e m t e 0 8 6 : value y 
the 4 sda — ha oe ab va see 1 1 8 6 £ z 
whe ea san by pozie a _ 5 — j Prong 5 3 22 7 5 262 1 P of the L 8 
rt o mill, , by wh e ae 3 r 21 í : — r 8 74 31 he "at 1 
raga — aufe e 3 e pores of 15 01 wi 8 1 0 — 9 = | 8 thou 
* f water pa low the e, t pe w ne of 9 1 15 H H 121 1 4 4 if. 3 * — 
em lato Fy ec en th 0 a ston y paie { 1 16 — 6 27 Va tot 
== 15 0 —— 35 sanal will r 
R for th a 2 g d 9 — ‘Rn Ls 15 1 8 2 p 16 40 105 weight, prizes, 
nt ce of some he It th 7 ge Under. ry 14 16 ae 0 8 30 05 1 d ht, 9 M ate 
sig r hi r a ft u h ro el Fo e S 11 3 0 90 5 85 76 : 8 berlar ee 
a su 8 any aes i he PP of ck Set a A v x 22 iss * ae bat 
bee ihe as el * — vate, fen gat potin i 29 6 5 41 9 0 — eg oe Geis 
eg ne mappi e tu ow: 1 d om e to ar mr 3 0 66 26 89 Ne * 
ual p ve ex ted 8 j yards, perfor om t w a 14 ro 9 8 59 42 7 down to ie l 1 — mi 
5 as niga e ormed otk a ater ‘wh 3 z 13 | o #1 Seer ast as o 
* i c 8 ioe 
isall nå abled t n 2 an ttom * peer 855 um z k | 33 26 15 driver w or a ei ush — 
us hi rde th er th f dt to 25 ee * oel len e 9 | 30 | 131 = ‘ ar work uden it 
8 3 5 3b 7 hr c 5 . ‘| Tne = npa dm pr 5 27 | 24 1 t ata D a apa pei — at y 
obtained for A ut ill ou ent r d ae val 1 vs dd — : | 32 . aoe t ut I the n s it i — 
. gard no C er ad to ugh m 18 inated ue N T chi 3 23 . . — nf oy — t — may be. le = 
e w om di a ou ex se of ne R ot ne HA 1 — — = he n os rts s 
ia vs pu a f ioe tth te F th 1 al ry ~ Rs Bancr a o. cae — . 
Scour worthy rive š ional x ms Res Pi e 4 ou = Fan r Canna — — grou — ts pov 
had eae OS iv ati al e ga tae | ment oi a sam 1 tla, aes nea —— easy nes a =s 
e 1 af a ma h Ni t ti a e syst y Pai EID — 5 the t 
8 — with e of h wa athe ol le E of d arin la E 7 sll No 6 5 9 d might step ov presenti Cum 
; nta ofn 3 1 f r er 1k heel | ar drain ng wat under 1724 Í . N ledge has a In s construc. 
fet thi co og 0 1 call 0 l an drain w z by th 5 20 0 a z —— eine pi charro enting th - 
day poor he shat bong ‘at 1, il el it! nu th th th * 224 . You on ew M: 8 apok — nk quite 
H 1 h ’ b es t l þu p 18 alan peal al ei 3 wae e mi E £ ~ 5 2 a 5 Sow It cad . soins 
which 2 “gee xte ‘ena ional an eing jon of f ver for — 5 EE 1 1 — — if noth ton 1 — —+ 
_ oe u 0 ns e d 8 * ns, of ea te ‘or pr st N ge Aa ae 14 ° ii —— n li tt chi Fi mee ve til 
aed et * re peen Jof up 80 ii me ted nt at ns — 9 tai — — chet of peli ng —— are 
were rm oo Ey et ply ft, is cs ares t gri th of 52 te ws... ‘ me ntiti =e th ea ith, The 
Berin pen 0 y i T ee of mil er . p n wh 3 t Th 
8 = i aie 1 ee ponn = re ws nama 7 ma 
1 sorted ie ss inthe Hee n eth i at wre ali as, of — nue 550 6 belie ae er — — * — 4. 

Tes, lrie sm 0 ed ea a5: e of 3 n ror Ww tees t ve a f f land, a Mik nm Pias e IL e II 8 10 tu * tn ty 
whieh ds, oron ai Th 1 — ce: urf: i tl ate th le 3 ar jap up to nd £1 227 L: — nd — — timed * — 
2 g 0 aa ‘par 8 el è el centre instan bo she ot — i pose e = — a ther Si nk, os w ath. 
Pin bri dern nt * t ag 4 ca ws ca n of 0 ft ei as 8 e n peia t a ai 1 8 od ani e; epost 

e : 4 à wih of “ae f mie re the ce, ink he gh b i 1 4 on the — 82 2 gis il ps Co., edus Whether 
: dep wil e ail ed o gravel oi BEA il ew mie re ‘deck = os at e betes ami , of Ply eter, how. 
pre 1e de adap der aeli the t w eisir farm se 5 “ln The pi th ti “piymon 2 
bed Up th ioe si ale h te fab ri 0 me oS ager aoe 
i the e e la j pt ed, im 0g od Se t er ig th ec}, olds d x coile bed f . * “ ae f “ere left er ” 
A T ESN 8 elow E E evel as 15 is wh a , it il Sete y k: 8 T 42 th, 
Se e f 8 p e d 1 wh b e ildi e a z ip il = : = infia a each, a 5 . h, sell ia 
' i we ro th c Wie n siros in wate e ro 2 in ‘a le l l fae M farther ot wi 
a dy w e tly và e, pee vee d er n es 5 igs in wn a ad his ER Prat 2 ey r. Mi 5 W — 
still [gravel es $ E 3 5 oi themse th 125 — a fr stand 5 — sa ng Sr —— ha * r r . fie med iy comer 
8 lower l at r peli 15 h vot ma ya ground u — ser TET to rerain th oore, ofi =S 
pick t di ou . EE psa — PILON € . rien n 
b h ist ugh r in e had n n cti ak th ie = u th b vo e tare ar 0 Ta 3 at ity 2 ly red, we 
one do ayy ar ti p. eac ha d 15 ink iy in er p ntil fesas Heren ir bien hi pein Sey or sortable 
beast, the 3 ere — 5 p Tiig ve 5 me of vert di t he fo ‘ — sev thei, ae their t hill * 
= of a5" 53 ri aN 5 r g us ‘apts 5 se hie is 10 tl they a for th eae wula sie tails i y pon to 
e which See ; pire: f 11 rai Pad 5 255 N bene is ch rf mud rvo e eee Sy oa og in the ap ** k 
Se rst c n 5 Drala of | me apitalists nt t e ge sara Ne o i ich i 11 on =a, you pe 
. arle E a gi Nii rd pi i ine ort 
wae l i d an th or * f | nti ‘yin o Seas Lords : * into rer ere int Aad i va mast 8 h 
i sou pele b oe mant 0} and quite wi ras i and dis- th eee Ah l of t 5 
the n . ot 3 s e sts and an e it oe Sine: ach — y w upaa ett tt . 
N ca _ tee tom ood monet x aa uis w a land ore ie with w toal : fen s 141 ody, er not a th = Y 10 
ee rw aly i ; low i. the 95 ith ei 1 nta ag: Kga Api betore pu * — a way. is wi — f the tai, 
. he ddi a 1 a? im e w t og Ww m gaasis ges oo 20 uts 0 er es on: 3 9 la 5, ina ate — 
. e or he ti — hi pro nts 8 2 2 v een g N ye? -pinte tea If you 
i ni impassible lan n shis su th tren am ts at ferred. bj 2 a Seve ma uffici wef 4 Lem onl a ae 5 N 
— Py 1 577 a 5 bj nt of view a tin on 2 to . ent ik ese nder, Wc. 
po ry 6 houn ply lu h rained, a h e t sires view. nara I snake this ti b pe or mir Aek — ilk (t p ys he; so ufi 
mer, w sk rs per aed a et r a ee onal kenia — e inte pas 
3 il = pe d aa ho lo nereas ‘or ted i en 8 k as w milk o ne full 4 ba e 
bi =e man or ym pa veg ia om to ta | eae a et, =" 4 w , havit hes 
Kore = 21 75 ter 0 f. im en hg 5 the far 7 nts th a fat in and hen lk canno A 4101 heranne 
} int d if 2 u r * ad aci apro tf 2 oro 1 re * at squa = jo it in the. — lo — 
u an 0 holes ee can be m th ti into —— or e h Bre : 
ms _ judge 0 . pr unera ng boen ae he efi 
po al 9 — * us age * e vel idl * ir —.— ang ately ea oe a th is 
gs uP ua ‘th di —— i 2 hema ő 0 top 3 tely ; th tis ut 4 pu 
ee 99 1 Kaj atomen seg Arg - shade en e to p er 1 
io Eh 8 u ae reas 1 isis oo ned eam 
* 8 hee “i t ee mre the 
“on h 2 ry e U aie thi as 1 8 2 grea 10 roved i le, = r aon pat i p * 
it h 55 à z “the pom * ng 3 * yl E ut 1 
ml, bo Go as aia rt ar — ie * ter “fi 22 : 
tan ite easy tate ci ip’ oe d = 9 ef 2. th ut a t pu ú . K — her è placed n wh ts 
ivane fae ted re 1 reg z original: e far ili Ss lso r e yee aa Xp in, when it 
; seh fo it wi 1 * w ul en eg ere . r, er o e 8 om tu 3 “ty ie : 
25 88 e to tht re ul ? omen, ar pl y T e u p n] mu . it to e 5 
‘ba pe = its d a prod ly 3 ver emt — e z 55 è — on ne vat i ind 
x he: B equa uc men, total eñi i aes ng viding — ee ie 
gonen “pte nee dpe ar w 4 p een from nine g elon t until Ee : 
1 ` ex i ntel concern n gr tla e Mg vious lo eir 44 — 7 se * h pig an 
y * y a0 li 5 — waits — m th e —.— reachin it — 2 2 
tl w 2 e E mr total ere A Rea A 
— a ie k 5 B i and ent and val — Er ú 484 pon fal f of meg e eee og th — 
ö ve tock bted es p age . ad th e105 im the eh lúg taken, e is. ber of Beas wn rach os e va 
88 — o bk k ay Ti AF Siege —— 5 pro ehe eee å con: 2 isr abet wreg — . ly vat three 
ow kind wi pie wa 1s : digs f gnif 1e prop ve er - ra den 2 . — 
state ab fy se super: TA No riga — ponte 3 ther . TE 5 aoe 
555 ta os mune. tic aa e grea or ise — be aoe. 1 — aan a hag — A 5 
eit ran seg es alain entip ie 25 oe 2 5 LTE — 
5 oe ed. al Š 5 . Te you 175 ioe 0 is ataned. Basa — yn =e — es * Ca a anit 2 e 
= —— : . e e = E ae ale 5 
of 1 wil sora eth an ee wi y an d Di : Down et hiii d 500 1. mall 2 
the th th B us U ace t t n n ith Psst B R l Sh F nd ee in 
by caer 3 pee a hada d on ea! 8 ee 0 e ‘money 7 
—— them, a hs R st pe ahaa a i asta, 308 41 p, an Bes le Scots, 
— 7 oe 5 rain wi n 3 e ts, 2 6 d „ H deir fone 
ei px ha plan , a 8. Sia 11 j nd er, many of then Boos it 
ipl | . a quarter o ‘i 8 in 8 in é 2 2 0 ure 20 14 a ice 
of e in 1 Eri pon 5 . sh HB —— 9 of es are 
— —— can ia 3 2 * w — 
b cer 5 alee Sie : att E 
cultural € e es ee ns pani 8 
z mee 5 5 1 =e 2 F 
shel uus. ane, bs, aan bie with } ' N — 
N * * the it 1 7 of ~ rnd this i yp ted there Š f 
be 4 E Iri poe w. üh z as 
ne si e Cumberiaa es SEER oo x ies de To a yea 
sta ee — a pase chr oa pS 2 7 75 
. oe maa = ee = on 71 
: : the“ TEn eek Ti Ep 
ount carts deseribed seat a Ger Pee er 
chao prs = and 13 105 i . — -r : 
oT ; ws 15 pio torn 8 a ss et zs 
t 3 pos y b m N 
3 3 os airg” ~ E y * £ 1 5 a 4 e 
of 8 Prim 3; She a ows from 5 “as rally 
sar oe = 8 ‘ae 
C th t ado SS va 2 gain 
was — b e 
as | Od oe oe 30 =k iE, 1 5 bt > 
Now H e ig g Ta 3 
W “aa K 85 * Gave ae 
sy . i, es H 7... a 6 
toe as 725 New C = „725; a 
aes 50 to a ses. hy EE- 2 
a 1 ov Pig 1 0 
95 s — 85 s í 
155 e 5 200, 
E ge 
j sk te a 
oe 


= AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


COVENT GARDEN, Jcty1 


week’s rates, but 


re difficulty was experi- 


PSLEY | PELLATT > Cotan a 
A r aup Co. ; 


J. and C. STURGE, 


of Hothouse Gra Peaches, and Nectarine 
is — up. — — exces, an A large — need in disposing of the ayn —Barley is inquired a ca — a | 
portation of vp. India Pines has just arrived. They | after, and com $s an advance of ls. per qr.—Beans | have always on band, Bee Glasses, 1s.24. per Ran 
tolerably wberries and Cherries are very and Peas sell more freely.—The e Oat trade is firm, and | each; P 13. êd. per Ib. ; Milk Rags te Liu. Per R. 
— A few — 1 — made 8 er as ices 6d. to ls. per qr. higher. s do. e adenine, 3d — reeg white, 1a, n ate glam, RO 
as ripe berries u general are . „ . ; Shada oe 
safiicient — ae and — ve lentiful. RIDAY, Jury 13.—The —, of foreign Wheat Sor boa a" . r che ad and — 
22 spr * _— ch — — ained at from | since Monday amount to 9680 ; those of all other | may be preserved from n (oberes certain — 9 
fal, ‘The season for Rhubarb and Asparagus is nearly re small, That day’s pot Sen for Wheat are CONSE 9 a 
— — —— Is. 6d “as pit boak, n fully supported, but t t the trade is not large.—Barley is in Hurt, i CO. vod ch ee ee pny 
per. d. to demand, and fully 1s. per qr. Beans are held British Manufact 4 
Lettuces and other salading are sufficient for the ‘anand, firm! aP. einen I fi ‘pris at prices varyin Sheet Glass a i 
Must from 1s. 6d. to 38. per pottle. Cut Flowers firm eas are unaltered in value.—Oats improved | per Sauer. ah for the usual sizes required” from 24. toy 
consist of Heaths, Pelargoniums, Gardenias, Lily of the Valley, in price Is. .—The quotations of Flour gel un- Lists of Prices are re enha — y packed for — aii 
Cinerarias, Tropzolums, Carnations, Pinks, Fuchsias, and | altered, and there is little business PAT estimates forwarded, on 
Ing. ATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK © 
"FRUITS. may be said of Indian Corn. —The ipy since e the — oe and apee WA TER- PIPES, pt l 
Pine-apples, pert w., 53 to 8s | Apples ber gr bsh., 4s to 88 , GLASS MILK PANS, PATEN AGATIK — 
5 rapet, hothouse, p. Ib., 1b. me sia Orang 3 cams Is s to 2s and the crops are consequently 8 i poes 8 BET i MIE A 9 , ae 7 
eaches, pe 8 — — . 3 pp epei ae towards maturity. Taken whole throughout 8 See the Gardeners’ Chronicle, ae 5 
r un., 9d to 28 — per 100, 78 to 148 kingdom, they mead be represen nted as eS e me — | 
~ a ee: 2 | Almonds, per peck, 6s although complaints as usual are not want ing, par E 
Cherries, ean — — oh : 4 ee 7 * 4 larly as regards the Wi — d Barley, it is yet too 
Gooseberris, irene. ‘hf. sieve, È bush., 16s to 248 y to place mue 1 upon Continued 
38 6d to uts, Bar., p. bush., 20s to 228 shortness of supplies has enabled the holders in Scot- 
Currants, 4 5s to 88 VEGETABLES. p. bsh., 12s to 16s : 4 gn any 1 inl markets to establish a 
‘urther advance of ls. to 28. per qr. upon Wheat 
— p: doz., 6d to 1s rrots, per bun., 4d to 6d Barley has also anced Ap i and p value of 
Peas, p wee 5 doz, heen og 15 . sieve, 1s hy ls 6d Oats has sa upward tendeney. Disease in the Potatoes 
p. bush. 1s 6d to2s6d | — Spanish, p. doz., 1s 6d to 4s appea occurrence, but the yield of the 
Sorel, p. hf. sieve, 9845 | sg 9 z m to 8d arly a Wh is v small, In the near Continental GLASS MILE PAN, 
„ Arlie, 7 to 
Pe 88 Meee ie | Sanip, pee ry ai 2 sari 2 he . mes is to 2s. per qr. con 3 MILLINGTON is supplyi 
— per bush., 4s to 7s | VegetableMarrows, do., id tols as been sold at 42s. per q t, 77 ve 
Turnips, per ch, 3d to 6d | Lettuce, Cab., p.se., 4d to 9d frei y — 1 eet k 603 lbs. white is | in 100-ft. and 200. f. f large dimensions, 1 
Red aha Be to — Cos, do., 6d to 1s at 46s. per qr., Belgium 62 lb per f ft., or cut to size » poney — ere N nn per 
Horse als, „ bdl., 28 to s | Mushrooms, p. pot., 1s 6d to 3s mee has b ht 46 00 8 1 ot. British Plate Glass for Winda a * vind 
i 8 ENG 1s to 4s Small Salads, p. pun., Əd to 3d Rott od 8. ee Nr., f. 0. b.; ; and 1 lbs. wean purposes, from 1s. 2d. to 2s. per 1 7 3 
Rhubarb, p. bundle, 3d to 4 Fennel, per 2d to 3d in erdam at 458. per b p — 1 this great additional improvement w E 
French Beans, p.100, 6d to 1s avory, per bunch, 2d 8 resid 
Cucumbers, each, 4d to „per bunch, 2d to 3d AVERAGES, DATE BEB. PRAMS | FEA: 
Galore aa f bn mane S 1 * wont at BAY 178 9d a Od} 31s 3d 
p · „ 31 2 
eee, eee, . e 
7 . rene 15 26 5 18 0 26 3 30 3 30 4 cocons w 
Prag. 26 5 18 9 25 9| 20 10 31 5 | peti oat font ee ee 15 
ee ee Sak e 25 11 nn 28 1| 82 1 [8310 | warehouse, 87, = beste attest e 
Fntpax, July 1 shpi 
A . 26 
. 9 — oe eee ITH report that th the 338 Duties on Fo. sib as ROTO ee (eased Velie GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES. 
from the pi araea na te Soest rae and worse with bi 1.011 an 6! 1. E 0 aan PHILLIPS ax» Os i, Bishopegate-stret 
SS tions intel si ene? Cor Ave osha ee 
Pa — 26. JoxR 2. June 9. duns 16. re 22 i — 3, on on HORTICULTURAL GLASS, ` 
K LANE. 5 | IZE ii E SHEET SQUARES. 
Monpay Jury 9 =the su ia of Wheat * = w | oe — 2 INCHES LON p HEET SQUARES 
y — 55 \ ly o — — 25.85 -J * TA 85 * oz, from = to 34d. per foot. —_ Rs Wia 1 
Kent, and and Suff. 3 vs is 5 5 6 ic 
2 i rhe — rey at fully 1 pees of — 4 4 “a 8 > rye eae 70 
ay se nnight. 5 best qualities of foreign a 44 2 ele — PLATE GLASS for In BO WS S fia 
"London. ee Wakefield. Boston. alae =m , in sizes not exceeding 5 añ 
ee e irmingham. 2 thick Per foot is, ch per foot A. d. 
PRICES —ä — . i 2 „ 30 
4-inch ieee 
i 7 — 2. ae 9. es — aa 29 * 6. July 4. July 11 5 mit fg July 12. 4 thick a ogo a PLATE aidr ee 
. — A qr. qr. x 62 Tbs. EMOR en ds. M T ee a m 
Jö; VM e Be . Ba [Bs Re . Finch e 1 at 
New, red . 42 444 (44% 9 7 0/6 10 7 2/44 t050 Se 0 ir e te 77 e AND, — 
18 = 47307 2 7 6% 3 7 8432455304653 46—53 6 4 6 86 6 6 10] gine 20 lug. by 10. . ‘sa. Ihde 
24644 10 7 2 11 7 21434544446) — | — [510 6 56 0 1e ee ear ae ime i 
petite + 5o—5450—547 6 7 107 7 s ee ee lg ene apie ee 746 5 in stodi ti ua 2 
ve ..- (36—58i36—58/4 6 8 614 8 8 6/40—53/41—54) — o a o a UN GLASS MILK-PANS, PR ROP AONE pa a si 
480 lbs. 480 lbs, Pastry 323 cg h Glasses and Dishes 
Rye—New ... |22—24|22—24 3 aa . ments, Fish Globes, Plate and Window assot ee 
Foreign... 22—2322—23 8 as — — — — tion, Lamp Shades, and Lacto fi 
Foreign meal (6/.—7/|61.—7! m * * 2 sde areal r 
* — — ‘ial ie R ers for Greenhouses. i 
Barley— qr. qr a ; ne Ha tere er nove PAROH 
Grinding . -g -, | — | 2n oe ae 5 2s | FLABTLEYS PATENT ROUGH — 22 
r — soe 22— 30s—3 Os— ng CONSERVATORIES.— The 
Foreign... . 18—2718—27 RÈ ia 98/24 22 0/28— =30 29—32 9—32 81 5 i terms in 1 of 1 93 7 x 
r 6 sary. ewe have — xe p : N 
Male—Ship EE tock 55 = = 39—4239—42 — 2 in ee a with ie the ee 
. : ati ention 0 obility ig 
Oate—White.. jig—24}19—25 2810238 22810036 % — — Ui -l 20-28 | 20-28 der 10 by 8... 1 by 8 
Bee ee oe es ee . a ee 
Peas—Boilers zea Bde 34 282 28—322—— 
Grinding... |2325|23—2 29 —31s | 29 28 2 g 196 lbs. | 196 lbs. 
gn ... |25—32/25—32| 32 —34 | 32—34 . 11—12 11— 
—3 
77 eet eee E er | 
ae — 15—16 15—16 
40 —42 40 —42 32—4032—40 — ae in — eee pencon s and p 
71. 128 71. 128 — — — on reo 
338—358s | 33s—34s | — — 13. 
en — — 14 
280 lbs. 280 Ibs 
. p. sack p. sack per 
: 35—36 35—36 — — |36—40/36—40| 36—38 
; pene FRE FREEMAN, Hom T Hornocer 
Averages. | Imports, | Aver. | Impts.| Aver. | Aver. Gloucester. tinted? weld Lag call th tion ofthe g 
2 gr rs. s. d. qrs.|s. d. rs. ie i ea tages 
= ne 7 49 11 | 824 | 48 43 2295 
17 1 m 65 
27 9 19 97 2 
31 9 E 3149 
31 5 Tet 15 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 447 


= GOLLBOTION oF oF ORCHIDS S OF THE LATE CHARLES 


q. 
H STEVENS i is instructed to announce for | 


Boss. 
n of Phalaenopsis, A Aerides, Vandas, Saccolabiums, 
On view at the Auction Room the day before 
* ogues had. 

. EGHAM, zE: ia 
of fne OLD PORT and SHERRY WI) NES, from 15 
oe in boule part of the Household FURNITURE, 
* — Broadw ood and Tomkinson, a 12-feet Bil- 
Tabl n 4 “In-calf ALDERNEY cows, 
hard and ane ones 4 capital 6-light Pine and Melon 
Deity © ‘with Hot-water Apparatus and Lining Walls with Iron 
Pits, with a Greenhouse, Garden Implements, Box and Hand- 
Gard arden-engine. Poy t Dung-cart, Pony Water-cart on 

‘wheels, and other 

ann will sell by Auction, on TUES- 
M = ans — lu She by. the premi wo ta Engle- 
of T ard, Esq. (leaving his re. 
zen ot fine old — — Sherry Wines, 22 15 to 
— — 5 0 dozen of Gooseberry and Orange Wines; 
„ i Parsi i 


** in Alde 
young Sow and Pigs 5 — new r Pine — A er 


d and Iron Patpa. Dairy and — wing 
Utensils, Co e Hand Corn-mill, Dressing- 


he 
— oo ha e mo of ia “vont logues sadly be had 
— the premises; * Barley isis Maghani green; 1 of 
25. ong — and Land and Timber Surveyor, 


one ** of A outh ; with 24. The lan anta- 
ng the Dore ester ans , roa The la d-tax is 
— 3 264 years’ S 


0 

modern-built VILLA, with Stabling, Walled 

rte Tau and about two acres of Rich Pasture Land 
— — yea — . — Further particulars to 
de had of Messrs, F Henmo =~ 8, Solicitors, „Weymouth, 


al 
3 His 2 n is particularly fine, his s disposition 
gentle, and he is the property o n * an w s been 


Mxssks. BARRETT, EXALL, ann ANDRE WES 


PATENT SAFETY HORSE GEAR. 
J !GHTEEN MONTHS’ trial of the above REALLY VALUABLE INVENTION, has secured it 


— as the safest, easiest and moest economical HORSE WORKS e U 8 
8 r i i ; ex pwards of One H 
now been sold g Testimonials receiv ved of their high charac'er and 7 which aoe —— — 
be obtained o — by post, or CH MEETING, where a , of every 5 will be 


mber 
exhibited at Stand 58, T with a large assortment of Patent and La! THRESHING MAC R 
a INES, CHA © 
GRAIN | MILLS, &e. KATESGROVE IRON WORKS, 5 2 


| 
i 
E 
l 


making e efor, for 8 last — 2 to improve his ae 
of dena Por fa ee 8 5 to . of 
— 


ine MARKET GARDENERS, & OTHERS. 

MO SÈ BE DISPOSED OF, —4 preies] Term of 24 

—— of a very desirable FA „ bounded by the high 

Dover-road, — — —.— Bare olw ich, — ‘rom Greenwich, 

aod nine from Li ing 50 a of rich arable 

ae Us pap p — Ra Fruit marble ein in 12 bearing), 

low rent. The land is in high cultivation and fully 
There is a substantial and 


JF 


E 

i=] 

uf 

nee 
FE È 

AE 

4 2 8 

© 

5 

in 

2 


2 
8 
E 4 7 
+ . 
9 — 
E 
* 
Boe 
oO 
p 
ar 
E 
= 
f-o] 
E 
a 
"j 
1 
* 
p 
T 


i 00 
tiewlars apply to Messrs, Dickson and BELL, Surveyors and 
Land Agents, 22, Buckle re ary, Sandon i 


er, Nor wic 
TING OF THE THE 1 AGRICULTURAL | 


d OF 
that „and DEAN E ce 
Arrr HG Number their Stand in the —— Yard is 
turists wi x 
town Articl th of DEANE, DRAY, 
| Stake Daar 3 and of various lara fap d 
Makers , and DEANE, Agricul b 

: Bridge, Swan-lane, Upper Thames-street, near Londo 


i ENOR ALKALINE TOOTH-POWDER 
3 Sout rener yet been 


S. STRATTON, HUGHES, 


MESSR CO. 
Respectfully invite the ee gf 1 to their Stand, No. 3, ROYAL A AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY'S sitow-yarp 
WICH, where they purpose . a Large Collection ot e 
aiii CARTS, WAGGONS, WOOD AND IRON W HEELS, NORWEGLEN HARROW 
f the best constru ation, f the markets, Th y would avite 
attention to their Night-soil í Cart, and to their PATENT Sar: for e iquid Manure (as — avd Nee pecially invite s 
t York. The Soon gt my o¢ cwrt., and the Price 14l. 108. 


Michaelmas next, the Par f WOTTON, in the Pari 11 3, M and Co.'s had at their Stand, gratis, or will be forwarded to any address 
at tin the 80 of Mr. h ith. 5 receipt == postage — : 

a. of t 409 acres of w, Pasture, and Arabl ee —— — — — 
— — laad is most productive of Beans and Wheat H™ YDRAULIC ENGINES, WA WATER RAMS, Ser 7 ‘PORTLAND CEMENT. aani 
ing — sap piki land is — the richest fatten- d Principles; Engines worked or quarters, prove = CEM to possess the rare pro- 
— T. excelent rarm- e, * n- | Hy 3 — to raise from 1 gallon to 1000 per — Gad perty of 22 the severest frost, aud — — 
por pacers 4 arm-bui s are e an » |a height of 500 feet, and from a depth of 900 feet. Douche, | superior to every other for h birk aulic purposes, such as building 
mmber of beas tted up and arranged for fattening a large | Vapour, Hot-air, and all otber kinds of Baths, wos and lining. of Reservoirs, Cisterns, Baths, Fish-ponds, Kc. For 
The Parm is en feeding-houses, stalls, sheds, and yards 1 &c., heated by Steam, Air, or Water. Bori ex ther 
alles gaa four 3 from Hailsham and bourne, Sinking, and ecting of May &c. Towns supplied. i colour nor paint, It never vegetates, and wui carry from three 

station aeg rA arket oy n, and ret mile mee the Pole- | to JouN Pies poe am Í to four times its own body of sand. 

apply to Mr, Jonn Morton, Whittel , Berkeley, loucos. FLEXIBLE INDIA RUBBER HOSE, KIRSS, ano TUBIRG. I J. B. Ware and Soxs, Milbank-street, West. 

šire. -A person at Folkingto ce will show the Farm. AMES A ole Lice and — 

raff ae Manufacturer of the PATENT VULCANISED 13 INDIA- WIRE. WORK, nom WATER APPARATUS, 

TOBE Ler, for a term nq — —— 7 — are made all sizes, from USES, &c. 

Tental, with i 8 Finch bore and upwards, t injured by hot liquors and | QP, -THOM IAS BAKER, MANOR- HOUSE, MANOR. 
MANSION’ kno poss ent FAMILY | acids, are permanently flexible in all temperatures, and are PLACE, KING’S-ROAD, CHELSE 
Within 2 * at 8 Stanfield Hall, Wymondham, Norfolk, | well adapted for Watering Gardens, Breweries, Liquid Manure INVISIBLE WIRE FENCE. tó resist Grazing Stock, — bane 
Contains, on the ay tion, 0 It Pumps, Gas, and Chemical Purpo : uire no applica- dered Rabbit-proof WIRE. WORK in Tra Arches for 
tooma, consisting of Li floor, a noble entrance hall, and a suite | tion of oil or dress ing, and do not become leaky from — Walks Plower Rtands Saiar oi Ke. BOR- 

i of library, ng-room Wing. out of use — — them — suitable * Fire Engines Bordering IG: 4 a 
Man iting with each other by double doors, housekeeper’s ' g — TICULTURAL BUILDINGS, Green and Ho |, Conser- 
. servant” hall, store‘room, Z ere by HOT-WATER APPARATUS 
Éva principal deb renn, 0 » and brewhouse ; on the first floor, „i ULCANISED INDIA-RUBBER GARDEN HOSE fitted *. improved food on in e dss 
e water closet’ on the n — * 1 WW Estim rates ree. Work for the Trade as usuals 
aal aat two large he offices comprise two umpa, ard’s Cases, or Domestic Greenbe 3 
Toom, vi torr ao double co chor e, hay houso, and harness- Ai re agr alpat l'and the Tai a es communication | ALVAN ISED WIRE GAME NETTING — 
pasture i acid toa ne if ro. B, the Box, for conta tools required. G e e eee 
er particulars apply to W. 4 


28 5 Tight, 24-inch 2 a ae. 3 


- * * 
4 ‘saline strong 4 * » 3 
light o 6 o y 
3 inc s — „ ee. s ” 8 
card xtra strong ,, 1 ss 
3 —— ait long lengths | E can be! — ate prices. 
5 coez begs the . SELF. sore gt |, lee u upper h half is paa peah ie wl —̃ 


PIPE REEL, which is found a t convenit hine for same, dri — 
winding up — e ing away the * creep bat of — per square foot, one a BISHOP, ele 
‘arehouse, Goswell-mews, Goswell-road, | Man BARN an Marketplace, 
— — — Fa ers addressed 26 above will receive ay delivered fre pense in London, ret 
immediate | boroughs | 3 


ka A 


ROYAL BOTANIC SOCIETY, 


EXTRA GOLD MEDAL. 
1 To Mr. May, 3 to Mrs. Lawrence, Ealing Park, for 
30 Stove and Greenhouse Plan ts 
2 To Mr. eee, Gardener to S. Rucker, Esq., Wandsworth, 
for 25 Orchids 


THE LARGE GOLD MEDAL. 
1 To 4 3 Gardener to H. Coya r, Esq., Dartford, for 30 
and Greenhouse Pla 

HE MEDI Jorg MEDAL. 

ardener to Sir Edmund — 2 Bart., 
eenhouse Plan 
r. Mylam, ea 
bebe a a to C. B. Warner, Esq., Hoddes- 

hi 


Schröder, Esq., Stratford- 


LD MEDA 
1 To Mr. Taylor, o to J. — . . Streatham, for 
Stove and Greenhouse Plan 


2 To Mr, Cole, Dartford, for 15 Heaths 
3 To Mr. Epps, Nurseryman, Maidstone, 44 12 Heaths 
4 To Mr. Black, Gardener to E. Foster, Esq., Clewer Manor, 


for 12 Pelargoniums, — 8. inch pots 


5 To Mr. eee kopra 
Pelargonium.: 


THE asap SILVER-GUUE MEDAL. 
1 To Mr. T. Williams, Gardene to Miss Traill, Hayes-place, 
Kent, for 10 Kova 8 Plants 


or 0⁰ Mrs. Lawrence, Ealing Park, for 


3 ae Dobson, Gardener to Mr, Beck, Isleworth, for 6 
hids 
4 To Mr. T. Bray, Gardener to E. B. Lousada, Esq., Peak 
House, Sidmouth, for 6 Pine- app 
5 To Mr. Ivison, Gardener to the 3 Dowager of North- 
r yon ogee for a collection m Tropical 
Feu 


E LARGE SILVER MEDAL, 


r to Mr. Beck, Isleworth, for 12 
ron 21 


EXHIBITION, “JULY 4, 4, 1849. 


AWARD OF THE JUDGES. 


6 To Mr. Stains, New-road, for 12 — h in 8-inch pots | 4 To Messrs. Rollisson and 
7 To Mr. Robinson, Gardener to J. Sim ., Pimlico, for | 5 To Mr, Turner, —— 5 ue Pia 
ney Pelargon 6 To Mr. E. G. He 3 for Plants 
8 To Mr. Ambrose, Battersea, ae $ Fancy Pelargoniums 7 To Mr. —— for 6 He eat pe Pelargoniums 
9 To Mr. Gaines, for 6 Calceo lari 8 To Mr. arden 
0 To Mr. Bray, Gardener to Haron de Goldsmid, St. John’s Holme, Requars Park. Pret Basia Pe 1 En, & 
Lodge, Regent’s Park, sage Fuchsias 9 To Mr. ee rv Woolwi ich, fer 1 
11 To Messrs. Lane and So on, Great Berkhompstead, for 100 10 To Mr. Edw: phy aed 2 
Rr. Terry, Gardener to Lady Puller, Youngsbury, for 50 12 To i Gaines, for 6 Fuchsias 
12 2 ir. Terry, ener to er, Youngsbury, for 2 To Mr. Francis, Randi 
Roses 13 To A. Rowlan sq., Zaren , for 100 Roses 
13 To —— — 2 — Gardener to the Marquis of Lansdowne, | 14 To Messrs. Paul and we for 12 new Roses — 
Bo 15 To the same, for 12 Roses (single bl ) 
14 To it Spencer, a an Old Queen Pine-apple. 16 mmond, for a Ripley Queen P. j 
15 To s, Gardener to Sir J, J. Guest, Bart, fora Ripley | 17 To Mr. Jones, for a Ripley weg Pin Ine. ape 
0 — sen Pinea pple 18 To N 2 ‘Spencer, for a Ripiey Quee: 
6 sind lr. ond, Gardener to C. H. Leigh, Esq., for a 5 3 
ayenne ie PENE am e — or a Ripley Queen Pine. app 
17 To. Ir. Lushey, Gardener to James Hill, Esq., kery, | 20 To Me Fie tor nhy brad gree fae 
Streatham, for a dish o black Grapes ( 3 5 21 To Mr. Bruce, Gardener to er, Esq,, 
8 To . Bast Oak hi a dish of white Grapes (Muscat 1 1 Maor (Cuthill > ete — 
ria) 2 To Mr. Henderson, Gardener t 
19 To: r. Northcote, Gardener to Miss Wigram, Wanstead, of Black Hambur — poi PeR Beaumont, toast 
prenin of | d Mrs, Oddie, Col H fi 24 To Me Ti e et: 7 — „ 
20 To Mr. Monro, Bar ener to Mrs. e, Colney House, for o Mr, Taylor, peeta to J. 
four dishes of Peaches and Nectarines 25 ad 8 Pie ld, 2 to . Walen Ber 
To S Parker, Gar 0 J. a bn te Esq., for two h Hall, A 
dishes of Peaches and Nectari 26 To] = 21 5 f sng the 6 pe A ae 
22 To. + Bassett, Gardener — R. 8. Ho Hand, Esq., ston- 27 To Mr. 1 N to S. Gurney, Esq, * 
hire a splendid plant of Camarotis purpurea, over- Park, fi : 
d at the first lten, 0 n May 16t 28 to. lr. ‘thomson, — to Mrs, Byng, Wrotham | 5 
or t. 
THE a SILVER MEDAL. 
1 To Mr. Green, Gardener to Sir E. 3 Bart., for a = a . — — ot, Gardener to T. B. I 1 
specimen | ages of Rondeletia e spec: for ae errin, Esq, Fi f 
2 3 Mylam, for a specimen — of Epidendrum eru- |31 To Mr. Collins, Gardener to E. H. Chapm an, Beg Ba 155 
esce ala 
3 To ope Rollisson and Sons, Tooting, for Barringtonia | 32 To = 3 5 ae ea ges i = 
racemosa a ae 
4 To Mr. May, Gardener to Mrs. Lawrence, for Elwocarpus | 33 To. Me “thompson, Wro p sie etre soat of Alexandria) . 


TH 
1 To Moart. paars, Nurserymen Clapham, for 12 Heaths 3 Frontignan Gra , 
2 To Mr. , Gardener to R. G. Loraine, Esq., Wallington 5 To ne Williams, Gardener to C. B. Warner, Esq., for Ly- | 34 To Mr. gy - {rods of Peaches and Neato 
hii ee ' 6 Orchi ium sp. from India 35 To Mr. T. Bray, Sidmouth, for a dish of Cnerries 
: To Mr. me, . for 12 Pelargoniums, in 8. inch pots 6 — Mr. beeps Morton for 12 = Alpines 36 To Mr, P. Lydiar Bach, for four dishes of ae 
1 es, Nurseryma n, Battersea, for 12 Pelargoniums, 7 To a: 3 ardener to J. H. Oughton, Esq., for 6 Cape 37 To k A Esq., Pine-apple-place, for 6 1 
oi 
5 To Mr. Parker, _ H. Oughton, Esq., Roe-| 8 To Mr. Green, for 6 Heaths 38 To Mr. 4 Variegated Plants 
hampton, for 6 teat in 11 inch pots S 9 To Me. roa Gardener to C. B. Warner, Esq., for 12 | 39 To Mr. Green, Pi F 1 g ; 
36 3 Thomson. Gardener to Mrs. Byng, rotham-park, 10 To the satis, r30 40 To John M 58 Yoga, Esq., Albert-terrace, Ri 1 T 
ey of Grapes (distinet varieties) 1 To Mr. Robinson fort 1² 8 ums, in 8. inch pot iT z yi ig He, 
E SILVER-GILT MEDAL. ’ „ i 41 To Mr ole, 25 1 Labels (Ist elass) tg 
1 . _Narseryien, andes ond, for 20 a = 15 "Moseley y, Esq., Piue-apple-place, for 6 Fancy "Pelar- | 42 To Mr. ern e stone, 5 coe Lab . aa 
2 To a J. B Pare ardeuer to Bese. Miller, * Collyer’s- à eos 6 3 5 R road, St. John's. wood, 1 To Messrs. Rollisson an ped for Garten d tet 
„ sack, Wail Stents sinia a 14 To Mr. Turner, Slough, for 12 Carnations 2 To Mr. Smith, Gardener to Jose 
. gion 8 or tove and Green- 15 To Mr. Edwards, Holloway, for 12 Picotees Alpine Plants 
An . 3 a for 6 Cape Pel 16 To Mr. Norman, Woolwich, for 12 Pin 3 To Mr. Stanly, Gardener to H. Berens, Esq, Siem fe’ 
5 To M sing ùi ew-road, for 6 Cape Pelargoniums f 17 To Mr, Robinson, for 6 sias Cape Pelargouiums hg 
a D n and Sons, Nurserymen, Tooting, for 18 To Messrs. Paul and Son, Cheshuat, for 100 Roses 22 SS — 
e , o . Gaines, for a Seedling Pan 
ia ree Wi ii ieee 70 Mins. Un 2 Bee 19 To Mr ob loses” Gardener to A. George, Esq., Ponder’s-end, „„ n 
7 BR dora ey s, Batterson, for6 Pelarzontoms, n-ne ra 20 To Messrs. Lan and Son, for 12 new Roses 6 To po Hoyle, Reading, for a deep 
; 33 — arom a 5 1 21 To the same, for 12 Roses (single blooms) . um named Gem” * 
10 70 Messrs . He > 4 r ancy — "zona T 6 22 To Mr. rte a 50 Providence Pine-apple 7 TO Ar. Epps, for a seedling H 
erson and Co., Pine-apple-place, for 6 Cal- | 93 To Mr, Fleming, Gardener to the Duke of Sutherland, for 5 — — om Keynes, 5 for 24 oe 
1 Old Quee: n Pine. pple. r. Thompson, lv er, for 24 Pa 
11 To M Mr. Turnbull, Gardener to the Duke of Marlborough, | 24 T 8 fi “Ri 51 10 To Mr. Francis, Hertford, for 12 n 
Blenheim, for a Aiie — Pine-apple 25 To Mr „ Riphinst F 11 To Mr. 1 rancis, for 12 Roses (si ngle 5 blooms) 
12 To Mr. T. Bray y, 6 ard S E. B. Louseda, Beg. for an pr Ne ser instone, Heckfield Place, for an Antigua Queen 12 To} ate, W 10 ods, Gardener to P. P. Wiss, Esq, St. alo | 
26 To Mr. Elliott, Gardener to J. B. Boothby, Esq., Twyford a Persian graen- AAN i 
13 To 5 5 Jone — Gardener to Sir J. J. Guest, Bart., Dowlais 7 bbey A for a green-fleshed Melon (Fleming's Meid 13 To Mr. Dickinson, Gardener 3 . Sutton, — 
es pe ee © r Tydvil, Glamorganshire, for a Ripley 1 near Great Berkhampstead, for a 220 T 26. : 
ueen ine-apple 14 To Mr. Stewart, Gardener to R. Durant, Esdo 
14 Ey Ee Bray, iat ching to E. B. Louŝada, Esq., for an ai gs à “Drumm "fo a box of Grapes Melon fleshed Mok 0 
ville Pine- : 15 To Mr. Henderson, Gardener to Sir Beaumont, 
15 . eoa Sir den e Bt., | 3 Ae 1 1 nen. eee a e ok albaran oy gO 4 ra 8 He ph 0, 
istinet 7 white Grapes teas oe of f Alexandri ria) 16 To ae 2 Oakhill, for the same 125 
16 To — 3 ball, Gardencr taining not less than 1 Ibe y 3i To Mr. e aad dishes es of Peaches vig Nectarines | 17 To fani 3 to E. Lyon, Bede Terma 
3 o eet „Lydia ath, for four dis pee of Strawberri Oddie, for two 
15 * ie 5 „ipren e of Su as — To Mr. Bray, Sanos, for a dish of 2 To Mr. J; ene 8 to Mrs. i 
1 — fora —— dish « of Black Bambang "Gre 34 To an Gri Peaches and N dish ato 
o Mr. mete f white Grapes (uscat 35 To = one 8 H. Colyer, Esq., for a Peach tree 19 To a gc nsford, Brentford, 25 
in ae 
19 To — — Barker, 3 to J. H. Oughton, Esq., for four 36 To Mr. Taylor, Gardener to J. Coster, Esq, for correct 20 To Mr. mper for four dishes of St í 
“THe SILVER MEDAL. Labels (lat glass) : 31 To Me, Koroan, Gardener wo A MED 
37 To Mr. Plant, Gardener to J. H. Schröder, Esq. dishes of Strambe 
JJ E eee Tints Wee Ge)” Labela (ad aan er Henan g at et rea 
23 To urn fo 
2 To L for a specimen plant of Epidendrum sp. 1 rb R BENRA ye MEDAL. 24 To Me. Collins, Gardener es 5 
o Mr. May, Gardener to Mrs. Lawrence, for a specimen dish of Violette Hative 
3 Yee Henderson and Co., for a specimen plant of plant ot Kalosanthes grandiflora miniata * 25 To Mr. P. aha rd, for British Queen 8 
anhopea ti 2 To Mr. Cole, for a pombe) plant of Achmea fulgens 6 To Mr. Monro, for eight ki Stra 


4 To Messrs. Pamplin, Lea- ridge. road, for 12 peg? 
5 To Mr. Bruce, Gardener to Boyd Miller, Esq., for 6 


LIGHT. CHEAP, AND DURABLE ROOFING. 
ROGGON’S PATENT ASPHALTE ROOF ING 
ee n to rain, snow, and 


ee sare a fo eal ta timber 


e or unpractised persons. 
CROGGON’S PATENT NON-CON. 


EI. „tor Steam Bollers and Pipes, sa 
fuel. Samples and Testimonials sent by post on eded 


e e 821105 Tondon. 


3 en Jack, eae to R. G. Loraine, Esq., for hank: 


pass extensive exper . in all cli- | 
quired for slates; can be laid | Do 


2 
27 To Mr. Taylor, 
28 To Messrs. Pamplin, for 


for 8 Labels dete 6 


— 


HOOL FOR e ecg AND SCIENTIFIC 
pecially 


Suffolk, ae th 
RENDLESHAM, M. P.; y 
ssical and Mathematical — ae in- 
uate of Cambridge; m- 


be known on application 
et, Suffolk. 


A CLEAR COMPLE 


G ODFREY’S EX’ 
rape 5 POP BL DER cent ei 2 The First-Class Passenger Ship 
epg, and preserving tae Ski, an fa ging bing il be e er the Compost’ 
fume esd deli ats fair f a Settlements, from the pei of London, 
sunburn, delight c., and 3 ee ee. Monday the 6th August nex 122 
qualities er the skin soft, pliable, and free from dryness, ates of Passage, Provisions ae: — 
_scurf, ., clear it from ev „ pimple, eruption; i 
and. ad, by mrinuing its use oniy © sheet Sys Tm, akin will be- ‘or each Person. atin, cabin. Steerage, 
fectly a apd beaut pone yee coth, and the complexion fer- | 14 years old, and upwards = 8 
r Dan 9d., with 7 years old, and under 14 2 36 Ñ 
= ing it, by all medisine TETTE ee zee oi, sod unii 7 E O eee 
8 Berar ey durable and eh oon REN An experienced Surgeon is appointed by the Company, ond —. 
3 feet wide e 8 vu feet 6 . edicines, Medical Comforts, and an ample Dietary provided 
12 213 fi Are 0 | for each Class of Passen e-Cabins are provided 
di pie one” . . 310 : so ons o Passage, or farther Ini assage in the . 
nch Mattress on it, is a most excel l nformation, apply at THE 
re Peer and SON'S LIST of BEDDING, with Naw estano House or to iy order ote Starner, Broker 
ev 
of Bedding, sent ig post.—Heat and Sox, Bi Ni A pee a ETON. 
(opposite ew Zealand 
Se C a Demin duly 1, 1840. 


b ebnen 18 


IR Ts.—. 
Foe etter sram long wish 


HE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 


~ \GRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


I stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, JULY 21. 


No. 99—1849.] 
— on 


X. 
| Nets, C 


2 
Peat wes conversion of, into 
1 ede 455 a 
Pigs hag om rds 
Plants, perfect n afis 
diseases oft.. 
Plumbago 22 oe 
Poly podium 
sn Lagoa 
Potatoes, cut ting — 0 
Potato disease, cause of 


e ape 


rons 


7 


8 (Mr.) Nursery, noticed pH 
Roses, climbing — 
9 453 


Scale, to ki l 
new, for ithododeadrous = 
453 
5 


seseseseossses 


Bo il, 
Sparrow nuisan 
inea ows 


ee 
— sin 15 


453 6 
| Peat, — wood a substit ute 


whee besdecccenas — 
42 6 


22222 . 454 e 
ff. 3 a 


EL seb NIU M—“ aaen MAGNIFI- 


[Price 6d. 


lants of os 


GREENHOU 
a FREEMAN, Hons aeii Buriper and Hot- 


ter Apparatus Manufac cturer, Triangle, Hackney, near 


rende ar 


LL m Feats 


Me 9 wa 


ngdom. 


AND H. 


Yellow, 


Noisette and other Climbing 


dozen 


rar SOUTH LONDON FLORICULTURAL 
00 


Tal the Patronage of HER Most GRACIOUS MAJESTY, 
Peco tion sA Cenk above Society, wil 
ROYAL SURREY ZOOLOGICAL enp y iSe 


00 
en Plants, Cape Heaths, Fuchsias, Roses 


* — “epg 9 sw Grapes, Pines, — 
es 0) ri 


rs will also be awarded, 
d Picotees 


s. J. and J. Fatsbair, 9 ‘Of ‘Clapham, to Class the First, 
for 6 Cape Heath: 


s, Large Sprer 1 Medal. 
50. 58., for white- 


HAH 


hibitors, when 
viz.: 


s Pl 
of Prizes and aie na ca “for Exhibiting 
Joun TAYLOR NEVILLE, Secretary, Ebe- 
urrey. 


12 Achimenes, best v 
Cam se „ fin 


24 Choice “Evléea, one of as 
eraniums, 1 
0 6 best 
Ditto 

Soh 
Ery a Fulgentissime 5 
their Fortunii 

Clerodendron microphyl- 
lum 5 
Balsamina repens H 
New — Rhododen- 


Rhodbdendron E avani- 


ic] 
285 


hoice Geranium, C ji 


rb + — doe ree encomiums pass oo 
Florist,” = hone ao pe apy * „ 
any furt un 
„ Shide | rad near 
BROWN will forward the fi 
and CHOICE PLANTS to any part of t 


12 “Ten scented Roses, superior sorts, one of ea So 
evoniensis —— Noisette Roses, per * en 
aud C 


New ahd Choice Chrysanthemum 
Fine New Perennial Phloxes, Belgian varietal, per 


The newest and most approved Pe tunias, Verbenas, 
and Fuchsias, psn — a by post, per doz, 


est — wall set with flower bude, per 
2 superb variation for 


fancy varieties, fi 
new perpetual scarlet, ea 


` 8 
O ao 882 


1 
wpor * a of en 
this 


t- 42 ft. long, 43 wide, 90 l.; 


necessary. 23 ‘Mas 


London, begs to eall the 9 of the gentry to his bir prices 
as ial- 4 pr reenhouses, fi pe 


ood Substan rye 
` 21 13 wide, 5 50L ; 

A large —— 0 Conservatories, 3 

Iro 3 lights, Summer- 

h in the above line, 


10 wide, 501. 
Pits, Mel 
houses, peor an 


Newport, Isle of Wight. 
yl- 


n — 
YMEN AND 3 
OLD, 14 order of the T 
Deed of Assignment, in one lot, wae Stoc! 
. e SWANSEA NURSERY, 
Wales, lately 3 
an 


rustee, 
in Tr ad 
arean Sou! 


rimson, 
in Pots, suitable for 


_ 


per dozen 
nce in p $s 
8, per doz 


, 6s.and 


2050 Ae oO AACO 


— 222 
E 


S aa Vie 


ach 
Viola lutea 
Lili — speciosum ru- 
bru “A 
Phiox 8 
White Salvia — Azurea 
compacta, e 
Thunbergias of | sorts; Is. 
to 
Gloxinias, new sorts, 
2 


e 
3 


„ a AR S CSO 8 


e — — e e 


d cal ceolari: 


18. per packet. 
&c., by post. 


7 ATI 


He 


(original 
day of July, 1849, Ax che dul 
ion in reference t 


n 


Y FAIR AND FLA 


id 


nt tho Infirm 


10 
F 
1 


171 


i 


for 

for all Plants sent pa EXHI 

for — Hene as 
— — 


10 


best collec 
— deel exclusive 

collection of Ten Plauts, ys 
Six Plants, * Third . 8, 


be ll Exhibition being 


zA will be empowered to 
merits of an 7 collection 
seem to dese: 


send whatever may be in their power, 
t importance, for the 
plants — — for this 
k — Tuesday evening, the 7th instan 
he following mor: To $ 
the Sale Tent.—All ants sent to this 
to v. 
should ax) delivered at the 
intended f ie Tent No. 
T FLOWERS. — 3 of Pines 


a distance may fbe sent, K 

AL REGULATES 
Will be NS.—Judges will 
the purpose 
Superintending 
by each e 


The 9 


Sa 
— 
AMES Mawpsze. 


to the Gurduiars, and an nad. 
on application to the . — or Secre- 
WDSLEY and THOMAS WHALLEY, Secretaries. 


ON AND PICOTEE EXHI- 
lly fixed for the ee is postponed to TUES- 
of Prizes, and any 
ual Meeting of the Provin- 
prow ers, a 2 had of C. TURNER, pami ia 


JWER SHOW, in b 
rmary and the 

e 8th, 9th, and 10th of 
RTICULTURAL mies | I 


ted tha atmany P byte d 
4 


that their plants are not sufficien tly y good | to 
Tent should 
t, 


the 
„ spine utions, — fn Ste sold yan — 


&c., and a fresh s 
— 1y i of 7 Flowers each 
te is pp e o. 
o th 


ot be Exhibitors. 
ion Tick etsfor the Gar- 
ster Toe Atal a before 9 o’clock in 


‘eke: plant in order to avoid 
e mistakes in the return of plants, it is 
should onan del elivered ontributor, to 
tee will a 


0 TILE: 


amount in penn; 
his general Seed- 


ry large double Em 
Sock, Red 
w White Giant Winter do. 


0.5 


nches, 10s. 6d. oy and upw 
The e presen 

every plant sent ou 
g | Well-grow wn spene ens.—Bagsh 


ON, SEE 


— of that country. 
Thomas os of Ph f 
0 


ved a the 
i 
d none is to be 


tata QA 


Also List o of 2 Plants, Roses, 


Albion N a, Stoke Neri London, J 1 5 


ROW CABB 


om 
3 po ve 
Be Sy Bs — 


Shru bs, 
further’ particulars, apply 
Office. Swans 


o Mr, Jonx WilIiaus, Cambria 


0 ee dese Boned a 2 20 1 
of t t kinds, in bs, 5 
5 to 7 Sg ‘neh 1 fro m 8 to 54 eet caves the 
fine healthy condition, 2 4 covered with bloom 8 a oni 
parsculare may be had of F. J. Boo or, Manor Nursery, Shackle- 


8 


TAT TUES, VASES, FOUNTAINS, GARDEN 
ORNAMENTS, COATS OF ARMS, an —— 


mperisha by 
or 5 


ree TO „„ 
EGISTERED a ot rath oo TILES, for 
increasing the productiveness of Strawberries, Melons, 
ines, 2 Seakale, and to ensure chee IA ection, at 
earlier seas * N usual, 
The Gar aie Jaly pt — * _contains an edi- 


torial article “ne chase 5 — ous, 
marks are e extracted: be principle of ii 


3 


1 A 


1 


or 


By such 
appliances, and by the aid of such means, vast — apl. 
results may 2 be looked for. As connected l; 
with the culture trawberries and Melons, the use of s 
ar would andere pa cet hom te eng 8 s and flavour 

ll repeat, that the E Al 
that we ask, on the part of Mr. Roberts, is thot 3 of horti 
— for poupre them in a prominent manner ¢ 

calu which, so far 


* N d 


for Flowering next Season, Very nrntons of H 
mperor Ve 


oh 8 
Hol liyhoes, 12 sorts, mixed 


Ne 
Carnation and Picotee (mixed) | Auricula, finest mixed 


— pink 
d white 


better cann — 5 Leiceste 
het been receivedfrom Germany, and | can con 


Borough. 


YPTOMERIA JAPONICA 3 
STANDISH anp NOBLE 


handsome, 


t is the most N time for fae | out, and 
by Messrs. S. and 


fectio 
ABD 4 with t 


is appended 


to J. 


0 AGRICULTORISTS, 
CA voMPOU ND 3 aera 


uitable for 
per ton, g easy - cach peculiar 
. to Sl, per t delive tH 


results, bo 
2 ‘Ror the s is re aped, besides a materi 
the ~ the 


dine crop 


Surrey, July 42 


D-GROWERS, Maldon, Essex“ 
ing 


| or mor e o of stable manure, 


rp porti pape prs thereto he — ensuing 
spring, to make it as sagt s as + with the applies of 10 tons 


ture 


philbers ‘louse, "Maidenhead, Berks, 


agp describes it. 


postage s 


ä 55224460 


mp! 
N. B. 4 best varieties of Cabbages, ‘ares 1 ss Is. 


” 


26. 
84d. 


v 
— awn 5 ethan fh m is, 
S emo 
from u k wn correspondents te iiio 


»” 


a who have already given the manure a fair 


m bd one 
r 2 


This assertion isn 
of p Of discernment, 
practical trial in 
FOR E FLOW WERS AND cei, by a te IN GARDENS = POTS, 
t M pared expressly, 
— s abiy adapted and — in tin 
in 


derable saving is X 
rious y arrr rene of dhe fa Ait ses, Circulars 
de anure, 3 

of ie v aie quisite information, y be had upon applying to 


—— —-— &c.—H. Cores takes 


COLE: 
<OTICE ge the several customers po others 
wh 


9s. Gd. each. en three or more 
anoles: many of the ae stations 


to 18. 6d. 


7 Stirling. N. B 


Museum 


a 

entific proprietor who has ar n pleas ‘respectable and 

de — its preparation, and pri * “deputation for its sale, 
ng a re o tricks in y of adult &e, 


lei frequently practised 555 e fv not wish to run 
e 


acquired reputation being thus injured. 
only authorised agents, at pres resent, besides H. Cor Es, 
re- IN Lon : Mr. M. e | nee es. 
cadi illy; 

M G Mi 


naon, 


N. B. Samples to be seen at 


3 tb cond 


the Office of this Paper, 


| Covent-garden ; an 


| come direct to H. © CoLE 


Arrangements are also now 
in Epinporcu and DUBLIN. 


himself, 
to ensure no ¢ 


ofthe Des 

er- square, 
. — and ery aru information 
0 


IEE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONIC 


GLASS FOR 8 RIES, | 
Ae, soon sheet Siah of 
ture, mi he vary d. to 3d. 
r the usual sizes required, — pre 
dy pa pee p 5 * 
Lists of Prices and estimates forwarded, on application, for 
T ROUGH FLATE, THICK CROWN GLASS, GLASS 
LAT TER-PI AG 
GLASSES, GLASS MILK PANS, PATENT P ATE-GLASS, 
0 * GLASS, and GLAS 
» 35, Soho-s 22 London 


YAMENTAL 
TLEY 
‘ardeners month, 


GLAS S. 
HOMAS MILLINGTON is pia Foreign 


an nd 200K. cases, — ' large dimensions, 16-02, at 3d. 
cut to size in rang 1 at 33d. 
British Plate Glass for Windows as well as for Hor- 
ticultural purposes, from 1s, 2d. to 2s. per foot. No 2 
should — without this great additional improvemen their 
me — 


List of Prices forwarded on application at the 
—— 37 — — street Without, Lo = on. 
MILK PANS, PROPAGATING GLASSE 
JANES PHILLIPS & 00. beg to hand thee oot R 
rices, as follows 
GLASS MILK PANS, 
12 inches diameter, each — . Od — ine — ms se 2 = 
14 „ 2 6 {2 
16 si va ” O 24 „ ” ” $ 0 
18 ” n” 6 
PROPAGATING $ BER aa CUCUMBER TUBES. 
GLASSES. f 

2 in. diam., each 0s, 2d—0 24 inches lon 25. 0d 
$ y 50 —0 22 sd 1 10 
43 * ” ay 2 oe 
5 ” » —0 7 rs 
6 * es —0 10 18 5 3 oi 
Toos EEEE e iS 
8 ” * =l. 4 
| ee 27 —1 8 14 ie ous 14 
i % 

— 2 —3 6 Made to any length. 
Paal e148 5 . 10d, each. WASP be Oy * — * s 
LACTOMETERS for rying the 8 ete tubes, 7 

Address, 116, Bishop Loa — 

ARTLEY’S PATENT 28 PLATE GLASS 

FOR CONSERVATORIES.— The readers of f- 
deners’ Chronicle — Feb, 24th, must have observed 


= =e 5 in which this 
ave re- arranged our * of 

nai with those of the 
attention * Nobili 


D- 
ces to correspond pre- 
— "a a ee beg the 
other 


whi 


— * 


10 LA 5 — 4 14 tby a — 
13 foo cane 


4 feet 

888 * 2 nad by 
to JAMES ra and T Co, Lege eee Glass Ware- 
house, 116, Bisko sie ee te-stree out. Lond 


uares und er 1 8 y 6 
AAA wader ep py 
eh eee 


3 | 


| those who bis 


| of Horti cultur. 


e AND CO., 61, Gracechurch-stree 
Lond d 17, New Park. et stre we 3 Southwark, Inventors 
and — of the Improved CONIC “peng and DOUBL 
3 RICAL BOILERS, — “method of of 
etho 


me 


secured t to any required rnach, Withee’ the aid of pipes 

S. an aao 10, at the request of numerous 

they are now making their Boilers of Iron, as well a 

Copper, ps o Well known the ay is reduced. T en 
kno 


are arcely req 

not peda on in operation ö ses 
be forwarded, as me as reference of the highest authority; 
they may b ost of t pr’ 8 
Nurs grey dee t the eins dom. 


S.a 
17, Ne — in ns every a ticle required a the construction 
al Buildin 8, k well as — — them, may be 

ta 


— upon the most 
onies, Palisading, Field and Garden 


Fences, Wire-work 
REDUCTION IN PRICE OF BOILERS. 


ORo 


my been tested by a 


LE. 


eet 3 
N’S PATENT ASP 
rvious to 


s perfectly impery: 
lon 
ves half 


P Pat TRON—His R IN 
RESIDENT OF THE CouNciL—Riph: 
Vice PRE — — 
Patwowear—-dohe Wilson, F 
ea d First MASTER— 
ND MAsTER—J, D. Pem 
RESIDENT Proreasons deri lture: 


Natural History, Bi 


— ris 
tany, ecology: 
Ma 5 ematics pae ri Frito 
Prac 


erinary 


| — “while the —— 160 


deed, it can be obtain éd a 


oo 
* . f 


CE 
oyal Highend 


(J 


wired for sata 8 
ae 


ELLATT anD 8 (late oe and 


— Glass Works, Holland-street, Blac 


Glasses, 1s, 6d. per l 

each; Propaga 

do. i ag 2d. per Ib! i Grape Shades, 18. 6d, to 2s. 
he u 


each; Fish-bowls, ar ls. 6 each ; Wasp and Fly-traps, 40s, 

per gross, ai gr 6d. per doz — By t of —— traps 
ay be pres aa (otherwise certain) destr uction 3 
U AN ND M A ass URES. 


A OTHER 
PERUNAN GUANO, of the finest quality, direct 


NITRATES $ SODA AND POTASH, 
TE OF LIME), 

SOIL. 

SULPHURIC ACID AND COPROLITE. 

SODA ASH 1 . 

SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME (mad 


1 


ting Glasses, white, 1s. per lb.; do., green, 10d.; | 


AGRICULTURA wa : * — all Ea of —— 


value, may be h 


BURBINGE ax AND HEALY beg respectfully to inform 


130, — London, , July 21. 
Bure! DGE AT 
at this tim 
of —— &c., upon v their 


r system of Hot Water Apparatus They refer to psd 
under-eationed places, where they have erected most e: 


Royal i Botanie Gardens, Kew. 


Horticultural es, a an beer the new 
boile — —— to the large Con 
gargo Cons Royal p Airon Gardens, Regent’s-park, 


Duke of Devonshire’, 4 8, 1 Garde 


| — wit 


PRIZES, 


p 
and practical instruction 
th the a 


ord 
aaa ae 26 „Kin 


of — e of heh 8 to make a considerable reduction in Hiasan Miti 
the price. 0 par — The price will pee 
50 ft. 4 in. pipe 115 0 

gin in, 7 75 ft, 4 in. do. z 75 5 0 

14 in. i 300 ft. tin. do a „ 2 Wee BY HER 

16 in. do. 150 fi n. do * 310 0 

18 in. do. 250 fi n. do „ 110 0 MAJESTY’S 

Ain. do. 350 ft. 4 in. do 5 10 0 LRI 

24 in, . ii 450 fi — do 700 Mate Piles: 

i EW PATTERN BOILERS, AND Co., o b's- 
2 in, will warm 800 ft, 4 in. pi . 15 15 0 IF * row, London, the Manngact fers 
N 38 in in. —— in. do. 25 0 0 E ASPHALTED FELT FOR ROOFING 

in., 10 0¹ ers with double — up to 18 i in., “bs. extra; to 24 Houses, Farm Buildings, Shedding, Wi 

s. extra ; all above, the same price. purposes, to protect Pla Frost, 


st Inp1a Comp. 
HONOURABLE COMMISSIONERS OF 
— MAJESTY’S ESTATE, ISLE or poration ge a 


L BOTANIC GARD 


And on — Estates of the Dukes of ros Norfolk, 2 
land, Newcastle, — — a (at Riehen 
the late Earl Spencer, a 
and at the Roran —— * . tec 


Earl of Gai ugh u ner 

Earl of Zetland’s, U 5 square. 

Robert Hanbury, Esq., azr near Ware, Herts, Itish e price of any o 
Mr, Glendinning’s N: 


BY HER ROYAL LETTERS 


MAJESTY’S PATENT, 


OUSE V WORKA E KINGS ROAD, CHELSEA, 
1 favie the shiniin of Gentlemen ypt 


PATENT HOTH 


E. e DENGE 


which he wil 
owt Good Glass 


Made to 3 32 inches 


ENN 
* Samples, with 


ARDENS, REGENT’ 


the Nobility and Ga 


3 
tions for its aie 


Mase FOTHERGILL, 115 jrs Upper Thames-street, Lond warrant superior every respect to any er Majesty’s Commi 
„ e., will be 2 * 21 — foot, 1 foot — aa 1 feet long, on the so 5 — a jin the result that they 
arded on receipt of 8 postage stamps, Free to purchas Houses when completed, from 1s. 3d. to 1s, 6d, per superficial ee Rooms at the Houses of Parliament 
a 78 e. foot, according t to A. pa N our principle being formed ie Felt. Quantity altogether 24, 
TURNIP SOWING, HEA afie 10 — n ee meade dinot a 
7 4 1 —— COMPANY, having — et i a 
e “URA for Turni construction of 
nne 'urnips and T°, 2E SOLD, a pure n irei NEAPOLITAN SOW, | Every information sats tthe Felt 
It — m in the driest season, to secure a good plant, old, of PE old; on and two Sows, two months | ang proposed — — Testi 
produce a heavy weight per acre. They would call attention Maila end bree —Apply t DDIABD, Bailiff, Kirkby ORTLAND 50 
to their Superphosphate of Lime, which b the ory, near Hine * een pve ay CEMENT N 
2 jA akont in a very fine, dry — perfectly withstandin 3 andto 
8 e London ure Company have made raulic p is 
te best sarge for a ees sa p of — Guano, apertar a every otter § cisterns, 8 l 
ey direct — or ental castings it ra 
importer’s res. Corn r L of — — p oios aoe pont It never Mi and with eam 


rter’ 
Agricultural $ Salt, and every oth 
enuine Settee. 
EDWARD PURSER, Secretary, 40, Bri 


» 40, treet, B 
[epee 9 15 — GUANO ak. zit 
RTERS, 


Y GIBBS yor SONS, LONDON : 
WILLIAM. JOSEPH MYERS à AND Go, LIVERPOOL; 


sy 
GIBBS, BRIGHT L and BRISTOL; 
ON. 


inp + Aang ivi 
pELTESWOR TH, P WELL, anD » PRYOR, LONDO 
them: e injuri — 


— recom- 
= i makapi or to 
importers, who will amer the article in — 


quant, at their fixed prices, delivering it from the Impo 


J a A 
TEE Ps PATENT ALKALI COMPANY’S METAL. 
BLACK be PURPLE-BROWN 

d of Iron and Wood-w 


exclusive 
refilled, free 


New 
sland, Plymouth ; 1 
fo be « bta “9 ad also, with e es of 
mi s: of the ‘Companys: 20, 

A. WEST, Secretary, 


— rch. — 


to 2 times its own body of san 
turers, J. B. WRITE and 


1 
Ac FüR BUILDING 
BY HOT WA 
ALSO THE CULTIVATION 22 OFT 


K Sons, nee. 


ees 8 


3 THAN HALF 
8 arded. upon 8p. 


Goiene ORMSON, AND BROWN, ner eee 
a, solicit the attention the Nobility, Gen 
Garden to their su sa of — — Tiga — 
—.— — rge a connected wi rticulture, The 
ork done em at the Right Hon, th Ea l 
which 275 ave had th — aot of referri s b 10 — p eon m 
ues to give perfect satisfaction, Mr. Kin, —— 
to show the work and give any inform oun be happy 
5 ley o beg — = the 8 built by them during th . > 
„for orshipful Apothecaries’ Com Lon. i g’s-road, 
on, in their Botanic Garden at Chelsea, 3 the J WEEKS anp Co., Kin BUILDERS, 
— kindly show the work, and answer any —— © TURAL l ARCHITECTS, 2 — 
ey beg also to say the building only is ref Apparatus MANUFACT 7 n e wil 
eating Apparatus was not erected b various Works now in J. WEEKS 
Gnar, OnMson, and Brown, have also the honour of referring | of materials and workmanship, | J for inspection 
tapers of the nobility 85 gentry in the country, and to several | erected on their Prem ises, for atories, 
of the London Nurs Hothouses, Greenhouses, and all heated 
N.B. Plans and Estima furni: a te oss 8 most im i 
JH EAL n SONS LIST OF BE DDING, contain ue forma Ponrilating all Hi 
g a full description of Weights, Sizes, and ‘Prices b ing He entin niam Hota, e., has also 
big ie = * l a — ed to judge the articles best sui 104 3 — te collec of Stove e and Greed 
goo edding, sent free by post, nina "Plans, 
to fiir P 8 196 (opposite the Chapel). — ars 5 io ma eee 


ELARGONIUMS of 1848, 
— g ig mear apte 
d on prepaid appli- 


ss SEEDLING P 
v 
js now ready, and may — 
— ish eworth, J nk 21. 

- at ION 70 8 

TURN a Extensive Colle — of — nterest- 
ifu! se 

Somers. thee, J. H. Paxey, E 

. are 


a 


er 2 HinSjough, July 21. 


The Gardeners Chronicle. their 


SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1849. 


MEETINGS § FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. 

25— Royal South London 

worm, “0 July eer Boen ie 34r M. 
July 24: Slough Carnation and Picotee.— 
Midland Horticultural. 

— — 


e 
1 3728, Derby M 


Ir 


én of ood in their 


those who wis 


of tev. 
Brows has Saied the subject to our notice, 
we earnestly invite the attention of our — 
matali u as we conceive importan 
epa etail: 


minds the — 


is in no degree less impor- 
eatest horticultural 
if- 


js now some pe since we pt the pe 8 


hich 


cattle and — 

industri 

— the er — of all who havea 

untry, an a duty dictated not 

mee by da lere Fa tality; but by the 
nearest personal in 


2 


This is a very different 9 from that of 

local Horticultural Societies” formed in towns 

among the middle class. i 

few excepti — to 2 — year to 
many have long since disappea 

ements of speedy destructio om 

ning inherent in their — 
excite feelings o 


ing. 
ous ati in atelligent and emu- jo 


and other e 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


very high condition; and several allotments have 
— — Pen — 7 bushels o a clean Wheat on the 
hal-r0d, or 56 bushels 


Wheat an acre, farm cease 

fied with Sener if their land yale faa 

scanty sco: 

“ae — those who have seen the eee 
age societies, would believe how nu 


451 


will not require him to lose any part of his day 8 
2 ꝗ— in bri his specimens, * seeit the sho — 


te 


r 
and cn ideas, that the the 
tageousl 


any temporary 
through them. The j 
imens, must be 2 ti 
of su 


— or altogether ie 
to be village soc 


— . of g 

m with oor little luxuries, eithe 
own use or to sell as a source 4 gain, and thus to 
procure a little more animal food than their owners 


| gro 


with | ment, 


gain 
| absolute excellence of —* as a relative and 
wing improvement in the quantity and quality of 
re|food raised by cottagers, and in the beaut 
variety of their flowers, and the tastefulness of their 
nosegays. There should, therefore, be some means 
= — ae evident efforts at i improve- 
ere actual Be ner of the speci- 
mens will mt allow thet to pared with those 
tried Tonge or with more 
an 


their inc is very s 

mee —— not feel the loss of their sub- 
scription very m subseri nom 
should be — =o the feeling of indepen 


could else a 
y; 123 should not thousands of similar 
villages tore their little societies? Most parishes 
people who take — 
or two now 


self-respect, that jewel of English charac — 
che prizes 


i. among a larger variety of prod 
_ When we state me this last paragraph is given 
words of t v. Asner Brown, and that 

the por eb pamphlet from hea it is taken costs 


H 


twopence, w 
| commended it to rart who — y see the 


5 for it will be seen 
arin how small are the 8 and sum 
ich have sufficed to make such a rg * 
itself 3 and go on increasing fo for s 
ount of yearly ang t g AET a 3 13s. — 
in 1837; rat 2s. 5d. in 1841; 61. 28. 4d. in 1847. 
ottagers was 6s. 6d. in 1841; ; 


show of 1837, and al Be. a. in the 
1846 ; it usuall 38 5s, to 10s. of copper, 
i he sal 


Which they could not — 1 — winners 
1 tend little village societi 


TA 


Sati last year, any art artifici ial (em soyaga dien ar 
any ci den yond a 
Cucumber frames, —.— where the shows 


and show “on geo 1 ear te ot ae 21. 78. 6d. ; 
and in 1841 (three shows), 6/. 13s. in 1846 (two 
shows) it was 71. 16s. 7d., and in 1848 (two shows, 
81. 19s. 1d.” 
For the sensible a ya the 3 of 5 — i 
such hum — . 
large a result, we must 
; ae rA recomm dirie tint re pie tie 
jae ts has been let to the poor | adopted with as little change as Undoubt- 
$82, and — | has lately been added. | edly, circ ces may pta pe, 5 some 
in all, e and clean- | departure from them expedient ; but the great prin- 
farming, — and excellence of | ciples on which the Pytchley are founded can, 
testimo e good wo of the o case, be neglected with impunity. We would 
to the Sa gag 2 igs the | more especially point out the following, which are 
The land w. means of | entirely conformable reason and experience; 
: S jeg now it is in any n of them can sete — id : 
: on orticultaral S "e “The circle of e rn T ou k af re- 
— CIGA at Bytes, in North mp- | st ricted that each member may know with wh 
— Formation of similar e * 2 will probably have to compete, and that the distance 


Gardening. 
and Macintosh, 1849, 


y come (su 
= with ——. ing the d 


tions) —— 41. 14s. 10d. in 
71. 98. 11d. in 1841; ani 71. 188. 6d. in 1848 ; 
, accidental ci raised it to 9/. 


1151 ; 
8s. 1d 


ose who give their time to preparing 
the laborious 2 of the eg and clearin 


e onata | 


| cottagers around him prosperous and h 


THERE —— was a 3 —— 45 for e a 
were as as a Dutch pre- 


and wood-ashes. f the 
ixth of the second, one-eight “ig of the third, ae 
twelfth of the fo urth, and 1 urth o 
of the three others. This 
ont emer 


ought — — Tan on — ror day than 
oa rags oo 10 24th was à 
0 some relics of such superstitions, ae 
traceable in yas operati A mysterious 
virtue is ascri rticular dibini of peat and 
loam and leaves as sand or to each of these 


ount of allowance and ex- 
A 25 in the autumn show of 
w of 18 


are held (the only — se — in the parish) is is 
school-room square by 1 


CUSSU 3 


8 | rately, or to oth ay one day endeavour to 
point out what there is of real, and what of unreal, 
in the evidence 


are certain kinds of 


in 2 1053400 to N 25 prizes 


to ordinary m 
. cost II. 19s. 3d., and 29 


p ossess 
lous 2 that plants 2 to 2 their 


SHUWS tie u 


— 9s. wae The whole . outlay * prizes 


of them, and 
These a qualities are popali believed je depend 
nthe peculiar chemical conditions 


a re- u of such 
ived 34 prizes, costing 13s. che co gers and chil- upon a articular centage of iron for instance 
dren 20, costing ting 15s. 94. In that of 1948, 8, the ordinary npon contain a ‘of some other unknown matter 
or 7 which chemi i ight $ e believe 
ase 84; oo costing prs Saas Sse gr ke 1 = AP a bgt i e diferent qualities of peat 
depend upon their physical differences and upo 
a 


ished, 


oO 


of the show room from each cottage member's home 


i th of 
that peat is for many purpose 
and — for boden, 
* American 
Here we 


Shere of er Arras matter in the same 


leaves, dead branches, roots of wiry Grasses, fibres 
the Heather, or such wild p lants, and a 3 
roportion of sand, form the constituents ei the peat 
ras for gardening purposes 
n be made artificially, it will be 8 as good 

It will have 
as rich in 
will as much 


a one 


THE GARDENERS’ 


its —— never at any period throughout the entire 
m to be con- 
It was in fact perpetually | 


a mix- | 


bloo; season posses -n the least clai 
— 2 A ornamental plan 

m a cause al ey rm admit of no other res 
in the epecies—the — of its corolla, which i 
n consequence o 


tead of form 


and ; and ins 


h 8 
De ques 


the very substance which is was ard 

at their door. We therefore — to et attention 
= a case ben - ch we have been We by a ¥ 
ar Devizes, in whi 


those plants, and m ore rete 
in which nth pashan os delight. i If the love 


nt has done, they would, w 


peat is only one of the crop of prejudices which the 
progress of knowledge has to trample down. 


dere a oo -a SUBSTITUTE FOR PEAT. 
are man 
tke: ss elf, ha 


is s shown j 


er ; | plan 


entive of 3 Ledio 


e doubt | have n 
e indis — — of belie that it possesses any meri 
pian 


n or and 


would seem 


received t tho « ordin: nary a attention 3 d on gre 
blosso s therefore useless is 


plan 


bine pat! apse is best tr 
ts being kept moderately dry and e 
sed thei remains of the 


serve for the purpose 
gation, e every Joint being a of pro 


ting — beautiful plan nt the Rho 

rac the won our of a place in your W rs show by 
what sim eans the principal l may be met, 
viz., the takk t of sti suitable soil 


amateur who, i 
cultiv. 
I 


larre portion 


rate plant under pro 


rather sh 


40 


y adopt: 


iment w. 


raised 
pink, eR occasionally ed 
and I cannot 


of which the flowers are 
brown and yellow. 
Pi. Beem 5 has deen most remarkable 


—ͤ— wee 


per. 
property, the flowers shrivel up rapidly after they ex 
f 


eri uded 
88 . it 
enhouse 


CHRONICLE. 


sult, 


the quali tyi is inherent 
is in | e 


of this 


hey 


three isolated 


m 
E 


hope led 
better things of it than the experience above detailed 
v 


as a flower-garden | 


ted as a bse a s 


The young growing 

| shoots root freely a as cuttings, bat automa cuttings are 
will bear 
spre of the pring sen senson 


to erect as barriers 


ome nearer mi 


without i mwn if a with advantage, but a clo 
ir heat searcel, 

The gat Berrio 2 re 3 are eee Its 
is good, dw: t; per owe 


a 
9 779 


are branches ons in 
— would greatly facilitate and bere: to the value d 
n the other hand, the oft reiterated « practial” 
aral about “ unctuous,” “ friable,” ubm 
ious, and m u 


8 
its stolones may be a little troublesonte. 
co. and des 


f 1055 every year, 


1 ne 
1849 ee. e. from Verbena 


a8 | Pic 
h | ¢ aillardia sean 
Migno 


seeds of the following pla 
eolaria 
Erysimum Perofis 
pom a nivalis 

mesia floribunda 
‘Aster ergy are 
Pe T 


Phlo: ox „ 


= 
toma polyantha 
] . Stock ea 
rhe Queen Stock (tru 
Po bate 


Salvi 

— — rn Monelli 

Schizopetalon Walkeri 

Pans 

tee and Carnation 

macrocarpa 
Pentstemon coccineum 

er 8 scarlet Peas 


uble Ja 


green foliage. 

shoots 20 inches long — Fee 
feet they e Bignonia 

eos en —— all 

to their 


frequent most valuable 


occasi * 

Sane of d rel, to you, W ore, 127 your | 0 
ded me eer pots 

p! 


flowers, and th 


ich they wi ere pro- 
duced, my plant | in a pea — and apparently doing 


Swee 
Nierembergia intermedia 
. salicifolia 
in 
Cuphea platycentra 


| Lobelia — compacta 
Mimulus 

Collinsia grandifl 
Schizanthus potrigens 


Sow them in pots on the Ist of August (every year if 
sting | į 
fro! 


necessary at the 
varieti 


they will give intere 
successi “ae re rs 
b 


as near the aed as possible, 
air given in mild wea 
All of th 


good pot plants. Cantium. 


MOST 


the f. 
fruits of Brn Borden 3 in 
ts, comforts, and e convenien 
are 


3 insignis major 
kianum 


* means 

n frosty 
attention, in order 
if kept , the 
or sawdust, and 
with abundance 


em, if commer will flower well, and make 


2 


to 22 (o ich t they can n “for wid 


AEE 


cultural | ON THE CONDITIONS ESSENTIAL TO THE 1 
T PERFECT CULTIVATION.—No. VIII. 


entifi 
i their 


of E is swept away, and fi 


"y T aps o departm 
juggle of aie. ee bee, 
an in the peculi 


least in a pract l point w I 
subject morally) = di care the wild of ot ted 
parapher materials, and to 


every-day life, and rejoice 
ach — —— e stronghold of o opposition, and i 
2 sate 


is scatt tered in the wake of the steady faae AA 


term, iU a far more ex xpressi 
whish that all 


jargon 


and 
scientific 8 in thought fit 


, considered 


1 the 


* 
DISEASES OF 1 


ge -iir 
c | pened to me whilst wandering in in t-trees, 
ing old and thick hedges, or visiting fru! — 


> Vide Mr, Lawes’ pamphlet on “ artificial 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 453 


ther in some part of their length VILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENING. make a s wth, 

ne eee whilst both * and above they I mave recently visited two gardens, deste’ close to | sensatio’ Beem — bitter of . re like * W. H. 

V fora distinct and separate. Still more fre- each other, which come under this head. The Peach- |a “box of Cape bulbs ” — the felonies of custom-house 
ban 0 be s seen thus joined together ; the trees in one of them were without curl, blotch, or wag 9 tural prigs, the large packages of inferior things, 
— more than any other, is liable to this fone of any kind ; whereas in the other the trees the little ones of the rarer, the desiccated Watsonias, 

. The Juniper, the Plum, the Pear, the Oak, and re blistered, cankered, "ab nearly leafless. My at- with as many jackets as the transforming horsemen at 
E Pine, ing to Ginanni, afford examples tention was the more drawn to this circumstance be- | Astley’s. I still find a Melon frame at work best cal- 


acco 

goon the Fn” the Water Ranunculus and some others | cause of the positien of both gardens being precisely | culated to supply the uisite conditions f i 

— But these natural grafts are certainly glee But here e explanation of the mystery. | dormant Amaryllis, Brunsvigia, Neri 8 
$ i n 2 ing 


lzi 
n 
É 
8 
5 
Ò 
a 
g 
®© 
2 
S 
4 
E 
g 
a 
» 
S, 
-i 
g 
© 
8 
75 
m 
3 
2 
3 
. 
i 
5 
g 
lz 
E 
E 


; k and no k use, wi 

st pes, to — pom corns. which are certainly well syringed with clear water about three times a| under it ; Cyrtanthus is a difficult tribe, likes a smallish 
a qonformity with the ordinary laws of Nature. vosi, and they now present a vigorous healthy foliage, | pot, partial shade, and very sandy soil. Vallota I saw 
Besides, 35 far as I could observe, it has only taken | very different indeed from that in n the adjoining garden, flourishing in almost every other window in Scarbo- 
i where the seasons have been most favour- | the trees in which are in fact totally ruined, 3 5 rough, including cottages. I recommend all Amaryllis 
ey in individuals endowed with the greatest | been left to erf and the weather. The Pea to be under-potted the first year. A deep Mignonette 
gout, and specially in the densest parts of the woods. | tree by no means difficult to cultivate on the sol vill ee is a good safety valve — the host of Irideæ, Orni- 
E ach places the soil is peculiarly rich, from the greater | in the midlan d pr rir counties e great . hogalums are very pretty, as also and 
„of vegetable „detritus in daily decompo- are protection 15 Asi from frost, and keeping down | might occupy another box, but both would be better in 
- is reen ay as the trees begin to shoot out, and also kee viol the greenhouse. My preceptor was Dean Herbert’s 
In general, this disorder does not call for the care z ing down red spider i in autumn. elegant work, which leaves little to be desired. «W, H.“ 
m as it does not proome any appare To ban ct the blossoms in spring a piece of worsted | should ascertain that his bulbs are correctly named—a 

of the agen economy. Iam, ho aa netting answers mas but in the absence of that, Fir | rare thing with Cape amagi Mickleweil. 
ill th 


that a tree whic pi year produces | branches or even Ferns fastened loosely to the walls The Sparrow p amaai e presence of any 
or fruits naturally joined together war suffer | will do good 8 always avoiding too thick a cover- of our ra acious birds, rat og or owls, in a garden 
for it, as everything W which takes place in plants con- ing, which is more likely to be injurious than 1 prevent the plundering and destruction of our crops by 


to the course of Natu d pr 
— to their constitution. If the fruits so joined | have access to the d in order to fertilise Gi e „i to ee 4 8 — or fruit from them, except 
ined, it wi i ise t that 


it. fa 
not seeds, or that, at any rate, some of the seeds remain | and the young shoots bigo their growth, the covering * co sumption of insects, 8 
and I should be unwilling to assert that all should be removed. The 8 arising from the for the ft jay which they do to the grain an 
were ever capable of developing themselves. It once | use of netting is that it can be let down during the day | produce; but that nefit is bard. mtmr by the 
scarred to me to separate two branches of a common and pulled up at night, and by "this means all danger | soft-billed ci birds Many f armers just now employ boys 
Maple which had grown together, and were of a con- | from frost is entirely avoided. Those who have adopted | to watch their corn and to continually fire off pistols 
siderable size. I did it with a sharp knife. I covered | precautionary measures of this kind 1 nest 8 charged with — only, so that the enemy is merely 
d season wi v — a neighbour's la 


d cow The | seas 
branches did not suffer, The scars healed over, and the | not will bave to lament its loss. arish may sound as if it were in a state of siege ; and 
branches continued to grow. I have not succeeded in One pound of soft pty and half a — of flowers of in thickly-wooded, game-preservi istri e mis- 
the separation of joined pirya The wounds do not | sulphur, well mixed in two ga allons of warm water, w will | chief done by these apudi; chirping, ever-returning 
y nker. m mi in tri i 


Gexvs XII. Pinevepo.—This disease attacks the with. It should be applied with a Ee brush, care- As to the whole class of scarecrows, &c., the sparro 
roots of some plants. — begin by enlarging to a n | fully insinuating the wash into every curl — crevice. very soon find them out to be truly men of straw, 
gree ; — at cast off the bark which Alternate washings with clear water, with the syringe, treat them accordingly. It isa pity that the merits of 
covers them, others — vand — end by dying. As yet will serve to promote a healthy r and will tend ee pudding, an excellent dish, are not more widel 
2 observed in trees, but coe is no rea- | greatly to prevent the increase Of t the fly. Timely ap-| known, Were t is entrée to e as fashionable as 
son why herbs also should not be subject to i must be of jinom ee is the main point, but they ought like een pers and o - 7 which = i 
Species. ae must e = uously followed up. inferior, we might thus egitimate y estroy and get 
Fini ane PINGUED eee, Fre. ‘Even ation |, aid. not name — eee pe gr p rid of a few detachments o s legion of maraude ers. 
a ata hf me it was rub to the continent small birds are in too great req 
2 — —.—.— ae eee = eae cirumstances no ‘opinion can be | — pi * for the table, to arrive at the beer fate of 
Gams Panto escribes in cap. xii, lib. v. “De matter. Pharo on to "e they attain „here. haps es 
” “i j —— 0 corres n 
T — 7 = n Home Correspondence. or pr most likely to act as a sparrow scarer scarer in gardens; 
Adulteratio * Manures.— Pj reference to the | unless indeed it may increase the evil, 2 attracting 
adulteration “of no, I beg to suggest a very simple flocks of them to insult a captive enemy. D 
pipec GR method, which I have always 3 eli nt to prove] Grapes.— What ails my Damascus Grapes? 
the sample genuine or not. Weigh a small po ion | make no progress whatever in swelling = the Vi 
(say 50 or 100 grains), Dae it toa 24 heat in an iron | runs up under the rafter, and has its roots outside only. 
tensi is ma 


5 


E 
a 
4 
By 
2 
oF 
— 
a 
4 
3 
5 
a 
= 
2 
© 
77 
2 
co 
E 
®© 
1 
4 et 
82 8 
E 
8 
ri 
— 
E 
© 
th 
8 
2 
E. 
— 
2 
> 
© 
J 
4 
o 
a 
2 
5 
Qa 
oO 
4 
— 
8 
* 


makes i : a good ¢ t as made by James 
known to us that the Pine tree sometites | jose Se two. chirds of its weight under the process, there i ceptionable, Is it of too delicate a sort to have ite 
from the i a stron n 2 if not 22 that it is genuine. If in a different tanpu S from its head? 
— —— —.— —— — there be jos he as á will be red, if it be adulterated know of any * to real perfection in 
tay of the writers on the cultivation of Pin cas — with — here destructible by fire the ash will | circumstances? G. O. L. [The Black Damascus is 
id any attentio — lady sti Y| be over weight, and vice versd. It must be a very | no cons tender sort. Till lately, the ground has 
our Ginanni, in his menena vori aes x 3 cunningly devised adulteration which cannot be thus | this season been colder than i 
of Ravenna, where he obs 4 it On b + th eee: If it be required to carry the test further, it * illing coe and Red Spider.— You have f * uently 
@rdinary opinion, that ted. ee le a desi id be done by adding a little muriatie acid to the | stated that water at the tem er of 140° will kill 
i Sane manent Se po apc oa . which will disolve it all but a very small portion; — muscle * n the bark of fru it trees, but you 
ew per | and further a e. simple analysis 1 ee have not in my ‘opinion sufficiently insisted on the 
meen? 5 with little trouble and the expence of a ute is of repeating th l , 
5 and more combustible, 2 J. C. C., Long Wittenham, — (lt — nf at hold day from the first appearance of the insect in May until 
ye 


B 
4 
g 
2. 
g 
a 
gp 
A 
40 


peated by Chabrzeus. e points ha 
out u shall see it. è last have come from under the scale, as ve 
— te, wid Ping n naturally ame xobustioom e A Water Lily.—The most extraordinary plant I found that even when washed with water from a steam- 
From the more subject to it than the domestic one. have yet seen i is as hie irae 

white and afterwards hey increase in size, become y 


—1 small scale ” 
Pinguedo of the Fig -e distinguish it (from the sentation ‘net, which I have had made in the loom at | be an excellent non-conductor of heat. It was owing 
ea — cost of a farthing per square yard, and half that i i 1 — 1 
* 8 PTa there is little ne, in addition for linseed oil. It answers admirably | experiment of washing the tree with thin aansen ; 
of prevention war tere bundance of nutriment, the mode for protecting my Cherries from the blackbirds and those that 
be ey ec whilst, i if once | sparrows, but may be much improved, this being the | succession co 
: 8 It is so in oo ght, ; 
Sued under A eg that we learn the course to be pur- | k ae an 1 ink i it ce be rene ad adopted. T. , | there is no hope of being able to bene 2 afterwards. 
the first SME GS ciated foan The trees should, in Clith sens: [This is no not strong enough, It tears 8 This . thin starch is however a most 
dug alongside of th eared round the roots, or a ditch | and therefore will mite cheap.] effectual — e e L. 
bare, in order to es the roots themselves laid Cape Bulbs.—Absence from home and much preoc- | have proves goat — do tress? , again 
k ti from she tres Se ES of 3 have — my paying the — I | immediate wen the $ pi pete eggs remain 
May also Woe also, should not be omitted. It wished to the Amaryllids, which will not stand neglect | glued to the leaves. T. G., Clitheroe. * 
e this “sie to Feduee the branches and | and the tender mercies of mere gardene A.| Frostin. une.— Looking out of 1 k od yr ow 
daten. Some 0 uld not be done without extreme | Josephine again flowered ay, and was the fol- | about 4 o'clock on the morning 1 
fev bya of the superfluous sap may be with-|jowing year disgusted by being set in a cold Melon | I perceived the whole country white with hoar frost. 
$ with wet dripping on to the bulb, | Upon further « examination I found ice nearly one-fourth 
mocharis water e effect 


ince to 
i w that I was not wrong | vigi I found ate a healthy, after two | this frost Upon some of our hardy forest trees was re- 
*arliest writer Theophrastus must be considered the e —— ae. with slight protection. Aulicum | markable; the leaves of the young Oak, Ash, and 
à masterly 8 who has treated of agriculture in stood in a cold frame this winter, with Cypripedium in- Sycamore » were turned black, but the old trees of the 
signe and venustum and Gardenia radicans, but did not same kin = ee oe 3 "u 4 on their 
* Probabl like it. Damp kills or kee torpid Amaryllids in the autumnal livery, and the points of the y : 
a . r open air sian nek frost. — even Hippeastra, will the Larch were turn turned into a brownish yellow ; alse 


454 THE 


Te 
the Potatoes which were above ground, ey 5 


ias, were very much blackened and cut dow 
While this havoe was committed upon our — forest 


trees 


Fuchsias and Calceolaria 


se trees, not even on 


n „ 3 

t about —— bridge an th 
Allendales suffered very m 1 5 ey those in we 
I could perceive no 


: 8 Hillersdon-terrace, Nent- 


Sc the growth of his Potatoes after the ebe had 
cut ance 


b 
hilst these e sets produe uced this crop, there 
were few or none formed lar 


arger | 
had not been injured. I have heard ‘of n. no disease in the | 


. m 
be tried on a small scale. The tops were cut off b 
few farmers in this neighbourhood two or three y 
ago and abandoned ; it totally failed in preserving the 
crops. The topless plants were ultimately much worse 
than where the plan not been adopted. 
P up the hau gether, but with no better 
n the cases in question, however, a sharp 
n 3 the plan of covering up 


I 
s, and were 


am 
ee Potatoes.—Mr. Lomba’s report 


GARDENERS’ 
1 | evenly over them, the top is put on, the house is shut 
up, and the Tobacco is left to burn The action of 


a very goo 


can to eft to — out without * 


0, crow 


exhi- 
wding the — school mom, 
the scene of our humble debut. e pre 


ent show, 


add that benches of 


CHRONICLE. 


to this 
in| years ago I took eae — pa 


of gi giving 3s. or 4s. lb. 
poses implies the cana 


Cheddar —— — — — 


them i the Aa — at 0 groat m 
the — of whi —— no lim 
principally masses of q Earl 
this year ( ved a I commenced fo 


a 2° 


‘N 
oO 
— 


e and ha he 
| surface was generally transparent, showing an opaque 


white nucleus ; but some were Se er. 


quantity of Potatoes grown light 
ly soil; it is here énerally admitted fact, 
that those farmers who hav: e poorest 


Cumbrian, Irton, July 135 IN d = 

2 plan, we have only aed 1 trial experi- 

"Toning s St. Alban’s Graps.— If I mag) goes we: | 
av Gra 


e gardeners who e grown 
nothing but * bes ve Wilmot’s . Mus suet Dy 


Musq Muscat Pee PR sus; and it has also 
extensively cultivated in 


years—a circumstance | 
much ‘to ip pr ae it tends to destroy the 


in the house were 
ase and I 
— ine me not been mistaken, for I have j 
conical 


moved, 3 or 4 small red- m. the fire are 
Placed on the grate, the 3 is Pl lightly — 


gardening and ure, 
s ~ apn —— duty, or by the p . of a 
of fra 


m 
duty, 
= bo abis s sellit for what wouid pa 


nee have — attended with kirev re Kay 
Treve 
Tobacco = Gardening Purposes.—Passing 
jaca ma warehou — verpool som Kp By ing 
was warehouse a large furnace |° 
3 d the Queen's Tobacco 
= condemned Tobacco was burnt. 


and the i uently rec 
to me, that this Tobe might be applied mr A useful | re 


it could 


and that t without rick of 


It 


uld effectually prevent any 
p - would scarcely 
sulphureous aci 


it ie 
it is 


bl 
y young —.— beco 


peg | OF 


An intelligent feani of mine e has been 


acid ja 
uced — — be injurious 


eavy rains takes place, 
panied with — a as is Bhp eee the — 
so — 8 mperature of 
disea 


aid to 


dener, Norton, near Stockton-on-Tees, Y 
Felling Timber ma Building Purposes -Yon pak 
of the beginning being best 


or two until the sap 


able to 


C 
* 


ie 
as 


a 
Gaa 


di 
2715 
Hi 


2 
effe 
brimstone, and would, I think, be 
efficient a 3 of fraud 
mpediments i 


ma the f allowing 
be used as 1 — suggested, but even if there 
d ubs 


uite ‘cheap and abundant en 


— of both horticulture -L 


— — 2 at the ides idea 


much injury is committed, 


which obacco 3 8 H. L 
e E bavo hamd of bat Pavo not seen may be | è Queen Pine, weig 


... anne, 


the 
ane aarin, In our Re * of 2 
k, on the 11th inst., we 


a e Pine, 1 
t 
, ogling repel ib Ne. 


— 


39—1849.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE? Z 455 


—On thi 


TICULTURAL, Ju Ald fluid refuse was 1 ye from the house, and which he them were plunged i in sawdust on the surface of beds 
vein A follows: For the four | pumped out and applied for garden purposes in its in an exposed situation. All were in capi th, 
— pi 32 the —.— prize was voted liquid state, and he had always found it answer well. In a number of brick beds here, 4 feet wide, we 
rd Advocate, for fine speci- | Mr. — conceived that Mr. S. resided in the noticed a select collection of Junipers, among which 

| 1 mi i 2 


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53 
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— 
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28 
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p 
Lan] 
111 


. to Mr. White, gr. to Mrs. R. wasa man to carry it out in the heart of London ! in 6-inch pots, o true French Paradise ree 
8 floribunda, Tetratheca verticillata, | There was no doubt but liquid manure was valuable, (Pomme ae Pant, whi h Mr. Rivers thinks is 

h thew tice mucronata. or the but the moment it was pumped out of the tank, and | same as the 1 3 e of Armenia. git & very 3 
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d 1. ventricosa preegnans; and a charcoal, the moment the ammonia came in contact on — Peaches, Cherries, Plums, and Pears 
i c a | gro Re we makrot * a 8 of diferent 
. | reservoir for it, and pring it out to the plant when it | kinds ‘of Googeberries, intermixed with which were Fil- 
was awarded to Mr. M‘Lachlan, gr. to | was required. ma „Smith said into his tank a * berts and Nuts, having straight clean stems 4 feet high. 
Esq., for the two best dark Fuchsias, qënit of water was run, and this 2 conceive 1 in this way they fruit well, look 1 
g Etoile de Versailles and Comte de the best agen t for fixing the refuse matter, — — d produce no suckers. In order to give young P 
yon it wo also be the best agent for carrying a ge res climate than they would otherwise have in the 
the e of Lo — Mr. Rogers admitted open ground, Mr. Rivers the had a number of 
i way, but when a — of walls put up, about 3 feet high and 4 feet apart, on 
— * hich t are a an 


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good, but the varieties not considered suf- ground, and a bright sunshine was vin! follow m in London, nailed to upright stakes driven 
afram For the two best Orchids, the So- | it was all absorbed by the atmosphere, d vegeta tation into the ground ; they are black in colour, having beem 
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wn specimens of e | trivance on long stakes has been applied to the train- 
Bone, the latter ee fine; a second ge any remarks of his own. He admitted that there were ing of “rider” Peach trees. Some of the you 
1omson, gr. to Dr. Neill, a | cases where — agent referred to could be applied with Peach trees here were stated to have been cov . 
of Oncidium pulvinatum; having a flower | propriety, as ad heard of sugar casks being returned | with curled leaves in spring, | but they have been per- Í 
t in length, and for another, a variety | to — so indies filled with manure disinfected by | fectly cured by cutting down the shoots; the trees 
of the same —— For the six best and most h a process as that to which their attention was now have made new ones, which will ripen well ‘at ee are 
distinct varieties of Pelargoniums, an award was — g — “aid not, however, think that as regarded | perfectly free from curl or speck of any kind. The 
made to Mr. Cameron, for Gulielma, Rosamond, | Lo ndon, — noae id man be brought into practical | same kinds of s as are u or the Peach trees 


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Mr. Cossar, gr. ay, for Wadde st prize | into the country ata cheap rate, so that he saw no front of these was a plantation of Mr. Rivers's 
ptr Jehu 7 Anais, and Queen Victoria; a reason for a . at the same time, he did not dis- | fruited monthly Raspberry, both in flower and | 
warded to Mr. 8 for La | courage such investigations as the present, as the more | It produces — latter from lateral shoots, which it puts 
Belle Africaine, veers Victoria, and Champion of 8 they could get brought together on so important a | forth from every joint; and in this respect, as well as in 
Devon, An award was also made to Mr. Cameron for | subject the better. Several other gentlemen n spoke upon | the size and — of the berry, d differs from the old 
the two finest dwarf scarlet Geraniums, the varieties | the subject, alluding to the great interest of the question. | variety known as the double beari Ras This 
i m t i nursery 


ictoria and Fro $ prize : ag | 1 1 
(fered for the finest grown specimen of any recently in- Garden Memoranda. Mr. Rivers is trying some important experiments with 
troduced perennial herbaceous plant was gained by Mr. Mr. Riv irei igh ao RSERY, et — An | Vines in the open air, on banks covered with flints, and 
Thomson, with a very large Myosotis azorica; and a hour’s ride b ast train on the Eastern Counties on pillars, on which the Vine has a very ornamental 
second vote wart, gr. to Pro- Railway brings t the visitor to the Harlow station, which | appearance, even independent of fruit; but Mr. Rivers 
fessor for Calystegia perean For the three | is scarcely half our’s wal m this nursery. The | believes that it will ripen fruit managed in this way, and 

Achimenes, an award was made to Mr. | latter is yituated in a hoes: — tof Hertfordshire, on | to that end plants have been procured from the very 

Baxter, gr. to Sir J. Gibson Crai —— for well- Wan plants | gently undulating ground. The turnpike-road to Cam- | northernmost parts of the Vine countries for these pillars. 

of A. bins, gran diflora, and patens. White | bridge and Norwich bounds it to the south-east, and is | Amongst them Piepoule Noir, Moustardie, Raisin 

gained the first prize for the two finest 1 Gloxi- 12 feet lower than the frontage near Mr. Rivers's de Valentia, and numerous others, were in bloom, 

Dias, his kinds being G. maxima and rubra; a second house. The latter is 8 by three terraces, and promised to bear well. Mr. weve! is Bo | | 
or 


was ; of of 
The prize offered for the “twa most distinct varieties of | side planted in 3 ere s pogge ed to the ground, form, m Quince stocks. He has then planted 
i achl a of the is 


* cond premi e p p i ~ 
ted to Mr. Veitch, whose kinds were L. Erinus gran- Sadia could have a better effect than it had. A fine ing fruit. * are all shortened in twice a year, via. , 
and Erinus compacta alba. In the competition | specimen of the Fern-lea ved Beech, Ne years old, June and August. In order to obtain che Plum 
i to Mr. gr lose 


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— i ie edges, which serve as shelter to the for it ; and with a view to get y trees 
— . — 5 —— 1 To 2 ight is a steep bank, he employs Cerasus Mahaleb, or “fee k nmg 
* here ein b Douglas Queen Vis — P hard hite Ga ae turfed over. This as a stock. His object is to have of all 

. | consis of hard, w : $ t 
ident, Henley’ 3 = Benat, an 24 7 oseph Si a has peed wih into a bank of climbing Roses, and a | sizes and of all sorts, in order that = pe Bova may 
prize of one 8 offered by Messrs. J „Dick- most beautiful bank it makes. On the top is a row of be Bogg SA A a tree j 
ugh the Society, to practical gar- | Ayrshires, Semperv ursaults, ] lanted e feet ~ e 
ed Passy au equal numbers apart in a straight line; these are trained to stot yaq 
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A and Sempervirens) tion. — 
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Society . | house ursery, we remarked a row of star 

— — — elimbing Roses, — do of Myrianthes, Princess} Aq is planted with * onal of Oaks, in 

n, gr., Balearres, for a box of Cactus | Marie, crimson Boursault (a — 7 — ese with = — to . their 

which 4 a seedlings. A cer-|stem 9 inches in girth), Bennet’s Seedling, Ke. 


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a seedling near y> me, — 15 * 
it was o Mr. Scott, — to G. H. form in which the Rose could be trained ed could have s high, having . n ak — ant See 
» for a a fine . — Gloxinia, ed Eliza better effect than these weeping Rose trees, whieh xten- 
ery little fruit was shown on N — —— ; never touched with the 3 — | oF 8 og 3 
produced a basket of well grown | Rivers’s house were numbers of pans seedling Eas * 8 . a 
and Mr. Pender, | Conifers. R. raises all his seedling Conifers in the Tarn of eo y gr purp 


eaches, Nectarines E a b sant 
a basket of fine Pads and Nectarines. | open air ; they never at 


per- 
p ad tiie ET them ti begin to come | irti 

g — for exhibition only, not | forated tile is p z — common l i 
— alone, but also from private te growers. | up ~ ove is then removed, and more than | which years a A n l with ted, and were doing meat 


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JJ... Sei Ne, whch hw ro eed a in hs al scp on 


of which is given at p. 89 of 2 volume ked «Plan stocks, and are oo well. Mr. | hedge ; the roof es driven in na 

89 0 worked on ving well. . at back 

deny ai Mr. J. Toulmin Smith said, while he did not | R. is of opinion that the Peach will prove a valuable 1 feet 7 feet high at back, 2 at Tih in front tay 
ciene b R., | stoc path s 


| d N 8 is a 
* Strong advocate for the use of liquid manure, | as plants ean be fruited on it ina very small state. We end = the right E posa beds, ae ae 2 
ä aat oea it best | saw Peaches in 4-inch pots quite healthy, and Mr, R. . * ‘oie ig 
Premises the purposes of vegeta his own | thinks they might be fruited well in raises pots. Of baring gtd wing to the extreme 
he had a tank, e iho whole of the | Roses in pots there were many thousands ; quantities 5 4 el 8 


— 


— — 


456 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


We now come to the Roses, of which Mr. Rivers bas | early flowering climbing Roses, than which nothing can to begin again, as with 

an amazing quantity. We think we under him to | be more beautiful when they are tastefully arranged. plenty of lade Suitable in heath countries, 
say that he had 10,000 standard id Perpetuals and | selecting the vari for extensive cultivation, those won pe d trouble by aå But you Would arè, bews kam 

bons alone, chiefly worked ti stock, should be chosen which found most able to endure ste y tiar | 8 hole at ae En depriving plan, sae 
and clean and healthy. No aphis ight was the severity of winter unchecked, and which are least cap put on about the end of anf c T 
to n. informed he thought the liable to be ith mildew during summer, as ax: the 1 of the colony. W, * E. 
air too bracing for these pests, which sel or never there is difference as to both these is inl v ‘believe, hg preseas 5 Loudon’s “ Hortus w 
trouble him, and when they do their visit is but short. | different varieties ; and e found to su dj Ferns. We cannot answer 8 X i 
It would be v a . to deseribe what we saw much better in some localities than in othe Ai pantie ee TRY Oia N a 

g we cannot pass over unnoticed a FLORISTS’ FLOWERS orrLED Puas: Sub. Se 37 me 
plantation of 500 s s of Géant des Batailles. This, We have often wished there was a greater’ unanimity | Con1 — AS: T e Sow 82 in pane in pen Years vals | 

truly an interesting sight, the glowing colours of | am 2 * cultivators 45 this pone | family, and them in frames in a very little heat. Tren am, and iig j 
this fine Rose refl by the rays of the setting sun | that th dards already laid down e acted „P, Temove them t to a sheltered place of doors — 
had a striking effect. It is k of the heat of Roses, | upon kee’ N Hexion, Ireland, and de ourselves the responsibility oF — Stated, take mua 
being both early and late i in flow This idea foreibly strikes us just now, — tal ents, They must judge for —— 


Calendar of Agaa, a 
(For the 


would 
plant out our Pink beds, and would parm alliwho have 
do so, But then what suits 
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NK no , 
PLANT DEPART m e best southern flowers as looked on with 13 
Many plants whi m re wie 5 solely on ac- | contempt in the northern coun ow we think that | ` fectly. a 2 Plate will 3 
count of their summ uty will now have ceased to | w e a few that will suit both 3 and Maine GRAPES: Capt. e affection which has 
be useful, and, if not pei N had better be dis- | would be able to compete together. The nd’s | - Grapes has never been traced to its 1 origin, Tr ~ 
carded. Gloxinias, Achimenes, and other bulbs which | Lord Valentia, Lee’s Joseph Sturge, Looker’ s s Achile» the roots pipe owen and may probably be be coment 
requ no ould be placed in a close | Wilmer’s Laura, Reed's Marian, Kerr’s Harr nt out in what ‘wage Be 1 
„ where they can be ripened off 2 ally Headley’ s Duke of pe Rs a Hand’s Pil lot, they generally disappear after a year or two, pm ~ 
1 the quantity of water. T. re that all | Cant’s Criterion, ryt 3 hislor rp Hodge’ N Melona, roots are kept warm, in permeable soil, and asg 
plant so treated are correctly labelled. before their son’s Duke of Devons Now © | doaro: aD Wo cea 
jo p D aseron This will give more r o do belie will win at doch north par 1 .— 1 exhibi- Insects: Alpha. The “louse” fro a ae Wert inka bia 
o those plants which are bein own for | tions. planting out beds for next su rs Lecanium bromeliæ, common in stoves, W.—J P — 
arena ik winter, and which should be N bloom, we wee aves these sorts to be amongst them. Hater b. 8 themselves in great numbers if 
attended to with regard to tying ae eateries and, URICULAS, is past dry weather, must have r ay — — to fil — th — r 
a rather free admission of air during the day, 8 ae f unless well attended. Green-fly is apt to get| wood-work of beds, and rub them’ over well in 8 
inured to a cooler temperature than f shat in which they | roun art; a camel-hair brush swept round each| With oil and turpentine, and use iron WF, 
have been grown for the last three mo he e | plant, which coul be done, even if the collection — eye y — eee — oA M 
as 1 p A ro piete plants e, 55 alf an hour, sas kee se pests within — rege | more effective than han 1 
general, and especially with those which have n OLYANTHUSES should have plenty of wat rencering them conspicuous enough), and destroying te 
ear’s flowering ; th „and shade. The red spider is their greatest enemy in| tine 4), females ) cr Chie, hp ME ETATE 
` Aan i er the are shelves of a gre nhouse, from ry weather, which the above pn Ke ually prevent. The larve sent a — ETES : 
a om ny n pot ri ‘ bag: 58 Th * asthe rot swe’ nag ; 3 eae those ofa spe species i 
eym ve abundance of air, except at night, an é b ula se = allowed to stan e alae me actually 
when the weather is windy. Greenho ~ lants | Still as long as the hot weather lasts. Ae slight ain — —— — rank Daa bi 801 — 
require similar attention in everything except tempera- showers which we have had hitherto are insuffi whieh Should aor — — 
ture, which should be low as po le, unless 8 the bare ground, still a hip at which is 8 . The ich have attacked the Mangold W 
Á plants which it is 2 to bring uickly into by cro o some of t aragus, Celery, Sea- — = eas those noticed! * last answer to “J AMG! 
4 kal 2 1 s —_ 1 e insects on e Achimenes 
as S aly which 8, syringe overhead with a oii i Coy 5 Bal snared 2 2 rer and to many pecies of scale coccus, which is new to us, sad & 
rose all p ich are under artificial covering. , pa arly if recently planted, een of in all probability peculiar to the Achimenes. They are wy 
In fine 55 be found of consi erable efit. If] difficult to destroy, but try hot water, especially at the time 
glass or other covering. It is also of great benefit to re- | Manure water can be made or procured, it is of cours 3 fo aig yacare a 8 oe 
3 * gentle summer showers. preferable to clean werk and the 206 of applying it bruised Laurel leaves F J. Than te 
ve er m bulbous ed same, while the a vantage i 1s Incomparably greate. twigs ; nsects 
less seed is d from them ; do not however disturb | Re ecessions of Endi uce, &e., should a different species ? t applied 
the foliage until it is quite pe. If an teration in „and transplanted as soon i e fil or hand- * gg m Sulphur wil nn 2 
their arr gement is contemplated, it “om be id — 2 eog — tity aa if not already transplanted, tee Names oF PLANTS: Brand S. Anagallis tenella.— B, Mel 
By ly as possib at time, as t mm 05 nded to ith the 3 lupulina, a N. ‘atta arira e 
ing new roots rege White Lilies which | planting er a'i Canliffowsrs, Broceoli, Savoys, Seow. e it a Juillaice, It was not published i 
are now 2 beauty should be taken, vi up and replanted 3 pr res 0. r a a small sowing of Flanders 4 7 ay ' Asplenium Trichomanes 8.—0 oF. Tea ie 
ce in two yea as in the case of the Iris, this | ach, to succeed the last sowing of round or s r| th = n Arum Dracunculus, a n of tbe Levant 
should be done as soon as the old stems 2 inach ; s0 of York and Van nhabi f gard TRM ia 
A c ack Cabba e an old inhabitant o gardens.— 7 
The beds for either of these plants should be prepared | for winter an ing use wing of O ooh 1 e, a tant Reader. The statements, if 
of rich loamy soil, containing a good portion of sand o; should now be made, rather thick, for spring use. Herbs the whole of t istent ; 2 
er Bag arred refuse, with A * ient in flower should cut and hun * ay a a dry, respect we — that shove » vn witness a — 
of soot to destroy all animal And in air shed. Pull Shallots, and lay the a gravel ae 5 , 
planting, a little AN should be laid above aad Bele be 55 aa erer Se afew days — removing | Permanent Stups: T D H. veh anneal them bepaed 
m to store hat is stated in Mr. Fleming’s paper on the reap 
ROING DEPARTMENT. POTATOES : A Subscriber. It is not possible te Sa — 
ifter making the hena T of plants for State of the Weather near London, for the week ending July 19, 1849, from. the inspection of sugh a TERES 
producing winter and es spring fruit, a portion of the as observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chivwick. Sua Gb rs: Old Reader They destroy grubs and 
he picked r t e * of err econ J should July. Moon’s Banomersx. || Tuzamomerer. ns Ve. friendly to gardeners, ie do no ry ae, aata 
l succeed them ; these sho tted MA ee GS * know of. een 
iately if they require i 8 d grown on stead eraan Bowe! “wom baad erie SEEDS FOR EXPORTATION: A W. Put them me wel venisl 
W t eck ; any of smaller plants which Friday . — peas "30202 a 2 — ws 00 bags, and hang them up in the ship in some 
are of potting should also be attended — tel 33 5 29.990 || 2 H 0 8 60 89888 W H. There is — 
to. Omit not to up an uninterrupted succession | Pel. . 17| 26 || 29864 | 29.725 || 69 | 49 | 59.0 |] s.w. 4% | leaves yon! have ye 
by planting a few suckers occasionally in a brisk That. 1 @ || adh | 2202) || | 50 | 615 || SW. || i06 | TREE Peony: JM . If — 
bot . Pracu-1 Admit a free ci — N Taciak EA 5 S.W. 22 away the old Tokki and ee a 
of ae 5 a circulation | Aversee. 20.029 | 20,912 |] 78.1 | 49.0 72.5 re ad, however, be bette rae Janaa, a 
during day, through all the houses, if July We alignuly cannot you thro amen ian 
eat fine ; but the is just ripening} — 14—Qvercast; a ULF Abet: 2 — * 
o ities M th an v and the ae 16- Cleuoy ; very fine’ slight haze * night. 1 bo siini in all 22 where wo 
settling on the trie it. The fo © damp cold dens from — berg due; ede shower F app ou describe will suit wait 
— g e y —  19—light clouds and fne; towering masses of white clouds ; Warencarsses. Felis. 3 lace Te 3 
uld be kept i in a healthy state as long as ible b thunder in sherman, with — — cresses perfectly. You d all 1846. 
syringing, &c. Vinertes,—This vely hot 4 deres et wt ge — thee -E p255 oF our volame for 186 E . jon, W 
renders it necessary to shade the crops of Black Ham- at kse bale Bo Peso Peay er is years, for the len such van dirs sit 15 very difficult to — 
burgh Grapes — are thoroughly ed, to — guard. NERS. : 
shrivelling, as this kind is thereby deteriorated in &| 58a | ga ee greatest Prevailing Winds SEEDLING EL LOWERS. ety o 
x — h the Mu co to improve in July. 85 il 85 Re det Quantity | ese see ge N A very nicely marked 
Where the crops are swelling, exargine the ons 7 Rained. adanadan . ina 
state of the Ar 121 Š 8 60 Z Carckoranlas: T . Dark shaded — ; hape S 
te of the borders z6 | 520 | m 
$ a, 83 5 pauling or other rd Tues 225 921 ea ° gian IBE $| 5 inte fates Aigo dark vate was so much — 
terial. : f W 3 g 7 . wie 3| 2 | Fucnsras our 
hs fork, dry, let the surface be fally| Nur, 3 TT ae 44 $ p 2] 8) 2 7 . — de given of it.* poe 2 
ing of liquid manure give them a good water- Friday 27) 750 | $18 | 634 7 | os © (ilal 4 Petarcosiums: G M. Flowers of com a 
crops, ina remove : small 25 —— = ey = = er ria 0 ston st ihe * — 1 za 73 beser 
2 8. 2 occurred a robus e truss s 
using the syringe where it can even slightly’ in see 1344—therm.92 deg.; and the lowest on the Seal R . So — 
the ices to Corres m ~ 
arge, marked with a 
j FLOWER GARDEN AND SHR To CORRESPONDENTS. ae Editor begs for th inda ce of an a fi ety, but not very dis 
Those who can spare time for budding Roses, will of | in —— of hie —— at Yo 2 have beet answe red, 1 lovers Dy Flowers — 
; ce at Yor xaminable.— W D. 
on with that —- selecting EEN PEERI r K T. Thenks for the individually the flowers ar 
uch may be done to aid Samples of this pretended novelty. Itis nothing whatever but it is certainly in no w. 
the beauty of the flower. garden during future MA |. but the old Grove-end Sear! let. ant Eyres. Upper dark 
1 i eee Biak Roas: :JAU. We ints only the two for 1848, wards th 
` erpetuals : ou may ta 
and their hybrids, upon the strong young destroying the — by ing Pig nd enti ane —— cates F 
bing » which form such attrac-| fen Combs from each side ged Leid en the Operation in e- 
this season. The propagation of bardy — S te Ge IA A oan fancy variety nek — 
bee tically proceeded with. After not later one in the evening, and| edges slightly margin 
: AE bees the mi onth, in order that the ered with violet colo 
as Phloxes, A 8, may have time to repair the damage. Another plan is bright pinkish-red, much 
: will nextdemand a 8 into an 2 A, hin bp placing it upon ‘the texture, shape, and 
e never yet saw a D of both’ hives zbould be inverted ou the ground ; the mouths trusted. A very nice 
: found 8 t e yt then tie a cloth | crumply in the upper 
contained a superabundance of both w meet, in order to prevent the Pinks: H B. Your Ini 
2 2 from esca T the under hi bres 
bees t0 Dho fake ap on the under hive, in order to cause the crimson, A very nice ri 
Then put the robbed colony Vensanas: H B, Rosy 


RICULTURAL COLLEGE, 
yom on Friday, the pepo 
uired to atte 


j 


E wavicultucal Gazette 


SATURDA Y, JULY u, 


G WEEKS. 
MEETINGS FOR TE Kult 1 
g D 
vay 242 gri — me mp. 1 


gland. 
x e Society at tan 
. 7 ad ang 3—Agricultural Imp. Society of Ireland. 
aries Needham Market.—Aug.2: Ortery St. Mary 


gron 
gwer to the question TON OF 
— — to ** manure as well = the 
. And if, in order to ascertain 
the se prot 3 of a fallow crop, all the cost — the 


a 
for n crop, since the 
of the first winter’s furrow with which those 


fhe cal wih te ent o 0- 
with their — general Slide and that 
the Turnip husbandry which has enabled 
e the | cor ay which our country 
r, the n food, the more 


sa 

indeed we may safely assert that, except by 

an increase in the produce of the former, that of the 

latter has already in many instances reached its 
in in Brita 


uantity of ammoniacal 
manure — applied to British soil, and, ex- 
2 the comparatively small quantities i imported 
e island, we may safely r. Lawes’ 
demonstration of the fact that this 5 wholly | 
* weight of meat we * manufactu 
that to a maximum, and we shall soon a have 
Kune a maximum of fertility. Tti is well that we 
are still far enough from that goal, — that so large 
nein still remains, the inroads on which will 
e of both 


man. 
increased 
will the most my big attain them who 
et rapidly traverses 
te 


-Wene reasonable ee of a large. grain produc 
] founded. ld be a so thing if hick 
scarse could be made directly as 1 as indirect] 
creased e 


8 
Pa 
2 
ay 
155 
a 
4 
En 
115 
g 
FE 
7 


LE 
H 


HG 
i 


— and willing in this respect ~ 
his name and address, w 


SEPN 
F 
8 
a 
3 
| 
4 
H 


for the benefit 


pi 
j 


“ffs 
1 


en three to eight years old of 


t | 
. 15th of Jan. till the 15th of May. 


de door” 2 bor, 8 feet by 11 feet, and 18 
ae fed six times a ae alternatel with 
Ebern compound ; the d sed oti 


has 
` | sistent with their erent and e 


Z Morton, of Whitfiel 
e. 


n meet the ap 
they can give us on this important branch of farm | | 


Y | account have exceeded the payments by 254/. 1s. . 94, 


xc ; green consu 
: Surely . is a way of converting a ton of 
fi 


ie." su 
ee 1 a. crop is ripe, to 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


4. h received daily Tur- from 
nips or Mangold Wurzel, and 33 Ibs. of compound, 
made of 14 lbs. of straw and 7 85 of hay cut into 
g | chaff, and 4 lbs. of Pea meal, m med 
all together 5 3 an — our, then — into a — 
wit rick floor, and 1 lb. of Linseed meal and 
1 lb. of Bardi nal which had been stee | 
8 lbs. of water for 26 ‘hours, thrown over it. —— | 
pain last 5 weeks each animal had 5 lbs. of oilcake 


5. Each animal had 20 lbs, of straw or 2 bushels 
of 3 3 as litter. 

. The estimated increase in the ee judging 
si their v shes at the commencement a dead 
the peri een 20 lbs. e 
from 10 to 12 score per q have 
for from 54d. to 6d. per Ib. 

248 of the stock under this — 
been perfect, and the box —— ng has been con- 


108 Ibs. of Swedish 


They. 1 


“I 
r 
> 
© 


mfort 
e we 9: indabted to Mr. Len 
Arreuxsox, bailiff to I Š. Wnrrr™, Esq., undo: on, 
Troa is — po al Yas 


ereford 3- 1 I 
2 Fed 15 Oct. 28, till Jan. 30—13 weeks. 
3. 5 e each about 7 feet by 12, not sunk. 
4. T ve — * ring — peri 

Beans, and 


each animal 
* 1 Ib. of the — ** 3 or 4 Ibs. 
of et inde daily, with rather more than 1 cwt. 
fr 


5. They — littered with about 18 Ibs. of straw, 

1 , apiec 

6. They vans — for 60 “., and sold, at 6d. 

Ib., for 771, an in which repaid the cost of 

attendance and bonght food, , together with about 9s. 
n 


ain is furnished by Mr. Jonx C. 
, near Berkeley, Gloucester- 
Now this is the 7 of information desire 
ou —4 the larger the number of cattle to which 

the 

illustrative of the farmer’s business 

hope some of our . will Een | 
make for the — Net 


iod 30 * of hill 


abo 
Swedish ee and Mangold Wurzel, besides — ~ 
ere | co 


facts apply, the more “valuable is the ere m can 
and w 


s per acre; the rest sown 
1 aey p pama all consumed 
9. pa g a 


11 
H 
117 


um. trate 5 
a considerable n, a! Oats and oilcake for cattle. 

h. animal is 7 horses and 4 oxen. The 
Rca. abour is t 6l per week ; our day wages 
Xs. 6d. per day, with a little Der ; ; carter and shepherd 

per week 

i. The rental, with rent ch great and small, 
highways, land tax, church Tates, window w tax, county 
2 r acre, when we pay 5s. in the pound 

te; when we Pay 10s., 2i. 5s. per acre. This 
s. in the pound, which makes 21. 2s 


year we are pay ing 
. N. H. 


Home Correspondence 

* leep v. Level ar n your with of June 
th your correspondent “ Agricola ” seems to pity the 
1 of the Yorkshire farmers, in supposing 

br a larger e 
n level land of the same nt 
W your pongan dT and a F rench philosopher to to boot ; 
but as I a , I ma ee if I 

attempt ay A* — the e acuteness of 
orkshiremen is not in this instance at fault, No dis. 
pu p raised as to what is a hill. For the pur- 
poses e argument, any deviation 
level 15 A hill I may therefore 


an and as there is a 
grea’ and air în a hilly field than in 
7 ede one of the same base, 80 on that account 


pes! Th d, also, yraa amr being equal, that 
the more soil 1 have the 

plants 
they also have more con Accoun 
greater. quantities of any. plants, not excepting trees, 
on a hilly field than on a level one of 


management. 
s an 7 of the gross returns on a farm 
was rena green crop culture is aimed at, and 

mber of cattle fed as possible, we give | 
the fo Ne figures, for the accuracy of which we 
can vouch 

‘Payments, Receipts, 
Stock account 7 * Me 5 41411 * E 
1992 1 


* 
” 


met with any man who had seen trees, ay 

ZNE Alar ego all touching each other, 
cases, therefore, i Agricola 

re moss or ype wee poe planta, ‘These grow a eertain 


ce. By his exceptions 
mself unknowingly, as he will find when 
his Bat ho w does the 


Bunce th. 


1847 467 10 0 1559 7 4 
1848 1800 14 2 1865 2 8 


» 


Or, on the whole, 15 0 11 


6828 2 2 
eduet saint 6147 11 9 
Leaving a net profit of £670 9 a 

which is the be, return for 4000 or 5000 ton 
nsumed. ring the year ending 
April 6, 1849, the We under the stock | on 


is rather a better result than the average of 
does not 


more than 8 


8 lbs. of meat; surely 1 — of 
re ring be ex from less than wt. 
U 


e two-fifths 
ds. We hope that many farmers succeed, 
better thing of 
we 


on this sub- 
are the answers to it received from | 


into the middle aaa ‘evelled, | 
ittered any morning, 


scarcely it. 
d. 30 acres pasture; 170 arable. 
e. We mow about 10 acres of pasture annually, 
„7 about 20 


Yorkshire farmer arrive at his co conclusions t Nee 
| time to plough it ; he manures res 
sows it, and, lo 


para el it the ee bour of the plai 
-eighth or whatever the advantage may be over him 
of the hills! or that men changing about from farm to 
would not ily have — or advan- 
et And if you, disregarding 
42 method of sta ion, eld a scientiis gut 
n | the facts, ins 


of jumping to your 
g poles, jaa * have found that science 
the abs orkshire farmer. 


ways 
pollen” ir tbr’ your 
n 


458 


THE AGRICULTURAL 


GA 


the cloddy WT of . 


lands, is to lay mounds of 
of the ,| wi 
17 


ugh ma l and ~i es 
o the 


of hot lime, h 


sufficient teat Pi 
the lime will — e 
which is not Lats y attained in the’ 6 open air, either with | 


er 

uselessness, and in 9 — Met ss of imperfect burning a 
extinction of the fir ou undi 
contact of air. 


The lime can be got at any time, a 


the ere may be 
s proportional expense than 
me 


xture of fine 
. — to be blended and er yee 
of the 


many of your 
e thou nen that are g 
ments in countries that for ever 
divide them from relations and friends, wot surprising i 1 
is to fin openings at home, going as i 
. instance the following, viz. : 
050 acres, toletat £25 per annum. 
607 0 
43 
3 


were begging. 
Bealanaboy Farm, 
Mingaroon Farm, 


” 


ed in peor 
of the mo 


u refrain from 
fee — surprise an eared —.— British industry | 
— go ni the 1 into ealtvatio on countries that 

tle use us, as are r dista 
in in Austratis and New Z iind, we opine ing at home so 
fine a country lyin g comparativ ely waste, and a labour- 
ing populition starving f the w reh the employ- 
ment that the parti. ey of home land with British 
griculturists and capital 7 afford en and this, 
r occasions 


P 
oads 5 a there is to be 


es; in t 


; | business of the Society, » — held at the 


og hm Lif 1 and the 
H inform 


agrarian outrages are | S 


tant settlements | 


along 


but 
one objection, and a happily can hardly be said to any 
7 r if it Pen A ry much weaken 
me be e of being wholly removed. 1 

allude to the su insecuri spn of life and 
ungovernable prejudices 5 the natives. The purchase 
of a ee district an ts division into sections, and 


suppose a tract of 50,000 ae acres to hive been od 
with 


by the ci roads and 
arterial drains, and “id out in farms of from 100 to 
1009 1 and 
ffered to 


r 
next best is a solid one of wood, for 


the | 


attendance. 


the sleeping apartment. 
staves about 3 in wide, and nterva 
are in a 
4 or 5 inches 
may fal through to 5 dai —.— sera —.— 
hat, the urine falling 


e 
are 1 5 ine are 
eue 5 coy er, 1 85 weer > fattening ‘iii not `a the 
. Hux 


hA 
and other 


this on public grounds, disclaiming a nal 
considerations. J. J. M ar Tiptree Hall Farm, near 
Kelvedon, Essex, June 3 


Sotieties. 
ROYAL 


A Sp — CouxciL, 
ociety’s House, 
— 10, the 


in Hanover uesday, 


ce 
Accounts ot the So 
at 

in th 
aiding the specia 


ecounts), 
the month of J — last, the Finance Com 
182 — — etters, containing the —— 
nsel b3 the sig s of members to pay 
arrears ports: tion; and which the Committee had 
great . — in being ab able to 2 "s Spee peman 
with considerable Man 


any. 70 
*| preesod great regret a at 8 having ee Torvarded | 
their 


= Onk, payed 


as 
rm. Tale — * for 
te 


Earl of “ her -w 
- ai bedstea 
fen 


garden 3 gate 
h- | harness, — humme — nova — 
m anures, models 


ZETTE. Jot 
— —— YA 
The feeding chamber is floored THE ANNUAL 2 ATN 2, 
ches 1 P 11 W July 18.—The Im ORWICH, 
"These ing, and was 
wh 


merely 
carry away in their 


10 hay 


covers ; 


weighing ma 


wheels, w 
and about ae thet en ticles n 
Such a co 
cession makin ng its indivi 


as above 


that, after the 


say 
clusion, that the exhibiti ion was far more for the intens 


e have only gone half through the 
r it contains axles, and barrows, ee 
ds, and churns, sat clod crushers, 
in 


saws 
straw pia + —5 


truction 
to see what was 


e engines, tower ainda forks, sal 
S, gauges Grass 


tree 


first survey, we arrived at thee 


ÅT Tar E ar aes 


future; — others, who imagined th 
Iy | belong d paid up their arrears, and 
withdrawn; and a very 


perso 
ular, disputed 
With . to the latter class of perso 
d that the Finance Commit 


8 powers delegated to them by the Council t 
enable them to take such measures as would secure the 


— f the Committee in —— to the fut 
entries for the Implement Yard, at the Country Meet, 
ings of the Society, ys the arrangements connected 
with refreshments for the parties 
them within its enclosure during the 3 of meeting. 
: CHALLONE air- 
man ing Account Commits, then sub- 
ited to aa Gonne cil the Report of that Committee, 

h specimens of the — ion s of accounts 
by — N the vite! of — farmers. 
of these fo 

be 


tary should write a letter to each of the 
two farming account books in the library, oat had 
come under the notice of the Committee, informing them 

at the the Society’s “ TET val 
sanction ” was 


ur is on 
whatever on the 8 of farm accounts had to that 
time received e e appro i 


val or sanction o 
—On the motion of Mr. Gar- 
to 


on the motion of Mr. MiL- 
pson, of Hendon, Middlesex, 

was elected a Member of Council in the place 

Earl of Lovelace, whose e — OVNAR Gad 


ports were received and adopted from the Gen 
orwich, and Veterinary 


previous 
e letter of the. Right H Hon. Sir George 
„granting the ag | Aad of Metropo- 
Poli 8 at the Norwi 
ore the Council. 
the 


Chairma 
mittee had already oe chi 


es whose duties ¢onfined | than 


an 
and h 
d 


of the 
over the 


wn open 


was laid 


and that the trade 
bei 


1111 


ual mee 


as oe 
ground that the 
novelties or have 


another in office. 
where Biddel's 


in won honours turn 
this denied to 


Couneil then adjourned to Tuesday, July 
Guildhall, Norwich 88 


smaller number of articles we 


In Isal 312 implements were ini — 
ting of Society in er 
1843, 508; in 1844, 948 ; im 1845, 9425 — 
in 184 47, 1321; in 1848, 1508; r uy 
ished talogue, there were 
immense 


judges 0 


Or take 
searifier and 


ine making was 


of mach 


and now, 


ꝗ— 


appeared 


z 
i 
05 


N 


the 
and the 


H 
ani 


about, 


; 
W 


. AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE: so 
—— 

—.— 

ns, 

which 

ha 

epena T H 

no E 

ut of th A G 

ejof RI 

a perfi Ç 

AL 

kept 5 Z Š 
rmos prp 

t when E 

deore e 

BE 
ard 

AE 459 
— * 


* Swe 
dahr Biel « 
similar this 
— of curtain 
num 8 ay use 
: of j — th ess 
jud en h 
ges a lo — 
s bef nge rs end 
‘ore r tim ee 
À who ki ibited | 
m, whi 
ae — at 
to be the er 
to 
d, pr, — ery we 
scant n . = wo 
sat ae 
th ; ves 
88 and y necessary 
however | 
ybe er — y to 
„ it will bg Extras 
al the a 
binde «lb feel 
fer j oints, 
— ong * with 
aal 
ee Une, 5 
y 0 
0 
3 
22 
o 


chef things 
wan 
ted 
to i 
— 
ase 
this 
3 — 
fuln 
ess. the 
Th adj 
e just 
at an itse 
— by i 
— — 
2 
ral deli 
co ver 2 
nseq its 
— 
of tl ts 
13 
. Rì 
ch 
mond 
of 
Sal 
ford, 
and Ro 
£35 
ee aces 10 0 
of 
Lis- 


poring 
— the 
1 — ss 0 
Pam site’ — n 
Piast to aS ae “jadh 
221 pred heavy - ra egg 
Sa = ie — 5 
=e. — 5 Mayi znatan ge 
* s e ; 
ae m ge Mr, 3 1 — ee . . 1 — Be ‘constr 
Swap 1 se: : Mr. C Eibe, of N Bedfor cart, Y, or 54 cart cti 
— . . o [Me — orth * — ea mek pan aay liquid ma 
Eais age 4 Mr, Horas ; 2 ronds contain po ’ — 15 sapizi 
— ting 3 i7 — 8 2 n. and body ban y adapted = , contai 3 
Er eam Engin — Me, Ho ham. 2 olto; the han oru f 1 taini cart Bits 
taral o iat “ dar: + Fantham Laman —— loge’ 14 oy hi ider 
The — 5 M 8. G ye Sax. e ee th use J. 10 00 ele 
Portable — & esers. arrett. jvm xhibit fo 2 er T seas | ur: 
chine, — s 50 syne exhibitors obt fill y f y be le, w i ts, he — — = 
— applieab M l stan 5 or e tur hich 1323 tum Ht bene t bite 
car ra Ala Ma) 2 * ar dl =: med p 2. an Haller da 
mag pat 25% rs, G Be yto in 5 he tying eo ase ten ere the | i le and — 
E. . wer 25 arrett, verley. (hardly an At y prizo af N — mpl „r v e . n, of churns, e 
— 7 — mah 1 y an Co. me of ly ate ce, ent the — inal ke f th 
in — 10* 59 seco a shown Aaa und it; + t was | n radi ey-s IA eir 
af oe . G ps nd arded. grioul of Li 4 It i it, N 2 pene re ing tree tN well- 
on Crusher arre pri rac ype mord 0.3 oo t 7 = 
Cutter w |f" * ip cutter fi E tand - of | the 6, M = pe t No, 33 (Mean 
om — 5 essrs 4 ie tter or th mach * No. w har . — ars. — 2 —— ae 
Breaker 3 tleworth 8 fing of i w 1555 Cl ine), bite 5 rgely ETa — ól Ho and the r was Cottam 
— P 3 fs rth ayto c er. im — — fi d „ a p flessrs, ane the 
Harvest * ge 0 — ph 8 —— sha plem 0 Gar m on or whi fi rize e es, of nu exhi 
— a 5 |En ae » Hurw Te ill the. wer prize diat, 2 * 8 for th w Arhi — —.— Ds 
5 5 5 Exec 8 of e e pieces 0 — ne. obtai mili sian r the boot y leve wich, of revolat by 
— “mn ra He Fanden h 4 rib ap od ex fo ne w red 88 stad yp wd st ught t of. r harron ove- 
Set efor making 1 Mr. tors of on of Tur. an e, w B 4 Kur 8 ay fo bury No. th stron t) plo Bedf. xhibit lutions 
ee Teas “rai 70 a na sich re d 22 edal d heep of ma the ’ . 8 e z pad for and ugh rr w fol ited 
Hesry tor “Ge n- 10 Mr. — late a bo q i ll se ap e) co (M ; th evol Nader the at l nera four is 80 ca lewd a — 
a } 20 n * ewark which ! tows f 2 a clov m by, er, tere H OA as wel N lee = 
seanser Taros” : Gai — ich hang in aa a p Abbing Kotta ari | oar ng p Pger yi that off 
. yp Fim ley — rome er ed 2 bbing and d for ha arts, an A et ne the 
3 z 755. teh e ed de plac by 2 d on.! havo several pt Boer cia ar again. 
' 117 5 ln aa ead, o R, pend a d 2 2 drilling ed ver 4 at — be — 
3 i 5 [Messrs Mapplebs fPr 1 3 ei ha behi idth 1 It will ai al pattors mg = peculiari cien 
a a 1 Me en Wil ebeck and the tn ed ys — ind eit as exhibit oi Seite — tee witl tly 
Hore Hos oa he rid sk 0 — rian 1 and N Price 2 ae — pete the ind may the ibited b poss ut to a > ie e of 85 
e 10 e K ration, Taylar, 3 i uter 1. 1 call i 22 . 8 —.— last e same i yM nake ot onl — — 4 ; 
mgt 2 ge : Mes Ips 14 — Phage 2 he egi quire ones Se im best — ri plo en hea year, np r. 8 it — wi er paid in 
E 0 ne — r. 1 ia d i It pl ce u ti » b rin tan ita th (of 
Work Hand * 5 8 5. — es — of Wer n harr aniyasa con emen rn 141. ghs, maner ye ut cip le ble a vi whi and 
— Dri “| a0 2 Smith * cire 3 ona re to 2 — e mater Ero reimp rich the 
pary rill, to 10 + Bo — and ý aad dom peeps on 2 sie or m orse. 00 use rial nd — — eo —— g — 
tr to 3 Messrs, Wi Co, m m saw con — al 9 fro . th by s, to formi veri ly ne w in 
Gorse butor ithh Willi „ of orti orticin tain all ‘oll y ac kab 31m e j sub obtain g rin impro 10 rough, ga 
tor 3 8 eee tices ein ed, tilth scal owed 5 ly he jet- bstit 8 — the ved at — 
2 e 5 ik ewin; —— Pray! hee — * 2 bau whi by ing 8 ereby sel ery . mae ó 4 t 
Cain —.— 5 . aylor. th 8 mee. 11 nd . at d self acti sate co of 4 ees is 
5 es . ur | von HD j= n * 2 : 
De ee . — eri 3 aes iain no timo, which — xing ap — — ——.—. = 
er his Machin S . — yg — — N daii mp b ie tee b A= ig ar p ng com r simplif 
lar wag rd. th eey h uni ga fi lete a Wie wh or gs, jointed , bu tus 0 ma poun — plified ir 
ention 8 Andr and m — or gatos tog on Bates tatus, 1. 1 e aeger e 
— cn ot 2 Mr moet ae Co., 4 re aye pe ing 1. . at . 2 i — 
. 5 — — — —.— exhib 1 supp ina re mor. length avanc o — — _ Not too Pri making i 
5 ae. a anso a| were se ara ithario ar te n, by whi nee cma eae purpos — ark ited 
5 be —— anes e 2 eos 2 — e an . — 
— pur Mr. H ay. | oor tao 1 . — wer on, whi medal. Tho — a — sing ma — — ong Ae 
— Fou: os parts sho —— apa pot 222 ich dif nalts tol at wa pur Barrett h side ited 
— ar 8 y. wi be * —— 3 à — by of ine and 3 rire ax 
Yering e D u tio saa hag sin wid iffere a ma r an n of ada ut 
— — pa 0. we si pec omg and ea Be Sa a ap ofi two 5 cer travel ptation s 
Portabile ork faa a Do, Mr. Di are ve oes o eacli of wi ridd cage its set sets 0 of ery a r-wo: . their 50 llin 
— — 8 owns, prize glad ne e of 8 ol ; it 1 th * 1s had rk At el g ita 
be. + Do ess of 2 t effici sak aes h ivid whi pe hag e si — had vraag ae — ing 
ter — 48 eee. ge find the cheaper, indepe od into ear „ which i jada patent — ore and 
ote Do. Mes as. ere tend gg ent a the a independe: to he dra hich of th g — Sth -po 
— Hy Do. saan 8 bite witli y t „ bu a pen sw seg WS béi n each h rE. 
Wires, 2 for Do. 1 „e subsoil pul d his rhe! n — = . ent up eep * cing worked iron and they 
Ee . Ires e Eo peated, ie 
= ey usin, 419 . on . — — — . nro 
Te ae eas Say, | by han cian ‘as — bbl corset The tran ay jee 
=e b ap implemen pe Ss See g: The advantage centre 
work H Erum yý S of Th bn wor 8 — AAA . 3 it roun wh ore or of the 
te Serag: s 2 1 ne 22 any Stilton, Huntin ae sho ae pea cee at for age gained the regui it, 
Pipes ý * the han crew” mac. gdonshi i — * — paly maisin —— 
e, Stand — on th pplied fandi or machine » ire tines. a 4 nou any — ho alot a us err 
N . Os e of the e wh ), con = ont straighten — nds 
a self —— one end of ibe the sr e ich is n- nry at —— * s * ower. 
a the yaa 5 ee dof e then siariad — on d moor p” cay. — e 
—— end his the resting d), an hi * — a d to aocident, 
— . eos 1 ERT sit ad 
The ley, . . ch ho ee . — beat. mew 
— a —— 7 rests tae it we y th — — a r or new — 
i at N and — foo the dp pti e n DA piee oneg 
pat objects s 2 at work, the ge of his hand always feta ‘One — > roll 
of J or again ' a hand un — alrea fer — 
es “rae A to ft foot o 5 — to — 
: . lactom ne on as off yes 82 — wh exhi wt te its v ice een by Moms ow 
should have 1 ae la a . C * a = — aetna — 5 kno — 
Se ha 8 oe: . Bistope. ada a n immense wd the silver meds — oe 2 hag wi, and g 
Rear, Dy Mr — own in taken of or Pt rm. ted w t . be fi pt pan idle, which pe Br 
— s ke. Amon of 8 -| of this eart min e in Be- | es, pre a e. = 
= — eau ci [seat — — ee 3 2 r ro — 
7 + which eo liquid Strat 1 yey at Sore ieee | > —+ the in it „of : 
esse 9 a —— Pee Aa ca es 
— avoid ype ig n — elings ar — nd te — wit — 
awarded a dea i — =n axle i apn sad — 
rai en arin railway S ot a pendul ar ne = ; are soon h 2 hone — — 
de of Mr. S li The y e 3 pend e Mr. Ma niae iioa by pt a 
He 1 25 sams ae Jar So =e grenet 
a 
tone 3 — — ap a a che bee 8 — one a 
. —— side 5 d eag — — 
‘aa of rail, f th for * rate ibb ple. all ept or 
tip meee 2 tw er ce 0 — P epi dry and 
y ad tipper at 2s. 0 h 3 50 of w pacae rice e and 
m * per yard. aa wi an pig — —At of 
: 1 EI 2 
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és rg 5 — plun sh Mr. — Re hough th — i 
2 8 0 ~ Da exhib Pho contri the dur into 
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S oferta foot — — 
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_ 460 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Jury 2 


ti 8 help, alon re 9 lunge- boar to pro- AT 12 o'clock the Rev. Epwin SIDNEY, M. A., d his 
= ade 8 P E ds, P Lecture in the County Court, “On the Parasitic 2 “of the pneum< name. It i impia te 
luce the ry agita ‘tish Firm.” the President of the Society occupying the chair. | begun in the pleura, and has extended to t inflammation ty 
Messrs. Garrett is of prizes ‘he 8 team engine, There was no crush at the doors as on former occasions ; er bably it is not in any stage inflamma Te: But pre, 
the . 


it and renders it fit for circulation t 


a had 


orse ablic laja. from a b of 1747 a description of cases and 

R P i | dicious choice of time for its delivery, seeing that the ShoN showing that it is nota n ow thing and Cases of this disease, the 

and as we have not space to describe it as it deserves, | yard the chief Perha aps e has Cae tad —— why ee 9 that as ae 

we must pass it over.— At No. 90 we observed Mr. 2 were not 150 persons pres sent. The Lecturer observed | seems evident that it arises from a pec 7 80 È 

Chandler’s excellent liquid manure distributor, It is that he would endeavour to use ‘simple and popular lan- | sphere; and when`a disease is engendered by tg oe aine, 
e e y 


b ; _ | guage ;” a usual opening announcement on such occasions, but | seldom ‘infect tious, There are man: it 
istribute liquid manure in an state of Was doe are sorry to say that the subject tr eated of is so pregnant ne ara 9 from the appeoa 2 Pleuro. ù 
7 an of sp 


ticed | halation 


e 


ta tinai ept to persons alr eady e the air around it more deleteri i 
rot, or Lango zel seeds, with liquid N- e them, Instead of ‘thoroughly simplifying. and explaining ee originate in food, ventila pvr overs Predisposition to 
the flat, in three, four, or five rows, at any stated in- kinds of fungi, the Lecturer | avoid ba . suas these 2 9 be., 
tervals. It is constructed that straws or leaves. which | briefly penile upon a gre an Duni, pointing — a few of | disease is not inflammatory; if so, we should 1 Seems 
in liqui ta i . | the perie of each, glancing at the various theories | &c., as in a common catarrh, but the . 
held with res o their propagation, a and suggesting hints | the lungs, thence it is transmitted to the bl 
z z e : "i | respecting olay so that a mere N cannot be of much | poison reacts upon the lungs just as in small 
as the seed in any given quantities. Price 30/., at the | value, and an entire report would tak too much ‘of our | reacts upon the skin, As the blood is empoisoned, t 
Westbury station, Wilts. It received a prize of 5/.— space. The 3 was an interesting ebr illustrated by up- The diseased mone has a 
at No. 100 exhibited a number of wards of 40 diagrams, and many real specimens of the develop- vert to its ; constituent parts. The sep 
* W m hich dial cutt | ment of various e plants. The Lecturer described the | will not coagulate, flows to the cell Ne- 
excellent chaff machines, in whic 8 15 ial eu * epithet 8 = * mailag something which lives at the | in the ox’s lungs, and not in those of the. ‘ton 
e to c 1 i on i 


r It also 
drill, for depositing in the ear arth together, Turnip, Car- | to render much en ig enment — the n 
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of the pparatu du j aa D 
tion, the blades being 80 placed as to admit 8 the pro- matter w 9 it is attached. The simplest form of fungus is 3 causes a flow into the thorax or ches 
trusion of the straw or hay behind them while at work. —— „mouldiness.“ Under the microscope this appears to has Kee ~ the te The oxygen cannot effect 
At stand 115, Mr. Paul, of Thorpe Abbot’s Hall, | be a series of jointed threads, placed end to end. A seco nd ie p? s going ves and thus — bisot d yd 
near Scole, Norfolk, exhibited his remarkable drain fi po — y a sure 5 of car 
2 5 Ak or r se eds, th n structure that the bota- posse it is Pes (3 to. gs b 
plough. It is a revolving disc, with projecting | nical arrangement — — Some 185 ngi posing e than effus 25 tut tore — a ba a — 
teeth or tools, which, once in position for working, animal and vegetable matter; others attack hea althy tissues. to. 3 > on at of eo 5 and pl oe 
are ade to Siate by chain an nd dlass They have various properties, some eata oan some poisonous, | not to reduce inflammatory action, vie awa 
A the whole ma ï others luminous. The minute fungi tosi n, Grasses, &c., | falters from blood-letting, cease to bleed. Ca — = 
A ’ i : finished 88 to be masse s of dust; they attack all * rts except the exhibition of aperient medicines, is e at the comme 
ward in the opposite direction, towards the unfinishe boots, and Under the microscope this dust | mint of the isase er if in large — the — 
end of the trench. The teeth enter the land at the appears to be dude end. club-shaped fungi, with seeds in the anal may be excite d too 75 Common saline aperten ie 
tom of in its i 


When ripe the seeds burst the epi- small doses, n (as seldom happens) ebnet 


of the 
. 8 k <p. . | dermis and escape s being diffased 3 es the pro A tion ensues, 5 — wich act upon the kida 
material on which it is acting, and works it out, lifting —— a —— * A oe "eed robi on Whea FCC y hent dneys by enaiis 
it up to the surface, and, with the help of a mould- | oa nsists of one of the fungi termed Uredi ore Sg pe and carry off the watery blood. They are hehe to be prse 
board a each side ag this disc, which takes out the | another variety, which injures. the ste sear ‘and also renders — * e, eee ee ater containing nitre is useful; and te 
i ive. nd” is another kin and carbonates 2 oper in an alteration of th 
; Uredo ; it confines its ravages to tks grain, * ‘Alling fibrine. Sedatives are of little value; but the exhibition of 
side, 1 may be yest d wi e or horse 3 | the seeds it enters with a black oily . hod powder or spores. opium, with calomel, is of — ch use. To keep up diuretic 
and, by a single sepahe 211 oa a drain from 3 to These spores will adhere to sound g d the disease, | action, and excite paiepleationy cover the diseased anims 
4 feet in depth a te of from 4 to 5 feet per therefore, may be r “ke the seed by cleansing ‘the ‘Wheat w aa — eet 3 3 E soem css 
i zue ++ | about to be sown. and as an alkali will | +” ssue immediately below the s W. uce 
minute, according k rey ect ure of the soil, leaving it Saat ithe nasi ee — T 13 “i or potash, or arsenic, | tion elsewhere, , 

in a 1 mee uae with a perfect level bottom for the | will allow the fungus * to be easily washed off. Toremedy generally, debility in the second stage of the disease, 
t is also calculated for raising | the smut” is more difficult, as it is pin! 2 that the — dy and water many fe given ; but herp give carbonated 
clea’ m 


tiles Dg 

1 > | sporules a e ido i c ether, 
subsoil to “he surface for for par 1 of ne ing er ds; ventilation and light, early hoeing, vot, to early varieties also to be gained from ral tonics, and sulphate of quinis 
e. Clay 18 in a plastic state, Will raise TOM | where there is liability to the disease, and manaring for | Ke. From these — it is certain that there can bem 
4 to 5 ewt. 155 minute; and on stony soils it may be the crop preceding the Wheat instead of for the Wheat | specific for this malady, and there i is, as yet, no 
made equally efioacious although the operation may itself. * act is a disease of the grain or seed of both regarding its origin and propagation.—Both the lectures — 

ee. It may be corn and G The attacked prune 2 and turn very interesting, and both well illustrated by 
ad black; Sense attacked by it is very injurious to animals, and | drawings, plain and coloured, The Lecturers, in thet 
vantage when the surface m the soil m an hav | there is no cure but breaking up the land “into tillage. Legu- | attempts to compress a — deal in a close compass, eue! 

= t a 1 . 


r dr ather for amp 

render i lants, The blight on Peas Beans, and Hops is the . he, | gretted, but still more 2 it be deplored that so few wet 
der impractical to accomplish the 51 : 1 same which attacks Peach. er 2 cer. ve inju 4 by a | present to receive such useful and valuable 3 Abe 
drains nual labour. e utility of this imple- species of Uredo, Vetches by Botrytides. The pores: infestans thanks to Mr, Simonds, the Chairman, &c., left th 

ew to Euro tuber: tat D 


1 ry 
in course for Wheat crops, and from which the first | rot in timber comes from the spawn of fan 13 saith as the] At 6 o'clock a large party of gentlemen repaired to 
crop has been ta te ps, Thelephora and Polyphorus. The spawn . — from a spot | Andrew’s Hall, to partake of the Council oes here = 
1 diatel upon the wood, aud insinuating into every crevice, destroys company was jarge, the dinner was but a very dull 2 
ing immediately spread upon the surface, becomes | cohesion, and rots the substance of the wood. Corrosive subli- | the viands were far from being ofa fst y character, Mi 
thoroughly pulverised, and comes into immediate opera- | mate will immediately destroy it, hence the process for pre- the. — were of 3 te cost usual tus 
aa a . hig 5 Pt 8 onded to, Mr. Gibbs read the amui 
r the succeeding e x ` 2 an Sedgwick 
È | — to increase it or bring it on; therefore trees should be of prizes to cattle, sheep and pigs; and Professor 
royalty, 50/. This machine e tel hpo on by nin winter, Imm ain i in water has a counteracting | then addressed the — in a very rapid speech, 
who are about to enter largely draining.— At influence, but heat tends to increase it. Penicillium (which | the “Drainage of a part of Norfolk an d 
stand 116, e . Ransome and Sas ‘exhibited a a large P a ld i rath &c.) and Aspergil, are found growing north of piper bi a He amp aia y simple works 
e 7 An 
e ent of agricultural machines cylindrical called . But there are also fungi upon 1 p apon ot drainage, must have a beneficial influence on — 5 — 
8 machine, with a sort of screw wind Pro- silkworms, and on the skin and mucous membranes of us | of the country. It was to be hoped that when Ou i jy 
peller, astraw cutter for litter, 98 oF animals. All herbivorous animals are —.— to moulds i in the | ing of farmers at Norwi ould br 
were among the novelties. Mr. Clark’s (of say ut- 1 canal. There is even an Aspergil found in eggs. | gathered into smaller congregations, ener tuen go ora 
f F 5 ` fungi dep i lari pild: i al 
ave Lincolnshire) plough, at this er with the parts ioe, change in the blood, &c.; when assimulation fags, the the coast and witness the fierce battles between ere 
tting it either for common or double 5 parasites begin to propagate and thrive, These were the oane an action of the highest importan noe allway — 
work, for horse-hoeing between ridges „ Ke. s | prin a nega edt and Es vig —.— * : The "Ear o of They must t have observe a ee ae that ia he 
ic or his instructive obser- stratu Ainmg 
with a silver meda e plan of uniting vations, and the aar e withdre and over that is ee a mass of brown cru s 
emen ma fferent purposes of chalk, rolled stones, &c. This hae bo — which oo 
sil deserves encouragement by the Society. Mr. ant 40 sta a —.— larger —.— assembled to — 0 ge . surface were b whe ns 4 «ads the Wash etat 
s irrigator, described and figured in * | Professor Simons’ Lecture “ On the Anatomy, Physiology, and | formed the suriace Welle reg! rer Nori 
vertising jea eana was rewarded with a sil Tin bn e esc ag? see of Respiration of Domesticated Animais this clay was sent, by a great inundations canton under $ 
i Aa ASS ra y a silver medal. wit particular reference to Pleuro-Pneumonia in the Ox.” the chalk 15 nich forms 
is described thus :—Easily worked by a young boy, resident again took the chair, and the Lecturer proceede à te the Kimmeridge and Oxford clay, WY consists also% — 
ugh more economically by two, and distributes water — ss a still — gathering of 1 by observing of the Bedford Level. This prostit aa 
or liquid manure on the land with less viol q | that the blood o nimals is derived from their food. The food | tions of gravel and clay. The C 
iolence and is first . du ‘which h it is “sottened, _and rendered united with numerous trout streams, the fall. These re 


ring 
more ity 5 a a of rain. It wil 5 pulpy, ready for deglutition by the saliva rounding hills, acquiring a velocity by 
from 10 to o horses are used, | the stomach, where it — chemically — upon. It is then wash away earthy materials from 16 are 
The oie by ‘the f feet 0 of the 8 is igoonsiderable pan onwards into the intestinal canal, the bile from the | them to their mouths, where in still weg by such depots 
and “e 2 of * — le i the mass. Chylifi. | aud form a growing delta. Land © P Romans, ‘The (ee 
liqu implem g ka ith | cation, or the separation af the nutritious from the annatritire was embanked and reclaimed by the Jen hundred 7 
qui less than An acre may be manured | portions, then ensues ; and in passing along the small intestines, | to empty itself at Wisbeach, © its waters int? 
with eck four to twelve tons b liquid for bs _ Drought | the chyle (or nutritive matter) is absorbed by the lacteal vessels, an artificial channel was cut, diverting gens were Sei 
ka — din and conveyed by the mesenteric glands into he receptaculum | river, which evacuated at Lynn. ne ed condition ui 
prevent seeding, | chyli. In this e terminates another system of ab. flooded, and continued in a most of Bedford 
sor ; 2 


Liew 
and the crops may be treated at any time with any | lymph, and the two united fluids, now forming“ blood,” pass | works cutting several | k bears’ 
’ 
manure or T Geg may require. Not ah th h the thoracic duct — the jugular . The — watery tract. Tusks of the wild boar, and o o ancient 
ee quid, e resembles a pump, from s . blood ion „e by the | frequently discovered in the fen aut ago 
8 ready liquid, such as sewer water, arteries soy ns turns by th The v s blood is un- ness of this region. Not many y vas 
t, hemp, and "a steeps, gas water, spent leys, fitted for circulation Tait. it 5 again 1 through the river was made straight by r 
and the like, and all soluble saline manures, such as lungs, pe the new grei by first 1 a vein is imme- allow the fen waters to escape ee These floods * — 
guanos, su hosp! te of lime, mar nd oth diately forced into the i to be t fitted for its proper | the liability to floods on the lan d alone has 
salts, but N ig , +s other | uses, Blood e 8 of — e among which are | matters. Not long since one #00 — 
ela: rm-yard manure, and even og marl, | fibrin, serum, and the red globules. Fibrin Mites Blood to co. | damage the Bedford Level 10 sh idy prodigious i 
y, and other insoluble arai 3 ae agulate—it is the most importantingredient, as the main part of | money. and has increased gore — and also d 
e bo dy are e com pose ed of it The red particles | quence of the improvements in dr 


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é a the bio a to — capilla pesca W. “the fens is mingled 
incomparably less than that of common Sion vareed Bi blacker by t e loss of Oxyg ange te ical ‘proces 1 m — A Un ewise furnishing = — 
The great object of the eet ae to enable the TT occurs in these vesse 10 ie hi id i nd | This is of rete sangan ce, as . aft 
tivator to liquefy all his manure, and to use it as rapid] he at evolved ; thus the blood serves two purposes—it builds: up | Marsh land is such as has ae , formi 
as it is produced. Price 20“. Pidiy the va dy, and also maintains heat in all | sists of silt and sand. 2 15 R decay of Y 
«tem wi illia parts by y this poen at the extremities of the veins and | of water and growth an E 
illiams, of pery: at pes ee carried off | arteries. Respiration is a function which cannot de suspended | land has been embanked from e th 
for ah a aes tem | arrested. It is ne pores for supplying the lungs and bloo a Nene, and since the bank z e sen side on. 
ree 2880 has excited great i ngenuity 1 pHo xygen, gas. | soil 4 or 5 feet higher n as S 
whi chine | In the osseous cay ity € called the thorax or chest, are d Rennie, the great eng neer, ped th 


a 
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an ch, looking at this r form the lun d f ke T g them, panne 
of | the lungs ; and respiration requires a continual alteration ole of the fens, gau ed 
it, at that of on Grant’s, of Stamford, and at that of the bulk of that cavity. Accordingly the bones or ribs whieh they are all high enough — LA to her 
Mr. Smith’s, of Stamf. “4, protect, can also alter their position by means of joi i without the use o and 
or paur 8 now to hav joints and | drainage, the upl 
nearly a e | cartilages. In expiration the chest contracts, and then the air, water. He proposed to convey ett 
BRI x ion remar — — , with the assistance of the muscles, hrows | catch-water drains), along i the best 
lement fs or the ‘present out report of the im ke at outward. The windpipe, when approaching | fen waters, thus giving the ie been tried 
P ow at Norwi We et etted to find that e ungs, avides ‘into branches calle ai bronetial 22 one to of its waters. This has O Nin in time be 
the Cumberland — in ty 3 R.” had — 1 ng. The ox and sheep have a in chen à horses only 3 ement 1 e ve be rendered — 
10 1 r 
not 2 1 off ground, as Mt by Mask the nes dale ti ose contact with and the —.— a — ab airman * 
Ransom pswich gases takes —— e veinous blood parts with its sas rle to them 
acid and receives a fresh supply of the Cik th ite carbonio parkin £ ¢ the which are siven 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 461 


29—1 849. ] 
who so kindly — ve een “a anh aun there Met a sere erable lankness behind it round horns.—The first prize in Class II, went to a white 
De- ue te company separat ida od ee e ne ee al of very r be e 
À Sse EARE: e ribs were fla e ce was short | i P 
TarasoaT, July 1 19.—This morning, the cattle yard | between the hook and the rump, and in that quarter — ere ee Hereford, while the 
Wia „to a large num mber waiting, and cattle never can be too long, as it affords the cuts of the | stitution and hardihood. The hind uarter 
re vere — crowde rg an inconvenient degree. | choicest meat. The best point of the animal was the ee 1 and t r long one oak ss 


alved previously ya the Ist of J. : a7 : nt of aenels eb 
Class L 4 — As Wm. Tod, of Elphin — 1 — e unusually full, but the twist rather narrow. — — . awarded to a mottled 
ae Be nod; 34, 20l, to Mr. Tho re Atkins, of The horn was of proper length, and well set, and its size bull, ll, which though inferi ae 
Sew aian Spore Atkins, o: showed a large degree of vigour. Though no doubt the | showed ough inferior to the former animais, yet 
Class II. Bulls calved sings the Ist January, 1847, and more | anima! was the best on the ground, we think that —— — slg A “eaten ae, 3 3 legs were 
—— in — ere ilk or calf—Ist prize, 207., to Mr, Pee metrical carcase ase has been n often seen of the short- | the back straight, and the chee i ——— 
e — Wariaby, near Northallerton, Yorkshir jee reed—more cylindrical in the carcase. e, and more | seemed deficient in taper, and in the outside furniture, 
45 F. Tn- aif H eifers, not exceeding three years old.—lst body was la: 4 à curr Herefo: 
, to Tie. ina aura m, of Hagnaby, near Spilsby, 4 x A us 
. 2d, 102, Mr. William Fowier, of Mar ** 1 over the kidneys. The thick.—The first t prize 4 Class 
Devizes. 1 hung ungrace , with a 
Gas V. Yearling pue ist prize 101 , toMe, ie | of thie length. 1 * a pee se . — ma | — red coloured _ of the aam rare Gori 
— of Bramwi „ Burnley, araile to Mr. C. Towne- pengesa me “oa be: varied in the colour of white and long in W the body, full D the quarters, 1 fleshy rit, being 
3 ed-roan. II yw pose pE ee sa 5 — but very points. The head and face w. were un ] 
st January, 1847.—ist deep in the rib. The chest was r deep and | and pleasant, and the neck and — — 


ey 

sa = ard Pri fthe 0 t H 

wW.: ce, of the Co P i j 

Ti, 1 eos Hons Pem 3 int and the back straight, The —— projected, | taper. The hook-bones were widely set, and the 
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Bulls calved since the 1st January, 1847, a 8 a considerable deformity. -The belly was deep, | of the brisket were ver t i 
» te a 1 to Me Pree, of the | a 2 showed much weight of offal. The breed was deserved the prize —4 — The touch wi 
i * better than in the first = animal, and the ct delicate.— The second prize was gained b Hebd 
i or oalf.— is pis 20l., to Mr. John Was wider and more rounded. The horn w very | cow of the very oldest variety, havin gige 
Hereford ; 2d, 10l., to Ur. appropriate for the r The twist was of ood | grizzled a and a back and | thighs ofa — — — 
— cdeger — 5 e width, and the hind legs stood very upright. The tail of white and red. But the points were mip ood, the 
R. Smythies, of East Hill, Colchester ; 2d 10. —— “rll cor in length. The hook-bone was particu- | flesh on the ribs, the — — the e thighs belag supe: 
— | rior to many oth 
2 — 5 — Beas, = he 17 N. . Bh rm projected much, a e upper bone of the|—The first 3 in Glas Tv IV. was . bya — 
enn ao A thin 5 40 — — whole, we believe we with a grizzled body and a mottled face. The — 
ter beast, as in the former —— of this animal f r particular] 
2 pA 3 : january, 1847, ms prize The rize in Class III. was award red | on the ribs cadena 3 N 
8 Farting, Gt Richie Tow south Melton cow em dó pienie e ed breed, which mrin the pro- | proportionally light, and the colour is not very pleasant, 
3 2 ihe 1 ‘ E — 54 ae high 7 2 fe mr am hea . in ee point | but otherwise the prize was in no case better bestowed, 
Iv uary, and mo el of s tri refinem The | —The second prize went to a hei purer Here. 
year old.—Ist prize, 207., to Mr. W. M. Gibbs, of horn of the proper length, and well set; hee sd long | ford sort, having a white face —— of a sandy 
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near Maito: 2d, a i Right Hon. the | : 
‘on in eon gpl Hall, K 2 2 — prize, to the Sal * placid. The — bees. onea he last alinaka ihe ‘first prize of Clase V. to 
— of Leicester, o of r 4 Hail, orf well covered with flesh, and the top rounded, The ling heifer, The compactness of the bod ae 
u., arham, near Wells, back straight, hook- bones wide a art, the ribs close | markable, aud the short space between — tra the 
si aeg Heifers, not more than 3 years old,—Ist , | home, and remarkably circular. Twist very wide, | rib. e buttocks were protuberant, and not so — 
K ae ge of feta near Taunton; thighs deep and fleshy. The touch uncommonly silky | the fore-quarters ; but the animal formed a ve superi 
jun., of Warham, near Wells, and resilient. Our opinion reckons this animal the | specimen of the 3 Herefords. The — 
an Yearling Heifers.—1st prize, 101, to Mr. Anthony best bred of the whole exhibition. The colour is not showed as good a body for a oe but the —— 
2 near Swaffham, Norfolk; 2d, bl., — fashionable, — the other properties most amply longer, we tended to coarseness. 
+5 0 ee rae Norfolk. mpensate.— The second prize went to a roan cowofa| Dervons.—The first prize was ined by an animal of 
Glass L Bulls calved before let cr 3 -1s z (ghed colour, This perder and the last are the pro- | great — and orii eh ade 
Mas , sp perty of the same owner, and show h skill] the De e wee oe 
te rfolle oF the sA „ar ow much s e Devon breed beyon any aiios 
errison, Bart., of Oakley Hall, Eye, and discrimination. No animals in the ard never more on the present occasion. At the 
IL Bulls calved since 1st January, 1847, and more than : lee i 8 i 
ze of 10}, to Capt. Inge, of Thorp Constan, same excellence. „The circular prominence of the | animals of the sam d ownership as the bull 
orth NR ribs surpass anything of common oceurrence. The | now exhibited. And i pu must t be ee — —.— 
— — cat 1 — Ean e — 1 width of the hook-bones and the fleshy points are almost | animal of this show very fully confi 
tae | unequalled. Mr. Booth must possess no common skill, — formerly expressed, The i gaa of the ody — large 
0 Thomas Berd, not above 3 years old.—The prize | The first prize in Class IV. was given to a white coloured | in proportion to the size of the 
sing — — od Pio we, 55 11 heifer under three years of age. So far as the parts are the compactness admitted no . taal in the e. 
the pri to Mr. George | developed at that age, perhaps no ge carcase was yard. No heavy offal appeared weighing down the 
deface the 


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orth Wal 
porpeses, fees, 5 rize, 107., to Mr, ever shown at any exhibition. "The si eof the carcase | belly, nor any exuberant lumps of fat to 
enham St. Peter, near Rougham ; nearly measured a straight li t The girth is full behind the shoulder, and 
outer hip, and the hook-bones were — hidden with | the flank vı ry closely ribbed home. 2 
sh. The postia at bey top was round, and covered | toa 33 <a the hooks 1 spread. — 
not the a Devon animal is 


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y that tribe of animals which | of Sp 3 breadth. The back was very — ceptionable. The present animal had —— on 
Aden! 5 and straight, the tail deeply set, and per er e the whole exhibition of this year.— The second pri 
those orf other 3 aud retained much beyond swinging. The head showed — itself, a horn animal showed a 11 visible — in the — 

chroni 807 e ge department. The | of the gentle taper, an agile ear, ag a placid quick eye, | and in the lead of the body. e head was coarser. 
inhabitants were ‘poss 4. of Britain aoe that the | deeply fixed, and pro tuberantly se set. Such an anim mal is and the shoulder leaner in flesh. But the very supe- 
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fred very much beyond de Ur. flesh soe _— as | superior carcase, but the points 2 dawe below the | of 2 Dev — 2 8 cattle. Though — the 
Which was, no T reed e tice of m oi | former animal, but to which it formed a very good | animal . a symmetry fully superior to the last 
ances of uced byt = tavodratle circum- | second. The hind legs stood narrow, and the ribs were mentioned animal ; every parta of the body being formed 

i ction. These circumstance es have eon wide from the hook bone. Th he girth and the Shoulder | by the very c animal life. The second 
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was awarded to a A aek roan yearling 1 biter z marks of perfection.—In Ciass III. the first prize went 
e excellence of the} very superior merit. At that age the ap . — to a Devon cow of much beauty. It is generally under- 
. — h could not have very w onderful. No beast in the yard showed m — tood the Devon breed are not good milkers, and with 
Rive: —— A emis spon y wae ago. | so et rn ora rib round, or a 7 — so richly | this admission the specimen not be sur- 
mn he result; but none | covered. The chine was most remarkably wide and | passed for ce bps valuable ble qualities of formi 


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much inferior to the las second prize N and 
e, badly covered, and the back 3 pial body, showing more propensity to mil 
Peso on- ne ern) fulne tendency to the narrowness in the hind parts, 
ates exhibited, Is year, eii tor the HEREFORDS. ~The first prize Bull showed the fleshy hook to the rump.—The first prize in Class IV. was 
Show Ar, thei qu os of some parts in piena than an ordinary degree. Itwas of the new | given to a Devon heifer, which amply maintained the 
Fer certainly has not been sur- Hereford or white-faced breed, with a white belly and | symmetry of the breed, as did the heifer that got the 
pigs and horses pra aa were e ert The body was lengthy and well proportioned, Leere prize. The two yearling prize animals were 
nF need Sections of our own particular | the hook bones buried in flesh, and the back straight in | handsome, the 2 being of a dark red colour, and 
. The hind quarters were very deep and the other more san seems that any mixture of 
th class of Sno pa gt fleshy, twist wide, and the legs short and well set. The | colour is not —— in the Devon breed, even to the 
m 10 cultivation of e, ee was very full and deep, and the shoulder tapered amount of one hair. This exclusion very much im 
ra — success. T in a very fine proportion. head was “hap proves the uniform ap ce of the animals, and 
We Shei ae dives 8 colour r shows a a ee which ooh glen ere ee. E ere 850 a 3 chem as having arisen from an unmixed source 
À delicacy al inion, | muzzle was small almost idaen, and this of progeny. They are reckoned delicate, or they might. 
every r the forms “The E pe 121 i 2 
b 


4 : : i * d into many situations 
N e i . of animal life. pent: superior beast of the very first class.—The second | where larger reeds would be unsuitable, The pro- 
j d vey The ani rs especially „ darker in in the prize went to a bull of the mettled faced Hereford pey to fatten is very good, and the — is of first- 
, Saber p Ttioned eal in question showed a lengthy breed, which likewise formed a very superior animal, | rate quali 
f à detail, blemishes, Wer kan not free from very The body was long and cylindrical, and av sem 2 en or any Breep.—The firs was given 
py The brow was N = and protuberant. The shoulder in the to a polled bull, of very fine skin, — [ong inthe by, 
Wee horas ear The y prominent, and neck showed the usual excellent point of a 7 Pe and loosely formed. The ec re, resembled the 

; Shoulder was thin, and breed, in which they much excel the boasted short- but the carcase very different in pyrene cays ie 


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462 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. [Jury a1, 


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ined by a a ball, i, which showed duce the colour itself, and vice versa. We believe that] activity of development, No such aim 
— —— the eo ess of the polled this mutual propensity is generally understood and ac- pigs. 3 1 Fi deficient in the — at 
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d. — order to form the flitches of bacon of the, Tequisite 
0 on ever had to | Jace — od to an easy ea Being with the gust 
of beef | the De is the rather diminutive size, and the | points form a superior animal 33 be 
1 bod a pig needs ‘then baron a y kind, and 


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heavier, and the horn one-half shorter, the only — Pao the daily use of consumption. ” 
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prizes in Class III. were given to cows of the | on . use of 

Derby or — long-horn breed. No particular qua- general appe me and tedious; very y largo pigs frm hams, which are we 

ttach these s e ing the i the convenience of constant use, and o that 

of acquisition, For these re mii can 1 ee mey 

size of a pig in the average fattened size 0b 1 preferred 

stones, . for me purpose of getitral es 14 

uses will in 3 smaller va 
We think the show of this varieties for deleae rai 


n of that breed, none of whose part 

-In Cl V. the prize was given to a long-horn cow, | congruous cy a ta et —— fully Ha 

which showed the fattening properties beyond the com- ported — very just reputa 

of that In Class V. the prize was Our con cluding notice of — pulls of this year’s show 
rt. In no other show have the Devons 1 gs 

n withheld the middle size, with th a large breed be 

unequalled in Britain. And Yorkshire most hams, Which any 

and pi its bre — ng excellence i in swin 7 did oe 

and pigs, under of breeder 4 

The black pigs, belonging to Me Y 1 — 


F n yon st prize as t 
allowed for competition, never came pe in higher in the fore — but the hind parts projected, and 
perfection than in the show of this year, which proves destroyed the square which should contain the outlines 
t the elements are not wanting, but only wait the | of the animal — ame. n this perpendicular position of . — P AND Honrsrs.—We regret that the limited oaa 
attention that is nec for the ulterior and succes- | the hind quar in the posterior extremity, the short- | of She mand does Arnet we 5 a ——— report of dean 
give development. We may confidently state an opinion, | horn ime every yates be acho The second prize bull — ich, however, we shall a 
i l te 


give next week. e may mention, g generally, that & 
larger iow of hoo * we have seen; ; that the indii 
imens of the young progeny, and not in n the bulls of the 3 eed, we give a candid —.— for the be part, of great merit, and that a gaim 
one class only, but in all the three breeds of the 2 * ba of a very considerable F of the Suffolk Punch bree 
varieties. It would be difficult, or an impossible, to | show. The prizes of the second class were withheld ; 
name the preference in the yearlin of the —— rn, and in the first class, both the prize animals were very 
Hereford, or es where . — by universal ac- 1 inferior to those of former years. This defi- 
—— very pre-eminent in their kind, The | ciency may arise, not so much from a want of the 
strete length of the body “re the Hereford, — — aer excellence of that breed, but from some casual 
glossy state 2 the skin, invites a very special atten circumstances, which direct the sending or with- 
and is pleasing beyond other — th t — holding of the animals, and Pa om as they meo * 
roperties that ma maturity. One 


At 6 o’clock in the evening a large assem 
dinner in the St. Andrew’s H $ Ball, ‘the E Earl 9 
i > 0 


ore | the nece 2 
valuable results. Still, the appearance is very inviting, | cient, and the succeeding year may be over-abundant 
and founds the — that the — ap ce will in the materials of exhibition, surely there can be no 
ya pondin p 


g din ab 
maturity. It is PEA to say — — may animals, of long and justly acknowledged pe heer It 
happen in the — of organised life, as some qua- must be poortader ed that the Devon and Hereford 
lities are seen to change, and even wholly disappear, breeds are suited to a greater number of localities in 
and properties enter and show themselves in lasting | Britain 8 e short-horns. But situations are 
vigour, whieh could not have been expected to proceed | numerous which have kept and can support the latter 
from the existing elements. Bas this certain fact, of | breed to the utmost excellence. The gaudy colours and | ve 
0 sp ar attracti i 


successful 
ord Chichester’s s s admirable peeled and we have no dost 
under Lord Down ire’s care that it will go on aud propt 
during the year to — ome 


very strong occurrence n 

neglecting the —— of the | best known elements, - as we before observed there may be a mutua 

as — may b e i me 

Calendar pd Operations. 
UL 


much more reasona 
expected to from a aeaa — of first-rate fe all events, a colour is W which pleases the eye, 
qualities 1 ‘rom * of incongruous | when no known quality is attached, and when a 
qualities, assorted without Judgment, —— — — it is perpetuated in the continuous offspring, without Brrwicxsmme Manse Fa Ak July 13,—Sinee last repo 
u satan We alwa: traw have finished ploughing, harrowin: g, and rolling the fallow ek 
and gone over it with the grubber, and made it all ready 
3 the weeds, but the workers ar [am] 
ps ; the Swedes and the gs y 2 7 


ities ppear, equal or more va 8 ones oil often — „roan to any other in the short-horn breed, which 
arise; and when inferior properties are banished by | may have resulted from — . tendency of 9 
d red. On the 


iy 


the growth of the animal, the contiguous influences of | original , PFE which we 2 an N. 

e better elements are often found to bring into ex- grounds a hardihood a re general utility, we | 8007 2$ we cam get the fallow land cleaned. S P se fo d. 

istence a much more valuable and lasting substitute, | always nae the sakes ae refor 5 to the new > seg ea core fine — S bot. We bare bee 

which not only formsa very valuable exchange, but | white-faced breed, and we believe that t engaged cutting t e remainder of our hay, whichis asmall er 

contributes to imp the whole frame of the acknowledged by the breeders of these pic na cattle. | an w an average, and is so thro ont eas 
st expectation ery reasonably the white face ext often | terday we 5 —— * hing falow 

grounded on a superio ast being produced from | does, the visual organ becomes to app wea The — oc is ARRIA rapid progress this week, n Wel 


0 other pre —— from present appearances 
be quite so bulky n so early as last year. . A. 


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most frequently proceed in the opposite direc- | . among Tessin d cattle, has enabled us 

tion. This is the inevitable result of bad breeding, dr: — an m establish this distinction between the whi 

or of — progeny from imperfect specimens; no |and mottled-faced Herefor er 2. it may not 

improvement car expected from them, for the ele- — i in lowland oe which suit the temper o 

ments do = — ei nature requires both time and | most animal organisations ; but on higher 8 me 
n vei pro ved. Th 


CONSTRUCTION 
aper read * f the members a r oe 


. cast 
armers’ 2 statea op ey a * 3 
bout 6s. a rod of 7 


onl “Th t of quarryin of co 
aa of stone £ Pi surface, an 
best F x: Q Tea It may be grown distant e 
m 
den, are in existence, and dela. e ae press istent ie many he deal of iere * a 
are in and delay not to come forward 8 a the exception of the bulls of the short- Probably the white 
in the progress of the animal, We dwell at some len horn breed, we think the Society never E a better LATE — Crop : Rape. oe i ia the na 
on this influential of all consid agth y — ern age oe you ean 5 ity. Rape 1 


e my t. 
: PIG : Rustic Good 
from the very best adult specimens can be found, | Class I. Boars of a lar argo. * reed. "Prize of 15l. to Mr. Ashby | ` % little linseed gruel in a mash. 4 
and to lay the foundation in order to raise a valuable H. Wilson, of the Abbey, W n, Cumberland. Second prize also be applied with a syringe twice a nd g, 
Wen à to Mr. tg Editon, vi ‘Headingley-hill, Leeds. seruple; cold water, 1 pint; mix. V. C. S. bene 
this year’s show, our ex ail breed.—First prize of 151, to Mr. | Wrens : Clackmannanshire. Bow the weeds 30% 
sie ha pecta are | W. Pisher Hobbs, = Boxted Lodge, near — —— d plants ust be got 
more 232 raised and satisfie more by | prize of 5“. to Sir Edmund Kerrison, Bart., of Oakley-park, oh 1 may be destro 
— on ‘the aged elements | near Eye, S Suto We have done it. Itis a fact ie 
or igin. Similar | to Class III. Breeding sow of a large breed.—The prize of 107. | by perseverance in cutting them off at 
via Sanat s — yE 1 . Joseph Tuley, of meri Head, near Keighley, Yorkshire. 
— results under Class IV. Breeding sow of a small breed.— The prize of 10l. they appear. xñ 
— jäs — n „ and hence we may loo rp, Tuley, of Ealey om ‘re ban, oy Re oo ; 
—— —— of all the animals in „ . e fon. of Laly Piani; H prize of 107, T GARDEN, J0LY 
Britain being produced in the e dae eee ME: Mark Stainsby, jun., of Lady itt-lane, Hunslett, near 3 — —— A reaches, 
a very chief element ase e any handsome Bg VI. Breeding sow of a small breed.—The prize of 10l. | well kept up. Pine-a ples remain cots have ö 
progeny can arise, we have much pleasure in recording r. W. Fisher — 2 22 Boxted 8 near Colchester. Cherries are plentiful. ert jes an 
the three breeds as sho — ripe demand. Or wa 


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this year. W to a large size, the es almost in pablo of reared | ance, as well fer fe 

i ge our opinio , O8 — a ur 

is year. e nion, that no show of The animals included. ame "the oe — of mo ye. are: suffi ient A er 5 
n ngst g 


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ibited two specimens equal 
comparable qualities with the two a cows. of cate eg dies are maha of hair, which | plentiful. The season 
Mr. Booth, of Yorkshire, The fleshy properties were | tive of t es the skin to blisters and eruptions, and is also indioa. | over. | Green Peas fof 
developed almost beyond y prope tive of the —.— tof — et 8 eh though the hear are cheaper. Pota! sufficient 
ope yond precedent in careases that be large and bulky. A pile of hair medium oath, and Lettuces one other § $s. pottle 
were rather under the common size of the heavy breed not too thickly body, is mont 8 to constitute | Mushrooms fetch from 1s. 6d, to 
of —— while animals were fully capable of . pari healthy, pig À 7 ngewe of court i 25 very consist of Heaths, benz, Carstens, 
i | ess 2 0 ic developmen -em § lums, 
pamen o eo and reasonable bulk. | of the sm CC e O 
1008S were v particular ded, whi | of hair, and the p pet of the skin * ·[ 24 them ‘to 8 be Wee aT 
a pic of much fafinence in aff ording roo m for the | Povlous ulcers. Black pigs are less exposed to this evil, re Pine-apples, per 1b., — Oranges, er Toa w 
embryo fœtus, also in developin . ap r apes, hoth ouse, 15, er sl 
ing the milking | rain, But animals that are dressed for use with the skims | P es, per doz., 68 — 27 ert 
easant s 
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a u a presi is not much consideration in removed to either of these objectionable extremes, and] — standard, p- Ib., be b 
ps Oe a colour is very often indi- Show the very great advantage of having a good middle Gooseberries, green, p. hi. siere, N 
ative of certain qualities * propensities, which pro- breed to L the necessary size with the refined) 38 6d to 5s , 
required | Currants, do., 5s to 88 


29—1849.] ~ THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE 
. 463 


—— 
1 . HAT. Per 
to 6d Per Load of 36 Trusses. 
doz.,6d to 8s | Spinach p. sieve, ii to Is 6d prime Meado Swurnrirrp, July 19. Sales by Aucti 
Is 6d to 4s Onions, p. bunch, 24 to 6d Prime Meadow Hay 5 10 78s) Clover“... . . 60sto95 bp Auction. 
bash., 1s 6d to2s6d | — Spanish, p. doz., 1s 6d to 4s | Rowen w Clover . ., 60 85. ENGLEFIELD-G 
P Pi sieve, 6dto9d | Shallots, per Ib., 6d to 8d — 50 60 Str ns -GREEN, E EGHAM, $ 
1 6d to Is F „ . Coors. to 20 years pyr gery lg men: 9 
* * — x RLAND s 7 
dus h., 48 to 78 Vegetable 2 doz. F s 6d to 3s | Prime Meadow v Hay 70s to 758 Inferior 8 2 Pianofortes by Broadw se e — Household FURNITURE, 
8 — — Inferior ditto. s... ++ 55s to 80 liard Tab and Tomkinson, a 12 
bunch, 3d to 6d Lettuce, Cab., p.s Ne 50 70 New ‘Clover , =a le by Thurston, 4 In-calf ALDE 3 
doz., 28 to 4s Cos, do., 6 P „ 55 80 airy a Brewing utenails, 4 capi LDERNEY COWS, 
bal. 466 1% Ola & Sera if 34 Pit ils, 4 capital 6-light Pi 
p: bdi, = 6s Mushrooms 3 lover ... .... , 88 a 38 S, swith Hot-water Apparatus and Lining Walls — elon 
e 8 Sal A . 
Randle, 3d Fennel, per bunch, 24 to f MARK L lights “Garden-engine, ik — Pony Weter-art on 
Beans, p.100, eet to — Savory, per bunch, 2d to 3d MONDAY, JULY — Ty ly of E — 5 T 
286 Thyme, per bunch, 2d to 3d neighbouring gounbike Bey. of English Wheat from the R. WATERER wit ‘te ll by A 
— 8 Parsley, p. doz. bun., 38 to 4s time past, Early in bet e4 cn 1 larger than for som DAT, July 24, at 11 Aaa k, y Auction, on TUES. 
le eT Cai pinen. Ooi — — — — however, | sidence), 106 de ‘property of T, R. Ward, Esa, (leaving Bis ee 
a 8 p j came IV. ver, a , 
‘bunches, | Mint, green, per bunch, 3d to | latein the day, — tie . on remained unsold | 20 ye bo czen $f fine old Port and Sherry Wines, from 1570 
“a Basil, green, p. bunch, 4d to 6d — been submitted to. Foreign: Vary tle busines a “ey edding, the Ach Id . N ties and Madge Wines ; 
occurre Ch Tabl d g Bedsteads, 
SMITHFIELD, Monpay, July 16. cep * — ee “ similar r e been ac- Square | Pi te 88 Drawers, fine-toned 6. octa 
oon wale en rem — ent n We. it is exceedingly difi- consequently raise our qu tains the ad avanc — a of Fri naa Ta ast, and wre | 3 ; prone es nt 1 Nie "Ten gy ae by Tan 
owever, 48. i e.—Peas s are a slow | Cues, Balls, 2 e ursto i 
eist 3 again a large supply of Sheep; laas Thare l Oats are u pons — — trade eae. Sete Ser thie | Toes ow and i 1 8 Cows, "ine 
5 in a few instances 1 onun * somewhat Fe — et; * former sold at 308. yay Nar stg nor Cov 7 fae Apparatus, Pi „Wan wi yomg 
obt man ULY 20.— ping, and 8} $ 5 s with Iron 
— 4 * ae = fhe 3 for ges Fas tained. holders be eing gen sae aar i gg man badly attended, and | à Greenhouse 15 4 : ope tn — and j 64 Pines, 
stich form ty of the e supply, The supply of Calves ro ag millers . 3 LN. about 23 Tools, Box and Handlights 
ndeis very heavy at low rates,” From Tolland. and F À maneng ani kafe in e 
an paar $e 
e * 345 ; and from 2570 Sheep, ‘at 186 6 Calves ; Wednesday at a decline ‘of rg ey kag saló than machan i h — end Har 
= 5 1 * . 57 — 0 Beas fully maintains our borasi quota 2 T; dia om M onday, . lour Firewood, Sprays, an ro 
Bb . „r t- „ 4 | may be purchased on rather reduced terms. Cor is all, and | — — 3 
„ 22 86 4 0 Ditto Sar n . 3 4 = he reminder on the Hale of 
1 — 3 6 — 3 8 Ew es Ex 4 quality eee FRIDAY T; 1 20.— At this day’s market we had Mr. E ce a 3 green; 
2 Beasts 2 10 — 3 4 Dit 2 W. dealers, and there was * dem Chertsey, Surre nd Land pa Timber Sx 
e 99 pana Meus . 3 . bat 1d, per bushel less money was taken. Good à Piou r FREEHOLD. : 
Hal breds . +? 2 . ne OL ine — 
«„ | n n <. m2 8—3 8|done Onts eaf ganeri hy her kinds very little was LO BAe PRE MISES, 
x 2 an: 
i Beasts, 8234; e Calves, 393; Pigs, 208 Indiana +, ee erg — — Nen e transactions i in R. WATERER will 9 
v. have today a small sup ly. 15 E 3 quarter. a decline of 18. per | o'clock, by order of the on tomate July 26, 1849, a 
brisk at fully Monda in «few instances 4 | 2 A E PE PE ie Butler, the excellent HOUSE AND PREM! late Mr. Benjam 
i e 8 1 realised. Th AVERAGES. Oats.) Rz. Beans. | Peas | 822 part — —— Extensive Pee — deen 
i e coo. ning 8 rfi un: Š ndon-street ; 4 
——— We have are in “the 2 8 ya aai . — ig by ad 6d} 31 7d 385 4d — of 28%. It — ng ma four airy 9 at the yearly 
tis quality being scarce, but on the whole trade is no better: — 13. 26 518 ol / 0 \30 + |C Kiteten with convenient, Cupboards, School-room and 
| 3 trade is exceedin: ty I heavy, and | . 23. 6] 26 5 18 9 25 3 A ee Bee Wash-house, Two Cellars, Dairy and P — 
— arly ad fäculty obtained. nd July 7 1 25 11 17 11 28 30 10 |31 5 | — 2 Oven, Coal and Wood Sheds, Ch antry, 
l ve 80 Beasts, 810 Sheep and 199 Cal * 2 FE 82 1 [98-10 Wo with Lott over, Large Build 
from France, 24 Beasts ; fr r and Nort bs 7e 25 3 18 9 26 11| 82 130 9 r Spacious Yard and — well . for 
Scotland, 29; and 113 Milch Cows from — n, 70; Agereg. Aver. 45 8 th excellent water ; also the Freehold and a Pump supplied 
maton, | ee oi est ean sor ge —— — 2 ilis 2% s| a1 5l į |adjoining the above, called “ The Co — iy pi ‘and 
pe e rer 3 4— 3 8 85 Grain 1 1 1 1 0 0 i 10 — — * y De ee S Upper Sitting-r 288 
—— 8 > Sho 21022 P tuations in the last six weeks’ Corn Aver — —— — Building at back, Two Seable 
wbs... RICES. p | onveniences, w 
= „ Gates: — . : a= ‘ — UNE 2. JONE 9. .| JUNE 16, Inn 23. — lr 14. — ry Ashby’s, of Fy egy mp rent of I8} 
Sborn . I be viewed, by! b per 
662; Sheep * TAA 12, 790; Calves, 611; Pigs, =e, ot Messrs G sale, and f urthe r Part then — — — had 
» GRAZEBROOK an 
HOPS.—FR J Auctioneer, L my — X or of Mr, W ATERBE: 
Messrs, PATTENDEN and S AY, uly 20. N. B aud and Timber Surveyor, Cherts: Sur B, 
r N.B A Pian of the Hatter wl be i an ranr ofanla 
ee gt BE SOLD, 5 NEAR WEYMOUTH 
on. Liverpool. Wakefiel 
PRICES d | Boston. 
aeae 
CURRENT. July 9. July 16 July 10 July 17. Jul | 
ca a is Bog be . 6. np 13 2 pam | July12. | July 19. with 
— ar 67% 16 s % d s : 62 ea 62 Ibs. a eae and ahoat two acres of Rich 2 
* toane 10 0048 08140 to52145 05048 650 6 1 6 7 0 6 (7 ier eines Anon Sl ors, 
0d, red. age 7 87 2 7 7}45—53/46—54/46—53/46—53 16 6 6 f 
— % 46 11 7 2610 7 24446 we 2 2 7 3 
bb 47 7 45—471 — — 66 0 6 666 10 6 N BE LET far a — of and 
Foreign... y 7107 6 7 9| —53 —54 — — 141 4 haelmas next, the Farm r 
4 8 8 64 8 8 645455 — — (5 06 2 6 | Folkington, r 
8 480lbs. 480 lbe. a eee 
Fi À on st 4 ry cI — 
* aae 22—23.22— 23 — 2 * 7E n — 
8 4 7%%— 0 — Rd „„ me. = 
Grinding iz. oi ie tog 
Ms =: [etaar] = — ee a. 
B — — 92194 qr. 
Ea tne ee, a asians 24—26| 23—25 23—25 
D k 27 30s—32s | 30s—32s — |28—30/28—30} 29—32 29 
* 7118—27 5 ae 24 28ʃ24—28 — —32 
Malt Ship... 6! 6 iat 8 
i ö — — ere „%% ee —— 
: @ats— White., 19—25 45 Ibs. ee 155 dye . ee for a term of years, and entered upon 
ne. 25|1925les10e3e 2d/2sl0a3e 2d — | — 21-21 GOLMOOR, in the pariah of Bling, in ¢ of TESTWOOD AND 
et + {15—23 15—232 5 2 8 2 52 l4—21 14—21 | 20—28 Dm parish of Eling, in the coun 
4 * 4212 eee ee of 355 T- E sia Soe e he Proprietor, Tt consista 
to eH Panels! eee ee — ns atered by the river Test ; aikoina bani DA 
; Boilers 25—30 25 30 — Pace 1 =. 151 acres are of rough 7 —ê . 
; —30} 34s— 34 28—3228—32ͤ- Ags 33—40 0 e niaan degg into rich productive rk mes aey bs wie ie a 
23—25 LPA PREA Ee 196lbs, | 196 Ibs, | Buldings.” The | Fem house, and large commodious 
-~ [25—32/25—32| 32—34 | 32—3 me en: e aa ² G De «| Sennen and the: tarnpike seai Aaa Se x of 
> | 4 oe k we a e ae be throug — a — = within 1) mile of the Eling Reiiway 
23—29 30—33 | 32—35 . 10 rom, 
E — 32 32. 35131-36030 1 apply to Mx, Jons eee Whitfield, 1 Berkeley, 
5 235 3613 2—14 n Phd dS „ near Glouces. 
21— 36/21: — — 34 —36 a. — 34—36034—36 15—16 = — the Farm, 2 | House will be directed to show 
i—36|21—36; 23 —32 N 80 3113031 — 1113 aca C a FR 
* w 91 bef ves — — eel 
— | 40—42 | 40—42 32—4032—40 — tis ‘ T MALDRETT srn hou . * . 
rie 8 0 2 Bask: con T ii E ‘ord; fo of all tithes rates, —— of miles from Guild- 
eee anise and —— 60 acres of 
é ‘ * ik e, ang 52 acres 
92. 7 ] 2238 Arabl wW 
a [9L 76 71. 128 i There are ou the F 
ulkan] 7.12% | — | — oe — have or not as he pleases. Roads exceeding 8 
, ae — wee oon a ak i pat — — near Toren enquire r. e 
+ 84034 5 8% TET | — | — } — | un TO NURSERYMEN, | : 
. sack|p, sack; 280lbs, 2280 Iba. 2 mae "BE DISP FLORISTS, AND ‘OTHERS, 
436—44 35—36 | 35. P p. per sack. per sack OSED OF, by Private Contract, the 
36 | ~ 36840640 37-39 | 36-38. | LEA.BRIDGE NURSERY.—For particulars, apply 
i f premises, ses, or of Messrs. PROTHEROE and — apply the 
July 17 Impts.| Averages. | Imports. | Aver. Aver. Aver. | ong Amn DISPOSED OF. at a — 
m mpi 3 hy 1 ARDENERS’ Cunontcne, for 1841; the Gardeners” 
52 e alent ap 25 = s, d. ds je d. qr. 2. 4. ges — — 7, and 8, all complete, 
6 95 |48 3 | 7065 9 11 | 1501 | 49 03 795 |“ Gardeners’ Ma ee X 
14970 25 11 sei 21 0 H a gazi ne fòr 1937: and Four Volumes 
21 6 "a spone gst ae 581 arrison’s “Floricuktural Gabinet,” commencing in 1838, all 
s 24060 7 x 263 [N9 @ | 1016 13 11 285 19 34 ae: unbound.— Apply to B. E., Post-ofties, Dulwich, Surrey. 
An ee eee ue a ae 850 TO THE SEED TRAD pee 
22 mm “— 
abi a 1 190 30 0 827 34 0 19 . b i BE DISPOSED: OF.— An old-estabiished — 
10 2222 — 871 Bos aS di — 7 in one of the largest towns in the North of Eng- 
3 n a firs situation, with premises low. a 
| KIVGSPORD SEG above presents a good — tor a br men 6 
i AR ang SA ; anch establishment of 
- ~ md LAF. | TUNNFCLIFFE, e. DU — —— I and C. STURGE. bat priucipa 3 * tres ad ; ae at a valuation. ‘None 


464 THE GARDENERS’ 


— 
DARIAN | CEMENT, —.— internal Stucco, instead of 
common plastering, y be ted and papered within 
20 hours of its application to the bare walls, ye | by the use ot 
ay be rendere! itable 


also prepa! 0 
ing, & c., &c., specimens of which W 
the Patentees, CHARLES FRANCIS a and Sons, Nine Elms, London 


FLEXIBLE INDIA-RUBBER HOSE, PIPES, ap TUBING. 
AMES LYNE HANCOCK, Sole ‘Licensee 


ot become lea mea rom remaining | 
tor Fire —.— 


—— 
and flexible pipe 


—+ Bound 
purposes po daa a permanently sou 
VULCANISED Si RUBBER GARDEN HOSE fitted 
3 and jets, complete, for attaching to 
Pumps, 
J. L. * tr the attention of parties using long lengths 
of the Flexible Garden Hose to his SELF-ACTING HOSE" | wi 


fa: poe Warehouse. 
. —— . N iy Letters 3 as above will recei ve 
mediate 
Gal 1855 WIRE GAME NETTING.— 
Td. per yard, 2 feet wide. 


=< 


Ja pane 
ised. 
ne m men 1 24-inch wide 5 per yä, on. * 250. 
h oe 
2-inch „ . — ge g ove 12 » 9 ” 
linch ,, t 5 $y aS 55 © aise 
inch ,, strong ove 5 75 B „ 
ch „ extra strong 1 


All the above can be 9 x any width 0 proportionate prices. 


If the upper half is a coarse mesh, it will reduce the price one- 
fourth. Galvanized sparrow-proo oof netting for pheas asantries, 3d. 
per square foot. Patterns forwarded post-fr 

Manufactured by BAR ok age pre BISHOP, Market-place, 
Norwich, and delivered free expense in London, Peter- 
borough, Hull, or Newcastle. 


N 


n 


2 
122752525 
2 


ateis 
222 222888855 
o N 

WOE SIREN SDI 
$ 5 28289 MSH 


Gee WIRE NETTING, TWO- 1 


as e: trop e Show, ok 
highly ised pon for its utility and pretty appearance, and 
w! he cheapest and best article ever produced 


F. L. S., Lectu 


and to secure 
— it a 
par Sng gf tom Taine quantities always tock, of 
any 


15 24, 36, and 5 ee it —_ — , be 

dimensions desired. forwarded free of —.— 

12 3 wide 3d. oo aes 2 a ng a p FE 

18 „ » 44d. „ „ 

24 „ 25 6d. „ 55 ” — ” 
Galvanised do., 3 ‘oot extra. 

Extra strong Imperial Wire . ntanna 3 feet, 1s. 6d. per 
running yard; if galvanised, 2s, Also every pene of 
Wire Nurs and Fi ards, Wire iouis Lan and 

Dish Meat : —— 


gany frames; Gothic garden bordering, 6d. per running foot; 
lower * from 3d. eac we Sere 2 20s. each; 
d Tying Wire at 


— * na 3 35. 9d. each; Galvan W 
Dahlia Rods, and every E. tion of Wir 

aed waitin 2 the use of paper- 8 millers, — 

— — ll of Tuomas HEN RT Fox, 44, Skinner-street, 


HETLAND Pí PONIES AND CATT TLE. — 


7 
84 to 12 hands high. Also 
and HEIFERS, down 
alf Y ——— and in ale ; also some small 
The eens give a large 
rich, similar to the 
. Tuomas A ORN Sony and suitable to this climate. 

8, Salesman 

Majesty, 69, Wapp Importer to her 


AUTION. DE LOCOCK’S FEMALE WAFERS. 


Just 


enuine but “WAFER RS,” and that “The 
o. 2 of the genuine Medicine.“ Dr. re is no 
afers are the on remedy recommended 
Ladies, They fortify e Constitution 
They remove —— agen ot ‘ths Hear 
allay a create en ie nin nd 
1 direct 


ride. 
ondon; wh are also Agen 15 e “De 

ma, n. oughs 
and Colds, Sol aby bp N M à 
Sead. wud Lis. por Bok: edicine Vendors, at 1s, 14d., 


swers adm irably for pong a kinds | 
kept i 


is day is published, in feap. 8vo, pric 
SHORT INQUIRY INTO THE HISTORY OF 
AGR RIGULTUDE, in ANCIENT, MEDIÆVAL, and MODERN 
ag oo ey CHANDOS WREN HOSKXNS, Esq. 
pd eh ts the Author by BRADBURY and Evans, 
, Bouverie-street. 


J. Hooker's Guide 


Jast published, uniform mp Sir 3 
us Wood Engravings, 


o Kew Gardens,” in 16mo, with nu 
ha 4 
Geo, BOTANIC GARDEN ; ; or, a Popular 
uide to the f Glasgow 
London: LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, and LONGMANS. 
Glasgow: JoHN SMITH and Sons. 
T RECENT GENERAL ATLA 
btn ly New Edition, corrected 75 1849 from 
with all the and 


— 
Just comple 
the best y — — 
many of the Ma — he 
colombier 4to, pri 


ved; in one * 1 


— 70,000 8 21 of Places. 

ery best of the large 

ed, for 2 aud accuracy, as 

s its very. reasonable cost. A e at — beau- 
ph t 


he most cursory e son 1 
t the opening ¢ of the present century, 
h whi ch, in such mer 
late, and th 
ail whose du — 
— Ex- 


with the best collectio a 
pve show us the astounding rapidity wit 


— 
— than equal pace that is kept with worn 77 
x is to popularise and make acceptable their results.” 
miner, 
London: LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, and LONGMANS. 
~ KEITH ON TAR GLOBES, IMPROVED BY 1 
RIER, AND MORL TON. 
New Edition, elende ably improved throughout, 12mo, with 
Plates and Dia agrams, aes 66. 64. bound, 
TREATISE ON THE USE OF 8 GLOBES; 
or, a Philosophical View of the E and Heavens. 
New Edition, greatly improved, by 
ALFR AXLOR, M.D., F.R.S., Lecturer on Chemistry, 
&e. n ma 8 Hospital; 
R. A ESURIER, rn, B. A., Scholar of Corpus Christi 


Terk Oxfe ‘ord ; 
J. MIDDLETON, Esq., "Protas of Astr 
Ada oe ted to 


KEY. the new Edition, b r MIDDLE- 
TON, 12mo, 2s. clo 
London : ene Brown, GREEN, and eee 


PESCHEL’S WORK ON NATURAL PHIL HY. 
Just biad, 3 = fep. 8vo, Woodcuts, 215 lot, 
LEMENTS of PHYSICS. By C. F. PESCHEL, 
Principal of the Royal pny . W. Dresden. Trans. 
~~ from the German, with EST. 
Vol. I. contains The Physics of ‘Ponderable Bodies, 7s. 6d. 
bes — and III. Imponderable ies, 13s. 6d. 
e the ha nd of a master, 5 0 has. placed before his 
mee in 
improved s work is a little eneyclo- | ` 
coe E ot aoai science, cat we heartily r uea it as a 
work by — h the panu e bind pened coe aad e 1 
: Lon and Lonem 
NEW Soran or ENES ran MA A e 
WORKS by Mr. THOMAS Sak Mathematical Master of 


readers ‘int the 


the National Society’s Training College, Battersea. 
RINCIPLES of the DIFFERENTIAL and IN- 
TEGRAL CALCULUS simplified and applied, 12mo, 


air rr ane LE 122 
ALGEBR 
TREATIS 

the Method of Seog 
EXERCISES on MEC 

PHY. 12mo, Woodcu — 


EUCLID’S ELEMENTS. 
— Ir and Exercises. 
10 telae mn BROWN; 
He ee S BOTANY. — 
h Plates and Woodeuts, RY; 218. 
“SCIENTIFI OTAN 
n INDUCT By Dr. 
dinary Professor of Botany i in the {University 
Translated ay Epwin LANKESTER RS, 
rer on Botany at the St. George’s School of 
don, 
mgratulate our readers on 


“GEOMETRY, TENTES A “ier a LAND- 
VELLING. 
ADE EA SY. 12 
r 

NIOS 1 NATURAL PHILOSO- 


E ready, 
The First Three Books, with 


N, and LonaMans. 


ust. publiated, 
YRINCIPLES ‘of 


eee 25 Lon 
the appear 
capable to jus s Dr. Lank ester. It cannot 
fail to interest deeply allt > ee rs of Botanical Science, om 
we believe it inc be Poca th | a valuable addition to ou 
A ame Philosophical 


13 70 Buow N, GREEN, and enpo 
A Hae SCH 
Just published, in ee with Plates and Woodcuts, 18s, cloth, 
oe a OF ASTRONOMY, By SIR JOHN 


W. HERSCHELL, Bart., & c. & c. & 
ur leave of this remarkable work, „Which we 
hold t to be, * doubt, the most 


a ver 
To òn the First Principles r ARITHMETIC, after 


0 
nglish edition 2 this 1 work, by a — — bd | 


course e of life. B A Pa 


ne 
H 7 


to 


f tho 

ag : some of it 

rst principles, and whi 
— race. On the subjects Shee and 

pas sions, t t dvi ut is 


5. 
a t 
Psa 


duodecimo put 
p 


d Rr 
à of 2 — 


Times, 
39, Co — 


PILLS, NOR ANY OTHER MEDICINg, 


0 MORE 

ONSTIPATION, Indigestion, Diarrh 

Sickness under a 

e heartburn, flatulence 

tions, pips Were. bilious, ve . complain 
heart, der oe of th e kidneys a nd bladder 

scrofula, consumption, devilty, 4 oft 3 

tually and permanently removed by D 
LENTA ARA . EROR 


or expense, as i I 
for infants and invalids generally, god “uti ATTON- 
it never s acid on ft 
ach, but im e relish for lanch ar dinne, iad 
Feslored ‘the 3 = ee 3 
most e serenti d Co. sii New pte 


other 


5 onthly re 

bg the ighest reqpectabiliy, practical due 

the removal of the aboy omplainte, crate 

health to the most feeble 9 
Analysis by ‘the celebrated Professor 5 Chemis 

lytic ioa 8 1 n ioe „ 


pra 
8 sily di 

of the 3 * bowels and thereby 

sia, constipati d their nervous consequences, 
1 alytical Che ons 


name of Mess, 
and Cos. invaluable Revalenta Arabica 8 
e Right Hon. the Lord Stuart de Decin- 
——, Dromana, Cappoquin, county Waterford, Feb, 15, 1885. 
emen, I have derived much benefit from the use of the 
Revalenta Food.—Stuart de Decies.” 
4 Park- va Little S Ohlsen, London, Oct. 2, 1848. 27 
been Poer EAA by your ur excellent 
eeks’ time, &c.—Parker D, Bing. 
8 Royal N 
—, Brom — Middlesex, March 31, — 
The lady for whom I ordered your r food is six months 
2 pregnancy; she was PARERE 66 verely from indigestion and 
oastipation ; throwing up her meals ct blag after 


ar. and 
7 


to resort to physic or the en 
appy to inform you that your i aod. 971 ba- 
n sick since, had little 


n She has 
formerly, and the chi ldi is is very views and 
cong an she begs I 

her a n pa 2 or pep one change, W 
eas to the Revaleuta, r to fo lowing 
n u have been so very . oe 4 * 

m, ERF very truly 
12, rick-street, ‘Cork, Api 1849,— 
Arabica Food to a girl of 
ithoul 


healthy. Sate 
eee 
strc te ai 


vomiting ceased al 
hen health is improving 
I trast a) will — &c.— William M 
ril 13, 1849.—Respec 


Esq eg 
— y 4 Beg. „late Surgeon 96th 
t 5000 other correspondent j 18 
s. at 22s, ; super- 
or 10 Ibs. canisters 


in which the laws of astronomy and the appearances of the 


observers, and recalled to those who are.“ Athen 

In the earlier 2 more especially much wek 50 
introduced, all intents and 1 indeed, 
y Outline s of Astr aye must be considered a new k. —80 
careful * 5 the. revision, correction, and remodelling of 


the ae Pes numerous the additions to it, and so 
important the ae — s of inquiry opened up.“ Eruminer. 
Lo me a 3 MAN, "Baw: GREEN, and Lonemans ; and 
JOHN a 


T REMEDY FOR INDIGESTION, 
} ORTON’S CAMOMILE 3 are 3 
t n remedy to — 
suffer from 2 Sick Headache Bilious s Live 
plaints; they act as a powerful tonic and gen patie nang p 
atone) ‘strength to the stomach and eee it the nervous 
system 3 at ls, 11d. bi 2s. 9d, each, by A. WIL- 
LOUGH —— Co, (la Win 
Without, ae meaty all Medicine Vester. 
NORTONS PILLS, and do not be persuaded to purchase 
tations 


recommended 


* 
a ortnum, 
r 2 Her Majesty a 8 ; E 16 tine 
n Glasgow, Alex. Duncan, jun. 
n Dublir Dublin, Bewley, Fisher, a and í 0. 
E 


= 
© 
& 
2 
© 
a 
8. 
at 
E 
pA 


TOOTHACHE HE PERMANENTLY CUR 


only Subesabos approved by the 
1 — in as ‘being ur eee dewith r dan 4 


3 Revit 


the good effects = which 
e Unite —— ingd 


mpany e 

by return * — 
Whitetriars Plectatret, | 
stam CAUTION.— 

has ind uce 85 Hen! 
imitations, and to copy ‘ ents, 
It i — needful therefore A gs against such rd by 


e name of Joun WiLLIs accompanies each packet. 


Cabin. 
For each Person. Guiness: — 5 
l4 years old, and upwards 3 e's 
7 years old, Bos Gander? oe 8 * a 
1 year old, 
der 1 1 5 Compra, 
we year Surgeon | is appoin sd Dieta 79444 
Medicines, Medical Comtorts, E an vr 
for each Glass of Passengers. = P ae 1 7 
for Persons paying in ull for their o information, apply prose 
For —— Passage, be + —5 ade doe 
New ZEALAND House; 4 er o Court, 
110, Fenchurch-street, London. 377 Harten 


9, Broa uae 
July 21, 1849. 
No. 13, Upper 7 
mot a Nemi . e 
th in the Coun 
bard-s' r im, the 2 755 oe 
"Gove arin, 2 county; n r 


New Zealand House, 
London, 


Printed by WIIIIAM BBADBOR 
re of St. Pancras, and FBE 


Lo 
parish of St. ‘ADDRESS? 
ments aud Comm 


ATUBDAY, JULY 2, 184 


[HE GARDENER 
AGRICULTURAL & 


C 


ETTE: 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultuval Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


ES 30—1849.] 


SATURDAY, JULY 28. 


Lane’s (Mr.) nursery ....se.0. 471 @ 


ure . 4 
of mag 


oo ee 


HOLCE FLOWER SEEDS FOR oman opt AND | 

pad Aa SOWING, free by post, with useful instruction 
Cat talogues on application. ‘The foll — 

and choice varieties, each, 


| 
fors 


77 e 
* — i syed h froni 825 ge collections of new 
esi 477 ¢ | Per 
Le +» fs | Ane io . tols 0d 3 t Os 6d 
Nepenthes fluid, aiii ot 10 „% o» oa se Abl. ra to 30 vars., separate 5 
Netiing a support wd c imbera 4% | Antirrhinu 2 FY ae 
„the Pessiae 468 a | Auricula * 2 
e? z 47) 70 | Calceolaria Iris, ath * 0 
food for .. 1 . 468 4 Cinerarias ee sh iD 
auen . , eulti 467 e , Dianthus ) an sy og 4. 
Cumbrrs, greenhouse. Polypodium Dryopteris and chs Petunia 1 pre | 
rente raten. . .... . .. 4 g | Geranium Polyaothus 8 to 1 
— (Mr.), nürsery. . 471 0 | ” smaller ‘packets Pr a sinensis 0 
1 a| be scarlet ) — — 4 2 
„ „ee ee n 4] | Gloxinia b 10 Sweet Wiliam 0 
| Royal South fern Society. 5 g Ve rben 1s. 6d. to 2 


gossip .. . a | Trees, ancient 
new mode of barves — € 
ee 469 a 


29 vars. choice Greenhouse Pere wa 6d. ; 
20 vars. Choice Hardy Bieunials — e 
| 12 ditto 
20 vars, showy Hasty: Annuals for spring —— 


12 do., 78. — 
78. 


Soc.’s nr 


ING of this Society wil will ld at the Gardens, In 
ws-park, on FRIDax, the 10th day of August next, 
to receive the report of the Council, . a the neil a 
Officers for ensuing a s we. ai at 
lo'clock.—J, De C. Sow BY, ee — 2 


The Days fixed for the EXHIBITIONS NEXT SEASON are, 
ee . and Fruit, WepnesDays, May 8th, June 
2 25 gr — Plants, SATURDAYS, May 

— 


. Hy ; ka ae LOZELLS HORTICUL- 
TY.—The Third Exhibition this season 
7 held in the grounds of Hockley Abbey. 
12 55 — Ss oe dyos pees Baers will attend. 
open 


; r the oars 
l 1 — bea ‘Bos. Sec., poe 
minzham. 


tead- road, near Bir- 


n HORTICULTURAL EX HT. 


Hon. de ng 
 ~Pelaxconium— FOQUET res MAGNIFT- 
T. 5 a ending out plants Bad ber 
-inch pots, "5 the middle of October 
Bett, price 2. 25, each, s damper aud en í 3 7 
i ped and as tock is limite t can Pe 
Mo ers w one in pec — Po 
— payabte on the. 8 Newport, Isle of Wight 
e ed is flower e 
Chronicle 


an ners 
ts unnecessary.— Address, MAJOR 
T OQUETT, Shide H —— near Newport, Isle of Wight. 
VILLIAMSON has much pleasure in announcing 
sioe Cole per ulon ot È a Cointe from New Zealan 
ES EEDS, of the rarest kinds, 
a large gear of 
at 


tanical Gardens. 
20 7 medullaris, or large black tree Fern, grows 
and called by tens ee Mam 

medullaris, fine 
fine „ tree Fern, from 


llum, Trichomanes, Adiantums, Asple- 
iphobolus, Pteris, Cyatheas, and other 


ne ot dealbata, or silver tree 


lla m 


endy His each, n- Apply to A. WIIHIAMSOx, Brandon, 


EW 415 6 CHOICE PLANT 
NR. CANT, St. Ne Nurs 
a O to 825 the fo Uowing select ists at 


agree eg speciosissi- 


Weigela rosea, p. Se: 63. & 93. 
fh californica, 18. 


The names of the — 


ress Postage stamps ae ‘on N amoun 
Bass and Brown, Seed and Horticultural Establishment, 
ş ik. 


bester 6 — 


ECK’S PELARGONIUMS, and the bes 

| of other raisers, —12 e following sorts, — the 

box and carriage to London, will be sent out for Two Guineas, 

well Gn in Z. inch pots, og wendy for an immediate 

into r size, Orders wi 1 be 

informed 4. the plants * read y, when remittance may be 
e by Post-office order Bren 


„ Gus Negress, 
2 Sun r 9 of the Sere = seat os 
r Topping’s Beilin 7 Foster's Vie 
he above se tal ction, well cultivated, w 
exhibition plant 
po ere *. teis, ‘may y be 
n Cot . F 
ey Florist a Gardy Mis 
few to ba had of all 
selle rs, . the title of “ Beck's Florist. wd This work contains 
4 pages of —— 
3 a "tas s Page, and a Calendar of Operatio sup- 
plied by eminent cultivators 
“Too much can scarcely be said in favour of the continued 


tare will te ke und in the 


colou aby te, one or on 


excellence of this 6 work. „—Fnor. LINDLEY, in this Paper, April, 


18 
rs SEEDLING PELARGONIU MS.—Cir. 
a, vi í 
question: ante the bes of n be had upon applica- 


TO THE ARa MIRERS OF THAT SPLENDID 
FLOWE 


TH 5 CHR 
yout. AND CO. are now aca vert to ‘execute 


of the Whole ‘cock Messrs, MAYLE and 
Oo., Florists, &., 55. New-street, Birmingham. 


OVEL APPLICATION FOR THE IMPROV 
MENT OF Le LERY, SEAKALE, CARDOONS, RHU- 
BAR B, Ke .- By means nary OBERTS’S K Sockets, these 


Above 1 
the following prices. 

50 dest new sorts . . . 200 
2 os ki E 


varieties, at 


12 
Fin ta for bloom pa in Autumn, w. 
pots, or — post free, with all orders Gf — er 
— ne a successful and easy mode of culture for ex 
biti 


CAMELLIAS, 

Comprising me = varieties, well set with flower buds, 30s. 
to 42s. 1. ce 

Ranga LON E SEED, „Savod from selected sorts, is now being 

t out by You d Co. in the peat yer: and can 

ba awarded, nay ae ye at 28. 6d, and 5s. per p 
cient to so — bed of 12 or 24 vardh 8 Nen at the Pmt time, | ne 
it will afford a fine display through the autumn and winter 

months, 

Catalogues of the above, with an extensiv 14407 i high! 
ornamental pani — N 8 gg by enclosing two postage 
stamps.—Great Yarm 


S EART, 55 1587 80 GE. 


eady to send out his 
om oved the best ye 
any | other sort yet g 
ing 1 0z., 2s. 
postage free yak 5 prey or the 
amount in penny postage stamps. * 4 Epwanp TILEY, at 
his general Seed-shop, 16, Pulteney- dee B 

ON. anD 60, beg to 


autifu rm N a ed are even, 
smooth, and regular in — general appearan my “rhe Sones 
: taining their colour and form 
This Gloxinia is of 5 

d therefore is 


r in N aland. Much d for 
1 ew Zealan ue e or | dne 


ishod in small | 


rti je 
pamphlet, 
N ke of thes 
may 


Notice.— The 
editorial article upon 


e principle of the invention is 


— ch a pe ic a — en LI the sid a such means, vast and im. 
looked for. 


ortant result nably be As connected, 
especialy with the akar of Strawberries and Melons, the 
these Tiles would 8 add A pA earliness 
noe Lome ur. We shal 12 of i, er 


‘a principle of great pra 5 fig oe 
TREE AND HOTHOUSES niade by mm 


Li satranted best materials, a Lean-sa 


bric 
sheet lan, n . per 
a rut WIS's Naanias fi Hothouse Wor 


ade ce ced a ah te 
HS OTHOUSES mpi oe aw are 


fixed complete 

siderable Renee comme 

and Melon Pama. — Lights ar at a en 

acked and sent to all parts of the von Fim a 
. terial. Sodas tare ts of every descri — on, at JAMES 
oe LI Claremont-place, Old Kent-road. Refi 
may be had to the Nobility, Gentry, and the Trade, in 2 
of the * in England. 


M PROVED FLOWER STICK S.— 
THESE PEO edd 9 are he circular form, ent and 
i edges, which 


injare the planta. The ar may d st d brown 

t the various — be had of all 8 8 
pos and men, an 1 detect in Garden Implements, 
Manufaetured and sold Wholesale, at H. MoRRELL’S, 149, Fleet- 
street, London. 

N.B. Samples to be seen at 155 san 5 as bieter. 

TO AGRICU'TURISTS, G 

OMPOUND CARBON ISED ANIMAL M. P MANURE. 
ICULTURE, 


the season, 
large 
continuing in bloom for a 
like Begonia Evavsiana, of fine habit, 
. acs then — a get 
Any D ithe wg so 
Pine-apple-place, Edgware 
BOUQUETS OF FLOWE VERS are are 
in Glasses con- 
s knerted 


by post, in boxes containing one dozen, 2s. Öd., postage 
included, on receipt of stamps to the amount, by Jackson and 
—.——— 89, Bishopsgate Within, opposite St. St. Helen’s-place, 
ndon 


ronie kat 
| Wada 


URE, to suit g 
at 6l, per ton, or for each e crop, a 
m 5l. 5s. „„ rda d 
to 6 cwt., ac 


FOR 170 ND D PLANTS TANTS IN GARDENS OR 2 1 
sold in tin canisters of 1e. ‘and 2s, 6d. each, or in 
boxes of 255 3 which 

saving is Se lied by H. COLES 

babes for the Aren 


circulars, tes relative information. 

NOTICE TO O AORIGULTO RISTS, &c.—H. Cores takes 
this ing the seve eral customers and 
who have im to let now “w ents are 
not established in the different provincial towns for supply 
the Car d cara 1” met de highly respectable | 

ife proprietor who bas pleased to confiđe to hi him the 

mode of its Preparation, and eo ae deputation for its sale, 
being aware of the many tricks in the way of a j 3 
that are so frequently practised by these, does wisi n 


SALE, a Collection of about 50 SUCCULENTS, 
consisting of Cacti, Cereus, Cereus, Opuntias, Stape d other 
select $ plants, To view, apply to Mr. Wuomes, Ger 
Nursery, Windsor, Berks, si 
Fan eo BRUM MMOND’S "REAPING ST THB. rt ign 


W.ar — — 2 bring a0 to call the attention 


9s. n ent down iy to ying the swathe so | 

urea compacta, Is, 6d. | that it can be easy ga red f into evenly sheaves | 

Spiræa prunifolia pleno, 68. an, Siet Price 9s ea r more | 

on n, | Beate an oy of tera stations | 
T um speciosum, eac out the tbem . * 

Is, ; — enn ach. m unkno pondents without a | 


pii not 7 attended to. 
UMMOND and Sona, 5 Stirling, N. B. 


the risk € of its eke 9 
ent. 


br Lox box: Mr. M. ‘others 20 a, Upper T 
Mr. G. Lawrence, 18, Pie ris 0 
ves 


. irect to H. Cours himself, 
enumerated parties, to ensure no disa n 
ory the genuine common . res 
treet, Leicester-square, W ere app ications for the Me keri e will 
foe duly attended to, iri every relative information may be 
obtained. 


~ 


THE GARDENERS’ 


LA S 
— PLATE. | 48 
5 2 TIF 8 8 a * 
With Drilled Holes. : — be © 8 £ 
oe 6 — 
— Size. Js. d. 3. d |s. d.|s. 4 6 d. s. + 5 * ~ 65 
12/1 62 002 85 0% 11/1 3 7 
Smati Imperiais by 57 141 5/1 11/2 Zt 10 105 1 2 1 83/1 11 
mall Duchess 2 be aa 5.1 10/2 6/4 8% 10/1 2/1 8/1 10 
untess y 10/1 1% % 018 8% 820 Ol 5/1 6 
Counters. a 7101 10% 4½ 10% 4% 80111 3/1 4 
Large Ladies... . 16 by 10 90 91 301 7/3 ( 74/0 1001 21 3 
Ladies 16 by 89101 1/1 52 60 7/0 905 904 1 
Boubles . . 13 by 7% 800 10% 22 2% 6% 7 800 10 
GLASS TILES. j 
Rouan PLATE. SHEET, 
inch thick . 0s. 10d. each. | — 2 a oe each 
o $ . » 
a ce" fies 36 om, = = 
“9 aK pee 32 oz, 1 
3 rrugated Tiles double price. OONN 
and every information m may y 
a — TIPS and Co., Horticultural Glass 
arehouse, 116, BISHOPSGATE - STREET WITHOUT, 
don. * 
ESSRS. COATHUP B Manvurac- 
rurens.of Bristol, and of Kalson, 9 beg to inform 


Engineers and others, that they are prepared to supply *. 
Arg aada — from 1 to 4-inch bore, in lengths o » ah a 7 feet 
e lengths being less as the diamet ers s of the —.— 


ty ce CONSERVATORIES AND — 
mia PURPOSES, &c. 


MILK PANS 


AND MANU 


ouse. 


0 
ort 
NITRA TES "SODA A AND POTASH. 
GYPSUM (SULPHATE OF LIME). 
DRIED NIGHT-SOIL. 
SUL cere RIC ACID AND COPROLITE. 
soD SH (WIREWORM DESTROYER). 
aa PERPHOSPHA TE OF LIME (made from bone only), 
ee URA Ml SA pet, and all other Manures of known 
1 e, y be had o 
MARK Fora pps m å, Upper Thames-street, Lin 
A Treatise on Guan 
forwarded on receipt or 8 postage stamps. 


n be 
Free to 


URNIP SOWING 
HE ONDON MANURE COMPA NY, having 
adapted the URATE “ more particularly for Turni ips and 
all Root Care, can reco! ommend — with the greatest confidens 
tse 


CHRONICLE. 


(Jury 28, 
N OTHER RES. Eo amarore CEMENT.—¥ a 
PERUVIAN ¢ GUANO, of the finest quality, direct from all quarte nding the se this dhe 


It seldom fails, in the dries 

| to produce a heavy weight per — — The y would call a — 

to their —— — on Lime, which 15 prepared with the 
test c and s tAn ain clay 85 dry state, pertorly 

made 


grea 
— for mpany hay 


mpor 
Agricultural Salt, ina "every other ‘Artificial ren dn on the 
1 2 terms for a 4 a 
RD 


0, Bridge-street, Blackfriars, 


ERUVIAN AND BOLIVIAN G ANO ON SALE 


Y 
ANTONY GIBBS ye SONS, “LONDON ; 
WILLIAM zn MYERS a D ČO., LIVERPOOL; 


d by their Agents, 
GIBBS, BRIGHT, — CO., RPOOL and n 


nst 8 3 consequences o of 

usin rg ton o, pure 

— ys to 2 ‘only 2 ap pa of ‘established 1 — va 

the above-named importers, who will supply the * n any 
antity 2 their fixed prices, delivers ing it from the Import 


*. „ 
Warehous 


RAY 


Ch 
— to their 
very descri ripti 


ti ae to give 
show t and g 


„ ORMSON, anp „ BROWN, 
helsea, rol the’ attention of the 
superior 
on of Buildin 

work done by them at the 
which they have had the hon 
* t satisfaction, 


e any i inform 


77 also my to refer 
= season, for os Wors 
0 


Y, OnMson, and Br 


referri 
Mr. — 
= bap 


ROWN, — E 


— 


to f th 
PASTRY PINS \TEPHENSON anD CO., 61, Gracechurch-street, san do s — — gentry in the country, 
— don, and 17, p Parkstreet, nae or and 3 oe 
= and Manufacturer of the Improved CONICAL an DOUBL 1 
ö | CYLINDRICAL BOILERS, reapeckfally solicit the siento of B 5 PHEA fi 
AYACINTI FLOWER Dises | Scientific Ho Tank St to their much improved method of 21 Chelsea, by special appointm ent to her 
app ying er ank System to Pineries, Propagating Houses : Frince ert, — STAL ‘WATER TO 
PROPAGATING@BEE CUCUMBER CLASSES » by atmospheric heat as well ag — is | Bernales = ety 4 2 s, E Canada, 
HEET GLASS, whieh i without the aid of pipes or flues, we “A rent, and laugt geese, sheildrakes, 
4 1 TORE preron Haragi + oon a g S. and Co. have also to state that at the request of numerous summer and winter teal, gadwall, Ia 
Gin Sk wa toe ol * andes 106 teet'end — feet cases of riends they are now makin ir Boilers of Iron, as well as shovellers, gold.eyed and dun bene — 
2 Sheet vw Bigot ting at Ad per — Copper; by which the cost is reduced, These Boilers, whic esticated pinioned ; panish, Cochin 
Plate Glass, from 1s. 25. per foot, according to are now so well known, scarcely require description, but to Malay, Poland, “Sune, 2 à Dorking fowls ; white Japan, 
GERE i Boneh Plate Giese, from Fto 1 inch i in ' thickness * those who have not seen them in operation prospectuses will and common pea-fowl, and pur 3 na pigs; and até, 
Qa nor det obrata, kP ans Son be forwarded, as well as reference of the — —— or s 
5 ee eee eee 
from 12 to 24 inches long, at 10. pe inch. ‘Lactometers, 7s. Gd. kts eae 8 r tain Maker, 7%, 
each. Wasp —Lists may "oe had on oreet at e TA — — London, pba be worked by a 
Eastern Cou 4 a mn, See ee Oe Horticult ings, as —— as for — Pon — small stre of — 
astern obtained upon the most advantageous terms. where a fall of 2 feet can be 
“GLASS FOR CON: yo „e. Conservatories, &c., of Iron or Wood erected upon the most obtained, The same RAM, with- 
ETLEY anD ~ pg” 4. 5 Sheet Glass of l designs. Balconies, Palisading, Field and Garden out the aid of a Tank or Cis- 
Bills Manafecture, of prt from 2d, to 3d, | Fences, Pp E o £ Water constituting a . 
ET are on 2 URBIDGE anp HEALY’S NEW BOILER ke taim- with the head of water be. 
of Prices ‘and estimates forwarded, on application, ted ba vier . er (be blished), | neath. 
PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK CROWN GLASS, GLASS | modelled express] for t rge Conservatory, Chiswick | Engines for te wells of all kinds, Douche and ot 
TILES and SLATES, WATER-PIPES, PROPAGATING | Gardens, where td is now at work, From 1 observations muna > heated 12 water. Water wheels to work 
GLASSES GLASS 450 Wen PAT ATE-GLASS, B. and H. have been able to make, the warranted in ma ee from sa — A — hire dg 1 
N TAL W W GL ASS, ani S SHADES, aei 8. it to he ha 5 909 plus plixa = Any x Ae large plant ewly-inven all con 
to James Hatt aay 22 35, , Soho- square, London, — F has been kept FESSRS. 
See the 4 Gardeners” Chronicle t Saturday in each month. barn zing for és — without me — 3 They M — Selben 38, kerr as 
AF SLEY LLATT AnD Co. (late Psi y put up at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. | A Sound practi nowledge of Anal 
Garen), Faloon Glass Works, Holland.street, Biack@étars, Smaller boilers upon the same plan. Chemistry, Geology, Surveying; 
have always on hand, Bee Glasses, ls, 2d. Ib. ; Cucumber Burpiwce and HEALY, 130, 8 London. ing, e., — be obtained in Messrs. 
Glasses, 15. 6d. — b.; Milk Pans, 18. in., Shite glass, 5s. 6d. ge 
each; Propagating Glasses, white, ls. per Ib.; do., green, 10d.; | r. Neseit’s works on Arithmetic ty Loe 
do. condensing, 2d. per Ib. riper Grape Shades, 18. 6d. to 2s. BY HER ROYAL LETTERS band tempan paras Parsing, 4 — 
; Fish-bowls, from 1s. (d. each; Wasp and 3 403. neh tes had od =e on application ei 
per = or 3s. 6d. per dozen “By the an MAJESTY’S Tbe rms "of the Se hool can be 
may be preserved from e certain) destruction. PATENT. —.—.— or by letter. ï 
CULTURA 1 BUILDING AN 7 — CHOOL FOR GENERAL asp 
HORTICULTU Lb: BY i oa AND HEATING | PATENT HOTHOUSE v WORKS, KING'S ROAD, CHELSEA. EDUCATION 5 with regard to 
ALSO THE CULTIVATION oP Fig CHOICEST PLANTS, DENCH invites the att n of Gentlemen about Wickham Market, Suff conducted Up at 
VINE * to erect Hothouses, &c., —— vast superiority in every the Right Hon. Lord Rendlesham, M.P. ; 2 
Nee — ase — — 1 his PATENT | — SES, which be wi 2 es. The Classical and M atreal . pet 
superior in every — Good Glass trusted to a Gentleman, a — nae oe — 
— 16 to to 21 oz. per foot, a ~~ ide, ‘gy et long, on the th Tes 
Houses when completed, 6d. per superficial 


1 
1 
i 
i 
1 
1 
I 


J WEEKS anD Lo, King’s-road, Chelsea, Hortrevt- 

„ TURAL ARCHITE s, HOTHOUSE a and N 

APPARATUS 1 URERS, solicit tion of their 

of materials Works woor in progress, prenia 
workmaaship. 


. 


uantities that th 
at TESS THAN HAL- PRICE, s * * N sale 
Togues f pon applicati. 


“TO NO 3 8 


an Ec. 
upon his New 


ew 


EAD’S GARDEN | ENGINES, & 
ie, whic’ N portability. 

ass a of ‘th ki 
with two-thirds the labour — hiner ied 
e same power: 
of ptt d ti 
nis and e on 

oven, or Choked 
de. got Ma the tur — = Ricnan 
strument Maker to her. Majesty, 35, Regent Ci Circu n, 


HINE ENGINES, WATER RAMS, Re. 
Hyäranlie pow gp sect ng aad ugines worked by Steam or 


„e. heated ter. Bi 
Sinking, and Colle retin of of Water, * 1 Bes 755 lied, "Boring | 


to Jonn Leca, Chelten 


comm: 

the 
ngs, | si 

nn 


ity, our snag being formed 


witho: 
ODD’S "pit te 5 PAINT very 
n redue see * This article is ae 
Gas. — 
Builders and and 1 others for painting 8 eco. It prevents i = 


s r it, M wfactured or ng batin 
and Sons, Cement Wo: orks, Nin — Fine isa — 
ARPE RAE I. CORROSION 
PAIN — and other 


before the 
„together with A copyof 
ation to * ideen copy 


or Ornamental Plastering, fi aus’ e 
which may be seen at pg: Works of 
CHARLES Faancis and Sons, Nine Elms, London. i 


Se., & 
Poa "Pateuters, 


432 
HG 
R 7 75 72 


ning i 
„ extra stron, 


Ke the above can be madoa 


N 3 and e 
i boroughs Hull, or Neweastl 


225 — 
2222 2277 
of 
— i 
8 4 
— sete 232 
247 7 6 
25287629 ot 


width 
any 11 ill te 


esh; 


PrOMERIA JAPONICA SEE DLINGS. 
TE STANDISH anp NOBLE having still 
of t splendid 


| ES SEEDLING PELARGONIUMS of 1848, 
E and —— 


r 
to be certain, e spring 
already, and t 


u , err armen irae 


THE 


above 
nts at the — — low prices 
. 368. per doz oak phon 10s, per 100; 
inches. 53. each; 18 — 24 ine s. 6d.; 24 


out, and 


nee 
t Wahle tit time — Hp 
is ibe most n will be dsome, 


ess and N. 
ou —— Surrey, July 28. 


older RIPTIVE CATALOGUE 
is now ready, outed on prepaid appli- 
one postage stamp, 
Patt: Isleworth, 2 28. 


1 FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. 

n A „ e e 

som 31: Erith Horticultural. is a worth 
y and Wednesday, July 31 and Aug. E 

and Fisral,— Woden sday, Auguat l: Meath Horticultural, 


best time — feling we hold |Ì 


n is thus producible. 
a large po of its water, 
ing rooms have been 


— on the 
ri T00 perform 
do ng: well, eri slowly ; and 
el always effected by mere 
exposure to currents of ait, which gradually take u mp 
be moisture and carry it away. Suc 
š oe much time, and, in 
days, is most imperfect. We cannot, 
ore. air-seasoned timber is em- 


been proposed 
‘which that of ip. 


wh would sa we) 2 
wd ou we re r 
es hundreds — 5 — ung disfiguring 
$ f: ject is of 
i Whilst Sieuoreas — 


en y 


rm quickly | $ 


e- | projected visit to a country a 
rdens promise 


GARDENERS’ 
sod the sam 


t to the — 


— ge ggg me 


that H 
which no 


eat 
tands 
| 3 = the 1 Yorkshire Philosophical Society. Let | muc 
the 


any one remember tate of the old doors, and 
the ere ee of our Village churches, * 3 0 
e ced 


0 — — 


— if it is not 


bes very 
| altogether useless. It strikes us, 


ew 
will soon em age modification of what we have descri more 
messe nger of ie It bos 3 true that their ‘date once un the na of the tticoat.“ 
is often uncertain, but it so happens that we have | There is no doubt. that E ate. properly 
positive evidence asto the great antiquity of some applied would. greatly. check, if n altogether 
of them. as July 1847 the re f the remedy, the evil, and, in the early s of: the 
ins of Danish nai Nes still fixed to the doors | attack, no injury could occur to — short close 
the churches of Hadstock and * — in Essex; bine; the only * would be one of expense, 
to which doors they had ; the ge entlemen — e that = wo ould be so 
+ | having oat the misfortune to be — with the aol o make = remedy i impracticable, 1 if, 
and, an en — flayed alive. These doors in "the case of its being found 1 ent, some 
1 be 900 year end could iu consequence be made to permit 
w in all — cases the wood was left to season | the growth of Tobacco, duty free, yA te especial 
Peak it stood, Our forefathers never eiad 7 = sa Or the T obacco now burnt in the Qurex’s 
ood—not hee * were ignorant of the 0 cco-pipe,” in the Liverpool Docks „might 
aint; it w seem, on the e contrary, chat ‘they eat t o be sold for the use of Ho growers. 
were 5 ac 3 uences of The fumigation, with a modification of the pa- 
— it. cu all their beams, their roofs, their | rapetticoat, might don half a rood: of 
carvings, their doors, 2 wainscot linings, were of i , and we 


t li 
* Oak. In the places — such timber 
aid, oe air moved freely ro — it, and 
won nt 


the elemen Whatever moisture there 


m w e 
n our ships the 
nship may rie pcm to 
the mischief, for tw are so constructed now that 
e between the Rui sites in 


W. engage to sa 
ry,” be durability of which i is on w 
advantages ; and that she 


— air ce p UAA between her — and tight 
ere, except on the outside of the hull, where 
tightness i is s Satie sabl 


e. a 
If w. we intend timber to last as it once did, we must 


con- | com 
al ural mois hence its | It —— probably be necesse 
J durability, We, on the 45 hand, wiati is it that 
ed 
the | ` 


Dorise the late dry weather reports were every- i 
e most. appal 


ling respecting the prospects of 

the Ho —— Vermin, mould, mildew , fire-blast, | a 
and a host of other plagues w ere said to be at work, 
a more or less mpi destruction. A 
abounding in Hop- 

d a good opportunity of sind ying 


b e take the earliest 
f our 


the vario 


ine 3 
don it to the 

. learn from: 
barked and left to 

i Ail thu experiments ended, we we 
— * practical . 


Nor ison 
indeed any l terpa priltcnos 1 u 


this idl 
it; when prar Seres into bingy | 


its s 
This, together with | 


the: dockyard We also: 
ot Halloway, 8 that: 25: or 30 ears 
j 1 bark) 2 ly 


late period, is- the lighting * g fites, with a 


observations. ports were 
scarcely 1 pa though refreshing showers 

drought, under the | 

and there 


na : 
Saint — Day (July 25), no 
3 not, 


isposed to anticipate better 

should 8 en to find our 
wishes realised. this, however, as it ma 

evil has advanced so far, that if it is regs 

by genial weather, it is too late to suggest for the pre- 


norance, we were d 
and we 


thi 
op 


3 in every stage 


procur | 
of geen from the aphides or Hop- ice an 


ed in every gar 
in which case the 5 
though it is ae disease, but 2 a severe 

thang of. hid ¢ with the 


. | 


ground, by — intelligent practical man 

are most san adio - 

omme miin 

apply i 

than on d even were Sie "fumigation of 0 

3 — cluster of Hop plants too Peg we 

conceive that a smouldering heap of ignited Tobacco 

leaves might prove a eat alleviation of the evil, 
As regards the 2 di seas is sometimes 

so destructive to Hop gardens, a mildew, caused 


it | by a parasitic fungus, belonging to — genus Ery- 
eee and in an —_ stage: of — ing 
s|the characters 


ia the — e | which has 


> genus Oidium, a species of 
of late ben s 80 destractive | to 3 and 
which an allied species is the h dreaded 
oe * it is stil a botanical doubt whether 
1 these e 
e genus Erysiphe, as # certainly the 

case with that of the Hop; but * i 
the structure in either case is so e y 
that m 1— i doubt that the — treatment 
would be equally efficient. Now it is well known 
that sulphar i is an 2 ee for Peach or 
columns is suffi- 


785 
E 


once a wile ee is affected, al 
ut were the case er 


useless; 


ON 4 — CONDITIONS ESSENTIAL TO THE 
PERFECT CULTIVATION.—No. IX. 


Saab was a great amount of truth in the reply of the 
who, on vapa vis was the. first great 


icu 2 wh 5 it is), 
w forcibly must it t apply ta its e 
in the face o 


gel An alm 
» whieh, were nat the vial energies af 
p ee no orgauiyed body could d vegetaie —te 
grow is out of the question. 
Admitting as it dws of 0 sar enaeetions, it may be 
cognised ad a rule that no plant ean flour ma inaa 


saturated wi . Ev very other 
to 


yanl She sche 
| every ‘other necessary as su 


468 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


¢tention I th t 


which it derives from the stip ag of cattle pa 


set a no “ 
wil me * urse care required in the drainage 
in others. 


h- The calcul 


ial 
par rit A. Dubre 
e 


actually dro 


entioned. ] measured the trunk, both i 


1s gone 


pe they joni for a uae Tw elve persons m 


t the 


of 163 feet. At this height, which is the smallest 
the trunk, the * 3 is 29 eis 
ated age of the is 850 


K PAE OF PLANTS. 


Conti e 453.) 
XIII. Wina. a Akeli ecies. There are 


GENUS 


individuals, an 
At 


and i 
N Perceptible in we eak o rst I was un- 


m 
aa 1 ee pape AR ring table which 1 have si in | thei 
e yet remains a stone bench by their 
ay seat them- | € 


sur l Accroissement des Arbres Exogénes, * 
uil. || e 


willi 
which is ; constant, especially in n the Vine. But as 

f evacuation would be injurious 

im nt 


WO Seasons 


lter. Wr 
those of ihe —— aathorty,t — do not 
mend turning o ted plants 
just the drainage j OF 70 sabstitut te new ; but, with all 
rence, I think this a somewhat quest tionable prac- 
tice, which shouid never be resorted to except in ex- 
n 


n be t drainage 
being a e useless from pa at tg Bice as 8 
the actiou of w 
As it is necessary ‘that the 3 material for the 
e should b of fro xious a ora 
ss i 


5 
[k] 
E 


— to ad- | run 


-|gum, prod 


ines 


those 
i ean i and thus waste 
a large — of precious 1 matter. There are some 
few Willows and Bire r Alders, which likew 
emit from gen bu 
very rare occasions the 
Genus XIV. Gum; 
ulcer, which i is ie la 
which I her 
itself. This 88 in a ae un 
ced by excessive veg s the 
strata of bark and epidermis, wad 8 fk in 558 
form of larger or smaller 1 fhe along the trunk an 
— trees are thoes ee 
3 tree, of all others, 
The disease is 


moded by it. 
a 


angerous at the sein of the flow of the 


AI Ways moose 


gan 


msidered par 
The soil should be 
to allow the 
— it t halls; 3 it 3 not rh cbli seek escape 
betw soil and pot, lex 
hed. papa been much the fashion 
to recommend yeep 1 to be cut into ¢ 


ee passage, 
tne every "facility of admission. G. 


ANCIENT TREES. 

Tae Pessine OAK, nd — Aon —This Oak is 
near te-Inf 
account of it by Dr. D 
in the Annals of 


Beet 
Drui uillard ati term in the bapa Sc for 
of Oaks), doubtless consecrated 


= 


g” iy 
more f Pess 
in question is the 2 one of che old fivel which. the 


hatchet has 
This tree is decrepid. Its trunk, 1 
mutilated d b 


hollow, has been 


completely 
time. 


ripen 
side 8 above-mentioned, 
it may not be objected to me, that this | b 


The p 
rand ies negle 3 Sometim 
vigorous brane t appears | 


pom downward 


ige 
aving the paca of the the 
te 


sap in s 
thee of this phenomenon are little known, 
es it first shows itself 


n 
of a blotch of a pale yellow colour. 
soon a shows itself, the branch should 

diately einputaigl below the spot, satire there is the 
most certain danger of seei 
t 


3 
the root of oe, aise 
e 


ti tical obser 


e- | richness 


ancient Oak, the deli 
Druid dey it ia prade nt to graft it o 
ear a rar * Breuil. oth the | 
ts to 
is the branches. “Tojudieious and too frequent oan | 


neision mu . ie even through the wood itself to 
then the wound m an be treated 
will be ex — T der the head of wounds. Prac- 


us that, in 


use. 


. If confirmed 
0 ay 5 as will diminish the 
e transplanting, which is the surest Bey 
but not sways. practicable. In such per it ma 

swer the ose to remove a of the rh 
soil from 2555 the tree, and re 


rtility ; such 


men ne although even am 
shoots that may be ras — — drie 

— Jati to that cause. In 
icate constitution and soft e e the —.— t of gum 
is mo ical. Therefore in all situations not 8 

n the Plum. It will b 

at the peal and some others, are generally 
pte ey om gum on their trunk, whilst in the Peach it 


e be 


ds a iymphatic =~ and on some 
t 
eye 


As 
e imme- 


— | the 


sed wi 


5 figuring the Pairs: or plants in the 
8 


* 


may also 
be one — the fatal consequences. 
Genus XV. RANRNESS 


li 
hrastus, have observed 


do not arrive at a full maturity. are laid, 
b 


and are destroyed by their own vigo nd it is 
not a Cerealia and Grasses that are subject to 
Y. have o herbaceous plants 
th 


— ek ariniy pe t forth their flowers, set 


in the same manner as 
I add this ovaa in 


a and abundance of its bu 
N be owing to the large supply of 


may 
manure | 


nus VII. 3 
a as might be supposed, were we to res 
lib. 


. 


eophrastus says, 
| ot his Historia PI antarum,” when he cp ib. vil, 


gre practised by the 


and w 


e same course might be 

it is feared that 

period of their 
well their seeds. 

mild winter cause plants to 

them 3 — to * ai sprin; 

25 45 — 3p i 
this 


wei a dinary 
ay a lover of agresia 
0 which pee 
al time. 


h b 
he had left resem was my Tee by sli 


VILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENING 4 
In the midst 


especial atten ition, The villa garde 
niles to contend with generally than the ganieed 
arger means reatest difficulties u t 


ej 
me, ther refore, earnes tly impress upon amateurs 
pòrtan ce of e ommen cing thus early with the 
uk ae Verbenas, Fuchsias, 
ed all per nial plants destined to — 


modus operandi at this season is sinple sai 
ady border should be es & few 
i purpose. 


ey may beco d and firm in 
this, ne water sho be given ; 
m ali By this. 
been 


mple wth to afford 


rther i impress upon 


ndy o or ncia so 


washed grave 
a sherd over the hole, will 
ditions to success. Phar 


e species. — The | Amaryllids 


ree on, 
mselves upright, me 3 ntly than th 


eir | see 
| seeds, and then fallin ng opioid with their own pte ons 


few anthers of it, cut off 


paper to be sent in a letter, as 
the border in which our plants of 
has disturbed their 


hee only one 
w but pollen, “ £ carefully pre- 
is more 


pof Th ibet, — it hom 


those beautiful Rhododendrons they met 
„there i bt but it would fertilise 


Perl Tp * D. Beaton, The Gardens, 


e Sow in the same 


loses twice a week in rather s and by this 


Ree! 

1 be 
ts by the Baud posta: ~ enabled t 

r the 


mpan An e go 
Sih clad — side * side, 


r to its vigour or to 25 8 
r ee It is not eas 

Jour eee mist 

plants of “ decided P. calcareu 


pposed e going on, can he| ¥ 

t the original 1 plants from 'Cheddar 

; or that his later 
ete “cla 


oventry 


THE lett aot 


t 9 


ce | scription of the filter 
k. k i 


here, ary thus procure new crosses | coarse grave 


ter, s- through s a delive 
The liquid — then 1 to — — of the | of e 


easy to worms 
ake „has 
m,” estab 
are . of the “ities ? 
8 


growth, and when ily 
if allowed to infest the plants for 1 after eg 


e pect 
3 supply both night and day, i 


also start C p away 
— them; and if they encourage bl 


with me t po 
for gardeners, . as to vegetables, — and 
feuits, partic ens are ral well 
+ require a gow straw — to 
whe’ A they are r 
te supply of leaves and garde 
N 24. or 30. — out in m, bo 8 
and sulphate of ia, a gardener is 
independent of the bee wer — a for his hot beds, 
North Bri 
— Tank "Filter. —The following is a de- 


tan 
i and 7 feet d 
end of it, and consists of a = mber as long as 
7 pe the same N e tank, and about 4 feet 
nches wide. It is divided into two equ 
oy through wih * the b 
12 inches high b inches. 9 


latter compartment the — water from the roofs, &c., 
ows ; it then ough the eee the parti- 
tion wall into — other compar thro —— 
se botto d = 
ery pi 
rse be a little — the level of the 
re built of bric 
er. 


yea e 
filter 8 to be cleaned once in the year. J. H. N. 


GROUND LINE 


CHRONICLE. 


or moisture readil 


are still pure an 


y ago 
rash them out into our 


r loss ofa little fruit to t 


in contact with the plants. I can say little about soil z 

for I ane ee ee ee to procure much else 

— n garden mould. The v. I force are 

Keens’ "Seeding and British Queen. John Toy, Oat- 
den. 


y 
lands Palac 


e Fork is recommended in a late * 
n the south of France a 


Calanthe veratriſolia.— This is one of those delightful 
Orchids whose flo 

an almost indefinite 

he expansion of i 


has been in flower 
reeuhouse here for a 3 time, r. its blossoms 

unspotted, and on several of its spikes 
just begi Grown in 
ized well dra 


preserv: 
„long i in perfection. Jas. Duncan, Basing Park, July 20, 


3 will prevent 8 plundering "a 
ears reared t parrow-hawks, and 


with 
clipped wings. og” shrill chirping wale’ ari, con- 
tinually make so frightened 1 
throstles, and eve a 
mer, that we at 
erring the ppan. Hr 


regularly at a certai 


— dirar Jun., 
the Fence, Macclesfield. : 


The Sparrow Nui- 


* 


5 


sance. — 
gave his Pens 
y 


MAN HOLEJ 


ike, 


is) 


REFEREN 


across filter tank to within 6 inches of the bottom ; 


aan as soon 
m, Ad 27 * in rae centre of each 
The p are then 


pot, which 


ip an 


ide the 

the arg daily, and when 

ecasionally give them a 
3 gn itua- 

November ed into the 

penan houses (if ok 7 not, vig ge pots are 5 

nder to prevent 3 from 

anuary by 


the tempe- | 

oes not exceed 65° with artificial yee. nor fall 
T 

; for I 


they are 
state, much 


iting Pine-sto have gro 
the fe place i in an early N. but I do ta 
A ee of either si ecause I cannot have a 
uitable tem 
bee 


warm it a little before it comes 


=. 


‘cE TO Woopcor.— A, supply pipe; B, connecting pire; C, waste-pi N71 D, stone or brick 


-house, 0 


2 me a sat i 


HOLDS ABOUT 
1860 GALLONS 


N 


——86 9 


0 


E, filter composed of . r this plan L 
this year in a place surrounded by wi 
unmolested until, on one 


When 

in * they are fed, er th 

cage. peat this once a week 
1d 5 -a sparrows will be be maii 
= 
paren Mixed Fie i Beds.—I aal, 

oblig ed E our elucidation 
pesn f — A disposition of colour depen 


convert of me. Ire t he 
cided heretic, as far as bach opinion, that mixture 
eri kind 


such an inference. 
be associated with the ultra movement party as to gar- 
dening improvements, while I would not rera td dis- 
card old and cheris hed ractices without duly in 


either in theory or practice 


sE he will have wath * ss to favour 
me vun ge real name and address, I shall most wil- 
h his 


x i kea ee 3 
is y yrr e e Nuneham will at any time be 
Paglia and I shall be most happy to 


tio 
an e him practical illustration of the p 


470 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


attempted to advocate. If on examination of E. X?s” 
garden (which I = * will ac I see 
n to think error, 1 shall not shrink — ju 


landscape gardening in former da 
ees admirable fo fore- nra of effect, 
spond Xi tions a few flowers, ee he 
thinks N. eo mpose — nose 
J will not o 
isli vely artful m 
ow fashionable to 
carry. 1 2 ill, ho owever, state 
that some of these formidable e are fro 
to 1 foot 6 inches in di 
mille upon wire, wit th the flowers 
13 circles of e * ad 0 to 

used i t thi 

caprice ‘of “despotic ain ‘and may be truly called 
é Horrendum I think that your cor- 


nosegays, W 


mantie scenery o 
few flo wers were introduced, I would oe the $6- 

bei); 
but in the grounds immediately surrounding 0 classically 
I think it is 


ould rather se 


ion w 


ore ery 

e inferior dees of society are the — 
den deeid the merits o the fi 
arts; and this department. ot test ntl 


The rose 4 


— Beil, A East Lothian. 


ameter, upon grand oce —— In the 


ich | buted by Mr. Hook; and Mr. 
e| men plant of Dipladeni a a. 
Care Hea 


one ee of seeds, which I sowed, and from which I 

ined several se "o plants ; these produced three 
9 — -coloured, a second deep 
inches in diameter, a third deep rose with a dark 
— spot at the base of the petals; its young nino 
one produced white flowers. The pare 


; m 
spotted Cistus, which never produces seed. John 


Sorieties. 
Roya H LONDON FLORICULTURAL, July 25. 
This — held its fourth exhibition for the season, in 
e Surrey Zoological Gardens, on Wednesday last. 
e day was eee and Lare ~~ ams a thin 
show itself was a goo 
s collectis of 15 Stove and 


en Mr. Cole — the pale 
alon — — and A. cath 
ras refle exum, the same /Echmea 
exhibited, still in good condition, 8 
co Dipladenia erassinoda, 
saligna, the latter insutficie ently in fl 
uced a well-gro 1 — — 
of Plumbago Larpentæ ; — Lisianthus Russ sellianus, 
i ia crassi The Nurserymen who 
e Messrs. Pamplin and Pawley. 
ov z yea 9 Plants was contri- 
Cole had a good speci 


merous and fine. In the 

eéllettion ns were exhibited b 

wiley. In the first 

group w nice plants of infandibuliformis 

inflata alba, ampullacea obbata, Irbyana, Lee's tr _— 
metulzeflora bicolor The 

_Aimat teur 


paren eai 


n quantity. The bes t plants 
came from Mr. Sh uekford, of Stockwell, tees produced 


— ures 2 „ sat 
sine submit to the deprivation of what we cannot com- | 
ow what Ag most suitable 


conception. — Bailey, 


a 2 


a 
Common Nettin 
agains 
elimbing plants, Maurandyas for instance. 

Chalk Pem amr to Lawns. ee uring the late hot and 
dry weather, the lawns in many places apartes on 
— elays) ‘tae lost their verdure; but if chalk is laid 

n the so wo inches in thi 

use 
at me 


or 3-inch mesh, stretched 


of a finer 
asure Ran the sun from | 


ip.—I know Wing of the —— of 


ar edla dF winte ter possessed b Hab 


t| One in the 


ng of 
inst a wall, forms a neat and cheap support for many | 
Sa 


ness, * laying o 


. Black Pilna ; 


well 
f CN itae 


capital specimens trai single stems, formin 
pyramids of flower Strom 6 to 9 feet high. His varieties 
were Corallina 25 Napoleon, e Prinee a 
h Dr. Smith; Eximia, an 
Pomona. Mr, Robinson n, of Pimli ico, was second ‘with 
arty, Gigantea, Duke of Cornwall, F 


ixton, was first among nurserymen, with 
NJAA Queen Elizabeth, Eximia, Exquisite, Napoleon, 
pai, ephson, Rosa elegans, = Plus Ultra, 
ibe rt. Mr. Smith, of Horns a 


Stoke Newington, 5 d thee soiling one name 
Emperor, a large bold dark flow sort. 
abeth 


bited spikes of these 
They — ft 


Napoleon, buff; 
Queen, ae pink 2 — elegans; Mulberry 
Are hur 


kr, very had a — — of — 
tre 


The Exhibition of “Susan 
Th 


r i 
ing. Can any cultivator | deeidedly good. ew — of showing them in — 
‘acon ng the management of Brug-| boxes of a uniform ete and on cards, con ibuted much | tent ; and sta — 5 
iste ia ea, against a co tive wall? I to the general effect. In of giving in full the | se in various parts of —— ne 
ihat at Chatin + pom encomiums pe the winning stands, we will notice the finest | whose trated were—Elm, and g 
DE PE R ni ayaa sm pie in hea Peta ere 
= as g 5 e recess | bition. In there t Bistort 
wend beatin a somo that of a rank gigantic | during the last ms ; thei este — . — of Gowtis Dr. exhibited (as 
dull Hue ; Would rede pie of an unusually | marking contrasts beautifully with the pure white Alder which had been found by Mr. dere ggg 
de it 0 Manas nae teen: ts luxuriance, and grounds. Picotees are in this respect f: of | into — “ar mine full of water, opr ber) PO 1 7 
Plant. Would that y? [You have got the wr rong | Carnations ; but for striking effect and brilliant colours | a re le manner.—Dr. — . 
succeed against . fancy ranium Unique the latter carry off t aoe he finest | ago ‘Me. ido of Falkirk, had oe | 
Meas se i, and attain a height of 8 or Scarlet Bizarres were 1 Curzon, Splendid, , — f the root of Senecio” Jacoba eee 
Mik a diccuasion on the merits of Bi — ll I am glad | Brutus, Lord —— fe, Poley rt, Omniu n by a very — 0 
has commenced, and I hope all seer 5 ilton, Count Pau- extended itself, completely -i — 
‘their nes ‘OF Tta WS NN dily two récord line, Caliban, Mercutio, The Thomas EhM, Vivid, Pux- 2 .—M W. Thomson saree 
ed by a respecta n ago I was lens Queen, Paul Pry. Pink Bizarres: Sarah Payne, had come under bis at 8 Pla 1 
— — — Ga that a bed of it Puxley’s Prince Albert, Twyford Perfection. Purple | drains were comple — 
lady in the east of this y? Lag asst noble | Flakes : — 8 house, Squire Meynell, Earl they p gh a Lareh — 
lant ‘su d y d if every penter, ay’s i 1 ier, S ire T * th Larches h vin : 
in the nursery of See phiri emet Puna Ifa plant | Sanat Fakes: pr nee Dido, King of — Hol- — le — o Piane” 
At one time Mee terry produced | liday’s ling, 1848, Bis loucester, Hard- | interestin i pa 
Has Tacsonia pera ha 3 od — le. | wiek's Fireb nd, May’s 3 1848. Rose Flakes : supply the village of 
gured? [No] 4 ae 1 Antonio, and Ariel, Princess Royal, Part of these tile pipes, 2 m. 
: Sener —I have Ve raised a Cistus from Italian seeds, | Pr 8 aa, — 4 Ely, en ag Beton = 2 ian 
with white flowers 5 inches in in diameter, and it produced | Lady A. Peel — ‘owe: Venus, Princess Royal, | Pipes are 


bea Seren white 


— | Ist class certificate 


5 
5 


yrto- 
fulgens sarge 
m 


Erica Sarileana, as men 
Mr. 


accordin 
y Organic mate, chiefly m malic re a ited 
2 1 


. u. 
Magnesia SA g o 


a young leaves of Baroy disila 
whi 


ises | which 


Queen of Roses, Green’s f 
Juliet; * Lorina, — Pep ite 
tress, Amy, Duke of Newcastle, Heavy edge 


niin 
i 


FF 
jr 
F 


— 


ll size, an 
or Faleo idge,a pin 
— 8.— wore ee j 


Hi 
ij 


EEH 
11111 
Be 
GPH 
4 
E 


Í 
ji 


mae light n à, very püre = well 
y for Bur 


uaF 


nd i 

oa Wout “eu, open 
s, was awarded 

antifally grown Bowers, mostly 

own raising.—Carn 
urner ; 


“to 
to 


among the latter, to our taste ” a medium 
aa = ms variety, with a pea eye, from Mr, mae 
f New Mr. Wood, of Norwood, had 


deere ot “Aline and —— plants, and there wa 
e fru 


BOTANICAL OF sorn July 12.—Dr. Bala in 
the Chair. The following: papers rs were read : 1.40 
Nos tochinec, by J. Ralfs, the Chemical 
omposi 

Pe of 8 
that 
p eo “Nepentes ee 8 
Botan n of Edin the Experimental 2 
the n —.— S: e ckson and Sons, and 
Ro ai Gardens at Kew. * er dealing 3 
revious chemists in in regard to te 


: Voelcker, co 


Soda 


te bee 


ing called a 
is generally called «dnr 


and 
tion —— — 
(x had si) of C of Ceen arianna 
3. © Notes of —— = pene wer 


30—1849.] 


THE GARDENERS’ 


Batail 


CHRONICLE. 


= in some instances they approach nearer the | bere.» v of nil Bosen, tently tint Stinderd Hybrid! Porpoises! Hasso wa 
these Géant des Manetti 


points ‘Too 


insta 
Se to the levels, and at 
entered. ceed i plants outside, 


The roots 
adhe 


i 
1 
°F 
3 
= 
7 
BS 
5 
BE 


Hid 
0 
128 4 


a peculiar aspect, All the branches of 
were 3 with knots, while the 5 — 
m them. 


TEE 
10 


E 
Sn 


ate 


v 
stones w 
enveloped by the expanded anger us root. 
idea on the Growth of Bambusa nae 
naten, by Mr. Robert Scott, patid e i ES. by 
mad hea 45 a 


par The author had e 
the Bamboo t 
ound 


in the large conservatory a 
that, after — a certain 


rapidly. 
e ground on 


— om 
appeared above 
cp haw — the = of 8 Dr; by the" Ist Sept., 5 
its subsequent grow as follo ke 


les, a 
| could now ill spare, for itis the first a t bis 
ucceeds amr on u dach the Dog | 


acquisition be pe 


iat Rose of 


with it, as = 
ason of blooming, is our old friend Baronn 
we know of no Rose so large — 


—— as the old Cabbage. Duchess of 


arengo, raised by the 
seat des Batailles, and which he a. bate . 


T — ame Trudeaux, 
Robin Hood, than which 


e des Fleurs, 
there are few better Roses, Sidonie, Coups de Hebe, 
flower here, and w 


colour, hrapa is that of the Ten-week Stock. Du Pett 
Thouars als so a brilliant deep carmine Rose of gre 


merit, an t escape 


were almost — 
0 


n — effect ; they bloom most profusely, and a 
a a _ lamp should WwW 


osanque 
a Malmaison, white wich 


rawn to l r row 


ss 

they may be made to, gladden the face of a ba 
otherwise uninviting, and under certain conditions they 
are no less aig in highly dr ground. A oer 
clump — the on 
stakes a 


among the earliest 2 


wth w ep b 11 ano —.— —.— of the nur- 
ery ane „ by the side of a Grass walk 

Date, Height of Specimen, Daily Growth. number of drooping or weeping standard Roses, varie- 
September 1. es of the Ayrshire and Evergr pervi- 
1 isin YA ‘ieee rens), worked on tall stout 1 with their branches de- 
2 25 feet onsen — the grou effect of these weep- 
30 — 42 feet tree The va treated 
When cut down in 3 ia the) following in this manner ‘tere were Ruga, Thoresbyana, Gar- 
were its measuremen land, crimson B ult, Banksiseflora, Myrianthes 
Namber of internodes i ise, Donna M Laure Davoust 


wie 8 ih pe 
e ae joe ny 


14 in 
See (at 8 feet 3 ins. from base) : Five 


eden . eames ins, 

eS. 
« the 8 dain. the grow owth was, 
— 7 degree ; minimum, 60 d Fahren- 
heit, The paper wil appear n the rR r “of Natural 
History, and the ety’s 3 — Dr. Cleghorn, 
Madras Army, exhibite drawings of some interesting 
Plants from W ore. pat, was laid before 
e meeting a specimen of Myso e gamboge, with 
— —— — “ap Na tae h furnishes it, 
uid other Guttiferze ; also Xan hochymus pictorius, 

n 


of this gamboge, whilst the tosti- 
accurate r prove the tre 
ce — an elevation of 2000 to 2000 
— 2 a great = weet Malabar Ghauts. — 
planters have — ing information, an 
forest may becom 
fhom the — 


F. 
HE 


masses, Syn 


1220 
Bs 2 
Hi 
$ 
4 


d 
m 
firl 


ose tubers 
‘food, Dr. Balfour exhibited male 
Mr. Spiers, with 


ni 


1 
Ls 


ced fertile flowers, and is in 


Merio e 
„GREAT BERRHAMTSTRA 
. N lies towards an 
—— i le ugh wh 
— ig oe be —— ea „near 


walk from t10 


s nursery, a sneak 
the Berkhampstead station on the 


7 
0 


ground ts higher ex 
an — eresting view . — Beant 
to « = Castle, #3 eo 
anit to the left left 
at 


z 
ir 


i 
te 
2 
11 55 


right an 
Lane's house is 


breadt of Roses on Grass, and higher up are 
— cts — when 


n. evening 


, 


— of the 
striking and 


and it 
that this h hitherto ee iat ction of the 
importance | 
mass he 
each of which Mery fog power of |; 
saccharine sol t 


2 
is flowering and stated that the same | t 
‘produced 


p. | gra 
| autumnal flow: — 
8 | a 


Lou 
er is, however, somewhat tender; it succee 
These ge Roses, we believe, 


pe notice, 
Fu rther — the hill were some newly-formed ae bri 
rage + Mrs, Bosa 


r | Menoux and Marqu 


n 
r of pi "ilas 


ose of t cupped 
ren not quite so full of — 5 a "a Géant. 
* 5 Gail, 2 pink, very double, and beautitully 
ped. Dr. se, like 
end, g a bright glossy pink, scarcely 
double enough, still a v ‘y pre Rose. Gen. Morane 
giez, a most profuse b r; deep rose, tinted with lilac, 
L'Inflexible, a ve all we cupped and finel 
t shaped; col r, peach blos Madame 
light brilliant crimson, a beautiful variety, 


FSF — 
. A 
zE 3 
8 5 


4 
2 
— 


variet v. 
mong the Bourbon Roses there is not much novelty. 
is de buie, brilliant crimson 
bloom ; and Lew 


with flowers as as 
Souvenir de la Malmaison, but it does not appear to open 
freely, at least in the summer months. 
Calendar of Operations. 
* — the ensuing week.) 
ANT DEPARTMENT 
AZALBAS which. — —— their eir growth, and 
formed their flo now have a slight shift, 
according to the — given in our 
some time back. t will also answer for 
e 


climbers should be regularly 


to ae eee still 3 e to SS in graceful festoons 
from the Mai 


vigorous mes z% means — — — mapara arra d 


ll. possible 

ane r touched with the kni — — an extensive re aan Soler of floral 
Along with a variety of ——— ——— the rie beauty for the late autumn months, in onder in 

1 Bowe, 2 nal, crimson ren, e ensure to e — the sudden — of 

e 2 t in the op ireumstance which we may 

— Do — — and —.— Rie Bovag ap b 1 pae expect — in October. _The syringe should 

ee w be used more sparingly, except in very fine weather, 

hy hybrid Bourbon Rose, and it should at all times be nosy er. sufficiently early 

In a line perabundant moisture to pass off before 


parallel with the — pee, — 45 
alluded to Mr. Lane had planted v. 

forest trees, as Larch, ee English — nd Wych Tanz, 
Ash, Poplar, Acacia, an 

a variety — different in appearance 
mon Weep low. 


Among ng Conifers, of at which there is here a nice collec- | 


tion; we re ed of Cryptomeria pore nearly 
8 feet high ; Tax — oe ervirens of a a similar 
height ; and a agg: wt of Abies Deodara, vers 
from 1 to 7 fee 


ecessful culti 


ow, 
com- | 


FORCING DEPARTMENT. 
VıneRIES.— Early Vines, which have completed their 
ripened their leaves, — — 
esire to go to rest, should hav ame 
si sible If the ameunt of ventilation ‘obtainable by means 
of front and top is insufficient, th 5 5 ends of the 
uld be tilted, so as i 


vation of the | inside and o 


Cu 

foliage c lean and he 

a cool moist * using a little fire in very wet 
weather only. Take care that the soil of the borders 


a medium 
ere the fruit is 12 yet gathered, a rather 
is required. FIds.— Where these are 
me what drier ; 


5 
—— to establish itself at such a crisis, 


is 0 
Its colour is sig and it possesses a delightful fra 
nee; assoc with it were many thousands of 
AP gaat b Y 


ure ma circumstance w 
moved pr peat will do well to pene ember ; but, in 
order to e suecess the more certain, we — 
advise some — pees eaten to be mixed wi 
the loam. In the sam 
of Araucaria i 

2 to 3 feet high, in 12 
ieee plants nts treated i in this manner 

ts; and, to ensure their safe ee they are trans- 
planted every year. 


noticed | notice of this 


Mn. Rivers’ Nursery, e eee our 
Nursery ted inadver- 


last week, we ver- 


trees the vigorous 


ed a whew a 
toate, , of — from 
— rs. Lane | e 


se grown in | M 


the 
gies of | of the plants, thereby suspending in some measure 
— ga of the pla 

FLOWER G —— — SHRUBBERT. 
„The late rains — eausing . to grow = 


itio 
— breaking down. 


— ona 


472 
T 
HE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 


which end every effort 
tah dn 5 og wi fe should be made to conceal or | 
J ce. oval A give eitad a pagers. mie the aoe better sorts, by using the — — 
vo ye W 
* to do many jobs i . A this be budded i c whi a ae s Aat ones for stocks.) is Poa maritima.—A Z, I, ( 
? as inni in e re 1mm — e purpose 4 Aritima 
uals, biennial g and transplanti serve | be cut down and g 1 — i they fail, th pose should | 2osum ; 3, Epilobi AZ. 1 Cres 
1 ials, and ng ted i e stocks Holcu ium 
which stand , perennials, and 2 young cks can s lanatus,—M montanum 
Th too closely together i , and various shrubs State of the 1 Weather ner enn a Chamædrys; 3, Ex HAA, f 
e propagation of half h er in their seedling b SA RRS served at the See 5, ‘Shntéuta tou quisetum ae a minus 
should be comme d ardy plants for g eds, the Horticultural a week ending July 26, 1849, pratensis ; 8 1 6, Sn 
species eme fi as soon as that of 125 rr on) Jay. Le. — l] Tue —.— a pparemiy a morsel. piepen 
orme hardie E BMOMETE osa ; 12, th elast 
* ation eee wd ns is bits: Mays. Ot Max. | Min. || Max.) Min > || Wind. || Rain or — sevcked Sua younger — 
“ antity is plants, of which Satur... 21} 1 29.677 | 29.596 || 7 j s cause and cu 5 
cult b 4 requi a is someti ch a Sunday. 22 29,982 | 29.821 73 | 47 | 600 mildewed ; th e are equall 
F e Monday’ 33] 3] Bere | Sse BIas Se || ae | Leptop fa mish bare a ene 
eis; cutting i ing but Wed. | nae 29.519 29. 67 | 48 nye S.E 00 the milde 
t ci y g in a few of the eae a mo S : little ( j 
8 be okasi 9 be obviated, ph oe wi re — 8 — | 29:549 || 74 4 s23 || SW i eee — un BK, ome 6 ö 
whi f 5 row ou I erage. ee 60.5 04 me? EA 
ch strike with the strong young sho tele -g 272 | 29.812 94 ~ * 46 willin he p din 2 ba perhaps nop K 
applies toL greatest facil ots, y 20-—Fine; dense 4 8.7 mpg g to consume g lists must state w 
a similar char Petunias, and ma iy eh This hint) = 2 — Togi konaa cf Dehin — 1 EE Ln Nien of the dene on that g | 
ny other la "e 3 ry fine; densely ov ith your bundle, 17 i mest plant W 
1 É ter. While the > shoots plants of 3 3 on deep, filled wi 17 inches lo 8. niries abeng 
paring, ns s of the 24—Cloudy; h riai south : with th ng, 9 in are s 
8 scarlet eee may at omm ese “are i dan night. eavy showers ere om thunder showers. and hedgerows. T oe spn — mina 
in order to allow s wi ‘which should Was prop ence wit 25—Fine; showery ; thunder 4 essively heavy rain ee help those w * s pplication ndnctions iat the fae 
; showers; —5 e.m, with ply yo must j 
1 before Aram rage A nN y pagal o val Mea tende heanythunder-iarm —— e Make yo te —. to the study dy Of a he aaia 
n any situation f. i ey a asil n State ure ofthe week, 4 deg. be yana| procure Babi r of Lindle 0 
rom a of the Weath below the abingto ey’s 1 
of a south wall; b slight dase aed 1 5 gated pather at Chiswick during the last 23 with ner see, m'a, “Mannal, and. th Boag 
pensable : itisth 28 attention to one tai 8 8 ending Aug. 4 1549. 7” fr - pial — this we will giv Bs appy Them ae 
. 8 a oin ; 2. |gs ast 
py or sand Wr a sbe ‘Slanted in er Jay. | ESG FE ga | Noot — — 1 alone 4 n 
y are cicatrise 4 at bot tase alk no wa agai — 258 bee SE which it Hin 8 With ene * 10 O NOAA pit ver pamerane s 
danger of deca yim after which ghee 3 Rained. hke] rich soil use of their 
boxes may be Ope ver situ there is little Mom 29| 76.0 | 514 sadade ti e Sin probably that 
y paN My ation the on. 30| 734 62.7 | 10 A Z ise you to b which did 
during stro: 15 a a light shadi pots or 31 74.6 io 62.3 13 0.31 in. 1142 effectually de e more sparing of it the mischief; 
ong sun ng is necessary Wea, 1 11 HA S 923 9 = 428 2 7 ‘ 3 oses 1 EL. estrone 1 e, t next year. Tob 
2 75.1 d 5 10 32 — 3 € ood 
oo "POMSTY FLOWERS. | Friday 3 is 3 22 a 15 — HRE 3} %% Ro aan pi Be Perpetual 15 
begi OTEE j eee a eee 1.0; 3| 2l] 7} 5] 3| 2 ass: X Y. 
ter cutting ning with those w eee may n Ow be ee ee hone = 555 9 5 177 : 2 s : i S zova, Coins 505. tw: 10:8 very good sample, and un 
aw are the | 1842—therm. 43 g.; and the low above period 1 mb: BB. S 
oot to be o ay some of the low ongest. deg. ext on the 30h duly) Ish, d fit An retum, pur tephanotis fi 
which ma: operated on, slight! ati a leaves of each — —-— a 5, and let — Bhd ae 7 — m, red; Bigoonia tart enen m 
and 4 be placed some i f Bess: W G 1 ise to Correspondent 8 Soe ke i pink; a 
san H 0 nitin 
each layer); dy soil or sand decayed der weak colonies, instea T at your neighbour’ bee aay village ‘blac The pickfork, is. nos 
joints, 7 ); then divide the st rol handful under Sutin order t if f destroying them 8 o your 1 ksmith will make one ah ia e trade; 
„ leavin i emt ut in rder answe OREN p e furnished wi 
cut off close E re must = ee ok the} bi bre r to do the thing propery you sho ne hemes er well, The TA Astat place pker B. It — we have 1 
i ; the layer ma; e “nib” e provided with = the | e Hi it is a rather pb out dem, 
z f y then will a „h ith a fum wn ap ; i 3 . moist ; 
may be kept naihi 3 the p e p pegged box, Sef tha avin fang ite att tee rr or ipo Ree | you wile 2 — sand, suit = easy cultivation, TA 
cover very sli ter each i i? at it | beyond tt uck in the b a perforat à them Te 00 
place, ta ny ag oar! where the oe ta down, burning stuff, and tie a cl y eto i averted hi ive Sega arie ste Sey a aer too damp; was 
, to settle the soi as ta join, in pe to o! round ya hi >| charged wi adler. fear 
= . il, no taken | soon å prevent the e oth hives where: the ged with moisture i 
ing these flo 8 the fertilisati ther point of] fallin rop down stupified, at 8 ape of the bees here they | + oi dial as a consequence the Lesa your garden is m 
weed, b Nai if left to chance the n or cross-breed and a Nate nope of the hive; ja making a noise ae Ps P pu m h —— aty, of your Cee nadine 
ey will habia el n all is silent withi ; tap a little o e Peas nig tbe well to en 55 — r 
ae it by fe y far the best and prt! sometimes loth, and spread in, remove i n the top hi rae cut out a 2 bear tower 
tl : hem it. Shak pave; er that the = 
0 . 0 = way is to l d the queen * t about with e the bees N others might 0 
the flo ae e cee cha 9 2 warm days ee snit eh dee on, Matsa your be destroyed. While ath order to slightly "shortened Te "Nove ery 
"an those amongst the e whole of t ny our own hive i hat pur- ov — 
tracted an ontainin 5 e petals aag see that there i e bees in an n the way d 
e em eser rule d 
sin Paya to tho poi po intals 2 * h wg a eo hive over Se Cae pie cloth: Doak iee peretitiial 15 me 2 15 
this is d pla orns“ (to s to ascend during th , raised a little for ai $ ace the a earnest i -A nine years : common: 
one judicious] ended to be — afternoon of th g the night, and or air. Allo in requesting us toi . 8 
: see e next + co wth ursery g us to inform 
for parents, a great i y. . the best eeded. If that your nei mea day. It may be nfine them until ihe you must * e are to grow. ee 1 what 
at improvement m of each class if they hav e, been 58 will be of eee to Obserre it then let now better than we do nde 
Daur and des ust soon take brimstone previously near! or no use to your c us seriously advise 
1as,— Liquid manur sisted fardurite A place | Booxs: 4 Ba 8 y smoked to dea 1 85 e in stick «Euk you pop to think of 
e should be gi owers. “ Flor y Botanist, Fo Af ; but we never —A Sub. 
re shou e given oecasi . ra Germanica ;” f r European ceed from our publish 7 
them be to neat sticks, in 9 to . D i Flan ntarum.” * ae tate be Me peas 55 en it we had space 
hem ing — 3 er not ide Engli FRANKLINII 1: J D. icher's ianthemum A e but th vate 
— b s only to English climate, e do not thi with ad oides, algarv 
fon val semid . ge gl but to allow free — wore — ne “it yah has Devens: bear any — he libaneos e5 Mg Ate 1 viih 
A r 0 rol 
centres, 1 2 double flowers nih pre 5 the pla > aa of its being the Huon Pine „ e and Ase = It istus ovatus we kno — error for Libanotis, 
flowers ey show them ose havin RUITS FoR SH mparativel e dare 
8 ha R NGHA ely rec i g * 
as recommends d 1 725 Attend ing hard aaa the mont A itheroe. The foll ent retin vi W. . 
onelle, Old eceed at owin centre wi ellow, 
Diel, Glout earan Cra dais, mers, place. PE Heed line indented 52 rplish mz size sm 
Seer’ ps at, dine 3 : Newtown ré Rance, Beurré spotted with pale N yellow, i 
einette, PLums: Greeng nstein, Gold ppn, Male Carle rably good, but the si wn; shape, 
e, Washin on, ippin Golden wit few rather la — 3 
Impératrice, Enabled with indented, shape oh midi . 
with dull purple in the ing. 


Advant AA 
— should 
be A — this Vi nce, Bi 
is 
fa ourable weather Blue Perdrigon. C garr ay Du 
— z 5 — : Flor 
w Stra eds. Th Late Duke. Maiden plants ma be ne eraris n 
5 au, M k ma 
make mn e plante in Was — * — rege good, size rather Il 
a w dull row n + et r t 
oe azed h b ; size and pene 


for their ror * 
tivation, = 
prepare: v ground 
dressing of 47 eeply trenching it and » be eee n 
for the soot and rich man and working in Y | GREENHOUSE 8 trees are fit to remov, 
i 44. Tu runners * 7 gina good Mandevill uiusens: B B B. To th 9— er. 
ing them should n earliest plants Hardenbon suaveolens, white; Ken 4 85 Ë rathe 
the strin from the selected, rgia macrophyll so Joa have, add r flat and crumpl 
the g should be retai parent 9 af and in $ andiflora; Te 8 ly E ‘purplish. toes larryatte, red; 6, brownish purple apa A 
plant in the pion ce ed 5 fow inches of | he Dolichos lignosus, „pink. jasminoides, white, i gm azurea large, Msi e good, 8 í H marbled 
2 und, ist in The eye r side. 7 $ 
will. be Ne in spring shoul he young shoots 2 the larva of wee of sent is not a w ana vse — — yellow, lg 
—— liable to split off i securely tied v a Halde, which fe gore ane * eg —.— Fuc toni were e in a 
vr off in wi „ Or æ, w 71125 utly u N 
r.. e e in part i "h feeds on ground insecta; and the a — howe ee e mad 
ra 
LN : b eee reep Went ichneumon: (Proctotra 8 young, but the papa cf 8 ee A waltivation, Ame — 1 
Index e 6 et the 
een. y y attending to this matte: — — y —— wasp-like — 8), which teh oe aa of a and 3 9 51 o. beath with a bright tube e : 
Cra T im 5 
* bel For Pear tre — — an ug en Tne les e solitary | sithough ‘short in aioe ange ee — 
cylindrical. T pyramidal, and shape now | Will W. It is not prob progeny. F. M. aid up in ough short in the vob Boe 
sheots mus = uce the la nd for Apples adhere permanenti probable that any Next week. enough, either in colo ee 
ots must be trai e latter sh ples, the absorb ink with y to the China y fluid pre cultivatio n; 1 urs, sha ape. 
am radii ained outw: ape, the liter any force, and n Thea w ration} foli 1085 nice high-c 
; Rot a ei ards hori y ated, Perha „ and there: . They wili oliage and vei ree ay 
pe muat be fixed Aam the outside of areh e eke ae ear aa 2 ape boinetinn ob- —.— desirable in dhe Jol 
le perpendi ut 9 inches ch upright| the use wer, We hav ne thick oured varieties, 15, 
gee oe ‘ asu ike thi weve soft blaci and oran 5 with its long 
: es; and wh r to suppo called u ese tablets. ' Those — long ago abe ead, 13 is a ite bol arlet corolla, is the most 
en the Jatt they furnish the m o sell — an Fund ld flower, but not di 
er have | Liquip Manone terials for writing . e large. flowered 
AZ. Pump it into Re 555 7; 4 is a neat 
any covered reservoir Soon and commo: rie 5 — 11, tube 
ell contrasted colours and ample ie ol 


rived at 
ived at a convenient hei 
arrived ight for traini 
ining and frui 
it G chare 
mg — st, and leave it there Aueh th 
e smell is gone, | G 
. | GLoxinta : 4 se Flowe 
1 pig Se 


gathering 
the bidei their prô 
side shoo’ gress u 
right to ano oe i agri should be stopped ; 
support t , by means f across from one g nating at dasti is invaluable, "Fin 
will a aa other. In a 3 they will eee - | MELons:: z; ö bo eee peat ma ne coke-dust is better than 
ee re 
re become suficiently fixed to ke the branches | Set; z Melons ar BE mote dea moč explain the hiat on the inside of the lower lip; 
be then e assistance of a yd their proper make cae 1 then “the ott say. thay they wane — — R chape angular Pi a 
$ ` „ 13 e r 
rn only one main ahe To produce id which will of Have attained Melons bore the Vine 3 same colour, with — eater 
one which will f. ‘oot must be pyramidal Pear ae ‘strength and fr it ir wile deel enough 3 
of side e main stem of rt ed to pro- the the purpose Aesar ia, èd. es oke — —— k PIW. e, and m: 
especi . tre Bromham Hall vari H Bund: s good rath : rii 
ower part of the troe should be aid a e treo j the | Dut thugs ge rent ali varjeny ds mow coreied. rrer | 2 
en 8 av 1 2 . ' ro 
ig tn tapidly 4 y shoots 3 regulated were aw =i the 8 Silver —— a nig gh htik. ENE parente „ „ dull; A Bs ja His 
rT. i eir nei h E 10 we wi ompet i tors. edal to t, it to Pr . 
tion; it 5 3 rom n Suckers N Names Uh report spentally upon y in opportunity is pra" wry re fading to a br sho Upper 
z ; : : s s: 2 t. 
with — — ee i of every deseri — with narrower . T Statist te us with pale feen colour, red 
them on! e of soil, as su * o cut them o liii ou three ribs are not visibl or, perhaps, jerai Re the Phe base ; size, substa! 
more 45 causes them to fae a mode of dealin 25 l r Poplar, Witch + Nila Sedum Forst “spatholata, but 7 ; shadi — 4 ae 
meat fe s. To do the w up a progeny dan with | Teucrium & Statice Wee 2 St avery © or Take Upper petels dark Kope 
3 > bared 90 thing ' times Appare Šeordium ; 4 2, Statice r of them, e, and slightly r near the 
ar origin, 4 e rently a mor e Valeran e, n. | red; substance § 
3 reful rs traced ba L se p! — lire 1 Pod al daR too small for a show Pa n 
lly removed with the poi 1 to W bath een ; 3 beauty "for ee ene if rie preg 0 C. e pale rosy Siac in 
r . 
a e de e e specimen eent y age 
Sp tippen dung be ‘rant tol i Sweet: 8 was a ka pag A 
fine varieties, particular! 


sharp k 
nife. Buddi 
ing may be 8 
oa. 
on Apples fi 
p es, Tan A handful ef guano t 
Dot w ig . oa large w i 
3 atering- 

Wd. De enarotium moscha tor, e pot shades of purple or pink 

Grass, the m folnson. Your ated Coe single varieties 

udlands of the Humber, | sorts. hatt ea gle k 


2 


varieties u 
n the walls m 
ay; By this leans, be ver laced 
| Yorkshire 


30—1849.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 473 


E . — —— 
— 2 AGRICU LTURAL COLLEGE, of foliage immersed in air or the amount of 9 —— gutter out of the field. It is only in so far as the 
ighting on the extent thus immersed, that is the | question considered can by its decision influence our 


NCESTE li 

Saturday, the 11th of J 5 

‘The Sammer Session wil commence on S tired do attend for | material point? If the former, we are still a issue, | practice that its Dobima is useful. e cannot 
t 


; N 
August, —+ an +— ing day. Those who purpose entering | for we believe that the exte nt i merse ed is not cause the valleys to be exalted or the mountains pa 
i i made low i to ca 


Students 11 ‘th Principal, at College, 2 e carry o 
— 8 ys 2 admission | if the latter, he claim superiority over us; | decision, which is, pro tanto, in favour of ary Sar] 
$ eih —.— west Sir * for the quantity of — lighting on the se — but we can put a stop to that artificial process of 
Ten Offce, 2 7 oe 3 * of a district is none the greater for that args ne ridge-erection which has disfigured so many of 
and which 


— 


eng he 
~ RBIDGE ins yo HEALY, 180, Fe Fleet street, respect- | being broken up into hills and valleys. And w —— which has injured them too, for the 
Bis call attention to their meth warming Orchid | must remember, in choosing the slope and the fiat ae s of — eap it facilitates is mis- 
me They hav ve had the honour of warming the Orchid | on which to try this question, to select neither a chievous, and that of under roe a sier might 
Bigos the und Gardens, Kew. 9 we a 3 aspect; the right thi ot assisted. 
Ee Gardens, Chiswick, additions to the House. ould be, mpare two similar circles of equ nal In conclusion we add that, owever fally we ma 
rehid Houses of the following distinguished a hes one level and the other surmounted | consider this subject to have been already . 
— The Bishop of Winchester, Farnham Castle. by a conical hill. In reference to * the idea al ahd we ie * from wishing — Aone the last word upon 
A Lyons, Esg, La Ladiston. atmospheric food 3 the hill plants, i only suggest if the discussion be 
5 e Pick also observe that the effect of wing which rors E our pec 9 He should endeavour to 
1 ‘Schroder, Esq., Stratfor this food to the —.— must very much equalise any make more ef d lyan the determination of a merely 
R. Hanbury, Esq., P etai: near Ware, differences 33 the two cases that might other- | amusing quest 


See Ra Webb, Esq., Clapham. : 
wise occur he observer ; currents of air, i wh rar Foor I 
be assume od in the case of cultivable slopes, take jus ra co . 
The Agricultural Gazette. as long, and a 1 to traverse the ascent as — . N SIONAL EXAMINATION, 
SATURDAY, JULY 2 o to pass over the horizontal "earths on which | , T. gmi M 
MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. it stands. GRICULTURE—1. a nat Yeovil ; 2. V. Rice, 
n The question for discussion is—taki f ge 
I air, e e eee *, * e e T piece of Cuemisrry—1. T. R. Luz de of Liverpool; 2. C. 
Warresnay, Aug. „ yy ‘Society of Irelands e level land, forced upwards ae below Lethbrid Es 4 
Tuusa, — ‘ea ; . à ge, Exe 
1 into hill and valley—whether with the greater Narvrat History ri R. Holland, of Mobberley ; ; 2. 
arasan, 5 e r p Beit e ° superficial surface it g thus acquired, ~ altered 8 W. Mayo, Yeovil ; and E. J. Lambert, 
H ere. ang f: Ottery St. coca Aug. 4: Newcastle, York.—| in that alone, e will yield larger produce to the Clifton. 
F Aug. 8: Furness. husbandman under the same treatment which it had Vererntnary PRACTICE —I. G. ee of Wraxall ; 
i e Ky ay at 75 2 in a ed 3 ly recei — We consider the true answer 2. H. J. Carter, Co 
of the Hic D Soc s in the n itive : there is the same soil to feed the | Marnemarics, & w ihe R. Holland, of N Mobberley ; 32. V. 
ea MEETING AT ee e ial er chee qika little consideration shows that it has just a 
t l 


y 
especially take notice of the report and speeches | the same vertical depth as formerly—there is just the SURVEYING AND reia st ar of London ; 
connected with the chemical department. same sunshine as there was—there is the same air sur- Jo: ai W 25 P July 9, 1849 
Mr. Finxie’s remarks on the 1 0 5 advantages ad whether the on be considered or the passing a 'rincipal, 3 ° 
derivable to the farmer from the m which agri- | breeze which fans them; and we believe that no 
cultural chemistry supplies are 0 by his pistes number of upright plants can be grown FARMERS’ PROSPECTS. 
own experience, — ought ne be read by all pna rte one case than in the other. If they could, there In my last communication I endeavoured to show, 
hey would see thes them that there | is not more food for them; but we be any they c i — l 
is no better business nome nt than that Eei not. — 5 HAYTOR admits, as Loy 1 8 3 much ae it willat the same time, an ricu 
goes to the support of efficient chemical aid against | that n e houses can be the case | to th will not 
the fraudulent dealer in agricultural stores. The j than in or other butt 1 8 — 3 is not seriously — — surplus for rent and profit, and that 
i ment of the Highland Society has not | affected by this“ they can be placed in close contact by attention to afew details of management now too 
yet received that aid which it deserves. We hope and all the space filled up, but I never met with any | generally neglected, it is in the farmer’s power to 
the statements on behalf of it made at the meeting — 0 he says, “who had 5 trees or corn, or any | up any deficiency, and in fact to derive larger profits 
referred to, will open the eyes of some who have vegetable crop, with the stems all touching each | from his farm without in ital, 


hitherto aloof, and induce them to come for- other We think, — — that the comparison | J limited rg 3 two points—the unne- 
ward in its su is perfectly just. Philosophers tell us that there is cessary waste of cat s Dy unnecessary exposure: 
ee no such thing as absolute contact—that what we call 2 to wet and cold, and the waste and wasteful use of 


rene en to en- touch is produced by that repulsion which sete ee 
ae zo in wulle bas we submit already | deve bodies freed upon one another the gre | mit etre eed te coght, porbspa, a the 
. e to ha 
other things being equal larger Produce may be the pressure 5 nearer the particles are fice, hd nly as in itself of great economical value, but also as 
grown on 3 i Lev 1. Lanp is not of such im- the denser they collec sated become—a thing which the means of greatly — the preservation and 
portance as to justify the a abstraction of a | could not be if there were absolute contact to begin rn of farm manure. I allude to the waste 
column for its discussion, from the few we have to with. Just so with the atoms — W or of Wheat — | arising from the use of | straw as litter. Ne inconsider- 
Be taniy However. of soma ini aia Mr. Cnavron has 3 8 now 2 able portion of vines aste rein the farm-yard is 
7, fess : ve pea at oe ure in these cases pushed to its | occasioned by the Jutge: proportion of long straw. re- 
mit—and a an thinnings of our Larch | e to be rotted woos the ae is in a mavageable 
o | plantations and of our t wn grain crops ; the | co „or, as nan. 
17 of stalks be wae 4 — in the struggle for for | — nage I ses om stop to se a Jr mant 
om the one hand of 3 85 land into high age 8, om ol rege 8. t bet a We Fu ent e d by th 
aad on the other of using the turn-r rie Ltn 6 hoger P of the products of desert: ch in — pass 
lat; and for these reasons mpt to th there A e bricks Peat = i ape 55 into the air or the horse pond ; na am not advocating 
e practice of thick sowing be adopted in either +: eb fool ee re hist Soe live stock * 
eke ree eae 9 5 have sively pi rene on cad, an Sos the son the use of straw as arrima P ny nasa 3 
The question must be decided, we ne, b obtained both on the s and on the level land, to the results of analysis, To get a standard of com- 
ee e those alin fey snd = de ere will ws just as many of them, and no more, | parison, let us consider the feeding mi of an _ 
Dot h * n ich xtrao iiaate thstanck n the — as on the other. Of course the mee meadow hay A ton and a half may be taken 
fat Sead tio 28 ee raor Wo 3 pice zA d far may sow less grain if he woe = — ee i. 5 wr ps an 1360 E n archy 
S. 0 e 
that there are ms 8 oe plants fiat will grow may differ i in any other pa ci — — tiva — pm rents i — 4 * thes ihe 7 id, and the 
More largely in” the ‘ate kea thas. Wien pos from his neighbour on the flat 1 et * 785 
Staller extent of its h 3 sad 1 Li a or the effect of that: but let them both * an —— * s. 8d. prs e feeding valne of 
for instance 3 * rs 3 , egi rw. 2 precisely similar methods — faa — ay gga 30 hak is, will yield, of, 
? 
Profan Phn i is a mere line; but, with the French Tee cna bey a a ini 1 gluten, 
alluded to by Mr. C F of need, On surfaces n r and 95 lbs. of oil—worth, according to the same scale of 
F While some flat ee ce ai < 1d equal to one another in the horizontal, and, if they value, Al. 46, 10d. By straw wi 
1 growing plants may perhaps yi 1 i ms not differ in other respects, we will answer for it droppings this feeding ue 
upon the greater extent of the incline hey will not differ in their produce. They will | the necessity for exposing such droppings to air and 
: h ier! in this—that the rd land farmer, though, | moisture, in order that the straw mixed with them may 
trees, Of course sees Frat = 4 land ae by supposition, he ha more soil to turn over, rot and become what is called fit for use, deprives such 
iel Tett prd that good * 5 5 t will find it more difficult to "TS owing to the | droppings of their fertilising q pass 
poor land on the level that's l ascent up which he has to pull his machines and his | 


= 


average acre of 
s 


BB 

. 
4 
1 
2. 
F 
F 
m 
4 


ofttim 
t "| coarser : vit 

is in flat live ” never perceived it 2—undoubtedly they have; Oats and bruised Beans, and mixed for feeding stock 
PF 45 ai things bein epee steep field is not worth | with oileake, soup, an oni. Beas au Barley-meal. In 


at the foot of a sl the f case : 
the fields are 0 a ope; in i. bared so much t t as a flat one. Have these differences baun, * Clover and other green —— for 
cee > rob by 1 W on ad the 3 they ought to exert on the minds | hom Sg traw may be advantageously appli 
tly low th and in the latter not Non 
on does the flood in ee . rs, and checked that — oa of | in — layers, w yy such ps may be safely 
Auch fanit: not rob them, but it t brings them carried in a greener state, consequently less exposed to 


a such as tly less 
hore den ting matter, at the expense of the slopes ploughing ea clay Ja seis e pa ager ridges „ 3 and | injury and waste from weather, and yr ack i given to 
| ‘aly des ve; 5 85 ich M c Wess There may be no ater labour as straw by the yi heating of the stac uces 
er aoe ed * M — — Tta 5 on pori of the slope thes artificially created, and 
big mt 3 = 1 as cattle fi tion 4. 
mate ee soil, havo 3 * r z the enie sag pe tere sarc ey Ge wanted dee 2 breath 
the mischief common to the natural an e St Tea ge. the anim ae 15 755 5 
exposed to But wha ng (more pee 


, t becomes pi h 
. it we consider wh whether it be the extent eee flood in 5 the nae some | to wet and cold), and a small portion 


creased weight o 


agricultural produce, if the farmer 
ition, must on with 
ces of economy and skill, which in manufacturing | 
to annot com- 


greater — of ca 


the growing or fattening tion. 
ese deduetions the entire ingredients of | 
me 


floor near the thr 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


The cutting machine should be made to trav 
onwards a the mowers. The ears of co — 
separated mi ight be at once housed on a well ventilated 
eshing machine; if above the 


e 

ered coat a — ting, by rolling and rubbing the 
tw m, would clean the grain from them, 

wars let it fall ‘nto ‘the winnower beneath. The opera- 


tions, according to the new and old methods 
— present f mg 8 toam machinery used, would stand 
mewhat a une 


and a consequent seein incre 
arket. 


buying ppings of sea a fowl, but he does — suffi- 
ciently consider that its value mainly consists in the fact 
that these droppings, bini prs as in all birds, the 
liquid and solid exerements, are deposited in climates 
h no rain falls, ut moisture fermenta 
tion will not take pea the nitrogen has not passed into 
as air, ~ the phosphates and ang salts been washed 
o the Let the sete, his in mind in the 
— air of his farm man iy “let im combine 


liquid and solid — nts of h is cattle; lessen the n 
cessity for ferme: a avoiding the admixture of 
rmentation, which 
ss take place, by 
nd not allow one — of 


uxury the 
eannot afford them, and may be well — for a 
dry Ze = shelter from the winds. The farmer may 
object 


sheds, “involving outlay in building ; ; there are few 
farms, however, where hedge-row thiunings or other 
wy an treatme 


n, to have 
on stout poles 
3 the ex 

My. 5 — of ns appliances is 
all — into a pit, directing 80 = all 

cattle — — paella ching any overflowing in 
2. To spout all poy — 1 that no 

2 1 

3. To ost pos 

as Ter food, , that ‘the 1 45 quantity be mixed 
wi 


pent 2 jgan eae 
say 1 ewt. year’ 
5. To ae the stock by sheds from wetand cold. P. 


. e Correspondence 
n Pigs. 


Gazete” for ing 7th from signing him 


a simple remedy, and 


re a Harvesting Grain.—It has 
a —— that, by the employment of eee 
man 


exchange 


— 
corn is mo ould, 
without being tied, be laid. under a ee like rer of a | he 


=cut 


ears, with as 


op picking, the 
„and then stac 


mt 
ds The result of a day’s work, as 


on — 
weathe 


ect. 
ible amount of straw | y 


ar 
4. To a > ee manure from time to time with earth, | so 


wa 
—Seeing a letter in the “lyrical 
elf | t 


is you 
ges gardener and have 


a 
| ree seize on os plot 


many proprietors and | a surf; 
of less 115 


—— now considered neces- | 0 


| = a i) than, on 


was 
into bags or — like those not 


T METHO 
1. Two — two stint, and 


New "Mer 
1. Two bet gan delivering corn 
to feeder, one boy saved, 


en feeding 
machine. — and one 
boy working machine to cut | 


off ears 2 
2. Expence — chin ery for 2. Expence of staddles of stone, 
utes Se ears of grain. iron, &c., on whic or 
[The difference between cost | stacks now stand. 

of cutting machine and the | 


seat pt would be saved— 
staddle costs 57., at 
at) 
3. Carting ears at once to the | 3. 
Car ting loose „straw 


Tying sheaves, setting them 


426 a0 
8 sav d.] 
4. Stacking che loose straw. 4. 
Muc 


h of the cost of stack- sheav 


ing, and all cost of thatch- 
ing saved. 

5. One man car ards 5. One man, horse, and cart 
ears in baskets thresh- taking sheaves from emer 
n ou to threshing machin 


— itself. [A and cart 
and machine sup- 
plied quicker, a 
6. sae and one man 6. Two women ene man un- 
indi ng shea and feed- 0 
2 ein — 
7. Two women saved. 7. Two women sone away 


straw from machine, 

ne man, cart, and horse, 

arting loose straw to stack, 

and stacking it, 

ar as 5 can estimate the 

relative advantage s, seems to be a sav 
thod of two 


8, Man, cart, and horse saved. | 8. 


stack, unbinding them and thatching the stack, part of 
the fuel for the engine (both because le 
be neede ause mo 


agile, pidh be 
nh 


method ing e 

2 he 1 3 Kane ff the heads of 

sagat informed. I 22 

a e a be sf communicate the 

esult of a trial of thie das 95 7 a * per implement 
for cutting off the ears in the fiel 

8 Land. — Tar friend zi 


D 
& 
~ 


B S 
1 


to point out his error, an 
ing diagram think, explain 
s — am a market 
a flat © 
piece of ground, n B, 
measuring 50 feet, on 
which there are 25 rows of 
Straw wherries ; way 


and throw a mound over 
it, giving or on the eee, CB, 
feet. If I 


he has done so on the base, — 5 B 
his compasses to A D, and then 
to C E, and he will Ng convinced be = 
error, a — t wil not then say that 
be gro a long 2 line (like that of the side 
ae aes i ine in a horizontal 


3 Prater sobre y a Yorkshire- 
— yet ing lo n Yorkshi el disposed to 

offer, if not a gama hay 2 little — cm the 
Vorkshi not be ly eonvineed — 


— being left in the illustration 


u in p. 443). 
and if it does not ) 


S, Supposing | num 


upi in field, and carting them g 


and thatching 
ot 


i 
within certa — 
-| Whe 5 in at 5 feet distances, but I do not quot 
his practice). N 


that seeing is t believing. ng, I think it wil 
different . may be 
esis tate ay be drawn — * 


It is true there are the numbe the thing sag 
marked on the horizontal b R * of due 
and-rail ; but it is 3 de un and 


HR 
111715 


ze 


E 


whic 
1 55 necessa — for 
pe — to the horizon 


F 
E 
l 


1151 
d 
f 
£ 


HE 


ll than 7 its — — 

ndicular — can be drawn upon one than the 
her ; and because these lines are at ‘the — distance 
apart, . the roots or e roots must be d 
at this e distance + bat I den’ ate unless maths. 
— age are — fault, for 1 — lage ea taught 
the ene of a square, 
la 


e accompanying figure 
be the side of a hill of 
which C D B isthe base, 
let fall a perpendicular 
from Ato D in the prey then form a square, of which AY 
is the diagonal an „D B, B E, and E A the S 
Now if “ C. B., Norfolk,” be right, the straw growing 
h i distance 


at the point A is at the same 
point D is from the point B, and the line A B is equip 
the line D B, i 


sowin 
500 as 
perpendicularly but ee ae 
ate e produced upon 
breadth of E itd and maei is 2 the hill side. 
Steep v. Leve s Land.— 
n 14 July, 5 — that wh 
— to 
finally disposos of this 
satisfaction, by a drawing of a very 
ircase, which is only another r version 


Surrey, 
.“ 


to the met 
right. I now beg to that, rey ; 
mechanical elne in whieh it has’ ve esas 
that stalks of corn can — 
— — en — e, 
of s 


is not cultiva! 
land going — of pom in Ireland 
searcely any taxes are levied, and mern? 


e Lord as e 
added that Lor 
than that for 5 5 farmer aig oy destroying. 

rabbits on hises 3 
thi gi Mr. will pr 2 

have mention 


prove your 


— THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 475 


than 108. fice’ oe will consume them m on sequen nly thoy'aro — — 

the land, is perfectly inapplicable to the = as — whieh is in ectionable, as a 

ing of cattle. I there — the name of ` the value a r — of Damien to be pulled and carried | at this age is not fly developed ——— may either 
al the land nsumed in —— by cattle, Tullia retrograde or e improve in th of another 

Tuke, Bradford, P orkshire ‘ae 


an 
to the form mand Stage of the scythe best adapted for the 


inseed, corn, extra at- i 
the quantities of which are taken from 


fields that have been mowed, and in those th very 
rough and uneven sheaves, and the quantity of ears of | e asons for renewing the prizes 
miniog , een re ap- | Wheat strewed on the ground, which ae eared to have | and riian simplifying the duties öf the judges, 
portioned it over the quantities of straw and Turnips p ed ani 
the agriculturists to w om I had referred had 
to u 


o | against the standing crop. ] eed, belonging toa 3 who appears to have 
succeeded in every variety of stock, and to a carried 
off numerous prizes at at the resent me r. Fisher 
— . The other — 0, 242, was also —— 
ended. ese young an goon well 
| shall probably find them successful om etitors in other 
d at Id., on the ground that the cake . mere refuse le asses in succeeding years.—C Fa for 
6 Ibs. of it are only equal to 3 Ibs. of seed. The cake is | dray purposes) were certainly the done 9 the show, 
1| the seed, less the oil which can be squeezed out in the | which may be accounted for in some — by the 
mill, and if analyses are to be relied upon, the best fact, that such animals are rather out of their latitude 


ett 
Cattle Fattening in your journal of the 7th inst, The 
writer recommends Linseed, which he oe at 13d. 


fact ment in favour of high feeding | Seeds, generally bought up for pressing, contain 20 per in the eastern counties. al four wate an competed ; 
over the old eee On the contrary, it — in — cent. of oi ren the pro Tua by analysis, 10 per the one which received a prize was certainly a fine 
only ecidedly pri ecessity | cen i Osa and — deficient in activity, considering 
exists for high fe feeding, as well as high farming, contains 12 Ibs, 2 oil, — s= Ibs, of food closely re- | his size : the second ho orse, though with much 
in all its brane hes. ‘The “ J. M., of June 2d evi. — d in composition Bean meal. The same weight | may rather be — as an agricult 
f i oil 


Er 
Eg 
Fe 
2 
— 
4 
2 
2 
Fs 
83 
25 
ri 
% 
E 
jat 


bullocks 
lot are taken, &e. In th itici worth any such price; take it at one-half, or 24d., and searcely to be found one t ter. Breed, com- 
n of — — — we get as the value of 1 cwt. of seed 6s. and 4s. 6d., or | pactness, a light head and lengthy neck, with good 
(June 234) the result of feeding beasts in large lots, | 10s. 64., and for cake 6s. 9d. and 2s. 3d., or 9s.; wil if | oblique and lean, shoulders, one Cian deniable legs, are 
h i m i 


tioned were not isolated cases nfi to i- | give more t is. 6d. 1 cwt. for seed when cake can these must be t — — ; he must bea afo 
ments ona small scale, and — of the caplet be got at 9s, P., — and fast walker, and easy and fast in in his trot, doing 
a heavier average . „„ . his work with himself anc N 


en Gazette 4 J. M writes, that he neve: 8 T SOCIET re 
: „„ K. T MEETING OF THE ROYAL AGRICUL URAL SOCIETY : 
denied (en; but 4. M.,“ “of June 2d very much yi OF ENGLAND AT NOR as we could judge, were nA 


stallio 
issi r hoped that the 
: ission), he says, it is the duty of those — — itho — show of horses at the Is jast. 10 or 1l years, it is to 
ating such methods of valuing the food consumed to the York Meeting, which a favourable locality and the No. 205, 8 od f roadsters oa be h eee, gegen 
à calculation of the inerease in weight of the intes- | attraction of additional prizes had combined to render daret belle ee eee Mowag a gaol 

i is eoun 


ey 
fa 
EE 
a) 
E 
E 
z 
2 
f 
a 
o 
Sarg 
8 
= 
8 
3 
* 
ES 
8 
S 
g 
& 
® 
2 
3 
8 
3 
5 
5 
5 
* 
<a 


in 
— not avail him, and that I ean give him | no less than 30 goodly animals serve perplex the ee 
final I days for offal, and beat him. In oth on min nds of the judges, being double the number exhibited $ 


mare, 

A ; , former in merit—strong, monet and apparently active, 

ed by each animal, to which “ J. M., Po York. The first prize, we find, was awarded to a fine 3 

— thus refresh his — in y's and with re- | four-year-old dick heme horse, No. 214, the property | With a good foal by her "side. il and 273 were 
f . : 


Harling, | * 
: r. J. n, jun. r 
Wat the sole eo! the animal, I ‘maintain that such | Norfolk, an animaj bred in Norfolk, but partly, if not | 
mee, to ion ‘by which, under all cireum- | wholly, of the Suffo — was upwards : . 2 
fame aon the value of the fosd consumed. The of 16 hands in hei ght, with good legs and feet, strong T siR class other animals possessing 
that he cannot have —— crops of corn back and loins, a shaped shoulder, and good head „ 
zehed by i being first well stimulated and en- and neck ; — fault was being rather too long in The Sonmiiktian Sonne 1 
den man eS i and he also knows that the — — the leg, but as he was only four years, and would pro- É g — — ——— 
dem made of procuring such manures is to ve | bably furnish more as he gets older, and is, moreover, a 5 praa animals, Ss! Mos. 998 tad 290, both of 
> eae if he were lendid walker, we are not s t with these | only a shade superior , 
Which zue Ce ingredients (straw ted) out of | various excellencies he iome the first prize, although | W : , — 7 

ing ang atures are — — if by | he had some superb animals to contend with. Tt should | others of considerable merit. There were also some 
— ng to his cattle 1 ton of Turnips, the be borne in mind that it is an instruction to the judges | ee. x ‘ork very promising yearlin ies — 
other ingredi à certain — of E or of any peer they — bet take into consideration, not only sym- nene f 8 uffolk 
der, would ha whieh, whilst it would have cost him metry, but strength and adtivity + and that they only | b k~ —— to the mame breeder ; 
© animal, | ve given no — inerease of weight to | have an opportunity of judging of the latter, as well 
d, tn of he that such is the value to the as of dise ring various faults which the public | Wh 

ips. In conclusion, allow me ane no ascertaining: a 5 | ereditable to the district in which it was 

tebe od M. P.,” should it ever again happen | was given to No. 224 3 Gon, ee ed, and i worthy of the e great Society under whose 
dale wt Ren to be admitted anony- lingthorpe, Halstead), à true Egen a 5 * 

N troversy, however trifling | in and a strong, compact, horse. : 3 f ~ th list under this t 
— at he sh he should not endeavour by In this, as in other classes, the Suffolks were in PE dandy owing is the prize departmen 
- that t lass I. Stallions for’ Agricultu: Parpotes, of any age.— 
x the same time knows 7 prize, 301. to “Mr. Jona Dodon i jun, A au top near 
A ~ in his last letter, where he speaks li in the first class, 3 4 7 which * — —— 4 Bast Harling, Norfolk i 2d prise, I, 

ips | bred vi n ; stead, 
s. per ton had been made of Fuente aoe + Sg nase er Pitabas — Carin i ms 0 Class tT Two car ee * Purposes, 
? 2 1 —Ist i „ bs t 01 2 en 
ee P.”) knows that I never named the certainly a remarkable animal for his age, possessing a hearin. ae Higham 1 3 o Mr, William 
ebenes; and as he writes anonymously, wond — of chest and strength vs poema He | Wilson, of Ashbocking, near Veen. 
suspi a howe by no m i N. vas ley, St. £ 
be mot onen Whether his offer of 1000 tons of | amount of as” which had been put on him, and which | Wiliam +e aves, of Abbuilay, St, Neots to Mr. John Bar- 
Toe, ber With’ we offer of the man of | we believe is neither conducive to the health and ter, jun., of Wiggenhall St. Peter, Lynn Regis. 
is wi n peihs: vi a animal, nor inérénses chances of Class V, Mares and Foals for Agricultural Parposes.—Ist 
1 


35 

IH 
— HH 
7115 
Yi 

= 

4 

E 

115 

4. 

F 


7 
105 
E 
E 
8 
Za 
g 
E 
8. 
A 
“i 
3 
771 
fs 
ETA 


HEH Zi 
4 
[REF 
1115 

= 
cH 
En 


775 


last remar There her horses in an prize, 202., to Mr. Thomas Catlin, of 
ay Communication, 1 ` prize, 10l to Mr. John Smith, 
and would merel tih equall objectionable state of obesity. We observe that mondhatn. 
ler to sell all his Turnips at much le thero was no prize given Sar duunin — — Class VI, Two-year-old Fillies.—lat —_—* Mr, Ben- 


iT 
F. 
i 
8 
ji 

* 

E 

2 
f 


476 


THE —— GAZETTE. 


amin Cubitt, of Sloley, near Norwich; 2d prize, 5l., to Sir the animals, there been an increase in D 30L to 5 
Gooch, of Benacre Hall, Wrentham, Suffolk. thus we are progr waar with the difficult but desirable and the Reh: of 150. to Mr. Garne.—In C. 
task of augmenting the length and height of the frame of 300. r. Large, pe me prize of a 1 
—A mere list of che 8 exhibi eck without losing the s ani, of form, fineness of offal, | for a ak fine shee shies | 
would ‘afford useful 4 nly to those who have and excellence of quality which indicate a so ndness of rump plate and chest, and 2 bone.— Clas . 
watehed the names on the shadi from year to 5 constitution and propensity to fatten. From measure- | of 20/., and the prize of J. to Mr ita i 
and as most persons attend d principally to those par- the same individual at York and Nor- of beautiful ewes—large, round ‘ » for two e 
ticular breeds th t interested, the | wich 5 gee rge, ound, good ramped a 
mes toe ey are most interested, is wich , it appears that the prize sheep are not the with wide chests and firm good mutton, sheep, 
at mass of the public will be ignorant whether the jargest, but that the prize sheep of 1849 ve 8 than Stock there were some pretty little leone Ex 
various b ive, stationary, OF Te- | those o The measurements stands thus— small to be useful. Amongst the — 
trograde condition, ey are furnished with a 5 ee a wise’: e ‘ ling 
critical on eer yin n. first-class breede 1818. Fenn. 1849.—Nonwien No. 496, wich a Wr 1 lek-legged ani 
are advaneing or not, it rtain improvement Fatt oe ab whee (ie DA cae eb ge af 3 are offal, and — 
is iiag ‘widely be rapidly diffused, and that oe re ik oA le ae | Be A unworthy: Aca Magnificent a W. 
many more first-rate sheep in the country now than ISIS e in his dl y to stand beside the many noble 
2 were 690 or three years ago ee e. 1 pS i = t 7 1 whole the Leicester keep 
r Ti pce RET res See 2 u ir characte 
by the ain increase in the number of exhibitors, and 3 : 2 5 . oa hin en es a 5 have greatly b. 
er of animals in each class, ee LEIcesTERS. E E have 9 their Poran glory. í Long wd 
ably, but “aking the “general 1 at several shows Class I, 2 kt. in. ft. in. t. in = tt. in. ft. in. ta 
shown thr ti Jat ing AA AA 16|4 10 |3 10 |2 6 
pens nn n ings 2d eo: 16504 ; 3 K 2 i 16| Not measured. HIGHLAND AND AGRICULTURAL, July 4—Hj 
— Class IT General Meeting — hte Society. — Forty da 
1847. 1848. 1849. 4 2 ra 5 7 9405 s 295 ; 1 1002 63 embers were adm 
| nan CY, eS 5 2 
Northampton, York, Norwich. 305 8 Í 28 15 1 3 9 2 61 TE cus ony NGLE, a 
LEICESTERS, the highly com-“ 28 j 9 |3 6 33 gave in the annual r report on te state of alia 
Class I. Shearling 42 70, 14 of them|46, mended (55 15 14/3 83/2 6 He i th iet uecess er te 
sees entered also Sourupowns, branch of their establishment, with which he thos, 
prizes one Ist Priaea . 164 13 7 2 33 164 433 10/2 43 they had every re to be sa Their 
Class II. Rams of 31 048 42. d Sye 9 163 833 73/2 22 164 13 82 2 | was now s as a distincion by i 
ass il. 
Clase III. Shear- 12 pens, 5 of|16 pens, 5 of|l4 pens of 5 = Fien iota oak 29 * * 11 4 || 3914 6 3 10 2 53 ee pien all parts sa nel eg. and — 5 
N ot measured. 
ling ewes. each. en 82 each. D India Company as a qualification for employment m 
SovurHpowns. so eras aise des 3 5 siis e pa irk 10 8 $ 3 10 * por LASGOW. —The SECRETARY reported thet $ 
D a e aa cst Br a e a a a cist $ : 
~o v aaia % at * l 164 95/3 7 2 6 the arrangements for the show to be held at Glasgor, | 
Class II. Rams of 15 15⁵ 24. — iy commend. 16 j4 8 |3 742 52 ext summ had been commenced in a very sats. 1 
ae 4 factory manner. The Lord Provost and Magistrates : 
x Ist Pri 3 0 5 74 042 91 64/5 64 42 9 s ` ; 
ig el an * pene ee We 52 5 70 142 at 52 5 10 4 5 |2 10#| the city had, r ions, readily come fo- 
Loxdwoors, Highly comme 29 |5 AST 2 t ward to support the Society. They had appointed a 
Class I. Shearling 15 20, 6 of them}14, * This i the largest sheep during these three years. uential committee to rate with the director, 
—_ also for local me of the sheep e enhibited — s Leicesters s are, in fact, and had intimated, through the Lord Provost, that the 
Class II. Rams of\11 12 10 not Leicesters, but ross bet w e Leicester and Green would again be at their disposal fo the purposes 
any age. : some larger breed.. If, therefore, get cross-bred | of a show-yard. The district in connexion with the 
beg secon Shear-|3 a 5 of|5 ‘pens, f|5 pens. sh p are admitted into this class to ry the show compe t 4 er counties of Lan Renfrew, 
g ewe: ach, ie ‘leo prizes from the Leicesters, w joul any | Ayr, Argyle, Dum and Bute, 2 
riz cross-breds (between the Oxfords and Leicesters, Lin- | with the addition $ at “Siig the ag i 
Extra Stock I Oxford ewe. |1 beriet ram|2 “Leicester colns and Leiceste c.) be ompete here which, the dire happy to report, had en 
n a 9 also? Those breeders who s 4 5 to certify a cross- | sented to co- aei 
lamb. rams. Handel as being of t icester b ave now no al- CHEMICAL DEPAR Curistiso said, 
22 Southdown/1 3 downs. ternative but to compete with the Cotswold and Oxford the proceedings of the Chemical Department had bes 
lambs, "iei outhdown | breeds, both of which have obtaine nce over | going on for the last six months with great 
e 3 y TA at theirs. At Northampton all the prizes in the longwool The committee was divided . 
iem ewes. classes were btain the shires and | sisting of practical, financial, and scientific members ; 
But besides kya multiplication of “ the best models ” improved tswolds. At York, five of the six and it ld be well if practical agricultur through 
rizes were won by either Cotswolds or new Oxford- | out the country at lar of the nan 
re eo ‘a 


throu agaon 23 
being m 


i more improved. 


has 


ountry, these ido taaalo are 
It of a 


been said 


year Seabed perfect in 


form and quality, and yet 


of shee 
— 5 men of sheep (far o 


eir size; ooLs.—Class I., prize of 


no important and 
ut - numbering the 8 | 


each year finds them better t 
‘is cans Baay eek te ha a ag otter slide, 0 and imp ci Oxfords) that are disqualified to compete son, Woolmet ; and Professor Cah 
that the spectators of the Society’s shows obliged | * as Lei and re 15 the present class for the Cots- that the constitution of that com pec | 
to confess that the s ben ing con- wolds . 1 Oxfordshire great confidence in its prac actical e, and proceedings, 
tnai ua But gh the great victors at t In examining the moh ies of peny at Dink ge xe seeing that in such a department as Connie * 
exhibitions have improved their stock, other breeders nd, as has stated, a general increase of nu co-operation, they 1 He be 
are frequently steppin eprive them of thei bers in all th es, notwithstanding that the York. investigations of a purely theoretical natures k 
h urs. This fact, clearly showing the pea of saire. Ae Society’ s a spirit doubt- | lieved that was a general feeling hogs 5 
Eapro present is set forth in the following list of ast year. In each class | culturists in this country, that many of wl 
we observed 8 merit he animals being in good tions which h ave been entered upon y chemists 25 
chemical associations have ] 
849. —_ of 2 gene of quality, and excellence of | to be tur to account in a prac 
Norwich. ious year. The 2 of 301., was his own feeling in that respect, 
LEICESTEBS. 1223 las 1 Ji "(Shearling Rams), w warded to mended that all investigations wh 
We r. W. Abraham etly- le-Wold, Lincolnshire. under the sanction of the committee, 
AA 8 í braban h pw sig but the rump was the first instance, m 5 
Sanday scarcely high enough, and the handling rather men; and he had great pleasure in 
5 Class II. possessed fin e. e prize of ntlemen whom he had named 
5 Sanday. Sanday—an animal of better quality than the first; suggest many i portant practic: 
Commended Hobbs the fore-quarter good, the chine full, and head fine. | require a great deal of investigation in 
Wool plentiful and good. In — ass were some ex- but which promised lead to 
ae 1 possen! og both size and symmetry; but | diate practical application. These g 
Class IIL ere were many with thin was pii bad fore-quarters. | to having suggested thi bjects, 
Ast ies eres. simpson. The shee of Mr. 5 0 were by far the most perfect | their willingness to undertake th 
2d 15 eee ..|Sanday. and beautiful among the Leicesters.— In Class II. i Id 
— — Burgess. (Rams of any age), the prize of was given to Mr. d 
lass I, Sanday’s sheep, a very fine animal, of remarkably good 
PS aga — Webb. mutton. It was goo in every point. 
Highly c se Webb. The 1 of 151. to Mr. Br apes Hébbs. A good rum 
Glass II. ebb, wide full fore-quarter, 
r p= L ibe togetlite with a fine pnd ance and small offal, are the 
Shelley, pearing: oft l.—In II. the prize of 20/. carry 
Class III. ebb. Mr. W. Simpson, of Kirby, for five beautiful 1 ing 
= Shelley. ewes, with good jousia and well formed carcases vered pense a 
with a ony: wool, 9 prize of 10/. to Mr. en u 
ee . Orverman. e good ewes, wit oma rumps and ood 
ey Dika tg Sale we sont aia -e firm aie x 2 
* of Chichester | _ SOUTH large show o ery fine sarees. 
i In Class iy eons ai a of 5 301.1 8 155 R Webb, for 
lat ram with remarkably fine bre quarter, and 8 
= E 1 T Lor pect ; the prize of 15/. to the same breeder, | sum subscribed d 13 
Highly cor A itarge Hexer, Garne, | for a short-legged oe p, but having a straight back. | tributed by 279 kd 
Class II. ; Another of this gentleman’s sheep, No. 429 (uot a prize 8 ae a small sum to to come 
— * Large. one), was rfect model of a Down sheep, qurpan as Sco , where 50 many agri 
Commendsd Sick „Garae. in symmetry and quality every sheep iu the yard on this an interest i he 
Highly commend. ; 7 Hewer. ar perhaps, also, on every ormer) In Class ney of 
i Class II. 1 I., the prize of 30/, was adjudged to Mr. Fisher Hobbs. | was pa 
2d E, 25 Large. ae had s eat backs, high good rumps, good | to raise in a 
Highly commend. ee ecks and h fine e; the TEN of 15/. to | he conceived that it 
———— ewer. Mr. J. z Shelley, f for s very fine good sheep. In Class | exertion on t 
ghly commend. |Large. ‘ 1 prize o o Mr. Shelley, and the prize of | Society who b 
Besides the pinaso in to f. J. Hace sof Bur. * . tween chs i 
; ? sum, 


| 
| 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


when the expediency of ; sample from tue stock analysed, and had no difficulty in pro- S — Stock,“ to be in Legard 
held out to the Society w curing an pres om of 10 p t, from difference of value, I wits 1560 Council Di by i ? 
ws hing a chemical department — under oa cannot conceive how any agriculturist who ex his hun- ry hy after the Council Dinner on the 31st 
[We ret that we are 3 e to pu reds a year upon portable manures is justified in applying | of uly, and much information is expected to be elici 
F111 ̃⅛ b. womit borrade a Arama, om this, very important abject, whch has exited ao 
; they are w the purity of the articl hich he is not onl di V 
ae 1 rt on the work done in the deer age rc ae 3 ie genuineness only ‘expendi re | needs in eatization. Teir intention, w bend 
0 


jadu or tey 7 esent engaged rere 


and ev ai — crop in t rotation, is ae 


green crop, a 
without a k 


pendant; for w 
of the materials employed by the agriculturist, it is evident 


eee whic h had! 


. samples o 

of which, grown with guano, was found to 

— rior quality of butter, and these had been 

a very care examination, — was jus 

which they proposed further to extend and iert 
Turnips grown for the purpose during — 
a 


vy 
but 


and | 
g 


incident to his daily occupation must be a matter of chance, 


8. 
m look a 


y 
be told this is a tenant’s question, and i r his 
but 1 hold e 


own interest — he will fare the better; 
is necessary for the tenant — ot be dispensed with by th 
landlord; and “if fro m not having a ready and cheap way oat 
having his — — ppi loss of a crop is the conse- 
quence, is ois — landlord's rent endangered? But I would 
respectfully s —— t these portable manures, now so im- 
portant an clement | n good farming, ul 


sed to carr: 


siderati 

It is mary war 
land —.— a Í fietitions — and in its downward progress 
it was arrested by the introduction into this country of those 


wal, 


ree 


ver 
133 ede 


we, they ropos y o! 
on the 3 bé the purpose of . peng differ. 
values of that e 1 — —— — — and sses | 
well kno influe: value to a con- | 
extent, ad alse ope soa of — — importance 
should as much as poss Able endeavour to ascertain 
Eese ee am nip — —— with the view 
n of ar eally good 
As this, h i cos very. —— aud — 
ad resolved to — a 2 = the pre- 
and had m s for ob- 


BEESEE 
10 
538 S ie 


20 ession of years in 
field, during the —— ol which time a series of analyse: 
soil — —— 4 be ae at rege inerle, 

mi 4388 the 


HEI 


cultivation to land nacarally good, bat inaccessible to — ze, 
ed 


herbage appeared befor ro — a — : may state, that in 
hows wae 1814, the declan ed v of bones imported into this 
country was somewhere — 1 — in 1823 it rose to 15,00 0l.; 
and in 1837 to 255,000. In 1815 the quantity of Rape e-seed, 
Rap and Linseed-cake imported y some 
1600 tons; in 1 it rose to nearly 800,000, In 1841, 


appointment 

of a chemist In the first place, as I said before, our — 
2 is adulterated, and he could — that and Rape-cake. 
To such an extent is Linseed adulte ted, that, from a cal- 
salation I once saw, if the whole linseed rae Ra apeseed grown 


| well to 1 an extent foreigners u 
r 


e 
8. Then 


themselves. n, as to guano, we have a difference of: 7b. 
— 


she any one be bare enough to say 


T pr saoti 
Goonies 5 


farmer. “Ap convener of o the 
for the 1 gare ebe, ~ the chemical de. 
partment, I must say, and I believe I speak the eee 


unles — che eee and occupier: 
1 forward nee promptly = pore vt setae they 

— donn, little credit wi Siy ulturists 
28 1 m the step the yh O 5 2 assuredly, | 
funds 7 provided, the Society will be thwarted in its 

4 only will 5 . duane be 0 ed, e i 
E= endeavou: essfully 3 indie practic 
— — lve ‘a of rey aid ot 8 a lowed — 
must be taken by the 8 2 Scotland 5 those 
of the other countries of — I can, to a certain Ta 


adulteration ¢ oth e but exist, and how necessary 

5 1 a test applied Sakae — rchase f Bat already we have 

experienced, in this country, the value of a chemist. In 

g d as high as from 22“. to 281. 3 1842, 

the Agricultural Chemistry Absssiation xisteuce, 
Professor Johnston analy sed the natural guano, published a 
come sid 8 


Atrected 5 it, spoon ays to the 
“me No doubt aa a increased ‘importation lowered — natura 
o to a ain 


cer that produced 
by — ‘acture, ty ro affe ted to the extent of some 61, or Tl. 
pet ton, If, therefore, it has been in a great measure owing 


the — skill, and perseverance — the Scotch — 
| that Scotch agricalture has ass 1 the proud 3 
occupies ; if. it yr been found t t eae farmers were t 
l further to atte — re, by ap 


bat not —— üp 


A 


8 . am, with what to — during 
it s dis 90 ntn 
— Who * els the Wrede ak eee et this 
at so very ee a proportion =] bce 3 
iene should be kg rm and indiferen 
. ree * Ti ¢ will materially bee 2 
Scot — 3 sea 15 ee ae a still 
Be andara of f in'elligence, 5 — 
whether chemi agr 
rae To all — I would vespectfally s aay, — an idea exists 
mice of in nquiry, If not presuming too much on the 
preg is meeting, r Sat state, in a few words s, in 
SER I Mark. a Practical farmer, have experienced 
5 5 ** j à „Which I thought, and 
ave been supported in th 
— of any farmers I might have consulted, 


u 
om lime. Eight acres were limed, T an 

expense of ~via 

me I wonld har 58., Ton moked! sn er then occurred to 


exceed. | con e 


ractice, through the medium of the Agr ioul- 


ing sci ence to 
ch they originated ther 


enefits ou O 


tenants, 


— | 


to 
8 | 


prietor Tn us 5 to su 
inter 


will be so un 
he! making these o 


r 
42 


ted by any o nterested or 88 thy m 


o what I te qA 


is 
ing as many as 74 in number. We 
Laber hate great exertions have been made by the 
or Leeds, o ch Messrs, E Eddison 


om 2 t „0 
40 Heaton oca es. 
“Sulphate o 77 Magnes ia asa Ma sng tap * a fixer 
ammonia, t 


can be no doubt that 
n this 
reumstances, 


to 
and 


may add, that a certain proportio 
especially 9 to the — and that, when added to 
manu pit 5 
its qua 
g 
rst place, it is Negrin 2 rice, an 
second, its fixing power is, to that 
as 32 to 46, and to tha 


is e measure 
the greater certainty that | the whole of 

the sulphate of magnesia will ac . As to the use of 
g u 


ts on 
re sack which are so far satisfa 7 zon n very 
ee e, e amaira a — — 
oa — r Hay. 
The — p part oon . te a ‘gave. 8. — per acre, 
te of ia, per acre 


290 stones. 
2 Oats in Mid-Lothian (Mr, Main.) 

No dressing gav — bushels.. 

Dressed with 2 owt: of sulphate of rag 

In both of these cases there was a larze increané 

are said to ave" 93 


measure everything. 
eat 33 two plots on acs field om 
which the eee nts are o m 
2 rtions » e e ng i a tained that an 
You 


my only ambition is 
the art I practise. whether w. 
of the pak state of agricultur 
but a tew years siuce—a glance | at the rapid i 


with i = condition 
mprovements 


11 


J 1 705 
nsideratiun by a 
“Never aving been 


— a made 
th regard to ano sry point of my practico. 
Poppy cake my a un 

ant, to whom 


FETE 
5 


f 


$ 
Jia 
pE 
E 
hy 
92 
=F 
Hi 
OnE. 
sel 
Zen 
Fa 
4 8 
E 
© 
a 
p 
REK 
oe 
8 8 
8 
8 8 
8 8 
& 
$] 
2 
8 
2 
” 
— 
zn 
ey 
8 8 
* 


: 
E 


— superior quality and greater cota anco of crops on i 
erage of seasous—at the progre provements i ners 
— of sheep pan spied — pa 7 — whish 
e agriculture of this da ssesses over that of ones a 1 
of a century past 3 Soak that ali such is not ned to 
a i eat gered vad arene. but extends to — —— with 
re favou red e roductive— -weli 


i 


used for hour. 
— 1 


H 
Fi 


g 
og 
F 
8 
S 
=E 
@ 
er, 
E 
E 
5 
E 
2 
2 
* 
5 
— 
© 
fe] 
* 
2 
8 — 
e 
— 


as lambs were in the question, double 
I — 3 a sample, for analy- 
another of lins 


to proceed with whatever may tend to advance the art of agri- 
culture in Sco an nd. 
Mr. Finnie’s remarks elicited, as they were — 
man 


re ado opted 


more oi oil than the linseed cake, 


. 


HHH 
JHH 


a 
F 
i 


d 
e viere of Professor Johnston, 
det nt Chem istry Association, by whom the analy- 
at I hold that — di ames is bat a drop in 
iso to be obtained, 


IHH 
0 


1 0 
ji 
Ps 
sf 
nimi: 
PHHH 
H 


FEF 


e sone 5 ka inal ysed 

d when the secret was . v 
Lay * of a 

to 


n Londo wired 

taken — the ship. p. The — 

5 mediately the sh — off * 
rgo 


érsov in Le Pre 

i given an analysis of it, wo the sample 

delivery Ihat different uud 
hat all was not right, T I then Ea a 


A a 7 rd e the ral station, pi a 
aah Š 


cellaneous. 
eal arney Meeting at 


Mis 
re Agricultur at Leeds.— 
A arem will be of a 


Sond visit of the Soc 
character ia all probab ility to fa 


Yor. 
The 


vast 


veal as w aarden 
ae show, as | 
the Leeds 


w m , are there 
facilities for an pages a remy in Leeds ; the site of the 
show utely i in the town, and i within 
vacant space 
ed, an nd affords 


likel 


of h 
ee it Sao as an addition to the manure in t 


which, ways sit may also be used with Beans. 
l it =f dusting to the sets before they are 
of using here impure sulphate which 


© ejerens e Jour third 


ad Fe pee with one of common arà E nitrate of A or 


z ewt. These m 
in in ths proportions a and yam the N 3 in- 
dicated in refere mixed 5 te of magnesia, 
„ Raport of Agricultural C Chimistry an.. 
Calendar e of Operations. 
ULY 


Pans, daly § 23.—Until the — ot 
cely be said that we have summer 


— ag egg 
this month it can 


u = 
very ato ee and there has been a 
on our ie hills — the months of ee 


ellin 


dmir A1 


for ars past. The — 2 * 


street. 18 & 

the most 3 access possible. 
will take place in the magnificent new Sine xchange | 
| which is one the most ele egant rooms in and 
very conveniently and centrally situated. under- 
stand the Earl ot Carlisle es Tatim ated = e of 
l his post as ie dent, and the arl of H 

romised t i Among the 


parent, m6 de especially on 1 on 4 
the ‘condition nor the blooming skin 
„ we have had genuine summ 


of sheep on the 13th, be 
— jepara es partiy SE é 


kiyeh ofi a discussion et ‘the “ Ho ousing 


Bey bad’ last year, For 
d everything 


. 


THE AGR ICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


478 
about 20 per cent. bel w those of last year. ool has risen 
from 2s. Ap per — 24 lbs. The 9 p business d 
shepherds at this season is to keep them clear of maggots 
i present gto 


are wing v — the pe 
than half paneer pane ya all are ready for the — m Te hase 
ully shot ou anoth 


w a i 
week, The late cold weather retarded the growth of the hay 
crops so much that we not begin. — for a week yet. 
The crop is very light. 4 Lammermuir 


| 


tices to — 


vv PH. Does ass contain salt i in excess ? 
If so, an efficient f thorough’ * might, in the course 
of years, rectify the fault you complain of. The scouring of 

—— le sometimes proceeds fi this cause. iy ss ee 


rom 
any strong alkaline manure, such as potash, de. 
— — nag it will cure the defect to which = bee os A | 


` we cann: 
ae dee, Macuine : W B Egan, MD. Many thanks. 
to procure a sight of the machine before 
its * — 
ASHES oF SEa-w Marino. Mes Rendle and Co., who 
supply them, Infoved us, that their calcined l is pro- 
—— the coast of —— — and that they do not know 
the m rin whic a it is 
* “SOCIETTES : CR G. The English Societies charge 
ve yar 3 for e 3 in which steam- engines 
Scot 


COVEN T GARDEN, JULY 28. 


The supply of prakti Grapes, Peaches, an 


Pine-apples PAAR unaltered, 9 an na 
ripe mp seber 


well kept up. 
9 plentiful. Apric 
suffici 


t for fha deman — Nu ts 
aad. Lem 


ns sro plentiful, 


pæolums, Carnatio 


per lb., 


les 
aon hothouse, p.. it a to 6s 


. — ze som. 


ooseberries, gree: u, p. hf. sieve, 


p to 3s 6d 
Currants, do., 3s to 


Cabbages, p, doz 
Caulifiowers, p doz. 


33 are abu —9 1 


her salading ye sufficient for * 1 

Mushrooms fetch from Is. 6d, to 38. per pottle, Cut pow and quit t 

consist of Heaths, Pelargoniums, Gardenian, Lik of the Valley, mae ein — ail, but wo 
u oa and Ros 


ir “Appies kitchen p. 57 4s to 88 
0 28 


lent tiful, for 
Green Peas 27 from 


d Nectarines is 


s, and Curr, 


HOI 
Messrs. PATTENDEN and og 
firm, Duty 70,0001. to 75 ua Teport that the — i 


a ae — iy 


unsold lat 


must be written 1s. 8e qr. cheaper 


PSE — July 27. 


MARR LANE. 
23.— The supply of English 


iage to this m si 
| of tte finest 1 Nr > disposed of we f market T Wheat 4 3 
rom e fg 8 = E 
la e age of Ln day sennight, but che 8, = . 4 

najori 


day. Business in forei 
do not alter n 


h n Daa and a 


r doz 


e Oat 
lities are written 6a. to ls, Bo at eis 9 VY, and 


FRIDAY, JULY 


The arrivals of English com 


27. 
week have been small, and those 0 


er 10 105 to ios. morning’s market was bad] reign 
7 S badly attended 
per 100, 78 to one aig Monday co — only be 1 
onds, per peck, 6 a — ay. Foreigu m 4 2 retail inquiry ot ing 
sweet, pert Ib, 25 to 38 arley is 6d. per ‘quarter — — Beans an Tater 
0,1 sale at former prices.—Qat: eee in en Are a slay 
„J to 248 of 6d, to 1s, per quarter.— inde corn has 


L m 
: pE 
tili 


uts Bar, = 20s to 22s and cargoes of Russian, and fine Gal 
re B ro. bsh., 128 to 16s — obtainable at 288. 6d. to 3 8. equation * 
1 f — demand at 248. to 258. 6d —1 Leet gr 
. s have been general pave pa ee d 
6d to Is Carrots, per bun., tinea 2 a inst.; thes 7 aid the 
6d to 38 La pane Ps sieve, 1 to Is 6d — ill protr’ 


liar, ——— to advertise their term 
Coat Cinpers : H. The mae be at to dry up and absorb all 
of liquid and sew: manure, and thus eer 5 ID 


Da. New ‘on’s DIBB: GN., in our Paper of last week, 
Ph sng 1 = — is Wheat, pac ea this instrument, looking ¢” 
which 


per 3 4 sh., 
Tu prnipá, per —.— 
Red Beet, per doz. 
Hor h, p. 


ae he ai sieve, 6d to 9d 
4 Finns par ton, 605 12 1808 
per cwt., 5 


Ve M 
124 = 6d Lettuce, Cab., p. sc., 4d to 9d 
Cos, do,, 6d 101 18 


adi Pe Mushrooms, p. pot., Is 6d to 3s 
Asparagus, p. 100, 1s to 4s 3 Small Salads, p. pun., 2 to 3d 


S8 8 
ae 
Q ao 
P 
88 8 
B28 
28828 
2825 
1 
qf 


3 high 
don, ls 6d to 3s weather —— to have been m of the 


here 


and best qualitie: 


sh 
Britain, chiefly —— Liverpool and Scotland. 


Bo 

ge 
FA 
ap 
Tr. 
ag 
nE 
8 . 8. 
l=] 
8 8 
8 
ih 
ai 


cannot be had under 47s, 6d. per qr, f U, 


New York — of Aea 10th inst, state, th 
— — k had been sligt Wr 


htly in access 
aa some extent b were, making a 


IMPERIAL WHEAT. |BaRLEY,) Oars,; RYE | EANA, 


44s Gd| 26slid\i7s Ta 25344) 
44 2 26 5 16 0 20 a 


1. 0 % 1 ii 


ctuations in the last six weeks’ Corn Ay, 


verages. 
Jvxn 16. .|JUNE 23, | JoLYT. Drs esen 


ins „both of looking extremely well.. The 3 p. needa 3d to 4 Fennel, per bunch, 2 our — 
Barley came up v nd lo o bad g the winter rench Beans, p 100, 6d tols. | Savory, per bunch, 2d to 3 supply; 
that I thought I 7 4 2 9925 * * 2 e Ga cara p, aae 4 Lto 1a ls yme, per bunch, 2d to 3 
, eeks, pe ‘ bun 
but it began to tiller out so thick and strong — I was ees, per bune 10 i tos. Parley, a do: p. ble. AAN 
to hoe Parsnips up. It is now looki g 80 well Radishes, per 12 hands, 9d WT dto6d AVERAGES, 
that every one who has seen it say that they Seo —— such Watercress, per doz. bunches, | Mint, green, per bunch, zd to JUDO: Dossin i 
a crop before in their pne: s; Teis quite thick enough, and more 4d to 6d Basil, green, p. bunch, e 
than feet high, The W. ally as g I have — 23. A 
h sen pec ey; and: should "= . 
extremely me if ase 2 * the kindness to tell m HAY.—Per Load of 356 Trusses. 81 aes 
name of it, entirely new here, A Spade Farmer, 118 SMITHFIELD, July 26, pe | ieee 
isa remarkably — specimen ore common Prime Meadow Hay, 68s to pee Clover see’ see, ve 608 0 958 
Grrsv se sulphurie — on paige a dane bb ap. Do not sanding oor 50 w Clover 8 84 | Aggreg. Aver. 
win act of it and 8 The Row on — mae HA 34 | Duties on Fo- 
ic acid which the — — detach, and which the Sor 5 bas 50 70 J. — ign Grain | 
latter might retain, is of importance. Plants can find AND MARKET, July 26 
po ty of it in —— — es stage of i purpose, after they | prime Meadow Hay 1s toia] Interior ln thee, WELO SOs 
wo Once attaine an advanced sron Inferior ditto... Kew w Clover 3 od 80 | Prices, JuxR 9. 
es mr 8 an — p . New bs 36 
estimate e kiln, to burn or turn out 5 3 
— used ia-mostly.turf, coals. not.being d Clover, p-a. sea. 92 ' Josmva e 2 


of where 
easily obtainable, 


3 July 26. 


1 


aoe 


see „% e 


On ND. Do Pou by the Rev, E. S. Fine Old Hay .. 66s to 72s | New Clover „ 65sto 758 47 a — 
— D: 6d., 22 ade, ane may * oe at the — rditto .., 45 — Inferior ditto 3 50 a 4 ies a, os fe 
3 1 zanaat al agers mat g a dee oe Seta) taal NY TP Ss tea — te a 
ition, revised and enlarged; by tte eee Hs 
MENADE. RENI Pedu ong be bha ad at the office of this Paper, e Lond 7 - = Wakefield. Bont —ů— 
of all Boo rs. ondon. iverpoo ene oston, Birmingham. 
SMUT IN BARLEY : J T Agricola. It arises from the seed — — 
having carried with it to the ground some of th spore oF P | 10 
sporules e r | 112 19. 
consists. And the ony, Todo Hes in perfectly 8 the CURRENT. igo wS 23 T 5 l * 13 * ala ies 1804 por 25 i 12. jet 
before sowing odot 2 hd ory Wi * » . . . * 6 
it in soft water, ry it with „ „ eles ito alee G. d a BAH OT , , 
lime powder, . eee 5 persed suggested, as | New, red . |42 ꝗ‚044 42 t0446 9 7 0/6 10 7 6046 to5 245 to51/45 t050/45 to50|6 1 
r =, |a7—s0la7—s0)7 2 7 77 2 7 sG—S4ls5—23/66—S3]48 04/6 6 
i } us n 
1 img they give the seed. — d, red — [42—48 40—486 10 7 2/6 10 7 2)45—47/44—4 ge — 7 0 
vitriol w. e used for some years in the case of Wheat, but s White ... 50—5450—547 6 7 97 6 7 9| —54 —53 — — 6 4 
it has fail led his yonr Pereign ia iae poleg. une 8 8 614 8 8 6/42—55/41—54) — „ 
Sunpzies : A B. Southdown ewes, after their lambs leave, soon | e ee e 
fatten, and alkate at is the best thing you can do under 480 Ibs. 480 Ibs. 
the cireumstances, Heifers will fatten at 2 or 3 years old, | Rye New . 22242224 — — ogy 5 * 
senordiag to their breed : 111 they will — as rapidly, Foreign. . 22232223 . sik — -e pa j 
oxen. ce is too expensive for cattle foud, Foreign <r 61.—7161.—71 2 pte pay 
that is the'onl object n. . 5 i! sr -e 
— —— dmit . f, r. 
ih den ee, or a suring, Ora variable dere |Gtindiag . 21-24 2% 2% — . 2223022232426 2426 
on, to 8 Aa irregular and patchy way Malting... e+e 12227/2426] 30s—32s | 30s—32 na 
e In e dry seed time, wi stayed s — 
Tu ‘arnips do come at swice—thove patches Foreign... . 18—2718—26 24—28|24—28 — 
p enough at once tostart i 5 6 bush. 6 bush 
222 ‘and the show plant shor 1 thes not of long be, to N. | Malt—Ship ...{ — 3 biti 39—42)39. — — 
— rst rains, 
8 5 Ib 1 
* —— Wednesday cannot be mation mere 19-25) 18—25|2s10é 3s 2d)2sl0d3s 2d) — — |l4—21 18—22 
answered the same week, acK... | 15—23)14—23)2 92 5 — — — 
Foreign 1421132142 4 2 6 2 42 6 — — j — 
* * . A r. r. 
SMITHFIELD, Monpay, July 23, Peas—Boilers |25 10 30 “uk. 345— 285 322824 — — 
e — — of Beas ta for the season; th Grindin 
ed. Th : 
n ‘te is — * li shesein) Foreign . . 25—3225—32 32 —34 | 32—34 | — | — | — | — 
to market in condition. ius 
are easily sold; Dut ie is dieu to dispose of otber hinds. Tho New, small ... | — | — | 32—35 | 32—35 |3I—36/32—36/32—34|32—34 
es being sh ere is a trifliog improvement ate see |23—33/23—33) 34 —36 34 —3 5 
8 trade, Prom Holland d 6 h ; 736 
fo Bana atc Sr from Norfolk b cana SUMAR — [21—362 1—36 Si 32236 180—31/30-—31)" a ies 
Beasts ; ort pton, 800; fi 
300; and 17 Calves from Ireland. r . K . el 
E ˙ Porstofsitn—a do al) F 40640 — E 
fords, &c. 2 10 f 4 0 Ditto 8 6 t 6 e 
Best Short-horns 3 6 310 | Ewes 2d qualit 5 P „ T TE e | we Tee. o en Home 
e Ti g Foreign., Jorat m | =p eee pa 
Ditto Sborn . 2 ib cat Pis . 2 8—3 10| dan Corm— |30—34|30—34] 326-388 | 295—309 | — | — | — | m n 
Beasts, 3496; Sheep ei ae Gees tie Pigs, 240. b. sack p. sack 280 lbs. 280 Ibs. p. sack/p, sach per 539 
ig BIDAT, July 21. Fiour— 36—4436—44 35—36 | 3536 | — — 6640640 37-87 
large; trade is prices i 
ay. The supply-of Sheepand| Weekly i ; 
; at Jate- i 
fewer Calves than for some past ; they: Averages Impts.| Averages. | Imports, | Aver. | Impts.| Aver. | Aver. ore 
dearer, but co.in quite outside au Quotation,| Imports. Jayi N moe 
n 10 Beasts nona manaa ö Jun. 8: qı s+ d. grs. |s. 4. r gi op 2 
Scotland, 129; and 14h Mieke Goes — leg 50 0 ano] 4 2 13130 4 6 7356 50 9 371 | 49 OF | © 
Hest Sots, Heres | — 1 „ „e a | 
. . Best Long-wools. 1 6 % RYE te . 19 11 10470 18 3791 22 0 748 ip € 20 Ae a 
Pest Sher or — 3 pag 10 Boren — i quality 5 aa veg BEANS" one pallies: — 26 11 430 -p — — ays 
2a qnatisy Beasts 3 0—3 4 .8 6-8 4] Bi —. 33 1| — $2 4802 31 0 | 468 34 11 1 
7 — — —— ib . 3 : Z. — 29 0 a, 30 9 1676 a 214 Ll agi, £ 
Pito Shorn 2 Wa eee. cates aa 2 i vE and C. 
naib Shey and amb Bas, ni, i ashi, Stowe | gg 4e 2g, sannane| gaong | AONE 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


479 


— =M and entered upon — 


OBE LET, ready 7 rnished, in WILTSHI IRE, a a 
good | ew Residence, with larg 4 Lawn 

sand Walled Ga 

Stable, and other — pleasantly Haine nen the c 


thecounty and within an easy distan of ra to and —— 
coaches pass the house s above 
—1 be had either by the month or ee a — * sorted: at 


1 —Direct, by letter only, to W. H. S., 284, 


* RK, HO" ; HOT- FATEN APPARATUS, 
pa THOMAS BAKER, MANOR-HOUSE, MANOR. 
PLACE, RING'S. ROAD ; € 
INVISIBLE WIRE F 
gat abbi 


oar Cons 
On-WATER APPARAT Us 


STRONG PREMIUM H. HARE AND 1 PROOF 
WIRE NETTING. 


OF IRON ae WIRE WORK, &., 
WESTMINSTER; LONDON; © 
— O,; 128, — 
— GLASsGO ; 
e attention of Landed P 
trong Wire-Net ence for — —— 


i 


g 


j 


lace 
—_ — 
oe 
of Scotland, held. — at Th —— 
reat 8 ing Cheappess 
m tho Judges 


f 


FHI 


— the course o 

the entire cost 

s Net, It is so durable, that when 

Are sufficie iently advanced w be in dependens siis 
be removed to other e 


. 
H 
wt 
F 
8. 


p 
342 
1 
522 
p 
as 
ae 
sg 
[=] 
7 8 


TR 


1177 
F jE 
17 


i] 
i i 
Hie 
jit 
ih 


-> 2 0 
— 5 0 0 


— appearance, being a 
8 fume and delightful cosmetic. 


ue 


f 
Paser: 
ily 
HE 
ni 


1 0 


and 
As —— 
A 3 ata dis. 
and Co. have made agp 
2 W to deliver it at 
— and rhea 1147 One 


„cannot re a better 
—.— vp 


f ‘ 


the 
obsta 


4 
È te 
SEE 
85 
Enae 


2 
= 
5 
a 

ii 


p 
E 
a 
8 


idea of the great 


7 
j 


y 
& 
ji 
af 
4455 
& 
FH 
2 
EE 
4 


= 


» | full — 2 of weight, 
of Bedding, sent free y post pavan 80 
| facturers, 196 (opposite the Chapet); Totte 


un. á 
War's ‘Establishment, 241 Straz 


WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT, 


— —— — — 
ONDON BRANCH OF T 
TRIOTIC — oR SCOTLAND. The wh 


849, à 
at 473, Oxford-street, Bloomsbury, where am —— 
ORD’S EUREKA § SH fortable 
fitting Shirt — a desideratum iong wished Sny The Publie 
only require 23 eE ment of 
Mr, FoxD, of 185, Str —+ as, to be — 


ont his Eur ekas 
of the many advantages — rå appearance and comfort by 

wearing tioba made at this celebrated Establishment. — Musical 
Gazette, mes 26, — 

8 ve hirts for 30s. ; gine all the new Patterns 
Colou N Shirts, six for 27s. tailed Catalogues, with 
fee and Directions for ry meas — By sent post free. 

—Ricuarp Forp, 185, Stran: London, 


Me ETCALFE’S ALKALIN E 100 TH-FOWDER 
will be found to be the best th ye c 2 

a urch ng tha 
remov nee Bay gap pro. 


pearance so m 
2 — — poe 1 and p e br 
e. Co., from many years they h ig im rated 
Smee Makers, have had o eee pn n (that occur to ew) 
e relative merits o wders th 
oarit —. the public, Mab spat now suce 
euring the receipt from which 
and confidently porate end i 
sale and retail at , — 8. oe s; Bru 
to H. R. H. bog sew Albert, 23. per box N he 
oder will have the Royal Arms, 
R H. —— Alber, on the lid of the box, andithe signature 
and address of the fi 8 mm “MeT TCALPE, BINGLEY, and Go., 
130 s., — pT 


S 


— Farm of WOTTON, in the Parish o x 9 
the occupation of Mr. Sho osmith. a =e “ye gen. Sey ager ety, will held London Tavern, 
— Ai cres of cad — Pasture, pa Arabl 8 858 SR ry 3 17 fo Bist of July. The 
consists 9 Beans and Wheat: he a oe ely by the 
— 2 eren a — i ad is of 22 richest f 20 Right Hon. Sir James Dukz, Kt., the L ayor, when in 
— the Pas sture and eadow an atten- pi teresting statements will be made of the progress of 5 
ing 7 the Farm-buildi ings. ave ‘lange and — modious, : att exists for — dis ee — pereme e eel ag ity that 
ing son and ctw an — ie nding its sphere of usefulness, in order to iate 
— opr ora in feeding. “houses, stalls, she sheds, and yards. a 1 85 | ete — eyw will take, place ia the Preem one’ Tan 
eon t four miles from Eastbourne, PANY li; ns Lavern, 
pis “LT pong arket town, re one nil from ee Pole- Beal a | = 8 —— Gu i reas, the 2d August, sa em — — — y One 
— station on the Lewes and Has tin For particu- HEREIN Secretary, at Messrs, Bigg and Sons, 53, P 5 . 
g , 53, Par! en 
: E apply to — your Morton; ee Berkeley, * es- n nan Gaidhael an Guaillibh a bhéile,” 
at Folkington Place will show l . 
: — — ~~ GEER SQUARE Fo WIRE NETTING, TWO-PENCE omens z arera — Hon . 9, King William-st. 
: BE LET, | * a term of years, and entered upon PER SQUARE F his. article requires no pei rice 2s., or by post, 2s. 6d, 

é ext, the FARM of TESTWOOD AND | ing, the posh sa tok 5 ving * slightest actionon I. Ii THE SCI SCIENCE OF "PE, or How to Live, and 
coLMOOR, in the 7 of Eling, in the county of South mp- | was exhibited at the Tate Me itan Cattle 4 and w Por, with ample rules for be regimen, — 
— present in the occupation of the 1 It consists highiyaulogis eulogis ove both for its utility and pretty appearance, and | self-ma — ag er with — ecuring 
ef 85i acres, of — 3 e 88 E ae ran — to be brs > cheapest and bes tarticle erer produced. foot health, longevity, re —— sterling — — — on only 

—— i ct gg f | atta ous obse 
— . of gg h Pasture, now on 1 ay | hares, a> seg and cats, and is peculiarly adapted for Aviaries, | course of life. By A 2 3 
be canverted into Parm. a: oe 2 4 1 — — aaga ing no p as ani to 5 secure ree try; at ag b — ga mised À yy? aa work — us is one of those e 4 — of the press 
a > answers admir. traini s | to which m n 
There is he Farm is about five miles from the town of of creeping plants. Large quantities ys aed ders n 2 k, of |t — = ‘first et odie poe * will 1 
pon, and the turnpike road from there to Salisbury | 18, 24, 36, and 48 inches wide; it can, however, = — 0 any hu the í subjects. of diet ot regulati f the 
— it. It 3 wit 2 mile of the Eling Railway dimensions desi red. Patterns forwarded free v pass ughout is most val — — hae Baa 
— and Wharf on the Bee river. Fo pare ul 2 ine ide 3d. per yard | 30 i N — "a. “per yard | no he pitati tion — affirming that, were the precepts of th ttle 
apply to Mr. Jons 33 Whitfield, near Berkeley, Glouces- 18 „ 5 — is duodecimo put into universal practice, the province of the 
tershire. A person at Testwood House will be directed A show 24 „ 5 — X — 1 physici of riest would — oon derably lightened 
— Galva o. ld. — while long life would not only be ensured, but a ith 
GTO ON MILs, Somers Extra song igre Wine EM = Seng 3 feet, 1s. 6d, per , Pa most parto ct happiness, — Sun 
ning: yard; galvanise o every d — tion of Published by Ke 
BE LET. ne erm, with imme diate possession, | Wire Nursery and — er ig Wire . — nak pad i ; and may be h ad of wT and iicuan 5 ‘rier 
CET MILLS, n 8 ng Shades, Fly-proof Dish Covers, Meat Safes, &o, ; Window 63, 8, Oxfords. * ANNAY, 
Ne N and — heel with The Mill h linds, 1s. 10d, per square foot, with ‘bolts complete, in maho. published, price G. a pam 
eee iron W ater-w nee ogee gany frames ; Gothic en bord „ 6d, ; 7 2 phl 
— r. A feo ilia wheel | Flower Trainers, ls * 2 Garden T. A — Seto N THE CONSTRUE TION OF PuBLio BUILD: 
is drien by a streama of water which never fails in — driest Flower Stands, fr rom 3s, — ‘cach es alvanised Tying Wire for NGS AND PRIVATE DWELLIN 2 ON 
driving pair 1 yey is ca 12 of grinding plants and * Dahlia Rods, ant description of "Wiro: PIREPROOP PRINCIPLE, without — 
Soo sacks of corn per — of Arable Land, in a high work; Weaving, for the use of Besani — fema mille At UDIE and Sons, Covent a 
state of cultivation, with a F 3 and 60 aeres of excellent the Ma: nofactory of Tuomas Henry Fox, 44, Skinver-atreet, y 
may be taken. wich the Mili from Mic next. | Snow-hill, London N ES This day blshed, p 
The Premises are well atep three miles from Castle Cary, 0 a ay A * Re ca THR FUTURE PROSPECTS OF 
Somerton, m Shepton Mallet, and twelve 6 00 DE S PA A T E N T I R R I G AT 0 R. REAT B 
Suggesting a Kor . eet the 1 of Free Trade, 


with a Plan, of Farm Buildings, 
By W. Tuoxotp, M. Inst, 1 * E., Honei e practical farmer 


ondon: — Plead and G. Fox, 67. — 
hing, a neat pocket volume, 5s 


HAND: BOOK OF — FERNS: aani 


uide and Companion i n Culture; and coms 

prising 2 and popular — with wood engray. 
dies indigenous ai A By Tuomas 

n of the Society of 


ry and j Applied to 
acumber 6 the Win nter Seaso 
“ We confidently r — 5 — it to the lover, 


aad especial > 
— e of this beautiful tribe.“ Si a 
ened of Bo 


J. V. Hooke 
RIDGE and Sons, Paternoster-row ; 
. PAMPLIN, Frith.street, Soho. 
. NOVELTIES in PAPIER MACHE, at 
London. — A visit to his 
London 


— GROOMBR 


and 
pe 25 9d., and 113. per Rox. 


1 

1, sil sags ö ane 

, pen Be haa “and o ‘other ae . — Seeman 

2 of the paten lated tooth-brush, 

e rer a FEMALE WA AFERS. 
2 imitation. of. tis edicine je lage hen 


by unprine — 7 of 
— t no 
edicine is uine but and that dee is no 

No. 1 and No, 2 of the genuine Medicine.” Dr. Locock’s 

Female W ary Se only to be taken 

by — They fortify ~ Constitu at all 2 

eaviness, P pipisan 7 = Heart, 

e "Weakness, a0 ene allay ain, er ts Apoena, and 
Indigesti Giddin: ons ull directions aré 
en with see. co hey have a pleasant „ 

only by Proprietor’s Agents, Da SILVA 7. — 

lane, Fieet-street, Lo ho are ete. for 5 Dr; 

Lococx’ s/Pulmonic Wafers,” for Asthma, m pti 


à at ls. lid.. 
„ 24. 


BEAUTIFUL TEE 
OWLAND’S ODONTO, or PEARL 


most rché [ngredi 
timable value in preseryin 


DENTE 


— COMPT EX 


to t 

Gobrhk ys EXTRACT OF ELDER FLOWERS 
trongly recommended for softening, improving, beau- 
ol tifying, and preserving the Skin, une dee giving Erenn — Å 


and charmi 


very hu 
and, — 9 — — only a — time, 1 be- 
eauti i 


| etn — 


8 the * e 
e Breath, It 


Tee a ensure 
surface. Its Anti 


i this 
efficacy preserving and 
1 „anything of the kind ever yet —— to the — ona — 


Majesty the Queen, 


— obtained its selection by Her 
t Britain, and the 


as „ 
eto ERETO = 8 


f these, with a French M excellent 
one 27 5 ne aad SONS ur" 8 7 e with 
— 8⁰ 


N, Bedding- manu 


Europe. — Price 2a; 9a. 


and Royal ae of of Grea 
per ae 


CAUTION.—To protect the —— fiom frau 
Co 


Hon 

tors Name and Ad- 

dress, thus“ A. ROWLAND and som, 20, 11 Harton — 
A * 1 Government $ 


ach box. d by the 8 and by Ganito — 
— 


A CERTIFIED CURE OF SCROFULA BY 

A. OD dong AND PILLS.—The follow- 
corn, of Terrigo Plains, New South 

Wales, was forwarded. to piara oF Seg gern by Mr. Pinkey, 

Che e pla is to certify that my 


r 2 
5 without succe ; 

s Ointment and Pills, Pi pama in sont three 
vinpletely. cured her, aud sh 42 in the best of 
s can be verified by nuz 2 in this 

e resided for 22 years, (Si piae d) R. ALCORN, 
zists a ma at Professor HuLLO- 


, Lond 


all Drug 


OOTHACHE PERMAN . CURED BY 

using BRANDE’S BNA deengi 
— 

only substence 

medica — as * — i s with pai 


— A them 2 


imitations, and to 


It is needful, — * sae against su 
seeing t Jon us accompanies each 


Just 
ee ty 


y pe —— 


This a is published, As yt 9 pra , price 1s., or 1s. 4d. post 


180. TEE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


. Svo. p 


Asta INQU IRY INTO THE His GR eh 


NEW WORK BY 75 2 OF “VANITY FAIR.“ 
On the 31st inst. will be p e 2 4 2 o be completed in 
Twenty 


I 83 
HACKERAY, Author of The Great Hog- 
With Illustrations on Steel and 

ood th the Author. 
meee aa Evans, 11, Ponrerie seet, 


ES DICK 


= WORK B 6 2 
On the sist inst. will be 3 the 4th Fda pels ls., 0 


XXVIII., just published 
ee Two Thousand Monthly, of 


G. W 88 
8 Stat seeps: HAND BOOKS, 
PR ENT OF NEW WO . 
"Serif pea Shillings Bie Annum, 
A Specimen Number grati 


AMONG THE VALUABLE BOOKS AT PRESENT ON 
A — 
ANDREWS’ (H. C.) COLOURED ENGRAVINGS 


HEATAS, taken fro Plants, with the appropriate 
Specific Character, full Description, Nature, Place of Growth, 
and time lowering of each, in Latin and Englis „288 beau 


AVID COPPERFIELD THE YOUNGER, 
BLUND ms peg coms ped Sed CHARLES ni 

Res — ilastrations by by H T K. BR no To be completed 

wenty 


MBH 
ondon : —— nis Evans, 11, Bouverie-street. 


tifully coloured plates, with e al oo weet of the several 7 ts, 
4 vols. folio, bds. ead N 140. i (pab. 
ANDREWS’ BOTA ANIST’S REPOSITOR 
NEW 1 RARE PLANTS, 9 about 664 i 
ther s 


ae FOLLY OURED PLATES of Plants hitherto undescribed, with 

n the Press, and will be ‘published i na few d fae os 10 vols. 4to, bds., only 51. 5s., originally 1 75 705 
OURNAL OF THE ROYAL AGRICULTURAL 2 

J SOCIETY OF =e — Vol. X., ANNALS OF NATURAL nn or Maga- 

zine of er Botany, and Geology, by 8 W. JARDINE, 

1. On 1 Farmi vinings A Mr. Garnett. > J. SELBY, Dr. Jon HNSTON, Sir W. J. Hooker, sot B AYLOR, 

2. On a Drainer’s Dress. By = * of Westminster. fi h nt in 1838 to the end of 1848, "numerous 

3. On Giant Sainfoin. By. Mr. H 8 Us (p . at 1 Biv „l5 38-48 


By 2 Portman 
5. On Insects noxious to Potatoes. 6 Mr. Gurt. 
6. On Farming of South Wales, By Read. 
7. On a new Drainage Level. ot sÀ Cooke. 
8. On Hemp. By Mr. Ro . mT 

r. Matheson, M.P. 


9, On the Tussac Grass. 
10. On Labourers’ Cottages. os ine Duke of Bedford. 
f Gua pe B 


By Mr. 3 
13. On 8 Food or Stock. -By Mr. Pusey, M.P. 
14. On the of Cows. By 8 8 Simonds. 
15. Experiments TMF Fading, By Mr. Lawes 

Lendon : JOHN MURRAY, 50, Albemarle- street, 


bt. i MORAL 


VERS. 
han in size with ‘ 


A 


or en 
gathered from the Field and the Garden. By Mrs 
New Edition 


By the same Author, uniform with the above in size and . * 
SYLVAN MUSINGS; ol eg — of the Woods. 
New Edition of The e Woods.“ Tlustrated with 


beautifu ily ene — 
Lon 27 775 2851 Brown, Green, and — 
8 BOTANY. 

and Woodents, price 218. 

C. BOTANY ; or, 
E. By Dr. M. J. 
sor of Botany in the University 
wis Lan R, M.D., 
r on Botany at the 1 a School of 
som —5 


Just . e 8vo, with E. 
F of 
NDUC 


| in a deg 


e cnn set of this 
BRITI ISH FLORIST ; : ‘ox “Tady s Tournal of Hor- 
ticulture, illustrated Selection of the ost ak 
Flowering Plants, with gi ua, eis ie pici 07 1 
and Groups, 6 vols. 8 vo, green 11. 8s. (pub. at An is) 
10 n exces dingly — en estan nt book. 
ANIMAL KINGDOM, 


s. e B 
ee from the last edition, 


with 4000 figures, n coloured, on 800 plates, Talk 8vo, to 
orocco, 3%. 10s, (pub. at 8.) 183 
„ WI work son 


LLIS having purchased the above excellent 
adv vantageous erms, gh call the attention of his cus- 
tomers to its very low t is the most scientific and 
apon 


general work upon the subject, Say: the o nly one a E 
History suitable for a “Home Library.” The pla 

graved upon steel, — 7 near yé 3 comprising s upwards 
of 4000 figures of Quadrupeds, Binds, Fishes, Insects, 

DON’S, GENERAL SYSTEM OF As NG 
AND BOTANY, containing a Description of all Plants hitberto 
kno their pl ace of Gro wth, 
Culture, a n Medicine and Domestic Economy, &c. 
ounded upon“ Miller’ r’s Gardener’s Dictionary,” and arranged 

‘ous 


he N ts, 4 vols. 

4to, cloth, IJ. 10s, (pub. at 142. 8s.) 1831-38 

R b ILLUSTRATIONS OF FOREIGN 
LOGY, new edition, greatly improved by Westwoo 

with nearly 700 FINELY — RED figures of Exotic Insects, 3 vols. 
royal to, half.bo morocco, uncut, 31. 10s. * z 151.1558 D e 

„The Wege work of Drury displays mplete sect 

of perfection that leaves ae jpa be des — 

oe ames E. Snia. 
DOR 


ENTOMO 


GISTER, consisting 
iltivated in Britis ardens, 


capable to d ll justice e it as t canno’ 
fail to interest deeply all t us lovers of kaeaea Science, and 
we believe it will be er red a valu able addition to our 


re at econ Ji irn 
: Lon Guan, ST far =o t per Lecce 


ir Willlam J. 


ernst J 
erous Wood 


* Gardens, 


with 
e with num 
Gion, BOTANIC GARDEN; or,; a Peak 
Guide to the gg ses vas of Glasgow, 
REEN, T wanne 
Ara and So 
SCHOOL BOOKS BY WILLIAM ish TLER, 
EDITED BY TH 
n BIOGRAPHICAL, HI 
ICA ELLANEOUS EXERCISES, 
. 12mo, 78. Gd. bd. 


Editi 
ARITH METICAL 9 Rr Edition, 2 
with Additions by Grorce Frost. 12mo, 6s. b 
EXERCISES on the GLOBES and MAPS. With 
8 for . and an Appendix, by which 
Constellations ma asily known. 15th Edition. 12mo, 


6. ba. 
A KEY to aed EXERCISES on the GLOBES. 


6d. 8 

MISCELLANEOUS QUESTIONS in ENGLISH 
HISTORY ina BIOGRAPHY. 4s. bd. 
E 


London : * 
asgoy 


STO- 
12th 


wee 3 by St. 9 Ant narrating the most important 
8 ee 2 35 Histories. With Maps. 


ie L TABLES, &e. cape oy 8d, 
MPKIN, MARSHALL, 


hG 
ment, contin ued by 
contain ing upwards of 2500 “fuels P oath e plates 


GENERAL 


own, or described 


Birds hithe 

edition, with. (pwards of 200 coloured plates, 10 vols, 4to, bds., 

41. 15s. ‘Fo 
L&WIN’S (W.) BIRDS ins sas BRITA 

with their Eggs, Heeg figured, 327 coloured plates, — 

ral 4to, orig val e calf, 4l. 10s. 


scriptive text, 8 vo 1795 
TRR EY” AND PREN 5 SIL. FLORA 
GREAT BRITAIN, with upwards of 200 2 f vols. 19 7 
n occo, 8 gilt, 40. 10s. 0 at 6. 12s.) 1831-3 
OUDON’S ARBORETUM oe FRUTICETU M 
RITANNICUM, or the Trees and S of Britain, Native 


ulture, Mana: agement, a 
upwards of 2500 woode mar Trees and Shrubs, 8 vols, 8vo, extra 
cloth, 505 41. 48. (pub. at 100.) ate 

LOUDON’S MAR BEST OF GARDENING, c 
prising Treatise Landscape Gar 2 8 1 N 
ee e Howtieultare, "ae BE THREE SERIES, 2000 en- 
gr if ae wood, 19 thick vols., Svo, Naty. Worse OCCO, fine copy, 
1835-43 


MUDIE’S (R.) HISTORY OF BRITISH BIRDS, 
Tribes of the British Islands, ꝛerous 


umerous por. 


HAM BE RSS EDUCATIONAL N 


The following Works are . rg — 
bound in dark- coloured — > iready at „ all stent 
RECTORIgS, schools aE 
Infant Treatment Un der! Tw wo lous 
Infant Education from ae — 4— be e: F s j 
GL e.. f 
First Book of Reading E a i] 
Second Book of ing „ 
Simple Lessons in Reading i 5 eo 2 5 5 
Rudiments of Knowled TT 
Moral Class Book we eae a „ „ 
Introduction to Composition Ds, A 
Introduction to Grummar A 2 * 90 
ammar, Two Parts, each .. s MER 
Etymology 2 . it 
Elocution 5 k : — 2) 
istory of the En: dane La anguage 8 * 24 
THMETICAL AND ei i * 14 
Tatroduction to “Arichmet tic Sro ie 
Ari 1 ic, A ced Treatise „ ite 
Key to Arithm aie’ 2 t 
Rosie keeping by Sin gle E Intr 2) 
Book-keeping by Sin gle and Do 11 
Ale a i 2 rome Baur 1 
Key to Algebra es ok 


netr 
Key to Plane Geo try 
Solid and Spherical Geom etry 

Practical Mathe 71 5 “a dees etch 
Key to ra actical brah 

Mathematical Table 


2 


sessile a) so ha 

riting— d, 15 99 

Wer prepared Cony. books {post size), each imi jame 
r Set each. 


Firat 00 k of b ing . 82 os .. 

Second Book of DE . “ 
GEOGRAPHICAL, 

Geographi ca 8 


Text-book at Geography Tor E nglan 
SCHOOL-R ae 


altogether form 

prove the Hemispheres Gneludin ik 
Sie 4 

SCHOO 2 ATLAS of Modern and Ancient it 

containing ele four quarto maps, coloured 

PRIMER ATLAS, eee uarto maps, 

Introduction to the S tee 

Laws a es 5 and Modon * ne „„ 

i 

1 


fec oe 
Iydrostaties Hydeauties and | Paaematies 25 


I ici 15 
Kaarik . 
* ptics aw A (Nearly ready.) i 


— 
8 


oe 


5 —— 5 
volo 


NY 
FA 


lee Phy siolosy 
me e 

History pna p 

Histor yo 

History of ae ‘British Empire 

Exer mplary a nd Instr hepr Pi i 


WITH INTRO 
By 


U. Julii 8 Ooa mentari 
P. Virgilii Maronis Carmi 
C. Sallustii Crispi Catiline 25 Jugu rtha 
Q. Cnrtius Ru on: de Ges 2 Alexandri M 
M. Tullii Ciceronis Orationes Se 

atin Grammar 
Introduction to Latin Grammar. 
er works in 


W.and R. 
corner, and 147, Strand, 


FLEXIBLE INDIARUBBER HO 
ES LYNE HANCOCK, 7 


Pumps, 
| tion of me oe dressing, 


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184 


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natant i be of the greatest possible benefit to the utifal and 820 
; by affording i inere ki se 4 l employment, Ge. 8 80 an . work was published at 19. 
Nation, Fats SOCIETY OF L eae Beam royal 4to, half calf, œ fine and 
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great p importanece,”—Irish Indus tri ial Journal. The above te sn gp co ee — a series of most TIFOLLY 
We strongly advise our readers to m: e the whole perform- — D PLATES of Fruits, Flowers, &c., fin ished in Siia 
ance a matter of personal study. equal to the Saale drawings ; an original copy, subscribed for 
„is facts are e. Journal at full ae ed price. 


WILLIAM BLACKWOOD py Sons, — — 3 


A GUIDE IN EVERY DEPART. 
CULTURE. MENT OF HORTI- 


= Te COTTAGE 3 (Edited by G. W. 


n e „ being enlarged to Sixteen 
cludes E, and all other departments of E Morticulvare. 
33 0 
“FRUIT ocean 


er: 

byi Mr. R. Err 
—THE KITCHEN € — Mr. 
. 1 


Mes Mt 
8 brie smon TE GREENHOUSE AND WINDOW 


Mr. to Colonel Sower' — 1 8 

APIAIIAN. DEPARTMENT b , by J. H. PAYNE, Seq. Eei 
iog poser Thursday (to be had through any Bookseller). 
and in Monthly Parts, by Wm. 8, 

an On. at THE COTTAGE GARDENER OFFICE, 147, Strand, 


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System, with an easy I uction to the Study of Botany, 

seventh Sanimi. including 1 most recent discoveries, many 

g vo, cloth, 1 1830 


person 4 vols. 
The! last edition of this valuable wor! 
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be 5 


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T and oe “ . by 8 and Iarin Tease ak = wi 16 

Woodeu bound in two large volumes, wale 

ONLY 765. 1 at 1. 155 C. Knight, 1840 


en gay 3 work 3 shed under the superin- 
the Useful Knowledge “Te and 
r 
ATALOG n all beanie of NATURAL 
HISTORY, both new and second-hand, just publish 
‘and post ah i just p ed, gratis 


ONDON : G. WILLIS, 


we 
A, re —.— e Unio n- sees rie 
between the righ ah and the Tank, or . : 
B, th pigen. for containing any small tools i 

r; 


S 
== 


ere All 
immediate attention. -i 
| WII dA Baavsuny, of 

| Par oS Ps Pancras, 2 En Lin Gon 
e toa 1 de 
et an and Peas, Coven oe 


pariso 
mevts hy 


L 
GREAT PIAZZA, COVENT GARDEN, 


Satuapay, JOLY 28, 154% 


HE GARDENERS’ CHRONICL 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


No. 31—1849. | SATURDAY, AUGUST 4. [Price 6d. 
— 
Se 
INDEX, VIRGIN Qi QUEEN | GERANIUM (Ansorp), is the RIC AS. — To be sold, very cheap, a large col 
3 490 a | India, climate of existence. of Specimen age in splendid condition, fit for — 
— — n 40% % HOYLE’S CRUSADER has likewise proved itself of sterlin Ea y best sorts. They are now to be seen at 
483 ò | Liquid manure, how to apply.. 493 8 Good plants, in October, will ba ready for sending J. „Wye s and Co, 8 “United Nursery, King’ s-road, Chelsea; or 
Markinch Cottage Garden Soe. 487 ò | out a or 6d. each; or the — dy 12s, Ear arly 5 shove a full ‘description bid ill be forwarded on application. 
Notes of a eus, bet 154 e | be made to Witttam E. RENDLE & Co., Nurserymen, Plymouth, 1 8 E . 
Orchids, inez 522 4 
. 10 ESSRS. H. DE LANGE anp SON, of Haarlem, 75 -|| — 
age —. . 487 Holland, beg to inform the Nobility, fenan, and Public PIPPP IRP rE | a E 
Pla he 15 a dienes of .. . 5 that they have a choice assortment ‘of DUTCH BULBS, With Drilled Holes. se elas se = jue Po 8 
Potato crop. . . . a b—s98 EEDS, and SHRUBS for sale, at the following prices: e ee ee 8 
Pots, charcoal a drainage" for, 485 Gladiolus ramosus, per 100, 3l. 7s.; Gladiolus Queen Victoria, Lå * TEA | . 
ty 7 ar Pace AOTAN » 490 each, 28.; Gladiolus n each, 1s. 6d. ; Double Ane- * 1201 602 ole als ® ` — t r i p 
Béna Tapes: 8 rev . 487 6 | Mone, in 25 sorts, na amed, per 100, ids. ; Double A pn Smati 1 by 14/1 Bill 112 7/4 10 10501 2/1 8501 11 
Slough Carnation Show ...... 48 mixed, per 100, 25.; Ixias, in 25 mi; per 100, named, Il, mall Du chess 22 by 121 Sit 10% 6% 800 101 ; 
parrow nuisance ...., Lilium longiflorum Sian, per 10 Amarylli is longifoti ia | — 2385 1011 1301 6% 003 silo salt ait on 10 
de n keene obea, 3d; Iris persion Viscountess. 18 by 10/t Ht 4% 1 4% doni sit a 
<. 489 a Turnips value ofa ton 72 per 10 0, ; Iris Susianna, per 100, 138. Double and ‘Single we ountes . 16 by 10 1 Oll ‘| "13 000 z 0 sale 7 ` 
— entan 483 & | Villa gardening... e 5 Ban i yk: and Double Tülle in sorts, Crocus, Ra- — * Pies y he hd 75 1 
beds, i Gby 80101 1/1 52 6% 7% Or ol 
prizes at Chiswick ..... + 486 b nen ere . 8 een. &ec., all at most reasonable terms, Letters and Do xtc ah co a 13 by 70 80 1001 22 3 6 7 1 l 
. 8 AoT York 3 407 orders are requested to be sent prepaid t OB 4 y Gt Pie 4% 610 7% 910 10 
7 a 491 s! 4 
isd — — CARNATIONS AND PICOTEES, Rovan PLATE. SaeEer. 
TILEY’S reer MARROW CABBAGE OUELL Axp —— nounce ade, sae | * thick 2 py a pg oz, bis sš + each 
und well known EXHIB ON of the above win ” “ ode wee ” 
Ms TILEY bes e at hai = full bloom, UPWARDS OF B00 POTS ARE STAGED. fo 5 * — om ned he ®t 
to send -= 1 arly 3 Marrow Cabbage Seed, which has — — 5 Enn y 55 i. i . 
best yet in cultivation, and five w re earlier than ein in September, at the r — ated Tiles pn price 
an — 2 A . Av sink 2 i fine and = superior first-class iA + * A full List of Pri — and e in nformation m may be * ar 
vertisementin this Paper of July 12. “Sold | in packets contain- owers, by Da applying to JAMES PHILLIPS an a 
e a 25 se do. se 5 10 o Warehouse, 116, BISHOPSGATE -STREET WITHOUT, 
‘fing 1 o7., 2s. 6d. ; J oz. packets, 1s. 6d e above will be sent 
on the remittance of a Post-office order, or the ag gr fine Show Flowers do. ahs < z- 4 nose r 
2 Aa 10, Pesia. Sene Bat on: Timex, at) Great Yarmouth Nursery, Norfolk. e 1 ee of ou y 
e ption o ass 
CUPRESSUS FUNEBRIS, OR FUNEBRAL CYPRESS has beer greatly improved, and we aid now supply it free from 
= EY WARDY HYORID WIODODENDEON — ESSRS. STANDISH AND NOBLE, Nurs ERYMEN, | strings and all irregularities of surfac 
* a Bagshot, have the ho preen # im gra Noblemen, Gentile | our list of pri prices to corre = À precisely with those ni the e Pa- 
(Figured in Paxton’s „ Magazine of Botany“ for this month.) men, and the Public, the successful in obtaining | teutee, to we would D attention of the Nobility, 
HOMAS JACKSON AND SON are now w sendi ing out seeds of the above ees we weeping ‘Cypress from the north of Clergymen, Gentry, and otb 
good plants of this handsome Rhododendron, at 21s, each, China, and z re now send out fine healthy seedling In squares under 8 dy 6 —— 
Tt was at the Horticultural Society’s Exhibition at | plants at 21s. each. 8 by 6 — 10 by 8... 44d. 10 by. b vader 15 rt 4 oo 
Chiswick, on the 5th of May, and awarded their Knigbtian This splen nid Tree is a great favourite wi Chin and 1 y ng 5 foot.. 53d, ae 


ith the 
Medal. The Editor of the Gardeners’ Chronicle, in his review | in the north of China used by them principally for —— | in 
of that Exhibition, notices it in the following terms: Of Rho- thelr burial grounds, where it often attains the height of 60 fort 


— e AILI PANS, e b 
dodendrons, the best was a seedling from Messrs. Jackson, d fo of the most beautiful Evergreen weeping Pastry ishes, 8 Orna- 
of Kingston. It is a good 3 the . wr i hate . es Graj discovered by Lord Nasartney mena Fish Globes, Pla Plate and 
e, of a whi h the exception of the upper petals, | and Sir Geo. Staunton, ye: e gre e of 3 in the a ge 
are dee . — Pestova spotted with pa a beau- | north of aes and — ae ngee 8 ‘brought ome by Sir Gs. êd. 1 6 tubes, 
variety.” Discount to the Trade. —— , who, in cae Macartney’ * oor naa voyag for 3 : 
Narseries, Kingston, Surrey, Aug. 4. to China, thas dese ribes the” ale of Tombs and the plant: | ise of A every. ation may be had 1 
BECK'S PELARGONIUMS, te 7 ed a bor en — —— ; ee WIKUN, Bondon. ory. 
and the best — other raisers.— 12 + e fo lowing 3 


carriage to London, will be sent 
dert for Two —— well rooted in g. inch pots, "ind ready for 
shift into a larger size. Orders ked, 
correspondents informed when the plants are en 
remittance may be made by Post-office order on Brentford 
Aarora, Blanche, Centurion, Cracker, Forge not, Ariel ; Combs the variety of 
Cassandra, Cavalier, Srana, st song ulielma, Grandiflor snuments is almost in 
— ath Ros Sun ; or 9 of the above, and | « monuments of ee rted greatness are surrounded 
* 1 tusader, or Topping’ s Brilliant, w Foster’s Victory. | pytrees—such as different we, of the Cypress, whose deep 
. lection, w , make first-rate aad melancholy hue seems to have pointed them everywhere 
plants, A Cai. 3 including the | out as well suited for scenes of w woe. The churchyard Yew „did 
atag of 1848, ead had on application to JOHN DOBSON, not, however, grow there, nor was it observ ed in any part of 
e, Islewo Ghina ; buta species of Tee Thuja or Lirios vite, with te a 
r — their culture will be found in the ong pendant branches, unkno n Europe, overhung many 3 — ee 
n 3 te ied Miceli.” ee egg on the 55 ot Sr i | of ay graves.” ‘ PROPAGATINGES cu Up 
“Beck's Florist. all bo s, under the title o of the Vale of Tombs, the weeping tree in the 
Speedy This work gonan one coloured plate, one Pim dew ges to the Tower of the Thundering Winds is this SILLINGTON’S SARET slag Py which is of 
‘ands woodcuts, 24 pages of original matter, a Lady’s Page, | plant, and it has since been proved by botanists to be the „the best description, varying from 16 to 32 ounces, at 
‘ mpo dender of Operations, spra by — cultivators, | weeping Cypress. Messrs, STANDISH and Nosxe obtained, | from 2d. foot and upwards ; 100 feet 1 55 200 feet cases of 
4 —— can scarcely be s n favour of = ontinued | last winter, from the north ot China, dried specimens and te re Sheet Glass, for S up, at 2}d. per foot. British 
Y Teg, of this work,” Pear, pel se in “this Paper, April, cones of the ei tree, which were forwarded to Dr. LINDLEY Plate Glass, from m is. 2d, to 2s. per foot, aeeor thi — 3 
and Sir Josepa Hook Ek, who at once moomia gee 7 be Patent 1 Plate ee 1 y n thic 5 com 
OBERT WHIBLEY will forward the fo e the . Funebr 22 N ee e gh net 5 12 pee 6 . 9 2 
rte, -desirable Chrysanthemums, in pots, for 10s. ; 2, — n also supply 1-year Seedling Cryptomeria japonica at 15. 6d, | from 12 to 24 inches long, ps Id. per inch. Lactometers, 78. 6d. 
mte de Rau aided King of the Crimsons, Madame io ’ lant, 15s, per dozen, or 5l. per 100; ie Seedlings at | each. Wasp Traps.—Lists may be had on application at the 
Lana tzou, Sphinx, Isolier, Campestroni, Duc de Conig- 3 plant, 363. per do zen, or 121. 1 oer) 100. warehouse, 87, I Without, same same enn, 
i la —— of Solo de Marie, — . = —.— e ORS OF FLOWERS —Thi Eastern 33 He fes 1. 0 
a lomon nie Salter, Crea l rer E : 
l s Qi a — Phillippe, | Floribunds, Pilot, fps ing the season CULTIVAT be layering LASS F 0 R CONSERV gron ES, 
nd — Dey hess d’A oa Puin Incom- toes, bang e Ea 7 — of GREEN 10 PIT FRAMES, & & 
and Arides.—Chester Nursery, Ken „London. 2 a gees Plants, ee. „ those who ETLEY anp CO. are supplying 16-0z. Sheet lass, 


sS cals 
; i ction will find theirexpectatio of Bri Manufacture, packed in boxes containing 100 
Bee 5 1 M—« ‘rot OQUETT’S MAGNIFI- desire to eu 1 pg the debe ANIMAL MAN URE, square feet each; at th the following REDUCED PRICES for cash, 
? thee niin ng out planta of the red expressly for th se, H. CO OLES, reduction made on 


prepa ep 
ts, i ddie ot October 1 4 bourne-street, ieee dure, in tin |. miast: PAIRI „oo feches, * Fee 100 feet, 
each, hamper ch po package included. Terms, kreng y ih pe oa. "and 2s. 6d. each; orin r square wooden | 5 spe! : by 4 at IId. is 
as the stock is limited, no osant ver Ss bones ol ba, by ta taking w which a considera abt From 6 „ # oy) r g. 15 
z d in strict rotation. A small quantity of i incorporated poer: | Tn? p 8 „ ê » 2d. „ 018 9 
the Post-office, Newport, Isle of Wight, — — that is employed. — — a | „ Hn i 
— Cabir passed o nd eee sI 3 . every oth ther autumn-flowering es will be 3 improved 11 p B 9 „ „ẽ 1 211 
2 3 ront them on the s . 
a 5 1 now applied to 
: 8s, MAJOR Larger siz 
; -E hide 88 near 3 Isle of Wight. theirrocte — 0 a 16 oz. from 3d. to Sja. per square ‘foot, wy according sie, 
SUPERS a ? VEL PPLICATION FOR THE IMPROVE-| 21 b. „ 53d. » 
We Nan OF ELEA EAKALE, CARDOONS, RHU-) 36o. n Ra: s = 
bs mated Colleen n e Hollyhoohay oori- BAR sy means of onea 33 tie season. 4 PATENT ROUGH PLATE, 3, THICK CROWN GLASS, ana 
ese tif wers, is no articles are gre x expositi „ PATENT PLATE GLASS for Horticultural purposes, 
e dt 5 ilecti 3 e ualled 8 8 sone lh i apie > raa ienn to horticul — reduced prices, E T 2 et. 1 
at on une ed | tic 0 tern 
pry taped will be very — to show them to any | may be had on application, are edited A et — — — iter Tomes 3 ee 2 8 7 
. — ee e a a 3 rnal of “July 11 1819, contains an Propagating — Bee-hive asses, Guoumber Tubes, Glass 
E Nursery, Saffron Walden, nen 1. eee es, inventions, trom which the follow- , Glass Water Pipes, and various other articles not 
ya LLLINGER’ editorin! Brticle upo : le of the invention is eats — 
i PILLINGER respeita Hy invites the attention | i Teast isening of which ... 
a d im- thi or article up 
TURNIP n generally, to his HYBRID such br eng F 5 — —— W glass in a gentleman's residence. No 
ir uth 9 5 i n e e ne 2 Str errr nd ‘Melvns, the| alteration connec ith the sash is require 
— to Salb, stands unrivalled 1 i iy with th 5 ee, add both to earliness GLASS SHADES, as ornamental to, and for the 
la on that has attended its grow T, | use 9 a hat the princip | of every p of goods susceptible of injury by ex- 
Season, has m an extensive patronage, | and flavour, . . e sha l rebane of Mr. Ronznrs, is th suis sin e removal of 3 3 — = 
: * of seed ry limited, this advertise- excellent. All that we ue. rh 3 inem in a promi. dnced ags ME, List E Pines and Ratt 
: e oe hey ae Sod applies a fone: aanne a prinsiple of great practical utility.” application to James HETLEY aud 8 le w * 
=) oe * London, 


482 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


[ean 
A PSLEY PELLATT anp Co. 
AJ REEN), 3 be Works, Wee Blackfriars, 


1 on ee Glasses, 1s per 1 Cucumber 
aa. 1s. 6d. — i: $ Pilk Pans, 97 white glass, 58. 6d. 
each; Propagating Glasses, white, 1 A r Ib.; do., . * 1 Cope 
do. condensing, 2d. per lb 1 Mag e Shades, ls. 
each ; Fish-bowls, from id. ; Wasp a and Fly- Soe os 
gross, or 3s. 6d. per dozen. B che use of these traps fruit 

y be preserved from (otherwise certain) destruction. 


ARK’S ETALLIC HOTHOUSE WORKS, 
55, Lionel- tho Birmingham.—Proprietor, Mr. THOMAS 
ger, » Jir, JOHN JONES. 

his grateful thanks to the Nobility and 

above Esta rig shment, 


ing a peri thi that the 
repeal of the duty on Glass enables him to offer — METALLIC 
HOTHOUSES at a greatly — price. These Houses are 
glaz with tish Sheet Glass, in pane en 24 to 30 
inches in len and of thickness as to preclude all 
danger of Pars im R N age, whilst that which arises from 
the action of frost is effectually prevented by the peculiar 


the new Royal Gardens at Windsor, admitted by 


n 
to be the most complete of its kind in the 


— = o N judges 


S 


TEPH HENSON AND CO., Gracechurch-street, | 


0 
friends they ar their Boilers of “Tron, as well as 
Co — by which the cost is reduced. These Boilers, which 

80 well Enon scarcely require dese ra i but to 
hem a 


3 


J, New Part rest, every — e partae ine the construction 
of Ho vem a ural Buildings, — es ras a ahang them, may be 
obtained upon the m soya 
Conse —— atories, on iron P: Wood e upon the most 
are design. Baloni s, Palisading, Field and Garden 
ces, Wire-w 


tisfaction. 


PsrLart and! 


BY HER ROYAL LETTERS 


MAJESTY’S PATENT. 


ouses when completed. from 16. 3d. to 1s. 6d. per superfici 
oe according to size and quantity, our principle being — 
without wood or — in the roof, 
HEATING BY HOT WATER. 


NIP SOWIN 
ONDON “MANURE COMPANY, having 
+ 115 parna any for Turnips a 

the — N 
5 ieee ag aid 
to produce a heavy weight per acre, “They woila ea — 1 — 
to — —— — — which is prepared with the 
and s a very fine, dry state, p 


PHE 


— stores. Corn Manure, Nitrate of Soda, Fishery and 
—— Salt, and eee other Artificial Manure, on the 
low —— ms for a genuine article. 

D PuRsER, — 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars. 


W — eee e GUANO ON SALE 
Y IMPORTERS, 

ANTONY GIBBS. — SONS, LONDON ; 
WILLIAM JOSEPH a D CO. LIVERPOOL; ; 
And by their pores ts, 
aan BRIGHT, gH 605 1 2 r e 

OTESWORTH 
To. protect A again 
using inferior and spuri 0, purchasers — 2 
mended — apply rt ~ dealers ‘of "established character, 2 * 
the abov ed im who will supply the article in any 
yee ae their gy Trees, delivering it er the Import 
are 


ences of 


[A UG, 8 
WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY Pen oo 
SQUARE Pogy, 

a i — nes RRS 
oes i Betts 1 we 
1 Daa i 


25 
cau 
8 2225 


LVANISED WIRE 
PER SQUARE FOOT. gdb. 


NG, 
s article p TWO. 


G* 
slightest 


5 hibited at the — 

was exhibited a late Metropoli “they 
acknow — . both for its nity and 1 S 

ac 


equires orem 


. 


t forms a light and durable fence a 
gainst the . — 
a rabbits, and cats, and is i 
— an è bate tee be tha 
ably for ee 
Ways ki 
—— erer, , de m si 
arded free of 
e 3d. e yard 0 yrs wid ad 
4d. © Tid, Pet yand 
6d. 8 t ia 
alvanised do., 1d 
Extra strong Im 


per fi 
runni ard; if al 1 1 ; descripta a 
og yar it galvanised, 28. Als 
Wire Nursery and Fireguards, Wire yi: t 


rs m ; 
5 h; anised 
plants and trees, Dahlia Rods, and every i 
— at Rit — for j ip e use of paper-makers, 
e Manufac o a HoMAS HENRY F — 
Snow-hill, Lon = 
AL 


|G" 


ANISED ` WIRE GAME NETTING. 


GY UANO AND 
D POTASH. 


GYPSUM (SULPHATE OF LIME). 
DRIED NIGHT-SOIL. 
SULPHURIC ACID AND COPROLITE. 


). 
E (made from bone only). 
pits eign hoard Sani T, — all other Manures ofl known 
value, may be h 
MARK Fortior, 201 14, „ Upper Thames-street, 3 
ea e on Guano, 8 
arded on receipt of 8 postage stamps, 
a Guato, &. 


will be 
Free to — 


d. per yard, 2 feet wide, 


HORTICULTURAL BUI BUILDING AND HEATING 
Y HOT WATER. 

ALSO THE 3 oa CHOICEST PLANTS, 

„e. 


RAT, ORMSON, and Brown, have oy fe the hon nour of AONE © TURAL ARCHITECTS, HOTH BUILDERS, a and Hor- 
tomany of the nobility and g in the country, and to several | APPARATUS Mawtvacroxene, “hoti cit an inspection of their 
of the London Nurseries. various Works now in progress, * ae oe — to quality 

N. B. Plans and Estimates furnished of materials and 1 — now 

URBIDGE anp H tfull erected — their P — 2 for ene es rie f 

3 inform a er +e 
B their Friends and the Public, they we ai UAA Hothouses, Greeahou 


to undertake the warming of Hoth mproved m 
superior sys t Water Apparatus, They let — the | in 
f g, e nd Ventilating all Horticultural Erections, Th 
— — es, where they have erected most ex- res ing of 2 Hothouse, dc, has also enabled them to grow 
Royal Botanic Ga rdend, K r ies calves eae np — Stove and —.— ouse = which 
5 va —. uantities that t 
ma — . Chiswick ; ateei the new at LESS THAN — “Plans, Estima — nd Cata. 
dor! serv. logues forwarded upon applic 
a — otanie Gardens, Regent’s-park, 
— evonshire — * — — 8 vo MENT, ay ea Stucco, instead of 
Earl of Zetland’s, Upleatham, York: seem scr ae a N be 3 
Es 


20 hours of its application to the bare walls, an se OT 
1 1 1 Poles 3 Ware k which rooms may be rendered habitable before the materials 
Raga aca 1 5 ery, . N . monly adopt ou in to d It is worked without 

P s e er important places, the slightest difficulty, the labour — han easier an less e 
GE and HEALY, 130, Fleet-street, London siv: wi ti tucco wha ir quality i 
REDUCTION IN PRICE OF BOILERS. — r Ornamental Plastering, for r Encaustic — 
„ Or KS O 


me of whi ch ar 
in various forms, showing the most im 


the Patentees, CHARLES Franots and Son 


Conser ———— N & 
are paver Mi and all heated by H 


C &e., s — — of which may be se 
Ns, Nine Elms, London. 


HETLAND mn 
S — PONIES CATTLE. — Jus 


from to 12 hands high, 
n ve Dd e rae 1 COWS and H IF Re 7 — 
alving, some wi side, and in milk; 
OXEN and SHEEP, for feeding. These Co 8 g ge pss 
os of — iao their size, which is very rich, similar tothe 
ney, and they are vi ardy and a te 
To be seen at eee ORTON’s, Balesin — climate 
Majesty, 69, V 69, Wa V appi 
A re — — CIDE PAINT ataven 
Lu ODD’S PATENT PROTOXIDE PAINT a very 
considerable reduction of price. This article i 
Bie Prend wo SEALY beg respectfully to inform used by the principal Railway d Gas Com e 
it S, : consequence of the present reduced price weeny and others for painting Stucco. It prevents iron rom 
— ri ~ Lare y Orbe pal a considerable reduction in sting, wood from decay, masonry fr tt 
DE Boils oilers. ye p * ll be, — has no effect upon it. Manufactured by Canis 2 — 
1 — 2 1 — pipe 25 25 * ~ and Sons, Cement Works, Nine Elms, London 
14 do. 100 fl. 4 in. do.. 15 ; 
È . 4 in. do i 0 ORD EU IS.. A 
= i — comfortable 
1 * z apo > $ in. 2 — 310 0 fitting Shirt is a desideratum long wished for. oie Publie 
2115 rg 4 in. do. » £10 0 only require to be made 9 with 74 ee ire ment o 
1 eo > $ in. * 5 10 0 Mr. Foxp, of 185, Strand, and t 8, to need 
os. tax Bontas. ` 00 * e advantages gained ‘ie ie and ode ort by 
20 in wil arm 800 . ie we 0 Gasete M 821 ade at this patt e Establishment. — . — 
6 . 25 0 Six very 5 Shirts for 30 
All Boilers with double arms, up > to 18 in., 5s. onan, to 24 in Col ined yt er , Daaa ey Pattini 
5 oured Shirts for 27s, r 
1 N all Fp. the same price. g Patterns and Directions for 8 Self. m s — ens bn 
eet-street, London, August 4, —Richanp Forp, 185, Strand, Lon — e e 


— mesh, — 3 wide 2 — 
” » » 
inch fi Arn ons, 53 1% ge eee 
lg-inch „„ light „„ 8 
1 -inch „, strong — „ 
1g-inch ,„ extras gar ong., u „ 
All the above can be meds any width a peopel 


n — ee half is a coarse mesh, it will — M 
Galvanized sparrow-proof be is i ne 
a ees foot. Patterns forwar 
. by BARNARD and "BISHOR —4— 
Norwich, and delivered free of e in London, 


and lining of Reservoirs, Ci 
— plastering and ornamental castings 
—— nor mar It never erariga s, and 
to four times its own body 

Manufacturers, J.B. Wass and Sons, Milbank-street, West 
minster. 


CHEAP AND DURABLE ROOFING. 


BY HER 
MAJESTY’S 


~ 
Se 

mb's-buildings Ban 

Hy sealed 

THE ASPHALTED FELT FOR YE ROOFING ga 
Houses, Farm Bu peg dd 2 anne 1 
t Plants from a 1 

n regis? Lhe tio eal een Shows, it is this 
which 1 hee been exhibited an ed 


and 75 we Felt SOLELY n 
HER 


PRIZES. 
5 ESTY’S Woops AND a” 
F 


Roya BOTANIC 
And on the Estates of the 
land, Newcastle, Northum 
the late Earl Spencer, and 25 
an at the Ror YAL AGBRICU 48 ‘Soc 


IETI 
other deseription . 


mber in S construction 


2 a great sa 
Made to any ees 32 
E 


Patent Felt Manufactory, piar 
London, sta, 
The new Vice-Chancellor’s Cou 
minster Hall, were roofi 


ouses 

tity altoget 
ing 
os to 


000 feet. be 
eee 
their Roofs, pio € 
jnformenel “forded on on dbe ae Felt. 
any ‘propose ed particular appli 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


CRUSADER GERANIUM, 7s 6d. each, | 0 r Ragwort. There is, within our knowledge, a | ripened in the open air, of a handsome dark brownish 
words drained garden, kept in perfect neatness, red variety, whit ich he called the black — 
altho 


. 8 6a. each in a tg — drain-pipes of which pass to the outfall through It was ve t acid, and 
bir to Wiis È. RENDIE a and —.— Aisoni a piece of waste land well cropped with Docks, remarkable for its rich mulberry red flesh. On 
Waterpeppers, Thistles, and Burdocks. Can any | several subsequent occasions during the summer we 
PER, Sion Nursery, Croydon, begs or one hope that such pipes will long continue to | again received it, and it was found to improve as the 


— one the following select plants. ork? We have no such expectation. season advanced, so that at the Chiswick Meeting i 


pec in 
ä 1s 64 us lucida . 0s 9d Possibly Mr. Parxes’s collared pipes may prove July it bore compari i i j 
i Gardneriana 13 ” cardinalis 1 ss Sega te aig k perhaps s some other Sontriv- the finest favoured sork, 1 N10 spec 2 
—— — 1 ; 2 eyphilitica ie — y be f a more effectual barri 1 ; but, as on sh Queen and Elton ; like them was far behind 
speciosa 17 mulus Harlequi to those poin * we ane: experience, an cas Saw the old Fine, the 7 of S 
. 3 E ifolius can se poi it. We also ait to know under what | as as go Sedli te presto E 
Be 7 Petunia bn circumstances roots direct themselves into subter-| Upon inquiry we find that a few of our b 
Cera longifolius ! Phlox de > pean 2 5 ranean hollows. It is evident that there is some- vaiet inquiry we În with this sort ; but — 15 
. Í sales, gmc ite thing besides the mere existence of an opening into | unknown to all but a very few. We have also aster- 
i ersoni... — niis i pipes which attracts Aisi roots. If it were 4 so, all | tained that it is always very early, preceding the 
— 5 1 rain-pipes would in time choke up, u care- | scarlet varieties by a full week or 10 days. Under 
endida (Low) Scutellaria macrantha, less cnltivation wit which they an ‘@tonected. these circumstances it deserves to be generally dis- 
p 5 Thunbergia Pryeri “ But that does not 4 * In the bye nb of learning | persed—for the gain of a week in the Strawberry 
fine rage w yellow so something upon this subject, we, tw rs ago, com- | Season is important. It may not however poet 
Souvenir de 1 6 Torénia seabra . mood the 55 one — 2 ent, y Aneh is still in the purpose of London market-gardeners, se it 
“eS 8 peciosam , ws of drain-tiles were laid down | is too ponl for the 1 The following letter froth 
p — „ 0 9 Weigela rosea wilkin 6 2 a eac — other, in hea A land, 15 | Mr. Beaton, dated Jun expresses his opinion of 
bircinum... 1 0 | Rock plants, in great inches below the surfac On ne row was fo rmed the 3 3 7 
Ele erin Kalmii 0 9 variety, per dozen. 6 0 y, r 
! with fe woke 8 Gee red pipes, t the other or T ude PM tb p have great hopes of the Black Prince 
semi-cylin tting very imperfectly at the ents rawberry, which is as distinct in the wth and 
The Gardene rs Chronicle. ee, aie Ove r the y a 107 of Willows was ee of e. in the ee — to be noted from 
others in the same some distance from t ak 
SATURDAY, AUGUST 4, 1849. planted. Upon mining them this morning the early qualities there can be no doubt ssh, for I tnd. 


ground is found — ated by their roots far below | ; 


Gs F R THE ENSUING WEEK. 1 in 4 here this season, n the sa — with 

ug, sd Hortieultaral ana — * 4 eos 3 Pes f 5) N — * ign ee roo 2 . be rem d what fer s’ Seedling, full 15 —— e it. * tasted the 

selena ent ts and Friday, Atget 8, f and It e of el e one line or the other; and, what | fy — of it last year, and found it as good and well- 
is very remarkable, a root has reached the junction | favoured as any other sort, excepting always 


isme Ganveners’ Curontore of last week will of two semi-cylinders without entering the drain; | lific Hautbois,to which we have no rival yet wee hk 
be found a report of an interesting meeting of the on the contrary, after reaching the junction it has | succeeds, but like some — it does not answer in 
' Society of Edinburgh, held on the 12th of | divided into two arms, which have followed the | every garden. At the request of the foreman in the 
July, on which decasion some information was given junction right and left, and finally plunged into the fruit department here, I allowed all the May blossoms 
concerning the ACTION oF ROOTS IN DRAINS. It is un- earth below We 8 the root sitting astride, as it —— picked off the Black — order to 3 


e ACTION 
; beeen notorious that drain pipes have were, $ the joi i ; i 
instances been so wholly choked by the adira Are we to mier from this that roots will not enter much disappointed if we Aer not find’ that do be tite’ mn 
ofa fibrous matter in their interior, chat water can dean-pipes se so e or y s the 3 is moist enough to Strawberri — 
Do pass; and this in gardens as well as farms. | Support them that t ra only pass into drains pots. 
The f matter is by some, we might say by | if the soil chances to be oo dry when they are in Na — — 
many, persons supposed to be engendered in the — ss va urhood ? or is their 8 a mere last year, and divided the plants Where we could ; then 
water of such drains ; and inquiries have been ad- er of accident, the chances of which are in pro- planted them on a sunny border, to try them ins 
dressed to scientific men —.— ing the = and — to the abundance of — 75 in h soil t orced KrEns’ Seedlings, treated after the same manner, 
mode of tion of these imaginary subterranean ih TM 3J Eine fin and also against our autumn Alpines. The result was 
aquatics, e have seen many drains ere weather of May and June an e aa favourable to the Black Prince, of which we 
we have — many samples of obstructing half of July, has 3 tly saved the Poraro gathered fruit down to the first frosty weather, while 
matter; but we never yet saw anything fibrous Crop. At least, there a no serious indications of ar ae of the others came to table in autumn. 
= re e foreman i 
p 4 


. 
2 
5 
F 
K 


d that any other fib i t l 
. so pa material occurs in drains. ‘iby á — "haat 1 E in Great Britain and Ireland, department on his own shoulders ; coors also been at 


d. 
u b i ö 
that roots can always introduce themselves into these That we are not yet safe is aes to be gathered | t thi 7 = — 
: ‘ in his observations, H ted last autumn to 

deeply buried water channels. It is not long since from a report by the Inspecto of the Highland | off the blossoms in . T allowed: kiar t6 . 
fibrous matter 1 Nr dated Lo cndi, in Ross-shire, | He has a stock of the Black Prines now in pots, 
4 feet deep in a field i July 2 7 i ‘the 
wee r ak e aa with — — This ‘intelligent officer states that it has broken — — — ä —é— Bo — — — 
have come about; for there were no trees earer g m gi e yee when cada pin is 1 gg and that | hence, PHERD, the declared to më this 

ates t ma appearan ago, on them re new Strawberries would 
ótcürred in the ade Fa large field. In other spo pace S he first ta i iti in 1847 and in i 1848. knock the Alp ere? out of pipar in less than three 
—— 7 ise I. Showed it,” says Captain desi eg er This op confite by 
‘the same ki ischi 1 1 cellent pro rietor who gave orders in my earing others, who h vho 
e 8 for chem to be taken up and throws into the sea arest pasties de thelr ehitad ob Chara 

plants to send rion Ao 110 W e ons His — ahs I was gone South, induced him Lanier than oe Wa as late as any, and much b 
aad the evils thai W i i believe it was the effects of frost (from which |than many, the Black Price Strawberry may be 

t have been observed are as likely . ; ; 

* owing to weeds h trees or it Was distinctly different, the leaf having a black | recommende 


or Grasses, as to As è 
At th i t in tre, and not frosted edges), and in| We do not, however, say that it is a novelty. On 

the enemies which “whe 1 Kare, reply t Secretary of the Highland Society, he | the contrary, Mr. C. Kar states in a letter now 
Bistort, Horsetail Coltsfoot, Docks, Thistles, as well said it had gated disappeared, and so it had; I | before us that a very few plants of it were sent to 
% Gooseberry bushes, Elms; Poplars, Will d found on my return not a plant left where I had | B. ‘onvin, Esq., Norwood, in 1843, from A 
Mie trees, * OWS, and observed it | | deenshire, and were cultivated by him at 

‘Une lesson tau 4 “J have only seen it here, and on a spot 10 miles hill- lodge for four years; adding, “it is 8 or 10 days 
teetity of clean AR By Me ed a 5 me here it exists ; but now it is very rife mer — earlier than any of the tribe kow, a very great 
that the tap saa dnp Gra so re making it disappear by cart-loads. bearer, fine ties makes an cellent preserve, 
mung the ies most likely to h “art a mate abont 20 women and carts em 1 ctting — and a good fo for 

ots. It i y PIRI wee x The een of novelty is immaterial. All that 


J the stems) over and e 
; = corn and Turnips and Mangold ( <The 6 ) roe ae ihe. Bh but ee well. the public has any interest in is to know that it is 


1 eg to a depth much i 3 iti 5 
f There are many more Potatoes planted than for | new to them i lities are such as 
1 several y is. The e crop is att 2 ry we have d ‘ribed them to be, about which there is 


unequal; some ve 
Rabe portion (the effect of bad Lea very shabby. | no room for doubt. 
d neral.” n 
re ee ia. e dried MIXED VERSUS MASSED FLOWER-BEDS. 


the extent of their undying roots, and 
ö d that many 2 toda bè i ‘alluded "tbs “the 1 effec ts of a safe Potato — Sonya ns hae — Gros selties dire ` are ot coat nd 
1 by Dr. Nei, where the oa “tnt aa nce rable. 2 vf the n af piace a grace beyond the reach of art.“ 
Le e vg aca baa 5 the pan — * 9 1y; geons had — i Pope's Essay on Orit, 
7 illustration of th Arrhoven much has been 
12 = ch pi to ‘fl’ the diate ee 2 have changed their minds. In illustration of the as flower 
the poi 


Point that roots extend, with defihi rring fishery is than for 20 10% 

3 te who would impose upon us a code | which 
— ung, and t 4 tt real nce nS it is useless s pri inhabitants, woa haye no we are to ead) the — of our fancies, and bind as it 
izin of drain-pipe will rapidly beco o barrels, an F only were by the dry formality of mechanical rale the details 
= rine an cannot kes the fish either for their own | of a subject admitting the exercise of the purest taste; 


e hardly need observe that it is re of er ee people, had Re bow! pe althiongh of colour and general effect, and though ther ae are ho’ 


sping: ; provided the: plant use hereafter, or for sale to distant places. in an art essentially a “ fine art; yet it will be found 
dende 80 costly an operation that n We venture to add, that they never will find | that rules will never be adhered’ to, that caprice or 
fie ‘Wisely neglected Wetisüre at W — salt, barrels, or purchasers until they provide them- | fancy, or pure taste, will each severally reign supre 
Ty a. when it has been once laid down, | Selves with energy and industry; and that — according as * ind of each o r is constituted oF 
ein Coarse perennial weeds o grow on land will never do, so long as they can find Potatoes t "| echnical Gnd —— . y 2 rely 
N proved is to rear a tear a host sA e all ready feed upon. a7 bah de it 


3 main destroy his wor E Anour a fortnight before the earliest Scarlet coal ever bate strictly adhered to 
“Sir aoe pin. her is Banik in Stafford- | | Suan were seen this year near E bowdan we | cumstances occur in 
. overrun with Thistles | received from Mr. Curmi, of Camberwell, fruit truth of that axiom, The blind 


484 


DFDS ( ——————— i 
rules in the details of the fine arts must ever be pro- same grou 


artist has e 


ev 
vhs eel scree everything to sim 
because they ca siha hema nothing | ‘beyond it; 
would pile every picturesque group into a pyramid, and 
. — 


th he 
syllabled verse. But I am not l 
on taste; I must return to the subjeet matter of my 
letter. 

I have said that no mechanical rules should be per- 
tag ¢, id. 


none m must be 2 K oon in the execution of ornamen ntal 
garden et there are principles which must 
be er w and bee they are such as no good 
taste in landscape gardening will ever depart from 

And it is because your 'eorrespo ondents have meni ex- 


they e anai have not ‘understood each — ‘that I 
beg wt in the 


discussion of this somewhat im- 
. 


THE GARDENERS’ 


o pen an essay | Yet 


be in shadow and part lit up by 
And where ien ar 
roups, to vary expression, or 
to throw some noble tree into relief, the Holly, and 
smaller aai of Gorse in conjunction, are 8 
accessori 
wate er department of ornamental gardening we 
exercise our r abilities and tastes, harmony of parts must 


N. 


in natural scenery. 
principles entirely lost 
sight of, ae with what la beatae results, LAN in 
e nooks of pata f "hee st ; Hercu 
lawn of a quiet rural retreat; and m 
aped ae a a square rod of omens gar 
e Amphitrite sails through myrtle ‘bowers, 
There gladiators fight or die in flowers ; 
Unwatered see the drooping sea-horse mourn, 
And swallows roost in Nilus’ dusty urn.” 
Popes Mor 


on the 


al Essays. 
The disposition of the siy in a parterre in such a f i 


The first 5 — es 8 important — in —— 
fit- 


upon the organ of hearing produces a sense of pleasur- 

able delight ; but the very same notes, the same 

be so eee that a harsh and dis- 

agreeable piece ould be the result. What, 

then, constitutes the difference ? Simply the skill of the 
3 his — 7 edge o 


CHRONICLE. 


rede per lake 
rden i 


AESA are the greai 
beco! 


he harmony of sweet soun ds. be 
e. the artificial 


N ; 

all, yet ‘ee man e and consequently 

there will be DE AAAA of — — But in re- 
nee to arrangement of flower-beds, there are 

two seg es to be considered, and which ap- 


this discu 


only seen to ad urrounded with every- 
thing essentially artificial, and where there is no 
tempt to ape natural * The n of the 
beds in which m are displayed, m i 


A * plan is the 2 1 and the in- 


SSO 
of art, no attempt to conceal such mu ust be 
allowed, or you ve 


a pleasur 


8 


— other. 


com anying 
e same 22 may ve at the command of 
t arrange alik 


| are now frequesited by the July-bug. 


e gre Th 
ent of flowers —.— for the one is totally h 
Large mass 


m as to gratify a tasteful eye, admits of many | collecting th „or Spade, 

variations, and each winn artistic. What that ar- | called, which must be aft yel 
ran aam be can onl determined by, the | poultry may also be arem a ps: ed Pips and 
hose ape the arrangement is to = too well aware of the daint 7 4 — 

be pony ean Love e plough; in fact, they rt 
dead roots of Giad where the {semaine 
X * 
ENTOMOLOGY ence by ignorant persons been supposed to be ty 

The MAY-BUG o he — cause of the mischief, in the case of the Y mal 
WE are often 3 —— 3 do n farmer tioned by Mr. Spence, who « siti 
whether in such case the small white butter (Pontia | to see d’ nasty craws pull up all tG 2 
Rap) is not the young state of the large white (P. | set d’ bairns to hing up some aud clouts 0 
Brassicze), ee — the com fy (Musca | away, gin he’d letten en alean they have “ 
ee tica) is the young of the blue-bottle fly (M. all d' close.” It is also very adv m 
ee or whether the . july-bug ( Amphimal a sol- | children to collect and destroy them when they 7 
the right hand side of the ac- in the perfect state; thus Anderson in his“ 1 
p ne the young state of the com- | of Agriculture,” states that 14,000 cockchaffers vm 


as bg on the left side of | 
go, had been ob- 
he same localities as 


ual profusion, and in t 


It is quite see that — 25 j ge but their mode of 
ely differ eh — man . the 

r uae cts are loped in a hard 
which in 


is the r nes of 


imals 8. 
ut Fg cannot 


ones io fon m swelling o 


ackgr 
d esi Nay the noble Banner Mer) Dah 


— or i pas 


approp. jects 
t gardens admit only of — ties of arran 
or geometrical, and the 


merits, is 
cular — but one can never be 
the other : 


d 

ld paltry 

Ping of a | 
ers may b. 


. | increased pone This process is repeate 
ect has arri 


pe | genera of the family Melo) 


off, the insect gaining at the same time a new coat of an 

ted from tim 

time until th 
t 


two fi the full- 


are 
the 
uliar 


and they 
to be in their way. After 
te in the ya Bi Gen 
earth, 


s the cas 
they e 8 them. It 
the young state that their fs 


to an incredible extent, 
is, „however, in 


gene. or 3 case, * is incapable of e an 


organs h of the ho 
a | insect are increased i in size, the outer case, which had pre- 


0 high health, fall o ba 


alee 
them which is 


s emplo in greasing 
wheels of e b bi 


aphitndlla solstitialis the Jul is 
smaller . the er, diffetin ty Bs, in — 


to me apr ws as an oily | — is ob 
n numb 


the the eaten o only 3-jointed, and the boch 
mu a with the tail noi piep ki 
generally shani two-thirds s or 

long ay b en flying i in the twilight * ö 
wit great 

cially í in 571 pipe of England (being much rarer na 
wards). taceous colour, 


crown of the 12 doe he thorax rather dusky, wi 


a. = 
= oa hs 


grey hairs; the elytra also pilose and pale, with d 
suture and outer margin brownish; the legs reddish. 
appears about the summer solstice, the 


name given to it by Linnæus. J. 0. W. 


TES OF A TRAVEL 
Chrysan- 


bushes, the 
ae 7 — green loaves, and ner 
to bloom most and 
The m 


s 


bo 
stance, 


the 
supplied during sae a 2 


3 = ba lux 


3 


RTI THE 8 CHRONICLE. 


485 


e nature of the climate, | no trace of the disorder. is good to know, also, that 2 both 
in ous 


2 ples. x 7 
and aT home "alike in the garden of the no time should be lost, as the best blooms are always | “ The peculiar property of charcoal,” says Mr. Squarey, 
— pt a cottager as in that of the arare obtained from plants of the previous year’s increase. in his “ Treati ural C 
c Picotees shou red, i 


in the drainage of pots and as an 


absor 
the central or more | the most A* . . ‘ie most affected by frosts, | i — — of manure. For the former it is well 


n 
of the empire. “The system of cultivation | and for this necessary to prevent the — aa 
ng | 


the main attended ing j noug — i g 
have been noticed, namely, choosing a rich In examining some other trees, I ari thought I| height of about a fourth of the pot, in the same manner 
oe to a single | saw on them analogous excrescen ces, but I have not as potsherds are employed. Owing to its highly anti- 


once into large po 

— ing it to send out numerous terals, and | yet pae proof of it, — eee e it eg ap- septie qualities, it will continue for several years in an 

Sa" peral supplies of manure water during the | pear shall continue my observa’ undecayed 
1 ese 2... ieee . 


d, the L er aca to the amateur than that of Carnations, | greatly, 
or 1 it is in | Picotees, and Pin is one in which he may excel | 8'7 


in — K ———' dra f 
rder to obtain these, they gene- horme AND SUBURBAN GARDENING. is calculated not only to act in like manner as a con~ 
Ph hs 1. ‘al flower-buds. THERE is scarcely a class of plants to be found more | Veyer "oan i 


iving out an 
— — people, bin — in the rv eco- 3 frequently does) even the professional gardener. and, other fertilising alkalies or gases may exist in 
T i ce th 


yards, halls, and temples. Iti is pree e season for their propagation having now arrived, | the soil, to 


we are indebted vd rer for the parents | operation which old florists were wont to look upon as | Subject of manures, is its powers of absorbing var 


Enis raised by M ter in France wou much the soil. After the whole has n med, and 


varieties of Chrysanthemums which now en - | difficult, but than which nothing is so easy and certain ‘gases in the pores of its structure, and e 


oisture. It is proved beyond all 


e progeny is more nu 0 h possesses 
3 2 Some of those beautiful the young grass, and each shoot pegged down in Power of 2 90 times its volume of oor gas, 
ld be h | th been trim acid gas.” And 


es its volume of car 


eee eC . — florist. It is a curious fact, the points of the grass shortened, a little fine light he further ı states : * If any manure has been applied 


however, that 
sad lucidum 
Europe, are 


J 


ose kinds, such as formosum soil, about three-quarters of an inch thick, should containing ammonia in its free state, that is liable to 

— —— riginally raised from seed in be spread carefully over the whole, then a good pass off in a gaseous form, the charcoal will absorb it 
are also met with i in the north of China. R. F. epeinkling of 3 from the rose of the watering-pot, | 95 it rises, and retain it until the first rain, when 

— and the work is finished. Some perform this kind of gas will be dissolved by the water and carried into the 

DISEASES OF PLANTS. layering with es neatness and precision, but they | soil, there to be applied for the assimilation of plants, 

from are rarely more successful than others who s nd less and the removal of the gas by the rain from the char- 


pe é a 
VI. caves sa sok he vr gie. This is the | time about it. The principal points are the slit in the | coal restores its original powers of absorbing gas; so 
i plied to as 


in Italy R e tfi 
så is peculiar to the Olive tree. I have restored to it | of soil, and keeping them moist until wares are rooted, | constant reservoir for these valuable gaseous su 


tan 
the name given to it Theophrastus, who calls it also | Pinks and even Carnations may be re increased | 2 es which mene we nor any circumstances 
hat i 


y adily 
Patella, Ihave not had the opportunity | by what are technically termed pipings, which are | un ter 


Fungus and ven when, e course of cultivation, 
of studying it well myself, and shall therefore confine | young shoots taken off, the poisto of the grass cut the charcoal — applied on the surface of the 
myself to stating shortly what has been published re- | away, and the piping shortened at the second joint, ie “ey is ploughed under the surface, even there it does 
tating to a malady which appears to have been very | cutting horizontally through * under it. A ose its power of absorbing the gases, but carries on 
prevalent, especially in Italy, during the last 30 years | spent hotbed, or a very light bed made up on 2 — its — with undiminished energy. Proſessor 
of the last century. It is probably not much known i will tend to promote their rooting. Six inches of light Johnston, in his valuable work on the “ Elements of 

e of the most celebrated of their writers, | sandy soil should be placed upon the bed, and the ome Chemistry,” stron the 


and someti it is wanting a $ 

culiarity of the tubercle is, that under the tumour pose. If place ed u ring 

of the bark there is a corresponding excrescence from | 8S is practicable shod ld be admitted, except in se 
he 


Presta, Pan t to 
hat the first mentioned of — writers has treated of other day, and if they are found to suffer phen e 
tin the most ins structive m: nner. According to him damp, the glasses should be kept off for an hour 


* n “tubercles, hich are distingui or two until the moisture is dried up ; all damp mouldy | additions! 0 
eee i s time be 1 | —— have been esta blished throughout the kingdom 
0 ed and p 


ing of the Olive, says, „cet arbre west ni sujet pipings dibbled in about an inch from each other. An ming. of c 
i insecte. i i i ; 


+ P- 5 are ord 4 
Italy engaged the minds of several phy- to prevent the glass from fitting * afterwards, | of this 
cul 4 


f the Olive by being of a leaves should also from time to 


$ g nee 
the wood itself; and in this point it differs from all other | frosty weather. They will require very little water, whic ch obtained for 


exereseences of the Olive tree. Many pretend that in- | must be given only when the plants are tae fe suf- 


gro 

selves, An epidermis or cellular covering of a — Use of Chern in the 3 of N . 
texture, or more stiff or dry than usual, and which they | 4 Drainage for cy ts.—Under the head of, “ 
sae they 


Fe 
© 


On 
are formed. Conditions 1 to the most pe — Cult Prt 


tivators in the close investigation of The whole should then receive a good soaking of water, into general use. On all oe 

ch are Giovene, Moschettini, Tanciani, and the glasses asses should be left off until the foliage a — it has been tried, I believe that, without any 

ini others me | cuttings is dry. They sh hould be examined e eee the results have been found so satisfactory, 
re 


ngly 
charcoal, meag ani cha 
manure and other rich applications 
ity 


gards quantity and quality, in the produce of 


they have fully compensated for the 
utlay. I understand that several manu- 


eg! 
der glass during winter, as ma: — remark is ae —— to every pe r oot} 
as an 1 * for the purpose, can now be 


e nted ex- 


m parties appoin 
pressly iy the —.— agricultural societies throughout 
the 


sects should be charged as the originators of these or: from drought, and then a small quantity only ntry, there can be no exeuse for its omission. 
tamours, bu the dissections made by the above ould be administered at a time. Pharo pen — mised manure (iro 
named Giovene, it is made clear that they cannot be the 7. 8. E. C. W.“ Your plants were suffering from seen an advertisement of it repeatedly in your journal) 
+ work of insects, and that it is impossible that any should ~ Sais of the intense warm an otf weather which | has recently 4 y me in various e experiments, 
have a or ‘sting sufficiently long or powerful e experienced some time ago. The late rains, com- | 0n a small seale, in an ens as well as florieul- 
ere Hert through the wood and penetra bin ed with a diminished atmospheric temperature, w will | tural way, and i ny > good success. 
priradia rd ane of | improve them L a a a E a 3 
7 
— ich form ited year 1 this tree, naturally of a e Corresponde 4 had taken, it appears to be very ri ch in phospha 


o | pha f a 
» | junction with — orhighly y fertilising: ingredients. Iamtold 
ha pared pv 


rs, the foecal matter 


n 
i i that in w is 
Or a frost, or even a hoar frost chokes them, a — — se appeared in p 2 — Number, I fully accord with | t errs ees Ep ee 3 


to resum i 
— — productions, which a — ery or some Sure as a manure; 
y perhaps prevent. ne having observed removed 
es are — efficien 


Manured 
come of nd thereb s 
our best cultivators abandoning such a treat- compressed by the roots of the plant, and thereby 
i i nt its | Alban’s.—I 
On fan confining themseives t to vegetable manuring. | scape th to water, as ebe; . — set pre | factory aswertothe mu 3 


pot cultivation is, made respec 


g already opened, the pene extended, and | arrive ay the a of my 88 relative 
ons made; 3 that an infinitely more efficacious “ protecting 
abundance, the —— phere pa is distended, carried ther in — aterial „ than moss will be obtained by the substitu- Josing s ‘St Alban’s Grape. —t find mnk ‘menioned 


consist 
truth it is not necessary to i ves exceedingly beneficial in the way of supplying | Grape 
prune the Olive so | Pro. ngty and that I 
done, followi moisture the roots of the plant on occasions 
— e owing too much to the letter the its presence in the pot, all humidity hada able to judge ofits ruit was 
i e 


and the . appears.“ po of charcoal for the purpose, independently of the in your 
arises therefore from a superabundant other advantageous properties t T admit | sum 


in moderating the force of the sap. In and moreover, while its absorb 


3 


moss had no ot yielded. to — de ere 


ung; 
asto. —— effect produced from an appli- 
wh 


he 
ed to| cation of it to my Roses, which not only grew an 
>is more luxuriantly, but were ae 2 


or other insects. W., Lon 


Paper as being a fortunate m 


y ; : bjection to be co’ fi 

ue, 1 “ i no objection 

r and takes its place consequently amongst that, as“ G. a ers, moss 18 an excellent N J ais 5 

uses. Its remedy main ch ; | Sorry 8 d * z — fl = 


state as 8 
ities last, it | unjust means. 
y pyem nly: | Gr is really and truly a seedling by myself, 


used airs — of showing it to persons 
sent for opinion 

the — e two seasons 
— Society's Rooms in Regen nt-street, 


he pla 
d — to the Editor of the Gardeners’ J — and to Messrs. 
a ee, rat z pher taneg Pine-apple-place ; by all lof whom it was pro- 
ced to oe 


“excellent and distinct.” The fruit in 
m 


m 5 : tl very case as was also that 
with animal ee D been the occasion | composition, which frequently a became submit — — opinion to Mr. Thompson. R. Josing, j, St 
t that 


followed up in other places, and have | experien nced to the use of moss in 


harbour for worms, slu 
— clearly the real source of the malady. | that it affo rds a most inviting 3 eee 2 — * the case oy 


number of Olive stocks of which | Woodlice, and other destructive vermin ; 
with stable dung, and | Le ae, that let its other advantages De e 44 3 
ot m 


4 x : : I have lost many val g 
with Rogna, whilst | ing this evil. ag se Yaiscontinue the applica- 


ted with Lup ml nd after a time | ¥' , peat, or an animal, I thi 
they recovered t their health, — — aae 20 months had | & agricultural or floricultural sed to i is not n meaty we so | stances, 


58 to be. question. 
countries, to cut green for man That from wood I have 


eo — at present give 
uiries 
ing an “racy ; and I should, therefore, 
ing silent on -> — sre tho 
irly ee 


= ary sna t it 


rdinary correspon 

Y — 

he applied — or baked Lupins.* these canno counterbalance the injurious ry tha t 1 [ should n mee = infor — — ones 

became aff i uable sate ine h | that I have been for 80 mploying n er 

Seein m — perfeetly eliciting the . and 1 in inthe midst of e. ieting 
i i i ion, i et to cha whether it be opinions, I must —— eing slow ondemn 

n a plantation of f ue | woo Now, with mes think that its value, either in | that which I did — ubm praise. Under the eireum- 


not o er- praise the variety in 


. y 2 precia 
—— very much cultivated in Italy and Oth Tit rom ved I hav shite used with the greatest ad- | by Mr. scaling y and positively afirmed by him to 2 


486 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
seedlin ibed it solely in regard to the intrinsic | the solutions for destroying bugs are yaw pa ties, 1 the facilities w aR y 
merit which 1 7 und the Rui ruit p = ssed ; and, con- of corrosiv i „ but every bottle | 


justice; for I question much whether, in p 
flavour, — variety is exceeded, or even equalled, by 
Grape in 


any existence. respect, at least, I 
have not regret, wi Vitis,” that too good an 
opinion given of it; for, until a better flavoured 
Grape can be pointed out, too much cannot id of | t 
the one that stands pre-eminent. it should, however, | 


Ifi 
1 oah to be not distinguis shable from the ‘Chas selas 


ot risen, or — 


2 of ry money. Charles 
Castile, 29. 


Fu . pul ifolia.—This Fuchsia has monsariott taken. up and housed —— 60 . of Sieg 
eee ee h admirably with me under the following treatm ent, in the whole I haro not found more than one 
one. we were cartainly no — — berries in the January I plunged my old plant i tove, which is is armee but that one was y very bad. 4. * 
bunches which came under my notice from Mr. Josling ; | heated on the tank s ; it soon made t shoot:. yian 
and they had — we longer, and also stronger shonlders I allowed it to remain there till the shoots were about ~in — Paper of the 3 30th June, 
than the Chasse usqué , or even th one foot in length. ie — — a —.— ` d Hoey coe R. H. W.“ sta ates, that 
0 ed it — und mot's superior placed i arm ery having ee boran, he is able to 
cultivation. T sent for description appeared san | i we lh it 2 oe de of —— a ian without 2s. b. for honey, whilst e neig 
me different from aon of the Chas Musqu | showing the least inclination to fl this stage | able risen to 18. wi 
that rent modes o — and other . . ven it "put sparingly, for a 1 fe = days, a explain lan of collateral boxes, and 
stanc so gr n effect in Sanas the appear the leaves Eoma ellow and most of them fe ell off. It is the erage quantity of honey ann 
ance of varieties, pe even those h them | was kept q dry for about a week, which partly | from each hive by his plan 
will sometimes be ived, I thought it advisable to | ripened the wood; it was planted in the flower borde n—if he has, bow d rev 
obtain, for the satisfaotion of the public, the most direct about the -20t ay, when it soon sent out 50 lateral sealing up the ventilating pipes of the 
proof — the origin me Grape in question that I pos- 1 43 of which are producing fine clusters s he swar ow 
sibly could ; and — ingly addressed to Mr. Josling | bloo I have no doubt that fine specimens may be een from depositing her eggs in t 
@ series 125 “ques — distinctly numbered, to which I| grown in this way, and by leaving oe one — * he is able to prevent al 
requested the favour of a reply. The time when the take the lead instead of three. J. Aud s, Ramsga be kind enough to sa 
variety was raised, and its parentage, were made pr New Drilling Machine.—Having in = eee boxes, and generally to 
minent questions. To inquiries as satisfactory to procure an in ent to supersede the old p of and al te w. 
answers were returned as could possibly be expected ; making drills with the line and hoe, I constructed, this pure honey he ever obtained 
they may be seen by referring the notice of the spring, a rough machine, something after the fashion of beside leaving an ample 
> in “Jo l of the Horticultural Society,’ | the accompanying model, which answered the purpose | winter. I have tr 
vol. i p. 296. I need only add that I feel 2 to remarkably well. The teeth may b avn moveable. cess every plan I could he 
Vitis,” and — correspondents, for endeavouring to | more may be introduced as required ; at each end there promised an ahundapi su 
ear up-the ma — that great | is a guide to run out ee marking the ra from. the | stroy ying the b in 
2 is no decided proof of ion tha Robt, Thompson. | 100.1 
m of opinion that common tobacco 
ag — tobacco — in the Liverpool Docks, if it 
could be oo mite, steeped in boiling 
water, r b more effie: economical in de- 
ying vermin on Hop 3 3 g them, for much 
of the smoke must necessarily escape without effecting 
any good. I find steeping 1 lb. of 2 two 2 
of boiling Were and while it is mil m dipping t 
shoots of * and other Wang infested with 
gree: into be a sure remedy. 
man by tak ime basin full of liquor in one hand, 
and dipping the point of a Hop plant into the basin 
ith the other, would get over a large plantation in the 
of , and a hands would so 
get over some acr ork must commence as 
soon as insects make their appear nee, and, i 
necessary, the g d m gone over mor 
once. A moist day — uld be chosen for the operation, last drill. * is i at the top, and drawn along th 
but heavy, rainy, or ver ery windy weather, will not gro vane by a man, followed by two or th 
answer. A. S. Aden, Arundel. opping ate m drills either Rene P 
ter-cut O rable.— I venture to trouble — or Turn ed. e drills are filled in 
vou with the following statement, bearing strongly on the TWO 5 and two or th 1 
nefic £“ Winter. out Timber” for buildings of |sow an acre per diem ata 92 
every deseri well as for ship bui ding. n ex- be made of either iron or wo Fal ) and the bees 
tion of a residence called Ockenden House, at Cuck- Fruit Prizes a ick.— co ourse adopted this peti pa pe to e up as far as they ca 
field, of ancient date, the residence of f on, my | year by the Horticultural Society in 1 wing the | creep quietly through this hole, and are of 
tion was called to the lintel of a door leading down | prizes it has hitherto offered for fruit at the Chiswick morning to the other aie without the loss of any of e 
from the outward air (the approach 


though (in 
a on al the doorwa 


ould be in future 
e 25 cut when 


locked r 
comes, if I am rightly — sme Africa, it appears 
very desirable that the co 

i h has py 


ing, insuri 


ng 
thereby the greater duration of ships, pe great eventual 
l, Knapp |i 


M. Burrel 


large cla: 


rizing men. I do not 
the Society to make 


ich, in afew years, when 
sa 2 


requires as mu 


ood the principle whereby 
fluenced if the prizes had nome 
S yand Jun 


in the cultivation * fru 
tam success 


lensely crowded than any other part 
have heard it sta 


bir 
* è 
2, g den rs sell their est articles at hig rices instruments in 
Kyan Eaa 2 much e „who will not allow them to be rexhibited. i It the 3 of i 
buildings. I am ag ed b and o i appears, however, to me that the principal questions | decreed that p 
— 2 Ms clalton e experience ate—whether the prizes heretofore awarded have an. shall bg un 
timber, and kelly th yans solution for Soaking | swered the declared purpose of the Society, viz., « irected to 
2 yt 1 2 kinds of Wood ; it is a reward the skilful gardener ;” and whether the encou- i 
worms, 4 “aie 5 b injury by | ragement formerly given is worthy of renew On | that some 
chairs, picture fram ind ‘ath int brush on old | these ts I do not anticipate any difference of opinion ; | one may 
has put an end to their desti si e, perforation > | any who reflects on the Pines, Grapes, M 1 
perience has pro oved ; but a thes tive pe orations, as ex- &c., which gave satisfaction 30 years ago, and compares | the co sequ 
2 in spir, of in to adatt ce cunt ¼ ,. 
which wat (afterwards ad : umprovement has taken pla atly desire 
4. ne- at inde. be a added, in ee E ~ 2 colisider i er . improvement is chiefly . ; 8 meti ; 
in dast, T havo to believe | to the encouragement bestowed by horticultural pare 


“3 


ch skill 4 attention to attain 
of flowers, 


tated that the fruit shows 


ows in ay and June, has been fette, l e bees, from fighting, 
atd uld be to 


ee is in- 


withdrawn 2 the July | « 


jifficult, 


iably more 
t of the r 


early have Fee 


I fipa, wooden boxes 


n | any particular deser 
beasts 


2175 their 
f j satisfying their 4 
fs ao y- e hand of tect 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 487 


Marxincn COTTAGE GARDENING.—The first meeting for the ‘ 
ber of sparrows and other birds wi _ * Garden Memoranda. 
4 D.” will end no relief 12K OOT presen? — em al d Gixpentne IN pest at all d the name isa 
seldo 


api e k s wars, trait, and vegetables, that | feat m a pell ao 2 The smoke and soot of + 

1 ave from meeting to — ‘on m year to year n S dus usky to i y most people to effec- 
articl hibiti 

m Blackrock, states tha St an equally faroura — 2 — and — clay * prelude all al chance of —— plants 


tin; 

Sending pene. of tin plate | first-rate 
tehed across his plo od Fen, 
is the best “ scare-sparrow ” he | _ CRAVE N FLORAL AND HORTICULTURAL.—This, the first exhibi- | to 


successfully 
Mr. B. says,“ I iare a flat- 
— house — citable for a town — 9 
lace ardian 


place a case on it, and try 27 l 

1100 | th pleasant aet of Hrtaltare.” “Ob? tye Me, A 

e t quality, particaleriy $ Strawberries, Figs, | your san will prove ‘a dead lette I, too, ba 
ieties, and 1 — tied ram le unusually _ considering ie ning on the leads of my 8 and wn 

ryness of the seas lowers were truly magni — 
fit HoRTICULT duly 18 _—This Society held | particula rly Fuchsias. The Rev. A. Marsden exhit ibited $ failed, 8 failed. Iw ould recommend you to seek 
third and last exhibition — “the > ason i N grown plants. Verbenas and Roses were — amusement and the occupation of your spare time from 
2 ‘Esq. It was well attended, ‘and in ad addition to a re 76 red. There in tl dueti ther source ;’’ and Mr. B., relying on his friend’s 
5 w of fruit, cut flowers, and plants, there was an exhibited b 7 and cottagers, particularly the latter. It $ 
* of Carnations and Picotees, which brought to- | was remark ded by mony —— sent that the 7— — ’s gardeners sr ga relinquishes all 1 plant plea But 
incipal growers. Judging from the size and bril- | must go a-hea re! or cottagers would surpass them. Wild the worthy gentleman seen Messrs. Wrench’s little 
„they must have been at their best, at | flowers of — exhibited by 88 under 14 years of age, | greenhouse on * 2 leads of their warehouse, at London- 
Carnations, 24 blooms: Ist, to Mr. C. were both num select. Upwards of 300 prizes were bridge, he would not have been so easily dissuaded from 
3 wich Colleutt's ji af May’s Antonio, Prince | awarded. a 


— v his purpose. We paid it a visit ay other day, and 

s Beauty of W e, Holmes Rebiew found it quite “a blaze of floral beau my LS ah that by 

ire 75 w, 8 1 B. eviews, Fuchsias alone; all or most of them to single 

i. Sey Cahan, ana eee eee Leone. ** a Lady. (Two parts stems from 2 to 4 feet high. F. a. was beauti- 

pdpiral Curzon, ‘Wakefield’s Paul Pry, Simpson’s of the oron 2 Colonial Library.) Murray. fully flowered, and a graceful Fuchsia it is when “ well 

Victoria, Kay’s Omnium Primus, Wastes Sarah Payne, | Tuose who desire to know somet hing of the natural a i e this ngi It 8 not be less sry 3 wea 

; > — history of man, ani oat nd plants, in one of the most high, and as much throug e also remarked Smith’s 

lora’s Garland, Hughes Sir Joshua Reynolds, Hepworth’s un ean Area 0 our 3 will fn find much 14 | Senin, which still occupies a prominent place among 
True Briton, Cartwright’s Rainbow, Willmer's Telemachus, | ‘ es, 2 A 7 * 

Hepworth’s Antagonist and viuia, Colleutt’s Brutus, . — ` these well written volumes. The authoress, ho dark varieties, as do Purity and One in the teg 

thoug in 


B., pere Flora’s Ga 9 0 Hale's Prine Albert, t, 
Queen, Mansle oodhou 


= 
8 
8. 
* 
Z 
ie 
2 
n 
= 
Ek 
1 
F 
B 
p 
B 
4 
8 
eS 


— — ne a onquering Hero, Simpson’s x N n 
ware, Holmes’ Co tan t Pauline 5 appear to have mixed much with the Europeans; on wed rate varieties mbled 
oodhouse, May’s Edgar, Hale’s Prince Albert, Holliday’s | the contrary it would seem as if she had avoided inter- | here (about cg * i 2 we must not forget to 
Lord e, Whale’s Chance, Ely 8 ir H. — . Buck. course with them, for her residence was on the bleak 8 that we saw . them a well-bloomed 
’ to a acked by an amphitheatre of mountains | p! essrs, eitch's serratifolia, a spe- 

32 blooms.: Ist, Mr. J. Edwards, Hollow ay, with Hale’s Prince on the land side, and facing the ocean on the other. pate whieh Be flower wel even payed the best of cir- 
Willm nt some years in e i tances. These w 


m | seclusion, amusing herself with native servants, and — of the house Pel — — now cut down, dis- 

Bea P 2. $ 1 6 

fs Lorenzo; 2d, Mr. Newhall, Woolwich, with Tom- meee history ; and re ** nights to the roar of rooted, and put into small pots, Fairy Roses, Cycla- 
, tly s p sh 


d Rancliffe, Willmer’s Earl of Errol, i 4 i i have been s N lants bought in from the market. 
ie » | reading her book this must be . in r or it will g p g ro é 
ee 1 1 Me Barreog:r, Bed: be supposed that the life of a Sier: settler is | Nothing of the kind, They are the legitimate children 
ah Me E h.—Picotees, 24 blooms: spent in a epee) 22 uth is that * 322 of the o wai * wn and flo yay in it, and they will 
C- Tarnet, Slough ith 9. — arris’ Prince Albe 9 nt Xoual Heroine, i fo e to co little 
ce 0 es, Trakar’s Rosamond, May’s See‘li nar kera in which all this, — gmc more, has been 
and Constance, B hes’ Duel of Sutherland, | Zale as a pyar i } j 
Mays Seedling 1848 and Portia, B Bi arre: uches of Duke * here is m agreeable writing in these volumes, effected (for it is kept gay with Hyacinths Geraniums, 
A egina, Burroughes’ 1 May's with some ee ene of a scientific knowledge of the Fairy Roses, Phloxes, &c., all the year round) is only 
5 e * 2 W 0 ETA ERA piira erae spoken of. A fair example of the 3 ress’s 5 * lon ng, . peas iias and abont — ſeet igh, span- 
Tay H. —+ May's Sebastian and Juliet, Headley’s Venus, style will be found in the following extract j à, — plies a — * I ear sae 
— a hag Np i pms Woolwic! ods miinor “T have lately seen the Palm Fan I think pipe beten by 2 * * pes . v 


0 
&e. 2 ves. 
ie — 1 Holmes’ Count Pauline, May’s wy cle on which her een home was perched. In Some may possibly imagine that the Fuchsias may 


es’ e — castle, B Mrs boilers, and by these means, a one. li rame, and a 
„ Norman’s ue man, 1 Lady ae one of the stra ngest and best eatables that Africa po ting semi A with suitable soils. — &e. 
mast art Seon Maye Portia “Burroughes Mrs. Bevan, Nor- | affords, It is nothing less than the heart of a tree, the W h ’ bied. toi haii —ç— — of a country 
Nelson, Toys ade legan at Koomas 2 mes e nd stem having to be cut down ere it is possible to obtain eee ee e p of the sent er ded and busy parts 
s’ Enchantress, : $ 1 a f 
n — ——— ner’ Princes Royal, Holliday’s Deli- the Sais | itself, This is a large odd * sub- 3 
cas ige 8 nique, II iday’s Lord Randolph, Headley’s | 2 s . 
Log ne Burroughes’ Amy and emer. and Holly. piece of a mw veal (about as great a rarity in this > ER 3 the rey pth ar ng i a 2 hae a 
hoe” i Mr. Ward, nie: ie ease gd Bragg, Slough. place), when a closer examination showed it to be a set will met be lost .sight..o i to 
f : 2 
bof England, 3 r n Ker vid Th ne s yo mi We — 5 ws 
2 oar Dacre, Barnard's Mrs. Barnard, Close ether, that un e ey reod ; 4 
n, Sharpe’s Elegant, ene; Duke of sist h mate a It exactly resembles, “en * ep year through, a ype . — 
i > Mi tt 
i Regina, and Wildman’s — FE d, rech! green Peas, and in that state is often the early mo s, Crocuses, and Sno 
wards, Holloway, with May’s n „ “Ble. salad or Pen; but when boiled has a far uran deli- 1 a om 8 4 Cinerarias acd Pal 
Emma, 7 75 . General Jackson, Lady 4 cate flavour than a common Cabb -le, keep up the display till the vagi a of June. 
. er i Sa ae Jessica, $ Prince Albe “One of the commonest trees of the negro ga gardens is | § at 8 ias and Puchsias would carry 
h 


. The’ purserymen p present wisely, 101 ae the Pawpaw ; it is of ra pid g growth, very us to the very verge of winter, when the Chinese 

fie eee ae up the classes for 12 blooms to the amateurs. slight spongy trunk, rin ringed a like that of the pies The Primula would afford some relief at that comparatively 

of used to a light red edged Picotee, Burroughes’ | fruit, which when ripe is of a bright yellow, or rather dull and flowerless season, And thus, at but little 

i ich appear O excl tim as a swan's . urbe nearly 
egg, is attached by short footstalks to the stem itself, aif the y ote re might ~~ TRR 

a ABNATION AND PicoTEE show, July 24.— The round which it clusters very thickly. uropeans eat OO 

r yok Aeta. was held in E Royal Trt Mr. Turner it with black pepper and salt, ~~ I donot think it at all 

d, and fancy it i jus tast — AD 


. * 


— 5 * mon ; he was anxious that the po 3 nb ildi 
resent s hi v : In DU 
. See does + atypia ict Fo l viously to being ee on tablo, incisions are made in orn 5 e — re 0 4 si 
; eh mention description ot such a h t the Surrey, | the rind to allow the escape 3 and milky ry 
pt Bed 4 Besse SEEDLING CARNATIONS. The pre- | liquid, wh ee, tures left me + a oe hae 
ificate were awarded to May’s in which insects can harbour such is the case 
er, and certificates to Falconbridge and Romeo, The gles: eaner of facts relating to — uses of plants will eft 
3 find many such deta tails as these. Of the Cocoa a we 
di 


ay 4 utherland, “Lorina, and Lady Harriet | find in the appa ajan nn something that re- ing them rs sae im yh e cockroach, which is 
15 s 


* 


o 
8 


N a No son and ry — na 2 quires a word 0 k the greatest enemy to Orch 15 pia feeds by night, or 

i e dr Eee s paar along the leve in the dark ; he frequently finds his way into the in- 

wards (h In the sine we g path, | in q y 
h Dhon 2 ‘sp . . Bet, for Mays , Shylock, rh which is shaded by Sings trees, and by one fine Cocoa- terior of the ‘pots amongst the broken erocks, and eats 
Benz Romeo, Justice Shallow, Percy, Bar- | nut tree, whose feathery branches sweep the ground, | all the young roots unseen, These pests delight in the 
Paste Fete, Wodehouse, Puxley’s Prince Albert as it has not yet attained a great height, though in full | hottest parts of the house, either in a moist or pr 
esex, Ari Briton, Se: incess i This is the i see i 


riel, E- some resembli 

ynolds, ‘Lord life, Bright Pheebns, Mr. wing; and the flower wha mbling a tall | roots and flower buds, and it a ischief a 
“Squire Meyn fall bunch of ripe ears of Wheat, wih both young and — — e insect will do in one night, for if e qir the 
Tork t in their lished gree 1l = — 


; atem = Bo ae on fect. | Service to th 3 fresh point. 
: arriet, True Briton, Flora’s Garland, | once from the same tree, has a peculiarly rich el effect. | service to the — it again forms a P 
: Piret lass let, i Norman, for Hard- | The flower and ey fruit, whieh i is but a he cockroach, however, is by no means nice 
Prines Albert, s Garland, Squire Meynell, Hale's the full sized one, are protected by a coarse “gauzy his food, for he sometimes has no objection to eat 
poe earn 0 — Sg canoe-shaped — Pg which eva — is dead com 1 M ik pA — ong ised with of fat or 
Meynell, s Garland, Squire | and I think the natives must have deri ideas tallow grease, and pase 
Miton, nee P Phæbus pee Rain w, Ariel, Lor, of weaving clo th from the appear ce of this fibror ts for 7 Te 
; Flora’ Albert, ‘Be Frets, John W i zor substance, which is exactly like a 5 — but thin stuff prefers rs the tender points of the roots to such bad, 
Gar ohn t; 8d, Mr. Willmer, for ? P 1 df 4 em, 
Dake of fand, Brutus, Rainbow, Duke of York, Huntsm i this tion may be extended far | Some empioy toads an caion. 
Wodehouse ord, Squire Tro Cou * Fania 8 of We baiste tet pie ager erie A and that | these are slow, and the cockroach is very nimble : they 
Dae. €, Marquis of Chandos; Sarah Payne, and Admiral taon e barisna ves : sik 
2 i ooms.—1 real 


rg 5 
41 


r tance | hoever once 
Isabella pe iet, and A Mrs 3 „ Mrs. Bevan, l peti the base of a keep such pests og doing any grea 
eee Pries e — Royal j e dwards Bin tal aaan a a ok: with its exact re- .d look afte N ee m 1 24 80 2 after dark 
JJ... o a eyo nf a ge ars ay et al 
Bina, ackson, wa 3a, Mr. is ego Les ‘Now Palmt y 
— ta, Duchess oo an, Princess Royal, Sh Wellington, in eastern been | or round the pipes for them to escape into. The wood- 
mV Mi Cambridge, riaa ican y dman’s re ‘i wis nd must have their imgs e t to Orchids: this may easily he 
| Sebastian, “Gu Marris's Prince of Wales, Captration, ‘and | well kno os nab earliest “inhabitants eg 3 : pest to 8 
Beneke Class : ` Norman, for Mrs. B. e leaves must have been used as thatch, and in ** off trapped in the usual way in * orners, 


= 
£ 
= 
1 1 
ie 
1 
vie 
3 
2 
$ 
£ 
$ 
Fe 
a 
Hii 
5 
B 
® 
2 
te 
4. 
E 
Z 
& 
m 
S 
ny 
8 
8 


such leaves the li r rr 
Princess Royal, Mrs . Bevan, Amy, Lady a familiar object, Why should it not baye sugg rao anenee Gh Mant, Wey are conily doari Om 
; welke Gem, Venus, Juliet, „Seedling, Isabella, Jenny | the idea of forming a a similar ma material by weaving | as well 2 at night, “td ft if not kept 
Greg bern 4 King James; ; 3d, M Willmer, for Began | together th evens fo und in the stalk of the leaf! "e next pest is the small brown ant, which, if 
Janus, Eu Mrs. ‘Lad Pee d Marsh co oe der in time 1 so numerous sa eee to 
Wee anf Lind, P ieee peat dm Juliet, = pen „ Gen, | su rag 3 the consideration of our antiquarian | und Gare 
2 g t i entirely y 


* 


* 


THE 


spider, and other in 


Pines 
rathe 


Let them 
to 33 the establishment 


ich are now 
r drier Teese 
n 


E 
D 

* 
— 


r more 
only, as an excessive 


y 
render the soil too 


GARDENERS’ 


and planted in a close cold frame in a north aspect for 


CHRONICLE. 


which 
any length 3 time, they eei have 


— N — | 
cold w b 


crop hierd ls: 


— exhibit too 


pests ent 
to allow them 
keep them in cheek. M 


2 GARDEN 
ower-garden does 


year. attigi of Ap shania be 
Thermometer not registered above 


e, glass, 


AND SHRUBBERY. 


not possess more 
summer than the. 


however, and are easily destroye ed b y arsenic the State of the Weather at Chiswick daring 
following way: pound some loaf su very fine, and | three weeks or a month until they shall have cicatrised ensuing week, ending 
mix with i l portion of arsenic ; grind the at the base; they shou taken pitin up, 22 838 
ixture on a smooth eet of slate with the face of i b pots, and pl in a close w. Aug. Eas 525 
hammer into an pab aer On so beg the little | frame with a gentle bottom heat. So treated, they ho <M | qe 
creatures ot separate ne naa e arsenic ; make nice plants in a short time, and if kept un Sunday § 735 | a37 
then take some small pieces of white — paper, put as slight Fee during winter, wil fill their pots “abd „„ 
much u h as would lie E a shilling, and place be ready for planting out in April or May. me so Wed. 5 74.9 — 
t near where hend kear frequent. The dose must be | trea t year are now in great e Aat Tithe | oy wl Ra e 
ted when as the eggs left be- | Pink pipings were put in t the ti e recommended, | Satur. 11| 74.7 SSRI it | a 
hind are f afer the old ones are destroyed. The | they now like ours ready for transplanting into | The highest temperature during the above period 
slug, or small snail, which is also destructive to Orchids, S;in o uations they may be plante a and the cowed os toners 
y trap a oak Lettuce leaves place ongst about 4 inches apart in soil e rich s induce a Notices to Correspond ents, 
the pots ; it fi i should be sought for | healthy tie: anure fro old Peena bi „ never recomme A enue The i 
in the evening by candle-light. The red spider, thrips, | 3 shape aan wers very well for this Supa as it The best one, * 2 On taste and Inea, 
d diff of scale, ma be destroyed of fibres, a ye produces a healthy but] high and 11 inches in diameter, flat Aa top, aal TA 
inging first wit m water, and after- peg 2 development of top. hole there large enough to admit od 
wards with a weak solution of tobacco-water and sul- The collate Pal and Paraire from which 
phur. With attention, therefore, all these pests m No time should 1 be 72 — in getting the main crops of naged. You may find a de 3 one of bog ie 
be kept under: persevere constantly until you have | winter Spinach sown in good rich ground, deeply 1845, ot 
entirely exterminated them, and afterwards make all trenched; th = Ë irenchin ram Booxs: T RM. We are not acquainted wi 
t renched ; e operations o ne An owing answers your description. NV C. Ten 6 
received pl do quarantine before they are | sho ed simultaneously, as the soil is (karoh We know of no book which treats on pot R Te 
admitted into the house. Fumi is requisite in left in a loose, uncompresse state ery thick sowing | BORDERS : "High eld. Edge it with rough bela T 
summer and autumn; for the small black or green fly | should be avoided „and the rows should stand about 15 m T gen Pee Pate the ironstone tiles —— 
e on 1 or 18 i for fo apart, to allow a free pas sage between the that £0 — — — to hand, and plant bir dent ai 
p . rows for fo rkin cle. n d gath th cro anyt ing already in pots. Further th — 
U oles a — will also be nen ond t eee Ma a n a 3 ele iro shy we re of M, lera È / 
e 
eo Aaen the ae Un avas with x — is 125 destroyed enh ae sown with Spi 8 3 some value. It is — the vendors of such e tn 
: aa | other er c ti lic adverti t; 
warm water (not hot) regularly every ten days, will E Ai "Celery A is h pant kee : dapted to dae Chloride of rersement ch ‘does not den 8 
vent t all such pests as the scale, red | Succeed any crop which has the ound 1 quality of manure, een 
spider, thrips, &c., and it will at the same time greatly fi T ed Disease: FE. We are unacquainted with this disas, t 
3 > 8 or two or three years, as des possibly arises from insufficient ventilation and too damp 
tend to keep the plants in health and vigour. From Mr plete turning and exposure e soil tafe re any y other atmosphere. The specks are cause — 
Gordon's Pa int urnal of the Hort. Society 4 — ugh the skin. ‘A it of much im — iE 
N p crop is planted in the ground ; the lates st crops of this po 3 
Climate of India —“Feb. 18: At Akbarpore I had should nom be vl Th f pl f ne : L D, Pack it in a box — aly * 4 
thermometers, one to the depth of 4 feet cell e gt Toti drove Selon ted in bram, bu he 
© ththes the other 5 Seok 6. cda shih b both indi. | new rows of oe and doing away with a few old pa ckin ug now „ employed te 7 Bran rad 
> à wever, answers í e very w fret 
cated 76° during the ti time of my sing theair varying ones ever ised e Agr w olanca i exhi 1 i 
Wee surfade tro 705 5. ’ Dew has very aptly apply o old plantations N have pro- D, York, The affection hich has shown ü 
l ‘ee — ‘ie l i tes ed their earliest 2 7 hea the vigorous |. your Grapes has 5 — been traced to its origin. Tt isen. 
A at Dawah, the a bolig is cooled 12° below eral heads from the two-year-old ‘plantation ms will | with the roots, Buon casey are not Paa AA 
the té wag 5 le the services of the older one be dis- disappear after a year or two, provided the roots arè 
e temperatu e air, Pe is ere kept 
I tried again the effects of s Sard Ye atidi 3 ith. f the Cardoon is much in request, warm in n permeable soil, and thoroughly free from stagnant 
d 2 i 3 ter. 
tion, on the sand — dierent —— not 1 able to sities p 8 p y by cut te AREY d 110 9 ani Iuraoved Bunwa Kun: H Curtis and Co. It is a ghd 
do so on the alluv vB y cutting the old flower stems of budding knife, but in no important respect different fom 
of the Artichoke do thi the y k n 
emperature of air, 87°. choke down, thinning the young suckers an that long siree manufactured by Mr. Plum, of 
Hoo Daylight of following morning. trimming them exactly he sam nner as real Lasvnaua Sports: J L M. These phenomena are of constant 
Surface 11055 Cardoons; to m a little rich manure may or see pat 2 f our vol 3 * 
e hd y 52 5 forked in between the plants. As a ra stimulant —— The Misch kor iA is * — remedy, If 
4 1 sie 67 fi si — w o grow particularly fi taken early e hur would have . 
8 n Sand wet 73 Wet, we the dung from the aviaries and poultry-yard | _ vented i 
16 6 do. 74 carefully collected, and mixed with twice its b i f | Names or Prawrs: Mary. Asplenium Filie eng 
[The vegetati on fare fn cluded Clerodendron, Asele ias, | ch : 1, Agrostis vuigaris; 5, Agrostis alba; 2 
Ficus, Terminalia, Vitex, Ver P 1 R °p n se. e heaps of this mi e are rinum; 3, Anthoxanthum odoratum, —I Wd Caiceolaris 
nalia, Vite nica, Potentill ig anun- | over with charcoal-dust, and after lying a year in that ascendens, 1 Barnes: 4, Lapsana communis; 3, Carer it 
culus, and Riccia.] e Journal of Botan tate — en it for almost all kitchen garden crop —.—— 5 — 1 118 e 
nsi are, however, is nece is, as it is bers mixed), 
„ of Operations. nearly as strong as ano, a d rse an over d symbriom — rn 2 ti te or 105 —. a — 
‘or the ensuing week. would be dangerous, After the ground is regularly | Bird’s-foot Trefoil Iti is not cultivated, butit ab ary 
CING DEP i moist temperature, vith —.— and 8 light top-dressing of the mix- other ani ‘i imala.” Te 1 down clo 1 tacoma 
ke p minor, 


cover 


very koe for Car 
family. Tripoli Onions for future transplanting shouid 
w be d Endive for a late crop. Con 


nte 
ted i in a bones they can be p 


— or similar situation on the approach ie winter, 


State of the Mime ge near London, for the week endi 
as observed at the Horticultural Gardens; Clavia. oe 


TAERMOMETER. 


July. B . 
ala 2 2 m AROMETER. 
M: — 
29.973 “29.88 
30,030 | 29.992 


30. 1 


tly high for another 


be taken ‘mines lately 
this temperature, 


m 


3 


N ; fine; cloudy; sli, hi 
E uitry; cloudy,” nene 
t; 


overcast ; ers; cloudy and mild, 
overcast; fine; — ne at night. 
g 


ay fees loud: fine 
1- Very fiue; ele — Je u t night. 

—Very fine; r ; slight rain. 
PP 


T 


* 


injure your drains. Its presence indicates 
as that itis infesting red Clover ors some such plant gg. 
dus ‘ Epidendrite” — a Ate ng specimen of Polyporus 

us, a very curious 

wG 3 — “Give your land + 

hesive aving done that manure it as 

afford. If de can lay your Histeria on ce on 
them rou ere surface 1 5 
be acted o would * 
is good 3 and ahat you kaso oe a 
neath your 7 — If 5 have you must 
OYSTER PLANT: A Corr eee the P 
t tastes ‘ike — oysters. 
TREE Ros Th 


is the consequence e of go 
a — Sr Peas 


white Escholtzia, — Ade Zausc pot 

it 
flower in the > Open i ground in summer, but may not wee 
duri — Plagianthus tasmanicus 9 2 
cultiva ee 
SEEDLING FLOWERS. 4 
Fo pai a — T. Tube short, slender, 


ELARGONIUuSt: upper 
fading into bright violet — the outer 
white, 

I 
size, and shape good ; 
dark shaded crimson haiie to noran 
outer edge, and v 5 


n 
colo w 
size, and oas eee good, texture rather 
etals a litt aa Segura 
prowess: . Your large white seeding 
to recommend it ; it is very coarse, and bac” 
Pings: G B S. 5 „aana 1 12 are 
tolerably & fined colours an, petals. | 
tolerab als and well : 
are very mi 
dull in i 
‘ENTIL A 
if the plants are as 
colours, they wi 
t on the 


han 
ne 

1 * ingular, and 

8 long — 11 Hy broad N 


e 
will be very fine 


OLLEGE, | 


RICULTURA 
CIRENCESTER. 
ion will commence 4 bir p< the 11th of 
New Students are red to attend for 

d 


PHILIP 
ing William-street, Wes 


Kin , West Strand, 
AL AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE, CIREN- 
ESTER. 


3 Royal bedis PRINCE ALBERT 
or THE Councit—Right Hon, Earl BAT HURST. 
posse Parsipent—Right Hon. EARL DUCIE. 
t—John Wilson, F. R. S. E., FE. G. S., &c 


History, Botany, Geo * — Buckman, F. G. S., & o. 
E Natur 25 . Rev. L. C. Edwards, B. 2 
. : John Robinson, M. 
and Practica Enginee ring : . Pi ton, C.E, 
of this 1 * is to provide — * fs course o: 
jestruction as be m seful to the Agriculturist. The 
penefits to be derived froni 'a judiciou s application of nS 
becoming mo 


can be 
piesa — the practical opera ations = husbandry, are 
scattered ach of very few. 
truction is conducted in such a man- 
the prineiples of each 


science, its relations with culture pe JN 5 arn 
and race and their — application show r as 
in the operations of the College farm e e 
and instruction go hand in hand, and the whole is 
r the advantages of collegiate Sone pro 
By order of the Co wes, Secretary. 
London Office, 26, King W. street, West Strand. 


The r Gazette. 
SATURDAY, AUGUST 4, 1849. 
MEETINGS FOR THE 1 FOLLOWING. WEEKS. 
Agricul 


Tosar, Aug. 77 


Day, 2 8 Great — at Dublin oft the Agricul- 
9 tural Imp, Society of Ireland. 
Tuns“ er Ang, : South Devon.—Aug. 8: Furness.—Aug. 11: 
Peterborough.—A' 3: den. 
Ws ire the 3 of those 5 * 
y reports, a Ca 
i to those which have ra mitad. ‘his 
mM. They were 


distinct accounts for the 
of Operations, so that you may be able to 

one, and give all your reporters for the Calendar 

write some- 


ap 


importance 


y 
t on our own or neighbour’ s farm, so 


_ Managemen 
the young and amateur farmer m 


to, and dag requesting the attention of 
out reporters to them as specimens of what 


marks tend t onthe 


: ers be, if 
attainment of his object. 
Mr, Wa 


egg zi wie ; and his ig is 115 remove that 
regarding th y hin- 
its effort, 5 8 the only . cause of 
— —— This object is both desirable, 
Vs believe, attainable: the thing is by no 
possible of attainment, ially in a 
0 


it. 
run, re- 


r. Tnonorp approaches 

ae y trade will not, in the long “hs 
price of agri ural produce, whether 
ied pian emd or not, certainly is not a well- 
tultua] han of offering enco ment to the agri- 
: for the ee sa A obtains 
is Sm on “get a“ effort, and 
th ffort be made 
train. Mr, 


: » and hardly paid its lab air bilge ne 
y paid 1 our bi paying 

W Profit in the occupatio of a 

— economical agriculturist, aoai he 


8 


ts | attain as 


J | many to 


ENT ho 
1 Gre, AND - RE oF FARMIN 
them T Brimar.” * He does not think so ill po tis Wiebe 


too | aP 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE: 


alteration in prices had occurred in the interval; and 
he pe yy sini have landowners trust for their 
rents, trust for their profits, to 

5 1 rather than improved prie es. 
And we aper back we oe ice argum 

of course av 
prices that every oiha person engage 
work of manufacture or production naturally feels, 
but ta suppose that our particular trade is to 

the others 


n exception to is unreasonable ; 
signe that while cotton goods and silks and 
wollen cloths, while iron and porcelain, and every- | we 
thing else made pea ed in this country, 
have been reduced i i pai e-half or even ee 
fourths within thelasthalf century, our own particu 0 
e gears to remain artificially enhan mi 
u 


within parhelio rey little of former 
ats is ann gt and we add—to think that 
arming, of a ts, vants t eg 8 which 
15 waer ‘er iade to and master difti- 
culties, i pei eerie uppose —4 . 
chall brin . . down, and on us thus to put 
forth extra effort to draw from 
profits as before, are we not thus merely subjected 
to the same pressure which has Sona unremittingly 
cotton manufac- 


ast n 
by its rough education, kai not o 
ee of their wares, but perfected 
and strengthened them e ely again 
oie er competition far ary serious than that of xi 
the world beside. What is there in agricultu 
wiih shall disable it in the face of trials no —— 
than those which other trades have already with- 
m 


ntrary, pr 
sels so "that 11 n rewards a 
Sealy 2 extr aordinary exertions ? 
Our opinion is simply ei; an 3 is apera on 
f | the experience of several years, t n work as 
hard and skill as great shall have been applied to 


the business of Pg farmer as to that of any shop- 
eeper, merc or manufacturer 1 and not 
till then, may rh expect returns as large. Is there 


say 1000“. invested in his business, 


as a ore our of peace s wherein 
to end their days? We do 

is not 1 Mei to very many, t 
m it is a serious business, a har 
anxious N a failure, oo notw 8 all 
their efforts; and are there n 
failure in other trades as 
us Pena at this? Ambitio 
will ta 


more than any other, to possess an am 
extra labour 25 meet an extra spin 
And it a car 


the —— tured 8 
ordin 125 


has 
attention now, but how much more might be 
e other raw materials of th ra 


out r doors, they were 

economy 

But leaving the * eget steps of their manu- 
of the goods after 


the sights and lessons of the week, are we any 

the better able to compete with the ‘foreigner 1” 
* no one could answer; 80 that, after an explosi 
ation the “ wieked and ini — 


5 law,” which has . us — — this 2 
ject 


the subject dropped. But sho rtly t 
questioner, we think, a if supplied, the the answer, 
so far as he was hims elf e ra 
bad replaced caine 


and among 
teks were talked Py 
f co had lost 


we 
ractice | ; 


eir grain, an 


3 poe cc nya gen 


h, on farm resources 
s thoughtlossness or idleness permits in 
is 3A 


some which, not — a elded enough to 
“se e timately g * fr 
of rats 


ene 
to it's a hea fall 

grievous to 
ya maintenance of price, but just 
in the matter; 


us who pro 
consider the 23 of the Nation in 


st 
armers es who have borne, un 3 


higher pert k years gone 


We do 
neral application ee this 
urge that their destructi 


Mr. 8 an 
correspon “P.” who at the 
attention vp 5 readers to chis subje ect, that farmers, 
or rather the agricultural interest generally, have 

means 


t instances enough of | per 


ess. prea 


£ aae e 


untried, skill uncultivated, and 3 unemplo ed, 
ide— der 0 Ex. 


wide to ower p a hopeless 
It would be strange indeed iculture, the art 
e| of all the sciences, a business which ot so 
Yom as living b d support, were unable to 
withstand a slighter pinch of difficulty than that 
which other trades, wi ce, in Bri 
han a> ve overcome trium tl 


phantly. 
only add, this subject has another side—to 
be e hereafter 


FARM ACCOUNT! 
Tue Agricultural Gassie of the 7000 June contains 
discussion the London 
e Uses o 


rming 
orse power i 6d. per qr. Mr. M: 
not pace: that corn 3 be threshed at the above ay 
and estimates the d labour at 


charging coals and labour, and giving the engine credit 
for all work performed, , me to constitute a 
bled account, and to be very unfair towards the 


3 certain number of horses to 
keeps no more than is requisite 
. the 


-n farmer 
the tillage, 
to do the work in a Tu ‘br 
ear there occurs a varying num upon w 
the mar cannot be employed at 1 bes, by reason 
of rain, frost, or snow, &c., an are then 
: employed at peste ge chaf-cutting, 40 9 
nl bo oe many farms, in many coun’ ties, I have seen the 


f| without — with the ti lage operations ; if the 
land is not in a fit state to work you cannot go upon we 


in your acco might be pear 
at the very work which is then als done eA the steam- 


He nk nk we ty el 


ormed 
they were mim An h or were not required to be ; 
the fields. 


or hinge eld told of rg many sta 5 
one-fourth the 


— iiti, 
accounts, — Taat i hover 
* 


$ * 


THE AGRICU tA AL GAZETTE. 


itis common to hear 


ere 
of the same soil, of different . of cultur 
pend on accounts. eep your accounts in 
one man ; Grass is more profitable than t tillage ; $ peer 
them ina different method, and the contrary shall b 
1 


p t 
urses, of different applications 
„ de- | we 
land 


se of the Con- 


came to 
comparing thes 
e | addition to the advantage England Poss in stoc 


— 

wg ah we we. sonia that for half a century, 

anten 3 the mode of 
— 


m 
* even in Zn time 
they they parlay . the art of “ cooking ac 


CONTINENTAL ARMOU Dee 
ing, 
in England for ite 


ee market in 

P 92 on 22 — great plain of 

Belgium, reds we traversed as a dis- 
d 


that — wean has a 


Rg 


dw 
niy wt patchy. 
weeds were to be seen, rome pt. } a few in the W 
Two Va at most, were used in 


a few 


cattle of a black and white 


y | ing this ng a subject in the ec 


r | ascertaini big the sex 


e left asala the fields, as 

reat plain of De Aixa. „Chapelle, we — ia 
p n for 30 
. here than in Belgium, t 


evident, to pee a pA fertility of ie 
some substitute for stock, 


h 
e careful collection 
tion of the liguid and solid fæces of 
away in this country, 
d increasi 


is taken he a 
spread Soia: 


on becoming quite cold. D. 

Sex of Fouliry.— oak correspondent, July 21st, pee 
r | for information, and at the h 
| resting fac 
non 


e | eggs 


2 55 
and preservation of the liquid and Prete manures to b 
er towns and 3 4 poset | with 
bour and higher, 


1 52 able to do—for himself and 


family. Thomas C. ee, 
wW 


me Corresponen 
on — Lusor a. Ve 8.5 a lat 
inquiries, under the ere site, Concern: 
my of pou 
ves instances of the — possibilty 
of the forthcoming embryo 


Sex of P 


a 


“S, 


are, in Aana illiterate quacks, 
rather meer ish than reveal their 
pa 


97 80 


male, 3 nd 
Šas 


e 


are so much alike, the 5 

uinea regen k as to rA disti tinguishable only 
by an . careful examination, secundum 

With regard t 


of the y pected 
against the light, render the latter 8 unmistakable; ; 
with e former (the sex of the embryo 


nes, as containing co Cer tainly: is is ee infallible, 
but coupled with the 8 more ¢ 
| knowi 


n 
casion, who ben efictal use of pounded 

clam or oyster shells, I forgot to mention that the 

not altered in their co 

&e., but much i „ be and 

more friable after abate 2 by putting them into 

clear fire, and when red hot 


00 arlance, and agree only where they are 

copied from one another, ape Fite ras result of 

the writer’s own rr V. 81 ppeals to your 
nt‘ D. S. E ebe; pointed | out in a former 


d foreign 5 es that in | seed be 
k 


a less | confe 
wi 


an-hau 
e rn a 


i 
of 


No theory 
— this ; it would — far better to 


male 


take en out, to be pounded | b 
des 


smut, but that in spite of 
pea often affected with 


ean 


or 1 . it littering i in us . 8 

of the disease y t promügud 
— or 

ok 3 oe re L. — 
— Lou observe ma; baro 


Kobi 12 as at ae food. It is 


— 
2 
i=) 
Cus 
7 
8 


ause, and see whether 3 

— to change their present plan or n 

e decision of horses especially, and T a heart 
l burst of i 

otive 


t that out 


n, is cho the 2 fe 
be 5 a slight e g or 
will be the only way of giving satisfaction oa 


co! 
volume 9 ce er tl pted 
ining male 8 with wees embryos. 
(See Nee 25, me Sower 08.) More recently, in 
‘Ornamental Poultry,” Fd iniae: seg published, with 
the exception of the “ Farmers’ Dictionary j 
leted, and which I have 8 seen. 


in your paper o 
Ys 


Ber: 
Wheat. ona you or any of your 
yi as to the disease which 


pro 


teenth of the 
àt, one-twentieth of m 
small co 


aoe | — it with 
much more 


— 
ct 


t| Again, a 
ee of hay, 


sure ver 


bers at large. I . — ely hope this 1 
serious consideration of the council, pear ‘ 
y shortly we Bass 


—1 


atthe market value, e e are 


l eat 
— if we val 
n sixpence, the butter must cst more 
sell for. I therefore Faeroe aier: 


no more, 


be prevent 
me : A hs Es 0 r that — 
us in preparing m 


in relative value of hay, 


d by the | — 


p tons 
one very partial 
2 suffered from per Ib. for the 


energy, may pa — 
spirit and for a * o eapital, one a throug 
tillage in all its The fear 


un 
e 
83 

ie 

i 

1i 


00 ieties, 
TURAL SOCIETY. ae ans JULY 31, 


Tux 12th 


what 
: — en 


R 


— y 
adds z repairing to California and 
—— 


FE 


— AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
3 taral Society at — 
t aceruing to 


meetings of 


other York, and Nor 


trial he . a fi ying fi — = 
i *P2 —_ of his — vions trials w — re still — i 


as naturally o 
1 Ploughing, and it was in a condition to — it still 
s 3 


the work is 
„de- attempting es to find soil of this-sort it is lan hon om, however, 
can 


rved a pre lass of stock that e get a aw trial; stony and t soils 
bring such a et of exhibitors into competition, it rary e their ition in diffevesit pox — of a 
is * to p this g coe prevents just discrimination of 


in | have been given by 
to the exhibitors of — — to 0 the visitors 


tory to th 


dormant, whic ht | 
the — of ihe bee strength), 
large amount of labo 


soil for . purposes will sah well 


8 


has 
2 of the mame This i i 
d e 


2 Sok ene: improvements. Upon 


8 


E ter 


spectators, ‘The last but not least 
was the 


places a at the disposal of the judges 2 vr to be 8 little prae costs little, and is, in many 

imple w r | capable of doing the work of an —— searifier. To 

cl a it i implement for in 
which show the greatest improvements at the t stubbles for autumn sowing or fallowing. It has an 
meeting. m in being able to be lifted out of work in turn- 
implemenis in the yar i by pressing the 
judges of Hill's paring plough could not be tested uponstubble land, 
Bainesse, Catterick ur e f „several very 
Rai ; 1 wers of rain fell, which materially i 2 wi 
Mr. Bourne, Civil Engineer, Lee subsequent or 
Ki 


jan harrows ere used, 
but none of them were capab 3 of working, 3 to 


the glutinous nature of the s which caused them 


to clog. The competitors were, Mr. Stratton, Bristol; 
Kearsley, Ripon; Mr. 


construction of these im- 
plements is now well known; the principle points of 


ials | difference in them is i ied length of teeth, the form of 


axle or or round), — method of elevating 2 
2 nd the number of ro Mr. Stratton and 
rosskill — both —— 5 prizes from Foy eval 
rv gricultural Society. Mr. Stratton has three parallel 
1 on which spiked wheels are fixed; Mr. Crosskill 
as a 


aring the has also three axles . Crosskill’s machine has lo 
clod-crusher, showing its i teeth upon a round axle; Mr. Stratton’s has 
the Norwegian ; ook and a square axle. The dora rmer has the advantage in 
and hedgehog hide, to the inaionating pip | working deeper than the + ayin we the round axle 
hoe, is at any time w- | lessens the oe ~ K upon soil w 
ever, as thi contains stones. tratton N 


e 
seven —.— it ors 
d 1. Mr. Gascoigne, ‘Wetherby (Swing). 
2. Mr. Stead, Gateforth (One w 
nell, 


3. y 

4. Mr, Busby, Bedal 
5. . 

z à ka D 


‘The ‘depth of ‘ploughing was 
Mr > 


minimum. 
1 


TIN fine edge, even seam, — sige fron aoa 
: Barats 's J. he , Plough whi whith was 
in manuf: 


Mr. Meyneli ell Sone or 
b HE ta t gs —4 ag not clone the 


The Sootch p 


ugh, 
a of "the . and his 3 of his implemen 


we were surprised at 


of the soil, er 


jan e 
ys prin: 1 is demonstrated 
and light ploughs. not only 


Dis ae.’ K 


? | ducing 


les 
ing features, Each p 
s 15 e at are if 1 yg at the depth 
with 


ua strong rp ll the ad tage A 
| who was de 
before, s 1o “plough dep aa 


f | patent o 


of using the 
by which the manufacture of his clod-erusher 
o him. In this trial the short teeth had the advan- 
n the state of ground, however, was such that no 
e would use the implement upon it in farm- 
ion could be come 


ever, only half of an ordinary he 
ing of oo cylinders clean each other ; the cylinders fix into 


the framework of his scarifier, and Koai lifted out of 


this obtained the 


is k Rei v 
two horses. This implement, we are i to think, 
does its work effectually, and 


o. | Construction of an; 8 
harro have had year perience of, 
and it would be tto to 2 
e purpose it is professedly : kman. 
JEY Mr. Barratt’s harrow is very good. Mr, Kirk- 
8 well, and in the 
porr simple and d 


492 


in DRILLS, 
ils drill and tw mbined, 


. 


. Cross row . 
worked as e 
admit. It cannot be too much 
who sow Wheat upon Clover-stubble or after depastu 
usby also i 


ine * 


and 1 drew atte rr 

s horse-hoe Mr. B — 3 ‘exhibited, as well a 
ents from recognise makers Mr. 

ed a very . collection 
shi achines, 


Garrett’ 
many 0 — implem 
Crosskill, as gona exhibit 
of well assorte ied 


BR 
8.8 


Indeed, after four years’ use o 


0 


0 
original cart we er ee, it as nearly as may be the ne 
carts. 


with. This implement to too 
is a very small price, 3 — ably “adapted rae ithe 
farmer who cannot hase 
L EXHIBITION OF eee oe July 
d was opened to the public 


throughout the e on payment of ls. Very fe 

vailed themse the a until afternoon, | th 
when the eres ame numerous. The weather 
was as avontade a as could ti 
ny mee tiog, which ‘had b bee 
nce more became 


cam ENGrnzs the — oy awarded to a petite 
bat a 5 perfect specimen of machinery, by E. B. 
3 pales sa e is of a novel 
‘both portable a aoe ee yh During 
and amused by 

show en 


ing 

the day the multitudes were 
which it caree “over rhe 
the een ues, and ing the of 
ns with much ae y Where * ground 


adequate, and a 

wheel to get it — tof 2 difficulty. e can 
be worked from 4 to 7 horse power, yet it is only half 
mmonly exhibited of the same 


quires no other fly-wheel — those on the “hind — 
which act also as els when travelling. 


engine 

price 75/. sont e (Leeds) engine is of simple 
and si construction. Price 1 

i dee ä tried and work done were as 

ed maa Ashton, 3 oo 


eee: 
Mr. „ sjái Sher 
Mr. Crosskill, not wo rked, Having been! aaa by Railay, 
Mr. Darkar 8 
Barrett and Exall. 11 a a 0 
Do. 33 4 


Barr are a nd Exall 


81 min. 45 sec. 


20 sheaves. 
a pi + 


4 ao 


2 horses 
2 hor: 


” ” 


a large | ear 
oroughly ee as by the 

0 of ‘hat machines, corn-dressers, 
Woh &e., was not timed, 
reference to the general show of implemen 

the time at which our parcel must be Se a 
precludes us from giving any other than a few general 
remarks, Raps num e 


ibited an excellent selection, 
* 


vet w. 


wo 
a foe 4 


Rs throwing their chaff- “engine out o 
Hor 


his 
and axles, = 
ess; 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


one or two — novelties — tried. and newly i invented drills 


were 


were his thigh’ 


coaching st ne 


hire 

5 as end. rs show pel — shake its 
nags w merous n 
tion of horse should | be lik 


horses are 
but little chance 


second and thir 


dike hes w 
rs else (back, “neck, “shoul i e abantar ei 


00 

egs are, perhaps, 
oe ** 
always call for this 
la 


ere n 


lers w that, u Yang 
re perfection in the Yorkshire show, they trs 
and this anticipation it is that e 

ing shown. 


Ie 
IMPLE 
8 HAATI e Bus 
o., N. 
| Gene ral Purpos 
ht land ! in every 8 * 
Light Ploughs—Ist, Busby 


MENTS.—AWARD OF PRIZES. 
sby, 5. ; 


ses—Ist, Busby, the same plough as on the 
ey E. 2. 
2d, Barrett, Ashton, 


zag do. 
Light feet ws—lst, peg roses: 
Sub: bsoil Pulveri * Kir 
rs and iat eon 57. ; 2d, Kirkwood, 


ill and Co., 27. 


Sir ms mast 

To Barrett, Ashton, Se Co., for their mill for bruising 
Beans. Barley, and Lins: N. 

10 Barrett, Exall, — N for their two-horse threshing 
machine, 5l. ; to the same, 
silver m medal. 

Pe E. Hill and Co., for their improved hurdle for 2 
n the ridge, and their general assortment o 


eep off Turnips on 


To Messrs. n and Chandler, for their * ap- 
e same, for their sack-holde er, 10s 


Mess an 

to prevent acc 

e-hoe— Ist, to Mr, Busby yes — Garrett's hoe, 

Ciod. roller—To Mr. Cro skill, silver medal. 

To Mr. Crosekill, for his Potato washer, II.; to the same, for 
broad cart manure drill, .; to the pias “ee his wheels 


To Barrett, Ashton, and Co., for dressing-machine, II.; 
the same, E cored AR humbler, 
To Mr. Meynell, for his Turnip-cutter, for both cattle and 
sheep, 
Te Mr. 1 for his 8 108. 
To Mr. Gre r his different 3 of wire fencing, II. 
To Mr, Nelson: he general — rtments of foreseps, 10s, 
To Smith and Co., Stamford, — met slay- maker, 37, 
o Mr, Harland, for his s one-horse cart, 31. 
Sir George Caley, for his one-row drop drill, silver medal. 


al, 
Mr. Stratton, — his liquid as cart, 20. 
Mr. Crabtree, for rat traps, 
Mr. E. B. Wil — for steam e, 20l. 
Barrett and Ashton, for four- horso threshing-machine, ae 
3 or Srock.— The yard was crowde 
early hour to witness what is decidedly the best 5 
bition of £ Stock this Society has ever ha n pigs, 
indee: 


metr 
2d, Barrett, Ashton, and 


for their two-horse gearing, 3l, and 8 


ra 
Mr. Clayton, for his tile-making machine, ‘101, and silver 


have never yet b 
fir 
at 
len Harrows—Ist, Barrett, Ashton, and Co., for their zig- M 
a 


pigs exhibited were several of the 
at Yor 
othe 
s 


y good and bers colts bein 
HE SHEEP Crass wa 


fat 
and — — also, were such as 
assed, Mr. 
st and We — sof the Royal Agricultural Societ 
York las was he not at Norwich 
—. d) was 


Among the 
1 


h was situated in 
the sou * side of ‘ae 


nths, were in the judgment ring 


—— ‘ground, whic 
und on 


NCIL 


it has been the best ever kuown ia ‘any place, pias 


times will best — ie —— of — W : 
In = 838, at York, the 
eeds 
Northallerton 


s.. 


vo K * 
Doncaster ae 
Richmond 
Beverley 
Wakefield ... 
1847 „ Scarboro ... 
— iy a erl 


rams i cheapn 
to which — 2 R. has ded “this valuable invention, 
without trenching at om upon its utilit ae 3 appa- 
ratus on as upon many occ ived 
prizes; the price at which it is now * bigs ik it within 
anybody’s reach. opinion o 


ere 


power 
Mr. Richmond's machine W. 
has carried away the pa About this and all the 
other im implemen firm, 
visible t workmanshi 
| moderate price. The root-washer 
| by this firm is 2 and in a gg a and 
— agg durable, 


ria i sips, 


sack 
ted by Gilbert, with wheels, and the rick ventilator — en as a 
show, Freeman 


of ( Gillett, exhibited 
oy 


to refer to the trials 
Busby’s stand. To it 


to save us any allusion 
it his choice collection of p 


are |a 
P | fatness 


cost, | th 
We have merely | Martin, e: 
to Mr. this palit af Victory was hard to wi th 
iogh, | as many friends as the The sa 


1849 „ 78 
In 1848 the ! siti ern; with 2 Royal 
and no entries are 


as bee 
ae 3 bull a 1) is a are fine animai belonging 
orkshire The 


path . weld W not for his lameness, » 
from his hind quarters, is scar inferi 
is meeting was the yearling heifers Cheesy . 
lot four or five are co he priz 
ae of Mr, Wilson is regcomp iv erase y” drr en 
| perfections. th, as usual, both in his 
33 and others, maintain — ‘his supreni — cows, 
| We are glad to find another of our old breeders, Mr. 
Wiley, maintaining his ancient fame ; his fat cow was 

specimen of size and quality, symmetry as well as 


The show of Were. — a not so numerous in 
some of t t hav xp 
holder | Y The . for Arto 8 
rhaps art 


xeepted ; these two are first 


same two 


whic m i detracts | 


| 


5 


on 
rate horses, and | priz 
second having 
horses 


h 
— — in 3 Er of 
the arh ons 
5 on 8 T a 


k were 
The judges ‘of eee os ie 


Pigs a a j Jed : 
C. Smith, do, do. orobili joast 
Burley, p Sa Hach dag Bore 
Smith, Humberton, Borobridge ; w 
Borobridge. 


H 
Class 1. os a — 
a! + i 

Hi L, Maynar kes, Farnley Hall, Otley, 


Ric 
to Mr. a es 
or 


lass 
having 


| E 
184 
9.] 
T 
H 
E 
A 
G 
R 
ICU 
L 
T 
U 
R 
A 
L 
G 
> 
Z 
E 
T 
T 
E 
493 


. 
to the 
a 
arquis of 
of 
aad 
ndor 
te) new 
* 
— 
»W 
yn. 
yar 
F 
000 
k, 
„8 
toc 
ke 
Cl 
Pig, n 
pos 
—— 
d 
ry dry, but 
still 
opi 
have 
done 
be 
tter 
than 


E 
KA 
5 
edie 
2o 
5 ~ T 
ae ven 
1. F asti 
* . n. an 
Mr 9. poe y D 
a 5 ie 
1 : th ior 2 175 oe 
om 15 iar 8 Ps 
Joba ; For E A ay 
Í> 8 fe 
* mc ie 8 . st priz fl 
En ‘6 eh aa "es 2 ize st 
X. 1 Fo ee 1 for 1 pt — 
T moe sb Se Ki pen 
me Mi ort te use A tee to fo 8 m 
“a ra ork, ars on ome 0 
— ae ce fo y agos 34 i bea aths 
iS jas Sow 5 Mato or L al 2 8 Over 0 
2 othe ey, Ben a of Ram— 72 i 2 . 
Ke e Walm RTE ; i Gh N j * ‘a 55 ls 
= ; : Eo e m ` ve 
2 Bailso “i a et, ? A ndo és: 1 seks o id riz 
18 the pen ot 5 32 1 pe igi : vite ta, to. 
7 Seth sey, Rude s— st — Sti ju ae the Best 
: K . vz * p men 3 “ge F; 2 
r. to Mr. „ s d r 11 0 g 8 Hs — t t 
"H, 3 — — 50 = 201, to t “te 2d mi 
i zee =o ° | ation ot the al Bas Me 
1 d, a 0 e n i r Į e 1 1 e r. 
i aot uring 5 „ 10 birdie 5 U * iy 5 
ae ot 12 rhs sl = ihc 8 . ac 
20 a y — a bo N to D hy o s vid 
ae M pero idling M $ i for 24 E Mi D 
erp 2d . gere 2 is f mt — $ e for © s f Sorte g 115 Pig * * 
tov — „G te 1 — * 2d. — ds 92 z d, ph 93 rs niy 8, f gies, 
„Eor mirang ök se eä—1s hii tp 5 to ners. — giv ta on 1 Jo „B 
12 ds; or the sy vie; ka 1 W. Du s r ale, Kel 9 85 te 10 p 
125 5 — D oe sm an st p aa . et 105 — TE = 90 litte 0 b ley 
1 2 MM epee eath si * ey. Frp Ssi dding a 5 Hei at r Ext =: ind tees 
aie 1 E. ae ze ng, ger D prio m 5 RES 4 e 
om 1. yd cg ** . re oii i 6 ne: a GC ley ; com T Ne K s; 
to i th “Yet rizo, 6 Enon ekai rton, n = al ize to Mr 2d, e ot exe 15 
Young e r Wathore z R sf — W. Ja — n ita hn as 1 ck, d E 1 
e y — 1 8 5 z : R eeds, for 5 th : d ge, Ste: ta 8 . P ay 
— , * as ic 1 lion f of at pi —— e st ren pasta je AR tagha = pe r = s av 
as 5 De eon t Mil Ia Sag res nn, — und ' tu suitat ar iff, = Ww ay ie requ pe 
y i aa coman 11 Tose nd or 7 5 TON of n) wi ae et d 
= 15 pal Josep 8 gi s Shy oo ils “for ae ~ io 
t Bi 101 H 0 8, m m t r aa — t sted ny e o Y, Le re y tle n 
J — Mr. Stan oe ; 2 eph Na 1. ilk ich, dite per a e p 10 — irby, £ ed om, s o o 
N ay M A ai cana 2d, E N e for II a hare, 2 un and th Hegi p y, s; 1 15 „No e a 75 dey, 
a rte 7 $ 78155 sil, d. ta p for Ha 00 ia raano, t t e » S ; © pes 2 bet 
E ar a c rs— 5155 st ppli l Tur — he “had ra 0 2 25 e | a p Te = 
2 27 th — Satya — Ri 50., 1 lor, Chay — t os Turi 010 5 b jeld o t we d, ith, | 4 s that. Fa 
to 5 ohn Ro nsor meh st 0 Ly =e ri : — i rb t aes apn bly exp 
d om be na 0 85 . h a an 1. e ark oper re) y. 0 s of dae at the a ro 
tolr, Mr. Ns 1 to 0 Fe Selb pris 25 fue a En Minn ns „Th M — * ne 
TE th M amab 7 0 tag a sel- — sa 1 5 eae ir te ae f Nr so 
George b cat 5 2 “gt ae pn | bow manag at ae pt Pai ions, 0 sk; Eee x 3 
ea W : —.— ptt Sila 9 50 sci — ea : gen tore acre 0 ied wa st — aia 7 p wil 1 and 
= Den cite ‘or Cardi sa hed — — p e n hea i rd re 7 1 5 — g. is — a mor 
A Fort ert Goodi a 1158 Yi ad g z 2 Si rte = an and u 1 „ b x mec A 10 re 
<n : “3 ai, enon Fos ul sae sf P size P at 10 1 ‘the heir ef iy 2 6 4 f th ie cute — very * = 
to $ 8 head, Go neon * —— ; ded 2 Ta dr i be — 3 ewt. — as cutting = te o been ndt Hy 
1515 “i z nson, Pa = ilham sang 1 al; 1 7 5 — r ene of 8 5 ewt. supe ho corn e erop 8 or Tat good yt tistact mich 
eg bo os 3e a . im G z 5 5 nips 5 . 155 l 155 ial ee 2 ace 5 ce 5 
2 85 5 hed aman a u Gran 17 2 ee oe = an i? al dre * =, ur SE ome G 14 ned as ce th ‘a whol 
8 A ae Oele se ae >. d ' r s em fe t t: bas pr 
se Ae aii agh _— ango 0 Pips e aW rere a x; — bd s TE I ow 7 Zu ; P "The 
10 r — hee st A moor re ee ma r wi he A Wut ng repa = 2 red 01 a . — | oads, x ve p tee ie i its alt R da e TR — 
oe r Wi tt p Sear F and E Aoh aa — tim th feces of 10 — Poe hate er ad a ag of 1 ry os hed. lye 11 hat 13 
= ar om m te tha 2 5 e e „ h now 5 re have been 
=n Me i 0 y ce -a he ie =a Ba Po ur ton nly as ave at they 
tr, p — "e y arm, 2 idge, 1 an 2 soft ime ra vac Se ar i in Eoin and clean ë late, seed, 1 a ‘ on 
ane ià — aoe ye con or fo is 1 eys p ng have l have e aron e op ae’ hout | aos dite a bo 8. in he 3 oo infi we 
. a Fone a ugi Lee a r 34 „ ao a > from e e 1 n for h 2 thes fi over & a Whe Lay ce showe 5 eri seat 
on + bes hns g 15 : s Didie 2 me ap, pp ge “aa how i bare i clay mures join 5 eat, T n weed hae o 
oie 51 fee o —— oul i mc a re Sie gage nn oi een be ay is i ch on a “ae : ing Te * te 3 
poo to F. z n r- hu for Di oe ild ; be W sun risi 7 * 11. se ext, wi 3 ne amur Sey — (ara own ery lange 
5 se Br n Dipper, 2 se bes wane 3 ro or nd ah 5 n ey ts eth G aban 
aoe _ pins D ld ti ior 1 d. „ 5L ae Ibs. eis 8s say Si 5 abs. . aun rap a ga * 
A E pam =o 0 n aa 2 „ . the ion. Ev ate ati 95 fa — * Cc — d abou — appeara aoe * 
70. th 3 . gham 7 p ., e d od 5 0 per Ba 42 = A d ee d wor ins, C ea = 
s lep ae arao 1 on DA 15 on vrs Sees eco sae oe iy RE is ae eae: 15 of ee got En 28 5 * 
a ac =e oa 225 a0 ea ee E en a 4 oe 85 a 73 ae 
by see 7 g feed st 1 : For rh T ca 5 a a and rome a sr. o ore ae — r bral el 
os 1 185 1 5 man = 5 aay 5 aise 15 Py — — 
“ths : hal W 18 ait g g— a, sal By 8 9 used T — ce note 17 p Wes Pani ce n m th gh at part, 8 an 
A —— Pe G ? 10 gi ipe ae h bree ti rot, A E 1 0 h 1b e rt d 
= e ke ‘tors — g Fi Heys 1 vag reparat 8 to u — u y DF h s for Vedia . Lane, 5 10 hinni piee , and 
a ae : : a ro s edic of gag Tur 2 ota t " oF 
“i E 2 n — 8 — 1 di H t — oe Sat ‘and sept f — r rs is ne ur- ii a i ate fag 15 N ch, 
* werk {he b gto, in iz h e ti d == ont —— t f a ded gag 
X a * n, Hen dj Bi —.— e, Ti 55 woke an pur ee P it =e od one g. E J 3 yeu ou les 0 eof — 
ee 0 a ey 24, either Thi X e | fo nds a y ye 3 . el 2 3 en e t . You es bg 1275 . Sue 
met k; fay Smit a it — p st — ae seat a ó =a by uE 0 mon e T, u t d es t 
p = e 15 0 a : = =a 5 . : 
hay, F. t prize, fo 8 a 5 in 2 oe 5 re e h ouid. 4 w ae i ater, aes A ei D hey A ld aie hi te 
8. — De 25 gto: oe l cat ir 1558 ae 2 uf = 15 5 ae a 5 1725 j at tl ese * d dee 
; „ ‘ERI 1 oe 8 ê ill 1 m ate = ec fi a fea Pig a S r, ic a * had b cham ichu 23 Vi > am T r Be ing 
Leeds ; t priz 2 si . t pri y R a q li — ave me st xs, on = io - n of V ag 
smali h ths bet è cake ; 0 prizo, z : ra 5 — 9 ppi Ss p “iong + 4 ‘ayo Nowin ges — e -wte prim 
x “iam j ras! % 225 . ed in gu ma impr s for s 0 — = te 8 ington’ o T nts r fed ; 
REN i i ef 10 se 2 er J4 EE 50 IT a RT = cee 9 5 55 wt 125 
5 : e VES 5 . i a 1 5 — io we nak $ So ae ra wie - a 
pages St rh Bes Be t . 1 and 0, u th oul a p de for 4 a u on eu peen e ii ub 
Se e homas gc i np = — 5 dh ot ys ing oi ild, i pr de ey $ ing 12 Passa Oya des Ta very Petm . —. ne — 
. 0 l ti 3 i a a * L N 
Wick E or u a J. omas ii sages bby; Fa ee ee e — ba venti a aes —— Mn o a 
. ° x 85 2 £ . oF of ae 85 es a fiel “one 25 H 10 ENE rate. — n rg 0 ana ie 
5 8 naen Moo of Pigs 25 1 pr at n gst a Tarni e ci hus 5 Ra ioe and $ eb cen 
i ei ur w 
i . — er Th, t0 18 8 Al 4 of s — td ri pee = ostor s) a Sa its 
E » 7 e 3 jood p3 : a 15 aie rie ted e rip tape and ‘Tart f 15 e ts ge p: h ne alia of g> 5 
| ao SS = 12 a zs ine = 5 1 p 5 5 wy 5 ea ` 
7 ið, smani Gil — a t. 2d, 15 s R 15 <b Pa f nN fi — ae EE aide s vin a . 
amt me ae — J 5 ae 8 ase: À te w g e sle bus wih 
zion i a sarc Da aN th 5 n == 1 a N cen sa are 22 banin thing 
ge’ 8 h ere | ng sh he oa O! ri . afta 
Se . ae bree Er yp EES =e Fink 2 i 155 = 3 Se inja * 275 ‘ha o pro erer 
lesin, 2h to ane = 1l, to vrig p al 0 st à h month al 8 — 5 ais ey iw, og," i my — a rai sb he ry apita] 15 
— e ao +8. ing aan ge — the the 3 ne 8 5 Ek porh» be — com , men ‘ We — + — 4 . “ae r in 
1 or the M. Ss N t, 1 vm „ me e = B at, “ae Bet 0 e vogte TA Te be Ly. th * al . 
— enry ¥ Le Ly a, — of oth ii ary fag ‘A — oti — are e oe bhag Pon dag paar — al — 
oe 1 a —— d hs oe: . e Te ee A 
old— shire d erde t a 2 — ag me i wc ai aoe an y 2 . 
the bent en 4, — an g i ol ci agi ual prie er han Fr ree ‘sts 2 e eng i S E es =o F 17 5 
1s — re Pie Ha 8 = 9 cro, Serena T chi 105 in . by ee — 1 eee n ti n t 4 t to 8 —+ 
3 z 11 A — we Fe See — sy ipai e ct the so i —— ou regret i 
155 n N ays t, 1 1 8: d e ine hi a „ rious th sp S le n a low 
G ee Bs Chad- — * ee bbi am = : d ote et ford up 9 the ¢ ld 2 
. 5 PE eeds; 2 at neo, — re ar oh tyin a een os wi 2 ep — "ik abo yo nabio 
5 * Š 3 wry so tio ae Er e los See: seem, esp extent 4 yey - my * itl I 3 > 
; 2d oe 1a, on bata ng cere ao 4 "prie $ * get 5 Ee ae t, code man to 110 ng roota 
wot 85 i s= 2 5 — 5 ey + oe — 2 — = 10 =e. = 
a stor t „ 1 a 0 0 T 8 i e w 
aer Fane be e ae he 4 oon oy pa eas us was 1 e a sale =e s 
re T ns in — Sages ve ex “be ane pen eve 5 Lege 1 ter, — —— the. 
ata R 0 to Som 0 ime e apas Bie in r. ve a cme —— 
m song to w Sa 2 BE L ies h g e. 5 
g her mnths g un E ing to ing ir . se mos ad a see 5 to ng — 
. T 2d * d. ba! 82 * a 25 fee 8 ree 8 mm pro lig ' 
owe Ouse ict h series ndt x 805 y ge vet c *. meg 2 bb ad ood bal 
— e of 8 ae pla 5 a dhe fog bo a *. Bh P ma ch a 5 the 
8, xe Id seas d but — mae ne nec mg e 12 seta es qua > es i in, diet, 5 i 
— wan ona Ti 5 cut ef TE s 3 55 ; —.— 2 th 8 ul the mme 2 5 
n ia ro 15 abe co a oe thy ys — baat = me £ soci i ra — 
ie ge F e K See re ne y pin ather, a" tt 1 7 nt an 850 to f cane 
ee . — 41 oie — they sh s 7 r higher 8 ere, rare = =D hy — y want Tom an 
15 1 7 P rig == es a a w, thoe erf a large ny — — ris a 
e í fi eye $ do 1 ` arge ac m the 
2 . Jul; À sin rg er F than u onam l, ana E a h cou of ich * . 
d 2 z 3 eat — meee 7 mi ut e e abba TS 
eae races m 8 7 = 2 ae z t as : 
t e at et 
Ml quantity e 3 r see an EEE y of * ae . A & e clear aS 
ki 1 D å dod Bat 8 Ee 
- li e -ar * D. Thi 2m chy 5 real 
nd: bio oe e waer E Thistle H yola t 7 * s by a 
E . — f a = rae a p 
y time on * naa: ae a d aed 8 30. ee 
ru = ey ana nevon * 4 ites 5 — aa au ot a of 22 
* } c À jo 8 0 e e over, 73 8 8 trae 
eet i PP a t iar 1 in 9; Re Pa — 
toe never cht = sfori 1 11 ai 
or r vo ae 2 cats S A 10 * A — 
ey soa ibe! arf 1 LY “a A c prsa 
ee oie * ae > . Best = et 
ee ie 5 . an 4 E * Eey FOO 
E * cr oat Lo 5 There 
15 wi tthe | ote et Tamb ‘| pas eae == 
ere fro oe ch er “he S — seg ibs. Sheep, 
T —— e 1 = 5 a = 
mah y s HS 5 
0 in r os r e Mond: . p <n 
A we St Sou er . ste uj oe al 
ne 2d ag Jol k 4 
0 t s —— ise ae . y 3 
a is hamt q é "i er 6 s 
ar 1 Flom of £ i 2 Per 
oe 5 5 a 11 
12 2 8 eiod oe et 
“ 2 — 8 5 me A 
A = E == 
o on : Di — ~ 
z fe Lo = id 
= . sol 
it Ditto Stor * = 
to Sh Ste 
— i ioe mso 
Calves ! 5 oat h 14. 
sis E 
os os Fhe 
id * 1 755 
oe p: 6 
= n 
4 2 3 se 


| dam 
ee 
has 
bee 
n 
d 
ou 
e 
„ 
M 
an 
y 
of 
th 
e 
ST 
nifi 
w 
ere 
pu 
nn 
W 
b 
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e 
Dii 
Dio Shora 
2 
mo 
_ 
ep 
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Da 
„ be 
00; 
75 
680 
dor; 
Pigs, 
255. 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


COVENT GARDEN, Aca, 4 


ushrooms fetch fro 
consist of Heaths, Panipat wun fe Lily of the Valley, 
Tropæo lums, Carnation and Roses 


Pine-apples, per 1b., 43 to 


ay be 


Is. 6d. 8. 


8, Fuchsias 


an 
ndant: 
arket is overstocked with * Melons, 


Pea ches, and Nectarines is 


A 
Oranges 


per pottle. 


Pears, per doz., 2s to 4s 


Si tae dene Aug. 
Messrs. N and SMITH E 
from the Natale “continue * — unfavourable for the 


Ripe pt gene and most part, Market firm. Duty 
pricot: — n 


LANE. 
he supply of ey nen Wheat by 


ONDAY, te land 

jage sa es thii DA rning from Essex, Kent, and Suf- 
folk was — for the season; a Saitis was disposed of at 
about the prices of this day sennight but a part remained un- 
sold at a late hour. T emand for foreign was ofa retai 
character, and little progress could be made with sales where 
ene insisted upon er 1 Polish 9 — > 


me gra | for Belgium, but t the limits, 36s. to 3 
rae ight, and insurance, are too low to 2 or, pur- 
eing ou 


that the E h 


sd. — ar. over our quotations.— Bea e un . — 


Ales 3 OY Suction, 
TR. I. C. SEO N AND PITCHER 
3 * is directed 
1 * d Co. * yal 


Gre 38, Kin at 8 
DAY, peter 8, at nested, Cove Nei. 


his cou 
in excellent condition, p Messra HL an 1 5 
ants in 
on the morning of sale, and See 3 a 
et 


pan 4 6 
ten 4 . ob. ano bin 8 te value. SONN ane is ood demand, at af improvement of ca. 
Pasties per doz — 185 — per 100, 6s to 16s ® 1s. per qr. 353 of the 17th inst. quote an ad- 
Nunn, per punn t, 25 emons, per doz., Is to 28 vance of ls. per aria lou , on the premi 
es, p. pun., 9d to 8 — per 100, 7s to 148 FRIDAY, Au. 3. 2 * re has beni English corn up since Bow-road, o DAT, ry dot: 20 
pottle, 4d to 1s Almonds, per peck, 6s Monday, but the arrivals of rovers are 7 — od. This marning a viously disposed of ra private co 
Po TERE ep Is 12 1s to 48 sweet, per Ib., 2s to 38 — was very thinly attended, and business in all a 50 y tom ——— and the ‘whol ole of eee 
Gooseberries, per half sieve, Walnuts p.100, 1s éd 2 28 of a most oe —— Ao prices may be consi idered Fra 
28 to 38 6d ush., 16s to — y the same as mo Sng „with a tendency in that of Seeds, uel in trade, d c.—May 
Currants, do., 38 Nuts, Bar.. p. bush., 20s 6 22s Wheat to decline.— Th A — although not settled, has been had, one week pri 
Apples, kitchen, p. . 4s to — — Braz razil, p „ bsh., 12s to 16s fine since the 28th je a tha crops of late have made little | the pr emises, and or the 
Pples, P. aE a ponoria harat (c 
VEGETABLES. progress tow: ards m — à Harvest 3 N par-| 1 JAC KSON, 
j d “at e genera The ( re Z 
— — hn A — ea to 3s "Carrots, p p. — porter 8 accounts of the W Theat crop are variable, but we continue i received instructions io of 
ens; per ite ah., 1 16 6d to Onions, p. bunch, 2d to 6d oe =: . a — ~~ eae oe | ay will pro- | in the course of erf 
A 585 y make the Barley sample ity. Markets A 
pene x hf. ush; 1s 3 — oy = per yrs 2 — re — — st 7 heavy ——— the kingdom, and, with i tate 4 s oF whio lib 
Potatoes, per ton, 608 to Garlic, per Ii 6 te * — ions, it has declined 18. to 28. per ots, that the proceeds o f th this eae a to 
— per ct., 4s ti Artichokes, p. doz., 1s 6d to RIDAY, —W i had fine weather. and form the basis of, a 
— per bush., 3s to 5s Vegetable Marrows, doz., d tols Supplies es of indian Corn hay * — be bee large, e, OF other | § spiritual: Insert e fund for providing fo for 
Turnips, per bunch, 3d to 6d Lettuce, Cab., p. sc., 4d to 9d | articles moderate. At this day’ s market the sacii r Wheat | the Church of England, of the population —* a 
Red Beet, per doz., 28 to 48 Cos, do., 6d to 1s and Flour was extremely — 1 Ree eons were 2 County, where such necessity exists to a aoe 
Horse Radish, p. bdl., 2s to 6s B p. pot., 1s 6d to make some little concession in pri Oats and Oatmeal | Jackson, jun., will be happy to give “any farther 
Asp , p. 100, Po Small S s, p. pun., 2d to 3d were dull, ana rather lower: ren ay Penans a Pon as very | on the e subject and also to recei 
Rhubarb, p. bundle, d | Fennel, — — 2d to 34 quiet. Indian Corn — declined is. to 25. Per rats, on which who may feel inclined to 7 5 ay 2 1 — 
French s, p100, aa — Is | Savory, — d to 3d he demand became very a etive fu metre GA of the 8 nee d by his sities 
Cucumbers, 2 Thyme, pe uch, 2d to 3d a e ‘iP Hitchin, Herts, Augus 
Leeks, —— 400 on Parsley, p. do oz; buns, 38 YE. BEAN EAS 
: 1s to 28 — Roots, p. bdle., 1 
Celery, p perdi cree u N is 44s 2d 26s 5d|18s 0d|26s 34| 30s 3d 305 4d 0 LET for a ter “Of vol, 
Radishes, p nds, arjor: m, green, p. „Ad tos d y nd e ’ 
Ww oz. bunches, ee. ‘green per bunch, 3d to 44 6| 26 5 18 9 25 9 30 10 31 5 Michaelmas next, the Farm of WOTTON, in the ae 
4a Bas: p. bunch, 4d to6 47 1| 25 1 17 11 28 1] 32 1 33 10 | Folkington, at present in the pei a of Mr.! ; 
i = 3 a N E £ 3 e s 2 s 9 | consists of about 409 acres of Mea 
wi ‘ $ 3 32 4 | lan 
sy „ pt eror 49 1 28 119 6 26 1 32 5 32 0 
— 58 kath 7558 2 i y to95s Aggreg. Aver. 47 2 26 0118 8 27 2 31 10 32 0 | ven 
ny uties on Fo- n 
Howe ot ee ee eae" os reign Grain 1 0 1 1 01 0] 1 1 0 
CUMBERLAND MARKET, Aug. 2. 
Stine Mea Hay 7 0s 0758 Inferior * sos ü 8 Ms uctuations in the last six weeks’ — 3 es. 10 miles from 
Inferior ditto 50 ‘Rew Clo nee PRICES. JoxE 16. June 23.) JULY 7. JULY +91. Joryv9g | gate — on ie: Lew ee "and ‘Hastings . 
* 3 — Me — d E — | | — Be sehen Mr, hg oP Whitfield, 
aie Bee 1 Josi 3 498 1d Ps ae ne 120 ad — tershire. A pers t Place will ow 
, Aug. 2 48 10 95 55 it sti 1 vik 5 2 LET, for a term of years, and 
Fine Old Hay "esto 72s "| New Clover .. 65sto 758 48 2 se . a “ haelmas nex t, the FARM of TESTW: 
Inferior ditto Inferior ditto... ... 50 60 | 47 1 ve — — — 
New H S 44 6 i GoLMOOR, in the parish ‘of Elin g, in the county of 
BY we 00 tray aA = „ ton, at present in the 5 or the It 
Old Clover ... 100 rs es . of 355 a of which 64 acres are excellent Water 
ris F 3 —— Dy the river Tents 
| London. | Liverpool. Wakefield. | Boston. Birmingham. lol aches axeiof 
PRICES = converted 1 rich productive Turnip and 
ere is a goo arm. house, a 
CURRENT. July2 3 July 30 July 24. July 31. July 13 July 20 July 25 Aug. 1. July 26. Aug. 2. Buildings. The Farm is about 
qr. qr. 70 Ibs. 70 Ibs. r. r. r. r 62 lbs. 62 Ibs. — — t 
ea ail d „ e d. m dad a d. si pte cet ism , e. d. & d. ſe, d p 
A n . tion and Wharf on the Southampton river. 
New, red... 42 044 42 to44 6 10 7 66 10 7 G|46t052/45 tod 1.45 t050/45 to50|6 0 6 7/5 10 6 4| apply to Mr. Jonn Montow, Whitfel jeld, near 
„ whi ws A750 47 07 2 7... 817. 2 8 54 45—53 54 5316 3 6 76 2 6 6 igre a erson at Testwood H soon l 
7 ne 8 4 a 7 26 10 7 2\45—47\44 46] — | — 5 10 6 45 9 6 2 — e 
„ Wh . 50—5450—54 6 7 OF 6 9 —54 —53) — — 6 2 6 86 0 6 
Foreign. 656636564 8 8 6610 8 6425541544 — — |5 3 6 105 3 6 10 T°: BE LET, for a term, with immedi 
480 Ibs. 4801 INGTON MILLS, comprising a 
House, su 
Rye New 242224 — — — 4 — — “i f 
oreign... oe ot 22—23 — — — — — — disa by 
Foreign meal |6/,—7/|61.—7/ — 3 — — — oer e woh, 
Bar ay r. r. T. r 
S E E > ou — 22. asl22—a3l24—2624—26] 23—25 | 23—25 
Malting... ... 24—2624—26 30s—32s | 30s—32s | — 29—32 29—3 
aa ß ff Es | rea someon ane 
ee 6 bush. 6 bush. from 7 hg farther ee 
Malt Ship. ae 39—42 . 4 üa Bailiff, Charlto — 
; 45 Ibs. 51 TO "ATO NURSERYAIES, dae AY 
Oats—White... 18—2518—25 21945 2d 281 0d 3s 24) — | — 18221822 20—28 | 20—28 O BE LET, e 
Black.. 14—2314—23 52 8 2 2 — — — — 19.20 19—20 
Foreign 12113202 42 2 426) — — 2 — die 
r. r. . è 
Peas—Boilers |25_.39|25—30| 31s ste fag—seiae—ao} — | — 33—40 
196 lbs. 196 lbs. 
bts W r 28 30s | — | = | — | — 11—12 | 12—13 
i oreign 25—32|25—32| 32 —34 32 —34 -= — — — 2 iad 
New, cual só — 2 —35 32—35 |31—36|32—36/32—34|32—34| 12—14 12—14 
Old dš —. 23—3323—33 34 —36 34 —36 — — — — 15—16 15—16 
3 i a 5 ‘ ee 
Foreign —. 21—36021—36½ 32 —36 24 —36 30—31(30—31 — — 11—13 11—13 s; à do. oh 
3 f rick b i h Gree ouse 
TLinseed—Feed — 4 | 40-42 NN sh sheet glass, painted ee Works St 
Foreign 86—4 4036—40 adic * 8 FR — foot. — J. Lewis’s Machine Hothouse 
— sige! PET T Middlesex. ADDING 
eas = hy: 
„ | 77. 1% | 7128 | — | [ee | 4 nm er. ri 
Foreign ... 6l—7L 6l. * W ing a descriptio 
: i jes 8 888 ey — which pedi ino are e . 
co : to make a g set of Bedding, sen 
znalan Corn— |3034|30—34| 29s—30s | 25s—28s | — | = 13—14 | 13—14 | to their Factory, 196 (opposite the 
p. sack 280 lbs. 280 lbs. p. sack p. sack per sack. per sack | —— er N 
35 3 — | — 66-4040 36—38 | 36—38 ins Oo; Rak a 
Aver. Impts. Aver. Aver. Gloucester, 
verages. Imports 
s. d. qrs. |s. d. qrs. s. d. rs. 
49 6 7356 |48 6 | 1163 44 54 247 
wr 930 | — — — 331 
22 0 748 16 7 266 20 11} 587 
31 0 468 rs — * 108 tations, 
oy 214 — — — = 2 bleaching, and 
— Only at 
i 130 B, 
SANDARS THOMAS J. and C. STURG. 
ond BoA WRIGHT. 2 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


: WORKS ARE CONSTANTLY 
IT TAE GARDENERS GHNONIOLE OFFICE, 
STREET, STRAND, LONDON. 


ITION, REVISED 
cal e T CHEMISTRY : AN g ie 2 


HE STUDY OF THE SCIENCE IN ITS RELATIO 


244 150 WARD SOLLY, F.R-S, P.L.S., v. 8. 
* MB. ROY. AG 
pter of, 2 the Rara Society of of London, 
— in the E. I. Military 
“on Che 125 — 3 


„„ atthe 


2 Culture. 11 
e GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, with tions. 


for 25 es for distribution amo ngs st Cot 

Pat falarei any wiere ndon, on a Post-office 
the * JAMES — at the | 
rs’ Chronicle, and made payable at the 

180, Strand, London. ) 
SOTTAGERS’. ene OF GARDEN 
OPERATIONS. 

py Jomen PAXTON, ** to His —— the Duke of Devon- 


Reprinted from the 8 Chron nicle. Boat 49 ‘nal = . 


already been sold. Illu strated with several woodcu 
Just Published, price 1s. 6d., free by post 18. 10d. 
“LABELS FO a THE —— 
G OF TH 

Classes, Alliances, orders, and "Sub-Orders 


PROFESSOR, 1 VEGETABLE 
M, 


W 


printed, in large * e can be cut out and pasted 
a ee rie HERBARIUM. 

e 58. 6d., cloth 

AMENTAL PAND DOMESTIC POULTRY ; 

and Management. By the Rev. EDMUND 
bar 3 * 3 y ve with Keswick. 
Domestic Fowl in tthe] Musk Duck The Pea Fowl 
2 The Grey China 


a — a and 
Guinea Fowl Go ilver Hamburgh 
Spanish Fowl The White Fr 1 


onted Fowls 

or Laughing Goose The Cuckoo Fowl 

The Wigeon he Blue Dun Fowl 

The Teal and its Lark - crested 
congeners 

The- White China The. Poland Fowl 
Goose Ba 


PA 


m Fowls 
The Tame Duck The Rumpless Fowl 
The Domestic Goose gi a yoga Negro 


he Brent Goose the Frizzi ed or 
urkey Friesland Fowls 


formation, pleasantly 
with pic eturesque sketches, and varied 
of the Watpretist: ”__. Spectator. 
ofamusement and instruction for the lovers of Nature,” 


' to have the opportunity of drawing — — 
€ neglected in farming operations, but e 
poe Ser — profit, if proper. attention 


which ty published most opportunely for our pur- 
. g on our friends the importance of this 
— in ao Soo oyment, sae ork 1 * has aves been 


he 
the | eee and 


Popular Works 


PRINTED FOR 
TAYLOR, WALTON, ann MABERLY, 
BOOKSELLERS AND PUBLISHERS TO UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, 


28, 1 GOWER-STREE 27, IVY LANE, 
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Profes: 
ac in Universit oinaan 3 Ec. 
recti Additi 


ROF. LINDLEY’S INTRODUCTION TO BOTANY. 


—4—— — in 2 vols. Svo, ix Copper. plates and 
rous W. 248. cloth, 

INI b ION = 2 BOTANY. 

essor LINDLEY, Ph.D. S. Professor of Botany 


Fourth Edition, with Cor. 
ons. 
CT FROM PREFA 


deferen ther © consider t the soundness of his 
in all that relates to fondar a d arrang or the 


Be ore 
0 great bee 


J ce which a lon ap most suc sful of 
RLE EY oe — 8: e rp hl public in. 
SCIENTIFIC LIBRARY — an in ht i 

(Book I.) ie mation of the en structure of ts; 

a branch comprehendin lates eith 
: 6 of tissue of which Š — one iy 

appearance their elem 

SCHOOLS, PRIVATE stents ARTISTS, in'a etate of conbinacon, Ielwexceedingly decia t thang 

AND MECH arue os be wi ae e the the b: 

er parts of the sci I iol 

= is T 3 of this Work to furnish a Series of Ele- is execut ted t 755 the agency ‘of the p organ E — 


> 


tises on Mathematical — e, adapted to the 
waits oft — public at large. To youth of Aer sex at public 
and private schools; to pers 


the demonstrations of proposi- 
are made plain for the mind and brief fom — memory, 
Til + p h Gani 4 


and the 


ising 
Botany can have po logical 


sideration ; — re- 
kpang y are exactly settled, 


cision unti 4 ae of 

A —— of r exists 

botanists, upon . 

that it has bee n fon expedient to enter occasion: 

vee — or the * of satisfying the — 5 of the 
N y of the facts and reqponings upon which he is expected 


To this succeeds VEGETABLE Punrsrorooyt (Book IL) ; or the 
history of the vital omena that have been o 


ser 
— . in general, ticular spe oin = 
orga i 


J So their 


simplest but to their shortest form. 
* 


1 
r 
A New EDITION (being the fifth) is now ready, 


A SYSTEM 
[POPULAR GEOMETRY; 


Containing in a few Lessons so much of the Elements of 
Euclid as is necessary and sufficient for a right understanding 
of every Art and Science in its leading truths and great ate 
ciples, 

Br GEORGE DARLEY, A.B. 
rice 4s. 6d., cloth.” 
$ 


H. 
New EDITION (just published), 


COMPANION 
POPULAR GEOMETRY; 


the Elements of Abstract Science are familiarised, | 
rendered pr: eres useful to the various pur- 

pre numerous Cuts 

2 Sonon DARLEY, A.B. 


. ôd., 


In which 


poses of lif 


III. 
THIRD EDITION, 


A SYSTEM 


on et nate cape 


11 0 s, and throws light inf | et 
agen . ue ee be given to Mr. on's 
Sen the present treati be henceforth quoted an 

ù yet t only as a standard book, but the only on wit, 


TTHEWS, at the Office of the Gar- 

gricultural Gazette, 5, Upper Wellington- 
and may be ordered of all Booksellers, 

SCHOOL CLASS. BOOKS. 

und, with 220 Diagrams engraved for 

he Work, 

NTS OF PLANE GEOME. 

tory Appendix and Supplementary 


eometry,’ for following in the 
tc 6 i hee both the 
* tudent. Pre- 
kpada tan — es — of mathe- 
= sa te the elegance of their —— as for th 
of their reasoning, vil Engineer and Architect's 


the best edition of the Elements hich has y 
ir wenne which, for brevity, ele 

revit 3 oe or 
sae fhe reo ear feng ot be easily 


— = all al that ‘could be be done to make Euclid 


ap- 


alle Rae Ceai 
* 100 Elements, pr 
LEYSSI GEOMETRICAL i PROPOSITIONS 

to the sib omy uclid “bing a 
deisde 0d Private AN of 186 Proposit 
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Bell’s 


Adapted ÈR ETER chools, or | 


POPULAR ALGEBRA; 


A Section on PROPORTIONS and 
PROGRESSIONS. 
By GEORGE DARLEY, A.B. 


cn 4 1 L thia a4 1 fth 
ts 


* * 


e, or susceptible of no 

a previous ech of th with the 
0 port oe hy. 

is at present * oly in po the yof some of 

— tree 1 — of wpe a 6 interred re: 5 Fool ** 

at it rounds of 

true 


s t admitted as 
A n at engs 
tie ton o + a ead 
jective terms, whicb are porge vised exclu pois 
re ty — employed — Fang è in — 4 — —.— 1 
—+ sense. The this . as alee to the substantive 
Organosraphy, will be found in a copious 


rms explain ed in 
Inge at the end of the volum: 
every subject that hé 


It has been the Author’s wish to bring 


re is foun da 


the same A 
THE THEORY OF HORTICULTURE, “Svo, 
SYNOPSIS OF THE BRITISH FLORA. 8 10. 6d. 
FL MEDICA. 8vo, 18s. 
38 G Tip. Brown, GREEN, and MANS, 
etd Een! pp rel — ical so ANY. 
| This day is published, in one vol. 8 a us woodcuts, 
Vee oe pried Aaah md does 9 Vale 
An Account of the Principal Plan 
or Domestic 3 my. 
TRACT FROM THE AUTHOR’S PREFACE, 
The Vegetable Kingdom contains, 3 
dee — 4 known impo various u 


8 e The principal part of seg which ean be 
esis gd y teachers in Europe N the notice of studen * 105 
Wh their great importance, 55 ry be amo 


of study, are mentioned in the following p he 
proposed in 


a 
ar are — 
rstly, * a greater work wou 77 
h of the majority of ae 


observation, such as Botany, sequins © to ‘eoticemerate gf rage atten- 
tion, in the first instance, stance, upon a a limited namber of objec 
BOTANICAL WORKS BY PROFESSOR — 


1. 
D poder tS or, the Rudiments of Botanical 


400 Illustrations. Price 5s sn 
— VEGETABLE KINGDOM ; or the Structure, 
Uses 


for 8 tuden 


sciences, there are, perhaps o treatises which c: 
‘with more advantage than — Popular ee. 1 
Algebra. Library of Useful Knowledge, article 


IY. 
SECOND EDITION, 


A TEM 
POPULAR TRIGONOMETRY, 


Both Plane and Spherical. 
With weber pore ge on LOGARITHMS, and the 
to Geometry. 


fin — DARLEY, A. B. 
Price 3s. 6d., cloth, 


FAMILIAR ASTRONOMY. 
Br GEORGE DARLEY, A.B 
Wirn Encravines.—l2mo, 54., cloth lett 


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ee ee Bee oF Lip; being the || 
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the „* e Enuneia- 


* aan is a vast deal of astronomical information conveyed 


ee and "scraper Te manner in this de lig htful 1 


cation, an of P —_ ‘aerated pom tbe 
Nai tural — Second Edition, strated pom the 
oth, 


308. i 
| #8 10 5 suit the 9 Students and om, the above 
Work is issued also in 1 m; sl RR 


E ELEMENTS 01 OF ‘BOTANY, Structural, Phy- 
soos, and M With a Sketch of the Artificial 
cel, ee me a Glossary of Technical Terms. 


The Glossary may be separately, price 5 


had 
ii will complete the * Botanical 


its Processes. Of the 
is — nets Ot the — Of the 
Leaf-Buds—8. Of the Of Food a 
10. ped the — A Fluids Ii. Of the Flower-Bud=12, of 
ye sent Of the 
wna 
— Ovule-19. d 
f the S 22, Of — 
Analytical 
* ner of $ Studying.— 
The Elements in Medical and — 1 illus. 
thnted 1 numerous diagrams and woode: — is now ready. 
t published, 
RCHIDAC RA S LINDENIA NÆ Notes u 


By Jonx . —— * F. R 8. 
| Prot in the University — ‘London; and in 
R 1 ai Tn nstitution —— 

es OW i readers that it contains a vast EE ie 
useful to —.— classes of hon! we strongly 


| naa volume, 


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| talents of its projector anions Mr. ree — Sun, 


ai 1 
: Baapnonf and Evans, 11. 


n Colombia and Prt 
A 


te 


496 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


DESIGNS FOR HOTHOUSES, PINE PITS, AND OTHER HORTICULTURAL = 


BY T. W. THOMSON anp CO., LANDSCAPE GARDENERS, AND GARDEN chm 
i KING STREET, HAMMERSMITH. 


e eee . 


— Sa ee 


. 
Fruiting Pine House, for Queens, Vinery. 


D 
Conservatory. Peach House. ‘Kae ing es shag a for — 
and other dwarf- growing varieties. * 


growing — 


l if fit Il es 
fa f — Hamm 


Melon Pit. Succession Pine Pit. Prakt Pine Pit. Hotes for forcing Roses and Succession Pine Pit. Cucumber Pits 
plant 8. i 
Ay W. THOMSON, after 25 y experience as a Practical Horticulturist, Landscape py meer p Garden Architect, ma any years of whi 1 hs 
ə in the Royal Botanic Gardens of 1 ale . Gardens of Windsor, and other d n of — E al Garden Fer sig! pupae nie ie the attention of 3 b fe | 
modern style of ier 94 Warming, and Ventilating Garden Structures, T anea rly to his new mo * 2 Bottom Hea substitute for tan, = dot bs 
one given, an who e for 15 years patronised T THom{Įmsox’s mode of Bu nd ad Warning and Ven tinting He ni z h 


HAMBE R 8˙8 EDUCATIONAL 

LIEBIG. AN D KOPP’ S + "ANI UAL REP ORT E following Woas are 2 already published, ie 
bound in dark-coloured cloth, for use in schools: i 5 

PROGRESS OF CHEMISTRY AND THE ALLIED SCIENCES, Infant Treatment Under Two Years of Age. n 


ant Education from Two to Six Tears of Age.. 


PHYSICS, MINERALOGY, AND GEOLOGY, FOR 1847 anp 1848. ENGLISH SECTION, 
Svo. Part I. 6s. ae 


“irst Book of Reading Be oa 
i second Book of Reading „% E 
London: TAYLOR, WALTON, and MABERLY, 28, Upper Gower-street, and 27, Ivy-lane, Paternoster-row. imple aoa Kus anes? ha i. TETAN 
Moral Class Boo! e 
Just published, Pant XX., price 1s., f utroduction to posis „ 


IHE FLORIST, AND GARDEN MISCELLANY; „ — 2 


CONTAINING A mene opto COLOURED PLATE OF EPACRISES, AND’WOODCUTS, AND locutio 
USUAL AMOUNT OF INTERESTING MATTER, History ofthe . den Language 


trodue to 1 . 


F ee 
CONTENTS ae, The = acris (with an IIlustration).—2. x ee 
0 p ig i ustration My Rose-Journal.—3. Water Plants (with I Ee aaa riti —.— T eee I Treatise” ee 


y 
4. School Gardens.—5. On the Philosophy of Florists’ Flowers. No. —6, Fancy Pelargoniums.—7. dodendron 
di 


In 
! 
8. Rustic Seats “(with an Illustration). — 3. e Ladies’ Page. —10. Hortieuitaral Society.—11, Royal Be z .— | Key to rete A — 
12. Stamford-hill Horticultural Society.—15. Calendar of Oper: es for August. eG T Society. Book-kee * 
The Su tendent of “ TAE Frorist” has much panei in acquainting the readers bf ‘the work that me has been Book keepltg by Single and i Double Entry” 
an with a Frontispiece for Vol. II. from the pencil of that eminent artist and author upon art, Joun Borner, Esq., | 2 b x oe 
F.R.S will be issued, with a ope 2 with No. 24, so that the Volume may be entirely ne Fe on the ist of | Key to —— .. aks Til t 
December next, It is scar vanagu to much Mr, Berita kindness will improve the Volume, ; lane Geome pans oe pe ee „ 
erden: Carre and Hart, 166, Strand. Practical e Parts, c e 
4 „ 7 „ 
a Tai e Ma hema 
CILLA SIBERICA, —Twenty Thousand bulbs of ARE TO BE MET WIT keyi to 
ha 25 y 9s., and RANGE TREES, —A few very Arge Orange Trees Mathem a 
12s, 5 100, according to size.—Apply to C. Jackson, Nursery- ma ei i to be pai „ best eee jana —apply, if if Writing—Plain va see gt Pe 
man, Presto: etter, — paid, te iR „ 
Nis Fonte ͤͤ A ENE Se e ared Co 7 books (post size), each | ++ 
PRESENT SOWING PRITANNIA LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY.— Anoia Bot, ia Ten A mee size), eai» 
EVENTY” VARIETIES OF MIXED™-SWE ET Capital 1,000,000. This institution is e by a First Book of Dra ing 8 
WIL a. 20 double and single. (See Correspondents 8 7 of Parliament (4th Vic., cap. 9), and is so consti- Second Book of Dra ing „ 
Gard. Chron. J 5 1 st them are some very fine tuted as to afford the benefits of life assurance in their Tallest GEOG! ooRAPHTCAt ; 
Beso particulary th the aes wee Maer different shades of | extent A ‘policy holders, and to present greater facilities — Geographical Prim 2 
purple or pink i A aie ren 25 E gland 2 
single varieties are g ferior,” The e subscribed capital, together with the large and SGHOOL-ROON A raphy for Fugla d, Ireland, 
erres of Sra 1s. each, or 12 postage stamps, post free.— continually Increasing fund, accumulated from the premiums urope, Asia, Palestine, North Am 
Harpy wers, Maldon, n upwards of 8000 policies, affords complete security to the z! oh, 1 : e ach map m 
; n A ae MORAL OP korn 2 i PERAR whilst the magnitude of the Company’s transactions 5 feet 8 PA in length, by 4 feet 10 inches in br 
Just ria 5 ,, | has enabled the Directors to offer unusual advantages 2 policy alto ether forming ten maps; nine o f which ate 
Seasons, iu 905 niform in size with „ Thomson’s | holders, as will be seen by reierence to the prospectus, and aan the Hemispheres (including As! 
ustra ty ihe ‘Etching Club, price One Guinea, the varied an 5 tables, which have been 2 fi with paiga 21s 
HE N * e e ee Ry L EE t riiet xpressly Kaan the use niyi 8 Institution, sCHO OI ATLAS of Modern a 
f VE FLOW. F or ou ETER MORR: t Director. 1 55 
J inert MORAL OF FLOWERS 5 or ; thongs |. peison Bani Loudon, Aug & Patan tre ee 
3 3 4 5 e HE LIVERPOOL AND a FIRE AND ean 
uniform y NSURANCE COMPA eo to the Sei ee 
* Eton of ie a Spirit ad T ee tery 5 — N ng a e 8, vl s bes Liverpoo te r Charitteom, M Mansion- of Matter and Motion. .. 82 
t-street, Waterloo-place, London, 1. — ies 
beautifully coloured plate This Tha titution t is n D 2 ee — 7 
‘ mpowered by special Acts of Parliament: | Hydrostatics, H drautios, ar i 
o ma keene 7 58 has a Subscribed Capital of 1,500,000; 1000 ; Surplus Funds, 164 . * 
ust orm ir am J. Hooker’s eo. es the ace ; the liability ofits 9 Ww se iee 3 
w Gardene „in 16mo, with numerous Wood Engravings, | proprietors is unlimited. Its Sheen — lte 0 Meteoro . as Thee > igi 
adapted for persons who prefer 8 to speculation, and | Optics ca Acoustics. (Nearly ready.) eee 
(i Lascow 1 GARDEN; or, a Popular por Ph oto elong 8 8 will — mparison with those Anima Bh ppr „ 
len other Compan me 0 sy Jo Ta ae 
T Tawana, 8 Gizen, at Brome F Tosurances T the — terms of established offices Zoo 3 e, 
` Glasgow: JouN SMITH an Sw , Secretary to the Company. penne Physiology „„ „„ 
. r eN 2 “Heno —— Resident Secretary, London. Geology. /// ai ey 
1 dae NEW WORK BY HARRY HIEOVER, gat = i 
fig SCIENCE OF LIFE; or "How te i Live, and | yaz published, pii 9 fcp. 8vo, uniform with “ The His — Ta 5 5 
e * 1 as piaeas = | Pocket and os e Stud,” 2 Bing Ate Te one representing Histo 22 1 tish Empire Ee 
3 A a “A pretty g kar other, Hatar a the Britis oe 
„and that sterling state of happiness oss eci esther í Salen Exemplary and — Ker : 
he enter observance of a well-regulated | HE STUD F OR PRACTICAL PURPOSES a —— sca), ae r ENS a 
usii 8 PRACTICAL MEN: being a Guide to Choice of a f Berlin, oe 
d owes “ome 2 its * ot the prosa Horse, for use more than for oe By Basar} Hust.” i Dr. — of at ee o 
tion on an principles and which will prove a boon to the London: page, eet | GREEN, and B Recto! of entari de Bello Gallico ** 
human rac n the ‘subjects of diet and re og ae a Of whom e had, by the same Author, a 
tho advice tm throughout is most v. THE POCKET AND THÈ STUD. Price 58. 
passions, t in oe "e i nase 
per into universal practice, the — ot tos 300; THACHE PERMA NENTLY CURED BY 
å u and of the priest would be considerably lightened, f BR ope E’S 1 AMEL for filli a 
long life would not only be ensured, but attended with and rendering, ch 8 
0 oe and painless.’ Price at 
ee vz and Roma 2 . seve ee e only 1 the 
, 38 ‘ac hae eing unattende pain or danger, and Tee 
6 and may be had os and Hannay, the good effects of which are permanent. Sold by all cecal W. and R. CHAMBERS, London; an 
„ Oxford- street. 4 147, Strand, 
. in the United Kingdom. Twenty really authorised Testimonials horier, an 
Just published, pr or post- free on receipt of 18 stamps, | 2ccompany sgh box, with full directions for use. Sent fi — x, of 


i ree, No. 
i Pte CULTURAL MAGAZINE, Part 56, br mmn x Beet Wy J. eee? Bast Temple Chambers, Pah at tere Paevantex 
the C clamen — — Treatise on 1 ps. CAUTION.—The great success of this preparation roy . 
— W 8 * = for the establishment of Barrack | has kilful persons to produce spurions pet oa in tol) mi al by byt 
1 e imitations, and to copy Brandes Enamel” Ad Rn, ot 
“ The Horticultural Magazine is the best authority on PY name ee ee e angeben eu are 
”—Glenny’s Garden Almanack. signe: . al ig against such 3 3 
London: C. Cox, 12, King William-street, Strand, accompanies each packet 


row 
63 
r 
of 
G 


HE GARDENERS’ 
“AGRICULTURAL 


stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, AUGUST 11. 


[Paice 6d. 


EX, 
Laxerstrœmia indica ....+ 
Machine new drilling, &e 


TO ADMIRERS OF ROS 3 
PAUL AvD SON beg to inform “thei r o s and 
ite lovers of ‘Roses in general, the extensive ollection of 


owen ~ TO DAHLIA GROWERS, 
a mene HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY.— 


last Show for season, to he » ped on FRIDAY, 


—— in the — f R. HAM, Esq., ad- 
Railway Station, there will bea cibai for DAHLIAS, | 
open to all E . Entrance 10s. 6d. 
or more entries are made, the Soc y will give, in addi- 
pirra the whole of which will be awarded in 
tot , and one-third to the sec 
i R compete must g ive the Secretaries notice 
b, Tuesday, Sept. 4. F. S. Swans: 
i G. H. Becxavson, Hon. Secs. 


AHLIA 


E BLACK PRINCE poets ¥—Fine 
2 


Plants of pag 9 ode WRER 


. $a i Nur 3 
a full E i will be forwarded on applica 


for delivery on the tery! ; 
ow in per- | 50; 10s. ; 25, 5s, N. B r ine 2 
elf till th mber. The 1 than any other variety in 1 it is — very 8 
pap very 3 to show them to any lovers of this flower, peels. well weeny a, 1 preserver. It 
whether purchasers or not. Cheshunt is on the * N. well. = + he blossoms — picked oft “it in Spring, 
Line of the Eastern Torona Railway, aa mile from the nt cr mayd Ai ned from it in Autumn. For 
Cheshunt, two miles from the Walt — a, es Ute be yrs Dr. Lindley’ >  opinior ading article in ra 
the Br ozbourne stations. An omnibus nas Gaia ns at Chronicle o weet pago “483, also 883 
Waltl he Nurseries. Wcheshe by ¥ E. 8 hy r 15 att, he by eee Mr. Ingram, 
- of Frogmore, „ Mallison, of Clar r. Beaton, and 
Bercy tne ge te raia t erel VIRGIN Q QUEEN | e — — is the Mr, Snow, gr. to Earl de rèy, Cor mite « 1 
Rain. water herad ss... iss 502 a | r in existence. Straw apin Potato, Cucumber, Melon, and Lisianthus,” 
eds, Ls — rer 501 | HOYLE’S ORUS TER! hes Tikewise proved itself of sterling | | price ls. P ges fice 9 on Camberwell, Ins OvrHinr, 
Sean — eS r excellence. 4 Good p ats, in October, will be re ady for sending | Camberwell. r Lon 
i EE a | — t at 78. 6d. each ; or the two . 128. Early should m — 
e res 503 a . ol pee made to Winttase E. - REND * * Co., — i Plymouth, TO THE APRS OF 5 SPLENDID 
0 O prepare e 0 seriet 7 TENY 
oat — * ee, of ICAS.—To be Sold, very cheap. a large collection THE 0 HR et 5 ANTHEMUM. 
5 Ttak 503 5 of — . Plants, in — ag mee nditic — “ft for exhibi- OUELL axp C no red to execute 
—— le 01 ¢ 3 1 y retes sty Naar 15 road, 5 woe Page extensive and eels 7 of * 
st At ee * and fine continental varieties, 


orders fro 
above, — © all the n 
the — prices 
3 new sorts „255. 
ditto ai 


ditto 
pios plant te blooming in 
or per ping a wich all orders’ — i eae directions 
be be sent for ode of culture for exhi- 


LLIAS, 


sent out by Your. and ‘Co. 10 the fines 
be forwarded, per post free, at 2s, 6d, and ‘be ** 
bed of 12 or 24 yards, Sown at the present 


Two gem 3 season; or a 

Apply to WILLIAN E. RENDLE à — Co., 

FOR AUTUMN SOWING. 
c 1 leave to recommend the acts 
8 for Autumn Sowing. The Autumn sow rdy 
Annuals, including the Californian, flower much earlier and 
stronger than t 2 sown. With Perennials and Green- 
house s, a whole season is saved. The two latter should 
be sown as early as — venient, and the Hardy Annuals by the 
5 2 of Sep 8 Flow — warded, prepaid, by post. 


À 255 i eee 

AN A A 

j : e of Botany” for this month.) 

N ace now senting out 

dendron, 2 oh. 

at the Horticultural Society's Ebi 
pa pmr antes 

Chron in 


notices * in the follo 
wa seedlin, g rom Mesar Messrs, ay —— 


this handsome Rhodo 


„ FOR THE BORDE aS II. FOR THE GREENHOUS 
toting 1 . 10s, 0d. | 25 fine Green ouse seeds 78. 6d. 
= = čo, do. 
12 do. do. 
2 5 olf 1 3 Manurandyas ... 
12 tal ` $ 6 Petanias 3 on 
Nemophila insignis, p. oz. 12 Stocks, German... 
Do. macula ta p.p paper „ Biennial ... 
50 fine * Perennials 12 6 Thanbergias a 
25 0. ane 3 fine vars. 


12 N 
6 Antirrhi nw Calceola 


: it — afford a fine diapiag 
E | 


Sad 5 will forward 
NEW, and 1 — PLANTS to any part of the 


through the autumn and winter 


3 ogues of the above, with an extensive, ey di, of highly 
ornamental ae, w will be . W y enclosing two postage 
ips, —! t Yarmout 


Ji Ax H. 15 a fol- 


9s 


od 
p 0 
99 
en She. flowers ber 3 Aquilegias L neraria, ert, a 
white, with the — Y the upper peta’ n Delphinium chinense } Eri ries ) vars. m. .5 0 
y ith crimson ; — aillardia L Gladioli ? vars. . * 0 
i Balighocks, n. dwarf 3 J 
5 16 Pentstemon 1 6 3 1 
er SHAKSPEAR ede. ics 1 OS FO ee oP 
yous -to recomm above new | «= All other Fi r e 2 2 
Bwarf CABBAGE for general cropping to the notice the . me 8. a — ue of 1500 w will be — . — Fine Peren reat 8 nn 8 o 
Akish RR i trial will be ope — ee a first-rate collec- The newest tand m ost approved Petunias, ge 
1 of Dutch 3 pren flowering Bulbs ‘ill be mode; in 44 and Fuchsias, can oo be sent by post, per ** 40 
So rn the A Sold “in few days.-JAMES CARTER, Seedsman and Florist, No. 238, 12 non . —— “ $ 
3 oz, ls., sev ree, upon folborn, 1. a. a ) 
17 8 of a Post- office order, or in ee eee 2 Kape Camellias, finest sorts, well set with flower . 
f eee eee TILEY’S EARLY MARROW CABBAGE: aaa m0 0 
= ERSON anp CO seg DWARD TILEY begs respeetfull the] Azalea Indica, benutiful distinet varieties, per dozen 24 o 
E pak e Nobility, Gentry, and the Public — 2 tat he is now 24 © Ericas, one of a 80 Ao 18 0 
T g new and choice Plante: ready to 2 4 * his Early Marrow Seed, which his Epacris, 12 beautiful paani E for nas e p 10 0 
of noon bis isin very a anaoa pre 8 oo cultivation, and five weeks earlier than Geraniums, 12 superb varieties, for 58 15 6 
i of robust habit, with rich punn foliage, and pro- rown, For further p ulars see the ad- Ditto 5 best fancy varieties, fr s „ 
. ofa my white ur, with crimson yertisement in iis Paper of July 14. “Sold * — contain- | Allamanda Schottii .. 78 6d 1 — 3 6 
$ of which is 3 — yi are of a 1 oZ., 2s. 6d. ; ackets, 18. 64. The above will be sent | Erythrina Fulke — 2 um beten rū- 
tooth, and vb xpanded— here * ower — e free on the qal ateei of a 5 order, or the | 8 ii 0 3 6 bee ine : 4 
j . ee ILEY, at | Cle ron micro - 
4 of aer he retaining — eee and form amount in pn bt. 2 tee yo te y * e lum p 2 5 6 | White Salvia and A a 
í after the his general Seed- e 16, Pulteney- = zure: è 
o nded. * we pre is of a Balsamina repens... 3 6 compacta, egen 1 
[ upright growth than any o therefore is S AND VE New Yellow Rhododen- Thunbergias of sorts, 1 0 
; j my a conspicuous, re EORGE S MITH Sa to offer the following NE 7 ¢ | Zauscùneria Californica 1 6 
| AURANTIACA,—This = and beautiful Be- HSIAS, at 21s. per dozen, viz., Story’s Elegantiss rhododendron J Javani- Fuchsia spectabilis ... 7 6 
of Bolivia, in South America, and is one of | Ne Heben’s Gem of the West, Smith’s Lord — „„ 21 0 Plambage Larpené... 1 6 
flo showy tribe of pian nts, It is a green- | Turvill’s Fire King, Elegance, Shylock, Gem, Miellez’ Perfec- | 12 Cho hoice Fern 6 0 s | Costes new sorts, 
wering profusely from July until the end of tion, Julia Grisi, Guzelle, General er, Chateaubriand, | 12 Distinct Cact ti 6 ase 
e-red colour, Kevne’s Admirable, and Tiley’s Sir Coarles Napter. VER- | Choice Geranium, Ciner be Primula, and olaria se 
th’s P ur i r packet. Also List of Choice ee 


WER SI SEEDS EDS FOR i PRESEN i AND |N 


seful instructions 


The follo gon 4 
Farce, ea 


oy ¥ 7 1 Holl hack . Os 6d 
FN — vars., separate 5 0 

6 ki a p570 

1 0 117 8 

0 Iris, English a 0 

0 ae nish ... 8 

6 | Pansy is. 5 

0 | Petuni 1 . Se 

6 | Polyanthus Ad. to 1 0 

6 | Primula sinensis 8 

6 | Ranunculus ies ZOE AR 

: 6 William 25 6 
Verbena Is. 6 

Greenhouse Perennials, 10s. 6d.; 12 aoa) te 6a. 


Hardy Biennials and Perennials. 7s. öd, 
spring flowering... 4s. Od. 
pon ost- 
to Bass und Brown, or STEPHEN 
received for Taali amounts, 
and Horticultural Establishment, 


e, per 
HELIOTROPES : Grisau ant 8 25 Liege 
ET Louis } 1 sero Bona a La ps 
nee of ee ae ls. each, — 


Model, Lady of and Pri 
Miclle2” Saturne, dame Miellez, 


CH odol, Tad EMUMS : 
and ne ai s 6d. each. 
The abo e, on the receipt of a post-office order, wiil either be 
sent png — r by hamper, = plants to compensate for 
| earriage.—Tolli — Nursery, H 8 Ishugton. 


ate FPO THE | CULTIVATORS ae FLOWERS. —This 
for n 


tions an 

— or transp! ‘of | 

aap sere — e., those who | 
ons 


ings, 
cultivate thesein perfection wi expectation 
ly gratified by using the CaN BONISED: yerri A — 
for the purpose, of H. C 


. o T 
OVEL opengl FoR "THE INPI IMPROVE- 
MENT OF CELER E, 
BARB, MENT OFBERRIES, — Bs ‘By SERT 
Sockets, these articles are much improved, ee 
an 


3 re heap, 
orie. - The Gardener! Journal = july 14, —— an 
editorial article upon thes ntions, trom which — 
remarks are e extracted : „The e pri of the invention 
one tages of which there can be no doubt. By 


cester-square cy 5 in 


eeu eo and by the aid of such means, vast and im. 
y reason för. As conn 


aaor yi Aed 8 is — 
be incorporated — 
bee mums, 
tly improved 
soil around 


ed. Dahlias, 
. 3 will be 
22 its Poti now applied to t on the 


especial y with 3 of Stra 
use of these tiles would undoubted 
pes fiav ag è . We shall eee i 
| — ent. All that we ask, on the p 
pam nks at hortic ciara og bringin 1 * them in a 
t manner a principle of great Practical utility,” 


JHE GARDENERS’ 


in announcing the arrival, per ship Cornelia, from AMES PHILLIPS anp Co., 116, 
New Zealand, a Choice Collection of FERN SEEDS, of Without, have t 
the rarest kinds, and in excellent preservation; likewise a of SHEET GLASS for Ca 
am ae of Specimens of Ferns, CUT TO SIZE. 


ate Cura 


5 — f the gy eo al Botanical Gardens, 16 ox, from 2d. to Ne per foot. 
— of the roe a are as follows: No. 1. C d at 3 , 
nd — 


3 


LARS BOE CONSERVATORIES, CERE 

treet 

he pleasure tohand their New List of Peed 
sh. 


SHE 
8 — of 100 si 


CHRONICLE. 


Bishopsgate- 


T SQUARES. 
8. d. 
42 


6 
s, or iat e black tree Fern, p s of 30 feet high 6 by 4 and gnder 7 y 5 16 6 1 . 
laris, or 1 1 rer uch used for fencing bridges, &c., a ” 5 ” os » Tb by 5 8 by 6. 18 6 ing, &c., &., specimens Par ey — 
called * re T ak. 2. Alsophylla medullari 95 yo 10 by 8. 20 6} the e Patentees, CHARLES Fran 32 SeeMat the 
fine variety, No.3. Cyathea cme fine silvery-leaved tr g fee 3 200 feet cases of large t Glass, for cutting HE IM PRO i — 
Fern, from 20 ob 30 feet high. No. O, Tricho- up, at 23d. per r foot. British Plate Blass. — ls. 2d. to 28. per T 0 H la 
—— Adiantums, Asple — Lomari F * — us, Pteris, foot, according to size. fixed by FREEMAN Ror, Fo 
atheas, and other gen 3 URCH PLATE GLass, London, can be worked by a 
Ae ee or silver tree Fern a, 8ps, With a Gales Pattern Cast upon it, about } inch thick. mall. stream of half. an. inch, 
Packets, at 10s, 6d. each. — Apply to ALEXANDER ROUGH PLATE GLASS for WINDOWS, SKYLIGHTS, and where a fall of 2 feet can be 
Winttamson, B Bra ndon, near Cov ak Warwickshir LOORS. tained. The same RAM, with. 
Se NT ROUGH PLATE TIL 8 ad Tenk at (Sian 
i r Od. - ginnen A “4 wa 
S, CHEESE begs ‘respectfully to aiei Mushroom- — ee etch on —— 3 each re of Water constituting a Fon. 
growers, Gentlemen, Nurserymen, and the Trade in SHEET GLASS TILES AND SLATES. tain with the head of water be. 
general, that he still continues to pea y his — SPAW Sr ag: 26-07, 32-02, nea 
as usual, at 3s, per bushel, exclusive of . usually de nf Shas Al lod. ts. 44, Bug s for deep wells of an kin ds, Douche 
charged 7s. Any quantity can be safely packed, and for 45 20 ins. by 10 . 894 ls 155d. 13. 6d. Bui nildinpa heated by hot water, Water 19 
e e to any part of the known world, on Perm ‘of aP ost. Slates are kept in stock of e news sizes, and made to any geye s, from 15%, Es stimates g ven for 5 
office order arly sup pply ime newly. invented Por 1. given fo 


limited and the de demand great. No order atte es 


GLASS MILK- PR 
aes . Flora Giens, aveeaine, — ILE-PANS, ROPAGA 
don 


Pastry Slabs, Hyacinth 


Lon 2 Fis * Glo — Plate and Window Glass of every deseri 
„tion, Lamp Shades 

BAKERS PHEASANTRY, Beautort-street, King’s | 7 GToMETERS FOR TRYING TSE QUALITY OF MILK, 
road, Chelsea, by special appointment to her r Majesty an nd BES, 78. 6d. > 

H. R.H, Pri 20 Albert, = 5 na te et Canada, China’ Self- Registering Weenie —— ae ee EE 

Taksila. brent, and — geese, — pintail, HAR 91 PEKS 701 AENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS, 
geon, su and winter teal, gadwall, oe T, ASS CONSERVATOR 

shovellers, gold-eyed —— 1 divers, Carolina ducks, &c., ETLEY rg ‘CO. supply Toks. ar Glass of 

domesticated and pini also Spanish, Cochin hina, ish Manufacture, at prices varying from 2d. to 3d 

ps ex ae, aad Teching wia, white Japan, pied, | per square foot, for the usual sizes required, many thousa 

and pure China pigs ; and at 3, Half- acke: j 


breton — 


— AND —— aie made by machinery, 
anted best m Lean-to Greenhouse, 12 feet 

aA 4 feet, gam ends, 1 door, toa 3 feet of glass in front, = 
and painted three coats 


terials 


ORNAMENTAL — ora 
to James HETLEY and Co., $B 
e Gard 


ATING AND BEE 8 
Glasses and Dishes, Shades for Orn 


WATER-PIPES, PROPA GATING 
GLASSES, GLASS MILK ors PATENT 1 GLASS, 
ASS, 


San — cel bee 


personally or by let din 


9. II 1 ENGINES, WATER 


on Impr d Prine 


N 


~ SHADES, 


of iy ile olour, delivered to any r harf in aee _ See the Gardeners’ Chronic icle, first Saturday in — mo to Jo Joun L 

for 151. 10s. ; a do. do. 15 by 10, 221, ae a do. do. 18 by 12, | GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES AND BORTIGULTUREL ARBO 

281. 10s. ; a do. do. 21 by 12, 321 10s., including a plan fi PURPOSES, &c. 80 

— lj-inch Greenhouse Lights, glazed with 16 oz, COMP 

sheet = painted three times, 114d. per foot; 2-inch do., Is. 2 
ac Lewis’s Machine Hothouse Works, Stamford-hill, 


HORTICULTURAL Le BONG AND HEATING 


ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF T7 THE CHOICEST PLANTS, 


MILK PANS 
PASTRY TRY PINS 


ing from 
100 feet 
at 2 
per foo 


LLIN 
e best description, va ary 
nd upwards 


Traps.— 


J WEEKS Axp Co., av , Chelsen, Homncut eee rn Counties F 
„ TURAL one tects, H and Hor. eni 
APPARATUS MANURÀCTURERS, sane an 3 thei ia 
various Works n or D şs; which — — st “9 = —— ; br. HER 
x al — n e he san ave now 
erected o eir Premises, for —.— a 5 at — of D 
= thouses, Greenhouses gn og re Foreing-pits, ae, simien 
f which t ip heated by HOT WATE 


me o 
in various forms, showi 


HYACINTH FLOWER — 
ale r aLa which is of 


to 1 nch ba — from 
k Pan m 


ent of Lands in pa 2255 of Engla Ireland, or 
Owners we Settled Estates in En nea nd may, bee 
an Dra INCLOSE, BoD on, WE their a 
harge the Inheritance with the perme te 
Mr. Tuomas May, Secretary, 9, Bedford Cireu 


Wey ORE, HOT-WATER APPARATUS, 
En Ml ES, &e, 


FISH CLOBES 


16 ounces, at 
and 00 9220 gover y v 
r foot. Bri 


on improved and economical p 
ian waited on in Town and Country, an and * 
age Work for the Trade as 

ses, or Domestic — 


's Cas 
STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROG OF 


WIRE NETTING, 


t, Ra eee to — 


ns fro 


ROYAL LETTERS 


PATENT, 


e e 
2222 
1 


228222 
22424 
AMS 
= 
22222 


mproved methods of Build- PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS S, KING'S ROAD, CHELSEA. À X 
ing, Heating, and Ven —— all Hordleatara Eree DENCH invites the attention of Gentlemen about | 8 eae 
erecting of these Hothouses, c., has * Ahan rect Hothouses, d&c., to the vast superiority in every | etet UM 

first-rate operoi c vi has ve and ‘on —— Planta, v which | respect possessed by his PATENT 97 which be will 222 . 
are cultivated in su mous quantities that they are sold | warrant superior in every respect to any others. Good @lass MY) — 
t LESS THAN HALP-PRICE, 3 Estimates, Ke Cata- from 16 to 21 oz per foot, 1 foot — ‘Stet long, Bary Fy ps * N 
logues forwarded upon applica | and the H when n completed charged from 1s. 3d. to 1s, 6d. HARLES D. YOUNG a 
‘per superticial foot, accordin rin- k . AND C. TOUN 00 vis 
ciple, the roof being formed without tt or putty, and the MANUFACTURERS OF I — AND * 
other principle being wood rafters and the glass put in with 22, PARLIAMENT-STREET. MINSTER, 
putty, Pate nie 5 ae puer — Td. to 9d. per ft. BUILDINGS, DERBY-SQUARE, bape RPOOL 
; í R EDINBURGH; and 32, ST. 
GTEPHENSON anD CO., 61, Gracechurch-street, | respectfully to call the attention of Yan 
and 17, New Park-street, Southwark, Inventors | Others to their st ng ire- — 
and Manufacture mproved CONICAL and DOUBL d Bone rap masr — If 
CYLINDRICAL BOILERS, respectfully solicit the attention of | , This Net was exhibited at 
tific Hortieu och mproved method of — 9 —. * t Streng 
applying the Tank System to Pineries, Propagating Houses, ane — and ha ae 
& whi quired degre g~ as as bottom-heat is a general atte oa — 
s y 8 2 ~ aid of pipes or fiues, | the — — nae — by Hares and a 
8. v t e request of numerous that 
friends they are now making pori ‘Boilers of Iron, sk well and Young Piamtatiess is — ee entice A 
Copper, by wins the cost is reduced. These Boilers, which à Year or two it this Net. It is 80 : 
are now so well known, scarcely * description, but protesting th ficiently advan be 
those who have not seen them a n prospectuses wilt Plantations are su ee to other exposed 
z . — fi 8 as — as reference of the highest authority; ae or | Fre. greatest facility, by any 
may be seen at most of the Nobility’s seats and prin te sufficient, 
GRAY, ORMSON, anv BROWN, Danvers-street, | Nurseries throughout the kingdom, À K Hares and yer? tino e of isel quite 
eam ign solicit the 3 fag the Nobility, Gentry, and S. and e Trade that at their — be saree’ siae driven into the ground, 
to their s superi of Erecting and Heating 17, New Park. street, wary — required — construction Pose, to v 28 : 
srry dese Building c — no with Horticulture, The | Of Horticultural Buildings, as well as for hea ting ay "be jt ee apart lin paper tr existing F 
w done by them, at the Right Hon. the Earl of K y’s, to | Obtained upon the most advantageous terms. focira nia Hedges, TAE a and by being e 
1 they have had the er. of 3 80 long. still ! eo ieee seer = Iron or Wood erected upon the most ieces of th ree oF ts re feet, as requi d * Plants 
to show § the w 2 actio on, r. Kinghorn willbe happy | ponces, Wire. one en or irene whe aan — yu t at ite expense, img” 3 
They also beg wre er to * houses built by them during the U ND 1 3 
S NEW BOILER.— 
pn m. Da A the 4 3 "Garden > a rang Company of Lon- above is a . of their Boiler ha pt 2 5 ‘Is „ta, per in yards 13 in ins, wide, will cost 
rma will ki show 1 apin pas Mr. Moore, the | modelled ae for th mservatory, Chis 4 50 * 12 yards, 24 ins. W 
They beg also to say the building aoe i pate ag publi eg rom the observations po: of 100 yards, 30 ins. vide 
Heating Apparatus wasn — — apilks erred to e| B. an d H. have — n able to make, they are warranted i Bo: of 100 yards, 36 ins. Wi > 
GBAY, ORMSON, ne Davo Aa 8 stating it to — the as plus a a” me a large plaut f m less than — we required, 
so structures, s a proof, one charge o el has been kept per y ait 
— many of th the snobs and gentry in the country, — to several — for 48 hours without any addition, and one boiler of „ also o admirably e Be 
E Plans and Sauni shed free, — warm 1500 fost of 4inch pips. | Ken! | Poultry-yards, and is charges’ obstacle to msie f 
F ny instances, o. have 
ERY KER, Instant Maker THE ‘Sm er boilers upon the same plan. ALETO, this Net, C. sia dies it care 
invented pag oF Aureus, Bm Be. k ton-garden, Lond — has ign p and HEALY, 130, oe ay London ts by whieh they man aglan 
* ende er pin case ORTLAND CEMENT. — Testimonials received from | principal Porte of Pr 
it ean be adjusted to call attention at any te — * — ; all quarters, prove this CE o possess the rare pro- 4 1 155 per r lineal y cannot give a 
As a Fire-al wdestrable Instrament en red, perty of 2 the severest ke and to be conseque ty | Premium Wire Net 
fixed requires no attention to keep it in order price 41. 4 Superior to every other for hydraulic purposes, such = ‘ae F strength ot thelr ard of their 24-inch 
Superior Achromatic Microscopes 3l. 12s., Bl. 15s. 94 10s and | 2nd lining of Reservoirs, Cisterns, Baths, Fish-ponds, Ee. the weight-of one Yer in the markani 
upwards, Hoti rmometers, to penetrate 18 inele Sie Se | yards of ano — . r inspection sent 
Its., 253. A Book of Prices and description of Microscopes, | + colo our nor paint. lr ner vegetates, and will carry from 8 * 85 1 manufacture nape 
Telescopes, Barometers, and Misenenicters sent on rooi pes, | to four times its own body "of sand. D. Yo ung oe aired f ene. 
prof M t J. B. WHITE and 8 d WIRE WORK req) , 
two postage stamps. Every Instrumen t warranted, ufacturers, E and Sons, Milbank-street, West- | | an 


irre: anil 


THE GARDENERS’ 5 


5 n . ee u. Seal ful valley, i. 3 i ne 
raiser intends sending out p e is even worse. e out ut | : 3 
J . pata, Se the middle of October | ten days since, and I have got re Hr. . on * same ground, “too, —— indica of dis- 
enen e than T ever before witnessed it, at least for th ease presented itself last season than an an 
pen Pee, and as the stoc 5 Arcee it, a or whe | othe this neighbourho It is an old ri 
err. executed in strict rotation, Post. short time it has prevailed. It seems at Lain con- pagture. b 5 
payable on the Post-office, Newport. Isle of 5 fined to the earlier voaa or, to more correctly, Pasture, broken up five years ago. Most early kinds 
be well Fiona encomiums passed to the white skinned Potatoes, for I have an acre and a however, are mat and safe, but 
half of a late white variety, which I from the crop and small, on account of late frosts and sev, 
sands of Norfo all diseased, and only a fortnight drought. Since the late rains, crops, d 
since they were looking splendidly. Od every side I late planted ones, both early and late kinds, are 
ear complaints of the beginning of the disease. ot m i 
— 


der: e booked, 
rmed when the anis are gmi y, W. 
y Post-office “na — ni rd: 


Centurio ck 2 
—3 jel oo pps flora, 
— Rosa of the ve, and 
er, or —— s ‘Beant, * Fosters * 55 ho 
above selectio ot well cultivated, will make first-rate 


Descriptive Gat talogue, — the 
had on application to JoHN DOBSON, 
Cottage, Isleworth 


for their culture will be 
isce 1 seen d o 


Be: may be 


found in the 
n the Ist of each 


Lor 


when 


TS, nder the ry — 


I hav miare me peip my neighb 


——— 


g 
8 


unday night — air 


8 * 
— 


FS 


eee will also follow, if the present damp weather 
ts, and I will take the trouble to re 


the 1 
to 


CUPRESSUS FUNEBRIS, OR FUNEBRAL CYPR 
| ESSRS. N NDISH ann NOBLE, 8 
E ve the honour 4 inform N foblemen, Soni 
$ eae Publi, — A — 


* 


out fine te seedli 
e Chinese, 


formed a beautifal sheet o iy 2 fines or 
to t 


ni 8 and 

Be by an amphitheatre of picturesque upon 
9 605 erected pagodas, ve. of pe ety attracted par- 
tion. It was situated on a bold pe 


— — seems to where 
cb a 5 a — 7 of w woe The churehyar did 
as it observed in any — of 
bas — of 1 ig p or 3 vitæ, with 
es, unknown in Europe, overhung many 

ng tree in the 
inds is this 


as diffe rent p species of the ee on pas — 
e poin 
on Tan 


Vale of Tombs, the weepi 
fie ng veel of the Thun 


eae 15s, per 
per plant, 36s. per gt or 124. 10a. per 
ee DOUBLE HOLLYHOCKS. 
aus CHATER, begs to inform the public 
— 2 nor ae ge eae a of i Sorat prem) con- 
: ‘or th 3 3 ae 
*. tod wil en lf that 3 sur wee ualled 
beers, and will bs a8 a col 1 9 o 2 
— l sema „ ether purobas wae ae me 55 ay 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
as Fit Y, AUGUST 11, 1849. 
N tured to say üben 1 that we 


re written t 
At Putney, on Fri 


© 
© 
E 


without a Potato. e Pitman, Rumwell 
Taunton, Aug. 7.“ 

* Bhnors Cre VICARAGE, 5 August 9. 
have to report to you the return of th 

ns’ in its most virulent form, as far on of 

splendid luxuriant haulm goes, On 98 1 caw the e 
first st spots on leaves ; on Ea it had ir epei 


that I had a 


Lodge, 


as devasta 


stand in, if effluvium 

I should add, —— ~~, Le 
f | toms of the m ady on the 

half grown—and excellent a Kidneys (Lemon and 
Ash-leaf) are most oni and the haulm dead ripe, 
No diseased tubers ave been found by us in the > ground ; ; 


O 


as bad n both in — 4 mon 
et Upon this = 1 pr rly and if you desire it I | 


e 
eB =I |in 
ur: aeh infes- 


and disappear ; ma 175 
u 


is ee lag 


pas de. 


gangrene having 
——— can certainly growoverit. Let 
no — therefore assum 


e that 


we ah 


no means cause and e 
7 pa point, ec 80 upon many (we 


pro 
bserve no 
sandy loam, looking to the south and east. 


core l August, it was, 


suddenly noticed, and 


| tse caused by ays of destruction 


| fro 
we rence pee return vases 
take adv: 


pay, 8 others rs, relati ting da vege le disease 
rler enge B 
of seed Kidneys o on sa coach house floor, unmistakeably ena that w acta 2 many — past continued 
affected, taken the liberty of reporting this a to draw attention to the subject by of t 
ou as the very | first decided case of this di Ribs „ a it means of Coun 
these parts ; and if it ag ith repor you are no | een to be * We tó 14 i in th seem, 
doubt receiving from other localities, it may be some pibon O De nee Sit TANGI I-A. discovery 
to you in forming an opinion as to the general of causes ; and it is evident that the subject is one 
ence. I should, 3 assure you at the same that 5 be w out mainly by men of science, 
ime, how luxuriant beyond description all the field oe min tained to exact observation and 
Pota everyw. und me, and fast p accurate reaso ning. T — 19 ae og “ practical” men 
ing mplete a . Still how little ground for x5 incapable of dealing with it has been proved by 
calculating on their being preserved to 01 incidents occurring in Pike w; where one 
five days ing forth the change I have 5 
my 
Castle.“ 
t LopsworTH, 


and those 
“nat this, how 


To wever, 
In the meanwhile we 


tion a new Ag. e parti 
In a umber of the Comptes 


May n 


yet observ 
in the clays. 
various peri 


noticed 
ae Nea E these we select the 
NEAR BATH. zn 
ed in this 


and 
leave 


7757 
Ha 


u 
E 


5 


Hii 


severely, from present appearances. 


“cq Dietan, Coley Park Farm. 
Se the truly gratifying Editoria 


it is to have 
You that your remarks are not correct as re- 


50 to Captain R. 


is mostly forward 
sorts and late planted 


3 Paper, “upon n the eto rot |W 


| be — — 3 
We have also before us the vn extract from 

letter of Ca — Surrn, R epute 
t rr, R. N...Inspector-General High: 
land Destitution, 30th July, 1849. 


now, wi 
and Saturday I ins 
wnshi A Skye the state of the e Potato . at 
has 
Ba rlin, in Skye, a new d 
made i 


appearance. 
d ElLIorr 
This ae sw proper ts * dat 


rts, | | the absence in 9 e 
| stances essential to this ra from a soil in which 
vated 


ex 
eeu at, me 
useless for 
- manure 
ith deep regret, to state beth that on Friday 
5 ted in the districts or 
fresh d 


s reports | man 


nts. 
which has so hea 


tol it is culti Some e ges have 
made, d 7 year it is — 

— is the ‘eet. recommen 
precautions, which it — 8 
ication ei a 


— — 


en dung is th 


wa Comin 
It is, — — ae 
sien le Lort dis- 


of Maldon, 
Potato oe 


rarely come under ow eal fatal 
me debe — oe a . character, save one spot 


wi 
of lime? Can this disease, which has giv 
so much trouble, be owing to the absence of certain 


THE GARDENERS’ 


Sh i SUE 


500 
organic substances, especially of sulphuric acid, | smother and destroy the young stock. In potting, the | Rice, has given 
— e 2 eee $ villa ener should 91 * large shifts, and thus keep wing a 2 7 roe Work hk ma 
“Tt appears from M. Bovssincavtt’s treatise on | his plants sere ans of wiatering them. | Rice ground to mat 
rural economy, that Potatoes, 75 counting the | There are m plants ruin y promiscuous 1 The Rice pr pos young 
eprive a hectare of land o in winter — by any Pact pA want of skill in re d wit — pons end 


haulm, 9 kil. of phos- 
phoric a Ar 8.8 kil. of su e acid 3.3 kil. 
chlorine, 2.2 kil. of eee fy magnesia, 6.5 
kil. of Naa and 5 ¥- 6 9 kil. of sila, 18.6 kil. of 
alumi no takes from the 


2 we should ie to know whether any one 
untry possesses any experience which | 
thiows light upon M, Bone s views. 


aeiia the ees produced on Tuesday last at 
f the Horticultural Society was an 

F from Peru by Messrs. srg to 
i ae s plan „the 

piney elegans of P paein had n exhibited on 
previous occasion e yes muc 
attention. It was r 8 arded as . prety plant, but 
not as one of striking m however, 
quadru pied the size of its “foliage, doibh that of its 
flowers, and acquired a brilliancy of h i which 
laces it in the 


e and c t w. ek 
and worthless ; planted in the open border, and fe 
undantly hy aon 


ures 
e lives the species to be hardy. 
wo yea 


iow it 


The leaflets are firm, fleshy, 
and stained with purple on the 


about 9 inches high, bearing ve or six 

deep rose-coloured flowers, vith a 7 dark purple 

eye. 55 ee effect they ay not unlike Viscaria 
nly m 


uch handso 
Till phys shall have: ‘been obtained of the 
real habits of this species, it will be prudent to give 
it some sli hé shelter in the winter e believe, 
however, that dryness will be more important to it 
th at that As a rock plant, it 
promises to be extremely useful ; for a gay bed ina 
e it will able. Nor are 


with other 
flowers, and will open perfectly with no more Tight 
that of an ordinary day. 


VILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENING. 
ae bold per and cultivate Heaths 
and New Holl 


3 1. 


re tivation. Phar 


NEW ss om Fy 1 MACHINE. 
1 FA rd the m d by the accom- 
ue 


t to answer the i 


t saving of labo e it for 
ween drills, I use 


ing be- 


the ‘betas as abo 


nches 


air and dew, it has become a gem wW 


contracts to 13 inches ; and should even this Titar width 
— greater Ri 917 drills pes Hor. 
two hind ti weight w 
“ot t e 4 55 e. throu 
y the way 
ich mac which keeps it 
9 steadily— on Bi see is not represented in the 
drawin 5 ut it is 
n I use the ee for ens up ground, o 
for working it into a fine state, A in a 955 
to a set which I have similar in form to 
mon grubbe r; in he way I prepare * 
reception of a a 8 savin; 
; ma 


m- 


gouad — the 
e expe 


e purpose 

re the ground is rough, has the “additional effect of 
pac me machin ne; but I never use i it, it is not 
quired, a 
light eke is hat eet order. 


„in this soil. My ground is rather | 


have 
—— most tein, anes with the addition of a very ji 
grea 


in the d pg eid 
(the near side), and which are five i in number: ithe trans- | di 


suddenly t 5 cover itself wi 


iroli 


e plant dlhe anf in a very 
s the observation of the above qual 
pike 85 


66 11 the s raise 


pected. 
The checking 8 too sre! fertility of mae 
By an W a f 
dm 


1 0 f a noe 
it of such variety, or 
manur 5 — Rice ds, is’ the 25 — 
secure treatment to zai Moret, If a Rice Paas 
observed to be i y, and gg 
clear indications of * ap the malady, È my 
be mowed down whilst still voit aA may afeli 
chance 95 a i me draw off the water and lè t 
cattle to feed it down. It see » that a pe | 
ferable course to either of these two is to draw of & | 
water a little belos the plant shoots up into ear, Thy 
should be left in this stai leaves begia ® 
fade and the plants Feri look languid, when te 
irrigation may berestored. This seems to be the mnt 
of poe 


so; the object being to 1 
4 iia hiai ng drawn if kept under 1 1 — The whole machine, which is of iron, is very light, 1 
the whole year, and are conseq apt t ve of and the work which I have described it as doing is 
or their foli during winter, Heaths are — er e * = The, work a man 
diger 40 müde at this pi ne shania bs could go through with it would not be less than two 
: í acres per day, hoeing betw urnips at about 2 feet 
) with flowers of sulphur, to t its pro- th i : 
gress, and placed in an airy situation. In the course zPartz the grubbing he would do nearly as quickly, and | p y 
of a few days they should receive a good syrin ing, fi would sp ly up Potatoes at the rate of a e ere signs of its app 
ane e orua its side, so as to prevent the sulphur ay.: Shora am achine, I have fading gh the loarel ie 
from being washed gnto the pot, and also to 
soil ing del with an over supply of water 
Some of the woolly-leaved ter under 
glass * oor pa 4 Massonii, * 
ii, gemmifera, and o of t that a hich 
are extremely liable to suffer w ee heavy | K. Sivewright, Cargelfield, 
i They should laced in a frame tilted on a Edinburgh, July — A B hi: liabl bé -a inve al 
brick or two, so as mit all the air which it is DISEASES OF PLANT e sil a h 
possible to give them, without Xf g them unneces- 2 (Con oe hte ge — gr * 2 yo famed one 
sarily to the autu ins, which are to prove Genus XVII. . Lombard name Perish from I It 
pias as and from the 9 — Arer they | to a malady called rei —.— Ruggine ep or —.— made any progress 
ever reco n the rs begin to | and probably known by stil! other names to growers of Senson. But 55 
wither, they shoal — easel picked off —— wing es which is the plant which suffers so much from it one . g et by 
ony remain exhausts the energies and Rice ost vigorously. Thi Hieno i 
exhibits at the same time slovenly prind — = 45 shown by the dee rit —— its 2 water, if pe, soil ki 
The fr Mosat Heaths should have their 2 vigorous — by its spikes longer and bale liquid sik first symptom of the disease is 
in order to keep the plants within | larger than usual. Then it dries up and dies 
megi and also to perm om 7 — short time. Rice is affe by this pate be “gan a very e 12 folding of the leaf. 4 
sa good time to tie Heaths out, ane 22 —in its young state, 7 fall rown. The mis- oF HES 1 kad 
them 1 3 avoid, 1 Ps e use 0 2 thos mally prevented in the former case than | ON THE GROWTH OF T to this ie 
eS $ k 4 e pres shally Laer sda ul in the latter. Thence I distinguish two kinds. 1 facts relating | 31 
~ eultivating this beautiful g r as are due bundance of manure, and never anes se the years l cote r 
possible to pier . the plant to support itself. Neat, | show themselves in — or abandoned Rice grounds. and have 
well- all bushes are more to be desired by the | As yet it has been held to be a genus of disease which tha Mémoires de P inetitat e dee 
a than huge overgrown requiring several | only attacks Rice, but there is no reason to conclude} A abin is ogh of 3 
p= tl them. Two eB spray | that other Gramineve living in — — Iso the nam 
Occup’ leave room to it. 
for vari “The present is an excellent time to re 2 
f ie pot First Species. Tue Lesser CAROLO. mon that the 
the later fi wee ol the soend baaa ae nee gsc pose ps parts of Italy an im- | known 
pot-bound ; 5 in pan branch o economy, it is to be hoped that | 
— Heaths and New Holland : poem: better known which affect this | 
Sonia te: them fhe 3 a bound. It — plant ich cued so many nes 
* better, when 7 ge for the accom- | from their „Ar ee Dal Toso and Bevi- 
moda allotted to “varie sry young plants which |ia bis have treated of ee recently, Dr. Biroli, | 
rather tise on the Cultivation of | their 


THE GARDENERS* CHRONICLE: 3 501 


S ahairea from the one abo Tansa IL —Continued. water when they are kept cool, but plenty when the 
N Relative | raised. 1 
amount of : i i 
Taste I. Á ‘tote Caniat Nama of Nature of Soil. horizontal much * Lou cannot err in a subsoil of 
: 35 Table I. 2 The ing of ees.—What makes bees swarm? 
E ory is it heat? is it want of room ? or again, why did my 
4 lee $5 3 . a 12.25 swarm w I gave them more room? are 
Nature of Soil jas Age of Trees, of 3 N — 7 3 eee ne questions often asl i, and I would remark here that 
2 8 8 K- aR, Wermouk rach. i wren hen Se 11.56 |the suggestion in your last Paper, that the yo 
: Ree nie = — too forward a state when the adi 
a * ae l room was given, is in my opinion wrong. I have always 
Years, far. 35 : Tarch W ö 3 9 lesi | considered that swarming on a large proportion of bees 
Argillaceous 4% or more 24 fe 22 5” sat Sade ge 2 leaving a | hive, is A ately tani bee meagre 
4 «+e. 50pH0ra aponica . andy cla . Fanii akio 
wee Sandy « 8 | eee , —— 20 Common Elm Sa calcareous clay} et I — * nearly the en y cause of bees leaving a hive, 
wt * sand 4160 or more EER Queso Oak T . ‘Sandy e when the stock is once Hhestablsher 8 
e. with flints| 5} Bo. . . 12 7. Ditto . .. Ditto, mei o 75. | only Site sind tha Saget Aiai that will cause this is 
sad cla; .. 1 12 ote ove 2 „ A e sand +. Mer from 100° to 1 5 accordin g to the weather I do not 
r spe f ect ia San „ 6:76 consider want of room as any further than that of 
8 Sandy clay bile 05 * and upwards 111 2 . Beech. UL ee d Hee dite. o = increasing the heat in the home of these little warm- 
8 Be. tn 1125 5 ime J dee ; “sand, 5.29 b » and I do not believe they wouid en 
3 be mois 3/100 0 and upwards 110 . in a barn if the temperature was raised above 110 
ji argc, an suid. i)" a De 12 16 .. . Chinese Arbor Vit a | argillaceou sandy, 5.29 oe : > gad seg fo : —1 ng to a bees go = 
Pi 2 * ty W mos 91 poins 9 2 4 
Acacia * 33 13 Ome Oak eae sand. 4221 in th 4 m — 1 * 
i 3/60 0/090] 9 777" . Sand 4,00 ease seve: g as nearly wo 
RE Arg praag wi ne TR ki — . e sso? 4 — quickly found’ thro fr ee Marl g It is hardly 
europea .. Sandy spwards| 102 1 — san necessary to t t bene t arises in preventing 
iS Ulmus campestris} Do. ... „ 1 and upwards 224 e Correspondenc |a swarm from leaving the hive. There are a certain 
1 Argillaceous I 100 and upwards | 114 Bane indica. — This very . stove number of bees required as nurses to the oung grubs ; 
1 sey Presi ary so seldom seen in perfection that I am induced | and whether they swarm or not, that number will be 
„„ Sa n 1 * send an account of one we now have in bloom. It employed, but if you succeed in keeping them in the 
1 1. 60 and upwards | ,251 ds about 9 ft. high, measures about 6 ft. through the | hive, the number which would — been wee — 
4 losa, | „ ace and Mee 150 spikes of delicate purplish-lilac | nurses in your new stock, will now be employ it 
eee 4 to 60 42 sf ded ; some of the spikes are 9 inches | securing spre, 2 To effect this — hives on Nat's 
d E Sandy cla 2 — oo 185 flowers : y ex o e . aipin opérer paa principle — boxes fitting closely 
3 o oin pee u Do. n — 8 ti n — ate of beauty | together, com woe "with each other by openings 
aa. en 9 — erstromi e a indica m tome left in the sides, which ean be closed at 1— and each of 
— been, cla; 11 20 8 % 435 9 be under judicio N 2 ed a hivi ely entrance for the bees. The 
2 Di E clay y 5 E ee 137 | Plants of boat 18 — nich. "bat oe should e — *** —— such * — va eo, must ras Aa — 
be Laricio is ld. e prov. 
A Da „ +»|Argillaeeous e en last heal e started i in J stove costs in spring, | means for veatilation, If the centre is getting too 
us clay 5 Do. 4.185 | after cant them in hard, reducing the old ball, and | of he nication with one of the side boxes 
es Pees — Sandy clay — 3/60 and upwards 200 pot : range a Mixture of bai oam and well rotted | must be opened, and that side box must be kept pro- 
r enue E dung * leaf-mould. Abe in bloom they may be re- | perly ventilated. And now forthe great cause of failure 
—.— D 165 to the conservatory, and Ses ill last a month, in many instances, It is not enough to open the way 
* om: A * da 453 irt ill em uch after into the side boxes, but the eee into the centre box 
%) Do, taxifolia .. Sandy clay 1 60 and upwards |. 88 15 manure-water will assist very m hoiii bei the entrance to the side 
in Cupressus disticha| Moist la- Do. . 488 f r e . T. Ann, . D. 8 bet front should be —— a & ke 
ceous sand, x given as a ale 
Libani Sandy lar 4| o. Esq., Penllergar | * f or into the centre, except 
re ae ' trees were originally | other way of putting ae out of o e ce 
„ ealearecus clay|10 Ne i) EA ailure $» 5 = „aA a po 7 through the side box, kept cool by ventilation. If heat 
287 | planted PH ach api eng y < i tre, th into the side 
Moist sand 5 10 to 30 vee eed 3 n E built a homes over th í glazed drives the centre, they go 
TT glass ; last year they bore a tolerably | which they find cool enough for ihem; and as the close 
ead 11/30 and upwards = good crop of Figs for a first crop, which ripened about a = ese are is os ‘en — 
7.40 to 10 hail-storm, quie wor l tried, i 
360 and u upwards 118 June; in a che July following oe ** Tra 8 Will be fraid to wndesed. Mn Qld dptartan 
per — . 414 eee eee * to the infi 4 2 1 . 
. . co! u e were 
pe eed E A T aE E oA ove 
aiam a a oe a pe Fe dat onn ta aoe an oe asas — 
y ¥ Y 2 3 : ;| A small three-pro ork, e some 
he mesg table” exhibita the respective thick- | seam, and Pf ipri mengenke arana iras 3} inches; 
mse of the annual layers formed by the different they appear tough, and whe: y 


mei but in order to ascertain the relative bulks of | stage, small blisters appear just under the skin, m Puas Ya 5 ah ge about half an inch thick, ti 
nber, further ca ; for this is | after a ti 


further a ey burst and give out a glutinous kind 3 err e 
tt in proportion to the numbers the matter, after which the ecom- | ag ap ssa 12 ladies — d 
hese Se ag mie ne seni. 428 w lu 5 e well, for a working man, ‘but this litle tool may be 

še numbers. 1 n, I grow lux 22 and a most useful one 

lare arranged the . the following table in the | milky exudationb "s irs E . N oe ca iege T in 
i ant — values N eas og th consisting of flag-stones laid upon brick pillars. I first know what 1 eng m opie yt it, after ong 
ran sections which the respective thickness would ted the cause of stagnant m ry ad — — . ing the clay from the 
fm. Thus, if the white P lar, according to the first the roots, and I made a 8 inches wide in N — ale te 8 
table, makes: annual titles ‘aves 4 re Ër inch in | front of the house inside. e gary eA to come in | annuals and other tende rap nee 3 
— the ond ur Hornbeam makes only 0-059 inch ; e 33 coarse material, and with. | say, is little enough, This isa tool which we do not 


— P a aial ae: 
respective sections ila barib aiak . it does not appear to im- want the trade to furnish us with; our village 


a at the end of ‘say 10, 20, 30, or more 
of their 5 > has. made me one, and really I think 
Sog hence the area of the section of the prove them. I examined them yesterday, and found | blacksmith be charmed with it 
that 


times — Notices 
Figs ; I therefore Ree Be” — . 
is — f the Hornbeam. In like them dry—rather too much so for Figs ; — — 
Sen Ay oe A that the horizontal growth of | conclude that wet was ang ar of she isles 3 * Green: iy. At the 1 of May, when the — < 
“gh —— eee ee n 2 2 foot 6 inches wide, in- | threatened to devour all the foliage — our e 
— ond urable instance, by 12°25 ; the | several places (w „ pee * : fass 
l Se roa at stem at least one-third i on under the pty oss 40 yards | I dia who was working in my garden 
wer than the imi the Ayrshire Rose shoots, which 


earlier ii season, as a substitute for your 
7 which appears poor. I stop the young shoots at every eee — not calculating 
1 . White m... Moist calcareous clay) 7-39 | fifth or sixth joint as they make wood, which * EME as this; but I assure you my little 
3 T eea eera caus the foli considerably, by which process I) ons ie. phi her ancceeded :to a made fer Mik 
= ea ite eee oat 0 43.56 ine that the up more nutriment er He had no sulphur, nor mateh- 
. Slatthasgiandutoss e fae he can and the crude matter is an bacco-box, nor pipe of any kind, nor 
risen te . e 3 ee. the action between root nor even a to . b 
$ 8 een Ditto 2.2.2.2. 37.21 y i ual. I would allow them any r even Read’s ‘of the Privet, 
Daae Common Ein | PE 49° and branch being eq but I am/ little besom of his own, made of the shoots x 
ee Seat) bears, ionn my er 10 the manner — with which he brushed up the Rose shoo — ok 
me T Plane. Ditto. — * bliged * 
Da e SY bias | e mea shoul not eat ta in the hones | M. J.B.” that i 1 grew Hops, 1 would try and whip 
oe to eee the vermin from in oe a. 
it hay e 21.09 Do you think that taking away a portion —— 2 — the “ p nd smoke 
Ir r or take Errare eee, 
17.64 — — the bottom, and give the roots page 467. Addio. An the 1 
17.64 | 1 1 have stated that the front wall Eradicatiag — me 3 — 
. ö — i —— feet below the surface, have met with in adopting your sugges * * 
16.00 of the is built on drain below the tops of | to the extirpation — And . x 
16.00 and I have made rubble ars APPD S 8 
15.01 | the arches. D. J. [The trees have been probably 


ire li I have 
125 | dry at some stage of their growth. Figs require litle | as much as Ihave been ; and for ten years 


THE 


with eue and by 
so I had, as 
I found 


been at work against 1t—at trsi, 
that means I fancied I had succeeded ; 


e 
5 in eutting o ante, 
of pecks being carried of the Jav 

n cut off, an 
pe ted. By next year I Kii there wi 
a Dandelion to be seen, soei the 


“re 3 pen A 
13 inch. as left 
n the pot with the other seedings, ane sae aedy 
pe Mall cant ther head appear when 
plan esl it had six gp. * me 
gnawing line of the slug by a bro ar 
stalk, and ps that upwards it had the appearance of 
ut of the lower beats of the stalk, like the 


wn. 


s, Good King Henry of 
or Orach of Lo hi 
and called Mercury in * Few 17 
rt of the coun without it, for 


specially now that Potatoes a 
co in at a time * * i is pae ig wanted, viz., > 
beginning of May. It is a hardy perennial, and nev 
fails to ina a gp "R 3 5 trente ted i ke As i: 
1081 8. soil 15 s apart, in rows 
ibis asunder, it wil il put up stale ne arly as thick 
‘a one i little r. When from inches high and | 
upwards, it may be cut off slo oka old root, the 
bottom jet striped a ane the ka 55 peeled, Ayon 


stripping it upwards, seed shows n the 
top remove ih 5 the kf, a the to oR 25 aves wich 
the stalk, w. is the p e used. Ti 

venient inches ond bo boil it 555 it beco 
lay it on a drainer vege ghee pe erve it up 
pol or without melted butter, Ae salt, vinegar, &c., 


were hundreds me 


as may suit different tastes. It may be eaten with 
any kind t, roas iled, particu- 
larly with roast fresh meat, and boiled bacon, It 
a good substitute for Spina eh, Cabbage, &e. 
No garden ought to be wit 3 it ; about 50 roots for a 
and 100 for a 5 e. sized family, will keep 
up a supply, until it is time to discontinue cutting it; 


then let it — like Asp paragus, cut off thë dead haulm 
mulch over the roots with rotten err ng 5 

let it re main in that a all man and turn 

with a fork in spring, as soon as it begins to grow, mot | 

earlier, for if done too 8 and aan frost sets i 


trunks rest 
— 3 


d a groo 
whole length of the building, oo 27 feet 4 
eams forming the walls resi 


kling thinks 


| a= of the building, the r 
mined the wood, which, o 
nife, is like ebon 


el have given tafetetice, there is a 
and 


church, an engraving 
g timber wall, &c., in deta 


fh fol il 
tinet, 2 and bedding out plants, of various colours, for 
mateur’s garden, and are easily kept in a frame or 


pit during winter. 
ey eranium Uni 


2 
2 
2 
— 
© 
s 
© 
= 
8 


Queen's 1 
„ Victori 

„ Sidoni 

„ Lady Plymouth 
> 

3 

’ 


3 
3 


„ Ivy-leaved, white 
, pink 
„ new gold. edged 
„ new silver-edged 
» Tom Thumb 
Salvia patens 
72 —— 
chamædryoides 
Campanula — 


Nuttalt ia ore iflor 
leremberpia sient 
Cuphea payee 


plat aa 
Aster bellidifioras 
one japonica 
— opium Voltaireanum 
Jazania unifio 


Enothera . 
3 12 


"eA n = D u> Pis 
= 
E 
B 
g 
E 
8 
a 
Ş 5, 
8 
E 
g 


Sel 
crlronia aheri 


imbers.—The following 


ing 7 —.— plants for a om try co 


Clematis florida pleno 

azurea grandiflora 
Passiflora racemosa cærulea 
Lonicera flexuosa 

Nintooa 
Solanum jasminoides 
Jasminum 3 14 


GARDEN ERS' 


of trees with a portion of the heart cut out. 


He 
2 29 — with a 
ny, — exceedin 


Scarlet Mrr . 
Bignonia radicans 


Thes 


The 
eet high, — of the 
e at the portion 


gly har 
hy it n not last 


eee 1 
il, 15 m, Au 


ing are selec ct, dis- 


AnA sopana 


88 * 

Silene Schaft 

Alyth variegatum 

Potentilla Macnabiana 

Viola Neapolitana 

Double Purple Jacobæa 

Lo 2 Eriapa compacta 
inalis 

Gain ardia aristata 


Phlox Van Houtt 
Double scarlet N apres 
Blo — ed do. 


Orange do. 

Petunia ps ti ‘Albert 

„ Splen ee ae 
Verbena Em 

35 Define 

„ Avalanche 

» Lady Brackenbury 
Calceolaria 8 

„ Kentish Her 
Fuchsia formosa — 

„ Purity 

d 


æ 
hneria californica 
ntstemon cn lius 
Chelon ne mex 

Sedum Si eboldi [thum 
Mesembryanthemum 5 


are 18 — hardy ‘flower. 


tia tat ifo lia 

—— Amadis Ros 

Noisette Jaune Desprez ditto 
öğ iss Gl tto 


So 
Multiflora De la Grifferaie do. 
ae 


Belgians 


Glycine sinensis 


posed 
oma elegans.—A plant of this bam — — — 


CHRONICLE. 


ers he} —Fr 


where it would receiy 
| flowers, 1 W could ane 


= — 12 


same time, 


It siy a plant of Pentstemon cordif 
I > range-flowe st i ar: 
> ap state, little — ry ti it has nat 
as in this country s entl 1 x 
pam ei It is ee — fase 5 05 x 75 
same nu n comm Np 


The serym 
Verbena 1 as did 


rly waa | 


ye 
Ripley Queens, weighing respectively ¢ 
862, 4 Ibs. 1302 an and 5b, vel. A Banii MA x | 
awarded for ast.— Eig heen 3 fra 
his hybrid Eatin greenish 
r. M 


but one weighed 91 
oy 28 fruit ha 


Ou one of the fruit being cut, it proved not to be f 
n flavour, A Ban edal was awarded — ! 
e two 


2 Nen nd — 


vering material f 


it starves e roots. It is fond . + liquid man 4 Plerom 1 of ite kind 
applied previous to a ground. Pro- ong which w yropeea, quite a gem d j 
pagate it by sco e roots, There paa — from re ommending it tomy fe fellow hor iil tires various Orchids, ine sock 1 alt 
wo or „green, &c.; the green h ot possess it meagre suited to any Auevulnera; berni Zan e 
lie ve, much “the bes est, and grows much the” — collection of plants, arte smal, as few of our moder $ the pretty Apricot-eoloured Cn . 
Richard Rilott Dorrington. ntroducti ae can exceed i aut 11 2 1 ell figure plant called Tritonia aurea; 2 rae 
_ Filtered Rain W 3 90 feet deep well of mine jn « Pax azine ‘of "Bota any 30 Mare, gure white and a yellow Portulaca ; Vilmorin’s ha 
ite repair, and the water never good. but os is there stated 4. — a stove plant. This is a mis- of Thunbergia alata, Pentatemon little beaut, 
should therefore feel obliged to “T. W. T., Cheshire,” | take, as it will thriv nhouse where frost is ex. nium gibbosum, a Cape rit A fragrant in $ 
any rain dents, to inform me cluded, ative of an elevated part o rgan | desirable on account. of its ia patens ; Cas 
Aiakiag E teow ths prev ah gree eo cud bei Brazil. That it is capable of being eulti- oving 4 je ert i red ad Hal fovea 
1g an spring water, ted ] $ aria cuneifolia ; A 
5o, I will give up the well at once, and build a tank as vit to the gardens of Messrs, Veitch, the fextonate in. | Begonia a aminat fom mene Lare ol 
re bana Chronicle, further hint will be | porters of it, will testify, for there may be seen a huge | ine specimen of the on should possess 
ee W. 2 — Hingham, ee ‘ bush, which is literally “Le f flowe éb a plant n it will atiat 
} i —I beg uscat 0 olypodium Dryopteris and calè Ihave found | Should it not prove 15 . and foal? 
r on the Ist of March, having pruned | poth of’ ttle a limestone rock, on | make a handsome greenhouse pans s 
it for a general erop, though it was in a weak state — Si this se vane Eat; $ — roy tNm small plant of Mimulus tricolor, & roe 
Vin ch Beans were on the flues, and when the are both the same species, A —.— only takin the pretty flowers, but having a delicate — 
inen vere in flower ted spider was spreading from them 2 —— when | exposed s nation. dificult to cultivate. Ab A 
effetting sad — Naam — * mildew were = the locality above — 3 —— es agent in the hands o N pes 
. ccur. G. Maw, Bideford, Nort i Sm 
8 = ae 5 ~ 120 ce here, I en- | ° To —— — woes ‘might be spared if th a gpd Aug. dap. oe i — wi 
stood it well, and set their berries, so 1 tinued the 5, gentlemen who advertise in the Gardeners’ Chronicle a — Sea many m gnificent 7 
ractice till the ripenin the fruit, which thle fone ag m ce at peci b; ated b + 
fa Jul Ih Pi * nel i — which they wish their letters to be left, and the forms | Pecies, Was p godin resented by O° 
edi S al Shows —— and the Vines are in under which —— nd to receive them ; it would save | rare Engl a Y —— l 
— 11 l 5 tries and fruit rs a great deal of suspense in waiting so long Hamlet Clarke, and Mr. 1. presented bY Ts 
—— of 3 2 for answers, and, —— is more, the vexation of 1 logical publications were ar ag 
2 stan, I did not apply hot water, and their notes — led for.” 1 Agricultural iety, the Et = 
5 . pearance it m a the sped of “C. P., Cranbrook » it is | Stettin, the Tyneside ah Naturalists, b 
= * ago. 1 — hot 3 as — e hoped that he vil take the hint, and that I may be the | 2 Series of portraits oven i collections — 
haasi only one, now or in —+ who may have ao species . f, 
bs petra i: — that continued t the application of of the | co —— J. P., Dover ; 22 terous insects, including many 2 70 
virulence of the blight is subdued; but I believe that 7 : 
Pagar e , Sulphur, nor anything else will resto Sotieties. 
ken in its pristine state for season, for HORTICULTURAL, Aug. 7.—J. R. Go 
eet: prs 1 — whole syst leaves of the . Fairbairn, 
2 indicate debility; a crop will a collection of large and excellently well cultivated Cape i j 
1 —— ee in ths, i ul condition. The goes E. 
use. ; „ range, Leyton. varieties of E. ampullacea ; Irb very fine speci- . 
* nnd Quality of Timber. —In nection n; Lee’s tricolor, and 9 is, A — sitical Proctotrupes were 8 1. 
— — on the lasting quality of timber eut in olden | sian Medal was aw. em.—Mr. Moore, Apothe- | bee within ag el ; 
Ion ne owing may The es’ Garden, Chelsea, contributed Plumbago Lar- they had destroyed. > various DOF | 
“Me ma sm volume, entitled | pentæ, a plant which has exci interest i in consequence Consul in Albania, Greece, rA 
Ease of the Antiquities and Architecture its not having h — ti ymenopters fromm Geleroder™™ ay 
Holborn) by Mea Rev uckling (Weale, High | f of it. It was suggested that as it was discovered sexes of the i ge bad 
— — i it Pe — the walls of r winters are more situation of which in the simen ponent 
chant for t the: y ours, it might be found to succeed nea doubtful, He also exhibited 22 
— ar corpse of St. Edmund. | planted out out of doors on the — of —ů— si i apparently — small Greek 
being hich had been reared fom 


. 


THE GARDENERS’ 


can look. 
n exhibited minato but that its bens 


d general mee 
8 held o on jon Tuesday, 2 31, at Watson’ s 
es Palmer, Esq., 


= 
z 
8 


f 
i 
i 
i 
ö 


Hg 
1 


1 
HE 


1270 
Ta 
i i 


i 


a 


j 


E 
Fis 


77 
i 


2 


which we can 


— — 


sand persons from either town or country, and march Sl II. i Hardge (E ley) — Red-edgrd, 
them along a bank carpeted with m of this beau- Splendid (M arth = — 3 
pn Fork-moss, when every frond dunted by its | Gin Mes) = or 
ovely fructification, not ten out of the thousand Kr 
would take notice, or say, Is not that ing! — Ban. Holmes) —.— — . — 
* majority woul it and ma see it; yet if — n ma (Ely) Coutts (Bur. 
their attention were special! to it, they would | Queen Victori ey 
9 wonder that ‘hey ‘had not before y — viet (Holla ) — 5 
t — ‘ 

The mind of the young naturalist is directed also Amy (Ba: — 

e N of interest connected with the ee of ye 2 ae 
e Lamarkian Kirk Enchantres 

of 2 which, however 8 to i imagina. | Flakes, Dey) Juliet (May) 
tive f. instrue i t stand before a ——+ d Sor (aren (Maus- se, aan 
sober and careful view in tas nothing to fear Premier ( ) Dii wane — 
from facts, but it rejects fulton er it is well to be able | Queen of Purples — Princess Alice (W. 
to separate the chaff f. e — Trom (Jacks (B kton in) President — es) 


As regards the facilities which the work presents = 
as 1 a genes know ct of * laere 
re happy to be able to 


arked, for extract, one or 1 0 exceedingly | 


graphie ae . relative to the myria animals 
which swarm amongst Algæ. The — wy evidently 
points con amore, and is a tru 


Gar n Memoranda. 

Roy K N bone Nearly a centu 
elapsed since this 
proprietor was Mr. Bro n the 


on the Ist of e ast. It ae fell into the 


roved 


— stands of these 
end of October. 


4 Pi 
pae struck under s 
8+ | trifle of bottom — 
bly. 


cupat tion of it end ded | 


receives sufficient 2 
oe my vegetation of Venezuela, in 
tani 


u 
can 


ursery i excellently * si by the 
nly | of the London and Wi 
Castle. It is x — from parae the road, and | 
18 by the Grea way, to —— i 
lough it is pretties» The soil of the rer] isa 
rich yellow 1 and the w 


premises are well | 
sheltered by very large and fine Holly, Yew, and — 
edges, 


Mr. Turner's excellent —— of Carnations and 
. were just at their best at the period of our 
and never have we seen oa a fine display of 
ese favourite flowers ; sS we - 
usually large and well coloured, and the foliage in the 
most healthy condition ima Mr. Turner 
bloomed 1500 pots of these beautiful fiowers thi 
nts pot). A new con- 
af manner of that put up 
in the Horticultural s Garden by 
Hartley, contained 600. pots of these flowers arranged 


22 1 
Fee 


worms ; 
is it receives is about 


indsor | at pairi tenn te, 
generally wan 
at made them his 


— — — 


— DA Mal colmson ; a 


Pride of the ‘sa ae 
7 and Soa: 


e | Bishop of @ — (Brown) Lad: Peel — 
Dido — La aD Dacre © (Garret 4 
Firebrand (Hardwicke) rs. Barn Barnard) 
Hero of Middlesex r (Willmer) Ph . graa 
a — —— 3 ly) Princes 09 (Willmer) 
Quee ueen Victoria (Green) 
Venus (Headley) 

Ariel (May) Princess Royal (Marris) 

Yellow avai are but poor in al y, particularly 
oe esteemed by florists. The best we saw 


emia, Benvolio, Willmer's Queen of 
pretty 


4 en Martin's Queen, Pride of Pon 
self yellow, named “ Parsee Bride.” 
ahlias were igorous, short, and strong ; 
kept well tied out, and all superfluous shoots are 
moved ture often overdone by 
inexperienced rs. 
s; ere sho 


owers from the lst —— 


nks now cone pe —— a small compass, they are being 
uare propagating eres with a 

they appeared to be doing 

dmira 

The grounds generally are ran — Ae tha kept clean 


and neat, and contain in „additio: inks, Car 
i | Pico , Dahlias, | other florists’ flowers, 
a 3 2 of general n They are at 
all ti well worthy ofa visit; but especially so when 

any bove named e 
Misce 8. 
Botanical Collectors. inky are happy to learn that 
Dr. Karsten, of La Guayra, intends to proceed, if he 


to * — the rich 
the capacity of Bo- 
colle ctor 5 and t that he — — A r while in that 
for 8 who 
communicate with him throug the 


russian Consul 
> maar — Dr. Karsten 
sendy” ater ir N 


where they — to be found, and knows exactly the way 
and manner 
mr mentions that if he w 


can 
favoured 
glish gentlemen, he could supply them 


best — to j 

rns, and 
8 and many — — ‘aot 
small colleetion 


the natives, is first into Bombay from 
naires 570,426 Ibs, în 1838-39, 

816,728 Ibs. in oI | — . 
That this Senna forms a large, if not the largest pro- 
portion of what is in this country, is not only 
evident from the above importation, but also from a 
comparison with the whole quantity of the other Sennas 
imported, as given by Dr. Pereira. 

„ ,576 Ibs. nb. ‘o 
Prom other pac — — a * . 


named. 
The following Carnations and 


Picotees are p 
bat izat ato varieti, whieh may be nied 1 a07 
FF 


504 THE GARDENERS’ 


brine Peas 


Calendar of * —We y seedlings ai n 
For the ensuing week rays 
PLANT DEPARTMENT i quatity, be bat 5 ies at 
As in spring a progressive inerease of heat and wi do not think it ti to ave them pu ily simp 5 
f N. ee ter 8 woul eel disappointed. Y We. are ee thot ae thus ame se 
3 a be ar e agi Nd so piani 1 some new features in these tiful flowers, and 
healthy state gi d ~ 4 or season of rest, and now blooming, 99 v 15 gers , 
the amount of a mergy for a new year’s to b x psa Sets rom those which exhib 
s pris ae eir autumn treatment. novelty, in 5 that t ay be ace sh I 
Plants jn general require from this time to ts are not already put out, let no time be lost 
éxposed io ti e circu f air, a er cing o fi , eather fo e operation. 
temperature. Water however must not be supplied too AnD Picorgrs.—Continue to * er every 
sparingly to the soil, as the roots y ill opportunity they or see be done MM t z latter mr 
ue to make considerable progress ks O vew Put 55 ome pipings an hed 1 
apply more particularly to hard-wooded plants, which, to matted pie fh wall 1 soar 4 Bl 
17 3 eir grow wth, g eth al aso e . 
8 opting this ois however the pipings may come, 
ede sidera inet ee they will a 97 tablished b etüre es 55 Lhe 


m 
the value of liquid manure for 2 which are flower - 


ttings. By picking off the flower 
kad encouraging the growth of the p n by rich soil, 
and e poe! manure, the extreme poi will make 


ean and the young side shoots will prone Sree 1 


RCIN G DEPARTM 
— Uais the fruits in progres are yap- 
TOW 


bre: 
course, must prevented, but at the same io it 
aata. be done in a neat — 
are induced to set it this remark because it is not u 
common to see ard looking stakes, sha — 
sary strength, wed 1 for this and other purpose 

ch and the noble foliage ot ‘the 
Pine is eee but pleasing. Vinerres.—In damp 
wea a little fire will be found n y 


MeLoxs.—Thes w growi 
fast, and must have regular attention i in stad to prt 
ping — bisaig; Let th s have abundance of | 
air, and retain à little all phe pin bya Ap attention | 
to this point, the flavo mpe fruit is much improved. 

them ni al amps: supply of wie except when 
the fruit is ripenin 

pape GARDEN, AND SHRUBBERY. 


our flower gardens. ach left hand Page, a prong 


ensure flow 
3 to ve well siended * mulch the 


* 


d our sista eee 


n good character next se 

soil Vane rott 

via =e of wate should the weather 
misshapen buds. Thin 


re 115 
whieh pring small flowers whilst those which are Britan 
rs | should be allowed rry more blooms. 
1 rt W 


E 
RIES.—In where the work is kept in 


e 
at once arag o preserving those of one 
45 — years’ standing, to 8 5 mai 


n supply next 


latter “ought to mediately divested 


These 
of their pe art but without injuring per foliage ; and 


heir growth, s otted manure 


a 5 forked. into the ground 1 al aoii the plants. 
D t an 


utt 
[eating to plant a row of strong young plants from 
9 inches apar 
Eliza, at mn foot of a south wall, These will ripen 
ier than those in A5 open — and — con- 
a Aer the forcing houses 


of some early kind, as M ih 


eek so It 
xamine ine. state of "ie soil about the 


oots be Peida, Apricots, and Figs, on the open walls, 


f their fruit. 


vi negle 

a the earlier varieties of Pears — Apples be 
es | gathered as they ripen. 

State of the Weather near London, for the week — a g Aug. 9, 1849, 


CHRONICLE. 


Nast . 


Europea. 
Fes N S N. It is ha i 


purpose. f 
Tonka cco: Jean Nic Ot. Gather the o 


VERONICAS: 
hed 


is made of the 5 0 of a portion 
n 


VIPERS We cannot reo) 


our gui to the quan 
dia y by cuttings, and by seeds or 


neither redundances E defieieneies, dienppoiniment 
is prevented on the o and waste of labour on 
the other, besi 


; l 
weak lead improvable a, and, by observing 
the more satisfactory parts, will readily perceive 
ture ngem 


he eee SE and to 

ing N The 

y sp “ve and cutting the 
1 


2. 5 
Re 
2 
=I 
pe 
2. 


urther hould be are 
‘as soon as the good and bad varieties are 
e. 


ed for each bed. Sunday 12 
3 of N whole a then compiled, and this is Pas }} 
tity to be propagated imme- | Wed 


— 15 

Thurs. 16 

pap in pina Friday 1 
e hav Satur. 15 


Notice 
Back ge ss | eta 
„ for 


sickness, co 
2 ano nee harm gene <u — B 9 had bee 
y, however, no means Apink the 
— = ii with sugar — fv that would make a sad 
mess of them while in a state of so rj W. 

Cucumbers: H W. Your Cucumber 1 
of mildew which attacks Grapes, 15 ean 5 
dusting thefleaves with sulphur the mom 
makes its appearance, t We have ui. * A 
Esq., of 38, Cross- street, Islington, two magnifice 33 

bers, of the Deflance kind, grown in at Bolmaise-no ouse 

his gardener, John Hunter, T 


uraces 
I omær 8 za. Besides 
Z about the same value as Pignuts. Some of 


my.” 
CM. M 
re . Kan. 
vir Es 


as observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiswick, 
* BAROMETER, THERMOMETER. 
Moon’s Wind. || Rain. 
j ax. Min. Max. | Min, Mean 
3 29.987 | 29.965 6 39 53.0 N.E. 0 
4 29.979 | 29.300 7 1 35.5 N E. 00 
f 29.039 | 29.8363 72 2 57.0 & E. 00 
é 30.048 | 29.939 80 44 62.0 W. 00 
ed 30.062 30.018 83 60 71.5 W. ut 
5 29.960 | 29.837 85 5i 69.5 S. W. Ki 
.. 9 29.752 29.67: 1 | 56 68.5 S. W. 5 
Il 29.081 | 29.385 || 480 62.4 9.5 
in: o St: col t nig 
e; clear. 
5—Fine; overcast; cloudy. 
and fine; ver. 4 fine; clear at night. 
y fine: overe. j lightning. 
-Thunder . sone — era early 4 
gy: very fine; hea . — in e overcast; rain. 
temperature of the week, $ deg. below the average, 
State of we Weather at Chiswick during the last 23 years, for the 
ensuing week, ending Aug. 18, 1849 
: ailing Winds, 
F H AER ey Gina 
= 2 mantity | jas EETRI ae 
S| 255 3 | which it | rn 2 
Ae e. a Rained, | Of Rain. |z 2 we 25 
75.0 513 | 63.1 0.21 in. 2| 1| I}—| 3| 7) 5) 4 
72.6 50.3 614 10 1.14 — 2324 9| 23 
72.1. 50.8 bl.5 7 0.67 — 5) 5) 2) 2] 5) 4| 1 
73.1 51.1 €2.1 10 0.61 1| 3) 4) 1) 3| 4| 2| 5 
73.6 52.8 63.2 8 0.53 — 1) 2) 1) 3) 6) 7| 3 
73.3 51.8 2.5 12 0.54 2) 1) 1).1) 4) 5) 7).2 
1.9 53.4 7 12 0.3 11513110 3651401 
The highest temperature during the above period occurred on the lsth 
1842—therm, 92 deg.; aud the lowest on the 13th, 1339—therm. 32 deg. 
es to Cor rresponden 


nts, 
rice will be given for Nos, 42, 43, 46, 47, 


Bess: WG. We . ensure you much chance of phi treet} by 
the plan | you Bg — 4 sa < bees, for per cba neither 
er until 


they have rec from 
seat a pe might be a great — in the 
n left alone. 


eaf is affected aes ee 225 


the finest w we have se seen in 88 3 


DISEASED 2 Novice. — last he No., p. 488, 
1 ge woe takes — ka our 


inquiry would fill 55 


n Fruits arinace 
oa pex the Society 2 “the Diffusion o of 
he following oy the : Yams, 
rd “Tanters, eee T 
tg — eyo enata, Dio 
S i Palin ms, Cycas . 
2 there is a opiate of 


described in Lindley’s Medical and @conomical 
r, James Potter, 2, Blake’ s-row, Ravens- 


: X Z. Apples, four dessert: 
rtof Wiek, Scarlet Nonpareil, and d Boston 


wo kitchen: Dumeiow’s Seedling and Bedford- 
oundling. 


Six varieties ties of Goose berries for es — 


eg pa 5 z 
examina! , 

8 „ AS ent we have = 

and you merely increase the nu 
Misc.: Clericus. The most u 

to China ke out with 

flowers of 115 Melons. 

I 


ACHIMENES: W 0. T 


may consist of Woodward's 
Massey’s Heart of Oak, Keens? 
and Red W 


in the hen 5 
— — yer the 181 ee 
best Gard. Chron 


common n Thri rips. p aea Beis 
Laurel leaves, r shuttin 
appar Bee . ap 


ES 
8 
o> 
tte 
7 ia 
0 
S 
ap 


common 
stercocarius, which a woh pe 3? the 
sylvaticus, and what u regard as the 
N are par an itica 1 acari ri. w 
, 


E : 
Melon. It wai much were Te 
the best Melon we have tasted this year, . wy 


L IES: 
according eir vigour and age. The leaves now bom 


ne t= 
Coers ee Sel ott, C. atoma ria, Presl, C. fi 
r. Hook. S.—Novice. P „ Veratrum 
Miche Werkia gracilis. —E J. E . 


m 
JM. 1, Stachys palts 2; Len 
bufonius, — young ; 4, H parvo at ES 
= ata. 1 ee Verbascu E 15 arbarea vulgaris; 


taria? not de te — e t 
Where is it from? What its habit! e 
with better informati on; 10, Nostoc commune; ae 


caused your Pelargonium flowers to 
general s uch is the result of exposure ab oie — 
air a fall sunlight by day, particular! a 
ment and shading during the 
“nad better cut them down now, 


dry, and fully expo a 
iliako them out of the soil, cut part 
the 11 ‘ 

f the original hybrids whope 


Kidney would. answer your p 


day to day, 8 pct ng : 
guished, again hang t 

htly in a ant p oe 2 
pack them tig y Sean we straggling br 


witha 
sprinkling of water 6835 aay arin i cr 
to dry., When 


pat 
others will Gk a mp 75 
young, will secure peti , . 


especially of —— Peac! 


longiflora, with deep vil, ee 


d colours 
ture, shape, and co 

be tube, 7 rather pearance, 2 
rive it a nice distinct 3 

yut too short ry h 2 
— ay . — 


Hom too 
"reS 


8 5 
8 8 
2 8 
© 
La 
289 2 
os. 
© 
E 
zZ 


2833 
Soe 
Ade 
427 


15 
32—1849.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 505 


S 


AL AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE, to discuss uss the probabilities of a return to “Protec-; But there is other general aspect of the 
n -e do not mean to join in their discussion | matter door vite hodo: and it 5 — be introduced 
‘The Summer Season wil commence emer peer way or the other—but imagine one of their thus. At the tate meeting at N ons Mr. Wop: 


are 
pagos 1549. * — ne preceding — ‘Those w rho purpose 22 number attempting to advise that instead of devoting House referred to Mr. Carrn’s pamphlet on Ligh 
| by letter or pe er or personally to the Principal, at at the re College, their efforts so pe to a political object, Farming, and, vy ad passage yoa 
| — for — should each increase their efforts at home on practice of letting farms by tender to the highest 
2 nites Ex “Bowss, Secretary. 3215 ow yn farms and homesteads; and do as, u = peg 9 exclaimed God forbid that this should 
Viandon Omice, 28, = Dg — RATT RA the similar circumstances rice forever be sual custom in this coun 
‘tno AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE, CIREN. 2 8 other * have a ore to do— | there should * any single instance be a 2 
al Highvess PRINCE ALBERT act carefu ore industriously, more * to it. ow this is a favourite, but 
PIEDENT OF THE Counen- al „ Ho 1 e energetically, and more skilfully in the panii of | we submit a mistaken sentiment. It is certain) 
s e FarstpEet— ight FESE, 7.6.8. their business. How would À be received? Let — — and for no one more than for the 
Gurtaix and Finst Masten—Rev. L. C. 0. e B.A, him be of as s eee and honest intention as landowner himself, that the highest bidder should 
* John Wilson, F. R. S.E., Kc. can be 1 him really? 05 that in thus not always be the accepted tenant—but if Mr. 
istry : aes Voelcker, Ph. D. . 8 advisi ‘ae we, pig 50 g his Fy audie ih b 4 N Tra bi sacri thinks that the rental of this country ig 
History. Botany, Geology: Ja uckman, c | probability is that he wou never eless be held to | generally lower than the intrinsic value of land wi 
Somat and „ one hah peg A ar. L Ç. Edwards, B.A. — ele his hearers, and he would be hooted Fustify, ie imagine that he is gato bees 
— and ical Engineering : J. D. Pemberton, C.E, from the room. What! tell than} that they are he thinks that, on the average, it is the generous 
e Baraa Farage Da | Ct areles — ae and do * know their own | feeling of landowners, and that 1 . re 
— iy pe derived from . r ror sf — busines a no such t k ny Pige pe Me ntended or tenants i live, he is  altogeth er — p p n. It i 
. e e full tale of bricks from them | true of o let as itis of land to sell, that it 
3 al : for the ti 50 e ant 57 yet a old 710 vif Fras ae Mg aar pe” fetches j — N 5 ee will 2 Ags A market: 
— o t 3 cal operations of husban: y ly a acture 5 ame or diminishe eitort w e tru certain case as in 
to be within the reach of very few. | their profit, the very motive to effort, has been riat Brier is the’ — which fixes market 
eee n the prineiples of each | de estroyed (he would see that he ha "chosen an price in both — cases, whether it act — the 
— 8 8 application shown as far as | ù —— time for his speech). Certainly, if it | formalities of o e by auction or t 
sed pie, and ek of the College farm. The theoretical not the general question of senate distress, | less immediate ht still cout operation of a public 
r Eo han in hand, and az whole is but the subject of Free-trade alone, which had drawn | opinion formed and disseminated at farmers’ meetings. 
t roe * een betonda. the soundness | And the reason why veng are not higher is simply 
London 26, King n 5 5 his Ma =f oubt Soe are a to the | because they are already on the average as high as 
10 ORCHID GR object ry the pers „an 2 not to have been tenants can afford to give. We sa without 
1 anp HEALY, 130, Flectstret, respect. given then and ceting but the advice is well judged, | for en pee thinking to fix afian te any party 
l cease 


i 1 ere — thoir “meth ae 2 . —— . — e Orania 3 and whenever readers or hearers are in | —when w disciples of a mermi school e 
Houses at the undermentioned places : a temper to receive it we believe it is well to 2 it.] to attach or to suppose blame in what is positively 
Tela Gar dena, Chiswick, 6 The advice is—not that they should c their | an irreversible law of our“ nature ? every man 
i mf eter louses, 0 of the follo wing distinguished | effort for any one thing, whether of a political or |as he t 
growers SEEE SESE gem enc any other charities whatever, which they believe to 
1 — 
Nod Lyons rey a 4 e ae be either their interest or their due, but—that th of mistaken and officious 
J. Warner, Esa., Ho oddesdon, should see their only unquestionable, and in all otherwise be let loose among us would produce 
Messrs, Henderson, Pine-apple Place. PP afeguard to lie in their bitter and mischievous fruits. Landowners and 
Schröder, Esq., Stratford. A saleg e in their t t t lik her b 
R. Hanbury, Esge het near Ware. own skill, energy, and exertion, 2 the improve- | nants ‘a ike other business people, are guided on 
an: obb, Esq: ments sure to be effected by these in an art which | the great scale by the average s those ordinary 
Sete SOWIN is at — 7 in so ve ee a condition. But, | feelings and opinions which have resulted in the 
T= LONDON MANURE “COMPANY, having | as we said last week, this subject has another side, | Multitude of separate bargains between individuals 
e — eee Hep particularly for W and * ‘ 2 now... devots our attention of either class. The maxim—liy 
hom 


at 
it tn the dx ake sori to secure a good plant, and 8 are than to w this vice is mere > tu ot 
to produce a heavy weight per acre, They would call attention moc all these proposed improvements, however or espe . s 
greatest care, and sent out in a very fine, dry state, perfectly profitable, neds considerable first cost, and the there—it acts in every other trade as well ; and it 
ready for use, The London Manure Company have made} means of ating in this pare are already fully obedience to instincts 
be b 12 ngage e do not pretend to offer advice | W ic rigs 

porter’s stores, Corn Man re, Nitrate of Soda, Fish | dividual tion of thei t 
‘real Sal, — 8 other oe Arino ial a ea ‘th 4 ees ie oh he pr y the syr are ig A essential to the prosperity of one another. 
— 2 Pome 8 1 Bridge- street, Blackfriars, in every trade in the position alluded to, and the — sera 3 — 1 ns gp 

IAN AND BO BOLIVI AN | au ANO ON SALE er gor rt and = long of — is * weg general A l : g er, we rei ak de p 

Y [IMPOR . è . 
ANTONY GIBBS AND SONS, LO ONDON —.— ae 4 ciously—but let en hear the ing what some might say wWas a the — nti of 

‘WILLIAM JOSEPH PH MYERS anD CO., VERPOOL; | | fraih toe ooo oia Gale he bal ches: eaper if if the our business relations: there are justice and h 

BRIGHT, anp CO., LIVERPOOL and BRISTOL; thing be possible, and labourers must ve | nd 9 other essential . to to bind us here: but 
wont, aia AND I PRYOR, L employment ; look at the history of any other p 5 ro- obliga ould any 2 pane “aig Pd of 
the 


sh 
——— njurious ——— es of Ekal igation a 
ductive art, and say if these gs are not likely s i an d 
s 8 . h are reco E T ie 2 — idea landlord 
Se n ary only to dealers 8 aera maa or to to be. We have no doubt that farmers will ive not- e gg “why of as and 
— eir 2 — La e article in 5 withstanding, and that they will ad py m 2 on | er belief $ 1 2 * — i n i 


p ose . 
roducers of food who cannot in “their “preset - n ” 
The Agricultura! Gasette Doeition withstand a loss of price — who nable | Viduals with which to 3 the bonds = 
to make the ou ty necessary to that wt of produc society, without assuming it to have any spec 


SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 1849. operation in conducting the ord affairs of 
whic alone can withstand it — Ten Pera £ 
MEETINGS GS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. and lost if they.. do not get out of th way y. Any business, whe ther 4 in agriculture, manufacture, or 
3 3 inp Society Triana man who has done his utmost, the utmost’ which | commerce. 
Pannas Orust Aus. 1 his means permit, and can only just live a 88 But we have digressed: the truth we believe to 


—1 ma . ula rea r pros rices, if he believes that prices are to und | be that cumipetition: fixes the price and rent of land 
ofthe F a = 8 ee 7 a s country. A duty to himself to retire from a position in which | just as of other things; and it is to this point, as 
— . Was a qim promise, ind “though the he is sure to fail. If it be his circumstances which | affecting our present pects, ‘that we wish to 
want still depends on many e contingencies, it is di i 3 a _ gine si 
Satisfactory t is calli i tion | guided by skill and economy, will save us from the 
is to think that average circumstances, sume his calling on a smaller scale, or in a posi e 1 e. 
t he changes and | injury of a lower price of but that it will not 
during the n here he can fully carry ou nges and | injury grain ; — 


| Ww. u all the e > 
barns and “nent ith — ae ad improvements which altered state of trade | raise what has hi eondi 

and for beast as they eve held before. They are requires. The subject is no doubt a most distasteful of the agricultural body, so long as an excessive 
empty 75 z pag one to him; and he mk curse the policy which | competition SET idk ha differs 

ntly ; i has brought the thing to sucha but that will | other in this, that w. 

Great ms the stock of TA p a ot help hi and he may depend upon it that if their accommoda: need, it is 
Ireland our ad ti — none. | such injury is to come, those only will ved who | co within the rigid limits of our 

pent tod G poehi Yat 2k on ir th to meet t can be geep., but not * m ar e 

deen, but 8 circumstances of their porto It is no strange 

e e Soe of England in the course of nex | thing that has befallen us-—other trados have amf | agricoltura, profit to that amount a which any ms 
e the reports from Ireland, which are fe 8 an vidin ude like : : H 

Daddition to > 3 * 1 ve survived and content to live. Here, of course, as el 
7. the haa |e stronger than eer, not because of external aid extraordinary individual, skill — 2 
1 i assistan because t s e i f needy 
b their = ti arrange them correctly, = 2 a wh er, ae i chp and while “ao titors vil, v ‘he offer of rents ya 
derbe of Ar * iy of the ngaged no doubt have suffered | | mm geome ke away with any gen tendency 

e in the island, 2 na thas prety diini much, those have risen u and better off increased returns in 2 t is well for us is thet 
Altered over Eke a 1 than ever who earliest acted on the advice we have i in the me atime we have only to raise 

A * witty t to find that 9 is very little ventured to offer. We take no part in Tes free- N our readers up to th ual 

en ion le one way or er: | whic fallen 

mM na pra t ad in y Pa gme this advice we Dievo is sound whichever side] be r enlarged upon, that needy co 

— ealthy 3 P prevail ; if acted on, it yi save us if prices fall, | cannot for ever : ae hers 

5 , àñd abundant. and it will enrich us £ uy ve k The l maaga = 1 r capital ge 
à Somer an assemblage o culturists met to spirit it aims at encouraging is all culture can 

phe depressed cation of * agricultural | referred to ; the methods in which that will develope — i well. their land, and 


to denounce the ffects of Free-trade, and | i tself migl eekly articles. 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


— — a — — 
REPORT OF THE CROPS IN ENGLAND, SCOTLAND, AND IRELAND, ~ 
‘COUNTY. WHEAT. BARLEY. OATS. PEAS. BEANS. | POTATOES, HAY. [GREEN CROP AUTHORITY, 
0 ee ee eg > 10 
Stock on hand. | The coming crop aoe 
SCOTLAND. e Eg 
F ([ . G Average Very good Light „M i 
Es None verage Light Average Good Good Poor ood . Maskerne Eat 
1 Under average Excellent Excellent Sc, Coe » la Very bad Very good |J. Grigor, — 
T ² o a Abundant Very goon . Average Light Promising M acdonald, ne 
ne Good Averag Goo a... Very good Bad Not good . Smith, — 
Fan .si Average Excellent Doubtful Promising Good Good Light Good R. Colville, — 
Under average Good Full average S ery goo Bad Well Alex. Bell, — 
Under average Good average Promising Good Promising Bad Good ). Ross, Naira 
Er Excellent verage Under average . . Good Bad mising |W. Ewing, Grieg 
Under average Average Average Average Average Go Deficient Promising = Carse of road Hs 
FIPESHIBE......... Average Excellent Average Average Average Goo Light ising ). Tennant, St. — 
Under average verage G aai a Average Light verage F. Veitch, Kinghors 
STIRLING . .. . . Over average Excellent Good Average bo) pau. cell Promisi Light Average R. M. Naughten, 
Average Average Under average Deficient. J... 4 Go iat Bad Good V. F — 
Under average Avera Average Short Good Good Promising Light ising . Melvin, “Thal 
EDINBURGH ......) Under average ood Average Fai Good Good Good Light Promising $ Finnie, Sate 
East LOTHIAN...| Never less Excellent Average Inferior waned Middling Healthy air Late +. Hope, Tem 
5 est Light Light one Average Healthy Light Promising Russell, — 
ERWICK k Under average Excellent Good MOE: we a ee ee Healthy Light Good Wilson, 
, idee BEBE Se ak: Light Promising i. dees: Cee Promising ight Luxuriant \. T. Wilson, Dune 
SELEIRE irere nder average Good Average Average Good Good Very good Average Good . Walker, Galas 
WARM iseset Under average Average ood Light Goo ood Average Ligbt Not good ). Gardner, Hana 
RENFREW .. Under average Average ood Promising reads Excellent Average Promising t. Boyd, Renfrew 
PR TRE Little Promising Light Promising Average Light Tennant, Sbiem 
pAn Excellent era Good Good Average Good « Dykes, Kilmarnock 
Over average Fair Under average Luxuriant Good Thin Good ilex. Maccaw, Maybale 
was Very good Averag ink Light Healthy Light ‘Aver: . MCulloch, Girvan 
WicTon ......... Average Good Aer, Promising Healthy Light Promising + M‘Cleiland, Balim 
Average Good Good Fea Go ea ROS Mp: SANRI Very good . Caird, Baldoon 
DUMFRIES ........ Limited Very good DDG. Good Promising ht First rate |—, Dumfries | 
1 Good gi cig or Very well ery thin Good J. Little, 
Rox BhU nen 8 cs Promising Good Full Full Promising Average Promising J. E . 
IRELAND. None Average Average Few Few Promising hi Late =, Maheragh 
None Middling Average Good Good Good Average Promisin 2. M‘Cleery, Portaferry 
None Luxuriant tee Poor Defective Promising + Sheer, Stranorlan 
None Medium T— eer Excellent Excellent Short Good Boyd, Letterkenny 
None Deceptive fu Average- f ai. Average Good 00 Look well J. Lamb, Belfast ~ 
None Over average verag: OS Case AN Blighted Very good Plentiful Various „Marshall, — * ns 
None Very good Healthy Excellent Very good Very good | Very promising Excellent Very good . Ker, Bangor ra 
None Good Average Short Full Average Promising ig Excellent l. Robinson, 
None Avera Good Excellent . uxuriant ad » Gregory, 
pci G Average Average 8 Average Excellent Very light Average F Coleraine 
Excellent Good Very good [J Kins Good First-rate Bad Under average W. M‘Culloch, 
saad, Promising c Healthy Poor Good Pe 1 
None Never better Excellent ECT Very fine Poor Very bad J. Fitzgerald, Castle Mar. 
ne 7 Over average Good Cyne 45 Very good Very good Good pps 
None Good Average Light Good Good Promising Light Good 
Excellent Good Average Average Average Excellent Poor Good 
None Average A Light Average Average Promising Avera Promising 
s None A Aasta Good 93 f EA, * Good p thet Promising 
7 None i Average Poor None Blighted Promising Light Average 
None Good Middling Poor Few ood Good ood 0 
Little ee Seg hi ie Bg TE cinco. Sesame Excellent ‘oor Average 
None Very good 00 i Average Good Luxuriant Light Late 
None Excellent g eee better Good Fine 
a Good Average Under average gies Be Healthy Good Excellent 
one 00 Average Average Middling Promising Average Good 
Over average Disease Excellent be Average Excellent Short Fromisin 
one Average Under average JJV Excellent Short 
None Superior Splendid Luxuriant Fine Fine Good First-rate 
Average Poor Good RT Wod Very good Short 
Average Deficient EPE E igg Promising Average 
Very 2000 ETR 3 ie ae 2 Ap eae Luxuriant Hea 
Good Go Good Good None Good G mis 
Very g Very good ee. ²˙ E A Luxuriant Shy Good 
Under average Good 7 Fair Very good Variable Good 
Excellent Good Very good Promising Excellent Good Very promising 
Vi Very good Short, seedy ne SURE: Dias Excellent Heavy 
None Promising Bad 5 saia Good Fair 
. 1 eye Good 3 138 Very good Poor 
Very little ood Excellent arious Good Good Beautiful Light 
Non Over average Light Promising beside Good Sound: small Good 
N Very g Good Good „„ Very good Very g 
None Very good Good ett e Pugs Tee E oa Excellent Very light 
None Very good Various Luxuriant V. ery g 
N Various Various a yai laa Excellent Short 
apne Good Good Thin Well a Excellent Light 
weg Good Average Late pe I haa Fair Light 
Dat Remarkable Very good. f- onis ae Very fine Average 
None Average Average Average Light is Healthy Light 
. r Very good ad Not good Healthy Poor 
= sors Excellent 2 Short — ied Very fine Light 
- None Very fine Thin cc Daa. aes Very fine Bad 
sts Fair in general Various arious Good: few | Luxuriant:—| As yet healthy | Light but good 
ex 0 
None l. Good G N Blight . Indifferent 
seias $ — Venen N average a Diseased | Good in Fur Light 
: ver: V 0 sedans Promi Good 
None Excellent Good A * Good 
2 8 Good Poor Good Good Promising Excellent 
None ‘ar Middling Over average |... Averà Good 
Little v Good Good — Excellent Light 
ge — good Good — L Short 
None wp Good e Excellent Abundant 
Rane > f sing acts Excellent Tolerab! 
ga ee — ot glee — — Light 
nder average ‘oor ne n Healthy but thin Good 
None Aversigs Promising Excellent Bad Bad Excellent Poor 
Good Good d Never 1 pe 
eie è Promising 
diets Very fine Scarce 
pM abi Healthy Various 
Suspicio Av 
aen = — 
Healthy Good 
‘uot Good 
He thy 8 Light 
— Average 
Healthy 
Promising 
Healthy Light 
ait Excellent Very good 
— —— 
‘Good Good Average 
ponies Very good Under average 
ʻi i — Facer į 
ETET arious 
2 5 Excellent First- rate — 
Average iebes Very promising 
es Paes 2 Good 
Promising xee verage 
fee EN F Abundant 
sie srst Very { Poor 
— * — * À 14 i Good 
rs *. f Goad | Average : 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE: 


507 


REPORTS OF THE CROPS—Continven, 


— 
cousTY — BARLEY. OATS. PEAS, BEANS, | POTATOES. HAY. |GREENCROPS| AUTHORITY. 
* —5ði —— — 
; Stock on hand, |The coming crop 
— — 
ENG : | Under average Very fine Middling Bad Good Fai Good W. Glover, Neweastle 
LAND dive ae crop Under average ——. Good Short ta — + 75 U . J. Grey, — 
Under average arious 00 f a ealthy ery lig arious =—, Pen: 
. dist be e e ee (5 Ries, Wig 
Considerable Middlin ort xcelle ight ous, 3 A 
7 Good F 4 Light sae 3 eal Light Late L N: Be Mountain 
WrerMoRELAND Average 001 ood o See a ee pew Promising Light Late J. Crosby, Kirkby Thore 
TE iae Average Average Not sd ‘oor P Promising Light > F. Dixon, Darlington 
=. Very little Not averagge Very light Light Shor ood Very light ari . Bell, Durham 
W rious Various Short Good Inferior Healthy ght Excellent Hannam, We 
y Very light Average Light eee a 4 Tolerable Healthy Light >, Stevenson, Thirs! 
Small Promising Short Poor Fair Tolerable ealthy Fair J. Briggs, Wakefield 
Small Average Various VW Good ealthy Light Vi . Pairon, Gainsborough 
Average Full average Average Not average Average Good Promising Light Avera; . J. Turner, Richmond 
56. 0 Vario Over average Short Good Healthy Light Various I. S. Thompson, York 
E „ Average Very good Various Excellent Light Various Fair, Pres 
Not ave Excellent Exc:llent Very good Good ery g Light Good ). Harrison, Milnethorpe 
Not average Excellent 2s" Good Good Soun Light Excellent d. Evans, W 
Not average Goo Short Bern,, her ae Excellent Light Very good . Drewry, Ho! 
Light Very good Good Good +. Ber ae G ealt Good V. Skirving, Liverpool 
msn E Ligh Good Good Fair Good Excellent Healthy Light Excellent y Chester 
41. 0. Good Excellent Good 2 Look well Light Promising t. Owen, Nantwich 
SHROPSBIBBiis} q Over average | Not average | Not average Good Not average Healthy Light Promising J. B. V.” Ludlow 
5.85 Average Good Average Good Good Promisi ood Go , Shiffnal 
ave’ Various Not average Average verage Average Healthy Light Various E. Bowen, Ludlow 
Not average Various Light Light eeverage E s,s Good Average ery „Shrewsbury 
Not average Good Good 2 2 ery g Very good . A. A. Lloyd, Oswestry 
ot average vera Good Excellent Average Health ood Excellent -—, Bridgnorth 
Not average Average Not average Poor 8 Promising Below average Well v. Minor, Mkt, Drayton 
Not average Diseased Good Average Good Excellent Well got Healthy d. Davis, Little Wenlock 
STAFFORDSHIRE :| Very small Vario Good Good Excellent ealth: First-rate Good . Aston, Mkt, Drayton 
DEemsYSHIBE,..... Average Ho r Goc hin Excellent V. Powell, Bakewell 
Not average Average Good . Excellent Promising Over average Very good . 
H)); ee ee es ee ee 4 Promising Good G od Over average Promisi ng F, 
Normmeman nnn Excellent Average Average Good Good Promising Excellent Good . J. N — 
Under average Various Not average Good Promising Healthy Abundant Various . joi 
LINCOLNSHIRE ,.. eked Heavy and laid GQ er: Average Very good sonb dis- Good Good . a utton 
Scarce * Fair ws Unfavourable Good Tolerable t. 
Scarce C RIS sik ol a 6) wees Promising Doubtful Good Well s x z 
mall Average Good Not average | ew... Average Good Promising 8 Grims- 
. Good Average Good Excellent Touched Excellent Good ight, i (by 
ORFOLE Not — —— 1 Average Average — ‘on g Dood . Cubs, 3 Walsham 
elles ot average er average ight elow average g . . ‘ 
Not — Arein. oe Indifferent” Good Excellent Good Very abundant Good : k, Ba - p orroe 
Not average 00 Good Good Good Promising + a oo a 
Not average Average Deficient Good Good Pair Promising Vouy goo — Broan: Da 
t average Fair Not average Good . Promising — ae — Ward, Acle 
verage Not average Not average ood G Good — 00 ao — p . 
Not average Good „„ Go — Promising wae ee} — sing ‘Winona 
Sm: Very good Various Good Average Promising Doubtful 1 es b —— * nl Ps Isham 
N Aver e ee eae Good * — r * — ` 
Average Average Deficient Good Good Moderate r a AS zen ge 
mall Injured Deficient Deficient Excellent Good Touch 5 * 
Cum ers B. ,] Not average Average ood Above average None Very fine Promising — ate 
Average Not average Various Average Good Average ——— 8 orn 
Not avera Various Average Not average Good Goo i ing Good arious 
HUNTINGDON ,., Average Hardly average B 8 Abundant Promising Good “ote Promising 
Nokruampron.., ER Good Various Goo: Good Good co — good 
Very little Good arious Average Good Good 1 — z Good 
Not average Good Not average Good omising — ad ee 9 r ee 
$ Very little Very good Various Good Fine — ng 88 
ROTLAND ] Not average Average Promising 8 Excellent Very good romising Sat pine AA 
Ferion average Seon ae Aruga goa 1 7 u ood Good, touched | Very good Good 
ot average ood, late Average ‘00 4 
Incmng. 1 Average Mi dear Average Very good Very good ar Very good Good 
ae Promising Thin verage Not average Short Goo Light Yer 1887 
pis Promisin Not average | Not average | Very good good wan — A v y 
pere . Average Various Good oe Good —— I good N. N Good 
Waswicxsume , ‘Rep Very good Not average Excellent G = Very good K 8 Healthy 
Not aver G ario — Lig! Good . Sa 3 
ans e — — en age iake Touched Good Good 
ot average 0 arious e · 22 
Not average Average Vario Indifferent go om pice — — d —— — 
RS Good Inferior pot ie orcs Promising Abundant Hos good 
ERproapsmige Short Full erage Fair Egekent fet ee Soot ‘Good Bed 
is Not average Good t average . 1 God Good Very good Good 
; Sikse Toro, a a hort Good Good Patchy 
Moxwournsn, ... feet Very fine Various Very light ~ —_— cau Healthy Middling Indifferent 
iin. | 7 po 1 —— Good Excellent Good Average Promising 
. —* Wo- 
Full average Light G Average Good Healthy Very good Promising 
Good Average Late 
Not average Excellent Average OS de TIn Good Light Promising 
i Excellent Average ight out Good Goud Very good Promising 
y Good Various Not average lin Good Good Very fair 
terree Fik Hate Good Middling v 9 ee Inj 
Very small Goud | Light Moderate ery ery g Excellent Light Not —.— 
e Good Light Not average Pann = 2 
n aes Fullaverage | Not average Good Good 
. ce Fair 
Hees Excellent Good Good Full Poor 
Books wutetesee flies, Average Average Average 
Average Late 
avi Bad Poor Nace good Promising 
Avera Average Avera Bad weld Bad 
Sma Good Good Indifferent Da ee 
Never less Average — po Good Various 
p A Various Bad aes — Good 
Small ee Poor Poor var pou — 
Full average Good Various Good y 4 ‘Partial 
Very little Average Various Average Average Late 
Average Average pee Average ‘ 
Not average Injured Poor Poor — Various 
N ull Poor Bad Good pve 
Very little Average Full Bare Soak ú 
— on liven Very good verage 
8: ‘oor oor 
Line Well Poor Average 2 88 
Not average Excellent Middling Various yore — N 
Very little Very good Av Average x dling 
Has Good 8 Not good — d Various 
ot average Average Not average Short 
> Not average Good 
5 A A Good Good 
Very little Good Good | Excellent Good Poor 
ery little Very good Average Poor Pp 
oe Full Good Inferior Phat Bad 
Never less Good Average Indifferent a 
"Very little Under Various Bad ind Ln 
va Very good Good Various Inferior an 
scm | alaverage | Good | Average —— 
W MEN Very good Gooa 
Un Not good Good Good Bad Improving 
Good Average Poor Waben 
| Sood | Good 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


REPORTS OF THE CROP S—Conrtinvep. 


WHEAT. 
— — 
Stock on hand. The coming crop 


BARLEY. 


OATS. PEAS. BEANS. 


POTATOES, 


H AY, 


8 Over average 
Good Average 
Middling 
Short 
Good 
Average 
Various 


Fair 
el Excellent 
Goo Fair 
Over average Average 
Deficient Poor 


Average 
Various 


SSY Full 
Splendid 
Good 
Excellent 

Excellent 
. Excellent 


00! 
Excellent 
Capital Average 
Excellent 


Excellent 


ruven cat Good 
Good 
Below 


Good 
Excellent 


Excellent 


Above 
Good 


Partial Excellent Healthy 
Partial Good 
Bad Good 
Bad Excellent 
, cas 
Average 
Thin 


Siete 00 
Healthy 
Healthy 


Average 
Indifferent 
Good 


Deere ae ead, cn cs ee 
ee Seen tat 9s oe 8 
VVV 


Average 
Below average 
Below 
Good 
Excellent 


Ges Se ce rte) 
. 


Excellent 


Excellent 


00 
Healthy in fields 
Good 
Touched 
Promising 


Good 
Excellent 
Good 


Go 
Under average 
Healthy 


Touched 


Excellent 
Good 


Excellent 
Good 


Various 
Prime 
Excellent 
Excellent 
Goo 
Abanddet 
Excellent 
Various 


Good 
Excellent 


d 
Light 
Three-fourths 


Partial 


no 2 

Very late 
tehy 

Very well 


U 
1 
pil t 


E 


rP 


j 


: 11155 
i 


ene 

ELA 

1777 
FH 


FAA 


i 
f 


i 
F 


11 
a 


ERE 
pma 

7 

2 

A Ẹ 


J 


5 


H 


Home 1 
e of the — implements | 


80 
the rows of plants. The s 
put to any part of the a, so that t 
either walk in the 


es the pric 


i. e | nature, 
— le), 1 ), might jaa 3 — its use, 01 should think, in 
Such the uses of uabl e 


introduction and nd cul- 
abours should not end 


drooping. With this implement a man is enabled to 
get over a large breadth of ground in 
tri on some rather lo 


thrown away, but converted into aso 
0 


> 
‘Ss 
g” 
© 
— 
om 
<B 
oo e 
5 
cb 
— 
E 
ri 


s i 
iff | disgraceful in the e 


wners of 


may require 
the implement efficiently. 
able that the rows should b 
Mr. Garrett’s more powerful 
by this some — afterwards, when th 
ably d a 


®© 
Qu 


as 

e first gone through with 
horse-hoe, and followed 
ound is toler- 


horr 


they m — they 

for ek ree fanii ereat óf; — 
revent the apartments being 
they n endi attend to the cleanliness of the p 
— 


drain 


. 


The st strength vot the 
by breathing th 
h 


e to pre 


king 
n double tieaiching! 


the s —4 is —.— be 
wide, — “partiedlacly Í in strong jid: o o grea 
| struction is caused, as to prevent the 
its proper d 1 1 wo ~~ therefore be bette 


snare 


e plough reaching | 


| a plough for urpose, w 


The great obstacle to the subsciling “apa has been the 

nsidered Falcon. 

e x nanting} <9 than a lar; 145 — 1 that would 
l is. 


supposed difficulty in its execu 
ire four 
Sith of 3 
a which answers the 
come to a grea 
+ ary preferable not w p penetrate too far into 
n the first insta 


well, but 


nce, but * to effect the 
u 


pran of the best and 


| don, 
piety dr, in|! 


to be 
depth, Read’s sub-pulveriser, 25, Regent-cireu 
price 57., is a very val — — 


uable 
how be sound tioned that an addition 
nd fii 


to 9 
ts t has made its appearance 


ne and enlti 


er 
tis too light a 
too nahinto, One hint m 


N 


r stirring driiled 
once, — necessary, 
same a Masgoid: Wur- 
shares, 


N, 
vator. The eee aa 
easily yet efficiently, that it effects it by band e [0 
th | 


tended oe Law 
Sewerage.—1 og I Uk before suggested th 
the sewerage w asted throughout the 7 5 — 
pb to the land, almost m 
curred b 


ses now in- 
y the outlay required to support “the pauper 


n has construe ted a plough of this t 


the h 
3 now considered | i 


ld, 
m wou 1 b 


and t he loose | 

moist, ari pane soil 
will be found to be er 
y an 


| metropolis the 2 filth 2 


much valuable labour locked “up which should and upon th 
to advanta 


ould be employed to tage in mer oil = lags 
3 it, with the assistance of t e, to 
bundant crops, which it would willingly ‘do. 

It is is 15 i hoped that any plan for the i mpro 
the. London drainage. 13 will tend te the 


waste 
ond th ousands of 


2 hundreds 
without eontaminati f the Thames. It is 
nge that in this enlightened and 1 — ms 
the means of obtaining wealth should not only 


— pare 
h 


r| reason of these mo 
tation the same as the = generally, 
goo: 


way, two t 


the minority, a stro 


Hills. nie ers 


eain. 


32 


ee 


2 


are in 


| 
> 
© 
8 
5 
a 
=. 
5 8 8 
8.8 


He 


It is e 

property permit y tenements to Mk 
such a ame of abom How 
-|in their n bed 


— 


2 0 daily journals publish and n 
a t 


ulaj 
pieno 4 rents 2 1 these 
wo nid be 
8. a all al probability bef found most ‘valuable pet ant, 
nd 


which pervades 


e labouring classes must be weakens! 
atmosphere 


appears m ra 


ain of ie Talon 18 1 
shrill an 


* 
It is satisfactory to think over- fed ne 
admissible at the great agricultural meeting 


a Grass field of 8 or 10 


ate has not een eee 


45°, or any other, agains 


Ergo, the incline must w ber 


GREAT MEETING O 
MENT SOCIET zs 
Tnunksbar, August 9.— This is 
Irelan The 2 


d.“ 


old 


Sorietles 
. b el 


oro 


r than the 


55 


T 
i 3 b i 
3 * i n ES 5 . =< e " * * 5 L * 
ia eee % eer nn EEE EEE a a 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


— skill anc ha id f 

skill an ustry, we have evi ences o 

Lait incentivos to 18 exertion of both ony 
both have contributed, now coll 


WEST HIGHLAND, KERRIES, & 

A.—W. Owen, Blessington; West — 

51. — Edward Carroll, Newtown Dillon, 

Be Calf), Black Rose. . — 
ount 


ull, 2 many — 


N 0 — the 
ci 


Dablin e prese 
tion list of the Society an 


e mind ; and it is hardly possible fo ve 


= to —— himself to so limited a portion of 


Eee 


amid litter of the 


steamers 

about 11 a.x., and her pro rough its principal 
streets was one say ag ben page of the 
her prese cited; she has sin n 9 2 
visited the, city, oe l drives out more than once 
every day, followed i. 
cathe adm s The 


saw at York, or might W 
of the national Society’ o 
hi 


irable ca and ppt 
that Society is distinguished at 
d pi 


of those 
arrangements 15 which th 
The cattle an nd 
abo 


its annual exhibitions. 
and e 


a 
3 — a which ` no no doubt good. im- 


else 


22 Majesty — in Kingstown harbour on Sunday 3 
roar 


— eee 


Boa 
to Moynalty (Berkshire). 


Prap E 


; two West Highland Heifers, 1 
a 
STOCK, 


John Farrell, 


J. Wade. x L 15 rar Lag 

a 10 New Us 21 usk, an; 

| fat heifer, — ed March, 18 ass niies 
HORSES, 


—Patrick Savage, Ardeath, Garris 
Faugh-a-Ballagh, 7 years old. 30l — Hatch, 
Castle, Ardee; cart Stallion, Sir William Walla 


B,—For — fara cart Stallion, foaled since the 
“5 un tho: 


1 6. * 
h-bred Stallio 
ze: 822 ‘Section Athelsta 
are for the cart, Ka te, in foal, 0 Hrein old, bred by Mr. Pat- 
terson, at ale, No merit f d best 
D.—For the 2 art gre i — xcoeding 3 years old. 5%.— 
Ball, Malahide ; ht Fill 


Ardee 
rs 


A by 7 — 

EP “CEICESTE RS. 
Shearling Ram; 2 s Douglas, rig oak aie Hadding- 
ton. 10l.— N. W. Ro che, M. D., Fermoy —Tw ear Rams ; 
John Litton, da. Cloyne. 101. de * other age ; 
James aa —Pe of five sbearling Ewes; James 
Dougla ; William Filgate, Lisrenny, 


OTHER Ione. “al bo ger SHEEP, 
; Hen 3 


ei 


Kingsto — Nu 
Silv * R. alt, ö E dende og 
agoi Henry Fottertón, Moyra 
of five arlin wes; no m 
Samuel White, Balipbrophy, Borris — . N 
SOUTH DOW wie 
Shearling Rams; 25 8 . 
17451 Blessington. 
oolsey, Milesdown, Castle. Bellingham. 8l 


breed; Richard Chaloner, King’s Fort, 

Ta John gg oot Kill, Naas 
f small breed; t.-Colonel Hill, 

Oatlands, Castienock (Yorkshire). Ore Liew Colonel Hill 

(Essex), —Breeding 

Mcclintock, k, erde rry, Kilcullen (Berkshire. 

Shaw, Kimmage House, 

2 * ~~ of small br — 

7 Larde (Yo rkshire). 41.— 


s of five ewe Lambs; 
N. 


any other age; William 


of large 
(Berkshire). 


s regards * 
there was little 2 
which the 3 of English shows 

ed There w. a large number of the stro: 
and jas 9 implements * Scottish makers. 
wel a vast pet f polish and glitter which 
3 es: 8 been that sort o 


Rie of TE we must say that 


pecially a a climate s suitab 


P 
does their — sense, 


ot sneak 


much for 


ch espe 
crop — and for 


aoes not 717 


breeds of sh 


80 goo e ex 
cultural Improvement Society act in one respect bet 
= their wo gr oa eighbours. The cattle exhibited 


structive and useful to the rea There was a very 
2 show of poultry, comprising splendid specimens 
the Dorkin Malay, aa saga’ and other Deri 


here w. ling 
e following is the priza list f feast 
The judges were Messrs. Tor 
RT-HOR 
Londonder. ; Bull, 
ed April, 1944 Tynagh; Bull, B 


d the seed is 
ir hol es i rito’s a Tanda which hag set y t 


Ns. 1 
as, Atheistanford, apri poenl — Decep- 
m 


was on ard, and Mr. Robi 
burn, bepices ‘the merit of 22 had 
exhibiitg 2 admi 
ments of various kinds, am 
churn. 1 4 hpi of Uilingione nonr 


in t 


ong aes was his well-known 


ear Glasgow, showed 


e invention we 


ses of new construct 
A Believe of f Mr. „Girdwood, of Thirsk, À North Wales. The 


ellaghy ; 
David Charles La 1 Touche, ‘iggein a 
is 


is more 
; draught Stallion, 


lst January, | i 


No merit.— liters: 
nford, Hada es; 5 


1847, 1 — by Francis Beggs, Esq., Feltrim ; got | 
ma 


five searing Ewes; John | 
c 


509 
trious or more successful in the effort to show the vast 
d a ee ia ii 

— processes, 


than 


inion ly to recommend 
the work for perusal by all who would cultivate those 
A 


no single ll better explain the 
malting: tales, and e of of the work, or better illus- 
trate the style in which it has ritten, 


E 


observe, and not the e 
had accus- Y 


strong | P 


If goes 
ae among people, "bet tempts purchasers here, it FARMS of Tremellius Serofa, 


rie with 
of their respective 

Ferrand without a 1 
iterature 

— travelling to By $ the wisest ( 


often most 


0 
“Tr is from 7 illustrations that fie around a su 


5 


2 


allowed to drop. through the 
hem tu to the ground 


85 


in this machine t 


—— above them, and empti 


at once 
des 


ood, calved 13th Feb., 
A. F. Nugent, Pallas, Tynagh; Bull, Young Banter, 


and three Medals.—John La Touch e, b 
Bull, Colling 


r. Linehan’s simple 


lating slide, the holes in ‘which were filled by the reat | are 
tied 


m 3 
drain level, in which 8 ſor 


1818. 101.—Jobn Hodson, Twyford, Atlilo is is obta tained by the action of a plummet, and the sloj ope 
T ved 10th è March, 1848. CJ. donee obtained r the whole ee is easily preserved in 
a M I Moynalty; Cow, Modish, 7 years f it by a fixed u of the supporting 
-rir — 5 eee Tower, Tranent; Cow, loon, sede hm iene for the whole fall may 2 made ty | nors an 
Wag Pollock, Mount —— stown, Navan; Heifer, hen sy apply in ar, successive part of the slope as made. | a 
r r 1 3 Athelstanford, Haddi Mr. Line 2 x the author of 2 excellent, practical | 
iJ n calf, calved Februa 
50 , F. Nugent, Pallas, Trka Telfer, en clams. inage, reviewed so eeks ago ne 
dap; Ae h 1847 ; 10 —Richard Gna loner, Kingsfort, Moy- co 
C Benjamin wine calved Sth November, 1 uet took place last night in the Rotuo ads) 
Saved Jane, lig, 190" „Brawith. Baty Yorkshire; Heifer, ewa the presidency of the Duke of Leinster, 
urner, Newtown Villa; K Kiloallen prt e subjects referred to there by the speakers were hist 
a 18th May, 1848, 5l. ’ | of a complimentary nature, ot sure that we | 


ORNs parm HEREFORDS, e. sh f } ly to | tented if, s 
oin ban Stedalt, Balbri ull, Cl for which, indeed, we ha room. have only to a, 
old, iad Gold i a ggan; Devon B ink, ald h hihi 5 © not been a ab . a th rst, he should tity have >. 
ani . Acto exhibi 
. Tames oa ioe = Wits Ag ye ew, ea K Rillaughter ri — ie Pars hes ag eous. 
Talante Ear of Chariceulh Punch, calvod april, 1847, 5l. : Autumn Fallowiny.— Having for . 
ek. Charlemort, Marino, Clontarf; Devon Bull, SS t y.— Having years 
8 1848. 10.—Lord Talbot de Mala Rebiews. practised, and ex ced the benefits arising 
“tle; Devon Bull, Trojan, calved llth July, | 4 Short Ta quiry i into the History of Agriculture, in | from, autumn fallowing of stubbles intended for 
à Plunket, Old Connaught, Bray ; Devon — 9 ars Ancient, and Modern Times. By Chandos ps the ens ASON, and rw: itisa Ero -i 
ig 1844. ry Prentice, Caledon ; foe j Bradbury and Evans, II, far from universal in Norfolk, ce 
7 M: t, Old 0 ht, B Devon. Heifer, 1 edo roei, London. rty of suggesting to you the propriety of bringing 
"ait 3 years me mths old. 10. -Lord Talbot de Mate Ir elegance mposition. 6 illustration, the subjeet readers, presuming 
è Caste; 1 ` “in calf. Belle of Mala. most interesting sub- | that in wet season, those who 
ee À June, 1846 fhi n calf, Belle of Mala- | and a Soe e e of h 3 at all oe have m pare eee 5 
e ae th Castle. B lone the eee procure for the author any gener: > ee E nn It dmit that nded 
o Marino, Clontarf; Deron Heifer, Daisy, calved "Ne. one, of late year has done more than Mr. Hos- | that, immediately after the removal of the corn erop 
8 3 kyns to ture from the character of a e [izrod 2o the depth required ae 
* en n ue“ art, involving the exercise s Kenn. stirred, to required to e the weeds, 
de a teerd e ae a. \else than brute force; no one has been more indus- {either by “scarifyiog,” “gr or oo 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


510 

ploughing,” according to the nature of t — soil, means, SMITHFIELD, Monpar, Aug. 6 qr. on the rates of last — 
. i (p,, ,.... = 
tly a c opal choi escriptions make a j i 
and rollings (if m ) 25 — the weeds ; iittle Aoh mo Ę mber of She eep is also acres the FRIDAY, Aue, 10.— With the : 
the whole, together with the stubble, may then be re- demand is, however, very "Hmited, and it is with difficulty Naot of Oats m ad, exception of : 
ved fı soil, uced to ashes, — pro a small advance 16 obtained on the et qualities. Good Lamb | English and foreign, durin rivals of all 
2 ͤ 0s , masket vas AG oa 
hich, by using his —— e choicest "kinds, 3 and € 79 | the little English : Wheat fresh u — i 


saire. there are 579 
eep, and 86 Peat, cen ry gerd 


33 


fl 


armer | Bea 
may not thus prep ora greater art of his from ines 59; and - Scotland, 1 ew mples f new we 4 
land intended for green crops, for deep-ploughing and e ee ee ge 7 and inferior, weighing about mare gay A 
sub-soiling (p which an — system of fords, &. Oto 4 Ditto Shom . 3 6 to 3 8 528. to 53s, per qr. In foreic, bs., and were sed g 
bandry will cause to be also more generally prac- | Best Short-horns 3 8 Ewes & 2d quality ceedingly limited, and our En, sales have berg 
), during the winter mnths ongst other pi: * ae and 2 10 — 3 4 emaa 2 10 —3 4 Ey E Pie l 1 a 
i ; „„ 0 pe 
advantages which may be expected to be derived from rte Calves 1 3 1— 3 8 ave — — ‘Dea at 
practice, besides the above, may be mentioned, that the | Ditto Shor Pig 6| advance checked sales.— Best b 8 held fora 
weeds, by bein in an early stage of ron ir | Beasts, 3433; sic nian Aj ‘Calves, 208; Pigs, 225. fad buyers at 24s. —The rands of barrel Pi 
i ; AY, Au weather 
ato are much aca — ext pate the The supply of B is vga * ; the late warm weather | been generally highly favourable since the Sint hy 


ds, fro has prevented N to the usual extent, and conse- crops and also for harvest o operations, Whey 
Sta ighly favourable for their vegeta e- j guent ir tra a e to- 1 is 3 but prices es remain npor the s ie cutting has commenced, the yield is re Where N 
quently wg nt ; e labour require for geting vad se rite n 3 — 5 are | equal to i but ae e 
in the green e ring the ensuing sprin = rather lower except for the e e e have ren . e rops, taken as a whole 
summer be t ar —— abridged, allowin 2 rashes a maller 4 upply of Pera but the, demand i y so ve ry Englan d. will p — good. eat has l 
opportunities for horse-hoeing, advantages we vell small that no advance ca aine rom Holland and | difficult of disposal durin the wi 
worth —— ring. John Swann, "Bost Carleton, in the con 1 8 Beasts, 1100, S N Mn 150 aee; decline of Is. to 28. — qr. in — and undergone a 
Norwich Mercu from the homeco Spring corn — also shown a slight — aia 
t Page er Best Long-wools. ... to ... | Indian unsaleable, unl endene, 
ë fords, 10to4 0 Ditto Shorn S 49 8 » unless at a further , 
oti to Corresponden Best Short-horn rns 3 6— : 8 | Ewes & 2d quality 3 say§23s. to 2 248. afloat. 
ARLEY: Ceres. It is a — — fine head a common Bere 2d quality Beasts 2 10 3 4 Ditto Shorn 2 8—3 2 
Epucation: H E. Y farming in two years, and | Best Down Lambs 4 0 4 00L, FRIDAY — We have had 
afterwards farm to an extent limited * your N at Half-breds Calves . a ee eel B vamia r since Tuesday, with p Benat t heavy thunder a 
cme 3 Ke. Mr. Maw no doubt d th itto Shorn Pig 3 6—4 6 8 day’s market there was a small attendance 
tice of ing growing yy 3 straw alone during winter. „ sticep and [Tambs * fio; Calves, 489; 5 Bigs 29> Flour] bad 0 — wad he *. Lyte 
MuscLe SHELLS: S Burned and slaked, they HOS. Paar, Aug. 10. Beans, and Peas much the same, Indian ral 
would 32 good ros a ati all, kiari or tine hey 70 ers. PATTENDEN and SmitH report that the accounts | offered, and the sale being rather brisk, the — 
shell fk would be a good manure, and probably contains | proq sei nanpas saber e N 
— ann on insala duri IMPERIAL WHEAT. |BARLEY.| OATS. | RTE. 
‘New Sourn Waes: : J Dempay. Professor Low's ‘Eigse of MARK LA egy aan aE Wa 
Agriculture,” for 8 . * and ‘‘ Atkinson on Monpay, Ava. 6.—There 1 l lish s s 9d|25s 9al. 
Agric ultore. 9 Grazing South Wales,” for the | Wh i t this 85 ing by 1 ere wasa fa supply oie Da a H 2 25 $ is 9 26 11 
plicat 
Ne ewe N JR M. It is not yet published. It will appear in Essex Een, and Suffolk; a few of the finest were sold 48 10 | 26 7/19 4/28 6f 
monthly at the opening of the at 28. per qr. decline upo 4 1 t 1 1 f 5 xi Hi i 
pg omen » Do * ae “thd may be bad say — the prices of this day 9 but inferior deserip- 
Ode of of this Paper, and of all books tions must be 4s, per qr. cheaper. Aggreg. * 47 9 205 11 18 10 7 2 W 01 
PROVIDENT HABITS BOURERS: B 7. “a harvest occupation | Foreign cont! — piai g the few retail ren “heals 0 Win 
is commencing, wages will be good, and now is an excellent sales effected were at 28. per qr. below the quotations of R he 
yo tog for the distribution, by those who in t them- day 1 ts l loata dél tuations i “ay last six n Corn Averages, 
n the welfare of our ru pulation, of the tract ay cots a e Bale at à decine 2 N ULY 21, Jou 26, Ate 
“Ont the Advantages of Savings’ Banks and Friendly Socie- | of 6d. per qr. ; a sample of new Kent ob d 31s. pe — bbe 
ties,” hick may of gece * — qr.— an are unalte value; of the 49s 1d a 12 
Aeading. ' > latter there were a few samples of new white at ket, | 48 10 on oe 
-circulation for whose benefit it is intended. “ : Pp £ r 
Rare: . You 1 hould transp cat boi B and | which were disposed of at 30s. to 32s. per qr. on trial. 2 5 * i 
Cabbage, and, digging your Potatoes be dug in: you will | In consequence of the very large arrivals of Oats, the | 47 1 a en ae 
want a green — msn ors Is. pect anion pam sea a broad- trade ruled exceedingly heavy, at a reduction of Is. per | 44 : 
cast, an e it in; you may dig that in in two —— s’ time, po 
RURAL CHEMISTRY, 4 — ana enlarged; by London. | Liverpool. Wakefield. | Boston. 
e a be . sey ih ee ffice of this Paper, PRICES i E 
* — — — Wed y „ {July30|Aug. 6. July 31. Aug. 7. July 20 Aug. 3 Aug. I. Aug. 8. 
“answered the same week. qr. | qr. 70 Ibs. 70 lbs. Ar. J Ax a a 
t 4. $ . 89 {8 8. djs. d. & d.] s. 6. 6. 6. . d 4 4%. 31 
Markets. New, red . 42 044 40 426 10 7 6/6 8 7 30461051 1 5 45 050 4 to48 |5 10 6 dest 6 
x COVENT GARDEN, Ava. 0.11 aks toe ae . 47—5046—487 2 7 87 0 7 6/46—53/46—5 rend 3 ; Soe 
rapes, Pea ectarines are plentifa ppe — 0—4 3 
Pine-apples are cheaper. Cherise are less plentiful. Psa 90 14, white 8 E 5 Pi 6 4 $ 206 5 4. *. 8 ua iS r 510 6 t 
sand ts are sufficient for the demand. Apri- | m? . ex ER 97 1 5 3 6 10 0 gi 
are pretty well supplied. Nuts in general are abundant. Foreign. aes: 36—566 10 8 604 8 7 O|41—54/41—54) — oe i 
and Lemons tiful, and the market continues 480 lbs. 480 lbs. 
4 be 9 with Melons. Amongst Vegetables, Turnips Rye Old 22422 pats 4 ae — 2 0e 
obtained at from 3d. to 6d. a bunch. Carrots the same Ravel sie i 1 pori Pe 
— ars pl P +h from 1s ca, oreign. . 22—23 are — — — . r en 
4s. per bushel, Potatoes are cheap, Lettuces and other Foreign meal 6“ — 51.— on — — — — — E 
ing are sufficient for the demand, Mushronos, fetch * Barley qr. qr. qr. 
e oonsiat of eatin | Grinding... 20242 — — 22. 2322232426426 23-25 | 
— Fürze Malting .. 24—26.24—26 30s—32s | 30s—32s | — ra me e 
l uae eta ls6dtot Oranges, per doe, 15 2 25 iula e Dir fin s Fass A bush. Be | 
2 s | Oranges, per 
Nectarine, per diay Seto 1 15s | Lemons, per don, 14442 451 45 Ibs. ial 99} 20—28 ! 
8, P in! — 7s to — 1 2 18 1 — 
S eee Oats Wee 18251825 28104 3s 2d|2s10d 3s 2d — etter 19—20 
' i — sweet, per Ib., 2s to 3s k... [14—23|14—23|2 52 33 8 sani — * 
38 60 Walnuts, p. 100, 1s 6d to 2s Foreign |13—20113—20/2 2 42 6 — yese 
3 do., Sato we ee - ponh., qr. qr qr 4 ' 
ea : 8 j y 33—40 |` 
S Jor half tete 4 tote Sa ante toles | Peas—Boilers 25—30|25—31| 34s— — 34  |28—32/28—32 — | — 196 
EGETABLES. saat pA? 
dtols | Spin nich patina; deuS 6a Grinding... |23—25|23—25| 28 —30s | 28 —30s — — ras yx ake 
is 6d 9 Be | Snip. Suna BE Se ae Foreign . . 2532 25—32 32 ! ! 4 
8 $ 
P. bush is 6a Sie | shall per Ib., 6d to 8d i dals 32—34 12—14 | 
— | Garlic, per r lb., 6d to 1s New, small . 1 Tee 2 —35 32 —35 |32—36/32—36 32—34|32. sme 1 
9 pan tan, | Artichokes, p. doz, 18 6d to 3s 55 * „ 2—333—33 34—36 | 34—36 | — | — | — 2 
„do., soe 30 e — * i 
| Vegeta Cab., p. sc., 4d to 9d 21—36 21—36 —3 30—31 vv bo? $: 
Cos, do., 6d to F. 3 — 
Mushrooms, p. pot., 1s to 18 6 7a — — 40 —42 40 —42 32—40 — * ppr” 
Small Salads, p. pun., 2d to 3d Foreign ... 1364013640, — ek „„ 
6d Fennel, per bunch, 2d to zd | LinseedCakes 
Savory, per bunch, 2d to 3d ritt ae PE 
Thyme, per bunch, 2d to 3d sh . [fke 78 Zk. 15i- 7h 12s 71. 128 WE — 
sony Sane bun., 38 to 43 Foreign. 61. — — — ave 8 5 
be 13—14 
Marjoram,green, —— | : 
— per bat og hee Cc 30—34/24—28) 25s—28s | 24s—26s | — SK sack | per sack. 
Basil, green, p. bunch, 4d to 6d p. sack p. sack 280 280 lbs, p- were 36—38 |" 
2 our— 36—4436—44 35—36 | 34—35 | — ee i 
HAY.—Per Load of 36 Trusses, 
“Glover girer 605 to90s | Averages and Aver. Impts.| Averages. | Imports. 
ree E Ang. 7. s 
s. d. grs. s. d. qrs. 2. 
oe — N ~: DESAT |. B A A E 
Prime Meadow Hay 70sto75s Inferi ay, ua 3858 to RLE — 126 913 26 1 1424 
ee Bas , me 8065" |New Olover . . 25 30% OATS... ... 20 7 18130 19 6 392 19 4 
e 2 Stra s S 86 2 241 8 — 26 1 80 
lover , , DO 98 | Josnvua Barer | BEANS 29 8 3 
APEL, Aug. 9. EAS f cmp 2 56 185 32 4 
Fine Old Hay . 688to 44% New Clover ... .. 70sto 80s} — OW Tie OP 1356 
rr Ss soak oa 45 50 
M y te Stra 285 28 | 
er. „% SR a * ; { | KINGSFORD SEGAR and 
Sienen { TUNNICLIFFE. 


32—1849. ] 


— 
; O BE LET, for a term of years, and entered u 
r — Auction. Ta Mic baelmas next, the FARM of TEST WOOD AND 
— n the parish of Eling, in the county of Southam 
BARE ORCHID M CENTRAL IND n, ent in the occupation of the rietor. It consists 
J. C. STEVENS is ins etre 3 mam J rass acres, of whic are excellent Water Meadow, 
Sale by Auction a tered by the river Test ; acres are rable Land, and 
Garden, on TUESDA next, ach August, at 12 for 191 — are of ro rough Pasture, now being drai hich may | S 
j o'clock, an Importation of exceedingly RARE OR be converted into rich productive Turnip and Barley land. 
the last Overland Mail in excellent condition, | Th ei 2 arm. house, and large commodious 
Central Ind and comprising Dendrobium | guit ngs. The Farmis about five miles from the to 
Devonianum, Dalhousianum, Farm 2 Gri — anum, Lon Southampton, an t ke road from th to Salisbury 
within 1} mile — Ee Eling Railwa 


— 3 te 


M ECUADOR, SOUTH AMERICA, VIA 
ae Paow,POUADOR, AND PANAMA, 
R. J. C. STEVENS will sell by- Auction, at boy 
reat Room, 38, King-street, Covent Garden, on T 
DAY, Aug. 21, at 12 for 1 o'clock, A COLLEC 


. PROTHEROE MORRIS 
voured with instructions by Me. I — to submit to 

— by Auction, on the pre — Nurser, 
Bow-road, on MONDAY, August 20, at 11 o'clock (unless 

of ip rivate contract), the valuable —1 tor 

Ae the whole of the Greenhouses, Pits, 

ouse Plants, —— Stock, 

ars 

or to the sate, of the > principal à —— on 

the Auctioneers, Leytonstone, Essex 


~ MALMESBURY, WILTS.—IMPORTAN NT FREEHOLD 
ESTATE. 77 s 


a S RURSERYMEN, PRN TEENE, anD aa 
ESSRS 


yP 
ve 


rev made 
given, that 
— ownage ag — iei and pleasan 


4 


. R * 
bene 3 Yards, imago — I 3 


i 


f 


li 
a 
ee LE 


28823338382 


Frs 


165 2 2 
Pasture 28 23 0 07 
1 1 2 20 
2 2 27 
1 2 25 
6 2 0 
2 1 37 
* 1 3 30 


Lor II. 
— Part of Bean Leaze ne 
109 Ditto, with Tie-up Stalling for 12 Beasts 


ey pe 
5 Partof the Marsh. 


r IV. 
e Marsh pis, 7550 Withey Bed 
South part of Long March io” 
8% North part of Long March $ 
Lor VII. — — 
182 Allotment in the Common Arable 0 3 10 
Numbers 


a 76, 77, 89, 894, 94, 95, 108, 109, and 162 are situate 
1 of i. Paul's, Malmesbury, and ie to a tithe 


ee . t. Mary’ 8, 
to a tithe rent charge of 101. 16s, and 
The ESTATE abounds with young thriving Timber, is sur- 
y by lands of the Earl of Suffolk, and adjoins 


— is capacious, and may at a small expense 
comfortable and suitable —— for 


n FARM 
e converted in 


m country so cele- 
Ayas ag from the 


e aos. oa = 

T , DISPOSED ‘OF, BY’ PRIVATE CON- 
4pply on. the „the 3 GE xu . particulars 
ee and Monis, 


onstone, Esse: 


if “eas ‘MILLS. iy onan as 
* term, w m So immedia 
MILLS, com inga 
wheel, with connec 
re ter. 
— never fails 


5 — pa ee 
in the driest 
le of 3 
ble 4 eh ig 
60 acres —— 
well i from N ee — 4 
l tuated, three miles from Casy e Cary, 
Teor Merton, eight from Shepton Mallet, and twelve 
Particulars, apply to Mr. ALLISTON, 


SSEX. pa 
of years, and entered upon a 
m sets * in the Parish of 
e g“ ur. hea pa 


f- 
H 
3 7 15 
2922 
ee 
112 


Market t 
p aani and — R rtic 
gs Railway. For particu. 
12 Àir, Jons Moron, Whittield, Berkeley, Glouces- 
on at Polkington Prace will show the Farm. 


se 


req 
e possessió ofe 
pam — rtable Dw —— | 
— attached. The — me a| 
ear, 
i 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


STREACY, Morning- m 
the Office of this Pape 


— a . — 
M d to „ Rent or Purchase, with imme 


eigh 
r more, 


rove, — 


nd Church- street, Ha 


| St mpton river.—For particulars 
apply to Mr. Jonx Morton, Wh 1— — Berkeley, Glouces- 
tershire. Ap twood House will be directed to show 
he F e 
) GARDENERS AND FLORIS 
0 „ on Lease, eres of wg 
0 ND, with or without Greenhouses low 
rented; 1 acre of which are productive and — 
Cress-beds, within 14 mile of the City.—For further particulars 
apply to Mr, CLARK, Seedsman, 25, Bishopsgate-street ; Mr, 


ackney ; and at 


diate 
t-roomed age aa * 


rent or price. 
Near Tendon on 
iculare to be sent to A. B., 


ee he side 
at Miss Eve's, 


GALVANISED WIRE GAME N NETTING.— 
per yard, ? feet wii 


a 
72835 ase 
2987875 


peanaist 
225 
222232522428282828282 


2-inch nite —— iad. wide 


one 


Japanned 
ron. 
Id. per yd. 5d. per yd. 
” 


Galvan. 
ised. 


2-inch 8 5 64 


Rp inch „ Perner strong » pa 


— light 
i neh „ Le i 
1 eh ta stron 


ng, 
the hon: can be made any width 
5 the * half is a coarse mesh, it will 


Galvanized s 


borough, Hull, or Newcastle. 


ne 


2 and BISHOP, 
expense in 


12 9 


ae 
8 * 


— 


antries, 24. 


ark ace, 


London, Peter- 


AN 
landed, direct from Shetland, 
PONIES 


— PROTO 
onsiderabie ređuction of price, 
used ‘by thi * — 
Builders and others 
ting, w. 


PONIES AND CATTLE. — 
size, from 8 

mall COWS pre ERS, down 
arge — and — equally carious and interes 


—— — 2 
or painti 


Just 
a quantity of very hand. 
to 12 ee a. Also 


Importer to her | 


* PAINT at a ve 
— 


88 
25 8 
tere’, 


ER see 
2825 
2 


a 2 — TWO-PENCE 


PER SQUARE 
ing, the 98 
was exhibi t the late 


aoa area ie 


2 
2 


Extr 
rumning peor i 
Wire Nurs 


lower Trainers, from 3d. each ; 
m 33, 9d. each ; 


Snow-hill, Lon 


te 
ORD'S REI ‘SHIRTS.—“ A comfortable |ti 

fitting Shirt is a desideratum long wished for. The saser 
to be m "sextet acquain| of 


T.—This a 
— aving — — action on it 
M 


„Dahlia Rods, and eve 
; Weaving, ‘for the use of paper-ma 
the A e, of THomas HENRY Pox, 44 


pees syne the Establisbmen 


rticle requires no "e 
t 
and was 


| — 


511 
This d blished, 
Mea — — ECONOMICAL BOTANY.— 
Wage Te b * viene "Ding a. 
W price 145. 


L 
Just published, in 2 vol 
numerous Wood Engravings, price 24s, cloth 


NTRODUCTIO TO he. 


eee and By ane, Whiteliian 
PROF. LINDLEY’S 3 10 
pu 2 vols. p 


fag ially i 
what relates to Vegetable e = ate ne 
sent 0 considered, in respect nen work, 

on : LONGMAN, BROWN, naa and mtd ANS. 
~~ BOTANIGAL WORKS BY PROPESSOR LINDLEY. ing 
L 
Sc 3 ; or, the Rudiments € E Ditori! 

Edition, ps Illustrations. 

VEGETABLE KINGDOM : ; or the Structure, 


tion, and Uses of Plants; illustrated upon the 
Second Edition. 500 Ilus trations, di 


* To suit the convenience of Students and others, the abo 
Work is issued also in 12 Mo — Parts, price 2s, 6d, — ite 


p: ELEMENTS OF "BOTAN Y, Structural, Phy- 
siological, and — With a Sk ketch of Ro peng 
Methods vole hen Classification, and a Gl ossary of Technical Term: 


Price 
The Glows ma ae ad separately, price 
This wi series of . 
Works a 232 * of — 8 —— 
„The n Kingdom,“ form the other p 
t published, in dem 500 price 
ROHIDACKE A LINDENI NE; 


W 
otany,” and 


LEY, Ph. D., R. 
otany in 2 University of London, and in the 
Royal Institution of Great Britain, 


“ We assure our Dashes nas it contains a vast —— of 


| matter interesting and u 


seful to — T of gor $ —— 
armaceutists, to 
| and cordially recommend it.“ un — Fe. 
London: BRADBURY and Evan . Bouverie-street. sesh 
— bound in cloth, — = W ood Engr: 
Price 6s. 6d., 
eee OF — BIBLE, AND CON- 
ae ge Hg R emg from the Monu- 


ton 


an to 


— 


br 
the Rev. —— 

Critical 4 the 
ture are more or — exp 


of Scrip- 
elegantly-executed 
iting.” 


Price 58. 6d., € 
‘THE HISTORY OF THE . UNITED STATES OF 
AMERICA. By Jo Philadelphia, 


Price 7 
„ ge TA tive Pence from the 


—— 

and by the g — 

Arabi for training all kinds 

tock, of 

any 

rd nse, 

inches grr ~ o per yard 
n 3» 
3 ” 


22 * 


3 arches, 208. ench; 
Galvanised Tying Wire for 
— tion of Wire- 


ig ven er-street, 


> CONV wer 


only require to 
Mr. — of 185, Stra 
of the many adva 


d try h 


wearing t 
Gazette, May 26, 1849, 
rts for 30s. ; 
Shirts, aap for 27s, 
Patterns and Directions for Self men 
—RickasD Forp, 185, Strand, — 


also all the new Patterns 
— ong — gues, with 
rement, sent post 


millers, GC. A1 | Public in an —.—— and improved form. Simple as 
jee 


Pane and — by 
those mare at this celebrated — Musical | — 


Earliest 
By EMILE DE — — The two volumes of 
translation. 


57. 64 
P. r? 
(QPNAMENTAL AND 5 Gdr sh rr POULTRY ; 
eir History 3 t. By Rev. Epomowp 
Saul Drxon, M.A., Rec see mh Keune? P 


sadapan 

Domestic Fowl in The Musk cox “The Pea F 
eneral on rey China The 

The @ i 


Guinea Fowl 

The Spanish Fowl The White Fronted Fowis 
The Speckled Dork- or Laughing Goose Cuckoo F 

ngs The Wigeon he Blue Dua Fowl 
The Cochin-China 1 — 3 — * its Lark - crested 

Fowl Fowl 
The Malay Fowl The “White China The Poland Fowl 
The oS a dtd Goo: antam Fowls 

Fow The Tame Duck The Rumpless Fowl 
The . e Fowl e The Silky and Negro 
The Mute Swan The Bernicle Goose F 
The Canada Goose The Brent Goose 
The Breas e he Turkey 


The Frizzléd or 
useful information, pleasant] 
sketches, and — 
the lovers of Nature. P 


“Qor — os 
resented, 

by disquisitions of the 3 
of 7 — . 


a mi 


5 We are glad to the opportunity of drawing attention 
toa 2 much — wae in farming —— but mia 
toit, k “oe 3 and — 22 -< domes — — The 
or ot things in mos rds in this respect 
is most — a and has ey ey impression — the 
management of poultry will never pay. Th rm 
ment does 4 pay, and never will, 
: but a heips li in the right direction would soon afford 


and belie 
K. pe proof taat no n of ons of t 


show a — gain than 

shone which a in this departm 

these opinions we may refer to 
useful 


pose ofa gain u urging upon our friends the importance of this 
branch of * — employment. The work itself 
printed in rdeners’ Chronicle, and is now give 


t of that work may be 


— — animals, and throws sigit * — — 
peculiar power “If due a 
the pre 


which it treats, 
“ie — shed by Home MATTHEWS, a Office of the Gar- 
Agricultural pets 5, Upper Welliogton- 


i — Coveut. garden; and may be ordered of all Booksellers, 


512 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


— 


Portable St 


R. GARRETT AND SON, LEISTON WORKS, “SAXMUNDHAM, SUFFOLK. 


rin ize of 507. fo 
— o BG 


The 
Machine, were b 


N 2 GARRETT anv SON beg to an eg neva 
former is adapted for driving an the 


(Ave. 11, 


BY HER MAJESTY’S ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. 


bees 


less cos 


Machinery, at a mi 


3. 
with a vori t Safety ae bronda ‘of "Puel, and the F 


have latel, 


s 
GARRETT and zan. 8. ‘Patent Horse Hee. 
and Tile Machines, Drag Rakes, Clod Crushers, 


Hull, or Neweastle-on-Tyne, by water; and to any Station on the line of the Eastern Counties and Eastern Union Railways, x 


cos 


T Frc = will have pleasure tas su 
riptions of their 
adapted 
Searifiers, Ee. 
to London, 


on 
Patent Drills ye 1 Corn 
for Wheat, 


(AS SEEN AT WORK) MANUFACT 


oF the best Portable Steam Engine, for Threshing and other Pb purposes, and the Prize of 5 a the —— 
RRETT axp SON, of Leiston Works, at the Royal Agricultural Society’s 


whereby a ee larger quantity m 
vinfor manon 8 with the above, on application, by p 
eeds, with or without artificial Manures or com post, in an 
Barley, Forte. Man gold Wurz el, 
Iron Field 88 and Ploaghe b of every d 


i N i titise, and at any distances apart = 

a 8, and at an 8 ces — 

and any other 8 _erops ; Patent Chait —— — a 
ription ; also Patent Wrought Iron Corn Rick Frames, 


eam Engine and Threshing Machine, 


Meeting, at Norwich, July, 1 


y quanti 


eae 


This day, 16mo, with 20 pistes, 1 puo 3s. Gd. 
* 


* 


L 
For the use of Beginners, 
London: Wr 


5+), 


ENTARY OTAN: 
By T. S. RALPH, A. L. S., &c. 
: WILLIAM Arge Frith. street. Soho 0. 
oe in ING, 


AN 


f the 
2 


1 with Directions for 2 ** 
ent o 
Warrinc 


the Deepdene, Surrey. 
“The little book before 
the experience of one 


the result of 


Plants ust 
; Gardener to Thomas Hope, Esq 

s is * a rm- chair production, bnt 
our best gardeners, 


can therefore contiden . — commend it to all who would 15 
Fi 


— manage thei 
Chronicle. 


Also, 

L OF CHE 
oF. 011 DN Te MAN NUA 
OF DOMESTIC a ONOMY. 


at from the Field aud the Garden, 


Few 

By the same — thor, uniform 
SYLVAN MUSINGS; — the spite of the Woods. 

New Edition of The 


amg colo 


ower Garden,” — Gardeners’ 


„same size and price, 
ESS—MANUAL OF MUSTC-MANUAL 
F CAGE BIRDS—MANUAL 


* p Bodux, Pleet- street. 


“MOR 
„uniform 


AL oa e 2 
“ 2 


or Thoughts 
By Mrs. Hey. 
above in size and price, 


Being a 


mo ga f the Woods.“ Illustrated with 


: Lenn Browy, GREEN, and Loxcmans, 


Tus "SCIENCE OF LİFE $ 
e Fo * with 

; toget r with instructions y secu 

fect health, longevity, mse that — state of happiness . | 

attaina observ 


self-manag 
: ary 

course o ute. 
The w. 

to which mankind owes 


ost 
tion on first „ 1 emy — Shieh will prove 


advice througho 


sprees 28, or by post, 25. 9 
or How w to — oae 


Edition 


— — 


e judici 
Pursieran, 
Aps — 8 th f the press 
—— informa- 
a boon to the 
of diet and nen of the 
out is most valuable, and we have 


ance of a well-regulate 


On the subjects 


RICHARDS, 52, Pacers oster- 
of Maxx, 39, Cornhill; and Hannay, 


MEtcALres ALKALINE 


xford-street, 


TOOTH-POWDER 
o be the best that has yet been produced; 
ing that can — the finest ena- 
1 impurities š, pro- 


e been 


lid of the box, and the signature 
pia METCALFE, BINGLEY, and Co., 


| in the United Kingdom, Twenty — authorised Tes 


n on peri skin 
5 attent 


e the application of the 
a 


parency oft co mp’ exion., "Ladies baren or taking 
éxercise will find it t and weren fe e 
In cases of eae or Stings of Insects its virtues hav 


s KALYDORS for sale, contain ning 
mattis ngents utterly ruinous to the co “ages „ana by 
angering popi ord w 


Pë Urner 
MATT RESSES, 8 
elastie. keti N — cheap. 
22 4 feet 6 in. wide . 


N 5 
One of these, with a gee Mattress on it, is a most excellent 
and soft bed. HEAL aud SON E i 
fall partionlats of we eae size, and prices 
Bedding, se 5 — yp post.— orig aad ‘Sox, = > 
Jacturers. 196 am-court-ro 


\OOTHAUHE PERMAN 


inless, 
‘or saseta — eth. y — stance appr 
medical faculty, as being — — with pain or — nger. 
the good effects of which are permanent, Sold by all Chemist 
onials 
box, with fall Wr me for use. om free, 
24, East Temple 3 


Whitet F treet, London, in return for 13 
sta p TION.—The | great success of this dite ners 
has ilful person Aes pro oduce spurious 


Ds 5 
imitations, and to copy Brande's Daas dvertisements. 
It is nee 8 ee to 5 5 —— — _impositions, by 
ing th t the ot Jon accompanies each packet. 


tt 
nothing but dis „ 
the important fact, that PARR’S LIFE PILLS are now proved 


8 They increase the 5 whilst most other medicines have 
Let 


system any one take from 
e to four or six Pills — 21 hour rs, ul Biased of having 
hugo be found to have revived the animal 
spirits, and to have imparted a lasting ne to the body. 
. In their operation t ‘they Er ke to the dis ame 9 7 
have taken s lis, 5 
ome oe and ro — 
will persevere in regularly re 
8 will Pe aa be 
are gen 


thre 


cea th 


os by 8 
and te you 
ix pills * — day, y 


ony 
a Fite 5” are * white — — ‘a 
mp, 3 round the box 
of the Proprietors, * T. 


red ground, on the Go 
. the facsimile of the 8 
RTS and Fleet ate London,” on 


Co., 5 — 
Directions.—Soid 
packets at at lls, N 185 = 
roughout the worl directions are given with each 
box. Sold by all Chemists, x 


- phigh, 3d. 


pe 
inch mesh, yd. 


At the request of numerous 1 
K REE is reduced ne 46. eeke 5 
Fan E ROSE.— 


N oer oon the GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, 
ndon: J. Ma 1 
x — E F CI N 
e from 


and Bab, rote Doge, Deer, 5 
2 ri requir 3 Bar, 1 
6 feet, w x — y width $ 
Weit adapted for “8 
RienAkxDsdx, 21, To br big: Bato 
N. B 100 Tron” five-bar hurdles 20l., 
nuts and armen 
ARDEN NETS. ae 


er yard 


ready painted Joel weil 


ripe fruit from w 
R. Dy nce 2T 
B. Seco iig hand 28 Capes, 


, TENTS, 


183, sail 


roportion. Tents for Lawns, G 
feet round, 6 feet high in lowest part, Ei 
sizes in proportion., Emig me Tents, 


12 feet . e. 7255 
— Fêtes, Er, 


New. road 
ee hire for 
Tents and Marae rents, with iron sides, 


moderate e. cost. 


e 
ed and m ay be had 


m 
Desks, &c., in ndo 

— — Tadie Cutlery of fen 
e Tables, affording 


PLEX N. ER 
ODFREY’S RAe OF ELD: 4 
i ngly recommended for 224 ln fi 
tifying, and ipreserving the 8 5 
; i ar 5 
— ale deli eul cosmetic. 
sunburn, T a „ Gees 


fectly — 
directions f 


of No. 13, 
Wintam Branson ur, Murrett 4 
Printed by. St. —.— and Faso Ae County of Middlesex. 
row, Stoke Newingt u, both Precinct, Waie ee i 
fice i n Lombard-street, in oie the ffs O here 
London; and published by them, en jn the county, 2 ru. 
parisa i 2 8, Covent-garden he p55 
ments and Comm unications 
Saruspay, Avevat! 11, 1840. 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 


GRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


3 stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, AUGUST 18. 


[Price 6d. 


No. 33—1849.] 
o 


INDEX, 
1 518 ò — cg 


ä — * 


e 
Je rn, ob the 


anp — —To be sold, very cheap, a large 22 
f Spe r ~~ in — 5 oe — fit for exhibi- 
ay ha w to be — at 

J. WEEKS and Co.'s, Un ited — King’s eroad, Chelsea ; or 
a full 1 in be forwarded on applicatio 


pA a i SEEDLING PELARGONIUMS.—Gie 


S, with particulars of — above superb varieties (un- 


A 
Hy FOR CONSERVATORIES. — Bing 
has n 1 atly improved 
8 
our list or prices to “ct d precisely with ies « of th the 
nie = "oe ch w on We beg the attention of the Nobility, 
men, Gentr 


try ond other 
qu —.— 1 8 — 6 
8 by A under i 5 8.. we 


* 


38 abe 1 boy Sd. 
13 22 


P 20 4 ger e te the — rs of e w season), can be had upon ——.— 
Nr on srs. 
cal Polypedium Deen. and a Co. „ Flortste ists 3 4 reet, mole tack, Me eee 
Pot isease > 
a pim Potato di Virein QUEEN | GERANI IUM (Annot), is the 
f machine Roses, cla best WH 1 9b in e 
accounts ... . Saving» banks . 
— Shallots, transmutation Obsesi 


Societies, friendly 


aco Speen ATRA 
rn 
fine art 


Storms, Reid V. ef 
spi: 515 e Tobaeeb . 520 922 r 
523 e | Trees, effect of alkali works 8 515 5 


oxide on 
Wheat, — mow., 
Wood, to pr eserve 


Tur Pur GRAND DAHLIA SHOW OF ENGLAND, 
* FETE, 
IRM 


WOODLANDS NURSERY, 1 E near 3 


ILLIAM WOOD anp SON have the pleasure of 

announcing that their immense stock of A a osigd a 

pona — now = —.— ae and will continue during the 

of a coach between Tunbridge Wells 

a Conte re ily ty each eth in connection hg fees morning 
— from London, and ae near the Nurs 


pies cal UNRIV 


PET 
the choicest etken of other raisers, 
d 


. GL Schedules of pri n be Priced Cata- 

d at the Gardeners’ Chronicle Office; atson’ Hotel, logues of the above are now ready, and may be had on applica- 

-square, 1 and Messrs. MAYLE and Co., tion. N. B. J. W. haviog — ted a greater 3 of Pelargo- 

* et, Birmingha niy m seed | than he has s 2 0 grow, egs offer the same at 
s for 5e 


? 


he best varieties, 


Gn T WEST O OF ENGLAND DAHLIA EX- James ‘WHOMES, 98 ron TUN 505 — Aug. 18. 
aa e be held g 1 the 29th of August CARTER AUTUMN s 
zan articulars may be had, on ap iip aton to Joux be s leave to 3 ni fo lowing 
Eerie, ity Secretary, Salisbu zits 4 Be S for Aut i r wing. The Autumn sown Hardy 
— xy eran Se — aer ornian, flower much earlie à 
Ae EXHIBITION OF DAHLIA will take stronger than the Spring sown, With Perennials and Green- 
in the grounds of the Amherst Arms Tavern, | hou a whole season is saved. The two latter shoul 
l on Wednesday, September the 19th, 1849, when —— — * rly as 8 and the Hardy . Annuals 1 
be: ded on an extensive scale. A prospectus, middle of September. Flower Seeds forwa repaid, by post 
fap mp — n —— ation I. HE BORD 185 II. FOR THE GREENH( 
Shackle eee lace, 3 8 Annuals 10s, Od. i fine Greenhouse seeds 7s, 6d, 
NEW o. 
eri ee Ax ao. 2 do. do. 
' N ink. P 2 *. ge of 3 S. | 32 12 dan Larkepars 2 3 M aurandyas .. 
— of GERANIU SS. POCHSIAS, PETUNIAS, VSR- |in ‘sll do do 2 “ Stars gern 
CHRYSANTHEMUMS, ACHIMENES, and OTH eee muen poni ’ Biennial 
PLANTS, Copies sent free by post on application,.—Bass and . , P. Pap ren 
Brows, Seed and Horticul 50 fine Hardy Perennials 12 6 Thanbergias 
k. orticultural Establishment, Sudbury, | 23 do, do, i Schizanthus, 3 f fne vars, 
12 0 
Ebwand GEO. HENDERSON, Wellington-road, | $ pee oe can gl ap GaleColaria spo spotted i m. 
St. ene rood, London, is now sending LCEO- 1 a —— a mr ge 
LARIA 8 phinium chinense Erica, 59 vars. ł 
Pya of his own ving, from ciclo — —— only, Gaillardias Gladiolus, 20 yars * ae 
4 Katte g and he has still a few packets — of his 1 Hollyhocks n. dwarf mea rubro- 
1. 0 RARIA SEED, at 2s. 6d. and 5s, per pac Pentstemons new n 8 A € 
U. can als upply strong plants of the ne 2 Con ti- illi * p "P. 
Rental other V. Sweet William Ipomopsis superba 0 
— 3 as, the formar of which 23 Wallflowers ... Phl x Drummondi, 20 U. 71 0 
J = — peg 2 . and far superior to previous in- € All other Flower Seeds may — single packets at 
y now be seen in b J e usual prices, 0 Catalogue of 1300 will be sent, prepaid, on 
application. His n f a first-rate collec 


Mio x OF LILIUM LANCIFOLIUM, OR THE 
5 JAPANESE LILY. 


Sundays excepted, 
nitt tance gratis, 
1 one having a few good SUC- 
VIDENCE, nn TRINIDAD Pine 
a purchaser by ap- 


4 E APPLE PLANTS fot SALE.—Clean, good 
] s had ch lying to M 

Barat M EER AE 
erecta: a small parcel of 5 nde; 


nder insects, 


ani 


Also, 

married Man be tie heres 4 preferred; 
er Weelk, Within six miles of London. Sk 8 by 
e and Vulture Tavern, St. Michael: Uey, 


ington, Middleton, 
, begs to call the attention 
orists, to his cho + collec- 
1 PRIM- 
ES, and PINKS, —— 
mioh n application, inclosing a postage stamp. 
E fel m pikaa in informing those gen 
ae with their orders, that his Plants 
T — hg eae — ng, oh aaa condi- 


Ta RYE-GRASS, TRIFOLIUM IN- 
eH SIX WEEKS TURNIP, WINTER 


En AND SONR have 3 harvested 
of for present sowing, 


* atu 


UH) 


1 85 


80 ay be bad} 

N'S IM LOVED RES LIAN BERGAARS, . . d. 

10 eee 2 bushels—per 0 
ARNATUM, proper 3 pir 11 


ted REKS STUBBLE TURNIP, wil come 
Per gain” by end of this month—price 


ee. rib. 0 1 0 


coe — ito o London, Bristol, or Basil 
e, Reading, Berks, Aug. 18. 


n of Dutch and . — flowering Bulbs will be ready in a 
— days. JAMES * Seedsman and Florist, No. 238, 
Londor 


High Holborn 
TO THE 15 UF THAT SPLENDID 
AUT 1 84 FLOWE 
YSANTHEM 7 M. 
oU N 0. are now prepared to execute 
orders from their extensive and very select collection of the 


w and fine continental varieties, at 


above, S all the new 
the following price: 
50 best ne’ 


Se 
& 


Fine plants for blooming in Autumn, well “seta bticnea i in small 
pots, or per post free, with all orde — 5 3 ee 


will on sent for a — l and eas e of cu 
biti 
CAMELLIA oy 
—— the finest varieties, well set with flower buds, 30s. 


r dozen. 

‘o ANEMONE SEED, saved from selected sorts, is now being 
sent out — ioe and Co. in the finest condition, and can 
be forw: t free, at 2s . Gd, 4 nd 5s, per packet, suf- 
tto site, bed of 12 or 24 . 


14 by 
3 foot 
GLASS MILK. PANS. PROPAGATING AK * 
Pas try Slabs, Hyacio th Glas N des for Orna- 
ments, Fish Glo es, Plate pen Win — every descrip. 


Shades, and Lactometers ph . the quality of 
s 7s. 6d.; 6 tubes, 10s, Selk. {eae the quality of — 

be. Gre enhouses. 

A fall List of Prices and eve ery information may be had by 

applying to James Puituirs and Co., Horticultural Glass Ware- 

house, 116, , Bishopsgate-street Wit ook oe 


GLASS FOR CONSERVAT 8 be. 
ETLEY anp CO, * poy) oon, “Shoot Glass of 
British Manufacture, a from 2d, to $d, 
5 foot, for the ke — ny thousand 
of wi 


licati 

NG IL ASS, GLASS 
TER- PICES, PROPAGATING 
TEN PLATE-GLASS, 
d GLASS SHADES, 

to JAMES HETL ho. London, 

See the Garden ri’ Chronicle, fret SotedGay tm Vai anii 

GLASS. FOR ‘CONSERVATORIES AND H HORTICULTURAL 
PURPOSES, &c. 


MILK PANS 
PASTRY PINS 


ED ae FLOWER DISHES 
PROPAGATINGGBEE CUCUMBER GLASSES 
, MILLINGTON’S SHEET GLASS, which is of 
es t descri from 16 to 32 ounces, a 


11 
dd. per foot upwar 5. . Milk Pans from 
12 to 24 nee Loony eter, from 28. to 58. each. Cue Tubes, 
from 12 to 2 5 per inch. 8 Ts, Gd. 
cach, y be had o ste sd 
t Wi as tke 


rehous 
2 rar det Pe Railwa 
'| HonrIcoLTURAE 1 BUILDING AND HEATING 
ALSO THE 5 — CHOICEST PLANTS, 


ir th 
Hothouse Greenhot 
soma of which are extensive, amd 
iù 


cien 
ms — 3 a fine display through ps autumn and winter erec 


a 
~ Dataing San of the above, with an extensive variety of highly | ar 


eee, 3 will be 1 by enclosing two 2 
t Yar 


mouth Nu 
BEAUTIFUL BOUQUETS of FLOWED are kepi |- 
perfectly fresh for several days in Glasses 2 
oe * tton-hole, the Hand, or to be inserted ja nps part 


postage inc 
nt, by —— aor Towssox, 89, Bishopsga 

opposite St. Helen's Place, London 

REEN AND tet L- by machinery, 


of 3 H 
editorial article upon there inventions, from 


.RTLEY’S PATENT ROUGH PLATE @ GLASS 


Re eenhouse, 12 feet 3 marks are “The 2 
me: — — ember 2 feet of 2 — — one about the dane or 8 be n — By 
with 16 oz. sheet g ss of a large size, and ted coats | such appliances, and by the aid of such 3 vast and im. 
of oil colour, deliver any railway or in London, urez seen ty 3 reasonabl } As connected, 
for 15t. I0s. ; ado, do. 15 by 10, 224. 10s, ; ado. do, 18 by 12, especially with the culture, Strawberries 1 Melo 
281. 1 i a ‘do. do. 21 en including . plan for sna Tiles would ie ati arliness 
bric! OF -inch 5 glazed with 16 oz. | sm e shall repent, “hat ig r ne is 
sheet i ogg — . 2-inch — > Sais At aang ak op te — md pa inem ina f ERTS, 

T. chine Works, Stamford-hill, | thanks of hortio inging before 
per fost naia e 3 k nt manner a principle of great practical utility,” 


514 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
EXHIBITIONS AT. THE GARDEN 


HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY OF LONDON, | 
FOR THE YEAR 1850. 


THE EXHIBITIONS WILL TAKE PLACE ON THE FOLLOWING SATURDAYS :— | 
MAY 18, JUNE 8, anp JULY 13. 1 


SCHEDULE OF THE PRIZES. aaa 
FLOWERS. 


Division I.—In which Nurserymen and Private Growers exhibit independently of each other. 22 
argo Uections of 6 new and first-rate ones in the pot from the open ground, or that is shown in a pot , F Cape Heaths ; in collections of 10 entirely PEA 
x "e s, 1 pectockly distinct —* “cultivate d with s of any other size en 13 inches, in = inch pota, 2 75 CE—LS 
erior skill, in 8- 3 s. SG—OE Yellow Roses, best oe SK—SB—C G Ca ci ons, in pans of 24 distinct varieties, SB, 
N. P. Th fi } t! N.B. To be shown T jiri y, and really to be yellow; mer Gly 
—3 The co preference. pale cream inet are ones PE i 1 Vicotoes, in pans of 24 distinct varieties SB, gay 
ti 1l-inch pots, | E Ca e Heaths, in collections of 10 entire stinct varieties. 
B peiargoniums in collections of six varieties, in II- inch pots an on y I Pinks; in pans of 24 distinct varieties, SB, a 
t shall not have been actually grown in N.B i t tl t shall hibited only.) 
2 ratified. 1 on e than one occasion, The Judges, in — — their N. B. Carnation Give and Pinks must be sh 
C Roses, in pots; in collections of 12 distinct varieties. GB— reeds ‘will give, both in this and the next letter, a e out cards, in boxes bd four ons 4 t 
peiterenics to plants grown in their nie orem a without 5 i do From e — 3 
in May and June only, and in 13-inch pots. | stakes or stays; and will also take distinctness o species outside, depth at back, ay 1 0 
2 Pies 3 83 "disqualify any coll lectio on that shall be into favourable consideration, No duplicate will be allow- The face to E painted light gr: — 
found to contain a plant which has been — placed able. allowed to exhibit in which the oo an ag 
ee II. 3 which Nurserymen alone can show. i 
K Exotic Or p cultivation. GB—SG—CE. $ 
Division III.—In which all persons are admitted to equal competition. 
ceolarias, in in ll-inch pots. LS—SK—SB Z Exotic Orchids; single specimens displa: very superior N.B. It is certain that prio b 
2 and — onl cultivation, de Se ite ' playing on j plants in common cul c 
wae To be nen 21 ye J 
M Single s ry superior cultivation, eng | N.B. No duplicate Medals can be here awarded, — &e. &. This ab will „ i 
everything which can 3 singly i 44 Fuchsias; in threes, of three distinct — rich in July only. a 
plants not in flower. CE—LS—SK LS—SK—SB NN Tpae — ses; in sixes. (In ain 2 W n 
N Stove or Greenhouse plants; in collections of 20 plants. | BB Pelargoniums; insix DISTINCT SPECIES, exhibiting superior 00 Newly introduced or extrem 
Lé—GK— cultivation. CE—LS—SK ower; not W i — ie * 
N. B. Calceolarias, Fuchsias, Orchids, Pelargoniums and = | N.B. By the word species is meant the wild — imported ne These Medals wil 
plicates cd excluded from all the four classes of Stove from — Cape of Good Hope, or New Holland, tuberous and not or the usual aeua. tachi 
ants. oo Nauen inckmsive, and not garden — observe that none but new or — 
0 8 ~ = ‘Greenhouse plants ; in collections of 15 plants. Pelargoniums ; in sixes, in S. inch pots. SG—CE under this letter. Nothing 
B—SG i hib pet 
P Stove or Greenhouse plants; in collections of 10 plants. N. B. No duplicate Medals can be allowed here, seas — 
DD Achimenes ; in collections of six distinct varieties, exhibit- varieties of ie any kin 
Q Stove Pera plants; in collections of 6 plants. S@ ing superior cultivation. S CE_LS—SK. Un — uly only.) i which have been intro 
N.B. Exhibitors cannot show in more than one of the classes EE Six distinct nn sa Tall Cacti in flower PP Miscellaneous subjects, 
of Stove or Greenhouse plants, SS an es O each con sting ‘of N.B. Exhibitors under P P will not be 
R Greenhouse Azaleas; in 12 distinct tenen. 3 sas they are ga athered, so as to exhibit, as far ticket, Cockscombs, 
S Greenhouse Azaleas ; in six distinct varieties, SG-CE—LS| „$ possible, the habit of the variety. cE—LS— quets, together with all 
N.B. No one can show in both ——— of Azalea NJ. B. In July only. No one whi exhibits in this letter can are offered as single specim 
T Greenhouse Rhododendrons; in six distinct — In "also o compete in the followin QQ Seedling Hybrid Pelarg 
May only.) SG—CE—LS 6 Roses, exhibited as in the letter FF, and in 25 varieties, SB— 
U — of 6 New * Evergreens grown in pots; Coni- LS—SK—SB. (Private growers only can exhibit here). N.B. Every seedling must 2 
z Wr N. B. In June and July only. If Roses are brought for exhi- the name it is to bear. The 5 
N. B. No will be Ea maei 8 which has been in bition without atte nti ion to the regulations here explained, prize more than once in the season. 
Y Conifers, in 3 ceo T ve sry rare species, in not less Enoy neraet mp shown in pots, and not in a cut state. j 
than the third year oftheir growth. pera H Helichrysums. CE—LS—SK BR Alpines s Lo mehren, SK—8B—C ( Hay only) K- 
N.B. Hand / can only be shown at the exhibition in July. i. I Kalosanths ; in sixes. (In July only.) 3 88 — in in 6-inch pots. ( 4 EWE = 
W Exotic Orchids ; in collections of 20 species of — culti- | tices; in collections of six species. CE—LS—SK 1 
6 L Ferns, in collections of 10 hothouse species of very superior N. B. Prizes will only be given 855 P 
x Exotic Ò Orchids; in collections of 10 species of superior cul- cultivation, LS—SK—SB. TT Hardy Heaths; in sixes. 
—CE -B. To be shown in July only. UU Seedling Florists’ Flowers. 
Orchids; in collections of six species. SG—CE—LS | MM N ew Hybrid Plants, exclusive of Roses, | 3 A = t wi oP sores for the 
N.B. ine ae cannot show in — these three class: — ae and th s will be awarded ; 
I (tee eae ae any opinion upon the merits 
y 


FRUIT. ao 
or Growers pm 3 in a habit of supplying the Market, and Private Gardeners, -a independently of each other.. 
to exhibit at = o duplicate a can be made in any case whatever, in P. No can take more than one award i 
ee 0 B. E. K. M O, P PERRET se i 

N.B. All Prait must he sufficiently ripe for Market, WELL COLOURED, and erect NAMED by the Exhibitor, as far as 22 if me 3 1 2 


F SK—SB—C 3. Muscats. LS—SK—SB 
$ — 1 3 — 4. Other sorts, — from the foregoing. LS—SK—SB 
` ens. F Peaches, in sixes, SK—S 
2. ' T heites 2 N yeunes, Sugarloats, Black Jamaicas, Ota- 8 Nectarines, ee i 


SB—C 
nees, LS- SKSB 3 5 and Pears of the previous year. SB—C 
imens to CE—LS— 188, 

— an ; * k Cherie, in d in dishes of 11b. ie - > 

in three bunches for private growers, and six 1, Black — 45 . White. SB—C 2. The bes sk—SB—C 
1 Black F for bare Black Prin : 3 came | L Stra — hy ; six ome to be shown. SK—SB—C pe other kinds 55 “fruit of ait of peculiar e head will be 

— — ack Prince, &c. LS—SK— N. B. The: 1 under 

aters, Kc. LS-8K—SB | —.— must ae grown in the pots in which they are +2. 333 sats doe eee 


Waxen, at HALE-PRICE, , the GARDENE pakian CEMENT, — — 


may be 


applica: to the bare — and 
which rooms may be rendered — before ren 
mmonly adopted — It is w worked. withont 
sive than with any other stucco whatever. A finer quality is —— 8 
also prepared for Orn: tal Encaustic Emot | A 
ing, &c., & c., specim y be =. bg A 
the Paten ARLES Faancis and Sons, N | a Sera 


Patentees, Cuaztes Faancis and Sons, Nine Elms, London, 4 4 
Town's PATENT PROTOXIDE PAN PAINT peas en gen and | SMYRNA, 
price. This el f 
used by the principal Railway and Gas — and 2 ery teat ‘and cian 
„Builders others for painting Stucco. prevents iron from 1 


| rusting, wood from decay, masonry l 1s. A oe Se 
sun has no effect upon it. Manufactured by CHARLES FRANCIS part 
and Sons, Cement Works, Nine Elms. i Han ee 


GHT, CHEAP, AND DURABLE ROOFING. comfortable sian bristles, 
3 PATENT ASPHALTE ROOFING T fitting Shirt is ad i long wished for, The Public, | Brushes of ater 

rvious to rain, snow, and ‘and only require to be made acquainted with the Establ ment of | wring gg 

4K extensive 1 Mr. Fon, of 185, Strand, and to > = j 


uired for slates; can be laid of the many — gained in appearance and 3 “properties 
— — or ——— ed persons. — wearing those made at this celebrated Establishmen Musical 1 
e GROGGON’S PATENT NON ERON. Gazette, May 26, 1819 * cee cr Sponge: On 
d Pipes, s Shirts for 30s. ; also all the new Patterns Feuu Sole Establishment, 
ffuel. 8 e sent by tit — in — Shirts, six for 27s, Detailed ogues, with To, $ 
— to Caoccon si ea =a — London. Bag ek d Directions for Self. measurement, sent post fr 


| Holles-street. 
z free, | Beware ae 
Rien Foap, 185, Strand, London, | —— ws 


95—1849.] 
xs AR BRE BS: 
of other raisers.— 12 of the followin 
— — and to London, will be = 
ont for Tao Shin into a 3 ele will be a, 
gn immediate gents informed when the plants are ready, when 
act 2 ce 0 ord : 


Cracker, a not, Ariel, 
ta, Gustavus, Gulielma, Grandifiora, 
Sun down; or 9 of 8 above, — 

pping’s B Brilliant, or Foster’s Victory. 
“will make first-rate 


aardas Catalogue, including the 
be had on application to Joun Dosson, 


— Centurion, 

Cavalier, Cruenta 

Negress, ~~ 

e Tare f. 

— — of 184 155 may be 
rea don o i their culture will be found in 

Florist and and Garden Mis nen „published o n che! Ist of each 

and to be had of a sellers, under the 7—— 

. 


his work ‘contains one colour 
= — 1 matter vs ge, 

we calen —— ned by em minent cultivators. 
“Too much can scarcel —— said in — of the continued 
reines of this work.“ —PROr. LINDLEY, in this Paper, April, 


” 


NEW HARDY HYBRID RHODODENDRON. 
—— — CAMPAN 3 SUPERBUM. 
Magazine of Botany” for this m 


E 
E 
* — 
2 


MAS JACKSON anD SON a w sendin 
O 
bited at the Horticultur ociety’ i t at 
on Rogge f May, and a oak their Knightian 


the fi ually 

eer a 3 Ls — e 7 3 upper sammie. 

as Battie and distinctly spotted with crimson ; a benu- 
ug. 18. 


* — — à 
IE BLACK, —— — — 528 
*. 


— — 
2 oo 5 55. This 5 — — Try post 
po ale other variety * . 


, and a It stands 


e good p 
‘it 15 ariy, very Say. 
* er. 

D ae opinion . u lead le in 

Dr. 8 wea te a leading artic 
„ 1849. 3 4 — wr highly . 
ie kee ` ngage r Miyan; te Henderson, Mr. Ingram, 
Beaton, a 
„Snow, gr. to 0 Earl de ded 


f Ola aremont, Mr. nd 
Rong “Bag Treatise on ‘the 
pen Powe’ —— and Lisianthus 
ls, Orders o ell.—Ja 
ear London. 


THE GARDENERS’ 


MES Gotan, | 


HOYLE’sS IEE RE SANUM, 7s. 6d. each, ca 
cto 
— — the — a 7s. — each in October 
each for 125. 
— and Co., 
Nurs urserymen, Plymouth, 


The Sa Chronicle. 
SATURDAY, AUGUST 18, 1849. 


MEETING FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. 
Country Smow.—Thursday, August 23: Warwickshire Horticultural. 


We — last week to the —— of —— 
ing the ca EASE AMONG Prants with m 


— to — E. 


jeet; and we re 

in courts of law which ipl illustrate the n 
sity of the question being 

to r principles, which my y be an underst 

by everybody. A recent trial e Yerk 

deserves mention with panel to ‘thi great public 


In the ea 
Mr. Justice Parrxsox, the plain 
village of W —— 
or injury sust 
deleteri 


ntiff, residing in the 
near Wakefield, elaine d da 


d and 

dying, that garden crops were no longer yielded as 
ey had been, that hay was of ba vm sai N it ¢ 
. — was good, and so on ring me and 


dence it te pena that the smell 1 rendered, 5 
rooms uninhabit 


CHRONICLE. 


men of science ; 


saw 
k assiz ‘ate f 


use of Arna v. Simpson, tried lately before e 


jat "poid constititionsl vigou 


question, whatever deleterious FK. tiay y hae 
gon exercised by the vapours 
è defi 


adillo 

m crops are not likely to 

be injured by alkali works, unless the acidity of the 
they are e 


rom acri 4 
oubted ; perhaps 

securely guarded by some pec 
skin of the a and 


the plaintiff’s ek Me was rat to the works. 
On the 


injury rem Aia ar 
what were called “ nat 


Melon 
Octave tre 
ELA — — “i n MAGNIFI- 
GENT.”—The tends sending out mew of the 
2 well established in ‘inch poi in the middle of —— 
nam and pa kage included, 


A. 2s. each, 
A d as the 
allowed. 


hide House, near N erpa Isle of Wight. 


A ip ta S AND v 
cath: 5 H begs to offer i the ‘followin 

at 21s. per dozen, viz., Story’s Elegantissima, 

ee ' Gem ver the — . Nelson í 


VER- 
Maid, 

Ble Advancer, 
Pans uyal, Devear, Painted Lady, Princess, 

le, Lady — “ciantess, 83 Grey's Rosea 

Princess Alice, Young’s Ne tg “es tar, Royal Purple, 
Ivery’s pre pps’ Eclipse, 
iley’s ee, ie ane of th he isles, e of 

„ Exe t worth, Junius, L ri 
Thurold, Mieilez’ Napoleon Bonal 


syche, “a 
of = Prem h, 


apoleon Bonaparte, La Reine, 
Prince of Wales, ls, each. 
Saturne, Madame Miellez, 


ce order, will either 
— to compensate for 

ursery, Hornsey Road, Islington. 
ESSUS FUNEBRIS, OR FUNEBRAL 3 

I STANDISH anp NOBLE, Nunser 


tre in Fiat — 
to roeping C out fine —— — 


at 21s. each. 
splendid Tree is a great favourite with the Chinese, and 
of China used by them principally for 3 in 
and forms is, N it often attains the “geo et 
the tiful E 
Iewas — ese a by Lar Lord Macartney 
— ie 


i 
n 


rice the E s, in the 


ronicle, 
mments — aty. Aade, ‘Mazon 
t 


ec. | SO is 33 


— i 


mage to — er 
Another fro newspaper 
te — — have imagined í that — — soil 
— have caused the so appears that 
“a num 


there ed 

tiff's — in this r 

show that active injury had bee 

perce tea yet the fruit was worn to have — 
847 and 


323 in 
espect; that -n went — 
withdra 


7 
ontended that the ns 


„ b 
ran pet exhalations escape from the attack of cholera, 


In addition to * 
e "constitutional. 5 — pr trees of 
am nimals of “the 


ha of a 
fetid drain, while another will sink 


cked by cho 
— exhalati 


ond argument on the part of the defendant 
was, that, as no — 1 ave esca 
chimneys Since October, 1846, no injury can have 
been sustained since that time. How any Salles 
irm that nothing ever 


1848 mp — and he 
left 0 jury to form 


thei mclusions. The 

jury, which was — and ic 121 vie owed the 

388 before the trial, gave a verdict for the 
defendan 

Had this been the Wa of a common jury it 

5 ; it would ne only 

ase ge that list of nenge = 


o tri e ca 
uestio — and from their 
position in life should have been able to re are | 23 
— truth, 5 the difenlties hi 

to have unded it. That 


a 


the bert ott their dames ‘the 
t the ected wi ng is equally certain, as we | 
shall ani Bers to 


The defence — “three-fold. First that the in- 
ca 


o, in Lord — voyage 
the Vale of pinced and aie plant: 
a beautiful sheet te — — —— 


—— 
a n N 3 Par- 


i 
0 


7 
i j He | 


i 
f 
b 
E 


1 

8 to 
Confucius, who li 
— In the Vale of Tombs the variety of 


] 
55 


greatness are surroun 
Kere y — whose d 
em everywhere 
scenes of woe, i The served in any part of did 
„nor was it observ 2 
e weeping Thuja, or Lignum vi 


es, unknown in 


ne of Tombs the weepin: „tree in the 
Tower of the Thun 5 s is this 
or 


F 
$ 


FE 


72 


pal 
Soil 
FA 
275 5 
if 
F 
i 
çE 


PFE 
10 


. — warded 

bral ER, wh sc — need them to be 
f Cypress ( ioe Jedin ng article in * . — 
Of the 21st — Apri | N. 
ear — Crypt 


1 100 
or 12. ibs. 


d st 
1 
Plant, 36s, per — 


72 
is 


5 
85 


s. per 


beca 
a bold peninsula that | could havi 


— This 


in Europe, — many | wo 


ef 
as proved by the 
; and thirdly, 


om by, 
three scientifi A agan 
* 4 vf z >- f th tation 
It is per 5 “A rine that 7 2 e 
ear the chimn ance healthy. 


as these woul 
pevienced observer ; and yet they are 
the e They T 


of segues pas ies nce 


oi 
donk reliance of gentleme 
3 | flues, 


2 
We will take the two 
ev 


no 
attempt — decide an isolated question o 


to e e g 


Plan 
different powers of ‘resisting disease, partly 


e animals, have 
be- 


e 
facturer’s wor 
proved in October, 1847 a2 — afteractid va apon 

were said to have been stifled), that recent injury 
18 | had | 


roduced on the late trial, also 


viden 
elle en e y that the atmospheric influ- 


neys, and mec contrivances, and 

especially upon the care of — Next week 

hall show what that proof was; examine 

the — ue of the opinion, that the com- 
gerh of was referable to “ natural causes.” 


we rset tork oceasion to — — 7 — 


principles 
di ce interference in “the 


particular question ich our observations were 


rs called forth, and we "id so in the belief of that then there 


h 
ea are — the 
number engaged in it, either ine 
to whom 
sound principles would be far m 


identa 


onger the innate love and inherent feeling 


ere 
for Art, the greater t the necessity for giving it a Mei 
di 


rection. active an exube 


“Tt ba 


8 


in fer 
education, example sho hide ever go 3 in — 
with precept. Rxxxolps says of that greatest of all 


516 
in Art, “thedivine Rarrartis,” that the 1e works 


t po ce R, AxckLo and all Rome were a school of | w 
ri to him,” and he expatiates PEN on his obe- 


* 

— a of A. and illustrations of prin ciple 
architectural student is especially well fared 15 in 
ahis rı Of what direct and weng Ngee dames 


tinction. “The 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


rs Rose in 
when we scarcely looked for Roses 

mon ear, ~~ e summer N 
smal e large family of ‘Toes S, 

er discarded the gre 
n consequence of the better varieties 

ith eq ne flowers an 

of blooming. Still, the summer 
1 0 


respect. 
would a series of studies 2951 nature 
might exhibit. not 1725 


e 
this kind ae 


vYSUM, 
the old Beer painters; and een Arpo 
Horx, and BaRTHOLOMEw, amongst the 
are ee of works of Art 5 75 applicable t tol 


PAN the the e of garden poi by WATTE 
and W and many of a similar character at By 
Srotuarp and Turner, are full of 4 whether 
esign, or beau- 
tudied with 


urs. be 

that no great ho rticultaral en 

whether i or private, should be without its 
2 e Art,” in whi ch m 1 5 be fou 

of Bonai on einn 

threefold on i e 
of 


that 
of the Eye,” his t 5 


and shade, and colour; 1 — whole 
Bterary works of ReyxoLD s, or at all events the 
Lectures; and, We they would be 


39 


ord . s not far 
groups of garden raps: will te tested 
y mii principles of Art 
amenable a the same kind of enim, as a picture, 
a statu any work on which the ar fistic faculties 
have Beall exercised. But to effect this change 
must look to artists, not to gardeners. M., 


ON THE CLASSIFICATION OF GARDEN ROSES. 


E have oar oubted whether the present ne 
flestion of Gard es w ble, for after en 
deavouring 8 the particular points which 
are made to distinguish ce ctions, we confess ou 
selves at fault, and we believe that if there was pre- 

a ogue which should comprise fewer — 


and m 
would bette 
more at home i in the ton I 
are some pome cie tinetions that anybody. an 
The s Roses, which nobody istake, form a 
though there are sapane, ve 
ac 


The old CHIxA Roses, both 
have long been familia; 
classes, 


— 
cased hey are the ter vales Rose 
æ ‘China, ids 8 very marked omen = 
seg Git em, which — the 1 
arne, but ‘the bark i is ie m and mooi, e — 2 


promi 


abundant as ever, 


considered and 


- which — e after 


For es there m 
ape the 


on which w 
a the habit of the | 


ss of ever. 


ess it 


some flower; 


and, wi 

season of g * al = pat rest again, = A 

make a third n, hich the flow 

however, t the pods “of bie: Yee 
lowed to go to seed, or rather to perfect neuen 

o plant is dado and ont the common China, whi 0 

e whole family, they wil 


"tt, 


e to draw 
ipar again, 
diverting’ also 


“Tes whe 
upon the plant, an 
and, as a matter of course, 


cultivators — ciate 
wish that the 


essary, when we e d the 
as to which secti on e 


erg — catalogue, in w 


he gives first, Ros — 
that bloo ne ay, Jun 


e, an i aay and follows with, 
second, — owering in August, September, and 
October : but unless this were — — well, it 
were better let alone. In Part I., for Roses blooming 
the first three months, we ses 
Provence, Gallica or 5 Hybrid 
Hybrid China, Hybrid Bourbon, Alba 

Fart II, 


aaeain in the first and second 
a guide, Everybody knows 
— s long before August, Sep- 
ber, ae that there are Hybri 


| one from the other. 


ving, howe 


to swell the number of sec 

their po of blooming, 
use we one pat understand that also. Weo 
served at the Chiswi 


na y other name that 
Rose grower ver may ies but China would 1 1 
now a family or fee a deserip- 


with rough, bar 


2 
oom, June or July. 
in fine order more than a 


or a month, Everybody would 33 such a dis- 


all and not 


f | be 
re than three weeks | rapa 


e are thrown into the way of their 

acquiring pe 8 “ate less people are in- 
clined to encounter them, ho e n in 

whether a w Rose j 

hybrid ing-else 

hybrid i ait ö 

Chi it be a Perpetual 

for the turn of a leaf or the size o 
mako di distinetions aiie differences, 

f 


in June” wasa — figure | nobod 


aor 


A mend strongly some Rose grower to 
f 


Ari discontinue Ritts until | bt 


i flowers and the season fhe b 


can thoroughly 
very few can see them, 
giv 


there shall a — — 
all be inet trot ta 7 

— that everybody ma: 
r want of some better di 


088 


C 
Bourbons 121 and other smooth-bari 
al China habi Ray 


and us 

that hae the origin 

ing 8 flowering ; subdivided in t Amta A v 
. bei 


ummer 5 n 
of bloom; ahnte ing al hon 


, give two or 


subdivided if n een 
Noi 


necessary into 1 L 
risin 


e 
amilies phe ed by name. Hybrid thi 
is either a agen wer and 


at faci ony coul | 
The loai being de orbi we need only seek the one 
rfs or climbers required. A 


us whether the flowers were large or small, ani we 
were going to say double or single, but we the 
of single and semi-double Roses has gone by. Tis 
however, belongs more peculiarly to another portiond 
th subject, in which it is necessary to What 
e qualities to be most app a good Rose, 


ved a clas cation of a t the public so carry us all through their catalogues, to 
255 pay tand, b shies to the splitting of the us the differences that separate th 1 
family a zon ons tha are wid distinguishable the e sati ry to us; but in 


uF 


. 


incapable of appreciating anything DS 


If it 55 like a China, let it be called a that w 


to enforce is 


so that a m who wanted a dozen, or a 

desired to form a complete Rosary, should 

able to p bloom how and when he 
Peed, and short or as he Poa 3 and be 


thirds those i e cata- 
Jogues * we would have 3 ae was not 
worth a place thrown out of cultivation. Cri 

_ DISEASES ‘om 25 


Continued 
—— 5 In clayey 


THE GARDENERS’ 


Second species. Destccation oF Borns. — Some 
bulbous roots begin to lose their outer coats and at the | 
ime to fade. Their scales no longer show their 
usual lucidity, but assume a greyish colour, and al 
at the same time they become wrinkled, and finish by 
dy yacinths have shown e this kind of de 
siccation, and I have lost ier considerable 2 from 


2 more a me, e diseas 
gave no premonitory j oms, but only qt itself 
at the time of ‘taki ing up — roots, which I generally did 
in the first fortnight of Jun 

observations, and ee remedies available agains 


VERONA ME 


“ait att wa acid on oxalic acid), 


517 
became per- 
pearance died immediately ; but 
the action of carbonic oxide 
pose ir, if they have not 
he gas, I kep i 
experimenting, 48 h I ex 

n they were quite dead. 
th the of the 
A fs this time mixed with a 
en; the larvee did 


80 
me epee still tes | 4 had been in the 
e fresh ere afterw: 


xi — 
xis averted — — Wen — ner ren — ost = evil, prove to me that it is owing to an excess — quen d 
un, aged P iada whick spread 4 _ | heat. i ected by it when th gas, a quantity of air got in, but still 
—— he surface of the soil, are liable to perish ring has been hot ; those are first injured which are ectly quiet in the same 
near the eae Tha ’ ll fibres fe at the surface of the ground, thence the first preserva- At the end of 24 hours I ex them 
in aap ee iti pash n fol. ive ake care in planting them that they are all to the air. At the end of two hours those that had 
first dry T ” cd 2 This evil overed at least with two inches of ear ket came to life ; when placed in the 
penoy iN * ay, but may: bò f pede gardener informed me that in paan years when the sun as the first they died. 
is very * tse deans plaint in was excessively hot, and the means of irrigation de- destroy weevils in these two 
it is in m duit so many plantations which appeared 3 he eae a a ane r 2 q" aye of | states, by placing them for a certain in contact 
a is san i n 7 — ing them I foun wi I endeavouri 
t gg will — — pre oa 8 Ne bulbs reduced to the sam as m z It to find out the shortest time in which they can be killed 
— cr, who by avaries or y ess, | May be of use to florists, when their Hyacinths are wi ve described. To ascer- 
fault ian i ve mt f the te s ? | beginning to fade, to exam ds occasionally, insects were — . 
dem, Not only trees but herbs also perish by and if they find the roots too near the surface, to add by carbo took some of the soundest co 
72 on, and in the latter case 15 two good inches of soil over them, taking care, however, | could pomes rikere it into two portions, one of which 
more fatal, as it is more difficult to perceive it in time. ne E t * . 3 mf k 2 à 3 — 
It 1 more especially affects bulbs. Hence I distinguish the desiccatio not reached the inside of the taining 3 
— Ibs, they must be cleaned from the — * n to If any of these insec 
Ti, S 1 Elms 2 1 Wee a “a lars dry, not expo: the sun’s rays, appro — — not in the second jar the 
l priate place, through w which passes a W catia of air. ly experime 
acer —— * 3 y 8 em in the shade, under a layer o bors 2 may be usefully employed in 
roots dry ks first, but e ace onire vir e ner must not neglect the most careful exa whic estroyed so quickly in con- 
3 tet Bg » Very | nation of t when he em up, becau “of the rate 1 which these insects arse 
some one, at that time 3 attacked by e certainty to 


' of appearance, ady lost. I have 
seen a Poplar of which the 10 lower half 92 already dried 
up, e upper 3 still gave signs of a vege- 
tation not even very languid. ce may 
easily lead into error if — a severe drought, the roots 


being y affe ea 
For a 3 the head of the tree resumes its no art 
but y it inevitably follows the fate of the roo 


light, or as the saying is, rich in sand | ¢ 
in sap, then the 2 remedy, without 
indeed little else is is to add to the soil 


may show it at a later period, when there will be no 
longer a — it having remained concealed unde 
the outer scales 


1 e AND SUBURBAN T GARDENI NG. 
are desirous > excel in the culture of 


ho 
a Pera would now do well to look to the compost-yard. 


manures ye by the ‘application of skill and judgment, 
ided experience he has gathere i 


oo perm 25 applies with — 1 2 and success, | 


= 


sisan is 


to ‘the e chemist, a — it has long —+ contain | u 


any mys 


The first atl — get is loam of a turfy and sandy | us 
peewee! 


Common loam i is 
e best which — mm obtained near London. 

will be found very suitable for all elf ore of potting, | 

Melon or Cucumber culture, and indeed | for go — 


ected 
able variety ‘any Dy — m vin have ‘the best 
this country,—capital tal stuff for 2 or for a 


to | in 
rican plants in the open groun nd, should be lai 
p 


ssib it with a 
the colonies in — other state than that ot flour, which 
early worthless after passing the 
ropies. Comptes ii July 1849. 


„Home ‘Correspondence. 


r e of grt ir agent water . 
ha 4. ceased to perform this o 


— 8 9 
material of the pipes does not appear to 
best and 


not very perceptible at first sight in themselves. 
hi 


t they could be no longer 


e 
er and mix it with the hose who are n trusted; and I therefore Sesks neni up. opening 
oe of preparing the holes or trenches bef rass and Heath with which it is covered ally e itself. Eie pi 

and leaving them some time open, - | decayed. A silver sand should al kept in tance were filled with 
vantage ee P y i plete! — A i 
bef “gon the soil being mixed up for a longer tim re, will constantly be in request in potting oar so comp — y cho em, in 
— is covered over, is more le g- any delicate rooted plant. e next article, of which a | a matted mas fibre 2 chat they afford ect 
— by the beneficial influence of the atmosphere, | supply should at all times be at hand, is decayed ere — 1 wi — 
— aias a greater fertility. e young plan cowdung, when of sufficient age to use, will be | various joints and — inequalities now * 
dour of much less to fear from the pernicious ar- — N article in the culture of florists’ flowers, | 1 what was : en r i 
kno gee heats, In the d best | and especially the Ranunculus; three years are requ in | and heed — va Seater ou 
to me, I t re young to d it and reduce it into a condition fit for 43 feet), and I trust so careful y Pas e- y 
Be tons are destroyed by the summer heats than by use, conseq y e. s = is —— necessary ir length 
winter frosts, ose who follow ost injuriou e-dun to a usable state; 1 aii high fi 
Practice of mutilating th us leaving their supply may Pad e frequenti — from the Cucumber w a 
Extremities too to a heap it is soon fit n — with the plant beyond ; 
much the 5 th h, r Melon bed, an eu — oy raia th er part of phenomenon is 
The Vine a for use 5 å s — the flattened part whic’ 
the also subject to desiccation. Virgil, on | scarcely any plant either in the ope und or under | the extreme thinnes: k 
Poweria hea of ane re which the too glass but 8 x4 ais er pi h = — eer — through the substance Agie p by one of the 
à remed summer may do to its roots, teaches us | su provided a little skill, which perse sinal in thi rmed 
— some dnss to to have been use in his days application will very soon oe . . into | breadth, though it could caption — 
es, he says, or d put n. Ind i a 
Vill defend. the stems of the plants ; in this way you tion will ‘beat ekill ‘slowa p oat Sm sett eos How long this ching gies = pear, et 
vho rends gmin from the rage of the “summer dog | ductions owe much m the one ERE AEN ible to 
followed thi earth.” I knew a poor Vine wer who | “ E, O. sf. should be 6 inches higher at back than 405 od en agra 
vessels, haries, and covered his plants with earthen | front, and 2 feet deep at the latter place for his purpose; | aein 1 — — — ‘ios diy, on 
tine it mate had the ce to uncover them every | perhaps a double box would be better, ne = —— frei ‘of the. — fibres through 
1 San set upon the other as the ee ptt 1 ug ie laid 
caused b. dhe render . ae confusing this plate a Goana — ill some time there was no 
Plant, a. by the action of the sun on a vigorous Get an estimate from two different parties, and " 8 i 3 ion. The entire 
Mots, but another which ends by the drying up of the provost your om a we how your Chronic G. se 
Samery, nch less idly, and even in mildest with the woodeut, to your blacksmith, and he | stoppage of the water about five years > aled ae 
light but , This is owing to the soil bein — — e. Divide your peram must ares in S 
but ved ing e so g y make you a p e leaf-mould by al and, therefore, it is 
eren das rf of nutrimen matter, and is not when the — is over. Secu — Pharo. have 
means. 


not onl 
to that cause alone ; it belon — — 
hich gs to 

4 Sx Thay — ive seane of Lipi 
27 bourhood of Montpellier paved his 
bor, ering way to the ridiculo aad taunts of 

e 

Nada persevere in the experiment. 


1i 
8 
Si 
1 


It will benefit your stiff s0 


— — — 

ON THE ACTION OF mage gel — ON eee. that the; 
We EEVILS. a — — — There 

Some corn and pea ait gente vee 


plunged! in i impure 22 2 "obtained by 


; bu 12 not to be Larch roots. 


518 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


are . young Oaks, Beeches, Ashes, and Sycamores | paying especial attention to its thorough drainage.” 25 and forked light! y in 
within a short distance. But the most probable to me Anon. 


to be a Sycamore stump close by; and the The Small Fork recommended in “ Hints to Villa and Rho 
appears to to correspond with ias of that descrip- | Suburban 1 Gardener 8 (p. Fe a mpat excellent tool, 55 masses, and sh 5 
tion of tree. But the practical point to which I would both for flower and kitchen garden, and one only plants grew luxuriant] 
that if tree roots, such as | wonders how pe soplo d 1 1 it. ji believe it can be | have applied leaf Soil to Rhodo 
uate themselves through so | purchased, handle and all, for 2s. 6d., from nearly all kinds of Azal wi vie 
minute an interstice as a crack in a cemented pot pipe, | ironmongers. 4 Su ord m also seen it used for Rhododendrons wi 
and there keep up a sufficient connection with the The Disease in Potatoes has suddenly and unex- | About six weeks 


nd no care in adjusting the ordinary | have been in confined cottage gardens, under the shade remainder peat, 
8 On aang to the er hinted at of fruit- . but it is not confined to those hg negra pA e 
in the Gardeners’ Chronicle, secure them against such e progre s of the evil has been so rapid, that the | They had ex 
contingencies, The conditions under which these occur | worst m be anticipated respecting the Potat ato crop ; plants should have ta 
are, as is there very justly remarked, at present and the Worst ought to be anticipated by those who are | 801 shou 
involved in much mystery ; but it is to be feared that | wise enough to meet a coming evil. Large growers Gardener, Thorpe Perrow, 
drains will at all times be more or less subject to| begin to be seriously alarmed. I find that asa Pota-| Swarming of Bees (see p. 501. bias 
them, and must suffer obstruction from them unless | toes, taken up a fortnight or three weeks back, and sup- | advises us strongly to use Nutt’s res 
where made of a size, like the old stone drains of | posed to be perfectly clean, have now to be very much | this to be careful to shut the cians i a 
former days, totally inconsistent with that economy in cut away be ore they can be used, and even show box as soon as the communication 
their construction which is so essential an element in oe quite in the centre. While this is going on, it | one of the side boxes is opened, At hopin ak — 
the whole question. W., Aug. r gga to calculate what proportion of the crop entrance into that side box, given as frech 
Polypodiam Dryopteris and calcareum.—1 suspect | will be in an eatable state three or even two months | be open, so that there is no other ma Gea 
* 


there must have been some error in the case nee ian hence. E see intelligent cottagers near us are or into the centre box, except 
these Polypodies, stated by Sir W. C. Trevelyan at page taking up their whole Potato crop, and sowing Turnips | kept cool by ventilation, The “Old 
454. Many persons can surely bear testimony to|and planting winter greens before it be too late. this is tri ed, I think the plan will be found to suse 
having cultivated these two plants for a greater or less An immense weight of human food may yet be grown | Now I want to know what is done 
number of years, without observing the least change in | before the winter, if the country gentry, their agents, obliged to give the other side box as fresh room} j 
ir respective characters. For myself, I can bear de- and the clergy will recommend this pelt to be pur- | must open the entrance into that box, but I could m 
cided testimony to this effect. In my own experience | sued throughout the kingdom, The on Stone, at the same time, shut up the entrance into the gig 
I find P. Dryopteris to be more easy of cultivation than | purple American Stone, and early selene Malta Tur- | side box, given as fresh room some days before, Py. 
P. ealeareum, and to have a much greater tendency to | nips, are all 33 for the purpose. Two penny- haps an“ Old Apiarian” will make this part of de 
take possession of situations in which it is artificially | worth of seed will furnish many a welcome mess as an Subject a little clearer. Count de R 4 
planted ; and I would a ge suggest the Fe addition to the scanty dinner of the labouring man; Lagerstræmia indica has been raised here from s 


in the ‘ease e uded to, of = Pee ided and the immediate distribution of packets of these | cutting not more than 14 inch in length this 
reum ” having died out in “the e ei ‘15 years,” | seeds, and of Savoy plants to, every cottager in the and it is now 6 inches in height and — 
and P. 1 having been in the mean time intro- | United Kingdom who has a garden, would be true fully. John Stoveld, Siedham Hall, near Midhurg, 
duced to the s e artificial situation e some other | charity, involving only a little personal trouble to those Chalk beneficial to Grass on Lawns.—Mr, 
hand. Tke fact of the A Ses Cheddar plant “ having | who undertook the hermes and but a 1 expense to those 470: “If chalk is laid on the soil 2 
spread 3 s quite accordant with this —— vio supplied the To place any reliance now before laying down turf, the Grass will grow dy 
nation, for P, Dryopteris soon spreads extensively on on the Potato . is s folly and wilful blindness. As a R. paima 1 not be so liable to burn hot su» 
all sides when placed in a situation at all congenial to wath guess at a remedy, it may be worth inquiring of ne, Being about to lay down 13 — 
it. I do not, indeed, forget that there have always been | geologists and chemists whether the native soil of the the fall of the year, upon very heavy clay land (whith 
those intaine eris and P, | Potato in South America contains any elements which | however, I pur ing ya 
caleareum are not specifically distinct ; but I fancy this | are ting, very deficient, in that of Europe, and there being no ch lk —— 
view is now confined to a v div 8 Those who have been in volcanic distric aw. ry considerable distance of me, I should 
hardly be supposed that a botanist of the experience r cran e earth is at least | Obli 0 Dyer, or any 

Trevelyan could have originally mistaken the | occasionally charged with gases of mixed composition, | ad me of any other article I could use instead d 
species; nevertheless, I have myself sometimes s but especially sulphureous, whic a chalk that would have the effect. The veniam 
doubtful specie both as regards the texture and still weather by those walking on the surface, and of a very beautiful lawn where I have been living is 
compositi e fronds, but the glandular surface has which must have some influence on the vegetation of been completely des krad 
in these in Sande ane separated them si those regions. Mexico and the des are doubtless | 8 eing burnt quite brown, lade 
it was such an exampl was originally planted for | similarly circumstanced, and the peculiar constitution | soil 18 to 20 inches deep, and I would gladly go to sost 

eal nd if so, of cou d change | of plants native to that range may possibl uble, and expense too, to prevent it 

was not a real one. I merely throw out this suggestion | depen ose conditions of growth. e the t to have laid, if 1 how. Would ày 


in the endeavour to account, in a way agreeable to my | Potatoes in the kingdom of Naples attacked by the | lime answer! and should it, or the chalk, be 

own convictions, for the case which has been stated ; for disease! Because, if they are, the presence of sulphur | with the top soil ? or the turf laid upon it alone without 

I feel convinced that under any cir ircumstances of cul- a the soil is no preven naive aga inst the Potato plague, any soil? Any advice 2 -n 3 A Subscriber, 
rece 


* — 
careum as long as they exist. Thomas Moore. — Mr. 94 s St. Albans Gra ae 1 consequence of doubt respectin 8 ea ia mhich adi 
ge states that intermediate varieties occur between high chaser r given to ‘this Grape I 3 induc vhs skins ; 2 chen I have bad proof that 
above plants; as I have never seen such varieties, bes a pian early in the spring of 1848, and being | viper, but also, its harmless neighbour ome e a 
x ‘should be glad 9 learn in what their intermediate anxious to ve the paris of its produce as soon as | gilis or slow-worm, shed their skins 1 
eter consists. I have seen plants intermediat in erer it — e shifted in o a large pot filled with a rich | their 3 in the way I described, ie. miss 
a e show that t 


compo 
characters of one of the plants are connected by inter- | developed the young shoot was inarched upon a strong their “slou oh” b ‘Messrs 
; g y wriggling bushes, 
mediate states with those of the other? I do not think | Vine planted within the house. This T by — —.— our popular writers, aud — 5 rs 
t he can, and believe the opinion 1 they are distinct had ripened above the junction a rod of considerable.| bers, of Edinburgh, state that rene 
N di ran univa versal amongst botanists, Charles C. length, and at the time of pring m was cut down to | on emerging from torpidity, and that a ieee 


bington ee eyes, from two of whi s were obtained, | turned inside out like the finger of uf statene 
tule’ of Cape Bulbs.—The following has struck | which set well and progressed satisfactorily till the | meant to apply to our puny 1 1 
me aer a new light on the culture of bulbs, by | berries began to swell and rip n the majority of must be wrong; for they do noh Oe ca 
ring and ripening them in frames without artifi- | t to crack or split at the end, and before | before J In ; aan a 
cial heat, The e. pian i iven in the June number of | they became fully ripe were rende eatable on ac- inside out, but merely cast off in a served & 
2 Gat and Fruitist ;” an t | co mould which grew upon the tips of the| like a pulled off stocking. 1 25 their 4 
sie e (see page 437) should not have cracked portions, or us. to ascertain and glow-worm in act of shy at 
ready access to the work, I will here copy it :—“ In a | if such has been the case with others who have fruited | during confinement. The form — 
a brick pit, adapted to a cold frame, which we have | this highly commended Vine ; if so, whatever flavour | at the least sight of am observer; the wires of its 
lately described, lower the moveable floor to within 2 feet or quality it may possess i d it becomes | voked by a stick put through the to hile $ 
f the top brick sides; place thereon s of | valueless the are made public | still it never showed the least disposition, 
f Lick erial, and on this lay a stratum the better. Should this, however, prove to be a solitary stick or dart at one's hand. When a 
a foot thick, composed of sharp sand, two parts; leaf- | instance of its . 3 thet event the splitting must be | would hiss, and quickl d eng * 
er * cee, One, peti ; Ygs fresh loan — peri attributed to some other cause, perhaps to its having | hole curiously situa or vos ope BA 
ö N mixed in a moderate state. been i cou - 
In this plant the bulbs towards the end of eloke, =e Selby, A vigorous shoot of an old-established — opening 8 2 viper could 27 


small space 
e no water, but protect from frosts, and give air at Hot water v. see ik 2 t of litter to 
all favourable opportunities. They will tgi piiss have yo ca clas proof tnt t hot w Ear Mr, Bat especially pee 
2 111 ow 


: 


water is a cure for mil- | what I could see of its 
ite 


g 
8 
25 
EK 
7 
= 
2 
Ta 
22 
fa] 
£ 
88 
FE 
2 EF 
eee 
ekg 
z 
S 8. 
E 
4 
725 
Be 5 
ant 
ere 
SE 
cai 
E 
EE 
ay: 
85 
ue 
pÅ 
eB 
iii: 
H 
Au 
Lhe 


5 
th 
uy 


“Eg 
CEES 
ue 


ll my o it blind, I ha 
| little faith in such a remedy, and particularly when I | ment. 5 — an — 12 5 
compo from those who have seen his Grapes they split stick across them as * ads, i 
» atter giving air early | not Sot of 8 evil yet, nor likely to be. Serutineer, then hold a bottle rage po 
DOR. CULE. p not e case referred to readily enter ; a bit ; 5 
of the day, and thereby raise the 9 not so a ac inp =F d 2 I can start ye on — of the bottle to — 
as 


late in the day. After the plants have tea pee | the mantelpiece of a room in Bae a fire is kept during ae ck my late 2 was -a — 
bsequent dub paih 


8 
8 
* 
5 
p 
8 
ri 
a 

i 

S. 
© 

8 

E 
2 

& 

B 

© 

81 


eir the day and that . bloom freely in my sitti room 
rity Mapa ly 3 Tiny oe Bg 4 — o anata an aspect, Laina find that with the anne a . myself, cal 

in the middle of 518 day, pe 10 to 4 o’clock, the plants f — — ahg — K —.— a bn konp my — ae ie prop wasin ane 
hefore cool * = EN "Contine, Sie i | ee never to allow the latter to — i — sometimes | filled, for in the act of giving 


111 
1 i 


1 
* 


— eeks, B., B tame herring gull, one of the 
af this. method of ot Substit bes | finger, d left. some venom» 
the bulbs will he = OF tele qora Saree A bed for A erica ites fed pei of peat soll me | mediately. to, suck the, wounds Jig g 
always flower in perf = d, and thereforewill | time since sine and {lve no peat has int since been added ; ve — more pain than the. 1 
ber of which can be ventila a oe | à 3838 ee orai ea every = is iri e plants Bags a the same treat- Wighton. 5 8 soloing 2 
domi mgs baceous plants Shallots —The fl 
command, the nearest nearest imitation —ꝛ— 12 — adjoining, A Ely od — f that the Potato 


pa 


33—1849. 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 519 


na s some 


Se Shallot. In a bed of Shallots some few and for many of those changes of the wind which, antil against this wall aro some large and well-trained Vines 
Sii from the Shallot. In a bed of Shallots pnd few : 


s, which ripened well With a 
greater supply of Shallots, i in —— — 
and it stood the well ; but to our sur- 
produced a bed a ae fine brown Onions. 
mistake in as 
wn under our own special care. It wats 
— whether — not they will p 
rtest day we intend 


of | rece 
wN wed | 
seed, 
it bas 
is no 
ged and so 
Son, Maldon. P.S. In our 
, the — 65 “suspicious” should read 


‘ish 
th, it 24 5 sp! 
being meats : : —— 
— — 0 — scarcely a 
— — — — a dam on be or windy situation 
mostly 2 
nif — . — — 


fruit-trees. 


tary. 
. to the following — ment, —— Feferenee to | 
planting. The situation w s a bank slop! wards | 
arany ary, and abe a de ee of about 
e 28th 2 pen — * 


8 


mont t — whole crop w 
lue ers’ Glories, 
against 


: 


~= 
FERE 
=| 
3 8 


i 
A ki 
1 5 


* 
E 


w 
2 
E 

. 


th 
t on the 16th 
— 


zE 


1271 
l 
fg 


iz% 
B 


S 
€ 


725 
reen — oh the 
experiment was repe 
Enis insect, — 
anders it more liabl 


nt in the Potato, but —.— 
er causes acting upon w 

— — — or in t che, s 
t ——— of 2 


sease, jun Pr. 
1. —0n examining a — eof Cambridge Ki 
Several patches (one, 3 yards square) ) where t 
ed bla — , and G. H., 8 
— Disease is spreading fast here 

since the 8 rains. rsey E 
— a E 710 — 


D than 
way, appare aay quite bee nd, have p 
tT * rapidly as those still growing. 


5 pd Ht 
Be spat 
4 
1 
* 
E 
22 
8 8 
ae 
af 


sail 


me 


ever known A 

but — 2 thunder, prevailed, an 

— — . — Lesterday 25 Potatoes show 
—— eaves being spotte — as if speinkled 

o-day ne s stem: 


10 


82 da bly 
‘ath 
— he Poiato po 


aud the 

ie ie Potato dec decay 

ance in the stalk, ‘We are 
or more 

9 e date of — 


attacked appear outwardly sound, 
that ae is no atte — 5 oa the foul spots 
e — —— in 

Pot 9 . 


sound and look 8 A y those 
deat spots, and the first are very bad 
98 the stalk is pons attacked 
away, tuber will in follow, 
around me it — fair to _mention, lean to 
s s low as — sae 


themselves 


mwell-lodge, Taunton, Aug 


Kebiews. 
of the Development a — Law of 
my ond. of the variable Winds, I 
of the Pon to reran o 


Wine € B., E.R.S. London. 


By Lieut. 
eale, 
424, 


W. 


tudes- 


to 
ts, which supply the place, in a puei 2 of | 
Han, Nu conce: 


and for many of those — of the wind which, until 
ve baffled 


and in eve! 


equator 
revolve from right to left, and south of 5 
equator f tren “left to 


explanation. 
i storms are vast whirl- — 
il ; e wood was 
towards the top of the a where there was no disease. 
= e Apple trees had 

P 


good crops on them, but ther there 
Three sides of this 


right. This proposition Col. Reid 


iven 


e 
the approach of a stor 


tery. The ex 


5 


earth’s surface, and most o 
whirl ; the depth aS the compressing co 
at th tr 


culturis 


grams, 


Mgb 


0 

o navigation, is pointe ted out in n great et 

g of ships, commanded by pe 

this fundamental law, which have, — overtaken by a 
its 


tered a gal 
14 ome the two first being stee; 

escaped — whilst the latter, by being | w 
kept on yey wrong tac 
n | centre o 


lanation of this well known fact, as given | garden are — 5 a belt of 


to m 
quences which ‘alow poe the 
ospheric pressure, e 
„ | conclusions on the probability of the weather 8 ee, 


ym 
intelligible as — those 


rsons acquainted with | are 
the evil had 
e ground in sw it grew was a 


vortex, and 
i ve | produces all so 


| tarines ng vi kable 
crops of fruit here were those erries, 

which were * This, like the o pages yuna 
| garden, is well cropped and clean. moat round 
the castle, now no longer wanted for the —— of 
war, is well cropped with vegetables, and the wall on 
either side is covered with Pear, Plum, and other trees, 
| iddling — 52 as 


r the 


H- 


e west front of the 


rm 
2 in a barometer falls on 
no longer a matter of mys- 


trees, among w 
frequent resort of — illus- 


‘He has 


Col. Reid, is as follows, | are fine shady walks, t the 
ed porti 


ROT SES Ia 
rh 


and its weight wil. be 2 
hirl 


wt Nag Es 


could be grown 
o useful a ina medicinal — tof view. Comptes 

— N ovember, 1848, 
New Process for Preserving Wood.—M. Brochard’s 
f\Plan for preserving w which differs very lit 
r methods now in use, or at leas’ 


pre Brochard’s s Way, was 
atall. — p Na ag 1848. 
3 is evidently 1 e s process.] 
than by putting faith in arbitrary of 
opted.” 
by storms on the tm 
ran 


on 
and the lowest 20s.; the medium being 


178. 6d. 
oe 2 Per lot, of which there were in all 142, 
ii eaten eee 


Calendar o —— ons. 


winds n the roofs of plant- houses should, 
rtant subject of er — pan 
clined 


ir d if proper pr besiis has been 
tion, p old plants of 1 qui core 
iscarded 


By this 


interest 
9 25 aa indications of speci 


Gard 
ag Castle G Ne 
gardens h one of w 
3 but heantiful — and es 


which forms part 


in consequence of 


receive, and in 
ea —— Tulip, & 


them perish entirely. 


520 THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE, 


London, for the week ending Aug. 16, 1849, the stems be 
forcing, » be potted immediately, that they may .... an ten N Gardens, Chiswick, > -s bee — Green Pepe br oon 
have sample: ‘ime to fill the pots with roots before their BAROMETER. THERMOMETER. Itivation 
exci owth. To make amends for the pk Mooie RAE UPPER 1 | Wind. || Rain. | ROYAL Boranre Sociery : 6. * can gir 
limited quantity of soil allotted to each plant, a couple rsd Bical ee eee tna „Jock 00 r reporter ho Proceedings a 
" * ean di p as r 
of inches of well-rotted cow or sheep manure, mixed Rates it] aar |i aael anaa oe. aa al 2]. thatthe mesting was that A mie 
with about one-fourth part of soot and sand, should be Sunday. u 8 29.764 | 29.679 || 53 | 56 | 615 S. 02 private purposes 
placed over the drainage in each pot. The whole of the — . d 2 || Bw % | Rust on GRAPES ; Viti 
soil should be rich rtion immediately | wea. .. % 2s || 29:00 | 29.355 || f2 | £2 | ezo || Siw: || ‘or | you suppose 
i Y Thur. .. 1% 27 || 29.793 | 29.763 || 64 | 42 | 530 || SW. || 1s | afflicted with rust on 
surrounding the bulb, which should be of sand or pure | Thurs....16 | — — plants of the White M 
sandy loam, The base of the bulb should be placed on | Average... 9.204 | 29 | 52.8 | 62.8 ost | on either side, 
: 7 10 —H fine; clear; I benin at night. of the hardiest 
* level with the rim of the and the soil Heap ed Es 11—Mach hightning, ‘thunder,and heavy rain 2 ſine; elear; that the plant i va n question is 
over it in a conical shap e T pots when filled shoul 12 rin x phe an * clear. stitution, — there is som 
be plunged in a bed of ashes, and earthed over with the — —Showery d ; alicht ah lear at night your letter would lead u us to su 
— 4—Cloudy; fine; cloud ar 0 
same ma > nth us shoul — n fine; 2 slightly over the soil is $ ki 
flowering during t he rae, Poe and. the * ni — 16— Cloudy; heavy showers; very pony at night. i 
es of Lisianthus for n n’s isplay. Mean an temperature of the week, equal to the avera; wt atate oF te te ak 
Species e er as soon as the 
8 2 last 23 , for th : 
politan and Tree Violets nin now be lifted and potted n F for the the evil does not lie i n that direction, the 
in 4 er d mch ts for winter flower ring. han thes 3 8 a or „ 
2 oe | ow, `; revailing Winds, é 
ing can be more — at that comparatively FA 72 8 35 eee Greatest BRE RO he pri lee. 
— season ug. E PEE SS | which it ot Haine 2 vie: to be had at the Otte of thie P 
<n < Rained, INES yton. Your Vi 
FLOWER GARDEN AND SURUBBERY. e understand 
Sunday 19 72.9 5L4 | 62.2 12 0.42 in, allowed k dower 7 a 
ance a order and perfect neatness, and this state of F oa mitted to form on e 
Wed. 22| 70.4 51.4 | €0.9 11 0.58 e pinched off. T 
things can be effected and maintained only b 1 Thura: 2 41.3 48.7 | 60.0 13 0.93 a and not worth the tr able, 
tematic perseverence in going egular y and frequently | friday 2: 70.5 | 48.6 | 59.8 10 0.23 are a little touched with te 
over the whole. Considerable attention is necess y a as 703 | 51.5 | DA 3 s 0.32 > : gaenen 
. £ he highest temperature uring the above perio occurre the 20th 
keep the half-hardy plants and annuals in ord ; any as 136, ey ist, 1835--thern, 83 deg.; and the lowes on the 20th, 1339— — wasps Nests: C C U. Take them by means 4 
which have extended t eir | 37 deg. Pour a . full into their holes at night, and t 


SS FE rR Aa IO 
Notices to Corresponde 


i nts. 
the bounded r Other ever 8 5| To our CoxRESPONDENTS—May we beg it to be understood that 
at same time tall or straggling growths of plants in uiries pr ivately tha east the post. Weare 
i ith t eady to give ‘reasonable information through our olari, 
mass ould be shortened. If this is done wi taste, 3 : the a 1 
the ay be de en ular and uniform without 5 ERED 2 H. W would willingly assist you, but we 
— * ` is a co n practice at planting out annot, Florists will uot sell their best seed. : 
or the sake of — . to fill the mixed oer —— L) es ub ay Grandis eg an 3 
acran cæspitosa alba, pulla, pyramidalis, versicolor, 
beds r hibar thickly ; but as s increase in size 3 nitida hiss and white) and pernai foin (blue and white). J s 
the least deserving should S thinned out, that the re- OnannrD T à valuable manure for all kinds 
mainder ma; o aces to light and air. Beds of vegetables, f 


* . 


may be m 
character Pr rarega group of distinct | Carr ore nrg 
individuals, rather than that of a confused or jostling | Country from China by 
d. i as Iris, N 


— . om Society some fou 
or si years ago 


was introduced into — 


w pring flowering „such S, Nar- DAHLIA Exnisition: Delta. Without t seeing the flowers, it is 
— Lilies, &c., the roots of which ar e scarcely ever impossible for us to a 4 wit — 3 what was right 
an was wrong. en centres or hard green eyes are 
dorman t, sho age she immediately, that they SAF amongst the greatest blemishes pertainin: a ia, but 
have time to establish themselves before winter. Th there are also imperfections of an opposite — — which 
are all deep rooting plants, and require that the beds you may n taken into account. If your statement be 
should be deeply trenched. manure should b eee Th to iar needling G Gooseberry, about the si 
— e Size 
placed in the of the trench, to encourage the bf the red Warrington, round, hairy, Gath ed, has a good 
downward pro j thereby make th Ga a ceł but owing to long carriage, we cannot form a 
more independent during the scorching weather of Ju m . rrec . > ur, | bin chit Sec a 
uly. The let Tiger Lily is splendid at this Herkrnocks: Expect eee. are ee A 
3 8 8 them t y 
for planting in straight lines, or for the decora- Hya 27 Bal ay 18 more 8 8 pregen 
tion of large clumps. If the plants are now exami ed, of growing them in kua didis has been tried. How 
l bulbs lb u n the axils of the ves; ore i mea g over 5 td will not Barga wel 
oil is immateria moss is used, it mus 
these should be carefully collected and planted, about an 8 thoroughly scalded i in the frat instan nee : 
ch asunder, in boxes of light so Many annuals and | Ice Macntnes: An Old d Subscriber, W unable to answer 
perennials have now ripened their seed, which should be your question, The dealers in the article probably p 
thered immediately in fine dry weather, and spread s 
f Ixsxors: S F. The larva sent is not s the 
out in a cool airy sh young we one of pie eee e whioh spon 5 in- 
sects. W. e blotches on the Pear-leaves are caused 
Pix — TEON ERS. of those pods of 5 the irre of Timea Clerckella (see Chiron, 1841, 
p. 2 The 8 sent by you is the larva 
seed ‘wiih, have been ee: < ee t down the calices, of a handsome two-winge d fly, Stratiomys chameleon. Its 
to prevent the din W, 


lodgme ater, an ae te with a 
handglass; but — a as 


history is recorde pu 
—— B. The — sent oy you 


all knocked a pieces, The beetle is — Curculio 


u loose in a pill-box were of 


them up with a turf, 
Misc: S 4, hee The ae Cueum 
quite the contr ir į— B. hay 
“ Pea Violet” is 
raise it in bottom 


not likely ji e flow 
avour to get te. Palio wel me atid sa 
year.t—4 G. Boston; ; Parsons and 


York ; and Buist, "Philadelphia t 


7 FLOWERS. 
ANTIRRHINUMS W. A nice collection, 
less displayiag? a ye slow centre, 1, 2 £ 
pretty OEA, kinds, pane 
1 sorts, = f them very x 
op t distinct enoug n colours, 21 dull in 
8 are bright self-coloured varieties, p 
large yellow e e; 13 i 
—H 17 All a 83 and 76 ane 
75 and 71, with white tages aed triped 
48 and 2 are large, lilac, pote and 
good in size, but dull in e colours; 
6, 


110, 131, . 
light. spotted varieties ee Vo. 90; 218 
1 stripes, pa articul ly 88 ; 97, ros y lilac, wit 
un is foot i it "rather 
olours i 


show flow wer ; it is only w 
the open 88 on account of E, Baie oat 
ConvoLvuLUS: Young 3 ur flowers were 

Shri; velled up y when th 25 t 
ld Po 


F UCHSIAS : 


with very long reflexed 1 


and r 
vering isa I e hicks nibbles 8 ves of Peas, ma, tufted caterpillar pro-| a neat and Popua shaped ) little flower, vith 
s in a stick which has had a e in bably th he common vapou oth, and ea * contrasted ome ee 
it for its reception. By this lan the fı cimex is the Tuts pabulinas. "w no sis no who ike many o ers now ‘a cu 
circulation of air and i aidia — is — Holz Bachaue nöt Heather, Moss, Chestnut, Beech, and short and sender 23 proportion 1 bee: 
4 ae 8 gu Hollyhocks are not attacked by so many — of 8 as | lobes long, narrow, bel? much po 
a If pipings have damped off, or otherwise been the Fir. It is im mpossible to determine caterpillars by your xpanded ; corolla deep violet pupa legend 
destroyed, another p may be yet put in with success, Mabe descript ts fine ample corolla 2 sa bes no ret 
Pansres ow is a good time to slip off rooted side Line 5 i . Nothing i is better than a solution of nitrate of| A L. Your panas 5 not co 
ee e exe ellent: plants. in a x hivei 8 sahi or marking lin: GLOXINIAS: a 2 
shoots ; mak Pp ry short Liguip MANURE: Vitisa a The term is used in a general| bright rosy red, dotted inside. 
time. Mark all promising lings, an ose | sense to signify any kind of manure which i is used in a fluid | LILIUM Sas tein n; R H. A 
ok colours only, which are re-eniinent in State. The kinds are numerous, and the manner of prepar. spotted thickly with dark cH 
Ys p bru 
form there is too much sameness alread in this class con —+ — men te ead —— — co stom nig: po — P aA wiv a HWB Upp er pet 
: m upon more at length in a future Number, ELARGONIUMS: 
of flowers. Daxnuias.—Give plenty of weak manure! In the meantime you can use fie water issuing from an edged with pale r 
f y 
water; remove uds deformed, and thin out deposit of — or if this is not — e, you may petals yo slour wel dwipa bees 
as 4 E : make any quantity by — — 5 size good, colours 
4 d 8 > —.— — sh — ments in water, and a adding a little harcoal, much wit ed when 
the ough : à , rısts hopes by former to destroy insects atid the ar 3 clarify the Nals could be formed.“ 
prostration of his plants. Give Tulip bed a But whatever 1 be careful that it is not too st — it PETUNIAS : wf 0. — 
complete turning over, clearing it of wireworms at the | is much be ae 5 8 h| texture thin, co 3 . 
é an 00 much at on olet; dies goo 
1 2 — inquire for — varieties wanted for MANURE : Amateur, 3 — add lime to your liquid manure 15 rather thin, 3 a 
next y oom. y shea a is 22 et . E you could possibly — Passa, Eoia saa centre with 
EN GARD ut into it, 1— ` nia in a ‘orms is a exon: lilac, veine wa 
Cleaning the borders, clippi edgin ngs of feat — ess it rg not suit Carn — Picotees, | and shape 3 Laney 5, 
; 2 nks, Ap t with caution ; little and often is better eart ntre; s 
and Thrift, and w and st a — gravel walle than large 8 at long intervals, 5 ith purple near the edges; sha 
is now the principal work in this department. Let MES OF PLANTS: FA P. It very curious little Pink, contrast of ear novel ei 
up of Celery be attended to, as the different Which we do not — is it really wild? Could you| inthe centre; ine 14, pretiily 
cas s ` 7 end a few more sp ally of a larger size, and nice pict Be 9, like 14, 
become sufficiently large; and let the in- 4 niy m 
retest ` Cey hata pe seed pod or two.. The orm of the seeds is material 10, rosy lilac; size and beat fe y 
termediate rows of Peas, &e., be cleared away as soon among Pinks.—B B B. 1 and 2, Armeria elongata ; 3 and 6,| 11, thin in texture and common in 
as possible crop, is gathered from them, that alpina ; 5, A. plantaginea according to och; 7, Lobelia} thin in texture. 
the hi the advantage of the additional angulata.— Emily + Drosera rotundifolia, the Sundew, niceiy net 
light anil in Late Turn —W. Veratrum m. V Y. All as common as partridges pr etty. 15, rosy pink; a 8, but 
8 ke 5 crops , ey, and poultry. 1, Butomus umbe? us; 2, Myosoti ustris; thin; a = eae like je 
Spinach nach, &c., should be thinned as soon as rs lants 3, Limnanthemum nymphæoides; 4, Sagittaria sa ttifolia; goniums were not in afit state 
begin to intrude each other, I i p 5, Alisma Plan go 6, Symphy nale ; 7 —— ee Ry Pale t . 
i; ttenti on 3 A r oS z 3 | pa an 
4 galericulata; 8, Lysimachia numm ia.—J M. 1 and 2, shape, marking 5 
— gi e — iae apren of Endive, Let- entiana Amarella; 3, Trifolium pr 34, Agrostis 4 By Your flowers were nearly size, he., 
tuce, Ko., as soon as are large enough to — alba, one of the Fiorins; 5, Bromus erectus? No number, the apara us, but ju “W W. W., 
handled : p y b. Wi W. 
andled. Ths aastiaat: cig of Cabbage-lettuce stuca sylvatica. — Erzeroum. Many thanks, Letter or be the eas ga sent us b z in colour. 
be planted on a border with an east or west ly 4th just received ; an exce by which shai VERBENAS 1 7 C. l 
n alyst besce 2, ros Mias. 
t me 0 rint 3 W ready, VERONICA : 2 Babes. Tour 2 
e re he latter Jab — 3 3 ave copies for dis. — licifolia) and V. 
; ice, T sowings more = e „Should Id a pa their tenantry, can supplied at the rate ter of both paren 
be made ate of Fal wags should | Pras: 155 2 F. Your! s Pea is very like Knigh ities Marro size of thot, ot the spike — 
u our very like Knight's ue w. panded, while 
“mediately of Early sintio. Caulifiswers ers for LVF T. Your Pea is the Large Crooked Sugar, Pois G6 broader and roun 
under : arge ug éant ro tr 


I 


8 bandlights, and preserving durin sans Parchemin of 1 French. The pods have not Me usual 
— in frames ; an ’ g nest dressed, in a young state, like — 
and Putoxes: . Cœlestis, e icua, Eclipse, White Perf, 
early — celestis, consp p e cme 

1 La Rein d 
Dk ann sibly y snit Yon; mT major, e, and Beauty will p 


% As usual, many 
1 and 


eP forwarding 


ved. 
otherwise little chance 
80 far.“ 


* * 


1 


i 


| 
p 


33—1849.] 


LONDON MANURE COMPANY, having 


“URATE” more particu ularly for Turni san 

2 recommend it —.— 

Root in n, to secure a * plant, and 
a hea 


al the driest season, 

Tr seldom vy weight per acre. They would call attention 
t sphate of Lime, which is prepared with the 
» care, and sent out in a very fine, dry state, perfectly 
greatest The London Manure Com have made 
ready — ts for a constant supply of Peruvian Guano. m 
aranget goes, which they will deliver direot from the ship or 
. stores. Corn Manure, Nitrate of Soda, Fishery and 
importers Salt, and "every =~ Artificial Manure, on the 


VIAN AND BOLIVIAN GUANO ON SALE 
By Y IMPORTERS 


An 

BRIGHT, anD CO., LIV RPOOL and BRISTOL; 
GrprESWORTH, POWELL, anp PRYOR, LONDON, 

e injurious — e of 

urious Guano, ished: ers 


article in any 
at their fixed prices, delivering it ge the Import 


— nor pai 


— o 
TEPHENSON anv CO., 61, Gracechurch- street 
851 and 17, New Park-s treet, Southwark, Inventors 
of the Im mproved CONICAL and DOUBLE 


their Boilers of Iron, as or ks 

reduced. These banoe, which 

— ges require — Pore t to 

n pro — 

well, — es 0 th é highest qatberity 

— Hh most of the Nobility’s seats and — 
hout the — dom. 

Co. beg to inform the Trade t their Manufactory, 
ho — boo every article r 3 i the —— 

Ke — — ree — — — them, may be 


—— im of ry ee — * erected upon t the most 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


521 


7 TURNIP SOWIN ORTLAND CEMENT. — Testimonials received from | 
T to 


quarters, CEMEN sess the rare pro- 


and lining of Rese 
rnal plaster aia, 
E it never vegetates, ai 


3 fi 


ngs sit — f neither | 


regarded our profession, is illustrated by reversing 

the order in which the are named ee 

ede interest, it ma would be sub- 
rved by th establi 


serv: 


— 
to four times its own body of sand. 
* ufacturers, J. B. Warre and Sons, Milbank-street, West- 


The Agricultural Gazette. selish ns 


TURDAY, AUGUST 18, 1849. 


MEETING FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. 
BER Aug. 23—Agricultural Imp. Society of Ireland. 


Tue BUSINESS—THE ART—THE 8 Ari 
CULTURE : that, for the most „is the order of 


their relative importance in Fap ind of the prac- 
titioner ; just as, first, Self—t then, t the Profession 
—and, las y, the — Welfare take prece — 
he minds of mo 


of one another 
a 


food manufact e national support, t, but a 
ers by which: livelihoods ve to be attained, this 

necessarily and properly the case: for the more 
— consideration, — r it 3 — one, is 
naturall e to m t because 


no | scribed in 


nal prosecution of the busin 
— — of this article 


mar 
the i in- 


ing o 
in agriculture, which it would tend to —— that 


rm prices than by information on farm pro both ed art and the theory are in so incomplete a 
m} the latter again will be sei — upon tong. batts conditi 
the theory of any aa improvement is cared | We shall not further pya the general question, 
for or inquired i The object yg je any | but proceed to describe a method of keeping Farm 
practicable or plausible’ t ing, is firs ertain | Accounts, 2 9 little about and no complexity, 

if it be profitable, then to * the bin way of | which we have for some tim c: 

carrying it out, and, Bpad — e e the rationale | of a maali firm. It is simply a method of classify- 
of the process. gears ulture is not | ing cash pa: ts and receipts ; it does not pretend 
ey a department of natant truth, nor merely a | to arrange or record e de r credi ese 


ither debts o th 
m most -e kept account of by invoice cheque 
ooks on 


thi eld off the farm, oe, for cash or not, and 
unpaid goods m must 


another in which rec 8 

acknowledged as Rhee ms sending them, 
Every pay: / transaction is to va entered and de- 
armer’s pocket m 


ornamental designs. e Palisading, e farm morandum book, 
Fences, Wire-work, great penetration to perceive that “the 955 1 K 85 and N i be transferred to the pages of a book 
URBIDGE HEALY respectfully inform | importance of the three aspects in which we have | rule elow. 
their Priends ona the Public, they are at this time pre- x 
— — the warming of — e., apn their — FARM ACCOUNTS FOR WEEK ENDING—— 
8 — — ie Names. . Ts Ta. 8 EE o a | Lanova, | Torat, 
tensive works, 
Botani PAYMENTS. E 8. d. E . d. E . d. 28.4) E . d.] E . 4. 
— Gardens, "kismi ck: particularly fhe new J. Smith .., .., w b a a 0 a OTOOTO 8°04 ETOT oa 012 0| 012 0 
boilers applied to the large Con servato: ry. 2 
Large Conservato eral —— —— Regent's-park. J- — — ton of Oil- 
Duke of Deronshire’s, Chats = PERN Gea Re — C VV 8 10 0 
— pe 1 arpaan S 
Robert Hanbu oen sola Ween: Mati Carried over ... ... 070/82 01/080 0 12 0 920 
Mr, Glendinning’s Nurse am-green, i 
1 500 other im bene places, 8 ee 
1 doe Beam: LOA 10 qrs. Wheat... pan 8 hy sak E ie a 
W. Smith for “ 
BY HER ROYAL LETTERS 10 fat bullocks... 7 ear. ee ee „ e a p ae 24 0 0 
| 
MAJESTY’S PATENT. Carried orer |. Se ke eee 3 z peoe 


PATENT HOTHOUSE W pressie KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA. 

. DENCH invites the atte 

erect Hothouses, &c., to the vast superiority in every 

—— — his spe er aes ie will 
G Gl 


T pu 
ng wood r: 2 : “the as Tae 
5 rom 7d. to 9d. per ft, 
HEATING ee WATER, 8 


REDUCTION IN PRICE OF BOILERS. 


The 
ntion of Gentlemen about | the Jabour done by ea 


we are 
i have since very gen 
testi- er, of those 


x small — are for entering, oink day, 
ach ma nst the account 
pi? whose peere he a — in 
, €, &c., are for the record of money transactions 
| about the different accounts 3 is desired to To 


ill be see n M 
day for the benefit of the Wheat ot "half a day, 
and for the benefit of the dormant capital —.— 
half a day; on Tuesday for the | benefit of the 

And on 


Ir 
h g 
the Editor of the 2 the N of the Pora ro Crop. 
The returns bibel in 
last week oe ed up on Aug. 1—a date 4 
was considered sufficiently late to represent 
result of the year’s crop with tolerable certainty ; | me : 
very sorry t that the 


erally and plorably a altered. 
those reports hav 


who fu 
that, during 
the month, th the old Potato disease -y n 
om 


: 8 so ell that the fields in the eiche 60 
[of Cork present evident marks of it, and those w. 


the lower half 0 "the prrs 


the first week of the 


in the hill district of Kerry to the aait of Killarney 
are already black. 


STEEP OR LEVEL LAND. 
I wave read with satisfaction the 


to find that half the 
0 x 
was not without reason we regret | the weig 


522 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


by intro 
ring or bee 
have for years been te 


mental principles of their art, 

em method of manufactu 
— ge soil. bagia 
rs how to impro 


by chemical means ra 3; chem 


‘BEES 
8 


ac 
e the — they manufacture 
— b istry an 
pen eee . 


ducing an im- 


their 
aching 


rro- 
neous ideas — — prejudices, instituted in ancient 


time hav 


urn 


subsoil-draina 


e become con- 


for an 
e 


ulty and 
e, and many will still try to stave off this | ca 


absolute equ to good and ave e cultivation by 


ese imperfect expe 
As er, in 
ment 


was not started w amusem 


of the peasant and his 
in the culture of the Are 
ith that unerring accurac 
absolutely necessary to perfection 
should op viral upon 
without Bari to contend 
irregularities ; the district or country 


ne error; and lead to 
removal of = idea that they obtained 
without immensel 


careful, and cau 


ing article, oe supposed ir 


ment 1 


endeavoured to direct the attention of 


inequalities, holes, or 


tious deliberati tion, 


I have become convinced that the numerous, but praise- 


worthy improvers. of agad nlture, have 


pruning the branches of this art, instead of examining 
the root. When I first addressed my mind to this subject, 


Intt 


D: 
1 


culture; b 
root, and pes oret the true cause of the disease, 


Agriculture is a system of patchwork 
engrafting a modern ae an — nie and z> 
of this strange a i 


—— 


the 
—I shall fea obliged, n for m 
e ee own co I 
— 


So e a request ‘ 
vin enon at the same time, 12 Je ate 


chanie science, and 2 in using 
haye been ac acting contrary Sae mg 


to, or offending the 


instituted in 
agriculture te 
ws of the Medes 


result 


pur- 


farmer’s Bomm and 


wn sake, 


machines, 8 


funda- 


ae 
’ dissolution, 
I| a week’s 


mental laws of mechanism, to their own great detriment 
and loss, un- 


ought to 
assertions held out, C. B., 383 Norfolk. 


ERRORS IN FRIENDLY SOCIETIE 


ul ations are now 8 


of sound societies, and putting an end to such as 
* a differen t kin d. 


45 £ fy. 41 


„ whateve . aa age m Cs ; for 
the younger ers Gen a i 


there is a rising scale of Pee of sickness 

years of a man’s life. The Highland 
d that, between „men are able 
a week indisposed per annum. 


eeks. m taking 
uitable grounds for their calculations, made out the 
8 — of siekness too low. In ie oe 
sets of calculations are ‘given, e pro- 
portion of sick out of 100 at particular Regen of age: 


is to assume th at eac — e r pay an oani when th 
a sum * 

becoming when the 
ers burthensomet to ae funds Pala the middle. aged; and, 


before the final reckoning, Year} 


and who in many in a 


2 danik forth Delo 
as ent instituti 

— of — middle ms upper 
a its members 
orm with it as an pottery: 


shar 


a person in b 


It is also essential to the character ofa 
society, that indi viduals be not admi a 
ke in 5 


enjoyment of good 
55 = 


the society. 


a | 
ciples, s — — itself to deposit funds ö 
grenna security, and ab mtis 


i English dwards’ 
* Benefit Theoretical 
y Societies, Table. 


Ages. 


20 to 30 


The deren in 5 three EESE is here of little 
onseque hey at least agree in representing 
increase m years as attended by increased liability to 

w it 5 society is. 
peer to advert to this circumstan To admit all 
agesat an equal payment is irama Ó iid ing the yo anger 
members pay for the ge who 3 have entered at 
an earlier age, and been paying al a 

reat 5 5 g> constitution of —+ 
societies is in m ar any of 
the old 


= 
"oO 


unds, the 


J s of 8 — — entire deposits for 
r II. per m ing charged by w 
interest. The e surplus, if 12 of the twopences and 
— after sick and burial money and other 


taneo iation p 

room pa ‘their meetings, and thu 

tions of a tavern ; but none las esi 

an equality of payments ages the yearly 

The youth of 15, who is not liable to half 
sickness per ogee pays as m 

of 57, — is liable to tw 


obse 
give 10 me for the funds plas 


aid, or 
„give to capitalists — and 


With respeet to the * ——— 


Economies of t 
Information font the ta 


ee e Correspon ndence. 
weed Come’ Ireland. —Being 
905 opinion ‘that the 


reland lies in the ! introduction of capi TT 

a nyt ing tending to direct the a ttention of optalt i 
Ireland — be encouraged and supported, 

nno t express regret that your corresponds 

“ Cantium ” should have brought Pi 
that poor rate to profitable — 
Ireland; that fact being a solution of 
Davis’s system, of 24 farms in or i 
for tenants at a nominal rental; and I think 5 
be well that your readers should be led to consider S 
#0 | weighs should really be attached to “Canta ae 
 Cantium’’ starts wi ee pre tg a 
forgot the poor rates and other 

— p his Jotter of 2lst stint s 
there isa a in England where the taxes 
more than nae aoe of the produce, “t consent 
not cultivated.” reply, asumo * 


d security against outrage, 
an y 3 a 


pepe to In 
1 
hich OF 

5 

Td 


the 
Irish soil will be 3 = 
instead of f which 
on d . 


3 —In reference to ee 
the — etion of damaged: tote 
—— T. G., Cli — ~ 


us by the addition. 
— at the same time 
I gave a 


in. their Tal 


gg—1849.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 523 


bjected to 0 nen a bath in Seotland Caird derives his large profits. A difference of opinion | on the edge of the uncut corn), loses i i 
1 * that tobaeco-leaf was as easilg may exist whether a greater profit would arise from next 2 f baa to tho,“ tying,” the ts head 3 
deaph) decocted as burnt. The answer I received | the — of stock, or from growing an — | sheaves that . G. L.“ laments, is that whi 9 — 
= ial from the Board, through Mr. M'Gregor, | quantity of Wheat. But, in either ease, the same gives mowed Wheat ite chief advan The rough 
t my proposal could not be entertained; but penne apply to one as they do to the . Fat ag it sheaf admits the air and lets poe aa damp. For 
was, wy, Be à one nent said not. Henry Stephens, Edin- | is to these we should look, if we wish to turn capital | drying purposes there is as much difference between a 


aa, skill to the hest t pose account, or, in other words, | neatly gathered and tied sheaf of 
igh J Ta Agricultura Show. -~- Having attended | to make amends for the reduction in prices by aug- well put together of mowed — a5 there ie between — — 
— oer ual exhibitions, I may be allowed | menting the smount of produce. Mr, Caird is clear | swathe of ht 


y 
to at a “pa observations on this one of 1849. | and satisfactory in giving accurate returns of the gains | up with a fork, I have said —— ut together, 
were two days’ admission, one of them, the first, and outgoings in his farming concerns. This is a most by that gathered with a level “wt as few ears as pose 


admit visitors to the implement yard at 2s. 6d., important part in all farming speculations. Where | sible 4 — the band, and that band so made 
the cattle yard at 1“. ; eeveral attende former, doubt and ineredulity often han a new system, fastene — — do its mee to the machine — 
spa T doubt if many did the latter, the charge of stern facts alone can convert the sceptical into true nothing is irritating or impeding in taking in a 
defeating its object. Many implements were believers, and then into practical imitators. The return | rick —— — — bands. A for mowing 
pt on the ground the first day, and this, to one wishing | of a Caird’s s profits is shown from the following state- | will consist rer two men and a boy, one man cutting, the 
to view them leisurely before the crush upon the great ki i wn ban other man 
was a great disappointment, One implement of Value of crop and sock, henis, produond „ £642 0 0 | gathering and tyin I however prefer 
deserved all the attention and patronage it Now produced „ 2518 0 0 | sheaf open for an hour or two; in this case let the 
received, and this was Dr. Newington’s dibble; in my Being an increase of 1876. 0 0 ell away from th corn, that 
a most useful and invaluable invention, and one The cropping of the farm is : when the cut corn is the ears of that 
ified me 80 mneh, that I felt my long journey — acres pete * „Clover, and pasture, corn may be at a sufficient distance from the 
mses amply repaid by having had one in m — Potatoes, corn, to leave an ample path for the mowers i 
2 expe They yare bought 8 1 1 = a — Ia ae after Clover, &c. bac 8 es E — 
and the Doctor's a n the ground obliging to er foot t lect in thi rticular, So 
— I must say I saw some monstro sities, A — 0 b acres reclaimed „ as the sheaves are shocked, I have the ground re 
machine for digging or ploughing — another 260 a with a hand drag, i y morning for 
gra bing, harrowi ng, pressing, and sowing land at one | This gives 10 less a quantity than 165 acres in green operation, as the damp prevents any “ shelling out He of 
e ti I must not 2 another imple- | crop, Grasses included ; or without these, 110 acres, for | Course e rakings are no up till noon and then 


and . } 

ment for shocking or pooking Barley or Oats, an inven- which manure must be regularly provided. To raise only if dry. I get all my Wheat down before it is ri 

ton very ingenious and no doubt useful. I must say | this manure 130 cattle are fed off during the year, five and I put the whole expence of cutting, gathering, tying 
es, i per acre for a good 


the plan of delivering catalogues looked very mercenary, | Cows are kept, 150 sheep, and 3 young hors Th are ging, an g at 7s f 

impl t ls. each; | account for guano an 1848 was 256l., and for | ĉrop of Wheat, last year’s prices. P. 
many could buy but one, and one only te should hay, Linseed, Beans, and other feeding stuffs, 270/. Spontaneous Germination.— In a late leading article 
have been. The cattle not numerous but good of their The dung-house is covered, situated at a lower level than in the Agricultural Gazette, you call — attention of 
Lud; admirable pigs ; some good horses, p% 0 none the feeding byres, by which arrangement the dung can | your y 


rs to spon 
eonld discover the sana of one aa pee which received | be wheeled in successive layers over the heap, and the of seeds, and instance the s u — Clover in 
afirst class premium for agricultural purposes. —aà small | urine is conveyed over the top of the dung. Dried peat heath lands that have been imed; a good 
be animal, Are the eee for light- moss is stored at hand, to be spread over the different example has occurred in my own 
ness of * gone out of fashion? There were some layers of dung. * portion of the urine that finds its years ago I had a common Foxglove growing there, 
wd short-horns, but our remembrance o a. Derby and | way to the bottom of the heap is caught in the tank, | Which seeded, and for two or three years the plants 
1 meetings called up forms not to be found at which extends the whole length of the dung-house. It flourished but died away soon after, and I saw no more 
Norwich. The es were very fine, to not very | is built with stone, lined with Roman cement, and arched of them until two years ago, — givin my 
i i in the spring 


uumerous. This objection cannot be applied to the | over with bricks at the ground level. It is 4 feet deep, | flower borders a dressing of > 
implements, for the * is this—the great makers of 10 feet wide, and 31 feet in length, and can contain scores of Foxgloves sprung up around the place where 
* make it a bazaar—the shop is trans- 7724 gallons; 500 loads of sea-ware are also obtained the plant had stood 20 years since. It may be asked how 
ferred to the Show- Yard. Hundred never see the new | yearly on the coast; and about 2000 loads of peat moss, I know that the seeds of these plants were not in the 


row of sheds for all the new inventions, and such as | stances are i in alternate layers with th oxglove had formerly grown, If the been in 
have deserved a premium; and hither strangers and | itis carted out from the fields, About 5000 loads of the peat it ought to have come up all over the garden. 
others could at once meet with the object of their — * this wa cps collected and applied to | Our farm labourers say that “black muck” (night oi 
1 ks f Saly it is a regular hunt, and no sign-posts | the green crops. This is certainly a splendid exhibition | and pap S breeds chickweed ; this I used to laugh 
3 ill not trespass further on your space, of high taining, sia at defiance protective duties, at, and hether they thought 
will cnlud by noticing two things—the dinner, But we may go a step further, and see whether, even if passed throug fire o 
which offended many * it was had; the other we admit this management to be so superior, it may not | but now Ihave no doubt of the fact that this 
deservin, remark, viz., the parliamentary train be possible to attain a still m elevated standard of | manure stim 
which generally, indeed krat kerag left at half- -past excellence, We hear nothing of the drill system being ordinary manner ; and i s 
4 P.M., was, on the great show day, started in use, nor of tillage. Now, these two processes are | Without its assistance, it may be said t. 
e M that the — company a did the humbler | most important in 4 gm and are not in general | fact you mention of Clover springing upon heath land 
visited the show, and who expected a cheap sufficiently considered, We know that for a corn crop oneness — of lime other instance of 


e used much grumblin e or | peci to 
annoyance. It was a shameful Nes towarda| m manure. We read in the very valuable work of Mr. active vitality. Is it not possible that the difficulty, 
1 of 3 intended to protect, but how Tull, that he grew good crops of Wheat 12 years which is 8 often e experien 1 some 
A- pe man to make his complaint known ; will ne on the same land without any manure at ai, — * by our ignorance the proper 
y do so, Mr. “Editor and Iam sure they will and solely by tillage. The quantity grown by Mr. ‘ 3 . 
pis F. 2 Hants. y Caird is exactly 36 bushels on the acro. | May it not be — . well worth the attention of 
ractice with 8 : Mr. Caird's Pamphlet. —A supposed that if these two processes been adopted, e G., Clitheroe. 
Service could not have been confe ered. on the this quantity might haye been largely increased ; it A oda for After-Grass and Weak Clover 
s 2 M g 5 


N 


ete 
dvantages of high + faning, Many modern improvers | 4 very superior quality. The rent paid on this farm is | 8e 
ave ad e thing, and have enforced their on ly 16s. the acre, the allowance for draining being 
pinions by precept and and example too; but it is to Mr. deducted, 3 — ure indeed, and con- — th 
tini the merit is due of f having, in a small treatise, ex- sidering the high rents paid in some other parts of e-grass cut six tim - . — ing. sope od 
ad of eory with singular perspicuity and force, Scotland, is not such as will ee high farming into te ming with lig ig — © C) — only ey thee cosh 
o supportin it by in reat repute ; because uise it as we may, rent is 2 9 
own prac tactics, The ee oe oe on ain thing to look to. It has been mentioned that | € cutting—thus making it grow 3 3 fee in 6 — 
raised thei i racticability, for, 


ee ew oOo Pe pag 
3 


vantages arising from this the m g i 
admira! ble exposition of facts are Tikely ea Be attended | some landlords have ir rents in East Lothian | have — reached th the limits wo pra eee ane 
His avowed — been to | within these few years 33 per . It may be very 3 — . 
: "a á ible the Auchness farm may be raised in the menns and convenience of thus collecting 
Produce and an improved i same degree, when the tenant's —— term expires, their liquid manure : 
Whether in am Bo R ay ea question for u nr te large rise takes place there will be but a probably the best pap mg N Git aiiin, wien 
7 more than half a century, been carried to à poor return for the sums expended dl the land 2 * 9 pon 
degree excellence unknown to most st of these | lord in the expensive buildings o of * he an is — P . y pplied, hungry Clover. K must be 


8 U 


doubt a complish eee | Lk owt acre is but where money i 
18 thero are large districts, or even the greater | able that a è farm nens — auction, | 13° — too common case, now, amongst farmers) 
where farming is still in a very and that a tenant vee be chosen who romises th = Sigel do; though of course not so well Tor 
1 


=~ isti : i shoul per acre, 1 cwt. 
fm, consisting of 260 acres, through th should turn his possession to the best account, the same 
Means ofa liberal Galasi, Colonel M‘Douall, 8 me owner gd ae rene A 4 if he das bis — ae — or ie fo — * 5 — = 
i d enterprising tenant, Mr. with proper re; the in tenant jay weg Ma in 
himself being only the occupier. These as his own, it is most probable that both parties will be n Pu ai - wpe ab ka opi 
nsist i W bsoiling, and in alice benefited by judicious and liberal covenants, Law. — — * pe wet day must * core i § — 
ocate variably be washed into the soil, as its may 
ts s 1 enor ey ne ith — — do more harm than good, if } lying on the surface. 
be tive, from the Potato ; and it am happy in — “C. L.” with the results of my rideaux, 
40s. the io, Oe ed that the Potatoes had been rated at experience. The i 2 — ——— 7 — Sorieties. 
— The Nen einen — * 2 realising wrs a bow to it made om a : by the — ROYAL AGRICULTURAL RAL, SOCIETY, OF ENGLAND: 
i quantity 5 i wards crop, with th PECIAL uildhall, Nor- 
is very of manure made upon the farm; and it themselves. — if possible with the ands The wich, on Tuesday, the 48.155 ; prenh en 
i i i i RICHMOND ustee, in $ 
manure to the | great point to be attended to,in harvesting Wheat thus, is the Duke of chair 
is absolutely requisite in green the gathering it well after the mower 5 1 put my most | Hon. Robert Henry Clive, M.P., Sir Sir Thomas Dyke 
that Mr | every stravr left ungathered in the swathe, (that in just | Mr. Barnett, Mr. John —~ Mr. = Me. 


1 


524 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


—— —..—.ñ?: — — m 
Fisher Hobbs, Mr. Stansfield, M.P., Mr. Milward, M 
C. Hampden Turner, Mr. Henry Wilson, and Mr. 
Wingate.— The eee omer geese pe at this Couneil had 
reference — 3 local ai mporary character 

th the details of the Norwich Meeting then 
about to * held 
G 


ENERAL 
Guildhall, Norwich, on ton Friday; the 20th of July 
the Earl of Cute ESTER, President, in the 555 
Votes of thanks were jis unanimously, to the follow- 
ma nines Meee manner in which they had respec 
—.— 3 the success of 


2. To the Local Committee, on, tho m motion of Mr, Fisher 
econd — , of Lon 
2357 thee the Owner: — — of Sites of Ground; on the 
ion of Sir Robert Price, Bart., M.P., seconded by the Hon. 
Dudley Pelham, R.N. 
Capt To the on corm a of the Norfolk and — ee 
— — Nor amber of Commerce; n of 
vo Challoner, seconded by Mr. Barne tt. 
„ To the Railway Companies; oa the motion of Mr, Fisher 
ed by Mr. Ki nder, 
— 


Challone 
Colonel the Earl of Chichester ; on the ingi of the Duke of 
ond, seconded by Colonel Challon 


A SPECIAL COUNCIL w. n held ; present, the Mar- 


of DOWNSHIRE, —.— nt, in the chair; Duke o 
ichmond, Earl hichester, Hon. Cap in elham, 
Colonel Austen, Sir — na e 2 P., Mr, 
tt, Col. Challoner, Mr. Ham her 


ond, Mr. Fis 
bs, Mr. Kinder, Mr. Shaw (London), and Professor 
ds. 


The Council ordered 5 best thanks to be — 


f the Society was held 72 se 
p 


_Finances.—Colon CHALLONER, Chairman of the 
the accounts wh 
that the 3 special balances were in the 
nkers, namely, composition balance to be invested, 
e 
pur- 


arge 
ad responded to the 
2 N in the letter addressed to them by 
s Chairma an of the Finance Committee, the 
n a condition, at the conclu- 
resent ae fully able to meet and dis- 
charge avery alata em 

Diseases IN Stock.--Mr. RAYMOND R * N 
man of the . Committee, presented the 

ort of the 3 which was — adopted 
;| by the 27 eil. 


professional mae 
Soc who 

e disease among his 
stock, and wi y lett 25 the Secretary, will, 
by re pois post, receive a aafe list of queries, which he is 
requested to fill up and return immedia S On the recei ipt of 
such returned list, the Secretary wi 


rtot 


to Mr. Staff, „the town. o lerk of — rwi ich, > or the muneration oE — Inspector ae be a 
manner in earried he — 2 pa 8 diem, Ko 1s, per diem * or per sonal ex a tron ond 
e charge t cost o trave ing to — rom the 
of the me. om and Er ration, the "Wishes of the Cou localities wire his services ma e be — — The 
eil, e communicated to him; and to the fees will be paid by the Society, wat * anag expenses 
i of f Metropolitan I Police for their t of xin be a charg o against ee applicant for “professional ai. |, 
e meet is charge may, however, 8 uted or remitted alt se ka er, 
3 5 of their — during the dati ings ear * anied at the discretion of the Cou cil, on suc eing recom- 
with an the entire — ation of the con- mende — the Veterinary — tee. 
duet of Inspector — and 2 under his — he inspector, on his return ‘sign g tt sto 
On the motion of Col, Cua Mr. ing shall report to the nee in writing t 3 of i — 
was reques to act as of servations and proceedings, which del will be laid before the 


ociety’s Contractor 
Works at the country meeting to be held next year i 
the city of Exeter, at the same rate of c r as on 
Co LONER then gave notice that at the next 
monthly Couneil he should move the ee of the 
medal of the Soci ociety to their Consulting Engineer, 
nner in which namo- 


e sam 
the rte 


A WEEKLY Councit was 4 at the Society's House 
Hanover-square, London, on Tuesday, the 31st of 
"presen, t, Mr. Sai Bankes, 5 5 ta tee 


5 F.C. Oharey py Mr, 0. as Mr. Kinder, Mr. 
J. E. Overman, Prof, Sewell, Prof. Simonds, 
Turner, Prof. Way, Mr. W 


The following new members were elected : 
Bouverie, the Rev. W. Arundell, Denton Rectory, Harleston, 


ounci 
When Ly or aoe arise, that may atte a personal dis- 
charge of th „ he may, subject 
o the n T of ‘ie Committee, 
fes sional — to act in his stead, who shall receive the same 
rates of remuneration. 
Tuomas RAYMOND BARKER, Chairman. 


ROYAL erdi ee ee OF ENGLAND, 
S 
This list is returned by 
Mr. 
— 


(Christian and surname. } 
(Parish 
(Post town, i 


G — ñ 


2. Whet ere of sine hava you 

What are the relative numbers of of eat catt a5 5 Spon ee pigs, 

kept by ~~ for breeding, milking, grazing, or other purposes ? 
What is the general character of your arable and pasture 

4 ? 

4, What has been the usual stat 

po on the farm 

oo did the wo ger _ appea 
at number of your cattle, — or pigs are now 


£ tha t Te} eal 


H 7 
aunas 


affected 3 ? 

Ho many have died or been destroyed? 

8, What time has „usually ela apsed Kihi the first indica- 
ions 8 al? 

_9. What was the state . ers e weather previous to and at the 


Norfolk t'me the disease was firs 
i „the Rev. John, Norwi 10 — — malady first show i itself among the seas or 
Vincent, James, Clifton Maubank, Painii: Dorset fattin ttle, sheep o 
Bird, the Rev, James afen ta n, — 9 Norf. 11. W. hat is their age aad — as to fatnes 
Sous —— Irela: 12, Can the outbreak be assigned to conta agion or e ? 
Pritchett, Willam D., litle Halingbury, Hertfordshire If not what do you believe to be its probable cause 
Goose; Edward, St, ochester, 13. Is a similar disease prevalent in the 3 od ? 
Franklyn, Thomas, Ui Maana 11. W e syin ms shown by the animals, and what 
Baxter, Willi Edward, roe — Lewes, Suss 7 T. 80 as you are able to form one, of the nature 
Macdonald, Sir Archibald, Bart., Woolmer Lodge, "Liphook, ye: he malady f | 


Hants 
Stanley, Hon, Edward Henry, M. P., Knowsley Park, Lan- 


eashire 
Whi — oe 2 — Saat —— Park, Shiffnal, Salop 
London 


n, Bro 
Zomson, James, Baru — 11.2 Mitchel D 
Finch, Henry, 69, King W y Wil — City.” London 
R.E te Governor of the Palkland Islands 
pe Ne Rendon} * Enfi 
ge, Enfield, Middles. 
5 Right Hon, J. Wilso n, M. b., Lisduff, Rath- 
were 
the s at of rt ei — oo Pam * from | 
— — on on Hosen $ sn tubing pr nrd 2 
A 3 Couxctt was was held at the Society’s | 
Hano on Tuesday, sat Nr of m 
Barker, Vice-Pre- 


ces — 


was elected ao 
eight candidates were 


as ameliorati ion been attempted by change of — 
or management? —— — — quantity or au uality the 
food ? by medical trea y other means ? 
16. What effec have f o followed an any viet that may have been 
0 he 


g to pay the travelling expenses of oe ig in- 
pector, should the es decide on sending h imido 
0 


Council to be om ted. He e thought 
known, 1 1 contractor was the x 
a tende 


8 6 


—— o the co mplete sucta 
—— 
os, for testing hand and 0 are 
ae li ed to 


Preg, 
Jon toed 


Tho 
nstances had Ae bat roll 


as they were valuable in guiding the ¢ decun y 
the noie 


es. 
Colon CHALLONER then brought forward 
of which h i 


te 
ntry pee > of t 
hitherto of the 


i 
£ test, nothing more 
—.— registration o 5 facts, distinct and decisive ia at 1 
character, and in 3 convincing alike tote 
judges and the ereibler rs themselves. 
XETER MEETING.— 
d M 


the country meetings of the 
Society, in the place of Mr. Thompson, who ree by 
rotation. The name Mr. Shelley was added to te 

list of the General Ex 

e agree 2 
Prizes for 2 at tho Exeter Meeting : 
IMPLEMENT ; 1850, 
the Plough best adapted 225 poet pi 


For Al. 
For the Plou gh best oer for ig Legg 


: 12 755 
the most approved merkod — e 
manures in a moist or dry state, quantity being especially om 
sidered, 101. 
N. B. ‘Other “qualities ree | sque the N 


ada m 3 
and Tump t. 


ee 1 
— i | ; 
Je 


SUA goil yeno the mobic is s depo 


For the best Turnip. arili on 
—— ‘approved eg d of distributing 
nu moist or dry state, qua 

sidered, 10. 

th lities being equal, 9 : 
N.B. O —— — - i tis may be best adap eee 
ed is de g 


anures in a moist or dry 8 a ; 
ideea: 10. 
, the preference will 3 
N. B. Other qualities being e i to cover thes 


For $ 
buting 1 any 1 rege or 
a ioiei ate, and which is capable of adj 


t bushels. 
think desirab! i i livery of an — from 2 to 20 
sfc iia is acres an) ae E E 
EMBER oF Cou — —QOn the motion of Col. CHAL- qr ote ee arai perpen 27 
LONER, secon y — Serie Webb, Lord Camoys, of Forth k © best port able Threshing-machine apps" 
ie 4 Park, Oxfordshire, was unanimously elected a or steam powe nine, 10% 
member of Council, in — place of Mr. Thomas Umbers Lor - best Fern. dressing Machine, M al 5 
of Wannenbury, deceased. 1 ea hs is 
Norwich Dinyers,— Mr. Saw (of London) re- For the best Lineeed an d Corn-crusher, 5h 
gretted to staté that he feared the 3 . ray Fo 9 Te 
of the a mes 2 by the contractor, e Nor- 7 ariety 0 
ich m had not given chat — e it“ F poses, 10 
ae desirab Is the y should have 1 At the proper F ne tie : 
| stage of e proceedings in ester idar or next year's F ens of the Tiles, © ok 
22 — should * at, from the experience he sho vain ig ‘the yard: = the iio prico a hy hong 
0 t sid 
in on and elsewhere, to o 
w oped would prevent a 
rrence of the evil se of; in tin 
e thought a sta 2 in one of the 5 
wih papers, = on the f the 
| arose from the — in whioh the Society 
ihe tied him lates i his price, to be met with 
the —— 2 — : e of such limitation 


accepted; and, in order 
that he might | might ~in —— to o fulfil his 
cost]. 


E| easy c one of the most ly dishes to pro- 
next „at the Connell dinner, namely, turtle-soup, was 


of the judg! 
achine to be given — * satisfaction 
MF the best Set of . for general Drainite 


For the —— Heavy Harrow, 9. er T 
For the best Light V arrow , OL. gcarifier, W 
For the bes — t Cultivator, “Grater, and e 
For the b . 
For the test Horse Hoe on the he flat, 10% 
or the best pee — ae bags bags on the ridge, 

Por the best Horse 
For the best Horse eee 75 
dri 

a 2 best Cider l Drill, we ror 
For the best Barrow 
Korets wonder en hee 
For the best Haymaking Machin 8 
For the best Gorse-bruiser, 5 . 
For Cottage Stove or 


33—1849. ] 


the best 


— and most economical Steaming Apparatus for ploughing. He did not ry those who thought Mr.) banks, on the ground that, when is known 
m 


save, 
Z 


awards and Essential Improvements, Silver 
a tention of an —. K xn "aa eee such sum as the 
Council may think proper to award. 

or Crops AT TIPTREE Harr, July 26.— 
4 


* 
ii 


© appearance o 
the re- 


1 
$ 


t 
! 


+. not bat consider this country in a particu- 
; 30 yee rÀ yn had a population 
millions. At the 
e are farm- 


a 


kable of our population 
our sanitary regulations to prolia mg the life of the 
societies to ao beet going to war, they 

rease o of progress. 6 a 
had r 


ie 
iit 


sa am 

— v their starving neigi u- 
am paion in such a way that the 2 

vation was — ily and hourly forcio 5 

Selat esof se community, 

in the way of that 
1 — ery he 

uliar to 


— 
the railways, which were to give 
and a nuisance, but were 
E a —— those lines had 
sul from th 


— 


desire to "ia preservo old — ts 2 of 
breaking ws of which was pen oy a 1 tax 
= — — their — —5 A * — — possibly see the 
ad pointe rin rn for food, and 

g —— K ite — 


—— — Be 1 ne 


Ru 


eget 
an 


awe hte Ey 
t that ¢ peajadice, having 1 the 
nd Bre eatly to the a ds 
were o matters con * 
erious r no one conis doubt that good 
a long while; in f bis 
o dif- 


a 
BAL 


s landlords. 
way a 
n la 


it f 
1 


H 


g5 
led foe — — the — 6 and 
pose rs ago. If good cultivation 
by a = sum how long did 
sert th 


a 
i 


g 
R 
BS 


- 


„ and 
farm after 
an 12 for a fair valuation nd the — — 0 


took a grea any y 
io and ap had been unfairly taken oat of E 
to this—th — 


1 


anded interest 
very ‘Brest respect, 

they were highly deserving of that sen- 

timent; but like dthers mert had their = udices ; and let each 

and all labour to — coo ad 8 

his a on m Tiptr * eath ; — 

+ h 


P 
283 


Far 
ght 1 but to o “make it 


cap 
“all 1 
ney 46: come 


he m 


of; for he v, tho 1 
s of dane = walk as tenants, 
1 Seay reget * ng cea The 

se he had got 8 — and as 

— = 


ney int nto — rou — 
a rofit — — It was = to trayel 
— p dom to the other wi —— — 
that the bull of the land is — t half “fa med. The — 


or sex, in hovels hardly fit for 
5 — it was the bounden —_ of landlords and 
fond — enh sts of the 
aid to t — 
— and to t 


mn Precept without exam 
vo 


w anyin peh 
— to roots pi tell * Tiea n 


and — . . by 1 a ttie j 


bad 
— 


een the results of use. 
ad bee —— se 


e autumnal cultivation instead of spring 


hi going at too great a 


ns o be found beneficial 


deep ze en 
5 ; then with hes use 
reous substances, — his opin 
certain y 


ceo 


9 


this 1 
= 


of l 


2 steam or w — coe, a as glad 


farm with 

form the vari — 

— of the old-fashi 
achine: 


and th 
would find — — 


— 
and the 
almost 

d em 
e feelings of the —— 9 farmers 
had been highly grati going ov 
— . Mechi had —— —— was room 
e (M 


freer aun the 

hoeing the 1 crop a at a — of 7s. 
28 have been better done with Garrett’ 
. ae addition of 5 — labour, at 
BAKER, of Writtl observed i 


—— fo 


ei 2 
£0 — 
able” (augt 
e | professions f 
ture; thus, I ery 224 
realised in c = direstion — 
whole framework of society was susta 
pened, however, t — ony — 


tained. 


no common 

powers into 
irman had d 
eye poua — 


pow. 
8 * 
one. — alcool 


— 


. man, 


bidding — 
1 Franklin, who invente 


Gat he he e 2 ot ne Son fast enone Mlanghter), ou all the o 


— de ir “high — an could not 
— 8 persuad 


“Win 


was h riy — 
expended in eo 


“It “the 8 
po j 9 y ve assembled 
man had the 


means 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


fault now — 


by tenan yen 


tainly expected ee the 

fobs) 8 to the wide and 

Id; he — = 
amd — 


4 bre neces- 
and in 
oboe mt the 


1 


t ol 
— reg little peng in f. 
tive | gene 


2 about by ins 


Let it also be consider 


he is the 
is master, or to 

a general. failure 
masters 
people should id ea many 


and sobriety which a working man can show. 


— pt with —— 


— tees — 


— in in this county Ar. Wm. Hutley), who | 


eved 


. — his advantage; ; and us 
ed that e —2 — ra —— 


er- 
th his — 0 


‘co 

far were of Fates that the use 
ery would — — labour; but let them go 
otland e best-farmed distric 


ts of England, 
po 


r improvement; and 


r. Hobbe). oer: have — * to one 6 seen the land a little 
and, ins = of 2 be 


ing engaged 
acre, he thought it 
s r with 


as 
8 isa — 


then said, “so pro 
er), that peop ple who had made money T$ oe i 
rti 


hap 
h Big) thinking 


3 
mg sir 
rere 


succes. 


— 


h apuaan N and with 
r the good o 


ankind. 
f 


—— a the clouds, = edd whose observations 


electri had been turned t 
nly u 


such an account, as 98 —— 

2 in its effects, Dat t promising to become 

eliing power for all the machinery in 
who, fro 


igent — 


modes 


uld do. 


volution takes place 


sobriety 
I nformation for the People. 


ndu pear, and steadiness, 
„ and — take their ple place. Chambers’s 


Calendar | of suoporations. 

T Farm, Aug: rvest is now general with us. 
there to very ‘little ae —— 5 — with 9 weather 
ere will soon great dea ood condition. 

Wheat ha ual 


a for W at this time of drivi ing r du 
—— me ohn vi ben v they m 


me 
mere 


and Fai 


e was Tul who, | 


y intro 
id 5 


than any se man e hi da 
hall, Young, and argh down to their 

afar who had added the capital — tt 

— ne evinced talent, ingen — pow 

a des o promote ‘the improvement “of 

rought 


mpar 
kind — generous feeling of bringing his ‘friends 


see what might be accomplished | by uniting 


Miscellaneous. 
Saving „ following table 


a highly — a table, 
bang carefully 2 died by e 
industrious 


T 
r worthy 
of obse 


e col 


— 


ied 
s together 
all their faculties. 


as formed to 
eekly contribution paid into the 
ank would a 


mount to in a 


d, 
well worthy o 


very individeal of the 


. 
2 

— 

— 


— S en 


06 
61 


— 


SS 


One Shilling 
per week. 


51 * F 
ST 86 IL OL 89 


€ 801 


76 et 191 5 

11 6 

80 86 
e 


9 1 881 


701 FL 9 Sal 
g 0 GOTTL #1 18 


i+ 7 


9 981 
1 9% 


5 


2 


One Shilling and 
Sixpence 
k 
Two Shillings 
per week, 


Three Shillings 
per week, 


Four Shillings 
per week. 


Five Shillings 
per week. 


A 1 exista in in i fhe minds of many working people, 


is perhaps affected by others, 


against savings’ 


r 


in when 


a 
B22 3 


Wheat in 2 —— be nstances, and have always found ita 
fe rtiliser ; 


— * in too —.— — it w ar from the seed to 


ho plane — rad 


rt, a 


be able 
upport from the —— We have 


to altoget 
gives apeere ana = e 


— roots are — ag well; but 


sry put in, om — not under ordinary e 
vy crop. We are still engaged in — 
he e frst or psa hoeing being from 5s, 6d. 

ond 4s, or 4s, 6d 
e system of giving beer in 
ow as it was, and the po 
her so muc 


parties 


kn 
— 1848 — now ‘being | 
it will — be 
market, G. S. 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE: 


1 
Drying MACHINE: SP: x It 


— 1 — have not al 
xce 


ale for it at present i 


is not 22 easy, 


worse W the new comes fit for the 


otices to 2 
ur Co 


inquiries, owing to th 


a pierce 
clothes are put i 


Wilmer. It is — for us to say. 
hand flour mills. 


are ie ay E 
me and, if =, would 15 obli — by some 
— “of it being 1 able — 7 whether he 
ould be permi 299 85 see the met thod in 


OPS,—Farivar, pe 
— 5. PATTENDEN and ern report had the 
accounts speak of the injury the crop has sustained 


market be 


The 
j A* 1 of the Fr winds and cold nights. Duty 70,0001. 


COVEN T GARDEN, Ace, 18. 
Hothouse Grapes, ‘Peachey an nd Nestarines are —ç 


Turnips may be obtained at from 3d. to 
ry ts the same. — are — 
Green Peas feteh aa ls. 6d. to 4s. per bushel, Potatoes are 

cheaper. Lettuces and other salading are suficient for the de- 
mand, Mushrooms fetch from Is. to 18. 6d, per pottle, Cut 


526 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


consist of Heaths, Gardenias, Bignonia Germany we 261 Beasts, 670 Sheep, 103 Calves, and S FROM E 
Flowers — Genet wane and Roses. 24 Pigs; from meri 11 I from 2 and ee R. 3. 0. STEVENS » ill SA R AND 
venusta, Tropeolums, 18 8. sal ié ton, — ts ; and 141 Milch Cows from th 1 Roo Tinga Ye Tel by Auction, 
„ bsh., 3s to home counties. 
; — — ieii >| Bose Sones, Here: Best Long.wools. 3 6—3 8 DAY, August 21, 15 5 12 Ach ate the the COLL aya 
doa, 1s 6d to 3a | — per 100, 6s to 16s fords, &. . 3 10 to Ditto Shorn which comprise a n w Sta itz in Ecuador and 
per 80 fo 1% r do., 1s to 28 — Short-horns 3 6 — Ewes & 2d quality 2 io— 2 4 supposed new genus, several aal pas — d Evelynas, a 
„per doz., 8s to 15s Leas —.— Ts to 148 — — Ba saad 2 10 — 2 — ren 88 — ë choceros, a splendid’ Cattleya, and many Curious 
— halt tod wa . gwest,por ah toSe | Ervas = x; 81004 D f Calves: ° | 2108 10 og oar ones e cond . — enon 
3a 6d to ds Walnuts, p. 100, 1s 6d. to 25 Ditto Shorn gs 6 | morning of sale, and Cat 5 im ay be viewed Ne 
Currants, do,, 3s to 4s bush * to 24s Beasts, 970; Sheep and L Lambs, 11 „090; Calves, in; Pigs, 250. 8 
Pears, per doz., 28 to 4s Nute Bar., p. bush., 20s to 22s arena : 
= perhalf dievo, tets n = p. beh., 128 to 168 | Mowpar, Ava, 18.—The supply of English Wheat this M8 N. “a 6 — with instu]m 
land carriage samples was ama , including only urseryman f 
— p. dor me 5 36 * Spinach g bandh 85 * one — new from Essex (red, and smutty), and 26 qrs, of ae to A Auction, 7. is Great Room, 38, Ning Belgium ty 
Soa oa 18 64 faena doz., Is d to 4s | white from Kent. The quality was not fine, and was sold at 500 NN $ August ag » at 12 for 1 00 Covent. f 
Peas, per is 6d to2s6d_ | Shallots, — R. 3d'to 6 50s. per qr. ; the sale for old was barely equal to last Monday, | 9) CA? 2 rom 1 to 0'4 feet, comprising most oF — | 
22 err Garlic n Foreign was rather more inquired after at prices which could ao peri varieties, y j some of the novelties: the i 
p 1 to 1208 chokes, p. doz., 1s 6d to 3s not be acceded to, and the retail sales effected were on much | are be Inbelted with "Snes with flower.bnds, ana aa q 
eat, Saito Os Vegetable di arrows, do., d tols e terms as Friday's.— We observe no alteration in the a Lt y ia with their mames.—May be viewed the 2 
mar ür. Louce, Gab p.se.,4d to bd value of Barkey; thero: wero a few — of new — ntish | P Sale, and Catalogues had, Ay 
aa = Com dds o quality not fine, and sold at 30s. per qr.—Beans are unaltered 
sa Been per dono to dn | Mushroom, pot, 19 to 1s a de bee he Peas unt be noted 2 por qr, cheaper N EROE e MSG 
bal . gre 8 
Beans, p.bf. 22 6d Pa, ade p: 28 34 in some instances an —— of 6d. — — was obtained. red with instructions by Mr. Howcnorr, 3 
to 28 T Sav avory, per ba nch, 2d to 3d FRIDAY, Aud. 17.— The arrivals du —— oam k of English | competition by 0.70 on the o jte mises, Mile-end Nars 
Cucumbers, each, 2d to 6d hyme, per bunch, 2d to 3d | and foreign grain have been exceedingly small, cxeepting 7190 | Bow-road, on MONDAY, August 20 ani ty ollowing day 2 
— s “m4 40 to 6a laine D, dos. buh,, $8 to 4a | qu eat: from abroad. At this — a market 11 — — ng pte Previously — gs sed of by private 
* Oe bende 15 to 28 Nodes p. bale, 18 to 18 there were a few samples of new Wheat, the — of which the valuable Lea * a4 and the whole W 
Rediches, perl2hands, 0d. | Matjoram,green,p-ban,4dtosd | was generally thin and poor, and confirms the increasing Pits, and Frames ; together wilt ty pea 
Watercress, per doz, bunches, | Mint, green, per ‘ade, $d to opinion that the — will prove worse — — been expected; house Plants, Nursery Sto ck, Seeds, utensils in trad, be — 
4a 0 Basil, green, p, bunch, 4d to 6d | this was disposed of at — prices. * — altera- May be viewed, and particulars had, one week prior bh 
Carrots, per bun., 4d to d | tion in the value of foreign, sales of which were limited.— Sale, of the principal gee» n the Premises, and of the 
Barley, Beans, and Peas are unaltered — value. Oats are firm, | Auctioneers, American Nursery, —— Essex. 
HAY.—Per Load of 36 Trusses, ere bei w on sale,—Flour maintains our quotations,— R 
CUMBERLAND MARKET, Aug. 16. The weather since the 10th ins hough not settled, has been MALMESBURY, WILTS MPORTANT PREEHOW 
n — 1 "a ESTATE.—A 
re me Inferior . .. ... 50s to 845 | sufficiently fine in this — ma to admi itof harvest opera- W. HI. TE gan AORN ity for Investment, 
uferior ditto... New Clover n. in 50 t | tions being —— with little interruption R. FRIES will Sell by Auction, at 
. 30 65 Dirai r 8 the White Lion Hotel, in Malmesbury, on SAT 
Cloer. 90 95 Josnva BAKER, LIVERPOOL, —We yee tarts ce | September 8, 1849, at Two o'clock in the afian 


< dealers eda 204 | no rife in the fe demand. W was barely such Conditions of Bale as shall be 
b be 


The Beasts be quali ood as on e full prices, le ously made by Pri 
— Ana — — aad tho qu T of it Dat an was rather in request, ‘Oats, Oatmeal, Barley, 1 5 das Motive. will ab ing that very date Gah 
of Sheep is larger ; the demand is, however, consider- and Peas, were only taken in retail, at previous r In | « 6 od the Borough and 
and remain unaltered. We have more inquiry for Indian Corn there was — Is, per q t distance 
jd Lamb, and advanced rates are s still WXzar. Barer. Oars. | ana | rset PEAS., prising an excell . — substantial B 
for although a slight improvemen stalling sufficient for 50 ) Beasts, and other suitable 
From Holland and there are 469 Beasts, 2990 Sheep, 478 ld} 2856114185 0 288 14 32s 1d 33510 | in good repair, and about 203 ne of 
and 79 Calves; from Leicester and Northampton, 1700 Beasts ; 48 2| 25 3 19 4 286 11 32 1 30 9 ductive — in the following Lots 
3 d Per st. of 8 Ibs. d d 4 1 36 H s 48 1 "Tithe Map Map. 
ply 8 i —8 8 4 26 1 32 5 32 0 4. BB 
Best Scots, Here- i — 3 6 to 8 8 48 0 26 3 18 9 25 6 31 10 32 1 | 94 Farm-house, 8 Yards, 2 3 i 
4% „ 10 t 4 2 Ditto 1 47 4 25 8 19 2 26 7 32 0 31 1 | 95 Wortheys Pasture 47 q 
ba — : * — 10 2 210 —3 4 t 4 2 * Marsh 4 0 p 
quality Beasts —38 4 .. | Agereg. Ki road Leaze — e } 
ane 4 48 1 Been e. — 1 —— ae 122 — — 670 88 ` P — 4 4 i 
: . 0 Cal * . orn? 8 "an ttle aze à 
iie Steg a —4 6 zA = E 82 1 Ss —.— 0 | e” 1 2 Broad Leazo 5 a Bei 
Beasts, 3206 ; Sheep and Lambs, 31, 4 i daltes ives Pigs, 240. Es — 52 — = = 11, 689 Th ae „ ei stura ae AD 1 i 
FRIDAY, . . E ea 
We have a moderate supply of Beasts ; the trade is and 49s 1d 691 The 16 — ot ee 
Monday’s 5 obtained; in a few instances they 48 10 — 
are The number of $ is smaller; 48 i 15 23% 
p aada sate cae pies 0 + E pa ya 205 A a 108 Part of Bean L Mere Pasture 23 0 
t es; av 8 2 — 
bat a few choice sl early 4s. From Holland — 47 i — 109 Ditto, with Tie-up ‘Stalling for 12 Beasts 4 1 10 
London. | Liverpool. Wakefield. Boston. — © ag tor mn. 1 15 
Boston. OT 
PRICES yes be * MOSS trair ko wm 675 Part of the Marsh .. e 
CURRENT. | ug. 6. Aug. ug. ug. 14, ug. 3. Aug 1 Aug 8. Aug 15 Aug. 9. Aug. 16. — 
qr. | qr. 70 lbs, 70 lbs, qr. qr. A qr. 62 ibs. 62 lbs. TAN ee e ruf, and 1 Withey Bet „ - - 
Wheat— % 3. , 8, . d. 8. kn d. 8. d. s, 6. . 8 — „. 6. d. $. d. s. d. S. d. 89 South part of Long Maren „ 21% 
New, red — 6 8 7.36.8 7 0/45t051 (2 ta50)42 to 9.42 to46 5 7 5105 9 6 0 r VI. 2 
„ white ... 46—48 e Ray rin 4650 44—486 0 6 35 9 6 1 8 Norch part of Long Ry on ae © ee 
Old, ond —. [4044/40 (0426 8 7 36 8 7 244—416 TR 5 6 6 05 4 5 10 162 Allotment in the Commoenn = Arable @ 810 
„ We 1327 67 3 % NEEE TES 2 
Foreign... ... 418 7 04 9 7 9/41—54 0-88 — — 5 0 6 65 06 4 * mbers 76, 77, 89, 894, 94, 95, 108, 109, and 162 3 = 
480 Ibs. 480 lbs. the parish of St. Paul's, Malmesbury, and subject to * the 
Rye—Old 2294/2994 — charge of 111, 88. 3d., and a land tax of 6l. 173, 4d. Ti 
Forel 2 — 24) 22— oo 7 o 2 * — — — residue of the Estate is in the parish of St 
oreign... |22—23/22— 23 — — — — — ‘hits — bma Malmesbury, and subject to a tithe rent charge of 10), 16s 
Foreign meal | 5/,—67|5/.—6/ — ne — * se 4 * — to a land. tax of II. 10s, 7d. hie 
Barley— qr. qr. mass The ESTATE abounds with young ye Timber, — adjoint 
Srinding . 20—24 22 — — 222342223 24—26 220 23—25 | 2325 e eee 0 
ung.. 6.24—26 30s—32s | 30s—32s | — — — — 29—32 29—32 The FARM HOUSE is capacious, and may at a small expat 
For ee oe | 10—26} pü aii 24— 28 24—28 table into a = — ae 75 residence fer! 
: , e tag ee * ad ma respec family, and particularly for a sporting 
i 6 -/6 bush. very conveni situated for (indeed in about the 
Wralt—Ship ... | — = 3 — 39—42 39—42 — ates oe * of) the two adjoining Hunts of the Duke 83 * 
Ibs. ite Horse, and close to ray — irom 
@ats—White... 8 brated for Six miles from the M and 
me meme Ate ee : ae ey cg ye 2d — | — 118221822 2028 20-26 | Chippenhams Stations on the Great Western 5 
1-23 2 528 — — — — 1920 19—20 To view the Estate apply to Mr. Compton, at the 
[13—201 ! . TA — and for further particulars ; 
* Solicitor, Tetbury, Gloucestershire, at whose office 


qr. qr. qr. r. 
348 345 m a d e 33—40 È he Estate may be, soom n 


196 lbs. II LAND ND WANTED. 
A Pa 28 —30s | — — — — 12—13 12—13. ANTED T0 R INT 
mi SRS | a, Sta aad ae a 
wes 
| — —35 | 32—35 32—36032—3632—3432—34 12-14 | 2-14 eee Sans 
sag oe [foe bok = 1 > | ee | oe 
sia aiins | Racy Ma oe Tengen TOBE IET for a torm of years an and entered 
pa 8 S on, a presen in te oecupatjon ofr Sho 
is 7. 76 71. 128 71. 128 * 
60. N W — 
24s—26s 268—288 12—13 
ek 280 280 Ibs. 
34—35 | 34—35 34—36 
Gloucester, 8 MILLS, SOMERSET — 
— BE LET porama gee wel 
an "e ~ Tami MILLS, comprising a comfort $ jl 
un n a elie 
19 112 9119 is driven by a stream of water which never i 
s , driving three pair of stones, and is 
ae 1299 700 aseko of corn pot week. _ 66 annee 
ii 2591 Pasture, 5 the Mili’ from Mich 
The Premises are situated, three miles 
Jand C. STURGE, | from Yeovil, For farther pariiculars appi 


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"ga a cr ter- 

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vicinity of yt ots e.—For particulars apply, b; 
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Recently publish ee and 


NT 
Lo — LINDLEY, Ph. D. F. R. S. Professor of Botany 
in Unversity College, London pam Fourth Edition, with Cor- 
rections and g Additio: 
KTRACT rari PRE 
In this new and enlarged Edition, the 1 — * has followed 


r De Ca h 
deference, whether we consider the soundness of his judgment 
1 that s to order and arrangement, or the great ex- 
— — a > tong and re eee career of public in- 
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The Author has begun can t is called ORGANOGRAPHY 


th 
or to 


organs systematic 

es arate jpa mae 5 arising out ‘of. their con- 

sideration ; and descriptive Botany can have no logical pre- 

cision until — principles of — hy are exactly settled. 
of opinion 


A differ among the most — —— ed 
bo some connected with this 
— it has — Purpose of s te enter Face Per, Jato 


this succeeds VEGETABLE Parstoroey (Book II.); or the 
hista — the vital phenomen a that have been observe sd both 
in plants in general, n particular 
wr a organs ios take — 
ch has the most direct bearing u 

— however, are either unintelligi tib 
exact 3 without a s acquaintance with the 
more important details of Organography 
present 2 — in doubt, and the accuracy of som of 
— = ge ae of . is s inferred a than 238 

trated; tial that the grounds of 


the m ove popul 
rejected as — 1 
Wake follows i ey apt 5 — III 
called, TERMINOLOGY ; ricted to ‘che definition of the 
jective terms, which are er used exclusively in Botany, or 
which are employed in that science in some particular and 
unusual sense. The key to this book, as also to Ey substantive 
terms explained in Organography, will be found in a copious 
Index at the end of the 

It has been the A ‘Author’ 2 h to bring every subject that he 
has introduced down, as ——— as possible, to 2 — 41 eA uripa 

doi ng a 


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THE THEORY OF HORTICULTURE. 8vo, 
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FLO 


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RCHIDACEE LIND ANGE a “Notes 48 
8 £ Orchids formed in Colombia and Cuba , by 
x By Jonn Linpter, Ph. D. F.R.S. and LS., 
r a 0 1 in mrin University of 
Royal Institution of Great Bri 
paan — oo ott —— anann BOTANY. 
This day is lished, in one a sy i 
Borat Ax — RCAL BOTANY ; or, 
Principal Plants employed in Me edicine 
or — 
— FROM THE AUTHOR’S PREFACE. 


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— LE Kinapom’ of the j h t sequence of matter 
departed —.— ‘in a few instances when it was Baltes ed that the 
students would ne — msulted by doing 


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d pos 
ARNARD 3 atid BISHOP, Market piaco, 
— of expense in Londo on, Peter- 


, S) 2 
N 
N 


se 
2882 


ine 8 


Ep Bo 


“a er used, 24 plat 
sa hrama sending direct to the Factory can be sup- 


nape des (H. C.) SA SRO — 
OF H taken from living Plants, with the appropriate 
Specife 1 er, full Description, Nature, Place of Growth, 
nd time of Powering of — in — aud 9500 288 ee 
ape toed ed plates, with 
4 vols. folio, bds. 412 140. ak. at 36L) 1802. 5 
BRITISH DEPT) 5 2 Saami k ki ournal of Hor- 


ti 
6 vols. 8vo, green cloth extra, i. . 8s. s. (pub, at 41. 10s.) 
eedin ngly 


GDOM, arranged ac- 
eing a History ‘and ih etal 5 

Birds. Fi shes, 1 Shells, &c., by Cuv 
Translated from the last French e edition, 
800 plates, 8 vols. 8vo, oe 


above 
o call the 8 a bis cus- 
tomers ery low oes It is the sap 99 Boos 
general — upon the subject, and the only upon tural 
History suitable for e Library.” 


ARDENING 
— s — containing a Description of all ony, N 
r Generic and Specific 8 place of h, 
Culture een Uses in Medicine jnd; Domes 
unded upon“ Miller's Gardener’s D iotionary,” 
cording to the Natural System, numerous 
470 Gok 10. 10s. (pub. at 141. 88.) 1831-38 
BURGH JOURNAL OF NATURAL HIS. 
ORY, conducted by Professor med Si ial with n coloured 
32 of Mammalia, Birds, Mol . and Insecta, 2 vols. in 
foli o, half moroc co, neat, 1l. 5s, (pub, at 3l. 35.) 115. 1846 
This in che baa and capital work 4 N adapted fi 
young people dditi 
cludes me most 15 
KING DO 
tions. 


nt portion 


ted manner, 


ED WA ARD S 3 (G) NATURAL HISTORY OF 
BIRDS, and of some paer rare and undescribed Animals, 
Quadrupeds, Reptiles, Fishes, Insecta, Be. 362 finely-coloured 
vols. royal Ato, an original copy, russia gilt, gilt edges, 
very me Ba set, 51. 5 

wards’ o Wark are assuredly the most valuable, on gene. 

ral 00 that have ever appeared i in nen No 2 oolo- 
gical library should be without them.“ — Swains 

3 SOCIETY'S TRAN: SACTIONS, 

2,11 vols. 

and maps, whole eal russia 

1811-42. 


A gilt 0 181. se y 
his choice copy formerly veionged to the late Jas. Watt, Esq., 


of 12280 Hall. It is quite complete, with all the Plates aud 
8 and the List of Subscribers, & . Copies usually sell for 
25ʃ. 
N SOCIETY'S TRANSACTIONS, 
| fro’ mencement in 1791 to 1847, numerous plates (some 


8 19 vols, 4to, half calf, and 2 parts, only 111. ero 1 
at 58“ 
The above is a most desirable 988 
1847, very difficu 
price, 


of books, quite sompe 1 
lt to find second-hand, and at the above low 


N’S ARBORETUM ET 5 


LOUD 
BRIT 1 or the Trees and Shrubs 
oreign, y an 


and 5 orei Hard pi Aan with their Propagation, 
Culture, Management, Uses, with about 400 plates and 
upwar “ae of 2500 dodoki. rof Trees and Shr ubs, 8 vols. 8vo, extra 
cloth, only 40. 48. (pub. a 1838 
RON S MAGAZINE 6 GARDENING, co 
prising Treatises on Landscape fbi rboriealtare, 
Fristoe, Hortieultare, Ge. TBE THREE Sbm, 2000 
gravin, wood, thic ck vols., 8vo, half morocco, fine 8 
5l, 58. 835-43 


TH’S (R.) HISTORY OF eee —— 
or the Feathered Tribes of the British Islands, 
traits of Birds carefully coloured, 2 vols. 8vo, cloth. gilt, 155 464. 
(pub. at II. 8s.) 184i 


EPT COM?LETE WORKS on LAND 

SCAPE GA — — 1 LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE, 
new edition, with la ions by J. C. 8 — illustrated by 
250 engravings, t thick 8vo mo —— — (pub re 10s.) 1840 

SMITH’S 10 FLOR ntain- | 
ing the Flowering Plants aa 1 4 vols. ae. last and 
best edition, cloth, new, II. Te pak, at 2. 8s 8 

SOWERBY’S CON NCHOLOGICAL 
new edition, enlarged, with numerous woodcuts and copper. 
8 es, containing upwards of 650 figures of Shells, Svo, cloth, 

e pl 


3, (pub. at 25s.) ; pi — the 
53.) 


lowe H. 12s, ons 

8 8 210 0 
loured E eit and Descri 
coloured plates, 2 vols, roy 


ates BEAUTIFULLY COLOURE 
1846 


C MINERALOGY, or Co- 
ce 1 of Foreign Minerals; 169 
8vo, calf gilt, scarce, 2. 12555 (p 5 


Guner TIRE NETTING, TWO- PENCE 
nt- 
AA 


| phreys, containing 
of d Q 


Maletin- ry of THOMAS Fox, 44, „ 


Y 
on 
and | Poultry, and 3 7 Youarr 
is 
; ONLY 18s, (pub. at 11. 
tF 


WESTWOOD d HREYS’ 1118 
— 5 yel = 3 Transformations, with 124 plates, Toth, new 
vat te „ finely coloured, 2 vols. 4to, cloth, 
84. 185 * kogn 10s.) 


1 BUTTERFLIES a nd 
their e 42 beautifully coloured plates, by Hum. 
upwards of 440 figures, 4to, cloth, 30s, 1848 

i AN. 


OMO 
Ilustra ew, Rare, and Interesting In oe 

plates, exh biting several hundred figures of Insects a 
vo ure ca ge coloured, 2 vols. royal 70. cloth, 27. 25. 2 at 
3-5 
MARTIN’S FARMERS’ 1 
the last revised editions of the 9 
orse, the „ the Ox, Sheep og, 
d MARTIN. Tilustrated sy — 
Woodcuts. The w 
8.) * * i 10 1846 
This most valuable work was published under the superin 

8 ul 9 poset, and comprises t 
treatises on each subjec 


GEORGE W WILLI 


JUST PUBLISHED, GRATIS, AND POST FREE, Drees ROMAN AND PAPER W 
HIT 
G. WILLIS’S 


SSUS, 4s. per dozen.—The al above TE Xan. 
lohi is 80 justly e esteemed fi ta early bln oe the former 
fragrance, and the latter for its purity and el — — erg 
just received at A. COBBETT’ i Fordiga ` — 
18, Pall-mall, near Waterloo. 00-place, Also D * j 
Crocus, Tulips, Anemones, Ranunculus, 4. A Hyacinta, 
logues of which may be had p j priced C 


MRS. HEY’S “ 3 
eee published, in 1 vo 2 MONE Rer 
easons, illustrated — th e Ete ing Club,“ ~ 
illustrated with beautifully colour 80 orm Price One Guinea, 
HE OF FLOWERS ; or 


gathered from the Field and th ; F og 
New p aa ition. © Garden, By Mrs. 
A the same Author, uniform with th 
A. e above in n sisé = Price, 


— — MUSINGS ; — — Spirit of the 

New ition of The f the Woods,” — 
red —— =“ 

8 


W solot 
Lon 1 pido NGMAN, N, BROWN, GREEN, and 
This day i is 5 90 the 2d 2d Edition, with ad 
N ESSAY ON THE FUTURE PROSPECTS GF 
: ce Trade iat See 
Inst, C. E., aud N 


$ aoas ctical Farmer i in Norfo ; 
93 : RIDGWAY, Piccadilly ; and C, Fox, 67, Paternoster. 
A 3 ain HORSE.—NEW EDITION. 
ust Publis — — 8vo, price 8s. cloth — a Su 
designed to advance the work irop». 


Q 


orks, whic 

prehensively written — highly. 5 comprise äi 

nie which 1 be require a on their r respective — 
ondon : Rosert BALDW. 4 Pa oster- row. 


In 8vo, with Cuts of New Machines, 


&c., price 
ODERN AGRICULTURAL I 
Cu L 


MPROVEM 


By BERT WILLIAM JouNson, Esq. 
„ This work, anti into a small space the 
he last 15 years, has — 1 quite inde. 


7 
pendent of the object for apres it has 
Supplementary to the “ British Husbandry)” 


Farmer’s Series of the ie 5 Useful K 
K, aer 2. 


London: Rosert B 


IS, 
GREAT PIAZZA, COVENT GARDEN, LONDON, 


3141 
done by them at the Right Hon. che! Earl of Kilmore: 
which 19 7 have Heat the honour of 1 80 A 
action ES ingia nwi fii be happy 
ork 7 give — inti 
They also beg 2 refer to the houses built by them — 
Past season, Worshi L 
922 in the se Holenie Garden a: Chelsea 1 
8 ill kindly show the work, an 83 
will kindly s < S referre d to, 1 


They beg also to say the building only 
Heati — Apparatus was nat erected by 
Ga RMSON, and Brown, have also the fe honour of 
to —— — the 8 ats entry in the country, and to 
cn on Nurs 


a and Estimates farglebed fret, cule 
Tuis IMPLEMENT gained the Royal Agricultural 


Society’s Prize for 1819, at Norwich. 


F ² ˙mm PREE G AE ee eee 


»-FRANT.TONBRIOGE WELLS. 


INGTON'S DISBLE. 


3 
— 
2 
* 
[s] 


E 
< 
8. 
‘bt 
— 
ə 
z 
2 * 


Printed ‘by 1 WLIAN Bnapevnr, of No. 
Parish he = Sesi and 


ren Avevar 18, 184 u. 


SATURDAY, AUGUST 25. 


X. 
Lawns, to O chalk 534 b 


FUCHSIA “CORYMBIFLORA ALBA.” 
JEEN. SALTER begs to inform Er numerous sub- 


IE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


1 Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


[Price 6d. 
Rie RT WHIBLEY san supply strong plants 


s year, 


atronage of Her Most Graciou 
DAHLIA, HOLLYHOCK, — 


and . E 2 


By Jo n Edwards, for th 
re 


| D DAHLIA SHOW OF E ND 

dee FETE, will this year take place 

; IRMINGHAM, on the 26th and 27th Sep- 
stak 


Salisbury-square, 
Co., 55, New-st., Birmingham, 


5 ‘SEEDLING PELARGONILUMS.—Cir 


te best of a af the season), son rate had upon applica 
whole stoc 
55, New-street, Birmingham esve. Marsa and 


TELL, Sees .—WESTERHAM, KENT. 
LL, SeepsMan an sag 
f mats that his stock of bedded plants for 
: this season is, as usual, 8 
excellence of — a, Barnes re- 
have j ~y 


pare, ensuring a 
r, — "aot . in 
ges De — oc be de ag — 
ire includ ded; 6d. per 


made payable mene 
upwards gelte ed fi 
ot the Sou th-Eastern 8 ây: e 


and 
— 


ouse the spring 
aria seed of his own Savin , fr 
‘Per packet, and Cineraria seed ing, ee 


, CHRYS ANTHEMU UMS. 
AND SONS, NURSERYMEN, Vauxhall, 


“ELEANOR” 
d send out 
rege! varieties 755 th Ne 
t aai pa aao 103. ôd. 
8s, 6d. ; Mammoth) 3s. 6d. s 
j, eens’ p ea par 3s. 64. Pelve- 
Too, FT Tincess Royal, 7s. 6d, ; Cut- 


be made payable to 
eE Aug. 25, 


FOR THE BORD 


1. FOR THE GREENHOUSE 
a cies ugha Annuals 1 
0 


II. 
8. Od. | 25 fine Greenhouse seeds? 78. 6d. 
5 do. 0 1 do. do. 
12 do. do. do. do. 


12 German a 3 Maurandyas.. an 
| 12 tall Petunias ... 8 
Nemophila i isan, p.oz.1 12 Stocks, German 
Do. maculata, p. paper 1 5 — al 
50 fine Hardy Pere ennials 12 Thunbergia 1 
25 do. . fines vars., 1 
12 do. os 0. 3 
e An ee 5 spotted m m. 
Aquilegias Cineraria, 
13 Delphinium chinense Erica, 50 vars. j 
4 Gaillardias 1 6 —— 20 yars. n m.. L 0 
10 Hollyhocks, n. ‘dwari 3 1 8 
6 Pentstemons 2 new yel. me vse l 6 
$ Sweet Williams 1 0 Ipomopsis superba... 1 0 
6 Walifiowers . l Phlox Drummondi, 20 v. 1 0 
* All other Flower Seeds may be had in single packets at 
usual prices. A Catalogue of 1300 will be sent, prepaid, on 
application, His new Autumn Catalogue of a first-rate collec- 
tion of Dutch and other flowering Bulbs will be ready in 
5 — 5 cage er Seedsman and Florist, No. 238, 
ESS HENDERSON AND 91 beg to 


INIA GRAN This is a d dis- 
tinct variety, of robust habit, with rich ren wie and pro- 
duces very — flowers óf a í pres white colour, with crimsor 

hroat, the colour of which is cle: defi a ey are O 
autiful, pence form, fit — are even, 
ooth, and regu The flowers 


gonia is a native 


of the above superb varieties (un- 


owy tribe 0 
house 3 dower “profilsely Gear J 
15 — flowers are the br ogee ange -red chour, 
undantly, pan flower 


ig vi is bulbous rooted 


all the. novelties sent out t + ae and ew 
Mete ee Dr. — = — 5 new FUCHS ny of which can now be seen 15 bloom at the Nurs 
ip Signe sake eeej out in prs poo the Ist of September, at II. each, can still supply his set of — — — 
without 3 4 me s plant Mage be giv r for every | Chronicle, of August 4. WE ter Nursery, Kennington, London. 
ee ordered. It was awarded the Certificate of. Meri t at the TT 
Exhibition of the Horticultural Society on the 11th of — 4 it Ņ HOMES’ UNR fie LLED PELARGONIUMS, 
Pi 3 as been in ever since, and i admired ; it and the choicest varieties of other raisers. Priced Cata- 
Pigs, breed or. „ 539 e | may still be seen at the nursery. logues of the above are ready, and may be had on applica- 
‘ — fo 5 n% . 8 Versailles Nursery, William-street, Hammersmith Turnpike. — Bit F W. hav ings saved a pate i 8 tho sa ideat 
nium 
Plant cultivation V 858 OUBLE ROMAN AND PAPER WHITE NAR- 1. per packet of 12 seeds, or 65 an 
h | Poimaise pits . 5 34 CISSUS, 4s. per dozen.—The above Bulbs, the former of | the best varieties, 
532 6 hen oom Dryopteris and ba which is so justl emeren te for its — AMES WHoMES, Royal Pelargonium Nursery, Windsor, Aug. 25, 
Potato disease .....cc. B32 a— 534 grance, the latter for i ts purity and el ance, have been PFET TERI FFT T BOT MONIT Ty SAE AEE 
5 44 Poultry, sex of 855 c | just received at A. ConnErr's Italian and Féreign Warehouse, Mer S SEEDLING RHODODENDRONS. — 
$39 b —— sdiri 1 — . mi — 11 — near Wa erloo-place. Also . uteh * 4 — mo for these fine Seedlings having exceed 
2 re eee rocus, emones, mgt: — c.; price onk's expectations, and being desirous of sending out 
ba b Shallots no ore — 5 55 logues of which may be had p an established plants, be has determined not to let them out 
è Fee en 8 MN SOWING. l utumn of next 5 Orders for the same will be 
rees, ancient .. .; · executed in strict poe ee former Advertisements for 
Turnips, vale eo CARTER b begs leave „ the 1 description.— Perry Barr Nursery, near Birmingham, Aug. 25. 
V seeds . z . 
Vi —— b siss ; Annuals, including the Californian, flower N Sle 4 SPLENDID 9 4 PHIL OX, DAHLIAS, 
Walis, garden, 81 10 c 5 "ai the Spring sown. With Perennials and Green. RBENAS, &c. &e. 
armers’ Club . . . . . . .. 540 e -a 5 viol 5 is saved. The two latter — OHN Sa ALTER — to invite the growers of these 
T 4 as early as convenient, and the Hardy Annuals by th fav e flowers to inspect his unequalled c a of 
I SOUTH L LONDON FLORICULTURAL middle of — 2 Seeds forwarded, prepaid, by Dost. new Foreign and rome pee varieties, 1 ch are m 
RS 


TEW CHRYSANT EMU 18.— Twelve best new 
yana W and vas es for 2 


20 9 


and upw 


Brown, Sesd and — Establishment, 
vlk. 


—On Sale, at a reduced price (to save the 

r of removal . ther part of the Binds d — conse- 

ence of the pomii required immediately fi 22 

eee about 500 yards “ot. Hogan or fine gifted 8 tor 

Bards n Walks, o Apply at No. 11, King- 
street, Holbora, London. 


— 


oe 2 PLANTS. 
| ESSRS. V 4 825 SON beg to inform ad- 
i mirers of beautiful plants — — pecan novelties 
will be ready for nova A on a y, September 3; 
A BELLA grmu 
Lob It is 8 in Curtis’s Botanical VEERE for 5888855 
last, wherein Sir W. Hooker, in deseribing it, says, Th he most 
lovely of ail the Hoyas, 8 scented, re 
amethyst set in frosted silver.” It 
agazine for De ber last, a W 
owers for delica nd beauty 
— the petals br of a very pas white, and beau 


coiled 

and — on anally — ted at 

wick and Regent re pare at oath of T — it peared 
the first prize fo: and rare plants. blooming plants 
633 ch. 


MITRARIA COcCINEA. 


This very | handsome and distinet 5 (probably hardy), 
y Mr. * ape T 


like 3 Evansian 
gro 


3 ayaka the — Pri 
Pin apple Kr Er Edg ware. road, Tona — É 


TEEI GOLIAH 8 BER 

LEY begs to announce 

Growers = the Public generally, that he has no ready 

to send out, 3 well-rooted Plants of the poir. ‘Seedling 

Strawberry, at 12s. per dozen, or 4l. per hundred, an ls con- 

fident that, taking it. it in all its combined | merits, it 1. ‘the very 
best ofa and as a criterio: 


the best that is out, ow the British Quee 
lst. Flavour—if not erior, is equal with the above-named 
variety, tho: = me pre resem mbling that of the Pine-apple.* 
er than 7 Quee 
more conical. 
ving that white unripe tip 
prevails in pa og sao very prolific, 
5th. "Foliage villous, uch resembling ari Queen, 
which it is raised, Bat stronger in its gro 
6th. Het stands winter much re hy * the 
Qu a at least, in Peas neighbourhood. 
J. K. having fruited this very apenas Strawberry three 
feels perfectly 3 1 by y person once having it theit 
possession, will not find ordered it. It 


o flat as the Que 
4th. Colour- brigh 8 not hav 


its goodness, begs to refer to ex 
nicle and the , Gardeners and Fa 
From 2 Gardeners’ Chron 

Your 


) 
sabe 7 re Wel have great plea- 
ing "r rd a exquisite flavour of your Seed- 
ling 8 „Goliah.“ I Be were it 5 s the 
piquant vate of the Sin e richness of 
the delicious aroma of whi an” 


weaned: K., L. 


with the — he Queen of F 


en, | gon 


m the Island of 22 


It requently 
Regent’ ann and had first prizes at 
plants 31s. 6d. each. 


both places. 


AGALMYLA STAMINEA (Bums). 
. ee plant: is figured ii in Paxton's Magazine for } cn 


n Regent-street, 8 T: 

La ame: 1 Medal; and at the 

the 5th of July, 1848, it also receiv 
318. Gd. each. 


plants, 
CANTUA PYRIFOLIA Sard n E 

This mal and fine gree’ which was sent 
us from Peru by Mr. Wiliam Lobb, i 
tanical Magazine for July, 1848, where a full 
is given. It was exhibited at Regent-street, in 
and received a Medal. 5 isa hardy greenhouse 3 for easy 
culture, it blooms * y, and is of a fine foliage and habit. 
Strong plants 318. Gd. e 


Medal, Strong 


PICTA (Hooker). 
This is a very beautiful plant, the flowers 
orange — e A 
summer an The 3 
compact me Tot” It is a plant 
eral satisfaction, It eg Se the tem 
Iti 


rn in | s 
Magazine for March r ts 21s. each. 


rom t 
do not remember anything in this way — 15 
; K as the noble fruit t 


world as ‘ Kitley’s Go w 5 

To be had at Lyncomne Vale . PA Bath, and of Messrs. 
Garra om and Co., Bristol, who can te estify to the supe- 
rior qu and flavour of the fruit, 


Good 
TROPAOLUM SMITHIANUM CUM (Ds CANDOLLE). 
was s 


ent us from 


_The usual Ascent to the and when three of any sort 
e taken, a fourth plant put in gra 

N. B. The earliest: will have q strongest plants. 

Printed Lists, ae further descriptions, sent on application. 
Exeter, . August 25, 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


[Avg, 25, 


. 
EXHIBITIONS AT THE GARDEN “> Tee 


HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY OF LONDON, 
FOR THE YEAR 1850. 


THE EXHIBITIONS WILL TAKE PLACE ON THE FOLLOWING SATURDAYS :— 
MAY 18, JUNE S- AND Jy 13 


SCHEDULE OF THE PRIZES. 
FLOWERS. 


Division I.—In which N urserymen and Private Growers exhibit independently of each other, 


argo in collections of 6 new and first-rate varie. in the pot from the open pa, or thatis shown in a pot , F Naps Heaths ; in collections of 10 en t 
2 — with perfec tly distinct colours, cultivated with su- of any other size than 13 inch n II inch pots. SG—CE—LS tirely distinct eee, 
or skill, in 8. inch pots. 8 8 D Yellow Roses, best six varieties. 88-0 G Car rnations, in pans of 24 diatinet varieties, SB. i 
N. The aes in which the varieties are most distinct} N.B. To be shown in June only, and really to be yellow; only.) (In Jig ii 
"oill 7 pale cream colours are inad oor Pov H 


Pooks 4 in pans of 24 distinct varieties, SB. i 
B B, asdar bod a ; collections of six varieties, in 1l-inch pots, | E Cape Loe in yon. of 10 meg distinct varieties, Cn N 
G 
N.B 


only. 
CE—LS inks ; in pans of 24 distinct varieties, 
N. gs plant that shall not — * been actually grown in B. p ibited only. 8 (In June 
11-inch pots will be disqualifie on more than The J 72 in making their N. 3. Carn ations, — and Pinta ji 
0 * in pots; in collections of 115 distinct varieties. GB award, will give, both in t this out cards, in box four sixes, 3 ihe following at 
preference 10 ae grown in their natural fed, po ine — sions re at ad to 5 e, 3 ins. ; from pon a 
N. B: Te be shown n 13-inch pots. stakes or stays ; and will also take 8 ess of Be side, 24 d pth at back, 7 i ins. ; s ditto front » 
èe Judges Ta “in Walle — 4 — * amda shat sh be 1 favourable I. a ea No duplicate will be all The face to — Eein light gree e 
found to contain a ant which has been recently placed able. allowed 


exhibit in which these — and are not complied 


ETEA e e EEA tthe soo 
Division II. xd n ‘Nurserymien alone « can show. 
K Exotic Orchids; in collectio p ation, GB—SQ—CE, 


P 
Division III. — In which all Persons are admitted to equal competition. 
L Calceolarias, in sixes ; in 11-inch pots. LS—SK—SB 


Z Exotic Orchids: single imens displaying v superior; N, i3 Fed + atam that much may be effected b hybridising 
wi B. ze be shown in a May and June only. W 1 ation. SKB nns common cultivation, vc as Lilae, 
of very superior cultivation, excluding | N.B. No duplicate Medals can be here a arded, Buckles, om, &c, This class will be e judged by the ho 
— ng which can 455 shown singly in other letters, and | AA 2 ias; in threes, of three distinct conten ; in July only. officers 
plants not in flower. CE—LS— —SK— 


NNE acrises ; in sixes, (In May only.) hoiata 
it More or Greenhouse 8 in collections of 20 plants. 5 ‘ é 45 


BB 3 in six DISTINCT SPECIES, e superior 00 New! y in 


introduced or extremely tal plants in 
cultivation. CE—LS—s SK 5 
x3. Calceolarias, Fuchsias, Orchids, Pelargoniums and du-| N. B. By ¢ 2 word species is meant the wild kinds ported ne “Fhe ela ih amas ag a 
2 oa pet oom ‘om all the four classes of Stove or from t = ee pe of Good Hope, or New Holla 9 SS uae and not by the usual Judges, fe: Brad : 
— ouse plants. S rey pre e — a garden cross-bre t but ants ca i 
0 o Bove. r der e plants; in collections of 15 plants. C Fancy Pelargoni in sixes, in 8-inch pots, SG—CE observe tha 1 re a No 5 ‘rare plants 3 
P 3 22  Greonh ouse plants; in collections of 10 plants, a B. No duplicate 8 n be allowed here. — 33 — — Pe ar — in a previas 
5 D Achim in collections of six distinct varieties, exhibit- varieties sal any kind. No ppa will be given to New Plants 
@ Stove or Greenhouse plants; in collections of 6 plants. 86 ing superior cultivation, CE—LS—SK. (In July only.) which have been introduced through the Society, 
B. ——.— — ot sho ow inmore than one of the classes z — varieties 8 3 yo 2— — — P —— subjects, — of Ferns, SK—SB~O 
of Stove or Greenhouse pl eties in loose bunc es, pre consisting o A ‘bi i t be entitled to 
R — — e — distino t varieties, rr three trusse hey are gathered, so to exhibit, as far r gitar ae and — 
sG — A ops srad tion as possible, tho habit of te ee EA quets, together with all nants ioe whee N 
A B. rm th classes of A N.B. In July only, — * ho erhibi bits in this letter can are offered as as single specimens, are altogeth 29 i 
P — — se — my = distinct v varieties, (In compete in s dling Hybrid Pel Bs rd new ercssts, 
May only.) | 0 Fer ag bs in pots ; Coni- | 7% Bates exhibited as m, ee letter FF, and in 25 varieties. e Seedling Hybrid Pelargoni ms, rely 
ar e ns m LS—SK. n exhibit her 
E — — = 18 SK % ee Private growe here). N. B. Er. very seedling must be shown singly, and marked with 
N. B. Nothin 1 be rega can as new which has been in N.B. In . and July only, 171 — are brought for exhi- |. the name it is to bear. The same — — cannot gain a 
eke more an three years, bition without attention to the 735 tions here explained, prize more than once in the season. The plants must be 
r very rar are species, in not less 8 ll not oe allowed to comp shown in „and not 5 a a si 
than the third y year of ici grow mth. LS—SK—'SB Helichry CE—LS—SK R Alpines; in 1 SB—€ 
N.B. Hand V 49 e 2. own at the exhibition in July. II 4. in sixes. (In July only.) LS—SK—SB 88 Ginerarias ; in sixes, in Ginch pots. (In May only.) SK 
Ww — Orchi ns of 20 species of superior culti- | KK S e of six species. CE- LS 
LL F Ping d in cóllections of 10 hothouse speci les ok xorg superior oe will only be 2 to e fine specimens. 
Y Taote, Orchids ; 7 collections of 10 species of superior cul- cultivation, LS—s SK S5, 27 ‘ards Heaths; in sixes. SB 
tivation. N. B. To 7 shown in Jul only. 
Y Exotic Orchids; i paar collections of six species, SG— LS 


feat eed "is wun of dee: ba o 
A tent wil rovided for the exhi 
medals be warded ; the Mian re wishing to express 
any 5 por dh * 5 merits of se 1 


MM New Hybrid Plants, exclusive of Roses , Rhododendrons, 
Azaleas. and Garden cross-breds, such as Gloxinias and the 
like. SG—CE—LS 


CE— 
N.B. Nurserymen cannot — in —— these three elasses 
of Orchids, No exhibitor can show in more than one of them. 


— . Rapes heey | hit 1 Kag Fla we ing an ), — of n the eee — Private Gardeners, exhibit age ee of ah other. 


— — 
cs aa whate No award in 90 
except in B, E, K, M, 0 vex, except in F.  No.person 
: N.B. All Fruit must be suffi sufficiently ripe for Market, wax 9 and PROPERLY NAMED by the Exhibitor, as far as practicable ; r the contrary, it will be disqualified, 
4 8 or 5 in pots. SK—SB—C 3. LS—SK—$B M Strawberries, one dish each : 
i. oo ie ice, oe. = — Other so sorts, — the foregoing. LS—SK—SB 1. British Quen, Queen, Go. 80 
f j ea x - ng’ S 
2. En loafs, Black Jamaicas, Ota- Nec — ap ge aay ae N — yor ee 3 ming Se or pots; no one to show more thas 
: 1 P — > sii! 
— n pots ; 25 CE—Ls—sk |: Figs, A pad wer aka Previous year. SB—C NB. Ws class of Fmuite ts excluded if gathered. 
5 ee the heaviest Eiren Cherries, in dishes of 11b, each : 0 Molona, Tera p ecimen each: 
rapes ; three gee six Black. SB—C 2. White. SB—C SB—C 
| Bunches for L Strawberries, in pots; six pote to be host. g- SBC ; The best best favoured, ay wine te 3 
2 ? Other kin of peculiar excell 
2. White Hamburgi, ‘Black Princo, — EER N.B. They must have grown in the pots in which they are Pr = The sa si pgn under Pee — will — 
; ee n of the Society’s o 


= GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES 
AMES PHILLIPS anp Co. hay 
land | New Lis 


M ronas se COATHUPES a — cin 
1 
EA ES — — 1 to L inch nel bore, in ler 
being less 


LASS, which is of 
0 to a es O 
om Oo | 


est materials.—A Lean. Ja mahs 12 per 
ds, 1 door, and 3 feet tof glass ins mance 22 fot Ine Stee a 


. i tg al A play for | froma? tone a 
ie gl che from 12 to 24 inches 
three ti per foot; 2-inch 0 gis. use, 


P a as aa e ETA a Ctr e i 


S EE EERE LA a AT AN ae, 


IRGIN 


CE STRAWBERRY.—Fine V 
RAW 3 will i — | 
Pri 8 


L 


ARNOLD’S VIRGIN 
Two gem pe 


THE GARDENERS’ 


QUEE 

best WHIT 
ROTLES CRUSADER 
TOYLES CRUSADER GERANIUM, 7s. ôd. Tä 


s of the season ; in a plant of each for 12s. 
y to WILLIAM E. RENDLE and Co. 
Nu 


CHRONICLE. 


GERANIUM (ARNOLD), is the 


= once 1 
ce had been 
"This description ser 
the class of facts on which the 
which the . jury disregarded ; 
had ever been wi the of the Garden of the 
hilosophical Society in their 20 city th: 
have seen the very s i in 


+ance. 


Efi 
R has likewise proved itself of nine 
12 October, will be ready for sendin 
o for 155 Hoh apppestoe should 
— rserymen, Plymouth 


— tober. 
EN, 78. 6d. each in October. 


kin jury as th 
n Oe plained of, where the — re wilted person — 


CAMPANU po — 5 


PER 
azine of B for this month, ) 


|The € e Garveners’ Chronicle. 
TURDAY, AUGUST 25, 184 9. 


MEETING FOR THE E 
CounteRY Snow.—Wednesday, Ang. 29: 


not — to trace it to a 
the argum eh 8 to destroy the 
importance of facts of this kin d, aware ost ee 
‘natural causes sufficie 


NSUING WEEK. 


Salisbury West of England Dahlia. | equ lly occur 


on M LANCIFOLIUM, OR THE 

. coo SE JAPANESE LILY. 

1 GROOM, Clapham Rise, near 1 by 
M 


FLORIST TO HER MAJESTY THE QUE 
S 


and 
Beni 


of the w 
dying and unhea 


orks gre 1 


- | bran 


S more 0 


day, $ 


Admittance gratis. 


ONIUMS 
of other raisers.—12 of the following 


Syl ig ee to London, will be sent 
ted in pe — and ready tae} 
s will be ked. 


tion, 
of Sa. 
ae — worth. 
or their culture will be found in the 
scellany,” gee apo on the Ist b each 
under the title of 


of Operations, supplied by 
areely be s 


aid in firoas of the 
this pia „—Pnor. Tr INDLEY, in this 2 a, 


E FLOWER SEEDS FOR PRESENT AND 
C: 


with useful instructions 


4d. to ls Od Hollyhock . 0s 6d 

6d. to 1 ( > 3 VATS., separate 5 0 
r = Via 28 

2 1 

ioe Iris, English 0 6 

3 * Oia 

Oe as Pansy aca sarig 

eset R a P 1 0 

wae 5 n E 44d. to 1 0 

1 Primula sinensis .0 6 

ie 2 8 

ae 0 6 
Verben 1s. 6d. t 2 6 

r —.— Pörennials, 10s. 6d.; 12 do, s. 6d. 
Hardy Biennials and Perennials... 15. 6d. 


: 2 0d. 
Hardy An Annuals for spring flowering... 
from unknown sibel, or Sera 


s. Od. 
TRIE aot Po hea . “Post 
i Pepaya eto ee 
Postage hings resin received for 
ROWN, Seed and Ho at ‘Establishment, 


UNEBRIS, OR NE N CYPRESS. 
SESU. AND eit T 

t —— > 

*ublic = gs — 


obta taining 

weeping Cypress from the north of 

2 to out fine healthy seedling 
t favourite with the Chinese, and 


near the works was red with dead leaves; some was su 
* Evergreen weeping — dead Apple and near the works 
Vale of T ere in wret ; were dying. Fee 
bro and once healthy young "Bear trees were dead on the 
side next the chimneys, among them the Swan’s 
Egg, one of the hardiest of all varieties; their 
branches were 


said to | 
bil who lived three centuries 
ale of Tombs the variety of | Goo 


menti 
gin a line 


Tending article in the Ga 


It was ‘proved i in court that in the neighbourhood 


ak 
be ie ospy osed to the dimer, bee a e irag Arae — 
of r less. e bee 
in — — — 1 they w 
several were nearly dead. A row of Larch trees i 


proceeding in 
Evidence of the most 3 
was produced to show that these 


Ika 
— sending out * ’ ; 
this handsome Rhododendron, at ip Arter the nden in our last journal were manufactu urers imneys exist sec 
ne rhen aa warded 111 2 eS va concerning the Diszasz produced amone | W° tenacious , high ds, frosts, bt a, 
1 L Gre in his S wiew | Trees around alkali works, a copy e feld recent transplantation, were, we eee assign 
notices it in the following term fR Examiner reached us, in which the subject is treated | by the defendant’s es as s suffic ient to 
1 Ep- Messrs, Jerson, of at some length. If the statements made by o a the appearance of the Walton vegetation, 
Sich the exception of the upper petals, | of the Eu ri corresponde ay reli t is perfectly true that diseases similar in appear- 
agd distinctly spot en with crimson ; a beau- | upon, hard-swearing had more to do with the verdict | ance are to be ound elsewher o man can ri 
5 at Vork than true testimony. We prefer, however, to — ig * pee 1 5 F rps yy ey 1 
ea ying ; and he will often find it im- 


d 
possible to say what the causes are which have — 
duced ag 8 Stagheade and Ashes 
eee and Plum trees, perishing g Fir 
trees, have spt ao edly in innumera tances no 
po ossible connection with ambi 7 — eys. 
s how or why. But when 


175 es were 
trees 


Saif of trees an 
In a row of y 


s had once 
ere 1585 e 4 — 


These 


t 


by the defendant’ s —— 
with the jury. Insects u 
what — people 40 not — no 
the oles in leaves, or r thim entirely, 
y com 


nu 


| y * 


pillars had eate 
planation — no serious notice. 


thought other wi 
was refered to. But the trees affected 
alled 


x“ 


ve seen w groun 
Aw 3 of. We dare to 
say n land is not : 
and it is likel ugh it 


as a universal drain 


to the 
to be unfit -for the ms ee of 


in the state repre- | th 


W. 
on the other han | 
adie as l and * dung shoots of a 

Yet the jury could not see 


d killi 

a | hardy as a Gooseberry 
the Nr 

— — that 22 ee 


with the chimney, both of 


hich 
op ae injured by a stream of 
line from 


alton trees 


> 

532 — GARDENERS CHRONICLE. [Aus. 25, 
—— ts which tho es had thi ;|erop in its natural state. Yesterday the Potatoes of; 7 DISEASES OF PLanrs = 

‘wigorous y per 4 — have i ied 2 in K both were drawn ; in the rows left untouched, two- (Contin: expat Ploy si 
e manner sworn to ; which 5 thirds of the erop were found more or less} Genus XX. TaRLO (Vermont wih hoe 
i were produced in 2 The jury did ee | Plodni" ae 
not perceive their importance uantity the same as the others, I beg to add that the Vegetable Patholo ogy. he consul in hig 
But not only were the arguments employ st by — — followed a similar experiment, made in a authors who treat of the rng consu adh diferent 
the defendant 2 futile. There was the garden by one of my workmen, upon a small crop of | searched Ginanni’s work on the Pine-woods of 
— proof on the part of the plaintiff that 1 the ‘ Snowballs” J. Gwatkin, Parc Behan, Tregoney, | I can find no mention of it, It appears that i 

: ugust 17.” m i orests of German 


n oun s tak 2 
place lately, and from the action of some deleterious} 41 send a sample of Pot tatoes, grown under cir-| “The corrosion of 2 is yo * 
matter, acrid or otherwise, upon their surface. Fy be cumstances which may, „perhaps, — the view peculiar to the Pine, which destroys — at 
case like weber of the Pear trees, now figured, is, | respecting the disease sugges in your Leading | liber and the alburnum. This di y the 
ive. These trees were young Article in the Chronicle of the Ich inst. The Potatoes with the extreme branches, and gradually works 
and healthy, Cont that many ofthe anes were | ar ee gro i fen ert, Bee Er [iv way dove sha the ale t 
anner, from a In isco a 
dead and others dying; they were attacked by some | follon 8 bog 5 r ] roy Bing 1 


enta 
8 —— on them Vers. produce such an effect. which we hay alled coal warp (though this term is or are easily detached with th 
We wet he other e that would. Let the | more strictly rer to tha. refuse soil of the coal | the — ete ippedie — . keen ps 
following ee Sedcription of 3 and | measures). On this spot Po had me planted, | liber, the alburnum and the inner surface of the 
unhealthy Pear shoots, of the same age, be atten- | and hitherto always escaped — This circumstance are corroded by innumerable 2 channels, 
wie — and the nature of the mischief will be | came under the observation of the inte telligent medical | assumin — forms z we As E these corroded 
manifest. No doubt can exist that it is produced | practitioner of this parish, and in consequence he ob- | channels a e Dermestes 
by something acting on the outer surface of the | tained some of the deposit ; and removing the soil from typographus, it * thonght that * tes —— mischief was 
a plot of ground in his premises, down to the face of the | cause this insect, enck shows however thag 
rock — be por o: = filled in with the coal | it is cau: io by . 8 of stimulus, the more 80 as, 
r warp, and set several s tatoes in it, of f which I prolonged drou ht in * 3 rod 
dry scales; all * — i — N te the to ad seales | Send "you samples, 1, 5 — Kidney, weighi ng disease, w — eli ts of Eine kaaa S 
1 ` Un- dying s <n tinged oe brown, | 10 oz.; 2, Silver-skin or Button, a prolific but very| The above 7 N proceed as follows: 4 The 
0 
ear, 


a 


r Treesnear London, Diseased Pear 3 at Walton. 


s the | sm 3 conve’ as it 
ten 5 Un * h i- 2 : : 
—1 i «e cells a cl vital centre. er the bi 12 oz. The large size of these SA eng would seem to | into hot cinders, and the roots re aa gee of all nutri. 


especially 

; in many suitable to the growth of the — and they have en- | about the forests are also dried up b the excessi 
ces . alres ady ——— td escaped — which a age ared ater ares Nor can the leaves absorb any naishia Seer 
plasm (vital lining of the cell | rally in the parish durin uring the let ight. J. overdried atmosphere. Then the juices are stopped in 
Melis.“ the vessels of the plants and putrify. There is neither 
Nee N ere — Sai shrivelled | The Potatoes referred to in this communication | precaution nor remedy of any avail against the evil; a 
gument bright green and juicy. stains proceedin through the the | Were very fine, and perfectly sound, copious and gre ye fall of rain will alone put a 
wowa n i 

brown Lenten — ape tg We are requested to state that Dr. LINDLEY re yet 5 Wherever the 3 first shows 

ihe —_— n= i = obliged to the correspondents of the itself the a should be cut down, before the 
We regard a fact of this sort as ae of the same Jou s Horror URAL Socrery, if they | exten ids over the whole of it, and renders it unfit for 
evidence as the discovery of property will f . — Prk their communications in the hehe 
ys 


ny 

ue ope 

ls df aa ionii aiir the person of a sus- | Course of a few Tany II. Dr sev ge 8 kin Pena gy 
— e 3 


“ 8 ‘ city of aliment, its unsubstantial quality; the want 
thief. It overrides all denials and evasions. a age 
— ia legitimate thet — dre REMARKS ON PICOTEES, 0 the stimulants betete, heat, or light ; “deficiency of 
ing from an affection traceable to the atmosphere, Havine attended most of the nto and made a | ing . = to be recogn nised as the causes w which, 
d. inj same | few notes during the late Pico season, I beg to give | under the present h ead, by = the plant in a state 
cause. In reality the same kind of in mani- | Jour readers accoun | } lis | of weakness, 1 disease ate ver may increase 
og — Othe trees, ghem the pe 9 not much esteemed florist flower, and in doing so I will | the quantity of nourishment, improve its nature, or 
3 N neie: rde ma 4 ie mse 3 cause the — A stimulants to resume their ordi 
ons h. stands for heavy edge, m. medium, I. light. | acti ion, to which the plant will necessarily respond, will 
we are warned by our epee The, that | Those warked with a * have proved cons nstant, retaining | tend 70 0 the plant to a state of he 1 ? 


+ 
; 
E 
"= 
9 5 
© 
æ 
© 
et 
8 8 
®© 
> 
0 
a 
* 
E 
E 
zy 
© 
mh 
EF 


the question must p brought to ac e room | their ch 
ie have. piven it ae demanded 2 ri einan 6 aracter even to the middle of the flower ering | Genus I. SreRILITY.—Some plants, singh, wal 
impo ; an importance that Of Pal edges we have he ned i s A ig ma 2 
cannot overrated, when it is recollected that £ tation S Others’ Je ele 5 M formed ‘flowers which are 
every estate in this country may be ruined by the pee t work ay — 9 ' Aa 
€ ; uty 1 ), 1. Lord Hardinge (Smith), h not 5 in number, but yet are not 
i a few aw), l. Miss Annesley ( lani) 4 ence two species of sterilit 
chimneys of chemical works The owner of a few | Beauty (Shaw), 1 Annes! k H peoi i 
r . 
neighbour's timber, and render his residence unin- Duke of Newcastle (Bur- Nottingham Hero Gz mirable memoir of Regnier, on the influence of climate 
habitable, with perfect impunity, if verdicts like i Decca: Nulli Secundus (Mansley), h. | on the and nature of vegetables, must pe: any 
uestion can be ed entlemen will 8 E Sieben y President —— nes h. One how essential it is for the agriculturist as well as for 
therefore do well to crush all such causes of evil | Gen. Jackson (Burroughes), m. Prince Albert (Crack), 1, the botanist to know the char cter of the native stations 
while there yet is time. ir gardeners and | Jenaz Lind (Bly), h. Prince Albert een m. ol plants on the surface of the globe, their elevation 
wards should be instructed to familiarise them- Lai 320, e ae cod), h. | above the level of the sea, the greater or 
gant (Sharp), I. Regina (Cox A : tity and 
33 early symptoms of mischief, and to of reflection of light and its intensity, the quantity 
i Sid bo dainas eee iii Of late sorts we have Amy (Burro ages), 1 - 3 Juliet | duration of rains, and ot i 
earn Ae edge’ Oe ial a Sanaa i 1 I.; and 2 (Edmon nds), “Spe uld here | cise so much influence on vegetatio 
met „ e special e ae Bao ced by — 42 bserve, that our more recent varieties, * Possess Some plants obstinately — p~ most attentive 
centres of destruction, If this eke skilfully — substance, must have a warm season to develope care of the gardener, and cannot be made to bear 
and ey, they will be in ths tion of Mr. their beauties in, and they also require the addition flowers ; neither will an any ben fing of „ . 
Warn rox, Who has the misery to be 010 his beau- of cap or blooming glasses. Stout flowers, moreover, | crease of nutriment, be of any avail, nor any of the most 
: ; ’ perishing fore his eyes, and his fruit | 40 not open so white as those of thinner texture, unless | refined processes of the art. This must be owing to & 
garden ruined, although it is full 1000 yards from | care and attention are bestowed on them; 3 they, how- | want of the requisite degree of energy in the stimulants, 
the centre of destruction. It is evidently ee certain ever, fully repay this extra —— uble. arising from the effect of climate. Thus we prion 
whether a jury may have intelli ugh to u Of red-edged kinds the following are early: Anta- plants never flower with us, because they are 
z 
äs d these cases, and to pi t ‘Se niri — onist Garne m.; Isabella (Kirtland), ~ ; Miss B. | hotter climates. Toa certain degree only can the gar- 
—. tho ra rubbish that a dexterous 8 utts (Burroughes), bad Be ultra (Matthews), I. dener produce desired effect by means of stoves, 
j~ ess Cambridg ther contri into 
rooks), h.; Duke of "Wellin 7 Seung m.; Emma : lants removed from a cold climate 
struck 
ghes), L ; Isabella (Wildman), * rs. Bevan a hot one, and there exp to ae Air are 


n ider- 
0 m.; with the same sterility. This will be readily 
(May), h. The late sorts are Taa (Ed- | stood. Accustomed — they are, if for amn. paker 
— l; Gem (Youell), I.; Jenny Lind (Ed. natives of high m. 8, 

mon 55 f James (Headley), h.; Mr. Trahar | covered with snow, ee live on the os 5 

orkshire ture more sajin mild, th 2 e greater 
Hero (Hepworth), h. Generally speaking, the red | one — ls net, as is generally the 
ges Seem more positive to their season than ed —— ually them, but rather 

: purples. want of a long continuance of 

pa ates to the result In the scarlet and rose class we have less choice, but Sometimes, ‘les, their sterility may be occasioned BY 
Ek a trial of M. Toupstte Lompa’s plan, published sag too have their seasons and peculiarities. The first the inferior quality of their nutriment. M 
us ; the second records the | to, gladd : i 


Smal an FFF reels Ce hots as ae lat two | iatan ant bave ther: ede Supply of fresh fod 
ms ily” te ran | ctf i (Sa) ee | Emme cae a 
r 

i 65955 * — Ae n the leks hya and iis of blocs = r 2 rry.— Plants in 

8 , height, habit of growth, — = rill probably forza 3 Now: ay 3 2 3 that 


the subject of my next next communication, and in it I also | regular and order which are known to be req 
var to 1 remark or two upon new or for the ete duly to a the expected pon el 

very searce varieties. John Fiordi, Wace Cottage, | organs of generation, closely examined, apPerng 
olloway, or is any defect to he found in the pollen. The 


ually satisfactory eg state 
— that he will have work 


nde 


Ce a in the heavy sheaves. But ail these 

þri to vanish. The flowers do not set. The da 

remains unintelligible | psr o originators — heen merc 
initiated in the pomp an 


; * t what this fall of EaR r occasions 
77 — be bought Eon ays other cause: 
ee m those 7 o may be 
siar the Rn “that plants are endowed with a 


gard 
— which, in e — with other writers 
| shall vail o Aeg Without at the same time il 
2 myse to 


mos e or diversity from 
onl 


mals, only repeat, | o 


tr 

seat of this irritability of the sta in their spira 
vessels, it by his observations on the fila 
ments E. the Nettle and P. Le ; 

who would le m this subject, 
ene of the most important in the eren i of plants, 
emsali what Senebier Ten in volum s 
Physiology.” For my purpose it will now suffice to 


add that whatever — the — organs of a vege- b 
table of this irritability, renders it incapable of repro- 
a fe 


_ Avery slight degree of cold at the break of 8 
= 954 for a a a slight wind, one 
dissi d, 


are ted as soon as forme 83 i 


heat to deprive —4 a — their irritability. 


I. must itted at the same e that the disease 
8 treating of sesh Seend tg the Polyanthesia, 
ion is necessary to distinguish the 


uwi pecula 

fe effects we observe. Yet may it not happen some- 
tines that there is a 3 of the n aR sap for 
bringing the organs of 


eneration to Ao ion! What u 


ndnces me to believe it is, the obse Mgt l have often 


lant are i: with barrenness, at | t 
others it is aay 2 or more branches, whilst others re- 
untouched ful 


— ached. To this same 8 must be re- 


the whole or a portion of on ne or more ears o 
oom remain empty. pe 
Siy take this — o of observing, that the acci- 


which sometimes happens to the c crops of | han 


eke ppe 
te field whilst the adjoining o ones have a rich harvest, 
this disease. Whe 


—5— 3 — at th 
i sterility — be 3 by wind 
a Mechanically to carry o 


oo 
2 CONDITIONS ESSENTIAL TO THE d 
PERFECT CULTIVATION.- —.— X. 
* world's e history 
ence, and paisan, ~ wah mA mind 


THE GARDENERS’ 


3 how * same germs of progress have, 


which springs the monarch of the 
at slowly ripened into perfection; and how in ape 
of past . every reco 
and blazoned forth 


earth, 
presen atime” in the omg marble almost to adora- 
n. k it will not be ir- 1 may boast of, and I know not a 


relevant to link with the — of science those of interesting tribe of plants than such a border should 
a | gar some of them i 


ke every any pe pe po ttn has had 
at least in con- 


grac 
SNe is er T er in twenty — 81 collections 
Wh 


ess of which a K cultivated plant is eapabl, 


for it, 
Pes er the system many plants to woul ay find 
_ pa rec ognised in deed 


CHRONICLE. 


ow, after 


ies, with and i i 
5 ‘ counterfeit 


i 
gon not unders tidia 


aceful 


been 
ut no = cip pio is * in its spelen: 
3 


n 5 — 

ty ie d, w aed mens are more e — 

es — full of aucune rubbish—there w ill em 

one-shift system masaya find - syaw and bea app gas 

ci I result was that a few of the bulbs were very ‘fine, 
0 


ff the fecundating ra 


0 
would give you, superior results in one-half 


lige gs ee GARDENING. 
THE ved when a “a the 

have at any time been directed — den may ured 
each = = the ‘planting = 8 plants, e 

e beautiful es which so much | the 

uring autumn, meee spring, w — 
tablished 28 3 = | 


8 8 


xt 


ng loo 
oe that penal: plants exa 


da say practice 1 is is, to replant | ti 


like gardeners no subject is of more importance ; avtcuuon 
to this pas pm their borders and beds an air 


— perke is what every garden, however 


„an y either i i 
propagation or culture, they are peculiarly amateurs“ 
lants. The principal care they need is, keeping them 


of clean, and the erect growing kinds neatly supported 
t z 


. oF ne Chéne-Chapelle 


e cemetery of the Commune vA Allon avilio Bellofosee, 
= 


near ae In 3 fon the —.— of 5 toga inches 
e, und, its umference was 2 inches, 


trunks e completely 1 hollow, has — — into a 
7 i 


a eet 7 inches in diameter, and nicely wain- 
2 2 ted. = 4 door secures the entrance of this 


mall temple. Above the chapel there is a small cham- 


tis 
2 p a bed; the ascent to this chamber is by 
0 ams 


ns of a winding stair- case on the outside of the 


“Tho top has been broken off many years ; where the 
diam 


present 
covered in with slate ; and this, by replacing the bai 
contributes to the preservation of the tree. The fol- 
s of lowing inscriptien is pa the door of the chapel :— 
tients 


ETROIT, CURE mess as 


— EN L’ANNEE 1696.“ — above the doo oor of the upper 
mbe N 


chamber: “ À NOTRE-DAME-DE-LA-PAIX 
The tree had probably ee. hollow after — its 
season w 


top; for, if this happened at 


y be 
off nearly, — N ia 200 years ; 


th bee 
for it appears from t g above date that the cavity had 


en 
same heigh measured t 4 inches. - 
lated this Oak is 870 years. Extracted from 
A gS 


es sur V'A i 
M. A. Dubreuil, || 


sary — me Correspon — ; 
The Non-Transmutation of Shallots.— I have tried 
the esa of raising Shallots from seed, and the 


certainly bore a considerable resemblance to Potato 


Onions. Each bulb, originating from a single, isolated 
seed, was less compressed and taper in shape than those 


which are grown from offsets, produced in 
crowded cl The whole crop of seedlings was 
sorted into els; one, light in colour, like 


three pare . 
fresh Spanish Onions ; a second, — ish and reddish ; 
iate odd lot, 


tertium quid, or inte 


2 is king-cy 
quired, in order that ane The more — 
0 he 


mae Sb e e 

mint Science, deom poso be understood, at 1 
opinion ie ces =16—when = say that it is the too 
vera to that which I wish to combat 
— men are o importanss to 


— thet — for the 3 year's now is the come mix 


— 


sn 


hi 
the latter will | never does. any grower sees a head rising i 


ust be the 8 characteris- 

ir ‘that no 
lot of Potato Onions, let him e quite sure 

per bulb has accidentally become 8 


stems, w 


all bserving 

Potato Onion and the Shallot are undoubtedly very 
nearly ange in ae propensity to subdivide into sepa- 
ra 


te buds or bull r Onions show the same ten- 


pes 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
before he venture to speculate upon the | yo young queens are in a proper state . admit of en My Polmaise Pits answer capitally in every wan 


lanted i 
phenomenon. on, Is there a good mo on the Onions | departure. Until that is the case warm will not except that my gardener cannot gy 
ia the: Jounal of the Talent ay e a If not, leave the stock, even ** the ane were linn Melons, Both last year and this, up * with | 
such a desirable paper to add to the series. to ruin the colony. J. Wig the Melons were most promising, but then ¢ — 
Finer = are obtainable by sowing seed than by Sheep in Orchards.—I yey an idea prevails in this | red spider, and all was over, It is difficult to get a suf. 
planting offsets, simply because the vigour of the plant, | nei ee that Apple orchards are rendered un- | ficient amount of moisture. W. Hornby, St, Michae?. 
and the nutriment obtainable from a certain space of | fruitful if sheep are allowed to graze in them. oes | on- Wyre; Garstang. [If you cannot obtain * 


und, are concentrated in one bulb, . — of being the experience of the cider counties warrant ma such | moisture by the usual “po a sprinkling the 
— amongst a eluster of half a dozen or eight; 2 or is it altogether a prejudice? J. R., e ping * ee of the s moist, &e., we — 
i ily obtained, it may be a question | Sev se you to increase your om rating surface m 
rea 22 3 best m ‘ — kaai they Roses.—AÁ thousand yaa to “Crito” for his article | we 5 thik, igh be o easily effec sted This, 
— = by weight, by which mode the heaviest — on Rose catalogues; he h sig understated his ease. Canary Birds.— Mine are kept in an aviary attached 
be grown. on a given! space of ground. Shallo I know that some of the. very | — growers near to a 3 A — are regularly fed with 
— ndon (not — * amateurs, but dealers) aw no and canary seed, with a smaller portion of 4 
— — found by some persons to bea medicinal as . A —e of their ame 22 eir Roses are to be 3 22 a season, with 1 5 — 
wholesome and agreeable dish. ZE. S. D oun ray pursue the subjec . read in addition, me pai the 
Uniting Bees. I have oie st read in er — of — — Planis for y Rockery. cages. In former years, with — n 74 — 
the IIth inst. the doubts which “ W.“ casts upon = Sedum ru ponaria — a successful breeder, but this 
1 
* vae id Ban re 3 fi — on th y | Soldan ella i le Skinneri eed ote ag ry — lin 7 bal 
not yet united them, perhaps the following method, ee cæspitosa sycopodium denticulatum 8 panache’ * es fang to feed 
lately adopted by me in two instances with complete granulosa dimulus moshata th 18 € 
ja : ro Vin . a learn 3 a similar fate iy T by 
, A t ser other breeders. Gloucesteri ug. 21. 
window in my house, devoted to the purposes of an „ hispanicus a R Sa: Polypodium careu inter. 
apiary, I begged of a lady apiarian in my neighbour- | Lysimachia nummularia „ canina mediate varieties of caleareum and Dryopteris partake 
hood the bees out of as many stock hives as she intended Cantium. of calcareum in the largeness of the rhizome and 
to destroy this autumn, for the purposes of experi- 2 Hany 2 ernery. — nd of Dryopteris in the e xed character of the 
ment, Five hives were accordingly placed at my n Asplenium ebeneu ranches. The editor of the second edition of Smith's 
disposal, so that I had enough to fall back upon, phegopteris ” Adiantum-nigram “bpa Botany,” — vill. mays „Although 
2 pe particular experiment about to be deseribed „ auricalatum $: dentatum — hy bags 3 — claim to the 
i nd now for m lan of ration: After pe cristatum 5 Ruta - muraria seems doubtful.’ Si ooker sta 
dark on the evening of the 9th pei I began by ” 9 a orri cimen which he possesses from Sir J. E. Smith — 
turning up into a pail No. I hive (a late cast of this 1 — Onoclea 20 115 rather 5 = = thicker and more rigid tex. 
year, full of bees, but only half full of comb); my Dryopteris struthiopteris, ture than by any d specific character. In the 
assistant. immediately, yet without hurry, applied an * Trichomanes locality before alluded. a ‘on —. 502), prs ‘degree of 
empty prepared cottage hive, of the same size, over the Cantium. | size and rigidity occurs, some perfectly rigid and nearly 
full one; a sheet was next thrown over the whole, Useful Seeds to be sown in Cotta, Gardens in 18 2 high, while others are very 2 and 
round which was passed a stout piece of string two or August. — Dwarf Asiatic Calas ee Cabbages, Horn ing; the former occupying man situations, while 
three times, just above, below, and at the point of june- | Carrot, green Curled Endive, Cress, Gian 3 aon are only fou oe — stony ground. G. Maw, 
tion of the two hives, to 22 any bees escaping. Tripoli — Myatt’s triple Garled Parsley, Snowbal e 3 
My assistant then proce ive the bees up, by | Turnip, ne landers Spinach, new Olive Radish, Crop.— — in hopes we had got rid of the 
tapping lightly, but inkl, o on * —— of the reversed Corn Salad, hardy winter black seeded brown Cos (lis thi i but T am 7 to say that it has made its appearance 
hive. In about 10 minutes it was evident, by the hum, | Lettuce, hardy rene Cabbage ditto, and | feide i — 3 vita — Fi ah trap ates — * 
that the a — into the empty hive. A | Walcheren 3 Cantiu — tov at I have sng 1 ears, oe the 


<b> ee> wm 
EF 


this year 

very rich and populous, was then turned mpi 1 2 oa kind of Board — formed to receive specimens, and Halis aihena eee, just 
as the first had iet. quickly, to inform those who sent them which were wholesome | after the late thunder. storms. but vend — car come me about a 
placed the hive into which the bees from No. a s ma — funguses, and proper to be eaten, and how they — month later than it did last. It affects soils alike, 
— mount 7 (In the meanwhile a third person be dressed. Dr. Badham’s book has called attention to and =, a> fon cultivated, I have some nne n So „ 
with No. 1, a it over a hole filled the subject; but, as it is not written in a plain, clear, | h — — À — — 3 2 — ind bat seal cal a 
with a little sb cette, 80 as to destroy ew which | an pular form, is of no practical use whatever. We — grown most luxuriously—all have been attacked. I have 

remained ; this was done also with the second = — if it could be found, some such plain and prac- | also some new sorts raised from foreign seed and this 
The Sea having sar covered with the 1 as before writer as = — bbett, who would have told ui ase aad — 8 ear 288 . Ar 


PI y togeth tp 
fon though there was an — it was eas ily 22 and we know not where to apply for information. Sonn 
accounted for ag the increased heat of the hive, and the | Here we are surrounded with funguses of all kinds, have e escaped ; but the di h ade its a appearance among 


conseq necessity for ventilation. o bees, how- | Q. F., Tunbridge Wells. he planted ones, though not as yet — 
ever, were found dead. The hive was taken off after a Centaurea nigra flore albo. — 1 have found this self ow wn, and is making rapid progress. “Ee appear to be proe 
short pause and placed on a table, where it wa s suffered | variety growing in a field amongst the common sort. — A Hs opnaa noa D hae a 
to remain all night, and up to 3 o’clock the ‘followin ing | F. X. stalks. . eee e * Hoddesdon, Ho Herts, Aug. . 
day, when, e sun being out, I proceeded in a bee dre Six Hardy Aquatic Plants for a Pond.—~Villarsia | ——T s appeared in a patch of Potatoes in the 
to finish the job alone. I first spread a sheet, doubled | ee Nuphar lutea and min inima, Menyanthes garden ere, “thes sorts Aiected are — Ash-leaved tee 
in two, on the ground; I then rested my box on one fimbr a, Nymp hea alba, Hottonia palustris um. Amerie er — b * — . 
— r i Ri — to — — Ms ‘in g sagt or should say that the chalks should pa eaea the 2 here the the —.— has shown 

a nch fr e a spread evenly on the surface, sa h thick aul, gardener, Allerton Par 
rie of sticks. This done, I gently t — the 1 hive, | the angie — be proe fective a ‘acon sb dug. 1. ET — The sowing symptoms — 
Ww s Bees borsang swarm had b been pe ym orking mixed with t the soil, and the turf laid on it. I have | . here. The black spot —— —Uͤ 
i y, and holding it directly in front of the box, with | chalked many acres of both arable and pasture land, |t M. J, Berkeley, Ki Lig ok of 
wo or three rude taps, shook the —— all out upon the and am certain of the great advantage derived there- The Shige has ag gh visited See themed of Sim 
sheet 3 when, lo! proof positive that my bees were har- from. I may state that much information may be ob- | One à — ————— . “almost —— By 

peared three combs, the | tained on ebalk, lime, and marl, from vol. i., British others ¢ slightly. 1 8 me 1 
a ` 


tte Mereever, I picked up a ueen, sown : — 
ets the only victim of the experiment. In less George Dyer, 3, 22 Villas, Holloway. insure escapo from it R. 20 225 Belfast, — 16.— The 
4 minutes the bees n cloth and in the air Chats wortn. — As many lovers of gardening may now | stems of the Pota toes here have r fresh than in the 
z joined their queen in the box, whither she had | be on the wing for an horticultural ramble, it will save oer te — -eg 5 y ginig ma é ors 

which. ik wae atai — — by the honey with them some risk of disappointment to learn that the con- to be ri Sona — tnne tubers a ain 

here remained nothing more servatory at Chatsworth is not shown without an order, disease. B. Th Thom; i it 
s : 05 7 a i 
the 

. ace the Maine spaco of four 4 mixed 


to 
N where they were safely placed the same e t 
ven- 

ing. Sea p have elapsed since then, and the box is by letter beforehand. Parties visiting the house are on sane —— — — B. d. Nunn Se 
almost filled with comb; and I doubt not, with asked whether they wish to. ne the grim, ania th Diss Farmers Cl Noel Aug. 21.-—— Disease d net 
they — at ones to the pleasure. ground; but 2 an eariy otago pie growth, as i 
at the gardens, which are nearly a mile distant, so that kered quite sound, bat = sorts, not not dag or or hanima c — 
much time is lost in making application there. J. E. ad earthed up, are now decaying very fast ; not ning hen 
ulture of Cape Bulbs. One of your correspondents | °° fst" rit fealty foliage an So ge S 
518) has quoted from the “Botanie Garden and | Henry Bundy, Piste, Castle, Zange Aig Oe 
s of a weak | Fruitist,” of June last, a paragraph on the culture of | The aeae is spreading rapidly in this locality Oi) — 


bulbs; Another part of the article quoted from | Fp —— d therefore wot be Lau en much, . 


8 
8 
d 
a 
7 
g 
f 
a 


— 2 2 3 as I think it but ee [e ey ——— pune ee „ 
: I bave À oore, G , Dublin, Aug. 21. 
Uniting bees above described apana; se the: pou int = of Old Ford, that it shouid la be kasra thet “tag | ks, allie, £, i le og ie ried Thomas 
‘Say, try it, and it t will prove far simpl iwas unicated — House, vin be el — Potatoes — were neariy Apa 
than any plan of — and easier mount of t Lea n myself bear testimony. about one in ten ae T since August is Unipe Oh 


J. M. Pilleul, Clerk, 2 i rer in sugar. P. —.— is one of the most brought ha bear on x on garden ee hut ga S 


Arhtws. 
Introduction to Meteorology. By David Purdie 
on, M.D. wood, London, 8% 


ne ee son Blackwood, Edinburgh and 
ing Nutt's plans, which have — ften exp — d. mon snake, the — — feet 4 inches Bit ogy or the “ “t acance which seq g 
pa =, W 80. 0i „ € A ; ; : r „ 55 
u iih 0% to say another word concerning in me i Chambers describes, turned inside out. Teese 2 1 bb werd. sil in 
„ap ve — some of our | my and if Mr. Wighton will favour me | very i.e nom betina us defines the w the labours 
Swarm, however ie bine, — not bim. Hi House, C 1 W Kimiz, ad tho many fe ef 
st yi —— 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


jeed, it ma 23 of the park, Saint panan and even as far pr ter eg meeting: rwich, where he 
of the oper yet remain to have | Mai a is supplied by means of pipes, farnished | warded a fer — for Coni et, pei a prize for “the ciiid 
5 i to them. with 1 — , in connection with the pipes of the ett, and ained a medal at the late Royal Sou 


son By few original opinions are Ore hid- — . This pavilion, gay with flowering shrubs, —— Flovieeltural meeting in the Surrey Zoological 
A of the effects with which we | is also destined for the exhibition of Orchids in flower | Gardens. 4. Barfield, Dunmow, Essex. 
ted ; 2 author is satisfied | during su 


cases — it} The Orchid Rouso adjoins on the left of the one above scellaneous. 
astly, condensing the var: described, a a span-roof, running north-west and Temperature of 8714 . houses. aE g 
nee to exp h-east 3 ‘length 78 feet 8 inches, width 21 feet 3 ins., PEK ra rilon of an Orchid house, some fice been misled 
8. 


is sunk 
detail; when, says he, “the air can no | the ground level. This house is divided into two com- ig e 
the moisture blended with its particles, it partments by a 3 partition, in order to accommo- | pe ept v 
ce ioh the earth, purifying the atmo- | date —— requiring a me ater or lesser d * of heat. imagine that those from the hotter and damper parts 
h which they fall, and fertilising the | The hottest 833 , that next 2 heating appa- cannot be advantageously l in the same house 
drong shin rain. This or melted snow is ratus, is 26 feet 3 inches 3 laisan s terminated by | with those fi 
‘of natural waters, though, in consequence of | a small pavilion, which prevents the direct infiux of ex- pla 
power, it it generally contains some extraneous | ternal air. Stone tablets or shelves, 1 foot 4 e 
wide, run along the sides. a space in the centre, sur- from 
* er r meteoric water, which falls 3 d with a low free-stone edging, contains some short durati , yet they represent spring and a 
is greatest in the tropics, and decreases | branching 3 of trees e with Orchids; the Orchids, Sete 1 other ant have the 5 PON 
The physical features of the rest of the ground is covered with Lycopods, Ferns, adapting mene to oh anges o . and locality 
ably the quantity. When we | Palms, &c. ; and a basin with a jet d’eau playing in the | po z 
in a given time, we mean 8 maintains a humidity very — to the 


e nts. 
making no allowance for absorption| The Se oe: plants requiring a lower degree ms 
; it is, in fact, the quantity which would | of temperatur nished with side shelves, 1 foot seas 
mul on the earth eds in the middi temperature, however, must always be endured at the 
expense of vigour. Again, plants, natives of a colder cli- 
mate, may be grown ina far warmer one han ever the 


9 ine wide. — a 
e must be taken with covered with gravel, which is kept constantly moist 


d, both as respects the openness of | the drip from falling on n the plants. The side lights are 
freedom from currents which would | double; but, in order to avoid the opacity which usually | times the ex he 
mal collection of the rain-drops, and the | results from double gla sig in consequence of the con- 

3 . Thus a rain gauge on York | densation of watery vapour between the inner and outer; 

f gave 14.963 in. between February 1833 | glass, the sashes containing the latter are hinged, so 
1 ile on the ground a similar that they can be readily opened, and the whole kept in 
a fall of 25.706 in., and one on tlie a proper state for admitting a pure light to the plants. 
d 19.852 inches. The hho ouse is surmounted by a gallery which serves for 


D 
8 
— 
D 


mperature, ma 
mt pe ae be grown with advantage i in a much 
I plants grown in a lower tem- 
less t 
| the first and last stations is 212-87 feet, and | the F of ventilators whieh are placed in it, and for perature than 3 U atmosphere, shoul pe let dview 
Gi feet respectively. Again, Professor Phillips, with paral shade A thë ' year of 
instruments, placed = poen, 3, 6, and 12 he water in the environs of Paris is more of less i 5 
its surface, found the following results in a sheng with hare, and if employed r — watering of i i 3 should 
e T 8.408, 8. 314, 8.249, and 8.206 inches | plants te nde to destroy them. M. Pes re has, how- and thst only in the gro ry 85 be 


e ous 

erting to preternatural rains, such as pollen- | and the rain water from these E other buildings i 

! of rains ured with infusoria, | conducted into a cistern sufficie W ag ensuring | te 

ist rains, the author draws attention “ to the still | an ample supply of soft water ke 255 s pla the 

er phenomena Sag showers of fiesh, fish, frogs, * Orchid house and the 3 pa heat ted from 
worms, re ; 


H ind 
ces of 5 are give m by the — in a subterranean —— ; sin is usually 
Mret by 5 E. fo — of violent | sufficient for heating. The pipes are of two kinds, viz 


“That frogs,” sa says Dr. Thomson, and other | 3441 feet of 3 =s round pipe ; and 4394 feet of flat, apr se Pt ê increase of 
creatures have fallen me — atmosphere, need e D scarcely oF inch thick, One portion moisture b en i mosphe g See ards to the 
but that th e descended in such | of the wand 155 pe — pass under the 5 which are roots or soil, accompanied by a “proportionate i ine 
den of a shower, is formed of open g ** gang the other is placed of temperature : this period of their growth should be 
This subject was discussed | in bey 8 on an 1 e to heat © reservoirs of water, very slow. Summer must be represe grea 
before the Academy of Sciences at Paris, ist heat is 65 ned by means of increase of both heat and moisture; e 
The personal et ee of copper L By these —— also the water for f the plant 
was one of the most interes It was | watering the plants is brought be the proper tempera- into full ferce. And las tly, an autumn mus ated, 
e irten of the a n s, one above to prin ing about maturity, by gradually reducing the 
sided, A heavy rain had fallen, | the other, under the stone 88 which go round et: antity of both heat and moisture, until the P lants are 
covered with toads, |t the house; and by them the latter is heated very again brought to a fit state for repose. t and 
stretched out my hand, which promptly, * 3 apparatus was put up by M. last stages should be of but short duration, ind req 
many of these animals as they fell. The pe a of Versa caution, otherwise much mischief may be done to the 
of them oats I saw them = Pe sate’ e goio of Orchids consisted, plants. : y growing Orchids in the mean — of 
25 roof of a house, and rebound from thence fam, of 640 p get Brag’ iar eres 350 species and maximum of heat and moisture, they will not make 
pavement. a all went off — the channels, varieties. Sin t has been — ore such rapid growth zebut they will become orobat 
y carried e town especially, by thes pasts of — Quesnel of Havre; and healthy, and be le eas: lisbte to receive inj 
ft} so that there are now upwards of 2000 pidh. and the | sudden transiti — — heat, 


Aer treating of nit eet the author | number of oa and varieties amount to 700. The | drought, or — — — of the house can 
— — for safety —Sedulously plants are grown on pieces of peat soil, in ane s and only with certainty be kept regular by night, partieu- 
à 1 electricity. Do not shelter under pots placed on ihe beds and shelves 5 ze pieces of sus- | jaxiy in summer ; therefore the fire should neve r raise 

$ oF come near em; the great majority of acci- | pended 8 ee on the branchy trunks of Ses. All — heat of the principal house na — than 60°, and 

ise from want of this precaution. Do not handle | the Poca an excellent — of growth ; their shout five de egrees less should be tained where the 
metallic bodies: a servant cleaning | good — vigour do great eredit the in- plants are in a less excitable — but as the days 

Kat a window, during a thunder- storm, the — — and skill of Mr. James Craig, who is specially lengthen, so the temperature ma rise, yet it should if 


2 so te at 

— 0 was struck, but not killed; ; a | entrusted with their cultivation. In this splendid col- possible never range higher than 75° by night in sum- 
y during the lection, 166 different species had flowered between the ae? it will occasionally, however, be higher in very 

tl — r seat and experienced a glow. Ist of January and the end 8 J uly, 1848. arm weather, and should be cou unteracted as much ag 


cae pendant, Besides the houses for Orchids, there are various — by evaporation and ventilation by night, and à by 
part of the apart It is not | others for the cultivation of different things, and for both, as well as by shading, by day. Injury is 
We there ig the window an d door, 7 fireplace, | propagation ; altogether the length of these amounts to effected by a sudden rise of temperature by fire heat — 
meat; ig current of air. A bed is the securest e 200 feet. (Annales de la Société centrale d Hor- | winter, while little or none is caused if the rise is 
ed | — “es —— fait to derive iste te ys re de Paris.) occasioned by sun-heat: care should therefore be taken 


lding this gra to guard against a 
9 yourselves Within an Mr. Cwarer’s Nursery, Sarrron War : particularly in matdwib tet’; ; rather suffer a depression of 
„ Sunk in your downy couch, if ye Horkrhocks. — Until within the last few — Eie a few degrees of heat in very severe weather than use 
gentle sl 3 think at least that you | Hollyhock was to be found — in the plantation over-strong fires, which will over-dry the atmosphere, 
tive safety,” or border, but it is — becoming an especial fa- and. on the der hand, create too much moisture, 
25 passages, extracted from the present work, | vourite both with ama and florists. Mr. Chater’s | if water i is supplied. Moisture, however, is by no means 
` ‘he la readers a general idea of the author’s sorts are of a superior Mad; $ regen of the bell-shaped i 
i hapter of t lar 


af 


to Orchids, p — 
he work is devoted to blossom, showing a large eye, his specimens have a * r are impat ient of stagnant damp. From 

iS of the weather, the rules for which are | semi-spherical flower, gr ae A er having a flat, Gordon's Paper in the sailed of the Hort. Soo. 
general be | reg f, and the blossoms so thickly packed 


index, eon Fare a used in meteorology, and a | about 6 acres, and more than one-sixth of <i is Pb sate eg (Fi 5 the NN oa ) 
in splen 4 
sy merce —— e e a vety Me ruby red,| Ler shading be ‘ied jess 2 ‘and o ep 
—— seedling; Enchantress, deep rose; a gran number of hours, as the ces. Th at of 
n Memoranda. light rose; Attraction, elegantly veined with puce and | the solar ray is very aa: too powerful now, then . it 
M. PESCATORE, at CEL LEÈSAINT-CL LOUD, silver; tion te : : 
out of ‘he Chateau of Celle, and | ground ; Commander in- chief, remarkable for immensely | to be ripening their gro 3 
a nts, we enter long spikes of flowers, some of them 9 feet high; Queen, | daylight and pe nag i ag sunshine they can 
uprights — sash-frames are iron; a delicate blush ; Aurantia, salmon; Pulchella, roseate; case of Orchids this 
tly constructed aceordin ng to the de- Pallida, lilac; Magnum Bonum, a rich glossy maroon ; $00 leaves, and pseudo-bulbs may be thoro 
ction pr M. Pellechet, architect, | Snowball, purest white; Black Prince, sable black; matured. Those which are already in this 
j at ormosa, dark ee Mulberry superb, Delicata, nearly so, should be remov 
7 — 3 4 inches; it is almost u e Mr. C. exhibited —— n, at Chis- Great care should be ts no 
Hide dr by 28 feet 2 inches. . A terrace | wick, some of his Hollybosks, whic were grown in into a new growth at 
Bide of 3 on the other a view is pots | f dhe at the Royall ger W ‘properly mat 


2 1 
* In > 2 x Calendar of Operations 
Tin te principal instene appendix there is a short description | through between them. Mr. C.'s mursery oceupies en P y 


a — % c .... 
536 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. | [Aue 


PPP . 25, š 
draugne upon the stored energies of e plants w pac but 2 filling the pot, the la ers are laced o | Focke, &e.; 2, Asplenium Rute-muraria, a sraao T — 
materially interfere with their next ‘production 4125 de, filling up — and slightly ly presi ing É aa soil 2 grams te tee 2 — rh common Pers, 
i biums of the D. nobile character, ogs They ma — be watered, and after having 15 in mountainous Dryopteris, grows in dry, ston anne, da ; 

which are sufficiently advanced in growth, should stood an hour they should face — into a elose cold frame q =o n, gro snows tal task a, ied perl jum vulgare a 
be removed to a cooler house, w ey should be for a few days, after which they may gradually be of der walls, fully exposed to the oun; 6, Lasta 2 — 
supplied with a moderate temperature, abundance of inured to the air. Little attention will be required for | moist banks, skirts of woods, Ke. For spinulosa, 
air, and scarcely any sea till their stems are ripened | the present, more than keeping them occasionally sada these Ferns you had better . — 
and their flower buds formed. Those Orchids which are | watered and shaded from excessive sun. Look to which is "usually called Cow 3 the Jrifolium medias 
in a growing state pens be placed in the most favour- | Pinks that are ripening seed; examine the pods and kee that Mr, Cuthbert Johnson states that phe Gesrre. Borer 
able positions, and en by a high temperature, from wet. Alpine seedlings will be flowering soma of Trifolium pratense; p possibly more thanone ki coasts 2 variet 

m 

so long as the strength of ca will admit of such a | remove the pips, if good, as it weakens the 3 ée ** AND Gr —— iI D. we 
3 n should now be e between ch at this season . re ea em to bloom, Atte you say is given between these ge peraia — — 
those plants whieh 2 — Th prover Mat ike blaze of beauty — directions — 6 is wrong. 811 is rightly stated in ‘School * you name 
between this time and the end of November, and those HARDY FRUIT DEP An writer of the work alluded to is not a botanist, 2 
which are to ing midwinter and ear IL in or mailing l asata sn irenda ee 9 
rd 1 a third Rev will „re of koa par. 2 now be gone over ste last time this season, 5 nil ous mating aaa ional thinuiags b Jou have on 
principally that the Ae etter chance of ripen- | is excellent, Cut back Laurels in A yr Besar tion, Acacia timber 


2 
oO 
a") 
* 
4 
S 
4 
E 
85 
EA 
® 
@® 
2 
5 
. 

8 
2 
p 
Eh 
O 
x 

K 


especially for ae res de services. By reducing | ing, from its closer pro — to the wall. ut: 
sen : rf Proli 
the thing to 8 the tig! nd ase W male. ling eig fruit of e e is gathered, as many of: hani: Sne et ee y flesh,’ parting 


end edi to wath cael’ po fay m, | shoots shoul Enough | Ruvsars: J Galloway. We cannot 
aim : 8 n 
according asy kogo ne to each | has been aid . Strawberries in former Calendars, of the finest and largest sorta are th th 8 Three 
the particular treatment which 2 Bes! demands, — all that is now necessary is to urge the early com- | Linneus, and Myatt’s Victoria.\|—Agricola à —— 1 
N N a pletion of the work connected with the summer manage- ding Rhubarb plants, and in autumn mal make ts pana , 
o plan which have been recently ment of this crop, especia ly in making new plantations > Feat between the rows, and the plants 24 feet apart | 
8 or "shifted into w ill are now growing vigor- | and cutti h — cr 
2 4 Fühl h and cutting away the runners from the older ones. The | Roses: J C. The Géant des ig pn Rose was raised 
yusly. This state of things should be pel ice Mi by a old pberry canes which have done — should] Person somewhere south of Lyon and sent to the 2 
liberal temper: ature, 9 however by sufficient | now be cut away and the young ¢ commie tied koninin goo of Paris, who | let it out in the winter of 1847. Rose 
ventilation to prevent undue elongation of the leaves, | their pl ; i Vinto: B O- W. The = fibres” are Toots, sesame ae 
i t places 4 at 5 e same tim uxuriant one branch — 
any v ery lu ones es in consequence of their being kept in 
to 8 their tissue before the arrival of the should d to the bei hh f about Dife wiry damn atmosphere ne 6r g kept in a warm and 
** A he top height of about 5} feet. A y p a: phere—the original roots being much colder, 
short da atmosphere should be — 1 dung, forked: in anion gst the Wi Such fibres do no harm, and are extremely common; but 
3 generally, and especially to those intended for | much assist welling: end tipeniag ‘of ** buds 105 they ought not to continue to grow after the fruit is set, No 
fruiting early n x t spring, as it is very important that mpe year’s — z lated — — ai hight sare — mouldy, 
shoul eres a strong sturdy habit, and devote : E C. It ie be desirable, forte purpose of tang 
whole energy to the elaboration of sap rather than State of the Weather near London, for the, week ending Aug. 25, 149, frale trees, to have kitchen garden walls not lower ove thea 
to the increase of the sizə of the plan ist the as observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiewic 3 those han ng outh, eouth-eas or 
swelling fruits with liquid manure, but admit abundance Moon’s|| Barometr. || Tozamomeren. n 2 8 Flued walls $ renee as — 5 thal Pe 
Ps Aug. W. ~ 
of to prevent the crowns growing too luxuriantly. Age. Aar. Ain Mar In- Mean id. Rain,] counties; 14 inches is the a thickness, but 9 inches 
VN anIEs.—Pay every attention to the preservation of | Pda 1 2 || moa 2.872 eas = = Wien, piers aa be strong — — a good foundation, | 
va 7 7 y 01 ATERPROOF COMPOSITION FOR CALICO: Omega. Th 
Grapes from the effects of damp, by avoiding the | Satur... 1s} @ || 30.016 | 20.993 || 69 | 40 | 54.5 || W: 00 old ale Tanedo oil, 1 oz. of sugar of lead aa tig pe 
y. 19 272 E sug oz. of white 
ling of water about houses, and by admitting a | Monday 2| 3 , 60" | 610 |] "N. 00 ar of lead must be ground with 
free current of air through the h in all Tues. . 21 30.1% | 30.330 || ga | $8 | eso || SW 00 0 ol > Siainder, incorporated 
e house ina yourabl — 3 30.323 | 30.230 || 78 | 58 | 68.0 || S.W. [00 quacnity — the 8 and added to the at SEP inco 
weather, and accompanied by a little fire during rain | Thurs... S 35132 30.125 fo 1 | 620 8. . ‘00 tobe —— a 
or fogs. Th uses xt now, if possible, be freed ——— aid en! bya a short time when ex 
teal x A p Average.. E 177 | 20.115 || 72.0 | 50.4 | 61.2 0.01 osed to the air; —5 va — — as nile a and heat as anya 
entirely ts in po an 1 are . o re- | aug. 17—Clear; A Tnight. — 5 glass, and peor ot bee ildewed.t 
main, they should be of kinds re little or no 2 Ez jam Fy ee and fine; slightly c'ouded; cold at | MTSO. 8 a a 1 The e tie tubes used by chemists are 
wat r. 8 wasps are now e troublesome, —  20—Overcast ; clou y: overs ast and very calm. usually made, of in — rab re „ 
their ingress should be prevented by fixing some thin . rer good reason to bollore that the Shamrock of the pra 
r ting o er the mov ble 1 ne the me 23- Unifor — nee clon — diy ana a aas was pn eree F. We presume that Broad. 
0 growing boots, w ether of leaders or emperat the wi below the eans may be preserved in the same way as green Peas,— 
7 State of the Weatherer Gener A aeg e Chiawitk during th L. Your Mulberry has its roots into a cold, bad bottom, 
A aoai Da Popped, aan erin r 80 ensuing Seager mek forthe . oil by some such means as y ou describe. ‘The 
late from without ripenin iberry lik h, light all 
sufficiently early to benefit the Vines in return. ? ine 828 238 ga or Frevelling: Winds. the ma fatter wit . — 3 —— “Pra 3 ar, Jersey 
liéwever. must taken not to stop closely the | «4% 85 ELS] $8 curs in oiis J ; 2. * it is rather late. tstemon gentiae 
> z i j: 5 and Sept.) e | FSS e | which it) of Rain. E gj alg Ee | — — coceinewin Cans monies ramidalis, a and doable whita 
7c 
A in such cases to burst the buds | Sunday26| 723 | 48.8 | 55.5 lin. F-1 3] sis] of él 3 two parts light turiy loam Tand 0 veg 
too near the base of the shoots. Mon. 27 730 | 50.1 | 61.8 f 8 sraa h s ner rotted ey with a nae ‘sand, and plunge it 22 
Tues — pas 1.3 620 11 0.0 — 542 2| bark bed where it can have a top h „ 
STER FLOWER @ Thurs. 20 719 | soo (08 `s 8 ac ara winter and from 60° — 75° or — 90 rey heat in 
Friday 31} 70. 49.6 ; J 1 85 summer. ass cylinders are better than W nes 
dener should cet, further advanced, every gar- Satur. 11 foo | BS 204] 11 130. 2442 63 3 Cucumbers, Pel "goniums are shown at Chiswick in the 
„ as nearly as may be, Whether — temperature during the above p occurred on the ist Soape s round bushy plants, — x: nches or more 
Sept, 1845—therm, 88 dag. ; end the lowest om —— 38 deg. h and a e ch through. The s are 8 
el r 1 1 241 : — a roe u ly towards the sides of the 2g and then they are 
dass es to Correspondents, wed to grow upri Strawberries may be kept clean 
ey P = as well as to those =e ch he is n W pro- | Back Numsers : Pull price will be piven fie for Nos, 42, 43, 46, 4 y the adhe 3 Roberta” n mee Bh ae 
pagating. It is mee we this immediately, as his 45, 49, 50, § for 1848, 1, Gastioyanum will succeed in a tub in a com = — 
ust it. If his room is de- BEE kney. You may take é honir on hitewashing the roof would 19 cause th e appear 
, he must either restrict sansen 3 vein sie manner pointed out in arecent Number; but as | pn cen Which your leaves present, They have been injama 
— bas P 5 the season is advanced, do it sparingly. Cement the hive 5 some deleterious action inside the hous What kind 
thn rtain ddi Sres er loss where it joins the 7 7 before the end of the season; but b othouse: sree! greenhouse, or hardy t$ 
2 wae 0 l sae yp oe its are of pts — — — 1b —— all o that would prevent the escape „ SEEDLING FLOWERS. 
urable, an ough expensive in the first Ba from the bees. : J E, Scarcely different from A. * ata, and, 
outlay, are cheapest in the end ma very commo! Books: H D. Pie Greenhouse Hotho » aan variety, 
d n make- 3 use, and Stove 2 ‘anything iäferiór to that sort.*—W H. A very nice 7 
shift pit is built of t erue they last pis season, and and Whit ng’s Flower Gardening for Ladies,” reviewed at 2 h purplish- violet flowers, rather smaller than its parent 
2 90 atens), 
very warm, are in appearance very untidy ; and Focustas: EO, You have possibly taken floweri * th in size 
4 $ s ; : ng shoots ; | DAHLIAS : A P. Your buff seedling is very good, bo 
on this account are reat st into back pre- they will not strike with you. — pet RANE igen growing | and shape; as N 55 of pota ii 3 regulated the are 
a species of locality which ought not shoots, and you will succeed, The ark applies to] well cupped, and the flower well up in the centre. 
well garde —— it st a eliotropes and 8 nice show variety. G. Princess Louisa: Petals 
. ver, quite possible to aoe Inox T C. Many causes prevent the setting | crimson, white in the centre, stained wi et ; good in 
a very cheap and useful which shall 0 nos but eee e iron pipes are not among those | shape, texture, size, and contrast of colours; well filled up 
1 k g neatness and good order; to do tad ae save Rot know 0 Such 3 are little employed, in the eye, snd possessing ag pth of petals. 4, 
this, mark out the interior le a “ o experience in Have any of our cor- ros a flower, if constant, like the bloom sent. 
seat CHN ae; l ngth and width of the pit, respondents? T. C.“ phe that | his Melon n pit is heated | Eric J Leach, Fairbairn’s large flowered of 
immediately without line insert at convenient | . — hot water passing through such pipes, that his fruit E. — is a great improvement on the species. 
tall >P short. . 8 bout 4 inches square, usi perience „ well in! his pit, and that his ex- the flower-spikes and the individual blossoms are very large, 
pate * 1 ears, and the latter are highly i 
ot beicks should be laid an at the front, A single course — : ZC Y. Ventilate both at front back. You | Fucustas: A L. dey Sinski rellen on lobes of thi 
4 in a line with the Dont, to cut annot much air when — mo co. i 2 d t others; colours 
off. the se: J or, A y — BF = riagi on — account from in tex- 
— cation between the groun the me “hs T. ALBAN’S GRAPE A, specim thro t „ coroll. sy i — „ flowers rs good 
oy oa abo Thin 4 in bondig ses should ba failed ligh it w — Mk question of the — of thie and itt ee ht and proportions, but rather small ‘ 
t rown LapioLus: 8 B. Tolerably distinct in colours an 5 
upright sonthe Mires 55 or à inch boarding oa — —— of —— — appear to be the — — of HOoLLYHOC — R C. Very 1 — more parti 2 
feather edges outside; a 5 inch board nailed alon late laterals. Mr. Thompson is endeavouring to ascertain shades of rose and pi 20, and 11. In light-col 
i ? g the and p ink, in 9, 15 
top hole, "pha aaa i in effect | 9 t se Fagen Se oy Albans, and) due time | ones, 15. 16, and 19 are ve Ja fhe tho shade 
i : . wn. Ifi Bags stinct variet, coloured” ones, 2, 3, 8, 14, and 25 are = 
w | 2, 
by a hollow wall built of "e —— the Chasselas Musqué, which is one of the finest — rieties, 12 and 24 are showy, while 4 le 4 is a good dark — 2 
work is tarred 2 . ira —— nios: clear yellow. 3 and 9 are the finest and best 
many years, A sowing | YY: “Toy halk, Your inquiry was accidentally mislaid, for which received.” 
may now be made for flowering earl we have to apologise. There is no objection to cutting the bawas: °H B C. Not in an examinable state when in colour 
a a lie are — very close; in the first instance it will be disfigured by | Petarcosioms: R W. Your scarlet is very i 1 
ee ee e earlier = the operation; but it will recover by this time twelvemon and truss to Tom Thumb, but the petals are a little 
next if th is 2 t suffis 
xt year, and as frame room in spring | Lr e aoa well managed. and consequently the flowers better in shape, butstill no now 
Gy may be oraa ia A ort: while to cconomise it; ¼—— Ä . many Sth bees aatage in eG 
m ndaka Peik . unless it has some advan 
3 e garden, and after wards Mn na G. Aeae ap jages one 3 ia 0 pper petals dark crimson, — ae 
Pionir? „ ag ith 11 7 —— air, by having with rosy purple; s bright a red, w middling, 
RIST FLOWERS. een m tter or leaves, or acon ie of — centre; texture, . and size Loe time 
The early layered Carnations and Picotees will vad will — 5 ous n grow if such mud if it forms upper petals a little cramply.*—J ext 8 at 
be i a to pot off. The great ee N — Petunias: & J. Flowers rosy pink near the ood, 
Fes =A 25 great point will] Naurs or —.— ra ‘We c — undertake the labour of | white in the centre; eye slightly veined, size an shape mat 
y the soil well sweetened by frequent naming dried Plaats . The parcel is returned through — colours delicate, texture thin and flabby.» S B. he howers 
gs, but also completely fro: * ata —E J. It is probably Angelica ng but Um.| withered to determine their real m olling © 
vermin, No care is too ¢ liege — i — aero be — determined —.— t their fruit. up in paper singly as you have done is a — Lng ers now 
be better directed than great, r t can acca icosandra is an Indian plant; it map n o English | Vensenas: P. Not sufliciently distinct from many ably near 
1 searching me eee — M. T and 2, Medicago —.— ; 3, Geranium] in ec oe A RN ery good, but remarka? 
s wireworms, —— Many an amateur Pusillum. -le Dublin, It is not an Aglais, nor at all like] Comte de Paris, both in size and colour.® — W E de 
deplore the of so me scarce and beautiful one ; we are un rp eres WON It is nearly related to red, “fading to a bright rose near the centre; 4 f 4 little 
, when it is tos Psi n Limon miri — ——— —¾ history 1 and | flowered variety, good in-éclours, $, bright scar ane 
85 Arg kit has tae ee the pop, | serrulata. any fruit Jen you —.— send af .— Fern is Pteri larger in the flower than Boule de raoe Jour. 4, 
j vatica, We “wa colour. 3, pale blush, common and „ and rather 


. 1 oi 1 —— mens. J R B. i deep + a nice large flow 
= make it a rule never to name —— flowers. 285 Leora pg eH — rosy’ lac, tolerably good in 
ab tobe bates of Briain, we, therefore infer 1 to be . pale lilae — el ie lis 
‘ e age splenium e or blush, not very un : 
Adiantum nigrum, a common Fern, growing on dry wails, | best and most novel“ 


Fi 


te are well drained ; 
za ant, * be carefull 


small, — 
the 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


— TURNIP SOWING. 
LONDON MANURE folly for Te inv ing 
= ii more 1 for Turnips and 
2 —.— 1 With the e grea A — poe 
ab U s in 2 * driest — — to secure a re plant, and 
y — weight acre, They 2 call attention 


hich is prepared with 


? 

j w rs 
ore ood co AL LE 

CAL Felten respectfully solicit the attention of 
Horticulturists to uch improved method of 
the Tank System 10 Fin orion Pro — ating Houses, 


— tmos =| heat as well as bottom-heat is 


— — 
Na AND HEALY’S NEW BOILER.— The 
modification of their Boiler (before published), 
expressly for the large Conservatory, Chiswick 
ms, where it is now at work. From the 9 
H. have been able to rranted 


boi 
m 1500 feet of inch pipe. They 
eh up up at f the mai Botanic Gardens, Kew. 
ller boilers upon the sa — 
ben end HEALY, 130, ‘Fle 


t-street, London, 
ROYAL LETTERS 
PATENT. 


see Hortonas, Go., to the vast superiority in 
possessed by his PATENT HOUSES, which he will 
ot =G 


q y; one pr 
sued or putty, and the 
95 the glass put in with 
Sashes, requiring no paint. ren: 7d. to 9d. per ft. 

HEATING ring no paia T 3 


, London 
riea an E 3 — 
— allway — 

ESBIT's Academy, in 


Pp J 
5 eti ic, Mensuration, Gauging, 
ing, &c., are published by Lona- 
— 8 å may bo had of all Booksellers. 
1 an be had on application either 


WOR ORK H OT- WATER APPARATUS, 
GREENHOUSES, &c. 
BAKER, MANOR-HOUSE, — 
KINGS. @’S-ROA AD, HELSEA, Manufacture 


a ; WIRE A to 8 —— f one 


Country, and Drawings and 
„or —— — aon 
ENT, for internal Stucco, instead 


ustic 
iar e oc at ths Wore = 
s. London 


Sons, Nine Elm 


re pro- 
consequently 


gaie requires neither 
J. B. y of sand. deed 
J. B. Warre and Sons, Milbank-street, West- 


110 b WATER e a Ts 


(YDRAULTC RAM 
Maker, 70, Strand, 


spi 


g 


which | Sep 


Stock, 7 
in Trainers, — for 
„ &. HOR- 


i 8 


about 


in the m 


537 


TO ORCHID GROWERS, 
— 130, Fleet-street, respect- 
attention to the method of warming Orchid 

e fo have had the honour of — — the Orchid 
Houses at ent 8 5 

Royal Botanic Gar 

Horticultural 5 "Chiswick, additions to the House. 

Also the Orchid ee of the following distinguished 
growers of this! —.— ing class of plants. 

The — so . Farnham Castle. 
J. Lyo sq., Ladis 


r, Esq., Hod 
ea Henderson, Pine-appie Place. 
J. Schröder, Esq., S 
Han bury, Esq., oy sor Ware. 
W. Webb, Esq., Clapham. 


The Agricultural Gazette, it from dae 


URDAY, AUGUST 25, 1849 


TINGS FOR THE TWO ee ee WEE 

Ar, 

CLUBS.— Se ept. 
Cyst. —Sept. 4: 
: Burton 


KS. 
land 
1; Newcastle, t Oa akley, W. 
5 55 South Devon.— 
on-Trent, Ottery St. Mary.—Sep. 7: Halesworth, Debenham. 


Farm — 
aoe 


the side of a river in a remote 5 county 
a traveller once saw, or he saw, Post 
Tanding; with the flowing direction on i it: 
ossing this here Ford you must bear to the 
n you come 805 — middle of the stream. 
N. B. Them as can’t r etter go rou 
by the Bri fen two ‘ales 73 r down. g 
It was a witty sc at wrote, or a witty ae 
that invented, this considerate gt 
benefit A unlet 


hat 
epigrammatic shape the great sodil 1 5 of the 
present day, exhibited in no e of pe veraa in 

such striking breadth of c ou 
rage ea man i with his e it — 
d 


‘h that t the little par or Res 


o do it: up to this point all is harmony and accord. accord, 
bka by a doubt i r 


osed to be defined, ony into 
uproar, and the w sd argh sympathy i is chilled into 
dissent o two minds are agreed even at 
threshold. ite while the Socks 3 the patient 
is left to ae e himself as best he can ; just so much 
worse o was balaie in ee as indi- 


an he 
vidual mae se and private benevolence are too 
often suspended for the pa A: issue of public 
sentiment. 


4 
. 


complaining evidence. in 

large towns, nay jis Ae are in constant 9 
which bring som medy, in mare direc 

direct, for the 8 misfortune, where w exists, 
of faculties early and utterly . The 

bbing of mind, in 


examples, of virtue and vice, of ignoranc 
edge, the occasional visit to the Institute or reading 
te the popular lecture perhaps, where scientific 
ruth, or Truth of some sort, is dressed up in words 
at harder learner the full- 
child, can carry away at 

pen * Sof » “These 8 other para d 
acting in the aggregate, help to clear the mental 
atmosphere ma the dullest eamiprehension, and 
ity ¢ 


well remarked, “and you have accomplishe hf. + dl 
the shen difficult a i of = education; he is no |} brick, pref thorougi hoe bate 0 1 H Gras 1 — 
longer ignorant in the true sense of the word: or (to the R ng eye, where the very air is 70 010 from 
apply the cunning moral of the Sign-post) enable | its true proportions, where the physiology of earth, 
him to read the Postscript, and he will read and the chemistry of heaven are either banished os 
Direction for himself. Leave him in ignorance of disfigured,—a compensating influence pervades 
. | this, cree you address that to him in spirit and whole vital experience of the ath 


gain an agin has this ‘ traveller’s tale’ jerked 
itself ‘info: m 


tion is as = 
ds of the Apocrypha, “ How can he 0 
Wispom that holdeth the Plough, and that glo rieth 
= the goad, that driveth oxen, and is occupied in 
8 blo — 1 and whose talk is of the breed of 
u 


amongst those signs of t 
e to face in the crowded 
rare of the street, er mix 


ar Cotto n mi ven the te of 
bark Set movements ” in own vil- 
—when the janati N of E Stock- 

5 T es rare holiday in 


T | pe coping from 


As rate towns 
the firs 1 e. to 3 off the, iron 5 
of feudal serfdom, mi 5 aos seem destined in a later 


5 to achieve ancipation from the 
noy of the mind, “roti that tyranny of 4 
—for it is a hie virtually blinds out 
the A world fro rom the eye, even whilst 
e bodily organ is reflecting the richest treasures 
„of the fields oods, the landsca 
sky, teeming with multitudinous know- 


we 
outspread of wonderment and puzzie to the ignorant. 


The aiy of ee says 
ar Letters, informs 


und thinkers of all ages, 
ar 


IEBIG, in one 
us th at the 


g the 


the 
mplified and popularised 
as the pae it is — 55 e a 
the din r the 
humbler appetite of —— has bee en sisted, 
3 oy or girl, neatly dressed 
annered, stands by the ieee kam 
n the calls of the little bell that t signals ‘the 
ficken” twist or the 8 roving; 
these (for 5 i hat 
3 befor pen to rem t again 
e whit 2 to be don +g Ge said, or thought, 
the great subject of Epucartion, oe pertaining 
a i classes 
ae ay Pe — — as a 
ss condemnation, engrav ved upon The 
= ual ae. cut 
upon y the laws o 
cruel Athens ? 75 Are the pleasures of that 
divine 3 
5 senn and crabbed as go foo Is suppose, 


and of Science. 


in days like 
55 we peck the ve ae 
, and ie A 


f slates and pens and paper, 


mit 
ti 

Se science of f N 
e the servants of man, whilst 
to their 
e the of ma T o govern his 
will, wh 1. 885 . into their hidden 

connections, he might overn them. 
Would it be possible to express in better contrast 
than these shed do, the difference between the edu- 

n 


control. 


r ideas 
atte education, naturally of its errors v 
ver the have been; oi are sidia 
certain te ripp 
bitiren —.— of books and 


the material o 

5 be cen for the end. "The cote cal of 
reading, of writing, and of applying these two facul- 

es to number as expressed in cyphers, to space as 

figures as expressed by 


d by linear s, to mas 
no = constitute education than the 
t of manual use of a tool constitutes 


an 
compre. 


n sh 
those 2 daily a avocation tien, most of all men’s, 
them 


distant as yet—‘ Small as 


m y 
the far horizon ; but it is one 


— ea 


takes th 


7 us as 

overlooked in practice, am 

individual trial and failure sisffered in after life, b 
wit, 


e ue of te tool for the mate of the 
n was well m 


538 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZ ET TE. 


to the — wee for a Farm, who said 
in ie ee for 
a 


CESTER’: CESTER'S rep! 
he de would © 28 
hie had bee 


u are 


Bedford, for their plough, a 


To Jonny Howakp and Son, 
for their horse 


Medal; — their three-horse draught bars, ; 
hay-rake, 4l. 
To J. “kmawoon, Tranent, East Lothian, for his two-drill 


To. D. MILLER, . county Louth, for his ploughs, 27. 
10 


1 
rehended, o n 
ughed at, or — 44 probably bo 
iple at really great 
to 87 3 of | * 


n day, w. 
è term, he would have probably smiled with as 
right pai will as he had himself been laughed at 
by the o 
All Knowledge > * The paradox of 
The ‘Theo 


Pg more — 
‘own 1 78 and th 8 scentless invisible 
‘carbone acid °? Who would be- 
hat this by ain} parting with its 
That the ponderous pid 
Aree is but a depos it from the earbon of the v 
ess air ? 
And who does believe it, or any other fact of 
Science, if he has been allowed to rush u 
without one on of — he — a in the acquire- 
ment of her upon the lon 
jou 
contact w e powers of ae unprovide 
ubdue them to 1 5 
he true Genii of 
or 


le governor, 0 
the loser in the Gitet with those: . i tense by 
eee —. — 8 b surrounded, 
succession, says a recent 


Mas 100 ind and claimed kindred with 
a 


ns of progressive improvemen limited 
125 the ability of che e to e 
their resources, unti as bee 


101. N. Do 
É To HENRY SHERIDAN and Co., Dublin, for 3 horizontal | > 


T | merit o the aoum of implements and cattle 


pon Nature, | 


ng | u 
rney s a practical life ro thh Petits him into daily 
with 


the 
5 culturist i is | 


To W. 
cart, 2l. 
o Rrenu 
apparatus, 80. 
mill, 10. 


; for way corn drill, 5%. 
and CHANDLER, Salford, for Pope steaming 
"te their chaffing machine, Ms ‘or their Linseed 


engine, 


Belfast, for 1 


P 


; for his churn, 


Turnip slicer, 4l. ; 
ies COTT, 
0 Jot 


; for their lever Turnip cutter, 1 


Bel fast; 


— „Ballinasloe, for his estate model 

To F. LINEHAN, 8. E., Carlow, for his drainage level, a oo 
a Medal. 

We have only to add to the above that, let a 


what it may, it is su 8785 one part of the Society s s 
plan that its influence be exerted upon all classes of 
farmers in Ireland ; and we — this would be more 
likely of attainment, 
on one of the days to one shi 


ORTH ESSEX FARM, 


a 
numerous labouring 8 
120 of which are arable, 20 a 


The rental is oil may 


May requ 


Clove er, — (consisting of N d Clover and Trefoil) 
or hay, and part op es of white 
Glover and Trefoil) — h 
ah „ 
As it re 
erops, which varies considera 
son, the oe may be considered asa fair statement. 
Ma at ae aani Carrots, » per are 15 to — tons. 
5 to 6 qrs. 
* 35 6 ” 
* 55 4t 
and Pea: Very v variatie 
00 crops ‘are entirely consumed on 
urzel and Swedes chiefly by ral bk, 
pox and; pigs, and the white Turnip 
are mown è 


7 d con- 
sideration ; w ho ail ie 
to supply ; and “eps earnestly invite every 
pression of o from — correspondents on a 
a 80 important, o on 


of — sme the late m meeting of THE 
AcRICULTURAL — T Socrery at Dub As 
instances of its we may record the facts that 
no prizes were award the i ents till the 

ra large n of visitors, who would 
— ave been guided by the seen 
: and that the reported prize list of 


sowing | Whatever is 
— 


five men 


a ject most intimate 
the 8 of land whith I have en: wished 


| appreciation of its peen 12 


Having always an ample supply arising from the farm- 
factor ora stall-fed bea sts, I seldom purchase any other 
Of the 


l} to 2 tons per aere, is 


horses kept is six; four of 
used regularly for ploughing, the others assist 
d used for vari 


omen 
are engaged chie stock, two 
men are — with the els and the remaining 


to 118. per week. B. 


THE ar ge a a OF A ee 
THERE is a subj 


be taken 


5 up by some of „your correspondents qualified | 


. Munrer, 77, 3 Frederick- street, Dublin, for his PEA 


dJ. rp uz, Ardee, county Louth, for their farm 
ed 


5L 
AT AEA county Down, for his two-horse | į 


if the admission res was reduced h 
Hin ng. 3 


wedes, Carrots, or Tares, to be co 
ips. 


os 4 the amount of Reed ies of 8 “different | 
bly with the soil and sea- | 


crop, which th 


rform the ordinary labour of the farm. The g 
| ploughmem receive 118. 6d. and 10s. 6d. per week with | go 
| perquisites, the other men from 9 


| been first errand boy, 


the stages in ey 
Some have bee 
farme 


ontracted no 


from 


at the m 


further 


re ki base 


fo llows the undulations, and the 
cases. 


the question 


nt of estates duly qualified for such en- 
Possessed e smallest share o 


course that those 
d show to — world their 
inting as their 
possessing re- 


managers and rep 
ae AA 
unty I resi „ 4 * 1 
merely of the rest of the Kingdom) no ‘lifieatyon 
chief 


fx hemo, Taste 


the domesti 
pe et fall — his old habitual o 


to his attorney in all point 

with his property, ona to entrust ae estates to those 

mpete = to advise him iews, 

e aid of the lawyer, whose objects and desires are often 

3 repes with Objects it is more im 
. 


STE 
Ir can never be de 
Every point established i is, —.— 


The pate to on “which lan 
The theory se land- surveying 
think in 


| at once clear it of 


e of of 
the 


n much 
apoi estates, x igh g of the — 


to carry o 


EEP AND LEVEL LAND, 
emed a waste of timo 40 work @h 
a 8 in philosophy, although the results may nd 
great p pape 


esent t question < 
is m 


o be of 
and the 
‘ord to eave be 


but I 


ita see aa 


surface is 
Not if their inclinations 


without 


is te "i 


t 

J 

— 
aly mit 
7 

p 

* 


ir 
elu of prin hen 
may y iF their application- to 8 — ! 
The only way to a this is 
from whic 


= 
} 
i 


is respect it resembles exercise in 


THE AGRICULTURAL bari Bid 


wever gern he om "grg = emay 


nally necessary to full developments | w 
ts 


ical thickness of the 


rise * ‘yet the o air does nof act 


argument, OF su 
2 fs) position at an * aled necessity in the growth 
yo 
e pmi. is 2 fen $ thing as absolut te con- 
i t 


aspace with houses, how will — put other 
— 12 e But if yon have stems of Wheat 


ie it may be taken for a maxim, that the more are te be investe 
* from the land the less they require from the 
such an incre 


i cag is thick; on poor, the stems 


ilis not opposite in its nA eae to the plant below.” 
—+ be 3 inches apart, it would be a steep hill 


e the upper one overtop the other by 
@qurter the length of its ear.“ Is it n or 
* y grains that fills the bushel? So, 
it me in any degree, the effect 


if ximation be only z inch, it is equal to 
22 quarter of an acre in an 8-acre field, or about 
in ° 


ö up. e will only observe, that, ridge 
In high as you like, you cannot practically take ad- 
Nee of any but the lowest stratum of the n 


ae land is for the most part * maxi 
| din hilly countries, on the flat, at the pad or at the 
btless on hill side 2 = best soil has 


r 
pE 


par 
— gibt On a naturally dry sil, we |Ì 


er slight undulations toa 2 
worth an arg 


— 

az 
— 
8 
a 
3 7 

oF 

a 

2 

. — 
8 

7 


in extreme, You 8 t have the greates 
one way without exposing yourself se more 
isad ge e We 


not formed to draw food from the air, 
b m 


h 
an incline on the of the land, 
Croft, Darlington. The better quality 


b. 

Will feed be absolute calm, * 
Sis on riy exclusively on one layer of air, 
tases fee] ee flat, and a plant to leeward will in 
S mrio. of from rai 55 male — 


we must defer 
> Mr. Chay Bo Boxe for we have 


y 
h agree with us that this su 9 
— & nt. ] z sufferin 


Prese 


— — — are to aceru 


It needs 1 — — ingenuit, 


„decrease. The 
to do ‘with it; "Te although slants for | j 


ea h c 
1 my argument is, “that, in 
as ears % u 2 each other, m 
stems be appro use the one up t the 


t tu 
3 bright eee before —— in the trader, the 
t dy? Hav 


— “ “Suppose two adjacent stems of equal G 


e 
case development oft the roots o 


he: duct thei ag duri 
conomically and productively ; 1 4 e insult 0 
e n Those who t think they ean | how to 


cal e 
to put = in coal = heartily sing ‘tis, 


as the very term 


this — 1 indioates, os fore the — of m oney in pe 


ales 2 —— tran — in — * most — 

7 engage without the fear of being — ered rash. 
t is strange to see active farm 

rents for inferior land 3 1. —— a — — 

of the sea, they might have the choice of land of the the 

most fertile description at almost a nominal rent. It 
ust make an 


lk of e fw 
so good, what might not be anticipated from improved 
culture? There is a description of turf in Fand quité 
1 I can 


08 
not help faneying that ir this was cha and pulverised, 
i * ke an ex 


t Po 
heavy land; I should like much to try some of — if the 
ee could be im orted into this cou try at a 


ur small expense per ton. What is thee Gasette’s opinion 


res 
rf; if scientific farm a favourable 
opinion of the suggestion, I trust 
ill give their opinions o asa guide to 
amateurs, ibility of converting th 
manure for the land is much i 
I feel confident the Agricultural Gazette will, in the 
course of weeks, contain numero 
n the point in question. Falcon. [We believe 
there nowhere ange oney to be made by 
than in Ir But, so far as we could during 


land. gathe 
a iia s 22 this is because of cheap labour ra 
than land. No doubt, to men of 
- — 


which the wretehed tenantry of large 


rative Value of Sloping and Level Ground. 


n 
ge distriets in that 
unfortunate country are able to obtain it — — 
g The Compar. 


Fairs — 9 — 3 a = 27 2 or 
slope, p 

pale — ahead aisd of te r — which the 

1 ne denies the space 


plan P 
P forded b by sloping ground is to that afforded by level 
age as the hypothenuse of a triangle is to its base 
r that ace is as desirable for — 
8 +h p 


Now, these facts, perena considered, must prove to 
demonstration that sloping ground is superior to level 
- | ground in its capability of producing more, let alone 
all consideration of aspect. J. Bailey Denton, 

Horses: Norwich Royal . — Show.—I have 


read the letter from à e Browne to 
chester in a late Number of the Agricultural Gazette, 
to | I can testimon 2 jadgment of three his ý — 

am confirmed in it by the ju 
> | men, all of whom are first-rate j — — ithe 
out hesitation I say the j of 
p Council of the 
tural Society, arrived at the Norwich show tend to 
There we 

horses ee that it is to me wholly 


t and n — 
surprising that the judges could any how have awarded 
w | the pem — P say nie) wi which they did to those 
el 


in 
— Tees for J 5 ou have more than 
once recommended some one to — — Larch poles 
for conveying liquid manure. Bamboos w be better, 
tradin Indies, 


ro- | and, near any sea-port g wi wae ta Wol 


y 
can be got chea ply and, if in any demand, 
A canvas tube or two, with an iron or gutta perelia 
ring made to slide like a telescope, over a stout 


urng 
it is | or other = swith might irrigate a 
of furrow, 


considerable 
spreader, a considerable breadth of 


P 
— =. 


is to 
Aer 


y | empire. 
co kak of the mind of the 
& question like the present, | 


P | enternally of the shell, which can determine the sex, 


The largest egg each hen lays — be found to produce 
a cock chicken; those said not 
aans containin — — 


to to Ire 
es | eggs taining no 
ost desirable 1 ar- a se present 3 determine this deficiency, Eggs laid > y hens who have 
iate wi as 


no assoc ith, are never used 3 
your correspondent may know. X. F. Z., Hanis. 
Breed It was said by a Norwich corre- 
spondent the pigs exhibited there were not of their 
art I never saw a better collection 

pigs of a small exhibited on that 

oceas I did see which made me wonder 
at — presumption and of their owners sen 
We are advocates of the small breed only, 


10 3 any one keeps what is a 


eoarse - gr 

l, e breed. It is said flitches of bacon 
—— . deep; but it does not say the meat 
is close- thin · rinded, 

coarse and thick skinned. never saw a good, 


email breed of pig that could not be fattened to 15 or 


20 score. Who desires bacon from a heavier pig? this —— 


money, as 
they farrow 1 This is an e A in 
first the scarab if properly attend 
the rearing, will be o peace weight — their age than 
which may look biggest. 


, as to farrowing, a sow 
trip, yields her increase and 

We 
will pay 


we 
ve SO 


a dozen 
— of os hg e roasters for the famil 

t lea sow and her famil 
lie enjoy ane species = V 
reared the small sorts with large prof : 
less food, — as . are unrivalled, prov 


price for their pe which 

many would mr eat, if they knew how it was fed. 

X. F. Z 

Š Scotch v. E English Agriculture, —Some few years ago 
sent you 

you were kind a to publish. ae 


n practically of rural 


ers as little yet I gave up the controversy, | 


not able 


tense it can improve upon 
such an exte 


man, 
on of Turni s worth 2?—Hav 
the fi — oa yout venders 


but expecially 
only 


is placed in such a position, 
big, to speak o 


which | anxio 
me of the state- | « 


mt as to| effo 


refu 
p 


it ‘could delight — 


of the ini 


agents gener 
men, an 
value thei 


of cours 1 
Calen 


— the “calendar a 


e have been quite us 
amateur 


tie article 


assist 


teu 
Prince aii 
glorious reception of 
must bea s 


| the 33 than any legislative me 
Did the pe So feel that the first 


rom 


ly, as several o ngst 
— — friends; but 9 a4 pe in being pa 
cal m 


ent laws, 


ch, that it was not there. I 
~ that ithe „general adoption of these light, easy-running, | inte 


ſa mare's nest in the change of my ne gs but even 
fi vai a 


the 


itial 


would scorn to throw obloqu 


asa rs or try by hypothetical wey gine to 
A 


skill, bsence from 


has 
hitherto prevented me kir seeing your Gazette, and 
lying sooner. J. M., . 13. 
of Operations.— 


Ratho, A 

—1 he 
ts” e far 

siei” ee ii ho 


0 
ve the effect of rem inding me of 
gear farming 
ttentively 1 the observations args the wr 
What is an acre o 


e of practi 


ce. 


worth?” Ia 
3 the Bp — chaff i — 

d to whi ch the e 

ing of pigs for sale off 


mer in Sour i — The 
the Que 
bertel, nite eae 


niy require: 


air ai a — — and strong band, cs 
cess ar so well able 
been mplish this s undertaking as his Royal Highness 
Prince Albert, 
ps Cumberland Paull Car 
— — or any of those 
ised to 


te 
d Mawi 


dividual of rank is 


who inquired after the 


ave for rite been a 

reader ‘the Fei ee hth Gazette, and I must confess 

m M 2 meal no 

small 

ld N WN obli 85 eid assist 
w 


Afte 
ite r of 


late 
r Irish subjects 


ris.—I “regretted” as much 
Cumber- 
own outside the ground at 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


on 


not | m 


the sow, and | lit 
I shall feel grateful fo — any information on the subjeet. 
n An dmateu 


her 


I had one made b 
nae 


ving up this cart to t 


in gi 
full intention to ha 
unforeseen acci 


Cumber land 


— on 


to be e on the 


bd the goby, by trying to find | weight 


ae rr esa qu 


roa 5 lightly — 


of, throughout the lon 
j| landlord yet thinks of giving 5 ; as these qualities are 
y carts of 6, 64, 3 ‘re b — een 


possessed by 
is there in * heavier 


and carts with a slight shelving carry 
lime, and well heaped-up soli 


cart 
One says “ these carts 


ould be 
‘ainsi to — — — — — 
— 


of the e a 


ve taken it to N 


uite as many Potatoes, Turnips, 


ng comfortably out of a field 
will 


n bri 
easily, and 
ngest Frcs 


r carts, * 


manure ; without the side- 


n care 


land, 
vehicle—from 
to the ton 


&e., 


> 


gro 
present furnished with heavy, ill 
e 


a — a s Canibetlas d carte ” even in the district 


| agricultural — 
h 


r, but the axles and wheels 
and cart will carry p 


are 


and ton weight waggons 


> South, 
ive, compac: 


s Breeding = Api T belive, ae 
who sui soils, 7 
Another Terro says, 10 


is probable 
rts of England been will prefer caris 
equal to the "o roomy o eperen mberland 
hills; but as axles mad j — 
little additional — 


might generally weigh less. 
of the different kinds of wood to 


I have airs speaking of, and it is only a 
mr! as in almost all other kinds 3 of 2 
first-rate excellence. You may fad 


wher 
the com 


But 4 


n Scot 
xamine wil & 


oat = prev ber 


of the carts of t 3 because wil” 
yi — outside oft the — che firm «do imant 


darts s howe ever are 


$ 


are 
as the 
he highest 
brs i 
ba 


men, 
quite as Se kly and easily the — may 
hips . en who ha 


ang * 
in your Pa 
and Manches 


3 they — beda, 
industrious orders to the 
of i 
s ana again, and i 
Lee of either sending the orders ors they 
trange: of the Guardian Societies 
dova 


manufacturi 
n gi 


ving their Paj 
—— in that city and 8 
the alarm 


et 

oul much in 
they receive — they exhibit in in 
their crop of bad debts — o 
far from luxurious. 
Liverpool Guardian Society. 


Farmers’ 2 
York, Au Farming in the : 

252 nt, and Pro at hs 
Tue deer ai for the a ce of "showing er wh: ~ 
0 J 


little known com 
ment of the 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZE 


that inas e —— derired 

quently fo iceable i 

business, T “teal anxious to contribut 

Prong of Msn ils respecting or failure, 
25 th a moderate use of . the 

ea yarns correspondents in the C 
— — interesting or valua 
homely in thei 


** — journal have been fre- 
mical —— of my 
pin share to 


AN 
HH 


— tate 


HI 


Hi 


on which co 
eee of agric — a events at this per 


e peace, 2 
to two sar A viz., the war and peace 
1820 


— 
way of — or labourers ; so with every dep 
to 1840, The battle = 


belonging to the fa 


i 


TRICT.—Since the beginning of 

rain among the Gane snd 
h a day EPAYI —.— t heavy shower 
the 1 ge hill po areon n and 8 
ey — Potatoes h uched ; 
but h and the ne A 
all. r 10 days ago we cut a little Barley on a warm bill side. 

The crops stil look well, though here and there 2 „G 
especially. The green crops “behind time” a week a 

g tast 


4 
ER 


n began t 

and to think what the 5 fo id "do tee themselves. 
was a great demand for land, and the per * 

value, and at the rene Poca 

brought into cultiv: 


HH 


eav vast num 


i i 


This br 


mowing to 

Sars, being not thoroughly 

ripe an e common and 

allowed to “ie a day before ying; “if 5 the sooner 

sheaf the better. The — e rains have made the 
so fast that we — So ho 

leaves became t 

— 


they a 


dly 


3.3 5 
— 


d ee 
drilled with 4 bushe ls of * bones per acre, softened with 
50 lbs. sulphuric acid, wel te starts the seed well, 
| and we expect ‘the = og will not be exhausted until the root is 
| — — matured, When ood oed 
ows an Sdi ay. 6d. a day each, 
— the Turnips. — oe a a — 4d = —.— e” 
1 


ace, very great | 

SEPEN arts, ara 

which were tiret applie: e, ‘because the 
and ensured es quickest return. Tho: . 

came pasis te 

mutters, and it was not long befo: 

and many other 

were a dg to 

used them, M 


men mi 


remainder kept to b orses ak rl which 
sell 2 1 — 4 either for thes: corn they contain, as th 

e get ripe; or 2 the Clove er-straw is 5 get sing | 
it an n full “ bottle.” d has 
arg fm of winter Oats, skimmed and 


of 
n the è titliivation of the soil, and if 1 
— at 1 meeting at Le eds, they is year’s era, at 118. per bus 
on tion that Turnip, bebe 3 drilled 20 inches a 
tifn 


most beautiful engines tha 8 ever exhibited, —.— — nF horse-hoed ; in ridges, the Turnip plants is 
i believed, of bei brought practically to bear on the cul. apt to be buried or bruis — a aps some of your — wi — 
wntion of the before many years are over. He alluded to smile at that excellent ga — being shelved, by awk 
engine exhibited by 3 Wilson, at Leeds. The same wardness or 1 of those who use it. 
gine was exhibited Norwich ; and, in order to show it GaLLoway Far 13. ~The operations of late have been 
‘Capabilities, Mr, Wilson ran it round the ae ow-yard there, and | of a routine * and scarcely wani of record. The 
‘be assured him (Mr, Charnock) — it would work by its own hoeing of green crops was finished a fortnight and the 
i 


ight ago, 
Nothing more 3 


met in the drills. 


all 


TT E. 


mi . 

young — Turnips are promising erop; R 

early kinds are this year di „and an average 

P; but the later varieties have been injured by the dry 

weather, and we „prove a small uce; added to 

hich, the disease has attacked them during past week, and 

seems ent any improvement crop 

sheep have done wall is i 854 


s now made its ap 
ot is not much afected as , 
now become quite black, 


— —ññ 
N N 2 e 
BARLEY : J P L. The wt hee red Barley, and 
pending m aay on the seeds 
ari 
“suppose th ere to be the 
tuits of benty Grass in 
„ as there is in mowin 
rwise last through the 


being alive a 


i: thet 
nd containing —— of 
BEN TT Grass: sheet We 


In 


not acquainted with the 
yor doubt the feasibility 


: F W F. You will find this subject 
n, past numbers: much more ly 
e time, and we have no desire to 


12 05 It is P elegans. 
DRAINS : MN. The cee from one corner to the ther, the 
ust be e 80 considerable, 300 yasti, that 
we should there- 
placed directly down the deecent, as in 
without branches. 
Economy oF Ma ANURE : Inquirer, It is beneficial to collect the 
droppings of cattle and horses in the — — all their nitro. 
genous ingredients will otherwise be w 
Eyes or Lam W BH. The lambs 8 be bled fr from the 
veins immediately below the eyes, which should be fomented 
with warm water, and a little camphorated oil afterwards 
applied. V. C. S. 
FA ARM t Accounts : f Agricola. Ra ae aa have a column and 


utin the 
18th, it would be ente ae un 
one of the ways in which those 
is way would no 
—f or 50 ACRES or E Lanp: T 15 Two horses and 
our labour 


5 


fall of 1 


— — es ieee 
your No. 1, 


n. cutte — and he wi shows the advantage of early sowing and abundant manure to two men, besid asional 1 — Tour bill 
l e engine and see could be done, but | the Turniperop than the . — of growth, during the late cold} may amount to 1300 or more per annum, of 
‘@ euniuing bsoil it was found to be of so loose and | moist weather, between those which were well grown and those | horses 
mumbling a charac r, that it was quite useless to make the | which were only new thin ed, For about a week the young FARMING IN IRELAND: JR, We have no connection with 
| — e had not the least i tnip made scarcely any progress, while during the s writers. Your letter has been 8 Davie We 
mià a suitable implement, and upon ordinary land, would cut time the more advanced crop was growing rapidly, the larger ay y low rented land in Ire 
i any difficulty, and particularly on lan development of leaves and roots being of course better fitted to | HYDROPHOBIA : PAC. About r Tohr nts 18 the usual period ; 
re pihaa only giving this as an instance of what might afford rapid nourishment to the plant. We have a striking | but the gs has known rabies to occur from five to six 
— 1 is likely to be done, when really 3 instance this season of the ere of very rough dung m TA the dog had deen bitten . a rabid a í 
: attention to the subject. This bro ought his | for the Turnip pne About cre of the corner ~ a field V. C. 
Leatt up to the present time ; and there was no doubt that | was dunged with ill-prepared teen receiving ale cwt. — Lreriax Ark. anass: V A N. Sow 2 bushels per acre g — on a 
a vast proportion of both the old and newly guano an d 10 bushels of bones, The ground n ca got clean Wheat stubble, first pared and r e 
om are present in a mi ble he Turnips have several cuttings next year, an d may then 1 it up 
ny certain] po capable of paying any | on the latter are infinitely the best. The rough dung —— — for mo me r Wheat, It may be grazed, but.it is better suited 
° Present, of realising any profit to the | positively injurious to the plant in ‘its "e stage. Pota 
ry large extent in perhaps almost the te re gions 5 — but the disease is beginn m - 28. mey mi piron cows most beneficially. 
: on. Within the last fortnight he ha arance, and it should not be forgotten 2 Be if it appeared wee very ey young and Ja juicy, 3 Gan — — day previous. 
* Valuing an estate, in which he made a dit. earlier last year, the crop Pie was earlier by 10 sora : ieee a — removal of green 
that value of trom 15s. per acre to 60s. 55 arable | fortnight. We began Wheat harvest on this day last year. leaves will i 00 2 a ren gd i +o es ae 
was fag cheaper of the t The | We shall have none ready this year for 10 days yet. The men Oh rine, 2 15 PP „Read, of Regent 
end so ae on — have been busily engaged in preparing thatch and ropes for ircus, ies? 1 ly. HHW t The best way is to 
and amount of production. He harvest, and the horses are —.— er. weeks’ holiday at the REMOVAL or 22 © Cannos say. pA * 4 Abe 4 
on of what can be done for the futu pastures. Indeed, I may mention that the 7 he ake m oh ae oe — e mae ane 2 
st course to loo nger 8 a rend s holiday, anda “ — al ay. — fortuuately was, oh. asa e lake “ikke y a manag carry. 
Sting knowledge to attain kind arrangements of our steam shipping compan 
ene. ge ‘ald igs — g é Pee heir | WHITE 4. — : Anon. Sow one peck 
h r 


per will e 
peobahiy < 4d. n per. 2 ; it “a not stand the 8 10 AAN 15 
Tur 


in June, in time for com 
sho 


í ; i the be brs is too prem for Rape, but we 
ich but a limited idea at | back a ain, of — it z to be ho very many will avail nips. pr 
ny. The average yield of themselves. A who can — — beyond their noses . idan aca to 49's xe Sse Mus an kis to be Morisi 
ire ee gf ada ay’ erence eee zg hexastichon six- rowed — a. would affo rd a fair 
yield, they could grow they will bi well tepati by the — of good nature which th io oF * i arn fe ams 
complish great things. With- men will lay in 1 the pleasure The grain crops now samp. 8 ry plu 
l, which should be scrupulously | show = advantage of an application oh guano wherever it has 
might venture to offer this | been v investment of money in farming we think is so ts. 
orkshire coal proprietors, certati ol a profitable ee as that which is laid out in si 
ge for the transit of such = ot 2 th fe r acre harrowe with the grai FIELD, afoxpar, Aug. 20. 

Oal down to Newcastle | crops. As an all expenses must paid at any er We have —— increase in the supply of Beasts; the de- 
— field of their own | whatever increase arises beyond the first cost of the guano is] mand is, however, considerable, a fair clearance is effected 
well known throughout the | nearly all profit. J. C, mall reduction, The number of and Lambs is 
land possessed a sufficient Sourn Ham peat Farm, Aug. 17,—The weather during the | about the same as last week ; trade is heavy, but prices remain 

erate price, might | past fortnight = 2 favourable for harvest operations in | abo plentifal and good ones 
© very little foreign corn to general tor e rather showery weathe pretty readily realise 4s, From Holland and Germany there 


d hay 
bject of drainage, 10 years agoif a 
y to drain a sn mAs shop —— a 
95 i coula w be m 


n ph no damage has been Gone to the "a 
except in cases wher’ ith ty and incon 

siderate 2 We find = cutting our Whea t gi ere is ev ry 
chance 5 ood yield, mething over an average crop, 
although n sane — injury has been done by blight. 
Barley — a 23 crop both as regards quan tity 
and quality, and k like 
produce. Oa ats, B 
average yield. The gue labour u 
pa thanks ip so 


0 th pee Gn i i 
pr 


n a few: months from 
e 


e 


* s 0 — 
n of the Barley crop, . — have been employed three 


oser than for early 
Our labourers 
have bee 


night-soil 8 ashes, o drill 
Tu — 9d 3 14 “inches s betwee 
yin h 


Te ee 


ee. 


ig 
t work, 


wede T 
sort etek T 
„ 


E 
= 


Oats, 


oe even ordinar fan sown, the soon 
bred hush, ay mush value on tis erop ; indeed, sine 
—— — art; but e are 


8 „5 20 
thing in different level 


. Rename ere oe i e 


Best Scots, 


3 
ely to prove a full average | 2d 2d quality Beasts 2 wus 4 
Sait per Peas 2 a likely = auch — Best D 


e 
m m 
best kinds, Trade is ee ante aro pi and many 
rem and 


3 
Best Short-horns 3 6—3 : 
2d quality 2 2 
Best Down: 


Ditto Sorn 
Beasts, 1008; Sheep and Lambs, 


are 608 Beasts, 3660 Sheep, and 73 Calves; from France, 29 
Perst.of8lbs—s d s d 
wools. 3 6to3 8 
Ditto orn. 24 
Ewes & 2d quality 2 8—3 Q 
Ditto Sorn .., E 
mbs ste 2 4—5 0 
a wee sl ace Fi 


Beasts; and from Scotland, 40. 


Perst.of8lba—s d s d 


—.— 


tto Shorn 


We have an average ber of Beasts, 
y is very indifferent, consequently a few choicest Scots hays 
e 4s., but this is too ch to as a fair 
e 


ain unsold, Sheep 


r8 

Beasts, 1640 Sen gi 129 Calves ; from Ireland; 
9 Calves; from Spain, 24 Beasts 100 

a the home 


Milch Cows 
Best Scots, Her 


. 3 4 to 3. i 


fords, &c. Ditto 
8 Dig Short? 2 “ena 
Ditto S sas 


8 to 3 10 
8—38 
— 3 8—3 10 


2 
2 a 
3 7 Hig ty 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. e 
. 


542 


— ee ee 
COVENT GARDEN, Ave. 25. EN iia i er e 5 r janse * J. 
ectarines are plentiful. 
* —.—— les have not ——.— our count. Cherries, | from tae he plantations speak of the Hops having ag 4 little pro- E STEVENS 4 e favoured with 
except 8 — — and Currants are gress this week, poe oe cae has advanced 1o to 75, 0002. At the Auction, 5 t u e ain ees 
scarcer. 3 are pretty well supplied. uts in general same time the me fall to be on the increase in Mid Kent. — ge — AY, A t Room, Belgium iy 
. A few Eilberts have mado their appearance The market is m, fll pices for al Se e Hops. 500 GAMELLIAS ee tvs lst, at 12 for 1 d 
put being unripe they realise a dull sale, at from 35s. to 45s. MARK LANE favourite varieties 4 feet, comprisin of the 
per 100 lbs. Orangesand Lemons ns are ple „ and them. rket | Mowpay, Aua. 20.—The supply of English Wheat this | are well grown and furn Nishe d the best novelties; the 
à on te — with Kone 4 and 22 yr a ier . 80 by land e e a t entirely of —— inbelled with their gfe ag A are 
egetables, ps may a 1. unting to ut 100 ars. ; the and conditi and m Hay be viewed the d 
6d, a Punch. 0. the same uliflowers are plentiful. po 5 generally good, some fine, and a toalised ce jo 150 xT 11 8 2e Sale, and Catalogues had. * 
! a fotoj from — = — per . de. — per qr. above ane a obtained last week. The ale of yrs pe ge AND GREEN j 
Mh ease er salading are s P reign Sas quite in tained 
ushroome fetch Sor se, pee dardenias, B pottle. Cut —Barley, Beans, an nd Pas are unaltered in “yalue.—The Oat ESSRS. PRO leg ig AND MORRIS 
Flowers a need Heaths, —— pinan G — Pom Big nonia ees is firm, p fine qualities command an improvement of | petition by A ructions b 1 IS aro avden 
enusta, Tropæolums, Carnations, Fuchsias, per qr. ere were several samples of new white and y AWCTION, on the es, D 
6. 1 vag 2st aes brown Mustard on sale this morning; the former was disposed week n September, in consequence H 11. 44 
Seger “at E. p ADP — per 2 of —.— Ks per bushel, and the latter hung on hand at TO oa 2 d and 3 xn Were 
* „P- A, anges, 1 e A mpany, 112 able HA 

ots, per d to 36 — per 10 a s U RIDA, With the exception of foreign Oats, th LIAS, ranging from 18 inches to 10 4 ic 
Peaches, per d 68 to 128 | Lemon, ere 1s to 2s supply of which amounts to 19,350 =, the arrivals of a grain bloom buds, amongst which are ely AORT pnd dag 
Nectarines, per doz., 48 to 10s 3 st rrd since Monday have been small. Thi ing’s was | Oe approved kinds ; also the choice Greenhouse 
Plums, per hf. sieve, 3s to 4s Almonds, per peck 15. very badly attended, and business in all articles ingi amellias and Greenhouse Plants aroia th 
Gooseberrios, half sieve, Wain — ok Bs to Bs limited ; prices may be considered nominally for each, except- ene are particularly worthy the attention of } 
De do., 3880 48 rp 1, 1s 6.4028 | ing bee ber deen dere and ey, with atic loudly tle, when Catalogue may bo had of th, oat Se 

9 ry, with a thi 0 2 ad of t 
Pears ears, per 225 mf k 122 st fe 1 Nats, Ba ae P bush. a atmosphere ; great progress has been made with t ondon, on th 3 Covent-garden and of the 
eve, “YEG TABLES. 7 . 128 8 a . ter ng of Po em crop 2 — puer ern — tioneers, Am paritan norae e Eat 
e is r submitted 
— p a 7 5 | Spinach p P. 3 as 4 et 6d * the country have been — lifeless, and — competition pata ly in Octanet "pak 
Peas, per bush., 1s 6d to 48 ish, p. doz., 1s 6d to 4s pach 11 turn lower. Spring corn has not narkets ne any ~ TO NOBLEMEN, GENTLEMEN, AND OT 
Beans: p. bush, 18 64 to2s6d | Shallots, per ib, 24 to 6d material alteration in value. In the French markets pric TICE OF SALE.—MAIDE THERS, 

” 424 42 094 ark tig Sa to 6a e ae “= for 8 to this country. e Belgian CHOICE AND 1 STOCK POF aoa 
Potatces, per ton, 608 to 100s | Artichokes, p. doz., “1s 6d to 3s 8 3 I — Se ND OUSE PLANTS, oar 
per cwt., 3s to 66 VegetableMarrows,doz.,6d to prices have given way 2s. per gr. Inthe R. begs to notif h reini 

— ber push, 2s to ás F pee a Balt oie Ee s bee ee languid. in Höns 3 a t he ias 
. ‘J 
T „p. doz. bun., 1s to 28 — Cos, do., 6d to 18 LIVERPOOL, FRIDAY There was a poor attendance (who is relinquishing his bus fines 916 Sch by A 
Red Beet, per doz., 2s to 48 Mushrooms, p. pôt., Is to 18 6d of dealers 2 this me 8 * oF] the business was extremely premises, Felix Cottage, ae 5 1 Maidenhead, on T 5° 
e e 
ab p. bw » Per oo 8 sel = — neglected. Oats and 9 were ATORY ‘AND GREE USE PLANTS, 
ry, per bunch, very eans wore in limited request. Barley and Peas ang a 0 Camellias, 50 Azaleas, 8 Ac 
gen Rey 33 t0' a Parley per bunt, mia gnist. À 2 Indian Cor node was heid id ith mpage firmness, but sho EAR Dapa azori Da — Abutilons striatum, 10 Ferns (Adiante 
Leeks, i ey, p. doz. bun., 38 to 4a | Mand being very m ane A t was ult to make cuneatum). aphnes indica, 30 ©. persicum, 
oak g bundle, 1s to 28 00 x . bale. 18 1 Good Flour was stead „ nee. 0 * „18 Alpine Auriculas, about 90 ioe Lilies of the F: 
arjoram,green,p.bu' “hg a nt and various other plants, which wil 1 
— T per doz, bunches, mg — r 3d to IMPERIAL EE ay Oars.| RYE. | BEANS. Pras, | logues, together fan ae al 755 rien 
4a to 6d . Basil, green, p. bunch, 4d to6d i | Ss —_ | - — Rafters for Pits, Stages for Greenhouses, Hot-water 
Carrots, per bun., 4dto6d July 58 3 S Pd 5 * PA 8 328 1d 308 305 9d Flower-pots, Hand Truck, 24 new deal (not 
— — 5 32 2 32 4 ga antit of kep “— Gothic Door 
5 S e rane ae e or ) 
i B „ 4 ee. 0 32 1 ann “of the Plants are in 
Faterion dito Hay Tos to 5s — „ . ore es tos — Heres 47 4 25 8 19 2 26 71 82 0 1 1 | The Ca mat are well set with flo wer-buds 
es operi — 2 BO — K 46 3 26 1 19 0 27 5 31 29 2 sorta fi 3 to 9 feet high, and some are 
eke | eee — {8 ote ee ag er . — | double white, and others in tubs. 
ao ao 3 ng J. COOPER. Bettes e Aver, 46 11 26 0 |19 2 26 10 32 0 31 3 | aging froh 5055 10 fi t high, $ some arein 
CUMBE D MABKE ET, Aug. 23. reign 1 1 trellis, 9 feet hi 88 
Prime Meadow Hay 05 170 266 Inferi bas . 70sto 90s Fluctuations in the last A wk Gaa Aver i, 5 Sale i is igh, coming i h nau 
ert dito. — wl 5 ages y the attention of the 
— rae 50 — Hor over. 70 90 ICEs. 90 r is. Jury 21. Arx 28. x 28. ae D ee 18 1 — ne ay a vical sat 
wee * Tews 5 a ay be viewed the da ous 
Old Glover se + 11 90 ped ERR JosHua BAKER, fg j “2 ae — — ay Jogues may be had on the Fremises, of 
Fine Qld Hay .. 65sto 70s | New a . T08tO 80s 8 8 Aa it liont „ — Seed 
Inferior ditto >n 45 0 Inferior ditto... 20 1 2 ae E 
BY nee ee . 32 47 4 sk 
Old Clover. 90 100 46 3 8 85 3 
ous eee ave — R. EW. a 
London. Liverpool. Wakefield. | Boston. irming the White Tán n Hote, in 
PRICES ITE — F Poi ch Ai ENE, pe MSMR Tk B ham. Sopi ES, , at pe “al oa in the 
1 such Conditions o as s 
2 |40g12)Aug.20| Ang. 14. | Aug. 21. |Ang-)0 e Aug. 16. | Aug. 23. due noice wili b V 
qr. Ar. 70 lbs. 70 lbs. 62 lbs. 62 ws. “ WHYCHURC 
1 . 4. 6. 6. e. G. 8. d. s. d. 6. d. 6. d. 8. d. Js. d. 6. d. mont distance o 
28 ad o 8 0\6 7 042 to50 10 to48 42140 410 5 9 6 005 9 6 0 Praia uff excellent 
oÑ, red 40—42 40 to42\6 3 7 26 9 7 as eer e 
4 . ee ome — 5 4 5105 4 5 10 ductive Iani, in the following Lots : 
eo enue 6—4 7 4). = == | — G 4 Ede 4 § 10) derees 11 
W 94 6 7 pHo oe 4 5 0 6 45 0 5 6 Tithe Map. o, Buildin z js, Gardon, Gg. 77. 
ö -hous s fards 
480 Ibs. 480 Ibs. 95 Wortheys P r Pasture 4 ig 
2 pes — — — hychurch arsh 5 ” ” 1 
e br 1 d 5 
3 — pa ea . 667 Broad Leaze is a gue eae eee » a 
— = * — — e Less i 1 aii 
A i — 670 Little Dry Leaze ... oes os oe ” j 
qr qr 671 Littl d Leaze Arable 3 i 
2322232426 24 26 : 689 The 12 acres g 7 
2 D + oie abe, one one 0 
. 5 ae B 3 23—25 690 The 8 acres 3 Gt RIE E a3 
24202428 = —3. 29 691 The 16 acres Se oe eae oe — 
6 bush. ö bush. | = — 
3942/3942] — — Lor pal 
A W 108 Part of Bean Lease Pasture $ 
= ek a * i ae 109 Ditto, with n Leaze. ning for id Beasts ” — 
— 18221822 a A a ae 
— = =< Ty 19—20 | 19—20 Lor 1L 
qr qr cnn odii ee ; — 467 Part of the Marsh ... Pye 3 
28—32 2834 — | — | 33—4033—40 andre arth a SBR „ 
196 lbs. 196 Ibs. South aa 
saem 2 19 89 part of Lon M 28 * 
— —— 12—13 | 12—13 "Lor vi. 
— — — — di 89A i atat iai a e ” 
| 162 Allo sania = 2 
29 233 30 ’ x tm “aes 
236 32—35 12—14 12—14 j ent in the 
15—16 15—16 Numbers 76, 77, 89, 894, 94, 95 108, 109, 15779 5 


in the parish o of St. eure ie 61. 1 
3 y, 
and a land ee 


-3130—31 

1 a 
residue of — Estate is vin the pi of W 2 
M ject to a rent charge of 


1190 


324032 —40 


vems Ve’ 


= 
toa eet of 1 IL. 10s, 7d. 
The ESTATE 5 — Sa with 
rounded principally by 


— a A a 


este. THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 


543 


mof WOTTON, Pa — Paris 1 not 

pn, ai prese ithe a occupation of Mr. 8 
5 ve e Mea dow, Pas —.— “and — 
yoda SE Meadow land is of e N 2 fasten. 
There is an excellent — 3 hous — every con- 


ee 


—— a o large a ommodious, 
y fitted up and le or — a large 

feeding-houses, stalls, sheds, and 
meee som Hailsha 


beasts in ar 

is about four — 

from Lewes, market town, and one — from ine Pole- 
onho Lewes — p At ons Railw: For particu- 

to * sony e 3 Berkeley, ‘Glouces- 


NBWINGTON'S IMPLEMEN TS.—Mr. Ba 
#3: 


Dibbles, 
* ether with specimens “a cr a 
itin 


LET for a term of years, and entered upon at RAILWAY TRAVELLER’ S COMPANION. 


BY FELIX SUMM ERLY. 


TRAVELLING CHARTS, 
IRON ROAD BOOKS, 
FOR PERUSAL ON THE JOURNEY. 


N WHIc 
THE TOWNS, VILLAGES, CHURCHES, MANSIONS, PARKS, STATION 


S, aa VIADUCTS, 
ELS, GRADIENTS, Ke, THE SCENERY AND ITS NATURAL HISTORY, 
THE ANTIQUITIES AND eee HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIONS, &c., PASSED BY THE RAILWAY, 
TH NUMEROUS ILLUSTR . 
Constituting a Novel and Complete Companion for the Railway Carriage. 


* Upwards of Eiant HUNDRED ENGRAVINGS, — Drawings taken ex 


nt, — shine ina straight a nse 
m 22 . —— sy decidedly the — 
panel between the hours "Of 10 A. x. and 
n se 

o 

AK ERS PHEASIN TRY, Beaufort-street, King’s 
Seles, by special appointment to her Majesty and 
LRH, * „ WATER FOWL, 
consisting ¢ black and — o swan gyptian, Canada, China, 
bernacle, amh i poe a hing ¥ oe sheildrakes, pintail, 
widgeon, summer gd _ teal, ga dwall, Labrador, 
Cc. 


ressly for these Charts, b 
re comprised in the se i d y distinguished Artists, 


2 TTT 
The following, each in a Wrapper, are now ready, and may be had at all the St 


ns : 

i ONDON TO BRIGHTON, containing a Map and 83 Engravings, 2d edition, price 6d. 

2. TUNBRIDGE WELLS, with 52 Engravings, price 6d, 

8 «+. WOKING AND GUILDFORD, with 52 Eugravings, price 4d, 

4, 50 WOLVERTON, with 85 Engra ings, pri 

5 80 i HMOND, with 15 3 includi ing ¢ a View from Richmond 1. prico 2d, 

6. . WINCHESTER AND SOUT AMPTON, with 125 Engravings, price 1 

3 .. GOSPORT, with 143 . price ls 

55 .. READING AND OXFORD, with a 3 nd 74 e, price 6 

ee .. BISHOP’S STORTFORD and CAMBRI IDGE, witha Map and 47 oot pr, ôd. 
193538 ... FOLKSTONE AND DOVER, with a Map and 99 E Z a ls. 
2 .. RUGBY AND BIRMINGHAM, with 137 ‘Engravings, pri 


Or, handsomely bound in morocco cloth, price 6d. e 


SMALLER CHARTS FOR EXCURSIONS FROM LONDON. 


1. TO aed AND HAMPTON COURT, vim 4 1 rs 20 r with 8 


Engravings, price Id. 
ings, p REIGATE, 'with 83 Engravings 2 3d. 
2. . ARROW. with 13 Engravings, price 1d. RD, with 27 n price 2d, 


— HANWELL and SOUTHALL, with 12 Engravings, pr. Id. A = shoves. ETON, and WINDSOR, 23 Engravings, pr. 2d. 
Also, in Octavo, 


FELIX SUMMERLY’S 


, ORMSO D BROWN, 83 
solicit me attention of the Nobili ntry, and 


H 
8 2 7 
5 
8.5 
5 
5 
8 
85 
Q 
— 
ae 
® 
8. 
E 
og 


ferring so lon ng, still con- 

3 will be happy 
Work and give any information. 

refer to the houses dulle by them during th 

the 3 Apo Gele Company of in 


rof nee 

gentry in the country, pt to several 
stimates furnished free, 

TO AGRICULTURISTS. 

ND CARBONISED ANIMAL 


—This MANURE is composed of a combination of 
stances with natural ani 


out experiencing 


sed to H. Cons dsman, &c. (Agent for th 
point 35.5 Soot c. (Agent for the 


Direct, with full Lag par 8, to B. K., Crosby-hal! Coffee-house, 
do 


ALSO THE rr OF a CHOICEST PLANTS, 


PLEASURE EXCURSIONS BY RAILWAY, 


rn Counties, Birmingham, South — Brighton, and Ponia Eastern, 


TO eno with 3 E ngrarings, price 1d. TO CROYD 9 Engravings, price 

— HARRO 7 Engravings, price 1 — CHIDDI GoT 08 and HEVER, 7 Engravings, price 1d. 
— SHOREHAM, 4 Engravings, tion ld. 3 18 AT E, 10 Engravings, price 1d 

— GUILDFORD, IIe price 2d. WALTON AND WEYBRIDGE, 13 Engravings, price 1d, 
— WINCHESTER, 11 Engravings, pric 


Or the whole in Gone Volume, containing 74 Engravings, price 1s. 


Published by J. Francis, at the BAYAT r Office, 14, . North, Strand, London; 
y be had of all Bookse 


EEDSMEN AND OT STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT P 
1520 eee is desirous of — bt a SEED WIRE NETTING. Soor 


USINESS, or a Compact Nursery and Seed Business.— 


Bishopsgate-stre 

n el eas EE C NE nt ey 

HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING 
BY H WATER, 


VINE 


exe 
he 


oo, Mh am. 


è 
1 et 

. Ga — 8 * 
- H OUNG , AND Cue LATE 

gam aa C. YOUNG), 

MANUFACTURERS OF IRON AND WIRE WORK, &e., 
22, PARLIAMENT-STREET, WESTMINSTER, NDON ; CASTLE. 
= anp Co., Kin g’s-road, Chelsea, Ronen. BUILDINGS, Denny savas, LIVERPOOL ; 128, HicH-sTREET, 


URAL ARCHITECTS, Hornouse BUILDERS; and Hor-w 


n f oc g 
i a A 255 a ane sig arg of Landed Proprietors 
os AP 8 MANUFACTURERS, 80 hich wi iu 3 ton of th their pai TE H 
i s, whi m attest as 
ts and Flowers in gardens or 7 MA ke peal Page Se J. W. and Co. have 
„ an . : 


to th ig Wire- Fence, lag ng Hares 
and Rabbits kroch Gee Gardens, , young Plantation: ap per A Ke. 


uality on 
2 and MAp e 2 This Net was exhibited at the Show of the Highland and 
ected o gy for — fons ma Agricultural Soci See nt held lately at Inverness, 
p, Cansartatoriós, Fore its Efficiency, Great Strengt ed 
attracted general n, n h: rded 
the Society’s Silver M 


them to gro he The immense damage 8 by 2353 
pe Eai a which and r 3 is often k 


bourn.atreet, Leicester- a year 
— be dni at Prue d rotecting then with thie Ment ae te ae deeibie ates 
ly attende d to Ss THAN KAME and p. pe 2 
IRE GAME NETTING. protection, it can | ` nd itp piher 
Td, per yard, 2 feet feet wide, — — 3 TOOTH-POWDER | the greatest t By aay labourer 
` will be e Hares and Rabbits, it is of itse mal w f 
wids, nor any that can injure the finest ena- | be unrolled 1 wire 
5 822 * ence 3 the H ito be dos a pe E to wooden stakes ———_ 
22805 72255252272 e appearance so muc desire er exis 2 
: . BR Re and its fea agant perfume tends to sweeten and breath | dering H Hedges, Paling, or other existing 


RHE 
ene 2238855 
5 : 


urify th 
M apa G y years they have been plist, as | pervious to 


{three . ob aama, — re 
15 -brush Makers oe d nities (that occur.to few), Pieces o i 

of best testing nh Makar, merits those powders that have been | cient. 
brought before the 


5 igh 9d. + 24 ins., 1s ins., ls, 3d.; and 
the public. They have now succeeded in pro- Parices.—I18 ins. high, 9d. ins., 1s,; 30 ins., ls, 3d.; 


curing ie r from which aes shone Powder is Pens: 36 ins., 1s. 6d. per lineal yar 


Or a web of 100 yards, 25 wide n coms 3 15 0 
a WENE a 

Do, 00 3, — wide ee * d 

Do. of 100 yar 1 86 ins. wide 710 0 


If more or less than a web 8 e eee 

at the same rate per yard. 

This Netting is also {a adapted . 
yards, A est 


ar Poot 
iron. has, in inst n obstacle to pa 
a Geers met eono F ELDER FLOWERS tance requiking g thie Net, G. T C. D. T. and Go. have ak 


hd aa a 
5 will undertake to to deliver it at any of tho 
pal of Scotland, Aagisgd, and Ireland, for One 


Hints 


THE GARDENERS’ 


544 


CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


NEW WORK BY THE AUTHOR OF “VANITY 1 This day, 16mo, with 20 plates, 


WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER eee TOST, On the 31st inst. will be published, price 1s., No. XI. 8 L 81 a 27 opies s coloured eet 
=a ~ze ox = 7 M. THACKERAY, Author of The Great Hog- For the use of Beginners. By T. AN Y: 
] ER 5 garty 51 wale „ c. Kc. With Illustrations on Steel and ondon: WILLIAM PAMP im Fak Ratry, 4 L. 8, 4 
H d b as Author. at AMPLI, Frith-street, Boho, ” 8 
i ooch London: Branson & — 11, Bouverie-street. ogee Lhe ne De BAA ain or Oat 
3 . — — ished, and ma 
F R. CHARLES D DICKENS. free on application at 4 
| On F ae inst. will be published, tho 125 Number, pee Ir MEO iene 1 — 
VID COPPERFIELD THE YOUNGE , OF MAGIC PASTE are ren nowned thro ghout 2 AND 
25 5 9 7 22 32 7 4 LUNDERSTONE eg Y. By CHARLES Da He exhibits also th é stock 2 World, 
222 822828 ate 2. Ys 2 ota! 2 Illustrations by HABTOT K. Browne. To be — Articles, Dressing Onis: Work B es, Tea T f 
meaty M 8 Numbers ow ee ue aka anaie eni on thing ‘toe the 5 
— RADBURY and EVANS, ouver ie-street. able, Table Cutlery of first-rate quality. Mechi’s fa 
TWO-PENCE is day is published, in feap. 8vo, price 5s., telle Tables, affording a charming on V : 
Given sarane E WIRE NETTING, 7 ires no paint. |: A SHORT INQUIRY INTO THE HISTORY OF Jast publisaed, in 2 rols, 8r INTRODUCTION To BOTAN, 
PER SQUARE FOOT.—This artic e t 1 in ANcrent, MEDIÆVAL, and MODERN in th Si 
the atmosphere no t having the slightest action and was | TIMES. NDOS WREN HOSKYNS, Esq. s Wood Engravings, price 2a $ ; 
— exhibited at the tate rr ag 2 pee ty appearance, and | London: 7 Published for the Author, by Brapsury and Evans, N RO DU CTION O BOTANY 
hly repa 3 = 8 4 best a rticle ever produc 11, Bouverie-st 2 ‘By eee er ies R Professor of Botany: 
It forms a Reus and durable fence 4 do e NEW AND CHEAERE SO) ee ions and 4 erous ‘Additions 8 
hares, rabbits, and cats, and is 3 ‘adapted for Aier Sixth Edition, carefully TERS 1 5 e AR 8 MENT It has been the Author's with Sobek every — 
oult: an 1s . y subject 
bomen = one int, it answers . for training all kinds INTS a —.— PREGNAN oY ane di in the LYING.IN whe Lig ig 2 pie. earl 2 the state ~ 
piama - > pleats Large quantities always kept ia st k, of ROOM: with Hints on Nursing, G. as BULL, M.D. added 80 very considerable — of Bch p> ban he has 
18, 24, 36, and 48 eg —— ; — 5 =e any y the same Author, 3d Edition, ep. pa price 53. n what relates to Vegetable Anatomy and Physiology, that 
. rn „ 
1 inches wi rido à 34 per yard 30 — wide 744. pe yar HEALTH må DISEA — GEMENT of CHILDREN in presen nt Edition may bec unsidered, din those respects anon new work, 
18 „ 5 » E ” : LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, and LoncMans. THEORY OF HORTICULTURE, 8 1 
48 1 ” vo, 123. 
„ om bel : SYNOPSIS OF THE BRITISH FLORA. 12 
do», 1d. per foo . CK ON BREW OURTH EDITION. mo, 10s, 62, 
Extras "a nt Wire Aaa Ne Netting, 3 feet, 1s. 6d. per Biema al Er: 3 1 F f 
running yard; if galvanised, 2e ire House Lanterns e : PRACTICAL | TREATISE ON BREWIN Noman, ie en Gawen, and eee 
Wire Nursery vag Kose sandra Ste site Ease Widow bas ical and Economical Principles, with For. PROFESSOR LINDLEY’S @CONOMICAL — 
Bhades, 15 on oer 9 2 with bolts complete, in maho- ——5 for Publ 1 Brewers and — icas for 1 Fami- This day is published, in 3 vol. 8 with numerous woodeuts, 
AR 5 P * y W ACK, Practical Brewer. our ition. 
any frames; Gothic garden bardegagzen arches, 20. foot; | e Tavaluable to the practical brewer = private families; to EDICAL AND (ECONOMICAL BOTANY; 
T ach; Garden arches, 20s, each 425 
lower — rs, 2 cach’: Galvanised Tying Wire for | the former we recommend it as a work ably green i = their An Account of the Principal Plants employed in 
cance, Dahlia Rods and eve description of Wire art ; to the latter, as one which they will find a nd | or Dom 
plants se — — the te T apek: makers aon eT correct guide Chemist. TRACT FROM THE AUTHOR'S PREFACE, 
oe 1 p ur Fox; 44, Skinner-stree et, London : ae Brown, GREEN, and LoNGMANS. aoe Vegetable Ki 8 3 5 quantity 
HEN ts ot no k mportance to man, various spe- 
Snow-hill, PROFESSOR SCHLEIDEN’S BOTANY. 3 h useful 
ployed 8 che ui or in the man branches of 
PRICE FOURPENOR, OF ANY ben ATUR Just published, 18 870 , with Plates and Woodcuts, price ae domestic ceconomy. The ‘principal part of th y mae 
ENTS o mz NUMBER z R SATURDAY * “OF SCIENTIFIC BOTANY 3] brought by teachers in Europe under the notice of students, ot 
ONT Y 3 | bro 
T. AUGUST 1 Y as an INDUCTIVE SCIENCE. By which, trom their grea ance, deserve to be among the 
IDEN, Extraordin Fati Professor of Botany in the | earliest subjects of study, are mentioned in 


“ATH 


. 
THE M, University of Jena. Translated by Epwin LANKESTER, M.D., | where arrange 
JOURNAL OF ENGLISH AND e LITERATURE, — R. S., F. L. S., Lecturer on Botany at the St. George's School | TABLE 1 of the author, with the sequence of matte 
ONDE, AND THE ee f Medicine, London. departed fror in a few instances, when it was believed that the 
enty-four Large Quarto Pages. Č We parari — our readers on the appearance of an | convenience of younger students would be consulted by doing 
nglish edition of this A ETE work, by a gentleman £0 | so, The author trusts that this selection will be found to hare 
33 5 or, WITH EXTRACTS Te to do fall j nD k 18 t fail : h 
Fifteenth Report of the © Pi e to ite Mats of Wal- capa able to do full justice to it a cots an 1 t ce, and, ail | been made in such a way that all teachers who bre” 
of National Edu. sing and St. Thomas o interest dee eply all true love tanica z ence, 5 we | ably extensive means of illustrating their lectures, 
at te mye of gh ate r By Deside- believe it 9 aia e or: our Botanical Botanic Gardens, may e larger part of the speciet 
cation 1 2 liter: 2.7 Ji Philos 3 oned a selection was 15 
th Re Church s Erasmus. Translated by mdon : lament, Brown, GRE — mm, and LoncMANS, rstly, oe a grea would have beyond the 
Education Society for Ireland J: 6. Nichols, Esq. E 2 e e — 2 and secondly, banaki 
The Policy of a Separate Grant | Fac e 8 Reflections. By a Will be ready on bass k oa tember 6, in foolscap folio, reach, of te —— — Ps 3 ae who have ee iy keis 
for Education land con- Su cloth sett 65., tra te their attes 
$i . own en servation, E as Botany, require to cone a i 
eee eee B7 3 T. | AN IMPROVED FARM” ACCOUNT. BOOK. | oo, i. Bere e upon ines Aaa 
D. ‘ 1 
Irwin's Review of Dr. Towns- | Essays on Subjects connected Association.—The great necessity of Keeping Farm Accoun j 18 
end's Remarks on the Policy | with the Rete F. Hl. Maitland, | has induced the author to publish a book, in he most simple — —v— 5 e 1 
of a Separate 1 land. By Rev. S. R. Maitland, form, and adapted for gener: ided into two parts—the | In crown 8vo, 4s. 6d. bape wl va 220 ams engraved 
h Education ety first forming the Labour Account his pe rnal a ee e o 
History 2 Ernie beorins bees of Travel r round the | and the Second, a Ledger and Sarg of Act be UCLID’S ELEMENTS. “OF pea GENE. 
Society. By Ba er had by o order N Bo seat ri TR 


Proceedings of the Zoological First Preach h Book. By T. K. 
Society rnold, M.A. 
Present 8 of Trans- e 5 By B. H. 
i fi Sa asian. Edited 
spondence, by H. E 
on Horology- 2 W. S. = es on English rier By 
Life of Hin meg Bs Rev. J. 1 3 Prophet. By Rev. 
C. Pritchar 

ilo phy of So- Blements of Botany. By M. 

Key in 25 Pb b d eJ ore: Translated by 


ty. By G. P. 3 T 
The pi Dime hes Gardening £” Children, Edited | 
Rev. A. Jobn 5 

` Gar y 
guage. 

Cicero on old Age 
Trial. 
sponden OS coat Notes during a 

from Bayonne to St. Sebasd 
Gossip. -Unpublished Letter of General 


Det, 


RY; with oo mag | Appendix 


di and Seat 
2.. Budge-row, Watts: Propositions for Exer Adapted for the Use of 


ari e s published. 3 for Self-instructi WW that 14 + make Euclid 
HE ART TOF AGRICULTURE Established on dy va beier 2 * 
True Principles. By James DRUMMOND, Newington, Edin- easy to uners.“— own motto, 
Mr. Cooley seems almost to shall Fe 
. for Forty Years a Practical Agriculturis st and Hortieul- hat oe eas 792 4 vf Geometry’ "for fo 8 iata 


steps of Playfair. 
voite of tho work as well as the labour 228 mape 
fixed to Sá Elements are some remar g are 
matics valuable for the ciggance, “of — 
correctness of their reasoning.“ u ginder 


Journ accion 
s the best edition of the Elements W. 
4.” k Ae ie 5 ö eee 
cerning, attention to the w nts of 
2 Jublin ee 
V. D. 6 Y, À. B. Author of the . 
and Inland Discovery,” «The Negro-land 
iform with the ‘ Elements,’ . 
00 LE Ys "GEOMETRICAL PROPOSITIONS 
DEMON ATED; or, a Sup 


Edlaburgh: Published by James Hoce, 4, „ 
London: R. GRoomBRIDGE and Sons ; Dublin: W. Cusey, jun 
and Co.,; and all Booksellers, 
HE CULTIN rIVATORS oF — bog should arder the 
MIDLAND FLORIST for September, which l contain, 
be sides g a variety of other e 8 Ouigtaal Articles 
f Roses in Pots, by E. Beck, Esq. ; and a 
Complete List of Pirtek —— for Garden Culture. Order 
of ey — Kseller. 
* AS aa Edition sent post-free for 12 months on receipt 


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allads— Society of 3 s— Professor 
iy cree and the 


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Contraction of t the Muscles—Currents in the — — 
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Musical and Dramatic Gossip.—New Directo 
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is ne is genuine but Warns,” ge that „There as 
2 of the Say Da ” Dn, Locock’s 
. are the care pay recommended to 
Ladies. — p% constitution 5 all ‘Periods of life, 
alpita 


KEY to the Ese ee app pended to t the E 
— a and povan Students. of Euclid, are 


e to the exigencies of Free Trade. 
By W. Ton amb, M. 5 
wg from the Fir Six Books 


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Norfolk. Second Edition, with additions, price 1s., with a plan, 


pl 
London: 5 ape one ; and Fox, Paternoster-row ; by ne iagrams. as 
and vd at the Stations e Eastern Counties Railway. Will be found 505 3 gat 5 j 
H: 2 801 Story Fao, Fe 2s., or by post, 2s. 6d. he Mathematics.’ Gro, price 14 being d. A 
— IENCE OF LI or How to Live and ap. BVO, ID; ae 
to Live re, with ample rales for diet, regime on, 8 nd comms FIGURES T EUCLID ; a 4 
sel-mansgemont > together with instructions for securing illus the Se Bom foo x 


fect health, longevity, and that apt aos — 5 of happiness 5 
attainable through the se observance of a well-regulated 
course of life. By A sok 

k re si one of those emanations of the press 


to which mankind ow f its most important in start ke am 
tion on first principles, a gor whist will orove a boon tot ure in her operation, but li io 
aey rac a nd slush as ion of the his compass, wing not where 


thao pein of diet a 
ghou and Borg e hav 


rte oth — — practice, the sedii of th FE PILLS are no v 
physician Keir e priest would be considerably — conquer disease and prolong 
while long life tifa ould not pret be ern e but attended with è y increase the strength; 
health and the most perfect ha ess.”— ve a weakening effect upon 
3 5 23 a and porian 52, Paternoster- from three to four or six Pills e 
; and m „ 39, Cornhill; and Hannay, — ae as they —— be 
63 y irl 


0 THE LADIES. —The 1 influence of th their ee they "Pils, you 


en six or seers ai 


ased atte 
pi pleasing and 25010 pe sd 

LAND YDOR, so ree establ 5 ished 1 royal our disease 
tion. Its application neutralises gm 
— and induces that healthy action EE 
the 
RTS and Co. 


; also, 
“T. ROBE 


parency of complexi 


coral gil for sale, containing 
e complexion, and by 


utterly 
—— seat endangering 1 — The words ords RO W. Printed by W 


only by the Proprietor’s Agents, Parten of St. ancras, 
sem treet, Lond Taxe a R” are on the wra row, Stoke Ne both in 
ats a WW 8 are also Agents for “ Dz. Lo- | article ; the words Spa Rowan. and Son, 20, — tet 
2 e W for Consumption, Coughs, „ —— G0 t St amp affixed 
= . 1 per vendors, at1s.1}4., on each bottle. Price 40. 6d. and 8s. 64, Sold by the 


tors and by Chemists and Perfumers, 


HE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


a Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


Mo 35—1849.] 


SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1. 


X. 
Landscape Gardening, Down- 
in — ——— 2 2 “4 b 
Manures, artificial 
er 8 


Potat sosse 
Porste hh — Ireland eee 
Re aipe ers’ Clu hes 557 


ene 9 24460 
s. 


urnip seed 
Villa gardeni ming . es es 
Wales and its pasture ` š 
Weeds, growth of.. 

Wheat crop 
Wood, ripening of the; 


Na. SOUTH LONDON PORNIT 
Under the patronage of He 

A Grand DAHLIA, HOLLY d 

obs FLOWER TA being the sith and last 
REY ZOOLOGICA 


g collections, laneous and Spe n Plants, 
Tabel, Roses, Dahlias, Hollyhocks, Verbenas, Cut Flowers, 
Tut, Grapes, and Honey. In: addition to the 3 offered by 
the * extra : By John 


to Amateurs, for the 3 3 Midomi of Duchess, 
three priz 


es, 6l. John Keynes, for the 


THOM’S SEEDLING STRAWBERRY. 


ripens in euceession to Keens’ Seedling, is Re arg ze 
higoen pey te lour, In point of flavour, it 08 
delicious, and cannot be surpassed. Reference may be peter to 
e following parties, who examined the beds when in 


ae MILNE, Nurseryman, | Mr. A DER, of Di 
Sunnyside and Sons, Edinburgh 

M. T. Dantrne, Gardener, Mr. Epwarp RAVENSCROFT, 
Woodhill Highland & Agricultural 


Messrs, Smita and Carpno, Society’s Museum, Edin- 
ae Aberdeen l burgh 

ants red iran ag Smith and Cardno, 
sy 2 P. eid and Co., S rg "Aberdeen ; 
ae . Dickson and Sous, Edinburgh; Ae Peter Lawso 
and S inburgh; Me Lern. Hurst and M“ Mullen, —.—ç 
Leadenhall pone “London and Mr. George Chivas, Seedsman, 
Eastgate-street, Chest 
Orders addressed to "R. Tuom, Cornhill, Aberdeen, will b 


[Price 6d. 


NN CUCUMBER, LORD 


28. 10d. ied * 
2 true. 
the 1 * E in boxe ta ps, tot the 

Sold b WARD a Want — a g and FI — 
16, ha Mente Bridge, Bath. 


8 TO FARMERS.— Trifolium incarna- 
mported seed, grows taller than En glish, re wer zt 

Tallan me e r on bushe. 

A s. ôd, 


— 
High ‘Holborn, 


J. 8. Wairr’s Seed Establishment, 181, 
London. ane Cash. 


VAL OF FLOWERING BULBOUS ROOTS. 
WII. 


punctually attended to.—Cornhill Gardens, Aberdeen, Sept. 1. 


CHOICE SEEDS FOR PRESENT SOWI io 
ILLIAM DENYER, Srepsman and FLORIST, 82, 
echurch-street (near the Spread Eagle), —— dee 


ILLIAM HAMILTON, SEEDsMAN and FLORIST, 

156, _ Cheapside, —.— (opposite St. Paul's), begs to 
e ual importation of Duteh and 

2 Flo — — „ in — pa condition, comprising all 
a bee A variet 1 Of "HYACINTHS, NARC 1880S, TULIPS, 
oR S, JONQUILS, GLADIOLUS, &e., &e., and respec t 
— solicits the aoe of 5 7 public and the 55 su 
port s fri ends, , assuring a who may favour him with th 


Gr: 
to cgi ite following, which has been carefully saved by 
be est 


+h 7 


4 


b 


akan owers, 1 per 
tpt SINENSIS FIMBRIATA, from splendid flowers, 
3 show flowers saved by Thomson and 
other eminent 3, 18. per packet. 
W. D. takes this W to intimate that his Annual 


5 due * roots, — a strict observance to 

reful nae king and punctual oa 
HY ACINTHS, a — rs, N and 188. p. doz. 
er dozen, 


side, London, N. B. Early orders respect- 


4 shown 0 he e nine Dahlias, viz., I fli relied, no 
3 Purple Standard, sng ee on, iss Chaplin, larzel in Holl 
E Ponie Regina, ackmore, Rainbow. Miss ofr * i wy low prices, Descriptive A Priced, an. Mi e D HYACINTH SUPPORTER, so Mi Ror 
eyed 1 five prizes, K me, SM Mr. k * logues may be had on application. ing his 1 by all who used i ‘The vagal 
as let ou mse’ at any time, two (oh . bs f 
Fes, N. By Mr. E. Hunt, for se 3 blooms of General EW ae ANTS AT VERY Y REDUCED PRICES, for Biya 8 A wf pe and cheap port 
; r. ll. a! zone a * * th iced Catalogue is now rea "pire e best new Jer Hyasinths, 1 ide * . PER DO DOZEN, gi 
fs r. urner's Dahlia, Mr. Seldon y ties of GE RANIUMS, 3 FONTAS VER- 5 
n d e best 2 blooms of Miss Jane, fancy | BENAS, | CHRYSANTAEMUMS, ACHIMENES, and OTHER | _ 4 Postoflice order.» cessary from unknown correspondents. 
21 U. 3 John Eam a iter 8 9 PLA ANTS. post 72 applica n Basa and epr 
Bushell’s Duchess, 10s. arms, Esq., d Horticnitural Establishmen u! 
b for the best 2 Blooms e e Seed and Horticn ura ary, AOE CONSE PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS 
easier 3 Dahlia, Lae = has been greatly improved, and we can now supply it free from 
oe nate oeoa, ~ ae nae NEW AND RARE PLANTS. — and all irregularities of surface, perfectly fla atthe 
; spikes di > of 
Mr. i ESSRS. VEITCH a y the Patentees, cuttoo in panes 
610 oe ig tags takes for N mirers of eer plants — the kalen — ge by 10 under 14 foot. Sid. 1} foot under 3 feet.. Gd. 
ot sent out, the Bronze Medal. will be ready fo and after Monday, September 3: — — j $ ; — i i 5 PA 
ecretary, Ebeneser 2 j This antifal : OYA. ARE HO. 1 p3 ACKETS IN BOXES of 50 1 8 Te a 
: 1 al plant a” ms y 54... 
sfi ara in 2 ee Magazine for Octoher { 6d. — and 10 by 8 . 158. 
Lee DAHLIA SHOW OF ENGLAND, 14 ast, W beg Sir W. Hooker, in sor t t rays, The most 2 west us e each, Metal A Tiles, and 
ta a 1 ath = this — take pl ace lovely ofall a “Hoyas, delic scented, 8 — — 
under — e 26th and 27th Sep. methyst se et in frosted silver.” ee mae also figured in Paxton’s — ach h es, 10d. each; Wasp Traps, 
í singin as Pe Cc ien Prize be Mr. Gt ae Sb fagazi — aki a bes gga ETA — — 1 55 ris N 3 bes, Plate me ed 
e Z - er 2 n auty Te ts, Pish G 
Prizes, & e., can obtained at the Gardener?’ os ate the petals are of a very pure w pe — beautifully | of — seription, and Lam ‘Shades. 5 
l lain Marz Hotel, Sali -square, Fieet- | frosted; altogether it is a plant of nee in a the quality of Ea tabes, np 5 ; 6 tubes, 10s 
— 8 and Co., 55, New. st., 1 — am. | collec 4 the flowers endure In perfection for Tog time, | io mometers for 8 1 — — Glass, een 
p+ fr. nt.” It has x! al LIPS and CO. th- 
1 s 0 n MUSICAL FESTIVA aud ees 1 ore, at both of which places it — a AMES P PHILLIPS a » 116, Bishopggate-street 
K, CULTURA PONDS WO RTH AND 222 ELLS HORTI- the firs e for Fine blooming plants (A REEN AND HOTHOUSES by = 
Len in SOCIETY will t Exhibition 65, enc REEN A 5 made 12 feet 
Seed . kde lend A Sass MITRARTA COCCINEA. ty ary) | by b ree glass endar door, and 9 feet of glans ta front gazed 
band e d distinct shrub gested A ) , ’ painte? coats 
= * was e ag William Lobb, from the Island » | with 15 ozs ah l ect glass of a lar dar lway or in Le Me 
2 ee Ton. Bec, Handsworth, near Bir- | Te is figured in Paxtons Magazine, for r August lat Tea ot 131. 108. ado, do. 18 by 10, 22. Ide; ado. do. 18 by 12, 
[iversr dwarf compact evergreen shrub, plants in ite ph peerage riet n including 4 wid for 
J bundance on plants 1 sma -3 g oz. 
SCHOOL, under — 8 a2 t of the Co 5 foliage Is small and — a lagane er goog ol ers | sheet ss Hs oa 11125 ee 2 iach : 
une d tion, the pec j hine Hothouse Works, 
8 Ta — r r A. M. The culture ores oth present in cultiva- per foot.—J. Lewis's Machine 
Se open ied into th "ee ae — 8 — of . ee e ss ä sa N P hibited at — ee Middlesex. ERV. AT OR TES, 
: » from oth 0 Ser- R ent's-park, and had first prizes at both ng FOR CONS 
egent’s-park, GLASS 
3 plants 313. 6d. each. GREENHOUSES, PIT FRAMES, & 
EN par he Aer LMYLA STAMINEA (Brome). LEY AND Sheet 
8 “inl — 2 peak og — — e 7 . arvin — whore plant ’s Magazine for May, = tish Ma 3 
Wen of Meat d to three-quarters past 3 o'clock, The 1818. It was exhibited 11 —— on Horiultura ge the 3 Co maby 
awing Adnesday and Saturday are devoted exclusively | m in Regent s t-street, December 7, A reduction made on . per foot. Per 100 feet. 
r Latge edal; and 8 the Regent’s-park exhibition o Sizes z a Le ichs, T £012 6 
beende are — Writing, Ancient and the th of July, “he, it also receiv a Sily er Medal, S ng saline * oir 45 T; -a eee 5 0 16 $ 
ih H Germa 8 neient and | plants, A rom „ ” 8 6 Sid. „ 018 
mee an hy, both sical and Politieal, IFOLIA ee Canvouta). trt o o» » 1 1 0 10 
and Geograp Y, CA ANTUA rn 6 10 8 „ Hd „ 
* Batura] eeping, the elemen n — which was sent 8 * 9 § 1 1 
, or Se and ie wing. aa pupil may omit Pa 3 Se ae os ’s Bo- 83 E m 
— n, and devote his whole attention to tanical 8 * July, 1848, where a ful cription “of it Sr sines,stot Laer e 40 inches long. 
— pe It exhibited at Regent-street, in April, 1948, 3}d. per square foot, — oe 
examination of the pupils at the end of | is 5 h for easy | 1602. from 3d. to 53d. pe 
and the Prizes are eP and received a Medal. Itisa hardy greenho habit. 21 oz. 5d. ” 
= eof pA Mont School is mee aE without corporal | culture, it e freely, and is of a fine | 26 0. „ sha. 1 
— of the conduct of each pupil | $ ts 31s. 6d. CROWN kme. 
NERA PILA E E O , | PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THICK GROWN, oaase, 
Particulars may ‘be o obtained at the office This is a very beautiful t. ; PAT 
ery thro the by the 100 square feet. 
5 . son, Secretary to the ati and prod most ly all ugh ces, by attern 
in the Classes of the Fi pbs, a Medi- | summe scarlet, and Pro“ The foliage is handsome, the habit Glass TILES AND SLATES made to any size or p „ 
on the Ist of October ; f of oo gee a plant that will certainly give | either in Sheet or Rough Pla e Glass. 
* ober; those of the Faculty mpact and dwar’, It is hn ‘oad pera of a cool Propagating Glasses, smaa pe "Cucumber Tubes, — 
i aon WHEA — 3 ss: lke sage — iI is figured in Curtis’s en Milk Pans, Glass Wat , and various other articles n 
e A Packet oon 1 1 arch last. Good flowering plan 213. z hitherto manufactured in glas — e e D mo derte 
= free du esst third year from the Mummy, | MAET OT OLUM SMITHIANUM (Dz CANDOLLE), | PATENT PLATE GLASS. ite presen it to supersede all 
i ) esp ad postage stamps; 8 tiùm was sent us Co- | price 1 4 fleman’ sresidence. No 
his pen disti t San d in Curtis’s Bota- other inferior ead ith he in G rea 
lumbia by Mr. William Lo 
soon, | san due fash deka fe f= em | of tS SER epee cei igs 
5 {| dant bloomer., Well de dns Trade, and when three of any sort of every description the removal of the Excise duty, re- 
and the public that they will] The usual discount to the Trade, posure. Prices, since the 
to 18, Cum — taken, a fourth plant put in gra atis. d 3 List of Prices and Foo. the forw ion 
eas wil 5 carried on N B. The earliest orders will have the strongest pla — n — o James HETLEY and Co., 
Printed Lists, with farther descriptions, sent on app a London, 
Exeter, Sep 


TRE GARDENERS, 1 i 
[Szpr, J, 
SS 


546 


MEDICAL AND ECONOMICAL BOTANY. 


Y JOHN LINDLEY, PaD., ERS. 


In One Volume 2 hs a with some Hundreds of Woodcuts, price F. aurteen Shillings, em 


EXTRACTS FROM THE AUTHOR’S PREFACE. 

“ m contains, amo vantit: lants of no kn man, various useful species empl medicine i 
The Vegetable Kingdo ; The p 8 „ of r which can be brought by teachers in Europe under the notice of 2 or wih ta ge 

im ce, deserve to be among the earliest subjects =a of study, are -mentione in the following pages, where they arranged in the manner proposed in the“ OF grai | 
Kuben of the 3 with the sequence of matter depa a few i ces, when it was believed that the cenvenienes of younger e = i 
by doing so. “The a uthor trusts that 2 ibn rma — —— 9 that all teachers who possess reasonably extensive mears of j 
their lectures, ah al Botanic Gardens, nish the larger part of the species which are men ioned. A small selection was indis — t nis firstly, because Hintay 
uld ah of the 2 of f purchasers 5 anda ster beeau use experience doy us that those who have to study a science of * 
at n, a limi 


po hay ag pari — 


“ n of the oh is rine to that so happil bd by Linneeus in his Materia Me dina, a ‘joie te valuable in its day, although now fi 
rrr’ 1 * objeets of medieal m than any be hich has since appeared. Each species, placed in its ogi position in the 3 —— — 2 
name, as well as that which it bears in scien , in a few words, er country whence it vase the quality it has been said to possess, and the uses to which it hashes 
found a * licable. Very — phrases are also — for the purpose of showing how the genera or species bit to be distinguished — each other. 
The whole plan of the work as, in 2 to point out distinctions : . —. pb Jere sate — employed with this view. In many instances the . 
not be absolute, a they are sufficient ordinary pur ose o become better acquainted ‘with Botany will, of course, make the Pet 
Kinepom ’ of author the subject. of en study. For the buen f 2 3 may 1 a: to do 80, references are made to that work throughout all te 


following — 


SPECIMEN OF THE ILLUSTRATIONS. 
PENIC ae Microscopic. Cobweb-like or mothery flocculent masses, producing simple globose spores disposed in patches about the pencil-shaped ene 
1. ppt fori Grevilla—(Ta VINEGAR PLANT.) 
‘Mycelium forming a h. crust-like 5 ee web; branches somewhat 
entangled one ores pore werdigtis-gee 
Habitat. On d 
“Quality. eee in the 


atifeation 


it to vinegar. 


Mycoperma. It is probable 
the 3 ee tr > which 
forms arious infusion 


mothe — m 
mycelium of, Mucor, Penicillium, 
and othe: Se — ong 
r of “of Mr. “perk sle og „ 


in 
branches — the air pro- 
the true fructification of 
— of Fungals. i > 
FF al Journal, is suff me | : . 
ycoderms, fig y Dr. Pereira in the P! 1 Journal, is sufficiently evident; as will be seen by a cut (fig, 31) of t ion i -guesinate of amu 
borrowed from the Pharm. Journal, vol. vii, f. 8, p. 341 wer m y (g ) of the Vegetation in empyreumatic 


Nartuex. . Falconer. Umbels compound. 3 0. “Calyx obsolete. ‘Fruit thin, „ at the ai atti a dilated border. Ridges 


7s co 
dorsal, Vitte 1 to each dorsal furrow, and 2 to the laterals 

TEN, Asafa Falconer. Ferula Asafetida Linnseus.—(ASAF@TIDA.) Fig. 3 50. 
Radic 3-parted ; segments bipinnatifid, with oblong-lanceolate, obtuse, decurrent lobes. 
— Seen; Affghanistan, tha Panda. Quality. dum resin fetid, stimulating, antispasmodic. 
Uses. rrh, e 9 

*. * eee, ip ee the substance is also yielded by even species of Ferula, It has. 1 conjectured to hare: . i 

See Thapsia, p. 


i -LONDON : PUBLISHED FOR THE AUTHOR, BY 
BRADBURY AND EVANS, 11, BOUVERIE STREET. 


Fier TO LET. Mn. EDWARD RYDE, Layn- This day, 16mo, with » 20 pistes; 5 5 
NT, SURVEYOR, and VALUER, begs 2 a af g his in- ES Aen. 1 k O TANT 
tions to Let, under, liberal covenants, at nable E E M E N TA R K. ates 48, 
Rents, — — vg several capital PARES, $, varying | For the use of Beginners — n 
ee —— in K. d Essex. Printe ticulars London: —.— TAM dere 
po se be obtained. — is Office for the Sale or Landed 2 at. SẸ IRI j 


| Propert, — "Fe 
yt te, y. a a gam &c., 14, Upper Belgrave-place, | 


HO RTICULTURAL 8 AND HEATING | _... 75 asst 
88882 


22 28272825277 22522 
ALSO THE CULTIVATION on THE 5 OnoIEST PLANTS, 1 252777776 
RNS, 


GBAYA ORMSON, AND p BROWN, D 22287282727 
3 

Gardeners, — their 

sori don cription: of Builg 


412 15 


_ WEEKS AND Co. „King s-road, Chelsea, HORTICUL- 
9 e TUBAL-AROHITECTS;- HOTHOUSE rap — IIOr-warzR 
| APPARATUS Maxurgerunzzs —— an inspection of their 


f ia 2 to 2 2. inc 
of. materials and workmanship. hey h pey have now erected € ir | 15 
the | Premises, for 9 a great variety of Hothouse * Smeg 1 al 
Poreing-pi 8 „extra strong , 55 
howin above 


brot 


ie 
1 
1 
an 
i 


s, are eng i 

. e : — 
e, Ferns, and of ther Plants, in such imn dp 

; i THAN "HALP-PRICE. |? a nufactured by B. 
and everything connected with the | Norwich, and delivered free 

rimenta ; Plans, Estimates, and Cata- | borough, Hull, or Newcastle. 


N.B. — farnisheà fe 


4 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. oa 


SEEDLING Fr TUMS. S.—Gir. | Wien n Bch ARGONIUM 8, ve: is ber higa pih TEV one Hakeas, and Per 
ve superb varieties (un- d the choicest varietie ri ata- tances shee ef wl 

canis! had upon apnlios- logues of the above are now — — — on applica. sheets white or 

82 essrs. MAILE an 4758 N J 770 N a 8 quantity of Belango: | valve i "be fon moda vif w we see their leaves. 

irmingham. um se to grow, begs to offer the game at In cu svete is 4 e fou u in little esteem 

Pi WHITE NAR. | N AR. |ti |. te ye —4 . 011 i aat or 65 seeds for 53., declared to be from | called ‘ylomelum — correspon oti t 
Bu e r Pelargonium Nursery; i i 

orite 2 Nee — excessive danas Warnes, tires! Windsor, Bent 1. Sept. I. 3 from the 2 Mine where. it is wild, 

— api it as “a most beautiful tree ; the blossoms 


its purity an n 

BBETT’S Italian and —— — 
e The Gardeners Chronicle, Por sem. darle green leaves ae in 
f — e e SATURDAY, SEPTEM. 1849, oy elegant.” rÀ that | is 4 to — 


ON OF LILIUM LANCIFOLIUM, OR THE TINGS YOR THE ENSUING WEEK. the same appearance s to ripen the wood as it 
10 AUTIFUL beh de wal LILY. Sept. 4—Horticultural 3 7 + ripens in Western Ambers. Perhaps no shrubs in 


* 65 288 7 a 
Sei ise, near London, by PPP 3 are equal in perfect beauty to the Verg- 


t FLOBIST men HER MATE — “8 E QUEEN, and Lale Torticult ral e and Thursday, Sept. 6 ar 1 75 N ! 2 r = A 
to invite the OnTime Botanical and Saral Thursday, Sept.6: Teddington Hor. COP Sor. of Western Australia ; the 


7 ad OF DATON ins T, begs a sortmant f peppa e al, Meath Horz 8 e Hoxticaltoral and Floral, Ten nba. AT be Ali f £ ys 
an pe . S Wells i de ural—Friday, Sept. 7: Newbury ‘Horticultural, Corus 1 lianey of their flowers When dead and dried is 
fa, endid Li — stich days excepted. number d- — reg ill metallic, and their nu ember is countless among 
Ha e gratis. a 8 5 Har is “Rireninc tHE Woop?” The . | [the dark green heathery leav We shall never see 
—"PABBAGE a — WESTEREAN, = tion may be better put now than at any other them thus till their — ripened; perhaps 
Cal  SEEDSMAN and Nurseryman, ‘begs | season, for now is the time when ripening must i ae | we may never see them in any "Wind of beauty, for it 
. = = zagt place, if at all. One would think ak: the q uestion | may happen that art is unable to supply ‘the 
Weil known excellence of his Early Barnes re- | answered itself; but our correspondence tells us that e for perfect maturation. Let us, however, 
he winter an a —— ensurin 8 many persons have no distinct notion of what zipen- | t we can. 
44 may be > depended ing wn e be accelerated, or how prevented. " Gerdenets may rely upon it that they cannot 
per 1000 n previous occasions we have — out the neglect any means of ripening 0 ane f in — 
ney ay cultivate 


— — — to be made payable here. 
Packages of 1000 and upwards 3 free of oa ariago: to the | th 
tdenbridge station ot the South-Eastern Railw 


at greenhouse shrubs:may be fro om — impunity, be assured that no unt of ripening which they 
and that others will endure our winters with norisk, | Can. poss aay. secure will be excessive ; on side 
provided their wood is ripe. e know ‘that thatthe tin they cannot Let them, then, now 

ya 


ry the 
‘ ae “Killed 1 in 1 AA ret ith half ipa ma warm dry dianas for. —— plants Er all 
pan Aaa of . here the wood is seldom ripe. | som heat, light, and pe at undance of air secured 


vus, Gulielma, Grandiflora, I ver tess = a pee apo Thes 
Rossmung, ‘Sundown; or 9 of the above, and jibe moai à impo an Ate of all autumnal work is to | Phet they ms 7 ae a 8 
Wader, or Topping’s Brilliant, or Foster's Victory. 100K to the state of the wood. t 
5 n, well cultivated, will make first-rate e ripening process consists in a gradual and | without — alle i e yeap aguy in the worl Ee 
— 3 ip all 2 pies oe complete removal of superfluous 3 and in a be of small a vail. 
Wate Cartage, Isleworth. perfect conversion of fluid, crude, organisable matte a But there is a difficulty in the way. 


p Heat and 
shad Garde e spess ished on he sto dn the | into mes more solid eae vere hee it | Tight are dang gers — ant will destroy life as 
and to be had of all bookseller: title of during winter proce although | Wet) as invigorate it; an re is — — 

Thi essentially í distinct, = F e r about | that * the ripening process to its limits by 
© | by the Aas é artificial mean 


5 
2 
B 
4 
9 
2 
E 
20 P 
f=] 
Hf 
1 
| 
LA 


e regard. 5 0¹ under the opera- 
: sai Ps 
ie Big * is driven off by heat, light, and tion. to guard against. mg — is 
urrents of air acting upon the surface; sclerogen, | W me ns rules can pre nee Her re ga art of 
starch, gum, resin, and other solid secretions are in Sul ening comes into requisit prem experie nee 
RDY HYBRID: RHODODENDRON. li 3 ? ee cad alone must be led to. N d h 
ike manner formed the force exerted upon 410 us appeaied to. o gardener, however, 
eee A : ee Who deserves the name, can haye the least doubt as 
Sr sending gi carbonaceous matter derived from the air. If to the -way in which the difficulty can be met. 
: h 21s. each. | these agents are insufficient the wood zemains We 2 cautioned by an — t the 
at the Horticultural Society’s Exhibition at * F ana 
7 girah of May, ‘and awarded their Knightian soft a mae , and the wy ok —— are 80 danger of falling i into oP oro men, while 
ditor of the Gardeners’ ee tidal rated that t panas little we are — ing to 3 irtues. But 
scedling Seeman: Jackson, | 0 the stability 1 to . ia a complete con- asan . the imperfect 1 even of 


HA 


per it dsa mood User, the flowers individually | dition. Heat and light together, in es presence of | the may be, we incur at least equal danger 

SENA nea spit 4 — appe ey air, if possessing the requisite power, solidify all the, in Cilowing 2 itly their best W 8 when 
Discount tissues and all their ayer ‘keeping up the play | ignorant of the grounds on which they ase piona. 
= Kington, 5. — — = K e 


of chemico-vital action til the at of assimila- urious. circumstance illustrative this 
tion and 8 is 5 lat tely mentioned to us casually as we l tray Aur 
il be ready The effect of this ri tipenpg process is by: 2 means by railr 
limited te . plants a power of resi g cold, A few months since a disease had De 
arly, that is but an incident in the operation. Thea na in amongst the winter ** of a well known agr 
stands Object is to provide an abu indance, of food, of tap ae, and singularly enough it 75 the — 
r ki of which account was given at the time in 
parts which are about to appear i in the sicoseding g tis — urnal. The disease increased rapidly, de- 
Messrs. son, —— spring, and also, in in many cases, to the production of — wre ultimately almost every flower, and pre- 
Claremont, 1 Beaton, and the embryo flowers upon — the hopes of the ae all ho . ae best course seemed 
ae o Pea ua coon pn. the —— are founded. It is literally true that not to be ves o ploug it up at o » and to secure a cro 
Camberwell. —JAMES Committ, a flower will appear upon a Camellia, o or an Azalea, o ich 
ra Pear, or a Peach, or a Strawberry, or any other with 8 success. Previous to being ploughed 
line shrub, or herb, unless there has been such an up the Beans were rolled. who had a 
0 — onare — MEN, amount of heat and light, and free 1 to the | very high opinion (and a — 1 of be 
ublic have or successful in obtaining air, as will haye caused nutri triment in abundance’ to | neighbour's judgment observed him rolling his 
from the north of be formed, and “the young and fener. nay pelle panne. “My friend,“ says he, “knows a thing or two; 
ach s tone health piene scales, which.come together: and make the flower, to some good reason for what he is 
Tree is a great fay with the e Chinese, and arrange themselves in the 0 rder assigned io shy by shou 1 cannot conceive what it is: Twill do the 
ey i e 8 .” Accordingly he set his men to work, and a 
8 * po eb ; explains the great advantage of-a dy, warm fine wt was- soon en ge, Tho gh, o 0 
1 or, e e oP Lord Macarine iney | * — . — berry beds, w. which then produce this caused some amusement to his neighbou „ his 
3 R. ca a 5 n abundant blossom in the following year ; e sev É 1 nf ‘the beets i ofh D Magnus eee 
—— age those who coddle and nurse their plants in cool and was by no means lar. in case the 


ribe: nthe Valeo?) Tombs sha laces, where they are always soins tell consequences » were ere as papas, 
er, and su br d page ona oun a lenty, ut not a fruit. This exp ains NM ib to this is happening kegy 
deen Nerd pon | why’ Camellias flower so ill in close greenhouses day both inthe * the, field, and will occ 
ain Lane bt pee por facing the north, or darkened by Vines, where. they 50 long as-peopl will . chink one . oe 
n Se „or . of | have 1 heat, nor light, nor air enough; am ves. ; 
en built in the why, un r circumstances the: reverse of this, i | , quently brought upon really valuable — 
variety of | bri ght sun, iG accompanying heat, and the. constant their supposed failure, when the failure might be 
dae Da ly present in the open-air „ Rower- ara to more or less complete ignorance. Another 
in crow occurs to us on the moment. The practice 


e 
jand we hi have little idea of the extent 10 kof cutting off the haulm of Asparagus beds, just 
Should go; itis doubtf fal i nepal before the peter ripening of the berries, had Bean 


the of exoties is ever ripened in adopted, with a view to Evens the growth of seed- 

À land. We are told that in hot vg lice lings from th ale “fallen berries. 9 W without 
eof the Yal wood of the Peach and Vine becomes as har inquiring the reason, or thinking 

i a of the z nander Wind i: bie iogan, aid as brittle, up to the siya of the eS cai the following year to cut off all 

ö — ‘by botamiste to be. We know that numerous shrubs, especially | the stalks, Which accordingly was done as soon as the 


may 
‘the present rage for novelty ; 
— S by a dislike of the treble’ 


348 
THE GARD 
ENERS’ 
OFRE DEONT PLANTS AND THE and th S’ CHRONICLE. 
“ By Nature’s ae Apar ponpak THEM. 2 spd eraporatin gi it down till SSS r 
— — 1 fills me 8 — 1 atn of tency of treacle. In this latter . s 1 appear — these aphides EPT. £ 
and t vier balsam pear in the winged sta 
Ethereal tme drew olufi of Tolu, from th he mischief i ag ka M 
Frofuscly beeathiog from the spicy gro 1— — ia 1 odo se tae, pionit foe tiles A, places, and to denen 7 
‘Lied ales of tin — kato the spicy Sora vouch pind ipa for n e We sp * 2 r — 
UMERO 3 ; THOMSON ike e mixed with soa use, but | having b is insect as 
cultivation of saa f — stl from the — a of ne properties — a oo — with a an | the a, I 3 eet wit -aa descriptis e 
: n i 
the sake of fit in the end than that 7 yew — ̃ ͤ———ʃ z ane 2. rt — is family 22 : ie Walker a 
e ee te emi inn as 
plants which e various parts THEat uus OF THE LETTUCE R Our high e is unacq le “ Zoologi 
that they may 3 gia T. them 80 sudd 2 2 2 sin ai eirs ly magnified figures 2 with the y 
ver , is the main branch of the art of eg yon their presence e not pre “s the tched, will enable 2 
3 of the art of ib ee That i a * eviously an “anticipated, supine hidh brimi ae s from the majority of te 
quity ; it was i e * at insects ention as they | ; ins of t genus aphis, hayi the 
— 8 batons thë Pete e à ee to pane of temperatu are a 3 sensitive 9 beet insect, for ‘which dong: 2 to — be 
Sat Matas * . eee pono. the sni af Pani 
w : nse 1 i 
gum from iho rere exudes by incision and dries son trical take f ths knows well that a dull — ne jot perfect insect is one line! 
the * of U ng fo burn aloe tis add the air in an evening will b Bary aleo: | th colour, as thos etaan of dns of apale greenish 
that sa 5 to do honour to the div ng aaie e moths in the greatest mn Me nnn e thorax, polished ; the w of the body and : 
Thetotians were adored. Many of the pa: E — 5 in the earlier spring lant 2 thing i — Peder chestnut, leg Bee and — 
r tee > put to death because th s — apply the term of a s than to hear 1 enish, The antenn antenne di 
cense to id ey would n + | easterly currents of blighting wind to those The wings one-third } æ * onger than dirty pale 
n the Romish ie h alow state air accompanie m pupa is al rd longer than the enti the thorax, 
> elr sere still retain the use of | re Shortly —— — ats and which, dee e i k tener litaba ris ale — green coloured, vi body, The 
solemn funerals, besto eremonies, particular! rwards followed b noug 83 uten » With shorter 
y at Breat nu 2 of i by the 2 6-jointed 3 mæ, as in the 
Psi ish matas a aa yan | mene Sag csr wl et ot ee wa is cay AE 
used orks indicats: that’ dried 500 o ing numerous own, similar to that of t of white 
po eek se 15 pee cd that th syren" a ee oe of heavy. paea! are ots 125 poet or ahay ut ee j Spo this . coy sticky or i 
mode — ices, Adi ssively hot efore us, and from y emitted in the 
irect pix GE Althouzh fi the extrem 
* k aa generally pot pourri used for scenting — — ed some years 75 Lig K Tota subj ect was pub- nur belon rae 5 195 Too of plants, mth sie Ak 
72 a8 ental | Actions of the Ent n the Tr: none of which 
to carry about the ab ong —.— had wondered anlegen Societ Tan rans- | ey acquire wings ; lik 
t y. er, it is d 10 e most 
Chi accra fe as is the yuna eee mae of odori- ge moth o i —.— ou elas tele illars of y th Fauna the end of t the boty. of the honey- then, hs 
The * Ba 9 y among the of these having allow the supposition gures re 
* ellium,” mentioned by — scented woods. h the spr n vf 110 bl tehed earing magnified ; fig. aga a ae g. „ the perfeet ‘ne 
idera on — 
— in l 1 with, 5 fa 85 soná a ad not 1 — S mack: laces at ort zei 3 ae 4, he 7 antenna ; fig. 3, 
ata a prove th 1 rve Th atura. magnified ; 
a "oy period among the H — rfumes | the eggs of 8 are 1 by Mr. Lewis that 7 , the — Fs — ix-jointed antenna pa 
spo 5 —— — ents tae talerpillars rem ched perona months pre- | m 9 45 J. O. W, 
pag Re M, and oil, s hou all through th caterpill 5 8 pop 
y ointment, with which 88 A — nee it into — of daik eed ee beneath a -r 4 15 a ee Se MOST ESTIMABLE IN AROSE 
Belonging Karea oy Tabernacle and the ae e ha ae oo; per — gs aieh emale been Iess — understood tha a ere is no flower that has 
3 passage runs, “T which e of the atmosphere , at when the ent th Rose; it is so beautiful is 
e. galban „ ake ch instinct told th n the spring arr ealyx unt 11 the co bursts t 
the cre, and confeetion them into a holy — ag wal pt gs rance, they Saree os was best fitted for a of the tl it i 25 loomed, that even the wild — 
Lord.“ In John D fered ut 1 — astonished the reda ** patch of gluten, | ho raised the fc s er from © On this account nobody 
a E ‘that the boy é of 5 at their sudden ap. that every mov 4 the ‘satan rena 
— aes ee records therefore ices, myrrh, and re ae novelty in colour, habit, pope 2 
* ` n in use from the eee that per- e maa ew variety, and thousands ary fro 
icates r Ages d for this article in mary 3 ; re teristic most o merit d eT om. T The 
with the age of the pec this respect have e in- perfume, for surel, a apes by the multitude is the 
all climates, but Fe lowers yield . —5 * R> is s uisi Hundreds f the floral world 
are most prelito in Geir odour, hia thwe from the claim a igh piac in our ao w somo dpa vil i» 
sweetest. Hook s ose from the m o errie but h 
ka of the delightful fragran n his Travels in Teeland, become alt le pe whan 3 
Violets, Primr ‘sere 3 we 5 that Winter. mhe remarkable arn of the Rose, Itis somewhat 
in great abundan ~~ and the wild Thyme amc: te saa the Chine kind, and genni 
ptain ; explorin; 5 Pi iesse, in pany P erfume, and some of the finest 2 „a pre d 
ustralia, writes, “ Th g the wild regions of S cellen Š specimens ex 
a green as d e rains have clo £ outh oaa this deficie ce. It o im o 
. e act too meadow in symmetry and beau 7 Wool peg Fa — 
The yellow e Anemone of th e leading point, in qualities 
>d Wattle resembles the Rose ; hen 
e, sb it in scent, ce the old 
ies TS A aoia, and [avoi een See ad i weal 
= many of “aa ve been a good thing if, in the 7 of 
serdi the om the East aiko € Caka i the al ays * inte the Rose family, p 4 
i of utility t0 the bs however he exico, 1 view, that they might 
are i Shen perfumer. Grasse 8 real infinitely worse . md out so many that were not olf 
j he ee art; from their ee — in the Rose the et eee se 7 — 
bene comparatively sł á parent fly. ma z e charity s cov > : 
applicable to bring to — elim 4 nat that 3 have been — by the ageney af 31 : of the point of — -m Having d- 
without fear of On the plants required for | sa k, Ead., writing fro ham pondent, M. Shur- | that EETU hybrids, Tea and | varieties 
all the planta for frost, one night of which would destroy ee es or De anoni a . be ge 3 point in favour o 
* are found ere “2 at Bit more northerly, his esac pe, Sae without i thunder, and de e ad a great the mea re ere 1 en 
ituations where wn in th ~ fine, I ed, ollowing| The form 
to perfection. The odours d — flo —. — ay ais o give them a He large and | full, that —— be round and the face should b 
5 = lours of plants reside in di wer | nothin ey drooped more. good watering ; | should be th may form half a ball. The pens 
iti g n? sometim ein di g. On pullin , and became good ? 2 = k., smooth on the edge, and close, and be 
vert; the stem the roots, as in Iri peared milde g one up, I found good for | laid uniformly and : 
ie a oD Ced : Pa ples 2 1 ine ap- | lower petal 5 and symmetrically from the base, © 
sera genase diye hve F vn ih el 3e es 
odorata) and Caraway (Carum eal); the Geb | whether yout open part of the garden between the cat ne nope Ty Cs 
Some plan the 3 er you ink Be Se ind 55 a flower can be p weed in, and those of È 
quite 3 yield more than on í way, and e edd is likely to be attacked in — t Roses that are the most round and the most 
for i and characteristic. odour, which i the attack? The do anythin are a the favourites among ordinary ob 
alte araia T gives three—from the ge b, — G Jy conse servers, Again, the regularity and symmetry of O° 
Sad oe the. from the leaves, one called exami ining the root pen sods wonderfully to the effect of any fon 
* fruit, neroli with a sent, we fi on Rose b 
this tree is th „orange. On this ac the jorit number of small green wi yi ound it swarming | b " te size or as small 33 
e most valuable of all to perhaps — in the pupa state, havin ing ess aphides, the ma- | an y 4 seas form equally par if half s pal, 
The fragance o the operative | nes E mun rudimental win 5 Bu! yi pidana p oit par fA 
all cases, to r odour — g of the Lettuces was — i 1 ll is a good deal El may be ssid, 
small vessels perfectly volatile of — is owing, in nearl es, especially as we h owing to the attacks of the o the valuable aunts of a Rose, there is 
i or sacs withi either con iy | munications of the same lass since received the more important than a las flower. Hundreds 
to time during their ar life, „or generated — ean similar circums e same insect observ — — har poni- | varieti all 2 — ers Eno, hardly hold foat 
— exude by incision od as when in flower. om | aphis will nees. That this peculi recisely | and-twenty hours in r open 
anum, myrrh, $ 0 orifero garde prove equally injuri ar species of 0 J —— 4 they are a 
what are called b Ke. ; others give, b 7.88 i en crops, ap Jurious to Celery or oth they are in pie sun is y 
balsams, which appe y the same act, 3 aphis most improbab] er | upon them an hour before th and are spoiled, 
oil and ear to be mi act, plant. phis is generally confined able, as each and they seld ey flag * 
balsarns are — aeons gum Seon RPT Fw ees to The on yw ich to a single species | flims Bes om recover ; the sole cause of this 8 of 
is indigenous by boiling r E a tis eee ch appears a | thik poles this it was that dictate? the peche da, 
it in * w ich the the plant | A ee n stroying this new enemy, | and Miers S are not 80 soon affected oe = 
N 2 ving a mu or foundation to 
Peers, | quassia water, = ita good waterin: 5 of the, hold much lon pr and of course 
and this is the more e ee or retain their beauty ae —. — Lager than thinner 
| petals could under any ci n 


mi 
1 


art of Rose is another in quality. > 
am the value of a variety — 2 
an tly in bloom is a splendid pret 
es in the shrubbery, or in the borders, 
a tree ost of of * but — recom | 

How importan t is, the en, ese u- 
i in full fiiam six months out tof the twelve! 
E of bloom is another beautifal character: 
wers 


— 


sed; od are in the highest perfection ape they 


U 
because an 2 — spoils all that 
2 1 ope, 3 and the ground is =n 
5 petals ; nothing can be kapri objectionable 
dn this, for unless the seed- daily trimmed o 
sha 


of the petal, and particularly of the 


f the — 92 and 3 takes 2 5 ch 
Fro 


varies from a 


ortnight 


wth the — g kaara poradi diy, i 
of whatever material is | fo 
seeds 


supplied to them. e 


dentally or intentionally to be made to vegetate 
wood, as in some instances has been th 
adhering —— to the bark, and make 
h the growth of the stems, — affording 
beautiful cuales of the manner in which ep 8 
so firmly on the highest boughs of 
tropical forests, as well as accounting for 
he —— ESP they frequently occupy in in the ir 
| 3 
The — difficulty to contend with in rearing the 
young mac th has been fo * to consist in their treat- 


plants fix themselves 


e — in 


ment during t 


e first 
months, when on are Np lable to perish, if e pe 


ae is a ore — — — we? byt 


ragged is unsig 


10 


is thick it is also smooth on an edges ; 

ed flowers, the varieties whic h'o url 
5 edges of their pe * aie — 
and 


bend and — out of _* exhibiting paiia, — 
shrivelled-up petals; and all this is 
be attributed to thin petals, for r ies i th oe on 5 
may be seen holding their form 
mar off the plant, looking well till they fa 
Every one is capable of - citing that the Rose 


we more dense in ——. and colour, in the eyes of 
sme people, goes great great way in a Rose. But colour is 
nter of iste ; j it should never be allowed it to form 


Weat present possess would be highly * me 
pate may be said of any colour or shade that w 
Bot at present possess, Crito. 


— ranean ad 
po GROWING ORCHIDS FROM SEEDS. 
th the Present time there are few subjects connected 
ed 


ough there seems no doubt that such could be 
oy ea by careful — an inference I 
here to T analogically on experiments made 


of 
— our indigeno ous Orchids appear to seed freely, 


NU. 
= wae wpe whether an. 
the 


a bhi ag wil that there is.any — on re- t 
isa = 
dids, on having been effected among Or- in 


this 5 — will have muiaa that | warm, by giving od; but er 

by soe 4 them the full benefit of light, pe it is 
ved e together with heat, is 
t influence on the — of 


E 
a 
E 
E 
3 
E 
B 
2 
br | 
S 
F 
B 
F 
2 
G 
S, 


$ 
$ 


fated atively few exotic species among our cul- 
fre Of the produce seed, circumstances sugges- 
ae kar that the latter require artificial assist- 
the can be readily afforded, by carefu 
and llen to th id face of the 
Orchids he llum. But whether the seeds of hardy | t 
tances p Senérally imperfect, or th y circum- 
pora > eae for vegetation and the subsequent 
Crops ans pon wanting, we certainly do no 
"ations spontaneous! 
Stages o wth, Pt 4 


F. 
i 


—? DISEASES OF PLANTS. 
ontinue m p. 533. 
— — or deficiency of male 


whic 
isis longest in flower must be the best for general | Antheromania and Pet 
the thi before explained, it a be easy ~ meg all ead 
to be known with re 
I will only briefly 4 upon their causes. 

T may have their origin in two different | 
sources, and first, in the deficiency of na oric. Thus 
some plants which from a temperate or hot climate are 
transferred to cold regions, or, to speak more correctly, 

e 


is necessar 


ese disease 


cause 18 


yea 


extrem 


observer htly, even heat be ermitted $ ‘oka 
a in almost all cases it will be Tusi that in proportion 
the | h 


4 ave 


in 
ill- These are Epidendrum crass 
the latter being now in flower, — three years from 

the sowing of the seeds. D. Moore, Glasnevin, Dublin. 
rs 


ued fro 


ch as 
moved t to 535 prod 
same individuals 
they again develop their perfect 
Ano is the deficiency of peva a and pri 
vation of ‘igh t, which z often occasion the imperfect 
lla 


e en 2 = ag 


egard to 


tears * eee thei 
ight. The increase of nutriment occasioned by the re- 


prove 


— ‘the a 


ta DOi 


as is wel — a if the 


oxygen, 


in | not 3 
and this kes aioe 


Slani, the fruit 


ined in too abundance in a 
sa not attain aem sweet savour which | 
ee = essary sso remains sour, This happens 


e -e 


rassifolium and Picks ge m 


no 
are brodght pe = a hot situation, 
t flow 


to es y 
ummer is not very hot, — oy or parti- 


: 1849.] THE GARDENERS’ eee th ai 549 
growth and — s sapat to the | simple pof ye — geben of 2 vegetation 
rgi be til the protrusion 


the fruits raised in the country watered by the 

says that It is to the superabundance of water ‘hat is 
to buted their bad quality; from 
| have no flavour, and never attain turity. i 


happen oe po acci- 


„ particularly the winter 


oisture, drought, e old, o 


arm 


may be observed in 


an “v. Carpomosta, that is, Acidity of Fruit.— | m 
acidifying pamm, that is 


that the pea — the ee. in oe off 


are | passage s 
the Ade “of | fruit was known 
di 


Fs 
B 
a 
PSF 
1 


vi 
of the following year may be enti — sacri 

e protects the young shoots of the present 
year not yet well formed, and prevents th 


ed, prev em from 
drying up. If you strip the tree blindly, a general dis- 
ill suffer 


us commence — — by thinning out the 
branches, and if we rem ee, we must not 
tear — off, but take them off e — using for the 
instrument. This strip- 


iency in | purpose, if necessary, 
ese | ping must moreover be: —. very 8 — chat ĩt 


shall — be . — 2 till a week before the 
maturity of the fruit. The eutting them off with a pair 
| of mr is a slow method, but a safe e one. 


ended. cann 

‘blindly. this “ors of dwarfing trees which naturally 
love to i I hope to be able to make some ex- 
erim aaki“ on this point. In the meantime I 


ny that the plan is more advantageo 
0 


here the sun has less force than in ours. 


VILLA AND SUSURSAN en eg, 
Manr of the luxuries wh exclu- 
sively produced in large an eh expensive Ae nts, 


w | can with a little care and forethought, = arar an eye 
2 


vigilantly upon the seasons as they pass be readily 
a i —+ garden. 


n ro 
roductive during half the year. ding, which is 
scarcely ever thought of by the amateur cultivator, may 
oduc 


as 
during winter. Lae, Endive, Onions, Co: 
e : = will 


e ‘rom ace with a 
slight 3 r d ry sand or coal ; the latter will 


also prevent the gsr Ar ef slu which are exceed- 
ingly destructive to the plants while in a young state. 
If the cultivator a handglass or two, these 


at | may be usefully ay, on dag in protecting young Lettuces, 


&e, by pricking them out thickly un nder them, and 
trans i 


c and “Tight on the — 


p t 
cially in ose years 


But sometimes the evil arises from a de- 


lanting them in early spring ; where no such 

eans of protec xists, much may be done by 
ing d covering with s in rigorous 
and inclement er e If the plants are under a wall, 
recourse ma wattled hurdles, which can 
readily be a Rect a slanting direction against the 
"n a mats nie over them, hich will k keep off snow 

well as the young plants 

— S Seal 
ser ] a y tered situations, by — 
ae iva 

— winter 3 th litter 


Perfect, wh i s contained in the are | rays of the sun a sufficiently free access to it. Vegeta- 
Withi artificially impregnated bles ene ted from hot climates to our own suffer | d A tem e of protection 
in the last fi Lanta r 9 practised by the London market gardeners 
Dees haye ve years, seedlings of the following from this stg = ee . „ 
been De Aëre, Aquis, | con g gro 
wrin, tamely raised in the Orchid-h as- | Hip ger , POR e. x parang of | form of a common frame, and nailing a — 
malas Perea and Ta oe nar eg tri ee. waren Me aeons ofthe veria — The surrounding soil is * thrown up 
5 Vegetate «a ecg eee e * The Ajuga Iva, like the Ononis eee 8 0 th o the thickness of a foot, besili it ee 
Manner of — th other plants in the hot calcareous regions 8 2 of and securely against the boards. Rods are 
Pang Beedlin e seeds, and treating the Europe, belong to a class, now known to 3 ason, and | fastened ov e e to receive the coverings nat — 
hö fall 88, has been to allow the fine dust-like | plants which produce apetalous flowers at o 
tu ftom the ov fully developed ones at anotber, and almost "universally the | or litter. In constructing this temporary pi 
— which i they show symp- apefaious flowers produce the most seed. In — to k back considerably higher than the front, 
zug open h is readily known by the ovaries | Violets, as well as in V. canina and several . L eee ee fil be found to be as 
Weiber tap u one Side. When this takes e lowers are, in some seasons at least, the only ones w ich nal re 
— taken m the plant and shak p tl ripen t r seed, the petaliferous flowers being generally barr great l trivances ; 
ta nes of the oth On aken gently over | IP that genus the apetalou flowers come out usually in | for oom ppl opted, be 
fone 5 then 8 | summer after the perfect ones he 9 oe careful to let all the sun and air in fine weather have 
flowers, md bot — somes —_— In Ajuga Iva both 1 — free access, in order to and en those suce 


Purpose, in, or on pots prepared for | abo 
“perature After which, atom ee a steady I high fi 
dance of m „ are all requi- 


ee whieh aro dee 


dington, or even & 


+ Thee 


-i 


re 
especies, fost elianthema, 
ei multaneous. It is a 
— — Translator’s Note. 

ite 


ver, of a elevation in mountainous 


effect, how 
countries 5 2 to inerease t 
ably to the increase 
Translator's Note, 


e size and beauty of flowers, 
oe ‘ight to which they are ex- 


n | plants ; keep a vigilant eye cons mstantly upon them, re- 
eca; 


these only inerease the evil, by communicating 
2 3 to their neighbours; gns as 
little particulars may appear to be, they 


550- 


eating success. Phar 


ore maa than genom knowledge in; two or three ata 
Take | tried it; but, if zegoe canons true, many wi 


THD CARDENERSY CHRONICLE. 


time. As a bedding plant I ie not, named, 


adhe that 


iving sun in win a sun E pea r allowed to appoin ted to find i rthless even 


— upon any frozen 11955 until aft 


lants, suc 
he will see that the er whie 


er itis thawed ] s [My onian ‘is that it. mall very 800 


] rpose. I 
he points out — teeth totally ruined by the use of cam 


of the frond, and the — or absence of the 8 Domi wia a short * A 
. ttle as e 


W. J. Hooker’ ie he has cured his Vines ae aie by — * 


learn 


in this Pha. 
n- be consigned to 


am ' 
rs as | |ang o 0 ee in areas 


blivion. J. Jex » the rdens, Bentham. hile Ton- 
Hom — — in ilge el, Aug. rt [Yo tre be mistaken. 
hoe arg Dryop . — calca bane 


ron statés, p. 5 


ho 
might well: have — end, r is * more than a 1845 I had ee of ptr rory fin ne Fo D n 
in 8 2 


—— question, —— — muc 
tors. C. C. 0 — 


ports having seen a bunch of 
of the weight of 10 lbs. ; if so, we 
ow to cultivate even that — 
ruite Is the — ible 2 
do not believe the state 


ms: quently I decided on pursuing the fo an, When 
Garden Fork os P. e “ Subseriber is not in the otatoes® are at — fit to dig, I have a pit excavated 
the trade, he be glad to hear that the fork i foot deep and 3 fee wide, in the Bottom of which I shake 


dug; but, 
culti- with ot ers, the dis gan to make rapid progress among 
the out of i 


friend who lately wm 


shaken amo a 8 

en at Clumber, re- This plan stopped the disease, and I did not lose more than a 
gallon, er th ə mixed with them th 

nerally know little to remain in it all winter, well covered with Wheaten straw, | 
they w i 


an p i 
but comparatively Working the ground which the Potatoes occupied, that some 
G. O. L. [We hicks had been Jeftin the soii were sound, it struc 
ee 
i — 


eep 
10d. only. And I a ge Re geet pr lime, then 8 a 8 
r with 


to inform him and your other readers that there is thick ae Oe off Wie ov aeo 


one per rail. Addio, are el Pre 


great majority are sown wi the manure—one — 


well ept | 
possible that noxious i! slagked lime 


of Potato 


n nor are 

likely to be. His } at Vines are c clear of the evil, 

English Botany 1 little weight with me. Probably, they are never been a attac t 
h ow goné far enough, and 


The P haha eiving prised disease is again becoming 
833 i Tb Ove you my plan of storing Potatoes, In 


k, and so on with e wen alternate 5 — taking o : 
5 7 — the sides Une the ih so of a baru, and the en cover 
my own invention—a | all r 8 or 9 inches thic aw h soil. Imi 


ud Avh-leaf “Kidney 8. In my opinion 


sort, the name of g 
il Christmas ; 
en — Se 
ja small 


dressi 


or > base 8 Preventive of f disease, Care 


h to serv. a round the pit, to k 
Lif o on th 
di 


— the latter 


ery 
e, e a s they were dete year, 


the disagreeable consequences — careless and dirty as er a — it ag season, — on some land; ce) two editions are 
rn oe eather E: been the end the same. Now all that followed the original 
various kinds of grain, They are thus conv eyed from very fne for these few days past, 4. e Aug. 25. The 
ld 


the field to the barn, — the barn 


gard the 
those who have the e bump of order ‘Strongly areas 
han 


and o a single pair of 


with the and the Gornal crops will be i af; 


to the stable, and | Cad ama aa 
nnoyance of | 


y 5 4 
Should really compasionate the — of —.— | edition. 
horticulturists; and instead of complaining of free trade , Longmans, London, 15 
ed 


„ endeavour | Dow 


tetas, 
Treatise on 47 Gardening, &o. 
A. ning. Putnam, New York; 


9. 
A Treatise on Landscap e Gardening, fo. 


acre, to take the whing, ngmans, Tandan. 1849. 


e 
sown thick and highly | Our favourable opinion of the second edition 
smothering weeds | Downing’s work i @ belie 


Fourth 


les: on 


ve im 
4 ip 
Plumbago Larpente,— member your asking, | subject of landseape garden ing—to have applied ee 
about a month ago — 5 21, pago 452), Pbether owt — to the scenery of the United Sta te 
ic 


body had “tried this Plumba 
north wall.“ And —— 


hade, e 
now 2 tell msi that it is flower- | able amount pe ori 


8 3 very o 


allit has gone — it has spread 
sh 


much sur- than a trick—it isa blunder. For the reader 


is good, and so is the 
colour of the — but these good — ao not, especially in that 
the flimsiness of the 


— my a compensate for the 


pi 
manner in which they are developed. amendments were, we naturally 


no reason 


are they 


d was known of the them with water at 130°. I have since seen the em, and | a gener 
specific characters of the plants than has now been 


ave shown in the course of his 22 — This nursery lies close to the London and 
í e see to| about half way between the Farnborough —— 
ing in great beauty on the shady side of a flower-bed in | repent of the Opinions we have thus expressed ; and our London Sou - 

my ovely plant, notwith- esteem for the author would have remained 

this trying he had republished his work in the same words as ride from. Farn 


~ [Sepr, , 
yan certainly t the utmost 5 Btreteh 
tion will not teach us that — 
The ye grea: 


pic 

| quality capable of being illustrated in painting.” 

author’s original definition amounted to this. be 
al beauty spread over Nature, But — 

exceptional beauties—sin 


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In the passage 8 ə have he 

“ the ee . 9 — general, 

mc piciu T aving made this change (wite 
out, however, altering one single remaining —— 

definition), what is he to do with his former interet 

— assification of & the graceful and the Picturesque ? in 

ot W. i 


all feel 
he truth is, that, while in this new fit ol 
and re the author might just 
third 


ctlons so obscure—we mean UGLY beauty ian 
t 


would be something in 5 


ing 5 
should be taken to 4 new English publication, is completely surpassed by 
in the fourt 


wW: 
he — being thus made unsound, we bare 


be 
of Mr. no patience to go into further details. What can 
ved him to inciples ? 


„„ 
Memoranda. 


Garden 
Messrs, STANDISH AND 5 sN — — 


station on the Richmond line of railway ' Asin wale 


R atterro ; | teada th suppose t 
up,” . ps the strong sun without curling publication, N apo oleon, aoe of hisi invasion of konba 


thor 
the present edition considerable alberatibins and 
e been in some —— 


Sm 


p 
„ however, 


us | pleasantly si i 
is little else than sandy peat ; 
ae 
subject 


| ob 

oii nature of the 
beautiful and the picturesque.” Curious to see what these | 
turned to the section 


was a plantatio: 
i were 
| something good is expected; Near them 
comes | ments — with sevdling plants, from 1t0 24 of 
of the bee ghee = wn Cryptomeria ee á 
M d N. 


trees perfectly, as: as, 2 well — by 


condition of M tandish and Noble's 


these — di ri r considerably from 


both in appearance and habits, some 2 cm 
b ile others are 


[ 
: 


f 
Í 
$ 


THE oe 


mats to dry inthe sun. Guava: At present it is seen 
At various other l The weg of Mr. in situated about Mire miles only in a few gardens. The white and purple dee 
f i ater- 


ce. | among 
and we also noticed here nice: plants with fruit trees of all kinds, including 3% acres of the hills, and the garden Cress, Radish, Lettuce, Endive, 


e 

Zebra, e new ch, ’ y us | Melons ir in profusion, 

parere looking — a Chinese Berberis, called a5 of Plum, . with the Fig, Apple, Pear, —— the 1 5 trouble. They are very highly 

te the Vale of Tombs, with large and fine 41 Mulberry, Loquat, Olive, and many other fruits, flavoured, and occasionally of large size, and sell at 
i i i i i ac is a v fa 


„from : 
gr e a 
2 rere Glycine, and an Opuntia from ae N Grapes, Raisin Grapes, and those for wine. These | Jerry: Of this tree there are 10 different varieties in 
oils, and as the 


which is stated to be quite hardy. The Ca- three gar rdens ‘principally supply, the Adelaide market the colony. It grows freely on all s 

pit said to flower remarkably well in this house ;| with fruits. Mr. Anstey’s garden and vineyard are | silkworm has been found to Se it is probable that 
— out in a peat turf walled bed, composed | situated on the lower mount Lofty Range, 12 miles the tree oes wall be extensively 22 ted. Mushrooms : 
ee peat, and one-third horse- | from Adelaide. Numerous smaller gardens and om On the plains around Adelaide undreds of bushels 


JWS remar as also the Gree m as been di d to the 
as like a e bottom-heat. The pots and other Plums. Tons of sweet and water Melons are | doubtless be extensively planted. Onions, Leeks, Go. 
Sei abed of sawdust and coal-ashes, which is vended in Adelaide weekly. Culinary vegetables are All this tribe in the greatest abundance. Hop: It 
the warme c 1 small y 2 2 


en im 

has been pa aid dere to hybridising and the rom which source the town is pretty amply Europe, and is free from blight, fly, Kc. Kidney 

improving the races | of our pean Be hg Pigro and 3 i Greatdificulty is, however,experienced inkeep- | Beans grow in abundance, and constitute the best 
zo believe with considerable su „The object aimed | ing up a succession; the ee a the spring developing | Summer vegetable after the Pea is over. Loquat: 
8 


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gritorious and promising crosse: tth 
gesting among which is one — ——— and and ede grom gro own ie the 4 ard . rei 52 range groves. Pea: varieties have been cul- 
yelow Ghen t Azalea, which they are in hopes will | “ Almonds r: Trees from the seeds of the common — and the produce is immense. It can be grown 
right oy ang heims but it has not yet Ai r ~ the shops, sown in nee’ 1837, have | in different localities nearly all through the pre 
ieldi undant as 


Peach: 
uu may be bene to . — way in which 2 anally about a bushel (at least) of —— The fruit fruit plentiful. It ripens in January. Pear: Like the 
The seed i h value, Th at present four | Apple, the fruit grows very large and fine. Some fine sorts 
January, in a pat tle heat, and ‘about the end of March . — Peper 8 or Sultana, the have been taken to the colony, but there are many, both 
the plants are in a prepared bed over the Manring! the bitter, and the common sweet. The Almond of the earlier and late ge hae known in England, 


men hang in the pit mentioned above. They is ready for table in its green state in November, and which are still wanting. They ripen in February. 
remain there fll July, when they are again pricked out | begins to drop from the tree fully ripe in iag k Pine-apple : Grows and produces well in cool frames, 
into cold frames, 3 inches apart. Next spring they Apple: 3 40 of the finest varieties are n in the without foreing, but will not stand the open air. Plum: 
meni large to be planted i in the open gr ground. colony. Some ol the panne cider Apples from cee All sorts grow in profusion. Ripe in December. Pome- 
i Ë the duced, and very large orchards ae granate: Abundant, and most luxuriant in its 
mal to the one we have just N was a large 1 — — . * — Gé ripe from December to April. | Potato: In the winter season very fine crops are grown 
fimaf al the r nos and 2 of Roses, chiefly priest z: This tree flourishes everywhere as astandard, | near Adelaide, but the Mount Barker district is its 
tall ut * They were and bears most abundantly, Nine varieties exist in the favourite region. Quince: Not extensively grown. 
Poarkably clean shen health v, and appeared to thrive | colony. 5 late in November, December, and Rhubarb grows freely, Raspberry: The common white 


the loams of Hertfords in the higher districts. Asparagus This is found good varieties seed on 

Z to thrive on all soils. It has been cut the: thünd peur The true Antwerp sorts are unknown. Strawberry: 
s Japan Lirans.— These ow beauti- from seed, and produces abundantly. The Artichoke and is abundant in the same localities as the Raspberry. 
{ily in bloom, and are well 8 5 a visit. “Th e show- | the Car doon also grow well, and produce heads an d | The only sorts known resemble, but are inferior to, the: 
house e largest finest specimens of leaves of great sizp and high flavour. Banana: — | Carolina and the common Alpine. Spinach grows well. 
dem; but there is another poole — ear it whos not found quite suitable to the climate, the heat being Tobacco: A variety of this plant is indigenous to South 
iSeovered with smaller flowering plants, all seedlings, insufficient for it, as well as all other purely tropical Australia. The Virginian and several other of the 
exhibiting. every shade of colour. en punctatum plants. Ba rberry grows: freely. Bay: The com- more approved sorts have been grown with om 

jome:of these seedlings have well dined mon Laurel and the omens Pays both free 8 s | success. Turnip is abundant in all gardens d 
blood-red spots on a pure white ground, and, being free | in. any part. Beans grow ve wel, L n| winter, and spring especially. It bed not cultivated ix 
ely handsome. A ae ‘of the bods the higher distriets, but are a te some | the fields at present, as there i of natural 
it al £ ( A 


mi bloom equally well in the peat soil of Bagshot as in January, about Adelaide; and in Januar and Febru and red only are known with the exception of a few 
| ht Peay agsho a y — rained fideo Mount Barker. 


doom; 3 lac ith a which : — 
but the majority of them have not yet e yod and des estroys the Bean. The Windsor variety Walnut grows luxuriantly, but has not — 
ower well every year with Mr. grows very large, but the common Mazagan is the most Abridged from the Morning Chronicle. 


in the open air, their gaudy blossoms produei fi early in winter, around Adelaide, ex- 
— Seroki but itis in the shrubbery border — are — BHO? — all Calendar of Operations. 
the green $ are seen to most advantage; where ts varieties. old Wurzel has been grown 18 ins. (For the remo oy ae J 
lal Slien of the shrubs hides. their stem cumference. Broccoli, — and Cauliflowers PLANT DEPART 
d further extremity of the grounds we — "abundant everywhere, at all seasons, and more Many — intended for winter er flowering have filled 

aa oe ouble red Amaryllis; and in the same | delicate than in England. p~ curly Kail also thrives | their present pots, and are still growing fast; but, un- 
added two plants of e Horse-chestnut; | well. All emigrants should take out seed of these less in the case of very small plants, it will ‘be better 
* Successfully with the new Californian kind. — Capsicum : Grows freely and abundantly. not to pot them again this season, but to rg them 
r Seer es ‘ b 1 ccess i ul 


has been th S i 1 
i Miscellaneous. Caraway. tie. attention has hitherto been paid to this | of the ultimate pot must in many instances be regn- 
Progress of Horticulture in South Australia,—To the 3 except in a few rivate gardens. Cherry : | lated by the purpose for which the plants are grown, a 


arly attention of B — whose d produces abundantly, Mayduke, in most places a supply of flowering plants is required 
ant to. garden — ao K r mm ergy 3 ye the Whiteheart, are * the colony, for conservatory and drawing-room decoration ; and 
Alas of fruits immediately after the town the true Morello, and the modern vari of them will be req to asar ageer 
innere selected, are indebted. for the This early in N Chest- | vases, rendering it necessary to practise the — — 
* of the descriptions of both fruits nut (Spanish or Sweet): A few trees have fruited. | system, g las rich as the plants 
— paris of the world, and thie resulta de ur tection 5 gror It — NN roportion to the size of 3 — 
North ts. In eman at shade or protection of any requires sible, in p ; e 
Bana i; there is sc s Comune a sown ae in September, and watered freely in the much as possible, of the use of liquid 


a fruit nen 
the ¢ cultivation but has a . ineluding the Fig, dry rior Currant: All varieties have been intro- | manure, These remarks, of course, apply 3 


and m varieties range, duced. The fruit, although as fine in flavour, does | growing plants, which are grown for a parti 3 
ches of the Citrus f ily. p —— —— L —— 5 om attain t size it carom — land. Fig: pose, and which y are of no further moment; 
een, 3 the i 2 — d luxuriant eve e, especially on the but plants which are intended to form fine specimens 
topical frui Guava, the Pineapple, and other Abundant 2 xuriant everywh —— . 
er is also an extensive collection of a trees yield. — pile, every year. | superior 8 va = s — ne * 
otani ing the whole of the varieties from the Filbert : > A at a have been planted. Goose- cramped at the roots, except for the purpose 
ue Garden at S b e remark applicable to 77 2 Currant applies dueing an abundant supply of blossoms upon 
ef vi fruit with the adit aide eal it seems more in- which are shy in that respect if grown luxuriantly. 
be a The Am in the colony Some conceive that potting can only be performed 
ea Grape Vine: The whole at certain stated seasons, but this is a mistake ; 


y. however werent ' ge at 

1 ait ustralia age me Vine. 400 sorts vantage at any 
gos mil ie 5 N 2 = Ryo Mon — paa 2 the colony, se from the best season of the year, when the roots have made such 
The locality has found admirably | vineyards in France, Italy, and ok So: — cost progress into the soil of the last shift as 


for the : anit tera me some exceed | operation necessary, provided always that they are in 
Ppie, of whi om Sighs. emegine ned from, . te p ss ene From 450 to 1200 allem <y active state, and that such activity is not the result 
r i roduce o of a vineyard in of unnatural excitement. The roots of many plants 
‘le tinue to prog! while th ] 
in the end of May e, an course at such a time a shift into a 
quality, have been made from ill be perfectly consistent 


ro} er pot w 
other ne however it is important to mark, that. the supposed 
and laying thi on | danger does not lie in the potting but in the watering 5 


CHRONICLE. me o 


———— .. — -P... 
no 
0 
m perat 
en 
th tin tion 
e da its in 

m ee 

mums k it performa 

ings orm enin 

sE pesa 

t á ui n n 

lowe ded t out manu t > miya terri TH 

cco o wih this. ee 5 

po e re si et 0 ciall ju 

gts — eae toc ARD 

ea sim — e a fe nt knee 2 EN 

be N lari light il sekor poe ok Pasa e E R 

give oist * 1 ht Anera y wi e ed to if t ste 8 
ne i tial st the wea e 
D Pnt iey situatio t y * Pri Sky a ae obi s te (br at as C 
in p uce th my Be as t app heir 80 m sto 228 N ade H R 
be reservi em to e la or ey ear; 28 di goo of. conti 0 
ng th Wine omi * tter euitings 10 sito ground, yol HE his ts) those pets : NI 

be a sone — DEPART Atel art sho 4 eu 2 , yet = ae oar CL 

gent! obj i a ey the ng he ea set he wey or ep Faia’ si aa E 

pare. u ect, eat I} 0 ca stur sh a bed est b e d e pla rati it tin ck a 

P E d or i TEN „ y enough fo io e 

be e a fos, cr hat orth, aaa » 8 bases gm to th 

th rem ta b ight id ng co ow te rene 85 8 ene well d fo offs ou b 91 sult 

eh oved u ete birch r. ne ibl uld be th, The ¢ t ch rally be 8 ets o ld n le his ote 

should be i er pakis mh on the Pe tak he ious ta . is ow tr ttin f choi 5 75 sto fot ax 

a A he. A ves ve roo hou ea will al de ngs kio ter com m read g th oic 1 manner that ha : 

sol be u 7148 m ld rly n this ea tr g d tian ” aid y em e a th ha 1 

3 4 of nirai of being a Wee at y houses; | the la enged piss th * t or K ks wing The 0 1 ie pofu of ae 

ea e ae 0 ` n ‘ 

2 th t sulphur a ned, a 8 allow . wh times A . ts cter. fi fas “a i e yea 0 s fro t meg ink Medic Bsk tof all {Se 
n wi ur nd ed r imd asse owe sof C „ W and e fr: r, w 5 m l Ita 5 8 
for next yon eaves are pot Cana th a a —— 
E next yonr ee eae rs RN. andy textur TE 7 pe if yo, 
portal for A 50 1 * tome, i miek to Ü herrat E ast ext h s ould adv bas green lear che elie 5 — Sea I 
e ole r. yarei ft s oots all e fenders to the ib: aci LONS wth ure, ure soll d ad ain l y wil lea oache „e 8 ei 
wit! of t Th g oa off. lit a e at i ast em 3 th tha is vis d ves 2 won the — 
h oil t he w e the and P; tal ete ter i State injury of ed; et to e so n “is not 80 ma 1 nd — ca is 1 ae bad 
t ur pai llis a os lass yo that 1 the trees of th ry o ne 1 perfe il of ery 220, Rh , ext arenarius off is a pad 
he we, * tue sho oe g care to ih Ang fth glect Ì sep ctio whi vise ticu Per 2 weg clever =e paren & 
sm ho and A th rk noe fra t ith Au daar ec a it; n. eh 15 Cr. W ley lfr 2 1 91 — 
pra oth use d is il thi e “seta he it P o pe rapain 1 — a Fi rop 7 40 Aigre Wa is Crocus n nina or deseri ts ya ~F 
8 ee e a re the * eee well £ ne mg fo Frida, foon’s atthe Toad = of la 2 ode 8 emis ter sona h nudi Gres 5 Gon 3 eril — —. a 
u sp ere wal nab ate er — Satur... ieee z orice biasa e sio c 1 W e Tend ption show * d 
2 t th ern 7 be i sh san shed ud Sunday . 34 A — oom these n 2 23 70,6 b Ca euc 12 sho + I 1 
te — inert in, ee silt Al ai te eet e 5 e —. — . — 
ə p d 
fresh, mell oil as tho ro any $ expensive, I be painted hat 3 Te Tem sl oe rea wen 0 e > 
ch all pla he roots wi » 2 ordinary — 5 i gS ee ak (pray send ah. 2 5 . * 
. l loa ace s wi su nd it ar, Average....] n based — arses Sag, * se Ey ; „La s Sero tin 
we rs = th ill uppaa it gives ee y 2 —5 29.389 Astragalus seed 55 4 Tamarix; — balls sent 3, Team 
iod, a the t ofthe border, ch may bel 1 EJE- 1 tauren seeds" 11, thai — 
give ent a nd orde: sho 8 el ly 2 29.92 h yte 5 8 , 0 174 0 ; 155 Pas : 

2 h b 1 of. th T, ul m ur. ew U: ry fi 00 ve er um. 85 gu ro 7 yp „An chia erna 
ksa k e. borders a é 0 can 0 3 — be uch k- ae seria ether 29, = ee f facta , napi 7586 e — ia; M, Oat 
e ani e sera of a 2 yo ight! 976 7 ph 5, 5 nth „11 a 

mac he e itina sina placed with soft! ee e "Bane oi, Asa — 
auff a li m m d wi ma 1 — . 5 cut W Lani — seeds s 
2 cie — stimulated to se bes: — : lee cree very ng anny rentl obi * H Valeri as 8 
8 * 7 dene i g —— shoul d of the cee ; clout 57 coceum ; i am ymum Enc pe 1 p k Nodes; 2 
— ae to h . — W ene durin . = . night. ; cloudy. bits m; its ts fr ee acharidium A fs part; then & 
WwW — — 1 ce R uri nw g th . E 3 . 8 om nil uit 8 d um rist’ ae i 
e wo e e af GAR ng t ater be ° ER ge pec tat d Lane pre ; 6, 17 — yi flo M 
pea uld „an not e fi eee the „ to Sun E EEF kek iad 3 not uri chus Sta trico dee PTE — 
mar d es N h M da; 2 . ov e i ialis sa; be ol 0 N 
re of of ne . do; ich manag $ 285 ed ie et an n CO 01 ern rum 
— Oa the 3 d rman owes 2f 70 45% SE No. ata pe ae The i ower t ®, chys germ pa aa 8 — 
7 diab disp — babe most ef e all th : Tara $ 152 48 . Years in G T £ tab ve require 12, Po sree ES etracoccous ia i 1, Cu. | 

A m “ ri . j 2 c „ r 
or infer dis ular] ts and testi flo ose Batur, 2 697 S 59 Rained’ | © Guantit i — 1 — e pie of rgd T 10 ser r | 
in re pla y t pe tiv WE: wh — 4 70.2 5 ae —— Pre o ch if ut o ak re ti 10, on * i 

n cen i ges #9 a 18 eculiarit p rs ne: 0 1 bs so 77 Mee 5 K Rain wailing W D. iata; h sr aes of bren 1 L s 0 arda diya 
2 . a eho ATE a 7 : 
mt grea com he ee 8 the . as tite 45 IN 103 wai. 3 2 Zz U ETE Ther odin a? moped th. — is 105 tr anal . 

jeeti test m je ch a plan be ofe or 33 — 59 1 — . 322 > Ho re ch robe Seng u n QZ. phi a a 
In in perfectio ct of are t th ca * 8 tber 50 11 oe 6 led Co ata — e. heen iy 1, nN 
In making ax e ear thi n at reful * Mine rig 1 11 03 45 id e tin ok Hiboka ro uiri e on 
i 11 oft ction ly in is is ow b tim ted a ly sg No a 5 8 4 5 5 1 Tele at Ny nown n quiring a moist . 
to — * ransi tom to ie ow become sth sg. we oat ans ti g. eee ate 3 Be 3 6 ORN eJen the ev estro 508 7 noist peat 
8 wie ange ient ake he 1 penn tin es @ u mot anse cest puas = 22 5| 20 e asio edo * — 
a Ae a men: be atest on uis shee abut wee anor in 0 owe peri : 3 3 — 3 l 0 lon ory A i att Me mall Stanhope W < 

larg is tou g nts aut xel paar h th y ome 3 ¢ 8 orr 3 130102 KRE Pa izon, 3 mgs en — it yaf 
each e m t rea of 1 0 one 0 Tek nd 50, f not as uiri M e eth, 183 i121 4 6 XT of so e Up ‘ormid 

ce e t t r ive e kg sey on ace 8 aoe 1090804 ce ori bint Pach ge inc 
N lee be nse av i of se 5 d, tin Bo : Jun fo 82 — irtoa po 37 ed slats pric e ek ttn rrhos cessa * — 
tin tio don mbl ariet ind co 2 and "= 3 nior, Bes : Full nt te deine eg nden “ther a 1 Pati a ol a cane ng on ti miy enemy, 
vi . — sor ee parr o 5 aoe 5 iste eae noun 
ro u r C = a e. ESS e n u, ~ 5 0 11 re 
bs etfectly. uitati and puch et * . en ete bee 1 y 88 81 5 53755 e hepa ders si heart Soe os r mong, ne, 5 Pa 2 doch 284 uba leaves 
dera best tly ia e aN p! of th ple i by in shou mis FERN Lam m ook, Hou tven 5 is me th i — a e x bs 3 TU hie, 2 
whi ta, wa mic oa ants N l ld be ae eee 8 — Si y at | Ains swale B res wishi T E. 

i fi ay tif e the of ost mal 0 pa tia ire ou Fe 08. tte olu are 4 yi 11 n y in had 
tating sig i pr ul as diffe t usefa al tian by = roug naif ü TO at gh ill print 5 42, 43, ung — — 1 1 spol te a king 9 „ ‘at 
un 8 roa it ocee a thi ren li b pies Se fill 8 0: Abie ce: t graft ein 46, À 3 7 C. hibi a pee . ome * 
pogo: ch mosi for a thing of t eee „ coven * — ee os suit yo 49, produce Fare 1 Pineapple afer no ras 
2 5 pincer igs he may pris . — „ oe eri rym 
cia 85 te y re ma kin is m ma IGS cov nd he: f sho pot old, stem 1s a ce P to ect hich qu ne i 0 to 

— or ae i y to his stan Je is ma 1 ‘mould, am sherds, ova ni vegetatio of the conseq uestions arisi . 
pro on f pl asco Š a ith t of et J Se th "ra éve a 3 over w í antek ting on. hav oan ten pns arisi any — 

p gst wi an wry a th d . to W. ep be ge a, a — 1 no Me nsequonoes.- g 13 
2 peimetn fio pancana 5 ae — a t g n — 

gle oi i fo $ n a 4 3 patte illus We 10 o — ae le in ich in tine aot me T bee yeh ut of i 
beds of is all bri flow r be poin as nd gs in Peony e 3 — ss. a ht oaiiy a poa — id, a nt e Tombel 2k T their tat of 

whi sopien very renal 28 3 10 Be i sub hate ay fork et 200 no if fe tom h sow remainder ba . ime the alk 23 They s ie lian 
8 n W arm pu hey come . ‘all he wh 0 sátor The Harnbe H, Heats the Ak shoo 
— plentif nen e 2 in col folia rpos e ers a 1 ‘howeve is eienr in ticle — en, 1e Bong e the growth of th onenig t again and 
Te ntifu 3 the jae 8 elit 3 DINA one. not ity i olum u Troi not rgb, tof Ale zent fer erin culari in con- 
— . ey lly ed sam á dis : and the Ka it 118: Bn 9 n th e rep * — Alex nt fi r 2 is y di in foll 
and sho eyo from the aoe c 5 . m ing erable si freely. Sub. * 5 Pps ed e matt ical inspe eproduce ne p the? andria, kruiti beate pans nue 
by wy h n in th ease int; ome „ wh 0 qu Ward Tiss tt W. Som the ar ules er, an you ction yae tė arth * fade | 
8 e te e u > b wi 2 f A 8 w Vi e ao nd d to p er e ne ' 
tud or nse bisa pon * th thin the 1 by 8 wou e find i elon im it ustration do you to prun ould 2 5 sk A sought 
i ying 8 olo! asan ith ose BOBS th Tf they | ag. thri n th the ge teenies 15 in alone = a off — gal aer 
the 1 pee in bsa it bes have Wi ive all; rough plate m mes 5 AN p fairs Eun . yonr hee 
e Mans ore gelen, Gern z 2 a ters e t mend ination 3 — yee zeu 3 
thay. pto of the foliage t0 Inert * m ben sonal ter — TE ue 3 in a pale gro SE . 
y wi rod to a Yarar: J ur en tter al ii wit r wer 3 ot to inthe contre gro wW ED plan you W ons 0.88 
prod n th 2 . EN Y eu mil wi ns ho: gree pe: ith ust 0 of er nti cate ae LI ts 1 e. a 
P eir ee — 7 amg sewed, poe utt nh e 3 25 tena ee T NG ae: uld ersonal 
ce i ECT F, int m € yo tio; hem ou eu 0 10 fadi fio F wan as not 
her in and seei s: pt HB. Pr oe our Grapes, se; yY nw urs ; * L Fae LOWER tit — 
e th differe: ye ng An Wes wif it cis sim ek tha W. A masa "ino to whi pon Bors they 
ey m a Agar Seri Tnqui 3 m t be ated possi the 27 oo a r-colot e e „ tted wi 
ay t 8 am ecimens of ke Agee certainty 3 $ 5 aang cely lour, part 3, ASR viih brig 
be d — of t W. a y lik lie ly fi or | Peps tnd of ine Ci cen thi „5 e 0 pre bt 
t d r (b T b k: t ichiy u rosy 
nd coa he i ec rul e b ee UW. ri ON es = ay cl and ter tty, 
sh EI in an e la suffi fro sidered 8: 2 be yell yn 6 r edge, 2, 
55 ae 82 sec ha ney ck C cie m Dan sen JIM re 0 3 e; 
0 Was le A Tr ty ral er 1 ntly d a rle Cc. 2 w, pre d wi small and 
ee up, ep ry fami aged a arrant jell pin nie t), h Yo 5 tty, ith 
eds b amig rm dyis jell 3 bb 22 e varie Ae c iently but too erent shades 
on A 1 — — y hi pe os e Bn dis : 
a s e on w yo bi Be od ty ati tin 
p a you la w hit u t itio nd nea “M for el on culti ctin 
he ted 2 5 — te be witho exture depth ie om ey dn 15 : bein rated. colours 
ery perae 0 ut ae of cen or oe cao 
ple tig rm Ain an r e pet re Ro oå 
nt, ero in ars nde is ed a als mu berts ers, an 
. Th ya ry r za o num: "if 8 ali w, t ch on only be 
ebl buff e Tne nep 2 ipped fighter in ” ou con- 
* ermine val he year. 1, d us, e . . astat,- Yel with eo pari — 
bs fe low, 1 38 i Yell a ôn miite: s a 
0 ath > er * all. De ower feet 
0 , tlin r ada peer and eep fy, an 
8 d near th rf oi ou red: 
> ager e “ordi $ t of — 
ne rreg eye; nt e con petals — 
ula 7 ro tals diti 
rin size, ti und org hot and 
— d eas lower t this 
not t ir outer nis dm 
9 Aera bright 
tinct tal puter, ede — 
„ Gand tolerably 
seedling 9 
call * 4 
«Tom 


Masses 
bos gh 
8 
en 
r ns 
and * 
oth 
er 
eve of 
rgr 
een da 
h k mo 
th ? 
bs that ol bich 4 
m ar 
1 of 
aid av 
ph: s0! 
is 8 Eiter 
The small p 
all ê 
pu gree 
pa : no 
1s eg 
at of P n 
f EL fu 
Kl 
N 
we Gene 
Ge 
piini fi 
k ” rah 4 
me a our yo 
od let 
2 dl 
* ss 
bri 
igbt, 
and 

ases, appt- 


autu 
hocks, kee 
z Ie C need 
som 
Rhodod Tpm Eme, duri 
arm, 5 me fl rin 
8 ow th 
en 8 eri 
Sie dron ae ei: 
rott o ree 5 wah the 9 2 ing plants, suc a 
they , aoe -During ho and the s Roses H ya sor A 
sansa 4 78 PI : n f atter oll lecto An 
ioul 1 F. gloss or r ca y J rs,” 
as . b the Sik be! dis nn A ardi thomyia 
a S ed d Tt booma a vens gree — — British the volun 
erwies & = — a ad — 2 met 155 can proc But x ee 
ce Ke. reei mal y fas 5 ft e e éii Eee, — es In 
ane. a toad ly fastened, he Abii es ae oii 4 ‘ot Bash 
thos Au d aa d — pall axe the sell an ritis! 8 * 
and “vale Se fi to fi anc sed plentiful wa 5 and Mo b Butt 
sha ULA du pre or wit e of affi 1 ter oth "Th utt ustr 
th 8 10 of ar an er — il s e er u! 
£ ec — us yeu exhi ve 2 gypsu im pres thr a aigh . 
las Se ly t sbitiow. a Maa m, ald a Bg oug ut sn — 
mar, te edli conti Je ition, ou h 2 å saline ung a a a hy W. bs gr nd 1 
gi 5 r — ea eep t re a means of —An p cheap Syno ol. 
a A 3 3 re ag Wood t a that t — mart 2 ion in 
> ar her, vated d rts med ae ik, lso — a $, Woman psis rentl 
e much in “ad — Srat At be well tu no, y Bs lougee ey ak riving the g n, You Peroni spt’ Uy 
nelis, e 2 Hylurgus pi and-pich 8 a mai whic ve subst 3 con 5 warf. 
clined 1 1 EE La ba — ro the inju! ehi — bs of Tittle TB A 
10 . — — piniperd . 5 root upa njure the nees, f fle was. 2, pu 2 
— wate pep a. y child k ts of the 700 . an parti y- rplis for 
3 he Th dren no Tu 3 ar partial 3, h wi 
HEES nnot re fin Ras r Pi wn rni Th e va c arl ‘Toar mide and rose ndow: 
ook spe: 00 8 pacha’ — ct ae ariet, 5 ur c t pu textu: stai sor 
m til ve ts 8 0 e ed y. r und omr ee: sine ned a et 
pany it. ki tho so 2 tree gol 3 = tiered; peo the — 9 tolerabl: a 
t ë ; d vein 
Your 1 * 5 — bien 11 fae wii opera 
ur s a an 284, estu 
esi sd other nod well a 5 R 4 ile sh For : a 
ourt oe t xtur vein nice ture r a Sou ron 
op am than flo a slight Poer whi ed cog a 3 — 3 
ons” arrived deep 1 = Gin, ——— or eye. aly ma i 
n r f 
ore aor 3 ses ta 0 
ell fi sha * ioe i g, e small, 
i pe lou on np — th, purr 
2 and rs ed ro wet ; 
Satie 12 4 edges 3 
r ol. a 
of sath ape, 4 size bright” 
5, white textur w 
ture, 
Tri 
. 


no 
w 
3 these 
ath 
r 
‘iy this 
ex 
d, 
r 
up 
on 
on, Tuesda 
8 
à 
Epe 
lette 
r 
on 
Fri 
da 
y; 
z whe 
n the 
ey were 
VER 
s 8 
3 
SM. 
. Qui 
te 
wi 
thered 
whe 
n rece 
ved.*—M 
rosy pink; — 


if 
th 
Offsets d 
8 o not 
ts, rom present 
will nsa 
alan at sor 
do Drita 
s0 novel 
: 2 : 8 
* ee ý vour 
be “sometimes 
mes ea 
pinched 8 
stat he A 
od M old | 
off i sort, 
with in a sort, of 
out M etd 
panne: hig quai 
e It Bey. hoparen 
of w is R ar, pias 
haa be ae arere, th r 
3 za they are not 7 
f. bud d are not in- 1 ed 
abr an diff 
so — 
. erage from 
7 ora ne ier bonari 
flow a le, ours — WV 
cut ata tice va r R 
ers ather B. 2, 
f ets 
2 a 


eat 


35—1849.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 553 


= TURNIP SOWING. ORTLAND CEMENT.—Testimonials received from | 
LONDON MANURE COMPANY. byti all quarters, prove this CEMENT to possess the rare pro- 5 f ee a. oe be ine, Te that be 
— ual the URATE” more particularly for Turnips and | perty of wichstané ng the severest frost, an consequently | -. rm, an ney ees in which aid shall be 
ean mmend it wi — the Like ates wrt: : — superior to — other for e 5 such as building | given from funds not raised in Ireland, and let that 
in the driest season, eag plant, a an ng of Reservoirs, s, Baths, Fish- nds, —— For i “4 
Seeder a heavy weight per acre, They — call attention external plastering and ornamental castings it req — neither x t kna 1 rather 5 . ft, in order to 
to heir Superphosphate of Lime, which is prepared with the | colour nor paint. It never vegetates, and will . — * three counteract as little as possible that spirit of inde- 
v care, and sent out in a very fine, dry state, perfectly | to four i times sits own body of sand. pe endence and self-exertion which it is of the utmost 


The London Manure Company have made Ma: turers, J. B. WHITE and Sons, Milbank-street, West- 

ready for ts for a constant supply of n Guano, from | minster. i 3 impo wc r d 1 We know, from sro 
sange m hich they will deliver direct from the ship or 

dhe best cargoes, W Ni h ARIAN CEMENT, for internal Stucco, instead o 
importer’s 1 ee Bots $s e rue — To Her j common plastering, may be painted and papered na oe cagar to emigrate ; that if there were a bridge 


al . * 
Agricultural S uine article. 20 hours of its application to the bare walls, and by the use or | to America or Australia, they would rush across it 
gwest terms for & gen 40, B treet, Blackfri which rooms may be rendered habitable before the 5 A e mass 8 il assi 
ARD PURSER, Secre — — commonly adopted would begin to dry. It-is worked without * 42 and that they would hail stance to 
ay the slightest dificalty, the labour being easier and less — = s- cean 2 the greatest boon that could be 
(ea o> A ROYAL LETTERS | sive than with any other a whatever, A finer quality is | conferred upon * man, i 
a prepared for Ornam Plastering, for Encaustic Paint- pent id be a hap „if I 


for ntal 
g, e., &c., specimens or which may be seen at the Works of could but t get sir America ! “ is an exclamation we 
PATENT. the Patentes, CHARLES FRANCIS and Sons, Nine Elms, London. | have heard from many a starving cottier. We —— 
moreover, from the same experience, that m 


PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS, KING'S ROAD, CHELSEA, band ‘or -Borovo 
DENCH invites the attention of Gentlemen about | The Agr tcultural meee se, ministered as relief i in EnaA. 3 — to be ad; 


to erect Hothouses, &c., to the vast superiority in every 
pol possessed by his PATENT HOUSES, which he will SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 i eee too strong to be resisted ; that the only 
warrant superior in every respect to any others. Good Glass 4 
Firs wil on per foot, 1 foot wide, 3 feet long, furnished, MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. e against it consists in the direct levy of the 
um se Houses when completed charged from 1s. 64. v. Lanz bub Sept. E Agricultural Imp. Society of is 5 relief ger funds i 15 5 locality wherein they are 
per 1 . e sog d quantity 1 the Beagle e 2 Tepi t „Borton,on- -Trent, Ottery expended ; t even this is not a sufficient 
the roof mg for putty, ary.—Sept nham.—8e ntee, — — those who have an interest in 


ng wood rafters 225 the glass put in w — gu vi 

—.— requiring 10 paint, from 7d. to 9d. per tt Tur Potato Te AND 6 ANp | abusing, 5 whose indolence connives at the abuse, 

A 2 = tur Potato Buicut!—These are topics of which | of the relief funds, are more numerous t 
Fer aad d the Publio paige etA eee most readers are 2 “hastily weary. They | those whore interest lies in an opposite direction. 
$s tallertake rming of £ Hothous es, 857 upon R ral are topics, owever, n not to be blinked in an agri- Relief in aid of wages (the monster evil of the un- 
of Hot Water Apparatus. They refer to the | cultural journal. The ee of Ireland is an amended English Poor-law), and relief in aid of 
= ed places, where they have erected most ex- agricultural question. Improvement in the social rents (to which, so far as the rent of land was con- 
Royal Botanic G Gardens, system of Ireland must semis with an improved cerned, that law We a ets cre themselves 

. Horticultural Gardens, “Chiswick ; animer nd the new agriculture. The breakin ng up of a social „system in Ireland we ises 80 and so 


| spe- 
ber —— eg bs Conservato d — Regent's-park. based upon the tato reacts on the agricu ulture | clous that no i who has n A ld s sis experience 


i 


Duke of Devonshire’s, bars worth Gardens. and retards its improvement. It perverts to evil all of thom a form an any ie on — 1 variety 
—— — Yorksh perms aie attempts to mend the state of that t unhappy country | and e There are plausible ents to be 
Robert Hanbury, Esq., Poles, near Ware, Herts, by — N the mysterious influence of which i in their i mand plenty to 1 them on 
e bb Nursery, Turnham-green. Spr meg ae Bons it marred all |the grounds of conomy. Besides 

Drunter and HEALY, 7. 130, Fleet-etreet, London: the e peek ‘ibe devised to the same end. the jobbers of all aain and classes, whose name 

FMA s METALLIC HOTHOUSE WORKS, Everyone in Ireland, who had Potatoes to plant, | requires no 3 es are the pseudo-phi 

C p el-street, Birmingham, Proprietor, Mr. THOMAS | has again planted with them every available acre. | thropists who e the welfare " a people by 

CLARK; Manager, Mr. JOHN JO There are unequivocal symptoms that the Potato | the pa: mee“ dis stributed among t them in al d 

Gentry for th r liberal jia atta tha above „ disease has now become chronic, and that we are on — — a writes Sete party 2 interested meniti 
a period of thirty years, and begs to state that the | the eve of another failure more or less extensive oe a, hä ave seized on the Poor-law engine for 

ce oe duty on Glass enables him to offer his METALLIC in England and Ir : als even ae e Aare the ruin of the adit x race of land- 
with B British Sheet P i the humanity of Great Britain for aa 5 gilant inspector will be unable 


Glass, in panes of from 24 to 30 making to : ! ` 1 . e most vi rei 
5 Set hoy a of such thickness as to preclude all | the suffering Irish—the Irish who are suffering from wholly to stem the torrent setting in from these 
ts action of frost Pani ees Sy "te peoia their blind adherence to the Potato. How shall the | quarters ; a lax, s not very determined inspector 
mode of glazing adopted. mple of his Metallic Hot- | appeals be met? In a recent article we declared | will be carried away by it, and will have on his 
houses, in which all the . ident improvements are happily | our eici that the sooner all classes in that | relief-lists numbers exceeding the sate population 
_ ombined, Mr, CLARK refers to the 5 wage erected H . of his distri ned in 
ty him in the new Royal Gardens at Windsor, admitted by | Country knew that the ee be left to their own 1s is has happene re instances 
judges to be the most complete of its kind in the resources, the sooner they would learn the necessity tha one, both under the Tempo: 3 Relief f Act and 
— of self-exertion—the sooner they would cease to the permanent Poor-law which succeeded it. 
CHEAP AND DURABLE ROOFING. lean on that broken reed which has gone into their | fact is, tha 2 relief is wholly cnmited to the 
3 , nd and pierced it. -This proposition is advanced, | circumstances of Ireland, but the entire DE ana tt 
ROYAL LETTERS | however, with some limitations. If all aid be | of a country cannot be put into verti and if 


PATENT. u n st perish, I the > 

fog ial these multitudes pan that the survivors may learn pumai they Mes gr ge , Fe not Egaye, d 

M'N 25 self-exertion ? all famine and pestilence be left be in such a condition that the greater Portion e 

E —.— “the p Gopor sf Lam 3 — a lene 1 to do their work in reducing the 5 which Population must have out-door relief 3 arp! e; and, 

seus, HH ASPHALTED. — Ton ROOFING the Potato has called into existence? We advocate with each Potato failure, numbe of the rates 

purposes, to n Shedding, Workshops, and for Gardek | no such dip rrible doctrine, although we have heard it | payers will be dragged down into the e class of pau- 

“an Great National Agricultural Shows, it is this Felt — maintained . eg men, . altho * * et 1 the resources for supporting them will 

— exhibited and obtained two SIL n appear to be a on it t, from he ue to diminish. 
g and is the Felt souey patronised and adopte ted — F thei Relief afforded in m hape of assistance to emi 
Food ann Boxxets — in which Ser are 5 earin g their pr apart ies from liabi 

110 ges of tenants, now burthensome but once profitable | grate, if not wholly ex mpt (as it is not) from liabi z 

NOURABLE EAST INDIA COMPANY, under the Potato ae. We are no enemies to to aaa presents smaller temptatio ns to Amg n 

i i s 10 ing it e 


the PARE, m modes of relief hitherto tried, costly as they have 
lat ene Estates of the Dukes of Sutherland, Norfolk, Rut- | and imitate, We would not withhold British aid, | been, have barely sufficed to keep os 33 
migra 


ewcastle 
S , from t 8 d misery, Assis 
52 AchievzrunAL Sociery’s House, Hanover- | Potato famine, even though they 1 thank Taya would ag within Ld reach comfort and 1 
the price of any oth ription of Roofing, and | OW improvidence for it, in n ing warning by | pend ans of acquiring property, an 
Mis Set Saving of ' of T nber in £ “the construction of Hoots, the ee which preceded it. We rotest, however, coming employers of labour, unattainable by the 
°° Samples e PENNY Pen inst aid being given in such a rm as to perpe- | present generation of the peasantry o of Ireland, or 
8 óns’ for its Dek; che "Testimonials | tuate its necessity, and that is the directi tion which of RR either. 
Memes, Architects, and Buder erat dre to Noblemen, Gen | British aid has hi therto taken ; whether the channel shall. resume this subject hereafter, for — 
Die da y: r and orders by pest ex sent free to any part of the in hich it has flowed has been that of gift or loan, —.— of rented = the importance of emigration 
© Great Britain is cautioned thatthe onl Works ee whether it has been administered by the Govern- |a — i — to Lo n a clan healthy 
$ ve ng is made, ar iti iati by those un- |system of tenancy 
La ment, by the British Association, or by th n 0 agricul 
— * Lamb's-buildings, — wearied labourers in the cause of humanity— e of pointing out means by which assi e to emi- 
Ante z Vice-Chancellor 8 Bites be Society of Friends. The report of the ae body grate 
bro years ay were roofed with F. 1. Nna and Co. 2 Felt about Was published in a recent of our Jou 


© 
5 
= 
=o 
9 8 
© 


nu 
Ral under the S hip of Chas, Barry, Ësq., d eth: t deep and eee 
He tated e we Commissioners of Woods a and Forests are se age Se . in w b 8 and clothing to an — the equilibrium, if oe it poe ke. aie dis- 
Rites Room : a t i 
Qeit Pelt Gaes 5 of Parliament to be — with effects of reh 9 alms-giving, they 3 ofa by 5 a sh a pags 
Nore, Cons ether us 000 feet. 
sending direct to the Factory can be sup- 8 5 3 5 y attendant on the transition state 


Eiin lengths gran 
best sui d fisheries — rants | gree 
i Fer than they require rear, > = Roofs, 2 aoe = for — 1 ures 2 iat elk cals they | Deca th which Ireland is passing—and must pass. 
Wes e construction of Roofs, or ds of Turnips, Carrots, Parsnips FTF 
cular application of the — c ene THE FARMER’S PROSPECTS. _ 


CARson’s ation of the Felt-_________| Cabbages—we fe 
Sas ei at Say igre eee and er dertook the temporary cultivation of 800 acres| I mave perused with muc interest the e! 


admini 
3 mpany, the principal by pide husbandry. The amount of relie a Roatan ta Britain,” and hope that 
‘Bab bodie s, and e Nobil haritable ere Prospects of Farming in Great a ope 
ic bodies, anc 1 by the obility, | thee by er a 3 s * bx: A. journal will not cease to remind the agriculturist that 
— —.— | aa the th ey estimate a illi d 0 e « unexhausted resources too ample ender 
s laber ster 8 for a 8 . vances of the Go asa sat at 10m lions; and with Joer prices a hopeless affair.” Once for all, let the 
Iron, , A all this ory assume, as a necessity of his position, that 


proved ractical f ‘4 armer 

numerous Fd 400 and 500) testi- | clusion, that, with very y few exceptions, no permanent | prices of agricultural produce must range low, that 

» and which, from the rank and station in good has resulted from it t, and that the prospects of the | there is not the remotest chance of heavy, if any, duties 
being reim] on the 0 c 


have given them, have never y i $ ; 

of th e ‘brovg country, so far from having improved under it, are posed on the im n of raw materials, 

will — lour and Price together with a Copy of vader G worse. The only bas —— which 8 r first necessity tn aa The 
ise Y; on application to WALTER CARSON, ; : 
back of the Bani a e a tae the Government, by the Briti ost of transportation from abroad is the on! protection 

are particularly requested to be gout direct, | Associa Gio Sky e Fei of Friends, is Assstano 12 upon. His sales will be at such prices as 


554 : THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


[Serr 1, 


A . ö—•—ä 
foreign produce, of equal — in large quantities, shillings in t the purchase of gypsu and sprin 
— — into his mark 2 ld ate profit The | little over each layer of 8 The gypsum vil fá 
position may not be — but let him look it in the that is the 47 per cent. of sulphuric acid in it will com- 
like a true Saxon, consider carefully how far low bine vit e ammonia as it Ra Nor ‘ti its service | 
rofi h 


Mr. Mechi’s gathering: Turning 
i beinen M belied —— 
notion among farmers as to the use of corn fi 

duction of meat.and manure: in their a thet nd 


sows, and the produce consumed by his stock and by his | service, and its per centage of lime, it is worth its cost; | appear 


own family ; that his tithes, his tradesmen’s bills, his | as a means of preserving the —— of the liquid and 

labourers’ wages, and even his ae — will all be re. solid exerements of cattle, iy is invaluable, 

duced in a degree more or less onding with the | It is not to be inferred th. i Saldanha Bay guano is 
i i val i 


0 
tenant farmers cannot command the capital required for contains the phosphates of two or — tons of bird 


e; | whether he cou m l Benia, 


because perhaps daily under their eyes. me of the the a the manure are allowed to go, There 
i = i F r 


1s gan 
in communications inserted in the journals of the rain, or a black-looking horse-pond in the corner; and |r 
rath rp 28th July. The Editor, in the article above | to one or both of oe receptacles the phosphates have 
1 


alluded to, has pointed attention to — — 4 unstopped been washed away. erefore 2 spouted |o 


drain in "the — of rats. oe admits how | buildings, a hollow for the manure, and a tank to catch 
ain they eat and how {meets i re they foul, | any occasional overflow, as only se econd in importanc 

but he says, do what he will he cannot — — down. to the fixing of the products of. 1 the car- 

This is true if he allow them plenty to eat; the — wund acid, and ammonia And when I re- 


1 
how many a they have which are daily neglected, | In most of the farm-yards I am — ed with, even | writers in 
i f 


tra 
t 8007. w rthof corn 


an, e 
method: generally practised or known, and perhaps it tected from loss by fermentation and washing 
only amounts where the choice exists to a preference for | The agriculturist without the means of f 
ot so protected, and as mice, Whose powers of must needs make ends meet by attention to sources of 
i se ich he bas hi 


ge 
rh, 
fi 
SE 
= 
4 
© 
8˙f 
*S 
ae 
— 
m 
i 
2. 
— 
i=] 
05 
oe 
8 
* 
E 
Ra 
a 
a 
E 
a 
oO 
"o 
3 
2 
E 
. 
* 
=| 
E 
E 
oO 
© 
E 
E. 
p 
"oO 


in 12 case. Mr. 8 
30. Ga. Mr. . had no doubt his friend's 
were 3 he piap observe that if Mr, Mechi a a 
i and obtained 


0 
to place their stacks on staddles, | I have referred to, for this is the last month for puting th r 
d 


end all farmers 
40h, b but the e is the usual objection, and I | up staddles for his corn and pulse e rops, and 
anticipate it by remarking that the most effectual, if the | convenient time—the yards being empty of viele and 
less sightly ones, can be put up by the farmers’ la- — bs po his buildings, and for making 
Bourers at the outlay of a few shillings. Fix firmly in | manure pi 
the ground a sufficient number of stout posts, sairi With the ‘editor’e s kind —— I shall be happy at 
to the size and number of stacks proposed, leaving them some future time to bring to the farmer's notice such 
to project not less than 30 inches ; purchase the same — cheap —— as — and experience 
number of —— of — or galvnnised- iron sheeting, | have suggested to me. P. 

£ 


ine e eee ee 
each post, and — nail a the usual wooden framework, Home Correspondence 


= eed a greater 
than another man c upon 100 Ege Grassland 


of the “pest ae besides in the 
| th and p 


2 may consist of the rudest wood thinnings. The Harvesting res —From all we hear ‘there is a 
his year in our 


and it 
of the posts are first cha € to call th the . of 1 ulturists rg the question, 
In my last communicatian I sp oke of guano as illus- | whether something might not be done, so that the work 
of combining the liquid and | of harvesting grain might 15 carried on in wet weather. 
in 


— 

=n 

© l2 
8 . 
88 8 
9. . 

2 

0 

5 


from rain. I have since read securing Wheat for storing; some farmers d 
2 3 s aara on the “Composition and Value cap their Wheatsheaves, 2 take — trouble of 
Number of the Journal of the doing so; then in some parts of the co 
—. eee Socket, giving an analysis of near healmed ; then corn in the stra w has in w sre alts wa 
es of thei ti 


ith estimates of relative | bee i 
es. Some of the nen illustrate remarkable wich * 7 E — drying 1 — aye 
manner en us waste from fermentation, I ob- cloth i ; 
that the value of o mainly consisted i in the asked 9 2 


ooms. fi 

fact that it was deposited in ciek . ce no rain fell, Wheatsheaves? it must be admit x 
and e r as without moisture fermentation will not nat take that the business seems to be a peat iar de Ase | 
— e er. had not passed into the air. The and whether it is worth the cost, and it is strange that 
— a — — e only of Peruvian guano; other kinds, more numerous experiments have not been made to 
— for instance, * not * effectually | ascertain so important a fact; for the waste from the 

protected from — rom fermentation; he conse- sprouting and — of grain during wet harvests 
Ta = — on the anes must often to the value of millions, which 
Sains m 3 e eeg in giving a Pen agricultural | would be. are — — country could it be house pea 
2 essc parece: Pr Bros! eruvian sores — the pre resent —.— we eae a 


22 guano was only 1.68 per cent., giving as the value w hich is frequently to be found! in farm-yards would be 


exper 2 for 8 hold nearly 


th 
poor Grass land, especially if at an inconvenient part of 
> farm: he would rather till that which was in the 
est eg ont ae bapa would pay the best for calti- 
vation leaving the poo d to become im- 
ved by tke extra quantity of manure e. — 
3 as well as by the extra quantity of 
would be fed upon if; for he held that it — rec 
little use to convert. poor rass tillage! 


for the purposes of tillage. 
Cumberland Qei eg 23 
, e exhibited at 


A exigaitural: Society, va i 
was not the case, we have been supplied by Messrs. 
Ransomes and May, of — with the aot. 

articulars of one which has been sent to them by our 
own corespondent ont L. V. Ri,” see Agri pap rea 
May 12, page 298.]—The one-horse cart we — 
a from Cumberland is a specimen of good 
m and of — e application of materi ors 
It reese to us as usually carrying a 1 this 
and with large coal “not — we do not geld 206 
quanti it, but it 


ammonia in a ton of this kind of guano, 18s. only iavadlable, fn in produein 
A 282 h g A i ga poraya 1 f i 
What is the cause of this enormous difference in the would much facilitate the process of drying. I consider | weight. The — particulars are taken careflly 
amount of ammonia (or of ingredients producing am . — important 3 tee with securing | fro tself. 
preg: = in these. two kinds of guano ? Ra deposited by Wheat in this country during a wet harvest ee. | ” 1 
the birds their composi tion is considered as nearly an f cut 2 E placed in a line, 8 n a is average * 
identical ; difference is ow to tha very same what quantity of cotton cloth would cover its head, so pe —3 th 2 4 
a , wiath inside at one average 

— Xposure to the air and rain, which deprives | as to secure it from h is o. at ‘bottom * 
— — ents of yard of the greater portion of the wonderful triumph of machinery that a square foot Average depth of sides heaping: 5 
— — In the words of Professor Way, of cotton cloth may be bought for less than a halfpenny. ie content of f the body witha . 

— ha Saldanha Bay p may indeeđ be re- Tore Williams, therefore 214 cubie feet. There 

a ed as — originated fror ae more tons of í eles cas — a — corner of your Gazette| attached when straw, tar ar ie as 

rain have re- that you ‘co now and then spare for r lated | b d, which consists o — 
— * the greater part of its ammoniacal compounds.” | Wales, I — t think you could do a patos e prrs — Y Dihi long, 24 orgs: ep, 0 the eat 
ss than e nat a diszumian on the: advantage thas) wid a pho bolted to the top pieces are 

indeed Tora tat eee, allowed to mix with must oe sony the tenant, the anded, and the pee — aig o the — these g fest 5 inches 
ei PP ing 3 a ee must take place | if one-half of the “miserable” and upland | fastened two longitudin f 4 and these 25° 
but does it hence fol follow tha t fs eable condition; | pasture land broken up and put es a proper course of long, 2} inches deep, by 2 inches paca pieces be 
sarily lose, like Saldanha Ba EO byen nave. cultivation, instead of remaining year after year, or | again ese ted b th 14 inches one — 
of the ingredient which const ae its 1 w ep 3 — after generation, produein rdly 1} inches long, 2 inches wide, by and the other 


ant lane cannot pay for the constant trouble of looking after, the 
ae a cov with a layer of earth, and a are certainly not worth looking at; or have they an — 
ave eee 


ARES G 
ar tim time ae do this; he can copy. 2 ee — ee 9 A 


e on this y Mr. Baker, of is 
rex hi Siaa ba eai da out a few r [tinna tinuation of — — boxes 


ammoniacal ; i i 
ce, n would good = — that of being « first-rate j jumpers?” — 


es 
front, another 13 i nches therefrom, 2 projects 
2 foot 
back end. This fram — 


inches, and connected- together by a bar of iron 
in a wood eross tree 5 inches by 4} inches, and 
are three „ 6% inches 2 as raise 


bloc 
— The naves are 11} in 


s diameter, seed 


THE —— SALETTE, 


es above’ the — and in 


2 2 coe bes ‘st E tho height of the . ae 
d 4 feet 44 inches respectively. 

cwt: 

6 


qrs. 
weight of cart en frame 0 
225 of the fram: 


The total length of — and cart, 13 et 7 inches, 
of the shafts at the front e f the body, 


matal; tlie 
Ransomes and May, Ipswich, August 2 
Islington Market t.—As the ere is at present a great: 


which have lately oe — — — of the mismanagement 
ae an etek want of | i 


aud reckless was 

confidence in —— — I beg to call the 

mere — those con- 

tus of the 
from 

er mv its — pro- 

urn for the capital 

large 


profit. es, 
2 of 1 peculiar privileges and 
rights; and a large valuab rat close — the 
terminus of the new cre — Railway, and convenien 
t all the — railways — 


will yield a good pro 
abolished—and itis not posible that this pest-house can 
dwaan 


and the shafts h 
bearing weight upon ‘de ee is 33 Ibs: 
“i 


freedom from t 


Biss it is well suited to their —— 
bse en ere in reply to a correspo 
erop this 


and — 2. F. 


those made vse 


tolled; because, forsoo 
is to f En Ind from con pres 

room slothfal — — state, and stimu 

kill and energy.“ [This i is not quoted ya 

thè foreigners 


his back that he could ce ge Bh 
nst one who had but a feather 


ES 


mthe | answer 
agp — Pa year, 2 highly 


tural Polis ~The a o argu — you set forth 


in 
ok this or 


shou ild have 


555 


4 ron seg it can’ de NH into this — 
then 


rom 245. to 268. the quarter. 
me British farmer, as the gentleman 
returning 


n that can have 
No, it is not — addtional produce that * 
might possibly obtain by attention to 
nure-heap, or the dung: wa 


other country; and only th 
fair play, and Uat Land 4 ——— all the world. * 
before the letter 


published in. He therein — much su 
— were the ee — denne as — as = comparative 
e burden taxes * 
through which te travelle 4 were, but the 
much cause ear t — er 
from the more ain 


© 
et 


= 
21 838 


It is not gene — known that an 


«| farmers com 
sea that Russian Wheat 


be importe 

price: that — yat: — — of the — of our 
peting wi . t from good t 

down at 

essa for 188. the 8 and — the — aasman 


The object sought to be attained 
iment over node three 


the experi 
the durability of the differen 


Manures applled in 1847. 


cut in 1817. 


si) a = 


Bg 
3c Cost of the Manures. 


i Ae 


ht 


5o 
mee 


B 


Weight of Hay 
cut in 1849, 


cut in 1848, 


82 


Weight of salt 


when th 


g 
inspection of 

a but such as will produco p puolista? If she 
barat mystery Th ha some little-suspected 


Containing 
—— from er own — intendence, 

disinterested and trustworthy 
that her 


Sittings of eggs, w 
——— only. 
— * es 
Turnip 


ted, by picking from e o procure that 
might be offered to her, — moras effective, emr likewise 
only, and allowing them | that if a 


= | Weight of Hay 


| y 2 yards of mud mixed with 6 ewt. of 


ö 929 2 2ũ½ k 6„„4„4 sees f 


— yards 
Head of LIE. . e v eee zee 
po — fo yards of mud mixed with 3 bushels | 
— — yarda of mud mixed 
— A ete of TAN YARD REFUSE 
oe = P abel Be ud mixed with 


Lie eee 


— 2 |? 


a K o vm 


2 | weightcr 
] i 
a 


ag F 


of 3 cwt. 755 ewt. £ 


e 


0 
0 
0 
0 
0 


n 


7 
419 
354 


. Ths alan diane ii 1807 was stocked 


he after-Grass in 1847 was s 

o. II. — Report of an ES cr ta i tia, 

5 an of pas 

a 3 when 

cart, me were ot 
rainy weath 


1849. 
mixed with a small qua sity of fine 
broadcast on March 29th, and during the 


att 


hich prevailed the time. — E a A 
verage 3 sad was * poo tillage land, 
but has been in pasture The cro 
were mowed on 5 June, une, and t the he herbage produced 

was of a 


r | the different man 


Quanti: 


No, Manures applied, 


tity 
applied 
per acre. 


—— tables 
j per acre, 


ee 


1 6 „„ „„ „„ None 6 
2 scale uperphoshate of Lime ait ee 
—— eb 2 * 


ETETE 


06 
1210 


The obj ect’ of my communica- 
—.— te : from you and some of 


ing t 


cause; for ev 
the hand 
It is not. only nec 


‘ — tem 
Tipe Seed.—In Soa 1 Hants the failure of the 
p ae was ener. us your wo cured for ealeu 


who recommends 


— having 18 cubic feet 


| 


who gave ; 
vE aood eee 
100 lbs. of 690d — 
22 88 Ibs. of Carbon, 53 Ibs 
oxygen, and 


oh Staffordshire, t . 5 use of the . coma 
boiler ith semicire ead being superse y 

n boiler, both -Je roa ig in round them 
but now the eyli in general use 
round pis, but the lower 
e fire and 


At 
cog known by the vast quantity of black smoke |r 


calculation of | 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


reduce those 4 4 in use, so as to make the quantity 

f ess, as may be desired, a 

draws the implement i in such a direction that the ma- 

in a continued stream upon the rows of 

ws at atime of the Turn 
ts. 


— 
a 


as poss 
this be et t attended to, there is a danger of the passage 
* logged or stoppe is continued stream, 
falling 2 — ithe plant, of a stimulating 
nature, added 
oots ; I have 
year, in part, under eve — Sian 

The ground was ee * and foul, a 
mass of Toh et year m taken re rity 
arrots 


hydrogen or coal 


e 
and mix it in its proper pro 
hydrogen of ie waste — 9 


po 
2 a most mixture, but if under 
over that quantity it; il not 8 
nected with a flour 


t, 
t I was obliged 5 es 8 RA 
per, Which saved more per 
t a damper is — Sekri by 
easily put Er a low-pressure engine, but a good 
igh-preseure boiler er is not so easily obtained 
plan is best! 


it worked admirably 
besides sà saving the fuel. Richard Nicklen, Glenville, j 
Jsle of M 
Drill- Machine In reply to the 
your number is morning, I — Ai 
drill — by me is 4 for „ 
light and ver 
sowing 5 erops — be the followin The 
drained a 


be ian perk 


but I see in the b 


with 
80 as to form that 9 


ty 
ecidedly of opinion 
sort of crops should be laid on 
There should be 
i be 


n any part, after —— plou ghed, it should be 

filled up to ` sates s with the 

a hollow will lodge, and when t 
al 


n 5 find W 


ching manure Seger applied, | farmers resid 


pade, as wherever ara is | 


h a the tenant farmers 


Ireland with the 


= 

-a 

25 

as 

11 
HE 
H 
458 
122 


5 


y farmers. Several 
N table shop. keepers have — left ‘Sligo for 
merica.” The following report of t Cation 


re and the _— 


untry, together hen county cess 


S more Cas 
nse of roe 
rsnips, if the whole work were to be 


te 
have ve this enone per rformed 
r showery 3 . if this piran antage cannot 
baal 0 plained, it may be as to follow the deposition 
of the manure from the Mand aril with the hoe-culti- 
vator, which will assist in covering the greater part o 


H 
8. 


it and thus prevent the escape of the ammonia, 
an 


: Fattening in the on of the 7th ult., I beg to sa; 


3 are satisfactory, er the result of the a 

e pon, ter of 3 D. 
o the — . that = fact elicited; C 
lf 1 


der than mode of 


ed 
Í mi e 120, after mentionin 


Trey Aug 


be 
Expense 5 EN — With . to the 3 


of““ = h ult., upon what 

n in F er on Cattle 
yl 

are tha room for a greater approach to 

omparative estimate of = 225 Hip 


ave 
If the pe of = 1 a 


tself is tad relied u tis a matter 

it (viz., that 1 ewt. of L 

iio oil as 1 cwt. of the thao belie. it is 
0 


eite the 


3 Lane — > longer useful for p ing. Mr. 


of p 
says, in his book on sogas cultivation of Flax, 
dou 


turned 
may not injure the 
tity of sawdust, 


er 

The jekfornted sl 
box will either 

ene of the two 


a Ten underneath 
close entirel: les n emerin for 
distances described, or it it will partially | 


ondly, 
in the analysis of the oileake for 
nature from A i p is a pre 

ion, are to und in 
what is considered fae avera 
imported f 


s of a differe 
tty general im- 

consi oe ameti in 
e oilea em 

pay f this rapier er- 

irable- = it should be ins pe. 

gh yom 

In you bers Mr. 


B., Alnw 
Emigration K I — 
your crept a E 4 Falcon ” have 
d i 


Hewitt Davis 

that 2 

es — — rè farm to 
ustralia, 


that there is no per centage allowed | ve 


rent charge, 8 poor- rates, * other per- 
manent ns lan d, are y 
ruinously — to the W of the soil, 
one-half, 2 ney, in many EE: a and more, 
of its e value being pa rent, even on tillage 
farms. "That a rate for the pów of the poor, a just 


m of the capital necessary for the 
of the soil, — thereby annihilatin 
c 


coun m 22 
such destruction, necessarily ine v asing = ~ —— 
the surviving minority, will ere long involve a 

25 ha 88 islature 


and 


B 
15 
B 
8.5 
5 


their families, to se 
entire capital is 
5 denied them a 


———ů— of apie! 
t of a district, 


ese farms, in their 
x English or Scotch gorse 
of these farms than a 
and certainly did not m 
stances of emigration, ant without pr 


roperty, unde improved by 

trol of a 2e erde be efited by eu- 

an niey of para a0 the whole 
hen, 


ployment and good w 2 
—.— y Bri 


, 
all expressin 
n|to A nd. sock means as were held out to 8° 
a living. Many were from young 
igration the support the mother 
Alas! how cruel it 


to Ireland! — than Aus 


| supply them. 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE: 


557 


many miles away from 


ld be driven so 
nel, Se ative oan: untry, when such ample space for 
lies so near at home. 3 Davis, 3, Frederick's- 
4 Jewry, London, A 
N Hale ros a and Hedgo'row Ti mber —T as once con- 
the aids that im 


8 apart, — r snd ae ae portions vt iow estate, I like. 
to | wise proceeded to trench-plough, n to 16 


* is to say, t 


young & 2 grazing on the hills, with 300 sheep on the 


pastures, at given extra dressin anl the cone 
0 seeding was to free the land of stagnan 
water; and t to 000 his, I oboe or te to 4 5 all the p e 
mak 2 feet deep, cutting fresh ones 


erma a ad to bring 
same time I 8 — y 4 feet deep, and at 40 to 50 feet 


a) 
E 


es deep, all the 

7 cultivation all 

hamarra e ge to its tillage and Meese? — 
standing in these fields and the hedge: 


arable — $ nA Ha 4 from 2 


that too gen su 


accomm: 3 Fase! Bhi ~ aes 
preserve By 74 gae g 12 o 
eeping 6 — and f fatting 1 100 and 200 re * on 
the * es providing 3 = — . from the plantations, 
he peat into ashes, I 


following year, half the 852 4 4 : 
and in 8 way I have been going aliy. gr 
increasing bo Fertility of “the lani: 50 that at ‘this time there 


ariy w. 
from the 1 of the rains ment the 
lea 


ing ¢ 


ta Kea of the farmers of inferior hud, that 
ided into small nd sha 

igh hedges, as most unfortunate. The 

being thrown away, their apan is dwindling to nothing 

and notwithstanding heavy pri and 

anxiety I i 


warmed in the spring, a0 gather | 
all t 


s to fatten more tha — — rag top ragat mo 
tes ever bend ok “the estate, and a e the 
of corn has been ver ly 17 an TE — 47 


e 
ant | and by using pee got from burning the peat 


e? ab 

to your questions, a very small portion is drained so near as 
24 feet ; all the eres where possible, are 4 feet deep, and the 

th 15 inch drains, which 
are 2 inches and upwards); the cost of the draining is from 
4l. to 6l. an acre ; the first crop on the new land was 88 
I am an advocate for deep tillage at most ae say fro 
14 inches ; the crops you saw are from seeding as 5 5 
Wheat, 4 pecks an acre; Barley, 6 ditto; 2 8 ditto; and 
Beans, 8 are ard dung has been n helpe ed out by mixin 
mark his sat tter scraped 


have long been of 
light, was the most profitable, and that 


opinion that of all ae a sandy, if not too 
uch of the fertility of 


T | the larger portion of — was ign owing to the better 
zan and treatment of the tenant, than to any superior | 


sian be found that they rise and fall together, We 
refer 6s. per bushel as the calculated iy price of Wheat 2 
Per ꝗ 
DIBBLE AND 1 LAND SCUFFLER ” : Inquirer. T 
concerning them) are to be had at Knole vats e Fran Tune 
bridge Wells. We believe they are made by e and 


attribute the exeellence of the crops of which we sa are heard 
t ner seeding, more skilfully 


to the adoption of a 

than is possible by either hoe or drill. 

RYING Macnines:JP Y. We are not acquainted with the 
ine alluded to ; 


it; it does not 


Guano : Inquirer. Less than — hs uano to 1 Ib, of water, or 
1 cwt, of the former to abo ons Ad 2 will make a 
good liquid manure. Sow — 9 ril over Wheat, 
not at seed time, Rye cut after earing 7 ut into chaff 
aud wen . as fi sa will be little better than straw. 
Kohl. ubseriber, Sow nly in March, 
in 280% 12 * pein, and 22 u Hy June, in 
rows 28 inches apart, an 4 at interv vals raat as those 
in rows. They will } h ani nied fe be given 
to all kinds of eren 4 —— ir woul probably ran 


Worse next year, e should prefer seed from biennial rather 
than aunual plant: 
Me on Grass La 
5 28 


pt slaked lime, some months before application, and santos 


al fer tility, and I h part of 
— Bagshot waste— —drained deeply, t tilled, and similarly | treated 
as to dressing and cropping—in course of years 
brought to bear corn as well and as profitably 
land already in cultivation. I enclose you a letter I 


l sometime ago to a very large landowner for whom I was agent 


over a small estate that might | be made very productive but for 


aun favour 
timber, and other matters inconsistent with high farming. 
You will 8 from it my views ot, some of the essentials to 


ds near to trees, I beg to represent to you, that ve on che 1 in kern ae E Me Bava’ will it 
, 
N the te Be 3 a 5 t M 5 attend the . mesa of the Club, an 
eg = sn Te 5 address the 3 on a this subject. 


ore 1 the 
r 


greater occasion there is for higher cultivation, to 
bring it into uren . with richer. In 
opinion ould not b 


is not (or 55 a question 
between high or ion eee ae th m 
between high and no cultivation. admit of no other 
test of ing, as applicable to the merits of any 
fystem, than that of figures ld he is the best 
farmer who raises pee “at the lowest cost ;” but e 
— — this is nearly equivalent to the com- 


1 

moner one, “ of largest ie for I believe corn can 
be best Ry cheapest by dev veloping 1 the returns of the 
In writing thus as 
t peer g 


re 5 your eke it 838 
Hewitt Da ote, 3, Frederick’s-place, Old Jewry. 


Club 


* 


the vie 25 = dles o 


ll- 
| regulari 

x op of irs atrength, 22 time, an 

d 


Miscellaneous. 
hes.—A trial has been made at Genlis 
e 


ance, under various na of Belgian scythe, 
sape, piquet, & is same form as the scythe 
biade, though a little smaller and more curved, and is 
fix ith a strap to a very short handle. The r 
makes use of ith his right hand by an easy move- 
ment 0 little fatigue. He has in * * and a 
hook fixed to the end of a small handle ery light 
wood, with wliich hä holds n * while giving the 

cut with t ty Thi ts n the 
above man of e, 


up tò “all 7 e —— 4 ‘tell feat tl N 
present, to furnis vantages over the n and 
rake-scythe. It ents as close to the groun may 

desired, does not shake the ears, and consequently peee» 
not cause 22 grain to fall ut The reaper does 

ant when using the a A he) 48 
er to o follow bim to eta * — is left — 
his 


rms ce 

and much better ; it allows not — to fa fall, and baned 
{ the required size with surprising 
ost evident manner, a 

nd acts better 


over the land — 


LINSEED : Inquirer. ought o be ground, but may be given 
unboiled, nd it an soak it a 36 hours ; they say that is 
ane pore, raat — of 

NGOLD T. We doubt that to strip green 


3 aves oto a pans nt isa 45 not A ooo — _— 
— growth ; * no other a is of any use as fi 
7 5 Youn Farme tent — — s * 41 
ject obt ined a prize from, and is dye im Oh the Be 12 
Agricultural Society. It — not sas pre 4 published, bu a lt 
j no doubt, rie the Journal ultim ately 
0 N d 


Pour j twithstanding the many ul 
yet s 4 ust be guessed at; there must hare been 
some grand error from the commencement. What was the 


drin wer he our 

were the birds cooped with thelr mothers in a dry, warm, 

cago 1 or Tee A The be 
dry bread crumbs, then chicken grit 

are t first, — a bit of i 

cceaslonaly 

win 


crop p fro 

such tittle delicate morsels, is — . "Moping A 

Ha genes resembles the ree hegre ine — shrill Rese | 
ny, 


p among them the chi o ma 

heult! © distinguish, it — “probable t che 2 were variously 
affe m the same e . — examina- 
ion, hates — ps bein found full of gravel is very rem: 
indicating ation in as 
bably for hess to pick up; Barley and Wheat, as if 
whole, they could not well eat for several days. e same 
a wou indicated by inflammation of the stomach 


and gall, probably diseased liver. Soft or — Tiet is nee 
recommendable, nor kitchen stuffs, nor alum 
ground could not have been nea where t the — of 
other poultry had the poms run, It is nearly impossible to 
cure chicks a ee * and a acer old D. S. 
SUPERPHOSPHATE 0 
ntai 


Es 


iron will and may be dried and 
weighed. 


| „ A Sub, We hare seen nothing to corroborate the 
n this subject ; but are on R so sceptical, 


of j 
3 that ary ch h without personal- knowledge of th a 
uiar ks on „ having kindly sent an the ordina implements In corn beaten down, are much inclined to a it is not “true that white Mustard, 
x > the bers of the Club to i fa. ger t a od aak een eee , and ploughed in tae or thee as 
his improvements and p ice on ttt nan — urers 0 gabe ppe lot « shiii s se will thoroughly y the ” as well asg 
ement at Southhill Park, Eastham r, and much of the produce is lost ; whils use| de a rich fertiliser, Vetches sown in September will not be 
party of members availed Teme of Mr. ai of this instrument offers the atest advantages, as fit to cut till May on most soils. 
Sate, and spent a pleasant day in the ins é of | works with just the same precision as though the co 
te farm above mentioned. The part of the farm under | Wore ade che ordigar. soe i = ee en oats 
vation has all been from the waste heath | WhO ee ee : 
Within the last four n and is ee of the poores 3 at “the action of this instrument, and we IELD, ee Aug 
description, ing of ik d el, d ot but that next year a great number of farm We have a son — y of Beasts of ar 2 s 
to the depth of : 10 ight p sand, an gravel, will adopt , Which is a boo both master — — is ne ye ae — 8 eduction of . sth 8 ib, 
tay from inches. a i à itte t they e 
loam, which, b ags : n persons who are desirous of seeing | Sheep has also’ ll e no al petra 
hag been mixed with the y 3 a this new scythe used will be gladly afforded that ae, sales are slowly effected at 8 A hoice 
feature Á e upper so 8 : n at Genlis; it will n ut into | Lambs ar req but other kinds make very little 
ure of M > opportunity on application pu ; 
deep r. Davis’s sy ap e pportunit: | money. Trade for Calves ; it is with much diffi. 
Ploughing, wide ing, h hoei i tion in their p ce, and the manner 0 pte . ulty they can be “oh rom Holland and 
Reding, be 5 ge A vy few m os) will 9 728 
the The y h gra t seeing, on it (which may be = a — 4 wert — there are = Bettina 1 = 1 15595 — 
farm, i H is is well | D jorthampton, m 
; the best field of Swedes between there an 5 ined om ne rat K ihe which | i y w 1 g "sad eoa Cambcidgeshire „300. 
Aug; one field eat esti at five quarters k C * k. T P ee — d s d Per st. of S Ibs. —s d a 
en ne of Barley at six; a very fine field of | much after the fashion of our bagging hook. ] t Scot Here Best Long.wools, 3 4to3 8 
i ‘urzel and Potatoes; a fine field of Bean 5 fords, &. . 3. 8to3 10| Ditto Sh 
— between the ro and the crops Notices to nahh Pee 3 — 22 ie ae 2d quality 26-8 1 
32 i i ED TurNIPS : Old Sub. en Beasts — 2 
Similar soi] 1. b ay. saw Re B subject that we are acquainted with resulted in a loss on the | Best Downs and ar „5 e 
tesnia speak Jonge, immediate e e ese] Cattle fed on warm boiled Turnip; those fed on the raw did EE ETI] Calves, ee ee 
and oud} to prove the superiority | better. The T must be cut before ing, and then 2 rans: 2 a <4 6 
letter bon e of Davis's system. The carr hed | any of the machines in use will answer aips p 5 be out ad Beasts, heep an rae 33, "070 ; Ganes 339; Pigs, 220. 
of the Club = Davis to one of the honorary secretarie given just — 'Turnips 5 = — We have by no ei e large su * — Beasts; the demand 
the above i show in what mode, and at what expense, | 575 of any y to benefit by 8 = ‘previous Hag. | is —.— exceed ly it, “at 2 A difficult to main 
bas Frederick” mts have beon effe : 5 = 7 — — — en at goes yaa after | tain Mo nda ay’ q —— — of Sheep and Lambs 
a a 8, 0 . 4 z r 1 q t li 2 ig 
fer yee Som 8 bought 8 r. dite tara iti oor ils and i it Mil fake you alt May to ge to ge 7 ir properiy ferior fee oe J ice ones i Satie make as — md = 
Purposes » was thought to be of — — vio — soe ul redu Ma eaa | Mon aen but other kinds meet witha dull sale, Calves are 
deres were Phe the land cultiv: — unless you | again lowe the cannot all be di of, at reduced 
nd the ue remainder being ~—— Burxps or CATTLE: A poor Sepa es ee a ates. From Holland and Germany we have 327 Beasts, 2120 
or Man ordinary crops (Wheat, Bear "Benns, red Clove different breeders. Low’s " Dom Sheep, à 157 Calves ; from Spain, 15 Beasts ; 
Se land’ no: — . mie were any of | _ scribes the different breeds. l 43; from Scotland, 100; and 192 Milch Cows 
` aun cul tion). F cai . ination of | CoxN. EN TSH: Constant Reader. In several cases lately, which i ir 
timpo ttil, and — 7 rom a th f the neighbouring ve come under dur immediate observation, the money rent | counties, 
might Ul vas convinced the 1 a aie e — e peig hea th eed o 7 pape — oe value of the farm has Best Scots, Here- Best Long-wools. 3 4 tos 8 
eee een the e crops perona on ana Sete arol Wheat; the| fords, ah 2. E r 
perseveran som them them you mat j E 79 8 Son years more rent 2s bt al 7 Ty 0 thereafter —— the value, at the Best Short-hori 4—3 6 wes & 2d quality 2 8—8 2 
the in the system Ww a W h the ! and to bear, f preceding year wy ue annn of the number of quarters 2d quality Beasts 2 6—3 2 Ditto R a ase 
tot 10 be there ar — te lige od ltivation,... nd | thus obtained e cases the farms contained both| Best Downs an ambs ., „% mf OS 
ewe %7 „Stimular ant fr g ba tee cul he 8 arable and e hare and we ap nr that it only an : alf-breds .,3 8—3 10 paste: pes eae 4 4 —3 4 
ing a a -etati ter — mix culation | Ditto Shorn i 
ME, there git, wore been, at hie et aed j Stacked, this che arerege PUSE UE m ANEC, foro th it | Beasts, 901; Sheep aad Lambs, 11,810; Gat, ut Ties 240, 


558 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. p 


A — —¾¼ —— f 5 
ae G fz = — — 
= COVENT GARDEN, Srrr. . x MARK LA — 
Grapes, Fontes, and Nectarines are plentifal. a age a. 27.—The supp ot 1 9 0 Wheat by land Sales by Auction, = 
Pine-apples have not altered since our last account. Apricots Bag es this morning e 0 qrs., consisting 
are scarce, and so are Currants. Nuts in ned abundant. | chiefly of tbe new crop. The 7 er ak th — bite is generally IMPORTANT SALE OF PLANTE S 
are more plentiful. Oranges and are abundant, | rather coarse but heavy, the red good, aul helore à any progress AND GREENHOUSE 
-the market continues ov W e with ae a apd foreign in sales could be effected a reduction of „per qr, upon MESSRS. PROTHE 
Among Vegetables, Tarnips may be obtained at from 3d. | the pew was necessary, and. 18. fi 25. E, 8 fon a3 e old, as also favoured with rein b Np MOR 
to6d. a bunch. Carrots the same. Caulifiowers e foreign, for which pees the demand was limited,—English | to Public Competition by Auction Mr. J. Smith, to 
Green fetch from 1s. 6d. ‘to 4s. per bushel, cent arley is unaltered in valne, but foreign grindin ng the turn | on TUESDAY, Sept. 18, 1849, and 1010 remises, ‘Dalston 
and other salading are sufficient for the — cheaper. Beans and Peas support our quotations Oats are a | in consequence of the premises bei owing days at 
Mushrooms fetch from Is. to * 6d, per pottle. Cut | slow sale, and secondary qualities 6d. to 1s. per "gr. lowe: and Birmingham West India Dock Ji 8 required by 
‘Flowers consist of Bees . oniums, Gavenios, Bj Bignonia There was a fair supply of new Mustard seed, quality generally the VALUABLE STOCK OF pook 
yenusta, Tropæolums, Pap s, Fuchsias, and R ata d of 23 to 38. ing i 0 


! ; > * { . r OWD;S 
2 : es Ssto5s Oranges, per doz., Is to 2s having been inadequate to the demand for . prices kinds: also the i z dee Pens of all the Dr 
* ee L per 100, 6s to 168 ‘were the turn dearer for all descriptions, and not likely to and a powe qiapahouge, Planta, The Camellias 
ts 28 to 8 Lemons, per doz., 18 to 28 assimilate to 2 before October. From Baltimore, 13th, the ticularly worthy the attention of N top order, and are par. 
‘Peaches, per doz., 6s to 12s L per 100, 78 to 148 new crop is comp! aned of, and only € estimated at two-thirds of | the Trade.—May be viewed a * emen, Gentlemen, and 
22 | Almonds per nach Ge p, . p| Catalogues may, be Dad, d, eani drm top 
ums, „ sieve, 3s — swee m ‘nipay, Auc. 31.—Wi e exception nglis eat, of of th inci f } h 
Currante,.d Bato 48 W 1s 6d to, pi $ ene PERSEN, Seedsmen in Jeden on the premije 
Pears, per doz., 2 | p bush: ; of a 0 oderate. 
per half sites: re to 6s Nuts, ar., p. bush., 20s to 22s | was a very small attendance at this day’s market, and sales f 3 
Apples, kitchen, P. bsh., 2s VEG 22. ma razil, p. bsh., 12s to 16s | Wheat, either English or foreign, 3 oily be Egotea — MALMESBURY, V „WILTS. -IMPORTANT F FREEHOLD” 


8 diet di 1 5 at some en upon our quot: rad gd a zvo y for Inv 
©. „ P. doz., P. sieve, 8 teration in the value of Barley or 8 ew wW. ite ee 
ome ts a p. pae £ — 6s Onions, p. bunch, 2d to 6d are held for 18s. por, qr. advance,—Excepting for the finest qua- M R. w. H. “JEF FRIES will Sell by ee 
warrant per doz. bundles, 12s | — Spanish, 215 . doz., 1s 6d to 48 Melee, the Qat tradeis heavy.—Barrel Flour is held at iato the White Lion Hotel, in Malmesbury, on SATURDAY 
He Pe npe b., 8d to 6d —Maize is dull, but former prices are demanded. Sin 1 8, 1849, at Tw p o’clock in the afternoon, subject to 
* per bush., Is 6d to 4s Gar r Ib., ad to 6d 5 Zach inst. the weather: naa i peen sany and cloudy, 1 fine, Conditions of Sale shall be then produced, unless an 
Sorrel, p. hf. sore, — * 14 eee me p. do z., 18 6d to 3s and the crops around Lon e now tolerably sec . gr reat eligible offer be previously mate by Private Contract, of which 
‘Potatoes, pe Vegetable Marr 5 6dtols | progress has also been ate in other geen of the kingdom. due notice will be given, that very superior ESTATE called 
— eee eek: 8 2 97 3 Lettuce, Cab., p.sc.,4d to9d The new corn is generally good and heavy, and much of it “WH YCHUROCH,” eligibly and pleasantly situate within a 
a> poir Miet 20 to 4s * ee Cos, do., 6d to 25 a (dern fine. short. Panenan Ahe: or mgh Town of Malmesbury, 
' ps, p. doz. bun, to 38 ndiye, per score, 1s 6 as sae PEL Ie Se 1 k arm-house, substantial Baro, Stables 
Red Beet, per dioz., 1s to 28 Tomatoes, p. hf. sieve, 4s tos LIVERPOOL, Farpay, Ave, 31.—We had rain all day yester- | Stalling sufficient for 50 Beasts, and other suitable ourbu ldings, 
Horse Radish, p. bdl., 28 to 66 | Mushrooms, p. pot., 1s tols 6d | day, but finer weather this morning. 3 1 8 54 77 in good repair, and about 203 — res of Luxuriant and Pro. 
French Beans, p „hf, sieve,1s 6d Small Sal ads, p. pun. 2d to 8d was a thin attendance at market to-day. t declined 1 Numbers Lanp in the following Lot 
to 2s Fennel, per bunch, 2d to to 2d. pet 8 “i Flour 6d. per fog. = ith a very 3 Numbe: 
i each, 2d to 6d Savory, per bu nch, 2 2d t 0 24 demand. Oat e i Gers aout of f sale, ane Fane Joner, Tithe Map. 
‘Leeks, per bunch, 2d to 3d Thyme, per b bunch, 2d to 3d Barley, Beans aay "Peas shad here 94 ol ng te Buildings, Yards, Weise Orchard t i 
‘Celery, p. bundle, 8d to 1s 8d | Parsley, p. doz, 2. bun., 38 s to 48 | few transactions in Indian Darn. but — cod a intaloed 95 W e 47218 
Radishes,p. 12 8, 1s t — Hoot ts, p or bila in fo Ud no new Wheat in to-day. A few undried nen 7 Oats sold at 665 Whyeburch diarsh” 9525 7 » al 
“Watercress, unches, | Marjoram,green,p.bun.,4dto6d | 2s, 6a... and new Oatmeal at 24s, to 25s, per loa | 667 Broad Lease... „ OB 
4d toéd int, green, per bunch, 3d to | 668 Great D ase — 
B per bun., 4dto6d Basil, green, p. bunch, 4d to 6d TAL Wear. [BABLEY.| Oars RTE. BEANS. | PEAS, | = —— 1 A 15 1 4 
AVERAGES. / : z » 
HAY.—P er Load of 36 Trusses. Faly Benne 544% 46, 14,8 425 Gd) 828 530 n . e., se oe ARAE 
MITHFIELD, Aug. 30. — 28. R 49 1 8 1 e 32 5 32 0 4 E: 
Prime Mesdow Hay :20at0:45s -Clover ses | Aus. f.. 48 0 26 3 1 2 0 f 10 % 1 „ „ .. 
Alerior ditto... 50 65 | New Clover . . . 0 84 A 11. . . .. 47 4 25 8 19 2126 7 82 0 31 1 155 2 2 
„„ „ e „E. 46 3 26 1 19 0 27 5 9 29 2 Ta T. . 
Nen Hay. . 60 10 RRS J. COOPER. — 25.44 44 8 26 4 18 10 26 5 82 2 28 8 1008 Part of Bean Leaze Pasture 28 07 
Prime Meadow Hay 707% Inferior ws sw ‘Osto-80s | Aggreg. Aver. | 47 4| 26 2/19 2026 9) 82 1/311 109 Ditto, with Tie-up Stalling ford Bodsis „ 22 
1 PEER WOE oaia uties on F i 2 
— ons e 6 Sea *. 30 34 reign Grain 1 0 11 Lor III. * a 
Old Clover 23 95 a Josnva BAKER, Fluctuations in the last six weeks’ Corn Averages. 675 Part of the Marsh .. j 1255 
Fine Old Hay r gig | PRICES: Jux 21. Jour 28. Ave. 4. Aud. 11. Aue ,18| Aud. 25 Lor — 
— ae T gE — err 8 5° | 76 and 77 Clover Marsh Piece and Waben Bed * 2 0 
— . 55 195 l — ip 15 uh es 55 — 
; * a Stra 25 48 10 — . Bee ač = oe 255 89 South part of Long Marsh 5 n 21% 
Old Clover .. 90 48 0 SA ERS es 1 Wi. 
Ho ge epa Aug. 31. a $ | * * — 25 894 North part of Long March vi „„ d 
Messrs. -PATTENDEN. d 8 = E Kee Í aoe see —— he) ee, 34 OT . ney PR 
tinues the same, Duty 90,0007 iR Report chat the markat oon 44 8 „„ kis — Se 1 162 Allotment in the Common .. Arable 0 310 
— —— ꝶůĩ4I᷑— a — — 
a pa Liverpool. Wakefield. Boston. Birmingham. PP 76, 77, 89, a, 94, 95, 108, 109, and 162 are situa’ 
PRICES “aba. n the parish of St. Pau 30. s, Malaesbary, and sub N 2 "Th: 
g j rent chan e of 111, 8s. 3d., and a tax of | ; 
CURRENT. aug 20 Angar Aug. 21. Aug. 28. Aug. 17 Aug. 24 Aug. 22 Aug. 29 Aug. 23. Aug. 30. residue she Estate is in the parish of Wes siport aie 
š Malm and subject to a tithe rent charge of 101. 16s. 
4 gr. 70 Ibs. 70 lbs. qr. qr. qr. qr. 62 lbs. 62 Ibs. | 45 al — — n 
Wheat— s „ . d. „ a a ee „%%% ˙ cr. d. he ESTAT 5 with young thriving Timber, issur- 
New, red 1 whi 42to44.6 8 7 06 6 6 10'40:t048/12t048/42t046'424046/5 9 6 05 6 5 9 „ ound r principally by lands of the Earl of Suffolk, and adjoins 
„ White 20 0 —4% 0 7 46 9 7 242—5042—5044—48 44—485 9 6 15 6 O the Park 
vga mall 
Old, red ne 1 — 4 40—42 6 8 7 216 6 7 0ʃ41 1 * „„ en The FARM 3 is 3 9 ae es 
i j be converted into and — —— 
ie white * 46—48 44—477 3 7 47 0 7 3 —50 —50 — | — 5 8 6 25 10 6 6 respectablefamily. pin a mee arly for a 
Foreign. Les — a 36— 544 6 7 94 4 7 8038—5138—51Iͥ — — 5 0 5 65 0 6 2 being ve 1 a for 18 uae be od 
| 480 lbs. 480 Ibs. } | of) the two 8 ‘close to the the D B 
Ryo—Old ... [22—24 3 2 — ei S| Shane iT tla 1 ae 
22 Mi * Bis — 4 pas . Chippenham Stations on the Gas a Ras iw, eena 
. 5 a 3 re Toyi iew the Estate app — 2 5 
and for further culars ; an — . office: a md 
Ar. Ar. FT A ‘Shemnastorsbien, 9 i 
2 22—24 the Estate may be Am of ‘be pure: y 
29—32 | Lot 1 may (if 2 remain 133 ‘se sen thereo 
— USS 


8 
0 T f ae a MA 

T 5 3 8 ate in the Parisi 
i and Arad 


232523252 28 —3 
Foreign wee 24—3224—32 32 —34 32 —34 


New, small 3 i —35 32 — 2—3532—35 32—34 32 34 12—14 
) 4 421—360 21—36 24 —35 24—35 30—3130—31 — . 11.3 
Linseed- Feed e an ac 32—40132—40| — 
— 1 40 — 40 —12 AOS Gf vic * 
TLinsseadakes : rae eat = 
2˖;³ẽ—. m:: , , . 5 
Foreign .... 61 * . . wie — 8 pics 
Indian Corn |223 2226} 2 29 Í + oe gles 12—13 
p. 85 


p. sack p. sack per . 
36—4036—40 34—36 


riende, in ; 
Aver. Gloucester. 20 i j 
erages. Imports — "Boilers. Th price 15 9 
am a. Amporta. 10 in. willewarm 50 ft. sin. pipe — 54 
Ars. h e Ars. N 75 fl. 4 in. 40. 20 
833 43 8 2090 14 in. do. 100 fr. 4 in. do... . 310% 
3 i op merken = see 
763 | 19 10 883 ZZ 
— — — in. 5 3 
* act os Re in ipe BY 
— 20 in, will n800 . 5 
sd Sein” n romm 1500 ft. estaj 
double sail up y 


ge] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


= TO GARDENERS AND FLORISTS. 
ase, 2 


d Pits, low. 


„ CLARK, 8 dsman, 25, Bishopsga 
apply to Morning, lane a’ chick. street, Hackney ; oat at 
ce of thi 


per. 
the .. vv 
LICATION FOR THE IMPROVE- 
MENT OF CELERY, SEA-KALE, CARDOONS, RHU- 
: S, &c.— n 4 gi 
are m 


0 
remarks are extracted: ‘The e prin 
v 


the 

sone ag isola undoubtedly add. — to earliness.. 
fiayou' 85 e: 1 Ligne that the prineipleis excellent. 
All that we ask o part of Mr. is the- ‘thanks of 
horticulturists for sieer before them in — ey anner 
a prin neiple of ma pieten utility 

AGRIO 

Ouro POUND” "CARBONISED ANIMAL 


be for gen al urposes, or. a ee gatan 
cul: crop, as may be nired, and, its 

effects upon the soil will continue Leafs. Price (uet 
cash) per ton, from anei to 101, ; oe . — to be applied 
from 3 to 6 ewt. st 


per a aceordin 
TO THE- CULTIVATORS or FLOWER RS. 
THE CARBONISED ay sons ea als so prepared, by a dif- 
liarly for Plants and Flowers in — or 
pots, and sold in tin en ere at 18. = 9d., and 2s, 6d 
act mee n uoza, Er 5s. S by taking which r — 
i — t is so ee freed from 


smell, — clean, ‘that the mo A lady may use it for 


her drawin ng room plants or r conservatory experiencing 
wien 


annoyance ther: 

oe tnt ean Col . n, &e. ve Tat t for the 
special a pointment), "32, 999 street, Leicester- 

— ‘tore, London ems be ub 7 attended to. 


acres + a a 


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t. B; 


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* Upwards of Eicnt HUNDBED ENGRAVINGS,- from Drawings taken expressly for these Charts, by distinguished Artists 
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ig of WHEAT T and other-crops, are respectfully 
——— I NOTICE, in 


t in — — increasing demands rendering | — 
req impossible for him to-execute the orders punctually 
ity amen 
©; 


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rders addressed 


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Queen-street, 


% on the Eastern Counties, Bir 
be pleased 10 5 8 price Id. 


FELIX 8 UM] M ERLY’S 
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mingham, 8 Western a, 1 n, and South Eastern. 
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4 — AND WEYBRIDGE, 13 E price 

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Published by J. FRANCIS, at the RAILWAY CHRONICLE Office, 1, Wellington-street North, frand katile; 
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: in ing. 
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z UFACTORY, Middle- yana; Great 
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N 8 
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Well as relerence:o the highest authority; or 
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r HISTORY. “OF. THE UNTED. 3 or 


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18, 94 nts. Large quantities always keptdastock, of, aee TRE University 
sions de, 7 werer, ade to an) By W. P. i 
nland 


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It is the purpose of thi fu i 


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— dend ia aE: with 93 Wood Engravings, 
rice 6s, 6d., 


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FIR 8 OF 8 E ao a TORY, from the Monu- Kill be faund iple sof the: 
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From the e British Maganine This is an elegant and- ‘well. 
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| From the Birminghat Herald 3 
n to the lil of every Biblica * 

e Rev. Thomas Hartwell Horne’s. —— to me 
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14. — 

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There is a vast deal of astronomical info rmation e 
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SYSTEM OF F POPULAR GEOMETRY ; con- 

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DEMON NSTRATED ; or, a 2 3 — use | sian ists, ae — not er common hair. Flesh 
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CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


. BY HER MAJESTY’S ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. 


LSxpr. 1; 
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Portable Steam Engine and _Threshing Machine, 
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The principal Prize of 501. for the best Portable Steam Engine, for Threshing and other EREN purposes, and the Prize of 8 5 the best Threshing 
th awarded G 


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latel. i considerable improvements, w 
N will have pleas 


s 3 er’ ip Cutter Scarifiers, &c. 
— — 


nts on a Farm, such as Threshing and 
ud in a 5 mamor to horse power, ane three N bein ng | sufficient is ees it, may 
ne ~ so sim adi 


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ed, e to London, Hull, or Newcastle-on-Tyne, by water; and to any Station on the line of the Eastern Counties and Eastern Union 2 
—— inenammenamenedll 


FAMILIAR LESSONS 45 satel gab GARDENING, 
On September Ist, price One Shilling, or post free, 18 sta 
HE HORTICULTURAL MAGAZINE, contain g 

a complete Treatise on e * As of the Al stroemeria ; 
also Familiar Lesson G 22 ng, d&c. 

London: si m-street, Strand. 
PRICE FOURPENGE, OF ANY BOOKSELLER. ~ 
CONTENTS or oF — NUMBER ror SATURDAY 

, AUGEST 25, oF 
“AT EN 


M, 
OF ENGLISH AND FOREIGN LITERATURE, 
JOURNAL 9 AND Largo Quart N aT 


Be TH EXTR 
Louis Kossut 2 and the — Four Y Solve a the ‘Pac 
History of Hungary— wer Lieut. the Hon. F. Walpole. 
vig Kossuth, &c.] E R-N. 
A. Frey iples of Zoology. By L. 
John Bee, and = 2 Agassiz and A. A. Gould 


yee of Europe, 

ergy in the 
of the Seventeenth 1 
considered. By C. Babington, 
M. A., is 


8 of ‘the House of Or- 
leans. By W. Cooke Taylor, 
L. L. D. 


3 SHORTER NOTICE: 

Auto-biography of — — Moderate 9 2 the 
Franklin. By Rev. H. W n of Haller. By F. 

A Lift for = rina 

Before an 4 English 
R. Hiley 

“ Sidmouth 


Steini 
The Child’s 
Grammar, 


Original Papers.—Poetry : (“My Books” 
from the Sea”)—Old English A 
Their-Garten, Berlin 


gn 
—Mont D’Or, Auvergne 


3 in the Army — The 
gton Irving’s “ Life of Oliver 
to Aus- 
w Museum at 
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ae 2 t. Lawre to Lake 


in, Black, ro — 8 the ati 


on the School 
ve “of f the Gospels, 


at 3 ee Dis- 

3 he S F —Mr. s Fresco Paint- 

ing of “Sota aa Justice,” and Mr. Herbert’s Lear 
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3 — he Hildebrand’s "gpa 
Redcliffe 925 


Music and the Drama. — New Strand Theatre (. 
First and Last Courtship’) 3 
ast Opera 


ssip.—The Past 
Seasons The Huguenots” at — Surrey Se E 
Obituary of Signor * e ore 
i Extraordina 8 Cunningham's 
Hand-book for London —the Widow of Milton—A Street 
Paved with Gold Territory—Hoist- 
ing Apparatus at Britannia Bri Regge toon Remains at 


ie 
roving the OT of the Working | the 


ETIES.—The P of the COTTAGE GAR- 
| DERSE have determied to place gratuitously at the disposal 
e Mana h Horticultural Society a Copy of the 

— * wish it to be 


OH eee ZE TO COUNTRY HORTICULTURAL 
SOCI roprietors 


Pict otam of f ths $ Wo Kk. fee n ~ = 
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Society’s Managers, ` i request that 2 ail ‘ate: 
tions for copies ma; e by ident or . of 
all such societies before the Ist fy osta te xt. — Office of the 
COTTAGE Tyee , 147, Strand, Lo i 
E.—NEW ED 


ON 
a Supp! ement by 
pooner, 422 80 to advance the work to the present 
state of Veterinary Knowledge 
HE H uke its History, Breeds, and Manage- 
By WILLIAM Youa 
The Supplement magi bo had, pao e price 1s, 6d. 
Also, by the e Aut ATTLE, price 8s. SHEEP, 
These — 9 eek are "closely p rinted, com- 
probenaively 3 and highly illustrated, comprise every 
information which can be zeguiret on ipa! olin! cone subjects. 
on: Rosser at 
vo, with C Ea price 
ODERN AGRICULTURAL IMPROVEMENTS. 
UTHBERT WILLIAM JOHNSON, Esq. 
oe rk, — into = a space the important 
nts of the last 15 poms, has an interest quite inde- 
ch it has Toh written, namely, as 


2 — ORS 171 
Just Published, i 0, 2 8s, cloth, with 


wane 


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Supplemen! i a Husban — 3 in the 
Farmer's Seri ries o nd “Lt ry of Use edge. 
ak Ros 1 1 55 =e nos 3 
ON B 5 oe ON 


REWI 

Jast. ae i 4th Editi son is in 1 vol, 10s. 6d. cloth, 
"ie pete L TREATISE “ON BREWI NG, 
based on Chemic: — a Economical 3 with For- 

mulæ for Public Brew and Instructions for Private Fam 

lies. By WX. e “Practical Brewer. Fourth Edition. 
hae — ti — 33 3 = private families; to 
rk ably treating of their 
art; ats the Tatter, rs one ne which th 5 find an efficient aud 

correct guide.“ Chem 
London b Brown, GREEN, and LONGMANS, 


PROFESSOR ge ggg . TO BOTANY. 
Just published, h Six Copper-plates and 
numerou a Wood ttt obo rice 243. 81 4 


NT RODUCTION re BOT 


It 2 been the o Kathor wish to bring every shies that he 
has introduced down, as nearly as 1 to the come in 
which it is found at the DE day. oing so, he has 
added so very considerable a quantity of — matter, especially 
in 7 relates to Vegetable Ana 3 — — iA — the 
present Edition may are in th fot, work. 


THE THEORY oF. Bien 8yo, 123, 
SYNOPSIS OF THE BR ee FLORA. 12mo, 10s. 6d, 
FLORA MEDICA. 8vo, 
London : LONGMAN, — GREEN, and Lonemans, 
BOTANICAL WORKS BY PROFESSOR LINDLEY 
CHOOL BOT - Y; or, the Rudiments of Botanical 
Science, New Edi ion, 400 Illustrations. Price 5s. 6d, 


E VEGETABLE reg tng or the Structure, 
Classification, — ses of P eer Illustr. strated upon the 
30s. inaa T Seco: d Edi — Illustrations. 


eee Students and others, the abo 
ork is issued also in 12 Monthly Parts, 5 


order The Athenzum of any Bookseller, 


e 5s. 6d., cloth, 
RNAMENTAL AND DOMESTIC gece 
History and Management, 
ivi: de, M. “Avene Birds trea of os nn K 


of are 
Domestic Fowl in patie Musk Duck ` The Pea Fowl 
genera he Grey Chin 
The ip Fowl 3 ver 
ish Fowl Th te Fronted Fowls 
The Speere Dork- or Laughing Goose The Cuckoo Fowl 
ings he Wigeon 3 Dun Fowl 
* e ce * Teal a its Lark - crested 
congene 
The Malay Foul |The Waite China 
EA oe Malay G 


The Garis Fowl 


and 


owl 
The Poland Fowl 


Tai e Duck 
The Domestic Goose 


8 Bos! ee or The Tur 
Go . — d deal of useful information, 
presented, 5 with pictures idae rese 
by y disquisitions of 2 „ 
a rs’ Chronicle and aire Gazette, 5, 
treet, Covent-garden ; and may be — e r 


the Royal — 


at Norwich. 


and 


THis N gained 
ociety’s Prize for 1849, 


Dt NEWINGTON'S DISBLE. 


NLE PARK. FRAN 


Err 


London: Brapgusy and Evans, 11, Bouverie-si 


price 2s. 6d, each, 
erie-street, 


of No. 13, 
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in 


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2 


7 


eS E 


HE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 


GRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley, 


SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8. By. 


No. 36—1849.] 


INDEX, 
Vs 2 % 565 Lettuce-root aphisg 565 Ò 
u works, v. vez tion s.. 563 Lime water v, mildew’ ssc h 566 a 
Agrealtare and po tics 569 Martindale’s Analysis of Soils, 
to salt 568 ret 566 
istine Farn» 3 A sions 8 8 565 
sersssosesooo ildew, cure for . T Kan 

Pine ico cip . 573 Moths . 0 
1 567 New s (Dr.) machines 572 
2 Bas Norwiel X . — judging at .... 571 


566 Phanerogams, fertilisation of.. 3 34 
g —— 71 


saving 
Pasio 9 by Couch 
. 


i me goats .. á 
een 
57 
1 ee a 
EDA HOW or raz NORFOLK AND 


1 HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY will be he!d 
* EXCHANGE, NORWICH, on WEDNESDAY, 


9th of September. There will be offered al open compe- 
2255 — — ers and Nurserymen in all England, 


a priz 

: pe best leri vin si of 24 b 
The 2d best do. fas 

do. 


t ko ands 
No entrance money requi d, but parties aan 85 8 
are requested to give S thereof = the Secretary, Mr. 

ither ian bered, may ee 


Five pounds 
ee Sou unds 


ahi e requested 5 Coie 
"clock. . 5 4 mber 8. 


7 AND MUSICAL FETE ar 


CE, pace — see on FRIDAY, 
ee 


offer ig cathe Prizes for 

i r viz., for the best 12 dissimilar 

3 e fee Ps 6d. 
=. Hes n. Sec, 


7 to all 


at arg ia third be st. k 
—.— 


€Premium s, & ba ob 85 2 * 8 Par: 
c., May be o taine ne ILVERLOCK 
Pin 8 Norb Cute Woe ar i 


ROUPELLIA GR 
J LODDIGES anD SONS ha — raised the above 
Stove Plant, figured in the Botanical 


. each. 


pate the present month, are enabled 8 — — lants | 
fom 1 to 2 feet high; price 21, 2s. ach.— Hai 8. = 


Nurs 
turn her 8 to aa fon, bi pai and 
umerous cae her usband received 
2 oe vst to co se the 
8 retofore, nothing shall 
robation of those by whose kind 
she there- 


FLOWERING ROOTS. ROOTS. 
7M. HAMILTON’S annual importation of the 


e has arrived — excellent cones A priced 
Catalo th mo — 8 ment, is now a ag nd m may be | 
had — 94 ‘on ¢ applicat 
HYA ining ere superior eee named, 9s., 128. and 183. 
per dozen; D n ditto, 6s, per en: itto, mixed 
or pots o i 1 * int —.— SNOWDROPS, 28. 6d, ; 
MIXED CROCUS, 1s. 6d. per 100. EARL "U „ 
JONQUILS, large, 1s. ; NARCISSUS, 4s. to 6s, per doz. GLA- 
IOLUS, RANU pi — EF Soak Fo! IRIS, LILIES, &c 
at moderate prices. GUERNSEY LILIES, 9d. each, 
TON’S POY a 3 PORTER FOR HYA- 


CINTHS, TARO 15 SUS, &e., 6s. 
VEGETABLE EDS for 2 8 

Pos kata onde Hy N from unknown corre- 
spondents. —156, Cheapside, London 


CHRYSAN THEMUM 


FLOWER AND 


orders from 
their extensive and veer Sikit collection of the above, 
comprising all the new and fine continental varieties, in fine 


strong, bushy, plants, fit for 7 hibiti ion, at 15s, pe — or 
smaller plants, per pons free, 
at the oo gee 
0 bes aed ae 2. 285. 
Erea 


12 dit 
With all 8 i requested), directions will ibe sent for a suc- 
mode 


cessful and e cultur exhibitio 
Y ACINTHS 

OUELL anp CO. hay 

Haarlem, their ape at tall m o 
pene condition, comprising many dete 

of this favourite — which t Lot 2 to offer at 6s., 

9s., 128., and 18s. per dozen, — ag for glasses or pot culture, 
catalogues of which may be ha n applica ti 


just ro direet from 
eee 


Comprising the . vatibilet, ¥ well set with flower buds, 30s, 


to 42s. per dozen 


PINKS. 

The finest first-rate show flowers, of me newest kinds, per post 
free, 12s., 18s., aud 24s. per r dozen pai 
h an 5 M variety of highly 
ornamental plants, will be — by enclosing two postage 
stamps. 

Pos kodo orders or references are required an unknown 
0 Dru Cn ene Great Yarmouth, September 8. 


TEW ANTHEMUMS.— Twe! 


—.— . 10 estar ae 5 and 
thi a 


p 
plani foro | vamber 


[Price 6d. 


UBLE ROMAN AND PAPER WHITE NAP- 
CISsUS, As. — —The above Bulbs, the — of 


uD% 


18 aie ear Wa — a 
3 Taina Anemones, Ranunculus 
Jogues of. whic h 50 re had per post. 
CH raw —— RO 
AMES CHARTRES. SRED: 


his Friends, and the Public generally, that he has mpo a 
large Assortment of the above, which has arrived in excellent 
condition ; the BULBS — remarkably aed nd the 
modera te. 5 ca ad on 05 n. 
fos RS ERY MEN AND STS 
ARDY SON, Maldo a Essex, — 


the disposal 
to 4 inches nies 
ollection aly — — named flowers. 
on applicati 
MYA 18 NE STRAWBERRY, . 
MYATT anD SONS out 
plants of _ and the s following varieties í the prices 

1 . 6d.; Fer tilised Hautbois, 


10s, 6d. ; ‘Britis h Que — Globe, 3s. 6d. oth, 

d.; Hooper's Seedli ing, es 6d. ; Keens’ Seodting, 35. 6d.; 

app Gaite de Paris, 0075 Princess Royal, 7s. 6d, ; 

Cuthill’s Black Prince, 15s. wee i 

Post-office orders are — to be * ‘ae age to 
Josera M Myatt, Manor Fed. ‘Deptford. Kent.— 

VAL OF DUTCH B 8. 
Cora ND Co., F Lorists, igh-street, 
Bo ugh, have « received their usual supply « of choice Hya- 
u 


‘THE BLACK BRINGS ‘STRAWB 
Plants of 4 STRAW 
Price, per 100, > 
prolific, we lt flavoured, and @ 
itin 8 


tained from it in A 


Gardeners’ Chronicle, p. 
Straube ota 
rice 16. — 


W AND RAR 
ESSRS. VEITCH anp SON See ts 1 1 Bl 

ers 3 a = plants that the Hee 
are pate. for 


ering fine this autumn ae 
40 new and select vars. (inetua rs 
24 Ditto for 158. 2 Ditto EF 3 0 
THE BEST NAS, vonslAs . PETUNIAS, 

&c. of 1819.— Strong and bushy plants in bloom, in 3 and 4-inch 

po ots. A Price lay So en ready, with 11 reduced prices 
attached, containing also the best new GERA 3, last sent 
ut. Goods delivered hes to „ aud pie plants sent 


gratis with orders of 40s. and upwards, 
Bass and Po vial Seed and Horticultural Establishment, 
dbury, 
FINE LATE STRAWBERRY, “LA DELICIEUSE.” 
3 FAIRBAIRN, Capes near Lo ndon, 


; ELLA (Hooxns 
e e al ee us ee b Mr. Th 
It is figured in Gur is Botanical Magazine for October 
Fete f ail a Sie We, Hooker, 
of a yas, deliciously scented. 
frosted silver.” It z 
Marai pido December last, 
flowers delicacy and 


stead cs p 
STRAWBERRY. 
Copy of Mr. Bguce’s Letter, sent to 2 JosEPH FAIRBAIRN. 
Merton, July 23, 1849, 
“Dear Sir,—In respect to the ee we were talking 


| about this morning, I believe they would be an 9 in 


as they are distinct from any o 


any establi shment, a 
irn. property of coming in after — 


hea vowing STRAWBERRY PLANTS may be 
— ims, , Warranted, ays Messrs, DILLISTONE, Nurseri 
. Harverhill, auch folk : 
rince and on 15s. * HDR 
tte fe Paris (Pelvilain’s) 5 
and prh Hautbois 


*tincess 4 ce Maud; this is here the very best 

on cate 2 ee „ „ 
on Pine ritish S, S 2 4 

bet for preserves” 85 pee 


BRACLEG SEPTEMBER SOWING. 


— — 455 N EU M, one of the 
the world, is a Biennial, grows 
in one summer with a handsome fluted stem, 6 or 8 


Mrs, “Loagreumference, ro 7 feet 

1 5 Ladies Companion,” P page 141. Packet of 
directi or sowing, ls, 

be sown MILA INSIGNIS This noted annual flower 


ts edgings in katane. 
tummer, — a a display of flowers from March 
ihre Hard Per Ib., 83.; per er 
Harr , Annuals, — 6d. All the a post free, 


ers, Maldon, 
N SUNO THS, ror JUST IMP ae ae 
—— SONS, bg S extensive _ 
ted Floris 


from se 2 most ce 
i 70 supply the Pos spire sorts, an 0 
Glasses, at the following low prices: 
name, per do ae .. £0 Os. Od. 
3 do. a 0 6 -4 
colours, separate or m Freeh mae 
raul” clone oro round 0 1 4 
Bet 8 sorts, lg rein È 1 0 


5 piace: of Anemones, Jon- 
2 Bulbous Flower Roots, as per Priced 
pere 9 
TRERS of 
off suc 
orders 
? 


will be 


Ba conrad ably fine 8 
o bearing, 


8 — will 7 come 
re reques! 
n Berko, 


other sorts = over, thus lengthening the ea oer season, 
mig 2 rathe 


plant 
collection n, as the flowers 3 in 
. are 213 fragrant.” 
ick and Regeut's-park, at both of which places it received 
the frst prize for new and rare rir Fine blooming plants 


63s. 
MITRARIA COCCINEA 


This very handsome mg distinct shrub 


importance in 
ection fur ai 
It . — e ox ime, 


(probably hardy), 


Mr. William Lobb, fro 

It is figured in Paxton’s ee 
dwarf compact evergreen shrub, pr 
lossom 


m the Island of Chiloe, 
ie & It is a 


= mg F. and J. Chester 
n, E. P., Hul Son, 

Dar a, R. F., * 

Frettin gham, Holmes, Sheffield 
ng 


poe B Bury St. 
3 


Imrie Bro! 


5 AT Beauti 
road, Chelsea, * gere. 


a, 
8 


ing a choice stock of trained and | 


eas 
H.R.H, Prince ORNAMENTAL Y WATER F 


pinioned 

Malas, Poland, $ Surrey, — Borin fowls ; ve te Japan, 

and comm 8 China pigs at 3, 
te aint eae 


, except colour, . agent resem- | tion. as frequently aoe — Ghiswick and 
bling sat of a Bigarreau Cherry, an pay ople who Regent’sparis, heey st prizes at 
paar S this B ising “a Fo ag tint to h undecided 2 75 of many plants 31s. 
ommendation you can ai YLA STAMINEA 
tion onal observation.—I am, dear Sir, ve A (Biome) ). 
confirmation from yours, en — Bruce.” ne. igh This bea — w ted at the Lon in Paxton's Magazine for May, 
Plants ready for delivery ae —5 middle of the month. — It w e London 
co S — ed fi 2 Silve: a 2 on 
n r — nie om u | al 
riden k ARTE Ta the Sih of July, 194 dal and — a — Strong 
+ 4 th A $ 8 al 3 r3 ants, 
| tne above Stra woy CANTUA P LIA (De Canpotte). 
Austin and Aden Glasgow Jeffries, R., Ipswich This rare an preg — — — was 
Backhouse Mackie, Arthur, Norwich us from b: gured in — ae 
Burgess ana Kent Penkbull M‘Intyre, 8 tanical Magazi uly, | 548. poda afa a of 
Coysh, J., Leiceste Miles, John, on Dore is given. It was exhibited at — inp 
Crane, George, Kidderminster | Palmer and Son, D received a Medal. It is a ardy —— ae plant fo ka 
Dickson and Co., Edinburgh | Pontey, Alexander, on h | cul blooms orat is of a fine fol casy 
un liage and habit, 


— and dwarf 
e aie satisfa ction, 


M 


— — for March 2 


“ROP 


wering p 


E0LU M SMITHLANUM ( 
turti 


3. 
rade, and when tix 
urth plant es dg ea gratis. ree of any: sort 
ave the 5 est it 5 K 
Printed 2 gan further descriptions, £ planta, 
Exeter, Sept, 8, 


562 THE 


Glass FOR CONSERVATORIES, e to 
FOR Feat ag aly ye 


anes F LIPS Co. have the pleasure to 
J hand — — List of Prices of GLASS for . 
CUT TO SHEET S E Too f : 
= oz. from 2d. +0 3id. per foot. pi boxes of 1 e 
” 3} ” ” 
— ELA 2 n 73 n 


9. d. 
1 
7 by 3.46 6 
8 by 6...18 


under 
” 


nder ... 
6 by 4 and 
ies 


= T ee sh et Gla : fo * ie 
t cases of large Shee ass, for cutting 
3 7 and 1105 E 5 1 Plate Glass, from 18. 2d. to 28. per 
> 
t r, ROUGH EEN packed in boxes 
0 feet eac 
d 6} b: 108. 04 7 by 5 and 7} by 5) . . 12s 0d. 
8 bys n J 13 6 9 by 7 „ 10 by 8 15 0 
a from 2s. to 6s. each; METAL HAND- -FRA MES, 
ous Tiles a Slates, Propagating and Bee Glasses from 
Cc mber Tubes, 1d. nch; Peach 
each; Grape Glass eB; ucumber es E 5 Pa 8 
i pet — r Ornaments, 
and Window Glas y description, 
— eters for —.— che Gasllig 6 of — — 
6 tubes, 10s. Self- Registering The 


at t 2 forwarded on 9 to their 
eee et 11 morh Lo ndon 


rying Se m 2d. to 3d. 
many thousand 


GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES 5 
PURPOSES, &c. 


S = AYACINTH FLOWER DISHES 
TING cucu 
 MILLINGTON'S ‘SHEET 8 3 is of 


m 16 to 32 ounces, at 
d, per foot an 


pae. . 


12 to 9 24 — —— . =i apa ‘cnet mber Tubes, 
— 2 12 to 24 Trees wag 1 per indi * rs, 78. 6d. 
ach. Wasp T —Lists may be had on — at the 


1 87, ‘ishopsgate-stret Without, same side as the 


Eastern Counties Way, ino 

GTATUES, VASES, FOUNTAINS, GARDI 
ORNAMENTS, COATS OF ARMS, &. d ARCHI- 

eas 47 ae — — Lui INOR TS, in Pian . Stone, by 

VA s. end, Bo T. J. Croaeon, 


bang — ‘Goad 10 , yp Aike r aenar — at e containing 
wings of 2 morton — * ak Paka on application.— 

Spec 5 be at Messrs, CROGdON and Co. “s, 

2, 2, Dowzate-hill, Lon 

IMPROVED FOUR-HORSE PORTABLE STE AMENGINES | 


Works, and 70, Strand, beg tocall attention to their Steam- 


GARDENERS 


50 CULTIVATORS OF © 


TE 

o BE D ED OF, pe mbit n terms, a fine, 
NILIS, mea 
No. 138, Pos 

pA GREENHOUSE BUILDERS ao OER RS.— 

y person having good second-hand o enhouses, 

G reenhouse, Pit-lights, Hot-water 5 era the like, to 
dispose of, cheap, may nd a Purchaser by sending full par- 
ticulars * Pome to A. B., Elm Cottage, Park-street, Cam- 

berwell, Lon 


on a foot and a half high.—Apply 
:- office Hal I. 


rom 11. 55. to 
PEDIMENT OR 3 BAROMBTERS, 17. Is, to 61. 
STANDARD BAROMETERS for 5. 5 
— 1 according t to — size of the tube. The above Barometers k 


port rtable for carriage. 

THERMOMETERS for Registering the extremes of heat an nd 
cold, of the best . by 10s., 18s., and 15s; ditto for 
Registering Cold only, 4s. 6d. to 6s. 6d, ; ditto for Baths or Hot 
Water in Gamer or J apan poly 28. 6d. to 14s, ; ditto for Hot- 
beds te ort’ — bottom- heat, 15s. to II. Ba. 
matic M copes, price 3%. 12s., 5l. 
pound ——ç— 10s. to 23. 10s. T opes, 1, 2, an 

— 15 from 158. to 2l. 2s.; ditto for the pocket, 128. to 3l. 38. 
Mas 's Hygromet ing the de a idity i 
gr 8 es, sick chambers, &c., i and 1%, 1 L 
for showing the PeT of Milk aa is e e ii 
sets, from 10s, to 41. 4s. Magic acd Ea with 12 e — 5 
105. to 2l. > canada View Apparatus, lent out for the ing, 

. 6d, an 


anted and 3 if nor 3 
s and desc 


een 


OTHOUSE DESIGNING, BUILDING, AND 
HEATING.—Every description of 1 pee 
ture Designed, Erected, 2 eated by Hot Wat mon 
* most economical poe arora 
ials ane 2 from Noble- 
Gen patronised, for mo 
than 155 years pee, FA 8, aildmg sat 100. K Modern and Simple 
of Con uilding, Warming, and Ventilating 
— Struct — 


Ss 
a 


ui) aga M ‘am 


ny 


J. Tuomsow having had dun ur ye 
per Horticulturist, “Landscape Gi Gardener, and Garde 


ars’ experience — a 


Majesty’ s Royal s at Windsor, Kew, a nd 
most res 1 — the favours and pa jo — 
ge of 1 aud 8 Pen to form new, or to alte 


ngines and Threshing Machines 3, which are more ec 


HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING 
BY HOT WATE 

ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF THE € CHOICEST PLANTS, 
VINES, FERNS, &c. 


as quali 
m e now erected on their 
Premises, for inspection, a groat — — of Hothouses, Green. 
Conserv. 
howing t the mo 


T 
bot ethods 
2 * — Sm Ventilating all 2 — Erec- 
ese ppa they are enabled to grow 
her Plants, in such immense 
TESS THAN HALF. PRICE. 
everything connected with the 
; Plans, Estimates, and Cata- 


Geran ae 8 
nted best materi to Greenhouse, 


made by ma 
12 


onomical 


e 2 and 3 feet of 88 in front, gla 
ot bert a colour, delivered to a e tires e coats 
a n 


3 
— 51 175 1 N Hae. ay fens — Fs Tar 
wis’s Machine Hothouse Works, Stamford-hi n, 1 
— 


T, CHEAP, AND DURABLE ROOFING, 
ROGGON'S 1 e ROOFING 
1 mo peat sn ow, ana free and 
and extensive experien 
"Sayed erate the tong an required for dates; rs be haid 


mates 
on with great facility by farm-seryants, or u npractised rson 
J 8, 8. 
rr uare foot. OCROGGON’S S PAT ENT NON. CN. 
— 2. cbs 9 s and Pipes, saves 25 per 


on to Croccon and Co., 2, r n app z 


— j r on 3 
Ho othous e Builder, &c., King-st,, Hammer: smi ith, ne ondon. 
t * Rustic aier Houses, Ghote, Vases, and ir diesen 
Ornaments, made on the shortest notice. 


terns, Ba s, &c. 
external pla Tt and nal castings it — — 3 
— — nor paint. It never vegetates, and will carry from three 
our times its own body of sand. 
' Manufacturers, J, B. WHITE and Sons, Milbank-street, West- 
min 


e CEMENT, for internal Stucco, instead o 
mon plastering, may be painted and paperon within 
20 here = Aig fa on to the bare w. walls, and by the use or 
which ro y be rendered habitable before the materials 
com * ‘adopted ingen By in to dry. nad — wo 13 yapon 
a 


s FRAN 
WIRE-WORE, 5 — T. W n APPARATUS, 
NHOUSE „ 0. 
. THOMAS BAKER, MANOW-HOUSE, MANOR- 
CHE —.— 


SE 
Walk 


Count and Drawings an 
the + 8 
ases, * Domestic Greenhouses. 
117 APPLICATION FOR THE IMPROVE. 
ENT OF CELERY, SEA-KALE, CARDOONS, RHU- 
BARB, STRAWBERRIES, &c.—By — of Roperrs’s — 
— a Ter these artioles are m mo — ved, if applied in 


on for or bringing before them i ina prominent manner | 
|2 principle of 


phlet, with wood en — akan n exposition of 


ing — — — ¥ 


—— Its m at a be looked for. As e F 

of these $ with — che ot of Strawberries and Melons, the use 

of -s would undoubtedly add both to earliness 

_ =e We shall repeat, that the prineiple is excellent. 
s 


great practical utility,” 


CHRONIG 


palthy, original se. EN PLANT of CEREUS 7 | 
an 


aise Londan: a . a * ee Sin 
HEEL BAROMETERS, all bese and Patterns, 


a 
ORTLAND CEMENT.—Testimonials received from | Pie — 
i N po p 


e fee 
] — for! ini 
7 cient guard, at little 5 pt ae vif nt 


LE. 
ALL COTTAGE WANT 


lours, and three or four Be 


n Improved Princip es; Engi RR MS, &e, 
Hydraulic power, * raise from 1 g ilon ribet. by Steam gr 


MR IIe aa “PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT 


1 0 0 1 


THR 155 


i 10 015 ine 25 s 
10% ee SR 
1 ND 

Mg BSE 

5 a 238 

a 10 ies 


Ro 
al 
ENAN 110 r 


ALVANISED WIRE NET I 
G PER SQUARE F —.— . — 


© 
58 
3.4 
E 


highly pok zoe nke both tor its uiay rana ret 

acknowledged to — 5 ty —— and 
de —.— 
any y adapted for A 


wi aed n, however, be 
8 ——— gp ent forte ae 0 — 
B inches wide . * pi 2 inches vide Id. per yard 


LEJ ” 
, ge pi 


extra, 
3 feet, 1s. Gd. per 
Also every description of 


“wire ouse 


F 
fro ach; 

pang fen ‘trees, Da lia Ro Ta and every 

; Wea for the use of paper-makers millers, &e.—ät 
— Manufactory « of THomas HEN RT Fox, 44, Skinner-street, 
Snow- 0 Lond 

RONG . HARE AND RABBIT PROOF 
WIRE NETTING. 


lt CALI 
3 P. YOUNG 80 COMPANY — 
C. YO 
MANO LOTURESS ra Op ROR AND WIRE beg &e., 
STER, LONDO: vati SE 


endations. 

de immense damage by Hares — 1 Rabbits ia 

— Young ee is 5 ofted £0 bie — 

year or two mount to more bl that when 
teat them mith ‘his pt EAK so dura e, od 

Plantations ~~ sufficient 

protection, it e N Fe to other expos ned situations vin 

eatest fi ility, any ourer, ; only to 

H e Rabbits, í iti has = itself small bange ba i for A 

nrolled a wits os 5 r every A 


wiog to w . 

or seven feet apart. 
deri =: ap 1 or other ex 
perv to such vermin nt, 
pieces sant three o 


1 p a = gh, — 5 J 


Poultry-yards,_ and is char; 
has, in many in 5 
tance requiring t is 
ments ty which they will undertake to deli 2 

rincipal ports of Scotland, England, 4 land, 
0 cg t 4. a 

: cannot 

strength of th etting than ty 
the weight of one e = thar 

yards of another article 
"Samp e3 for inspect 


— 
nufac countries. 
and WIRE 2 N for this g foreign caa 
aee a nin mone 
R COMPL 
Pi opm EXTRACT ( OF ELDER FLO 
ee mmende 
g, and pres . the 


tifyin : 
— charm ing — 
fume and deligh ful . as 


sunburn, redness, &., and 
qualities render the skin soft, N Eo 
scurf, &., clear it from 22 humour, 
and, by continuing its use only 9 short 8 
pe and continue soft and oid nba 

ectly ae and beautiful. oe in * 


directions for using it, by 


36—1849. THE 


GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


563 


; best quality, — 
CCO-PAPER of — — Rew 

à per Ib., 
n ee, dees Fee, fit 


l Ter ER CUC CUMBER, “LORD KEYNON’S 


ucumber bes Ayo i itself to be 


* 1 shanks 


tab’ Sol 
Poach —— seed of — ag Syon “po 1s. 6d. per packet. 
tenn. 3 tage fr mittance ares —— n 
Warranted er cash, or 2 seth — stamps, to the amount. 
gee order, either EpwasD TE, Nurseryman, — and TI orist, 


AM ey Bridge, Ba FF 
NEW HARDY ERI RHODODENDRON. 
RHODOD. U 


RON CAMPANU PERBUM 


S 
9 their Knightian 
rs’ C 


Editor of the Gardene hronicle, — his review 
e Bxhibiti * — — — — i gees in terms: Of Rho- 
—— om — JACKSON, 
It is 4 210 T russer, E is flowers individually 
een ception of the upper petals, 
* and Nane Se with crimson eau- 
Si variety.” Discount to the Trade. 
— Sarro Surrey, Sept. 8. 

Bc xk’ RGONTU MS, 
B and the eer ë varieties of other raisers.—12 of the * lowing 
sorts, and carriage to London nt 
gat for Two ao a rooted in 3-inch pots, and ready, on 

a larger size. Orders w ed, 


rion, mag hot Ariel, 
— ae Gulielma, Grandiflora 
8 d, Sundown ; or 9 of the nel ont 
— a. fn lliant, o Ps 
will make — ril 
on pianis, A — ps ‘Catalogue, including the 
— td bead on application to JoHN DOBSON, 
Vorton Cottage, Islewo! 
for their will be found in the 
arden rip ys go pol 3” published on ag — of | each 
under title of 


eny — Fa wall oo mseg one 


5 


with us instructi 
ps Be m “The following, 
and choice varieties, each, 


ee 
By 1 th separate 5 


2 
Se —— 5 0 
sared from large ieee of 2 
packet. 
4d. ate d 


* 


2 do. 
wt, English 
Spanish 


Peewee se ees 
SSS 


8 gsa 
* 
a. 
Greenhouse Pereeniats, 10s. int 
15 aie Hardy Biennials and Pere 


— Hardy Annuals for spring flowering... 
Remittances requested from 
orders to be made payable to B or STEP 
*. Postage Stamps received 3 small — 
and Brown, Seed and Horticultural Establishment 


Rn ED 


a do, 15 44 


5s. 


tae 


u KITLEY’S GOLIAH STRAWBE 
KITLEY 
Jars — begs to announce 


the Public generally, that he has 
— well-rooted Plants of the above Seedling 
i per dozen, or 4l. per hundred, and feels con- 
i est of all hiing ifn al ies e 1 ed ere a ae oe 
1 and as a criterion, he tested it wit 
i ie Hate is out, viz., the Baltish h Qu een, 
e above-named 


rior, is 
more 8 that 1 a th e-a; z 
than the Queen, g e Pine-apple. 
as 


1 


ery superio 
that say e tae — 1 it in 10 
or regret h e ordered it 
— ea the North Wats | mi 
Chro- 


š S (From the 6 Journal i 
* Pie aa F 


Straw *Goliah,’ 
3 Stee 7 * is worthy dase, 


3’ Journal.) 
— —— Vale. — We! 3 great plea- 


wherry with — 

— 2 See i proportion 

anything in this way that — to our 

a treat as the noble, fruit to be known to the 
Lyncombe Van 

ale N Nursery Bath, and of Messrs. 

den Co., Bristol, who can testify to the supe- 


— Aa it partak 
taste, der Part from the 


TURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1849. 


EETA P. 

orticnltural.—' 

„Sept. 1 
Ha 


—— Horticatt 
arni (Boat —Thursd 
ma Fira, Devo amd 

— 2 Sept. 14: 


45. 
oe re Post- 
pee ys pe ip 


woke 


ts Gaerne Chronicle. ir: 


haali follow, 


and proved much | The thermometer 
weather which is al 

i ident from 
— been prepared by Mr. 
The following TABLE wer Highest Temperature 


as will be evi 


of such influe 


sunless, for the last eeks; how 
ocating, especially at night. 
with all i 


warm, damp, 
That cholera 
A in = Fie presence 
esi ed 


xampled n 
the 2 — table, which 
R. THompson 


est during the night, for 


Highes 


Average Temperature 
for the last 23 years. 


— 
presen 


f Lowest || Highest 


* the 
Day. 


during the during the du 
Night. Day. 


1826 — 1848 
August. 


ey en es bh ee 
C 
n 


Sept. 


1 
Sas 
3.. 


> — 


D O NDOO 
ee a a ee 


yA ST SO ST ST ST ST 


E 


. 
). 
). 
59. 
). 


Sear 


j 


co bo 
228 


en on A A A a 


En OS CD ob 
Anne 
IO oO 
mw Ww 


Cm “Too 


— COST ON SS S87 ONNAN SI 


O 


b 
f ‘ 


ph RRR OR ON en g. Oh me 
D 1 D D 


) 
À ) 


of superphosphate of lime, applied to the roots. If 

= mpe riment be suc pags it will form a a 
mportant precedent as o the mann er and season at 

whioh Evergreens of — size should be removed. 


Ir will be 3 that in the Warto 
CumnNEY case, to which we have 2 tely dev — 
some space, the — — for “the defence swore mn 


— 

bably perceived nothin 
works when they visito d them 

The value of testimony of this — is 3 
indicated by the given in 
columns that injury 
— deleterious mat 
matter is distinctly — 


chimney than the — 1 5 and land of t 
— In the eld Examiner of Satu 
a letter — this gentleman, from w 
following yi extra 
Sept. 1, 1848 Vitiantur odoribus aure.’ — A 
land-agent, and a land valuer, and a tree valuer to 
boot, actually stood up, and publicly upheld the benefit 
do ds, and 


shreds and ends’ o 

they pui one in mind of 
h Coventry. 
nicety : ‘hi 


e average, 


as 
e 7°. 


ratures are 


EE. 
5 


has 


sain tied remark how oppressive | i 
? been, though comparatively | 


rise took place, from about 8° 
| the a the whole 
amounted to 16° in 


was from 9 to 10° 1 than the average; on 
Ther 


e is very promt ke is we — high 
ed with 


era- 
usual, and that 3 t night 
3d i ithi 


be 
of this rapid advance 
hours. From this time 
t 
higher 
nights of the 16th and 18 it 


corre- 
the 


— 


day was 
e mean ns ga 
onth of Au 


y 74.03°, while the see highest alg in 
i It also appears 


ears that, during the 
the 
; in one 


ge chs circumstances may affect vegetation 
e seen; all newly planted trees have 
of course made stri iking for they have b 
expose 2 


een 
e 


not, rtain that th 


a hard mae 5 "better o on n this account, 

unless we 1 have se 

eather, to ee the effects of me 
0 


cool, dry, 


— — aided T 


From this we gather the following remarkable : 
facts. Up to the 6th of August the day 


I never fail to have proof paren manner o 
hat Doctors A, and B. have sigmay failed in ame 
administration of their nostrum suppress the poi- 
sonous vapours. Not all the 25 and Bs who now 


y| ev 


figure in the ranks of modern alehymy can render them 
holesome and i ous olus himself would 
breath. m 


ruinous 8 


Ane Pitti f eof vi fate of 2 who rashly 


3 ts these pestilen 
eads within a couple of miles of 42 — 


this season, when the lovers of plants are con- 


For the present we take a f 
* W be found in Messrs, tats 
Bias ape at Exet 
Fagus ws is an eg Beech tree 32 
beauty, 3 from to 40 feet in height. 
—.— Chili N according to Mr. 
w in 


and of value for its is heyy wood cupies 

PH Hooxer, gfe the lower 
ins, and will y bear 
in the —— west of 


* — h _ Thuja tet i} 
is described by Mr. L of 50 to 80 feet 

re e as N ài as ‘as snow 47 on the 

og an It is a ge pet, wi 95 

revered es, whic be ex 

han i. 2 species of Z 

stature (80 to 100 


pe are among the finest Co 
| ey inhabit the same — 


564 JHE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [Save 8 
Araucaria, and advance to tl thward even 0 01 “cold drawn”) and forced together by a powerful of which it is changed in ints ` f p 
raps eh eee ia ‘ot improbable that they sere This asl is only et ge where the plant is | instances, into a cellul r bod row of cells, or, in 
far be z hardy as tha e, and if so they will be | very ng in its oil, i.e. e author chose — A irati | 
ot me a i Po sibly ae of chan may 2. Distillation. —The piant, o or r part req ee, hs an page as have 8 occasion to observations * 
or very 8 in a metal- pan, and covere o his own conclusions. Phormi 
Chi i ne a lioa ote sos hee 2 yl p [àe dome-shaped lid is fitted, terminating with a í pipen w which Lot mai ae and origin of the theory of — 
H indee rene 2 is twisted cork-serew et, writers, an as the t he 
pose ed b y 80 with the end peeping out like a tap in a barrel. The the formation of existing opinions an mat Influence e 
Of } Myrile-like ade several have been gee Later in the still is made to boil, and having no other embryo, is unfortunately ery y to * th 
specially a ve retty species called M; exit, the steam must pass through the Sg pipe, which | blosso our ervatories found 
e y ry pretty sp p » and the 
stipularis. Thes ese will be about as hardy e sed being surrounde d by e cold water in the bu con- — pro vais 1 He examined Fritillala in 
eos mon r t the tap ; with the | with Kgs eee since so much ay 
Berberry PA a beauty, evergreen, with 8 the volatile oil or perfume rises, and is is liquified at laid on the appa nk greement aon has ba 
deep green foliage and rich orange-yellow flowers, | the same time; the liquids which thusr ae al ane mace W Er opponent ‘of the above-mentioned absernten 
ka a a It will 505 e hardy. for a time, iat ate into two portion Sis aiy on thi with his theory of fe 6 Mad 
Th 770 ed. of which the divided with a funnel hav ing a stopeo ow | author 1 he satisfaorion, i in this plant also, to Th 
dy pats ks h be g kn the part of it. By this process the majo rity of the oils o or ik. 555 views in the isive N Confirm, 
bes n the course of his observations 


e known as 
e of its having been 


exhibited a the m eetings in ihe Sota = 
the ee Society. Two other 
— ine xý rubra, and will 3 Hivo. a same 


consti 
Desfontainia spinosa ; an evergreen shrub with 

the leaves of a Holly, from the Andes of Fatagonis, 

will satel be valuable, on account of its flowers, 
which s o be produce ed too sparingly i in its 

mative hary Its iedams. is uncertai 
Embothrium coccineu 


8 1 chrub, and 


odour the recherché, as the Frene = say, 8 = pro- 
ped by this me thod. Then recourse is ha d to 


"3 aceration dees 
whati is called pommade, a certain quantity “j purified 
s lard and mutton suet are put into a clean ASIR 


5 5 m being melted, the kind of ‘pee required for 
the o ue we carefully pic Ser put into the 
liquid fat, 2 all to “ena i from 1 48 hours ; 
the fat has attraction for the oil 
0 


a 5 nate firm no =s i it sot wn €P | added r five pero over, till the pommade is of the 
red fl 00 required s ength. or perfumed oils the same opera- 
out: a fine thing for — tio tion is followed, Saba in 22 of the lard and suet, fine 
from Chi loo olive oil, il of Ben, i is used, and the same es are 
8 several long e rimson N at the end of a abate sa Antiques, 
ns that of a Cowsli ly neh oils of gat al uch a flower, | o 
e a — a a parts nean a ei one Win ne neither of ‘the foregoing processes give pa 
y— jm 


are er 


w 
pretty under-s 
flowers seem to 888 on sting without fading 1 5 

ula , from North Chili, 


It will no 


the summit 
e looking an dried. 

species, new, 3 to N 
yellow flowers, i is growing in “Mr, Vinai 8 1 


Among other plants, 1 less moment, are Cordia 


very | tory results, Pali 


w 
h jit, and there left from oe to 7 


ethod of procedure adopt 
nihi > 


jie. i 
e glass 


ndra, an evergreen shrub, with w iite 11 
from North Chili. If the whita { is pure, it m 
agod 8 for the 2 bi pane. Crukshanksi ia | 
f the lobes of he 
calyx . into : sound yellow plate, as ha 
Musszenda ran cam, pestris, with Hise | a 
we ompared re some sort of Thyme. 
Crinodendron Patag 
eet high, from oe = Patagonia, 
probably 5 — a greenhou 


wers, an inc 
dich colour. 
ese in 


y wi 
which is all that they are ss ntaa — 
aS THE ODOURS OF cone N THE 
EM. 


ruling king.” —Dryden’s Vir, 

easure derived from. omelling ‘at 
2 instinctively induce 
man to attempt to separate the odoriferous principle 
from them, s0 as to have the perfume when the seaso 


e | suffered to 


f 
confess, of a žar = r 
ce as a guide 


tur rac 
season that no one flower can be discov 


operation is re- 
peated several pre ges mela the 8 are 1 
8 AS essu move the now perfumed oil, 
rorking w Icom 


ess 
e come to sp indi- 


a vidual Rew or p ers re 
Whenever a still i is ore or the "skate is 4 to be 
it mu 


o be done 
hie h 


t be porta 
this i 


an, which is e double, so as 
boiler to psig 5 tee pan for 
oe of boiling the contents; instead of the direct 
din the same way, 


nded in quantity 
ered 1 as pronon nenek 
of the delica; 


fold 
torturing the plants in every way their inv 19 could 
devise for this end ; Bess’ 3 were not wholly 
sage ty ir foundation the | 


de o 22 by the 
perfumer of th e 1 5 preparing th 
Faries S e ge sent 8 for 
his calling. The processes Pe dive ided into 
tinct o 
I. Expression or the squeezin the odour-giy 
of the plant ot (hough a TA which are eee i 
rally made hot (though cold, and * the 


7 | few 


oils, &e, sed in 
dis- in 


scented flowers carefull y blended, they Inen 
exquisite sensation on the o nerv 

therefore much prized p 8 pri wealth aun 
them to indulge Abas such pleasures, 
he megs of o 
extra 


FERTILISATION o: PHANEROGAMS, 
In N the course of the 


e pollen tube reaches 
5 o. sac, “tow mem aoe generally remains 

is in 1 ew genera only pierced by the end 
of the tube, a formation of cells ‘lata i Deg ice: 
[ely ia more) of Like geciulanl y vesicles, in 


cone are 8 eae fi rat develop Pi 
pce pment of cells ang 


ita cell ; 


— 
embryo 


ied ha oia 


em, 


and 14 copper- 
Froma Notice by Schlechtendal i in Baue 
Oct. 2 


_ DISEASES OF heer 
(Continued from 
s V. Die n, that 4 “carci rai 
of shud —This dise: 


£ species, is always produced 2oy the paucity of mo nutriment, 


the want of the 


1 ts to procure 
its distribution as it otal ht to 


be éauiallf over all the 
that whilst one 


if 
sponding with the starved bran 
state, and 3 2 — iy have Krb into a bey 


differ: ent and m a 
E for ins where the tree 


airot 


| These — — must be fully i 
can 


~ | corr 


de use of bette: 


miy g 
is against the. wall of a court or pie r dellig houses, 
The roots find themselves in a poor 
l, whilst others may ve found 
or receptacle for dao. = 
good advantage of 


e 
efective conf 
p e nutritive : 
investigated before 
n to cure the evil 
se saad 3 — ori 
ding t 


is to lay open the ros 
ot ma ar A 
with f fresh oe of ine best analy to the 
6 in in meadow mixed w 5 
at — a year = tld: should 1 e over 
with earth however, 2 


A 


ti ared, to tak 
water, or rather better of . 15 v 


re) quantity, that they may 

hich will 1 es if Laney by! 

— taken. tes let 

- incisions, 

neision be e ö from the 

the main which bears the 

1 thd be extended 
* —— 


place in one (very 
im consequence | 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


565 


= however, occur that aer Te necrosis 
ee ce ofa weak s which the | 
the trees a a f 


when the mo 


below. When any p 
o be huite E of vegetation they must 


or bad quality of nutriment is the second 


All st of dung, 
n the 


aoe on bee a, yobs n to fade 
Eve uch 


upper porti 


all. Not that the you 
buds lost, but after the Lela of cold t 


ould not ins 
ei of some fat 
sudden transition 
on 


* 


— hem y without i the a 


in a medium 


a muc The 


by an extraordinary 
anches 9 nor are the 
he branches 


. 
ng b 


languish for some time, lose their deep green, and grow 


more 
Third S 
the lower 


e indee 
Be 


5 


E om, surrounding the whole trunk, and 


a a E or eee CaN 
pari ve, the plan — This dise not f 


e dwa 
over luxuriant branches, whilgt he wat has 
ion, whence ometimes 


The remedy is 12 ame of the same means as 
r the cure of th 


DMA bf ide Gears! i that is, 

is not so distributed 
„ so that}; 

ved. 


E 
© 


perish, At the point of junction a ana 


water, but with 7 


art [oY 


the 


44 
SPa: 


Z 

sap is made to flow continuously, — keeping 
no effect will be produced i 
which i 


le 
be prese 


These operations require br 1 or at 


rate much science, aly can r be ma 5 

I regret not having ma sian 8 * e within 
my own experi once saw it very success- 
fully carried through in th e of e which 
was much more vigorous below than above the graft. I 
saw incisions made Apple tree, but it no 
ood effect was produced, which in m as 
occasioned by the old age of the tree, and consequent 


n to 


s | the ancients, I would refer to the treatise on gardens of 
Chabot. a 


Roger 
Yet AND n F 

Ir careely possible find a mo ing 
autumnal ‘plant 125 the Hollyhoek, or one 8 the 
owe produeing, under a variety of e ireumstances, 
so ike an effect, e Dahlia, once the flower of 
the million, unceremoniously thrust ea To herba- 
eous plant into the shade fact, it oy 
disappeared except in 15 had 
occasion lately to visit a small suburban garden, the pro- 
rietor of which duri 


uently he continue a: to cul- 
eedlings, 
rior, an 


the eke of 


etly double. ighbours 
ed 


course, it is s 
It must be admitted dnt the Hollyhock is a highly deco- 
fave autumnal plant, and, on account of its e asy cu are 


tio 
glorious spikes, loaded with innumerable flowers of all 
rs, are unapproached by any autumn plant in 

10 —— n. 


The Hollyhock may be propagated either by seed or eee 
glass 


by division of the roots, without the assistance o 


and finally transplanted into t 


mn. anaged thus they will flower profusely e 
following season. The effect of a line of Hollyhocks b 
the side of a walk is extremely grand. mass of hans 


s scarcely less im g. 
baceous plant which can, as a matte 
be admitted amongst ae its stately 
buting a new characte ited landscape. 


~ | exact from me more 
h dish. 


to incre 
5 autumn, and as off occasionally 
n wet winters, the old 5 e and around the 


3 
e 5 be carefully covered with coal ashes or 
“het! sand. 


85 e 33 
PY ead Catalogues.—I am glad to see chat the ken 
f Rose catalogues is engaging 2 The present 
trary an d uncertain to satisfy 
conveniences most 
y defi- 
a 


class ate tee oug 
— to si same ; thus, the be 
list or per — be after the following form : 
é, Tea-scente 
pies EA 
— ot Vibert „Noi 
ne ä Hy bri 


Au 
And so on, chee the cata jopas For “the — | ef 


5 


receiving, to subm ption 
The phis 55 iè Lettuce Root t (see — ne —Your 
0. W.” spea ing a 
0 


Lettuces are at present swarming with it. 
attack Celery. G. — Sept. 3. 


the finer 9 * ta may be divided | 
are a 


- | few 
| diarr! — 


t | paration of r opina „ b 
med 


i 
disposition 


am | cate of merit — 4 a a ec of w 
u 


n oe — ë; ou Ie 3 — 1 that ‘iis n 

— thing. ? Ihave ve known nit to affect — — in 2518 
ibed r. Shurl in the mon 

July 7 — na last 12 years. |j 


it. indie al 
e | was found to work well, an 
advertised 


— 
Tigridia — ete e year all the first flowers 
of this show crimson, resembling in 
nee the old "Tigridia (Ferraria) Pavonia, when, 
er for eeks, 


—. 
Garden Fork — Liquid Manure.—“ Subscribe er 


a mentioned the three-pronged fork (page 518), is 
not an ironmonger, but a poor “half-pay,” who has an 
cre of garden, in which he is continually at work, The 
trenching, or turning the ground, is do ith a | 
fork, with long prongs, oe much injury to the roots 
of fruit-trees, and doing the work easier and better 
than a spade, I had seen them used in burgh. 
— 20 3 = and surprised not them 
onshire —— 1 turned my sword 


de 
s con — red 
dar, but — articles — er Our blacksmith would 


not me of t and the 
carpent charges 106 2 the. handler — with my 
small experience in the 3 nd that it is ex- 
remely difficult ae “the cow try manu 2 om 


compete with the either 
Perhaps “ Addio” pore five 5 Timotheus » (tor 1 find it it 
i a name) some hints as to the 


ich I ex — oT 
n 


used 


Skins. —I latel 


it was rather too far 


ney in 
J. Wighton, Cossey Gardens, 


Ca mphorated Spirite injurious to the Teeth e 

partiemi, beeren ——— — tn 

for my — and vom 
I pepe: be 
happy to this if 
he will var invite me to dine with him, — not 
than three minutes’ application to 
a toug card, and am at your 

5 service any hou er 5 Oelock. N. B. 
«X. ” need n ouble himself to provide turtle or iced 
punch. 

A Dentifrioe.— Tho following is one of my. own, which, 
with some in the relative quantities, I have 
used for these last 20 years, and many of my friends 
have also adopted it: 
T magn 


kept i = a a wel-sopped bottle. When —.— a fishing, a 
otland, I was seized with violent 
Ti am not sual Sheer * when it had 
became 


a little u b sE 
or apren 


paa two days, or more, 
and I thought 


ar from er ve: advi 

of my tooth-powd 3 antiseptic, e r 
and carminative 5 jus the thing I wanted. I took 

good spoonful ; the effect was, I may bor ————— 
I have since recommended it in numberless similar 

instance 2 
much m 


as far as my 1 — ile any it is 
therapeutic in its p. any pre- 
y, ammonia, or other prescribed 

5 Bend I observe among the dealers a 
Seeding pag am te standard of this flower ; and 
where ae | m influence Societies un 

e management 

| instead of six poian the trial — because t 

shat — a 5 


a Dahlia that is N 
N ap l r nevertheless yield three blooms out 
of 30 30 plan 


three 

blooms are p e evidence 
of quality. Geo re 
Specimen Plants.— The Leamington exhibition was 
remarka ble for “one 73 regulation. The com- 
d the judges 


na. 


to award specimen prizes 
without * of W of any amount not 
exceeding 20s., the same 


as to oe aneous sub. 
not under the 


d the Birmingham 


last week for the 26th September, has the 


* 


> 


the statements hes the press, I unh 
otato 


566 THE 


ny (one for show Dahlias, one for fancy Dahlias, and 
Pas a 28 size let out by one grower) went from 
* ior wth, all 

p for growers within 


Vine —— affected, stopped the — 

The upper portion 

inevitable i in syringing the un 
it-door Vi 2 ris. 


suecessful in br 


— ened unto other bird . oe only i 
s. I have been * nc 


boxes sh 
mined, for in the breeding sane. any are 
often Infested with small red bugs, which get the 
nest, destroy the young nee cause the onl spe to 1 

Birds sh a good su ater to 


In the 8 of the breeding season, dune me first 
laying, some hens egg bound, and often I have 
complaint, but NN 

ni I 


ah Foie rre- 

spondent shoul the s e Cage Birds “i 
ited by J 6, bade 1 will then 
Athlone. 


“suggest by 
wre 


of m 8 
Martin in your Chronicle of Mare 


ase. | a 
should also — zen, 12 this is 
a fine 


-Having 1 7 i 
alm 
10) which —— 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


skin. They are quite ripe, having been set early, an 
Gothen them all got up immediately, J. B. Glegg, Wilington |" | 
Hall, Chelford, Knutsford. 


PRERE 
Hor n 2 R. Gowen, Esq., Se- 
— of 3 


of all B aie: nan ce 
e e 


treatm 
propag oath on o Pistons 

ished Leben grandis; the little 
peek 2 Nor h 


Load = 
88 
Lo] 
> 3 & 
oo 
— 


alm if pa “Sine dy; and a tal 
called. — 8 A Knightian Me 
o the four first-mentioned l gaa epii rs. 
a8 two specimens of 
riant growing species with orange nifio 
ree 3 strikin 
men also s ing Heath 2 by re Story, 
with pale green 8 is ed wi ink ch, 
er. to S. Rucker, Esq., produced a 3 8 Statice 
i ica Irb 


nce 558 if it ae 


3 of a Regents 
on this . e — a single diseased 
8 among — while othe: e same gro yee 
managed in sual mN have 8 diseased on 
S. F., Ryton- sir 

fasone of Melons ta, the report of the Chiswick 
is stated “that Melons were 
deficient in 


ochyna 
1 flowering species, 
an nd Erisa infundibulifo ormis and 


„ but “ don n the us 
oot Plerter, vith 8705 to eful 
4 Peas 25 the specimen of N Air A: noticed, 

ian and to 
the E. Irbyan o the other "Heaths, aon 
essrs. ieai 0 Clapham, sent large and w 
nts of Erica retorta major, mutabilis 


ener. 
the — for if under great powe 
e are to expect hi _ 1 — 
as been the seas ee 
that inferior sorts would be” 
hav i e 


f the B 
scarlet-flesh (both new kinds to me) be so superior as 
throw all others i s! 


e tuber, ANO Devizes, August 30 
[This is a very curious case, to which we shall refer 
hereafter 

0. — On a former occasion, although 


the cos universal opinion of the inhabitants nal 
esii 


The Tük Potato 
posed by 


as eyer, although t the tops appeared to 
withered tops throughout thi his 
statement; and the 


ose which 


escape, the Profitable crop 
ovincial papers give a favoura e opinion. ty 
Eie them to point oat to one single 214 — Potato road : 
free, from isease in this county, D. R., Carrick.on, 


Crop—P es in this 
in quality, ut defotent in quan 
Grouse ec lasted from May 2 


be b 
I trust that these few 


8 . 
and nba is left on 31 


for 
r are very good in quality. The 
people console themsel 
that, suppose th — by 9 fatal and absurd delusion, * 


— 5 TENTE eke to 


and cut specimens of their large 


e 
da, misnamed Belladonna purpurea 
three beautifully flowered candelabra-like piisi of 

f which h m about 


o me awarded to these, 
r. Jones poe been potion vw rewarded for 
fruit of the samé kind of excellence. 


2 the Earl of Abergavenny ; it weighed 4 Ibs. 8} — 
3 earner yg F ni, , Mr. Willcox, gr. 

to the Ea Earl of of Stamford, sent a seedling Pine, weighing 
ut a fort- 

ance it Beker, Esge 


ke 55 ae 
0 


ev 
mera 


Mr 58 A of Stettin and Zoological Society of L 
the d Mr. 
6 = ai 1 of Si 


dra wi 
, | drawin 


p- 
pplied 
p tid, , thirdly, on the impropriety of 
odern 


mksian Medal w amey 
point of y iames was the — „a green. 
Melon, weighing 4 Ibs. 11 oz., * 0 
a netted oval, nearly eylindri 


near 
markable for its 8 


being cut. properiy of 


w Melon, 


ured was anu 
capil grown, as its poe ai 4 Ibs, Hp. 

Mr. Culverwell, gr., Thorpe Perrow, 
be: 


profus 


when 

stove ; and, finally, apes 8 and 
The same establishm — 
peratrice and Doaa pke 
—G. R. WATERHOUSE, 

the chair. Amongst the donations were 
ne publieations of the Smithsonian 3 d 
well a those of the Entom 


g 


51 2 Sept. 3. 


nced that a 
* ) wi 


7 oe 


The 
— (vol. v 


sed specim eotrupes § 
Water house consi id it these 5 to be 


wh o 
ao 


ung.— 


ra — YS 3 disel 1050 pees being also 

in one of the burro 2 

the Pemphigus Barnes described in the Gardener? 

Chronicle, as well as several — Hymenoptem 
om New he mad remarks 


7 
oO 


ens 
Mr. Samuel Stevens exhibited ma ae 2 wel 


us, he conside 


ain tha 
the Rose ; 55 
cific name ing ap 


| cies —— the different m 
———ĩ—ç— 


8 
ue 
3 


don, 


THE: little work now before us i 
d gardeners 


Š weight.—Mr. — 
of Richmond Yale Brighton, —— a boxful of a 

seedling Grape called “the Richmo 
Hamburgh. 


This is one of the best of l 


principles to practice. 
chemists, 


8 8 


1 
Hi 
3 
i 
1 


1 are but few in number, 
They are all described, 
ar eee ut by Mr. Martindale 


it b 
o | Weigh out a quantity od this 
gin 


, | grai 
suitable vessel 


GARDENERS’ 


that may be in it ; next expose it son to the air, till 
at or res. Process lst 
ae -dried ae 200 
into a short test tube, or 
1 saline, or oil bath at 


ns—and intro 


weight. The 
s then care fully | ascertained, This, although not in 


CHRONICLE 


loss of oop 
in 


y borne in mind, that “chemistry 

oe gait * — so en periment, no 

— understand it fully unless he personally per- 

guch experiments as verify its mental truths, 

pearing of lectures and the reading of books will 

“er benefit him who attends to nothing else; for che- 
Lewd can only be stu to advantage practically. 
pelea! acqu from one we 


— on to explain how, by m 


eans o 
seri 1s ies, boch * the component parts of 


ee 


ascertained. 
P Chemical 1 — — — l ing 


row oe and they 


of the variou 


r 11 “aay since ag which 


Itural 

That as 

adjustment of the proportions of elay and sand 
soi 88 most 


n y must be present in ag quantity that the 
N N be able readily at the proper season, and 
lly te 


w 
ries of 
ly, the 

e crop 


„were the impalpable portion, which is 
y diffus ne ie whole mass—an 


examination, an 
analysis, tho — in calca- 
to be ve: 


E ak | is not 9 solely to chemical 

de treats also of the — cal properties of s s, 
1 2 classification. On the classi 
| the ‘author says: “The most ready rei 
ame thod of . soils 5 wh estimate Sheie 


mn x much clay, a more or less 
a calcareous soil; but if the 
sand and 3 with a little | 


mo 
ohe; author after ieee 


roportions in which they | o 


e 
— hot for about 10 Nn then 


or three — 
0 


amp; allow it to remain 
let it cool ; * 
mine the loss of weight by weighing the soil re 
in the ca e loss, since t 
loss . 


of 5 matter. 
Suppose the loss to be 40 grains, — 40—4—=10 gra 
0 r cent. o matter. P 
that portion of soil, which remains after — and 
it into an ee. g dish or 3 
and mix it with 5 fluid ounces of hydroe 


the per — of water being known, of a ion 
air-dried soil, uae E to 9 or . ote of 
thorough dried soil can be use any subsequen 

ration. Proce ss 2d. ‘ake ni grains of arid soil, 
and mix it in a Florence fiask, es of | 
water, and boil, allow the —.— of the flask to 
remain quiet for aoit 10 min if any sa tter 
subsides, then pour off the supernatent fluid, and add 

re water, until nothing but sand seems left; dry and 
weigh it. H i 


ains 
Take n 

| towards kui pee 5 penya very much the appearance 
„of the leaves of so d 


debt and w So, from the day I took to providing 

for myself, al keep b the 

house, and to live o an r, rather run 
stead of eating dry bread, an 


** self to make it into soup; for 
own the ts, which apr not 
enrich the laine it ih sharpen my wi 
best use o that could.”—“ I believe,” 
tinued the g i 


fi = 5 they were 
as stones.“ conomisé. 
Note on a diseased state 5 hee ves of Pleroma 


in po: 
cells, hexagonal alow, but wach — 


1 


2 not been e 


the whole mixture we 

ish, or jar, 
— portion n has 
e filter e times with pure 
d its contents at 300° F.; 
loss of weight reckon as 
cess amount to 46 7 


mix them with a 
e who ac we iL 2 


then 8 
ill the oa is 
Afte 


ts 
way, W. portion 


filter it afterwa our a second portion of water, 
and on the 2 stir the whole well up, and 
again allow the parts to settle; after w 

0 


this process until only sand, an 
remaining suspended in water for a short 
Colleet the suspended m 


y have 2 obse: 


green, the hair — Phin e. the centre 
As the swelling i 


been dried, very rapidly on the application 


—— are not 
bun een which may 


ing 
in Dr. Dick 2 The Rev. 
M.J. — in Hooker's 8 of Botany. 


Calendar of Operations. 
ek.) 


(For the 


Misc 
Flint Soup.—* Now M usband when 
marri: 


ary, m 
ied), I must lay by — and 
i ere is the 


sa 
money is all gone, 8 we ee 
orrow’s din 


am 
4 Pel t My hu hu ional we was Aird kind; he found 
no Kult t said we could hay flint- t-soup sa 
din 


much | is present it is 


of — or 
y are called heavy 
its peculiar class. 


1258 if it ha a lay ve pipih | 
3 re called pei 


going to y 
that if they were 1 
„the a ta 3 — at least as mueh 


Saturday's 


| the amount of stored up sap w 


at 3 weigh the content thereof, and regar ensuing w 
Weight as clay. Suppose the weight to be 130, then FORCING DEPARTMENT. 
140 232.6 or 323 — niant the soil contains 311 VINERIESs.—Admit a free eee ue, ed — through 
per cent. of e the houses in this 222 nt, an vigorously 
The pt extracts wili be sufficient to enable our | to destruction of insects, by the erin a appliances. 
readers to judge of the way in which Mr. Martindale Keep the atmosphere as as possible where the wood 
treats the subject he has und n. our opinion | is ripe o rly so, and in all cases stop the growth of 
h gard bes d farmers cannot do better than to | | ev en a warmer temperature is 
make themselves well acquainted with the“ Guide” | kept up for the gehen of ripening the — as the 
thus pags them, It is, however, a great fault i in 80 leaves pi 
useful a t attain a perfect — mower id realy 


h they have coi Sey 


Where art fruit is ripening, a 


ed, Med ie | 


during their tae 
m rature must be re tain 


a ing to t ‘their present state, but aiming in all cases 
to Age! them thoroughly matured — the end 7 Septem- 

er, PixxRIEs.— Euco e growth ‘of s ions, 
by abundance of heat ois p as the 


urse, t 
Continue to 2 any that require i, 
urnish th 


oes 
fruit ad t! ma 
an ensure 5 flavour. 
FLOWER 
The work of this 
routine 


sunday suo to ow ros — 


— though entirely of a 
ed 


ing of 

ing of every plant, cl 
and tying of = * N must = on 2 
e of any o 


ear an a 


73E 
7. 
£ 

3 

2 

A 

cre 
8 

5 

7 

3 

4 

f 


other early spring fio 


My re Be was pleased when 
aud we were thoroughly settled 


urse 
not | pared and 


and tothe rubbish yard, if itis not, Beds 


ae 


4 


568 


THE GARDENERS’ 


in the greatest perfection when planted in a ghs sandy 
loom N pasta! 3 with well dee 
table 


e 


inches below or, surface. The dep 
fi 


nure; a 


the 
duld’ be trenched in about 12 or r15 
h of th 


goo a stratum 


t 


mposed 
. 


Except the hive is very light, however, and the w ather ba 
you had better Sy 1 feeding ut October ; and ifthe colony 
be short of about 14 Ibs., hive exclusive, ma ake up that 1 
by feeding. Th tue will “Teal store up the food in the 
3 ope Roepe again to their 

HOLERA. A C nde 3 ‘Mast nt us the following extract 


vary from Percy and, in planting, a little’ “aid 
should be thes roun 5 


FRU 
Alpine Strawberries, pe 8 should be ocea- 
state of ee 


i o ascertain the 
about their roots. If they are pares they 
encouraged with rich water, and divested of all 
ass re pba of 


ft 
marking the fruit as v 3 


an 
plants. Buds of fruit trees may w 
r safety than a month ago, as they will liave time 


be likel 


perina 


to posal an intimate union with the stock, but will not 
ely to F, 


If Cardoo a few rows 
earthed u aP “the middle při This 8 
think anything is gained bye earthi 

her 


bit ata yas It is 


a quantity of long, pin, yE “gute N 
with, pre 


for binding up the le 


them with soil; or if 


y 
of strong liqui 


TOHEN per 


anted 


8 Er oe 


EN 


hese 
t re my constan 


eav 


s may be 


I do 


ə 
the growing crops, as 


Cabbage, Broel, Lettuce, &e., and especially e 
ragus, to te i 


> 


k too large to em in ex- 

even if it one, injury 

g the s and branches would 
e tago. gained 

articular atten 


growth where — 5 and . 
from the a sai A of insects by a sp 
und ee ; and 


o young crops, 


vegetable manu cleaning the 3 
use the fork as much as possible, in prefer ce to the 
hoe and nothing can be of gre 


ter — to 


crops at this season, than dne t the — and ad- 
dition 
K 
Mate of the Weather tigar Londen farii the week ending Se 
observed at the Hortic | Gardens, oi a ar> 
THERMOMETER, E 
@x., Min, 
6| 53 | 68 N. 26 
69 58 63.5 E. 24 
77 52 64.5 S.W. || 04 
80 58 | 69.0 8. 42 
76 | 53 67.0 NE. 00 
77° | 52 | 64.9 E 00 
7a 48 1.5 N. E. -00 
—— J 5 | 54.1 | 64.8 0.66 
Aug. 3l- Hazy; SES 
Sept. Bacay rain; overcast ant; lightning and rain at night. 
— 2 2 and fine; . lightning, and rain. 
se — . lee a Beare ; thunder li ghtning, raiu at night. 
se —Hazy ; very fine; clear at night. ster might 


ean temperature 


State of the Weather at Chiswick 


ensuing 


espon 

from the e ee Gazette :—* During the late alarming 

prev valence of cholera at Lars it was clearly demonstrated 
f M. Andrand 


crease or ‘decrease of this ‘aoe very much depends on the 
electrical state of the earth. The daily indications | of his 
powerful electric al machine proved a 
in that mysterious agent, electricity, unt til it amounted s 
— f it, that the machine ee! to 
yield any sparks, when worked in the usual nner. Co- 
Ineidenty with this singular fact, the 8 steadily in- 
creates „and was at ae height on the 7th of June, when the 
machine would no lor ger act. _ On the 8th some feeble sparks 


re-appeare 


CHRONICLE. [Sepr. 8, 
a, aoea ormai Ja yart Se anana aaa = 


the persons reagan nest da 5 W TNE E 
timber 75 uers — pict 1 
say is that la ndowners should thi 


their affairs into such 8 twice fore ae 45 
. 


chim 
the Wekspicla 3 7805 M 
who candidly admit that “they are wuspratt and 


ry possible way to 
plain avowal that they at least have n H — i 
may give full credit to thei r laudable endeavors wi 


entertaining a confiden N that the e om M 
successful. 
WEEDS on WALES: Sub. Salt destro 
lays the foundation of a bette T or en at first, byt 1 
ublimate has, we believe, hoe tried wit 


i ith — but 
dangerous to use. Ifyou wish to make 1 
8 t 4 


that the electricity had re- . its dom and 
the 9th the cholera abated, and. as 1 in the 
number and intensity of the ever a r 
much to be desired that sinter observ R 
made in London and other parts of the United n 
So far as they have be een made, the ey fu Hy confir rm the iby ypo- 


in portions of its surface be oe a time exhausted of its 
natural portion of electri pices? nd that it then abstracts 
from the bodies of men mals that quantity of elec- 
mar which, by F Denutiful — ‘of Providence, every living 
system pro oda ces r the he althful maintenance + its own 
Anetio ns, and without nguish.” 
And h is y to furnish hiresaif forthwith 
soles made of 8 Percha. 
CHURCHYARD PLANTS: E S. rubs: Yew 8 
bertiana, C. funebris, iro Whiteth orn, Flow 8 
a — ranthus caudatus, Woodruff, Pansies, een 
yme of different kinds. nch u 
3 arenarium and similar n 
Contrers: It is difficult to ry bpd they would . 5 
planted in the w. way you mentio not. Som 


WINTER Pits on Frames : Jgnoramus. You 
KETER it to be a sinale “ine of bri ric ks stoma —— 


P i ; Aae 
understand the description, except th ou perfectly — 
that the boa were to be p at yon aid 2 observe 


— 5 


or two of dry sawdust, laid in the bottom of th the cavity be. 
t ingres 


v 
Misc: An Ol e are unable to answer your 
Sei is probably as tte as kre other, and neither 

Wardia yb d of 


in any fashion. The plan, EOS isav ery 8 one, 
and the undrained land would certainly be against them. 
CurtTines: Quidam. No cuttings ought to have the leaves left 
upon them below “go a level. Leaves cause roots to 
appear, or at leas uch i the operation ; oer fore 
I t 


better for 


* 1, 1 a + +. 


it is necessary t 
instead of fé, LAAs ite i s they are very apt to do i per- 
mitted to 8 Beads Hence the use of Waves and 
ali such contrivances, 
Fres: F F. You will Rick a ca ultivation of 
Figs, by Mr. Markham. or Hewel, 2 228, pol 1814. T 
Insects :—Z. Your inse = el escaped, 
E CB. The insects s infesting yout | Potato-field, near —.— 
minute Podura fimetaria (see Gard. Chron „1847, p. 221, 
for Vitel guna), We should question whether they attack 
sound Potatoes. They are doubtless bred in the decaying 
i ld be ith 


ght 


are t erpi mal 
there 8 ke iajured state of the bark ; “the decayed’ part must 
be caret remayed, and a plaster of lime, clay, and cowdung 
applied to the spot. W. 5. U S. The grub destroying the 
Turr aipa ff s the larya of the moth — segetum, See last 


E 
j 
i 
Pa h frama 
$ a muc greater extent 8 the 15 18 inch board, An inch 
4 
J 
i 
l 
i 


rden e better, say, fi 
of Wick. 2 The Salsafy i is stented by Uredo candida, 
a very common parasitical fungus, Let it alone; to remore 
the leaves, if affected on each plant, will du 
more harm than good The Lily is the common monster 
afer 785 Ay double L. candidum; ' its origin is unknown to 
Aldenham e tubers gr bd . to the 


nde Fe r black ‘Bryony they 
ene not produced 2 — 2 anoi g tho kpin and con 
tinually kept down by the mowers. If you really desire to 
know whey —.— vas put t them into a litle heat, and force 
them into growth 


ae ee FLOWER 
Ax TIn EIN UMS: R W. 32, striped 27 ‘dtd san oon one 
pale rosy ground, centre yellow 
distinet eno and 3, havieg — 5 
and higher 8 “partie ularly 31, biaen = 
yellow all over the grou colour, are 


$4 is washy and 5 and 30 has too faint an ae 
4 HS. Small and n in colour. E T. itis 
lings, 


er very fine clear and cool at night. 


e ofthe week, 54 deg. above the average. 
** 


or ans the last 23 years, for the 


week, ending Sept. 15, 184: 


af Yooh Greatest 


2 which it — zhi 9 > 
T @ 2 
593 11 1.09 in. 77 rir 
4 13 127 — ila 5 $ 
58.1 0.45 2] $|- 713 
56.4 7 0˙49 3 ale 10 
56.9 10 0.49 2 a\4 5 2 
Satur is] op pas} iz | om -iasau 
The highest temperature daring the above period — aE 
1341—therm. 84 deg. ; und the lowest on 12th, nF ea e o sake 
Se 
= Notices to Co; ts. 
: : 4 B. Without knowing the real condition of 
ve cannot exactly state how long they ought fo be fed, 


week’s answers to 3 W.—Z, The insects de- 
stroying your 8 are females of a species of Coccus or pat tg nice — a id g your 7 eeil 
5 0 of eggs. They may be destroyed by washing the shoots or two amongst those with purpl ned one 
with a brash with turpentine. or oil, or with hot water. If with a carnation front and white abel i pa pre rae 
th ts, DAHLIAS : ts 15 s: "a shaded near the outer 
those most infested opakt t to be cut off and d. edge of the petals with de ple; in size, 
e believe Kir ok on Bees is not likely to be and shape, with depth of peta als in proportion. 1, over blows, 
repri “aes e of the ein 5 — by Mr. F. nd not a fi ate for exainination.? W D. 
wor gs have appeared in the Zoologist” from time to time, crimson, well formed, and with a great depth Piar 
and we believe are likely to be reprinted. re too much ero „ particularly near the eye. 
Morus: A @ S. Put spices or any very strong-scented sub- A very good bright yellow, excellent 
stances among your clothes. Bruised pepper is as good a depth of petais.* —W R W. Outer side of the petals cri ee | 
nything. Kill the larve by baking the articles infested fadin violet; centre white, size good, shape rather flat; & 
AMES OF FRUITS No one can be absolutely certai nice — ki d, with 1 urs.“ each 
of the names of Pe and Nectarines withou e | DELPHINIUM V. A beautifully marked little Larkspur, ain, 
leaves owing whether the flowers are large or small etal bein 5750 with a pure white st down the r 
En 1 and 9 are 3 10 George; 2 5 Grosse You may able to ripen seed ee ae tie by plenty 
ignonne ; 4, Bar. ton ; Uegarde; Noblesse. n s on bricks ov er your plant, and so allo 
e or: 1, 2, Re Roman; 3, 4, Violette Hative; 5, — — — k s upon bri d. pat than K bn 5 seeds will, in probs · 
ruge iiey. — . 0 tiful : 
Names or PLANTS: A B. Cyanotis vittata.— 4 MG, We do not Fuonsias : Veiteh and e yo 1, tube bright galt short it | 
recognise it by i — seed.—A Sub. We really cannot . broad and well reflexed; corolla violet pag 33 
to ans w wer enigmas, Surely itis only reasonable that gentle- well 8 d; a nice bright variety, 5 
men who o supply puzzies for = >: apes rather slender $ lo! very | 85 sg, mach pe i 
are in an examinable condition, Those which you have done little reflexed ; colour bright red ; corolla 3.48, be 
send for our b larg e and showy, but not first e jark iat 
pulled out of ay pre. adamite hays 1 P H. Daphne col- short} lobes ela and ete bright red ; corolla ofits 
lina ; one of its varieties.—L N R. Clinopodium vu vulgare; or purple, and donb curious kind, on rly the same 
2, Galeopsis Tetrahit.— JP. 1, Agrostis vulgaris; 6, a variety 2 corolla. 6. ic ge — rer double variety, nea and shows 
of do.; 2 i an 33, Aira flexuosa ; 7, Phleum m pratense; colours i ut with the lobes more reteset, Mai 
8, Aira Ret 9, Arrhenatherum avenaceum ; 10, Bro- ing’ the double corolla better. 8.48, tube sh . — 
mus, apparently ‘erectus, but ag “pombe pyar 11, the awned with goo lobes, a little pointed ; t 
state 12, Festuca, urple; a nice middle-sized flower, good par long : 
13, Molins cerulea ; 14, Nardus stricta; 15, Alopecurus ge ube bright red, rather short and thick, wi violet; afn 
nicula = s. ns arcel was much like a wisp of hay, and] lobes, a little re oa corolla ample, deep Te, the betot 
some of the labels were of —W. Ara his hypogæa ; Africa; bold flower, send in ize, colours, aud tate ind, on at 
produces oil; is 2 1 ugly ann seedlings. 11-48, a novel and denis iia shah 
NotsaxcES: O. As — to the lime-kiln we do not see — of its variegate ted or carnation- striped 4 
how you can ee the nuisance. Had the lime-kiln e., only middling.* some of 
been constructed after —— occupancy ‘began it would have HoLLYmOCKS: W C. good assortment, Perfecta, 50 
bese i different: All large shiners nares volumes of aingke fine, particularly the following: 1 shape; T 
estructive of vegetation cording to the] ball, Enchantress, a fine rosy good Comet, a 
fuel used, or the works to — 3 grandiflora, also good in s shape and siza; y a fine bon ! 
Pears: A B. In a cold stiff soil the aimed is even — dark flower, but rather bein in — — Surprise, t the 
likely to canker if gr afted on the Pear than it would be flower. None can “Baht 
the Quince stoc sent.*—R M S. — a Breadalbane : right ee 7 
PELARGoniums : 4 B. Such è state of the stem as yours is not| double; an exceedingly fine variety, wi nile the last, Dot l 
uncommon, and is usually assigned to imperfect action of 5inches across. Duke of Buccleuch : "yer ke e aaa 
the leaves. It is, however, impossible to say how such a eeper in colour and not qui < Elphinstone: Dep 
diseases arise, unless i Teror their progress and more double; also a very fine variety. the crown; amie 
studying all the circum ee them — if rose, very ouble, bu se 21 in light — barely l 
then, The same obser apoie the Men leaves. To in colour. — * A fine 
There are no external indications of Fungi in either case, double enough in the n.* again packed in ag 
PROTECTED gruna at The s we have seen on these are | Peruntas: Band B. Your r flowers bein g 2 again aint. 
thriving v ; but having hes een only planted last spring, | paper, arrived in a state quite unfit las ate Wi 
nothing ca eat tin pi dared of the fruit. Mr. Ker is of —— ub, Duke of Devonshire: £ lour 4 lilac, debe 2010 
that the lights should be yoi off till October. If the Mong 7 . veined in the eye; nor upe eoi OWS 
are too dry, they should be protected by mulching. | texture ; for the size, good © ian oe f 
8 Ane BEDS : E Tou may give as much as tne ans a —.— crumply at the cages Hage the eye, ae ae | 


oa “ae Apply it after A plants have began to grow 


Satin: 8 W. Your scullery must be damp, or it would not be 
infested with yer etl 22 dislike to cross horsehair, but 
then 


the best remedy perh . ee floor now and 
with quicktime they cannot po es — 
Tre ST. Kk NEcT : A 


Enchantress : deep blush, violet and 2 | 


above a bud, to cause it to push a shoot; but ee 
8 recommended as e the Vine. In th bend- 
: ing or keeping the upper part cool and shaded, will stimulate 
WALTON ALKatt Works: P W. PAE We have read the 
‘ articles, but they require no answer ; in fact they are founded 


36—1849.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 569 


= TO AGRICULTURISTS. — y 
POOT NIR NIMAL MA. ANDOWNERS WEST OF ENGLAND AND is no novelty of the last few years : let us inquire 
OMPOUND OCAR SOUTH WALES LAND DRAINAGE AND INCLOSURE| if there be nothing in the Art to: t for it— 
93 — —This MANURE is composed of s combination of| COMPANY. Established 1844. Incorpor: 91 by Act of Par. thi h aje raa hin of PORTUS: yg 
tilising d liament. This Company is prepared 5 — ai with Land- hething in tl e relations 2 landowner and oc 
highly fer as to contain, in a conce 2 f ais e, all the ele- owners for the Drainage, Inclosure, er or Improve- -| pier practising t this art—nothi ing in the methods it 
ments that are best calculated, not only for promoting the ment of Lands in any part of England, lan ri or Scotland. emplo oys or in the processes of whic h it consist 
— of f — Pan e. 3 ality 97 Owners of Settled Estates in England as. through the Com f 1 
e 9 ’ 

Sin which it has been applied, It is prepared either to 1 a “inheritance ean D — sie 3 La ¢ 
the for general purposes, or expressly for each parti- In our las t 1255 s volume we referred to an Ac t of 
be suitable E 5 as may be required, and its beneficial | " a a etary, 9, Bedford Circus, sae: Parli t (ll a nd 12 V hich 

of crop, , r n 7. 
pa 328. soll will continue for several years. Price (net f x er fae ) ders incorporated. 
effects upon „ from: SE bs. to 101; the quantity to be applied GRICULTURAL ue SCHOOL, HOD- |the “ LANDOWNERS’ ner oF Snajan AND SOUTE 
cash) 6 sae er acre, according to circumstances, DESTON, HERTS.—TWO VACANT . Wares Lanp DRAIN RE Com 3 
fom d to THE CULTIVATORS OF FLOWERS. on the FOUNDATION, will be FILLED UP on Tuesday, t ee 
- THE CARBONISED MANURE is also prepared, by a dif. | 25th inst., at this Institution. Full particulars relative thereto; greatly facilitating the becoming 95 money for the 
4 process, peculiarly for RFA st “egress ih onu 3 eee ee are vacant, may be ha hod Sa pr manent e of settled es by ing 

n whigh ae Head-Master either personally or by lette „ <i ce eee precedence. of 
Giierable paving is obtained, It is so completely freed from = other incumbrances upon such properties, During 
si fastidious lady may use it for e past session of Parliament, a bill was brought i 
sael pa clean, that the most T G p „ a DU Was brought in 
Sane dea th e e without experiencing ae mgricultural Aze tte + | by the Duke of Ricumonp.and has passed, by which 

sed to H. pee 25 Seedsman, &c. (A for the URDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1849. the facilities hitherto enjoyed only by those em- 

mosh — e nt), 23, Orahbouch. street, beser: ploying the West of England Company are now 
iare, London mil bn daly atended 17 ETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS ferred ll T : 

5. Tavsan, Sept. ise sea Tmp. Society or kalen. conferred generally. The machinery for super- 

JOMPOUND JCARBONISEDANIMAL MANURE. |. TE" o =y N intendence employed in the case hed the Government 

URE, fit either for the drill or for cas tin — loans for these purposes 18 reta ned, and per. rfect 


, g, 

being manic ured expressly es — . i ap Tuey say that it is impossible to la ie gy the | security is thus ensured for all the Eire con- 
. — with their 1 for it for the red emp Agricultural from the Political. We onder what | nected with the property. The Earl of Canuistg 
ing autumn sowing of WHEAT and other crops, are respectfully | the historian of the next 10 years W ill have to record | alluded to this Act in the following terms, at the 
requested to give him TIMELY NOTICE, in order to prevent any | on this matter. It is obvious hopie e Political; Yorxsnıre AGRICULTURAL Socrery’s MEETIN No, in 
it frequently i p 5 y | include only 9. may be called sitio politics, Leeds : ; 
without such. The | qu antity 3 aa d to be used is, 5 the two are thoroughly — buaaed E 3 And “You will remember that three —— ago the sum 

about 3 cwt. Per acre, at the time of sowing, and 3 cwt, though our correspondents “Q.” . A. C.” of two millions was allowed to be advanced on loan, to 

t 


ut 3 cwt. p 
additional as a top-dressing in the spring. Orders addressed A 
toH. COLES, 32, Cranbourn-street, Leicester-square, London (certainly ' the pre may 2 0 have acer in be employed in the drainage of lands. Those two mil- 
or the MANUFACTORY, Middle-yard, Great Aussee maintaining this separ. colum to a t 
— be duly attended ta, sup 8 Scottish subjects on the other side of the Tweed, wha 
canni 


pose the separation impossible is is 1 sau: 
Tur LONDON MANURE COMPA ANY, having . A certain spe stands in an awkward Dre. good thing” they took eare 10 be found wide awake:” 
adapted the URATE” more particularly for Turnips and | dicament e people think that Pa liament can — put in a claim and the PA 5 believe Tee- 
all Root Crops, can recommend it with Kes e give it 50 PRE aa it appear s to require well ! ! ourths of the entire — allow Gane 8 „ tu 
a goo an ri 
en per acre. They ea they ought to press eg views A the Go overn- of England, who flatter themselves 8 a e e at 
-to their Superphosphat eof Lime, which 3 is prepared with the ; we who do not pretend todiscuss | least a larger portion of her Majesty’s dominions, were 
. rde London 8 3 questions of party politiesare not how ever ee put off with less than one quarter. (Laughter.) It re- 
arrangements ts for a constant supply of Peruvian Guano, from il eof use, | mained with them to consider what they would do. A 
the best cargoes, which they ‘will deliver ‘And as is the antagonism between “Q. * views great many landowners and occupiers were anxious to 
when 


to 0 M „Nitrate da 5 Ps 

importer’s 8 Oks en ey oF = JETEN N Soga, Vie 5. and add our ow he aseerts that Pailiament he borrow money for the more effectual drainage of their 

“Seo aE ara TK a ’ grea t blunder in So hap ae land. If they were offered good security for the pur- 
RSER, Secretary, 40, Bridge-street, Blackfriars. prote cti i and we assert that the low © of agri- 8 who mon the 


ROYAL LETTERS i wiy 
cultural practice! agines an antagonism, no capital of this 2 may not be justly. a * 

ubt, or he wou 7 not r attacked us so sharply; applied to the mprovement of the ‘soil, ell as 
ee E ribs Te thinks that the more the farmer strives every other iage 3 of o 8 za 5 
HOTHOUSE “WOR ne KING'S ROAD, CHELSEA, with his cireumstanoes, the less chance will there — We were told in the course of the late discussion, I 
t DENCH invites the attention of Gentlemen about be ‘of Government assistance being re oe wW i and | think by Mr. Maw, m the process of agriculture must 


PATENT. do 


t Hothouses, d&c., to the vast superiority in every that if he sho 6 ucceed in con be ide of the nature of 
Tespect posses quering t to- consi „as partaking e nature 
N gee My Mpa 900 181 gether, then Protection, being unnecessary, will be | tures ; and so it obviously does. The turning of fallows 
nh 1 foot wide, 3 feet oe no Bin se a Be 5 this be his thought, we | ito flourishing corn erops—the turning of waste lands, 
marshe 


i 
E 
* 
5 


and the Hous ‘hen completed charg ed from 
Per superficial al foot, according to siz tainly agree ; 

ciple, — — formed without wood or putiy, sane th the ill. "feelin ng ieia us on that account! We both eR aid e i rar — Baat Ridin . 
bp. Patent ——— Wood ratters and the glass pot in with aim at the same object; aud the fact is, we are not of y orkshire, an 1 the fens an hes of Li 08 
* H 8 t am proce i 


5S: 


uy ghia no point 3 7d. to 9d. per ft. 
G BY HOT WATER. enemies, but allies ; : ~ 3 ; 
HID GROW quarrel, though 1 may know that, on the conclusion this ha eee draining, the manuring, the 
ss Bue. Ax HEALY, 130, Fleet street, respect. | of a successful campaign, in which our mutual a shay liming, the rome cia a are these bat 50 
gall attention to tt -e tong 3 Shag = g Srog has been attai Er his borda will be disbande -4 many processes of manufacture? And why is not the 

ed place eit 3 Th nt on Which we differ is this :— capital of the country to il to 


ad 
2 8 
8 
= 
8. 
p 
oe 
2 8 
. 8 
4 
7 
i: 
A 
= 
oO 
E 
5 
+ 
= 
E 
a 
9 
E 
T 
E 
ta 
eo 
. 
E 


15 2 poin E E f 8 

desire the success of the farmer; he, howe 755 z such purposes as these, as well as to the converting of 
o ack oa 8 — = Boua oS assistance, and we by better-directed peves by the fleeces which we have admired upon the backs of 
inte elas i ee But what would be thought of — p any — epas in the wag field to-day into your senate cloths 


apy | class * be tho 
of . Farnham Castle. i = W ee desire the national defence to be and merinos, or to the conversion E the Cotton plants 


ho d 5 
oddesdon, left to an ally, and discourage any attempt 105 rouse | ™ in the eee eR pronn 8 = Shy hi IM 
hee W the spirit of the people in patriotic self-defence ? | | which ae just — thro a. Parliament, it is proposed 
y enounce raitor D 


. say so much as this of those — ‘the —— of ee lent b; vern- 
iW BOILER.—The | who would have the farmer look exclusively to ment, which money was applied under the superin- 
e e ee ch slag? for help ; but we do say that the per- ten denes of the dral inage commission, of which I am a 
From the vos ewick | manent welfare of the profession depends far more | very humble member, and who employ oopa 
able to make, they are warranted in | upon i 55 ni haart ba resources ~~ on assistance best, and practical men in the superintendence of 

plus ultra“ for Warming large plant from an y other quart We do not object to the | these operations—it is proposed, I say, the same 
ö ilies an its behalf; but we do object to machinery shall again be employed, And the best 
ual to w rm 1500. feet of in a oi 3 e e e distract it ttention 0255 the fruit, I think, of the good working of commission is, 
7 > a 2 * 2 
rely pat up at atthe = Botanic Gardens, Kew, | Very ning tending to Te that so little fault has been found with it—so little com. 
2 main source of its relief, ee ia e cake’ Sa : 
ere is no “ ‘eee to farmers intended, and, P b ve that a many people have net tom 3 
ine 61, Gracechurch-street, | but for “Q.” we should have said conceivable, in a 3 i N y pore 
’ r. 8 i ? of i It is proposed to the same 
the [Park-stree i. Sout Inventor z the advice to meet a diminished price of produce by | aeee eee iho mito —— and “with: 
LERS, resp peetfull SAAE Ge AADO of effort after an increased amount of produce. There the same checks with regard to the money Which Gila 
s Tank $ to their ma “impro | method of is no insult intended when we say that 1 private owner of may borrow from any private 
a atmospheri Bae indore E Pat ngs re o nt | is not so laborious an art, and has no 75 hitherto association, or any private possessor var capital, for the 
egree, without the aid of pipes or flues, | volved such accuracy of method as mi others. | purpose of carrying on improvements in the 
to to state that at the 5 est of numerous | Where is the insult then to agricultu when we of his property. And you will observe as to the 
. Venen | tell them— Build your 2 of relief, mat on — | borrower of a am ’ ee his successor, and all the 
F a Parliamentary oui fat practice 1| may ber — e wil te the Security A am I Bodi 
Well as eon of the} highest e ; or effort truer economy yof a more _ 7 Ca 7 superintendence 
ibr e ee nelpal | Is it not better to speak thus, than di 3 ae skiliul and e e 3 And 1 
to inform the Trade that at their Manufacto tory, of our “indus ae ttl a To bis és correspondent of of the person who lends the money, there will 
orien required for the construction | OF bela ud 90 5 rare with § 4 a charge made on the T * — 
Most sdvancageons ferme, eating them, may be | the Economist, as A 1” in the science and practice | to the increased amount of value which has im- 
of of farming ? parted to the property. — as the amount of — 
bee. e Fi Let t us look our real condition fairly i in the face, | will not y allow- 
politi a professions, of what after all | ing 3 per cent. additional to repay the — a sum 
thy, at their real ak, total of 8 pe cent. will pay off both principal and 
us the i 


Ë 


upon the most 
2 


i 1 of 22 oat 
iri er. which they Ily based, and let the cry of In 8 to the interests of landowners, it is 
od Keane 3 Academy, . e en pe to us of agricultural E call neg at to the nsii of way: ai 
— Arithmetic, Mensura auging, | Mismanagement—for so it is, in spite of all the ex- as to est of En pany, 
English Parsing are published by Lowe: cuses which our fickle oats suggests to “ Q.” | the way in ‘which the Act affects them, we refer our 
a De had oti Bile lication either | Lhe cry has existed under too many sorts of political | readers to € to the 8 of our correspondent 
~ circumstances for us to see its solution in them. It“ T. T.,“ in another column. fe 


570 


— ö -m ́ ä— — — — 
EUR FARMING IN 1776. No. 1. 


AMATEUR FARMING IN 1776. —No. 
ecount o 


for- 


e ARM.— 


works, dis appoin 
give of the situation "ot this far 


which is 
cattle can hardly live on it. He has 
field, to try, I suppose whether they or ja are el 
for the ground; one sees 


der to obtain 


TO CROP ELEVEN ACRES—In or 


e dir 
culture were to | rid ges, — 
trongly | some 


some poor weakly plants of 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. : 
| Burnet in the pasture, which might have been good, if farmer, he gains but two quarters. He ean Ine 


the land had been er ndition. 
os 2 hay, but t 
saw suc rraca 


There is one field de- 
weed 


r. Young’s 
m ; any other farmer wou — of 
3 or 4 acres of Potatoes, but ‘the ee 
is so hard and r that the people cannot hoe the 
nor can the Potat 


. 


the loss of the gro 

eet of the furrows nothing grows 

are fall of gaps — his gates open. I had walked 
his farm b 


und, for wit in 
n 


o | everything in fine order, but a was again dis- 
ted. Ther e several transplanted Lucerne, 
„but as full of Seam & = ‘f they had not bee for 


appoin 


-shanks allowed to com 


ex pes Bsn must 


Mallett, of Norfolk, 
secuting their os oon 
of the high farming 

to some districts in the present day. Z 


e you som 


se 4 the g. 4 


f Green Food i 


CROP. | When sown or transplanted, 


13 ç 4 £, 
| Weigut of produce ior 


= 


ruary , 

n July an nd Aug. 

eden ae in oe and on f 
till May, and half o 


2 Rabi: 


3. Ea —— 
Followed vy ape.. Trans *. 

4. Vet 

A — * 
„ Cabbag 

agat 32 of it in the April of 

the year 

6, Barley, } sown with 
Italian be a The autumn of rl ~ mi nase 
Th r half in Autumn, with See è 
ee Rye. grass, ai 

wed 


2 

are = i 
Sown in July t 

Í 


Turnips akies kes 
d Rape — 1 Juauans 
8. Mangold V Wurzel ../Sown in 
y Horn Carrot S Sown in 
9. Beans * ene Sown in beben and November 3 


Oct 


Z 
> 
4 
J 


Aug 
8 


Fb. Mr. My Jun Jly. Spt 
20 baibs| #1 4) 40000 .. 1S a 

2 2 4 6 
15 3 8] 3%ñU 
18 VF 


. 
. 
bo 
bo 
wo WS 


2 
2 
> 


oO 
* 
Ots 
. 


. 

eee 
— 
. 


10 19? FSP PSs 85 re 
12 fe Pe eee ete ee ee ee ee Set ee 


Total Produce . .| ma ey | 


31 


16 | 16 | 16 16 | 17 17.| 16 | 16 [16 


— GLISH FARMERS versus FOREIGN FARMERS. 
In the r igs an agricultural A mags induced me 
es, there 


ue of 
5 em 1 of still farm 
it behoves 


eee 

very e ists wi 
confidence; for until confidence is: 2 oud fature ue 
believed in, there will be the amount 
work of « cultivation. 
the probabi 


and manufactures; 

and machinery are being improved in a sur- 

d manner, riled that it must rely for 
resources 


| Bri 
heir ee 2 
0 


th will raise ou 


at, 
d | whether or not our husbandry has b 


an extens sion of | 


is the on nly | it i 


es grow ; some fieids are laid into high When w 


amples | — ider tha 
of those * e whieh would do credit 
N. B. be 


; magnitude st ees N it has 


profit are — 


an acre of theirs, we must raise a proportionate quan- 
tity from it, either in vegetable or 
are we able to do this? rity or ruin of 
iti i cae se n’s practical 


anxiously seeking 
many hesitating whether to ho 


fidence * 1 9 an "afi 


whatever may sien — 
h 


our svstemea of 
ur 5 * 


breeding and feeding mor 


o skilful, our 
ur labourer 

we * ve actuall. 

assertion ‘needs n no a ther demonstr a- 


capable than in other co 
dons it. And this 
than t 


nses upon our lan 


per th 
stand this, it is necessary only to reflect that price is 
merely an indication of . — æ not of actual value. 
Suppose an a 


u 
ananas on d. Now, 


e or despair, so we | I 
r humble voice, and declare, with all con- 
0 


d than t 


longer 


tionate quan of produce left after 

have been B subtracted, and not the mere — 

that 1 forms the greater 

say, therefore, t rsd the taxes and other 

penses of the British far are greai — 
countries, w © mean n not awe — 2 greater 

nominal or m value / — — 


— farmer, the remainder 


i 


and . F pi i guy gorse byt the 
r | fa rme h grea who. 


than 


qu 
arres four quarters per 
ves -3 o quarters to 1 upon, bat L twice as 
muc —— or four quar 
six quarters per aere. t is th — — dite 


ucing at least 


eign agriculturis 
nitude already been done, 
a long ‘time, and are actually now 

g as our 


exceed theirs 
panine Brey a that paron ri prices for farm 
eis all be relatively pr as 


when prices were higher 


5 | few oe to be made for th se m-re 


taxes, &., which do not entirely de, nd upon the 


F 
2 7 
3 


i 
i 
it 
ath 


ys k 
AF , 


5 
5 
a 
6 
5 
8 
5 
È 
82 
g: 
E 


ares | quarters of Wh sar and the expenses are 


half of the produce; and 3 another cae in in England 


15 


to be a the same conditions. Suppose the 
uarter ea e ign country to be 30s., 
„ and the expenses 60s. 
In England, suppose the price "to be 60s s., owing to + 
prohibitive duty which, by making corn scarcer in 
the produce will 8 


nses that the forei 
nap rs only half the 


” but sve 


for double the money 


eee the 


easy to 
profit is actually the rates 
farmer might tay, “I pay double 
oreigner does, will 


produce, on | 
Eria might my, i sell — 


to too ran 
housing “ail gar ae 1. 
2 = preo quantity 

0 


agri 
— Bt podn of doar 
see | tries, uld pay 


10 
8 ks 7 
l 


$ 
ate 


systems 
- ber ha; I have K P| 
but richer—like the foreign the best 


C a a NR 


a 
u 


— 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


g in 
- | those of a West of sponge Company, = be 
er 


9 ra * and execution of the w 
serves to save by 


company m 
by paying a 22 


e that 
land shall Fi ‘effectually drained ; and 


ra surveyors and workmen constantly — 
all 


Albin 


F ork, 
| his skill and attention ; | i 
r- 1 if, 5 i — hand, he prefers putting the busi- 


| than in the other. 
h | pasture, as 


gr x essays, 
fear, then, sae we * be 
a are far, behin 


manures, engineers ore useful 

producing more pn fattening 

i dsmen — forming m e profitable plants, 

becoming ——.— in all these 
ose 


e an The 
of dear — to a 


we 
all the rich deltas and prairies on the globe. 


Home 3 
. of Judges at Norwich: Horses. am far 
escing in the spirit with which Mr 
and — 6 —— have gare th 
Society in 
of the horses at Norw 


is highly uld be com- 
mented on with t most latitude, as it is the only 
= way in which a defective standard of ex- 
i ean be corrected. But why blame the Council 
after they have Sne thei utm e this 
tause for b up” a society w as done so 


which h 
as other respects ? ? Those 


—— good in “this as well 


t 4 their chance of the pre smiums, and 
Reserve their own judgment of the merits of the animals 


of — no man, & 
d h 


shall fear nothing from | 80 to e 
4 C. 


a not its e 
pendieulars 


ompany makes a profit on my draining, why may I 
it myself and save the profit 


houses — —— het — to g 


ea 
ean be grown at that nearness in 
ee eee 


be t 
cussion, then we say, to find that you must 
the quantity of surface exposed b 


— 5 we can only — — the dis- 
another volume. 


or speaker, 
After rpm oe leav 
dar may 1 do 
act, or — rat diffculty, witli regard to 


as the same money which has b d for one job feeding, rer bothers me, is the di l of the liquids. 
ay be applied again and agai course of the | There pe. The box is to be 
year to different jobs, all realising a small return, the | 80 drained as to exclude every drop of water from with- 
aggregate profit may be sufficient to induce capitalists | out. There may be little or no difficulty i ing 
o to employ Nye ir money — for the benefit of | these one-sided drains, and in pr aluable 
the s pubiic „ liquids within bly there ignorant, 
teep “Leva ene — I believe that 8 slow like myself, who would be grateful for a little practical 
3 troversy proceeds fro e ad- | direction on this head ; but is no di the 
mission of an — principle into it, which both | way of the box holding all the evacu e are 
acquiesce ears to be told its dimensions should be about 10 feet by 8 feet 

taken for granted on both sides that the — of Gras ine nd 2 feet in depth. A neigh 
of grain crops grow mostly, if not a ther, in a tells me this would contain a little mo 1000 im- 
direction perpendicular to the base line or level line of | perial gallons. According to the ities, an 
e hill on whose side those plan ted; fi oids about 2500 gallons of urin u Sup- 


direction spred this . the 
mode of the hill side has no 


cy to ue it- 

self, Unless the perpendicular lin line of the ate pr 
produce above ground be — beneath the sur- 
face towards the base 1 of. the hill, the restricted 
i limit — 


aes . i 

the base line ty ue 

t fall from the line of the hill sid side to the 

level line) it must pe possible to place more ei at a 
iven distance on a superficial area of an a 

quarter, — may be its ioiak 3 a a 


f | box fee 


must overflow, 
without snar addition of straw or any npr thing. The 


* is no evaporation, no fer- 

— no escape of any ee or in any 3 
but that the who sg —— out of the same weight at 

n the u, as the aggregate of the 
fed and feeding — sone had been putin. How 
comes it, then, th r which would stand — 
4 inche e f the surface does not 
off. To the fact that it does not do so we — 
timony of a legion x fi Yet 
con no te. It may be so, but to me, at 

paradoxical. Ch I. 


goblet = with water to t 
when a live fish was put in. The solution appears 
omy plain understandin 


e 

hol a 8 not wish to revive a disc 
if right, y i exhausted, oF 
which may be uninteresting or unprofitable. I only 
want doubts e so much of a common 
sense 1 ation given may det 1 ne, nd pos- 
sibly others, whether to build boxes, stalls, or sheds, 
It is to be tted that we have no means of testing 


urgh to wich, and — f 
20 doubt the it ie enient 3 to the base ] ae held up for adoption with 
leres that his merits — at length been fully ap- argument about the impossibility of placing more | arrays of figures, both uantity and profit. If the 
let those who have been disappointed | stems on the slope than you can place on the level has | royal society maintained an officer, like the ale taster of 
try Exeter. N, = o applicability at all to the present case; if, inde d—one correct nose 2 sharp 
Drainage Act.—I am eas 2 — you had to plant a parcel of canes through the slope, | eyes and e omed to balance = jence—to 
with the provisions of the act ju just passed, some and fix t erpendicularly in base, you might | examine into the g en pretence “are 0 
e on which were made by Lord Carlisle at- the well say that y d have ore canes on theslope | novelties, we should have an authority on bee — we 
Agri ws al Society’s meeting. By enabling | than you d find room for in base; but that has | could rely, and nt 23 —— 
ee e repayment of money bo: d | surely nothing to d = i e eion of pns — ng ae gr be at the 9 — — 
d ean their roo’ the N vin f ran 
es sagen 3 i doubtless prove of thot afford — by the dozen beasts in boxes you bo de — satis- 
— which will lend m — on th urity. | of — hill, — up as — stems as that line 115 hold, factory conclusion. You upon —— 
g 1 being ed to enabling proprietors more and of course man re than run co ve at ing perfectly we wall. The — 1 
% to raise money to be applied to draining land, like distances from each other, if they had been confined | the veracity and ar 
a lock upon ‘it as antagonistic, but rather as to the area of the base of the hill. Nobody doubts that Sw jent of Land. 
the ne the West of England Co y, | the circumference of a semi-circle aff uper- | to refer to the a — — — 
nie latter do not lend money, they o ecute — sige your correspondent = 3 mae — 
. Contract or ission, whether their em- r that you can stick a — — number of | broaches the question as to a eae eee 
borrow money or pay for sa worth out of their pins “cot that t they be short enough to be considered as of farms. Your se ponme 
ive, pockets, The West of mpany’s Act su to the circumfer ence than into the corre- | surveyors ee arm by pet may 
dead facilities — borrow, which faci- —— * — ; now the cir res of a semi- sure on the be ou 50 2 hedge 
nag? the Duke of Richmond’s Act, are now ex- | circle make es a very good hill, of which the diameter | or hillocks w may be upon it; — ee 
agla, all par hether employing — West a may be considered as the base line — ean no doubt Tea vsti tg (w i y . : 
: es ent ar not; peenaa be had | fin cere a . or trees upon level as at as paper, even sup a — — 
it will — — e it (so that their gro | , posing Mac 
: It — dou doubtless, be cheaper for a | with the depth of the 3 tina: we can — its corre- | Dhui, the madai in Britain, — 5 age in 
"i or himse employ I believe sone a | the centre of ra — 7 me fact it} could other- 
= pee rm res hrown so ise ; no accurate plan could be ; if you were 
pany, supposing the practice which has t w 2 ait con hepy 
e md Feasa ape * aa pe obliged to hile — oa e the * 5 coast line of (whieh is level) to 
i ll i methods of a w ‘ 
82 2 — tee i aa a small —— not — to — error; and in the and tely laid down on 1 
own beer, to supply one's own ease 2 geier = having a pea — part, 2 
tradesmen; or, to to be their practice cannot of anything like could you lay surface measurement within 
— —4.— land; but — — Pecuracy. R. W. B., Alnwick, Aug. 27. the coast line, y laid unless you laid dem 
sup wi . possi 


572 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


— Ss? circulars throughout the country. And I must agree with your , The soil i l 

Agricultural Society having issued circulars , throughout the country. And I must agree with your e soil is a cold silt, and not very 

The ace j — e ea to this disorder, it may | correspondent in thinking it a subject which cannot be | growth of Beans; the ground, * 

not be unacceptable to many of your readers for me to | brought too prominently before the attention of those | whole summer looked s so thin] 
i 8 a ar a 


ese goo ter e ected 
. present disease, however, has prevailed Ti 5 nee, and enlarged by education and his | it is now so full a crop that I 
along this coast ; there is no doubt it is contagious. It abilities; ought to be merae not alone in protecting | through it. From being so o 
said isti i i i t- 


sor 0 . em fr rea and standing go si 
but my observations will tend to confirm my belief of its | roll, but also, we — in every w vay, industry, | the rows, the air has so freely circulated as to 
being of one and the same character that assails both | the employment of san ‘tale and consequently improved | the perfect setting of every blosso 

species of animals, The first outward appearances in | systems of 3 and by meee strict ju — done | the stalks I have counted 40 and 6 . 

e cow are these: — The hair erect, trembling of to those under him, to promote eir p nd the | a small piece with Oats, dibbled at the rate of ] 
the peon eese at the mouth, and the lips and nos- advantage of the pr 8 bati as 1 his pocket, per acre. They looked much inferior to the 
trils co h gla pa swellings or blisters ; the | credit, and popularit And what in too many eases do 3 w "e was 1 with 4 bushels per 
mouth highly 1 ee he tongue and palate „n we find in the place oF what the representative of the | the t of coming i ear, * the dibbled 

d e former is ai hold of in drenching the | proprietor ough to 1 a ee ably a a. — 75 shot up fully 10 — e bigher 0 
animal, es skin peels off in flakes, The animal moves 3 ms his d as to collect the rents, a raw is so stout and reedy, can it will not be 
with pain; the soles of the feet very tender. The hoof, 2 . t reaches him a ee the land is underlet, raises fok a week, whereas the rest i 

as them—a perso x 


r walks elo ry e 
admit a shilling piece between the crust and the sensible | exaggerated notion of dió rights of property, without | much larger scale another season ; for if th 
i j i robab b i i 


part of the h ks it can only 
the odour highly offensive, so also is the breath of the | if an outlay is thought necessary, m makes it in a way too | instrum t secures, as this doe 
animal. Such has been the character of this complaint. an eventually found to be of little 85 to the regularity Evers of depth cua antes in err: the 
Its treatment :—Bleeding freely once, breaking the | tenant or advantage to the landlord. Or in the case of | seed. J. F., Denver, Norfol 
blisters, and rubbing the parts with a solution of salt a person raised from some office, which cannot have i m Prospe ects 1 16 would be de if some one coy. 
and bark ; some rub in common salt only. renches | given the experience necessary, we find the self- phe with the reverses of the manufacturing in 
of solutions of apt or Se igre salts, given twice or | sufficiency and arbitrary abuse of power common in uld point out to“ Q.” that if the production “ ean be 
ice a day. nimal cannot bite the Grass, it those who with narrow educations are raised from low caleulated to the fraction of a farthing,” bent. 
is cut for them, 2 or any other gen food. If this |degree to fill pte ae they cannot be adapted for, and | of brisk demand is often required to compensate 
is not done, they waste flesh rapidly, and hence so | consequently deter men of sige and capital from Sg, » a dull trade, a strike, or other an 
many fatal results, the tr mal not having strength and | embarking on the — or placing themselves under | bring the risks of manu acturing to a pretty close level 
ment sufficient a contend against the disease or | their influence. Any one who is in the slightest degree | with agricultural enterprise. “Q.” thinks prudent 
support life. In or ten days the animal re- | interested not only in the land, but in this country, must caution or emigration preferable to an increased ap 
covers its usual health. b of Pigs.— The first acknowledge the immense importance of this subject | tion of capital, a and 1 You said, August 
stages with these useful creatures are these—they sud- e mismanagement of many Chancery estates under party “that a man, after doing his utmost, who cam 
denly appear paralysed, sit upon their hind legs, and legal receivers has long been a. crying evil, and the only just live ‘at present prices, bags believes * 
seem incapable of moving; upon being forced to do so, embarrassments of me arge landed proprietors | they will fall, is bou to himself 
they move with difficulty, and upon stones shriek with | renders them unable to escape from what I may call | retire from a position in aiik 1 is pik to h 
agony, the soles of their feet, a. those of the the control of their shat bu 1 Sect ee feelings | Can “ Q.” advise cr better! I would ask him if 
hind legs (and in cows the same is observed), are espe- and independence enable them and whose | he is quite satisfied with the manner in which 
cially tender. A little sulphur (flower), mixed with wish is sd = Ee content, sd 1 95 them, | operations are co ee in his neighbourhood; how 
some milk mea ven twice or three times a day, | cannot move the management of their | many farmers have a proper quantity of the no 


8 ure; but giving them air, z allowing ppa doi —— ne influence of misplaced | of live and dead stock; how many farms are 
them to herd together, but turning them into a meadow | power, to persons whose character, education, and | wild Oats, Thistle, and Twitch? And yet all the avail- 
day, they soon recover. Allowing them to remain in | pu ursuits will ensure the per nn of their real and | able capital is engaged, sunk if you will, on half the 

sty, or to lie upon the dung in the yard, retards | ay ledged duties. A Subse saur, | farms in the country, and, with all the “acco 

their convalescence. The cows Siw should be turned r. N. nee nee Machines. Having previously heard | that can be obtained at the bank, amounts to but a sorry 
eut, X. F. Z., Hands. nek of the fame of Dr. Newi aoe 's dibblin ng mac achines | investment ee oe what might be employed if 
Cumberland One horse Carts.—There is in your paper ae other 3 I took an opportunity a short only as many e held as could be cleaned 
- of August 25th, page 540, an article entitled“ Cumber- | time since to visit Knole Park, to inspeet them, and also | thoroughly, stocked d amply, and ae skilfully. “Let 
land One-horse Carts,” which deserves some notice for | to witness the effects of their application in the cultiva- | him resume ling,” you add, “on-a small a 
i isti it, | ti and althoug ave 


unusual tit and, howev ful 10, Oey S 
and for the mischief it may do in misleading the igno- | than 60 miles for that purpose, I was certainly amply 8 to be acted on by those ats occupy. ü 
rant and unthinking. What can be thought of the com- | remunerated, as well as greatly gratified, from what I | their us „. re discovered that *seasous™ . 
parison drawn between these carts and what are con- saw, and also from the very courteous reception I met | may defeat ingenuity and production ; but do 
temptuously termed ‘ Scotch” and “ Prize” carts, the | with, being a perfect stranger. The Wheat crop grown | insects, and other evils act pre ejudicially ab as 

d merit of the former being that they weigh only | from half a bushel per acre was the finest I ever saw, | as at — “ There is a time to sow, and à timeto "m 

pangs or 75 2 while the despised Scoteh and — and formed a striking contrast agit 1 ean and dwarf- | mow.” Ninety-nine times out of a ee sowing 
or 9 ewt Does not the author of those like crop by its side, upon the e quality and con- and mowing are in favour of those who know their, 
— 3 chat a cart for a large and pirat ul | dition of land, and where three bushels of seed had been business best, and “do it well.“ Some men there are 
to be employed also on wan roads sae P son- | sown broadeast ; and I should say that the produce of who think rent and taxes the wolf to devour all the 

city 


e thi 0 
conditions are reversed. Does he not know that horses | inspected a field of Beans, part of which had been a and look spe all 3 as expensive 
usually draw heavier carts than ponies, and did it with the dibbling machine, and the other part by hand, | Such m i vae of corn va pe 
never occur to him that the same persons who make | and although es machine deposited mn half the — than they might 4 05 y never here any other thal 
capacious “Scotch” and “ Prize” penton could also | tity of seed per acre, yet there red to be double store stock to sell, and, “like the “ Amateur e 
light carts, nay that they constantly do make the number of 5 nts, owing, 8 Ras — to their regu- | they re no ‘cle or if they d pee — 
carts as light as the C eee W li . eae ‘too, —— A of distance, and 'also to the seed having all grown, | sumes them. Talk of sending capital to ban 
ever their choose 4 L. V. R.“ consequence of = deposited at a proper and | colonies, indeed! it must be suppl 
des on to contrast light y seater r ick, and aioi depth; the owner, a neighbouring farmer, | flowing coffers of benevolent citizens, we hav agri 
winds up this part of — 23 with this startling stated as his opinion that there would be nearly double spare from the py or what will become € 
ete “ There is no reason in the world,” says he, the produce per acre upon the dibbled portion, and cultural poor? A vast deal more capital is at 
why a cart weighing 64 ewt. should have a narrower | that he should continue to 8 . 1 There in antes village alindat in England by both, those who 
eel rim than one of 9 3 if e en re 8 —. can be no doubt mee gee rn derived very nt, and might doubtless be obtained if principal 
is much the same say, th great benefit from ing poet tly. hoed with the permie it could be assured of the e 
in the world why a wei tel Ti aged — kis — be we adapted 1 employed for that pur- and interest in case of death, geo means 
seit o mys eae shes n goes on to tell us of a pose, constructed so as to one between four rows — one whims of landlords; few of them have ee expected 
use the enormous period of 20 year y peed and by which acre of Wheat can be build d 
but “at could tell ‘hin pe an and waggons, — —.— effectually hoed for a shilling. The dibbling anshi to invest liberally, unless compensati ba nitable 
in use for 40 years, aye, r half a century, and re 3 appears to possess every requisite qualification for de- | permanent improvements. A simple Pa re 
p pa pas soother, 1 all going off a * the seed in a perfect manner. It not only system must be established by Act o 
3 e ajs 


o 
3 
. 
3 
g 
2 
3 
BE 
A 


to puff —— Ransome and May as an ert uniform depth, but also any quantity 8 avy kind of no errors ber tae farmer than it does lor 7 
xe! h icultural i ich may be n b, e pe or the 
2 red with, dee ill = say, let | depth may be varied and regulated, as the season or the | from the genial shower, the ameliorating k 
E ble maker of carts, to build | character and iti y requ invi ing win ro is 0 
= one of any weight, from 5 ewt: up to 15 ‘ewt., and | dibbling points being only of a sufficient size to admit | especially to him who endeavours to turn ` 
request will be cheerfully complied with. Also, | the seed, they easily penetrate very stiff an and pa to account, and who believes during the e raging tor 
— — most celebrated for Se made by t do w. as to o i th eee ow we wil; 
carts, he may get any 8 = > any | destroy the seed, eee is frequently the ease when the shapes our ends, rough hew them 20 hen 
pattern, of,the very best seasoned fos common dibbling ir 2 7 appears a man —.— and gratefu prr grumbles no 
respect than he can by the individuals “a eset in ate: asily dibble pa al half an acre 4 day, and that do at every rise and fall of oe e 15085 T 
kerland, and also at less price, all these di es being ede the regularity with 8 e seed is de- of weeds, bad crops, and lo he sees un 
and capital em ar ty eae ee ce, s, paea: two or three pecks of cn ‘Wheat will produce | his armour of ren . and ed ih ae fe fertlt? 
seein € uve lon n a — as any one w to see upon his | eve assing cloud an agen | 
_ devoted of manufacture, 4. B. Cs land. Obs é par E 


to this branch of em . sere his fields, and nt to his 
— Land- agents. No one who bestows! Dr. Newington's bann Machine. — 1 have much ably advocated the necessity of a aban 
landlord . observation on the connection between pleasure in bearing testim ony to the great ee de of | management of farms, and who in ms 
prospects a. or state and Dr. Newington’s hand dibble for sowing Beans. I have trut! is n ity ł 
— agricultural inte: for an | this year a pi ith it, at the rate of 1 babol this Wheat thin and blighted 
correspo importance of the subject broached by your acre, and alongside of this another piece at the rate this crop was yellow with 
33 BRE to what ought to | of 2 bushels pe all Heligoland e “ hairiff“ (Galium aparın 

q of a land-agent, and no one who is „and the cups were y adapted to the size d that flock 


' ent, a s so nicely ada nered 
; gm of the powers and responsibilities of those who of the Bean, a T denak tak 1h weld hame Dius Tasi ages, fiyed and foot sore, 
2 perform i to manage their affairs | possible, on the land dibbled at the rate ot 1 bushel per | side, a publie nuisance ; they por 
of $ . doubt that the tendency | acre, to find one hole in a thousand with two Beans in clumsy carts and a winnowing 
, wers must 33 it, with such Fenn, low-roofed house, with 


ener 


25 . eS ee ee a a eee 


36—1849.] 


wooden anure, and a pile of faggots, called 


old-fashioned English farmer 

waking to t. ter iti 

— b 1 root crops, 
ie has 


Eri earn 


earned ae whie 


ce with the fa Leer arguments 6 of the 


“new 


sufficien 


m Memoranda. 
baaa, Wictow FARRE os 
pamphlet entitled“ 


* a little sceptical, bu 
merits of the system pract 


now ventures to present the 

results of his inquiries. 

taken the coach to 3 we spent two or 
with Mr. Wright, the tenant of Girvan 

la who de pore us over his fine farm. Not 
g either, were 

struck with tie Superiority of the ite on reaching his 

first fields. 

„. wd en rds Bes 

fine land, and 


annually, and over and abo found that he had 
applied 4 f Peruvian guano per acre to the 70 
acres of green crops on the f iry of 


W 
Y cows, and brings up 40 calves ager A selling them 
fit to the butcher at two years old. The whole of the 


arm, 
ment elearly en ntitles 


w 
manage him. Fro 
— oad is mostly through a high 


a geen 
untry, 


ding nn liming of moss going o 
pritdoon lies a ~ oe 
rill n. The ap e farm house from the 
; a; is by a pretty drive along the wooded banks 
. agg ue ach. The house itself, which is in the 
har, style, is beautifully situated on the ne of the 
and lies embowered in in evergreens and surr 


unded 
dian laid out 2 It i be close to he ruins 


ee Tie 
convinced that he make a — 
bet 5 — ees which we should thin 
Value in the hands of any 3 
5 ee 


been 1 known as a erack farm, the 
nearly 100 years ago having begun to 
ae principles. It is "oa 


a been 


uch espe but he has some |t 
nly requires an ac- the ri 


THE AGRICULTURAL — a 
stable on one side, and on the other a heap of prevent all hay in the ditches, and render sluices ; increases the quantity of ag terial 
call There were, sa r 


for the drain 
Wheat on the — 
being ne dp . 2 an ordina 
Oats, about O ae 


peg Al 


Tue B ns 


‘be greatest 
m 


e far e point we 
satisfied with and that w was oe alteration of the nages, 
which h w been 
eeing en g — 80 


2 
© 
a 


oO 
5 
Q 
@ 
2 
© 
© 
55 
"i 
oO 
m 
— 
= 
n 
32 
5 2 Zg. — 
R cg 
E 
p 
a 
= 
© 
fd 
© 
B 
— 
> 
© 
mn 
[e] 
© 


centre of ae ri 
g which is 


This istrict i is oat the property 
struck w the appearance 


moss, ur atten ion w. 


afte 
Profe 


iven 


573 
with which 


~ or shingle on the sea-beach, at the rate 


the residence of the | we 


rop. 
were nearly 80 acres of Potatoes on the farm, 


ears’ so drill of them penan fe more v — in t = growth 
e Lothia 


than an 


crop w 


i 

own 
è the r of the land, including all 
on it, 15 though it 
N = 


a steep 
being sand, 10 feet 
Pett he 


wW of Turnips, 
2 well, except 3 or 4 acres, 

ih were touched with the 
ers = toes.“ Th 


bei — those earliest sown, 


uce, and that 

A ramea of 

While the soil n mari ya ay using 

fertile, the es portion being a moorish 
e 


ird d 
give a balance sheet of Mr. itCalloc’s — 8 but. 
| even adding a few h ed poun pen 


e SSOr 
er rolar in Edinburgh, viz. „Re ie» it was a fence a 


ws round bullet ts, 


5 5 y touch itin case they bring it down upon them- 


stated, we have no doubt whatever, g into account 
raised and the 


entitled to say to 


a 7 — es in gp hase all the dykes we saw. Alig s 
shore of Glenluce, the soil was either sea sand or 


e [though Du but a shor 


The dung-house, b 
A 


but, with two or three exceptions, 
indicate much spirit in the managem 
field we came 2 heses nging to we chne n cutting 
Grass, t crop was all cio finished, ` e 
reater part of ‘the secon be ear n be fit hie cutting 
i cut when even 
The next field was st Grass, 
e and o 5 sg 
nee; amon. th e 
in os of it the Fuchsias were most luxuriant. eg Ee 
ffices are built ge ents behind the house, and, 
rom the road, they 


the crops aia not 
sg an e firs 


dake 


roofing. Having 
to | Mr. M‘Culloch, he kindly showed us over every acre of 


bis f is offices, and even set a oi 

the man 
ood by an in- 

plan of the offices emni we Mr. Caird’s 


hk the 


mphlet. 


turing on the old Grass round 


h 
of this part of the country; 
1a to be excellent 1 88. About 
clay, mixed with sand and 


of far richer quality than any made in — 
open air, where it is liable to be washed b by the rain and 


P 
Pa There were about 50 cattle in me byres, and 10 pas- as 


und M. 
| Pr 8 om high, while one 
a fi eight, 


at shat ine des at igh water 


dried up by the sun. The quantity of d ss mix 
with the dung and saturated with the urine prodigiously | 


ed | bred e ee 
One curiosity desery: 


t rds are 
try go 2 do likewise,” they must be 
act in the same liberal spirit as Col. M ei 


8 


desired success 


shrubs grow luxuriantly. W 
Mr. M, Culloch's ee 


5000/., tho been expended 
ornament. were some excellent fields of 2 
on Logan 3 it ran the risk of 
strong. We also «sigh epe ge or ten beautiful td 
d one r two 
85 


574 THE 


cut out of the rock, and surrounded with a high wall 
into which the tide flows through a grating, and in 
whieh is pono mber of eod and other sea fish, 
—— chat they cae when — on, and 
literally v fed out of the hand, and allowed us to touch 
them with our hands, and to tic Le their backs with our 
min 


ieks, seeming to derive pleasure 
Having spent an interestin with Mr. ee 
mained ~ es. with 2 Les ea. nex 


for Stranraer, e got th 

from thence by — 5 to Gama, Edinburgh, and h 
Mr. Hope, of Fentonbarns, East Lo thian ; [in ihe 
Scotsman. | 


an together. Wheat benefit 
anal of lime so much as meng WB not 


HAY.—Per Lond of 36 Trusses. 
Prime Meadow Hay 68s to 75s OE ee o e =e 
s. * 
— Stra 


New ue m e — J. CooreR, 
‘HOPS Fn. Y, Sept. 7. ; 
Bonge PATTENDEN and — report that the accounts 
— ko Kent. eee is 


very Fap idly, and many planters have menced picking in 
Se, Ts me a ale | 


OVENT GARDEN, SEPT. 8. 
othouse — Peaches, and — — are plentiful. 


nuts are abundant. Oranges are scarce. —.— moder: 


a 
Green Peas fetch from ls. “ed. to 4s, per bus 


nations, Fuchsias, and Ros 


—— per Ib., 3 Oranges, per doz., 4s to 6s 
s, hothouse. br ö. 15885565 Lemons, per doz., 1s to 38 
— Portugal, per a | — per 100, 8s to 16s 
$ 20 15 6 Alm 


Weekly 
Averages and | Aver, | Impts. 
Imports. Sept. 4. 
„ G. €% 
WHEAT ly 9 | 
OATS... FEN ae 6 51620 


BEANS 
5 
„„ 


Senn g E 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


H 2 
Pine-apples have not ders d since our last — ount. Apricots 
are nearly over, and so are Currants. Filberts and foreign TE 
tely 


n 
plentiful, Among Vegetables, Turn raipa may be obtained at from 
ch 


` e! el, | 
tatoes have not altered since our last account. — es a — 
din 


e: 
from 1s. to 1s, 6d. per pottle. Cut Flowers consist of Heaths, 
abere age Gardenias, — ign onia venusta, Tropwolums, Car- 


a lar 
— a ston choice things 224 — E 


e of b 
— — — r of sheep for the pies È o 


as generally ac 


ne 2 * a in bnde 
have declined 1s, per qr.—Indiag 
ussian 


— We have had fine weather 


Oatmeal, 248. per load 


ZALA onds, per peck, 6s 
ectarines, doz., 2s to 6s — sweet, per lb., 2s to 3s 
Calendar Sust, erations. Plums, per hf. sieve, 48 to 6s | Walnuts, p. 100, 1s 2 — 2s Beasts, . Sheep and ‘Teme, 1. 120; Cal 
BEDFORDSHIRE Far x. The ~ est being nearly concluded | Co°rants, do. ot — p. bush., 16s MA res, Sb 
ed One aaro ea yo early spring food. Pears, per doz., p" to | berts, , per 100 Ibs. 15 5 to s vty 11 — pee 
e ground — if “peste be well m = > insure’ an not — 5 ve ist to Py ct coo, Brazil, p Ps 8 ay regi — 3 samples to this pa «ak Fc 
than 4 bushe! T acre, nsure an early an 2 mu fit rat 
fall arep- We always use as — as 4 bushels of seed, an 3 a meng ri the S eo 
sometimes 5 to the acre, Trifolium is 1 substitute for Cabbages, p. 2 pags be Spinach p. sieve, 1s to 1s 6d s s pe 7. 
Tares, a may e sown now upon the stubbles for eating off ee to 6s Onions, —5 bunek, 2d to 6d wae 8 
or soiling next May. The ground does not in general require — per * a ta 12s oS om b, p. d d 1s 8 | Pins 
1 ots, per 
joughing. ‘The eg if very © 3 and fo Peas, per bus wah., 18 4 to 0 ds tarita, er Ib. Š i 6 a s 1 . . ` grindin g 1 —— 6d. per 
of seed all — orrel, p. sieve, 6d to 9 Artichokes, p. doz., 1s 6d to 38 ; 
isibe, A Any bianka in in the Clover Seeds may den fl fled up up Potatoes, per reas noun ee . The Oat 8 aul, an 
with Trifolium, Winter Beans cannot be s — a bett — ettuce, ý 
time than the end of this month; they — in — sown a — p r bush., 2s Apa — Cos, do., 6d to 18 
inte Wheat sowing usually commences in ty and expe- Turnips, o. pa | 28 to 3s | Endive, per score, Is to 1s 6d bee mornin 2 we 1 
‘ced farmers now begin to select their seed, hous pre- | Red Beet, ver doz to 2s . p. hf. sieve, 48 to 68 Wheat . — ata 4 ce ig ay, c 
ferring a change, and that, if poss m a poor soil toa rich, | Hors e Radish, p. bal, acing A paana, P: pot., 1s pe éd N 3 am the [tte busas 
or from : op to characters, such as “ie chalk | Fr ench Beans, p. hf. sieve,1s 6d Smalt Salad * * pon, fa 2 3d | is 7 — — cheaper, Grinding Barley — be noted Is, 
an &e. ennel, per bunc 
io Cg 2 are —— E be * 2 * sR a ets ae oe Savory, per bunch, aa to — me — 
comers at a small charge c eeks, per bunch, 2d to yme, per bunch, 2d to Corn is still held — 255. to 26s. per qr. for fin 
— le a 2 i N ery, p, bundle, 84 to 1s 34_| Parsley, p. dee. bun., 3s to 48 s to 25%. per ee 
— i to merc — rag e = — 9 paaa pes Radishes p. 12 bunches, Is to 2s — Roo p. bdle., 1s tols — 
sighboure? ¢ at an extravagant price, supposing it all be — per doz, bunches, = j T reen, p Ta 6d * — os 45 — active, but with no 
the time to be a nice change of seed from a distance. To to int, green, per bunch, heat were 
fe s mistakes as is farmers ° — among | Carrots, per bun., 4d to 6d Basil, green, p. bunch, 4d to 6d K only a Tittle new hoas undried, rather soft, 
themselves on market days, always ot e. win 
of the soil 1 the seed is gro FIELD, Monpay, Sept. 3. BARLEY. 
then a certainty in the transaction, and the saving of a dealer’s The supply TI e is 2 large, and trade is very heavy. 
Profit. Dr. Newington’s Dibble a 0 the There 2 2 ver, but little reduction in ‘choicest qualities. 285 14 
ment of the day 3 80 — 3 and cheap! — a — — Sey ned several N. — a as nd is 26 3 1 
r manner. ave num eop an ambs is considerable ; mand is 
KN poao has prre R succeeded where the whole | equal, and late rates are fully realised. Calves are not q : » 
3 = arried ou ote of Lae agar 7 4 roe putting in - ager eaten as they bi have agg — — gee re Gane 4 
seed well, an ards well ng the plants in th 4 more money. From Holland an Germany there 
e abou’ el of seed Wheat tothe | are 1051 Piana; 5140 Sheep, and 92 Calves ; from oe , 34 $i? 
acre, and have invariably realised a yield of from 35 to 42 Boasts, m France, 81; from Leicester and Northampton, 1 
per acre. Y mers would do well, when “fant Lincolnshire, 400; and from Cambridgeshire, 300. 
series of fue Tntroduser's plans, — as — —.— “ters 2 t En a „ of 8 Ibs.—s asd ol 
— 8.11 
ceed in the result, Some of the most bean s e. e o Doaa 7 
fail Hom. * — or the nar itto Shorn 
want of a slight So it is with A e pee lans y gee 5 1 4 2 $ Twos & 2d quality 2 28—34 0 25 
appear to think so, — ot suppose that Serer at — — ee ere N Lambs wf O=8 0 — mer” 
a full effect. | The d ‘tha ilar clases a ——— an 8—4 0 8 . : 3 : $ 3 we 
— thy sa + nilar cames only produce sim the | Beasts, 4113 ; Sheep and Lambs, 31,580 ; Calves, jia; Pigs, 225 8 y: 
results, when acting under sim 1 mstances, on similar 
á substances, has been ove overlooked. Ir 5 3 London. Liverpool. Boston. 
MMERMUIR Far — 4 Since our last commu- PRICES „ 
nication the + — has bee dng a fayourable for all kinds of 
astures are — general good. Corn is rapidly CURRENT. ea 27 “ti 3.| Aug. 28. Sept. 4 Sept. 5. 
hanging co our, and will, to appearance, be ready to cut about 2 Ibs. 70 Ibs. qr. 
the 10th of 3 while Tarni rnips are growing vigorously, Wheat d d. 
though, perhaps, on som arias ene in e dits , — E ya = 5. S. S. d. 8. . 8. 
shape of “fingers * > than usual. The making of — W vee 42 todd 38 to41 6 € 6106 4 6 8 38 to43 
n n . a sheep on 2 —. 44—4804 D 26.9.2 40—46 
s erto pope bi th oes — — — 
whole. The Clover hay (a miserably light eon) wt ich wa — . N e eee 
first in hand, was made during unfavourable weather, rayne 2 — 4—4 1 Of OO 78 i 
so far as we have proceeded with then Foreign... 36—54 36—52 4 4 7 84 3 7 8 — 
been got up in excellent condition. These, also, ar Nixes 480 Ibs. 480 lbs. 
= can aah usual, 1 32 — oe the T4 Ps i disposing 1 —. 22—2422—26 — — — 
1 — a Foreign. . |20—22/20—22) — pale — 
ewes about the middle of August, while tho Foreign meal |5/,—6/)5/,—6/ * 82 * 
tined for the butcher must remain a little longer to suit pur- | Barley 
ch diffi ma hick the’ be sent. | Grin F ¢ * gs 25 
ave everything weaned. Prices 4 = 20—24 yes = oft om 
are about 2s. per head es ast year’s, Towards the latter | Malting .. . 24—2625—26 30s—32s | 30s—31s 
oad Pepe et thadeaiting sod selec of the oldest age of ewes 26018 — 
— 4 2 oe PR 5 7 we ri be 2 of at font mee the 
they 1 lie set storm 255 son the el where 1 45 Ibs. 45 Ibs. 
4 w without danger of drifting up. A Lam- uated tr ia 18—25/2s10d 3s 2d/2s10d 3s 2d 20 
— a k... |14—23|14—23|2 42 8 2 22 5 
Notices to Correspondents. Foreign |13—20/13—20|2 42 6 2 32 5 — 
Garn: OD. If it be a wi rain . „ q7. 
may sow salt in N i satu N er eae — Peas Boilers 25—30ʃ25—30 PPR 12 — 
1 . per S ai sceninn ap ta 90| 49—90 
— — hin as Tate as ssible, shoul indi 
if the ghing as late as possible, should destroy them, | Grinding... |23-25|23-25| 28 —30s | 28 —20s — 
and you “ota then depen od upon dh oa ‘the ae in Foreign . . |24—32|24—32| 32 —34 | 31 —32 — 
Razsits : A JH. The chapter in the“ Boy’s Own Book, small 
SEX oF —.— XYZ, at page 539, in the last Number, New, coe — — | 32—34 | 31—33 32—34 
those said not to be properly fecundated (or — oe — » [243312333] 34—35. | 34—35 — 
are eggs 8 volk.“ He here — oreign gre 3 
statement true in words only, likely to mislead, for very nee * — 
— 1 . s ir p= a agg and, in| Binseed—Feed au E š 40 —42 40 —42 — 
ra or ‘Caren ; d Cumbrian another column, Foreign . . |36—41/36—4]| — oi “ 
a ar eme for cultivating 11 acres of land so as to obtain 16 2 
of green food from them in every month; 16 tons per riti eek -m 
month, or a cwt. per day, will keep probably 6 to 8 cows, Foreign ... oe ee = 71. 128 81. 2s = 
STRAWY 8 Z, Try common salt on the corn * ae 
dressing in April; also silicate of potash — bor bes Indian Corn— |22—26/22—26| 26s— 
ended on peaty soils for this , 22—2622—26 29s | 26s—29s 
Wuear: A 1 You sow and compost of p. sack|p 280 Ibs. 280 Ibs. 
Flour— 36—44 3—44 33-34 32—33 36—40 


i 
TEH 
fig 


OATS. 


19s 4d 
8 9 25 


> 
— ———— 
ae | oe | mee mm ze | | 


1 * 71 


* r 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 575 


Second Edition, Revised and Enlarged, price As. 6d., 


F RURAL CHEMISTRY 


an Elementary Entroduction to the Study of the Science in its 
Relation to Agriculture. 


.I F. L. 8; 


Honorary Member of the Royal Agricultural Society of England, Professor of Chemistry r the Horticultural Society of 
Company’s Military Seminary at Addiscombe, de. & 


a. 


F. G. S., 


ble East India 


ede. 70 THE SECOND EDITION. 


+ Tate 


ined. The whole has been carefully re and 


a Second Edition of this little book, the o t vised, 
Ae Bare In — the „Tables of a have been 1 greatly extended, by the po of the 


4 ty has 
throughout been made, as the 8 of — — necessary. 
Sirasi most — Analyses of almost all those plants which are cultivated as crops, 


CONTENTS OF THE VOLUME. 
Bleaching by sul- Colours, changing , Fibre, woody Iron Mercury, chlorides | Phosphate of lime | Salt, s — of 
phur Fib Iron combusti ercury, oxides of Phosphate of mag- Salt, roc s 7 — be — 
Bl Colouring matters- Fibrin, vegetable Iron in plants Metallic alloys nesia Sulphate of m: 
Blubber Colours, vegetable | Fir-ashes Iron, oxides of Metallic oxides Phosphoric acid Salt’ pn a in ne * 
ones za e n, peroxide Metallic Phosphoric acid in| water Sulphate of potash 
Bones, boi — Fire-damp Iron, protoxide Metals plants alts Sulphate of potash 
Bones of calves Combinat: sh, refuse Iron pyri Milk 9 22 acid in Salts, Epso d poiha £ ad 
Bones of fishes p aming predueed Fixed oil Iron rust Minium Salts, Glauber’s Sulphate of soda 
Bones of horses y ri ammonia Iron slags ixture Phos epho alts of hartshorn Sulp tes 
Bones of oxen Combi nine number | Flam — — orda: Pickling — Salts of iron Sulphur 
Bones of pigs Combustion Flag Iron, sulphate of Mortar — Salts of magnesia | Sulphur in plants 
Bones of sheep Combustion, results | Flint Tron, sulphuret — gold Pla omposition | Salts of the me ts p 
Bones and sul- 0 Flour Irrigatio Mou Salts of potash v t of iron 
phuric a Co sa Flowers Isinglass Mouldering Plants death of Salts of soda — of lead 
Bran Composition of ani- | Flowers, their affect | Ivory Mouldiness — — © | Sand Sulphuret of silver 
Brass mal matte on the air KELP Mucilage 22 Sapphire Sulphuret of ti 
Bread Composition of or- Fluorides Lactic acid Muriate of ammo. ria effect on the Sawdus ar gas hy- 
Bricks anic matter Fluorine Latent heat nia Sea fowl, excre- : 
Brimston Composition of Food of phai ad Muriate of lime Plant ments dupa acid 
British gum plants Food of plants Lead, carbonate M Plants * thof | Sea-wa Sulphurous acid 
romide of magne- | Composition of soils Formation of see Lead, oxides sia Plants, nutrition of | Sea-weed un flower 
sium Composition of Formation of soils | Lead, sulphuret Muriate of potash | Plants, their ele- | Seed, formation of | Sunflower-seed 
Bromides nes ul smells 2 Muriate of soda men — germination per-salts 
Bromine omp , binary | Freezing, effects Lea Muriates Plaster stone Super-phosphate of 
Buckwheat Compounds,definite | Freezing of water j office of Muriatic acid Ploughing, subsoil Selection by plants — 
Buckwheat straw Compounds, saline- | Fruit egumine scle Pond mud Shells Super-tartrate of 
Burning mpounds, ter- ruit, ripe Mustard, black Poppy seed Shell sand potash 
Burning lime an ater- | Fruit, ripening of — tils Mustard, white Potash Silex Swedes 
Burning of plants nary it, unripe Lentil straw Nar urn, coal tar Potashes Siliea 1004 
Burnt clay 3 Site Fumigating by Nascent Potash, bitartrate | Silica, chloride Tarnish on si 
Butter lorine Light, effects of Nature of the soil Potash, carbonate —— in plants Tartarie acid 
CABBAGE Fumigation by sul- | Ligbt, influence on | Natural oo Potash, caustic —— soil, use of | Tartra 
Cabbage, red ——— matter phur plan Nightsoil Potash in plants lic Teeth 
Calamine Copper ungi Lighting a fire N — disin- Potash in the soil State — — Ternary com 
Calcium Copper, oxide Fur from water nin Potash, — of | Silica 4 — Tests, vegetable 
Calcium, chloride | Copper, pyrites AS Nite Potash, nitrate Silic Thern 
Calomel Copper, sulphate Gas coal Lime, action on soil | Nitrate — potash Potash, —— of Silicate Ape — Tiles 
Candle, burning of | Cop — as, inflammable Lime and salt Nitrate Potash, silicate Silicate of soda Tin 
Cane, suga Gas,manufacture of | Lime, biphosphate | Nitrate of — Potash, sulpha Silicie acid Tin, oxide 
Carbon ‘omnis sublimate — liquor Lime, burning Litrates otassium ilicon Tin plate 
Carbon in plants am as liquor, strength | Lime, carbon Nitre Potassium, chloride | Silver Tin, sulphuret 
Carbonate of am- | Cream of tartar me, caustic Nitre beds Silver, oxi Tobacco 
monia Cr 9 2 rotation of Gas works Lime, hydrate Nitre, cubic Potato haulm Silver, nitrate Toasted cheese 
Carbonate ofiron | Cubic latine ime in plants Nitric acid Potato starch Silver, salts of Treacle 
bonate of lead Cultivated lant Germination e, muriate Š —.— 2 232 of Potato, sweet Silver, sulphuret Tropical countries 
prea sag acce- | Lime, nitrate itric acid Pottery Skimmed mi ubers 
Danas lerated ime, oxalate S mure 88 active Skin Tur ashes 
Decay, influence of | Glauber salts Lime, phosphate Nitrogen Proportional Slaking of lime Turni ore 
lim Glass ime, silicate of 1 Kaen Protein Slugs Turpen 
. like burning Gliadine Limestone Oak Proto-salts Smells, foul Turpentine, oil of 
Decay of humus Glue estone, magne- Oat Jarn Prot-oxides Smelting TE of ammonia 
Decay, results of Glue, refuse ian Oats Proximate animal | Soap N 
Decay, under water Gluten Lime, sulphate principles Soap-boiling Uric acid 
Decomposition Gold Lime, super-phos- | Oil-cake g Soap, decomposi- | Urine 
Decomposition of | Gold, chloride a , cas Putrefaction tion of rine, cows’ 
Gold of pleasure Lime, when useful | Oil, cloves Putrefaction, influ- sash | Urine, hors 
8 Gooseberries Lime, when not to Oil, con- n ence of lime Urine, human 
Dew Grain of wheat used Oil, drying Soda, carbonate Urine, putrid 
Dextrine rapes Limes, juice of Oil, fixed matter Soda in rocks Urine, pigs” 
Diam amond Grape-seed Oil of lavender Putrid urine Soda in plants agen sheep 
Grape sugar Liquid manure Oil of lemons Putty powder Soda, muriate Use of leaves 
8 of plants Grass Liquid manure Oil, linseed Pyrites Soda, nitrate Use of plants 
Distillation Greaves nks Oil, mustard Pyrites, copper Soda in Vapour condensed 
4 — scrapings Green m Litharge Oil, olive Ervoligneous acid | Soda, silica’ cold 
Caustic potas Double salts Green ver Ou, pores rolignites Soda, sulphate Vapour in the air 
Cellars, foul n in f Dough Growth of plants Loss of manure oa ra Wr ium Vegetable alkalies 
Draining nies ucerne of t turpentin: e Quaternary com- | Sodium, chloride | Vegetable manure 
Drainage water Gum arabic Lungs of animals oil, Spee we unds ter ermili 
Dung Gum, cherry-tree | MAGNESIA Oil Quicklime ch 
Dung, cow Gum, resin Kagan, carbon. | Oil 8 Quicksilver Soil, colour of Vetch straw 
Dung, farm-yard Guano i KAIN water Soils, analysis of inegar 
Dung, horse Gunpowder e in plants | Oily matter pone seed Soils, n | Vitriol, blue 
ung, pig Gypsum — muriate | Ores, roasted cabbage of riol, 
Dung, sheep HAIR Ma; pe a phos. | Organic acids Red lead Soils, exhaustion of | Vitriol, oil of 
Dung, rabbit Hard water Organic man Refuse of gas works | Soils, formation of Vitriol, white 
Dutch rush Hartshorn wu ignesia,silieate of | Organised matter | Rennet ils, mixture o Volatile alkali 
Dying ay Magnesia, sulphate | Organic ma Resins Soils, nature of tile 
EARTE Heat Magnesian lime- Organic subs Respiration Solder 
rth nut Heat, animal Organic substances = of eombus- | Soot WALNUTS 
Earths Heat, influence on | M um in soils tio Sorrel ater 
Earths, alkaline a Magnesium, chlo- | Oxalic acid Results of putrefac- | Spirit of salt „ air in 
Heat, sensible Magnesium, oxide | Oxide, carbonic Rh Spring 
E substances | Hemp-seed Maize Oxide of copper Rice Springs Water, its composi- 
nts Hoofs Maize straw Oxide of iron Ripening of fruit 
Efi Hordein alt xide of lead River mud Steam Water, its freezing 
Egg, white of Horn alting Oxide of manganese | River water Still * in 
tricity, influ- Horns Malie acid Oxide of mercury Road drift Straw Water, phosphoric 
ence on plants Humates Mangan xide of silver Rocket ae i T 
Elem Humic acid Manganese in Oxide of tin k salt ater, pure 
Em Humus plants xides, metallic * L Straw ofpuckwheat Water, rain 
m sali Humus, decay of | Manganese,oxide of | Oxygen sala ater, sen 
Equivalent Soro excess of Mangold Wurzel | Papen bleached by | Roman vitriol Straw of maize Water, soft 
55 chl Roots Straw of oats Water, spring 
sea 3 carbu- Manures, animal | Paring Rotation of crops | Straw of Weed ashes sip. 
fowl an farm. yard Parsnip R Straw of vetch Weeds 
Exhaustion of soils | Hydrogen, its light. Manure ceed Paste Rushes, Dutch traw of wheat Wheat grain 
Expansion ess Manures, Pearlash iron trong manures Wheat straw 
Explosion of fire- | Hydrogen, sulphu- | M: „ Rye Sub-salts Wheat starch 
Pp retted Manure, liquid Pea-straw Rye straw bsoil hite lead 
WING cE nures, organic | Peat ashes SACCHARINE matter | Subsoil ploughing White of egg 
Farm-yard dung Indian corn Manure, p ago tum Wine 
Fat Indian rubber tion of Per-salts Sainfoin ation from | Wood ashes 
Fat of animals Indigo ure, sa Sal-ammoniac Woody fibre 
eathers Iuflammable air Manure, strong Petre, salt Saline compounds | Sug ool 
F norganic in Man etable po 23 manures Sugar of lead Wool soap 
Fermentation, pu- | plants Maple sphates Sugar refiners’ 
trid Iuorganie manures | Marble — — earthy Salt x ake -ia waste Yeast 
Fermentation pro- | Inulin Marl a” of alu- Salt, b Sulphateof alumina 
Matches alt, on A oe of ammo- | Zinc 
acid 1 Mechanical division Phosphate of ame Salt in sea water Zine, chloride 
Fertility Iodine in sea water Mercury monia Saltpetre | Sulphate of copper | Zinc, oxide 


PUBLISBED AT THE OFFICE OF THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, 5, UPPER WELLINGTON STREET, STRAND, LONDON ; 
, AND MAY BE HAD BY ORDER OF ANY BOOKSELLER, 


576 THE GARDENERS’ 


IMPORTANT SALE OF 6 AND GREENHOUSE 
T. 

— PROTHEROE anD 3 are 
favoured eee instructions by Mr. J. Smith, to offer 

to Public Competitio m by Auction, | on the 8 Dalston, 
on TUESDAY, ri 18, 1849, t 11 o’clock, 
in consequence of the premises red by the London 
and See West 1 Rone Junction R y Co rg are 


with blo 


and Geen house Plan 
ticularly worthy the attention of No 
the Trade.—May be viewed a week peio to the Sale, whe 
Catalogues may ls. each, returnable to purchasers, 
of the 35 Seedsmen in London, on the premises, 
Covent Garden, and ef the Auctioneers, American sery 
Leytonstone. 

The valuable Nursery Stock will be offered to public 
competition early in October. 


be ned, 


CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


ASTEN E LIVERPOOL AGRICUL- 


SOCIETY. 
Patrons—The Right Ho on. the Earl of DERBY and 
WILBRAHAM EGERTON “a 

President for the Yea — — Right Hon. Lord De Ta 
THE ANNUAL SHOW OF LIVE STOCK, IMPLEMENTS, 
SEEDS, AND ROOTS will be held in the TH HAY- 
MARKET, LIVER TEDN; eo THURSDAY, the 27th Sept. next. 
Th he Co ompetition fo for e, & c. yy i is open to all parties within 


IMPORTANT TO NURSERYMEN, FLORISTS, MARKET 
GARDENERS, AND OTHERS. 
ESSRS. MOODY AND NEWBOLD are cng 
Ped een fo e by 
in e ent Lots, on T 
— days (unless previously disposed of by Private Con- 
tract), ail the RSERY and pote: 
ay Le ae e., of _ Messrs. Wilson — Sa 


eee which are compre large orna- 
Trees a _Ev vergreens, collections of choice 
F 


Geraniums, Heaths, Epa 
ment of Fruit Trees 8, traine 
8 Nectarines, mcr Plums, Apples, Pears, Cherries, 
rae * Par chong rig in all stages of 

uracarias, Cedar: unipers, Pinu n orna- 
mental ‘thorns, Laburnams, Hollies, Limes, Oaks, Elms, and 
Yew nelusive of Foret 
Tree 


Wilo ow, saai on Poplar, th a large stoc 
Spruce, Oak, Elm, &c.; ebe for progression of A 
Pears, Plume, Ke. d beds f Yew, Hony 8 Lara 
Quick, &. The sale will poe gan at the s Nur rsery, 
at 11 o'clock, unless an entire sale be N aa viously, o 
which n 1 will be given in the Derby Mercury of the Yon 
* 28 
* 


= The Auctioneers — prepared to treat for the entire s 
the Stock of either Nursery, up to me 18th ete and 
d roved security. The nt is on 
in tl aa 

ffords an opport 3 which rarely We — parties com- 
encing 2 usiness in one of the m portant 8 towns. 

e St. Peter’s Nurs 1 contains ant 5 nag s beauti- 
ally 3 pion 5 minutes’ walk of the Derby: Railway 
tation, sery at Littleover contains ibe Land ye 
ied therewith, pe adapted ‘ae Market Gardens) about 32 
eres. Further on may be had of the Pde a, 
Derby, Septe 9 3 


10 
O BE SOLD, 
old and long, established | NUR 
—— 8 - Nur p carie many y yaar Mi 
Messrs. er Y, AD. nd H The e 5 is gebe 
N 


th + + 


BE hah a 
AP AR 
4 


RSERY AND SEED 
by 1 “CONTRACT, sone 
= SEED 


and the senda t oa — Fag partis iculars, apply r. JOH 
yee Natsir Seedsman, Newington Butt: i ondon ; 
i ROBERT DONALD, Saneren, Woki ivg, Surrey ; or to 
OLE and TURNER, Solicitor s, 68, anbury, London. 


URSERYMEN, FLORISTS, AND Q 


To. BE 3 OF, by Private Contract, 5 


Lea-brid se For ee apply 
mises, or o 1 5 tonsto phat Reet 
Cc TO a ERYMEN AND OTH 
_ Piked OSED OF, by Private. Contract, the 
that excellent improving NU y BUSI 


Soufio 
le young Stock, wet pow n a very flourish- 
iksi property of. een William Ireland. The prin- 
unds 


f v. 225 
ing peni raona 
= Lease of 30 


—— Crs of the Nursery G 
20 of * roprietor will 
na portion of the — shy asa posal ag it required. All 
Tetrers g 3 to W. GRIBBLE, Esq., Solicitor, Barn- 
le r. W ND, Stanhope Arms, Holsworthy. 
8. 


Oe PLANTS ror SALE, the property 


to leave his situation. 
d in 


ond; iraire from any part of the kingdom may 
pe's wn by non-Subscribers on payment of an entrance fee of 
ls. nor and by Subscribers free 
The Entry to be made y letter e g to the Secretary, 
5 — 13th and 20th of September 


The SPECIAL SENEN AD MEETING, to award prizes for 
the ae AE Farms, Crops, &c., will be rer at — 
Neptune Hotel. 8 te the 20th Sept., at g ock, 


Prize Lists, Rules, blank Certificates, and ev cates intor. 
mation, ma be had — . to the Secretary, Mr, HENR 
HITE, Land-agent and r, Warringto 
Warrington, | Septe m * e 
( ; ALVA peng WIRE —.— NETTING.— 
per yard, 2 feet wid 


‘ Galvan- J 3 — 
ised, Iron, 
2-inch mesh, light, 88 wide ... 7d. per yd. 5d.peryd 
5 inch ,, strong “a 9 i 65 „ 
2-inch „extra strong,, 5 1 9 ” 
inch „ light 75 sis 8 ” 6 » 
-inch ,, strong 10 8 ” 
-inch 45 ae strong, * 14 11 ay 
All the can be made any width at proport mate price 


fthe Sipe half is a coarse mesh, it will reduce the price one- 
fourth. Galvanised sparrow-pro oof netting for pheasantries, 3d. 
Patterns forwarded post. frees 
BARN gree BISHOP, Market-place, 
Norwich, paa delivered free of expense in London, Peter- 
or Newcastle. 


GRICE FOURPENCI 


ENCE, OF ANY BOOKSELLER. 
6 1 2 age NUMBER x SATURDAY 
, SEPTEMBER 

Ar 


N UM, 
JOURNAL 251 ENGLISH AND FOREIGN LITERATURE, 
ENCE, AND THE FINE A oy 
ye, oll mt Large Quarto Pag 
eviews or, WITH EXTRACTS 
eee from_the Select a “ee Doty 2 L Califoraia. 
Revere, Lieut. 


“A Tour 


T 
Heinrich e Kleist's Life and 
Let 


and Surgery. By J. ia 
A History of the Lif [Heinric von 
Richard e ir Kiog Kleists a und Briefe, 
1 1 By G . F. R &c.] Edited by Edward von 
ulow. 


tin 

* Fapers.— P. : (Sickness in Spring’ The 
Probable Causes in Operation to produc Pestilential 
Cholera, by Robert Hunt, Esq. 

Foreign Correspondenc ae otes of a Tour from St. 
Sebastian to Azpeitin, and a 
Ignacio de Loyola. 


Gos ssip.— Restorations at Westminster at 

—The Silver oath Ours of a Bronze Statu 

the Memo hg of D ni Can sai at 5 
10 d the — —Note the ical Fes- 
tivals (the Liverpool Philharmonie Fe. an ‘Royal Ita- 
lian Opera, Covent-garden (‘D Giovanni’) — Sadler’s 
Wells Theatre (‘The Tempest New Strand Theatre 
(‘ Katty from Connaught’). 
ell Chole z- Ancient Stone 
„Preservation Leeches— The 
Roman Wall—Phillips’s Fire e Annibilator—Railways in 
kets—Mining 


; Ly 5 vars., Skinneri and cr Streets— aie ian Mus Casual 
nanthus, 6 vars., good plants, in baskets. Also Odontoglos- 
sum Cattleya Forbesii, — we esa aoa ye 88 le plants. Ore OEY Bookseller. 
The Advertiser would be Head- This day, 16mo, with 20 plates, price 3s, Gd. 
Gardener in a Nobleman or rrio arbet family, err) pry (%9 2 few copies coloured, price 78.), 
desired, bring a Sincoows plants with L E N A BOTAN 
him. he is beg and aged 30, ee s for first For — -= = Beginners. By T. S. RALPH, A. L. S., & c. 
— vi „ Ke. Address T. F; London: WILLIAM PAMPLIN, Frith-street, Soho. 
2 Just 1 6 72 pages 7 price only 1s. 6d., posta 5411 
HA F — da the Parish of Wadhurst, Sussex, about ACT, -o August 1, 1849. GILBERT’S Verbatim E n, 
4 miles from Tunbridge Wells, consisting of a good Farm | With a very useful and copious Consulting Index. “By. a 
i d dings, and 202 e: — Arabiy 1 — ster. This is the most im nt act connected with the 
of a few acres of Hop G ound. subject that has been passed during t the present century, ~~ 
Farm called the Grove, at Nizélls, in the. Parish = Tonbridge; bining as it does a concentration of 
consisting of a moderate-si w Farm House and Bolldings, is paste that this full though edition should goo — 
extensive ee amongst the 3 at large. 


— 3 aleen of Arable ma — * or particular 


L, 25, Gresham- street, City. 
5 BE AE PASTURE, axo DAIRY 
160 Acres of 3 


= 


O BE LET fora tenet a: 


nat 
. next, the Farm oe 
at prese 


n entered u 
8 of W ae = Parish of 

It 
3 — o ut 409 a acres of Nealon: 
land: the ee land is most productive of Beans astare, and E 
most of the P Pasture and Meadow land is of the richest 


here is an ex nt Farm Konik. with ev 
venience, and the Farm-buildings are large and paneis hetas 
and eco cally f up and arranged for fattening a large 
number of beasts in feeding-houses, stalls, sheds, and T 
The Farm 8 Hailsham and EB istbourne, 
10 miles from S, Market town, and vores 4 


tings Rai rticu- 


— station on the Lewes and way. 
3 to o Mr. Joux Sorton, Whittield, pae lous. 


person at Folkington Place will show the Farm, 


SHIP. 
RKSHIRE 
> ioana Docks, will be ce for the 
y’s Settlements, from the aie 8 
ay, the 1st of October n 


REG A 


of Passage, Provisions included: 


Chief 
For each Person, Cabin. Cabin. Steerage 
Guineas. Guineas. Guineas 
14 zan 3 and upwards 3 25 18 
Ty and under 14 wee 88 3 15 n 
1 Soki ran an er 7 N * 
nder | year gue 3 
2 experie urgeon 3 appointed by the eee 1 — 


1 eee provided 
provided 
for persons paying in full 2 cate irs 1 in the Steerage, 


For Freight, Passage, or her information, apply 
New — House; or to Mr. OSEPH STAYNER, Pg 
110, Fenchurch-stree By order of the Court, 


t, Lon don, 
Tomas CUDBERT HARINGTON. 
New see House, 9, Broad-street-buildings, 
London, September 8, 


isit to the Birth-place of | me 


[Szpr, k 


RUSSIA 
ALERED BALSTON begs ge es 8 
moderate . — * offer A 11285 of best quality — * 


Poo 


Just 5 renee 
[HE NEW HUSBAN DRY; on Kean 


NDB — 
the * e 1 drawn p 5 5 rot * 
inen riet 
Observation. _By Lit 1 rurlsts Pre Re Vaig 
London : LONGMAN, 2 


3 : 
SEED CORN FROM eae 77 FARM, a i 
TED. i 


SE 
R. HEWITT DAVIS ben 


am 

ussian Winter), and Peas of e ? 
selected for finer feeding quality and laren 63, ; Red d 
alier Barley, from winter wing, at 5s 3s, êd; 


3, Frederick's place, Old Jewry — 
HIS TEE USUN í 
NT gained th Agricult! 

I ciety’s ENT i 1849, at: Bs 


as] 


DA NEWINGTON'S DIBBLE 
T. TONBRIDGE 


KNOLE PARK.FRAN 


A PROSPECTUS SENT ON APPLICATION. 


80 

for em Teeth. 1 

culty, as pe A with pe 
of which are permanen 


by return of po 
Whit Ayat: 


uced n 
ear Be “on te cop rande 
It is netre, r therefore, to guard against such 
seeing t of Jon WILLIS insompanies each 


Vögte FB ins Co 's NEW PA 
RUSH and i SMYRNA SPONGE 


stablabmen 
ee dene ofthe words From Mercur“ 
by some houses. 
T'ano THE L 


LADIES Tho povi ma 
ie skin at peia ts delicacy 


of Insects 


jeware se yen = KALYDORS 


arer th 


b — 
e ot St. Pancras, and 4 p, 

toke 

in 1323 ns 


+ 


MHF Gi 
URAL s yT 
E 


A Stam. 
ped N 
ews 
paper 
of R 
ural 
Eco 
nom 
ws.—The 
Horti 
cultur. 
al P 
art 
Edi 
ted 
by Pro 
fess 
or Lin 
dl 
ey, 


N 
= tt nee nenas ratae 
URD 
AY 
, SEPTEMBE 
R1 
5. 
[PRICE 6d 


‘Adder ins 
mexicana, fo 
* IND 
os 3 tn andra 888 5 ri 
eee E Feen 
hci. 3 a Nan top of. 
after 7 3 of 
(Mr.) r. 583 M ped aE TAEC 
pam 1 Wa cial . 
e. eee Pama | 20 a CHOICE 
aft: 683 ensign on a 
Enan Rat iM nium — ANI 
Plants, di 5 7 8 * s season A a x 
5 3 a 
0 Politic apg of. 583 a for pig chasers’ ill ‘rer e DLE T LO 
Polyst € en 882 HO 8’ selec 5 AND C WP 
Potat e i QU YLE tion o y the Gt etoi 0., P RIC 
savi onc d EE 8 fT firs ck o 1 ES. 
jani ng hitis * 5 Ebr N, CR WE f les ymou uth, 
7 = at a: * 58h e sara oe 9 Ny, fom 8 have EDR 
egg of e ebi ere al G U 
te New S 8 n aa F hal, M ury B 1 era- 8 
tato, C : . 58 la bunt E J la A fu D 
| Tie mas s. 585 oes a 5 bs 2 e y 1 o, fg —— Prinoe, Start 1 ts and hea formed th 9 
— stirr i 8 925 2 1 er. sab org sdem: carle tar V „tree th th e A 
— See aot 275 e 177 f to e LES CRU ella, Stani e VIRGIN et en stoc — egen Fmt TRASCA IA Time 
— : m Ld pd e t a 
. oes Gardens « Surrey erly. SADER dof erke mbrance, Th terete: Ar ore a 4 — abov nd Co. | d Pl ARIA 
OHN Stat = S il, implemen verted Zoo ders ana rection 9 — Ta he P + Ancaria * to offer a high 11 —— IMB 
CH SEED c Vitia kai 1 seers 12 we are RNO Siri Fl eri, iy Tia! 18 t 15 tthe y or th are RI- 
six H AT LIN ales, rdening ee 2 8 desi LD’ us, Duc — N hes 5 nam most ven 
: eS ANG HOUT HOG — 4 jog ur 8 sired, i S VIRGIN uc The usual ata, er mag ‘pices extensive 
K is in tcce 5 0 s Nu 1 ce verg 
EN ei at ON HO one ee w re Cat RENDL ome QUE reer. aie axger ot — bs 33 reen 
e oe hey beg 12. 888 4 ady, alogu of the EN, | 780 S tireat Yar . ee 
o Lo ere E to vise 589 a an 57 H 1 iler a Ol. 100 
Be ree eae teflon ae eee a Hyacinthe and m 55 85 i 55 
t th r colou Th rd > of Gr D wih e s ad, P est —Thi D ae 
Aara —Th — Nu our, & eset Obs is t the acech EN SA 8 a roll lymou' abli 1s CA FD rm s t 
m e D rsery, * he follow! ur ¥ TR 8 the" F shed AN R UT ore 
eee by 3 ry, Have That, toe —— Hyacinth, “i 3 1 8 EDUCE} spe 2. h, | Laue s, is n madan BONISE! AND are taken. 
promptly * sa Pe TERG rote een 1 D P Tos | Anemo Hyacia fe nga whieh SED AN CAP 
E apatins ith ero” atalogu ffolk ays Hyacinth eae gent Sei tend on marie Fae ou one. punio 0, prepar tho As ale BEAL BULB 
AME dto fno jed E e 18 i of RO 8 . — s- per dozen named, n Hol land, pure oe the cult oe — 3 ready acq M ANU me 
MES CHARTRE . polyanthus Ni Kerra be Sele ed, suitable á 18 amet are ‘eet are reg Pe of thes, other re 8 Ke pres NURE. 
t, R LO awb ps rre or d m ea arc i o to y | BU ques 75 at d of b ma oomi us- an 
large As an nee L ES, S WER bridewo A responden li- | Tris m ait pia ch parat . oie ihare BS or 8 pr 2 Balbous or tuber 2 ly 
args Atom the ondon EEDSM OOT prih * will Do., Engli wy vari ie , choice so jour — © ‘bein other 8 Ae 9 8 per- 
t nt o Pubie g be: A 8 erts b ., Spa ish, b ietie sin sorts, 3 „ v0 ents o ng a ap partic r, pa peri ded rou ulus 
ienie” Catalo f c gs &e i e s— n e T pli ul rt od S- 
12717 pir is ove % 7 4, bi Gi Spanie pan ae es ate ry good 6s. Od thus he — q in ies, in for pl be ous-rooted 
OUBLE R B are pie e g Wil 8 a ed, all co * ed, the wa 21 0 8 ee aceon — — pon in 
} which SSU 0 u be had arkab as Pate has o inf 11 W. D teb, ndid urs, v. ed t and 4 0 e pla: nd nthem arn on in y req nether posag 
+ e ik = 775 A za i fin er an 1 8 pb f. b. feels cont 8 genui a = 2 . ating o ga i the eons m we 4 
iy Eee ak- e aim sent prer onside the abon ene be to the Cm be Pinks ire he manare; 
EE ae pes Ji N ete emg °° [ie he’ above eaten e 8 Pirie: 
of whi ps, A — T purit; bs, th NA e had ng all carri: 8 . yt ki -stree ad that i all do as, Ciner * paes 
ich nem 1 ia Fa and sA for R on a th age. titi give sati 12 bs | of sol ing t, Lei of HEN is At. the 
== ia Pe wan N e TEs ee wid aires trea ‘a ae 
D: n 0 gn av: war glee a „each uanti ne arial in are 8 2 
LANDS NUT — Dutch a aa — — co WBER peen 2 ‘pric oad Pa caniste tity for be ini pani compa ia Seat sdb 
8 0 „ £ r ng i n s 
LLIA S NURSE DATA de.; pried acinths, Alpin "correct ton 0. d to RIES. avieties of Hyacinth chown 3 . He et in canister &e. 
P T KF RY; ALO * e Whi lye 8 o ma . * 3 ” 
and 0 EL M GU seg ” ite per 1 meg ste ; JAg b ga n Gl y wi e. . a xes 1s. 
a ang te t > e gen Sere” ieee dp gie ag e ct 1 ne tine fo sana 
eir na rle p> a 6 3 o be of i 0 R i se 
: hew to other all Snes th NEAR Conk. 700 i 8 : 6 La Liege ie : 5 to — e een oF ea 
and v patties. have. now TIVE e pleasu zie or Sir e e é 3 per 108 H.C en 1 y En R 1 re fi r mann 
in the ae it wi favo publi CAT Cut iat G.M ite 3 6 are m S 99— condi - has, ch is rein glish botti N P ully er, th 
pres des will ured ished. ALO re of | D hill e SC. ack w 5 M eedli z 3 aud itio zu perfi , and Te gias es WD gratiti eir 
LF ent anes be th G 0 arle en- 0 yatt’ in R n, hi rece ectly — of at 2. DER, — 
FRED Stn red ehem witht GUE of oe tect oe pod ROOT een 2 e 
ant Trado mari ST ses ge 0 rte — a . ines... 1 He oe nor. F me 33 10 5 ied 
J. * 8 ON be paa application 27 nd Scarlet 323 EE MESSRS. ee si imports led wih the 
SS a Bale. te i anger autb s Seed e ” ioe ueen ... 7 an x: hieh e th 
Ber le, Sep offer MA to iat nd ois (pr ling.. see ” liza pple th H L d Gen AND REM. e 
ibs re E orm Keen! rolifi ed ’ Proli „ [ya try D H. 18 in 
F prepared to tle N t. 15. 2 — his fr e os fic) . Pa eee 5 N yacinths, 4 UTCH N ROW H BU! fine 
Hee > ; oo igh 8s n LBS * 
ai lection; small p gota ae e i eat ceding. ~ ny Hes. 8 = aps aad At 825 OWN offer t men s 
ot Sn ooh all plants, 8 2 ts of utham very arge, et for the p. do Mg Royal 50 ue Az. aes | 7 any col d ieee BULB o the 1 7 
—. proved 5s eB that pto: seca ine EE 24 E Indi nest s ste emon ands 3 AND obili 
ofeach 8 eigh ed to blo otani beau n, is li of K insto (fine, 25 50 ricas, 2 orts, N 8, ingle, cH ty 
W. ple Rowers, ki with be ae ing pre: pa SWAIN. ALNUTS FO west itley’s Goli e i — P) ed, stil 2 ee i men 
i ad wi sp ikes ardy AIN. UTS mo e-ap) l oliah gPin rea bes dist 6s. ti 
i 4 ith a aa orb 78. "ea - of. eee e — inet 25. o 8s 
splendid = R n length ch ppl g atl yy 12 Noiset n Ros ; one of ea to 3 0 
eae 8 ounge, plant apply to T. x = ALE. 2s, ery h 333 „„ ut n a a 
Ae soe NURSER of beat. FINE 0. 1. — P, e DO malls of per doz ardy, — ee , choi —- eel z 30 8 
at * ae offi 0 ot rts „ h k: 
dee t low prices 5001 aaa Wr AND LATE S ce, King’ miles of of 100 Chr and bard other oiim a oae een ouse Pl 13 
oe ieee UTOR Fl —.— Fi LAND J. tae r F ATESAT a1 “road, Ch oe Trees, emer 2 bing Rose oe steak anis 40 0 
ia Wa S T a em eties 
7 station atte aa an Pairs CAPE Cop; W BERI at plea BAIR RY, i 5575 p nd one- Petit warf Chinete — * Roses, in pote 9 0 
gE a bel 1275 pice at utift th OOT! a larg begs y of Mr RY. sure in N, Cl LA DE „„ Fine Pou inese 1 8, € ums, * i 
WBE can s fre eed 155 — t varietie iria eee te “Dea „ BRucE’s reco ten. apham LICIEU Fine © Perennial Chrysan „ eer Sectinouis 6 6 i 
Be gene ee meses . sam, near Lon . e eee o , 
— » Prin Sg ‘Dl ee eee _ wili and hs estabiishmen espect nt to Mr above e most tees an Belgi , La Li 1 6 
H tfally ree cess Alice M — of th ampton. o free to — — shment, cyte tines s ab excellent Geant a ee ‘ Belgian varied aponne, 6 0 
* K> ek weer Na 0 vd “i z followin Gata. vd be r sorts — Oe ae om A * K. trawberries 3 Taly 23, 1849 6 of garni ons * $, per doz a 12 0 
the tebe full liza ye eg im ing in er, th le istin 3 1849. e f ic e sen , Fu Alr sa 8 
‘ght: fully lay, all Keens’ peters of | ov oar “rather m ee a from pie e s albu ollowin plants nt 7 be P. * 9 
and Two th arieti dresse com Seedli —jr er, ds the od the an u henin comi any e 8 tia; „ pune A beaut all th A etuni 2 
prci 1 a of dasa — “eno Bes hands st ia noa singe ps Sheed * . ple dium, ven 3 ifal Lili e best 8 RPS as, 5 
ate abiit in woes 3 „ a pide A koari, 1 5 4 2 tum, san er, vi orts, 6 
— monte a root age sers.—1 NIU ar tö one smi afi earin ved ers i amely re Gladioi U mt riz, La 8 0 
Blan be ito a larger in 3 0 TE of th —— 8 oat Fadl eer an ord, 3 ao and o last ought y, by 3 *,* k PA in be na — exi um arn 
mtu: y P n the rders „and e s r vari eculi arr our eve y oth ef mo e eA: es rieti an pear 
sao pian = Hoar states ra male to a * pie pret ti erect — 2 ae Hapani” 
; e „ 0 „ er, e re k F ull: om i int to nd gh S rr ery. A 8 
der, or To und, tavus yi ro ad ed, lan y per s 1 to th a Pade bt AR Sto 100 e 
0 ecti vee Sun sbg 3 n Br » wh Pric Jours rson ocom the u ere a mber, berr, Nu D ke N nts an to 0 
. * of 1848 te, A” De ret Si Sulielma, Gri entor mz o Bs. p oe u 23 5 4 0 rae a 8 e Garden š Bo 
i „ x c 
“Florist tago, Isleworth, escriptive € ae Poster ranilor "Foe nde ex dozen, oF 0s. pe ee 2 ot many sate É at 10s. 6 er HENDERS sds of 
t s 3 u r dear 8 è . 
TAR for ee — i 21 re 2 me above $ rmentio ree er hundred. niddle D Sir, very age , with igor 2 on SON, x 1 
iMipcelinay.” p re “pclading the — MA ae are the required fi of the mon 3 22 edgi he up he will oy ta j — 
any,” ure will oHN Do — 1 Maslin, G : A from unk th. the Queen Vict ‘soo — 9 of 48 pe comm fancy. Ge n 
3 ene Mes fecal BSON, Bites —.. T., 2 Son, Gison gents ea 3 2 E. 1 — ictoria Gers sore an, prd ie ot = eran — 
n th i er and to Jeff fi or: H. c e se raato eee ing 
— n th J. ene ne, K M ries ‘or th 8 d be 8 en at niun retai owe der dee out 
of ‘oom Dicks . a okh ent nokie, R., Ips e sale of Teni it trong! the Nar A ns its a and N 
D son rge ull M‘In > -= wich | 1 will y rec ders raw ow trus: lush 
icksop and i Čo, Kidde Mile ntyre, ar, Ni Nor AR gere Aid ömmes zi ing 4.5 oe s larg 
— b Pontey, 4 beg aot ‘allow 8848 5 “the rea at — DT 
etti , Ak Der ry ou a e est 
are oe =: ERAC r wiil beei to the T et of bloo piece and 
Scott Son St. oma fee a LEU: ven. roii m for ever 
Saltm: Mr. if Aber dmun h li e pign n one sun M 00 PTEM me such 
Ski arsh, athfo d's 12 in nt z IGA BER ‘or ev a 
rvin , Ch Ey 12 feet nes ants NT 201d ery 
Sta age Smee ‘nr. Ba Mri summer, in th EUM, three 
IE m 1 th | Seed, udo 2 an 2 th a — is one of 
0 e ns ce. C 
Wat teh, J o, N.B. wE lat vith e ™ Lad with lant some Bienni the ; 
ena 8 „Essex ‘i 8 0 ies’ £ 3 fiut ial most 
„J. on, E | spri TS LA ine s for at es from of 1 1 i 
Ds xet ng. ucce NSI reg 1 ‘om 5 stem bi 14 { 
Man er till Nov and e ssional GNIS, wing, 1 P toT f ite fl 6or8 | 
chester Twen re 2 ly in — 1 hi vee “feet wid owers, 
i Spleen . er l 1b. 85 Siig a is noted Tacke See 
3 — y An 2 8, 0 annu et o 
Son, nuals per ispl r.e al fl f 
Seed a aa 8 10 of 110 ging pe; k 
growers All t „ per Ts vs fr utur ay 
7 Mak above o., om M un 
ildon arch 


578 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, 


[Szpr, 15, 
— 


HEPPARD’S “WINTONIA” GERANIDE vil be ARTLEY’S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS S Bee and, g AND CO. 61, - 
S sent out the first week in October ne str — FOR 3 N This w en te Fee ous T 2 * — 17, New Park. str b Gracechurch-ateg, 
a — size pots, Jls. eac has been greatly improved, and we can now su it free from nufacturers of t Sout Í 
mapa 60 siap pot the trade’ Js ek p, Nursery od all irregula igs of st fectiy flat and at the ee e boi 
8 to > ae eat "hia WINTONIA is an e Pa entees, “cu to order in panes of | scientific Hortie ulturists to thei T 
pea paisa — a first-rate fancy variety.— Agents in a by 10 under foot. Sad. 1270 an under 3 * fa. applying the Tank System to pear tg paDrored ted i — 
London: Messrs. Hurst and M‘MuLLEN, Seedsmen, 6, Tandas. 3 fee 64d. 5 fee C., by which atmospheric heat a s well as me teen 4 
Ball. street; Mr. N. 8 , Nurseryman, Battersea ; Mr. W. 5 fect Tid. 8 feet. 843. secured to ant y required degree, wi rth eaid j bottom n 2 Í 
* Nurseryman; 4 Pee LOKETS IN BOXES * 95 ‘ee each. 8. and Co. h also to state yl att the 0 8 a 
ee he a good s me under-named varieties, at 18. 6d. 6 by 4 and 6} by 43. E 6a, iS an by 5%.. =. friends they ake now making r hota’ ' 
each, via, “Sheppard's. Beauty os of Winchester, Sheppard’s Queen 8 by 6 and 8} by 63...13s. 64. Tia $- . by which the wost is * of tron, aaah 4 
Victo ris; Sheppards Lady R » She ppard’s Lady Flora Milk Pans from 28. to =. each, Metal Hand- “trames, Tiles, p so well known, scarcely require dese ji 
Hastings, Sheppard’s Pri gees Ab Maud. Slates ; Propagating Bee Glasses from 2 ach; Cucumber thos ne ‘whet have not seen the * ription, but 
42, High- street, Winches 3 ld. p 3 Lench epea. 10d, ea 3 hoir. Was a p Traps, 3 es as wal as referenc e of tho hig —— wil 
8. 6d. per dozen; Pas a yacin asses and Dis es, seen ost of à 
NAYS APPLICATION FOR THE IMP * Shades for Ornaments, Fish Glo bes, Plate and Wind song Nur * throughout ee 8 dom. obility’s seats an and pnt 
ENT OF CELERY, SEA-KALE, CARDOONS, RHU- | of every description, and Lamp Shades. Lactometers ie trying S. and Co 1 to inform the Trade that at the 
BARB, STRAW RIES, &c.—By means of Roserts’s Regis- | the quality of Milk, 4 tubes, 7s. 6d; 0 tubes, 105. Self. — 17, New Park-stre eet, every article pores f eir Man — 
tered Sockets, these articles are much improved, if applied in ing 13 for Greenhouses, Horticu 161 of ‘Horticultural Buildings 8, as well as for heating eo nstruction 
season: A pamphlet, with wood engravings, and an exposition of JAMES PHILLIPS and CO., 116, — ms 4 With- 3 aam e most advantageous t ting them, — 
particulars of these and various other . s to e stamps, t out, Londo ba an a . . a of Iron acon erms 
may be had on application, enclosing two postage Ps, ss FOR CONSERVATORIES, ae. FOR CONSERVATORI ES, e. — 3 onies, Palisading, Pian Fg the most 


Mr. Jonny Roserts, Merchant, 34, 1 


Lon 

Norics.—The Garden erao — net July 4,1849, contains at 4 — AND = supply 16-0z. Sheet Glass of “Wine me Go Fan e 

editorial ons, from which the follow ritish Manufacture, at — varying from 2d. to 3d. WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE F 

remarks are extracted: g The principle of the 1 15 per square foot, for — — sizes required, — thousand 1 00 T. 
anta 


By | feet of which are kept . packed for ä delivery. 


about th ge 
such appliances, — by the ‘ale of such — vast and im- Lists of Prices and estimates forwarded, on application, for 
portant results may reasonably be looked for. As connected, PATENT ROUGH PLATE, "THIOK CROWN GLASS, GLASS 
especially withe the e culture of Strawberries and Melons, the use | TILES and SLATES, WATER-PIPES, . 
of these Tiles would undoubtedly add both to earliness and GLASSES, GLASS MILK PANS, PATENT PLATE-GLA 
a e shall repeat, —— — ORNAMENTAL WINDOW GLASS, and GLAS SHADES 
All that we ask on the part of Mr. Roserts, is the thanks of | to James HETLEY and Co., 35, Soho-square, London. 
9 nent for — — ome — in a prominent manner See the Gardeners’ Chr. conte first Saturday in each month, 
a principle of great practical u a ED We 
HEEL BAROMETERS, all Sizes and Patterns, BY HER 
1. 5 to 5b. 5s. 
PEDIMENT OR UPRIGHT BAROMETERS, 11. Is. n. 6s: MAJESTY’S 
Ph pattern —— — — Ea oe oA — F&O ZS 
thet e Barometers 
p — | Le Forno WORKS, KING’S ROAD, CHELS 
siat ENCH invites the attention of Gentlemen ui 


ROYAL LETTERS 


PATENT, 


Poratie > for — Aas 
— gen ei — for 3 the extremes of heat and erect Hothouses, &c., to the vast superiority in every 
cold, of the bes ction, II. 10s., 183., and 153; ditto for respect, „posses: sed by — PATENT ae which he will 
old — 48. 6d. to — 6d. ; ditto: for Baths or 8 warrant super or a eve p ect to others. Good Glass Ppearance, and 
Water in Co or Japan cases, 2s. 6d. to 148.; di ‘or Hot- | from 16 21 oz ee foot, 1 oot Sida a, "3 feet long, furnished, = ; 1 
beds — tiro bottom-heat, 15s. to II. 5s. Superior Achro- | and the Houses 8 completed charged from 18. 3d. to 1s. 6d. . = — oe the depredationsof f 
matic Microscopes, price 31. 12s., 51. 15s., and 91. 10s. Com- per superficial foot, according to size and ef ; * prin- — iit aan a; ANS is paculi _ sr hin 
nd Microscopes, 10s. to 2. 10s. Telescopes, 1, 2, and 3 | ciple, the roof being ee, without wood or putty, and th phates ries, 2 ecure poui ry; 1 d by 
Sess from 15s. to 21. 2s. ; ditto for the pocket, 12s, to 81. 38. Ka principle being wood rafters and the glass put in with | ur ngao 2 1 ate. bly for training all kinds 
Mason’s Hygrometer for showing the degree of humidity in | putty, Patent Tre requiring no paint, from 7d, to 9d. per ft, 18 E PT 48 1 faa ad 4 5 ties always kept ia stock, of 
nhouses, sick chambers, &c., 15s. and II. 10s. Lactometers HEATING BY HOT WATER, 8, 24, 36, and 48 inches wide ; it can, however, be to au 
for showing i the e of Milk, 5s. ing instruments, in | <r _]| dimensions desired. Patterns forwarded free of expense, 


aon 5 wide 46.5 e = = R = na — 
1 


75. 6 24 ” ” Se ” * » * $ 
Bray — warranted and nas SEER if not approved sed do. ‘oot extra. 4 
— Gentlemen wishing for the paus and descriptions of Extra strong 1 — — Wires pone Pesce. —— pins hii 3 
of the above, may have them by writing to that effect. running yard; if galvanised, 28. description of j 
“Hexar | BAKER, Instrument Maker to the Board of Admiralty, Wire Nursery and Fireguards, wire — 5 


ton Garden, London 


HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING aoe * a on a 
4 Flower Trainers, rads 3d. each; en 4 
ALSO THE CULTIVATION Or rrr CHOICEST PLANTS, 1G a DR Sie ee i — Flower Stands, 9d. each; Galvanised Tying Wire for 
VINES, FERNS, &e. 1. e AN Bes + ps : plants and trees, Dahlia Rods, and e vers daa n . 
; fad i : } 3 eaving, for the use of paper-makers, millers, &¢—At 
— the anufactory o of THomas Henry Fox, 44, Skinner-s treet, 
Snow- aa Lond 


GALVAN aed WIRE GAME NETTING.— 
per yard, 2 feet wide. 


RAY, OR RMSON, AND b BROWN, Danvers-street, 

Chelsea, solicit me attention of = Nobility, = eo and 

3 me their superior manner of Erecting eating 
ty descri iption id bes . connect ted with ——— The 

ka Right ye — Earl of — 8, rs 


Which they — — the honour we rring so long, still con. 
tinues — A * satisfactio r- Kingho rn will be happy 
to show the work and give any 2 


O The so beg to vale to the houses built byt hem during the 
past —— for the Worshipful Apothecaries 292 
in 7 2225 ene, 
222 2222 
They 522527 252825 
Heating Apparatus was not erected by them 

+ Gray, OnMson, and B Brown, have also-the honour of sp ae. 
APPARATUS MANUFACTURERS, —— an inspection of their tomany of the nobility — 
various ee now in progress, which will attest as to quality | o * = London Nurserie 


of materials and workmanship. They —* — — ow erected on their Pla anal — furnished free. 

Premises, inspec grea th ouses reen. — —T—:7. s 

houses, Conservatories, ap boa “ag all heated pereen: REDUCTION IN PRICE OF BOILERS. — 8 » Hight, ne jae. fre, 95 m 

WATER in various forms, showing the most improved methods — : E 
and Ventilatin all — rec- 2inch , extra * ” on a 

br Re By means of th they nabled to — — neh y 3 * k 1 

Stove, Greenhouse, Ferns, Po other Plants, i — such immen 1 — 2 rong , n i 

numbers, that they are sold at — — N HALP-PRICE. a 5 2 4 be made any width at proportionate pe. 

Mats, Mushroom Spawn, and 1 — ected with the ithe upper ‘half is a coarse mesh, 923 

fourth. Galvanized sparrow-proof netting 


N and Seed tag Aai ts; Plan gim d 
mee — an mates, and Cata- 


per — are foot. Patterns post- free, 
E. 5 R BARNARD, anı and Eeer ees 4 


\ | 
|| 


REEN AND HOTHOUSES made by machinery, 
warranted best materials.—A se, 12 fest vered 
by 8 feet, glass ends, 1 door, and $ of glass in front, glaze — Rall, — 15 weastle. 
ith 16 oz. sheet glass of a large size, and three co = — i 
of best oil colour, delivered to any railway or wharf in Eason. 0 ON’S ORIGINAL ‘ne Britis ad 
for 1 * . do. 15 by 10, 221. 108.; a do, do, 18 £ as AINT, specially patronised by the 
287. 10s. ;. a do. do. 21 by 12, 321. 10s., 3 a — Beir Prena amns HEALY beg — to inform | Governments, the Hon, East India 9 kind E 
-inch N 1 , glazed ieir F Friends uced price | Dock Companies, most publie bodies, A A E country e 
sheet glass, painted three times, 11}d. — foot; peme Pog ie are are enabled to make u considerable "reduction in | Gentry, "and Ulecgs, for out-door work al as the mo 
er foot.— J. Lewis’s Machine k Hothouse Wor ks, 83 Péir Boilers. o The price w wilt be, 2 The Anti.Corrosion is particular 3 . 
——— tt. 4 in. pipe el 0 durable out- door Paint ever wS — ac 
GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES AND HORTICULTURAL in. 75 NA des „ 0 every description of Iron, be the practical Test 
PURPOSES, uc. Min, do. 100 fl. 4 in. do.. 2 15 0 o., work, as has been proved by the pra 400 and 50 
16 do. 150 ft. 4 in. do. 3 10 0 of 60 years, and by the numer‘ Sen the and 
8 in. 7 250 ft. 4 in. do. 4 10 0 | monials in its favour, an igor have ne 
21 in. do, 350 ft. 4 in. do * 3 40 0 socie! 0 o Rave give 
24 in. do. 450 ft. 4 in. — ü EE 0 oman by anything of the kind hithert bronili a 
ATTERN BOTLERS. public notice. Lists ot Colours and Prices, RCN" eg 
30 in, i ae — 800 ft, 4 in. pipe 15 15 0 ials, will be sent on a — i 
36 in. 1500 ft. 4 in. do... 28 0 0 15, ‘Tokenhouse Yard, back e arly requested to be sont 
ae Boilers with — üble — — to 18 in., 36. extra; to 21 | Agents e ; 
03. extra; all above, the same price. 
150, Flect ateost, Loudon, Sept. Ih, — | ALKALINE — 
RBIDGE AND ; resp pype Linen — — aoe 
their Friends and the Public, they are at = 
— red to undertake the warming of Hothouses, oa — 
uperior system Hot Water Apparatus. — * geet 
under. 8 places, where they have ‘oor to fen 
tensi rs, have opportunities ( cae here beet 
up eee 100 feet and 5 505 8 — Royal Botanic — „ ck; particularly the new | of testing the iste merits a of those ponds ine 
— te the large Conservatory. broug ing Tbe receipt from wi which the abo above Powder de f 
Conservatory, Royal ‘Botanic oe Regent's-park, curing — 1 wend ó 
k Duke of Devonshire’s, Oer rth Garde — — — 7253 00. 
“4 Earl of Gainsbor Oakham, Rut tawe and retail ut METOALFE, . . 
tote. sach. Ou. ubos, | url of Zertand’s —— Yorkshire 7 co ARH, Prince albert, Bs 7 
per inch. Lactometers, 72. A. Robert Hanbury Bea. oles, near Ware, — der will have ‘the Koyal lid-af the bom, box, a assa T 
wareho } i bad on application at thej Mr. Glendinning’s Nursery Turnham-green, RH. Prince Albert, on the 
Eastern Counties D Without, sam * And at —— ` t places, | and address: peenes rm thus, AMEE 
BUBRBIDGE and e 130, Fleet-street, London. 130 B., Oxford-s 


gas 


VIRGIN QUAR GERANIU orien, | 
rin existence. It is a seedling of 847, 
ch RITE flower re — all of which bloomed 
i rom whi ast season, mor — . EXPANDED ae 
t 


tly last 

. counted on them at one ti amongs which È 
| ea vein oo only one imperfect lowes was to be seen 
each, 


if 
t satis Pric 
the 9” aes ort? s 8 


sfaction. 
of that excellent fae 
E. RENDLE & Co., Union-road, Plymou 
Dutch Bulb e just arrived in excellent ep 
Catalogue on appllestion, gratis. 


recommended, ari will be sure he: 


THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 


e 4 nae ertised in our columns, together 


T Economic a tone another 
The m 


th T 

l 
pi co 
obm forward, with barbed points, can be 
ws. These tines are well adapted i Tooke 
nough 


— ATTS dl RAWBERRY, “ELEANOR.” 

J. MYATT 4 3 = prepared * send out hogi ng, the mi must be — otherwise the cutters 
ollowing varieties a e prices 

pos pot ais and the 10s. 64. Fertilised H Rooks. get clo ge e find latter must be kept 
maei ben British Queen, 3s. 6d i Globe, 3s. Mammoth, | very sharp in order to ae all the weeds as com- 
fy, bd. ;, Hooper’s Reodting, %. 2. . 0528 2 Bs 3s. ore pletely as faia be wished. We are not satisfied 
Pa ak Prince, 15s. per 100 . oe | S for paos orpoan, the implement doo does not amit 
Post-off ers are reques o be made payable to s grea OV ermi- 
jours Myatt, Manor ot ST = nating in a flat t triangular sole, clears the centre o 

i LANTS the course v ; but the sharp edges of the 

A Sr Catalogue is now ready, of the best new side cutters f a ar ury: 3 a which 
“ase of OERANIUMS, FUCHSIAS, PETUNIAS, VER * 2 Q 
CNAS, CHRYSANTHEMUMS, ACHIMENES and OTHER | weeds are apt to accumulate and muffle the edges. 
PLANTS. p 2 4 2 . — Cutters with sie MALHA convex lines, resembling | m 
— 8 scimitar: s ar agg, would doubtless clear 
ITT a much better. 

LACK PRIBCE STRAWBERRY .—Strong 
Jen, ofthis STRAWBERRY are eu be Eee ah HAND-DÌBBLE is po the best 
Price, per 100, 15s. ; 50, Éma 25, 58. It is hardy, very early, contrivance ut s ki he holes can z made 

Plite, well l and peers te preserver om os- | with it at any eter" distance ; and their depth 
soms are picked off i ine Br. hindley’s opinion, see | CA also be 25 egulated. The only dra — — 


9. Curuin’s Treatise on the 
r Melon, and Lisianthus,“ 
8 on Camberwell.—JaMEs OUTHILL, 


following STRAWBERRY. PLANTS may — 
true, wil, Su 3 DILLISTONE, Nurseri 
bi 


F ee a 


per 100 


Prin 15s 
: Royal and Comt 4 de Paris (Pelvilain’ s) 7 
Tiga Chi Chief and Prolific Hautbois .. oe 
i aud ; this is beray we very best 
and most ‘productive e early Str: 3 
. ng, 


ry 
Eliza, Bri ritish “Queen, and 


Oli Pine, — ose aa 
8, &c., JUST IMPOR RTED 
SUTTON anp SONS, being extensive im- 


Florists near 


do. 


happy now to mark off suc 
“ae — orders are „ Aggie 
Reading Nursery, Reading, Berks, Sept. 15. 


Se —— 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 


SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1849. 


MEETINGS FO bom ENSUING W 
Suows.—Tuesday, Sept. 18: Oxfordshire | ee OTD q 
Besday, 19: Hig ol ‘and ‘Norwich Dahlia, Shack'ewell Danii, 
— eD: 
SA ea ieg 


h Shields Horticultural.— Thursday, Sept. 


— of ean A prevented, > 


ry; 0 
inferior portion, 5 latter se 
moisture. In short, > the 
S whic he top becomes an interposing medium 
tet 5 — the under stratum from dryin 
of the sun’s 


| strongest plant in 


the drill s 


than the 
— of the cells in on of t the 
r. F. J. Gra 


i E vil bars con eee that 12 sun's rays we 
y the 3 to a E a depth tha 
When 


It is is not only i in Ta weather — a compact sur- 
8 prejudicial to crops, in general it proves 
hen ain . 


* 3 
p quality aes r posse 
n connection with this . we have a word 


rain- or pro- 


h all or 
801 


in equal Silay ee has e the 
-water possesses for 


; — tad ement invented 
deat epee * wget 


n each pat 
Seah three or er} plants eth seeds, 
same hole, come up equally st 

aithongh the eagle will ultimately overcome the 
weaker, yet it cannot 455 H AN 15 more or less injured 
by the contest. For rops, E consider the 
drill system is posal to paibplin 

With regard t RS Ope the hand- n 


effects a great e n seed ; or the r 
above stated, e think it w a — de scan. “Ml 
ke a 8 trial of the hand-dibble and 
cultivator m with its f - ers, 
the seed thinly scattered in the drills made by the 
p 


system ‘sight requi 
that certain species of Funct 
0 


known 


cual was at wor 


rasite. u has 1 3 * 
Attention to this subject, FE) 


cause of disease 
om than 


here be not 


i of drying up, the tissu 
rtion becomes decayed ve Pappy 
contamination may be traced running d o the 
ste ten for a considerable length, Sy occupying 


. 1 3 
act p n tate of the roots, ams — 
ju loved, spreads, encircling at teng 
wna San: ath a decays, and the fruit is 
left entisely to its own resou 


ere the leaves cent articulated wi 
np | the sem they are N thrown off, but where: 8 


|i no destined point of separation, the peccant part 
must either be — by a new growth ben ig 
e or less 1 
scabby Potato 


o that which takes place in 
s, for instance or the evil ai scarcely 
read. 


fail, sooner or ue ater 
Mr. 1 is sul n nuing his observations, 
and, — communication we ney lately had with 


him oo n to expect that his views on 
this Labie will ko both cae and confirmed. 


THE QUALITIES MOST . IN A ROSE, 
S 1 


THE habit of the Rose wo S to differ 
ee pp a 
a plant 


more than one blo 
make perpendicular shoots, ail the bloom comes at the 


top; t loom off, oots will come from the 
side, near the top, and go as — as the first; all the 
pruning that can be given will not f a hand 
head or a handsome b The habit most desirable is 
that of an ordinary P ear tree, in which 


ches grow all manner of ways, according to w 
the buds are left to pes so that, supposing the ive: or 


at the bottom near the top. 


case ens oe 
Many cl 

very long —. without many s side . 

bl -4 2 2 


OOo 


f 
: stead of the ordi 


the | 


habit. 
ig 


Others throw 6. side shoots 811 very long, but 
the very ground, and every side shoot has its 
; this is a good habit, but all Boyes should be 
shor jointe 
is quite certain that evergreen Roses would be 
wae ciduous, and er fore it is very 
doe 


t readily 2 its 
em mo half through 


tend to moderate the . but it is far better not to 
use them it the wi l not come under control. 
ooms one in a 


the bl 
place, and not ; often the case with perpet 
and hybrids. Itis seen on many otherwise fine Ro 
that side buc cramp the main one, and 
that they 


1, and they p 
ee Aa 3 


grow 
e pulsing’ mt Lae, oF ar a 
a good d 


where they will, g Rose is a singular, 
habit, but good for Life unless ou can cr bud on 
in a 


Rose is 


all r 
G hold them ws ‘bon nd pat 


bein 
e | foliage, and strong 1 to prevent them from 3 


ere are gt that are quite as 
wer than either of the originally 
tage fronts 


2 


an U 
plant, more so than the crimson, 
manageable until it 


vigorous goma but it is not very 
covered a darge 


g 
5 


China, with more prominent aud 


580 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, 


ans. 2. N. 5 N 
ascidiis ovalibus angustis viridibus 
* WELL, we know all about that. 
i I ha 


anguinea 


FAMILIAR BOTANY. — THE PITCHER PLAN. 


—— 


Lindley ; ascidiis oblongis sanguineis antice altè alatis et fimbriatis 
apice sub collo albotomentosis antice alatis et dentatis, 
A plant that bears | d 


í W rons that grow perched in the b igs, u be human and too human to be trees; monbehs 
pieken a es rarity. 7 seen them on - | the Sii cables by which old trees ride at fogs in| ready fashioned for the drinker, wile ae sr 
bages. world is blase with marvels, which the the woods till the coils eat into their bodies, and destroy | tumble down upon the heads of 3 are bore 
ail © nuoth Mo e to be arvels hem pon the natural carvings, shaming the Acan- | veller ; and, finally, of those pitch srt ; 5 

> oe 3 atkin Vonderless to his son Japhet, | thus culpture of the Greeks, which lie tumbled side by | full of water, and only lose their co ü 

change is — dista: ge. Mr. Japhet side with the dead parasites that fashioned t hile | as they hang dangling from the bee e 

3 ee upon the strange living. He had been talking too of the strange idols that cling. “I assure you, sir, that uor them 

plants en mn foreign lands, upon the Rhododen- grow of themselves in the woods of Malacca, too hideous said Mr. Japhet ; “and if you had seen 


n 


ay = s i them wonderful 
eve Mount Ophir, sir.” 


If to his Carnation be 
the worthy gentleman been on that Mount 
he would never 

È 


land The Pitcher 

tbe immeasurable superiority pr Carnátions. 
* to find them, 2 in broad rings, bed: 
with fantastic forms, darting upwards 


d party-coloured, wearing e 
of which sight 2 bt be Lp nae furred, crested, and 
dssgerous looking n point-armour, and as 
harmless as his under- jerkin. 


ver 
Behold them as they por in ao Veitch’s Nursery, | at 


; or look at t are sketched on 


imad collar of 
us to inquire why 


call these sot teers Nepenthes : 
Not that Nepenthe r 
Whence as Dan rs sings huge pleasaunce grew, 
And ote oblivion of all ae care, 
Pair gladsome waking sta 
And joyous dreams more 


wi 
No, not that, which was only vulgar Hemp disguised in 


4 masquerade; but a far m ; 
g all near alliance* with the vulgar inhabitants 


thoughts, and 
cy Men = Would 


oyous 
they be greater ‘if they 


th 
tchers for? Can any one, tell me 


. Pi 
that! or must iT find a use for them hereafter? R. E 


MANNA—MIRACULOUS FALL OF FOOD 
FRO EAVEN !! 


Erzeroom 


gained daily , Specimens of the 
were ‘brought t hither, aod tra 


en oer 


tice. 


leasure 
18th or 20th April a period when 


a species of lichen 
ble quantities over certain trac 


? 


ll 


F 
i 
8 
P 


4 
5 


g 


i 
85 
‘ane 
a 
=: 


towards 
the “ope 


the 
of * 


=f 


1% m 


> Meir unaccountable appe 
tires ere greatly injured by locusts, and a 
aromen, a had substance been known 


icinity, it would peta 


THE GARDENERS’ 


th’ teed upon his heel, and o 


have | tra 
aphet 


vious to that period, which I ge not —_ able to as- | 
certain, chens to en blown 
fF l 


ce ac- 
| counted for ? and pieh is it that they —— aiti large 
p of . 


gi fa II; 
early one morning, had o 


to admit that finer things by 
nt 


= ne 
settle on a e and healthy branches. 


0d to a cessati 
loss of mini ‘a a sudden sate 
ed 


iad been, i for — on fortnight, very rainy weather, 
a and E.S.E., the 


in 
has if the soil is pr some 3 
metimes, 


at Byazid 80 me years 
+ edible quality o coder these lichens be became 


i 
ace pre- —ů— life. And e 1 myself, in ora Nosology, 
| had been incautiously led into adoptin 


vill 
Hellen Strewe over a tract of ground where — * — 
n y on the evening before, it is proba 


ound; ers, two 
1 fees another — i of lichen 
e spot was a well- 2 


3 8 


rae h 
ars | =) it seems they that the fall had occurred on 


few days previous 
From all —.— the quantities collected have been 
erson could collect 


. [Our 9 
ens of these uetions, om we shall 


a take an early opportunity of 5 and reporting on 


t DISEASES oT ELATIS 
(Continued fro 
VI. 3 one species. “PAYLuLestA, — ee of the 
eater part of French wri who 

st us who are — —— 

copying or 5 them, deseribe this disease un 
etn ing of the spite ere a the 
ran for it is 2 o be pe to tha 1 
phen 3 of that opinion, * 1 piin that 

it is no the P But 


pass over herbs, although it may 
| Pe frequently. more 


versa, . the difference in the internal 
a of the 
he curl . wak k individuals, especially towards | 

ni 


Their size increase very soo 
branches 2 Bae 
swarm, more 
goglioni) attaches itself to to the res ‘whioh has m 
sexe re the cause of the d aa 
5 — exudation ‘of sap, which 
redu woes the — to that 

carefully investigated this point, and as far 
my ana serv Singin n goes, ver seen 
found pre symptoms of disease in 
although tea vars Á “ 
in the night, and fo 
out of season, as wel in 


ie very 
bute the disease 
organic distensi 
perature. 
sy of 3 
ganic beings, sh uence on — 3 "e 
I trust that his new duties will leave him sufficient 
leisure to publish the result of his labours 


those for which there is n 


of eee vee to 


wever, — will stele 


administered. 
the * is not severe. en) 
7 


herself, especially where 


to | the tree eea nourished. 5 is therefore again n 


caution ment of it. I have 
also — that badly kept 
tease are no not worked about the sore or are 
r themselves wi 
ade to the curl. 
vs VIL: one species. PLL OUR. The desi 
een has been eee * to such plants as 
i become —— 
intended to convey 
between animal and 


2 


dea of a point of analogy 


g it, I now think 


CHRONICLE. 


aphidä( (go ji 
the 


e * 
ve always down 


tree. | 2 do. 


those | under the sam 
allowed | i 
the 


581 


it necessary to reject it, What carer can there be 
| between the chlorosis of the fair se 


bring on the other, this 
alow — — — by a — in —. action of 


som ose stimulants which act with the greatest 


ught ene in veget. 


— 
In t cr volume of —— “ 9 
Physiology” = scientific reader will fin 


The prin 
pla — = plenty of I light ; in — 
the e — taken in pruning 
to distribute the branches well. Exotic plants, requiring 

more light, are more subjec 
llour. But when 


dually by removing them every 5 — 
situation. 

Garden e advan — 1 
vation of light upon 5 

d less 


22 
effect of the pri- 
tender 


th me 
3 n» Beloges gardene rs treat us with most excel- 


to piy sarg with pieces of n bans Deby or simply 

them close up 2 and afterwards 

from a stock they bury the 

pose, where the rte ome 

their — flav fi 

— which 

5 not corresponding to the ends for 
reated organised and living beings. 


nature can only 
which Arane were 


COMPARATIVE TRIAL OF MR. TOMBELLE 
LOMBA’S 5 — OF CUTTING THE STEMS 
OFF POTA 

In the 3 of last 1 I planted the Early 

Frame Potato, a later w and the Queen’s 


slaked lime was 


I enc gud had always entertained the idea that the 

ves were indispensable to a Sora of the 

rs; but after reading your observatio 

Tombel 3 plan, I resolved 

ll E in 
N the 14th of habip the e being still in flower, 

I cut off the s ws of the later white 
d 


I perceived sym 


p- 
ps some of the leaves; 


* 


remain over. On 

4th September I ca three rows of the Queen’s 
Noble, cut down on ‘the 14th July, and three rows cut 
down on the 14th ns ce a en up. Those cut 


A down cow 6 14th, 3 


. len 2 N all 
do, 


sound, 
all sound, 
— sound. 
bers small, the — size 2 3 0% 
ose cut down on the 14th Au 
55 feet in length ... n bs., 
do. é 


pro 

— tubers diseased, 
— — 
A — 


4 1 Ibs. — all — 
— woul 


1 row 55 — in — — Ibs., * tubers diseased. 
The 2 generally. neh largor, and — — 
t in this 
m ae I chink itt — be —.— for in pre — way. 
te P an sort than the Queen's 


before 

therefore, were, in all lity, more adv 
state, and in a better condition to draw nourishment, by 
their own vitality, from the soil, 

There is here, I opine, strong 2 evidenee 
that the talents as affirmed Mr. Lomba, grow 
unassisted by the stem and a flo cannot be sup- 
posed they would attain a size to weigh six ounces 


582 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE 


im flower. The ditference in | 
0 


tha shone — soon 

eases, but more particularly in the Queen’s Noble, 

clearly proves this where I ha rred. The 

error, however, It d also appear 
the disease is d leaves an 


class of plauts; a few have been hybridised 5 
re, so far as obtaining seed to | appearance perfect 
is concerned; and it has been sown, not 
2 Cattleya labiata was crossed with C. gutta 
d swelled its. pod; Calanthe veratrifolia pee N stg 
Tankerville ; ‘Dendrobium moniliforme wit th oth Jen- 


8 5 8 


? 


ni 
stem to the tubers ; for in no 8 where the stems 
were cut of before attacked by the disease, are the 
a wah diseased, so ab both of in other cases many 
of bers are disease 
The result of these — will, I think, justify 
m or early spring pl 


a better — 


illy ma ts appeara 
Mr. Tombelle Lombe’s 2 — per be a reason- 


ality and a 


Sy tts 
Yain- ar , oe — 


not increase or spread 
in July. H. Dooville, Alphington, near Exe 


wa 


ILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENIN 


wn 
ive ihe particu ulars y which amateur 
be guided in its management. The seed should 
vere 

hould then 


a 
tion, v when | the seed will very soon ge rminate 


> aS soon 
h 


after which th 
air. ir should 
be given, and if green — has made i its E y Ap — 
gate V taking care, on 
and often, for the e are able $ a be 
ied. 


pricked o other pots or shall 
ani ina framo, k keeping them shade 
may b 


com ring 
plenty of air in fine weat 
the wer much be 


the ae dene plants until 2 8. 


to ut in ps u round. Those 
aa | reserved for seed (and these of the best), should be pro- 


8. hat the paneer whieh swelled 
belonged 8 to hybridised flowers, showing that a cross 
ted, or that in t * ‘ag val of the anthers 

I have the hybridised seed pod 
of Stanħopea Wardii by me, er and * e pleased to 
present some of the seeds to oth 
ntleman who may tak 


hopes. I may remark t 


duce into 

pe A as y Pircher plants an 
l futurè time. J. Cole, — to J. 
y near S 

ons. At pag «H. S. B.” has 

n the defielene in the flavour d 


ing more aime 

was a censor at the Salisbury exhibition he Re ty 2 
of Melo 

n tha * Aer 
r 


7 were positively 
table s this to b 
Perhaps some of 1 my Salisbury friends 
R. Glendim 
Soria Potatoes 
prittles vaiga open baskets 


8 for house use kept in 
which the bottle- 8 
an e flav 


el Gr 
taken d seeds dry, why should Potatoes 
he ah subjected to £ different and to a bad syste 
to be 


most prejudie cial to = 


his seedling 

Rosa Galliea 

have been delighted 
at once have de 
Such was the orig 
is that too many 


086 have 
leading to 2 but r erm del 
thus dividing group 5. 
interest to their stitute, é és, with those 


Roses; but then grouping h 
excess. Our Damask 4 g 15 been © 
hardy, our Bourbon and ina 
our Tea-scented Ross tender, 
Sie,” are all sensibl 

Bourbon Rose i 

hone into " divisions ” is 

sense, and is as 


8 

lea ves of pre Roses as Gloire 0 1 
apitaine, and 3 being like the Maho i 
aquifolium. t if 


ge and h 
d their catalogues as possible. Rosa ra] 
[Why is b 1 “mi Crito” ” contends for, 
Adder For the information of Mr, N 


I can assure ie tha Arin ss do invert their 
I Iki 


4 
that instant shed its skin, which oat 
bor th r amongst the herbage, 

t. I re it quite perfect : it 
rvab) 


not 
Was 


been e i 
off, and still retained its lenticular 8 with the eier 
side inwards, rved this ce sa 
I hay 


e seen, and It eee 
in which adders cast t by i 
Potatoes grown at Lodsworth in 1849.— 
SORTS. 
Date of Planting. 


London 
Kidney. 


Jul F 
ki aoe 


Nov. 30, 1848 

Jan. 10, 1849 7783 it 
Feb. 21, 1849 985 134 
March m 1849 125 — 


The Julys in field 
15th of ft nti the haulm having en 
the course of the precedin Rete ys. 


in appeara i 
trial of Tombelle pte ar noe Berra I suspect, 


and if kept in the frame or pit — should be i vn K eed ; and may not the 8 therefrom bee — 
ow 2 — a — air —— — t for — er, gt less able to resist what e might how j aes — E n ot understand how thi 
Daring > tig Bon 2 lens tal A, w. | make little s no impression on them? Carr N panats ai od A to tho following resul 
— uai wi A ge . ‘ae. ept cl sh r of | could not ept if subjected to the same bad Sinta tes — ph Sen 
1 vanti mi . a * pare 8. mee w ich which Potatoes must submit to. The writer has foun nd Haul eatly 
oe ere and which | the Potatoe pauperi. the pitting system is | As one mo et be 
— esteemed for their good + pasee should be ayere followed ; it i por present where th process | planting, my Yorkshire 
— ae whieh * 8 4 and ; *. will — exists. Let a to m aa what he may have | produced 76 lbs., while 
— n ere! oved and treate precisely arra emeli when a large pit . opened 1 5 produced 81 Ibs 
a tuber wo a Potato t e of Po this season 
— * —— 2 — —— — — pė Ir trial of the ae dmg 12 uae ground in my allotment field, 
2 odes riched peeve how much the flav to is | and turves, o i a 
— —— — old miiy a nnn — ; improved by by ay ee an the eis floor cou - p Crops in în Treland.= Crops of every 
i * e the large growers to ve a yor nearly a crop j 
e however, will depend upon the | the they require, x Tue — td ust of pA oy should 3 much affected. 
een on eertain soils be 2 gA windward ; this 2 . 
would become hoed up over bers, and preserve m and infeet the tubers. 
them both and worms. J. W. D. pect to lose one-fifth of the crop, 
of | Rose Catalogues.—The index of Roses, referred to very slightly affected * g th 
by * a Old Subscriber, is not a new idea, ose one-third, 2 
ivers, I think in 1840, pa published an index in ie exact November in 
form given w, Jose correspondent. On sugges 0 2 Those ple in 
Mr. R., 80 e since, how convenient such an index Would you not recommend early 
w ins present time for reference, he replied, son for $ Sie tas ure! ee gka 
ec dy gabe : g t contain such a vast | very m a 
of names o! „the greater part of which lindine, oe $. „ i 
not now cultivated, owing to their g supplanted A 1 * Thap = Florien a 
better varieties, that he had been deterred | the Show of the 
from agai ing a editio —— emg Suciety, at the 
-| of mey ely worthless v s of may be | day last, I was much str 
* te reference pohly oceupying ” half the | of the co J: 
baze 01 6 den;“ the sorts there = former shows, not only 
ated a 5 2000, in 38 groups. visitors, but the character 
Now, from 23 250 to 300 really good 5 — worthy E the day was m 
cultivatic for the absence 0 
ass of names it refore for the usually honour the garde 
| growers o do kk — pity cae for the public, in | what struck me most ſoreib 
eir mak catalogues, 2 such sorts as are now really | with cigars in their m 
of t Tom, amateur. clay pipes ; go where 


worthy = attention 
Wo: 


met, who not only requires es his food provided for 

but also digested. t me suppose peas DG. a ee 
| and to have crossed a or Provence 3 
Rosa Gallica, would he not have pointed out to his friends 


as commen 1 R observed om 
iv 


rx 2 finest 


aie the ae 
I tia hope to see him point out 
than the 


ing 
he only finds fault, ani —9 fear, a gour- | 


of i 


haling 
him, ti le igs being 
ur, 


We 


noses, and wh o, if spoken eat the 
Eoin the barten possible 8 Ronit the 
there 


might p is practice; for 
no great Adel diy in showing th 
are acti trary to their best interests, 
away the visitors, e might become 
d 


ve allowed to 
W 


to some 
deen they mix, with on such oceasions, who would not | th 
d appreciate their productions, if allowed | its e 
ke. 


ip do 0, 3 by tobacco smo Visitor. 
ly concur in the remarks of A corre- 
t. If the proprietor neither can nor will pre- 
vont such offensive practices, the evil will work its own 
que; for no person son of N will visit such a 
a of Couch-Grass to enter Roots of other 
— support of the statement at p. 566, I may 
that in rooting u e remains of 


THE GARDENERS’ 


and in a few hours th greener colo 
increased rapid} 


lice became of „ apex 
] r y in aize, aad aoon . i 


After con 
roduced in — on — Sloe bushes, from whieh i 
tot 


migrates op, the writer dissents from — 
gesti nee (eon the 

tomological Society in January last, ch has been 
much circulated in the Hop districts”), that it is only 
necessary to destroy an 99 — i to secure 

e Hop from the at of this insect, asserting that 
its eggs have also bee Sak on the Pl d that if 
all the Sloe trees were destroyed, the i ect would re- 


e memoir 
terminates with the history of the different species of 
insects which feed on the Hop aphis 


Garden Memoranda. 
APOTHECARIES’ oe 8 There is in bloom 
ere an 13 spec 


CHRONICLE: 


8 
e observation that the Hop-fly i a 


o| pot, 
the — and 


— divisio eestor — pe- 

taline ene presa aa ith broad thin 

margins, otherwise of the substance of the which 

are thick and y- The sepali overlap 
thia margins of the petaline segments in the bud 

state, in which state the ra the width 

of the latter, which is seen not to case after ex- 
ion. 8 ns protruding be i 


long. Pistil equalling the perianth. T. Moore 


Miscellaneo 
Potting Orchids.— When shiftin potting, be 
— to drain bee If the pane is to be 4 in a 
ys place a small inverted pot in the — of 
fill row em — 3 and — er the inverted 
th potsherds to within 1 


F disco * — until the pot is filled 
and six roots P growing shrough, eash plant 3 to ericana, but in its flowering inches of the rim; then ‘pat in a sufficient portion 
8. Harding, — — 1 q |state it proves quite different 2 — erg the roughest fibre of one to slightly elevate the plant 
this and other examp — 1 mmunicated | cially in the arran amines ove the rim, and cover up the roots (if they require 
w us, we hope vi e e a n is instead of forming a pyra idal head, — horizontal so doing), with fibry peat mixed with half decaye 
5 and the general 9 is, I ka happy to nta branches, has the b — ascending and 8 a leaves, pressing it rather 3 ly d the ey but in 
that it has sustained very little injury. All our haulm has been | dense head, which becomes thicker and ioe vom other part, more particularly near In 
i 2 N * aa the t rds, There seems little doubt that this plant has — remove all the old soil from * eee 
ther to throw off the disease, or whether ~ recurrence of „and pros ably from i infaney, in — such can b serra tly fe a sa 8 
warmth immediately after the first development ae a garden ; oe it is therefore to be regretted that not ants t me rather dry tor a tew days prior 
—— 8 yA 3 1 os t telk; t rd o rigin, nor any historical particul re- 2 operation, * e terwards before 
result is that very few of the tubers, except d. U oisture is ne which should be, first to the atmo- 
localiti ti Th to table in Spee ting i t, — to have been preserve nder 
p acd better conditio a n than has bee Te ncaa Rie Ga z > these circumstances, it is impossible to form even a con sphere — and afte ae * the roots or the soil. 
2 is —+ hope that —— will . — good Dhotigh jecture as to the actual age of the — But een No as the proper one for 
nnot yet feel confida nt on this head. H. E, ing that it has iy nent * shifting Or Orchids, wi generally 32 may be done shortly 
Sep . I. . dise vay hag been RIPA Tacha 1d after th n ave co enced forming young or 
de dang the late ext emely dr ather, The black spots | appearance than th — — wou p 5 = ill be i 
ee: 1 — and all yore ce of the Botrytis had | to be a full sized specimen j 2 — ts leaves being fresh roots and whic W ume 
i ing 1 yesterday, thongs I searched | about 7 — 2 eir height 4 Test ‘ond — height of after they have flowered, and just before they 
. wy I Lead no ot see >a W pke 8 mee °| the flowering measuring base of |® fresh growth. All the plants should be shifted at 
: * &' ninu ore 2 
: ugh the evening and n This . — the Potato | the plant, 19 — 6 inches. This —— h least once every two years; but when, and 
i ; bad assu amed quito a Gre aes Be Bots — branches, and t are again subdivided = eight : time between the 2 in some 8 
Wey seed. frosted with t otrytis, ‘which oeeupie the green secondary branches, term e e ach by a cluster 5 epend upon circ v g» however, 16 
i . ee ee ee sings, ow a num t flow may E Go — rtain, that ee the soil becomes in auy 
a * absorption of the little moisture that has fallen, about 4000; thus, 21 XK 8 128405 The —.—— 8 0 the plant has lost its regre — having 
oe 905 . ie a day or yes be destroyed. bodied tha p> flowers are found on examination, and especially when | become over dry, shiftin ing at onee is the best —2 
ee: s tt thi By: 
e inch oc 9 * serra! nag and dis. | Confined, to have a strong and very — odour, æ p “with ve aay sies — is at times, 
K i ug ey have not yet assumed the ch I can compare with nothing but that of decom- * — Wit — arge plants; ang ones re mn 
s are so parched that they may be rubbed with the slightest posin g Cabbages. They eontain also a lear liqui a ny e the 80 il entirely. Mr. . — 
pe a Ki i gy NE teat 92 to th pop eee as es 2 which is a compound of sweetness and P aper in the e Journal da the Hor ioultural foeitiy. 
n he ate. owering stem became visible about preser Chemical 


s have — sad indeed; all our 
ae —— 3 e tubers sr attacked as in 
: qmen; 7 has . in this district will I 
de de prevalent all over the kingdom. Some of our Beech 
5 Goose urrant erg. were deprived of thee 
es; — the 1 o of a sack of 
aneighbour, d Ia the = an 
the followin 4 
i —— so Rang Nur ory. Dublin, 3 


Plant Lie 
—— — mations, iieii the 
. — and i 


an 
s Enem 
ihe Study of Inset 2 By F. Blomley, Esq., 


cates the gene aracter of a lecture 
the Weald of Kent 


J 
252 
© 
È 
5 
3 


n, at Maidstone, in consequence o 
rain or —— at the beginning of rere 
1 air they had been deposited tw 

to grow. 


Ww 
P 
; their a 


emies ; with an Introduction to | leaves 


53 
The title of this Tittle —— — which we have e given 
indi ral e 


z The | 
the middle “of June, —— ng in the firs stages of its 


wth was 


rogress a pe nt be podar ts gro’ 
and “until the 


hree- fou nha of i is height, a 


marked soms, those of the aie and 
elo 


of its rate of growth was preserved, TE conse 
or : 


= 
“oO 
w 
2 
— 
E 
2. 
© 
E 
>= 
—. 
® 


it was 


sligh 

may a ome measure, rà its more 
gro log . its s earlier per than a 
stimulus usted. The f 
detailed description esr the p ing con- 
dition : Ste aaah terminated by thick e eee 
as in — americana. Leaves numerous, the ral 

in th = 


— base to the apex; the 
into bracts. _ The colour of the leaves i isa 


fro 
is 17 fect 6 inches high at this base, which is the | s 
est part, 1 foot 3 3 inches in diameter, and 10 inches 


10 4 diameter just below the flowering branches, t 
the | stoutest 


of which are 2} inches i ae The lower 
half of this stem bears only a few abort 
but the upper half is densely sinha. 
o | branches ing, again ly brane 
| secondary branches forming dense corymbose pani 
of from 18 to 25 flowers ; . 


Flowering 


a 
thin, with Pl flowers, the upper o 
;|larger an and more crowded with — | the Lilies go out 


branches became 1 when its progre s less | i 
e firs 


n , Case 


| used, and h 
| prepared,” 


ually passing 
laucous | 


0 
Gazette — a 9 e 8 ee i- August 
1849, states that to preserve milk or e 


ntit 
nto o sirong m 
| bottles supplied mika a cock or pee — to a pipe 
„ jar or bottle; 
so that, on opening the cock, a portion only of the e milk 
be drawn off at a time, pressure of 


as madi 
soda — acid. The e gas he washes in water before it is 
e always 8 or boils the milk before it is 
Calendar of ‘Operations. 
For the ensuing week.) 
3 DEPARTMENT. 
eg 


sessile, | diately — N. 
ed 


í Goren, 1 for adeq 


Australian and other plants, which have been 
. ö 


reparatory arrangements 


d be considerably reduced in bulk, re- 
ing a a proper selection of shoots ts for late 
ly 


urnishing the roof ne 
ummer. addition to this of eam. the 
ii t aom freel into a house, let the glass 
E niece bate a every a. N 
ger of Gesnera zebrina, 
capes, pd a strong bottom 
heat ; t allow the latter to 


‘openly 
beautiful i 3 
br A flower, let the pots be laid on 


TE 
TE e eee 


584 
TH 
E 
GA 

RD 

E 

NERS’ 

CH 

RO 

N 

10 

LE 


Side 
8 
lor 
a 
week 
or 
tw 
o 
in 
a 
sun 
n 
y si 
tua 
tio 
n, 
atte 
r 
th 
e 
y ma; 
be 
oc 
cas 
ional 
= 
wate 
red, 
bu 
t 
neve 
er 
overd: 
on 
ne, 
9 555 
BE a 
SED 
LE 
Av) 
ES: 
E 
Smith, 
is 
ur 
Pear 


wh 
which 
th 
tion. gl m 
u 
Th st be 
M. ese din rep 
r e plants — 
sibl ARa k in sar 
does h * 
judi not 8 cap — 8 very ah Aspe 
ae ers must now h short mn open ao: 
ol and ights ef e 
8 se k © ceri i n of situa as 
. — i have situa | Our 
b VO t th am te care st, u thi 
u pe a eira ee Ra in good on ful Our Alpines a 
fd. a ‘relation eras & eden, 0 atten inf 8 - 
be e aras DE 4 at > its of 4 aad 3 pos- | so | inferior on 8 2 the 
ar e e Ei H n a 00; 
for es bs furn sulphur he — ‘Water mh codling 1 a o — ag — 
cin navi d ishe top 3 wall mrep c o — g plan th rem col — — 
g. re aves! e, fe e A ov ou — 
b ce og ete walls be oe an 8. p e. z most ena 
y n ni in h b 0 nt ai d = en ’ ut pa 
habit tl — n destroy ingee air 8 i b e. if ti 
i fr y t. gs ob ins casi rn ch 0 0 30 ull ent 
e ee cir panied e etter an — ge moring hie are rder, E aie a 
lantin o this ¢ io uxu should ; sce if the eep pore y —— than e partioular mimes 1 ie that 
at st ‘ht aha „ 1 ir, t w pay sty f ith ust di aps isa av nec an ryas DE pose er OL middi R 
a i fall ex hav: 5 the en a, eie n. e 10 pit on th e wa wod opa kakon oots 8. middle-size i 
be ful — ve all ‘on a er th its for es r ted wth p a “for of tained ined, : John daii 
ittle xpos ine nee el a 2 thereby | the sens of acti thoes fi wing gath 113 8 roun Pitis 
p way ol ca -as e ee ke Say ber 1 m; asf e eri 8 “ite favou oe aig oie 
lants clea: nb t th f po pt ine ed ys eav the ede to ith er 1 -n : 2s our do You Pear lear 
8 PG tag teh ey ae of oe rae ci ry 3 e 8 —— ener S. Cor doubt d e 
filled of the 85 ee in must Sar, * nea rai em 8 at — P for £ m t N ed an ap oni with’ yee — aa are 
ied wih —— pigs ti ‘dep bs gradun riod, cautior ee present ios ene grou into Pota- =s er. Th the | of cess a 
e a v a- e 3 4 
wor “om their win ae h parime CARE ther sw * ri ste ins 3 od Wa cos — > 
k 0 bulb wi mo 9 ment, y ew SW s t h in a yp mo sh an thrin ake oyi nt pa 2 an than 
r ti 5 int ved e e P : eati ok of g th nd arti un ou to w nt „ th ppli at 1 th 
cor ga . — ca Ag =e Da mo p ae ee 
> Bnou a . i atoe ais h co r ea a 2 a Ewell with 
= a — ee | 1 he = = et e it 1 
1 os 5 5 v a i in e Jarm? aes lia u p i 27 
. — 8 | — el es EN Sea oe e Si 
equi i e to t 1 n occu x r 8 aini rd i g „ A h ill w prop w mgs e 3 gt 
piel aeg Xoquiring ar i give ostpon a pla pan 0 ee mu ve ainin s on th nd e th her os e be ith Vi est mi 11 y fi 
v e pr nt pve st nt ing pipe t el a e ju epagated to an m deus: 
th the ce e de * ng. it th ess in mi re st: ila i pi e a at 0 pr oe — = ‘a 1 ig 
e on to 1845 A el ing the t ta ulati an tin . in im cen 0 ter re i fi oan unu 1 8 
m 1 T ren ifici t tte a cle atte e e go tio d g jes m tre. or obj ve cie 8 n u i tribe « h a s You se 
e ts eee 2 eae = pte 5 e = 2. rat er =e 
trio m 3 . e re Me quantity of nt n om whieh preven 1 in Ay 1 
Wees n ae e compen — g and ty —.— esh —— 3 a a ae ap Th. 3 3 he provemen Sins Sore ee ent, sects h 2 
be pi perse n c arlie: aut mang tying in i . co pu Pa ng part t e bs e the an proved 2 species Boe — he nt in abi 
10 — v pee 28 te ord og 8 in ee rpose rsl erb 0 join ordi to ort edt Josi ok sn . 
e to an The | — ke a required is ue ety di ley 3 a o aboy 5 dinary N = d was but slin yas of 1 have nis; A 2 
e su ea — e y eh xce a ryi th ES a eli f 9 Agen we Sad 
ay’ im ne th ve — wa ro fo: d an pt ns yl e ai e 8 3 ou elt all 
sa Sey ep equate: eee 2 mensure ns de * of or pik on Gherkin nd, hea, nuns east Seely Erua: idling, aed te 5 i Tor a 
i r ort in on nee er nds i 0 e th te ew in pod in we ot of s 8 A n th he u pl pie: 
will be th “ discs utti a seat of the EAE > = ani al pla box 1 g and p s, Cl 0 4 hg: l as quit sple 1 2 de y when ite lage gree meant 
asthe aid gens aps aa to ring <x N E ah plant ilies mber not n du by dina. “Ee T Yolo our ranch an ime 
— in t th ew ofe inte the pray ti aff win a ext ould od reserving. and N egle ring bien 2 eee ee Taler 
Te itso TNT me cuart 3| fime a, e Im a Sass 15 5 — coe toe Sais 
pr a anche. epa — » at 0 * ae and -ho ed; i. rm che —— — 2 f “I ars bang 
TART gre pe ath ean on | garden. ar, box a fora thes oot of the so — CORFE 1 ae ae 2 
3 ad aes in ate y s a St. is v ae str ason pai nier ante es seve a some pe pen sa so n to carpus, and nea ings 1 wert sie 1, seed 
let them È 5 N next vr fo: triking | atte, are = 8 en er Bese tan etl Sona f stant Re y 2 — ‘an 1 5 ling plank 
mt, 3 nd ho atu t pene RG: e tie: lish y the’ ontem tis be ae ee ul coo. seid te dean n — ppar pii } be box has an 2, n a 
es pring anh a dependa e Se a 5 . e ei a 
yf - a e cu ti e a aS The 
oes ze ges 78 hardy 5 raisin ee See ae io die axes curled mB men will 25 — 
yf u a din in a b e is m , Witen n t s 
80 o; t as w. y n- 8 g f efi e r a f r iot he — 
oil, T a; sto ta r 3 n . diag or oe Sore 
el 8 y ng h te f w r 0 ots 0 s h pa M. 
Thé roo pee e ck h e ts — „The Bo G J. 
h in ek st di ev > re ose oft Sm. a Ww Ww of Sh mi occi El T he th va C. — 
a e Tea N 2 oe ily in ting — s he Wea Sens 0 ke Calami * that . pT mi nical th; ompho. 
2 comps 7. — y elter urdy, healthy ees 3 M as observed at th lads sh In x K have her Stachys 1 Rosa T aan g Elm ie ne of — 
late ae ye ed b ey y pla = rooted, — foon's} the Hort = late uld y e tim e Sk j hong of Carya o . 
sl, ad prote: by . a ti P they shou plants 0 — == as 7 . — ndon, for th e ltaj be. e de Da 2 Po 2 — tioa,- = 77 5 of fo — or H 1 8 
n ee ete e er t befi n Monday 8 20 “Max. ET zalera tin d eali u ni nt ;3 R i ith ory; 
A asc St d fr msel ten z pdig 9 3 se 1755 Tues. * 21 ax ER. Pedin] z 5 i Pee — — f “ed Z E 125 — 
ee Rocks sh 8 arà = ran cried is Thar. i 4 30138 || Tuer — m si sg a i aire mort 
0 n | 1 4 35 995 caries ept. aiid =e 
— =a hero th h themael 5 — sit pins = ele n sandy, and eif Ee lopie ger ial 
— 2 . ou secon i * 5 i e 
garden. A oe z of der, whe Brompto Id bes Sept — 2 —5 29.253 8 n. Mean nee Pore ee nts, V. 18 ca ouster 
s f e er on an ec 2o 29.35 9.111 70 m | 360 Wi — sania P e . $ 
—_ — sere er pana planted ia om = Pat 55 E 1 5 Aalam mola at tars 7 5 
dee n m — 700 -410 5 . i it d . 
C * n, i immediate) i er 3 ed into Ee — 5 Fine’ T R 29.5 62 42 £8. 1 — = — sta ireland a th raine soil w ou ST BW, Pe f 
Mears is sa Daie d ea 0 to ight . he fine a || * 43 a 3 . ae — 1 ed, s 7 oe time 
2 e. 1 sen tely, per er ht 12—He y hroughout aii 66.0 47 eS — . INE ock cie — Perhaps 3 these cing find upon 
i 0 b "perennial 8 ected . udy. 45 54 S.W. 44 7 — N — a ng the — this 
> ha on FL ya ere ea Mean verca — vey hay at I vie SW. 00 ee — yo a ps.y vigor t it can b rare 
— rable f pottin * 8 L 2 Ss =" 2 chen ohi ghat is may cithe our sol bd “tne otal | 
i 0 0 ra a a! 36 m a m e 1 
— Be en opportu la > FLO amou ~~ Sos f the Wi cee 2 y- aa red, nS we? 3 is much exp — on atm — 
soil Sefi D ptunities, Saat gna 3 nting 8 Sep eather 5 a wy show I 0.97 batiy a. — easly to E — oth thes mild 
— re s the so 8 to . 223 — we k, 24 light ers i Thel. 1 ther me 6 Mar * =a 
s Soret int one e soi It wW an EE 8 z gp deg. nin n th re el 0 vi ow. sa of 7 nd provided $ 
ept es whi ili is sould Sun per 82 8 1 belo g at e eve è 3 ee re Bene À tt again does eo 
layers, -ex ihai W. ich is th a eed ad Mon” ne 52 5 — w the dual be ken yo aie r G. It R mat Me well J 
1 ; peri m t eh kan a oad ed dvise Wed. 5 E gé gee. 8 average. a ton avin: A ett: h 8 O. yt „ SW pes is back 
t is do i 1e. hro ave TS th —— 3 bo * 2 aeg a vy orm AS which i3 f to eoldn to kepa ds 
rooted fo at xem e co ugh the 2 3 al E * SR Ma a distances Su i ip 00 db ane a 14 5 
— vet ag „ 8 our e 0 atur, 22 923 Hi 57 E Ean for th ao —— ane — wart ee wor 
wi pos 0 in cay be » 22 me 4.9 — à. —.— P: e we ie . bees. eases come arm v ost 
e t ed t te ] in The 6 4 8 3 rev h be d k b 0 
wil w : the isf r Tayers in h the id th 67.1 220 56 10 Raine ailin Misc. : aiina = the relati somo 0 accou ith the, ; — 
— 3 = ag = _ us in en 22 my 45.8 58.2 10 EE g Wi JB. reparation he best z of o ee 3 oun 
is ps p h cy er t 4 i a fi ati m y 
tho atif oe st —.— eer a eal 000 A m. 84 dex 3 3 10 050 in. 2 l n 3 5 Do a of an apa of corre 12085 
— ul read ee thei iti e foli e th ATAD s 9 0.7 1 92 92 S all not eee y con spo! 
kaes y to pu = fist inj age nas — ate Ss BE 4 FEC ae mv open areto ens . 
pti en Pi t e case pŠ e d * Seti ice meat 0. 2 2 t 2 5 41 c ripe . Se ood ope gros ure 5 erent from 
ng mr — — made by of P be ne do in] —— 7 — 3 0 a Teen aji uF 71 3 close to thi ‘the rea aie 
P lat yet e e yth Pin f y- wih E was orr the Hele 2 4 I 3 Spo the roots in s to ing t. Co you tall at j 
dr te the noe e k h som t, in 4 e 155 JE r 8 dr. Ne at ld wan this — 
ous r pla man e ve ir pla pi nose te no | Mes ced with 1 spo are . 2 deg, lala 2 sporting D urine 5 vs 892 ee season; 
* ama vote wis dion, . 6 light x -ha wack 8 pondents — ali san ten ahli eeni ied e * 
“amateur : nd , th s eav rity bar er pr rd Conserv 8 en g. he ch hem den ai joyi to th kop te a 
bo: n thi p e Paske ba — ce A- s ati 1. 17¹ saat f — ing t 0 d e mo of A 
sir otten fa ii planted wal. soe rte o Stead wee i gust tet fu appear oce deep see, Fon as tee E 
‘ails, called) fom, tho o the min g phe o ea = ware nits at sai 7 , 
$ a „ wi 1 
: . — d)| be pinten, 7. n es, te A se cheat of constar cally o ithout r ‘hes, Pt pe eae 
. oide y inc 3 {i 7 wil Ka plant oüs wh ree ing t dif. ar a —— ms, te fie 1 
3 mi etl 5 aoa li 2 oT aer de e = ts, .f. of the 
-desi p the fluid to fi a 8 e matting or e n ti rw — 
— Puchsia quant int atens . mate — Dota 4 st and close e cn 
le i 3 We ties of to witek te wat — — ae cn p ae vas — e to da Koran oe a Frere started, 
na cenit not : — the vx: against — a pet orbit = whe on 
“perenne brous pla pen now penne Te is a morth -iy bat th — . x ae DR 
lantod the fixet dry : me 8 g tE coe: et eae 
— e 7 — eee 3 2 . o perais ree: 55 
Tulip- utifu — hoep e ie be yed — g the son. v — are sha at . . 8. 
3 lu — We li old ndy le att te A pos rors ngs shay ne i 3 E «li 4456 P 
d. is nif e re, ght a, ca ee will si 8 go ped 3 ye, arl tti shape, 
nie 11 a m w us w le: ibl a 8e. od i w a 8 an 0 et 
itormity, 80 fans i eee pply. eee 
rhe fo “which fo 2 ly apii eats 
ity, 80 y anay 7 5 efi Th air, to 1 all th 08 ma ran flo ie ae hi ran nd 8 pth nd it an and 
Avna a ocula leads tf siring TE ke the 8 . — 5 pea es 
wi r n ud I e 0 ttl 
TULAS, | BEES : ta, —. e coe: eae ider parts lobes lon nt are ra — rome =n —— Pa ás ar orty 2 
A ate ra eties of at no —— — . — — 7. 1 tr a in arked | 10 peel 
1 55 cose oe ante) iong be oe 8 ae 
8 Feed pul dro atola 1 ann —— aie pro ee cael o th of petai poe eS 
ndros id — ke thas tion ort, but e paca tal a 
4. ži at ops L ifior als e pt, ag ran rti ut and r: slen e a ls; : 
J ere. m . re, to Celsia and w ome 8 ather stand 5 — 1 e 
— ye Bees a = oa N blossom well L= ee 1 — ard i os 
14 al d na eti «mo a e r 1 et, be: 5 4 not n size. 
F e a e pro wi S 8 
texis 5 aud oras, ilia t diey: z in ng jety, 3 aes oe ey n, 
stlovg onh a 5 . — e 
ist long on hone — = ae fir state i com violet, s Rien, 
oney th * yet ab : N e 4 ery m t, Bite; | 
"oho 2 seen ly fi K 3 uc ere = 
Y. 1 us 2 Sa e ys 
— k u ariet olour on; red 
18e ety; with bri , they, 
e: th man, ao , 
os can be mado. W municat rose fading 
ributions a have been A 
sponden detained fe 
2 the 


— 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


arters, E T to poss re p ro 
sof withstanding Ne 
c pur ose: $ 
ee er, Seire, Cisterns, Baths, Fish-ponds, &e. For 


and ornamental — it requires neither 
carry three 


It never vegetates, and will e from 
leur ser paint. body of a 


minster. 
IAN CEMENT, for internal Stucco, ins sega z 
common plastering, may be painted and pa withi 
mits application t to the bare —— * an 122 the use — 
shew oms may be re abitable 1 
which peed mould be “pe It is worked without 
demon; adop 
z difficulty, the 2 zmt — easier and less expen- 
2 than with any other stucco whatever. A finer quality is 
ave Ornamental Pl ng, for Encaustic Paint- 
— &c,, specimens of which may be seen at the Wor ks of 
Sree Cares Francis and.Sons, Nine Elms. — 


4 
co 
© 
$ 


and frost, a 
e experienco in all st: 


fi 
ELT, for Steam Boilers and Pipes, saves 25 per 
Sa mples and — a — E aet on appli- 
con and Co. te-hill, L 


—— ana 
CHEAP AND DURABLE ROOTING. 


ROYAL LETTERS 
PATENT. 


M‘NEILL anp „ Co, sf ent s-buildings, Bunhill- 

s row, London, the Manufacturers and only L gage of 
THE ASPHA LTED F FELT FOR ROOF 

Houses, Farm Buildings, ving Workshops, 2 7 — Garden 


to protect Plants from Frost. 
5 it the Great National peiro e ral Shows, it is this Felt 
TWO SILVER MEDAL 
opted by 


exhib’ 
Aus, and 1 ve r el SOLELY pat paronia. = ado 


3 oak RD OF On Seren: 
ORABLE EAST INDIA Comp. 

HONOURABLE Commissions 0 oF ene 

Her MAJESTY eo him IsLE OF Wia HT 
: — —— GAR ae s Par 
3 oo Estates of the — of Sutherland, Norfol k, Rut- 

h ichmond), 

e Nobility and Gentry, 
AL Ad — 3 House, Hanover- 

half the price other description of Roofing, and 
Fon a great cong 1 . “i — construction of Roofs 
ee ength by 32 in 

s. £ Pens 


Eat b-baildings, 


where roofs covered with the seen, 
Vice.Chancellor’s Courts, at aes . to West- 
nd ith F. M‘NEILL - Hise: = a aonni 
un er +h Q 


rry, Esq., 
esty’s Commissioners o 254 7 . are 


ee * 1 ber with 
—+ 9 used, 2 
nsumers sendin doe ect to B= Factory can be sup- 
ir Roofs, so that they pay for 


they require. 
Erery information afforded on the 23 of R 
oofs, or 
proposed particular — of the F : 


rticularly well adapted for the 
composition a variety of highly invi- 
tance ly 


timate ited wi hsh 

animal pe ucts, is now ready to be 
autumn n ae win 

ley, Beans, Vetches, ie cae er crops, from 4 


Mr. STEPHE — 
1 in the —.—. when the quantity 
le, a 


2 — Y, SEPTEMBER 15, 1849. 
MEETINGS FO: 
ie ae eam 
‘Cusseta an Hadleigh —Sept, 29: "Northaanpton, 
See of Guano oa of other Fe egret b 
of what 
th 


ec tly 
last waka in Aee G eere 


i That re 
‘thay a avoid the pisa risk which 1 they 
ing o with the ori 


ve thus in 


AND CEMENT.—Testimonials received from | 


one Searere, J. B. Ware and Sons, Milbank-street, West- Myr, 


Mr. BussELL of * purchased from Mr. Man- 
for 


LovE of Glouceste atagonian guano’ 
l. 15s. per ton. few was bought by sample, = the 
bulk delivered was of the same qu as the sample 


sides 
M a perfectly trust 
T. 3 man: but, "a8 we are all w 
awa 


. | whole case is fully reported 


r 
Bunhill-row, 
be 


fW 
e 
* * * be at 5 Sars — the Com- 
oofed 


a few days’ rona notice is requested sam 


tltural Gasette. 


| must stand for the 3 with co 


e | protect 


es to the purchaser, even under | 
y ha incurred, that we 
readers, 


The pes be as o por, however, is, cor 45 
buyers of nly as Mr. BusskLL did, 
— are petfectly Sifo — 2 risk which 
ordinary care is likely to incur. He “took samples 
out of all the bags to 
e e s,” and their aitat, which he had bought 
or guano, proved to be not guano 2 all, but a 
pound pee e 1 bone- earth, and . organic 


1 a he ch t 
„Mr. Bus 
Bristol a short time ago, and bro 
— which purported to be guano to an 
I did so, and found it to be 2 of 


rubbish. Mr. 
his words from 2 7 ‘Glows 


Wat . 
. matter 
Crystallised = 
Carbonate of lime ve ee 
Phosphate of lime ses ots è 
Superphosphate of lime 0 Saas A: e 
Silic: . 1 
99.45 
Its nitrogen is one per 2 r ee the ferti- | 5 
lisin 21 f dere ye Ib. of it would ey se 
"E rm dun Gait u 


it; and the 
It i is ve 
fir . en 


m, a 
with a little vitri al added to 
remaining third of some eg agra 
poor in ammonia. I never saw ee 
before; and the reason 1 say it i 1 up 
8 y first, because erystallised pen could 
well exist in natur guan ondly, 
[contained no shells Py any sort; thirdly, it contained 
no feathers, which guano always does ; fourthly, it 
solution ad of alkaline ; and fifthly, its 
—— is low t of any guano I ev ed 
It has not 


gypsu 
lites, 


ssib 
analysed man anos. 
Like other things they differ = PSY, but there is 
ugh sa, of them. I 
ells ia gi o—water, 
urse—or, 
never—carbo of lim 
lime, always—superphosphate, 
invariably.” 
ed 5 was iioi — — end after such a 


monly— phosphate of 


r. HE ATA TH P Bristol for 
he So 1 


PATH hare in evidence we take 
kes 


m 
ro- | Proportion as truth i 


0 
3 matter, alwaye—orjtallised gypsum, misled 


never—nitrogen, 1 


t as this; e particularly i mpress 
5 purchase TS or Spe is, 1. * uch a 8 
be had by every one iis will ta 
trou ble o preserve a specimen of the dodik he, pur- 
chases, for analysis by a competent chemist, in cas 
tion. “The learned judge , from 
evidence on a bot 3 that $ som 


the evidence eee 
In arriving 


t this decision, 2 could a avag saying 
at he was sorry fo 


in these 5 
ysis to 


Ju sb e ihe character of the . ene had im- 
i se rs. MankTovr and Buss Mr. Wa 

fay a t a most gaw ble paper on guan in the current 
3 va > English Agricultural J arne in which 

he t the conclusion that, i m a ‘valuation 
of manate, — to present 
monia sho uld be considered biag E 
lim 


e 24d., per l 
‘ rao a 


TA of 
po case 
‘ore us, a ton of the 


he should be ae 25 the 1 of its zun te an Mr. 


About 336 lbs. of water, w orth 
» 360lbs. of organic matter, con- 
1 22 lbs. of aren or, say 
stn ammon 6d. 013 
20 Ibs. of gypsum at Le, cwt.0 6 
Carbon ate of lim eypan at ni 0 
About 720 lbs. of phosphate of lime, 
at 3d. 2 5 
29 Ibs. of superphos hate,at1}d.0 3 
Silica, worth * “i ding: 0 0 


. 
ESTIMONY is Valuable not merely in 
witn 


Tes properes to 
the sima of the w ess; his a 
8 


misguided by false finger- 
ae 2 been erected with the 
nd the 


cased 
ncere desir t him ari 2 


ifficult of attainment ; and 
agricultural truth being accessible only t 
laborious Tage agricu 
ough. re 


Abe 
mistakes — no dou e miscon- 
* shonesty of 8 “i origi- 
s the severest criticism is 
agricultural writings o 


le m 
on this acco unt only that we could excuse 
he numerous . s which ati appeared of Mr. 
Carrp’s pamp n Hien Farm No one —— 
thou z of 3 "it of any — unintended erro 
but this has been done —.— a confidence ima 
— with the fac t 
the least, as fallible as the 
arguments of the former 
lead as was the eyesight of fm latter to have 
however, is now 

etai 


al : 

ohiit le Ai Tiet ilies a this Bonik 
—— es to be well studied: it rene shed its fifth 
edition 3 in less than five mon i 


vidence on farm 

safely taken if that of an intelligent man, 
— practised in the art, is to be rejected. But how 
has it been treated in the case before us 


wished 

2 known that this te 

oss returns of farmin 105 as 
fear of this. It 


margin of the 
Now we have no fear o not 
the occupiers of land 


8 sper 
ing 5 


aug analy not undesirable 
unaffected 


forced t adm 
from which =; pre on 2 hey have no confi- 
ence in it as a real motive in the ordinary un 
of business transactions. How much to 
acknowledge this n once: the r 
better foundation for the security of st 


+ Reackwoos and Sons, Edinburgh, 


586 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


Hike behaviour than any that this continual 
of a merely ty sentiment will ever 
The truth to 


advocacy 
provide. 


owners tako as mue ; 
trustworthy tenants; and rents will rise 
permit—not otherwise. 


as 


w the t 
n us whether, 
wilful unbelief 
is so obviously for 
emo before us it professes 
which instinctively opposes it 
the ten of Mr. 


fM 
may, the poi 


our benefit as 
to be, the prejadice 
ble. I 


Caray's pare let be 
— pt rer it is not whether it be 


* 


lord's statement as some 
whether or not it be a TRUE one. 
ow on this point those who 


hea 


ve the means and 


the leisure ought to apply for permission to satisfy | 
thei b 


oubts by a personal inspection. os 

who cannot spare the time which this would require, 

we have stated the i 
to believe in the re 

When they shall 

esulte, th 


been attained, and th 
far as possible, their own to the conditions u 
which such produce and such profits have arisen. 

i e to give when the price of 


them 
Horn. 


rts of Messrs. Carro and 
truth of 
ey will to 


pre ia no better advic 
agricultural produce is falling, than that those should | 
be made our exa hose profits so far ex 


mples w 


be this—that the would-be 


ar- | addition to a tolerable 


point open to | wo 
a Aud 
ve called it, but least 


a 
= 


vise 
e advise = 


ben u. „ We passed along the inner end of Fuea’s 
Gaun. the Sent of the wumberless inlets of this coast 
— F 
ing country, comprising the sou e an- 

| eouver’s — ia well pted for cultivation, for in 
| soil and a moderate climate, it 
| excellent harbours and abundance of timber. 
17 will doubtless become the most valuable section of 
! above California.” 
| We may be permitted to doubt whether the Govern- 
ment have acted judiciously 

the Hudson's Bay Company, because it is very 

it wi the interest of 


as much 

yuire for theirs, Sound. 
Who then will pa 
a prohibition f 
the policy of th 
be 


we be not greatly in error, it is 


the island after five 
i i country. 

with 
military 
ition o 


been favoured 
1 acquainted 
can Colonies. 


which we have by another 
with the 


Havi 


3 
oe = 


over Western 
ties of 
ss in that region of the world. His diary, whieh 
has placed at our disposal, though written — ſor 
his private use, betrays the good education and in- 

v of the writer. f 

hen it is borne in mind that about 250,000 emigrants 
res, with fi i 


our own when prices were satisfactory: and 
examine in detail the plans of Mr. M‘Cutrocer 
Auchness, wi in accordance with our 

Inst week, to look for the causes 
distress in the faults of the art, not 
circumstances. 


to 
at 
in- 
tention exp 
— ieultural 


CANADIAN AGRICU 
phiet of Ma 


YS. 
ichael 


i 
i 
i 
5 


i 
il 


f 
il 


i 
A 


odities and in 
ith Australia, wiih New Zealand, 


i 
f 


* 


Spice Islands, with Ceylon, with Madras, and 


Li 


if 


rr 
f 
I 
i 
HHI 


l 


FEE 
A 


125 


direction to the tide of em 
consideration, and any ible proposition by 
Irish pauper labourers may be established with 
T facility in any of our colonies, is at this 
| moment especially deserving of attention by those indi- 
. scheme 


some 
which 


f 
t 
} 


| absorption of l rs, i 
| adults of the ragged schools, in our North 
| provinces ! t bein 


g. 
<a 


in surrendering this island | pend, 


on the op f 
a price which practically amounts to | ri 


years held a staff appointment, and travelled repeatedly | are 
n particular, he has had ample | 
condition of our 


capital wherewith 


uding the | 
American fell 


futurity, 
does the fertile shores 


steam 

on its borders.“ 
„The soil of Red River settlement is a black mould 
of considerable depth, which, when first tilled, produces 


noble stream, connecting as it 
of two spacious Lakes, with 
its bosom, and pepulons towns 


Overland Journey Round the World,” p. 132. 

whom we refer, 1 82d 
victim to malignant ebotera s ts the 
attached —— he pee He was endowed 
admiration a 


esteem, ERE a S 


qualities, | 


— 
the vicinity is ri 
of coal about 10 feet in depth can be traced 
considerable dist along both sides of the 
‘hat coal may prove to future generations of mais 
means of facilitating 8 
region yet imperfectly explored. Westers Cie 
ithout doubt, the most desirable portes @ er 
i and 


an 
amplification or any artificial * 
“ A humble farmer having disposed of bie lame 


nningof August, and 
— in the Huron distriet. 
ith to buy at 
pany on their terms (with 

capital a much more advantageous 
ade from Government 


1111 


0 
i 


i 
1 


f 
k qH 


i 


i 
1 


R 
: 


1 
iF 


th 


587 


AG RIC ULTURAL GAZETTE. 


T H E 


eee ee aijan ag pippe 2 22 45 ‘ ‘ 
BOWE e 1 pahe 10 i i eee 
H 21. * 3 ~ : ‘ TEL : 
Sepak gaeti a a niea 1 ee 1 
Hy Hah (eet a tr (Eel 10 pi 0 1 0 1 
1 i e hhl f A Hil 0 ne Hi % He 1 
tE 4 3 812 8 Hi Ei rit $ 12411 8 

peste, i Hilt tra IID eerie HERNIE ANTM THE ao 
bt si a iii: ill 1 Ht Hie e ik 1 
jii hi H f ujip: ainis ANE F HiT 1155 i} ii e HHE hiig 
Re til lji Hite JERR iiis Heli eae ny if st il HSH 1117 fan iinis 1675 11 ff 
i il F ; zi i gil i ae il 1101 i ipp ai 1 
e . (Ce TEE fi HR : 
1 e a ae Biani aM ff 1 inal nai 15 “+ 7 p 
1 TALE j ATAI PTE RRA? nilij: eats 0 1 Bug ie 12 1 eal 
HF FER DNF j= E — $s 22777881 8 1822 ay 26% 
H RHK . HERES fina eld 1151 ani imate fi 
11 i 1 e ite 10 0 Hi nent 16 Al 
fy fs 1431 a p : É 110 ES ay 2 1122. 3 1 
Ht e a i; 0 ia 10 it 1 0 i ii 
lass hi iH beet 1111 RINNE tr Hin Hi: 1171 abn i 
111 1 Kt tai bat 22° 11 10 ia 100 i 1 piji» jija ni 

SA eer F if 

lu! rth : HEA HT it 10 1 % i 1747 iif 


588 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


[Sepr, 2. 


LA tes laced in a hazardous isk and a vast community 
k that a nat o rath 
lam 


rg 
D 
7 s 


l | per a 
that on light and menes 


a Abe e and 

is to restore 
“the htt r m tha 3 a . oF 
which is now palp osing, busin Iw 
gladly leave you, i niia of England, i in the hands 
of such an 8 could I perceive any = 
of hope that, by the touch of his wand, 
would be turned into joy, and De yoa u would 5 
find the er, treasure there t confess 
faith 


E 


y 
the tortuous and = eaved billows of a muc 
and swollen sea, 
wrec 


untried schemes of a new-born agri- 

38 0 m mean for a moment ` won 
mend, that no step towards impro 

— to Po taken ; but if so, with ina eaution, 


= Bly 
us ah ou, on the contrary, ur 


our grief |r 


e 

dibble half an on acre ror Whea 

g | inches This seven-row dibble i is v 
nd 


, | small farm the flail 


e farmer’s immediate m „„ 


mpestuous 
e position of mere 
cience.— 


ready been stated that t 
much i eh 2 r even e 
means 


ewberry in 
hg spoken ‘of 1 y epa ort of a 


e chaff, rmp. Turni 


us 
rry recommends, and 


they believed it to 
amply sufficient. 
an 


They fi ound the dibbled Wheat to be 
stron; in th 


soil and atmosphere than those | 


ich a placed more 
thought the ‘dibbler — — om seat es 2 tas 


Beans, enabled 
fem more — 


| the farmer to clean 
Mechi informs us that he 


had tried it, and gives the 3 e of a in 
b. He says:“ My hine e has fi 


not seen 

soils it isa E Walen . im- 

se soils, in a wet or pis! state, it 
hea 


my 

Parsnips with his hand-dibble this year. 

have come up well; where they have missed, it seems 

to have arisen from the irregularity of the ground, 

which had been lately broken up from lea, and the pods 

in consequence had not got properly decomposed. The 
e 


dibbling depositors when raise a passa age e for 


the seed, which Lin oo aa the les which these 
he 1 


t only 
reat s wel s seed (half a bushel of Wheat being 
a fale à allowance 


, throwing out stirring and h 
5 mplement likewise inserts the seed into 
an ir 


a seven 
be to it, be nace to 
a da ay, s 12 


depositor a 


andy. As to his lever- "dibble 
not yet seen it, but I understand it 
ái dibble Ewo” Jees of Wheat a da 


apar 
in size, being —— an 
n wheels I 


exact 


eater pa m, but it may be as 
more A re i one or | two of them. ‘There is 


economy and podi tion, Pin "the nee by which the 
grain is to be delivered from the — rs of corn. 
is of general use, and it may be a 
question whether this method will 255 answer the pur 


e | pose, if properly performed, full as well as most of the 


machines that are worked by horse- pow 
of these is, that 8 preni attention is paid in poeng 
the corn thro ough them slowly, the person feeding it re- 
taining t 


left t in the en 


laborious, i measures is often slurred, and it 
often leads to pilfering. The expense of a large thresh- 
ing mac 1 ch as is oer d to almost all the farms 
in Scotland, very great, often amounting to 50 
ed tl 


8 each; aie it is to be e ere 


riet o purposes, suc 


ps, 
i- | steam, but of course more confined in 


e, 


ocess of the row-culture, a 
this by the newly invented ae eee having been now 
fully explained, it remains to b what are the 8 
im best adapted for cleaning th nd 
bringing it into a proper tilth. Law 


a lad 
attached to the Bl, it rin einen to mim of its 3 
draw 


but does it n n by one 
man? If it» vine —— of 1 ing all the work 
as stated, it would be a most invaluable ma chine, and 
the more panes were uainted with it the | 


three to four | chi 


Aah skh ient | h 


tio 
the straw a sufficient time for the teeth of the 
machine to extract the grain, much of the latter will be | su 


-| and to: —— — 8 3 i 


0 ag 
means of any s 


p. 500). 
n and ig a of the | a 


better. 


8 soil in W it has been used is ea; 
order, * 


vements to 
o doubt, be N 


us render it more 


may. n 


echanic whom loyed 
position of the weight o on thd — bar 
in your sketch. . — ve 3 


and energy of young farmers, I 
it to be s — feel quite sure, Rene conversations lear 
anded proprietors, that they would be 
glad to —.— — English, Scotch, or Welsh farmers, 
i i rms 


their position. 
= considered in the rent, in the 
in this country. the av side poo! 
amounted — me in the pound « ons at 8 a tenant 
would not rth 
— was only. 30. „ the spe bai 
facility of sale being the s 


disappointments during t 
their settlement, gr prs pea untry w 

9 that the on remedy 
by the he introduce 


oO 
ge 


cultivated by English or 9 2 5 ! 
xceedi es each. me n 


ing something more 


island? The ing v 
the probable fate * the "Potato ¢ crop in 1849. on 


tation to sow Turnips, and plan feared wan : 
od fea 


nt of ten 
to oo the lowality of t 
culars before advisi 


against failure ; But at 


and Scotch — in the country, 

repent of our 8 poliey. 

e ae 
’ 


not afraid of a lit 


e Plough, Kc. 


Falcon.— 
F eani criti uncture of 
t an unfavourable impression (as quo 
extract) should be sent abroad through 
widely circulated a paper as the 
riis. 
(the — Relief Committee of the Socie ety of 
distributed seeds ef Turnips, 8 Parsnipe, 
En we fear we must add seed Potatoes also.“ — vide 
Gazette t. 


take the liberty of s 


ily 
e * 2 
Irish N 

eav 


589 


r soaked, also guano d drille “Taking the quanti ad Sg dag England and Wales 
over u 8 mom I fete g Aree ligt ote “the drill kam od “ight — A - of a 
rse, find, from several years’ experience, | m e, as 9,000,000 of acres, thes mber 
aor Sisika on the ridge or flat, it answers well and of er cubie “feet of water given will be 871,200. 000,000. 
does not spread too much to admit closest uce this into horse power, is this da 
rse-hoeing. were all put in with it this in pa Se estima —.— 374, say 38, 
year, and I believe finer or mo not be seen, | cubic feet of w falling every minute on an oy 
My neighbours are also to sa easily | wheel of 10 feet diameter, is reckoned the power of ong 
ill 3 acres per day o angol urzel or Swedes, | horse. Divide the abov numbers by 525,960, the 
and, besides the saving of expense, I much prefer it minutes in a year, y 38, the number of i 
dibbling ; the seeds are mo separate, and the thinning | feet, and the result is the constant h wer of 
done more easily afterwards. I got idea from a| 43,590. This, how er, supposes the water-power to 
wing of a drill-harrow at the end of Sinclair's Code, be only on a 10-feet heel, and that wheel to be 
substituting cups 8 a or 3 inches long to dip out | motion every of the year. But by judicious 
the seed, for pods mmends of letting the seed | conservation and division of the obtained, in 
— 8 iin 8. a roller 1 y h. | of using the nstantly, it 7. be 3 for a 
he following 1 ia a rough sketch — | certain number of hours per day „an 
of the year; and taking the average of falls a 2 50 feet, 
the gross amount of pow derived from the 
drainage of nth aa of may be safely calculated 
t a gross amount superior to 1 „000,000 h "oa 
his is sufficient bs show the national importance of 
the idea; and to estimate its value in individual 
the me sugg y Mr. De will 


It is for thi 
e e that the ing is so superior to the pping 
er ut — estate, — indicative of its surface capabilities, 
ce; of e I do not mean to en showing tia 4 2 N 4 lice, ad on this ject we Nr, her to the pamphlet 
say that this been universal, om my legs made of three-eighths rod iron. itself, which landowners should rea 
knowledge of th acter of too many of my country- 
eA s Calendar of Operations. 
SEPTE 
East LOTHIAN Fanx ept. 10. She earer’s w wages in this dis- 
trict are 10s. a week, and eee and 4 — ngs. If the + oad 
; —— war cea next week, we expect a great portion of th 
— . ARM ——We have had a con- 
The n = of onal — ater "enog our our Jast report,» which Ss 
105 en observation n of drill-barrow, Sept. 3 ; indeed, the harvest tray non be Sd de b. 0 
| amdmoderate abilities ld learn more in the course Wheel * we A inches; Hook pi — or e in this part of the county. e fine showers we had on the 
of a fortnight’s tour mongst us, than he would from 54 feet. The box should kept as r the wheel as | 1st Sept. — greatly — the gre an crops; —— pe | 
years of reading and theorising on — subject. S. B. possible, and n he A tin e conveys the | — e a heaty Ser ene early, he horse labour on 
Farmer’s P rospects.— Your la or three Gazettes | seed in a slanting direction tothe ground, and this shute | the farm for the past fortnight has been ploughing, harro 
have drawn attention to the future Brospeots of farming, on the 0 eur ved pi on which hangs | rolling, &e., land which we have seeded —— permanent 
e, sad r Pane; loosely, , and by its weight j ust scratches the mould where K the Trilollumn 8e seed, ploughing for wi — Tares, * — the 
as to the best method to pursue to smo f the way to wheel does not print sufficiently, and sometimes a remaining portion of our Oats and Beans, scarifying and har. 
times. Your pondent „P thinks by | piece of chain dragging close after will er Turnip | rowing the Bean phe Pea land, preparatory for the so 
trifling details and strict economy in all their business seed sufficiently. There are four holes drilled in the | Wheat Odd horses are kept continually employed, remy 
i that lief e gained; while; 7 . edge trimmings, border cuttings, Grass, and weeds after 
y 5 : | iron axle, into which I screw different sized cups scarifier, carting earth for cattle pens, cart g hurdles for 
f mother r, C., says nothing but a return to pro- quired, nce using only two at a time. 1 moval of sheep, also carting 2 — a —— * n 
| tection, or, in other words, a 7m duty upon imports, | old wheelbarrow wheel, on which, when the tire w. d young stock, and sundry work which, for decency 
is at all ti 
ma aopn Present race of farmers from certain off, ed pieces of hard wood with a sharp edge. necessary, y. The labourers, after th eon — — 
Tain emelading v with > es iat the“ nape — Alfred Tuckett, Warmsley, Brisio employed trimming hedges, cutting Grass round tha 
. A class of industr and per ea ngines.— o your correspondent’s | field — hoeing F a 1 — — d 
l -EL wichen t disputing this fact, “will the ire to gain some ie about the best steam | heaping m dng wu thax TÈ Claas of On Sue bane or ee 
Wer state the amount of acres and er reputed capital engines, I beg to say that k some trouble to do ruvian guano, and 14 ewt. of gypsum per roadcast, and 
the small ‘British er generally in his neigh- „and succeeded in finding one Englishman, name Bari — —_ the seod ; they Pe ag ee * 
bouthood ?: i 2 „and the second crop o an Ry 
| fet thas bs — a oromi . 5 p 885 ae Powell, of St. ti Rouen, owhom I refer hi for | thateni i and trimming the j re ricks. Our work during the 
12 yp Aa 8 ed 3 have to a ed, a any calculations, who put up E 6 an ay ey for next week or two will be taking up the Potato p, 80 ing 
tistics ? corn cane tion show it is the concern _ established in France. e Con- | Tares, carting the manure out for Wheat, and ploug ag 
feat E — À yeni of the farmer to produce with | gum tion of co: ill be guaranteed by the maker not * the 1 lea ground for Wheat, the early ploughing of 
| culture corn sufficien t to feed the + ed 4 r hour per horse power, that i seen 8 ‘of Pota es is ne 
4 wi : c SF the aire 2 horse power will consume 60 „ 4 — 240 Xx 12 hours | of °c years, the being prematurely ee the 
i us an improved method, by which our fields = 2880 lbs. = consumption per 12 hours. Our engi disease does n to affect tubers, except in a vi 
Ray produce double the old verage. This improved | have each two eylinde the high pressure st en- | ‘rifling degree, but the produce is small, in the good land. 
System of h 1 5 nie — — and for and sheep 
corre bandry, if I mistake not, your intelligent | g the small cylinder, and after acting upon the k, yet do well where not the epidemic, 
nt“ Q.” ean » if so inclined ail with piston, is allow into the larger cylinder, where, whio complaint is still doing much damage in some ; 
Pleasure his second letter and trust he will enlighten by expanding, it again e lar this coun ot 15. — — * 1 y y See — — 
a t ften giving in your columns his which works coajointly the small piston, c y pected; the quality is fine, but not equal, E oo ores Sy to the 
Ps ul gee advice, both in raising cereals and a parallel m he boilers are 30 feet long, produce of. the N wi 
Wi’ general management of fi pur. with two tub receive water from the boiler,| Sussex Farm, Sept e have been fav “edhe 
i an gard to ruinous prices in this neighbourhood, a laced under the boiler ; these tubes can be taken out — nde hate in ge emerat ia" this 8 ins 
| ves Poor farm of 8 acres, and a tumble-down house, | and put in again without displacing the boiler. The fini — good, even better than 
1 — à fortnight ago by public auction for 40002. 5 furnace is unde o tubes, and the turns we expected. Our teams at —— are engaged harro 
Bler O be Sold in a few days, without a house— | from under the left hand tube and returns over the left e rolling * — 4 N ee 
a acre has been bid for it, and refused; the Jand * the left hand side of the boiler, it good * van Mask Sith the disease, but t 
T5 ; th modern systa + To meet the present times, besides | t rthe top of the rom hand tube and are ‘ver, y little — red e yet Key 1 repairing 
i i i Sekai S, hoeing Turnips, threshing eat an 
da it out, 80 yao fen abiy argued D de ce = under is right hand a is hea Ra — rain year's gorii, of which we shall be able to state the y 
must be bd 
—f Some alteration in rent, tithes, poor-rate, | of the fire, and th , which is thus three times th 
Pleo taxation bearin farming interest. | length of the boiler, is 90 feet in all, and thus consumes es to Correspondents. 
steadi] argue against these burthens, and nearly all the gas before it passes into the chim ee erat Q. The publication of the first letter 
eed, without 5 to burthen one — not say that I shall be happy to allow any one to * the second was 8 gs pi rp wont — — con, 
i i i * ee that it appear „ 885. , 
p 1 Wal lesi alata SA é rrespondent writing aed, — only ee ie oi do. seal J.J. H. | desiring to fnd and 2 55 2 
uir h 2 t 
you to stimulate the Welsh farmers i an apparently ‘severe — ours on the wd agr nie 
s n lands. If he had spoken of R telus, ivi N fom a 3 arks which did not 
been sil 1 ` — s Drainage of Lands, and the eras of Towns, By fairly belong to them, ae, Pus — etn a i bom 
n * 0 ng an ea e 
ws fet tient po Ta th 5 a e Bailey Denton, Land agent and Surveyor, &e. N 5 4 bod 4 elves, and we imagine 
N rz John Weale, 59, High Holborn, London, t you do too: the conduct proper to the present crisis ma 
= climate of 7-10ths of North : surely be discussed by us without either = us being su — 
only allow of corn being grown to a profit Er wy gegen ng pamphlet contains the substance to bring personal charges against our comrades. We hope 
Protection from an influx from more a paper, on model and relief mappin 3 as the best you w will not think we desire on this acco — fair 
e e, the proprietors and farmers of | inden to the e, capable of a surface, w ick oes read| criticism. ‘ LBH. ‘Theres tothing extraordinary ta 
cultivated almost to the tops of our | befo ae > Society of Arts durin past s gp sal . et ae stale of Wier 
ither ustry nor capital has been The int. which Mr. Denton insists, in at Gara 2 wait sown in a rich 2 
is j ver, in stares us in the t i 0 E to drainage, is — proba 1 yield — — many ears as the young soldier 
be partially seepe from the farmer | the — of drainage motive power. a Deiker: —.— This Buse 
the rent, b ing wed 1323 quantity of rain falling o ee is esti . 4 mid- ett ‘ior rows a foo tanne on a ig i soil, 1 which is nous 
ent pasture, g to the dairy, | inch annum ys pari tter for being very ric ; 
$ : 3 1 E or eaves, 
cattle, and small eep. This change is | deducting 18 of them as absorbed by io rigs l s — = ie eet a it say e — 
is f the labourer? I| evaporated into the air, 12 inches 5 
to of th fap 4 th, is worth less than Barle 
b bed, which I believe is! trickle do nwards hrough e iy an a find thei tè Way | BREAKIN o UP Grass Laxp tad, and T am ‘saved 
Y You political economists. A Sufferer. from the lan springs—to the sea byr : up about 100 acres of ol 4 
3 Two or three weeks si 155 of water over the surface of an acre of ad weighs instead of ad — Á jas: — ae age Preemie 
1 make use of sa <b 8 
Agriculiural Gazette respecting a|100 tons; 1200 tons fall annually on every acre in the — ba 1 ere, broadcas 
Ma ee Wurzel, &e I mes ve one inland, and t 7 2 descend to the sea. hat a on this, a y knock the turf to piec 
u Some years eee. s here wasted, which might be made 2 ; plough it under, — pua so 
ros £ E one n eavy, 
ts —. not) eo cost n : ie the far more nsiye animal power ie wil . 2 — — —— * 
; B „first, in nm or ar expe n urning, 
5 Magol Warzel, piee four days, sand, Parsnips — on farms. p — on this. particular method, 40 mucli as 


ve 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. : 
{Sern a, 


The use of salt or any other 
means that have actic 
— — — — 9 * into — ally | HAY.—Per Load of 36 Trusses 
ive x 
par 1412 EE * ne aft, for eu ly — . — . 683 to pe tone — p, h oie t H 
means of obtaining a fair mon aa 5 4 pe of the most abv’ 3 2 . ‘Clover . e 608 todes carriage sam sbi 7 —The suppi 0 
e u sha $ 
this country is to turn it cat È 7 od — N in 2 ere Str "o were cleared N 7 morning w 2 ante 
Grass for good arable crops.” . exchange bad * 3 30 day se nicht. T ecline of 28 per land 
Berne IN PIGEONS: Anon We unit Coun ERLAND * Se J. COOPER. here was more a upon itio — 
EASE ee Hoek In the absence 91 ail 80 Inf 3 enton Hay "10s to 75s ara Wei, gE tion , but the very 2 foreigu Wheat a = 
the 9 4‚¶˖Ʒ⁊v des under which the shee — ormation as 4 e tt 50 65 New Cl wie ee aed Wage 80s | at a greater abate antzic could m at a — 
1 T shair aa age, sex, and food sd ve e placed, — old * — o-. sale. Foreign mu J .—English — Marks 
a ag i to advise. We are goa being amie, itis gute Clover ... +. 86 92 sie i 33 | unalt x Now — whos er qr on arely so gett 
se from tympanites, or distention of the st ba Agreed Ee WHITECHAPEL, osnuA BAKER, per qr. advance. We ‘white a ave tounin ee se 9 
— 8 — -i food. 5 t n bate | Fine pi Roe . 65s to 708 2 . Mappers —The Oat made is h maui afier aiie : 
nferior di ea z 
— es > An asin or te To | eee — 1 ditto... „ Bie ansity of Moe vy, and fally 1s, per qr, oe 
8 a sein iil i 1 * * at — at a decline ooo i tion inferior to that of la i 
Jevas and pit nie soil 4 Cabbages in T bag 2 off the outer mo * 00 to 408. per sack. per bushel.—The top ate ech | 
NeTon’s Macnines : W Grifin, We ha beeen ET FRIDAY 
— sates . of he: dibbli — — — sa E HOPS,—Friway, Sept. during T, Sert, 34h arrivals of all grain ia 
em. The point may be considered fr ATTENDEN and SMITH re ae 4 ; red W is morning mar: have been ft 
E ed esta- yom “the plantations where picki p pat the accounts | realised a heat was inquired ket was 
gerson or Guano: Amateur Sub e Hops come down picking has commenced state th b a slight advance, but ter, andin somi 1 
soriber. Let very sh at | bl 2 im 
Peruvian —— t well alone. — said con very short of expectation and on the best descri provemen 3 
gy a very good thing. Wead * to increas , and that the | Geman riptions of D 8 i 
so-called “ Essences.” ` advise you to avoid | About 1000 pockets of th e rapidly. Duty called 20 0,0001 B .—Barley maintai antzic, these being toate 
ag hn hanks 92 ey are no doubt a powerful manure. But selling freely from TL. to Bl. 8s. new growth have arrived, and are eans we observe no alteration. Ter Peas 
a 
relatively —— hepe — it is — to state their . cine athe : te sale, bar ae 2 295 with 3 
R i HFIELD, y.—Indian Corn ‘or barrels re 
mni AE or ev — . not always depend ex- i upply of Beasts is 3 9 fos „ K. o. Dog 3 > attracts a little more 
Sr batt Sn? . |e meal eto ne any onan Se asant, much ain dppeas fo and ae See Ae BA 
r r cent, o eep and Lam 5 4s, e st affect’ en t i 
— precipita — 3 5 arate the oxalate of lime, poil consequently 2 * G w well a, e E — ee — —— 0 — i 2 | 
quip MANDRE : L M. . s, exceeded, Calves ported, and, in some was manifest i U in i 
— — t E heory would indicate th that aq should N 8 aas maT be second- rate aro = 3 E here n followed by, tho 1 1 — | 
quantities varying directly with he plant, and | sh a olland and Germany the & 5 Fi eek, and a decline coi 
growth a nae A th the natural to tendency to eep, and 21 Calves; from Fr * re es ape t 3710 those of eyon “ager: agt s. per qr. was gener 
— of applying is that of M 8 ener, 1 Northampt ton, 1600. SR “Bens and from e e instances 1s.. tiero e. — 
pes, with removable hose connecti , by under-ground | Best Scot a s d; Per st. of 8 lb ERPOOL, F noes 10- per qe. Aas 
3 —.— — — —— er] fords, e. Here 3 est Long-w saint . d| foreign Wheat gry aay be 
‘<onterence wi wie — could be best 5 | Best Short-horns 3 10 ay S| E sar 8 | the prices of Tuesday; the s a fair retail Dusinese a We 
plan op Ss make s saeh machines. T 2 quality Beasts 2 10 — 3 4 —.— i quality 5 0 3 4 gar i s cleared off at Her rea 
cylinder fer holding th the Haus is pierced so Stratton’s, where the eee an pe or better. Barle 8 Maden te See 
op the liquid 2 8 3 10 — a ae a 0 y rather he es! A 
— movement, yaa — — emai 2255 — >e spl ee n 0—4 0 Var „„ : 3 10 s firm rather cheaper, Beans and — 
and liability to e oom lexi > Sheep and L 8 — 2 at 18. per quarter. 
Pa nozzles is avoid apm gn pierd pipes, and . obe and ; eg es Calves, 160; Pigs, 220. Wear. [BARLEY:| Oars.) RYE 
OSPHATE — Lime : Amateur. e ber of B : 
supplies It is never made ; our large; easts is eee le, but th a Pio EA 483 0d 
Bim 7 — are abundant i i bones, — half kee a | Thes ; e f e * ‘ashe’ ae s rates are readily per 47 4 25 z T * oe oH 
r of lime. ES nt 21 at s er being favourable, te a — . _) however, the bi 4 26 1 19 0 7 5 
acid 4 — * their weight 5 l from reque 2 N 2d. per 8 lbs, Erpe — clear, trade is 44 8 — 4 116 10 126 $ 
22 which are first well wetted, and . t; a few good ones make nearly a pare not much in 44 6 . pers 
— mn the acid, suffered to lie in a no. 9 after — ond rate are unsaleable. Calves ic By — as of late, but 26 9 18 4 25 11 
per aer a acre, se manu for Turni ith ashes and pp 5 or em woe eee there is a reduction © Petal H Agya trade fr Agereg: Aver. 45 11 26 3 19 
re ips. . ¢ an 8 Ibs. Duties F 0 26 5 
mga An ae reat beds of 1 um is never pre- 93 1 from Spain, 65 ae a 254 Beasts, 510 — — — sale 
— sandstone, You 3 it iR: “es marls of | Best an Beasts; and 108 Milch Tae mais 3 and Northa sane 10 0 0 1 0 
dealers pply cot. ai ties 
be er ey asks, ‘ Will milch cows r Prarie 2 — 3 10 to 4 0 Best Long. wool 3 8 to 3 10 via 2 e 
— 7 — oilcake, say 3 lbs. — 22 extra milk 94 Short-horns 3 8 me 10 — . ee — pp e 38) Ave. 35S 
in winter ?” Pu — mmer, and roots * niner 1 s and 210—3 6 Ditto Set 3 - 6| 483 0d— 
Rare Cake: Old any one say, who 3 had k ge Lam vee 47 4 1 | ats on ie 
— or the English gy vor Farmer. experience 1) Ditto ee esi 492408 Caly — see oe a tat ie 4 3 7 pe 58 
rere roal, Mr. Pusey gives Beasts 91; Sheep and Lambe, 10,800; Gal 4:8 3 ‘ = i 
finor salia Per nn mene” $ of Nitrogen s and Fat, L 8 is Fis, 20. 4.8 jah oe 
ore 1 ondon. a e ane i 
— to the advantage oË 5.23 PRICES | Liverpool, Wakefield. B a 
th Sage 0 the latter. We i dli no CU ——1.'ů i oston. Birmingham 
oa 6. Yes; you will ‘probably 3 RRENT. i 3. Sept. 10 Sept. 4. Sept. 11. Aug.31 Sant 7. Sent. 5 | 
EX . 5 ». HKug. 1] epd. t ep 0 = 
or Ecos : E O cites the following on this s Wheat— es A ar 70 lbs, 70 lbs. qr. g p Sept12 | Sept. 6. 
1 P of Useful Knowledge,” publi bation. from the | New, red 3 > d. dis 2 Ar. qr. 62 Ibs. 
es ie eee and the number on Dome by Cradock — *. 38 to41 6 4 „ . 6. 6. | Se 6, | Se 8. . te & ad 
mals, To know whether an egg will a Domestic Ani- | Old, red 2 pases 3945/38 to43}38 to42 5 6 5 9 
cand! if the ra anin ö 40 41—48 40—4640—45 
egg contains at evacancy caused by tho air-bag, which every n Rube aa MOA 41—43|410—42| — | = * 72 
e . en.. . 36—5236—5004 —50| —4%d — | — 10 6 8 
acock. The la y iu the —.— 36—5035—49 
— Page 28. ee ubs Re- Old |2 SAD} of oe 
* — YZ Any machine maker will con Foreign... 22 Se bc 2 aie E 
near Glasgo — — Alle, of Foreign meal 50.— age ets - „ 
e e W, make them, „ sor of | parley 51.—6151.—6“ — ie 2e 2 * 
stalks . s avery * 4 x = — r 3 x » f 
pas 2 — seed are not an a But 37 Grinding ae ae 598 ‘il d - 
„ Communications is given for the plant on a rich ootis Malting... ee r ; p 23 20—22 qr. F. 
. aon Sanam! h soil. be | Foreign... ee ee ap Ger 2425 2425 2224 f 
— | i g—2618—26} — „„ 2 9 
Malt—Ship s. | — i 6 bush.|6 
, 37—4037—4 
Hothouse’ COVENT GARDEN, Serr. oats— t ; 570 * re — ; 
F white 129) | 
8 . fi Wal à altered since our last acco _ K. . |14—23 18—22 _ — 16—2016—20 19-27 | 
8 s modera: 'are — aR — Foreign t J Te ok a 
nips may be obtained tely plentiful, . 
ame ; at from 3d. to 6d. eg S Tur 2 2 * — 5 
er" Cauliflowers a bunch Carrots the Peas—Boilers 25 qr ee 165 j 
last s, per bushel, > gas fetch from spss 4 — : 
d. to 4s, per bushel. Potatoes hase nokaltered since our | osten. |2 26302630 — | — | Smi 
Flowers consist of Heaths, Polare ls. to a sufficient for the — he — 25 196 bs. 
venusta e i a * eee * oT — I 
i per Ib, eter New, small von — — — i 
—— Nn. | ns per doz., 4s to 6s pe 5 oss rr 34 32—35 209 281292432 24 12—14 2 
per Ib. oat per doz., 1s to 3s — es 3 ssi . T ; 
Beaches, per doz., 28 ols 22 per 100, 88 to 16s vena i. — ey 5 30 oe — — 1415 
Se ht sleve W eck, 6 Linseed—Feed 1 wet ea 
sieva as 10 6s | Walnu es per 1b., 26 to 38 4 — 4 
P100, 1s éd%023 Ting am . 9G 32—4032—40 „i — 
e | LinseedCakes 
i 3 se 188 sag 7 to 558 British ; — e — — — 15 
4 = Brazi, p. Dah — rug to 22s Forei 91. 128 12s 5 
to 16s ign aoe y. d A adi a a * Tr Í — — — 
P. sieve, Ass $01 18 6d Indian Corn— 22 4 — 4 — sais 1 
h, -ta 156d p. sack — 12—13 
hab pe oz, sao ss Flour 36—44 psi ver cack | T 
—4434—42 32—35 per 
to 6d 84—86 
P. doz., 1s 6d to 3s Weekly mad 
tols Averages anā 
4d to d Aver. Impts.] A 
i S | Ay 
e, biete Sept.11 ages. | Imports. 
ene. s 4. 4 6. . 
e a 
OATS... eee 30 1 3 20 4031 
ch, 24 to 30 = — 420 26 3 1807 
RYE 20 6 19410 19 3 
. 28 2 27 0 — 
r a 
w a ee 28 6 — 
775 a 697 
SIGNED RINGSFO. ! 
{ and Dy ae TUNN. AR and 


i AZALEAS, anb LILIUM LANCIFOLIUM, 
ane TE NURSERY OF MR. A. VAN GEERT, AT 


1845 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE: 591 


9 WHEAT.—F oe — at 50s. per quarter, good Com a Ae OE 


enuine seed of the RED-STaAW WHITE and ONTENTS ae MB 

1 abs — ‘Samp — ar will be sent C ST, n my Pap SATURDAY 
i shew mps cover ex ense of ost e 0 

from nown correspo rg — — ib bya Orders 455 ATH 


GHENT. tan — | WINTER BEANS. for seed, can be supplied at 58. per | JOURNAL 1 — ENGLISH AND Fonuna re URE, 
MÈ 52 8 * 1 Foss: of — gp bushel, Jonn cae . * 5 tan WR, a3 AND THE FIN A ARTS. RAT 
1 Set. 21, at 12 for 1 clock, 800 CAMELLIAS, com- gin G. 8 enty-four Large Quarto — 
n u Double Whites — = other Popular sorts, well set HE LONDON MAN URE C MPANY beg to offer R Bragan OF, WITH EXTRA 
— buds, 250 Azaleas, of goo and 200 strong as under, and pledge — ne besa that every Manure sent — on Public Libr Com Field M — nT Teadetaey, dur- 
— Liliam lancifolium . 2 — on the t by them shall be free from the slightest adulterati th ith the Proce aries ; — the 64 years of his Mili- 
and morning of Sale, and Catalogues had Peruvian Guano direct from Importer’s Warehou: uses, London ofthe Commi —— Mi ngs ary Service, —[Graf. Redetz, 
st SALE OF CAMELLIAS AND GREENHOUSE Maout e Co ene —+ Wheat Manure and Urate, Sulphate of ia | vidonda. ana i 8 by be] Ry Gare, 5 — Y 
PLANTS. A monia, Phosph k ates 3 Ammonia, e titrate of Soda — 2 "e; —.— Doia ppan Foren ations: a Foam, 
uperphosphate of Lime, Gypsum trate a, W- ; 
— AS La lured 5 — asta and ¢ 1 — re Epidemie Cholera. | The Parson’s Home : a Poem, 
Competition by Auction, on t “a ises, Dal D Purser, Secretary, 3 Blackfriars. — * .* its Re- Le sage tear “a 
„ p — — . ora 
Sept. 18, 1849, and following day, at 11 o'clock, E JOHN CLARKE has the pleasure to inform the | _ R. R. Madden, M. R. I. A, Woodlands. By W. Jones 
of the penra nies r pared by + d M breed: ep, that his Show of RAMS | England in the Days of Wielif. | Portraits in Ministars’: or Ta- 
————— (about 2000) Tang: | Willtake lace on Thursday, the 20th day of September, when ony Bev. H. Hubert, M,A. bleux de Cour. By H. J. Fry, 
i ~ | their company will be est The 3 ams will be apers.—The Liter: Fund—Folk.. 
— —— —— penned at 12, “and soma 5 at be o’clock, by Mr. II. —— doe — Lincolnshire s upers — —7 Posey? 
choice ay age Plants. —_ Camellias ps 
Plants in the finest order, are par- This day, 16mo, wie oreign Corre — Notes of a Tour in Spain, 
the attention of x . Gentlemen, — L ( A few coj 3 to wm eea 
be viewed a week prior Sale, N: Gur y Gossip.—pritish Association—A à 
may be hed. 18. a return able — — E. For the use of Begin By T. S. RALPH, A. L. S., &. cuments—The Arctic Expedition—Discovery of 3 
Seedsmen in London, on the premises London: Wittiam Pan Frith-street, Soho, Papyrus—Death of Sir Cuthbert Sharpe— ub. 
and of the Auctioneers, American Nursery, . St the relief of Roman Refugees—Death, at St. Cloud, of Sir 
a i Dedicated, by express permission tis Royal Highness  Fonteyraud — Proposed Betableb ment Death of M, 
—— Stock will be offered: to public rarely ighne 3 Tracy at alt Establishment o a Public Mu- 
ig alford— 
ROYDON, SURREY.— Live and | [ESSAYS ON THE CO NRC. ox OF FARM) 5 Albert Gallat nnn 
ads of prime Hay, home bred DINGS * — — COTTAGES. By sai: Scientific G ition of Manufactures at Paris 


and Horses, 6 Draug ght Horses, Agricultural | — . — and 8 — or, member of the Royal A 
cult 


mrar 
—The 8 am Babe on of Manufactures— Investi- 


7 sige hg 5 pa is ural Society of Eng? 5 getom of 22 on Atmos 1 ity—Rep 
l sell by Auction, on the pre ication o rrespondenza Scien in Roma’— 
mises, on TUESDAY, September 25, and folowing day, eee . Bombay Geographical Solety—ovestigations of Mitr T. do 
i 1 delock (e t time), by outer ot Hewitt D vis, Esq „who is gs, L c la Provostaye and P. Desai olariz of H 
h en 111 Adaad F ot Materials—the Fitness of each Class of Buildings for their Explorations of M. E, Du Couret in Central Africa—N 
: } 00 lee SARS | ean on m- | Intended Parposes—and the wis beget for acomplete Farm. P phic process, 9 
+ stead on the Princ Djon: of Economy; Illustrated with Plaus, id 
(all bred upon the Farm and of good pedi- | Elevations, and Sections, accompanied by Detailed Specifica. | Fine r Shee Cartoons of Raffaele, J. Farina 
7-year-old — — * — r-old Carriage Mare, tions and Estimates 8 Roberts's Sketches in Egypt and eie K trait of J. 
aught Hors 4-horse power Thres h- iy HI. Brooke, Esq. By F. Grant—The Interior a a Ragged 
"9 lete) by Garrett a ett ands ‘Bon, ; nearly Bew 12 On Cottages for en a wing the Best Mode of Con- went Visit ie — Gare of Waterford— The South. 
orse Hoe to c ab. Angel iron | struction as regards Economy—the Steen of Ventilation, Gane B 3 burch of Saint Peter and Saint at 
and the General Arrangement best suited to the Wants of the Navi ier, C. C. b . r of General Sir G. J. 
Labourer—his Health, 8 and Morality. Accompanied cr. Kü b P V M — — Inundation, By 
by Plans, e Sectio , Specifications, Ge. iörboe—Portrait of He r, Esq. By F. Grant 
Published by 8. Monat, Stratford, Essex, geist t Gosstp.—Restora — . Abbey Church 
— ———— — Mr. P i 
w Edition, rice 18., or 1s. 4d. by pos Robert — as 3 1 peta — of 
in| WITH ENGRAVED PLAN OF Fatt BUILDINGS, Edinburgh—School of Design in the Potteries, o 8440, 
, Newington Causeway ; ; "Gar. nye FARMING UNDER LIBERAL COVE- Music an ra: — M y 
r ange-alley; at the office 2 Messrs. emoir ma he Countess de 
Dara and nd re 3, Frederick’s-place, Old Jewry; and of po ty pnp arate “or nig aain, Rossi (Madame Sontag) Not trike fusical Festivals 
> A arm (The Liver ol Philha - 
T den I believe it will te of the grea test —— benefit to the tival) Sadler's Wells armonie Festival 5 e. 
11a 51800 ER TO MANUFACTURERS OF fp Sarge yng bourer, by affording increased employment.”— Musical amatic Gosst 
R he 5 E A r on the state of the nation or ggg int ssp.— 
pns BE DISPOSED OF, a moderate Royalty, July 2, N Gentlemen’ Holle —. ne Gondaetorship a of 
t the present time, are of T on 8 Uoncerts- He 
ne Bight of a e “for p ions Coe | great shite 1 rtance.“ sal Tadustrial Journal, f wetz— Committee for the Est stablishment of a Native 1 
ACTURE = MANURE or FERTILISER for CORN |g a Ep 5 porta l sical Theatre 
which a * 
soils, ope > articular, apply (postpaid) to Dr. JoNES ance a matter of personal study.”— Agricultural — 1 a.—Mr. Hunt on the Probable Causes producing 
near Newcastle Emlyn, His facts are invaluable,”—Journal of Agric holer a- Discovery of Coal in Egypt—The Maize Crop in 
WILLIAM Biackwoop and Sons, eared ip pat fa St. Samy s Park. 
TO NURSERYMEN ao OTHERS, Sold by all bookseller Order The Athensenm of any Bookseller. 


Dees OF, by Pri vate Contract, the 
pen lew ose Bonta nd im roving NURSERY BUSI. 

0 years, situate in the parishes Xf Pilton 

Te to he ied Market Towns 


— 2 $i ide ond, 3 of 13 
in eget 


TO NURSERY AND SEEDSMEN. 
SOLD, : 


articulars, apply te to Mr. JOHN 
Eer e Newin — a * 
urse an, Woking, urrey; 

lieitor 1 — gae: Aiia 


; 


—————kn — 


—— e 
Land-agents, 3 


RAILWAY TRAVELLERS FO MEPANION: 
BY FELIX SUMMERLY 


TRAVELLING HARTS, 
RON ROAD BOOKS, 
FOR PERUSAL ON THE JOURNEY. 


IN WHICH ARE 


THE TOWNS, VILLAGES, iks ae MANSIONS, PARKS, STATIO BRIDGES, VIADUCTS, 


NS, 
ND ITS NATURAL HISTO 


N , THE SCENERY A TORY, 
ery, carried on for many years by | THE ANTIQUITIES "AND TBI HISTORICAL ASSOCIATIONS, &, PASSED BY THE RAILWAY: 
Ser castes — ILLUSTRATION 


NUMEROUS 4 
Constituting a Ned ate Complete Companion for the Railway Carriage. 


„ Upwards of Eigar Hunprep Enagavines, from Drawings taken expressly for these Charts, by distinguished Artists, 
are comprised in the series, 


following, each iv a Wrapper, are now ready, and may be had at all the Stations: 
1. 3 TO BRIGHTON, containing a Map and 83 Engravings, 2d edition, price 6d, 
2 TUNBRI DGE WELLS, with 5 i ice 6d. 


NBR „ with 52 Engravings, price 6d. 

* ie ~» WOKING AND GUILDFORD, with 52 Engravings, price 4d. x 
1 oe TON, with 85 Engrav Wy Ot 64d. * 

S. we .. RICHMOND, with 15 —— s, i nga View from Richmond a 
ees .. WINCHESTER AND eee with 125 Engravings, po 

fe a ... GOSPORT, with 143 Engravings, pric 

* .. READING AND OXFORD, poe Map and 74 Engravings, sy ai 4 Eo 

vie .. BISHOP’S STORTFORD and CAMBR ja with a Map "i 47 Engraving, pr. Gd. 
8 .. FOLK STONE AND DOVER, Aa a Map and 99 Engravings, 
* .. RUGBY AND BIRMINGHAM, with 137 — tag ma — 
Or, handsomely bound in moreeeo cloth, price 64. extra, 


THE POLLOWING 
SMALLER CHARTS FOR EXCURSIONS FROM LONDON, 


1, TO KINGSTON AND HAMPTON COURT, with ür 4 7 25 e with 8 Engravings, at 0 14 


„ Frederick's place, Old ings, price a e 
— ÑA rings, price id, “mn TPORD, wi Engra 20 
Regi FLORISTS. . — HANWELL Prd a thn with 12 Engravings, pr. 1d. | 7. — SLOUGH, ETON, and W Ty Engraringh gre 
. a NURSERY, 9 pe 
i — vay Station, 
— is, in FELIX SUMMERLY’S 
3 PLEASURE EXCU RSLONS BY RAILWAY, 
t of having an offer of partner- unties, Birmingham, South W ton, and South Eastern. 
deseription.—Address to.A. B., 
7o P „ wih 3 re price Id. 10 — eh 
GARDENERS AND Sher nga E ‘a — = f 1 and * Engravings, Price 14. 
on Lease, 2 = — 2 HAM, 4 8 — oc 3 — ya n. 
or without — WINCHESTER, 11 Tee 2d. cravings, price Id, 


Or the whole in One Volume, containing 74 Engravings, price ls. 


— 
A 8 — — 5 m Strand, ss 


7 5 
592 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. IS rr. 15, 
8 
ROWN’S IMPROVE — | | 
* TXT ANTED, a Small Occupation of 100 to Popular Works B eona ame 2 ACCOUNT: 
1 highly 5 first-rate LAND, in the above county, 833 Mr. Porz begs to announce tt , BOOK, | 
to No rfolk covenants.— Address, O. SELco, Braintr PRINTED F may be had by y order of all 1 — of 
TAYLOR, WALTON, anp MABERLY,| -A won : 22, Budge-row, Wa l 
Par ERSHIP.—A young Man, who is sses- $ RK BY THE AUTHOR oe : 
sion of the Stock in . — Pad = Florist, &c., — who is BOOKSELLERS AND PUBLISHERS TO UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, On Wedn nesday, September 28th, mill te — 
practically acquaint mith th ness, is a about togive up the | 16mo, uniform Mr, ene 8 in 2 
ises he now occupie beg i aan irous o 8 y e — 28, UPPER GOWER-ST anD 27, IVY LANE, 0 
n havin a amal reap ital, who wona be wiling to join hi PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON. OF N ATURE, 
* taking rii h co K., Office ot this Paper. | A beeps r By A a Die 5 
ORSE FOR eT be sold, a 42 705 000 7 Translated, with pars! RE o sanction Sak on How 
strong young plants of GORSE ah peg Furze ja per ` 
1000, whieh will fe berm up and dis Fl 8 5 n 2 A R E E Y S 
this month. 20,000 p 8 quant y fo 
acre.—Apply to Mr. Jessop, Nursery G , Cheltenham. ISCI ENTI FIC LIBRARY PROFESSOR n ibd 
TO M PSO GROWERS. 8 FOR THE USE OF his day is published, in one vol. 8vo, wi 
AMUEL CH to inform 2 
8 Gardeners, Nurserymen, and t =< g general, hat SCHOOLS, PRIVATE STUDENTS, ARTISTS, 1 prem 1 ECONOMICAL BOTANY ; o, 
ith his superior n Account o Principal Pla } 
ee, 5 y — 7s.; warranted ih e t AND MECHANICS or Domestic ono 1 5 p 2 a1 
d. Any quantity can be safel ed an > g 1 AUTE i 
fire meg Wany pa oa 1 — ae the receipt of a I is the purpose of this Work to furnish a Series of Ele pe The Vegetable Kin —— 
t-office order for the amoun 1 a the supply is limited, reatises on Mathematical Science, adapted to the | of plan 
3 orders soni be advisable, order can be attended to wants of the public at large. To yo th of either sex at public — employ = in medicine tl 
d. ney, i ; j omestic œconomy. The princi 
unless for 1 sas Flora Gardens, Bayswater, Londo and private schools; to persons whose ation has been ` rought by teachers in E Ke 42 
THE FOLLOWI ING WOR RKS RE CONSTANTLY 75 SALE neee Or A se 3 ntion has not t. been . in 5 which i; trom their great impo e, 
AT THE a O DENERS” CHRONICLE OFFICE and to Artists and Mec earliest subjects ts of study, are mention 
5, UPPER WELLINGTON STREET, STRAND, LONDON. pence will t l e he principles of the various biter ae ano m’ o S a ai 
ti Sciences are rendered as familiar and brought as near to our | departed from hun ee 
„ i don, on a 1 * t-office 8 commonest ideas as Jag the demonstrations of proposi- so. The a 8 nts would 
80. 


Tenan delivered anywhere 
bels sent — bres Publisher 


Reprinted from the 6. 


African Lilies 
i thus 


Beet 
Picanial 
Black Fly 


Books for Cottagers 
ornan, 


Box ox edgings 
Brussels sprouts 
Budding 


China Roses 


pei 

Cucumber 

Cultivation of 85 
ers in Window 


Currants 


Dahlias Dais 
Dog’s-tooth Tiolets 
Exhibitions, pre- 

paring articles 5 
Ferns, as protecti 
Fruit 
Fuchsias 
Gentianella 


TIONS. 


rdeners? Chron 


—~ 


Lee 
entern. 
J arn 


ondon Pride 


Nemophilas 
Enothera bifrons 
Onions 


Pea-haulm 
Pears 
eas 
Pelargoniums 
Perennials 
ersian Iris 
Petunias 
oni 


Pinks 
Planting 


„At the request of n 
* TREE TREF is reduced 
HE T 


umerous Subscribers, the price of the 
ed from 43. 3 5 3s. 6d. (post free.) 


REE ROSE.—Practica 


= idee and 
Reprinted from 


a preparation of, 


Bade dormant and 


—.— for tr 
antation Fa 


Culture. 


the GaRDENERS’ CHRONICLE, oie 


Pushing exe, spring | 


— 4 

pushing Aan 

— treatment 

Shape of trees 

Shoots FR buds, 
hoice o 


tat: pp bi 5, Upper 


1 55 

James MATTHEWS, at * 
R OF GARDEN 
By JosEerH PAXTON, gals. z His 3 the Duke of Devon- 


nicl. 
already been sold. ee ated with several woodcu 


Above 51, 0 have 


Plum 
Polyanthus 
Pot 

Pri 155 oe 


Pruning 
Propagate by cut- 
tings 


ue 

Rustic vases 
Sage 

89075 

Sav 

Saxifrage 

Se * Runner 


Seeds 

Sea naw or Thrift 

Seakale 

Select Flowers 

Select Vegetables 
and Frui 


ummer Savory 
Sweet Williams 
Thee ae edges 
Tigridia ee 
Tra napia 
Tree TF 
Turuipe : 
Vegetable Cookery 
Venus’s Looking- 

Glass : 


Verbenas 


t of dwarf 
= 


ines 
Virginian Stocks 
Wallflowers 
Willows 

Zinnias 


tions for its 
1 by 24 Woodcuts, 


vaca "growers, Te- 
mark aon 
Graft, binding up 
and Arira 
Grafting, advantage 


Beau i 


tions Fi ace pan tal 


he sie aa and bee ef tor hen 


À 


and 
es but to their shortest form. 


I. 
A New Epirion (being the fifth) is now ready, 


YSTEM 


ciples. 


In which the Elenien 
illustrated, and 


A 


e 4s. 6d., clot! 


5 1 1 
New Eprrrox (just published), 


COMPANION 
POPULAR GEOMETRY; 


ts of Abstr 


act Science are fam 


Cuts. 


RGE DARLEY, A.B. 


SYS 
POPUL AR ALGEBRA; 


A Section on 3 and 


À Price 4s. 6d., cloth, 
III. 
THIRD EDITION, 


TEM 


By . 7558 A. B. 
8 ‘es 


24341 


POPULAR GEOMETRY; 


_ Containing in a few a, so fear < rig Elements 
understanding 
of every Art and Science in its leading tratha w great prin- 


By SOAT DARLEY, A.B. 


iliarised, 

ed e useful to the various pur- 

poses of life, with numerous 
1 GE 


fih 


of 
Natural Syste: 


be 
uthor Kune 8 this selection will be found to 
a wa i teen all teachers who 
ns of i 


been 3 


rating their 


e mentione 


i uch a 

tion, in the rst instand, upon a 
BOTANICAL WORKS BY PROF FESSOR LINDLEY. 

Seer BOTANY ; or, the eae 
Science. New Edition, 400 Illus 
HE VEGETABLE KIN 8 1 ch 
ces goa KA of Plants; Auen 

Second Edition. 500 Ilus $ 


80s. in clo a 
To suit the convenience of Students and thet bid { 

we nj at issued also in 2 2 Mo 1 Korti, price 2s, 6d, each, 
on: BRADBURY and Evans, 11, Bouri save 


3. 6d., cloth, 
RNAMENT TAL. AND DOMESTIC 


their History and Management. By 
Sau. Dixon, M.A ag of Intwood with 
e Birds treated of are 


(the Musk Duck ie 


he Grey China 


ane Fowl in 
gener: 

The Gioi Fowl 

The Spanish Fowl 

= 8 ckled Dork- 


the Oo Sochin-China 


The — Fowl 
The Pheasant Malay) 


e epen O 
The Domestic G 
The Berni nisi Goose 
The Brent 
The Turke; 2 


ood deal of useful inform 
Bios ay vapiti. with picturesque — and 


list.’ 
disquisision of the vee 23 beleben, 


| ad 
br Ban! sci mt 


3 


usement 
L Rai ron ee 
“ By way € EE try that nas erer DS e 
lished, 1. ‘s dere written, and full of 1 
edge. The or has, for some time, 3 he has bii 


of the habits 25 "chardeteristies pS — 1 Ag ; 
the assistance of num in diferent P 
the 


ee Midland 2 5 
ti A beg. the poultry loving public have 
h they may depen nd for full and 
on Rha 9 9 nd managem 
evidently the work of a gentlem 
and will, we have no bt, in 
admirers of the feathered tribes do! 
sake of p or pl re. 
xcellenc the wo 


4 
dents 


or 8 
sciences, 8 are, e; perhaps; 
with more advantage than Da 
Algebra, Library of Useful Knowledge, article ** 


no treatises which can m be 2 


rley’s Popular Geometry a 
r 5 


A 


PMen 


8 eee. 


Both 
With 1 pimin ATIS 
Applic 


ES on „ 
bra. etry. 


TEM 


pherical 


n of Alge 


«There is a vast deal of astronomical inform 
| in a most winni ing and ünässumi ng manner in this de elig 


By oa Sane A.B. 
Price 38. 6d., 


cloth, 


POPULAR TRIGONOMETRY, 


and the 


ve 
FAMILIAR ASTRONOMY. 
By GEORGE DARLEY, A 
Wirn Encsavines.—l2mo, 58., cloth pie 


ation conveyed | 
htful 


OWLAND’S 2000 N T0, 
3 2 ens SE ta ee 

most reche apes ana ae 
timabl pre Es sweetness and 
strengtheni ; sweeter 

the Bre 

eeth, an 
ace. 


heal 
the brightness recor 
by o 


n uence, age 
the . an 
reigns and Nobility 


Sove 
50 787 9 —To protect oe 2 from i 
—— A ROWLAND and $ SON, 205 


n the Government Stamp, 
to be engraved on J by the Proprietors and 


xy, of No. 

as pai ee pai 

both in e Coun 
in the Precine’ 


Printed by Wana 
Parish of St. Pancra 
row, Stoke Newington, 


ee, © whic 


11% 


nee 


a 


E 


bard-street, 
Tom 1 Core the 


and 


1 tha ¢ 
å editor, Mr. Darley.” is 
y 2 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRON ICLE 
GRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


No. 38—1849.] SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22. [Price 6d. 


INDEX. TULIPS, HYACINTHS, AND DUTCH BULBS. RNOLD'S VIRGIN Q QUEEN dE GERANIUM is the 
is the 
ee 3 R K Ho, GROOM, Clapham Rise, near London, by | Ase It is a seedling of 1847, 
progress of. 2 Gardening, BORE TOER E a appointment, Fronisr To HER 2 raged THE QUEEN, 2 — 1 ere procured, all of which bloomed 
b colour of, altered b; AND TO His MAJESTY iosia Kine or Sa begs to prac that gg been last s season, more than 350 roi — 2 1 
. N Gabeln gerüss e 598 ö = * v his usual e e or HYACINTHS and | SOMS b at one time; 3 
| pire + ne eee Ee A —— 2705 K 
a zr: 898 A | Hollyhocks, select , 77 599 a boga to aay that Bis , te., for an be strongly recom and wi sure 2 
Botanical Garion "ange Philip, 1 ert 855 og — eady, will be forwarded by post on | give the greatest satis ae E d. each, 
a 509 idney Bean seed wrote indigenes 3 lant of that excellent pa „Hor 
YHOICE FLOWER SEEDS FOR PRESENT AND sap d 7 a r fi r ak Gav: 
fee tats, SOWING, free by post, with useful gs = re 14 
— — E. RENDLE & Co., Union- road, Plymouth. 
for g, Ee. Catalogues on aad akon The following, Our Dutch Bulbs have just arrived in excellent — 
— — Trom large collections of new and choice varieties, — Ca Catalogue on application, grat 
per pac ele Were 
PER — 4d. to 1s 0d | Hollyhock . 0s 6d MVATT'S NEW rr N. 
new semi-dbl. 6d. to 1 „ 30 vars., separate ) J YATT anp SONS are prepare 
hinam .0 20 do, pla 
wa eee 


to ou 

nts of this and the 8 varieties at the rice 

1 0 „% d doses keene ere Myatt’s Eleanor, „ 6d.: Fer tilised Hau toi 
Iris, English .., 1 nag 6d.; British Queen, 35. 64. Globe, 3s. 6d..; Mam: 
„ Spanish ., i ; Hooper's See edling, 33. 64. ; * Seedlin ng, 38 


œ” 


5 . Poultry, food for . 1 
. 5 Raspberry leaf mi 597 6 i 4 1 
arn ot crops, by E. Regel, rev. 0 Roses, e on of ¢.1 * 590 | Dianthus ; 3 0 FT Pelvelaia’ s Comte de Paris, 7s. 6d.; Princess Royal, 7s, — 5 
us b| Fuchsia e 1 ECC Cane Black Prince, 15s. per 100. r 
1 
0 


e 


unia 

Geranium Polyanthus åd. to office orders are requested to be perl Le wes to 
6 | Primula sinensis is 1 8 MYATT, Manor Farm, Deptford, Kent.— 

= 83 Sweet William ** "MHE BLACK PRINCE STRAWBERRY - 860 7 

oen ypt S056 1 E re O TEET a i es eti 1 5 2 is tek a er 5 10 ready for delivery. 

20 vars. choice Greenhouse P . 6d.; 12 do. rice, per ; 25, 5s. It is hardy, very earl 
HE GRI GREAT 8 DAHLIA SHOWS OF 20 vars. Choice Hardy ouso Perennials, 10s. fa, 12 J ig ye & 5 prolific, well favour ed, nod a first-rate preserver. es the bien 
. 


—4.— ce with s 25 smaller packets 


85 57 
cien: 
| es . 604 @ [| Ville kardchiúp ssboëbicssesss 597 e S 
we c 2 F W Agri S eee Gloxinia 


ENGLAND, open to the Channel Islands and Continent, | 12 ditto 5s. Od. soins are picked off it in Spring, an abundant crop may be ob- 
will take place on Wednesday and Thursday next, the 26th and 20 vars. showy ey, Annuals for spring — 4s. od, | tained frou ie in utuma, For Dr. Lindley’s opinion, 
Tith inst., at the Town Hall, 1 ad Premie nts. Post- 3, 
, aud 50 other 1 b , OF STEPHEN I otato, Cucumber, Melon, and Lisianthus,” 
a — Mr. George Glepny. Mr. Age will ne at — Postage . received for small amounts. rice ls, Post-office Orders on Camberwell — JAMES CUTHILE, g 
the Organ. — — N Is. each. Bass and Brown, Seed and Horticultural Establishment FFF Te 
1 TO Y GROWERS. Sudbury, Suffolk. W FANCY GERANIUM 
G. 100 Bane, x 5 anges a , Perry Barr, near NSW CHRYSANTHEMUMS FOR EXHIBITION | ED — GEORGE HENDERSON, fp age 
, begs to ee aks he has just secured S AUTUMN. a i vi 5 emily, t we dect n tee . Ane eren 
ceeain Autifu ad Bibs stin 
soak of he unrivalled 1 6 OUELL anp CO. are now exe ating orders fron Arne , sean t 10s. Gd. eacĂ, ae ramet aia 
their . and very cages ollection of the abore, | on tl 
to send out next spring, price 5s. ea ches Eko aal 9 comprising a the new and fine 8 v ee in fue purple, with a “ight. 5 of “biash, the 
‘count to the itt Oediers will tie strong, bushy plants, St for Exhibition, at 158. per doze n, white and sometimes biotched. ree 
Gated in strict rotation. Sole Agents: for London, Messrs. smaller pice pa Tas free, or well established in small po most profuse bloomer, and r 
Hugh Low and Co., Nurser, men, Clapto at the OE e Queen i 
Aare a 0 best F a 880 $ oe Holden) r be seen n 
. 8 


pe ie 


i One d Evergreen Oaks, Two-year 25 E 138. can str wagi 
i Tage either fit for potting or 3 out. Evergreen 98. has no dont it prove. one of 
sale Ha Lya per 1000.—Direct to G. RUSSELL, 20, Sus- With al ordre x requested), directions will be Bee: . Da Stes pete — ee utiaues in one. $i 
culture for exhibitions, N je ri 
AYACINTHS: . The us ar allowance t de, and for way threo 
—.— ordered four w 5 * 618 en. nse . 


povar p DENYER. Nonsena, Loughibarough- YAURLL a anD CO. have just 5517 direet fra 
road, Brixton, near Zon s his Patrons his fine | Haar r annual Sini o n of DUT H BULBS 

— 4 of AUTUMNA Nas m, — now be — in fall * pees comprising many new and beautiful 8 $4 DARD GE ORGE HEN DERSON, Wellington 

bloom; also his annual importation of DUTCH ROOTS have | of this favourite flower, which they pie enabled to offer at 6s. Nursery, 5 John's Wood, London, will, on the 15th of 

red in iti also invites attention to his ex- | 9s., 12s., and 188. pe r dozen, ad apted for glasses or pot culture, October, commence * ending out the following new Seedling 

tensive stock of FRUIT AND ORNAMENTAL TREES AND — of . 2 may be Bad on —— CINERARIAS, ata d by him, and would advise intending pur. 

00 all h 


sizes. Gardens and FINE CAMELLIAS WITH FLOWER BUDS, | chasers to Jose no time in sending their orders, as the strongest 
ted be any eg a 3 AT 30s. PER DOZE pianis. will be sent off first, and all orders executed in strict 
he 
Com g the following superb varieties Picta: rata, Ruckerii, 
neral 1 list sent on a prepaid — Hecate, fi King, —— Imperialis, ene striata, ADELA A VILLIERS, a tery poo Ms. J 11 fet and 
. aks blissima, Pendula, Thomson’s Susan » Lombardii, Ju li „large size 1 5 23 fa s pier 
an a, Eliza, Queen Victoria, Si eboldii, aoe every other fine every 5 ede ta — 1 ts points 103. 64. 
gs announce he has just variety worthy of cultivation. ANGELIQUE, carmine, white dike, Cati and ni 
w and Complete Catalogue of his AMERI- PI 0175 . 5 0 
P 8 ich way be had on | The finest 3 show flowers, of the newest kinds, per post BESSY, * nch plum, a beautiful, distinct, and 
closing two stamps for r posede ie free, 123., 18s., and 24s. per — n pairs. striking colo 
ATERER, Knap Hill Nursery, Woking, Surrey. STRAWBERRIE CARLOTTI GRISI; a clear white, » Slightly tipped with 
NEW ref 75 TAL LOGUE. Their fine 2 = be found — in a separate licht rn 5 7 for 7 
_ WOODLANDS NURSERY, MARESFIELD, NEAR rtisement of this day’s Paper. DELIGHT, rosy avonden, disti i new colour, a 
8 UC EPIELD? SUSSEX. Catalogues t — abore; with an extensive variety of highly neat d wart flowe 5 0 
OD anp SON have the pleasure of | ornamental plants, will be forwarded by enclosing two postage 1 rosy . large bold flower, at and very ó 


ALOGUE of | stamps. 
8 1 eae By Hi be|  Post-office orders or references are required from unknown | F LORA.. Me IVOR, rich brilliant crimson, one 


i h be of the 
to all who have favoured pore with their com- | correspondents.—Nursery, Great Yarmouth. best of its colour, of free growth, and excellent * 7 6 
es it will be s LADY GERTRUDE, bright dark blue, 1 


wt ee tcc peer KITLEY'S GOLIAH STRAWBERRY. fine form 0 
J “Grower KITLEY announce to Strawberry | NYMPH, a clear white, violet- purple disc, fi ‘orm good, 
s th Punni ally, that he has now ready flower cupped, “x 5 0 
ill send out, the first week to send o debe Fania OF NS abore Seedling PAULINE, a violet plum, shaded with crimson, fine 
broad petals, ae shape s AE 


Uctober, the following highly desirable GERANIUMS, 
eset in 4-inch pots: Aurora, Favourite, Queen 
Sir Gilbert, Raphael, Lady |p 


8 * er * or 4l, per hundred, and fee 
fident bea ap pet do all its co mbined merits, it is the very TASSE RING, petals divided with white and péar 
ion, he h 1 n, the lat ter predominating, fine dark. dark dise, s6 
the best that is out, viz, a British fhe gun chaste 28 0 , md king 2 — 
Ist. Flavour—if not superior, is equal with the above-named | WELLINGTON, petals pqualiy 4 1 wich 4 
variety, though more — that of the Pine-apple.“ and purplish crim 

2d. Size—larger ar 2 — = form, ne and beautifully 

t as N. B. When the above set is Sres * price will be a ie, 
and if three sets are taken, four will be given, or three plan 
plants will be given. 


wits a, ory of Guernsey, Orio $ dor 
or ; jy li illous, and very much res —— the Que . Sive pen 
ET PELARGON vi —12 of the following superb on Fo — it is raised, Dut 3 ih nits ing the mm | as possessing the desirable qualities necessary for a Price Cine. 
tor 1 * — Pas hrubland Superb, Prince gth. Hardiness—it stands much better than the | raria, being compact in their habit, and producing a fine mass 
ayler, Prizefighter, Comet, Pink Nosegay, Queen ; at least, in nie i of flowers equally ex arm 8 5 = allowance to the trade. 
s Pia gh ie a sree ee X. having fruited this very superior Straw W PREE D BAL 10 
om m oy: very’s Scarle | feels perfectly confident that any person once — it in their St N æ `f 
be Master, Gem of the Scarlets, Tam A cae sossession, will not find fault or regret having ordered it. It ja ar RE gs 70 orm his rap ti in 
po: 1 the Trade that he hers 3 „1 TS of best quality on 
aE el tat a Dov Eo ocd os Poe sh tenet eer | wart terme 
ompactum, Horticultural Societies’ nE TEST NOEL TR 
b Kenni n Age are re ed the Gardeners’ Chro- * — * r oF THE -SEASON—WILL — 
paya le a at ingto í quired | its goodness, begs t to refer to extracts from TURE IN 4 FLOWER GA ARDEN 


th the order, which will be pigge dene s and Farmers’ Journal : q 
— From Fe Gardeners’ OSEPH. SMI TH, Nurs she Be fe: Kent. 
London. “ Strawberries,—J. K.—Your Seedling S eee ‘Goliah To be sent out the w of 
1A” GERAN IUM will ll be judging from it seyo is worthy of cnltivation.” GERANIUM 1 ia, 
Fro e Gardeners a 
at TONE siara wk RK, pa preon Vale.—Wehavegreat plea- | J. S. begs to inform his friends and the publie that he intends 
e e testimony to th e exquisite flavour of your Seed- | to send s k two beautiful rose-coloured GERANIUMS, so 


ae i 2 
Ae e Nursery- in ng of. 5 
ling Strawberry, ‘Goliah.’ In our opinion, it combines the | much admired by every one that has seen them, for their 
1 3 — Ta iquant flavour of th: A 1 with the richness ofthe Pine, fuseness a a com and beautiful foliage. The brilliant pros 


riety.— Pi ee 
ME -| the delicious aroma of which it partakes al 1 tion of the meets is admirably revealed by the distinct marking of 
11 ee. eaten. . oe taste. Apart from the Pn cae of Frai its, w certainly | the hor —For particulars, see ‘sing wer to — i i 
ember anything in this way that conv: eyed to our | in the epea mear d s d Farmers Journal, August 25, under the 
‘the under-named varieties, at ls. 6d. delicious a treat as the noble fruit to be known to the signato “J, B., Kent. 
Winchester Sheppard s e world ce 0 Kitley’s Goliah Strawberry. J. S. recommends thi pees p m friends and 
— Lady F To be had at Lyncombe Vale Nursery, Bath, and of Messrs. | the pide with the . t confidenc nat 
age Ae gc Garraway, Mayes, and Co., Bristol, who can testify to the supe- honour hiza with their orders, Good plage Si. te a 
s rior quality and flavour of allowance to the Trade when three plants 


« ENCHANTRESS.”— A 
ariety, obtained a Prize 2 * — 
us in 


It was 1 ogee by SAMUEL 
0 Rose Cottage; or Stam 


OSEP BAUM TANN, _NURSERYMAN, Ghent, Bel- 
i i and the public in 5 Sater 
wW CATALOGUE of PLANTS is just published, and | 
is, or 3 e sent post-free on applic 7 tion to 

5 — Te Apna oxand 
eet, L 


RYMEN, FLORISTS, &. 
OHN BET THAM, Member of the Committee of the 


THE GARDENIRE 


uth London re tural Society, Cust om Hou use 
di mt, be 


Bo e, 
land dio nadie, Cox and Hammond’s Quays, Lower Thames 
1 8. 

HANDLER a ONS, tn ag 4 
are n 3 7 — strong N plants of CHRY AN- 
T UMS 1 at 128. and 18s. per doz at 

any of the Railway stations in Sanden, “included, The plant 
e very healthy, and such as will flower well in Ave autumn, 
2 


der will be expected fr 


read in the collection, and from the light Baita 
oil i t has grown, = plants have “al a tines 

of fibrous root, which causes them to grow most luxuriously 
after be “gem ng . — 3 
a 32 7 4 feet, ee 5 1 10 to y 
2 feet, 10s. 8 vem 


1 to 2 feet, 


wa 


h 
100s, — 100. Stand — 8 
doz A lar ares | ah of e Oak 


in pots an nd: tr 
„ Elm, Beech, Birch, 3 


iat whole pe been 
or full particulars see our Cat alogue. 

OZ, 
r doz. ai rs. 


esrb near ee, Panic 
RLA SER I EBT, ne 
ach, or 
8. Lyclinis 
coronata ma 
Plumbago tarpon 
Pumila alba; also ap — s — R 
Ne na Ultr: ra, Fabvi ier, and Fairy Roses, 
doze: of 
of Fa ch 
tru 


Cramoisie superieur 
at — 6s. to 9s. per 
the oan’ varieties 
sias and Verbenas (some of the — s bei 
from 6s. to 12s. per doze’ — — 
—.— new hardy per — plant Dyclitra 


— eet from Haarlem), alarge assort- 
ment of Hyacintho, ‘Tulips — Gladiolus, Ixi — ave 
ris, &c., is enabled to offer them at very mode —— e pri 


AWBERRIES. 
ver O. beg to offer the following to 
ea of e hes uighly esteemed Fruit, all of which are 


per 115 d. r100—s. d. 
* White 6 La Liegeoise 5 0 
a ed ae 3 6 ee mse — „ fine 
Austrian Scarlet wee 1 0 
3 6 Myatt’s Eleanor 10 
und white .. 5 0 „ Glo 7 
Coul, o Sir 6. Macken- 25 British Queen . 3 
~zie’s rate sca 3 5 we 5 
Cuthill’s Black ig, 10 i we wee 
ownton ... 5 pa Prolific ees on 
Elton Pin 3 „ Mammoth Bao 
Grove Bnd — 3 . — Alice 3 
Hooper’s Seedling... 5 Roseber: 3 í 
Nabe (prot) 5 T iok 5 
- Royal Pine (ine) 5 
Keens’ See + een. s SeedlingPine $ 
Kitley’ 3 Golla, s Pine 


P., doz i 
Agents tor the nae of bg, 8 Gollan BURRIT, very hardy, 
large, and o e-apple flavour, at 12s, per doz, 
Nursery, — 57 — 


CHRONICLE. 


8 
N have now ie * healthy "Plants of the fol- 
i „2s. oe 216., per d 


r! 
common pea-fowl, and pure 
moon-passage, Gracechurch-stree 


Nou APPLICATION FOR 
CEL 


ng fo wis ; 
, China pigs 


MENT OF LERY, SHAKAR Oe n VE. 

RAWBERRIES, &c.—By meansofRo S, REU. 

tered Sockets, mt articles ar e much i — 

season. A pamphlet, with wood en i i 

parti y s ofthese — ariou other: ap ees . — 
may be had on application, enclosi 

Mr. 25 ae 3 the Garde Merchant, 34, Ec ech age stamps, t 

— G ener’ 8 Journal see 14, 1849 
= c 
s, i ‘ontains an 


ing re emarks ie extrac 
one about t 


“The 
no doubt. 
portant results may rea 7 * 
bly be looked for, 

especially with E 9 — of Strawberri 8 

= these Tiles would — Fy add both to earliness 

your. e shall * * that 3 TaT 
AN tħat we ask on the part of M p 
ho Societe — for —— before them fa 
a prin of grea utility 


Sr naa 

HORTICULTURAL BUILDING HEATING 
BY HOT WATE ara 

PLANTS, 


ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF THE CHON 
VINES, FERNS, e. a 


tE 


(HH 


= J 


WEEKS Axp Co., King's-road, Chelsea, Hortieut- 


® TURAL ARCHITECTS, HOTHOUSE BUILDERS, and — 


planted; also n Oak 3 — 4 ERS, sat pe m of their 
Hornbeam, Prive ra 3 | us Works now in progre 88, W 228 
Ord: must be — y remittances. Orders a TERN of — ant ‘workmanship. They ee 
ing to 5.. delivered free.— Poole 1 Dorset. K N ND Ned N Premises, for inspection, a great vari Bouwe SEE 
FLOWERING BULBOUS ROOTS, &— HYA Aix 0 wae N houses, Conservatories, Foreing pits, ie, al — 
rious fo , showin 
JC eames | ACN 10 ee ee 
> 2 7 * 
1 & > 5 f AOR WAN Ny tions. By means of the G to grow 
$ ON, — pe ad, of sou ound quality, om WX. H 6% 5 Stove, Greenhouse, heres, “and other Plants, in 272 
AGINTHS, superior varieties (named), 96, 128, and 18s ANN UR aan 1 numbers, that they are sold at LESS THAN HALF-P 
z — common (named), 68. per dozen n; mixtures, 3s, per NANOA 7 ON pe ey and Se m Šp ee Ne. rom stimates, aud 
dozen. TULIPS, ls.; JONQUILS (large), 1s, ; NARCISSUS, yee NAA 9 F —.— 
45. to 63. per dozen. Mixed CROCUS, 1s. 6d. ; in colours, 28. RAO Ta een 7 1 — ä — — 
r 100. 3 28. 6d. oe 100. GUERNSEY Wy XXX) 7 i 5 0 GLASS FOR „ AND eg 
LIES, 9d. e. y be had GRatis on 0 0609 A 100 88 ; Ge. PURPOSES, &c. 
application. . : 
25 varieties of Hardy Annuals, for autumn or early spring 000 NO an . 
sowing, 58.; 12 varieties, 28. 6d. ; free by post, 6d, extra. XX) 5 WAN ONY 
CALCEOLARIA, GERANIUM, and PRIMULA SINENSIS 7 . 
FIMBRIATA, saved from the best varieties, and warr. ON 
very fine., Vegeta table Seeds of all kinds, Garden Implements, 0 Me Naa x SIAN — 
ird Seeds AA AWN 
Aol FLOWER 1 55 9 of 2 ng his RYN Ry 5 10 KOK l ny ky oe 55 RONN MILK PANS 
5 X X Ki * 
eissus, & c. The ‘Florist’s Directory” — i T — N Ma YY N N 88 uy — ina 
simple, useful, and cheaper support for Hyacinths, i — BEER NR A KB X 75 A OY BQ D Bes 
e. er 3 in dh or water, can hardly be ro 1 W O NERY ‘ 85 ee XY AY Kon sae 
Price € “per doz Address, 156, una APSIDE, LONDO Rey We Wiens 188 225 sd 8 Oy 2 =e Ga 
ce Ord p YO? XXX vaT 2 N $ ae 
SO RRs 8 PROPAGATING&BEE CUCUMBER GLASSES 
8 a — 
EW Teer PELARGONIUMS, GLASS, which b U. 
AM 3ROSE begs to inform the admirers of MILLINGTON’S —— 
W : ounces, 1 
„this beautiful el f Pel e the best * —— ae feck eases Ó 
prepared to send out, i the middle of Sotober, for prepa — Tur an ABOVE IS A SKETCH H OF A FRAMED | from 24, per foo up wards 15 25 — 
only, the following first-rate varieties, raised kgad cad ha na Sparro single Son — = Currant ma from | large a PM Glass, "for = bro, Ha s at r e 
an i > : 
Derk Gece on serai as show varieties or to Blackbirds and Thrushes in the Summer, ‘This Net is 4} feet Patent Rough Plate ines, from $40 i in thie 
1 J | high, 1 — — and 1 i knot to knot ; | 4d. per foot upwards. Glass Slaves and Tiles. Mi Tubes 
DEFIANCE- Vuy Geet maroon, witht wilhe Bilt <i tend, being tad o waterproof, 1 12 to 4 inches diameter, from 2s. to ti eters, 1, 
Dodie i ge bone * rl 3 e and 1 most profuse for fum migating lants by — it, aan 2 a gore es g red ry Agha had on applies + 
3 applies 
R ae cpa most dis- purpose, with a loose bag of eheap calico. Being made to fold | warehouse, 87, Bis treet Without, same side 
. ] — umbrella, the Frame Net is conveniently * Easten Counties eawn: NSERYAT A ATOR 
grou s clo 
-b 3 . RICES FOR READY Mover. GLASS FO 
2 PIOTURAT 2 anar ce 3 4 feet high, 12 feet cizeugpference 8 . 1 Te LIPS “ian Co perp 2 
lower petals distinctly spotted with e „very dwarf habit, wick 1 Rosen end te gir 10 k i Prices of r. ‘SQUARES. 
adapted for small pots ; a most profuse bloomer. 10s. 6d. tting of all s — s, 10 per cent. discount. 0 — S 100 feet. 1 4 
BEAUTY.—A most distinct and showy variety; upper petals n FEET | 16 oz, from 2d. to 83d. per foot. In vt 6 57 Ji 
deep apone ea with op 1i with pur le 3 a 7 1 inch from knot a ey per ones yard, = 3 ” ” 1 bo d and under 7 by 5. H 
aroon ; robust and a free 1} do. ue 8 
26 ” g „ 7 „ 7 by 5 s ear i 
BEAUTY “SUPREME.—Rosy lilac ground, clonded wi 1$ 25 22 . P 
Rabbit Nets, otto line feet d td r yard. ” 9 for cot 
7043 a fine bold trusser, of good habit; a fine show plant. e ; 55 5 et eet deep à eep pas 100 ior 200 ct of lange Sheet et f OF 
d, cloud n ets for Greenhouses an othouses, 5d. 4 — a 
1 . i r r — — are of per 2 ta, Linte, aad Twine of all sorts made to | foo ccording to ng to en PLATE adil 
Rega toe ae fine bold show variety; white it shaded — Ax an = ROMP 500 HART LEK PATENT 1 gs each: 0 1 
Pith Carmine, sweet-scented foliage, strong habit, and good ANTED, aS RFOLK. 6 by 4 and 8 by 44 - 10s. 6d. 7 by 5 and 7h by 5} 2 
mann and pretty flower, mark —— Arete — rite w150 sunty, | STS 5 W ae 
— — Aiape on ee Ta. Host of the above have received subject to Nb covenants.— Address, O. — — : — K PANS, from 2s. ite ts i a = Glasses 
se zef i: n 4-in RAE EERE SRT ai TE Ea ; dozen! 
pots fi fo Far fs seein So Mots ch | > ARMOUTH BLOATERS—GENUINE AND OF Glasses, 104. each; Wasp Traps, 2 Spades fr 
> een, Queen THE FINEST quanti. vac 3 Glass of every 
NEW SCARLET GERANIUM, “MAGNU Yarmouth has —— celebrated for its | Fish Globes 3 aot Winder 3 the 
W. A. can with od oom te 1 “Yarmouth — the he delicacy of whieh, when and Lamp Shades. Lactometers for try™ 
formed Foon Bg in cultivation. See the opinion in the Gardeners obtained in their genuine state, requi o comment. Such an * ; “6 tubes, 108. 
‘and Land Stewards’ Journal of Oct. 28, 1848: “W, A., Batter opportunity is now ; and — e any | meters for Greenhouses. 
sea: p seedling is a beau er, form ent, flower | Part of th om, or for exportation (on receipt of i | _ Estimates and fmt 
Dees to th vid — aut 1 8 * . to Mr Eu — Bro — — — fans 
ofun DERICK HTON 
attainable; een orange scarlet ; norte . mens armouth, m TOOR 
o not hesitate 5 8 it a r 
vase . =| Snr AND ) HOTHOUSES made by machinery, Manufec 
Lean-to ‘or 


cereait to pive satisfaction * r in the . worm as an — 


bouquet, the elegant and er 
be tr lady of tof 
wet 2 of the present day.” The usual discount to 
AMBROSE a 
nium than he ott having sam * growing, be „ 
Se —— * A pramen n ie ow unl en 


erials Greenhouse, 12 feet 
s, 1 door, and — —.— of — in front, glazed 


by Stee gis iy — of —— 1 coats 
OZ, 8 8 nes a nteé th 
of best oil colour, delivered to any — — — i> heal. 


for 154 10s.; ado. do, 15 by 10, 221. 10s. ; 
28“. 108.; a do. do. 21 by 12, 321. 10s. 
Seng yap wey . — 
Bae Lewis's Machine Hothouse Works, § 


Briti 
pen square foot, 
eet of which are kept 


CHOICE GERA HUMS AT LOW PRICES, 
* RENDLE Ax CO., Plymouth, bave 
excellent stock of the e following 6 

— h will 4 read the first week in October, 
2 selection of TWENTY, from the following list, 


w TOYLE’S CRUSADER, ARNOLD'S VIRGIN “ts 


„Sir Robert Sale, Black Prince, Sta: est, Lady 
* u Jenny Lind, Scarlet Defiance. Rosy Circle, 
unt Etna, De — mona, Remembrance, The Peri 


al, M 
Pluto, Forget-m not, Sir W. R. aiken, Flora’s 
— Taabella, Standard of Perfection, Sirius, Duchess 
Aeris CRUSADER and ARNOLD'S VIRGIN QUEEN, 
any orders are desired, as some of the sorts are 


— to WILIA E. RENDLE and Co., Union- road, Plymouth, 
2 New A 4 Hyacinths and other bulbs 
ipnow ready, and < and can on aie ication 
7 n — best 
Nasi eties — last season, strong and — plants, for flow- 
ag te * 5s 
and re oe vars. (including the above) for s200 
4 12 Ditto for se 112 
BEST NEW 9 5 — — prions 
1949,—Strong and bushy plants in b n 3a 
Priced Catalogue is now ready, with very n reduced prices 
containing also tha boat new GERAN 
out, Goods delivered free to London, and 9 pi — 
orders of 408. vibe —.—— 
n Sul mia pem Seed and Horticultural Establishment, 


B 


tamiang 
a yy Ranunculus, 
may be had per post. 


— r z 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle, 
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1849, 


MEETINGS FO WEEK. 
Cooxter Snows.—Monday, Sept. 24: * gic Floricultural.— 
Wednesday and Thursday, Sept. 26 and 27: Birmingham Horticultural. 


Also Dutch Hyacinths, 
s, &c.; priced Cata- 


We are aaaea at every m * be cautious in 
ent, and n 


ately 
the trial to which alee 
| ore ur colu 

-The first case observed was that of a young, ia 
! — every leaf of which was perforated 


N ` 
‘ Mi 
X Y 25 


“ie 0 


Sf ug 


1 


| A 
5 
i 44 


45 


a 
ie 
| a 17 i 


ll 2 


| 5 j 


ira acy 
prapa 


In an early stage 


THE 
p 
of w 


x we Soon found y — 4 tag een 
N. that ant; and 2 


ve ` ng fad wish to, B 2 7 ex: |a causes, 


ee 


the cause — 
nite space was — — — — eae and the suc- 
ceeding 1 s growt red portions 
of the leaf had Let tur rown "OF entirely the 
inert an Leaves were foun 
4 the ae — of 1 pon in every 
the little brown patches hung by a single point, and 
at last fell out 2 en The same appearance was 
observed subsequently in a Plum-tree, and a heavy 


stage, till 


a aie 
8 . 


* p 
l 5 
< ll 10 fs 
2 


| 
ih ih 
Y 5 


LA a 


| l; WN 


{ 


0 / ; 
$ 


jp t 
i 


` 


0 


hail-storm in the summer afforded an opportunity o 
tracing from the beginning a — — several 
Rose-trees, only, in this case, ect — cause 
by a blow, the bruise had rS y paa the line 
of separation, and there was in Po a we nce a 
border round every cavity. 
be observed, were caused n A irio actual penetra- 
tion of the hail-stones, but by the separation of the 


af 75 
£ K A 
N Wp 5 


hb Ly 
90 @ % í Ki 


70 iii í 
hed Heat Hilt 

00 
j 4 


sound 


far mpossible, that 
he | nt, and were . oye on leaves by drops 
a corr 


. 


| 5 capable of arresting a conflagration. 


k | lady’ 
apertures, it should |p 45 


from the dead Se regres i 
s panier condition of oe 1 A, to rise ay 4 


omena, : 
Now, r J aapa, , merely for the sake 1 wj 


g vapour de — 
theown On 


with the ordinary uncultivated power pen of 3 of observa 
ede 


| tion, ver ire i u she 
We rely su 1ppos sed a 
o | sugges ested by the pe Flory but it is obvious ‘that 


| numberless analogous cases would occur in such an 


Srverat months have now elapsed since 
attention to a most rtant contrivance for EX- 


TINGUISHING 2 WITHOUT . Arrangements 
for the sale of the mys 1 now complete, 
we gladly return to the s much 


accustomed to regar oy as the on 


material which can be employed in 1 of con- 
flagration, that the attention of scientific men has 
hitherto been divert: 


rted from devising means of apply- 
ing other well-known agents possessing the same 
water is but a feeb 


may be said to r present arrangements, con- 
signed to almost inevitable Decke in case of 
HILLIPS, a nav, officer, 
that other agen oyed, and with 175 
greater effect L. water in extinguishing fire. e 
know that flam or an instant i 
carbonic acid gas, or in the air called nitrogen ; but 
the difficulty has bee 18 to obtain an ‘such 
instantan and am n safely of. them „ would 
t di 


een W By the 3 


us by means o which 5 se 
result is Stained ia s not bulky, n # 


2 get out of order, nor — iae ia its lication, 
nor dangerous to keep, nor difficult to apply; it is 
thereverse ofall these aratus w t, 


without the slightest inconvenience, be kagt in a 
s bed-room, no 
0x, we e ourselyes se 
vings, tar, and combustibles, b 
that it it could not be a hed 
ut inconvenience, » extingai in 
a la. Such a fire would not have out by 
common in a q 5 
if the machine, the men, at pie water were all at 
hand when it broke ou 
ersons in cities ma 5 be indifferent to oes be- 
— they have the great insurance companies in- 
essantly on guard; yet even they are not free from 
the most fearful risks. A curtain catches fire, wood- 


work se a the. semen are sent for, they arrive, 
ut the 


is 


guished (perhaps) ;- 
room at "leat. is te, and the house 
k, with window ed, and 


est nothing is 
an 5 brou; 
scentless, 


Tang i charge of 


“em vapour 


e s maji taas * fiercest fire 


were 


a 
Nottingham 


The 
vi em but Pr 2 o'clock 18 stacks r: f Wie 


494 THE 


GARDENERS’ CHRONIC 


LE. 


[Sepr. 22, 
pure spirit or 


1 red much in its advance by repeated changes; agreeable, but when diluted with 
e — i our Roses in classe : t ery pleasant. 


house was only hsb by the great exertions 
rs an men; a corner o Bh urnt. 
The fire de Ee to rage erag the 
an annihilato deen 


H 
at hand the fi fa woti ae been 


a man was mounting a orse, in Ca 


. 


rapidity of its progress 
y 1 1 that a fire . by one gallon 
of ator wil in five minutes require one 


y 2 0 
romptness. 
a effectua 7 and incessant guard 
contingenc 


against all s 


In 
That this contrivance will come into teint use 
ret 


; for that it will perform 
o perform 
it is impossible to 1 too muc 

aders, aie 


1 grouping, 
its "distinct foliage and re deer 
haracte 


ary 
nannihilator of proper dimensions is hibitors 


uch box 


still have our 


H Roses may go 
which aoe arly partake. 
the grou * French Roses an 


n Roses m tained 


Celi Rais at 
only in 

a Rose 
often heard he 25 
the 


fair. 

truth; the A ae is a pale red, gon ge earliest variety, 

the York and La ita is perdas ite. We 
k Rose 


then, 


fay) 4 


Bon 8 attenti N soaker Nothing at first | 1. 


co 2 vee less interesting than the mode in 
takes place in — p 7 dem | jo 
ited the 


whieh de 


e is no indicati tion, 


Ana appearance so very strange, presented ee 
a few 9— since in a basket of ‘common Codlin 


SAL. 


m 
-e 
2 
E 
ot 


and pale 
. gros and it ponent all = indi- 
n pained m 


e overdone with gro 


uping. The 
_ | damask and ater should go hecho but, then, what 
H 


shall we term ooded autumnal Roses 
is their proper designation, but it is ugly and u ungrace- 
ful. Suppose we call t “Hardy autumnal Roses, 
r they are in in truth the only bet hardy Roses that 
bloom in autumn, 


of flowe . 
from the’ root then 1 5 ak o 


by 

the substance meanwhile feeling extremely hard again occurs, and they ive flowers from these young 
glassy, reminding one fo sling of the Potatoes | Shoots in September and October. Hybrid Perpetual 
ibed by Ma b affected with th i bloom also early in June, for the are our ear- 
(Trockenfäule). Here and there beneath the cuticle yer S 5 hve coceatonal Bowers during Heir © rest, 
beautiful radiating threads were observed, evidently elliptic Shy al ate: Meera 
y 8 and occ eae flowers till September ; then a full erop, 
indicating " 3 of a fungus, but as they did whi oils, as the shoots a boin in anes 


not proceed any further — — we could 


nat aceerta 


remained a ction t 
differe ata, the cen Ag one e sound, 
but 204 becoming reddish brown, and collapsing 


different way from what woul have been 

the case with healthy tissue ; surrounding this was 
a thin layer of brown, evidently diseased, if not 
actually dead cells, and beyond this a superficial 
matun of pale grey ti as In none as e, 
any trace of xcept 


N a the radiating flocci, above mentioned, were 


visible; the brown cells had lost their granular 
contents, and the walls of the ea cells were very |5 
irregular and collapsed, so as to present a = conten 

microscope. After exposure 
to the d 


the cut surface ; say, the central 

tion, consisting of the two inte strata, was 
cov. ig a species of Oidium of a greyish tint, 
Ww. ex ch had now lost all 


e 
aia’ g att occupied with a white circle of Peni- 
glaucum passing on the inner edge into = 
8 ad of adult tft of that fungus. We 
recollect to ha anything of the kind 


as it shows how muc shh there is for observa-| W ot going to speak K perhaps, more than 
tion, even in objects which we tread every day under | tithe of tl the plants that have a perfume—only ns 
: (which, for convenience, we hon arranged alphabeti- 
The Oidium is a most beautiful object under the | callg) will be mentioned t are used by the operative | 
microscope. It is a form of Oidium fructigenum,| Poeno of there being a demand for the article + elie, 
— rat a icle ; while 
differing merely in its rather grey diffu e, from cir e is unable to sell 


with attention the 3 of 


inclined to 
been carried 
00 hastily made. If “ Crito” 
ows that the science of botany | w 


+) of any o 
mar 3 in eave it is 
his | and f 


|i the vaer wees? 


ic 
cession, ee all through October, and often till late 
in November. 


must keep our Toe Roses, our China Roses, 


o that this group is to co 


en act with due caution. R. 


epena TH apra 
e chance 
Down by ‘by the l Apei Hawthorn. phates! way, 
the s; — 5 is of 
The scent regal’d; each odori s leaf, 
Each opening blossom, freely — abroad 
Its ee and thanks Him with its sweets.” 


the real. The first 3 comes under our notice is 


many ages 5 it may ip 5 di 
the Laurel u, 1 the kernels of s 
m the bitter Almond 


een plates, for procuring 
or e oil from he nut ; the cake which is left ster 
| this process is akagua yoa ed with salt and w ater, and dis- 
tilled by some, it is put into a 
coarse clo 


2 — of 

ber 

5 
ee eee 7 ta far hot 


der oil rises 
still- 


e those s 


t 

8 imported fro neo 

When kept in melted tard or suet Tor a fou hones kh 
partially N and to the odour 


our Tea -scented ore es, a ur Noisettes. e first 
group, in particular, is of 8 1 interest, is so distinct į 
in its habit, and realtor the most abundant bloomer: 


mpris 
in ä of ero or more,” ay place rly a 

— 8 es in it, e arti ly the Bour- 
ray! generally bloom in lar arge clusters. This p 

blest really worthy of attention ; let it be discussed 

temperately, but let z not key ty zing 

anges, tani ames and classes have been so 

often ites within d few years, iat’ we aight to be 
able to ase new memories to follow them; let us fl 


ON THE ODOURS OF PLANTS, AND THE MODES t 
F OB | 


3 or spread 2 a oe and the steam allowed | 


s, but re- it is v 


spermace 


bits ; | 3 nied = suggest the flavour of 


for 
lation r the died 
ERGAM 


.— 


eured f 


© 
= 


ut a quar 


useful, subsiance 
dries as 


this to 


water 4 8 en ni 


of ali our autumnal es; their interval o Pie rest is | fine whi rs in 
ry short ; still, in commo th China Roses, they | best handkerchief bouquets. 
lways take it and des t. Tea-scented iena has an intense Violet odour, 
tender. Noisette Roses, as at er : grouped It is procured by maceration, 
jumble of hybrids, but there ar are good e cabin which the flowers are th 
es among If“ Crito Y's e i followed, several hou he spe 


they propers for e 
Cep ds an 


used sparingly ; and if 


ess of the 91585 0 


s pro 
and w pr reasion from the parsing It has 
Fea: 3 pale) beauties, | i 
i; 


se 
in the e of the si 
a good form 


ZO so 
in ein bing tion wi with kin 
the Acacia aa 


It is much Used for 


‘il 


ilis used with jn, 
into the eombi 


115 


Îi 


* 
PS 
8.8 
5 
a 
ie 
2 
10 
2 
J 
1 


the 
Py 


i 


cies of soft 


il 
Fit 


17 


fi 


ting soap; procured 

fruit before it is quite ri 

mE te perfume, 
itrus 


i? 


+ 
8 


15 
i 


ar 
2441 


IE 


abou 

pig cloves, it forms an excellent 1 

eee eee $ 3 Dh isa aoe 
to p 


let the gum 


e 


ect perfume is obti. 


38—1849.] THE GARDENERS’ HON EE. 597 
ves.—There are two species of this odour or oil, was of very little 2 in proportion to the require- nearly occupies the entire lea‘, and then descend to the 
distilled from “the Cloves, the other from the ments of the roots for their extension and e earth. The perfect insect appears at of 
of the Caryophyllus aromaticus. fragrance; Iam ed that although it may be more easy to ust, in the shape of a minute black-winged sawfly 
— the Car other ; the fo „most in use by the | prevent than to e is y adapting the plants | (Foenusa pumila), measuring about one-eighth an 
perfamer, m much for r scenting soap, in combination with | to the soil that may suit them, yet that when the sub- | inch in length, and about a quarter of an inch in the 
other perfumes „and also for mixing with Lavender oil | jects are not old eed — Fae be poy It would | expanse of the fore wings. It is glossy black, the ab- 
in for handkerchief use. A combination of this be necessary to soil an em a better | domen with a pali ge to the second joint ; the legs 
ts me. much prized, under the name of “ Rond dele wed one, which * we. e be „ with beneficial | pale testaceous, with the thighs, except at the tip, dusky 
to make which we find the ee good form results black ; the tibiæ sometimes whitish at the base, and the 
Pure Alcohol! ... 1 quart et ee i lacki ith i i black. 
Oil of Cloves „„ — — . TOMOL LOGY. ps e specimens must appear in the winged state in the 
” pre 5 ASPBEBRY-LEAF | following spring, in order to deposit their eggs inthe new 
5 Rose e (Otto) = 1 . oa epr i of the Sawflies (Tenthredinidre) consti- | a berry leaves, These a 1 fresh brood or, 
a E drachm. utes one of the most interesting groups of winged | 38 rs er ey, are the survivors of those 


33 nts may be left out 7 it rho a noes insects. Belonging to an order (Hymenoptera), the hatched i in A 


The two | cate 
rpillars of which are almost universally white fleshy 
proper, but they greatly improve it if use | grubs destitute of legs, the 1 of the Tenthredinidee | 3 the month of of ge some 22 5 
DISE ASES OF PL ANIS. are, on the contrary, active, variously coloured cater- | under r observation, proving that a * check exists 


pillars, furnished with numerous legs, which feed like | to th 

e 549. i g ’ othe too great increase of these sawflies, which cer. 

Genus VIII.; ae specie. Biorcurs. (Macchii.)— | = 5 of a. and moths 2 they | tainly had an injurious effect upon the plant on which 

The gardener er prides hi mself much in the possessions af closely resemble) upon the leaves and other parts ~ we observed them, which has not, during the two or 
t A Mara 


ts marked with white spots or blotehes ; he show ae ard = — ec* | three years since we fi i 
with gratification his variegated Althzea and similar | — cin fe f he f he — . Ww, yes e different | duced'a roper crop of fruit. We can onl — 
productions. But the naturalist cannot conceal that he = 1 e majority o: the order, We here, in fact, | picking off and burning the leaves as soon as they are 
gees in these blotches a certain n that the which in the was 8, Ko., is 80 | observed to be blotched, as a remedy likely to prove 
from the want of appropriate nutriment. The terrible a weapon, and which is transformed in the Ich- T ficial. 
sure remedy of this evil, and the means we possess of ug uon — ses fing 1 for boring), r engraving represents a Raspberry-leaf with 
causing it to disappear, leave no doubt of its origin. It | peste. on the saw ee aa eee ee are blotches ; the dark parts, marked with a *, show. 
suffices to remove the plant to a situation where it will | P®@utifully constructed saws, which apan f the mining caterpillars ; also 


ing 
ii n food, and we shall soon see the weer together for the purpose of ſorming drills in the caterpillar i itself of the natural size and and 
ves or stems of — nts within which the eggs are de- ma representation of the perfect insect ; the 
experiment of Fabbroni is well knwn. He treated posite ed by the females 3 showing the natural size. J. O. W. 
i 4 A à ili 


4 aa pe — GARDENING. 
THE a consider the cultivation 
of the — Vine or hie — and with much 
a] 2 nt reason, for the conflic g stateme nts 


ei to say nothing of the numerous plans 


os 5 . 
CON peculiar m 3 — — Good gardening, however, 


The spot which sometimes ap n fruits and seeds is gar 
ry depends ag rious quibbles, and far-fetched 
— | ab pe mysterious q Pass 


appear to me to ee to a very different class of dis- 
eases, 5 which I shall speak hereafter under the name of 


ies the lovers of variegated plants, that if they 
Fish to preserve them they must water them copiously ae The Grapes, a 
in summer, otherwise the hea t and light of that 2 seas d Another circumstance, which 1 * the investiga- appeared at p. 683, 1847, were evidence of what an 
wil make them resume their primitive green. That | tions of the habits of the 3 of this family especially amateur, but little 2 o the art of hortieulture, 
bas often happened to me with the s striped Grass, or | interesting, is the remarkable ariation of habits which | oan effect in Grape growing. This class of cultivators, 
Variegated Arundo Dake which when not watered in | different species exhibit. The majority, it is true, f therefore, should take courage, not only from the ex- 
summer loses the white streaks, so prized by gardeners, | in the oye sage state upon the leaves of various plants, ample just alluded to, but 9 from another which has 
In this case the disease is clearly owing to a deficiency | to to which they are sometimes very i njurious, without recently come ular ai notice, at Goodwood, not in 
in the proportion of the stimulus of light and heat. y provision for athe or defence. = Bad the case | hig Grace the Duke of ichmond’s , but in that 

A fact I have often witnessed, confirms still further with the caterpillars of the Gooseberr Sawfly = of Mr. Kent, the superintendent of his stud. Mr. K. 
What I have said. I have several times procured from ag a „ p. 548, Taa the nigger 5 black ca is eminently successtul in the culture of his garden, to 
Florence seeds of the variegated curled Kale. Upon bilar of the Turnip (Gard, Chron., p. 620, 2 and which he devotes his leisure hours. this moment 
sowing it tedly in Lombardy, I could scarcely raise | the larvæ of different species of Lo ophyrus, w which he has a small Vinery well worth the inspection—aye, 
here and there a plant which showed some slight trace sionally defoliate whole Fir _ plantations. But ollie er | of the best Grape growers in the kingdom. The con- 
of spots, And this always happened the first-year only; | species exhibit sin cations of instinct in the | struction and heating of this house is of the most simple 

second i e border i i 


S 


8 
8. 1 


means which 
colour. This perfectly agrees with} the above | themselves; thus the Slimy Grub or Slugworm of the y drainage, Turfy loam 
des ez of Lombardy being much richer than Pear and Cherry ( Gard. on., p. 692, lee covers 3 e K K. manure — 
the 8 self with a black „ which com complete] alters | his border, which is raised above the surface of the 
Te to such e pasa, Se rage appearance, and es to conceal it fale its | surrounding ground, and has an inclination outwards, 
du wi ons witout the least weakness, | enemies, or defend it “from the hot rays of cay vag The Vines are pruned moderately close, the spur 
ted the 1 of another s Selandria Æ oceu bra tak A Title 


plant stem, one cane 
— * fodi Paris or London, soon become | Chron., p. 524, 1848), 2 on the under side a ‘the par is applied during — growing season, 
l green with us: that is caused not only by our | Rose lea es, leaving the upper surface of the leaf en- | py aot er of ventilation, The bunches 

but by the action of heat. The French them- wor as a "defence. Other species pecu uliar to the ties so as to leave a good but not an excessive 


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all France, do not acquire the exquisite | w rA portions of leaves, in which they reside (Gord. only of moderate size, but well thinned in the berries, 
Italian ones ; and who will 3 not admit that | 8 »p- 684, 1847); whilstanothe rspecies, first observed | which are large and well coloured, and covered with a 
the greater hea heat of our climate is so by us, materially injures the Apple crop, the larva | beautiful bloom, all of the sorts being Black Hamburghs.. 
e to them. i i 


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1 


eating the core of iis young fruit (Gard. Chron., 5. 852, Throughout the whole house there is not an imperfeet 
CALLOSITIES or THE Roor.—It is not un- 1847), exactly in the same manner as the Apple bunch or an ill. coloured berry; they are produced in 
trees to have callosities more or less Tortrix; another 4 Ur (in the same way as the 3 style worthy of the first gardeners of the age. Let 
the commencement of the roots, or on | Cynipidæ) forms i i th n ir of bei 
em as are near the surface of the earth. | (Nematus et long 7 figured by Swammer- | furnish his table with good Grapes of his 2 
the ease, especially with trees. The Elm and whi s been recently | Little is wanted to do this except courage perse- 
he Olive tree is in published by Tn Dufour, “gt Annales of nid verance. Pharo. 
Entomological fig my a f > singeb 
an difications has habits in the larvæ eren t species, | 
— me Correspondence 


0 
cla history 2 shortly appear in this series of en- — Dive .—This year has bad the skill of of 
t | tomological articles, committing ve t inj to | som our experien Cucumbe 
za, the wan the ae shoots of iy burrowing w and | produce that fruit in perfection. We had little direct 
the roots deformed by these callosities not feeding upon the 7 7 and we now publish the history | sunshine up to the Ist of June, except a few bright 

2 in soils naturally sterile, but also in those deep soils | of — species, which mines the leaves of the Rasp- days about Good Friday. Under such circumstances, 
Sa mature , ly called cold. berry, in the same manner as the larvæ of the mining | 3 or gout, or w whatever m like to call it, killed 
exe _Callosities must not be confounded with those . er Tephritides. e plants in all directions The way in which I treated 
*XéTeseences, often of considerable size, caused b by t the beginning of = kepere of July, 1 1847, we mine this pg. bony as follows: Whee th e mould, to 
Sga ation or injuries; those of which I speak show no Pcs Mie that the leav very fine Raspberry | the amow bout 25 or 30 Bit put into 

of internal or of external diso isati They | plant, growing close wd * side of a . in the pits, it was fresh from the fields, and tl 


rganisation. 
ery our garden at ‘ 
of boils, by which name I should have designated 8 or dead parts, — on — were | wanted, on account of woodlice getting into it. I add 
— had not the word already so different a found to be hollow, the fleshy portion of the leaf being | no solid manure to the mould at all, but I retail with 
trees The Almond and the Olive are the fruit | consumed, leaving the two surfaces entire. Within | liquid manure a wha the plants come into not 
the Which wi the The dat hese blotches we found one, or occasionally two or | before that time. The process of exhaustion by ev. Vapo- 
di cate way furnish wi ion from the leaves was 
Abbé | three, small irty green ER N fl 
hree pairs of | attached to the segments following | year, that my Cucumbers did not need or receive a 
wing | the head, six pairs of ger aod a a wh 1 pro- drop of water for two months after they were planted. 
legs ; the 3 All the moisture they got was from saddles on the hot. 
- | brown in — the head 1. a ; ths to dd, third, bro Lare 3 full of water, in order to moisten the 
and fourth segments with a black dot on the under side, | a i this treatme y 
and the anal proleg surrounded at at the base with a kid. —— or fruit. Cueumber growers failed 
nt space black ring. | 2 g on account of their using highly manured mould, 
in 


These caterpillars shed their times, 
leaving the exuvia moe the . . When fa full grown sonny ar might do =. well; but in a season 
| they eat their way out of the blotch, which by this time the now and 


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eS aves, as most any other season. High flavour, as I have just stated, — 2 this country, the lose of the erop bangat 
= eq = 3 r in the econ omy | i is depen dent upon the perfeet action of the leaves, and mated to vary f o-thirds to one halts hae 
* è tabi ' ife and if their functions are perfore | the action of the leaves is dependent upon the supply of quantity 3 is 50 great, * other agricultural 
of vegetable ite, save t te ih tle ce of that amount of light and heat which each plant requires; abundant, that no wee an fet 
rid of its if high flavour in the Melon does not follow asa — tits and prices are — afn t than year, when 
comes gouty and ical, and canker is the result. | matter of necessity, from the result of heat, light, my they were not half what they were in 1847, > 

i e evil. Under sù a y 


598 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE SEPT. 99 Li 


ù : er 
ly elaborate the rich | favoured), then this portion of the theory of vegetable Sotcieties. 
= 8 a rag oth 1 toy "Whey ought to be physiology falls to the ground. A. Jenkins, Berth- i CALEDONIAN HORTICULTURAL. — 


wi 

starv 3 J Guhl . at Redleaf.— When perusing, a short e | small, but the tates per 5 were v. 
8 we have had this last spring. James | since, an account of the vane iM ppa 0 ria imbri - 55 e 2 k, — of first-rate character, For 
wi F aa nem ete Bai oman na Te nis e Sota get Cae Segue ee 
pa oy ten Sn nary thin Sf in 1 22 N ny tion for it in this country. | N be * 13 5 aj Br. to J. Syme, Esq., for Noblesse m and George 
pas ge pa huddled ei emp Mi fal of w eeds, Igwe to offer them a hint wit ever o this noble Pine . There was n m i in in Grapes, 


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oun experience. 
r ic house —58 every- at Redleaf, in the lowest part of the gardens, in a cool of fine fruit. For Muscats of Alexandria, a 
Wang belongs Ma y4 a e y view to prom rom eer situation, having 2 confined atmosphere, corresponding | was voted to Mr. Lees, gr. to the — 
may I suggest to your readers how desirable 3 would with the place above described. It produced very and a 2d to Mr. Baxter, gr. to Sir J. G. Calg Red 
be that every horticultural society should give premiums | vigorous growths, but the latter ripened imperfectly, For Black Hamburgh Grapes, a ae ps was made to 
to gardeners, who can show that they, deserve it, for the | and aye eg" ag that all the young growths | Mr. Ramsay, gr. to Sir G. Clerk; a 2d to Mr. Maus 
general tidiness of the pre mang ty der 5 care. II ma ade i in m — were destroyed by the ever- lan, gr. to W. R. Ramsay, . z and a 3d to Ma, 
believe it sometimes * s that, for t of nA ne 27 dae 20th, * although the Rennie, Inch House. For excellent Frontignan 
such encouragement this, r o Ni 5 may plant had à tehed fi o prot at the time. a Ist prize was gained by Mr. M‘Lauchlan with 
lead to neglect of the > general state of the garden, on | In the following year this plant was removed to iga a 2d by Mr. Cameron, gr. to S. Hay, Eat, 
account of the cea time being ay ag spent ground, near 1 and à 3d by Mr. Reid, Millbank, 
wer is, The latter endured the frost just alluded to withou t Frontignan. For the heaviest bunch of Grapes, ft r 
I think, is buying g gold too dear ; 8 that, it leaves protection, and it experienced but a slight discoloration | dessert, the prize was awarded to Mr. Marshall, gr. t 
many pains-taking m without that uragement | of its foliage, proving the superiority of a high situa-| A. Croil, Esq., for white Syrian. For very 
which they deserve for the ir geen attend to every- tion over a low one. Profiting by the hint I planted clusters, a 2d award was voted to Mr. Ramsay, 
thing placed under their care, H. G . A., Sept. 18. Cryptomeria ene on * and dry ground, in which Southfield Black; and a 3d to Mr. M'Lauchlan, fi 
Hardiness of the White Indian ‘Azalea. If it be probably it m . for some years equal in growth | white Syrian. For the best grown Pir Je, the pe 
this orrespondent “S. r 


can dw ih equal to 
7 er as beautifully in this nei So * will prove the ‘highest in the following year ? prize was awarded to Mr. Thom, gr. to C. 
in the opet — without aay protection — er I Abies Webbiana, at Redleaf, Ta igin ally planted near Esq., and a second to Mr. Crocket, Raith. The prin 
have seen in a greenhouse. A — — oa Arautaria in low groun was much injured | for the best six Apricots, exclusive of Moorpark, 
Bridge W Wells, Sept. 18. in January 1838, and was 1 — “moved to a gained by Mr. King, Musselburgh, with the Breda, F 
Experimentsin Potato Planting. + Regents, —s | higher place, and exposed to a north aspect, with a view | excellent Green-gage Plums awards were i 
on an average 4 oz. each, were cut into sets of single 3 delay its 1 in the spring, for late Spring frosts | made to Mr. Miller, gr., Culross, and — — New 


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n ing great s — gr Ne 
——— with small whole Regents of the same average rol ; Ti nees man that they will prove more successful | Abbey, fo: Washington and Victoria; and a 2d to Mn 
former produced a erop of 21 bushels to and durable than seedlings. Some of them are worked | Mackie, -iA at Larbert Han for Orleans and Victoria. 
— and the latter of 17. The difference was | upon the Weymouth Pine, the grafts having been | The peter in Melons was extensive, and two 
partly to f of th taken from the large 16 feet plant at Redleaf, which | prizes snip — ‘Ist to Mr. Aitken, gr. W 
ing. The tubers of the cut sets did not excel the others | died in 1843; they promise soon to attain the P. G. Sken o, Esq, fo -flesh variety; E 
Size as much as I had expected. The conclusions I height of their parent. I am of opinion that this | 2d to Mr. Les, fo 
vo en Nom Yaki various other experi ‘on sets of 8 distinet will be found to succeed best The — exeited interest, 
single eyes öf about 4 oz. each —— that early kinds, in situations denen A shaded from the sun’s rays. | and, notwithnitemdin the = 
and all sorts, late plante d es especially, on poor ground, It m — * interesting to know that the late proprietor there were many irable stands of flowers Sent 
uire the largest — whilst late kinds, early planted, | purchased in Bond-street, in 1808, then 40 years of age, | competition, In the Nurserymen’s Class — 
and on rich land, prosper with smaller sets. Regents cones of the Cedar of Lebanon, and that from the seeds | prize was assigned to Messrs, James Dickson 
and Forty-folds were thus planted on the same plot of | were raised several plants, which now assist to embel- 
ground in February. The produce of the former is ex- | lish those gardens ; before his death, one of them girthed 


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cellent, the tubers being often of nearly a pound in upwards of 3 feet, at 3 feet — the 1 at ano * 8 cess Rad Fs 
weight; but the erop of Forty-folds is very poor. | plants of Abies De _— from cuttings made by m E. Antrobus, Empress of Whites, and Boule 22 
—— sets of Early Frame produced a good return in — * 8 — yet of 20 feet high, — oqtay 1 2d 
, but the crop in the field was miserable. ngs, and Spreading in diameter propor- | I ue á 

Ta also eut Walnut- leaf Kidney in crown and bottom sets. tionately — their height. At the present time, how- | I n „ N Gen 
— were platted in the field with excess of | ever, the abu — nd cheapness of seedlings renders | Lilac Standard, Shylock, Marquis of Worcester“ 


manure, came up and ripened early, and — affected | raising them from cuttings unnecessary. Joseph Wells, of the North, Grenadier, P among 
with the rot. The bottom ends were planted at the Shorne, oa hc at Redleaf. ward Antrobus, and Crocus. In the competition > 
same time, close by, in unmanured ground, came up Alkali Works—The Yorkshire jurors on r — practical gardeners, the a est premium was — 
late, and many are rotten. As to the rot, it — —— case may have their observation directed to the in- Mr. Macdonald, gr. to Lord Willoughb 4 Eresby, yit- 
in highly manured ground and hea Avy go cvile, oven f | fluence of alkali works on some trees near ‘an Stoke | mond:Castle, for Oapt. Warner, Duke of Welling 
roughly drained. The late planted also ona Prior Works at that station, on . — of the Bir- | chi 2 — S 
but the early — — — — with mingham and Gloucester Railway. Mr. Seldon, Beeswing, Scarlet Gem, 
manure in moderation, have alm succeeded. | Kidney Bean Seeds.—Though 1 5 is s weli known that and Grenadier. The Silver Medal wsa 3 
— — — a g Sigma. the ripe seeds, especially of the varieties producing 2d prize to Mr. J. Oswald, gr., 
Adders.— In my communication on the subject of — * of Kidney Beans, are much esteemed as duced Cleopatra, Beeswing, Duk 
adders casting their skins (p. 582) your compositor has | f he Continent, and at ‘some tables in our own Mr. Seldon, Shylock, Marchioness of 
a letter, and thus rendered the sentence unin- — it may not be known that — seed of fresh de Feu, Emperor of Whites, Mr. 
5 as it how stands it appears as though I had | Kidney Beans, when far ‘too too ‘stringy ‘for use, make a | Scarlet Gem. A 3d prize was voted to 
stated that the “corner” of the eye had been cast; it most excellent vegetable. is merely necessary to | to Mrs. H. N. , who ‘produced 
should have been printed the “cornea.” Perhaps I remove the coloured skin, which, is very easily done by | choice flowers. In the Amateur 2 
was incorrect in calling the scale, which in the skin | the —— and pot 1 gmt far ! „ in consequence 8 highest prize was assigned ‘to Mr. § 
occupied the place of the eye, “the cornea,” but I the —— a dish, than might a t | burgh, whose kinds were: 
thought the fact that a seale which appeared to fit ‘the | first —— — They should then be well boiled and | Caractacus, an 
of the eye, and which in the skin presented a served eicher with with gravy or melted butter, and will be made to Mr. King, Inveresk 
concave surface outwards, sufficiently curious to merit found to make * mange „when vegetables | wing, Mrs. Shelley, Standard of 
——? observation. i Bah (a 


ne ͤ fall off. M. J. Box. For fancy 
Colour a — altered by Guano out Vine | im 
eee Ch — Horticultural oo 4 on the . — were well dressed last winter with good cow- | awarded to Mr. M: 
pa a r, a silver cup was offered for the best | yard manure, —— had been protected from ‘rain and a. = following : 
clusters of Roses and on leaving home in May I desired our gar- | Surpris 
e Pertivian guano in a large — Harlequin, an 


i som 
uantity of water, and to use it freely on the borders mium was voted to Mr. — 
d 2 houses, as also on the Vines in the for Mirobolante (Krug), Mons. 
being — inside. The result has Bijou de Chloshauet, Vietorata, 
the . es i ‘and 


has been 
. Lawes, King William-street, n, Wales, For mema a vs premian 
walt. — Constant — — Mr. Henderson, gr. to C. K 
T rtainly in e 


uano is “is incapable of abie of producing the Irbey, Maria 


———————————— a mern 
eke. e See e 


attention 5 
gr tel 7 ig Fins tly RA N 


THE GARDENERS. CHRONICLE. 599 


rofessor Dunbar, the kinds being: Ch fi b bl f Bushell’s Duch deviation from the o ordinary fo 


ifolium album, speci . „Mr. Noakes ‘Eats tra Prize by J. Howard, Esq., | tris i 
We have to add, that on this occasion many meritorious for the best 2 coag of Howard's fancy Dahlia Mise oleracea may be instanced. Such instances, it is clear, 
ctions were exhibited, for which thanks were Jane: Ist, Mr. Pope. Extra Prize by H. Harms, Esq., | are not regarded by cultivators as di 
ccordi i or the best 2 Goons ‘of any one white Dahlia: Ist, Mr. I. Diseases properly so called arise from some 
were also two splendid Cape Heaths | Keynes. Extra Prize by Mr. H. Hamilton, Cheap- | derangement or * of relative pe gay aga in the 
from the Royal Botanic Garden; and some magnificent | side, for the best fancy Dahlia: Ist, Mr. C. Turner. | various circumstances of tem ture, &c., mentioned 
i of Petunias, raised in the Society’s own | First Class Certificates were awarded as follows: to above. The effects of deficient light, ai air, and tempera- 
garden, attracted general notice, and were much Mr. Keynes for seeding Dahlia Sir T. Bathurst; | ture, as also of a meagre or over-manured soil, are 
admired. It may y] prape 2 that a new implement, | ditto ditto Magnificent; ditto ditto Gai aĩety. Mr. known to every eultivator, and guarded against to the 
for facilitating the earthing up of . en Bragg for seedling Dahlia Lady Grenville; Mr. Legg best of his powers. The chemical momenta are doubt- 
crops, invented by Ar. 8 — of Cargilfield, was for seedling Dahlia P ot Mr. Liddiard for seedling | less quite as important though less obvious, 
exhibited at work in the Culinarian, and remitted * a Dahlia Miss Compton; Mr. Drummond for a seedling 2. A second most prolific source of disease is the in- 
committee for a report. Gloxinia. It is not our intention to to report these | fluence of parasitic plants living at the expense of the 
meetings again unless the tobacco nuisance, alluded to a juices, and often deranging their structure. Mis- 
Rorat Sourn Lonpon —— Sept. 12.— last week, is completely stopped. oe and Broomrapes are well known e examples of one 
The Dahlia show was held on this occasion, and, not- — of _ parasites, but these are few i in compariso with 
withstanding the unfaxourable state of the day, there Borantcat or eee Sept. 7.—The Tre: r in| the 
was a fair attendance. In preference to giving the the chair, Mr. C. C. Ba abington presented — ng of different forms of Potato disease, rust, smut, 
names of all the winning Dahlias, we will enumerate | of Rubus —— (Bab.), and Rubus incurvatus | bunt, ergot, &c., are obvious instances. Our author, 
— which appeared the most constant and which S Bab. ), collected by him at men. North Wales, in | like most of his coun trymen, is an advocate to 
own n. Se i i i i 


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Many of the flowers were most excellent specimens of | Odontites verna elegans, were exhibited from Mr. | doctrine which solves . by throwing 
their kind. First : Shylock, scarlet, was very generally Ball, i in n illustration ' of the plants described by him in | them out of view and involving greater. 
shown ; also Mr. Seldon, shaded lilac ; Richard Cobden, | the “Botanical Gazette” for September. A paper 3. Insects also are productive of disease, as in the 
saded maroon; Duke of Wellington, orange; Victory, | was 14 — m Mr. W W. II. Colman, “ On the Plants In- | case of earcockle ; and, besides the actual loss 2 
on oy — Scarlet Gem ; Andromeda ; Yellow cosa digenous to ‘the neighbourhood of Horsham, Sussex.” from their direct ravages by cultivators, many a 

Fearless, lilac; Grenadier, crimson ; —— — ture is deranged and altered by the deposition ma S 

— eog blush ; Toison d'Or, buff; Bla k Prinee, ROYAL HORTICULTURAL OF Comnwant, E j 9 thei 


arom ; The o, rose; Nonpareil, — ; Mynn, Melon Beechwood, 6 M. * a euran ee little work before us. If it 
crimson ; — — —— red; s Vyse, white | Grapes (th er Medal), 5 Muscat, Tottenham does not contain full information on the points on which 
and purple; Gem, en Violet Perfec- Park Muscat Black Prince, Mr, Vivian. Sot Fouts Grapes, | it touches, it at 2 lon before us some general prin- 
fion; Queen ‘of the ‘east, bin Loni. ‘Philippe, crimson; | White Syrian, Mr. tacts Ce F ax. Dems 6. Paachan, Forais Feat | ciples, which is the great thing which is requisite, 
Box, ancies:—Belle de — — en a W. Daubu — Best ¢ le . of Apples, Isolated examples must indeed first be described; 
Nogent; Bou — — —— and white ; Comte de White Quarandine, Mr. G. C. F Figs, but these will do 2 to promote our knowledge of 
i , dark red and white : ‘Conspicua, crimson and 1 — dish of Cherries, 3 Morello, Rer. 8 Rogers vegetable di cept we take some wider view, 
4 ur de Maroc, dark maroon and white ;| Best dish of P) predic ge ea th Bronzo Medal Zouch. and endeavour, as — possible, to generalise our 
Í Gasparine Furstin Reuss, dark and White; General | neria Californica, Sir C. Lemon, Bart., M.P. t 12 Stove | notions, 
s violet purple and white ; Hermina, red and N se Plants p — me Medal), j, Aphelandra —, 
white; Jenny Lind, maroon and white; Madame | Dipladenia 8 2 — 
s P " fi „e., Mr. W. Daubuz. Best — ecimen, Di ladenia 
Wachy, purple and white . Miss Jane, purple an eer ay Mr. Vivian, — specin en, Clematis | Botanic Garden, Port Philip, N. S. Wales—The 
white; Miss Blackmore, white, with purple edging ; — Sir C. ae Bart., M.P. Best Orchids, Oncidium Board of Management appointed Mr. 


bu Gongora macula e 
maga Striped with red; Picotee, yellow striped and | gemi sai, Mr. W, Danua, ‘best 3 the death of the late Mr. Arthur. Ar, Delachey arrived 
with ved ; Postsecretaire Hane, — — 2 specimen, Lamberti rosea, Mr. F. Passingham. Best 6 —— {ia the province by the ay a from ee he was 


scarlet and white; Remem and | Exoniensis, Corallina, Duke of Cornwall, Reine our, pan wep i acl for erdeen, and 
a > i 
i white; Striata perfecta, 1 lavender spotted and st striped with n at the ez eer tated to be 2 ees for the aa asad 2 has 
msy lilac ; Vico e equier, purple and white. | Daubuz. Best 12 Dahlias, Bathonia, Admiral — Bees- W Port Philip Argus 
Seedlings were numerous, but there ing | wing, Marchioness of Cornwallis, Sure-enough, “Cleopatra, 8 . 
them very striking. Keynes“ Magnificent is a 777 arguis Calendar of Operations. 
: e es : 
The tosy lilac of fine form, and apparently constant. 6 G ditto, 8 Shylock, Toison D'Or, — Princess Radzeville, (For the ensuing week.) 
‘same may be said = mi F. a eaea crimson. | Ba: tho onia, . ss of Corn ie * — * pe w Best PLANT DEPARTMENT. 
Premier is a well forme purple ; also an orange | Roses, Mr. H. Williams. Best Hol a iliams. | Tug severe weather this week, in many localities, 
z i Pa 1 Pl: 1 mi A : 
fover named Earl 1of Clarendon. | Syiph is a promising Bost Asters, it — Bost Bul tous W. Daubuz," “"° | has testified to the necessity of beforehand with 
$ ht e season, and those who had h i 


| white ground v ompac th W. their most tender 
8 sity, yellow with red — These * Two other reports of Country Shows have reached us; plants would not be sorry that they had done so when 
| the igh objects in the seedling stands, 5 we cannot 3 — for they contain a list of —— they saw the severity of Tuesday an Wednesday 


With the addition of very fine constant dark Dahlia gez Without A he most — localities, all 
met sizo, exhibited b — aoa — ‘ord, and a EA the most tender greenhouse plants sho c 
trs Elizabeth will hike i ary p rng en e Reb irw at present : fon 4 7 — —— 2 long 

3 be d asa blush, with rosy a —— rey) —— auf das Phlansenleben in ihren 18 į 55 avoided, and there are many plants whose 

Puple stripes well defined; Liddiard’s Viss Compton is ungen Krankheiten der ee will allow of their being freely exposed for 
abright red and white, but too thin; Bragg’s Lady 5 20 “Zin neee asa fenilion dantanee -sf this we may 
Grenville i dull white and red, but very good in form. am 30 Marz, 1847. Von Eduard Regel. Zurich, mention the Cytisus, and as the flowers of such 
Howrxooxs were shown Chater and Mr, 1847. o, PI pp. 32. plants are valuable through the winter, a litio Senger 
Bircham, in very fine condition, the spikes being one a title implies, is the exposure will retard their season of blooming. In very 
ome Mass of ers . 8 on the t outward agents nts which aff cold i ums, in pots, be 
as fresh as if had been on the parent stem. — life, more especially with reference be ty placed in a cool house, or under the shelter of a wall, 
Their names were Mrs. C. Barron, fine rose ; Delicata, to which t where they ean be protected by drawing down a canvas 
fesh white; Enchantress, rose 5 cultivated are subject. It was r course — id in ati se ED Many plants whose wood is properly 
Geen, blush ; Surprise, fine deep rose; Comet, rich within so short a compass as a lecture contained in a | ripened may at once be removed 8 — 


; | pamphlet of a very few pages, to give anything like a | facing the north, or they may be place 
ete vi j Geranium ; i 


171 
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piik and rose c h — stage of use; the si m should 

g > Obscura, grey purple. Mr. Bir- important matters, some indeed excluded by the very | however be such, that frost can be effectually excluded 

ian overs were, Rosea alb a, Shaded rose ; Defiance, | terms of the discourse, still it contains a great deal, not | without entirely depriving the plants of light, These 

: 3 Model l of —— y” blush ; Rosea | indeed of — but of plain sense, on the matters | will include Fuchsias, Hydrangeas, Plumbago capensis, 
Ta, best rose William Te crimson ; which are brought in view. Hibiscus, Brugmansia sanguinea, Erythrina, Bou- 

Queen, blush mottled lilac ; Mount Etna, ‘ihe rich crimson ; After briefly stating the fact that vegetation varies | vardia, Hedychium, Canna, and a great many 


Achmet, dark maroon ; sulphurea with climate, without however entering at all on the others, By removing these, a greater space will be 
tes ety? Fel, red ; formosa, fine dark; ‘and d | subject of botanical geography, the author poy afforded for plants with healthy foliage. Annuals, 
: , fine dark. simply to describe the chemical composition of vege- | which have been cultivated 2 the plant 


| awarded as follows: for the best tables, and the various sources from whence the com- | houses during the summer, must of course give place 
| goatee” bibamiš (private growers), Ist ponent parts are are derived. é „fe oy ra 

: ; „Burnham; The ab y implies | quired. y Rhodode Azaleas, Kalmias, 
85 ‘secretion. The Nat materials penetrate thro the for forcing, should now be taken up, potted, and plunged 
2d, | whole of th — in a bed of ashes, from whence they can be brought 
. | producing n ow parte. e processes are —— forward in succession as they are required. Roses, in 
carried on in the newly-formed pogo and am amongst | pots, for winter use, should be examined, and any that 

these, exhalation of gases more or less charged with require re-potting or top dressing should be imme 

humid matter, — 1 ‘the fluids. attended to; a little Ar in the way of rich 

ces which affect the vital | will encourage the nanan prepare 


perature, light, — their buds for healthy and Let 
activity o id tem a y an — expansion. 
atmosphere as, water water, and soil, The effect of each of all watering in this department oa done in the early 
| these is briefly reviewed. The concurrence of each in = of the day, and let*this operation be 
the | its 5 proportion is ee eee eee extra caution, especially with hard- wooded plants; 
perfect devel t of any indi species. If any . CARER, 
thom be 4 FLOWER GARDEN. 
ixed matters had 


Wah 


one j 
z or mixed 

| lutely noxious, the normal development will be impeded, — of winter to aniio ara RTD M the the 
| or actual disease will be prod ion 


onger time to establish es, so that t na 
arisen from such devia- struck well rooted plant will 68. 2 * as two 
eee ee 22 m a 1 the 
aa e much as possible from re- — —— — uring winter; 
General | verting to their original type, or if practicable to in- — gf delay is too obvious to nesd samasa 
Mis. |ccease’ the pine . Geena” p yramidalis, Antirrhinum, 


THE 


t protection, should 


600 
= plants which require a sligh 
laced in a — ati n. 


e pla ll these arrange- 
coal should as . be completed at once, 
so that the hands co a ge hen the weather be- 

Pathe it necessary to ta take a 
pot t all the old slits required for another season. 
is end, — frames, boxes, pots, &c. should be pre- 
ed, as this weather makes it desirable to complete 
the jo gel) as possible. If it is intended to make 
any extensive alterations and improvements, which wil 
include t of trees = sap „ no time should 
the w ground is in 


GARDENERS’ 


uch indebted to you for the fork ; but it is not 


CHRONICLE. 


VINE The 1 Mus 


lost in commen s the 
much more workable state inal tt will be two months 
shrubs shift 


hence, and any s immediate] y will have 
time to strike fr 
1 FRUIT GAR 
able eyt ot ‘facilitating the 
made Bene 
trees are of m stre „ a — we over- 
crowded with wota, the Pes a will now be going on 
manner. If anythin 

e nany to stop 
rees of greater Tas this 
ively, takin: h 
ack 


a trench shoul 
ce, and the ball of mi pene carefully 
off all — are 
Where aan bot! 


etrating the 
a -i impervious, this is of 
e can 


soil. 
been concreted, or is ‘etal 
course unnece It any of the 


an vn u orn p 
wood 8 ely 1 while at the same time the og 
will have the full ben efit o yin moderate day tem 

Sy 


really dead. 
and the Amphipod (not Isopod), is Gamm — N Ww. 

B. The two insects sent are Staphylinus olens ; see an- 
nexed woodcut and, for its further history, — 740, 1842. W.— 


HI 


IW. The bright coloured caterpillar fonnd in 
Potato is ‘that of th 


e Death’s-head Moth; see a eee 


of assisting the ripening of t Endeavour by all 
means to effect this . ‘abject before the arrival 
of severe — 
State of the Weather near London, for the week ending Sept. 20, 1849, 
as observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiswick. 
Moon’s|} BAROMETER. THERMOMETER. 
. 4273); BRM, | A es a 
m Age. M i Max. Min. Mean 
Frid 27 || 20.166 | 30095 || 62 | 51 | 565 || S.W. || .00 
* 25 30.170 | 30.239 || 66 | 42 | 540 S. ‘00 representation and, for description, page 9 — Bin The 
Sunday . : E — 2 ibd 70 — 4 2 5 = dark- ee — 4 is a hens of the s moth will 
a . 30. 5 50.5 E. d 
Toae i 1 || soas |203 || 67 | 38 | 478 || N: ‘00 —— * n Thanks “for the “Ripiphorus 
Wed . % 2 || 30.400 | 30.435 || 64 | 40 | 520 |} NE. || <03] paradoxu with a piece of the — — 
Thurs. 20 3 30.407 30.298 59 46 52 |] N.E. 5 i the cocoons of ue arasite — s, and will you 
7 755 rr aep” — bor er to find the larva, which is a great ra 
Sept. 14—Fine; Sn haze at night. a a STRING oF Questions: L B G. No; your Ma urandy 
— 3 — 9 mild; overcast. — t be Hatre “2: house where the air is rather damp 
= prey brat Boe s wit out being cold air of all sitting rooms is neces- 
a 5 reg — loudest night, an cold, sarily too dry for plants; and such as Maurandya will never 
— 1e- — very f fine; slight y clouded. thrive in it; if they thrive, you at 1 will not, unless it is a 
— rth-e: ; clear at night; rain, very dark room. British Orchids are not very well ar hed 
— — er — 23 deg. below the average. a Wardian case; they cannot be: raised from seeds 
must get them from their native wilds monk e plenty of ‘eter 
saith . he ea (weak ja 8 manure if you can), with ch 
5 nie “ensuing week, ending Sept. 29, 1849. ; Metons: Sub, We are unacquainted with À Passingham’s i 
toria — n-fles Melon ; but — as you state, your three 
be 22 Prevailing Winds. plants ‘produced fruit all differ 1 another; 
2 ‘ 28 É 32 j in | Greatest only infi roumstance is that the 
Sept. 8 ŠE SE which it Quantity}; als “ele = | __seed must have been badly sa 
<a jan "Alz Ala la womens: Addio, The is a very curious example 
— — of the same kind of change as that which produces the Cauli- 
Sunday = z: — nE — = in, = : : 1 5 21 flower, only each flower here is conve into a close mass 
Tues ál e7 | 453 |560 10 Px: 1424 gn : of branches, by a monstrous 6 1 abortion 
ed. 26| 661 | 48.0 |561| 14 069 42 s) 6| 1) 1| ., Of a flower. 
Thurs. 27 65.0 } 45-1 |550] 13 057 22 146% 2 | N 7 — Jas ro. 
Friday 25) 645 | 443 8 10 | os 1231 8| 4|3|2} Pentstemon glandulosus a ntly, but it is sm akan to 
ae : 0.35 1 20 3 2 5 6 2 2 pi gane 3 — — oF Pakis Siebeldi. You 
ighest temperature during the period rred are very o — 0 ank you much. — 4 D H. 
1842—therm., 82 deg. ; Gaede sericea tin A aiaa — ot re Claytonia 2 r 


Notice be ents. 
JA. Trans it now, if the beds g 
Nove your Myrtle oe Pend i 2 it flags shade Pate it. and an W 
if 
it up a a Fe ball. * ke 
BExs: u will — oe nice and useful 


it every evening till i 
broadside, on 
reulated by the East Marlow 


> Hee oEtING Macuine: W H, Cork. Mr. — 
ta 


wright, of Cargilfi Id, burgh. tes, for your inform 

ti that the machine which is figs t page 

— a by Mr. Slight, “which. the 
ine maker, Edinburgh, eo Same 7 * 


ted a — It is much too light Amateurs who from t al —— distingulsbel 
use themselves with gardening will find yor an smooth the, Royal Mus below, ar sere ves of the former arg 
ee Watts : HH will be obliged by an din nes are thickly set on toe eck mye re Royal Muses, 
Vaak plan of a garden wall, and will 17 N oo snow ie thers sorts. have round white with bristly 
ould be any advantage in letting the face of the wall slope, Chasisas Nan é has a richer Muscat fi berries, but the 
WA 5 that the rain ree each the 1 better. Frontignan will ripen i in — enhouse,| ovour. The Í 
a prac J are unacquainted with a dwarf white- Misc.: S. There 1 $ 
flowere Neither Ed — ai 9 e Way.—4 
and if we were we sald not tell you where it is to be pur-| be reputed as other th eysantha, mor Creams lucida z 
chased, We never e cannot answer the inquiry better danta, Penton & Op, 
* CRS 9 ao of the leaves * * Vines | all European seeds, of VERY FINE QuALIT by replying tht 
ufficien ty account: condition in the United States; and that no ge tig demand 
2 your fruit. adva itageously.— non, We believe you to papate na 
Insects: Notts Sub, Your Vines are attacked by the thrips ; what “abuse and lies” do you refer in ree T 
see answer to E. Franklin,” in = st week’s Answers to valine who — — himself Dahl,“ or of any o to the ni 
respondents. . Observer. Several queen wasps occasionally n’s Gardener. We : 
hybernate in the old hive, but we believe that in 5 cases | in ap the whole affair we rely agres va you in look. 
hey undergo the change to the perfect state in the autumn. peddling piece of Hudsonis But we'de won It isa 
lace the nest under ll-glass, and favour us by infor ing visabl interfere ; nor, indeed, is it necess thin i a. 
us whether the supposed dead q sealed up in their cells character of the transaction is now un derste the true 
i or whether — gardeners who happen to possess understandi e 


ren FLOWERS, 
Acuimenes: HB ers the size and very nearly 
colour Pad those of A Bento, and A ohnen 
on any of bong — or rose- N 3 
G K. 


ANTIREHINU 1, 3, 4, v. on in colours; 2, 

3 with a pale tube, rather novel in colour, but dull + 
a fine large, ag Mr igi bright ae ‘and 

10 shape.* —E 15 a pretty 1 

varieties 9 1 and 10 are 


also nice carnation 8 prie but D flowers were 
much withered when they reached us er numbers 


vans 


acuta is eee ers arrived in 
good and: aias 15 a 2 na y ot 400 milest NA 

A size aa agg of petals very 3 
cupped re, and regular; colour * 
stained Sear the porte cies with bright purple; 
filled, oe slightly sunk ; 8 ery nice bright 

k : size good well sl 
and regulat ; eye well filled, 
textu e good. sky red 
d in shape 7 * 


markings near the eye 
a self, unless it 


4 ror e 
middle-sized 


corolla bright Cee oe and h ardly am 


K 


ortion 
nel 5 corolla reddish v 
g and sle 


BB 


fat text ober one 


i 
FRE 


0 
5 


K* 


upon re Ey 
HELIOTROPE : No m j © 
in colour.* 72 uy i E 
pat! in in being a iea — zuflicientiy on 4 
the flowers from oth must depend 7 
habit of $ g 


the ways of mana g bees the slidin weight ttached to the e —— bar, which a hs 
Horticultural Society, to — secretary we refer you. 7 Ibs. 7 5 2 Seeng tines and pe foes A board it is tanoides * 1 
Anon. If your bees still refuse to feed from ‘this pans, you abad it is somewhat harder work with the grubbin oo wre Calne = 
ee put t the food on a bit of comb, or in a common ; his men say about equal to 2 — for the same time. feathered with violet v4 thick 
with litter amongst it; place the plate under the| The quantity of work which a man could do is not overstated, osy pink, stained, — 
15 . ally as regards the hoeing and the earthing up. Mr. bright re i 3. 
ACKBERRY Wine: P T O is anxious to make wine from the Slight has made many of these poe and his charge for middling, size smal 
fruit of the Hazel-leaved 1 Perego is a ripening ; the complete e is 20. 15s, ivewright — that} Shape tolerable, sural 
iia — e followi Even: he will be happy to show one in to an ith dark eye fea 9 
Will d of fruit to 1 hod — be i * ather- who may call on him for that the lobes, and thin. 5, p 
ing it as it per 2 Does the Bramble juice resem le the | ORNAMENTAL 2 Domzstı ee by the Rev. E. as ; &, pale ory 
Grape juice in thinness, so as to render water 8s [ Dixon, price 5s, 6d., N and may be had at — — — i 
The juice alone is difficult to ferment, where there Š p ee of| Office of this Paper, fed of if all booksellers. slightly ly feathered ; 3 8 
loaf 5 — to the gallon, w quantity of sugar is added to | Ozone : Ignoran A. is the smell of elec —— mall. All 5 ve 
give eth, “PTO” k * that beer-yeast is objec- | PINE-APPLES : Jenne me pman. The Mon t of Speechly, icey marked, a tre, with 
fionable ; might Potato- be less so, which, in its first] and of many growers in the north of England, is the 2— feather ate re the ge die-sized 
process, had a very sm N „yeast, but which | Jamaica of Brookshaw’s „ Pomona Britannica.” The nicely ‘marked vari erated violet, flowers 100 S% 
ultimately lost it —— 1 of sugar Potato, — nad Montserrat is rao lh worthless. 5 texture; 2, P 
2 purely vinous smell? The Bramble- has a Rhubarb | Roses: An Amateur. We ee g your case, and crumply.® 
taste; a 233 the ‘wae destroy it ? or any other | suspect some m — Pea 2 certain 7 Patox DRUMMONDII : 
“a The eis rather ae paze; ho . it? if by | SNAKE 9 a Weeks. We are of 9 — ee Tri- with large we 
Ad 3 Sow is it to be nsed—juice or husks ? chosanthes colubrina, gnated with the e on Cu. VERBENAS: 1, ros 
: SW M. We can only say at 3 Botany, ” the cumber, will not be eatable, but will be 
. of Botany,” and the „ of | TALLIES: Subscriber. At present our opinion is — in favour 
to Ly 7 Tee of galvanised iron tallies, cut with a rebate surrounding the 
tany, who do not require details.—An Old Sub. face and . a piece of glass to be inserted in it over 
2 ture,” “ Encyclopmdia of Garden- the name which is PP nove on the face of the tally, Speci- 
up i hens’s Book of the Farm,” | m ay D seen in the Botanic Garden, Chelsea, and in 
4 « Porters Tropical If he can read French, | „that of the Horticultural Societ 2 . 
ault Eeongmie Rurale.” BANSPLANTATION : Eboracens e inclin *,* 
Diseases : G T F. Your Thorn is out of health, no doubt; but experiment with September 3 rove 4 d rmes — err ore ore 
dee e curious, Duk a m ogee adr er aa have 
the * -Dy our: long ngs, at present they 
of morphology. look quite well. Y ‘ou may therefore as well try, E 


38—1849. ] 


WHEAT SOWING. 
Ta LONDON MANURE COMPANY 5 to e 
‘ 1 th anure sen 
— Sga ee from the slightest adulteration, 
mporter’s ** ty 2 8 ee 
of Am. 


dust, eve belen rtific cial Manure 
ene Pons Secretary. Bridge-street, Blackfriars. 


OF WHEAT, &c. 
pur oun! D CARBONISED ANIMAL MANURE. 
OT which is particularly well pe for the 


érill, 58 —— 12 its composition a Morin of — woth 
rtificial agg intimately united with c 
nim 


ar o either of = following Pigh In London: Mr 8, 
2 eet, Leice er-square ; Mr. Marx For 5 me 
2014, Upper er Th eevee EORGE LAWRENCE, 18, Picca- 


Mr. G. e is, Tavistock- row, Covent-garden ; 
In Ha e STEPHEN HORNER. 
N B. 70 insure te ality i — the delivery, when the quantity 
is sconsiderabe, a few days’ previous notice is requested 
to be given 


ORSE FOR CATTLE.—To be sold, about 100,000 
strong young pat of GORSE (F rench Furze) : at 5s. per 
1000, which will be ta 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


601 


—4 Wen neg 000 plants isa proper quantity for planting an 
o Mr. JEsso P, Nursery Ground, Cheltenham. 
a 1 — — a AND AGRI. 
arselin e , Kennington-lane, London. 
wledge — Analytical and ee al 
8 Geology, “Surveying, — —— 5 ng, Railway Engineer- 
=; — fl be obtained ir be e . NE 


Ur. sir works on Arithmetic, os ration, G 


lish one — 


are published by Lone- 


ess the rare 


ESBIT’s Academy, in! ENG 


fro: 
superi r hydraulic purposes, ween as cquentl 
and lining of. Reservoirs, 3 Baths, Pai -ponds, & . For 
external plas and o tal casti sit — — neither 


colour nor pai aap It t never . — and 
to four times its own body of sand. 
5 J. B. WHITE and Sons, Milbank-street, West- 


prne D ee WATER RAMS, 8 
roved Prin ; Engines worked by Steam or 

. r, to palate ok 1 gallos to er er minute to 
ht of ee "feet, and from a NN 

— Hot- and vest other d 


— — * , heate 


Sinking, and Collecting = 
to Jons Lecea, Cheltenh 


d by 8 Air, or F Wither Boring, 
Abani &c. Towns supplied.—Direct 


condition of the people: it is not our part to y exhibit 
those motives which alone have radical’ influence 
here, but we believe t 


or these adver- 
opp 


en lost o 
to the parties sending them, for Messrs. WALKER, 
x, RusserL, or whatever the alias for arts semg 


olvent c 
nd we advise those who are likely to require ‘their | 
memory refreshed on such a 1 as this, to 
this paragraph for the purpos 


A very interesting 1 a be found, 
in another column, on InkLAN A FIELD ror 
Neuish Carian. The TIRA A it conveys ap- 
pear to us os trustworthy. e have no doubt 
that the safety of both person and property over 
— districts in Ireland 8 

says, quite as 5 
ee nd. 


ae ; indeed, no circu 
this kind mor — 2 for the growth 


ably 
ood agri 
mta as s abundantly as — 
as the means of goo 


BY HER 


MAJESTY’S PATENT, 


respec 
per foot, 1 foot wags 3 fet long, furnished, 
d charged fro 


— ery requiring no paint, from 7d. to 9d. 
HEA 0 050 BY HOT ns 
HID GROW 
fully call ae Orchid 
g the Orchid 


AnD HEALY’S NEW BOILER.—The 


1 * 
n modification of their Boiler (before published), 
expressly 0 rg 


r — large Conservatory, 

1 is now 0 Froth obs — ns 
have p“ make, they warranted in 
pa te “Ne plus ultra” for warmi ng large plant 

a proof, one charge of fuel has kept 
i hours without 1500 1 and one boiler of 
is feet of 5 pipe. They 


pu ardens, Kew. 
n the same plan 


= yah 
i rs u 
gue z and HEALY, 130, Fleet-street, London. | 


SON CO., 6l, Gracechurch-street, 
and 17, New w Park-street, Southwark, Inventors 
turers of the 7 CONICAL and DOUBLE 

solicit the attention of 


ank Sy sei improved, method or |] 
ystem to rag aga ouses, 
well 4 1 is 
8 


9 goer description, ats to 
seen them in operation pros 

as reference of the highest authority; or 
at saat of the N obility’s seats and prittclpal 
Out the kin 
— the Trade that at their Manufactory, 
ery article required for the construction 
— as well as for bs Desens them, may be 


‘ate or eee atte erected upon the most 
Palisading, Field and Garden | 


ROYAL LETTERS | 


t think sufficien nt for his Man 
ry | toes; the childre 


Buren! as HEALY 130, Flect-strect, respect- | 


previously to, any 


elleve, more p bie ndantly than anywhere else. 

hy is it that such desperate wretchedness i is so 

often to be found i in the midst of these Soe sp es? 

We have seen 1 ilies living in hovels r 

pigsties—under cover which no pe — would 
ango 


d oh pars enable them 


o copy 1 
si ote 


ur correspon ae) 


od agriculture, might be had, we ; 


lr g 

25 an Wik TER be accompanied b Jor oe consider, and which is of high importance to the 

per bushel. Jons Morrow, Whitfield, Berkeley, Gloucesters ght solution of the Irish problem. Idleness, 

8 s a the root of the mischief, might be 

iminishe y goo xample d reasonable 

Thie, Agricultural Gaze tte. reward for industry. Excessive competition for 

URDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1849. tr z 2 eh ee ed — 
ranslation from the ra a nearly pauper tenantry 
a renpe Society of Ireland o that which would then exist of independent and 
HUBSDA uri 

FARMERS’ 1 Sept. 28: e 1 ept. 29: Northampton.—Oct. l: omnis labour urers. The ssities of l d- 
Great Oakleigh, West Hereford.—Oct. 2: South Devon—Oct, 4: Burton- owners would cease to aggravate the case 
on-Trent. 3 

eee who have on ame, were enabled or obliged to 

Our friends in Cumberland had better beware of abdicate in favour of others who could fulfil the 

gentlemen, well to t ardian | dutics of their station. Direct relief to paupers 

; | Societie Man Me and Liverpool, who have most certainly goes to the encouragement of 

lately been advertising in the local papers of that | pauperism. So long as death by starvation hangs 

m an Goods, over a people they oq no jane be assisted ; and 


n already urged i in 
umns, to leave the > conntry at once, than have 

s administer rele $ n after season to the same 
i tall relief a that which personal 
ort —_— will strengthen the necessity for its 
Ww — a thd the energetic 

e and resolute t 


tenant ld thus be attracted 7 mal in- 

terest—the imperial interest —is, no ust the 

sum, or resultant of all the individual 8 
ma 


es 
interest to carry their capital to a a 1 where such 
immediate benefits would follow its investment. 


s it that starve 
with the elements of fet around them The 
s we y believ 
case is 15 5 il 
prs ork not neit ime sapien 

The people, whatever be the cause, — not 
Work as others do, and thas: 8 — the w 
np ee wer! ene we, no doubt, call bad, but it 
15 the eir standard of 


t to be, 
agteation of 


c praisew —— patien 
and so forth: these ar 


creatures, — their 


what 
k | religion discourages 


pect of 
independence of 8 and with 
TEE wher 


is the best friend of the agriculturists of this 
y before them the neces- 


from * considera- 
considered vain clamourings 


sai 43 ig TAPA À of the policy or impolicy of 
ties. 


these 

e out of 
hundred persons, of all — es, pee have 

reflected on the ag ge at me and we the 


mer ely "onae reg which 
of ninety-n 


eness | servation in order a text on which to 
offer a few 3 
y the - > we by n 


o means 
855 mere t ers of the 


it all vigour of resolution e is there a | soil. 

a gentry to guide them 1 orance and de- under that den on ose who 10 
ce they are children, but these are in me turists by deputy; ; ex either have not the 

union with the confirmed habits of old age; a | the Ps 275 leisure, or the inclin. ation to cultivate 

characte ow 0 lag wath 1 its mis- their own land, ant th erefore hire it out to others 

Mende nie strengthened by such lengthened for a share € of the profits, and whose. interests are 

exercise might w well be dee emed. unchang zeable. So | the 

situated, of cultivators that, for our igre purpose, the two 


of consuming it? Any extension of the m of 


tenantry. And thus and 

werner the people benefit not; and we have 

n harvest months the extremes meet together 

of vert d of sie 

po A 200 plenty. in mitigation of all this 

e We do not pretend to speak of 

Cuaracter in these columns, except in so far as 
rial ; though a change there, we 

contemporaneous! with, or 

rovement 


in the 


classes may be considered as 


fit is very soon swallowed up by a 8 g These are struggling times in which we live. 
— — — of population, or, pe ive relentless com- | Every 5 ‘sg ong 528 het living, and who 
etition for land, it is 4 ly swallowed up by | hopes t ition in 
l rds with necessities a as 2 eat as those of their the aed, be ‘his per arbor ae it may, has to 
n 1 does produce think hard, live hard, and work l; aye, and 


against obstacles, too, — make it necessary 
m * ope hard also. Now, While, on the one hand, 
it that there is the same amount of 
the co sa class, 4 8 is to 

ching a merchant's Seek in a Man 
peer -house, or in a lawyer’s chambers ; iJ 
the other, we do not ey og they are a hard- 1 

ing, industrious body of m A tolerably extensiv 


602 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


le 
8 
ad 


experience, gained not in one country, nor in ‘one 
of the kingdom only, convinces us of the 
reverse; but at the same time, we may obse serve, 
that there i is an j ag well as a zeal, which is 
not accor wle A man who toiled: from 
n to late > nig, descending by s of 
well, and bringing therefrom 


plying its handle. 
one ‘possessed of still pon ingen and 
resources, might, provided wi ngin 
apparatus, by merely, now and jen thr im sa a few 
coals on the fire, more wate 
than the other three could do in five days. 
It is in this, then, that our ae “for agriculturists 
lies—that their pres = = leaves such a vas 
i There are a great majority 
turists “ill in ‘the position of the water 
vith his bucket and ladder; and but fe 


; while t 


2 
ards, still ane 
udest in — ears of 


on agriculture, we shall 

ifficulty in dende that — principles 

— the — were better acted upon b 

of its professors in diferent contre even 

before the Christian era, ey are now by a 

i peaa majority of the — of the United 
ingdo 


to be the only thing devoid of 
— Are we m — for lessons in the most 
rtant of arts, to days, rin the fl eae crept 


ee ji «Semper | 


2 ? "If —— in 


a proper appreciation of the resources 
they — we shall hear less of the iment ndent 
and almost des espairing tone which has lately been 
So common. The feeling which prompts the setting | , 
of 2 stout heart to a hard tas 

that which ri the sword after the 


then, and tenants too, unite together 
icultu 


Let them, instead of all 
— — ‘and energies = be distr th 
spectac loads reign corn, re 
that every 1 of ae perpa might be, but is not 
manufactured d in that 
state valueless sultans upon which th — 
is a direct loss to — and the e xd ountry at 
— that 


the direction which 
with both te 


the Royal assent, and the principle of which, if we 

are was first brought into public notice in 

Paper,* 2 it in sata of the latter, even 
their be ied up, to afford 


it, 


ION. 


e 
Mr. Grepwoop’s Letter rives 
War, p. 478. — ee 


mp to 
f | going ; m 


beyond the measure of their light, are impracticable if 
they were 3 and unlawful if they were practicable. 
r there 

* 45 one. . —— ur 

ima pro weet its verity. Ita 
to en, an 44 ames amg: Hs o all classes 
te reat or dia at imes P Shane 3 exons man, , tho 
ra 


os 
3 pas whither 
tion so long asi ts result is not matter o 


d its means matter ‘of mystery. | Ifa knowledge of neither the 


ir light, 8 their r pre and | mate 
hei = ord.” 


and the habits of the plants he 


HA. 
i pi 
H 111% 


ë. 


now unnecessary to 


e o tfai instances that occur 


er in five minutes | wa 


r 2 ie 7 in all its b 


Without light man ‘cannot ‘work, mat ean he pursue. his 
Y; neither in any sense of the word can he 
2 can a mind that is dark think, Conai or live. 
— — a man is intelligent is ineompatible with his 

ering about, unobservant of the sublimities, an 
the: lies, and slumbering over the beauties, that are 


him 
A clev er sarana must 
tion, an accur 


possess 


nches, The eye of th 


ary, for instance, see3 in that 


t hug has 
ble the figure he is about todevelop, — even before he 


has wielded his mallet, the treatm of the various 


eminence, 


‘As — course of edueation is necessary to fit a 
man for the attainment of eminence in the schools of 
science and art. The necessity is e allowed, 

and in none of the —— save that o icul 

would the students think of pro 2 a 1 
without such a — had been comple We 
t of such a = — throu — a 
of — study. who have made 

k no path by 
which they reached it, but on — station itself at which 
i aimed, for ways arrive there 


Fame 
a force of will that projects ‘them os sige it. Pro- 
cate 


ea 
ate eye, om a 8 “inowlzie 


8 must at Pee be all — a oad he can rise t 
tion. 


— ry, botany still as theories H gh 45 
o be cunning in the handing ot 0 ra 4 
— the breed of a hep ods 


the routine of ealtivation, 3 is a ae i pellet of practice. 


motto of a alone, of all things gre 
culti „had been is'known 


will ‘then take the 4 t the 
ma 


p and Hopes letter, 
pu ished, ae are — suggestive i | 


andlo The 
e Act,” which has lately received | 


AL EDUCAT 
Says the 8 3 Hall, 
ven the 


is not seen = rol 2 


arising 


be | from the:school-houses that are now 3 dotting our 


land, clear-hea 


forward, or pass over them i ignorant —— 


r 
P 


of educating the people, and iks 
er | propagate — — — th irritability, the: 
ina 


A 


departme science which 
N or — upon his ec province. If al- 
lowed, we will see 2 e 
bourers through the f 
The labour of Aaga — generation occupies a 
space and requires more exertion than that of 
wrt ag Labour now requires ‘more —— and 

has hitherto — m 


the faet — W > 


e 


hes of — 
the watson That eourse of education which cs i 


run through, or are foreed through, w 


ithin the sp 
ted by its laws, and fene ge 
o study of geol 


In what, you ask ?; Surely in those and in 
that wards 


r. Hume 
the dunces 
business. 


* 
2 


ensure them 
But we all know the or 
(as M 


ee > ted by 
A — DA eer 4 


A 


A Now, for minute "observa * veiy 
esence a minä, a W ee * 

erg 8, in the mech capacities eben. 

These, its K 
ertion. Without such 


Prof. 


acquired. 
says the celebrated 
ce without theory: 


It is not, however, to be imagined 
viduals are to be formed for 

important situations of or 
entions; for as 


best 
of life, for conducting the estab blished 
servile repetiti 


man for new 


— are of so general a ewe 
an 


a ee 


it may — truly ly said, 


1 


pam 


0 
vl 


E 


t "; but when the high | was 
when a new and 


advancement of 
made beyond the 
of our forefathers ; we must rout out, some 


by for agri 


one e should do — — to increase the store of 
accumulated by 


Ww. ame 


1 


art of the wo 


a 
eek 
z 
Soa 
a 
77 5 
84 
os 
83 
JE 
EF 


F 


ir Hom will t 
‘wealth, — population and our 
As a nati e possess advantages 
agg — economy rof labour — * 

That energy of character and vastness of 
— vite hich has raised us to our 
wied cured to us the highest reputation as a 
ring and a learned people, may apply to raise us as 
qiealturists, beyon nd all fear of competition. F. R. S. 


the soi ta 
which aise wi ser d 9 — and em- 
Davy, end to in 


as 


physical 


sR 


Ea 
gE 


IRELAND. 
Tame has been some discussion of late in your 
@umns on the ss Ne of English farmers taking land 
in Inland, and perhaps the observations of one on the 
gi Saal ess, 
e of all warn those who write without per- 
whose 


ul acquaintance with Ireland, and even those 
squaintance with it is confined to a rapid tour, against |'stating the object, would procure o some of 

ing general conclusions from limited an induc- | instructors.) At the workhouse yo always pro- 
fon of facts, and 8 thinking that what is true | cure from the clerk the Poor-law valuation of any farm 
done or tricts is true of all. Counties, dis- | The clergyman o — 7 5 generally give you the 
ttiets, and even n differ just as much in Ireland old tithe valuation, i „the n 
2 on in E d, the same respects is — ri valuation" ‘Qir. ‘Griffiths’ ) is accessible too. 

in to the cha 


1 gree recurrence, e. g., in your 
Ti „H. Davis says th at “ Neither the turbu- 
kat Bat t 


home, 
poy mentione 
sprin 
not ae 5 shen la scommon, 
parts of the adj 3 eng- are 

— bat I doubt if even there 

aad giving emplo 
Rttived in these 


our p Raae Te 15 Doran, thinks 
Secret charge upon enant's industry 
will surely be sie re cae I can assure 


E 
E 
BA 
BE 
3 
3 
af 
P 
pe 
110 
E 
3 


ct, 1833, they are necessarily in 
highest poor-rate levied in a Ireland 


ce 
ii 


175 
ath 81 


Ares 
255 


distriets; 
28. 6d. or 38. 6a. 
to the landlord and ethno on on 
neat y ask what the rates 

h of England, or Neben un 
he landlord ? Let them increase 


, 
AFE 15 . 
bP 


8. 
22 
A 

ZE 
3 
: 


51 


re- things 


uar 
nderfal — e 


e such places. he 


ers much 2 one —. 


t, e who — not the m 


. 8 
nt would not be gladly | 


cially if he has som 
not find at home, though tun 
and 


in very 


any part is that the 
„as pitious, it is 


33 of * and skill pee a in S tricot 
e 


; THE REBLOU LIVE St GAZETTE, 


a considerable sacrifice of rent by 
the — Tandlord for is object. Doubtless these | 
are not inconsistent with enormous ren else. | 
where. There is no fear, however, of the point of rent la 
— overlooked by any one who may come over to 
8 


em — the chief drawback to — English 
i of farm | 


W 
in ote places, prob 
wholly unreclaimed, Such farms, I believe, in many 
p may be hire great advanta tage, — for very 
long leases, sometimes for ev 

i ony Moro — 


—— late, — even 
able, though I have seen wonderful 


crops of Turnips in in 
Baim } 


mate seems especially 
ada - $39 —— Turnips everywh 
M e to any one thinking of taking land in Ire- 
see for yourself. If nie fes 


age $» the railways will take 
and back, — | you 6, 


is cheap, as are the inns. 


io sp 
pe some 0 of the n 


; 
IP 
HH 
ce 
BEE 
— 
wT 
[=a 
Ss 
B 


umerous — 


will be 


* 


Lord Clarendon’ 


a | 
5 


of your land- 
lord, raten, Ko., just as you would if taking a farm in 
uestion the relieving officer, 


moment many are s to let lan 
forced to aia for anything i “he — — 
much s 


and I shall be 


in buildin „ Ko., man 
money to spend at once, 
allow a et or the whole of the cost gra- 


is ma ven outlay 


e to the aca of English 


ho ign veal lly | cie 


s | to the best — e charging their 
and bailiffs, are “seuttered —— or of some of e 


if > ca ital 


ectation as to | great i 
cheapness of vai wil not bo — where due inquiry — 


— — conducted on different principles to those 
which regulate —— manufactures has seri 
— agricultura h 
cy will be very “likely to lead to the falfi 
own prophecies, viz., that it is impossible to ma 
ure food to a pr rofit in free 
cou — 1 ee 


—— — as is th 


e premises fora set of pil- 

off many pounds’ worth of the manu- 

n the course of the year, and we shall 
unreasonable an 


TE 
to make up this disadvantage, loss by pilferage, &c., 
by . a — — s for cotton 
words, 
— + 
proper machine 


jo 

themselves — the security of a lease long — to 

enable them to get back the capital thus expe 

Let the landlords give up th ber and hedgerows so 

inimical to pro — cultivation, and game, 

— thy —— which often rob the 
anal — of the fruits of his toil. On 


of n 
any — hand, let the tenants adopt those principles of 
d 


upon which the gene 
country have been so vastly extended and improved. 
Let them abandon otion that low prices 
are only to be met by lessening expenditure. Let them 
uce acres to thei ital, and thus put them- 
ves in a position to expend in improvements all that 
their —— — — and in dou knowl 


tie 
n their fu d 
against m — of every country in the w 


d cheap; many are | S. B. G. 


Box-feeding:—Having for 
interest 2 on ys alinak of “Gf bor keedng, in 
= the economical method of making 
s — 
— — i into the air, I 
that I can — My — plan 1 have adopted pd for more 
12 — nths with t : I had 
the floor of my p — d e —— =a horse- 
stables, ilna 4 1 foot deep, then filled in the same 
= anything I co es —— at hand, such as road 
pings, clay, or the ving the 


en Se: ae 


ere (espe- 
pital) wh H which he will 


exertion are req too, as L Tu suspect, non 
obstante California, is mts case all cver the — 
W. B. J. 


1e Correspond 


28 to the ee n of | the 
tion, and 


Clima 
e Te is not 


ufactures, 
our climate. Now, it appears to me, 
man is foolish 
with the expectation of havin 
; he takes his land, or ought to take it, 
that 


he wou 
higher rent ‘for it; the weather, 3 a — mu 

in manufactur f food, as 

are calculated in the 


— of 

capital, industry, an nature 
2 extent of the dein ess, with ample security for 
reaping fruits of such ch ‘employment; ; "for it will 
surely be admitted that somewhat in 


viz., the 
roportioned vies the 
le 


the shape of tion, &c., have the 
effects of uncertain seaso — — ns been mitigate ted, and the 
per centage of loss from t this cause greatly les lessened. I 


il from land, leavin 
ch soil eega or any —— that is not fit for any other 
d, p dug 


udgment 
Wh 


be out, is quite 
ee ; if that be n 
it covered lace, 


et in among the 
prt which is put in * the cattle’ s bedding taken or 


ae should be the case, as 
in the dry and not allowed to be 
scorched with the sun, is of 

ure 


land be not ready for the — when taken out of 
— Tunak a e man pit to 
e as above manure 


| believe the fallacy of sup 


604 


THE AGRICULTURAL 8 


uality for 8 acres of land within 12 months, remunerative as an investment of capital. High) a 
4 pi j “ch bet the ter dressing one baie anaes 2 land, farming can alone prod great re It then oni 
than farmers give theirs h mpost becomes a matter for matured consideration—what are | paid, and yet hei e is des 1 
— oe vil no produc so quick an poy on the | the principles and elements of which i composed? Wh d 
„ but when oe is coming to ing of t st order consists in arable culture | to do what a alle man wo 
ae i then d * itself: ee ure only: the nearer it can ppe aR to Saraga the | — is best broad cloth at the 
is ready for emptying every six weeks; y have it taken | more perfect it will be. Let anyone examine the rich | clothier finds fro 

out, thrown up int about 2 or 3 yards wide at | gardens in the vicinity of London, and it will be seen | extraordinar 
bottom, ridged up to the top, to keep out the rain, and | what an immensity of produce is derived from them. | that me 
a slight covering of earth of some sort put all over it, The principles remain the same in agriculture, but that | outward appearance of som t 

us to prevent the strength of the manure from eva takes a mor enlar d scope. To he gre op, to do t 

ting. ke care not to let manure when spread them so productive, is added the raising of a grain material f 
on the land to lie exposed to wind and su ys before | crop ; and the accomplishment of this is facilitated by | rapidly on t peli 
dug in, but when drawn out on the larid, if not ready for | a variety of useful im the two, therefore, | suffere ; — 
digging in, I have it put in large heaps, say a a ig as an art, is more comprehensive; and as a late, that it would een more prudent to — 
heap well patted down, and when spread d i ractice, is 8 Leer and may be made more pro- substantial article than one made e like & Peter Pint 

ediatel orry t so y fi ere 2 who has at all considered ba zors,” for sa If in trade it is a 

abouts allow manure to lie weeks before it is abundant produ sak on of the green crop system, the | traffic on certain t ll kno: Custom tp 
ploughed in, when it cannot be boty than so much chaff. [capabilities poets by it, of its being increased in | should the labour branch be an exception ? We why 
At some Fiend: y, I purpos -gre y e | bulk much beyond our pre esent notions, will hesitate in all capacities are considered too rime 

8 


little farm, with a Dr. 
agreeable to: your pages. [Many th abe a] J 
h 


o signs 
various en for and against the system 
feedin ough not possessed of a four- 


er, | can possibly be. 


Ta 
much given to | 
to bh liek + and 


ee arable land of infinitel a 
Royal 


men- 


ur sal of going for 60 to 100 fe 


n Gria 0 


ag = this | b 


footed beast t beyond horse and dog, am we ng by. 

looking impracticable whatever does not come r orders are improvident, which is no doubt true ; but 
and 3 bing 10 rtunate enough to one e seen some of | range of our own limited philosophy. If we divert our | we must t measure blame the upper 

7 best peg among the farms where = pom attention from the g to the grain crop, we may find | as being the cause of such recklessness ; when Ias 

carried o and the conclusion at which I have the e vement not narrowed to present | t rm classes,” I do not mean those only 

ceva is kokira much in favour of the 8 performances n many parts of the kingdom the who are considered gentlemen by birth and education, 

boxes. Probably the opinion of a mere amateur will} average amount of Wheat grown on an acre does not but all those above ind who are compelled to 

not convey much weight in th I wish | exceed 20 bushels. There can be no reason why, under | earn their daily bread by co nt laboùr. This 

to explain to “ N.” that he is apparently puzzled by | proper management, the minimum should charge appear rather sweeping and harsh; how. — 

thin t m as the k to a | bushels. Itis no easy matter to say what enlargement | ever, when we come to e it, there will beprobably — 

level with the top of the 2 155 E is sunk) 5 of produce may take place from extrem minution fo und — truth in it than a er a observer m 

dung is cut out, and hence I think comes to him the of the soil by deep and frequent stirring, by uprooting | imagi ere are many things of importance 

puzzle that a certain width and length an — depth can every weed as soon as Po l its appearance, by | we —— over without much ade although they 

contain more par it gone possibly hold in measure- | the pereti i enriching as 1 as toe mag comprehend the very ne 1 our beautiful 


ment; 3 but t 
the urine and 


The Se .— Yo seems to consider the 
knowledge of thi 
already i in the — * Be — 25 am E to come forw 
9 ’ 
housewife ein the nor rth td 
th unerring success, 
eggs to > be haiga under th 
amined in the follo 


ard and 


gently round (as a top 
— about half an inch in 
eter, etly seen, inside th e egg. No ow, if this 
hollow be exactly on ‘the top the egg will prod if 
the side, it 
er hollow, either on the top or — — is the case wit 
eggs where no cock is kept to fec 
n th 


h — hen’s 


wel. 

sed rew: alr o . 1 

quite * much. attention as it deserves.] 

Practice with Seieren. 
erent 


comprehends an 


ent s 
this point of so madh importance to those not | i 


manures, by bringing the soil into a 
if too strong reducing it, if too weak see gthening iles 
by the choice of s of the t a 


pro ou 
These ameliorating 8 the constituent — 
nant | tow 


of high far Sere ate t ae dition 

as att as f his landlo n diia pot “the 

tenant is s ivi eat with ‘ie, sweat of his brow, livin 
rape his rent, 


ar 
tirely from his goin 
make-shift and short-sighted re . 


poor, w p 

poor man makes a * Te 8 3 a poor fa 

makes a poor man. ord m in regard to the 

landlord. 
_ 


e hyperbole, 
imagination ; > “but let a 


d those persons wh 
iw to provide oe oily ii necessaries of of Tife, be 
h n the | 


; from their neig 


but 
r po onl . through h 
e | his pr 


munity. If we want to view it in all its bearings and 
variety Of aah should find it branch out into su ch a 


Tine convineed, let them go and i inspect some cof 
the splen ndid farms in the sm Lothians, or even mou 
tep 5 . examine Mr. Mechi's E Tiptree ball 


varie whole 

to 1 a full Are of its numerous constituents ; $ 
but if we confine our enquiry to a plain and simple 
ria we should see, as it iy tana: 4 the “ New 
Husbandry,” p. 41, that the whole of it 
following N ns. 


e their tenan 


Norfolk. But Ea anyone ‘is tos suppose ka raining |o 

ing for r him, he will find him 

. is “i like the grond: 
OU 


> but as we advance further, when 2 have 
ur g strings, something 

to raise us to the elevated 

bounds of science 


only creditable to us, from its s high ats 


standard which the 
farming not 
ttainments, but 


our practice this might be o 


Mr. Davis’s Spri ring-park farm, they ma 
— 8 50 led to change their opinion, and may then 
3 that high farming is the thing 
to improve the ae we their property, 
fro Rane: of To mw com- 

torne. 


one lesson we learn r earliest years, and u 
contained in the churoh ‘catechism our duty — 
r four lines of the answer wil 
esent consid opts 
e him 


y ov 1 
ticall tis out 0 os best of my power 
185 ically carry n 


ries he were by some unforeseen calamity, r 

by th own extravaga noe, to be eee al 

w aid naturally desire subsi 

honte: hbours. Why sh ould they not have the 

same pig bee x upon others hey would wish for them 

selves ? Fal 
Impro 


in 
o calling, u under a mae e 
fection it will reach under 
oe e of a landlord i r 5 in in farming himsel, 
is rg and 2 
oi sees: His tenants 
oper industrial agents Asa 
2 work to good and gainful 
in 


roving — 
eavouring to to salve} ‘this pote 


petence, rie bility, e and w alth. Law 
The l Relation . betw 


een van 
8 rer rests on a oundation, and 
by every change in the ma rket of the su e 
of e A men a, ~ 5 
and rea 


ee 


ways the wisest plan to 
in regard tow 2 eais ogy 
pay a make it — int 
serve yo faithfully, thati 1 cut him down 
1 7 nnot act hon mean * say that he 
er, i 


rvice 


` lam 
n buying an article in a shop we 
Pay pe it fein get to its worth ; if the texture is fine we 
uch m If we 


er 
out commer ‘ial 
| anticipate money’s worth, 
| code of rules, in dg with 


a ‘boon for his strength 


I es 
— ‘ition to eet common 15 
l try of 


annual prizes and € 
kandlord, s perhaps 


myrrh 
for exertion. Patrick Matthew, 
| Scotland, 


y 
Arman natu 


e 
it the ruling passion. The wise ma an 
— or ae ae 3 their Tu i 
well ! when the proper er rds 
l tion of er Tan 
ape subser 2. ee u * re 4 
te 
ace, the tenan each esta 
competition of Lag managemen 
neouragem es of 
py sweepstakes | 
while, opa t 2 — ot i 
ete in rio iori 17 
high cultivation of prope 12 5 pe 
pence &. 
to shire e 
men upon 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


RI 
Cattle. — After 


manu: 
Sarei on in — abs axsile farms of the fen 


or boxes, wit 
b 


that the urin 


manger, 


cond plan, t 


p in the fattening of cattle, i 
feeding in Maluri. yaris. 


Society, a discussion on this son fe = 


EGARD, who 


uantity of 


ani 
t consumption of vegetable food, then 
d 


cattle under = r 
“pe 


Lineoln shire aid 


1 6 inches 


he sheds * 1 be 


ong ago 
3 5 when A soe of pre- 
A 


yr 
‘posure of manure mi rain, in abe of being 
would be beneficial ; and he 
by Professor Sprengel i in 5 
ultural Society’s Journ 


as than when 


ed to 


in, thereby enabling th 


was present a 


d he believed. the 


mixed—m 


5 which is protected by a sort of rack, 
» by admitti the of th 
=i 5 head 


e animal only, ben | 
his share. 


te of t 
water foun 
an insufficient nig a 45 
stand and lie 


d filth, the box system could not be expected to 

e ank as, 

irely pre 

etas the oniy moisture was that whic 
mal ; 


by comp 
vented, and by being —5 —.— 
h came from 


th, 3000 
In boxes the manure was made 2 eid best | and had to 


of land had only three or 


Matsin Roast of 


= be. tillage, 


arts of | j 
3 


e ammonia, and | j 


gas, which 
n it; 1 Ind it absorbs a much 3383 ee 


ts three an 
: | they — His is system, ous 
| tages es of 


on iia —— that if ‘the was taken 

rw at at all i it — 95 decayed, 

to interfere with 75 su preg ar 
not to 

too large; 9 feet sq unre, or at any rate 9 fet by 

10, 8 not be Prec. otherw 


had an animal o eed. In stalls r to 
ay up the temperatu re of the — — as there 
ere more cattle in the same space. This was e- 
cided yrs — attening animals, of which he had 
ag nce last winter, having m moved eight bullocks 
“fe eeding-shed to another which was warm 


In stalls there was considerable economy 
which on some farms was a 
the preservation of the ma 
matter. The stall 


usual prac e o rain — 
if eee — under cover it would lie 
2 e dry ; should it be artificially moistened, it would 
ment rapidly and suffer materia He had 
accordingly tried a method last y 
to a 


swer 1 bly well, viz. to litter the cattle with 
peti cut into short lengths chaff-cutter. Th 
w placed in the mangers at night, and the 
cattle picked it over and eat a little of tbe best of i 
the remainder w t in the morning for litt 
In this way it w. move y merely the 
oiled part of the litter, which from being cut short a 
sorbed all the liq e from the cattle, and 
the whole was wheeled alongside a heap of moist clay, 
roa ing 3 even soil ee 


mixed in a few mi 
vented the sone? ‘a either or 3 and formed 
the best com r putting on with 


st e Turnip drill, 
thus obviating the —_— ssity for — oo other lan 
He had e 30 a 


r 305 se the manu 
uch exposed to the vie — of ee and 3d, 
N the cattle could not ciently warm. 


The age se my te yards might be m 

by bein well provided wit! 

the yards — d 
m them except 


red with 


the 2 cattle in 
eribed 


nd small yards, con- 
structed a as he had above. In this way the 


. R. C e 3 M. P., 
sans referred to. 


e to — or 

si nl 
* — the advan- 
nd box fe ing. He was rather 


neat 


accessible. EPH 
hgro — his opinion of the stall feeding and 
— er fattenin —1 cattle was 
—— was by far th 
er quan 
— of their s 


d carry 


good man the 
n | system out to a state of high farming. “The cattle in 
stalls would tread 


the e manure into a good quality 
hen 
drill, or used in 
His opinion ce a ia — Ke little 
or pleasure 


d | regar was an agric 

than profit, but —— could ey he — tried a 7 number 
y 

he had been reim — 


taking care of his manure 


armer than they had done in the n 


be one o 
f | ture at which pee ought to be — discussion, 
had been 


cleanliness, not allowing the manure to accumulate for 
if it did both fermentation and e take 
ould be 


went on to sa the 
animal ¢ A. carri in —— of 
fatty matter. Now on a great difference 
of opinion on these matters, They had been told 
that the could n onsumed upon the 
arms, was of opinion, however, that no stra 

need be wasted upon any farms; and therefore the 

W, n upon strong lands, might be consume 


the e best a, 
e shelter 
results to 


ad a number o xes he Benl and he — the diffi- 


the best mode of crimes 
but the are mrt as this, had 
h | put the cattle ap 


on the 
culture, was now argo f adopted % 
Wiske, begged to direct the 
m ho w 


uainted with the subject to a point v vha seemed to 
him to much importance, viz 


the tempera 5 
of the beast. If they — 2 
and it was thoroughly we 


a 
| ably more beef ; 


— — 


ore it was clear, rhe. hought 
„ tm one ‘cou 


TH 
E 
AG 
RI 
CU 

CRETE 
GA 
ZE 
TT 
E 


shoul 
favo 4 
the urable a 
je gmt It w. rature 
In = poss 0° w was the 
not — in wer und e 
s ust whi ep mig to m las 
Ww uffic 3 pon + ot too ht have aes meri 
—. See À these plas o ventila- nt eli 
ver scores ee 9 en too so, h off 5 mu — Aae ooms fe Ri 
th 3 varos naama Pine. . fetch other 
e roo * well east uffici m , ught E. Gr: appl e 1 from Sal — * 
f. n exh ieni u tha th rapes,h 8, „ F , Pel: 18. 
to th a ntl; st t e per uch t 
at such pre ere sh latio! litte — was Pea —— Ib., 33 to sias, i 0 12 are s 
55? ve: ould bo mM, 2 red 1 4 Ne ches 2, P. 1 UiT tnd Ros . 6d, suffici 
do the or 60° 8 —— nd he * h — pane opan a 9 tos _ sk ac — t for th 
best a the din: e ve 2 te ee — hf. s oa * ols } fae nges ign ut to dis 
test. was aes y ntilati Y ee ae 132810. — oni N 
— gw likel they v 2 aoe eed, | ê "pe doz., 5 70 45 Le | Alm 2 K s Beasts. 10 of th 
if th — — wo ry tem lose e shalt: — 68 | monds, p 100, 8 s to 68 3 80 Sh f them. 
a e di le i be era fin pera * 0 tehe sieve * Wa „per sto to 3s m * eas sir Fr 
— ama 10 ~ — — the ren Gaul 8 — sto | Inuts 2 ck, iss Best Hes anai — 
he 2 no e — 1 — cb, sto ds | Filberts Uh p.100, Tb,, 2 2d q Sho Calves fst SEPT. 
eir * the w cl y ARLI d e = Pe ‘occoli, ers 0 48 Nuts, B rts 1 — re to 3 Be 1 . < “a — fro 
fav i p osed — nat tw: t Aus AE 6d tols VEGE — pen i isa to 28 est Down Be rns 3 8 to — —— 
oure W. ors art 3 I A Fe- th as * afb: b ZD Te Br + 0 lb 8 +* — 4 and i 
d t of of am ons en sal t Pot: p ush undi. BLE azil, p p. bus Bey 4 B ned: 8 2 Tia ' 
duty * * nie hat — 55 — : Pan — 0 ios stoi? Onions „ bs. a “tae kin 55s 127 8 * 8 ela 8 E —— and Tie 
task — — th *. 0 oe oink and m paan — as 10 8 Aap ji — 5 bon 12s to 225 11; Shi ig 2 oe 
tions f vol . (A th e ge sai ave now —— rnips, sh., to >a pm aliota, en 2d 16s 6 eep a 4 0 Lae e 
nhi ves u pla ntlem d, to i Hor Beet, 4 * nee 00s ©, s per i hip, dazed to 6 carriag 5 dad T. 2 45 57 
2 8 use opini tn ih 44 — per bun, 5 Ve 2 104 — Sxvr. e He 108 288 
you D Hap 0 who ess meh adish, doz. 2 E aa 3d to to 4 ei quick mop) 17.— 11 eas s = 
subj pera you a r pre 8 havı ios Bea p. ~ 3 5 ettuce, ia doz., 6d 8 chante ly.cl 8 thi K 5 a 0 pi 
lead m. Zu side y. 0 os ucum „P. 2 3 |E Ca rrowꝗ Bar et et a eare s m LAN én 2 Ca 
y friend mm naan 8 able | Cel ümber se gp tag nd Sos A 8 — N dat — ia 0 
— far hate. as z att s not e | Celery, pe s, each, sieve, 1 s Endive, pi pe » do rks 8 d tols 38 . 3 — Ply . ain? 2 1 
W he W „ Mr of the empt — Radisher r bun 2d 8 6d — r sco d to tols its: oe good 1 “advance f Eng i ag ‘ 
which w * AE (ete |as n coe 8 . =e pee 7 8 8 * 
e a 0 N 3 m „ ei 3 e 7 
he tol er — wed — — — ct inches I ne F ali Sal 5 P, Dot, 18 to Bapes — * re inguin iny piados e, and the 
pai ayrip t to that —— are oe doz. b 1s to: Savon I per B p. Bs to 6 10 15 6d — 9 Se 0 od e for Daag pe qg, 
An ei — — — ced th hp. bun., 4 2s Par: 3 neh, 20 2d d | be hav T, BEET. 2h- t sal and ga. ot 
d it i to p even naiue oa sieve, d to are] „ pe unc 2d to ein e b ma ea d. 
— ; isa! — f his ol tan tha d to The eilet 6d se ber bu 2d ae g sm pan gt emand, and x > aad a la Beans ar 
to your oe e the — reag of n that 5 con re 18 ols 6d Marj s p dos oh * 3d bows all, b + arge, and: 26 Lage q saad Pek 
w unru ion acti but Re —— con 25 ram, g P. b dies to 3d ae a eia d for pgp 2 ob quantity in Peas, 
pre e palities— — iy idle 3 on | of e D, asil, g cael 3 Tee con ontin s5 wa Wheat tained for To prios, 
—.— —— a i, whieh yon positions of ——— rades LD, Mono ey 2 e 3 ere 
people 8 N hte! you eal of of — ae 77 8 iy bel ae 2 wer lier, Sep panes S0 to6d of an advance of ha keld ae ds, bui uring s 
short, them 5 serv r)— migh 8 8 paratia s — Wate 9 4d or canga sign uat oe t ow Be e obserrenn’ Mondays 
pst — from (Laugh to yo tall cake. to dispose ny Ba on. ow vi 5 g to 6d quoted, quen 3 during obt — Ay —— 
noth ay con ter * ur appl fr: od of de is der eerfu es est port Wich iit . Po 28. the d 3 un e 
way gro vrs dil — = colns Leicester — pagal. ch — is not = Scots m easts, an ana qr, th ite t Spring cor * h 7 . 
) is to g rusty * Ln 3 . gta — ingly gt pls the make g g fi ras pr bus atic. pric - ave been n 
1 u n r a P ar ali y n h rythi 48. n b. 1 n hi abli of Con, 
* 5 £ Jou wan io sopat 2 bad fo ang hing e erage, Live e there, Th lie — oe nolan 
9 — it You want to ate noe — — = Sema ETEN — 
— — dar icki t to gom 8 c — ga 00 Å ote E Paige eriy a amb poe ng r sib) ty ted 7 
wh 2 of Ope aes "ea Best sat .3 y Sheep, an k. dif ble at Ld. 5 ae 
we t a EPT Down y B rns 8 eas a cul e o 2d. 66 2 80 E 52 
= rations push ae ist al 8 To — Aap — 
e 
Siseased There after of V -Since Noa à egy 3 2 Ditto Se — — I N ultima yo 
favo Swede 1 Be Pot Whe ly fnis! „ 10 — D es & ls, d — vanc tely a good 
ura ble ith 2 rern, toe =, hi sport we Sh 4 a: aali 3 6 8 w Mest siya fair Amden 
for «finger * atoes and ya mad oota — few. eep and 0 Gat b h q is 7 to 3 . wiis per, — 
Be N ya Took he — a Purnips is afu 2 ng o ave or — ot Beant 1 ves *. oo 7 Bisel 111 Whe 
E ue oo 00, 5 pres f e Scot sis cons se aL 3 4 s 4d T. 0 Ar 
png ron Fou te — ut the ut good — meng Hha, 12 i — i iderab “Calves 0- 32 u 
He ag — 7 Co ing. J. athe yelo w. 2 in on larg erio bigla 5 159 44 8 26 1 * 2d 
kn and a tratton, Bristol p Da er has ow ar le, dean ze and g — Jonas th Pigs, 4 43 6 26 s 18 1 ); 
Biher 0 ian stions Pr nden 2 im d at a ality — „ 210. 0 26 9 19 
Fo de Freie jee k prove —— A er, b 45 27 18 3 
Fs ee es, wis * ee PRI Sake an e aod Pn 1 Birger 
grom a fi one, there — — vo mad, Staats CUR CES L ere xtreme wink 26 4 6 
— vy Boe iet, — — De. —— ing, & RENT ond ° 3 ee 478 4 1 11 1 18 10 
of ls re ‘or t, feds e fle: — are ml most swe! ould © Wheat on. Caly ki — pos Ie 46 4 1. sin 2 
or equire mor on es: —— e of p of — ip be N 8e es, it sar oice 3 — Sa olas io 
— — more vari to f the othe nely form poultry ew, red pt 1a|Sept Li is dificult 4 8 155 
a fordon * 88 5 Th o be , form are try ” qr. ` ive cult 44 8 7 see 28. 1 sC 
meal m of rand many m sod e most ti chief ed i wel Old i $ Se = 7 rpo 43 6 — | sii 
little. ee 2 mrad à hg wa red 4 38 8. qr. Sept. ol. 0 2 as 
—— d three he B inted ot in — ting as a Ge — fom —.— 3 w m A ; 
155 J 2 . a 1—5 TE ba | oi Wege ALA 
a 7 e 5 oo eee „ 8. 2 if san 
2 e aer Numbers Ry i 40— 0038 56 3 ae 701 8. 8 Id. ; 3 — 
cold, Ri sand be e—0O 4 hd 6 8. bs. ep B + 
a 3 eee, Po ore Ty Oats 1 36— 241 26 9 616 d. AT 30 - an 
peck abov er not sunse T ts F d 50 —4 7 8. q Se sto 
“a mill consume ronan Am ep Hao Edna 3 3 Baie 2 n. r 
e n 328 one and mid-d i ario — one 22.2 5004 0 7 86 4 6 6391 8S. hag Sep t12 —" 
wiil r + oo 3 e Gri toy meal oe 22— 2 7 317 4 6 z 8. qr. Sept 5 i 
maa aay poe i — . — 4 —55—5 . . . 9 — —3 auge br nine 
les the land mnt keep. D: 3. £ 5 —— , | Fore 05 1 — 2 4 =t 1—4 38 tod: j pt. . 
seed eatin s land fr tno» ep. D: Tao ign... ra —6 — — 3 = esr: haiie 3, | Sept. 
——.— . per we week. way biti laa pag “ne? ae * 0 Ibs, aas ppi per — "y 2 . 
7 x i 4 „th Re üii PAN 49 prune Ai 7 : 
— peers at if 4 oe — q is AR Ses 44 |ó p65 phasi 
5 ede Was 3 Powe 1 prey 26 2 r. 49 jas 8 6 5 4 a 
2 55 As — . ony — = |= pa 147 
a ty VA. hi * 1 qr. dg aie 10 95 6 2 
has f ur Bek. lle 8 abi — 4 6 4 30 
sea lost of . — 8 5 1 8 
ans im —— . 30s— 20 cee ie es 6 2 064 
put | Peas— oreign 18—22 — 26 i 4962 
: Boilers — — 7—22 s — 22/2 wail ar 
nerap 2 —26 — f ~. 
Grinding r 2d 4 b 21 3 25/2 — 
= Wer — 443 24 — — pits 5 = 
r 34 * 2 atr Sa 0 — 29—32 21 
4— 3 28 ote. 1 — 
- 2 —2 . 8 ne 16—20 * / 
31 ae 28 e. . ia 16—20 rr 
26—3 — i : - 
— = n olas * 19—27 1 
ae pare 304 — 18—20 ss 927 ; 
32- 22 W e E 
40 24 n 32 $ eas PIR : u= ; 
a 40 30—31 i 5/32. ad 1112 T 196 Ibs. 
81.—81. — A 1130—3 wg pitas me n 
a 4 pee wet os a 
oe 27 — — p e io ; i "O 
n poe | — — = — 
eren de 2 = 
peera — f oe 
I — 1 
— — qrs. Aver. | In per *. 1 
. sack. {a 
— 4 — Se d. * A 34—36 ; @ 
31 1 65 45 qr r. re 
19 39 d. s 
dae 1546 |2 11 z nt.. 
TUNNI 8 15 se 17 a 45 
j op i ; 
CLIFFE. pen an $ 
. and 


Í 
i 
1 
$ 
$ 
Í 
f 
f 
j 
i 
j 


9g—1849.] THE 


“AGRICULTURAL — 


— Sales by Auction. 
ITHFIELD. 


AND OTHERS 


rustees of Mr. 
blic competition by Auction — 
— aes — 3 
3 


ng oy several 3 * Drawers, 
es and Weights, Mea 1 Winnowin 
5 Window-trays, “sack trucks, adiens, 
ny Sac 


TO NURSERYMEN AND OTHE 
ISPO 


o 
í 
© 


acres or — — Stock, i 

ing condition; the property of Mr. William Ireland. The prin 
cipal portion of the N ursery Grounds are heldion a Lease of 30 
years, 20 of which are unexpired, The present proprietor will 
retain a portion = the business, as a partner, if required, All 
letters 5 o W. GRIBBLE, Esq., Solicitor, Barn- 
adjs D, Stanhope — Holsworthy. 
There is a good greenhouse on the seen 


Gas- — 4 arlo ur and Bedroo e Stoves, a, and 
May be — 3 to the Sale, and Catalogues 


— ee, Desks, and Bags, M Mushroom 
the Auctioneers, American 


bed on the | Premises, 3 
aseri, Leytonstone 

R. J. = STEV ENS . 33 dcilaly to 9 
Mes e sale ‘diame a AZALEAS, &c., from Mr. 
irae Ger —— as Advertis 
Aut, was 

a put off, "het it will positively take 

ttn AY NEXT, 24th INST. 
Me King arden, London, Sept. 22. 
L m TAND RESIDENCE, IN SOUTH ‘ida 
with singular 


ctions and advantage es, beautifully 
a the banks of f Milford Haven, Parin eshire. 

RS. DAVIS * ~ . RS a commissioned 
f th e late Orlando 


ep — 
and Eikon i — for e —. 8 
It is — in the Parish of “Cosheten, 3 miles 
fom Hobb's s Point and Pembroke and H 
sùl miles from Tenby, bounded on two sides by a singularly 
estuary of the — ee to — ich the ground 


, from whence the views of land and 
sea scenery are The r is ever clear and 
lake-like; it affords an inexhaustible supply of seaweed for 
dressing the land, ong - fish of 3 pen description, in- 
duding oysters. The munication by boat with prike nd 
Pembroke admits of. pos — — 


47 * N 

Within 3 miles of the e ern 8 buildings are modern, sub. 

built of stone, and well ret S The + contains 

first-floor six chambers, and o ground-floor, dining- 

mom l5 feet by 14 feet, ~ rawing-room 120 feet by 193 et pantry, 

and very convenient and commodious — 

stabling, and — 52 — * 
farm to show it, — 

with plans, may be had at the pacha Hote tel, 

Lion, and of — Lock, — e — — of Wm. 


3 and 0 one Hote 3, Frederick’s-place, 
U 


Hay, home bred 
es; 6 Draught Horses, Agricultural 
yr Mg 

— * will sell by Äuction, v the pre 
„on 

— arag — time), by orde er of HEWITT Daru Ried. oie is 

comprising all the capital live an 

ane of 100 loads of Ha, ay, ¥ valuable c N. 

n re! 

useful 


Mr. 
Solicitor, 27. — 88 51 on. 


| r of p — as 


TO NURSERY AND SE 

O BE SOLD, » by PRIVATE. “CONTRACT, —.— 

old and long-established NURSE and SE 

NESS, PAE ry, carr ied a. n for man — — 
Messrs. GRAY 8, an 4 GG. The situation — mig 
and the 2 7 er happens apply to Mr, JoHN 
Sanester, Nurs 2 tig edsm But —. London 
Mr. ROBERT Dona Nurse or to 
SoLE and 5 Solicitors, 68, ——— — 8 


T for a term, from Michaelmas next, a 
FARM, Corn Tithe Free, with suitable house 
ell situated, within five miles of South- 


0 
in d _ — ‘asi N particulars, apply to 
THOMAS Lon , Hounsdown 


wn Cottage, Eling, near South- 
— Danta 


SUSSEX, 
O BE LET for a term of years, and entered upon at 

Michaelmas next, the Farm of WOTTON, in the Parish of 
Folking = upation of Mr. Shoosmith. It 
consists of a — Pasture, — Arable 
land: the "Arable land i is most — * — —— and Wheat: 
— of — Pastu ure and Me adow land i e richest — 

g qu 

venience, Ta the Foe Aari are peme and comm modious 
and —— fitted up and ee for fattening a — 
num beasts in 3 alls ds, and yards. 
The Pons is about four miles 


on the Lewes and Hastings Railw: For 
lars, appl a 7 Mr. Joun Mogton, Whitfield, — e 


tershire. A person at Folkington Place will show the Farm. 


ly to 
As KNIGHT, Edmonton; or r. HENRY KNIGHT, 


Towns owns supplied v with Gas or Water, 


whi may 
common adopted — 1 begin 
the slightest difficulty, the 

T. 
also prepared for Ordamental Plastering, for Enca 
ing, d&e., hi 
the Patentees, CHARLES Francis and Sons, Nine Elm 


METAF IELD CLUB, 1849.—The Ann ual Show 


the Ist proximo, 
be ready at all * 


8 COATHUPES » ron * ss MANUFAC 
of Bristol, and of Nailsea, 9 beg w 
e, 2 ohia inat they * e to supply — 
PIPES of from 1 to 4. inch bore, of fro o 7 fee 
the le gel Fs e 67 e — = the sin 3 
D CAPE BULBS, &. 
OMPO OUN D CARBONISED 1 ANIMAL MANURE, 
E, which has already acquired such an 
m in —— cultivation of fibrous-rooted 
yt for — * in = 
aryllis, Ranune 
poena and every ri 295 kind of Taa or tuberous- — 
be io. is 1 * recommended to be used in 
e the e present —2 for . — — 
i ders, 


e of 

So oer no —— as 0 5 — „in giving the 
are requested to be particular in stating whether it be for 
BULBS or other applications, ong they require the manure, 
there being a mate istinction in the constituent ingre- 
= of the ew sorts. 

e cultivators of Pinks, Auriculas, Polyan- 
trate, Chrysan anthemum 2 — Verbenas , Cinerarias, 


— 
e above — be eh of — — Seedsman, &c., 
eet, Li 


85 the Baie ar the F i 
district ; at the 4 Inn, Newing to n Causeway; Gar- 


— 


R. W. HASLAM begs to to inform A AMATEURS 
the Sere aha that he is in 

Auction Mart, Londo 
BSDAY, October 2, and FRIDAY, D 5, 
8 at 12 for 1 o'clock each day, 

COLLECTION OF LILIU MS, TULIPS, &c., 
Was AND STANDARD 
al IMPORTATION OF DUTCH BUL 
Warranted true to 3 and will be fully deseribed in 

e Mart, and of the Auctioneer, | 


iring merel 
seguir ag ine the 
HAARLEM, in fine 
condition, his extensive annual importation — 2 BULBS 
and BROT a catalogue of which may be had on application 


EDINBURGH ; 

respectfully to call t 

others to their 4 

— — —— — . 1 young Plant 

Par —— 

where its — iS 
eral à 


perv nd by 
pieces of three or ae feet, as req 10 2 


n and is e 
has, 


tance req 
ee vai can poy will 8 to aeva — at any yg oe 
„ England, an 


to h 
7 UMN SOWING. —POTTER’S GUANO. 
—— TTER lar mmends 


ör using his Oua no, as, if now 2 erent to the earth, 
itis — er adapted, when th rns, to yield to ‘the 
poen fen eo food they re 


TO LET ON LEASE, in H 
400 1 at the Yarga of the rasa ue, eae 
— 2 Be Torn a The land is capable of great improve- 


Bachata terms. = 
LAND, —— Foulsham, Norfolk. 


$ 
F 


10 
le 
1775 


13, 
1755 


for derate Ro 
Right o 8 * the ECONOMICA 
A MANURE or FERTILISER for C 


995 — 

‘olla. Por may quadrupled on the st 

N 2 or particulars, apply (post-paid) to D . JONES, 
tar Newcastle Emlyn, South Wales. 7 


-om LIGHT LAND FARMS. 
LET, with immediate 


z 


— — es (being now 
: e — gera 5 te 
t of arable and Meade my rent, 


757 

ull 
dei! 
j 
i 


all who wish to grow 


ut crops a 
In — of some tenprineipled —— 
as Mr. Porrer’s agents, s. —— their -y compounds for 
the genuine article, the Proprietor — a 
direet application to himself at “i Works, 28, 10 am- road- 
place, London. Where the E -ye tity taken is adequate, an 
rrangement, as arriage, will be made to the satisfaction of 
PORE GYPSU liarly adapted for 
RE M, im a state peculiarly 
usual low E 
per — to poet above address. 
ID. NEWINGTON’S INFLEMENTS— 
ventor of these 
giving every inform 
Be advocate, i. . — — a 


persons, once 


The In- 


607 


IMPROVED FOUR-HORSE PORTABLE STEAM-ENGINES 


AND BOLTING OR THRES HING MACHINES, 


REEMAN ROE anp HANSON, So — pa dpm 
Works, and 70, Strand, beg to atte tention to their 
Engines and Threshing Machines, which 


in fuel, for the quantity of work done, than any —— the 
2 


public. They may be seen any day at their works, Sumner- 
street, Southwark Bridge-road. Vater, 
Deep Well Pumps; Baths ; Hot-water Apparatus ; Fountains, 


ARIAN CEMENT, for i — Stueco, instead of 


mon plastering, 


&c., specimens.of which may be seen at the Works of 
8, Lon don. 


B. T. Bran ee åi —_ Hon. Sec., Corn 


Moon Street, Piceadilly, London 


ASTERN COUNTIES n 

alterations will be pane in the Trains of the 
For p ne — ey Tim 
_ Bishopsgate Station, Sept. 2 


STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROOF 
WIRE NETTING. 


5 ee 
3 
510 0 ca 
; icine — Á 
(CHARLES D. 5 AND COMPANY dai 
. AND C. YOUNG), 
MANUFACTURERS OF IRON AND WIRE WORK, &., 
22, PARLIAMENT-STREET, WESTMINSTER, LONDON; CAST 
BUILDINGS, DERBY-SQUARE, fey ie mags * — 
and * ST. Enoc E, 


1 


e attention “Of Sander der ea 
Wire-Net pl S 


an 


d at the Show 


e „ and —— 7 — Gheapness 
— — 


attracted the Judges 


the Society’s Silver Medals with 


The immense damage done by — 
and. is often so 


that pur. 
und, about every six 
ly adapted for ren- 


gro 
r seven. 18, eculiar 
dering Hedges, Paling, or other existing Fences completely im- 


ious to such v up into small 
effi. 


se, for individual Plat ama re 
Prices.—18 ins, high, bit 24 ins., 1s.; 30 ins, — 


Or a web of 3 1S ins. wide, will cost 
Do. of 100 yar 


36 ins., 1s. 6d, per lineal 


De. of 100 ag 30 ins, wide oh „ & 
Do. of 100 yards, 36i ins. w Oe 10 8 
„ R 


t the sam 
ernie Net Ne thing i tes pi gae admirably adapted for —— and 
ed at the same rate. 
stances, yeg. n obstacle to 8 at a J. 
Net, C. P. X. and Co. have made arr: 


Scotlan Ireland, for One 


r article in the 9 
ard. Samples for inspecti 
„ Younes 


— Byronem Premium Wire wo Netting than 
the weight of one yard of their — LaF "ia caval wat 
— * 


22 
C. D & Co. manufacture every deseri of IRON 
and —.— WORK — 
parts of Seotland, 


Workmen sent to 


ca 


would be allowed 20 per cent. on the 
Knole, Frant, Tonbridge Wells; agent in London, Mr. Mit- 
CHE Charing-cross. 


WIRE GAME NETTING.— 


ines 7 anes *. 


8 


2282855 222 


Galvanized 
Mee by BARNARD, and BISHO 2 


— Hull or — 


608 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


Portable Steam Engine and Threshing Machine, | | 
CTURE 94 


R. GARRETT AND SON, LEISTON WORKS, SAXMUN DHAM, SUFFOLK. 


The principal Prize of 501. for the best Portable Steam En 
GA 


Machine, were both awarded to R. GARRETT anp 


ee former is adapted for driving all the Barn 
rere ss i i 


BY HER MAJESTY’S ROYAL LETTERS PATENT. 


42 A th 


gine, for Threshing and other Agricultural purposes, and the Prize of ar * the best 
SON, of Leiston Works, at the Royal Agricultural Society’s Meeting, at Norwich, July, 


ARRETT anp SON beg to call ~ nasa of their — 3 to their 8 BLE er ENGINE and ban MACHINE. The 
Saws, 


— 


m 


Piha Pant 


7 A 


Counties and Eastern Union Railways, 


TE 


Sede. 


. 
BO 


. 


3 


0 
— 
C 


5 


Sa 


e * NETTING, eee 1 


pey GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE to be disposed 


f, from the commencement of 1841 5 Ee inclusive, half. 
bound, "ex — the year 1848, in clean and excellent condition. 
Price for the whole, 101. 10s, Address, A. 5. Office of this Paper. t 


gas 5 AZOTIC MANURES, — | 
r his diat tendence, 
Agel is is earnest rected to 2 7. 
E . Gea 


IMPORTANT TO FAR PERA AND „GARDE ENERS, 
Just published, in crown 8yo, price 3s, 6d. cloth, 
HE FA RMERS’ AND GARDENERS? GUIDE 
to the Analyses of Soils | and Manures, and to the Practical 
a g By JoHN 
our opinion, both gardeners and farmers cannot. do 
Talter. than to make themselves well acquainted w. vith the 
* Guide’ thus offered them.“ Gardeners’ Chronic 
It contains, in a compa ratively small space, the cream of 
the works of Professor Johnston, Liebig, Lav My sons and other 
eminent agricultural chemists. ch ee me ei armer 1 to 
nicle. 


be without it for a single week.”—. m 
PER SQUAR 2 ine article re 
ing, the atmosphere no no avi e slightest action it. ag r E rest ee of alt ened tor every f farmer to * 
* re Mie tan Cattle w, and was | ee, 
highly o eulogised both for its utility and pretty ce, and Sja anean ary peat 5 fety te : tapae important 5 N 
to be the cheapest and best article ever produced. | farmer, with the — al de information possessed by that 
It fe 8 ight and hee y fence ngain the depredations of 2 e — Darlington Tim 17 po y 
hares, ra cats, and is peculi adapted for Aviaries, % 
Pheasantries, and to secure try; and 4 the galvani London See ee. oae 
F it et ee ly „„ = z PRICE n OF ANY BOOKSELLE 
IB, 34, Bean 4 inches ride ieean, however, be made n ONTENTS oy mme NUMBER ror SATURDAY 
ee of expense, 
5 bi 3d, yard + ra ey ard 
— 8 2 n 38. Per oa JobRNAL OF ENGLISH AND FOREIGN LITERATURE, 
24 „ y” 1. = SCIENCE, AND THE FINE ARTS. 
“jalkasi „ ld. — foot ex —— an Large Quarto Pages. 
— r p r Wire Shi a Notting 3 feet, 1s. 6d. per e OF, WITH EXTRACTS FROM— 
ire y 8 Also every 8 of Stone uin Goethe i in | Extracts, from the Registers a 
Fireguards, Wire House 5 Braai $ 
Shades, F Dish Covers, Meat Safes, hes Wi Window | fg eit Gash n 
Blinds, 1s, 104. per square foot with bolts complete, in maho- | [pespracho mit Goot ee Works, entered for Publics 
‘ames; Gol foot; 
wer Trainers, fi from 3d. each : ; 203. each ; 1 of e Select Q. Committee and 1587. With Notes and 
Flower Stands, from 3s. 9d. eac Galvanised ogy i Wire for Libraries. [Third ae by J. Payne 
plants and trees, Dahlia Rods, end every sates, d Collie 
au is — ving, for oe — 95 „ Ss tents Wits Snortan Notice 
y Fox 
Snow-hill, Lon x Guide to Birmingham Taks beh tho 115 French Re- 
R thi the Seckat — pn Saat Han ti By J. F 
AR RS * ILLS e nees. Eng b Repetitions. yJ. F. 
P = 575 fain occasionally use medicine to assist 4 nend Social Economy, aae Riek Bed 0 
Nature in operation, hee like a mariner at sea without | « Ormond!” an Ina: eat ka: pi iape n . 
and here Knowing not where to steer, they first try this, | dress. By G. I. Banke, Outlines of General Know- 
sen irese meet with 3 Proverbs fou the E People. By E. pledge. By H; Ince, M.A. 
; agoon, of Scotland. Rey. 
en oe fint ayo re to | The Earth’s Antiquity. By J. va Thom me 
rolong ees ie ve Gray, Analysis andil Summary of He- 
; other medicines | Tints from an Amateur's Pa- ro dotus, a on Turner, 
ote: — 79 e a pr Tete, By A. Jackson. 
be found to have revived the Papers.—The Literary Fund [Second’Article. J— 
e lasting strength to Report of 8 at the Ninetee seer „ of British 
oie * ? Association for the Advancement of her 
go to the disease, pe Our Weekly Gossip.— Obituary of Dr. W. Cooke Taylor 
ve Pills, you will ex —British Museum Commissioners’ Report rt us todiaaship 
will become less a . eee eee camel age, 
2 * — Fine Art sip.— Graves’ mycin of 
58 y Engravings- Bassroliof of th the he Nelson eer ris Exhi- 
e words “ on anufactures—S at —— 
3 pag So + laden Report of O for Building s New Churches 
also, the faci of the Signa. Music and 1 eatre, (‘A Bird 
en c. PT ROBERTS and Co., of Passage —— Wells, (* The Merchant of Viales 9. 
on ions, ea. — Bartholomew Fair, Smithfield — Th 
Jåd., 2s. 9d., and family pac packets at Lis. of the Haarlem Lake — Public 


Sold by all 


Mauthe Doog ”—Drain: 
Libraries of the United States—Restoration of Ely Cathe- 


Order The Atheneeum of any Bookseller, 


MARTINDALE. + 


e n of the 


based —— careful : 
of the soil. The Manufacturers “si th 


cn Heede which ae 

made entirely of rich ; 

te timonials to pro ye b 15 reat i oe 

Prices, 6l, and 6t. 10s hem i e Maran onies 
WIRE-WORK. ae r 

T. THOMA S BAKER, le onen MANR 


PLACE, KING'S-ROAD, CHELSEA, Manufacturer of 
VISIBLE WIRE FENCE, to Fare OA Grazing Steet a e 
-W 


on improved and economical principles. 
Parties aited on in Town and Country, and Drawings sod 
Estimates free, Work for the fie 
Ward’s Cases, or Dom 2 
Just published, in 8vo, with 13 plates and EWERAGE OF 
D TOWNS. A Pie OF LANDS 5 ANDI bee 
TOWNS. on Model or : 
best Index to the Capabilities ofa r Surface; with a Description 4 
of th structing Maps. Hilber 7 
London: Jonn WEALE, 59, rere we 4 
Fou i i T THE | 


ing a fur on boiling, 
destroyin 
eee large 
tration. 2 
University of Ab berdeen. 


HE AUTHOR 
RK BY 1 s lished, in 


n Wednesday next oP em Sa 
with Mr. Murray's “ a ds oh 
ASPECTS OF NATURE, in ices 5 
in Different Climates, By ALEX 21 
Translated, with the anner * 7 i 
t — — desire, by Mrs. ap 1 54 Loraas; 


Edition, price 1s., oF 1s, 4d. hy post ygs 
WITH I ENGRAVED, PLAN OF ae: B . 
IGH FARMING UND. —— . 
H NANTS, the best Substitute 5 
Pri J pa ah 9 Rp, Farmer, : 
A A Da 5 of edin 
tura À 
Speech UA. 5 ncellor of the Exchequer on 
J aly 
15 re publication of sis 
ar reado y to m 
al 1 study.” —A À 
abe one Ei 
by all booksellers, 


ance a era of pe’ 
s rl facts 3 ae 
Fm 

Bap pan poan, of N 

and F. wg 


y Wirit B 
Printed by W Pancras, 
row, nt ecg N 
office in Lom! 
parish of St. 
ments 


and 
biel 


SATURDAT, — 


“AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29. 


[Price 6d. 


No. 39—1849.] 
ee ly 


4, Great A N Boner rg London, 
OHN KERNAN be egs to unce that his Dutch 


5 . — 


Ranunculus, Cro p 
9 5 fine ‘this season, of which lists may be had on applica- | 
he 


tion. That he has also tod A e es. true Winter Tares, 
Winter Oats, Wi nter „Rye, and Rape 

Spa and fine new — 2 Seed for Birds. 
— 1 Russia 10 1 


Seed; Mushroom 
Cuba Bass for 


ye SEED TRA 


EMOPI A MACULATA ” 


Price forwarded o 


Th he e a limited, Messrs. V, can only gua- 
| rantee to supply the first o 7 sca 


HIDS FOR SALE, by Private T ‘reaty.— 


_lection of upwards | of 100 plants, containing — fine 


For particulars, 3 7 = PLAN 


EX. 
Ireland, climate o. s.s.s 614 5 
= fed Society o n bi $ 
Lichen e 952§2ĩö“4“ 611 
— — TTETT 612 4 
Mau 222 66 4 4 60 6 4 4 6 0 612 a 
M —— 5 to Ahe fla e 
Neweastle Farmers’ Club—Eat- 
ing spring Wheat. fla 
Odours of plants s.s.. 613 a 
| Onions, | cont for an acre ...... fli e 
—.— protected trellises . 614 a 
N 6 — diseas 
-6 Potatoes fro 
l 6 seed 6 
ni 61 — seme Ba sodescses 614 
1 — . 619 — st on dry land 1 * 
* jeading libraries . 620 a | Potato crop . . . . . . . . 
— 8 8 620 Roberts’ Hore Inventions, rev. 216 
— — ——ͤ—ͤ— 617 Roots in drain 6114 
ie beh, A — Down .. 620 pen to propa: éusvebauge: OLS 
food, Dr. Thomson on nutritive 
value . i ‘ia —— 415 a 
Linseed an cake as.. 619 c 
= Fuchsias, bedded ou 615 a Tre i 
ng 
Vines fora greenhous 
Whea! ** effect of — it off in 
spring —— 2 621 a 
of preparing an acre 
W. a n * b 
Wood, drifted,.......s00+ 614 b 


> MAMESETELD, near UCK- 
ROSES 


M. W 


UMNA 
are now i inf blo oom, and will continue until the end of 
be season. 


—Sey 
RCHIDS AND STOVE PLANTS.—For Sale 


low terms, a very excelient it a = 0 sous 
AND STOVE PLANTS, contain superb specimens 
searce kinds. the property of. a 5 se ep es fm 
— For 2 ae 1 apply to W. W. WEBBER, 
Nurserie 8. Ot 


Merri 


PLANTS AND ORANGE TREES. — 150 
Fruiting aA 200 Succession 3 healthy and free trom 
penny princip ally Queens, with some few . and Provi- 
Also seven e Trees, about 10 feet 
es in fruit, in excell? ont new tubs. Also seven „ The 
whole to be 1 of at a a Taak —Apply to W. ROGERS, 
Sen., Nurseryman, Southampto 


TULIPS. H ACI THS, AND DUTCH 
R G GROOM, Clapham Rise, phe § 1 — 5 8 by 
se een rer TO HER Mases E EEN, 


ACINTHS a nd 
ry fine condition. go 
t his CATALOGUE OF BULBS, &e., = 
ni y, and will be forwarded by post 


a 
-Rus DEODARA, ARAUCARIA IMBRICATA, CRYP- 

ERIA JAPONICA, AND OTHER RARE CONIFERÆ, 
inform ae bed tore ia in con- 
Pe eas business, ng sed of hig 
NURSERY Sto r off his Extensive vod price. The | 
Stock con: 


eodara, at the following 
ants, all grown in the open air ii 


e re! Plants 4to 6 inches, 2 p. ti ; 15l. p. 1000. 


9995 12 to 15 „ 
„ . 18 in. to 2 feet 2 
5 2 to 3 feet. 5s. each, 
a Japonica, in 
= p 1} to 2 feet. 3s. 6d. ea 
Warrant, ot ne 4 Fruit Trees of every tition 
inclogi e above may be had on application, by 
5 hale Postage stamps. 


see vut 


idam Lee-green, Kent. 
ANCY G EAR ae cee. 
GEORGE HENDERSON, Wellington 
Nu St. John's , has to offer the 
exceedingly AT and ze 22 mes new eee Geranium 
ALBONI, at 10s. 6d. each, which — wille 
n the 15th of October. The upper peta Typa 
5 with a light edg ging of blush, the under pon bush 
white and ao metimes biotched. The flow mes arge, 
a most profuse bloomer, and retains its tes wer 2 1 as 
— Que i, Victoria Geranium. A drawing of the flower (by 
* 2 iy seen at the Nursery, 
strongly recommend the ab nd 
“hip 5 pote it will prove one of the greatest favourites ever 
sent out, as it continues in one sheet of bloom for such a 
lengthened Lee od. 


DWARA 


ual allowance to the Trade, and for every three 
ae — or val be e given.—Sept. 29. 
CINERARIAS. 
D GEORGE ‘HENDERSON, 


38 8 


CINE RARTAS, vise intendin — 
ders, as the strongest 
pan s will be sent off first, and all orders executed in strict 


d 


RS, a beautiful rosy crimson and 
i qual proportions, of pera: 
form, large size, and surpassing in all its points 
ery other flower known 10s, 6d 
ANGELIQUE, e carmine, white disc, distinct and novel 
co ag 
ESSY, fine rich plum, a beautiful, “diatinet, and 
maffen colou! 
Saee TI GRIST, a clear white, ‘slightly tipped with 
light blue, fine fort 
DE AGH, rosy lavender, distinct and new colour, a 


at dw 
EM PEROR, — die bck flower, * 


show. 
FLORA "ivot, * brilliant saat, o 


—. 


ae acy 


y 75 cupped, a very desir ble vari 5 
ULINE, olet plum, with’ crimson, fine 
broad petals, exquisite 10 6 


aD DING RING, a divided with white and crim- 
n, the la * es ating, fine dark disc, neat 
7 70 tow orm, and a striking variety 5.0 
WELLINGT ON, fetale equally. divided 5. white 
in m disc, flower of fine 
form, large, and beautifally PE 
N.B. Wh taken, the price will be a 105 


and = three sets are ee four will be given, or three plants 
ill beg 


| of any one sort, four plan ven. 

egs to A ester ‘that e above may be relied on 
as possessing the 1 qualisies necessary for a good Cine- 
raria, being compact i abi eie a one a fine mass 
of Babies eanan poe The usual allowance to = trade, 


N1UM, “THE QU on UF SUM 
3 GEORGE HENDERSON, Wellington 
St. Jobn’s-wood, London, is now receiving orders 
‘or the above ‘beautiful SCARLET 9 which will be 
and after the 15th October, s: 6d. e ach. This is a 


CHOICE ; GERANIUMS AT LOW PRICES, . 
have 
— — 

niums, which, will be ie the bret week in 0 
7 — 5 urchas selection WENTY, from the following list, 
‘or 

HOYLE’S CRUSADER, ARNOLD’S — 
QUEEN, Sir Robert Sale, or ek Prinoe, 8 Star of the W py Paced 


ourm demona, Remembrance, The Peri’ 
ebe’s Lip, = tee Porget. me-not, Sir W. R. pre Flora’ 
Flag, Zenobia, Isabella, Standard of Pe rfection, Sirius, 
of Leinster, 
HOYLE’S CRUSADER and ARNOLD'S VIRGIN pate 
for 12s. 
a orders are desired, as some of the sorts are 


Ao u Wainin E: REnDLE and Co., Union-road, Plymouth. 
Our New simp ue of 3 pec other bulbs 
is now ready, and can be had on 
SPLENDID NEW GER 777 ae 
* ESSRS, VEITCH anp SON have now ready for 
1 delivery: 5 A ona eg Te of the following 


beautiful v tly recommend, 
Aspasia, Poy į mr ey ] ady Clementine, Gaines 1,04 
— Beile of the Village, ayra, Gaines’ 15 0 
Hoyle’s 10 6 {elet ger, 3’ «15 0 
Berengaria, o0d’s 7908 Refulgent, Beck's i ae 
Brilliant, Toppiug’s 10 6 tolla, Hoyle’s .., wi kh. & 
Crusader, floyle’s 15 0 sparkler, Hoyle's 0 
Elegans, Topping’s 10 6 tar, Beck’s ee 6 
Flamingo, Hoyle’s 7 6 Superlative Hoyle's 6 
set of 15 —4 — 
E 


Pa m 
strong plant of $ —— Field Marshal sent gratis oa the — 
A general — 2 be had on prepaid application, 

Exeter, Sept. 


ECK S PELARGON LUMS, San OTHER. 
RAISERS’ FLOWERS.— Now ready for selection and 
going 2 Twelve of the following a including box 
L 


in 3. inch poss, g2 rea 
— Ban 
Cassandras ‘Gru 
Jegress, d, „ nine 
Hoyle’s cs 3 pis eee s Brilliant, 
Eby WARD WARD BECK, Warton Cottage, I 
n on Walden, Sept. 29, 1849. 
PERR DOUBLE HOLLY HOUKS, 
ILLIA M CHATER is now 
Plants of his unequalled collection of 


vent 1 


pnh e Vict 


prising bis new and choice enge of ace a 1849, — 
took the first pen at the Long tural 
ee e open 


a and Norw 
o ali Baglan — and ota 
"SW, hme also tho entire atock of sho late Mr. O. Baron, 


W AMBROSE 
e thi 2 N class 23 mat h 
ot etober, for r prepa: 


Pe “ia 
| prepared to t, in the middle 
only, the following A 9 raised by — an aud 


— e can dently rec as show- 3 
hn tos ee or 8 as they flow 


— eof the year roun! nd. 
ith white belt all round, 


DEFIA ANCE. wi 
and 2 white throat ; of fry size pms Am, a most profuse 
to be the most dis- 


» 
net b yet volsi. 21s. 
aT ORMOSA. Beautiful rosy crimson upper petals, shaded 
— purple: white grout * bs Sd tom pan ciouded with the 
ame colours ; of stro pes’ habit and most profuse bloomer, 10s, 6d. 
10 pene aisi > —Uppe n Fg — e, w 
lower petals = esi spotted w cherry, very dwarf habit, 
adapted for ll pot ee aie it ae 


oR most Abihas an — 8 
A some colour, ee, with eps 
eee ith deep maroon robust miite ground; lower 
bloomer. 


BEAUTY r SUPREME—Roy lilac ground, clouded with 
uies trusser, of gee a fine show plant. 


Royal, 7s. 6d, ; 


ested be made payable to 
YATT, Manor F. Pana, Deptford, Kent.—Sept. 29. 


Tur bl. 

; i Pno LACK 5 5 o et 

: rer STRAW 
mall fiav ei Suet 100.5. 2, 1 5s. It is hardy, very early, 
rate preserver, ef 4. blos- 
pa abundant crop m ob- 
or Dr. Lin dene opinion, see 
. 468. 1849. Curnriy’s “Treatise on the 
1 to, Cucumber, Méion, and ‘Liskanthes,” 
rs on Camberwell.—JaMes CUTEILL, 


t 


j The ve Bulbs, the fi 
Pat ŝo justly esteemed for its early benk and ee | for 1 1 eulture or a — he of the close habit of Tom 
—— A the latter for its purity and ele ave been mb, b 25 3 uch superior in point of growth, and very dis- 
P ore at A. Connkrr's Italian and Foreign Warehouse, p : s mento Ph egated, the flower-stalks white, the 
G mall, near Wailerloo- lace. Also Dutch Byw einthe, leaf peautifully transparent in appearance, and orna- 
Too? tulips, Anemoi ones, Ranunculus, &c.; priced Cat nt itself. It bloo ost profusely in large tru of 
: qe may be h ad per post. a ark s carlet flowers, thrown ell out from the foliage; and 
; MYATTS N ith all will certainly prove one of the 
PE MY 8 * STRAWBERRY, “ELEANOR.” beautiful, unique, and desirable scarle yet out. 
RTT i D SONS are repared to send .4. The usual allowance to the x three 
5 Plan the following varieties at the prices plants are ordered, 21 Pr 15 vee 


SRRATEST NOV ASON—WILL GIVE 
AN W FEATURE in THE “FLOWER GARDEN, 
pein SM P Nurseryman, Westerham, Ken 


inform b his friends and t 


J. S. begs to 
* out his tw UMS, so 


es 
in the Gardeners and Farmers Journal, Sen 25, —— ‘the | 
pennn “J 8. Ke 

recommends the “oma Geraniums to his friends an 
the public, with the conndence, to those who = 
| honour him with their crdets. _ Good plante 5s, each, the usual 


1 with ros 


e = ng Tay of 


— 

earining ted — 3 habit, and good 
bloomer. 

AE its “iD. —A 3 distinct and pretty flower, marked 

y lilac ) s. 6d.— Most of the — ve have received 

ot Merit at the Londo 


u exhibitio 
The following Six first-rate faney Pelargonioms in 4-inch 
pots, fit for exhibition in the ensuing seas TR, 
Jenny Lind, Fairy Queen, Queen Superb, Magnifies, Mine 

ar SCARLET ee —— BONUM,” Se 


— o o 
and diana — m F pew of Oct, 28, . * W. A., Bat — 
sea: Your seeding is a beautiful flo excellen 


=s oo shor ortness 


usual ciscount to 
we, Ameen having saved more seed of the ancy Pelarzo- 
nium than he — for his own growing, 2 


same (which he can recommend as saved from new and first- 
rate varieties), a 2, 6d. per packet.— —Nursery, Battersea, 


vier ke 


THE 


NEW GERANIUMS, STRONG PLANTS NOW 
p geag 8 AT A ada LOW PRIPESI 


large, strorg, and 

yt yoo 705 following, “ell established in 4-inch 

pots, They are prepared to receive an ate shift, and will 
make fine 3 1 7 plants 1 8 

NEW VARIETIE DARP SENT OUT. 

. set of 18i in che following pene | g 0 


12 ditto, purchaser's 

r less tha 2 

Topping’s Brilliant ae 1 s 6d 
55 Ele e gans 0 | 
Beck's Emelia ... ... & H 
ei | 

| 


the prices attached. 
Story’s Mont Biano, No.1, 
itto, No. 
Hoyle’ s Flamingo 
55 
” 


a 


SS e SSS 


Ral ra ` ene 
| ay Sparkler ia 

| Whomes’ Princess Helena 

| Queen Victoria. 

Windsor Cas 

first-rate varieties. 
ha 16 


Refulgent in 


eM one ) 
Symmetry... 5 0 
Sundown * 
Harleduin (Fancy 
Selec —.— Area * following 
7 ties, of our own selec 


2 Ditto 
15 Ditto, selected Wr 1 110 0 
tto 
acchus, Folly’s Black . Blanche, 
n, Cassandra, Clara, Co mpeti- n 


» 


of sg West. 

A LARGE Wb ee OF FINE og aes a 

at 9s. per dozen, our 

Josephus, Rosy Circle, Orion, Desdemona, Label, Mustee, 
Margaretta, & 


NEW CHRYSANTHEMUMS. 
12 strong and bushy plants, best new varieties of last season, 
ont Rekk rak al = autumn 225 . £015 0 
d select (including the above) ` 70 A 0 


— ditto, 1. 3 12 * 
Goods e rriage free to London, or any station on the Fae he 
and Bury Un ne, and extra plants sent gratis with orders of 40s. 


A Natal a 1 


collections of R culuses, Gladiolus, = 1 and other 
choice Tulips, Aenean imported Dutch me Peni and other 
roots ; select Roses, herbaceous plants, &c. ` 

Pos 
office orders payable to Bass and Brown, or to —— Brown, 
Seed and Hortic Seat ees — Suffolk. 


GARDENERS’ 
NURSE eren, 


AS rival A 
inform the public that he will se 


be 
new r Seedling FUGHSIA “ ALBONI” out the ARE week in 
October, at 5s. 6d. um Saye 1 but one plant will be 
oe vor ‘6 . begs to refer to ex- 
tracts from the aer * also to the — 
and Farmers’ Journ 
(Fr 


~ “the Gardeners’ Chronicle.) 
“Focustas : 4 ery much 14 e in tbe lobes of the 
tube, and distinet on that account from most others ; colours 
ale 


CHRONICLE 


of the tube pale blush; corolla rosy pink ; g 
ture, colours, and proportions, but rather small,” 
om the Gardeners’ and Farmers’ Journal.) 

“ Atkinson’s Alboni, an excellent variety of unusual attrac- 
tions ; tube short, stout, but well proportioned ; colour, blush ; 
sepals broad, obtuse, and TA exp 2 the same tint as the 
tube, ti flushed a shade or two deeper on 


ppe 
the inner portion ; corolla excellent, describing half a circle, 
The peculiar attraction of this flower consists in each petal o 
the corolla being beautifully and distinctly margined wit 
bright rosy scarlet on a pale blush ground, the inner portion 
being beautifully tinted with the same, We consider this a 


novelty, for such deci r is an n to any collection.“ 


ENR MAJOR, Knosthorpe, near Leeds, 
o announce that he has now ready for sme a at 
healthy plants of his five beautiful PANSIES, viz., Jullien, In- 
dispensable, pa William Henry, 
the five for 10s., post free. 
for 18s., post ** a , Major’s 
os Indispensable, Sultan, William Henry, and Milton; 
field’s Canary and Negro, H è 
of Nor folk eae se mek 
ceolaria seed, d, and 5s, per pac 
wer pi . is 8 requested with 
the or 


D AYS “JENNY LIND.” — 

JEN sd LIND. — Cherry pink, fine, good shaped flower; 

plants, 3s. 6d. ; Royalist, aie ; Rosy Morn, 1s. 6d.; Symmetry, 

f i j Queen, improved, fine, 1s. how To 
m Thu 


mb, im mproved, 1 ; Tam O’Shant 2 t- Gas 
Thebes TAS ls. 6d. ; Gem of Scarlets, ls. 6d. ; aylor, 
less * 1s. ; Pink 21 3 3 Ivy Scarlet, 5 ; Lucia 
Rose ea, I set of 16 for 


The 
PETUNTA, “CONWAY'S 4 BEAUTY SUPREME. * — The 


EW F 
Wi SKIRVING begs to call a" attention of the 
1 of Fuch s to his unrivalled see dlin ng, “ La dy 


week in Feb. 

850. It „possesses in h degree all the properties 

pua constitute a White Fuchsia et ike first class. It is de- 

eidedly distinct from all others now in cultivation, possessing 
the most beautiful white. parent tube and sepals 


hsias, — M. W. cel 
— Walton or Liverpool, Sept. 2 
ADERE. AND PINKS, new d 4 3 


ties, now ready for se 
PANS 


ELIZABETH. 2 N broad deep-blue belt, fine eye, 


large, and fi . 
PURITY. * I broad violet belt, fine eye, large, and 
fine shape, 5s. 


AZURE, clean white, neatly edged with light blue, good eye, 
large, and fine shape, 58. 
HE ey glen, edged with purple, fine eye, large, and good 


Miss: STORKE .—Clean * aw edged with lilac, good 

eye, large, and fine s 

VILLAG AID.— aoi ‘vi broad purple belt, eye good, 
large, 4 fine shape, 

The above * have been ordered by the 
growers ie Abe est, who 
what we 

12 of the Toliowing for 10s. : Master rpiece, Mrs. Bragg, Berryer, 

ot Waterloo, Lord Stani ey, blooming Q an, Beauty, 

Ophir, Purple e * Supr Mar, of 

MOPE oe 3 „ Winnifrea Sabi ne e Mabel ; the 
g 


ORISPIN. —A fine-s 8 
1 


full a 


average size, with 
2 purple, 58. 


Is, dw per pai 

ALN WIG —4 full fall sized flower, w with hig E centre, broad * 
rosy pur 

12 of the following TA 10s. 

Princess al, 


A Alfred or- 
N Smith's Queen of Eng- 

Gl 5 Dauntless Lads 
per dozen, If 
Will be sent fres; if otherwise, 


„ helf. globe Aster 
each, R cg = S. W. 


wr been 


ree, 
Ranunculus, 
——5 and 5s, 


3 &e, 


= He 
2 = form the aed that 
f 


given as to — p arrival and departure "of 


vessels to aud from Hamburgh, Rotterdam, Ostend, Autwerp, 
vre, Bou! kasan 4 the United States, Scot- 

nea e.— Address, Cox and Hammond's Quays, Lower Thames 

street, London 


FIRST-CLass GERAMIUMS TVE Y RE 
YW ALTON b AT VERY R: aster 


e ext 
3 TUMN CATALOGUE is now 
one stamp, the le 


He 


ha — z „St tudded all over 
from e groun nd upwards, wit ith a of most showy 
ie 5 part flowers ; è met ag — ls. 6d. 

VE po 3NAS.—Fine collection of the newest variety, 9s. to 


12s. per dozen. 
Mary Conway, Earl’s-court Nursery, Old Brompton. 


3 DENYER Fördern, eee 
Brixton, near London, informs his Patrons his fine 
collection of AUTUMNAL ROSES may Aisa be seen in full 
eat also h f DUTCH 2 have 
arrired in fine ee invites attention to his ex- 
EtG stock of FRUIT AND. ORNAMENTAL —— AND 
HRUBS of the finest growth, of all Gardens and 
Fisser Grounds laid out and plan * 18 o an — 5 extent. 
. is desirous of ost cet y his customers he has no seed 
shop i in London. A genera list sent on a prepaid 8 
a inclosing mp. 


FOR SALE. ; nome of ue finest IVY grown in 
"England, of different sorts. very moderate rate, as me 


old ateur | 
ave said, They are someting like | 


proprietor intends to clear it off his grounds.— Apply to CHARLE 
Wane, Carpenter, Sutton, ae 
OSE AMATEURS are e . that 
A. PA kiei Son’s Descriptive Catalogue OSES for 
the present s may now bo fisd on ps mri enclosing 
two stamps pE ee —Cheshunt Nurseries, Herts. 


1 e Descriptive Catalogue of H. NE 
d SON, Great Soham tead, with a Supplementary 
List oft hose best s cing, Grouping, Training on 
Trellis, Weeping, pos A i it ede. and Mt Seg will be 
supplied with a copy by enclosing two postage 
poas (ABIES) DOUGLASII, bopita 
E. — The N gpa havia succeeded in raising from 
AGNI FICENT oa be tok 


id ts October 17, 1846, 


rg n i teet 
5 inches, 


cula- 
237 ti This ‘description 4i 
its magnitude, the Wende, beautiful specimens now 
Dropmore (ena some few o 
intr i wack yea sh 
an 
** healthy N 6 inches igh, 
per per dozen; 33. 6d. 8 
specimen pianis, 2 to 5 Fent, 78. . ROGERS, 
Nurs teman and Contrac cting Planter, “Red “Lodge, near 
Southam 
WHEEL BARO WETEND, all * and Patterns, 
l. 5s, to 51. 5 
bb iat OR UPRIGAT BAROWETERS, 17 15. a} * 
RD BAROME 


ANDA 
2 E pry ais dra l the size et the tuhe. The above! Salen dela | 
untry w 


ut fear of injury, being made 

88883 a ioatea 
THERMOMETERS for Registering the extremes of heat and 
struction, IL. 10s., ve 
Cold only, * ci Oa to 6s. 


Achro- 


Hyer 


by severai . 


com 
: gentlemen, where 3 bus given th st 
3 Plans. p y rard nd estimates free, 8 


n een rong Sa Trade. 


TU THE FANCIERS © 
Ve ted oh GAR 


—This 


DUTCH 


= 
na 

bee 

a 

E 

E 

* 

m i 
E 

E 

Y 

4 


flower. It is th 
the dle of these, at the p 
So that mistake may occur, ig: 


re being a mate 
* of the two sor 
e cultivators of i 

thuses, Chrysanth Seal one iu nka, pe Poljan. 
oses, and oth arden ouse — Cinerarias, 
be planting or potting at this 1555 eason will do wen Un they may 
the reto the — Manure that * otal 
ogori Sack 


package, 


n 
Parties who aay wie, * bloom, in a 
Hyacinths s in Glass i have their “ade ie * 
using a CHE ale PREPARATION IN POWD al 
for Tp i 
z tea. 


by H. 


to be dissoly d therein, and th tamy 
solution, which is perfectly transparı 
H. C. has just received fo aie een rom HAARLEM, in 
and ROOTS, a catalo if y vhi Hih 40 b Dora 
alogue of w 
Be 8 ich may be had on splat 


HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING 
BY W. 


H 
ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF THa CH PLANTS, 
VINES, FERNS, &e. pa 


— = 
—— 
eo eS SS se 


— 


J WEEKS 4 AND oe: King’s wane ORTICUL- 
„ TURAL ARCHITE s, H oTHOUSE BUILDERS, and Hor-wares 
APPARATUS MANUFACTURERS, solicit an in of their 


: 
8 


p. 
Premises for inspection, a grea 
houses, Conservatories, ieee Ree be heated | 
WATER in forms, sho wing 


M 
Nursery and 
7 e on ap 


RMOU TH BLOA TERS-GENUINE AND OF 


Yarmouth has 9 5 aa Mabe Pee bag = celebrated for 
well-known“ Yarmouth Blaye fha delist mh be 
obtained in their genuine s requ no comment, Sach 
2 is now offered $ ‘hath ey nes ean be a e 

bart of the kingdom, or for exporta 

ce order), a 1 125 pr + Ast, —.— an (on reen Mondan 1 
be addressed * Mr. F RICK BROUGH ToN Y Yousts, Cu- 

quare, Great Potts 


ORMSON, anp p BROWN, I wy ee, 


RAY. ni 
helsea, solicit the attention of wy E 0 1 44 
4 to their superior ulture 
every 88 of ‘ait ng sonn ; Aae Kit rey’ 
work done em at the Rig Jong, still o 
which they cose nad the hone of et so i wil be bapi! 


tis spits et 
to show the work N pares any crt ame 
They also beg to refer to the houses . 
at season, for the Worshi hecaries r 


f the 
y N.B. — and t Eorimatos furnished free 


TANTED, a Small Occup of ion of eg , 
ultivated gay tne LAND, Svs 


of highly e 
subjest to Norfolk cov 


THE — — CHRONICLE, 


611 


— . — ala cha a GG 
SELENDID NEW Be: 
é FI 
18 fe a Striking and Noble Flower, With a remark: 
ably fine habit, great A om of b and substa: 
petal The truss is s large an Dlour of Ge — —.— the foliage; o — 
i t-stalks ; the co 
. crit, with x tt yt ge wer e petals are Pee 
It 10 a most desided 82 and wi . 
eee: tae only faultis an — 


< Messrs. nd Son are now prepared to send out strong 
well Sen plants of the * at 318. 6d., with the usu 
discount Exeter, Sept. 29. 


eep monk 


„ 


in ä 
are the 5 W 


way in ich the v 


h inactive ? ie 
+ pee s — tiie itself into the pipe is that in |i 


which roots have been found to act in other 
There i 


re 0 
a. which sent a fibre through a brick wall in 


t 
thing. 


n record the I sete ory of a Melon ones, for fewer roots wi 


llars, | rapidity, if my ean but get into: them. — me 
25 a care in b diary drain pipes, can ver a well a 


t Putney became dry; and u 


It is ogy however, 3 this evil may be 
di if not removed, by a few simple precautions, 
rains wi shallow 


e more — 
reach t 


should pass near tr ially Ash, 
3 gg Willows, i Limes, Elms 
k Privets, an ll form fibrous roots 


dy. ossible to say what 


t isn 
of ie 2 incled the drain described by “ H 
f p > 


RICAN PL en Ro ots | ee , not by extension, but by — ve n tos er a Sycam 
Hoses w ATE ERER begs to announce he has just | perpetual additions of very soft celiul 4 r to or a am whet in of the as was 
published a New and Complete Catalogue o his ANARD their poi That matter is in fact egin- | prove a microscopical e examination of the tissue ; 
ura a CONIFEROUS 3 E ad n * ning . ucil capable of — 5 n it mi bi bars been 
Koap Hill Nursery, Woking, Surrey. | s nall portion of this mucilage finds itself in contact | other reasons why drain np we of be near trees, 


GHEPPARD's « 8 “ WINTONIA® umu will be 
sent out th week in Octo next. Good strong 
„in 60 size ee 14s. . iy 48 size pots, 218. each, 
usual nage — * — ade, ' — 
n 4 Satay el variet Age 
excellent shape, rs riety.— 
: 12222 a Horst and Wierer, Seedsmen, 6, ene den- 
* Mr. — GAINES, man, Battersea ; Mr. W. 
n, Pe — y Bag 


. erym 
J pa g tock of the under-named varieties, at 1 
each, ¥ 5 5 8 Ne of Winchester, Sbeppard's Ones 
Victoria, Sheppard’s Lady Rivers, Sheppard’s Lady Flora 
one Sheppard’s — 4 Alice Maud. 
42, High-street, Winchester. 


W ROSE CATALOGUE. 
WOODLANDS | Dearie MARESFIELD, NEAR 
phos SUSSEX, 


ILLIAM WOOD a SON 42 e the plespare of 
announcing that their DESCRIPTIVE l OGUE of 
NEW and SELECT oes now —— d, and will be 
42 nie wre ave — 


with their com- 

; to other parti will be sent — on 2 
Sony new and very desirable oom are enumerated and 
described in the present Catalog 


eels VIRGIN — GERANIUM is the 


from which nine plan 8 all of which bloome 
ently last s eee more t than 350 EXPANDED BLOS- 
being counted on them a e time; amongs ich im- 


isfaction e 78. each, 
a? a plant of that 8 — in — s toe | 


2 5 WI LAN E. RN DLE & Co., Union. road, Plymouth. 
tch Bulbs have just arrived in excellent condition, 
on application, g 
rere ter 


ANTING SEA 

42 BALSTON begs to inform planters he has 
large proportion.of his Nur, to dispose 

of, — in 1 of having Sa iit Aie he trade, he 
uce: T tock comprises every 

ay oÈ. ORNAMENTAL FRUIT, and FOREST FREER, 

and all the best kinds of SHRUBS in cultivation, no ex 

been spared in the gece — and from the light ere 
it — e plants have all a mass 
* aa to grow most luxuriously 


0 
g transplanted. 
AB. 1 recommends the fol 12727 8 Laurel, 

S inches to 1 foot, 15s. ; Koed pasena | eet, 40s. ; 4 to 6 
000. * 10s. per 100, 
2 feet, in. tie, 60s. ; 4 to 
of a. pe finest poda: 

Thoaan plante, mal dozen. 
, dron campanulata, h, Caucasieum, caiambicosi &., 
at ara Poup N fines k noria, He per 
Hat st 0 Bong en k E ots and trans- 
Boog 8 Bees Birch, Berberis, 


must be s 


vered free,—Poole D 


c > Gardeners’ Chronicle. 


- SATURDA Y, SEPTEMBER 29, 1849. 


— Orders amount- 
orset. 


at becom 
introduced n 
— tase od have | Which roots 


which is unkno ca the eil 
against the cleft, * ciate $ is 22 it 
7 . solidified, asi’ the of ot is 
tablished in the cleft. The point forms mor 
Solan i 


e growth 

goes on, through all the inuosities of the harrow 

at it traverses. 
e 


ic een 
nearly 21 prita thick 
the root, there, was 


gure of |€ 
spac 


and ent risk 
y | only are the t. 4 roots of 5 3 peculiarly well 
a lin drai 


ni on a point of 
e Bly riads 
ound in 


ada. into 
act with a crack 

a 8 p sufficient | i 
to obstru run 


m to be no hope 
ries common ites | 


water-courses can be Lee 


0 alk sume: MUMS aid sell t extraordinary |i 


the win 


gray a has 
| scattered with — 3 
ap 
[a burning sun; 
still recognise their with 


ed, that the roots of trees 
e formed in 


out ain water. 
or this reason we think it doubtful whether such a 
— as Beet wi 
is sus 


rains 
of early ee ye tik 


suited to burrowing down 


usual rical form, ts are allowed to flourish, there 
and thence proceeded to | We consider t ence of drains in le, 
develop branch in 5 first thing —— to keep ear is to 
he männer already de- and clean — and perhaps the only thing, 
scribed. The thin con- 
necting plate was suffi-| Tun natural world is full of real mysteries an 
ient to maintain the marvels, “ ete orth and evanescent,” “no — 
vitality of the roots for | knows by what device,” and to these the credulity 
ars; the roots a ignorance er man has added many more, which 


anish before calm i pinay or observation. Hence 
have arisen the greater part of th 
our jo 


we 3 


asty ower, is 2 


almost as rapidly, to the common eye, inde 
ut the more minute observer will 
relies, 


i 
* mm resenting fissures at under the first shower. 

. Mises Oct. — 8 met aN wonld be — referred some of cases of the sudden 
Soon re —* a therwise than choked :| appearancs immense quantities of Lichen escu- 
A FEW weeks sin published such has alread s, Partas, and its a orms or varieties, in 
— te si ee "gine — been the fate of 4 Persia, Armenia, and Tartary, sometimes to the 
8 whieh Drains had been choked as is too well known. depth of several inches, it had not been ob- 
is northern counties. It goes Whether this can be served es others are not so easily ex- 

= Soy “posh es,” from 40 to 50 feet lon prevented, is a most plained, it seems impos hat a subst: 

Weed and ce: r and intended to be e serious question. Wel eagerly devou by the — wherever it oceurs, 
dled throughout, l laid ers about 20 years ago, had do not believe that it could possibly be overlooked in any district where 
become five years can where drains it is abundantly produced, haaa closely it e= 

; the pipes had, though tations, un- | resemble the stones amongst which it lies, especially 

1 * “tid 25 A less iron or glass pipes, as it does not shrink into a mere pellicle, but into 

ha prov: . are masses, varying in size from of a grain of sand 

had been — gg ig side of employed. Our corre- to an inch or more in diame ence we ot 
a * spond ts that at once reject the accounts which have rom 
the drain, and through the old stone drains of time to time received, like that which has lately 
insinuated the point of one r days offer reached us from Erzeroo s quantities 
inserted, the point length- some security from the falling from the skies in the course of the night, 
and lengthened and Mriged over evil. No doubt they would, if nap Ba were of such a/ though no one has eir descent. It 

last the interior of the diameter that the inside could out like a is certainly possible that some of the heavy storm 
y filled by an wai hg ey vi 2 sewer; but we have, within 80 3 of where we which traverse the e which it is 
st eac are now writing, an example of a 3 feet culvert about | evidently extremely abundant, might neo up a 
ns 1 perfect mould of 50y ong, passing P ies, which has qu — course, and trans usport it to Persia 

were in-| become so obstructed by roots that it is every year Armenia. TE 
1 Toe. observes ing more In point of fact, 
no subterranean water-courses 


612 


end of the 18th century, described and figured that 
form or variety which is continuous or orm 
within and contains the greate 


test paei of nutri- howe 
t 


ment, under the name of Lichen esculentus 


Lichen (or Lecanora) esculen 


RANUS, many years afterwards ie 15) 3 in 
the Berlin Magazin ne specimens approaching t 
enian plant, of a more ge elatin ous seo aa 


Eo 78 Cr 
wee’ = 
2 
Tat fan 
23 
t 


Lichen (or Lecanora) affinis, s 
Parrot brought specimens collected in the beginning | į 


of 1828, which were said to have descended fr 


GÖBEL 


the pla 
the potae frequently in the 
Asia, had seen ar 


Paia it 


duce and 
is observable that in all ounts, the supposed 
0 is dee en hi during rai ny ather 

Eversmann had an opportunity of studying the 
species o on a the rivers mei — , and also near 
Lake Aral, was convi that, even in the 
ig there is not the thatthe | 


us production in question is eaten both 
in the several 


THE 


om the | p 
tricts of Persia, and to have covered | 


| are 8 various heh icone to theu 


ru to 
them range Kia 2 k 3 1 called “half standards and 
los the ground, 2 5 


een po- ro 


d 
of a strong top mS make a slit 
f rancha an 2 Tong, through ar 
hard wood ; 


GARDENERS’ 


Grape has been obtained from Paris by the Horti- 
cultural Society, and will be exhibited at the meeting 
next. 


wi 


PROPAGATING 
THE a of Roses involves aay nic 
tions; we ma as many as any plant or feet in 
3 The — comprise layering, budding, grafting, 
ucke = = or ipa cuttings ; and these operations in 


opera- 


— s = rapid way of saa dee plants, 
any p as there 


ches, therefore it is ge ay practised 
with those kinds which not scarce, and ich 
are wanted for use the next —the Moss Rose 


mar h 
n | generally we ore a strong bushy 
mly and rather deep, all the branches 
i easur i 


ed hrough, and carefully ben 
that part of the branch to the earth, whic e re- 
hd with a birch twig or a hook of 


ant Nr, 0 50 many 
ed “er the n 


xt year 
n, and ths value of it is 


base of every le a 
> — cg 8 sto 
common hedge B 


oa fee tee or standard 
en we have 


be put to. * 2 best a 


Roses; thes 


others are wI hort, cut elo 
. se stocks are Si a e as the 
ay from 1 to - feet distance in the 


the main stem and up the 


the bark, but 15 into the nother 


slit 
the thin 


CHRONICLE, 


a tre 
A GLANCE AT THE DIFFERENT MODES OF 
ROSES. 


e 
tion to bag 


ocks same as 
to ti 


act 
s 2 makes it appear 
e 


the sake of the additional strength 


adaptation of a well seasoned, robust stock. produced by the 


7 TING is N common oe hil 

sionally resorted to in the spri 18 Oce. 

u £ and the grafts are Bi vi, Roses az 
culty in grafting t © 38 Dorm 
es, for th pa = thea 18 in 


EFS 


of these grafts 
cutting an angular slit 
so that two sides of 


ita 
ieee 
E 
8542 


ogether, ne 
remarked that, in af operations 
c 


E 


H 


ong Roses, a be appropriated 
easily; you merely cut a pas 1 paro root 
plain side to the graft, bind them together 


fr 
mid-day su e smooth-barked kinds should be 
a in under glasses, if taken in spring, but if put in ba 
roun the autumn, th such precau 
The ses A kinds should eo a dozen 
more, in a 4-inch size, and a eee number in par 
nereased size in use; these should be 
fra m drying 


put into a a ame, to keep them from 


,| winds and fro 


The iyering = ~~ produce Roses on their 
own bottoms, that ie, Roses whose roots are the 


the main yr 
c 


eans of 8 
ery pia 5 directly the y appear above 
e grafted or padded are upon 


ase 0 
peeta 7 
the actual 


game man- 
raised by eyes in the same 
a „ but nothing is obtain ained by i that 
ie more easily attained by other 1 e 
uarter 


rg tga 


bed till they are up, ey ma 


graduall : 
and wh in a poe ees 


en large enough potted off one 


n i tries extend- ife, li 
ing from Algiers to Tartary, ne it is 3 e 3 e, and i = Aer > a 
The sheep, however, whi u it i i o tne Nose you intend to propa, and select ANCE" 
ae 5 15 eee, ee the bud you mean to use; e off a piece with the BRITISH 1 FoR THE ADY 
not thrive, in eee ence, 1t 1s sup „of "i i NGA i 
large of oxalate of lime whie 11 leaf on it, by entering the knife a quarter of an inch NT OF SCIE was beld this 
amounti 1 o GésEL’s 1 to nearly 3 mi nee stp ape d ona i? god Serge bt meeting ot i Ao foer ot hed 
66 | > It, e sharp point of the knife pick out year at ‘Bir * u f members by * 
“ae dual plants h f fi t pee of wood that y aved o the | ciation expected a e 4 
vi plants weigh from a few grains to bark, and leave the bark only; slide this into the slit | e once more M the seats 0 ie doomed $ 
seraples or upwards, even when dry, and when | you have made in the stock till the bud is at the e and commercial wealth, they report of whe 
swollen moisture nearly twic uch. Parras | and by cutting off the part above the bud, the bud with te disappointed. “The r is the re 
mentions another Lichen which is eaten by the | the leaf attached to it fits down close to the wood of the | number of p sin 
Kirghiz ars er the nam Earth-bread. | stock, and t bark of th ck covers it ia complete; Old Like fe 7 . 4 
This, however, hes a very peers! habit, covering it is then bound * e h a oe f matting or coarse New colt * 
8 of the steppes with a whitish grey crust worsted, and then ou may bud only or ow hel al Membere — 
and breaking into man 8 lines the anil e the 5858 $ generally 11 the branches come opposite ppi e E 10 
dry. It appears to bee eaten only in cases of 8 e ee buds e, Feu 
85 ; > A mitted, except he — te on which the buds are bert rc 112 
mecessity, and is constantly accompanied by z p ~ "nat the 
5 commo 4 laced, and ev re shortened, enough grow Making a total o d 5 seen tat 
i being main draw the sa d. Ina ro report, however, . Alber 
The internal structure varies ra A in in the | few weeks — ties m ta the bud is numbe i ; isi 
whai enta, EVERSMANN, | found com etely united ; the ret of of pas ie goa . 


„Ev., aah i is 


33 wich few, if any, free thr 


Ws understan d that a supply of the finest ible 
: -specimens of the CmassELAS DE FONTAINEBL — 


form 
the 8 substance is 
eads. nee 


require n e n —.— e 
amination to see that the stocks do no K om out ot! ther 
branches, and e the ee rs that the buds re- 
quire. This operation is pe in all nurseries to 
a great extent, os esi — — or tree Ries 
r by means. ses be budded 
ou China Rose stocks, and on any other rank growing 
varieties ; but the Briar is the general favourite. 


1 is per e close to the 


tho plants an ee went dwari, but it is done chiefly for | 


39—1849. 


de deposits of these rivers and th ose of the 3 
fos ertain the presence Z fluori ne by sau a 
resetion of this su bstan n glass 


found ere 
present in in Mr. Midd leton, before ae’ came 
to the 2 that fluorine m prese se 

curred, as had ascertained, in 


water, ce it oc 

1 of marine ‘mollusea. Silliman 
» Bon a gg en. of Middleton's views, drew the 
same inference invariable pres the cal- 


with . of lime, that it Berd be expected to occur | of 


in the bones of all area ma and terrestrial. 
a found fi „ likewias in kelp f 
Shetlands, but much less d distin netly than he anticipated. 
Glass plates were only co marks 
when breathed upon. 


d grown close to 


plant. ac 
too much, the author thinks, 
now take its place ndior 8 


nowledged 
e has e 


ere “a at length 


this element, and into other details connecte 

ina paper in the “ Se ces om of the 7 Society of 
h,” vol. „ par and in 

tion made to the Association at its Se meet- 

ay certainly be added to 


Specimens of etched glass 
illustration of this Dni ORSCHAMMER 
confirm: ults of Dr. He had ex- 

and 3 
e had also examined m 
sal and marine 8 from various localities, an 
— gave me *. kad 25 * * A 
was 


amined sea water from near Copen nhagen, 


2 


ina 
of ‘whith 
—Mr. 


0 be 3 
ONTHE ODOURS OF PLANTS, 5 5 THE MODES 
OF OBTAINING T 
OR Sweet BRIAR, ea os what 
the poet Robert Noyes says, 


fragrance yields, 
urpassing Citron li or spicy fields,” 
does è find a place in the perfumer’s vocabulary N e 
in name. This, like many other sweet-scen a ts, 
does not repay the labour of collecting its odour; the 
— Sa lant is destroyed more oe less 
7 treatment ge it: is put to, a and hence it is 
jele 


upon them by 

1 pint each, or, we might say, 555 
ees, e ‘de measure 11 spirituous essence o 

mon Grass, 

P.: 


bis we know is 
sold at many f ‘he — 


ambucus 9 —This 88 may be 
rocesses before 


resorted t to by sous 
had eee Adele W Tü Bow 
of 


Fol 15 cribed, none 


socalled ‘* Milk of Elder- 


THE GARDENERS’ 


junior, | w 


The | chie 
m the 
odoro 


in Paris, and gives great | are 


boiling of water, the pot 


m, obtain half 


this in your macerating Pt and place 
4 position near the fire of the 
t it will keep hot; into the fat 


cho 
spirit) wil yield, if left to digest fora 
ul pe atone for 


therefore absorbs it b 
he second 3 the spiri 
the fra 


ex . — 
aried with 


thos 


my lord and my lady 


s 
waste their orl in the de 
vies might t seo lly be preserved in 
suggest! 
inclined to 
deterred 5 sayin 


as we 
bered 


r of Heliotrope resembles a 
Almonds and Mineo ane is Brite imitated 


rgri 
Essential oil of E re 2 4 or 
A mnes of this at under the na 
trait de trope,” is t 
the shops of Paris and Peer 
i mee eon orn Woops 
“ Copio * —— the 
rel 5 her sickly looks 


What t 


theless it is a flower that is 


i io 
each of extract of Rose, Viol 


perky 5 deeds of essence 


55 Luxuriant above all. 


Th 


are away from — how many flowers in the e 
. | vatory are 
n 


that m eia of our reade 


et, and Tuberose, } pint o 
ract of Vanilla and Tolu, 1 10 drops of oil of Neroli, 
onds. 


CHRONICLE. 


a pound ‘a fine 


linen ; 


put 
it in such 


greenhouse or 8 


Sree 


— rw being ie into a wide-mouthed bottle 
d be eas 
ew days,“ Extract 


with proof 


the handker- 


owers, and i 
contact and become es itself | 


t has a m 


rance than the at 


erfum 


. here 
any flowers 


deed by having the vessel for 
which 
xcellent “ millefleur” 
ce might ne: produced ge ev 
d 


we have 
pommade 
conser- 


c 


many other luxuries he lays 


of the kewa 
ser- 


o blush unseen, 
sert air,” 


the w. 


m 
nt. that fine essences for the handkerchief are wort n 
Fast thought 35 had detected i Wins in many per p per * t, and the best scented pommades fetch 248. 
p 


mixture of x 


thus— 
-4 


5 are ops. 


F 
ame of “ Ex- 
aged is generally found in 


‘Woodbiee, pale and wan, 


he poet 8 = * is * true, never - 
ctical per- 2 


ad flower is one of ‘the most vised 


fam 
arts * ly to grease and spirit; it i 
— volatile, ren therefi fore flies 


of the operations ie r proc 
i isthat which we spoke | w 


by the per- 
im - 
se 


and suet, then melted sie beaten up with 
— as as — Mah, ane of. grantar halal Ae 


terial b being — 
| capable o of holding, 25 - Ib. of fat ; ; at the season when | 
| your 
mutton suet, ady 4 3 2 fine 


kept 
mo 


ceous plants 
e 


18 
24 hours the 


613 


7 nae by the hairdressers under the name of 
ine —— the Ae -i = a 


— 
The ‘ — of ppe 


f 
bouquets, especially those 
The oil of 7 impregnated as above, is sold under the 
Huile Antique au Jasmin“ —0 
used for 


calling the p 
This di 


ee year. 
cording to its more or less deliea 


cture, 
natives of hot climates, are ost subject to it; 
a and tbe 


the P 
verifying the observations of Roger Chabot, who writes 
that this dis is so contagious that a healthy tree 
coming in e contact og another attacked by this meunier 
catches the infec 
Conside 3 derived from the localities and cir- 
cumstances 1 in w 


a subtrac 
i pd eo ga it from properly dis- 
I believe that at the 


h substance, w 
is extremely in peig to the vital vga tad of the piant- 
that the right te 


matter ge is pro a p 

| 2 93 affect the whole machine, and 
=. ~ £ vege being disturbed, the 

2 must st perish at 
I have obse 3 l. n 


. ova bour. 
ks of manon fish- n ponde, sa 
er, the 


7 

as I have observed, when the disease 

dividual recovers its former vigour 

When, “yea r,a portion only ‘of the individual is 
in see and — remedy to prune — 
down to = sound part. The ground must then 
well wor aed around, * ‘moderately we watered. This 
with herbaceous 


iad; to 


perir is fixed of stone or very hard 
Every 


it open; iri then covered with some rag. 
wood is examined, a 


of 3 on 
sap, More or less „„ 
ee een wih be th ike wedge re 


THE 


614 

is 5 of vsa d, which I — — 1 1 require fre- 
quent renewing. Tais sign s for a 

fortnight or 458 — til the —4 5 —+ ntirely 
nearly ceased to exude any matter. In this manner 
the plant discharges i its superfluous humours, and re- 
covers its vigour. 55 bave detailed the met ethod for two 
reasons; first, 
= her diseases as ‘for instance 
here plants 
huso ours, and are wea kened for mt of proper trans- 
piration ; and b because this —— cautery 
rets of cultivators in imes, 
of bee r of vegetation to 
ay be n Pliny’s “ His- 


gum, or in any e 

2s otie of the 
to cause trees 
the co 


njury done; run no ri 
will be able ile Lune to judge 
ly o the ot 
tation. 3 ar 
solely direeted to the 2 * — sad eren bas 
which follow the sy The a uci can only 
be prevented in so ay rare cases w he humi- 
dity or mists — may be the cause of the albugo can 
be. away. 
But olen at the whole amy $ in the proper light, it 
hould be ascertained whether bad cultiv 1 may 
in some remote degree at least, have 8 
ment disease ate ‘af i, ip or 
influence, the 


to ise 


ng to be done. 
course api ‘but to or Marira 
work for herself, aing ee with cutting away 
those branches absolut 1 des 3 
necessary in the f 
it trees. I can never Fepaki too 9 
mania of pruning fruit trees in our country is 
umbers of them. 


VILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENING. 
Nearness should i 


re ther they e 
Box, Thrift, or Daisies, they should be well kept. By 
this ex, n I mean that they sh rong unbroken 
and of equal width and height for however otherwise 
well kept unless — 5 ngs of ya 


to 87 ew wn Grass edgings, 
laid down it shou 


edging iron 


it should never be than 
for this height is sufficient for all the purposes of 
an edging, and when not higher than this look 
neat and tidy, particularly in 1 dens. Over- 
grown ed i y kind are eviden - 
ing; besides they harbour slugs and other vermin. 
am acquainted an who this summer 
pe tes annuals ed by slugs in one night. The 
w wept i d no wonder, 
fis box edging was a foot thigh and swarming with slugs, 
His and Cauliflow ed as soon as th 


pi 


were put out. Now, one of. best cures for slugs 
and other vermin is to offer house ; and 
as edges of 1 are them but little aceommo- 


aud high keeping of the ere let me urgently insist 
upon this apparently trivial yet important matter 
garden detail being attended to. Pharo. 


i „Home Co rresponde ence 


are suffering st a a repletion of — shu 


e | bloom would se 


i Gl 
trip ; doy are sufferin ngm 
of 


in 
e as 
= roots will have time to catch hold of = soil before 1 : 
is 


Id be 
A line should then be stretched months. 


e 
protected Trellises.—] left home 3 the | i 
and 


GARDENERS’ 


the fruit * PAE but progas aer bar glass, the frost 


ayps through the and nearly all the 
d thi 


bra I 
9 — outside the glass au 
and 1 ch s 


I shall this 
e roots were 
prua ed fro xig rains, ow ing toa a mistake, the gutter 
the ak sccm f the lights was not put up, and the 
5 during the whole early — were sodden with 
wet, as = the rain Ang from the whole surface g? vo 
ights r n dow e border in which the t 
were 15 and ee this was well drained, Ba 
[ saw the sodden state of the border, I did not think the 
B. Ker, Cheshunt, Sept. 20. [The 
1 of this fruit was perfect. 
saw nothing new amongst plants 
uch Eob scorching 137 ‘on 
glass, and as the glass ra are cutting up sheet, and 
mixing it with small crown squares, the yrs chief is 
ba . a and w ide, 
mexicana.—In the description of this plant 8 
3,1 have stated that 


year pu 


is is re the case a 
rio deeay of the per er pa N in 
* 3 * s of the o development tof the flower, the 
pistil is 2 the perianth; in the latter er it 
becomes len ethene, and. a equals the much exse: 
d then perishing stam omas Moore. 
Drified W. me 2 Climate of the West of Ireland.— 
I enclose a pice a trunk of a tree, 1 washed on 
shore here. Iti is 23 feet long, ns from 10 to 8 inches 
in diameter. yér 1 e kindness to tell me 
what wood it is, and whether ‘tik is one which is imported, 
and likely daar to have been 
or if not, 
absence of m 
sp 


4 


during the | ars, 
ometer in an e ae od: yrs wad — never 
28° Fahr., 


z 


register therm 
— lower than 


Bewicke Blackburn, Island 4 1 
w in question is that o e Pal 
tree, and possibly of the Cocoa-· nut ro Tt i is never 

imported, and therefore th 


ithe 


Som 
s answer the 
eas taken up 


is the best time for pruning it! 4 8 


oes raised from New Zealand seed distributed 

by ‘te I Horticultural Laps ty last arius —The seed 

sown as soon as ived (Apri 

an, in light pos N uit te in a 
eat. As soon as the young p * 

were shifted * one place 


ntle 


CHRONICLE. 


rted, 1 erop therefore must pie bee 
tore 


y “ waive the irr 


| In this 
c tances) m 
hiim fungi till it be ee R ita alt — 


manner, the 

made to 

end stated, the past re ae spread ‘ 
thin on a flat surface, as ites 

fangi, and their origin or poin ema which eis 
2 


will 2 be seen nagy A oe E 
—Early sen 14 


arrows’ oust 
collected, the remaining 5 $ 5 el 
haulm, and treading the soil firmly 
allowed to remain until wi el 
result of mere re tment = tubers 
have increa i 
" be ory of Horan” ” states that “ tubers came 
oe tity of se creted matter, se- 


aims 
that “he ey at are magazines in which plants store up th the 
nutritive matter collected from the leaves” This 
en fed and 
n the erni itive matter’ i 
the first crop, which © 
leaves vere et C. E. Wells, Gardener, High 
nam Court. 

“ The Chepstow Show.”—Will Mr. 
assert that the e i 

00 


ul venture to 


f 
S 
. 


the cup was oati gran onw 
Sau 


Unles y therefore, that his — 
w. 


;| [The judges mak not to havo W 
irregularity.” 


ess they are 

have gg: ra "a 
dressed t m by the hon. 8 of the 
one Society, from which we take the following 


aR Walch hough both Messrs. Garraway and Co. and yourselves 
were disqualifies by ua censors from . the 88 

the September $ e Chepstow orticultural au, 
tie best stand of 24 clusters of "Roses, we 9 att toe 
h lot e ning more 


ess s snra they did r — — coll 
the 


. 45 
copy 
“Both * disqualified, having m 
bun —one bunch i in each Phage only. 
The gentlemen in whose 


was but. 
l 17), in a shallow | $ 


reason 
— desire me to — ia that my have no 

cate conduct in aw tne ay cup ou, after 2 oe 
marks of the ce nso’ and dt trust ity ‘letter is pa 
explanatory to sonnected 
of any unfairness on the part of any gentleman - 


our 
We o have also received a letter on the subject, from 


ar 
2 heigo by others, 
your r of the 22d inst., 


tinguishin 


Pink ey A disti 
are “al ‘shallow. -eyed mY 
of the roo 


Chronicle for 1848, that fungi are formed 
tion and modification tissue of a plant 


pa 
struc that of p 


l surface, its and 
8 by the aid of a com- 

e to | China 
the fungi, viewed by trans 
structure will be foun 


microscope 


includ 
stated in the pay saan 


7 EAE T T ae e a 8 


sn) STIER" 


ed! 


l m all, in their cuiture as aai yr in their 
— to special purposes, appears e to be|* 
tead of advancing the cen & 

if I understand the 


1 


y 


ery purp 
BoF, bo 


1 nel When 1 ny Alain, 1 "thas wok b 
2 imp! that the line of separation is 
daily — on — grog A the various classes, to 
gst a com rase, “run into each other,” or, in 
words, crossing, to obtain ieti inti. 

a 


to w 
found sufficient for all practical purposes. 
some knowledge of Ros 
w 
in, Nr t 


or 8 
; 


warfs, 


ix, ` 
725 7 Plan FB „ Lee eeping.— A gentleman of the 
name of 33 exhibited at the * meeting 
held in ingham, three glass hives of quite 
. the weigh it of which was 50lbs. All 
rom — no upon — plan, poy gape 
— yaer erstood him Be in three weeks, 
Lloyd, ee e Ona 
t Fu wo now upon my law 
bed of the — — Napoleon — another of serPativolia, 
of both of which I s 


0 feet, 
pped pe ey would 

high. Thes e also in 
. G. [Beautiful — — ery 


8 Rot. * Clericus ” is an ipea landlord, 
pwer that particular spots 
ot 


Fu 
ave e a height 
had not been sto 


. Every year’s F agen verifies this notion. 
7 That is the rule, as we have repeatedly 


a ts’ Nests.—A notion prevails, but it is a mis- 
one, that hornets never live underground, like 
eee, Poy have oo foun = 7 4 in such 
as only in wee Pe 


1 cav 9 


of a shed, or 
» but most of all a ho tte: 


SSS 
a 1 


mongst hornets instead of eggs or 

have this curious double nest, which first 

r smal except 

ii how, the golden-crested wren. * 
is a t destroyer of insects, it 


ss a» 2 


= 


ad 


aff 


8 are a complete failure, very small 
quality, the * all died * six weeks 
Wheat harves —.— 


E 
A 


277 


rel 
8 


7 


25 


h, 30. 300; 18th, 30. 
t want of * 
Hilders, 4, t 


2 


llowing experiment 
rows of York we 
week to cit they a 

hen the first ere ay dise ap- 
i til the 18th, prep Sn h 


THE GARDENERS 


e queens 
rear their offspring | o 


combat against so powerful an mapi — 


— * — aiseased, 72 ibe. — and 1 ibs, diseased, and 594 lbs. 
and 6 Ibs, diseased tubers, I would also state that my 
‘otatoes were all planted in March, add were — t 
ripening TR the disease — p August they w 
rie ays a ug up, and produ 


ue 
J. Canham, Summe 1 


r Hill, 
fereabonts get ne Potatoes show all —. diterenee 8 be . ex- 


CHRONICLE. 


rg sound crop. | 


Echite PA Era Uetodendton —— and omg 
— grandiflorus. Nine Stove or Greenhouse Plants, 
Nu — — Class: dere was but one competitor, Ar. New- 
— S =i prize for Allamanda 

a denticulata, Clerodendron fallax 


man, who w. 


— 
= Sis 


rience, betw 
contrast is — iet 


expe! 
n, the 


ize to Mr, 
Cornw. all, 5 2 a Rubens 


| digging 7 Ti — Tist reo 7 though others pas yo 
ill f t 


oth cade ê wood,” this is e aren watever 
* s be Pot beats in store, that e is the 

widest diference — the botatoes, as turned up ‘ou season 
and the I venture to add d be 
2 * 


years of ewes failure ? ? 
as I càn testify ; and indeed, for several years, pd —.— neither | 
seen peo a price nor suc otatoes as are rsal, 
Last week, the . pei of the neighbourhood took 
tiets at enbury, an h Pot 3 as the cottagers exhibited 

were really enviable, — now — e to be found, last year, 
i eais the sty? Aa I — “exhibited Potatoes (Pink 
n on aise ed ridges, fot better drainage, which 


Ofe ourse, a fine dry summer afforded little or 
est of the advantage of Pager — p 3 1 the com- 
pedenn e want of luxi urian ulm whi ieh as very 


$ ok 


and 

Mr, Hall, gr to the Earl of Ma reh, ö for Duke 
wall, 2 Corallina, Dr. Te ephson, Rubens, and E 
| 6 Roses ñ pots: Ist prize to Mr. Evans, =. B. F nd, 
Esq., dy Bourbons : Barei, De la Ma Imaiso , Atidalie, and 

Comte d'Eu; Tea: be Pactole 13 Elise Sauvage ; and China : 
Archduke a s. The bes oap; Exotic Orchid: lst 
prize to Mr. White, gr. t 0 8. n, Esq, Tt È Acihè ta Bära 
| kerii ; 8 the 24 prize for a ring pe Bi Sig not an Orchid, 
. sen 1 the Ist being awarded to Mr. N 

* nea. 6 Petunias in pots: lst — eg o Mr. Evans, for 

Elegantissima, — — 3 Sengdapled, Beauté 
parfait, 4 ata; 4 —— B=. for Nino, Gem, Blockii, 

randiflora a — ‘ing * Tnunberziflo 
6 —— in pots: ist aise x Mr. Evan, for Princess A 
Skinneri, Gem of the West, Ibraham ote and Shy 
2d, to Mr. Hall, for Defiance, s of Richmond, Bense 
Taglioni, Louis-Philippe, 6 scarlet 
for Lady Cs 5 pots: Ist pri 
for Lad rolina, Tom That 
Dewey) Felipoe, an erpetual Queen; 2 

mith's M N Compactum, Dalan — Perpetual Queen. 

H Eric ots: to Mr. M‘Ewen, for aE Are 


ab the vide indicate 


hic 3 in wet seasons, Weald be the great 
ht m 


in po 
Bland — verticillata, vestita fi Ipi 
Fruit: : best Black man aica Pine-apple, who also 


dbeider 

to bro — be 

ot ag Tg A established), is 
th ning ee dated Se “Bist, where a 

8 8 


that after a fall of r ain 


Sotieti les. 


RAL OF IRELAND. — We find in 


> 


to the repor mpet 

follows : Plants and flowers, 83 ; traits, 2153 eee 

181. e day’s proceedings are stated to have ended 

with a row, of which the following — is 
ri arme azeite: “It is 


of 
stating that the value of the 
over * S was given that eac 
e his fruit, at half-past 


places, very busy i crimmage, or grus 
a better 

ming a a very Jar 

wiih paz fru 


is 
Beet, &c. On the whole, the scene was of 


most disgraceful character.” 


— — — 
Country Poa 

CHICHESTER HORTICULTURAL, Sept. 13.—Having on form 
occasions visited the exhibitions of this Solely it is gratifyin 
dening skill bestowe ed o 


* it 3 chat! it hed: Ery be termed a miniature London 
3 is held forth 
sent occasion, gave 

e advantages 
veginabies, and 
ly feeling oman 
not only in the highest 3 


nd commendable 
by this Soames to cottagers, who, on the 

mple evidences of the due appreciation of tb 
porde then for their ex eo we of frui 
ere beyond all he 
I grades of soci 


Grea 


say gion? ust, and 3 does, 
N 
gat cottage gardeners 


>en eA OF 
= 
S 
52 
ye 
8 
a? 
op 
a5 
277 
i 722 8 
HE 
px 
5 Š 
AE 
2 
i 
ss 
135 


Clerodendron squamatum, Gesnera zebrina, anet 

folia, Strelitzia regina, Torenia asi 

1 gii a E Chi oen i 
d Cuphea platy cen 

P. ee ek, Shen, for St igmephyllon aristatum 


reflex Clerodendron splendens, Con 
and 1 fle: ix 
for Justicia carnea, 


ruit at this r 
h exhibitor 
5, but 


is proposed 
the t — in beds 3 feet wide, with 


8 2 call ity rizi a noted character, = ur. 
have 


ng 
m the stove a 


to Mr. 


— io 03 bein erwar 
ove Plante Ist eee thea te sais 
ultia formosa, ual di 


yr 
v: 8 Fa 
7. 20 ee to Mr. Kent, Goodwood, 


n, but the rules not ‘allowing him to re- 
w 


| ceive two pri to Mr. 


d P 
distributed — — — — exhibitors 
& cae * 5 


GRE A BIRMNGBAM.— The sweep- 
stakes c of 100 1 rig 70558 by five exhibitors, was T 
by the pireng 1 ue 4 * stands, and 
awarded t T, of voy gh, who also a the £ fret Bt. 
prize for p erg 
— . the chief 88 Howard Burnham 
s. But the seedlings were the chief attraction — oi 
the fires clase were awarded to Mr. Keynes for Sir F. Bathurst, 
* and Snow “Anite > to Mr, — for Lady 9 
Proc * Elisabeth ; and to Mr. Turner for 
Se jack, wo for a acalled Mrs. Mills. 
prizes to 
— — ‘day oe were some 5 —— produced by 
rs Curtis and Co., of Bristol. Birmingham, Sept. 27. 


Veviews. 
Observations an the ea: of Stra wherries, Melons, 
uits ; also an improved 8 for the 

of 


other 
Cultivation 5 ioe ey by means q w Inven- 
* John Roberts, — 


Second-cliss 


HE above is ‘the son of a pamphlet 9 forth the 
u from in f various 


Ta 

advantages likely to result 

searthenware artes which — rand — — manu- 
and registere of these is his “ Horti- 
hese tiles 


—— = two oblong pieces. space 
of the side of cash, — that when the two are 


and 
fe sep elean and is lesa abl 
he contrivance is good, and 
teurs and others, care- 


10 


me ex in the pamphlet 
avin ube alleys 18 inches wide 
in bed, 


and the sa 
us 


fill up 
or ran old litter, to „ te ee i inchea 
well and firmly, then 


616 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


[Sepr. 


evening tul the middle ot June, choosiug fine warm 
weather for the final removal ; when that is fixed, then 
ace of the vonke 
pea tiles, peggin ier lants as 
of th e — rss the glass is finally removed | 
as they will 
occa 


e 
E= 


directions, you peck have . best flavoured Melons or 
Cucumbers that 

The above ney may aka in warm situations, in 
warm summers, and with some of the small, hardiest | 
sorts of Melons. 

The ee next treats of the culture of pees = by | 
arthenware crag formed like two longi- 
tudinal N = a cylinder, so as to inclose 1 plant. 


These 3 re of diferent ‘lengths, and seem well 
eserving o t present give any 
opinion on ibe. ‘Grape tile. Tis effects require to be 
tested by experime 
Calendar of Operations. 
For se ensuing wee nih 
DEPARTME 


WaHe ung 1 — are used for Ving pits of any 
eee e should be t to secu 
which e 


renewa 
e labour expended in this would soon 
y the triflin te outlay, naes would not only protect 

the heating material, but w prev 
the heat, and do away with that farm-yard like appear- 
INERIES.— 


S 
00 


th n a yg ng 8 
be taken to prevent them receiving any c 
the heat is supplied b; y dung lini ings &e., this will jade in 
2 attention. wants of the 
water; avoid er Neer and 
ne we with ‘elas 
must 


ance as considerable 10 50 will be 
ring very dull weather. 


B, 


These flower at the same time, and may also be re- 
ed * reserve garden i 
Many of the 
dormant preg and if ed to remove them to 
| other than ged present situations, or if it is desired to 
increase pein ock by division, this is an excellent time 
efect has Geste, as ey will commence rooting 


t k , ob 


te 
paaris and will have time 5 establish themselves 
before the ground is locked up with frost 


KITCH ARDEN 
Proceed with the gota of Celer ry, and commence 
with Cardoons. For the latter plant, sand or fine - 
| ashes is dec cidedly caging to haybands in immediat 
contact with the s and may be managed bya — 
nde up 


contrivance commended for earthing 
Celery. T nds unavoidably absorb moisture 
from the srt ey soil, and are thereby decomposed 
and form a harbour for insects, and a natural conductor 
e object should 


by which the 3 is admitted, where the 
y 


ould 
ere iff e chicane sg such a ture 
will ameliorate the texture of the besides te 
more suitable for the preservation of the crop. 
either case do — allow 3 uter leave es to be sedge 
as bre ey are much hardie n of their 
osure, and form a dairy guard 
leaves within, Where soil is used, let 
as possible, = made ra with 
is placed r 
still remain 
delay, 


und the plant. 22 s of Potat 
158 . the ground should be got 90 7 
Wr e sorted. and s lightly sprinked with 
d by charring or 8 

; a good plan to ensure perfect 8 i 

ary crevices between them with dry ch cal dust, 
aye any — 3 rom the 
Pota The s trongest of the young Gculiflowere 
should. 85 ee out about 4 inches apart, in pesas of 
such sizes as will suit the handlights by pah th 
to be paaa e the winter. The ground oni 

by ng t 


te of thorough repair, and 
brought to ma th in order that they may be ready at 
a iiaeie 


ed, or they will 
e liab! 5 State of the Weather near London, for the week ending Sept. 27, 1849, 
b ab e The e of proceedings should as observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chitwick. G 
be similar to that eee d for the early Peach- 
houses. ld, loose h bark should e rubbed| Sept. snil en ee Wind. || Rain. 
off, and the whole of the plants washed over with sul- Sat — || Max. Min. Mean 
phur and soft soap. glass should be cleaned, and | Friday.. — = PP ed | abe 56.5 || NE. 02 
. : pi $ 2 30.082 30.05 58. 5 
all the interior of the house painted ; eve ution | Sunday. 2 6 || 20.915 | 2007 % „ | eso ll E 42 
ld be taken to smother effectually insect life in Monday % || 29.s»» . 6s | 570 sw. 00 
y stage. The old worn-out soil should oved | Wed. . % ~ 9 || 2943 | 20.207 || Oy | 3 | moll Eo 0 
m the surface border, and replaced by a rich | , 10 |) 29763 | 29.728 || 76 | 51 | 60.5 || £- || oy 
compost, containing a ion of roug bone t. | Average... 29,925 | 29,892 1 66.2 48.0 0 | 67.1. 0.27 
C. ES.— The d Cherries will now be losing their | t. 2!—Showery; five; very dry air; slightly clouded 
leaves, and should, with the house the occupy, be itl” Spied kiedi dake 7 
treate: ctly as recommended for the earl Te eon. very fue; birar st night t 
— — ; o vercast. 
P some ba 8. U — 3 — = clea ae : 
be free] su lied with ame bine; rether windy ne; rain at 
can ie z > e a of p Sires! 2 heat, rature of the week, 1 deg. dion 8 n 
they 8 Fa little further value; and, as the fruit Stat Weather at C 8 i wate) years, for the 
ripens, ey may nipat mt ensuing week, ending Oct. 6, 1849, 
various plants during winter. e, howev 
L A § er, a er, of be |gs No. Prevailing Winds, 
those growing in pits which are furnished with the| Sept. cae | fee H 2280 Aenne, 
py ergs 2 es for keeping up the requisite amount nd Oer. AS | 56 | FS | Rained | of Rain. 
of heat. e ha use, from whic first se F 
fruit was eut in the first week of May, and which bas ff z $2 , , mo | pasm ; 
continued bearing in uninterrupted 8 „ a oss 5 
$ and will do o La Ri e ed. 3f 62.7 | 45.0 | 53.8 12 01 7 
since, a long time to co + a ab ig as ae 0.36 a 
Friday 3 ; 2, 8 057 5 
LOWER GARDEN Satur. 6| 620 43.852.911 073 R 
flow wer ee. po lants ts in The highest te temperature duing t the above pe period occurred on the 5 h 
ahi ich bet ‘inte eas sac P cua oe 3 - therm. 80 deg.; aud the lowest on 3d, 1336; Sth, 1826, oe and 6th, 
g win Many o a tenderer kinds must of orice . 
immediately, and if the tempo es to Correspon 
. 5 . z 4 
atter of great importance, it 2 ons 3 5 — n ve our seed bas been gathered n 
: le at once, as it will] or it has been buried too p when sown, For heaven’ ’s 
time to establish themselves before winter. E sake change 5 
de en up, pruned to withi rene ne 0. The number of Pansies, c., to be shown 
k , and no other number 
y y ey —2 2 > ones: Ru or less —— „de permitted. Neither five nor seven are six, 
o water shou n so good as to send a 
given to them till they have comm to form new ketch te 10 is in a essential respect different from the common 


pap Brine 
strike root easily, and 


in pots during 


8 fle ulbs, and ' 

for them should bei d 

by making ie it — zich. iately cleaned and 
flourish most 


English digging fo for k. except t th atit has fou 


purposes Lip forks “are much bet 
should ns 
Grass: ishop: 
— — ” sheet of Hartle; ey’s patent rough plate” pien 
whicn shows that much improvement has taken place in 
5 of this article. 
: 8 D. Are 


Gra ot the roots of your Vines too deep ? 
€ —— causes Grapes to shank, : N. 
UR Hesperus. You 2 them well by 


La 
£ 
1 
i 


manure, for a all th 
better wi 


„80 as to exc! ade birds, 


vigour begins to dec! 

IMPLEMENTS : SA Sucre, We Neur the expense of 
5 — 2 253 e piane dene 
genious machine much cheaper and better than you can 


1 
have it made. — a 
as well add, that it shee Woe — improved 1a . 
ciali y in the rote ante to by us. As 
ultural pu ses; 
very of Purposes: 


ols, 


va 
s skin of which you shave mistaken 
accompanying wood engraving. The e red mite (T 


mploy children to kill 
3 cockehaffers ey oh The insects the 
= ; e Pear leaves are the 8 te ire grubs tiene 
elanaria æthiops. Powder the leaves with j 
them with 2 pon ter. W. pereg 
Law not, as we have repeatedly stated, answer 
Prey consult your attorney. ; 
r Melon was about as worthless as anywe 


1 or PLANTS: Beaumaris. Gaillardia picta—A Young Be. 
inner. Per gulari „ arming with mealy bug, 
itis produced by 5 2% is, and can 
be removed by cu y down the plant to the old 
burning all that is poe off, nal then ar ve 
destroying with a coarse ‘brush aud water er 

afterwards appears. — D H. Cheilanthes tenuifolia i 
Ford 2 maxillare.—B @ a at nr a 
S S. 1. Coronilia Emerus; 2. Eryth —6. 
Oncidium 8 


b 


legal questions. 
MEL JC. You 


baie cp. Lek Se Rena Peete a aber 


may ebm i with you privately. 
Pinellianum — W pomœa sanguinea, a rarity. Have 
you seed to spate ? 

ONIONS : 


cover thinly with ro mould 1 
PEARS u must let your Beurré Rance Pears remain 
oo ‘hey easily 185 from the spur on being aoe 
ut pulling or twisting. 
——— . B L. Ik y u will read the article with s 
little attention, you will see bee the — a eiee 
ave been pierced by and 
yet that the perforations n bong: be owing to a totally 
cause, That is you 
POTATOES: A Cons ag Reider. For autumn planting 
Regents oe 2 Shaws may be employed. 
RIPENING Wo RT. We do 2 see how we can meet 
wishes, without going into long a 
when men 8 eee ee * 
sists in the varia of the means at the 12 5 
gardener. A 
any « of which would answer in good hands, 
Gentlemen Ke 
the do mid 2 may 15 unable to 1 
ciples w poniai out; but surely gardeners can, 


ee ˖· ee 


the 


7 


liged. The fod — nea 


tA 


brought I had it taken out with a 
smith’s aim taking it by 7 5 skin per 
2 — en administered a dose of pru 
ut the tage or ert 
. 14 tempeh, — 2 vided with th 
circular ; 3 — — out until d ofits 
hour), They are sit pane | sba e — 
gaa tail, a thes were 
reme end being first drawa rain P 
5 as ny snail’s horn 
should not have sus; “nag what een 
oot : Anon. Some ot the best grow 
eae 5 Try its effect on a small scale first ol 


ot answer legal ques 
ae ak have lo right to infi e 
uld uld give, such $, leg o 
will ‘pot order a mans 
because he 5 to alerg% 
legs. ie i 


me 

ho te cuns: A G. 
the prineiple that you can 

severe than 2 law w 


8 is probably 
ripen edna 


WREAT . : MX. ee thanks. 
as you will see next w 
EEDLING ve mith a d 
Groxinta: T. Flowe rs Nght bl e 
ins 2 bol ae owes lip; 
colou n, sha 
= very 5 . dall 
2, — crim 


on, outer 
3, pale rose, ou 
e good. 4 
me 


.“ 
size 
red, een m 
ter peta 
2 pad y 


39—1849.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE: 617 
Friki CLUB, 1849. .—The Annual Show of} AUTUMN SOWING. I GUANO. behalf application is made for the bounty of the 
f OMT rocr will take place end Friday fort prt gt ee R. POTTER particularly nds this mame Society of garv are the tenants of the applicant.’ 
ren . Printed Forms of r In answer to the question ‘ Hast thee a boiler ? 
| Peis, atthe Bazaar, e Stel and The Printed wüst of | it is better adapted, when the spring returns, to zila to the the appli — lied th t h ld do anythi 

ecient the Honorary Secretary, and returned to him ilation. Th f chemical knowled plie à t “ia the sale fro — — — 0 ch ges 

— 1 TY, das thoii — assimilation. e increase of chemical — edge, as applie e o keep people tarving. n this I re- 

eden Grass * Sec., Corner of Half im — in the manuisoture of his Ou Gusan, which | 1 — PORE: rked, The Committee of whic the appli 

Yeon Street, a is a ember, have hitherto resisted the distribution 
lu 4 crops at pope — ns — f 


EAT SOWING. 
LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg to offer 
as under, and pledge themselves that every Manure sent 
shall be free from the — —4— 
Guano direct from Importer's Ware Lond 
Company's Wheat Manure aad Urate, Sulphate of — 
— norpbate of ae. peee. or Ammoniacal Pome ey 
Saperpbosphate of f Lim m, Nitrate of Soda, Bone Saw. 
dn, oad spe other Arudelel Manure. 
PURSER, eee — Bridge-street, Blackfriars. 
A AR RYAN’S AZOTIC MANURES, prepared 
— his immediate superintendence. The attention of 
is . — to these well-known F 
of which is based upon a care eful 


to prove o the best Guano. 
Prices, 6l. and 61. 10s per ton —— ces, 24. Navies lane, London. 
1 — . . 


j so 
OMPOUND CARBONISED ANIM AL MANURE. 
yar his Manure, which is particularly well adapted for the 
3 pwera in its composition a variety of highly ave 
4 


hg sequ ee unpri 
as * OTTE pel substituting their pors compounds for 
the genuine . the Proprietor is induced to re commend a 

direc’ 2 to bimself. Where the quantity taken is 
ade — ate, a — ryeeg as to carriage, will be made to the 
satistaction of the e 
1 eee Bal state peculia dapted for 


ip hy — sta 
ual low price. Bones direct your —— 
per eet; to i following address. 
28, CLAPHAM ROAD PLACE, LONDON, 


3 
and English Oil-cake on sale; also Peruvian 
Guano of te finest quality, ae — of Lime, Bone dust, 
Sulphuric Acid, Animal Cake, Wh 
cake, * and all other Manures of known value. 
Apply K FOTHERGILL, 201 a, ane Thames-street, 
it for Collins’s Patent Disinfec g Powder. 
rat 305 — Dried Sewage Manure, suitable for mixing in 
Co omposts and Dung-heaps, at a moderate pri 


EED WHEAT.—For oe at 50s. per quarter, good 


and genuine seed of t 
HOPETOUN varieties, Sam — 


paing a 4 — on part intimately united — 
* we 


ng. 


: to be addr e+ * NU- 
NAM, Middle- yard, . Fe cite „ inn-fi lt | 
er to either of — — — che In London: Mr. — Cou 
E Leic “square ; Mr. MARK muerte, 
Ma, U —— ORGE **— 158 Picca- 
4 wed 0. 1 is Tavisto k- row, Covent. garden; | 

5 HEN HORN ER. 
N. B. To insure 1 in the delivery; when the quantity 
$ 3 considerable, a few days’ previous notice is requested 


ROYAL LETTERS 
PATENT. 
s PATENT HOTHOUSE v WORKS, KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA 
DENCH invites the attention of Gentlemen about | 
* toerect Ho hoe uses, d&c., to the vast superiority in every 


respect possessed by — PATENT pg th bn which be will 
geet any otbers. Good Glass 


ity ; 925 pri 
out wood or putty, and the 


Principle being *.— and the glass put in with 
patty. Patent Sashes. requiring no paint, from 7d. to 9d. per ft. 
HEATIN ae * TER. 


rmin othouses, E bao 22 


on the expense of postag 


for less than 4 bushels can be exe counted 5 
per bushel. Jonn Morton, Whitfield, prieg $ rapplied at ôs 
The Agricultural Gazette. 


SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1849. 


MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
Tuauns pen, Oct. —Agricultura) Imp. Society of Ireland. 
THURSDAT, Agricultural Imp. Society of Ireland, 

FARMERS’ iger Ge, "een t Oakley. West He.eford. — Oct.2: South 
Devon.—Oct, 4: Burton-on-Trent. 

Wur e expressed fears that the Society of 
Fr ale had distributed gmt LA in hr 
a ara mpression of hay ment 

RIE from 1 riea Avos that yay had 
fus so i of Me Sa teg in the notes of 

ah aii Friend, who h a tour through 
the west of ae last oak: 3 conceived 
in a congratulatory tone, on = breadth of Potatoes 
planted. We: regret that's a fear was expressed 
without more closely ititi gating the grounds of it, 
' | but rejoice to have be ans of eliciting a 
vat claration that eng planting of the Potato is dis- 

raged by those whose opinions vill . such 

Wel- merited Ae in Irelan 

In one sense, bo 
the mall fa mers to cro or heir land, may be said to 
have indirectly ea se * yah oes, however 


saperior system of Hot Water 15 5 They refer to the unwittingly. Knowing, a w that class 
—— tioned places, where they have erected most ex-|and the profit-rent laune in “Tread cling 
3 dens, K 2 Pota pane drowning m plank, and 
* Gar ens, Chiswick; p particularly the new | knowing, as the barefaced attempt made by 

r bbin 1 to im e benevolent in 

Cons jo 8 Pos 
ee 1 W 1684 847, we have no doubt tha * Deas s, &c., sup- 
bai ot Gainsborough’s, Oakham, Rutlandshire. plied by eee — ould be exchanged 
Robert Han “ 2 5 Herts. for Potato In illu saien vót s abuses to 
ian oes ursery, Turnham-green. which all 4 efforts of these ns are liable, 

Baumer and He —— ae moto gga we present the following ‘statement Wo of the 


ROYAL LETTERS 
PATENT. 


ss 
F, S . 


ops, and for Garden 
e is 3 Red 


5810 F CUSTO 
1 l OF rer 
‘ofthe Dules of Sutherls s PARK, ü 
e Dukes utherland, No olk, Rut. 
del — 1 magne (at Hebron, 
7 tage Spencer, and mo e Nobility a nd Gen 
itary, Soen 


OUSE, 33 


Foc 
its se, a and Testimonials 
emen, Gen- 
d Builders, — — to any part . the 


at the bed Works in London 
where the above — is made, are 

+ MNEILL a D CO. 8 
anufa gs, Bunhill-row, 
Pred be 8 


or | receivi 


inspecting officers under Temporary Relief Act. 
“ During my whole career in this capacity,” he says, 
“the British eee refe * to me all the 
numerous N s made them 
dis ge under my aed. 
even when proceeding from the most respectabl 
sak: well-intentioned, I 00 N obliged to 
reduce figures of rhetorie to the ari metica 
the ss of the oer its plier aegri population, 
the number of perso ns employed on the public works, 
and ‘the number of rations issued under the Act 10 
ic. cap. It was only towards the close of = 
Tem mporary Relief that I was requested by t 
Committee of the y of Friends to report on 
applications e tothem. I have now before me 
copies of my comments on the replies made by one 
Squireen to = queries i ge applicants were 
required to answer. e case was this—after the 
» | Baronial Gonna and tach ittee under es 


8 


foun single 
378 acres, 
at 198. per annum. He 
distributed i in the district_—he replied little or none. 
I gave the names of the ral Division Com 
mittee, of which the applicant was ee che a 
number of daily rations issued by them eg with 
the rtion the recipients of to the 


c : population, mon! I receive 3 nein er | 
with | from th 


rs who are not on the committee, 
that Pee el not destitute of e “ag 3 are 


neipled persons, once acting 1 


no 
E, GUANO, AND OTHER MANURES.— a 


eat Manure, Gypsum, Rape- one o 


— his of Friends 
greater nadine — the British e — 


th 
pe éthers who assisted 


wever, arin, ers, 
under an intimation that if they do not, the supplies 
will be s e was a w et zer he pro- 
osed to 3 the gra ciation with 
peg or — pr pini De 
chere much sickness i in u the eee 7 — pen 
— er ee k God; while, wer to 
d on the — of 


English . 
id did nk ai derstand ot ntry, 


ety o 


a belief that the e were vat: unfavourable to the 
di — of cone nty among occupiers of land, 
ended their distributed in 


wer 
On another application ype © to the same 
officer, we find he reporte ows: “ This 
appears to be an application for pry ‘to a part of the 
Electoral Division of 
and 


of —— — the names parishes, 
and in the names of the gentlemen composing th 
Committee, I have no doubt t entral Committee 


h he C 
of the Society of Friends will recognise those of 
several to whom they have already ma —— donations. 
If the Committee wish 2 oe distributed 
among the farmers, that i ay in which relief 
is generally appropriated, ‘iin not distributed by a 
elief C 


table well to 

reserve futher å distribution of relief per ‘after the 
15th of August, t advances 
ceasing, and the —— of the ‘por —— by means 
of local rates, relief will be pen ona pega — 


form of | s 


e 


Jam 
keep ofthe rele lists farmers ated above a 
value. The parties of eooo a 


limited scale than at ram The poorer clas 

will very soon suffer more from want of loth- 

ing than they tier bers from want of 3 

charitable associations 0 a m for 
giving them the materials for ir o- . ä 
clothing, furnishing industrial ion for 


and hae no to those who are desirous of emigrating, 
the means, would be most thankfully 


A READER of our columns has expressed his dis- 
satisfaction anner in which we — 
d 


ie’ pora of his pleasantry, 
y republishing the joke here. 
At the same time we are willin 


tis wi 


pening t 
rofessions 5 
accuracy that 


a struggle to | to e 
a certain. of 


618 


LS 
that it 1 * of the A but of = condition dvemi ay. will It 
affirm | pecun 


of the art that we speak; it is one thing to 
the axiom, that the land of this s country is esse 
national existence, and another to say that its 


the overcoming 0 

pany fair to A, tine while of all tr wo — 
professions in this island we believe our own to be 
the most open to 10 us improvements, we readily 
acknowledge that i maren easier ** advocate than 
(under the 1 
to execute mA impro aa practice we reco 

a o intention of publishing our own 
—_ "ig illustration of the ace at whic 

zarding, w 


a 


DGSON, 


determination ofaw 

ated our opinion tat agriculture is not so 
ecise an art as even our fickle climate 

it to be. Thi any one differ from us in 


ssential | Serves 


n which many are Lr | 


of ha Hop of ssi 
Ws en, all 8 7 eli truth on , 
the 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


is not the 


oss alone which anian through this, that de- 
v sph Bi ieai for it is clear that the animal will 
be burdened with he pr of gettin of th 
i ; hi 


priate will e 
eaper non ‘nitrogen ous 
avourable 9 it will be- 
come diseased, by 1 being e ompelled to act — opposition 
to Nature. Taking it for granted that he requisite 
3 
d, 


the absolute stre 


en without 
the mee or lees i 


vour to a oH ho ean pro t 
proporti on o n nitrogenous and nitrogenous aliment 
with other diiad of food. The 

exists in Grass or hay is 1 to 8.3, as in the following 


this? Let him take a thousand acres in any county he x ble: 


nerally carried 


l 
exits wus. respect to nin Stpan — ths 
=> ew og when we speak of the — 

it is 3 carried a why 
should it pow the ill feeling of any of its prac- 
titioners! Bu mea o our readers if, in this, 


an who turns out 


the credit 
at the avoidance of future “yah or at the ayari | 


of future 
him — the ra be still disputed, w 
a eee specimens of his ‘ — 


a e will you — the paa = ra in the 
business of — re? No doubt such a 
of detail i as 


in pea "of 


ca ra 
eat crop from the earth, the 
which they „ reside, to 
their ditmate. position in the e ut co will 


0 anufacturer eee 
We 3 little doubt 5 1 profits 
eens also, when his care and skill shall attend 
our practice. 


PRACTICAL 8 OF THE L 
POINTED OUT BY DR. R D. THOMSON, OF 
psi Pleret BALANCE OF THE FOOD IN 


ret ya 
By E 0 tana Fresenius, Professor of Chemistry at the re by — 2252 tue, w . piring of food cannot be eaten raw by 
i Agricultura ees age en. f ——— wfire t e iabe pee OOY may be eaten raw, apoi a 
face aie beii bers neerning the relation portion in white Tarn Oat Sora we must supply | Cooked. Hence boi p ey 
PUn m betw. the nitrogenous and non for ev 2 nutritious equivalents of the former, 1 twofold effect; prise ys 
a a ep 4 bar Aat to Dr. RD. food of * a — uivalen e as for this mixture 2 2 of digestion ini n 
an 8, it is bu n to igesti e condition. 
knowledge, that he considers this the most im — | give proportion of 1 to 8.4 ; that is, they must be gef — Matah, — dextrine or 
es Ür nutrition, And wae to BREE A — with) 130 2 b a fresh white Turnips for every 55,55 ary 1 250 
tention to it. This eon f “obvlodely stern en ian Wak the 1 d requires the proportion c — fibrine, , ' Second it 
various classes al it must — em er 2 
different even in the same class of animals, according a 5 Os Cy 50 this 1 ave beh g e represent auio val val 4 55 au 
to their mode of life and to the amount of exercise they un tas teens a K Hay, we must take Impossible! "Stil it meee ee 
. for éve 5 feeding cattle to coo Tar 
An animal a is hard worked will require a dif- — ry ak ihe ae onl lag i ac in this way: that Sema go 
> proportion to one which at rest in a stable; co paje proportion equivalent ta. rane he Poe meat more quickly and easil digested when 
still more Itter. must be the proportion when our with 8 58 Ibs. of 47 lda for uns ú Ibs, raw; and thus there is mu 
oe a ov the animal. I consider it to be one of dry ha — to be thrown off ey 
ost important tasks of dietary and the feeding ts warmth gives a 
of cattle, to fx the requisite proportions suited tothe den of |e oi Heskett | Potatoe ho | Ht deprives the body 
these limits en j —— — must, aati for every 2 alimentary equivalents of |® 22 
out mp Let us suppose, for ——— beef alimentary equivalent of 8 te for this 
requi ; ion of | mixture ik the proportion of 1 to ; he must 
e) to . th e for N 2 lbs. of boiled beef (reckoned 


og . (nutritive) 
E conan in 


food in 
5 es n of one 


| The following quantities con- 
tain one part 
ma 


Relation of one part 
t nitrogenous to 
non-nitrog enous, 
Relation of one 
part nitrogenous 
to salts. - 
* Dried at 212°, 
Dried in air, 
Fresh sub. 
stunces, 


=a 
bi 
S 


French Beans... 
Le PEE ep ak 


n D N S 
SS 


ä — 


S — bo OD oe ee et O 
S g g ee S e g » 

g SP atat: 
AAA EEE 
Fe e 


White Turnips 
Indian 
D Wu — 


~a D o o a t en oo o aae OO 
S SSS 


CC ß 


DO nne N ge e ee 


Ce oH 


L feadow Grass 8.30 | 0.73 | 10.03 | 10.73 | 12.47 
Potato 
at-s straw 


* S o> 

d a 
ENIS Shs 
to Om a SO 0 


— 


~ 
SO SSS 


=o 


mai 


175.4 
2 1250. 


-m e — oe — 
— 
4 
— 

3 32 5 

®© 

m 
2 
R 
i 
4 
to 


KAEN 121.6 1 


will be our m0 


five | 1 77 
its food ; * Wand te 


pe co ein 


Sehe 
us| mittel, and Sordin 
‘a 5 ha 


is Table, as given by Fresenius, is derived from Germ 
* including several rime Hi obtained * published 
Thomson in his Researches 2 prs 75 . See 
i id P. 4 450. re 
n co mpared i with English g — 


ish yo “ Philosophical 


we then to ive them Carrots, in — 1 part ¥° 
ry 7.84 


nitrogenous is contained for eve of non- 

trogenous constituent the a woud e be 
— disturbed; 
Potatoe 


proportion 


1 nutritious equivalent of of red Clover with 3 nutritious 2 


8 
: 6 
Hee K 9.00 21: 27 


l lbs. of Potatoes (reckon bee. 
shed to produee the 

— n. he — enon it t by 
s of the f 
oP — "attor, w bich — 


> oon For this purpose he must 


proven uf e. passage is “So wird es beim Erodlira 
* — Thi Prat, moan eben doch nur 5 5 Tie 
andere = — . 
en » wird Arel —— id 
ole Na 
— Aap 


ea =s opo — of * — e 
nieli 


p- | That 
araeo of 921 Ciover, vik contain 
bs.) of n 
proportion which | 133 


of nitrogenous equ 
ter. 


them 8 


eat 338 parts of fresh Carro 
bacon (ree 


ir-dried Clover contain Pisco et 
(17.728 Ibs. avo oirdupois) of 


12.47 : woei * 


rc 


kilogrammes 
matter, ſor 


t mixture will consist 


(16.93 


precisely 

— —_ quantity of the calls saaa boa 

in nae 

Conclusions High the pee —We have 
ted m to the object we had 


r. Thomson on the | in 


ith 6 animal. From 
t 


30—1849.] 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 


619 


i=, jipii presents ad 2 vantages for the introduction of 
í no other pee. of this empire can 

to prove bape it 
8 to the British pro 


e to fo 


to supply 
re 
many 


there exist the means of ome 


smil roprietor, generally 
tenant for life, had no power to bind his successor 
compen sation for 

The landowners of p. west * — though a 
nstances 1 ovident * 


ictims 
The pr eg shih the ey 
sell by 


nne, from 
selene to th which ex- 
from legal erg and a judicial sale through 
of 
te mperfect — com 
-bound coast, rendered a 
e peo 


ratively 3 
Agarian outrage, however, n ir eg r to the 
sülment of British farm A good oc yer was 
chin of a welcome. Rocke connected with the 


tates of the pro 


armer e 


of the two other 


rms, 
26,499 acres, | 
597 in any farms above 


class, yia ayta for the Sale of w 
session, — — 
Pro 


increase of only 


e, as lawyers term it, conferred 2 
By eee title, I mean on 


or would 


= 
re te 


e prostate 


existence of an incumbered — — . a seaso 


peasantry, 0 
| [look for its — to the introduction of -w hax aiii 
isi, and the removal eggs ( 


18 found that a — —.— eggs produce 


| following San che 


imself | ral, vc that the farm 
ch 


t 
e 1 — 20 


in value at intervals of 10 
Point of depression has never 


been so extreme as at present, I am by no means an 
| over-sanguine prophet of the future in enguring that it | 
will, in 1860, have attained the value essed 10 | a 


gaged in commerce with 


ve, by m 
fertilised a 3 — 2 pe of meyar the 
1 of food elsewhere. The town of Clifden 

in Connemara, and the surrounding country, were, in 


| me tell us 4. such k 


above the other. If we look to our publie schools and 
n es, we shall there find the sons of elergy men 
private gentlemen being educated and associa’ 


only * 2 


his at the beginning by —. x youth d 


become rs of this professi 2 
i we can hope 
ition in 7 which is our an Som 
mi is ess, or a 
necess roof will adduce 2 
e — farmers who are tilling their —— 
to perhaps the greatest advantage—men of little or no 
education; yet suck 
than the rule, — 3 the prineiples upon which sound 
s base ass 


1815, in ras a ce of seclusion, that it contributed no | practice understood, the m t go on 
revenu ee 2 a ate, = 2 to 1822, its groping in vibe De ntil the wants of a are 
ulture was so imperfect, that cely a stone of | known, how e apply suitable food for its growth £ 
Oats could be got, In 1836 Gia n bad . — me an export while ignorant of the ingredients of our soils, ho 
town, having sent out 800 tons of Oats, and it produced | we grow the erops best d to th Again, I can 
to the 1 annually 70002. From t penditure hear some say, “ All this wledge is obtained by ex. 
in Connaught, in 11 years, of 160,000/. in publie works, | perience.” True, by innumerable failures, by g 
the inere revenue derivable from the loss of capital, and — lon Bo 
provinee h e equal to the 2 amount.“ ailure—alternate failures 


beco 
Travelling 2 on is now 
Connaught, and 2 by means of Mr. Bianconi’s 
well-known Irish e 
Having poea by t these general observations, 
- | legal and physical barriers to t 


4 = West, stricken by 
r gripe of famine, 


an ich 
justify my recommendation, in an agricultural — of 
view, to 
Doyle. 
ne 


Home 
æ of Egg. — Having read “ D.'s” — nV. 8.8 


* —— a I am induced to tell you that, without 


3338 to any knowledge of abstruse Be spores: I 
have lea which e 

the practice pre this 
uecess. I met with the hint either 
It con- 


ones. Generally, te 


select ae t promising rou 
egge W moet 1 the very largest. 
— succeed in t 
— myself often had cn rt ae n to have 
whole brood ; the — — of 
Ma 


nats 


ltural Education.— 


and as the schem 
diocesan board of education may x eih 
— 1 will bret state its outline. 

0 ad 


institution o a ted for t 


tution, 
en speaking of these 


superior m 
different koria Wa 
ildre 


unless by se 


they — hi h it was 


suppo 


his master. The superior e iety in which the 
one would walk, combined with his peee of — — 
the schools for a longer period, w still keep h 
Resources of 


Industrial 
+ Ibid, 


e British farmers to locate there. Martin | 


roduce | gre 


nd 
It is certainly |t 
his 


arr much valuable deore — I am perf 
to express their re on the subject | i 
of the Lichfield | sou 
our | 

"a hav ete an 


pur pe! 
e of the National Society’ 8 


— cultural eee 
| per 


rs had sufficient good sense to seed 


suceesses ; and e 
when a ma us pr i 3 at any 280 rules without 
the aid of science, all his experience is local, ned to 
the spot upon which he lives, and should e — —— 
— el him to seek another situation where the soil pos- 
esses a different character, he must in or. n 
as ignorant as at first. e can eep pace 

the age of progress in which we live till we bee 
the vital . of a sound, 3 and scientifie 

education, Such ence at the 
school. Agriculture should there hold — importance 


mall portion of 


land to such establishments, — t first —— should be 


| instilled, whieh will be — effected by a general 1 


us a connected wit 
ble et animal physiology, geology, 
ld thus acquainted 


of the 
chemistry, 8 
wh da 


2 a high state of perfec 
he Royal 55 Cae of which — am es. = 
ards of th 


oputens ity of ac- 
ectly 


t have been ined elsewhere ; and it 


Seen Fentz "Cottages 


eeding.—Partridge shooting prevented 
me from — last yh o the request of your 
correspondent “R. W. B.,“ T on which 1 
founded my season the relativo values, for * 
, of Linseed and oilea a My statemen: 

2 the effeet that the eake co 
he seed, considering the seed to average 20 per — 
the cake 10. In Professor Johnston’s “ Lectures on 


for 

both Togiak — and foreign ee is — s at from * — i. 

It is observable that although the analyses of 

give a very variable amount of oil, 20 per cent. — a 

doe i f 2 e eee 
0 per cent. being a moderate a esti 

the value of oil — 


ence roti 134. t follows, if we assume 10 per cent. 
il i ded than the cake, 
sixth more valuable than the cake, and not m at | 
the rate of ls. 6d. per cwt. ur correspondent thinks 
10 awk 3 a "E p of oil to in after 


< 
© 


3 capacity, though they differ 3 ee in 
thei d in their flav Ra 


— oil would seem a sufficient guarantee against in- 
intermixtures. a ae so wate remar 

tle fo wee 

ery much ovesooked, "having hither been used 

as a manure. From experimen wever, de- 

tailed i in the last Nane of the Journal of the Royal 

cultural maine. it appears that if gra radually intro. 


vents the e nitrogenous constituenta of the 
able nly exhausted to the extent 
from o one-fifth to to and the 
l 
e ‘cao and 
serv ood fo 

. t any nes diniin. of their 8 
manure. 


Scheme for Agricultural cae tion by Lendin 
Libraries—Some short time 


l 


agricultural pub f 
Royal Agricultural Society c of England, who have the 


that the = * vig fs the whole spike of bloom appears to be fecundated, and 


| 


rema 
let him contrast the this 


n 
e in their lifie 


pe 
ate it every eer 
e 


|S 
ng | ot 


the 
cylinders the Mag of the stroke, 
e 


lic. The entertainment belongs to the 
0 


THE — 3 


umerous small eo 
adden me as 
be the male organ of the plant (how do you 
s?) It was er the 8th of May wads 
on the 20th of August, as stated, — 
uch to the gratification of the pu 3 viewe — 
curiosity such a well-ripened produce in such a shor 
iod 5 —— ; >k is full three —— earlier than the 
new For day ze, and 20 nl more 
ate 120 8 05 arf a mpac — "habit, it is . 
— variety iy 25 be at all tinea sure in our cli 
Thre ned over the supposed ret, i “ad 
cise ov treatment, 55 * ine, 
erence. The other is 5 emiled Agric 
ural Maize, for green food, jisa ts 0 
exhibited producing coe enormous wei ht 
the acre, and that in ~ 
months from the time” = 
valnable to the box-fe Snovskas thing 
thi The cattle vl devour it witht av weg ity even 
the very roots ; pigs cep 
patil fond of it, 3 
juie o not swallow 
shat enormous bulk yielded by the 
that ee * foreigner to export hi 
marke eaper rate than we can fatten 


pily a 


of — — to 


n be 80 


Jeg 


ch a bulk; = 
; for its ro oots a appea 
upr ight 8 while xuriate 
; and 3 it can a consumed 
inter Tares any 
e to the necessity “of the 
ing upon your valuable 
co eee eile its value that I trust 
onfirm my statement, and furnish 
any details their sk Sepelios must — proved to a 
certainty. H. Hants, Sept. 18. 
Steam Engines.—1 hope your correspondent“ J J. H.“ 
m engine, viz., the diameter of the 
number of revolu- 


of carrying the purpose i into j It w 

very valuable addition to the useful labou 

Soci The writing part of the livin 
oor 


a form a 

s of that 

ng — 3 is, and 
wh 


gement be 3 profits must be 
sistas abandoned, ony some suita 
ad of 3 the stationary 
no hypercritical observer must be 
cause they strangle 
The very utmost 
e e, forward every 
erude or refined, free 


r liberal, y 
iscussion would be en note tome errors 
would be detected, and truth would be settled. J. D. 


raised his new hybrid, 
called by himself Forty. day sain, but this he never 
has. I also stated that, in y opinion, e woul 
Labia en same varieties as those grown 
by the Messrs, P. uthampton ; pesi 
this to produce ne 


; that he — — out 
that shames 3 refutati srt can 
make me disbelieve what I have this day seen, th 

have paid great attention d a period of 20 years 
to select those varieties best suited to our fluctuating 
climate, as well as regards iness of maturity ; also 
those that will yield the greatest weight of green food 
for cattle ; ‘in fact, some fh em are —— ised. 
1: i not oniy {0 me to any one of a 


dem aeg o of 


fasts, which bear a wales 
ine aition 


| UCE. 
BurrER (London N —B5l. to sor Peon Sarsfield, Cork, 


| reported, re following a 


Sex of 1 4 In reply to 
the name of the old woman 

I have made Vali en- 
th 5 — wer— “Th e farm wher many 
ar Luton, in Bedfordshire, but I have 
em was 2 


qilas and e 
sa 


icke 

e disease among them, I Melleve they — 
— but . except when they wanted E gi 1 eep, as 
the pullets came re ady for sale earlier now the 
reason of the po 
A to t thank 
the pr No. 31, p. 490. 
” has ereetagked it, 41 ‘would rarr him to it. Of the fact 
th the of the chick may be 
ascertained by s k doso erate trons the inspection of the 
egg, I entertain mot. — Soe 8 and should be glad, if 
there be other ose mentioned by 
Cas By > the posession ‘Of the Poet would favour us with 
it, Lusor, 


Sor ieties, 
AGEL URAL 147100 EMENT or IRELAND. 
correction of the Premium List at the late annual 
exhibition of this Soci ciety in Dublin, we have to ex- 


: 


airy pr 
1957 y ere ma 
POUL 
1 2. to ton 888 Dalkey, ee cock and two 1 
eee. — and hen 
t, America 
do. 
h br 


W N. t oh ton 
ll. to Lieut.- Gol 1 mil 888 
GEESE.—2. to Wm. Tod, Tranent, Scote 
ll. to E. Ruthven, Enfield d. 
Ducks.—2I. to H. L. Prentice, Caledon, Aylesbury = 
ll. to W. De Salis Filgate, Arte, do. 
RY PR 


3l 3 r e 3 derne 
o P. B. Mosse, 
Do. 8 Markets ot 51, Mrs. BE as Baltinglass. 
31, to J. Campbell, Te; emplep atric 
4 to J. Tweed, Larn 


veral farms in this count 


a report on 


me | by us, and whick I consider ss, bei 


short spa Ag w three | er 
e Wha 


it doe si re 
80 constructed 


2 who superint tended the poultry . 
establishment te alluded to July 21, eutirely in Grass 


0 
kanm, &c.—For the best Cow in | 


n 
epa sae not pre viously | ca 
ade 


Farm Memoranda. an 
Hicu FARMING IN THE County Down.—Having had 


imitation. The farm of Ball 

Robert Boyd, is situated sae 

omber, and closely 
rs. An 


ee 
been dug out and disposed of * 
not "ike his eae to hie i e, the 


ha 
n very rapi 


ing o 


por > for the purpose 
the ine whilst the third cutting w will e em- 
sumed b. the house - fed stoc i The rema 


s from whic 
are ae a crop of Turnips, sown as 


— eons i — kindness and give us further par- were e 


Fourth 13 85 rm a break there are 10 acres 


on 5 of the fe rm, the remaining 4 acres 

eons pin in yards, roads, &e. 
ck.—The steel: on Ballywi illiam 

ern of 46 cows, 


e 
100 u that farm; 


“a months, Mr. 
pee feeding his 


22 winter a 


I have no doubt of tis statement, 


opan 
ould be ready to seiz e hold of 


eee ‘6 make use a it, ie the 


et oi which they tt fect wer o 


objections to a 
perhaps, fro 


y- A great portion of the 
first eutting was consumed by the cattle ; 72 the bch 


unt of the 
th 


find that in Mr. Caird’s 
“H e very 
po 


x 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
— he increases the — a se! his farm. pop eaten down by cattle with some degree of safety. REMAINDER OF WORK TO ACCOUNT OF WHEAT. 
r day 


crop was thereby retarded, and gee from — 
— — ar in straw, and there was less liability to He 
said cattle, because ye would eat too close. He agreed with 


eA) 
| 


a 


ee nt a aa 


12 


* 


as, ood w. 
Mr. Boyd’s cows | being selected for their 
erti 


issible ; 
if adopted a t all, it must be carried out 
rstood that 


the pressing 
eb this would be | — done by gg roller—in 

h, i . W. STEPHENSON could 
= fog 9 ometimes 


and t by it; it de- 


es, W ut 


i 


= 


cal 
tow 


is be 
would pi 
for 


i 


There are Many Owner 
so doing ; but Im r to 
careful a ttention which is paid to the most 


—The 


H 


pi: 
£8 


and General Management. 


= 
0 
5 
5 


zi 


mmodious enough, and are nearly | 
When it t is understood, how- 


witho 
led a awed m t but they aor awed 


pended very much on the weather which followed. Y Thi is year 
all appearances, to be benefited by 1 pa ne 
the ground, now bo 


e tim 
spindling crop, but now pr om mised we 3 8 
as he had — observed, the practice did harm ; the 
ales og k died, d be laid 


ong ae or light. He d the re. 

and a on the average, that he ao efited * — — The 
ECRETARY said that several communications had bee ate 
1 One was from Me. Hues TAYLOR, of Cramlington, *. 
said: In considering this question we will t r granted 


rds the | 


ep, as re- 


state of the land, &c. We mall then have the — 


y 
it is laid dow d principle “jn a rich ci ‘the 
— of a plane is — 2 — A and leaves 15 
n flowers; in such cases aungi ~ roots or — 


Ar! 
H 
2 


2 
a 
4 
© 
3 8 8 
® 
Q 
— 
S 
2. 
w 
ce 
“= 
ai 
w 
2 
he 
— 
@ 
3 
fe) 
= 
3 
= 


may act beneficially.” again, that“ a 2 

by being ‘constantly deprived of its create will ultim N be 
destroyed.“ We may — from — that in a rich soil the 
Wheat plant will throw a long stem and broad b blade. Now 
too broud a blade is held. — mers to be a 


crop. 


r short tening of 


621 


sie 


of Wheat seed 


roar women shearing one acre, at 2s. per day 

One man binding two acres 

hte! men, one — 1385 and six horses will lead and 
tack 15 acre 

Paik — as 8 and six horses to thresh and 


— 


eee or 


Vo 


“< 5 


Delivery, 898 all tolis 
ering and roping stacks 


oe 


— — 
a „ese 


9 e gig 


0 sow v 


Total “i 
Add one-half cost of fallow 
Total 


wlalewleeso o ee 


Cost per quarter (yielding three quarters per acre)... 
Rent of land 30s, per acre, and half of fallow year’s 
per quarter ie zaik ove Se 


Cost per quarter phe 
a renin’ or HAY cnor. 


82 
— 5 


=n re nT, 


a 
Tag 
4 


Cost of yp 
Hay harvest 
Rates oe 


Tota 05 
Eg uke? of the cost of fallow 


Fog taken into account as extra hay (two tons) 


oc 


= 
Sap 


er 
es 


Cost per ton as soe 25 tos 
Rent of land, and quarter of fallow year’s rent, p. ton 
Cost per ton 


ent, and thus the sie is greatly 
esd, also, in other ways, and proves — the 
great importance of this valuable assistant to the farmer. 
On a cursory examination of this farm, there would 
be more fences than are necessary, from * e 


roads running deat ‘dis 
kept, free from weeds, | e 
e general manage- 
evident that 1 most 
Sry Ls cular. onl 
red of all weed 8 but 
ee a 


a trifling exception, the whole of the 
~~ drained and subsoiled. 

—I have thus 93 d to lay 
stem of manage- 


i glu 
— ota ae and, contained in the | 


ofth , mand that 


XPENSES OF OAT CROP. 
One ploughing, three quarters of an acre per day 
Two 2 harrowings, four acres hed 2 515 
zonr bushels of Oat seed 


gen 5 off, causing a lot rif 5 matter.” 
off or ammonia and — aed — Fp to the flower le 2 
is extended, in ano ther part of the same work, to the Jeaves i 
pane that it 
uid prevent the pree making so much wood, greater 
er would be devoted to tbe pr 8 of seed? and that if 
the number of leaves, or extent of surfac a“ bla de, wa s lessen ed, 
the e nitrogen, which would atherddes bates 
andi increase the nutritive 2 properties 


lah 


favour 


* 2 


+ at full 


Land will yield per acre five quarters 

Cost per quart 

Rent of Land, res | quarter a of fallow atd 5 rent, per 
quarter 


in, the seed ? 

inclined to aaron stat the eating of ‘corn on la 
ith sheep in the . mi pine be of pew anta uge but 

Seile 5 which tho Binde | 
arked t 2 


mod e- 


subj tof — seeme 
to think that r soil, 1 and weather, 
they should nne to follow the 3 It ma universal, 
and he — yi = it 5 aa — su when the 
mer wa ss, and t ather was dry, aud ae shepherd 
kept the sheep moving about, an 
d leave the other untouche d, 


He lik 


elf, to eat 


* 
etter chance of 
io * 


= Wheat, to which it was more particularly —— „ The 
e thing in which 25 thought it was very beneficial, and th 


| Cost per 2 1 2 2 10} 


Mr. WEEKS obse ‘on Mr. Taylor made thec cost per acre 
of — ema fallow 3 for Wh l. 123, 3d. ; but 
he had found his land to cost him 24. —Mr. Rosso said, few 

It 


would be found, he belie 
a pres guessed it to be, 
e la nd, its cleanliness, &c. 


ved, to exceed —— most of them, off- 
It varied, too, a tothe tenacity 
On — 
2 41. 125. 


„ or tithes, — 8, or taxes, or mauure; 
would bring it — — — 128. A The oe were the 
Five ploughings, 1 
2 3 


which 
items : 
15 
0 10 
2 
2 
10 
2 
7 


Hand. pickin 

La, * on dung and spreading 

Drilliu harrowing seed 

Reaping, bin binding, leading, 3 thatching, » thresh- 
ing, winno pE — marketing 


was the treading in of the Clover-s It ‘would Le well i 
rine bo the members ‘would hurd le off an acre o in: 
n 


ca S 


1 
12 


of Wheat an v 
8 eae ompared wich the rest ~i — crop. 
There = be little be peri from a number of experiments, 

a satis 5 ee solution of the ques: ‘ion, an way or other, mip 


y 
2 


yhether mJ 


a4 


Rent (two years) at 25s, 
Rent charge (ditto) at 48. 
Rates and taxes 


aoe 


a 85 


wee 


attai p 


aw often ie 5 ie, 


tas, under any cir — 
grown in ge bridgeshirer . ich F 
[Mr. Rosson; What a 

was cut ose n, just as a garden 
them. In the north thes cake expect 


requi re 
call“ Baggies, 2 
r cat off his Beans to impro 
to be ruined by such a 


Abn in this pai of the country, 
But pent z A ded by eircum 


` d possesses no 
have already said, is te and li 
nev ny assistanc 


In my humble 8 1 a ‘thin 
furnished rar is of 


and that 
wise.” R. Oliphan 
Aug. 23, in the Irish Industrial Journal. 


i» Jarmers’ 


e from his eA 
y antage 


the great 
It shows what We 
his 


88 
am er gan 


foregoing 

t Pringle, Castleward, 
> Clubs. 

» July 7 : Does the Eating of Wheat in 


o 
Interest of shige ger: aad wear r andi tear 2255 four years 
Rates 


and particularly by the wea:her. 
estion on the card 


Taylor, which was in these 


Brought forward 7 0 15 
Vater-furrowing 
utting, &c. 
vesting in spring 


is a copy, 

Š phat $ * eee 
Cross ploughings in 
autumn 

End-loog ploughing « 


£ 
0 
0 
0 
re 9 4 
ie 
arting and stacking 0 2 
'overing an nd roping. 0 2 
Threshing and winnow- 


po. gored small harrow 0 
Rolling 
Harrowing with small 


Cleaning 1 land ab 
nure 


| of prođuction on the clay soils of South coder 
m of management, and on an average i 
duvbt, in a short ume, by taking advaul 


etricts 


; though 


thas se which ev ery year is intr ‘ducing, that 
derably reduced. As it does not seem oo “that the whol 
ense of the bare fallow should be bo 2 the Wheat “(he 
method usually of labour h 
Seon given to that crop, a 
vided 2 apt course ; the 5 s pe 
t, as it occupies the lahi ora roe a 
1 * peso and manure 2 
allow, The wages of a man a, 
k, and m pia fos; =. a — ogg Ay — day; 
and the value of a „ per day Bi the 
A WORK DONE IN THE YEAR OF ue 
Five — oue acre a! - 5 
One rolling » i 
Two 7 — harro 
Three women qui ickening one acre 
One ditto spreading 
One lad Jeading —— off five acres 
Four men, three | and hve horses dunging 6 acres 
PES 23. 


g 
4. 
af: 
— 
Seco 
oe 


ir 0 oS 
— 
EE 


al 


ads, 


— 
1 SS 


| 


Total 
One-fourth 


wee 


2 co 


2 years’ tithe (say) ... 0 010 0 
' „ aces: 


* 


y 
church. rate 
1 1 2 
over .. 0 


Carried 
A brief conversational discussion e. hand 3 of 
these statements, and the meeting the 


oleg 22 


Calendar SETE opereton 
R, 


Do 
could have deen wis 
finished 


d quality. Turnips are Took 
and) as care is a large quantity 


3 
in E pi fair in 
=i = mer materials go — e only dra 

ate 


tock. 


622 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


~~ 1 — tain will be Pidi 
under. Our horses e time will be ploughing 3 OVENT 6 SEPT. 29. Hors. Pm 
me getting —— in, a wand ater r that we ppal 4 B apr pees or 4 — 3 Grapes are An Peaches end N 3 r “and Sung » Sept, 28, ™ 
next year’s r. p; a ad T g apte thin eek 4 to scarce and dear. sha N alte — * our yep — supply of new Hops at market which that there jy 
Jand intended for union; as in epa y count, — and. — Walnuts are abundant, Oranges are dt the. following prices: —Mid a? Kost a steady i 
get what is called clump heeled, “and I have no doubt scarce moderately plentiful. Among Vegetables, Tur. | Weald of Kents, 61. 103. 1 * East Kents bl. 
li ad U * 2 9 
8 on "those farms that te farm, nips may be. obtair ned at from 3d. to 6d. a bunch. Carrots — Duty » 80,0002. to 85,000, "5 Bomex, gp 8 
. Oauliflowers are less plentiful. Green Pe eas fet 
halk near it will be best to apply lime, for although it may | about a ial 
“ena more expensive, yet a great saving will be effected in carriage, about 4s. per bushel. Potatoes have not altered since swe MARK L 
expen 71 dane, but last account. Lettuces and other ae are sufficient for the Monpay, SEPT, 24 —Th NE, 
as far lobe weight of it per Sore lenel will serv> the purpose demand. Mushrooms fetch from Is to 18. 6d. per pottle. Cut servings | ae ne aa this morning nat English : 
either that can be got most conveniently will serve the p rp Flowers consist of Heaths, —— ‘Gardenias, Bignonia | Kent good, and the wh arning from Esser Wheat ig 
sufficiently. Our : Aai are e r — n venusta, 2 Fuchsias, and Rose day seinnight. The bind i as cleared off on the N 
ic ve erops of after Gras ms vals z 
object 1 get them eaten as Wort as possible, that th FRUITS. nt — Lale ; tme oa rain are nn 
spring s may the sweeter, Some of the best of our | Pine-apples, per Ib., 33 to 5s Lemons, per doz., 10 y 3s limited at last week’s prices, exce pti 1 Wheat ee. 
beasts will be tied up soon, as the Grass after this has not bait ig nad oye 1b., 9d to 38 — per 100, 88 as taken freely s at fully late rates.—, volish Odessa, 
— sufficient for keeping up “th ose that are large or in Portugal, per Ib., 9d my 1s | Almonds, per peel, te are unaltered in value. —The Ogg trade 2 Beans, and 
ood condition. Suns of our sheep are ane Tomp e Peaches, per doz., * to J — sweet, per Ib., 2s to 3s turn lower, excepting for r finest qualities, heavy, and 4 
1 and most s have ram. Our Nectarines, pri doz., ho ha ias TE p ny 36 — to 28 48. to 68, per qr. ** e, 
13 urers ge ne employed in ate and SE a burn- | Plums, per e, | 0 24s 1 Serr, he arrivals 
ing rubbi m the hedge banks, providing food and — Pears, per A ¥ os 8 | Pilberts, per 100 he 458 to 55s ave been ng by 2 
for the — * —— reed for cottage thatching, and gett: — per half sieve, 48 to 6s | 3 „p. bush., 20s to 22s Eog gli sh Wheat fresh u moring 18 
out dung for the Wheat Apples, kitchen, p. bsh., 28s to 4 — ai. P. bsh., 128 to 168 neglected, and there was A 3 ok w 
Sussex Farm, Sept. 24.—The sees bii being + now competed, Oranges, per doz.,4sto6s | jo Baier ise gen foreign, eneral ce on the E 
xcellen e now engage’ a: „a tree sale at reduction in 
= the e Ge ass lane a and Be pi stubble for Wheat, and 2 ae n VEGETABLES. unaltered in value.—The Ro of ont Beans and Peas ay 
2 shall commence to sow, We or — P. * =e 6 Oni paradi Fe . oven = 4 tl. pa — Flour meets a mods a Iii and the tin 
£ . doz. — 8 to 4s | ter about 
scarifyin Whea aa “Oat stubbles for the next year’s | gane rg. p . 1 anish, pedas, Us er, b the samy 
pip Seng ‘After 1 we give a good Seep ploughing ; N tradi, 10e t0139 oie nek a ong x p 25s, toss 258. 6d Sa. for braila 2 „ 6 ae Tia W ms 
this is what every good farmer ought to adopt; the land is laid Sorrel. p. hf. 1 e ee e eee eee 3 ae Seon 5 1 aud in 
andd — tie winter’s frost, which reduces the spring >, P- 2 Lee 9 #8 Provincial markets declined 18. to 8s, Many of the 
— We have threshed part of the Wheat and Oat crops o a 8 Bos * 1. 3 1 — ls | Beans ave the turn dearer, Barley, 127. 2 
18g — white Wheat, the seed — — set had from Whitfield — 3 20 to * e a t wm! P: kapti — 0 pot Nee a m Trel sale, Maize is 80 less Oguired 
á - bs — , do., rela 
e e A S wel hs! Q is. e acbel. The Hate | Turnips, p. doz, bun. 28 to 5s | Endive, per score, Isto 1s 6d | Prom Scotland e ae aan stl à mates ont | 
— 1 threshe a were 5 as oor piece of land, — —— Alen, * 3 — eee p. hf. sone — bs 6s 10th, Flour had declined about oud. In New York, gaits 
orse Radish, p s to 6s ushrooms, p. pot 6d 
formerly not wort ecasionally as woven 
litter, but satel improved y "field | is 16 17 acres, of which w “ae h Beans, p. hf. sieve, 1s 6d e ee sh., "330 Ga 2d to 3d LIVERPOOL, FBIDAY, Sapt? 
have thresh Ka and the yield is 12 bee per acre. This P. P this aa s market, We ma was limite u 
fae DAE, each, 2d to 6d Fennel, per bunch, 2d to 3d pee a 4 but the 
crop will pay an the expen se of improving. J. B. —.— per bunch, 2d to 3d Savory, per 3 2d to 3d need bbe towards 2 smali decline, "1 we a 
ara Celery, p. bundle, 8d to 1s 34 | Thyme, — be pn 2d to 3d 2 dsl vA t ray 2 ie Parcels of ne 
Notices to Corres spon nden Radishes, p. 12 bunches, Is to2s | Pa arsley y, p. doz. bun., 3s to 4s 102 Ait * 4 3.0%, 6d. dor tos, 4 
AuBURY: Thomson. The dr 7 summer is probably the cause, Get Wateroress, per doz. bunches, ty ee — — — ls to ls Und 2 hi 8 MA Fahy ad or two Sat of extra quality, 
ur land full of nutritive ma! or the plants, and enable 4 rjoram,green,p.bun.,4dto6d 5 
* gesnap the right te ays sas o this Food throughout its Carrots, per bun., 4d to 6d Mint. 9 : neh, — to IMPERIAL W B F 
sub:tane 7 and if ‘elim o Goes n t fail, you will never be | Spinach p, sieve, ls to 18 6d | Basil, green, p. paar dtodd | resume HBAT./BARLEY./ Oars.) Ryg, 
. vith ngers a 8 N 
‘Carrots : MO. You 4 to hae done all that was possible, 25 
end we must amina the malformation of the roots to the HAY.—Per Load of 36 Trusses, Sept. 1 
dryness of the = SMITHFIELD, Sept. 27. BARI gee 
DRAINAGE: A DC bedaa may be 33 feet deep and 24 feet = 15 
apart. Pipe tiles = s gabe as good as tiles and soles, and Prime Meadow d 68s to 72s | Clover . Gs fos : 
opes are cheaper, rains should run into a main con- 2 pian ditto. 50 63 | New Clover. aal 
necting with the 5 5 vou Aerin K „ se e 55 60 | Straw sea! ie 30 A 1 
DRILLING versus BRoapcast: R S. On “ very rich land,” as on | New Hay oe mo m — . 3 Bates * 
any other, we should certainly drill rather than scatter the Trade hevvy, ol 8 
seed Garrett’s drill and hors % a EP AND MAREKET, Sept, 27. reign Grain | o| 1 0/1 0 1 0 
lemen 2 of their kind; the prices vary with the e size, the two Prime w Har 1703 to 7586 s.. e. 65s to 845 Pee ” ” bps six weeks’ verag 
3 costing fr om 301, to u upwards of 401. You need co — 5 ditto... 50 65 | New Clover id agg ee — | Prices. AUG SEPT. 1 15 
sow mora than 4 poet per acre on rich land.—The work will 12 5 ress „ Ree RAW: tse eel gE 3 é | 3 | 
be advertise VOR E 95 JosHua BAKER, ¿ 
Gorse : J King. We = not know where plants are to be had, Wrrrecuaret, Sept. 27. vie eA l 
and do not know what passage you refer to. You had better Pine ola Hay 65a to 768 | New Clover 80sto 86s} 44 8 5 L 5 
nsult some of the large nurserymen, and if they cannot help r ditto 2 65 Infer erior ditto... pit 50 60 44 6 8 ii. l 
you, advertise, See Mr. Jessop's advertisement in our columns, 4 * ee 35 er 28 | 43 0 = A i 
Hose: 2 25 ADVERTISERS : We have inquiries 5 the — Old Clover 41 9 A Ha i 
effeet: Can you say where and at what price per yard Ie as! aes sd 
obta — hose for attaching to a fire-engine — — * 
of flexible, water-tight, and cheap material. I have lately London. Liverpool, Wakefield. | Boston. 
dam, near Ber excellen e e 
hem hose without seam, Le hundred — of which PRICES 
I —— although I could not find the exact price, cost CURRENT. Sept 17 Sept. 24 Sept. 18. Sept. 25. Sept 14 Sept 21 Sept 19 2 
bg re money. It is a great desideratum for agricalturists r. 70 lbs. 70 lb 
qr. qr. 8. Pings r. 4. 
cheap hose, flexible, light, and strong, a and neither eat Shit . e. d, edota d gla =z Pie 
1 tilit ee Oe tee oy: a A one, 3 
they en not entirely | ont of the reach of 49 aos nom A New, bal eee 138 to43 38 to43/6 0 6 6 6 0 6 6 4 to45 43 48 40 tots 38 1042 5 
with the hose I speak of. W. „ whi — 42—4542—486 4 6 916 4 7 O}41—48/45—51]42—45/40—46 Jo 
e or — — . — for Tear, 1 Old, red . [38—42 38—446 4 6 816 4 6 940—4242—46 * — 5 
matter was publis ecemeal in our volum : 
E aa whi ves 181-4314 OT a À F at BO cae ZNE 5 
J our volumes for 6 and ae p= 1 kid hd 
1847 ; see their indice a Fereign.., *. 36—50136—5044 2 7 84 3 7 2035 —4935—49 — — 4 
Tares: F M. Sown now w they would be hardly more than just 
Thane arouse hel y J 3 A A 480 lbs, 480 lbs, 
WINTER BEANS AND Wa : Clericus. Asto sorts for seed, we y elie oe — oo — — = — — 
—.— Or Beans, 6 to 8 weed per acre, sown in October, Forest meal /5/,—6/|5/,—6/ — — — — — a 
in a= 2 feet apart on land services cultivated. manure qr. qr. 
broadcast and ploughed in 1 ribbed into drills at the 8 s 
requisite interval, the seed to wn and covered by the Grinding —. 24—2624—26 pe 3 20—2220—2224—2521—23 
heavy harrows, If artificial monures ae added, let it be done | Malting... 4 2828 ills 30s—31s | 30s—31s |27—33/28—33} — 
in spring ; and the probability is that, if the land be already Foreign... * {18—26 18—26 de 91 2821926 am 
well dressed with , Manure of an alkaline sort, such as ae 6 ht ah. 6b r En 
w S, COM Salt, e., will be the tsuitable. As s 9 PUSH./9 HUSH. 
to Wheat, sow from 4 to 6 pecks per acre, in rows 12 inches | Malt—Ship ... | — — — — 37—40037—40 — — 
apart, Detober and November, and give a dressing of com- 45 lb 45 lbs. 
of the Wheat Silicate af has been found to check the falling | @ats—White... |18—25|18—25|38 04 36 2a|3s 0d3s 200 — | — |16—20/14—19 
sh has also ee — ten- Black 
dency. You ainia chemical manufacturers. ack — (17—22)17—2212 12 51/2 12 5 id * * Pe 
Foreign 13—203—202 32 4/2 324| =] —{|—]|— 
2 r. r. r. r. 
ig, Peas—Boilers |25—32/25—30| ais 34 263026300 — | — 
Th p of Bes BTELD, e 6 38 
— e. supply asts is f 4 * 7 
kinds are rather lower; Be best — not Aan Grinding... |23—25|23—25| 28 —29s | 28 —29s | — y 25 ae 
over abundant are pretty * dis — several | Foreign . |24 32/2432] 29 —32 29 —32 -= = —_ ose 
second-rate remain unsold. The 9 
same as of late, but the mae Dal — 7 small 25 37 go 29__2rlo9__94/299__34139__34 
pr are consequently taken ; notwithstan oe ig Roe cela ne a c ; 
vod clearance is effected. The price for Galvos. is again | © bes — (23—33/23—33| 32 —35 33 —37 oe aro — sory 
er. From Holland and Germany there are 850 Beasts, 1360 | Foreign —. 21362136 24 —35 33 J 3130 11 
l i „ 4 24 —35 30—31/30—31 
= ä 89 Calves ; 2 Leicester . orthampton, 2200 = 
ists; from Lincolnshire, (00; and from Cambridge, 300. inseed— 
Perst.of8lbs._s d s d Per st. titans d s d * e. Feed | — — 40 —42 40 —42 32—4032—40 — — 
3 est Long-wools. 3 4 to 3 6 oreign ... 36—41ʃ36—41 — — iii — — e 
Murge e ak Bens 10 Biso Sborn Spaen 
24 qoa Berg eas — 26-3 | “British 91. 12.094. 12s| 8.—8l 5, 8—8. 5s 
and Foreign * J. pat ss 
Indien Corm— 22—2622—26 27s—30s | 27s—29s 
p. sack P sack; 280 lbs, 280 Ibs. 
| Flour— 34—44 40} 31—32 | 30—32 
Weekly 
gmt and Imports 
Imports. š 
rs, 
WHEAT... 2 
oe gal 855 5 
OATS 1520 
— 8 veg 
BEANS ane 
PEAS... — 


Su m{ ggg SEGAR and 


HFORD. 


| fects. be ad, a week 

| ee ale — the — ises ; of the principal *r 
to the sale, 

. American Nursery, Leytonstone, 


ay the Auctioneers, 


2 EN, NURSERYMEN, BUILDERS, FLORISTS 
QOGENTLEMEN, (AXD OTHERS. d 


ESSRS. EROE anp MORRIS will sell 
by Auction 1 = premises, Mile-end Nursery, Bow- 
on TUESDAY, Oct. 9, 1349, at 12 o’clock, by order of 


owcaoFT, retirin g 
 SURSERY STOCK, consisting of Evergreens; Ornamental, 
; and Forest Trees; American Plants ; a quantity of New 

i Herbaceous a 3 pi 
e 


8 Plants, and Box-edging ; also three 
é Greenhouses, Pit, Brickwork, an exce t Chaise, set 
: Harness, Rotten Dung, &c.— May be viewed prio 0 
Sale, and Catalogues had on the Premises; of the prin- 
= nd of the Auctioneers, American Nursery, 

Essex 
ESSRS. PR HEROE — M IS are in- 
d to 4 to public competition by Auetion, on 

Royal Dockyard, on 


, s day; 

n the morn ing of Sale. — See 
of the principal en and 
eers, Americ. can Trapi Leytons 


Amateurs 

generally, that he is instructed to offer to poa 

, at the Auction Mart, oe at on TUESDAY nex 
d fı 


r, Epping 

8 pr brat ira ~ notice “Of ee last 
ted in a manner which 

ni be i Bh that the sale of 


k, and which it is hoped wi 


be considered a auf- 
cient guarantee for their correctness. 


SUFFOLK, 
HIGHLY IMPORTANT . AT FROSTENDEN HALL, 
NEAR WRENTHAM, 

BE un BY AUCTION, by GIRLING anD 
í hiana asenhall, near Yoxford. Commencing on 
Tabs af — FRIDAY, the 4th and 5th of October, 1849, 
the SPLENDID FARMING STOCK of James HINGESTON, ESQ., 
retiring from ie Agric cultural pursuit, 20 eee Chestnut Cart 

1 adm 


) ngs mirable symmetry and colour, chiefly 
under years old; two Chesnut Cart. Soke, aie . 

* horn Bullocks, 40 Head s * — new 
Threshing Macbiae and Chaff Eng eight 
‘Tombrils, Ploughs, Harrows, Rolls, Gove heey oiea 2 8, 
adapted for a extensive occupation, Th e proprietor’s aim 
has been by skilful Agriculturists in 
his Horse 8 Therefore more distant 3 as well as 
Suffok — — — u Sonti attend the Sale, so re- 
as the Stock has on few Farms in thé county 
Will be found bet ire Sto cause all 


rs Entire ck 
WW Sale, a portion n of the Genteel Household Furniture. 


WOKING, SURREY. 5 NURSERY STOCK. 
Mn WATERER begs apnounce that he bas 
ons from Mr, WILLIAM Jack™. 


—— M wh 
iness, to Sell by Auction, on MON DAY, ‘Ost, 


l — . 
wi ne day, al bis valuable NURSE WE STUCK o 


lars ppea 
i 2 nd Catalogues will be forwarded on 
888 four postage stamps, to Mr, 


mene 
m oer, 
Ch ey, S 


if 
q 


* 
tro 


2 
E MAR 
ru pa to Sell by Private Treaty, or to Let on Leas 

productive „ N GROUND, consisting of nearly 

„with 3 ng Houses and Cottage adjoining, 

r particulars, ly to M 5 — Auctioneer 

c 


TO LET, in the perish of Croydon, Surrey, 
t140 r with good buildings. TARY by by letter to 
pper Wellington- street, Strand, L. 


Contra 
and long established NU RT and SEED an 
— 15 miles of London, doing an excellent Trad 


e 
Exo 


spot Mh a ih T ih RRS 
IMPORTANT DISCOVERY die MANUF ACTURERS OF 
A 
+ * BE DISPOSED OF, 
eser & 
been go, "Biot 
F Ded near For particulara, ap 
1 
5 © NURSERYMEN AND OTHERS, 
DS BE W OF, by Private Contract, the 
i 2 enamita eee 


a moderate Royalty, 
ight of a e Bensi for he ECONOMICAL 
— 1 or n for CORN 


tpaid) to by he Jon 
. les. ee 


t amd improving, mero — — 


ietur w 
: business, as a partner A uired, 
i te W. GNU Baa’, . Solicitor, Barn- 


KET GA anaes —Mr, oo | 


n the most | 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 


A NHAM GARDENS, PRES?fON.—SELLI 
Gardens now occupied by Mr, Charles 
m business, the whole of the STOCK 
— — SHRUBS, <p te Nea sus and 
HOUSES and FRA 


retiring 


k co onsists of anim 


oses 
The G 
quantity of fina Camellias, Lilium lancifoliu 
Fuschias -pa 
Azalea * 
at the bee 1 5 ag oleae 16. by the end of 0 
Pianis will be sold Presto m, ‘September 29 


of the Great Western Railw 
T's BE LET, by Tender, “for a term of 7 ye ars fr 
= March 25th, 1850, TIMSBURY SLEIGHT ARM, com- 


the sur 
shell marl. The estate 
A — 2 situated i in the e 
been recently erected ery convenienre.— 
Turtles particulars may be learned of Mr. uate, of the New 
Inn, Timsbury, who will show the estat 


AMES PHILLIPS anp CÔ., 110. BISHOPSGATE 
STREET * ON, offer the following 
A 


wit 


. A. 8. d. 

12 in. 3 0 6 0 
3 6 7 0 

4 0 8 0 
„ EE 
50.. To 

0 12 0 


— ae n — t top ls. 
naD ou SSES. 
CINTH DISH 
12 inch BBE -he 6d. ; 9 inch, 1s. 2 1 inch, 1s. each. 


4 PANS, 
1 w... a in. 4s. 0d. 
* 4 6 
$ o 2i 5 0 
0 


26 
„Siss Tiles and Hiss Propagating and Bee Hsien: from 
d. each ; orn ws araoe Cucu * Tubes, ld. per Pa 
Poach Glass 10d, Was bsg 30 per doze 
Pastry Slabs. 1 Glisse: # "Bhades for 1 Fish 
Shades Tse nd Window 


t 
tubes, 10s, AN PHILLIP S ayp 00., 116 
Beese ron 0. WITHOUT, rts 


R CONSERVAT 
ETLEY — CO. supply 16-0 oz, ‘Sheet pays of 
British Manu facture, at pric ces vary 


pe square foot, for the usual sizes re bide — Fein 
eet of which are kept ready Pe, a W ato, tar 


PATENT R 1009 H H PLATE, TI IK CROWN, SATTA 01 
TILES oy SLATES, N PROPAGA 
GLASSE 1 TENT 2 
ORNAMEN TAL WI NDOV 85 


ere 


AMES HETLEY and Co., * Ne TAE 
e the 80 


25 


s’ Chronicle, first 8 in each r 


EFH 1 — — rech- 
London w Park- —.— wark, Inventors 
on CONICAL, and DOUBLE 


and M pene 75 poni Improved 
ND L BOILERS, roapeotfaliy solicit 7 attention 9 

o thei uch improved method o 
applying the Tank System to 8 Propagating Boulos 
by which —— ee as well as bottom-heat is 
e * an ny requi Í 
S. and Co. h 
friends they are now pot nn ru —.— of Iron, as well as 
which the cost is reduced, These B 


red degree, w 


be 2 4 of the highest authority ; or 

they may be seen at most — the Nobility’s seats and principal 
N 22 ee the kin 

S. and Co. = orm ~ Trade that at their Manufactory, 

17, New Park-street, every a required for the 3 

ot ‘Horticultural i) Buildings, ae as wal a oat for for hosting them, may be 

ned upon 


obrai 
Conservatories, &c., of tron oe Wi 


Balcon 42, Palteading, fine, vid nd c, d Garden 


F ences, Wire-work Ko. 


REDUCTION IN PRICE OF BOILERS, 


1 
KBIDGE anp HEALY 


BY aera 
their Friends, in conseq price 
of iron, re enabled st tx ces aoe reductioa in 
price of their Boilers. The price will be, now: 
10 in. arm ft, 4 in. „l 15 0 
12 in, do 75 ft. 4 in. do. aang. e e 
1 in, do. 100 fr. 4 in. 0% . „ 215 0 
16 jn. do. 150 fl. 4 in. do. „ 310 0 
18 in. do. 250 ft. 4 in. do)... 4 10 0 
21 in. do. $50 ft. 4 in. do. 510 0 
24 in. do. 450 ft. 4 in. do. 0 0 
New PATTERN BOILERS. 
30 in. will warm 80% ft. 4 in. pipe pes 0 
36 in. do. 1500 ft. 4 in, do. ... Ši a 0 
. ar amun, Ph 1 to 24 
in., 1 ' * 


, ELAND, saa ‘Arras, Holswortby. 
‘Sreenhou-e on the premises, 


G 
OFF, AT VERY REDUCED . 2 the —— and 
e | 


athe 


ORTLAND CEMENT. ä ved from 

| all quarters prove this CEMENT to possess th pro- 

perty of withstanding the severest fros rays Se hs are p tly 
ae every other for r hyäranlie p 22 such as building 
nd li 3 S, Fish-ponds, & . For 

M nor Paint. It never vegetat astin wale rita hie waar 

e * an carry 

to four times its own body re nd. — 
Manufacturers, J. B. WRITE and Sons, 

minster. 


ARIAN CEMENT, 5 — Stneeo, * of 
common plastering, m and pa 
20 hours of its application — "the Fag walis, 
piat. ra ms m Cy pit deren 


Milbank-street, West- 


an with ever, 
also perea for Ornamental Few tering, 
g, &e., &., 3 of w may be seen at the Works of 

— Patentes, CHARL 1 apa à Sons, Ni Nine Eig ms, h Londo 


RY Ni 


4 


AVN 


ANI © 


D 
ie aa 


Sores 
S252 
CP 
— 2 


. 
— 


N 
HY) 

oe 
8 


+ 
rae 
r, 
— 
— 


2 
— 
— 
— a 
— 
ae a ae ae < 


<2 


— 
2 


a 
2 s 
ARS 
Zs 


— 
SES — 
RE 
8 
A — 
. 


— 


wee’ 
AON 


VNR ii 


SOR 
(Xx) 92 AO 
225 50 OX 

8 


1605 ror 


Tite ABOVE 15 A SKETCH OF A FRAMED 


Ufinches and Sparrows in the Winter and Spring, and from 
ee tt mj 
high, 12 feet A er 
— made water 


ce, and 1 i 


tantly exposed ather, This wed Jape. also a used 
kor fumigating — a4 covering it, wanted for this 
purpose, nuha loo: g of cheap Solin. 0. Pei * cas 5 fold 
up as an um We Fr rame Net is conveniently packed for 
riage. 
ies — each. 
0. 


car 
For 97 ‘nee and upwards, 10 per cent. . 
Netting of all sorts for Fruit Trees, and of any size, at the 
* aai 
1 es from ss be knot . 


ICES FOR READY Morni, 
feet f Piati 11 feet circumference... 


~ $8. per ore yard, 


11 B — 13 
Rabbit Nets, set to — 5 feet deep * per yard. 
3 Nets, 5 fee t dee 

p and Fly Nets for e ad 8 5d. Per 
samre P Eon Nets, Lines, nae Twine of all sorts made 
er Kanwar and Co., Bridport, Dorsetshire. 


able Stone, by Vavanan and 
end, ondon. T. J. CHO ae K : 
— 85 A Pa — ean be had on application, c nin; 
2 aes ofa re m of — vet at stock, Specimen amay 
be s at Mes: Croee nd Co. 2, Dowgate-bill, City. _ City. 


Gais v Wik GAME NETTING.— 


Fa gL 325888 

* 2225 2 2225 * See 
22822 t 2 222822 

Do 28252857 ones RR 

2 6 

2225 


0 
25 b 
forore 


2225 
2 92222272 


RR 


— * 
* e 54d. aio 
Siem Hy n 
inch n 
inch 4 


bi 


If 2 tas d half is a coarse mesh, i t will — Pep ao 
fourth. 3 sparrow. root odbe s for pheasantries, 3d. 
per square foot. Patterns forwarded post- 3 

1 b BARNARD. and BISHOP, 
Nor wie of expense 


. l v5 4 ne Beg Bans on ke : Pa 
C — 4 — ANTI-CORROSION 
PAINT, ray y patronised by the British and other 
Governments, th Hon, — India Com ong 
* 5 — mpanies, x most public bodies, a — Wy — 


9 


societ, 
ead by thing af the kind hitherto 


fhe bebo Bo eit * on „ 2 Wa TE 


Toeaina Tard, back of the Bank af 
ane orders are particularly 


624 THE GARDENERS’ 


I) OYAL VETERINARY Y COLLEGE, LONDON.— 


R 


The LECT goas will 8 at the paer Insti 
tion on Monda ictober 8, 1849, at 12 o’clock, when tae 
ductory Lecture All de delivered = Professor ‘Spooner. 
* Anatomy, Phystilexy, and Pathology of the Horse—Professor | 
pooner. 


—Professor Sim seemed 


e hepa ee Morton, 


— 
Perpetual Fee to all the ~via — en Infirmary 3 


and Anatomical Demonstrations daily, 20 guineas s. 4 
dak dad VETERINARY COLLEGE.— E — The | 
ttee of the Highland and Agricultural Society of 


2 
Scotland, a "appainted to superintend the Veterinary College, 
hereby intimate that the Session will commence on Monday, 


The e of Study will be conducted as follow 

L ban or f the N Physiology, aud Patho- 
ogy the Horse, Neat Cattle, Sheep, Pig, and Dog; 
Stable Management, an ad the priors. of the Forge; by 


2. The Principles “of Sea i and Pharmacy, by Dr. GEORGE 


= Genera I Zooto eee Dem eee by Mr. Bartow, V.S. 
Zoo mary Materia Medica 

5, Practical Pharmacy, b N, V. S. 
By order of the er, 7 N. HALL sei h Secretary. 
Highland and 5 Nb pr ee ö. 29. 
LIGHT, CHEAP, ras 
zocas S PATENT PASPHALTE 11906 Ten 


„snow, and and 
has been tested by a ‘lon ga e expe erience in all cli- 
233 Saves half the sober required: for slates; can be laid 


ants, or unpractised persons 
r square : foot. CROG 5008 PATENT NON. CON. 
ane for Steam Boilers and Pipes, saves 25 per 
1. Samples and peer "es Dy pone on appli- 
cation to ee and Co., 2. „ Dowgate-hill, 


ngravi — 
Particular Anatomy and Diseases of Domesticated Animals = 


| now 


HE EXHIBITION OF STES OF reget oh 
bene ND 1 naa Exhibition of Manufactured Art, 
will be cheated at considerable! length | 

r OTH E ÅRT- JOUR 
ted by upwards of one “hundred and Afty 


F 


in pe 2 — 
It will be Tin 
rene 


Bo 
a5 


ver, 


etures. 

Th ese will — an astonishing g kees n Art ‘within 
the last few years; and sufficiently: pase roth wer out the 
* manufacturer to compete with the best fabricants of 
Frane 

The Exhibi ibition at ne cannot fail to have great in- 
fluence on the future course of Manufactured Art in Eugland 
extending — repute and eee its mercantile value. 

The Editor of THE Art-JoURNAL has, therefore, con — 5 
it his 8 — make arrangements for reporting this 8 
on a scale somewhat commensurate with the magnitude and 


The October number of THE ARrt-JouRNAL will also contain 
three engravings on steel—““ Melvo lio, E boa! Ht Moa by Staines, 
from the painting by Maclise, R.A. “The Tru nt,” engraved 
bed Phillibrown, from the painting a Webster, R. A. both in 
e VERNON GALLERY;” and of eee ” engraved by 
‘tle, „from the statue by Marshall, A. 

TH T-J OURNAL of the past eight r mouths contains, besides 
deveta pie red engravings on wood, r than twenty 
engravings on steel ; each of whieh dees te regarded asa 
and eee Specimen of Art: they consist lia of line 
engravings fr the best pictures of the best British artists 
ee in A VERNON GALLERY—the pae non ‘presented by 
the late Robert Vernon, Esq., to the mnn peop! 

To the amateur, the connoisseur, the ist, kad the public 
pae this work cannot fail to be an "acquisition of ona s 


ote i 


derable value ; 
smallest 1 cost to the . 


* VERNON’ s tian! 
ni icent gift i ople. To 


of the Pp 
T: 1 


WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER FE FOOT, 


1 cote ef ed TTING, e besa 


2 SQUAR s article requires no pain 
ing, the . — — ae 5 autos ob it. K 
was exbibie ed at the “td e * olitan Cattle Show, and was 
highly . both for its utility — pr ay and 


It ges a light and durable 
hares, rabbits, nz cats, andi 15 peculiarly 8 tg 


Pheasantries d to secure poult d the abend 
requiri „it answers admi iy for training all kinds 
of creepisig piunt s. Large quantities always kept in stock, of 
18, 24, 36, 48 inches wide; it can, however, be — e to any 
dimensions — Pat forwarded free of expen 

12 wide 84. pr an 30 inches wits 74d. pee 755 
18 43d. 36 9d. 

24 „ ls „ » 


6d. e 
Galvanised do. 14. per foot ex 
omnes strong Imperial Wire Sheep Netting, 3 feat, 18. Gd. pes 
ard; * galvanised, 2s, Also every description of 

ards, Wi see House Lanterns and 
t Safes, he.; Window 
with Soins complète, in mabo- 
y es; ring, 6d, Pics 3 root 
Flos wer Trainers, from 3d. eac arden „ 28, eai ch; 
Flower Stand from 3s, on each Galva ‘Tying Wire for 
lants a Dahlia R d ev ery description of kuy 
use 22 paper-makers, millers, &. — A! 
THOMAS Henzy Fox, 44, Skinner-street, 


Snow-hill, Londo: 
IRE Goose css a ls. 1 lb, 5 
Feathers were never 
HEAL AND tps 1 Prices a 


pons! NER s 8d | Best as 8 110 
N 0 N ditto 2 
Forign at ditt st Dantzie d 0 


6 
Beata aby ise: and 8 sweet and es from Sa st. 
d Sons’ List of Beddia ng, containing full an me 
Be anart $ 3 and prices, seut free by post, on ee n to 
their Factory, 196, a e ok London 
TTERN 100 1 


has the important tage of searching tho ee oct the 
divisions of the teeth, and el nen 
inary manner, and is famous ra mot. 8 
l ls. An improved Clothes B that cleans in a third 
of usua! time, and incapable of injuring the finest nap. 
etrating Hair-brushes, with the durable uabi ed Rus. 
sian bristles, which do not soften like common hair, Flesh 
e 


us of 


2 4 „ ar „ 


G 
by some honses, 


” adopted 


N 
shi 


i g i and a source of lament. and in- 
eaten 
The ART-JOURNAL may be ordered of any bookseller in town 
or country. 
eet GEORGE VIRTU že Pate rari 
PR aT UR JOHNSTON., 
will 8 ebe 


R.S e Volume Oc: 


XPERIMENTAL "AGR ICULTURE: bein ng the 

Results of Past, and Suggestions for Future 8 
in Scientific ‘and Practical Agriculture, Ry JAME bas * Jon 
gron, F. R. SS. L. 5 E., &. &c. In On 


Tat y publ ished, by the same Autho 
oe oN ‘AGKICULT URAL CHEMISTRY AND GEO. 


LOGY. oro. 8 
E DO; . 8vo, 5th ew 
SCHISM OF Di). 2 Edition. 
INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE ANA 178818 5 OF § SOILS. Is. 
E USE OF LIME IN AGRICULTUREB:: Ta 8vo. = 
CONTRIBUTIONS TU SCIENTIFIC AGRICULTURE. 8vo 


6s, 


Wa LIAM BLACKWOOD and Sons, Edinburgh and London, 


Just published, price 58, Part IV., Vol. I 
E get JOURNAL OF THE HORTICUL! TUR AL 
SOCIETY OF LOND 
ConTents.—The Vegetation of the tate Bap ae Sa 
8 a “Reinwarde— Chinese Cultivatic on, e Tchou-ma, oe 
y R. Gle po Gar —On som 
Moulds referred by authors to eee mee. — certain allied o — 
analogous Forms. By the Rev. M. J. y—Memoranda 
concernin og new Pena recently int 


Garden of ihe Society in mpsen—On the Cul. 
of Brun ih šephi B Charles 1 
res “rig *  Joslivg’s St. t Alban y Grape. By R Thomp- 


taniring mind. 


a 


ber. By G. Lovell, pened aes to Te 
rchioness of s—On Marl Hexagons, a new material 


INE HEAD OF HAIR. 
Ra MACASSAR OIL insinuates its bal- 


the head, 


samic rties into the EPEA nourishes the 


8 “a article has the words 
SRACASCA Ot 1 

Wrapper; on e 
29,028 letters. 
adon, an 


iniu 


3 on Histo: ory, Philoso- 


fr Gard a. Walle, with Slabs’ of the same ing. "By 
ors. yth— On the Cultivation of Vi 

y en gardener to Colonel de rg — 
Ko., 


IR 


May 22 to September 4, 1849. 
anton ma Regent-street. 
KIUE ps „OF ANY BOOK 
ONTENTS o OF ber NUMBER, 2 SATURDAY 
LAST, SEPTEMBE 
THE AT 
JOURNAL OF ENGLISH AND FOREIGN LITERATURE, 
SCIENCE, AND THE FINE beg: 
Th races o Large Quarto Pag 
Beviews or, wits EXTRACT 
Holbein’s Dance of Dos th Annals of 1 for the year 
ar 


The Basle Dances of Death, By G. Buist, 

Pye Holbei:’s Initial Letters. F in Gens l Pa 
Dance of Death for the year Little Fadeno tar tite F 
1848. By A. Rethel. te] at = Genk 7 

Wits SHORTER eee s OF 

Fairy ag moa e By| An Analysis of the First De- 
Count Anton milto de of Livy—Analysis of the 

Introductory g Botan cond Decade of Liv 

ree 720 — Classes. The Disease re th medy ; 
aurice, or, Rhona and National 


Fateh and „ eee By R. and National Pauperism, 


Ori A Dream of Noontide“ 


ginal Papers.— poetry: (“ 
“ Dolores in the Church of St. Gunegunde“)— Milton's 


ido ow—Report of Proceedings at the Ninetee nth M ting 
of the British the at hat 
Our Week Gossi ip.— Invitation of the British Associa- 


cien 
— Projected Railway across the Am ontinent—Move. 
ments of Father Mathew—Dr. 2 s Expedition to Nim- 
roud— Working Men’s re e for Promoting National 
Secular e Deat f Herr Steiglitz, at Venice — 


Yorkshi 


66 of Manufactures ‘and Art at Bir- 
"mingha 


1 


t Gos ap. — The Nimroud Marbles—Antiquities in 

a British Museum Sheffield School of Design—Sa‘ le of 
Doras Works eee on Artists, 

ie usical Pestiva ls 


Festival) -Marylebone 3 Velasco) 
of | 


e’)—Surrey (Rose 


al and Dramatic p. —Native Art—Bank- 
raptey of i Delafield—A of Dr. 8, Wesley as 
Organis ssip. 


Sadler’s Wells (‘ Measure for Meas 
rragon’), 


Goss! 
ntment 
to Winchester Cathedral—Foreign Goss 
Balloon Passage of the Alps—Promotion in 
Sir John Franklin’s Le anc — Archbishop Tenison’s 
Library—Progress of S ni: 


O Taie History ani 
their 1 and 


AUL Dixon, 


e Birds 1 
Domestic Fowl in The Musk The P a 
eneral he G ra 
| The Guinea Fowl | Goos 4 aha f The d 
e Spanish Fowl |The Whi Silver — a 
The Speckled Dork- = Wen Fronted meme k 
he Cochin-Chi Tee The Blue Das tag 
n-China the Teal kad its [Th Dua Pon) 
Fowl congeners 5 Lark- , 
The Malay Fowl |The W owl i] 
The Pheasant Malay Goose The Poland Foy, : 
ow The Tame Duck Pantam Powis a 
The Game Fowl The Domestic Goose The Sine Foxe 2 
The Mute Swan |The Bernicle Goose | ppo and ieg 
5 — Goose The Brent Goose Pg z 
e apa on he k Frizzled „ 
Cape Go 15 Friesland n, 


400 ntains a good 


by dis squ uisit tions of th 


At length the poultry- * 1 have 


n which eaa A — 4 d 
| the b 


deal of useful 
presented, interspersed with p ——— sity 9 


for some time, — know. i 
a Hi and be has had 
land Counties’ Afferent parts of 


AND DOMES 
ro — 


e Naturalist.” Peg 
oe 


epend for 


and will, we have no 8 n future be THE TExt-Boor. 
hed goea 
sake of profit or pleasure, ae: ced a 
Se ciara — be Apis Fy Oet 17 5 fact, that most of the 
says it as 4 series in the ‘Gardener? — 
Chronicle and 4 eee ee Gase. scp wih 
ne gla d to ane the attention ; 


* which prevail i 
these 


branc their emplo 
printed ia the Garde 
pubiic in an a an 5 
ject of that 


wo sed 
agricaltur: 8 frends that coer will find it a most useful and 


uch n 
lated to afford ‘considerable pies 
eeding and ri 


show a ciearer gain than a care 


pinions we may refer to Mr. Dixon’s very aparia ty 
useful book, which is published most opportunely fur 
pose of “ne urging upon our friends the pers 
ho The worki 


opportu 
cted in fring ope 
4 attention be 


opera the 
reful reformation of 
in this department, In cov! 


oymeut. ba 

ners’ Chronicle, and is aoe given * 

rag impro ie $ 
suppos 


teresting m 
ti 


t +} 


of the ha 


its of domestic animals and va been ll 


ven to Mr. 


peculiar paota 


efforts, the — 1 will be . 
2 erred to ya 


which it treats.” — 
‘The ticle 
a mere 


it is ha nd-book 


it is a m te 

gr 45 e of 

istory of 
Chron 


elbourne,’ 
Weekly iclé, 


SECOND EDITION, REVISED 
price 4s, 6d. 
L C-H 


Just pablis 7 5 
U R 


n the Hon i; 

“ Partie’ not in com 
the work sent, oe by 
order to that 


Annual pruning 
bee principle of 
xecution, &c. 
ding up 
Budding knife 
Badding of 


piant, care of buds 
Budding upon body 
Bu Ftion ot, 


des 
ae — success 


buds, 


March Bon ing 
ixture for healing 


lantation 
Lendak: J. MATTHI 


b; 
Printed of St Panen 
aw, Sto! 
po in Lomb 


essenger. 
of this book ~ lead a person to 


an 
It reminds us much 


eB be! Daa SoLLY, Pe r RS, F. L. S. Bd 

Hon . Roy, AGR. Soc, E 
4 the s iiorticultugal pager fet of Londa 
E. I. Co. 


post, fo 
mount to the "Pa bliss, 
the office of ox Gardeners’ Chron 


pws, 5, roe Upper Wi 


URY, 
WILLIAM aeae k 
both in in the, 


—.— ooe wiih, 

standard book, y: ne 7 i 

the poultry-yard—an 
g 


nature, 


and we cannot 


4 l 
1 


6. ; 


pr 5 


ing weh ne 4 


of No. 13, UP 


AGRICULTURAL | GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6. 


No. 40—1849.] 
O 


INDEX. 


O MARKET GARDENERS, NURSERY 

and Others.—A large quantity of CAULIFLOWER Pia 
sd sale, 22 . hes taal r stock.—Enquire of Mr. T. Cor 
Jam ai ve 


S CHEMIC UPRANP MANURE should 
ood bloo! 
old in tin r ry 2 w 
, and e ont: For f ange r particulars apply to 
Winn — E. Ren and Co., Union- road, Plymouth. 
Our e pr —.—— vo — adjoining the Plymouth Station 
of the e South Devon eet we and o 


be used by all . perasa a 
ag ag aaa other 
3s, 6 


FIRST- CLASS EMON i AT VERY REDUCED PRICES, 
arag u WALTON begs to 2 his Friends and 

he poeta k: that kis AUTUMN CATALOGUE is now 
ready, ‘oad | may be had for one stamp, conte aining the leading 


t- Grape mild se.. 627 b—630 e 
2 hne, 
635 a — Haz . (398 
Society of England €34 a | Horse Show ut Norwich ssc... 636 
Py | — Society „eee 6: 
Sia „ e . 631 
125 646 frets as — in: . 635 
629 e Josling’s 1 St. anp Gra b 3l 
„ 630 ¢ | Lisianths, Prince oo. 628 
sy e 628 
Te ee 
* 
dosies „ee 630 Pona’s Draining abies rev.. 75 
. 1 629 Potatoes, cultu ‘ 
#33 in tan 830 
635 3 
63 : 
637 
“Capt 3 Martin's — ‘ 
ir.) news fro 628 
mildew. 1 627 —. = 
Wheat ——— * an Oat in it .. 2 
23223 627 ¢ | Woodward on Polarised 1 
St. Alban's .. 631 b rev. 


e Petunias, Pinks, Carnations, 
&. 12 of the — Geraniums sent out * — autumn = A. 22., 
including Hoyle’s mpe aa Arnold's Virgin Quee 
GERANIUM, 


ARDENERS’ BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION, 


Peppered to send | 

the slet iost. (after which time — will not be received), 
to age, length of nites ant 

è, and means of a m without which petitions w 

By ord of dey Committee 

8 i akan "Secreta ary, 

rringdon-street. 
. of Petition — — —— — application to the 
tary. 


ANCHESTER BOTA NICAL AND HORTICUL- 


er. 
pie the 98 
N GUNSON, Secretary. 


AMERICAN NURSERY, BAGSHOT, SURREY. 
; Joux WATE ERER has much pleasure in announcing 
© he has published a Descriptive Catalogue of his exten- 


collection of R HODODENDRONS and other American 
be 


188 No NURSERIES, 
E. FRANCIS'S N w Deseriptive saul 


0 
f in — ag the e ensuing s season is now ready, and will be 
lication 


* with rose; ioner petals blush, with pure —.— centre, 
Th 9 t consiste f the petals of this flower constit 
— Price The usual allowance 


H. Bh T ber eedling Geranium, feels con- 

fiden s giving e having this season been 

— es mieter judges, who have pronounced it e in 

its e i oo Strong ipe now ready. 

PINKS.—The ae t first-rate show flowers, post free, 6s., 

98., and 125 per 
All at Burnley 


Edgend “nso sang near arais. 3 — Oct. 6. 


DOUGLAS'S 


which is thus des 


NEW = STRIKING 8 ane e 
RTHUR MACKIE begs to offer * anes 


£ oned to the attention of Florists, a — 
tion that they will give entire satisf: 
Ar 


pan 3 OTHELLO. —Good 


whom 


„ has- 
uble olighecks, separate sorts, 
b bl eg buff and red, crimson, 
pale lilac, pink, puce, purple. red, agony , white, yellow. 
5 Mixed moe Hollyhocks, 
l age Pœonies Double White Ponies 
Pink ditto | hite Sweet do, 
1 roots at Is. each. 


RLY GREEN PEAS. — This 


a loss 5 
hardy, and of a most distinct habit to al other early Peas 
can be had of F K WARNER, 


n-street. 


Retail, 28, gonm; and 3, Laurence | 
London 


5 SPLENDID NEW GERAN 

yess 1 anD SON kae — 

ch they = — steno recomm 
15s. 0d 


end, 
55 15s. Od 
Gaine 15 0 


Masenger. Gaines 


"5 flowers. Se 
—— — $ — — VI 
fter tha! 
will be 2 
2 WOODCOCK” S MAGNIFICENT. 
n an “Verbena, 22 
2 


‘MEN, | ¢ 


A 
| petals ro ma 
NIMRO 


[Price 6d. 


Ganes rengia FANCY AND OTHER 
GERANIUMS, 

GEM.—Upper petals . “purple, 
petals white, with a sta - — 3 

JELIGHT,—Upper pe nason purple — hong white, 
lower petals white, with purple spot in each, 10s, 6d. 

MADAME E MALIB RAN.— ae inc, edged with 8 with 
— 3 lus. 


OREST 86. — per tals bright rosy crimson, with purplish 
spot; under peta — purple, with white centre; the best 


uf its cla — ** 
. — Upper petals shaded crimson, under 


a white 


-Upper — crimson purple, with crimson spot; 
lower peta. —+ mson ee. veined; 108. 6d, 

HERO OF SURREY. — Upper petals nearly black, belted with 
pure white; lower petals white, with a carmine spot in each ; 
10s, Gd. 


e SEEDLING SHOW GERANIUMS. 
EL 15070 J r s fine rose, = crimson spot, mar- 


— Upper peta 
| gined with orange, an pure white; 42s. 


URSA MAJOR. pper * eri tod with rose 
under petals rose, excellent shape, colour * & 31. ide 

LADY EVELYN.—Fine pink, with hg 2 crimson spot in 
the upper petals, tie 33 nine fox 8. 6d. 


à FLYING DUTCHM N.= Uppor petals rosy serie, 4 —— 
spot, margined with 3 under petais a perfect 
model; 318. 6d, 


PRINCESS HELENA. — Orange, with crimson spot in the 
upper petals, fiue form; 21s, 

GRENADIER,—Bright crimson, with a dark spot in the 
upper petals ; the best of show flowers; 218. 

DUCHESS’ — ARGYLL.—brig ut pink, crimson spot in the 
. petals; 2 

Hi MOOK: * petals nearly men N with rose; 

node r petals rose, sha ded with scarlet, a spot in each ; 

tinely p pencilled, q an yvelly ; 31s. Gd. 


NEW AND DISTINCT SCARLET GERANIUM. 


LINDLEY, in the Gar DA ronicle — Seeder 17, 1846, ton the flower i ght cherry colour, perfectly round, very 4 
page 693—“ Height, 215 ; greatest circumference, nt 7 fee la large truss, free 3 a fine horse-shoe vagy the stem and 
9 kocher at 187 feet high, 17 feet 4 inches, wpa * -stal lks’ of the flowers are transparent coral, It ob- 
tion contain 237 leads of timber. This descri ito ne Royal Botanic E * Hrst-olass 
its — the several beautiful Nn ae gro rtificate at the Floricultural Socie x 
Dropmore (and some few other piaces), and planted when’ Many of the above also obtained prizes at the same societies, 
85 uced 18 y since, pae » ve Cutalozue will be ready tribution early in 
an average growth of t per um on ungenial .—Nurser dee Me ne, Battersea, 1 
Strong 5 3 6 inches igh, 2 pots, 2 years old, - - 
per 100; 30s, per y ane P A few 
is 1 * 2 to 5 fect, 70 d. to 4 00 
5 rseryman and Contracting Planter, Red ige, R. Ab A A. PEARSON | — + a large number of 
— thampto „the above, offer them at 64; euch, a s 


cosum 
Chrysosplenium al- 
ternifolium | 
Camp 


6 * 
> TULIPS, HYACINTHS, RANUNCULUSES, ANEMONES, 
0 6 ae net 10 H AURICULAS, GERANIUMS, anp LILIUM LANCIFOLIUM. 
+ 15 0 | Sparkler, Hoyle’s 10 6 OOM, PHAM oudon, by ap- 
0 6 Book's 206-404 30 6 piara FLORIST TO HER MAJESTY THE 1 an 
6 oyle’s . 7 6 to a AJESTY THE KiNG oF rea cg respeott y informs 
or a selection of any 12 for 5l. 5s.— | the Nobility, Gentry, and Amateurs, that he ny a fine be. 
aniums to the amount of 50. 5s, will have a lection of the above Flowers, which he can offer at the geese 
lies ies ome Field Marshal sent gratis on the lot.— | very moderate prices : i 
can be had on prepaid application. 100 TULIPS, i in 100 fine sorts, named 7 7 0 
— a. eren 5 5 0 
TEXAN Mixtures, per 100, 5 aT 7s. 6d. to 21s. 
ose LAING, Nurseryman, Beverley, 95 AHT ACN TH. in 25 superfine sorts, named arp 
S the public that he will send Atkinson’s Ditto, fine kinds, per doz „ 
oe a —— out the second week in | 100 RANUNCULUSES, in 100 superfine s sorts, named 210 0 
t discount, but one plant will uperfine Mixtures, per 100, fi m 5s. to 21s. 
odere d. A. L. to refer to ex- 100 . rery ANEMONES, in 50 aparand sorts, aa 
Ci also t new collection 2 
tures (double), p: 100, 75. 6d. and 10s. 6d. b 
RICULAS, in 25 superfine sorts, — ai — — i 
4 a oy. much . in the lobes of the varieties, per doz ope ice | 
on that accoun 1 st others; colours 25 GERANIU S, in 28 upertine sorts, named — wise 


sg ag LANCIPOLIUM att, D 157 0 — or 10s. p. doz. 
for 


ed * anded, the same tint as the 

‘sto creda f ipe a shade or two deeper on 

oie olla peenaa describing half a circle. 

hu action of this flower consists in each petal of 

erag beautifully and distinctly margined with 

ally pale blush ground, the inner portion 

nted with ider this a 
decidediy is 


ting 
selon 15. 26. to 10 8 
Ditto Ditto, punctatum each from 5 ) 
Ditto Date rabini or a from sad : — 
ts — 4 —.— - 1 
A ew COLLECTION 0 an " SEEDLING 
crores: six sorts . . ee 0 
H. G to say that this Catalogue „e., is 
ready, — ‘will b orwarded by post on 313 
* The usu al discount to the Trade, 


K 
individual flowers will freque fly vel six anic 25 
very free h he and growth, and well suited for Lake See alis b i formosum 
„Sept. 15, 1849.—“ W. „ pumila azurea | „ levis „ ternatum — 
rose, 5 to pint =- remarkably fine variety, wi „ ditto alb; „ lanceolata 5 oppositifolia 
largest flow . Plants, the a of April, p poll „ hirta „ Ewersii 
1850, — — ais Pheer’ three ater rdered four will be sent. alpina „ Stellaris „ stellatum 
Norwich Nur reery, Octobe „ ditto rubra „ Sternbergii „ rosen 
3 pe Cardamine trifoliata] „ as ae „ hyoridum 
5 “temas EMPEROR PEAS. —These 9 * R elegan a. Opi 
Peas, being large croppers and fine in flavour, well merit | Dian hysso’ io 5 „ Sie 
the attention of Podders and Farmers who are growers of early ulata 
Peas; they are decidedly much earlier a pamer than cæsius 
= generality of early Peas, as a proof of which they were Draba — 
thered at Win ner on the one of Meno ay be oy inc 
9 RICK Wan sman, Wholesale and Retail, | Bgllobiumlatifotium 
Cornhill, and 3, en ö — lane, Cannon-st., Lanzen. van) ts 
pi 


1a r tolius 

Linaria alpina Bucklandii | Thymus azurea 

„ hepaticefolia ogee Tussilago 

j balaria Thalictrum a 

„ Gitto alba v a vulgaris 
j variegata] „ Ainoa pleno o 
„ pilosa Silene 3 Veronica montana 
Lychnis alpina leno „ taurica 

„ Viscaria „ alpestris „ alpestris 

„ ditto alba „ quadridentata | ,, fruticulosa 
Linnea borealis — „ saxatilis 
Mitella diphyll o excarpa 


Chilwell Nurseries, e e 


ARMOUTH BLOATE ERS—GENUINE AND OF 
THE FINEST QUALITY. 
Yarmouth has for cen 
known Yarmo: 


1 for its 


oj * 
part ot the k or for expo (on reocipt of a post. 
| Sse order), at 3 per 6 100, — ing included Ja orders to 
be addressed to Mr. ap JK BROUGHTON 
uare, Great Tamos 


626 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE, 


— = ant AN IS STINT a 
ARNOLD'S VIRGIN QUEEN E is the 
„It seedling of 184 
Mf sila E ai all of which 1 


time ; 


whic 
magnieenty last season, more than 350 — 14 | orde 
SOM 


3 


give the greatest satisfaction. ea 
including a e of that excellent jon, r s Cnv- 
SADER, 
eee WLan E. RENDLE & Co., Union- road, Plymou 
Our Dutch Bulbs have — 1 arrived i in excellent =. 
Catalogue on application, grati 
D'orses, ROMAN AND PAPER WHITE NAR- 


_CISSUS, 45. “yar doz zen. i abo ove ate the former o 8 
teeme ssi 


ee; 1 Cat 
logues of which A w. be axe 


— GEORGE, HENDERSON, 8 


ohn's Wood, London a to offer 


Fe — 5 WITH FLOWER BU 


DELICIEUSE STRAWBERRY 
2 J. FAIRBAIR N regret to inform the 127 
t other, We fei ye so libera 


the 
— e very mitad — they — ps a 
G n compe 


ROSES he ak Catalogue of H. LA E 
an N, Great Berkhampstead, with a a Rapplompatary | a 
List ot those best sui for acpi , Grouping, ining on 
Trellis, Weeping, &e., is no 


rea ady, and applicants will be 
upplied with a copy by * · two postage stamp 


9 8 Horsphallii, King, Monarch h cia tis, 
ee striata, oblissima, Pendula, Thomson's 
Susa rdii, Juliana, Eliza, — Victoria, Sieboldii, 


rthy of cu 
eat Yarmouth Nur Eeg 


TULIPS, 755 ANE XEMONES, HYACINTHS, 
CA „e. 


S0, F PICOTEES, 
LO 


— — . Peautitul and very distinct new fancy —.— sive collection of FLORISTS’ FLOWE a8, oul hare to 
pg ig ME Re A ~~, vo en ir ap m 1 inform them that n Priced Catalogues will be sent to 
on = aa A light edging of — wil ine 2 a t y any add tee: on 5 of two postage — a. 

purpl + 

white and sometimes biote The flower and truss large, HE RANUNCULUS : yg TO GROW IT, may be had 


a most profuse Coenen — retains its lowers as long as 
the sar peng Victoria Geranium. A drawing of the flower (by 
Holden) may be 

8. taw 45 strongly recommend the above Geranium, — 


of any Bookseller, wee > 
closing Sept po 


r direct, on application, en- 
tage 
ranunculus Seed 5s, per packet, post free, 


BN! IN R. CANT „ St. gen! s-street Nursery, 


. no doubt it will prove one of the greatest favourites ev 
— ont, as it ia iisa s in one sheet of bloom for ok 4 „ has now — 4 for delivery, strong well- 
— thened peri e ion nts of the followi 
N.B. The usual allowance n ihe 3 and for every three | GERANIUM, HOYLE’S CRUS ows WB. 6d. ine 
lants ordered four will be g ERRIRE, 8 BRILLIANT `. 11 7 2 
Pp FUCHSIA SPECTAB LIS Ts. 


DWARD GEORGE HENDERSO ON, Wellin 
Tn 


1 es e and pac kage free to London, 
rence, requested from unknown c 
The She discount to the trade. 


aya n’s Wood, London, Wee on 1 * 
comm: sending o = the following new Seedling 
CINERARIAS, — by him would advise intending pur- OSEPH 1 NurseryMan, G Bel- 
asers to 1 time in — their orders, as thi * um, begs to inform his friends and the public in general, 
a be sent off first, and all orders executed in strict | that his New CATALOGUE of PLANTS is just published, and 
ad gratis, o Kevin be t-free on application to 


gin all its points 
r 108. 6d. 
ANGEL Ligue, carmine, white disc, distinct and novel 


om aati and Shipping Agent, Cox and 


BESSY, ~~ rich plum, a ‘beautiful, distinct, and age stam 
striking e 5 35 FRUITS for * 3 Page 8 e stamps. 
W ier, a clear white, ‘slightly tipped with EES ae RUBS, r the present 
ht blue, fine form 6 8 Eng t-free 7 rsi —— — 
DELIGHT, rosy 5 distinct and new colour, a THE MINIATURE FRUIT GARDEN, or Culture of 22 
neat dwarf flower 5 0 | midal Fruit Trees, * for Root-pruni ing, ao sent post 


EMPEROR, 
FLORA ie ‘IVOR, rich 1 


rosy crimson, large bold flower, and very 


mm 3 —— hames- street, London 
Db CATAUOGUNS, BY TH * 
VERS: OF r 1849, In s only the most 
rted. 5 on receipt of — — 


free for 24 3 


Nurseri “nen ome Herts, 


best of its colour, of free wth, 3 — 7 6 | TALL, HANDSOME EVERGREENS, & 8. 
LADY GERTRU DE, bright — 1 blue, large flow well r ooted in an adhesive yei — 1 Ane effect, 
Senta 0 J. FOSTER, of the Edgware Nurseries, an 
NINTH, ‘ cles white, violet-purple disc, form good, 0 pos fine Stock the ee at 9 low prices, 
T cupped, . 5 0 which e delivere don, free. They ist 
PA LINE, a violet plum, shaded with crimson, fine rincipally of Portugal Laurels, Gree urels, Arbor Vitæ, 
broad petals, — ite shape ee Je Kem. Hollies, Spruce, Scotch Fir, eymouth * —.— 
8 I 4 tals divided with white and orim- Laburnums, Maples, Limes, Horse Chesnu nae rnbeam 
thelat 4 ating, fine dark disc, Beech, &c., with a quantity of — Spruce, evergreen 
—— — 2 of fin 3 a os. — — 5 0 hedges. Roses, also, and Fru of the — kinds, are 
WELLINGTON, ‘peta equally divided with white grown mnibuses alan the Old Bell, and Black 
and ish crimson, maroon dise, flower of z> Ball, H and pass the aih — five times a day; fares, 
form, large, and beautifully cupped warded on application to 


the price ‘will ‘be V. 10s., 
given, or three plants 


AN. THE QUEEN OF SUMMER,” 

RD. R n Mtge a ae 
Nursery, St, John’s- wood, London, is now receivin 

— the above “beautiful SCARLET GERANIUM, whic — 1 einde be 

sent eùt on after the 8. each, 

— 


ol born, 

15.5 inside os _ Prices 
outside te are Nurseri 
— ATO — 


ron Walden, Oet. 6, 1849. 
SUPERB DOUBLE "HOLLY HOO CKS, 


LASS FOR co 
Jass, PHILLIPS A m 
e Topa New a or a of 
16 oz. from 2d. to oi per a 
21 ab, 


ay : 4 
5 * 

m Und In boxes of | 
26 5 3} 5 er 


3 


32 4 
Ni feet paa | 200 feet ences 
at 24d, foot. rite 
fact, according to size 
A 


of la 
Plate Gt 


a 


6} by a. 


6 by kant 
8 by n» 8t by 6 


; Wasp Traps, 39, 6d, 
Slabs, see eo Glasses. and D 
Fish Globes, Plate ** 


stimates and List of Pri fi 
Warehouse, 116, Bisho pratesi Vat laia 
67 ASS FOR ONSERY 
GREENH 100 ane PIT FR Kane 
R AND 8 are ‘supplying 16-07, Sheet Gi 
Manu r ek Containing 
square feet radia at poss “ollowing REDUGLS 
4 reduction made 00 feet, 
Si nches 


1 


PRICES for cad 

From 6 

7 

8 

10 

rger sizes, not exceed 40 inches 

16 oz, fsa 3d, to a rel acos 
2loz. ,, 33d, 

260z. „„ 34d. 734 
1 ROUGH PLATE, THIC 2 sia te 4 
Hortieultural 

r Rough Plate Glass. 

R 3 er Glasses, Cucumber T 

ee Pans, Glass Wat ipes, and various other 

nerto ma — gi in glass. 


PATENT PLATE GLASS.—The Tr 
— 


uperior i 
alteration ¢ connected with the sash 05 required 
GLASS SHADES, as ornam 
of 


apptiostion to James ——— and bo, 35. . 


AND dee 2 — 


by 8 feet, glass ends » 1 door, a : 
with 16 oz a 
of best oil colour, W to any r —.— London, — 
for 151, 10s.; a do, do, 15 by 10, Hi iy; as IS : 
. 10s.; a do, do. aL y 12, 32. 10s., ig a plan for 
ick 12-inch $ I. coe 4 
sheet glass, painted t! as * per ony 2inch de, i 
per foot.—J. Lewis’s Machine Hothouse orks, Stauford-bill, 


Middlesex were ee 

AKERS PHEASANTRY, * 
d, Chelsea, b; ial appoi ber Majesty and 

H. R. H. Prince Aibe rt, ORNAMENTAL wars _ 

consisting of black and white swans, 

bernacle, — and 3 geese, pr beren 


II LIAM CHATER is n w sending out strong 
mts. of his unequalled co — eks, cor 
. isi ‘new and choice seedlings of 1848 1849, which 

1 “= ee gad ae ich Horticultural 


rever shown 


TO C. has also the entire ‘eae de of the late Mr, 


C. Baron, 
1 dereriptbe and priced list m: 


e at Saffron Walden. 


tisa gy SEBENDID N) Jey GERANIU UM. 
e „and quite orna- ae Ba MARSHAL” 
mental in itself. I: blooms most trusses of 1 is a Striking oad Noble Flower, with a remark- 
dark scarlet flowers, thrown well — from the foliage; and ably fine habit, great freedom of and substance of 
with all its g qualities, will certainly prove one of the most | petal, The trass is thrown well above the foliage, on 
a ane — os “3 and wi etout. | ‘stout erect foot-stalks ; the colour of upper petals is a deep 
E. The usual allowance e; an en th ` 1 2 : 

plants are ordered, four pi given . 

gS 3 GROWERS. admirable show variety, Its only faultis an occasions l umeven- | 

ROGE S UTTOXETER HERO. a in the u 1 — — exhibited at the Seedling & 

: _ | nium ibition at Upton —— une J wh 
pone ge ROGERS, bey ay’ and FLORIST, has it was one of the that ived prizes, See — ‘of the’ 
great pleasure = 5 inet and first-class | genome and description of flower, in No. 19 of the “ Florist.” 

22 assur „ luable l Te essrs. VEITCH and Son are re now prepared to send out strong 
. the 2 twa — 4 ne ag on of nery — ae tors * i plants of usual 
ardeners’ Journal, tural ae. 
Cabinet. and Midland Florist. 6. considers y ‘the j Miscouss to she irea eon acter, Out. he 
pd 1 FoR SALE.—Soine o of the finest IVY į grown in 
fa . good, Feen eg ee ef at a very moderate rate, as the 
or eines bree Wane, Carpent nten pagg — earit rot? his grounds, Apply to CHARLES 
e and exquisitely — A 2 


etl raised and 


2 erage.’ 
Brot 7 Viite, sno pic pe The usual discount to 
the trade es are ordered at once. The above may be 


bicolor, 


i meee d Wee e 


la rosen. 3 of) 1 


p.... eae ON REN ae 
HEEL BARON ATES, al Sines and Eaa | pean 


| shovellers, 3 and dun LEE — 0 


y be had, on lica 
aa mp. application, by | 
mca is requested on very of Plants, Post office orders 


domesticated and pinioned ; 
oland, Surrey, 4 Borkin 
—.— bee and pure — 2 
moo e, Grac 
COREE ; BUILDING AND Tamm 
BY HOT WATER. 


ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF rue GHOICEST PLANTS, 
VINES, FERNS, &e. 


12 
EE 


ue N 
Co., King Cina ia 
H 
will attest 9 0 ae 


PE WEEKS anp 


2 
— ee which 
os now in progress, © 


3 
Sa OR UPRIGHT : BARONETERS, Il. 1s. to 61. 6s. houses, Conserv. 
BAROM 5s. 


05. 
fe for the pocket, 1 
‘showin g the degree o 
9 te 156. and A. 100. 
the qu ali ity of Milk, 5s. Drawing 
iis. to 4}, 48 Magie ‘La 
Dissoly ing View 


PIS, 
nterns, with 12 er from 
out for the evening, 


t warranted and 
wisiiing for an acne, 
„ m 
— hae faker io to the Buard of A 
m Garten, Lun don, 


r H net approved 2 


‘by writing to that J yd ‘ 
Admiralty, | 


s Feal at 
2 


avery cellent stock 
which ch will be ready the first week in O 
selection of TWENTY, from the 


Lip, Pluto, 
pes —.— bella, Standard of Perfection 


“ti CRUSADER and ARNOLD’S VIRGIN QUEEN, 


y to WILLIAM E. RENDLE and Co., Union-road, Plymouth. 
— Ca py 
és now ready, and 


OSEA W 


on = ene 
ANTS, 


ERICA f 
IRER be 


CAN ano Pirate tes PLANTS, ee m may be had 
25 


; Hoo Ps 3 * 

Paris ; Princess Royal, 7s 

Cuthill's Black i Prince 
ay il * 

tT, Manor F — Oct. 


Lisianthus,” 


on 3 fe CUTHILL, 


— , ne ee ee ae 


aT SEASON. 
LFRED BALSTON | to inform planters he has 
still a large proporti his Stock to di 2 e 
2 in consequence of. 4 — ige shed the trade, he 
at Page ver ced prices. The Stock comprises every 
MENTAL, FRUIT, and FOREST TREES. 
sal be the bost t kinds 85 SHEUE ultiv 


5 T to feet, 1 1775 c 3 4 0 6 
b Portugal L 2 feet, 10s. per m, 
1 to 2 feet, a . 3 to 4 feet, Gg.; $ 


maller ditto, 6s. 


1 


Bc il a ped aai 7 5 k 
tandard epai of all the finest sorts, 12s, per 
— 4 of r Oak in pots and trans- 

m, 


drs 

4 2 moc 

i į also Beech, Birch, Berberis, 
f Priv veh he 


ccc 


to . err free. — Poole Nursery, Dors: 
write Y’s ghee near 
LEY ounce to Strawbe 
—.— the Public pit 3 that he has now ready 
strong ee È a of = above — 
4l. per hun a and fe 


tat ou viz., the British Quee 
lavour—if ior, is equal with the above-named 
though sgl 
e Queen. 


th 1 
the Queen 


* F 


and very much resembling the Queen, 
j which it is raised, E a oy oy Be th, 
Heer i. pit the Winer much 4 than 
* 


e ie Sin Gera- 
following list, | ford 
PHOYLES en CRUSADER, ARNOLD'S VIRGIN for an h 


» | Or ons 
Brilliant, 0 Fg Victory. 
he 


. orders are desired, as some of the sorts are 3 
p Hyacinths and other bulbs 


w announce he has just 
published a + ew and Complete Catalogue of his ANDRI- * 


oth, 
1.5 Kee Seedling, Bs. 6a. 
7 


s maie eee to 


trong Ee 


a 

ponticum g 

feet, * Fod 2.100. n Azaleas of all the fin — Phinds, i 
„ 28. 6d. 


ae must be maotinpasial by — — . amount. | 


bling that of the Pine-apple.* | it ao 


PEL T R GO NIU M Ms, 
OTHER RAISEES’ FLOWERS. 
Now ready for selection a d going ow Twelve of th 
fol . Variation includi 2 es carriage to Lo 
will 2 arvan dine ozohango for Font office Onder ron Bren 
ey are well roote inch pots, and 7 


Ep K, Worton <i Isleworth, 


— ich remittances 
e7 the 10th inst 
plantsin tacky 
Catal, 


e ed, 
— chen maining 
pots, will be open tor 
gues 
ation to JOHN ee Worton — simn 8 
dlesex. Post-office orders are re. wangi n Brentfor 
B. The anguar 


in its stond. 
DSCAPE GARDENIN 
H ROG GERS, having had 1 practice 
the above departmen tot 4 jpo and given the 
RARA 8 his mployers, can with con- 
fidence offer his s sin designing, “aging out, and re — — 
ing Parks, Flower- gardens, and 


SONS are are pre oil out — of every siz 
Ponte of this and the following varieties at the prices and pee a, pee ye — w the m ost app oved taste. Tern orms, 
yatt’s Eleanor, 10s. 6d. : Pertilised Hau utbots, clusive of travelling e hn ng this, when 
sar a British Queen. Ss" 4% Globe, 3 Pr ary, to include : a Working Pian, clearly defn d, and 
if 3 Every i A ipler s also given relative to t 


b 
munica atio ons 1 to W. 


ROGERS, urserym 
0, Hig h-street, — will 


posi with rom t — 


RD DENYER, 1 1 
on. ee 15 


nest g ten 
is laid a and — to any e 
. D. is desirous of inform oye — s customers ie E; no seed 
shop in London. A general | nt on a prepaid application, 
by in 


The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 


'ATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1849. 


ESE tell us that a gardener near 
Loads has been fined for 83 the neighbour- 
ood by carting 1 bogie’ to = master’s 
Kathi ses. The material w s lime, and the 
dener said that te used 14 in the hotheuses “ for 
other n 

S 


shoul 
that which infects a a rhoo 
hothouse, or reason the ingenious gen 
a had for supposing that . — 
and other most offensive emanations could 

destroy the mildew on his Vines. 

Ve 8 here a 1 8551 me agies of hen Jeol 
saa 


ptoms of | in 
hapara 


ood gar- 
of till, hos Suna 
th 


today 3 on the other 

the practice of an Unr “never to do 

api phic. waa On can Le be put off till to-morrow,” 
a ple certainly, for a} except the masters 

ì | who — 2 by it K. In the case of the U. 

not a day, not an 


eginning 
eglected it is irresistible. puts 
off attending to it is li e man who, his house 
being in a blaze, leaves po hg and windows 4 
open , and then are mastering 
oo ets ce looking for r the 8 


ME quick-sighted correspondent sent 
* day an Ean 


growing out o 
Oat-field, ergo, the ad change 
2 ced figure ne ge ai well the appearance 


of the phenomen 
Sure enough ps A "L here some ian 
vidence of the 


; glue was then 
ene with bein nga ‘party 
o a trick, 


but 


will 
i ; the sig Een was that 
sel pa rate 8 Vin P e gar- 
dener * 11 that aim hydrogen will kill 
insects; e ma mildew 
to be an . av 
entered his head, or he could scarcely have hit t upon 
the e which ended in his appearance in a 
lie neh 


EE poe 


that Spana hydrogen in large 


roy all life, whether animal or 
the 


. et a Bath, and of Messrs, 
11 Page who can testify to the s supe- 


ae ROOTS, &¢.— HA 
e J i: 


superior varieties 9s., 12s., and 18s, 
(named), 63. 


if K 
Wilte . — will des 
But — 


the hat 
and egret condition,” 
lace. t be othe 


WM. HAMIL 
sound quality, from ie | and 


dozen 1 2 2 
18. JONQUL Pas 2 5 
ee 
ive 435 a pe —— . aad 


vegetable. if it was to kill mildew in 
this case it have killed the Vines. Iti is 
fortunate that the “ experiment Was not pe 


in a very 
when such doings take 


t cannot rwise if in other respects 
ing, 


| would have 


Their condition wed 
see them in London; they will n 


;| They sho 


2 and hw off 945 sop 

ted itself round the ear o 
— very young ; they had pir on up together, 
linked in stri e chaff of the Wheat 


race ; 
© | had completely hidden the stalk of the 2 which 
snapped 


at last, by some accident or violence, w 

parent, and left clinging to its 
1 hidden 

such acldents as this have led to to the positive 

3 of corn will change into 

another ? ray be eiii Arje a in 28 

case, the . was to all appearan 

bee n tod le 


supporter, 


W, 
rded as being “ very in 
7: lest week 8 to describe it. 
Two or er. were brought ss 
the nn Soc 
e usual notice 


aya 


number of bunches of the fornens Chasselas 
X of Fontainebleau, of which it is said that 
lbs. are sent daily to Paris, were exhibited, 
e reason why we never 
V x 
ough packed in Fontainebleau mu 
they were bruised, broken, and . 


wed, af, howonay | cont Grapes 


their treatment ; forn no one 


old ki kitchen fia a at Weile, the . 
2 e r: 2 W erran 1 7 


628 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


we translate for the Bn get benefit of those who 
putrid odours in 
G: 


with 
tion 1 of benefit their Grapes :— “ The v 


land. 

Another exhibition of Grapes was from Mr. James 
Davinson, the Gardener at Aldenham Abbey. Fo 
we 


IDS 
example to thos ” gentlem 
lain that eng See get any Grapes 
ouses are so bad. 
These Ep said Mr. Davipsox, “ were grown 
in a house which, owing to the recent alterations 
RT, have 


W 
Dont their 


any commendation es 
An ingenious contrivance, by Captain t Mammis, for 
ling plan’ of a 


enab ants in 2 the dry clima 
` drawing-room, o hide the pots, sath to 
deserve favourable 850 


The invention con- 
rnam 


ds and yet its 
as it could be, if the proportions of the fruit were 
served. T is is eleven ounces heavier than 


hibite 


e Hort ticul- 


me. 
jenai we eren into hole two 
d, was Be the heaviest 


wii Mr. "aie has this y 


thus we see that t years c 
accomplish a feat * cultivation which dull-witted 
o doubt 
they - judged correctly of their ws capabilities; but 
ie. measure everybody by their own low standard 
an absurdity of which only cual men could be 


Tun many friends of Dr. Joszrn Hooxer will 
rejoice to know that the last Indian Mail has brought 
safety amidst the dangers 
On the 5th of 2y 


rains were ieee toe 


pe 
e sometimes must give, in order to 


t ap 
Rhododendrons | belongs 


he same mail has also brought letters from Mr. 

e| Fortune, dated Shanghae, July 12. He had made 

very large collections of Tea plants for the East 

3 Company, fro oo-e-san district, 
ll as 


are reported to have 
had been forwarded 171 Dr. Faxcongr to the 
, | provinces. 


. irons oF Listantus* is of too 
s of fine plants to be left in 


porta: 
What 


cbse ty u 
are is sufficient ly t 
fen the following extract f 


R 


range it 
to the section c S — is 
undoubtedly one of the * Arye at in cultivation.” 
„Iti tis a native of New Gre 


80 
much im- 


told by the annexed cut, and | 
a new number of | w 

the Journal of the Horticiliubal Societ 
n 


there 
a class of compound or mixed 
of e particles . stiff, earths, 
rough to the touch—not vadil 
_ | Readily diffusible i 


on by a 24425 $ and tha green — 


- But loams most frequently contain a 
i calx of iron, which is more or less oxy- 
genated, a circumstance which produces — 3 
in the colour 
8 pow 
n 
o, some Proper of the hereon acid. The 
sandy part of the ero tarar has m 
3 olour. When d are mixed wi 
ms, the dist 3 pers ore pavelig so ie 
an wi limestone loams,” according as the substances 
predominate. 
Loams are e generally understood to consist of clay, 


siliceous sand, he carbonate of lime, The quantity 


humus are Hoy f 


at are found on th the 
seems to be naturally formed for the dee ese 
tility ; the pure earths are in themselves aln 
barren ; sands receive an 


require 
ois, whieh will 


‘aly he studied 
a ee 


winter. The whole aboun 


ndsome 


e 


Apm protection from a 8 5 “temperature in 
nus 


er vo E 11 Journal of the ats $ J 


8 3 i 
— ol 
one half of of “tis soil to be san 
rest chalk, to f ood loam, and rather 
heavy. Loams require tillage than 
and will bear more stirrings to 
the produce is 
kind of m can exert the popei 
they find a variety of substances oD 
their influence. All kinds of crops 
hrive well on | d animals 0 
“Some idea may be formed of the — of = pastured upon them during the whole y 
plant the dimensions of one of its flowers. | subsoil for loams is a compact x 
The cup of the calyx is 4 cat 5 p ý the miin the moisture downwards, 50 i begir 
is 5 inches long, and rather more than nch wid 1 and retains a s eee u B 3 
in the thickest part. ers hone on lon e upper soil ma 
terete stalks from the axils of the 3 2 T vag asf ji 
which are ovate, acute, deep green, and a amope * 
smoot LINDEN, of the Luxemb etd r, pers ** 
has raised it from seed, but it has not yet flowered | perty by which its quality is ju 
a : perty by w ich its q 
To me it is only kno a drie y 5 which, the 
eee Bao they i 


criterion of lh 
Nature affords the in 


ant will prob i 
mal = aoe 2 


Pome po — is a that so little should be form 


3 


— — 


n Res 
this flower de it would searcely be 


1 


i 
1 
„ 


= th 
w 3 


40—1849.] 


THE GARDENERS' 


CHRONICLE. 


629 


Limestone, g: 2 and sand are also ape mea for 
2 5 equa 

will be the remedy; 2 2 
of man is able to effect — only” 1 echa- | 


| shows as yet no external signs of life. It is yond a ex- 
n the ee aa the epidermis, that w. 

certain tha perished. 
cellular tissue pief a K perfect health. T. 
give scarce any sign of life, and the fibres which have 


ught 
s which the Jand undergoes in the pro. 


afforded 


to be D, yet the no : 


d are 75 very few and small, and yet there is 
i This state of the plant lasts 


h water, in exciting galvanic 4 action, 


ht | tuberous, A peal even in bulbous 


pearance 
The following year it produces some shoots, 
of the poorest Thus the plant is graduall 
extenuated _ finally perishes, This bg 
rees, but t examples seen in 
3 plants. 


it in 
m (Pelargonium ay bed botanis ists). I ha 


a large 
bee full of old roo A 


no doubt, 
of the “elements from which the pane won. tog 
is subject has scarcely ever bee 
but no part o of oe physiology 8 po 
tention. J. D 6 
ON THE ODOURS OF PLANTS, ole THE 
MODES OF OBTAINING THE 
before mentioned, it is not intended me 


1 


speak of 


e 
vill apply as ee that, thou gh sweet in 
Aber Lare ae they becom 
of abstracti 


© 
** 
D 
= 
E 


m oil comes over which is poen ly na pars s. Next 
in the order we have laid down 
_ Lemon. —This | fine perfume 15 "abstracted. from the 


Eg 
HF 
ch 
— 
mu 
z4 
o 2 
Hy 
— 
8 8 
oO 
a 
B 
ae 
— 
EN 
oO 
8 
3 


ots of — 15 vhi I gave away several, 
But neither in those i i 


However, 
and in spring they again put | res 
Those only perished which 


ater 

2 nnot, I think, be cured in 

will of themselves in due „time Tee 
of trees i 


restoring vegetation. Can it be that the large wound 


inflicted tA the operation, by suddenly — the stag- 

nant sa motion, e — who 

functions to to resume tkeir ? 
ne species. ge 


1 vn. —In the public 
salle 5 thé gates — Re 


it is sufficiently known without description. It is seldo 
nsed in perfumery alone, but frequently in combination 
Be umi 


a 
s 
E 


b also used in certain 
freshness pungency are req 
with nee and nage th 


uired, n oiii ion 
yme. 

te of England appears to be 
better ida adapted for N peer bow mk of this fine 
old favourite perfume than any other on the globe 
hence dour, but import rt all the reek 

in ey the seat of its production in a 
reial ngs oe wW. e flowers of Lavandu on 


proportion 
med Laven 
shay be peii teen > 
2 f Vanill 
ide m e Extract of Vanilla. 1 


we big ae er. £02, 
» Ambergris .., 3 pints, 
* ree 


2 
at least three month 

1 perfamer’s s trade this fine odour 

— known by name; the small demands for the 

article induce the Parisian perfumers to i the 

With Orange flowers and Rose, 


eDsA.—But for the fine 


as a weed. eet as it is in 
gris and d prolific in odour, we are not able, however, to 
e 


10 
l 
i 
8 8 
Fé 
eel! 
ai 
f 

d 


Her 


ery 
ignonette 8 


£ 
7 


rth the ? adition “of i “drach of ns" of 
e storax. The fi 
2 pints. api torre 
a spoonful of magnesia and filter if 25 quite “eke. 
s before u 


0 
odour tim 
known . the élite 


exportation it should be done at the lowest la 


I observed for some su ive y 
some amongs trees which after havi ed 
om oro and passed the 


very rance of ro 
yellow, ia bý the m 
d a d 


following spring, and again eve 
season, b 
was repeated. The co 
in different individuals, 
very year 
of them had perished, although some of them 


what we call the 3 Bak an 
d 


a eee The plants removed to the fields in circum- 
stances where they can no 3 receive the same 
PO Bg ts to v r to a certain degree, but 
taking yina oa of the — ious matter, of which 
more or less 2 on the aer of ‘the — 
continue to grow sf u e jyan 
to extend below that, i 18 psi oa a 
the amk pr 5 of P debility to: which they 
is results the necessity of 228 the 
and to be careful in 


diffieult, and 
ill be to him 


found to ae n | 


e system of organic | 


13. 
th Pipa 271 ee is a list of officers and 
e 


enced e 
e years a considerable ae | 


in their natural robus It is this morbid sta tate 
in which the t annot ney the full powers of its 
vegetating faculties duri ary perio 
term lan 


| this phenomenon i is very 


of cultivation, Zhi ry adh 10 the soil more s Eai 
The grea which 


nveyed — plant Ff its roots, may someti 
3 pos either rains or 
medy. 


ano! cause Fh languor, vee. e 
originally the fault of “the cultivator. This happens 


any rate pre- 


e 
med | BRITISH ASSOCIATION - FOR T THE ADVANCE- 
h NT OF — 


2 ‘ontinued Paana P. 6 
tion D, NATURAL "Holes: 


2 


e in this 6 resident : 
8 2 


F. L. S.; R. A 

: — (Rotterdam); 
onald, 5 Prof. on ops 
J. W. Gutch ; R. Ball, M. R. I. A eae as oe 


It has appeared to o that t ibe "principal ea cause of Serves 
lady i is the ore of nutriment, ful 

vation of the a convi 
The Smera in 3 is in a 


s soon as the roots 
er | penetrate into this, gi find n in a soil which 

supplies but a ve anty on which becomes 
more imperceptible as the drought increases in a sandy 
soil. The winter rains and the overflowings of the 
t in spring bring dori 


tage of 5 water rising fro 
tthe i e thing 
modifications as y the diversity 


ears they do not appear to have increased in 
size beyond what * did i 2 first three. This 
m badness of soi pens Bee be ascribed to 


=e ara rietor. This is 5 praca 


Possible, to p 


i 


1 00 
ES 
11 
4 
3 
ul 
3 
= 


simple 


odour from the leaves by | absolute 
It is not used, but is imitated. 


~. DISEASES OF 


| Sometimes th 


point, which, from what I have N some places, cen 


to the in the country as to 


9 some anal quantity — of — 5 
tinue to vegetate, althou do not grow sensibly. 
e bad — Dor pian planted 


F.LS. — Royle, F.R.S. The first comm 
ne of | read i begs Bn 


yF 
y|in coal beds. ithe Spparaton used in these 
constructed 


being Pe e every year, | P 
caused b 


ion. 
soil is er looked to before | 4 


m 
88 8 ‘whilst the 5 being in gravel, which i is 5 per 
absolutely ad to their the | Dr. 


ere 
at present 8 the action of “that gas on ant more more 
cular]: 


p 


uantity — eet 
during the than exists at 
Auen did not think the theory of =. 
carbonic acid in in the atmosphere during the 


and has had no ati 
„1 Hard Hoope. 


630 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 0 
A i CT. 6, | 
period. It was not | take advance of them. Has + a been | information. as to the method of =< a 
Sian N of certainty tht 1 * de mass ea that — Hed the pira ess of — which m its be aze di ‘Fee ang ihe rody 
— n ti ally consis kern He ha ti- not ject of mere luxury, but has cradle ede to used for the repairing of tea chests, Pr, et those, 
vated Ferns extensively, a and wund that they Were apply it to all the ordinary purposes of gardetiing, Wi | year and age to cu the 1 wat 
gréatly influenced e kind of soil in which they | we have had onl Cueu lig rly | splitting, &e. F. FER: bm * 
were A 1 — heen supposed that the tempera- | C cate being an essential in English gardening, and| The Grape Mildew.—Havin rd of the di á 
Ye of teed rópið thé d uring | nearly the only one i get into the ine- | which Grapes Have been so much affected of vith 
the period of the — deposit ara at présent, but he did —+ gardens, — then come bark beds, 1 pits have been using sweet oil remedy, and in late, Į 
not as the As à confirmation e. A * r 400/. a year garden esta- house in which I have an abundance of ee 
of this view he might state * the Ferns of the coal bisher How t that we cannot produe as cheap urgh), I find it to most effectis 
ds we er seen in a etification, he as the Duieh, now the glass in this country is e eap, er them every day and saturate the à 
d found, in the cultivation of Ferns, that those which | a ind timber is cheap, with labour at least as cheap as large camel’s-hair brush, dipped in the äi Pml 
ordinarily bore spores in w mates would not doso| Holland? You must feel mortified at the little success satisfied hat it isan effectual cure for the dics quite 
when éxposed to a lower temperature. e believed the | your exhortations have Ar with regard to the use | every bunch in our house was pi 101 æ 
chief growth of Ferns in the coal period arose from the eap glass as soon as the duty was taken off. I they are looking most healthy, and are wo" 
pro lu of sucker ANKESTER stated that always thought that your act us were praiseworthy beautifully. I have always used the oil when 1 iw as 
Broogniart’s theory accounted for ore than the v eta- gre ; try again. As regards Apricot cul- unhealthy ap éaranéé on the Vin , and Î have any 
tion of the co: riod. It accounted for the deposition | ture (the least satisfactory fruit tree we ), I have had any ill consequence arising f bit a de 
of the peroxide of iron in the old andstone, and the heard that Lor ill has the lat chere’s | contrary I have alwaysa most lovely erop of fing Gia 
deposition of onaté of lime in — tain lime- Dutch gardener, and that he yearly forces fine crops of Mary Andrews, Leyton, September Grapes, 
Stone, both of which must have eld in solution by | Apricots in small frames, and i any spect I a Poiatoe. ept in a l and dy 4 
carbonie aci rder to account Tor the great increase | continues the Dute mode of culture of W + house during 184 1849, and they were turned 
of vegetables and anim e su — of th ,| ticularly as regards salading. Is this Can any of | over frequently, so as to prevent their either heating * 
e mist have — supplies of mineral carbonic | your correspondent us any Aeboü bt af this ? Why rowing, and covered with just sufficient to keep the 
id. 3 Daubeny had shown, this was abundantly does not th . e Society send Mr. Thompson | frost from 1 em. I reco ced Planting in Peru 
supplied from wiese * ces. periods when | this autumn to Hol s they did last year to France! 1849, i stiff soil, previously prepared by deep 
volednie action was greatest, this gas would be in larger | I think he would ieee more than aris, urge | digging, "td attest W ith a compost of rotten farm 
quantities in th ae e én there was no proof at | your readers to ma xperiment protected dung, road dirt, a es. The rows were 20 inches 
all that its presence in t bore a fixed relation | trellis with different fruits, especially Apricots ; but I| apart. The ground was kept well hoed, atid the Pota- 
throughout all time to the oxy aiid nitrogen there nk the main point will be btaining some slight toes were earthed as soon as they were ready, ig 
With re to Dr. Daubeny’s experiments, it would be | bottom-heat on some plan similar to what Mr. Fleming | order to protect them from the weather. The 
interesting to know the relation between the growth of | has so well e néd i ur ns. One advantage | cultivated were Early Purples, Oxford Kidneys, 
plants and the soil in which they were planted when | of the trellis is that not having the tree nailed on a Manleys. I had my crop housed about the fist . 
in earbonie acid. It appeared to him that south wall the blossoms do not appear quite so quick as in September, and there was not one bad one; 

il, as a physical agent, capable of absorbing | those brought into premature bloom by the heat of the the whole lot—20 sacks. A 1 day or two ago 1 ak ie 
earbonic acid and gase more to do with the | wall in the early spring, and thus the roots and the | all sorted over, not a faulty one was discovered, Ire 
nourishment of plants than had been hitherto supposed. | bloom are in harmony. are say moveable | commend the following rules to be observed; Is 

Pro E Epwa : t with regard | houses like those mentioned by Mr. Bailey will be better | Never put ici 15 or eating Potatoes in À 
to the theory which 1 e deposition of moun- n the fixed trellis, and be made applicable to m smothered with s o heat. Never 
tain lim abi by the —9 held in solution by carbonic | varied purposes ; but recollect that even the fixed trellis | sets to grow before Planting ye etideavour to fitish 
acid, that it was oppo fact that zoophytes | is very useful as * for half-hardy plants wanting | by the end of Febru use 
generally died very rapidly Í water t ith caf- | protection from rain, &e., such as the potted Straw- | from the stable or 2458 der ralber look to the well. 
boni —Several instances were related by various | berries, Hydrangeas, aa dne, & c. Dodman. rned heaps. 4th. Have all the ground in which yo 
members of the Power plants — o of purifyi otatoes in decayed Tan free from Disease. —Having | place the tubers well turned, to catch the frost 
water so as to w marine and fresh-water animals to plenty of old tan in which s were gr last receive the full benefit of the 1 Where 
live in it, 7 pitied 22 would rie ily died. autumn, I determined to use it in planting my Potatoes, | Potatoes are pa nted early in the year, they must be 
soe fora property of purifying sea Shaws an d Regents. InN r t 5 h — deeper than usual, compared with the old custom of 
te Was po the nieht fettiaikable degree b wet loam—thrown up in ridges — feet April and Tam jnelined to believe that tio kinds 
— sea-weeds, The olive-coloured and red sea-weeds | apart, in ben that they night Fe Pidie the benefit of | of Potatoes should be set cn ie s The erop from 
were not so effectual. t er. In February I had the sides of the Hayes which I saved my seed was much much 30 
slightly chopped down, and a quantity of tan laid | that 15 lost one-third of the * in 1848. Falon, 
VILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENING, __ | bet em commenced planting the last week i ants: Grubs i 
Arter the operation of propagating for the following | the month, each set being planted whole, about priek the plants out in beds dredged with slacked 
flowe den decoration is over, prepare the | 16 inches apart, rolled up in à lump of rotten manure, | In so s if any plants are attacked, the de- 
plants to withstand 5 winter by exp vat 17 de d with on a quart of old tan; a slight | predators W ought for lestroyed, whereas if 
sun a dually withholding water, with a sprinkling of mould r io aN tops of 5 finally planted from the seed bed on a large space, ing 
ripen and harden the stems and foliage ; for “fleshy rid ges, 8 from their firs t appearance above ground | tender state, they are subjected to hosts of destroyers, 
2 28 plants, wher pge artificial heat ¢an be up to the present time they 1 5 tot had the slightest By the period the plants are large, and have nice * 
supplied d * damp Sebi are e of disease. They were the admiration of 7 roots, the o grua ason is over, and the lants are aiik 
very liable to die. Young shocks largely charged with | who saw them while growing, and also since they have | safely re prevent grubs, a pert 4 
watery matter are hardly capable of resisting frost or | been — ae ne re * ant e 2 ve z large puts atochtiigs on the plants wy winding i ba 
mp. An excellent contrivance for ripening off plants | an 5 were or needleful of worsted round their legs * 
f this pi p vibe eilg re. dily Ge in any odd though ‘i 1050 been was a Neary 60 Frode were them; Ls ie ttied this plan with sucess. * 
corner of the g t might consist of a few comm wn on the plan just allude . C. Benneit, gr. to P. Son, 
ds set upon bricks or empty pots, one rising above Novel li, Esq. Pi $> d-house, Dishwieh, Oc 4: 
the other in the form of a stage, and pl in full sun-| Gaulthe iy ae —I am surprised that few if an ocieties. 
light. In such a place, garden stuff well-rooted might of our great game preservers have planted this ver ry} HonricurxunzL, Oct. 2.—J. R. Gowen, 
be dried off for winter quarters very successfully : this beautifu ol evergreen to the extent that its excellence in tary, in the chair. M. Jean Pierre Peseato 
temporary stage should also have so mpor: affording both food and shelter for pheasants deserves. | St. Georges, Paris, was elected a Fellow. 1 
covering, ra a protection from wet than frost. In my 8 garden 1 o game, except a stray sion a large nu of interesting subjects was 
Should any ion be entertained of severe | partri and then, o be seen, its fruit forms | together. . Lawrence's garden at 
weather, a susp nd ends the food o of Ri bi 25 vind mice from this period till ee came a nice ce specimen of Aphelandra il 
would p: the * 55 from frost. tehed late in winter. the grontid i is covered with snow, | some six or = — s of bloom on it ; . o New 
urdle also forms g protection. A few large 5 their “ prickings” phut: ing towards various en u ce puberula, the ever-b! 3 
could be employed with facility, or a 1 old | el „show i at vourite it is 8 them. Holland ion C beer yer a : 
oil-cloth ; but 3 the readiest and cheapes e g Not only is the pans one of the most beautiful of our | of Cr with pretty pit ö 
would be a few yards of patent felt. The la latter would | evergreens, but its flowers, whether foreed or or gathered various “Orchids, | 
require little trouble or ingenuity in application ; | from the open 2205 orm one of the prettiest bou- ei 
for a few tile-laths would be sufficient for its sup quets ; whilst at this season the i érable strops of 
A tem se of à would be found ex- | ripe fruit give the plant a purple hue. Its produce is 
tremely useful for plants that dislike wet. Auri enormous, for on taking the average of the weight it 
and Phe 1 575 e pri and gente of | bears in my ithout any attention, I find the 
amateur gardeners, might be wintered in such quarters ; | lated crop would weigh at least sonal r acre, 
for, like most damp ei ved plants, these are much In spite of its various merits, the plant appears to b 
. 8 9 eir . traceable more either 8 or neg r for on noticing a large 
Square of the plan e nurse Finne 
i R” 1 wintering | dea, ing 2 y Aega aid Co., of Gee, I asked if they sold much of ie 
litt Tr Cae ing t well | Th reply It is never asked for, and we shall be 
9 5 — : yo yee off, mer this i is pte ay ty in with- | glad to sell it very Ten or twenty acres of it 
she — hees gece ore ng i them to the 1 5 Wege of as rgro th l wood, l òuld conce the 
15 Should ies e gro wih is inimical to t ir well- | pheasants of a district, and it spreads so ws 
— * aad Tr, kene AA wnish tinge, 2 aeons so t that in a few years the be would become a 
they teas 1 uring 5 . maturati n, | dense mass of evergreen. An Old ci 
y lose a portion of their it will do n Soil 9 1 5 S yn piled peat a m -4 
harm, šo long as the stems are sound and the roots | terial to grow Dahlia L ask, because this Something in 
healthy. It must not, , be supposed that they after I 1 planted 50 the le of ar stock, 4 filled * wich r rich purple flowers barden 
Sou. ilowed to for want of moisture, that p my usua ich I keep fo s0 
a kind of workho n sao dt * e © ta . 81 which I take T del of Sead nk with), I ), I planted 
2 ‘Gon k n- 
— shake <i order ht they 1 hed perfectly on border, amongst the shrubs, leaving * to take 
L Lhar. . chance, and although those in Me ahlia bed: 
i were Yegularl, watered twicè a week (from the time of 
333 lanting them out), pi ege Maniis made of fowls’ 
Bailey ý Mises. —I am glad 1 their flow n, either in size 
gree oe ection, soe a n dendron 
za 8 whieh aid not receive a uath] part o of the trouble, me fio 0 
and which were aps oneea w the but by far the best was the Que 
peat of the border was filed in abont threo ago, | Fleming, some account of whic 


40—1849. | 
inferior to this one, were nevertheless all 
i at Wilton maas 


Antigua 5 $ 

—— ſor the 3 Queen.— Of Gra 

tod. Maclaren, Esq., sent a dish of Bl 
in the berry and well coloured, 


pes. Mr. Rust, 
ack Hamburgh, 
h re stated 


* 
2 
~ 


. 63 
n oblong, Mk, yellow 
2 the — — 


common iron garden p 
1 small xs seth eylinder 1 moving on the 701 be- 
tween them. Il be tried in the Society’s ge m and 


ia meris reported o on at ‘the meeting in Nov 


i, which 2 wall for vases and other o 


Sieboldii, 
door culture, but it 


f its flow 


> and 
oad leav 
= — A orl pares called 9 lh 
Pa 


i) 
8 8 
1 
Z 


ilo 
nusta, a gaa oi N colour ; the 
ha; Mr. Fortu 


i those of the Japan Anemone, 


Panis Horticutturat Show. The revolution of last 


H 


THE GARDENERS’ 


a lean-to greenhouse, without the | and third-ra 
; f Meri 


re B 
- | Angevine, Royale "d'Angleterre, 


a frame, | Dah 


id A u {Introducti on — the stu 


ddiges? weber ; THE 
broa 


specimens “of Souven 
— atetla, Jacques Lafit 
Ami, Géa 


e Seine 
* Dah 


me 
the Grapes, which were not even ripe. 
Jami were splendi 
Angleterre, Doyenné d'hiver, 
motte Crassane, 1 Colmar d’Arem- 
Lecle D 


Colville blanc, and Ca nada Pi 
mens of eg ssful cultur 
M. Marest, ay Jamin, for Rete 
Soutif, ers ereau, oy, and Vinee or 
i amin and Durant, e PO 3 
ne, . to cqu ue 


pas Guenot for seedling Dahlias ; and M. Marest 
ling Rose. 
itw. 


b 
. By ge les Woodwar 
Svo 


ard, F.R.S. London : 
sen iene a familiar 8 of 
the ‘phenomenon of polarised light, and — a vantages | 
3 
other — sub 
Those who have 


by mean — 
a polaina apparatus ‘ies — to 
‘a do not understand its use, will 
find i in the little book now — cessary 
—.— them re only to employ the apparatus in 
eae croscopical researches, but also to understand 
the peren on which it its use depends. 


Curtiss Beauties of the Rose. Part I. Ato. 
roombri 
Tux author of this — periodical i is Mr. Henry | 
aoe of the nurse oorend, near Bristol. 
p 


ted, but 


present at the show wandered about 


Persons who 
8 more like spectres than gay Parisians, 


to such 
in the world ; —.— ugh order is restored, con- 
does not re seem to be agreed that 
— cannot A be 2 v duration, but what may 
due next is mere matter of 


Tp 
p: 


a, E 


wer 


i 
25 


T 
E 
& 
H 


of fine circular form, |t 
petals, high centre, and distinet 
superior to A I have ever seen 
of the Roses were good, but tiga gene- 
1 


Zz 


a 
ESSR 
a 
pi 


j 
H 
$ api 
Aes 
Rg È 
8.5 
fas 
1 
1 
RE 


ed 
Bourbon, — ok the 
and Géant des Batailles, 


r 3 id 


e 
of any known 


AI orm, such as most | w 
eaten would N found but 


in Ade ed it necessar 
culars 


I 


execu 
peered por ill serve to guide amen’ in their 
selections, as far as i new eee — 
any quality, where florists’ flowers are concerne 


Miscellaneo 
Note respecting the mee . ‘Alban’s” Grape. 
—A n peep s, rga or gd to iety by pæd 
edling raised by him, and named J 
ling’ s St. ‘Alban’ s, was onblished in vol. i., p. 296, of this 
Journal, The bunches sent 178 not the usual character 
rape; and, u 
how it was raised, it was 
uality excellent in two 
git, I 


to when and 
distinct. Having found its 
seasons in which I had an opportuni we of tastin 


The matter, howe 
doubt j and if I could not — ay Aer it up. 1 
obtain and state all the we 


. 


under 
Safi circumstances and by what “mode 10 of culture the 


CHRONICLE. 


af wm Th medium size, double, and tolerably good | ascribed 
e 


r seasons, more penay 
of the d 


peci- 
had — 8 b 
M. 


the 
dy of Po 2 


wa 
ng 
as | during the day, s mo 8 1 clean, o or the 


Vine under Mr Josling’s care 
from a liability 


to which is . 


631 


to the Chasselas ast The ig is Lg tens 

in the ge of A. M. Tim 83 i 

near St. 
ing’s 


P, and 0 


outside. The 
house is 80 feet in length, but is divided i in the middle, 
the widt 


es, the arrangeme 
which is not the best that might "have been ad 


he house, — — along 


e upper surface ‘of the 

test her 
side of the middle partition, —4 in a similarly ee 
manner heats the other apartment. It will b 


n the notice of it in a he en — it 


which was r — 

een. i 

4 Josling’ s St. 
ué 


had cut par the crop; som 

unches, with berries free * 828 — tr 
and the quality = exce nehes, 
had wes a ¥ ry long 8 as — 
great in 1846, probably in conse- 
hausted of that 


cannot be disputed; 
whether it is more visa 


ve, some gen- 
the expense of building a house, or 
large pit, expressly for the purpose of i 
kind of Grapes, should other means fai 
moisture, either at root or in the atmosphere, and 


2 Aia a 
own the red spider is ‘not so necessary. R 
| Thompson, i in the Journal of the Horticultural "Society. 


ee: of r of Operations. 
( For the 

FORCING ———— 

of daylight is now 80 

e different 


ean 
coveri 
—Take great 
eare of an Sore la Pines Shaye are now coat 
or flowering. as they will be 3 in bedi i 
2 bottom and 4 hea aed and 
1 attentio 


will soon be as 


a pid to D S Let t 
admitted 


| the 
have ail the light — opena while they + in 
h t liberali 


flower, 


THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


to surface the beds with dry sand, to keep 
If any Gra 


base 


ed. Cold pet 
t from oun prune back to the most | 
an 


ttin 
promising eye aa the 
GARDE 
Very little can g gree 
ence to this de 


to 1 Calenda rs in wal | 


nearly as large as they will be, and taking ating up is 

about the best ns ethod of preventing them from bei 

spoiled and destroyed by wo The smallest of the 

3 not planted in Wii lights should be planted 
ra 


to xub seeds out, rope Onion t ba 1 for 
Cardoons ; and ‘let the 28 U men help forward 
with the work i in the other departmen 


ble spring, from their greate 
amount of bloom than young lees go generally 2 Weather near London, for the 1849, 
ing, it is not the fortune of more th a tenth observed at the Horticultural See 
them to live, owing 1 ss manner in which they 3 NMoon's Baromzrzr. || Tuenmomsren. . 
4 Ase. —-— 
are taken up and after ly survive, M Min-. M. Min. nean 
such as are less roughly, and find themselves Friday.. 23} 11 || 29.825 | 29.730 || 63 | 51 | 595 || s.w. || .07 
placed, more by accident than skill, in favo r E GS FOES |) BW, 45 
tan This proves that by taking a little more | Monday’ ] 14 || 29.598 29. || 57 | 45 | 51.0 || NE. || 02 
ins, and exercising more judicious management, any ft.: f, , 20 || 33 | 33 as] NE | i 
quantity might be oa nie The plants should be | Thurs... 4| 17 29. 479 | 29.027 || 58 ] 33_| 43.0 |] W. 07 
taken up with their roots as perfect as popes: an Average 20.577 | 29.394 || cos | 45.3 | 52.9 2.12 
with as much soil as will 1 to them. takin Son ears: very fina overenst's vali 
get all plants ae with a ball that will admit of it. ng he — 29—Overeaat Lanes ; rain at night. 
— ain throu 
soil in which th potted should be light and sandy, Oct biene oe ge i R fine: overcast: 
d of such a wn as is likely to encourage the root a I to: . cloudy; partially overeast, and cold at night, 
without stimulating the tops. Unless very large bushes — UAean ken rain: showery ; rain at night, 
are wanted for next year, let the sides of the plants b PCC 
pruned i at the pots may stand elose together. stat : during for the 
All flowers sh removed ; but, with the exceptio se cin: week, ending 665 13, 1949. 
of side pruning, every healthy leaf should be eserved et. lee. | ce t Prevailing Winds, 
un e plants are established in the new soil, after] oe, | 222| 222! 22 a — 
i 1 H es | 2 a which | i en 2 
which they may be cut d to any convenient height. ŽAS | 588 | AS | Rained | of Rain. di 
If the soil is moist at the time of potting, Geraniums, 
Crassulas, bryanthemum other succulente ama a tee e E a $|- 
should have no water till they have commence sj Tues 10 600 | 43 23 1 0.52 4} 1 
it se il the ha f this agent ` undreds o 5 s Thurs, n . n aa +s 
riday 32| €04 | 43.0 | 51.7 1,00 
i 8 ter 5 the p 3 should be paoa = aon sans Lee is 7 


sina mo 1 ‘a 8 a Lets stagnant e 
sphere. 

FLORISTS’ her hit vie 

be a better ti 


ce of air, bu 
plants are more har and the ey are 
extremely impatient of being kept oan = smothered 
up in frames ; and, if cl when the foliage 


canker and b) 


eparatory to planting. We 
ours in atin ridges, which — be levelled 


Nit Y FRUIT GARDEN. 
Let the different varieties of 


cE 


d 
be kept perfectly sweet by allowing a free current of air 
to enter Peh and 


within the roo ma 
injure the keeping qualities of the fruit. In pag te 
: in the drawers, all he! or ones 
Ha Fejed aid ep for immediate es if this be not 
‘attended to, such fruit will soon beji n be Sey, — h 
not immediately detected will be liable 
‘the pe to their neighbours. The ab deen 0 


> oN a 


1 e -aaa or 

windows ; when it is euficiently n 
r fi hous 1 ich 
a small hot water Pipe | 
be carried ro 


be | | e end of 1 If any new — 
are wanted th advisable to order 
them i Spee may be amongst the earliest 


KITCHEN GARDEN. 


sais end avan a e weeds flourish } 
883 every should be 


„ and 


and „and variations of the temperature 
should be carefully avoided ; it should be perean with | FILBERTS : In 


+ i t 


The highest temperature during the above period — on on the 
1834—therm. 74 deg.; and the lowest on the 13th, 1838—therm, 28 deg. 


3 
= 


Notices to Correspond den 

ANALYSIS ori Sons C A. Apply to the — — 4 ‘Chemistry, in 
Oxford-st 

BEES: Troed. Tu strong oaran are plundering the weak 
ones, therefore close the door of the whole of 525 liven 
in the evening, but keep bus tittle hale open for air, a few 

ill r. B. 

Boo Z. Donn’s ‘ Hi ortu Ca ntabrigiensis,” published in 
1845; or Paxton's “Botanical ny g "wit th Supplem ment, 
just published. LBS. Mo “ch 's work on F d 

ood. Newman’s " much h r, better printed, and de: a 

For Misiones y = mu K. 5 oorr e. = eogi 

Your booksellers will give 7 prices. H. School eim ps 
will suit you perfectly. F M. Loudon’s “ a Gar- 

dener,” the ‘* Manse Garden,” or M‘Intosh’s Practical Gar- 


= 


Goan ore oe Edinensis says we might gratify some of om aeo, 
who are admirers of Coniferæ, by e them kn 
in a continental trip, say in France, Belgium, or —— 
ar — ns of Coniferæ may be found in Pinetums or nur- 

Covent FOR VINE BORDERS: John Patterson. The best and 
cheapest covering for a Vine bo eer is eet consisting of 
one part lime and eight of unscreened gravel, mixed with 
sufficient water to give it the consistency of stift mortar, A 
portion of ¢ charcoal dust, or coal fete s, ma 

; this will 


ead of | lime, with 6 or 7 
cover your border (56 square yards), e expense of 
mixing and laying it on will not exceed 1d. per square e 
Tou will be best able to tell what the gravel and lime will 
f you think it necessary to — it 

at any time, the old — 4 — shou Id be preserved, as they 
may be worked u h lime. tarpauling 
is more easily appli — or removed, but it will not last more 
t e—2s, 


e, it might 
Wheat straw, provide: e an 4 f 
pearance is not peste gene see border of the s 
— — would require about 1 of straw, and will — 
n labour about hy 
Disrases : tF dt. ape Rose leaves are blotched in consequence 
of the attack of some fungus—probably an Erysiphe. Do not 
yon ta the aeg threads? Burn the infested leaves 
w, and when the fungus again first appears, attack it with 
flowers of sulphur, 
Drains: JH. Roots usually afford no a than ne 
2 ce of the plants to which they belon, 
have — 


of a pea. w ihis will ee All 2 5 fo size 
will perish wich — Dec Snead of the size just 
menti still less etain their vege- 
ation and ripen next peel a ies ok protect them from frost, 
and for this purpose 3 Ms fmt best material. 

. Thes d be kept with a 178 stem, 


may all be 


ofa pea 


m suckers, and sparred Te Currant trees. 
| FrRuIT TREES: Peach, Pear, and Cherry wens 
nted 20 feet apart poner a walls. || 
GARDENERS’ ADVERTISEMENTS: An Advertising Gardener’s 
plaints are just enough ; but we know that Pen. 2 cannot be 
removed by our interference. We cann pel people to 
act wisely = well; on the contrary, interference only makes 
t he wages they de- 
I * ertisements to be 


rs will not state, 
ope their 


hem worse, If f gardene 
mand, 7 have no right i toh 
su ae 
Gra . Patent nig plate will suit you perfectly.¢ 
Oii Aera Q. Whyh ‚e 2 pips it to —_ res 7 
Get rid of it * sulphur 32 ont of 
‘goede’ Kee eep them — 


e harm 
and dry well thes — in which th ch they g ge 
GREENHOUSE : The f your lean-to green- 
house, having a monies es 6 — should 1 12 feet high.? 
Insects: JS. 5 know no more effec! ode of destroying 
than by placing hand- asins o a ra mem at night- 
fall, with some crumbs of bread in ses at 
the side, to enable the insects to pnk n, t — polished sur- 
face of the inside preventing their esc will be N 
rapped by soares a ——1 must be — te e 
a W.—JG. You had beter employ children immediately to 
catch the dad The surface of the Grass 


54 


[Ocr. 6, 
be swept with an angler’s bag-net at the end of 


the oo being formed of lawn sich must 


onally, w 
D- 
Mg to 
—M G. The i 
Haltica . 
onsid 
e 


flea-beetle, er 
Y. Th 

lon ag ps at species of the ante “beast 
rane), 2 are reared in deca: 


1 


sects: ( Podu 


i 


Myr — domestica, waich h 
infiabitants of the 
publish a paper, wi ith a figure and 
series 1 entomological articles, W, 
MULCHIN e know that loose 
te in 5. climate. They not 
ration, ut ten ondense moi enever 
than th nos te ye they 
or 3 N once in every 2 * 
happen on your estate in the West In 
8 is much less Be ag am between the 
night. In o nswer your 
satisfactorily, $ sme 2 ch ing ents require to be question 
lim flints are probably useful rather tha À 
The 6 is partly N of flint. otherwise, 


UHH 
: 1i 
i 


$ 
5 


a A 
2 
FH 
iH 


0 
êi 


— 
a 


NAMEs OF Fruits: ur Grape decidedly i 
PURI wba og you have, E 0 Mot the 
—W T. Appe s to be the Worm msley Pippin, | — 
NAMES oF PLA ži : MB. Itis impossible to name F 
from such an imperfect specimen ; all we can 8 
is anormal leaf of some co n free-veined Fem. I — 
nothing to do with Lonchitis, a genus is Avie 
by anastomosing ve m your plant is of age to 
duce perfect fronds then send a specimen. S.—M B. —— 
dilatata. S. Mathe It is Heracleum sibi also called 
— ee 8 5 nip, It m ad of some of ths 


F 
may 

dsmen, never recommend dealers,—( Rag, 
Stanhope 3 some . of Wardii, pon 
8. raveolens. 0 Sta 0 f 
k variety ; the colour is e th: | 


da 
Alihæa. Gomphocarpus fruticosus, —J F C. 


Datura! We see „nothing to distinguish the 
from F mula, -J R M. The leaf seems 
to belong to some Solanum, an immense genus, the 

of ende pot only be de 2 ame by the 


in flower.—3, fil. You 


perfect specimens 
quote anather authority so bad as that of Mr. bdo 
3 Ipomeea tuberculata ; a well-known species. — Erze 
t, OF chis latifolia.— T E B, Eucalyptus pulverulenta, 
Physalis’ 2 and Castor ba plant, 
P Ei ta : W D. No; the over luxu 
oniums was no doubt the cause of thei 


Atriplex hortensis ; 5 itchen garden grown | 
instead ot Spinach. —P R FV. Nicandra mee! ervey 
; 


sary. It was probably that which did the mischief; me 
would advise you to be more sparing o it tnext year, Tobacco 


smoke erates | destroys green fiy, and s ur will KI i 
8 ae —. appe ed pe enough—that is e a 
ENS: ou mistake 

anatase, 8 mth strictly confined to tager? preted 
about which there is no di 
TuE Cuerstow SHOW: We 1 received from 
Saul another letter on this 3 but we must 
further consideration of it. 


been exp. 
in aa hy 8 ö 
9 : in 5 eters have no idea where the Garten à 
not at all near London.— 1 i 


bably 
of 110 of the Valley will go out to New Zealand very well if 
gathered N arida in the Pict in a dry sie i 


berry, pla ants — 
trees in mid-w 
paini FLOWERS. i 
Danuta: W and AB ange scarlet : size, 282 
good; petals broad — well formed, but a . — 
eye a little sunk and crowded; a good showy flower 


great depth of petals.* 

Fucustas: J Veitch and Son. Duplex: tube short, right re 
corolla dark violet and double ; good mages 2 
and singular on account of its double corolla, Unique 
short and thick, 4 5 waas ani large, Pape 
violet purple, wel hapa „and ample; a very j 
sized flower, goodi in texture and colours. 8 r 
rather short, Enar bright red, lobes very cabins: 
corolla well shap ple, a and of a deep striata: 


pe 
its carnation-strip: 


middling in 
respects. Multifida: wia thort Er. e 


mone and pointed, and w 
Bo Lon D — hem er rather “iong, nape 
ou e — meariy tnise 


i 


5 the Tank System to Pineries, ‘Houses, 
— Soe regal drt „„ 
— N aa 
Be now o niich the.cost fs reduced.: T ors, which | 
Rmo iae not get tient e e wl 
may be seen ne as reference a AT 


E eS ee hen Le, ETSE T CATAE, E EN 


40—1849.] 


THE AGRICULTURAL SALETTE 


633 


WEST OF ENGLAND AND 


Establish a 2 — — 3 
Lament. is Company Bias to 
for Aara nes dg > —— Irrigation, or r Improve: 


Qwners of Settled Estates in 
DRAIN, INCLOSE, Bens — or 3 their i, and | 
Ruge the Inheritance -wi the permanent * 
ay, S 


ONDON MANURE ‘COMPANY beg to offer 
as under, and pledge themselves that ure sent 
them shall be free from the atat 9 

0 


hosphate 


te of Lime, Gypsum Nitrat f Soda, Bone Saw. 
— 2 n race F “| RURBIDGE anp HEALY ’S NEW BUILER.—The |! 
ARD Purser, Secre a Blac A a Sopr Te 1 — er (before * 
z = elled express : e Conservato 8 
AUTUMN S WING. —POTTER’S GUANO. eng where eis now at large From — — a 
R. POTTER particularly recommends n 5. . have been able to make, they are warranted in 
for using his Guano, as, if now — os sy 8 h, stating it to pe FP “Ne plus ultra” for 5 — large plant 
itis better 1 when the spring return the | structures, a proof, one charge of 8 * been kept 
growing crops the food they require in a fit pasts rk 1 | burning for 40 “hours with out miy addition, one boiler of 
assimilation. Thei — — od ge knowledge, as applied al to w 1500 feet of e “ine h pipe. They 
90 ture, — 5 nabled to make some important | are also extensive ely pu put tup at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, 
ents in th —— of his Guano, which he — Smaller boilers upon 24 same plan. 


most confidently 2 to the use of all who wish to grow 
ex 
neipled persons, once acting 


DETS METALLIC , 2 me 
55, Lionel-stree r, Mr. THOMA 


CLARK; ; M 
Lies eful thanks to the Nobility an 
ge ot — oon Establishment 
wat — „ d begs to state that the 
isin J of ag duty — Glass enables him to to offer ‘his METALLIC 
<vanirg 2 y redu ese Houses are 
1 


zed 
fnches in length, 


Bursiper and Heatry. 130. Fleet-street, London. 
ae y ENGINES, WATER RAMS, ye 


proved Principles ; Engines worked by Steam 


Bandy * s agents, substituting their p 
the genuine article, the Proprietor is induced to recommen nda 
direct —— to himself. Where the quantity taken is 
adequate, a angement, as to carriage, will be made to the 
satisfaction 0 of the purchaser, 
PURE GYPS a in a state peculiarly adapted for the 
farmers’ use, at sual low price.— Please direct your orders, 
per post, to the 3 address. 
28, CLAPHAM ROAD PLACE, LONDON, 
R. RYAN’S AZOTIC MANURES, prepared 
under his i gane ie attention of 
well-known Fer- 


s, which 
made en tire ch — posites 5 — — 
to T them to — ‘eal to the best — 
Prices, 6l. and 67. 10s per ton.— Offices, 24. Mar TT Lon 
3 AND orien MA 51 
Foreign and English Oil-cake on sale iral Peruvian 
Guano of the finest quality, 1 of f Lime, Bo one-dust, 
Sulphuric Acid, Animal Cake, pe- 


ANDRETH GIBBS, Hon. Sec., Corner of Half 
Moon Street, Picsadiitn London. 


ROYAL LETTERS 


PATENT, 


PATENT. HOTHOUSE | WORKS, KING'S ROAD, CHELSEA 
E DENCH invites the attention of Gentlemen about 
* toerect Hothouses, . to the vast superiority in every 
Tespect possessed by his PATENT HOUSES, which he will 
s to any others. Good Glass 


n Im 
Hydraulic — — raise from 
a height of 500 fee 
Vapour, Hot- air 
— 9 3 heated by Steam, A ater, Boring, 
— —— Collec ctin sA — Sicha r, & e. n supplied. — Direct 


5 — or 7 — at 50s. per quarter, * 
and saer seed of the RED-STRAW WHITE and 
ent 


The AGA bene i 


SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1849. 


MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOW —— Bard wo 


8. 
and. 


7 9 Oct. II-Asricultura] Imp. Socie 
Tsu — 18—Agricultural Imp. Society of — 
ena ’ Cuuss.—Oct.8: Claydon —Oet. 13: Peterborough. 


Ir the Agriculturist alone that the 
isan of ee Ne ATION is either inte- 
portant. The more it is examined, the 


by him in the new Royal ripe at Windsor, 3 mitted by 
ee tt udges to be the most complete of its bind in the 8 
— 


and try we are either positively in advance, 
prominently distinguished, among the nations of the 
ur shipping scours t to 


earth. 
produce of our Looms, our Fo 


ugh of our grea 
ational Workhip, one of. — gg or ae Iron 
r Loom or the hee team 


Foundries, see the Powe 

Engine at SoM and not fee pel a prond a meritorious 
sense of real national eminence and distinction 
How was it obtained? Was it * ae . urge 
upon the Cotton pare the importa tering 


and applying the Science 5 Mechanics? did the 

Calico- of abou or the Dyer need to be and 

worrie t 57 value to his art l the science of 

Chemistry ? 

stn gc e the half-hour 
hambers each „dev 


Vhy the very sight o 
ü valk hire 


n tim 
e case with Agriculture? How 
any farms in each county of England, as we walk 
dag field after field, as we look a 
k the s 


on this 
apart from re- 


orta 
more it is turned about ba ooked at from every 2 — apart fr r indisposition to face 
point of view, the more will it be found to attract | the truth which “constitutes t e Pride at 3 n 
and carry with it the piin iade — * od k and ever makes the very name of “learn * 


es so already. 
new one: ya 0 chiefly because it zs eally 
ord is unhacked, the shield i is on 

lon, ‘and Sar spari unblooded ; and amidst the read 
eers and hooting of many an Gen the stripling ! 
comes forth, slab it may be, yet neveg and 
sustained by in ard Bey anes and purpos 
a whispe age utte speed you!’ of hae 
ices than reach the public ear. vse 


there ma 


e being ass 
= Sashes: vequiehiy ió S pasit; from 7d. to 9d. per ft. 
NG T wat 8 


FO ORCHID GROWE 
| Bogota: anp HEALY, 130,  Flect-stree -street, respect- 
"fully call attention od of warming Orchid 
oe warming the Orchid 


1 Gardens, Chiswick, additions to the House. 
Orchid Houses of the following ape e . 
this interesting class of plants. 

The Bishop of Winchester, Farnham Castle, 


J, Warner, pa Hoddesdon. 
Henderson, 


3 Place. 
* — near Ware. 


„ Rail neer- 
War e 


E 
ji 
8. 
g a 
aay 
7 
ge 
52 
E 


can be had on 0 either 


SON anD CO., 61 —— 
and sot the Park-steovh, Souths Southwark, Inv: 
CAL BO e Improved CONICAL and DOUBLE 


= 


But in 


ion 
—— eee 
whi ch is the very conditio 


parni lines and landmarks of all preceding 
na 
Mrana riously timed political stroke—the last (and 


A 
lucky that it is the last) that British Agriculture, 
whether for good or ill, can ever know,—has brought 
the i issue. 


T t 
It is a difficult su su bject, em, 1 


abomination and an offence to him who . ne 
begin. 


an be the Nee dr which devel 


hli 
| — 1 i 1 iy ated with the spectacle 
. Intellect pre-eminently alive and 


ù time e n we are markin 


What c ops 
before our eyes the anomaly of a nation 

driving wy haria iga prodnati ind 74 its industry 
n almost every other, branch of art makes 
— ure, 2 5 the remotest harbours of the 0 and 
eins timidly, with beaten heart and confidence, 
e very t ought a of nemning its strength with 
other Pp e in re f Agriculture? What 
8 while the eye and 
le ive 

in 

makes the other a pees T of. slowness and 


1 W in all its pro 


stion: we ask only is 
it not arise 
ced. Some 


ot assume the ques 
it, or 9 it 5 f supported ; does it, or does 
from the mpariso 15 we have a 
answer discs: must be to it; and that answer must be 
found in the history of the Past. Even at the e very 
ng and lamenting its truth, 
the cause may have been remove 
1 is said to lie hid under the ugliness 
Adversity may have silently begun to assert itself, 
and to have thrown out ar first faint ray even in the 
humiliation of that rsal enquiry, oA is our 
Agriculture depressed a down- 
urely 55 is — — be up and mee A to 
ae'h sin 


lore. denying to this one bran bran 


The advocate of 


the old system says ‘It is all over with Farming: 


101, den) 


the reply eee not 
etical Necessity is that now, for time, 


by tongues s 7 but! ped p 


acknowledged elemen 

advancement, and ulti cess, are "tor the fit the fig 
time let loose i imp ion. The fluctu 
ating dynasty of ‘ price-per-bushel ” has passed away: 
we do not make it so: w e case as it 
stands nn be unavoidable Ta undeniable. The 
question mains,—the only one that can remain 
—is- e-question of. ‘ t of produc- 


and deathless life of the Scientific 
e. What has hitherto been a matter of advice or 
invitation, is now a demand, resistless, and 
ann ethene f this be true was there ever 
when the question of education was more | 

mportunate ? 


a Eii or more i 
app Science is 


Surely it is not moms! that we want. sema 
denies 1 t our ur urers 


a tru 
e labo 


iver irate of respect ; 
or less than 

the most painful 
new invention, every improve í 
chemical 4 exhibits an — endene in the 
direction of the saving and econo 


Si 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


Blessin ET labour, there is a * . 

attainable by man—the blessing upon Kno 

Hi is vain to urge that the labour of the field 1 is as 7 
an t 


greater, if you pl 
tory, 70, the ó 32 e ess you can 
show t that it is directed fo a corresponding knowledg 


the manufac- 
tures on 


e | of natural l philosophy s 


knowing in ary ye They must not Tg be able to 
ive instruc grammar, geography, isthe 
| writing, book. keeping and practical geomet 


prese 


also be the 
2 — rer students. Mechanics and —— should 


5S 
5 7 


tre eat ed 


chanical —— This knowledge would be giv 
order to render the — o of >n — of wah, 
the farm 


offensive, strike it out ; sobstitate è some word as and constructio mplements, 

been hacked and badgered about from | familia A snd t r 1 scholars ma of judging o of 

mouth to month till it has become a reproach and the real of new inventio The mechanical 

a quarrel, a thing of a nd personal laws of fluids shoul he be made. yi engage 1 atten- 

FFEFTEFbCCCCCC ceeain tan a 
ind the o and look at it in its tangible | nie wo are sketehing * ree: 


People — 5 at the noble Gee s ideas,” 
says the Spectator, referring to Lord Brovenam’s 
prophecy, or 2 of the furthe r introductio 
Steam-power into Husbandry, “ but there is nothing 
in this view ap ee 5 the ee progress of 

s n the rary, the whole tendency 
of improvement i is to substitute for buch and rando 

methods, a m 


more 8 and ma 
ere apeti 
n similar attention should not be 
wed on every seed of Corn, every fibre of the 
plant, and ery f at of the rp that is to nourish 
There can be no o doubt that raw material, in the 
shape of Seed, aout an Soil, is wasted to an 

incalculable de 

Are this comparison, and this assertion, true or 
not true? If not true,. then Ag griculture has, = 


some eight or ten 
said to pass u 


no el 


can be done, eae indeed to 
And how leatit From Practice 

do them an juste by 
ir own answer would be We 
n our aay, according “to our light : 
you ha 


t 1 
invidiously refer yourselves to our prac 
attainments, making A imness of sare a, gt an 
excuse 115 oe followi 1 te 0 


Tite 
est degree, ourse ves; 


spirits that in every age have 
worrying of th ackward, by a welcome to 
every symptom of pioneering intalligenee, | in our own. 


ON eee, EDUCATION, 
Now for a few words U 
can be introduced bo A to 
that is desired? 


What system 
8 5 the 2 effect 
tion has been 


he form 
and of nr pa peculiar to — 


actical oe 3 
e at wo 


appropriate apparatus. Geology may be taught 

tures and diagrams ; Pots sho wed precede the 
study of it, 5 The of Bota ma 
very praetie N — be co flected, thei pee 
pi — ; they may ed, 

e sho 


è 
a i much interes 
in the preservation of health amongst it, 8 — inform 
tion wo uable. This d Bi horough 
ny ge one veterinary must 


art. The t 
eture on this 9 and he must 
illustrate an nd explain A* efly by means of diagrams, 
however ns gh they m 
Subsequent to such ale mental training, the parents g 
those sedans that discover ability must draft them 
e of the larger —— institutions, = east 
O gr Und 


ature, 

unelasp it e urning over leaf by leaf, opening 
forth to their eye the treasures of the arih. Thus t 

co th equip for the service of time, as 
chemists, botanists, geologists, and mechanists- useful, 
working practical men, bringing to bear vast inge- 
nuity into agricultural operations, remodelling old 
customs, and es w arrangements. It may be 


å Speedy —.— with t 
—— 


An else he 
ould know, since the theo: d practice of — 

— has been en already notived 1 to a part of our a 

* 

may — * asked, What are the pe men of 

the 3 time to do? These schools 

recte 


e presen 
ne moment idle ; they 


o great; but 
| these institutions pase failed to take hs ‘standing they 
were expected to and w ate vising 
that 18 months should be . at the Royal Galle e of 
Chem: ndon, w opportuniti 


mistry at 
| found of Swit res 4 * 1 also, thè other b — of 


seienee we have alluded. e at the 
p — rer wang — at we m 
day Many e gone to their farms from 
thence, and by the experim nd improver the 
have already introd Py tte manner in 
from | which sag conduct their * fully justify whatever u 
laudation may be passe — d education.* To 
n those who canno e. aose to these superior bene- 
of a fits, is yet left books. Few of this 
Wo = iets. Who | lass are so poor that Lev cannot x y books. À thorough 
reason w hy an may not be resorte with n’s Chemist. 
to with good effect in Eng giant 1 Why shout should not the | broad field of wealth to any young man.” This work is 
elements of | te aed be chooks as al ral | wonderfully comp: sive, abounding in all sorts of 
edueation i The apply | useful information concerning the daily eoneerts sof] life. 
ge. iel’s, Turners, or —— — woe chemistry 
mnt of| may follow. From t boo ogy we 


anaes ag 
t the following. Pro- 


iples, 

os It is ta wi on Soils, &e. 
general education. 4 Y — by the 822 for the Diffusion of 
* that can 2 Knowledge is th on Botany 


us advise such young men agricultural 


à 
no no precedent. 


ay 
in the simple practice of 9 * 
Roane by the lads thus otherwise busied, 


d 
ct m 
> 
mn 


e treatise on 
can recommend, Their . — renee on Natural | m 


association, Let them aif 17 ** prid ; 
. ‘and apamuna use — . — by 2 
tor 1 r aa egg j 


Philosophy “acme also 
abstract of the sub 
ey 


things, the abuse of leisure — ‘Write n 
sopr above the door of your 
line 
n Thi nk that to-day * never dawn 
In the morning as you go out, and in 
you ay pase it shall remind you of your duty, 
may be perceive of US an une 


sides 
ting the advancement 


A far — — Son Se 
thin 


pgs is now requisite than ever 
R. S. 


r | gavs; or can give.” F. 


— — 
i ASSISTA 
article of the 8th i 

are 


enied, was inconsistent Wi 
* — ied bo prm of an Ah, to say the least ot 
uties and obligati E pew! | 3 


of “ee and energy ap 
But the 3 
ul safet 


p heapness, in 
il nsure ¢ 
tbandanee wi F * ome demand for Pe 


would be a several 


The | 
farm 


„ Mie used t 
| arable portions. 
western bo 


SUuIcIent 


l districts, want the means of ang 


0 isione and com- 


are 
. ronas ote 


counteract the bad 
E 56 é employment of all system of its cultiva 
e the *pipply of ali the 


of our attetit 


been s 
rts, our wealth “une 
at 


hong) | pestilens, ail” our effo 
as nothing) we shall prosper and 
both at at hotie and abroad, A. iia 
$. Lest it should 170 imagined that 1 would screen 
andlord, I beg it age be N. ef pr ey 
no means dale to xcep 
duties to perform, and these i ‘ball de glad 
at out to the best of my 1 4 in a future 1 
I wish to reflect upon n present Gove 
with 


Gis have been t: 


Mr. M‘Culloch* g 


cellent 


even 


d 
article on“ Agricult > verdant pasturag 


i a 85 8.” ga I trust will receive the attention it diese 


novu ione IN IRELAND.—No. 


vinee of 


the 

asons: e fertile 

ts general capability afi Ky 
d and 


and its 
ing Present cheapness of lan 


f the 
ties 1 counties of Mayo, 
‘will add Clare in unster ; ; 
common, these 
specting them may n t be 
contains 1,355,048 whe 3 of 
eultivated; the rem is un- 
eee with heath, and eien sorts of 
7.940 aeres are 
510,592 acres; of 
476, 15 are unprofitable 


A 
— six miles from 


wit 
geen fertility. This 
t | the 


ons 


A 


this 


e 

nad a heavy erops of Oats tha verywhere ra 

“oor cultivation, ont its ex- 
th 


ich possesses 
creating wealth and prosperity 
in this very county of — which in the best of times 
exhibits a degree of degraded wretchedness such ah > will 


the sea 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


come abundant appe in fertilising — already 
Tam 
e 


asses | of inert matter is convertible to the va 
N it is said to be s 
the a 


prol 
of Ciare) 


of a 


A great portion 


ts pr * F 


ualities of the upper stratum, for this land can 

be injured by no dep 12 of ploughing.“ 

n from these cay Soap oe vi 
may b 


fav: 


4 K large eee of the s 

ment, Ireland is and mou 1 but not- 
withstanding ne 1 it contains a gre 

13 nee of the gon 


uxuri 


common, a al 

soil, but resting on — there are spots 
nd e, which though gem iin pen 
eanty 9 — . sheep, and i m 
admirable flavour to the 

The -Times afer reli 8 the following | 
report of the most 1 maT 
bably the most As an 


neglee lected co 


7 It is a 9 fact that "the 
rther you travel westward in Ireland, the m 
ti fal does N — appear to have been in 4 upon of capital 

1 resources, and the less has been 


e places exhibit the 
turne . Ta 

here such soil vp tris hy ky 

lias that it Appears as pi if Nat 


üch a soil, ‘cattle are 
e to a great weight. M 

of it is we in . eee that it abounds in humus. 

ourable testimony of the 


hearts of boch under fosteri ing care are 


mend the | healthy and we tiger ee 
make an 


nee, n 
fem ty judge for himself f A. documents that cannot 
yr ; he can a 

22255 nation of any — offered for 
ha oh farm advertised l 


per- 
; he can visit the distriet 
any sath of England, and * — a 
cenery, which the late Mr, Inglis—no i 
ear 1 bed, when speaking of the ay ‘hills Is of 
bo W Casha emara, as the finest in e. Where land i 
f Mr 1 ek labour is 


him 


at mae 


cheap, there 
r, who p sak both to a profitable account. 
n ‘agricultural disingenuous however 
of the soil o of t 


ere requires but capital 
It wòuld be 
that the 


respect to Connaught has 
h. | attende 


green crops as 
r Majesty’s dominions, and on the whole 
suited to t of 


to partake rish duet iol weigh heavily, 


uch 


. The bathing places on the 
coast are very wi urite places of resort, and 8 oe ver 
Kes once bathed in the strong 2 of the Atlantie, and 
felt its invigorating powers, will consider the waters o 
and bi , compared with 
uce this con- 


urface of 


t deal of 


ngular since 


gy age n to 41. indus- 
days 


of sweet A fertile sell * two 


gn es. 
ls psa tat for eee, nt is evident from the 
re of the so ie and the facilities of obtaining lime, 
8 A sea-sand, or sea-ware, by means of the 2 yo y 
2 which * as channels of transit, and from the 
and 


eky, and pro 
in the pro- 


re boun- | 2 


83 e 
t 4 most 1 — i i the pre 
of of area was two-thirds less 
han that rel England 3; whilst the int of labour in 

extracting that produce was greater, What 
then to the skilful farmer of realising two-thirds more 
than has been yet produced in Connaught, and at a less 
outlay! I shail 2 occupy, sir, your valuable space at 
present wit nn 
which I have ara praras consider. In my letter. 
I hope to conclude the subtest. Martin Doyle. 


Bit 


Hom e Correspondence. 
Will High as a * Low 


a 
„ 


of which, 
| 250 mills — in —4 
ocean,’ 


entire barony 
| and curraghs 
- | The 


lent cro 
the 45 J 
beef 


and the JACK 


years to | design of puffing 


on the east side, is 
is @ very moun- 
¢ for location to 


Roscommon 


y 
soil of Erris with ord 
its Oa 


market, that the soil 
tility to induce the farmer 
earth will reward him 


| people and the lands 
Statistical 


e ee 


with fish of every 7 Kind, espec 


ing 


Connan 


of that province 


though su ficient — work the 9 of 
n, flows 1 to the 
a fishing } banks of Erris ‘ 
ially cod and ling.“ 


h or fi 
and all the fish taken by 
suffices for d 
ion Paget exc | 


3 


in the English and —_ marty on its 


je on to > attribute the want of et aterm 


of all en 
au 


uld be 
N. given at different eronat time, 

ght estates for "the English 
of sufficie 


in per pl — answer, No! 
— 


rt goes 
to high rents 


nt fer- 
the in z 
and, if so, may we suggest to some of them the 
of coming forward w — of ochurs 
failed in the attempt.” 


ee eee TURAL GAZETTE. 


‘measure re to o the i a which is tl 


Sti 
there is any profit in that system or not. It is true we ward, the tubers are very bad Z * = fl I entered 


have had Mr. Caird’s pamphlet, and have 2 — vs of | where = old woman was di 


‘Culloch : no 
latter gentleman deserves the highest credit te the po ane were black the tubers themselves w were quite 
i i nearly o 


; bu 
farm a sort of model, and well worthy the attention of ri w badly oaio d. It is Ari: sy curious that the | of 
any farmer. But, as to his extraordinary profits, when santry invariably den — existence of the disease, 
ing 80 acres resen ao Ajk 


n as oes. he 
during the last five years, owing to the peculiarity of | la ndlord near rec ihs infor 
his 


e-half were found 


titu 
is soil or other fortuitous circumstances, has grown | deniably existed to serious 0 in Guat distrik 
good isease which has desolated | and he greatly feared ‘hat the coming winter would be 
other Potato fields, our surprise at any profits must nearly as disastrous as the last, although, from the great | s 


by a fi se, I think, o i on 

not help the farmer in his i es, as who | while 3 extent of land phe ‘been pee, the 

would advise any pae English farmer to risk a population has materially decrease 

nt state of that removal to the unions ; therefore it m 
he fiery f 


the pres 


readth o tatoes in en 
lant. The question, th therefore, still remains, 8 is the the heat of the fiery furnace, throug n 3 — 
f. o be d h 


igh farmer unerated, wit in at a low | has been made to pass, is abatin 


With respect to the 
“ 


„ g. 
price? He — hitherto. found the profit of his high | future prospects of E generally, I found ate 
i ing tha 


cultivation for roots in the ine d produce of his prevalant opinion exist e race be — d- 
gra in at old average of prices, have | lords (that sa mediately 
repaid him with a fair lus. But, will free-trade | dependent on their Irish property) must be come extinct 
prices a h remuneration ? before m that unhappy country 


? If not, this 
cial em of growing Wheat and Barley at the I cannot see the justice of this 


ieee as they, like 


expense of other and losing crops must gradually cease, | all other classes, have but attempted to maintain their 


and thus the home growth of grain diminish rather than | position in society, and, having no 
i btl l 


gro 

increase, unless some mode be discovered of making the | doubtless more c amorous with the rt han 

intermediate ps more profitable than they would others having large rent-rolls in England or Scotland ; 
i ate a e tha 


0 judges. He opinion 
highly’ proper that 8 fp E Jade w 
mented on with th og 


rea I ine, are 
not machine ae and do not sympathise with uy 


, | one of that body who may consider that the incidental | 
trade is calculated toi 


mention o his rival in the e 
himself. “L, V. ” I take it, means and 
nothing but good-will to hove in gene 


an 
hitherto appear to have been. C. H. indeed, one gentleman stated tter than obtain the assistance of Ransome 
Royal Agricultural Society.—On the question of English landlords were the best they had, —— at the to make the article known, whether their general | 
excluding subscribers from the trial of implements, thus | present moment had scarcely — rent y er d e mae ers, or their proximity to s 
virtually depriving them of a day they have hitherto great hope, which is expressed by all — even scene of the English Agricultural Society’s ensuing 
regarded as one of the most interesting attractive | down to the ear drivers, seems to be that her Majesty, | show be d ave not seen this cart, whieh, 
ya the show “much may be said en both sides,” but by repeating her visits, will attract her wealthy | however, I have no doubt is well fitted for the cirem 
y it has excited 8 ages 2 sonnei — subjects to follow in her wake; and then, as the stances out of w it has arisen; and 
of. —— I can magine that the Irishmen say, having seen our c y nsome’s description I should deem it as probally | 
3 


seen ountry and our- | Ra 
presence of the publie on es ah —— may have its selves, they will assuredly be induced to invest in 
nveniences, 


not these balanced by counter- | Irish soil, and thus displace those who appear to have 


tages 
his duty none the worse for having a crowd of witnesses | in that position of comfo 
ac 


to his ment rs 
win look * the —— as, after all, their ce and most | informed by a Limerick gent! 


in y 
vailing advan 1 On the one hand, a judge will do n hitherto unable and 8 to ee the tenantry 
inde- | one w 


ema t 
t jud N Sie e for the the same carriage with me, that land could be bought 
arduous position of those who ar alt a * decide at present at 15 or 16 years’ purchase, but, he added, 


in such matters; the ee use 2 4 hing but an in a year or two it will be 20 per cent. higher. With 
surel is n of and, I was n 


then, but not poe heme adopt or — it aside. Iam to commit a murder for ! I was speaking of this 


Mr. 1 passing thro 

inea is charged for what cost the Society but 12s. 6d., | sum would have sufficed ! ! But I was glad to hear bis ac- 
and half a guinea for what they pay but 7s. 6d. ! Surely | count of the im provement in the morals or the ngs of 
visitors have quite enough to pay at their inns on these | the e people; he stated that the peasantry had bee me 80 


: Nie GO 205) 
ons, without being victimised by a Wee body completely s ubdued and erest-fallen, through suffering, | 2 


oecasi afferi 
like this! If these extra prices be defended on the | that the former deplorable state of feeling had entirely 
ould 


ground of the expence of pro W. a suitable building disappeared, and that they w 


for so large a company, the ex cuse dose not apply to | friends those who came to take the 
Norwich, whose ample accommodation for both dinners | them as labourers, To this desirable consummation, I | o 


welcome as their best 


was provided 7 the preg in their noble Hall of St. | see one great obstacle, and that is, the fictitious value 


, thus dispensing with the Pavilion altogether, a | which the violent competition vd 


p land has given to it in 
circumstance which had never occurred at any previous | the ne of almost every town in Ireland. It] first a cak 


meeting of the Society. Mr. Shaw (a member of the | is certainly true that the soil is sure <p fertile to an 


London Council) has attempted to whitewash his col-| extent not dreamed of by most farmer. 


ite 
leagues, by blackening the Norwich Committee. He Scot land, and labour is sac too 


that the society not only paid the contractor all | of the —— but, for want of the 


he asked, but of their great liberality, declined his offer | kets e possess on this side 
of turtle soup into the bargain! Here Mr. Shaw, as | duce 15 of — much ea dane 
over ady i at the m. 


y vian 
soup — for the sum of 12s. 6d., I ask, | capabilities are great. 


toriously relinquished by Mr. Shaw! The substance of on Lord Charlemont’s 


“i grape but the public were, and it is of this saw so early in T ; they 
; com) i 


The Potato Crop in Treland.— There are so imiy] to to 6l. per acre, Irish, which is to 
of the prospects of the Potato Ter se Slade. 


: r na 
crop in Ireland, that I am induced to send you| Lus —The a — of a letter just 


fo 
the result of my own observations during a few 3 from a s 
to Lucerne 5 — 


on very highly-manured ground, the foliage | Aug. Ist, and Sept. Ist, each cu 
2 This has been more than 


saw (a field of Lord lemont’s), which had been horses, 7 — very fine 


turtle sou n co gi 
with Mr. Johnson, by what hocus poeus can the Society | England, the green crops quite amazed me. Tend 
. y 
transmute this 12s. 6d. into 21s., or the 7s. 6d. into the Swedes on the model farm at Glasnevin, near Dublin, my n 
10s. 6d., minus the soup so magnanimously and meri- | promised a crop of at least 35 2 per acre (English), and 
arm 


n England and 
cheap — the welfare 
ti 


of the water, the pro- 
but if the proprietors 


r Dublin, 


the | is, that the contractor was not cheated. cat — and M ay tone zel ik: ilar saying Lines 
e been 


could not hav 


to English as 7/. to 4l. 


may be in 


days that wi the growe a small half gree. 4 i 
i — p uri 
= . In the neighbourhood of Dublin unem pe ground. (2200 square yards), I so 
crop look "rS rs with Luce year. Ihave already (Sept. ines 
particularly and well flavoured, and, five erops aie: it: viz. en. 2 3 ee e e Ist, 
ve in 


to keep m An 
conditio 2 


n > an | discussion in your colum 
condemn, without trial, r implement merely because | estate on the shore of Lough Derg, where two or three 
w and strange to them. Give it a trial, and | years ago, it was stated, wo a one could hire another 


ght, | cleaned with a brus n. 80 tended to. 
n to have him regularly and propeti a 


t e barrows full of good 1 
A been and still am very particular 
go | noting down all the cost d ; 


whatever the truth on this point may be, I have m 
doubt that the letter of “A. B. C” about it, write, 
ost imagine, in fear for rp 
5 for the spirit of his com . 
e of probable benefit to our “dam if not com | 
emned by some 7 testimony, as I believe the abore 
to be, of the general pig 
bor 
Bor. feeding. I am "perfectly satisfied that 
feeding is a very admirable plan for bringing forvard 
x 


you g e 
sapere J followed by farmers. To test the value of 


w 
— 
2 
a 
5 
y 
3 
Qu 
E 
3 5 
=] 
a 
H 
sE 
a 
. EA An T A O 


e en | the method, I had bought for me ata bouring fair, 
erary) where half the | b a fri end of 


I gave the | 
mine, a yearling, for wile 
sum the . 6s. For the first month the mi a | 
Gra s from a small 111 cut 1 ~ 


— effluvia; he was 


4 

08 

= 

2 

oO 

j 

7 

i 8 be : 

> 5 
te 15 712271 

E 
tee 


a oa a T eee enii 14 
aned ou a eng 1 16 1 4 


The valiant manner 


very b 3 ve not at that time | good eut Pere ane on Oet 1st, and T do not despair 
e ously the 


of one on the Is 
itho 


7 


> 


on this subject, 


without weed. Can you match my farming by an 
similar example within your . — : Another : 


says, I saw 


the same kind in in Lombardy, viz., the fourth erop of 


Great Southern and Wester Lief Ratina as you . f. Lucerne ont in July ; e the bugbear of the | 


1849. 


into a blessing. 
* 1 of “ turning all weathers to 
illed in 8 anshi 


pening 
Belame eT T a though sk 


an 


Dr THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
Saming evil into a blessing, „ They have much to learn varieties of Wheat demanded much of the farmer's and folded at night upon the poorest jand, preparatory fo 


| 1 


n many 
meie introduced into the bp are pe ote About 40 a year 


| Wheat, The fattin; 
flock have 


| crops, en wet the flock are not 
e * | 8 over the y yah 
teamed Potatoes, boiled Rye, 


. ee 


a 
season, may n unacceptable 
peer to have my thority on on ti om of a 


harvest, I give it in tw 2 1 
: “ Toulouse, 1, 20th, e and 22d Jul 
Gar e found 


emposed ther side * d 
aide.” * J e 29th July. cg 
ve found the hary ted i 


ree lege.“ The 
e informed, ‘slaps, that the 
a late one in England ia 1 


Farmers’ Clubs. 
Norta CoxxwaLI. e Crun: Culture of 
Mr. ones said, the first care was the pes- 
paration, and here he oct t 


ed, in 
ann — on 8 entalled on the 5 by 
so much eedin 


lnd to 4 re; i ix years ren- 
itn o make and burn pea 2 3 
ably d the value of their onan oe ring i ran 


t their skill and capital would allow, and | 
; l be the best 


belief that this object w 
by a constant succession 
tw 


nd 
d | that the vigour of the ne 5 was y mii: 


823. R. T., near 
fo 


the stack-yard, per the 
| 


Whos 
and will for some time rie ye the chief occupation, dem 


| msd on heavy soils. 
he 


t;s the colour 


few 
clined ger in fester mt — 
white e of imported from Spain, called the Talavera 


ield very largely, 
ually de- 55s. per ton. 
Bey. Then came a 


and Barley. otatoes 
are o selling for from 8d, to 10d. per bushel of 60 lbs., in this 


uch less dis sease Be sve 


n, and the yield of flour, from 
ts thin oi ata, fine in Batts. It was considered superior 
te 50 


to be 
id, 1 me 2 if sown aan it _— 
be ripe in Augus be just the sort to sow 
erami bolera: had failed, ee grain was sown = * 
few years befo 


2 , and * — sls nued. During this 
me the prin aut ee ere the old red, and a 
— ak white W Wheat; ‘then came the red straw 
Whe * eee * ared to a auswer we almost all 
soils ; ite Whea 


Devon bul 
smallest compass. Lately there had been several 
The only one he was acquainte 


ratin 
te change of soil, Before Wheat 2 ye its root 
n the spring, a: principal ram is 
progres s of the worm, — 
tion sie — with a Jl the 5 — — an — 
rolling with a very heavy ees or clod crusher were 
o save the crop ; and the greater 
next approached that 


a 
= afte 2 aja sega 


shoul i 

Pro 8 nad blest 2 with vate es 
abundant crop, and their care should 
well. The first st 


erable loss both in the field and in 
grain did not produce so white 


our as when cut in proper season. Cornwall Gazette, 


5 
Tah Sery the — of Pipes, or Tiles, and the 
rof Ro 2 hen i in Agricultural Drain- 
pit ‘By ward Pon 
e Brom inches a: of cartridge p 2 strengthen 
calico patch, containing useful information St 
doubs—bat which any e could calculate in half 
hour ; an red to purchasers for at least 12 U times 
the real cost of ihe all 


Calendar of Operations. 


BEDFORDSHIRE Far ow 82 
most attention on all arable farm 

has bee 
The daem aan slugs are 

—— after so mo an ate pea asm 3 
a ed agai A slacked lime spread upon 
"e plougbing. is in 


Tor 


eneral a safe oom? tative against then 


wed 


an a g 
conga ina 8 to plough the 
soils, he co 


pl 
Mr. 
e last agricultural 
= 1 prize was awarded for it. It is a shift- 
b with a skim coulter. These eae a — waa 
he — co in hilly 8 turn 
unde: the furrow. ‘The usual 


oth Sto w as it would 


a 
h 
nsidered | 


actice of sowing lime kas igh, atter the vermin 
Two 8 or 


ap Ar am aya 
Dr. Newington’s 


3 
85 
$ 


ultur: ri employed 
men at present, — as labour well directed fs reproductive, it 
hoped t ose who are — e Sis willing to 
give all the employment in their power, R. V. 


Notices to > Correspondents, 
Sub. See“ Gas-t 


uc 
ood 
blood. Ordinary farm manure contai 
early 4 per cent. of nitrogen, liquid blood contains 3 per cen 


of nitrogen, 

BonE-pust IN Cos : Novice. Nothing can be better. Add 
about 12 bushels to "the eg of earth and lime which you 
intend 2 cap on an a 

Buck wHEA ransom It ie worth less than wre dig 
We — Bot know at the price of it may be * per 
you may buy it 1 of any corn 
per sane We do not happen to — how 
at presen 

Cnark R N. chalky stratum will be excellen 

dressing for the pee top soil, ema it 2 all the — 

above it are of diluvial origin, ed from oe 

uarters according to the direction of thet * 


brought them 

Con Cuina Four : J K. Mr. Nolan, of Dublin, can, no doubt, 
supply you, We know nothing of prices. See our advertising 
columns, 

Cows : H T. They are Settar — re, turned out into an adjo 
ing yard for an — ae 9 bay and straw, 
Lins us eed, and grai food, We. have a. 


tity. Of 3 we would not give more aay 13 lb. “ally 
to a cow, ane that should be potted toa mucilage, and thrown 
over the e 

Gas Tak, on PRE FLOOR : 4 says, a these. sifte 
such as is used for topping walks, and al-gas tar ; leved 
the ground perfectly; mix — nd — * quarts of the 
latter to each 4 of me former, till sae A gig cleo pare xd 
is saturated hin his is best don 

stone floor; sp * wr, about one ish t ick; rol i hard 

with a hea avy — ‘fener, When dry, 

inches ge according to the purpose for white h he 4507 is 

9 * s soon as laid, and 2 until it is quite 

„ at the fol- 


* Poet 
merchant for — to 32s, 
the price rules 


are. * eek 


dgravel, 


16 inches deep, 9d. per 
looting high prices 13 rang per bushel; gus tar, 44a. per 
gallon; * esp 

HORSE CHESNU . t aware that the poison they 
8 — ae use as nied for cattle. — find it * 

n the Gardeners’ Chronicle fo Hg ten shat in ieee d they. 

n the morning 


and evening. 

— ON oona. Scotia. What 
tops y of the 6} per cent. interest 

its loan invested in dräi 


Int sá 7 tenant 
Shik Government charges 
. is not, 
vestment 
call 


» you 
may be a ‘quantity 


„ Comm 3 . town after Wednesday cannot be 
* answered till the following week. 


Markets. 
SMITHFIELD, Monpay, Oct. 1. 


The supply of Beasts is again large, but the choicest 
3 nn t very 8 — demand is ee nor. 


dibble | 18 Bodine is its 

be more rene ap 
from 4 — 6 pecks Bg acre, 
sufficien of o 


plied. Our usual — as been 

but this year we think . 3 be 
Som oe still continue 

from 2 to 9 bushels of seed er acre, and to reap tet AAN 

20 to 25 bushels per acr Por several years past we have 

a 2 an eusy method of testing the 4 of the Wheat crops 
est, The 5 foun 


“= ae a pag Een ae 

= shock. “ed wor 
rs are carried, w —— e im 

—— eshed out or aaa y= 2 fora 3 * — 

The —— = at jn measured corn is then multiplied by 

30, which gives the gross produce of the whole field, and that 


have to 
the bottom to the top of the hill again 
With = these — the skim coulter- 


made about 1 
a Wheat stubble for Tares. 
Pred ‘Our r sheep have for sume time 


EEG nun mber 
acrea We conceive such a test, so early in the season, 


yield, 


ble 
8 and frequently important, not only as regards the | 


* 3 8 to 3 1 fee ron ati 955 
ben ert horns 3 4—3 6 wes & 2d quality 2 8—3 2 
2d quality Beasts 2 6—3 2 Ditto Shorn .,. .., a 
Best Downs ; Lambs an 
8 Calves se ssi 


Ditto Sborn 


.. sss 


— 2 2 


s | Beasts, 4700; Sheep and Lambs, 28,080 ; „ Calves, Lr; Pigs, 190. 


2 Oet. 5. 

We have not so pply of Beasts as of late, and 
sequently ase is m ** 2 Owing t to the * 
eee tolerable 1 ro age ed, and pres the choicest kinds 
time 


the number wf 

Sheep is a fair average; the demand has 
ave advanced about 2d. per 8 — ba have but few Dres on 
— They are readily sold al 8 lbs. more money, 


It is now full time 


with food, which are intended fi 
ald eo. 


upon Gives, 


From Holland and Germ on a 6 Beasts, 2 

as certainly m e» cheapest ; an ole erop, ngle fields, which can seldom be stacked | ang 105 ee — — . eep, 

ee i nothing "further but to = rately, so lasts know the roii of any shines ote vg ohare 4105 Mien Cows from fia konii Nanaia, 00 Beasts; 
ith regar e have tied fattin 8, n „ 5 
with one et bio — 4 meal, and hay chaff. Nine Yi steers nase =~ Norge 1 2 Soots, Here 3 wii Best Long-wools . 3 18 8 
i ove No 3 Ditto 
objection he o, deilling on their thriy 3 ell upo & mach less 7 oe of land than they would | Best 2885 3 en 2 ez 4 
i | i th f the pastures j 
is was that it . soil 1 have done if pe 8 inn ee ee etal oy the 


638 | 
6 | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE 


Hothouse Grapes — cms nial. "Peaches and N byt dav hd Load 
gearce ee geer, Pine-apples have 8 petarinas i of 36 Trusses. 
berts an: ys our ac- THFIELD, Oct. 4 
re are also somes 1 ren ata "Oranges aro s and en ge tonas] C Clover 60s to90 
ns erate ntiful. Amo e scarce. | R nee . Clover a bag s| TOG 
ma be $ . ng Vegeta les. Fe 6 „e % e e ENTLEMEN, 
2 r paei at f at from ay o to 6d. ® a 33 Zi . — Str 0 85 28 — ne 
about 4s. per reen Peas fetch 2, HOOPER. 
pe bushel, 2 satoa Beva not altered since our | Prime Meadow v Hay 7 to The Tad Oct. 4, MES by 
and, Mus fetch from 1 ading are sufficient for the | Inferior ditto. a s inrer vee „ one G58 to 848 road, on TUESDA premises, N 1 
Flowers consist of Heaths, Pela: 8. to ls. 6d. per pottle. Cut New Har shi New Gloved’... cighasts ae Mr. HOWCROFT, ret t. 9, 1849 r 1 5754 Nursery, >i 
venusta, Tropeolums » Fuchsias Peeaigns, Gardeniin Hignonis r NURSERY 170 the’ business fer by x 
i , sistin. mess, the Zi 
FRUITS OSHUA BAKER, ruit and Forest Trees ; g of Ey Whole 
i s * MARK LA Flower Seed ; America: ergreens ; 12 3 
Grapes. pee Ta 194 * Lemons, per doz., Is to 3s an Mo eupay, Oer. 1.—The supply 3 capital — oe e Nn a quantity fee 
= Pp 1 Ib., 94 tols Almon al 3 — 8s 4 4p 8 t br land carriage samples was 25 N Essex $ this fol 2 51 Harness e rickwork, Box-edzing ; a 
j 8 od ; rmer was d ate, from he Sale, and 4 ung, &c,— f 
Nectarinee per per dng, 88 fo 13a tes | sweet, per Ib., 2s to 3s this day se’nnight, but in 1 a about th e same terms as cipal we Facey i talogues had ns 80 Ma) by vent a : 
fam, per hf, Sa s Walnuts p. 100, 1s 6d to 2 was submitted to. era — of Leyton ` of the A e i : 
per i ere 4s to 68 es fab. “és to 24a 8 —— 1 ety ee ver met a fair inquiry pafi wl A “ ytonstone, Ess Uctioneers, Of the 
a 4s ey, bot slight American 
Aber half sieve, 48 to 6s | gabe per 100 lbs., 45s to 60s per gr. cheaper. For Ep Sciith aa Bae ae a free NTLEMEN, PLO te 
Apples,kitchen,p. beh., 2s to 4s — Br aul N n r n ESSRS. ENE Pout, AND OTE 
Oranges, per doz., 4s to 6s P. ip tolés Floating © and pri es ôd. per qr. low n value.—The Oat 11175 ted ubmit As HORRIS am 
VEGETABLES Dae Steer of indian Dorn Ace Weld with i qualities | x he Lion and Lewy Lege e 
Cabbages, p. doz., 6d tols 1 np ‘ead: ti ith increased October 11 iit, 1849, at 11 0 Tamb, Lom 
— ers, p. doz., 28 to 68 — 8 Ae eek have 5 —— arrivals of English corn d and co A MEADE yop h 0 ‘the 1 5 ’ 
3 dog band to “10s s t0125 — per To. 34 70 6a m3 large, Toph Wheat — Wheat ane Barley also icone ES us KS E EARTSEA ae CARNATION 
Siara si arlic, Ib., 8 he treme Plants; a? ELL 33 
Faber eb todd Artichokes, p. a * he te ines be no 821 118. per . dearer, but it is Ben n sere. of han ` ‘antes 140 sorer : 9 Ä and n ge otk 
. per cwt., 3s . La 16d fols Semen, Beane antzic.— We observe 2 = 2 t oe 3 Carnation Sta k se Carat irrer Ink 
7 per b oe b 0d fe teta ae a or Peas.—The Oat trade is rather re aay di Weichts arpenters’ Benches j N ett a 
e p. doz. — n Endi prides — Itai lour is in fair request, and h eavy, but | ce s, Ladder, Barrow, ag | 
Red Beet, per doz., is to 2s Fading ee sin En 3 aay D 2 Mar he a s iyor Hares ce and 
orse Radish, p. sieve, 43 to 6s een excessivel i ; ating cargoes, on th i or to the Sa 
= Beans, ve £ — N a n, p. pot., 1s to 18 6d 2 22 rather an inerensed inquiry fo re 1 Lon —— and of the Tae. ises, of the disch d 
€ : Sal Bade ahs So toa obta a slig W which enabled f: sa om Pp gn Wheat, | tene. Essex, oneers, American 3 in 
ucumbers, 5 ate 10 Fennel, per 88 $a 3d | sent the ha vest a = need prices, Letters = from Scotland repre — etn | 
Celery, p. t bunch, 2 i Savory, nn Ja OE OY favourable conclus MESSRS. PROTHERO E 
* es, p. bunches 1s is to 28 * par D do buas a fe hel dealers 2 this my Dee b= Chere was a fair attendance of ZE 2 8. S 1 7 hag sig have . | 
er ches s 3 | new Whea an e demand and followi ie A 
4d to Roots, p. bdle., 1s to 1s eat at Tuesday’s prices ; th and took off all ie oad, Chelsea, o Migs day, on the 
garmon per bun tate, l f. bunch 34 E E a E A 0 AI | 
3 r in a 
Spi p. sieve, Is to ls 2 1 — KEAT very dull. Few . in ited supply 5 3 but N pa E f ge Mal r buildi: e * 2 
OTATOES.—Sovtuwark, Oct 1 IMPERIAL |W ons ta Barley, Beans, and Fes and varied collection arts ane and 80 — 
Potatoes up to the „ P e Pur. Baxxr. Oats.) RTR. B P illar Roses; oseberries; ale sen, dl 
ay we om hardly say the > ae ae . so z ** m 7 | | BANS. | Peas, | Camellias, and — eons and Pi Flowerin g Shrubs, Cami, — i 
á hose from the Continent h enced at the KT. m s — 4d am oe 26s 5d prior to the Sal, pis Plants, &e. . — 
— 8 selling at a low figure 1 ery free pi x — 2 27 0 32 x 28 * Nava on the yon aer us pas ot the . pripa — 
yr anika Aa 2 quantity o of Potatoes in 3 43 0 227 9 8 H 2511 31 2 29 7 Nursery, Leytonstone. 3 of the Auctioneers, America : 
5 1 “following sre ony Eat got mgs ate 41 9 27 1 (IT 30% 1 29 9 [0 0 ASHFORD, KENT THR 
ts, 708. to 80s. per ton; Scotch, Pand ’s prices :—York 42 4 97 41/1711 25 2 9 30 0 ESS RS. PROTHEROE 2 1 F 
whites, 60s. to 65s. to 70s.; foreign Fg | or 29 5 31 3 ceived instructions from the A ORNIS h » 
26 10 18 2 rupt, t gnees James (w 
begegne Sm AY, Oct. 5. 10 | | s 2 : * cord, mey the Railway Station on WEDMES e 
trade 1 , Í 
for the new growth, at „ at there is a steady . Sas” | 1 0 1 o| 1 1 © | Forest 2 NURSERY STOCK Gele of ar 
— ars ale, ox for 2 finest sorts ey te Nearlings s ae Se the last six weeks’ Corn Avera — e Household ee nd. Americ ms 4 % 
id J — od `. EPT. es. ur li gin f 
1 9 80,0001, emand, s — — PT. 1,|Sepr, 8. SEPT] EPT 22, Srrr 929 Pony 8 e Rustic een . e i 
4 and Eas’ we aise and 1 ; 
Kents . p. cwt, 130s to 2103 Fe ams, p. cwt. 210s — 231s 6 poii : ee oo 8 pig eee May be viewed, a ae iron 2 E: ge fa Bp 
Weald of Kents .. er — 168 Year arn pg Kents... 70 — 110 tes ee EM n id Si — =e Premises ; 9 che e pri Sa ack BE 
Sussex... ... ... 126 —147 4 Sussex. 58 —110 . os 5 he Auctioneers, American Nursery, Leytonstone, ot yaad 3 
- 20 — 80 — 225 oo ‘in TO NOBLEMEN, GEN : — 
“ 5 <H TLEMEN, NURSERYME 
Lond 8 E „eee BUILDERS 3 
PRICES — N Wakefield. Boston. B r EKO anp MORRIS will el 
radi — biaia 4 tas as ard irmingham. y Auction, on the Pre ompton 
CURRENT. + Oot. 1. 2 * Sept. 25. 6 S 2 on FRIDAT, Oct, 19, 228 11 bed i 
ar. 70 Ni a lee pe 11 o'clock, by order of the Proprietor, the valuable SUBSET 
2 r ee aa Sept. 37. | Oct. 4, | BtandeXd l Deer Roma) Tange” guansy of Ere 
* . * 2 . 1 . a 2 sab 
ew, red . 3844388 to43'6 0 5 66 i dls. s, . Ee a Tae rls 
„ å 4816: 4 6 906 6 . 38 to42 36 t A „ „ ite as a. sr 9p Trees, A capital , pity e 
red : 8446 4 7 045—5143—49 40 en 2 S ee jowed prior vati she Gain: ORANE 2 
Pan pu n 49 40—4630—45% 8 6 05 6 6 0 of the prineipal See Recdsmen in anes 5 
te we 8 N E American Nursery, Leyto se ix 5 a 
1 427 84 3 | 50) —48) — 5 3 5 8 
8 y 2135403347 | — 5 10 6 35 8 ES. 
Rye—0! j 480 lbs, 35—4933—47| — 6 2 M SRS. PROTHEROE A 75 N MORRIS kiai 
d 0 |z pi 480 lbs, | | 4. 8 6, 24 8 £8. 2 peti Wag = p pias ig by Mr. pid = 
2 paee i coe a y Auction, on the pret 
— er nr — seth | 8882 = mr AEA an NONDA iai of the I 2 27 
— = — u . i 
qr. s — ae an į 15 — * don and Birming 1 ow est India 18 i a; i 
— P i — ak y Company, the valuable NURSERY STOCK, consisting df 
30s—31 30 20—22)20—22|21]—23/2] 23 q Das ponas ana ai 
P 31s |28—33)/27—33 21—23/21—23| 22—24 22—24 Forest Tree 
F- Va, A 3 V. 
21—26|21—26 8 29—32 29—33 = „© From the adhesive nature of the 
6 bush. 6 bush — peis move safely, sd 
1 37—40/37 40 ee . KY 1 
45 lbs. aa * — sto ‘ 3 
: — k bein 
1 Ab 24 ee * 14 19 14819 
4 2 5 9 14 19 ogg 19—27 
2 4 — ijai 1 8—20 18—20 


qr. r. * 
326 3002630 


— oe ii 
= — 

f 

F 4 
— — po 


sack p. sack per 
32— 3832-38 34—36 aber 


Aver. 2 Gloucester, ure : 
Imports. ATERER, Chertsey, Surrey 
10 NURSERY ME EN 


11 i 
* 3 564 2 uras, 5 
‘ ph 1274 


en 
3 TUNNICLIFER 


40—1849.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 639 
: : EXHIBITIONS AT THE GARDEN 


HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY OF LONDON 
FOR THE YEAR 1850. 


THE EXHIBITIONS WILL TAKE PLACE ON THE FOLLOWING SATURDAYS :— 
MAY 18, JUNE 8, ann JULY 13, 


? 


SCHEDULE OF THE PRIZES. 
FLOWERS. 


Division I.—In which N sue ty and Private Growers exhibit independently of each other, 


- 


Pelargoniums ; in collections of 6 new and first-rate aoe und, or that is sh t Fd Heaths ; i 11 distinct varieties 
4 ties, with perfectly distinct colours, cultivated with s * auy other size 7 ar 13 inches. * mann | nien poe, “io ona mindy 7 
skill, in, 8-inch p . CE—LS 2 Area 9 best six varieties. SK—SB— 7 Carnations, in pans of 24 distinct varieties. SB—C, (n quly 
i pre gmnt de vhi t gor rte in 4 only, Fari — 2 to be yellow; Pica 
5 we the pre e. 3 colours are inau/nissible cotees, in pans of 24 distinct 
ara in collections of six varieties, in II. inch pots. | Æ Cape B_so—ci in collections of 10 n distinct varieties. V.) 7 mn 9 
86—0E— E I Pin “4 in pans of 24 dis arieti June 
N.B. Any plan rl be di 5 all ee been actually grown in N, 8. ted that tl hall hibit — ERT Part „ 
ll-inch al will e disqua on more than a occa The Jud es, in making their N.B. Carnations, Picotees, and mus 
0 Roses, in pots collections of 12 distinct varieties. GB award, will 2, both fi in this — ~ next * r, dng their | — cards, in ‘boxes of ’ ae oe 2 = of the followin Fa 
860 preference to ah diena grown in their ral orms, without msions :—From centre to centre, „ 3p in us.; from e 
N.B. To be shown in May and Jun h pots. stakes or stays; and will ral take — — of —— — taide, 2 24 do.; ; depth at back, 7 ins. ; ; ditto front, af 0 dito. 
The — will disqualify any — 2 tion pos t shall be into favourable consideration, No duplicate will be a The face to be painte d light gre collections be 
found to contain a plant which has been recently placed able, allowed to exhibit in which these — 2 —— Ai 
eee eee 
oi Division II. * whieh 3 alone can show. 
K Exotic Orchids ; in col upe ior cultivation, GB—SG—CE, 
— — — —— — — — 
a Division II. — In which all persons are admitted to equal competition. 
ee Calceolarias, in sixes ; in 11-inch ons. LS—SK—SB 2 goed Orchids ; single displ very rior, N.B. Itis certain that much may be effected 
: 1 pr shown p May and Jun ne onl cultivatio: . mms ä plants in common cultiv — such as 
5 e specimens very superior cultivation, excluding N. B. No duplicate eager}. n be here awarded. . Ke. &c. This class will be judged by the e Honeys 
F a 8 m ine which vf be shown singly in other letters, and | AA Fuchsias ; Ls threes, of three distinct conan: in July only. office 
0 4 flower. CE LS—SK— NN Seances es; in sixes, (Jn May only.) CE—LS—SK 
_ NStove or Greenhouse plants; in collections of 20 plants. | BB Pel — in six DISTINCT SPECIES, exhibiting superior 00 22 introduced or extremely rare ornamental plants in 
WB. . Fuchsias, Orchids, Pelargoniums and du A. K. By the . — is meant the wild kinds imported ene r i 129.9 
, bd 4 i i 
tes are ex — from all the four classes of Stove or m ape of Good Hope, or New Holland, tu barons W nagging! a b Av will particulary 
house z species inclusive, an = not garden Rtas observe that none rare ts exhibi 
e Aa Greenhouse plants; in collections of 15 plants. | CC Fancy Pelarg ; in sixes, in 8-inch pots. SG—CE under this letter, Nothing will be 1— Den — 
P Store or en plants; in collections of 10 plants. N, B. No * Medals can be allowed here. season, DOr Bod. — . dag r y Aai adena 
DD Kr — es; in collections ati six 7 exhibit- arieties of any kind. No pace will be 8 New Plants 
4 Stove or Greenhouse 8 in collections of 6 plants, SG superior et ity —SK, » July on only.) aon have been introduced 
xB. 1 EE Six Lt varieties of Tall Soa din — —SG—CE | pp Miscellaneous su eave Peas sk—SB—¢ 
—— Greenhouse ae ants * (of 50 varieties in loose bunches, each — sting of| N. B. Exhibitors under P P will not be thereby entitled to a 
in 12 distinct v. varieties. GB—SG—CE che e gathered, so as to ae as far ticke „ H — toe 
a. Azaleas ; + in gis distinet Varieties. SG—CE—LS as possible, — habit of the variety. CE—L quets, together with all plants for which separate 
i 55 Jo one can show in ia both cla sses of Azaleas N.B. In le ly Jes ee Para who exhibits in this letter can are offered as single eh al pianta dor Waien separano prizes 
E Rhododendrons; in slx distinct y varieties, (In also compete in the fo ng. ] elargoniuins, of crosses 
3 only.) SG—CE—LS A GG Sina, exhibited as in — > inter: FF, and in 25 varieties, 2. 3 ä 6 J 
Casein < * Gey Se Hardy . grown in pots; Coni- | LS—SK—SB. a ‘owers only can Erhi here). N.B. Every seedling must 8 shown — — marked with 
5 N. B. In June and Pini If R n he same seedling cannot gain a 
J. B. . will be r regarded as new which has been in aiji | pang attention to the — — —— prize more than once in the season. The plants must be 
the nurseries ee — * 5 : t 
VOesifers, in sixes are species in not toss ey will not be allowed to compete, — — pots, and not in a cut e. 
E third sekta Aik N LS—SK—S aH 1 — CE—LS—SK | RR Alpines; in bgt pat i sk—SB— 
Veni Y can only be shown at the exhi bition i in July. ef I 8 in sixes, (In July only.) LS—SK—SB Ss Cinerarias ; in sixes, Deis, ta May only.) SK 
F Exotic Orchi KK Statices ; n collections of six —. CE- — 1. * a 
tation, LG GK LL 83 in 5 — — of 10 hotho — r e 
I Exotic Orchids; ections 9 1. cultivation, LS —SB. Haay eaths; in sixes, 
` tration. GB ; col er srba To be shown in July only. 
T Orchids ; in collecti G—CE—LS | MM New Hybrid Plants, exclusive of Roses, Rhododendrons, 


Seedling Flowers 

A tent will be provided for ti the exhibition of oes ‘no 

NB, cannot ag ya pe ag three classes — and Garden cross-breds, such as Gloxinias and the medals will be awarded ; dressy at g to express 
Orchids. No like. S@—CE—LS any opinion upon the merits of seedlings. 


exhibitor can show in more than one of them. 


weet Lost Fruiterers), in the habit of of eupplyin the Market, and P a exhibit aaran measan ` of each other, Fruiterers 
o duplicate awards can be made in sat aonb — ver, except in P, take more than one award in each letter, 


es or Nectarines in pots. SK—SB—C 3. Muscats, LS—SK—SB M Strawberries, one dish ea 
pples, in ee — 4, Other sorts, 3 trom the foregoing. LS—SK—SB $ 11 Queen, . e 
4 —SK—SB. i Peaches, in sixes, —SB—C ling, 
14 e Black Jamaicas, Ota- Neetarines, — ~ 3 en N O — A &e., {pote s z. one to show more than 
. = i Apples and Pears of the previous year. SB—C NB. Thi is excluded if gathered. é 
— . — pots ; — to be shown. CE—LS—SK K che NN i ishos oft 1 O * one specimen each; DREN 
— r % sach H 
roy 9 — ei „ l. Black. SB—C » White, SB—C 2. The best t fiar — 
f 5 seni ts to be shown, SK—SB—C Pen Other 
Prince, o. ogee app d *. thay ee have grown in the pots in which they are 
Sweetwaters, i 


~ TO NURSERYMEN AND SEEDSMEN. i L “DRalNING: * DERBY 


O BE DISPOSED OF, a Small Nursery and Seed =A Very Superior Draining kevn), of great sim- 

T Business, in a good ne igh hood, abaut 100 miles pm rd 5s., to be had of the maker, Jou Davis, Opti- 

o. London; the present occupier is about to remove to a . The above is securely packed sake sont to any part 
ay 


WORK. HOt WATER APPARATUS, | 
ENHOUS ES, &c. 


= i Paar *r ituation. For furthe - 
to be had at the Aart, and of of the Auctioneer, South | Hemera s apply, post-paid, ee ‘Office ofthis Paper. o 
series, E ing and Onger. LATE WORKS, ISLEWORTH.— 
rticles, manufactured in Slate for 


a ; Horticultural purposes | IN 
d MER tee O MANUFACTURERS OF by EDwaRD BECK, may be seen . Won rox — anba : ain Arches 
Tube, Plans 3 oleae ave, Dalen Path e SUILDINGS, Green and Hothouses, Conser. 


. p SED D OF, for a r monet Sh : 2 82 Hot Hot Water Tank Cove 3 heated by HOT-WATER APPARATUS 
| NORE wr FERTILISER for CORN | Shelves hold water tor Grabidecnous Rowe, RS. oe 
è — . wa upon D. and Country, Drawings and 
i A large stock of Siate Slabs, of all sizes and | Estimates free. Work t 25 3 
apply (ti) to - JoNES, on Se toes on ene: : Warg’s 6, or Domestic 


T, CHEAP, AND DURABLE ROOFING. ARIAN CE 
sh of ‘Croydon, < Surrey, ROGOS ATENT ASPHALTE ROOFING 1 common; 
builiings.—Ap dy by letter 4 FELT is — ‘ious t n 
trau ve, sds has been tz ted by a long and extensive a maa chi- | which rooms 
mates. Saves: 3 i — ; can bo daid 
a with great faci ty by farm-se — tis sed persons, 
„Per 


5 eo ey osha Fores T . . 
| peat. © of fuel, ded 8 i 8 * 
cation to Caogson and Ce 


-established 0 
och or pate 4. at ihe Price ld 
aagi oF 


640 THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL mie 


VED FOUR-HORSE PORTABLE STEAM ENGINES 
ee BOLTING OR THRESHING MACHINES, 
D HANSON, Sou + ark 


WIRE NETTING, ONE PENNY PER SQUARE FOOT, 


ne, than any * the 
bli Ms *. ma: be. seen any day at their works, Sumner- 
ret, — es Ae ge-road.—-Water-rams f for eg a Water, A 
Deep Wall’ i aeiia Bade Hot-water untains. N 
Towns supplied with Gas or Water. AA 
IRMINGHAM CATTLE EXHIBITION, 1849.— Y 
he Birmingham and Midland Counties Exhibition of 0) 
FAT Poe linge SHEEP, PIGS, and POULTRY, will be held xX 
€ y, Wednes sday, Thursday, and Sak gona > 1 
—— ene 14th 5 bea. r next. nt ertificates 
several Classes now be obtained, together with copies of ALVANISED WIRE NETTING, TWO-PENCE 
the Prize eng, eo application to the Honora - SQ E FOOT.—This article requires no paint- 
entries must be mace or y Saturday, the * ing, the atmos e slightest action on i 
November. — r. 5 . Watoa, Hon , Union-st., Birm 2 was ex exhibit ed at the late Metropolitan Cattle Show, and air 
ALV ANISED WIRE G GAME RRE SSe highly eulogised both for its utility and pretty appearance, bee 
d. per yard, 2 feet It forms a light and durable fence against the depredations of 
— hares, rabbits, and cats, and is peculiarly adapted for Aviaries, 
H . I Pheasantries, and to secure poultry; — by he galvanised 
Ba 22 equiring no paint, it pbg admirably for training all kinds 
225 i of creeping plants. La uantities alway ck, of 
2225 18, 24, 36 , and 48 inches mide it can, however, be aal e to any 


222 a 2 25 
CHR 225 
ote 22225725 


Galvan- Japanned 
ised, ron. 
2-inch mesh, light, 24-inch wide. Id. per yd. 5d. per yd. 
strong ” on » 6f „ 
s, extra strong ,, oe 2 ” 9 ” 


aoe 8 ” 6 » 
10 ” 8 ” 
11 ” 


15-inch 
lj-inch „ strong 
1}-inch » extra strong , 5 — 


att oh 


Tf the upper balf is a coarse mesh, „it will 2. — the price 84. 
rth. 
per square foot. Patterns forwarded post. 
Manufactured by BARNARD and BISHOP, Market-place, 
Norwich, and delivered free of expense in London, Peter- 
borough. Hull. or Newcastle. 


STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROOF 
WIRE NETTING, 


12 inches wide 34d. per 510 * "pet =~ 
8 4d. 


i ” ” » ” n 
no Sa 

anis sed. do., cog per 

Extra strong capers al Wir 

= nning gar Wee i 

Wire Nurs 


55 52 


h S &e Wistow 
Blinds, Is. 10d. per square foot, with bolts pep in maho- 
8 Pig al garden bordering, Sg per m oot ; 
Flower Tra from 3d. each; Gar 20s, ach ; 
Flower Frog . — 33, 9d. e ach ; Galvanised Tying Wire for 
— wr and trees, Dahlia Rods, and ev ery e of e 
; Weaving, for the use of paper-makers, millers, &c,— 
ne. Manufactory n THOMAS Henry Fox, 44, — N 
3 hill, Lond 
S Gay pani 545 l 680 70 3 BOTANY. 


This A 


Mag AND CECONOMICAL BOTANY ; or, 


nH 
Vo 


RAOT FROM THE mate aa? 8 . 
95 A Vegetable boy ane contain ala arge guantity 
of plants ot no 


of those which can be 
or 


N econ my. The prin 
br 7 he by teacher rs in al an une e 


| departed from 


dy, 4 oll 8 pa 
TABLE Kixapom’ of the author, with the seque 

in a few instances, when it was ae that the 
| convenience of younger students would be — ey doing 
so, The author trusts that this selection wi ill be fo o have 
been made in such a wayt il 
ably extensive means of Ve e i a lectures, 


Stee h 


and a 


“YOUNG AND COMPANY N 


Botanic Gardens, 
en 


(CHARLES 4 
W. anD C. YOUN 


MANUFACTURERS OF Pa AND" WIRE WORK, &c., 


cie cotland, held. oe at Inverness, 
ere ‘Bicloncy, 5 — Strength, perce 1 ee 
—— general * d had a d fi e Ju 
the So 5 r Med 


a year ount rad more 
Fasc — with thi Net. i 
9 are ee van 


er 
ageer perl facility, b any labourer. 
Hares and Rabbits, it is or itself quite sufficient, having — i 
be ee with small wire sent for that pur- 


pose, to rome stakes driven n into the gro about every six 
or seven feet apart. Itis, besides, 8 “adapted for 9 5 
dering Hedges, Paling, or other existing Fen es, complete! 
tos vermin ; d b; * poten up into res 
of three or more feet, a 3 t forms a most effi- 
t guard, at little expense, for individual Loma and Shrubs, 
IcEs.—18 ins. high, 9d. ; 24 ins., 1s, ; 30 in 
36 ins., 1s. 6d. per lineal yard. 
Or a web of 100 ya: de 34 ie OO seas 0 
D of 100 yards, 24 ins. wide 0 0 
Do. of 100 yar s, 30 ins. wide 6 a g 


Do. of 100 yards, 36 ins. wide 
If more or less than a web is required, it would be Pattee 
at the same rate ard, 


carriage 
— 15 ety ata = 


3 
ing this ey wil C. D. Y. and yes have made a 


a better idea of the great 


i and Co, cannot give a 
strength of their Premium Wire Netting than by atating that 


the weight of of 24-inch at ~ is equal to 2 
yards of another article in the „the ame width, at ode 
per yard. Samp! 

©. D. Youre & Co. 


d. 
W ETCALFE ES 8 0 beo DER 
will be found been produced 


R. H. Sies Albat a hel 
aod adres of the fim thus: 
130 B., Oxford-street, London. 


dy a science of 
alg such as — require to concentrate their atten- 
tion, in the first instance, upon a P 


Just published, in demy 8vo, price 2s, 6d. 
G LINDENIANE; or, Notes upon 
Collection — ee ids formed i 3 N d N ay Cuba by 
Mr. J. Linpgen. By Jonx LINDLEY S. and L. — 
Profess sor of Botany in Te University * London, and in th 
wet Lig rents ot Great Britain 
assure our readers that it “contains a vast quantity ot 


aceutis 


| imavier interesting and useful ce one eee of persons, and 
Pha 


whom we strongly 


Gra i 
and cordially recommend it. — — ee, . — Journal, No, 40. er The ae any Bookseller 
= ELEMENTS OF BOTANY, Structural, Phy- IMP NT T ARMERS AND ND GARDENERS i 
ological, and Medical. With a Sketch of the Artificia Just published, in crown 8vo, p 8540 DE 
Methods of 5 and a Glossary of Technical Terms. THE FARMERS’ AND GA the Practical 
Price 12s. ¢ o the ses of and Manures, J X Mantin DALS. 
— may be had separately, price 5s, Application of Agricultural Chemistry. By far cannot do 
This will complete the series of Elementary Botani s our opinion, ardeners with the 
Works by Professor LINDLEY, of which — . “ag ona tter than to make themselves we a 
The Vegetable pp: ” form the oth ‘Guide’ thus 2 them pace, the of 
NTENTS., It contains, in a „ ae, Lave Cisie, and ¢ 
ART 3 Attribut Of the Elementary the caren of ‘Prof essor Johnston, Liebig, Lav tarmer ough 10 
9 Of t 5 and its fee ern Of the | eminent e * 8. 10 f am Chr 
Compound 5 — Of the a t—6. e the Stem 7. Of the be w ithout it for a single w ”— 
eaf- Buds—8, Of the Leaves—9, Of Food and Seeretions— “ The most essential know edge eg every Ide 3 o bnt 
. Of the Motions of * i Fiower- stripped ofa of 


errai GARDENE 
GARD 


J 


pany en 3 
t o 


he 
o th 
Published by nes SEPH * „ Tremame 
Company, at their Hall, in Ludgate. street, 
IMPORTANT = ADVER ne TH 
n the Press, price 6d, IRD YEAR, 
HE HORTICULTURAL 
DE F 


arge, 
must be forwarded without Anan 
_GRroomBIDGE and Sons, Paterno 
TANTAN AND SHAW’S FARMER'S AL 
LENDAR fi for 1850.—On the Ist of Noy, 


rti 

aan. 5 — 12, will be the latest pes prac 
rec e A = e Nu mbers, from it 

presen 


This ae is 3 in a 
XPERIMENTAL She 
Results of P: “od and 1 ons for Futur: 
= Pra tlont Agriculture, 
W. JOHNSTON, F. ee 
tt ot “ “Blements * 2 1 Chemistry,” ke, 
e eee Sons, 2 
be had of all Books eller . * 


PRICE FOURP ENGE, OF ANY BOOKSELLER. 
CONTE 1 2 g NUMBER A ge SATURDAY 


SEPTE 
TH A 
JOURNAL OF ENGLISH AND ie alen 
9 ae bebe 
` ge ge Qui — 
Review peen w he EXTRACTS FRO: 


R n ee 


in gree 


d Expe 
gaco ng a Caracena] Ca- 
from 1833. — 1848. By | 
T ‘0’ Connell, P: | Bos 
and 


The sag a Regler, 
other Poems. By E. H. Bick- Poems, His 
erstet us, By R. and W. B. 
Che ester, 
Original Fapers.— Milton dom Speculs 


s Wi Casting of 
Report of Proceedings at ie 1 3 of the 
British Association for r. 3 
Our Weekly Gossip. New Pu 3 
tation to the Br itish Tae pr Brittan’s Observa- 
y missi 
— e Drainage of London — 
. n Danish and — 


a 


School Children Blot Telegrap 4 
one j 
Fine Art Gos p- ee aa ee ey 
of Tosscloted Pavement at Ciren ter—Employmest 
French Army in Rom 
Music and t the —Sadler’s 
Would and She Would a 1 
rey 


Theatre (“ 
ssh os aù Aco 


Bud—12, 
Floral py Keen f ihe 
S Disk—i6. Of the Female 0 
1 A Of the “site of Torus—18. Ofthe Ovule—19. Of Pon. 


tilisation—20. Of the ein Of the Seed—22. Of Germina- 
tion—23. Of F Dans, . 
Parr a A get! fo tee ei Analytical 


naient Botany, illus- 
i — woodeu ts, is now ri 5 
OTANICAL WORKS BY 3 LIN 
807907 BOTANY ; or, the Rudiments of Botanical 
cience., New Edition. 400 r meoten Price 


THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM ; or the Structure, 
Classification, and 525 of Plants; zuu strated upon the 


the necess . 
eriments are 9 perfectly eal the reach 0 oye 
perin mer, with the usual degree 0 f information tion possessed 


. Darlington Times 
‘<n 5 N f en a Co., Holborn- „hill, 
ERS, 


p Standard eo 


WINBORNE” S FARNERS 
Mate 


BOOK, 93. 
tto, for Large Farm: 
SWINBORNES B. aT Fs ACCOUNT NT 
3 AYLOR’S IMPROVED FARMER'S 


cheap edition, 5, 
BOOK, 6% 


Coy 
nora MARSHALL, and i and Loneua’ and 
and TAYLOR, Essex Sta andar : 


Natural System, Second Edition. 500 Illustrations, Price 
303. in 2 clo th. 

it th f Stud. he above 
Woka is issued also in 12 1 T price 2 6d. — 


London: pay ury and Evans, 11, Bouverie-street, 
PROFESSOR LINDLEY’s INTRODUCTION TU Tedis 
ust 1 namero fe 2 vols. 8yo, cers 


hs ofessor ö 5 Ph. D., F. R. S., Professor of Botany 
in 9 College, London, &c. 4th Edition, with Corre 
ions vag numerous Addition 


It has been the vag ha wir to bring every subject that he 
has in 3 down, as nearly as N to ier state in 
which it is found ab "the preseut day. er. „ he has 


80 very considerable a quantity of —.— especially 
in what relates to Vegetable Anatomy and Physiology, te t 
present Edition ma: aun pare ue, in those respects, a work; 
me Author, 
THE THEORY oF HORTICULTURE, 8vo, 123. 
tap OF THE BRITISH FLORA. 12mo, 10s, 6d. 
A MEDI 8vo, ie. 
„ Brown, GREEN, and LoncMANs, 


è 


Standard” Office, e beo 
CHE PERMANENTLY 
22 ENAMEL f for 


den Pe 


x, with fall di 
or J. h e e 24, 


u 
Bran 
itations, and to copy 
15 15 — * aber ie Lng 
seeing that the name of Jon N WILLI 


of No. 13, Upper 
Printed “ ‘by WII IIa . Ricx Mm 
mS 5 gee 7 
oig of ran ne Co 
— 


TUADAY, Ocronxx 


10 zas 
New Editions — . follow 
may be nak of all 8560 MPL: ETE Eo 


ng ACCOUNT S005, 
12 


$ 


5 


IE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZE 


n stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


i 


a hea 


‘a 


651 0 rass land, to lay down. 651 
. 646 e gom I EE GFT 
643 e | Heating, furred up boilers wins. ¢ 

Hooker, Dr. af 
H ve 

a 
* 
wW 
t 


FFSA aoa 


8 0 
Plax mbago * 
. 645 Politi 9 5 4 . 
649 Pota ing the stems Off 64, 
. . 647 — eee 4 
62 — ro clansif ovesence 8 
650 ee oli i sses. 46 
6 
6 


a oes „„ 
653 a tons and alkali works . 646 e 
a Fete ta ardeni g 646 G 


h full testimonials as to age, len 
means of subsistence, wit hout which 
By order oge 1 1 
ED W e ‘Secretary, 
October 13, 97, Fart ingdon-st 
dan Forms of Petition ae —— had upon — to che 


N inst. (after which time dane will not be received), 
8 s will 


THE SEED Rate: 
<NEMOPHILA MACULATA,” —(TRUR.) 
1 


fal in ering some ul 
25 N to offer 8 Prine forwarded on appli- 
Oct. 13. 
13 quantity being. Me, Messrs. V. can only gua- 
antes to supply the first o 
Hoa 


TS’ FLOW 
N HOLLAND. rade’ ante Middleton 
near Manchester, respectfully orp» his 3 that 
sk of Florists’ Flowers is n 


S 
z 
8 
. 
a 
2 
r$ 
8 
[=] 
ge 
= 
ao 
ER 
E 
E 
* 


a een) 
98 5 
T 9 — 
2 bs, —649 ‘and 13s 
wp Ay and Al ipine, per dosen ; 
i 2 185 


per do: and 6s. 
8. Show 3 Trees, per Eor prin és, 


ICE „ 
bes he 10 offer Twelve of the 


. 
\= ellington Nursery, Bedford-road, Clapham, Surrey. 
3 or reference required from unknown cor- 

ao 


Walt 7 e eee 

n).— Upper petals deep claret, mar- 
wer paaa tae, with pure white centre. 
ency of the petals of this * constitute 


ng Geranium, feels con- 
. —— engen = season been 
judges, w who have pronounced it first-rate in 
ts now ready. 
est first-rate show flowers, post free, 6s., 


ie 
1 Yo must be be prepaid, and be made payable at Burnley 
eee —— 
T PLANTING SEASON. 
ma begs 


ce of havin: Aae hui the trade, 
ced prices he Stock co ey 
AMENTAL, FRUIT, and FOREST ‘TREES, 
hinds of Bt SHRUBS in cultiva ion, no expence 
n the collection, and from the light nature 

i it tas as grown, the se ng sted all a mass 
ve — — uses them to grow most luxuriously 


recommends th following common Laurel, 
5 Lto fet, 3. 2 to 4 feet, 40s.; 4 to 6 
‘eet, 10s. per 100. 


Oak in pots and trans- 
Beech, Birch, Berberis, 


by remittances, Orders amount- 


SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13. [Price 6d. 
AMERICAN PLAN D HODODENDRONS AND AMERICAN PLANTS. 
OSEA WATERER begs wp ce he has just Advertiser having an extensive tr: en za 
pu alts hed a New and Complete — of his * adapted gs cpa growth, has EV on hand an unlim 


d CONIFEROUS maroon which may 
application, inclosing two stam r postage to 
Hos ATERER, Knap "Hil S ursery, Woking, Surrey. 
eee . Wellington 
n’s Wood, Lond sending 


be had o 


* Roe 


GERANIUM, 0 a 6d. Ditto, 17. Tf QUEEN OF 
SUMMER, 8. 6d, 8 new sparse oA Adela N 
10s. 6d. ; bee ta Be essy, 53. ; ire Grisi ; 
Delight, 5s.; Em 58.; Flor a Mi * 2 
trude. 5s, ; ae t 95. + Pauline, 10s. edy W ating Ring, Bs. ; 
8 Wellington, 5s. For des scription, see previous numbers of 
thi aper, 


. New Descriptive and Priced Catalogues of Geraniu 
Cinerarias, eee and — r roota may be had on — 
cation The t ual allo the trade. 

r L A = GONLUMS, 

D OTHER R 9 N 
g t. Twelve of the 
follow arieties, including bins 


carriage to London, 
ford for 21. 28. The 


for an immediate shift into a! — can 
racker, Forget. me- not, Ariel * ustavus, 

Gulielma, . Junii, aer .* — Sundown, | 

Or, nine o above, and E loyle’s Crusader, or Topping’s 


Tae 05 Foster s Victory. 
En cK, Worton Cottage, Isleworth, 


ECK'S SEEDLING PELARGONIUMS 0 or 1848. 
W 8 e ab . ave been received, 
hav en eat’ ae th memes ng of good 


av 
12 yy * pots, are now op 2 222 Catal gues 
may be had on prepaid appllentio on to Joun Dosson, Worton 
Cottage, Isleworth, Middlesex. Post-offic ce orders are reques sted 
upon Brentfor 
N. B. The sto k of tow uard having mes ee symptoms of 
blindness, the whol e has been destroyed, and the remi sree 
bigs * tai gp or any — plant in E. B s Catalogue given 


me 
5 


HE T CROCUSES. — The under-mentioned 
utch varieties of new CROCUS are A beau tiful get 
— nteresting feature in the Flower Garden In-door 


— of the various size 
uoted, deliv vere red in London 


[Ri RHODODENDRON ponticum, ; p : i e pe 1600 
» 


i a 


1 — wit stems, fit 


10s. 
Ps 35 13 het, 18 pet 100; 2 feet, 40s, per 
vnplnating out at once 
j hybrid, fine large a0 


4 
for graft ting or working the fine scarlet and 
species. Tree ode or ” muy thus become as gene- 
| pl on cultivated as 1 Tree Rose 


ENDRON ponticum, waite, 18s. per dozen, 
15 seum, 2 feet, 40s. per 100. 
‘i 7 i iare lants, 3 to 4 feet, 
s. per 1 
v pr 2 1 varieties) 1 to? feet, 183, per 
roots, 
ai abana —— 2 feet, 248. per doz 


new silver striped, 2 feet, eg per hatso. 
bybridised with arbore * 83 
prodicin large handsome trusses of f — of various hues, 
og 3 = blush, lilac, and white, 4 to 6 inches, 258, per 


; 1 foot, 40s, per 100. 
Kania in 2 to 4 inches, 12s, 6d. pa r 100, 
to 9 25s. per 100. 
1 10 2 feet, 4 ent 100 
id id 2 to 3 „ e Áin } Blooming. 


AZALEA pontica, A foot, 408. p 
3 ne large 
EI Piok A ee 


lan > (looming) 3 feet, 30s, per doz. 
105 fi rant, 8 forces well. 
other a Plants at” equally 3 ow prices, printed 
catalogues of. whic ie ti be had, 
he ey se Stocks, tit for working, 8s. per 100, or 2s. 6d, 
— 
1 sen., Nurser man and Contracting Planter, Red 
Lodge, near Southampton. 


OW SENDING OUT BY YOUELL anv CO. 


| Valcan xtra dark — 6. a" Sir Walter Scott (extra), s d. THE FINEST CARNATIONS, PICOTEES, AND 
3 o PINKS 
lus Ult 6 | New Giant Gold, 3 
* a Reina t pe ai | 8 per 1 100 > OUELL anp CO.’S Extensive and Celebrated Col- 
white variety, — 100... 3 0 purple, per 100 28 0 e ed kred abeve are this season unusually strong and 
Daria 3 fine blue, Na 3 40 new sorts, health wre 


per 1 3 0 
0 ee oak of aor and Co., Dusch Root Importers, 


y, a ad) for sending out, fe tine well-rooted 
plants, ge 55 part st Bg United Kin ms om, or for exportation, 
at the tol! lowing pri 


86, High-street, Boro nyt C ti 3 
CHOICE GERANIUMS AT LOW PRICES. 12 Be VVV 55 
2 pe E. RENDLE Ax D CO., Plymouth, have 25 1 of very fine show varieties of do. do. 3 0 
n a very excellent stock of the followin ra- 12 do. do. do. 10 AL. 4s. to 110 0 
atoms, ‘which wi will be ready the first week in October. ne mixed 8 r ditto- per dozon pairs” eee .012 0 
rchasers’ selection of TWENTY, from the following list, True old Clove—per pair ETE 
for ope sige first-class show Rosen, 12s. 18s, ont 
"HOYLE’S CRUSADER, ARNOLD’S VIRGIN | doze soga . 5 pr 
Robert Sale, Bl k Pri Star of the West, Lad s. to s. per dozen. 
ah ag Fs — Taa Lind, Se a iet Defiant e Nez Uircle, CAMELLIAS 28. sites and bees Linde; bin tiie a 
Nourmahal, Mount Etn a, Beater Re — The Peri, | 30s, per eve 
Hebe’s Lip, Plato, Forget-me-not, Sir W. R. Gilbert, Flora’ CINER A8, do. do., 123. to 18s. per dozen. 
Flag, Zenobia, Isabella, Standard of Perfection, Sirius, Duchess . wes ` bee = best autumn and spring-flowering 
ter. kinds, 12s. to 18s 
| gr CRUSADER and ARNOLD'S VIRGIN QUEEN, ROSES, e Hall-standards, a oma Dwarfs, of the finest 
for 12s, I 18s. per di 
oe” orders are desired, as some of the sorts are THE FINEST. DUTCH HYACINTHS, Se 
YOUELL AND CO, have r ceived their 


ony vol to WILLIAM E. RENDLE and Co., U road, Plymouth. 


Our New Catalogue of Hyacinthe and other bulbs very superior HYACINTHS p name, empra double and 
is now ready, an n be had applica single Red, Bi , and Yellow, 
is now ready, and can HRUADEOUS | PLANTS (hardy), of the very best 
MYATT’S NEW ee eet and 9s 
MYATT anp SONS are prepared to send out n UE FASTOLFF RASPBERRY. 
* plants of this ed the following varieties at the prices] Y, and Co. beg to announce they are now Uncle 
annexed : Myatt’s Eleanor, 10s. re ae ed —— for the above i in fine strong Canes of the e ae 
. 6d.; British Queen, as. 8 Glo 3s. 6d. ; | the honour of sup plying ier Majesty’s Gardens and most of the 
3s. 6d. ; Hoo 2 W ng, 3s. 71 Seedling, 3s. 44 Nobility. "iss. — 
Pelvelain’s e Paris, 7s. 12 Princess Royal, 7s. d.; Fine large WHITE RASPBERRY, 24s, per 100. 
8 i's Black Pri Prince, 15s, per oor eee a sss w 
Post-office o are reque made payable AWBERRIES, 
OSEPE MYATT, * arm, Pd Kent. —Oet. 13. 
ARNER’S EARLY EMPEROR PEAS.—These M e hi he uuns 5 the following to 
Peas, being large croppers an f well merit 
oS > they k ot Podders and Farmers who are growers of early per horse å. per 100—s. d. 
re decidedly much earlier and better podde: n pas 3 . 3 6 La Liegeoise 5 0 
5 re generality “of early Peas, as a proof of which they were ; ‘ .. 3 6 Martham Seedling fine 
Aknea on the 18th of May.—May — had 2 Austrian Scarlet 2? ee os Seed 
rn WARNER, Seedsman, Wholesale a lina .. oo Ss 8 Myates Eleanor.. 10 
Cornhill, and 3, 2 — Pountney-lane, 9 on-st, 1 Se i white... 5 0] a 1 ¢ 
MHAM HALL GREEN FLESH MELON, Coul, or Sir G. Macken- ” British Queen * 
DWARD TILEY tfully to inform | „zie. 1 ack Prine. 15 nf | " ae a 
the Nobility, Gentry, &c., that he has been fa favoured with Cuth 5 o | * Prolif s. oe 
the whole Stoc a Bundy, Gar 2 gnc ee kai sat * 
MELON, from , Gardener, Dynevor | e, . 
obtained such h te at the London great exhibitions Grove Er Eod — : : 5 — 3 
during the summer, has obtained two medals during th Havebols ( 7 — 00 5 ok 5 
season. It has been sent to Dr. Lindley twice, and pronounc 8 5 Reyii Pine Pine ne) — 48 
by him and others to be the . e Lee seeding. 8 8 natons Sending Pine 1 
tus Every Le will be given in 1 — 3 Kitley’s Goliab, p. dez 12 ob 5 0 


seeds, 
f 15 e and hain e free to any part. 
y} rae Sock LORD KEYNon's és 1 e x 
as proyed to 


a ran Tt isa 9 h handsome troita eo 1 — 
and never shank in packets, 23. Gd. each., 
and package arts oe any en A 


Sold by be ban r N d Florist, 16, 
Pulteney Bridge, Bath. A remittance — ae 
order, 29 penny postage stamps. 


. 2 3s. 6d 
postage 


Z. Termes ‘s Pine be 
sane for the sale of Kitley’s Goliah 
t 


rmouth. 


correspondents.— Nursery, Great 


as * 


Ai pe rong, 28. per dozen, 
RHUBAR „ Youeli i's Toboisk, the earliest btn 9s. 
g. per dozen ; Liuneeus a vt, hia 49 Prince : 
(Mitcheil’s), 2s 25 each; and Quee : 
Post-oftice octane bte. respect ull 1 requested from neee v 
a 


1 * 


THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE, 


642 
— — —— : 
ENDLE’S CHEMICAL PLANT MANURE should ANECROFT EARLY GREEN PEAS.— This pon tp EY’S PATENT 
ed by all who wish a good bloom of 2 forio early PEA, with a dark green glossy sy pad, FO sole a mis o TA TORTES- nu 
Tulips, and other Dutch r hoy T Sold i Pou isters at 2s., being h has beer greatly im aia 
35. 6d., and 5s. each. For further 8 apply to as well ae * ‘superior flavour, can behad of FREDERICK WARNER, | strin ngs Pn all feast * 
s Liam E. RE and Co., Uniou- road, Plymouth. Seedsman, Wholesale sne etail, a A Saga and 3, Laurence same price as charged b : 
r extensive premises are adjoining the Plymouth N — £ Cannon 14 by 10 under 18 = 
of the South Devon ay, an A our D NEW — am pre. fe feet... 
€ pring the tast A 22 ae ESSRS. VEITCH anp S0 now ready for beet p Kr fet 
ROMHAM z erg MELON.—It is requested that L delivery orme, well-established as of the following W iind G te S IN 
all pe ns wishing t o proce sen of the above Melon, | beautiful varieties, which the 8 by 6 and 83 py 9 
shoul k tion to 16, Pulteney-bridge, | Aspasia, Gaines’ 158. 0d Lady Clementine, a ag 58. Oct Milk Pa Nen Ge 5 8. 
Bath, a he is now in 3 of ths kei stock. Belle of the Village, Lyra, Gaines’ 0 | Slates; Propagating Bee 61 
H. BUNDY, , Dynevor or Castle, yle’s, à 6 | Meleager, Gaines’ i 4 0 | Tubes, Id. per inch; Peach : 
3 =~ e Berengaria, Wood’s 7 6 | Refulgent, Beck’s 10 6 35. d. per doz Pre 
ELARGONIUM “FOQUETT’S MAGNIFICENT.” | Brilliant, Topping’s . 10 6 | Rolla, Hoyle’s „„ hates tor Uranisente nR 
Strong plants, w well established, in — pots, now ready, | Crusader, Hoyle’s ...15 0 | Sparkler, Hoyle’s ...10 6 every description, pe) ** 
ice 21. 2s. ea d more stoc e pera realised than | Elegans, Topping’s ...10 6 | Star, Beck's „8 the quality of Milk, 4 tubes I 7 
lants will og n for every three | Flamingo, Hoyle’s .... u ve, 7 ing Thermometers for * 
r 6l. 68., or a selection of any 12 for 5“. 58.— Greenhouses, nerte dme 
arties a Geraniums to ae amou: 


pri 

ti ated, four 

ordere — ng — Trade Direct to pajoe iy Reith FoqueEtt. 
de House, near Newport, Isle of W 


T AUREL — RSA 2 several T 


housand 
— 


strong plant d Mar 
A —.— list = be had on * application 
Exe 


s 
t of 51. 5s. will have a out, 
shal sent graja on the lot.— 


Ithy well rooted Laurel Plants, of va 

aia wt be delivered — the Railway Station, Salis „ Oct. ETLEY AND CO. fet, Sioe 

25s. per thousand, in quantities not less than 1500. —Apply TO MUSHROOM GROW British Manufacture, at p afi. peated 

to Mr. Jerreay, Wardou r. Sa i sbury. S eners, x CHEESE begs to inform — paks n, Gar- | per square foot, for the usual sizes equ from un 

deners, Nurserymen, and the trade in general, that they 7 of which are kept ready pac or immedi atai 
n be supplied with his Superior MUSHROOM SPAWN a ists of Prices and estimates forwarded, on — 

ROUGH PLATE, THICK CROWN 
A 


3 DID NEW GERA r e 
EL 


8 
HIS is rs Sariking and Noble Flower, with a 5 
ably fine substance of | forw 
1 * — foliage, on 


etal. 
— 3 ‘foot-st ; the colour of ge hay at pales isa deep 
p a h 


The 8 1 large and thrown wella 
stalks 
an e lower | petals are fine 


14 


Its only fault is an occasional uneven- 


iL — variety. 
admirab * It was e exhi bite ed at the Seedli ing — 5 


1 
well ‘established plants — the above at 318. — wich — usual 1 
discoun 1 


e trade.— Exeter Oe t. 
SEEDLING 3 mati OTHER | 


MS, to be sent out in Octob 
Is ro osy —* belted with white lower 


Gaes, se 


EM.— 
petals 5 te, 2 * y purple; 108. 6 
DELIGHT.—Upper - petals crimson — belted v n white, N.B. His nee ab dee will be sent free, on application 
lower petals white, with purple spot in each, 10s o Mr. 1 BETHAu, Shipping — eee Forwarding Atens, 
MADAME MALIBRAN. e . — with — with Gar d Hammon = aan am Lower T 
a white spot in the aope petals ; 10s. LY 6 F THE = 
OREST ES.— Uppe a det —— ‘crimson, with purplish REID 8 
b iiie 5 fo oer pen — the pho on so 
spot ; under p 2 — purple, with w centre; the best ws Sat esteeme d far spea ana 9 
r it a place i “mee 2 


of its class ; ds 
MA 
peee 8 lilac t a 


8 MARSH 

. 30. te bushel, 

can oe! * 
eipt 

9 order for the — 4p As the supply is Limited rey 


orders wou 
for ready money.— Address, Flora Gardens, Bays 


offers 
PLANTS at —— prices 
2 Cryptomeria ja 
2 Damwara austr —— S, 
Dacrydium — 10 feet igh 
Araucaria — — amii, 8 feet 
gener: ral, he has still a goo 


— each ; i, ge 
ocks at 2 


DAME ALRONT. ie 2 petals shaded crimson, under | It — requires 
gar 


charge ; warranted the best ae 
y quantity ‘can be safely —— and 


oduced. Any 
the known world on the tofa 


ded to any part of 
uld be advisable. No order can be serosa tounles 
— 


UG. T GEERT, Pb saree na oe — 
e following fine specimens of POTIS 

ponica, 9 f feet thigh, each wae 4 8 
9 feat high, e ach oe me 
cupressinum, 10 feet 4 ‘a 2 

A. V. G. ao begs 4 inform 54 Nene, and the 2 — 
ood stock of Cam — with flow 


buds, of the best 8 Plants from 3 to 5 feet, from 78. 6d. — 
ss ge from 71. to 101, per 100. Fine Camellia 


o be me aft go seams 


Leh h 


6 per dozen 


OD. —Uppe 
a — ey 
3225 OF SURRE EY. ie as petals bai . — — 
white; lower petals w ; 
SEEDLING og  GERANIUMS. 
ns pot ge on spot, mar- 

er —— — 
URSA — — ae, en 3 * ~ak 
co 


AJO 
kopy! ado rose, excellent shape 
Y sakt gat —Fine pink, with a dark pen Bo —— 
6d. 


yery distinct, fine form; 318. 


the prta pet 

FLYING DU: T CHAN. —Upper petals rosy scarlet, with dark 
spot, margin range; under peta:s rose — a perfect 
model; 51s. 

PRINCESS HELEN A. — Orange, with crimson spot in the 
upper petals, fine form; 21s. 

GRENA DIER. parare ee bar a dark spot in the 
upper petals ; the best of show ls. 


ls] 
© 

8 2 

et 
8 
® 

is | 
PrP 
Ea 
4 
ta 
-o 
5 
7 


” 
x 5 0 — —— = = — 
flavu * 2 6 pe ach 
crown inane, fine mixed cg DD — — ma — 44 — 
Double yellow cae a . 2 6 per dozen 
brown and 2 6 per dozen 


yellow striped do 
20 0 fine late Tnlips i ~~ — varieties 


J. 
n ‘xt early in November the true GERMAN PRUEN 
-a e best in cultivation for 


E succeeds well asa Standard. This 


Double ler 


per 100 
0 per — or 4d. —_ 
6 per doz., or dd. ea 


er een 
a aes 


— 
um aurantiacu 
arta auramen foro pieno, s ‘scarlet, 
— 


See the 


Re PHILLIPS and 00., Ile, — 


to JAMES HETLEY an 
Gardeners > Chronicle 


GLASS FOR CO FOR CONSERVATORIES AND Amt herbe 


eee CUCUMBER GLASSES 


LASS FOR auh | neg 


‘cle, first Saturday in each month 


PURPOSES, &e. 


e HLT 


INGTON’S SHEET GLASS, which 4 
ti 


Delivered free t Bath or 9 stations on the 


aun 
so begs to — the public that he will commenc 
Preserving, and also for 


r and December, when fruit is searce 


—— Sen ön Novembe: 
season, when all other 


DUCHESS OF e LE Bright a crimson spot in the 
u tals 
114 15 upper petals nearly black, edged with rose; 
rose, shade uaa "e me a dark spot 2 each ; 
aitean êd. 


Small Trees . 28. d. Second — . 5s. 
In full bearing 


rir of the Fruit will be sent in * for four 


Baws p wany ag: qui 
NEW AND DISTINCT “SCARLET GERANIUM. 


N. 
supply ear * orders. 
th 


. The Stock being limited, J. R. can only guarantee to 
— Postotice para pi requested to be 
Bath 


d . 
bove also obtained prizes at the same societies. 
tal il ready for distribution early iu 


— ursery, Surrey-lane, Battersea. 


BRAGG to inform ee ne Cu ith 
. coer rerea ares these new 
varieties, raised by EDMUND — Es q., 

Clewer Manor, for ion of whi tlowers of other 

of fe years, see Catalogue, which can be had on 

. ; likewise of ns, Pinks, Pansies, 
oses, Hollyhocks, 3 e. 

LADY GRENVIGLE, FA DAHLIA, having gained 11 

first-class certificates, via, ot tn London, —— Flori- 


cultural Society, Highgate, Wycombe, Thame, ‘Ted on, 
2 Norwich, Newbury, Birmingham, and S 
in class showing a ee London Florieul 


dington and Slough, ry be let 


Nu ursery, near Cb N 

Amun 1 AND HEATING 
HOT TER. 

ALSO THE ür riad oF THE CHOICEST PLANTS, 


2 October 13. 
Vicks A a 5 TREE 
VIOLET (rrvz).—In an e numerous inquiries 
the and the great pier ta ot given by tke plants 

„ ED a * pegi he begs to state that 
this year 


be enough subse — in the trade. 
; — ir Nurse ursery, 


above — double 


jin colour it is — 
a plant of enen — she tro inner 
nals 


i remane me 


* 
3s. 
order, * — * 
Sold b, 
Bath. 


num 


, 
y Esmira ag Sarena, S pater, oe greed 
Pulteney Bridge, 


fice, to Joun RRID, Mount Seilla | 
— ilts. 


VINES, TERN 2 


NI | 


* ee 
——— ee 


WEEKS anp Co., Seg er Chelsea, Horricun- 
„ TURAL ARCHITECTS, HOTHOUSE BUILDERS, and cae 


these houses, they are . 
Ferns, and other 3 in such immen: 

at they are sold at * ESS THAN MALP-PRICE. 

erything connected with the 

Estimates, and Cata- 


bers, th 
Mats, Mushroom 
Nursery and Seed 9 ious, 

an. ioation. 


pore A AND nen made 


Middlese. j 
alana scl ea 
Circe er S PATENT ASP HALTE ROOFING | 


and frost, and 


has been a tong an — in alleli- ‘New PATTERN 
mates. 3 — the timber * slates ; can be laid 800 fe. + in. pipe 
an with great fuciiity by farm-servants, or anpractised persons. ‘20 in, well worm 5500 . aim 4 — > 
amme tout, CROGGON S PATENT NON-CON- ma : 
Price por amet Stewm on waves 25 per All pollere ae the 
cent. of fuel, Samples and Testimonials sent by post on appli- | in., 10s. extra:; = e 
cation to CRoGGoN aud Co., 2, ä London. 130, Fleet- street, Lon 


ork don 
whioh they have — the h : 
i ve perfect Mr. 
to — 2 — oe and ae 
Worshiph 


past season, forthe 


tom 
N. B. Piaus and — E 


e 
o the houses) 
ul A 


REDUCTION IN 


TULIPS HYACINTHS, AND DUTC 
Y GROOM, Clapham — — = by 
Serre FLORIST 6 HER Werte pn 4 
F G or di — 1 s to sta at 
n tof HY ACINTHS and 


ao 7 veceived bis us 

we LBS from HOLL LAND tet He 
oe to say that his CATALOGUE Dor A fe for 
et is ag and will be forw on 


bloom ; 

arriv ed in fine condition. his. to 
tensive stock of — AND ORNAMENTAL TREES AND 
SHRUBS of the growth, of Gardens 


THE GARDENERS’ 


also his annu 


1 “ty 


FE PWARD DENYER 1 Loughborough 
road, Brixton, near London, inform 
115 AUTUMNA AL ROSES 


s his Patrons his fine | 
may now be seen 
CH ROOTS poe 


and 


eee 


HERTFORD NURSERIES, 
P. FRANCIS’S New — — Catalogue of 
* ROSES for — S is now ready, and will be 
free on application 

N aN NURSERY, BAGSHOT, SURREY. 
; O ware RER bas — inan nouncing | ow 
ape published a riptive f his exten- 
an ae 2 RHODODENDRONS — Other American 
which will be forwarded on application. 


P 
poer ROMAN AND PAPER WHITE NAR. 


e Bulbs, 
its ow ‘blooming and excessive 
ri 


ustly esteemed for 
sihis 90) justly $ latter for its purity and elegance, have been 
— A. aj — Italian and Foreign Warehouse, 
Pall-mall, ogee, vane. 45 Dutch Hyaeinths, 
Tulips, Anemon 8 &.; priced Cata- 
fgs of which may be rer we 
— i R. Ty = er s-street Nursery, 
B cones has w ready ry, strong well- 
ampte of th — Be 


73. 6d. each, 
13 6d, A 


carriage aud package free 8 Tbe. 


n Ane SPECTABILIS 
es om unknown cor- 


— — . enee, requested fro 
he usual discount to the trade. 


E. B. is serment of isforming his customers he has no seed 
eral list sent on a prepaid 


che Gardeners’ Chronicle. 


ATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1849. 


Tur attention at those interested in 
wit 


combi yan- 


— — of the finest LV Y grown in 
nt sorts, at a very moderate rate, as 
to — . his grounds.— Apply to CHARLES | 


I BAUM N Ghent, Bel- 

begs to 8 1 friends and the public in general, 

ew CATALOGUE i ANTS Seat on ublished, and 
a mee 


tion to 


Omni 1 the 
and pass the Nurseries, five times 
= ls. inside 18. 6d. Prices forwarded on 3 on to 
Nurseries. 


the Edgware 
AING, La ngewe totes Beverley, 


experi 
who were present, that 
a powerful deodorising age 


SS 
tf 


wee ki in 
will 


a 


Ae inform . public that he will s Atkinson’s 

ner joe > Rs et ee out the — 

: at 53. 6d. iscount, b 

5 * ne p ia s ordered, 4 L. begs to refer to ex- 
Gardeners’ Chronicle ; also to the Gardeners 


Rroniole.) 
uch refi in the lobes of the 
count from most o others 3 colours 


. mR distinet on that ac 
tube ade blush ; perdi fotp rosy pink ; 


ae and proportions, — small.” 
armers 


— 8 r Dur 8 rtioned 
btuse, and well e: ded, the same 
— — a e or two deeper ou 


with ale green, 
4 ng half a circle, 


15 


have — strong, an 
pas stock of 8 established in 4. inc 
2 wenn fee romaa sape: nk will 
specimen — . exhibition. 
1 TIES Last SENT OUT. 
- ‘Theset of 18 in the follow al mA 
i of ditto, our own selection 5 eae : 
lees than 1% ar the prices attach 
aes, Brilliant . > Story’s Mont Biano, Nos, Se 
Becks Eleguns oe | 


5 


hia Hoyle's Flamingo 

55 1 
Was iy pee 
„ 


h 5 * 
nen, 


Bra ste 
2 2 2 2 
pas ft 


ce OV Or Gr Gr Or Or ee 


7 
2 


f 
i 


i 
3 
2 
if 


Sab Armada, Aurora, Baechus, s Black 1 5 

oat, Camila alba, © rion, 5 a, Clara, Compet tie 

„Duke or Hamilton, — ta Narr mike mond, seer s 
lielma, Cus 


a ads, Peri, Pericle Rachel Superb, 
= 5 Sere Hts a star 


e. the abuse} an 


| doubt 
| further value, and the question 


their 


some 0 
latte 


dema 


2 


be found 


I 
body capable 
— acid, sagt 


feet but tly arrest those 
vegetation, —— 
— make manures useful. It is 
a | teat. interest to ascertain with 


Tydrogen ... 


gases, must 
This w was fully demonsrated oe 
3 
ne part by w 


went 


as to prevent Geir p escape 3 
p are held 
7 


tendency to 


indeed. As a deodoriser, then, there ean be 
— — but still if it had no 
as between it and 
of chlorine, we 
a aae ive our preference to the 


bt of the power of 


e various p 


pp 


í oe —— cena — recommended as 
a pt decom animal 


p 
calle 
* at the Mec 
of Prat Cuarcoa 
was 


ubs tances 


CHRONICLE. 


643 


that charcoal and neers acted favourably a 
on account of the carbon of the charcoal 
uniting with the oxygen of the air, and — 


carbonic acid gas, which was thus dir ö 
roots ts. Most i ; , how- 
ever, that t take place whilst the carbon 


shop in London. A gen application, an explanation of the beneficial effects 
by inclosing a twopen other causes. In the fi it appears chat all 
pers s (ABIES) S) _DOUGLASII, E DOUGLASS charcoals contain in them the inorganic constituents 
seed A a brs of wy bis mont e of the plant from which t e obtai H 
23. . Dr, they may e a source of supply of some of the 
— a, i * a ee einen Crs tobe tr, „356, | inorganic ments required by plants. In the next 
“ Heigh t cireumference, 57 feet plac ace charcoal e exer’ its nity for 
9 257 bes high. 17 feet b inches, which by calcula . 
— ost A — contain 237 loa se * "This de — a of w withont being directly mixed with them. Like clay, 
its e, the seve utif chalk and garden mould, it has 
ee erg sn $ otier em key fo re Jand E ofa i the power of absorbing moisture, carbonic acid, 
Str mg h — eS eee ee ich. in pots, 9 years old, r rache l si 
. ea „ n 8, ears o 
ag . a 2 1 d fine and thus of conveying them directly to the roots 
— plants, 2 to 5 feet, 7s. 6d, to 42s. each.— W. Rocrns, | P e ot aware that any extended series 
Nar 9 and Contracting Planter, Ned Lodge, neat | of experiments has been made on the re ab- 
pers na 3 bing powers of soils, but we . from Scuun- 


s 
LE 2 power 
of absorbing the Achat d st degree, and 
humus in its acne character and 9 
osition cary resembles 
Although ves Pays no We “experiments to ee 
what ist such s clay, 
chalk, and homus act beneficially i in peni yet we 
absorbents of water, car- 


ow 
onic acid, pe ammonia ; and as 


opra 
peat 
nt. ‘This subject, how- 


uch importan t we are 


alt m to it, in order 


ed, and a larger | 


1 given by De Saussure, will 


wW 
near enough to the truth to assist judgmen nt 
for all practical purposes. 


Volume. 


aaa 


arts by weig 


of might-soil, were 


for whether — undergo 
by some physical force, 
themselves is 


painais: 


The process of deodorisation, gute is is mostly 
nded for s hich ha 
— — —— manures 


ot only 3 


arrest 


40s. | Whether in virtue of its own ton: or any it may | 
mixed with decomposing vege etable 


tlle EN ye: our splendid — flak os) matters, it is r to act as a manure, 
Wit whether ani 


arly and other 
4 and other 


ht e —— “ith 
mixed t 


aay — 2 
hich gave 


disinfeet- 


ny™ 
me eco asubject of | 
to 


of 
elements aE the food of re that ~ apm soils are 
beneficial. This nt leads re to the 
conclusion that charcoal acts a pee — first 
| absorbing moisture, carbonic aci 
the nog rp ol and then yielding Dak to prei nra 
E it surro 
w, if a is thus adapted to act beneficially 

e little doubt of the advantag 

mi 


plied in its pure * * aoa obtain from the at- 
2 ere. appears by mixing 
arcoal with animal . in the way pro- 
bang Mr. Rocers. We understand that his 
compound has ig 7 big as a manure, and we are 
not wi ae to hear very favourable accounts of 


‘ta success, 


price 
in stoves, 87 


Hand is te 
at — less than 


ollowing 
Mr. P HILLIPS, 


would inevitably 
bustion. We have be poe —— — 
have vent hre to solicit. information 
on the Laver: — sone of met por Brick seren 
The qu phates and iron, 
by) i — strike oa aiig 
rise to 8. combustion. 


as recorded in 


THE 


time, place, and means of rse aik -n the refuse 
n hereafter 


GARDENERS’ 


aa i in oi would be w. tch their 
6 5 


CHRONICLE. 


the parent, and as you 


for use, those are points ave ay recom- jassa re out some of 
article which Mr. —— Roe RS $ sy a small drop of fluid, Mee = 7 5 1 
brought before the public shall be in the market at ing {he corpuscles, on a slip of glass, covering it wi Fe take = i 0 a 
a price which will make it ari . ag event | a ul of ee glass su cient large to Tea Sch ads p The Mit we 
about which we are not particular round the compressed ne and simply laid down right ani ieit 
lating the edges of the e upper ith vere 8 pi If they will not h R 
3 to cut off all communication with al air end shoots till they will. T Sore 
ee 1 . will — . by ee Sa further e at every eye 4 rain : 25 8 
- oh bodie onde t the end of eee journey. Of A Tea | 
fable as —— — — PIERA con ibe aloe secretions, &e., are identical If the elliptic . 8 — uisite, then eh 2 
maki bodies, w ently restrained in di wil shoots 
po fw ote of Tuns na $ pi s question directly germinate and produce fruit, it will be seen that they | when the wood is strong enough, — — misc 
the Sheen g iih Sey y h ound encysting cells, | With s . the shoots have 4 firmly 
our cognizance and we make no apology for |are via identical with the comp ysting j tthe. plane iE reached the ex. 
ander our TS an ir fungous nature will be ys ished ; if, on 83 04 ff, P ar ina ey are to cover, the tops may 
F . | the 85 the oceed to a er degree „ rom time to time, wherever th 
The independent e of at least three ob P R TET side shoots come too priya they mait must he the 
rs SeanRy veral competent persons. in development without germin: ming 110 oducing the branches must not be al thinned, The 
z E Ort : 4 m 5 nd cells, we may be sure that they are no to hang about and get con. 
whose hands the objects have been placed, go a great | COMP , * fused, but the lateral shits should ea 
to prove that in rooms and districts infected by | form of animal cellular tissue mi TeS and may plant ‘kept within unds by spurredin, and the 
Cha 2 ies — found in the atmosphere then consider whether they are Alge, or whether ebipbelally 2 back gear 
d ter, which occur in ri .|they really belong to some new type o of. Fungi, in 9 — mida make fresh growth, When the bloom 
pre Ne 8 stico 18 disease, and under other Which the mycelium is altogether repress is over in the autumn, all eek side or lateral brang 
1 2 circumstan Gide" Bide Tie he experiments may be varied’ so as to show what may be cut in a yn. or at most two eyes, so that the 
5 in n r and size, in accordance with the | chemical compounds r eid or prevent their develops "e roga he Rose rods will be nothing bap 
virulence of the attack nd ad ast, as the patient ment, and if it be . that they have actually any- shor 


recovers, entirely vanish. Exceptions indeed occur, 
as mentioned by Dr. eee n the “ London Me- 
Gazette; and we have a letter from a very 
intelligent practitioner and ex sea gee red at 
a a 


— 
S 
2 


a healthy district, th 
stress upon the point, as one mice negative. The 
questions which interest us e, first— What is 


Are those which are found externally and internally, | . 
identical ? 

As regards the first, we have had an opportunit 
h specime ziik and find a 


iiien didai ided figures of Dr. I 
protest, aahi against his interpretation of the 
corpuscles annular or cup-shaped. A v w- | 
erful — is by no means necessa for their 
examination, for en of about 250 linear will 
show their struct 


e have e we find — dispersed, 

bee ge pecially in the ment, cells o 

ostly 5 but pene iy mes sub- 

globose, or or . with e 
collapse reee c 


s, beitaining evidently a second 
8 fille te agr mass, and occasio 
ally one or two pR Many of these cells are 
ps sikh but even in A this state the walls haye 
strength to prevent their eollapeiitg In 
one 3 ich we have ) 
figured, bserved a cell © 
presenting a curious form, RO 
exactly corresponding with > S 


y in germina 
of Mucor and Oidium 


no one the leas acquainted with fungi could 


have a doubt as to their nature. There is indeed no 
of increase apparent, such as is observed in the o 
ate of yeast fungus, but eat weight would 
to thi TTAN, how- 


siderably in 

size, uce young cells within their walls, and at 
give birth toa number of ne dividuals, 

on the absorption of the 3 Se apm His figures 


are not, indeed, very clea iently et 


with the op of the 3 to tiare no doubt as 
uthor’s meaning. 
If, chen "tha connection between these 
the smaller cells be established, their 
es extremely tful. No su e 
of propagation s j we know ngi. | 


in fu 
then nothing analogous to nyaa, 


: 8 y speaking, 


Aes like a head: 
-į bac 


of the disease peen thus pro , or whether the 

bodies may be 

necessarily.’ 

| consideration of — whose peculiar ashe rae itm 

e.to make . * e It is . 

| geh m aoe not to jump too hastily ‘to co ae 

i rem Wer may e to show that rated F 
r, hov wever 3 ng, is at present too imper- 

fe an studied to warrant any very general deductions. 


THE EFFECT OF PRUNING ROSES, AND ON 
THE VARIOUS MODES OF PERFORMING IT. 
ose is a most important — 

Very fe 
re properly treated, and they always take 
ae ber ` — ag them 7. feria, if they are maiden 
trees, which 1 one year’s g rom the bud. 


r strong 
it 8 be gat down to the ine or at 
yes. T will the first yr give 
you two or three strong branches, which at the end of 
the second season d be also cut down 8 two or 
three eyes each, aad es third year there will be some- 
After this su ave n not ig to a 
all the branches ‘to the low 
ha to cut clean out any that are 
or grow inwar se) and fi 
the branches 
other, and the head should be thinned so as to ire 
plenty of light and air 


W aving s ag t el 


but each * would give rise to a number of 
very much after 
hye 
analogous 


ery 

Ve must arte recourse to ie lower ple» | 

for as ‘ococcus and | 

1 bat wit T 15 pany ep beret identity ; not ne oF 
es of Mr. Tu. 

825 re that these, and |p 
genera are more pinto as to the 
thallus, = its cer 5 

hi 


ture of their ous 


the fashion of | ® 


in true 


ina sloping direction, with t 
the slope on the opp 
cut close t 


e eye 5 A be part of 


d 
all pruning, the less 8 is left beyond 
ashes 3 for the sho > tai Heong to the 
8 often further. In pruning standards there is 
rule that may be 
cn 84 25 nor thou 
aple 


ye more or less is not of so 

much importance ; by not a . to this the head 
takes an awkward direction. It is plan also 

examine the trees when they ar en out their buds, 

to rub off avy that you see ill placed, such a 

would grow inwards or cross other 2 for it is far 


tter to e re coming than t ve to remove 
em 

The plea dbo smooth-barked varieties of Rose 
that bloom all the year near 

thinned ; invariably cut out all thine weakly shoots, an 
prevent ye head from being crowded, but no branches 
should to fi 


never 


rown, 
remove them 33 as they fade, and the plant eon- 

8 vigor e bloom abundant. 
dwarfs the same as stand 
two or three eyes of the 
ut the branches back to two eyes each, and 
y growths, with this dif- 


7 
well 


and if 
cut it d 


oun 
orgy 


instead of hundreds do, cut it nearly down 8 
the same 8 as the bush. Let every bud of new wa 
wood that t starts from the bottom undergo the samé as 


trouble ourselves with 3 as s the possibility | at a 


they have one strong site as it were, | bushes, th 
the bud. Ho 


worm 
ee es i although 
t 


simply abide 138 the rule to cut away all i 
hoots, any 8 


Sones of f the so called climbs Roses make extraordi, 


nary growth, and do best almos 


ees, or cover the thatch of an old 
make to ch growth 
house-fronts, or arches intended to be k 
As ral rule, it should be 
pruning produces noble flowers, but that Dumber 
rather than the size of the blooms 
ay ed a g 


back ae hart we of course uantity, — 
i we 0 5 half a dozen phe tre N 
and th 


where 
times the quantity, a 


service, 
but beyond this they might be allowed to do as they lite. 
too. e less ri ; 2 


rained 


j. — for the purpose of pot 3 
5 kinds as well as very robust growers al 


avoided, Crito. 


BRITISH ASSOCIA EE 0 Eir cb wa 
MENT O 


e 
re you an account o 
ltivation iol 


early trials, L HaTe Pa 
Cod 


ar 
ound, the “a 0 


41—1849. ] 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE? 645 

yess, classification, and oon rac a with the adapta 6inches. The circumference of ka e stem, 5 5 feet | have all the b Ich t 
of the food (as to its m eee) uae different — of from the ground, was 1 foot 9 inches, and at 3 feet, | formation ; bes roa fled by the axe =. cut hori- 
the insect, insu e been this season | 1 foot 11 inches. Fig. 2 measured 21 feet i in height; a mar mp are 
very su ful. in ger worms able to | handsome tree, richly clad with branches and a š dy substance, which, “parting Pa the centre, 
nich; they had no dise: any kind ; they m of a gre yish aspect, to the very ground. This towards 
iheir in 30 days, and the silk I have been able | young measure the horary lines of a dial-plate or quadrant, 

off is as strong, and bright, an autiful, as I had read that 


io wind o 
2 which, in * rts ra was pronounced superior 
to the best Ita 


ON THE ODOURS OF PLANTS, AND THE MODES 
OF OBTA IN s maar HEM 


Nano! OR ORANGE ER. — Few odou 
more extensive use in pres — of perfumery than ‘this’: : 
itisin no way alte separation from plant, 
when on the Teann it paa not alter or 
become faint like many other umes’; it forms the 
tasis of the famed eau de Cologne. It is p ed from 
the Citrus Aurantium flowers by distillation; also from 
same by maceration in any fat bod rmer 
yields what is found in 0 2 re u pe ame of 
olof Neroli, and as suc ing soaps and 
for other secondary purposes; the later bein g somewhat 
fragrance, has us y digest- 
iog in alcohol it gives Extrait be: Pan d’ ge or ex- 
tact of Orange Flowers, a handkerchief perfume sur- 
posed by none. It ge ra 8 er so much that 
with eyes the 


way as e peel of the 
r to etoi: the, little 3 that 
m 


eee it is = is called a par- 
and refreshin 


„sharp ng. 
“Parcour, pansman Patcho sly lt has been said 
~d 4 very eminent French pe 


the such, however, is the result of 
a year or two ago no lady of ton was perfect 
she was e ed, as it were, e fragrance of 


arthy smell—not very en- 
tog certainly, 75 ‘eseription oy much less so in 
osia f Chinese or Indian 


to an admixture oe this 
3 Th the 8 world it 
zent of odours in of i 


plant in its manu- 


is the most perma- 
is thi few 


be 
7 D 5 ai ose, Jasm 
— forms an agreeable e bouquet for the — 
the ae doesnot combine we 
win ~ al latter destro 
103 us and Caro 1 emits 
” 

ane i Tie me <a babes fa rte To — win. 
. at present aie erfu 2 

7 very fine e be ee, from the 
Tz 

prepared, when 
ion that is sold, made 


eteh, tty body, and 
Ve of a 3 A and Rose. P. 


produced in spirit ; not 
8 


B 
We have bee HAMIA FRAGI 


FERA. 
son a sina with the following | 
Thi 


und 
several 22 not of a a 
which 


are not, all united 

sng together. They be 

d ornamental Himalayan ever-|here and there found to be se in 

ry Dow Caper hag: oie or in fruit, would form a | their mep. ge cg rence, or in part only. In 


green, 


highly desirable addition to our shrubberies if it vue the cutting 
h 


a transverse section, a 
some | whole eylinder of the woody i 


will fall ow 

ut unfortunately it is not so, except in tissue l 

28 South Wales aad in Conal and Devonshi ing in the inside. Sometimes these 

where it is very handsome, flowering in profusion | loosened 33 po . 5 r 3 powder when 
i a g $ 


o any commo 


n garden or whieh 
soil, but it requires to be eight 45 ten years old before a . On vessels contained in the woody col 
it comes into blossom. hich are eis 


p producing are ge, globular, 
— — 


in their union with the new 
he general 


eee yer, Fg ag bark. “T's — 
1 . 2 y excessive 
DISEASES OF OF PLANTS. Ap species. Dovaut, ALBuRNUM.—We 


"ight vas thn ie 


trees of 


genus XV.; 
Sere r. Some owe to M. Duhamel the deseription of this and the two 
i Uo mee 2 e, standing, following maladies, all equally irremediable, and arising 


646 THE 


GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 


from a 3 of caloric in the 2 of che pe 
the 3 may be seen a zon 
e of alburnum, after 


usual. In 

these double — are rare, b 
much more frequently in pty clear woods, situated in 
light a ma mae — The fa lse alburnum is no 
always of the It is n eer | 


n 
1 stem above grou und. 


4 1 ai 
remain — and there is no outward sign of the 
disease. se 


— 

VILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENI ING. 
Ar the approach of winter e floral * a of our 
er ens begins to dee and wher 
depend almost W ee for their beauty on wii ane 

i lan baldness 
ent, un — some means are adopted 
flowe — — Pela | 
ar ornamenta 


r an interesting vernal display. 
uses 2 sbould be A agm 5 
t other, and 


a higher, 
more lasting exhibition 15 nimed at, then Polyan nthuses 
issi y be planted, together 


; these e 


i r 
bulbs are smd no disappointment need be a 
hended. Phar 


PROFITABLE CUSTOMERS, 


We insert the following siis for the benefit of the p 
ope-| T 


— which is now about, as it would seem, to be 
rated upon by a new — he Australasian pleasures, 
Liverpool, No. 4, Davies-street, Dale-street, Sept. 27, 1849, 

“ Messrs 14 and Co., _ Plymout ith, 


of New Winter yoe and in oy the Articles, 7 
inform what is your lowest price — bushel ; — as I —— 
Ha 7 y fo 


tal ity “ged we. 


— Sample order 20 Bushels, fie per 
should. iT approve o of we ang M at the price, wiil forward you my | 
; u for the present rg order. 


B. i MackIGOR. 
P. S. — ey chip the 20 Bushels, Please apn per same | 
day’s post, stating name of conveyance, 


verpool, Oct. 3, 1849. 

“ Dear Sirs,—Yours of second Sikes , just to — "Lrecog- 
pise Res oa name of Macg: a very old pe earns en and a 
man that we have ipo ll 2 in six different n 
as many di resses. He has no place of — ate 
but calls for his letters at 4, Davies-street, which is a dirty 
little cottage in a dirty little street. 

“ Yours, faithfully, 


“Jas, Rear, 
* Messrs, W. E. Rendle and Co., Plymouth,” b 


e Correspo ondence. 

Roses and — cle — Ia 
present arrangement o flowers had best 

be let aes for I consider the a of the — 
ly tha 


» Rose is the only Damask rag that) as it tas the — — 
a ane object of his ambition; he gat 
o give ith at Thibetian wong ae — — back of the 


p mrii 


5, 
s point Saag to the 
eaii friend s) with the authorities on the frontier, 
b n great table land of 


delivities. 


5 
— 


r e t 


Th 
re en route, or on t e 
iti 


the 1 5 
ian . at 16,000 feet, 4 
~ — 


15.000 — in 
cessively oppressive to 


a, 15,500 feet ! 
met with are inconceivable, partly from 
the country, but still more e from the 8 character — 
of the chick, especially of the Rajah of Sik When 
threats were of no avail his — re ora was repre- 
sented at — ; “should he b 
e 


— atmosphere was 
veller, the temples ein « as if pressed in a vies, 
e — coming on, as from 


short 0 
ee worship could be though 
anxiety in his behalf, — induced him 
urn to Darjeeling,” Dr. Hook 


D pray oe 
er, had, therefore, 
his 


H 
2 


iff 
h Winter Aconites, Joni i Degstoatle be Tyas Early Ind L 
las 


ing 
ed him to give me a red skete of tnos |3 
trea Sk Sikkim. He called for a large sheet of pa 
and wanted to form his mountains or wer 


and charcoal 


im good — (the 15,500 feet. A 
visitors awa ny) | yal 2 droping dried, 
t of 


tate 
ing I was not t ene 


into Cheen (Th Thet H” The entrance was by e 
Pass. Samdong, the name of — last place 
tion, is ens ei ight mi des north of the fork 


ed and Webbinsa. 11 —— — 
2, good — rts. Marshy 


N ssy 
flats border Pike stream 


| yak grazing grou nds, and Dr. 


Here 
flanked by two stupendous mountains, althou h the 
t, aving only low eeg om — for that 
A little Juniper and a Rhod y Sa — — aien 
or up, beyon ad chic in Pear — 
ith stones, marshy flats, and plant, about 3 beet 
the ve ae scanty but very varied. | flower spikes, bat the 
ibetians come across t ontier in summer and feed 222 dropped o 9 
their yaks, living in black horse-hair te nded in 
traveller came across two of these, and e one of — did the o plant — at once 
them found it inhabited by a a. jolly laughing z Chinese. |t 
looking girl, jees presented him wit A 
make 3 all the N ating th 
milk, and Fa 1 = ts ad. They 
1 F in Aity 


2 


— eges 


es at 


full; and i 
with 4. g.s? eee 


Åi foot hitans 


mped led ; 
ong b å tong, full of Rhododđen: |i 
"upright, Bonot pen inspection, are 


ran Kai water-t 
as 


ischief, It was 
some cases on the a Tae rhe nat 


d 5 —. 
— Eae 

maggots, the saute 
wet, though of so 2 —— 
smoke from 


the 
— on à beautifal Chinese mat. 
“off Brick-ten), with salt an 
Bhote 


n Ma 
rty — ee ryt 
uiensils 


of J 
moulded at Dijarchi, panas the churn * Bando 
in which the tea, salt, and batter were churned before 
boiling. ring a severe 
storm, and for five or six — a arak fog ; the 
rocks from Kinchin-jo he 


1 
ii 
li 
wi 


en , and 


the tout ensemble. 


53 
i 
ai 


= 
\ 
<A 


mongst which the Lach 
and they — 


10 
au 
i 
i: 
{ 


jow with Chom 
the a 


ridge, nee the ebe extreme inchin- | azure blue above us to cal 
oino, and on e border — Core ye the plant, tax 

pily the rea —— 5 the large effect it 
plateau di * successive very o ng a san 
with a canopy of va — ‘and 


iid 
it 
i 
Ti 


4 
* 


e 


t, K 
ass of snow, 2 a feet elevation, rose abruptly 
a piles of debris. South-west, 
and South, between them 


as it wane with . the fannel- | 
after | 


A 


k 


2 


THE =f ben nent 


CHRONICLE, 


647 


pandred flowers on it expanded, 
eth 2 ent with beauty. Those who 


at for 


„they force it on 
t is fixed in a vertical posi- 


wing months are the best. 


Purchas 
Effect of — $ the — — Potatoes, A 
bac 


-i 


uced in weight 2 stones 5 — 

ete from the drill left to Nature 79 — 
stone 9 lbs. ; a few Potatoes were bad in 

in the former. ki th 


while 
I stone 


=a 


£3 


Pot al Woodstock, r . Oct. 8. 
t m 0 s year I 


T 
21 


fF 


dise Some 
Potatoes, full of eyes, are ge free from 
— not quite; they are a very excellent kind 

and some Goldfinders, whieh are all more or 


10 0 


covering over the ground a ineng ar 
effect has bee 


8 
7. — it i with ag Fete of 
expect op Sa other Cai: but, as I wanted 
mt ham ple rather than a a great yield, I was 
11 n an unsound tuber; and I am con- 
à an unfavourable season set in, I's 
SP bushels gainer in sound produce, as there were 
4 Thive the haulm was left grow 
ent just t dug the Farmer's Profit Potatoes, of 
you an 
in 


— — aaa having r 
— 
. 


T 


d very remarkable nner; and out of 
from 2 Hendi L hire had but 1 bushel! a 
Graham, Cranford, Oct. 10. 


standing conspicuously ; were 
br lovely . — foliage, and forming Bran 


e 
wood | H 
en 


e | occupy it. We shall give Mr. St Jo hn’s graphic — 


orm 
| = Shia apse | ihe ground. “This plant e 


na 
ro tai 
s 
d | seeming at times to outstrip the sight, bat i —.— again 
shadows, 


9 
to 


*** 


rare Agrophila 
4 by Mr. — 
exhibited a — species of Tinei 


—— a paper containing descriptions of some new 
Dipterous insects, in — * s new species of the si 
gular genus Achias from I 


an 
7979 age OF 3 Oct. 5.— The President in 


Cha dwell presented 
Lastrea cris tun (Presi) collected by him 
me near 1 1 5 in 4 n 

R nts i in- 
— to the 1 of 4 — 
was read. 


Adventurers in the L Murray. 12mo, 

175. No. of the "Colonial Library. 

have so little to do with gardening — — 
— 3 s book would seem to be beyond our cogni 

, however, a — * pas fame of er in 

whieh those who des 


retched enough are the former, rich enoug 
the latter ; but neither so wretched nor so rich as 
2 fe 
desert is not all sand ; but 2 sate the 
— fore rm a shift to exist there erar A huge stones and 
We can imagine such a ss of 
— after a 


ot for the savages that 


of each. poa first of the desert 
ten heard and read descriptions of the 
De of sand,’ but we rho rselves 
in what might almost be with, 
K a ‘re 
f the ligneous — 
xhales 

ing resembling Rus, and is culti: i- 
at Ale xan ndria on that account. | 


vated i in pots 


of 2 As w 
— to 


encouraging, for off ‘they 
at first 
dine, 1 
ryg mii now * 


2 as it were, over the vas 
a long i r line, 


together, now s preadi 


away swiftly like uncertain 
faded nothing ; as a prolonged 
the air 10 939 ga 


in view, flitting 
until at ‘length the 
echo, —— eee thro 

die * 


œuvre to 
n, and 


green 4 and our — 6 man 


get a 


supply of fresh m ing dow 
another ve ih obliquely s ~ “pat the cautious creature | * 
way with her young charge h 


in double le quick tim tim 
The Siwa i which our travellers visited, lies 
in lat. 201° No and long 265° — Men less than 
150 miles the Mediter Tt approached | ‘ 
by a dre — like that * antes ribed; consists of 
houses built of salt mud, and is surrounded by s 
feti ich render 


the — and will have — 


ae — e were hey fl pria ot ae dew dusing our short 
rise the 


stood | | 


erally 
about eer to 92°, 95°, — 105°, | 
The was seldom 1 perfectly sti still, warm blasts 
oti in the day- whilst at night there 
wasu a violent northerly — 
resemblance of a was seen. 
and were told it pert fella fortunate ci cireumst 8 
as 50 their earth t houses might melt 
the approach of 
said to be 


ed about ra 


me day like a snow-ball 
aada Slight shocks 2 5 are 
very frequent, and to 
8p 


tii 

people, it Pig 8 iriure 
paii not learn that they manufactured 
baskets and mats, 


Formerly tliey grew 


ae tints 


a ratty dae 


mother and its fawn lingered to nibble a 5 


neig 
than that which 


sa 
hom the sight 


er the flow of water from the | ente 


other tage 


tirely to have abandoned this profitable brauch 

of pr pructon, — which — had so excellent a — 
n Egypt, near} now 

—.— of ne ‘bowed 5 modes of procedure I coal 
learn nothi cept that, contrary to the usage 
many other . aay both water and manure the 
trees, the woods or gur 
with walls chiefly composed of sa 
s bone stu 


2. 


ve 
ucerne ight here 


WwW ht back, as 
a present to the Nazir of Abus ir, a small skinful, whigh 


ery ex 
re under the 1 that t 
ad rag Hes ee 


aa y 
the Bedawins Nin the 


were * ' dense Palm-woods with 
rous clumps at their my righ 
— — and inry h arg e rising gradually in t 


ver the parched su 
in order ay reac 
A ante practice is vaag 


ee 


Ta 
B 


belo 
in the 2 
K * Abouk 


s 
unready people, always leaving “a 
arrangements to the last,” whence the designation of a 


we were 
rides, and in i places. 
= 8 sun, but it once rose at Abusir 
o 128° ts even 
ihe onk wag mi 


along the ya 
long te a there 8 of oa 6 65° at night. 


be eee eee ow as 5 


Misc ellan 
An Indian Hothouse.—Dr, — ives the foll 
account of the management of Betel-pepper, in 2 
hboarhood à of aap ina 2 te much colder 
it. 8 


ring by a gong ae, and 2 
t heat, damp, and moist 


Consta 


ith its deep green 

every mo 

the rA 
ter tn 


thi 
S carat, y 


_ 648 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


frequently take up their quarters in these hot-houses, 
use fatal accidents.” Hooker's Journal of Botany. 


THEE of Operations. 
or the ensuing aean: 7 
RCING DEPARTM 


fob 
—Where the plants ae 5 swelling r 


NERIES, 
trait, let the temperature be hips kept up. Where t 
poe one 4 8 are grown, a gradually har Tenine | 
adopted, not suddenly to check o 
Ey thelr ‘om but to renas, its rate by r ity 


ay as the strength o vot 3 wil roel 
The healt hoier, during thi h, uld n 
to fall be 60° i 


injur e would advise, as a precautionary measure, 
8 the soil heal be put to the stems ; this will pre- 
in very severe weather. 8 
hea now in their winter quarters. The fra 
should face the cy i every possible eis 
i lants 


and 
mild wea ther. Rain should be 


the better. 
season, even if the r „ be reduce: 
leaves. The beds should be. ie htl y forked over and 
leaves, the roots g 

the las 


§ 5 
e ground, and the first e be 
— to plant * main < ds. 


KIT 
Let the hap e Gelen e eee 


and Lettuces be protected from the ravages of snails, 
i ithe dern with lime and soo ny sp 
ould now be filled with Lettuce and Endive for wint 
e. A soil isting of red | and leaf. 
u e 


dung. The plants should then be introduced into 

a forcing house or pit, with a temperature of about 50° from the 8 1 good balls, and 1 

This must be ally increased at the rate of 3° or frame, taking care not to br e the leav ves. 

4° j week. e pots can be plunged in a bed The latest crop vat Cab ge Lettuce, intended to stand 

al 15° hotter than the temperature of the house, it uring winter, and come in for spring use, should 
A A h 


ratit in 3 of the tops. Let th nts n 
every fine day; and if a quantity o 
fermenting 1. N ean be introduced, the exhalation 


arising therefrom will considerably assist the develo 

ment — hes Met Peacu-Houses.—The later e 
w be ready for cleaning 175 N in 

the Deis „ described. The work should b 


du 
be planted in the driest, warmest, and most sh 
border, a: is an object o 


250 possible despatch, as the w 
ere to admit of lon nger delay. 


’ 
3 soon as possible, that it may n ahi Sertés sth competes, if possible, by the “ae of th Farag If of 
the out-of-doors training, which should be commenced 1 * gee er Nee e 
tt month. Foncrwe Pirs—Rhubarb, ale, and ard * of 1 Beye for use, a part of 
ould now be in The two former h he taken upaa are te gre of a z 
may very well in any place pose essing the north wall, where "hey. will ‘be retarted, and may be 
characteristics of a Mushroom-house, namely, moderate protected by som ather 
warm exclusion of light. sparagus, a pit 75575 
State of the Weathi i 1849, 
s 1 28 i e furnished with bottom . e oe 
fi 0 pit, it red with wooden A Moon's || Bazomstss, THERMOMETER. 
t. — Ww : 
oe the Ludi provid greened 5 es their i 55 . oe ieee 
in r, and exposing them in a glass house | Friday.. 5 749 | 20.682 || 56 | 87 | 465 || W. 02 
after cutting, Satur... 6} 19 |} 29.770 | 29.654 || 55 | 44 | 49.5 || S.W. || 445 
Sunday. 7} 20 |} 29.296 | 29.128 || 64 | 49 | 565 || NE. || 102 
LOWER GARD Mond 1 || 29. j W. ‘00 
Pits anD Frames.— Cuttings whieh are only ares Tues. F 9 92 9 5 6 3s #0 . 0 
rooted should be kept warm, and as close and moist as | Thurs. . III 24 29.526 | 29.475 || 54 42 2800 NE 00 
can nie ges agp 2 8 e and dan dangerous Average “29,786 | 29.589 || 56.4 | 37.1 | 46.7 0.50 
extr p- e addition 0 of 
ture here recommended is to encou — — the mi mere = cher Vine? heavy main at night i e san 
a little growth both at top and bottom before they are D 
e ; that more time may be afforded for] — 19-Oente pey fne: clear as might 
the latter p rmer should be effected with = _ 11=Overcasts heavy clouds ;-el 8 
consistent spot, Cuttings which were moyiga Mean temperature ofthe week, 6 deg, below the average 
and are now fairly rooted, should be gra dual] State of the Weath Ciduwiek during the lant 8 11 
„ th + 7 ensuing week, ending Oct, 20, 1849. niom 
ing winter in a comparatively cool mapi erature ; 1 Prevaili 
this shoul ed by keeping them quite cool ai 288 Bea | ag] NS, | Grente | “rE UDO 
5. eS gg | Years in 
t, merely excluding the frost, and by exposing them as Eze Eee mae | Stich fe Kd 2 4 12 
fully in all n weather, excepting during frost, a — 2 
must be carefully excluded the | $rdeyis] 60.0 | 415 | 508} | osoin 3 
more tender plants both by night and day. During the Tues 16 537 428 „508 10 935 3 
12 ! ; 
no y y 5 E . 4 
the object aimed at, but i 3 imisi The bicbeet bebe ams ean be — ben ons 
2 es ern 71 
Points should be stopped and all ‘flow er-buds ar — 18)0—therm. 72 de. and the lowest on the erry — — 
ved. Aphides or other peee must be destroyed yere 
n the first wh of milde plants so affected 
syring sted ov me to Correspondents. 


should be s, ed on a dry — and 
with flower of sulphur. Take great care of au 

son seedlings of any kind by placing them close to the 
glass, and w where they will l be e "sfe 2s little as pos- 
sible to extremes or sud 


anges of heat or cold, 


the 
ogg, 


Cactus: EL C. It will no 
e 


gochey Your beds must have been sadly mis- 
anaged, The materials employed are good, but the result 


tho seri in some way. Asparagus, being a mari. 
time 2 delights in salt, You had better 8 some 
mach er about a mill — which to grind your flour, 
Books: B RC 1 don's n, or Downing, on Landscape 
15 Garden 
EES: § WJ. You are not the only one who has been misled 
y books which state that bees may D prevented from 


1 being the 


è primary e i lia 
d | ün th s abora Sy men,“ In your case, however, the young 
2 queen — in a forward state before the colony had ad- 
ditional — * ik ently the bees followed their own way 


of en arming. Ww. 


ane now. After it has done 3 keep it rather 
with a view to rest it, durin * ont * 
POR. ountess of Zetla fed: 


ew light a —.— Circle, — edged; 8 ký 1 

— e ood, purple edged; Grandissima, blue, light 
rae 

Favit: Hen e agree with you that there is no reason 


. We 
why a gentleman donk not sell his fruit as well as a f. 
his cro: bar will easily find parties who are in th ehanit 
ot gs h fruit, by inquiring in Covent Garden. We 
¥ never jendetan end tra 


monia), in the ion of ire aeaeaei et wy all 
water, will have 8 og t of keeping them M one: — s of 
clear u had perhaps better use 

portion of ibe erate: tet 


ng OD. Your soil does not appear to be 
are eaths ; but possibly the the immediate cause ——.— 


Misc.: 


t injure your Cactus to allow it to = 


of failure was | 
s turf on chalk, | count of the 


[Ocr. 13, 


MANURE: A Constant Sub 


Manone: A Condant Sub. You millind mage 


—.— — non Its qualit eau analyses of 

injur alth is connected with ie age sà 

but i . certainly — to M hie weetened in the On lang 

mixture gypsum eat, or first instance instance by 

I kind po Mv or charcoal dust, OF tome 

nsects: S F. The insect sent i wire 

the Millepedes 2 * Tt is one N 

(Polydesmus 2 


complanatus): 
3 oo oe £ 


sect found ii the &S 3 
8 of the fr 


perda. 

shoots attacked 

must be cut off 

and burnt as 

soon as they are 
be 


former query 

was answered at the time, A Const, 

Your —— are the common thrips, See several of ou 

— — ans w int to awit the lar V.— 3 u. Le 
arrots are in T with the larvæ of winged 

ila Rose an . — 


See p. 344, . —4 Reader 


4 earn's 
11, Court of Wiek; Fyne Yellow 5 ae Mien 


Names or Fruits: R B. 


wre ee 


8 appears to be Powell’s Rus 

2, 21, Beurré Bande? “3, Duch d'Angoulême ; 

ergamot ; 6, Knight’s — false; 7, 

é Bergamot; 10, Marie Louise ; 
ne 


SHW. I, 


22, 1 23, Bezi de Montigny; 20 
bad. 

Names or PLAxTS: Old Sub. No. 1% % = i 3 
a barren frond of Cystopteris dentata, tata, which is e zu 
sidered as —— = — e fragilis, which — 

e b cidium m ee of —— 
number to 1 — 3 sarcodes.—S W W. We know 
nothing about the matter. 


f 

SEE 755 f 
i fh 
Haiti 


t 

2 

E 
Ti 85 8 
is 

È 


E 
iii 


— 
3 
2 
E 
u 
A 
0 
8 
E 
2 
. 
2 
Oa 
z 
Fi 
E 


$ 

8 

{=} 

3 
aM. 2 
È > 
i 
= 

at 

EE 
tn 


325 
f 2 
34 
n 


: ve 
avon of the Sensitive 
can — 5 Er you 5 


i 


RE Ee ˙ ˙wwm; An... ee ang i eee 


3 8 

Ko 
1 
MY 


E 


u had better a 
7 betore. nE prune your ged 
INES IN Por. See 2 abe 
Cli 2 a Der wings © the flowers T 
not obtainable any where — we know 
roots 


— oe bud on the firm 2 
15 6 2 
g ay 


i. o 
— at and Co. Light ANT 


1 
0 
9 
5 
4 
x 
3 
1 
f 


9, 12, Basr 


— ne OOOO 


41—1849. ] 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


OMITHFIELD CLUB, 1849. —.— an Show of 
8 PAT STOCK will take place on Tuesday the llth, Wednes- 
Lay the 12th, d Saard the ey, — 11 the 14th of — . 
der, 1849, a azaar, Baker. The Printed Forms 
Certificates, 


or the ent entry o of — a nd —— must — 


WHE 
HE LONDON MAN URE C COMPANY beg to offer 
E as under, and E — that every Manure sent 
ont by — shall be — slightest adulteration. 
nw rs Warehouses, Lon 
Manure ore, Com 


monia, Phosphate “of Ammonia, or 3 Phosphate; 
osphate of Lime, Gypsum, Nitrate — Soda, Bone Saw- 
dust, and ver other A: Ario al Manure, 
Epwazp PURSER, Secretary, Bridge-street, Blackfriars: 

AUTUMN SOWI NG.—POTTER’S GUANO, 

R. POTTER particularly a this e 
M for using his Guano, as, if now committed to the earth, 
itis better adapted, when the spring 5 to Sis ld 10 the 
growing a the —— —— — in a fit state for immediate 

ET ease of chemical knowledge, as applied 
— an oe tomake some im 
improvements int the manutactare of his 1 5 e Peer 
most — — es the use of all w wish to 
luxuriant crops — 1 nse, 
In consequence 
as Mr. POTTER’S peta s, substituting their own 
the genuine a — the Proprietor i = induced t 
n to him * 


unprincipled persons, once acting 
. ied for 


a rm itale peculiarly adapted for the 
farmers’ use, at the usual low price.—Please direct your orders, 
per post, x? the follo ers. address. 

CLAPH M ROAD ‘PLACE, LONDON, 

Ee oes AZOTIC MANURES, prepared 

1 0 din —— The attention of 

ted to these ies known Fer- 

. a ——— 


of the soil. — S pe 2 — 4 — 
ade entirely o of ah animal matters, have received numerous 
testimonials to prove them to be e to the best Guano. 
Prices, 6l. tad 61. 10s. 3 .— Offices, 24, Mark-lane, London, 


don | 23. pr WINTE 
Urate, Sul hat e of Am- per bu 


—— — . ha AND OTHER MANURES.— | 


649 


FARMERS AND BAILIF 
12 BE LET, with immediate 


yi — —2 with a 


A FARM 


miles from Shre 

The 3 — bave g objection to 305 rhs a ‘sonal penis fs 

TE Gare je 8 à portion of the funds.— Apply to 
ti 


EED WHEAT. —For are at 50s. per quarter, good 

and genuine seed o — ERABAT WHITE and 

e 4 ee ieties, fais of grain and ear will be sent 
on receip mps to cover > 2g expense af postage. No orders 
for less — 4 bushels be ex re pos anaw m un saon 

= st be a d by a tance. Saoka 

BEANS. 7 7 can be supplied at 5s. 

shel, Jonx ein Whitfield, Berkeley, Gloucestershire. 


‘ATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1849. 


MEETINGS FOR THE TW 0 FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
Tavaspar, Oct, iy nae ve a Imp. Society of Ireland, 
Tuunspar, 5—Agricultural Imp. Society of Ireland. + 


he ag surrounded, 


13 et for the 71 attainm t end. 


e have beaten the 
or of the world ‘in i” ali all — manufactures, 
it now o emains 4 r us to show that we can beat 
it in "that 5 food as 
We have said that it will require the united 
5 th landlords and tenants, to upraise 
hun 5 position which it 
„in so fi ts practice is 
concern 7 baie? e, on rs te ne hand, 
latidlords A roe otherwise improving their 
estates, only that their tenants may more thoroughly | € 
impoverish 


exertions of 
agriculture Enp the ve ay 
i am a 


of pud 


eattle can be fi 


ed c 8 and well, exposed, thon t 


CAL L 


possession, 
comfortable sacaran l situated seven 


or rents must 
The 


The Agricultural Gazette. be 


- th 
Tar united exertions of Landlords and Tenants i 
propri 


y 
e, m like a | th 
tha 


jority =i e e e agriculturists of this country, 
and wi eely give it as our 3 that 

sie Aral ge a one of two thin 

a either lan 


antage, and ai 
—ꝗ 1 — the most at ea methods cure he in 
fall. 


of inheritance have hitherto opposed 
eat obstacles to the get of 4 on improve- 
Few possesso 


gr 

men downers of land in 

this country haye it in fee "they ‘for the most 
t mere life-ren hen estates in land have 


* . with as Hite » outlay a : 


où loan, 


and 
enabling the proprietors Er iA iii the 
sanction of the Enclosure r eee u 2 
r properti es wich ren charges, cale 
1 ith in terest, in 22 peie 
instalments. The 


who. this acca = speedily 
applied for, and absorbed ; to the 2 of 


ssible. 
an Act 1 by Parliament, 
abe the 8 on 
f 


S 
3 


those who were fortunate enoug to in 
of it. Demands greatly beyond the limits of the 
large sums named in the bill ha n recei 


ut as the . 1 
4 state may a mone y-lender held to be 
ntrary to sound npa omei 20 indefinite 
5 of the meas d 


ve 
n N ity, S 8 Boned * scourging system of dry, the other, he adv, eee 

Sulphuric Acid, Animal . Wisst inira Gypa, Rape- | liberal ‘and 8 tenants, willing to improve, be- settled estates to mproye their lands by draining, 
; combed and 8 error pei — 9 "Thames stroet, stowing pas: me and manure, 55 as and that without Far ote to their younger ae 

= — for Colline’s DE Disinfecting Powder. aptly r e ke br lime — i 2 so obvious, that during the last session of Parlia- 
4 the one ae or o re in the other. ent, an Act has been passed, di 778 th little 
ROY AL 1 In order manufacturer o ay be fom the 3 Act o etails, but 
placed in a like position with 1 5 fellow-labourers in authorising the money to be obtained from private 
PATENT. the other departments of the arts, it is fair and rea- | instead of public sources ct money may 

PATENT ROTHOUSE WORKS, KI KING S ROAD, CHELSE eee furnished 4 1 bs are 9 5 — Ais äräiiags ot Si 1 An gate eda 

$ appliances for carryi his business to the best | ti or may 
5 gsi ste Niothous aen +n 8 5 entlemen about | nh 8 It 1 e to expect that large defective the the titles pended 27 that it be certified 
j: y — he * d on ie rn which is, for three- roper authority, that the improved sta 


principle Momo re in with | Shelt blast of t the 
wein er, to every blast of winter. : such are t 
Putty Peters Boh requiri ints front 7d. to 9d. per f. conditions under which much of the agriculture of baren himself, but with the full 
© BT HOT W the British’ N is conducted. it is the most likely means he can go to enable 
PRLAN CEMENT, 5 Stucco, instead of Agriculture is a profession Er 19 0 his e 1 unctually to keep their 
hours of i nd SNE pape u at least, has always been oversto y from |€ men 
Wer 0 ts application to the pare walis, and by te — 4 the very mistaken notion t e who is unfit for he new e Act, 12 and 13 Vie, Cap. 100, 
Dan adopted would dry. lt is worked without | anything else is fit for a farme oa partly f 5 om the dis- is termed chor, The Pri rate Money A 
en 8 E nRa een Te A and lesa expen; | inclination which the sons of the c 1849.“ It provides, that it shall be lawful for the 
; Rie prepared for Ornam ental Plastering, for Encaustic Paint- leave it, or the anxiety they feel 95 ee bm to it own i iny "o or Ireland, w 
821 „ce, specimens of which may be seen at the Works of after h ving’ realised a competency in other pro- | shall be desirous of borro or ancing money 
— . Mine ims, Landon: g This redündancy 60 farmers has for the improvement of such lands, by Works of 
_ CHEAP AND DURABLE ROOFING. always supplied the landlord with numerous appli- nage, under the provisions of this Act, e ad 
3 cants for ‘every pie 1 e of, or advance mone purpose ; an ave 
ge ROYAL LETTERS No matter how wet or foul the soil; no matter how aaay 3 1 8 r 
| MAJESTY'S PATENT. dilapidated the buildings, some one is to make | defraying the expenses incident thereto, charged on 
his “ibe rance, ready to romise to Pay the rent, | the inheritance of 48 = and with 
E ˙ Kb 
oD, nly Patentees of low rates of prices o roduce are, 5 ee 
THE ASPHALTED FELT FOR ROOFING ever, beginning to interfere with this state of things, | with the c ut of the Act; and that applica- 
W Yann Buildingu Shedding W e and for Garden aa ee 7 ae ooie are now giving tokens’ of yielding i m4 ici te ip be toads em by a d of 
bs lite’ Grane National ae S, — is * . future a muc ger N of promises to taking advantage of 2 of the Act. Same 
Fun,, and j g, in an they used to | Commissioners 
a i Mase ns Wok a rete . SW We have freel ae out opinion of the mode in | the form in which such — a is to be made, of 
Hono’ à y ji 
— — — which their business is carried on by a great ma- which the following is 
fos HONOURABLE NERS OF CUSTOMS INAGE ACT, 1849.” 
Masesty’s E „I W $ “PRIVATE MONEY DRA , . 
Andon o AE Bor ——— 8 baut rfolk, R TO. THE INCLOSURE COMMISSIONERS FOR ENGLAND AND WALES. 
‘And, Newcastle, N. —— — I, the und d, bei wner of the lands herein particularly ly specified, the same being in Great Britain, and being desirous 
‘the late Baris. and, Buccleuch * Rie ond), e undersigne ing own pi hersi ovement of such Lands, t by W Works of Drainage ander the provisions 
7 Dt 1 and 2 — W ee the Mobil 1 A Sent try, | © of f borrowing 2 2 * a ont a oven fo author’ 
i LARS. 
the eine bee ies of Müh, and P yh 5 
ref. Thabenia.the — of ofs. Estima- Amount 
32 inches sg cy ee ithe 67 2 — — of efectng 1 Drain- Esti- —— — to 
Name, residence, —.— ested | £ age, materials pro- isted of value be bor- 
ori $ | and description 4 10 be | Acreage| Parish. (County, | drained, vested | and | posed to be used, ate 
experience, 3 3 A — > be a icant, | subsoil and nature of out, abr (or "at 
pases Tall or for Life. : an 
—4 the only Works 5— London 
s covered with og Felt may ‘be bau. 
s © at the entrance to Wes 
> E * 
oods and ee Tf the lend 
enor tan, is ak 
an econsent 
used, 24,000 feet, the bishop and 
pean St dee — shouid Þe 
on the construction of Roofs, or e A 3 
ion le N.B. It must b specified by the party making 


650 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. ar 
The Act goes on to — that on the Com- LBERT MODEL FARM. subject of the letter was agricultural Goo 2 
missioners Beg satis fied by the report of an| As the a ‘hind is now apparently awakening to | attached to the Unions, I 
Assistan mmissioner that the proposed works the necessity of agricultural education being imparted | general —— but merely co 


hat the : . rreet 
certify under their seal, to those who are to follow the profession of agriculture, into which Mr. M Farlane e must 
i i Model 


cc i will you permit me to direct the attention of your English fallen i in reference to the 
pe — what amount of money shall : at re | whio » Mr, MPs 


not greatly err, will very s shortly 4 
hat w 


that 
e same subseque give her prints an impetus tha oie even — a liberal 1 allowanee for 


the 
——— fix the rate of interest, if gee |S ahead of large — of the United King, 8 | however is not paid for. I believe 


no doubt well known to yourse rself, I — it 5 e ot MF. 


ent. per annum, to pA paid in respect of any y foll Although | intend 2 — ublish sd balance et et 
ex 


owe advanced.’ fter the 
os is allowed * the — be generally known, either to the landlords or tenants of farm buildings, ; that s — is hi 
d 


willing to lend the 


pay it: into the Banks of England or Ireland, or some years a National Mo t Glas near sleeping rooms ) 
chartered bank i in Seotlan d, as the case may be, to Dublin, and which in future, in to l vey 3 | worthy of the object —of a 
i in e m, farm men An 


rtificates, they are to receive from | used 1 on 
the Commissioners grants of rent- 9 — ee bun sits itt 
to repay P principle and interest i The 2 


. a as eee, It is worked | whereas the requisite 
d as 


mber of you 
u the rate at from the N schools E their « superior attainments | im oare ion — he cropping of 


oned under the Act is | scientific agriculture, go forth into all parts of — goo od that is sate by disunio 
money borrowed: at country as as stewards ina bailiffs, y E. Slade, Chislehurs 


with m 
5 per cent., will Topi principal and interest in 22 But the feature of most promise in — A 


ars. im is the 
Where the owner of the land is willing to advance nated by Dr. Kirkpatrick, to whose aie — ne mind I SEND you 45 II. 


the money himself, the proce gs are somewhat the idea suggested a 1 des instruetion in agri- I have a good of —— pite 
e pro 


— lt nd ltu t ith. th 1 worth publis hing, and shall fi 
S d w ks are ow d culture an agri icult is wi e usua 8 z 8 
f ter scott of | branches taught in the ee schools; he accordingly | extracts, which I think may be 
L e 


rse of 
rat 1 : training at the Glasnevin Model Farm; here, Mr. Don 2 hag. 
nai (the teacher) laboured for two years, at the termination of OURNEY FR To Norwicn,. 
to be c . red personal property ; and “shall, | which period he returned, so competent and so zealous | Dec. 29, —— 9 — left. Edinburgh at 6 in 
without ene to the title ok the parties making that his little pupils at Larne soon became the won der in the New stage-coach ; 
— 1 (as to reya the —— — such of all who saw — or rather hea yon a „ under exa- — — two io of — — "for be pt 
application by ommissioners shall be con- — sto the system was found to even beyond other a — dark. 
usive), be a valid and indefeasible charge upon ation n, and i is m ow an ‘acknowledged art of the what was to 
the land ised in th t thereof, b 10 be | open A — Monrarn, Saturday Dec. 30.— Here, ere, being tired 
e land comprised in the grant thereof, by the said |83 i ere: | a we 
Commissioners, subject only to tith rent-charges, | are at present about national schools, ered the inside of the 1 got 
land tax, local taxes and rates, quit or chief rents pace — all gh of T land; * whic Fa ——— was afraid of falling, tee by-and-bye, I 
incidental to tenure, and cha ated, or to be and 1 age gpr are 75 t, r n 34 * saa ba machine. 1 
cecess withou ssing it, one could scare ellow, and master o 
ereated, under any act authorising advances of —.— e 1 pin "upon * rt lw. their horses at Grass d 
? 


tioned upon 


charge te f 
he a ct farther provides, that thet rent-charges a much higher character than is customary with us. | much fresh 
be Separate farms or divisions Each of these schools hasa farm attached of from 5 likewise, >a Boo always give their calves Turnips in 
of the rie chat the rent- charges on lands in Middle- to 30 acres, and so sensible are the proprietors of the the win e, to keep them growing, and 1 
sex or Yorkshire, Treland Se i — 
registered; that the rent- charges in England and from the knowledge thus spread throughout every Se H 1776. — About pres sun 
l 


or Scotland, are to be soil becoming to the vast advantages to be hoped for great a 


e in the same way corner of their estates, that applications are continually | very rich and beautiful ; all inel 


48 e- P 
rent-charges, and, in Scotland, in the same being made to the commissioners of edueation, for the | . ts are 50s. per Bore: 


in Hea the: natio f their neighbourhoods; the ex- 
3 ae i 5 ee t. | pense of the b ä are borne conjointly b the pro- p 8 57 building pen upon couples. 
i i 2 dont | prietors and e oners, the former paying one- sheep is of very great value; some havea to 


2 during their occupation; that arrears of rent- third, . latter L. e two-thirds of the cost. in a fleece, which sells about 10s, per stone. 
Jan. 2—1 left Y 


; j join erection of suitable model buildings, to be attached to o eat adv vantage for saving hay. 1 ; r 
way as fue duties or rents; that tenants may join : 3 . — sheep folded in sheds, and done at very | 


arges are not to be aca after three years; In proof of the working of the system, I was informed | 


that rent-charges under the Act are not to prevent | rece ntly, while in —— that in some of the remote d ark and rainy, whieh joined wian 
trustees fands in mortgage of | districts where a green rop had never before been seen of the coach we were in aving been 
the lands; that the expense of securing outfalls for | (excepting the ae — are this season very pro- York and thrice at London within 4 Here me 
the drainage, and of fencing, trenching, wry clearing | mis ing cropa Swedes and other roots, which a dull scene till we got to Fe ai — that they have 
the surface of lands to be drained, 


Pa 
e of converting the same from „ ast under the direction of the sons of the tenants. and in many senne in Englan N ee ea 
into m arable or i —where such rasto 1 W cottars, lads of 14 and 16, who have recently left these oia geet så the ae SSR of the country; 


a. ` naghy, f1 eat, 
— . rae = at the cost of the works, | sy superintendent of the Alber t Model Farm ; his duties drop of water could . seen standing on the Fron 
3 by elenae on and their are arduous—in addition W the active superintendence Sonal it was quite 


T 
doned, are to be applied to the indemniff street, who: eventually go forth as teachers themselves, had a ve 
1 * 


the pur- have been — bes subsequently managed, entirely | that I first saw the f 
— i 


Mr. Dona the i teacher at Larne, is now the | were covered with a fine 


dl on the . of thie farm and all its concerns, he has the entire in- rows. Almost their only erop 
ction of the pupils in every branch of farming, it w s as rare to see a 


ere m tim struction 
time, as each ‘ok the work (etter in itself) delivers a lecture to them every morning at 8, and he West Lothian to see a piece of ue 
any balances — Be whi — 5 lectures at 3 i ; rns 


rnoon to the youn at 
are completed ne the Victoria Training Establishment in Marlborongh- e we dined, it was almost all 


bation ’ 
of the parties hable to the rent cA Re owner. Who shall say th ope for Ireland} When we crop Turnips must be. Some 
ont the rest 


Čo., and to the w 
+ gives 


of Ireland, e rmers of 
signification given to it by the Tithe C Com- England, of Scotland also, are yet 8 at 


e saps 


9 m we have now given, it will| I believe the benefits of the “Albert Model Farm ” | 10 the man 

6 oordat al it is now within the reach of all are not confi he class of pupils poken of, on 

o to have their lands drained e we hope to a, while I was in Dublin, there might be seen the son | he; Lord 
d that the Act is is extensively kén advantage of ef an English baronet, plodding over the fields, taking a | 
$ Hovwin: ag e manua u ef I believe h 


during the v i r: 
1 k k e only jodęes i TEN TA There 
raetical difficulty we EH To iges in the neighbourhood, and repairs to the farm Budgeen. 
Se whi ch may pa haps Ge Fy in its : PS ween daily. This is as it should be—would that the example | | while breakfast ee 


o the stag „or the rietors anded gentry were sufficientl ine 
We refer to the peculiar mode of re- their own true in wiles ig o 88 division, cows 
gi tost parties who lend money d to | lege its walls could contain no m then might among the horses, swine 
ms urbed, and to rece from time to | each county have its own agricultural college, and each Barley in the barn, 
of e mere interest, ee the principal un- village or parish contain its own little model farm, for | me. A man 
touched. If ae e to which we have | the instruction of the 3 son in that knowledge about four lea 
out to be a 


nd i 
the usual clauses of inte 


| 
| 
à st i ved prac! 
ord “owner ” interpretation, Ee will pervade the minds of a mee portion o | and I was sorry 


the 
Reger mshire 
ve their 


aye and 
the threshold of knowledge. 


3 2 
$ 
4 
= 
B 


fore ry: he is to earn his future subsistence. annexed, these 
11 is of some importance that misstatements should | man has: hold 
iry go forth to the af hae of > eminently useful an | which is fixed 
establishment as th "i 


“g you permit me t e to a j iit r which appeared | 
© in Saunders’ News ane of 27th 2 from Mr. 
| as pe e of the North Dublin t 


EF 


money required are bi pag and Scotland, that da a Saan e ai — and the buildings include 
del Far for 


E 
15 
5 -e 
HHI 
AHIT ke 


T 


nt f 
as pupils consolidixted fund. Mr; a is 


171 


$ 


the 
l t5 , Uae vary w m 2 intelli at the expiration of about two | should inspect ic, It is devoutly to be 
which the money is borrowed, but the | highest rent- years, melt Yas aces 8 a well. grounded Lest of friends of Ireland would unite “te and 
į un c 


15 


ji 


elit 


——— 
provement of Irish ae eulture origi- NOTES OF FARM PRACTICE SY 
ed b of A 


A —s 
tear a oss Were Genie Ma. | orate SRE aaa 


— 


41—1849. THE ae en GAZETTE. 651 
“Jis. a. 5.—Set out from London. 9 part of Essex ture as an art or science ? r correspondent “ Q.” | killed 90 mice myself upon about three 8 ot an 
rough <p ye road lay see to be very wet, | — e the 10 aid as 3 ery heart acre. After all, the crop was an averag: 
grog land, and ö appear to be and soul of the of manufacturing pa Snara other was a piece of rley — aAa, wi 
good, but at the season every thing in the coun > it i subordinate to the main point to of course could never — headway. The 
pe so bad, that we should make allowances, In held in view, that i y well be ed with alto- | were very superior to those done by drilling, but I 
Suffolk things look better, though sti y wet; but gether. Will a fiscal regulation lighten or a pasa t as to exact yield — a I think 
ibis, believe, was owing to at quantity of rain labour of production, or will it ea two of | every effort ought to be made to bring th into 
hich fell yesterday, for wherever there was a level eat to grow where but one grew 2 Will * gene practice ts ad v es must ry bagi to 
of ground it was covered with water. Their lopping and topping of . ever grow a coomb of every i telligent, flecting „ vi e employ- 
— lands in Suffolk have a very pretty appearance, | corn cheaper, additional perth from the ment of a vast amount of Ja in this , which 
gi done up into 4-furrow which looks seil! [Itm might t the one, "bat not the other, certainly.] | cannot find a market ; and the payment of that labour 
fie a rib silk stoeking, for it is done up| What would your friend “ Q.” do with the corn-feeding, doubly over, or more, by the seed which would be saved. 
@ mat and straight, t in whole fiel * mouths 10 years hence n hope to has made that the amount of seed 
amot see a bit of earth in a furrow, or a drop of water | fatten a bullock on a ewt. o Parliament! No | which would be saved by the general adoption of dibbling 
standing ; the coachman told hey always do up doubt “ Q feels the pinch at present, like the rest of would be equal to the annual importation of corn into 
their wet lands so, but lay their dry lands in broad us, but ideas are all past and present, never looking coun Lam om the 
sien and by this means they manage to get Wheat | to — — — Is the future to re of itself! experiments I have made, and others have made, that 
pen wet land. Very shortly, I have reasons for 9 I shall be the crops would very much exceed those under the 
Jon 6.—Leaving Norwich I walked out to Bexley, Maid amongst the enthusiasts ; would that we could nt system o i are 
i land 


ged found my Lord and Lady Roseberry —5 well. In 
ge evening I was introduced to Mr. „ W 
temy guide and preceptor, so te? as I — to fol 
In. He is a good-looki olly man, very — 
hope we will do well together. 

ils me that they plough four, 
heir Turnips, — g the fi 0 
hey begin so sowing at 8 old s 

inte so wing till re end of July or later, and they give 
lung to all they can—they hoe twice ch costs 


IEEE 


w 
vided they had plenty of meat y Id do in the 
house. Not at al? a ‘he, t ‘they will feed twice as 
fist in a house as 


Jan, 8.— and I resolved last night that 
we should have a walk ‘this is morning, let the weather be 
what it w ould, and a ow set ta pri 8 in the 


see rni —.— 


re is 
— it was not for z 
would not 


style, and con-| take a 


«| factu 


q | important — in this co 


6 
— 
me, | of 


infuse a little of the so-called ait Bi sot into the hearts 
of the e desponding lay- -upon-your-oar class. i 


cultural has that odious word “ — — N 
it — as curious a word as any in our language, and ver 
ca t 


da 
at higher gong + that of repairing the pEi 
fabrie f Parliament. What should be the 
main A Ay subject of —— Why, 22 
the — be capable of profitable improvement 52 
usiness. fs it capable r Tt is, and the fi 
portant item is its mechanical de — 

with the sister arts. e — 

to pay for, and from which every other 


and 2 im 


30, — — for — r. 
um to put e farmers 
prone 20, 000,0007. What pater be de profs Ha Ne 
mines, collieries, travelling, — — 
pottery manufactures ; what w expens e — 
Plymouth, 12 and Deptford 9 if all 
re labours were execute 
en it was not wor 


e distamees, n measuri “hel 


have o machines, very 
fond of the regular use of the line to dibble 1 v; and 
therefore thought it best, after r setting out the first rows 
by a Er E e side of the piece or field to 

leave all the rest to the operator's eye, by way 
t | making straight lines or rows. requires a A. deal 
of practice, however, a person can accomp 

this well, and eroo ooked lines look badly. Thef 4 0 Tate 
simple contriva ae a 7 2 5 is all that is needed to ful 

the Take two pieces 


we done, to 


er 
in front of the machine like two arms, . 
— In . me should be. made (previous to 
faste them on ine pacati holes at inch 


tħe first being 7 sgae Bun the cen 


be 
single d These cost me, iame But “ Q.” will Diin &e., they would esa to be 

mas * a year (1774). 8l. a ae T gave | plished ; wall wit he 22 * it onght nit to i ne wilt these two s fasten a lath, or piece at Nn by 
them straw and the refuse of the Turnip the first winter; he venture to. say 5 t litarian“ times such screws to the holes in we. arms, rding to the 
they got plenty of Grass all summer, and now the ey are thi ? I thin an w —— distance you h to ve yo ws, $, s 9, 
the best of Turnips, and n I come to sell profit to himself —. ee emplo that mind and those or 12 inches. The lath need not be stouter than 
I will not get above 127. 108. a head; nor do I think talents I see he possesses, in endeavou ing to assist a person’s litile may project out beyond 

they have th: badly 0 5 but n make no these worthy tiers improved mechanical ends of achine 3 or 4 feet, ing to 
tof i d are much better to sell our p to cheapen produetion, — > studying | the ends. Thas you will need ine or marks at all, 
Lhave done a field this year, at 2d. 10s. per aa unble books on high farm arming, se fis diving a if you have a straight side to begin at; the lath will 
— eaten on the field.“ ittle 92 en he may help to. in roduc- | set on at first, an re, by 
: What study has ever prov ved i tself’ 80 useless, so | altering the screw whe 9 
set oat correctly, the 333 by extending over them, 


* Correspondence. 
orse Carts, ea your. — — — 
at 2e sP, neta 6 A. B.C.” criti 
on the subject of the light eee 


t 
ce — — . Rans and] May, gentlemen 
— epee unacquainted 1 and who, Id dare 

rn to receive 


ake better, lighter, 

the ate ud ea setei 
do i it 1 
3 of ood 
carts, do 
— r, > that your correspondent or any good m 


of the wonderful 9 cwt. carts, and ton Weight 
ich he says last half a no one 


„and cheaper | 
„ whose | ou 


“prize neither their makers — € 
Ger e . eredit. My only = 


century pa 
er, but all going off at once, like the | 
a candle, which for so 2 and — an TEN 


ou | the exce one was. Wheat n in the 


ples and vexatious, as * political ? Tell. me of | 
of 


bygon ne 8 the 
$ wish the natural soil — one- half as 


of corn. Continue to address your P 
p 


cannot err, excep 
to pri the political upon us as the prineipal, whereas i 
ut be a — — to an 1 = « 
— no art, pra itio on, 
even tive 8 88 when it eannot and 
its — own merit; in eon 


soil by the same or simila: 

means to pe ag employed in 3 Dockyard, then 1 

aroun’ ection, 3 

ben the cu — aps an acre urni 

ings instead 100 ore the thermometer of 

rise (and “Q's p so, I 
w 


mproved practice, and no he resuscitation of | will keep you 
itieal soil is indeed fertile | with 


fertile, and could be made to produce as many * stretehed fro 


assert ass 15 

ê 

Sie speakers. Th 
— ae 


not till 8 
ps | of 


f anything interfered 
could be 


and expeditious, and 
if the first rows be correct! 


Sorieties, 
R ASHIRE.—The annual meeting 
and show of this See took place last week at Preston. 


ean only give the remar 
The Chairman, T. Cureton, Esq., of L 


2 who will have the kindness to 
best method of preparing and 


But this is a point of — 
is m 


fection never ned, and perhaps more diffiealt: of 
—: in a humid — such as the climate 
| triet, in other — 3 


Heacham, 


terial to cogitate 
— wer — mage sw happy days : ee! id od old times 
a George the Third was king.” j 


ewington’s Patent Dibble.—A piece of Wheat 


im portance in the gr the land of 
everyting we wi wish to clear it of, an if ie in een — 


to put A init, itis 2 1 


Dr. 
e the latter part of last October, has yielded 


n’s 

. 

; dibble ; of Wheat, „and 

ve been highly satisfactory, with 
put in 


autumn br. Fig at at I peek per acre), and unfor 
mice were very numerous 


and got part of the seed; 


d to Grass; 
— 


— in 


= 

— — — they are 

ticularl er. At first 
n, | pen to of ac oia ture, and we r N — 
wh —— — * e land, are the p Lampe mm 

the soit, to — an detrime of thore wi 

— ‘ 1 2 the — which I shall 
now have to mak laying ¢ the i & 
Grass, I take it — — — the land is 
by ng ng—by hoemg and clean- 
ing, and by getting rid of the pernicious roots and weeds, —.— 
is the — ry towards 
land he first object is then to prepare the for 


. 


* 


652 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


h he seed; the next to y select the kind of se seeds | 
most iikely to succeed, and the —— — to pert — in which 
oni are he ich the —— 
wn. 


p 


iv 
After the 
ception of 
— ehai way, and at what season, isit best sheep? “should | be 


sown 
of corn in the sowing of land to Grass ; but yet, if the lan na 
intended to rem main permanently in Grass, and if considerable 


“ Penny-wise. aud pound-foolish,” 
1 — resent 
1 w land to 


is being, I think, 
the permanent goo od of the pasture 
erefore it is eo in such a case I shou 


object, it 
to sacrifice 


the 
e grow affords — to ‘the ae 
witbout bev he Goel of the nourishmen — t 
the autumn ords food to the sheep, which oth 1 
benefit is also Abeita to this 
e consuming the 


i 0 
oots of Clover and other Grasses. 
the land through 


u Sonn 


moist and warm, a second 8 will. soon appear, aad it vill be 
e t 


| several yok of Oats, the crop of the off going tenant, when 
bg Foer tor pi — 25s. the statute acre, 
per acre—one of the 
fields of this farm, equally pile steer ‘tor not one yard of 
d well manured for 3 “tip 

m, an 


(I believe the leafy kin 
Stickney), 23 William Stickney, a celebrated a agriculturist in 
Holder he 1 5 — it “Old Hold army 3 —.— its be ving 
select “a old pasture in that d ppg 
combined with white Cloves I turne wing T considered a 
extraordinary n r of pep. into this field in spring, Tah — 
—— r Boon addition after another was 
made; but the Grass pew! “gaining, 0 
65 ewes of the large Lei r bree ae 
double) apon rather — maa tat 
1 J am not sure if the field on eps after 
year, but I know it produced re ploughed — een 
five Pex six loads of meal per statute ac It ery rarely 


rict, 


remarks, 
subject more rie eea under disc 
— sata provided the elevation be snitabie, if properly drained, 
capa able of growing profitably the v: yer ove crops of 
Turipa. Potatoes, Mangold Wurzel sy ah ht to be 7 
and va manured, ane 1 horse- hoed, a kept fr 
If the land be tenacious , the —— — 525 


eeds, 
shba 1 transported to the yard, either a t To — = ten 


by a wooden moveable railway. If it be ‘ight land, a 1 rows 
alternately may be removed to the yard ; the rema inde er be left 


tne sheep 


affording to sheep convenient | lying ground, At the latter end 


June, it exhibits nothing but 
then nearly over. It is £, infe Poni in sire nutritive 
The follow gal kd Picks 


pee Foxtail, ayo eadow Fescue, 
ave got from Graminea Woburnensis,® ng remarks 
a Sel the l 

heag 

A 


er to os Duke of Bedfor 
made many very valuable’ 2 
it hi 

the nu tritive m atter contained in iy min de : 
also states — given quantity of N r Grasses, 
classes, 2 5 ghee cee of flo 9 à their 

sayd, Me. th Stick, a very Sa l — ted ena de ent erh 

hon ebrate 

introduced into pra at An in Hol has 


a varie 
great merit, and w ichs pie under bis Said to 
ore inclined to be leafy, and run less into e.. This Grass iş 
metas a Mea oxtail thrives fee adhe than other 
loa n light siliceous soil, Tt does not mat bunny 
| fullest productive pomaci till 8 years, hence it i to ity 
for alternate husbandry, but is one of the best not suitable 
untae 1 Grasses for per. 


The herbage pred a 
than that of canes, B though the wil d matritive matter 


in one season is co ably less, It thrives hel rary 
gation, and is permanent and constitutes tes part of ths irri. 
of many of the best pastures. Mi 


Grass, is of great value, mixed with yes 2 imothy 
manent pasture or alternate 1 sine 8 epee 
Grain, at ene N the seed i i more nutritive 

matte other spec cies s of 1 It olen 
ire tof 25 hates in spring, in the prop 2 
to eight. Its valuable early folia 


of 1 = 11 d Ne, isk ‘ho Barley be sown by th 
drill, at 9 or 10 e bet w i the la fh if 
e 

wi — 
appearance. 
horse-hoe to ne * through the rows. If th 


with the horse-hoe. 
ed and pul- 


d again w 


i found to sustain. Ith 
he effect, and in fact pk aor must have 
he 


— — without the | withou t delay. It is strange that oe machine should not be in 
g 1 h di it with perfect 5 
f: +} Iih * 
r fails among his haan, even 


n 
ow that many o of m 
hunting say that fox oe is 


4 

L 

t 

friends who are addicted to fox 
i _ 


the w that ¢ a pe 
ason is often missed owing to 1 1 high sor rebut the wind 
does not prevent this machine from being used. “Tf bate seed be 


good, it must vegetate and prosper under this management, 

f great ree to the fields, ‘and I have seen their r arks and the ret will og 85 ame better for the 8 In 

orne out 1 agree that oncerned in, enant is re- 

own by the h horses’ feet, and which the next year oe ve — een | stricted yn turning dette, = horses TA hi K own Grass 

found to produce the best pe of een This does not, how- till the month of March or April. This sagen is un- 

ever, carry ou ie of re peg cof treading down th necessary in wal cultivated dist the contrary, 
ng 


e ricts, 
| in Lancashire, where it is all bute an 3 rule to turn 


heavy cattle and lr ge into the seed Grass all winter, and 


pas kor e, W th te UM It is un. 
eee Re alternate husbandry, oh the cultivated red Clover 
uch m abundant roduce 


vous il (Alop urus pratensis 

. escue, Per Crested 
805 Monat stalked Meadow Grassi gery Creo 
rnate husband Rough Cocksfoot, Meadow 


Clover, white Clover or Mow 
Rye-grass.. Man T ‘have — doubt, by L. o e e 
and expense of oer 

| be in part obviated mo Se cent are We s ordinary ea 
vation; but the far 
auanei, and quality ra “the roduce, I 


de pide ghing through a fi ric and leaving a pox of allow them to tread the land into holes, destroying many wise an — E principle than that of scantily 
water where ‘their feet have trodden upo e very and | of the plants, and which holes in heavy land — Gis water | — the lahi with 3 seeds. bi is the 3 5 
most successful system of sowing iai t to Grass is by ciate a winter, some restriction, o say, is 1 between doing it well pi — gly nd 
the seed with one pound o 2 75 Rape seed and grow * wale very important consideration is the kind of Grass to be | difference in * = net ¢ There pig no better ber a 
inthe autumn. With eet d to the description of seed to be print Hs As I before a * land 5 — 5 oe instead of | farmers to bec ted with the best Gras * 101 
sown, I — not think I can enter on the subject minutely here, | being sown with a ra ind of Grass, is o Nat I was } adapted to the 100 per — than for them to ta ohe 
because the diff e not far from proc bel — ging to from the best part of their meadows o or pastures, oriona 
upon the quality and quantity of Grass which land must pro- | a large landed ee and as I 1 along through me their neighbour (if superior to their own), and to plant iti 
duce. On a d soie intended — Ren 8 white Clover, farm writing down the state of each field, I came a re | garden and allow the Lire seed; they 4 se] 
Cocksfoot, Timothy Grass, differen and those kinds | I found nothing but a bad miserable iprinkting of ! ‘the. what their best pastures and 2 rÀ deren — 
of upon w ich sheep thri 8 . sOWD on this Lee 1 2 £ Agrostis, mixed — Carex and a small kind of may venture to order * m from 2 ad 
description ¥ land—they will be found to produce best, On 5 what to call it; it was not worth the time a more intimate „ of t to be the 
colder soils I would recommend red Clover and other kinds of of pacer * ‘haa. 1 5 the tenant what he called it. | valuable and peculiar qualities of the Green ene ve if cut 
Grasses “fs stronger character. In the management of farms er replied ™ — we let it * that i — he let it lie after several study 3 farmer. Some Grasses are more n * 
it is sarees sp arya ranpa posre of Grass should be eaten 3 — ae any seeds, that kind Nature might have the | when in flow —others when in seed. For instent®, 


down sm ofthe year. Itis the habjt in the 

best 28 counties ik “England, 8 ee 

shire, Lincolnshire, &c,, to fill the pastures as full as possible 
ry thi i 


9 


modes of treating it, 
land. There are gentle. 


say in conclusion that | 
be extremely glad $ be questioned, and to give 
answers such as I am enabled t 


opport > afr a few pain to bestow a covering of Grass. In 

passing g through many . on = gga tae I noted down 
Let Lig“ as the most e t term, ehas a gro 

of rubbish “that will 3 ih * — paying a rent, putting 

money into his own pocket, or providing food for 


population, It is no wonder, then, we require the as 
of foreign nations to support the Ere 
before mentioned which would grow or rather exist u 
‘Jet lig” fields, for I will not designate it by the — of 
pasture, is, though very deficient in 6 1 still more 
hefo aey in qu oor gh he 9 with the 
recommending ety of — ey we shall simplify the 
question materially, if we take it for grante ed that the land is in 
culti n, and tha has been 


be 1 of me.— Mr. Brians, Lancaste er, said: 


N pay Le but of the kingdom at large, might 

creased, by superior cultivation, to 8 thet Achar * 

with very little r — of capital; the d be better 

ee, pol ee oer ea larger profit, the 1 3 nt, 
fully 


heavy and light soils, ere the 
ee 


n 

ccurred to 

me that it could not mt S.i; The 

lands been exbausted by a succession of 

— — ge = they a no — r to such extrava- 
reasona emands, b 

Spgratefal hand of m 8 en the grasping and 


re, they 2 — ft to her 
less generosity, that w a been so — and — 
Proridentl * this sco g process 
r any mde. being so. 
whi e may be obse 


y ex 
they piam then left without oe. 
The blue tint of these lands, 


of Care 

— — ally 
h all an pes refuse t to eas, t 

= unger, „These worthless plants, combi nif not o compelled | th 


— — ouch 
toad 1 s, have fo à 
tt * even when in E * 2 ‘hel 


of | la and I 
convinced that the e Produce, not omy of the ‘soila of 


| or 1 — — 155 3 — to exceed that when the | | 


ok attempte b vea eo y aere m of their 


d whe 


ripe; 
wth at the time of flowering ; s the case wW! permanent 
and Meadow Fescue. Some are fala gag come do not 
the increased | pasture—others for alternate husban ie a sears oes 
The kinds of Grass > one year. Grasses are more produc 155 a e de 
n these | requires a knowledge of the. ae ture of 7 * kind of 

mix them in the most profitable man eee with a stiff 
viek Grasses are sown is important, @ 1 down and 
t Grasses. In straw, that will admit the sun and air an 85 with 
2 the seeds, is durable, It has bo 5 of this 
some to sow the seeds without grain, but und ‘to lay 
made suf- | plan is sping except in cases where foe way, inde- 
the | down a piec ermanent Grass in 1 pethe Iate Lard 
pe Eg Ae pris nse, It was recommend * piece of excel. 
cester to transplant good turf—that pad it on the land 
lent turf, chop it into small P roll . One impor 
er the follow wing, intended — — or o'be mentione net as to ed 

uestion remains t 7 * 

Ete — Fg he should continu deers being be grst year 
re the land is vie ee „ bes, and ene 


ly stocked, its foliage, which in many cases is 
K aion 755 Tò distinguished by an experienc ced ‘eye from some of 
he finer leaved Grasses with which it is combined ; but when 


i 


52 h nae 
more than — third, and that w: 25 would be a 


wa, ance 


č 
É 


ma 
| roots be d to — read 
bona ride of "the question, 

land, because vata 


ts are — and penetrat 


g 
w 
88 
is] 
= 
e's 
88 
ae 
8 8 
on 
we 
— 
E p 
E 
up 
ei 
© 
> 
e 
2 
as] 
a 
Ss 
2 
S 
2 
. 
= 
© 
n 
or 
Py 
oe 
os 


re is —— 
"ts A at at het 


the pey 2 N 


ex Dogs oo 
opinion with regard to this Grass, ripe 
and afterwards, it is provineally called Windlestraws, from 

e white and wiry nature of the culms; it does not furnish 
ao! early a bite in — ng Sy many other Graces, I 
is inferior for Byes ve husbandry, t for permanent 


n. These unprofitable | pasture a 5 ——5 a close turf of nutritive baban, e, an 

— tures t, in my opinion, to ge again pl and is little affected te ex —. of oppo It is Juby Ge chante 
— rex: 4 delay, a course of fallowing and manuring, 5 sheep ee and constitutes a considera on of 
pan 3 2 tion. 7 . land, herbage in the best pastures. een Nye. grass. Much 
e. tation described, is gly difficult Wess of opinion has ate ag amongst farmers the 
ARa the co pre expense, chased Ploughing anà value of f Rye-gra grass. Not ny ye zix go it was coe by 
1 Pats y ese rporating the manni wit Some said it was — 
— 3 2 of pasturage, upon being properly | but Couch Grass; 5 —— that 3 it 1 only windlestraws 
eve eich ye i = 4 — 3 of suitable seeds, — — 2 wou N ah it. This arose from Air of under- 
Bei. re x . — and, could not be believed by standing — 7 — to the old slow- 
pol pa pes hola Upon = e farm that gro z . oy rapidity of k the farmers by 
pe g A most s tenant and exhausting | surprise, ‘ore they had sufficient time to consider how to 

system of cropping—as proof of which I need only mention that flower and „„ 


the mau , 


M D 


that 
proper manner. 1 
t of food and prost 
ense amoun jess Grass. Mr. Blacker, 
n 


land Engla et | 
unnecessary bar to their tenants 1 y 
lands in rotation, provided they 


opel 


8 auper labo description 
te land— 
| workmen may be employed to 


which are of widely different meaning. Eleven vere 


4j—1849.] 

pegotiati as early last year opened with Mr. Eller- 
pe eae: to the Duke of Norfolk, the result of which 
ee tbat a trac f moor-land, acres in extent, the 


some | 
west of a and on the road > 


sere. 

ven miles 
N aspeet ol the 
ah tag 


. The an 
* imagined, * — is ical. of 
considering also its 


ere ted 
bodied paupers, 8 sent to the farm 
of — 5 any entire 
rred to the —. grinding a and oakum pick- 


f the 


yar farm b 


general conduct w 
— aie! is no — 
ing = EC advanced so far 
part of the plan. 


> th 
} + 
farm is i d on one pa by a good stone wall, upon the merit of that or any other performance by th : pom as any other soft carbonate of lime. J. 
which an immense amou labour has been bestowed. | metical accuracy with which its author may have per- Ta he eee ode 7 ater 1 it will rot 
Itis 880 yards in lenge, 5 feet high, and about 14 ss formed the various “sums” in addition or subtraction . 2 the sa pth: a — 2 — 
in thiekness. The e of the stone was bared an that have come in his way : we are not ine yari — 1 the 2 * ght fur ish. 5 A 
quarried b ‘the pauper . s, and by them conveyed | mate the value of a lesson applying to all agriculture by | Fon rer. Indian corn, ye, are goo 
to 2 ape ired, the 5 labour having the = dard of lar development in any one case, under prs beets it yon eile henson as 
to be paid being the dry walling. The opposite or south | any one set of e g” to confine our discus- | Grain: Mowbray, We sh and to poor fo 
side of the area is bounded by the adasi road, which | sions fegarditg i a farm e exact 3 pounds 05 eding, as blanks are not to be expected when individual 
previously was walled on oe Pint A shillings, and pence} of 3 profit derived from it. plants parts. 
pa Shiva: Aide kiio face , Pleats o Wes * e n eher n 54% ar C may obtain an answer if he will send us his 
stone on the Jand * ere 1 tio i tter than that which our contemporary, | Machixks: T. We know of no machines used in farming to 
To 133 the conveyan the stone from the already alluded to, bas lately offered. Let our land-“ wind up and set to work as a watch ; morning cases where 
ne * been aid, palong w yia the stones | ow w that of Lord Kinnaird—advise with their e ain jaa i ple: 1.8 podem oie — i 
the 3 of the hou yed, having | tenantry, setting (by example as las precept) the] meter, or in the revolving of an e think 
deen got bytho m e themselves, — 1 on . building best methods of cultivation before , and encou- Ihh * ae — direct the attention of machine 
site ready for They have in a similar | raging the 2 oe 8 Sess hods by ample security eee 75 atasak 1 1 for hgn 3 
1 to 3 erection of a spacious shed, for invested let our cultivators follow that of gradually ake it all oF ‘nearly all ower, hh wg it compost 
way between the ho e quarry, 8 Mr. M:Culloch, — the tru . fra me and intelli- 7 —or ch ng t for use pnp agra en pnie aad 
to be occupied during inclement weather by the | gent! g upon it, according to their circum- arte —— — on the ol 
men in th 8 of st the id us —— energetic 5 and let our writers follow that ~ eis Boos: A Subscriber. The subject has already been 
mtbuildi yet 1 ared. Another important of Mr. Cai BEEP : Chechire, Xen letter has been forwarded to our vi 
van perform by oe lou rers is the construction | of incompetent critics, make known to en grill | -inary anihority ; ut it is Hor he pamiii be con be of use to you you 
the dan a line of pipes having been laid 3 to deserve th | 2 you 
inder ground to the house from a fine spring of pure | or adoption ; and we shall yet see 1 — pape 2 — 457 It is a good top-dressing 
Water, i ‘Bos f several hun ards. The for any length of time, she has never been yet, a pros- for Wheat; 20 20 bushels With 3 owt. por pore, d in March. 
work of clearing has been accomplished upon about | perous profession in this coun stent t Mits: E EMG should apply to Parkes, Bir- 
2 acres adjacent to the homestead. The superficial| Lord Kinnaird’ pamphlet contains, besides the letter | -Fer v. LEVEL L L. Thanks, bot we must not épen 
Sone, which is only too abundant, ot Sen in the to his lo ge * on 3 ane question = ata 
formation of deep underdrains. s having | chemistry by Mr. White, and the speech on agricul- | Wimewoam: W Barlo oio and A Constan mt — — not 
deen well broken -A by the hagl thoroughly rites | tural chemistry —— ons “i by Me. Fin ee Swanston, 5 5 3 of quickiine ana 5 owt. of eait 
md efficiently drain e first time under to which we have already allu n thes e pages We per a — ean: the land, open water furrows, and 
taltivation, With = shemales of a pa plot, the | hope the work will have the vate protest it deserves leave it for the winte 
= cropped with Potatoes, Oats, Wheat, Barley, i 5 
bay old Wurzel. The tillage used Looe tear em e 1t, 
the unio: establishment at Sheffield, mingham and Midland A Exhibition of N i 
— of these ee 1 er to be Fat “Cattle, Sheep, Pigs, and Poultry.—The first ex- 
tion i 1 The „as they | hibition will take place on Tue esday, co 
iu certain p 0 to a well- | Thursday, and — the — Asay d, 15 ea 
in the best cultivated part of England. a — Tn ral 
t broken ow rend, aa — ne “hd, Sux the — 


n 
, Scarcely any bem Seca pene pr gs those 
orthy o ard 


used | 
bere on applioatio 
e | Birmingham. 


of 
must co nfess, hitherto 


tal. rd Kinnaird’s 


et however, farm eg very fairly orem of 
being rer for this purpose. It appears 
e of 3 rial acres, paying ı a rent of 600/., or) 
tie a a ala the amount 0 —.— is not very 
inteliigibly sta stated to have varied —. n 11002. and 
2 om loving sums salve been a liani, after pay- 
ment urchased pry of fi 
2 x tes stock, and rent, draining, and 
other improvemenis, &c. 
In the year 1837. aa £130 185. 10d. 
5 : 21 19 
n i 100 202 19 
11 254 16 9 
„ 106 17 8 
. 112 0 6 
333 228 11 
„ | 304 7 
5 ; 523 7 8 
5 242 8 
a 285 18 
In 1 ove ves 225 one £2413 
owen ing 2197. 8s. 73d. annually, or more than 10 
per cent. on the 1 ip 3 taking that at che 
| N Tano si su -F aet to be fully above 


the average exper f fa rmers employing any an 
Se te in a their busines, “though we know 
well it is not near the e experience of men 
hats 8 . i other t trades: 
I sin of Lord Kivnaird's pamphlet, 


e sha 1 


m 
e Aanby its energies: we do not mean to measure 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
e | duri 


o very mensen illustrated "the z 
profitable investment of ea In Lo 


they will cost 25s. an acre . The weeding 
uring the summer two or th over, is usually taken at 
etween gl. and 41. per a or they are sown, cleaned, and 
cleared for half the crop, the tenant receiving half for use 
of his land. Complaint i wee mil among the early 
sown Swedes, though ex of Turnips and Rape 
Ly plenty of Eoi” for yo winter and spring. ae ewes 


t crops 
m the breeding flock have their teeth cut, and 
j 33 —— the tops are abundant and growin 51 they 
do the land as uch good as if a — 2 ted of Col 
— — d in f 
be carted off 1 and 
the —— ploughed 
abe urers, now 108. per week. J. W. 
Sussex Fan RN, We have had some ve 
— — dere have now put a stop to 2 =i 
hen 


e Turnips 
stored = cm a a 
Mood Wheat, Wages, for ordinary 


ggo 
y preparing for 
shall tie — 7 — to fatten en 
threshing Wheat for seed and Oats for horses, mowin 
cleaning and cutting hedges, &c. cut our & 
seed, but at present have no prospect of getting it in. J, 


oned by your correspondent 
— 9 be rb solr = 72 — rom springs charged with 
bicarbonate o 3 2 it te be covered by peat is 
not surprising ; how it became cover ed with the yellow sand 
s anoth yer 3 I would not, wit es- t seeing the 


be “warp 
drift, ight ; of a calcareo 

tafe full of labels of f species now heei g the v 

strata, and ae by 8 to 


oe a hollow in the “ Eocen 

of brown sandy loam, which I call warp of the drift, 
es. others will not —— it to be wo The tufa is more 
2 12 feet — and toa marl with seams 


of peaty clay an 2 Diab Water shells There is a layer 
of — 4 — 1 it and th tertiaries. 
should like to know the depth and ex 


ioe 
to the Honorary Secretary, at wif 


hi t 
and. Mus 
year’s rent of the whole 50 acres. a o aa aed Flowers consist of Heki 
clearing Need land, Calendar of Oper = venusta, Tropeolums, ap hg and Roses, 
prepared, is at | SEPTEMBER AND OCTOBER. TS. . 
8 of labo Fen Far, Sept. 29.— The main tu mn is to pine anpi AD sae is e E, Bs to 168 
“tom half. past six in the | clear the land of weeds and rubbish, and prepare for Wheat | Graj r 2485 Almonds, per 
— seeding. ‘The first operation ed . pert = during dry : 3 wr T os to 8s 
ent? ded 8 The week’s | weather, when, after skimming euffling the stubbles, the | Peaches, per-doz., atto 10 Walnuts p. 100, 1s 8d to 
Sea r —_— to a ay, | roots = Nettles, oper 5 Twitch, shai be picked off, > coral 6 prin A nah., 168 to 243 
after partaking o 7 ‘din ner, returns to 4.4 s dry enough, wel would strongly advise Pave’ P 20g gg re Fil ib eris, per 100 tbe. 45a to 60a 
Sty and f at rnt, ‘and wos as frequently recommended,’ see t half sieve, tto 6s Nuts, Bar., p. bush,, 20s to 228 
; 3 with whom he is at liberty to « compost heaps,” Paea ae of 3 . seeds and hungry | — pe r Lt — a . beh., 128 to 16s 
N Sabbath, th, but he must return to . farm by | offsets, that multi tiply on a rich tilt, o baffle S n “tt 
Saturday . When we visited the last | or ae ation. 3 a are 0 ve ny gan 24 te a N 8 ABLES, i 
oon the men had left off work ; we had | the side er we dake snare. ‘They must be band © pat to” for Cabbages, p. doz, Gå ach p. sieve, 1s tols 
the advan of g whether or | muck, to poison diated chee ste such u filth. „ane in | Caulifiowers, p. a — 75 eo es, p. ni jae UA 
cheerf en Of this, | his excellent Book of the Ferm” Kiga, „ PP- ik pia having —— e ba pape ih ore see ery eat 
. 2 reen: N 0 
oTe assured, that while ener — re ‘of mal alle wee of mand — making what 1 Brussels Spee „ u. sieve, Garlic, per Ib., 4d to 771 
N parish, they greatly prefer being at conceived should be good manure, T per . . „ Enr: 
l a 3 9 —.— aia Loon at it was no child's play to to collect together | Sorrel, p. hf. sieve, 6d to 9d Lettuce, Cab., p. se., 4d to 9d 
l ; ret un Ar 10 se materials into one or two places, and 2 ge Potatoes, per ~~ = 100s — e. 
0 most ev th ende ‘ — ewt. , 38 to ês e, per 
| y healthy and ros ee put eget te he materini iia = be nat 4 — bs dt 140 enn 
i times wi e greates! ps, p.doz,bun., ’ j 
n care; Poe bat wan notwithstanding iea favourable appearance, unless Sas Beet, per doz., Is to 28 per — » 38 to ~ ie aa 
X very large quantities w m benefit was derived rse Radish, p. 2s to 46 Small ds, p. pun., 
Rebiew. frota Sh tO CANE comedians 44 loads to the ge French Beans, P. hf. sieve,1s 64 | Fennel, ya bunch, = it 
y 12 cart amg > bunch, 
Investment it 11 years’ Practical are aid ne es pruduce so good a an eects %». bunch, 24.9934 
pital, or 11 y uck.” He farther on relates how, with o 
ie vo iu ef a from Lord of Turni e covered em Thiet — 4 By . —. g „P. = 5 
i all re use material, a good quantity of a 0 g 
; es for Turnips or P s are good in 
to understand the 4d. per 5 not yield so well as pro rh id to 
4 n Ad. per sack di : are great 2 i 
tive, the . of | growa sat 5 and they are generally very ne 4 


654 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


SMITHFIELD, Monpar, 


1 of — > large, arti — average a quality is very | 


the — make 45. 
. ready * ; indeed, 21 kinds a —.— — — = demand 
8 2 of Sheep i is ao quite so large as 
last * pierde for fat Sheep. The tra P — hon 
2d. 8 lbs. advance on hype des: The de for 


Calves is slow, but 
tained. * 3 pat Germ 


i 


So FOO 


1 — 
Ditto Shorn 


seripti — 
uota: iene are pretty key main- 
we have 1203 Beasts, 


D Shorn . hin 
Ewes & 2dquality 2 8—3 4 
pee Pere: . am 
Lam 


2 
Pigs 
Beasts, 4620; Sheep and N 27, ard "Calves, 384 Pigs, 1 180 


emand has d 


rate are e rather lerer. f 


be ite tava in pa price 
ave fallen —— for 
outside on for 


nase 
eat Calves 


ome 


middling deseriptions, iat —— 44. 2 the 
the choicest. From H tand G asts, 
780 Sheep, 61 — and 13 Pigs; ; from Leicester and —— 
ampton, 400 Beasts; and 109 Milch Cows from 
counties, 
1 Scots, — Long-wools. 3 6 to 3 8 

fords, &. 3 10 to 4 0 Ditto Shorn 
Best Short-horns 3 6—3 8 Ewes & 2d qualiiy 2 E 2 
2d quality Beasts 2 8 — 3 4 Ditto 

and | “eg à 
. 3 10 — 4 2 Calves . 2 o- 


a 
6 


POTATOES.—Sovutawark, Oct 
e Committee report that there are still v — few arrivals 
‘loa Yorkshir eor the Continent, but they are at present quite 
e following are this day’s prices :—Y ork 
| Re egents, 70s. to 295 per ton; Scotch, 65s, to Toss; foreign 
| whites, 55s, to 65s. 


AN 
y of Wheat from Essex this 


T 4 su 
morning was again small, — E from Kent; the former 


the latter were disposed of on rather lowe eign m 
a moderate retail i sete te at — rates — Friday 1 ist, Barley i is 
a free sale at our — e Peas e 1s. e 
| cheaper. —Beans are fully E ii e obser no alterat 
in the value of old oan, * 8 *. are 
turn lower 
FRIDAY, “Oor. — The arrivals of grain this week, both 
— 1 a and atone have been moderate, — Wheat of either 
ort is a rably free sale at the prices of sig fa eign 
grinding aaa; superior English malting Barley is in demand at 
— quotations.— ee and Peas bes unaltered in 88 — Old 
mai eir ifficult of disposal.— Barrel 
— The weather during the 
— part of the N was cold and — 1 i ~ has kept the 
w Wheat in better condition t e been expected 
romh excessive wer’ of last — ae Tave undergone 
little variation, and the general tone ai the market is firm, 
In Dantzic fine W very scarce, which enables 
holders — N ns a high price in proportion to our quotations ; 
f. o. b., has been again p age = Konigsber: 
lies are yet small, but may 
In the 2 * 62 Ibs. Wheat is 
obtainable at 36s. per qr., f. o. b., but some abatement may 1 
expected ere long. In Rotterdam prices of new Wheat a 
again Is. per qr. lower. 


LIVERPOOL, FRIDAY, Ocr. 12.—At this day’s market we had 
a fair demand for all good Wheats ; the better kinds of foreign 
were ld. per bushel veg and prime qualities of Irish were 

ey, 


was cleared at ‘Sep sacks priees, but — inferior ae es of | ve 


Ditto Shorn Pigs 
Beast, 3218; Sheep and à Lambs, — 260; Calves, 155: Pigs, 240. sn gg ——— mod b — a — 1 — Cern which |e 
—Fxripay, Oct. es was, however, checked by the rates oben yy bae sold 
Pa: and SMITH report t the trade con- | steadily at former prices. 
tinues firm at late prices, and the market barely — with 
new Hops, planters — for higher pri as the IMPERIAL WREAT. BaRLET. OATS. | RYE. | BEANS. | PEAS 
feeling seems more against the Avy adha 80, “Gk we | _ AVERAGES, 
think them justitied in so eg earling and old Hops: mere | Sept. 1..,...... 443 8d) 26s 34198 3d 278 Od] 32s 3d 288 6d 
8 .. 43 ol 27 adis ele th 30 8 fo 
„„ ‘ 0 0 
ö 25. | L 1 nnen 29 9j% 0 
SMITHF FVV 2 21 47 11 25 2 29 531 3 
— — S — 5 4 5 Nen Boi e eee e ee 42 4 27 7 17 5 21 9 29 0 39 5 
pene hes a come * J. Corn, | Aggreg. Aver. | 43 1 27 0 18 3 28 11 30 5 29 11 
2 ie brisk. OOF ER. Duties on Fo- 
c sa dare ek 1k reign Grain 2 9 FOIA ay t 1 
1 705 0 745 Interior „ 35 to Bis Fluctuations in the last six weeks’ Gorn Averages. 
. 50 65 New Clo . m PRICES. Sxrr. 1. SEPT. 8. SRE 15 | Serr SEPT 29, | Oct. 6. 
= — — . Sr 
Old Clover. 90 95 Josgua BARER. 448 8d — 1 — in be ih ag 
; wW CH: 11. 44 6 we * +d “ * 
Fine Old Hay ... 65 to 68s New Clover. ... —sto—s{ 43 0 À sie L oe ca 5 
— 5 55 | Inferiorditto... . 50 60 = : ` soe = | wes ee EA EFS 
ew 9 65 83 2842 — =F 25 * eal 
Old — i N 41 9 M wi yah aad E 5 | one 
London. Liverpool. Wakefield. Boston. Birmingham 
PRICES 3 
CURRENT. (Oct. 1. Oct. Sept. t. 8. Sept 28 Oet. 5. Oct. 3. 2 Oet. 4. Oct. 11. 
qr. qr. 70 lbs. 70 lbs. qr. qr. qr. 62 Ibs, 62 Ibs. 
Seat er? . . det. Gite fhe OAS 6. „ iiss . . d adjud d 
New, red... 338t0435 © 6 66 © 6 bee rie S6 0% 36 toal 5 4.5 98.0.5 8 
„ White. 42—482—486 4 7 06 2 6 9/43—49/4 40 40—45% 6 6 05 6 6 1 
red «+ 38—4438—446 4 6 96 4 6 8/40—44 — a — — § 3 5 85 © 5 9 
„ white ... 41—4341—37 © 7 67 © 7 6 —48| —47 — — 5 8 6 25 8 6 2 
Foreign. —. |36—50/36—50/4 3 7 24 3 7 233—47 32—46 — — 4 8 6 24 8 6 2 
| 480 lbs. 480 Ibs. | 
Rye—Old | 26 23—26 bei anti — — — — 
Foreign... 20—22 20 — 22 — — — . — — — 
Foreigu ee ee Aż m Kg cal bs a 
Barley gr. qr. r. 
Grinding... 2426242 — — 220—22 21—23 2123 22—24 2224 
Maing.. — |26—28/26—28) 30—31s | 30s—31s |27—33/27—33 29—3 29—33 
„ e T8— 218-45, oae 5 . N |) 90 
K 6 bush. 6 bush. 
Malt—Ship ... e 40 none ei ss 
Oats—White... | — | — 419013 —18 19-27 | 19—27 
oe wired — — 0 — 18. — 
i ; a 2 
Peas — Boilers 26—30/26-—30| — ae a 
2 196 Ibs. 196 Ibs. 
— 25—30/25—30 | hee ee Pe | oe | Ti dS tS 
orelgu ... 24—3224—32 29 —32 29 —30 5 aks 3 oe all sae 
1 ees |23—39/23—29 32—3332—2332—34 32—34 12—13 12—13 
— 11—13 11—13 
— 12—13 12—13 
k p. saek per sac per sack 
8 32—38 31—34 31—34 
Averages. Imports. 
Ars. 


Oer. 13, 
Sales ELET 


MESSRS. 1 PROTHEROE a 2 


pe 
Fi 


rm 
iewed, and 

— sale, on the 1 

Auctioneers, Ameri 


Catal 
of the 
n Nurs 
UILDERS, e 
ESSRS. PROTHEROE 4 
by Auction, on the Premi 
Fulbam. Sona Brompton, on FRIDAY 
following Omi at II o’elock ea 
NURSERY STOCK, conalating of es 
fine ln, Roses, Fruft Az „ of 
also a quantity of Poplars, Limes, Acacias, Plants, 
2 ee Cart. be viewed Prior to 
ad on the premises; of the 1 Seedsmen- P 
Auctioneers, American Nursery, Las W — ths 


DALSTON . nes 
ESSRS. PROTHEROEs anp MO 
M wi — — Mr. J. Smith 1 
the premi 
OND DAY, “October 2 2 dpe 


y ones 

e London and Birminghan West 182 TN — — 
ray Company, the —— NURSE RY Btn J 

4 very superior 2 

Pants, Ornamen al Trees, cect ‘Sana 1 
Forest see > 2 

* From the adhesive peni of the soil, Pirs 5 

move — and from their — . “ie. 


, and — 
pp h 

principal Sajne prior 
ursery, Leytonstone, Pee ; and 


AND 


® MORRIS wit ea 


m in Lon an Auctioneers, American 
Leytonstone, Essex. 
AMERICAN NURSERY, LEYTONSTONE. 
re: inhale AVD MORRIS 
ully a their Friends and the Public that they 
aing i- submi; to abe etian tition by Auction, on the M 
NDAY, October 29, ane i op following 
rom this extensi 


and 7 — ican Plants, of ever riety, in „ 
tities. P. and M. ree i Invite an early inspection of the 
varied lots, suited to Gentle — wo to the Trade, 
a 


agai a personal 3 * 
of appreciation € rf ‘this — 3 
with 7 which its stock c 
before the Sele, ee Catalogues wed of ofthe ee ae 
in London 
stone, Es — 
WOKING 
125,000 Shrub, Forest. an nd 8 
oor ao g Quick; Ros 
rR WA r will sell by Auetion, on 
Oct. 22, 1849, at 10 o’clock, at Hook ET 
the Woking Station (by order of Mr. — . 
declining 
dodendrons, Kalmias, and — Tins Suie 
Hollies, from 1 to 3 feet ; 2000 Laures! van em, 
1000 Chinese Prive ts, from 2 to 4 feet; 10, 
d 


0:0 Transplanted 


— ̃ 
SURREY.—VALUABLE. 93 
8 pen = aluable Nursery 


Y, 


on MONDA 
Tery 20 
sare; WD 


3 ur postage 
Ag ent, Chertsey, Surrey. 


— iffee-house, 
w, avent- N Mee 


rr ³˙ÄA ̃cP!ßiee 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


— 


Second Edition, Revised and Enlarged, price 4s. 6d., 


RURAL CHEMISTRY: 


an lementary Lntropuction to the Study of the Sciente in its 


Relation to Agriculture. 
SOLLY, 


Honorary Member of the Royal Agricultural Society of,England, Professor of Chemistry t 8 the Horticultural 2 
Com 


pany’s Military 


PREFACE TO THE SECOND er. 


tot 


Seminar 


R. S, FL. 8 


yat t Addiscombe, & 


F. G. 


In n contained 
F ren loos ok e ah been . — as the pis. state of knowledge. — — In particular, the Tables 5 Pye te — 
plants principal substances employed as 


of the 


DONTENI. OF THE TOPAR, 


1 


The whole has been 


reatly ex ended, 


n on 8 in the Honorable East India 


carefully revised, and 
by the addition of the 


Acetate of lead — Ss by sul- a. Changing Fibre, K o rou Mercury, e — Phosphate of lime | Salt, spirit of Sulphate of iron 
‘Aveta phu | Fibri 2 — aea Metall — oxides o 1 ot mag- Salt, rock Sulphate of lime 
d Blood matters Fibrin, ve etable ron in plant n Salt, sea Sulphate of be 
ghee 4 Blubber $ Colours vegetable | Fir. 1 £ Iron, oxides of i — — ps ll — acid S Salt, solution in — * 
es 1 as ide | Metallic salts ‘hosphoric acid water Sulphate of 
a er nic Bones, boiled | Com Fire-dam Iron, protoxide Metals ms lts — of potas ` 
Acid, carbo of. l Gonitiin Fish, 4 Iron pyrite Milk oric in Salts, Eps hd lum — e 
i calves i ation, 7 É » Epsom 
2 2 — — produced | Fixed Iran rust Minium water Salts, Glauber's r soda 
Acid, lactic of Combining number lane ammonia in mpare — ia," Sulphates 
‘ ini | ron ca | iron Sulph 
a na! muriatic Bones of pigs — — Iron, sulphate of ar | Pine-apples Salts of magnesia —— in plants 
Acid, ni Bones — — ion, results Flint : 2 sulphuret — . composition | Salts — the metals | Sulpburets 
aii Bones and s rrigat pón i ash uret of iron 
1 sen pha ia Common salt Flowers Isinglas Mouldering ö Plants, de death of Salts of —— — — of — 
Acid, pyroligneous | Bran ‘Composition of ani- | Flowers,theiraffect| Ivory Mouidiness | Pian | Sand —.— of silver 
' silicic Brass malmatter | om the air KELP ; Mucilage car — ac Sapphire uret of tin 
Acid, sulphuric ad ' or- Fluorides Lacrie Lar — of ammo- | or ag effect on the — Sade hy- 
Acid, — Brimstone | composition o — 3 Latent heat 8 — tater — exere- 3 . 1 
British gum plan Food of L — of magae- | Plants, growth of — acid 
organic Bromide of magne- Composition ofsoils | Formation eed | Lea Plants, — 2 — of untlower 
Acids, test for | sium 2 — ee in of Formation of — — 5 ee Mariate — Plants, their se — of Suntio lower-seed 
Action of plants on ee — smells u ot ments germination 
ong 5 com — nds, binary — effects o aves Muriates Plaster stone of iper- phosphate of 
Active principles Haas AA AAE T PEHEE A Freezing of — Leaves, office of — acid — — subsoil ee by plants e 
Adlulteration of Buel 8 straw Compounds, saline- | Frnit 2 ine a] r-tartrate of 
ano Spat Burni ompounds, ter- Fruit, ripe 2 — black Shell san tash 
3 „chemical | Burni ing u nary and quater- | Fruit, ripening of i Mustard, white Silex 
— ae in eats aea aS nar, Fruit, unripe Lenti ai 'ETHA, coal tar Siliea Tapioca 
mines Compounds, their | Fumigating by Lettu Nascent Silica, chloride Tarnish on 
Air — composition eblorine Light, effects of ture of the s Silica in plants Tartaric n 
contains car- CABBAGE Contagion Fumigation by sul- Light, influence on 3 ee —— in soil, use of | Tartra 
aci | Cabbage, red Contagious matter hur P Aightsoi ilicates — 
Air — water Palestine Copper — i Lighting a fire ightsoil, Silicate of Ternarycompounds 
Air, inflammable Calcium Copper, oxide ur trom water Lignin fected Silicate of lim Tests, vegetable 
Air necessary to life 28 chloride Copper, pyrites AS pipe Nitrate of lime Silicate of magnesia | Thermometer 
Air, its composition | Calomel Copper, sulphate tas me, action on soil | Nitrate of potash Silicate of Tiles 
Arx resists compres- Candle, or of | Copp das, mmable e and salt Nitrate of soda Silicate of sod. Tin 
sion Can ae 0 Gas, manufacture of — — Nitrate of silver Tin, oxide 
Alabaster Corrosive peng per Gas liquor , burnin Nitrates Silicon Tin plate 
‘Albumen — in plauts Cream as liquor, strength | Lime, carbonate Nitre Silver Tin, sulphuret 
‘Ale contains car- Carbonate of am- Cream oftartar | of Lime, caustic Nitre be || Silver, oxide Tobacco 
bonie acid rops, rotationof || Gas works e, hydrate Nitre, cubic | Silver, nitrate Toasted cheese 
Alkali, test for 98 of iron Cubie nitre || Gelatine e in plants N urid acid į Silver, salts of Treacle 
Alkali, volatile Carbonate of lead | Cultivated land ermination „ muriate Nitric acid, action of | Silver, sulphuret Tropical 
Carb of li EATH of plants eee acce- 2 e 8 — 7 in ma- 8 ei milk ar 
Alkalies, vegetable | Carbonate of mag- cay | erat ime, oxala 4 f-ashes 
Alloys = — . 3 influence of | Glauber salts , phosphate Nitrogen Slaking of lime Turnips 
Almonds | Carbonate of potash | Glass ime, Silicate of Nut l Slugs urpeutine 
Alum Carbonate of soda | —— — burning Gliadine estone | Oax ashes Smelis, foul Turpentise, oil of 
Alumina tes decom- | Decay of bumas Glue Limestoue, magne- Oat Smelting Usare of ammonia 
Alumina ‘by acids Decay, resuits of Glue, si _ | Oats Soap Urea 
Alumina, silieate of Carbonic acid gus Decay, under water | Gluten Lime, à Oil Soap-boiling Uric acid 
Aluminain soil, use Carbonic acid ne- | Decomposition | Gold Lime, super-phos- ap, deeomposi- | Urine 
of eessary to plants — Ferres of Gold, chloride phate Oil, ca uon of Urine, cows’ 
Aluminum Carbonic: oxide i} ras a 33 Lime, when useful | Oil, cloves Putrefaction, infiu-'| Soapmaker’s ash | Urine, ‘horses? 
Aluminum, oxide 3 hydro- — Lime, when mot 10 Vil, coco Soda | Urine, human 
Ammonia | Dew rain of wheat de used Od. drying Seda, carbenate | Urine, putrid 
Ammonia absorbed — Dextrine rapes Limes, juice of Oil. fixed Sı da in rocks | Urine, pigs 
by charcoal, &c. | Carrot iiamond Linseed Oil of lave Soda in plants Urine, sheep 
Ammonia, carbon- | Caseine Diastase Grape sugar Liquid manure ot lemons muriate oee leaves 
e of Caseine, vegetable Diseases of plants Liguid 4 re Uil, dinseed oda, nitr Var of planta 
Ammonia, fixing of | Castor oil stillation 2 —.— 0 l, 1 —.— in soils reo condensed 
ch i Diten i reen manures Litharge olive a, 8 é 
amon „ 2 3 4 Mern i Dou 8 T vitrio Liver Oil, poppy Soda, sui) Vapour in the air 
een tout asta’ | Dom haf Taser 2 apan üi Sodium ve ble 
S Chalk Drai u ii of turpen Sodium, chloride 
er ; Drai = water um arabic —— rot 5 Oil, volatile Soft water Ve 
urate of Changes, chemical ainage v 
il auer Charcoal rang Gum, cherry-tree | Maces Ou of vi | Verh 
` Charcoal absorbs Dung, cow um, resin — carbon. | Oil dregs colour of Vetch straw 
heat ammonia Dung, farm-yard uano ave Qil seeds Soils, analysis of Vinegar 
manures | Charring Dung, horse | Gunpowder Magnesia in plants | Oily matter ls, | Vitriel, bine 
l principles, | Cheese Dung, pig | Gypsum Magnesia, muriate | Ores, roasted 2 Dre 
i i —— —4 Dung, sheep | Har Magnesia, phos- | Organic acids phe gi 
tances 1 rabbit | Hard water prate | Organic 8 Sous, formation of viewed, white 
thing TAPAE — — Ma Dutch rushes artshorn Magnesia, silicate of | Organised Soils, mixture 5 — 
Magnesia, sulphate Organic Soils, | Volatile oil 
Chloride of ma — | Maguesian ‘Ji Organic substanc i | Volatile substances 
seas lire 2 tae *. — | Weer 
Jerusa- Chloride of potas- eat, influence on ——— — eicisetaslt Water, air in 
— Hein em ride | Oxatis ‘Spirit of wine pory action on 
Chloride of sodium Heat, sensi oxide | Oxide, ‘Spring water 
i — — aed Maize ‘Oxide of copper Springs j Water, its composi. 
Maize straw ide ot ir ‘Starch 
‘ch "en Mal Oxide of lead | Steam 
t ; 
Hora Malting Oxide of manganese Stili 
Malic acid Oxide of &raw 
: E . 
2 i anganese 
Cireulation of the sence rest mee Oxides, metallie | Rocks, disintegra- Straw of back 
i 5 Manganese, oxide of | Oxygen 0 
4 eee, ; — Ne a M eo Wurzel Parer bleached by | Roman vitriol Straw = maize 
He drogen Manure a 4 
drogen, carbu- | Manures,animal | Paring Straw of rye 
a Manure, tarm-yard | Parsnip Straw of vetch 
Hydrogen, its light- | Manures, green —— Straw of wheat 
3 Manures, morganie | Pearlash trong manures 
Hydrogen, sulphu- lossof Peas Sub-salts 
retted Manure, liquid Pea-straw | Subsoil 
Ice Manures, organic | Peat ashes SaccHARINE matter  Subsoil ploughing 
Iudian corn Mamure,” ; — — | Suffocation from 
‘Indigo Manure, saline Petre charcoal 
air „strong Petre, salt Sugar 
1 in | Manure, vegetable Pewter Sugar of lead 
matter ure, $ 
I ‚manures Phosphates, earthy Salt and lime f waste 
ke Phosphate of alu- Sulphate of alumina 
Iodine Mechanical division Phosphate of am- Salt in sea water 1 ma 
Š monia f Sulphate of copper 


| PUBLISHED AT THE OFPICE OF rest F THE GARDENERS’ ee plea UPPER reas ames eeoa STEMT, STRAND, LONDON ; 
D MAY BE HAD BY ORD. . 


656 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


BY HER MAJESTY’S ROYAL LETTERS PATENT, 


Portable Steam Engine And Threshing he) 


EN AT WO RED BY 


R. GARRETT AND SON, LEISTON. WORKS, SAXMUNDHAM, SUFFOLK. 


The principal Prize of 50/. for the best Portable Steam Engine, for Threshing and other Agricult 
RRETT anp rie of Leiston Works, 


ee eee to their PORTABLE STEAM 8 and 


9 


Machine, were both awarded to R. GA 


a 
have T undergone co: 
labour. R. GARRETT an ying 
containing drawings and —.—— of their Patent 17 for 

GARREIT and fora s Patent H d for Wheat 
z Rakes, Clo! 


o horse pow 
d the apn 15 * simple 
oe, improvements, — have 3 Patented, whereby a pode larger quantity map 4 e eshed 
every information connected with the above, oni applica 
game Corn or Seeds 


tural p 
at the Royal Agricultural Society’s 


hing and Dressing oe Sern age 
rses Sook ork coi to re it, m 
y be understoo 


arm, su 
three hor 
- re 


n, by po 


Barley, Turnips, Mangold W ursel and any other N * 
d Crashers, ton Field Rollers, and Ploughs of every dee 


witl 


e te London, Hull, or Newcastle-on-Tyne, by water; and to any Station on the line of the East r 


urposes, and the Prize of 251. 7 7 the 


d and pane eB — any pe lhe farm 
_— 


best Threshing 
Meeting, at Norwich, July, 184 
HHN MATHA The 


and Linseed Crushers, 

yis takèt from place to 
labourer, 

e 


s 

nape yqu 
; Patent Chaff Cutters, Dressing and 1 1 Machine 
also Patent Wrought Iron Corn Rick Frames, Read’s Subs 


e GENTLEMEN, NURSERYMEN, & Others 
W 


R. B. AN 8 orem to the late Mr, Jonx 
Kine) will sell by Auction (wit reserve, the ‘ground 
a a uired for other purposes), on the m ses of 


r. 
s Grove-road, 3 xton, on WE Y, October ur, 
1849. at 11 o’clock (in consequence of t — number of lots), th 
mhole o hyo Ho ye NURSERY Stock, ponistiti be Orna- 
7 ruit, and Fore 
sin 


t Trees, Decid ‘green 
Arbor. itz, a nus, “Hollies, 
2 ; and a quantity of Seakale, 
, a Welsh Cow, two useful Ponies, 
s, a 500-brick Cart, a small brick Cart, a light spring 
ewed prior to the sale. Catalogues 
Messrs, CLARKE and Co., Seeds- 
Wu. CLARK, Seedsman, ames re e- 
2 ; and of the Finit Miko South Grove, Peckham rrey, | 


NURSERYMEN, SEEDSMEN, AND OT 
0. BE DISPOSED OF, by PRIVATE CON TRACT, 
able 


whole of the very valuab 
th 


may er 
et at the office "Of Francis Cruso, 
— 1 Assignees.—Leek, Oct. 


T, within 16 16 miles of London, a useful 
th g Farm Buildi ings and 


TO Be ue 
— 


cottages e isin bi h 
122 igh 
G had upon 

Agent, Bi 


ont ae 
me y be a and 
3 ts W. Troms, state 
„Surrey. 


hood 
20 acres of deep, 
are also req: by 
$ Towar. osii Westminster- 
Price 7s. 6d., cloth, 
* 85 F FRANCE, from the Earliest 


sendy Jou, ero ae Market 8 4 
> ing, Kc. A Dwelling 


to'a, B No 


of the 
i of by the Minister of Pattie 
through five 

of Fleet street, 


TO FLORICULTURISTS, NURSERYMEN, &c.—- MOST 
ELIGIBLE AND OLD . BUSINESS. 
O BE DISPOSED OF, onsequence of 
death of the late proprietor, Mr. Jonn Cutts, a 
RANELAGH GARDENS, ROYAL LEAMINGTON SPA. The 
on the south side of the Royal 
Spa, where they have enjoyed an extensive and 
3 and patronage for a great numbe 
posi tio: 


he 
8, presenting an 
e posses: * of a first-rate bona — concern 
vii me! it 
ries, — Hot- 


to 
houses, and Pi ts are ‘on an extensive <_< constructed o n the 


. ity | 

r. WILLIAM . Auctioneer and 

9 Leamington. 

5 WIRE — NETTING.— 
yard, 2 feet wide 


2 erat, 
22 2 
. 


222 


ens. — 


TA 
885 os 


2225 ese 


222 22 
2225 7255 8 

25 2225 Sete 222525257 
222 25 se 2722285 . 


Galvan- ee | te 
ised, 
— nch 2 Are am 24-inch wide 2 * 5d. 2533 
75 ss 

2- —— 77 2 Svog 55 és 1 w S 47 

lj-inch ,, light á 75 H # 

nch strong owe 10 75 8 

lj-inch „ „ extra stron ng. 1 — me se 5 
All the above can be made any! width a tep z 
he upper it wi ne — — price one- 
urth, Galvanized sparrow. pro of netting for oF cope gre. 3d, 

per square foots. tterns forwarded post- 


De NEWINGTON’S AGRICU ann ae 
MENTS.—It has been the study of the Inven 
Implements to in ce a mo 


2 and cultivating the land, e as in a mea 
esent time, The sav 


ew inven- 
gh as eariy as 
persons wis 


ôt in Lon 
— oe apply to 1 8 Agent, 


of thes 
re scientific and saving method of 5 


n Counti d Eastern Union Railways, 
URBIDGE anD HEAL rS inform 
their Friends and the aie ther path bag 
wnat arming of Hot! og ep upon . 


par v 
superior system of Hot Water 3 ‘They refer 2 2 
under. mentioned pmo where they have erected most 
tens sre orks. is 2 
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. 
2 Gardens, Chiswick; particularly 
boilers applied to the large Conservatory. 


CYLIND 


friends ey are now asta ng the 
Ye oppor; by N - cost is a 
ell kno’ 


es, & 
cronan | designs. a Eirne conies, 
0. 


L 
eo its 5 qualities, e 


His m actory t 4, Lea 
Cornhill, "Balanced 3 sets of 50 
1 ber 


. 2 

t sharpeners, , cases mak 
Siete — ‘ous, vee e. 1 peal 
trop a pers pasto have given 


ATE 


— meets 
— pe Ws and the 
unequalled. 


oat 


ny, of 
Baap e 


a “WILLIAM 
e of St, Pancras, 


? 
London, and 17, New Park-street, 2 | 
and } 53 of the Improved CONICAL . 
RICAL BOILERS, respectfi solicit 
System to Pi 


AGRICULTUR 


<< 


THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE 
AL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


No. 42—1849.] 


SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20. 


[Price 6d. 


EX, 
2 value 


FORD NURSERIES. 


IND 
education . . . . 655 a affected b = YF — 
rena gts | Magn cw tet go! A), P, ERANCISS New Deseripiva Catalogue ot| I hates ny nena al ore 
Bread. price Land 12 vem, artist eee e e RO RES for — a — season is now ready, — res Wane, Ca inte a to clear it off his grounds.— Appl 0 
forwarded Fg n applicaton. 2E, Carpent r, Sutton, — 5 ee ere ies 
2075 85 LOWE ER RING BULBOU s R ROOTS, &.— HVA. 1 CHOICE GERANI UMS. 
} ADIOLUS, IRIS. NARCISSUS, AND CO 1 to o Twel th 
475 Onis . ; „ be fer Twelve of the 
— 6 Oxide Seas leaves iirc — — JONQUILS, CROCUS, RANUNCULUS, ANEMONES, LI. | A following varieties, — nts 80s. Armida superb 
2 650 a Plant half hardy ti ED 25 go, m — paas 7 ie und quality, ‘from WM. HA AMIE. Aurora, Belle o s Village, Ariel, Ondine, Sylvia, Meleager, 
ai san 2 = en. | Alonz o, Marian, Norah, Jenny Lind, Lalla Rookh, Phylii 
— iù CEUTE 4 od 637 b . = Se 642 Pana superi varieties (named), 9s., 12s., and 185. Minna, Ter hore e ern Cramer" aad 
Bieta, terial 25 125 7 Z Mr. Lomba plan of saving 662 — doz en common (ns med 6s. per dozen ; 52410 3s. per Vietory.— mas ery, Bedford „ Clapham, Surrey. 
Praia, ‘tie Ache, cor a | pich Mosen Chas bai A er 100. SNOW ROPS, 2 — pes “ó. in osiowa, 2e 68, respondents. 
seres —Vattlie e 
parani + vs 5 Pakete . 12657 b — — * — each, A Priced — may be had Garis on LANGELIER, Clarendon Nursery, Jersey, be be egs 
121 . 850 8 2 . . t that his DESCRIPTIVE j 
Eman: Kher r 7 eco e| 25 varieties of Hardy Annuals, or = — or early spring PEARS with — . iptions of each peerage sige — dl 
; t Shrubs for fences., cg sowing, 5e. ; 12 varieties, 28. 6d. ; fre ost, 6d, extra. lished by Messrs, ae R, Paternoster. row w, London, , price 
4 — eee GALOROLARLA, GERANIUM, * PRIMULA SINENSIS | Is. 64. It will be h andy for Amateure as descriptions are 
n saved = the be ‘Minds, Gast and warranted given in in fu 1, it as well as the stock — 5 
ne. egi eeds o arden * ill 
Bird Seeds, f 1 
os u. Haren takes this opportunity of recommendin — BROMHAM HALL GREEN FLESH MELON 
1 . IMPROVED T FLOWER SUPPORTER for Hyacinths, t| RD WARD TILEY begs most respectfull to inform 
9 Garden 663 a | Wilson's (Mr.) ferm at Newton 669 5 — ae: ‘ — nn 4 ‘an orist’s Directory” rem: the Nobility, Ganis, &c., that he has been favoured with 
. _| simple, usefu and cheaper su fo th hole Stock of $ of th b tifully- 
J)OUBLE ROMAN AND PAPER WHITE NAR. de. whether grown in Pts Grates, ea, poor ELOR, San Me, Dunis, ariane, DIAA Castle MAUN bes 
CISSUS, 4s. per dozen, —The above Bulbs, the former of 1 6s. per dozen.— Address, A 23 eae obtained such bigh repute at the ' London great exhibitions 
whichis so justly esteemed for woh 3 an = 1 A Post-office Order requisite — during the ner. and has obtained two medals during the 
legance, have t n sent to nd twice 
3 at A. CoknErr's Italian and Foreign — — AUS: 3 GEERT, 9 Ghent, Belgium — others eg be the A — flay sine Melan th 
Pall-mall, Waterloo-place. Also Dutch Hyacinths, offers the 8 5 1 fas pecimens of CONIFEROUS tasted, Every particular will be given in future N 
Crocus, Tulips, emones, unculus ; pri a ERANTS at — oderate pric 8. d. nts, Sold in packets of six seeds, 2s. 1 peg pickets 
logues of which may be 7 9 feet high, sacks 4 1 O 0 of 15 seeds, 5, postage aud package free to any pa 
OSEPH BAUMANN, NURSERY YMAN, Ghen „Be ` 2 Damara an tralis, 9 2 — a : i 4 he ga e ee 2 gy nta ‘PAYOU ITE.“ 
begs to inform his friends and the public in 9 ee eee eee eee 
bal Hew ee of PLANTS in jane published, and i PE E er Y 10 rte nee 22 0 0 Mar It is a very handsome fruit, good bearer, free setter, 
miy be had g or willbe den ostfre a on apptloation’ to g * 2 0 0 and never shanks off. Sold in packets, 28, Cd. cach., postage 
Mr. Jons . M, e gnaw and © hipping Agent, Cox and A. V. G. also begs to inform his s, and the e public — | and panaan Erne toang par 
Hammond’s Quays, Lower Thames-street, 1050 eneral, he has still a goa 28 i Dae s, with flow old by Epwarp TILEY, Narseryman and Florist, 16, 
n T NOES buds, of the best sorts. ts from 3 to 5 feet, from 7s, 6d. to Pulteney aridge: Bak > A Snes as NOREN the 
ASS anD BROWN have still fine strong plants of 7 ae 8 fom . ˙⁰l,, dak an an ais — am — 
the following new varieties, last sent out, ready for im- 1 B. Ta printo Catalogue will be sent free, on 1 PELARGONIUMS “' GIrey BRIDE,” . ARE Ke. 
ee Beck into larger pots. o Mr, M, Shipping and 5 N Agent, W BRAGG to inform atrons and Culti- 
; 32 ry Prometheus, on ge 558. Od Cox aha Ham vee d's Quay, 1 ower Thames-street, ow sending 
ý arkler, do 5 0 
. 5 0 | Mont Blane, No. 5 0 y SPLENDID NEW GERANIUM. 
2 eee Oe oven ‘Gate, Whomes 5 0 MONS FIELD MARSHAL” 
| ise . 5 $ © |.Queen Victoria... Et HI 81 isa Striking and Noble Flower, witha remark. 
Or the 12 055 ably fine nant, great freedom jarna 
2 other frst cic ee for 21. 2s. petal. The truss is large and thrown . foliag 
| eg sorts of our own selection #1 $ o hat sat foot-stalks ; the colo — N p 
è collection of older varieties at 6s. and 9s. ‘per do zen. A et, Aylesbury, — t f ingha m i ; first 
bad to Londen 0. — 5 -n piate seat gratis with orders pee ee A iu class showing» at the Mon Floriva: ural Soc twice, 
8 i D $ 
| ý nese fiu thi tal a first prizes in mone 8 South pied T 
Seed and Horticultural Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. — Bahibidon | oe Upo i 7 sas Slough, will : ary ros, should there 
‘report $ 


= LITTLE, King’s- 7 Chelsea, NURSERY- 


. * to the Quee: n, begs to to offer the 
yacinths 3 — at 6s. per dozen. 
” 1 rene Yellow, Bite, Striped, White, 
i at 28. per 100 
RSA ü (ae can showy), at 28. 6d. ed. Per 
— gone mixed Dutch tales es a 2s. per 40 
ed Tulips for borders ( 9 ñ at 5 qet 100. 
‘ olium album (fine <a 6s. per doz, 
| n — tine y 2 48. per doz, 
Can — um š —5 


Ke, 


ntiacum, & 
e Lily 8 
atid pener St 1 1 (strong plants) at 25. 6d. — ‘too. 


Nursery Stock now selling at very low 
Te ie Chels Omnibuses pass the Nursery. 
L @LADIOLI, &c.,—all Strong Flow 0 
1 AM DENYER, Szepsman and FLORIST, 82, 


Gracechurch-strcet, London, begs to offer the following : 
Gandav ensis, a most superb variety, 6d. each, o 


sitiflorus, 28. dozen. 
atalensis, 18. * dozen 
sorts, named, suitable for either pots or 
amed, but in separate — os per dozen. 
choice sorts, named, 48. pora dozen. 
and single, named, the most showy 
per dozen, 
aaa e urs, very pretty, 6d. per dozen. 
many colours, 12s, per 1000. 


lancifolium: —— splendid, 2s. Bae 
for packages, Descriptive and Priced Catalogues 
application. 
PRIZE CINERARIAS. 
to inform — 5 Friends rind a 


see ATHY EL RING, » 
crimson, 
fae Lados. Fl . 


ar ring of 
from 


gained the first t the Horticultural, 

fr me? South London, a and London Filorleuitaral taral, Royal | 3 
ta, following varieties: Amanda 3s. 6d., Adela Villiers 
ah 18. Peckham 2s. Beauty 


9 78. 6d. ” y 
Gaiety 1s. 6d., Jenny eee 
Tirmo ae 
g 5s, 


e Mini 
Sa e * ‘Satelite 20. êd., 
bet ap varieties from 125. 


umn Catalogue of Geraniums, Fuchsias 
3 Antirrhinums, and piloot 


it was one of the four that received i rt of 
Ex — — 1 9 of donee in! No. 19 of the “ Florist. 


dto send out — önnen ra 
era ‘established pla pants ze e with the "usual al | P RINA” and “DUO 8 
NOW SEND OUT BY UELL inp 00. HALES TURNE Jas str rong ph j ra a 
e e CARNATIONS, 0 DUCHESS OF SUTHERLAND” nig 
red e ; the fine apne ae tificates 


1 = Se 8 Extensive and Celebrated Col- 


Y 


lection 3 this season unusually strong and mier see 
ealthy, an —— r out, in fine pools rooted wer and very constant, being quite free from bars. 10s, Ed. 
plants, to an part “of the "Gaited Kingdom, or for on, | BURROUGILES'S “ LORINA ” (light purple edge), very pure 
at the follo ng price white, with a delicate margin, which does not extend Sar leust 
25 pairs of finest . wt ae of Canama into the white; took first-class certificates at Slou Royal 
is — Picot — re — 5 * ndon, and Derby, six blooms at the ska ‘ince, 10s. 6d. 
pecans 3 Y HARRIETT MOORE Se gees m, at times a 
25 span of Tay fine non variaties of do. de 3 í 3 9 henry, y purple edge, large fine petal, smooth — — took 
ni? 46. to 1 10 0 ss certificates at 2 "Royal South London, and 
Fine mixed border aitto—per dozen pairs i wD 0 Derby. This variety, as W “ Lorina,” and “ Duchess of 
True 5 er pair sat 0 2 0 Sutherland,” was shown 8 of C. TURNER s winning 

* „125. 18 and 24s, per | stands this season. 105. 6 
CARN ATION. 

dagen pais. do. 8s, per dozen. a 

CAMELLIAS of the newest and best kinds, with flower-bude, Sane gree SREY, aked, i eh Purple flake, fun, 


308. 
CINERARIAS, do. do., 12s. to 18s. per dozen. 
ERICAS, com the best autumn and spring-flowering 


alf-standards, and Dwarfs, of the finest 


tion, * — enabled to offer 
nam e, e 4 and 

per doz. 
* 65. 


and 9s, per doz, 
TRUE FASTOLFF 5 
Y. and Co. beg to — 
for the above e strong C 8 
adh honour of of supplying Her Majesty’s Gardens and most of the 


See de lana as 


pod, and 


re in a 8 


purple 


3 SIES. 
TURNER'S | “MRS, eront ht: e ground, da 
als, ‘he bold 
‘orm, „n 


Is m: ed with the same; 
st-rate 
thr 


pie 
RNER'S winning 8 * 
Figured in th „Florist“ for May, 1849. 
URNER'S 'u eee e „gold ground, bright e 
; first-class certificate at the . South 


der den A N 1 packets, 2s. 6d. each, 


8. per 100. N 
Pine large WHITE RASPBERRY, 24s. per 100, 5 panies each or 9s. ae —.— n.—A fine collection of 
mported Bul Cata tion. 
‘STRAWBERRIES. arg . 
er to ir fine — — —ʃ—ö (DL— 
FC YARMOUTH BLOATERS—GENUINE AND OF 
18 gn the sa pas Of Kitley bag ne Strawberry, ies hardy, a ns „ QUALITY. : 
large, and of delicious Pin 3 flavour, at 12s, per doz. a has fi ustly ce ; ebrated for its 
Giant Asparagus, 2 and 3 y strong, 2s. 6d, and | well n Ta anit ng sloaters, the delicacy of which, when 
: Sea Kale, strong, 2s. dozen. obtained in their genuine state, requires no com } i 
RHUBA onell’s Tobdtsk, the earliest known, 9s, opportunity.is now . on nen an be forwarded to any — 
2s. per dozen ; Linnœus — ), 29. each; Prince Alberi — 2 = 4 — 8 = fog —— 9 z foe ei. All orders 1285. 
tchell's ome a 
ag - on ae 8 — be pa E pe to E For hick BROUGHTON Y — 


Post-office 


„ reat Yarmouth, 


eean requested from unknown 
| square, 


Great Yarmou 


658 . THE 


V. ARBOREA — the PERPETUAL TREE 


at the London exhibitions; in colour it is equal to the Crocus. 
Strong pla nts 2s. 6d. each, ora plant of each of the two latter 


at | 
| jug to 51, daivered Tee 


GARDENERS’ 


PLANTING SEA 
Anan BALSTON begs to ione planters he has 
still a large proportion of his Nursery Stock to dispose 
f, which, in consequence of having relinquished the trade, he 
v reduced prices. The Stock comprises every 
variety of ORNAMENTAL, FRUIT, and FOREST TREES, 


pen 
having been spared in the collection, and from the light nature 
of the soil in which it has grown, the plants have — ae mass 
of fibrous apen . causes them to grow most ously 


afte re ge nted. 


specimen pia nts, 24. 6d, each ; smaller di o, 6s. per dozen, 
Rhododendron campanulata, caucasicum, catawbiensis, &c., 
100s. per 8 Standard Roses of all the finest sorts, 12s. per 
d 


ozen, A large stock of Evergreen Oak in pots and trans- 
planted ; ao common Oak, Elm, Beech, Birch, Berberis, 
Hornbeam, os t, Go. 


Orders must be accompanied by remittances. Orders amount. 
= ros Nursery, oa 

CATALOG 
OPIES OF WM. W005 AND SONS New sept 


varieties or v 
fo ‘or 3s, the two plants. A . . — 3 oo the 
order, eit pees ps e amount. 
The whole, or any part of “the ah ae will oe — — and 
package free.— Sold by EDWARD rege Pgs e Seeds- 
man, and Florist, 16, Pulteney Bridge, 

NEW AND UNRIVALLED SEEDLING FUCHSIAS, “ YORK- 
SHIRE anaes » “BEAUTY OF RICHMOND, * AND 
te 1 RU TUS.” 

MLEY AND SONS ha aving ova successful 


every 3 5 
For Dr. LIXDLRT's . of the above see Gardeners’ 
Ch of August 18tb, p. 520, under the initials “ G. R—y.” 


No.1, a aA ina ECLIPSF, a large, elegant, — 
3 od ha abit, 8 with th aceful 
kt ibute > render 4i ` 

t is 


of the mos eat showy pe an 
Dr. LinDLEY’s — 5 — : No, 1, tube pale blush, 


* — 8 S oe OF ¥* owers, which a — Standard and half- standard TIRA ane saat aes and 15 
in gr profusion, the utmost advantage. It has Moss Roses, per A* 25 
long been considered that a ai — — th uli w Crimson Moss per doz. 
rties of Venus Victrix, of la d be a great Bourbon Roses, superior sorts, Ba La Reine and Per- 
eratum, and 15 this fine 3 pn have th this desirable re- petual Queen, per doz 3 
realised. pr. LINDLEY’s Empat “ No. 2, tube and tng 3 Greenhouse 1 one of a sort, blooming plants. . 25 
white, stained wi orolla dee olet 2 Choice Camellias, by name, ditt 0 .. 30 
2 size, and — 4 a nice variety, with ae colours a Choice Greenhouse Plants, one of a — byname .. 45 
of | Victrix ; the best of 3 your seedlings.” 10s. 6d. each. 4 Choi pice Meie as, om ofa 8 8 r 5 
ae ysa ums of newest an st kin 8, per ozen .. 6 
ni s AA let pga = nore wa Ditto 6 New Dwarf China varieties for 4 10 


distin and e 

rosy tg the sepals — 
Ala expanding, with live violet ges corolla, e excellent 
an 28 ig 5 has been gre =. Peg red b —— 

DLEY’s opinion 

pate cot ges etl ee Jiga lobes and 3 short 
corolla, a neat aad 1 staged. * flower, with bright 

: Well contrasted colou 7s. . © 


—.— 

be given, when a remi . 

or post- O — iicn ram payable at Richmond, will be required prior 
to the plants = sent out.—Gillingy Riehmond, Yorkshire. 

HOICE FLOWER ROO 

ASS ane. BR OWN’S reeds ae ve Price d Cat — 
of the above, embracing their Super rh Dollestions of SEED 

1 RANUNCULUS, Me wei EARLY TULIPS, IRIS, 

[POR TE D D UTCH HYACINT d o 

The ‘ol 


RANUNCULUS, free by post, wa n — 
100 nh ndid gre varieti 
tto 


in 50 Sne v varieties k 


N HS, imported wi 
— fine Vars., 8. 


tructions for pl 
£3 10 


” 


oS ee 
9 oo 


ditto 
with instroctions r pots, glas 


12 ditto, 5s. ; 20 ditto, 3 roots of each vile wee 
DOUBLE TULIPS, 10 15 s — 

hf of each 
IRIS, 12 splendid named Evglish, to 
Fine mined ditto, per doz.. 2s. . 
12 Salter’s superb German varieties 285 he 


2 
8 
Q 
CQ 
g 
— 
— 
S 
g 
8 
. 
2 
© 
— 


$ s 


00 
ANEMONES, 1 db — 
t mixe — — — 23. ; pee mix doz, 
Fine single, per Ib. ua 
GLADIOLUS, 12 splendid ‘named early: varieties 


t 
12 fine selected early hybrids, 65. { 
Fine mixed ditto, per 35. 6d, kunha 
Sandavensis, 7s, “ea. yer .;splendens, each... ¢ 
1 * mag new Cape 0 


— thes each 
pi — = arcissus, 3 o la 


“NEW —— — 5 
12 ee Paes gas EE Piian po 


* O bo Or 


— SS hm 


Sooo 
p — 


p NGO 


E 
2 


also comprises lists of Select seta 
Shrubs and Ciia Clima —— anda 


neces requested fro correspondents, 
to be made * Bass and Brows, = = 
Pe Resda nd Horticultural Es abli-hment, Sud. 


Kent. 


bates — CATALOGUE may still be obtained, GRATIS 
on applic 
Wocdlands N ursery, Maresfield, near Uckfield, Sussex, 
S . AND H. BROWN have to offer the fol- 
lowing, which they will forward to any part of the Unka 
Kingdom or the Continent, 
Fine Dwarf and Standard Trained Peaches, Nectarines 
Apricots, Plums, Pears, and Cherries ; the best pe 
pp f these respective kinds, true to 
e, 2s. 6d. each, or, per doz .. 24 
Vatrained or maiden ditto, 18. 6 3 or, per dozen „ 15 
— * Currants, and Raspberries, per one 3 
Str Vines, Figs, and les, p Sü 
Filber te new, thin shell and red 8 per p doz, os 
mrep 
Androm 8 l fine established plants weil set 
with bl 
25 Azaleas, new hardy Belgian varieties, on their own 
roots, with 8 3 one = a sort, „n «20 
25 American he „ 15 
6 Andromedas of vee inglading ad 8 
6 Kalmi 9 of a LEE 2 a . 
6 Ledum: 


oe 6 
3 Hardy poe ‘Shrubs, ante ofa sort, by name ve 10 
8 3 ee including — white, and rose, 


S222 


E 


New 8 Yellow Rhododendrons, | ‘each Ts, 6d. to 10 
6 Fine Hardy Magnolias, one of a sort, 3 na 10 
50 Dwarf Roses, on their own roots, by n 


12 8 Roses, one of a sort, by . — in pots 


Fine New Yellow Picotees and Carnations, of best sorts 
er pair 


— 
N do © 
Cm S888 8888 2882 o 


Y do 


Aar new choice varieties, per ‘doze . to 
6 of the following beautiful Lilies, 5 i ’ Lancifolium 
album, punctatuin, rum speciosum, interme- 
dium, venustum, sanguineum, eximium superbum, 
coe TD n longiflorum, and japoni- 
0 yptomeria aponica a 6 Choice Har dy Pinus, for 10 
Fiete of reenhouse, / Ore and Orchidaceous Plants, — 
Garden Seeds of all kinds by post. 
Albion . — il se 108 r Wong 
HE DEN OS AR, 
DESCRIPTIVE “CATALOGUE. of ie 300 of 
THE BEST ROSES in cultivation, propagated for sale 
by ROBERT See Ate BIRCHAM, and will be forwarded 
by prepaid applic 
M. B. = = FOR oman the ae SUPERB pt iy oe e 
Col Prie ce per p plant—s. d 


1 


Salmon ‘ 3 


ů—U—7 —E eee eneee 


sporessosssocseses ries pink, largs eri fall” seres 
—7—b * -Delicate } 


NOOR eee ete eneseeee 


Clar: 
s Dark shining crims. n 
ark maroo 
Wel White, — chocolate ground... 5 
ae 


jj 797˙.U33353633ů3 


ä — 2 


= 
© 
& 
5 
a 
g 


Grey purp 
bight parple í 1 
Beautiful i gir blush . 


. 
= 
* 
2 


sesers 
ä H ꝓ —2**r*ĩ * 
TEFEN 


t Gl 
5 Perfecta Pine sali hur : 
Sulpburea Palmata ......Light yellow . pa omer 
ine org E e a RA 
ark lil 


OO Go bO t tS C bo Crs 


41115 Ba dozen, 


flow: 
TICES OF r ün P 


ted by Mr 


. Biro 
superior Melden ce,” 


ext e for th = York 

erald, 8. 

-N ot omi iea rong —— tion of a m of beautiful 
‘oe — Hede ary, Norfolk. These flowers 
were far superior to anything = * Kind ever before scen in 

1 3 — — ee. f Hol 

MIN pad Snow. w genera of Hollyhocks, from 
Hedenham Rosary, B Nec — unusual 5 on, as far 
xhibited.' 


ary, 
exceeding any specimens of this Hower hitherto e 
— Leamington Courier, 


CHRONICLE. 


l 
Janes PH ILLIPS 4 


LASS FOR ee 


= 
a 


aa 


r 
— 


Under 
55 a ” ne a 7 by 5 
* feet ca 200 E t da 
eet cases of large Sheet Glass, for 

at 2 A 5 — * E 
fect, ace bs fin sin Plat Gis from ie 
HARTLEY: A TATAN ROUGH eee 


= 
ace ee 
8 by 6 83 by 64 “a 


wate 


— 
> 

g 
72 
D 
nol 
a? 


asp Tra 


ea 
h Glasses and De O 


rape 8 
dow Glass 


ass of every 
meters fo 
, 108 ‘Sele kae . 


ubes, 7s. Gd, ; 
meters for Greenhou 
Wilimates aud List of ‘ices forwarded on 


Pr 
Warehouse, 116, Bishopsgate-street Wi — tto thelr 
GLASS FOR CON lr 18 de, 
1 ply 


N CO. — Bae. 02. Sheet Glass of 
ufact s varying 
per square foot, for thie isk from 24, ty a4, 
feet of which are 12 ma e acked or 2 
Lists of Prices and esti s forwarded, on delieg, 
PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THIOR ORONG ¢ = 
TILES and SLATES, WATER-PIPES bend 


7 PROPAGATING 
GLASSES, GLASS MILK PANS, PATENT PLATE GT 
OW GLASS, 
e 
e Gardeners’ Chronicle, first Saturday in each month, 


5 PIPES. 
y=. COATHUPE ES anp 


Co., Gass 
of Bristol, and of Nailsea, $ mere, 
Engineers and others, that they are 2 5 beg tolnfoem 


PIPES A from 1 = kapes bore, in 1 of euS 

the I hs bei as the diameters of the bores 2 

5 FOR 55 AND HORTICU 
PURPOSES, &c. ue 


MILK PANS 
PASTRY PINS 


25 > 1 


PROPAGATING&BEE CUCUMBER GLASSES 


T.: MILLINGE ON, S SHEET fm e eskae 
e feet cases of 


1 — 
Plate Glass, from ls, 2d, to 2s. per to 
Patent Rough Plate Glass, from 105 to 1 inch jn in thickness, from 
1d. per foot upwards, Glass and T Milk Pans from 
>: to 24 5 — diameter, from 25. e len 5 
rom 12 to 24 inches long, at Id. per 
Was — opus bad on — 


each. asp Traps.— Lists m 
warehouse, 87, Bishopigate- prc Without, same — as the 
Eastern Counties Railway. 


HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HES 


ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF THE CHORES nan 
VINES, FERNS, & 


WEEKS anp Co., King's-road, 
© TURAL ARCHITECTS, HoTHOUSE BUILDERS, 
4 20 an 


tion By mean 
Stove, Greenhouse, gre 
pme that aig sse 


ns des! trous of entering iuto t ens nove 08 by! 


Modal, ieh is: is’ Sow i Lond 
security é eing given ; this e tion be 
Piracy. — Get. 20. 


e 


{wba wish fe a 4 


. Soldin 
rti 


q and ¢ Co., U mouth, 
i e adjo oining the Plymouth h Station 
est Devon Railway, b sales of Guano have ex- 

i 2 yt tons during the last five yea 


if 73 NEW STRAWBERRY, OR? 
* NS are prepared to send — 


AND 
MYATT the — 3 at the price 
ertilised Hautbois, 
N 38, 6d, ; oe 


ce, 
orders are 9 100 to be made more to 
a Myatt, Manor Farm, Deptford, — —Oct. 20. 


AMERICAN PLAN 
OSEA WATERER begs to — nee he has just 
EN a New and Complete eer of his — — 
cas fat CONIFEROUS PLANTS, which may be had o; 
inclosing two stamps for ——.— 
TRER, Knap Hill Nursery, Wolini ng, T w 
—— 


8 
has published a Descriptive Catalogue of his pe 
„ iion of RHODODENDRONS and other American 


&c., which will 

M“FOQUETT’S MAGNIFICENT.” 
Strong ach; an pel bpp in TOE pots, now ready, 
A. 2s, each ; ock has been realised than 
——— 2 be given for every thre 
nr by roe Me Trado. ani to Aa WILLIAM FOQUETT, 
Shide ort, Isle of Wight 


N AND AMERICAN PLANT S. 


Advertiser having an extensive tract of Heath Lan 
, has always on hand an unlimited 
scale of price 


— 
e this highly i im pena subject 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. _ 


St. John's-street N 


> R. garay 


y delivery, strong wel 
established lanta of the fol foll oria ng: 
GERANIUM, HOYLE’S CRUSADER . Ts, Gd. each. 
TOPPING’S BRILLIANT |. y Te 8 5 


FUCHSIA al tn gig 8 = 

The Three for 18s., carria ge and p shige fe ndon. 
Post-office or tee + or reference, 3 om unknown cor- 
respondents. The usual discount to the trade. 


„able security nst the introduetio 
-| the water Aan 


shear’ Gardeners Chronicle. 


TURDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1849. 


Ir is reported ned > = garden in es the 
er Hea or t has bee ed 15° b 
1 47 feet deep. This i if true is a 
ay 992 Se beyond 9 that we coul 
it Sg er ell a permanent result—eyen in 
inter is of course ad Pier: the 
9 Circumstances prevent our ini 
the 2 ad 8 1 alluded to; but, van 
0 an be no doubt or s 
result affen approaching it to be of 
greatest larger is attain 
It is r em the frst time, that publi c atten- 
n in the 4 dene 


tion 
On the contrary we 
ous occasions pointed out the 
undoubted fac t that a an increased temperature is ry 
of the most “valuable results of deep drainage ; 
more probable cause of gi immediate sirs velhsiit | 


have on severa 


ers’ emi tonne to a 


g at 
all considerable at such an iss 2 font ; it 
must be admi o positi 
evidence — the su biet 5 i — — therefore, 

sugges friends that it would be hi y 


desirable 5 — s the subject in such a way as 
to le 


It is of no consequence, for ins 
thermometers to 8 employed — 

exact in their indications as those ys Obeervate 

at Greenwich ; the —.— point mata be that all 

the thermometers in experiment should 

with each other, any little error that may exist in 

their aes being common to them all; for it 


ari sizes, and at th * 
— in L — it — 8 of the health of crops than the mere removal of ig no al 1 of soil that 
* water, or introduction of air Cis the soil. The wala. 0 haber nf a ehi: We 
obne ponticum, 165 45 ‘moog {3 3 5 per 1000 nature of deep draining i is 7 „ such re $ render | %, ve want to of different — We say this in 
„ ” additional of air to the roots of plants too 1 
gi 4 1 2 fit some ot inconsiderable 2 spyirecinbles It is only when order that observers wer pe * dete by the 
: 14 foot, 20s. per 100; 2 feet, 405. peř cop draining and hep: tremely’ SOC paij odok aris : micht be farms for bye pa 5 Of 
” 1 ; fit for pl dine out other that any great access of air to roots beyond ok ti 
1 eres 1 rior EEG , what is customa anticipated. Where both 1 however, the. more ¢xach the 
„ fine e 7 06 feet, 30s. to 
s d 00. pet dos ee 2 the effect is certainly m Four r SAER A should form a set. In each 
to 6 fect, standard, single stents, fit axe sty before Bes piece CF lena Which in| | oaa tharmonictes should hivo its bulb 1 foot 
1 ng the fine 11 — and’ 5 semi-hardy 1845 was trenched and drained to the utmost -= Dalan A mper eih y thi 
gate Tres Rhododendrons” m us become ag gen. which the nature of the — would 1 + fan „Each h d a — 
ReopoDENDRON ponticum, white, Gao The trenc was through London clay an to a . “7 it m fom t 
eee 40s. per 100, vel to about 34 feet ; the draining was the t with metal (tin or copper) a4 — = 
ps ze 15 15 3 to 4 feet, 3 er 16454 11 — 5 the ground, the space e betw n the 


scarlet (3 or 4 varieties), 1 to 2 feet, 188. per 
dozen, on — 
243, per doz 
new silver pne ea 2 fet 1E 183. oer do: —4 
RE polaran * rbore d catawbiense, 
ndsome 


i 2 which may be ha 

F. Rose Stocks, fit for working, 8s. per 100, or 2s. 6d. 
‘Wx. Rogers, sen., ——— and Contracting Planter, Red 

| Lodge, near Southampton, 

WORK ISLEW 


8 
13 
1 . 
T of f hues, 
mi ‘ey 45 mus, b, Jlac, an and ses of lovers of various hus, Ashes, 11 to 13 wae wr <a 
init s peeo 24 inches growth; Douglas Firs, transplanted be- 
Ar tug A lene: ee Spe i tween August and October 1848, 15 to 31 inches; 
* 182 155 2 } Blooming. Cryptomerias, _ 21 to 24 inches; and Hollies 18 to 
r 1 ants "ia ches, Bering e last summer ; and what is not 
Intas rents Gre 1 (blooming), Sie feet, t, B08.) . per doz, | a little remarkable, a Fuchsia has lived in this place 
rie ; ; A 
All Doriana- Pia Plants —ůů— giles, printed te omi ahy ee 22 a ae pa 1 
d 


purposes 
use at Women COTTAGE, 


ter Tank Co 8 n for 
fitted to hold Ki ae! foe Orehidaceous Home 
given fo r Wor 


— of ‘Slate Slabs, ofall sizes and 


h | trenched woul ae Age bear Gries enough to 


t could be no deeper. 
was planted ; and the following is Pye 5 * of | ™ 
Aga 15 the trees after four season s’ growt 
5 feet; Elms, 12 to 13 feet; Oaks, 12 feet 


© grown 


m. gene 


ral in the. highest possible health and 
ito 475 in a cold Tetik nacious clay, ch 
d 


before being 
make 


it worth cultivat 
improved ‘condition of the land has no doubt 
his ; 


0 
j upon Drawings — in 
. & t 


ao 


5 + m petals ; 
seme righ bien 5 ros 1 with purplish 
with white centre; the best 


inne me a shaded crimson, under 


| Petals rosy 7 

i 1—Upper petals n with crimson spot; 

bee 2200 05 crimson purp! 

HERO oF SUR 1 EY Up veined ; 

= white, with a carminespot in each ; 

N aman SHOW GERANIUMS. 

1 aed w rose, with crimson spot, mar- 

excellent sh pe ms Fes; 12 6. : 

shape, 

'N.—Fine t shape, colour ur fst n spot in 

ct, fine forme 31s. 6d. 
pper petals rosy scarlet, with — 

under petals rose—a perfee 


; the b — 2 ker Ppa xc. 


81 
SEEDLING FANCY AND OTHER | rature of 


— cenit ‘black, belted with 


dark spot in the | ne. 


Cherries, which was pla bout 22 years ago in 

a heavy clay trenched 8 to an iron pan on 

it lies. For a few years the trees grew pretty well, 

that is to say, as long as their roots were near the 

eee d received the warmth of the summer's 
ny as they advanced downwards the growth 
came he small by degrees and beautifully less, 


till at last it cease “st, and nothing flourished but an 
abundance of grey lichens, ‘with which the branches 


rates as se jus 
tioned; such a thing pier — * 855 tree , 


charcoal o or dry loam. In the bide of the casing, 
xt the bulbs of a en i should be 

peo Above the 2 vel the tubes should rise 

to the same hei adjusted to ne by 

which the 3 E might be 

indicated. e ‘Following — will assist in plain 

ing this descriptio 


* 
This would be an appara s extet enoia for tho 
urpose ; or various ¢ vances might 

Mel of; even a 33 fe 5 diag ape 


thought 
| experiment require two sets of 


were covered. The r was advised to drain it 
3 feet below fect N “the first year afterwards | 
tality was roused so effectually that the lichens 


Py ens cast winde by ips pases bark, and 


; a a ARGYLL,—Bright pink, crimson spot in the 
att Moony ls nearly black, edged with rose 
et ee a 
Vi 
DISTINCT SCARLET GERANIUM. 


Society ; 1 ; 
| prizes 5 the same a 
for distribution 


oils bg oo early iu 


the seco: 
1 
te 


ste soil. 
t-class pee 10 


th it as as it ihe sits ; the 
e gain in 2 var is s variously estimated at 

0° to 15° mmer—an enormous gain, | 

which rag plants c ona hotbed —for soil neen 10° 

above the temper, 


a 


ery, Ferse ite awit 


Deep inne therefore, aoe eis y . — ai 


: 5 o'clock (te pa the 8 and to — 10 
indications ; 


; t would 
79 * as near each other, 
“be similar in texture as possible, should be © 
4 feet 


ld be drained at least. 


accidents 2 cov > tne 
Jagme of the "gardenen. 7 of some cee f 
the apparatus every afternoon at 


4 feet. 
22 


2 feet. 3 feet, 
* 1, 1849. cy 22 5 : aa ; 
2, 


n 


laity, 2 
comparison of ih oe ‘registers would give e ha 
reall . i 
some public-spirite a 
different pref — will — He yn 
pomaka earnest. eag 


cost, 


not a. thought mere : 
Hmpertance of the results to which it must ara ig 


660 THE 
idered. The experiment would determine, 

not a mere point of abstract 5 28 75 but a question 

more intimately connected with the cultivation of 
than . The dis- 
e relative value of dee 


fo adjust their differences in a manner satisfactory 
Zo the public. Ford the present we vote for the deepest | 
draining ; the proposed trial show whether we | i 

Fag 

ers will probably remember that w 

published a — since some figures of 7 — 
EAVES which appeared to have been BORED FULL 
wots by insects, and which 7 
produced in the late trial conce ing the lton 
alkali works would of course haye sworn hea s0 
pi iend, whose attention was dra 


fri a 
the subject by the remarks then made, has jus vi 
us some leaves in exactly the same state, pierced |3 
with holes iy the oride of Toad om a refining d 
eins i ew hundred yards from their 


lea Sa 


Be wil fe power, and ort . the 
e of 


This is no doubt a circumstan 

— occurrence in the neighbourhood of all | s 

works from whose chimneys acrid vapour is allowed 
do escape. 


VILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENING. 


ndre 
The gardener described it as falling | nella Z 


GARDENERS’ 


June. In the species which feeds on the — 
(Yponomeuta Padelia; the larva also feeding on Prunu 
padus), the cocoon 

apres the enclosed chrysalis to he se seen ; and the wings 
of the mo 


ntil very recently several of the species of the genus 
o which these ong have been confounded 
together, and it h n ag “age that the hee cows 


ag a tr: on 
gs (Mr. 


in 

rs (changed by Zeller 

TeaM. which feeds on ‘the Sloe and Whitethorn ; 

Malivorella, which feeds on the Apple ; Cognatells 

eeds 

n Eu ropeeus ; and 

authors Padi of “Balle. Mey feeds on Prunus pa- 

; Mr. Stainton adding the following note, “I fully be 


fied in naming it as a 


minute black dots, whilst the cocoon is equally 3 


e villa 

i grante r that the 
preparatory advice which I have deemed it judicious to 
offer has been acted upon. bet re 4 — 7 ortunate | 
enough dee e ay ep other glass structures 
have the means of sec i in their own hands, not so 


chrysalis ; — side within the 
masses of web a lea 
in our woodeut, which also exhibits the caterpi 


moth of the natural size, as well as the caterpillar mag- 


Bhose who possess neither; an — Tf fear is the mos 
numerous class. To them, therefore, I will devote this 
„which may be 3 a chapter of expedients, 
not become down e winter is 
at hand, and your er * ts very night appa- 
rently doomed to d tion. Let your cellars an 
rooms be routed out. Old empty casks and boxes 
are not to be 5 if prop y 
m ; and it is not less astoni 
thousands of the flowering plants whieh 8 year 
adorn the stalls in Coventgarden ouse 
winter. Let these 1 or — be 12 od upon their 
si mo of soil from underneath 
them. Then place them close 2 nd heap soil 
all and around the sides 3 can be 
procured this will be more readily applied. Whatever 
material is employed let it be - naged as to carry 
of the rains. stow e plants away in their It is lamentable, in certain seasons, to observe the be 
winter q ke all in a per- | devastation caused by this insect to the foliage of some 
fectly dry state—i condition which I have varieties of the Apple. Not only have we observed the 
insi on with much urgency. Some coal- j| whole of the leaves of trees devoured, but the trunk 
ashes or dry sand will n required, in ich the = ee well e small twigs, covered with a 
pots are to be fally plunged to their ri when | strong, shining white web, om the caterpillars have 
this is the mouths oe these receptacles must rising hit festoons of the same 8 from 
be kept open so ap ja as rw e, when there is no the branches. Of course, it will be at once perceived 
danger from fros — over the mouth of that this strong coating of web over the young shoots 
the boxes at night, will rs ‘lr that is required in ordi- | must render it cult, if not impossible, for young 
mary weather, ere frosts set in, of long | leaves to develope themselves. Our friend, M. Guérin 
duration, greater a thick ering e | Méneville, who is n occupied in ce, under 
necessary. It ldom that we have frosts of longer Government commission, in investigating the habits of 
duration a fo ; therefore these boxes may | insects injurious to cultivators, has just pu — . — ey 
remain shut up without much inj r that period ; | notes on a insect (which he, however, still confounds 
on plants to sanlight, if they are i , which are well worthy attention as 
3 ntrary, let ually thaw in their practical utili ty. “The inhabitants of the depart- 
the dark, and only expose them by degrees. By these ments where this malady appears have no Tera 
being strictly attended to, Pelargoniums that the caterpillars are the first state of the ś 
and all the principal flower- lants may be pre- | merable sasi white moths which fiy about the fields 
wich the months with suecess—of | towards the end of summer, and, being ignorant of the 
course not the same op omg foliage as in a green- ich caterpillars undergo in order to become 
house, but in a po or planting in the open perfect insects, they regard the e 
ground next summer. s, and as having no 3 with the Apple trees. 


e 

LL ERMINE APPLE 
THERE are no species of insects spe injurious to the 
the 


foliage of vario an the e 


of their four 1 d by numerous — ota OF 
jet Black. 

Nothing is more co in the early summer 
months than to observe the Whitethorn hedges covered | 
with what is generally termed blight, or, in other words, | 
exhibiti ainoo Of Ges 'atincts sof insect | | 
belonging to the order and consequently 


Ie 


necessity ] meas 
stricter force the law 


ts lándlords, with their 


the period | 
t they remain in 

ry webs itih ad to the branches. 
em 
bla 


ever, and experimen 
nches 


by the more careful grower ; and hen 
of genera measures s, such 8 the putting into 
of échénillage, compelling 


| Persons to destroy the caterpillars.” (Anuales Soc, Ent, | ¢ 
de France, 1848, p. Ixvii. 


p. 
Ita ppears to us also by no 3 A to destroy 


or the perfect insects as soon * ave made their 
in 1 and before a Sire oe their eggs, 
ultaneous appearance the whole 


he 3 sim 
in the eee 3 de with ‘the very con- 


moths, will render 


CHRONICLE. 


m the former tree | 
wh 


so opaque that it is impossible to perceive the inclo — He 


A sheet may be laid benea 
s | time, whieh should then 
e oths, which 


by a very minute rous pamai P in ea 
the genus Encyrtus, such numbers of which ane ES 
the body of a single caterpillar, that its gl n 7 ià 
shrivelling up, is distended and drie ed, 80 ated of 
proper form. J. O. W. 5o a to Petia ig 
. —— 
e OF er 
GENTS eie 3 one 5 ü — 
It is not uncommon to find in the middle of 
trees p — of dead alburnum, with in em 
bark, entirely covered over by wood, This dried- p 


g 
8 K ; 
1 % 
rf 


F 
BERG 


F 
E 


Poplar wood. 


E 
2 8 K 
£ 


yet matured was more likely to suffer, 


rinti, iah, 
—On the stems of various: tar aag oy 
pesan trees but on those e 
e country, may 
seaihd or striæ, which follow the di direction 


reason, resinous trees are th 
Genus XVIII.; CARCINOMA,* 2 e 

— It is certain that pe owing marshy 

f the jat, are — 

peculiar maladi Suchi 

sent one. 

from whi ch exu 


d which are placed in aquatic 
often soe ed to the “ht extremity by ae 
n called ca 


SUPERFICIAL Canonova Ta tis a8 : 
— 


t only is the exerescence extern rnal, but the 
not only is 


of this 


cem n the occasion of explai ee 
— . I shall enter into 


important process 
Gossip ABOUT GRAPES. 
Rust.—In some remarks in a form . s 
-| Gardener Chronicle upon a 
tube Greek word for à 


108 
vital functions precisely in that part which by not bern 
And as Nat ; 


such Carcinoma. 
nker, I distiogys 


bee f= e- found scattered — | 


various causes ; by an , 

the proper development of the epidermis of the 

„ In that opinion I quite concur, and by way o 
corroboration I wi 


42—1849.] 


which I once ~ ich I once sent at for yo our inspection n, you ou observe that 
& the disease kno 
dently caused the 


wn by the name of € rust,’ which evi- 


8 
$ 
a 
B 
2 
8g 
= 


f 
will mention some instances which have 
wn practice, of the rust being pro- 


occurred in m 
duced by different ere 
I ha 
tensive Graperies, ae of = arly 200 feet 


addition to a Vin 3 rafter, there 
the back wall, an also what might be 


and rub the young fruit very much, and the conse- 
was, that all the Grapes thinned by that person 


d 
sweaty hands is the sole cause of the evil, which is re 


wrong, as the following case will show. 


There are at thi 
several sorts of Grape 


— in cold, heavy +d pro in 3 only the 
su 


f 


some that e 
l di rng in 
ose 


is place two Vineries, each containing 


"1847 all the Grapes in this Sans e, 
he eens 


Now, rough handling could not in this case have 
ced this excessive state of the disease, ae 
b 


<r 
by syringin 


itself as soon as e berries were 


to de — fon the s had never been syringed 
th f 


flu 
1 which has since c y 
with an excellent Grape grower (Mr. Frost, of 


is completed, and 3 consequently, the sk 


e more harden ed, n o bad — wil 


follow, provided tvs fumigation — carri 


The 


rried too 
acts therefore abundanti pet — 
causes. 


the 
ts which it touches, they 


are not killed by it, and as 2 increase with wonderf 
Tapidity, any small mamare = may have e 


à the fire must be immediately damped ; and if the crossed with thum produced | each 
apparatus is so warm ihat at is appre-| mea and when the latter appeared to 4 
1 from the fumes of the sulphur getting too power- | r'pe, it in three ; some on a log, wi 
a little air should at once be given to the house. It natu growing on it, suspended in a shady part 
to n the safe side, and not volatilise too the Orchid-house me was sown on ark hr 
sulphur, even though it should be necessa -pot, the inside of which was st Ma 
days . Some say| sphagnum, and pl in a of er, W 
ìs safer to saturate the atmosphere of the ho well, as keeping the pot moist was 
ore g the sulphur in this er of these two sowings ~ 
syringe Vi regularly, with a view of third sowi p a Rap coy Hed the 
spider, should be careful th 


B esis 
= 2 time) foel a pungent —— in his nostrils, 


THE GARDENERS? 


strong — of water a against the tender foliage. I have 
seen the leaves of Vines cut to tatters by being syringed | 
ith aie force. J. B. Whiting. 


BRITISH ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCE- 
2 woh T OF SC rig i 
tinued from 


Friday, Sept. 14— 2 a E. STRICKLAND Af 


ead the ninth report of a committee, consisting of him 
self, _Prof. Daubeny, Prof. faking and Prof. Lindley, | g 


Vitality of Seeds, During the summer a portion 
of each kind of seed pk in 3 1641 and 1846 were 


e. | sown at Oxford and Cii må be erti with a few zi 


CHRONICLE. 


sand. ird inside of the pan was about 3 wide 
and 2} in ne on it was filled w 
was e of cork about 8 inches wido and È 


N —Sect 
ò Action F Carbonis “Acid on the Growth of Plants, 15 


an 
ss detected. Even bereik lignite when thus 


soma 
ve» and one specimen seems to be of the genus Voltzia, 


1 
is not quarried there at present. The only ani 
re ities are th and 


E Surrey. No expe riments were 7 ed this É ne rat | 
Murra: 


Cambridge 
the curator of the Botanic Garden. The committee are 
very desirous ne . seeds sent them whose age can 


inch thi thick. remaining portion 
the cork, sich si then gently pressed under the 
f ng held there a short time, it was 
caused the — 45 adh 


of seed on 


and agg pte five N on pig 
med to 
Fad fast fast glee of ae cork 18257 gen ‘about four 
months o d. At that tim 


p 
pressed a hope that as the committee oe now — in 
* 


which produced seeds which for the longest 
tens resisted the action 2 the vital forces. The relative 


rangement o the facts mig! ht be made, although on 
previous occasions the committee felt that the data they 


i Knees a were too few to yield anything like satisfactory | es 


n B, CHEMISTRY. — Report 


BIOI 


ot the water ri hras 


time E os pias look looked 
to grow, and their 


for two reasons—first, it 
to cause the o ge 


the cork in water and covered 


ade N be bees, 


remained about three weeks : at that 


healthy, — the roots had ceased 
brown. I then placed 
4 over with the in 


. were in active growth. 
Cork appears to be agree or sowing Orchid seed omy 


it; and secondly. eae the plants require to 4 
rated the operation can be done without 
injuring mes, 3 — cork can be divided with a 


Dr. DaUBENT.— report, having emana rom t ot 8 e mar n Naas d or in a pot 2 
combined recommendation of the Chemical and Nat — Pea Esq., West Bromwich, Sta affor Shire Bag 6. 
History Sections, was read Section B to-da: Pot th he ink Hillocks-—The followin * lti 
A f port is given above. — vating Po given in the Belfast Northern Whig 
NT was associated Dr. Daubeny in} of October 2d but t b I bolova Si. fe 
this inquiry, offered a few remarks in gen con- | Drogheda gut In, ait — ** it tated 


perienced in growing the plants in perfectly air-tight 
vessels wa reat, owing to the Fe be g 
nhealthy under those unnatural conditions, that he 


mixed with water, potash could be ——— 


Section C, eee, E. STRICKLAND ex- 
hibited some specimens of vegetable remains in the 
Keuper Sandstone of Longdon, Worcestershire. They 

are for the most part fragmentary and obscure, but 
me of them appear referable to * eo Calamites, 


that Mr. Kelly v oul 


lanted on 


ber 
dig out Potatoes, which he had 
rinciple, on the following Monday. 


p 
Ace cordingly, a e attendo at the place 8 fo witness 


the resul 


highly aged at 5 
by. | Kell bed to his 


last four or five years, 
this, in short, t ny the 
distinct 


ent, and we must say we were 
sucess of the new system, Mr, 


of the fhe Hight- wbich amounts to 
blight of the Potato stalks is æ 
from the calamity of the 8 


calami 
That, in fact, the plight of o stalks was caused 


mentioned ud i 


any creams 
was harrow 


inc from 
then had the stems gently 
from the centre to towards the circumference, ede had a 


* frost, and the rot of the tuber was caused by rain. 


bein 

e | carbonaceous, as is usual with fossil plants of so great 

° | antiquity, they are of a light brown colour and highly 

elastic, resembling recent dead leaves. en viewed 
ier 


| under the microscope, these vegetable fragments exhibit : 
the cellular texture in great perfection. e only other — 
locality in Great A 


Britain where plants have been found 


0 
dorsal spines of the Hy 


Home ici eee 
ids from Seed.—1 have read with i interest the 
revious communications on the and raising of 
hids from seed, which have ap in your pages, 
d, from what come under my notice, I have not 
ma least doubt of the practicability of the affair. Den- 
drobium nobile D 


: i 3 — 
bout an inch wide run roun 
a betes about an br this with 


nd had the m 


ue, no 
in such good stead 


| tion to correctness in n 


plan 
camo upto omega ia a * height he had “aided the 


i 
1 
2 
5 
E 


a ; 
A 

571 
teg 


-2 


so as to keep brag — that position. In about a 


turn up their ss ez 


1115 


ould placed in the centre, 


have them all sound. 


i 
165 
AE 


before, have failed ua this year. 
J. M‘Cormuc, M.D., Belfast, Oc 3 
When 


It is not many days since, in passing a 


GARDENERS’ 


an increased demand for them, nurserymen might be 


eielon per shop in the vicinity of Covent Garden, | enabled to to supply them — cheaper, i in consequence of 

kósa tT saw sed for sale, atthe door, and labelled Bella- their attention being m T Be to their Pe ee 5 

33 ‘iis 8 of bulbs in blossom e e | tion. [ Yes, yes tw s cheapness ? hi 
wi 


8 e 
but of carelessness ; but, whether eres) 720 care 
wi ers ou o be 70154 
5 Fs the source 
e popular Wate “who 
ths of t wee 
g alluded to, eA the 
attached to them, would be content to justify their jn 
y 2 such oe ion as“ this flower 
5 et ae eed-shop, and the name must 
1 There 
ness of n menclature, resting upon tradesmen who 
Ar 
5 es sent for your opinion my 
g Grape, which is a hybrid between the Muscat | 
am fir 


that of the "Black Hamburgh, with 1 a 

edly — —4 flavour. Appears highly de- 

ref rinri I. 
splend ‘often grows many feet in height 
when it does flower well it is a 


y 
tak it,as some of your readers know, 
but I t I am totally ignorant of thi 
late too prevalent d e sure that there is some- 


E ee 


stun responsibility for correct- | and 


ix-| glaring a light ; 
removed, a the 


few of ‘these are fit Akg pieten if they are to guard 


pe] n planting Potatoes.—In accordance with 
your peel se, I planted ou the following kinds of 
Potatoes without manure in October an ovember 
last, viz., Forty-folds, soundest ; Kemps, 9 a fourth 
dise ased ; Clusters, a sixtee nth ; York Re 

f; ups, two- thir Clusters dug out 
tops ‘were fading were ee diseased than thos 


recommende red, Bri 


pve: 


rne 
6-light 
eac 7 side by dae, ; eight lights ae 
. a separate range, b E ar ae 
mparison with the abo . “ regar 8 the hoo and 
vigour 0 the foliage, = 
2 


8 
ed 
© 


2 an — — Sunderland al feed * 5 ee 
mended it highly for this N which he had Marder | 
to his satisfaction. He stated that he had some larder 

windows glazed with 21 0 


nd were reglazed with 3 
plate, but it was found that the latter diffused the Now |! 
even — powerfully than the sheet hon done. Now 

that m ss, I ae no 


oses of horticulture. Has any one give 
ines, Peaches, &e., or for a conservatory; i have little 
doubt of its answering sample a short time 
ubl and 


a Ww. 
s Robe 


g f on Fuc 
of the many of your correspondents who have suffered | of hies * tried 


10 houses plante d 
of which except ar ha e their 


n this dilemma, that let 
the physician be ever so skilful, if t the patient wows follow 

e no hopes of his recovery. 
. Castle, Oct. 15. 
or 5 the 


preseriptio 
James Pe ee 


tal Shrub season 


i f planting 
and pleas shrubs to form hedgerows, be, for Ba —— 


plants. 


‘The advantages of our own i day: are 
rs 


far | beyond those possessed by our 
res The many beautiful thin 


globosa, Sweetbriar, 
room makes a 


elle: 

gro bearing = oe fruit 
is very pretty. oe 

in situations exposed to 

The Eve 


5 ; uated 
flowe 
the Be finer 1 5 would n 


an t 
a "ood the eae 
would i ah 


of AS il worked o 
0y shk 


Gite oneas 5 fri- a 


se 0 nee. 
perou things that hve been said and written to the 
contrary, my opi 5 | tents of the bladder. 


ise Euonymus ttn, whi which Ps 
e Syringa | e 


ris, 
chsias Serratia a and Napoleon.—In the ing 
a few plants of F. serratifolia in the front 
If 


a conserva tory, an 


I had 3 plants "of 


ated in ye 1848, which, when 
ig 


. R. F organ, H. 


325 ee Lomba's * an 1 of saving Potatoes.— 


un 
On the 16th of August, four days after the disease had 


first showed itself in the fiel d, I had 


s plan has 
carefully weighed against two equal Spots, one just 
iÍ skars, and the other just below it. 


1, Above 
2, os Some 


F. Z. 
g Forest Trees . the ‘old d contro- 


1 pr of fores 
me 


vig EIR to the subject, befo 
Notwithstanding all the 


latter particular 
where are to TA heen baa specimens showing 


CHRONICLE. 


ough p and 
Macphail pit, 5 a e lighis o a Wi 
with t 


of it in 


ng probability of the truth of 


Here is the result: py ht 


een for some | from D 


um at Kew, | 


re 
hardly a kn ot to be 


Sotieties. 
u e e Oct. 17.— 
n the chair. — A large meetin 


omm B 
— 75 eonfine his attention to the pent 


wayne, and seen 
anta he had with one exe option fe pa od ee 
matters passed by cholera patients on rd the Drea 


7 
TT 
ar TI T o 


ankester, and the other int in 
whisk evidently exhibited “the characters of 
red 


ane of the g f e coarser kinds of 

our this membrane was not separated, and he made nọ 
doubt that these bodies dos introduced with the bread 

ten as food. A third form o more definite 
bodies was evidently due to the pr m 
starch ules, Dra of all these bodies were 


[=] 
5 
0 
8 
B 
. 5 
8 
ob 
— 
D’ 
fe] 
Q 
E 
E 
oO 
ph 
5 
© 
5 
2 
& 
Aiz] 
= 


8 E conser A that ap 3 7 
tion of cholera ha io y not yet been 

r. C. Woodward, o í Islington, said that e 

that "things whieh persons took into their stomach 

might 28 * of the e ap 


Dr. Brittai others. Mr. To ping had showa lin 
* 3 k mixture, an 


Fg 
Bbe i 2.2. 


rawings 


e fungoid theory, gav® 
account of the rapid development of fungi in the bodies 
i ibited drawings of the sa 
0 


stages of egrati tion, an 


disint the same bodies 
also been said to be fungoid had been fi found ia 


in a very | 


FEE 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE, 


42—1849. ] 

————— 
science, Sience, to whom the town of Ipswich is indebted for | 
one of r | country, 
Sir. Ransome’ N 


towards the free in 


rl of the co-operation of his friends 
me’s ga de 


e — 0 
ts of those to whom he felt — for — 


me 
that may arise from the disposal 

the prints aapna to the funds of the Institution. 

Among the 


ts alr ued are those of 

ý „Nr. — S. Bowerbank, Dr. Buckland, 

Mr. Gould, the Rev. Prof. Henslow, Sir William Jar- 
. v. Will Kirby, Sir Roderick Murchison, 
the Bishop of Norwich, Mr. Prideaux Selby, Mr. 
r. h, Mr. Yarr and Professor 

They to be succeeded by portraits of 

e orbes, and oth 


i original, are beau- 
tiful specimens of een art 
We ere — no such collection of contemporary 
tie wil P re been offered to the public, 
pro re most ungra tent if r not secon 
some’s benevolent intentions by speedily e 
— the whole of the small i 8 i argi 
purchased. 


-account ot its vag — habit. A fin 
Miltonia candi in flower, and another of the |8 
beautiful Dendrobium ba Bopa the fragrant 
: as Just coming into bloom, and 
ave , Nepenthes esiana, ose 
curiously r Tormod, — brown mottled pitchers are the 
one who sees th 


0 


Tayo cireums is will keep it gay 
til November or even later, after which time its tops 
down an ed. 


# 


9 9 oe vity when | 
The he pal poiat fo hep ther free om | 


, of eimens 
which we have formerly given some ‘account, was that of | 
ction of the working | 
in the science of Natural Hiag, by providing 

um, libra: ry, lectures, 


— 


pr divides the orchard 22 ‘ie arboretum m, 80 
e the 


. | (8° and 4° below fre Ar tliat 
i it is warm eri but to re . it is at present 


regularly twice a 
- ag Fi hich this 
1 
nora gn blossom well about 
little tree of Benthamia fragifer 


ayaa Ww 


“seer er week, 


h the P. h-wall which 


ien 


so as to form 


exhibition. This sE Holly 
hedge, which, previously to being a ag sents 
flower rg en from the arboretum 
5 yea 


0 
The Me — tuberosa has been tried in the garden, 


with the view of proving its capabilities as a substitute | 
tha 


for the Potato, but 
it has thriven 


late frosts 
eezing) alm 


impossible to say. 
We understand that in consequence of the frosts 
ed the blosso: pel of — — K the 
Pears, 


rudi 
have resolved to suspend for this . the distribution 
of wh 


specimens of these fruits 


GORDON CASTLE, ee eta N.B. THE Seat OF 


as do also the — ot wept 

tory possesses fine i 

ima—a plant about 12 feet igh | 
Christmas, a 


u | place the pots out of doors, * kee 


THE Du KE O F RIcHMON Į 


O 


of the bulbs flowered, and, 


e. a 
similar, another flo 1 in 1846. — beng presi 4 
flowered in 1847, and ne * in 1848, 


a thus uire a year t 2 Ae 


is year forms, on wever, exception, 
wer, one of which i is that now 


ecting seed, and I then 
th late 
into the autumn as possib] 
wn so lon 


1 8 that liquid manure is occasionally 
en them when the 


also two er Brunsvigias in 
flowe therefore, not so 
difficulty in blooming these plants as has 
hitherto thought, Chas. Leach, in the 
Journal Horticultural Society o 
London, 


On the causes which determine the fall 
of Leaves. By Dr. In 
of the Literary and Phi 


J 
and vigorous, in the early spring, we 
find that there is a 
mar 


2. F 
gi 


our 

aid, — shall — that, at the pe canai line 
of dem 5 . is simply an 

deposit in the cells composing the — and 

i its 


elsewhere, or oceasionally a 
terial. Iodine, at = gi . whole 
pares ce of a 


oak ease the leaf or — At 
this time the leaves require considerable force to sepa- 
rom the branches so much that we 
sometimes find that they bring — them some of the 
od from the parent stem ; branch is eut off 
and dried, the leaves cannot be — from their attach- 
ment without great skill and management, showing 
e joint is not yet complete. By and by, however, a 
i place; with the advance of the 


proximal side of the — a deeper 
distal, egin, re an ere, to see a 


its flowering energies 
paired, og a 
stages pmen 
pen remarkable for the pet of flowers it produces, 
inea—an old 2 oa be = 
bat when rly treated, one that never to yi 
ar. Sasuke This valuable Chin a Rose 
pillar, and, after being carried to a 
cient "i is disposed o on arches, over which it it 


g 
ag | arborea, the stem of whe reaches the eight of of 12 fry 
an | Where it ches pl 


suffi 
has a pret 


3 
————— “an it "reaches 
bro- vascular bundles, when it receives 


eo 
3 
if 
— 
E 
E 


iodine 
and not 25 at this 2 der for a 


also on the distal side of the nie 11 w we 
the 


: 
F 
A 
2 
F 
7 
i 
Š 
z 
K 


one; that it N ; 


i A teen wi winter they were i 
2 — | oo Daring the y . — oS 
the large conservatory, ved flowered and making leaf well. In May they were | inthe of the vital characterof 
na which it coutaiZs have —ů— paced ke age oT og areal , the | when we consider that rovision for the fall of the 
y are just breaking again. These flower | lights being P 8 


664 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


liest existence of the 5 5 bps it ts during winter, it is a good plan to surface the bed, Cherries are best gro * : 

Aans 5 wih the growth of the leaf, ied is com- with a 5 9 of inches thick of half spent tan or leaves — kon 3 rat tain. from fhe ho bids,” If you bel 

plete until the leaf itself is of no more use. 161 zai be | taken from a pit where they have heated and are par- —— for it. espalier 

in mind too, that it is not necessary that articu- | tially decomposed. This mulching will in a great 1 1 wellensis. The 

lated leaves should be dead when they fall, as we measure do away with the necessity of watering the wrk E s probably m it did un not 

frequently find them lying upon the pe a and | roots of Pine plants during the dark months. 2 1 advantageous results h 

pparently vigorous for a time; and i any | quantity of water oduced be very gee restricted, lo steam kill the meally bug, and 

of them that have fallen naturally, we shall frequently, | as the consequent 1 if produced in excess is e h p 

if not always, find that the base of the petiole is plump, liable to condense and run into the hearts of the . symptom of lazy garde nite, ae 

, and apparently living, which it would not be were | This evil may be prevented, in as ae measure, by du fested with vermin more than his o 

its vitality entirely gone. The provision for the separa- | attention to ven ntila arty and by keeping the laps phone 5 naeh pene e is the nee bots cases, 

tion being once complete, it requires little to effect it; | as the excessive vapour will be then carried off. Wher cussions Durian n 

a desiccation of one side of the leaf-stalk, by causing an amag linings are used for Pine frames, a legen. of A the: ances of ue 

effort of ewe will readily break through the small | mats will be necessary in severe e weather, and as _ water, That drai 

remains of the fibro-vascular bundles ; or the ae tend to — tany « escape by means £ tho ‘i, slit | * Rises 

size of the coming leaf-bud will snap SR? 3 or if these | air sho all night. VINERIES.—Once „ * 
causes are not in operation, a gust of wind, a ler we . he 1 pr = of adopti 188 "We efficient (Geometra sambucaria) 

shower, or even the simple weight of the lamina, will be | mode of protecting Vinery bo: ch from autumnal rain grains do not appear to have been cause — 
enough to disrupt the small connexions, and send the and the cold produced by e e evaporation. aap 4 . „ e a3 — — 
suicidal member to its grave. Such is the history of However well drained the borders may be, and however] the meal worm (Tenebrio obscurus) found those of 
the fail of = leaf. We have found that it is not an | porous the constituent materials may be, the continual} é&c., and which is even more injuri j 
accidental occurrence, arising simply from the vicis- | wetting and partial drying of the soil, . keeping eee + * 
situdes of ien paratie ub and the like, but a regular and | the roots miserably ¢old and wet, w will so injure the 38 ap „ . Mignonne; 5, 2,41, Alexander; 
vital process, which commences with the first ga mi hanical texture of the soil that it will cease pareil; 31, Bedfordshire Foundli 1 57. 8 3 
of the organ, and is completed only when that is o part so freely with its surplus water, ust] Pippin; 33, Margil; 34, Foxley Crab; 38, Scarlet Crofton» 
longer ul: an dmiring that le more and more upon evaporation, which * Pt 3 ie 2 Worthless’ and u. 
wonderful provision that heals the wound even before | will of course draw in similar proportion upon the] Foundling; 6, Good Year Pip bse 8, 95 15 Bedfordshire 
it is absolutely made, and affords a covering from atmo- | natural or a gees a of the border. Proceed] 9, Autumn Bergamot; 10, Bellissime d Antana; Tat! 
spheric changes before the part can be subjected to] vigorously w ning and cleaning of the Vines orate —— — tough-fleshed, The seedling re 
them. In the Copper-Beech, and some other trees from whic he the Kue is ah and at the same time letany | Scher Thomas Ges. 1 Ike Bl pane 5 4 
whose leaves die some time before they — off, aa needful painting or ot e done, that the] Muscadine; 3, Chasselas Musqué, ane prs r 
development of the starch-bearing cells on the dista 1 | houses Be ote an orderly and finished appearance, With regard to the want of colour in Grapes, v. opinions 
ide of the articulation does no san’ nor di b readiness th have been entertained. It appears to have been of mors 

f S — Re latterly than it when were 

there that disruption or disintegration of the cell-walls | next year’s praia oe By getting this work speedil glazed open laps and heated by flues, It seems aot» 
which is ordinarily met with. The joint, however, con- | ont of hand, they may be made immediately available | depend teen on ght, although the latter ought to be 
sists of Jaxer tissue, which is readily broken . by oe shelterin 0 ysanthemums, Geraniums taken up na anue spoe 2 time the Gripe aie MAAN 


part accidental violence, such as wind and storms of from the flower garden, and other similar plants, which | to change colour is, we believe, the best remedy.) ee 
8 or b ee wth of the new opt at the base merely require to be protected from the frost. mera a Nax — Pra B. On unn der uic bun wa Uaa i 
petiolo at the commencement of spring. Botanical | good stock of leaves be seran in dry weather, an um pentaphyllum, You can d 
possible let them be placed under cover. If properly sa wi the red spider exe ares oe me fe mica wee : 
= 5 and carefully housed, before the rains cause decom- smeared over flues or —— 8 and thus driver 
Calendar of Operations. osition, their fermenting power is very considerable, into the atmosphere. Jf you sve age A e 
h k. e Jeg 5 P i heated b I do—W T. Cassia levigata Lady 0 I 
(EOF e ee DUN) d a great saving is effected by using them instead of | heated bricks wil * 
PLANT PEN gr 8 ng — i the earpic 2 — A HA. I 
tion of ci when tan, which although not very expensive at the tan-yard, ns are huddled je broken and de 
the weather p Use fre eed. with c and becomes very costly when it has to be carted 10 or 12 — ched fro a e ka abels. 17 ee — 3 
pote s nae A : ; 7 — 
only in conjunction ith = $s the pae of exeladng miles ; and besides economising their fermenting power, Stenactis | speciosa, cod 3. Origanum ee 
and driving o Fro —Keep they are much lighter, cleaner, ard merg paara 3 to Dr. Lankester, No, 22, Old D. 
3 inter’s tree i 
aso in which poA ‘principal isplay parha stale fe for use, than when they have been exposed to a win iistatoncs ; : 
flower is made somewhat closer than an A of shedding for the purpose may be Epen Miasoumiensts : se ene parolis S 
conser — as sane 5 5 plants having cone ructed at a very trifling cost, as a rustie thatched shoots, and then cover the plants with dry leaves te 
been brought forw in heat will not cold | reof, formed of rough spars, thatch heath or t f course the bed is thoroug ate Tia Thatis 
currents of air. In ases, however, it is better furze, and supp by rustic poles, is all that is neces- essential, bat note asily managed at Shepherd's B 
: £ 0 a ->r | sary. If the erection of such a is not convenient, | Prans: E E. To suit your situ tuation the hardier fone ea 
to admit the necessary amount ir b ening nel : : p | Peata only should be pinion 1 Knight’s Monarch Eye 
every ventilator, and every moveable sash, a little, the next best thing to do is to lay the leaves under the wood, Broom Park, Haco neomparable 
than to admit sweeping volumes of the cold ele. | helter of some of the thickest evergreey trees, as Yews, Seckel, Althorp 8 gm Bom of Jersey, T 
ments by the lazy fashion of opening a few only to a Spruce Firs, Kc. sa atioli, H siel -QURD ST Suck af your fen 
greater extent. PIrs anp Framzs,—Forcing of plants State of the Weather near London, for the week ending Oct. 18, 149, will part from the tree by merely raisin 3 The 
into r wil w occupy a p rtic: f these a as observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiswick. po osition, should be immediately pul re . ng of nem 
where a considerable display is required during the two Man's ate kinds may be allowed to ginning y 


Banomsrus. || Tuazxomsrar. || nth, there is little danger of Y on your climate, ` 
ear. iy all eases let the excite- | O | Age. m Mr Mk. a Wind, nen.] After being gather, at cool, 


After being gathered they wil — longest — if kept 


M. Max. Min. Mean 
ment — means — — — — pe — — but the vin become more d 
-heat he 3 8 and by ans of bottom Friday., 12] 25 29.614 J 29.513 53 | 39 48.0 N. E. 2 mper: e of 60°, y The fruit 2 be thinned so as t0 
eep ts a in adyance of the tops. If Sana 13 38 20,569 | 29.890 91 39 | 45.0 N.E. 106 a ko * every square foot of wa 20 
ol 07 29.97 45 E. 
the ee 4 eo at the time and in the unday 15] 28 |] 30074 | 30.055 || 50 | % NE. 00 | SEEDLING Fuurrs, We have received from 7 the 
ey Tues. . 165 @ 30.037 | 29.981 55 37 | 46.0 E. .05 Coppice, near 1 a seedling dink : 
Wed. . 17) f |} 29-955 | 29.838 |] 66 } 52 | 59.0|} S 4 | Burton Pippin, said to be “an early and abun 72 
Thurs. . 18 2 | 20.164 30.130 || 67 { 44 55.5 8. -00 2 tr It bears quite as Wee 
— — — rag extremely handsome on e 4 he fruit to be 
Average... | 29.972 24 20391 IL. 40.4 | 43.1 |} |] 0.15 the Keswick Codlin, — — e i 
Oct. 12—Part' vercast; cloudy and cold; clear at night. oblong-ovate ; eye close; etal h faint blush next the 
— 13- Bein —— and at cloudy. smooth, pale lemon yellow, with a as 1 
— 14—Cioud tly ove cold throughout. flesh whitish, hollow at the core; su acid ; 
— ov 1 fine; 3 clear at night. kitchen Apple. Mr. 
a gy ; overcas rain a 
— 1782 ercast; cloudy 1 overcast and warm. THE Potato oe A Sub. The 11 
— 18 Fine; exceedingly fine; clear 2 is ht. at a recent m of the Liverpo tition 
ean temperature ofthe week, 24 deg. below the average. the disease — . — otato, is a mere repe 
State of the Weather at Chiswick Resy oa last 23 years, for the long since made by us with reference to 
ensuing week, ending Uct. 27, 1849. — in the Calf of Man 
Ran TOSS TANGE — — . Give your Vine jays aler n may 
Se.) See No.of | Greatest and in a few days of March. 
oo | fea] £23 | 25 | Beatin | duene |- the en 
cre tess tae of Rain. 
<= <4 Rained. z 
Sunday zi 685 | 394 |49) 9 | osiin 
ae % „ g jo 
wea. 2 sot 0 2 H 0.83 The Co ceca use 
T 5 55.3 f 38.0 | 46.6 9 0.72 ir 
Friday 26] 54.4 f 36.4 | 45.4 8 0.52 t 
Satur. 27) 545 | 39.7 § 47.1 8 


1 2— 
scent. dc Aah NERS ie ad KAE ohe ce Mh Pt. EF Yl’ A 
The highest temperature during the above period occurred on the 21 
1826—therm, 72 deg. ; and the lowest on the 21st, 1842 therm. 20 deg, 


Notices to fg bpa. tper ei 
Awnvats: MJ, It is too late to sow them now. You had 
better wait till spring and then sow them 6 a little heat, 
After they are "p prick them of into pots or still kee 
me in a little heat ; 7 ha me em off 
degrees preparatory to th erdiya] finally planted out. 


52 


ASPARAGUS: TG. =< may use any manur find most con- and Jas min 
venient. Some fi d night-soil "epera in oes pas what | burgh ona 172 
the Biscayans ae and their 8 s the — 1 n wall —. Bos a 
owed ah the world. Or guano, if van, is pae may transplant all ‘all the rA 1 oa ment 55 i 
Back Neusrns: The Re, T W P is informed that the| tage nowt —P E O: Dewees too many to alow Koes 
volumes for 1847 and 1848 may be E price 30s, and 30s, (d. Or layers, Two buds 8 n ` 
The former years are out of print, together on C 1 
DR. NEWINGTON’S — A B. We do not think garden si glee be kep Pe have room, 
such as Cabbage, could be advantageously sown by this im- | is bardy ; ; but 3 
plement. 11 requires the sam y increased Dy layer 
FRUIr TREES : Ry. The = is good one, but you mus ust and Clematis are — 5 
not expect quick growth with such an 5 It is = ERS. ; 
contrivance to ensure the roots bei only, not wet see tea an 
season. If your 8 very dry | DAnZIA: W P. Size, form, 


che pias p- needless, —E i In planting anor-| dark crimson on upper oat 
chara, i stones placed under the sa wit prove adyan- — good in shape, £ s 
, or slates may be e mployed, dded in mortar, xture i white, a l ne 
il ds. o by striking out the Bellige 88 WD. Colo igs, and veined wit wih lt 
P FORI | sippia and Mioshul Oral 5 ane 3 the * — towards th — Doiie 
PINERIES.— Keep a constant oe z eo deaf cis Pippin an ordshire Foundling, For S sad early Vinery texture an 

a you may choose the Black Hamburgh, ite Sweetwater, 3 _ oumu. 
asat no season is it more liable to vary, al Muscadine, Black Prince, and White Fronti pa In| *, 
k St. 


Season is it more essential to prevent such — ds. your late house, you 2 — better — — ~ 
` especially with fruit in progress, To assist in maintain. 8 (Oldaker’s) for the Black Frontignan. 2 in a es can be m 
iag an_equabe state of heat and moisture about the Kentish Gherty aili as interesting oot 


> 


. leaves have mostly fallen. The 
a a eder palpili, T but all sweet 


1421849. 


soil. The M 
8 — rich animal m 
prove them to by MY to the best — eg 
us, Ryan, and Co., 24, Mark-lane, London 


is season 
he earth, 


s applied 
ome importan 


** 


2 of his Guano, whic n he now 


ANO, e ORENS MANURES.— 


matters, 35 rec priat 1 


vie the 
nmediate 


LC GU I J YDRAULIC oolong WATER RAMS, &e., 
0 eae — sor — Hydraulic to raise fro: 8 
: t ity, Supe: aod mene of Lime, ne-dust, wer, e from 1 gallon u 
gasno o e Boe nimal Cake, Whe at Manure, Gypsum, Rape. | height of 500 feet, and from a depth of 900 Douche, 
alt and and all o of known e. Vapour, Hot-air, ae — 578 — of Baths. Buildings, 
(aks; to MAREK For parm Š Up Thames-street, | Conservatories „e., Air, or Water, Boring, 
: — Agent for Collins’s Patent Disinfecting Powder. hag vom 9 — e * Water, — Towns supplied.— Direct 
——— pv) ? 7 
RYAN’S AZOTIC MAN prepared 
1 immediate su 9 EN attention of | IMPROVED FOUR-H mg R E PORTABLE STEAM-ENGINES 
sts is earne tiy irected to t own Fer- AND BOLTIN 0 80 MACHINES, 
E be prepara which is bared hr a careful REEMAN ROE anp HANSO N, Southwark Iron 
‘ation of the — of — nd the re gee Works, and 70, Strand, te tocall attention to their Steam- 


in fuel, for the quantity of work done, than any before the 
blic, The 15 be seen any day their works, Sumner- 
treet, Southwar dge- — Water-rams for raising Water. 

Deep W Well imo Baths ; Hot-water Apparatus; Fountains, 


Towns supplied with Gas or Water. 


consequence of some — neipled persons, once acting 
a — 8 3 — their own 1 — ſor 
the —- peels, 2 Proprietor is ane ade mmend a 
Arect a himself. Where the — 95 taken is 
— age, wil be made to the 


dge themselves "i 2 
e from test p paeba feya 


Manure —— s Wh 
monia, Phorphate of J onia, or Ammoni osphate ; 
te of Lim sum, 2 of Soda, Bone Saw- 
dust, and every other Ar cial Manur 
EDWARD Purser, Secr etary, a ö Blackfri 
TO THE CORN 3 D OTHERS CONNECTED 
RICULTURISTS, 
N Was me sof yY — dealers in GUAN 
and other b 


—— — ea eee Particular — 

Knight-rider. ors’ Commons, ph on. 

AGRICULTURAL DRAINING: pe ween 
LEVEL,—A Very Superior Draining Leve great sim 


of 
ce 31. 5s., to be had of the Maker, —— Deets, Opti- 


AKER’S PHEASAD 
elsea, by spec 
ce eon — 


NTRY, Beaufort-street, King’s- 
al 8 to her Majesty and 
view Sih Ee L A bee 
s, Egyptian, Canada, China, 

— 4 geese, sheildrakes, intail, 

winter teal, gadwall, La rador, 
3 — — ducks 
panish, Cochin 

th Born fowls ; white 4 18. i ied, 
a pure Sono na p pigs ; and at 3, 


45 
ps8 


vers, 


2 o., 
China, 


C 187 ES. 5 


user- 


e, Mensuration, joa 

‘English — pea are seen a Lon 
5 and 3 had of all Bookselle 

oun ool can be had on . either 


ROYAL LETTERS 
PATENT, 


OTHOUSE WORKS, KING’ S ROAD, CHELSEA, 
CH invites the attention of Gentlemen about 


‘ENT HOUSES, 5 


pr hatn 
complete 
ee according 1 owe 
ciple bene, formed without 
Sa eae, beh epeb e — —.— ria 7 
req o paint, from 7d. to 
8 oe n tine BY HOT WATER . sr 
ENSO xD CO, 61, — — 
London, and 5 Aew Park-street, Southwark, Inventors 
f the Improved oa — and DOUBLE 
S, res licit the atte: —— ¥ 


ate ani 
we an 
kine oe in with 
rft. 


well as heat is 

without the aid of pipes or flues, 

5 state that at the request 
their Boilers of as well as 


ely 
o tion s will 
the ‘highest autoiy 7 or 
i Nobility’s and — — — 
ingdom. 

to inform the Trade that at their Manufactory, 
nal e required for the — 
as well as for heating them, 


the most 


ING. 
MAN URE ‘COMPANY — to offer 


ure sent 


ai 
Ld . The Above is securely packed and sent to any part | 


“street, | th 


numerous | 


day — 12th, T r 4 
— 1849, at the Bazaar, Baker-street. rinted Forms of 
2 * aat fang for the met of Stock and 1m lements, must be 
btained from the — rary Secreta returne 
T. Baas 1 e Hon. Sec., Corner of 
Street, pie cadilly, 
Che Agricultural Gazette. 


SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1849, 


Sied up and c com 
ae a 


every case an 
2 Which is attainable es all 
And i rth the search ? 


agile 2 es — 


bie 
co 
s 


rte e mind: 
ike prir consid eration of the 
book farm is pre-e 


nently 


the only key to the one great problem of agriculture 
6. —the profitable development of fertility ; and a 
— — is successful in — 
portion as he possesses it. 
The question What i agricultural truth ?—thus | t 
s consideration. Let us look at 


every ten |r 
pe 2 — yond mate value—that | 
8 nuisance 


p = 
BS 


es rs be sufficie ny as: 
sured ofi its — hover the“ — average’ price 


of corn by whic 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


con 
CEMENT, for internal 8 instead of 


ary, 
on or before 2 che 17th of Novem- p 
Half 


shall honestly 
Agri- | 


ence of i 
ee you l find that xi “includes pre 


usiness or not just in pro- weeds—that 


ed, are agree 
— ibe. greatest possible v variety of 


British farmers unl 


agricult ntro 
respondents to avoid the 


AN } x po 
ren . = ad of | honesty or of political obstinacy, rather i 
20 Marn of its application to the bare — and E the use or much earer relationship which it bears to that 0 
which rooms may be ren de red habitable s before re th the materials agricultural economy. Every one will admit that it. 
c only adopted wo egin ry. wichou 
the slightest difficulty, the la being easier and less expen- di ld be far more ad ous to cheapen the pro- 
— ve than with any other stucco whatev finer q ality is uction of home-grown toe ce the 
fh pass and — at Tapia Ta- price Of that Wich i epi? at the at the 
C. Cry ecimens of which ma seen a! e or. o, 
ing etn Eo» t HARLES Francis and Sons, Nine Elms, London’ result w would be alike to us n bot h the with 
EED W WHEAT.— For Sale, at 50s. per quarter, good | this clear benefit in the nner food for tha 
enuine seed of the RED-STRAW WHITE and e and y which th r is to 
e [nodro 5 Samples of grain and ear will i be sent | be attained are peculiarly appropriate for our dis- 
on rece cover the expe postage. N O Orders 2 2 
for less en tte 4 bush be Lavoe pet as those unknown | CUSSION, for t sa, tit is tar more pix e 
correspondents must be ARS. for seed, can be sappii 1 our place to furnish and er, ate tural 
ach. S, for seed, can _— ed at 5s. a 
5 — shel. Joun Mos ren, Whitheld, Berkeley, Gloucestershire — „ in mari an vr 3 our eo 
I FI CLUB S f than t 
MITH * 25 — — and propagate slitical e opinions, te * Fig 


5 — 


et 1 —.— the to tha question, What ig 
agricultural truth? Taten to the vA neg 
arty :— It is the practice of our ancestors, m 
fied, perhaps, in d e ex — of 
their posterity. t for it in iti 
of — — theoretical * ou 


it i practice of our 
bre sade and 122 ; it is exhibited in the 
alternate husbandry of our soil, in the — ll husbandry 


n ene fp. Society of ireland, of our crops, in the skilful of our live 
ENAISI, OT eee Ce N SaR stock, in the sharp dexterity of our — ” The 
HAT IS ieee 3 Unquestionably | unfortunate thing is, that as soo leave the 
there is 8 reeds, 3 are man A inne ved notional forms of tru examine 
and widel sed. to each other each, n — ich it is ee 1 fact, such g 
doubt, has 5 . —— = nies he how — ity ey circumstance t ae 
oubtless often earnestly differ in rth are reali we — that the opinions of separate observers 
mest hot forge 155 error and ` are realities rarely agree. Take an e of the Who 
notwithstanding: are e matters of sen- answer as above, vrs he carry away your 
timent, varying with the circumstances 5 e. les conviction by an irresistible series of illustrae 
z individual minds. And mber that | tions, each taken — his 0 7 
n agriculture, as in other depar er rhi of f knowledge but n any number of th y 
haovet may be the differences bet n of and A nfoun by the singular 
greatest experience and of appa rently equals authority want of agreement they exhibit. 1. is ly that 
—whate . ies be evident in the the intelligence exists which is capable of fully 
lations 5 05 f equally —.— — minds— 3 the in ented hod d ing cau 


E nompa with 


p abun- 

ce of ucing crop wi h which it 
— that industrious cultivation and 30 loads 
of rotten 


— 


Agee oat 


w timber is st 


are defended 2 many, cultivation is not 
ocated , and am e 


8. 8 
T 


be- 
ement | 


rsation on their respective breed 
b 


of cat 
icester and a Southdown breede ee 
e cha 


8 
T 


— 


se in many 5 
for instance, fund r e ee 
adminis 


d wast this is 
truth.” And so it 3 quite hy it; but do 
not let us iniagine led an 


t this i any 
considerable fraction of “what the ‘question implies : 
answe 


arto been 
eed, let any one but ven- 
ture to assume that whatever the difficulty of deter- 
mining with which of th 


it receives, as we s er besides 
me of Ame ay our olara by no m 


.. 


igent men, rte be 
or themse fo throug he — “this — 
hat eep—of which m 


Jd and Garden 


eee 
subjects who appear to regard 
all wrap 


ped opin te popstion, that Whe cannot aardly 


than half the farmers in the county, 8 : 
heard—to be the best the rds. 


y country 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


666 
Such is ithe state 75 the art and business of agri- THE 8 PROSPECTS, 
oria tT A nok. one e af Il, YEE ST leans ofthe toast Hemara of Nele 
e majori ear, 0 
the i ne isplays, tat Tiere Sandin wha 8 0 5 they 2 ihe mselves ill-used, consider they have no 
it to bet, that but 2 1 8 b n a — aN a competition with th a gn grower, and 7 
estin ssp on their oars, waiting the 
whi ch it may meet the extraordinary 1 difficulties advent of of better tim eir eyes are fixed on the | i 
it “hae rately had 1 70 pips nter legislature, and Wer rospects cannot be discussed 
But let us ask once more—What is pariglia 1 mene from political bearings. 
th ? Who ive a complete answer to I will not seek to defend the modern policy of free 


ertainly no one within the limits to which we are 
confined. The truth affecting the farmer, and which 
he therefore ought t ow, embraces probably all 
the physical sciences, and beside: it 523 
the prope the raw material on which the 
operates ; it s us the atoms of which 


` future 1 * are to be built, now 5 l in kas soil 
in f: i instructs w to 22955 

them in Syl forms which ge ke fertility; 
asserts and explains the influence of atmo 115 rie 
1506 and 5 and ea ad 1 of e 
on the processes of agricult 
h the and Pad that it telis a 700 of the mac . 


the and the S ic 
plants an peri the laboratory in which it is prepared o 

e ren les which organise this food for the 
of animals, of the anim male * wale ii is Lis further 
eoneentrated for the 

o minuter particularity 4 still, for it includes 
* of the farm labourer as well as of 
F the details of piai and o 
1g, of dairy 


feedin management and of marketing, = Fo a confidence, and the farmer would bave felt 
range of agricultural truth as that he had fair play. It would have — a boon too to 
is the structure of a plant or the composition of x the colonies, binding mees © — by the cheap ties of 
cientifi as if self interes t h apd inducing much of — peie of 35 
our deserved inction: of a niak- | Lawrence ~ Bat above all, sey have. compensated 
name !—are not our many failures sufficient proof |.” Some ? pa TEROR: PRRSS ponoy 
imperatively forbids to be throw gene e m 
o the chome of Pr rsh 3 1 yi h hen Fearful would be the prospects o r commo. try, permanence and real i . of — 
Ages aye pe ae e y =e a ‘2 eh 55 ae if admitting, as nominally we do, js, the right of the indigent into the caleulation on both sides, 4 =a 
> n o relief, we should de 0 or weaken the own th The tenant felt that went to 
developed its wealth in forms of the greatest utility, limitations of local supervision, the jealous n viglan of | earnestly, and prices remain i, 
anima 1 Provide: te with perfect | dire erest, and the lingering sense of shame in the f surplus would greatly exceed his calc : 
sconomy the Sod 5 is rovi r them, Hn pauper, Sata to show d-earned fruits of his | trust of the j ‘are friend; Protection, iia 
perhaps m ay rmitte A o speak of n e ae 1 Were that 8 the exchequer, him w his whe into the business; 
* daten. But, ti till th 1 designation | b ound to satisfy the pauper, his demands would ti 


a misnomer, for as successful practig is just the 
* of sound theor 


o all our errors and 

osses are simple result of eens proceed- 

The word ‘sci > me wW anged 
<nowledge, and ce one will sneer at that. 

Undou then a scientific education is what 

agriculturists should receive; the whole range of the 


wn with satisfaction T a a efforts 
of those who . elsewhere be t s steps. 
But what do we see!—Th ricultural 
irencester 
press en- 
silence Mr. Carr if they 
„of Whitehaven, sends a 

T 


r Meth Day 2 
wo first of 
have not room at prosent 0 spia of the third w. = 


nothing | e 
in any locality as to | y 


for feeding purposes been 
— experiments to be of no value; if the farmer 
0 


I coneede at once that it has inv 


sunk one-third, an 
must be deposed of ful 
verages. 
mind, badly W thre 


appeared to farmer uncer 


olved the tio 


of grain of all so 


0 charge 
The landlord's timber, "a impedes the 
s ce, and 


e ror of cele being now r 


e 


ng 


3 oai accidents, — no ——— for meeti 
„ doing 


it, and n nds self in of troubles 
nothing, ci 3 vee 25 do. 
say, if h e intend a" free trade w was badly 
introduced ; if the object was to develope an enormous 
amount of foreign ee n, that we might hereafter 
tax it, no terms of indignation would be too strong to 
sense of such heartless policy. The 
e | System of legislation, p 
been long main 


any appreciable extent our home prices, would 


limited — al industry had ceased to be fruitful, but 
not till then 
Conceding to me | farmer that he has much cause of 
complaint, let m him ya re ge whether there is 
525 remotest A rn to protection in any 
hape. not indelibly 3 on the existing 
— that protection means “ taxing me the con- 
sumer for — benefit of you the producer ;” that it is the 
same thin e consumer, whether =e of 
home va a be raised by prohibitive laws, or by the 
imposition of duties on produet from abroa n either 
at the home grower gains, 
= if you speak of duties for 
tells yon nat . is the raw material 
ustry, Be pe must no 


Admitting, as it is safest to aie that free N ma 


prices are inevita bie we proceed to enquire if the 
other burthens o 


bine for 
is 


obviously an — 
the s, and 
am not aware of an 
which aes 8 of i Tadas ustry ar 
orms an impediment to the profitable euitivation of 
e land. if any ante, 91 shall be glad to vr if pointed out. 
The gra Sea > admittedly a lan s tax; the 
malt-tax is born 


proved by abundant 
thought 


or e consumption 
object in 
The question of local taxation is one 5 — moment. 


farmer’ 


hav ve now 


mpor tant quest tion 


me 


ormer i 


assessed ta ellings, b 
plant fall so light ? 7 _ Excepting Sg the Haß paN i 
I am not which we amar per from 


they s rah too high, and what p 


re 


ni ieult 


are ta 8 what had been 
and that the be i 
without any pie ore inerease in the 


vation. 


—— rents, will ay land into 
e 


from weeds, and thick sowing, 
of | regard of ascertained principles i 


of stoc 


n 
culturists that rents w 
— not in fact too ang gee 


— 


of rents, and to the 
rospect 


shown 


s the landowner, 


his own on 


many case 


r land are spri 
, and seeing what grea 
i 


inf 
will than fa 
gt the tenant a 
of the e 


expend, — 


judiciously 
ereased to 


Publie policy, by e on realise the | certain 
burthen of the of oads, of — fabrie of our | Jegislation 
churches, of the police. my of p ý wn on | tenant pose mi no interest i + 
e | flection m w bhim; 2 


her real property, may in England be taken at 8 
and if one-fourth be the proportion irly 
Y | thrown on land, there a claim on 


‘| munity for 
This, en an assumed production of 


to the extent of 2 millions in th 
40 million quarters | 


42—1849.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZE 


TTE. 


fear for the farmer who does 1 his | nately there re are at present few farms Hike Anchen e 
c — 


few farmers like Mr M‘Culloch, both a favo and a | sedi 


in the face, and 
Bored yeoman should act. He will not join in vain factor ; and still fewer landlords able, like ‘Colonel 
to the legislature, or to the landlord ; he will | M‘Douall, to drain land, build commodious steadings, 


at once that no relief worth his seeking can be ob- | and rest satisfied with only 20s. 25 acre, the greater 


from either; but he will overhaul his whole | part, 12s., of which is n y the interest of 
siste i 


cheapness of food will ir 5 
thst he, his family, his horses, and his oxen, are all launch out more freely in supplying the ready m 
that cheapness, while it ensures him a for permanently improving the land, 13 hap must ‘ae 
market, sets limits, and those far more narrow than | reduce their rents to the Auchn ness standard. We have, 
he once supposed, to importations from abroad—that however, no sympathy with those baad cavil A Mr. 
s a 


country c 
here, and diminishes them in equal degree abroad. He | instance of a 2 farmer paying a high Corn. law 
will begin to perceive that agriculture may yet flourish, rent, and continuing to do so throu ugh his own skill and 
never flourished before, and will lament chat through industry, e also that his landlord supplies the 
2 though perfectly natural feeling, so 3 necessary accomm iit Rhy * eding stock and 12 soa 


d th 
to delusive shadows, regen llow themselves to sink | tion at the end of th the ‘male for the cr a a, Ran — — of all 
into poverty and des 


permanent improvements made by the tenant, suc- 
5 cess do not follow such an arrangement—if skill and 
AUC HNESS FA ARM. capital combined fail to leave a profit or a decent 
Amer perusal of Mr. Caird’s pamphlet, entitled | Maintenance to the tenant, no alternative remains but 
*High Farming, under Liberal Covenants, the best | reduction of rent. 
Substitute for Protection,” produced in ee minds of a Mr. Caird’s pamphlet there are many valuable 
readers an impression highly favourable to the arks on Mr. M'Culloch’s system of farm rming, espe- 


writer's ability and honesty of purpose, and also to the cially t the mode of managing the feed ding stock and the 
ical skill of the gentleman whose farming operations | Manufacture and application of manure. But, laying 
the theme of remark, A more minute an alysis, | these point aside, it will not be difficult to prove that 

it has not weakened this impression, has led to a the gross income of the farm rests very much on ad- 


th the occupation of Auchness Farm by Mr, aeres of Potatoes reduced to the proportion usually 


8 conclusion that the circumstances con- ventitious eireumstances. Thus, were the number of | har 
wi 


‘are so different as 7455 ose in which most grown on most farms, a very considerable sum would ad 
other farms are placed, as, in a great measure, to dis- | disappear from the bright side of the ledger ; and were 55 


gly -the case from being admitted as a proper illus. the sea to deny its annual contribution to the dung- 
of the principle which Mr. Caird $i i ay to es- | heap, another sum of not less than 60/. would require 
That armin is the farmer’s best safe- to rank as expenditure, if the condition of the Jand is to 


to 

: may be found profitable at 2 Aes i 

1 esd op 3 Ad in fact the only a * ies fias in 99 k i out of 100 elsewhere. i it be 

One point of difference with Mr. Caird is n- true that Turnips are only worth 3s. 6d. to 4s. per 

nected with the e sapre essed in the 1 title of his ton to the grower, consume’them how he may, it follows 
but with the napt and unfortunate case | that the principal part of farm expenditure falls to 

d in asain, In justice to him, however, it H by the corn crops, and hence it is that any Aa he 


r wn, pe 
tase upon which his ment is grounded, and thus un- Comfer a a greater boon upon his brethren than 3 
Wittingly he has supplied a most formidable weapon to | è case which all feel ean never be theirs 


e 
tase, as stated by Mr. Caird, brings out the following A FEW WORDS ON DEEP DRAINING, 


„at 262/, of yearly rent, being an advance of | sible to lay down any fixed rule, ; 
10), over the previous rent. Of this sum 481. ispayable | all lands, as to the depth at which drains shou 
drainage. i ilt by the 1 id. Ther i inci 


15004, whi ch at 11 — nt. build- e first step towards attainin 
to 1122, 10s. This sum added to the depth, is thoroug ge. In a very sandy soi 
t charge, 481. for draina. e, and both deducted | animal and a2 suites decompose rapidly ; water 
the present rent, leaves as the landlord’s share of passes through t gh a sieve. Such soils 
arm 1017, 10s. or scarcely 8s. per acre. Let should obviously be manured frequently, rather than 


how examine the tenant’s case, in order to judge how | abundantly at one time ; oj and although it is impossible 
i ari ea or can RES of to remedy such an evil in the physical texture of a 
i t, to the present position of other farmers. | soil, except by mechanical means, yet, the deeper it is 
his Place Mr, Mulch pays 20s. De are for | the longer will it retain ipon substances zon afford 
15 » which, even admitti 1 to the ee In argillaceous soils, e 
eee wre bel below its present marketable — — “in the | amount of manure be oP depend at ye time, bu bu t its 
Place, he has some 40 acres 


2 an e j 
are given to manh the coef $, these build- | cannot be gainsaid that the depth of the ane other 
k è th ; 1 


= 7 succe 


coloured, and and held a cons considerable quantity of a — 
iment in s amounted to 


n 
proper tests. inorganic part consisted mainly of 
very finely divided lies clay, together with — ol 
ha i xide of iron 
he specific ry of the filtered water was 1.00054. 
It abounde d in lime, common salt, sulphuric acid, and 
i unces e water 


Ge] 
= 
2 
E 
8 


p 
of lime, sulphuric acid, common salt, an 


| acid, a * of the water contained: 


Of li ae “ate pepsi) tee 

of 3 acid pon 0 eee 
Of — of sodium ose » © 
Of phosphoric acid “ 


with the exception of —— I carefully tested it for 
phoephorie acid, but the amount was far too small to be 
weighed, a although md was certainly present, A 
of the —— r con 
o 2 acid . 5 a 
Of common salt 


bear in wind that the — in 


rin 195 
ains of salt, This brine was passed through tubes 
of various — closely filled with a strong soil. The 
quid as it passed through the tubes was collected by 
Panni, in ae bottles. The first experiment was 
made with a soil 10 inches in depth, 

ape fn first pegnen of of Henia — 83 grains mt salt, 
The third — tes — -aa — 

Stee ae oe -5 2 80 

1 seen that the fifth ounce contains neari early 


will 
by 1 grain more — than the * — ge 


ment was made with a lie 
Th he first omen * * contained Ki . 1 
— sec pond 

e thi 


The fourth i = 7 — 
The third experiment was made with a soil 11 ſeet in 
th. 


4 


Tue: first ounce of ind contained. 6} grains of salt. 
The second and third ounces contained 154 


rains 
from a shallow-drained soil. Albert James Bernays, 
Derly. 


moss - | dura 
| ae adapted for — — every year about 10 ds depth of soil than the ane of the ai pag 
found r acre ; and in the third ess 


1 
rf 
53.5 


powe t whe 
manu annual present ee el 500 loads of and attracting water, capillary attraction, and the power 
Tes » While at the same time his inferior | of soils for absorbing heat, depend fortunately upon 
amoni requires to have several inches of the surface | constituents which are insoluble in water. On the con- 


he p, very year, in order to prevent —— trary, those salts which we find in all fertile soils, 

Site Potato Plant. This 9 earth being mixed and which are so necessary to the healthy develop. 

3000 et gs farm-yard dung, yields a grand total ment of the plant, are soluble in water, and contain 
loads o Manure ann 


nd 
farm of 5 — poten Ži it Bat be more | ms me, to my he bly two waters to analyse ; the 
m to he Mr. Mulch than Colonel M Douall. eat which had been taken * an 41 phd 


Tira: And tenanta in the nate are rom 3 feet drain, The land, 
Se aa 42 wre 
ere N The water from the shallow drain was much dis- 


nere, 
tation 
ed determined, if legally called upon, to use the former 
latter. A i 


k man 
-| amongst a people who have yet to learn the 
n — a oforder. Where is the Peel pa ig | 
vi dvan. 


rice of Bread.—I beg to enclose you an article on 
the price of flour, a matter now of the — import- 
ance to the consumer, especially the agric 


h 
must of necessity this winter be very low. H. 


ity “he 
Price of Flour.—Six or eight months ago 3 was a 
good deal of in our columns upon the 
subject of the price of flour, and i £ was shown, we 


think, conclusively, that the ‘ D y exorbi- 


668 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


tant profits, rau om from the poor whatever advantages 


there ma: 17 cheap loaf. TANIE, Oe Eee 
of Whea offer of Be per bushel made by a firm of 
millers in 85 mbridge to an extensive e “ahd | 


allowing the —+ 0 he the cost of grinding, a sack of 
m 6 bushels of Wheat) was calculated to 


8 3 ne 
glaring | : ee can be arar to es 8 idge 
Chro 

Climate a joa espa —The “ stern realities ” of 
ang,” melt down into a pretty dese ye 


tion > in sy a most interesting, and 
doubt correct to the letter; such details are atone 
acce of customs and features of agriculture 
abroad, as we generally get them scarce and second- 
nd. They appear to make ee use of their fine 
weather, threshing on the earth ya — — 2 jointed 
j by both men * omen 
ery ripe, the maid 


aed 
by horses, 
ith a thin bell, the grain sent into the 
air with a spa *. to clean it in some measure before 
= it through a riddle.” If the threatened quizzing 
d been harmless as these practices, I nee 


ignorant, whether the yield and condition in 
such districts the wolds of Lincolnshire n the 
Holkham esta Norfolk, is not ss a series of years 


tter than any in 
i hata aa no excuse for 


Wheat during wet weather, if it is 
ud,” or if more than six weeks elapse 


urin 
the corn instead of the n crop, is much a 
pam this neighbourhood, particularly where the soils 
either sterile clays, blac 


nditi 
medy, 


upon wr practico i is 281 ded, and as an 
the be: 


spondents, favour me y with the results of their expe- 
rience, through the mediata of the Agricultural Gazette; 
since it is sai muck i 
we cannot be 
John Coleman, Feniz Loar near Newbur erks. 

n the Value of Land as affected by the Hapi: 
i i induce more activ: 


e of a knowledge of principles if the 


ment of apilal.— With view to indu 
| encouragement being given to the impro f land, 
it may be useful to remind landlords and tenants that the 
t se or rent, 


inclosed, laid out, fene 
vided with buildings, drained, and broug 
hese are matters that “the landlord mus 


in the first instance, do to N eee, in 
position to be made use W ant; and 
on the extent and perfection of sta ane will 

eat! depand its usefulness and value. Were the im- 


ou of land 2 
security better understood, mu dditional capital 
ould be invested by landowners, not in adding to the 
extent of their estates, but rather in effecting thote 
improvements that are so essential to high cultivation. 
If the difference i farming and in the rents paid 
in different districts throughout Britain be contrasted, 


generally be g 

the useful sopdision of the farms, = developed by the 
invested expenditu ers, and the em- 
d skill and capital of the oc bope. E rather than 
ed the patural quality of the land. 
ritain, including 


acre. 
1 We 

a be er nat ah eee of a fertility s0 

great differences in the 


woot 
varying as to account et oa 
farmin 


175 n yield the highest 1 = told that in 
any parts of E ised on 
| having vay a very and su 
appropriated to 8 of cattle crops, that little tok 
is there fatted ; re bought, a 
on what sed 


BEES 


feeding 

the s Pd of pard 

a: They cannot affo 

ss of any of the soluble matter of their ma 

by a system so proe they are enabled to * hicher 
in for 3 es much larger returns. 

i e the condition of the farmers 

of low-rented land, — e practice we have been 

ins tancing, we shall a them comparatively ill off, 


sed food of a 


they find in raising enouf roduce to —— their ex- 
will listen to accounts of sto 


to a reduction o 


o the great waste 
supply of the corn te a spreading it 
upon the asa often as muc e weeks 


a means of relief in 
the returns of their f farms —.—. not — how inade- 
T 


as four 
peo Preig i in, = 3 it expose to the effects 
of sun and air of the hottest months of the 


ap 
ploughed in directly; he believed that —— monia 


at the 
Was ce by the earth, and, as proof, reminded p» i 
ch growth 


id growth of the lea, w 
value as a 


e 
e leaves = 


nia | investm 


T 1 al 4 al 4 raises 


- | particulars connected w 


r Potato crops looke 


rc 
any —— who were the means of 8 them u 
2 . | Low 


rd any waste of straw, ee — t 


lief be. hey en 
h ia 


five —— of Wheat an acre, — us i -H cheaper 
a a 1 Pi but 18s., and grows only three > quarters 


e, wavy wha the aig 

80 “often take en to be—perennial and wholly ari arising 
— the land—a landlord receiving 3007, a year from 

e farms wou 


has to maintain and i replace ; and: as the extent of | - 


than to the rent, every po 9 es that makes the — 
+ uctive raises character as an 

t, and gives additonal security for the rent, 

in — "like these, when 


wards by th 
st be dissipated in the atmosphere. 
ave on 


1 re the build buildings, give greater accommodation for 


keeping of s 
hedge-row timber 
make new roads wh ve the 3 
9 l 
and ma W — modern bn ee 
ery, an lish farmers 
libraries for their ten the b acquire are ae 
this way may free trade 45 met, — 
from the ruin that m cheats 1 thee 
Hewitt ee 3, Frederick’s place, O Old Jeans Jewry, can 


Octobe 
The Chartist Land rapa Sad Con 
former Her tio of 


Lowbands C 
whan 
turned out complete flats, 


latter. 


$ 


unab 
— 


than other people. 
has nothing else to do now, as far 


w not run z 


half mile to a ie that > kjer 


but of 55 
— is scanty, ped nn the ae 
nured 5 ine chil piee a The ei a 
9 — especially the children, are 
off for clothes ees ideale 
mo; 


things eet t: 


a 


affair was 


he cannot be proved to 
he is free from all civil pve to howe was 


projector assures people 
ey they — 5 


t if the 
reat 3 
es, the law holds him 


secure them profit— nag, 
fact, from ~ ee oe pk 
enormous deception. 
original schemer has been (supp roh Hen 
as much deceived as anyo: “4 cester 


Farmer s’ Clubs. 
Mr. — oop dled a ee 


rena 
2805 000k. as n 
„ gave s 
the average, Fe mber of cattle by oan arrived te 
prent E 
275 cor 


ee 
Lang 
an 


a 
— * 


Q 

Le | 

8. 

2 
. 

a 

2 

2 

a 

2 

E 
ae 
Ee 
a8 
1 
8884 

Ẹ 
$ 


4 
AY 


Cornish farmer 
ance oe ie ie Bis stock in a 
eneral co 


an 
Estek 


t—not only as 

m e, Here 
also a beer one. 
but ie of — — 


ther as y d — ‘money put pre i 
which great i feeding an a proved 20720 80 cn be Shot 
oh | ee oles; an ; and also that it was 8 Ans. to 

quality of 3804 i which ca used an 1 


42—1849.] 
i a a T 
weight in a short period, as THE 

J d the peculiar disposition, derived AGRICULTUR 
— dS re) — — podot for sions —-— Dov AL GAZETTE 
recommended that : 
ca 669 
rting manure 
to stubbles to be 


and fat, and mig wy age poe 
| ook breeding 3 ndencies to a 
“epg Y. a ee — ty. ng fiesh oak Py 
safest 1 ae i ate he cert > 4 — that i 12 tine Sa be given to be put on 
f breed, both males 1 g ae he consid ve Mr. — Are b 0 ee but ei . and — i 
— , and main rý es, which i st of that the es BLE — they are tak em suck th o skim milk 
one ily t is intend ar chat the en from th e cow from — Beg ag pe 
sidered that th r), in th to but as 8 E — calves athe cow altogeth the | sea. in. This 
[tent importance F Kr. He My | thing. Ti soul not “always — w — a wrong | Potatoes 2 . — carting of the woo 
‘ e as the ppearanc He ing. II stead actise ite ay — Pota for wool 
; e; — also, as it e general sa ile i ce of a ba —— — by . approved of th — of s 2 it would 2 they 2250 — Our own toes in this neighbor have — * — t Turr D — 
e rion they — a ty A ote bre — foe fr 8 ws, that mo y to which the took eee father ur- syste much the 2 frost laid the just are much ot too eer 7 
— . the dhe or 5 ‘those of a 3 field ae re linbay 2 Then — it 30 years 8 descri —A Lammerm — — — Spot on the ne by a —— 
recommende agem s joinin th Ba a appear eaves ase. 
i larly, whe at all pette ent of the g the 0 two da „when to have , when 
y ye a high — and — ne eg ever they a they se Their elds läs adjoining o = 3 — Br N — —e— e escaped as — 
with modera! ree or fi n, should hav: red ones — e | Turni ed; the; ba thse Waite te Onc oe e, and one ER: T C. Cha to Co 
Seated dro dropping e bleeding, our days — nas purga sates mes ** — 1 ut into the kz or by night, wh in Comoe pF oman ah carbonate — 
stock „ an and ays t whe TE we 
er ecturer enfore 9 — repeated, | the in the spring, when ‘ham fo et in the fiel 1 ie nad Banter: H U. it will correct 
the count to this part of th ‘the With respect torearing ot you gre. | ar pon te aes ae The An n is new to moldy. 
ge 1 the. — manage “ — | te r . smal yards: with used to The they 22 "feel pad bees Eear Th my Whoa, ne the 
prope: a abed — erive — Ma be! the * em straw and 8 3 second not feel | exposu Mix it wi e at once, but they of a dit 
“ ch yea xpos th „ = 
| —— wether inthe — 7 —— 8 mae anoeia Pi dire mkt 8 aani], | Doamete AA lime, which will bee of ‘the seeds of 
| — which they we pan; athe ag. THE Wis es fod in those bh * — 7 most sane Mion, The a the welt — 
e r L s n Dalton, 
diy caused by se Of mismanagement, an then de 2 — e R 2 "aly iow oF MANGES: without the pt studente; and the other edition is 
Ra diring he intr Du — was ee cured by a donation. from th Socrer it, supposing the later to conta Manure, Gua 
1 hothouse — e fields — ave — was mar pen * 5 of Wellin ae e Ma arquia erop, thoug mel ae a a ninin po gre and lime and 
Gre invariably formed 128 on A se . — und A pes ged a Despatch inl * F —— emne ugh no doubt a E a portion pay thei ca sane foc of lime, 
expos ed at eir 8 gon ks > on Ca b , probabl n the 
— pre e expense of the constituti which tee September presented to taining the noble We shouid — B. yo y one-third of thelr 
3 — frequent backs t constitution — in the lich, Willia the Society at e should not ¢ t give —— 11 
ease “ those rga 5 and y constitational dis t we — j Society = — when the ee 8 — meeting. ployment for t gonsider h ita — pr: Tems Ai that 3 feed 
Hoose, he considered „ and not of „which is pri urbances of undersi ot farquis oh owing addre „ Esq., of Gas Li or him in the 5 cows or n to keep a bo. putrid. 
cattle togeth also an aff the kidne primarily a di Readi gned t st Noble th s a ss of thank ve te unless you 
| peter ey a ig ys, is th PE) Sarr ag dh — arried unani- getable life: could dnd em- 
re to a fe the gende e resul ship’s h iety, beg embers 3 of Angl nani. | analo e: but > ts fresh em. 
0 w col ter, 8 and g to f glese gous t y ex state it 
releg — — nig and brought into proves. name v to 10 And most acceptab z a oe —— 2 0 ä to air 5 Sn to 
consumptive co — — dered 3 commo z after being e most — 1 — present of PY ae lord. the he — —— aa ea e a process 
—— conan angerous ed ship’ ee ation uke o che 1 p repeatedly, and be able t a quantity — 
. — t very — of Ton communicat reed from a 8 —— rhea splendid arenai pelea lordship’s — at che no in a mo a. spare per ac: — vege. 
of those —— wm ed tp the most price] olumes, beari of British | PE: al per acre, ate, i. th or two urn 
c., and said — diie — lec 8; 2 a — eless value,” ng your lord- such 2 er, It appea' e. including sprend it over 
— — ete ‘raced thet sor , ple —— cribed| M P rm M p g E emear ened in 4 deposit f ns of the 
Bai and. cold. of proper — —— — se 2 eae 2 — 4 r — a SA E; 
oe fel ventilation ae rowded | As One of the 2 ARM AT issolves a good deal of I — — leareous 
— join on, —a diseas well as re rt, this pat o rst to set wrox.— Thi solution ot bion f lim — a calcare in rai 
; n erro e consid evil ”— farm r Sir * iv inin eposited. , and On ex 4 
e vi r in d ere was . Gree ing so — if the 8 
8 ——— ati andto be — 2 it; contains 250 sta iring me years age on po lege EA process be alow, th posure to the air it 
farms ve wi f yo he ore but 8 tatute wick. on 8, such te of slow nate 
than aopa i — —.— oman je consequence of to the wat 9 farm- buildin Meta with a goo 4 9 be made of the materi are 9 1 cs result is of lime 
5 e regu! are st ly,” to ants o ngs are ng it abr materi And Vin loose in hard 
| me more commonly i a à judicious f pats stuffed — on rates — pun present mer” 2 75 3 inade ate —— frost oar — a, n, and kr k 1 aye oy 24 ie ay 
: ; — —— . — Pesta 8 = 4 — — 4 n 3 his e — — jeza found t ö —2 28. — sae 1o it OLD N 1 to reduce knocking 11 w . 
eee re — — ts appearance as n et Was t 8 S: Cheshire te in which i tagen 
inter g depa prev an early rance in early a 0 get ta — n th hich it will 
intended to be rtment, enting s y or late fi soles, whi ccom lish i 11 th z the a e absen 
l tied depas „ he str o man ush of , which h nE shed w aine 60 è pre ppe hoo ce of a 
e g The aol being sg hat 5 ee serie ban pinot po 
ihe r 
3 — tou etiam daar creas — dra 3 feet ong heavy, lose to New pasture, whe freque ray i re 4 che AAMA 
ee — e — — attached uring the aaa in, and, wi and 5 * y loam, he has ek titties acre A litt! Change of foo er food: and mulati 
eee e | an tod Mira oo ri eee ee SATE BRAA 0 
; be rai a south ule e til | to do this a ris odh oe ng to Green 3 1 given. are 
g to fa —— . — | has grabbed up th y the d 1 8255 r . 8 uta nad, ia produced by ths 
| n E E the | the dit p the old i ay at l HEAT: s a sort € are the be 
ch old ir s but n nnocent, ‘ald "Oa Phe 
| their farm-yards two habit of turni possent tin 8 into 1 8 2 n he | „8990 3 „ . aee among 
5 . 5 and . 1 ie ung Déa. lences, he a P gh up a 8 — ae here 4 —.— * Brat Has eg bee Bs qualit lity. ’s red- 1 hind, 
not too perin ot ay when mps e old rus ? m , page oonlight ressing the! s 
tho forcib! g about th the | W 3 h h . ] is level, evening, and thie 
be erected, — ‘hat in al on — 1 amin — — t or — wih soo _mmuure an for Oats 72d — — oe ar Wrasse a oud N are 2 rte 
1 alteration b est of tha | cor allies gu „ gathering — * te ceo 5 
d be . stem shoul a ovem ngs about to a other è e years, accordi in as pastu salt, em in the m ding them ed only by strewing 
— 5 — convenient not be lost — of old ones the Turnips, h eee ording to the re for Sv es 71 ornings, an till £ — 
ac — it is pr for ight of. „or six ps, he cleaned . The land bei price of| P 4B. 1 bet troyi or 
fase actised, & urposes, ose weeks, an them being fi 42 ter tha with 
e e B pet cent, on the rt, rua at | Bout 30 ton 3 by hand about for five SA ENE an Bas Ib. as food 
Me. Danbus, 6 by feeding eat — 8 his useful 1 he e ? > S tie, W ge mee gett oom ho 4 . for 
8 ill; e 2 OURSE: è e urzel -— Foe 
| 1 Dis e ces, on severa 3 plo plement : he orwegi 9 appeal to LH. Th and. without an 
l bere . Tywarahayle — 8 or to th — two horses p! with wi t fo doub bt, — bat this law wil protect you, i 
e 5 san sows for Wi 8 
ne 2 Ibs. of Li k was about is. 544. per day the | whi of a large ptt 7 2 eee EI 
iR - Ibs. o Linseed, 53d. per d inutely. ch is cont ly lives u a Se be: a str 
ot ie. of Barley «See ay on the bro ak e, inually wa e oo Chas 300 feet hi nefited by it 
14 Ibs, he Sagal — Rye, . 214 ibourh some extensi s orth —5 igh, Hotties Guar Kaik 
ay, at 38. p nee ae. se ay 47 5 life ithin ood, to the toc W = ineno dere fi ectarines Grape: continue to be 20. 
endance and fuel 555 n in damage of Eo cii ihe fitara, Laiak ot sone ag oaen ee 
eS tt 44 small extent may be ju ge i eager al yogetable Tucnips coe von a n ber 224 
shall ated ha eee ee upon ‘rom th mfined to may "bo gt rately plen: more pienti, and 
Pe 
17 — in e deai en fret Royal Agricult r miles ro 9 3 — e dys a 5 6d. Seine ee from 3 l 
d tire ‘tim nase „ > aea ural Society of E shea nd. Journ 15 0 . 5 altered, sinc since our las * 3 
: es te, orated e Tin eee e the 1 t entiful. 
e and on Turtips and thre Lepi Calend ae Garden! 25 tthe demand: Alush oom and omar 
-instead = hus ng fi crm of tb the o vory est . — — —— e Lin- MMBRMUIR S 40 e Operations ula, 1 Re e ee, se eo roras detch from 
rr ben — is st ga 0 fatten . — wi HEEP F . Pine. f ums, Fu 
mu en — enab meat, in eartin th fine soythes o Oct. 1 Gra apples, per Ib. UIT 
; totter a there was oe aoe ment and thereby ea three an 1 2 o . th ‘of 1 com- * ag ‘lb. 8 Lemons 
ban If tence for the cy — ere Tho lectu quicker —.— while „ aer each mo = 8 the Peaches per * per by Sato ls per 100, 85 is tots 
i — aa — stomachs yo ng chaff b — oe 9 = aed — E when the er — , and — “4 — —.— es, * s a ite Almonds, Seed * 
W. 0 nt nti loz., 88 to 
Se hi exercise tend t a rich asia te he ems better done—a matter of Sa this pis hoary ie septhes where |” ears, per doz, 2 to 48 125, | Walnuts g i 20" 
Bo — evils» 8 by the ‘ood a =o the in our Ws is mae ng, eat i inportwace 33 work i rid ved Apples, 38 5 eve, 48 to 6s 8 eg ia 5 
| maat {o Point o e con . — ar eng kept in constant rt have cost — cost Ring, and sentia, up of after dny ing | Oranges, per de » be — phan, 45s to 60s 
be nement ia th 9 Wie ail Marira a ans u Se With Dod: and sides food, white reapin Ox., £0 09.5 — Brazil, p. 20s to 228 
‘the umen, calle e feedi s in 3 A. bese bad bi Alth: 5 sooner gga en nsider ping — Pe GETABLES. 12s to 16s 
ús—such en; also 7 t, pad A uce - | for dryin 2 85 the — ie say shar ‘or — 2 — 2 — * to Is 
anit thee 5 eee direct 8 the wi what onan —— Greens, per 65 tolos n 
e: S oped n u doz.. 
in which ea pel d ry few ee ng of the third 3 nan fogs re a. the time, which ä able | 1 , 1s 6d to2s6d } Sh . * to 4d 
straw-chafl, Sbro — Ag with lal Te F 7 auns okie = been decir e of a SORTAT; ES co our hi poi — . bush., Is 51 Arti oP hy “town 
a aki á es oti ad 
din m this us Turnips, — 3 tible Ee aa d 5 chimney m but by . good conditi: orrel, p. hf. sieve, ny v cho es, ba £4 to 8d 
us. phd hard cone, portions of dition trust to the 5 we — the stacks sma on as Gar ke to ood “he mg Mawel 1s6d to 
e peculi pectin aked state betw indigested find At this altit ing frosts of it to keep safel es eas per cwt., 3 a, Cab. 58, do·., Is tots 
experience a diges a king food for een the leaves oe at all do experience th — Na feet), orua ter to put it into’ — | Tan — per bush, ah Š Eadive oe r ai 
of farm 0 The „ we not unfr by the 2 br ive, per 200 tols 
as ers, of the wed, e presen equentl, grain a is Tome re, 1 . 
e essary. at steamii £ as » | average. 3 crop in te thio avoid losin whenever it wil. jae Rede, 4 gp Mush meN p hf, Ries ay 
pd ng of grain Fn 55 S fon sheep Erak injurious ee on p TP pa ie —— ee — e! =. per Sees 4 en 
nducted ed by s every kin * m- tear bar. : er Se in, mis y above an to ns, p. hf. siev s Smalls: ush., 3s to 68 1s 6d 
on f 1 experi 8 wet N py ts are als e, 18 6d alad 
* “th a poena 1 — Fenne 3 p. pun., 2d 
33 è la'a z peeves w case 2 a is s troubletome a some. ` When the mbers, each rigs — pap 20 to 3d 
generally 1 — os ole ** A Anse a nusually preval: "E highly i infections Radik p. bondie „ Thyme, Lond Gee 2d to 3d 
and the early days of y subjected | on pone other respi infected, * 2 5 dis- * Bek 3 N 
to 1 the cows „ Calas * opor flocks arè ow very m much 0 3 285 per hes, 1s to 28 a oots ie ines is 
the nex entirely on skim proa bedodi 3 setae ecm healthy, Carrots 1332 dager 
32 ht weeks, 6 =e ian * . ont — 85 and have ar’s prices, The . ago at Per bun., td to ag Bune ereda 
ev , it would en en Tu 3 ur st well for ; E bun 
nes a sufficien: e. foes a very — the wa 59 seer rams is —.— extra keep be og oan NGLISH TIMBER 4 TIMBER ch, 4d to 
impo t supply of ananta ths | N and where j at t they d, and we h Pe TIMBER, AND BARK. 
werished, and the 1 e | mence in be in good condition when be ave Oak er Load, PLANK . 20 
improv nse- | fortni about te . The b tion w . Aah. ic: £510 0 tors 0 Per F ; 
ement im- 3 The c n days, and will occ sheep wi E — 415 0— ; 038. Od. ‘to i pes — n Bose 
and are terol ee bo T 5 e be e aes — 3 9 
ee 3 „111 it 6 * 
pasture uring th 3 0 310 0 
during day. The ene * 
1 à 103, pl ak declining in 2 0 
ppice 131, t 


. 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


2 Moxpar, Oct. 1 — 
POTATOES.—SourRwank, Oct 15. J GFS 
e have a v supply of Beasts Seine atith: the. ec ATUES, VAS : 
mand —— unusu small, owing t to the —, condition s on lave teen — er limited hy ate a say a a E the —.— Tuna MENTS, coats oF kee ye 
es hing low set a MBELLIS 1 S, ani 
teen - Tork Regents, 70s, 10 85s. rage + ts and AROR 
siderable number remain unsold. A few * Scots ing P avi ; Wisbeach, | VAUGHAN En i 
bah pay ar ery sy esc or = are said | 65s, to 70s, ; Scotch, 65s, to 708.; foreign N 508. to 708. OGGON, are 2 e 5 
high. Tho number a Sheep is — largan; hry for the above RK L of D: at Croagon and Cos Pee cker aeg Sa 
on fewer wanted. eri a reduction of fully 2d. of Drawings fo sear Dowgatehil, ty be 
8 Ibs. on all a ities, very tow Digs. bra — for Calves iar 2 3 i supply of Wi ei Biting 8 gs forwarded on application. oc,’ ipii 
4 se slowly, at lo 3 y taken IRISH PEAT dan 
Pro n ak, SOE PS 8 : Te qr. Foreign was held for higher fp aa SH er AMEL ARCO AL. 0 
220 0 Sheep, 66 Calves, and 10 Pigs ; . Leicester and North- obliges us to raise ou 1 . but the late 25 ual advance shed by a Ro: ORATION e 
os aee Taga Beasts ; from Lincolnshire, 200 ; and from Cam- malting Barley and test grinding are the turn de — ba 2 — ple gt 2, 1849, which limits th 8 Incorporation, 
— st 3 — d Per st fally support our quotations. Pea: 1l arer.—Beans | to the amount of the esp bange. of 
1 e „of8lbs—s d 8 d Ihe Oat trade i i a i, P 
Best Scots, n n 2 u 1 for best qualities, for which 4, 8 W , Cha oie n 
fords, Kc.  ... 8 Sto3 10 Ditto Shorn F ne V˙•˙“'i (late Ohut secret Dinion, 
Best _Short-horn 3 4—3 6| Ewesd 2d 2d quality 2 EE 3)” r Oo. cost and freight, itt . Oe e of Works, eee it in Bengal, i 
Best Donat te e Dawn me yews | heels mail, This morning’s are et wad tinte attended, vant Capital St 52 * % Place London, 4 
-breds 310—4 on eR ss «+ | bare of English Wheat, which is full d 5 soo ge be pital Stock, 500,0007., divi — : 15 
Di s —4 0 Calves . 4 te See $ lim — bat Be a y as dear, reign was in paid up, in pursuance of t i of 10h, = 
tto Sho: 1 Ae manded late prices.—Barley and Oats Charter: and Deed of Settlement, 1 rovisions cma 
Beasts, 1919 ; eco: = — io: “Calves, 1113 Pigs, 248. * Tons pn sorva 10 Aer the l a 8 Beans pe “ — Ay Of 102, a Shang 
25 se n.—Flour is unaltered in n three months’ ti 1 — 
The supply of Beasts is y no me: large, still itis quite : eee pen Dam Corn.— During this week the weather has Twenty-one Days? time after the payment of any fi 
adeq to the deman — choice Scots bein 51 seg and become more favourable for Wheat sowing. areholder, by letter from the Sesrét — to be given pea, 
make 4s, Monday’s poe — are with difficulty sup 3 3 — nde markets 9 the interior Wheat has been held with . payable on the 25th September, 184 The fetes 
seco a ate, T of Sheep is sm is — has thete an othe —— 2 Foreign 1 er 2 e ogy tly ies rates are This. Society was — aa — sienna tame 
ast. ng an st u employing the I 
We have again an abundant supply of L Calves ; ; — very ee rather more money; other articles s have not | and Peat Charcoal, Font antry in tho Bi 1 
slow, at a reduction 8 Ibs. Pigs are lower, owing to | q 55 e, excepting Cana Seed, which continues to | gradual, but permanent, ogs of Ireland, 
the glutted state of the dead markets. From Holland and ney jaro In Memel and Konigsberg prices of grain have no The Peat Charcoal thus 7 — of the Bog Lands, 
any there are 211 Beasts; 590 Sheep, and 54 Calves ; from of aae T any variation. In Dantzic the market is now cleare commercial value for m 2 — an article of considerably 
-_ == North ampton, 400 Beasts; and 114 Milch Cows | © ai pas peers oe 9988 t 4 7 5 al valu 38. to 45s, by recent public exhibitions, and — e it has been shim 
from b. in and the Lower Balti satisfy hi pdt 
Best — sa ee te — 8 3 4 to 3 8 little old Wheat is 1 is pad N of new eee — et —— ae oh | — i 
ese perde; 4—3 8| Ewes& 2q quality a 33 3 —— A aad es dry inodoros poi 
2d quality Be 2: 8 — 1 2 Ditto Shorn. LiverFoon, TUESDAY, Ocr, 15. e had | in bags and transmitted ee out inconvenience, aid ù 
Best Downs an mbs a good attendance of 8 and 1 Zug K j 
1 an r ere was a fair 233 de- e manure thus produced is d P 
aa — 3 10 — 4 0 Calves per Ae he Ma of Whee t, = an arenes of 1d. to 2d. per | €qual if not superior in — — 7 — — 
2 9333 Sheep and d Lambs, 5 1040; Calves 5223 Pi — 3 Beans, and 5 made fall eee Flo ashel dearer. Barley, “t —— nenen ure. 8 1 
5 gs, 260. easier term: Pi dian Corn fone held fi ewes sold 3 having f — e pe lished these facts at their own m,, 
or extreme rates few or some months past had experimental 
Ho PS.—FRIDAY, Oct. 19. sales were m ork at Derrymullen, in the co f Kildare, wher, 
Messrs, P. righ ned Surry report MPERIAL WEEAT. BARLET ddition to having satisfied th —— 
— 4 demand 155 ig „ which Nane Be 58. NN bri * rere 1 ; ee tein AREN Pact i don with > y 
mo Sussex Hops are 1 * in good demand at weal ri pt. 8....... | 448 6d 26s 9418 
Full Halt the new growth is already sold. Duty, 85,0007. aant 5 5 43 0 27 1 18 65 26 5 30° s 30 
rr = — 5 . 41 9 27 1 17 10 25 11 9 9 0 
eee A 36 Frasses, one. pe diad 2 $ 27 4 17 11 25 2 29 5 3 
LD, x cee 4 2 
Prime Meadow Har 68s to 75s ee — De 1 1 * 3 ff 4 5| 2810 i 
A : 55 = te e ne So gre e 42 
New Hay” = S tote Fie Duties on Fo. 7 27 4/17 10 [25 6 20 10 (80 5 
Wen Manet, Oel. 1 ‘ . gn Grain 1 U 1 1 0 1 0{ 1 1 0 
e ts Hey osto 30 y Inferior «n, eL DR ng Pa Fluctuations in the last six weeks’ Corn Averages. themselves and their families, cultiv d their patches of 
New Hay ee 1 5 ICES. | SEPT. 8. SEPT 15. ‘akin 7 — | Ocr. 6. Oor. 13, Lethe | lyi * 51 r want of seed, and in some cases 
„ n Bees, , 8 . 7 
HITECHAPEL, Oct. 18, so eS è - — „ constant employment. i 
Fine Old Hay . 658 to 68s | New Clo ; Sgt Be ectors earnestly — Bie 2 i 
Inferior ditto Tateno dato d 0 * * Bee ae dave. desirous of promoting the permanent 
New Hay 50 C — 1 — . | Bo ociety, of 5 a e e 
Clover ... ... A 4 E 25 = and profitable labour, 8 ali — 
5 mit can 9 88 
London. | Liverpool. Wakefield B lated t > 1 01 f. interested in in removing from the ds wht 
iat eld, oston. Bi TE — nglan use of pestilence and de 
PRICES ig irmingham. further that object in the only rati 
a A . natur — way, by assisting to provide the an — 
ebnet, [Oet eee ox, | ost 12, b ene ban, G, | oot q8. [or te amen . 
; 4 “i 18. iety promise to ren 
N eae 8.18. d. 4. d,. 2 W ee 8 4 a eso 7 3 bow W 2 
emp red . |38 to43 9 6 4% 0 6 4404045 39—456t S pease 0b % 1 1 e ee 
9 42—48044—50 2 6 916 0 6 1042—4 os 10— 4540—46 lô EN m commercial principles, the Dire ie aa 
red „ ; Z o sG a 6 8199—40 39- 45 40—46 5 6 6 15 6 6 1 who may feel inclined to invest in the Stock of this 
4 white "143434517 0 7 67 0 7 6 —4 eas LR BH OS Hee — Pe a will receiv aud satisfa tory return for 
Foreign. . 36—5036—52 4 3 7 24 3 7 832—4632 3 m 6 I BP RE oes mer “By order — i 
d 5 480 Ibs. 480 lbs, 3 — 4 8 6 24 8 6 2 To whom application for Shares may be made, 
Pade ee — — * 3 5 = RE BAT E EXHIBITION OF THE WORKS | y 
* — — vie „ STRY OF ALL NATIONS 1951,—At a meeting í 
— Pre are — — — see mE the Mere 2 7 5 Bankera, Manufac 1 i Traders, 2 ; 
iriey— $ — — * eld at the Mansion se of the j 5 
Gxindiug wie 3 qr. ar. 8 ar. ar day 2 EI ; inant 
— 21—29 5 Lord Mayor s 
Malting... ... |26—28/26—28| 30s—31s | 300318 |27—33/27—33 ae 20—24: | 99-24. | Tewas moved b Hl. J. Doente Bade Governor of the Bask 
8 . |18—26|18—26 ae = 21—26 21—26 9—33 29—33 | of pe Bag, rg seconded È RE ohn Dillon, 125 fey A 
22 — * anal — us lx, at this meetin Pare 
Mait=Ship ... = — 6 b Royal Highness Prine vag re i President of the Society ty 
8740137401. cas 1 pas for his propagat i te establish an Exhibition of the — 
Oats—White... 1824 A e beui in 1851, Hagel Mense in coming 8 
8—24 38 2d 38 34|3s 2d 3s 3d) — he oe s to co- -oper Roy 5 
For k. 16—2616—22 2 12 5 2 22 5 pics ate a we 19—27 rank by 2 7 Esq., M. P seconded by Mt 
oreign 1320132012 32 4 2 32 4 2 18—20 18—20 2 1 and carried peer | eae 
5 — — ting is of opinion that t the cost o the proposed Fut, 
Peas Boilers |28—30 neon” qr. qr. should be provi ion 
` provided by volun’ untary subscriptions, ang cog 
1 338.— 26—30/26—30) — — 33—4 75 taxation of the country ; and that a koynt a 
Grindin s necessary to inv ~ 
Forel at 25—30/25—30; 28 —293 | 28 — 298 — sass 196 lbs, 196 lbs. | and to give the world the utmost confidence that 
gn. PRY 24—32 29—30 | 29—30 3 II | fieis ("UL be amini impron e is 
iain — — * lies d was Masterman. s 
ee Sir J. Henry Pelly, Bart., and carri 
; eid Ka — pee 3332—3332—3432—34 ral Committee be formed of the 
; o 33 —37 33 —37 2 e e eels 12—13 1213 Traders 0 ashe 3 to promote the prop 
25 —30 | 25—35 28302630 = 1113 | 11213 The Lord the ebe ohn Master 
ee 11—13 The Lord Mayor elect Raikes 
40 —42 40 —42 |32—40'32—40; — a —— present George 
sa dis sis ein ay — e Sheri Thomas 
i — — ail ee The €p — a aa of the Bank of 3 
„ The D puty-Govern or of the | W, Cotton, 
Šo EE bi a 888 bs Bunk — England ; 
T 9 — a — an of the East N 
ndia Compan 
27e—30s 288—29s — — 1 12—13 12—1 The ja Company ag of the jas 
280 Ibs. Ibs. p. sack|p. sack per sack, —13 j East India Compa pany 
5 30—32 | — 623238 31—34 | 31—34 22 Rothschild, . s 
Golds ey 
oe add to their number; and 
Averages. | Imports, | Aver. Impts. Aver. Aver Gloucester. Stephen EDS carey, 1455 nde i Vat Sieen ; 
b s „ e Hon 17 ni 
kE verages, Im committee be instructed to and cor 
42 4 rs. E d. rs. is, d. j s. d = various towns in th the kingdom in 
3 7579 45 017559 [39 9| 8575 41 3 1146 
17 3 543 4 41 23 10 149 | 28 24 — 
74313 i i 
— 11 F 6 | 1021 
0 3030 30 4 l 3 = — ai 
759 
SEGAR and SAND. 
el TONNICLIFFE. |. nd DUNNS| _waraut, | CS © STURGE, 
9, St. 861 


l 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


PT Sales by Auction. 
DALSTON. 
hae ee AND MORRIS are fay 


msequence of the Lan 
— West India Dock J oo 
Sting of 
— Evergreens, American 

us Shrubs, and Fruit a 


al T 
rees, in a great var 
rom the 28 nature of — 4 aol, the plants will re- 
8 — m their extrao: y size and magnificent 
growth, oly, wait de 5 the attention TE 2 Gentle- 
and the —— The stock has ong bee well known as 
e fines ond. * oe roge wed p Aor the salè, 

mg ach (r 1 fo purchasers), on 
the princ Seeds. 


premises ; the Shon otra de ae of 
in London ; ana of the Auctioneers, American 285 ery, 
Ess 


* NURSERY, un MORRIS ree 
ESSRS. PROTHEROE a 
ð their Fildes á 


glock each day, a selection from thi 
4 OCK. It will seas of t eadin 


v uty ; among them 
Andromeda ena (ine, panty en and 
namerous eas, Pog ter = and Rhododendrons, well set for 
bloom, and | adapted for fo 

P. and M. again in vite a per rsonal inspection as the best 
méans of oe of this Nursery, known for 7 1 i 
N its stock can be moved.—Can be viewed a 
before the Sale, — Catalogues had of the „ — Mra 
is London, at the Auction Mart, aud on the Premises, Leyton- 


WOKING, SURREY.—VALUABLE NURSERY STOCK. 
"yo Shrub, Forest, and other Trees; 900,000 ae — 
aud Seedling Quic k; Roses, and other Valuable 


1 WA — 5 will sell by 3 on MOND 
rebar * myn * Hi 


4 fer; : 0,000 Yews, from 1 to i 
—— * — from 1 to 5 feet; 


May 
Memar A o — 


— 


ESTONE, CHERTSEY, SURRE 
wee WATERER will Sell by Auction, at is Duke’s 
MON 


tral 


qual to Freehold, Patjotn. 

r estate, and commanding a — of 50 feet 
8 further particulars apply to 

28, Craven- street, Stra — aud — 

of Mr. WATERER, Auctioneer and Surveyor, 


r 

warded ob, dh applica 1 and Catalogues wil Bin a for- 
n tt 1 ‘cl 
SEK Wa iby Antone 7 e E ioraa os 1 — our a ge stamps, 
ALE BY “AUC AveTIO ON AT THE ET mA 
LBs, RO ES & e. 

ME WILLIAM HASLAM begs to inform the 
e will yi on WSDNESDAY, 21 $ 55 and 
1 ASSORTMENT of 


pein f Mr. Chater), 
0 b Na rt, and at the 


Nurseries, E 


TO GENTLEMEN, © CONTRACTORS, AND OTHERS. 
Mur CHOICE NURSERY STOCK. 
ME. PEACOCK i Sel 


is erri dey | by Auction, ò 
& femises, on MONDAY, Nav. 19, 1849. and 1 following 
Se asil o'clock, the choice NUNSER LY STOCK. standing o 
Tetras of land, being a aha eri Mr. ae — 
Serrey extensive Nursery, halt Godalming, 
— a great e of Koley Evergreen and 
ards of and Shrubbery Plants, native and exotic 
bided Quic Two Milions of strong four years seedling an 
2 Several thousan soli transplanted (4 feet 


oung's Nursery ; and 
my © the fhe Chichester and Portsmou: 
Wen, Fass the at 

ern and So 3 2 e is “a 1} mile of the South 


ret 
to be | 
the principal 9 ; 


ming. To be viewed bet 


SUPERIOR HOUSE 
ALBANY H 
R. WA 


HOLD FURNITURE. 
USE, BYFLEET, SURREY. 
ATERER will se 


28 


—— Washstan 
pets, 9 
denen Chairs coat stuffed i 

— Card Ta 


7 ft. 6 ins. — 2 Sideboard of * 0 3 
oa rior ebe Secretaries and Bookeases, by ft. 
— pr 5 Tables, with _ sive ca 
n excellent $ day Clock, a 
— 3— and other 22 ; afe 
Utensils, Orange Trees, Camellias, and other pl 
and other — -n 4 »¶— gt 
sale, Catalogue upon the premises, 
— ‘fo 9 on application | by — inclosing tv 
stamps, to Mr. 94 — oneer, "Land an Tim 
veyor, Chertse 8 
N. B. The House p bete — th a piece of Lan 


LANGLEY and Gi 
w; orto Ar. WATERED 
FARMING S STOCK, CROPS, IMPLEMENTS, é&c., 

TE EROFPOLDS FARM,” LEWISHAM, NEAR SOUTH. 


END, KENT 
ESSRS. DAVIS anp VIGERS are direc eted by 
the oe en — a 1 the Farm, to sell b 


mise ove, on TUESDAY, the 6 
mber, at 12 for 1 o clock, the 9 — of the well. eee 
d vey choice LIVE and DEA p STOOK, viz,,—eight York. 

et a young Bull, cight 


-yr-ol three yearling Heifers, Ea fat Calves, 'B 
are, four Fillies, a — -year-old Cart s e, 10 active an on 
soned draught Horse — a Wegae , Carts, Ploughs, 
arrows, Se arifier, Hs. Wash. — Prine say | Sows, 
tore Pigs, two Ewes, in me Seat 75 ¢ ters of Oats, 
00 quarters of Wheat, g 80 quarters o — in the 


- w 
straw, 100 loads of 
d 6 0 


Swedes, an ang old Wurzel a Rick cloth and poles, 
nearly new, a — Cob, Gig and rness, and other 
fects in and on s at * 2 the day before 
and on mo et d on the Premios, 
t the — ai = ig) — 8 the d triet, and of = g pega rs, 
3 Frederick’ oe Oid Jewry. . Davie and 


VicEns are fully authorised to Let t 
TO -FLORICULTURISTS, * Ke. - MOST 
ELIGIBLE AND OLD ESTABLISHED BUSINESS, 
0 _ 5 in me ence of the 
oun Curtis, the 
23 SPA. The 
he ise of the mee 
aie sare an — le e 
and patronage for a great number of pours, attaining a 
positi Ay unequalled b — feag ee in th 
aoa Counties, an full business, p 
unit = = possession ot a first- ra 
— 


dea late proprieto 
RANELAGH GARDENS, or — 


— — 
great care pies 
a, = by are ars 


Gree me — 
— 00 patru 


— oie ae — 


teat Shop, Countin modions ge 
wit also a neat Villa 


sheds, with a M ate are arden 

Residence, that may — — 2 with phen! A vy | 

with the Garden = ge aged — property is n Lease, of 
which 62 years unexpired, There Tn “theres 3 

Nursery Grounds, “convenient ene in 1 puns of the 

town, liberally stocked wit every description Fruit and 


Forest Trees, Evergreens, Shrubs and Plants ; e ground 
2 pod held — Roem a — and — ht be dis. 
of separately, the option, however, being given to the 


— — . ee Gardens, Por farther —— 
2 to vie ply to Mr. Sae Ber m RUSSELL, Auctioneer 
Agent, — — Lea — 
TO NURSE: YMEN, ena AND OTHERS, 
* BE ene e oF, by PRIVATE CONTRACT, 
f the v uable and improving NURSERY 
paged de to the p ei s of Mr. Witttam NONNS, of 


benefit of Creditors, as now standing, and being upon 
4 acres of ground, at Barn erg. „ in the Parish, and within a 
uarter of s mile of the Tow wn, of Leek, aforesaid, ee 
e 


rames, Pits, T gass Were Fences, &e. 
Nursery is now, a s been in fall trade fo 

upwards. The * ‘of a 
amongst other —— „ an 


671 
Gez rE BOTHOUSES made by machinery 


= door, ned Shae 2 1 1 fet 
N of glass in giaz 
with 16 Fy, sheet — 8 of a large size, and palates tne. — 
of best oil colour. delivered to any way or wharf in don, 
for 15% 10s, ; do. 15 by 10, 22. 10s. ; a do. do. 18 by 12 
261. 10s: ; a do. do, 21 by 12, 321, 10s; including a for 
brickwork, l}inch Greenhouse Lights, glazed 16 ox, 
sheet glass, painted three times, 14d. per sot; — do. t 
T foot — J. Lewis’s Machine Hothouse Works, Stanbford hill, 


—ñ— — 
STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT P 
WIRE NETTING, t 


he ~ 
KETTA 
Wippe ; 


ow, b 


Hares 
arse — = 


ence, for excludi: 


and Rabbits from Ga 
This Ne 
Agricultural lety of Sco * a . 
where its Efficiency, Great sania mt Cheappess 
n Sag Ju 


the Societ s bot —— 
The im mene one 
and Young P Plantations is often so A nie 
a year or t will amount to to than the 
e — ‘with this Net. It a 80 durable, ‘oo when 
—— * are „ an ae a be 2 1 of its 
t can be re * 


Pose, weed 

oy seven feet apar “Tt i 
dering Hedges 

pervious 0 suc ermin; and A: — the 


ni F5 


pn Dh up into vast 
t forms a most effi. 


—— variegated and other 1 es 2 en, Porta 
n Laur ews 


a great number 
= the best kinds = — * Kr too numerous to mention. 
eae 222 8 Feri e En 

08 

— | Stock, cy in fi 9 abe Forh “Stafford. 
being t con- 

mater 


cient guard, at little expente, for i e = * 72 
Prices.—18 ins. high, 9d. ; 24 ins., 1s,; 30 ins, 
36 ins., 16. 6d. 155 linea 
Ora "aa 00 yards 8 8 ins, wide, will 1 1 s. T g 0 
Do. 0 yards, 24 ins, wide : 
Do, 100 yards, 30 — —— oe ee 5 
7 10 0 
web is — it would. be charged 


thy of te 
and, and I — for One 


not give a better idea of the great 
strength of their Premiun Wire en | than by stating that 
the weight of on of their 24-inch at le. is equi 

ee of another 


Lo OAH en i 

23323 2 225 

227225 choses 2747757 8 

— 

222 HHS 22 2 
2. 2222 
222222 


a at 
4 et: 
FORO 
22752825575 


a 
he above enn be made any width at at proportiona 
— half is — My it will reduce the we bir one 
-proof netting for p heasantries, 3d, 


The taking the tack wouta tinued Patterns forwarded 
Tanda. rope may be viewed and further particulars per square foot, — and BISHOP, — Ser 
had, on 3 at the office be Francis Causo, Bsq., in Norwich, and — 2 expense in London, Peter. 
Leek, aforesaid, Solicito ane hea 11. ees.—Leek, Oct. borough, Hull, or Newcastle. 
* BE LET, FURNISHED, n convenient COTTAGE, Ge GOOSE emigre 16. y Ib. — Bed 
p’easantly situa: ed in a Nursery m Feath OSS P never — 
bed-rooms, two parlours, Pe ame , Pg HEAL asp "e 8 * 8 we 
having E in London this offers an daba AET ony! A IE Grey ¢ Goose oe i 2 
as it is e to the Blackheath Station of the North t Rail- | Grey White ditto... iw > 
wep, and w within a quarter of an hour of London- ins | Foreign di i 6 | Best Dantzie ditto _ ,.. 
run every half hour ae half-past pi . till — * st 05 x. a, = Some List of Bedding, containing i — . — 
rsery, 
For particulars apply to SURREY. ursery is eights si sizes, and prices, sent free by i>! on uber > 
yi 6. ttenh t- 
O BE LET, i within 16 miles London, their Fact 9 To enham. court-roa 
FARM of about 130 acres, with good Farm Buildings and MPROVED METROPOLITAN WATER SUPPLY, 
three cottages; the la sos isin bigh — e Tery cor —*+ : ‘ablic Mee ting will held the Hanover-:quare 
outlay h having been re y expend ng. Be views * — Rooms, ia Mon * 1 22d — for the purpose of takin 
particwars had — ‘pplication to Mr, W. BUTCHER, no co nsi ideration As Of inprovin „ 
Agent, Epsom, Surrey 3 of placing the entire 
CHELTENHAM. -TO NURSERYMEN AND . — gare — * the bangs of ‘thie pes a sel 
O BE LET ith Immediate Possession RLES Lama TON, Esq, M.P. for tminster, will take 
pt Shey A KURSERY GARDENS, with 1 the En ir, A ‘chock, T. u. All —— of physic aly -n 
Green servatory, Dwe fee oh gyn Ee nerdfai « ai . nd — ee — — — . alt 
Ofies. ony Ponu are situ a gt veig * beg Jo X 00 i Tabbernes, ak japar e Po ap e 


ran i pe 2 ortanity for any about to 
ae ond oñ: 5 th oak which 4 Fan 7 5 be taken 
at a valustion,— stern 7 rs, Appl sers, Youna and 
GILLING, „ or to Mr. B. Ye: cr E oncer, Beile 
Vue Hotel, Cheltenham, Gloucester, hire. 


Metropolit r Supply Associatie on, will be in attendanee 
0 expound geig ‘sine for the. Astana of the abore great 
object.—Cete ber 20. 


672 THE GARDENERS’ 


In one vol. royal Svo, illustrated b ——* and Woodcuts, 
rice 9s., in cloth 
"THE PROGRESS OF THE “DEY. a Rt 
OF THE LAW OF STORMS, and of the Variable Winds 
tical A poue qi 17 Subject 8 e $ By 
5 K. N WEALE, 59, High Holborn. 


PROF. L ge ie INTHODUOTION TO BOTANY 
Just eee Food En 8v0, ix Co — and 
sW 


Lieut.-Col. Ret, C. 


ngra . 
gh BOTANY. 


BO very e 
what folate wove 
= ees ondaa < L : aaa Low 
7 55 2 5 75 rg Le 5 Ta 

QUARTO ED. 
Dn the 3ist — October will be published, in one Volume imperial 


art tert 5 cco, price 2}. 128. 6d., 
EE PN Reduced from 


>m ATL 
l folio. For the use of 8 
Academics, sul. avon 
By EITH ——— F. R. G. S. F. G. S., Geographer a 

Edinb trir in oe to es 5 Honorary Member of 

the Geograp Society, 
This Edition contains 25 ce 1. a Se tps 

al Map o 


ga 


Geol: 
bizhest a" of Art, expressly for this Editio 
= A. ter HNS TON, and carefully cian under thei 
intendence ; with Descriptive Letterpress, and a ory 


a be ety will cont Part VIII. (price 33. 6d.) 
ad hs odes Boa ree ee ed as here- 
e whole is completed 
f Febru 


2 


ave comp ore 
ublication shall have terminated, all the pe Tih 
got ready, and may be had on the lst of 3 
D ons, Edinburgh and L 
IMPORTANT TO AD 9 —THIRD YEAR. 
On Saturday next, price 6d., 
E HORTICULTURAL ALMANAC and GAR- 
N 


DENERS’ 
actica arde 
AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT by M. M. MILBURN, Secre- 
tary to the Yorkshire Agri HR Society, author of Prize 


Essays,“ &c., &. The useful and practical character of this 
— secures for it a most extensive sale, and therefore 
renders it 8 rly oie gree for advertising, while 
its cheapn recommendati All Advertisements 


will pos og 2 * did last 
without any extra Eare To 
arded on or befor 


ear, N porn a edition, 
sure 8 eee ts 
re Wednesday, 24th inst., to 


eee and Sons, Paternoster-row, and 
II Booksellers. 
ovember 1, price 1s., or post free, 18 stamps, 
LEN N 18 GARDEN ALMAN AC and FLORIST’S 


CHRONICLE AND sida secede GAZETTE. 


THE FOLLOWING WORKS ARE CONSTANTLY ON SAL 
AT THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE OFFICE, 
5, UPPER WELLING iai biti STRAND, LONDON. 


t. 
ing the year. List of 
the best show 3 fruits, ae. and ——. London 
ial, and continental nurseries; new flowers, plants, 
o., to come out in the spring, and other — 5 
Londo: Cox, 12, King William-street, Strand. 


PRICE FOURPENCE, OF ANY BOOKSELLER, 


666 THE NUMBER F — SATURDAY 
AST, ( OCTOBER 12, 


B 
E 


JOURNAL OF ENGLISH AND EPER ah Lat 
1 “pony ayy THE FINE “epee Ee 
enty-fo 23.5 Fig, 

H EXTRACTS 
" The Lord of thes — By T. 
= Hall, > Fea; 

rnesto di Ripalta: a Tale of 

the Italian Rev olution 
Jacobvan Arteve ade. B 
Concience, 


The Book of Com 
with Notes Legal pa Hist 
rical, By A. J. Stephen 

sau -at-lay. 

Acadie; or, Seven Years’ 
8 8 
Alexander. r Vc 

The Sea-side Book. By 

Harvey, M. D 


y Henry 
General French and English 
Dictionary General English 
2 Fri ä By 
Toil and lhe erg 
Trial. B. rill 
ton Crosland, x sgl 
Visit 


to General Sir A, Gal- 
on the 1 of 
ver Indus. By Lieut, 


ee By J. 


Reasons for revivin the Syno- 

= Function of the — 
By Rev. T Wri ht, M. 

A System System of l. .. “By A. 


J. — 
Rail w. 
Whitehead 


— Expedition 


Original Fapers.— The Arcti 
eiation— Rotes on the old Ordi 
dies in London— The T ais ie Sone 


1 and its Cathedrals, 
Our Weekly . Ragged eg 
a New Irish University—Mism 
veer E the cw dogg brary—Evening Classes for 
mural I — a PA Penny Banks—Intra- 


of Thibet, by Dr. Hooker. 


Report of the Cornwall Polytechnic 
Society — New Plan for 2 
Bollers — Observations r Preventing ee cee 


y ot Richelle) Stra 
ps me ( The 


the celeb: an Trage 
r ore ee 
—Port Phillip Gold Field, aire. 


-o any Bookseller, 


ER die 
ORERT COOPER, 
Taosa occidentalis, 18 ae 


Price 8 
()BNAMENTAL AND DOMESTIC POULTRY ; Taosa orientalis, citace Ae Cte 
their History and e e By the Rev. EDMUND 375 in pots 5 sift, in pots h. la 
Savur Dixon, M. A., Intwood with Keswick, 1 5 9 ing., trans lanted, 5. en AR 1 
"ihe Birds 8 of are ” ” 1 to 2 ft., transplanted Aiet, a 
Domestic Fowl in The Musk D The Pea Fowl tatarica, do., 8 to 4 ins, in wA 
genera The Gr rey China The Golden and Curnessus sempervirens, Upright Cypress, 6 60 91. doz, 11 
The Guinea Fowl Goose liver Hamburgh ans, per 100 in, 
The Spanish Fowl |The White Fronted wis * » 12 to 18 8., transpi 3 
The Speckled Dork- or Laughing Goose The Onckoo Faw „ » 3 ft., transplanted, each 1 10% 
ing The Wigeon The Blue Dan onl » ” 1 ft., in pots, per doz * a 
The Cochin-China The Teal and its The Lark -crested ” ” n pots, per doz,” zd 
ow. congeners » horizontalis, 4 to ö f ins., in pans Per it * 
The Mala: wl The White China a Baland Tomi ” australis, 5 ins, in ts, pe per 1 „ OE 
The Pheasant Malay Goose antam Fow » oides, 6 i ins., in pots, per fja he a 
he Tame Duck the Rumpl w Fowl » Tournefortia, 2 ins., in pans, ae CE a 
he Game Fowl The Komp 3 The Silky — Negro} _» torulosa, 12 to 15 ins., in pots, aeg LA 
The Mute Swan |The Bernicle Goo Fowls „2 to 3 ft., transplanted, earn 
The Canada Goose The Brent aar The Frizzled or , » suecica, 2 to 3 ft., transpl., eh. i 
The Egyptian, or The Turkey Friesland Fowls 55 hibernica, ; ins, in in pots, per doz” i j 
Cape ” Lycia, 6 ins., 12 pots, 5 N 
Contains a good deal of useful information, pleasantly > mos dle 1 ft. a, bi te tae ach 8 
presented, interspersed with 9 eng and varied it snd 4 i n pots, per des.. | 
by disquisitions of the Naturalist.”— 4: P o 6 ins., in pon, per doz, 9 | 
“p ; t Nat » » E 8 in A, 1 ins., in pots, eaccl, — ge 3 
—Railwa, pahe ” ‘te n pots, per doz, B. 
“ By fa r N work on Poultry that has ever been pub. WRTS 155 1 „in pots per doz, a 
lished. Ti 2 delightfully written, sda fall £ practical know- | As tbe d fe ate Anak ae transplanted, each 1 
ledge. The author has, for some 8 canadensis, Herhtod k 88 cP 
of the habits and characteristics oe 1 SN mead) Ro r bag, N St price, transl 3 fe t 
the assistance of numerous active friends in ‘different parts off each y. spruce, 1 to 6 ft., 1 S 
the countr d Counties’ Herald, te teak 1 ¢ 
ah Ct lengh t the poultry-loving 1 2 — have 8 a book hi eps Se oo Himalay: ra Spruce, * to 2 fl. oe i 
on which they ma end for fa se accurate information 11 
3 W 2 y eine = end eee of fow wis, It is | PICEA 8 Balm of Gilead, 1 to 6 ft., a 
evidently the work of a e i 1 and a na atura list; * „ 
and will, we have no ddr in future be THE TEXT-BOOEK of all ” Fra ee ed, 2 4 2 ft, e each „ „ 26 
2 of the feathered tribes domesticated by man for = » Setinatz Silver Fir eat 18 85 e mig 
sake of profit or pleasure, An additional guarantee for th Tn tintai i wat 0 33 ft. each, la. w 1 
excellence of —— ork is given 1 the * that most of the Pints austriaca 2 „Black Aut each one 
9 ne contains appeared as a series d o me we rdeners’ ine, transplanted, 3 to 
ronicle and A pede Gazette, Leeds In'elligen i 
„The title of this book might s Dad a person to suppose that baden 2 2 t, in BO vi plant „„ „ 
it is a mere hand-book to the -yard—an essay on the| „ Canariendis Sins, innos e, 
r of fowls. It is 9 more than this, however ; iV. fe. tee p bd 0. „, pt lian 
t is a most entertaining book for the gene al reader, evincing| ” 2 3 to 24 4 transplanted, , 
mik ob rate of nature, and g of ake ck ia fr T sti ink : 2 1 
quiring m It reminds us 3 of White's Natural oe pte ce 15 to 20 ins 1 ots, end 
History of Nirourns and we cannot give it higher praise.“ $ 5 ft., 9 slanted ed from pith , 
Weekly Chronicle. ” “3 P * n 
a filifolia, 2 ft 1 plant, = pot, Ez om 
At the request of numerous Subscribers, the price of the , » in pots, a ee as e 
TREE — — is reduced from 4s, 6d. to 38. 6d. (post free.) ” Gefardiana, Sins, i a pat tr 85 1 Non es 3. 
HE TREE . Instructions for its „ r envilla, 6 ins, ee pots, e ran sp m pots, = 
Formation and Cultu Illustrated by 24 Woodcuts, he iiatepensis: 6 ins * in pots pet 1 * e 
Reprinted from the GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, with additions 25 insignis, 8 ins. th woe 88 i 
CONTENTS,  laricio, 4 08 ft, r transplanted eack 1 
Annual pruning} Planting out, ar- distance, shorten⸗- ” pe Ad „9 to 12 ins., new, ‘pots, 
time, — of Sarees of| ing heads, &e.; * e J if 
trees, &c. saw proper for Lada 8 ins, to 1 fl., in pots, each 57 
Binding u. Pushing eye, spring the N „ Mugho, 2 to 3 ft., bu e transplanted, each $ 
e — nifo. ps - dwarf RAFTING, „ pinea, 5 ins., in pots E te ee 
shoot Aphides, to keep ” 12 to 16 ins., in ote a ach ee 
year, ar, day, ti time Me entsort $ pumilio 4 ins., in pots, 1 as 2. s : 
day, stato of the — — same stock Ereo-growers, re- x 2 to 3 55 N transplanted, 
plant, care of buds jon es, short list off marks on pyrenai ca, 4 ins., in pots, each 
Budding upon body | desirable sorts for | Graft, binding up ” strobus, We eymouth Pine, 1 to 8 ft., fine, t 
Bud, — of,{ budding ma a ot —.— 0 1 
into stoc us fting, advantage teh, 1 to 6 ft., fine, trans en. 
Bud, preparation of, Sap-bad, e 5 e i 8 syivestris, e 5 ins., in pots, per 
for use Grafting, disadvan. Winchesteriana, 6 ins., in Bots 
ds, dormant and Sha ie of trees tage of TAxps baccata, common Yew, Pa 
pushing Shoots —_ buds, Operation in differ- eac 55 
Buds, failing choice ent months Ir ta Yew, 1 ft., tran i e 
tn securing a Shoots — budding Preliminary obser- 5 ft., transplante 3 = a 
upply of upo — caer yes ir vations CEDRUS Labani, Cedar of Lebanon, 6 ins., en ty ath 
Caterpillars, slugs, | . arra Roses, catalogue to 7 ft., trans splanted, each 25, 6d. to 
— 8 an nd bri ef f deserip- CaYPTOMERIA Japona ; 2 2 in pots, each f 
destro oy ing t — remov- AXODIUM semper vens, 1 ins., i pots, each ... 
horn on, preparation | ARAUCARIA imbricata, 4 ins, A a " 
—.— buds, Shortening wild 2 insertion o A 
theory of re replant. hoo r * Scion, choice oe z 2 5 TEETH. 
ngwith Serene — arrangement o — 4 
Guards scales fen air nae tron: 2 Preparation OWLAND' s” DONT, on P —.— A 
La 2 {wind| the ‘ose — — FRIC A white Powder, sump Herbal, of ia 
Loosing ligatures curi: PPENDIX. most ERAT Ingre s of the 
March pruning age, "height; sort A nage of vari- e ng aud rene Be T TA 
—— hg healing for different gtr in giving sweetness esions 
cies of Rose ; take Commpattion be- 
T “ti “for trans- — ** up, trimming tween budding 
plantation sending a and graftin 
ndon; J. Mirresws, 5, et Wellington-street, Strand. 
BOTANICAL WORK OFESSOR LINDLEY. 
This ied — əd, 


N EDICAL AND GCONOMICAL BOTANY.— 
Lesage 3 the Third Part = Tar ELEMENTS OF BOTANY. 
Illustrated with hree Hundred Diagrams and 


—British Asso- 
ances — the Sham- 


0. Notes of a Tour in Spain: | - 


Adri. Sou 


Y, comprising 
Struotural and — a h Botany, : and a Gloves of Tech- 
nical Terms, volume, price 
These thre 2 ome complete manual of Botany for 
Medical and other Students who have made themselves 
uainted with the author's School Botany.“ 
E ELEMENTS Dr hipit Structural, Ea 


3. 


„ and ith — Sketch of the Artificial 
Methods of Classification, anda 0105 Terms. 
Price 12s, 3 
lossary may be had separately, price 5 


This will pl e series of Elementary Botanical 
Works by Professor — of Which vis School ol Botany,” and 
“ The Vegetable Kingdom,” fi 


Just published, in demy 8vo, price 28. 6d. 
Oi conection of 0 LINDENIAN Z ; or, Notes upon 
pe meee of Orchids formed in Colombia and Cuba, by 
„ LINDEN. By Jonn LIN DbLET, Ph. D., F. R. S. and L.S., 
8 of Botany in the i eggs of London, and in the 
Royal Institution of Great B 
We assure our readers that it ‘contains a vast quantity of 
meee interesting and useful to many classes of persons, and 
than to Phonceacoutints to whom we strongly 
recommend it,”—Pharmaceutical Journal, No. 40. 


BOTANY ; or, the Rudiments of Botanical 
New Edition, 400 Illustrations. Price 5s. 6d. 


THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM ; or the Structure, | py sowe 


tion, and Uses of Plants; ‘illustrated upon the 


hg tae ———. Second Edition, 500 Illustrations. Price 
9 To suit the convenience of Students and others, the above 
Work is issued also in 12 Monthly Parts, price 26. ea. each, 
London; VRY and Evans, 1 11, Bouverie- street 


unlimited jos ive an 
tite, by perpetuates ng etec 
he Proprietors of this Dentifrice 
preserving a 


EW PATTERN 
va poNGES.—The i 
ge 


CAL LFE anD 
USH — SM 


rfum 
Me 


ame of 
i t importations, 


profits and 3 


— tati «From ; 


CaurioN Ber 


e —— of No. 
by Wir 
Pain 1 . 


row, Boke Newington Bogh . 6 


T, OCTOBER 20, 1849. 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


No. 43—1849.] 


SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27. 


[Price 6d. 


| BSSKS. MAYLE E CREATORS 203 he | RENDLE’S CHEMICAL PLANT MANURE shoold 
enderson’s Nurse M — have sent out be used by all who wish for a bloom of Hyacinths, 
s-e | cates ahot at Carwin o ived, and have remainin hel few plants 2 — | Tulips, and other Dutch roots, Sold n tin cani 
] a in’ variety. Girona ars 2 bed — on applicat 8s. Gd. and Be. each, r farnar 2 apply 
i 78 a | Lily, Belladonna ding Crusader, ‘Brilliant, Ko., 20. 2. W M E. Ren 10., Union s Plymouth. 
Manures . four Se. edle ng FUCHSIAS f 1849— >| Our — pre 3 ore adjoining the "Plymouth — 
Mildew, propagation of Standard of "Perfection n and Prince of Wales hite, Hebe and of oe South Devon Railw way, a 
Niphwa rubida ... Diadem of Flor their Purity, and per- | ceeded 6000 to the ins 1 
j Plants, diseases or. f e s during t “a | years, 
d Pleroma Kunthiana ect act ve th jar not ve — —— — ater the two first ex- 
Dobe, —— . T2 f; e at Reg ent’s-park a is w where they will be 10 GENTLEMEN, “NURSERYM MEN, &c. 
Ey 0 ices sland... “ 2275 77 „ shown. Feeling co nfident — they wilt prove by very far the ART —A Nurseryman, near don, 
Lom labka pias of aites BTS Jed most ‘superb varieties —— — hey — ta other growers —— large stock of Evergreens, Standard and Trained Peach 
on gh gare arr oat have 2 sort vm will also attend ; it s but justice | and Nectarine Trees, would exchange them for | Green- 
Pruning forest trees 75 a | to the — aud ity superior, amply pays the raiser, ouse or Hothouse Plants,—Address ( A. B., Mr. 
ay GA ities ALD gee ag le “translation 55, } treet, Birmin ng Pearce, 15, Hart-street, — ä Lond 
cy one pike sof.. 3 63 . ä oe H até RSTEN, 1 to her Most Gracious IG begs respect Nobility » 
Lane — * .. 681 e | Trees, forest, to prune , 675 a ty 5 ueen, Quee delaide, and His Ro 8 y. and Patrone, — 2 has ments 
Mr. Caird’s pamphlet on 683 e | Villa gardening . . . . . . . 677 a | Highness Prince Albert, 8, Grand Hall, Hungerford-market, | by which his Business will — carried on per wd 
: m ye 1 s ‘clin Tenge 684 š Wheat, scale for resting zant be unit 
! 678 according to price of ...... „684 e g ery 


Hort. Society . 


erly. 
of returning his thanks for 
and hope: 


the liberal su upport rt he has pater 2 to conduet busi- 


he old 
or — Hya — — a 8 at the 5 5 Exhibition “2 eat way 1 will merit Se — 
a ast, at Amster C. is supplied y s friends wickenham Nursery, Oc A 

G. — 5 LIST OF PELARGONIUMS, con- | with a large and very e 2 ent of Dutch Bulbs, EORGE JACKMA Nona aan. W 

* taining most of the 3 varieties, is now ready, and | under whic — y rare, and only in H. 0’s 1) mile from Ww. kin Btation 80 . 
2 10 — E application — ozen, purchaser’s selection, a He has 13 8 25 double Rail i Nd ba announce “ym D Bile 188 8 — 

No charge made for r or and 25 single Hya ae peta tie best varieties, good for | Rai way, CA TALOGU ar ge Or — 2 
8 and plants” pain to compensate for carriage. 3 i doable sn, 9 carly Talips, — Tee ; 25 3 lowe cing 21 Trab, — rn emaa 
Providence Nursery, Ramsgate, Kent. 0. ; 25 double yellow 25 double Tulips Tournesoll ; Roses, F 
1 Sate 855 Hare 25 white Bowe — F EF Primes 1 25 * Eoleil d' d’ i (vo postage ata e. mie, hich may be had on application, — 
AND EDSMEN, Haarlem, in | yellow do State-Genera white; 25 do. orange. colo tnd hi 

„Holland, beg to inform their en nid the Trade We t | Luna; 25 true E x Nr 725 single do. ; 59 mixed Turba Wes J. St tot en on the 2 22d inst. masat his aer. — we 
their CATALOGUE or. GARDEN SEEDS is now being Ranunculus anunculus ; 50 mixe ndid Nursery 8 8 een bute 

and c g~ be one g u prepaid application, They give the don bie A 8 * o. single, mixed D I 15 
assurance that a enters with yop the, be favoured arge 28 OW ack o. blue; 100 do. striped; o. CA UE. | A 
will p: = wa rea i n. N or remittance is | mixed ; 50 Gladioli, Hybrids; 50 Iris Angelica, sported and ee Tae OF W M. "WOOD 195 ‘SONS New Descrip- 
reques! om unknown corres — nte.—Haarle 7. | striped’; 50 Iris Hispan ty pee > at öl. each box; half box e ROSE CATALOGUE may stili be obsnined, GRATIS, 

N. Los.; 5 one-third box, II. 11s. 4d. ; "quarter box, Il. Ss, Early én 7 — 
i TE TEN IV Hanover Nursery, Peck or particularly requested, as a great many sorts are | woodlands Tereg, wat near Uckfield, Sussex. 
ates to offer the following : Fine — and | Very inite. —Remittanc red. 

Wall-trained ‘PEACHES and NEOTARINES of the best | AN UNLIMITED STOOK OF SEEDLING AND IRANS 


10s, 6d. ach also VINES from 
3 ing sorts, from one to three years old, 
X. I. tis ‘a large took of Chinese Arbor-Vitæ, Lau 


rustin 
Aucuba, Ga arry tica in pots, Evergreen ake. Pom in 
—— lliptic Pots, 8 


1 LARCGHES, of the Finest Quality, at reduced 
Pri 


teusive s which will b 


ee — * 


7 M. Sarean axD SON beg to solicit attention to their Ja 
prices of e 
an 


GELLING ‘OFF, “AT VERY REDUCED PRICES, 


ion, ber of 
a general Nursery fapa worthy the atten- | Woodlands Baren Maresfield. ne near Uckfield, Sussex. pook consists of an afno Sumber o 
tion of Plant Variegated Lollies, Po 
tion of Planters, at very moderate ‘at very moderate pri LARGONIUMS.- | 8 Arducari . . — 
MOW begs to inform his friends and the Wat N pan krs much pleasure Box, Azaleaa 
ie, that he has 300 yards p — EDGING, y blic the following SEEDLING PE. | Decidu Sey B 
ee 8 SHRUBS; . TR REI Lee ee Gerani re a 
— reat varie ur- 6 e . Ts. 6% Geran 9 
‘bal ten J . i bo} Rolls i SORE 7 6 | drons, £e 20.000 Sei 
Š 6 ode phus (extra) ...... 10 6 — that the ground" 
; AMERICAN 3 NURSERY, BAGSHOT, SURREY. _ r 6 eee 5 0 | plants wil ve soid a we 
ree WAT a has much pleasure in arnowncin 4 * . ott 6 arate ROSARY, NORFOLK, 300 4 
has publ a Descriptive Catalogue of his exten- — Or the Ps ë D ‘ATALOGUE of about 
collection of . RHODODENDRONS ra other A an} +$ to accompany a from unknown corre- 8 CA TA LOGU] ated for sale sale 
Bae &c., which will be forwarded on application. spon 2 Post- office o:ders to Ap payable to the name BINGHAM, t will be forw 
of Johx Hine, lica 
1 3 SLANE oner nd E J. G. HINE, Providence Nursery, Ramsgate, Kent.—Oct, 27. een B. begs to . 5 
8 its supremacy over other 
being the earliest, finest-flavoured, and — coloured ever 3 NES e 15 sat late SAMUEL at — oH 
a most prolific bearer, an e grower, Fors — 5 a Priced List — 1 aati T. e * 
g, it far surpasses every other kind. If plant in a wine- | be Pel — ‘application, e ose 3 es er 
cellar, or any place where the frost and light are kept from it, ä » Stowmarket, Oct, 27. as Xs 
it will pro: e large stalks, of a nificent ee poe n five PEANTING SEASON.—NURSERY GROUNDS, A she 
Myatt’ sates atk. of ropta pilai cued RED LODGE, NORTH STONBHAM, NEAR SOUTH e 
yatt’s Linnzus, 1s. €d., and Victoria, 9d. The usual allowance AMPT rS unlimited supply of eve — of 0 
cot Nie Pi fice orders made payable to W. MITCHELL, EI Gom 0 
FOREST, FRUIT, AND ORNAMENTAL naasi, agi 
Highway, Middlesex, will meet wich every attention. N PLANTS, AND FLOWERING SHA BS, 1 ` : 
E TEARRE DE AE S i ds, at th — 
Nu. EARLY DWARF BLUE MARROW PEAS. cared 3 atalogues of which — 2 6 
’ EARLY DWARF BLUE MARROW PEAS rietor * ROGERS, Sen., NuRSERYMAN 3 - — 
grow Ha 2 — 15 inches high, flavour of the Knight's Marrow R E eee 
Yery prolific, and within one week of the earliest frames; well a ted Forest 2 1 to 2 feet, gipit for sea apt 2 8 
th, being quite hardy; tims of sowing from | Forest or 9 Planting, usually sold by the and; eee 
ay. The gf cag vd of the above Pea was 61 also of a -& larger size, for — z 2 85 N ey veered — <e 
acre. s. per bushel, to 12 feet, the p vary. a to 5l. p. 100. x 76 
The Trade only supplied with the above P pd Beech Breb, 15s. to 30s. per 100v, anish Chestnut, panne aa ar 
= ia speciosa, each Is. per packet ; 00. 30s, and 40s. ; Larch Fir, 7s. 6d. to 20s. ; spruce, 20s., 30s., ulberry Superb miannan e 0 
ow 3 l5s.; Gladiolus ganda- and 10s. ; ; Scotch, 10s., 15s., and 20s. ; Pinaster, 10s., 15s., and | Napoleon . ...... .... BU ne = iie 
TAB a Pine, adapted for exposure to tbe sea, 15s , 25s., and | Ni — Superb „ bla b 
B- Prees of every seed in cultivation can be had on ap- 8 ; oni onia, for cor r, 40s. to 80s. ; Hazel, 15s., 20s., Obse ssp DEY eee eee : 
i 3 G. Waite, Seed Establishment, 181, High 102 English Oak, 2 and 40s ; Poplar, 20s , 20s., and Purp rea 2 eee ms 
5 mn. s.; Quicks, 5s., 75. Cd aeen © ses . LATE t Ia gg aban $ 
k Y for t xtent from 5l. to y aero. Queen... nuseneessesnrsereererer „Beautiful . 

* we PEAR AMATEURS.—In his Descriptive Cata- KR CRM AM fed r oan extent AND SHRUBS. Hoses AMM AEA T a 
3 logue of Fruits, T. Rivens has given a list of 171 of the Rhododendron p: m, 2 to 6 inches, 20s., rag and 80s Rosea Grandiflora piak — 
5 finest sorts of Pears, with a desc a paragraph to each 1000 ; 1 foot, sin se ems, fit for working, 10s. per 100; 170 Rosea Superba $ 
4 ‘ety, and directions as 1 stocks to be e — their | 3 25 strong, 208. to 40s. per 100, fit for — — out at once to | Scarlet Globe me 

— c. : sent, free, by post, for four ee A De- cover; 4 to 6 feet, single stem, for working the boas Sulpburea Perfecta. 1 
tire 8 of donee, for two postage s Deserip- d other fine hinds, b9 00. Tres bares Palmata ; ae 
logue of ee and Shrubs, 7 — Prices 35 ag? or may thus become as generally cultivated as Tree Susa 5 8 
for six postage stamps. The arden, | Scarlet Rhododendrons, 18s. per dozen; hy t, blue, William E D 5155 l — — 1 te to R. B. B. 
ure of Pyramidal Pear-tvees, with p meha for root- | ilac, and white, with large handsome trusses of flowers, 2 io en the se — Ša s left ct 255 
for 24 postage stamps. nes also by Longman ¢ inches, 25s.; 1 foot, 40s. per 100; Soa latifolia, — ape wy AARAA st neat S . poe 2 
ernoster row, 3 rice o zt ; lto ğ Good — ret WONG Sisk. 
Sawbri ew 5 per 100; 2 to 3 feet, tine, 7 per 1003 Eph — ey Commo’ ag wring on ieee 2 a 
LARGONIUMS “ GIPSY BRIDE,” “CONSTANCE,” d&e, | 100; and E! Rose Sa cue for working, 8s. per 100; Single Ca- Ee Show —" The Hollyhocks from Hedenbam Ro 
W ,BRaca begs to inform his Patrons and Culti- 2 — 40s., and 50s. per 100, fit for working ; Double saritan andr rare tints, and particulary 
: vators in gene >i t he is now sending out these ne wn roots, 6 to 9 ine 3, d ; Chronicle, Se 
and superb bation. ralo by 3 Ta Esq., of E jasi, from seed, 6 to 9 inches, ict per 100 or York SHow.—" A noble tray a oligo pikes gee nighly 
— , for description of which, and flowers of other to 12 inches, 8s. to 12s. per 100; 1 to recommented by the Egon ie: res zor 9 . ite. — ada 
of former , which can be had on E 35 100; Laurel, 88. to 203. per | speci shire 
tion ; likewise of — Senn » Pinks, Pansies, 130 foot, — 20e per 10 125 405. per 1000, 6 83. per 1004 1 Pa Some splendid Holly hocks were exhibited by Mr. Bircham, 
cin ollyhocks, Dakia roots, a — 40 071 72 256. per 100; Clematis on — „ 6 . Herald, Avg. 18 an extra prize for their superior excellence.“ York 
— avin; ; in scabra, 2 feet, per ; | Hera 
ret. v SRENVILLE, FPANOY DAHLI 2 E prie a . vie. 6d. on 06; Tree Roses of the m We cann ogi i particular mention of a tray of beautiful & 
ates, via , Royal South London, Lon a oer Roses. ed, 50 Hollybocks, from Hedenham Rosary, Norfolk. Tieso flowers 
al Society, Highgate, Wyaunde, Tan 8 pee Minds, 51. per 100; Dwarf sorts named, 50s, per | Holly 8, E ia 
i bury, Norwich, , Newbury, Birmingham Slough ; 100 ; Double waste, Pubie Red, and New hectare an . — e e Yorks ee ever ; 
5 erbeten n don Florioultural “Society ince 40s. per i yar 190; 25 — oe perio. uteh Honeysuckles, 12s. 6d. | this city. w onera of BA 

a ‘patton a Slough sil Po Tet out In Ary — should there Pike prices are for Jey, de, per n less quantities a | Hedenbam Rosary, — excited um unusual at 

1 0 dar Bense Di hs imdi higher will De charged, g 38 en carriage | exceeding aug 
Nursery, Slough, October 27. paid to London |2 e on Oeri i 


1 


674 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


MYATT’S NEW STRAWBERRY, “ELEANOR.” OSEPH BAUMANN, NURSERY YMAN, Ghe 
nt, Be 8 5 
ATT anp SONS are pre repared to send out J gium, begs to inform his Peude and the public in genera D4 NECROFT S RIVAL EARLY 
e plants of this and the following varieties at the prices | that his New CATALOGUE of PLANTS is just published, and | being Hardy. ad ofen f PEA, with 
annexed: Myat atts Eleanor, 10s. 6d.; Fertilised Hautbois, | may be had gratis, or will be sent post-free on application to Peat a — * most disti 
10s. 6d. ; ritish Queen, 33, 6d. ; Globe, 3s. 6d. ; Mammoth, | Mr, Jonn BETHAu, Custom House and gs pe Agent, Dix and 8 ae asa sup 
3s. 6d.; Hooper’s Seedling, 3s, 6d. ; Keen’ Seedling, 3s. 6d. ; | Hammond’s Quays, Lower Thames-street, Pe pen: eedsman 
Pelveldin’s Comte de Paris, 7s. 6d.; Princess Royal, 7s. 6d, ; | OSE CATALOGUE. NEW 251110 0 18788 ä — n 
Cuthill’s Black Prince, 15s, per 100. NURSERIES, CHESHUNT, HER 7 1849-50, . EARLY E 
Post-office orders are ——— to be made payable to M P AUL Peas, being 1 MPER 
Jos EPEH —— anor Farm, Deptford. Kent.— Oct. 27. ie AND — beg to inform es friends | m e of N ddeopPer: and 
H a he public in 5 that their mE pe t E cdders and F 
RICAN yka LOGUE. oa now be hae ratis, on eaplosing 4 wo st — ea 2 7 ro they are decidedly m 
OSEA. WATERER begs to announce he has; just | postage. The price iow a 3 possible, and they ensure the | May be had of Fanon esto early Peas, 
2 a New and Complete Catalogue of his * supply of rell-cultivated plan Retail, 28, K Te og WARNER, Se 
CAN and CONIFEROUS may be had : Notices of previous Editions by the Horticultural Press, street, Lon Aaby „ and 3, Laurence Pow 
application, inclosing tw mapa p hfe Mess — R nd Son's descriptive 8 o. Roses is 
Hosea WATERER, Kaap Hill Woking, Surrey. DeM us, ane apg ae to be = known.”—Gardeners’ Chron. | B 0 S. TWO UNRIVALLED PIG 
— —— essrs, Paul's is nicely-arran “DUCE 
ENT AIEEE . CANT, St. John's-street Nursery, | taining the fullest E ie of — ranged Catalogue, con- far the best the above ee AND," Wg 
as now ready for delivery, strong well- marama and Land-Stewards’ Jeani al. Tn TURNER has 3 as produced, 
established plants ‘of the follo owing Paul’s Catalogue of Roses is remarkable alike for the lowing ready for d g plants of the 
GERANIUM, HOYLE’S CR DER a ts 6d. oh 2 variety it comprises rara the low prices at which they 1 “DUCR elven fiona 155 
TOPPING’S BRILLIAN + as Te Oa | pag: ah, E ds »— Gardeners’ Gazette. red edge; the finest in its Pg) UTHERL Np» 
FUCHSIA SPECTABILIS 42. 6a. “i Mr, Paul is the most successful Rose grower in England,” | Slough, Royal South London ang ook frst- olass ee 
e Three for 18s., carriag e and package tree to London. —— of Agveuiture premier priza at Slough. tp Metropolitan he 
Postoffice pn or reference, , requested from unknown cor- TTS i NNAUS grower and very Some at b 8 Seedling of the we 
respondents. The usual discount to ‘to the tr trade. MYATT phe SONS can 5 tl a ea z “TORING ” Qi free trom bars, 27 
ELARGONIUM “FOQUETT’S MAGNIFICENT.” 1 C y recommend white, with a delicate margin, whistle POrPle eda 4 
ivation. The most satis- into the white; pie first. ol s t 
ass certificati Slough 


Strong plants, well established, in 4-inch pots, now ready, | factory proof of this assertion is the fact th 
price 21. 28. each; and as more stock has been realised than | Gardeners round London and Manchester an 1e = ae S ages: and 2 erby, six blooms at the latter 
— „ 3 he — ae for ev poe three 7 Tamak more extensively than any other variety. | heavy pu 3 s GORE (Tonnen). Medium ats 
rect to nja ILLIAM Foquerr, | It is extraord ly productive, and about a fortnight earlier | first- ° “ue petal, smooth 
cla: j 2 
th pue 88 certificates at Slough, Royal South 1 tak 


Shide Hasse, ie near 4010 5 Isle A Tiea an the Victoria; added 8 We it of aaa in 
A general esteem This variet 
E FLOW for preserving and all c ary pur One-year planted | S A * lety; ox ee Lorina,” and “Duche a 
ASS anp 8 ROW NS — Priced Catalogue oa ithe ls. 6d. ; it “Tra Mitchel Royal ‘Albert, ls. 6d. ; Vict toria en as * in each, of 0, Tousen’ niais 
ve, embracing their Superb Collections of SEED dt 8 em wance.—Post-office orders are re- s 
LI ING. RANUNOULUS. GLADIOLUS. EARLY TULIPS, IRIS, uested to be made paya “ir to JOSEPH eer Sen Farm, 0 TAGE CARNATION, 

IMPORTED DUTCH HYACINTHS, and other roots, may be Deptford, Oct, 27. r 1 10 6 —Purple flake, 
bad on 9 The following selections are offered. ALF-BRED JUNGLE FOWL.—Several young e 2 
y post, w. elie ns fi lanting, PIN 
= roots, bas 50 splendid ale he 8 = 5 Pes 10 105 0 5 and gallus 3 5 X 8 fi gr — as ai ee MOE? 985 —Purple, petal of of the finest 

n tto ditto 3 ; , orm 
100 f 1 5 50 fine . . ee £ w 0 0 — sw > do the ae ay. Des. er See description i e, the 1 fo Aug 25 
0 15 — M al ; E S  ATTILA.”—Dar'! formed 
Ag acinus, . with re for pots, glasses, . PHODODENDRONS AND AMERICAN PLANTS. pod, and constant flower, E . Petal, long 
a ne z 15 e f Heath Land NSIES 
32 splendid. 15s. if enbendid adapted for their growth, has al imi TURNERS “MRS. BECI — ground, dark nn 
EAR X TULIPS, 20 fine R 9 Ante > — supply of the — —— sizes, and ö 3 top petals, lower petals margined White th the same: fine 
DOUBLE Maes 10 —— oe Bee Sad 1 quotes, delivered in London ; if ordered in quantity, free of hs y the good metering into the $ 5 Argante da aad 
— pr — 4 6 expense of carriag e good quality cf blooming in character 
IRIS, 12 spend ns 10 ditto, of each 2 f 0 10 n 2 ies {at 20s. pae n bitions ae aiaa e oe Taras winning 1 5 
mixed ditto, per doz., 2s, per 100 ue GIS 1 i ut the season. Figured in the “ Florist” for Ma 
12 Salter a hae 3 * me 9 ” » 1 foot (aingi . actin ane “se Play at old ground od, hele oa = | 
per ae 5 0. 7: rst-class certificate a at the Royal Sout 
CROCUS, 300 roots in 25, sap nas named rari” 1 F = 13 100 20s per 100; 2 feet, t, 404, per London Society. 55. 
ANEMONES, 12 3 arg., 38. 6d., post free 4 for 5 tage Gents Oa oe? CA a ahn! 
ae plants 1s. each or 9s. per ane 
— imix ne mixed, per doz, 0 1 5 hybrid, fine lange 8 4 to 6 feet, 308. to imported n Ja application, OEE | 
ei 12 ai 1 3. per dozen. Royal Nursery, Slo 
for * d named early varieties a ae o 6 feet, standard, single stems, fit > 
Ri nes selected early hybrids, és ‘post is ot ; n for grafting or. wotking ie ane ian scarlet and other semi. har rdy 5 NURSERY, 3 
ae en ae mayt G.H HIN E ( 
mixed aua per dozen, 3s. 6d. 88 rally cultivated as Tree R z x ate WILLIAM Mitten 
1 . 6d. per doz. ; splenden og R 5 ontic hite, s * gure in offering to the public his SEE tN PEA 
TRITONES AURE. Beautiful v 0 8 p 2 Be. pe NIUMS, whieh he strongl ds, To 
8 A, cheats iy Cape bulb b,each 0 7 roseum, 2 — eet, pry ra er 100. collection, distinct, and none P l 
| „ Jonquils, Liliums, late and ” ants, 3 4 p une theg 
F 5 cates Spgs pale » ” aa anis to 4 feet, constitute a first-class flower, these must be had, on account of 
ao des NEN, CURYSANTHEMUMS, ” meet Oe 4 4 varieties) L to feet, 18a, . 1 ‘NEW S EEDLING k PELARGONIU 
well eve with A 
ee and select varieties for = — 1 s arborea album, 2 2 fey At par don *ATTRACT! OK. Arge bald e ei 55 i! 
A t ae . do = ae ION.—Large bold dark crimson-scarlet flower, 
E ar am yhet — 233 y hybridised with arbo seal age caus white ; jety, of fine habit, Prio 
* one ... t 7 
E Cat e F W Usts of Select Roses, I Na abies facing lar, large handsome trusses of flowers of rast 4 SUNSET.— N rick OE a wi ooo Uae hig 
vergreen and Flowering Shrubs and Climbin, Jants, a m scarlet — blush, lilac, “ra white, 4 to 6 inches, 25s, fine form, rathe k babit, reat improvement on So 
extensive collection of Hardy — — — — ——— 1005 1 foot, 40s. per 100. Por let Deh snes Price 10s. rial 8 if 
. — new Phlox, Antirrhinums, 8, | KALMIA latifo lia, 2 ax 4 inches, 12s. 6d. per 100, = ALBA,—This vat ariety - is very attractive ; lower petal 
gdm 2 age froe to to London, and with all orders amdunting , ey fect SB i ne Jee 2 wie Mey rge white centre; upper petals, dark rese vin 
> ” „ 903, : — ark spot. Price 158. 
8 aks to be gr p 5 Own corresponden nts, Post- | AZALEA pontica * 405. — 700. 5 TEN pjt sel 5 — 2 N 8 
ROWN, or t » mer, Price 
dar nt Seed and Horticultural Establishment, Su d. wines 83 an pds as plan: s (blooming), 3 fee feet, 30s. per.doz, AURORA’S FLAG. n 3 of extra ** 2 
4 „ 63, ozen 8 a ces well, attractive colours, v ght. This flower much 
.. REEE ĩͤ v ee a American Plants a 1 a 
equally low prices, printed the style of 1 Tice’ 
LFRED B ALSTON p ave ah “Dra R of which may be had. BEAUTY OF THANET. Lower petals, dlinte pinis; E 
e has > wor, „ 83. per 100, or 28. 6d. petals black, of fine form, 
9 Š p 15 5 — . —— h per d arf Rose Stocks, fit for working, 8 10 1 2 oe Pri ea ps 
of, which, in consequence of having relinquished the — — 1. Roo ERS, sen., Nurseryman and Contracting Planter, Red popie with a fine margin of ma Hower isa 
2511 duced prices. The Stock omprises. every Lats, near — a ‘ model, and was admired by all who saw it. Price — 
— 1 T, and. OREST TREES, OS ARLES D AND SON beg to inform the cMAIESTICA~ — popes e and free bloomet, 
Having been 8 nn tion, no Trade and ey that they are determined t „ 1 
of the coil in which it has grown, th N pienta bate ait stones ose; ace, REQ 1 Sd ee Oe, eee horns, s per The s — to eight for i, 52. Usual allowance to the tde, 
— being teak re A a them to grow most 3 1000; . im 2 3s. des S000 3 T * ee ~ ed thus * have obtained first irst elass corte, 
; i 3 1000; L year Seed 1 i. Arto, 48. per Gas ingg company all orders from unknown 
Aie 1 foot, 18.7 T tn 2 aa tho following common Laurel, | per 10007 ‘Common Laurek 1 E fests Oo 3 stotice ote be made payable to Jons Hus, 
feet, Sis. per 1000. Portugal Laurel i 10 3 feet, 115 f. Si 1} foot, 6s. per 100; Broad.leaved Irish Ivy, 2s. T Kens, 
5 fees, ndron ponticum, 1 to 2 feet, 80s; 3 to 4 feet, Gis. ; 4 to | Tens. 12 % foot, Sen, gee toe . BERS. AND HOTHOUSES m — 7 ci at 
i plants, “Gd. each; 1 . per 100; ditto, 275 22 fect, 50s. per 100; ditto, 3 tect, 100% — 3 nted best materials.—A Lean- 
Rhododendron campanuiata, m, pies Hae i 100; ditto, 4 to 5 feet, 5s. each; Common Yew, 2 feet, 25s, per | yy fee t, ginos onda Tone 
1 00, Standard Hoos aai det a s, C., 100; Scarlet Limes, beet — s. per 100; “year Evergrecn with 16 oz, sheet glass of a large size, 
Bs . dares stock of Evergreen Oak in 2 i — —— ps geome ashel y” per Holly 155 old, ditto; 38. Maen Se < — er de e — — 
— j - 2 rries, 4 $ 2 Pap 
im, Privet, en, aie . rch, Ber Berberis, — i 1000 ; 7 € ie to, 5 Jaa 105 9 won — ite. Pig "do, do. 15 by te 3 Ee 
Orders must sing remittance ders amount ling 28 1s. 6d. Ber 000; Pe i n * R ok work. 1}-inch Greenhouse Lights, 
L. d ieni reid oole — peg | 2s. 6d. per 1000; 1-yea eedling Birch, 15. — per 1000 71 l- year — 7 glass * 7 2 
101 sy eee is. 64. per 1000; 2-yea rs Seedling Scotch Oia — nol e 
Ey vr 17 TREE „15. 6d. per 1000; Evergreen Oak, good plants, 3d. each; Leen 105 
‘Sree OLE 8 anin r to i Audromed AR a, 3 ed. each; Ledums, ditto, 64. each; Kal. HORT ; AL BUILDING AND 
ent ou ean by EDWARD TILLY, fe bege 3o atat  | migrmpi ngs abt, ds nc Erlon ote ayo EOTF AA enoret ean 
has ils year « five atock of ; Juniper, 21 : ; rts, hardy, 6d.| ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF gy 
s year a fine sto e nl double : » 2 feet, 2d, each; Evergreen Barberry, 18 i RNS, &e. 
ae to dispose of, which Ne an highly recommend, ; 8 fine plants, 1s, each; chinese 3 
beautifully scented, ‘the Blooms oe large ds the double bine | Sweet Bay, 1d, to 2d. each 3 . 
i 10 0 ~ e ne * 7 e azeis, Os. 
re perrecas tava Twelve of these ttini the end of May, and | 5 years transplante 10 £ na; +e 
5 . plants grown in pots wil he P d, — 3 i fine Trained Pears, Plums, 
wide, wiil be sufficient to furnish a amily with ies tea S rumhead, 1s per iÈ lb. ; ditto, ‘Barly York. ba. per it’; 
and the 5 oe Seed Potatoes, Golden Dwarfs, 13. coms: ache arei 
ather a dry situation, and in foose sai, as the Violet wil | POT Stone; dt, Clusters, 1s. por stono; ditto, Bariy Wel 
2 glad m e clayey 10 lingtons p per stone —, = 40-Folds, ls. per stone. Garden 
ae ke L ] „Id. > eels, ls. 6d, each; S 
) he eea Ib.; Seyre en and Sash Cor a, 9d. per ine T 
verpool or Glasgow. e do not pay Frei j s-road, ` 
7 yom Forest 5 s, Hazels, nor — Five ao Seta ae WEEKS anp Co., King’ BUILDERS, 
A lo., $ e usual credit iven ats mi any respectable Seed Mer- 1 
: year a fine stank of of the VIOLA —— in London. ct. 27. solicit — 
SOREA ALBA, or Double White HoT Wa TER PIPES OND TROU 
recommended Plant doe e [or WATER PIPES AND TROUGH PIPES, 
YELLOW w! been so mu i ; n large st 
5 much admired | of Hot-water Pipes, Elbows, Tee P mel A very large stock 
exhibitions ; SES ele usual, at J. JONES'S CAST-IRON WARE- 
Bricks, & Rag hepa on r Sash Weights, Air bs 
; ge ng pes, torts, and La ouses, in i A 
Of the an À Bb: exeslent quality. Other Cuatioga AK -very y low | Stovi 1 d at ie a ALE TR 
wil nalit, sit A eoonected 8 
package free.—Suld by Epwanp Ti N.8.—Men ured) to an numbers, that theg baren, tes, and Cs 
wan, and Florist, 16, Pulteney marke Nurseryma the work, aad is 1 2 — 1 ne N Ne wh do Mats, Mu- roc op oon pean yig 2 and Van 
e ridge Wharf, No. 6, Banksid 8 and Seed depa: 
side, London, bet. 27. os ues forwarded on application. 


pe ST 


eS ETN ae er ee ee S, 


aS aay HE PT a eh ei a AFT E a 


43—1849. ] 
NEW GERANIUMS AT VERY LOW PRICES. 
ASS axo BROWN have still fine stro 
B the following new varieties, last sent out, for im- 
mediate into larger 
ge ekir Prometheus, ae + * 
do. ae 0 8 —+ = 
„ 0 — No, 2 5 0 
* ae s.. Windsor Castle, Whomes 5 0 
opping’s ... 0 | Queen Victoria... 5 0 
Hoyle s —..- Prin — elena 1 8 
Or the 12 — 2 2s. sı r 
other first-rate sorts of our own 0 
3 ade 15 0 


3 . 88 — 6s. and 9s. per 3 
A 4 . to Lond — sent gratis with orders 
* 
Seed 1 Een — ‘Sudbury, Suffolk, 
TULIPS, HYACINTHS, ee * 

mee < GROOM. Clapham Rise, n London, b a bY 
H ent, FLORIST To HER peste THE Q 

ayp To His — THE Kine or Saxony, begs to Poe * 

wed his usual assortment of ei aoiz TAS = 


THE GARDENERS’ 


trees are 

have dency tof — bushy S, or 

— of equal strength; and, if neglec 

ey are long in forming timber, if they ever do 
: and they — seldom produce ee tee 

straight trunk. bins n Oak is in that s 

pruner is in his 


gE 


is * J big. 


tions with * — 
es bs ; 


rals w ri 
BS from HOLLAND ndition a 
—— — that his CATALOGUE OF 1 BULBS, &e., for state nches ae removed much of th 
the — 5 ready, and will be forwarded by post on | vigour of a ray 2 removed too; its power of gro 
trimat is more or mpaired ; and the operation defeats 
A the object iti is a at oe toserve. But whe 
HOLDER 50 “CO. begs to offer Twelve of the : 
„following varieties, 8 te $06. Armida superb, STA MAR rely s stopped, np — is ane urred ; lt 
Belle of the Village, Ariel, ‘Satine, S iia, Mele er, n the direction of the | th 
an, Nor y 


— ta —4 ore, laminin, 53 nay 1 
L — ice Nursery, Bedford- 2 Nees goes — 
remittance or reference required f. co 

R. LANGELIER, Clarendon Nursery, Jersey, begs 
2 ay that his DESCRIPTIVE CALALOGUE OF 


— descriptions of each sort), is now pu 
ip Messrs, PIPER, 2 Paternoster row, London, price fen e ere minute attention can 
he in r — anne ell as the stock which be E weekly to the progressive growth ofs 
will suit each sort best. ng plantations, stoppage is best secured by merely 
INFORMATION WANTED ON CUTHILUS PLAN OF bee with the finger and thumb the terminal will 
GROWING EARLY POTATOES. bud e growing = ranch. Bu 1 this is impos- 
eee CUTH Ne * well, 2 le i in — plantations, and no ery practicable 
fi all t ar. 
n ed nie TREATISE ON THE POTATO |ê nywhere, ri rival leaders will be | found after Abe 
ter lst — years, will have the — * to me — him how weeks wth ; in such cases the removal of a ter- 


SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1849. 


—— 
— taken; — scale 
no syly 
trees have not been pruned at 
d the attri to offend 
nc 


. NOT AT ALL, 1 Fag: can help it, 
we wil 


nee 


could 
ptorpreted 


1H 
8 
8. 
oH 
“8 
8 
fia: 
g 


Of co 
RNES, RNES, of Sheffield, 5 
an end to the sale of his excellent pru 
his understan 


No 0 person who exercises 


e | practice is this; if a sete — 


n certain t 


as pace practised. The : 


d thumb ; but such oa are 2 


e oe 
allow is their al 
the finger and 
Late of pincers by which tools may be held 


ee 3 
and the best reaso 
and 


gt Lo inquire, before such a reason is di 
re ruined 


and omega ; and they 


4 i 


t is, 
ly 1 * conclusion fre from this 
if th not ected when 
the ey would pak an Sen 5 assistance 
Weadmit that _ lanta- 
as hay — r heen allowed to fall into 


iiei 15 


more- | 


; chop, chop, chop; saw, saw, th 
umb no other value — that Ik 


n, is, th — 
when young. We have have and 
liscussed, 


É 


ugesi is, that growth ceases 


. By this means the object sought is gained 
without the slightest loss of vital power in the 


toes | minal bud will not result in the conveyance of food | Ho 


Fne G. —— Chronicle 


t then becomes | 


enough into the selected leader. 
o bre ches which are super- 
o we sa 


necessary to break the bran 
ous. We say break, not cut; nor 

break of; the pee — be 3 snapped 
across, and allow Bove 1 4 * i m the 


limb, n 11 the | to 


performed 1 the boken ken end 2 
e 

— dancin’ is 
ed, the buds co it are almost 
o break into secondary laterals, and to con- 
sume the sap intended for the leader ; pei if the 
N is broken it slowly consum s the t 
aches it, preven the buds 8 Tom Aren, 
inte laterals compels all t anes 
a 2 into the! leader whe anted. 


opera 
remain — for sev 


suddenly remov 


‘does | 
We venture to — — more 
e iment orat crooked by the 


— — 


y the cells, we know 


er | pruning-knife Me have ever been straightened by 
it. Trees will ighten of themselves if the 
ascending sap is for into the centre of growth ; 
and they will not straighten if it is are into 
1 marys <1 the Deodar an 


as 
ts flaccid ti 


a 
„| drain, drain, drain, and drain a 


675 


obscure and i 
propagation of certain forms 

w, we chall consider it so 
servation, without at all — 
even for the 


iginates circulate with the juices 
f the bine, every possibility of the reproduction of 
* ould in the ensuing season is prevented; 
quite — therefore, that there will be no mould 
the following year, and most likely none for the next 


t 
be sure t e ate it during the following year, 
ae m mouldy Hops are now of little or no value in 


untry the writer considers this information 

most « — tial to the British Hop grower. 
eal meaning of the eo EA 
ended somewhat obscurely. The lo 


a ment is so indeed very clear, for if the j juices of the 


stem be infected, we see no reason why those of the 
root shoul be free 

ruth, however, 2 to bo, wich this and 
Pr om noxious 


cles circulating in the intercellular cavities, or by a 
subtle mycelium gy brevis the walls o: 
n it is, at least, that 
ne 1 are in arapa- every — if not universally, 
arger are generally su —— 
o tavern, or freque atly than the cells th - 
It is then possible, at 2 chat when — — 1 is 
suffered + run its co whole 3 of the 
mycelium, however generated or propagated, may be 
ae d, an of the mother plant be- 
eath the soil left f m taint, whereas when the 
binei is cut off while p is active 
juices of the parts beneath are still in a condition to 
propagate it on the first favourable ity. On 
some such consideration we conceive it just Lee 
that ur or the report. 


ADVICE TO GARDENERS A “AND THEIR 
MASTERS. 


I sent you formerly some or observations 
gardeners and their I had hoped that the 
subject would have been me up in the spirit in which 

I collected from 


2 
— 
* 
ta 
2 
2 
— 8 2 
= 
= 
= 
mo 
Pa. 


your u will 


great man said that the three 9 
was action, action, 


w the reaso 


paign st the inha 

— ape to call attention to these consi 

a few weeks the work of mischief will have Begun. 
Nor let it be said, because plantations can be found | 
in ealth and beaut 


— absence of the pruning- 
ULAR paragraph which 
i Journal, 


ication, such passing stare | 
in the papers of the Gaited 5 Stat es, we know not, | 


bitants of the forest, it seems 


ing is 10 
them | crops, and . * 
There are many gardeners that 


stands 
ure that 4 is wanted, be- 
cause the roots of sir * aud er are standing in 


7 vate. 
It is of very m use to trench * w 
drain sly ; but if ell-drained gri 
| trench deep at least 


you have a w 
in three 
3 i 


between your 
can, pos in drills. 


in comes, it sh 
the scil, and ‘aly hardens the nmi to make this worse 


in 


„ an up lan 
this is i 3 age nao peie deep soil, and Sayer I 


L neeg drain Ortner reasons than w at 
stated ; * you will spi eat, then you must, as 
en stated, s also upon trust; but a fe 
Soar ee be of Lindley’s a Theat of Hortieul. 
book (if there be any 1 2788 


n this subject of 
in ty in idale pinire and 
8 master to to do 80 


and fruit trees, and coe about anything e 


bish ast 6 feet 
rom wall, or pave or slate the bottom; 
then have a good layer of loam or turf, never mind i 
rotten, and in this plant your trees high, not 
down in the soil ; mulch in ring and water 
once or twice duri e su t, however, 
a 


erence of opinion on this 


ow |g 
planted, 4 inches 
d, 10 8 — leaf- mould in a 3 


ace 
walls do not Took. healthy, 


— — 


ich they were planted were about 18 inches deep, 
and wide in proportion, 4 feet a apart, re filled up with 
y In these holes 
eep; the oy ere thon 9 with 
Soar mained 
pein ter. in 
advanced, Ti stirred and r ed a a porii àf the leaf- 
mould, in order that the Heat — the rays of the sun 
e — and blanched 
— 


e 
oe to interfere with the general mass of bn hen 
oe 


flowering stems, w 

About the first week in sei agp we let the gro vane be 
stirred despl y around the bul 
their roots, and thoroughly sorte 
water once or twice. T 


ed wit 


objection may be 8 
that they are without foliage durin 


foliage will be in perfection during the flowering season 


point, not even the being shown (as I have been) a goo 


crop of wall fruit, with a crop of Peas or Cauliflowers 
in the border. 
n nd you as soon as you get to a 


a radical reſorm, very 


mep other. But if you go to den 
o i 10 omiy a 5 old Apple and — trees, 
Filberis, Plums, &e., m at you can, 3 
are Site, outside 8 5 garden, and get 
master’s lea ve to cut down 
Pears, or conically trained Apples 
harm, and are handsome in the 


> aa r 
ditto a good salad, it will y EM 
i of 


oo 


rant or i must 
best of it ; A a says he does not care about th 
ts is * to iiri plenty, of gs 
g, and — potiki nts frem the = et 
show bim what i 


ur em) 
To save trouble, a — — list ates and 


struc! for 5s. In any but 
very ae =e blisument, one list pac ei ge 


BELLADONNA LILY. 
Tus sory w = truly splendid bulb has, I fear, not 
been th that tention which its merits as a 


servatory at this but they afford b ut a poor idea | a 
of the gorgeous Bowers which this 
Gaso but of dos Lily produces when 


of the Belladonna Lily. Tassell. 


— DISEASES OF 3 
(Continued from 60) 


| togamic plants, I 
of 


| tions, and more loaded with 8 plants on the 
side most expose 


d ee “epidermis w 


it | peasants call it go (ro 
50 | aged individua * 


eas it is certain, 


3 


r bulbs were wastin 


autu 
nce de a they produce offsets Auer 00 eyed 
ndan sO that I hav 10, | f 


s without e with the 
ilu 


is by 


e trees so py see d can 


imes 
eating out these iig a. and cleaning them down to the i 


healthy epidermi 


Fourth glis: Mixep Lerrosy.—The leaves of 


Genus XIX. Leprosy.—This name has been variously | Vegetables are som s cove 
9 5 to er — by thos ose who 1 occupied | Plants, which belong to the tribes of byssi, of moulds be, 
themselves with vegetable pathology. Ita to me | tha ec of Fungi, One 
best de be a 3 which eee on the | year when the summer was very wet, this disease 9 
bark or e iiaa s of trees, herbs, or leaves, which | very generally spread, the V 2 were covered 
facilitates the — of Cryptogamie plants on their | Underneath with an Eeidium, as indeed most herbaceous 
surface, candidly confess tha 8 J have not been plants had one or another aper putan 
i e saa of aie leaves, One kind ot mould is 


vincing, b 
of ‘the bark of 8 both ele 


leprous plants are for the most part o situa- 


27 pas fie ps 
laid down i in my rel iminary discourse, I T haye proleti 


m on the underside of the eared of 23 5 
3 


2 the bottom of the — — y e of 
observed one on t 
to od, and they — ate me 9 


mation of my general nye ition 


fir 
~ | exterior scales of the bulb in 
— eee. 


to the appea few 
bove "parce of aig i y mah aal 1 
varieties to 


soils have more 
Iean sia than 
what it exhibits to the observer’s | 
but the union of the 
© conglomerated in the 
r ears, a a head o 
Through — — the water 
th whi b- 


eye is no Reape 


8 
5 


dity, and the strata of 

which it consists, acquire, as it has seemed to me, an 

increased volume, 

ROST. — A quantity of 
. are see 


close 8 vered; more 
thickest portions of ‘old fo 
bear many in 
Second s 


rests. Detach 


fa cure, as it is er 3 ‘es restore to an 
active vegetation, which shall cause the bark 185 re- 
a i er vigour. 
The remedy for this ee of r is as well known 


© 
oO 
< 
0 


Serer 8 and tedious 


a perniċi cious effect on all trees aan from their natural | 
constitution, or from the quality of the soil, are pre- 
vented by these little plants from duly panig their | 


e 
las observei the outer bark of old trees, 
u | may iss ave disa te 
the atm 
not be entirely avoided, 


especially in the 
hed trees also | o 
moist situations. ings 


cal 
ies rom a ‘ies 


have 2 ee it for s 
his Mauu 


formations of pod or leaf seem to 
if trary tenden = one the 
| accomplish its end, in 
reverts to the prodeion a leaves. 
May in this yea 

the usual * 


the more attention athe e 


rege 

meness of the ‘soil ee 
ff lepro — But when n the m 

osphere promotes the a of the ov üer 


BRITISH peg pb FOR THE ADVANCE 
ge a F SCIE wy CE. 


4 P. 661.) £ 
— š > 
Section D, iee ESTORT: ö he ae m 


m to present uh changes more 


after the: eee of Tr. 


necies in 
: e other it 


et anne were 


f 


43—1849. | 


THE 


8 


— — 


gpd the plant, as if passing over two stages of its flower- | co 


structure, proceeded directly to the production of a — 
These pods oo 1 ovale mens and were 

— w 
* 


tals w be seen protruding "er era 
partly 1 the pod; Pape 

ining parts of the ‘omer 

d 


suppressed, as gp My <p 


H 


ans was to be observed. would 


otherwise, the plant advances to th 

organs, or reverts 1 leaves; and 
seve 

from ‘he calyx er ex- 

hibiting the Se will be higher according as the 

plant’s flowering-season has advanced, The ch 
ed wer 1. Ca 


forming simple 
he carina, but their 22 union — 
ternate leaf is less common 2 
changes the flower may exhibit, these — 
in a state to be recognised, and 

less frequent than any other portion, so that there is 
more difficulty in determining t 


e organs 


single . e 
more than 


well-known 5 of 


seen at the base of the imperfect pod on 
2 usually formed out of 
i In one 


a 

8 

a 
Sg 


5 
d- pods of the —. 
ne, the Clover heads with pro 
appearance ; one of in 


—.— h 
it oat then — that the onbetitation of leaves for i 


tem 
wonderfally ameliorates the nature of stiff 
so 


their i a 55 leaves | be o 


number of families or sections, 3 
ho know 


UI 
can perhaps 
-| will b 


h sm —— o the experianced. n conversation 


ve particles, which otherwise bind up in clods the | 
—— matter, so t no 


ground eo with 
to deep n 
ughly as possible. A dressing of hot — previously 

— will do good service, and a — ing of salt two 
or three times during w inter will also improve it, as 
well as assist in extirpating insects. Ground so trea 
may be said to be half manured; indeed for many cro 

wholly so. In spring the condition and — of the 
staple w ill be found — only improved, as regar 
du — —— es, also much drier and in better 
ing erops; 8 treatment 


sey ey 
hrown 


unslacked limestones when 
and they are rendere 


g —— ” will fulfil. — 333 now, they may 
service to him; but t e e energie 
him i he leaves the 5 ant spring. 


ome Correspondence 
Rose Catalogues. — I am glad to see that attention has 


desire is that those w erie Sar pam who 
fully 98 the t arrangement, 
efore they finally reject the proposal, | 
as they do, that som 


ear in mind, b 
that others do hot now so muc 


d by many of different. opinions, 

and it is admitted that the ae of families has, — 
many other things, been excess, SO tha ta 

alteration is necessary. — slight ‘the change — 

be it will be don the ae side, and every little in . 
Cri 


prone through the flower. Some of these orango 
been already noticed and described, but o 


ri * flower has not, that I am aware, been recorded 


With res 


cen of 


a te. 
Conversion of the 
to ae’ s view that d 
In this case the ee s woul 

from the leaflets upon the plan of 3 


VILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENING, 
o increase the 3 a the soil, and to destroy the 
of insects which injure the various 8 that 

y re 


T 


With insects and their 2 
8 yet such eee — — this treatmen 
similar uce an equal return with other a 

Soil which has | had the best means anion 


its latent powers n. a 
g, which all soil derives by exposure to the action of 
Ou ery i 3 ha 


| eee 


bida. — In the report of the October 


ose. | independent of the question how it is 


s pro- | loam 


mitted | 


: Enay supplied ; I attempted to 


f the Horti — Sor (p: ae —.— 
cies,” 


tainly the specimen there penn — —.— . 
mes oor ch —— some measu ——_ ified that cha- 
fferent treatment, 8 the 


gr 
ob- 


mass of his produce among 
th 


or undrain 


temperature of soils is 
dee 5 is beyond doubt, and 


or no difference, with 
Cateris 3 the result would be as conclusive, I con- 
ceive, as the e 

ison the latte 


ment as proposed would be satisfactory. It would be 
necessary that the instruments employ uld have 
been buried — least a week before being o 

der to e th ided. } 


been roused by the suggestions which I offered upon the i ious to disease than any hitherto in cultiva- 
subject of the present catalogues, and although 1 | tion will be obtained from amon Mr. 
the —— speaks of Potatoes bein v w-eyed, and, to 


in any cou 8 were grown 

ſrom which “island the Sydney canines 
ring a sample of 
them ut during a long and tempestuous voyage 
they al Tee with che exception of two or three, and 
2 p eI only saved by introducing them into a p 


WII 


ot y pats ey in — 


— that 


— ee 

the re ante 
by a a long-handled raren 0 
* Mao’ previous to the in 
Euro ments, harvesti 


ry + 


earth; they were started in a warm pi 
stood close to the > giana $ after th - were fairly started, 
they received very li little fire heat. During the summer 
house along with various duplicate 


th 
xi with a 


t 
eat | m 
re they 


ed; 
on the 


heavy burden upon their w 
come down a halfpenny in the ma they first ask. 


Bs Burnett, Gardener, ee li, 


Roots in Dra — chat I have 
ade, I am induced to believe, that when it is desired to 
roots in 2 aree a tolerably copious 


ains.— 


If, a 


n, w 
this remedy would be inapplicable where it is desirable 
— water sboul te e sides 

I have had choked 


re therefore how 
ject 


osso p 
sion ever since, the white flow 

on the slender stalks iu = “of the closely- set foliage ! 
the extreme height more 

There are still a considerable n * . of bio — 8 be 
n grown in re, and 
ida may be classed in the 
its eee pro- 


ru 
Van Houtte’s “ vie? w 
ngland, ct unknown. ] 
e effec 


raising the erature of the soil, even ae extent 


stated in the Le article of your last N eaten, is by | pro 


no means incredible, The withdrawing so pow werful 
conduetor of calorie as water, is no doubt the principal 


mass, therefore 
e cool system, ‘mk a litle z more heat at the | man, 
y mendat 


1 in lowin 


may have looked 


ing z with you that the higher temperature occasions the | 


in any cropped tev or} ; therefore re your recom 
tion of“ ped ping the lan 
e a certain preventive in open fields. 


ashes 
with compost or sowing over cr estroy 

. The larger ashes are sold * 
paths, roads, or to — fold-yards, These ashes, but 


678 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


— the a aE generally iy strongly . maintain the character it has so justly merited for skill 3 the former with fain 
salt. laying drains, therefor 2 where and enterprise. There is perhaps no eity in Europe — but agers nd n 
danger — be e han roots and fibr a able to compete with it in collections of Palms, Cycads, | leaves in the style of fulgen i: 
if from 4 to 5 inches of these ashes were to be first | Ferns, and Pandanus, to say nothing of Orchids, Ca- | folia, with * aas heads of reddi h 1 a 
put on the tiles no fibres would dare to approach | mellias, and Azaleas, which are here propagated on a — lata area edulis, 8 e miè 
0 * m e i om 


E 


touch t rain, for a — ta 
at their 8 or take a er direction ; the England alone are gst to ave rage between 10,000 —— was not equal t 
extreme saltness of the ashes Wr, not suit t thei ir taste. and 20,000 pla ome we um. On this occasion every | at the — ey: 3 saw two 
These ashes peste also be an excellent covering for the | one seemed to fı t his — to uphold the reputation fact of Brussels being an open — have vere 
ing sufficiently porous to allow the water to of his country, — the y had the satisfaction * seeing | fined to the province of West W, while = 
em in ot only the no i Fruit: uders, 


* 


pere 
ciently 5 stop any earthy sediment; they also with plants and fruit, but numerous collections of Ca- Pears, Apples 0 
possess —— 1 reed which is that of dura- | mellias, Conifers, Oranges, — 5 ivergreens, and | and 8 . st eee and — 
bility, — when exposed to atmospheric changes. | flowering plants, tastefully arranged in the front and | fine — * Ded in which were 
These ashes are sold e at the works, as they accu- back of the bu uilding while the — in the rear | Rambour d' ste, Reinette d'Es * Calville 
mulate fast; perhaps the price may be stated at about | was saisie set apart for agricultural produce. The and d’Ameri me's Peas: Ree de 

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My Balsams being very tall, I cut the tops off a | confine myself to some few of the finest plants which at- in it was perhaps the | 
; 5 t P 
3 of them, put each in a pot singly, and a . most attention, and for which mat had been | Belle pa msy hu ale Paan — 
i offer yt Araliads: Ist prize, Mr. A. I will n t d 
— pn aos a shift in A y ta large peni filled with Verschaffelt, for very fine — a vs pe = — —„—-— we —.— — of the agricu 
ich soil, a ve now a fine display of flowers and | crassifolia, Guatemalensis i foli i to be h 
nice dwarf plants, which I once believed would prove | other species ; 2d, Mr. — ate s — i — Be — ten ily e to “o a 
good for nothing. H. M., Gardener, Priory, Ireland. plants of crass ifolia, diversifolia, elliptica, eee 
— of aoe the — g Ba oiae by trifoliata, pulchra, p AE a and palm Br * Bebiew. 
es 0 ted, in meliads: Ist, Mr. T Ver schaffelt, for = artea | A 
of 32 8 a sandy soil, a janen, gracilis, gracilis as juncea pendula, Me Ebene — e — * — i 
2d, Mr. Van Geert, for large plan H 
sets weighed 3 ounces each or rather less; they of Bonapartea gracilis, hystrix, juncea, pen —— —— — — ros — pree Sabine, ie 
= e rs oe: about half a pound | serratifolia, Cacti: ist, Mr. A. Verschaffelt. In| AN excellent translation introduces the English render 
w are usually cut into Aa sets. They this lot were = eplendid Cereus senilis, C. mon- to one of those amusing and instructive works, which 
were planted rather more than a apart every strosus, 3 3 E. aulacogonus. Mammil c the ex — . 
2 and 8 — aes occupied fl x a Som laria niv d M. dædalea ; 2d, Mr. A. Van Geert, philosopher, and few except the brilliant Humbel 
8 Ich oa and Hours: ie i uxuriantly, | w 3 ‘splendid ——— cometes, Echinocactus | could write. His sketches of nature are those of 
Segui Rae ae — every hill exhibited the piliferus, and E. Pfeifferii. Conifers: Ist, Mr. A. great master. Like those uf un accomplished artist, they 
pet on eayes, and occasionally a brown stain 1 2 large plants of Araucaria Cunning- throw off the most admirable likenesses by half a dozen 
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October 19th, = > hills y du a is: day, Dammara orientalis, — cupressinum and ex- | like Humboldt wio know how to represent te reat 
e five nacre produc uce! = i of of Potato celsum, Cryptomeria japonica, Podocarpus longifolius | outlines of nature by a few clever 2 
oo i — n : mae 3} Ws, r. | and Totarra, Araucaria brasiliana, Taxodium Horsfieldii, | however, nothing that is essential is neg 
oT ayaa : — ae a er 7 — another Cupressus Lamberti, and Phyllocladus trichomanoides. It is in works like these that a student should 
a than » and the | Conifers (hardy): Ist, sa De Spae; 2d, Mr. Vers- search for the important facts of physical geograp 
* y S z =. 


sized. Five hills day, where the | for two m — 
agnificent pl f Cycas revoluta ; Ist pri i ths, but he knows that he may 
— — ie off, ae 7 21 of e e r. e elt, for splendid spec a of 15 place all but implicit faith in the * of his 
2 whee . weight, and there edule, Zamia species nova, Z. pungens, Z, deb is, Z. | teacher. He as maste 
o amongst them. The horrida, Cycas circinalis, C. revoluta, and Ceratozamia | “ A Aspects” aay — much to learn, but t he vil 


but 
untouched fve hil and hay —— . ai mexicana ; 2d, Mr. De Saeger, for Zamia debilis, little to unlearn, A paragraph like — 
suppose that there Be any in onasiga 5 tuber | elongata, and mexicana, Dion edule and aculeatum, and | hurries along the vender as the traveller is forced om 
in those hills from * the haulm had ees z — preas revoluta, Laurels: special — Mr. Van | ward in the rapids of some mighty transatlantiestream: 
Sn Daiane & intona to leave dic haulin ¢ t ; and | Houtte, for Laurus ager lst pri Mr. Vers-| These African plains occupy an ex thre 
take every other care I can. “John cover oF not, — gg hane naj — a l 2 — — iyo — See, | ansa piot ora 
House, Weybridge, —— Oct. 19. for Geatamata : specia „prize, Mr. Th Z y „and | 
r phyllum multiflorum; lst prize, Ghent | vicinity of the tropics ; and on =f >> 
— Belgian Mode of by Me P po — e trie 3 Botanie Garden; in this collection were fine specimens — charaeter dopada) In the eastern part of the 
out of my usual quantity FEEBS 36.40 BB —— oe of Stanhopea tigrina and oculata and Aerides odoratum; | old continent, the same geognostic q 
P I have never exceeded 20 tubers dis — n | 2d, Mr. Henderix, for Phaius Tanker villa, Stanhopea | in the temperate zone. On the plateaux 
TS diseased in Peares and oculata, 8 granulosa and Harrisonii, Asia, between the gold mountains or the Altai and the 
K beyond the Cale 


m ter crop of 
and hav r. Verschaffelt, for capital -lun, from the Chinese wall to 
wi 14 aa 8 3 0 iy poy — bad, pian nts of Sabal stellata, arem longifolia, —— — towards the sea of Aral, there exten 
chee — 1 , — rotundifolia, Chamzerops lutea, Sa- through a length of many thousand miles, hector 


; this — in 1846, Ch d i z ysel 
mama amædorea mexicana, &c.; 2d, Mr. De Sae f i ve myself the 
snd “eae to do so the other two . — My Thrinax 3 Sabal s Adansonii and stellata, 5 — — South American journey, — 
I always — aa * — — — — arge. Chameerops excelsa and lutea, Phoenix daetylifera, a portion of them ; namely, the Calmuck 4 
N * er Patin Cory pha rotundifolia, and Latania borbonica; special pv sin ‘between the Don, the Volga, the of 
ches i — ake Dsaisang, being an extent 


f 
it 


ak te = 5 an Mr. al m 
1 eger, for P. longifolius atin, 5 Candelor, -| “These Asiatic s Burts 
— hes oroughly decayed stable dung and flexus, as, gelogen, latifolius erns : — and sometimes intera pted by 7i 


Storing Potatoes.—I fear that our P ee Lt tine, ik Van Houtte, for a large Balantior (dispersed ove 
os otatoes will not 3 1 * that — e Ll Lane 
V. 


1 
i 


in e. Ist, Mr. De Kirklowe. Proteads: Ist, Mr. tati tha 
: ee has coal ashes, a try Van Geert, Camellias: lst, Mr. A. Verschaffelt ; 24. 2 an 
uxing them throu anaker ; es i d 
Ford, 1 answer. R. Musgrave, Co. Water- pr Finest 3 in bloom: Ist, De 8 — adorned with 
Large —The f. is the or Di ovata; 2d, Mr. Verschaffelt, for | Rosacese, and with 
ot ir —— —— Ther ve —— — Erica retorta major. Finest new plant in bloom: “As the —— zon 
am info there were 


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and I flowering 
aue — — tn Finest new Palm: r. De Sae e Asiatic ste oa it 
called — tree of _ same eed me Ones mærops fenestrata. Finest collection of — — some of the 2 by the 2 en 2. — 
deseribed in the Hortieultural Society’s Catalo — bloom: Prize, Mr. — r for Echites . herbaceous plants, Saussureas and of species 
that name. They resemble Shepherd's F. — Y | Miltonia Clowesiana, an eristeria with orange and Papilionacese, especially a portions of thes 
but are more like the Em ‘Al coed ving orm, 3 Finest collection én ew plants — Astragalus, In traversing pathless Tartar carte 
33 s an eror Alexander in a o Belgium from their native localities: Ist, Mr, steppes, the traveller, seated in — beneath 
1 Weight ARAE 1 % | Circumference .. io. Dalle, for Lycopodium umbrosum, Erythrina mex-| sees the thickly crowded — Took around f 
Eor e 1 = 1 i — —— rg wee vittatus, Eranthe- wheels, 9 —— wee m4 he is moving: Some — 
monic — um, and Serjania Brasiliensis, &e.; 2 di aor 
"George Wood, "Rochford Cue "6. Mr. Versehaffelt, for a — Aechynanthus, a — the Asiatic ste — are grassy plains dea * 
ied Brugmansia and Spathodea, Bignonia (Brazil) and covered with succulent, evergreen, e with fakes i 
Societies. Aristolochia (St. Catherine), Hard- wooded Cape piants: plants: many glisten from a — unlike 
Pe. F SoLTORAL AND AGRicuiTéRan Suow Ist, — fortwo. splendid - Prize Mr. Louis Vers-| exuded salt w artes T inter 
gium has long been cel — os ge chaffelt, or two splen plants, 10 feet high, of | appearance to fresh fallen artarian steppes „ 
its extensive | Y. gloriosa varie . Van Houtte exhibited a * These — 2 N features, its 


nurseries and numerous botani ; — 
its cities, es, Ghent stands eral gah? — — l large general collection, — ng of some splendid — frequently by ™ wi 1 
tion, which was held on the 16th Sagas > Gloxinias, Achimenes, Orchids, 2 Ges- | very ancient civilisation of of Thibet ane 
Casino, gave ample proof of ite at | neras, &e. Mr. Linden had also several ne plants, the vate nations of northe rn influence on 
to among which E noticed two new —— and various ways exercised an imp « 


renn 


43—1849. ] 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE 


em ve compressed the 


4 po have tended, more 


destinies of man. They ha d 
towards the south caci 
the — 2 or than the snowy mountains of 
d Ghorka, to impede the intercourse of L 


bey to placè permanent limits to the extension 

of milder manners, Cen = artistic and intėllectual 
norther 

ë Bat, — the “history of ‘the past, it is ** alone as an 


the plains of 
central A ee e proved the 
from — ; 8 over distant 
finds. The 3 nations bas these steppes— Moguls, 
s d aken the world. 


to the Chinese po 
driven back into — Asia. 
from 


From thence Huns, Avari, Ghazarés, and various 

tures of Asiatic races, broke forth. Armies of 

d ively on the Volga, in Pannonia, 

on the Marne, an the Po, home ga. those fair and 

fertile fields which, since the time of gm civilised 
man had adorne — a r monu 

Thus went forth fro e Mongolian et a deadly 


blast, whieh withered on Cisalpine ground the tender 
rished flower of Art.’ 


r 
this the * en — 4 of 2 e = 
sesse 


rn erstood ; 


— da will appear the most 
Eg parr 3 Welk value is undeniable. 
Take the followin tips as an example 
“The northern Mau — boundaries of — widely 
extended low region o its 
southern 


wn, 


we 
of several de 


the Sahar as 
imits towards the fertile 2 are e still but | margined with white 
I 


* 


gay at this season; and near them, small plants is oppo 
sort, 

The different species of 

a e floral 

g bright ae — Coronilla 

— Though 


out in a 


whi ch . — a — winter flo owering * 
deep crimson Aischynanthus pulcher, — — fi uchsioides, 
which also blossoms we 


the — little blue-flowered Ruellia elegans, 
trodue d there of the red. leav 


Cuphea eye though small, 
nded much to enliven this hou 


roweas, more especially C. stricta, whose fi 
darker Pensa than those of C. 
whic associated with it 


in only in thre 


ts an oad os the’ sis was 


the U 


e main s 
rar ek 8 oblong, 
with 10 scales, the larger 
. six-sided. Seed: 
or less ang 


1} E= and 1 in l a 


be very distinct from an 
e 2 of Lambertiana * 
in complim ent to Mr. poe 


it was 

that name. ing, h 

cerning the country han wh 

two or three years a 

isiting Mr. Low's nurse at Clapton, 
had ‘received fro 


Hartweg, w 
eg and finding it had very 
of C. macrocarpa, w. 
the — s Journal, takes 
precedence of the eaten, thoug! 
Lambe 


grow most any 
not very poor.” Sauna of the 
Hortioulturel poe an Oot TA v: 


TIRE of Operations. 


5 
TAKE advantage 


more easily removed, 
oy 88 * be managed by 
eyringing the plants with wa ture of 
about 120° or #3 0°, which will ‘aso destroy any living 
ch more 


insects which may be lurking a 
— done by carefully cleaning plants in this way, 
this man aware of. any 


cessary pruning, especially amongs be 
done before the cleaning commences, as 5 is ae 


ing n 
meter of che route between Insalah an Timbuctoo, and | spikes of delicate pink flowers; some of these spikes | to waste time in cleaning shoots whi 
‘from Fezzan, to Bilma, Tirtuma, and | measure inches im le This is certainly one to be cut away. Have ail dirty — 
Lake Tscha is now generally affirmed that the | of the most useful greenhouse plants we z for it | surface soil loosened, and examine carefully any of which 
Aud covers only the smaller portion of the great lowland. | is n ys in bloom. A good plant of Miltonia | the surface has a green or sodden appearance, which is 
Å similar o; —.— 5 propounded by di in the Orchid-house, together an evident sign that water has been too liberally 
the acutely observant Ehrenberg, my Siberian travelling ver-flowering Phaleenopsis ama ; Cattleya that the inage is inefficient; if the latter, 
companion, from what he h had himself seen (Exploration | bicolor, with its purple lip an ish green sepals | i üld be immediately e and i 
Scientifique de Algérie, Hist. e . i 1 332). handsome variety of the same, with a as considerable i done at this season, 
Of larger wild imals, only gazelles, wild „ and | much -r lip; 3 several Oneids, t the best of which was | when the soil gets > nhealthy . Many 
ostriches are t et with. Le lion du désert, says | O of the nhou eraniums, and plants 
M. Carette Explor. de PAlg. t. ii. p. 126-129 ; ii, | and — ni Mae plants, In the open Loony we remarked of sim xture, in of prepara- 
Pp 94 and 97), ‘est un mythe popularisé par les artistes that a small tree of Aralia japonica had been going to tion for next spring and summer, will require 1 
et les poè II n’existe que dans leur imagination. tome — but its blossoms had been killed by the In this do not allow the gant of year to be any 
Cet animal ne sort pas de sa monta ù il trouve de recent fros r as * in — agp bees of aad 
i se loger, ir. arl C pla e during 
Sune vt 80 à re es bétes — ‘ate lés ne ra growth, ‘than shifting | them into larger p — “belare their 
Europé:ns leur donnent Nou — ils repondent Cupressus macrocarpa.— Leaves ovate, imbrieated much m eater care in 
at un inpertartabl sang froid, il y a done chez vous in four rows, bright iris green, aed closely set upon watering ts nec y after repotting at this season, 
des lions qui boivent de Pair et broutent des feuilles ! In the Heatuerr the plants must be eare: 
Chez nons il il faut aux lions de l'eau nte et de la 1 * at * aa upon 
i i i paraisse ns le rst a ew. these 
que Nen G a — x 1 au. — us Plants as hardy as possible by a free eireula. 
aon que la vipére (lefa) et d’innombrables | n ee by removing the aray 
ea am hc hel a gard to these every one must be guided by 
* Whereas oo Oudney, in thé course of the long the particular requir i 
— from poli 9 Tschad, estimated the even here ts. gmc be * — 
rn Sahara at 1637 English feet, ga 2 - oe ar dee — Pag 
i whisk rAd — have even ventured a ghia inte oo vee 
add an additional thousand feet the Ingenieur Fournel d ö 
has, by careful barometric on under his gay — ae 
correspondin observations, mite i it t tolerably probable on their nat = wig sages „te ge 
iata part part of the northern desert is below the level of S ee nt o raine A 
Sea.” points he 0 
55 Such a book as this should be in the hands of every with their own garden, and he himself will be 
due desirous of valued accordingly. 
natural — 55 be acquainted with the great ORCING DEPART MENT. 
Peadin ena of our globe. To schools and EA —We now look * 
8 rooms it is indispensable. diy ay dawning duller an er than its 
Garden Memoranda. 80 o also. must our artificial —.—.— be 
ende. HENvERSon’s Nursery, PINE-APPLE PLACE. rd 
in — observed in the sho “ts with the latter must the amount of moisture 
Which of Myosoti $ iti — than be regulated. Till our 1 a fur- 
rt, to be m —— cultiva! nished with hyg s of a simple con- 
so It is ea ily managed, and a good sized struction, this matter must still b managed 
tich oi gas plants in a pot), covered with — dl our judgment, aided 
p. ms, has a rA : ractical experien ke care that the 
perl x i ‘on the night of the T A uantity of moisture ìs 2 
ouse, on the right of the show- house, A-shaped, sharp , condense upon the glass, &c , close up or 
: some fi ered Lilies, | the old plants ; they are et apa aw y 8I tlie pi T EA the 
Whtee Vivid pink blosisaah sender -o so | pointed, and thickly set the young ‘plants. | down into the hearts of the plants. To prevent this, 


ting trough should be more sparingly filled, and 
the pen tanks closed with moveable a giving you 
> 


the power to E the = ape or perm escape. 
n fine a greater nntity of air 
can be admitted, t 5 Ae of moisture should also be 
slightly inereased. Watering should be done with great 
care, 32 a 4 yeu admisib ade on the mornin 
of v. e days. hould be ith a very fi 
‘ose, Ta 2 Se po the ee but into the at- 


r * 
mosphere of the house or pit with such force that they 
y receive it in the shape of fine very dew. RIES. 
In the anxiety to keep those houses containing fruit 
sufficiently dry, be careful to avoid the extreme, even 
in that direction. 


s eas dw 

not an arid . but 
regulate it cety requires more care and 
jada t than is 3 found, except in a very ex- 
perienced pen 


it — 


trees, where 


tance, in 


© 
4 . 8. 


very shor 
season of repose, e move abate, especially 
if assisted by a little mulching on „the „surfac of the 


groun 


19—Stight fog; exceedingly fine; clear at night. 
20—Fine; very fine; rain at night. 
— Hazy clouds; rain; clear. 

3 Fog ery fine; ‘overcast. 
23—Clo a A! and fine; overcast ; slightly clouded at night. 
24—Overcaast ; cloudy and fine. 

25— bigest andi five; showery; rain at night 

Mean tem of the w. 5% deg. above the a erage. 
State of the Woon at ee —— thea last 23 years, for the 


Oct 


ensuing week, ending Nov, 3, 1849, 
8 34 è P P £ oe f Ja Aa Prevailing Winds. 
Oct. 88 8 ES Hin ; : sE 

22 2 © į which it Pb sth! le e 

and Nor. AE | ZSS aa Rained, | of Rain. EE 
Sunday 28 532 | 375 | 331 10 1.08 in, —5 247203 
| Mon. 29 53.9 0.0 46.9 10 0.43 213) 3| 1) 6] 7| 1| 1 
Tues 30| 54.6 39.3 46.9 10 0.50 3? 3f 1} 3) 2] 9) 1 1 
Wed. 3) 53.1 39.2 45.1 13 0.88 — 2) 2| 2.— 9| 5) 3 
Thurs. 1 54.2 38 46.4 13 0.38 21114 3) 4) 7) 2 
Friday 2} 63.1 [ 39-4 463 10 9.49 242 2080203 
Satur. 3] 53.3 } 38.8 $ 45.9 12 0.82 —! 2! 6) 1! 5] 4! 6l- 
The highest temperature during the above period occurrad on the ath 


* 30th, 1833—therm. 67 deg. ; and the lowest on 8d Nov., 1845 - therm. 20 deg 


tices to Correspondents. 
e is no di ference eres virgin honey a 

fi fre bs that never 7 

. It is only from . — that pure honey ed be 

had, on whatever Fate bees are kept. 1V.—S V. You may 
take ney fro om mon hive without 9 the bees, 
by turning i mbs fro h 
side, bat N to We operat ion a fev ew Pwi ff 
smoke should be introduced amongst the bees. 
tion should be danad in the 8 but it 
form it now; it should hav e been done 
bee es mi ight 


full one, which 
of both hives 
round — 
from esca 

be es to rise into the t — — one. 


t+ 


The opera- 
is oe late to per- 
uly, in order that 


Js 


the ground ; the mouths 
should fit ose together, then tie a 1 
where they meet, in order to prevent the bee 
e, in order to cause the 


of € activity. Baers regard to soil the most common 


make it too deep or too good. For 
pai jes. eat ‘ sand l stone fruits, good ixe 
with sand or burned clay, if too tenacious, is all that — 


at leas 
etter. When | any additional 


a pos of it, so aoe y 
a supplied in the shape o 


mulus 


the soil to exceed bottom if 
not naturally i 8 rvious ce made so by artificial means. 
here the situation is mp, let the border for 
the choice uit ees, ir eri Peaches, and Nee 

p ines, b = tirely = the ordin evel, 
is well w h while to ifice a foot at the bettom 


of the gags if by s0 ae the utility of the remaining 
port 


FLOR ISTS’ FLOW 
Tutirs.— Take the first opportunity of planting the 
Pirie or best 25 Be: by means advocate a dib 


— on coal ashes (if 80 not on — en 
all possi 


ery 
will often 


they 
wa ben should they get pee Tead 
Z g them to stand und 285 shed 
for a few days, we ‘have found — * 

EN 


IT 
Let oe under — have all the air 
possible, prot em only from frost, rain, and 
very = vinds; = 8 oe ety be quite closed 
he tops should be tilted in 


r| — GARDENS: 


wet, but fine mil eae they should be lifted 
to keep them 


an on clean. Watch 

closely for slugs, ir ravages by a timely 

lication of soot. little finely sif coa 

is an excellent thing to cover ace of the 

il with between er Koms of any kind our 

slimy friends have an insuperable objection to crawl 
i 3 — will apply to the Endive 

‘or winter u Let dead or Fg 


by no s a 

arlick and ay in 

autum 3 — ir commencing to root 
immediately, and to peg cor growing below ground in 
all favoura! e winter, while their tops 


State of the Weather near London, for the week ending 
e observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiswick, 2 1649. 


Kew GARDEN; GS, The wisegcre who wrote to the Daily News 


“Then put the robbed colony 
ith afresh swarm. This 
we Theat countries, where bees nar 
uch 


itable 


Ks hè s bad Kingdom ” ean 
aceon * ar * uses = > Whio — ipa ts are ied, 
t also fully explana 


_ an 


and of the source of kno products. 
atoral System, 1291 ` * ima agin 
very book y you want. SA — Jam = 8 3 ng” is re old 


e uncertai Yo ot London book- 
will easily procure it for se, 2 a 8 search. Dub- 
lin is an unlikely place. 2 “Encyclopædia of Gar- 
dening ” pei ap works also contain 4 few plans; but 


= 
© 
Ù 
— 
m 
a 
oo 
= 
s 


on Z mi eco uh 8 oe rrespcndents to inform 
him what is eates ve ha ef is the sea — = 
British 1 * which ihe cholera nee ascended. He means 
— Z SY been virulent and fat 
DE0D y herbaceous — you may propagate it 
upon n the Cedar of f Lebanon, But why take the trouble when 


DisE : Z. Your Sweet William leaves — attacked by the 
— called N Lychnidearum cause «nd cure un- 
known. Plant Gla oe us roots now if an can kidi soot 
th 8 If not, stow them away in dry loam, and plan 


An Ori 


rough 


d of you tas 

| Pont T N STA You will gain ee if any advantage by 
iron rafters in 80 short a pan.“ u had be tter Ant —.— 
— 


in such a house as y 
circumstances, 3 in the em ce cond © of hot erig 
Pn CS. Nothing else will answer — Creed. w of 
tobacco, Perhaps your Celery was sown too e 

it is a bad sort; Pager it at starved 
erloaded with m od s 


Gast: Wemble 


King” of 
Greening Bre Cou 


br 
4 
B 
4 
E 
5 
955 
5 


French brat 


‘ton 
bright scarlet, 10 not kno own, e 
t 


Acidiu 
no proper r En 
= Hart's per Bog mam 
ota ies” isa ae t 
Hopethe seed-vessel of a Species of Men 


the Caper aet 


e tim 
Genes were swelling, 
burst. . course 


* 


p 11 
ip 


Loudon's Hortus Lignosus Lo nsis, 
the Longan, and nothing eljas see Lindley’s 
economical Bonon” p. 101, f 

preferred to fam 


II. 


yY, Physalis 
o. 1, Ch rysanthemum n prn 2, Chr. 
Alystum maritim lott. Yo 
rabosus? Ho 


— = 


8 5 


oor 


answer questions privat 
ANTATIONS = 


ely, 
Pra 
these rules, 


den. In making 1 


4 Kanes ANA: 


h, you had better throw 
it away, procure a 187 healthy o one, m treat it as aboa. 
It is a plant that tig beh Se ttom-heat, plenty of 
— during the growi * son, and ae mekeni 
sh be kept r t soon 
iel if e su Hen with 7 in a low te — Me 
y 7 suppl 2 


SALVIA SPLENDENS : rrespondent suggests 
useful if the * at: the Priory, Ireland, would 
our readers with his mode of cultivating this plant, 

Tacson “nag cot tt 8 MD. Tes; probably its frait 
can be eaten wit 2 

To pik 5 t s. Voir eS ee 

eal, and — will procure jae if he can. We realy f 
San — recommend tradesmen ; 

Viotets: R S, Bath. — think je irar to defer ah i 
till we have had s — with 3 4 
will be grown in Sa co e in the 3 
describe, r. We can only say for 

present that the Russian Superb looks 8 . 

Mise: Much hg ge but —— 3 2 

resent. —Be inner, You 
plasterer 1 h with vane yellow gh ondon Re 4 ; lime is 


had 
mix the zg 
Cut your gre hard in, and th 
tioned in the Calendar of Operation 
that will clear it of scale. — — 
Physianthus — Beaumon 
floribunda are stove plants. — 
Th 


en apply hot water, as 
ons for 
ions cara 


o upon whether it — — — a room or ot ‘geld, 
We should be sorry t any minu K- Viner 
— 5 by “green” —.— nae “No doubt it r 5 good ma- 
o is night-soil ; = we men justified in carting that 
8 their neighbours’ no 
GERANI LP, The leaves wid ge tops Should be A gers 
off beih before’ they are ite Be part 


shaken from their roote. 


They n a not be quite dry when 
— but 


ey should. not be 2 we ss as to cause them 
pring, encourage them to grow previously to 
INA: PLC. Your plant has suffered from the 
eat — moisture, either at its roots or a the — 


ul mark 


8 
tate, has caused the 


. Rough plate is not stronger than other glass, 

tombs roofs have no advantage over 

ere is a very long bearin Rough 

s best for seas, undoubtedly, We 
5 8 

GREENHOUSES: F. An angle of 45° is enough for the roof, As 

much more steep as yon ike, not flatter than 35°, Cover it 

with rough horticultural plate glass, Heat it with hot- 


water pipes, 
aera 74 C. Double Reds: Bouquet Royal, Triumph 
Blandina, Sans Souci. Double Blues: Alfred the Gre eat, 
Grand 8 EY uet 8 Double Wh hites : La Vestal, 
hg plus Ultr met 


never recommend 


e, Her Single Whites: : 
Grand Blanche Imperiale, Queen viene. Catherine, Single 
lues: Ose ti d 


Blue ar, Quentin Durward, imrod. Single Reds: 
ars, Monsieur de Taesch, L’Ami du Cœur. 
Insects: C H. The flies which have rred in such numbers 


occu 

on the ceilings of your rooms are Chloro 
larvee from — they are bred, — at — 
cereal . W.— r Ciner: 23 are infested 
with apb e The plants should 15 washed with tobacco- 
water or fumigated beneath a cover with burnt tobacco, and 


water, 


w t 1 —— gz 
tum cannot be 5 in Englands 


u had better thatch 125 W. ree epe, z t 
fectly hardy. ł}—A H. You can apply ha 
that will prevent the wen 
38 — m withou the same time ele ae 
Try Ee effort of fencing them in ee 
sticks stuck into the d.t 5 
BEDLI ING FLOWERS. dear yellow 


Al — ne large flower 
“centre and pha A a shaded with my 
part; large. but a little eh ea 
2 erik H B. Colour 
in depth, and nicely a — 
over large. wü palo, x 
; lobes road and ra 
well shaped, and eq 


pe 
waxy white, rather short 


corolla 
= sizeof 


alin 
1 flower, wall "i contrasted is to 1, bat 

8 py 5 ery similar in act ws 1 ou 
little longer in the tube, and patted very i 
corolla. 3, tube pale b er ch rather i 
tipped with green; gore: pa ct ar a aet | 
flowers too small a pide! tinc Ct iall flower and i 

white ; — pale a 4 


very dist 
e ae 
from what re E 22 


Received in bad 1 


a pas p — 


very 
shape, and e „ i 
— — Althea, 2 271 pe 1 n 
exception; but ler you nen 12 which are an 


flowers, we can 
the deep reds — rote colored on ones. 
thea. Thi 


— NIA A 
* s have 
: 1, man; communication 
5 12 a and oiie 80 unavoidably detained tor 
= n be made. 


i 


: 


MISEFIELD CLUB, 1849. 8 Annual Show of GEED 1 WIEAT.— For Sale, at 50s. per quarter, good , 
FAT STOCK wi Wednes- uine seed of the RED-STRAW WHITE and 
day the 12th, Thursday te oo and) Friday the vat of Guen, HOPETO N gy Samples of grain and ear will be sent 
ber. 1849, at the — — reet. on receip ps to cov the expense of postage ers 
A tes, for — Stock tna 1 mplements — hed —— — — — can be executed; — rom 1 


obtained — m the Hon tt Dan ary, and r him 
filed up and 1 * or = betore Saterday the 17th of Novem- 
ber, 1849. B. T. BRANDRETH — Hon. Sec., Corner of Half 
on Street, Piccadilly, Lond 
23 AND > OTHER MANURES 


gasno of 
Sulphuric 
eake, Salt, — allo 


R. 
D under his immediate superintendence, The attention of 
— well-kno * Fer- 
ased u uon careful 
examination of the requirements of the ep and the condition 


for using 
. The u e Manures, which are 

S enairely of rich animal matters, havo received numerous it — better n a ee the spring 82 fi pra a — 
ials to pran 5 l to the best Guano. waa eet edited aga ae 
— — WALAN Mark lma Lace — tion T of chemical knowledge, as applied 
—0RGI » Mark-lane, London. | to agriculture, has enabled Mr. Porren to make important 
improvements in — potura aa Guano, which he now 
- BY HER ROYAL LETTERS — confidently reco — e of all who wish to grow 

“ia riant crops at small e 
n consequence o — — persons, once acting 
MAJESTY’S PATENT. OTTER’s agents, substituting their own co p unds foi 


PATENT nor noben WORKS, KI IN G'S ROAD, CHELSEA. 

E DENCH invites the attention of Gentlemen os 
* to pe Hothouses, &c., to the vast “Cages ty in e 

which Sia ‘will 

Good Glass 


c Horticulturists to their h impro method of 
the Tank System to ia * Pro oo ng Houses, 
éc., * r c heat well a ttom-heat 15 


m-h: 
zegi red degree, without 8 PTY 8 piper or -_ 
8. and Co. ne also to state see request of n 
are no akin 


at their Manufactory, 

icle —— for the construction 

ef Horticultural Buil ings, as r ree for eee them, may be 
aoe 


the ae 1 sop 
Wooden — upon the most 
à a Tiaoa. Palisading, Field ard Garden 
T C. 


ISH PEAT CHARCOAL, 
THE I AMELIORATION SOCI ETY, 
Established by a Royal — of naibilite of Subs dated 
which limits nsibility ate ubscribers 


ef Engine 


9, Water! — London. 
4 divided into Shares of 101. each, to 


eer in Ben gal), 


any pre s Call. 
all 225 to be ee p each 
e First Call was 


N was Septemb for the purpose of beneficially 
S the an yor | nthe manufacture et Peak Fuel 
from the Peat Bogs of 4 d, and, in the 
anent, We of the Bog * . 
ine r iey —— thus aon of considerable 
as been shown 
oubts 


p 
— r operations have proved, that, cd 
Sad nde by t * they will be able to employ con 
bag and we aom penedcisily thousands of the half-starved and 
peasan 
1 5 adopted and proposed to be sored — be — 
oyment of eee e work, wi 
ia mo pag d the Directors — 
they hava biel 2 to ¢ 


ey want to make 


TS earnes the public c for support. 
men the 3 welfare of oat 


in that coun ew field of us 
. . . 
in bebe n removing from the densely popu- 
torna of Englan d the cause of pestilence and death, may 
at th only 
y, by anten 
of A Siriese 
Society 
mas Annually of manure, now worse 1 
though this Society w: n philanthropic 
1 reial principles, the Director voy 3 
' inclined ts invest 2 Da Misik of tbis * that 
will —— a quick a — pinn urn for any 
may so By —— he cour, 
„R. 1 Hon. See, 
may be made, 


— — 


8 E 

Er 

100 1 
a 3 
7 
4 
EH 
8 
1285 


F 


z 


amy 


8 


r 


| sive than 
| 0 


The 
m general consent, ivided into two e 5 


y other e grain 
3 not icons my: after another, because the firt 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


be accompanied by 
2s. each. IR INTE R BEANS, fo ‘or seed, — 2 — Ap at * 
per busbel. Yous Moston. 55 meea, Gloucestershire, 
Tee LONDON MANURE € COMPANY beg to offer 


selves that ry Manure sent 
e —— — aang 


m th 

—— Warehouses, London 

74 Manure and tent te, Sulphate of Am- 

ate “of Ammonia, or Ammoniacal rote ge — 

of Soda, Bone 

x Manure, oo Blackfriars 

AUTUMN SOWING.—POTTER’S GUANO. 

R. POTTER particularly recommends this season 
h 


his Guano, as, if now committ 


0 
equate, an arrangement, be made to the 
— — yik of the r r. 
150 eur UM, in 
e, at the Fron y Bs — Please direct your orders, 


ors the quantity taken is 
carriage, will 0 


state peculiarly adapted for the annuall 


farm 
per post, to, ** NN address 
HAM RO AD ‘PLACE, LONDON. 


DARIAN “CEMENT — monn Stucco, instead of |} 
on plastering, may inted and Ay red within 
20 ae ot an 4 4 5 on to = bare walls, a yt 
— — a. be rendered to ary. Before the peee 
t 
alee paa 
whatever, 


— — would begin 
che e slightest difficulty, ag — 
with an other 
repare d for Orn 
ing, & c., & c., ä of which ma 
the Pa tentees, CHARLES Francis and 


Che Agricultural ame 
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1849, 
MEETINGS — THE TWO Fe TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS, 
Tuunspar, Nor. —— — Imp. — — 
Tauespay, Agricultural Imp. Society land. 


Dun 


zpen 
r quality is 
* a Plastering, for mne . 1 
t the Work 
con j Nine Elma; — 


NG the Bare, s een there are no mate- 

to deal that should engage 

——— or those substances 
7 — 


Although it is of grea a to have the 
land in a proper me * . e for the crop in- 
nded to 1 ke that is, vell a, Wee 
arrowed, &c.—although it equal moment to 


85 onf obtain a 
food for the papie p is-raising ; that is, he . 
use the 
be thi — however Po a condition, in 
a mechanical point of view, land m unless it 
0 


ha ~ land of England 
than in any other. 
ae that f or & lon, 


is more deficient in this 


ed. 
aang consumed by horses and cattle in Oats, 
Straw, Hay, Beans, Mangold Wu 
x returned to the land, for every 
ow. 


ood, 8 


the Whea 


m 
the 
material, which, if — 
lied, is beyond 
he fo 1 wing e era which may be tried by 
for the v nn 


artshorn 


sed to bre 
177 2 4 ra settle at the — of bi Emmy 
In the urse of events the Barle 


Farm- 2 manure is, doubtless, a most 1 
substance as a food for plants We know of no 


t con 
necessary fo for the 
Lof t e different crops ra sed by farmers ; but 
still it i a fault, that is, a want of strength i 2 two 
of its most important ingredients, in phosphate an 
in ammonia; if it 8 more of t 


— 


ai t 
will arrive at matu urity, muc 
ess be “ fruitful asd multiply,” as every farmer 


The best manure for a plant is that which con- 
tains, or Late by its Ri aay iy 9 2 
substances which it r as food ; 
inqui mah and such a ne 
the noe comp 


pigeon o bear in mind that no on 
rial can afford food for a sah by itself, any more tei 
r an animal, which, we know, if fe du upon a single 
material for a e torah of time, eventually 

ore form its different organs 


grea 


me, 

hai air, bone, muscle, 3 nerve, from such a 

as arrow- root. The m complex or the pam 
tances that are mixed to form 

ore likely is it to contain 


those ma an | 


animals, 


o | exhausting crops go fallow crops; all grain and 
wed ne are classed with the former, and = green 
e la Now. ‘the reason w 

sengien fallow 
is si is: "requi uires a much 
ingredients which 
mall quantity in ** oil kagat the latter. 

urs | The pf morera, gm instance, requi 
by ee plant, are used to a much renter extent 20 


of the land as 
for the second crop. 
abstract aoe the soil, 
ess, the most important, 


ui ad much of these 

o lea eee: 
01 the matters Pies, 
the “ phosphates ” are. 


2 5 


ment which w 
kta 


the above 
e co m — * i wht 
bones, guano, and - sveg sewers. 
should not the farme t the efforts now 5 
to ae om sewage gir of cities ? 
s of the grates 2 collected, 
1 of the streets are the sources of an e 


reven All these matters will yield by ae k 
omposition what the plants most 7 which ever 
should be taken that it is well mixed 


with nig a and as much sta as the 1 muck will 
soak up; nitrate nd 1 a, su 

te, yS in 1 

e farm if put on the land ~ hg 

, | themselves, for Cu ‘hey a 2 not so liable to waste. 


Tun Mark Lane Express in “speaking 
"lof — — truth — that there is 

ch a thing as editorial truth; and that when 
* encouragin _ those who would 
Camp if 5 ‘goa 


we m “ utterly at 
” with every thing it had Guiles upon the 


ing 
it with 


subjec 

Si it appears that we have na ae along under 
an nie misa s object 
has not d silence 
Mr. Cam. this,” he 


him. Well; this 


those who alone oan have. — 


tl 
. 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


readily admit, no longer open to variety of 
0 pre Sh : ‘bat our cotemporary errs if he thinks that 


e 
re-assert ou 


a frien 
belief that the Mark Lane Express, —— 


its — to defend Mr. Camp, has unfortunately | 
ose who would silence him if the 

AA collection of extracts from hi is columns 

would, we believe, ful 


mld.” 


be to apply to the gentlem 
the controversy on this — 


ess object to receive their judgment of his 
arbitration d thei ponen 
hea e perfectly ready to appeal to those on 
the = side—will they say that they have n 
been encouraged—that the editor 1 * Paper is | t 
-= obviously with them and against their -e i 
We are perfectly wendy to — to thei 


Peeri on our st or, as our cotemporary will 
e it, on our ve 


3 the ge = the ‘difference between us may | 7° 


reasons — his opinion; first, that Irish farmers 
emigrate to America and the colonies, Were . 
e not ae 3 meh had e age ae remain at 
e; and secondly, bec: th 


t farmers of 
may Ca ios held a 9 recently, and and resolved that r rent 


’ 
res sident 


u 
5 its proximity to the 


it at the leaseholders of a je iod when agricultural 
— igh, a a e fee of the oil sold for 28 
d rs’ pure e acquisition of 


30 eins and w 
land bell by lease er “desirablo, 1 from 3 causes 
—that land, moreover, being situated in one of the 


of 5 “Those who 8 by B hed pe i titi 
— — ce a Uk if kiy sere = not which 3 ly 5 in 1 1 oe 4 —5 ped ts 
encouraged 80 the Mark: Lane Express : the | ceased, within at least the geographical limits to which 


CAIRD 
ur ipasa antos that he 
Mr. 


It is ede: our rae A = silence Mr. 
says our cotem 
ins silent.” Now cr 
Carp — ray com 
argumen 


did 


ments — facts of his dyponén 
the Mark Lane Express, w 
ev 


y prepared ; but 
f one * “thou ugh de ad 


uttered loud “enough, ec 
edly—living 1 ong = 
volume of its o 
quency of the repellent — with which it came 
; d that 


re-ec! 
proportio n, — te 


ns 

a pamphlet whose y tation has orn extended 

by every fresh re e turn its 
their author 


are not accurately — — in these 1 tee 


as we have heard a — 2 voice, 
repeat- | 

not the | 
nce, but also to the fre- | 


ave, in my previous pesg FA my observations, 
and east of Ireland, 
a lease 
all the i Fp at 
ep ural 


made by h it i 
3 ee that this ie shoud now feel pa the de- 


f their holdings, occasioned by a —— 
cate cause, lowness in ‘the price of produce, and increas 
of local taxation. 


might 
tas the western highlands b 


E 


a Oe tee i ~ the t test of value. Land tes 
and for 


—was scarce in Ireland, it was therefore 


ra 
1 
which he can let at an — * 


tunatel 


1 the it here ; but in so far as 
wens proper o and and duties of 
cultaral j we make n ogy for oc — 75 
ing our space with Wa — upon the bitter: 

ä ——ʒ᷑ eee 


AGRICULTURE, IN TRELAND.—No. III. 
Ir remains for me 


e 
— and fe He seed Belägen 
t Davi 


recommend nd craton io to Ire! d (the t rm has a the 0 
se Beiter — a Sh ae ‘portion of 


y an 
ulent 


PY- corded adjace 
| harbours and bays, with abundant f facilities of obtaining 
eed and fish —salm riv 


ris, varying 
260 acres, principally grazing land (three 
only being under 1000), and from 


leave no 
but employment i is wanting to set 

as Mr. George R. C an 
t to > ood 


man 
m of 1200 acres, grazing 


` 


can 
the most 
as to rent an nd tenure 
to an improving tenant but. T ‘ook to ve 
esults fro 


us recent 
Ireland are not 


The — in the — real —5 — 
rhaps sufficiently unders 

England, aud yet mer i —— knowledge of this — 

ject gad require 


of tenure in Treland was 


each lii expi iy ew 8 was added to the lease 
another payment of a fine. This ies of re led 
several | frequent litigation ; as a ma ourse it never could 
zing in ascertained either when the lives dropped or what 
to | should be the amount of fine paid. Neglect to rene 
acted led to attem — itures on the part of — 
these again led to a suit in Chancery on the part of 
that he has farmers the tenant. The ten al — — an 


nathe he address of this gentleman is George R, Crampton, 


is therefore not surprising | Thes 


d — in riyeg and taken before | and becom: 


In England, after the war had ceased i in 1815, — 8 


Sper 
as well be alleged th ‘that 
wh 


th 
a truth in political economy, 
ted by the | enhanced 


befo 
- | the Courts of Equ 


8 — the efforts a have made 


rage By an act of 
ch 


the purchase 

s Act I conclude for 
e pure se s must in 
creditors upon the estate; 


th the following m 
e e ái 
many instances be ar 
; thus where be : 


gaged 10 years ago for 
15,0007. The creditor (and thi 
case), must ei make up 


ment to regen if that can be accom 
and a long lea: 
But s 


suppo creditor not to purchase: 
— will 3 a oe okvi valent ee 


s either ic or in 
2 “tek matter which ; he has an article to 
which is rather a drug, ‘and the Br Tarner a 
S at 


rom patriot 


is own terms. 


a a reidet — yet 3 

have their antages. 

British ened bana 
estates would be tre 


real p of ben a they prot do 
that the whole rental of Ireland ; 


their Nee 
that rental is in Muns 
acre of it, so soon as a rece 3 
8 between landlord ins tenant is is severed. 
urt of Cha 2 = age power to improve! 
grant a term of 2 nit 
ferant s pa peer and taus * 
— Chaticery estates have become a 
rable themse elves, they 


umane 
rings which many of that 


hat class is exempt oie 
| aya of their calamity, I — only rec 
and generous — 


A 


tinction of the other. ‘The returns pu : 
Larcom prove that the number of farms 


acres has increased, 
y — w 


Belmullet, Mayo, 


_ 431849. ] THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 


683 


Erer desire desirable the removal of the race of small farmers 
cannot witness a tremendous loss of human | 

ot a hardy population without the deepest com- 
miseration. Whilst I unaffectedly deplore the miseries 
I must 


ciety 
—— with capital whic 
rate rent = favourable tenure. 


y thes several counties 


2 21 


it wi ri — § 
course be consider 
estimating a 


we 
k-rented a andlord. 
i why should not districts in Bas west of Treland be 


en the 


ct with his landlord 

g agreement, the 
e rate upon a the landlord. In an 
s are redeemed 


excesses do 
He is like the rest 


exemplary 
It is true that crowds of mn ower 
ered Turnips and Pota 2 nfessed 
rocure transportation — and in 
n born to su But Be man 

hua not pilfer nor foi — yet who died of utter want ! 
turing this period of ut 


ar; but I fear the arguments addue 
re further to puzzle and perplex them, as: 1 listened to, 
istaken confid 


e 
stituents of ri — 
caprice nfo fashion Aae B y the manu- | g 


question, and with bold 


there — 
Ta we been — ee — no jacqueri 


= 


wants 


1 


~ able to adduce, is 


nt is a un er 
upon our land than any — country has done; bese: E 


ee has been but filth and ra would 1 
mend isolated instances of settlement * pon eng 
e oft 


N : bal 
who would treat 
his likes 
though he should keep a firm han 

ure from acts of se A violence in the wilds of Con- 
— as in land. 
e the reasons me a venture to suggest as 
hich the west of r 


n quiet 


nd for the wild and bolder scenery of a mountainous 
e | country. i 


q 
© 


y envelope), he will be enabled 
o defy all w vor and Luͤr be 8 for an 
bli 


Piney. [Th 
at p. 619, 


6 


allusion to the g proprietors of 
accidentally omitted Lord —— “pets e] 


he 
ENGLISH FARMER versus FOREIGN FARMER, 


N the Aal tural Gazette of the 8th September, 
hind is an article with 


juccess, 


“To des ae. pee ae — would be | rath 


especially welco could the n be r 
that E e held ey are at all likely t to be realise 
re only calcula — 


o induce a totall 
quite 


atly dependant on . 


pram it may s of our nation a 

deal of what it iy deem — by the comparative 
eee, bet another, bears no increase of the 
real, in opposit 

terchange de — on the 
at best, 


tition from e and ‘still. 


to competition with the whole 3 * forei 
rich soil and beautiful climates, wert rers who 


coaxi 
also, would be as a 


to 
— simple as would annuall gedan 


d 
n to pe merely representative con- 


es, | free trade or low prices- and x no 


just as much the price received for an article as its cost 
of production, which determines the amount of gain or 
loes to the ucer ; and to make his 


ace, and in England to be under the 
same geet ares. the value Bs a quarter of Wheat in the 
ote oll 30s., then the 22 would be 
120s. =~ ‘the expenses 60s. In „suppose 
at 60s. owing to a ty o on norm "then the 
prod ir will be 240s. and the e 


ow, 
8 in theo 


be done o$ ses ring U aa 
and reducing him from his comfortable clothing, wheaten 
loaves, and ore to the black Rye bread and al 


n do. 


se views, 
numbers are anxiously waiting in 5 aes en that. 
n will be done before 
N lost. I think these ought to 
= noble mi inds, to make farmers | alive to their 


try is 
cu the Bs ava | 
aber 


1 


* 
indiffere rence, hi 


try in the world at the present can bear a 

i fo eving the 3 And. t. to will do 
shing farmers to! know heir posi 

T have * vaes expres ts, which 1 
am persu are generally entertained, an which 
I humbly claim a place in your valuable journal. T. M. 


er E ae 


and 
should an En obtain equal — 
for it is obvious shat tih = rs opting the Scotch system, 
we could afford to pay the — h rents, and yet con- 
tinue to pay our own, there ald need ase no grumbling 


to the Government for renewed pro- 


as t, o 
tecti tion. I read ts beg 


the favour of some farmer 

holding one of these high rented farms, or some one 

we nversant with every to inform 
farmers 


harvestin separately 
pare the results and cost with our own. The 


raise a 3 quantity from it, — ti in 
vegetable or an ae 


He — re 

British agriculture k 
that we are. But unfortunately the * proo: 
ev one, that we have 
f| done it before, forgetting that it was under very dif- 
i| ferent cireumstances ; and he asserts that this requires 
o other demonstration than the fact of our having 

these e aid much heavier expenses 


culiar sort o t he assumes that we m 
have produced — r ute than they, as we have 
paid than they ; over that it is 


I-A, CS 5 Are we able to do this! | giv 


in farming, besides savou: ring of vanity in the Scotch 
speaker, and not being over — o D to the 


lish hearer, are useless, because 
a i ~~ > py = that of it pionii 


t al 
never one equal to the gegm rents of 3/. 10s. to it per 
rom 


us 
8 Grey's pamphlet. From this it seems 
high rent per acre is not owing to the 


684 THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


can larger than the English, because he obs “the 
han farm — * of from 200 to 500 Scotch pitta 
Ne è re economical and 


0 


5 ere sich 


arge towns where all the green cro’ 


rents, except o 


prices o 


n equ 
radox “to me, Which I I 450 ahah “like to 
d 


earful e which has been 
country clearly points out 
h 


tainted kinos here 


The gaol returns show that a large majority inf pier ror 
trace their first rar against the laws to drink. 
Agriculturists 70 ae well to ponder over these 
authority and influence 


ve 
recollect that “ water, page dropping, will wear 
se the hardest stone.” Falco 
6 Challenge.—1 was no little amused, 
and at t 
ately appe: eared in 


. Huxtab avi 
find thers was sO zo odly a mber o 

farmers rea e advocato their thks B 
t the improving f 3 of 
and fro 57 t wledge of tli e 
in the Venda of Saint 


* 


till all propre 
d the human bei 15 


oung w thus 
a profligate 4 te habits of “ite 
is corru 


E 
fue 


—— profit dates from the 


8 years of ag d th — of = 25 
e an e ee 
“Masters should have the power dl 


and spoil the chüd is 


ere in 
2 construction, 


ginal eos 
most effective in its application. I mean 15 s Can 


must | accom 


e in the 


pivo 
hitherto been t 


the above, a joiner tell 
widths and 18 ckness 9 


was referred t 
4 J. V. R” 0 dmg time since by our 


Renis, — Some sho 


n 

tolerably correct, 

t price 48s. per quarter, 
he poi 


requi 


ort time 
$i A back I was 


rapes! 


gai 
on 


far 
= occupiers 2 Wha n et ea 
rect. The o 


hat I have 


instead of 60s, e malede 


en 


A Scale for 


AVE 


14 


22 


16/18 2022 2426283032034 


— — 1—— | — J — J ST 


19022 25 2801 337 
7 | 20) 23/26| 29/321 85)3 


as. g +} Average Trin f 


Wheat 


PER Acri, 


RAGE PRODUCE oF WHEAT 
IN BUSHELS, 


24/27/30/33 36 394 


E 


40 43 10 


38 
36 | Ol 013 


6/19/22 
1 
1 


1 
1401 
12 
10 
8 


6 9 (12, 15“18 21 


ect A 


tn 


= ils A brags 18 boards, d 2 inches thick, and 

overlap each other, a elevating | one of 
their digi 2 inches above the one on which it is laid, 
= along each of these angles, the Peachy length a piece 

oop iron is nailed, to prevent the angles 

this being done, the imple E ie Gini ished, Iti 
by two chains, one from 
the slo 


| arms are covere 


som 
t | to exclude the milk from hái 
, | mitting the air to p okay ers 


all at once filled w 


gricu 
orses exhib’ bited 


To Cor 
of talkoa. halk, 
02 — 1 bes 


n Churn,—The enquiry you were so obliging. 
as to icone in No. 28 of 
of an American churn, has a to nase ial 4 


urnin 
F hiladelphie Courier” 


unless indeed the rapidity o of 


cidity in Beer or Cider,—Take Te de 
and put it intoa fs ais 
r will have become mild and pleasani 


your Paper for a description 


uest 0 bet e 


communicate more 


the 0 


th milk, to the 


ith air. 


a ‘their al 2 


horse 
e Ag 


rom his „r oe 
yele aan pei should by the 
and care shown 


ee 


— 


was impossible that the 
ial e could be 
7 ey manufacturing and 


men got rich, e must take place 
0 asses of soci 


t f poor pers standing idle, 
day afer diy doing 9 nothing. 
e 


oor man obtaine 


id the wide brown waste of he. 


oe ally? SE = eee a 


hers ady to pur 
regulations of that country forbade the bargain. 
ont reclaimed and cu 
food 


N 


wide ease i to alluded, 
it would 0 0 3 where 8 a a 
ness It would ‘have produced foo 


untry 
way inta their 1 rivers 2 
ditches, 

th 


FLTeare; 


again— 

brought b 

A 
Ii would see 


a 1 Die 
animals into newly created forests, 
— 2 state of thing i 


Hate 
8 8 8 


Hi 


r 
f 


8 
Fs 
E 
— 
55 
E 
pp 


2 

‘oe 

ERR 
SE 


271 


invested in P 
in rendering fertile land tilled by others, 
were y wealt 


1 


E 


Hd 


a S 


115 


8 


res, induce what is 
farming (cheers), Bogland wer "Scotland 

Present time, an enormous — of the 7 
prosperity. bour, 


offered and refused 
- | the ina ilit ty of farmers to employ laboure 
y 


The ence, 


If 
or two of land, you saw the green fertile spot as a eh me 
t 


es, 8 
generally prejudi apes by the n 
a- tion, and that 


| 8 not in that conditi 


the of application, to 


tively insignificant portion of their funds to 


u- | refi 
chase | th 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


foto we brought together, 
regu 


lations, for the good of the country.” 


poe gira 


who are terme 


paper, 2 weekly . teem w 
chall ; Ph 


p for the most part, whether as 
n, the Tritons 


to co operate under wise generally in a 


ry forward state. The horses 
loyed chiefiy in "Araning —— for Wheat an — 
Nag ellos — 


— 
on of our "Wheat, and although it 
secure 


1 
——— * 
good, from 40 to 


will ry formard sate 
bourers, which 
of farm 


ne w price 


otatoet for some 1 — = t, 
showed but little 

the crop, is 
of all 9 very early 
m are come 

* — well, 5 2 the root —.— 


222 


aught wit ety to every class. 

especially à or a the resolute application of all the 
nergies, moral and physical, hy those interested in the 
cultivation Pr the soil. Of the i 


impro 
reen pe ops— —the s 


ves Carr, 
principles which are not only indispensable as 
ary — to every experiment, but invariably 
prove, whilst the t at hand and tl t 


to be the soundest econ omy > the 


All those means by which the results of im 


rf 


ns and crops which test directly and immediately the 
ee aaa of the sci 
ose who 


prac rey, a 
de veloped pa thes 3 bav 
scientific minds, Ife 


po 

ployed, and and ge & urge the disadv: 

who adopt only half measures labour, 

—.— upon * n. he broad , of 

probable results of past er i can at this x 
nor im wer; 


ans 5 


Á Boxes: sian Nine feet t hy eight give the sm 


| have not altered since our last accoun 


conseq our you 

— yom and Oat 
pt continuall 
— ny ord wel 
— ces eo ys 


o lam abing fas 
9 — fallen — the» — 


—— ht; 
— 1 more free za 


a 
a bn — — and 


of Agriculture,” and Blacker's 
t size that can 


Bo : 
“ Eesay on Small Far: 


be rec ended. may be excavated 1 2 

dwarf ‘walls being built found — sides * pon 

—+ . ach from 9 Scariot abrar è 
t hi urface of the ground. The division 


Bovis, A moderately good cow on modera 


be expected to m 4 


tel 
ake 200 Ibs. of M. a the 
nds not only 
i eve, 


unde 
— why pigs it same food. 
Lanp DRAINING : pee book on on "ihe subject, 
yep Blac “i a 
e really cannot answer legal 
1 e 


sre: F K, They are free of toll, and the charge is an im. 


ig y% 1 


t eo 
- | Paice rok Dicot¥o: B. Fr ree working land 14 be ö 9 bem a4 
0 


K to 2d, a perch, and the m 
3, a day. 
torther. We believe it has rather 
a tendency to prevent than to cause orib biag. 
Sex or Ecos: A Fi 8 — m the Bc A method referred toin 
bers, of ju eggs, is at t as o! 
as the time of Horace, 0 teria: 
3 factes ovis erit, ill a memento 
8 1 — arip et ut magis — rotundis) 
no would be cohibent callosa vitellam 


bin: where to 
fords five-acre farm — by the Labourers’ Friend 
ety. 
a For“ Mr. Wm. Gibson, of Eydon, near Daventry,” 
at page 651, col. b, rend Mr. Wm. Griffin, of Eydon,” Ge. 


Markets. 
PIA skier Pa guns a a HO d the suppl 
* ntinue to y entiful, an 8 
ie well pt up; 1 — oreign W * 


ranges ape 
be 050 tained at or 
wers are less plentiful. 


3 are sufficient for the deman a. Nos Mushroome fetch from = 
to 1s, 6d. per pottle. 8 Flowers consist 1 — 

pasi ums, Gardenias, Bignonia venusta, 

Primulas, Camellias, an 


e- apples, per Ib., 33 Lemor 
Ga „hoth Sates — 
rapes 0 gal 4 9 to 1s 
dom, 8a 1o 12 Wain 


Filber 
Nuts, 


to 6s 
VEGETABLES, 
p. 6d to 1s 
rs, p. s to ds 


og ak K. 
„dog. bundi, a Lenny to 8d 


receive neither a satisfactory no! 
ates 3 plaints of aay not proved 

be i eer t inciples of truth, will 
entitled to, te lt sympathy. 4 "Sub- 
i ber of the R 
n the Mark ta p a 


Calendar ur of f Operations. 
2 T go 
8 MERSE FAR 


yriculiural Socieiy, 8 


r doz., 1s 6d to2 86d 
— „ P. hf. siev 


to 
— ls 144 to 4s 


Cos, 
Endive score, Ist “panel 
— Ot there, 3 ops 
Kast p. pot., Is tols 2 
Tarnipe, bah wy nedto’séa bush., 3s to 68 


1 
Horse rb, l, 2a to 48 


— 3 
seed, an 
sheep. TB. 


-fi s urposes ral 
or the p of 3 im- 
= add, waste land, waste labour, waste 
waste capital—I wish to see these elements of 7. 


Soura Hampsnme Farm, Oct. 20,—Since our last report, t 
weather we have e: enced has proved highly 8 
for agricultural operations, and in consequence farm labour is 


. 24 
t ae „ p. buna, 8a to I 34 
Wateroreds, per 


Leeks, per heme 
2 to 28 
doz, bunches, 
4d 


0 bun., 4d to 6d 
Carrot por bun. Isto ls 6d 


and Northampton, 2400 W 
Per st. of 8 IDs. -s d 
Best Scots 


THE AGRI CULTURAL GAZETTE, 


ITHF IELD, poig — 


fords, &c. 3 6to3 10| Ditto Sho 
Best Short-horn g Prd 6 
2d ty Be — 
Seat Do and 

H * 3 8—4 0 Calves paat 
Ditto Shorn 


Pig 
Beasts, 5283 ; Sheep and Lambs, 29, 20 


freel; Dough, 
Mon 
small, but ther 


day. 


bh 
al 


BIDAY, Oct. 


e demand. 
but trade is very oral 


perea oro 2 rel, supported. ‘The ane 
and re than can be 


eee 
eee tte 


66 Calves ; and 136 Milch Cows fom th 

Bast p S, Here- Best han 

fords, 3 6 to 3 10 Ditto 
Best Short-horns 3 1 —3 6 
2d qua asts 2 6—3 0 Dit oat Shor 
Best Downs AESA 

Half- 3 8—4 0 alta jae sae 
Ditto Shorn _... 


we have 

„ 64 y Aaa and 36 Pigs; N ased Leicester 
and from Lincolnshire, 300. 

Per st. of 8 lbs.—s d 

est Long-wools. 3 4 


Sl lel gaa 8—3 2 


to 3 6 


60; ; Calves, ido; b 521. 


Ewes & 2d quail 2 “s—3 2 


T — 
a Pigs 
Beasts, 882; Sheep and a Lambs, 43 380: Calves, ity, ae 288. 


HAT. —Per Load of 36 Trusses. 


SMITHFIELD, Oct. 25, 


HOPS —Fripay, Oct 
. PATTENDEN and SMITH — Sis the market con- 
tinues very firm. Duty estimated at 78,0001. to 80,0002. 


MARK LANE, 
. — supply of English 


Mowpay, Oct. 
Wheat by land c mple rning was moderate, 
it 8 47 oniy be disposed “of by submitting to a deslino od Is. to 
28. Fore a slow retail inquiry, but was held 
firmly fo E omona glish malting Barley — be 


. En 
written “yi per qr. po ei Foner Pid is in goa de 
mand and the turn dearer.—Beans and Peas are sc 
command full prices,—Oats are a aan sale but fine’ ae Snan 
and ams are not lower, 
FRIDAY, Oct. 26.—The arrivals of English and foreign grain 
since — — — — been narran aaa Wheat has been dis- 
osed of on barely so good term demand for foreign is 
very limited, but prices of old are ' nominally unaltered. Fine 
er ia malting 
and Pen 


5 
h 


5 5 
3 


A Dw 
ree 


» No, er- street wes 
10 THE ‘con aa 75 “ote ERS vo : 
TH Aak NNEC 
ED, Wa of the 11 9 8. 
and other MANUREN Ag 


— in the 


* — Address, for 4 
* street, Doe 
MINGHAM = 


HE BIRMINGHAM an 1 


d o of fe. 
and F FRIDAY, the llth, 12th, = 5 .. 


oF comman nd fully former rates.—Flour is a aul — and — 


d a trifle, 


the general qualities. 

emel, ee and . 2 ae Pomeranian and Meck- 

| lenburg ss toy supplies of new Wheat continue to be very small, 

and some dec n prices was anticipated. In Ro tterdam 

Whe at i is 2 “tha turn dearer. In Antwerp business is 

inactive; 62 lbs. new Louvain Wheat is still quoted 388. 6d. to 
39s, per qr. ote ab 


RPOOL, TUESDAY, Oct, 23,—At this day's market there 


and fully 1d. o 
Barley, Beans, and Peas went very slowly. Oats were 
tolerable 3 5 at previous — but T was dull, 
3d. per load cheaper. We make no change in Indian Corn. 
Flour was rather cheaper. 


on foreign 


tained, together 


All tne ind must be made o 
of eeu: n or nil 
— wee Oct. on 


ND DURABLE 


ES 


S PATENT ASP HATE 


1 ROGGON’ 
perfectly impe 


ious to rai 
has Poon — by a long and extensi 
mates. Sav a half the umb e 
on with great facility by farm- 


Price ld. per square foot. CR 
— ts G FELT, for Stea 
nt. of fuel, 


a Samples and 
— * to CRoGGoN and Co., 2, Dow: 


TATUE FO 


8 S, VASES, FOUNTAIN 
ORNAMENTS, COATS OF ARM 
TURAE EMBELLISHMENTS in Im 


Prime Meadow Hay 66sto74s; Clover 60s to90s 
——— * nee New Clover 3 2 IMPERIAL | WHEAT. BA nLET. OATS.) RYE. | BEANS. | PEAS: 
les” ink Sg 25 =. Goce | Bape Tt EAEE mar apr aA TAE MILK T 
ew n COOP ept, 15. 3 8 8 s 
T oe RS 41 9| 27 1 |17 10 [2511 | 29 930 0 Te SY NOW ¢ 455 0 NORTHWES 
Rees Mendon Hay 70s to76e Inferior ... ... . . 70sto 80s | = 29... ... 42 4 27 4 17 11 25 2 29 5 31 3 AYLE 5 MILK feom RUGBI, 
Inferior di 65. | Hew Clover... .. — Oct. 6... .. 42 4 27 7/17 5 [24 9 29 0 129 5 | AMP YLESBURY, and Intermediate 
pg gas Sree Geet ae WWW 41 4 28 0 17 2 24 528 10 31 8 | LONDON, "by Passenger Trains, at the unde 
Ok Geter: o . 3 41 1 28 2 17 424 9 5 30 3 come n, e 
5 bas ey, 
Fine Old Hay .., 65s to TOs) Rew Sires oo os —StO—s — à Fo. 22 Wen een ie ela Harrow, bates 
fone ze s 2 1 eg * mia bey 5 oye ü | 0 | 1 Under Nine Gallons, 9d. ; ‘above, ld. 
81 Glover So ee = w Ag last six weeks’ Corn Ave Wia. R 
e en 8 eri. SEPT 22. „SEPT T29.| Ocr. 6, or. 11 ‘Oor. 20° ghton, pene hig. 
— TH ta 7 m 3 
The Committee report that fica Mem have 8 but few arrivals 43s 0d— Tie 102 ek 1 s Bletchley, Bedford, : 
ew om 8 the 1 d only a 3 — 2 9 | 1 e Aaa d 2 a = and Nine 6 tex PA [1 
from the tinent, w uence o 12 on — ose oa T AIDE SA ons, 2. 5 
weather, — selling heavily at the iome prices :—York | 41 9 ac 3 RA 8 H Bit The following are the ondion bors ge 
Resents, 7 70s. to 85s. per ton p Wisbeach, 658. to 70s, ; Scotch, | 41 4 A E D 5 — conveyance of Mi 
70s. ; foreign whites, 50s. to 1 ta å 5 . z p Eech BLEED | Can will be subjected to the usual 
or booking ; th j 
London. | Liverpool. Wakefield. Boston. Birmingham. * 
PRICES 
CURRENT. Oct. 15. Oet. 22. = 16. 23. Oet. 12 ae 19. Oet. 17 loct 24. Oct. 18 Oct. 25. 
ka N 70 Ibs. 70 Ibs. qr. qr. ha D 62 lbs. 62 lbs, 
CV fy Gt dia d; d . 
New, red 38 to45 36 to43 6 0 6 46 0 6 439045 39—45 36 16042 34 t 40 5 1 5 85 0 5 8 
„ White. 44—5042—48 6 0 6 10/6 0 6 10424642 40—46 38—45/5 6 6 15 6 6 0 
Old, red -- |38—43/38—43/6 4 6 86 4 6 8/39—40/39—43) — — 3 3 5 915: 3 5 9 
» White ... [43—454 707 67 0 7 6 —47 —47 a a A A 
Foreign... eee 136—52136—524 i a 8 4 Pi a 3 an cae — —— „ Gon Fe io Manager’s Office, 
Rye— Old. (2396/2392, vie cag 2 Tard aad A ae 
Foreign... gs rp me 22 — — — — — es cs z3 INDUST 
Foreign meal |5/,—6//5/.—6/)  — * V = hants, Bankers, Man 
Sar * =| q . bans tne ansion Hous of te Gy of Zot 
ding . (2426/2426 — — 2220—2221—2321—23 22—24 22—24 n tl M. P. 
Malting... ... 26—2826—26 30s—31s | 30s—31s 2734273 — | — | 2933 | 29—33 i ne, Hon Sir J sn pee 
Foreign... ... |18—26|18—26 — — —26/21—26} — — — of England, 33 by Joh 
h. 6 b nimously, 
Malt Ship. 2 — . 0037 is pnts 
: 451 5 Ibs. ee eie 
8 18—24 te sa 225 3d . 24i 3a — | — |13—18|13 -18| 19—27 | 19—27 ness to” r 
ee 22 5 — — a 8 18.— 8—2 same 
Foreign 15 2020 1414333 Sa aa 
a r. r. x r 
Peas—Boilers | > 339% 263026300 — | — 33—40 | 3 — 
Grint 196 Ibs, | 196 Ibs, = 
rinding... |25— JJ 1l—12 | 11—12 | and to give 
. Foreign ... (2439/2 29 29 —30 . Ba oe ae nat ? mrad i 
Beans— t was 
New, small . 23292329 Pe 32— 333233323 34 
a nS at 2 99923382 34 32 34 12—13 11—1]2 
Old — — par ae eee — 14—15 14—15 
—35 VY Oo 2 no 11219 11413 The Lor 
um * — — —ͤ— — — — The $ 
F bs] Fe ae a a tie Per 
res — — 2 iii ues geste oe Bank of 1 
he © n 
28s—29s | 28s—30s | — — — — 1213 1213 vine, — 1 
280 171 280 lbs. p. sack p. sack per per sack yeast india C 8 
a are: * sq. M. P. i 
30—32 | 30—32 32—38032—38 31—34 | 31—34 Baron e e — se 
to add to their number; fp p. W 
Averages. | Imports. Aver. | Impts.| Aver. Aver. Gloucester, stephen hed Cattle, fo of eu Toin 
onorary 
3 ac ly 8 e Be ee — tee be instructed to cooper 
4l. 4 | 11920 ( 5 8103 |39 1/4727 | si un} 1760 
7 ` d 27 3006 |24 6| 433 — 1942 opeland 
“a9 deg 18 9 132815 5 | 1585 18 4 -= ad ved by Win, Tooke, 2 y 
i — — — — — — 1 
28 10 875 2% 6| 249 31 2| 89 | 32 103 50 . kwan mored Dilke, Esq, and 
3l 8 E Bi sis sar 180 | the cordial and sincerer Ea M 
noting the objec f the u 
SEGAR and SANDARS THOMAS and C. STURGE. bourtesy with which he has p À 
TUNN. : g s 1 i i ) 
UNNICLIFFE. and DUNNS.| WRIGHT. 9, 8.6 — Lombard-strett 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


er, Sales 


P. — K. respect 


The 
great 


before the 
is London, 
Essex. 


EV ENS will ell by Auction, at 


2 — ff 
. 
Me. l 


38, King-str 


TE cig 


ot gy 


eq 
fully invite a an —— — of the 
a — to ik — — to the Tra — e, 
agg jo will be 


by Au Auction. 


i re grat — g than any 
baten “Plants 8 


Hye! * 


ok ys me 
Sale, and Catalogues had of the e E 
at the Auction Mart, aud on the Premises, Leyton- 


his 
AY, 
ck, — e of 1a 900 


CAMELLIAS, cultivated 3 Mons. Souchet, -s of Versailles ; 


Ie 


ieties and m of the old and | 


10 GENTLEMEN, FLORI 


1878. SEEDSMEN, AND OTHERS, 


th Anr 


| A gn * . by Auction, at the Au 


7 a amn 2 


2 uble ae — 8 
* 


— —— g De —— Crown eae 
and a select Assortment 8 other choice Bulbs 
on the morning of S 


ty, 


ction 
w-lane, Bank, on MONDAY, — 1 — 
ne assorted DUTCH B BULBS, e 
eg and single n —.— 
med Van Thol Tulips, 1200 
“canal § prian a Gladiolus 
Anem 

May t y 
ale, and Catalogues had at the 


Mart, and of Mr. Izop, Sheriffs’ Sale Rooms, 46, Watling- 
| sree City, London. 


FOR SALE WITHOUT RES 
R 
8 


mile from the W 
all his 


es, on 


Upwards of Two, Millions o 
er a several 
Larch, 


87 
Fe irs; Hem! 1 


| Aivis 55 5 — R ig upon 
8 


dvertisements, a 
By on pra rra by itten, hae four postage stamps, 
SE. nl , Auctioneer, Cher 


ACOCK is 5 

e Premises, on M 

| gen o'clock, —— pies eo SERY STOCK, s 
acres of land, being a det — = Mr. 


great 
and Shrubbery Plants, nedeo and exotic; 
four 


he has re- 

ey 8 . CHAPMAN to sell by 

Y, Nov. 6th, 1849, and 

— Premises, situate one 

Station on the South Western Railway, 

URS E STOCK, 

ity of variegated Hollies of the best 

Evergreen, Flowering, and Foo Shrubs, fro: feet 
leas, Aucubas other 


and 
arf Ey Standard Fruit 5 Breas 10,000 


er large — —— ba fae 2 which 
aeina — moving condition, and well 
8 aed other Pl 


m for 
— "Further — — cay ll 
a Reni will be for- 


rrey. 


ENTLEMEN, CONTRACTORS, A3 AND OTHERS, 


ERY S 


Se it by Auction, on 
AY, Nov. 12, 1849, and followin ng 
tandin — — 
WII. 
cries, Milfor * Godalm — 


ate of Health e ——— and 


ar g aud 


r ye eedlin 
Dee of twie aapa, u feet | 


ce, bile ng SA easter, Austrian, 
ra, 


P 
sempervire ns, 


0 
m. ‘The above plants are of the most healthy description, 
f aad will be sold, without reserve, in suitable lots for the con- 
f of urchasers, 5 22 nd is wanted to be cleared for 
iter use, ‘The Stock m main till the first week in March, 
oe r pa A eetos and printed 99 to be 
Ü days before ‘the sale; at the Mart; the principal Inns 
| it the ad acent County ns; at Mr, 8 Nursery; and 
i . s Agency-office, Godalming. viewed two 
Previous to the sale.—The Chichester aad Portsmouth 
pass the Nursery, which is re bin 14 mile of the South 
and South Eastern Railw 


| Eastern Counties Railw 


1 NURSE —.— AND OTHERS, G: — pe 
| 155 %%% 
N a mer which they have had the honour of referring so long, sti 
l Py y Veloek omo on a MONDAY, N ia, 3100, 8 f 0 te day day, * “i zive work and give any to Mr. 3 will be — 
. ms ‘giv any information. 
Nad s very arge quantity of fine Evergreens, Sta ne 27 Suits byki uns 
2 warf Roses, Fruit Thee. American Plants, ò the houses y 


— ogues had 


— Poplars, Limes, 


1 c 
of it country Nurseryman.—M¢ 
of the principal Seedsmen, and on 


&e. ; 
es, Acacias, ber ae 
hes, Nectarines, &c. 

ay be viewed . to the 


. . . OPPOSITE CREMORNE GARDENS, 


R. D. A. RA 


NI. 
of 2000 


ices of 


2 


es, 
oag. day, at 12 Welock, 


all the une eared lots ot 
Aucubas, Laurestinus 


"GRA PE v 
8 


without reserve, by order of 
NURSER 
e 


ismen ; 3 


Brompton N ursery, Fulham. road, Brompton, near 


e., grown from 
the” attention of 


‘ res Private “Cont Ne 


ccession and FRUITING 3 125 T S, 


inuka ety © clean and healthy, and o e choicest 
bitten many of the fruiting plants witt 
anten c cation to be made t r. Kennan, 4, Great Rus- 
Went Garden, Lond 


SS —————=_E 
Toir A LET, within 16 miles of London, a useful 


arm Buildings and 
= land is in high — nda a very considerable 
E gp oer Bie eg May 
app n to Mr. W. BUTCHER, 


three — 

— ts aa 
| particulars cong 
» | Agent, Eps 


Estate 
— 


n gre 
— 0, te Ne oy dat —— — the 

e Patentees, age too 

d. 1} foot under 3 Te — Sd, 

d. et ~ eet., 


14 by 10 ma > ny foo... 
3 fee ; eet 
5 — 


135. 
oGs. each, Metal H Hand- trames, Tiles, and 
Bee Glasses from y ach; Cuc umber 
; Wasp 
Di 


— Window Glass 
n, and Lamp — — — for trying 
the pind “of — 4 tubes, 78. ara 6 tubes, 10s, Self-register- 
— "for Greenhous , Hori ticultural Glass, &. 
3 and CO., ‘Tis, — Wich- 


GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES A e 
HX ELORE anD CO. supply 16-0. Sheet Glass of 
Manufac rom 2d, to 3d 
uired, an = thousa d 
— immedi delivery. 


ists of Prices and estimates forwarded, on application, — 
PATENT ROUGH PLATE, THIOK © CROWN GLASS 15 
TILES a SLATES, WATER-PIPES, PROPAG TING 
GLASSES, GLASS MILK NS, PATENT PLATE- GLASS. 
M AL game SS, and GLASS SHA ADES, 
Co., 3 


HETLEY 5, Soho-square, London. 
the Gardeners’ Chronicle, first Saturday in each month, 


GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES AND HORTICULTURAL 
PURPOSES, &e. 


MILK PANS 
PASTRY PINS 


FISH CLOBES 


„„ > GYACINTH FLOWER DISES 
TINC@BEE CUCUMBER CLASSES 


PROPAGA 
1 N GLASS, which is of 
* as 


— . hss +g cutting, up, at 21d. per foot. tish 
Plate Glass, fi to 2s, per foot, accordi i 
Patent Rough Plate —— from ġ to 1 inch in thickness, from 


pren Tu 
Wee 4 inchee Jeng, a ** d. per inch. meters, 7s, 6d, 

act y be had on “application at the 
oe toy 57, ele- e Without, same side as the 


he 
past tm for the Worshipful 9 ge i of 
don, in their Botanic Garden Chelse . Moo oore, the 
kindly 
g also to say th 
a Apparatus was not —— 
GRAY, OBM and Brown, have also othe honour of —— 


to aon of the ARY syi gentry in the country, and tose 


viewed, and | 


687 


WALTHAMSTOW, 
T° BE LET, ON 

GARDEN GROUND, 
er Acres, wi 


TO carver 8 
regeme of 


BY HER 


MAJESTY’S PATENT. 


M. e AND ee Lam 2 -buildings, Bunhill- 
` 


F 


* row, Lo 2 facturers and only Patentees of 
TH ED FELT FOR ING 
Houses, Far m Buildings, Shedding, Wor Ae and for Garden 
purposes, to protect Plants from Fros 
At the Great Nation = Agricultural Shows, it is this Felt 
which has been exhi and obtained Two SILVER MEDAL 
Prizes, and is the Felt soLELY patronised and adopted by 
Her Masesty’s Woops AND Fon 
Honounasis Bo F ORDNANCE, 
Honovnasre E INDIA COMPANY. 
HONOURABLE COMMISSIONERS OF CUSTO b 
Her Masesrr’s ESTATE, ISLE o WıcnT, 
RoYaL Boraxie Garpens, REGENT'S 
And on the Estates of the Dukes of — d, Norfolk, Rut. 
1 Newcastle, Northumberland, Buecleu h (at Richmond) 
he late Earl Spencer, and most of the Nobility * Gen try, 
end at the RoyaL AcnricunruraL Socimry’s Hovs , Hanover. 
are, 
It is half the price of any other description of Roofing, and 
effects a great saving of T fs. 


Timber in the construction of 
Made to * — gth by 82 inches wide, 
NN 


part of the 
t execute 


the only Works — London 
paag. is made, a 
AN 


ry, ry, ando ers b 8 
ga The Public is 1 that 
or Great Britain — 


Patent Felt 


= 
E 


b’s- buildings, 


nien, 
h the Felt may be seen, 


that they 
Rooms at the — of the, Mec 


to 
their Felt, * 


| thori rities w 
| Publish hed 00 JOSEPH GREENBILL, 


ow — mep used, 24,000 fi 
OTE.— ct to th Facto 
plied in len gts best t suit Roots, 60 tater bly a 
they requi 
very information afforded on the construction of Roofs, or 
any proposed particular application of the Felt. 
C ARSON’S —— prais — oean 
PAINT, specially patronised by the 
Governments, the 
oc 


4 


r 


„ Brick, Compo, Cement, 

s has upwards 

rh — pos b, merous ween d 500) testi- 

monials in its favour, and whic m the rank and station in 

ar of those wi ave them, have yet been 

equalled by a — of the kind hitherto brought before the 

public notice. of — rs and Prices, 11 — a — 
the — i vil fig 


R OAR 
15, Tokenhouse Yard, on of the Bank of Bngland.— No 
ents le ms are partione arly requested to be sent direct, 
SHIONS OF STARTLING NOVELTY, in the 
D AZ heg oF ASHION for Nov ember, 
and d Fifty New Winter Fashions 
n any sng work. 
rosses, 35 — 


super G 
> tog 198 238 a po a —— ure of the 
amily Ball ane ‘ther splendid Plates, Descriptions, e., 
nt post free for six s extra. 

ondon : G. — 3 Strand; and all 


G YS SGARDEN 


w flow plants, 
qer ooga 5 information, 
„King William-stre „Strand. 


. 
Ton don: . Cox, 1 
OHNSON’S GARDENERS ALMAN he 

GARDENER’S ALMANACK for 1850 will coe Published in 
i ber, with the otber 3 ationers’ Com- 
any. e new n 
predecessors, kay on! 
occasional use of 
amongst * ‘a 


Company, at their Hail, in rg the haigne 


2 o IMPORTANT Ty ADVERTISERS —TuIRD YEAR, 
Gn WIRE GANE NETTING.— HE HORTI ICULTU URAL ALM LMANAC ond GAR- 
r yard, 2 feet and FARMERS’ Loner — 1850.— 
5 GARDENING. DEPARTMENT Practical * ; 
ZEF 222225 N 2228 3 TURAS D DELAR 2 — M TEN, Seere- 
2 5 22 22255 . e Lor ** Society thor of Prize 
322572 222 2222222 8 2 Essays,” . &e. age aserat practical character of — 
2225 222 8222 8 Almanac secures it a most en ensive sale, and there 
pee 2222 222 renders it a medium particulary suitable for advertising, while 
38222722 2 2822 its cheapness is a great recommendation. All — — — 
BRR 255 will appear, as did last year, in each se edition, 
2228 . — without any extra s arge, 
12 22222225 225 London: Gsaoompripcr and Sows, Trs and 
i 8 see spose 25 all Bookseller 
222228282 222225 22 5 Mane ALKALINE. ‘YOOTH-POWDER 
’ as yet u $ 
teed ids, no thing that can injure ena. 
Kalvan- Ja ey horoughly removes — tartar and all im pro 
gg duces that — white appeara 238 re . 1 
i d. | andits — ae tends to sweeten P the breath, 
8 EE os ie a wide y per yd 3 pery we — on. o many years — have bren ior dehen 
TE roca hes by —— have had opportun (that occur to few) 
0 inch, — » 2 ” of testing the relative merits of those powders that have been 
1 23 X n ae ai 1 1 brought before the c. They have now succeeded in pro- 
1 peers aeons T ae a ring the receipt f o's the above — er is prepared 
at at proportions pri confidently recommen universal adoption. Whole 
rte op bove can be Barren 2 will reduce the rad a one | sale und retail at METCALFE, BINGLEY, & Co.’s, Brush-makers 
s Galy 2 2 for pheasantries, 3d. to H. R. H. Prince 41 25. x. Caution.— Ihe ne 
ge ob in Dg ie pa wader man vt er, = 10 70 he bun ee — 
155 p sa BISHOP, Market la R. H. 2 r ame id o the sig nat 
e me ng 8 in Lond be als 2 em : TCALFE, BINGLEE, and Co., 


ugh, Hull, or 9 


0 R., pas frat 


688 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


MMENSE SA 
THE FLORIST, AND GARDEN MISCELLANY; I NAMED BULBS, STAND 
ovem 2 97 
CONDUCTED UNDER THE SUPERINTENDENCE OF E. Beck, or IsLEWoRTH. phe of Nie. B. Lon P: 
ESEE E artnership. The Lots, 2 
It is particularly requested that any Papers intended for the December Number may be forwarded as early as possible. This named f 3 cultivators, con 
will greatly oblige the Editor, as he is desirous of having the Volume for 1849 8 gisa Index, &c., early in that month. and late Tulips. D arge quan 
The forthcoming No. (XXIII) will be embellished with a coloured plate of Seedling P: s,and a Woodcut, The letter- | including hs Wen Scotch 
press will contain a variety of original matter, interesting to the lovers of Gardening ; a 8 of Operations, & e. Single Jonquils, Nareissus is; = 
p Beck, Isleworth. in sorts, 1000 of the best Sta 
Shaw’s, Dancer’s Kidne ndani 
1 J. and other $ 
THE FLORIST AND GARDEN MISCELLANY Onions, Garden Implements, and other effean ta Pa 
until th or effects. —May he 
Appears regularly on the First of each month, pri F don. ee 2 had had ot 2 Suter, 85 
London: CHAN and HALL, 186, Strand; and to be had a oa Bakin addresse me teva 
N.B. The Volume for 1849 will form a t iful fi Ch t, well suited for d tabl GUBSTITUTE Thick 8 MATS, T 
* 2 N, ‘lie C. 
NEW WOR CHARLES DICKENS. NEW Bray Pe PROFESSOR JOHNSTON. sition, admitting light to plan — A dressed with 
3 . Faik YOUNGER Or XPERIMENTAL PAGHICULTURE ; being the | mended for covering e e ane Mie or | 
ERFIE q 0 e the covering greenhouses, wa 
NDERSTONE ROOKERY. By CHARLES Dickens, sults of Past, and Suggestions for Future 9 8 blossom of fruit and also — i 
With 2 — by Hastor K. Browne. To be completed | in Scientific hong Practi = _— icultur light, which is outlast two mats, keep out i 
in Twenty Monthly Numbers By James F. W. 2 Rts. L. 1 5 E. 5 &e. &c. t Alen Sere i More et 
London : BRADBURY and Evans, 11, Bouverie-street. ely published, ‘by the sam the lh Voce auling, two yards wide, Is, per yun ee 
a LECTURES “ON AGRICULTURAL ‘CHEMISTRY AND | pe ol (C per yard. —Rosert Ricua * 
NEW wort, BY THE AUTHOR OF “JANE EYRE.” | GEOLOGY. Second Edition. 8vo. 24s. . 21, Tonbridge. plac erig ent, and 
178 in three vols., post Svo, ELEMENTS of Ditto. Foolscap Svo, Fifth edition. 63 „ ndon Pec Capes, for bowen oe. i 
S HI R L E Y. By Currer BELL, Author of! CATECHISM of Ditto. Twenty-fourth edition, 1s. ES f de ben le 
r ge ge FFF SOILS. re Wi 01 N G, 1 than É 
MITH, ELDER, and Co., Cornhill. LT Fcp. 8vo. a n Wire, oe : 
a OF JOHNSTON'S PHYSICAL ATLAS. ATLAS CONTRIBUTIONS TO SCIENTIFIC AGRICULTURE, and Rabbit, Can? ‘Dog 8. Deer 3 ted ; to ord j 
QUARTO EDITION. parse eR - high, 3d. per yard; 2 feet, 44; 3 tet ee) U iia 
On the 31st o tot — —— will be published, in one Volume imperial Witttam Brace woop and Sons, Edinburgh and London. 6 feet, Pv , 5 any width required "at Ta . | 
quarto, handsomely bound, ha!f-morocco, price 2. 12s. 6d. Price — he 5s. for 25 copies for distribution amongst Cott ell adapted for enclosing Fowls, Ph asante, &¢.—Raue 4 
er don ip imperial olo. r * educed ee the Fensnt try , delivered a anyer reia 2 on 4 P A ffice FISHING | , Tonbridge-place, New. poy London, 
ition in erial folio. For the use of Colleges, order ing sent to the Publisher, James akoe at the 1 N A 
gopeng and Fam = Office of the Gardeners’ Chronicle. ETS h 7 Ane 4 
* on derten F.R, — r G. S., Wer e at 18 corr TAGERS’ CALENDAR OF GARDEN | Nets, ‘Casting Nets, Drum i and other Netw fer P i 
s onorary M OPERATIONS. very Shee 3 
ig heh bls Edition contains 15 Maps, 8 Palæontolo a By Josxrn FNR Gardener to His Grace the Duke of Devon- coco t fibre, nearly 4 feet high, e 4 
igt e aeih of A ark, eee iy aged Edition * . Mes in the Reprinted from the . Above 51,000 — e Ries — a3, ee long., Rio i 
, e or ion ew. a 
and $. 2 dernen aud” deni paida 7 teas, W. already been sold. er eee with several woodcuts RO OUSES and various 
ee) with Descriptive Letterpress, and a very African Lilies Gilias Plum in this 8 Twel elve feet square, 201, ; Ditto, if o 
On the same day will be published, Part VITI. (price 8s, 6d.) ee Gooseberries Polyanthus . inches from te side when olor eae 
Copio 5 bbedsteads, 
ofthis Work, and the Parts will continue to be issued as her „ paat fy privet oa par kepr ith nuts and hgh any one Gin 
b ‘ce tae apt 8 . hole is completed Apples Heartsease k; packs — mpass very 
For E 3 n a a Soa 8ih of February. | Apricot Herbs Propagate by cut- 8 21, Tonbridgorplacey News, London. | 
‘to the Atlas as fe jeppeared from meath to month, and | Beans Herbaceous * ee eee 
wis : nth, and | Beans rar i 
may w e ìt in a complete fi befi Py ~ RONCHITIS AND INFLUEN — 
ical publication shail have terminated, aii che pe an — 1 1 io ir into Badishes by BRANDE’S BRONCHIAL seat 
D borot reat Be 5 ae 17 0 N Ranunculus iai 
arts wi y, and may ad on hehe lst of December. Plae ack! Haroto Medicinal . 5 to two of any 
peed e Sons, Edinburgh and Lond tora? we dint pt, eas Influenza, Asthma, and all Pul „ 
Books Dr Cottagers Horse radish Rhubarb 14 a rs, baring 
PRICE FOURPENCE, OF ANY BOOK Hyacinths Rockets formed oe when all other means had failed, by: 
CONTENTS oF mute NUMBER FoR SATURDAY Horeca Hydrangeas Roses 24. agree Papert Fear 5 
ox edgings 880 5 
LAST, $ Bice a Indian Cress kaniri 24, East Te maple G chambers, Pleet-street, London, a 
30 AL OF 'HE ATHEN UM, Brussels sprouts age be sent, free, by 
URN. AND FOREIGN LITERATURE, Budding Kidney Beans Salvias NPRINCIPLED SHOPKEEPERS, for th 
MEERE, AND THE FINE 6 ig Bulbs Luvender “| Say 
Twenty-four Large Qua Cabbage Layering Saxifrage FE n the form et Pills. of Pills. Pu 
Reviews or, witn aca = ity 3 Cactus Leeks Searlet Runner therefore observe that all Pills under i 
Calceolarias Leptosiphons - 2 counterfeit, and that no m pee Pin is genuine but “War 
Policy of a Separate Grant for the eee Exchange, By J. | CalifornianAnnuals | Lettuce 3 See K“ MAL WAFERS the n 
Education i in — y i Da. LOCOCK’S FEMALE are the only. 
dered, & Tib: W 8 Capana lias Sea Daisy ár Thrift recommended to be taken by Ladies., They fortify 
— § DD. By owns- Anthologia Po Polsglotta, By H. een 7 oe — ga ale tion at all periods of life. They remove 7 
| Carrots unis, e ect Flowers Heaviness, Palpitation of the Heart, Lowness of 
“Bynopsia of the typ — a. The Ogilvies. A Nora a hatte. es ; poau . ness, and, all ale, create Appetite, and r 
h Societ. Seven Dead: 2 : } Marjoram ruit Headaches; Giddiness, &. -diret 
N itaux: | Cherries Manures Snails and S1 j : sant taste. 
2 2 By de “tar Dy Bede Sus. | China Asters Marvel of Peta Sanders Propricits Agent Da kr asd Coy, 
= e irt le Tro Trouveur, By Paul de mas — Mesembryanthe- Spinach treet, London, who ars also Agents for“ 
rysanthemume, mums Spruce Fir PULMONIC WAFERS, r for Asthma, mies 
TH SHORTER Notices or Chinese Mignonette Spur pruning and Colds.—Sold by all respectable ae 
Book ot English tata By , Universal Grammar, By J chives Mustard See ls. 11d., 28. 9d., and i ie pr bo 60601 22 
ermyn. am "| Clemati Narci 
8 2 qe. =n French Grammar, By Dr. Collinsias Nemophtied Sweet Williass Henker artig P PATIENTS, Dist 
Chronological Tables of Greek | Le Gayi a oh peas Seeley Bo tea fag e of eA YLOR Sh 
rat — — E reek | Le Gefylsta : an Anglo-Saxon | Cress Onions Thyme commended to use TAYLOR J 
by W. Smith, L. L. B. dited | Delectus. By Rev. N. Barnet. Creepers Pzeonies Tigridia Pavonia | COCOA, as being very superior ‘article is man 
x A* wr mg fie raha By J agg 4 aret 8 8 chin og ape Parsnip —— Nut — a ik a partions 
* tolica tings. | Crown Im 8 Parsley peculiar principle, by whic e ue 
cg ys Translated from the 1 Cucumbe Peaches Tu ii p * neutralised, at the same time its flavour, purity, 
T lb one Aristophanes, By W. J. Etheridge, M. A Cultivation of or 8 -hauim i — praon are maintained. Itis en essentia ® 
4 eren loge Or Oa 5 = Plata 8 on the Chris. ers in Window Veget table Cookery under Homæopathic 3 he 
rnold’ ‘ s + 
Erne by T. W. Serjeant, tron T Bene yag Per. Currants Daisies —.— * —— baten, . ay proves a t the sam? same time METTE 
H. Hughes, M.A, i Dog’s-tooth Violets | Perennials Verbenas and refreshing. at their l 
Reviews of Medical Wor orks.—Change of Air. By J Exhibitions, pre- — Iris Vines Sold wholesale w TAYLOR 3 yib. 10 fib 
fF ggio, Esq. — Catarrh, Influenza Bronchitis d aing articles for | Petunias Virginian Stocks | fields, London, and retail, in a oeni 
As B T. —— M.D.—Half. yearly Abstract of Ferns, lox packets, at 1s. 4d. per ot by most PE 
3 W. H. Ranking, M.D.—Synopsis Bratt 10 . Phan tad —.— ah bor SOLUBLE COCOA (only í 
iseases uman Harvey— uchsias “ote 2 
ments eee e planer lereet | Gentianella Pee e 
Life. By ©: E Da, en Prac LION POUNDS per annum—a vas, which, 
reg Po 2 y Dr. Graves — ——— 8 A cE Ls FO R THE avs post — — sr manufacture f are totally de" 
ngrene. By J, Boggie, M.D. n 0 y — — ks ARI UM, somewhat resembEng the original at 
3 gy of Croup. By H. Green, M. 5. — On Infantile NSISTIN 2 zar. = eee aguinst were counterfeits 
oo: AZAN kasten, OA 1 Pana SED. Classes, Riltances, orders, and Bibidi 4 recommend the purchase of thelt s their 1 = 
x a. By T. B. Peacock name, with di ee 
ginal Fapers.—Monioir of P, Tec, ot} PROFESSOR LINDLEY’S VEGETABLE en ee a 
reen ospi ting of Spec ve: Dy 7 reale, NGDOM, 
> EST T REMEDY 
1 — aa Pixies, Superstitions | So printed, in large type, that they ean be cut out and pasted | ORTON’S CH AMOMILE PILL 7 ILIS are e. 
Foreign Correspon 3 5 end sin Bilon 
Vi it to the Buddhi Published James MATTHEWS, at the Office of th 10 i 
pene am of Koo-Shan, near Foo-ch boriso * — © Buddhist , — es and Agricultural Gazette, 5, Upper — suffer 7 — a Tndigestion, Sick H e 
3 5 ip.—Industrial Exhibition of all Na. Street, Covent-garden ; vane may be ordered of all Booksellers, rere sae bp to the ach ery c y 3 
1111.0 bund ih, wiht Wood Eoraviogs, | ß 
many—Publication of in’ A i LOUGHBY a at endors. Be su 
7VVWTT..T.T.T.v.b.'.!.v.. AND CON- | Wihoat sndgeans Matos geal © 
tropolis—Usefulness of the Omnibus Pacha of Beypt's FIRMAT ei OF SACRED HI STOR tY, f rom the Monu. | NORTON’S PILLS, an an | 
Challenge tothe English Turf—Obituaries of Dr Co daca, |= ments of Egypt. By M. ©. Tre — TUA CON ye 
Dr. Carl M. Raphael, U. U. Massard, snd is Lasur, Prom the ish Magazine e This is an elegant and well- HEUMATISM EFFECTUA Ms | one of be 
cleties.—Mi 3 p — gd book Fo na aak 2535 esting R LLOWAY’S PILLS.—A Serjeant” nad bee 
aë Cholera): g g he irming! ain Horaid—" A vilantie Mad indispons- ; son duty at Hobart der the ca ca 
ace Gonna ti able accession to the library of every Biblical student.” inente doing gar matsi Hen was der pent 
3 e ee — Decorations of the Chapter House of From the Rev. Thomas Hartwell Horne’s Introduction to the | mental surgeons, but deriving ot the to Hote? 
P — bbey— Panorama of the Nile—Ancient Mural | Critical Study of sg bo nee —‘‘Nearly 300 texts of Scrip- | treatment, in despair od a dle teipe as l 
o ure are more or less explained in this elegant! -executed | | iracle, this in“ e now enjoy 
Music D bee ee TSN * volume, and in a manner caval curious and interes — ting.” and or rfectly curing him, and he neins së 
- Sacred H Bociaty Likas GADE MT : 
Lises Masical eal Compositions — . in Paris M, HE HISTORY OF THE UNITED 3 OF 
Mozart Vande s Dramatic Re — reatment of AMERICA, By Joun Faost, of Philade 
— Price Tå. 
gularions Capture of a Whale ofa the Fhamee the ie | [HE HISTORY OF FRANCE, from the Earliest 
Gos al The e of Beria Telegraphs—A Boat for a Bridge By EMILE DE Bonnrcsose, The two volumes o 
Exhi lin Manufactured Articles—Impor- the 3 edition compri in m one of the 988 
ustralian Geography. This work is the history approved of by the Minister of Public 
egies er The sig Education in France, where it ay 86, Fleck passed through five ted Cont 
— A editions, London: D, BOGUE, t-street, SarumDax, OCTOBER 2, 184% 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


| ae KITLEY ET be 0 Tor the lovers of this 


at 2l. per Also, show ties, 
‘ats 6d, each. 2 mbe Vale ov 
RICA 
OSEA WATE! LER be 


i published a —— and — ait ‘Catalogue of his — ge 
uN ina CONIFEROUS 5 —.— may be had o 


ion, inclosing tw e to 
Hosta WATERER, Kpa IN — — Wo king, Surrey. 
prantine. For Sale at Brenchley, Kent, 24 miles 
from Paddock Wood Station, South Eastern Railway, 
out 400 Spani h Chestnut ee 12 fe NN 
their treatment, to move well; the lot at 41. per a les 
ls. ot — a lot off Horse aeons Plants, about 12 
et high,—A Mr. LINF ardener, Broad O 
— 5 NI War CONTRACTORS, 
; AND OTHERS. 
OHN 1 has ai Hundred Thousand of 
ng WHITETHOR UICKS for 
1 transplanted, me h * W at the 


} Lon ngham 
way, from whence they can go to any oan ‘of ae kingdom. 
Steric articulars direct to Jonn PARTRIDGE, Leighton 


Se 


per SHAILER, ‘Chapel Fee, Battersea- 
on the site of the ar —— Elms, 
— with great eee in ig Pres of his 

ae — — — of ai Ta kaving ive: ‘general 

a superior collection 
er ans 184 


pair. 


FLOWERING BULBOUS ROOTS, FF 
b _CINTHS, hone GLADIOLUS, IRIS, N 


INQUILS, CROCUS, RANUNCULUS, 

; ie, ar be had of sound quality, from WAI. 
SEEDSMAN and FLORIST, : 
ACINTHS, en va arieties (named); as, Lspand 18s. 

dozen 12 (na 5 35. ge 

TULIPS, 188 7850 Garg, 51 À NARGIS S, 
per 0 Mixed CROCU ours, 28. 6d. 

SNOWDROPS, 2s. 64. oa w. ERNSEY 
— each, A Priced Catalogue may be had RATIS on 


of Hardy Annuals, for autumn or early spring 
wg 12 varieties, 2s, 6d. ; free by post, 6d. extra. 
PIMBR LARIA, 'GERANIUN, 14 nd PRIMULA, 3 
TMBRIAT A, « varieties ted 
* Vegetable eens Yall ‘kinds, Garden Implements, 
his 
3 ar- 
arks—“ A more 


favourite flower that he has a quantity of fine double varie- 
| 
hundre 0 lect 


No. 44—1849.] SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3. 
INDEX. MYATT’S NEW STRAWBERRY, “ELEA. ANOR” 
r ; Gardeners and masters, . Tr MYATT anp SONS prepared 4 
at ee polities 4. 808 5 e plants of this and the following varieties at the prices 
. okt . 697 ò Gas li * annexed : Ne: att's — „ 8.3 Fer 8 — 
812 are maia to prune, 2 . —— Quse 3 1 a obe, sy morh, 
Main cit iite Ta... jcc WOE © | Grape, Rew 5.505205 eceuasetars s. 6d. ; Hoope s Seedlin 3s. ch. Koe "Be. 6d. ; 
Biscayan isss s, „ 695 ò | Graveyardr, overcrowded ..... Pelva ain’s sash . 7s. 6d. ; — Snark: 75. 6d. ; : 
ait =e — e N cause of disess 2 —— "Prince, 15s. per 100. 
eee ee. are re —— to be — ayable to 
r Leet (Mere Kariery Sours 2 rr, Mano Man or Fa on De ptford. Ken Be 
— ` | Maie sissssscsindidosisv : 
—... „ nA è | Mare anh JACKSON’S IMPROVED KIDNEY, THE 5 PROLIFIC 
Ee cou buys sss... 693 4 | Marine glue OF EARLY POTATOES, 
eee dee | | Mealy bu HOMAS JACKSON anp SON have much pleas 
N ssociation, ... Udours of p n announcing that in consequence of their having a sae 
sibiopica, hardy, . hea v, 5 prog of their IMPROVED KIDNEY POTATO, they 
Horticult 3 have reduced its price from 15s, to 10s. per bushel. All orders 
n Politics end agriculture bushel or more d red free in London, or at any 
of plant a—6 Potato disease station on the South Western Railway. 
oe 100 6 10 K ite i meg Foy EAA Nursery, Kingston, Burre Surrey, Nov: $. 
pena A bi V r e e e e pepe. ’s-road, Chelsea, NURSERY- 
6 dy aké as food 2 n, "is now se elling the very 
Treen, ful to pet prune « bs. ` oi : eee e. ar Epor donei f Taosi mroes, 
ICtOria Regia , 
Villa gardening ......... Lilium lancifolium album (flow aan roots), at 6s. per doz 
pi 
To —— The true Hautbois Strawberry, at 2s, 6d. per 100; 4 
Hen t sow! ing, experiment with ia a tandarā Wall- 2 — Peach, 2 Sn, and Nectarine Trees, a 
— 8. * ditto Dwarf- agers wed fine, at 30s. per — 
ry large Ficus ia sticus for 


[Price 6d. 
2ENDLE'S CHEMICAL PLANT MANURE should 
used by all wed haman — a oom of Hyacinths, 
Tulips, and other oun Sold in — — 74 at 28, 

ated eac Por ENA rther r particu 

‘= 'RENDLE and Oo., Unio ae, une uth. 
Our 42 premises are adjoinin the Plymouth Station 
of Guano have ex- 


ve the 3 Devon in ay, and our sales 

eded e us the last five e years, 
2 88 85 ST “OF SEEDLING AND TRANS- 
—— LANTED LARCHES, of the Finest Quality, at reduced 


7 M. WOOD anp SON beg to solicit attention to their 
very e xtensive stock of the above, prices of which will be 
Ni 


, Maresfield, near Uckfield, 


Sussex. 


paige OF WA, 005 AND D SUNS? New 

ve ROSE CA 
9 ation. 

owe odlands iiy, Maresfleld, near Uckfield, Sussex. 


EORGE JACKMAN, NURSERYMAN, wos ing, 
Surrey, 1} mile from Woking Station, South-western 
Railway, be egs to announce he — — published a — and 
complete CATALOGUE of bis O ntal mee “ig be and 
F.owering Shrubs, Standard “ie ‘Dwarf Rose and 
Fores tTr rees, &e., which may be had on ademas — 4 — 


w Deserip- 
ALOGUE may still be obtained, GRATIS, 


ny 

Tage LARGE aD MONTHLY RASP- 
RY.. — This fine autumnal sare a erry has been 1 sow 

ment loade 


an 
ce he has just 
0 


with Fruit — as the werp, and of fine flavour. It differs 
fr 


om the 3 — 


n AM GREG RY begs most respectfully to 
offer the — NEW GERANIUMS an 
FUCHSIAS. 
prt ar SEEDLING 9 
on and after the 10th of November 
NT.—Of very dw TE 2 e 


‘To be se 7 
LU CILLE BEL 


upper potne, blotched with dark — . j r petals striped 
with the colour; good for —— ep be pehy culture. Price 
7s. 6d. eac che 


55 ROSEA COMPACTA,.—A seedling from Lucia rosea 
ement upon its parent, being a very free bloo oomer, 

abit 3 a, well adapted for bedding or pot 
Rose-coloured Geranium, not surpassed, 


PLENDID NEW Alea 
be t out the first week in May 

DIANA.—The a pares est White age oP lo 3 a pure 

white tube, of wax-like consisten and well Proportio ned, 

ee sli ghtly penis with ate Winch, tipped with a pretty 

ade of gre 5 bri aT a flushed vith crimson 
20 the 5 Price 10s, ach. 

ACTZON,— e flower, t = 


corol 
the peantifal bared shape, so desirable ; a very free 
A excellent habit ; confidently recommended. Price 10s, 6d. 


M.—A well-shaped dark flower, tube and Sepals 


A- 

Sus, 

ANEMONES, LI- 
HAMI 


RINIU 
brigh t crimson, of desirable consistency ; 
< a free bloomer, and of rather dwarf habit. Price 7s, 6d. 


Th +t. h a 


Royal e e ey. 8. 

URROUGHES’S TWO UNE RIVALLED PICOTEES “LO. 
RINA” and E Senge — OF „ being by 
far the best the abo iser has pro 
NHARLE RNER È 


owing dy for delivery.—PICOTEE 

BUR UGE “DUCHESS OF SUTHERLAND,” light 
red edge; the finest in its class, took first-class certificates at 
Slough, Royal So don, and Met ropolitan Shawi. and the 
premier prize at Slough, as tbe bes 1 f the 2 * a 
grower and ve mstant, being q ite we Maca 3. 6d. 

BURROUGIES’S “ LORINA ” (light purple edge), Pou 
white, * a delicate margin, which ot extend the least 
into ; too ss certificates at Slough, Royal 


South h London, and Derby, six blooms at the latter = — 10s 
ADY HARRIETT MOORE (Tox wEn).—Medi 


h of C TuUrNER’s winning 


"CARNATION. 
CLARK'S REV. J. ger eg Pees „Purple flake, full, 
smooth, and finely marked. 10s. 
re 
8 ty 2 MONTEZ. „Purple, of the finest 
frm . We F 
l tion Si ee 
Se ORNER „ “sf “eo aai y- formed petal, long 
onstan 


Be at 
s * 
— shown in all C. ee 5 winni ng stan D 
out the season. Figure 2 e e for — p 1849. e 
h 0 
rae ES — 1 aah ass certiticate at — Royal South 


of | Beauty of Uttoxeter Lard Joho Raseell 
Crimson Perfection 


— J wishes to remind his friends and the public the 9 of 
Nursery Stock on the 2?d inst. = t his brother’s, Mr. W 
Seckiaah, who has decli ned bu “ine 


THE SUBSCRIBER begs = offer the following listy 


and 5 aaa — ok in the kingdom, and will —.— yrs 
— s in urse of ihe season, 
Haidak or HEATHS. 


Ampullacea vittata ;Eximea Perspicua nana 
Aristata ditto Ferrugi |i Propendens 
Andromedeeflora Florida campan etorta major 
Beaumontia rtnelli (lake a lnubes calyx 
Bergiana Hiemalis Splendens 
owieana brid Szudrians 
Ba liana Lricolor dumosa 
— mbertiana rose „ rubra 
Cun —2 mii Luc iflora Wilsonii 
— Licopodioides Veu utrieosa, sorts 
Depressa 1 = 1 Westcottii 
Fe abilis Willmorcana 
Elegans arpa flora 
And many other e to 218. per dozen, 
AZ ALEAS. 
Alba aoe Loved oa Devonshire |Murrayana 
magua [su undula 
Apollo Ex conde yptima 
Ardens A lora pieno rubra Obtusa 
Aurora ormo |Verryana 
Broughtonii Heere ee lt perba nova 
Heb i [Metulgens 
Coronata 181 Var iega a 
Coceinea superba Laveritia enden. 
128. to 21s. per dozen. 
‘sails. 
— —— e Flaming Nora 
Agri Forget-me-not Ondine 
amt 5 Gustavus Oriou 
Bacchus Gulielme coca 
* Gazelle | Plutarch 
of Clapham |Hebe’s Lip Prometheus 
Black "Knight Jenny Li (Que ae Victoria 
~_ of tie Village King Hudson IRo 
arinda nartine ja ra 
andre a Rockh Spur ler 
Cavalier iss Berens | e 
Centurion inna yivia 
Chimbor Mrs. Cavendish | 1 Lerpricbore 
Cupid |Miss Holford W ladsor Castle 
1 er dozen. 
CINERARIAS. 
ttila Cerito 
Alboni — Marittima 
5 ere Maid of Artois 
rand Mas —— eg Beauty 
— Vor Peckham Lady Tamworth . 


Beauty of St. Jolin’s Shep- ttespiendezs 
— 


125. to a per dozen. 


a TA in packets, 2s, 6d. each, or] 
OPHILA 33 pac 
anne z plants 15. each or 9s. per dozen.—A fine collection of 
impor —Catalogues on application, 
Royal Fase „ Slough 


STOVE PLANTS 
Eschz nauthus palche A Ga Hoya Cunningham .. 23 6d 
me apectowus irung) 3 6 | mper . 
10 Le) Inipatiens or © balsamia 
Allamanda cathartica . 1 0 
„ grandiflora oe ee | teen coccinea, a, sro, 
„ Schottii Se | osé 
himenes Loudonii... 2 6 e 5 2 6 
„ ocellata 2 6 mæ, per 
Br — Jamerouii, | 4 821 1 
per 0 o | Roudctetia spei ae es 
Francisca hydrangactur- | jor 2 
3 6 | Stephanotis foribunda, 
2 6 „ 
d ide 2 0 
Select Greenhouse Plante, 123 . to 215. dozen, 
Select Ej acrises, 12s, to 21s. per doze Select —— ee 
mums, inclusive r e nd — 6s. to 1. Olea ; 4 
New Verbeuas, 0 123. per Zau-chneria 
1 doz. 
he selection, the 8 
— “nil be ear vas belts to be accompanied — 42 a 
— 2 85 of With iam James EPPS, Bower 
Sareea, Matas 


THE 


ARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 4 
[Noy. 


CHINA = rr 2 for re 
Ç by — 1 e of Mr. Mac Lachlan, 6, 
npa e dite, s widan 

SON T ERY, GSHÖT, SURREY 


oHN WA TERER Bae — Ln asure in ann ouncing 
he published a Descriptiv: talogue of his exten- 
ae collection a RHODODENDRONS „ana hese American 
plants, &., whic be forwarded on applica 


B K CANT, St. Jade. street Tn, 
ready for delivery, strong well- 


AD ER pot 3 6d. each, 
TOPPI 5 BRILLIANT | — 15 
FUCHSIA SPECTAB LIS 2 ie 
„The _Thre d carria age a aud pac ekage free to N 
reference, requested from unknown cor- 
Suppo Th ual discount to the trade. 
ELARGON IUM “FOQUETT’S MAGNIFICENT.” 
eee —.— well * — heg, in 4-inch pots, now ready, 
price 21. 28. and a 72 has been — * than 
was en — — 8 llt given for every three 
ordered by keyi — — b e to Major Waan FOQUETT, 
Shide House, n 


NÆUS R 
can confidently eee 
his et as the best in cultivat satis- 
this assertion is the fact a ae, Market 
an: 


than any other r variety. 
It ho extraordinarily productive, and about a fortnight earlier 

n the Victoria ; added er ee it — ~~ in iodo oionn 
for: “preserving aud all c ary purposes. One-year plante 
roots, ls. ; ditto, Bitobell’s Royal ‘Albert 40. 6a. ; ak g 

erh he a ual Trade allowance—Pos -office orders are re- 
Sti dy Nov be os 8 to JOSEPH Mr YATT, Manor Farm, 
Deptfor 


R. ree NGELIER, Clarendon Nursery, Jersey, begs 
say that his DESCRIPTIVE 1 — 

EARS. (with true descriptions of each poor sate 
lis hed x7 Messrs. FIRR — Pateruoster- row, — . * 
will be ha for Am ateurs, as 12887 555 are 


s. 6d. 
=n full, with „as well as the stock which 
will suit each sort Saß 
RON WA 
SUPERB COLLECTION OF DOUBLE HOLLYHOCKS, 
oes CHATER has a lar, ze — of = 


W. C. en a coll 21 grower of Hollyhocks for 25 

years, has devoted a great 1 of time expense to 

i late Mr. C. Baron pur. 
wW 


some of maen are of the most brilliant colour and very 
fine in for Their merits have been 225 re K pon of the 
principal — in a kingdom in 1818 and 1849, where 


they have obtained the first pr — . at the . Sonth 
London Floricultural 8 open to all England, and at Nor 
wich, Durham, Darlington, &c, 

N 


and the trate that 

EN 82 SEDS 945 now being s 

a prepaid e They give ihe 
ich the 


g 
may be favoured 
a p 3 nod remittance is 
requested from unknown paanan nS ents. riem, Nov, 3. 


—Haa 


00 ; 
14 foot, 95. oe 1000; gr 

—— 13 foot, 6s. — 1105 Broad-leaved Irish Ivy, 2s. 6d. per 

100; Furnished Rhod 


tooth ; dius Reels, ony Se each; 
Garden Line, and S. |, Od. 
B. Free to oars wok or iat 


“We do not pay Freight 


for Forest Trees, Haze hs „ nor Laurels, Five per cent, for cas sh, 
or th n by naming any respectabie Seed M 
chant in 8 —Coler ine, Nov. 2. 


NEW GERANIUMS, STRONG PLANTS NOW 
vat oUr Af VE W piesa 
BRO large, sirong, and 


a: weii established in 4-inch 
immediate shift, and wi 


The 
ae = > song ties ‘to, our own sele ction 
di $ pr. tion 


AME, CoL 

Attraction.. one poskan veined 8 and 4 
A 

d ULPUrE? arne tank Sab 
Atrosanguinea rich dark crimson 
T mon 
Black Prince 
Bine bene dark ground, white edzed.....,...... 
ä urple e and TTV 
ee eae i ght 
0 
1 — 
F i 
Mag onum ., 2 
Mulberry Superb rich d 
Model 01 Perfection — white, 3 1 
Napolo paaris rs 
5 — elegans fe 2 she — 8 
„„ bea utiful 3 F 
Ro deep pin 
122 grandior". - light pink 


Virgin Queen 
Venosa rubra 
Wellington red 
If the 3 be left to W. C.: 
ara rats varietas Lof the above 
dit: 


THe 4 een eer „* 


8 3 


12 border ditt 
Scarlet, ne, eee hite, purple, dark claret, 
, and olka sorts, 1l. 10s. per 100. 
ND CHOICE SEEDLINGS OF 1848.9, 
ceo (Chater, bright ruby red, very full npin 
ne substance and form well 
abit; it has Se — 
o have seen it to be the finest 


ollyho 
3 at s silvery shaded puce, which has 
g effect, fine form and very 


Bag it i s), ogi deep pink, centre 


9 71 (batera), pa e 


ä —ͤ—ů—ͤ7 * *** 


—Lͤ— 2 


aud 
Surprise (hater 2% deep r 


0 
6 
6 
6 
6 
6 
0 
6 
0 


Elegans 8 s), delicat Zye lg 550 apes 
sent out in the tls 8 - oo 
ants.— Warranted tru 
W. Ki 1 a fine selection of Pansies, — Kt 
dit arnations and . = 
— — A R zE, 
dit Dwarf ditto, 4s, to 125. ditto. 
A remittance” requested Walden we of Plants.—Post-office 
A 


$. per doz. 
Is pars per ee 
oses, 5. per doz 


E PRE 
IRR outh N dernen en Sho 
Mr. W. Chater, Saffron Wal 
flowers, forming a 
ge 


at the prices ‘att. 


s than ched. 
Tories Baliani ark d Story’s * Mont Blane No. 


vee 


a 


„ Sparkler 2s 
Whomes Slog pes — 
neh) 3 Wind 8 5 
ous from the ct il àe fir, Betis e varieties, 

a OË our own selee 0 


Symmetry 


Hara ‘ua (Fan 
Se eve 
ee * 


poly di:to 
12. : Armada, contr ong oe i s Black Prince, Blanch e, 


Superb 
— Scarlet a Racks 3 
ARG = benennen 0 OF Ahah — ted VARIET IES, 

ozen, our uch 


s. per di 
Josephus; 1 Rosy Circle, orien, i 


m, Desd.mona, — Mustee, 


z NEW W CHRIS. SANTHI 
; ük and bushy pla —— — 


owers, 
Dey rv 2 to art than 
and we were p 


= 


55 
gton Ho 
ea of Hollyhocks e exhibited by Mr. 
= Florist, — Saffron 


iven to under: 

* a att at th 
S the first prize at the pratt ee of t — Royal i Florie : sultur: 2 | 
Society, at the i on W 


Bea that | 


to — 5 them, e benefit 
flow who may Ps 8 able to 
b- | Stand i in 2 of additions. ea 
igh character given of hich 
2 assert, mr = whi — bap 
nd Garden 
And 


g. 
ers and Ae , 
de deners’ . ae 26; 1 5575 


W SENDIN BY Y a 
THE FINEST CARNATIONS, 2 . 
OUELL Ax CO. si —— > r 
er Wege of — above ** — 3 — 
ealthy, and are now r ready f or sending o — 2 Y strong any 
1 fine 
—— fe hon. 8 of the United Kingdom, or, or for it 
25 dad Pio! of — first-rate — A ‘Of Carnations 


12 pai do: d „„ 
35 pairs of very fine show Varieties of do, danas Med * 
do. 8 
Fine mixed border eae erd 1 1 61 f 
True old Clove—per — ozen mi ” * ri i 
PINKS, Anot firs jee sho fie ? 2 
dozen pairs. : be ower, in, — 
3 8, do. do., 10s, to 18s, per 
AMELLIAS of the newest and — j 
30s. per dozen, Bice s with medal 
CINERARIA do., 128. to 18s, Pro pen 


S, do. 

ICAS, comprising Fino best 
kinds, 12s, to 18s. per 
ROS 


at 68., ae $ 


of the very best sorta, 


3 Red, Blue, White, 
HERB BACEOUS PLANTS (hardy), 


1 Surrey Zoological Garden adie and 
they attr: our ten i i eNe — we nesday, and 
names and colours.“ — Darlington and Stock Times, Sept, 15. 

he gr. Floral aod Musical Fete at osfield-place,—Mr, 

. of Saffron Walden, Holly hocks: Sum: of most 

exquisitely beautiful spikes we have ever seen; we are glad to 

hear that this noble flower is comi into favour again. The 

lov rs of good flowers owe much to Mr, successful 
skill. Among his co we observe many choice e e 
We advise tho who 57 3 it to buy them. — ESS x 


“Co of Durham al and — | Society.—The | 
most — ating fe: cent 
collection of Hollyhocks ha p 


f Mr. a 
eauty and bn of gro 


finitely surpassed anything ever s oll, — —— —— 
for flow rate Varieties of r season, is part of the country, I+ “pene needless to say they 

“lla ie f incl he iio - £0 15 0j were a great so of attracti — ; ; and W ~ are sure, 

ane Bs. ; 1 ding ane te 1 5 e 5 by — =: had an o roel ry t's ing them, 

$ n we etate that t ub. eati — 
2 e tree to romen or 775 station on tie London Chater for thus showing —— what se mith h proper clear, 

y line, an atis with orders mo 1 55 — can be brought.“ — Durham Adve 
tiser, Úi 

-colle Ramu — snow ond, Kg ioe N ri id Es 10 Y good assortment, some of them very 2 

$ 8 Tull ber ne * h a Patek bet s and other i ‘gan be ealted terior ep ng "ihe flowers sent. 

22 j us plants, & c. &. 5 "a ; 

Reute : ; Saffron Walden.—if our duties at this season 
ome orders Hake et uukuowa rao ft a — r Post- | fatizu ng, they are not unmixed with pieasures, as in r aoar 
beed aud Hortieultüral Bg aver, md raw now, , your basket of flowers we fully experienced, W Were delighted 

y | to inspect such assemblage of elegant loose. We proceed 


of D 8 eee 


Agents for the sale of Kitley’s Goliah Stra 
large, and of delicious APS a flavour, at 

Fine ang ye 3 a 
33. 6d. 

RAHUI 


rare occurrence, and o 


Lex, Arbu 
nolia, Uratægus, S ulus, large English E 
und 3 e. Busnes, &e., all of 3 it would be 
2 en advertisement, 

r 8 and will shortly be 
Thes oil of this Nursery being of such a na'u 
p f 


tus, Daphne, 
, Ase 


bted, , if they think fit, m 
sale a the liquidation . their 
ee e n a 


< LATE 


Edging, Hot Water Tank Cor ers, 

She elv es titted to hold pape tor O. 
ork sh 

of 


as 
pecifi 3 A — “stoke 
thicknesses, aps Oe OOM: o aaa 
YUCUMBER AND MELON BOXES 
dred 1, 2, and I + ae 


— One hur 


parts of the kingdom, References given 3 
and Lep Trte) in tro, ‘tious the Penra 


5 


ats 


es y 
Cos, T Domai e 5 
on opplication. 


seen at CHOGGON a aud 


e 


THE GARDENERS’ 


URSERY, PLYMOUTH. 
| RENDLE'S NU LISHED 1786 178 
QUICKS.—10, 000 FINE TRANS- 
m 12 to 15 inches for 31, 10,000 


old Seedlings for 208. 
N old Seedling 2 wv, oe 
ICTAR cae warf Tree 
er ai from 245 — 
selected Dwa — at 8 per dozen. 
ia cultivation true to name, 
de — 1 E AL Ende This has been 
We have more 
and wellestabished roots, a nt 208. pe 
abundantly 


ozen: small 7 


en. 
a stag VICTORIA, an strong roots, 15s. 


8, 98. per do ze 3 

ES, greia ra LAR a Thie is a 
varie ty, very — 3 1adellelon 2 and 
mplete satisfaction. Stro . 


— . “YOUVELL’S FASTOLF ans 10s pir 
s. per 


—We hav 


ANON. 

= 3 125. i“ dozen ; “yor 36s 
mie e Plants in Pots, 4 to 6 feet, 5s, 
"price usually charged. We havea 


| ance RUSSIAN MATS l. per 100. 
BLACK NAPLES CURRANTS.—Very superior 
d 


i BERRIES.—Some of the very best varieties in culti- 
"P = LAURELS.—An immense stock will be sold 
«nwally low. Fine plants, 18-inch, ior a 205 per 100; 3 feet, 
fad 4 feet, 40s. per 100. 
f or MAHONIA AQUIFOLIA.—A very 1 
ty, 18 3 , 16s. per 100. This is a fine py for 
rosea, strong plants, 12 inches, 6s. per dozen; 
— ata and floribunda, 6s. per dozen; —.— 
and albidum, strong plants, 18 inches, 9s. per doz 
and ASPARAGUS. In large ade, fron 


to 20s, per 
wil be sent, gratis, to any applicati 


orders above 51, will be Pang se d Bars tor oe 
+ the stations n the 
& or Great Western ali 
iis port to London, Dublin, 
1 three times a week. 
— Devon Railway is now oe 6 Bear, 
= re 0 
1 ae : 8 
p —.— — Co., Union- road, Plymouth. 
ESTABLISHED 1786. 
RES NURSERIES.— The Subscribers beg © 
intimate that they have for sale an extensive s 
of FOREST, lah Lage and e ee nates TREES, 
adapted the climate of Scotland. As great 
bestowed in — 1 the different kinds from the pave 2 
Varieties of their species, the plants are healthy and of 


—— have scr ng honour to receive the numerous 


g of their age, givin 4 
er trees in the climate of 
of Lea 


— Pie 2-year, por s. d. 


sus torulosa, 1 to „ 
J foot, per 100 

of Fores Trees of the finest qualities. tke 
lied at apes wholes e Goods x are ee 
0 poe Sarwar ants, &c., every infi 


a 


rg ed * “On Forest Pruning * “On 
of Scotland ;” Pa ere within e 


DING SPLENDID 2 GERANIUMS, 
STAS, CARNATIONS PINKS, PAN 
WALTON offer 12 of the following 
ANIUMS last sent out for 21. 2s., with a plant of his 
Seedling “ Antagon 8 now — out at 15s. each. 
carriage, The plants are l established 5 


„ d 
W bug Rookh ... 8 
. 7 6 Plutarch (Whomes's) . 5 
nee — Lind (Foster’s) . 23 
8 (Beck 3) 3 
Virgin Queen ( Arnold’s) . 


ta 
am 


0 
0 
6 
0 
6 
6 


an ee 
rene 
eee] 
pre and made payable 


e| structure are exposed to the gaze of ‘the 


red. 
ands 8 a 6 feet high, well 
Th 


to the old 
at 


“Our new Autumnal Catalogue i is . published, and vs 


„or reference in 8 from unknown 2 
t 


c 
Cork, e 8 | 


-| the v 


"r F OV ee — 
ro 
S 

== „ “oo? 


g, re two Home 
| two Tiems two E 


| he Kew 
1 by — 5 thither ga acer of eg botanical 


CHRONICLE; 


691 


M ROYAL ALBERT RHUBARB 
aintains its supremacy over gee other kind, 

being the earliest, finest-flavoured, and best coloured ever 
grown; a most prolific bearer, an ad free ae For Pad 
3 it far surpasses every other — * frp planted in a wine- 
cellar, or any place light are kept from it, 
it will produce large stalks, of a magnificent 7 Popes: in five 


week 8. ach ; also 
s Li innæus, 1s. êd., and Vic the a bah oc AB 


Myat 
to the trade, Post-office order — amends to W. — 
Enfield Highway, Middlesex, will meet with every attention. 


4 


The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
TURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1849. 


MEETINGS — — — WEEK. 
Nov. He pads 2 r. u 
— Sir M. 


TUESDAY, 
SATURDAY, 


Rumour says Ke Pn 3 8 at the 
British Museum are awakening from their gentle 


t- | slumbers ; and that one of the — st a proceede 
to Paris to ask questions concerning the manner in 
which f ve ge etable 


profa 
mig A of > ganas 9 ait in the Pe city. 
f th 


vulgus in the a 
W nch 


m 
nations l wealth in botany is * — 
ust ourselves 

o hav 


confess 
resisted gine 
whose whole hive ‘at hive been s 
appropriate to their personal advanta 
have been devoted to public science, are not the | ê 
kind of people to be PRY attacked by a fit of 
Pippa tga the pa interests as well a 
a public purs We are o faith in them 
™ But heap oath advice in the formation of a a publio 
tan museum ug aris? Ample in- 
5 might be ae, for a shilling np to 


them than belong | ™ 

ailing T destined 

15 the humble office of a fruit room. e principle 

on which the botanical museum 

is capable of . extension, but of no aac im- 

provement. A journey to Paris was super 
And why have a 1 9 . — museum came ‘all i in i dirty 

even an 


n 
t degre 
objects of natural history, an 
cially of articles so perishable as ina supplied by 
vegetable kingdom. We e it impossible 
to keep them in a 110 fit for — ii. The 
attempt will entail ontos mn wal an 
expense 


d struction as w 
sou 


num he 


b British Museum, as is evi 


m at Kew is arranged | P' iggle 


se ly a 
45 labelled. Ne a — there — — int the ca 
n be iden 


— to ees the public with confidence in 
ng ter ran be * — fave 


omplain for 

shells, which ‘a oredit to the diligence and science 

= the officers in char arge But, with such ex- 
ional 


itable to all concerned, 
If oe gr a establishment i is to be looked u 
g e; the public 


as a upon a gigantic 
oils 8 nothing — rp lain of. But 
intended as 


p if it is 
e. public may find in- 

ment, where — 
may be s 0 


we are bou 
to say that the intentions of its founders ad sup- 
r e are not fulfilled by the executiy 
A useum is a place 3 everything is 
talogues a 


£ 


intended to speak to the eye. mere 
supplemental aids, — Wha nabio — d etailed in- 

formation which cannot be co by written — 

a bels. Eve en he in a muse 


— thing, ther 
ould be distinctly, though vate e ian and 
a soon — pei sed to If this 
have no — 
‘i — iboli of its 


ep which t ed 
is was once the opinion of the authorities of the 
ident fro 3 
memoranda attached to parts of — Antiq 
collection. That opinion seems, ever, 8 ite 
changed, if we are to igs from the present higgledy- 
dy oer in which many of the objects 
are now exhi 
Take, for part what is called in the Catal 
“Room 1 of the Gallery of Antiquities.” In 
lace are — — AE a = 
200 


by which objects can tified. There are 


| numbers indeed — ee . a objects; 3 


civil attendants tell you t eer num 

o the Townley Collection, me need not be d d 
10 this room ae would also ae? according to 
the catalogue, to be five com pir tments, but in 


re i fae so that one has not been even 


by at all a 
The question will 


for a 
Supposing that set difficulties should appear not 
we know them 


verbial, why, us 
sudden Two publie collection, for the sa 
mg witaj nin a few miles h oS og 

vo, Where non 
no — but 


ums of e 
farnis 25 funds for two 
not ley 


e 


That at Kew exists, is admirably — ee is capable 
ma pen favourable fe for as 


ion to 


s of th 


TY | collections in 


Nor is the 8 condition of the British Museum 


— who has lived in * Not 


e paid Sa by the public r 


its 3 
sia the catalogue 


worse 
f Greek hn rey de ws taking 
bu 


| un-na 


he vaulted room, in which are 

. wegen us discoveries at "Ni mroud. 

ord is vouchsafed by the keeper of the 

ieiti es in explanation either of the interesting 

his 4 = this collection or of any one object which 
it contain 

Fs veces 
same. 
the most part 


l anywhere am among the antiquities, it is Just 
and there explanatory notices; for 
no information whatever. The state 
m” in particular calls for stron 
of most curious and 
interesting remains are found there, with mysterious — 
number attached, and not a syllable of detailed ex- 
Perhaps ith j 


auctioneer’s iian that of a national collection. Case 
escri 


93 is thus 
Case 93. Part of a lyre, and two flutes of wood, 
found in a tomb fo N gilt my rile crown of lead 
m the same place; glass mosaic 
par en of the F when a 
of Athens by the 


5 jon suppose 


0 that this the 
scientific description of the curious — neous 


set of things which that case really contains. The 
8 3 97, filled with 1 le objects, is 
sei nientioned in me Catalogue. 

departments are re in the same condition, 
The e cases contain whole 
birds without names ; the minerals, thousands of 
(Case 33 has but 1 t 16 natpesamong 
specimens), and so 
tate of things, in a 


about 140 
a any one compare this s 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


maintained, and almost a century | are therefore but imperfectly represented in the ears of points to 10 inches in 
Maize, and it will we observed that when the seed is |i 
abortive _ are dev i 


museum prodigally mai 
old, with the — museum at Kew, which has been 
There everything is 


years in exist 
well and usefully labelled; no catalogue is necessary, with a crop of four varieties of America pper buds of the cutting will 
ae —— sees at once wha e history of — er =s ro of u e —— ll and 1200 api- n 5 
e presented to his notice. The higgledy- A e irei] repa naked stem ; 
Ply tom he conncaned; Jabali aro nat |ie of Wheat tne” pty os D i dete, die den ke Tt te 
2 ? 
a for t is presented a nu = of heads of n grain. This med i off wisest ye 
mad 10 suiii for twenty others, different from it, | change has been noticed, but instances may not have | whatever length of cutting © plants are 
but packed i short, there is no | come within the observation of English botanists. M. i iabl Pi Pally 
g 8 riably to be removed from th 
confusion, but it is the sea of order, method, an urpin, as quote Tandon, thus describes it: inserted in the soil; for, if 
exactness. We are told N it is — intended “ Where the transformation of stamens into pistils takes most probably make their u k 
to propose t stees t a rival s be | place, t is mes a single s ary e i form of suckers "ie 
lished, in Great Russell-street What sort of | Which is usually situated near the summit of the princi- | prickles ; but this is of lesa conden 
tival we may jose by what is there now; showy, | = axis 1 50 eee in z in this each branch | dead subs they rot o pen 
confused, costly, and uninstructive. W. submit bears i is is a true description of the appear- After the plants have formed sh 
that eny 04 —_ — to be granted for any jouer eee 3 3 exhibit ; Taha in the | shortened according to the ; 
such purpos N e ear that the grain is wanting in Aaa to about 6 inches, Tk shorteni 
idik be kepi ‘inh us and in next year's yini Wh wheat prnl ia 75 situations or in cold seasons. taken to cut to u inting mg, 
1 e co of stamens into pistils in the ter- direction which the brauch should follo 
hie: panicle, th ere 4 frequently 5 — suppression o of the | complete the form in which the plants aie 
he us are mostl kept. Th i 
25 mae drew attention to the insanity of cbc or sub- Strobist: a in the l N Š n the i die, und a cde oe 
ing into a Vinery kon foetid “ * ue mpage em have an example of 2 hard ety dista > ix, eight, or ten b 
nees, 
— obtained from Gas works. The we then Zea, taking the character of the 3 are likely eee too W ihe yf 
took of the pernicious quality of this substance of the Grasses of the temperate and farete zones, | must b o buds pointing in ee on irection 
having been question y one or two correspo ENFREY said that monoecious flowers arose | thus, in the accompanying figure, su iro . 
mn, who find y e tremely useful o n their Grass fom either = opaan or dev may = the | were 5 ded to be prolonged eat. — Fe: W. 
„it seems desirable to draw attention to the resent organs i aracterised the then the young shoot is properly cut, 
description oft lately given by Dr. Uns, in a letter . the | fho uppermost bu a 1o proceed in ht dn 0t 
0 a morn ing i ead to such a | the con ef if the uppermost bud 
4. Gas lime.” he says, p? LAN and ein affords change in the flowers as had taken place in the Maize | inside of a s ‘ hoot, f which ould latig T 
io ach af a cyanic compounds that an eminent 2 for d by Austen. This might be the that the direction should b outwards, towards > 
38 chemist V ae cause of cod not . fruit so bells in this | right, then it would have been entirely wrong to cut at s 
f ier par R. | that bud. 
3 1 — ing 8 — er ue n + e | LANKESTER stated his — iea Sa the reason of the| Observing thus to cutat proper buds, each leading 
8 nly o o the profit- failure of the e in this c ae — 3 stein branch may be made to diverge outwards, 
able working of this patent is the accompanying sul- of temperature at the time ile ning. | Side, to a biia nt suficien t Tor ont P raint CAMA 
Frag which discharge a great deal of sulphuretted Maize had, however, ese 3 clivated i in v Indians The pamat of on 5 ee. 10 ci | 
ates along with the vapour of prussic and sul- for the pu a" - 5 ning s ` > hw — detailed from it ‘ene | 
c acids; an aerial mixture of the most |Procured b 3 ija ne 505 m- | early part of vinter, “the pae, ou pares heats. eal 
N N to breathing animals. And he probable that it N ne sugar in this sine ine but 2 5 extent, bea g in mind chat ge erally Oa ip 
goes on to say that: “That vile refuse ahodid be whether profitably, was yet to be proved. buds immediately 1 the section will break 
buried many fathoms deep in some barren region shoots ; therefore, it will be advisable to cut wher 
for when spread on the farmer’s field, after dis- another leader in required tH orate 7a 
g e gaseous poison for 1 time, its Tan Goosuseanr.—Left to its natural growth, the first winter pruning. second will consist in shorten- 
sulphur gets oxygenated into sulphurous acid, two | Gooseberry becomes an almost impenetrable thicket, | the leading shoot about one-third ; and alto ihe 
le Se at 1 X 8 not a apted for pro- other shoot intended for an adjoining leader. If there 
we fo the minato: chemistry of ihe ducin such fine fruit as Should be another young shoot ing strongly w 
ny obvious that frech sex En 2 is p ed by plants not iene it may be cut off close ; and others, weaker, ` 
is a ayni dangerous agent ; nit. for an Ñi 5 sega Sine ta is hat, ee the e 
in confined 1 that the gardener who latel > h he dat aan sh ng an 485 Kal, hace 
ee Ii ely habit of the Goosebery is | 5 — de Eberts tet to one a oe | . 
— ahs it in ae inery may 3 himself À át a bush, with a Wise three or four eyes may be n these, some of 
Pon is gaa a coroner’s inquest. ong tendency to reno- | Which will a break into —.— and others will 
A must not ae be therefore inferred that vate itself by suckers, and form frui The other branches will require a 
gas-lime is worthles erous when pro rly N a je re vigorous these similar meins E + Young shoots should be be trained up 
3 roar deleterious, qualities disappear anon V) are, fie more, liable: ave (© to supply the place of any branch exhibiting symptoms 
; sulphurette * x e t | 
hurets are spee dily * 0 y ee — iota W 3 w In the midland and northern counties an cup 
air and moisture; and an i arion | To vent this form of bush is generally aimed at in pruning; on the 
which it may originally contain disappear or ent confusion, arising from a | Contrary, in some case he suth, although te 
into harmless combinations. Gas-lime is theref E superabundance of shoots branches are pruned and thinned, yet some are left ia 
when old, a good calcareous manure, fit fo all 3 and suckers, the pruning- 3 for the purpose of shade, otherwise. et 
poses in which lime is re and . knife must be employed be scorched.” , ; | 
p fee the thie and something and that, too, at an rly eee we height on trellises, arbours, &c. ; et 
themsel t phur-compounds which it contains stage of the individual ex- eho such is proposed to be doney free, upright growing 
ems re ac ble manures, as soon a | oe the plant. orts should be selected. In places tt 
intensity is destroyed by diffusion through A the N g ae „ by means of hoked pieces of d n 
masses of earth. h at least appears to be 7 Ly 8 it will be seen for pulling d d forked pieces for pushing Be 
general opinion of practical gardeners: if there “that the wood buds, branches up toa cane jodi nece 
any evidence to the contrary, we venture to ask for a, a, a, a, are on the las n again referring to the engraving, it eat 
formation concerning it. summer’s shoot, whils served that the me mu are on the ing Priz i 
g1 9 t the 
wen — fruit b, 6, b, b, are = ood ; and on wood o : > 35 „ * 
ITI H ASSOCTATIO F b on two years old wood. fruit is produced. Bat uit. uds or spurs 
ENT OF SCIENCE 1 8 `a, The buds marked a, are much older. Strong young shoots occasion 
called wood buds, because 8 out from old wood, and if they are shore" 8 
On some Changes in . . ae’ Male Fiir of Forty from them young shoots keep them within bounds short aera , 
Day Maize. fetes exhibited wens tuke. are produced, but usually | ma) am be . from them. R. T. 
not from all of them; —r5r—!A⁊ n ——-„—— 


on 

at an elevation of 3000 to 4000 “feet, 

was as more likely to s 
in thi 


je observed that for the antiquaria 
— a keeper at 


roel than a 


vi for 8 . 
corolla, as in —— ts &e. —— envelopes 


the 
and ae "aie 


As 
ms Crass ; the 


from Nineveh! 


he 
e two years si 


ROSES. 
THE PRACTICE OF FERTILISATION, ARTIF 
L AND ; 


wood, which, a twelv ried on b 
À 2 A month back, were similar THE re a the as been carie on by 
I to those now many of the great raisers of ings to 3 beautiful 
Ar three had produced shoots, extent, and to cross fertilisation we owe many ? ae 
b Se? e, c, ¢, and the others varieties, which the nurserymen call hy ae is in 
a formed the fruit pada, not subseribe to the propriety of the term, Partaka of 
è „ ö, ma eral use to distinguish those s which p 3 
Bu rries are usu- the nature of two distinct parents; RE and 
WN l wa “Propagated by cut. hybrid China, bybrid Bourbon, hybrid Pe Chins, } 
Say, may be taken u means a cross n ean i 
ae as ws as the young | Bourbon, or the Pe al, and e other i 
Ifi has acquired a may be effected artificially, that is, by hand; o 
77 tolerable degree of firm- by placing together such as possess 
5 ness, whilst the fruit is on | pistil, the natural organs of generation, 
= the tree, and planted with | mix by the agency of fli 10 aud bees. 
success, roper shade tilisation is a very sim e operation, an 
be afford Bat, gene- m the yellow 2 fiom the stamens 0 
rally, the cuttings are Se and placing it in contact WI 
2 taken off srai s — in ae centre of another Rose. To dee 
— autumn, win r spring ; | you should select the plant you intend ae 
a, ont Wood buds but Sage in suum is s the the instant a flower opens, ve all their 
ere » b, ee ma buds. ik best time. of | they may not shed the yellow powder on 
13 8 cut back. almost any 85 peo then take td pene rom the Rose 7 
struck; but where there is choice, those that are some respects Jou w ieh to impart to 
moderately vigorous and firm-wooded are 8 ;| shed this salt on the pistil whic is 
— if off close by ‘their bases, 80 it, and which, in all probability, bu 
better. They may be ‘shortened by cutting off the | terference wou! ould have received its o eo, 


Means 
etme before 


i 

— but a — texture, and it 

another which has nothing ring 4 in 
may p 


$ k 
— i sped texture, the cross m 


a Pant 
* roduce 

e Rose is 

a white, the — — 


2 the — between white and red, 
so of 


ose. If on 


any — ities ena 


vo are perfect, an 
hich have or but petals, or are so 
destroy them if there were any. 


our fr ice 7 be 
tion must 


the 2 it is labour in vain. If, how wever, 
e powder 0 to it, there is no 
se 


other equally striking 
rather 5 of the very best Roses in 
ees ts other, and leave the rest to chance 


i sne very y distint 3 quality, and plant all these 


. he Mosses, the best of the China, 
Smooth -bar * inds, that were con ntinual bloomers, 

‘the most —— of th riars, and so diversify the 
slurs as to ! mething new. we 
ers would avoid placing in this group any variety 
tat flims e think there is nothing 


‘compensate for that deficiency, pai therefore ——— 


ann avoid oi nici g from eed ae riety 

with that drawback se — spor e 
isre had many colours fro om the seed of a thin white 
“matiety called the Globe Hip, and Bates pci none of 


sport, and in 


e garden where we gathered the hips. 
that where a dozen good Roses 
* * 


rem 
as poss: r contrive a gauze covering 560 
‘gi the 2 — but a hive of bees under it 5 $ but 


THE GARDENERS’ 


such as when fully expanded show | j 


he 
paid to 
of opera ting, for unless — brie be i in tio 


d | in flo — 1 hoe — emis! earthing 


pamos and shall never — am Be- 
sides that, term fungus se to give ‘ better 
malady of — Maize — ‘the word golpe 
— Barelli defines 
scence of various 
r 


use roport 

emain ikr af 1 he biat — 
The learned Professor having followed the course of th 
disorder from its o 


Pp 

f the Professor, by 22 choice of the best ret, 
i paea Š thos ere grow at the summit of the s 

y avoi b the plants in weeding them whilst 
them up without in- 
a. the ts too m — be ny ind the 

field, in — not to — too mu uid sap, and 
finally, if the soil is 2 si aer ths ridges high 
and well raised i in the m 


Te > 44 
o a chemical analysis, an 5 which it would have 
9 desirable to have made at an earli 
i one is m 


oxygeno aruas diseases, and 
cl santo p . kind w 

the vi 
the ve — — the a 
to the mineral e 9g 
e relation to he laws of chem 
his ais e has never been 3 on an oth 
Plant ‘than “the > Maize, and I 
low 


u! 


* 


even if t 


n by artificial fertilisation, unless we 
observed, a distinct object in view. 


DISEASES OF 5 
(Continued from page 676.) 


CREPITUDE ns Plait as well 


and more in cool years than in hot 
a, however, that I ha 
meee 

mili iace ave eee it. 


CHRONICLE: 


— 


7 — per lly on certain varieties of Hyacinth, 
have seen something like it, but I have not sufficient 
ata to affirm it positively. 


n a e er aeee aeaee 
a ON THE ODOURS OF PLANTS 1 9 THE MODES 
Dy OF OBT TH 


AINING 
Go, crop the gay Rose’s ve fete, — 
Aud — me spoils, a sweet fo 
cen 3 to the skies. ”— OGIL A 
SPEARE: 
Rosk.— This Queen of the pron loses not ite diadem 
in the 5 world. The rr 4 as it is 


commonly called, the otto s, is 
eg tracted by various 8 s from ie Cab bage Rose 
n Turkey, Persia, and = ia; the finest is imported 


or obtaining it, 


—— Ghazepore in = 
their own mode of ope- 


coun 
the procurers at each place ie 


ration, the best method however i is to strati ify the flowers line 


il of Roses, and swell a good Meal if the fowls are 
atedly. are then pressed an 


ma 
it is headache 
kpk: vertigo in thia state ; when diluted however there is 
nothin in odour, 4 ik mixed in soap, 
ae re spirit to * Esprit de 
The Daae p 

e to evaporate very fast, we are no 
the smell as in. ‘the 2 


e is diffieu 


th 


yields E 


t to account 


hoots, by whi ch the tree is 
must confess that a thi 

only leads us 

f = XXI.; one species. Foxavs OF THE MAIZE. 


ee abel by Si the nature of this disease 


i is never pire the perfumer, 


into ridiculous 
are 


for perfumers’ use 

English flower is not strong enough to 

purpose, oug e drie e Teaves are us 

| ane bags, ibe e ak little of their native fra poa 
In the season 


spoil 
are ninis pickled, , for this. “E bushel of flowers 
m the stalk, and to every 2 
ste ghee hg . ome of common salt i 


ual to poun 5 
7 | ih, ai ty rubbed in, the whole becomes y sage mass, y 


is finally stowed away in casks, In this way they 
will — almost any — of time without seriously 
injuring their For Rose r, which is 


S. 8. 


in 


re reparation not allow ae the re 


The sigg 


693 


best prepared from time to time, take 12 52 ~ pickled 
— and +, gallons of water, p a still, 
d draw off 2 gallons, this product will bed the“ double 

dis stilled Rose water ” = the shops. 
Ruopr 5 —A fine 


odour is 
wn * distillation. “and the 


of this plant ; it is 
"ad Na S ex 


e rere 


P 
ROSEMARY oe. officinalis).—The odour is 
more aromatic than sweet, it is procured from the 
leaves by distillation, Fap consumed 


largel in combina- 
tion with other scents for perfumin i 
Ros 


ANDA 
. The 8. Sandal tree perfumes, when riven, 
The axe that laid it low.” 
This is an old ee with — lovers as a it is 
the — that poss the odo the 
3 


mes 1 the Island of Time r and China, and on 


of its fra pan is — fashioned into — 
toilette. at and jewel cases, &e. any pe 
Sa havin —— seent · bags for drawers, 


gs 
When distilled the oil of Sandal is cally obta 
wonderfully strongand — the oilof sandal mixed 


e 
Santa ra 12 1 yxy — 
it for 8 hief use; it mixes well — soap, and 
en forms what they call Sandal - wood soap, and with 
to chareoal aA a little nitre it forms Sandal tilles for 


= 
— 
2 


ably; Sandal wood, an its derivations, is one of the 
most ancient perfumes, 


bod AND SUBURBAN GARDENING, 

of no plant so easy to cultivate, and at the 

same — so difficult to keep from year to year, as th 
P be raised from seeds and bloomed 


yei t 


5 


and we 


teur's as this, or one that puzzles 
cultivate more, The following hints may 


own in autumn in pans, or even in the open 
eeks. Th 


covered too deep s 
set of leaves, they should be planted out in s, in 
from 8 10 inches asund If seed has 
carefully saved from g an interesting 
8 will be the ; and of new 
varieties is a labour of peculiar interest. spring 
adv , the treated will commence flowering. 
The next point will be to select those which possess 
good qu — „with ea to perpetuate them. There 
are m ingular pleasing varieties that do not 


come within the arbitrary rules by sy florists’ flowers 
erthe retaining 


. tir possessing other 
— sally discarded. The eye 


uttings taken 
rac- | voot readily, 3 behind a hedge or 5 wall on the 


ithout any protection whatever. Insert them 
“sp id apart, and 1 inch — in soil of a — 


dy texture, and they will root in a few 
— afer damp leaves are removed as — — 
. a bed of choice Pansies, select a north 
with a cool bottom ; 2 ot ie — 

oul be pref 


ay 


wireworm. If the plants are put ou in Sep- 
i before — * 1 
t through 


E for it is onir foll 
this up that 8 kinds t 
tained ; seed is readil 


+ This is the same word as volpe (fox), the common Italian | 
name for the smut in corn, 4 


while saving that from 
Pharo. 


694 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE, 


pi 
$ 


Home Correspondence 

_ Vietoria regia at Chatsw 
th American Water iy, ae occupies a 

5 tank, built for the purpose, in on 
r three days. 


r in the course of two 


When 
that the Appie Pear, a 


ree: 

nevertheless, I 
to root ou 

n Januar 


were old, having been planted in 1794; 
was unwilling, at “one fell * * 


spring of I had t 
in the same way as the others, and the last season’s 


orth,—This very extraor- 


of the stoves at 
coming into psc and will probably | 


kpr Rees to extend their fruit-spurs 


en| The rem 
s — 16 one of my — — 
r 18. 


e vanes 
3 Land News, Mr. 
e Grapes 


forms a good pendant to the es a 8 8 
notieed in the r * ee eek or two since 
W. Masters. [Nos. 5 nat seated in * pro- 
liferous state which we * often see, but the 
which we cannot explain. The best analogy to this case 
is in — 1 ee on]. 

ous Ex upa t with Bees.— About t 
sinee, — 0 — . friends in Birmipgham wrote 
erer languid and inactive ap- 


to and one 
led bees were afte 
W. Wa, Exeter, 
2 

ter from 1 to the II. 
rt Smith states that 


n a lett 


som 
azaar, were “really an 


off the previons year, Being aware that the soil in the 


order, and that the roots 


cut carefully away by opening a trench rou 

at the distance of 4 or 5 feet from 
to the sizes and age, &c., of the trees. 
the ends s = attached — with a 
trenches were filled in again, 
next the — 
supply of sap to the demand. During th he second year 


After dre 


the stem, according 
ressing 


knife, the 
ting a litle leaf- mould 
This had the — of 9 the 


eggs.” They are called chow. cosh, ~ at least the name 

i a Grape would be an acquisition 
r of the Gardeners 

e it might easily nih intr 


— graveyard be well stocked with ants; they delight 
dry residence, but t — descend to the store. rooms 
— orm their work, have sa ee the guano 


pe VES euere 


, which, being from young vigorous bads, and 
were of large 


in close contact with the wall, 


ze and 


a fair d 
2 ger that this ean ge 
—. 


* produce to be offensive, I — 

Potato Disease.— Almos 
— confirms the opinion Seres 

ase, dryness of the soil should be carefully 
— — A Stine by | a 
gro wing the crops o or elev y 
wn experience Mig the utility of — Etter of these 


nothing respeeting the beautiful 
it and foliage = a runed 
a ilker, a oe 
Bug.—Has any gar ayer pd ee 
forki kiling the mealy bug on ine which was 5 vert 


a ago 
=e ground 4 often sound tube 


aa methods, 


soil, and diseased on the ee but 
rule had — gining cases of ex — One of the 
sou ps was on heavy land in — a second 
having a = part ene and the third — which only 
n the lightest land of the farm. 

ith — e of dun 
ith — ewt. of 


wW — ured w 
taken from the tc mS the — 
ir 


to the 


e 
g re- 
ter for escaping the 
ity, having in 

pecina ar then 


500 r with an 

gar f the Rege nt in its — 
y in attaining matur 
ar 3 


eavy low soil = really 
riest position, and thus eseaped t Two 

observed that Potatoes sevidentaly ‘left in 
in the mi 

ing grain I fancied that the 
— pre apres = might be partly the cause of 
exemption. my subsequent a 
is hypothesis, 


Fee 8 


totali y 8 variance with th 


to Dan 


S observation: , the — amount of 
evaporation for the year exceeds that of th 

by 4.569 ins. These — may be 
presumed, past ö a whenes is the supply deri 
wd — — — tity earried off in 


ich the perennial supply of 


ens 1 3 
or u upwards i in length, 1 but they — no — — or 


cause of last 


en days 
dis 


any neve 
ra 5 at seach R 
oduced. ot 


d E araeo 0 
ese 


otato 
r of your 


in with 


crop in = district had 

that is the case, though te a 
— dir — general and less des 
year. In its pro 


r 


2 
1 15 


table compost, the ne of the 
prs of blight a the end of Jul 
ers ad to artially diseased al ts 
miat y sound, and with 
en 


up about a 
Of the tele 
of the sorts 
est snch as the Trish 


Potatoes, 


it has been phe a 


f the disorder. I have iad a 
Fit though on a small seale, Last 
year the tubers ie from the sets 

u m th 


and ies = tubers 2 
ectly so I., Aberdeen, O 
Tena siki of Pagelalls Liſe.— There is 


Wingham, Ken 
Is 8 75 Cause 4. the Potato Di 


flirm that the Potato his and oi o 


ar I 
3 with 3 dng 
red with farm-y 
ad d healthy, we those to which guano 
re di in the 
of 5 85 i 
a supply e of itin a liquid 


necessary quantity, 
io 


floods is — course of a week or two i 


— at the end of and no ind ing or 
n bi and supposin 5 — to be v. 
e the size of the — body, I do not see — he — 
comes out again, except by out, n any one 
me b me oll or wherefore, these holes are what vegetables 
seratched out ? mostly on banks, not on the | hou 5 
E = = and fruit 


+h Potatoes in Aberdeenshire. —I had hoped to be able 


taken vegetables 
„ 


4 10 o'clock ; in a sh 


— — 


a Violet blue! A. Because the surface 


CHRONICLE. 


The Pear trees which occupied the sides of the 
hav 


long walk up the centre of the n e been 
8 vs rege e and we believe Roses are 2 be planted in 
ya cause they | their places, se Pear trees w 
— 4 the day before 3 about the | absorb all — e Tays of light ate Saale none. á | lastet new system of „ e 
spea ing to the cook about it, I gene- e things e? A. hey | to 1 4 an upright stem, and all the side branches 
impertinent answer to walk off with, By- ga 1 01 of the: —— of ight, bat reflect them all. from this, as they appeared, were regularly tied down and 
bles and fi got scarce, oving to the e leaves of plants - | shortened in to about 2 feet in length, or rather 
in the house. My ter came to me to | cause a hae —— Sak w called chlorophyll is and managed in this way they ormed fruit-buds in 
as that e was not sufficient vege- | formed 7 sai cells, which — e. Trees treated after this fashion oce occupy 
and fruits for the use of the famil reasoned | absorbing th s and of Pore B the blue and —4 room, which is not the least advantage of the plan 
gave him a full explanation, which satis- | yellow, “hich (eing —— pro We believe wes were slightly root-pruned. The plan 
I used sometimes to get sharply told of ith two — . must leave the | of budding instead of grafting Apples Pears is 
at the same time I wa fault. ave | subject to the piran s Sarh iet of your largely — 1 here. Many of these buds, put in 
by the servants themselves, who Q. What is the cause of wind? A. The sun heats | early in July 1848, have this seasor oots 7 fi 
were supplied with very few vegetables, | the 5 — — . earth odidi the air resting upon it; in length, and thick in proportion By this plan time 
e time there had been plenty in the | as warm air cends, the void is filled up by a rush | is saved in the production of these fi 
but 2 have been too idle to cook them. If | of cold air to the. place, and this rush of air we call All fi and more recently intro 
rrespondents would give a good plan of | win a l hoice kinds of 


for iho gardener 5 — Pst “= ay signed 
receive 


by. I believe that if such a 
ied out, it use gardener 
i employers to be better friends, and set aside 


tness among servants. Hortulan. [A 


1 ; unpleasan 
— form of list will be found at p. 723 of our 
lume 46. 


—1 veter no doubt that many 
ve had occasion to com- 


y greatly diminishes 
r 


so increases the p 
he fires 


other cases, very great. 
ut this, my gardener suggested that a plain i — 


| made to run the length of the hothouse and back 0 
in introduced the sanay about 2 
taken. 


at with this pipe we 

the temperature of the house — much 

few e from the lighting of the fires; and the 

ny è f fuel that e necessary to make 

ater boil will keep up chen mi o temperat — for 
i — ; and a saving of coal is effected of nearly 

quite three-fourths, é thus maintain a m re 

rith less fire = ‘ee bati to even warm 

Tater pipes; a case of very 

wed the sy — (ene of 30 feet and the other 

h 


re thus warmed br k 
been rae. for the 


2 that a 


Rebtel 
Dr, „Brewers 8 to Scienc 
be interestin 
—.— 
little book, containing ert simple 
would puzzle eno ee r heads 


answers to. A might ‘place a 
in the hands of his — 33 leas 


er upon the merits of a 


wers 
ar some things — one colour and some of 
every ray of nye is enpi e of all 
rainbow, e things reflect 
e p 


rays of light and 


8 wat 
liquid i is a — condu 1 2 ey but yet water is a 
n 


y mber 
— . et all the pec ino "of the rays * f light, and ae 


as we wish, | the 


d x D 
of which there 
ure | full flower 


Le 
1 to have the 


© ge 
are Sw 
e 


- | flow 
that, a quantity 


one of | ga 


the | L. have turned th 


Q. Why does the ee skin of a . onie scorch 
or blister — the h Because the black 
the 2 conveys it — siks surface 


of the skin, — converts it into sensible heat and per- 
spiration. 

Q. Why does the white European skin —— and 
scorch when exposed to the hot sun! et 


hite will — absorb the heat, therefore th 1 hot sun 
rests on the surface of ry -> and scorches i 
Q. at are clouds? A. Moisture —— ted from 
the earth and age ain 2 condensed in the upper 
Er of zas 
oper conductor of heat? A. No; 


conductor t 
enst winds i in * generally dry ? 
e over the vast continents of 
Asia — Europe) hoya absorb very little water. 
sai is — white! — Snow is — tet Be an 
very m crys 


uch better 
758 =~ 


these colours uniting before they meet the eye, ca 
snow to appear white. W. Brown, Merevale Hall, Oct. 


Garden Memoranda. 
Messrs. tare al HauuxnsurrE.—In one of 
the houses here, Lantana aurantiac 
s a 


russer, 
been gay all through the summer and autumn with the 
Shrubland Scar ri im which is still “are up 

blosso The plants from w th 


diately above — were pinched o 


more than 
bright and clear a blue that they were very 
in flower, and a useful autumn- 

Iso the 


ec 
aken together with Acacia 83 
— „Salvia azurea, and a pretty — of 
rummondi called Leopoldi. Among. ee 
llection here in 
ru 


ora; * 


ng house were sia of Lee’s varie- 
a but a 


A ple ores and others. 
ropagati 

gat: ted —— Geranium, a desirable 

nd associated with it a 


t maap ie arp. 


way — 
found that a quantity of w 


very | partment, givin the li 


longer stan The ad walk ght 
e 2 poh 5 to ee hye are lined w 

Cupre , Cryptomerias, Pinus 

Webbiana, Douglas T Fire. Ji 5 The} 8 3 m 

mpervire ews, an dars o The 

latter sate the form ‘of pillars come Fed feet — 
o hard are pad shag in; but his is — 4 to impro 


their appearance in after years. the Am Rar 8 
border we maar d some 1 — standard Rhododendrons, 


and in another part of the grounds a beautiful pyra- 
midal specimen of Minorca Holly, some 13 or 14 feet 
| bleh his is stated to thrive here better than in the 


pure air of Hounslow, thengh other kinds of Hollies 
thrive better there than at Hammersmith, 


Mi scellaneous. 
eran in Reans,— A short time — Se Du 
of Caen, se the Academ Paris 
— I specimens of Harieot Beans attacked bs by a disease 


| previously unknown to n we 
and which. was supposed r some snalog t 
to murrain. “ The disen ays M. Durand, “ has 
only attacked some of the fruit-bearing branches of 
nt. The Haricot is, however, so important an 
ticle of fi with us, that anything which is likel 
Tm its cultivation ae fail attracting public notice, 
ve therefore taken the libert | jon 
of the academy to the fist symptoms of the nt 


ase, in order that it may, if the re oye 3 


su — conseqnence, — some of i 
n | endea 


ur to ascertain the best way in 2 8 
—— may be prevented. pi M e sed Rendus, Sept. 184g. 


this country 


ese moar buzzing eA my tent. Of men a fly as. 
n 


as a small bee, of a rich green 
22 being a Hie. ere a win, 1 pei 2 
me with a hur l as the tones of an 
" Bat — habits of the — ther 
e least remarkable, judging from a oi 
ce that occurr 


in the barrel, and — in the hollow part of the 


lay beside nor honey was found 
in either of - ae e bee, coon 1 — 
observed abo ent, was as large as the Eugli 

bee, and ha a . — ” Mitchell's — Australia, 


vol. i, p. 5 
Calendar of f Operations.’ 
6 


allowed la 
they were then kept dry e 


where they now are. 
h pip being as lar 


One or pe fruit are 2 —.— to colour, and 


wellin 
As an poemi of the way in which the seprei of 
owering of some plants may be altered, we ap i 


plan 
ust done flowering. 


en 
orth in 
ve — 


essrs. cultivat es pretty 

planted by the side of the epic road, t 
sight to passers by 4p season; 
the 


elx, and bein 
ve been a 


ensure bee to 
bloomers, — — now —— p 


pomi our er. 


ffeet the end. This 
| on | heat during tho d the — — render it ne 
ae ag — thereb 


md to be inju rions very ari 
irreconcileable with the 3 * 


ter had they not 


lanted, M 
formation — pillar f | 
ds, maake have many nice spe- | 
Roses of -ags kinda, 2 ae Fae 


ciently 
—— of _ 


ues 
—. 24 free the | house and its 
moisture, un if the 


calls . 
dens cannot fail to have a good effect., 


696 THE 


GARDENERS’ CHRONIC 


= 


3 3, 
UIT Trees: H B. The Gansel’ amot succeed -E 
Pest aspect. Now is the beet time 8 
ut 


ich, d summer, 
Ep pe The bottom: eey produced 
is turned on ode 


ie of the 3 

ese three e is mulched over with som 
ecayed litter 

LORIS STS’ cf 5 

e n. t At this se of the year 
t to look 9 bait well ; Bito 
ill de! bare and Ithe W 3 . It — ll therefore } be 
eee cing a up the © pianis ad tho 


oe 


uantities 
ently ttle! improvement, This, 
ything 
N sgh cont 
of this class of plants 
> air pa 


2 apparen 


then ‘ought thence sla for assu 
would be 
i d 
them 


all thi see 
ive, This may 


e 
j bse 


Y M. Roberts on the Vine will possibly suit you.t— 


Beia book you ask about is sent to you by 7 post; with 
mpliments, Mr, n 


Loudon’s intentions 


Ban Jos kn: J B will thank Mr. Leac 
of the article on Brunsyi igia, at p. 663, 
what depth the bulbs should be pla 
stoned — ri Woes sta 

CARR 


h, the wri 
if he will ran k nie 
lanted, that 5 been 


r 
use; but 


spr’ ore are breaking into bud, and when 
eaf. 

8 In their present state your Log wood chi = 
are value! Tr you can a them = will be as A Sit 
any — tharos The sulphate of iron would do n 
—— can have no difficulty in converting the — a into — 


vou have a kene and the command o turves 
for the sides of the 
CRYPTOMERIA JAPONICA : 


„See p. 471 of our vol. for 1848. 
Darang 5 75 RTUNI: A H. 17 is 


perfectly hardy. It likes a dry 


EMIGRANTS: A Sub. Take out 8 Kind 
8 — ‘bar a warm climate: 
2 m mra a para things Vines. 
igs, &c. mmon 
ye eee Gourds, Melons, 
cums will thrive, 


of seed and plant 
enhouse eie will all 
— one Peaches, 
suit. Any good 
omatoes, Capsi- 


l require- | very easily be ascertained by an occasional examination 
= temperature according to their natural req 3 y 
ents. If their wood is properly matured they will of the soil, Torirs should be got in directly; every he south wall, you state yous mane, 10 remove . 
pr uninjured in a very cool 5 ature. ay after they have protruded a green spike is detri ig. andone Pear. They may be the Pe two Peaches, 
FLOWER GARD mental, SY an NK beds uld be gone over and} Noblesse Peaches, the rown Turkey Pig Ag the 
Where the immediate presence of the family does not | +o dressed, if the soil is of a hard and sour nature. Diston Fig 57 olka st aspect, Knight’s Hona Pana 
ist up atnesss, it is quite — * 1 at this season, after N rains, it will be the May ae Charts; — and Court of Wiek, ami 
w the leaves which are falling so ran es | necessary to stir — a rt ; and this may now be obably succeed ; at all events, if the — Currants 1 
till all or nearl down, as one cleaning up will ous with good effec 7 stand 35 N poe r may, || former shouid | 
ut the place in perfect order, as — as 5 is con LASS: o glass, whether t thic k or thin, can be 
— rned. It st, however, be born n min d, that a State of the Weather near London, for the week ending Nov. 1, 1849, . 3 . fs without bein Previously curved f . Í 
> t, as observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiswick, Sass works, unless in short lengths. As curvili: 8 
flower-garden with empty beds, however i chen and nea are generally very flat, 9-inch panes may b. e 
has a very bleak, chilling appeara alls far sho: Oct, | Moon’ s|} BanomarteR, | THERMOMETER. | | ‘wan. laa 8 We believe that the advantages of ¢ used without 1 
of the idea of a pleasure- ground, according to an English- and Nov, Age. N Min. || Min. Mean bach ty 3 . — Ts ` — he timber, strains i 
n’s taste. h a state of thin pS Friday.. 26) 10 || 29.800 | 29780 |} 60 f 42 | 51.0 || Sw. || or n application to the parties would p — : 
where there is the advantage o garden, as | Sat e ened BAZ. || Ot | armo ca B. ad better use 4-inch pipes with i 
sufficient shrubs kept, in a very small space of | $u Ses N A ETE 8." || ‘00 | fire. What do you mean by 500 square feet of air? asak 
ake the landscape during winter cheerful, | Tues. . 30) 11 20.315 | 99.990 || 6 39 50. 8. 00 wardens. The heated air should have been let into Church a 
ground, to ma rng, . 5 Med. .. 3I) © |} 29.802 | 29.495 || 54 | 34 | 440 || SW. || 100 | immediately after quitting the cock; the church 
if not spree beautiful. Weadverted to this su bject * 3| 16 |} 29.605 | 29.439 || 57 | 35 | 460 || S. B. 0 used by underground drains, in the mannef u ied Pack when i 
me tim k, but not so fully as it deserved ; and — verage. 894 || 59.8 | $9.0 49.4 0.05 the air into the church next the furnace, de } 
hope that — who have not already done what is Oct. 24. Sight flying « 6 z tings except the on most remote from the furnace, This 
ecess 2 e no time in accomplishing it. It iss, — 2 Hazy with slight rain; ace 8 ee 9 gA — ght, Make the aperture for al. 
— — r at ni air 
not of e expected that the beds canali be Z %—poens* exceedingly fin fine iba ret very high; clear. aportares rnae be too large n Conveniently esa, Sack 
2 rent =i e; 8 
fil ed with, towne plants; but they may with nic 55 . Nen HN if 3 iron roofing hes been 
dwarf bushy plants of handsom e Evergreens II pos- | Nor. platine throughout: clear at 3 . for Dilko in which it is advisable to exclude the 
sible 8 1 — er Mis taken of the w flowerin mm Stat wie heat at — during the last 23 years, for the ligh eka above, s —— — 5 Can some corre. 
shrubs we ha 1 Would een n pasta e 
. Pan Mensiesia, &e., and these ay he Prevailing Winds. consequent consu 70 and the 
be helped judicious selection of plants wea | wea 15 3 Greatest | _________| Manure: 5 — of the various woods you mention 
— variega ted 8 gold and silver tints off Ne. Ss | S28 FSE | which ic | Quantity Sluse] | will form ou must take care not to mel 
i AE Rained. zl fel lal is —— “otherwise you wil run the risk of burning the 
which contrast prettily with the dark green, and at — ees eee crops with which it may come in contact. Better mix it 
a t distan ay be easily k or flowe Sunday 4| 50.6 | 365 f 435 1l 0.44 in. 2) 3} 3| 2] 3] 5| 3 2 arth and turn it once or twice befi te 
We have at times mentioned early flowering herbaceous Ge ye ie HOME Ea 2 ere is — ga 5 the appearance 3 
„ Which may be planted nearer the edges of the | Wed. a oy | ara | des] as 102 =] 1/3) 3/4 pas) ae — ey 55 5 — e Bat 
ds, and outside of thes all patches of Crocuses, | Pudar 3 Bs 29] 10 9.4 111046304 ae 
Snowdrops, Hyacinths, &c., may be introduced. T s | Satur. 10 507 | 380 | 2 a 5 . 3 sea — 25 the Miaa "Ther et 8 
last should be plante d pretty near the edge of th PM ng Waa gorge po iie “th, isis; Pia Isis Sue wat | too fine to produce much mechanical effect unless usd i 
as they will thereby be less in danger of being disturbed isi8—therm. 22 dex, _ oe eed ta bara . ake 
when the shrubs are removed, and the beds filled w eae ee SEn AMES OF FRUITS ymer 2, No 1 4 
n 3 . in; 4, Old Nonp areil ; 
half-hardy plants in May. Tue shrubs we generally — tices to 8 ents eae 6, Cou et panda E Plat; 9, Riketon Pi W Po 
addition to the above, are small bus lants of | To ovr 3 o be understood that | Ingestrie j= LEM. ,Catillac; 2, Winter Nelis; To wn Beurré; 
A P we cannot answer ing pe Aid. Mout the White Do oyen 1. Urine Queen + 2, 2 d : 
Rhododendron ponticum, Pernetty mucronata, Gaul- | re ady to give veabonable information through Far N a basch. 1 etta hate nada 6, 5 80 of Wine 
theria, Tree Box, &e, These are removed with but we cannot consent to the labour of writing lette e 17, Fa mon Pippin; 12, 13, Dutch Mignonne : 15, 
balls of earth, and in spring are returned to their places | ASPARAGUS: 4 B. The Biscayan mode of cultivating it; ] Minchall Grab; 17, Franklin’s Golden 'Pippia; 18, old Golden 
in the res rde In addition e take ca recorded by Captain u aa at p. 147, 1846, 8 to form Pippin; 20, Vexande r; ravenstein; 2 
; 8 k 7 n idth, an any convenient length, an x ? : ; 20, Adams's 
have a constant succession Aegean on 8 various size w the n March in two drills, 2 inches in depth, and DARN 7S te mie SS ae ines Golden Golden 
so that when any of them are grown too large for ye 18 inches irom t the 8 fete leavin a nee of 2 feet b Pippin nil 
tween the drills, en the seedlings are about 6 inches in the fruit of Pas- 
P * finally planted out in appropriate height, they are thinned to something more t a foot apart. — 8 3 8 ee Errerm. 
ump Water is act — — — day among the alleys and over 465, Saponaria a, 334, Saponaria vaccaria.—Mark 
FORCING DEPARTHEN = ese seedlings an abundant and Newton. Cassia levigata, a common g enhouse shrub.—L M. 
ERIES.— Do not allow the cold weather to sea lup constant 3 of fluid during the sone of their growth. | 4“ wretched e 1 Kobl gi Turnip-rooted d. 
the Fontaine of these hoùses; the admission of air| This is 25 San belt orog 8 Pa . int cimess bage, ~ ates cultivated alt éver Germany and Holland— 
must of cou gr ally Pike Gi d my accordane year, In Mar S are covere Or 4 inches in t ic 5 AF. The Bladde der-nut, Staphylea trifoliata. ; 
2 : e! with town sewerage, which remains on them ring t he seed in March. Sod wad br s 
with the advancing se t this is a very different summer, and which is lightly dug in during ee succeeding Phaseolus Caracalla. the Snail-flower.—P K C. i 
matter to almost discontinuing it ery few nights pas autumn ; the irrigation being continued as du e first | is the common Lentil, and may be purchased of all dealers in 
without our plants having at least some portion of air, Season. In the third Ci n Asparagus = agricultural seeds.—Sarah. 1, British (?); 2, Deschampsia 
. m 8 ? fit for cutting, all its A e 1 aah izant: 2): 4, Avena 35, 
dependent of t obtains ingress by means of i cxspitosa; 3, Festuca gigantea (%); 4, 
pende gress by means anure being du 1 ‘te autu econd yea Brachypodium sylvaticum ; 7, Agrostis vulgaris; 8, Festuca 
Let wat y sparingly used this dull and when it does begin to sprout, i fin ds cits Toots in contact docs 9, Agrostis vulgaris; 10, Bromus asper (); 0, 
weather, but have an eye to those plants whieh stand 120 PLA $ aa ed ear 8 Mui 5 5 Agrostis alba; 12, Holeus lanatus ; 13, Agro * i 
i i mus arve 
BERE 300 UNEB OF hot er Piper, AB they are liable to dead leaves, to the mg of about 8 inches. The cutting does bint ee lis glomerata ; de as Gs are notina state for exact ö 
et d fore their neighbours. VI ꝶRIEs — All the not commence till t he plants peep jaroh this covering, | P Beth 4 
1 woe 3 7 determination. March.? 
houses from which the fruit is cut l this time þe when it is sarean removed from the stems, in order that New ZEALAND SEEDS: A HC. Sow them in 1 l 
ted int + th ire to b the finest only may be cut, which are rendered white by the j 
converted into ouses ; the Vines require to be soil? & overing, an 11 succulent by the excessive richness of the | PaxTon’s CoTTAGER’s CALEND aers t ee oe osie 10 tor dit- 
kept cool and dry, and the plants want very nearly the] soil, In the autumn of the ae d year, after the first cutting, | Price 3d. each copy. Parties pa, e supp the rate 
same treatment; frost, however, must be carefully ex- th a, a, and th e beds are again dressed with Yt con ce for on tenantry, ca 
1 oper: annu ally. ies . tl rough about 
a: ma Fail 125751 pianis vidi 5 ta aA tempora ry ty etA 85 “nts, the aoe ragus ground is so situated that PRUNING, Ee. B. Breaking bran f laterals X below the 
dormitor oy the beds are half u sale water at nioe} tides August will 8 cer production d ae ae 
perfectly clean and free hoe insects sof all deserip iptions, Insects : John Pe 5 is American blight, and may be wound; that is all you — rip phir permost, but up 
or these latter will leave broods behind 1 8 78 15 killed op wore spirit, 3 S deep Pe: you can ue 
85 very 8 sanp ther season, If possible, avo te . c how Ge 2 3 — 
putting plants into those houses in which the ruit i is still able to 3 en ace wb — 1 dP entity, that 20 
hanging ; hat. if 158 ted to do so, let them be of Th rk dependa ieee the ther aun Sanaa 
such kin: e th all F price can be given, not bate the m hich it is quite in 
4 Pat Aea Cr: smallest quantity « of water price, or they will heat you in the work, w 
uring win such as Crassulas e iums their power to lo. summer 
or other tant Udalen plants. As the leaves of the =< 2 65 aaar Aot wit in ensuing sass, 
1 + event you ir . PRN.. 
Vines ripen, let them be r removed ; pinching t Sulphur will kill mildew, if it be applied the moment üs 
at the apex of the leaf, and leaving thè foot-stalk to fall mildew appears. That is the ptained the 
off when its oe pe comes. Forcin Insure Rožat Borio G. We pipt eared in 
a sufficient supply of Rhubarb, Seakale, and sparagus, last year’s accounts. to hare, the account 
by introducing successions at regular intervals, accord- Angust 1o the ie re necessary tö do soe 
ing to the supply required and the quantity of plants to make things pleasant,” t og —— 3 hare Bie i n0t 
eet it. In selecting Seakale pl: th t . of the year. 
which showed the earliest indicati f ri by for us to explain this reluctance o ap rab 1 
' a 


TRICHOSANTHES : Amicus, We don 


7 ; £ you hang 
Warts wi WITH GLAZED SASHES IN dier, — If you barg 
sashes in front of a Peach = to: reach tow tow, bat 


as to have the means 5 e 7 arh 5 — eae 


Ara th i 
were found to be retarded rath into jou 
Misc.: J Abell. The driving a few sn 2 
will not harm it; par the; 3 ae A 
ult a 9 8 

n "justices to — “0”; what may be 5 y 

P. 4 5 — In our weekly tab F weathe ich 
AAE mum 2 — p that of the day Lare 1s that we 
it is placed, and inimum í of 

ogg | day pian fer 

d to the barome e m 7. M. are 
suse Suny ot observations 8 A. M., 1 P. ree Lad oeality, ” 2 
The account, occas y, of rain 
very acceptable. || 

SEEDLING FLOWERS. 19 0 pebi mil 
MELLIA! J Hand Co. eo —— ar paper Le 
— Soa ponparen fet; t dere 275 s 
t i A 1 
Abe than the eld 7 . = dsrk 
nearly round, Boom her ar Are A l 
n; a 1 i 

shining green i a T oar white ze leg 1a . 


e have been 
d eine communications 
A 9 — ‘others are unavoidably aiso beg P 
nquiries can can be made. We mus 


and prety 
w 


ROYAL LETTERS | 


PATENT, 


PATENT HOTHOUSE | “WORKS, KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA. 
DENCH invites the attention of Gentlemen about 
t Hothouses, &c., to the vast superiority in eve 

E aid by his PATENT HOUSES, ee he will 

sespect P uperzor in every respect to any others Glass 

were to to 21 oz. per foot, 1 foot wide, i 3 feet 12 furnished, 

7 g=: Houses ‘when completed charged from 1 3d. 

i 255 foot 


cordin 
5 


oa 
roof — rmed w wood or ro Ale ped the 
— le be 
racks e 


requiring no paint, from 7d. t er ft. 
ING BY HOT WATER, 


BIT’S y Paes AGRI. 
i n-lane, London, 
— ——— 


—— Surveying, Levelli D Railway Engineer- 
&e., may be obtaine d it Messrs, NESBIT's Academy, in 


EsBIT’S works on Arithmetic, Mensuration, Gauging, 

> Surveying, English 1 oo are publishe a by Lo. ae. 
Ax and 4 and may be had o e 

. of 1 2 ool aa — Bad on . either 


is prepa 


Scotland. 


Brid e-street, Blackfriars. 
, GUANO, AND OTHER MANURES.— 


a ieas on sale; 


mproved me 0 
the Tank 88 to 8 8 Houses, 
which atmospheric heat as well as bottom-heat is 

to any re degree, without ie 1d of piyes or —— 

so to state that at the request of ae a 

apap their Boilers of Iron, a 


peration prospec s will 
3 as well as ienris of the highest conver; ; or 
may be seen at most s the TORT s seats and principal 
throughout the 


er Par inform 


beg to 
Ss geet every article required for the construction 
‘Obtained > 


ural Buildings 


Wood e upon the most 


HOT WATER APPARATUS, 
„o. 


LSE A, Manufacturer of from 


and ren- 


g. Flower 2 Pheasantries &e, 
BUILDINGS, Green and Hot thouses, Conser- 
€. The ps heated by eee APPARATUS 
p may ged ad 17 
< 


N AFIELD CLUB, 1 


849. 0 = 7 — Show of 
STOCK will take i 
a 


— on Tuesday the 1 Wednes- 
th, and re _ th oh Decem- 
Baker-street. Printed Forms = 


of the RED-STRAW WHITE and 


0 0 
remittance. Sacks 
be supplied at 5s. 


mpani y 
itfield, Berkeley, Gloucestershir 


_ WINTER 9 
Jons Morton, Wh 


SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 


man Bo FOR 


THE — FOLLOWING EKS. 
e — ltural Imp. Society of — 
Sricultural Imp. Society of Ire 


were re- 


a 
ood rants "sh the “re put in with | j 
o 9d. p a 


WEST OF ENGLAND ANB 4 


an 3 a 


ingdo 
the Trade that at their Manufactory, ih 


= conies, Palisading, Field and Garden | 


WHEAT er Sais at 50s. per quarter, good | and adver 


Agricultural Gazette, pi 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


present autumn has 
W ree which, if at a 
hl 


lar one in 


he neigtioartio od of Hereford 
in a variety nearly allied to the Bristol or Spalding | 
Red, if not a 1 identical with it, and w 

precisely the s 


e appearances in Wheat of the 
n 


e 

e of the parien is found 
be —— . unaffected; the layer of vertical 
— . me ing — generally 3 glutinife- 

ss dera ed and stained, as in 
the dener par oi inh — w ith some brown 
matter, which tinges more ess ae 3 

he fecular cells however, as far as 
remain perfe af and colourless. It is salable ‘that ir in 
p gra the 


of any p a 
me x of aas L e aiB] derange- 


Tus time is rapidly approaching when the agri 
cu aitia history of the first half a in nineteenth 
i d 


fina 
m openly exhibited in a —.— of all 
others the 10 vexatious -$ the feelings of mankind 
—namely, that of its victim 
It is not an uncommon thin ng in social life to s 
an individual Leg . resisting and rese nting 
the advi pen the aes of enem 
pu 1 95 in solitary se self- 1 the ever 8 
e e, of his fatuity throughout a long care 
e 


roduced a singu 
— 1 will taken 
*. — mples. The firs 


f| burst of na 


w ole, the 
and the re he 
tactics of procedure. N 
politics or L N of gen a each p these 
The Trader may hav warm 
wer * — — prodace a 
‘free trade’ doctrines— 


away upon their respective line of marc totally 
opposite directions. non curat’ is 
the unavoidable motto of parties who do not make 


“Foreign Com mpeti ition” 
it loomed ever in 2 dista 


was! port 
nce, more or les f formidable 


‘the older 
city, however, severe 
erg the coming shock 


ching more, no 

rest a the world. 

a drage” Sias one ofp und W i is— 
ask 

When the n body falls to the ground from 

1 artificial eee in obedience to the eternal 

of natural gravity, do we blame the E Earth it falls 

on a for not bei 


=~ 
D. 


e false Ne it accepted, a 
false se seb: its accredited! we 
de 


b 
l the ma 


main how 
e who have been its 3 remain its ee 
a long as the faintest, the e 1 
resuscitation getos, op other the — 
tural expression. In "the we mber - the 
recent — the . — is still stifled into w 


rency. 
that did not drag him, instead of 5 eng him, 
his too late discovered e uch will one 


in the 
guage, n armer, not of 


the Far 
of the ee alone, but of every individe 
nected with the soil mre the — of ‘this 


country, when the —— eventful series of years, 
dating from the commencement to the middle of the 
rE he century, comes 80 fit for its picture to that 


unflattering 8 es takes posthumous portraits— 
to si ow Hist 
vil remain 


friendship | the de 


A struggle, of fifty years 


e 
one is yet unrealised, 
elieved. But ane . 

Rule of mortal ity 
t may be, is ended; and 

e will not look any in the face—why it stares in 
EN ins 

It is 


1 Lak 


The 5 — n the 1 not the — bat 
. be the st sufferer, stares bewildered at ihe 
tofa 1 for Corn, long ner common 
o all the world beyo e narrow limits o fe 
Brith is, ce further depressed by : 
fter 


ti wever, clear 
ons arising fom constitutional disorder 
which deper 


o those 


a er various 


opposite principle of Competition, and of Cheapness, 
d unde 


3 


| upon the former. 


ent of u ee, per 


ears’ cere eee e se e prosperity of 
ar and 5 ty, and term zarm | in the struggles 
of Peace and Plenty | In plainer and 
more ssc pt es phrase—the declension of the price 
of a Bushel of Wheat r Fiftee lli “ae we Win 
Such, without one iota of exaggeration, withou the pense t 
5 of mere rhetorical paradox, will be the curious ee ex . — pani impression 7 — 
„tale he will have to tell, and, what will be more bim, oi ba 3 4 peer Sad 
' | troublesome, to account for. ut, troublesome as it eshte dies Pacliamen 
ay be this will be a small part, a mere outline, of of ks Wirt ears trying with all thewealof 
his task ; for if he venture t his eye a little | Oit 3 vain—to And i out. 
wider, over the other arts and industrious pursuits) Then he makes a blund ring | against the 
of the nation during the cotemporary P. he Tithes’ Alas! the Commutation Act points sig- 
have to meet t = et ate el “i icantly tos En „ has ted the 
simultaneously Dril th every other branch of 3 eg, . ee. Clergy.’ 
rade and industry. Whilst laws are made 2 = Foiled here again of a butt for natural wrath to 
— to, and fortunes staked upon the faith of, the renik tuela turns, s after a moment of des- 
psa dii perate Goap —upon ree sok “landlord — a 
ment, he om see in 125 her nae . is too high —Who mode What 


698 THE AGRICULTURAL wien 


—— ancy and payments of them that receive it. debts under 20s. or 30s. - still — worth — 


expense of getting in. He is a fort . who can | give me the enquiring mind, not oe 
— es ut factors — the sp ae — =- made the — * in — 108. in the 3 = his debts ; ~~ of science. What hoy is th 
c: 7 
fact, a more general system of ready money payments what power of maintenance 
Competition that made the Rents? — wise 8 in ired ; and amongst Plage few of my cus- | whirl of life, of a set of men 


have lamented it, whether owners or occupiers : ‘and tomers who 3 3 the principle it has been . their “ plodding ” state and dlncosny N 8 

few of either class have — 5 nent or solid to answer the purpose both of the baker and the con- |“ Bill” is to affect them? How their dear! 
benefit from a system which encouraged the fright- | sumer. hen you further consider that from 5s. to 6s. | experience is to tell upon the aristocrati . 
ful mischief of large holdinge with small capitals, per sack is the extent of a baker’s profit when all | hitherto have awed the shrinkin i 
the natural and baneful — of competition. | deductions are made, and the number of sacks worked | echo, a vehicle, and too often as a victim? One of the 
Wh h i 


he Competition? up by the country trade does not exceed five or six, I | first effects of free-trade will be to rescue the i 
How many of those who in 1815, in 1823, in think few persons will eat their loaf. — acknow- | of the country from political slavery, and pe; — 
1828, itn essed and took part in the inauguration —— that what pro ofit there is on it is fairly earned. first effort of their eufranchisement will be — i 
and continuance of that System, under whose fall w that the price of bread is a subject of i inquiry, of the multifarious and contradictory customs 


to that far 3 oe wish to offer a fact for the consideration of to outgoing and incoming tenants into a unifi — 
we r — 5 we —— — ye T samti he present | well-defined system of valuation, that 8 
founders of the National Debt. Spare your anger, P 0 ed 


EN 
8 
ou 
8 
a 
— a 
5 
2 & 
be =| 
8 
a 
— 
— 
© 
5 
5 
71 


er, 
markets, a price at which it is well known that any “rights of pr i. e., proper 
the sea i = z large tracts of land cannot pay for farming, and much | having been employed in permanent unexhausted 
wind that vexed it died yesterday. “The parents | even of the best districts is scarcely. worth holding. | improvem 
have eaten sour s and the children’s teeth are Now, if Wheat were to advance 10s. per quarter, it Polities have terrified people because forced 
set on edge.’ The mischief of five-shillings-a-bushel | would only cause a rise of Id. on the 4-Ib. loaf or 4d. | them at an election, when party strife, family ambition, 
is born ei the mischief of fifteen. ost ve It needless — say that that would be an or dirty jobbing have alternately supplied the motive 
But it be replied, and with truth, that the im e boon to the farmer, and that he would be for a contest, but if such practices continued to 
mischief at present existing, and complained of, is highly “delighted to pay ihe xtra 4d. per Ib. for his | the world we should get from bad to worse, and honest 
not the whole esi of this fall—z. e. the eclen- bre The caleulation, — a man rows 100 acres men would despair of reformation. Surely with 3 
— of a ve lf century in the > ice of corn from 120 | of Whea at, is easily made, and the result is certain ; but | liberal education the modern farmer will imbibe more 
to 40 shillings per quarter in England, but the — — not 3 ey conid a who —_ 3 5 =e 3 2 pn re to 
; i extra price if t ops | respect him also, i propositions before 
ove venom O poeti — — = frer uented — of old, in —— ad of —— eee as gia eyes as a national assessment, in i trial emplo erg 
t fall of h smaller nt, wit from | ‘Ted 3 g ‘ U ment of 
Fifty shillings ta tei: "The tes val Taxes and now are; no sale for their wana stock, and the. greatest | prisoners, pauper farms, statistics of agriculture, emigra. 


year. 
y to pro very n e, for the evil. 3 of bread, can never make the difference | ment of leasehold tenures, the consolidation of hi 
It was r ‘ventilated — Wheat s suddenly between a good and bad trade. Then, again, ask the | acts, &c., affecting the weal or woe of all classes, of i 
fell from 80s. to 70s., steadily and warmly sug- | labourer who now receives from 2s. to 3s. per week less | sexes, lightening the burthens of one parish, heaping 
ested when the 70s. gradually sunk to 60s., and | himself, besides losing from 3s. to 1s. each for those two | them on another—all such matters will exercise the 
Foot quietly but prominently ae during the great boys, whose appetite is by no means diminished, pr ag ig and, to a variable extent, affect the 
gentler evolution which saw the Os. dissolving into e he would not rather pay the 4d. per lb. extra of the farmers, and therefore demand o 
t 


r aS A 


8 ut what 
meanwhile ? Does it afford a very practical evidence 
of the application of the ora suggested ? er 

they r —— ree 8 A as! practical reality | . 
seg the o Rowo ner hei the student of 


a and until 
habits and their consequences excepted. —— again, thing tangible shall appear, without reproach, as the 
to mind the state of the union-houses last year ; politics of agriculture 
— full — were of men willing to work, but unable to cience cannot alone ae for the exigencies of the 
t fifty- Sore 8 N one glance down its ob and let any one imagine what will | unprepared ican ven energy itself cannot aeaa i 
statistical columns, than he is heard muttering, with e ence the troubles consequent eh famine and low prices i 
astonished look, something about ‘inverse ratio’—| we still continue to refuse to Pay this extra farthing. | pauperiem rime depress industry and inteligens; | 
puzzle of puzzles both in —— and meaning, | Surely when the extra difference in the amount of the | eaution ghd 6 a acl of endu saa will help to 
those who tried to protect their own bargain by poor- rates is added to the feat dil, but a poor balance the dawn of a mor 12 8 period, with ‘onal 
enhancing the number of bidder. Fo it. will remain to compensate = so much distress to all — ent and survi irengih to avail him in be 
To his 9 eye the pania of the half-cen- | parties Foams And, lastly, when the — rds market. Look at tho great fail in prices of store stock 
tury is the — of an, € Inve e Ratio, —of a receive urgent requests 8 their tenants for an abate- of all kinds during the past month, as contrasted with 
Remedy, for a growing m schief, continually pro- ment of rent, which the present price of corn a — ck the unexpected steadiness spe upward — | 
posed, and as continually contra ned dy its pro- must almost enforce, let them ask the —— for Wheat at 40s., and Barley at 288. per quarter, and enn | 


2 
@ 
8 
B 
8. 
A 
8 
= 
5 
4 
a 
* 


ir Whose benefit they make the sacrifices, I am sure I | any one with corn to thresh and stock to sell disregard 
eee its Sh rth, and f it it, again, bilit certain d if speak the anne of the farmers when I — “the ey | the aspect of affairs a eee, If a disastrous war ensues, 
poss » and its prac icability; or in er a would rather No abatement | prices will leap with elastic force. Under any cireum- 


* 
oa 
* 
O 


things, and in the bosom of the Future, there exist pensate for the loss they have sustained. But, must it | drawn to agricultural produce, even peace 
indeed an Alternative. not be followed as soon as granted by a curtailment of steadiness, and general ae ent increase the con- 


— ———— and necessarie 

ICES OF BREAD AND FLOUR. servants and other dependants must be reduced both in | stuffs, J. W., Peterborou 

In 2 1 7 aper of last week I saw an article on the | number and salary, and many of those emjoyments and ä 
prices of — and flour, 8 written by a person pleasures given up; and for what? To support a THE FARMERS’ “PROSPECTS. 
who has no idea of wha at he is writing about ; and as he | reduction in the price of bread of one farthing per Ix the article which appeared in the Agricultural 
wishes for ry e on bs subject, I can only say | pound, which is not of any consequence the con- Gazette of the 20th inst., signed “ P.,“ and headed as 
asa miller I shall be most happy to give it. Had there sumer, generally speaking, when put in comparison | above, it is admitted that the 2 free-trade 
e profit on a sack of flour ones ich he speaks of, | with the serious loss in the value of farming 1 and | « has — — the tenant farmer in difficulty 


4 

E 

| 

$ v e- stated how deep a a And . 

was with gratitu le to the public, and have recom- quent demoralisation of the lower classes, It is only d of full 20 t. below former averages.” 

mended my connection to the tender conscience of my the more wonderful that so many Pome of severe 2 of that article it is aseerted ’ 

Successor, and retired with an ample fortune. The price | politieal contest should have elapsed to gain so small a that, “In truth the tenant had no interest in 

of Wheat from 3 that quality of bread is — reduetion in the price o z bread as one farthing per pound. n. i „ l é 

which constitu itutes three-fourths of the consumption of A Miller and Farmer same article, will certainly not reconcile the farmer to 

; . i * look his position 

i 

: 


POLITICS, wit od heart. Alen 
selling t to the baker wholesale. for 30s. sack. Eight Boon 

bushels of the above weight will make 25 stones of flour, | beneits lasting” PRG Ao we recom Se ile vim an | For how many laras aro there whereon 
offals, after 2 the waste in 0 Sa. 8 such knowledge as the paiz 1 — “bet one For h . 

er n other ir 

ng — ressing, (omer a profit of 4s, per ———— no Edinburgh Fa Review, No. 182, p. 3 e other erops and 
1 deference to “C, sr ~ „ love “of “ prac- makes as much, it appears, as by all his he 
st 8 l in 


wear ving a great distaste for party politics, I stock together, fel manner i 
bts, | am still of opinion, that the acts of ae legislature have | employs upon these, and the very skilful b 
o momentous an influence on the i 2 haaati of which he carries out the excellent eno growir al 

state | property invested in land, and the | umber of | adopted. If he should be obliged to limit the groma srg 
* ns and other — people dependent upon its application t ie a journal | Potatoes, as probably he will shortly, to à will be 
The 2 Some difference in those expenses. professing to advance the inte: ests of farmers — quantity for his own use, his marketable produce will be 
‘hea a for the 1 the profit on grinding. altogether D the o inions of public = ei, or a reduced in value ope- foui and bis p a Sn, 
s tb, fore: ae en ~ of good flour will make survey of the a tendency of public measures small indeed for a person of his intelligence an 
ee A ements evance i ws: 

is no an TE 123 it follows that if the baker may admit of remedy, and so — obstacle to In round numbers, one-third of his farm 3 d 
gi ves flour, t 10s. improving the position, present esta oar or — — year ‘been cropped wi 2 — „ 
e must prospects of —— men. 5 ear per ens 


-opped with grain, Turnips, 
f; i ‘ar ex ‘on cattle, &c. a 
general management of. — goa ; he “eschews| rasa, do. ; value thereof, pr pire ra IS ag) 


poe, I know such a man, and man like him, who | , 10s. per poss ou 
in only the common os of the sging is little better otal amount of incom 
book. | than a goose; his own labourers are a reflection of Deduct, ‘if the 18 bo” $ iliona und 725 ; 
| himself, sober, e and contented men, but he Po the tee aon — 9 — difference between 281 9 0 
cannot deal wich refra ractory ones, and unless they were Sz, 10s. and 17l., or one-fourth of the wholeince 5 . 
. — by — spirited ” farmers than himself, the gh p 25 
surplus bour, in the shape of cunning invalids or Expe interest € on capital, ‘2 
— eee reprobates, 8 e the constable, harass * diaro o, (cluding least See : 
| the relieving officer, and defraud the pari He vote: i 
un eee yi with his landlord ; he would not ——— course a — Pett; sement, meet — Warte a -g9 
even Permission, for the Indies. Is this Pests Be. T 


ll | the soil *C, B” expects to work with advantage in 


44—1849. ] 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 699 


| — at 
i — ditto, at 


e a Farmer,” writing 

Coun’ rmer,” writing in | support of 
g FE Coanty Dora —— in a letter to the Editor 
Mr. the Mark Lane Expre ae = Ta income for the 


. 42920 0 0 
oes — — 0 


uu his estimate he ‘values the Potato crop ‘at 75 k ‘tien, 


gi. per ton, which is 
worth Tae Wheat ] he 


nly low for a good 


gaquestionably high at current prices. Profit on cattle 


| tep at 6l. 10s. each, which is 


H 
— 
Q 
2.2 
S 8 
“oO 
= 
i 
3 
0 
P 
8 


nor e ee 


eee — 


ET 


An Ray Ban of this 


. 
, 


1711 


n goo 


also high, and cca 


e this, however, as it 
e considered impartially 
e can fail, I think, to see 


e 
A : w Scotlan 
that it not an agricultural truth that h high farming, I,and so are hundreds of English farmers who, at 


sere Beg so for 
e bee 


s for having made us 1 therewith. 

he attempt which has been eto make out a 

n support of the e woe! is neither su 
on 


this account that 


Jaird i is e — by 80 many, ; think, deservedly, 


s 
or diss en 8 whole 


cannot be regarded as 


ea. I beg to state that I shall be glad to oe 


see your columns exclusively devoted to the ae and 


of agriculture, or open to full, fre rank fai ey 

— of all political questions beai ii 

And with respect to the former, a pie di 2 * this 
it i 


h those of London, a calculation must be made of tbe 


The sea “ makes so 
manure.” 
blame to him for this ! 


pages prices, find it 
third or even le 


staggering to a eg 


superiority of d 


eep over m y 
Till very lately 1 always advocated a 23 feet drain, as 
it hasa tendency to mislead and do mischief va a ry o 
tha: 


an annual present of 500 loads of 
es it and no questions asked ; small 
! I wish I had a similar chance. 


no easy matter to make ends meet, 
ss, of the 


Southrons, I agree with “ W.“ i 
that the whole thing is 
ion.—Dr. Lin ey has completely converted me to t 


vator and the harrows will give — the command of 
opportunities for ridging up, manuring, and sowing, 
No cleaning 2 a 4 isite. As soon as the plants 
are up, Garrett’ ith one i 


each row, to stir the soil 3 or 4 inches deep, ra bya 
light horse or a stout pony, We have already double 


e 
9 inches — 5 and put the hoe over it prior to sowing 
che Clovers. We recommend th roceedings with 


nominal Seotch rents; confidence, having, with the — peg of yen last, put 
bat even here r. M‘Culloch 15 ſavoured above his t i ion i 


e sma 
eposited near the surface, we ee a the 
ili th 


| 
experimental seale, with fi ms thermome ters inserted | an 


cation, — very effective Sichel; though I take for 
grante 


re is some 
at foot, — rein the tem 


u z be 29° — 1 4 feet —. inet in the teeth ‘of his 
i 


wn argum that te 
depth at which the 


2 marks will be ſound useful 


were 3 rolled down, and not Samael in, The 
result is the most perfect covering of the soil I have 


were sown in the spring. C. L., Cirencester, Oct. 29. 
Small Farms.—I take the liberty of as sn 
nother article on this su ‘by many 1 ia that you 


mistake in the — —— seribing properly, I will Kis to you my exact case, I 


mperature at 1 foot dee 


the | 


m a clergyman, with a small living and an increasi 
| family, My income is about 3002. per annum, 461. 
which has been hitherto derived from the rental of 16 


— — ter is inserted in the acres of glebe attached to the living, but which my 
ou to i i he 


gr Perhaps the figures ht been | tenan now given me notice ll quit un- 
algo e suggest that it is most im- versed, and the temperature at 1 foot 22° and 4 feet | less I subm t reduction in the ren 

tant that we should have none other than standard | 99 ; thcugh I cannot understand ither ; seeing | may well suppose that what with rates and taxes, sub- 
measures used in effecting sales of a me kind. t 0 s a very improbable degree of cold at ptions to schools and ! charities, and the nu- 

nt there is, ae | uniform practice, Rh ights | 4 feet below the ‘surface, even in on st | merous other calls upon the house of a clergy 
us winters. e ——— of Mr. Bernays, of Derby, it is an objeet with me to tu 16 of glebe 

to the best account. The soil is rich but sa ex 

hi 


por 
Wei 
At 

Mh 
a prices can “bee compared with ekk i other, or 
dif 


erence in the weights ra =y Such ought 0 
case 


ng resolution, paint coed at a meeting of 
ronmasters fro ies i 


depressed state 
_ Wontrade: “ the present depressed state of the 
igin and is entirely caused by the 
ow rate of duty at which English iron is admitted into 
his er the tariff law of 1846, and its i 


0 
country, we, in the United States, can never compete 
vith the English iron masters, except by a reduction of 


to the pauper rates of that cou ntry, or protection 
a ti 


„8g 
2 
i 


. 
that i 


5 


J 
0 
f 
EE 
S 
ER 
SE 
8 
z 
5g 
5 
Pu 


may requi 


25 
2 
$ 


4 
F 
E 
ge 


Ragland owes 2 on 
Which greatne 
she has = 


enjoy 5 
erish her n3 


in Eng 
he will 3 rather ant to 


ss to the wise 
enjoy —— — * — which she 


is not the wish of any of 


. 
og 


our exertions to procure 


= which can only be secured by a duty 


I cannot, however, wa 


es 
d o 

a = 8 
* 
F, 
© 
re 
E 
© 
22 
=} 
. 
a 
o 
8 4 
8 
E 


e 
ire, or the community at 


— ol eannot—she will not—adopt | 4 
; — I will not say our, but the policy which 


e policy | e 


protective laws 


to co e great, and 


what 
done so 


are also very interes resting, as confirming the advantages | 
f d na 


f 
viso that deep draining s should always 


whieh 


e system ; but — this pro- . it. It is situated about four miles from a city con: 
mpanied | taining 20,000 inhabitants, and oe is mm aman intely 
with proportionately deep stirring of the — without poaten ous t 
4 pa , — a naught.— Mr. Martin | barn and capital sheds, capable of — pede into 
e ay areas till he is black in the face before he | stalls for 10 cows, es ling for or three horses. 
persuades Englishmen who have any value for their might perhap be able to in addition a four 
in esa i k 2 —— adjoining arable or pasture ! glebe is 


on this v er je ss 


offered farms there on 3 sara tempting terms—th ree | eminen 
I asked myself this —.— question, 


— renewable, pod 


Will one life (my own) be renewa ble in the event of 


3 
o 
œ 
p 
8 5 
8 8 
g 
— 
a 
© 


ecisi 
of which I pried never repented. Samuel Taylor, Barn- 


wood, ae 
Mai 


at — seen no mention of the results of 
as 


ts w 
rich soil, in the most sheltered part of 2 pon near | 


the sea shore in the neighbourhood of h. The p 


erop grew very irre 


F 
s E 
da 


England, and um mor rt a garden than a — 
espon 


crop corr 
eeii the fact of 
can 


— a new 
1 


1 in your paper, some Pres. ago, | 
H Taize and | © 


its wane a new M 


this statement enable you to judge whether, Aa kiren 
a dairy farm 


ise, 
2 


ps, not than an ; 
I do not expect extraordinary profits, but I wish to 
know whether with such care and attention as I can 


a some 
tenant, Should you think I may — nture to farm 
these 16 or 20 acres, would you oblige me by giving or 
referring me to some scheme b resent 


spa — ZOA 
stabling, pigsties, &e., valued at . clear rent of, say 461. ; 
rates, 31. 10s, ; wages are 88. a wich liquor, say 
8. 3 b 
e gall. ; Wheat, say 5s. per k 
bushels per acre. A. 


M. 
been Ireland asa field for the Investment of Capital.— 
* j of your correspondents ste ares this subject, but I was sorry 


of “ Cad hich appeared in your im- 
| — 4. Oet. = — he seems still to adhere to 
ihe now antiquated notion that avy gee r on the part 

0 


of an 
it and some of the old | by rae of life and property ; but I am happy to say 
varieties, Perhaps it may grate out to be somethi 
2 


l conversa’ “ wi A of 
rish in saying that ins of any attem 
of the English to assist them by ov capital 
and embarking it il 8 y such base 
| ingratitude as “ Cadvan to suppose; 


they would be received with a “ cead mille fealthe, that 


to which the in their native 

1 9 —— country. But I 8 I have just 1 hei — 

i aga ploughing, 3 — by ge ene ee w 3 ine 2 their inclinatie i do 

m 6 to y g 10 are civ. 

first pea tyon ich e next furrow slice is 2 —.— the — the reporta — 

turned as and ee possible. In this state ee. nid i. — of the land has gone a great 
rie 


best 
winter frost, till 


‘ray to de be 13 jes upon se pen 


ploughed 35 out of 50 acres in course — — ear’s 
| roots, an e Wheat sown upon this year’s Clover 
lea is up and looking beautifu e e found 


700 
ve able, 


happen to take in, and who ei — a r do 
not choose, to take se — opi tot n for 
themselves ; but 1 e ask nthe “admitting these 
reports to be — thi is s bores objection 2 We all of 
us are well a ust support our poor by |e 
giving them relief out of 


see that they bes prefer 
the canno they are apal to 


they will see ecreasing faster than th 
would imagine possible. In conclusion, let 

those who have been misled We thousand tongues 
of per reports, com er and j for 


themselves rz Iam e in snorting that there 
is in Irelan present mom 
the pirine of — 8 skill, and industry than in 
any other coun — 


Malt v. Bar ee — dent “ P,” says, 
the power to m 12 feeding — see s has „peen 
no value.” If 


be won by 5 — — —.— 

would be so kind as to state when and — sie: — 
experiments have been 

ee that he would — oblige — 25 cok 9 — of 

the Agricultural Gazette, and nu 


would show the folly of 
arguing ang epee — ae , positive proof ; and, it would 
— — t n at rest, as it is clear — 
the Govern — r — been convinced b 
abundant — — to proof. G. P. re 
2 e 
Wheat 


han 
impossible ; let him 
t ae 


t a better field for 


t 


t ird 
Sowing on the “en of the 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


a tit bit oct is for each of you, if you did but know how to 
get it. fellows, don’t you see the only thing you 
ave to do i is 10 o sell your horses an a steam kettle 
E u will save all hose 
mals are ho c ming ? 
All that you will want in lieu of such 8 beasts 
will be a small heap of coke, a few gallons of oil, a bit 
a tow, a poker, and a —— sam . steam kettle will 
be ready for the ‘field a any t — as fo 
of this all- —— — why i 
not to Now e 


his eye on the steam 
l bring him 3 whether the furrow — vo 
ors shallow, broad or narrow. o matter, all 
is to keep up the rn to the right pars and beit 
ever fail, and so long as England can produce — 
aleve er heads to sande and eo = — sa e 
80 big with future glory and renown, what an 
the i so unpatriotic — not to 5 the — of ‘his 
birth, and to laud the name that has raised our common 
country from a state af ruin to that of indescribable 
reatness and — ity? Q. 


Sotieties. 
E: Drains.— At a late te monthly | w} 


to 


ivided na 


indeed, there were springs in those 


deeper drains were. He ot reat harn ie 
— The subsoil was pretty unten 
retentive throughout the field; and the u 4 ‘uniformly 
not perceptibly more open re 2 2 t eyed soil was 
far erefi his 


ried in East Lothian b a 0 9 
opposite Anpan f n no el à 4 oy 
experiment ; but if corre N reported to him, it * 
lessen his . in rn A sais obtain by hiie 
and would be an additi al inducement to 

ith his ee on i in order to obtain data 
for coming to a right conclusion. Probably in another 
year, more correct data obtained, as in a few 
months only after the drains were made the soil could 
not ha n ly. 


about 20 bushels of Oats (equal to about 20, per acre 
had been obtained. This result was in conformity with 
what been obtained from other fields previously 
drained by him. But on the general benefits of drait- 

g it was unnecessary to dwell. The great question 
now was: What is the — of draina ich could 
be done most efficiently, a 


iage wh 
at the least expense! To 
E point enquiries ought N be speciall y directed, 

he 


Rev. . — Rn at Little Bardfield, Essex, as | The furrow drains in each break led into a large drain 
iled at a meeting of the ron Walden Agricultural at the ends ; at the mouth of e large drain, a . — . wah r kopor 
Association, Oct. 19. , a sandy loam, 35s, an ; | Water meter an placed. The field was dr 1 8 in 1 your inquiry as to th eee of the ex pikih made 
a Clover lea, clean and in good heart; ploughed in winter of 184 t had been 14 years in Gra by n nnd with tiles = > ffere ? t depths and 
October ; dibbled November 1 Two stetches last corn crop k „in 1834) was Wheat, of which the distances, I may preis that 0 . on ma 
adjoini other were marked out in the middle of land produe 8 33 bels per acre. In be describe rather a fre Toki but u na ey 
the field, each measuri etly one-sixth of an the spring of 1848, the field was partly sown with sandy | stiff retentive claye subsoil, mixed wit 1 
One of was thin sown, the othe the rest of the | Oats, and partly with b poss orn ° — ite free fro he Bie r. The ridges were 18 feet 
field ; both treated y alike, and neither suffe: ater meters were se Jun and were in width, and were gathered up from the stubble, lea 
from in or di Seed, Smoo red. removed in 4 au dh 49. At harvest of 188, the stoks anay furrow pent to save fat labour. Into aa 
Seed. Produce. | Straw, | Veight of Remarks a moro ~ contiguous furrows, each upwards of 330 yards in 
rain. š On a Steet and 15 feet drains, = stooks — acre, pe — + was put a drain — 3 feet in depth below i 
N bushels 593 Ib 352 Ibs, or The thin itd Sete tid e 
ae ‘ "3 y babe 64 Ibs. per rja little later. It w was On 3 feet and 15 feet — — —— 562 —— eee Another eee | 
1 pin s pe aT bushel. deen ith great > — ter that followed two furrows au vA 
are—two seedsin| These crops, on bein thr she a, Ided asfoll : rains, thus leading a ridge which may be said to be un- 
| e tole: Ps, 4 e s yielded as follows Wr es The H the field was done with drains | 
1 bus ashe 1 6} 5 650 bs, or 400 Ibs. or The thick sown was — s feet and 5 feet 3 4 bushels per acre, 1 foot 8 2 in depth below the ponet m 
per acre, bable a, 5 8. Pood een anni better " Weight i Jos. „per Shaver ” land si n having been ploughed fiat, ri 
> 3 feet 1 15 fi t 1 825 d th onside ie * io ex 12 rer 0 5705 drains 
n 3 fe eet drai Me 75 epths cut wit e Spade e 0 
Fre Trade: Agriculture : The new 3 — ars 33 3 55 d. per rood, or 40. p teh acre; the 2 
Gazetta the capital “ Q.” struck me as being on ETEA Pr —.— 3 — were, however tood, : 1 perio was 
t prominent features in a column b axing th the initials ecessary, „in regard to the black Oats, in consequence ing tha whole Seld; whick sonet eee i 
4 0. B., Heach ? of one of the breaks on which i i —— ay ops Ban | 
, Heacham, Norfolk.“ The very approving an ch it gre aving been, on h T he dri ing across the 
congratulatory tone of your correspondent’s | 8 one-half of it, shaded by tr That the hisy 8 8 e siat nde oe Globe, the other 
letter would almost lead one to suppose he was ‘ pulling | the effect of con siderably lessening the produce, aire 1 ne N made . being — | 
an oar” in the same boat with yoursel ; at any rate he partionlariy of grain, is evident from the following 1 ER oe: dust and the eanta oi 1 5 Jud de 
| resolved “ Q.” shall no longer | i 
6 C. Bs” ogatories, or a) — ples — — Brack Oar an5 aat 1 15 5 porti — i 
: ide the subject d in cr G. a” lei —+ Break shaded, sð, produced i ait ‘stooks = acre, weighed on the lach "December, and the prod » | 
they seem the ——— of a highly fertile 8 ah edea , Se ee White Turnips. — 
ination, that can doubtless easier idealise than » 1 reo Se 
realise the multiplied produce of the soil, which he is If the sed brenk is thrown out of view, t the result, Ga 1 foot d inches do 15 fect apart ` a 1 ut 
3 of agriculture, u ided and unpro- | °S * . ack ae tran — 12 —— 8 taai 36 feet a ae vis 29 14 — 15 A 
& bit A ie ains, — stoo s per acre. On po undrained * 1 2 ; 
1 anid = 704 bush. , = te was only after’ i the white 4 5 be a pw 
ld be sai e : 
tiès F 8850 sown for both Kinds of Oats was aian nie 2 the 1 _ The subsoil, J 
| at the rate >of 5 bushels r discharged n | 
8 s per arged from the deep drains, appeare where 
ing of from the bse sets of drains was as fo . Turnips; but the Swedish were much larger ö 
3 ft. and 15 ft. drains, 35, — pall pad acre, th at it the same time they 
ie wait 65 e — > at eat t wit he 4. About "o 
In this — ation, the quantit of. water which fell Were Obviously thinner o sown vin 
on the few ac es shaded with . was thrown out of middle of February, 1842, the — wot seed might 
view, vie results it would app that rather | Wheat, drilled across, Thre 3 per acre 
more had been discharged by the 34 ft. drains than r t portions were 
by the 3 feet drains, though the latter were twice as the eee 1 d the following 
nume the er. parts of the field, cut, stacked, and threshed separately, igh of all being 
therefore, drained by the 3 feet drains, there was more is the result, per Scotch acre, th t 
ity, of a return for such | water lett in the land, or went off by evaporation ; and the same, 62 Ibs. per bushe. Wheat. . 
su there —_ — oe of soil for the roots. This fa oe arg “ER g 
ed to explain the produce obtained. If the number | On 3 feet drains, 18 feet apart 1E 
of stooks afforded a correct criterion of the q ntity of ie b . ap art | om i 3 
aits her — st — 8 3 feet drains, and On port — n eee ed N 0 antil be 
grain on the 33 feet drains; from which he would di WAS sown 
infer, that a damp soil, though favourable to large Fro soe rel nin ho hd re moisture ` 4 
ine | produce in straw, was un nfav vourable to a large produce ary jik cher as requisite for the th of ‘or 10 
in corn. The 3} feet drains probably produced with The field was grazed in 1843 and 1844. Little „ 
greater dryness, greater warmth he larger quantity | difference was observed pasture during vat 4 
| of rain which they carried off, would impart to the soil year, though, in the second, eg, ea paerd 1945, 
a greater amount of heat. hy 34 drains, though | the portion with deep drains, In the spring Angus 
one-half as numerous as the 3 feet drains, should carry | the 8 le was ploughed up and sown with grey were 
e as e or a 1 quantity of „was a sep Oats. Before harvest effects of the perar tieer 
0 the deeper drains would very obvious. The erop on the ground wai it va 
— ii greater core t surface; but he had not being much heavier and bulkiest ; at ing 
ani pe that a 34 fee t drain would have drawn off laid when the erop on the deep drains 
double, or rather more than d le, the quantity of | On the la d on 
a e | water that a3 feet drain draws. The water was sooner ripe, field was all 
t | however, showed that this had been the ; This accounts, in part, for the wei 


į 


o ee 


: 


-cake 
ton. The Ai cake, 


44—1849.] 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE: 


- those portions; indeed, the quality improves 
gs the quantity “oa omen „The following table aa e 
the result, per Seote 


Weig! 
ts p. bush. § 
18 feet apart. To 17 * 40˙ 2 8108 
ins, eet apart. 
get fe 5 im. drains, 18 — feet > ARER 12 1 2 3 217 96 
— 3 feet drains, apart 4 40 2 4 2% 
On portion undr: ER e eee 9.0 40) 2 4 40 
On the rem oft there was a m d differ- 


oval of th ri arke 
ence in the eye of the land, the deep drained por- 
full of vapeh e while the part with the 
. 


en end 

of the field on the undrained furrows, for even the deep 
ins had lit no eff h drained furrow 
ixt them. 1 e rope a in spring 
Wheat n agnificent erop 


and was 

ed, over the 9 l 7 8. 6 bushels 
Scotch acre, ind weighed 63 Ibs. per b 
ast year, and i 


. 
He 


Miscellaneous. 
poor cake as Food.—Two ‘kinds of oileake, 
t N ers, are used i nile, gew 
e of Flax-seed, Linsee 
Etha other, a less expensive article, 
ed, as a manure for Wheat. 


n with oil- 
ahs, in the proportion z kra 8 a 2 for the pine 
e, 1 she ow the j 

about Dya ands cabot a shee 57. Per 


se. The 
have no enemies as yet. 


cultiva.. | 
d-cake, fur |P 


bi 2 500 sheep of my own, I hope that a one 
is disposed to give it a trial, will Eye 50 gradually 
—— DTA 9 any unforesee be the 
usey, a 1 — Fü the Royal 
e Seley: of Eng 


ppage of Pipe Tiles. an e farm is drain 

with horseshoe tiles and slate soles, ti the latter | n the 
refuse of the Welsh quarries. I was informed by the 
farm _ who kindly t ook me — e farm in the 
absence „ that pipes had been tried; but 
they do —— answer in that neighbourhood, inasmuch as 
the crevices become choked up with a kind d or 
the roots of plants eonsequently their u n 
abandoned. The s are laid at a depth of 2 feet 
6 inches or 3 feet 6 inches, and the mains, where there 
is fall, 4 feet, the space betw a a — 5 r 
9 yards. 7 04 Pes pat is light, a 

stratum ot ne ndstone. P. N of th the Royal 


Agricultural Society y 12 Englan 


Calendar of Operations. 
OCTOBE 


BEDFORDSHIRE FARM, 
rat — has been Wheat 
A cio: 


: 0.— chief occupation of the 
t sowing, which t is “soe nony — to 
— sown has come up nicely, appears to 
We have tried a 1 
large field of Cloy 
in various 


w 

per acre, 
eld was abai p ha — 9 and the 

— + esi land was twice rolled 

The egos ce of the 

prese 


— 
= 
2 8 
®© 
* 
85 
> 


ree ater — in all oe cases; at the s: 
time, every experimenter is wise in using due santion be fore 
oing to th seeding „ by cons —.— the state 
and condition of the land, and also * time wea nature of the 

m 8s 


its of the on 
tw e ke ystem. e, therefore, — 
advocate the 2 m py reba vat the whole 2 the 

i quently hoe under every cir- 
We hay ve dibbled about 10 acres of — — 3 


after ‘Wheat, at the rate of 3 bushels — ented The Beans are 
I , which were drawn out * the 
vail of horse-hoein g. Som H — r have een 


free — ed Green merope 'generaliy succeed — on 2 
dunged chong! ı the winter n when the manure is immed 
ate 7 applied Petike the . my sow ** u The growth of the bulb 
is ene more and aad We less when the 3 of the plant 
is properly disseminated through — soil. It d s no t answer, 


however, , to wint 8 dirty la th 
— ans commence getting = and 


Weeds 


ica gold — d Carrots, All roots requi o be 
well vontilaced when ‘first put together in E * 

y Mangold Wurzels, one Turnips also, lost ‘rum close 
oroia with earth. Our ing Sheep are now u rnips, 
and the stores run over eae. — and pastures, try fold — 


Notices to Corresponden 
A — or —— — A Turner. 


beten the 
better 


ielded 50 or 60 bushels 
t e 


HEFE 
+ 

7 3 
Z 


ion, is a 0 —— in brew malt 
ind hops lied in due pro; eos "it the = be insuf. 
ficiently malted the glaten will superabound, an a due propor- 
tion of alcohol cannot be formed. — ~~ tter principle of 
the Hop be deficient the beer will not k ~ * = 
wort be at the time of boiled, the — 

ing ; wit agge ye as — i tae 
solution of t ccharine 2 he malt an 
alkaloid extract of — Hops, boiled 


aflord the only eans of obtaining a — m beer 85 for 


table use atm — p temperate y alw ging 
7 48° to 559 is an —— ee vison oe 
IRMINGHAM mar Fart —— — The Seoretary 
see that wer red 4 the matter at p, 653, m 
Cannaacrs neman, Try vat ng the cows a little nitre in 
water over thelr soo immediately after milki ; or add a 


yw nitre in hot water to the milk when 7811 the pans, 
f that will not do, oy some chloride of lime—a very little in 


— milk-pan. 
5 — have a little more confidence 
desire to act with f fairnees. 


type imme. 


y Land Farmer, If will forward your 
name and a —ů 4 G.“ will Sa with you directly, 
= Rapuits : FS. See p. 537, v 8. 4 

EDGES : 


ring; but 
biag Tagin aa 


with on tek 


ept in 
t is aliviek 
pe in l winter they, kagiat ought to 

4.) We canno ts ich is the — that makes the 
r from ; the Ayrshire breed has 
a good Agap aa (5. Swedish turnips, 
Mangold Smee on loamy s ar 

e best green — vou can 
it em, „ cook them 

au says 


superfluo us portion 


t Wheat land, The mi ileh cows Teceive a 


15 431 


w 
T | their minds o — — ect. 


The 8 cattle consume about a bushel of Turni ips, 5 lbs. of 
oe and 20 lbs. of chaff * er —_ in a prepared state, by 
teaming apparatus. The system 5 3 — well last 
eason; certainly muc bes er than the non-coo 32 plan, 
although some of ae early paren appear re have changed 
Practically we must, as yet, fully 


agree with it as we 
be more of the fattening re, of 
forready assimilatio the animal, 
given in a pe cont 15 si we ula 


we K non E 


4 he t, 

than 8 the food is 
ot our 8 
It reaches the 


n 
bserve no differe 0 
e fit for eadi | analysis an 
ias referred by me = Ms, Way, w whose answer w 


1 * 


P 2 


5.23 per cent, 
11.63 


itrogen 
‘hen ith Ol or fat 


3 a 


— 


ards 


=" I have examined 11 speeimens, 5 on an 


v. — see .60 per cent, 
1.90 
oil isin ge general — t _ 15 to 14 age cent.” 


eee 


d e amou repari 
I will ar pie that though 
as food has =e quen 
r, in 
ben Mangold: Ware a kd . — straw, vas mas a a 
05 t yen: Sir Robe t Dri 


rt Pee:'s farm 
nless the p Rl 
, improve, 1 I should 


coured 8 it must, i£ 8 
think, eee 


printer now on Friday mornit g] 

Dorser Farm, Oct. 20.—8 —.— last report we have been em- 
2 a _ part of which is after Turnips, 
o finish sowing for ~~ — hd 


riy expre 
e best reasons for k — that our pm 
coincides “wich the bir — of the re ve shal 
f you will favour us your n vag we 
endeavour 55 obtain an rege explanation for 
STALL tee DING : Amateur, character of the — ola 


tributions on bis subject Se this Gazette must be 
by thelr We must refer to this subject in a 
be cero, A 
raat . The clear white Wheat is the Chidham—the 
oarse red Wi e paini variety. 


at th 
%, : „ —.— = after Wednesday cannot be 
answered tiil the following 


a 1S. 
4. — v. 3. 
plentif ul, — the supply of Pine- 


ry off 3 more than half of th 
the sheep are folded on — land, t eat the re. 
n Turnips a aud day * will 


maining Part. 

have soon a little. Linseed or oil cake (I penn 

be fatted this season) ; the pan ng 
will be for berop as there is a 

for them to eat cif, pa e if et would be hu 

Grass, We have not yet given our sheep 3925 ad 

plenty of Grass; but now that th 2 will noe — 

colder Miey will get a little. We reshed some of the 

ee which ae out very ar a every way, and 

> _ as it is eat — a 

We 4 — now e ot. ou 


za 
ag 


whic 

Our em Lane for som 
to ve vom for Wheat, and ‘pious 
— Op. The fin weather 

us to get off a s many of 
have destroyed by fire, and will find the ashes very useful o 

drilling in with various crops. We intend to plant — 
tatoes in = ee for which we are now å 
W part, 
no 


ing the 


days, which 


rie 
Wurzel 22 Tor — fields, for the ewes 


pasture 
weather has been ve 
ba 


w pp ri nig 
sleari 4 storin 
2558 the pits pith alayar otra 

t them et and 
— and 


and draining 3 fee 


cieauiog hedge ct crop te das, wh eh is very good, . B. 


take up our 


ed 
the weeds from the land, which wej 


to6d 
to eats 6d 


COVEN 

Hothouse Grapes are 

les of excellent quality 10 ‘well vap: Foe oe and Walnuts 

re 3 Chestuuts Eman scarce, Lemons 
gg plen = Pom 5 

ach. Am 


— per 100, 88 to 
Cabbages, p. doz., 

wers, 2 s to 5 — 

r 


VEGETABLES, 
—— 


P. 3 
isd | Garlic, pet Ibu 4a to 8d 
r | Gree „16 6d to 286 ar d G SO 
ge sieve, } V. i 8, per doz., 
to 


— Sprout, p. hf, 
ls 6d to 


Sorre, p- he — 2888 
to 1008 


izi 


fa p. doz., 1s6d to 3s | 


702 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. | 


FIELD, MONDAY, — — “off, POTATOES. Sipe gg er 3 i 3 
of — has considerably fallen and ommittee report that the market has been supplie TSS PATENT 
is consequen —— brisk, at advanced rates. The improvement is quite equal to the demand since our last report, particularly R. PHILLIPS'S invention for extinoy; 
y appar ent in secon — rate — which of late have from Yorkshire and the Continent. A few very choice Regents | 1 1 supplies the ready means of sayin 
50 t to dispose mber of Sheep ie also | made 90s., but we cannot quote the price as general ; those | Life from that destructive element. The yen 
r. risk, „but prices have adramaad for. alt from the Continent came to the market in er good condition, | cording to the scale of prices below, are a, — ac. 
Trade is also proportionately better for Calves and Pigs. and 2 goni quality ; but the weather hap; bawn.so mild that | Ships, „ and Warehouses as well for Houses, 
rom Holland and Germany we have 1093 Beasts, 3380 Sheep, | less m previous quota- | Property, viz., Out bälldings and stack; of Ha er Con ming 
52 Calves, and 70 Pigs; and 1700 Beasts from Leicester and tations. “Th e following are this day’s prices: “York Regents, The vapou: 8 out from the Mac oie Produceabl 
~ 
— 4 


— nx — per ton; Wisbeach, 60s, to 703. Scotch, GOs. to | pleasure in a few seconds afte 
Northampton, d s d Perst.of8lbs—s d s d nch whites, 8 to 70s.; Rhenish do., 50s, to 658.; | and extinguishes not only the 1 has 
„Her est Long-wools, 3 8 to 3 10 Belgian aa 50s. t materials of property in general, but also rg from the 
ee. 4 0 Ditto Shorn oer those caused by tar, turpentine, oil, s the same power 
Ewes & 2d quality 3 0—3 4 MARK LANE. highly inflammable substances upon which, weet and = 
2d quality Beasts 3 0—3 6) Ditto Shorn Monpay, Oct, 29.— The supply of English Wheat from | tion, water has no 3 en in combus. 
Best Downs an Lambs ws „ % Essex and Kent by land —— samples this morning was Stationary Machines fixed for w protection 
1 wt 0—4 2 sity . e 2 : moderate ; the former was disposed of on about the terms of —_ sonen a Theatres, Dockyards, and other 2 
i t the r, pplications to 3 premises, 
— 3787; Sheep and Lambs, 225 0; ‘Calves, iis; Pigs, 308. te offered at 1s. per qr. decline. Foreign met a retail in- | pany, 105, Leadenhall-stre et Lond — Secretary of the Com. 
BDAY, Nov. uiry, and prices may be considered pominaliy as last week.— 


I ce includi 
The number of Beasts is — — Friday last; the We observe no alteration in the value of Barley or Beans.— | Size of Machine, one Charge, . Price of each 
best 2 — disposed —— Mondays quotations, | y ee em ee ook wine ew must be written 1s. per qr. dearer.— aa or — . ee 7 2 
Or 
— > — a — . aa a —— — — e a free sale at fully late prices, but new are 34, — e É 0 0 2 La 0 76 
lower. Calves are more in request than they have been for By FRIDAY, 5 -Tha market has been moderately supplied 4th, or n FA 600 mee s 0 
long time anda rise of about 6d. per 8 lbs, is e, with English e during the week. The arrivals of foreign Sth, Or o S 0 0 0 14 
are also dearer, owing to the 1 weather. From Wheat are oad, said moderate of other grain. We observe no The Machines can be made to order of any size, ata 
—— neea many there, are 19 ester diee 4 Northampton, 1 — in t be ; — of Wheat, either English — — portionate price. & pro- 
ves, a The trade is dull, and sales limited — Thin grinding Barley TR RoR a 
Beasts ; — {ar ilch Cows 8 — a advance of — epee qr. ar Monday’s prices ; other HE BIRMINGHAME TLE EXHIBITION, 1349, 
Best Scots, Here- wo EEN 3 8 n 3 10 | descri as also Beans and Peas, are unaltered in value.— AND MIDLAND COUNTIES 
4&0. 9 10 to 4 0 Ditto Old — pri — good re — uring the EXHIBITION of FA » SHEEP, PIGS, and 
Best Short-horns 3 8—3 10 Ewes e. 24 quali 2 0 — <3" 4 last y fase great oe i — prevailed in the Wheat ae. POULTRY, will be held in a temporary building 
2d quality Beasts 2 8—3 4 ee Shor an a decline of 18. to 2s. per qr. has been submitted to upon Hurst-street, Bromsgrove-street, Birmin ingham, on Tugspay 
Best Downs and see sen ee new, in — important markets of the United Kingdom. In | WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, and FRIDAY, the 11th, ‘12th, 13th, and 
Half-breds ...4 0—4 2 bas“ Sebi beat? Ais : s —4 ° some a slight reduction has taken place upon old foreign. 14th of December ne next, 
Ditto —— gs 21 — 4 * eee eee Printed Certificates for the several Classes may now de ob. 
; ; Sheep and d Lambs, 5 620; Calves, 2 Pigs, ous: | LIVERPOOL, TUESDAY, Ocr. 30.—We had a fair attendance tained, together with, — s of the Prize Lists, on application 
of dealers at this day’s market, but a very poor demand — to ge Honorary § — 
ntri — be — on or before — the 17th 


HOPS.—Frimay, Nov. 2.4 Wheat, at a decline of 2d. to 3d. per bushel on new, and 1 

ATTENDEN and Burrs ease that the demand for | old, especially on the — descriptions, Barley, sut; 

w Hops continues at impro ces. Duty estimated at and F Peas heavy. Oats were dull, and 1d. per bushel cheaper. 

80, "0002, ‘and py some wpa aided — e : — dull and 64. per qr. lower. Flour was also rather REAN AND HOTHOUS = made by machinery 
. po oh taper arranted best materials.—A Lean-to Green 12 


of ——— es B. Wai 
3 Birmingham, Nov. ee 


tool eine cant EE b 8 feet, lass ends, 1 doo d 3 f. — — 
J 3 $ 5 s. | by gias eo e oor, an eet of glass in fron! 
Remainder... a pa 275 tas 13. 200 8 with 16 oz, sheet glass of a large size, and POR att oo 
17810d 258114 298 9d 303 0a | Of — oil colour, delivered to any railway or wharf in 
£80,000 il 25 29 5 |31 for 1 1 0s. ; o. do. 15 by 10, 22/. 10s.; a do. do. 18 by 12, 
17 5 9 9 0 29 281. a * o, 55 = 12, 32. 10s., including a plan for 
H Ar Per I Load of 36 Trusses. 0 17 2 24 5 28 10 31 8 kes 5 1}-in Crea Lights, glazed with 16 oz, 
D, Nov. 1 2 17 4 9| 29 5 30 3 | Sheet glass, painted three times, 11}d. per foot; 2-inch do., ls, 
Prime Meadow Hay Gis to 728 VOlover sae . . 60810908 ; 5 f 2 [as 8| 2811|31 7 | per foot.—J. Lewis’s Machine Hothouse Works, 8 — 
Inferior ditto x 55 New Clover. — — . CUEAP AND DUKAS 
pee we sus ue 24 28 Aggreg. Aver. | 41 9 | 27 9 17 6 24 9| 29 3 30 9 CHEAP, AND DURABLE ROOFING. 
New Har. J. Cooper. Duties on Fo- (yRoGGoN’ S PATENT ASPHALTE 1 
MARx RET, Nov. 1. reign Grain | 1 0 1 0/1 0/1 0; 1 0l10 FELT is perfectly impervious to rain, snow, a! 
Prime Meadow Hay os 688 10 725 Inferior ... ... . 50s to 80s Fluctuations in the last six weeks’ Corn A has ested by a long and extensive e 8 in 0. 
Inferior ditto... 50 ee New w Clover 8 — | Prices, | SEP T 29. Ocr. 6.\OcT. 13. oer. 20. 8 27 — Saves half the timber required for slates ; can be laid 
New Hay... .. Str: 3 | facility by farm-servants, or 
Old Clover 86 ' Josnua BAKER, 423 4d en 7275 E = a, Pri rice 1d. per square foot. CROGGON’S PATENT NO 
Wurrzenarkr, Nov. 1. 42 4 . 8 ert oe „ | DUCTING FELT, for Steam Boilers and Pi , saves 25 per 
Fine Old Hay .. 63s to 683 | New Clover 7 275 ide A Fes cent. of fuel. Samples and Testimonials sent y post on on appli- 
Inferior ow AE 35 Infe r or ditto. . ee =e 5 | ed Aion to Croccon and Co., 2, Dow wgateshill, London.. 
How Hay .. o — — . M 96 1 4 = ae — L— F | | ia GRICULTURAL DRAINING : THE -DERBY 
Old Clover. 80 88 "I 5 ads 8 ne —A Very Superior Draini 


L g Level, of great 
8 Brie p 15 to be had of the Maker, pe Davis, Opti- 


London. | Liverpool. Wakefield. Boston. Birmingham. c'an, by above is securely packed and sent to any pars 
PRICES 8 of the ton a 
RENT, |Oct22,l0ct.29.| Oct.23. | Oet. 30. Oct. 19. Oct. 26. Oet 24. Oct. 31. Oct. 25. Nov. 1. tat isto Mra bang „ 
. 3 70 lbs. 70 lbs. qr. qr. qr. qr. 62 lbs. 62 2 Ibs. Hydraulic power to wise ta 1 gallon to 1000 per minute to 
Wheat— yſ Ba Be 1 Be BT oS. s. d. s. djs, d. s. d. a height of 500 feet, and from a depth of 900 feet. Douche, 
New, red Ne 38 1043 38 7043 6 0 6 46 0 6 239 to4537—44 36 to40 34 a 5 0 5 85 0 5 8 Vapour, Hot-air, and all nae gree of 3 pang 
„ White . 424842486 0 6 1016 2 6 8 * — 48/38—45)38—45/0 6 6 015 6 6 0 Conservatories, £o. Baniciu m 
Old, rod 38—43 38—43 6 4 6 86 4 6 639—4389—43 — 5 3 5 915 3 5 9 V 
„ White. 43—4543—457 0 7 67 0 7 4 19 — 47 — — 5 7 6 15 7 6 1| PROVED FOUR-HORSE PORTABLE STEAM-ENGINES 
Foreign... |. |36—5236—524 3 7 314 6 7 2/32—46 32—46] J e a ee BOLTING OR THRESHING pe 
480 Ibs, 480 Ibs, EMA AND 
Rye — Old 23—24 — — : sak — A me 5 1 Makh n Wa nd, b to call attention to 
i 3 i Th i ines, whic 
renden bel . l % F | S|] SP |S | S| Retire ee sey at work don, cnn ap ees 
á 5 — 8 eae — — — D — ic. seen an 
r Ar. Ar. qr. qr. . 3 Bridge road, Water-rams for raising Water. , 
Grinding . (2426/2426, — — 2 2222128 123 222. 22 | Deep Well Pumps; Baths; ee 
ing. 26—2826—26 30s—31s 308—31 n= 1 Se * owns supplied with Gas or — | 
Foreign... . 18261826 — mae oe leas a CERET cay be paises Stucco, instead 6 
: 6 bush. 6 bush, what ahem een Ft aud bythe useot 
ent- Süß =. —{ = pze te. 8 A 20 hours o a 5 oe aye ee ree | 
` ` à 451 45 lbs. kraami a M adopted wou n to dry. erpen - 
oats— White.. 18—24 82438 22 3a 3s 2d 3 34| — | — 131813 18 19—27 | 19—27 | the slightest: difficulty, the se being oasi f 
Black 16 16—22ʃ2 e sive than with an o what at 
5 3 —22 2 12 7 — — — — 18—20 18—20 repared for — sa} Plastering: og lo Racal a 3 
F 13— 3— 20/2 * 8 2 1 — — — penis — ee 88 specimens 0: of which may be seen at the Work 
i oe =e. qr. qr. qr. 8 dnanrrs Francts and Sons, Nine Elms, ape 
Peas—Boilers /28—30|28—31| 33s— | 30s— 263026300 — | — | 33—40 | 31—40 HH OT-WATER PIPES AND e ; 
3 ; 196 lbs. | 196 Ibs, with all the paige | 
Grinding... |25—30|25—30| 28 —29s | 28 —29s 11—12 Pe | gf Mokmater Pipes Elbows, eo Eico 
; = ey ag: ora — 2 1 & 1, at J. JONES'S cash 
Foreign .. |24—32/24—32| 29—30 | 29-30 | — | — | — | — — — HOUSES ; deres TA i st 1 
Bea : t Ianga f 
New, small .. 23—2923—29 — — 32—3330—31ʃ32—34 32—34 11—12 ar cou — — von ae an ae 
— — 3% . „ Len any part of the kingdom 1o 
3 28 ; ogl m found, for as 
25 —35 |28—3026—25| — — 11—13 11—13 gens 2 shee’ * ey e 3 Nov. 150 
40 —42 3240240 — | — — iis METALLIC Hi HOTS Ei 
— — — — Sie eee 55, Lionel-stre irmin i 
CLARK; Maniago, ‘ite. ig Deh to the 1 
H: 1 = ae pe BA * RES Gentry for thelr liberal patronage of the above Bale er g 
= te ee oe ee ne os — ry the —— vd 5 p fein him to offer bis . 
2 ; ese Houses 0 
6 ae a 12—13 12-13 | HOTHOUSES at a greatly r aaao P of from 24 to 
280 lbs p- adk p. sack | per sack. | per sack i — pg, ap nd of such’ thickness as to — from lude 
. . * h en „ an ae 
30—32 | — | — [323513238] 31—34 | 31—34 | daoger of accidental breakage, whilst that whet pe pacatis 
the action of frost is effectually preven nis Met ije Hot i 
e * ers h all the — — — are bap | 
a range 
Imports. Aver. | Impts. Aver. Aver. Gloucester. 88 Mr. CLARE eg to the pg es admitted Wt 
Averages. Imports. >y him in the new aa mplete of its hind i£ © 
ga „ 7 gre. , 7% gej e d qrs. 8 "the mos Koge 
aoa 42 7 28143 37 7 | 3885 39 7 540 Beaufort-street, u. 
403 28 6 499122 3 265 27 4 — peas bina ayn R Ya enen to ber See 
10697 ji8 3 761ji5 0 | 2090 | 18 1 Z An moed, Chelsea: by SPeCORNAMENTAL WATES ONE 
80 ; i — — — ae ponesi sd black Tei white ioe Egyp mee a 15 
7 p 4 1058 30 5 234 33 4 %% | one winter teal gad si be. 
| — — -m — shoveliers, ol d-eyed and dun * << Spanish e Jap Gi F 
ECAR ond SANDARS| T qn, | Malay — — 7 1 BS * 
e pma, | „SANDARS| THOMAS | 4. and C. STURGR, 7, Folan ‘Th pur, ia p6 ) 


44—1849. ] THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 


— by Aucti RO 
uction HIDS AND PITCHER PLANTS. 
Sales by Auction, MB. 2: c STEVENS is directed by Messrs, Huon | rmo BE LET, within 1h wis of Lees, 
TO GENT LEMEN, FLORIE FLORISTS, aná Others, Co, to submit to Au tion, at 38, King-street, 1 of about 130 acres, with good F peee, 
RS. PROTHEROE AND "MORRIS are in- Co ovest- garden, on TUESDAY next, Noy. „at 12 for 1 o’eloc 5 i „ 0 arm l 
ESS | a small im 3 —— the laud — h pav considerable 
eted to ot be 3 on oe premises, Highbury | a importation of ORCHIDS which they have lately received outlay h 7.7 considera! 
> g from So A a in et t 2 y havi een recently lay be viewed, ond 
opposite Barn vern, on FRIDA fi , ent condition, and comprising | particulars had, upon — Le on to ine WB 8 
oer oth, at II o’cloc, S — of the „Proprietor, the selected 0 . 1 388 P To best variety | Agen at, Epsom, Su Surrey. orenen, Esta 
NURSERY, STOCK, consisting of Frui it and Forest i Trees, ill be a fow Aerides and sone Mapentbes a. Sane Ween ond GLASS FO ONSERVATORIES 
together | with a few fine Camellias well set with bloom-buds May b o cco Freres plants of N. ampullacea 04 imported.— GREEN USES, PIT FRAMES, e. : 
choice D wart Roses, &c. 5 be viewed pa the Sale. 5 „ horning of Sale, and Catalog es had. a ETLEY ope CO. are supplying ion Oi Sheet t Glass. 
Catalogues may be had of the pri — — f| TO NOBLEMEN, e Hiir NURSERYAES, & others, ritish Manufacture, packed xes containing 100 
i the — American . sepone OKING, REY. yer fet each, at — e following REDUCED PRICES for cash, 
OMPTON PARK N peia . —.— STOCK 5 — F = * 
rgreen, and other Shrubs ; Fruit, Forest, . . Inche 
ESSRS. PRO THEROE any | MORR Sare favoured other Trees. The property of Mr, Groncr Guarmax, de ad nder ¢ "by 124 i ee eet. 
with instructions Eus - r, Joun N San ER and Mr, | _Clining war ess ERER wil From S ” — 0 „ 
BosesT DoNALD, trustees for the above estate, ry submit to an i will sell by Auction, on TUES. ” ” H » 6 24d. 018 9 
. — e by Auction, on MOND az Nov a pe £ T, Non ember 6th, and following day, at II o'clock, — ” s s H » 4 8 —— a : 0 10 
ce upon the Premises, situat ti , £ 
i gonis SS * aaa “of the exter nsive phon maces able STOCK mss the Soph We — = Ralo : mile from — —— ý ee 2 
i ROMPTON FARK NURSERY, lately carried on by | STOCK, comprising 9000 variegaved Holler of ho week sorts, 1 Larger sizes, not ot exceeding 40 inches long. 
$ . and Hoca, consisting of t ell-known and | from 1 to 6 fect; 7000 Green Hollies; 1000 Magnolia grandi- 2 from a 11 2 de e 
Collection of Standard and — f Maiden and | flora, from 1 to 4 feet; 4900 variegated an en Box, from * 
ete 0 7 . cote gate Cone = = ; laigs 2 to 6 feet; 4000 Yews, from 4 to 8 fee ; 5000 Chinese Arbor- 36 oz, ” 3 d. Td, — 
f Evergreen an ecidu rubs, including large Portuga ite and Swedish Junipers, from 2 to 6 feet; 100 Sweet Bays ; 
| ani common Laurels, common fan-shaped and irish Yosa 200 Hemlock proce Fin 7 R nga PATENT ROUGH PLATE, T THICK © — em — 
American, Chinese, and Siberian Arbor-Vite, Laur rustinus, Portugal Laurels and Laurestinus, from 2 to 8 feet; 800 Spruce reduced pri ne GLASS for — al purposes, 
Hemlock Birse, Red Cedars, Green and N Tolis and Silver Firs 3 to 10 feet; 20,000 Rhododendrons, GLASS TILES” ap aie 100 ‘tae e fee 
Evergreen Oaks, Lil es, Spruce Firs & Also a choice Col. Imias, Azaleas, Phillyreas, Arbutus, Alexandria Laurel, thes ic th A 1 = mado: 7 any size or pattern, 
lection of Pinus, Cedrus — Cedars Lebanon, and | Aucubas, and Ornamental Plants, 5000 Standard and Sinan Glass E ene ate 
ee Grater 8 bed valuab 3 e sli Ilex, e arf nig 3 10,000 Limes, and other large maguißcent Mil Pane 22 ney ct ive Glasses, ‘Cucumber Tubes, Glass 
c menta es; nts; 700, ad! i 8, various other a 
a large Stock of Rhododendrons, Kalmias, —. bell worth the attended dere and other hitherto ma fom tured in — 


Azalea s, Cc. 
pproved hot-water apparatus 


rames, “get and utensils, Also the stock o — eds, 
Shop, Counters, and Drawers ; Counting-house Desks and fit- 
ation, and will rot 


Se. Safe, d — ee sare = prepar 
n Nursery, Leytonstone, Ess 


10 S0. GENTLEMEN, BUILDERS, 8 
1 NURSERTMEN, and Others engaged in 


Mes 


—Fare, 
may be had on the premises, of the prin- 
the Auctioneers, 1818 and Essex. 


T0 NOBLEMEN, GEN ROE FLORISTS, and 0 


C ĩð % / E E 


; MESSRS. PROTHEROE A p MORRIS will sell. by 
4 Auction, at the Auction Kart Bartholomew-lane, on 
; 2 Ar 2 Standard and 


ee 8a ' Bourbons collection 
5 


glass. 


wi 
planting.—May be viewed three days previous to the sale, and be present extremely moderate 
Catalogues had on the premises ; of . Cua D, Seeds- po, o one uperior art 1 — it to supersede all 
man, Covent-garden ; and will be forwarded on application Papoa r pagia sted 15 13 eman’s residence. No 
by letter, inclosing fous postage stamps, to Mr. WATERER, Auc- r required, 


GLASS SHADES, a 


r Surv ape Chertsey, Surrey, ornamental to, and for 


Leere al in of every deseri — of goods susceptibl 
TO GEN TLENEN, T ACTORS, AND OTHERS. posure x ious anes te the removal of the cats ‘uty, re. 
CHOICE NURSE i 4 STOCK, duced one-half, List of Prices and Estimates i 
R. ae OCK is instructed l uction, on pplicetion to —— Herrey and Co., oh, 20 — m 
— on MON DA Lond 


five acres ‘ot 
Youne’s 


3 


MES PHILLIPS anv CO., 116, BISHOPSGATE 
STREET Wann offer the following : 


2 a, 
ntal 
f the most purs — — 
in 1 lots for th 
as the land is 
—— use. *Phe's may remain till the f ars week in Mar 
if required, Further 132 he Mare printe 


Sale; 


nty Town 


24 1 
If rag at t top 16. 


F 3 
HAND GLASS 
ACINTH DISHES 


E the adjacent Count; YA 
12 inch tee 2s, 6d.; 9 inch, 1s. 6d. ; 7 inch, 1s. each. 


the Auction 
e Chichester and Parteninath 
h 3 — 13 mile of the South 


F —.— : » 9 salented —— 0¹ Oran THE LATE MR. CLEMENT. TORRES STOCK OF 
wuental 1 viz., “Adaathoe glandulosa, Purple Beech, APE VINES. 
He Worked Thorns, Tulip Trees, Gleditschia, 5 Pinus R. HASLAM will * by Auction n, at the Mar 
ie Ce da, Cedar of Lebanon, Cedrus Deodara, N on WEDNESDAY, Nov. 7th, RDAY, rg = 
BULBS won ee , = ; . first class a eee a DUTCH | 10th, 10,000 VINES, consisting of Black patas Masea- x 
t SE Or very üue ble and Single Hyacinths, ma Burgundy, Swatar, Ba Cluster, & c., grown from MILK PANS 
‘ulips, Jong cus, Anemones, Gladiolus, Snowdro ops, 4 a af w of theme het worthy the attention of z 
Le. Mag be viewed the morning of sale. Cata. | the eye a fe as “3 al 12 il. 22, 0d. 20 in. 
logues had the Trade and those w “45 1 of the late Mr. Ho ire's 14 2 
í Nursery on the Mart, and of the Auctioneers, American pt Tremis, havé reg aca. = the culture of 16 25 ster H ; — e 
i yy onstone, Esse eae eee ee eee 8 be pd e 1 £ Dutch hus 85 3 6 2 ne 
GENTLEMEN, B S N ; 2 and 200 Standar a Arse atx com he e had at the Mart, 
m AnD rn NURSERTMEN, and of the Auctioneer, South Essex Nursery, Epping. Essex, e. te and Se, Pr tae ont Bee au = 
MESSRS. PR PROTHEROE anp MORRIS will sell "Tg GENTES AR, FLOSISTS, AND OTHERS. ach Glasses, 104. ; Wasp Traps, 88. 6d. per dozen: 
Casino pois, on the premises, See seg Nurser ry, N R. D. A. RAMSAY has received instructions to Pastry slabs, yacinth Glasses, Shades for Ornam 
entonville, on MON Nov at 11 sell by Auction, — ths e Pre — pas npea paren pie me and —— Glass of every description, and Lamp 
quence 3 Lease ing s sold for —— the | Fulh 88 Brompton (situate one de- par or tubes, 
Y STOCK, comprising fine Evergreens, on IDAY, Nov. 23, at 12 2 by order of a 6 aban 19s. — JAMES PHILLIPS AND 00, 116, 
yor’ 3 orest Tree a. i ree ian 8 E 'declining the Tata Sy and rem ee for Hetty ne 880188 tabs STREET WITHOUT, LON DON. 
“Sag — Box Grena Ollies Privet, Lilacs, | of Sale. antity of Camellias a hřysanthemums : 
Laburnums, Pop! lar, ee Lime, Moun- sorts, Lilium | 1 &.; rge specimens of a eee ee URPOSES, a MORE: 
Standard and Dwarf Apple, — and Azalea indica, Aloes, Yucca, , be.: ; 
seberries and Currants; Greenhouse mental Trees, with a quantity of Mush 8 
N Greenhouse, Forcing-house, nine-light | Duteh Bulbs, Roots, & . May be viewed the day ‘prior and 
oxes, Lights, &c., together with th ere OSs: Catalogues to be kad of the principal Seeds- 
House, mer, consist of rooms, Shop, Wash-house, men, and of the Auctioneer, Brompton Nursery, Fuham-road, : > 
dad 3 be vi s 1 Brompton. m 
dotte A premise o ~~ CHELSEA, OPPOSITE CREMORNE GARVENA. MILK PANS 
uctioneers, Am n Nursery, Laro one Tesa. R. D. A. RAMSAY will Sell b Auction, on the 1 one 
STOCK, CROPS, IMPLEMENTS, &c., ON premises, K: ni san, Chelsea, on TUESDAY, Nov. STRY 


r FARM,” LEWISHAM, NEAR SOUTH- 


d lot CK, 
consisting of 2000 A cuba, tips po Laurel, Holly, &.; 


quitting th 


“a fires the — collec- 
Roses, new silver. 


PROPAGATINC@BEE CUCUMBER CLAS 


‘of è Gooseberries, oven’ ed 


3 8 a lange 


1 d other Cre 
seed 1P k 8 2 Azalea ee with ud Stam. wth Fa 
of Aloes, Echinocactus, Cereus, r: 
mune a May be viewed rior to ma sale. Cata! —.— to be from 2d. per foot and upwards ; 
had on the premises; ef the principal Seedsmen; and of the large Sheet Glass, for ing up, 
Brompton 3 8 road, Brompton, | Plate Glass, from 1s, 2d. to 


Auctioneer, 
London 


Patent Rough ards. Gis from 3 
4d. per foot —— 
5 MSAY begs leave to offer his services to 12 10 24 f che 
D. the — and others, as an AUCTIONEER, VALUER, 


= Wo ts th — —— his personal attention, with 
“of 2 urzel, a Riek cloth and poles, e — — 3 — 2 nae References e 
stg Cob, oig, and Harness, and ail other given and letters . to Brompton Nur — — 5 
ut the F Farm. To be viewed the day bef road, "Brom mpto p ded 
— e avd offered for Sale ty Aue OMŒOPATHIC PATIENTS, DYSPEPTICS, 
of the Auctioneers, | tion on the — premises. Tens sent on application, Hout i öf Delicate Constitutions, a 1 ‘Tee 
. te Tae BE coded e ure TAYLOR BROTHERS DIETETIC 
— UR COCOA, as being ‘the © 
Konus, NUR OTHERS, Nat hitherto introdu etur 
A. RAMSAY, wil seli by Auction, on the — — om te f 
ns n Nursery, Fulham.road, Brompton À i : 
November 26, 1849, ani following day at 12 or | kose und 
ote ‘ RY STO s 3 of agea 
Limes, A a quantity of ous essen, pales proves at the came time both in 
ie t and re 
È Sage 5 e r Pe sk 
Be, 1 a 4 
een eines NURSERY AND oat oe SS, mio = ois pa — at 1s. 4d. per Ib., by most respectable Grocers and z 
seke stin 7 Tea-dealers in the king ih At a ay be had Tavrot ! 
abo Brothers’ original SOLUBLE CVOOA (onty one-third the pric 
5 Hyacinths, Nareis- ion of article exceeds ONE 
dard of Coffee) the consumption — ME 
-» comprisin ne 100,600 Ty cae, SOR TO MARKET GARDENERS, NURSERY MEN, * a Kir nove ee, which, AAN 
7 5 Roi 10 Uig his hest bidder ‘on MOND AY, 70 BE LET, and e 1 10 upon immediately, YeD | parties — the appearance, are ta iy doer 
the premises o s. Lockhart, Florists, ae Prime N T GARDEN LAN at Para pon resembling te proper e 
; : Rn reserve, in consequsnee u ; are | ine article. epee ce e 
s May be viewed till the day of trees, ane furnished — 2 4 1 her e the e purehase of halen eral in ickets 
5 a 3 en eee Mr. I houses Held for a S e bis ae ie bear their mame, with 
Ee bs post with Catalogues as «con as they Sach, 2 2 ees or to r, Banz ond 9 ere 


Groet 


7 04 THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROOF 
WIRE NETTING. 


STRONG 


Pie 
AND C. YOUNG), 
MANUFACTURERS í OF TRON AND WIRE WORK, &c. 
WESTMINSTER, LONDON; 
LIVERPOOL ; 118 Hı IGH-ST 


ully to 


cultural So 0 
where — Efficiency, Great 
a 


? 
-i Aadal 


yemni — 


The immense damage done 1 Hares TIK Rabbits i in Gardens 
hat in the cour — ye 


and You 
year 2 two it will amount to more ‘ban the entire e 
with this Net. It is so 2 that ‘when 


pose, akes drive 
or —.— feet apart, Itis, besides, pecu 
derin pr i He ae — =. 1 other existing Bian, completely im- 
ont a ing cut up into small 
ere Pieces of three —— — t forms a most effi- 
at Tittle expense, 755 1 5 Plants and Shrubs. 
8ins. high, herd 24 ; 30 ins., 1s, 3d.; and 
. per line 
b of rte 3 18 dak 125 will sos 
f 100 yards, 24 ins. w 
100 ple sig 30 ins, Wide : 
f 100 9 36 ins. wide 
If more or less than a web is required, it would be. Sga 
atthe . — rate per 
This Netting is pas dener. 3 for Pheasantries and 
Poultry-yards, and is char t the saa rate. As carriage 
has, in many 3 — — — obstacle to parties at a dis- 
tance requiring this Net, C. D. Y. a nd Co. have made arrange- 
1 — to oe it at any of the 
nd, and Ireland, for One 


nn 15 0 
« p 0.0 
1 


21 
beg af: tote ame width, at 9d, 
per yard. es for — aaki — free of expense 

C. D. I px & Co. testa ele every description of enie 
IR ORK required fór this and foreign coun 
Workinen Me: to all carts of Scotland. England, and ire sand 
(GALVANISED WIRE DANE NETTING.— 
d. per * 2 feet wi 


eters (9 
232. 225 22522 
8 


eae 72 
8 
SES 28222 


10 
extra strong |, lk 11 
the above e oon Spinans made pA width at proportionate prices. 
h, it will reduce the price one- 
sparrow proof matting: for pheasantries, 3d. 
po 
BARNARD and BISHOP, Market-place, 
— 1 expense in London, Peter- 


i h lement 
—CoNTEN rs: Politeness—The Wonderful Sixpence: 1 3 too len 
either Ancedote off of Rea 1 Life—Death Cl 8 Seif Advancement of | «To Mr. 
i e, by Martin Doyle, 2—Cotta okery, by 


E 5S SRB 
anp COMPANY (LATE 
CASTLE- 
REET, 


g 
— and generous offers of co-operation were 
es 


[Nov. 3, 
— 
This day are published, price 10s. 6d. each, — 


PORTRAITS OF HONORARY MEMBERS 
IPSWICH MUSEUM. 


DRAWN ON STONE BY T. H. MAGUIRE, Esq. 


Published for Gzonce Ransome, F. L. S., Hon. Sec., to whom all orders must be sent 


DEDICATED, WITH PERMISSION, TO HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN and PRINCE ALBERT, 


Ips 
n presenting PORTRAITS of several of the HONORARY MEMBERS of the Ipswich Museum to the: ideo 1849, 
a ~ explanation h led to their oe This In 5 fre establis! in Iberer, 
1847, aay with the object of contributing towards the free instruction of the Working Clas n the 8 in December 
History, b y providing for them a good Mus seum, — 2 Lectures, and Classes. _ The * sa was n — oi of Bae 
ma most 

amply fulfilled, 


omises hay, 

opportunities have been afforded them, se o been 
Unde: ee sense of their disinterested kindness, I d the P 

= an t whom e fe el largely in nde ebte d for the e pr osperity whio has attended the pa ess of the IPswIcH Museu, 4 

me time I h which it was ower to offer, fi 

assistance they have centered us—either by y their interesting Lectures, or by their valuable donations to the A 

It was e Prints to the Members of the Museum, but so man: ny 

for copies have been made by the friends of those rides ‘Portraits have been taken, that I have obtained peri 

limited number of large India Proofs at 108. Gd. each. They have accordingly Aa ca’ reserved for thi 

1 a is W Any profit that may arise from the disposal of these 

Institutio 


to present to our Members t 


the issu 


funds of 
e on Ranot, 
The following are now ready : 

RLES LUCIEN BONAPARTE, Prince of Canino, Author of, SiR Rg N ge Impey MURCHISON, 2 5 A. 
‘ Fauna Italica, ‘ Continuation of Wilson’s American Ornitho- 2 a m e S, Ed. 
To. 


Sir J. P. Bolz zap, Bart., F. R. S., &e. & 
James Scorr BowERBA NE, F.R. S., L. 8. “and G. S., Author of 
‘ Fossil T and Seeds, e. 
THe Most NOBLE TH E MARQUIS oF BRISTOL, F.R.S., Patron of 
the Barik cit 
a BuckTLAxD, D.D., F.R.S., L.S., and G. S., 
nst. Fr, and Vi President of the Ipswich 

Museum, ‘Professor 5 Geology, Oxford, Dean of Westmin- 
Author of Reliquie Diluviana’ owe a gant Trea- 
Gem a Daguorredtype by Claudet.) 

ARD — F. R. S., F. L. S., Author of“ “On Vicia angus- 
folia’ in Linn, Trans. 
JoHN ele F: R.S and L.S., Author of Birds of Europe,’ 
Birds of Australia, > &. 


CHAR 
Si. 5 rsb., Cor Ins tr, 
Author of * The ghee ian — € The 
and the Ural Mountains, Alps, 2 and 
&., & 
TEE Bo ed ae oF Norwicu, D.D., F.R.S., late 
d F. G. S., Patron of the Ipswich Mien om 
ROBERT PATTERSON, V.P. Nat. Hist. and Phil. Soc. Belfast, 
Author of “First Steps to Zoology,’ ‘ Zoology for Schools,’ &. 
Lovett Reeve, F.L. 5 Author of Conchologia Systematien“ 
© Conchologia Iconica,? &e, 
PRIDEAUX Jonn SELBY, F. L. S. and G. S; M.W. 
‘t British Ornithology,’ British Forest Trees, ig 
Rev. Epwin SIDNEY, M.A., Author of 1 Wheat and 
their Re medies,’ and EHlectriei rieity, its Phenomena; Laws, &, 


WILLIAM Spence, F. R. S d L. S., V. P. Ent. Soc., Vice-Presi- 
gaps pe ofthe] Ipswich Serata, Author of An Introduction to 
gy,’ e. 


Author of 


REV. nstow, M. A., F. L. S. and G.S., Professor — 
Botany, Gamb., Koc boar of. the Anta Museu 
uthor of Pri 


ne iple 


8 


SIR — Bart., — R. S. E., and L. S., c., e-Pre. 
sident of the Ipswich Museum, Author of The Miki 3 

ary,” 8 to “Ornithology, oor 

Rev. saben te ot KIRBY, — L.S. and G.S., President 
of the Ipswich Mus m, Author of — paré oductisn to Ento- 


WILLIAM TRHOMrsox, President Nat, Hist. and 9 5 8 
Author of The 9 History of Ireland,’ & 


gee “Bridgewater Trecia 5 NATHANIEL WaALLICH, M. D., F. R. S. L. and E., F. L. S. and G.8, 
J noie „ LL. D., A. S., author of Antiquarian Researches Author of Plante Asiatice Rariores,’ &. 


nthe Tonian Baan, and Founder of the Hartwell Obser- 


tory. 
JoHN — Ph. D., F. R. S. and vy S. &c., Professor of Botany 
n University College, Load ; Au thor of ‘ The Vegetable 
Kingdom,’ Ine Theo oy of Honing e? SC. 


ILLTAM YARREL wth P.L.S. and Z. S., Vice-President of the 
Ipswich 7 — 1, Author of History of British Birds, Au. 
tery of British "Fishes, &. 


The following gentlemen have oe consented to ~~ 5 bilat added to ve Series skroto 1 D. T. ANSTED: 

R. S.; Professor T. BELL, Sec. R. S.; W. B. Ca ARPENTER, M.D., . Cortis, F. L. S.; C. DaRWI, F.R. ; Professor 

= —, — — R. S; Professor OWEN, 1 Di F. R. S.; the Rev. Paesens e F. R. 8.; Sir G. LYELL, F. R. S.; Sir W. 4 
OOKER 


opr < BY DR. GOLDS BIRD. 
publis hed, in fep. Svo, price 5s. Cd. cloth, 


HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING 
BY HOT WATE 
i pries ECTURES on ELEC TRICITY and ALTANA. 


ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF THE CHOICEST PLANTS, 
ee FERNS, de: 


tended Dr, GOLDING R. S., Fellow of the Royat 

íl College of Physicians ; Assistant Be cian to, and Professor 
H dica at, y’s Hospital, ‘ : 
HH on: LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, and LonGMANS. —— 
H MHE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, for the yeas 
11 1843, 4, 5, and 6, unbound, to be SOLD for f 10s, Maybe 

HH seen at Mr. vas s Libres, 7, Ange Hammersmith, 


2 701.50 
ESSE E ROSS'S „ e i DIBBLE— 
e see oor he 80 
egie ‘ 


WEEKS von a Eades hreier 8 —— 


® TURAL ARC HOTHOUSE BUILDERS, and HoT-WATE 


J 


APPARATUS N solicit an inspection of their Renne 
various Works now in progress, which will — as to — that merited t 
f materials and ar ce en They have now erected on thei: 


most 8 3 
in every other r way superior, if 
and Royal Agricultural catalogue 


et, Pwliheli, “Carnarvonshire, Oct: 


hae forms k 


$, Greenhouse, Ferns, and other Plants, in such imme 8 ae 
bers, that as they are ot at LESS THAN HALF-PRICE. —The part of the field of ben a 
Spawn, and everything connected with the machin obtained from you last pe PPE 
1 d Seed r Plans, Estimates, and Cata- eing mu h more than = py dag 
d on application. plant the 2 y 
ason, I will, theref rs m 
d erewl 
y Y AnMoUTH aa ie eee, ea AND OF cee 3 3 remili 


NEST QUALITY. 
Yarmouth has ieee —— been justly celebrated for its 
8 gs A —— ” the delicacy of — —— 
obtained enuine sta nan no comment. 
opportunity i a offered ; 5 ey can be 1 to any 
n a post- 


Da 
“To Mr, Jesse Ross, 73, New vats 
Sir,—When I purchased from y 
Machine for my Booey a0 tenan rapt 


kingdom, or for 9 (on receipt of a ried it: th 
Pice arder), at 425. per 100, package elne AT o rders to 1 2 seed see hay 
be addressed to ~i = DERICK BROUGHTON Youett, Church- | and of course takes much less 
square, Great Yarm ch so as to save all t 
m in the und, and 


e 
HE FAMILY 28880 1815 FOR NOVEMBER. 


and heap Cook 


; m Eleventh Article : compete Soles, cg =e B tn 
ns, | 
sipi Rie 


42 


‘Bat 


Th— 


Norwie 
Implement Vendors 
| e orders requi . 
| Printed by Wrunras BRADBURY, of No. is, Ope om: Shia 
Parish of St. Pancras, ag oe Ties h County © 
ie 


e . e b. 
ments and Com 
SATURDAY, NovemaEn 


Dat 13 
; and sold 


i at ait Mi Hie 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 


[Price 6d. 6d. 


No, 45—1849.] 
—— 


d IN . 
wat 1 Indian Cotton aise r 
q ey ae {England 716 Ireland, emigrati n fro s... 1 
710 Light, effect of, rd 8 me 
717 Lime on clay fallows .......... 
716 Maize, culture ph in ees 705 
. 709 Odours stp 3 ne 
712 Orchids, 80 
44 Boi 55 „nn . 712 
718 Peach-hotus, pennant of 71 
710 Peach trees 
‘stem s. 709 Pear, Chaumont eiie 
wild .. 709 Plants, diseases o 
to transplant. 5 710 « — odours of.. 
en 715 Potatoes, to EE eee 
707 layering a preventive 
707 isenge ....0006 
- Til es, to raise from see 
bs Royal Botanic — 0 710 
„ 7 Salvia wien ++ 710 
mithfield club...... ove 714 
Ped deus sees Sowi g br — ... 716 
. Trade memoranda , 
Vegetation, effect of 1 on 710 
Villa gardening,.... s... 1 509 ¢ 
Vinca, monstrous, , CTET 00 
Wheat. application ‘of ma 
nures to % 71 
Yucca gloriosa, large 710 5 


run. —In last week’, 3 is Paper, in: in Mr. Henry SHAILER's 
ent, front page, col. a, in ae 5th line from the end, 
per pal 


VER. Srey GLAD 
W~ DENYER, SEEDSMAN ay are RIST, 82, Grace- 
f i E London, begs to offer strong roots of the 
ollowin 


vape ndid, — — or 58. per dozen. 
us, beau ful, 9d. e 
Lilium lancifolium — — $s. cach. 3 

nustum, very pretty, 
Fine ‘mixed late Tulips, — 


ue collection, 10s. per 100, 
Spanish Iris 


„ mixed, all — ai Pi pe 

No cha are for packa 
Caution.— W. D. begs 
with any other person Of the same name, 


ENDLE’S CHEMICAL PLANT MANURE should 


connection 


e us y all who wish for a good bloom of AH 
hg and other Dutch roots, Sold in tin canisters at 2 
38. — he each, 15 sexier MET BE 2 apply 
M E, REN and Co., Union-road, Ply uth. 


Our ave 4 ie adjoining the Plymouth Station 
of the oath — Railway, and o 
ceeded 6000 tons during the last five years. 
AMERICAN NURSERY, BAGSHOT, RREY. 
OHN WATERER has much plea ae in announcing 
he has published a 5 7 1515 Catalogue of his — 5 
sive N 4 RHOD RONS and other emis 


— "P, 1 nana, 1s.,” read “ ants, &., which will be arg on — 
RNER’S “ EARLY CONQUEROR” PEAS.— 
HINE’S LIST "OF “PELARGONIUMS, contain- “This superior new EARLY PEA, which has s largo pods, 
ing most of the tending. varieties, is now r eady, and may | Ye J DERICK 
Per dozen, parcheser’ 8 selection, 218. WARNER, 28, Cornhill, and3, Lawrence Pou — 5 


i phad on 1 
very strong. 0 70 e made fo r ham 

“plants 2 in to compensate for carriage. 

ce Nursery, Ramsgate, Kent. 

INE PLANTS FOR SALE. — The different varie- 

ties of Blacks and Queens, warranted 2 and za ooted. 

doplyto W. Davies, Starch Green, Hammersmith, near London. 


RUS DEODARA 


r or package, 


3 ang ch the 8 so — 4 . — fe 37 — 
es 0 

ded on receipt of o 

amphlet on 9 — 3 Bad br 2 losing t of the wood 
ing three postag 
-roa pati Bris 
CHRYSANTHEMUMS, 

HANDLER and SONS, Nurserymen, Vauxhall, 


unknown — raga 0. and Sons — aiso 
7 fine stock of Evergreens, at very reasonable prices 


$ r 
: 3 Roses, 


e to the 


N MACULATA, , admirably adapted for 
and flowering early, 25 — plant, or — ge r dozen, 
M. Sranx, Edgehiil Nursery, Edinbur 


YATPS NEW STRAWBERRY, ees 
en an D SONS are prepared to se nd ut 
: of this « and the following — at — prices 
: Myatt's — — 60. 61 rtilised Hautbois, 
British Q 38. 6d. ; itz ; Mammoth, 
Weiz s Seedin g, 38. 6d.; š + 7 e el 38. wi ; 
ia aris, 7s. 6d,; Pri 0 78. Gd, ; 
Ai’ Black Prince, 1 ris, Be Boge neess Roy 
: ers are requested to be made payable to 
Deptfor 


rade when 


ge 


TATT, Manor Farm, ord, Kent.—Nov. 10, 


— R. CANT, St. _ Sola s-street Nursery, 
$ delivery, strong Well- 


8. 6d. each. 

venice BR RILLIANT © 17 44 55 
e and package Prt i — n. 
from unknown cor- 


r — — request 
The usual discount to the tra 


8 Dar a 3 a * 
er 
<p meing Aa en gr tad bs bet: red ever 
r, and or y 


large stalks, of a magnificen 
; large k of roots, 1 1 S ; also 
s, "ictoria, 9d, The usual allowance 
: i ce orders made dle to W. CHELL, 
‘ay, Middlesex, will pn, 


WI. MAULE — SONS beg to remind Noblemen, 


arrest: 1 5 WARNER’S “ Early Soares” " 
croft Rival, ” The above are all genuine and of his own growth. 


Appo UE 
AND TO ity 1 Y THE —.— or Saxony, begs to We the 


5 Gentry, cs 2 of 
e year for plant BULB 38 ally, 25 * th 
suppi the e following — of the — rise | fg — at moder, 
prices: 1 — gg GLADIOL 
CROWN IMPERIALS. IRIS (ANEMON RA ANUNCULUS, 
these are best planted iu the * — and ON IAS, IIe has 


also a fine seen: $e of GERA — and NEW PLANTS. 
His Catalogue may be had on applic: 
Clapham Riss, November 10. 

LANTING SEAS — —The L 1 the s 
favourable time for splant W. H. Rocenrs begs t 
state that he can supply finely — N URSERY STOCK of 

every size and ds, AMERICAN 2 price, FRUIT 3 


NTSi ay great vag ba 
all the most beautiful sorts of ROSES i cultivation 
logues os be had gratis on application, 

Contract Planting, the 3 of 3 and every 
aN of 22 ndscape Gardening executed i = part of the 
orgie = the most approved mamie an 
n purchasers will find | great advantages in procuring 

from their ae 5 the 
akan take t 


the American 


ll o; 

130, High-s street, Southampton, will meet with pro iou. 
ESS . AND H. BROWN have to ia the fol. 
lowing, which they will forward to any part of the United 

Kingdom or see ca tinent. 8. d. 

Fine Dwarf an tandard Trained sen a Nectarines, 

Apricots, Plums , Pears, and Cherries; the best and 
caw approved Seite of "Inese respective | ki 1 true to 


e, 28. 6d. — pei or, per dozen +o 98D 
Untrained or ma dit is. 6d each, or, „ per oze en 15 0 
Fine Gooseberries, ‘Currants, and Raspberries, per dozen 3 0 
Strong Vines, Figs, and Apples, per doze 0 
Filberts, — thin she ell and red skin, per r doz, ve 0 
CHOICE AMERICAN PLANTS 
Andromeda fi —— fine established plants, weil set 
with bloom, 7 — 20 


25 1 2 — | Belgian varicties, ‘on their own 
ith fi 


„ Wi m buds, one of a sort, by name ou 20 
r paawioas 13 do. do. se do 
4 . of sorts, ag ag floribunda oe 
6 Kalmias, one of a sort, by n b ve 8 
6 Ledum do, T 
5 Hardy Taat n ‘Shrubs, one of a t byn ov 10 

2 Rhododendrons, including scarlet, wie, and rose, 
1 varieties 12 
New rete Yellow Rhododendro ach 7: s. 6d. t to 10 
Hy tee Rhododendrons, extra — with 3) 0 50 3 ; 

5 eos . 

6 Fine Hardy Magnolias, one of a sort, by name ae 


10 z 
S OSS SSSooSs 250 Oo S SSS © 


50 Dw = paa on their own roots, by name 

nted ee ee of a sort, es name, in pots à 
a ard Roses, pe dozen, ia 23 

Moss 5 per 0 

New n Moss Rose, per doz. 

— . — Roses, sup ‘rior sorts, ogee: La Teine and Per- 
petual Queen, per doze: ; ; 

12 Greenhouse 2 eo a sort, i 

= —— sg —4 gh name, å ditto- 

re 3 wb 


os cane ofa sort, b 
— * newest and eit kinds, per dozen . 6 
255 Yellow Fion 2 ee gee nana! ve — sorts, 


* 
Led — 
> 2 


` per ¢ ‘dozen, ce to 9 
e bulbs —— eee beautiful Lilies, viz., Lancifolium 
albı 


BARNET NURERIES, HERT 
\ N TM. CORNWELL begs to call the attention beck aag 
Demen and theTrade to his extensive NURSERY STOCK, 
and solicits an inspection of the same, which is ae yo this 
season, — n arly the American Plants ; Age of 100,000 


Rhododendrons, many of them from 012 feet, fines cimens, 
with a large qu ity ot Azaleas, ‘Kalming s, Andromedas, 
icas, Ledur rnamental Trees of all sorts, from 8 to 

b 


of Flowering 
1 and Dwarf Roses, in quan 
kinds, with every article in the Trade, an the lowest 

W. O. begs to remind his Friends and the Pu blio that the 
Sale by Auction, advertised aa take place at the Barnet 
Nurseries, is not f. om the abov 


HORTICULTURAL EST ABLISHMENT, BRACONDALE, 


— e Jeading 


NORWICH, 
J intorn — 2 pro ep of 2 — , begs to 
and the Trade in general that he is 


men 
ELLING OFF is NURSERY Y STOCK, at the f 4 1 low 


9 all wa ted true and well worth their a 

Dwarf ee’ — * 8, Neate: rines, and Apri tem, ‘ite x s d. 
cluding all the popular sabes sf fine Pes hat 0 0 
D ma ae Se . 55 10 0 
rg T eo oe 2 ip 0 0 

Be. woes * os 30 0 0 

Do Do., soi Quince Stocks . oo „ 10 0 

Do Ap nles vi os i ee 10 0 
Fastolf Raspberr. ong ca ti ue per 1000-3 0 0 
Cedrus Deodara, one y 0 $ 9 stir 1070: 0 
Fine Spanish Chesinut, 8 to 1 oe * y 0 0 
nahi 3 — years transplanted W W dale * * 4 0 
If 50, 036 


E S IMPROVED KIDNEY, THE 
OF EARLY POT ATOEs. 


MOST PROLIFIO 


e pleasure 
in announcing that in consequence of their havior a very 
heavy crop of their IMPROVED KIDNEY TATO 
of or reduced its price from 15s. o 10s. per bush 

one 


he f th 


ee —— ay. 

Nursery, Kingston, Surrey, Nov. 10. 

er’ UNLIMITED STOCK OF SEEDLING AND TRANS.. 
3 LARCHES, of the Finest Quality, at reduced 


Pri 
Ww. M. wooD AND SON beg to caren attention to their 
es of which will be- 


furnished | on applic 
Woodlands ate Maresfield, near Uckfield, Sussex, _ 
RENDTE Rabin PLYMOUTH, 
CKS. HE 
HORNS O R QUICK — 8 000 FINE TR 
ANTED THORNS re 12 to 15 inches for 31. 
we eur old Seedlings tor 15s. 
RCH.—10,0 00 One- -year old Seedlings for 20s. 
SCOTCH. Bs 5, 000 One- year — ee for Ses 
Cf wept AND NECTA warf Trees or 
Ma „ per posea 3 Tr siap e from 24s. to 
308. per an ; fine — — at 503, per dozen. 
9 ait the bert 3 in cul esse true to naue. 
“ secre s ring we re »—This has 


ANS- 
10,000- 


PEA 
iden 


been 
my iann a be th arly ty ka We have more 
a 1000 strong, lare, pens well pi resin Toots, a at 208. per 
* These will produce abundantly next ring Smaller 
Vicrorta.”— Very strong roots, 15s. 
per doze mal 
RASPBERRIES, R? “REND 
rge Peggy variety, 
the most complete seg tion. 1 Canes, 8 
er zen. YOUE = ipek LFF,” 108. per 100 
ES, Myatt ANoR,” 10s, per 10; Cut- 
A e Fa is. 6d. per 3255 "Eiza, 5s. ot 100; Mam- 
6d, ag ; Cole's Pro lie, 5s. per 2 
Bedig 5s, pe 00, 

CEDA a S OF LEBANON.—We have a large stock of th 
in pots. “pos Plants, 18 inches, 12s. per done ae 
er var ge š lants in j| 
pe ach; or, one quarte charged. We myd 

large Pol which must be 0 

i 2 — i i get , 6 feet high, well 
transplanted, 80s, p = 30%, ror 100. 

BEST D 22 PRUSSIAN 1 4 TS, 5. per 100 
ES CUKRANTS.—Very superior to the old 


18 


BL ACK, NAP. 
sort, 6s. 

T ra the very best varieties in culti- 

308. 

“PORTUGAL L AURELS.— 
gm Aa 5 * ps — bushy, 20s. per 100; 3 feet, 
100; 4 fi . 
P BERIS, 0 9 AQUIFOLIUM, —A very large 
quant, 18 inches, lës. per 100. This is a fine "Shrub {or 

an | rosea, strong plants, 12 inches, 6s, per den; 
Parnettia mucronata and floribunda, 6s. per dozen; Ribes, 


An immense stock will be sold 


* d japoni- 
„„ . 1 8 
8 sinensis, — nag as 15 5 16 E ki 


f Greenhouse 
n Bords of ali kinds te 
Garden $ Nursery, Stoke N oe Noy, 10, 


aa ore ys 


dum, strong plants, 18 ine 9s. per dozen, 
SEAE KALE and ASKARA G5. —In tan ge quanities, from 
10s, to 20s, per 1000. 

Our new —— nal Catalogue eg published, and 
will be sent, gratis, to any applicat 

Remiitta e or eee in 1 from unknown 
gh sre 

orders pre 51. sgi 8 ve red free of c am 

to = r the stations on the ame ai 


Exeter, or Great Wes ‘ai ay Steam rs Prom: 5 
this pity v London, Dublin, ark, 8 Belt i 
tapen E three limes a week, : 
one ee von Kailway is now open to Plymouth, the 
Station ‘bing adjoining our premises, For Cacalugues and 
apply 


. RENVLE and Co., con Pisak, 
ESTABLISHED 3 


706 . THE 


AMERICAN PLANTS. th hal joel 
OSEA WATERER to annou 
published a New and Complete Catalogue o ot his oe 
CAN — CONIFEROUS PLANTS, which be had o 
application, inclosing two stamps for postag' 
- Hosea WArTERER, Knap Hill Karson. Woking, S: Surrey. 
MYATT’S LINNÆUS R 
MYATT anp SONS can confidently recommend 
J e this variety as the best in cultiva ion. The most satis- 
factory proof of this a i 
Gardeners round London 
neus Rhubarb more ekteni an any other variety. 
ro 


rvin and all culinary pu ted 
8 S jitto, 3 Royal Albert, ls. 6d. ; Victoria, 
9d. The usual Trade allowance.— ost-office orde ers are re- 
quested to be pete payable to Josera Myatt, Manor Farm, 


GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


G JACKMAN, _Norserrman, 


Flowering Shrubs, Standard and Dwarf Roses, Fruit and 
Forest Trees, &c., which may be had on application, — — 


stor the e of 

Nursery Stock on the Pa. inst. Moc at his 2 Mr. Ww. 

Jackman o has declined business. 

e 7er ge RAILWAY CONTRACTORS, 
OTHE 


OHN PARTRIDGE has Six. Fiun dred Thousand of 
ong WHITETHORN QU 8 5 for sale this season, 

all three years transplanted, and he can deliver them at the 
Leighton a Atakon of the Lobdon and Birmingham 


beti g Bedfords. hir 


Deptford, Nov. 
OBER . STARK, NURSERYWAN AND FLORIST, 
begs to intimate that his Lists for the,season of the various 
es noted a rneath, are now ready, and may be had a 

ope- 


ae KITLEY a to inform the lovers of this 

favourite flower that he has a quantity of fine double varie- 

ties, varying from white to black, with all the intermediate 

a? at2l. per hundred. Also, a few come’ show varieties, 
2s, 6d, each.—Lyncombe Vale Nur rsery, h, Nov. 10. 


e 
changes of dried specimens, or other interes iog Botanical 
objects.— Edgehill Nursery, Edinburgh, Nov. 


t 
m GREGORY begs most 3 toe 


the undermentioned NEW GERANIUMS and 
FUCHSIAS, 
CHOICE SEEDLING GERANIUMS. 
se 


r the 10th of November next 
S BELMONT. wee very dwarf habit, a free bloomer, 
— I petals blotched with dark puce, the lower petals striped 
with the same colour; good for bedding or pot culture. Price 


6d. 
LUCI SEA COMPACTA. N N N from Lueia rosea, 
a very free bloomer, 


A 
a 2 e upon its pare y 
a compact habit of gor ma ‘adapted f for bedding or pot 
ure, and colou um, not surpassed, 


SPLENDID NEW FUCHSIAS. 
Tobe tth 
Bs tt ew paron White Fuchsia yet introduced ; a pure 
like consis i 
Sepals light tinged with pale blush, tipped with a pretty 
of green, Pre 10s p arra nt scarlet, flushed with crimson 
ACTÆON.—A ry fine large dark flower, tube 
and se of rich crimson, 1 sepals ‘measuring 4 inches across, 
placed horizontally ; corolla very large, bright ogee —— = 


the beautiful barrel ‘shape, so desirable; a very free bloom 
and of excellent habit ; confidently recommended. Price 10s. 6a, 


CORINIUM. —A well-shaped dark flower, tube a pals 
bright — of desirable consistency ; coralla er e tiok 
purple, a ree bloomer, and of rather dwarf habit. Price 7s. 6d. 


The 2 — discount to the trade 7 all the above. 
Royal Nursery, Cirene eee ist 


HE SUBSCRIBE ER Tai 58 Ofer 28 following: 


niche thre bes 
1 m, Engish, eds ed 
Alders, bedded, 2 years. nr W e per 1000—12s. My 
Beech, 0 | Gorse, 15 year 8 2 
— 2. — i 20 0 Gan te 2 8 She oA o 


ae bd 5 tos 0 | Oaks, 
TRANSPLANTED FOREST AND One DIRETA. eet 
aouen Tho ft., p: 100, 128. Od] Chestnut, Spanish, 3 to 


ders, 8 to 10 feet ... 12 0 4 feet, per 1009 . 50s. 0d 
Ash, 3 to 4 feet, p. 1000, 25 0 Chestnut, faa 6 to 

4 t 30 0 8 fee 5 
Birch, 2 to 3 ft., p. 1000, 25 0 Do., 10 to 12 te A 25 a 


meS the true ee rai: ee here, 3 r 4 feet, 125. per 1 
4 to 6 fe 


75 ” 27 to bs 
a i 8 to 10 feet, 60s. per 100 
6 10 to 12 feet, 80s. per 100 
x Hertfordshire, at the same pri ces 

n English, 3 to 5 feet, 35s. per 100 
Fir, sare veg 52 to 3 feet, $03. per 1000; 3to4 est: 403. per 1000 
3 2 Me 3 feet, 50s. per yo 3 to 4 feet, 706. ee 1090 
3 to 4 feet, 3538. per 1000; to 5 fee t, 453. per 


10 ar per 
Limes, -twigged, from layers, 2 to 8 feet, 128. to 50s. per 
160 ; 8 tø 10 feet, 75s. per 100; 10 to 12 feet, 100s. pe er 100 
5 . per 1000 


Oak, English, 3104 feet, 358. ae i 4 to 6 feet, 50s. per 1000 
£ Turkey, 2 to f feet, a 
Pine „ Scotch, 3 to „ 208. aiy e 4 to 5 feet, 35s. per 1000 
Poplar, Black Italian, 5 to 7 feet, 40s. per d 
Lombardy, 7 to 8 feet, 25s. p. 100; 8 to 10 feet, 30s. p. 100 
Sycamores, 3 to 4 feet, 253. per 1000 ; 4 to 5 feet, 30s. per 1000 
Willows, Bedford, 4 to5 ft, 203. per 1000 ; 5 to 6 ft., 353. per 1000 
it ve arge sizes of the above ar fine, well rooted Ca 
having been teiue transplanted, and are admirably ađapte 


for planting where game abound 
2 MENTAL TREES AND SHRUBS. 
Acacia (R foarte several fine species, dwarfs, 93. per dozen; 
Standards, 12s. per d 


= 
e A — to 1 
Althea frutex, a fine ae collection, 63. ta 9s. 
; Ash, 12 fine sorts, amongst which are the pela — Chinese, | Be: 
02. 


5 ylla, &e., 12s. per do: 
Beech, ernmleaved, 2 to 3 5 v » do.; 3 to 5 feet, 12s. per 
doz.; 6 to to 8 foet, 18s 18s, pe 
s3 ft., 8s, re — 60 s. per 3 to 4 ft. 5105. 
rer doz., Fin por 100; 4 to5 ft., 155. per i 1003. per 100 
Berberry, several 8 408. 
Bre, P. P , fh per doz., 0s. per 100 
- Elms, 5 sine Kanes na eee e., 68. to 128 p. doz. 
Thorns, 2: varieties, including new double scarlet, dwarfs 10s, 


PS al per doz. — 128. to 158. 

: urnums, standards, fine, 6s. per doz., 40s. 

Lilac, sorts, 253. per 100. Mountain Ash, bie fh. 13 123. per 100 
Maple, Eagle’s Claw and several choice kinds, 9s s, per doz. 

9 Oak, fine gone of American ee „ to 9s. per doz., 


. —4 mixture for shrubberies, 3. per 100 
D 2 „2 to 3 feet, dos eas 
ls, 2 3 foet, 20s. ; 3 to 4 feet, 100 ; Portu- 
et, Eo s. per 100 ; 3 00d feet — tote. 

3 feet, very fine dea! Bodice 1, 
and Siberian, St he be ey 


O PLANTERS, &¢e.—The — — having 
arge overstock of the following FORE TREES, a 
at very red i 


Beech, 2 to 3 feet; Weeping Birch, 1} to 2} feet; Horse 
Chestnuts, 4 to 5 feet; Spanish ditto, 13 to 2 feet and 2 tog feet; 

ird Cherry, 2 to 3 feet Hazel, 1 foot and 2 to 23 feet; Lilac, 

aie and blue, 3 to 5 feet; ‘baste: English, 3 feet; Thorn 
Qui cksets, 2 feet; ae ate Yews, — w ee feet ; ous, seedling, 
2 years old; Larc ch, ditto, 1 and 2 y 


AMPERDOWN M. 
The Subscribers respectfully invite attention to the above 
variety of — a originated on the estate of the Earl of 


Camperdow r Dundee. It a quite N me * 
gomon weeping 8 being more pendant; form 
very graceful ornament to the Pleasure-grounds. Tine Teos, 
7 to 10 1224 high, 3s. 6d. to 7s, 6d, each. 
Pri a List, now ready, 5 i be had — esera 
Wu. Udo T and Sons, Nursery, Dunde 


REENH OUSE, —Wanted to pu ——— a d- 
hand S aetna in by letter, yy . size, 
price, and where situate, to J. W., Messrs. Evans and Son, 
Builders, Wastetieet Walworth, Surr robe, 
5 5 SUBSCRIBER begs to offer the following list, 
ich can be relied on as being the most healthy, 9 — rous, 
and gane; — — hed res gi — Dre oe and will make fine 


| specimen 
8 on n 

Ampullacea peere Eximea Perspicua nana 

Aristata Ferruginea Propendens 
—.— — Florida campanu- |Retorta major 

PReanmontia Hartnelli [lata Rubra —2 

Bergiana Hiemalis Splenden 

Bowieana Hybrida Sy —— 

Bandonii Juliana Tricolor yA 

Cavendishii Lambertiana rosea „ rubra 

Cunninghamii Lactiflora „ Wilsonii 

Colorans Licopodioides Ventricosa, sorts 

8 ee miele, Westcottii 

Elegans etuleefiora, tr 

And many 83 — varieties 128. to 218. per dozen. 
ALEAS. 

Alba 3 Dake ot Devonshire Murrayana 
+ Dilec — uncle 

Ans Exq 

Ardens Fiora 7. 75 rubra Obtasa 

Aurora Formosa Per 

Broughtonii ee, Rosen superba noya 

Blanda v Refulgen 

Coronata iga Vaiterate 

Coccinea superba Tateritia ‘grandiflora 

128. to 21s. per d 
GERANIUMS, 

Armida superba Flamingo Norah 

Agricola orget-me-not Ondine 

Brunette Gustavus Orion 

Bacchus Gulielme Phyllis 

ant e Piutarch 

Beauty = Clapham poes Lip Prometheus 

Black Knight y Lind Queen Victoria 
Belle of the Village King P mt Rolla 

Clarinda tine “ea P 

Cassandra Lalla k Rookh par. 

Cavalier Miss Bercns Sipettative 

Centurion Minna Sylvia 

Chimborazo Mrs. Cavendish Terpsichore 

Cupid Miss Holford Windsor Castle 

21s. to 42s, per dozen. 
CINERARIAS, 
Attila. Cerito Lilacina 
Alboni Defiance Maritima 
Grandissima Maid of Artois 
R — a N > boat agg Beauty 
Dena iè Peckbam |Lady Tamworth Rosetta 
ne St. John's Lady Cotton Shep- pe ga 
atell 
Beauty rae Uttoxeter Lord John Russell Standard 
Crimson Perfection 
to 21s. per dozen. 
STOVE PLANTS, 

Æschynanthus pulcher Js dd Hoya C amii ... 23 6d} 
85 3 (strong) 3 6 75 alis TAE E 
7 nr ERS kae or Balsamina 

1 cathartica. 1 6 repens, per doz. .. 6 0 
„ grandiflora . 2 6 | Ixora coccia strong, 

„ Schotti 5 8. 6d. to 2 6 

Achimenes Loudonii... 2 6 | Lagerstremia 3 2 6 
„ Oe 5 she orig Larpentæ, per 

th ea Jamesonii, 6 0 

OZ. 6 0 Rondotetia speciosa mi- 

Franciscea ee 2 s. 6d. to 2 6 

3 6 siphanoii fioribunaa, 
ees Be | 5. Gd. to 2 6 
Hibiscus a beide 2e 


treenhouse PI tante, 128. to 24s. per dozen, 
sel isori bie Po oie, —.— r dozen. Select chrysanthe- 
yan tae N varieties, 63. to 188. per doz. 


il a . All orders be accompanied with 
order in favour of 5 James Epps, Bower | 
, Maidstone. 


ing, 
| FR oper Brist SHACKELL, 


Upper 


its exquisite fragrance, it 
From various public 
ry 


the Be * Ga rdener? 4 
Bat wwe h ave much ple 
— made by vou in this tribe 


ti j 
3 e fact of its begi te. 
tinuing till the end of March, is a aud cot. 
0 ‘i n itself, Ja 
growth of t i supersede the 
— been cultivated has 
oer 


Antr Ai coe — d ih 
the grower as proving acceptabl 
t 38 


A remittance m om pay aft Gale When a dozen ay 
dered, th are 2 eli — 5 oa B 
ga e! 1 — 55 cer tga ia e vere — ath station of zin 
( Hr AND 15 ey by m 


best materials 


ae | 


a | 


8b. 10s. 5 a fas. do. 21 by 1 
brickwork. 1}-inch e Lights, g 
sheet glass, painted three times, 114d. per foot; 
per foot.—J. Lewis’s Machine Hothouse Nanas 
Middlesex. 


HEATING BY 


WEEKS anD Co, Ki 1 road, Chelsea, Ps 
and M Manufacturers of HOT-WATER APPAR 
Economical Boiler _— all 2 —5 fire warranted to last i 
hours without att 
their Show Establishment, ee Chelsea; and alsost 
most of the Nobility and G tiemen’s Seats in the couatry, the | 
Li ondon Nurseri — oe c. 


GLASS FOR CONSENT cous AND HORTIOULTORL 


MILK PANS 
PASTRY PINS 


PROPAGATINGABEE CUCUMBER CLASSES p 
; 1 ad 
MILLINGTON’S — 8 ok 
P, 200 fert 
Plate Glass, from t . 5 I inch in r 


Patent Rough Plate Glass, from 8 to les. Mak Pans! 
I nd Tiles. Mus A 
4d, per foot upwards. 2 ‘Cucumber T 


fees Bh 


12 to 24 inches diameter, from : 1 
from at — . 5 ld. pgs Lactate 
each. a on , . mide 
warehouse, 2 575 nde ithout, ; 


RAY, O ORMSON, anD ‘prow’, 
nelsea, 3 the ‘attention of the, 
—— superior 


every 
work done by t them a 
which aap ons ha 
tinues Ace 


i cet dot Zäu-chneria Californien, A ey 


make the 2 the higher sum per to 


SEASON,—NURSERY GROUNDS, 
on NORTH STONEHAM, 
unlim upp eve on of 
AND ORNAMENTAL TREES, AMERI- 
SHRUBS, may be pro- 
nds, at the most reasonable 
may be had of the pro- 
ee WI. printed ERS, Sen., NURSERYMAN AND CONTRACTING 


d Forest Trees, 1 to 2 feet, adapted for extensive 
Cope e fort — sold by the thousand; and 
r Ornamental Plantin ug or immediate 


t trom 5l. to 201, p. acre. 


8 8 


fit for planting out at once to 
fs Pt tek 


with large handso f flow 
+ 1 foot, 40s. per 100; Ralmia rune 2 97 
er 100; 1 to ? feet, blooming bu rd 50s. 


„ 258. Re 

8, 0 

Ae Dougla asi, Tom seed, 6 to 9 tithes, 10. per 100 or 
8s. to 123 per 1 to 


NEAR SOUTH. info 


Censker Wrote. 
rmed on all such rane in ou 

To Mr. KEE * eer of 2 
and member of | the Royal Ace of Bordeaux,’ 
we learn from ave has been reserved the Bnet | 
of seriously reviving Copnserr’s folly. He has 
persuaded the Comuni aas ners of Woods and Forests 
> — him try some experiments in St. James’s Park, 
ood move on his part, inasmuch as simple people 
wil therefore imagine ‘that his scheme is viewed 
with official favour. Both Lends and country 
newspapers have puffed his 8 ; à corps 
of seedsmen has undertaken to vend the learned 
8 s “new hybrid,” A the rota 8 = 
s. 6d. a bag, which is onl t guin 
5 seed; and he has 

h thanks the 


ouncil, q 


ublished ba 1713, says that “the reason 


oe aize succeeding x rarely in England is that 
the 1 seed onl sown, reas the writer 
sow: with the rs ee pellicle as gathered ”—a 


1055 of forast 0 


the N eceetiee of simple men; finally, b 
way, w of really astonishing his readers, 
he 3 ts that w every farmer will fi advan- 


b, 308, per 105; Laurel, 8 29 * Bann 291 satisfactory to have Maize b . in his 
408. per 1000, 8s, per 100; Variegated | house and at his table. The only difficulty is how 
s. per | to make 1 aia 


horns, 


E does not, however, pretend that the 

Miss which i is to make the fortunes of all the fortu- 
pot bi: chore a piege ee is any 
ye ontrary ; his is a new 

hybrid, obtained 8 the Maise of the Pyrenees—a 


All orders above 8h, carriage | sort which “has been the food of the Basques from 
N beg to inform the tune immemorial, and in all | probabili ity is as ancien 

Trade and Public that they are determined to sell their | with them as their possession of the country ;” i 
of “ag te sols a pee Deng Ima M per | very original conjecture omg considering that 
hp one lante 175 3 r 1000; 2-years "iio. 4s, per oe is a native of Americ should like to 
Seedling A 2-years ditto, 1s. 6d. w how this “new id“ Was , a point 
sore Laurel : to eon, Sn per 1000 rA * sou which ue 2 is not so communicative as 

j — 100; Irish | might be e 


pe 

r 100; ditto, ditto, good plants, 248. 
ee pat fg te he pss 8 feet, 100s. per 
„2 feet, 258. per 


* 
à Azaleas, ditto, 6d. 
bul, Ingle 64. each ; Erica, of sorts, hardy, 64 


18. Per 
$ ditto, 40-Folds, 15. per stone. 
Kiles i Potatoes, ls. per stone, Garden — * Id. pi 
; ditto Ree „ 6d. each; Sh T Per 


r EA Five per cent. for coe 
usual credit fives” by eg? any respectable Seed Mer 
n London. —Co leraine, Nov. 1 


Ae Gardeners Chronicle. 
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1849. 


MEE sical FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. 
a 


ppe 
28 8 
BREREEERE, 


* 


weet Se 

peice te tite, 

ds E e nd ra na A 
‘REE 


ze 


keke 


wis 


necessar 
Wich to bring 11 Sito cultivation in these is 
Will engage to say that the right hon. gen —.— 
neouraging = 5 men to 
project has x 
ed and found imprac 
o push the crop into sr a 
were not small; bu 


te as wa 


Pyrenees before ere 
ted. 


| aise 
e | names with which we 
.. | boyhood, little aad sorts. cu rated in Lombardy, 


in sue 
“We do not pay Freight 


no such thing ; he would as sor have thought | in 
rice or sugar. 
ó wien of hel ba 4 it 
cable. 


| it is climate ‘alone 


| ing to pee oh ton & large s 


We 1 tm thought all this beneath notice, 
and unfit to bring before = of any intelligence, 
i | but = thee Boe For ave patronised Mr. 
KRENR, and patrons give nonsense pbmsibilityas We 
r | shall thetefore ay a 251 


8. 
. 
= 


nknown parentage, but cultivated i in the 
very in America, whence it 
was originally im 
The existence of pram and early ae 4 3 
Corn in some European countries, is no very table 
covery. Mais quaranta 2 and Mais bes are 
h miljar from our 


ome northern Maize preset of 
ce. 83 8 75 is anothe ero 


as the last ; and so will 


Covent-garden 
n at Putney, in the middle ‘of 
3 his en 


4% 


a rich soil, can 


he | would have it ores ide 
The nature of Tndiam Corn is well air De 
SINGAULT’s description of it is one of „the latest — 
“ Maize,” says this eet shit, —— y 

kinds of soil, provided they 
ea — 1 the of soil, p 1 y AA 155 md 
The treatment which it 


and! in the oe ak clay. 
uires is $ 


ty; it must have a pro 


e a 2 


sio of pry iñe; and T doibt 


was pardonable at the Ane 2 


mPa. ke 


himself published 5 pamphlet i 
Royal 


' 


Tace. d 
These varieties — pas very well in England i in gardens, 
ers of a 


ipe specimens of Forty-day Maize, | pa 
exhib 


1 n 
a crop which recpireb at 1 


See e aig 27 te 
Dacca was most famous for its Cotton manufactures, . 
import of xn 


stream 


— 2 — 


That the enst 
Allahabad, — “of sesi chiefly at Cale magia e 
down the e western 


KEENE expects rh ia in the e of is „bat of Beans, Gol Dis estimate 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


But men of 2 are better practical evidence like this—for — has 
1 


4 e statement 
sagen $r — . a to e 


to listen to romances 
xplain, upon e 


H 


caltdn upon an 
hitherto shrunk focused 


ing off-hand way sets dows the yield o 


DN 
© 


77 
è 


—— 


ce that can 


ned, the 9 1 per — or its field 
1 1 This he has 
ing. He r e in ya et 


con 
2 what the 1 . is, and what the 


ere cost of husking i 
ract from 


the Maize is — in * che fie 
thus: The tw 
th 


The whole part 
uring the work, Lect su 


the 
ening of the 
ld; he 


erform 
urer, at 22 


e must 


Mr. — a phlet amol» which, 


in the annals 


husked, 
slice of Mote 


ned task.” 
of 


a hard day’s s work, siting Sni till e 1 


ing Maize, a e generous maste 


iving him 


boiled Chestnuts and a glass of wile 1 — of 


wages 
This course shall make our ficlds to lau 
This star its piessings to the plough ayel 
This care our valleys crown with golde 
Aud spread rich cattlé over the being 


and s! 
W 
ain 


aio, 


Amiable enthusiasm! What a pity 5 60 — 7 
and reality should have such small resem 


£ deficiency in American Corron, and the 


rimental cu 


Tux 
ag discontinuance of the ex 

ae havi: — bgp 2 1 hag this sub- 
ject, w ee $ on 


plant, trusting ge = shall. be able 
su Epi g j yen of — seri 
periments, 


this important 
to detail = 


es of unsuccessful ¢ 
e time point out Teale 


t the 
a 44 is farther probability of succe 


e have seen in Bengal proper that failur 


— n chiefly owing to over- 
rich soil, and moist, climate 
orth-western provin: ilure wi 

pales i e 


that success might 


r-lu uxuriance ina 


3 whil 


ned by selecting poorer 
0 ils and the more open eee e er the 
ing; 


same time, — 1 
mes for so 

În the more pi aes hes of the pro 

22 success seem 


“ee 
the 


the north-west 


rains, 13 in 
secure a e 

where the experiments have 
In our account o 


Beng depended much u * the 
n from Surat, and upon evel 


pore, for transit 
of this commerce 
— pee is now 


n Cotton plants hish had bee 
‘caltivated even by ral natives 
nehes brea 


hat deeper ploughing and closer 


the 8 culture in the 
tha 


l 


destruction of insets 


vince, suc 


easily 1 as we 


introduced 
Sii ¢ o be 
akin 


ae 


ssation, would 
rop of American . even in 3 
fai 


even when 


w esio ** 


emg directions, 


3. 
oe 8 
po Ea tran Deduct 2. 8e. asov 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


the coast and circars have been destroyed by the 
more cheaply eee goods of Manchester. 

0 05 tracts of country most favourable to the 
yd Saki and to ah of 

ý Berar is 3 the most suitable, though 


8 
li of Cotton belong chiefly to = Nizam of 
2 th Ray Na he val- 


much excellent Cotton is also produ 


can, it has been stated, be used rer 
Bee 50 per cent. of ou 
u all yarns under No. 20— 
about 15 per om less than the 1 
The quantity which could be cultivated is so much 
ter than what is ed, that it becomes 
both interesting and impo : e 
the 3 of soil and of climate which cause 
it to produc 
jst cn are su — 
e S cul also be pro 
elon Before oe it 0 ai strike 
some ai our ar readers that the fact of good Cotton being 
a distan ce of 300 or 400 miles from the 


ic t 
ndary of the tract in question seems 
to arrest the air loaded with vapours from southern 
regions and to cause its deposition on their sides, 
thus the c i i i 
wou be case, 
Instead of theory, it is more satisfactory for our 
present purpose to refer to the observations of one of 

Am 


American. During his progress he met with immense 
sag of bullocks laden with t 
rowtee an 


seen, of f: neness, colour t 
and, f little Bega cleaned, would ce 
good Mobile or Uplan 


rtainly equa 

d Georgian. It has none of 

the ek mon in the Cottons of th 
no: provinces.” Subsequently he states, 
as he had heard from Mirzapore, that Hin- 
gunghal Cotton fetches 1} rupees more at that place 

e O eke | e 
el Streman, “th 
n 


Cotton over that of the Nerbuddah valley. But 
when at Jubbulpoor, he observes that he learned 
from Mr. M‘Lxop the following favourable facts in 


regard to the climate of this re egion 


blow here very mild, and not longer than two months 
t. e n 


arcity of rain is what never 
that che greatest cause of failure i in the Cottons crops 
is the superabundance of it.’ grain crops 
are the staple crops of the valley.” Mr. M. f 
perfect dru 


: 1 


e land is saving, 
is the crop of om others, probably Hemp 
the most read e. 


much lich but level 1 land left bee * 
2 as Cotton i is not there, as 
ps,” 


be infers, that 


for the — 2 * 


-= -e cleaning, and 


ape otton 7 
rops, 


superior land in that district. pup 
acubit or a little joe in width, 


planted without admixture of other 


picking, mre and 
cleaning, everything 1 to be i improv ved, 


taste, 


th 
above-quoted Biro 


" | chiefly beyond — ace a the East India Com- 
pany, none o experimen 
been established liete thou 


mpts 25 ai 


eish, and it is pro 
e e greatest success has a the 
perimental price in the scuthern Maltat n 
o Which we shall next proceed. 


2 p . Ve, j 7 
NN 
AY) 


following memorandum : 
Cam 


o send part of the stem 


of a several r 


e e 
ee a ~ been “ringed” at the ground level ; why 
we know not ; it is for the gardener to explain. 
cou — thn result has been the destruction of the 
plants, so as it would mei been that of the branch 
had it been confined t ranc A and practised un- 
skilfully, r in the e instan 


evidence on a smal e, and w 
draw attention to it again, w ithout much ae of time. 


By DISEASES OF PLANTS. 
693 
SELO 


Es 
Brg 
— 


nating, an 
frequent c cold rains, 


d of 
isease can generally be pre- 


that Rice, if it grows 

— time of putting forth = 3 der 

i . 28 and i 
ireum 


5 58 ge. 


water so as to SG — piant by he 3 of 


| the sun is the remedy for t 


* n of which 1 e cot 5 derivation, or an 
other meaning, Translator’s n > 


disease is i by the disease 
a fallen, which ar 
wi 


it and the mes Retires 


dæ we 


a 
robable that in the | in 
moister ‘ceo se at the foot of the eras it will ao | 


= trouble to dry the hips, 2 then 
they are 
I th 


Of 


pa 
ecimen also presents nee os phy- u 
scal shall 


- grea 


ane set dows be 
5 ee fi 


of — 2 3 until there is no 
grains ing in the ground. 
seed Pie aera woul be of no avail to 
The two last-mentioned diseas 
observed on Rice 8 15 
| other ee plants. 
GEN IV.; one species. 
EA. a authors whic 
much d 


aes Pe 


e its Proper ex 


its prevention, it 


us XXIII.; a one species. Sanon 
i pina OF Rigg 


after 

years i in a the ground, but 2 i erry with fecha Fd — 
that e seed to 
— to the „ “hat the lates pa 


eae 


suspended in the fields attacked, and tas a — 


of any 


Prevent the evil, 
seases, 
may very likely be common to 


have been a frequent witness of this sad 
phenomenon in the Pea-fields of my own 
rving of a close study. I am now 


ted to what 
and 


nn 
e supera! 450 5 oxygen, combined — 4 


uch e 

hat Fre rves the ciceric acid, r J 
the plant, attacking its solid portions and paaria 
them, in consequence of which the plant shrivels up 
and dies, In those places where isease is common 
the peasantry give it the name of rabbia (rage), whieh 
I have a f: yet we have medy for it ; for 

kn Lica 3 shoul pe on 


who e su 
steep the nil for 24 . in cold water before sowing it. 


RAISING page gre: SEED. 


Tue seed of Roses is in 


$ in a scarlet case like 


the common hips of the ale but tof wre or smaller 


size accord ing to the 


d it is to bury 
these Any until they pa via the seed may be rubbed 
or w out for sowing. ve tried baed 

: wi 
of wire: 12 aver having a qua 2 bruising them 


out the seeds. 


season ; the stren 
reat vigour, and it is not at all 
flowers before the close of the 


sides, it may be necessary 
can be re through the oo it ist 
~è Another local term, probably of 
e iiia). 


er a very short ae > otherw 


t affo : 
en attacked with he 4 fi E 


ise the 


zen; but if this 


eee 


o1849.]. o THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 709 


~ Tike much more room. In May the whole of them munication was to show that the characters by which at the plant. On accoun great 

Say be 1 ar oe fr „ . species were distinguished are by no | real article, it is aat 5 “apres —.— 

foot apart a * E r erni. 1 f 3 — Pte 3 — we nstant, se on the 3 extremely variable; | facturing perfumer ; but it is most „ 
if preferred, 3 at tne Daucus Carota passes into the Daucus opie’ by mixi i inger-grass pogon Sehœ- 

er. 1 foot pa each other. agi they be attacked | mus, as it approaches the neighbourhood of the sea, and | — 1 an pat — ny the Awra — which re- 

the fly, they m 1 274 nin ge i with a fine rose and chat the plant w which has n referred to Drais | sembles the former toa nicety. pae rpe Lemon- 

pain water, vat which will dislodge them, and the ground Gingidium is also a sea-side — of Carota. There grass, grows abundantly in India, and the oil is 


É 11k it be not eff ered E Ve * — 
day after nef i not effective, recourse | variation of the supposed Gingidium, occurring on the | of Verbena ” is fo i i i 
1 had to tobacco-water, but the plain water is coast of Dorsetshire, which is remarkable far hiviii dom ; this, A hew is tet a ee eee 22 A 
pore desirable . and less trouble, and we have generally sek’ yellow petals with ciliated margins, whereas all | Ginger-grass oil in ‘spirit, The finest “Extrait de 
succeeded W with it. other 9 of our Carrots have white petals with Vervaine,” of the French perfumers, contains, 

If any portion of pie ere are completely deciduous, | entire margins. To this variety it is proposed to apply | that oil, oil of Lemons and Oranges. with the addition 
they may runed to two eyes next the ground; | the name ciliatus. This plant, which at first sight has | of a li ttle Essence of Rose ; this preparation tion is really a 
put if of the China or emooth- barked kind, merely remove | much the aspect of a veritable species, is probably the | very delightful and refreshing perfume “ 
weak spindly shoots and shorten the main shoot a little. — mentioned by De Candolle as occurring near Vrrivznr is the rhi f called 
They will very likely bloom — the autumn. Upon Dieppe, ad pss d by that author to Daucus hispidus | Anatherum muri — l me Indian cog oy 
the choice of those you intend to propagate, as being | of Desfontain It does not appear probable, however tie 3 — 

of a name, a good deal might be said; but it is that the — so called by Algerine botanists is identical pme ve ti me — — e a 
perhaps enough to observe that a new Rose should | with that from the shoresof the Atlantic ; nor is there | of Va nilla — rit ree de — df 3 
possess some very striking quality to warrant its being any sufficient evidence that either D. Gingidium, D. kerchief alone, but enters — —— afi 
added the hundreds already in cultivation. It hispanicus, or D. littoralis of Mediterranean Floras | of th kad into combination ow 
ought to be, strictly speaking, novel and striking — a have been found (as has been asserted), north of the lein ee. 3 ~ and old bouquets, as in “ Mousse 

ctly new colour, or a —— form and care e, Bay of Biscay. Living specimens of the plants de- the pti igar x- ca — —.— „ — in 
than we possess of the same colour. It ought to scribed were exhibited to the section.—Mr, Bantnoron fashionable world. “ 93 * a“ 3 ” 
be i — 1 * Mow apt 15 0 ele, atat, — — a of our commonest plants were the most perfumes which h hive also had — fet n of 
nd character ; e nota ifficult to determine. e genus Daucus 7 ; 
then it should * aparam some of these qualities in a high puzzling, and now that Mr. Torker b had aknak Gi ppe P oiekin r oe 
to make up inqui i 


' ld N55 

have a on ene you will propagate, use your pronounce no opinion on the subject until he had ex- VILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENING. 

eans, If it be of the China tht, amined the eo Moxur stated that there Tue culture of the Peach is one of the many subjects 
on — of the common China, or take cuttings, or were several species of Daucus in ee The D. that puzzle “the villa 8 He plan 

both, and at the proper season bud on the common 7 spidus of Desfontaines was the same as D. Gingidium | trains, and syringes, but he any adequate 
Briar. The advantage of China stocks is this, the of Linneus, and D. hispanicus of "De Candolle and | reward for his labours, I shall e: pe fae the chief points 
Rose continues growing, if you attend to it, all might only be a variety of D. Carota. on which success in this matter res il, if not light 
the year bane ta gh en efore is alwa . eer a condition better 

pd reeeive the an vet calculated to succeed soil, road- i i 
oit; so that out of t am common season of budding on ON Une OF OETI 1 THE | stiff adhesive land; but turfy loam from a common 
ng stock together by at m l ¢ should if possible be procured, and this may be obtained 

it i in icini almost all to w buildi 


id pr alls of gl 

worth hile to Keep ay — sort that is merely a sum- Beauty's effect with beauty were bereft, 3 are carried on; the ex ill be ampl 
i owev tae con . ts grow some of — R e ; oo repaid. In the formation of the border, the first a 
; the kinds v which bloo nly i in Jun nd July Bases should Loess but their show, the 1 — still lives, — most essential point is draining. This indeed is the 
not be disposed to eeh the idea of introducing new > AKSPEARE, funda mental principle of all good a whether 

ones of that — 2 nor shoul tolerate} Srorax, obtained 1 the Liquidambar ge it be in the garden or on the Peach-trees 
w pe o called, for they are es ok- tale by incision, and Toru by the same process, are ed require A dry s wane “avg The roots, if 
ing affairs, except ‘that they partially bloom twice a both odoro us p somewhat resembling the aii permitted to get into the su more gpa if 

lab i aa 


er look we erfumery, not so 

night at a time. We have already described and con- on account if their odour as for the wonderful property a% pt 
demned them, and we span ey will generally get they have of “ fixing” i 

turned out of good establishments, to make way for hence they are mixed, more or less, with extract of fro sts, in consequence of its iganik state, per 
more conspicuous varieties with he tter Liane e pm Violet or — mg peta odours 5 om its being overcharged with watery matter. 
due growth of seedlings, after once bloomed, may be TonRROSE.— This very fine and delicate odour. nage, therefore, as I have stated, is a cardinal 
le same as other Roses. In fact, except that they are It is — from “the Dog tae by absorption or en- — Old brick rubbish, or stones of + a ee answer 
searcer, they are the same as the more established | fewrage, alter the eo r des eseribed for Jasmin; the y taking care r I 
_ favourites ; they have the same wants, and if neglected in | pommade thus made, on being digested with pure spirit, | is carrie main — ; provided ‘the 0 

> hag these, they will soon exhibit signs of ill health. yie elds the“ Extract of argadi = of the s ‘oe Alone 9 and Fogat es it. The ae aloes soil constituting a 

e versta 


i ————— — . — mi n l a im 
BRITISH ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCE- | which has the advantage of being Mek white and does | dition is much more —— a deep border; 
MENT OF SCIENCE. not stain the handkerchief, an important consideration, teams or liquid manure is easily supplied, and the 
Continued from p, 692.) seeing we some ladies’ pocket bandkerehiefs cost from | quantity administered is so completely under control, 
On a remarkable Monstrosity of a Vinca, by Prof. | 31. to 8l ! that little injury is likely to arise from a shallow border 
3 Forses.—In this monstrous flower "the calyx petet r Tonka. —The seed or bean of this plant | with carefu supervision. Under such — ii 
; the stamens con i i conditions short-jointed shoots, full of flower-buds, will 
arises chiefly from 


i xpression posite o 
“a dopted is to cut the bean up — 3 oa pe on 25 healthy never in wet 
_ ml exhibited no sutures on their inner faces; the three it for some few days in proof spirit at a 3 elevated | log 

imer ones were larger, two were sutured along their temperature. The “ Extract of Tonquin,” thus pre-| The api of soil for Peaches need not exceed 
i summi is used in the formation of tirerai eures bou- 3 inches. Keep the border higher than the 1 and 
i if possible with a slope outwards from the wall, in order 
that heavy rains may run off, instead of percolating 
into th inage beneath, Some 


ear bodies the to HYME.—T wo, at least, if 4 more jee of a = 

Petals, a five-lobed i i i d i M odorous oil use umers, namely trees im Yi : N 
i aing im ich sh wel ee Boni of tem 5 T vii and the Thymus 8 Serpyllum, The only be in localities very moist and cold, 1 

of four bodies ent to carpels, two former may be used in conjunction with other oils, as 4 g 2 otherwise, 
them. lager peek the other awe eg one of the 5 5 oil of Lemons, and the oil of Lemon Grass in Spirits, to prefer the 2 et — E “the 
8 i style terminating in a stigma. The mon- | form a tet The latter has a large consumption In forming oe e pend i 3 
ta i ri soaps, as in millefleur soap and brown bottom to be conereted, so as completely prevent 

ith 


rd 
tion oi s W 
g a cup-like disk, bord by five leaf-like lobes, | Thyme, Lavender, Cloves, Caraway, and Petit Grain. 
within the in F Viri (Vanilla planifolia). — Th The pod of this 
: ; i 775 


1 
EE 
Fit 
2 E> 
au 
1 
. 


ene. like 
e reh — at kapim pee ] al Hy i tified spirit ; it has a fine odour 
d t ity as an instance of true folial|cut small, in rectified spirit ; é 
lade axile ee N in the same remarkably permanent ; its smell — — 3 on pent ae 2 in- 
— The monster was found among some | Benzoin ; the spent pod, after making 1 tha weight of | mest suitable for small gardens, In the first place, 
— di ing are 


e scence Se 
correct conclusions from examining the | nature as benzoic acid, iffering f t i 
form of plants alone. For instance, if we position; few objects are more beautiful to look upon ieee N Pere : Biruge, e, Boston, Hunt's 
determination of she eigin ot Ie ovale, it Suan Tile we viewed by a scarcely mention. that Va- Early Tawny, Imperatrice, ‘Murrey, Pitmaston Orange, 
axial in the monstrous Vinca, but | polarised light. Violet Hati Ww in favourable situations onl: 
vules into leaflets in the Tri- | nilla 3 is greatly used z Te cooks and 1 for sa are. ative. hite, in ad 


Ame 

favour t h It was pos- 88 3 a native} of South Ame 

— ene ; 4 Foods a 80s. to 90s. per ge ‘shan 72 ur MEMORANI .. 
VERBENA, OR VERVAINE, f tl - TRADE MEM = 

4 es with which we are acquainted ; it is well known | Can any one say w a Mr. W. Bendall is, 
32 of the Wid i . 6. by Ae D. pega a delightful fragrance by merely s pow from —.— mh, yon — — Fa 
; e little vessels 
: us, are noraen as indigenous i in our British | the hand over the plant ; — 0 Dak bo ant Ee — - 12 5 * 


been indica‘ d sacks containing the essen 
t to the D, Gin Gingidium. e object 3 m little or no odour by merely smelling | ceases as soon as he is 


710 THE 


i 


CHRONICLE. 


Nov. 10, 


Home e 
Athrotaxis imbricata.—The admirers of Conifers will 
bes 1 safely in England. Four specimens were 
ceived 105 ont "Messrs 3 and Son, of the Stapleton: 
urseries, nea: tol, about 18 months since, 
= rte a a doubtful stato, oa sind soon 2 and 
te of growth that their 
permanent establishment = be con- 
sidere n. Itis described by their 1 N as a 
noble ere tree, growing from 40 to 50 feet high, 
on mountains covered with snow the greater spa of the 
year, and he nace it will be able to endure our 
elimate. e have no confidence in the hardi- 
ness of this 505 
5 large Cedars.— have meniz trans- 
planted a very fine Cedar of Lebanon, from 0 25 
— high, 127 peer 8 2 1 —. 1 —— 
eede 3 Yon may 
when I state 


an opini on es e ite 
2 10 — ue draw 


Pa si 
that it required the united effor 

ge on whieh it was m a 0 
bours recommend me to pee aud manure to the 
roots, either from the farm- yard, or water, or 
Soap- au ers recommend | watering it al over with 
a garden-engine. avour i state 
how you consider it s 
panee about a fortnight 510 a ppr H than 
that hich it ori inally consi 
8 of good 25 earth was 1 shane the 47 
Beginner, Tonbridge Wells. [Use no manure. 
copiously next te f it grows. 
its best food.] 

The 255 for“ pony $ SA Feta, — by 
G. F., Aigburth,” appes as I can 
undersiand i, so likely to 11 of general tity z that I 

am s he d be confer: a gr n upon 


HE 
= 5 
oO 
4215 
= 
ce 
© 
Qa 
co 


many su 
if le would kindly give a few more particular 
meter of the pi 4 the situation a 
and a fuller desertion of his Apparati for alearing the 
by a * chai ached to round 
w- * A Ty Chesh 
Slori tatoes 1 5 any 87 have eat aed |> 
Phi a the following sæ in pt ing my Pota 
ave always fo und them sound, whilst 8 
my neighbours h ave moi and perishe d. I take th 
weather, if I eae and pote them to remain 
a day OF tn expoped paor isly to ple them in tl 
pit oy cave, ween I eo ier with straw or haulm, 
and finish with eart 


3 
1 to the length of the mtg more or ee- 


t 
taat a field a of Potatoes 
f the sam 
ime ; put pS not ps oh b ‘the 

the 


ery, but as 
too often N and the Potato 
ed with that of mish it 
3 


3 this beautiful tree — | 
eased to were that plants of this p 


my neigh- 
t 


Water 
Sand and leaves are k 
0 


sufferers like pre” 5 “the high p Si g 1 55 8 


ith me 
id conn vil be to keep a few good aie for ¢ aliii in 


and the 1 I place, 
„ thre 


es closely, apply toa friend at 


ie, 80 pronounced—he ma 
the Tu ma 


able 
| mA favour us with a co 


weight of the io fruit, ot wi which 


5 fair erop on 


—There is now growing at 


t e 
girth. of the main 251 being 3 fee 
3 and x e 14 distinct pends h 
eich round 


of Wight, 
ae the : ops of See g 1 of Disease 
—The following experiment has 
een on ** 00 li e . cale to warrant 
will i in all cases 1 a remedy for 
he 10th of June I potted some 
vag them i ina bet “of decayed leaves 
as the t 
were 3 in the d 


t they ‘did an 
Na othing Ae was 


early 2 gallons 
pe . ree. 1 vom 
ery s a averaging about the 


last 2 when the yield was n 
all, 24 p gas The tubers were 


sooner, and got the yield 


T. Middlemiss, Gardener to A. Poti, Esq,, 
Bentham iti, To nbridge Wells. 

Cultivation. of Salvia splendens. an na the 3 

s3 struck, I pot them off in a mixtur 
* and and a little NR 
about 60°. hey a 5 x isme them 

|Back h le but they Stabs abe n bary and 

w My fatu — ealti- 


gre enhous se, where the wood will have a better chance 
b x 


8 1 p 
will re them a front shelf, whe 
—— pi have plenty of ight They wi 
abou mth, and will wae a long time in 
beauty. T M, the 5 
New Grape. —On reading 1 G fine per 
ae ’ my first impression was the same as “ W 
Southampton a proeur for me, 
— rt Smith's Vines ; 
i 


from Con stantinople, a eat Mr. 


but on turning to the Monthly Volume,” 


| 9 in the * of Vines ie the a “ Syrian, 
that Cre ete, ma 


the followi 


ios, chy in 


etius informs us 


er islands in the rchipelago, affor 


1 bunches sometimes of 40 Ibs. we ight, and in this country 
Now as M 


y have mistaken or mis-writt 
nner of. pronouncing the word Chios, 


8 
5 


rkish 


Ro oya al Paie Society. — Havi ing observed among 
is | your Answers to Co: ondents,” in last week’s Gar- 
h 


correct inform 
r right. J. De C. yamala Secretar 
855 [We es ean only 14 that a Fellow of the Royal ic 
us, 10 days ago, that he had not been 
o procure his copy rd these 


Sor ieties, 


remarkable 


8 S 
„© s -te 
E gf 


uince stock, 
were y N to increase the 


his | specimen 


oot that or 


v 
breaking from: the mai in stem. W. W., 7 WA? 


sored satisfactory, goi 


V. 
L think that if $ had potted the 8 


5 half of 


Messrs. Loddiges, 


of the rare Oncidi ob 
prettiest of the small bright yell aie ed of 
tene ane Bi ics ih na. 2 


of Hackney, If = 
longatum, an, Al a 


peen 


hand l den ; Oncidinm 
evi, a handsome large yellow - lipped 
e ay at eee 


and mon- 
cn ightia n Medal was awarded 
especially for the Oncidium for te these, 
rom Lawrence’s garden at 
ark, came a an roup of Orebids, consisting 
two new Cyenoches, one with white and 
with yellow co the latter covered with small brigh 
brown spots ; also the A 2 luden tare 
Epliondram vitam the P MAI Senai 
on endrum vite linn, t e 3 M icta 
mbidium si ihe pa 11 ma 
tie four first- “mel 2. a — i 
a large flowered Oncidium (brown, ed yellow), 
Forbesii. — From Messrs, ee Fn 
lace, came one i 
ry yee 
by Mr. Ande 


of V. salicifolia, and much less thick 1 — in V. sp 
wale the foliage is just intermediate between 


p 
gradually change to whale 
spike w t is 
jan ed a man „ It forms a ag a i i 

Certificate of 


ager rthumberland, produ 
sweet-scented half — 9 Verbena) 
for which a Cert ificate of 


Santa Martha, 
was awarded, It was 


: highly creditable to the gro 
“sm merit. The bost eame 


to | past thei 


he grows them 
1 Botanic 


the w 
Certificate of Merit was 


straight stem 15 5 — in lengi 
n | trained horizontally on on either si 


i 
sorts, and that the result yat. possihly be a race of 
sweet-seented Verbenas, The 

same | 

| 


our 
of the shops, pom hai split they “Took not. 
zed 


n middle. 


apples — exhibited, all of them 
— ty af. were of 


— Pine 


Esq. KF 12 1 
consisted of two well swelled fruit of 
other 5 Ibs. 10 oz, 


th 
fruit of the sa Queen, 
eir * van sent by Mr. Bun 
= weighed 
re stated to 
ting, 


82 


astle, Llandilo. 


s by a her s; 

Bundy —— —.— "tf they had been Ripley Queens 

stead of old Quee agp no 
2 Ibs. h 


of Peak “house, g "roa 
Ripley ay sig weights were 
„ and 4 lbs, 1 oz. 


— elled, but 
unequally swelle good fruit, 
7 Ibe. 9 Oz: „ 


year than the 


` | hibited were pase swelled and coloured, and = 


were quite ripe, large, and fine. : 
was 2 8 Muscats er 
nished by Mr. Davis, of Oak-hill, East Da 

rtheless, — to those j = Mr. 


were, nevert 


ast three years. 


GP Sen — 


Pw A a 


5 


Mitel fr private purposes ee 7 extent is quite 


CHRONICLE. 


ee) THE GARDENERS’ 
son, and ripen perfectly to the very top. Inj Laurustinus, Arbutus, Bays, &c., which are frequently 
verage s uced ; 


; it is, therefore, contemplated to 1 a tem- 
er them next seaso 


ing shis year 2 b etw 


. 


best, havin 

the meeting took place ington, Esq., of Uck- 
feld, again sent specimens of 115 seedling Apple, called 
s Pearmain, It ing sort, 
, tinged with ak on the sunny side, 
to bear and keep well.—From 


i asp ce of his new 
—. Mont erry. is been re- 
Dr nothing fa but the old Double-bearing 
Mr. Rivers states, ee, that it rtd 
2 from Rer shoots, which it puts: forth-at 
every joint ; and in this respect, as well as in — size 
aud flavour of the ber near it differs from the 
have just 1 5 ertificate of Merit 3 
for it 2 — ** Cobbett's and of Fort 

some account will be found in 
of 


Ar Spang and bi 


on pi crs i ¥ 


at p. This — 

Cornwall and Devonshire. 
doors about London, and 

itis searcely worth the — —— a conservatory, 


Garden Memoranda 
PALACE, THE SEA k Dox F Buc 
amen While England’s poner kitchen ery pew 
at Frogmore, Scotland ~ her's at Dalkeith ; 
e consider that r has been esta- 


occupying as it does a surface of 20 aeres, 

= arrange rfectly, and at the same 

as economically, as any garden within our own 
Personal knowledge. The whole has planned and 
under exclusive superintendence of Mr. 

wh e and ability are familiar to every 

. Since we last visited this place, in 1834, the 


ns Pare? teen entirely remove e site 
ney stood i 


dings, 
me — brick e rections, and the views into 
— te been opened and exte 
in the vans of the palace are exceed - 
y picturesque, but we should say overwooded; por youl Ps 
0 


carri n the princely style which distin- 
the — alreadyſcompleted, Dalkeith will then 


yr 


8 
— an 
Scotland, 
— ont — of — 3 garden, near the palace, 
se on which is planted a —— 


only be Soe ms pean consider- 
the woody 5 Cw ch block up 
, and ante the atmosphere damp in the 
of the palace itself. Mr. M is qui 
of tg a out this great work, and we ma 
modern ornamental gardening 
3 — io. which is much required in 


— 
addon; se 
Ter e n the open 
q Yall, d Passiflora cærulea were ram 
‘i also Ceanothus divaricatus ureus. 
unusually large 8 of — ura 
n the turf, the latter 


poor e 


but facts prove quite the contrary. 


| upwards — 
P 


killed to the ground pan London, are scarcely ever 

touched here, The pi N. ves and walks 

"| Snes with them in te est profusion and luxu- 

ese walks and irom, as wel as 8 

th the gardens at Dalkei 
18 18 


5 


ration, for they ewxlend 
e im a n gar 
tersected — briek pits 12 feet high, and we were par- 
ticularly 2 with the excellence of the brickwork and 
its present perfect OSR for although they have 
een built a suffic * of years to bo elot 
with fruit trees, 1 - or freckled defaced 
bricks, or broken seen, the walls bein 
studded on both Ae practico we strongly 1 
The Apricot tr ees here are very fine 5 i indee d w 


z 
8. 


le a 


arden is surrounded and in- | 


— 


All the i in 


e 
young me 


which was by . just before — y were 
a picture of cleanliness and yon ars one a n is 
ng | set a reakfast and d h a long 


table in the centre, covered —— a perfectly — table- 
as a cheer 


— 
o | made 


evidenee of a decayed Tea ; but this is iont uni. 
versally so in the north. There i - posas of that gum 

ming and limb by limb dying o which is so 
in the w 


rotected 
yo 8 an 


suffered severely here, and in some instances they are 
i | completely des destroyed, This, however, is very general 
in middle aud southern parts of Scotland. 
was un nusually supe and protracted ; 
their usual efforts to 
frosts invariably checked or destroyed them, This 
fem thang sap 
ns, form- 
ft „ and 


8 


o 
2. * 
. 


e its appea ago Apple 
trees has ege “completely 3 by the ä 
of spirits of t 

We obs iret Celery bl 5 — — in two drain 
tiles; the tiles es were about 1 s long, and such as 


great num 
of acres, therefore, were tn of their surface in the 
immense garden. The soil a 
i a 


is 5 trifling. 

A inferred, this garden contains all t 
various buildin ired to uce an abun a 
the different popular exotic 2 which are 5 
verything, indeed, i 

be understood waar x 


the 0 


a 
; the 99 4 of the 
ower rooms — 7 feet in th under- 
a tank — the whole length “of the 
eet, which receiv in. w. 


with these cisterns are pipes, W 
length of the hothouses, with taps 


ite m A supply = soft tepid 8 is thus always at | resting and m 
c d. The warmth of e ich 


Ji 


— ns are . being — to the hothouse, the 
por is nearly o of 
is found pena to the 
in divisions of it are 
ed 


upper one for — 


and sim 
&e,, are 
Onions, and not by 
ity harvested ap- 
se, and 
is deserving of special remark, Wh eat number 
frequently lost or get out o! 
N 3 d i is sometimes dificult to 
s garden ery man 
set of all the implemento he 


3 off. 


fia re toe 


The | on 


send forth shoots, and the | w 


from an Rg dn | 


e — specimen 


rm, and the injury it does to the crops x 
e: 


rja museum 


— well — 
e 


arge apartments subdivided — rooms 
of ample 1 raaa ty for eee bed bei 


ms, 
om lin — we —— inspected. 
in — — clean and wholeso 


aN architect, we ob- 
e Ee = slept 2 os =~ feet of 
re where their victuals are 


w 2 buildings adjoining are 
— at least 10 pte mp he others, in which are 
ba ept the fruit, as if Apples and Pears required a } a ink 
rying e, and pog of ym aps for their prese 
ard the m at Dalke ith, Mr. 
M‘Intosh “lays ad — — keeping an even tem- 


perature in it; the walls of his fruit-room are built 
hollow, as, indeed, all the walls in and about these 
gardens are. Ventilators are placed in the ceiling ; the 
vacuum between the ceilin slates is stuffed with 
shavings. By these precautionary arrangements, the 
fruit is found to keep, not only better but longer, 

ther ‘of uses, W ds on the 


brought | men 


— 
range is devoted exclusively ‘o a la 


Holland plants, Camellias, &c. 
a similar 


ve scale, and eve * 
W. steve ayy cm requiring a 
e the na atmosphere affords, is most substantially 
ms —— heated with 5 pipes. 
In the pleasure groun circular — 
hous, filled with Palms at other large plants. Thig 
erec during the period 


have sea ee ; pope 
that it is likely, m no 
2 the 3 Wines of 1 
on 
for which —.— 


ens at ere contain a 1 extensive 
collection of Al ts. We have 

nothing approaching it in A botanie — 4 Mr. 
n attached to this very inte- 
M uch neglected tribe o 


— pelosi! specimena 
tates of 
— it is apie 
The 


a similar temperature, the under | 


specific names beautifully written on a 
every pot. We believe that the Bean rement 


* 


stone 
liar make, The stone has so polished 


CH 
RONICLE 


TH 

E 
GARDENE 
RS’ 


plants 
the in placed 
nec ingre 
tion ome of * + opr 
fic gem ad she pe alsa pore get 
pan ‘facture and air pot and 9 t 
Jing w raea gress pe „80 e 5 wat 
ida conel oode ut. eet, am i veh olan be pe kf and 
garden, in mess A Ve. z repre Into sh low the con- sary 
Diei wah ti: ho ry imperf sented by th 2 | on MS 
sta es of a ect e pots e te colo 
te of ga — * tay gain Pe ted of accom- ered ge these uring, o 
en e to a tru whi r ord atly . oth 
in 0 l ic er re- ers e 
Sale 2 5 8 5 . 25 to it ly ducal Sean requir , and Abe s — 5 a repair 
which of P Mis elise rina 125 ti in som EPEA are. — Whe a dy fo „the uly cata done 
M have lants cell Ors ese : : ing e ouse ded fort 
th ess feces —A an the way 7 e, and ool will to h. F 
f eoth rs. Low. latel small 1eous. stable foreir any regar and dy daring be in 3 and uc 
ahr gangs „of Cl y re _impor and litter s Beaks my of y dur 1 . ber b 3 
Epi wi yM y cerv rta fo ver b al a aid t n RAP ad Lind 
iden r be = 3 sh pace tion of or the Bat liable OREH by me sit "3 di season. Gr — d condition = 
i 0 
cidi k ad toe ate South Orchids, Red t inings to be oned, ans o et ae ik it oo 25 n. Ve Peers 
ium eri 2 fro h ght to Am of dun broken The pots id. pe effreti ap atta In u will Tet to 
ike aes ;0 chi m th at kind the h rie fore to u by bei ane teats p af ashior 1 bung 
Bes female, fee , o Plowing te eo Again isn ng rte i the iter it form ioned e a tC ml ae 
an ev „ro a t 8 st ean Sin at w Ww „ WI 1 er 1 H avo wi the ase i nt t . as 
and three Bi erp foldn eet gentloman' g Sees voles a . i not wanted insted je allow 5 — piapa 
s. " ‘ i 
Acinet ratum . ae ; alae a — n Epi- nentnes 18 Faden eap of * gat es a con sir ieena — ed Your houses, a Tady. ae onc 
J.; a fe a Sp., eee lds cea, l plant ides, © On- t ou 1 8 ment r the siderab , the ocr proteas apes mer t =e aaki ma 
leaved R to a Samy „n eee he 5 2 . — 12 8 a MENEE 
ed = 2 15s L 0 nost h 18 n op “th onsi itter i du wa wo — lm db esc „ be J 10 
fetched f tak A 3 tome Sac — oon hee em vater, th 1 = a high “ond 5 wie ate T 5 5 bars eseriptions wou 2 
Soil fo e anther le ~3V Wall ace 0 een b all hed he m = pit 2 such orde : t part 0 the * Co 8255 . n to bot gga 
* Sor V 1 to and „ Vand esia olabiu erid a at 0 ost e with t bil of at p ota and d væ 2 stant R se ro o pro — e to give to 
onl ins u Preh * De a, C picta m, di BPE cog eat ak 1 conom he lish mana erfect eacrt ye 16 ugh eure 3 
tu pon ids i ach. ndr ymb from itto; f e ab of ab ea i otto men gem ptio N Y plat a hh 
for re, a a thi in Pi obi idiu m Java. nd out out m m h ts. ent n at Clerckella e glass — S28 
aa althe nd i is poi ots. um; SAREES pr atio 30 i 50° stro eth eat s Wh p. 2 rekalla. Be “ao some 
far — ugh 5 = — Samos di from. patted 3 able i mepi S high y ie 95 upplied by 2. il (see cen ace am ca 
i i me 
kno ache er. be oe fee any ee of ndy, possibl up om an ol ith ee 1 eedin to e up a = pang wo 
on w wh me 1 it i littl dese ther 0 utri e of with aM inches e pl g 55 re 2 
er ee: 2 or een 8 E e 88 the th grea h Areria = aced 5 a light 
ver ed by — is eoneerned in ri import mhadra a be wate way —— flesh are, pr . Ther oil, wre n= 
wh mall (some oiha still ch or ance ion; ew ry m ittas y roo 86er vi plan ch as 
roundi 8 use hate e ee to an ©. mt Pa ake ing 5 
is OP proka 3 es ing * raa neces oil, w elude i raó end nthe su fer ne e 
beco which josphe reel entive ut br ots sary to . decide e ligh covere ntly He vs ee store mo 
sa ny bai wine a inae o | Method, edly s ET dw sen The of th du 
5 3 E Ea ts be Fron, Bene: he eth pla a avid: 
resists the i ant requi e 0 tsh wth ein erio: Sen es nts arti 
4 „ or wl utive quired same moi erds xam 3 it 1g — r to be utter oil ab shou * 
re fbr ecay lo — oo 2 5 ee * t — ing t ee ite is mer wk le foree di an te — 5 
3 — A tm e pee e roo tier e eer ur ae ss 
t smal bt It wi pa sour. nor li ater a e six ts 4 i uch by t is m „ to 
e 1 parti EE will t nd w „and t iable ia] | alter ore inches or to isie = ö ann 
en urpose fre heref arm bat to the 1 8 ight d ap gather ier m shor a sii 
Should ish à es of sh tapii whi val, ish art, i at „ 
-al b ed b = peat fro e be mosph ch, d and es; a su t for ter e z f ittedt 
few e left a beatin, latter aaah edan ere, Whe =~ int nd if t superficial ya ether Marc 3 
: e ae whe process 8 [ ee: rg fully avoit n the te = pring, | ts — 3y plant- soaps , when and — c 
: — 2 ayed le quired to dr i may suitab avoid xtu KITCH by are prese he a aga W—7 wees aa ect 
. av yb r ea le it sho all re EN picki no it T ung or th and 
aal pate dem ehe Th, re ia eae senate anes ape Bargas aa e 
ist rf: eces ; u r re 0 is fer ine 1 il ad 8 
to pass uring wi of ite” inpo N sed, and ee ies bar al e tena e arte e va et 5 
fi winter, siex at ite ith i e tim d cio arv sim e pas V.— 8 a ‘with 
tije or Bagot ays thro 5 H 958 5 8255 ies 4 a fore of ekes ni 9 — fr ee an a elec iei „ Care- ar Tail — 7 i Watch = females a e e Tipula 
ae te Poga A ugh 1 pike 8 ahs Srs up reed be fil a 5 1 os favo lorat nd dope, that it wet, Fir « Lge te pay the iw pie which also 
G. ebe of aaa: hole i in ater not bs tot n the ple filled posible urable o g influe f that fh at species e is ne TS 8 a$ but s or aigo 
ordon ewe fc ily ob es bottom ef 51 tl ts of = lof fe — ppor ai s of ay 5 “wi 2 n 2 ey ak 
Pape oistu d und viated tom of able ose roecoli os nere c ng th ty to ad tak the an oil this poe —— she ts, with hot wate re yong nits or 
rin the Jour see aspen ne: 1 quarters N eg how manir unf TE 16 a æ just ter or vom iuli 
a a oy í 0 7 e. i 
Cal — Wee ee. cing s$ Sco ds poin ey m 5 &e. Wher Pes rou and 1 biggie Pe ina ith hot 3 hat — 
Tar Fee 5 8 5 tel Kale oes ee 55 ay ities and] adv. sh olay, o all be glad of e 
—— . 1 e w a k ’ r 
a the aie ndar of Operati y. Erom | aye the north, on sirable copying a portis 2 rage it 0 cies 1 
be g air isi ANT Peg rat iety. sprou r ori ed, t age, o on an Bac: portion should nition den, — — 
top sen n by so osibe he makes T wee gee — 5 iginal pr g a Brus spare pi Soran alto- nea 4 eae 1 barn ins ts late 
dimi h some o ut ayas 2 3 con ther. ep righ re, sels ec 5 5. 3 the epth pas 
iinet e ther means & — siderable pr eek oe of ground ae ae eos 
ack walls will Seek ll z rainy ees s pro Ee ai tite ws , for th 5 be — you sub of pastur 0 you wil do aa 
ty lls i y. Th will koti by eather thi to tate of th port ion. this bate a ae a, om the nothin id : N to trench 3 fet d oleae erdes 
: as in 1 is 3 5 Weet} season, pi = 05 hele sin thé d well ¢ Ingle. A o the — for on pring prion 
ased ow. Nov si m lew r Te rab, ack oloure e Gr: 50 
e n M ; 5 a f. na Mi bu H d : ape much 
of v instea thai eee 7 58 es * or but pin gnonn t rather fatt pi ut sti 8, gro the 
entilat d of Sa day ze. a i : i AA cta be N E ; ra Cockle flatt 2 sour, Th ut of 
ors Sige ATE endi st at Revi 0 er . Th doors, 
in Sunday 2 12 Max. a. |) T nding N stewing. |- ge prs er than i it 1,2 he ai 
se 41 i 3 ~~ Te 8, 1819 quality Ú WF. d, Tihe g 1 — usually ry like the 
There — 20 cS ete 29578 Max., Min 3 : 8 fant pole Mari Pear the ston — * ; if 
rr 8 2 23503 20.098 1 Toei ach Wind. 2 2 Blas 1 aria Louises 2 kn shelves eying dak 
7 Mean ; à 1 
= — oor . | is Rain Duteh Mi bk Morocco e seedling non han 
Me Se - 31 29.473 30 3 — E cali Pon = 3 ing ari tem ri 
hes 25 * ; è i 
a ea ft ate 39 ‘|| 35 40 205 Py e japi AAi n A a T Be Mignonne. rne = in 
zX 1 Dente fog 29.547 ie Be pt W. ent 8 DON ANDET ing 87 1 acha . Grape Vb; 
— ense ‘om: ne; Th 85 Rea 5 S.W. 02 ylve of th um mw R 
— 2 mse fog ; el clea 5.1 55.5 S. W. 00 sh stri ot P. JG. e Pi elow’ ell ; O24 ; 
aR = ; 7 + at ni gh 88.7 | ET sw. 00 8 ve seem arsni Not ipp: s 8 » 5, Kerry R $ 
oF — fing eens = ri igar ai t. Bir 0 en tudy is right seed, Conia, ing; 9, Co : 
aes las coe — "nig rain at n N 7 Al Hotham. — i the v som apparenti : o 
More i Stat N 2. — ight. 8 me bert. W us v is n and umbe Hera y Ætbusa 
to carel eofth T st and e — 1 — m nts. lf Sane o such (co Is are cleum ; Oy. 
— e Weath ewe, 5 10 be 3 a a we Bonar not sim Angelics 
xami " ‘attention ens er at C 34 * * sp en N wea not ell-kn as you Botany, You 
lea ine the i Novy. aa uing hisw eg. abov A Z, ent eya re en waste own ask fi by Dr. 
the lin wi g 28 week, ick et with Y in res titl tim or.— The 
eee Me ts fi ill be da ill 2 5 83 8 —— Sige en 3 our fer essin sent for ed to eae Het, 
+ whi other y Fom th 5 E 87 5 ga g Nov, 1e last 23 ge. ap ng s a 15 eos names. quest exa ch wretched 
ch ee aily ne Mom” ESE EE 7, 1849. years, paren t he ot! speci re Man’ —— 
Sas > i uent! ffe ces ton, n È |SS of f abl tly her men 5 s lif 
5 our impurities ] cts sa 3 ars i or y an tw is 2 is 
8 „ y, and rem of ti theese Tues 13 25 E e | „ specimens, ied to aati —. ian 
8 rem never ually th ache. Gand thes Thurs, i 711 a Rained. Quantity Prevai 0 — ah Rep et hoe exaltats . 
byti of th oved the short: 25 ee d da e, Satur H 493 36.8 pa of Raine ling W count — owin olepis ne of er seen but 
tilti is ; ý tni hav lid amp. Satur. 16 49.3 ot 44, 13 e inds will ry. 1 f he we can de oblit them them in 
ould Dg th a free and i. e ev ecay — 49.1 — 22 11 3 pla corre f yor ; also BN ma pees“ 2 a 
ae be e li e circula: j > da er. in Th 49. 7 7 42.6 0.7 — Ph nt. Spo u ch he anner farni! e` itis 
; li y- ra git e 4 31 14 31 A nd. 00: his of sh 
d igh = toe ys wi FE ian 7 won OH. s t a us jer is 
Fic- — ion of it 3 pr a 1 therm. 6 de EIR 15 oe E| fan < SETH T. Dor cre Bed — wit pe | 
83 F the leen — air should b too it, let ord SE 942 = width 12" rar Pen Th n 1 paa tan . — E 
same .— ORC ard cold ould d the nh — eck 0.41 } Rates 2 fee each- e foll e . i 
pre i N — A 1 ie 
wi ping t — ssary i S shoe Se eat ua ieee: A OL; Su ot putes 1 soit 58 — back 9 3 
ith the the sh if it sho ts be il this T goar. Old & "a 99 toC — 3 i po ity, and S, S 0 — t. e wall 12 
knife eee uld be untied, — 3 „ orre aS Gey th Ae T — reminds he College. T Pre z 1772 
ife will uri attenti perf sista Ret er wh 22 spon e 12 cad ure e. pipes of front, in 
mo ng s tion „and if Caer TE o em e eigen, nde z — s you of a our seedli do very we 
requi umm has 8 n a Bakeri 3 INES v Simin Sa of addres Potatoes us ng 
ec. jer very fa pa t the durin ing winter s howeves, ison abers I ated 3 43 we —— Feat As aa T 
8 pac i o nti „K is o af. h , 184 ro pr Liq R nner’ 
it 8 paid, to 8 pen oe, and rep nly val necro 2 cool d urena cng s bark acts aie yous 
will h ing Berens ‘and Tesa rg ke unh — f but J, alsin injuri down ur; — Hain tire used in a i 
con- aoe well of lime them in da or trying may apply the —.— mnt ambūr freely upon milar Wa 
scones, Ont 2. — 5 p ing. dry or experi- 3 pe repent? ET bordert 
pe Kayii, bör D and lo They E Bottom, pro ova a aw the ee theit 
y oer &e., alceo! am, sho ly so ovis. al of 50 be to ttle sl se er in m 
tain wi lari with a = ea iđe idia aie bea ope as rough F a manner 
ty. 12 para such — — a e, bore all th they 3 5 . glass; 
wer l be elevati ome ep fi how i 4 
b. iG Rages kerar tish 5 contrivan vd against the are conde 
ehinkine ee Ne the S gain ati wall at rf 
tgp fe ig are 5 at ni eiyan klaon mG top: 
at g y Bor of yo e sea toge! ight. you may 
th ine DERS ur son ther, In th 
win Sa oi a 
Reni aa You are right i ae 
5 oe 2 75 t in su springs 
e pripre it is o. 
9 
s, it 


Misc’ 
— ey. Wil 
y. Will be taken 
into ¢ 


ASS 


FOR roi, wih we — This description of Glass 


roved, and 


T 


ARTLEY’S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GL 


en 


OT. WATER PIP PIPES AND —.— PIPES, 
with usual conne ag, tock 

of Hot-water Pipes, N Tee Pi — Collars 

Valves, &c., as usual, at JONES'S ¢ CAST. TRON WARE. 


Pistan 


EENAA p E 


. feie 5 4 
1 hing Hykeintb Glasses and ea 
Globes, Plate Window Glas 
hades, 8 for Pac 
„ 78. 6d; 6 tubes, 10s. 
ometers for 588 Hortien ltural Glass, 
O., 116, Bishopsgate-street With- 


E AMES earls and C 


FOR „ a eg &e. 


upply 16-oz. Sheet Glass of 

h Manufacture, at prices varying fro to 3d. 

u ma housan 

i edia elivery 

4 and estimates 8 on application, for 
CR GLASS, GLAS 

SLATES, 5 eee GATING 

ATE-GLASS, 
i ASS SHADES, 


PATENT, 


ORES, 
DENCH invites the attention of Gentlemen about 


2 
PATENT HOTHOUSE W KIN NG@’S ROAD, CHELSEA 


: E. 1 eae &c., to the vast superiority in every 
NT HOUSES, which he will 
t to any others Good Glass 

pid 3 feet long, 8 
rg ed fro m 1s, 34d. —— 


figs mg 

—.— 7 — or petey and the 

1 being wo ers and the glass put in wit 

Putty. Patent Sashes, requiring no paint, from 7d. to 9d. per ft. 
D HEATING BY HOT WATER. 

l aeh WHEAT.—For Sale, at 50s. per quarter, good 

d genuine se ed of the RED. -STRAW WHITE and 

ROPETOÙN varieties, Sam Te of 


corresponde ied by mittance. 
Au. each. WINTER BEANS. * ‘sean, — Dé supplied at 55. 
Te bushel. Jonn Morton, Whitfield, Berkeley, Gloucestershire, 
—The Sante Show of 
Tu esda Wednes- 


The Printed Forms of 
and Im mplements, must be 


“4 Certificates, for = entry of 8 
% from t rary S 

filed = and | complete, ono ca — 3 Saturday the 
n GIERS, Hon. Sec 

— Piccadilly, pr 


CHEAP AND DURABLE ROOFING, 


eret 2775 and returned to bim 
da = 7 ovem- 
Cor Half 


ROYAL LETTERS 
PATENT. 


— — 
F M‘NEILL anD Co. of . -buildings, Bunhill- 
* row, London, the Manufacturers and onl 1 of 
THE ASPHA LTED FELT FOR ROOFIN 

Houses, Farm Buildings Shedding, bE Tap and — den 
2 to protect Plants from Fro 

me Great National Agricultural K it is this Felt 
Which been exhibited and obtained two SILVER MEDAL 
Puuzs, 2 is he — — SOLELY Å pishi Sah and adopted by 

> One * 


ee, ND oar 


the Dukes of Suth 

e, Northumberland, Funan ay Richmond), 
rl Spencer, a ano most of the Nobilit ty and Gentry, 
Roral ULTURAL SocIETT's Ho 


W 


Roya: 
bim the — of 
ite Ea 


of any other description of Roofing, and 
gå T eS onstruction of Roofs. 


ar Pub Sov. E Foor. 
its ‘Use, and Testimonials 
referen to Noblemen, Gen- 
tects, nd builders, rs, cad pte to any par 
* 8 sf noah wy uted. 
c is cautioned that the pr — in London 
byt the above 5 is made, ar 
M‘NEILL 3 8 
Lam dings, B nhill-row, 
covered with the = . De sevd 
s Courts peep 2 West- 
. ‘roofed w. ith F 21 hetat d Co.’s Felt mas 
; rs since, un u the Surveyorship of “Chas, Barry, Esq., 
7 s Commissioners of Woods and Forests are 


Mad in sending direct to th 1 — an be su 
ban e best St suited to th their 1 that the 5 pay 5 
0 bird requ afforde 

d particular 3 
=i S ORIGINAL 


e construction of Roofs, or 
of the Felt. 


recommended as the most 
a ever invented, for the presery ation 


ether with a copy of 
e e WALTER CARSON, 


adele; 3 of eee 
be sent direct. 


Self. 1 a 


HOUSES. also f prera Pipes, G utters, — 3 Air 
Brieks, &e., Socket . a Pipes, Retort mp- 
sts. The above numerous other Castings at 9 1 
prices, — of 3 qu ality. 
N.B.—Men sent Bnd ig me to any partof the kingdom to do 
ee ting wal the Pipes and Connexions found, oee — sum, 
n- b ridg e Wharf, No. 6, Bankside, London, N 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


ES, ) then, i is the characteristic feature in the Scotch Sys- 


m of farming which enables e ti to give a larger 
8 of = me produce ar 4 ? Té 
— e the illustration 


DARIAN CEMENT, , for ee Stace, instead o of 8 
n plastering, may | d and pap red within NNAIRD, who, in writing to a friend in 
2 of its 2 pplication alls, and E by the use or | England, says: “Your land, w t 
ich room dered habitable before the — | A . 
only a 3 — 4 begin to dry. It is 4 without se — 2 ae underlet , and 
the slightest af ae the labour er sier pty tyne s expen- . Pah O clamour WI only — ual 
ive than any other stucco whate ner quality is | slovenly me arming.” A iving a state- 
— prepared for Ornamental — for 1 Encaustic Paint- 
ing, & e., &c., cco cS iene g. — eo tthe Works og ment of 11 ears’ experience in farmin ng, his lord- 
the Patentees, CHARL 18 sand Sons, eElms Lon chip sums up: 


vig LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg to offer 
under, and pledge themselves that every Manure sent 
out 7 ‘een shall be free — * bol slightest — — 
. Guano 8 from Im W 
Manure — er A 
monia, Phospha 
Superphosphate or Lime, G 
very other A Artifietal 3 
aah -URSER, Other Artificial Manure, 5., Blackfriars, 
AUTUMN SOWING.—POTTER’S GUANO. 
R. POTTER particularly recommends this season 
for he his Guano, as, if now committed to the earth, 
it is 2. 2 — when the — ng r 


returns, to yield to the 


ngs. In 
by the — 
we have had to contend with, in order to overcom: 
2 ural = cl 
t is 


facture of his Guano, ' which he — 
f all who wish to grow 


ire vs s ek . 
con ct oe ee . persons, once acting 
she. TTER’S 3 — ry their 
the genuine article, the cde r is induced t end a 
— — plicatio OE “Where the — piren is 
uate, an arra —.— as to carriage, will be made to the 
satisfaction 35 i ee. 
in a state eae d adapted for the 
3 ioe: 2 ea ‘usual How pr ice 
ee oe 


E, . to an im- 
ea by Pro — 9 War, él, per 
er 
orders, 
per post, to the following ad 
28, CLAPHAM ROAD ‘PLACE, LONDON, 


The Agricultural a 
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10,1849. 


MEETINGS FOR THE TWO E TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 


- Nov. 15— Agricultural imp. — 4 — Ireland. 
THURSDAT, — 22—Agricultnral Im Ireland. 
Farmers’ Cuun.—Nov, 1 192 — 


Tux opinion is very prevalent anol: t Scotch 
farmers that they are far ape e in skill beyond 
their neighbours in the south ; ese opinions are 
con and their v. — fattered, pers thos 
who are held to be ee nel R aioe 

d old t up a pes $ 
sree’ re 1 selecting — ud 225 

very fertile aa Shih yield 
high 3 attribute to the system of farming a 
greater degree o merit than, upon strict investiga- | Y 
tion, it will be found to deserve. It would be ae fe 


on tiated ; but 
-| of the light and inferior descriptions of land, which 
e picture, w e 


0 yea 
“ i e of here crop in 


me ood of 
capital em 
rent was enormous 
their extraordinary crops, have 

which agricultural writers have expat 


represent the backgrou e nevi 
have heard much, as these have nothing ast of. 
farmer, in re to , has lon 


e knew and 


— 5 by 
rce of the s 

vaipat y an recent date in is 
ho wish to satisfy themselves as to this, compare | 

the numbers of wo and cattle kept on the Norfolk | 

farms in 1770. en Younc made oof ban with 

the statements of th Anges pa ns Appen. int 
ts of the day, in Sir INCLAIR’S 

ay 8 the cultural ae 


cult 
dix to the General Report of 
and Political Circumstances o f Scotland, in oi Seg 
d they will at once perceive sais difference in 3 e 
systems ; ues pi Bo to believe 


einer 
8 


who — 
n | Pr 


are deso 


—+ cotch farm so much 
applaude y and re — the — on the 
lower districts of it, so well N 0 — 
corn and green crops, which have hithe 

the cotch 3 s main ven we 


rmal produce on certain descriptions of soil 
is is ot or Op under those circumstances, irane it is 
er 


stand more in dread of a dry 
oist s. — bad as their climate is repre- 


e ra e 
Those also fall into a similar error, and 
still greater magnitude, who are continually ising 
up the imaginary advantages ¢ of the “ mpa 
with rich soils and beau 5 
every reason to believe that 33 ich re have — 
been neglected so far as cropping is concerned ; and 
when they are once 1 d, the dertilising i ingre- 
dients are dificult If take Jac 
report of the co r-growing — or Europe for 
guide, the results are sober indeed; and the 
exactions o of the Jew, p who is the 2 banker that 
ussia can s rovinces ſar greater 
oppression to ga daring ea vator r, the rentan ; 
taxes are to the British farm 
all our difficulties we ge much for whi 
and we have no doubt if 
curity n by landlords for the in- 
ment of ve in ‘the soil, this — 9 
tracted towards it; for it must be confessed that 
while i ni — — have basi een paid for 
terms and conditions have 
„ as abundance 


d we 
ove a ers cure for this evil, it is Korea a 


resuming, as an agricultural question, the sub- 


in} In 
ject of Emicration FROM IRELAND, now admitted 


to crop, we mus 
as l it not ie many on for the evils which 


on the sor Cte 


liative to then miseries aen ant 3 
h which she 


ntr 
. z only one 
essenti regeneration. Treland is the 


ty of w 
— cote ete i 
wiih ye with neh ioe air the s by which 
have obtained such an e notoriety, and 
1 their less-known virtues have been 9 n 
Not to insist on the evils which sprang from the 
Potato in its high and palm or e dirt, the 


gh 
idleness, the cow. nebo which j 
t was the use of Wat 


was +. 
r it is at the present have been the fertile m 

in the s hi 1 its phases 

e hi 5 lands in the south, this essentially the same under al 
is men on md itself, w en rightly viewed, to enable and all its varying nomenclature. i 
5 p apprehend that the land was much more fertile ith the Potato has arisen a dense popu ation, o 
in e other. clusively tural ; that mie ee eo 

jej one seems 80 on that higher | in agriculture, but idle duri coi g 


7 bent 
5 rit T in Scotland than in Totland, that at 
t 


e do 
a bite E little hesitation in maintaining hat, if t 
80 produce is greater in nue oe 2 ka 


3 


is less on aa . the like it is = e | 
English counties 8 


, even 
acts of oppression, rial . 


| hatin ast 


not always of the latter chee 


e 1 


ure renders 

the tpplication of en, Wen — do 
not possess, to cultivation, and the — nt of 
t cannot be d pary th 


reap their harvests, and consume their produce ; 
Its 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


and while some are dreaming of the trade of Liver- 
Bally- 
shanno and Man- 
petar £ ‘the cocks tats rs of Britain have glutted 
4 existing market with their wares; are sighing 
or ne wales oer A they may s supply wi oad- 


cloth, calico 


acting as his substitute, would cause 

— demand for labour, but it would be 
ut ioi ope: — are important 

preliminaries io better cultivation 

be a smaller agricu ult 


ural popula- 


posi naturally prone to 

agricultural improvement, slow enough ev. verywher 
is rendered still slower in Ireland by the necessity, 
generally admitted, for an extensive change in 
wnershi wel 


some, 7 e alld to be greatly overrated. 


are y over - estimated 

nsidered high autho orities—might | 

y the numbers who must be detached 

These, however, are 
n industrious middle ‘clas 

must first be created, who will employ — 

profitably, in giving 5 a a nt to the 

class: of J abour me. for manu- 

i —+ iaa first be pes 4 by t the creation of 

wants oe ‘whieh a WAS dpe ho population are | 
unhappily 2 But the growth of such indus- 

occupations is slow, and thus the necessity for 

— — other than agricultural is immediate 


urgent e therefore see no present resource 


. —— 


ere, woul 


experience has ste her to 12 of all markets the best. 
Much of the reluctance to ears emigration from 
Holand has 255 rom influence of Iris 
nsels, fro ope that we > aieh tide over the 
aan till the Potato revived, — a See 

a desire to m 

of land in asii as ibe Peeps a possible in athe 
kate l in which the first Potato blight found it. It is 
Sen and truly, that the as a of Ireland 
5 8 ive if the resources of the 


9 5 


II a SRTR of the m 
ended in the relief of destitution in me had 
beet applied, and only a portion of them could have 


be i 


of farms, ranging from 20 to 50 acres, would haye 
stood their ground. 


Txose of our readers a in the Show of 
the 5 N 
ensuing mo the 
pleased to ——.— that the 17th — 3 

he last day on which they can enter — 

for exhibition. e = 5 apt to put these 3 
off till the last mo that sometimes ther 
| scarcely — to get et the breeder signatures, in ths 
where they live at a dist and we take the 
. ee of "publishing this sasiad tan for 
their 


THE FARMERS’ PROSPECTS 

Tue task I undertook in 
thankless one, 

irection must s 

e are proceeding on 

nothing system is certa sin: te A red to show 

thats whether juitly or unjustly, Joey 15 not the re. 


ring from a conviction that 
a false tack, —.— that 


anee of our getting from the 8 at the winte 


millions a year 


— e the a on of a few 
rents ; that the publie 


out f rofits or farm 

burthens pŠ- unduly bear 
land, though we hear so much said of them, are, in fact, 
so tr ‘fling as little more than to justify the shilling per 


but in = shag emigration, The -pta appear to 


m, men will e 
8 the Irish pesant, 
which has been poesta ages, whenever the 
country i sete ds its means of sub- 
gt mB s the rate of at at least a 
y. They are doomed 

to emigrate 2 on ox e necessity which this 
ia. 7 has „ undirected and 

im en of * public 


neg emigration 
s pestilence in its train, the es elt of oak 
h d 


n he emi 


x er own of s 
T Ta. ba ies as 3 


adopting a 1 of 
be 


al than hig 
„the es es and will wet S to bear 


t, | horses, or his live s 


5 


ding the men to the , 


ti 


es. already chargeable on the importation of grain 


abroad; and that rents being regulated by the |i 
June or J y sun, and ploug 

erfectly decayed, the plough 

ce 4 idevable t portion wasting on th 


—— 8 of free competition, although they 
have undoubtedly been — y the delusive system 
rotection, will not be ed, so long as land ean 
ivated sae then at a profit, or there ar 
— to — em 


gaining strength, that in England far: 
unequa h, and that the — who comman 

energy 2 der H 
requisite for prosperity elsewhere, or in prasa 
may aes, the land to good profit at + hoin 


ings, 


— are 


of such produce as 
ome, either by — family, his 
e hus 
oun 
ys y, that th 
ehalf ¢ the — 
Free 3 being “extended more or 
roduets, and the 


may be consumed at h 


i, 


into 

ofa all purchased er an 

e abourers’ money v ages reduced, and the 
t les 


is tithes too will year 


gg year fall with the fall A 
forced to 


e conclu usion that h n the 


But stil still rates and e and iradamen s bills, though 


ith br th 
3 are requiring the creation 
hi 


been so applied, in assisting the destitute to reve > 
w 


a 
my last letter was truly a 
9 that the first movement in his fee 
f 


on the cost of cultivating |i 


t | food consumed, that exact 
made. Str 


grain, mà he will ee p 


payment he must now sell 


bet 


system of manufacturing fa: 
Gazeties for the 14th and 28th uly as om 
tical su head. To 


ana of binds, 


of phosphates, 
substance containin rots, or is 
the nitrogen ae with e of the „ 
w forms the valuable gas 
a ton—that if this. ‘gos 1 ee W 
forming cae not ee fixed, that is combined with 
some substance, such as sulphuric sate which will turn 
t into a solid, it passes at once into the a 
pe is los t—that e even when fixed it ae 
—that the pho aphates also are more or less soluble, 
and that if water reaches his manure 
flow ws away, it will necessarily carry with it the salts of 
ammonia and most of the pho — with which it has 
come in rely 
facts, and inquir ir reality if he doubt tiem, 
let him for a moment contemp late his own 
— his sy — wa 


ing stoc 
and 8 additional straw as it is pro 


d other salts 
n —— 
d to a fell 
under 2 


ry, or no 
e e it, leaving a consi 
urfac 


What portion of the gaseous and soluble 


of the excrements of cattle, of that w. 
tion, tl 


; 2 


5 richness of cattle a ale | 
and phosphates so greatly paN 2 S 
penia og ae, . 


nitrogen; Cl 
2 per cent.; Peas, 
per ce As nit 

its weight of hydro, 


or constituents p 
only one-half per cent., ty amd th the dun 


™ | reduced, bave to be — eas ut has to be paid 
unreduced, and where 4 quarter atthe by ck: —5 


all these ingredients will 2 carried to the fields, 


peat the only risk of th 
their fertility. But under the system all but y of the root crop would be the com tive, Wit h one plough the suriane ip only partially Eoo 
| Saiversally practised, rarely L of these ingre- fo to dl with the seed ms surface, it would be ran Won ph — surface is only partially turned 
Gua ean have es air and water, and wi ese e seed a sufficient quantity of dry concen. | matter esea: 14 * pid, spol, part 5 et — vegetable 
| jggredients large quantities of carbonic acid haye also pao its * foree the plant rapidly into leaf and | quired to ben of chat 
‘ t m atie SRT A yi wth, ith ** W crops no | into monid 2. OF be youd 9 
| ibe xhausted of those volatile and plaian | has wre T think, ba approion Of the ninaa ren ronis form bat a i 
 stuents which e its * em 'of followin ing with a sein plough in the | should be tur. f land, and where they exist the soil 
| Bev me attention to the prevailing | adopted. must, I think, become generally | and th ood, over. Cih twp ploughs in 
y of cleaning the = and of shallow ploughin a f as 4 How nen r more maei rin 3 8 decay would show in 
i — e — ding i ove to 4 the work badly which two pair-horse ag — t easily be eradicated with the culti. 
‘and almost as much plant-food, as two acre pies 2 * a do effectually; and whenever lon much AY i Aaga urk moala be lightened, and 
deep, and yet how rarely is the plough made | in, the use of t covered, or a foul weedy s A P. asted converted into 
to A GERE a u inquire of two ploughs would seem to be imperativ r 
the reason you will be told that the soil 
inches 8 that buen there is ae cone F ARM ACCOUNTS. 
or gravel, y co ay. È HerewiTs I 
au that th the wr soil is only * oF gravel estimated Dr. a Bens ol Remar A 3 the four-course 3 but I conceive that 
or clay, more o e ion changed by frost and sun and rain, | of in a — of medium ie con, Boa K $ be realised b — 
ul mingled wi e remains of roots an a that ing to the common four-co — = of moll, ancora. | extended outlay in maumnse, artificial and home made, 
a — te hee ospherie in Hines s the erude un. of the country, which is much Dae A es a much heavier weight of Turnips =e 
— tat had ras AA oxidised and partially decom- | COrrect, a profit may still b eB A tomes a p consequenti heavier crops o! corn 
; that excess of acids h y y e obtained by farming on | and — obtai 7 ne 
ad been removed om- Est tained. Philo- Agrieulus, 
SEK the berated alkatiin aaa with’ the stimated Debtor and Creditor Account of cultivating a Farm per acre, of Land 
= — wed fall of rain and snow brought — Four-course aysiem a ’ of fair quality, on the 
in a short time the u ex- | To Three Ploughi FIRST ZEAR- TURNIP FALLOW. 
posed to these influences, would become as friable and Three e Dragging, ae and £ s 0S | By Crop of Swedes m 
Rolli , Say 16 tons, at 10s, 
mellow as the upper, and richer in the raakana ne food — bc and Couch gan ig atte ngs, at be, + : Balance carried the debit of next year .. ¥ 2 K bd 
Dring and Rolli i : 
if the lands be Parey ang PATON, hardi ngs a | = vr gre 2 a ure, 2 prs 12 tons, at 65. 2 1 0 
cos 
r te nd the landow. i Two 3 s, ‘at 5 5 
ain, he had better anf eee tito — — Turnip be A, wede, 2 ie ‘at Ls, Ba, 6 
leaving his farm, seek elsewhere a landlord who better Tithes and oo 010 % 
2 i nant’s interest and his own. i 1 — 10 per cent, ? 
80) ere here i $ 016 0 
under-draina WME not esential 0 4 a Hedging d ditching, and contin. 
y ands it must precede deep plough- 2 ee, 
ec eep and effectual ing will £11 18 6 eta 
era ae 
„ no landowne left an | To Bal b men YEAR—BARLE 
outlay. If not the owner of the One Ploughing wie g 8 fie 37 * ay 8 nee 6 ‘quarters p St His, #9 12 od 
y borrow under the Act, and an in- Gee Baan T and Sowing ie VVV harvesting and marketing. j 
er cent. on the outlay wi ne 142 
cipal and . If 7 5 in fe y he pin See ed Barley, 4 bus bushels 1 45 * wo 3 7 3 
at 4 or 5 per e and as lands sell for 30 — Ba carried rs ai of next year x a We eh 
t on the si ea pa 1007. expended £912 0 
ma eld ult 201 to E i EE . uo 
o the sale va z 
aina not sufficiently appreciated, from To Cleve peed, 4 Ibs, at 8d. 2 Eo 177 Balance 1 down 
ani n that if water quickly flow off the surface Be „ oh : d r p a 
nt required ae that its value mainly consists i lance to eredit of next year 116 2 — oy A R 
the land laterin atanda d earlier in sprin 5 
slight . to be able to gain R 5 = 22 „ 4 5 8 6 
g, and to be rarely debarred by wet | To Plough sie * YEA 
ee nd rolling ; : e reductions in t e "Hare arrowing — ee prion te * By Planeo se 3 at 40 3 3 
ence occasioned would abundantl oa at, 2 bushels at 6s, 9 12 0 The s j i 
ie extra rent. But it is “a 4 Went, ey as befor ap 3 (The straw to pay for harvesting and marketing.) 
s of increased productiveness that it should be Balance, being proi on the four years: (288. 64. 1 
ly valued as the means of raising the temperature per acre um) anes OS 
soil, and carrying warmth and atmospheri 
to it, rae admitting of deeper and E. £0 15 R 
of more luxuriant crops, and By Bal years, 
re complete ripening. P Who- — — . motho “i „£514 2 
8 ater frozen in a white-hot vessel by 
it an evaporating liquid, or cooled a bottle e Corresp nce. om out, Several years — 2 — 
ing around it a wet, towel, is aware that Use of Poms on om Clay, Fallows. . ost economical, uses deseribed, in 8 iors 5 
pa 88 paner of cold, and that if | and by far the est and most generally applicable Cont to me by Wm. Browne, Esq., of of Tallantire ! 
. on wad ps 0 a evapora- | mode of sedi te cloddy surface of clay lands, is 3 to this figure), 
warm bi onally e and the | lay mounds of alt yers of the rough materials where the bottom part was flat; and having one 
mm rays of y sun wasted, not its tem- hot lime, and to ignite the heaps by exposure to similar to „it occurred to me that a 
tonsiderable Tadge ap into vapour, During a air, or by the application of water. A heap of 7 yards ribbed bottom would act i conse- 
ae ger p e year rain is warmer than in length, 4 y in th, and 3 feet high, and | quently I had another made with the planks notched in, 
fener a Wish the land carries warmth ixed with 72 bushels of hot lim recom- to press obliquely on the surface, as shown in your 
e ammonia and 9 mended to be reduced to ashes, when fresh clay may | figure ; and it has been of ble service to me, 
is by At other surface ad so long as suffi ent heat i The damp i and to numbers who have N it. Its action is that 
heated e sun, and when rain falls h exhaled from the lime will produce a smothering i u rasp, of them are 1 
at once carried below, in- | effect on the clay, that is not easily attained in the open 
ie os by aig we and 1 air, = Boy ‘2 or quantity of flaming 
ecried e farmer's diffi- | combustib in the former case, there is 
b e n lessness, and in the latter of imper- 


fo be attained withou 
me care 
Regest would bring 25 oa i 


and the plan 
farm into deep cultiva- 


wi d bl 
Aay course of on tion pulverulent mass sp 

is 70 expose the subsoil to the at- and incorporated with the fallow. This ss will be 
nded for the fallow crop should | very effectual in reducing stubborn fallows that often 

in autumn, g the plough twice — 5 the — of labour, will add both lime and 
so thro 1G hes to soil; but land must be wrought in a 

5 what is better, e, ania Se ‘o before it ean be accomplished, when very 
the other. con le attention will be required. The quantity | 

vel, or indurate of ashes must be sufficient to cover the whole surface 

plough should be preceded 22 subsoil- | of the ground, when — j are spread; if less the 

gh with the mould board application may be worth li The ultimate 
uld ather permit, a are a mixture of finely reduced and ih in moil, |< 
e 80 


ve and the 
got at any time, and the 
the 


surface | stances, to be blended and incorporate 
noms much of th 


cina and use 
ect burning] and extinction of the 
surrounding contact of air. The lime can be 


eans are more at the 
+ Sek 


715 


exposure, 
process can go on in wet or 
command of 


Aue of the 


gine 
ing; 9, comf 
amount of 2 { cot! per acre) and skill w 
me ane 5 to meet on 
1 account, as is evident to 


the 43 
n soil with the new, and eradic Cumberland 3 to this im 
assume every ferme to have a ty Paper of the imm October, | part 
Zaan, or to be able to lire — where the writer is at a 2 i , 
bring clay land into p curious in the antiquity of it may see, on my farm, 
spreading and ploughing — pe f the kind e1 , | 
manure would be as usual, and as in C or perhaps in En 


rus 


waving and luxuri 


clean gro 
crop, a fresh supply of weeds 
appearance and Mao Mage iy A 
the midst of a Nor is 
the field itself, but ex t extends to the as ean 1 5 
housed, for on 5 men gree 
stalks bein ing a 8 the bot 
sheaves, it is ! 8 (at — in “his damp 

t thoroughl in the inside; 


—— 
arison * like sotto of 


us 
ars a fie ws superior r intelli 

Al, however, cannot be lum 
ed of p armers vill — 


“ dea ag os ad.” 
in | may be more inteligible to practical 1 18 1 Lona 
to bus from pou to 


een | quart 


h | Ba 
Wils 


e 
Shelley, 5 — Simonds, 


of many for a bare subsistence, will keep up rents ae a 
as not the demand for land in Treland bee 
And 


use of 
oe payments, in 
this 5 if of long n, will I firmly believe 
i er 3 ean 3 upt 2 ruine 
be untry. Biding the tim 
ith some mental 
tion at least, if no pecuniary gain result chesatfotit and 
I hope Š shall not be slothful in my little farm of 100 
pests F. IF. 
ead. 
Be “of ie = rep ae an nd Far 
settle the quest 


L hope you 1 = allow = 8 
r, (see p. 698), 
His yrds t 
jumps 
nes an 1 
2 enka ama to clear up 
ealeulations ; but this I see, that he says the 4lb. loaf is is 
5d. or m self, at the time the erties was written, 
we were e paying —— e (Islington), *. 3 and the 4lb. = se = 
w 6łd.; of c eaking of the 
quality and that li little convenient err or giv ~ ee 
sack e profit than he allows! viz., 26s. ead of 
0s. Qu. the amount of a baker’s 57085 after 
due allowance for alum and water, as well as over- 
charge ?] 


om p 


o that 


Societies, 
ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND, 
Tue Councit resumed their sittings, after the recess, 
on Tuesday last, the pa — November, shores a monthly 
meeting was veld ent, Mr. Tuo ae 
C eH- W; 


KE 
n, Col. A 
ne Bike, Col. sat 
bbs, Mr. Le Hobb „1 
Shaw a) Mr. Shaw parme — 
W. Simpson 


r Bra randreth, 
rett, Mr. Brandreth 


gree h and Pro 788 or Wa 
e following new ers wees elected : 
Wastes The Lord, K Hall, Wymondham, Norf, 
Delves, William, Frant, Tunbridge Wells, Kent 
Crabtree, John, Hales wo uffolk 
Smith, Henry, The Grove, Cropwell- — — Bingham, Notts 
Bale. 3 Flint Hall, East Harling, Norfol 
Hallam, Thomas, Bridlesmith Gate, Netting hase 
Tillett, . Hill House, aright e 
Saxby, W illiam, Rottingdean, 
The names of 26 ‘candidates: for: alettiin at the next 
meeting, were then read. 
FINANCES. ~ Colonel Cuattoner, Chairman of the 
d to the Council the report 
ciety to the end of the previous 
onth ; from which it 8 ed that the current cash- 
balance in the hands of the 
534. 


with the 


bours. But can low pri 

am a pra tial 1 farmer, and although 3 I am 

not janie on the prep zily o of agriculture, my 
earlies “pesca e and present 85 

rooted in the 


bs xperi . been u 8 
clay hoh of 100 acres, 65 acres of whic h are arable 
the other 35 acres are Grass, ave done mu te 
improve the land, and have not gruðged any outlay of a 
ive character. The follo owing is the result of 
my last year’s cultivation : 
Wheat from the harvest of 1848, 5s. 8d. bush ae 
Profit by ss 5 of farm horees 25 10 o | th 
Pigs do, sold 31 4 6 
. 5 9 952 
Beans (ót consumed on . farm) 13 0 0 
One year’s rent 2 = +» £100 0 a — 
Tithe oad rates one CEO 5.0 
» exc. — of work done by farm 
Guano and other man bought = 135 328 
(3 ures U 
Tradesmen's Bills gi 23 10 0 
l £321 13 0 
Loss, besides interest of capital 1 
——— £320 6 6 
Such is my experience of last year, Had, however, 
the old average of prices been maintained, I should 


rosie had s a ho s profit, but no more 


patties are deeply a 


exactness with whic 
neial business of the 


state i the Society. 
Coun mbers in a 


AGRICULTURAL SAARELE 


e, I | tha 
grati ifia- 


58 — 


e following er 
for ‘an business of the p 
1, Tuesday, Dec. 4. Mont thi y Cou neil at 12 
neni, Dec, 11, Weekly Council = 1 
eresse rofessor Simo 


gements w were then 
o'clock, 
lock, 


and 8 of the Toor in 8 
animals; 5 8 articular refer seated rot” 

w — Sheep, a oe onos, 
. Wednesday, Dec. 12. npe Council for Fin 

3 Ld 72 k k Pe wt Com. 

S5 ese Pro: 
Illustrations of the — A 1 hy Physi ditions z 
Water, at 8 P. . 3 sical Con 
6. Thursday, ka 13. Special Council for Stock Prizes, at 


11 prec 

7. Friday, Special 
of Members at 11 Au. 

AN 1158 having laid belore 


the 
3 wo e qualified to compete, provided they 
ee en tard ring with the Society’s rules for 
— mpetit 
ENTS, — 


the Country 
r. 3 of the Society, N Win in request of 


uncil, 

Farm Accounts,—Colonel Cuattoner, Chairman of 

the Farm- Account ae laid on the table a com- 
ose 


nicat td ei 
Veterinary Colle lege to the 
the Council, that Bone Simonds 
to act as the nary Inspector to the wene The 
Council w oted ti 


cordial anå best 


on in promoting the great object of the 


o. opera 
applies i — science to the live stock of 
farmers. 

SMITHFIELD 8 ie sarge wip GIBBS 
those Members of t uncil who intended to 
entries for the — Smithfield "Chub b Show, that the 
17th of November would be the latest ür for that 


purpose, 
Numerous donations and communications for diseus- 


| sion were received and 5 rred to the Weekly Com 


on the llth of December. 


F ? Clubs. 
Bortey: On the Application of Manures for Wheat. 
ent meeting of this Soc ociety Mr. SPOONER 


Depreci ted — “US 

ated v dae 106 15 6 
2 

Expenditure as above a i es 321 13 0 


5 5 Assumed balance for interest of capital and profit £105 9 0 


3 is the great erop on clay land, and T had 30 to the rec % practical 
to the acre last This I consider a fair farmer), awarded Sir Taomas TANCRED, Bart, of 
I am wrong in Cizenoester, pai rshire. 
for any of your II. The Commer ete A Ho: judges to the 
kindly to supply Essays N the followin 
ne may judge of H Concordiâ res parvæ l ai 
© cost of producti 5 
ice of produee with which t 4. “ The talk 85 : Farner 15 * his gs ks,” 
ct is too well known, | JounAL.— Mr. also reported that the new 
ers in some districts have part of the So satay’ é 3 was in the pm vend? 


death struggle | consideration, and report to the Council, on Dee. 


would be ready for distribution reres the membe 
soon after the ensuing December m i x 
 Prizes.—On the motion of M Mr. 


Stock 
| the following committee was appointed to 


‘SHER Hoss, 
to take into 4 


12, the 


others, 

1, lists of me: subscription, heed an 
rticularly those of the Continent, we find that our averag® 
| alphabetically © classed in counties, with a a statement of |P * rop of Whe cat doubles theirs, and K ee dobia y the 2 

p 3 ne yu A 
paed during th use our lani fetter or more np ae — er 
n the walls ef ae Oal: room, = order that an "| en nthe O ontinen, ut alee — ars depends on nature — 
examination of these names migh 1 lace by mem- ments for the moderate supply of that Foai wi o in 
bers = Council residing in the —— localities, and grain of Wheat could Lf — brought rode? aa rule, whilsthere 
reports made on the subject to the Finance Com ———ͤ — tees aa mae 
previously to the Special Council in December. ores — he exception, Th the land than for the — upply of — 
MEMB F COUNCIL.— ouncil Digi with | food of plants for the furnishing the in — materials from 
deep regret, i the announcement t of the decease of their | the disintegra gr — onthe ut ate constituents of 
venerable member, Mr. Hillyard, of e near — ek plantè 1 N two kinds, organic reer 
Northampton. nic or earthy. The former, although 3 three of 
E Essays.—Mr, Pusey, M.P., chairman of the cipal bulk of vegetables, consist only of tert and of 
Journal Committee, r iransmitted to the Council the bsr le — „ pay a bodies, — 
report of the Judges of Essays, gra and Specifications: forming — from two to seven per cent., yet muck iron, 
for farm 1 from w — it appeared that the numerous, consisting of salts of silica, lime, TS found com 
as adjudicati ions = made. potash, soda, and a few others, which horie, and other ande 
3 f 50 bined with nn sulphuric, phosphoric, ater, and others 
ve pa o 0 for the best Essay on | A certain number of these are soluble in water, 
oe. Construction of Farm Buildings (with plans, alsi are not so. f 
and ing estimate of the farm buildings,| The Wheat and straw together consist 0 1, egg, 
exclusive of due ing-h = s, enabling parties = 3 NNṔEL:! aae 835 52 


matter 


Carbon 
Oxy 
a C 
Nleroge n A 
1 . matter 
e 
Wheat removes i “4 Ibs 
AS. * crop s 1 1155 n 1 acid, ‘i 
5. po 
— removes about 
soda; it also — 


351849. THE AGRICULTURAL GAZ ET TE. 717 
e considered that t 111.0... re a ae Rae 
: — z was 1 all bones dung for ond T cod p crop, and to | mip be sap in 1846. “g ye Blo made this trates mpd it and e the workers hate been obit fe — Tare 


Be 
H 
38 5 


* 
N 


y been 
— * — pecu alte 
—— and the — food for Wheat wa 
nitrogen 


E 
HEPA 


773 
1 
j 


to sow 
b fit of the 


22 
2 
č 


8 
d 
88 
Hin 
pF 


n. me was fa —.— neces- 
mponition s = a dung, that it 
turned, * z to e fermentation, 
this p ntity 2 monfa, at least 
this is valuable —— — dissipated a and lost. This, 

as the sens ow : ethod of rais raising a 3 od 

as most essential, in or m 

which w utrodueti 


crop, a m 
Sarena of this altered system ma aay thus 
We — 

— Byt or “<j the field well covered — with e 
2, We save by this a consider 


9 t ly scp, A the 


ae 


i 
out the . ved 7 penp when acct 2 80 ite cote to sar 
a to often to lose the 
4, We reserve yi Fat — tat crop which rations nearly all 
a pels of expending it merely to furnish one 
or two of its 
5, By has, . only what the Turni 
d that in a very solu 


Bai, without manure, is considerably grea 
— with — at gh 2 mo pa 
that the carbon 


a 


ntity of d 
J lbs. of ammonia, grins e prine 1 al —— A 
which, however, can also be as es by hal 


m at the cost of 5l. 5s. thu ing rs —— of 2 od r 


ng so 
sea gd rp of 1 — Ploughing 
Carro and ¢ 
88 the pig dun 
ave about 1} acre * — 5 Ca 
ae 152 7 * — Bg * 40 and 50 tons 
| in gt ank w mea — OWS, spren — „ 
0 er — he maine, . — stubble and brakes, draining, &. J. B, 
e extract.) So that it 1 * | 


eee 
Notices to Correspondents, 
| Cow Couns: J, Kidlock, See page 43, 1846. If you have not the 
Í paper, wo uias, 
| CUMBERLA AND ÜL —— It is not to be had in 
ot the drawing suffice, Per. 
ps ’ will prži by a „Sosotiption of it as would. 
enable a country 3 to make one. 
No 3 whether it be a 
i fide —+ nure it is not liable | to ape 
r intended d for pe en 
5 i will suit your ae sot 


for 
a icher state 


rot crop, 
es 174 rpa 


mus 


the dung — the 
ne “Tames thinks of more. valu — 10 cw 
the la ud w 


ox, whic 
t. guano, is in 
t 


avenac —— 23 


e 


5 Thie 
N ij i Trifolium 
U per acre, sown 


+ pra- 
— um pra. 
um pra. 


. whilst th 
ia ini oth 1 


rivi an 
1 77 5 oa ‘cal statement, which 
t had been IV B Watson. We cannot find an certain. 
t. sa ve ariety ; and — 

selected not artificially hy bridised—is no doubt a hybrid, 
4 3 3 — ly in “sadn a crop of Tur- 

rop of en the year 

r the “advantage pra the ag — 


PAB Now, 


ure, 
ng ought to — it a, but the 
k tha 


oe 
e 


shou rg rg pine 
tenant E — „ og 10 
ee Han 


contained in the flesh, reason G iy mown co 


wed ine Ans corn that h hae been 
5 tied in looser sheaves ; 
together, and e n ther tore be hee tthe. tigh 


corn is sooner 
: the former is 
the s latter is neatly put 


a 
rag aver escapes 
f ammoni 1 Ur. 


ne 


Resa TURNIP 
INsECTs : 
INSEED FOR CATTL 


age 
m the money 
d I do not eres t say 

anyt — against Monge. — Beet must and no doubt will 
aud 7 ne eeu crops of a farm must — 


0 
ch iste 
may be dissolved as putting 


ones dung, but not sufficient for the se le extent, is to half. 
dress a portion, and add hale a dressi 
nure, Besides 


the advan 


— tetas, tip — toft es carriage of dung wi 
4 — 85 sory have ins seed Peruvian gua 
because it 3 grain, as it comes from a tropic 
* no rain falls, and thus none of the ammonia is 
with African varieties, which b ing 
, is more suitable a oe Autumnal 
i ost cases this means 
is the young plant nursed well through the winter, 
soon a3 vegetation 8 = start in the early spring, 
the manure is then re ady to come into aTi, action, 


2 * materia 
e is stil 


wee weather 


00 dry for its employment in the 


l m 
one measure of meal into pt = segni tor 36 
is afterwards to be diluted w sei so that each beast may 


consumed, But 
83 has been 


o good farming , witha tall-teaing € attle. ‘ot water enough e chaff 
ruch a doctrine as that maintaine Mr, Mechi, in a speech 1 Inquirer rer. hen the nee ot Celaya we should greatly prefer 
which he says that he — purchasing 10001. worth o mauuring in mn. We t “rafter” the land, how. 
rn, to feed cattle on a farm of 200 acres, Such s statements as ever, but plough it deeply 22 w ridges 8. 
8 are calculated to excite dist: It is ers | Pros : Inquirer, Pigs fattening in 2 mo to 12 sobre, will. 
to raise the utmost aineunt of green crops they ‘can, aod t equire 6 0 pe 7 ibs. of meal daily, with bolled roots, 
dispose of these crops to the greatest advantage. To his, » | Popry Ca T S. Is there any published analysis of this sub 
in nine cases out of ten, stock must be fatted; and if the land 2 
is not adapted for sheep, which are most fitable, cattle | RAR : FE says "I L- — if any of your corres. 
st be kept, to whom some portion of oilcake or other artifi- —— wii be kind enough togive —— the medium 
cial food may also be added with advantage, This is ee 3 of 50 ur Paper, a oipe fe — rabbit skins of the 
ell, fair and legitimate farming, aud the pro 15 
cattle must govern the value to vad aa on — roo aoe BUTTE 2 know how the rancidity is to 


u But tto 
of cattle atan annual 
e patriotic 5 tois ‘of supplying — > public 


us Liebig, whose researches | 
ani any living 
ants are capable 


case, much yad it will = washed awa e rains, and | wit th beef, or for 2 purpose of 1 the ung, water in cos c f lime d; b tities 
ie latter it m time on the Kaal giving off — dee, AS concentra ted manu Economically PE here mr be 75 by exp ent. 

y ammonia for which t us. OF are asked for facts ; and accordingly 

Mu ch w Longe Sey oh , depends upon the 3 question, and as To er ripe it ought to be! nt Br — eas ier fa t on this subject; we do N ma 

orous natare, and lying Mr. JACKSON, in his nae Mr. Mun unroe’s Farm, day oes any one know of a work on game fow eri aps 
may be ya with adva mises, — — was more con dof t the u! tility and profit of artilicial fully into the details of their management, characteristics, 
and able to a visited by heavy rain, 3 ures. He detailed ‘the er of its striking advantage „than Dixon’s “ 8 Poultry,” and other works 
£, there is unger 120 ar greater | over 3 vane ina o: Oats, the former being place on the pee subjec 

b Ee washed dow fur: he brow of a field : 4 Wi 2 artificial manure, prepared by | SHEEP? 3 They can bo kyt on: on petnar and hay all the 

— a general maie, = best e of. ap. Spooner, produced 4 — an acre more Oate than the other, ear j it better thana 

fear bowers, | dressings for Wheat is to put in about two- The only 8 with Prg ra jaia would the land maintain wether flock 
5 5 in the autumn, reserve i ne third for the spring, | itself for a second crop, s intain this palpable advan- | Swar, * : Falcon says, if your “A.M. A.” 
tioned the objections that had been urged | tage ? 333 to try a experiment, and wouid 3 know thing of farming, and can — attend to 
uano an autumnal application, viz. its repa the: result, He should cer 1 Se next year double th the enon of bis 16 acres, he might, by 1 . 
rapidly, and causing the W o be | quantity of artificial manure.— N Ames some duce at home, make it amu vey well; but I ir 
„and stated how he considered he had obviated nq excellent remarks on the practical Tatexemento of farms, and, he — te to depen nd upo to look 2 — his land, and 
am ia, and adding other substance in tha course of his grainy gars eres as his nion that lung trust t e marke * fot the rd of his stock, it wou id be 
s defi 8 The results had b were going rapidly ¢ fashion, and that the] more satisfactory i let it at a fair rent.—Will “ A, M, * 
al agriculturists been somewhat system must a are, Pc pass away “altogether. He had some furnish his addres s We kaa, — for him. 
ory theories propo by v land which had 2: been fallowed for eight years, and he need | Winter BEANS : We 260 They are certainly a distinct variety, 
14 el advice they have too ‘hastily | not tell them, who knew his farm, well as his sys They are also called the Russian B aps that tes 
blic. managing it, that ba ilan an 1 . Fallowing, he ae their origin 5 iter Tar 


s if they could o 
eradicate the Couch. gr . 5 be of which! he ami when drain: 


the soil, 


the —9 earths, in 


e con- 
e Turnip crop, 
on with e 


D 
22 2 
5 8 8 8 


rs. 
eee E sulphuric acid, 
No. 2. Theerop th 


recited some arenes hoes . 


e wis obtain in the application ot 


0 
e ea ea arene | 


ing, FER penetrated the land to ihe 3 of = 2 But, depend 
ami it, the — for general fallowing, i e of i deep- 
ed prejudi ces, had gone by Bee ever wat fee The question 
an peue thoy zhon id not exercise the talents they pos- 
Sl mack endea to increase the manure ures at their | 
5 He had not purchased artific — ft raga consequent! 
for h bis Wheat — but he had a so for his Tange: 2 17 e instances, but itis too mi 
with 3 and profit. Now, he did not — bullocks for “what qualit ies. Then mber « 
2g = 2 he did. he d t tha cong nay as vse ee : dor 
x this * what he —an * 
E the page to pay their pon = of 2 . 
no part of h 
the e yard, p intervals, goud loamy earth, 5 inches be Adept; to 1 
the 2 poe with the manures, w 
fields red to be used. He did 1 d 
aiia] apatinis in the Jei, beca 
posed to let the stronger overrun — — the weake: 
ood crops of Whea 


we have 
. een, Pigs; Tan France, 
* Timeotnative, 870; from Leicester r and Northamp- 
from Cambridge, 120. 
38 ó F g P tng — 2 i. 
ool t g-wools. to 
we 3 0| Ditto Shorn 
| rely 3 to 2 JS 
pte nana : 
Lambs 4 me : 
Calves „8 31 . 
22,990 ; ‘cin ty Pigs, 320. 
Nov. 9 75 
of year 


i 
m his home-m — 


sss soe 


~ a Beas the time ear is not excessive ;. 
larger than the eee ; still the best Scots, 
ery tiful, 'Inferior 


2 ae same am is the cause of the s 
r the 9 produce — . iu 3 
ended in the pon eof olloako or corn, and con app y. 

y feeding 530 Sheep, 105 2 and 18 1 18 |] 


——— F( — from — 300 ; 
Calendar of She, agers gery 


| Best 


BERWICKSHIRE PH N 2. — We have finished Bent 
have oa oughing the 

Bonn tan, and sowing Whea — aud p pap ag e 
Omo coals plough 


her was 


„ 2 
ee 


h from to 18. 
Heaths, Pelargonium, yen 
emums, 1 TRUTHS, Primu 


Pine-s pples per Ib., 3 
* othouse, p. ib., A pe Lil 


we 
Mean. per doz., 28 


= 155 — — sieve, 48 
np. bth. 25 tO 48 


Apples ki ; 


Lemons, er er 875 
per 
Cabbages, p. doz. 
owers, p. 
li, p- do 
s, per emear È 
Brussels Sprout: 


s, per bun., 4d to 6d 
Spinach p. sieve, Is to 18 6d 
HO . Nov. 9. 


og Ma 48 to je 


s to Als 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


Ar 
Almonds, per pèc 


sta EN, Nov. 10. 
othouse Grapes are ait pienti ul, and the supply of Pine- 
excelle = ‘quality is well koe upr up. Filbe: 


nd W alnuts 


2 hs das 


eet, 90 it, Y to 3s 


nts, p. 100 


beh 2s 


48 
vibe he per 100 tees 45s to 60s 
niee” Bar, E Biss 


„208 hag 22s 
o 16s 


LES 

to nions, p. bunch, 2d to 4d 
yrs — Spanish, p. dori, = 6d to 48 

02. bundles tals Shallots per . y 


— Ib. 
p. on i ea 17 38 


ioc, Cab, 
os, 


Endive, per score, 1 = to Is 6d 
mato 


e, 33 to 4 


Messrs. ois page and Surrz report that the market re- 


mains the same 


HAY Por Load of 36 Trusses. 


Inferior ditto... 
Rowen 
New Hay... 


— tar ditto... 


‘Old Clover 1. =, 
Fine Old Hay 


Inferior 
New a Hay: we 


“Olid Clover 


New Glover 2 
aw oe 


SMITHFIELD, Nov. 8, 
Prime Meadow ee >y to 15 


rade heavy. 

ND MARKET, Nov. 8. 

Prime Meadow Hay 688 t0728 | D Tosto 80s 
50 Rd y Clover ae 


Noy. 8. 
to 608 New Clover ... 
55 | Inferior ditto... 
= {Straw =...) w 


ee 


J. COOPER. 


ws. 60s 090s 


eee 


Zł 28 


30 


' Josva Nur 


—s to —8 
60 65 
22 24 


Supply — n Ma very dull at the above prices. 


„ WBE... yee 
Foreign...  ... 


Rye—Old 


F reign... 
3 meal 


Gentine pa 
Tens lt 


Mai it Shi ip s.. 


Oats White... | 
Black... 
Foren 


Peas Boilers 


Grinding.. 
Foreign 


London. | 


Oct.29. g 5.| Oct. 30. 
. 


508, to 60s.; Scotch, 506. to 60s.; Scotch 
558. to 65s, ; Rhenish do., 508, to 60s.; Belgian 
t do., 508. t 
t Flowers consist of 

nids, Bignonia 4 Camel Tropxo- 
Camellias, and 


ATOES.—SoutTuwark, Oct 29, 
1 that the arrivals nava been large 


aF 55 ies :—Y or 

dake , 40s. to 50s. ; 

French whites 
0 608. 


LANE. 
D Noy, the. pee of rail anc 8 by land 


T, m ps ete val nly 

IR ie 5 rt business in all descriptions of grain was én a 
most limited scale. We o i 

any a Her ge a the baa trade bag the 1st inst. has 

been firm, and although business t been extensive, an 

i r. has been obtained 


$o. be fast going into consumption. In Scotland the trado is 
less buoyant, and in Leith ni decline of 1s, to 2s. per qr. has oc- 

curred on peak he riptions, sab soy fore was 
1 well main- 


The Rotterdam marker is 1s. per qr. lower. 


t 
Liv i TUESDAY, Nov. 6.—We had a fair * — 


of dea t this day's 8 The demand for Wheat wa 
t firmness in 


Poa 
— point ae Rao dull, and declined 1d. per bushel, 
Indian Corn was 6d, per qr. lower. Flour was still heavy, and 


6d. to 1s, per sack cheaper. 


the be gi and No 


WHEAT, |BARLEY.| OATS.) RYE. | BEANS, | PEAS. 


B. TREINGHAM CATTLE E 
B SING OF PoR ua ITION, 


day N praade in — 


tained 89 7 licati 
Union. street, Biemi tion o $, Be Wa 
IMPORTANT TO AGRICULT TURISTS, 
DISTRIBUTION Tog LLECTION 
STRATTON’S AGRICULT URAL REPOSITORY, D 
TRATTON, HUGH 


dasa Wat 
and Delivery Pipe for distributing ghee att ith a av: 
also with an gne m disti SEAS —4 3 * 
given — itie 
STR pi oh and Co.'s 
scavenging „purposes in ** ches 
wich, Rochford, Cardiff, & e., 2285 * 


d p ndivid i 
pe 3 8 ae y illustr r W 0 nr 3 
gricultural Implements will b 
eceipt of six postage ze stamps. itd to any ad address on 
— rae ee a 
BESTSDIBBLE FOR 5001, 
ESSE ROSS'S PATENT PRESSING DIBBLE, 


These dibbl he soil at one operation, 
man with a pair m ay dibble an acre per i 
may be u iC E EE AANE A op 


TE 
“ High-street, Pwllheli, paper vonshire, Oct. 17, 1849, 


IMPERIAL 

AVERAGES. 

Sept. 29...... ws | 428 4d) 278 4d17811d 258 24 29s 5d 318 8d 
tp Boras 42 4 27 7 17 5 24 9 29 0 29 5 
ee WB l. 41 4 28 0 17 2 24 5 28 10 31 8 

SO ho ah E 28 2 17 4 24 9 29 5 30 3 

e i eh Li e neee 4; BBA Shi 7 
Va Been 41 628 7 16 10 22 9 29 10 29 7 

Aggres- Aver. 41 8 28 0 17 4 24 3 29 3 30 8 

on Fo- 

. Grain 1 0 C Of. TE a 


Fluctuations in the last six weeks’ Corn Ave: 
PRICES. | SEPT 29, | Oct. 6. 


Or. 13. Or. 20. er. 27.0 Nov. 3 è 


7 7 — e | era 


wa 
— 


e al Wafa [ | pug eae 
41 4 © Se Sed — nae wea ea 
Hi 8 * eee! SA R 


Liverpool. Wakefield. Boston. Birmingham 
Nov. 6. Oct. 26 Nov. 2. Oet.31. Nov. 7 Nov. 1, ov. 8. 
79 lbs. 70 lbs. q qr. F qr. 62 lbs. 62 lbs. 
4. ¥en. ee S a. ee a Ge. On ds, Oh 
0 6 26 0 6 37 to44 37 4434 to40 34 to40 5 0 5 85 0 5 8 
19 0 6 86 2 6 8404841483845 38—46 % 6 6 05 6 6 0 
4 6 66 4 6 6639433943 — CCC 
G- 424407 4 47 — 5 Moh AR BD chee 
7 24 4 7 632—4636—48) — weed ge Be Oe Bs 2 
| 480 Ibs. 480 lbs, : 
r. r. s à 
; Zz E 220—2221—2321—23 22—24 21—24 
308—31s 308—318 27—3327—33 — 28—33 28—33 
6 bush. 6 bush. 
— — 37 0 38 tee N as 
51 
da 26 25 95 3s 2d 3s 3d — — 13—18 113 —18 19—27 19—25 
2 a ie — — — 18—20 17—18 
Z 22 $ — — — — — 
-gi qr. 
30s— 338 26—30/26—30) — — 33—4 30—36 
ar 196 lbs, 196 Ibs, 
% lien n 
— i lle 3130—21032—3432—34 1112 11=12 
33 —97 33 —37 32—3332—33 1415 14—15 
25 —35 25 —34 2826 — — — 1113 1113 
40 —42 40 —42 3210320 = aa = oy 
7L 1588177. 15s—82) — — — . ai 4 
e| 276208 | 27s—298 | == | = ws | yga | ias 
280lbs. 280 Ibs. p. sack p. sack pér sack. | per sack 
30—32 20-32 — 32 —38 030236] 31—3 3134 
Aver. Impts. Aver. Aver. Gloucester, 
: a verages. Im : 
$. d. qra. js. d f qra. 5. a 
42 8 |17409 136 8 | 3629 39 14 — 
28 11 3604 23 0 361 27 2} — 
18 3 200.115. 8 | 1277 18 4 — 
— 502 26 5 239 31 8 a 
SaNDars| THOMAS | J. ond C. STURGE 
cnt DOME WRITE pe Lice 


Sir,—The part of the field of Wheat I dona with the 
5 obtained from you last year having com 
the yield being much — than that sown in our pom bn 51 
ant the whole of my Wheat wich fis 
season, I wil, 2 feel particularly obliged by your 
sending me the order herewith immediately. On receiving 
them I will remit you.—I remain, Sir, your obedient servant, 

Dav Evans’ 

cc To Mr, Jesse Ross, 73, New Walk, Leicester.“ 
‘ Birstall, Feb, 21, 1849, 
Sir, When I purchased from you last autumn a 

Machine for bof allotment tenants, I promised to inform you of 
its merits. Several have tried it: the corn has come up, and 
looks _— The seed seems to ive been. deposited regularly, 
and urse takes much 5 Thane we broadeast, as 


labour i is not — scarce. 
„To Mr. JESSE Ross.“ 


Galena dle 
w Walk, Lei patty Lost. 


Norwich ; the | Pat entee, 78, 
Implement Vendors in the — at 358. per 
office orders r INC TNS IMPLEMENTA- 

R. NEWINGT TON’S IMPLEMENTS- 


stated an 5 in the 
frie of a 


It 
3 Of Jast ae * the f a Mr. J. Ross were 
uxious to hav i with Dr 5 in dibbling —+ 
dere. Howeve e Dr. N. ma or accepting 


N. may be to f 
challenge in pe “Instance, nothing would give him — 
pleasure than affording the friends of Mr. Ross 3 5 
for gratifying their inclinations. . deg = 
not been long pointed out to Dr. N., h has only j sát 
— this answers he will enter into the 
eek’s Chron — > 
dis- 
pin N. that so many applicants have | been 
appointed in hp obtaining 1 ae had he a anticipated p 
gre and 


have taken m 


this sys ’ 

kent rd bith for Where t 1 wah! oo „ stale , 

here t an 7 wi 

to carr on tit 11 3 as be used 10 the only 
of oe Mor an Thomas, Esq oss-in- a 

com cad hiit week es Eaa a acres of very 8 1 

depositing 5 part rather S ss than 2 pecks per „ will de 

ks. is depot jn n Lond on i f ) 61. : 


r. N. has clos 
85 in ae $i week’s Chron 


work, Should a 
office, he is re neitað fio apply 1 forthwith; i 
Knole Par x k, Frant, near onbridge Wells 


TEPH ENSON AND CO, ed 
New Park-st 


they may be seen at m 
Nurterie 3 throughout 


. w 
S SE 3 
TURAL e ane Be — tor 


45—1849. 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


719 


1 zj 


latest and most c 


“acetate of lead 


porh principles ‘ 
Adulteration of gu- 


r 


Air, its composition 
Airresists compres- 
sion 


Albumen 

Ale contains car- 
bonic acid 

=, ve a 


-d vegetable 


l nns phosphate 
e = nos of 
lu 


1 ; g a Second Edition of —— * book, the op 
f “pres a e been 


Second Edition 


, Revised and Enlarged, price 4s. 6d., 


RURAL CHEMISTRY: 


An Elementary Entrovuction to the Study of the Science in its 


Relation to An alte 


WARD SOLLY, 


_ Honorary Member of the Royal Agricultural Society maad ee of Chemistry 8 the r meng Soelety of Lond 


as the savanced 


—— has 


mpany’s Military Seminary at Addiscom 


F. R 


e, &., & e. 


FACE 70 HRE SECOND EDITI 


Bleaching by sul- 
phur 

Blood 

ee 

Boner, boiled 
Bones of calves 

Bones of fishes 
ones of horses 


wheat 

Buckwheat straw 
Burning lim 
1 of plants 
pin clay 
But 
— 
Cabbage, red 

alami 


—— 
3 chloride 


Hanel burning of 
. — 1 


Q 


Diabet in plants 
— — of am- 


ard of iron 
Carbonate of lead 
Carbonate of lime 
Carbonate of mag- 
nesia 
Carbonate of potash 
Carbonate of soda 
Carbonates decom- 
posed by acids 
Carbonic acid gas 


oi 
Caustic potash 
Cellars, fou! air in 


08 rn chemical 

Cn areoal ig 

l charting 

Saen salts 
erry- 


Chloride of gold 
| Chloride of magne- 


Ele 


Colours, changing 


Colouring matters 
—.— urs, vegetable 
olza 
——— 
Combinu 
a penduced 


Combining number 
——4 
1 results 


. on salt 
oe e of ani- 


— 4 of or- 
ganic matter 
Com —— ition of 
Pla 
Composition 2 
1 
stone 


Compounds, binary 


Compounds,definite 
os — 
pyre 

‘bicker: 


es their 
io 


ri 
Copper, — 
Coppera 
Co 
eh pie sublimate 
re 

Cream of tartar 

rops, rotation ‘of 


Dearg of unt 
er influence of 
Decay, like — 
Decay ofh 

Desa, . er 
Decay, under water 
Decomposition 
pipe aa of 
ee 

Dew 

Dextrine 


. — 
Dia 
Disesees of plants 


icity, influ- 
ence on plants 
ments 


s well a 


g several errors wh 
state of — pe e necessary, In particula: 


CONTENTS, OF THE 


5 wood 


PIOA vegetatie 
Fir- 
pe 

ire-damp 
Pick 4 oy se 
Fixed 
Fixing 3 
Flaw 
Fiat 


Voor wy animals 
Food of plants 
Formation of seed 
Formation of soils 
Foul smeils 
Freezing, effects of 
ah E of water 


Frai t, ripe 
Fruit, phir: of 
Fruit, uari 


Fumigation by sul- 
phur 


ungi ; 
Far from water 
Gas 
Gas iy or 
Gas, i mable 
le pare of 
Gas liquor 
Gas 3 strength 


das works 
Gelatine 
Germination 
Germination acce- 
lerated 
Glauber salts 
lass 


Gliadine 


2 
Glue, refuse 
Gluten 

Gold, chloride 
Gold of pleasure 
Gooseberries 


Grain of wheat 
Grape 


ves 
Green manures 
Green vitriol 
Growth of plants 
Gum 


adigo in 
ble air Manure, strong 
onal atter in | Manure, vegetable 
pias | Maple 


ron 
Iron combustible 


n smelting 
Iron, sulphate of 
Iron, sulphuret 
Irrigation 
Isinglass 
Ivory 
KELP 
Lactic acid 
Latent heat 
Lead 
d, carbonate 


Leay 
Leaver, c 55 of 
2 Sese 


Lem 
— Gls. 
33 8 


Light. effects of 
8 nfluence on 


Lighting a fire 
Lignin 
me 
Fon me, y en oR soil 
t 
eed biphosphate 
Lime, burning 


Lime, carbonate 
Lime, caustic 
im 


Linte, phosphate 
. silicate of 
mestone 


irani, magne- 
ian 


Lime, when useful 
Lime, when not 


u 
Limes, juice of 


Linseed 
Liquid manure 
Liquid manure 


cerne 
2 of animals 
NESIA 
Magnesia, carbone 


— 
— muriate 
Phos- 


Rech anieal division | 
Fac 


M on oxide of 
Mangold Wurzel 


VOLUME. 


Mercury, —— 


Mucilage 
Muriate of ammo- 


nia 
—— — — 
Muriate of magn 


sia 
Muriate of potash. 
Muriate of soda 
Muriates 
Muriatic acid 
Musch 


ascen 

Nature of the soil 

Natural vegetation 
ightso 

Nighteoil, disin- 
fected 8 


a in plants 


F. L. S., 


ich the First Edition contained. 
r, the Tables of Analyses have 
s of the principal substances employed as manu 


8 


mina 


Suit, combo 
1 of am- Sutin sa e 
reps 


— — * lime 


Phosphoric — 
Ph 1 — ne d in 


Phosphoric acid in 


Picbliog "cabbage 
Pinna les 
composition 


Plants, — of 

Plants dec ar 
carbon iad acid 

Plants, effect on the 


Plants, food of 
Plants, gro’ 


The whole has been 
2 „ greatly extended, 


Salt, sient ú of 
Salt, * nE 

Salt, 

Salt, ‘olution in 


Salt ts, 2 Bpsom uber’s 
— sof iron hartshorn 


5 ö esia 
Salts ot the metals 
Salts of potash 
ts of sod 


of 
open nutrition of | Sea. 


Plants, their ele. 
me mis 
Plaste 
Plonghing, sabali 
Poppy seed 
Pot 
Potash. s bitaertents 
Potash, carbonate 
Potash, caustic 
Potash in plants 
8 p the sen 
Pot muriat 


oo. 


wee 
Seed, formation of 
* germiuation 
0 
Selection by plants 
mee — uii 


Sulton pied 
a ica in 

+ gel ea on 10 of 
Silica’ 
Silica’ 
Silie — of lim 
Silicate of mia znesia 
Silicate of potas 


= 


on, Lese on Chemistry i in the Honorable East India 


carefully revised) ahd 
by the addition of the 


Sulphate of iron 
Sulphate of — 4 
phate of 


Sulphur 

Sulphur in plants 

Sulphure ry 

Suphuret of iron 

. pb — of lead 
—— — 3 


fek rtrates 


Turns oil of 

Unarx of ammcnia 
rea 

Uric acid 

Urine 

Urine, cows’ 

Urine he horses’ 


|s 8 > d 


Nitrate of soda iy , Silicate Silicate of 0 ea 
Nitrate of silve: Potash, sulphate ilicie acid 
Nitrates Potassium icon 
itre Potas: — 
Nitre bed ver, le 
Nitre, cubic tato haulm ` | Silver, nitrate 
Nitric acid tato starch Silver, salts of 
Nitric acid, action of N sweet Siiver, sulphuret 
Ni id i 1 l 
nu Principles, riigi 
Propo Slaking of lime 
utrition of plants Brove! ‘ing 8 
8 83 1 vag 
rot- 
Proximate animal — Witt 
prae iples Soap. oiling 
cake Pruning Soap, decomposi- 
: Putrefaction 85 
„ cloves Putrefaction, influ. | Soapmaker's ash 
oro ys P web et Sods, bene 
, drying u : a, carbonate 
„ fixed matter Seda in rocks 
of lavender Putrid urine Soda in pla 
of lemons. Putty powder Soda, muriate 
linseed rites Soda, — 7 nea 
mustard Pyrites, copper 882 pi~ 
, olive hes a re acid 
„ Poppy 9 Sede’ pern 
UH, rape um 
Oi: of tu Guatertry comi- | Sodium, chloride 
Oil, volatile ounds Soft water 
Oil of vitriol Quicklime Soil 
Oil dregs icksilver Soil, colour 
Oil seeds AIN water Soils, analysis o 
Oily matter Rape seed Soils, composition 
Ores, roasted Red cabbage 
Organic acids Red lead Soils, exhaustion of 
Organic manures | Refuse of gas works | Soils, formation of 
Orga arter nnet Soils, mixture j 
Organic matter esins Bet Soils, nature of 
Organic substances spira 3 va 
s | Results of combus- 
tion 


téofatumina 
Suiphate of umme 


w ody fibre 
Wool 


ae of copper Line, 


720 THE GARDENERY 


CiIRONICLE AND 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


Sales by Auction, 


TO NOBLEMEN, GENTLEMEN, BUILDERS, RAILWA 


CONTRACTORS, N URSERYMEN, and Others engaged 1 
ESSRS. PROTHEROE anp MORRIS are directed 


th — roprietor to submit to public competition, by Auc- 
tion, o oe th — “4 bs a 8 Herts, situated 
7 — en rite 8 ember 
ing days, at 11 ook, each pe oe (owing to the 
NURSERY STO 


3 12 Pog 
The 
7 days 


12808 at a 
i may Še: had on the premises, of the pein, 
. and of the 1 Leytonstone, Essex 


170 GENTLEMEN, 1 NURSERTMEN, 
OTHERS, 

M ESSRS. PROTHEROE and MORRIS will sell 

by 3 N Nursery, 

Nov. 19, at 11 


Laurel, C Box, 
Guelder Roses, Laburnums, Poplar, Sycamore, 
a yok, 1 N cee Lge Dwarf Apple, A 


Lights, &c. 
ing of three rooms, Shop, Was 

Shed, &c. May be viewed prior to the Sale, Catalogues may 
— had on ite premises; of the principal Seeds men in London; 
of the Aon “American N Auge we Essex. 


MPTON PARK NUR 


RosErT DONALD, trustees for the b 5 1 aani toa 

unreser Sale b . spear on MONDAY, Nov. 26 5 

prev dispose ch y ich due notice 

will be En, the 72 ext nd yaly e STOCK 

aes: ROMPTO! Ne wie 
BAY, ADAMS, 

celebrated Collection and 


Tanri 


10 
unio Wr a << Green ig eae Hollies 
k 


America rust 12 55 
Evergree Spruce Firs, a choice Col- 
lection of Pinus, ns dara, 'dedars of 4 3 8 5 and 
other 8 8 a valuable Assortment of Oaks, Ilex, 
Daphne, Cratæ culus, and other ornamental Trees ; 
7 Stock’ = Rhododendrons, gamis Azaleas, ko: 


The Greenhouses wit d hot-water appara 
Pits, Frames, Carts, te i Week Also stock of Seeds, 
Shop, ro Sa and Draw v ing-house Lagas vad fit. 


Catalo ill be 

to ; and 

may be! had, ls. cach, pire urna pis pure — of the l 
ni n and on ena premises, American Nursery, 


——! ee eye ts pipet 
HEATHS, AZALEAS, AND CAMELLIAS.—THE SURPLUS 
STOCK OF MESSRS, FAIRBA IRN, OF CLAPHAM. 

R. J. C. STEVENS is favoured la instruction: 
Sins sien, 


ell by Auction, at his 
28 t 12 for 


to s 
Covent-Gard: io = TUESDAY, November 20th, 


xhibited by the ral 
eetings of the é past season, “Aled 25 IN DIAN 
AZALBAS, 85 1 1 wi hy 5 and 50 fine CAMELLIAS, 
from 2 to 4 feet, — on the day prior and morning 
and 8 bad c of Messrs, FAIRBAIRN, Clapbam, 
Mr. J. C. Stevens, 38, King-street, Covent- garden, 


HELSEA, Hen. CREMORNE G 
R. D. A. 


erve, by order o 
NURSERY T STOR | 


warf f Roses, new silver- 
got ‘Creepers, a 1 peung of large | M 
ca, with about 
a, Aloes, 1 1 and Mam- 
May p viewed ged tothe sale. Catalogues to be 

had o n the premises; ofthe principal See dsmen ; and of the 
anion eh an Fulham-road, Br rompton, 


tity oom pa 
: 3 e a day prior and 
to be of the principal — 
22 Auctioneer, Brompton Nursery, Fulham- 


am- L from Hyde-park 
Corner), on FRIDAY, —— 25 at 12 o’clock, by order of a 
Orist declining the Business, and re ed for enience 
k Sale, a quantity of Camellias and Chrysanthemums of sorts, 
Lilium lan s some large specimens of ea 
indica, Alo ia, &c,; some choice ornamental 
ae i of Mushro 3000 Dutch 
ce dei 
Brompton. 


ra 
: TO BUILDERS, NURSERYMEN, AND OTHERS. 
pot, = will sell by Ames, on the 
on MONDAY, "Novem 
o'clock, without 


20, 1849 road, Brompton, 
1849, ‘and follo wing day at 12 
RY STOCK, consisting of 


LE MEN, GENTLEMEN, FLORISTS, and OTHE 
k 4. RAMSAY has received — 5 


—May be 


TO GENTLEMEN, BUIL DERS, NURSERYMEN, and Others. 
= D; A. RAMSAY has received instructions to sell 
Auction, on the premises, the Brompton Auction 

m A Brompto . Fulham, road, ah mile from 
Hyde-park í Dine, on sb NDAY, Dee. 3, at 12 o’clock, tec 
try nu eryman declining the business, a 


and two fol- | 


ESSRS. PROTHEROEAs p MORRIS are favoured ; 


d Tre d 
-| Roses, veggie 1 Herbaceous pa Rock plants ; ; together 
the Fen 


oad, | stone, Essex; or to Mr. Wm. PAMPLI IN, jun., 


arf | Estate 


Catalogues to be} 
e Auctioneer, Bromp- | | 


large juantity of Grkastental ne Dec ciduous Shru ubs, Ever- 
greens, aero Roses, a y be vie ewed. the pia prior and 


E „ 


RA = 
S Ti ee 4 ees = | 
eason Tickets between p pierws, 1110 
mediate Stations.—Particulars sme si e 
the General Office, ou eee Station, 2 15 hes soit 
oe ed Station, 


morning 0 Sale, C Catalogu 

men, and of the Aucti oneer, . 

ip ae 5 ee bogs leave to offer his services to 
e and others, as an AUCTIONEER, VALUER, 

c., 21 A* ppan by Reroting his personal attention, with 

stri ictly moderate . to give =e rag on. — Reference 

i to Brompton Nursery, Falkai 


N.B. Parc f Stock received and offered for Sale by Auc- 
tion on the — 5 premises. erms 8. 8 on ap eon. 
CAMELLIAS, ORANGE ARD S, 


RHODODENDRONS, AZALEAS. KALMIAS, 200 LILIUM 
CIOSU 


M 


„Ec. 
RH HASLAM 2 to announce that he will sell by 


Auction, at the Mart, on TUESDAY, Nov. 13, an 
FRIDAY, Nov. 16, a pres 8 ody of the above, which will 
be found to comprise n ut t est varieties grown in 


1 The ROSES will — principally of La Reine, 

Vibert, Géant de Batailles, Madame Laffay, Le Roi, and 
peor ie Paris. Also, in each day’ s Sale, a Case of DUTCH 
BULBS. —Catalogues ma be had at the 55 = of the 
Auctioneer, South Essex Nurseries, Epping, E 


sT AFFORDSHIRE. 
ALUABLE NURSERY 870 ek FOR 


eae ie Barn-gates, near or adjoining the 
n Staffordshire, on THURSDAY, the 22d day 

of Nessie! fi ays, if necessary), at 1 

o'clock in the forenoon of each day, unless 1 rn eal 

act, of which due notice will b 

valuable en of Fouis — 


Sh Griho, Rhodod and other American plants ; 

7 and Gear ‘kind of Hollies, common and Portugal 

urels, various sorts 0 eer de age a variety of Le 
3 japonica, Dwarf a Standar 5 


with Hand-glas Horticultural e., 
and a 5 5 of other plants too on erous t 5 
sty anore . 1 ards in a ny bey and healthy 

onditio n conse 2 of the North Staffordshire Rail- 
wA passing 7. by, paroka will have the advantage of 
removing the 3 8 to any part o 1 so kingdom at a very 
e viewed on application at 

the Nursery, or to t the ‘Auctioneer, in heek | 1 further in- 


formation obtained at the offices of Mr. FRAN 3 uso, in 

Leek aforesaid, Solicitor to the 2 Test, 1 10, 

TO GENTL EN, FLO MEN, an HERS, 

l Annual Sale of Assorted Dutch Bulbe, direct 
rom Haarlem 

M. JAMES . will sell by 8 at the 
Mart, ve ay we a Aeaee ona 1 

1 o’clock, ‘two Cas pe „assorted, D dup and 

SINGLE HYAC CINTHS, med T Ene 5 9 


Anemones, Ranunculuses, Ht ty Crown [mperials, Snow- 
arope Irises, Jonqu Grand Monarchs, Primo and o 
Narcissuses, Am a and other choice Dutch Bulbs. All 
warranted roots.—May bë oe on the mornings of Sale, and 
Catalogues had at the Mart, and of Mr. Izod, the Sheriff's Sale 
6, Wa — srete Cit: 5 


RWICH NURS 
MEOR ERE 70. PLANTERS. EXTENSIVE SALE OF 
EST AND OTHER TREES, 
R. WILDE begs z inform the nobility and gen- 
tlemen engaged in Plantirg, and the te generally, 
that he Ey pee 2 trom Mr. Mack 
quence of his remo a portio 
sa at ‘Bess e ie submit 


consisting of fine transplanted Beech, 2 to 4 feet; fine =: 
planted Whitethorn, 3 feet; e red-wood Highland Pine, 1t 
1 feet; very ; black Italian 


s 

* been well on . — 1 the ro — are ex- 

ellent, Large purchasers, that may find it inconvenient to 

remove the rica at once, can nate the opportunity of re 
ma — 3 to Bagh ve them on the ground till t 

arch, 18 Railway communication to ail parts ‘of England. 

— Catalogues can be obtained = and after the 19th Sorner, 

of Mr. WILDE, 1 er; of M 
change. street, orwich, 

TO PLANTERS AND NURS m EN 

BE SOLD, without reserve, Two Hu 

housand finelprooted 1 LARCH TREES, 2 fess high, and 
p. 


E 
3 years transplan ny gentleman about to plant, this 
would be a valuable opportunity of 3 fine healthy tree 
at a 3 pr 2 iew, and treat for the same, apply 
to EDWARD JOHN 3 gent, Woodchester Park, 


Stroud, ee e e. 
TO NURSERYMEN, ee oe Ec. 
Pe BE LET OR SOLD 


hole or pae of the Glass and 

ata valta, —Further particulars may 

be — by he to Messrs. PROTHEROE and Morris, oe 
n the pre 


FARM TO BE LET.—INKPEN, NEAR roa 
BER ö 

Slee with immediate possession ost 
id -8 FARM 0 — our 100 Acres of Arable, Meadow, 

and Pasture-land, Rent, Tithes, and Rates moderate. 

farther teenie & 0. — to 1 WASHBOURNE and 5 

8, Cannon- row, Parliament-street, Westminster, 

Londo: = tg 

Se O EA EA E eee 

TO NURSERYMEN AND GARDENE 
WANTED TO PURCHASE, A BUSINESS OR 
PARIN raS Full I particulars aud terms to be sent 

addressed F. C., 13, Lower Charles-street, Northampton- 

pei . Unexce epti fionable references given an 

e . GOOSE FEATHERS, ls. per lb. — Bed 

eathers were never so yg as at present, 
HEAL anp SONS’ aor Pri 


Poul e sr OC Ba Best ‘Urey © Goose * 110 
Grey 5 p 0 | White ditto sa A 
F 5 ae 1 6 | Best Dantaic ditto 


Steam, and warranted sweet and pre from fox 
3 and Sons’ 4 of Bedding, containing full particula 
their 


actory, 195, 1 Tottenham-court-rom 


e lst of 


r. MACKIE, 10 and 11, Ex- 


rs 
d prices, sent free by 1 on application to 


tion, and the New 


that d able . will be published 2 the earliest practicable lo perii ke scot 


gate Station, No 1. th. 
ROSE CA’ CATALOGUE.—NEW EDIT < 
NURSERIES, e dee 
DAM PAUL anp SON beg to inform 


and the public in general, that thei j br 

ee may now be had, gratis, = enclosing OSE 

posta The prices are iow Bri ssible, and they ensue — 

Supply of „ pla 
eo rev 


Editio mie 

Mee. ul and Son: 8 desert „ . 
before us, and sor n ee » made known,” 

„Me essrs nicely. arrandi e 
taining the ‘eta deseription of any we — 
Gardeners and Land-Stewards’ Jou foal 4 

Paul's Catalogue of oses is remar rkable 

and the low em ae te — 


se grower in England,” 


AN Ack. 


ga 
E 
C 
© 
— 
2 
m 
B 
* 
JA 
o 
1 
co 
ta 
© 
& 
on 
45 
5 f 8 
me 
pe 
2.8 
Bo 
as 
8 
8. 
E 
Hi 
5 


b one 
ee 
of plants are 
— up 755 ee 8 sate of poor aiana 
Published by 2 OSEPH oon ILL, — 
Company, a r Hall, in Ludgate-s 
day is published, price 6d., | 
HE HORTICULTURAL ALMANAC and GAR- 
RS FA ARMES. 1 R for 1850.— 
DE PARTMENT a Practical Gardener; 
AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT by M. M. MILBURN, s, Seere 
to the e hire Agricultural Society, author of Prize 
i Le. eg 
London cosa and Sons, e 
all Bookseller 


RR ere’ pete fore! AND HEATING 
WAT 


ALSO THE „ OF. nas pe PLANTS, 
VINES, FERNS, &e. 


WEEKS anp Co., King’s-road, Chelsea, Horticut- 


„ TURAL ARCHITECTS, HOTHOUSE BUILDERS, and Roe 
APPARATUS MANUFACTURERS, solicit an in: a ca 
various Works now in progress, whi ch will attest as | 

s nship. They have n. ow erected on 
Premises, for inspection, a great variety of N 
houses, Conservatories, Forcing-pits, dc., all 


By means vat these ae a 1 did re onan 

ferns, and other „ in en, 

are sold at Bi S THAN I 
connec 


Mats, Mushroom Spawn, a 
pat and Seed departments 
logues forwarded on ation 


350595058 sinant 
N 4288887 8 
one 


2225 


225 2825 
2 — 


h 0 * aig ” 

inc extra 

at the an can be mai ade 
PP 


7 den and delivered free 
h, Hull, or N. A 


z „of N Ts, Upper Webura 
e 


Printed th of 


OVEMBER 10, 1849. 


ki 
* 
aa 


No. 46—1849.] 


* 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17. 


following 


begs re and t 


Brigh a 
M tha 


[Price 6d. 
. K ep nem —NURSERY — aa INE PLANTS FOR SALE. Tn 
: } .—The different varie- 
Althea fratex 2 297 Manares, Prina an, 5 P LODGE, NORTH STONEHAM, NEAR TH. ti "A Blacks and Queens, ea and 3 
seese 4 a Vibes 3 M 3 supply of every d —— of ply to W, Daviss, rtf . Green, Ham mith near London. 
ta Ml “| FOREST, FRUIT, AND ORNAMENTAL REES, AMERI.| > 
cope 5 8 | Oak, Africa CAN PLANTS, AND FLOWERING SHRUBS, may be pro- nil B. SMITH, having a eee Stock of 
e 8 cu wet T m these extensive grounds; at the most reasonable w hardy Y ELLO * RHODODENDRONS, in t 
oni * ease pri rinted Catalogues of which may be had of the pro. | var wee caution him to offer tho at very Pa 
Pike. instivot oF pristor, ‘Wa ROGERS, Sen., NuRSERYMAN AND CONTRACTING 3 with a very choice assortment of A 
Paaa %4 b | Poa Azaleas, por mea and Rhododendrons of rai kinds manly 
0 tite © cold, + 7 i zu "i reduced ; Catalogues of whi had bý en. 
Plantations in t in the North 22 ioe cane 1. feo — moea — to the | Closing a — stam 
Plumdago Larpentw 795 6} Docks whence rican Steam. — wk take a de. | Norbiton Nu rsery, Kingston, Nov. 17. 
8 (a — in Forres — arture, thus saving a delay and expenses of Land Carriag ~ SUPERB NEW FANCY DAHL iA, “LIDDIARD’S Miss 
ů— — 22 22 
H| Red spider sours, Tas a EAUTIFUL GLAD F a tom 
rr WV. DENYER, Serpsman ca y Fr res IST , 82, Grace- Eor LORIST, SEEDSMAN, &c, Queen's 
Ponor thi thin, a enn on on. . . . 732 me * begs to offer strong roots of the — (near . pA 5 — aSpa), Park.street, 
ra moranda 4725 i 
5 


ae gigantic, in Van ‘Die- 
s Land 


8 


r 726 ba 


PLANTERS, &e. 
overstock i the tron 


å 
a 


oon 


uality. ae “dept. 


42 to 5 
3 to English, 3 Thott 
eet oom 5 eri to 24 feet; oe i 


fi 
old ; Larch, ditto, 1 po 2 years old. 
— Sania Seabee 


oe LINNZUS RHU 
MYATT a AnD SON 


ee fact that the Mar om 
chester have planted 
extensi ware than any other var dauer 
extraordinarily p productive, and Png te a Pe ae oa earlie 
ae Victoria ; added to this, it is held i ral esteem 
Preserving and all pic Remo — Gus — planted 
. Gd. ; ditto, hg ge Adu ee 12. 6d. ; A gs ria, 
he usual arie t-office orders a re re- 
ito be 2 a e 1 51 to "Vue Mrarr, Manor 7 


ar BEAUTIFUL COLUMBINE.—Stout 

. of GRIGOR’S AQUILEGIA e. OSA are 

to be forwarded, post. free, at 28. per pair, and seeds at ls. 

t, Pras for a 8 05 chat value. —4 aa GRIGOR and Co., 
B 


. ORW. 
Jox BELL j 9 of the above, begs to 
Nurserymen and the Trad e 
L becca NURSERY STOOK, at the following 
i co and well worth their attentio 


—The Subseribers having a 
FOREST ily tia! are 
x e been 


Pri 
„ Gateshead EiT, New- 


Lilium 


Dute h 


N.B. 


CAUTION.— 
with = other person 


White oe 0 in e 
TRUE A 


— e Garden Seeds, 
published, 


ramosus, — — each, 
lancifolium are nite 2s, spond 
enustum pre tty, 


$. per 


us, Lapa hy — — 12s. 


10 


per 1000. 


o charge for _ a 


W: D, bere, to ne 
f the 


e has no connection 


splendid, 6d. each, or 5s, per dozen. 


Fine mixed late Tulips, from a superb collection, 10s. per 100, 
Spanish — Seed all colours, 
e 


espec 
has — x oe e aa the ent tire sto 
Seedling, which h 
as rdens, 


nes” 

money prize, at Slough, being di ivided between Miss Compton 
and 1 Lad t. Dry 
— il be let out to the Trade at Öl. each, if subscribers 
— by the 6th of December next. B. S. has a few roots to 
spare of Flora —— ’s) and “ Buffalo Girl” (Cook's) at the 


below named price 
MISS ‘COMP TON (Lipp 4kD)—Salmon-searlet tipped with 


ence, 28. 


Carriage fr 


Ba not less than 108. 


SHLEAF KIDNEY POTATOES, Sand a a new red 
ditto, both. quite free from disease, 2s. 6d 
JOHN SUTTON anp SONS, Reading, B p i. ntly 
mend the above articles ; also many — —.— kinds of 
a Catalogue of which is just 


to London, Bristol, or Basingstoke, for all | 


BEST = AN A AS. white, first-rate petal and form ; prove 
alpa ortiga Free to London, Bristol. or Basingsto 6 6 3 "ieee Class exhibitors, - Height, 3 feet 
Sutton’s Early Champion, 3 1 8 Per Gallon, FLORA we . = Crimson red, Pesala slight tip of 282 
Warner’s Emperor, 3 fe et Ten te Whe Sak is excellent form and centre; First-class — * 
Danecroft Rival, 23 fee Pee Fe on 4 : London Floricultural ; Roshervlle Gardens, + 1 
Fairbeard's Surprise, H feet. de neoe eE ee not let — n May. Height, 3 toot ome 
Paria s Champion of England, ~ i è BUFPAL 0 GIRL (Geox A prab, buf, fne Perl and substance 
, ry ‘ 2 How er ew bas 
fore larg gt A —— ‘3 feet.. 7 Hy - * 2 ri roved a successful show ower the report of Ae 11 
Ear ay She rar Mf s, F 85 sh 5 on ee aa politau Shows. Height, 3 feet ; pl oats in May, 3s, poet 7 
2 8 e as A 9 roots, II. Is. Early orders” R eY irod. Post ge 
nh — — unknown applicants,—Pa as ton 
“ CONQUER R OF TH west a CUCUMBER, the finest 777 


Er 8 


8, po 100 


RIBER has to: ofer the following : 
ih 
Alders, edly ears. 


DLING ree TREE 


; Sol 


Fir, 8 
TRANSPLANTED ones AND ORNA 


paid to Lo 
Herts, Nov. 17. 


. per dozen, 


nee s ARGE FRUITED MONTHLY RASP- 
3 of the above were exhibited, Nov. oa 5 

1 al Society, and 2 Certifica 
1 .— 60s. ~ a sim 
ndon, :— THOMAS an ERS, Nurseries, 9 


Od | 
10 10 foo in ie 
2 p. 1000, 25 
4 to 5 fee 30 


— 2 tos Bt . 1000, 25 


Acacias, 5 to 

iai 8 
sh, 0 

0 


0 
ra 


25 28. per 100 
J 


country. 
age stam 


an! La Gen ant 


raeg They 
2 niferæ, . ate — 97 new Rhodod 


RUS DEODA 


eons Lists will be forwarded 


Dette he a Pita, oa dag 
ioe 
ordered at 


4 
. pe Cherries, 20s, per doz. 


2 


beneiden a 1 single vari 
stem to the 


of Cedrus Deodara, can 
stam 


ps.—Stapleton-road N ees 


LE 125 SONS wer to > rotii Noblemen, | 
and the Trade, that they aes 2 Dog Ae any | 
quantity of 3 voip toa of beac most ornamen’ 
supplies of the ot oh Himaleres 
drons from the same 

receipt of one post- 


sirable | 


The Pamphlet on the Natural Habits and Quality of the wood 
still be had A — three postage 


Lap car will * a beautiful 


almos 


imfer 
r down, but stand out strai. 


they grow to a very l 


E MARROW P 
BLUE MARROW 3 
of the Knight's 
the ä 
1 time of 5 
of the above Pea was 61 


t dis 


remi 


for the Viola 
appointment to 8 7 


ttance mus 


er dozen ; oem ones, Be. er r dozen, 
t accompan 


5 


a- dozen of the 


HE SWEET-SCENTED Te VIOLA ARBOREA,” 
th tend oe Kinnie has 


nded blooms on it a 


It is 


* 


arge 
3 hed — *. — me lane 7 2 Des ina conservatory, whieh b had 
the 


plant. 
e, that — hundreds of the 5 bo Violet and others, 
been sold hehe 


210 > Bet 5 or in 


Id. amps 
ill be tage an 1 ints to 
ye Soe „ TIlxx, Nurseryman, Lb and Florist, 
Were ue, — 


18 | having bosi twice 8 and 
e abounds, 


Ae 
3 


pone sects A 


? 
U 


e hire, at the same 
n En ngli sh, 3 to 5 fee 
Fir, 8 2 to 3 feet, 20s. per 1 
pe 8 2 = < feet, 508. — 10 
Hazel, 3 to 0 


rl 
wet, Tae 


152 


Pi ariera 5 3 per 1000 phe dale 
Poplar, Black og 5 to 7 | feet, et, 3 1000 

rdy, 7 to 8 feet, oe p. 100; 33 p. 100 
Syoa ores, 3 to 4 ae 5515 per 1000 2 fot, 
Willows, Bedford, 4 to5 ft., 30s, per 1 1090; i 


‘he large sizes AS yes are ali ii 


for planting where 


ORN 
Acacia 2 sel 
standards, 


Bird, Popis — — — M: r doz., 40s. per 100 
oplar-leaved, 253. per 100 


—— 24 varieti 

per doz., stan 
Laburnums, s i 
Lilac, sorts, 25s. per 2 


lections 
W 


. 


0 (asy 3 We a 
. Nov. 15 


8 b 
E PARSONS, Frorist and MAN, by 
JEORGE PARS he QUEEN, begs to offer the undermen- 
which heca tly recommend. 
0d | Ho: ves Belle of the Vil- 
0 j 32 Od 
é iler AE a 
of me Ba SD 
6 Abl el Kader. 5 0 
0 Terpsichore ... < ; 
A ee 
s Ger- 


722 THE 


GARDENERS 


CHRONICLE, 


— a . e NURSERY, PLYMOUTH. 
PUBLIC WILLING. BEMS 1 N Qe 


Cottage, near Garstang, 
d out his Ar RID HONEY- 
r the names of Forton Honey- 
No. 1 has the hand- 
tube aa yellow Bee, but No. 2 e 
or 


TONGUE, of, Forton 
EE 


Barlow’s, — — A 
Soulangiana at 18. ‘ae 
THE GREATEST = eae “ROSEA 


Leamington, 


Ny 
a 
of the above a ndid 
ene ach ; the u ual allowance 
A Th 


iio : i 
excep peen and distinct 12 of pure white; of first- rate 
abit. 


shape and good ha 


Messrs. * & Co., New- 


„o ae tch & Son, Exe gton Bu — 

j st & M‘'Mullen, i vay y, Peckha 
Leadenhall-street is regory, ——— 

„ Widnall & = “a gto nf Son, Bir- 
Cambridge 

„ Pope & Sons, Bir- — Cobbetts, Horsell 
mingham „ Hosea Waterer, Knap- 

Beck & Henderson, hill 


d „ Pearson, Chilwell 
„ Waite, London „ Fairbairn, Clapham 
„ Crowdry & Sons, an eddell, Leamington 
Birmingha » Smith, Worcester, 
Wilson, e e 


» 
N.B. Post-office o o be remitted from reyog cor- 
Tespondents.—37, —— vote Leamington, Nov 


TO PLANTERS AND NURSERYMEN, 
Po BE SOLD, without reserve, Two Hundr 
: Thousand 3 LARCH TREES, 2 feet high, and 
3 years transplanted, y gentleman about to plant, this 
would be a valuable pii of * toe Sealy trees 
at a e rate price. — To view, the same, apply 
JoEHN PEAKE, Land 1 Woie Park, 

Stroud, Gloucestershire, 


"PEE SUBSCRIBER Pegs t wa vaasi S Bormagan * 
. 


which can be relied on as us, 
and ee e stock in rsa kingdom, yry pen yts e fine 
specimens in the course of the se 

— OR monk: a 

Ampullacea vittata |E: Perspicua nana 
ant ditto Pe pend: 
2 Florida panu- (Retorta major 
Beaumontia artnelli [lata|Rubra calyx 
Bergiana Hiemalis plendens 
Bowieana Hybrida ndriana 
Bandonii Juliana . ricolor dumosa 
Cavendishii Lambertiana rosea „ ubr 
. ii prapat Wilsonii 
Colora Ventricosa, sorts 
—.— 5 Longipoduncuiata 8 


* 


Elegans Me 3 
And many other deen de to 21s. per dozen. 


ALEA 
caine s oí 3 8 


Alba lutescens 
„ magna undula 
Apollo, lOptima 
: — pleno rubra [obtusa 
t — ormosa be 
1 Gledstanesii og u perba nova 
Blanda Hebe Ik Refulg 
Coronata Ignescens En igaza 
Coccinea superba Lateritia grandiflor 
2s, to 218. per dada 
GERANIUMS, 
sere superba varse ingo Norah 
ric mae ae Ondine 
Brunette Gust n 
Bacchus 
Brilliant 


osetta 
Resplendens 
Satellite 
Standar 


Lasy Cotton Shep- 


Lord John Russell 
ens 21s. per dozen. 


PLANTS, 
ger Cunninghamii ... 


STOV] 
paap Arean palcher 4 
eS e 3 ( 


0 
Plants 128. to 24s, 1 
128. to 21s. per dozen. Select 
al the new va varieties, 6s. to 188, ore bag 
to 12s, per Zauschueria oe, 


igher sum 
to be accompanied wih a 
8 James Epps, aoe 


a 
6 


sum per — 


BLISHE 
1 OR QUICKS. —10 000 INE T 
ED THO . from 12 to 15 inches T 31. 
One-year old Seedlin ngs for 15s 
LARCH.—10,000 Guevyeur old Seedlings for 20s. 
SCOTCH,.—10,000 nee old 3 mes 158. 
PEACHES AND NECTARINES.—Fine Dwarf Trees or 
Maiden at 15s. pios zen; small Trained 8 from 24s. to 
30s. per dozen ; Aas 96 ected Dwarf Trained at 50s. per dozen. 
Comprising all ihe best sorts in Maaten, true to name. 
UBARB, Mrr 


RANS- 
10,000 


LL’S PRINCE Je e. — This has been 
We have more 
at 20s. per 

ng—Smaller 


<a proved to be th — early variety kno 
n 1000 strong, 3 and 3 established roots, 
dozen. These a e undantly next spri 
ts, 12s. pes 
ron T wii Vicroria.”—Very strong roots, 158. 
per dozen gt roots, 98. per dozen. 

RASPBERRI IES, rower int — BEEHIVE,”—This is a 
large handsome variety, very p and delicious flavour, and 
has given the most 3 satisfaction: Strong — 208. 
per 100 or 3s. per doz “í YOurnLL’s FASTOLFF, i — 00 

STRAWBE RRIES, * IATE. ELEANOR,” 10s, 100; Cut- 
5 . Prince, 13s. 6d. per 100; Eliza, 58. Se 100; Mam- 

oth, per 100; Cole’s Pro lific, 5s. per 100; Cooper's 


Seedling, 5s. per r 100. 
DARS OF LEBANON.—We have a large stock of these 
1 pots. Good Plants, 18 inches, 128. per dozen; 3 feet, 368. 
er 


dozen. Large handsome Plants in Pots, 4 to 6 feet, “ga 
ach; or, one quarter t le pri ce usually charged. We have 
ese ’stock w 
KEY O —Fine, handsome trees, 6 feet high, well 
transplanted, 1 — — 1000, worth 15s. per 100, 
ake DOUBLE RUSSIAN MATS, 5l. per 100. 
LACK i ES CURRANTS.—Very superior to the old 
in, 6s. per 
GOOSEBERRIES, —Some of the very best varieties in culti- 


es ee n immense stock will be sold 
— 18-inch, bushy, 20s. per 100; 3 feet, 


unusually low e pla 
30s. per 100; 4 feet, * 

BERBERIS, (MAHONIA) AQUIFOLIUM. —A very large 
quantity, 18 inches, 16s. per 100. This is a fine shrab for 

underwood. 

Weigela rosea, strong plants, 12 3 Pie) por dozen; 
Parnettia 228 and floribunda, 6 Ribes, 
double red, and albidum, aroni plants, 18 aca ‘9s. per dozen. 

AKALE sad ASPARAGUS.—In large quantities, from 
ua 


ng 
a 


10s. < 20s. per 1 
nal Catalogue — = published, and 
will be sent, . to any applica 
Remittance, or reference in Lonia, from unknown 
correspon e ts. 
l s above 5l. will be delivered free of carriage 
to any of the sate the South a rr e 
Eg 


xeter, or a 2» Railwa Siea 
this port to Lon m Dublim Cork, eee pl Hes 
and Glasgow, aes times eek. 


The South Devon Ratiway th is now open to Plymouth, the 
Station being adjoining our premises, For Catalogues and 
further information apply to 

WILLIAM E. RENDLE and Co., Union-road, Plymouth. 
ESTABLISHED 1786. 


HT, CHEAP, AND DURABLE ROOFING. 
ROGGON’S PATENT ASPHAL TE ROOFING 
LT is perfectly impe! torai st, and 


on with pat facility by farm-servants, or unpr ractised persons. 
Price ld, m sanan, og CROGGON’S PATENT NON. CON. 
oe TING FELT, for Steam Boilers and Pipes, saves 25 per 

of fuel. Samples es and 8 sent by post on appli- 
nd Co., 2, Dowgate-hill, London. 


TATUES, Lagoa FOUNTAINS, ae 
8 F 
HM 


VAUGHAN and Co., ry Stone 0 
CRoGGON, late of Coade’ 5, Superintendent, Specimens may be 
seen wgate-hill, City. A pamphlet 
of Drawings forwarded on ‘application. 


HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING 


ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF THE CHOICEST PLAN 78, 
VINES, FERNS, &e. 


Co.’s, 


8 eee 


z i g 


J. 


— ARCHITECTS, eiga T ier. and Hor-warkn 


| APPARATUS MANUFACTUR solicit an inspection of their 
various Wo no in 8 which will —— as to quality 

; workmanship. They haye now erected on their 
Premises, for inspection a great variety of Hothouses, Green- 
TER ote, Poreing-pits, ae. t — heated by HOT 

WaT in various forms, sh mproved methods 


logues 


pr 
tha 
WEEKS anp Co., King's-road, Chelsea, Horticut-| N 


GRICULTU RAL DRAINING: — 8 
Very Superior —— Level, t sim- 
8 price N. Mi to be had of the Maker, — ae vis, * Opti. 
iaa, graas n The above i — wel es 
eem 


ETTA HOT-WATER APPARATOS, 
GREENHOUSES, 
JT. THOMAS BAKER R, MANOR-HOUSE, MANOR. 
PLACE, KING'S-ROAD, ‘CHELS 
INVISIBLE WIR 
WIRE. 


Stands, Pheas 


| neice BUILDINGS, Ea —— — Oonsor- 
ame heated by HOT- WATER APPARATUS | 
eee, Ri 


1 principles, 
“Parties waited on in Town eo bm and Drawings and Norwich: 
perth 


1 6 
Cases, a ee ‘Greenhouses. 


ed and sent to aug part | 


HEATING BY 


WEEKS ax Co., King? 8 
-ro 
J: a Janufacturers A ad, Che 
Economical Boiler 
how 
hm Ring's ran 

most of the Nobilit and Gaile s 

ondon Nurseries, 155 e 


OT- WATER PIPES AND 


with all the usual conn, 
Tron Bridge 5 No. 6 


mi ONES, 
kee: eeps avery large 4 85 of Hot Water — 
Elbows, Syphons, Tee Pieces, * 
Spigots, ' Throttle re &e., 
pri 8. 


Sores 


in the 


i 


TROUGH PIPES, 


low iene 
good w 
requisite for Ta 2 om c., 
pipes, Sutters, Sash-weight ing Bam At 

numerous — Castings are * ebf eat and 
Wharf, No. 6, Bankside, London Tron Bridge 


GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES AND 
URPOSES, &e. 


HORTICULTURAL 


MILK PANS 
PASTRY PINS 
—— 


PROPAGATINGABEE CUCUMBER CLAS 
MILLINGTON’S SHEET GLA 
è the best description, varying arg 16 


ASS, 

6 to 

from 2d. per foot and — 100 * and 200 i 

large Sheet Glass, for tring up, at 25d. Prey British — 

ate Glass, from 1s. . per foot, a to size, 

Patent Rough Plate Glass, 4 from it 5 1 diem 2 

4d. per foot upwards. Gla Tiles. Milk Pan hn 
12 to 24 inches diameter, pee . to 2 each, Cucumber Tubes, 
= 12 4 he 2 long, at Id. per inch. Lactometers, 7s, 6d, 
raps.—Lists may be had on application atthe 

warehouse, i T, _ Bishopsgate-street Without, same side am 


“ALVA ANISED WI RE GAME NIN 
7d. per ae 2 feet wide, 

25277672 

„ 


rE — mesh, light, 24. inch wide ... 7d. per 3d. a. per yd. 
2. in 5 on ” 2333 d w i 
2. — » extra strong „ „ 6 * f 
15-inch „ lig re „ e p 
li-inch „ strong r E gs 11 ” 
Iinch „ extra e i ” ; prices, 
11 th a e an ner * 
— e ma y i the pri 2 j 


abo 
miles of Covent-garden Market, 
Show-house, Propagating, Forcing, 
Frames, Seed Sho with 

proved articles for Sis wink 
prepaid letter, to „ e of 
Stoke Newi mingion n, Lon š 
EST DIBBLE FOR 500. 
215 85 ROSS'S ‘PATENT PRESSING 
hee dibbles press the seed into the soil 

air may dibble an acre. 

sed w a ith 


arity 
in rye sae pres way superior, if i 
and Royal Agricultural bn 
APA 
oe op „ Pw Hugh 
“Sir,— = hep of pei Bia 
machin ne obtained from rom 8 
the — h ior mn tha sown 4 
have determined to plant t 
season, I will, art gr Fe geet 
; sending me the order ieren 8 
them I will remit you. m 


Sir, When I p chest: from 

‘for my a! eee s 

Machine 2 1 oui dir 
yd 


. ong plants, babes 
Ath and 27 They — ** to refer to — Advertisement 
ae Bate LOWER ROOTS, of the same date Their 
71 e Priced 4 ue of Flower Roots, Select Roses, 
irin He baceous, and Chmbing Plants, &c., may be had on 
a 


and Horticultural Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. 
ee ROYAL ALBERT RHUBARB 


; still mai s its supremacy over every other von — 
deing st bm 5. finest-favoured and best coloured eve 


CINTHS, TULIPS, GLADIOLUS, Het NARCISSUS, 
JONQUILS, e ‘OROCUS, RANUN NCULUS, ANEMONES, Li. 

be h ad, 0 — E uality, ‘from WM, HAMIL- 
TON, Sz — and 


_ AY ACINTHS, superior r Varieties — 8 12s., and 18s, 
dozen ; common — al 38. per 
| TULIPS, 1s s JONQUILS ange T i ; NARCISSUS, 
i 15. 0 pn —— or ixed CROCU ours, 2s. 

SNOWDROP vm a." » GUERNSEY 


ES, . d. each. <A Priced e may be had GRATIS on 


ene varieties of Hardy Annuals, for autumn or — spring 
; 12 varieties, 28. 6d, ; free by post, 6d. ex 
 CALUEOLARTA, GERANIUM, and PRIMULA SINENSIS 
FIMBRIATA, saved from the best varieties, and warranted 
very fine, Vegetable Seeds of all kinds, Garden Implements, 


ma 3 ee 8 
takes this opportunity of recommending 
We FLOWER 8 for or ae 
issus, d The “Flori Directory“ remarks— 
i es wheter Sann, ana F darei 8 for Hyacinth —— 
—Ad 


in pots or water, can ha be imagined, 
6s. per dozen, 
A nea — 7 5 ana corres 


dress, 156, — eg ONDON., 
Un 


LEN G OUT VIUM, 
i ‘CARNATIONS, INKS, PANS SIE: 

HESR LTON begs to offer 120 vi ane following 

Hane last sent out for 21. 2s., ant of his 


” now ender — at orn each, 
on 5 for 33 The plants are well established in 


* 8. d. 

Kader (Hoyle’s)... i Lallah caren 2 8 
. ~D Norah REY a } 
eet, Plutarch (Whomes’s) . 5 0 

ere 8 “gare Lind (Posters) 1 

“4 dine 5 0 

. 4 rlequia (Beck's) 8 6 

"E Virgin Queen (Arno! rnold’s).. 7 6 

g vate varieties f for ll. Ts., or 12 

age, viz. : 

ndra, 


3 — 
ts, Miss H Holford, Orio rince Alfred, Purpurea, 
en of Kent, Rosa 1 Star of the West, 


sent by 
had i ko ee snp ; 
5 be prepaid, and made payable a 
Marsden, meer hard y, Lancashire, 


10s. ; a do. do. 15 3 by. ra ae a er a do. do, 18 by 12, 
5 ea? Spee CA 21 by 12, . e wih Tb om 

ret glass. * — aterri 11 foot; 2-inch do., 
1 


1 ex 
mer Sum aa garden PAR 


ES ae by machinery, ou 

Lean-to Greenhouse, 12 feet p 
1 door, and 3 feet of glass infront, g — 
— three coa ts | de 


chemist 
banaue value, an 


„ ore for rece ” 


Pain 


ave an extremely neat 
appearance, and are remarkably st 


eady. 


Ades 
nm 
i 


o hu 
— 


kd 
46—1849.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 723 
AMERICAN NURSERY, . — SURREY. HE JOL = 
OHN WATERER has much pleasure in announcing | | "Society. 1 E iai 1 Ne N ing roasted in a kiln 

J he has published a Deseriptive Catalogue of his exten- | tribute to the next part of this Journal will be so good as send and then crushed, form 
sire collec tion of RHODODENDRONS and other American their to the View Seore ary, 21, Regent-street, before the sentation of the finest ode Neither b 

— & c. 24th of November. The a of papers walah am printed touch nor sight can the most practised eye 3 y 

ä av REE “ELEANOR” thee 5 erataitouly f ed rll ys som Ta c» | guish it, unassisted by the microsco Thi stuff 
MYATT anp SONS are prepa out | if cir — ee d he falsi pe 8 

J ə plants of this and the following varieties at the prices sel consumed in the falsification of guano at 

A: Myatt’s Eleanor, 10s 2 hed ‘Maui ever rc Syro these remarks are printed ; and 
-; British Q = 1446 Globe, 38. * The Gardeners’ Chronicle. there is no doubt that a great deal of the guano that 
* elain’s Comte de Paris, 7s. 6d.; Princess Royal, 7s. 6d. SATURD r = i disreputable dealers consists of it. 
Cuthill's Black Primae, 15s. pe 2 URDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1849, to do, in order to 
rn e e e to MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. pon rt The a answer is, naturally—Consult the 
AMERICAN PLAN : 
3 WATERER be begs to an he has jus Monpar, Nov. 
published a New and Complete Catalogue o a his . 
CAN and CONIFEROUS PLANTS, whic be lies, 
tion, inclosing two stamps for Honan — t 
A WATERER, 5 Surrey Waprasar, — 

PENJAMIN R. CANT, St. John’s-street Nurse 
Colch ow ready for delivery, strong well- Tuunspar, — 

established plants of the following : 

GERANIUM, HOYLE’S CRUSADER pail: aih Farmar, 

i SPECTABIL i BRILLIANT .. 1 — 6d. „ Saruana, — n 
FUCHSIA Ts. $4. — ae so da to be worth] T 
r 18s., yn e and package free t de : one. 2 0 
stotice 3 . en Pace ige 5 eiia heptane R E ae to the kindness of Henry | ity of damaged guano now in the market is 
gespondents. The usual discount to the trade. — Horr, Esq., * the Deepdene, for a sight of inconsiderable to deserve much attention. 

JACKSON'S IMPROVED KID DNEY, THE MOST PROLIFIC |a ew Garpen Sear, which he has imported from e re bered that the measures 
Doas N. 1 5 3 aris. The kai of which it is 3 s | by the Peruvian Government render the introduc- 
3 * * alee i cy ought iron. ron bars, secu red by — tion of genuine 0 gh more than one 

heavy crop of their IMPROVED KIDNEY POTATO, they rivets, form the frames, while iron wire 5 ng European firm impossible is Messrs. 

Bave reduced its price from 15s. to 10s. ushel sig orders | furnishes the seat. We have now before us an arm- | Gimes and Co., All the Peruvian uano on sale . 

of one bushel or more delivered free in London, or at fi di S 
oe salts, treg pa pilaa air (fig. 1), a folding seat (fig. 2), and a footstool necessarily sejat ay ae» of them ow, their pric 

Nursery, Kingston, Surrey, Nov. 17 . 3). seat ae footstool fold up without | i " 9/. 5s. per ton in London or Liverpool, and 91. 10s. 

8 NEW 1 AT VERY LOW PRICES, reparation ; but t r is furnished with all other N man, 

ASS AN BROWN to refer to their ope. prepa screw u i * the | me, and which require to gemin uano at a lower price an nye — 
ment of Sa 3 last sent out, * 27 e 211 T 8 n 
— be unscre Ney ertheless we bear of it in the north o 


England at “Bl 10s. and 7. 10s., — at which the 
retailers must lose from 1/. to 24. Does an 


triots, immolating themselyes 
for sake of i ? 
Buyers may be s > that they 
are no such thing that 


eir pe riotism consists ex- 
oar 2 in filling their pockets 
sa expense of credulous 


yo — is at the bottom of all 
these b 
We have new before us ana- 


lyses of two samples, offered 
considerabl. w the cost 
os the i 

n one of these, l. 10s., the 


aiton. 
The valua Ea va of guano by Mr. Wax prove 
t ave of ammonia in genuine 
Peruvian is 17} per cent. nearly, and the 
, | quantity of sand is pore more than 14 lb. in 2 
5 d pounds, on an average. 
e cheap samples here alluded to, the earthy 
rtan 


s bee * 
abouts. 


t ill, P 4 War to a 24 per. cent., or pm 
1 ele pig weg ik 5 at yet 3 for : The following calculation will s the 
garden > 3 rmer N * ays cheap 
ts 
Ar a time when sensible ee are 3 upon the marke n _ Ammonia. 
well nt principle that e mother of Genuine i So amma contains 17.41 24. 121133 
the most ‘effectual. — for pro- = sae us aana nE ppa 1 
tective dt, it beco important than ever | Ditto, at 70. 10%. ~ 9. 24 Il. 
i h incautious ‘the value of guano ‘i Ge ly upon its 


to 
persons are Under the name of chea 
o and artificial manures, Apari are continuall 

arun at exorbitant prices what is 5 
the cartage. 
We have repeatedly drawn attention to this fact, 
especially as concerns Guano. We have 

f loam of refuse, sand, 


— 


other substances, 
et so ‘ingeniously falsified as to 
under so an analysis of 
n this ee eee g no 
fi 5L t 2 = 
Staci at rom 0 a ton 
gs anie loss of the or tpi and to the ; 
of one of the mt valu 3 in 
to wa a t name 
guano, in the state 


the 


uns 
to th 


It is no 
ne Peruvian 
in gone it reaches this country. 


one of our 


shown that p. 


that 
to do with low pri 
lysis has revealed the ath * oie 


placo them above suspicion, an 


e 
stones | sae, in 


that if iseni ano, costing 9/. 20s. „contains 41 Ibs. 
Fien i ed 


every oun s, guano-c ontaining 

17 per cent. only is worth no more than 3. 188. Gë., 
e who an — stuff at 8“. 10s., 
expense of the 


at the ex 
ehaser. 
ne evading this result, and therefore itis 
farmers are cautioned against mo rw rca 
riced { 


he may also buy spurious guano at 
e; but against that he may guard himself 
t scrutiny of the 9 jr e person 
There are pl respeet- 
the kingdom + bei 
‘and to them we earn 
mmend buyers to con ‘confine their orders. 


Few ee are more nomai than that of 
ect data. . See it 
3 e d fall within our daily 


; 


724 e E 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


o ma 
3 sufficient to recti sity. 
birth to system upon tone eee, often real 

makes 


affinities, and e preliminary studies the 
business of ctice, s th 

theory, the habit of premature generalising, and, 
indeed, the consequent popular aseology, is not 


from this; an ] 
same source, as, for ore that of th 
ing mi iew in W 


well be imagin 


the parasites by whick the diseases are respectively |}, 
d. 


produce 


| m 
The word Milbgw, however, is extended to other 


parasites, ee fi 5 those White _mealy strata so 


in cm 


t 
by many—well meaning in 
n| Wild exaggerations, eat they received them just in t a ths 


this statement: and we entertain no doubt that R. 
Manetti 1 emme as s indispe ensable to a pte 
a pruning-knife rake. 
119 we rave be fics re us an example 
the redo La ghee called Sidonii. 
RSO A of Pine-apple Place, planted a sma 
ril 1848, and budded it in the end of 
It is now 4 feet 6 inches 


der a 
e way obtained 


on have 
- | scores . slant of various sorts—some even larger. 


CULTURE OF THE PINE. APPLE. 
It is not on thre phere since we drew the attention 
Englis to bee practice pursued at 
made were . 

indir idu als, no doubt— 


med to receive the 
vies 


ave jeer accusto 
urned mto a pmi 


an, be his pre- 


reward of victory in h 


on 3 especialy Swedes. It is especially to 

this form e word, considered a Ea n 

ongs, as om implied py its its derivation “ mehl-thaii 
w. Therei 2a by err è n common 


milde hea 
berry, except the cir inar er aka acyl m 
same tribe of vegitablos, ee to the same primary 


at the m 
reproductive organs 
brown in the A Ape and Oidium with which 
the * of N e affected, the fruit 1 
but a l po of t the plant, t, the m myceliu 
else the fertile 8 being highly developed, ad 
the spores which separate from them with the 

est e by no means bese: with 
e spore-bearing N as is the case in Wheat 


of ee ane wrong; an 


the reproductive 


„Weight it w. 


h e 

the art = 1 is greatly in ime Mg of that in n any 
other try; but notwithsta this, the inde- 

fatigable, persevering, and an Pe 
taggere 1 ven the belief of our best gar- 
u his wonderful | Moudon productions. Some 
ertani — success to kno virtue in a soil ; 

0 mmoniacal e 

litter, as s itt 3 * had never been ok i in Pine 
in E Bu 8 class of cultivators 
= pegas d 


was r gro lbs. 
s no . Queen, more „ a i Ripley 
1 the chin ng was an impossibility. 
m glad to be able to state, however, that there are 


le 


5 


r 
difficulty like , not with folded hands, nor in a spir 
of do vegies wee ai sbelief, e with a cool determination 
not to be b Thi eat question of growi 
Ripley S as ] large e one sent from Meudon i is 
decided, and that too most satisfactorily. 


2 Ibs. heavier tha 


J 

2 
8 bo 
®© 
5 
2 
E 


ciden 
size, for I went from 


e | spring frosts we 


sient |e hate 


e shown was not a mere S 


should not take dwarfs Sas a prom 
to breed giants ; but no garde 


e has sired hi the top of 
e bens are afforded hi 
eat Mirabile Dicty im for accom 


— DISEASES OF PL 
Ngee pt er ANTS. 


name of Ply oa 
8 a odes of Vine e shoots, 

severe pied they will 3 — the 

3 = 8 fe 
ame 


t by protecting the 
circumstances adm it of it, teeth the pret Vie whon — 
f the Vines are attacke the diseased part 

, | pruned down to the qu The ancients row ha 
too early praning Lorene the evil; 


ood, i action 

Some cultivators ee their olan ith dine close 
mn. But by no means proved that this is a 
ete sometimes 


1755 be a means 


— — — 
1 bas gem ives 15 an al 
Ses II. Disea ses sokiel may he derived as wol 


pr oda — “et diseases ponte cri ibed i in th 
classes, may be the one o 


tend 
t | vegetate with too fe 5 I will make it cast its 
eaves i he same TE will 
uced by the we Pph 66850 

diametrically opposite. 

Genus I. Aspermia.—There are some plants which 
produce no wie alt though their fruits (in a or 
On 


n 
t 
produce a Rose e may, indeed, in some instances, myself on the poin Theke were plante t as perm 
consider the e aa and mature ia of certain mil- | Meudon, on a be soil. ir of the pit,| First Sel STHENICAL dessen He 
s as distinct, from not havi nad “their deye- An the soil in which they were planted, are both heated | the organs of generation have to their fuil size; 
lopment e sufficient care but i in the eneralit of Ma ee eee Ree ee rs OV ts pistils are much larger than usual, 3 
6 aide a wis 8 * secret therefore could not lie in the gaseous emanations bear an anther—at others they are are doubled; the sta- 
: t , moreover, who are acquainted with | m h oo remarkable. I have observed it in 
> the whole then, 2 tom that it is quite clear | the locality of Trentham are well aware that the loam the Madi edi: 15 
danger can arise Eat a practice which has | there is only second-rate, the peat so a Secon Specie . Consumptive Asp tre 
been adopted with good effect, and respecting which | that for all valuable — s Mr. Fleming procures | sometimes bear fruits which have no seeds, It is quite 
S = . — viz „that of ploughing | it a London clear that this is owing to the weakness whieh the plant 
the leaves of Turnips and Mangold Wurzel as n be „ that these large fruit were 5 fallen i in the causes I have explained un 
dressing for land previous to Wheat sowing, even in Pr ena uced e plants, retarded a year beyond | the head of Dearepttside I think there is some analogy 
in a year like the present, when almost ev ery leaf— the usual itol of fruita ng. The con trary is the fact ; 1 this in the Aspermia of the which 
at least a: ucts Turnips, is white with mildew, | che plants are young, of very moderate growth—indeed | never form il yee e 
There is e affinity between the two kinds of ha en plants t the e adorned wit b. be in a à wate of weakness the surface of the ovary a i 
ildew ah meee the Turnip leaves are affected fruits ; and such dae were, in all like ee, err the | somewhat sbrivelled, a eireu 1 have 
and ominent diseases 5 or 1 2 of the Trenth d had bly thrice served in the pistils of seed-bea ing Grapes. 5 
there any suspicion as to any more latent co ve seler der care and diling bestowed on them ; spe no doubt This disease, th motion of of whieh i rs anxiously | 
the a expense inc growing “such fruit was t after by man ns as —_ | 
betw , therefore, at once conclude double that of the other, because there is ver- sropagitet "ty many p It remains ns to be tried whether 4 
that no ozis 1 though $ er eee. on aey nuisance of the tan-bed to be renewed, in order | such plants be restored to ithe prin leo : 
pee ’ indicates er omen at the requisite heat may be maintajned. is | There’ to be two rae oT applicable to 
0 by no declares iden e risk alse of overheating, and the removal ej St he r. | Aspermia, wou to restrict the plant m 
p n ether with the dawage the | diet, placing it in a less ere hia ites Laa | 
Ovr readers have possi ibly heard of a certain Rosa leaves are liable to sustain, which 5 almost unavoidable Per erhaps ting a might be of some ) them- f 
MANETTI, N among gardeners as a stock. “ Las en the plants are large. The „we have the | grafting the individuals bearing such a „ 
but not least,” g potting thro’ ll their various Saan of progression, | selyes, As to the of old trees, the ar ae 
y two men are actually required to move one plaut, | by restoring them as I have said under of the pistil ] 
The proper situation for ee plant is unquestionably | In regard to the eases where the weakness it would be 
lanted out in the free cause it is much more | seems to be the f the evil, I think the inerease of 
avourable * 1 of its true character; difficult to remedy it, unless it 3 cane the sap 
N ra 25 n out ae - | nutriment, bending the branches £0 48 
10 0 tilly of bein t fl 7 
Crab Sasa poe WIN a badul of ilts foed pons. | To the aBonwN oie Thane sr de 
We have stated the size which een already at- vulgar error of san cultivator obe believe da by de- 
tained in this co by the planting out system of e a plant to bear a tained by the 
culture, but we by no means admi this is anythi g | priv iving oon of their pitiy a 4 belief en writers ers WhO 
like the size that Pines will 2 attain, and in this ancients, and by not a few among 9 5 : 


numerous suckers | 


e yas spear eonim the joc of 


opinion Mr. 

that a small Pine-apple is more serviceable to them 

than a an one ; ue but if the rs one occupies the 
nd costs the same sum to produce 


is priva 


hardly th 


P I 

k that i e p oiera aen fies of a hundred 

much obje Pines i 
te 


slic would be raised to large 
il 


V. 
The f eee = Sd 
er the coun jers 


I can state, from my own ge, tt wap in 
places w have seen it adopted 
Single failure has presented iteelf ; and although : [inle 


obstacles may at first appear, they are 
It is true that where little bantlings only! have "hithe rei 
en produced, 8 Ib. Queens are not lik 
result of the ; common sense 


leming Ju aa neurs. Some contend | have copied 


in any 
a 


ely to be the 
tells us, that we | 


aoi 
GOSSIP ABOUT GRAPES, Tio dat a afer 
Lr ee or Leavzs.—I ma. re al ent, 

rost's earl: rapes 


| 
4 
q 


i 


pki has made, and is | shoots, 
Garden 


46—1849. | 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE; 


although at variance with general practice. 
te Vines are not much ac- 


quent! they undervalue, through not man the 
gse of, the leaves. ave sometimes ose who 
capi to to have known better go i into a Fiery and in- 
— — for the sustenance of the buds which 
were Epeei to produce the next year’s . the 

2 and yet th 


s, upon 
r producing fruit in the s 2 ng 
season, ought to preserved with the care 
until they die a natural death. 

l are aware that the 


bunches 


mgement ; as these lon 
seen — 4 wen the Vines sie 5 leafless, a 
7 ee aoe discovere a Vine, i in 8 
way it may me —the e hga to “ae Ty mealy 
worthy of gase so far 
emed. Growe 


are e e 
riod when 


tise the close — em of pruning, not, ver 
account of greater neatness of A, ce, but because 
ae 3 eee compact bunches 
e preferable for — purpose 
lage shouldered — bunches, e perso 
obj large bunches because the ey a 
quently 0 chan small ones with what 
chankin and this is no doubt correct ; bat e 
reason occas to m not use the bu . 
being large are therefore wad liable to that defect, but 
because 20 jaro We bunches require more support from 1 
ag hog grow upon 3 the same number of s 


ene oe want of food, or in other words — the 
berries which shrivel an 7 5 remain of a 
; 3 a 


while 
colour, are just 


i 


“ Gardeners’ Sagal 
‘Urged in opposition t that strong-growing "Vines not over- 

with frui metimes 3 to shanking; 
t does happe D, 


of this, for it was pom upon king 
urpose of making a 


t a stock of hea’ 


appearance is con- | o 
of Grapes for market generally prac- 


nges in the fruit of a 
eee plant, su 8 1 pss that rut epi 
x d 


when after a few years the , herbage 
which 1 1 “the turf have decayed, it will be foun 
the loam from above the clay is much more ret 
water than t that weep 3 gravel benea 


— — soil 4 on loam 
ro 


he fingers 
with a fourth part of half-rotten farm y 
— fourth of whole bones 
er = which Vines cannot fail t 
it is payee shallow (from 2 to 3 feet deep, stag to 
the Eee wise and well Hat at bottom. The 
secret in growi ng good Grapes is to get an abun- 
ealthy ete and this = not be done in 
a cloggy, adhesive fe border. J. B. Whiting. 


3 


BRITISH ASSOCIATION FOR TI 3 5 ADVANCE. 
F SCIENC 
poe athe from p. 7 2) 
KESTER read a a paper some Abnormal 
ruit of Bras ssica oleracea e 


ascular tissue uniting ee 
c ch car mr was broader than it 
long, ros was composed of a little leaf-like bag, which 
red and contracted at its un ion w span 5 fellow 
te sid oy culated ve easily 
e metamor — . 
to those normally de- 


e beak, and stigma i e Cruciferze s ha 
n suggested . writers, folia ro 1 
lary e e but that they had a true axile origin. 
. Mungy, author of the “ Flora of Algiers, 


— of exceedingly rapid 3 Se ae eee, 
plai ains in! he course oi single nig It ha 
tas e e of support- 


able to RYA to maturity. I stated this epee e | 
years sin the and it w 


is | Israeli 0 


new border, isot 


te, 
Was man life, as in m e Arabs depend 
almost entirely upon this — 1 for pc The 
rap ween of this agate ne a . 1 ntities in so short 
eee “ orm and taste, and uses, 
suggested the possibility that t aan m ight 8 some re- 
lation betel and the “manna’’ of the ancient | 
— 


and fibrous pae without passing into the eastern 


res 
o have the mg pegar d of | which tiay are distributed peti ly. 


spon 
soapy areas that part ry Britain * extends betwee! 
mixture of — — * ee d the Lin 


ard d 
E istia rubbish, wi | Thames and Murray Firth. 
ell, if | sp 


ue, | net of meteorological sta 


as a th 


ritain over 
But they cor- 
tive peculiarity of being absent 
n the Firth of 
an 


mostly absent 
gong side of the island between the 
Thi ts 


nd in the n 


m the whole 


— * his observatio 
this subject further inv esti 


tended and completed—as beng 
well as the north-western part of Baniak, exhibited as 
yet great blanks on an isothermal m map, 


VILLA AND ‘SUBURBAN GARDENING. 


r the 
as far as the roots extend, with ad- 


pearance of having 


been planted on a little hillock. It 
n a common trees 


AND 


Y, Sept. 18.—Section A. MATH 
mperature ‘he E Britis h | 


Tugs 
Verein Scrence.—On the Tem 
Isles, and its Influence on the Distribution af Plants, 
5 e author first adve to the 
— rope as being phere 
. than all — aera of asimilar latitude. The 
als of 70° ona 30° (Fa ahr.) were iu North 


* — 
p 


d 
The V 


an 
; the White Muscats 


j t 
e aiak ia| sou portions of Wales. Al, Iniiai Wa 
quanti is therefore evident | north of England 
2 Tine Highlands, lie between the isothermals of ia 
orth igh 


temperature is very 
siderably lower, Inverness having only 55° 7’. The 
thor uded to the infiuence of temperature 


but | along the western 


body of ere buried about 3 feet | America from 30° to 57° N. lat. ; in Asia, from 30° to 
oe adhesive soil, and yet these Vin lat. ; in Europe, from "30° to 71° N, lat. 
The British Islands are placed almost in the ce of 
garden | the | . diagram of the isothermals of July | upli 

several years ago, some very ex- | and January, the hottest and coldest months of our year,) Wh 

ineries were kar the owner, under | fo founded on observations in 70 places s, was exhib iiad., an 
Penn and Mr, Wilmot—the g 

orised to heat the houses by his then | direction from ‘north to south, instead of 9898 battle. 

to direct the fi of the e eee. inferred. Between the Shet- 


and Islands an southern coast of —— = 
Cornwall and Deven there is no differe 
t bet 


land and th rn 
amounts to md t 10°, the form 
of 35°, the latter probably 5 
from the Naze 


e surface, thus placing them out of the reach of the 
atmosphere. is must not be done, being to 
the first principle of promoting fruitfulness. Encourage 
ra a ye meme of the border 

all the s in you ot because if they 

— buried re they vill — — — I avocate shallow 

planting ; they will become more luxuriant deep than 

— producing seats gens mgt in in length proof 
8388 eedin ter. Trees on 

with thete root | by the 2 8 Sin | 

ther will 


thay bo Bo Bahis ta gona 3 1 
cumstance of the 


a a low temperature 
re planted, they sald be fastened loosely to the 
om with a piece atting. 
being loose and we moved, it will settle; and if 
the shoots are tigh tied, the tree will 
"p 


ins to move in spring, th 


system us 
kind is, to cut all the 9 shoots 
a or at least within two or three e 


laid for 
all others 


highest sum 


| dicated by the ee e tral | 


mperature 2 the ‘the British Isles—in; | most 


hich 
not only the most ost simple, but alee di 
sition for the branc 


e _ coast of England, the the lowest in the 


is much | 
mal of 62° extends to perda Birm ingham, and the 


on 
districts of which he had 


p the 

be strikingly co rroborative with the gene 
of his rsa Ha 2 botanical obser- 
was indebted to W 


regard as w 


d be 
he shoots begin to swell, the ligatures 
would i injure 2 Pharo. 


TRADE MEMORANDA, 


Liverpool and reputation, is again in the 
fold Under now mamet, one of which is Robert MEE 


ond de — . 
The appearance of Rings on the pi a 
as exhibited at p. 708, may l I conceive, be fairly 
[attributed to to the ill effects of [ow temperaturo at some 


r Sa 


726 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. ov. 1 


—.— 
iod of growth. During the severe winter of | and sand, plunging z the pots in ashes in a cold frame in | abled to penetrate every part. On : 
— —— ny half. hardy plants were killed, a shady place. In October I remove them to a south | cropped with Indian — last year, — úi 
of the Camellias growing here, in an open border, where they can have the full sun, again of 80 bushels per acre, but according to my the rate 
exposure, and having the asia ng them in ashes, and keeping the tops within | it did not pay. I most certainly advocate thee ation, 


ir boughs during | 4 inches of the glass in a cold scan giving mp as the Giant Indian Corn as a green crop : 
the intensity of the frost, were similarly affected, the air in the day and ater hewn meio has me that its large flags feed more on the air to 
only exception being in favour of the more hardy sorts. | nights. By Ara a get ane sion — S. Newington; Knole, Frant, Tonbridg — 
On the covering being removed a discoloration of an which are a blaze of beauty a — through — ace Parsnip Disease. — I have once or twice elie 
inch o e stem immediately above ground was months of J — — y, and Mar recommendations of the Parsnip as a substitute for 
discernible, and from this the bark soon shrivelied and Aphelundra cristata major —When “well managed, Potato. I am sorry to say that, both this — 
ed off. The plants ling a time, but even- this is truly a magnificent plant; but, because it never last, my Parsnips have shown unmi 


me i t as 

frost had not been sufficiently excluded in the have discarded it. It > a mistak 3 2 — year the fruit of a e id 

previous winter, and premonitory symptoms of destruc- in the stove all the year round, e do, or to con- | tatoes was affeeted with a — of 1 had all the 

tion were very apparent. James Duncan, Basing-park, | sider it at all delicate ri rep ards 1 or temperature, appearance of the same disease that prevailed in the 
Animals.—At page 694, “A. H.“ asks about the It is quite as gross a feeder as the Vin d I have Potatoes around it. Cautus. 

ce holes made in the ground sometimes in brown earth, sath foun 1 it do best wa potted in “strong, turfy| To Grow Orchids well, nothing moreis required than 

aiea . with omy m pis prea of well-rotted dung ; to place a stratam of charcoal, broken in rather smal} 


2 
x 
= 
4 
®© 
8 
2 
3 
Hl 
E 
® 
5 
T 
3 


called ut A i + has 1 5 ring, I move it Pat shelf in a| pieces, at the bottom of the and to have the 
Norfolk, I have met with these, and there and else- = Wes or — 5 a stage of the greenhouse, where | remainder of the pot filled with small broken potsherds 
where I have been told (with what truth I cannot say) ms remains until the beginning of February, when the and moderate- — lumps of charcoal, in equal 
that the sand martin works them out. As to the preceding year’s wood is cut ba ea > first joint, and | portions. Canti [Orchis growers: will, we 3 
modus 8 and the purposes of these holes or their the old soil shaken from — roots, w are reduced | read this assertion witi amazement Will “Cantium” 
st leave others to explain them. Addio. a ~ aai it to be put into a pot _ — the favour us w ome name of the place 
Calla . —— has done well in a stream in the of that in which it flowered; it i plunged m yates cessary — what he here deseribes,} 
piip reaa the mages — eae as strong | in 8 — a Pin e-house, and ke ept ag near r ko glass e could — help 3 the other day, the 
as N in a conserv C. Trevel as cabin 0 it e ite — sar when it imme- | persevering n of the as it may be seen among 
Rough Plate ae, “i would cuales a a co upon | diately receives a shift into the pot it Jast flowered in. the * and — of "Saag Castle, A strong 
the horticultural world by eliciting and making public | It is then replunged in the tan bed, and well syringed | wind was str ripping deciduous trees and shrubs of their 
of practical men on the subject of glass for | with clean water and m — water “reason to fo — and carrying them “high on the breeze, over 
conservatories and other horticultural buildings. I am keep down —— . — ect it is very subject to and town, yet, with respect to the Ivy, it appeared 
well aware that Hartley’s patent rough plate is now under this method of — it always flowers with to — it cling with a firmer hold to its Pe em 
y recommended. Has it been tried with Cape|mein September. W. S., Oct. 15. Many Lomond 
and New Holland plants and found to answer in the Eziract of a Letter ewe iho Island of Madalena has burst upon this home of the Ivy; ye the 
darker months of the year, as well as sheet glass? In (off the north point of Sar aga —“ ee ee flou- heat of summer, and the frosts and — age it 
frames where the glass is frequently taken off altogether, | rishes e my sheltered — he ö 1 — cane, holds on its upward course with an energy that many 
Jean suppose that it might answer, and yet not be so Coffee, Cott The Geraniums run wild o rocks. with their reason to guide them might take a lesson 
suitable for fixed lights. You must be well aware that Captain Roberts has a hedge of 5 ——.— ms, from. The Ivy may often be seem growing ina soil 
there is, perhaps, a prejudice against it in the minds | 200 yards long and 5 or 6 feet high. You never saw | that received no preparation from man, with nothing to 
of many good gardeners, on the ground that less light is anything more 0 3 2 . is in om wer.” T. cling to but basaltic rocks; yet one column of rock 
admitted, and that as any diminution of light is a serious Gar pees 2 you, with much | after another is — bat it does not not stop there, 
objection, it ought not to supersede the use of the pleas ap 8 a — . — the merits of the | it scales the walls and pushes onwards until i 
brighter sheet glass, except in particular cases. If it —— little * which has been so strongly recom- green fl i d in th 
can be shown that Cape and New Holland plants mended in your Paper b ne Addio” and others. I. the ramparts. Mrs. He see. — Song, 
as we ass u 
I 


1 
It 


8 


et 
7 


lh 
i 
173 


in h plate during the summer is just the kind of fork that I wanted. It has a great no trace 
months of the year. I am try it in a Vinery recommendation, too, in being so easily made, nd Ke .. 
and a Heath house, provided I can satisfy myself that so trifling a cost—2s. at the outside. It is useful in Meeting the mountain storms with bloom ; 
the experiment has already been fairly and 5 either single hand or double hand work, and there is no oe rown the climb th bey 2 i 
made by any good practical gardeners. J. H. H. H., amateur lady or gentlemen, nor any gardener, I am vy, Ivy, all are ‘thine, 
ix: he nai Nov. 13. sure, but will find it as — as I do, not only in break- Palace, e, hearth, and shrine, ; 
Borders and Red Spider:—Shall I be doing ing away a parched or crusted surface of clay, after Although the Ivy may be seen waving where once 


right is in manuring a Vine border with a quantity of rains and sunn ny days; bes i in the removal of tubers — roud banners hung, and on mouldering ruins, yet it 
road-serapings mixed with the contents of some cess- | small plants of all sean it will be ae at this season may be seen in — lowly situations, affording * 
ceable. En Ver ing our 


2 t stab S, an onging season 
I find that Speechly speaks very highly of it. I| Plumbago Lar — — . have — pe ge pretty | fi — In a frosty night the moonbeams may be re- 
t those who have used carrion in their borders | blue-flowered plant produ — a of 100 clusters, | fleeted in its glossy leaves, but they afford protection to 
would publish the results of their experience. Another | and every cluster containing e time — cline to many a plant that lives under their influence. Knight, 
Season expired, and some valuable facts may | ten perfect blooms ; here it my er * this ia more than | “ Upon the beneficial effects of P the Stems ¢ 
perhaps have been collected with regard to this kind of | two months past, I 8 Plumbago Larpente to be Fruit Trees froin Frost in early Spring,” remarks, I 
manure. P a 


we 
succeeded with keeping down the red spider deing ie have, when properl pe indeed, it has been ad- a north-east aspect, and shaded by a contiguous 
hottest part of last summer. Being a ee mired by every — has seen it in arre se It ing, a — China Rose tree (Rosa indica), and a 
week my Cucumbers became affected, and I tried 7 has been condemned by m — orthless, plant of Irish Ivy. Both have risen considerably 
vain advice: sometimes given—“ keep them close | but this arises from their — — ake — it above the top of the wall, which is 13 feet high, and — 
and very moist.” I have mastered the spider before in | really oe G. Masters, Heaton-park Gardens, | Rose tree, of which the stem is wholly 
this way, but this season it completely beat me. Reader. | Manchester, Nov. 12. [Pray state your mode of treat- | branches and foliage of the ae promi has annually 
You have — recommended parties — for the benefit of these who do not understand it.] more abundant flowers, and e xhibited symptoms of 
; berry in a crack in the bark. I ato Disease.—In -y 1 (Forres, more luxuriant health, than any r other tree of 
have never succeeded with it in : way, but I have N. BYA the Potatoes have more | kind in my possession. The soil in i 
it grow by pressing it on the clean smooth from the disease than — Daise * —— poor and unfavourable, and I am unable to discover 
bark. C : C. J. year; much to the injury of several farmers, who had any cause except the protection it receives, u, Ivy | 
Frye on Vines.—I am convinced fro from experience | planted a greater quantity than r having found p has derived its luxuriant health and — 

What vou have written on this subjeet is perfeetly them oe profitable when they had failed in other is generally known to gardeners as piensani 
correct. Sulphur will kill mildew, if it be applied the | places. e have this morning (November pauda a aso pendant plant only; bat when the trees "ruit bearing 
moment it appears. I mix the sulphur with water, frost bers; the m ountains have been for days|a considerable age, an and have produc growth, 
— il will i b exhibit ent form of 


d E 
Hi 
Gate 
2 
TAAL 
Hie 
mila 
if 
H3 


ewhat 
_ the latter would "be covered i 
an sey were requisi foli Id be exposec 
2 North real eee find in the — the — “exceeded the pe I have p agrs aee ceed ie it is probable that these 
same destructive 2 — it, but never succeeded well as last year. I 


a 


; 
atl 


li 
i 
241 
: 
1) 


awn bout the depth and 
furrows (do not think T I am dictating to you), in 
deposit ba tted farm-yard m and cover 


Apt. as thereto emajn that the stirring, g, if pe ant in March, adds six 
ae ; eg — Sa nT planis ne . —.— * — 
of half loam and half! ' 


ne ee ms) p . p . ] 


461849. 


the Potato is to us in this coun 


try, and an — 
it is. of king it 


ed up 
the frying-pan, witha * gravy or dripping, I dare 
— that, after one-half of the 
in ee —— — it to the“ — root.“ 

r half. starved looking abori 


ks, and w 
t provisi ons, they alwa 
wlis. Our 8 from Sydney bei os exhausted 
9 ay ay the Brazilian coast, pede n put 
fresh supplies; an 3 
— ine that lov —.— * to sae — 
ross the ome | it was pleasing to all on board to see 
5 ks of her quar h 
Pumpkins, Pine-apples, Bananas, and other tropical 
9 4 £t ‘Burnett ii, Roby Hall, Nov. 5 
Kew M 2 ad to, see that you noticed 
— — t Kew. I saw i e 
inutes only the other nce and saw goodie to 
ine me to pay it 


e even here, 

at Paris; buttfew 
only on aes h 
r the natives; 1 Nang admitted four days in 
week, te orant. of this. e free 


s the way, 4 there is 4 3 sag 


admission 

ai imposition ; for there is in realit 

cannot see the MSS. without a a 2 ee 
readi cally more 


these plants are well 
d be but t Justico 0 the perso 
this should be done —— 


n in charge 


THE GARDENERS’ 


Satte, by n by rich h and poor; indeed it is to them what 


i any 1 


Tos round with | youn 
tingin adva 
e great —— ca pitala, "wich, wets bs taught th 


ear | lawn 


it. re Lepido 
slnding bot s . — Chilo sigalg, 
hy | e 


owers 
teur feeding it with Willow leaves.—Mr. 


trance found in the eg 
within 


their | dd. ge A 


such statements bei 
a p. 534, your corres 


nar He of actual ex nee. 
warm do not fiy weary their usual p 

e really suppose that it is their intention 
n the bush on 


as well be asserted that an animal does 
when you take especial pains to tether it to the — 


pened 

m that Nutt’s plans consist in ventila- 

per and hat an casual observer must have noticed a 

m of ontilation naturally carried on by the bees in 
5 ould indeed ap 


a 
fs 


ord to pro 1 — correspondent next 
on —— subject, "os learn 
eve e 


that bees 


+n 8 oper s departure our 
correspondent’ ust be treacherous, if, owe! 
his study of Huber he Pr saci he does not remem 
prc the oldest queen leads the swarm, and that the 
ve san immediately preceding the exit of the 
used by her 1 owed to destroy the 
"ae successiv ive at a state o 
rrespondent has 


ex- 


ong, L for on “a en be mischief 

tha ised false sta wa r Paper may cause, and 
shall be de lighted t we 7 is rectifie d. C. C W. 

Althea frutex.— different beautiful varieties 


CHRONICLE. 


perie 
t says, that bees when r f 


not run away | m 


recom tiendi the perusal of some ot our leading writers | to 0 hit m by botanists of no 


of 6 tree Althea are abe! to ap stem, as a stan- 
d 


s and dry soil. I have se 
saath garden i in the Regent’s 5 which every year 
has owers on it than six bushes I have in 4 
own alee aig it makes a 2 standard fo: 

. Dodma 


ariete pe 
ENTOMOLOGICAL, ousE, Esq., | b 
President, in the chair, pit he dies announced 
books presented 5 3 Society of Natural History o 
Man and a continuation of 


ra from Yaxley fen, in- 
to: 


xhibited of EAT GR iy 


n which the 


. k 
n — pike, of agg vos six pounds w 
observed h 


struck its ts head against a tenterhook in a 


727 

here he has constantly resided since that time. Mr. 

Lyell’ venga A was 3 ripe, accurate, 
ostenta; taste was pure and delicate ; his 


public that a London G rae perm 
unt, Mr. 2 — 


of enlarged and philosophical views, These 
studies he continued till within a short period of his 
exten — e 1 library, in 

veral rare works of the older 


7 n 
cotland, me which is Fg nr to in the New 
t, written by Mr. Lyell, containing an pearaama 
article on the —— of the plants ts of the parish of Kir- 
riemuir, beginning at its lower extremity to the south 
and extending to the high tare of Glenprosen. Those 
3 seen the MS. say that it is a production es 
ifully drawn up and exceedingly valuable. This 
rief and very imperfect account — — p ee but — 
nee with the words of Cla i partem 
velim, ee e — — — exit. 
—— “Advert 
nstinet in a Pike: — When he (Dr. Warwick) resided 
at Durham, oth seat -< the Earl of Stamford = 
as walking one evening in s e 
2 dee „ where fish i ntended for 
took 
tily away. In 60 doi 


alae 
rg Hy ME 


ving specim 
amia Textor, which had been kept t rea — alive æ 
ngpen exhibited 
found i at insect- 
i y of the 
d the markings and veinings of the — with the 
test clearness.— ibited 
some Tobacco from the London Doeks which had been 
m — by the attacks of the 
small 


specimens of a species of Ptinus, 
including 


vase, human a 
barrow, and which, from the 


of species: of Pselapidæ, fro m Mel- 
5 found in ants’ neste, and 
. micans and 


pure, £0 led virgin, 
by using hives on this 
y argument last, its 


—— endowments, his 
manner in which s 


| distinguished 


hie 
in 1826, 


eavern. 


— only, as it — ds a 
and turned the optic 
evinced by the ani re horr 

t- | rushed to the bottom, and, boring its head into the mud, 

i round with such velocity that it was almost 

a short It then plunged 


the assistance of t the kee 


success 
ranches of study which there | 
passed 


rian. nie the various 2 Ahn 
engaged his attention. a 4 

be | early . England, Mr. Ly ell retur! 
1, | paternal estate, in the parish of „ 


to measure them. ol sect at 
. 


728 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


[Nov. 17, 


North-west Bay River, at the back of Mount 


to the 
Welington, and are what mo here Ags Swamp Gums ; 
but I do not „ e na I see that 


appropriate name saga the Swamp Gum uch 
er tree. was growing, the ‘other ‘prostrate; : 
the latter re 10 the first branch 22 


thence to where top was broken Fi 14 0 sod 
64 feet, or 284 feet i in all; oe io that T 8 top it must 

been siderably ond 300 fe is 30 feet 
in diameter at the ba 12 230 or the first 
branch, and to that distance only would, from the stem 
alone, mor th . 1 f the 


ure 
0 growing trees 
40 feet in eireumference.“ Rotanieal Gazette for Oct. 


Calendar of Operations. 
i 8 


Sroves.—There fine umn-flowering 
= y which an done their. duty for pis season, and 
require to r such treatment as shall best 
suit rn duties eb 
tuberous 
netly m 

Do 
3 or ee 
ouge to ha 3 supplied with 
0 


eee — ng as their foliage remains healthy, an 
they 8 ripen 5 3 also be 
andas, 


gs. Where ther a 222 of s 
ari N plats, as Tekh aN 


by 


inch deep plunging material, to 
preserve the pots from the action of — ; and let 
extra covering be | ver the Hya s and other 
bulbs whi plunged out of doors, 
FORCING DEPART 
PINERIES.— Furnishing e by means of hot 
water has made the management of Pines during winter 
80 eae a patir, that a very brief space will suffice 
to all directions. The moderate 


„an 
air, are given with e facility. 
moisture raised within the pit m 
at this season, and the 


the neate: 
t 


0 
the plant 


cially necessary on * a 3 ground, and in low, damp 


situations. Many uous paty ceous plants fall 
under this he rich s Gai , Sparaxis, Salvias, 
: | Stachy s, Lobelia: 12 F | by means 
of some 1 peon material piim 5 n, toe do 3 
inches t Whatever be u is Fes e i 
should bà such as is 5 N 8 absorb and in 
moisture. any use sawdus y leaves for this 


purpose, and 1 their u woc hg dye Le 

1 with a little soil, a old t 

nient, e ually serviceable, a f 

top- 3 in i 
bby e 


> light m the er 
ee some sort of a shelter to sek e el, Pinches, 

s the prunings of 
8155 about them, as 
at a short distance they are not distinguishable from 
the plants pag 4 

TS’ FLOWE 


Pansy ap: will piri care fally 90 ng over; trim 
which have made too luxuriant grow wth, The 
seedling stants which i been last planted out should 
nded to. me bot —— the — — — 
s bad tim 


everer 8, stuc 


ally, an 
S | rou 


81 ng. 


w past years. 

5 planted — should 1 ook 3 over — 

weakly the soil a = stirred 

Ai pAr a “tittle leaf-soil pr 
orth 


e 
be kept gently moist 
88 ot either drought or r Bers be avo ided” 
P ve p of air. The sa same may b 3 
Pip i confine, and damp — Ae ant is highly in 
jurious to both. 


ted la sai should 


FRUIT GARD 


und nor 


n of shutters, pe e abe a ete comfi 


and th 8 y 
ing ‘the entire 8 force 


— on gems iately connected with 
it. The first babii ee is to unfasten th rom 
the walls, , if it be admissible, the latter should 
prs e a coat of colour, that all insects and their embryo 
may be smothered ; 85 if not, they 2 at least be well 
ashed with clean r from an engine. Before the 
old nails and s nite — fase again, let the former 
oil, for the double 


be made res and areia 
des 


purpose o insec 8 preventin g rust; an 
let the latter be "bole, * d, and dried p reviously 
to ar being re- 4 intend to pute the 


been long used it will b o chip outa portion 
of the old 8 and repoint all the 3 the studs 
all 


8 aN and to — 717 


E 
bya fr a om admission of air, tha 
culty in nee up the temperatur 


used, oe by back ventilation, must at all ti 
libe ly f : ii mes be more 
When there is evidence of a decline in t tem- 


necessary to remove a portion of the old surfacing 
ial, before the new is put in. These matters 


? 


siah ang | thei foliage. 


of | 
This recipe is very simple, but it is + equally efficacious 
h those redients. 


ealth and appear. | 


are then to be fixed in at suitable distances and the w. 
is is ready for retraining, At th e er auy trees 
wh diseased, or have been proved worthless or 
infer varieties, may removed ; after the 
stations are carefully prepared, better plants from other 
parts of the en, or young trees from the nurse: 
may be planted in their stead. By ing on 

at 


ixture : 1 gallon 

of water add a pound of soft soap and hal 

a pound of sulphur, with suffici npe and soot to give 
pa 


nsistence coloured paint. 


wit 


which h contain in many more in; 


State of the Weather near London, for the week ending Nov. 15, 1849, 
as observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiswick. 


THERMOMETER, wind, || Rate. 
in 
Max., Min. Mean 
60 44 ry S.W. 00. 
59 32 45.5 S. E. 00 
6 | 35 7.5 SW. 00 
55 35 45.0 S W. 00 
55 | 39 be S.W. 13 
55 | 36 45.58. W. -19 
4 jj 48 | 35 41.5 SW. 03 
— 
1560 26.8 iw 
29.945 1 0 nr ~ 2 0 


— 


Nov. 9—Ove —— and fine; very mild fı season = 

10—Ove-cast ; exceedn . 

1l- Fines a clear and v. inet ane ae ih 
zy; 


— 12-—Fogsy; hazy: 9 

— ae Fain : elear and fin nig 

— Kain; heavy rain in fo ; 

m 15—Clear; cloudy; rain; — apo night, 
ean temperature of the we: 


bove the 
— — TR- average. 
State of the Weather at Chiswick during the las 


ensuing week, ending Nov, 24, 184 4% years, for the 
Te eee 
ov 2 
wee | eee] ae | No.of Prevailing 
Nov. 82 5 Ee sig 5 N 8 hives 
= > 6,0 i 
Ae | ZSS | FE | Raned. | fain: 8 ie 
Sunday 18 49.0 | 35.0 | 420 15 1 5785 
Mon. 49.) 36.1 42.6 13 oa h l 
S 42.9 8 0.38 H 
Wed. 21| 500 | 395 447 46 oag 7 
hurs. 22} 496 | 364 |429] is | os 1433 
Friday 23| 48.3 35.7 42.0 8 aw k 
8 aaa! 49.0 | 33.3 | 412 8 is 3 121 
he highest tem temperature during the above uses 33 


dn. 59 deg. ; and the lowest on 18th, — 19 on the 21st 


dex. 


tham suggests in the er Flora,“ and that 

with leaves we have ourselves received. It certainly is 
Oak, but is more like Teak. In th uncertainty that exing 
upon the subject, able to say whi the 


BEDDING PLANTS: C 
fornic should be taken up, tted, and wintered in 
greenhouse.: They may be encouraged to make shoots for 
cuttings in spring; but the latter should have been secured 
at the eg ime. 

Books We are bei it! pois with the names of the 
authors sof: the tracts you mentio 

CoLD Pits: A B. Build them “of 9-inch brickwork, Make 


jhen potier 47 that is essential. t them face the 
Glaze with stout eine ee to size, that is a mere 
5 — taste or . eee. wrod take care that the 
glass is steep eno ugh to throw off the water perfectly. If you 
ean build i iron Nan lates into 2 plang so much the better, 
RAPES: B B. Four Vin 1 a greenhouse may consist of 
the Black P ‘the B k Hamburgh, Royal Muscadine, 
and White e 
MANURE : Sub. amm of the gas-works will 


liq 
hasten the decomposition of 8 rages ~ dhase 
it suitable for monet 4 your garden in a —the matter 
consisting of Bean-stalks, leaves, Turnip va 60 
2 nae Minimus. Give us your adde — 9 
k about. In return you may 
s prepared in the same beautiful TEE 
objects pnä pri one of which, however—the hairs—was 
broken. 
NAMES om. Fruits: Florence. Your Apple is the Gravenstein 
—G S. Your Grape is the Esperione ; it i is a hardy variety, a 
great be: 55 er, and colours well out of doors; but it is naturally 
more acid than the Hamburgh. — SH. H 6 Nonpareil; 
H, Kentish Codlin; I, Sire eny Nonparei 
Seedling ; IN, Dutch Mignonne ; 5 Nene Pippin; . 
G ; 8, appears to be Syke House Russet ; 
C, probably Northern Greening. 
MES OF PLA 4 ts ote “Your drawin; 
A py remarkable spe e 
M. 


NA 


6, Veronica Prisca Re da; 457, 8 leri 
ee Nepeta heliotropiifolia ; 478, Stachys i; 
h ica psis s Tetrahit; 4 
Sarurcia, perhaps piedi near 
aedium ; 134, Marrubium 1 
Š Clav varia pratensis ; the flowe 
—7 C. Your Eranthemum Pg to be at 
ally Wen you Bel bottar destroy the plant By 
nag annuali A — vou had ma er e 
hr —.— another from unaffeeted place.— 


of their not severing. When they have ou 
will blossom with y o 3 iiy 

Roses : Guichenet. If the roots were not grea 
Roses for Serine will 208 — anything from ha 
recently repotte er th 

SEEDLING FRurrs 


o roast them 


e 
‘ood Pippin. 
G ymphæs | 
bra, : . 
AXACUM: 
van tenth; nto squares, and dried thoroughly in | 
also w. in 


onl 
ployed We do ow you can make k 
tin 
to 1 . 5 72 A Walham. We cannot sive the pe 
writers oe ‘he Calendar. i rte s gare ee 
reid that — are e e g Se — be 00 


but it 15 not a good 
Vi nes to the rafters. 
ter 


a 
Rẹ 


his 
the Vine i s is ‘ cik Hambur — 
R ~~ — m are the great 
Yim reg C. Your Black Ham amibute>, Be 
hich 3 80 well against a wall, ‘oats ays" 
greenhouse. Fight be be done, 
man eye is to 8 
ai 17 
WoopLice, &.: E. A toad i preg be 
hroom-house. 
—— —— and perhaps fer woodlles 
the morning, and may °° 


beh into 


nice: PIB, ‘ein latifolia is E ar , for i na 
—— e or F py working” it 3 


1 ] THE 
KASA. S FOR OR CONSERVATORIES, 

AMES. PHILLIPS anp Co. e the pleasure to 
pe hand their aia List of Prices He el. A SS for Cash. 


sss TO HEET SQUARES. 
d. to co per foot. 10 boxes 2 8. d. 
eon 12 6 
* ” eg = Phy and unr 7 by 8. 16 6 
> » —— ” n ” Tb ae 18 6 


20 6 


e PATENT 3 gars, packed in boxes 

t eac 
6 by 4 and 6} by 4} . ays 17 by 5 and 10 by 51 . 125. Od. 
376 „ 83 5 di by8 ... 
4 "PANS, from 28. to 6s. each; METAL n 
— Glas 
10d. sank: 


— 
of every deseri iption, 
es. Latin — ers for trying tai quality of Milk, 


British — tt 2 prices varying from 
* foot, for the usual sions seire, many pple 


Co., 35, Soho-square, Lon 
ronicle, fi 


urday in — month. 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SO SOCIETY toi 


Professor SIMONDS, jy Hots —+ — — logy in the 
Royal Veterinary College, and Professor WAY, sulting Che- 
| mist to the Royal A tural S 


Society of Eng — have eac 
embers, 


729 


: 2755 1 - actual conditions Ne ich it implies 
scerta’ id 3 all the dif- 
ferent instances tebe n these extremes. 


| kindly consented to Galiver a Lecture Suhre È at 
the House — — Society, in 38 eo f it wjn TA i ma -iba gret that the 
the ensuing December General Meeting, namely— nglish Agricultural Society has th experimental 
sae or Heeren. Òn the Anatomy p and Diseases of the | farm, and will not authorise others to conduct p 
nals, with par ticular re! . rey 
* to the ‘ Foot Ro Rot in Sheep.” At 8 f. m., on Tuesday, the tical * as at its expen British Asso- 
r 
11 —— . 3 pan 0 me gre pa of Science has add 
7 = 4. . of Water.“ At 8 r. u., on re A to f e entific 1 * cr ian by efiniteness a 12 ae 
nes in 2 scien 1 c now E 1 
The General 1 S day, T B°, y ees = 5 2 5 5 
the 15th of December, 7 — ld yy in fn forenoon 45 they bye ; f ollow 5 f 2 5 
he Counei 0 uccessiul an ex ampie y 
London, Nov. 17, 1849. James HUDSON, Secretary. shot ald n r own national Society, for instance, 


EED W 
and genuine seed of the RED-STRAW 
HOPETOUN varieties, 1 of grain an nde 


HEAT,.—For Sale, at 50s. per quarter, good | i 

. de 

r will paeh sent 
No 


bes, 10s. Self. Registering Thermo- 
meters for onl ae 
| Estimates and List of Prices forwarded on Ay og to their | 
Warehonse, 116, Bishopsgate-street Withou 
GLASS F 7 ORTES, 
1 anD CO ly 16-0. Sheet 3 = 


GLASS PIPES. 

1 COATHUPES anp Co Manvrac- 
turers, of Bristol, and of Nailsea, Somerset, beg to inform 

eers and 8 that pa an prepares 5 L 7 

y of from 1 to 4-inch in lengths 

the lengths being less as the —. meters of the 185 


— nere — 


perevta ; o 
I Government for the importation and sale of this valuable 
i i protection of conaumers 


MANURE, 

and respectable dealers, to app 
_ ofthe article is still extensively. 8 and to 8 

them to apply oat to ourselves, to our agents, Messrs. GIBBS, 

Barent, and Co. — and Bristol, or to — or 

establis! 1 in whose arot wy fair 2 fuy 

ean place implicit confidence, Y GIB d Son 
_London, November 17. 


mM 
— 
a 
wm 
0 2 
4 
z 
HER 
wple 
> 
1 
> 
2 
84 
* 4 
Qi" 
2 
* 


a good e ae e 

ying, English Parsing, &c., are published by Lone- 
Ax and Co., pad may be had of all Booksellers. 

The terms of the 8 ete l can be had on application either 
Personally or by lette: 

e "ENGINES, WATER RAMS, Ko., 


Steam or 


ö g 

4 &c., heated oring, 

j Sinking 2 and Collecting of Water, &e. 

i to Jonx LEGG 

IMPROVED POUR HORSE PORTABLE STEAM-ENGINES 

-AND A 

Southwark Iron 
—— 70, Strand, es $ ge seg cra to their Steam- 

— and Threshing Machi which ore economical 

| for 2 3 of . done, pies ig n * "e 

| 

] 


ter-rams for 2 Water. 
pparatus untains, 


G OR THRESHING MACHINES, 
ROE anD HAN 


ROYAL LETTERS 


PATENT. 


——— B — 


Nen pov ‘WORKS, s, KING'S ROAD, CHELSEA. 
SENCH invites the attention tion of Gentlemen about 

othouses, &c., to the vast su 
— by his PATENT HOUSES, e b 
Good ve y 


EATING 
: SON anp CO 6 
l Faden. and 17, 1 Southwark, I. 
ö An of the Improved eee — DOUBLE 
l RICAL BOILERS, respectfully soli aam ype 


bait 
a DON MANURE ‘COMPANY os Be to offer 


tion e —.— 
„in 


Ar. Nessrr’s works on Arithmetic, Mensuration, Gauging, | ai 


more 


stance 
Bec 


or less than those fro ake ven 
C aS a must * eee v a — mg Sacks 
2s. each. WINTER seb ag — seed, can be sup 0 = — 
er busbel. Jonx Morton, W eld, Berkeley, Glou 


AKERS PHEASANTRY, Bea ufort-stree 


consisting of | a and white swans, Egyptian, n, Canada, China, 
ber po — and laughing geese, —— — 

wae and winter tea wall, Labra 
shovelers, gold ee wood a divers, —— ‘ducks, 
domesticated and pinio also Spanish, Cochin china, 
Malay, Poland, Surrey, a na Bo rking fowls ; e Japan, pied, 

and common peafowl, and pure China sly 5 ana at * Lalf. 
—— age, 


SATURDAY, NOVE. MBER 17,1849. 

MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
—— 22 Agricultural Imp. Society of Ireland. 

uuns Dr, — 29—Agricultaral imp Society of irelana. 
Farmers’ CLun.— Nox. 1 : Botley. 

Ir is >a 8 the case that Ning same stock | ™ 
is soins a farm summer ma: win Wha 
the rits may of the ie eb system, 
whic ss rears as well as fattens, "it is still far from 
ge — me alr — of course, throu se — 
mbers of anima als h 


& 3 
oO 
* 


and m 
fatten these sade the most profita y? av 
| howeves, no plan to suggest that is not ay well 


eaders, and we hardly need at 


known to most 
iaf to the subject at all, were it not that the = 
sent is the season when it is forced upon the atten 


range of warmth, a ytd Er . nines 


what is called bo ceding i i also peet 5 ly 
admitted, The importa of a proper union of 
nourishing food, with bulk 21 r e nong 

— 9 of he althy digestion, ev ; and 


ery 0 
the fact is also known that — is ateen effected 
d 


d 
tions 1 which hese ingredients should 
fo must, of course, differ wit 


1 


amount of raw rial, 

tity of the . article ; it is well to be 
able to convert o green crops into meat by the 

agency of that more economical apparatu which 
bai animala supply ; for, letting alone” —— ir 

n, compared with machin 

extract — more of their 285. 


consume; but me ani ri 
ian economy of its action, according to the 
The same ox 


a 
s of the food . 


8 seen nt most of the Nobility’s seats an 
st to inform the Trade that at their Manufactory, 
. the construction 
uildings as well as for h them, may be 
most advantageous terms. 
, — of Iron 2 Palisading, Field an the most 
Balconies, Paley: and Garden 


he fi feeder in a con 
5 Rit ger the eal A of the 
no 


it by 


may t; 
follows that, i giyen te the character 


e—more 
and it, therefore, 
Apes 


status on the scale of nutritiveness— 


te 1 ; it it will case of the best 
wb ib n those al 


The Agricultural Gazette. 


Propor- 
be mixed in 


f food. But, given 
p 


I have heard 


e — ee of the animal 


ee “he. “authorities | at Cirencester ig to 
un a now recom- 
—— on 10 re — + the 8 — — 
to its members? Th 
pensive practical —— to 
poet in —— ts of its shar . and — suggestion 
recommends se such a co urse, go ee 
with the . prim of the ety, as would at the 
time evince that co —— between = Eri: a —— 
agricultural peoga f whic M 
e we just add the following ‘metho ds 
. d Bea tl 


u vam! | 
addition to which they had about 20 Ibs. of Turnips 
-day: they did not fatten 


winter, and i ed materially in value on 
most of which would otherwise have been converted 
to manure, robably great waste of its sub- 


g- ot. 
n the second method, twice this quantity of Lin- 
eed was boiled and thrown over about half this 
rom of 


In both cases the re ro- 
fitable; for in both aes was a inal’ attempt 
to suit the character of the food to that of the 
animals to be fed—the tae were 8 he ng 
cattle, by no means kindly feeders—the latter well- 
bred 3-year-old Hereford oxen. 


w their 


No doubt one chief advan of rearing on youl 
© | farm the animals to be ti By as they do in Ber- 
ckshi “Sage 


3 


allow 
questions — 8 of elicitin f any one is 
willing to do so, he will ae oblige by * 
us wi ‘his name and addre 


THE CAPABILITIES OF TES OF LAND. 


But it is not 

who are thus guilty ; they are to be found in the pages 

of every agricul tural peri josh and yon See 
sgadan d 


as to the present ‘position of the farmer, or the wandte 
of the land, we conclude 


— 
— 


at the man was 


and his a aaran had 
in needy lyes all has been done that 
has beggared the. 


2 ruined the country iments, 
disguise them hem how they will Let us Ge aduire how far 
uo is consi 
I will take asa proposition a a short sentence such as 
es than I should like to 
one that vid Monel and re’ man 
It is 


this : :— The land now 


730 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


$ 
ee T 


[Nov. 17 


like a huge night-mare as it is, the curse and bane of 
the farmer ; and renders nugatory every incentive to a 
renewed activi ity. 
As to the actual capabilities of land, we have yet to 
solve the problem. as an art 
m 


para! 
how the broad fi 
porter can Ses ear the Sibel of 5 blust pane 9 
she e have only to hrough some of the 
southern counties, “Wiltshire or E Hani palit for instance. 
There oases in the desert, but they 2 oh * e | 
forcibly * general desolation. But . — 
myself on the present occasion to a few tite Tinted 
of the head = this paper 

Mr. s'a farm of 150 * ce a rent of 25s. per 
acre. * enters upon it aelmas, and A es 
taking his first crop begins to throm oni hints tha 
cannot live at it, the rent is too high, with the whole 
host of stereotyp ped grie sos peculiar to his class 
The nex 


labourers of the district at 3/. p wA or e pect 
more. T men consider this a boon, as it really 
is, and with this high rent they obtain a good 8 


outlay of capital, which is labou 
‘New, if the labourer can render land remunerative 

at a 3/. rent, ge cannot the ee pe with a rent of 

less than lialf that sero These t mere assump- 


but positive psi visible fete." The any 28 2 
ag nthe matter is this. A wan 
capital in the ee This, sir, is the fone sag 
3 ot you. Men are every day rushin 
— ing responsibilities of land, with not half 'suficiont 
and no wonder that t they fai il, or if they 
fail — they Barely ve vegetate, = 2 credit * — 
, or their lan 


hat an increased amount of “fey in the land 
must be induced to meet the crisis, is self- 
evident, and that such is by n eans impossible; 
cannot be doubted sions — toi snes 
strength of mind enough not to doggedly adhere to an 
old state of rors - . tinaciously set their faces 
rn 


* $ P. 


petition, or 

are peara. 

enewed 

energy, e employment impro e 

by the application of deten —— by 2 ere 
—— of additional capit: — And so must i 

the farm Mer e seratchin g the earth’s . — 


era- 

tidas; = not constitute the farming that will pay now- 

in many an 1 English county, does not produc half eoe 
ht. If one-half the farmers were to employ the same 

upon half resent quantity of land, a ke 


d, Two mo 
“ee owners ga produc 


rs, than the som os 


ty oi had in one — 
now 


permission to make 
I have no doubt sala: | 
enough to operani your res All 
T ean say is, God sped he rig ht. G. 
—_—_—_—_—_—_—- 

THE HIGHLAND CROFTE 
Waen the Potato formed 
and was 


$ — commercial Be og a par 
lan 


th 
the chief food of the High- — 


lander, Was cultivated with little ri risk of failure, his 
condition was free from want misery, though not 
one of progress for th 9 but as the Potato has 
naw failed him, the habits of indolence, and ign 

cultivation 


orance 
f that 


lamity T Moat — 


ert this is great ca 
8 p and I I 3 chief — for the evil 


g his croft, b. í 
; there re being no paid employmmen —— 
miia See this 2 — baying yu 


piae which is far too: small, for ares? Highlander 


4. bolls of oatmeal ; 
rsons, 
for each er ee sehold, 


tS 
De 


auf 
bols o 4 syk is required 
at least 4 acres of land m 


To produce this, every year 
e| be Laren — er Op 5 3 and t a cer a 2 rotation of 
* 1 “minimum” size of the farm should be 
; acres. 1 ea esa press this fact on the considera- 


ie of Highland proprietors, as, by experience, I am 
88 be — ae og an ine voas 15 land 1 e 
enants canno epende and c 


E could easily ia that sucha ae anda. be hy | € 
he landlor 


3 to t 
But it is also es — 
9 be introduced into the Hi ighlands, such a 
se ham to pas — would son Te dd to the embarrass- 
ent of the Dine and the first great step to mop 
aeania t I now propose to accomplish w 
the aid of lande ed Proprietors and philanthropic indi. 


E. 


viduals. This first “i st be a well-digested system 

of agricultural teac ings 3 eing the whole distriet. 

I do not allude to rs higher and. more targe branches 

of — ultural’ ap e try, as e out of 
— a rudimental state 


of 8 ; but I mean 
l far 


of green — the husbandry of manure, 8 feedin 
eattle, and other points of rural economy, which are 
~ | essential to the successful tape ure of a orn These we 


ean never hope to inculcate by mere precept ; 
ve an example before ihe eyes of the people, an 
leat —— to the same 3 ies of soil and 
climate as their own land. this be established, I 
know ane small farmers will soon follow the exam ple 
shown them, landlords will see 2 charity and pru piae 
of enlarging the crofts, and, rekap, we 2 have 
3 msl contented population, with pid isi 
in the poor-rates, and the grati ifying feeling to the 
e 2 RN e to so much happiness 
nd well-being. 
It is also certain that such a step will tend to increase 
the morality of the 


aimed to 
ye benefit of both rå and tena 

I have briefly s a es ow the tenant t will be benefited, 

and it is equally aus that the 


h 
may appear, will — 
d, be of permanent adva 
it contain l itself the elements ofa 
e iw will be 


practicable, or, if comme 
tage, unles 


circums! * 

per acre, and it may be further — 

pation 5 = farmer by imine, at an es vee 
of 24. pe s land, ready for ing 


us 

terest for his 
ere is little doubt 
ney to be 3 in this desirable mann 
may be . — ed unde age 

e difficulty that at first presented itself, 

but er rk as to have overcome, vi 
8 —— possessin, 


er i— 


shoul 

under the strict condition of * Slee 

—— . — ing stock for his farm. A crofter 

would thus, ‘for by additional 10 acres, 
aps of 60}, and very probabl ym uch 

eragi arged, he might allow a greater pro- 

portion of the labour w 


pated ; Dir when paid in one large sum, it will 
be available for the of his farm 


7 
But, to give a proper direction to 
ot the Highlan 10 8 


that, unless a better system of | m 


arms, — raising 
a 


| near the propos — schoo 


on | the 
3 would be as follows 


The 
° | paupers, as in 22 
less 


stron 
5 or 


, | Steeping, 
the Flax fibre 


such model farm persons designed to be o 
i tet sued to be farm 


or farmers eir own acco 
: Unt, as 
masters of all sects and ape Wen as school, 


ands, an rwards 
experience there ‘acquired to another district totally 
differing from it in soil and climate as the tl 

I propose 

aw the 


whic 


dent and his ured 
but would also 3 to, if not entirely defray, the 
Ary. 


1 nse of his s 
The school should be i mtral place easy of 
which all these requi 
n Lochaber, near my 
— Lord . — property; a and I know- 
at his lo: — feels so the welfare 


in some ce 


: of ‘ae Las une that re 1 . a . land for 


very me rent, I 


e purpose a my 
would be considered of some 


my power, 


1 3 and 3 45 acres 80 e 5 h 


* 


Buile sg oe — 


TEE 


81 ce 


ne year’s lary to superintendent 7 
One year's . expenses 


h 


enormous outlay requisite to support a n 
draw attention to 


Ẹ 
È 


—— 2 expensive, My 


ss 


well as 
top the progress of dist: by pie 
obtain the own liv alihood, shone than allow pauperism 
d as will force the Government 
now aid 


F. R. &. Se 
Lord A 


i 
to the . of the Scottish Highlands.) 
n 


DISCUSSION ON FLAX CULTURE AT, mE 
HEREFORD FARMERS CL LUB. 


members, viz. in the 
ee is a „ gees Fiaa may be 
vated in this county eford ), I), ond 


I 

n pu subject, 
the triumph over ies must be ort 
— 8 and ex opinions 
gentlemen who addressed the 


suj 
statement of Mr. Browne, of W 
e 2 103 bushels of Flax seed 


sufficient to pay r 
and seu 


Irish ane te 


f 
Capt. Larcom’s a ald be value fo alu for 


ee at 78. eee 
Pordi "Those autor acre, not im 
wae erop i in Téeland at ate i pori : 


46—1849. ] 


THE — as AL GAZETTE. 


731 


2 


— 


and denounces Flax as a 


— a1 3 


— — 


the surface, are 3 — 


from 
tions for its = — 
eumstance th 


— 
the stal 1 


i has just fallen, wh 
_ Yellow, and before the leaves 
ig an 


Is Flax in in general 


ene 


men prope 
| thefarmer, butis of 


regarde 
tar ire millions of 


hia ways. It 


him in — — ote reco 
tothe sta’ 


i pulled at "the most favour 
perie 


o grow 
, by his er to this country, corrobora; 
he 


and linen 
vad 


of Herefordsh 
— is . 


erefo 


ag Ane 


cordin sas 
dition of the — it vil not be uninteresting to your 
the document on 
by me 


interes 


, its quality db depe: 


Tt is 
ealand ese es the 
. to t 
the 


Care 


srg — „ 


urhood. To 


e 

y Bri 

money are annu 
Flax, and nearly 

encourage us to 


e acq 


w much stronger mamasi they 
was of 


f: 
ue of their 


5 Flax 


the cultivation p we — — 


e crop in Ireland? Yes, 
2 iiss is 25 . highly — to 
1 nse e as affording ag mong em- 


usbandmen, th mii it i 
ally sent to fi 4 

three more fo 

cultivate z more 


ted 
‘attentl n Aer i ip bring it 
a wen 
what mon 


+ 


as a farmer, he comes before the public in in a 
ruinous 


and 


tra de 2 


0 we 
to them 
2 


= 
®© 


from its being 


es 
| oil from the tem, — the ty aot of hong oil or juice 
e 


n? The best time for sowi ng i 
eek in n Mareh t 15 the — w — This is is 
nn f May, and | 


he Jast w 


London t is the ne ation 
which is + accompisied — * the 
handfuls ov 


9 of scutching, 
n Flax in small 
rmed the scutehing stalk, the mar 


ate 
is called in the wont of Ireland 2 — — use the 
| fibres are gene jd coarse, but the seed large and — this is 
sown thin, about 2 bushels per ac —Are the 
fibres of the Flax injured by allowing the seed to sips on? Yes 
if the Flax be 7 4 until the ee ri eg sre Ain seh brittle 
and dry, from ect of t t draws up the 
d in the 8 “org * > 4 ee the Flax 
be t good spin 
t is the usual value of the "seed of an reas e Flax 
gabe dis — 
oh ig 1 t men friable loam, hast 
taining a Tere quantity 2 vegetable matter, min led’ w 
sand. It should be freed of all weeds, and. harrowed ‘and 
rolled until the surface looks like 
Always 8 never in drills, as 
the fibre would be nissa if so — 2 
an acre of groun If tended that the fibres 
should be fine, 23 to N bushels — necessary, — not 3 be — 
btai 2 bush 
to the acre will be sufficient, asit will branch off | in the top and 
keep the 


—— — oily as it should 
ties. 
Betwee 


ti 


n, that 


in- 


t 
the — mines and the earth is then raked or 
arro n Flax raise be | it 
— and —— lawn, the quantity 
f ground sh 


nq 
| allowed tw ripen as state 


collected ‘ime larger ones, 
| plac 


ground wie ts rom —.— while the plant is growing ? l the 
tater oh must be efully removed, but t — low growing 
ones, anew the Flax slink readily overtops, are of n nse- 
e, and —— Re is —— done by — ag to 5 pail 


ning qual 
the 


up.— e know when Flax is — MWe know that 

— plant is sufficiently ripe for the purpose of the spinn er, and | 

pa seed sing the oil-presser, when the ate. 2 omes . — wat | 
eb ottom and the leaves begin to 1 hy off; but if the seed is | 

in order to a small | 


—.— requis owing purpos 
when it has reached this pg ? 
d 


an or E in that nate >the slate must be removed — 4 | 


uite green ; e 2 a avory oe the seed m e | 


ngai 


—— ipn und? Itis pulled = — edy in fine wea 

children; and laid in small 8 * 

f erer on the ground, When pull 

that is u — ripe, for sometimes one part 

ripens much sooner than we 2 — small pakils 

and being tied near the — end, 
wards, 


8 at least sit | 
of a field 


iher 
very w 

next duty ¢ 29 
admit the capsule to poe A 
— —.—— K 


— bright 
"To ripple — 1 ~ 7 — F co 


N comb 55 e a ip le.” 
the 


raising. — 
dese Kopon F oil sọ necess 
te ch w 


cattle, w 


p of 2 — ee ed 

ards 3 ts more are adde 

two — e cool it is — 
iven 


ich will — assertion, 
or | our 
f| 4s: 7d.; middling, 4 


| alluded to“ exagge' 
oil | to destro 


4 | 
o the anim als.— 


peer of the handfuls (which ie called 
a streake), — the pec end or 
by the rapid motion 

mill until th 


g 
= 
© 
2 
125 
. * 
o 
D 
3 
HIR $ 
3758 
p 
Ẹ 
E 
F 
E 
PE tai) 


—— ket ; for the process of 
wan and scutehing Ì Flax, see reagge 4 senile mills at 
ork on the fi Browne, 2 perton, Andovers. 
and T. H. S. 80 — is „ M. P., 
„Flax, 


ford, . tershire 

Devizes.—The great 

— Culture and Manufacture,” ng doom ree led and arr A ge 
a catechism for the children of the Irish arena b 

Mrs. Mooney; — like all works frre Bese 

writings, * —— were set forth, and I foun — 

alterations and corrections necessary 7 4 be m arkay to prevent 

disappoint danns g ‘ens that may look to A as a guide in 

cultivating the plant. 

Having descr bed th 


Eth 


go of machinery to dress 
and labour, and having 
will 8 from 20 to 25 per 


be Flax 


machinery, 
and — ear 1 we x — — 

by the — but the — matter bei 

7 riction, complete ly disseminated through the 

makes the fibres 

mp alike, which, when thrown over the 

— for spinning, splite i into ee — — 


e is 
* or Beret sang 
2 ng out this oily matter, as 
stroke of the arm must è to create friction, and 
ee al hand. dressed Flax is husky and dry, and wil 
| split on the ha gm 
open, and will r 
north — ne” * ae tation the trade 
tohed Flax in — ay an 


| ciated by the spinner. 


1 


ay 

— corn on ake dispen nsed — 
rom the Be lfast. "Northern Whig, of 
rket note of that date 
The markets are pretty well supplied, with a fair demand at 
quotations, Ha: yee a eae inferior r, 3 48, 4d. to 

, 48, 9d. to ; fine 4d. to 6s, Mill. 
scutched, low quality, 5s. 34. to wes 9d. ; middling 6s. to 68. 9d f 
best ditto, 7s. to 7s. 9d.; fine, 83, to S6. 90.” 8 r. Rowan 
rated statements as likely to have a tende 
duced to cul 


when s 


to e 

yet to save it for the pur 

. for rippling 
ich is w: 


i h ey 
from it to h of their eng removed 
ws nd to have assumed a yellowish 
ere or no N or s 

g“ 1 5 


os nhad, gaai n Dorsetshir 
Flax mo 


in ori that the 
tok 2 being placed im 


N es may not 


pe 
e io bundles, 1 
into — es 
. — What 


15 | pond with those of more * 
rule? To — Brine g 


rat 
ox tek 
plank, so keep th 
a we exclude aoe eieko fiey as 2 
$ occurs a —— t the tenth or 8 . 
ts three or mes Say 
afterwards apeg pror te when the textile epi 


ead 
the wives ode 
ht rain will not injure 
oceupy ? — erally 


ke a 


pa ory v See Die 
— Flax, 35 and 36, 


ta- | J Ait 


js. 6d. per stone. 
aps farmers to pay more attention to 0 
I will suffer the di: e of p growers fonna. in erro 
forward a dozen such s 00 
Dickson, Phoenix Hotel, 


e of | apply "his farm-yard. man 


8 ps fifth ica 


the E V. f. Ra are waging a re war upon 
pee merits one-horse 8 


that invaluable root 


never could raise 
crop of ry ce s with bone-dust to please a s without A 
were well saturate urine—the differ yield. 
i : 


ich Carts.—Your correspondents, “ A B. C. and 


ts of these and Cumber I can 
a say * 3 y Scotch carts, made by 
„of Kalemouth, but whom I never saw, are 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 


N: 

7 
$ 
gh 


were used for ca 

The men would tip the loads ve 1 roughly, to 

— if they oa ee they were Scotch, and would 

never, if ible, take one of them into town, as 

fellow- 1 would accost them, by saying, “ What 
sort of a cart have you re? Something new 


oe 
r in 0105 d-s 


huge a thing for one of these.” ir, it is on the 
Scotch * a built to suit En nglish farms, fas 
nger.” Ie so bulky and ugly a thing I never 
roy I aske d pey price 
o have been the sort 0 

saw „ as he dese rb 
e 


For orty- day Maize.—To p e of the Botley 
Farmers’ Club. How man s have been afforded 
me by the perusal of the AR PN e the Forty-day 
Maize (so ee x Mr. Keene), as given in the Hamp- 

he 


5 
the pla 


e 
had 


at 
e | assured was a“ certain r Ww: 
slaked lime Hongo de on the Wheat. This sure dene t 


too on sos Te e these are evils that are N 
e and n the N of the land a 
t the landlord no 
i 


that „ i 3 to a better ma 
manures. Edward C 
near r Basingstoke, Hants. 
1 e the dat the machine allu an d te 
Six pi 
pein infested vith slugs, which n 
pa, that was . the surface, but dan. 
| penetrated — oe drills mn e royed the stems of 
s to put a stop to these ravages, he 
commen sed dro 591 be Turnip rue about 10 yar rds s apart 
n the farrows of “oF an eat fields, and the next mm 
them pick and on one occasion he 
bushels from $ acres ah Wheat; e per ersevered i in this 
lan and = oyed a great many, but the mornings 
and the Turnip — . — 2 
did not at a0 like the work, 2 ta und s oe 
difficulty in prosecuting it, that I was s compelle dt 
abandon the plan. @ then heard ae t he was 
— to 


e kind enough 


ot only ate off all the 


destroyed som escaped, for when the lime fell 
n them, i 


n. n tried 
another “ cure,” by 8 3 5 of 
ber 3 acre ; this failed” in 1 the same way as the “ lime 

medy.” Var other plans were had recourse to— 

some of his ne ighbo urs endeavoured to extirpate the 

slugs 15 passing a heavy — — over the Wh eat ; others 
ucks 


e been one of 
5 I should not grieve at the 
had obtained an earlier, and con- 
e 


ULCUaASeIS 


Mr. 
i Corn,” and —— he stated to be“ Cobbett’ 
pend $ 3 he are known at the 
time that 


t 
ere remains h in 
e straw, and remains to plong the 


n the ~ 


on, 

from the eaves of such bu id. 

is, together with = rain tbat falls 
in the ith it 


nearly if not quite all the easily so 
manure, Ith herefcre do a Set 
— 
18 Tm-yard, and awed 
a remedy. 'ù Doubtless there 
be learnt both in the ing of | art 
same, and “a know- 


hile | t 
called 


shots — ground. 
d 


rio poe altogether 
n 


caused to traverse the fields to hem, and on 
one oiei I saw a flock o 


appearance 
An Amateur Pe 


Sr apria 

WITHAM ow Oa R? FRIE AGR 
Socrery.—At the . mosting of this 9 8805 lately 
Mr. pa we — following 


| aas 
| left dou 


aere for 
t carting on the “sr The 
half-load of straw he e at 10s. ; and he calculated 
there was a gain of 30s. an acre. There- 


s for producing corn, 
xon had put this s question to him, What state 


s ago a frien 5 mine had his farm | ch 


ook 3 g 


e | ments * challenge 


TURAL | 


th 
though that 


Nov. 17, 


and in these di he (Me. H.) wad 
of it, and would be atopy) weal 


employment ; 
take advantage o 


fee: 
ding ; vai they wn g — 
to capital in 


they m his 
Mr. Mrchr said before he went 
to other — perhaps big, would * to state 
ome experim he mad 
in ‘ote w 


p trying the comparative of 
and 2 bushels ; but this bag: 75 had tried the differ. 

— betw shel a cks, and a bushel and 
pe 


quantity ; 
—— of thick * this year, the 5 pecks giving an 
advantage over the bushel of 2 pecks an acre, and the 
k t 


land being strong with sheep’s m: 
they had too much straw, and had to wie ha there was 
s; fair crop, but they all thought it would fa down 

early in April, if not flagged. ith to Beans 

and Peas he had also tried a similar pai EE E 

found that the am sown had a considerable advantage 
the thi 


— 9 hn, eae 


2 quarters an acre e than the 
= 5 he had 56 weten 5 a very bad crop, 
other case only 48 bushels, showing a very 
wie of the thick porn. Beans over the 8 jor 
was the cas Mazagan, 


be hea "ie sith the 


g 


as thick Sowing, and three- 
thin sawing, being the big eg ai? 5 0 1 

ad e of — y dia 
being 40 aa the thin about 16 bushels 
He foun 


less, wn Beans were the 
eat higher, and cleaner than the thin sown; 


will the land be in for the rop without din g ? 

His (Mr. H.’s) opinion wns, ha the Rape 

hee be arg to producing a crop of Ber 
the ithout fresh man 

ons ie 0 would be, 

as much Wheat, and then 

the next ber 

eae 

ible, 4 co 


8 o 
vert all their vegetables, all Shite oe 

— bay, by disposing of arm save — except that whieh 
the requir ing forced to go 
on as ya di d last ion goes he fatted 1 100 beasts, some 
of which went at IJ, some at 2/ 
him, so 


0h asts. 
this he thought they should be all akoy to convert those 


res, Wi 


is things into e if zp Be could, by brin nging on those 
e adva antage to themselves, | den 


ek a state; and therefore he 
ke 


roug 
ourse he had e out, of converting ik 


straw, hay a other . bringing on e cial 
him ; 


f| had always run during the 


trusted | 


if 
) money, it it would come 10 the the landlord ; 


of more 


2 dae agree a 


eas were t 
ore straw in 


i 

| 

| 

d that tiek s sown ‘ | 
f 


3 

4 
aii 
is 


They would recollect that two yea: è w 75 
aikoina ae a Coates gentlemen x 1 
that water would not percolate n te ee. r. Wiliam Hi am Hatley 


order to test i it, which he accepted. He 
Mr. Hutley’s land at Wigborough, 1 


the 
saturated with water. pot this Jand b pene e 
ou 


40 tt — Me. Mercut: But it 7 wad ae 


46—1849. ] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 733 


~a Tsay that with rr ng but the utmost firm ness. a as good a any farm a hundred. 1 Pe 
. this is not the way of doing business ; still I have some | was a piece Revet ren there that nt as gocd 

— for the future, for I see that old prejudices are giving Mr. Mechi had got: and it should be recollected that Mr) Mechi 
bopes T remember ata meeting of the farmers’ club, in London, | was * tenant for life, while he (Mr. H.) 
. cellent friend, Mr. Hutley, — — a discussion on the | wy Now would stand by what he had said— — 
2 tion of steam power to the threshing of corn, “I ama ould d produce | ob bushels an acre more than Mr, Mechi, and let 


co ; were a rogue. 
ps Ar. Hutley Mr. Mechi and the other great leviathans went talking about 
meant to say, 1 ges a frail man” angen for 7 one short the country, and they had Mr. Caird, of the Auchness Farm, 
e find him, much to his „ urchaser of the prize | w ad an extraordinary account, and then it was turned to 

— exhibited at th Tors — ** m re h h 


I 
ae 


t 
„Mr. HUTLEY : I deny it. as “ai, Jos I rhea Aoig grag the hi have it in black and white—let the result be fairly and | 
eh 3 ld treat an 


o discuss with th him the whole ole management of the farm. 

ae oer I take you on you have more words 

i — —Mr. pe Mont: at, Hu Huey a uey maa I 3 a race in 
K arming, an 21 years of good 
— 1 bad farm oft: or —— pec I say it does not 
e Mr. Hutley, (Cheers.)— Mr. Dixon: Mr. Mechi began 

in 1844 re i will ask him for the return of 1847, 1848, and 
1849, and w sak for a he yy hy Re aopn but for the com- 


— tt t 
com- i the sta 
mend him for it.— Ar. * 5 State what is gi I appeal | cellor of the Exchequer. Mr. Mechi — e Sir Robert Peel a hint 


on the farm of that period, aban- 
doning all his other ‘expenditure, which I do not — pse 9e 
. 8 
cultu ows everybody u E. out t ter, 
—Mr. ecu: : Pie they 4 5 Dosa: I ask him 3 
giv e us the three last years arminug.—Mr. Mr ge 4 


to Mr. . if I did no “Tam a flail man; and if I go f of what he was doing, and it was poeni altogether, for 

it I will not go to * * I will go to — power.“ — men were subservient to their purposes.— Mr. Mxcnt: I deny 

Mr, NESBIT : I A I recollect something of it.—Mr. Mecut | jt,—Mr, HurLey said here was Sir Robert Peel, who had done 

said be must go to these ma „because his friend, who was | more hurt to the farmers than any other person, and he was sup- 

good farmer, had always pounced on the weak points of his | ported — the way in whioh t these froo. trado + * lived by 
w 


e 
no money to keep his land clean, but he was beaten by | parties down to a ruinous sy ue ays ; for it was clear 
tee want of drainage, and he saw more Twitch there than on that if N cuma; t the — toting of. — — commodities, 
sny farm he saw before.— Mr. Huttey: There is 2 quarters an cause tinue pro — a and the value of the pro- 
acre more produce than you can grow.—Mr, Mecat: I do not | duce of ‘the. — tung pen increa! in amount, they ought to be 
say it to find fault with him, I say it to illustrate the importance | allow o do so. He tho — therefore, the et ntion of 
of drainage, and I shall never cease to worry—if I may use the kalen oman te to be seriously called, under present circum- 
that subject 80 dong as I see it neglected on wet clays. to an alteration 2 all those ridiculous restrictions 
Mr. Hutley is my great opponent. Mr. HorrEx: Noto poms ough mpensation for their impro prenante 
Mr. MECHI said he looked upon him as his great opponent, or 2 — the ten — g unrestricted liberty to ) do n what 


Mr. HUTLE ke — — had been in the W 
of England, where a person, og inquiring if he came from 
Essex, 7 to oy — ny rent has been gee = and I am to 


| farm as echi d O way ih gag e ch he 


wit son tae as he og ate you will Pa rent os al.” 
hore yor ey — 4 1 from this ia tee injury it did. He 
with contempt, (Hear.) 0 
Ole 19 Powe —4 2 * What he got from Mr. Mechi's 
man; then out came a one-sided letter Mr. Mechi; and 
therefore he thought he would have him here this year. He 
repeated, the landlords took advantage of the statements made, 


“You must uce as much as Mr. 
echi does, or you mu ust turn out.” (Hear.) — Mr. Men! said, 
in answer to that, he could state that at the Saffron Walden 
meeting last year a farmer observed, 1 Was tied haud and 
fox t not to move tree or pa bat six months after, his 
* ht remove the trees, cu 
th 8, de, 3 he asked, ' H What can have 


but he had been 8 2 off dpa rock of prejudice, | liked with the land 1 a the ast four years, for 


and he hoped soon o see him in the clear waters of intelligence. of the lease the t would not for his own interest —— | 


h 
(Cheers and laug ter.) Ato one time Mr. "Hatley had: 25 troughs 35 the n “Th ere was a great deal said about drain- 
on his buildings, but he (Mr. M.) had a hit at him on the sub- age said water would percolate through strong 
pe and he had them now, and he hoped he should soon see clan jt 24 1 Id not e thought Mr. Mechi 


made 2 a p Sand, * poe opinions “ he replied, “I 

nave be en reading Mr. Mechi’s book, and I am perfectly 

convinced it is true.“ Theret 2 if he (Mr. Mech und 

done evil, as Mr. Hutley wished them to believe, he had 
.. As to 6, whic Hutle ked 


r 

ect. They could not go into any part of ee — his The whole question was t 
nn do nigh green lanes wit great fences, 1 in hee 33 “feet e supersede shallow — at half that 
15 or 20 feet broad—th could not help seeing that the land distance? He was prepa ared t to assert that deep draining on 


was not half cultivated, the ditches blocked up, the buildings | many soils ho 

down, the manure washed away, ae; ; and he did would agree with him—was out of the question, as the clay 
say that state of things must be and would be gradually re-/ would not allow the water to percolate suflic — — — 
medied. dw it h h 


way, and I sh 
Therefore he (Mr. M, 2 did say that the really go-a-head m drains, and the field was edged all over in rj Ae That was 
such as Mr. Hutley, Mr. Dixon, and others, who spent a — caused by the great distance at which the drains were — 
deal in artificial manures, and ih improving their farms, did | which prevented the water pere colating sufficiently through 
ag injury when ps patted on the back and encouraged the | them. Deep draining was better than shallow dr: — pro- 
nd now the drai 
h 


ns: 

ar’s crop; he never had | drainers brought it forward on ground—that they would 
s0 good a crop; he was sure it was remunerative, and that he | do it — as they would do ita and 
wasin the right road, 8 5 looked to the pursuit of farming he said 
8 him 


i m was i d he Ir. 
coke to on the — — pore say: I a bad farmer! My | trace them 4 or 5 feet 0 on each side of the drain, foe crop —— 1 
armed i — high there, and sinking down in the e between the : rn 


ire of these pro- | 


tho: 

were public property. It was true they were all ey great 
5 to Ar. Mechi, who had given a stimulus to agri- 
| culture which no other man had done; = the question was, 
—— he had not been an ignis fatuus, Mr. Mechi should 
ga 


g accounts be poia — Soles — result was profitable, the 
asap Mr. 
the room pes he knew where the mone ce 40 5, hic ~ were 88 of the s 4— acter, They | tenant must be ruined and the lan ere 
j N — it it went, and where s came in. He did not say he he bega gs, wi an openin; 4 g speech, and a ing A — ‘aaa, to | fore, on behalf of this society, and the community at ‘large he 
hac been perfect in n all things, but he said the the tenants ; then came a gentle- seriously and solemnly confirmed every word that had fa “rt 
all his operatione was goo 4 4 5 part “of the super- | m: an, the best tem pored man in 1 wo > P — 5 r Lag A kety Henge Mire — 1 it was 
struc A x t nd was prett “well peppere c 
ture was good Wale and though } his 9 inch walls and | like a buck, shot at, a 5 y pepp — Ii Nee 3 


to 
slated roofs aere called by the farmers of Essex extravaganzas la BERNT: and whither he was N wrong, — —ç oi 
of “No, 2 * aher were called so, for half the armers could not say. Then came a gent who gave 
that came in said, What expensive buildings!” Tet if he | account of some proceedings they aa 2 know muc aa 
nent ats details, and a opine one building, stated whatit cost, | but in the good old times of their meetings they had ca 
then Sa 


e was nowa 
ugh which h 
1 were in progress. (Cheers) - Mr. Mrcar: * — aad 
of me as an agricultural e er, you sh consider whether 
you speak of me as 1 — rd or a tenant, for the landlord's 


? they said, „Oh, yes! that will | facts from actical men, se — tried them upon t wn expenditure on “that | distinct from that of the tenant. 
ian ye re But if he said. Would you like 1 e ger e more — to benefit a Now, 35 nd I sa it guardediy i£ T had p 
hs 4 2 ae Tor grim g» they replied, “ Our rents åre too | cult ture. (Cheers.)—Mr. Bix Pr it t — up those buildings for — Essex tenant, ~ ão not wna at 
eneen he said wa s this, there 3 no part of water would go through all * — and rainage was recom- would have paid me interest — em. I could not one 
s not prepared 3 only question was how to do e most | who would deny their utility—w ap eget te that the places 
to justify — “thie 1 og (een * But essential m an men would divest their minds of | filled h 2 8 were 1 — eee e; mould 
when Mr, Hutley advised them to use 1 o and Rape-cake, he ale pes: and weet careful in their observations, rson that | not find aman to mae " mera Ae I 
said let them be careful how they oye e with farm. yard g judgm be coer able to deal with the | last naci reel ; or * was Ir ` : 
e, because Mr. e it Ne abe hem that Rape-cake particular held Ehe an acting upon, than from reading books | c.; how long dy that to last, and how po = down in 
and guano not e n all that meaa manure co! es. He was struck De remark to-night of | the 1 1—Tne Paesipent said Mr. hi 
for the best fi opr manure contained everything Mr. echt eat the thicker the seeding was the more successful | pressed for the peoo punts, Mr. 5 meme 1 * 1 — asa 
that every — eat: require ; therefore let them be careful | the crop. There had been a great d Jof discussion on this pe wa cu duty, an ey aon nore t to h = to see 
how they parted with it. He admitted that the fatting of subject; one gentleman in the count , he thought, sowed half | what — 5 ee J. t Th Ted n ‘ experiments, 
als was very ruinous, and perhaps at times it w ‘ould be | a pint an acre (laughter and cries of half a peck”); but Mr. made by Kin ‘hen read Fyn 
advisable to avail —— of these uoe — apes Mechi had given them a detailed account; his experiment Results of planting Wheat perda Kernel to nine in each 
instead ; and as no farmer could make more m re than year was against his previous experience as detailed to that} Hole, siesiy i four Holes to each square foot, and 14 fect to 
suficient for e-fourths of his farm, he mer to use a artificial meeting, and he seemed to come this conclusion, that ; 6 each Expe riment. : 
manures, but they ought not to neglect their farm-yard ma- ks was the minimum, and anything below was too 3 — 
nure. It did not appear to him that he had anything else little. — Mr. MEC pends on the soil.—Mr. Dixon : You No. of eof | Ke. te 0. E 
to say on these points, but he could not sit down wi ithout | have had the same soil for eight Oy ge oe LEY : And the | Grains. | Holes. leach Hole, Grains per $ — 
advocating the cause of agricultural improvement, which was | eame cultivation.—Mr. Dixon: He se re square foot. eight, 
ap raah i t benefit nd all parties in the kingdom, | clusion that thicker seeding than — * called wre mr 
in the progression of capital and the ter application | seeding was the best; and he thought that was to Mr. M echi a a 8 i i a ë. 02. 
of science and skill to the land, The agriculturists were not a | matter of practical importance. is 1 w ie would a vey e 5 l : ~~ 7 
: class, He they were a localised and non-reading | knew Mr. Mechi used his ems, he used his tongue as every- 12 56 12 — nit 
claes, but the next generation would be much improved. The | body knew, and he used his money, and he should like to know 168 — — — 
of his friend, Mr. Hutley, went to the agricultural college from ‘that ge poe 7 re Mr. Mechi had skes = — . — 
or to Mr. Nesbit’s, where he was instructed in science as where = had eded ; so that where he had failed they s = : “4 
ipp to farming, and therefore he would be less liable to | might avoid treading * his Stopt, and where he had * 1 a : — : = 
Prejudice than his father. (Laughter.) In conclusion, he | they ath follow him. It might tell a 8 Dise, x 4 38 i 
Would propose the health of Mr. Hutley, for he Tn say he ened w Mr. 1 N courage a —.— fuirn esi 1 to tell —— Sot — : 8 3 
E ea his t to go a-head in eve ing. (Cheers.)— | where he . 2 
Ar. HUTLEY said f did — . — — otk n Mechi an inch, | relieve his personal friends of a great deal of reg . Wine Experiments w with 168 Ki of “20g 
for he intended to have a shot at bim, and he would 3 hi 2 aes od gee sags — i me, 2 y — le R í * square: 
i ument, and ofs, a ets. (Cheers, e lan > , ee thar i 
They = uow ine 1 press, and in 5 — tenants, Why don't you pure such cro wy af as Mr. 3 does ? f wail : a 
i were three 33 who had been and you would s tter than youdo.” Mr. Mec 4 1 10 0. ol | No, of ca $ 
— talking: b but had never wn their proofs—Mr. at authority amongst the landlords ; and if ri friar = n- each, show. No. Grains | Holes — ee 
te Mr. H. tt Davis, and Mr. e s „ ey een | fluence was injurious to the tenant farmers, he ing the H 1 misplant eight. 
mn “the akat ara press in the ks, a | who would be more willing eve them from * knew Holes. Jop 
~ challenge from Mr. Hodgson, of Low Walton, i Whitehaven, the landlords used Mr. Mechi’s name nst the shoe es ee i 
bo show his Swedes and his farm agains uch should only b dows, wish — — and he hoped they s hould 8 
I e he left Mr. Mechi to | have the matter clearly unders e i i ‘ 
* — Mechi nad spent ac undre pres gen di was sure, would apply any remark echi a nis pd eis e s68 168 1 Unknown 12 | 251 |3 93 
on his which he (Mr. H.) ar ied ; and he | failure. * have tt naa of the whol, and they Ree ee i pe * n 
thank — h 32 fooled be content and sa 1 eers.)—Mr, ecto ss : 
— an 225 e e Rad nt, or be — according to the last constantly 3 oes the necessity of showing his accounts, 35 ene 8 i ‘ elw 
account, four sears ago, he had expended 13,500t, on 130 acres | and with the difficulty of his making a profit in agriculture, | <7 |}: 
of bis own and 40 ipo of land. The med he made Mr. | Now, would Mr. Hatley answer bim the plain — = 7 „ 5 í ‘ u 
Mechi w. this —the farm he was not the best er — he w oing t tto him. He had held Abbotts farm, i 
the worid, while — Mechi had laid out 13,500. 7 of 680 acres, for 20 years, and had n n A A 33 5 4 12 21 3 £ 
Would measure Beans, Wheat, and Barley for 5l., for the Tod again that "i years he never ma . 1 ae 28 6 4 12 |e |3 3 
{ithe society, to be laid out i Mechs by e gli fit, and See. Hor . said he duced books ea sek ; 11 1 š 15 — | ? 13 
us produce . Mechi’ 8 i they . > 
Dre alice gress g gegi laid out on his farm as Mr. Mechi . N — relloved a g 3 Drilled in two unknown 12 | 288 3 4 
z done ; his was in the jog-trot wage laid it out ao ian long to ee Secu: í 4 Jar. (Langhter.)—Mr. rows, 
and be be thought ‘agenda „ 8 oid Ap ina coos: MECHI — be was relieved by what Mr. Hutley had stated, as] N.B. mil allow 1¢ grins. give oa) „000 3 1 bushel, 
Aud then came the straw, and ood puny — M ‘had a nga an | he had only farmed since 1814, aor 1 1 had to aren and do every- e wi w 14 grains to foot, nearer the 
dere more than Mr. Mec effect of cultiva- | thing, and therefore he was placed in a mor 2 = 
Hon—not of alting pa yn 2 it. than Mr. Hutley, for the year 8 a: eg 
: sidered Mr. Mee earner, though he set up as a as a tenant and? 5} per © ee bad a ore 
Eecher, port ip Ap aie and said and 8 es he lost mogi ; ee bell a 
da done, ich “You A 
See my s but it was E green Beans, and I will show I make | to bring out a poe . How to Farm paraan, which he 
much mutton in one week, as I did on Clover in three pek e aha for he had no porting 
ks.” He utley) asked, “ Are you going on with it?” > e ear Songer aak ns ö 
od rete 8 or he was not, 55 he N pall od kerea ie t oe a oer. ng, as if t did not extend to preoipe and 
his i 5 thousands of the e e j ton 
ann he inen ý t his Wheat ang | © j no one they knew would | acre on some of that — 1 adhe a for he | 
it against nis; and then as to the Twitch, they all knew | the number of farms to 3 and po ee aces ae 1 serious cost, 
pega yard; 400 of rape and 200 of guano, which cost i, an acre 


8 h l if | leave a 
‘uch copied oni; e leave a profitable farm, Therefore Mt He challenged Mr, 


734 THE AGRICULTURAL pes da Y. D 


e advan DEN, Nov. 17. 
he crop he had stated, COVENT GAR 
— *. — lig 4 r for 7 — never found a Hothouse Grapes continue to be plentiful, and the supply 
and he l his | of Pine-apples of excellent quality is still well kept up. 
dlord to take adva! of the upean t who could pay his pp 101 
— The — ‘How wn think the eff of | Filberts 2 Walnuts are abundant, Chestnuts plenti 5 : 
n — visible —Mr. : Certainly two years very dis- | Oranges more abundant, Lemons moderately plentiful. Pom has bela 
—— — p% think clonger. G for | granates peak still be 2 * wea o Among Vege- re ten gate Holland ana Germany 
> . 0 tables, Turnips are good and plentifu arrots the . eep. 3 and 32 Pi deren 
* —— : A ee yard manure is not de pase ne — plentiful. Potatoes have not altered since our the home coun 188 ; and 138 Milch a . 
ee last — they are generally very much en re eee * * ens est Long i | 
j and other salading are sufficient for the demand, ush: or A C .810to4 0 5 t -Wools , Sto 
Calendar of Operations. fetch from 18. to 18. 3d. per pottle, cut Flowers pópaist . Best Short-horns 3 fu 3 10 tied 3 * N 1 
N indt ae | Heaths, 3 Gardenias, Bignonia venusta, Tropæo- | 2d quality a 2 8—8 2| Ditto Sara 2101 A i 
. been em — 8 e Pe Sena ae and for Wheat, | | — Chrysanthemums, Fuchsias, Frimulas, Camellias, and 8 breds 9 HETO Lambe... 0 See 
‘We hav 5 n deliv ering 1 5 . | Pins-apples, per Ib., 3s to 5s | ae 8, per doz., 4s to 6s Ditto Shor: w PS ts iaa a 224 2 
market; ploughing stubble land for Turnips, and ur Tara 87 8 s, hothouse, p. 3 pe to 5s | prha zel peck, 6s Beasts, 920; ; Sheep an and! Lambs, 3 60, Catv, 155 344 i 
mps for cattle and sheep ; an > have 45 cattle feeding on Turnips — Bortugal, per Ib., 9d to 1s | = sweet, per 155 2s to 3s Aan al 60; alves, 
1 er hf. * * 4 “9 6s nuts, p , 18 0 28 E. + Piga, 31a, 
— we begin the Swedes; one man with a pair leading the — * | nah. 180 10 206 MONDAY, Nov. 1 2.—The supply af . | 


| s this morning was by lang 
Turnips for the ewes and the cattle ; the workers have been as- half ae. A to 6s | Filberts, per 100 lbs., 45s to 60s Carriage samples g the smallest 
— in threshing eb pulling Turnips, and digging 9 tchen,p. bsh., 2s to 4s Nuts, Bar., p. bush., 795 to 228 member at this season of the Jear; that from K We ever te, 


ent was l 
s; one man cutting thorns and making a fence to keep oe. ice il, bsh., 128 to 168 Le the former was quicky taken very 
i non that are eatin etka Toco, from the young Grass; args 88 A 450 | P. x vanes of 2s, Per. 2 but this provement ould ets atan | 
two boys employed feeding the hv tle. J, B. EG S. ——— er. Foreign, both oldandnew, met saz | 
— 2 ge a pa e, ee ee cop Cabbages, p. doz 3 | Onions, p. bunch, 2d to 4 retail ye d * — E both English and 
about acres of wold land, of ‘which 150 are in Grass — 0 if — . ree s * ~ ; Aag 18 6 a IER malting and grin ing, was in pa and, — 
Swathe land, as we term it. The CC telt | | Shallots per tb. ade o 8d e den dung e, Oats are falis 
light gravelly loam frasar es 3 Fo pas iaae i e l tego — f ccaeaa — 8 Ib., 2d to 34 — . ng new Irish, which must be 1s, per 
achin; alk, of which we have pits—useful fo: , h b i Written 
the Suey a ae t is for the most 1 of good quality, ex- * Sprouts, p. bi. sieve, Artic ce ea, ‘ox, vi dto wi Fripay, Nov. — arrivals of all Grain, both 
cepting where it becomes loose and mixed with flints, After a 8 8 i ne. 4 P. 50. , nd foreign, . e week, have noaa aee 
little rain, the land generally becomes difficult to work, fr — P. — — sto 100s Endive — ene Isto = 6 a, Wheat has met a dull retail sale at the Same prices a small, 
may be compared to soap, being likewise most unpleasant for a ge ~ ndive, p hf ai * 8 Foreign grinding Barley continues in demand saat. 
walking on. Having given this slight preliminary sketch of | — per om 838 s to — a hg 1 25 T 34 | late rates.—Beans are unaltered in value, White Pens con, 
the soil, &c., the system of cropping, and work on the farm, rs = ee da “A nis va 2 6a us g 3 ae — ö mand rather more attention and extreme prices. —We obs $ 
next comes into notice, Of — K there is not much to re- Se — a wos bmg 1 8 a 8 Saale . be pun, 2d to dd = alteration in the value of Oats,—Flour is a slow sale at our 
port beyond the usual recurre of Wheat drilling (a ee 10 — ish, hs A1. Beto 0 — unch, 2 a to 3 à quotations.—Maize is neglected, and prices nominally 
disheartening labour in — ines of free trade). Oure Horse Radis — re ` hs ven im 27s. for Ibraila and Galatz.—The Mgr trade 
markets are, of course, as low as in other districts. The acum — peer to a — ah N 2 E ~ ; 4 agland during the week has Hat, in Sootland — 
uality of our crops (both of this and last year’s) was good. a * e> p nites ie be e — „ e ee Ireland rather firmer. In Konigsberg pae 10 m beat hare 
We used, this Spa as a steep for the seed, some of Downe’s R — P. 3 — x to — ars re 0 bdo 40 be declined 1s. per qr,, and are no w auoted at 
‘Farmers’ Frien d,” which seems in prett good repute. Not- Ws ri 4 3 es, — Manj ee aod sta ay 2d Live L, Friary, Nov. 16.— The ead an i. 
withstanding tt the ot sab of thin sowing, so much advocated Sp „ P . | m4 sh — 24 ery languid, the transactions were fe ee b moni 
of late, we do not sow less than 10 pecks to the acre; the fact 8 | Basi t, p inae g 2d Flour were about the same as | 
being, in that as in many other theories of the day, a medium 8 e 1 „ p not plentiful, and made fully p . 2 
is the to follow, and a judicious epbitoation pate to Spinach p. sie * change i ià Barley, Beans, gk Peas, There was k ta mle he 
S, seasons, ‘eal Our he ad at =— 8 all ee le THFIELD, Werz Nor. 12. her less m 5 
dly the s est and the neatest plan, leaving so litt Th 5 largely increased, the d . ASIPAT 
stubble Eri up, especially where one corn Bye p posted is smaller ; in consequence the trade i is heavy, and prices gene- WHEAT. Race Oats.) RYE. | Braus. Pras, 
another, method we = Iis pursued in the of rally lower. i wever, very plentiful. and — — P a — 
Wheat on having been ploughed soon after still make 4 supply of Baw is also large ; they meet “og - — 7 17s 5d 246 9d} 29s d 
harvest, to vee th “the arni wel “grounded, X oep witha dull yer ai rather lower rat eal Bh ee and Pigs are : 8 3 2 5 20 10 jal 8 
* es in a pla Where. the also lower. From Holland and Germ ave 925 Beasts ‘ 7 8 17 424 9 29 15 (ad 3 
was and "ight, 2 roller was applied before = 3130 Sheep, 99 Calves, and 34 Pigs ; ge fs 2000 Beasts from 1 3 4 17 2 23 8) 2811 $1 7 
wing. The us course with us on the best land is Leicester and Nor * mpton — 7 16-10 |22 9 he 20 1 
nips ee pa = land iy rmai (givi x ng : eas allow. Perst.of8lbs—s d s d Per st. of 8 Ibs.—s d s a 0 16 11 22 6 4 30 11 
ance of cake in r tro , Oats. eat laid down wit Bat Lon -wools, 3 4 to 3 
seeds for one year—and we find the Wheat sufficiently good wordy Ee ns .3 8to4 0 Ditt 3 Aggreg. Aver. 41 5 28 3 17 2 28 10 29 3 307 
after the Uats, from the effects of the fold, to continue the Best Short-horns 3 6—3 10 Bree & 2d quality 2 10 — 3 2 Duties on = 7 * — 
„otherwise the four course is more usual hereabouts on 2d quality Beasts 2 8—3 2 Ditto S reign Gra 10 1 n | 
the lighter soils. Our hogs, this autumn, at first did badly on Best Down Lambs e PRICES, — 6. (oon 18, ber 20. ov. 3. ie 
the Turnips, but have now recovered themselves, and have salt Hal f-breds 30-4 of Calves tee ese or 5 — 8 | 
added to the Turnips. These number about 369 at present, Ditto Shorn | 0| 42s 4d— ag ds | 
Which, added to 400 ewes put to the rams three weeks back, | Beasts, 4344; ; Sheep and Lambs, 2 26, 140; “Calves, 1853 Pigs, 500 a1 7 — ae 5 g 
our present compliment. stock of beasts consist of RI DAT, N 6 sey . vo 
60 head of short including the cows (8 in milk and 12 The supply of Beasts is small a ‘kite brisk ; there is an 41 4 Se ag STE © 2 
with calves), and the weather is so fine that they still remain advance, but not a quotable one, — the choicest kinds. The 41 1 we | oe 
out, picking up what rough Grass remains. Thesteers however, | number of Sheep is unusually small; the demand, however, is 40 7 


8 


$001 i when w 
of Turnips and oilcake for them. The latter our horses me i i ol. Wakefield, Boston. | 
share, with their Oats and cut meat ; they do well on t, an London * —d | 
is cheap, as we can buy it now at 6l. per ton. Wages with be PRICES | 
are sie Ja. week for ploughmen, and 10s. and 8s. for inferior CURRENT. Nov. 5 Nor 12} Nov. 6. Nov. 13. Nov. 2. Nov. 9. Nov. ee ma 8, V, 1 i 
servants, H. E. 3 qr. qr. 70 Ibs. 70 Ibs. qr. qr. 1 j ; ja A 
Notices to Corresponden Wheat— & 8. . s e. d. . d. e d. Olas c. 8. 8 deer Ag 
CagnadEs: ‘Clericus, Transplant in i tec plants of New, red 38 4043/40 to436 0 6 26 0 6 4/37t044/37—44 34 to40 34040 5 0 5 85 9 
- cad Cabbage, one Nia Yaa inthe ater |e welll. oa (42 4842-506 2 6 86 4 6 9/41—48/41—48/38—45\38—46|9 6 6 0) 4 3 
oam, w. a eeply dug. You in the event o : : ig : 
a wet season, have at leas 50 N ons per acre. Kohl Rabi Old, red ae 38 —43 | 38—43 6 4 6 66 4 6 8839—4339—40| — poe) ee : s ras 
Sreto be Wenzel Tike Swed „ white . . 43—4543—457 0 7 47 0 7 6| —48 —49) — — 5 7 6 2 
OLOD-CRUSHER : “ A, B. 215 re 2 Cockermouth, would much Foreign z «> 365235524 4.97 CCC pote “3% t 8 
obti; many of our readers by 1 particulars of his im 4 ‘ . 801 f 
plement. *“ How broad or wide the boards shou be, a 480 lbs. 480 Ibs. ate * 
ae much orans ar should be left wae the overlap of. the | gatie —. 23—2423—24 — — ee, N 3 ae 
= ete w deep should the notches be c eign., 20 -2320—23 —— whites — — — -= ne 
r ox ‘Guns : Constant Reader. How are its attacks to be bas. meal 60.—845ʃ.—6ʃ n = ie ay 5 gi @. qr. $ 
preve — Erbe use of salt enough is one method. Bar qr. qr. foe 
om WP, South Devon. Kohl Mabi 2 best in spring, Erindin te +» (242612496 a — 20—22 20—2221—23 21—23 
pot only because: . ß , eo 
3 F 8—26!18—26 2 29612] -26 — 
tirst : andi it would stand a frost whieh would iu- ove — | L6—Z0/ 1LO—26 — — * . 
some 8 Tab ier eas crop of Carrots will cost about 6 bush. 6 bush. 
188. per acre, Tw n pulling and diggiog r pryd will NMalt—Ship Fia 3 ae. PEN . 35.383588 —„ — f 
ae pulled cep one 3 5 e 45 Ibs 45 Ibs. | 
1 ery ro ie 5 a i t 
Liguip MANURE Cart: AW F. Stratton’: “i vista @ats—White,.. |}8-94/1g—-24/3s 2d 38s 34\38s 2d 38s 3d) — — 13—1813—18 i 
Smart F. DLA d Te wani ae pot sneer any " bd Black... ois r 12 7| = -i ; 
takea own hands, unless Fen Bag 4 to give j ie e Mon — Gina sree: ‘ 
ita degree of attention which is, we 9 altogether ineum- Foreign 13 —203—20%½ 32 4 2 32 4 i i 
patible with the Position of a clergyman. It would not f > * oi ae 
answer k . ae an batiar be satisfied | Peas— Boilers |28—32|25—32| 33s— 338— 26—3026—30 — — i 
with such a rent as market prices will wer. but igh | 
w money, nevertheless, under inage Act, for thi a: w = ne — i 
“a permanent! i ing the land ; oad . Grinding... — — 27 —28s 27 —288 — ve t 
ovement rease the rents bevond the amount of Foreign. |2439|24—32 29 —30 29 —30 — — — i 
5 whioh ' they will lay upon the Ja idh ei i 
ANINTER B. We hardly unders 3132—34 32—34 : 
Bie jane be 7 of winter Beans may be late in 2 * you New, small .. . 28—3324—30 — win 30—31/30 at 32—34 32 
mean to sow 8 uas onsi tad, in Ra to Tot, P 8 — — — 33 —7 | 33 —37 2 — pr 
green crop to dig in after the Bean harvest? If you a — 193—-36/23—36 wie i, mil —28 — 
good crop — same grow; if the interval between the Fon = 
rows were so wide as to let the light in, Italian Rye-grass e ae 
would probably be the best thing to sow, it would thea grow, Linseed —Feed ae * 40 —42 40 —42 (32—40/32—40 
and would cover the ground well before November, F. +> 41—4841—48 — — — pes pri TR 
; E | LinseedCakes 
rkets. Brite e e et e e een me |e Le 
on ern ann. Nov. 12. Foreign 74. N. ‘hie vis — — — ea 
50 Commi report that the e continues to be i i 
wells ae every descriptionof Potato, 
Sey pple w and it is with diedi lane 8 eeke prices have | Tadtan Corn— |22—26/22—26 275—295 „ 


. sack|p. sack 
poes 30—36 


iff 
been realised, T following are this day’: ‘ rices :—Y ork p. sack p. sack 
Wisbeach, 50s. t 32—40/32—40) 30—32 30—32 a oou 


ver. | Impts.; Averages. | Imports, | Aver. | Impts. Aver. 
Nov.13 
s. d. grs. 3. 4. ars. $ d. 
pty 43 2 2290 41 6 15823 42 5 pon A 5 
5 “trade resedi 1; k S æ. 130 3 7 2278 28 
Pe p MARKET, Nor. 15. — . o 5 6750 16 10 8608 168 14 1 
: 5 5 55sto 755 RYE 18 750 6 
3 i W 3 ... — 2 4 9 — py p, 
„ See m |BEANS 29 5 — 29 10 1053 — 982 27 8 
lov: Josnba Baii PEAS... = 132 7 = 7 36 0 273 
i | 1 5 8 
v market con- oe GSPORD SEGAR SANDARS THOMAS 
getting very scarce. Sind | FALAY TONNIOL IPR, end DUNNS| _ WRIGHT. 


r 


46—1849.] 


=o GENTLEMEN, BUILDERS, NURSERYMEN, CHELSEA, OPPOSITE CREMORNE GARDENS, 
ÀND OTHERS. D. A. RAMSA 


ESSRS. PROTHEROE AND MORRIS will sell 
M by public Auc ction, on the premises, Caledonian Nursery, 
-road, ntonville, 


on MONDAY, Nov. 19, at 
building 


: whole of the N ERY STOCK, comprising fine Evergreens, 
Ornamental Fr and Fores es, viz., Aucuba, common 
Laurel, 9 * thie Box, Green H —— Privet, Lilacs, 


= 


pear trees, wit seberri: Green. 1 
Plants, also a capital 1 Forcing ing- * nine- light 
ri rk, Box xes, Lights, &c., together with the 


of three rooms, Shop, Wash-house, 
* the prem 
ind of the —— 18 
TO GENTLEMEN, FLORISTS, AND O 
ESSRS. PROTHEROE an > MORRIS. will sub- 
M mit to public competition by — at the Auction 
. on THURSDAY Xov, m, and fol- 
ay, at 12 o'clock, a selected assortm of FRUIT 
5 — = Peach, 1 Apricot, Pl ums, Pears, 


S are fa- 

N ANGSTER and 
tees fi ‘or the above 33 to submit to 
Y, Nov . 26 (unless 


wet raluabie Stock of 
ery, s, lately carried 
nd Hoge, consisting 2 the well known 
ndard and Dwart — sos 

rgreens an 


bad on the premises ; rh 
and of the Auctioneers, Ameri 
eee er ear a T 
ats AZALEAS, AND CAMELLIAS. 5 1 LUS 
STOCK OF MESSRS. FAIRBAIRN, OF CL 
R. J. C. STEVENS is r with instructions 
to sell by Auction, at his 


— 
A pot 133 
VALUABLE ERY S FO 
ME- "AILLIARD pe sell ps p oiie fesor 
efit of creditors), — several — aak, to 
asers e Nu s of 


merican pl. 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE: 


735 


R. 


| consisting o 2000 Aucubas, Laurustinus, Taure 
a — — of Mulb Trees of all s cog! —2 

ee seberries, standard hs baer — new — 
— ig . — other Creepers, a choice collection of aaa 
Camellias; standard Geraniums and Azalea indica, with a 

cies of Yucca, Aloe 


view: 
had on the gg seme of the * See 
Auctioneer, Brompton Nursery, Fulham. soa ig — ay 


i — 
2 Evergreen and Flowering | 


London 

P. nan RAMSAY begs leave to offer his services to 
e Trade and o 

&., an W that by devoting his personal a 

strictly m moderate charges, to — satisfaction,— References 

given, and letters — to Brompton Nursery, Fulham- 

road, Brompton, promptly attended to 

dee B, Parcels of Stock received — offered for Sale by Auc- 


O MARKET GARDENERS AND FLORIS 
0 BEL ET, with immediate possession, Seve n Acres 
of 3 MARKET 8 GROUND, at ‘aoe, 
rrey, a quarter of a mile from 
well Che with Cottage * — Foreing Pits 
Sheds, and Fruit be rees, Com ning- on — sor. for the whole, 
the lowest. Lease, 14 years ; rent only me eng ya at Mr. BAR- 
RETT’S Offices, 2, Bell. z 885 Doctors Com s, London 
ESSEX.—TO NURSERYMEN, 3 
FLORISTS, ‘AND MARKET GARDENERS. 


gularly des 
nay] years —— by Mr. Curtis, an be 
of Braintree and Rossel, spi ae 23 pilas ga a 
—— —2 It compri — se 1 
agg Messuage, a "laa “Oo — ory, Cow 
arg gn pee — other ‘convenient ‘aildings, 
with about 4 of s Land, — 10 acres, 
oo? 27 the celebrated America — 2 s and 3 
ry Grounds; id ee = chiefly —. with the 
choicest Fruit Tre — the whole abounds with eter 2 
1 variety — which — se grounds have for any 
ars been £0 4 1 sg Neat — othe — orti. 
. BEA T and Tompson, 19, Lin- 
3 ssrs 88 Sons, Land 


Agen aud Auctioneers, Stratford St. Mary. 
K NEWINGTON’ Bine p og ei IMPLE- 
ENTS OF AGRIC E.— DR. NEWINGTON begs 
to propose the following — j with respect to — 
lenge offered Mr. J. —.— pane og Chro- 
nicle. sap these conditions not be acceptable to Mr. R. 
probably he would state his ‘objections i in the same public 
manner as he ‘offered the challe Dr. — not often in- 


yh 
dulge fancies of this popes but ss * Ros ms to thin 
orwich d not award the —— e fairly, Dr. N. 
s troubl Dr. will 
each panty 
2. That 
don — 


bad 


certain number of g — 
hand) be depo sited i eg hole (the number of grains to be 


STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROOF 
WIRE NETTING, 


(CHARLES D. “YOUNG AND COMPANY (Arn 
YOUN 

MANUFA OTURERS Or PIRON AND WIRE TORE, — 

22, PARLIAMENT-S Lo: 

eren 


s, young Plantations, Nurseries, & e. 
his Net —1 ie at the Show he — a e and 
seed Society of Scotland, held 

re its Efficiency, Great Stre! th, and —.—— 
tracted general attention, and ad orena from the 
— — 4 nite * ye "a high commendati 

* im è done by H 


protection, it can 1 
the greatest facility, b 
Hares and Rabbits, 


ose, to wooden aes driven into the —— und, about ev: 


noe rouble and of testing — simple. 
t 


tested by making. ny“ ) deposits in a box). 
broke cru eee ained 
he seed 


5, That the distance between row 
wise betw n hole and 2 


n 


and other Americ 
2 


— 
of the North — Rail. 
— the advan of |? 


an sol 
w yP be viewed e, a 
in — 
č pr —— ‘Oroso, 
—Leek, Nov. 


ose g 
* “pian 
expense ay 
Nursery, or to the 1 
formation obtained a 
Leek aforesaid, — — to the — —. 


se eraan Aa 
NORWICH NURSERY. 

IMPORTANT 5 9 et -EXTENSIVE SALE OF 
FOR 5 af eee BES. 


i n wt his stock to bis new 
e le, to cuban to public eo wpecition, — the 
ember, 


e 10th penn (weather permiting), “ONE 
Sie OF FOREST AND ORNAMENTAL TREES, » dey 
2 — red- aah my Aa = ot 
e 5 eruo red- 4 to 6 feet; “Diack | kalian 


aes = 


roun — till the Ist of 
ail s of England. 
Ibm ergs ? 
„ 10 and 11, Ex- 
ILDE, Auctioneer; or o 
. Norwich. 
omg ALALBAS, | we, 
R. 8 3 WEDNES- 


er. “ast Auction 


Stems ; 1000 Vines, grown 
the Mart, and ofthe Auctioneer, | 
eee coat e a 
T FLORISTS, sat OTH: RS. 
3 GEN . 1 eat 
nd Premises, 3 Ancian Ground, 
one - 


dpt tue reelle Se 
i Nursery, k Palvan-roud, | 


e 
„preference t 
— 


| pora a for 


und | 
once, can haroni — s opportunity ot — 2 
leu 2 


or Duteh 
bre 


ah the Res and 
Rieiptevested person to hold the stakes. It is presumed 
r. N., being the acceptor of the ch pe rs would have the 
2 of pe — hi plements — he would give 
cently invented Wheel-dibbles, Mr, 


eae so S ree lowei to prior — 23 he thinks proper 
— aiden: Ae is contest will — — tself be 3 

r koiti ng to —— ether a — assem peo 

e — 5 at the * time the gail te ri all his 

— n larh ae ag a at the Smithfield 

Show. He alm i 

vee ya alreac vs is 


E 
—— 
e 


tis, besides, peculiarly adapted 
dering 1 Hedges, Paling, or other a Fences, completely i 
to such — and of N 95 — ag into email 
penh of three or mo a most effi. 
cient guard, at little — Hy for Wale 5 Pant — Shrubs, 
Picks. —Is ins. r hish, — ai 1 ins., 18.; 30 ins., ls, 3d.; and 
ly 


36 ins, ls, Gd. per 
Or a web of 100 yards, 18 ins. wide, will cost . £3 15 0 
Do. of 100 yards, 24 ins. wide o 5 0 0 
Do, of 100 yards, 30 ins. = $ 5 
cal of 100 yards, 36 ins, wi 


7 10 
If more or less than a web is — * it would” be . 
at the — rate per yar 
—— Netting is also admirably adapted for Pheasantries and 
Pou ee sees d at the same rate, As 1 
— uny ins . — om an obstacle to parties 
tance requiring this Net, 0. D. e f and Co. have made ‘ara range. 
ments by which they v de deli it at a the 
5 pal ports of Scotland, England, and — ig ag One 
ae per lineal apne 
Youna and 7 = give a * the 


better 


1 for inspectio 
K 


required 


dress . 
Cnononxrox, 


— includ ing carri 
Esq., Heronden, 5 Kent, 


1 7 HORTICULTURAL A ALMANAC and GAR- 


NER AA 8 es for .— 
GARD ENING DEP RTMENT by — Gardener; 
AGRICULTURAL DEPA ARTM ENT. by M. M. MıteuRnN, Secre- 


ig Yorkshire Agricultural Society, — of Prize 
A „ &e. 
— 5 ’ Gnoounnipce and and — e rere and 


Mien oo ALKALINE TOOTH. POWDER 
pp sn a pote an : 


ae 
m on the 5 ae — wait tor the exhibition. 


* 


ot i but he hopes he sha 
ements Wan a party to conduct the 
; the undertaking will 7 
cale to sa! y the demand, The first of 
has ee — a few days; with i 
ther the barbarous systems of casting 
e 


averse farm 
their forefathers, 
— N. —.— 


— tg 
— — s corn 
ac 


4.5 ager * is a 
— wise — A. i in seed 


ne 


3 to 5 in 
rse Plough, ahb be 
red t ong proper i draughtan 
a 


tide | 


brought before the — T mn have n pro- 

cu the receipt from whieh the above Pow ‘Se 
mend — universal — Thole 

BIxdLxT, & Co.“, Bruth-makers 

E © 

powder will have the Royal Arms, com 

TER H. Prince Albert, on the lid — rag ana — signanta 
and address “i the firm, thu MET and Co., 

130 s., Oxfor 14 do; 


2 ELEGANCLES FOR N patti 
The greatest variety for I and Gen 
MECHI 8 Ean AGT RY a 
Leaden won — 
apt inn 
. to 201. d wi essing 
ia 2 5 


boxes, card bores, la aies companions 
papier maché é and leather ; ladies’ scent cases 
ttles, ladies’ card oases, chess boa boards and men, 
— chess — gold and silver peneil cases 
tuo ushes — each, cases of and 

ld 


cutlery, warran rope, 
porai aud every description ot fancy cutlery. Witha variety 
of other articles, ch catalogues may 1 As 
Meroni manufac eee yap premises, 
ane of every article 

OTHACHE PERMANENTLY CORED BY 

p i Sen —— 

and sy n ng them and 
for dener ral Tee 


th fAttin ; wits be exh 
a pe ec: shifting Wege . e rie 


„as 
the good yer — "of which 
in the United Kingdom. 

ous for us 


e permanent, Sold. — 
i a, r Te 2 
Sen: free, 


ee 


E 
Pad 


gel why, 4 
Mr. Mitcoell, =. 2 52, . ts 
hen entiefa cto angements 
be stated don vi aap parties may 
ridge Wilis, Kent. 


= by 3. 1 24, “Bast Temple‘ 
London, in return for 13 penny 
t success oft 


by rei rewrn “of po 


and to de’s Enamel” 
5 Ine to guard against such impositions, by 
et 


It is utedtu 
seeing that the ua e of Jous WILLIS << 


736 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE: 


RAYLING cb sis | 

TEE RO 
Dain 
par, Esq., Senior ae 

1 1 T pl 


se Pade 1 Reader, price 1s. 6d. e 
Sandon: Ta IDGWAY, Piccadilly; and all Booksellers. 


In one vol. 5 = illustrate d by Charts and Woodcuts, 


9s., in cloth b ds, 
[HE PR price 9s., in cloth boards PMENT 


GRESS OF 3 DEVELOP 
W OF STORMS, and i 
with the 84 Application of ae >Subject to Na By 
Lieut.-Col. Rew, C.B., F. R. S. Joun WEALE, 59, High Haldern, 


ROSE CAT ALOGUE. NEW EDITION FOR 1849.50. 
NURSERIES, CHESHUNT, HERTS. 
DAM PAUL anp SON beg to inform 8 friends 
and the public i 1 hat their new E CATA- 
LOGUE an A yad 3 tis, on enclosing two stamps for 
postage. vag 1 as possible, and t they ensure the 
* nd weltzaltivated plants. 
s of previous Editions 


Horticultural Pre 
+ Mes re. Pai and Son 
ger mel and deserves * tes made known.” 
Messrs. Vs is nicely-arranged Catalog 

taining the f 10 llest description of any we have seen.“ 
8 and Land-S a oak ae al, 

ul’s Catalogue of Roses is remarkable alike for the 
15 pte: it comprises ana the low prices at which they 
ag pi be purchased.”—Gardeners’ Gazette 

Mr. Paul is the most successful Rose growerin England,” 
—Journal of A griculture, 
e beos GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE on Sale, Te its 


mencement to 1848 inclusive, clean and perfec rh 
Price N. ine 


n’s descriptive Catalogue of Ridi is 
— Gar deners 8 
ue, con- 
— United 


9. ences 1818, which is unbound). 


“Fifth Edition, price 175 or Book ie { iby post, with engraved plan plan 
ot F 
} IGH FARMING, „UNDER IBBRAL COVE- 
TEES 3 75 the best Su dyg eead leg ae 38 eap 
H pits N hat t High rp rision w lie — substitute — 
Protection. is well illustrated by | the results. ”—Edin h Rev 
"Fi 


12 5 


—8 pesen 


cultural laboure 
of the Chancellor a ue . on ‘thea ‘state of th 
as pene 849, 


IaM BLAckwoop and Sons, gl and London, 
Sold by all Bookse 


PART III. OF THE NEW eae OF 
HE BOOK 5 THY FARM; 
HENRY STEPHENS, F. R. S. E. 
CONTENTS OF THE THIRD Pant, l — Sum- 
apt te of the Field Operations, and of f the 2 Weather i in Suinmer— 
nth orses Summer 
Treatment of Flax, of ee of the Hop, of the Turnip, o 
Kohl Rabi, of the Cabbage, of Mangold  Wateet of me Cai 
of Parsnip, of Rape, of Buckwheat, a the Sunflower P: 
of Maize— The Mationsle of the rmi 


Summer 
Wash- 


203 the 


—On 8 Batter and Cheese, © 
With Three ea aed Engraved on Steel, and One 
Hundred and Forty-Six Engravings on Wood, by Branston. 
THE First Vouome, price 27s., han somely bound in cloth, 
contains, Initiations Practice i in Winter 3 in Spring 
with Eight 3 es Steel, eg Landseer and lees, and 
Two Hundred and Thirty-Eight Engravings on Wood, 
22 TIE Fov. * Past, which will Complete the Work, 
WILLIAM BLACKWOOD 852 Sons, ake sd and Edinburgh, 
Sold by all Bookseller: 
PRICE E FOURPENCE, OF ANY peer SELLER, 
ER F 


or THE NUM > m SATURDAY 
LAST, NC NOVEMBER 10, 
ENÆUN 


JOURNAL pr ENGLISH RAT 
AND FOREIGN LITE URE, 
CIENCE, AND THE PINE — 


as. 
eviews or, wirH Ex 
dence | Papers and Proceedings of the | 
Edited oyal Society of Van Die- 
ey, M. en’s Land. 
Alleghany Pang Archzeological Collec- 
By 0. os tion. [Second notice.] 


Original Papers.—The 4 Arctic Expeditions—Exodus of the 
Israelites—Scientific Nomenclature-—The Burnett Tre atises, 
Gossip.— 


xample to Em- 


po. 
loyers—New | Periodical—Am. 
p . 1 sAm e 
Fine Art — 
h Engraver 


ry Hill, Ke.) 
eee S 


à eA Foa Ch: 
} —.— . —.— (The Crusades? 8 
i eg ”)—Sadler’s -e 


æological oe 
, Excava 
f British Architects is (Election of 
“of Arts (Ik in of the 


ame Gossip.—. ’s Promenade 
ae ic 7 sat, A “Concert in Man- 

r, 4 orn, Bay heatricals 
Musical Ne 


ieee to Pictures in 
i "cas gaat 
* 


ee oe. 


“| PRACTICAL AND SCIENTIFIC |} 
AGRICULTURE, 


PRINTED FOR 


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* POOE 2 THE FARM; s 9 

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fxs Edition, 70 5 ö ia Boae 8 forming 2 

Nee royal pe R which Parts I., II., and III. are published, 

e 12s. 6d. ith numerous Illustratious on Steel, 

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A 8 OF PRACTICAL DRAIN- 
5 


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LECTURES ON Si gue sce a ee ae CHE- 
AORT AND GEOLOG By James F. W. JOHNSTON, 
R. SS. L. and E., Nass e. A New Edition. In 

one e volume, Svo, pric 


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SOILS. Svo, pri 
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AND 1 PHYSIOLO r. G. J. M R, Pro- 
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ment of Forest tn By JAMES Brown, Forest ter, Arniston 


BOTANICAL WORKS BY PRO f 
F 

Lately nee 

i NOMIC 


M otter Students who h 
acquainted with the author’s “ School 130 


BOTANY, Soon f 


—— — a int a ie of Technical 


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The Gloss d separately, ; 
$ 7 A e — ti ha: doors! Price 5s, i | 
orks by Professor LINDLEY, of ‘ Botanica} 
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Just published, in d y8 
\ RCHIDAGELE LINDENIANÆ s or * 


a Collection of Orchids formed in . — s upon 
Mr. i Linpen. By Jonn Lin NDLEY, 1 ate 97 by 2 
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oyal — of Great 1 * 
„We assure our readers that i quantity of 


ontains a 

Matter inter eating and useful to pf cla: persons, and 
to none more so than to Pharmaceutists, . 

and cordially recommend it.“ Farm 


— o 
ee BOTANY: or, the — 


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WK 


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wa 


their History and Management, 
Saug Dixon, M. A., Basan e of Intwood * 
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. Fowl in ‘The. Musk Duck 
rei = e Grey China 


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The 
Si 


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Th — 5 Dork- 
e Wigeon 
The” Cochin-China The Teal and its 
Fowl congeners 
The Malay Fowl The White China 
The Pheasant Malay} G 
ans 
e Game Fowl 
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Th 1 or 
Cape Q 


Th 
[The 8 Goose 
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y disquisitions ‘of the Naturalist.”—. 

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oN, M.D., Edinburgh. A 
the Laws of that important branch of 
explained by numerous oe a 
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GALBRAITH, a eee A TWastrated 
„ by W K. Johnston; and 107 
baro 2a 


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| Printed by W 


. wa 
in different parts of 


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the assistance of numerous active friends 
the country.” -Midland eap Hae 
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Finding the difficulty, in 

existing works the 833 


onicle a series of papers, of 
with a additions.“ — Midland Cou 


fe the request of numerous Subscribers, the p 
REE ROSE is reduced from 45. 6d. to 3s, 6d. 


year of 

day, state ey the 

plant, care of buds | 
din 


Shape of tree: 


hing — and ‘buds, 
ds, failin 
or 8 i a | Shoots for r budding 
8 e i „and age ae 
ate ars, 8. 5 
ry qualia? “to Shoots, keeping 
destroy +$ even, and — 
Causes of success : 


— “‘Baappony, 
Parish of St. Pancras, and P ga 0 
toke 3 ; 


of No. 13, Upper 
ERICK MvuLrLeT? Eyan® 


THE 


RDENERS’ CHRONICLE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


i 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part * by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 24. 


is 


[Price 6d. 6d. 


No. 47—1849.] 


o trade, naei 
—— Te e 
— son's — 

"ri 


s; 
2772 
Lad 


sesse, 743 
make 220 a 

N. Wales —* 2 JH 0 

greenhouse., is 


45 

i to be gained Manetti, 1 tock 8 
10. b a Mee +. 747 a | Roses, plan of striking sss». 28 
= with high and low pri poe aa.s Santos ee r.), death 255 sesos 749 6 
= Auchnets .,.....--.. «ee Sowing, thin —* 2 749 j- 

seal save msr : Victoria . 739 
v. grnet se JA te of growth of 2252 

maite. Barley for q 747 6 Vilta gibdening. dus c4venceceens 

. ao Wheat, man 1 0” !? 72 7 


OBERT GLENDINSING begs to offer the follow- 


ing GRAPE VINES, RAISED FROM EYES, with 4 feet of 
$ | ripened — —.— 6d. per plant, except those marked with an 
k, w are 58. ah 
‘Bani PERA 8 Grizzly, 
bs ilmot’s, — 
O dk — — Sweetwater, 
ss l Hill, — — White ditto, 
„Muscat, Reeves’s, Old ditto, 
n e Black 1 
j Cannon Hall, Black Clu 
95 Alexandria, Black Dam wo 
* Muscadine, oo ig Cal 
Chasselas Musqué, St. —.— 8, lente. — 
ontainebleau, White or Royal Mu 
Variega' Wortley Hall Se edling, 
Frontigoan, » Black, Braddick’s Swee 


Catal We of Greenhouse, Hardy, and Ornamental 
Plants, and Fra Fruit it Frees, — . obtained on application. 


ielivery, 1 that copies 
of this P. 11 


Erfurt, Prus a E 

TCH FIR SEEDLINGS. 

BERS have 3 

2-year Seedling SCOTCH 
are 


1 of 
tems. Prices (and if necessary sam on appt. 
— e ar ste 


| TH T apii 


am 9 — 3 
Glasgow, also to London duri ng the greater part of the 
fear. —HowpEN BROTHERS * Lawson and Smith), Inverness, 
_ Inverness Nurseries, Nov, 


, DENYER begs g aa his frie: 00 and the 
AE ag ye in 3 2 he a a very large st 


on receipt of two paste 
3 eryman, Loughborough-road, 


tt Lchop in L Aon 


— “VICTORIA” RASPBERRIES. 
Pees NW is now ef ~ 

he above, at 
and of GEORGE 1 Mar oe we Baby tek, Herts, i 


rg 
i j ts 3s. per dozen ; also a general 
6 stock at very — — price 
Turnham. green Nu 


A MYATT anv S 8 recommend 
„ this variety as the best in —— The most satis. 
factory proof of Te Pa shes is the fact that the Market 
bn round L nd Man nchester have planted the 
than ary other variety. 


Linnæ Rhubarb 


atdhel vely 
f | Itis sstrenedinacity — — * a fortnight earlier | applica 
esteem 


than the Victoria ; — — — this, it is held in general 


for preserving and a —— purposes. One-year planted 
roots, 18. 6d. ; ditto, Nitobe ian ii — 6d. ; Mr age 
9d, weg usual Trade orders 

quested to be made — 10 12 ag rae Manor — 
De 8 Nok > 2k; 


FREE TRADE IN SE 
{ GW 3 a of GARDE EN SEEDS, 
now 1 74 5 n be had, on ye pera 
Vos bs Us "ALBA, Qs. 6d. acket.— 
lishment, 181, va Holborn, London 


&e., 
Sout. 
See 


, HINE’S LIST 0 A i i contain- 

= ending er is now Rpt: and may 
dozen, rchaser’s selection, 21s. 

rf Aer or package, 

i i pants — a to eidami ne pax — 2 5 . 


TO ORNAMENTAL PLANTE 


IH FIRE ANNIHILATOR | COMPANY, 
PHILLIPS’S PATENT, 
Me —— invention for fire 
— Stead 
below, are 2 ſor . —— 
Farming 


same power 


y. tar, tur — 2 * ar, and other 
highly int inflammable substaness — * . e in combus- 
n, 
Stationar es fixed for the protection of Mansions, 
— Mac — gf ge aod other large premises 
Price, including Price of each 
mary. af — one Ch rge 
dee . 5 0 
245 my 8 40 0 é 7 6 
3d, or © AE S 500 10 0 
— eo ERT A 600 1 0 
8 3 14 0 


The Machines can be mate e ing a at a pro- 


— to be addressed to the £ of the Com- 
pany, 105, Leadenhall-street, n. 
JACKSON'S IMPROVED KIDNEY, THE MOST PROLIFIC. 
OF EARLY POTATOES. 


eae JA 5 pleasure 
announcing that in consequence oftheir haviog a very 
heavy crop of their prec Abn gpa r gg they 
= e reduced “yes pue from 15s, bushel. 
of o e deliv — on 5 


np SON have m 


cee — London, or en any 
— pa — — — 22 P 
“Nursery, —. ae Noy, 2 
ERIOAN PLANY 
H OSEA WATERER begs 2 nounce he e has just 
published a New and Complete * of his ANEN- 
CAN and CONIFEROUS PLANTS, ing d be h 
lication, inclosing two stamps for — 
_ Hosea WATERER, Koap Hill Nursery, — Surrey. 
B Pere na s ponja K St. 3 N 
for 


RS. 
BREN anp OSBORN, of FULHAM, 2 Lon- 
espeotfu 
lection — . RDT T 
Catalogue, the no 9 om which 
practicable with that of Loudon’s 3 
Their stock on . is healt By a and well gro 
sie ip — 3 2155 
itto sa 


pollen atenti 


rs submit th 


the lth that 
the selection be left to Esha and a e basir the pur- 
chaser desire to mak selection. the prices will var. ary in 


dence Nursery, Ramsgate, Ken 


TO n AND MARKET GARDENERS. 

J. S begs to offer og spores | SEEDS, 

3 es ee been grown fro: selected stocks 
. nded on a — po 3 


All the most appr 
grown 72 sale by WHITLEY and OSBORN. 
Also STOVE, Ae A te — — 1 PLANTS 


And a collection of the rhe Varieties < of ROSES—Standards, 


name, are 


deliv strong 
3 ‘the 1 * am 
GERAMIUR, HOYLE'S ice £ a 1s. 64. each, 
„ 08, 
FUCHSIA erb 18 lana | 
5 e Three for 1 1 tree 


. REND , PLYMO 
ESTABLISHED 1786 


HORNS OR QUICKS.—10,000 ph nied 
PLANTED THORNS fr nian 58 90 15 


LARCH. 


id Seedlings for 1 a 
SCOTCH 1,00 125 He 
ANDONE XN E es wast 
dozen ; 


—— 2 re pe 
Con 


R 
fully prov ad to be 
— 1000 2 arges = well — at 203, P 
dozen. The = 2 — next | ring Sm 


eera 125. — dea 
BENDA Rs, Victoria.” Very strong roots, 15s, 
per dozen ; 7 foots, 9s, per dozen, 

RASPBERRIES, Phe EXDLE'S Lance Arrmex. ”—This is 
vour, td 
t eom ilete ng Canes, 20s. 
per 100 o! ay pien L's FASTOLFF, » 10s, per 100. 

STRAW BERRIES, Mrarr's ELEANOR,” Tos. per 100 222 

— 


ty, r 8 


satisfaction. Stro 


y be depe 
Climbers, and D _ Black Prince, 1e, ôd per a 2 55. Ss 
aa low, et a AGRICULT * — eee GARDEN, and PLOWER — 75. 5 per i ; Cole’s Prol 53. 
low tible wi ine | Seedling, 5s. per = 55 
p Swede Barly Pur ing “tt —. dane oe HER ERRER 1 CEDARS O 5 1 have a la 893 
above be in pots ants, 18 ine per dozen ; 3 feet 
angold W Grainge’s E — alowed . Warner and Osto Ouse think a ‘due to — to = that per dozen ieee handsome P. 3 * io 6 feet, 56. 
ne 0 el Winter iar ond poin very article 33 erein is in their possession, and may 2 — — — the p i, We have 
t their esta ent. rge stock wi eyi t A we 
hite Marrow —— l ren yj baseen a first-rate ability and character are waiting in this TURKEY E ANE oar trees, 6 feet high, well 
1 2 > happle ‘his te pri establishment for appointments as Gardeners, or as 5 33 a RIPE) es 1 Ay oe on 
Stubbs W 5 Be LACK ONAP PLES CURRANTS.—Very superior to the old 
— E — NEW FANCY nora 22 72 eee. OOSEBERITES.—Some of the very best varieties in culti- 
3 co * 
Green curled Savoy. ueen’s | v 
stone, Nor. 24. E. SPARY, ig we a 2 — . LAURELS.—An im i immense stock rite a gold 
TO NURSERYMEN, vey irany &c. respectfully to inform his friends and th T * that he > Wy gee) » bushy, 20s, per ; ate 
Y CO., 1 as been succesfully ex vi Ree ot an 8 ie, per 100 RBERİS 14 15155 AQUIPOLIUM—A i 
e — 7. — intimate to the Trade und others, that $ seeing Shacklewell, Slough, avi tt an Shows, ang | quantity, 16 inches, 162, per 100. This is a fine 6 
aor | s Certificates ; also half Mr, Staines’ | u 
have the award 1 between Miss Compton W. rosea, strong plants, 12 inches, 6s, per dozen; — 
of thelr money rize, at siougt, 8 bited at. Dry Parnettia mucronata aaa obawia, 63. per dozen; Ribes, 
r 33 double red, and albidum, strong plants, Tinh te per dozen. 
ecember next. E. S. has a few roots to AKA an — ene from 
„3 to 4 f. |soare ora P (Coole) and “ Buffalo Girl” (Cook’s) at the | 10s, to 20s, per 1000. 
t — BI hard new Autumna al Catalogue is just published, and 
2 to MISS. 00 — N —Salmon-scarlet tipped with sen alge to any arnie cation. 
30,000 Beech, 14 to24 feet. | white, first-rate Pirae ia new colour, 125 Remiita reference jonm unknown 
2t0 3 f an acquisition to the Fa lass exhibitors. Height, 3 
0 i and ts in May, eee ee y 
feet. 2 EN TEES red, with a slight tip of yellow, | Ali orders 1 51. will kegl - Sree of carriage 
10, „ * excellen 3 F ee „e, 1943 being | 20 any of the stations on the South Devon, Bristol 
“tee tag Quicksets, nearly oat, eo. out in May. Height, 3 feet; plants, | Exeter, or t Western Railways. Steamers from 
500,000 six years old White- ground roo! this port to on, Dublin, aa Falmouth, i 
_ thorn Quic: extra T BUFFALO GIRE (Gook ’s)~Drab bull, fne formand Fit), Bas and Glasgow; three times a week. 
P desirabl w flower (few plants let out in pera Ae ag The Sout Saimy is now wa to Plymouth, the 
Sn e F eae = ae 


e 
fe 


738 : ; THE 


GARDENERS’ 


TO PLANTERS. 
ARAUCARIA IMBRICATA AND CEDRUS 
EQ. 


D CO. most r espectfully solicit the atten- 
yo tion rt 5 > Nobility and Planters of HARDY ORNAMEN b 


GERANIUMS AT VERY LOW PRIC 
BAS, ate BROWN beg to refer to their 4 
of New 2 last ee) ent, of which they have | 
ill fine strong plant 8, 8 onicle, dated October 
whe ae beg 2 etot v their eager i 
f CHOICE FLOW R ROOTS, of the same dat Their 


ers in the coun try, are 
n pots), 
ARAUCARIA IMBRICATA, 1 foot (fine) 18s. per dozen. 
her 42s. per i 
* $ ani fest, fine han 
plants, 80. re pty 
CEDRUS DEODARA, J — 1} foot, 1. per 100 
eot, 102, per © 100 
Catalogues o. of their — of rare 
bo had on application. 


THE FINEST CARNATIONS, PICOTEES, AND 
INKS. 
CO.’S Extensive and Celebrated Col- 


season unusually strong and 
fine well. ct 9 


y 


OUELL anp 
_ lection of the above are this 
for sending out, in 


N 1 Catalogue of Flower Roots, Select — yond 
Hardy, Herbaceous, and Climbing Plants, &c,, may be had o 
a = 
eed and a 50 N bare t Sudbury, Suffolk. 
B. PAG ON have to offer from their 
arcuate a Si. —ů 3 Seed Establishment, 


GY PEAS, the earliest and most prolific 
dwarf variety in Nr 
sade ate ipa Liia ARF BLUE MARROW PEAS.—A 


very abun 
Tore PROLIFIC LONG-POD BEANS.— Very early and 
dw: 


warf, 
AGRICULTURAL MAIZE, for green cattle food, and the 
ge varieties, 


RTYNIA LUTEA. — A most magnificent annual for 


ipang pan oi ito Ù 4 Kin i allow: 
plants, ee res the: Unite wien, OF Oe oe orest t Trees, Roses, ag rewng ‘Stove, — 
— dne pce eae ose R gom Minot eous, ge Orchidaceous Plants in great v: 
var“ " Best Russia Mats, 100s. per 100; Second- hand Mats, 975. 04 
and 1d Picot oF £5 0 0 per 
15 pairs ii ā do. a „ 2 — yi Wholesale and retail 1 of Seeds, Trees, Shrubs, &c., 
pairs o ery nes $ 8 laky be had apes apphentn 
Oe Ot cece ae ee 4s, tol 10 0|- THE HOPE 8 BEDALE, YORKSHIRE. 
rder ditto—per dozen pairs = 0 12 0 near 
wean per pair ghee 0 0| (UILLIAM MAY, F.H.S., begs to offer, at Free 
NEN 245 per 


„128, 185. 


a 


TANs LES, _ do, do., 10s, to 188. per dozen. 
py en $ 411 411 a k a 


P GINERAR RTAS, do. do., 12s. to 18s. per dozen, 
RICAS, ae = best autumn and spring-flowering 
hinds 12s. to 18s. 
ROSES, Standards, 8 — 3 of the finest 
kinds in cultivation, . to 18s. per doz 


THE FINEST DUTCH HYACINTHS, &e. 
-YOUELL AND £o. E ed Nees e 
he o offer 
HYAC — bl d 
— 8 5503 ‘Hien. White, ia’ fS oy mate, compris sing 12s, per a 
5 PLANTS (hardy), of the very best 8, 68. 
8. per 


TRUE PMSA, app anata 
Bins and Co. beg to ann now exe cuting pap 


je 
n Ai 


Wee 155. per Dr 
e WHITE RASPBERRY, 3s. per dozen 
and maiden Peaches, Nectarines, Apricots, 
Pinme, Cherses | Pears and Apples s of the most esteemed kinds, 
warranted true 


STRAWBERRIES, 
e sale s Kitley’s Goliah 3 very hardy, 


* per r 100, e, strong, 2s. per 


P 
HUBARB, Youell’s Tabel, the Nr knows, 9s. and 
(Myatt ’s), e Albert 


ee ee oS aye wiih has 
pid spoken of by the Horticultural Society of 


London, can pplied, with the following fine dwarf trained 
Plants, 3s. 6d. 
— 

Elto 

May Duke Bla lack K lea 

Tartarian Black Guigne, — * Purple 

Black Eagle Ro we ges 

DWARF TRAINED PEARS, 

Beurré, Easter — * ‘Knight's 

Beurré Rance eckel 

Marie Louise Clout Morceau 


Incom ble, Hacon’s 
Nelis, Winter 


war of Wink: 
„STANDARD TRAINED PEARS, at 5s. each. 


Beurré, E unmore 
—— Morceau 
des Carmes a rey 


Sycamores, res 25s. er 1000; # to 5 feen, 3 
8 a B 7 PLANTING OR FENCING. Willows, Bedford, 4 to b ft., 30s. pe r 1000 5 to 6 ty $ 1000 
MR. We The large an "of the above — all ‘fine, — "rooted stuff, 
b LLIAM LAMB, having been twice transplanted, and are admirably adapted 
L NUBSERYMAN paars Baden, n Selkirk, a a large quantity of | for posting where game abounds 
three years ng a THORNS, ‘ot clean, ` pete agrei a TREES — ee aes 
plants, at 5s. per 1000; Strong Seed g Thorns, 2s. acia (Robinia), sev , dwarfs, 9s, per dozen; 
x —— a lot of superior r Larch, Spruce, — Scoteh ae ponent ant ag 125. per Tr 
three y ; Oaks, 1, 14, and 2 feet, &c., which | Ailanthus glan: Dee ee 
— gr ie prices. ltheea frutex, a renten, . to 98. per ‘ 
e * ashiels Station of — ee and Ha- Ash, 12 fine st which are the gold-barked, Chinese, 
ach of the North British Railwa; 8 12s. per doz, 
Selkirk, N B. Nor. 24, Beech, mean 2 tet . 3 to 5 feet, 125. per 


INVERNESS NURSERIES. 
BROTHERS (late | Lawsox and Surma), 


aera! crpion of FOREST ANI DORN AMENTAL 
RUIT T 3, Go., ich they have 


n q 
Varietas, selected by W. M. for display in the flower-garden, 
ks also bis stock of erde which he has been collecting 
and selecting for upwards of 25 a. ae Hardy Shrubs are 
eane in variety, being upw wards o ecies and varieties, 
and comprise all that is new and valuable, both deciduous and 
ing Arboretums, this Ss — a 


CHRONICLE. 


ii 
the por —_— producing gigantic leaves, and a spike of M 
2 Ea 


| or conserv vator. 
in 


Mircneltes RO YAL ALBER 
maintains its supremac Cy over ev 

— the 3 finest. flavoured, and best 

grow most ific bearer, and 

ren it — 8 s all 

cellar, or 


each ; ted 8 dien Ius S, 
usual allowance to the trade. 
to WILLIAM pear a, Enfield Hi 

with prompt attention á ghway, 


ug, 
de ee, 75. ed; 
Cathal’ ‘Black Prince, 158. — 100. 

— are requeste ted to - 
Manor A ee a i 


0 above i 1 
se of = 2 7 5 theo, 
ver and healt 
— City, I London, Nov ov ur e ‘ee King Wi f 
vomm e 
TE SWEET-SCENTED “VIOLA A » 
PERPETUAL TREE VIOLET. fun 


meh able b bl pete poge. 

la — as the double blue . and it 

ing 898 qualities over va ft. rs of 2 es 2 
belongs: one bloom is qui s large as the 
2 variety, one plant will produce p times je qua of 
flow will bloom for eight 8, and 2 — 
80981 80 ae flower, which is a great dee 
plant itself will make a pere specim 


bapa eb ee 


evergreen. To gentlemen form Ta ate t PEV a f Fa 2 
v vantageous opportunity. nomenc. ature adop ne ime, wi undreds of buds then 
is after Loud aon. 1 t s. d. | been in bloom the rare — ya —— mates 
Hardy Showy Herbaceous Plants, by n 100—30 0 | servatory so much, t 15 
Hardy flowering Deciduous 2 Evergreen Shrubs, dei „ 40 0 would h € e. 
Hardy Dwarf Garden Rose select e 30 0} head <li this truly — gt measures 3 sin 
sis e e sp De double — bi A of for Paes do., „ 30 0 Circumference, a nches the do 
st double, fot exhibition, do. er doz.—20 0 n, but stand out out straight f trom the II is worth 
Hoathe” a . —.— s, bushy plants, do. 12 0 | notice, that many hundreds of the old double Viv ‘emit others, 
Hard-wooded New Holland "Plante, fine young bushy, do. ave been sold for the Viola Arborea, „ 4 
per doz Foi AE 15 0 great disappointment to the purchasers. | bushy plants, 
Indian Azaleas, $ splendid varieties, do. do. per doz.—18 0 | 6s. per dozen ; smal. nes, 3s, per dozen, or 20s, 5 
en ee very select show varieties, do. „ 20 0 A remittance must accompany the order, either in cash, or in 
very good of older sorts, do. 12 0 Id. pos stamps amount pi quantity of the above 
Cinerarlas, including Henderson’s 1848 & 49 vars., do. , „ 15 0 will be sent, postage and package fre ny part. i 
Currants, May’s large late Victoria or Raby Castle „ 6 0| Sold by EDWARD 2 Nurseryman, A Tamaa e if 
e Selection left to W. M. 16, Pulteney-bri z> r aa j} 
Also Seeds pak aar from the — sorts of 1849 of Pansy, TON E 7 NTLEMEN, AND THE TRADE. i 
Hollyhock, Anti — um, Cineraria, and Calceolaria, in packets HE ADVERT 18 Eb spectfull attention R 
25. oe and 5s, F 2 NU : 
h thy and superb collection of general 


A general and extensive —.— of every description of 
Nursery tock, at very r 


** SUBSCRIBER pai ra offer ag following : 
EEDLING 3 =e TR 
Ash, 2 years, 1000 .. 
Alders, een Baska 5 
Beec 1.3 
B 85 — 20 
e, bed., 5s. to 8 
PLA j= * 

Acacias bee 100, 12s. Od 
A to 10 feet 12 

by 3 to 4 feet, p. 1000, 25 0 

55 4 to 5 fee 

Birch, Tio iR. p 1000, 0,25 0 
Elms, the true Wen 28 d her 


ed 
E os 2 years 5 per 88 pa 
215 0 
0 


” * ” 
> 


K 3 10 to 12 feet, 80s. 
„„ Me rtfordshire, at the same prons r 
5 —.— n English, 3 to 5 feet, 35s, per 1000 
ir, Sp * 2 oe 3 1 30s. per 1000; to 4 feet, 40s. per 1000 
r 1 „ per 1000 3 to 4 sy A 70 per 1000 
000; 4 to 5 feet 5s. per 1000 
eet, 30s per 100 
eng red-twigged, from 2 
100 8 to 10 feet, 758. per es 
M aple, 2 to 3 feet, 25s. per 
tèl foet, 2 25 per 1 
per 1000; ng very ery Vie ee 1000 


— rieg Scotch, 2 k 7 5 * 35s, per 1000 
ie ' Lombardy, 7 to 8 feet, 253. p. 100: 17 10 HH taas 2 100 


2 to 8 feet, 12s. to 50s, per 
10 to r feet, 100s. 8 100 
23 mAd eet, 308. per 1 


| Arbor-vitte, C 


doz. ; 6 
Purple, 2 10 Tar ge 50s. per 100 ; 3 to 4 ft., 10s 
” fe * 
per traces ig ay i 4 to 5 ft., 15s, per doz., 100s, per 100 
erberry, 8 pee pes 6s. doz., 40s. per 100 

Birch, sd st gn 253. per 100 2 * 

Elms, fastigiata, curl-leaved, silver-striped, c., 6s. to 12s. p. doz, 
Thorns, 24 rarities, including 1 double searlet, dwarfs 10s, 
13 doz., standards, 12s. to 15s, per doz. 

Laburnums, standards fine, 6s. per doz., 408, per 
piles, sorts, 25s, Mountain Ash, 5 to 6 qi 22 per 100 
Maple, Eagie’ s Claw — eee ipea kinds, $ 9s, per doz. 

* fine 3 of A an species, 6s. to 9s, per doz., 


= Portu- 


per 

: fine, . 

apie. ae hes be prt 3 re 
agt to 3 fret, very fine, 9s, per to eet, 128, 
binese and Siberian, 3 to 3 feet, ds „per doz. ; 3 to 


4 feet, 12s. pe: 


| of — fine growth, wh ich 


of which a Catalogue may 
the thousand price. 


harees are 


smaller quan 


2 Pec ade Trees, n e., at similar charges, 
op 


3 e r 
the following, of which he has this season very large qua 


low prices 

Spanish r Selui Elms, Se teb, Spruce an 

Firs, Weymouth Pine, English € Oaks, P 
Com: 


Lucon en Ilex Oaks, 
beris ifolia, Phillyreas, — 
Dwarf Roses, Trained and uari Fruit Trees, &e 


M T , 
Nb allway communication direct to a pac of the 
kingdom. eee ee 
| COCHIN CHINA FOWLS, and aber Sae 
Sale. ~— Apply. by ot gen paid), to W. 
6, Birchin-lane, e s 


MacLacblan’s, 


Sii Bt 
ours * attention. To be 
their Show i King’s-ro 2925 e sat 
most of the — and Gentlemen's Seats 
London Nur 
ric 


E aL 2 
ALSO THE OULTIYA 1108 OF 2 
m 17939 FERNS, Ge. 


100 
pay ses, 8 Pert 


WATER in various forms. show. 
, Heating, and Ver 


Not less than 6 will py A 25 h 
ared p 5 on bles, mie oo 


47—1849.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. = mor: N 


MEE BEST EARLY PEA &) Voru peou was afterw 


ards given, was first d 


s- j having been taken from him b English ay 
. . covered by Mr. pori Sir Ronnies SCHOMBURGK, bw although uni unintentionally o m by E — 
Sutton's Early Champion, 3 feet . 13, Od. . 30. d. thus ribed the interesting event. flo owers yo rm eiae the — Natera dh History 
— eari 3 Sii 2 2 i : 2 : ; ee While contending with the difficulties — in Pari arly as 1828; and ia they had 
airbeard’s Surprise, 4 1 $0568 8 ; “imposed in diffe rent forms to our progress up the unnoticed ; — Wee We sho uld be curious to 
Pato fet 3 of " Bagland, 25 Sing river Berbice ‘din British Guiana), we ative know how long they would have been beried ia the ` 
PPP S E E e z ata point where the river expanded, formed | rubbish of our own British Museum. í 
meee Katy —— 1.4. a currentless basin; so t on the southe pursue the botanical history further 
Te Warwicks, Framan, Mays, and 20 i “ extremity of this basin attracted my attention ; it | than by stating that Sir Wx. Hooxsr, having re- 
1 ai ae pri THe WAITE, Bovu R, the Afa “ was impossible to form any idea what it could be, | ceived 7 and important additional mem 
a age n existoues, 2a. 6d. per nea “and an ng t w to increase the rate of | fi HOMAS 5 collected the informati 
TRUE ASHLEAF KIDNEY POTATOES, and a hele aoii Z their paddling, we were shortly afterwards oppo- | here alluded into a memoir published in 1847, 
aie. to SUTTON anD SONS, Res . r ite the object which had raised m curiosity a and illustrated by four coloured folio 
recommend the above articles ; also many othe: ds of Veg wo der ! lamities were forgotte san lish botanist enjoyed the fortune 
new Kitchen Garden Seeds, a Catalogue of whic just 4 “Ite t as a botanist, and felt my: warded : a first to make this plant known in a scientific manner, 
WEE Gattinge free to London, Bristol, or Basingstoke, for all „ gigan ntic leaf, from 5 to 6 feet in diameter, so has an English gardener had the honour of ‘first 
orders not less one 10s “ salver-shaped, with a broad rim; of a light green | causing it to produce its glorious blossoms in a hot- 
— SPLENDID NEW GERANIUMS. “ above, and a vivid crimson below, resting upon the | house. So long since as 1847 two plants were raised 


BORGE PARSONS | F. «aes es * 5 “water. Quite in character with the wonderful in the Royal Botanical Garden a Xow and su 
nin ärieties, which LEEA oorifidentiy recommend, |. s leaf was the luxuriant flower, nee, of many | quently many others have vegetated there. Of these, 
l 


Beck’s Refulgen 0d | Hoyle’s Belle of the Vil- | 9 petals, passing in alternate: tints from | one was obtained Ir. Paxton in the beginning of 
b tee a . i : Sparkler 2 5 T 15 „ pur white to rose and pin The smooth water | August last, and immediately transferred to Chats- 
„ Princes 5 0 „ Prometheus . 5 0 a, covered with th Bi oms, and as I rowed | worth. Such means of cultivating it as skill and 
5 — 2 8 5 pms el hore ; r “from one to the other I always se me- WS ni 09 eal were provided, an three 

Stcrey’s Mont Blane 5 5 0 2 Sanne ms 7 6 “thing new to admire. The leaf, on its upper | mon er appe above water. On the 

Hoyle’s Rolla 5 0 Flamingo “surface, is of a bright green; in form almost 10th of August the plant was consigned to its tank; 


T e pia 
commend his fine collection of itis Gor- 8 orbicular, except that on one side it is slightly on the 14th of November a flower and leaf were 


G. P. also be; egs 

manica ‘ike — ‘sole a good time eee e them), in col- 1 

1 50 splendid varie 1 105. „bent in; its diameter measured from 3 to 6 feet; produced before Her Haet and Prince Alnknr, at 
stern- right Nov. 24, 


Nestern. road, Brighton, Nov. 24 around the whole margin extended 4 rim, from ro He on the 17th another 3 expanded, 
HORTICULTURAL ESTABLISHMENT, BRACONDALE, |“ 3 inches high, on the inside light green, as if to welcome to eee ye le Duke on 
OHN BELL, having disposed of the above, be egs to „ Uke the surface of the eaf, on the outside his return “from Ireland o 
J inform Nurserymen and the Trade in general that hie is. “ 4 like — leafs lower surface, of a a bright crimson. This must be regarde * asa ce striking example 
SELLING OFF his NURSERY STOCK, at the following low are very promine nt, almost an inch high, of horticultural skill, and shows the importance of 
Dw var? Mai iden Peaches, Nect am, pier 5 £8 d. 4. “ radiating from a a «ak ER yms * — attending carefully to ee princi les in all experi- 
cluding all the popular ma 1 m — P pee principal ones, with a good many others, branch- | mental rp 5 Axrox acted, we 
Dw. warf Ms ates Pics ý ing off from them ; these are crossed ain by a now proceed to 
Do. Penri reies N 5 . „ 2 W ~ bands at kge 33 1 In a WN of pe ient dimensions, a tank was 
om Do., on Quince Stocks „ 1 e whole the appearance of a spider's web, and | constructed 3 feet deep and 12 feet square warmed 
Fastolff a strong canes, true .. per 1000— r “ are beset with prickles ; the veins contain air- by hot water rbag an beneath. TTo ‘this was 
Gsirus Deodara, one year old, fe. -ss „1 “cells like the petiole and flower-stem. The added a ledge all round, 9 inches deep, 3} feet 
Fine lege ish Chestnut, 8 to 10 Road V “ divisions of the ribs and bands are visible on the wide, and heated by a triple row of small lead pipes, 
72 g 3 yea 3 5 3 upper surface of the leaf, by which it appears through which hot water circulated. By these meang 
Strong, Dwarf-trained Peaches, Nectarines, and Apricots, |“ areolated. The ng leaf is convolute, and the tank was rendered 19 feet square, with a deep 
24s. per doz, Plum rs, Apples, and Cherries, 20s. per doz, | 4. „ expands but slowly. The prickly stem mitra | centre and shallow sides. 
1 SEASON. -NURSERY GROUN DS, | “ with the yog leaf till it has reached the surfac In order to keep the water in mo 


tion. 
RED LO ORTH STONEHAM, NEAR SOUTH. x on, 
AMPTON, 2 limited supply of every description o 4 by the t it is devoloped, its own — 85 we. Fig. III. a, was added at one corner; one that 


FOREST, Ey eee e TREES, AMERI | “ pests tho om , and it flo oats on ae 8 “day wheel water was 88 to drop 88 with 
. PLA S, may be pro- te stalk of the ower z an inch thick near the ca yx, | force enough to eep the wheel constant! are 
cared from these extensive grounds, at the most reasonable “and is studded with sharp elastic prickles, about | the — thus continually flowing into the = 

th. Th by 


— — Catalogues of which may be had of the pro- 
tor, WM. ROGERS, Sen., NURSERYMAN snp Contracrine | “ three-quarters of ai an a ich in lengt e calyx is 
“ s 

Transplanted Forest Trees, 1 to 2 feet, adapted for extensive | , four-leaved, each se epal ‘upward of 7 inches bottom: In this way were secured the — 
Forest or Coppice Planting, usually sold by the thousand; and | in length, a and 3 inches in breadth; at the base | vantages of the water being so often changed that it 
ae 3 Ornamental Planting or immediate “ they are thick, white inside, reddish brown and | could not become 2 igen 

fect, from 3 to the prices varying from 25s, to 5“. p. 100. gç + . 

Ash, Beech, Birch, Tss. to 80s, per 1000; Spanish Chestnut, prickly outside 3 the diameter is poe 12 nee gentle agitation. No 
8 Sage Fir, + phos piei ga te eek | i 13 inches; on it rests the magnificent corolla, | natural state of a tranquil river. 
an Scote S., 15s., and 203. naste Sey 2 
20s.; Sea Pine, adapted for exposure to t e sea, 156, 255., and | , “ which, when £ z ; 2 ea a Wh paratus its temperature could also be regulated 
40s.; Mahonia, for cover, 408. to 80s. ; Hazel, 15s., 20s., and | the with its hun petals. en with facility. The thermometer 
— — Oak, 15s., Bae 2 40s. ; ; Poplar, 203., 30s., and ig first opens, it is white, with pink i in the middle, cated 8 


“ which spreads over the whole flower the more In th : tre of the tank v 
Figur for t Bl. to 20l. P $ e centre ¢ 
Ke 5 l =e p it advances in age, and = is generally found the of earth (Fig. J.), consisting of burnt 
inch x tog a pink colour; as if to To the burning of the lo . 


2 2 per 100, fit for planting out at once to | “ enhan ts beauty, it is sweet-scented, Like | great im ; and this 
ers tt 5 fe e eee ‘ees of “ite sean i e petals and stamens experiance of ies who e 
ome as a cahira am Tree Roses, | gradually into each other, an many etaloid materials in ening, | 
Scarlet Rhododendrons, 18s. per dozen; hybrid scarlet, blue, | “ leaves may ed which have vestiges of an soil is much improved by the 
g; lilac, and white, with large ee gh i arag fatifolia, 3 ried “anther. The petals next se = eaves of the and insects are destr Mr. Paxton is also of 
1 “fo. 12. 0d. por 100; 1 to 2 feet, blooming buds, 50a. | “ calyx are fleshy, and possess air-cells, Which opinion that the removal by fire of all ‘matters ready 
8 prei“ a, must a to the buoyancy of the | to enter into atii n, 
eed any N in 
is 
e- 
0 68. 
3. 6d. Roses of the most er 
5 named, with the progress of the 
$ 1; Large Dutch Honeysuchles, 12s, 6d. his eyes; nor was exag- Lily, we refer to a dns by Mr. 
he prices are for Wh iesala if ordered in less quantities a | geration in his eons as the event — shown. —— . = has the special charge of the 
öl, carriage} Supposing it to be a species of Nymphæa, Sir R. 


"tarde 3 All orders above ôl., 


MBURGK proposed that * — Mai Thel t produced is nearly 5 feet in 


a 47 
purchasers will find great advan! n ten ‘sh sult | ba mhet ts permit its sec be that P Tho ag . largest tbr 105 vam in i. 
de- of Viorokla; a request with which toe: inet was i latter appears to be seen by 
graciously leased to com. It however proved, Brinces ; Sonex, “however, he s that he saw 
01e NURSERY, BAGSHOT, SURREY. upon examination in Europe, not to be a Nympheea; flowers as much as inches 1 and 
OHN WATERER has much pleasure in and it e e writer of the present D’Orsicny 5 Sars ofa rite The leaves, too, 
memorandum bo have the honour of finally establish- although larger than any mentioned by Brivces, 
ing it as a new genus, of which Vierorta became the are inferior in magni hose found in Berbice, 
joni, one of which meas es in diameter. 
i Professor Lixovey, of apri- It thus appears — . skill has sueceed 
vately printed memoir upon the „ elicited in the Vioro 
— me further i from which it appeared to the gaze of E 
—ů— sra | that the same, or ee e og i ; asm 
—— 2 eee, oe f a z ina tri 1 he ver i ry | è i 5 


were 348 — i 1 
«| ier i 
eee eee ee eee $ $ 4 > 


o accomplish, All 
Š : f e dis- th che leaves being turned 
on SLLIS rati ‘tricts im all the lakes and tranquil tropical rivers of he 1 bea the rim thus 
. iw nee p ‘annoyed! at the k 


travellers — of the 
up; a a dat 
formed as as 31 


740 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, [Nov. 24, 
— 


WS 


. {O E 
MAS . : ) 


eec 


Fig. I. Section of tank, showing hillock, 

Fig. II. Rough sketch of Victoria—nearly natural size 
—as seen at 6 P. x. 

Fig. III. Isometrical view of tank; a, water-wheel ; 
on one of the es in front a man’s hat is placed, in 
order to show the size of the leaves, 


E 


i a 


47—1849.] 


The le eaves are, in fact, 


parts o l a size, wh perha 
owing to the rapidity of ‘their formation. Neve 
2 o buoyant as to gg of sup- 


them; this is 


weight. The 
— young lady about 42 lbs.—in all, the w 
uch less than 60lbs. An enormous 1 it 
of . of considerable size, dispersed throug 
the thick ribs of these leaves accounts for the 
buoyancy. ; 
flower itself, when it first opens, resembles 
the White Water-Lily, of a dazzling white, with its 
fine 5 — ry petals forming a goblet of the most 
elegant proportions; but as the day advances it 
r expands till it becomes nearly flat; to- 
wards evening a faint blush becomes visible i in the 


ange occurs; in 

m arrange el ves in u the 

form of a snow-white hemisphere, whose edge reposes 

oem ome water, eh the centre rises majestically at the 

; roducing a diadem of r sy ‘ 

has — then the 9 . sketched at Fig. II., 
eh constitutes one of the most elegant objects in 

Shortly after ths. e expansion ri the central 

poris ta proceeding, these points fall back; the stamens 

n interior coronet, 85 stigmas are laid e 

* a grateful perfume rises into the and the 
great object of the flower, the fertilisation of the 

inwards the petals, 

1 able textures 
nd the flower 


— 
e 


seeds, is accomplished. Then fold 


veil the progress this 
arises a n 


THE GARDENERS’ 


r| pointed ou 


CHRONICLE. 


| new leaves and flowers issue from the centre, keeping 32 pa towers in sey 
| the pmt from rene itself above water, which, | is strained 

s|but for such a case. 

. — the pate of its grov 


n be relied upon, the probability i is, perhaps, | °t 
in miben of its not being an ual. 
That its natural habits are gn as to render ~ 
perfectly 97 4 ere bei artificial management i 
striking manner in another + eae 
in this collectors letter 55 s Sir 3 Hooker. 
á proh: he says, in 4—6 feet of 
and flowers, ‘Shick rapidly 


2 are seldom more than four 

he surface; but even * in —— of the aks 
— the plants 8 numerous, almost covered the 
surface of t e leaf touching the other. 
The plant pala 7 2 ely the w 
with the exception of a few floating a of s small 
dimensions, amongst which I saw a beautiful Utri 
cularia. The blossoms rise Fe a j in ia above 
the surface, expanding first the vening, W. 
they are pure w 1 finally (and ‘tga ex- 


ure to the * to 
; flowers may be s 

every tinge — een ae two 
8 expanded 
rosy, almost sinking under water to ripen its seed 
and ew race of plants when required. 


ame time, par- 
hues, the 


mw 
nature and habits of this most interesting plant, 
onclude that it aya and does not exist in any of 
the rivers where the immense rise and fall of 20 feet 
would leave it * dur Farg! months of z year, 
especially in the season w es h 
ie ad e to little 9 in the height 
re the places where it grows in all, 


a n iy tes pink or rose |! 


being pure white, and the adult ber 


tor a week 
1 it up and di 
spirit for a w — . ; 


—— off (we 3 the first in this, or in any 
her country, real “ Extract of Wallflowers” that has 
ever been prepared. The man perfumers of 
Pari London imitate the Wallflower thus— 
leur d’ ge 1 pint. 
* anille 1 pint. 
5 Rose, from ponsi pint. 
3 piot. 
Wintan G GREEN (Frit 1 now and n used by 


the Parisi 


n scenting soap. 


We have now terminated remarks simple 
perfumes, er but little is to be said on the 
compounds or bouquets, which are various mixtur 


a certa 
Musk, Civet, Ambergris, The com 
are the most distinct ; there i which is in constant 
use in the present day, ar es i from 


every 

nown spice in equal proportions, 5 ile is added in 
weight ground Orris root equa whole, with one 
and civet. A liquid of the same 

ted bya prane of ‘ong above, one Mereutio 


by diges stin 
which oe Sh out the fragrant 
merit of being the 


80 Paris, prepared 
g the ebe; powder in proof spirit, 
principles. Ithas the 


enormous 
is difficult to approach the 
consumption of this ar ile Dut we are certainly within 
the limit in stating that 4,0 


for preparing it are as various as the inventive facul 
of the pe 8 or "the distiller, as he styles 41 
One p the best i 


0 t 
ew living ‘ee ; the fruit, curve d I ob ti ure ale oe ae 45 1 gall, 
downwards, swells rapidly, and in a short 3 the | overshaded the margin — ce of Bergamot 1 . 3 = 
1 fruit, a pric y -vessel, is observed conceal another colum we publish some tables ex- . Orange peek om 
beneath the floating leav Further hin “this the | planatory of the rate ‘of ‘growth of this curious plant. sf 25 1} oz, 
_ Vicrorra has no = atl but travellers say : the 5 p y ERO 8 “ra he 15 a it grain Ai bee gt z = 
hat at last th ned fi tically | plan on which i een managed at Cha of H ite 
4 1 eee 2 an example of the way in which all other tropical e 
above the Syan e in the shape of a goblet of exquisite p * 
5 1 aquaties should be conte by thos 1 to s a Mix — the whl opal ot ee om 
F in perfection. k containing Vicrorta, the | filter; e remain in a temperate cellar 
f . fragrance 3 ef the plant 37 r- M 5 heas rubra, cœrulea, stellata, and ampla, from six to 12 mouths, it is is then fit for use. Another 
experience RipeEs describes it in the + i : g aiir admired bonquét ts thé’ 50 ald © HL 
followi W I had an opportunity of ex- the Nelumbiums of India, some Sagittarias, — . He ee 
periencing the fragrance of the flowers. Those I charis, and Hydrocleys, 5 Papyrus or two, with t i Hungary, who is said to have derived great benefit from 
collected on preserving in spirits were aa ee vtederas, would b So 5 most beautifu thi of. pathi age 75 years It is prepared like 
85 on the point of opening; on arriving at the spectacles the eye could eer u au de Cologne; but with more are and th 2 
ae ten. House, in the town, I d ted them o eee dition of a little Esprit de Rose, subtracting from 
oom, and returning td ‘dark, Tio I found to my | ON THE cer y. pT PL 1. SAND: THE MODES | ¢ for orm given ren al ve all Orange. With 
surprise = all had blown exhaling a 4 this we for the p present 4 
delightfu l odour, which at first I compared to a „ eee e steal thy s —.— that swells, Of different 3 or the bag in bue, 
Pine-apple, afterwar Melon, and then to the If not from my love's brea Sus i Can make me any longer story tell.” SHAKSPEARE. 
ppo oth the white and see varieties of this ene «cic EM ee 
moya ; but Keroh it resembled none of thes 33 1 
fruits, and I at len e to the decision that it flowe ge ee grea eaa ee PLAN OF STRIKING ROSES. 
was a most delicious 25 very other, and ae a der, 1 er principle oro of| I mave succeeded we vus eg p Cga i 3 
‘peculiar to the noble flower that produced it.” let fi hir i ted. but the | followiog manner a pan square 
eien a better month — vers hag never y in pe 2 with spirits A 3 3 pince pa ongs a few 3 
than November to appreciate the justice of this or oil, as mentioned i rocess for Orange flowers al, z odes Ei = — = sagar > 
tion and others, namely, by absorption or enfleurage, first bro m d bil 8 i 5 whole 
33 the example oa by Mr. Paxton there and afterwards by digesting the | teat- l mix 
owing 2 P y. . , e a Y» h Peis et’s | well together, and press firmly. 
is no lover of flowers, who othouse at pommade thus formed in pure alco As The poikii Ss 4 I Gua 6 be 
reafter be ed by the red is vary doliente; j =e = e~ for the — pony PTD „ 
Possession of this vegetable wonder. If it saree 28 or Oris Tost in the fat body prior to its | choose a dull day f peration, and en to a heel if 
x! annual, as some suppose, the facility ab used for the enfleurage of the Violet, thus giving ble; then insert the cuttings with a small sonar 
with aray it seems ready to produce e — is or Orris root (which 80 5 the heel 8 may be near the ya 
ts permanence in the country. But upon de have not noticed in its alphabetical place) much re- | at the bott be pens Fae cae dohing fens 
that joint there is much room for doubt: and sembles the of Violet, and hence its preparations | the soil, about an Fe ig A when the — ar 
Iden 3 3 y favour of are of in conj ion and as a substitute for give a good watering p and sprinkle ti Of a quarter 
inte! mia llowin irit to stand over ground : z 
— nee + E pe wosks i al toa fs to abstract | of an inch. Then plunge op ips gees 
FT ogre at en principle. The Cassie 4 apra ar- | frame, . 3 
— also resembles the Violet, and is by the per, occasionally ehroughe They e 
to inerease the odour of the highly-prized| of depayod Me, when they begin to grow. 
4 5 strait de Violette ill dy for 
en as the odour of this flower of May 1 = a — 
is, it is not in perfumery, though no doubt it 1 up with a bandfal 
t be, and very successfully too, were the plant mnt 
= cultivated for that purpose. To this flower we would — to 
ng arly direct attention, as one we- ew ana 
Maple ae bei b on beit ele Pe gebe and 
a eee ptaini vic odour that we. would — ae 
to be tried are enongh ; to any quantity of removed more 
and sweet Olive oil as dee, 
flowers, without any of the green leaf, asean dhe ing Roses in- 
niie FS one week; strain fa 
convenient the oll with pressure in a coarse cloth; if 2 
it is r 4 ne odorous. If the oil, how- i oo 
ever, after two or three operations, od moams; ee esas 
or has only uired a bitter or rancid smell, no further 
periments need be tried, the thing is a failure. If, 
on the contrary, the oil becomes fragrant, 3 
th ut e r pS 
lard, kept just, and only, at a melting 


742 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONIC 


LE. 


[Nov. 


“STATISTICAL REMARKS on toe RATE OF GROWTH or me LEAVES, 


N. B. Each Leaf is numbered, in order to distinguish it from the other leaves. 


S | Measure. 
8 —— of 8 
eaves, | Sis 
Days of 8 ; ng 
the ie Bude -| oa GENERAL REMARKS, 
Month. 8 8 2 23 
S 22 28 S 
6 83 228 
s Soe JSE 
Z | Sa 9 
ft, ins, ft. ins. ft. ins. 
„ 3} 5 jvisible| ... -f ... When the plant was brought 
N 51180 to Cha 9 3 
oi 1 Ny pa * Tr leave 
a respective 
5 of 
— 3954 * a Sg inches, 
and another leaf visible. 
æ 6j. J0 H| .. is leaf was taken o 
0 55 perished, on the 10th Sept. 
680 
n 7 
e This leaf was taken off on 
„ 10 . 0 83/0 43 the 13th September. 
„ wink Od. 11008 
„ 12 0 65 0 7 
» 130.0 7 0 780 7% 
e ene This leaf was taken off on 
„ 13.0 40 5 the 15th of September. 
a 38 0 53/0 616 
> ae 0 7 0 8 
8 1 0 83/0 95/0 97 
. He Not expanded. 
r This leaf was taken off on 
es s the 20th. 
» 18] wih €3/.0.8 
„ 19)... 0 85) 0 93 
„ 20) . | 010 | 0 105 
1 0 104| 0 103) 0 103 
„ 119.94. ws £04 
w» 20) ...10 610 7 
2 21 0 74 0 A! g leaf was taken off on 
„ 22|.. 0 93 0 10, 22d of September. 
„ 28| ... | 0 108} 011 0 11 
w i Ve The leaf visible on the plant, 
so 22 wri Not expanded. 
„„ cont OE Taken off on the 27¢ 
» 2 we 1-08 : oe 
» — 1 0 1 
l 101 011 
„ 1 
24 11 5 The leaf appearing on the 
yrs of the water; stem 
„ 26. 0 6 9 ine 
„ 27) . 0 81/0 93 Taken off on the 29th, 
n 
5 1 1 1 
„ 300 . 1 1/1 2 
Sept. 30 , 1 2% 23 
i [ż ins. long. 
Aug. 27 12 The leaf not expanded; about 
ee e About half expanded. 
„ 29. 0 90 103 Taken off on 4th October. 
„ 80|... | 0.113} 1 Q 
oe OES OPI aay ae 
Sept. 1. 1 24 1 23 
N When the leaves only made 
4 an inch in 24 pase I did 
not deem it necessary to 
w eae tk oe note down the — 
to „ measurement. 
„„ %% eg ee a. . 
Aug. 30 13 s = The young leaf had thrown 
> off 13 inch from the crown 
Sept, 2. 0 9 of the lant, 
„ 38 1 171 87 Taken oi 
„ 1 41 
oO £11 6 
J 
„ OH | ES 
ream | a > k 
25 . 738 Half expanded at 8 a.m, 
„ „0111 1 Taken off on the 10th Oct. 
» — 1 Bh) 1 54 
55 e 
3 — 1 91100 
* , J LICU 
a 10 Fl j 
1 E 0 : 
» = W oe 17 | Not quite expanded. 
i : 15 Taken off on the 14th Oct. 
22 
bier ao Oe 
a Half expanded. 
N : A Taken off on the 17th, 
2 1 
8 wba: y 4 8 5 


1 S asure. 
nt of 2 s ent of S ; 
ays of So] Leaves. | i * of 8 Loerie. 23 5 
the 2 | ag GENERAL REMARKS, e m a „| Sn ‘ 
onth. 3 28 8 bed Month, 8 23 285 F GENERAL RAAB 
atte ISOS JE 38 [C8 3s 
9 83 288 4° 3 se 13888 
2 | AD — 2 | Zo 9 
3 — . —— n 
ft. ins. ft. ins ft. ins Ps ft. ins. ft. ins, ft. ins 
Sept. 14 17. 0 7 Not half expanded. Oet. ee if oe % „ | Thrown ofe . 
visas (iain og a W 64 | ~ 5 ENET Not expanded from centre, 
ca) eal : : 2 = | Taken off on the 26th. ” : - : 5 Not expanded. f 
17 442 ” 
„ 18] 2 812 9 s: 3 6| 310 
3 2 1035/2 11 $ 4 04 13 
er 3 0/3 02 is 4 2314 33 
nom 3 13 ‘> 4 444 5 
55 25 3 2 57 4 64 63 
[from ort » 7 4 7 
35 18 Hee ome é Young leaf 2 off 6 in ” Í 71 
„„ Hardt 2 8 * aay 
200 .. 2 4 2 83 . S sete: 
„ 2102 94} 2 113 VVV Thrown off about 9 l. ae 
„ 22 3 13/3 3 55 i 2 3 ; a About half expanded, 
9 1 3 433 5 ef ae 
8 3 54/3 7... Ins stem of this leaf was > 33 
2 3 UF a l3 Th 9 ft. 6 in. long, ” ig 4 y : : 
BEA y 55 
„ 22 19 1 5 1 103 This leaf was not expanded 4 43 * 6 
„ 23 — 2 44/2 8} at the morning measure- „ “p ** Tà 
55 > : 3 B Taken off Nov, 8, [ment, Nov. -| = |£ 84 8 ! 
33 . 3 — —— f fl 
2 3 89 3 9 Oct. 23 29 in ia n wn about 9 5 
p 3 94| 8 10} 2528) story] 1 41 a, Bee tsi one ay 1 
2 3 11 5 | 3 2-0/2 6 Taken off sent to the 
Oct. 40 4 0 55 27 2 103 2 Queen, 
winnie ae $6] 310 d 
* 20 ee rem Half expanded at 8, 55 — . w a í 05 i 
: 233 : as Not fully expanded at 8, * 31 £ 7 4 75 
2 3 3.2 Taken off Nov. 9. Nov. 1 tee 
2 3 33 3 6 = „ 7 4 N 
A A 3 3 9 55 1 4 98 pie 3 2 
Oct. 3 10 | 8 103 ie eee This is the largest leaf 
2”? 4 1 P: duced, ve 
; 1 4h 2 
Oct. 29 0 “ft m apie rie 
Sapt NIANI LGN o No quite expanded, „ 80)... |. | 2 0 | Partly expanded, 
x 30 „2 2 6 *. Taken o ee | 2 103 3 
Oct. pe ey — = the first leaf upon = Nov. 1 3 8) 3 9 
„ 3 8 that turned up i ” t 1j% 
„ 3.3 923 10 4 4 4 6 
55 4 s |9 11} 4 0 15 L 4 7 F 
„ 5 . 4 03/4 13 $e toni By as f 
§ 4 2 cis — eoi 
ANE Oct. 30/31] ... |... |... [Thrown off about 6 in. f 
7 12 é 8 Nov. 2. . 0 91] , |Partly expanded, 
* panded. „, 2 813.9 
is Pi. on 33 E 43 
» 2 Not fully expanded. „ 5 3 83) 3 10 
25 4 2 WAS 14 Taken off on the 19th, 25 € .. 4 1 4 14 
: wd 8 4187 . 
ae snr I STS u The stem of this leaf was „ 80. 4 5 4 5 
55 ip Oe 1} 13 fee et long. » 10 4 64 ... ou 
» wit kosi 2 er s aS 
* „ [| + 34 4 . — — | 
R Oct, 31 32 a a 
s i ove i Ki 4 53 Nov. oe 1 6 . on 
|| — RE | aa 
2 23 5 te +. |About half expanded, * ids 3 0 
. 292 8. earl d „ 
8 39 3 3 e e Ne ides dak a 
* 3 73 10 y ep awe A 
5 4 0 4 22 „ UBL ea | Heid 
5 „ ARNET | ond eo 
1 
ate Ses eH e 
1 4 4 8 3 y iina gi psa 
5 2 „ „„ [Thrown off fr i Ct thas 1 6} — 
e ae “on Half expanded; stem t 5 
„ 10% „ 2 2 n i fooi „ 11 fe % 3 0 
pi 3 33 6 „ „„ 
„ 1 8 83 3 103 ay AOD OR eee 
„ 18 „ 4 0 4 13 „ A 
» 144 23/4 3 „ 
ar TE 4 4 „ „ 
„ 17 „ 4 %% 4 42 gor 18 „4 
8 3 „„ AG ai ft a dood 
15 j W .. Thrown off about 9 in. from — — — — 
J ji bs 1 4 . |Partly rammed A TOF fe pat 
et webs OF 2 6 1S... Foetal ly expanded at 8, W. era. ie 
55 e F836 ee, ee e 
» — 3 T33 9} » Bio Sae 
» 3114 4 2 * . 10 
a II 4 8 ð 16 . 18 8 
. T „. odthowd o E ER td 
„ 190 4 4 4 44 „ 1 
5» í wer 4 43 ” 19 ings 6 wee one 
Pv | Ave e i Naas 5 
„ 15 26 1 . {Thrown off 9 in. „ AROS. p iin 5 wae 
” oe 2 0 2 8 t 35 16 diy ae 0 193 ees owe 
” id 02813 6 jak SACL Wee AE 
s —. 3 10 3 12 „ See 
„ I9 „ . ike Se 
„ 20% | 4 34 34 
„ „„ 
„ (bad. 
Noy. — 4 8 . '4 8 Discovered the first flower. 


&., on THE VICTORIA REGIA, 


AT CHATSWORTH. 


8 


plant. 


ea ves 2 aha 
de. George Bus rte 19, 1849. 


you said re- Src rr tai i 
give September, 1 


as 


dred 
weather in an 


ee 


W ee 


47—1849.] 


bers 


attained in one season. 


Sy bere atii 
Eblouissan 


THE — ESE: 


bad | a 
e 2 a 1 > eight n —.— 


w 
care, may be i eve 
by persons pe initinted i in the art of p 


ime, 2 feet; Cen e 
time, 3 feet ; Rivers (Laffay’s), — time, 4 r and 
em 


E — sim — 2 — 


to 4 feet; 


rs are from 2 
tantly i in bloom all summer, In 
the 7 e Perpotuals 1 I have Robi 

com bushe: 


= ap EIO E ee we E AA eT 


st 
; bier budded) ag you were here 
pere all planted in 
feet hight — of them an 


circumference 


„it; 
— ‘or the first three years, it may in 
Do. obviated. 


ae 


as with the quality of the fruit 
I would — particularly direct attention 
int, with a view to of 
eae be done by attending early to 
young trees are properly nh ren and 80 2 
a great m 
ure b 
irs nh, then, allow no strong shoots to exist in the 
eee or ere tree, and this must be effected in the 
mer pruning, or rather — ng. There n 
oy no fear that there will be a defi i 


— OLE 


ased t 
1 * feet be Boe the water, 
te 


eed | Tights to the trade? 


743 


and were removed to their 
ts, merely sin them to 

I — * * since they 
have in- 

a large size, and — — stan 


in w 


4. Sani Pe ld 2 Now 3 21. 

G Chairs.—The large e 

in the 88 D —— ol last 8 p. 723, the 
parson who attac 


what the difference in appearance will be 
y comparing the cuts with this —— on 
Peruvian Guano Trade. — How com 
Gibbs and Co. are sole im 
guano ł What is the nature ka 


of 2. 5 Wh 


centre. The next point i — 
under branches an inelination up . This the the — 
will draw the sap in irection, and relieve the | farmers content with a single os house of 
middle of the gain, never allow the intermedial | 8° valuable a commodity ? est that if 
central branches to extend so far as the others ; the sap Me ibbs and Co. have given a“ par te ak 
will, consequently, be controlled and regulated. The for appropriating this branch of trade, it would be 
us trained will nt a much more beautiful | desirable that their outlay and “ good-will” sho 
ural form, the il regular and |be bought up by the public, and th po 
perfect, and the tree itself will continue to bear for a of a most valuable manure be subjected to the cheap- 
much longer time. The sele for pruning the — effects of competition. A. P., Nov.16. [The 
each has, in most on ¢ g. This is, | guano beds 8 the property of the Peruvian Govern- 
however, the very worst time throughout the whole ment, which has concede ed the exclusive right of 
ear for pruning this t as much of this kind of work | Working eal to ibbs and Co., for an ade- 


done in early summer, by wt pera S the buds, and by 
t laying ch greater 1 numb er — shoots than 
be sec wood, 
keeping in mind that on the curren nt —— 5 7 — 
the followi e ear’s faa mainly depends. 


* 


They are budded with all the best —— of Ros 


stocks with Bourbons, yey 8 — 
m1 foot to 3 feet high, as andards 
I feel eonfid ent they will form bea heads. 
eonfident am I of — superiority of sa Manettii 
every other stock for Roses pien I shall thd 
in plant any cer, excepting for fall-sized sta 
other stock light san 


advantage 


— 
— it thrives well on ieee aa where the B 


Will not thrive at all ; and this ‘amy away with all he 8 


Objections that some 

all Roses seem to do well plies oa it—better, 

than upon their own roots, and no doubt they will T loon 

— — many on their 8 
rowing a quantity of roo 

— run wild. The above is a faithful account 5 

By success with the Rosa Manetti as a stock fo r the 


are 


0 
istory of the Manet stock i is as follows. Some 
Crivelli 


These he described as being ye 0 
most valuabl for stocks in the 


bisi 


respect 
stock of 

m mg, 
rich voi and and bedded the them found ig — buds | 
drowned in the nin igi 


eee: 


could hag materiall this = : 2 secon 
only be propagated by „while tter 
cutting * — 


ast ad 45 SUBURBAN GARDENING. 


iw 


fulness require, many evils will be pio which winter | 

and 8 — 3 inflie 

and the leaves begin to 

fall "the e time to regulate and 

— * ‘the young aes practice or fully 
ved the a 8 of cutting away at least one-half 

ra the young growth ; and when this is of a weakly cod 
cla ene mee with 1 Afte 


G= 
3 


is pruned, i emyr left in a — 
state until the following spring. Pha 


By ae 
4 an nd _ continued disbudding during summe ier, s0 wou 


— i 
za z chas 


whic 
| will probably grow ; by doing so, they will enable the 
gardener * 7 ve 


of these 
Ww 


s the great security 


eas.— 
I was at a loos t to 3 


h they 


rovide acco accordingly, and also impro 
Kitehon garden. Mary, Nov. 14. 


=y 
e | ordinary length of time with ice of any reaso 
thic so that it does not actually reach the root ; 
moreover, z seems 4 indiferent. oe the quality 
or description of soi hich it is located. 


oes ; in this two of g roots were organs 
end was grav much 

stones —— the two * plants, by way age anchor to 

keep them ing made a few 


rom driftin 
hold er, to the bottom. of them are are now 


after planting, 
about 8 inches, to keep 
grow and flower equally free on the — e —— in 
mud; and a spl appearance t 
to six weeks every May and June, [r — 16 to 


times cut dow 


eat (foliage as well as flowers), 25 ia end of April or | the e 


_ = May, b 


pletely c covered their e preas 3 ; and 9 the 
of flowers was 


ee nt without 28 a — 
5 of July they had 


557 different 

yellow “gt — Water-Lilies, their — 
think it might be worth 

one of gn plants down every spring, — = 

sake of the autumn flower. gie y sga 20. 

There are at ng, in pon 

‘ 2 tro plants of the 


the Æthio- 


ter coats everything with rast in an incredibly 

farin time, and many gel be have occasi ly watered 
— = —— — Indeed, summer, we thought 
waa os ge and used this 


g cn tions 


re lidium, w 


rom five | ei 


— each plant. Since — pns they have | g 
surface of the |in 


con- 
habit of some | ex 


0 
the 


house | Pian which have been in n nuelei or c 
* at least seven years, They were —.— standing i 


Sotieties. 

Linnean, Nov. 20.— The Treasorer in the ehair.— 

A letter was read from Mr. Bicheno, late secretary of 
the Society, enclosing ‘or the microscope of 
various she poor of recent Australian wood.—Mr. Hogg 
exhibited specimens of a variety of Hordeum hexasti- 
chon, remarkable for its ee aa of grain. 
of Australian plants, made by P. R, Drum- 
W. Saunders, Esq 


an 
Marchantia polymorpha. 
researches of Mirbel, Griffith, Bise 


interior of which the elaters and 1 
N developed 


ö oped rod 
the early stages of its growth the 


hibited a r of ats indicating ing ts points where 
3 3 nyo up, eac 
; this cell separated a 


8 
oe — 


i * . fe 88 Sies grow, ke Willows in 
t n large patet ay, some weeping Willows plan it canker off 
— Leyg 


15 


Bishop of 
en 


Norwich, 
Brown had his readiness to fill the office 


well- 


THE — 


CHRONICLE. 


z x lans and personal 8 
vided the Society. The election | season of the year. Pea ns.—Th out p on, neither of 
Lae arms eae Pr Sine er of the Society. side in betes: ‘ocalitie ties * 2 now make a sowin men wy 1 The not handsome. 
general principle in such a er th 
of these vegetables, with a view to obtain a very early Lok my — 3 = each other in colour, and the 
eek of Operations. crop. The seed shoul n the sides of lo ch higher than the outside beds. The 
. s 1 t th — we te, N bla ue and white, d 
ensuing week, ) ridges, the crowns of which will protec young „ deep yellow and 
the A 10 4 : violet and wana, . and green, blue and 
ING DE PA plants from cold winds, and the hollows between will] violet, yellow and orange, yellow: and orange, yellow 
Tr the roots of  Seakale be — — up orced in a aid in keeping the dry. Some chopped Furze, or] other colours, aad should be sep loon tra 1 
frame or hotbed, according to the method we described | othe material, should be sown along with the ava peta a E R greer i 
a few w since, it is supposed by some that the roots | seeds, to prevent the depredations of 5 arf peiie ee Barly à Ned M angaret, Early Ey 83888 
are thereby destroyed or rendered worthle of Pea T d be chosen, such s| shire Quarrenden, Sum lden Pippin, Verler Devon. 
for future planting. e, however, beg leave to assure Prince Albert, o; ite’s Quee 4 2 Dwarfs; and of} Early N onparel, cots Reinette, > Rit . ke 
ers is is a mistake. The growths first ne — the Deut Fan = be found hardy and prolific, ma Pi hiyi rs oorti ee Thee Adams Pear. 
produced should be carefully gathered, so that the dor- is a chance, that in good soci s, these early ines Braddick’s s Nonpareih, e ke House l 
mant buds on the crowns of the be not injured ; —.— will produce good crops, a prospect which is| pareil, Boston Russet, Cou 7 Ian B, 
and when they are removed fro me, to make | sufficient warran expenditure in seed ons Sturmer Aer ee WAand CE, The 
room for ther succession, they d be laid into labour but in — or — situations, the chance of] ick C Si tin, 5 rde 190 T Kentish Codling, Kes. 
light soil in a sheltered situation, and carefully pre- snecess is very small, In the latter case, there is Ade shire Foundling, F Abbey eedling Banz d tae l 
rved from snails till the proper season for planting re ble and more certainty by s in | p Se 1 Norful Rag Ply | 
e have even found that very strong roots, which have | turves early in spring, and planting them out in March. Pippin, rt ds, pe 1 2 Bait AR 4 dards 17 culti | 
n taken up early, and produced their first erop in | Cauliflowers should xamined y three or fou very limited you may train them espalien|-PS Tus . 
oven r and December, will bear forcing a second | days. th hich have arrived at m urity, if not ae are varie mo Pears suitable fer Walls :~Beurré , 
time the same season, and produce a very tolerable} req or immediate use, should be lifted = n dry; Diea 1 grail goed „ Bogen a Passe 
h or April; at even after this — will| and after tying their leaves together, they s ~~ be room Park, and Winter Nelis.|—J B Alte a good nt ) 
still be fit to plant out in the p und. The second | hung up in a cool shed till they are wanted. wall Peaches and Nectarines certainly ought to succeed, if 
p, however, rticularly on the first. being S vou make e the ay properly. You state tate bre 
inj ding Nov. 22, 1849, “ well drain feet tam tee 
carefully cut, Tı 2 be 1 i het d h Fan 0 d State offs observed at the Horticuitural Gardenn Chiswick x = e 5 te 18 8 th resting aapon a bed fy ha 
. e interva € hir e first an rr de t eneath which is marl, n 
ta forcing, the plants, if laid in recommen ed, Nov. 2 6 3 | Wind. n À jn order to drain well, you must go much 3 San Ee, 
will slightly recruit their strength, and i the aam if 2 ge se || Wax. | Min. lin. Me stratum, trench up some of the marl and T üs it * — 
perly protected, will ua crease in size, e, and pre- | Friday.. 16f 1 || 30.087 zzi 29 38 || Nw. || 00 | good free soil as e can procure o make up the border, Yon 
pare for a tolerably vigorous expansion Not only the — aie | est l a7 2 92 SW. 5 | mer 3 your Peach and Nectarine trees will 
9 30.0 29.97 31 1 N.E. 00 Tiv: : 
crowns of these plants, but pieces of any parts of the Monday It 2 30.063 | 39.970 3 | 415 |} NE oe | ate sinha abe mille ag ; 
roots which are from half an ine 1 inch in thick- Wed. zf 6 j} 30.074 30.015 3 * as but we know nothiog or 7221 price, nor how 
ness, and 3 inches in length, will answer the purpose of | e“ yp 29598 | zis S | 2 j e H | Insects: JM. The prem prar which uae be the sin of the 
sets, and will make good plants in one n, if the | Average. I 30.098 | 29.999 33.5 | 41. 0.05 | berries of the Grapes, is apparently th 
8 z ow Cochylis Am haciella, 2 Ins. de la Vigne, * 1 Teet 
soil been properly prep ed. here the soil is 85 17 — Clow aa 8 8 a a may Abe dis] fod ed by smoking the bunches wi l 
naturally stiff and unfavourable to the growth of th — 18—Overcast; slight r. rain. We should be ed of more specimens. W.—L S. The ran 
Seakale, it can be made more suit by mixing it} — Du aly ov feast throughout, grabs found with the Whe ose of the | 
freely by fine coal ashes, sand, or road scrapings, and} — 2!—Hazy; cloudy at nig barr 1 x Oe par 9 A 
of some 


lime rubbish, not . a dressing of good w 
rotted farm- 


notice, ascer 
the amount a gre ui * praus 5 of any giv 
varie 


en 
ct elias of these splendid flowers 


Zy ; 
2 1 cloudy ; uniformly overcast. 
aL perat 


re ofthe week, 2 deg. below the average. 


State of ais penpe at Chiswick during the last 23 years, for the 


ices to Corresponden 


e similarly fimbriated in some 
FLC LORISTS ipitin ensuing week, ending Dec. 1, 1849. species. Althou “s mining your Severe to Nature, — 
The amateur dan * “take stock” of his de beats Bay [weer Prevailing Winds, agricultural 0 eries 
2 8 a eatest i 
favourites, For may copy from his last yoy, ESE | 228 8 5 Years in Quantity weil «ipl sim oie ktora: It is ri possible that Melons could be pro- 
year’s register of Tulips, 2 “make a fresh list of those | and Dec.) A= | 298 AS | “Rained, | Of Rain. 2 )7> a Sh 5 2 der ‘throughout e 2 yen, 5 — * ao — ia f 
which he has this n committed to the earth, in i . and. They r pani s sun to give them 
” Sunday 2 46.2 } 343 | 40.2 12 0.27 in. 3| 3} 3] 23 5 2| 2 
hope. We would r end the ystem of J.] Nou. 26] aga 3 445 11 654 1608012 Mossrans: JB. Your Timothy Grass is becoming vivipare 
Edwards, Esq., of Holloway, as a perfect specimen of ea 2 gee n 8 la 12377 1 that is to say, the parts of the flowers a are anpe staa 
floricult book-keeping. By noting the ~~ an row, Thurs 2% 49.1 | 36.4 438 13 0.36 2 if 3 3.232 sings . Bi 
di 30 49.7 37.5 43. 4 . 1) 11.1) 2] 3| ši 5) 3 ace W ere it was 050 
eden feron row, name, from whom most | Satun 1 492 370 4544 9 % 1/222 2 66 20 wawes oy PLANTS: bee oe 4 
intere sting re sae ig is 1 e oe peer ci and | The highest temperature during the £ above period d occarrzd on the 28th parcels of plants req iring 
by which mean in | 1923—therm, 60,deg. ; and the lowest on 25th, 1346 term. 16 deg. be 


reaso t tk 
apprehended as the bulbs throw — “thelr puge near 
the surface ; should hard 


damage is likely to ensue, and coverin Id be 
absolutely . Carnations, Picotees, Pinks, 
Pansies are, or ought to be, all safe. If any require 
atten it be layers received late in the autumn, 
which have not had time to establish them Ives. It 
often happens that the lower leaves decay, in which 
case it will be necessary to remove them ; placing a 
-glass over them will also accelerate the emission 
of roots. By all means endeavour to lay up a store of 
food for the future suste f your 8. . 
willow 


manure, &c., are all h 
necessary, and florists cannot well have too fio S 


When rgen FRUIT GARDEN. piece of um, * dip pee ale glass oe ore in natfe fe z i 4 55 
ever — of th tiene a e surface rior of t pr amar fl 
soil being worked, it is ag of ee slightly syringed or . moistened, in order that a 
all a objee importance to ge 8 " onp aniy or Tope, may be formed in the atmo- 
ground about the fruit bushes Tightly forked over, at sphere me of th —— on; then shut up elose 
the same time applyin any manure or o rial for eed night. The only N required is to take care * 

which may be The sa: procu! carbonate of ammonia, and to use it only in 
tion ‘buries the l ves, and gives te athe á pyre] most aur bee for it is much more caustic in dry — — 
orderly, and finished ce for a long time to Cuisira Moosi: HC asks some of our correspondents to 
come. But to make the mint ony the labour employed, —— him how he is 8 this ahe ronis 5 i plari has 

rs 3 a ot it about 8 i high, from all the 
P. 1 * retraining should rst performed, 3 have died away, leaving about a dozen quite at the — 
as to avoid all tr n the Ke after the sur- of the 88 t alive. From all the joints where the leaves have 
e has been stirred. The anes, if it was fallen off, he perceives that it is breaking ; shall he leave the 
not done i in the. autumn, should 1 reduced to four of 3 as itis, is, thon 44 ? 5 had he better cut it down, and 
4 be Cuimare : ; prm Veronica salicifoli a, Geraniums, 
j 


32 eee and 


Not 
ADDRESSES: A Seedsman, J Silla, and oiera. 12 1 Lee 
icant 


ought to know cae oe do; r nee ys 
should — ~ some other ele who knows him. Our 
Tue ade Memoranda” explain one of the reasons why we 
asked f 

Bess HRM. Bevan or ebay on Bees. W— YZ, M‘Intosh’s 
you have not gotit already, will pos- 
Flower, Fruit, and Kitchen 


for. 


bly suit you; or Neils 

l the kinds which you name in your 
list are good, pr soviet they are correct to the names given, 
You may ned e e eap to your collection: Kingnorn’s 


Masterpiece d Yellow Standard; Holmes’s Macbeth, Shy- 
lock, Ophelia, ‘and Rosalind ; Gaines’ a rine 5 0 Ma donna, Con- 
rad, A a, Duke 


4 Are — AMMONIA : Ing — = gers Sdi beneficially in 
stoves and forcing- panya, — all y? — a can 8 it wich 

advantage in your Cucumber. pit, week, in t 

ing manner. When you Suet the pit Tor the night, place a 

bit of the carbonate (pure), about the size of a large garden 

Pea, alternately back and front, under each light, on a small 


apane pee flowers, Stocks, Sweet Peas, Leptosi- 

ons, and Fuchsias, from an open garden in North Wales, 

2 "ie height of 600 or on the e — a ey show, we 
that the t produce 


should think, sufficient! 

ny than, the rea pa 
CoLD FRAME: Clericus, 5 lean-to 9-inch fe walled fowl 
house roofed wi lass tiles will eo 
cold frame perfecti provided it is ventilated 
propose. We would advise you, . ever, to leuve the d 
where it is. It i is pet. on the north side than on the south. 
CUCUMBERS : J Holmes, gy yo Spine is one of the best 

as 


a 
weli, as 7 
oor 


S 
8 


Harden —+ maaeropbyla,| blue; Henfreya scandens, white 
Brachysem: tifolium, sca 8 Hoya Pottsii, pale straw. 
paar, —.— odor tiseima an 


ender, rgreens, f. 
. S Hodges, enham. Iti is not right = just, at 
an horticultural show, where two sets 0! 

one amateurs and the ott 
award, and the article ticketed 
that award, auy collection o 
be disqualified for havin 


wi 
state, ver — the ripe fruit on it. a 
been grown with all on a ae other plants in the same collection | 


Fics: G8. We do not know the Brianzolo Fig. A 
|| Gasparrini, N. Del Rendi 
di Brianzolo 


he follow. | 


Nor Tur EES: A 
with no beariog w 


PINE-APPLES: W an ; 
leaf-mould” will suit theni p 
We We n 


ome very distinc 


pips, 
t species, 
inese Primrose, 
rk d n 

tirely new race, thing 
— raise p> fine and distinct ist! seed- 


Jings, n 
Tae, 3 like e trying 
while she > is asleep, a thing 
anthus are ibe small -p 
e tube; the female isa 
rs with & 2. pin. like 
5 — 3 longer 
A When 
or forms, th 


— 


Calceolaria, and Pelargoniu 
SEEDLING Oaks: We Sie N 
GOR SEDET two r 
usually cut foliage. They appear to 
afin ne Pray ask any nurs 
therein you will find “ —— — —* 
n shrubs, an nd flow: 


of the 
ror on ae 
be handsome and We 


. eee cere 


current year’s volum 
VicToBIA REGIA; 4 Brien. See a 
column of to-day’s Paper. trace be vere bleak wi 


7 un ate 
m ie R ys: k — th wall were only Sti § 


October, . Bette 
rid e of. " 


Strawberries ; the, 
7 . 2 WII 21M. I. P. 


i Pionus FLOWERS: 


0. 23, olo Pig has ia * 
We are 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


47—1849. | THE 
BY HER ROYAL LETTERS | 
MAJESTY’S PATENT, j 


PATENT HOTHOUSE ` WORKS, KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA. | 2s. 


E DENCH invites the attention — — — guid 

f to erect Hothouses, &c., to the v rity in e 

— paa by his PATENT HOUSES, er he ‘wil 

—— or in pr : — Good Glas 

from — 2 to oz. per foot miss, 3 er Jon 5 furnished, 

and the H oues mhen oom completed 5 

according to sae and quantity — ee 

— or , and the 
the —— put > with 

beg. 1 no — from 7d. to 9d. per ft, 


putty. Pate 
TE BY HOT WA 
H° E IPES AND TROUGH PIPES, 
lt 


hart, No, 


J. JONES, Iron his a 


keeps a very large s ock of Hot ter snd Trough Pipes, with 

Elbows, Syphons, Tee Piec a Colla, Flange Sockets, and 

— * r nae Sen nality, and — very 
ring the 


done, * have 
Sotin sent to any oy oft the ‘kingdom, with everything | ¢ 
— for the beating, &c. sum. a es 
pipes, Sutters, Sash-weights, Railing a Air Bricks, and 
numerous other Castings are also xep at J. JoxEs 8, Iron Bri 
Wharf, No. 6, Bankside, London 
TEPHENSON a 55 CO., 61, Gracechurch- street, 
L w Park- street, Southwark, Inventors 
and Manufacturers of the Improved CONICAL and DOUBL 
OYLINDRICAL BOILERS, poriro a 1 oe of 
scientific ——— to thei ethod of 
iy? 
to any required degree, without 27 — of pipes o or flues. 
8. and Co. have also to state th uest of nu 


who have not dy 


es throughout the kingdom 
rand | Co. beg to inform the ei mr at —— 7 
1 New Park-street, every article required for ruction 
of. 1 Buildings, as . as for 
obtained n the most r 
‘ e, Åc., o Wooa. e cted u e most 
_ ornamental designs, Dakai, Palisading, Field — yet 
Fences, Wire. work, se 
i EAT SOWIN 


bes Tun LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg to offer 
À m t Dy them and pled 


5 


anure and Urate, Sulphate 


: — 


9 Ni Nitrate of Soda, Bone Saw- 
fi 


1 


* street, Blackfriars. 
ere DAN, B kien F of the Peruvian 


the im and sale of this valuable 


poe pra to recommend 
either to ourselves, to our mt 23 Gress, 
Co., of Liverpool and Bristol, or to dealers of 
ed character, in whose honesty and ‘fair 2 
ean . 1 confidence, and 
London, Novemt 


(GREEN AND HOTHOUSES made by machinery, workhou 


; BE glass ends, 1 door, and = feet of 7 in afront, —.— 
a oan oz. sheet glass of a large size, and ed three coats 


3 1 by 3A. 10s., incl a plan = 
j k. Ykineh e Lights, glazed with 160: 
i Miet inn pated ee es 113d. per foot; 2-inch do., 1. 
iy -ey Lewis's Machine B Hothouse E Waki „ Stamford-hill, 


CHEAP ÄND DURABLE ROOFING. 


ROYAL LETTERS 
PATENT. 


ee ee = |. E r a A 


9 MNETLL AND Co, of Lamb’s-buildings, Be Bunkill 
* row, Londo eturers an 


THE ASPHALTED FELT FOR ROOFING 
ae Shedding, Work and for Garden 
oses, to protect Plants from f Frost. 
the Great National r 
has been and obtained wo SILVER MEDAL 
and is the Felt soLELY patronised by 
Woops AND Forests, 
OF ORDNANCE, 
ND MPANY, 


AL BOTANIC GABDENS, REGENT’ ‘ 
on the Estates of the Dukes of Sutherland, Norfolk, Rut- 
4 a leuch (at Richmond), 
Spencer, and most te ee sag Gen non A 


— AGRICULTURAL Soc: 


We 
Bankside, London, wh 


bp cepa of any count in 


Com 's When 
n of “Ammon ia, * eee, dee, 8 a common rent 


EED WHEAT. —For Sale, at 


bn cover the expense ot post 
can be executed ; payed r 
ree anied bya 
EANS foe seed, faig 
per bushel, Jonn MORTON, Whitkeld, Berkeley, 


Che Agricultural Gazette. 
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1849. 


MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
— Nov yp i a se eni] io. Society of Ireland, 
6—Agricultural Imp. — ag 
urton 


of Lrelana. 
— London, Tavistock. 


supplied at ôs at oe 


nuR Dee 
Panag 29: Burto 
Dec. 7: Newcas:le. 


rents, the 
atin 7 


ighest 


eti try, is a 
oiadi for life; for — —— affords eas bnl} 
means of subsistence. The Pota upon which the 


ridge | whole system ne: enabled the Alen to descend 
lin the f 


to a lower leve scale of existence than the 
nie rope. The failure 
of this root has, many instances, 
. “Tandlo rd and ee — as the chasm 
nm on ruin. And hence 
ome over and heip us.’ 
mous as “ the 


nce perceive a state of society = the opposite 

of the above—the abundance of w lants in the 

pastures „ that * eapttallt Bai not appre- 
the soil t. 


ciated as an r there 
seeks reward in the towns where capital has flowed 
so freely int ch 


“sol Gans, in describing ~ bigest 5 around 
says, “Draining is 
W the whole; the soil 4 is a a colà tenacious 
clay, and the country has a bare and dre appear- 
; the lan A bei eing divided into — pop jes 
ey holdings let high, 27., 37., and 


8 


ee 
— 
- 


present t e he 
comfor table hess se, a ae stealing, and drainage, 
which are essential for his operatio 
lf pe 2 Suffo aie coast of E 
land, it furnishes anot 1 and exhibits to 
us a highly cultivated county, where "e. ee 
is 3 . —and the tenantry are 
igations it ei 


e on 


0 se- and “ a 80 

parishes one-fourth of the gross produce i the land 
highly farmed on the fott coki shift is expended 
n manual labour an iiai state of 
agriculture. 
be told that 


745 


e cottages on 


er, good th he farm, which 
à| are not estimated, sein prn — are included in 


the rent. In some districts, such as the Carse of 

Gowrie, 5 b iti “stil prevails to a great 

extent, numbers of unmarried 

roo ookin ng their own Tierna. 

been attended with bad r 
emo 


ifficu 


om come down 


orst | 
s] rg e county between Edinburgh and London,” we 


required | o 


o pay interest on am 


ither i in or oF out of the | 


from the 3 for * spring and summer work. 
The manual la des not ex 303. per 
acre on the best far — distriets, and if we leave the 
Lothians, and go into other 2 which are not 
fitted for the six-course on, good farm ae 
found where the — al babeer is not above 15s. per 
acre ; the expenses — * —— tJ allowing the land 
to lie in pasture for and even three years, which 


deemed the — * way to restore its 
eee. 3 3 lity, ter a course of cropping. 
Rents are by ans so hi Scotland as is 


acre (9 bushels, me 5 ts, 
under this fluctuating rent, cannot be much worse 
off in 1849, with Whe t 40s. per 

the 


quarter, 
y were in 1846, when the price was 65s. per 
quarter, 8 they — other products than grain 
fat on — rer of. 


and 


; N 
high rents were einai when he says, “ 

perous perio 4 of Irish agricu 
produce from the same extent of area was two-thirds 
less than that in England, se the eet of 


ite ‘state er 


e | labour in extractin, 


3 82 


—estimate qual t tw" the 
Tosa Sool i iving ”— e ses, 
“ seed, stock,” (?) only amount i. . 6s. Gd. 
re, and, with 


per ac 10s, 7d. for manure 
stitute theta u 


wages W 


ominally correct, 
labourers by 3 is 3 common, an 
to be imitated, as it tends to elevate the labourer, 
and affords a ‘fat better incentive to strenuous 
3 ye a frown of the master. The follow- 


one ya of a 


3 
1064 d open a £7 19s 4d 
* * am? a 2414 9 


2 to 13s, per week. A Scotchman, on seeing = 


d hearing the amoun 


aun which are 
tentionally m 
tute 


5 2 heard of, and unin- 
ified by confounding customary an 

4 the capabilities of 
crops 


agn 
measure, merel 
umbli e averages es and 
ush u 


ital with which it is 
ible m otland, conjoined to the 
opinion which i is too common amongst perms and 
tenants, that industry will in a great measure make 
up for deficie ency of capital, has always sr a 
fertile source of suffering, ed 
the 


95 


every respect 
shall endeavour to trace this out in our next. N. 


rops is Aue 
AEN proßtable — — < ion À 
economise 


PROSPECTS OF piar rman 9 
the crops ve had, 


of 
in Himber ia te construction of om whi Soo are 
E Be og ata Square Foor. rather 
Truetone for its Veo, snd Tes In Scotland everything is done to 
and wilde 8 labour, and it is the weakest point in the system | 
orian by there that so little m labour is involved. 
he R ria A 4 — * 3 poor have no claim for work, but are aoe 
n asp. 0.8 i left to their own resources, and find em s 
fac eA best can, in the towns and villages. for crude | '° The 
hand-loom weaving, they are ced 3 
1 Itural labourers aon 
e hy of con- | years 
direct F be iderab both to them an farmers, rs, springs J 
e r pay for | yearly wages is paid no ami. 
1 R 8 St be 


746 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. e 


description of the arable part. The astures are sandy, | Turnips is graS round to be fallowed for pep again, | Barnwood, Gloucester,” upon the eS 

3 diet bted more os ot then tn for what fertility — to 83 acres, — one-fourth of the arable land. pamphlet. It seem a Mr. aylor beat off sy Pee. 

As to cleaning, it can hardly be said to re ire it. It years ago upon mák 2 5 terms, which 49 

1 ies possession by purchase four = ago, the con- must be in better sonig than when n I to ook to it, and refused to accept, because of the murders ich he 

dition being probably better than out oing occupiers | I may fairly conclude that the crops will be better than | arising out of agrarian causes, in this country. As ay 

3 leave farms, but still very full of weeds. Its the last a * „splendid as those crops have been — 19 — — acquainted with Ireland than — 
tiki ii 


part > 
guinea an acre. Or perhaps the following statement | acres of Oats after Turnips will be su a for them, to tow that — "ane ous deeds were confined * 
em a judgment: the year I entered, a estimating the produce to be near 10 quarters per acre. few portions of Ireland ; he ought also to have ingui 
l 10 


fie t share the 
outgoing rope and down with Wheat. The produce acre. My fat sheep have e 9 stones when 16 | English absenteeism o f Irish proprietors of estates,has 
earl qrs. to the acre. I sowed Vetches, months old. The two cows have yielded 27/. a year | had in inereasing this bal feeling between landlord and 
sonal on the Wheat 8 which were partly fed for their butter, and skim milk used or sold to the men erf in Ireland. Such men as Mr. Ta ylor are doing 
off, partly mowed, the sheep having n PEO. but Sos at a halfpenny a quart. Having fatted 100 hogs to 10 more e dam 8 to Irish 3 at the present time, be 
sane It was then sown with Wheat, and the seore each and upwards, I have found that lls. a ee e pretended fears than they are willing to acknow. 
duce was over 3 qrs. per acre, in 1848. Thi is must suffice pays about 278. a quarter for Bays whence I calcu- | lodge. It is but another covert and crafty i 

up tiee condition * value of the farm when I took i will pay about 1“. a quar ier for depreciate the value of the estates now al 

y system. I resolved to arrange it as| Bar From all which I form the 1 ne broug t to a sale, under the Encumbered Estates 
sikiy k as e! into ar regular four-course rotation of | of + fatare produce of this milarly in this country. [Mr. aylor has nothing “covert or 
acne, Barley or Oats, ae and Wheat, which will | eultivated. era t him e 


+ 
8 8 
et 
2. 0 
D er 
E 
E 
et 
oo 
E 
cs 

v 
m 
23 
wy 


leted this current year. M on for en- 60 neat sheep, — at 4s. per stone Had 0 


y 
tively excluding Clover was ses the pasture would afford 120 fleeces . 0 dhasi : 
ay r 
E 


i 


0 

0 

5 ae of Ba rley. Y, at 6 ‘qrs. per acre, given 

o pigs, and paying 1%. per q 30 0 0 
0 
0 
0 


d 
urnips to be fed off by sheep, the whole of sia adres of Wheat, at5 * per acre, at 20. is no — risk, . in a very few localities, than by 
: r qr, ? 
T 


E WA a d * Koop St nding — aoe wee vie I —_ 8 elias 
ewes, their lambs to be 2 5 and sold ra p tegs, to be Pele ble produ 0 the fact of agrarian outrage, ot the cause “py it. Self- 
on Beans as soon as they would eat en| The o ietys e ta the past yey yew ex- cole st must, in all our pd be held to be the 
rnips were gone, to ‘ee lei onl over — ere vil be as follows : uling motive, and this will lead no one among madmen 
pastures; with half a ushel of Beans per day; E — ws ; whether their 8 A arisen from unjust treat- 
en on Turnips again ph have the same — a yg es and S0 W ae ment or not. But t any one enquire into the 
Beans with hay. The nature of the land requires Tithes and rates... ERESI SES PE ee Y paren disposition of er. 5 ple, | 3 
i to plough it. These, together with my Tradesmen’s bills aa ac Nnor tatu and he will find that e at . „ 
it is pe pono compatibl 
Peo hould reme mont that cee fand Papiet ee 
res ae the size of England, with straight * 
miles long; they s 


Grass eut for them. The same with two cows. Thus] I have not ineluded oe food bought of the miller for 
— ing at tte the pasture was to supply one year's | the pigs, for it is regularly returned on the sale of ei 
nd the i 


leaving ben ail the aftermath was ready. I was to| character of landlord and tenant. A more experienced | And t 

b and buy offal from the mill for much greater retu o wot 

them until the they 75 peasy for * eal. á hus was | introduce the threshing-machine a e horse-hoe, 155 
e ara kept in heart. Besides penning | whi . ee 3 e p! 

the fatting sheep on on e pastures, followed by — ewes, na 83 pea ~ pene tear = ——— eee. a few days ago. 1 over this property, of 200,000 

gee to be annuall dressed w that they are te idle. He would, I think (but K acres, not one agrarian murder has EES 
ashes Abe ele art cre), which are very . — in hereupon much the o dions of others), find. tha these 40 years, Ali over 19-twentiethsof 
the ya $ Ar n, and even where 


0 bush 
ashes per acre sown or drilled with them. The land : 
management. M hbours tell m 
was to be ploughed as deep as possible, going lower than my 3 ep h ave Š should mako the hemvier 
rmerly, and turning up a yellow clay. To this deep | proceed to point out the cause of this defect 
Piras I e d hme se 9 70 1 go * 9 į o nd, 
n iege rigidly followed, so far an the | Vetches on the Turnip f l dth _ 
. i p tallows, and though I have hada 
sheep and pigs are gents ; ewes having borne pieco of Saintfoin an à over, yet À 


yr een kept, and t mee rehased a 
7 ng now diminished three heifers bred, . fattened, have caused such a de- | mum 
. . a al . . ose 
Of last yen? wee ie aa mand for Grass and hay that the lambs have bee n | merely to remind him, that the renewal of those charges 
29 intended for 1 2 4 Lare next year, and 35 wether 
lambs fatting. Of course I had to to begin with buying 
Barley for r Pigs, rte * sheep, as well as hay for 
cattle. The system, also Ne been rigidly adhered to 
for the cows a horses, ex ept this summer, when the 
Po nuring for Wi 
: f the 20th “i 4 ied — a letter from ra 
: ainder (34 acres) w z the manner 
happen in the dry ew e, aE novel should be Beans can evidently be Clover. There is still — — 225 sos E yet 
Sagan ae another source — the supply of hay, and there- . A Pi a and observa- 
speak presently, Until this year n mpi ae fore the inerease of pasturage for sheep, adit ha kao llo facts er 
creased. Hitherto I have used no straw for fodder. uk — 
I] 


— > 
that itis is time to judge of — effects of the system upon foe. Cit he 20h 8 x Proving eee re os thal Gk J> | lea in the month of September “and often Angot dle 


h : and 
The first fi t singh Turni 7 as litte s e — * the el vps: lose bg 8 Fr. of „ used as a 5 
q of Barley per acre in season of 1847, Sr have ate — Ae g Clover in the part of 
q of 1 ns’ n Wheat land this year 1 think I see a idee a e bject to evaporation, 


y Gdi of straw for food, equivalent to 2 or 3 acres of hay. wit t 

Mallick ved Wheat in this 9 ear, 1849. 1118 Many other defects there undoubtedly must be in my | a8 0 —— aus the soil oil by . i 

rak estimate of Wheat are these: 90 shocks per acre | management. 1 have no practical knowledge worth r. Coleman’s friend aged cor ee shen the manure 

8 : we 7 | * that he believed the erop wi when 

karkat ihe fine things as would make a difference of many pounds if I . than 
e shocks were threshed out for seed and yielded | SOWA do them well myself. So that Tam compelled to pio hed, it awe Leer he believed wi n4 

E aE sata of clean Wheat. The second field that came — . that, 2 g l by the b 

un 

acre in the bad season of 1848, and. j pis ere: 5 * estimated, then — ofthe s rapid 8 Saas eva 

quantity of Beans already threshed, 6} sonido of | that a living profit from it is not to be 8 Bat | nie ta the 

winter Beans per acre in 1849. The third field that = is not so. I can plainly see at were a 

came under the system, judging by the quantity silm EE rs 


5 k, and perso 
ed, is estimated to yield near 7 quarters of minor details, I mn Fan 


i he “in 
i told, would be thus: I should do better to sell the | beng : 
Tees c — 10 yi ig 3 estimating 5 s lambs and buy older sheep for the Turnips. But my 1 z 5 „ country * 
effects Seasons i I should probably lose 5s. : broken 
Servin e ~~? 2 ‘my 3 wing f j 1 9 37 in ard ans ex four-course Py 2 prog * — ee former # 
aboy nenne field of Wheat then, the experience and estimates of one wi — up for Wheat, and from a P upom 
e-mentioned as p g a little over 3 quarters dona * — a 5 » | good erop of the latter may safely A bti ovet 
aae agag ae hich a an: | decision. I h b h novelty, but merely | *ceP* unde „ — Clover lea has bees 
once b; meh | myer wed | narrated the resul courage lication of which we have no power, When a lough it at eat 
the Seen fed by al b rhe a to re to the land. I have no Hadid. ins ta ker ; — the manure being ee 
sheep wi PS ut not > e N % 
e. regi, What amd | pi hl eee seldom reach d r Ld 
i , 
y laid and * a, during the pes ag 3 ut not least, the maiden elay, sand, and bi stones, | 
— but notwithstanding tha e eee eee which never before saw daylight, are now brought up 
the pe p to contribute to future depth of mould, Amicus Tull. 
Many thanks.] 


— 
D ir ye 


| _47.—1849] 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 747 


— utter would not only soil more cattle and make 
W. 


a three 


hi 
therefore, drain and clean the land, muck vel 


, and goo 


tter e of Wheat. 


cessary. — 
of the first steps to 


white- —— ones will follow 


Croft Farm, Bridgnor 


vod mprov 
has 


farm 8 
1 po green 
J. C. H., Bri 


ment to be gai ned by Trave lling.— M 
aft 


more 
manure, rop o Clover of 
one year’s growth will generally produce more Wh 


— N and hence it is 


that the 


* ay himself, in a few hours, — s raeg. as it 


a fresh 


Sees 
12 f 
S 
" 


E 
ge 
© 
8 
E 
8 
© 
8 
* 
* 
2 8 
m 
2 
s 
t 
5 
2 
E 
è 
p 
2 


0s. 
comparatively poor sands, and that gives to them in 
Months the returns for goin ck that — 
e period. 


‘Rew class of farmers into the cou 
med to regard 


then accusto 


on lease 


“Lothians a nd the 


annu: 
portion of — Bie of 1 ae produ 


country, — different are the stock, 
e ud habi icti 
ar 


e nra 


in 
as — i iyis countries to the English 


mish 


8 


rough it 


for a year or two. They would have to do the what can be done and made by honest farming ; oe 


5 and to a much greater extent, either in America, | with few exce ons, the land of. Ireland is farmed m 
the pica or Australia. Let us look at both sides of dishonestly “y die’ at mass of Irish ¢ — “eed 
icture 


Ist, against — the dwelling-house and poverishing the land by th tehed 
ead may be both smaller and inconvenient, but ing, and in 80 21 ining theme roe arta then — 


— ‘this would be considered a temporary evil by an | ing every one "bet the right I allow that the 


enterpris 
the worl 


ing young man resolved to work his way in | “west” wants settlers of capital more than the n 
d; should trifles of this description frighten a nie — so far “ Martin Doyle” is right in prais- 
main t sti 


2. Hi 
o regular labour and tolerable wages, will try — as on “ that.” ithout doubt Ireland 


| rsr 


their 


— their slovenly and apathetie way of hand ing advantages to an intelligent industrious — 
Th rt and blessing of receiving their | i ertile soil, ni 


4 
2 
© 
5 
2 
> 
= 
2 
5 
& 
S 
> 
© 
= 
s 
pi 
8 
03 
rf 
2 
ZP 
=o 
2.5 
es 
88 
2 7 
$ 
2a 
$ 
S, 


„are not at all high. ugh they may be so on 


fair wages, and treats them with common humanity, | mon justice to an enterprising settler, If he goes to 
will 44 er be molested, particularly if he is a stranger, the far west he will have chen eap labour, no doubt, but 


an 


g ma 
in Ireland t 


lish or Scotch. Now let us turn to the | tremendous rates, and no sympathy an people of his 


r Eng 
his favourable side of the picture: there are numerous | own faith, for few would he “find in th rts, and such 
ords i 


n Ireland who would be only too glad to let a state of things would in the end “rs of much disad- 
t x f b 


counse th i 
eriod could a pains- | whose company he could worship the God of his fathers, 
advantageously locate himself I will only briefly allude to the absence of all great 
present, affairs having almost | crimes in the north and east, and refer your readers 


Wen a point at which they must improve. An infu- | to the dreadful accounts of assassinations in other parts; 
n of common sense with a spirit not easily daunted and the worst feature connected with these dreadful 
ane ingredients in request for our sister country ; we | murders is, that the whole country is aware of the 


be encourage he good of the United Kingdom, and | more objection to an Eng 
. | for the 2 of wee als. . emigration to Ire- | quarter but the north and east, and I have done. The 
d energy i 


m to ge and why should not the exportation | crime, knows the murderer, and never informs, One 


ssed in point of view, coolly and English farmer is famous for his skill an 


nd be in 
im i without either making’ e» island a para- | taking advantage of every gleam of sunshine to save his 
i estern farm,” 


dise or a place of banishment a sery, and I feel|crop. Imagine him settled in his new * w: i 

quite things to — * — will far out- a glorious crop of hay in rough cocks, and only wanti 
Rind. —The ast system now prevailing in weigh toil, trouble, and i mie Iti uch | another day to save it—he a in the morning, — 
shows the absolute ape of ‘ieee the custom either to laud ndertaking up to the is cheered by the prospect of another glorious day—he 

o have | skies or lower it to the “lowest depths.” I would dresses and is off to his Her om but no 
their “Inndlords 2 having | counsel 3 course, the most difiealt to steer, but | there to ete his bell rings and storms in vain, 
Some claim on the property which is held by them, the safest. Falcon. He is answered by the 8 bell calling his “ cheap 
and fully entitled to enjoy a ‘Malt v. goet —I would refer your enquiring | | labourers” * mass ; for it is a “holy-day,” and not a 
ced by the culti- | co t “G. P. A.,“ to the experiments on this man dare work—ere I aus AAA ta aLa 
i at 


vation of th 


in “the disturbed distriets is 
on, an ought so little of by — 


of principle — — the 


is so deeply ro 


land how much easi 
"like it is to live . than $ to —— 
r. It is quite o — —— —— 


and murder 


eceed famine if the land is —.— 


pped. —— — ape clear 
conjun 


alf 
— — 


f in 
— . — oh Sa t had the effect whieh might have — 
the kin 


alive to thei air ie 15 
dunot be to the advantage of any one. Capital is thus 
labour is thrown in e mar 


1 


10 
111 


j 
3 
3 
epi 
i 
2 
8 


& 
PE 
8 
: 
B 
E 
3 


girip 
ei 
< 


f 
pE 
* 
cided g 
a8 
720 


hi 
E 
28 2 
5 
£ 
8 
E 
5 


247 

. aS 

FH 
E 
8 
3 
5 
8 
E 
i=] 
4 
a 
5 
2 


them astray, 

Aist all parties, 

lù and 
land wi 

‘te 


3 the w 


our hard 


ie 
here can be no intention on 


part 

who call the attention of the young sat ol and 

farmers to the fertility of the Irish 
far A soep M 


y des 
and p ce in a true light 


isadvan pes vot holding land in 
8 0 Suppose — anyone who is comfor — 


hink of chan anging his hom 


water, because they 


n are 


n the 


Bie ad- 
Treland. 


1 

A aie 
am 
eaper in our sister country i era 
y agriculturists will eterred 
may have to 


rresponden 
head . instituted by Mr. Lawes, mex detailed in | number of these holi 
e 


umber t pen and 
Society. They were undertaken for the time. In the north and east, though subject to the 
of ascertaining whether malted was | same annoyance, the mdma, She of Protestants will 


express purpose 8 7] i 
more valuable for feeding pes than unmalted | insure him some labourers in 


“This 
ith cety, in | great drawback has not, I believe, 0 Tore s, by 


Barley—were conducted wi 

ord 8 tain reliable Pied e 3 him to a Martin Doyle,” and yet no one farms in Ireland with- 
horough ae a that the ex g was out having been annoyed by it. X. F. Z. [The abridge- 
simply thrown away. Theoretically the result should | ments . bove a 

e be so. Malti * does not 0 convert Barley into those peculiarities of Roman ism whi 
saccharine matter, but produces a substance, diastase, eee on are hardly a subject of — 
which induces the Tag, 80 ‘that if for argument’s | discussi 


e c into 
8 destined for the 2115 — be steeped 30 or 40 | possible, how it is that he 
speek floor t began mis 1 
8 8 inet te a as he had 30 bushels of Wheat to the acre, 


were admitted to be more e or more Hih Fo Farming and Low Price: 


e su — Your correspondent 
fattenin t ne starch, it coul hardly be e that | R.! inquires “ can deg 2 be met by hi 
remain in suficiently long in ti animal's | farming, ‘and gives last year’s result of his own cu 
stom i take place. It is 5 proba- vation of 65 acres of arable, and 35 aeres of 
ble however, ox apne Ih — not the experiment, | in support of his decided opinion that they cannot be so 
| or seen , that this converting e the emer . eee we pret ila eg I am 
0 e „ he . > 
might gris ge gegen e coars iged 3 2 pi rag 


mate 
a t boiling, cake or li - 2 . " 
over the mass, which should be well pressed and | sumed by his horses, we 2 an average produchen of 


covered Fasa to prolong Lr Pores À 
f | the dias n the 


render 


this way 


acre. 
ist mass pecs | with a 
in the animal's 8 fair average land! Try it in another way, the principal 


mor pr of sol roduce 9 — ee which he sold at 5s, Sd. per bush 


en 
here perior in mal 
va a erena N fogh wee Ba relalising 204. 3s. ern oat b 5 had 720 bushels, the 
hels pe 


ery possible le benefit may in 


be obtained feb other cost than the trouble cre at 30 bushels f 24 acres ; deducti 


f d spreading. P. > "Boney 
y Eagle, Farming È in Treloni. have read with some | 116l., and the feed of 3 or perhaps 4 horses, as the 


e attention letters in your r, pro and co 

“Martin Doyle” “ ania and others on Eoglish a result be accoun 

farm Irish “far west.” II | 

lived the last three years 8 in N ee and 
novi 

x — me ek reve in the r elfare of Ireland, out why it is that farmers cannot pay their yy og 


n from return for 76 acres of arable and Grass land. Can such 


the details of farm management that we can 


Nr org leasure than to s ompulsory contribution from the rest com- 
mber of in intelligent ecm English 2 ‘Seoteh munity ; and as R. F. W.” professes himself anx — 
farmers, with capital, come over to this coun hat agriculture should prosper, though he very proper y 
sure if they could obtain a settlement i a. et; congratulates himself that he is no aet oni 
locality, where the rates are 1 2 that they would do | prosperity, I venture to ask him to give so 5 ~ 
well; and, besides giving employment, pt confer farm of his farming in 1848, and to exp i ow i 
6 meighboatlog Celta, by sowing came to pass that 35 acres of Grassland, and 4 4l tillage, 


748 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. (Nov. 


horses required to i acres, with | identif, himself with a country where such lawless of food, and thus either directly o or — ~ 
einen mony return of 21167, An 2 resi procee di ings are permitted to exist. I am still of ing of the price of corn lowers the coat 4 ar aa 


Pe rd occurrezices, th on, then T 
may cultivate Irish farms with great advantage to them- | there is no reason why they 1 not be m al 
— RS ETa 1 5 A cig 2 1 re Writing and talking will be all in vain to pain it can 102 Rare n that we possess 8 
c "Pamph et, rofits arising from the growth persuade them to cross the Channel, when, instead of ing o Saad so as to be able to do wan 
of Mr. X M‘Calloch’s moss land 1 5 in support of | discontent and confusion subsiding, Ria sources of farther lowering of oe expense, I appead soe 


if class combin fe 
wil land ap 0 e fl í h 
° : : i dent of th 8 sone may band together for good, and the latter, | produce, i. e., just alike as far as quantity i ; 
be cultivated ni A oppe ern ni 118 in ong run, having justice on their side, will |< T. M.” says this will not do in N Be oar an 
rs ; 


some means of overcoming the abominable spirit per- | imagined two cases, which, if eee ule 
per acre, at vading the island ; but it must be a combined move- | happen ; and they are quite sufficient to to show how it is 
land; — then, having done this, I was, in justice | ment, propo osed by men of all parties, Nothing but the | that profit depends upon the quantity remainin 
2 crate der the necessity of making deductions | mos strenuous efforts of the noblemen, gentleme n, pnd Lehto 55 ne ra gone for expenses, and 
ae "the other side of the account, for the cost of | tradesmen of Ireland, will now save the country. Meet- | upon the value of the whole e quanti 
iming 6 acres of 3 for the 1848 crop; for the ings must be he wy discuss the critical Ta difficult if we are b. wA corn at the present prices, is it to be 
i 18 one to e e 


8 


x work 29 acres r > be | | abon s 
x 0 alarming aspect of affairs?” The talent and integrity | by lowering them so much as to diminish by one 

ry ed lana preparatory fo an — = 3 wi the of a 8 Smii be collected, and, after due delibera- | his present comforts, but justas much * atom 
Potato land; for the value * zni ee e and the tion, suggestions should be forwarded to Government to price of everything he will have to buy will oy 
cost of such ’ guano ; for the Potato sets, and for the | enable ministers to judge of the united feelings of the | Is it by lowering our rents? Yes ; if 88 
expense of planting, hoeing, and gathering the produce better classes, and also as a guide to frame measures to | creased produce maintain the surplus: at its present rate, 
of the 35 acres of Potatoes. I say nothing as to the | meet the serious growing evils ; “whieh, if allowed to | Is it by throwing our taxes to the wind! No; ; but by 
rent of this land, for Mr. Caird speaks of its being in its | remain uncared for, can only terminate in the most passing a brisk wind through them—a thorough winnow- 
unreclaimed sta- i 3 There Aid i 


or thi d . “mischief, Ther „ it desen hn fing; 
$ upied by Mr. | be neglected without doing mis also | are now upset, of course 1 is henceforward fa f 
e lac papa * =a that the rules of society which, if 8 i bring ieir own | on the contrary, its line of rea mete has not yet 
ee tae rent of 2621. applies ee the 220 acres of | punishment sooner or lat Common sense tells us, impeached and proved erroneous, it mah ter 
land. Now, ang Ant we make a Dr. and Cr. as well as experience, that moi thrown out of cultiva- | minute degree, to lull the farmers into indies 
2 for this moss land, thus: tion ivii not produce food, and the want of aliment will | representations k iet 1 and help to inspire 
Dr. Bic aid tai Cas £ 3. | cause siggy 8 This is the or of atti bretana p the | logical rie with som 9 mall confidence in the hen. 
: 35 ee 3 ae 5 e with the addition of the dog in | lessness of low prices. 
To grt beige Be — * s per acre, the ; they will 2 ork themselves, Practice walk Science. — Ploughed land, under tigh 
moss, at 10, —9— 60 0 350 tons, at 406. 700 0 tithes vill ‘bey ati anyone else yas so. There is farming, may, unquestion , be made e infinitely more 
55 an old saying, “a child that can sing and won't sing | productive than Grass ane can possibly be. This s 
land for a succeeding should be made to si ng.” a „The idea of a 1 81 within | placed beyond dispute by the statements made by Mr. 
. ngland, | Caird in his pamphlet, and also by every-day observa. 
AAE ta 0k aaron i having been for the last da years in a state a utter | tion. The uestion remains, whether the outgoings and 
at 80 loads per acre, destitution, in many districts, which ought to provide | expenditure inseparable from the arable system will not 
1750 loads, at 6d....... 43 15 surplus cattle for exportation, is a matter of history, — than counterbalance the advantages from 
ie ante 388 218 15 but y Ae be cre ited by the next generation. The management of a arable farm is, 0 | 
Pie viene for 35 k That a country may suffer from a ag season a failure 3 difficult and expe ensive, and unless proper iui 
acres, at 4 c . of shots 15 not an uncommon occu rrence, b that a| ment be displayed in the co conducting of it, with a 
acre, 140 cwt. "i D people who are clever, quick, a ait not w arae fes in any of | regard to economy, and a vigilant superi dence A 
Te ose af panto, the characteristics of a high class nation, should court | the workmen employed, it must end in certain an 80 3 
hoeing, earthing, and disease and poverty, and render San weer miserable, | anyone supposes that a large district in Grass can 
gathering produce of is beyond the comprehension of a 5 n being. It once be converted into an arable state state with advantage, 
= eee ee 87 10 is melancholy to watch the atrophy’ * ande Ireland ` = = on Dez, find e grievously disappointed. 
. . 147 5 is labour ing; her substance is gradually wasting away, may be here quoted, — ogy ed 
‘ her energy is as an unstrung bow, and her case appears | J 8 Sinclair gp erii of Seote i É 
hopeless. Is mo no physician 10 heal her malady ? i 1810 George Fr. Stratton, F 
We find that there is a sum of 1471 58. to i Let us hope one will arise ere long. Falco U the Great Tew estate in Oxfordshi ed 
from 2518/., on account of the e land toes, ` English Tariy Foreign Farmers.—In the drt -a the Scotch husbandry. By this 
which leaves the total annual pro ce of — and cult saat Gazette of the 27ch of October er yee is increase of rent of 66604. per annum. F: 
‘erop, 23701. 15s. Then, as it is Boe every farm ge er who _— 3 the 8 title purporting to upset the ee 10,7307. 35047. was expended in ind 
has the privilege of pro P teas loads of 3 “I. A. C.,“ published a few e 585 Does | renounce their old leases, and a large Tt bas been 
annually, I add 2s. 6d. per lo 500 621. 10s., | « 4 T. "M. d really understand my ri age mean that | in making roads and other improvements. piss 
y 


1 
to the annual expenditure rang ue a which, according f it 
or 1848, was 1205“. 3s. 8d., fonds tal wy discouraging sw production? Of | failure, and after a trial -a of it for poe? vad » 
giving a total i as of 12671. 1 13s. 8d., — this course our revenue is obtained from our native pro- was found necessary to re rt to the old system, 

deducted from . 15s., leaves 11034. Is. 4d. | ductions ; ta is taken kee from the native pro-| lay the land down again i phat s 
vital invested, Rar for profit, Ko. | ducts themselves, or from the foreign products for which | incurred having been worse than thrown bie 
ed the iner i i 
tra 


8 
is 
10 
an 
eS 
8 8 
g 
®© 


pel 
1 Pm not say that ‘Mr. M'Culloch does realise 11007. | we re w | 
annum from , necessity, to increase the home production ; | may not be difficult to account from Wht” land 
Potatoes ; but if Mr. Caird’s pamphlet be worthy of | for how ean we sell more to our neighbours abroad rA The management of Grass and of ploughs 
a realise something ess nd ean w u 0 e i isti ct . ther requires the 
Tike that amount, and this er, of if aan of them unless we produce more with which to pay le ure and chance; the othe The 
h 


uch left to n 
circumstances em? The exchange may be of equivalents in value ; fall exercise 5 intelligence, activity, Fae 
e tg. ay farm to be let (about 24s. 172 but our neighbours may be in want of clothing, we in on class of 
considered as such b 


ers glad w aT 
I should aa have | want of food, and though our tive s may be fresh G land, as they will by that means Title 
bad petal ee r . 8 x respec y resh Grass lan > fe f corn erops with 


F 
3 
F 
< 
g 
3 
s 


2 
P 
8 
les 
e 
qH 
881 
E 
S 
5 
E 
Z 
g 
aly : 
A eo 
8 
5 
TE 
238 
87 8 
È 
. 
Ẹ 
uh 
= 
UH ‘e 


y it, there 
have y ine our wares as an inducement to buyers, hich would lead to the fare, it 
Ireland.“ 1 want to see Patricks at the looms, — increase of custom is to diminish our her; de 


* roduc- | were of a strong ý vite ive nature, to 
cotton and silk factories springing up in the bogs, n T kaoi N regard to „ T. M.’s” refuta- | under the plough, it an ar rena 


4 
a 
E 
3 
8 
4 
R 
fees 
F 
3 
= 
MF 
gen 
3 
ip 
ar 
LES 
ee 
a 
wie 
aii 


' . i : : Poets as more per 3 uld be 
must find an echo in every breast ; and yet, with facilities | than the foreigners as we rat paid more —— acre mc This alone soii An pr a See a E ra et 
ki 


de in | expenses (not immediatel . the ro a 
to | Socay Gabe malhedh of nko, tha 3 n 


m 


ect all this a most complete set of farm Berson 
—— and those ose of a perfectly different kind 
ted i ing — The 


must be such as to 


tion to what . the conversion of 

tillage may be hasty proceeding 

should, at val A nts, be avoided. It must be first 
whether local circu — 

necessary in 

The he rg oy e and the 

means to execute, are as we pes sr Pag requisites in 


n failure ; with them, not o 
— be obtained, but a A ado 
amassed, even under reduced prices of produce. 


a de- 
cit Aad 
Lato. 


hin, Seeding.— 
Si Wikis, of eke: upon the subject of thin 
and, that gen ving in the Che ge Chronicle 
cl last week thought fit to renew the su In 


— 
. 


f th 8s. 
athe extreme woul i as M shall be able to show, | bis falowa lor nothing they should not as he chould be ie a je 8 ‘hay enn be lands available, Ti the 
ds both injudicious and unsafe. I have just conclu an t 8 is sa; ng H iina — of the hreh ss A — done with them for 8s. per 
u experi t i ing binding and s : 
erie ay 5 others one e wio ean 8 ak k the Turnip crop d not charge any rent to t F * 5 Kon. 19.— We ve now finished Wheat 
y p 2 ee tenant, as that not busi like to call it | sowing, with the 88 of two acres ; all in good order, the 
result, upon a Clover Jey, mown three ti rent, but after paying the expense of the till on a most of it is up and loo Wheat ie Ferk, well. I Mies co. ih will be — 
ory li acre of white Bentinck Wheat h had been naked fallow, he thought there ought to be a further on ha we 1 of our first sown with the 
the ki 9800 6 in _ apart, an x f lant Feen, charge of 25 per cent. on the capital employed, as it sheep. Our teams no ap a plonghing stubble for the 
48 ving deposited at the 0 quired a great deal of labour 1 ny re to | Bean and Pea crops, and also for the root crops in the spring, 
ach inch in length in the rows, and the plants standing ; E ed | for which we pl from 10 to 12 inches at one ploughing 
l ; g ~ K the outgoing tenan Epo tton, propos carting rubbish off 3 1 .I of ditches, and 
e ; early in F ebruary I commenced my f solution in lading an an outline of. the general terms of | scraping roads into heaps for the land, Men 
a asurıng, an off into e valuatio ndment w ied by filling earth, ditching L 1 e. This week we 
empartments of one rod 3 ot the field e Mr. Turvill, to 1 5 5 t 25 uld be . pat ‘a? Ligon stock into the yards ; they will 5 
$ . q é u: 
1 8 other. Upon mpartment No. 1 the p sos charged iu addition to the cost of tillage. The follow- 3 wa shall fe 5 Turnips, The cows.are housed at 
15 i fully Aci outa with a hoe, leaving them at ing resolution was the subm e chair- | nights, but are allowed to run out in days; they receive a feed. 
i . t both ways, so that when completed there man, Mr. Whitwell, and adopted—there 9 about 30 4 Carrot e aes with oe hay ibe assertion $ ti 
Ta j 1 e whatever, which accu ever members present, a previous |l virewon, ‘are dsstroyed by the A5 — peage ag 
i waka ave been obtained by first depositing the exact year’s rent 3 charged to the i incoming 5 it is | disturbed 
| Mntity viar, e W ve = 5 I hoed the opinion of this meeting, no portion of rent should eee ae, 
| r fi sap ji th 10 50 20 80 he chatged to the incoming 3 —— De 3 asd — om zo e ” R — — is your defini- 
ij a one foot * the Wheat p ants 21 e row valued by him should bear a further charge of 25 per ine Sula ty Bes 3 hn 
» comgutining exactly as w 15 first drilled. On the third frees calculated upon the . of such tillages to be paid n goes person chargeable, 2 
“nent the rows remaine nched, and were to the outgoing tenant as a compensation for the capital Carmi Foo mg ol (See Blac 
‘in th tumn, being at the rate you —— her, upto 322 
8 and nied hoed, for employed "4 — us will — pretty w wel on a 3 —— 
in Clover pe E ee Pmr a it Rebtew. — Oe tate Lies set 4 = a 
ht 0 J Ki “are a set of rules— 
è 7 eee 2 the aye 5 or and Calendar Ea ian mB ve Beooklesby Pe ia ee The object of the 
il reaped, about the hun - Joh 168. ie Lon a — individually the whole loss arising 
n c number of TEE gway, 3 J» 8 fully | from he ae of a cow; the bose rarer to be potted 
5 the fi . a Ge maintaining th e character of the periodical as the best . Nee ue 
eight in number upon the former. an ai * ride egg It wa agp oa . shall rest ion as to the i — 2 
ieces, This day I had the 15 ren treasurer, on 7 
a , m nd weighed, y information belonging 10 c th, his subscription (in advance) of 1. 
perintendence of Mr. J en, my clerk, wn a very 55 ‘idea of the additions which pe fet each = he jay } — — et 
i of William P is | 8 —— dg pee: . of 164. 4, No ance to | member 
The result i 5 to cow above 12 years of age. 5. When a cow 
Weight of straw: rig ate e. Miscellaneous. a} diss theshin to balong to the owner of to cow; iaf UR 
5 0 Death of Mr. 1 —Our will regret with can d, the money to be paid to the funds of the 
H 7 us to learn the death of Mr. eee, ape 2 — a 5 me mp pee —— — nias to car mg 
e of 000 grains s stated by has s subscription for three successive months to be deprived of all 
: p grain, it e A tion, under the signature 8. E” „The baslik o of Mr. benefit from the club, and to forfeit what he may have pre- 
1 mg Wheat 5 is said Dias Santos had been ee for some years, and for 8 3 7 — eee Rep g fing the — 
. ptian Wheat, being a several inonth s he had been ee to lenve the a proportion of the funds then in hand, after de- 
or Fey for mealing but such was esire to comm ducting therefrom 20l. which was given by Lord Yarborough 
— vated i in aR gorg ualled ge of the Agricultural Gazette the pa | and i interesting wo the funds on prip — of the club. 9. —— : 
ra each cow he may e ï 
stores of information with which an acute mind, gre 9 to pay on ro — —ũ—ñaũ1-.. —ꝛ funds to 5 
th large cat ual | observation, and muc ca travel had supplied lim, that he which each cow 10 the club would be entitled, after — 
e Tis Pa] not even on his - to indite what he feet ing th farborough’s subscription of 201. 10. T 
ber of 1 Se si might be useful and 15 . upon the su the funds in in the hands of the treasurer shall at any — 
i se he allow: any cows 1 die, 
affordi cher faet upon | of f poultry. Mr. Dias Santos, at an early = at "his N mem — 1 to make up the deficiency. 11. 
ming ano I life took an active part in th the struggle fi Or Catholic The — subscriptions iscontinued at = 
3 e en e . cretion of the treasurer, whenever — 7 
A Sing Gob eee funds in hand sufficient as a goarant, reduced by 


f 
it is unt "that grains 56 
will produce a plant; but 


ntity o 


2 favourable * 


ithout 27 


I have been challenged by oss Rev. . 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 


Robert of life he was a man of great 


be drilled on land in a Sn en eee. 
Baker, Writtle, Sept. 3. 


o parishes alike ; some 
persons were of opinion that dacs should be no naked 
fallows : but it was well known that in this nei 


He thought a 
charging t — ou ght to be ob- 
rved.— Mr. Jon he Nec aie. of Borough Fen, ee 
tances ought 


vements ; 
815 to be ere dealt with, . — being loo ooked i 

very particularly ; the number of ploughings eddie 
careful — k with the 
rowing, an 


t 

- &nfess a less qua of s 
. and succeed hatter ; but ies 1 should aah it of Chester 
i 


to or alterations of the farm buildings; these points he 


on vd 25 3 system to be 3 3 


bour- | 
q basy land that 


entered into d ume 
2 of artificial mauures, drainage and —— | 


749 


great probity, generosity, and 
2 — y good acts he made many friends, 


The Dr. and (detain it dc well 
A is (by the — a Inge fara} tae 


o. et 


Year, 
Ren 
Tithes,” 
Cultivation 
and Expenses 
Muck and 
Lime. 
Seed. 
: 


SSS eee. 


— 
S 


„88 
SSS 


— 2 onl t 


5 NN 


416 5 


NI 16 0 
‘arming of South Wales, in the Journal 
ociely of England, 


Mr. Read 
of the Royal Agricultural Socie 


ead's F 


Calendar of | Operations. 


NOYRN 

peni wes ra ag A hogy . last report, we 
— ished s 2 on the 1 land, except the head- 
— We are po 8 greg Turnips—one 
field with Bo er 
Thresh 


* 
dressing ; ; one 
R? have 45 baits oi = Turns, ‘our 
remainder in th neg e cou: 
Sparren Cans 


may not pro 
completed — the 
dc 4 ine . it L. e chea 
24 s es) 
Boer uch 


— 
2 
= Fe 


Mr. Txpgurr said chat in present 


— 


exper’ 
on cold E osy ori 52 in a field occupied - — 5 son = 
idding, 12 bushels of B 


crop of 35 threaves per acre (which 
to “9 the size which th 
to 34d. and 10s. 24d. respectively, exclusive 

binding ar and 2 whieh, | k the wages curren — B 
cost 2 ere more. Cut utting, g, binding, and Setting sd by 


Cinan ey 3 assistance, In all his relations | 


THE AGRI CULTURAL GAZETTE. 


75 12. thefirst o da fay of January in every HAY.—Per Load 3 a Se — TOES -SOUTHWARK i 
— otherwise. to make out a 14 wont showing hie Bas ov. 22. * The Committee report that the — — — st the 
wipe agg a pays —— during — year, and th Prime Meadow nig 1 Her ose, vee aey 80s 83 N were +e ch enabl. aal 
b is and cause the "same to be | Inferi 2 0 w pigti stock, The e la a 
halar an . e mits ppi bane a 33 : 55 Stra h 24 brought us a liberal supply, which a cater part of Ter the ae 
DRAINAGE TILES : ord. have received a neck imen of | New Hay ett oth i J. . day's prices parse 1 5 we Regents, The following see a, 
in tile blocked up wit th clay so completely that 12 seems a gents, 90s. to 8. 
ree ossible to call a the latter 8 could have been UMBERLAND Market, Nov. 22. s. to 60s.; Scotch, — to 658.; Scote N e 
p Prime Meadow — 68s to 728 Inferior ... . .. 60 to 74s French whites, 508. to 65s.; Rh ups, 308. to 
ought by any current through the pipe; and we “ns ro there- te : Cl do., 608. to 65 enish do., 50s, to 608. Re 
fore forced to the conclusion oar — tile 3 hav been laid init 2 aips 50 3 over 7 o., 8 
rfectly—probabl, ol r bend in the line, 77 ft gei om s. | 
The 3 of Grain, also, is a probable cause of the Old Clover 84 90 * JosHua BAKER. bnd Nos 15 „MARK LANE, 4 
evil. e water from drains is always clearer th Wurrzeharkr, N Waea feoti the t n te supply of Engli | 
from shallow drains ; it brings no sediment into the tiles and | Fisa OM Hay . 68s to 5 5 Nom, Clover. pak?) to Sat of whish, tha best . 8 ene sat market tala mora 
an be deposited. It is of course an advan. | interior 80 a pee 
1 soles that they dan be more easily cleaned | New Hay... „, — — {Straw e e 30 — 5 l ee e ance then — 4 . i 
h ken out; but when pipe 1 are well made, so that Old Clover ... ... 80 84 lan a agtt te — iia erior goalie, fi fren we hen d 
their ends meet . well ee h a un nitorm fall int — 34 HO PS.—FRIDAT, Nov 5 * former n TN seas Ga quite in end 
line, and placed so deep t 1 r, they | . PATTENDEN and SmiTH report that the oe pom: and good foreign grindi samples — — i 
will not get stopped like t "specimen sent, They may be | dnos good for all new Hops, and with ne — sma 505 g 85 — eal 2 sok Wee ud extremeiquotations; 
choked by ferruginous deposit, o r Hy the roots of trees or maining unsold, prices are expected to go anen higher after vale <The Out tade ie eavy ; 2 * are unaltered in 
pints, Ve not — y 1 n furrows Christmas. Yearlings and old Hops are also in more demand. | gy alities of la end tis tobe cheaper excepting the finest 
e à ‘he work with t ENT GARDEN, Nov 24, RIDAY, 23.—The arrivals of E 
— 3 gather Sy veel aoe plough with a shallow| Hothouse Grapes continue to be plential Pine-apples are | week have been moderate, ber those of ore — 
w, harrow, gather weeds, sow the corn, harrow again, | hardly sufficient 8 Sp domari: Filberts and kaamen a able is morning’s market was — 
0 the paaa bet he ridges, and leave i | abundant, Ches plentiful, Oranges pr Lemons f Wheat, either English or foreign, were on too small a scale 
—— b- would ather have all the produce of the , abundant. eee may still be obtained at “td. — to ad f our quotin y alter in their 
poem ee proces han merar the meal out of it. The 7 Among Meg prow het e are good and plentiful ; — x 8 d ry qualities ba Barley arı e turn cheaper tad 
will, of course, go 7 — ther as food tunit up one But if you the same. Caulifiowers less plentiful. Potatoes have P er descriptions and foreign are fully as dear “Beans and 
ESAT PS = «cat of each daily, of course Oa | altered sone — last “account, te. ces ma ohi salnding 2 1 on „ at Whee is heavy, and new 
the better of | are cient for the deman ushrooms fetch from 0 er.— The t tr 
r gen ‘that geta the ee food will thrive o beiter. o | ls, 3d. per pottle. Cut Flowers consist of Heaths, Pelargo- 1 has been every where 585 Jah, — the 
ARCOAL? Capen Liddle. The following instructions | niu Gardenias + econ venusta, Tropæolums, Chrysan- | 1 rices, in some markets the dec 
280 pn by Mr. Parkes at p. 362 in our volume for = | themums, Fuchsias, Primulas, Ca mellias, Cinerarias, and Roses, qr. without inducing any activity in . al 
% The clamps which I constructed in Lancashire were sma 1, | “ata aso — ee has occurred, In New York prices ree 
being about 2 yards square within, and the walls wn ut 14 1 | | Sees eee per Ib., st 3 to 6s i Oranges, "per pet hee 2 12s man is 
high. These we idly and conveniently t of | Gra othouse,p. Ib., 3s to g L Poot, Fripay, No aba 
88 sods cut from the superficial bog-earth, which had „ — Portugal, per lb., Stot — sweet, per lb., 2s t 1 pri dy’ — — 1 ee aoe Taa Was à poor attendance 
recently turned over by a peculiar plough, in aide 18 | Pears, — doz., 2s to 4 Walnuts, p. 100, 1s 6d to ey former prices. Oats were firm but, not brisk * Wheat at 
inches or | by 9 inches deep. The joints of the walls were r half sieve, is to 6s p. bush., 16s to 24s nd Peas steady. Indian Corn taken at 9 
astered, where needed, bey soft stuff obtained from adja- l Ne a 2s to 4s rilberts, en 100 lbs., 45s — — pe hens i at previous rates, Flour, — 
t I also fo ther clamps or kilns, both pepe. 3 1 0 28 Nut p. bush. „20s to pin * e We ha es was 2 
square a reular, Vaig ng walls with moist bog ag. | 2 — . bsh. pay rate supplies kines Tuesday e wet weather and mode. 
4 gings, on the plan of Pisa work Since the purport of — 4 8 en ig an — 1s 6d Kent Cobs, 605 to ae 100 lbs. 
ovens is to keep air out and heat in, it is obvious that a y | VEGETABLES. IMPERIAL WIHEAT. BARLET. OATS.| RTE. | Brama (Prac 
will serve a temporary purpose which may be handy | Cabbages, p. doz., 6d 3 18 Onions, P: bar 2d to 4d AVERAGES NS, | PEAS, 
t spot, cheaply put together, and which does not Caulifiowers, p. doz. Spanish, p. doz., Is6dto4s| Oct, 13 te ls 4d 28 
burn away too quickly. Slabs of unburnt clay would answer Broccoli, p.doz. — eS Shallots, — Ib., 4d to 8d 8 85 A 1 28 i 
well; but my object was to use the materials furnished =| 8 p doz., 1s 6d to an si Garlic, per 1b., 4d to — 1 meet 41 7 28 
+ d in any 3 45 it. Three or four small Bru Ae P. hf. s oe at P? dos., Is 6d to 36 Nov. 3. 41 6 2 
holes, say 4 inches square, are left in the walls at bottom, to 158 00 ade © „ P. so., — to 9d a Waves | 40. erro ae 
give air hed a rae the fire, which is first made pretty | Sorrel, 3 a sieve, 6d to 9d Cos, en 6d to 1 1 40 6 28 
— Dae srt age aber to establish a — of r Potatoes r ton, 60s to 100s Endive, per score, 18 to 1 Rup 
hot fuel at bottom es are di reverend . pe r a 3s to 6s atoes, p. hf. sieve, 33 to À a4 28 
on, 2 finaly stopped up. Ifthe pea te — per bush., 2s to 38 Mushrooms, p. pot., 1s tols 3d | Duties oi Fo. 
Charred dry, mp may be speedily aed, al- urnips, p. doz. bun., ls6dto2s6d — per bush., 3s to 68 eign Grain 1 $ 80 1 
ways wine the driest sag — and covering the with Red Beet, per doz., 1s to 28 mall Salads, p. pun., 2d to 3d A s | 
damp diggings. The air-holes must be 12805 4 7 | Horse Radish, p. bdl., 28s to 4 | Fennel, per bunch, 2d to 3d 9 in the last six pe i Averages, | 
when it is s Judged, by the appearance of the volume and Cucumbers dee to 1 avory, per bunch, 2d to 3d Prices, Oer. 13. Oer. 20. en. 275 Nov, 3 an | 
clearness of the smoke, that sufficient heat is acquired below | Leeks, per bun h, 2d Thyme, per bunch, 2d to 3d | 
to carry on — . As the contents subside, fresh Celery, p. bundle; 8d to s 3d | Parsley, p. doz. bun., 3s to 48 tls 7d ens w BR IES | 
is added, care being taken to maintain the kiln quite | Radishes p. j bunches, m to2s| — Roots, p. bdle., 1s to 18 4l 6 oe os we 
full, to close all interstices in the 9 a to fill up holes | Wate terors er doz. bunches, | Marjoram, per bunch, 2d 41 14 — . te 
* at top as they occur from shrinkage p “hide e 4d t int, per bune 41 1 one ase 
Flame must — be allowed to appear otf rface. Carrots, per bun., 4d to 6d Basil, per bunch, 2d 40 7 er 3 ° 
clamp is known to be perme tte filled ohh “charcoal when ach p. sieve, Is to Is 6d 22 i os 
the added stuff settles but little. The 
st hen the charred phon ee wi 8 London. Liverpool. Wakefield, Boston. 
inches of the top ; otherwise, the 1 air, particularly 2 — — — | 
in windy weather, may reach the charcoal, ich would then PRICES i Ai | 
be —— Myre ie reng sulle 105 prio d Smothering the CURRENT. Nov. 12 Nov. 19 Nov. 13 ov. 20. Nov. 9. N ee Nov. 14. pr td Li 
surface with wet stuff; but the best plan is to extinguish with | qr. 70 lbs. 70 lbs. qr. qr. 62 lbs. ces a | 
ter, whi so preven nts the finer dust froni being Heed Whea 3. 8. 8. s. 6. d. 8 d.ſs. d. 3. d s. 8. . 3 8. d. 4. po bh 1 
away when the clamp is emptie New, red . 38 to43 40 to436 6 6 45 10 6 3/36t044/36—44 34 tol0 82 039 5 0 5 3% 0 5 6 
Pony: J B H. One cwt. of hay and 28 Ibs. of Oats a ugh 49--50\42—4816 4 6 916 4 6 8/41—46/41 a 38—46 3 55 7 6 15 r 
for it as it does little, and that little light pte 1 red „ 4 , 2 * 3 3 5 1 5 7 
Mang aie take en up now. Old, : *. 38-43 38-436 4 6 816 3 6 7(|39 — 39 — 5 j 0 
Roor-CnUs REER: E. Tilsley. We do not know the,book, and » white ooo 4345 43457 0-7 07 0 ea — Sa . 5 0 © Ss 6 6 
thus do not know the mm nares yg to; but there is a Foreign... 36 525 %% „„ — 38 8 — ga 8 5 8 
root-erusher for horse power made by Moody, of Wiltshire. F „ i 
WEIGHT ASCERTAINED BY MeAsUREMEN NT: Inquirer. Muitiply 480 lbs. 480 lbs, Be 
th f the girth behind the shoulder by 5 times the Rye— P wa 2420—22 — — — — — 
g p 0 reign... 20—23 20 — 23 — — — — — — ps e 
Lhath-i feet) 448 by ay +} * a S Bo 
ps 3 9 8 Peniga meal |5/.—6/|5/.—6 — bee — — ae po pene | 
Tonne Pres HG. The 8 is evidently a disturbance of | Barley qr. qr. 24 An i 
the — wor — Segoe or 9 4 — — eee action of its Grinding vce 24 22428 — — 20—22 20—2221—23 21—23 21—24 a 4 
ung pigs after alkalies, and Mal 3 2631 26—311 — 251 
should — ts s supplied with balt . he troughs, as well p tine- i 8 nf pi 308—318 | 30s—31s pkg — 21 26 aa n. ae 
sow, way of cure give the fo! lowing to each orelgn... see PLOS=60) £05 aU * = oie) oi au aT f E 
pfta e affected: carbonate of magnesia, loz. ; tincture 6 bush.|6 bush. piney 
of rhubarb, 2drachms : ti pium, $ dracl m; warm Malt—Ship ... Soe 2o — ie 35—38035—38 . — Ta 
Haag i ape carts s e pp t for eight — — The sow gn 1 lks SIETAS, 280 iis see 
ve 2 02. ate of magnesia in her food. W. C. S : : 1g —25 —2⁰ 
o Oats—White... |1g—24|i1s—24|3s 24 36 30 38 243s 3d, — | — 131801318 19-35 | 18 
rkets. Black... 16—2216—22½ 12 7 2 22 — — 1718 T7 
. SMITHPIELD, Moxpar, Nov. 19 Foreign }13--20/18—202 32 42 32 4) =| =) = [= gr > 
ý 19. 
nu 1 Beasts is about the same as on last Monday; R qr. qr. qr. qr. |, 
. — s dull, owing to the e in the weather. Peas — Boilers 28—3228—32 33s— 33s— 26—30/26—30| — 
The e qualities a ee make 4s, ; į iadd. i in 
ances 4s. is obtained. of S is but + as 
the mild weather — aa tra oap eee Grinding... 27 —28s | 27 —28s | — er 5 5 
fair clearance having been effected in the dead ets, pre- Foreign ... |24—32|24—32 29 —30 | 29 —30 Ror oe N 
Dorene, n pee Wes e fem Menan is reluc- — 
given ic e cho; to wns. ves are scarce, small | 3422 
u fally ported ; —— foa oan and a — [24—30|24 et 8 130—3132—3422 
a are ith di e Pigs meet wish a * , and | 9 = E r — | 33—37 32 —37 32—33 2 
— 1 9 ora +++ 23—3623—36 24 25 —34 |26—28/26— — 
have 730 70 Beaste 215 2780 Sheep, 43 — and 73 Pigs; j A 
00 Beasts ; and 300 from ss 
‘and Li Pr CCC 
ofSiba.—_s d s d Per st. of 8 Ibs.—s d s d Foreign . . |4148|41—48 — — — — 
, Here- Best Long-wools, 3 6to3 10 TLinseeddake 
— 3 10 to Ditto S soe Nai British 91 185 
Best 3 3 10 Ewes & 2d quality 3 0—3 4 Poren 12509“. 1287l. 15s—8/.)7/. 158—8ʃ.“ — 5 
2d quality Beasta 2 10 — 3 4 Ditto horn in orelg” 7i. l — — — on 
8 sea Ü Lambs s.. ss „„ | eee ae i 
se & 0-4 A Calves... ... -: 6 Endian Corn— 22—2622—26 27s—29s | 27s—29s | — | — 
Beasts, 4221; Shoupsed lamin, 36,000 ; Calves, 125; Pigs, 286. SA p. sack p. sack] 280 Ibs, 280 lbs. 
et Pui. ur — 32—40/32—40| 30—32 30—32 mi 0 
— pretty good supply of Beasts to-day, 3 
Monday’s prices are maintained. 
Imports. 
qrs. 
7771 
1326 7 
3802 
A 1488 
| Lambs 594 
ida Pe * a E Pigs ee ; 
1070; T Gate, 3333 Pigs, 294 | Stenzp{ 


) 47—1849. ] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, BE 751 


Sales by Auction. 2 BE n in Somersetshire, distant about 
miles gh ~ — a — 5 Exeter F 
BROMPTON PARK NU ere is a Station sais oak to tore honi set gaas pores PHILLIPS ano Co 155 » Bishopsgate-street 
peses. PROTHEROE anp MORRIS arefavoured |w pear ng place: and ° 1 — town, a FARM, com- N in 100 — * 12s. sale dn, 000 feet of 16-08 SEN 
JM nith instructions from Mr. Jonn Saxcster and Mr, | prising an excellent large House, with convenient Offices, 60| f inches b . per baz. Sises» — 
ROBERT comity bee > g to the above Te: to — to an pen! gi — agai 3 — Orcharding a and about 6 acres of | usually jardis. or 4 — . r are 
A 26, 18 „ a person of res bilit; P i _large 26-02, 
3 dan, att at Il o clock, the whole of the 2 commencing 25th March next, — Application post pad) Shot, tn, Panas of 13 inches hy Gi — 
ora valu able STOCK of the BROMPTON PARK NURSERY, | Messrs. SrurceE, Land Surveyors, Bri panes PHILLIPS anp CO., — BISHOPSGATE 
riding over 30 acres, lately carried on by Gray, ADams, and TO MARK * N REET WITHOUT, LONDON 
consisting * well-known and celebrated Collection ET parce ae AND OTH ier ab 
i Standard and D Maiden and Trained Fruit Trees, O BE LET, the Lease of a MARKET ‘GARDEN, GEARS 5S SLATES, with ‘drilled 
r — „ s, 
a rich assortment of Ev wee re eciduous Shrubs, Orna consisting of about 17 acres of — of good quality and Roben PLATE. | 
Trees, American Plants „together with the Green- in excellent condition, partly stocked with choice Fruit Tase * — 
houses dien new and approved i hot- waser apparatus), Es Koon t ve miie s from london- Pos fa —* good repair, — With Drilled Holes. 3 f 8 eE 2 laa ETS] g | 8 
Frames, Carts, and Utens Seeds, hop- em my ondon.—For er particulars apply, 0 |S led jee || © | = | | 
counters and Drawers, Cou: nti ——4 Desks and Fit — s, 400, Back Common, Turnham- | pe: ed a oa 
Iron Safe, &c.—May be viewed 41 to the Sale. Catalogues will green ; or rif by letter, post paid, to Mr. Augustus Daws, Market |a. dļa. dfs. als 4 4 d|a, ajia La 
be forwarded, on 5 etter enclosing postage | Gardener, near Kew-bridge, Brentford, near London Duchess oy 121 ‘li 02 905 9% u 511 92 0 
s, to PROTHEROE. an ornis, Leytonstone ; they ma Small Im ad b 14/1 51 11/2 7% 100 | 
—4 bad 1s. each (returnable . — on the — ESSEX.—TO. NURSEBYMEN, HORTICULTURISTS, Small Duchess ess 22 by 1 12/1 9 110% 64 8) 9 101 1 ih H 
mises ; an d of the principal Seedsmen in London. 0 pyr AFD maniat GARDENERS. h ó ountess.. 20 by 10 1 4} 6/2 0/8 80% 84/1 oli 81 6 
paises ; and of | avon eee 3 m ion, the sin- | Viscountess ... 101 TL 4/1. 10% 4% 8 
STANDARD ROSES, CELEBRATED GROWER &e. — — Maie 2 Large Ladies... 16 by 10 01 sji 7/3 9% 110 Hh Hia 
occupi r. Curti te near to the | Ladies . 16 8/0 10/1 1/1 / 6) 0 7 
0 2 ENS will se l by Aue —— ad — — a — and “Coggeshall, and within 2) miles of a ed ane 1855 70 $0 1011 22 300 aly 70 le * 
rea mon Roo s 38, at ld for . Coven 88 — ay 2 ee 2 — — Villa re — 2 a GLASS TILES : 
AY, 27th ae er, a or lo’clock, 4000 Pie —— ous ssuage, rge mservatory, * 
sation, and Pinks, choice sorts named ; 100 — 4 100 Barn, Fruit-rooms, Stable and other convenient Daildings inch Roven Prate. Snurxr. 
Phlox b Soani, and 100 Standard Rose nee Peas varie. | With about 45 acres of superior Land, ich = acre nch thick... * rs each. | 1608, ~ 0s. Sd. each 
ties.— ham wed the day prior and morning of Sale, it the: sag Pe — form tos — brated . on rdens and Nur. ” 21 oz. OD „ 
Catalogue 8 sery Grounds; the remainder is chiefly plant ted with the ” d ” — 2 188 
ene eie NURSERY, gga ss Fruit 9 and Sig 22 abounds with choice stock |È » 1 
n every variety for w these grounds have for s 
IMPORTANT 10 PL 9 SALE OF | years been so justly — Ber Rent and oth — — o Sz Rovan PLATE otis 
FOREST “AND. OTHER TREES. culars, apply to Messrs, Beaceowe and Tuomrson, 19, Lin- | — 4. SEY Gt el . a i 1 i # | In. 
{ R. WILDE Boge to inform the nobili ity and gen- Fee London to Messrs. Coor and Sows, Land | . PAPARE S e 
tlemen engaged in Planting, and the trade generally, Agents and Auctioneers, ‘stratford St. Mary, Suffolk. Not above 15 inches long lo 10/0 111 “ait 80 3 * 7 = 
1 irom Mr, Macue, in — = WALH MPTON, NEAR — N, HANTS. -i T Abon iB ins — not ok ab iät Ol ats 2 99 63 24 a 
ue! new Nur- : 5 b ala al 
i Ba, at asne > ap 11 2 pul yo competition, on fee SAGE Sar eT por sone 5 75 — w aint 3 21 dhil 1002 AH Ari 2 5 
: — ee 291 75 in the prev 0 ARMS, — Í | 
i ou t of the 12 inslant weiner " permitting), ON ONE quisite Homesteads and — r — * e Ol sanf aus 
MILLION OF FORES AMENTAL TREES, &e,, The tain: A. n p * sto Prices and every information may be had by 
consisting of fine trans . Beeck, 2 to 4 feet; fine tran Pasture ae SY jpeesrl yee 13 spP ae — TIN 13 S awp 0O., Horticultural Glass , 
i ted Whitethorn, 3 feet ; true red- wood Highland ae T 8 Arable * ie “ss we MG a A LOND ox. 6, SHOPSGATE STREET WITHOUT, 
pare es 3 a 3 Be 6 feet; black Italian 7 eee eee 
Poplars, 6 to 8 feet; Elms, Hornbeam ountain Ash, common ciate $ FOR 
, Levant Oaks, common Laurels, dsc, The soil of the Nursery For further ——— apply to ities. 91. and 8. ETLEY FOR CORSET AZORINE, ie.’ * 
is a light loam, and admirably suited for producing fibre ; and as | BARBE, Solici Lymington, Hants. British . t pri — 
they have been well and frequently transplanted, the roots are r square foot, for * e! — 24. to 
excellent. Large 3 that may find it inconvenient to eet of oo are ke A — yoked fi im! — e 
wah i A Nen gre = have the opportunity of arranging Lists 0 2 hy sexo ek ot * 5 3 
i ackie to leave them on the ground till the Ist of s 
` March, 1850. Railway communication to all parts of Soran PATENT) ROVAN PLATE, THICK CROWN N GLAS ASS, GLASS 
. can be obtained * e 72 y ATER-PIPES, PROPAGATING 
of Mr. ce ene re or of Mr, Mackie, 10 mad » Ex parce gen Be agg MILK PANS 3, PATENT ELATE-GLASS, 
| change-street, Norwich, ' ; % ͤ London, os 
į an o 
i ME: HASLAM —— p- U ome at = — Auetion Ore Chronicle, f Saturday in each month, 
} Mart, on T AY, quantity of Saar ; FOR CONSERVA TORTES AND HORTIC RAL 
HEATHS, 9207. . e. . op — 8 aang PURPOSES, &e. aros 
ancy. Weeping and Pillar Roses, r gaa other 
Shrubs, Dutch Bulbs, &c.—Catalogues to be had at the Mart, 
and of the Auctioneer, &., Epping, Essex. 
400 Standard a = 100 Lots of 4 each), 150 Camellias, 200 
Lilium speciosa and punctatum, 100 Asclepias tuberosa, 
Azalea indica, Vines, Weeping 22 Pillar Roses, Dutch ELEY 4 FOUL GER, Greennovuse, Hor 
3 and Improvep Pir BotLDeRS, being practical 
Ms poas will sell 4 ee “m 80 Mart t, and —— —.— are — . to offer their works at the un 
* SDAY next, Nov 23 sad 8 dermentioned low prices. They are the inventors of the Im- 
r the. Mart, and of the Au c- | proved Cast-i uble Saddle Boilers, well known to 
eer, &c., Epping, Essex. uperior to all others, and at half the expense, viz. 14. N ai £ ae — — 
TO BUILDERS, NURSERYMEN, AND OT 16-inch, 2. 10s.; 18-inch, .; 24-inch, 4/.; supe ouble = 
A. RAMS AY, will sell by Auction the | door and frame, 25s, Fonr-inch arten Pipe, ls, per foot; PROPAGATINGEBEE CUCUMBER CLASSES 
i Tanks for pits, 1s, 9d. * all other connecti oy —— * — aoe ià 0 
on N 2 = 1 low. 2 Greenhouses or Hothouses, 1 8 feet, 151. ; MILLINGTON’S SHEET GLASS, which is of 
o'clock, without reserve, the NURSERY S STOCK, "K, consisting of ot 15 feet by zo — 22. 2 ba — 12 fect, 3 26 5 ag renege | 4 er the 3 a td y mie Fap be D to 92 4 na 
| feet, 321., including a eet 
l 4 1 4 fine . 7 8 a 1 5 si iT portable, requiring no — E & can be — recom- large . Glass, ry eutting up, at 21d. per en “British 
! „Fru ; rican ts, &c.; aq y Be | mended by several noblemen and gentlem aving exe- | Plate Glass, from ls, 2d. to 2s. per foot, according to size, 
— Limes, Acacias, „ vee cuted the mo st improved works Patent Rough Pinte Glass, from 4 to 1 inch in thickness, from 
i es, Nectarines, &c,; from the stock of a Country Nursery- FovLGER, City-road, ——— | 4d. per foot upwards. Glass lates and Tiles. Milk Pans from 
bc Saane viewed priar te hp salas . had of PATEE 19 tp 26 inghons ů— —— chai Cucamber Tubes, 
/ principa — and on t 47 marn 12 * 24 arae hes) ade ꝓx—— Por inet. 1 oe 
T0 GENTLEMEN, BUILDERS, NURSERY MEN, and Others. p ser — 2 9 
i ou Bishops Withow same a ap 
M*. D. A. RAMSAY has received = sell Eastern | Ge Raliweg, 3 ` 
| uction, on the premi ton Auction 
8 . e e e ~~ BIRMINGHAM CATTLE EXHIBITON, 1849, 
Hyde-park Corner, on MONDAY, Dec. 3, at 12 o'clock, HE BIRMINGHAM AND MIDLA U 
the Stock of a country nursery declin business, a TIE ys get sel 2 ra 2. 1 PIGS, 


AND POULTRY, 

jong Abend ho- 3 — —. 

Day, WEDNESDAY, 8988 “te — — e 1 a Ith, 

and 14th of December n T. B. Warent, Hon, 
Union-street, Birmingham, Nov. 24. 


Ae URAL CHEMISTRY. — 


& 
Camellias, &e,—May be viewed the day prior and morning o 
— 1 rely be had the principal Seeds smen, and ot the 


nel ii nl el o a a ˙7 e aa 
TO NOBLEMEN, GENTLEMEN, rimam and OTHERS. 
Mk D. A. BAMSAY han re 


1 — p rece 
tion Ground, oe ral th pe ad, London (I mile sen 5 1850, to Students in agis 
from Hyde B Park pty Nurse THUR RSD SDAY, December 6th, at 23, Holles- street, Cavendish-sqaa 
| Carnation mort of — QTATUES, VASES, FOUNTAINS, GARDEN 
ellias, 8 . —— Pa teh Bulbs. of — cian — Wa Chels sea, — 5 e'attention 5 the Nobility, Gentry, and =| St RN AMENTS, 901567 oF ARMS, and nd A ARCHITEC- 
about id ododend ardeners, to their superior ma recting AL EMB ENT mperis — 
arte one — nner a few — Kh rons, v yaris og —— of 8 connected with Horticulture. The y,oguaw and Co, 60, Stones End, — London. T. 55 
5 of sale. Catalogues Wee t Superintendent. Specimens may 
: — the day abe, and moria: 0 be which they 8 had the honour of referring so iapa con- | seen at Cos and Cose, 2, Dowgate-hill, City. A pamphlet 
m a tin . * d n be happy | of Drawings forwarded on application. 


ham-road, —— to give pe 
EOT; Pnlham-rond: c — to show the work and give any information. — — — 
TO GENTLEMEN, BUILDERS, NURSERYMEN, They also beg to refer to the houses built by of Lone Bee 81 4 ou LT 4. a 2 5 —WHITE 
R AND OTHER tec ason, me the biaa seg — Aa of MULE l-year’ 5 gro mth, : 2yrs, 1155 š 
: ` j Auetion, on don, in their Botanic Ga at — 3. nt Sad 4. per 100. 

eat . RAMSAY will seli Asides Clarendon-oad, Curator, will kindly show the work, and answer <n Sun worms“ Ege, . Is. 6d. per 1000, of the best st quality. Orders 

n MONDA 0. at 12 o'clock, about 1500 | They beg also to say the poean only is referred to, as the | enclosing Foot me 8 punctually executed. — Address 
* am ‘Tr es S 8 . aei se we -5 R. 3 sti Bos 25 — Ne London or, — 

ith tity of RAY, Onmson, and Bro — e honour of referri ener, Spring-place, almin 

3 fegt 5 5 3 ve er = - 3 nabilit —— — entry in the country, and to several — ea a mee PATTERN TOOTH 
og of sale, Onialogues to be had of the pert) ER Paans ad Estimates furnished free. JÅ BRUSH as SUYRNA, SPON NOES, The i 

Seedsmen, and, i Py. past, on on to the Auctioneer, | N. B. Plans and Estimates — ~The = 2 
Brompton Nurs am- road, Brompton, near London. 55 RROSION has the im tage of to the 

ARSON’S — divisions of the — „and Sieasing them in he thors ine the — 

* SAY begs leave to offer his services to PAINT y 1 ordinary manner, an 8 com 
D. separe and others, as „ e ION EER, VALUER, — dn the Hon. East Ind dies, and D7 the p —.— loose—is, An improved Clothes Brush, that cleans in a third 
&e., — trusts that b — a nal attention, with | Dock Companies, most publie bodies, and — — — ye time, and incapable able ust the finest nap. 
* pion satisfaction.— References | Gentry, and Clergy, ou new — 2 3 Hair-brushes, with the dura — — 
2 mptl edt Brom pin MUY F om . t d mag tre y men thors for the aei nereta aen of Brushes of kaptoto ee and rete friction.. Velvet 
N.B. Parcela of Stock ~ eceived ans offered for r by Auc- | every description of Iron, Wood, Stone, Brick, pe — ia rushes which act in th 222 uccessful mane 
. tion on e above premises, Terms sent on a applicati &c., work, as has been y the — apine) upwa Ki ner. The 22 Smyrna Sponge, wW 5 —— rved valuable 
6 and by the n — 2 — «(between = = ` —— nay apes yes 2 re — e 2 of 
which, from l porta spensing wi 

Tes BE —— eh ARABLE FA — ee 22 ore on its 3 5 * po maa them, have never yet been | profits and d bleaching, — —— ths. L a 
three miles th ail mit immediato pot yg distanos from | equalled by anything of the kind hitherto brought before the | genuine Sogras Sponge. Only at Mer GLET, and 
si BO tg n o medina 3 3 Lists ot Colours and nage ay oe witb nouns of Co.'s stablishment, 130 B, —— — —— door from 


stoke, spotication 
tithe and rates ver: Por ais i wiil be sent on re 
y apply ho Y k of ds Bank yr England. agra CAUTION: adopted 
er (stating lig the ex erence and, capital or ot “epplicaut) to X. 1. 4 by 52 “Tokenhouse 2 iy requested to be bent direct. by some houses. 8 


ie 
F 
2 


752 THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


[Nov, 24, 


Meet vws — N LES DICKENS. 
wate e 8th Number 
Fru 6051 PERFIELD * ‘YOUNGER, OF 
— KERY. By CHARLES DICKENS. 
— — K. BzowNE. To be completed 
M thl — 
gang — „ y Fam and Evans, 11, Bouverie-street. 
SABINE’S ert ge ENGLISH TRANSLATION OF 
UMBOLDT’S hah WORK. 


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2225 2 


1 of the Kymry. ete 

p F hens. 0,950, 22 32 x 282 

The Mabinogion. By Lady sir Bawara ¢ or, Rail- — —— 22 
Charlotte Guest. way S Speculators. by Cathe- 

Life and Corres : rine Sinclair í J d 
a Southey. tied Review of the French Revolu- * * 1 
otice. i . 8 
Life of Oliver Goldsmith. By a RE By Capt. Cha- me mesh, Tight, 24-inch hee m per yd. or per yd. 

ington Irving. y x : , ” 
EER NS d sans j — strong ,, a ina 1 35 
Original Papers.—Public Libraries — Sir James Ross’s|1f-inch „ light 55 ae Orit gv 6 „ 
Expedition. II. inch „ ee * 33 
Our W: m the Ordnan 1 penro ay 4 4 


Sekly Gossip.— — 
‘Death of Mr, ae igell— National peng a FN 
Education oor— Memori Mr, Samuel Cooper 
Als. Mi the Bible—The late Publie Executions—Ar- 
chæology on the Continent—Navigation of Indian Rivers. 
al— Astronomical (United States A 


phica 
tronomical Expedition to Chile) —Asiatic (Captain Gill ro 
Paintings in the Ajunta Caves)—I We of Civil Engi- 
neers, 


Fine Arts.—New Publications: Hints on the Arrangement t| 


of Colours in Taden Decorative Art—The Form of Solem- 
Owen Jones—Instructions in Qil 
1 


d imale Society ( 


lebone (‘Much Ado About 


. a, or Qe — go Poser 9 {en Clan- | 
— Mary 


roof 
per square foot. Patterns forwarded aoe d — 

Manufactured by BARNARD and BISHOP, Market. place“ 
Norwich, and d. 8 of expense in London, Peter- 
| boro ough, Hull, or Newcastle 


HEAD OF H 
a ma ea  MACASSAR 011. ‘insintuates its ts bal- 
samic properties into the pores of 2 
Hair in its embryo ae —— its gro 


its posses: 
redundancy, re ‘he latest peri 
= Whiskers, Eye pany 


r bot 
ach bottle of the sonatas article has the words 
Pg lee MACASSAR OIL 
8 e. ; and on the back of the 
ng 29,028 letters. 
London, and by 


DIETETIC COCOA. 
OMŒOPATHIC PATIENTS, DSE ET 
Persons of Delicate Constitutions,’ 

commended to use TAYLOR BROTHERS 
COCOA, as being very superior to any ation“ 

Nut hitherto introduced. is article is —— 

peculiar principle, by which the. oily portions a 
lised, 
= is an essential article of ae 


at toe same 


ot he are maintained. It — ai 
ose under Homœopathio Treatment, agrees Wi 88 
ache digestive organs, is agreeable and soothing 


nervous oya and proves at the same time 
and refreshing. aks wilt, Spits 
Sold wholesale by Taxtor Brothers, at 

i London, — retail, ge L J 3 lb., and, ł Ib. ——— 
5 at Is. 4d. per br N ger Be arg 5 5 ALOR 
1 LUBLE cocoa (oniy, Te 
80 


essential 


ar 
ng St tamp, pa el 
ture — —— Proprio, s 
i don,” 01 


ine article. 10 ard ‘against * coun s 
| thers recommend the capo of their sie article in packs, 
which bear their nam directions for use. Bon 

Grocers and Tea- „ 


L 
A 70 3 1 1 A would fain occasi 
r operation, 7 sing like 


fro 

having weakened, 
animal epirits, and to have 
the body. 


es o their operation they go go direct to 
u have taken six or twelve hape a 
en 


Re Props PT ma and C Creer 
pis 1. — at Is. 15, 2s D and fami "family a 5 
—— 


arms e 


rections are given 


fr 


THE GARDEN ERS’ CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


No. 48—1849.] 


SATURDAY, DECEMBER l. 


OBERT GL ` GLENDINNING begs to offer the follow. | 
ing GR. NES, RAISED FROM EYES, with 4 feet t of | 


INDEX, 
press... . 751 D | Ireland, farm? SorrerrtT 
E rece D Hylurgus oe 5 
N 758 e Wa ndo assistance by . 764 


on 3 2 ag 
57 


— Thin 


— — n 757 
Fire at Blenheim ........ eave ea, E 760 ‘ 


4 per — except those t 
i. which | an ‘Ba. eac — P marked with 


8 2 gh Wilmot 5 hee gg Grizzly, 
rion 


Espe 
ad —— Grov — Sweetwater, 
Mill Hill, Large White ditto, | 
: ® Muscat, Lasip "8, Old ditto, be 
* arnes's, Black Prince, 


Mus ne, Raisin de Calabre, 
Chas ane Masqa é, West St. Peter's, (Oldaker’ 8), 
A baan a maaa White, or Royal M 2 
ted, Wortley Hall 
rn Back, Braddick’ — mond 


98 p Stove, — — 
Plants, mg Fruit Trees, m 
kN 


Hardy, and Ornamental 
Chisw ursery, S B te — sh 2 85 


nrx Gd. 
-TO SEEDSMEN AND “MARKET GA ire ola 
wi oa ERPE S begs to offer the fo — 
been 


h have grown from vena ————— 
nee gd “and mw mag bedea depended on às neat d genuine, * 
ly — which will be sen application ; 


as ‘samples if required, 


| White Belgian Early 7 — 4 
Parsnip rainge’s Early White” 
Long . Mangold Wurzel Brimstone, fed 
| Yellow Globe = Winter I 
Jan 


3 8 aime E reien 
Do, blue 


M4 — Cream 
Bu ee 8 Eclipse. or ‘Stubbs’ 


Adams’ fine Bany ' White 
rini Queen Ca Cabbage 
— curled Savoy. 


Seimetar 


d Marrow 
——— M aidstone, Dec, 1, 


LATE WORKS, ISLEWORTH.— - The following 


753a | Winte 7 Beans | < a 766 a ESTABLISHED i 2 articles, manufact tured in fartante cultural purposes. 
F "| EARLY PEAS.— WILLIAM DLE & Co. a — ermee — 
— „ Or: 
ere a fine stock of the flowing £ gane kinds. 15 — 
55 RYSANTHEM Da raio r4 T iy Rival, 2 — 1 Plan t Boxes, 1 Cisierns, en 1 Garden Path 
OBERT WHIBLEY 1 tho re readers of this Barly 1 Prine e Albert, 2 710 fe ras Surprise, 4 fete Eat, H oe Mater Tank apaid 2 * 
r, that he has rae sale very fine plants in bloom of all 4 ama pic $ ot En — ki i Ken t, 3 fe 
te tending va! 8 from 9s, per dozen, and begs an ins spection nes 2 Early F 4 sit 2 3 fe Sp pee mre ee 4 2 Work as show ag, en “upon Drawings and — 
of his stock. A Catalogue, which will contain every novelty in Bary Warwick, 3 fe thicknesses, k 3 on sale. toc late Slabs, of all sizes and 
sh owe re, and a ve 1 select and en extensive assortment 5 hese will be sold 2 their 4 7 low 8 ar Catalogue Sa e erg — 
ursery Sto e ready in the sprin rices, apply to WILLIAM RxN DLE and Co., i ASS 
Gardens and 1 Grounds planted a nd kept in order, r ia shad Plymouth AE canes 1 1 dee ern ge siy 
ester Nurse y, near Walcot-terrace, Kennington, London. We are now layi ng in a most e pi — : — it gee wec — 1 
ENJAMIN R. CAN: St. John's-street Nursery, New and Choice & sea? Sor the Aeren Ko araga s and all irregularities of surfac reg tat and atthe 
Colchester, has now ready for delivery, strong well. | 5) CEDRUS DE gee ya Patentees, n panes of 
| eetablished plants of the followi Wu. MAULE — SONS aes © ind Noble 1 by 10 under rie — ae 4 3 3 feet. Gd. 
| GERANIUM, Phoe ata tr ts z each, Gentlemen. and the Trade, that 26 can still supply: any 5 feet „ 6 — $ fa i ee 
— ty saber ry — p ry they a also large supplies of the other” Himalayan 6 by 4 sna 6} 1 5 ie. 8. 77 1 — i oy 12s, * 
18s., er mas and package free to eh, Coniferæ, aad the beautiful new 1 ms from the | ul — "13s, 6d. 9 2 7 2 d 10 by at "ie 


Theus A108 5 to the tr 


Post. office 3 or reference, requested — unknown cor- 
respondents. The usual dis 


NYER begs vg 5 his friends and the 
c in general that he has a 
e pri red 


E. D. informs ie his. is felends that he has no eset iy itá 
) NURSERYMEN, PLANTERS, 50 
OMAS KENNEDY anp CO. ERYMEN, | 
Dumfries, beg to 8 to the Trade. and others that a 
gh ead extensive Nursery Grounds being shortly wanted 
building. and Roget purposes, and in order to have the 
ground cleared, th 


wa ee Lists will be fi eipt of one — | 


age 
The — on the Natural Habits fr v os of the at | 


of Cedrus 2 can still be bad by g three postag: 
stamps.—Staplet — ae series, e 1. 3 d 
MYATT RH RB. 
T AND SONS can etait ye tly recom d 


est in 3 


ry 
5 
se 
2 
eo 


ve p 
nozu arb more extensivay than any other 7 

|i is 79 8 e . and about a fortnight earlie 

than the Victoria ; a „it is held in general estee 


preserving an nd a y purp oses. Sarig planted 

roots, Is. 6d. ; ditto, Mitchells Royal tin 5 6d.; 
9d. The usual Trade rigt — Pos 8 roy 2 5 
ade paya ble tò E . Manor Farm, 


Stock of fine healthy and well rooted transplanted TREES at 
prices 

200000 Larch Pir, Ito 2 feet. 20,000 Oak, 3 to 4 feet. 

200,000 D w 000 Alder, 3 to 4 feer, 

50 „000 Do. 


way Spruce, 9 to 4 75 2b 8 fee 
Eiis. 0.0 rubeam, 25 3, and 
— i bate, 
50,000 Seoteh 1 Pea 3. ps old. | 19,000 1 8, and 4 ft. 
50,000 Do. do., 4 years old. 500,000 five è year old White- 
50,000 Siiver Fir, 9, 12, and thorn Quic 
10 805 8. 5 i 0 six ise old Whit 
000 Balm neo Quicksets, aire 
410 955 N 
large Stock of dentin and Dwarf f Fruit Trees, Goose- 


a ished on a 


and 0 Cur 25 Trees, Evergreen and „ Shrubs, & c. 
Mane pplica 


AMENTAL PLANTE 
SBORN, irg Tara 


Was’ ear L 
È Mi Teepectfully solicit attention to their Extensive Col- 


of HARDY TREES AND SHRUBS, indicated by their 
omenclature of which corresponds as far as 


ec- | Burniey.—Edgend — near 1 


es will — furaished — 3 

aan Prie s ubove quoted are — n the assumption that | 

Ne left to ee and OSBORN ; but dn — — 
e selection, the prices ‘will v. 


as 


“FRUIT T ‘ 
low true to name, are 
. eon eae 


be had on ae and 
e to themselves to say that 
isin their possession, and may 


NOW SENDING OUT, SPLENDID NEW GERANIUMS, 
FUCHSIAS, CARNATIONS, PINKS, PANSIES, &c. 
ENRY WALTON begs to offer 10 of the following 

GERANTIUMS last sent out for IL. 10s., with a plant of his 
ae ae pay $ a T ran now sending out at 15s, each, 

2 2 rriage, ae ants are well established i 

‘bdel- Kader "aig ta 3 5 

Belle of the Villag eis we'd 

‘pce ma ie a 5 1 „ 

5 3 
5 


p mg ry b a POR 


é — Rookh 


Cerpsic 0 3 ro ae ee 
somal: Fon 0 | Spar 


ers): S se kler sb 
Any 20 of th following first-rate varieties L 1 5 8 or 1i 
for 188, with a plant 2 Hoyle” s Prometheus og carriage, viz. : 
Avenger, Ariel, Aurantia, Black Prince, Cassandra, 
Centurion, Gee a, Di istinet us, Desde emona, Forget-me- 
Not, Plora's 


Telezrapii, and V 
4 3 show Pink s for 6s., Ma nd 128, 
2 first d Pic: stees, 1h. and 18s, 
* first-rate Pansies, — risa * 12s. a A sent by post. 
eriptive Catalogue n be had for one postage stamp. 
r are N Ps Te e cd made 8 at 
, Lancashire 


HE SWEET.SCENTED ” “VIOLA ARBOREA,” 


OR, PERPETUAL TREE VIOLET.—This Violet has 
proved it-eif to be the best yet in 2 . ms 
the double blue Hepatic the 


in; 
belongs : 
ree. variety, one * ant wil pr 
wers; it will bloom for eigh * 
vial’ to the fi ower, tadva 
plant itself will make a beautiful 


8 by 6 and 8} by 64...1 
Mil 


the e quality a Kilk, iS tubes, 7s. 6 
Therm for Greenh 5 9 — Glass, be. 
o JANES I PHILLIPS and CO., 116, Bishopsgate-street With- 


“GLASS FOR ¢ CONSERVATORIES, 


GREEN „ PIT FRAMES, 
TLEY anp CO — ‘supplying 16.62. 5 
f British Manufacture, packed in boxes containing 100 
square — 4 each, at the eres REDUCED PRICES for cash, 
— ion made on 100 . — 
— 8. Saloni 3 foot. Per 100 38 
Under 6 by 4 11d. is £0 12 
Pron 6 „ 4 5 V 
En „ 6 „ 2 
8 „ 6 „ ” ” 1 010 
10 * 8 »” * 24d. ” 
Larger sizes, not ceding 4 40 inches long. 
4 = from ëd. to 34d. per square foot, ge a ross 
” ` ” 
26 — 34d. 7 74d. 75 n 50 
9 gy ik PLATE, THICK CROWN GLASS, “er 


PLATE G LASS for Horticult 
3 5 ices, by the 100 square feet 
GLASS bay te AND SLATES made to any size or pattern, 
her in eet or Bay Plate Glass. 
mgr Maw tig agree y. Cucumber 3 Glass 
9 Vater i ticles not 


ural purposes, 


The present extremely 


moderate 
price of this superior article 2 cause z to Domne sf 
other inferior window 


GLASS JLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES AND HORTIC vLTURaL 
TIAE TR &e, 


es o 
MILK PANS 


PASTRY PINS 
r conservatory, as they grow to * 
— n pots. I — a March last, in a conserva — —— 
the almost incredible number of 5 : 
one ith- eds of bu 
been bloom the whole of the winter, 
serv ener * — 8 y AYACINTH FLOWER DISHES 
) ta 
| eae * f tht E plant measures 3 feet 8 inches in 1 ie ee T GLASS, which is of 
circumference, and 1 pirap in height; the do not e the best description, va 
hang ons bat. stand ou i m the poe It is worth | fr per and. uow. 
notice that ma . of the ane yo a and others, | large Sheet Glass, for e 2) 
have hie oo iola Arbore: tias turned out a —.— Glass, „ : foot, a 
great disappoiniment nection ge bani, EN aten i m ¢ to 1 inch in thickness, from 
ës. per d a smaller ones, Bs. per dozen, or 4d, per foot upwards. Glass Slates and Tiles 
Ä remit e must accompany the order, ieee ak or = 12 to 24 inches diameter, from 2s. oy 
d. the amount, uantity of the above | from 12 to 24 inches long, at 
J pa ch. Wasp Traps —Lists m 
and Florist, | Warehouse, 87, Bisbopsrate-s 
daun way. 


Æ 


754 THE 


Stee 


——— —— EE 
1 ST. e vp te — may 
a Post- 
N e aoa . St. Aiban’s. f 
REEN AND TE made by ma inery, | F 


A Lean-to Greenh dadi, ap — 


ce orde: 


London, 
b 


JORN MANURE — BLASHFIiELD’S PATENT 
S, a New Manure for Corn and other crops, p 
Nitrogenous Matter tet on the banks o 
mb 


bric x ht lazed with 16 oz. | the Thames, in co nation with . of Lime, 1 
Bla class iiki kirar tinn. TIM M : soot: 9-inch do., Is. | Sold, in a finely-geound —.— 85 9 M, ue, oye = 
j tamford- hill, Mark- lane Iso at the Works, Mil- wa oplar; ater 

— e ee e Works, p Dock, La mbeth ; and No. 1, Praed street, Paddington Basin. 

r ee PU tent mee fort Corn crops; also for Turn ps, Ke. Super- 

AKER’S PHEASAN TRT. . King’s- phosphate of Lime, Sulphate ‘of Ammonia, Sulphate sf Lirie; 

t t to Majesty and | G um, calcined — saturated with liqui nure ement 

ee rines. Alb ee Onn ME IT. AL ATE FOWL, | for * uid manure tanks, malt-house floors, and barn floors ; 
consisting of blac white swans, Egyptia A s —— Drain- tiles, Pipes, Ke. 

laughi eese, shieldrakes, pin ee ae 

. — Is ughing geese, gadwell, Labrador, | QTATUES, VASES, FOUNTAINS, GARDEN 

. and dun divers, Carolina ducks, Ge,, ORNAMENTS, COATS OF ARMS, and ARCHITEC- 

tieated and pinioned; also S anish, Cochin China, TURAL EMBELLISHMENTS in Imperishable Stone, by 

Malay, Poland, Surrey, and Dorking fo fowls ; white, = pied, | Vauenan and Co., 60, Stones End, B —_ London, T.J 

1 ea-fowl, prow . — pigs ; and a 3, Half- | Croaa@on, late - Coade’ 5, Superintendent. Specimens may be 

’s, 2, Do sg “hill, City. A pamphlet 


HOT WATER. 


J. WEEKS Ax Go, „ King 15024 Chelsea, N 
and Manufacturers o — HOT- WATER APPARATUS 
omical Boilers of all si 
—— e attention. 
their Show Establishment, Nies road, Chelsea; and also a 
most of the — eg Geutlemen’s Seats in the country, the 
London Nurse 


HORTICULTURAL 5 pe a tel AND HEATING 
BY HOT W 


ATE 
Arso THE CULTIVATION OF THE  GHOICEST PLANTS, 
VINES, FERNS, &e. 


. X 
T7 


WEEKS. anp Co., King’s-road, Chelsea, ora 
— — ARCHITECTS, " HotHous SE BUILDERS s, and H 

ci inspection ee their 

will attest — 1 

er | 


5. 


hous 

WATER i in aston forms. sho Raa the most improved methods 

— Ventilating all Horticultural + 
hey are enabled to 


y are sold at 

pawn, and 5 as nected wi 
Nursery and Seed deparimen ey Plans, Estimates, and Cats. 
logues forwarded on ap 


cent. of 


seen at Croacon and Co. 
of meee forwarded on appli ca 
CHEAP, AND DURABLE ROUFING, 
Onde 8 PATENT ASPHALTE ROOFING 
p , snow, and frost, and 
sted. b 7 ong and extensive experience in all cli- 
s half timber — red for sla —— can — — id 


has been te 
= ates. Save 


aves 25 per 


CHRONICLE. 


« ae 


THE FIRE W SE. OM 

IPS’S P PATENT, 

| Mis PHILLIPS’s 1 for extin 
f sa 

tructive elonet 


L ife from t t dexi 


8 

zga 
FFs 
* 


only the 1 b a 

y ames a 

Gay fad of —1 in Cre but a wae from 
ver those caused ni Fhe urpentine, oil, ¢ 

hig su pod Si upon whic 

tion, water mes? xo prer t : a 

Stationary M fixed for the 

Manufactories, — 8 

Pri 


— 


Size of Machine. 
Ist, or A = en 


ee eeereee 


— 288 


5th, or E 7 0 
The Machines can be made to BAE ot any 
portionate price. 

Applications to be addressed — =y 
pany, 150, Leadenhall-street, Lon 


— 2 


u o 
* 


Secretary of the Com. 


N 
e 17th N f JESSE Rosa consider 
of the propositione 3 ia Dr. 5 N are more 
p the w of his cen than eal 
itis We is iN Dr Vee 
pe to ma As six iehi 5 7 a large and proper size * his hand 
machine, when i itisa — nace fact that Wheat which is pressed 


Pipes 
Sample : and Testimonials sent by — on appli- 
d Co. 


cation to Croce , Dowgate-hill, London. 


STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROUF 
WIRE NETTING. 


iid See l 
HARLES D. YouNG AND COMPANY (uae | 
W. anp C. YOUNG), 
MANUFACTURERS OF IRON AND WIRE WORK, be 
22, PARLIAMENT-STREET, WESTMINSTER, CASTLE 
BUILDINGS, ipera SQUARE, LIVERPOOL; 
EDINBURGH ; „ Sr. Enocn- SQUARE, GLa e 
nag to “eal the —— of Landed Proprietor and 
other t et Fence, for excluding Hares 


the e Societ — c Medals. with high commen — 
The e done by Hares and Ra bone in Gardens 
reat, that in the see ot 
t ot 
It is so durable, that whew 
Plantations are sufficiently advanced to independent of its 
2 , it can be ray * ce naar situations with 
greatest igh labour r — nce against 


OT- 1 PIPES AND TROUGH 1 PIPES, 
al 
f $. JONES, fron Bridge Wharf No. 6, Bankside, London, 
keeps a ver y la rge stock ot Hot Water and Leek a with 
e Syphons, Tee Pieces, Collars Fla ockets, and 
Spigots, Throttle Valves, &c. 
low ripen, Parties requir in 
8 
I 
1 


the o be don n 

good workmen sent to any pea = the hekingdom v with A ꝗ —.— 

requisite for the heatin „e., a stated Rai 

pipes, Sutte ers. Sash. weights, Railing Bars, vate Bricks. 3 
t NEs’s, Iron Bridge 


numerou 


Wharf, No. 6, “Bankside, London. 


F 


THE IMPROVED “FLUE T AND FURNACE. 


W 


HILL begs respeetfu 
e applicants for his “ FLUE 3 55 a small and 


iare size, vues he shall n December, 
to supply si zes tosu t every — of N t 7 
of 100 feet of . neh pipe t 2000 feet of eens 
a i — arar A a A 3 
his Boilers to be th ve and cconomteal of any in use. 
* — 
— — 
* WIRE Game NETTING.— 
1 7d. per yard, 2 feet wi 


lly to inform the numerous | 


Heres and Ra ving ouly to 

roll — hs attached, with — wire sent for that pur- 
ry ee en , about every six 
or seven feet got It is, besides, peculiarly —.— —— ren- 
dering ony , Paling, or other existing F completely im- 
pervious ti vermin ; aa y be "eat into phen 


ue ag 
pieces of three or more feet, as required, it 


ee ‘a 4 for individual N ud Shrubs. 
e 1 24 ins., 1s.; 30 ins., 1s, 3d.; and 
sein 1 Is. 74 wae iseal yar 
as a web o 9 7 100 puos — ins. — will gsn oe £3 16 0 
yard 5 0 
De. of 100 yards, 30 i — nase oe s.: 0 0 
Do. of 100 s, 36 ins, wide 710 0 


If more or less ig a web is 3 it ddt: be 2 
at pemi same rate per yard. 


ld have a good solid bed to lay o 
eighths to t aree quine ied ot an inch is not tuo large, ku as 
that has made E Ross’s machines so notorious for the yi 

of the crop as sony 2 be be gerd Be any other fo 
or drill. The idea of Dr. out 
18- 


ting Dr. N. wi with chat mating 

— fends consider it is not N a eting planting in 

ms the use ins a m ma N when once | 
is 


ar 
=) Taylor, one of the Judges, said, Dip e 
wing great partiality, bu vg 2 ile if ay apt a a 

J. R. then — erable — 89 


possible to catch a g : 
— JESSE ce s machine has the advan resin er Dr, NEw 

TO as J. R.'s delivers its seed when 40 i 

inte ihe Abbiüng chamber, so that when the dibble comes ge 


—— soil me gemea À socket is immediately ‘pie But 
ot so wit r. NE des hen the 
dibbies are ed pi dine d k oan returni ng Wes 
speed as the fall of the — wodd catch and crush e! 
in the dibbling socket, and this was the reason, no 
bine was not seated in the 
ee 


delivering of the seed, as ‘it was “clear D 

1 mechanical arrangements of ct teed Jessa os 
at ; and he defies the Judges or anyon 

the pra statement. will please der 


these 
22 ets 


$ 


K riends wo 


making aiiis on the ab 
for licenses gh ga Patentee, ‘oe | 9 
Leicester, or for rehasing t > — 
. beeshibied. at bes Po yech niey and 
05 itutield Sbow.—73, New-walk, ee 


Co., Sm 


` 258 
UN 10 BE INGED i 
M 100.2. to 30,000 f, to be advance dat 4l. 5 —— 
oo security of Fre hold Lau bs 953 ample value ee 
Heap, Solicitor, 9, ber 0 Exeter. f 


8 — is N at om g same e rate. As ves 
— in many — been an — = Ste — x dis- 
tance requiring this Net, C. D. Y. an e made arrange- 
—— by which they wil * 2 — it at 2 er the 

land, England, and Ireland, for One 
Halipenny in lineal yard. 

D. Youne and Co. ot give a better idea of the grea 
8 ot thait Pemen Wire Netting than by — gh that 
the weight of one yard of their 24-inch at 1s. 1s equa 24 
yards of another a — the market, the sates widi y at tod 

se, 
ery description of IRON 


yard, + Sage 8 1 free of ex 
C. D. Youne 
es on WORK 1 required f for d this ped — countries, 


orkmen sent to all p: of Scotland, England, and Ireland. 
M 3 ESBIT’S D sheen AND AGRI- 
k CULTURAL oc 38, — London.— 
sound pra now of — eee and Agricultura) 
Chemistry, Geology, Surveying, — — rg oe si 
ing, &c., may be obtained i, y, in 
addition to a good modern 
Mr, N — work * — ee: 


Th saps — 19 — 
personally or by — 


CHATSWORTH ANNUAL SALE. 

_ NICHOLSON begs to infurm the admirers of 
-rate Stock —— he will offer to public competition, 
— on WEDNE Da, ae gon 5th December, 


on application either 


60 Scotch and Short-horned Oxen, Cows. 700 Heifers, fit for the 
barcher ; ime Wood! Leicester, — thdown, 
Seoteh, and Forest hers ; 20 fat wes; 7¥ raperi 


E by B BARNA on and 

n "BISHOP, Market 

ich, a d delivered | free — : 
borough, Hull, or "oeu a london, 


an 


qultirwtions s situate at d 
PS, Nurseryman avd „ 


TO NURSE 
O BE DisP 
from Lo 40 


F eh 


father. 
r further particulars, 
6. Teal nholl-srreer. Demiin i 


either 


riv 
altoget 
3 SATI 1 ONS 3 


1 3000 pairs of Boy AR 
Shoo LINES, 310 AURICU 


thed 
ea Soa. 9 
ver pair «N63 P * i 


dhi feid 
Derpy. 


— s uay bo be hed of + 
1 


— 


48—1849. | 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


inform AMERICAN ne ng ee 

that their List . OSEA W _— he has just 
FLOWER, KITOHES-GARDEN, ~*~ — ae mena published Sit Catalogue of hie 2 
ready for delivery, and th 4 AN and CONIFEROUS | — —— 
the Office of this Pa aper. ere Pre ication, inclosing two stam 
—~ CORNWELL’S “VICTORIA” RASPBERRIES, osea WATERER, Koap Hill Nu ursery, Woking, Surrey. 

COR ELL is now sending g 
e of the above, at 25s. per 100; or 3s. To be 
ga 


and other American 

plants, pplication. 

Kans V'S IMPROVED KIDN NEY, eji ee PROLIFIC 
OF EARLY 507 

5 J ACKSON an 


Y LOW P 
eg to ‘fefer to weir Advertise- 
w Varieties last — out, of which they have 
see Gardeners’ Chronicle, dated October 
b peii to their Advertisement 


of CHOICE FLOWER ROOTS, of the same dates. Pheir 
Beat ne Priced Catalogue of Flower Roots, Select Roses, 
erbaceous, and Climbing Plants, &c., may be had 


—— 


ak Horticultural Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. 
EL 10 


lg NIU MS, and other raisers’ 
—Now ready for selection and going oot * 
of the following L ee box and e on- 
don, will be arded in exchange for — 1 on 
Lead for ‘tous Guinea They are weil-rooted in 3-inéh 
pots, an sey for an immediate amah into a larger size : 
3 enturion, Cracke me-not, Ariel, Cassan- 
Ara, Craentar — — nee, Tae Junii, 3 2 88, 
Rosa mond, S * of the above, and Hoyle’s Cru- 
sader, or Fosse 
_ EDWARD 4 . 8 5 Cottage, Isleworth. 


ND SON have to offer from their 
„Agricultural and e ee Seed eee 
Southamptou— 
PAGES PRODIGY PE 
dwarf variety in cultivation. 
STUBBS’ EARLY DWARF BLUE MARROW PEA, — A 


abundant cropper. 
ATA PROLIFIC LONG-POD BEAN. — Very early and 
AGRICULTURAL MAIZE, for green food for cattle, and the 


A, the earliest and most prolific 


— A most 
the flower = producing gigantic leaves, and a 
flow 


Forest roan Fruit Trees, Roses, Con , Green- 
house, Herbaceous, 25 nd 8 Plants i * variety. 
Best Russia Mats, 100s. per 100; Second-hand Mats, 378. 6d. 
100. 
Wholesale and retail prices of Seeds, Trees, Shrubs, &c., 
may be had upon application. 


magnificent —— for 
pike of 


1 ROYAL ALBERT RHUBAR 


ats Liunæus, 155 
allowance to the trade. i — orders made paya 
to og ede 6 Enfield 1 4 Middlesex, will e 
With prompt at-emion 


THE HOPE 3 NURSERIES ey 9 YORKSHIRE. 
Wins. ILLIA e be offer 
— 


Peal, a 1 plants, — and well ee 
Herbai Jong held a high celebrity pe correct- 
pecies and 


ing 

p Bes is new an 

wate fo — — 3 . — a 

The nomenclature “oe 
50 

40 

30 

z 

— 


rtunity. 


us Plants, by name—per 100 
—— us & erer Shrubs, rd. 3 55 
n Roses, of se or ts, do, 
* l wiser —— chases o of colour, * 
nest Boutile, for hibition, do. doz.— 
Heaths, ‘ine 3 . » bushy pi plants, 
Hard wooded New Holland Plants, fine young bushy, do. 10 
doz, 5 
Indian azaleas, *plendid vari varieties, do. do. per doz. —18 
very select show ered 20 


Galecolarine, ve 
š od of older surt: 
8 agd „ 
LLA 


go 
including Hen 15 
„Mays large late Victoria or ig Castle 6 
he Selection left to 


1 


The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 


SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1849. 


MEETINGS PUR THE ENSULNG 
{ Entomological 
Patholozical 


WEEK. 


P.M, 

1 . 1 N. 

Moxpar, Des. 34 Chemical... „Sn. 
P „ Sr. u. 
British Architects -8 rm, 

Horticultura: r.. 

Toxspar, — ‘f ro r. u. 
— Engineers r. u. 

ociety of arts 8 r 

Weprespary, — 5 f G — Ae 
Boo) 3 Pom, 

Tzvrspay, = 6) Anna eee eee eee ee 8 r.m, 
Royat...... Sr. n 

Sarvapay, = 8 i Royal Botanie r 1 


Westminster Medical 
E accompanying figure 
of the 


TTAC 
which has — fallen under our noti 
f a branch of a Nelis 


and at the tips of these a 
the present ee which have never sun beyo 
size as, in th buds; 


n fact, — 


the effec 
F Insects upon vegetable structures 


Ta is a representation of 
one of the _— 2 instances of 


ts 


ce. Itisa 


d — — i for the eggs; and the sup 


f but i in the instance before us the m 
e | for the latter object only, a 


described. It would lead us 
Arn into the effects 
nts 


8, 
for food, or 
ovipositor, for the establishment of a situation for t 
safe deposition of the The aaa also 
volves the fact whether the growth o 
similar tubercles or 

en 


upon any kind 
formation of galls of a larger or smaller size, in which 
case, we may, perhaps, be —— in considering this 
aphid as a new impo us as the 
American blight. 

The specimen before us is further interesting, 
from showin tical, occur 


t results 


iden 
n — wounds inflicted, whether by — 1 or 
Man 


vipositor of insects. nstan 
ood 


of large w pulls 


caused by a minute 
j e galls of the Thistle, produced by 
ritis 'Cardui, are instances in which insects of 
‘ound to be ca capable of causing 

masses; but in all these 
uced in — to afford a place 
ply of a sufficient 

é youn — age — 


nd it is “this ‘ind of of ex- 


crescence which Re ere, in his“ nsect Architecture, 


may hav 
"| independent of the attacks of in 
e aphids — vot the bran 


is, t — the N in question — 
selves to — agr lis d'hiver, and have touched no 
other Pear n Mr. Wnnor's 


grounds, 
There —— some analogous cases of predilection and 
aversion among insects, to which we may one day 
more pray allude. W. 


Severa inquiries 3 been la lately addressed to 
us concerning the porto | of TRANSPLANTING LARGE 
REES, We pee Ress we I ae fe resent 2 

of 3 though, in 
of 1 1 75 ai rs, it re 
n the “ 

a 


8 ago 
heory of aa k ” is the following 
of great attention to the roots, in the 


a 
, 


—— ‘of 1849 of Pansy, gy baas as possible 2 

ock, A 8 packets | e : if this is not done, but ibs 

at 26. 64. and § 58. eac! earth near the or if the 
N.B. A general fied ee supply of every description of tl stem, or if | 

Wen w at very reduced price he f. ickly 1 , justly enough called drawing, 

PLOW RING BULBOUS ROOTS , &e,— HYA- i hi he | i p are dyed by arn 

Gurs. TULIPS, GLADIOLUS, raat NARCISSUS, | cast-off skins T 3 phids, whi falm off or-destro tearing 
saath 1 ss Sn g ae agora very small size, and are seen crawling — aae geste a arene 3 
TON, 45 z etaten i 

HY * 7 age lg ed), ban T — and — — Berta oraes . e- is this 3 of roots 5 ge if it were — 
5 75 abstain ving Í : ; 

a which may be named Erio- arry without injury such ys bone —.— 
ee ee ee 72 ta ane : sr — n of the 0 wing “ork individuals are forest trees py is > paion obstacle to 
Buesa 3 Senken GUERNSEY | risk black, with white woolly matter exuding planting them, if the extrication of the — eee 

from the hind part of the body, the antenne six- of th which is not impracticable. 

or e. 10 of Hardy Ann uals, for autumn oF ear jointed, with a very small appendage or join As, however, the latter is a troublesome and very 
e a i and eee SIN SINENSIS tip q sixth joint, and tarsi are two-jointed | difficult operation, even when t only 10 0 
8 — saved from th es, ted | and terminated by two claws. of 12 feet high, it has been, time out of mind, the 
Yee Seeds ofall “ands, Implements largest of the individuals we have met with is shown om o a planters to prepare such trees for 

a oat Foye SUPPORTER 2 — w f fore they are to be transplanted; if if this very 
kani, — for 8 N — ably shy being at ies twice as — as the Ie pre e operation is is . y perfo ay prin- 
bardly be imagined. | or antenne; and it is this instrument which has cipal limbs mputated, will emit young fibres in 

correspondents. produced all the on which we have | abundance ay their extremities, e gardener, 


* 


From kno 
take the 


— che operatio 


THE 


wing where to find those roots, can easily 
m up without material injury.” 
This statement, which was ee nearly 10 years 
since, is, we beli ieve, an exact explanation of the 
ms which most nanie a attention. in re- 
aig o other diffi- 
eulty in removing timber tre aha consists in 
the mechanical difficulties of lifting and transport 


e 
that it had tọ be 0 up with 2 ckaxes; 
although the operation was conducted wich little 
skill or care, the plant survived, and, after losing 
some of its branches, recovered, becoming what it 
earing. r corre- 
acquainted 9 

P 


which could only happen 2 a Mulberry a. 

. ; the same thing 

it ; with ‘different hone 

of difficulty, h t of the variable 
amount of Vitality. proper to different kinds of trees. 

The fine old 7 7 fe taken to yaman orth = 55 

s ago, are now among the 


under the 
ton, of which a all account will shortly appear in 
our colum 


We Tepai then, that trees of any size may be 
ed, in case of necessity, if proper care gr suffi- 
cient engineering skill are applied to the task. It 


is a mere oa of N and money. The 
. o be taken 

18 eke, out of the 2580 ary all the delicate ba 

secure them against accident in transport. To 

ad in parcels, as they are extracted 15 0 the 

“ai 15 to pags, Ga ane Bere in damp moss, has been 

5 To 2 UAIN all the màin old roots 

which have = lapai broken in lifting 


andto 


; | tissues, and Ap oduc 
ti a It is 


d | first 
and | pu al gree for a few Ae. m oa then 
this has h 


any 0 hese cu 
of Harrineron’s direction, at Elvas- t 


GARDENERS’ 


part, is arrested at the 
unable to pass 


establish themselves in 
become the points of new active fibre 
To this ma added 

better understood, Poco the decaying roots becom 
the seat of dry-ro 
rapidly introduce their spawn among t 

e diseases which only fer in dath. 
well t ove a certain portion of the 
spray of bre. nmel trees, so as to diminish 
the 1 ap of the foliage, ea the tree 
again e tree has 


died ; appened in- consequence of the 

leaves consuming the liquid food in their eden 

hood too fast—quicker than the injured roots ca 
An additional remedy for this is dijde, 


to shoot at Chatsworth, their heads were enveloped 

in a cotton s eets ; y which means light 
ough to preserve vita talit ity was admitted to the 

ek. but the 

were stopped. 


4. It 
tree still Sewer" 
syri n 


main 5 and stem moss. 
this is partly to stop 3 through set bark, 
and as 5 to ay absorption by the 

e made marks upon the s 
to — dees in paitia such trees into the ground. 
The principles to be attended to are well known to 
d we 1 not propose to occupy 


them 
shall tell us 5 at is a ae o do 


ROSE GARDENS. 

THE PLAN AND DESIGN OF THE BEDS AND BORDERS, THE 
CHOICE OF Maier i 25 BEST M * a: PLANTING, 
ae, are gar gardens in 
whic 3 are che . t if not bine Pr planita, 
and sufficiently nu The 


arches, figure d h 
fancy ; a geometrical figure with a plage to stand on i 
the centre, instead o ore ish, a clump, 
may have the b u 
that the entire figure is sho 


la 
The n a operation, the importance of should be plante th s of 9 — 5 heights, the 
which i is too pe lost sight bint, is thus explained ahiortest „the taller furt 
in the Theory of Ho cultu that when standing in the middle the heights 
Under cacy e dene the roots re 2 dually inerease as the beds recede, until the mos 
necessarily be injured m ess by removal; distant might be standards. Suppose, for instance, a 
that case, all the larger i should be cut io a a | one of the most simple of all designs, we have a e n 


clean smooth. face; not in long ragged slivers, as is 

often the case, and which is Sale substituting one 

kind of mutilation for prii but at an angle of 
If the 


ends of m 


-uncontrolled intedduction « of water, decays in conse- 
with an excess of thi 


terior ; the woun granulations formed 
the living tissue, and the readiness with i 
t es place is in proportion to the sm 


n 
out, in room ose comparatiyely inac- 
tive subterranean oma a supply E young eshte 
fibres. is isa common practice in the nurseries 
in Pigg young Oaks and —— td 
trees, an one of the means 2 ed by the 
. 5 of Gooseberries order to 
inerease the vigour of 3 1 ; in the last case, 

cont 


a "8 


ue remains open to the 


s to meet on the opposite side. 


riaten 
s further on, rapidly 8 


ob 
be what is now 1 


e | form 
t fungi, which, once ere 
vin 81 


Palm trees were first observed i 


exhausting effects of bright light : 


may sometimes be necessary to assist the è 


unless our e puat P 
0 so. 


e be a e 


pyre 
0 — 65 200 yards — and ne 


CHRONICLE. 


same, all that descending organisable matter which gar 
would have been 5 in adding to the thickness | 


is the entran 


until you arrive at 2 
panting the fairy land by a 
ge 


4-feet standards, the istance 
and the fron t row, 2-feet standards, with 
tox to the training, are very effective ; 


the walks ay b 


l sort 8 a effect they pro. 

aas alon „indeed, were there but a solitary clump 
n a lawn that could 15 "spared for Roses, that clump | 
should be planted w i 
In some iblisin ts sta planted 
on the lawn at certain distances by the side of the path, 

ve seen t look very pretty ; but they seem 

to be frittered away part, me- 

rs hen are closer 3 besides, they appear so 

exposed when standing alone, that if th be 


honoured with a place to 1 we would rather 


would have it sagt 3 
t 3 feet wide on each 
ard and a row 


we are no taal sure 


na to let that weigh with us when 


© 
TE 


e seen one place where oh 1550 ape 


Sa any Roses 
t there was EN bold, Pigs striking, €x 


ain ne te the other on which to train the w; the effectis 
plants festoon fashion, d the outer edge of the first | 6 feet distant on each side in a single fail to interesi i 
plantation, where eet path should be formed on the ie but poo goul not except the ' 
four sides, with 


This would be one of the * simple a 
ries, for we have seen t 


nd he effe —_ 
x any fi 
but in none is 


hen in full gr om 
standards of a TAA N t apart, and row after 
ow increase in height till the 2 = tes all, right and 
left, qr be climbing Ros and festooned, 
u 


s 
might be arch 
apart and arched over the path. _ But 


tosery of this kind there 
lanted 6 feet a 


r and that it may c 


a wa meded the 


properly planted 

5 7 1 have 

anks of ge Cl 
with a we 

this is e compared featares 

so concealed from the 2 it all at 


singularity and had 100 yards 

ach side, t 
walk between two b 
m 


arranged Rosery, so 
of the 8 as not to be seen till you come 
once. Cri 


Nr OE ina e i aee 


DISEASES OF PLANTS. 
(Continued 1 724.) 
Genus II.; one speci £ * 
siccation of the is. — This disease 3 
little attention, although there is reason ys weg 
itis much more bet a an is ety! 


— 


that is, & 


much 1 1 18 
i io in those planta W m 
no ro Linnæ 


q 
4 
4 


rain, or any sudden change o ae it up in 

cold, hos 2 fecundation, by: 4 o na 
washing it away; impeding 

wes persia ion course ‘of the proc 

weaker the plant the a danger organs 

be seen, under N. is, that the female 


f the roots, ent 
Iargely to the Wos 
root, but incre 

t pow 


ers: fete: e limb of the roots | 
en wee e remaini 


here are 


Rose 

r 

they are dignified with the name of Roseries only 2905 
they a c iy 

R 

D 


ie should be in all cases no 
* ne 


re. 
the grand design in a 
Daly portak att 8 as ee 


St ce arf | who is 


off of flowers.—In some 


; of 
by protesting 3 from ibe vice 


* 


eS —<— T T 


. 


48—1849. | 


THE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


757 


falloff. From the observation that a little worm is to be o 10 
found inside each of them, it bas been concluded that 
fi 


r the flowers that are late in coming forward 
; these facts rae to show that the mis- 


n 
n three circum- 


e coming — „cold, or a dry wind. I 
when — expanded, chiefly when 
thick sky. 


out. In 
iduale 
ther 


which h 
re 


indeed 
manner in the least, otherwise 
he will pen not only all the pasty but perhaps even 
the plant 
It is cw therefore, t that this evil may be the se 
of two opposite cau e it is ed 
y the 


nutriment, for I have 17 it take place in trees placed 
in the richest as well the poorest 8 d 3 
appears what should be done to prevent it where 
x is the sac of the viciesitades of the Pesci the 
g mes he mos ible. me, 
indeed, may be saved by sprinkling with well or spring 
water, at the momen th s bursting out, the 
plants in flower s the morning mi l 
the some combustible matter, so that the wind 
shall carry t 0 — rai 8 ineyard, or 
garden, may certainly prese Over-pruning is 
another ca use of the mischief, qui rite | A ; frequent as these 
mists or winds. n om old age that * TO 


* its * 1 tah pa stated what 


— es are, amongst all Hor, those which in som 
to the shedding of their 


ine-growers 
e name whatever de- 


of sap, it will suffice 
lines broad from the cad of the arona year. 
is taken gee older es the ring must be still 
Darrower, must be taken not to touch the wood. 
The opera pst a r ag or 8 days be- 
The r uccess of 


ers, vestigation 


winds, r dryin ty the soi 
days, a. Fa pesia set Ta pe and that in d' 
every 


t the an nt they are ready to |i 


ses | 
h layer of soil is dried, under the a 


vaporation from water and land, have been very few ; 
soa T I believe the subject is well ee ate of in 
, both in a re d agricultu 
point of vi view the case, I have — 
that some excellent 3 on the ev: aporation 


—̃— —.. ä —y᷑—ü —yę—ꝛ — 
1) BRITISH ASSOCIATION 2 — THE ADVANCE- 
MENT OF SCIENCE. 


ilst this is going on 'interiorly the air which 

ests on ‘ae surface of the 
fectly saturated, tends also 
portion of its aidit, 
raws moisture 
oist beneath, hye this mois- 
ture, in its turn, is also Aren up by the «phere. 
Having observed for several days the — amount 
of evaporation from a sur 


m | smaller concretions, 


with — pebbles, —— sand, and 

osphorie bodies ing upon analy- 
— identical rete that of the true 
igin coprolites in this 


beds, ae only of 
sand and shingle, no such combinations could take 
place 


earth completely saturated, in the month of rs pon 
and rend 8 of "739 to 75° 
the re 

by ls to “pick ggg 


the W the Earth. 

Ree day al | BOC eR Sh 161 i 

ade E T ee E TA 097 „ 
1 . 070 „ 
. 1 „ 
o S ea WL 
Oth jy . 433 „ OiT 4, 
1 . OE: 


— 


ros n as 
most inappreciable. 


the depth of one-tenth of an inch ; 
which the roots 3 only to the 
to suffer, and require watering. 


subject of res were fi 
M. Borup rice of f Geneva ; ; Ar i for a similar period v 95 
e Gasparin, at Orange; the results, reduced t 
English measure, ane exhibited in the followi wing 
Taste of the average amount of Evaporation from the surface 
of Water, and from Earth, and the depth = 83 at Genera, 
in the years 1796.97 ; and at Orange, 1821- 


es to examine a very great 
3 of flowers nt the oguen of their 824 bg Lite 
seen 


from herbs. wi 
ae ppan i for instance those, which fell this 
e Pear 


the disease to two opposite causes. 


RELATIVE AMOUNTS OF ee ee AND 
FA agit 1 RAI 


A CORRESPONDENT, W self, “ J. H. S.,“ 
Pian 8 694, that he fds, by reference to ‘ Datel 
eteorological Essays,” agal lt of 17 
Bu observation fee cen.’ ths 
gyre 
— kak a 


wi 
“ whence” $ the 95 by which the 
8 from 


sey ce 


rivers is prese 
tions al 


GENEVA. 


Evapo- 
ration 
from 
Earth. 


Evapo- 
ration 
from 
Water. 


m 
Evaporation from | 0 la 


d 1 i . — of London Clay t non Noli: paler 


o | of the dry land of Suffolk. 


only purifies the “ f the and maintains it in 
a — a r the existence of living things, it 

serves also to — orm a 9 5 store of 
e ope the time when this shall be 
elevated and converted into corn-fields aa 1 
— rę urther change has, howe taken 


by 
denudatio he hard phosphoric 
bodies dislodged by t the sea and again seer rece with 
the shells and bones of a later period, n 


bed : it is 

pra all the geet and 
to the he phosphorus, may have served 
ients were in 


all —— containing organ organ 
pee eas of sews eat 44 — it must also be present iat 
soils produced 
kebabi be most abundant i in the clays. But there is 
another large class produced from 


Inches. 
0. 


epos 
previously from o 
that, since day and ma 


15.815 28 411 


rom the above it 2 2 that at roi about 29 
earth was carried off by 


South of France, if fed o 

mpletely dried up, an 

were as great as pp and. tiat if evaporation from land 

rendered unfit for vegetation. 

In conclusion I mse, 42 remark — at although by . — 
may appro: 


7 
this wubject might assist in | 
grounds would require 
Thompson, 


be | colou 


be again 
could be 


sewage water 
ar it would — e bottom 
ogi Š 72 use of — Proto-car- 
timate of 5 which is also soluble in water, may 
answer the same sijoi -Pioi Rogers aad 
that in East Virginia the stable manure was somet 
allowed to rest on she 1 
red and charged with phosphorie acid. 


VILLA AND ‘SUBURBAN RBAN GARDENING, 
first week in 


iis: 4 
| lowers of stiphar $1 4 * of — iar 
| the whole into 


THE 


GARDENERS’ 


8 


aud a sufficient portion of lamp-black to give it ay 
assumes the consistency 


Peach tr 
ruit is oe 
he most Et. 1 is that 


various ways, 
of using woollen 1 or 


itadmits 


f 
t 
22 we 
j 
1 
a 


ts are 
irely taken 


necessary or four wee 
S eN of ese required must = determined 
e season adv vances, and during the progress o 
ori, I would regommend ‘copious syringings with 
id water, When venings are cold, this 
d be done i in me 8 * oo afternoon is 
in arm eather, This ay be r peated 


e growing * 


of | motion in 


ing mails ; they came to us in small phials filled zo 
water, and on their arrival they were foun 

y may to germinate, uf’ 
tion to see six plants 
in a thriving cw (the plant at Chatew orth being one 
of them —4 sam Hed 


y t 
plants; of that nu 
buted amongst the prin 
= rie, to 
of the plants 
ave see 


this e, 1 


* rsa 
most rapid are during summer ; 
but as soon as rs days 
weather comes 0 


winter ) 

led to consider it to ual ; but, judging by the 
iption of the roots, as given pe by a gentleman 
w it in its native .. 2 y the account of 
hoes plants that arrived a e Tow wn, it certainly 
rennial ; but for the. N ot those who 
are endeavouri 
they knew that during the 
growth is destitute of w 


ry season the 


n, 
which Vict s planted, might I suggest 
any posli, nua — * of waterfowl, from a tropica 
climate. E our account of Victoria Regia 
is aon interesti ng, and suggest 


rity, 4 “when all Wwaterings Should suspended. 
rtant item in the culture of the Peach, and too 


pal 
2 


roots ; and, ppt tarota them with any kind 
of on slightly soever it may be done, Pharo. 


e Correspondenc 


livia b 


tion, a numb of our 


* 
were 
e 
1848, we received a glaz zed | 
ayali for that p 
ls D., of Leguan 
arrival th 


y, on 1 100 ol October, 


re chiefly si 
splashed over the — 0 
economy of the plant would be great! 

and also by its formin 


„destruction to the plan The yo 
leaves of the W. at Chats worth Esa their inherent 

tendency to form a rim, but finding as it 
im would be of no use, in their peculiar 
velopment. This 


er by the artificial 


necessity fo 
ons in which it is 
; and where the constitution of 4 nn does — 
admit of ee adap tation, it must 
seene. I hope eas points will be n by thane 
who * the opportunity. 
the V throu 


is 9 years old 


ing — 5 100 lbs., instead of less 


st time to kill woodlice is towards 
h bey have ce breeding, and are 
s ai all over a grounds; attack them then 
ey return to -= waag quarters, to which ays — 
pair — alacr on 
m bed parallel * an old deal fence 
might h anal been antic 


any one, even at this 
1 firs ** a hundred solic caugh w 


l) | might 


were | manner 


ing to cultivate it, it may as well {p 
e 
his plant of C. . 


cal to rem 


were by ex- |“ 


necessary to kee 
cats to 


eep 
keep down rats and mice, 
various crops from i N ¥ * thoy 0 are 
wise be exposed. 

t | sure, but so — Kemi 


PEs 
ag 


pit hp he smaller 
tams are kept (those about den size of a 
— ve — do little harm. 


fi 
Şi 
1 
72 
EE 


H 
S55 


E 
Sr 
8 


4 

£ 
srr 
H] 


if 
1115 


E 
Bor 


Cu thill, Camberw 


a r would a Ne 0 to permit, 
a ee 


— 9 
e same 


il she uhoda AA 


3 in the 
inch 7 ; then shift “ota a larger er pot, using one. ha 
me turfy, sandy loam (divested of its 


10 


php comple my con- | Wi 


the buoyancy of the d 


«found when 
a widish 


iain 


i 
si 
ie 


trenching old hedge banks or 

fur the by bernetion of bees oa 
queen bees are not t 3 i 
these banio po ES ae mansions, bat 2 


— | 


48—1849. 


R4 THE 


' — — 
hs aber . — When visiting the gardens sat Beil, 
. autumn of 1845 


— me seve 


4 
ud - a 


told . > — 8 ha yen een — oe: rs in the situation 
they then iad without e least protection. 
D. S. Mackenz 

2 rosa Manettii which you state to be “famous 
stock,” is unknown to 


ral p ts of the Athiopian Calla quite 
and Voom, in a sedgy pool, in company with 
any more native aquaties, 


light and dry, in a ch it appears 1 would flourish. 
Amateur Rose 

Phillips’ Fire ee 1H poia 
correspondents could give some 
about Ph ill ips’ fire annihilator, I 8 


r some of you 
rther „ ee 


» for the gas 
ut out life i in the Moldes of the m 
d, granting as certain tha 
jam: is the 


ent, tried day evening 
——— 2 he will iene = 
. eap of combustibles, con- 
1 shavings, hack Ke, was formed 
upon a wire. flooring, ey ws ing on ricks 
When 


strea 
it cannot remove on 2 which ieee 
essits action is long 


continued. — the case in — toaga 5 greater 0 — n 
were 


artificially than would hav 


ES 


ecessary to 
in g% ‘and 3 it ther: 
mai 


in stoppin g fires on their outbreak; what it might do, 
if of power enough, in a raging — when at its height, 
We have no means — 
all the fires that oceu 

inning, and quite within th the — a No. 2 ann 


The Fire at Rinne (seep. 358, Newspaper ).— 
the iely censu censured in this — 4 
hek on nly bag suspicion, for nobody knows the cause 

; but I consider 


the dung- 
— knowledge for several ro age 
public to judge which 
were most like to cause i 
— the babita of thi 
vlurgus ink da.—I know not ts of this 
k u pininsedaan T Dean st the babita of thin 
uence of its 


and burning these 


— tage gt 


in 


he: 
Mr Street tjt 


u 
ually G. 


Pg prepa 


oF the two | per 


hese | 
or wes 1 — sweepings. W. M. M., gardener at 


“toe as ali should 
ant wwe of often hear bitter — nis: aA the — 
est colon t they are all traceable 


Tn 


— CLE. 


759 


Loch Fad i 


unbridgense 
of Elatine hexa andra; from 
Evans apaa ad 
whi 


n 
d to possess a musky 


ur.—Dr. A. | o 
Melville, Queen's College, . was Pee a 
non-resident Fellow. 


Bebiews. 
A Guide to Port yore sa es ag ob South Wales. By an 


ex. Haris. 

A seful book, w hich the ‘eettler would do well 
to many The information w is to be 
ba ania od upon, = en of jus mi- 
— nt w ollowing fratar conveys, 


is another point on which consider- 
rehension prevails with respect to Australia. 
ian ph 


a 
he colony ; but . e 
t they can be successfully co 


uman me not found 


an pr a, from it where 
0 


So]? 

that, on the whole, a N em changed 

m belief in the d n that it was 

aie ly erroneous. I hav CAROTE 500 miles in ~ 
| direct line, in the interior (often 400 miles), and thro 

ed, and have 


m from Victo: Other 
Mr, people had by this time arrived, 


bro 
| meat to the. „erben 


money; an 


to gain. The 
n intelligence which few of our readers are th % | 
red for. 


read, 
t 100. a ton; and Po tatoes 301. 


eantime the simple experimenial P 
ustai 


means of o titious 
ir had been living on the — of their fellow. 
ined, absconded 


toria-square. ships with moneyed 


and the town acres 


ve 
s houses. Carpenters, masons, 
icklayers, and ie like wege a were worth any 
d when e all ed 


ls. 6d. to 2s. ôd. a 4 b. loaf; . 

a ton,” 

At last the bubble bur 

u i . in the value of 

Te famine, the 

go re the bitter fruits of the 

. land pote and but Erai mania which had taken 
session of the people of Adelaide.’ 

At the pe ker of ee Grey’s arrival in 1841, 

one was alm ined, all credit was go 
who 


at once were ru 
livered up their bodies to their ered. 
Then came the reaction ; the 3 profited; the 


improv — disa 
all turned 
culti- 


to other paris, or nd 


| constitute 


affairs settled down into a state 
prosperity, which we trust and — will be 
nent, unless a a mining mania should come on and 
everything. 
Glenny's Garden 3 1 It 
good deal of 3 3 


contains 

small 8 
the © publier especially to 

and it n — a 155 peculiarities 


‘i 


half his family be swept off by egue 


oh ea Man’s e ts “epee Australia, 
cto G. B. Wilkinson. Murray. 1 2mo. 110. 

ANOTHER excellent work for emigrants, 100 one which 

Its advi vice is such as wise man will 


— onies; but 


Boranı 
the ehair. The 
of Plants 


Societies, capit 
or EDINBURGH, Nov. 2 gin yaa 
wing papers 


England ; * me the name of the 


Breat abundance in — and exhibited specimens to 
the act 3. Account of Excursions last Autumn, 
With 


of ered. 
noticed the e plants as having been ae by 
n the :— Impatiens poli- me: 
ere in Cakile Milk Glen, near Glasgow 


reason 
re 
of . 


“'the eity of Adelaide was surveyed, and beautiful 
uares, terraces, and 1 might be 

seen at the — — On the land itself, posts 
and sign- bo 


Pye m Wilsoni, near Dunoon ; : 
and Œ@aanthe Lachenalii near 


Toward Point ; tine 


tréet from East terrace, ing 


extre 
I should wish m 8 
And he was te aa when in- — 


recte to ingsun Hindle ey- | Serv 
boards were e — Sine WI | 


ollow „ 
227 Give 


On turning cut one of the balls, it was wet just 


* 


760 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE, 


[Dec. l, 


$$$ === 
h down the pot, and seve eg it was as dry weather turns out very fine, the mg may be re- State of the Weather near London, for the week ending Nov, 7 7 
psp ya Who 3 these plants!“ we asked. 1 | peate d. must, ag reg hs rng netly 1 stood an observed at the Hoylcultecs’ Gardens, CMOS E 
do.“ ‘How often? When ea ya towards dry.’ | that these s yringings . 0 construed into Nor. |Moon’s|| Basometzs. || Tuzawounren, 5 
‘ ore week at this rate, we observed, would | delugings, but that the eaten is 8 “fall on the planta like Ace. Afar. I Min- Her- ee, 
have killed the whole collection.’ h ower said, | fine dew. The early Peach-house or a pit under similar | F777" 28 9 : 
‘he never could eaths ; ad, d last,| treatment will be excellently adapted for starting Barus. 24) 8 25 
undreds die. Vet he had attended strictly to th wberries pro a v early erop; but the Monday 36 15 5 
directions he had read, a t ha given by latter should if possible de plunged in a of leaves or ae gee | er g 
ymen.“ He been always told to ‘give but som r material, to give a gentle bottom-heat ; and Thur. . 2% 14 11 
little water in winter, and none while they remain if such can be introduced — the Peach-house, the | Average 
p, and ot been wetted lower than half warmth and moisture therefrom will be on to Ror. e sie ae 252 
an inch down for two t We t, therefore, | Peaches also. The pit, . is better for the Stra w- - 2+—Fogay : ome haze an 1 pe. 
too strongly urge our amateur friends to act upon this | berries, as they can have the mild bottom. haat — still — He Foxs — 100 ndy hn k cold F ears e 
that ‘plant ots always, winter and | be near the glas „ 
summer, want = 3 of at at every 2 29—Overen"t; sues sibt frost: ral ran ‘Nese ; foggy; cloudy, 
temperature of the wee 
watering ; the entire soil should be wetted. The only 8 + 3 8 ‘ 5 ae h deg. below the average, 
this, that, as they only require watering State of the Weather at e 
. a a soil ats dry, it ag 4 t a twice a day | leaves, ee mers be taken of allsnitable sumer ensuing week, ending Dec. 8, la e bu the 
, . 
in summer time, and be three weeks or month getting for clea them away, especially from the turf ome ez, | val aa | Nee loo 
dry in w Nen of very small intellect read old gravel ‘aie that the first good shower of rain may do] pes, | £4 8 TE E Years in Quantity 
boo write over again, very eae and in| away with the dirty and smeared a 5 consequent Ss | Se | =e | Rained, | Of Rain. 
other words, yopi they have rea he de- | upon the use of the besom or leaf- r ERR Sassy gerne ETI E pet: rer 
scription of men who are always ‘r rushing into print.“ ficient quantity of haven has been secured for ferment. | Mn. 30 47.8 ane | 4 n 5 
e 3 to see their names published; and |1 urposes, and for decomposing into compost, t ae ye ee 9 92 
they have done more real mischief to 1 than residue may be drawn into € spaces in the Thurs. 6 274 83 %% 0% 
po sive of the thousand ills that cross a science in its and covered with a little soil to prevent their being | atur, s| 450 6 0 u | ons 
blown about with the wind. I e course of the i. iak dun n e pela Sek aa 
— —— 12 months these leaves will rot, and next autumn they | 1937—therm. 57 deg. ; and the lowest on sth and 6th, 1344 hem. 64 2 
Miscellaneous. may be used as a top dressing or mulching ewl 
Potatoes and Salt. t spring I took a bushel o planted troes. 8 n Notices to Correspo nde nts, 
ow Potatoes fron i amon thé diban 0 ones vd weather E prepir ground for planting trees or | Corr P 3E Oori D — what pitch you give the 
5 r shrubs, by t daar fe well the clumps or spots which — provided it throws « ff the water. It is all a matter of 
d still a few good buds left. I put into 8 3 5 gira 
Per wi 3 ; P seg they are a to occupy ; and by carting or wheel- 5 NN cet It in proverbially a r 
2 asec ee se ts ea necessary material on to the gr while it is ont Wi UT a T 4 
uantity of water might have been saturated mith er 8 The same treatment usually g ameilias will suit it, 
q ‘the tity of 1 Thes itb 4 t hard . 5 to bear the traffic. Actual planting, hie See that the roots are healthy, and that the drainage acts 
„ ah onae eee e. oe a set near | ever, must be deferred till the weather is more favo properly 
other Potatoes, not diseased. Whe up I ha d able: ks ahs Fosta erni fety exp 155 OR BEEN ses: A Sub. ea risk legal "We tle Tah 
bush 33 $ ia better make it a matter of agreement. We believe 
pa ele of pe Potatoes, . half a Dashel diseased. frosty air. All plants recently removed should be well be E is removable; 
P e eg y k ari a T z re hall dise 1 I | §000 | mule with half-rotten leaves, or 1 55 ee hut if it ia fixed to the freehold it is am irremovable fixture, 
otatoes t in the vicinity oe IBCAES n two aterial, whieh e serve to di ig i ort of ure not consult your solicitor ? epend upon it newspaper 
previous pas I ve had the same result; an f t all awèh plant be sans 101 staked, as Ba Re in matters of law, are of little worth, 
therefore think myself enti itled to assert ome the phe neha, e eee a Heating: 7 8 G. Mr. Hood's is the best known authority, 
disease may be stopped by so the: nothing i injures Saha more than allowing them to be] aud by his advice you may safely abi © see no difficulty 


: th 
e put in, and the 
g must last for half an hour. Neumann. 


1 of Operations. 


he ensuing w 2 62 J 


77 DEPARTMEN 

Orcaipaceous Piants.—To assist i of these saperi 
as have 1 Boie. growth i in going quietl st, 
the at apers of the house should be kept Srodki 
cooler e same oe excess of damp must 
studiously 3 by care in watering, and by 
mitting sufficient ai ss p expel the super- 

dant moisture. ma 


reby. 


cf 


m; or 


i de is scarcely less 

82 Dendrobiums, Kenan eras, Cœlogynes, 
, shoul w be removed t dry house, to 
them for flowering. are un- 


but the temperature even there m y 
as the ee * not i stimulate gee but merely to 
keep them i 


if this 

mildew, will kd 

of the stoc 

| nothing i is more “aed * 25 Carnation, but, a nursed 
othered 


near the wines the 
perature ther: le to variation, an 1 — | 
- of 1 evergreen varieties is often injured the 4 
tor if it fall upon the | Froun 
n — pay at to examine ns crowns, 


the destruction of the root is in a gre 
guar 


rocked about by the wind. 


FLORISTS’ FLOWERS. 
It will be Bee stv eee during the present 


severe weather, to p ate eg and Pansies. As for 
Aae, provided th kay h ea Codi circulation of 
air, protected from Kenty 288, a and kept free from 
reen fly (which in mild weather is apt to be trouble- 
some), t ill we CARNaTIONS AND 
COTEES — ere is on ing m ore than another 
at this time of the yea atten iain to this class of 
= it is the desire of the amateur to preser er 


. — shut down, even at variance with go ood cultiv vation 


s system is persevered in, a black spot, with 
the nd 


* 
8 
oo 


s quite certain. 


and s r flor — e is so 
i LIAS * —— just now gel 

course have been some . out of the 

fore they are finally stored away, it will 
— these are right, 

is to pack them dow his 


measure 
ed against. 
KITCHEN GARDE 
ae AND * — While his s severe weather con- 
es, these will require very watchful care, as it will 


a state of gradual progression as aie * seta à to kee 5 them ‘closely covered durin 
e ag their perishing. CONSERVATORY. — are 5 of the ae if due attention has 
late flowering ich were for pai r fre eque parte tions to keep t ned 
wr unpruned, such as Mandevillas Ipomceas, are | contents ag they are in little darger of being i gri 
rth ut little | provided that two other points are also borne i in mind; 
should be done ster remy the changed lea ves than | one is to let the covering be ample, rather 
prune the weakest shoots; their final pruning | than otherwise ; and the other is to take advantage of 
ae be 2 a — or April. If r and | every favourable opportunity of coer Tights even if 
stronger sh w, the ey are apt to commence | it be for an hour * in the middle of the day. A little 
growing, in wa >of th m t and th tion, 5 st be . in ee, them — 
expend the strength ‘hick ought to be reserved till the direct ys of the ==. emir 


t 
piai The shoots of Manrandyas should be cola 
ably reduced in bulk, as they are affected by the|su 

wi only, hee 
e 


that the 
and thereby better 
‘daring cold — 
2 ORCING DEPARTMENT, 
Praon- nouse - —Those who intend to have Peaches 


r moving about 


mulehin 


opi for forcing 3 the 
d should b 


awed duall t 2 
moderate eath of of here 25 “A i 


e ox 
they should on this account be reduced’; | cuoxes should now be dvesta of their: deeayi Ge 1 ; 
are ges 


and after 7 Aes been sa ae A forked over, a 
aid ro 


manure 
The deca dug into t 
tity of no aien 
a portion of there will be broken 
winter, a sufficient quantity of 
collected to supply them with youn 


ame ins a 
= interior tem 
tfi 


ng ; or 
n emptied to supply 
excep 


plni "tot forcing. 
ting the ete should me - be covered 3 inches 
d dung; and at the same time, the 


and increasing ve 3 till 
the se airly turned; the day temperature may 
rise 106 by ferent and 15° to 20° ‘by su sun-heat. Un- 
less the wea age ry dui a slight syringing 
be given ec ith tepid water | when 


rature | thick with well ro 
ld be w all 
possible to do, without i injury to 
c? karia By perfi 
only 


s th 
may dert of the ool 8 
the growing. 


ouid 


dunged, and dug a8 deeply as it is 
rming his In peration L. it 


spring Gak, but wd pio 


n 
lower level 
Insects: JGH The beetles reared from the seeds of the wild 
Vetch are “rachus affinis. . pisi is as large again. W, 
MANURE E W. Coal ashes, the baste of pal fires, 


d A Grass 1 a light 
Soa en Bot en an 
— ioe oa 2 A H. Manure should alge 1 late = 
— — e application; soapsuds a 
is doubtful whe ther ra manure 1 2 pre inate 
„ alone; if urine and similar matters form 
art of he stops, — if not, n 
s: F W. Such sports api "chat exhibited by your Fuchsia 
bloom are rs at all uncomm 
: M Nash. 3, ‘Hawthornde me 
dared Pippin; 21, 


du Canada; 30, London Pip n: 31, Fearn's P 2, 33, 
Sweeney Nonpareil; 22 is probably the 5 
25, — Crab. [- J B. 1, 8, lenheim Pippin 5 — 
Nonpareil; 4, Scarlet Crofton; 3 ot the is ; 
Sweeney Nonpareil; Dutch Mignonne; 

r 2 46 Oro verital 1, 5 Hary; 18, Re 


King of the Pippini 
9, Golden Knob.|l— X Y. Tour 
Pippins. 
Pd or Prants: J K G. Fuchsia Ponin .— Tyro. AIl 
plenium Adiantum nigrum. : ba 3 os 
ts that are no „ 1, Ben- 
3 ni ma — name pian s 2 iy ee i 


a fragitera, see 5; iz glabra; © who e can 


3. ane, Obelone Sighs. 
— 7 ee Bach pip is a flower; if the 
rm. e : An ac 
is blighted. or otherwise injured, it at w e 
i ips are 


t di ps a 
management, no doubt; but the * pete t 
except by tho ee 0 on the spot.—D J 


p 


omise 


aea“ 

d * . ney in oy ag, watt wert 
zon fin give rcing bed, w would feorually il ae 
which iè also il 

apple-place, Bagewar> 

As ance Albert and 

RHUBARB: a 1 trans g t both Prince Albert 4 
mh tb rb with safety now. Roses 

nee J- tote — newly ae a voter | 


You may 
and ng — the topf 4 ly. 
— and e them just before you 
; common 

ener 2 Nothing will answer so we ee a 

for planting along the side of your pa ing, We a het 

— they + be kept be age boun foes re Gau 

ment. D N. Any r e e K prenre Gant 

mats Shallon for you if ne N ron 12 pulbs 

and An re uire a we ; 


leaves you hav 
soot fungus. 
opose. $ 


ai 
SEEDLING FLOWERS, 


W ts prem. 
with 8 petals, very A yery 


an old kind called Goliab.“ 
PE 


CHRYSANTHE 
flower. Wir 
:b. 5, tube long a! and slender ; ona 
i hie we a outline and texture iese a 
colo ariety, which no doubt will be very much 


th pe 
communications have ine 
T ker others unavoidably y se ES. 
air es can be made. Wem net lee 


10 


i 


448—1849. ] 


jety ref  Eegiand, * cach 
er s ri Leetu e before the 1 
the — of — Society in soina ah gg aan oF 
pared Meeti tin 


the ensuing December G ng. n 
i Ont e Anatomy a pei Diseases of — 
s, wia particular refere 
t 


I. Professor — 
Foot in NT Animals 
— oot Rot’ in Sheep.” P. M., on Pica he 

ntary Illustrations of ppi Che- 


5 = 
sal essor Wa 
t 8 r. N., on 


ral 5 Physical — of Water.“ A 
el 
The Sentral Meeting of 1 Members will be etn = Saturday, 
the 15th of December, at 11 o’ 7 lock in the n 
y of the Coun 


London, Dec. 1, 1849. JAMES 1. etary. 
GRICULTURAL CHEMISTRY. —The Consult- 
iag Chemist of the Royal Agricultural Society (Mr. War) 


will be happy to receive into his Laboratory, teas the Ist of 
January, 1850, two Students in Agricultural Analysis, 
2.1 Holles- street, street, , Cavendish-square. London 


5 avendishas 


J DRaAvtic ENGINES, WATER RAMS RAMS, &c., 
on Improve Principles ; Engines worked by Steam or 


ulic power, 15 raise from 1 gallon to 1000 per minute to 
. of t, and fro depth of 900 feet. Douch 
Vapour, oe and all N — of Baths. * 
3 heated by Steam, Air, or Water. Bori 


r. 
Conservato 
2 — nd Collecting of Y of —_— — Towns supplied. —Direst 
E075 FOUR- HORSE PORTARLE STEAM-ENGINES 
AND BOLTING OR THRESHING MACHINES, 
AN D HANSO ere, 2 — 
n to their Ste 


T 

in fel, fe ca — pga of work ion, than any before — 
c. y be seen any day at th eir works, Sumner- 

street, — 
Deep Well panier Baths ; Hot-water Apparatus; Fountains, 
Towns supplied with Gas or Water, 

IRE-WORK, HOT. WATER 5 
GREENHOUSES. 

T. THOMAS BAKER, MANOR-HOUSE, MANOR- 


Stock, and ren- 
dered in — . 8 for 
Walks, Bordering. Plower Stands, N ene, &e. eb doe 
TICULTURAL — ee NGS, ot ppa and uses, Con 

vatories, &c. Thes On-WATER APPARATUS | 


aoter and Drawin 50 
the Trade as usual. 1 


— poe THE TV TWO F FOLLOWING WEEKS. 


Tuuvss bar, —Agricultara) Tmn, Society of Ireland. 
ESDAY Agricultura] Society of England. 

TURSDA — 

Wepvespay, — 12 n Meeting and Annual Show of the Smith- 

THugspa — i field Club, at Baker-street, London, 

Farpa — 

Trespa — 

Weoneapay, — $ Exhibition of Bangg Cattle and Poultry 

Turres — at Birmingham. 

Acer — H 

Tavu 13—Agricvltural Imp. Society of Ireland. 


ay, 
Pamaran” Larter December 5: Tavistock—December 7: Newcastle— 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 761 

pm 

) A GEICULTURAL DRAINING : THE DERBY cultural Sanar will remain the constant oppro- 

VEL.—A Very Superior Draining Level, of great brium of o rofession. We ready as an 

ee —_ A. 5s., to o be had of the M. ker. Joun Davis, Op" E 2 r pe 4 y 

— one toi ist on t portance of a practical agri- 

ofthe empire, cultural education 25 that does not hinder us 

cn a 1 l from qaya. on the im ce of a scientifc edu- 

catio we e are as confident as any that 

= seein Gazette, | epi maste able to say to en, «Come 

and do this” 5 — er i 22 a reed 8 


a wider Aaa pim of scalar matters, theoretical 
as well as practical, alone nspire ; he 

cope with the untried circu 
which have already utterly 


December 12: London. Ireland 3.4 greatly diminished it here. Having for 
a Toe bras Acricutturat Press.”—It is many years bought and sold, and ange and sown, 
y no means an ommon toast now-a- day and 8 reaped e threshed, a and paid ren 0 a. 
ti an stoc accounts, and su 
Ame the } N. season, at the annual meeting of e eee 


more than one of our provincial ugota] — 


it has been offered and recei with much good 
feeling. Let us endeavour to express to the mem- 
i ourtesy. 


k you. The Tog arg wey you 
accepted, we are sure, 
gratefully — of the feeling it implies ; and w 
willingly j _ our brethren of the pr 
gments. 


our ackno But, in doing so, we hav 


unworthiness of those whom you have 
pleased to honour. On the contrary, however bold 
th 3 may be, or, at least owever bold in 


t 
s to express it, we believe that 8 bigest 
are 15 unuseful to agricultural practitioners; 
believe that the soe. of good feeling be 
118 ers and workers ys beneficial to 2 latter 
n every department of 2 is especially so in the 
case of 5 and particularly under its present agr 
circumstances. Every one values farm 
but i it is only i in so far as sit conveys with accuracy 


Evania and Bristol, or to dealers of 
established character, in eee eee and fair dealing they 
1 implicit confidence ONY GInRS and Sons, 

n, December x 


TEH E LONDON MANURE C COMPANY beg to offer 

as under, and pledge ata pao every Manure 

= . ag shall be free from 
uano direct’ 


slightest adulteration. 


Purser, Secretary. 


„ Bridge-street, Blackfriars. 


k for é 

ard’s Cases, or Domestic Greenhouses, agricultural truths to the mind that it is really 

ERUVIAN GUANO.—As Agents of the Poravian ble. Now, while we readily admit that there 

Government for the importation and 1 of hep aluable | are some sections 2 1 icultural truth which w ords fa 

MANURE, we think it right, for the prot annot convey mind, and which the press is 

i — article fs stil e Sint pel the 29 — E thus unable to communicate there are others 

eae *poly cag , to our agents, Messrs. GIBBS, 285 at importance w 7 tly and 

IGHT, an 


e sent | Pr, 


asily piian in this way ; 


those be pre upon agri- 
culturists at the present crisis aa their affairs. 

ofit is no doubt the proper end of agriculture, 
eve rofession i 


ose truths in farming which 
annot Fa, has generally hindered his 


PATENT. 


PATENT worHoten WORKS, KING’S ROAD, CHELS 
DENCH invites the attention of Gentlemen abou 


— 


possessed by e PATENT 8 which be will 
from 16 to 21 m. per fo ty Loot wid, 3 3 feet lor furnished, 

n 16 t per foot, ot „ 3 feet ong, i rnishe 
and the . when completed chart ed from 1s. s 6d 
t, according 10 oe La 


* ania S 

wood or putty, and the 
the 8 put in witb 

3 no sehen from Td. 

BY HOT WATER, 

One "METALLIC HOTHOUSE WORKS, 

am. — Proprietor, Mr. THOMAS | 
JONES, 

teful thanks to 2 chek ort d and 

ole zane te r Jibera patron age ot the above Establishment, 

— J years, and begs to ate that the 


à a. 
„the roof pond pone ph bg 
Principle bei 
Putty, Patent Sashen; “rea 


ee 3 by the 
on, Asa anne ache paru 


to any deine 
o eee 
$ are now n r 
Ses which Aas is ne A 
mos on 80 well known, — require 
; bya Who have sok baie’ them oe ean 
Aey sa of tbe highest authority ; or 
Nobility’s seats and principal | 
factory, 
the construction 
mee them, may be 


oa woll as 
8 
hroughou t 

and ĉo, beg t to — the Trade that at their Manu 


New Park.s' af for 


ROYAL LETTERS 


to 9d, per ft. | We 


lass enables him to offer his y eee 
a 


attai 10 it—we readily admit that there is much 
trath essen atial t to the attainment of farm 


by those who are a 
ess in offering 5 
ve ù 


intention to follow aa common example, — profes i 


e | to compete with them in * bog 


ic allow these rem 
and others of, a — ‘kind in this journal, to 
ss for those of an enthusiastic or inexperien 


n farm ent ; we have had ample experience 
that — — bel — rocesses is increased, and their 
profit of wig 3 e — farmer . 
is tommy to 
all Sy ede kill which. field- — * 
mpart e perfectly e that there is 
slid ck hy wre equally 
0 ed from the works of A. 
z3 book- oe it it be not baal on 
cultural truth, is based upo 
— ms * * the business of the farmer, 
We do orget that we are addressing pea 
agrioaltaral- — who have been pleased to 
ceive so 3 as * „The Agricultural — ; 
while we than m for their good-will, we 
wed teen the liberty s of f justifying their courtesy, 
by insisting on the im and —— of the 


e | interest which they ate — conga men 


SCHLESWIG AND HOLSTEIN DAIRY 
MANAGEMENT. 


appear 

3 an — of the 5 rae gners 
e and boast o he Holsteiner is his dairy $ 

and 4 Holstein butter m — wr G to be the best A; 

, the fo llowing sketch of the management by 

is more especially 


nor useless 


iry consisting of 200 cows gives employment to 
| the following — of A a dairy-man, a dairy- 
st maid, 


cow-herds, an an 


odd man, a 
8 


fro encies while 
roa amongst you we would assist on the n 
of a 


9 in hey — = by farming, | i i 


* are 75 be a upon it, that 
ass room and at the des 
On this —— a compliment to the agricu cultural 
bers of an agricultural society is, 
se for surprise. ndeed, 
rt n true cause for 
o be hat the importance 

agriculture of that truth which a merely field educa- | 


to be 


also 
much eman equally — to a profitable result is : 
lea 


ton does not conv ceived 


are not more generally sought — 
Surely there is no antagonism betwee 
of theory cannot supplant, it 


—that the truths en the eae and not the field- | orders th 


he knows 


ec i 
does he the less benefit by what they tell him. An And 


ust 

cows are milked thoroughly out, on which so much de- 
as the eee, ; 

work which belongs to the treatmen 


even though a knowledge of causes shoul 


ses —— considerations id ‘ae one, "they ee. wil 


shew sere they Sy 


e purse, we — 8 
ound 


guide our “ men of business ; > but we tain i 
withstandi 


the y f fa iL 

the generality o imers—no 
me who will see this, but the yi 

ators of British goil, of pa wa majority a are 

ral literature— 


cent. of 


TE 
8 


caltis vators 
still unacquainted with our fang 
ui igher 


i seco 
a than t 


; and we say V that unti tl r. 
hat 1 per 


Z tionary or 
for them, 


rle reeni ride 


are in the stables, 
wo last persons assist the ee with the 


F cena ees 
uent sarcastic — 

articles of 8 J. We mention the matter here, in order 

our readers, ifinclined to study the ‘arguments — — 

retrograde policy in agriculture, may 


* 


762 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


-herds, to give the hay and corn to the 

3 p w-herd is y nat for each 100 cows, aay 
duty bei hatas ch the ong as they a 

. age to collect hag together at ne milking 

when the cows are housed, they 

u 


imes a so s have 
clean man 0 ohio = 0 N The dung is removed 
by a time is fully occupied by that 
Warte See ty. 


he routine of dairy work is regulated to 2 in ae 
be 


. 
8 
2 


skims 
36 hours; it is car: 
jetas the milk paes as epa are enna are washed an 
manner. 


tinted; second, a close 7 texture; * resh 
| fragrant weet kerne olly tas and 
n | fourth, good — will, shen all, be cstingushed by 
penny aeria a considerable t time without acqui * 
cid flavour. R. S. Graham, Bulteigh, Nov. 


THE MODEL FARM AT FARNBOROUGH. 
as given me pleasure to notice this small farm, 
we s i red a few years ago, on the bord 
Being a model for the istrict it a now wishe 
ior re ob ort progress, and 2 8 has 
tended the spirited outl 8 


the former space. d (p 2 of Bagshot sand 
formation) * now becone a a ‘desirable 1 although 
y years w 1 doe 


er 


does high 
es? This is an inqui hip 
| —+ it understand t oan Ka that if 
| answer sadi cultivation i in the best mars, it will not do 
nagem rent and taxes 


is t 
w ares 4 his system of farming yie 
a — aa rè It is interest only that can be 
ke the improvement 1 in . spect of the estate, 
tition animals. 


= 
© 


and for f aney purchase 


r fox- ug. A few 


Instance 


cellar amd which the tu 
as the giris have finish 
carry the skimmed milk whic 


operations, which accompli 

than 50 or more cor 60 e by the pow 

. is in motion, 
e previous aay, 

and to put it into casks, all 7 Sera paid 1 

ain either between the lay 


cheese 

The girls then carry the tubs placed out to air into 
the cellar, where they remain 12 hours. 
to breakfast. After breakfast they wash out the milk 
mails and the conveyance pails, the churn, &c,, and all 
other utensils that have been used that morning, an 
pee out the 


y work unconnected w 


dg nne 
ape een important pann 


Ai n as on her 


at measure both the — 
of the * and, by 
prod 


oe depends in 
Pe 

and quality 

t of 


5 


upon $ 


2 
qualities o ‘rate butter are considered to be, 
a tine even yellow colour, neither pale ne > 


to draia othe: 
the cleaning of the tubs, they 
he 1 gentlemen, like 


would lay out the 
> 88 alone; they expect a — for the outl 


hey then go ar 


t 
5 and then ge ey At 
o’elock they do 
antil, 11 oe “nen they are called to N at 
2 4 glowed 3 K ! 


quence, the of a 


almost Turni 


aiid for the outla 


instance yt 

lately in ye another farm r 

treated it in a similar way, by putting many 
into one, a ere ‘itehin -ü = fencing ; 

not content with draining his own | eee 


prieto nai yf 
a 

us may therefore infer tbat the 
uccess attendant on the first model farm has induced a 
further 9 on additional land upon the same 
prineiple. 
in a low 


aan he jealous 


ust q 
Wheat, 7 quarte oo Bai ey, i tons o of ee 
of Mangold, pit g 4 tons of Clove: 


beat € Gloveland blood, f 

there are 33 bal of superior Durham 

wy sali 330 0 Ham mpshire down . 300 of which 
3 : 


ers of Hamp- a FA 


8 
oe * d 


+ advanced rental of the lan 


an of c 
gentleman has as much tigh to sig a — 4 in farm- rent, 
-ra 


wd ee 


een purchased certain 


e| and ri 


fine animal e a se digree, i 


to the proportionate average pr 
r the year, all — become right again, pries of 


„ of the high price of — produce, 
arm a Was re 
10 a a 


Pai 


The agricultural 
is, a commiseration 8 thal 
nena Sonal w than when the bb. 
pel ery their Pota Baby 7 
y. 


meetings 
e much 


ot 
will not 8, their 


of 8 or their fam Is the same 

of = PES of — Jandiords p pit i 
in sim mil way for to sustain 
2E, $ Lance, Barossa, e 


* 


Home Correspondence. 
Maize.— am astonished to find that, after 
severe ce appeared in the Gardeners“ 

10th Nov., ag ainst t hee of the 

n England, my com 
Forty-day Maize, with w 
ens (and not the best). gety in a 


[te was in type the day whet it arriv Whatever 
may be the result of the experiment; whether it bea 
failure as r 


air one. 
d e for Maize sut- 
— r bya 


kasma of no ostens ible Bens why i 
n in this climate; and It 
has acted in a per nest, fair 


tious almost entirely subsist 
onp people are 8 lam 


so small a 


the air, 
he fertility of the lan 


stocked, and the following produce will ena 
to be wintered, the lambs reare: ed o r fattened 


is care; for she has aoe + $6 ; 
—_ — ever ready for the calls 7 for 
dairy 


room, 
po ary the mune bing as 
In the stack-yar 


arley ; 28 acres of Clover have * cut, and the 2 1 
math fed weed i be 


the fields, nor ean the e hedges supply t — fields with seed 
een clea 


3 


2 and a 
o farming not yie 


y5 
the pursuit will * be follo 
more plentifu 


wed. Far 


poo consist pr at ase ts 
food and a as wath al labour, either 8 
ughman or the plough-maker, an Ne will 
necessarily be lowered by the averages, so that 2 
will 3 in the same advantageous position 


| Tents, disproportionate to the tim 
| ords wy a o will lose on the 


succes: 


; —— attained, I am f 


. | climate, I am ineli 
es. X 


any season 
| there is to ripen Grapes in the 
; | ficieney of 4 Z — soi 


bis, if tee will aang cure itself, iF I 
ould becom 


formerly, except only in the instaifte of tte at — Į 
t is the land 


V they would have | agent at Batavia se 


455 Mr. Keene may 7 

or rather introducer of the so 
certainly the 

public ; for 


that sober and canny race, I do 
will be tempted to nk e their 2 in ut As regards 
ot been alread 2 7 ufi- 


pt sun in 


for this result; the 


soil, in a stiff insuffici 
attribute what I cannot but ‘bok a 6 


attention to i 


__48—1849. | THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 63 


what was deemed the most valuable sort. The and econemising labour. A powerful steam engine with; Price 
captain purchased about five or six couple, and landed | its tall chimney i en. applicable fo for a rep of pur 2 Miller 1 . 3 a 3 — Sd int À 
alive in England about three couple—their cost in the poses, and is a distinguishing feature that marks s farming | miller, and baker, are barely making a living with bread 
island was about 10s. each. They were stated to be the Jansena as you pass along the country. These struc- | at 5d. per 4 Ib. loaf; and at this price iy corre- 
2 . 3 ag 3 of og * tures have a valuable effect i in causing to be > made uyon | Spondent, who does not hesitate to state of 2 fellow con- 
: - inal price at Ba- without which no high | tributor to journal, “that he i : 

g your journal, isa person who has 

is 


tavia. I believe a gentleman in the south of Devon and | farming can be carried on ; and this is strongl no idea i iti al 
myself, each having been favoure with specimens from | plified ia Mr, Caird’s case, ‘from the . es ling N ‘Although eee Ming the f 
the hd alone possess the unmixed breed. So of loads of manure which he carried out to his ‘green | i 
much a the seisis a the new breed, if new breed it crop, besides bis purchasing amna artificial man unknown to me, I venture to say be is quite alive to the 
be, an ae or t 8 * Pr are large; I | His farm, as well as those near Dun bar, have a great price of the bread as sent in by his baker. You would 
have a rag i s : 71 ave weighed a advantage in this respect from having a command of | much assist public inquiry and truth, Mr. Editor, by 
cock 84 ich had weig hed $ lbs, and in high | kelp, which is 8 close by, on the e and is | occasionally letting us know what the market quotation 
condition 8 I think, have weighed 10 lbs. The | very valuable, a perhaps is one cause of these farms | may be. i can 

my 9 dies goo od oe to average from | letting so high. 1 50 years ago Sir John Sinclair, | great part of Kent, although second bread may, with 

hag cocks about 7} Ibs. They are ex- | who had penetrated so deep into the recesses of fa arming | Tare exceptions, be found at 6d. ; but I do not know 

cellen dad e table, with white flesh, rather pugnacious, | improvements, gave the gred a of these | Where to go for it myself. Where it is sold at this 
and indi ria are p The eggs of the pure breed are | farms : 22 cart-loads per En says, were | price, itis by some new baker, who is trying to run 
we, 7 0 ; 2 almost spherical, excellent, and applied to the Turnip land. = med pay 12 such cart- down others, 7 der these circum ou admit 
nearly 5 of yolk. The colours of the birds vary ; | loads are 5 given by the generality of farmers. | strong articles n all e, will you favour us with some 
black with yellow or light hackle, white, and speckled, | The same quantity was also applied to the Grass land | editorial remarks on what bread t to be in com- 
the latter predominating ; the colours are often very | before ploughing. Yet, notwithstanding all these ad. | parison to the price of flour. I much fear the consumer 
brilliant, and the mixtures sometimes striking. pea vantages, s, it was found that Wheat could not be grown — does not yet get the reduced price. A Free- 


i 
carriage; but on comparing them with Malays from of time. Mr. Grey estimates the avera amount of Aal v. Barley.—Your correspondent, “ P.,” says, 
Baker’s, there is a perceptible difference, in which I | produce on the Scotch farms as follows s quarters of | “ Malt for — purposes has been pro roroi ¥ 


the Ja fm rage, 5 t 
noble carriage and larger. I regard the breed, from its | turn out 6 to the acre ; pd or 11 quarters of Oats, 8 or | information, I fatted three pigs, one on Barley-m 
size a - a if ai of its esh, as identical with the | 10 tons of Potatoes, and 20 to 30 Same of Turni i, ‘en a one on malt, and one on a Leg 05 of from ab aoe 
lost Shackbag or Duke of Leeds’ breed, if not consisting | good crop. This is a high standard, and so long as this to one-fourth of malt to Barley-meal ; in each case the 
of the cross gree suggested, Those who have read| s maintained, there need be n o fear of a fs ah of | meal was mixed with water for some days before being 
the Rev. Mr. Dixon’s book on Po oultry, or who have English rents from the 8 of English prices; used. I did not keep any account of it, nor was I very 
studied =e ao 3 of Somestie poultry, will be | as a proof of this, let the profits be calculated on Mr. | particular, but I saw enough to satisfy me that the 
aware that in Java and ‘Sumatra are to be found va- | Caird’s farm, 21 will be found not only that the high | Barley-meal * itself peor the pig sooner and better 

rious wild breeds of Gal li, ey pash the. Gallus | rent of 34 or * acre may be maintained, but that | than the malt by itself, but that both of the em separately 
giganteus of Temmeuck, of which a stuffed spec men. | in addition 2. will be a fair and handsome profit tu | were eg a iter to a mixture of the two. Malt is at 

d from Sumatra, is said b be in the Edinburgh | accrue to the tenant, A few shillings per acre more or | present à too high a price for me to try experiments 
Museum. The cocks of the breed I possess have some- | less in rent is of little consequence, compared with the | With, but ‘ W” can try it. A. K. 
times low flat combs, like the wild specimen referred to, | immense difference that may be made betwixt a bad Labourers’ Cottages. The Royal Englich 
and the hen has a very small comb. Three of my birds crop and a really good one. In one of your late num- | cultural Society has lately * a aprh, of bes oiiz 

ve drooping tails like the pheasant, whether the re. | bers a correspondent from East Lothian enumerates Goddard, architect in Lincoln, for the 
sult of accident or not I cannot say. But this, as well as | various reasons for the high rents in Scotland, These construction of a pair of cottages Nor, parr 
the fact e of the hens with a drooping tail having | are highly dese ente, the consideration y English pro- | labourers. Iam not an architect, but having had a 
proved barren, has suggested to my mind the possibility | prietors. Amongst oth ers, o the economy | very 51 and extensive experience in all co 
0 is t the — . king 


great cons Wa i 
may be valuable as a large game breed ; ht 1 the bus number of small outgoings, aree appear | but his wants are those of common . 
3 better adapted for 2 than Ae R. T. H. | of little import, but which, when take the e aggre- Goddard’s pe improves nothing upon the 
$ h Farming. —It is is certainly a m ra curious | gate, mount up in the year to a large 8 This it is rooms of Tweedside and Northumberland, w 
inguiry, and highly important in the pate state of which makes gentlemen’s farming seldom answer — | family of a number of ages and sexes, bei 

t i i is proverbial. Scotch i 


her, forms 
high rents are paid in Scotland, as compared with | amongst his urers, has neat 3 for them, social system of those cele 
$ > part of | gen ture 


vain premises or uncertain contingencies, but supported | money and i in 2 erg! aie pel rhaps so any its chosen residence. Every domicile very justly elaims 
N irrefragable proofs.— The East Barnes farm, near pecks of Potatoes ; and does not shift them yearly, but | two apartments on the ground floor, one rather better 
pays 4/. 5s. an imperial acre on 480 acres; and | gives them an 5 in ere places by a continued | than the other, which will serve the oceasions of v 
did pay not very many years ago about 64. the acre, or | residence. Added to these reasons wre vege: farmers or family occurrences. In the prize plan, the 
2800/. a year; but having been taken in hand by the are intelligent and prosperous, Educa P EEA T in 2 corner of the cottage, 
who resided in Edinburgh the while, it got earlier with them, from the „ of parochial be cold ; = 
rated, and so reduced. Well may your corre- | schools ; is spread through all ranks, and has been the 
spondent « W.“ 2 be astounded at these marvellous rents, | means of supplying other countries with the best | Where the family enters the cottage. It must 
a paradox ste th 2 bailiffs, and the best gardeners, By | preferable to place the door in the front of the 


15 


i 
i 
$ 
$ 
: 
ii 


1 
8 8 
ai 
BT, 85 
EE: 
gE: 
Hi 
84 
so 4 
Ss 
88 
EES 
115 
aT 
R 
$ 
B 
A 
ho 
RE 
F 
T 
28 
g 
HHL i 
1 4 
25 $ 
Ereta 
ian: 7 
HEKE 
41777175770 
11 0 z 
HETH 


ve thus a larger : 
— being infinitel 8 than that undertake an expensive improvement, or to keep up | Placed in the front of the cottage, a most 
ynder Graos, But this ng a by no means the case. In | their farms to their proper mark. A well authenticated position, and is even 820 with a verandah 
adj de ease may be mentioned of a farmer making 8000“. the window. The fil ust be carried 
a nari arable culture ; yet — during his term. Many are who have grown |Scullery through the living T room ; 12 
Fee e mor to pay more than about 25s rich on their Sat, i Mees bee doubt that English | ment ype Aa 3 
Fhe Re description of ey ie arm- | 8 mui ia 1 cases do the 8 er the ra tienen into go dape 40 siting rs woes but very 
tiven ia u al Agricultural iety’s ournal ; ow rents they now pa ey could on | proportion room 
id from th BI ——— pt gas aes. Ae 1 same inteligence and ‘apt three bedrooms open all tog 5 
ə land is of an inferior quali lity, it might be expected S the best advan- an ‘our aia 
t the landlord’s profits would have been larger than | tage. Law. Raw pace 
what. really are. In examining rents paid Small N your Lie 25 of Nov. 3 a corre- |W 
in Scotland, it is too frequently supposed 1 e ee eee F as to the 
9 f f e cy o ing glebe into his own i 
such id ; but going from Edinburgh | hands. 1 hold exactly that amount of land, ai to improvements in the plan of 
ernie and theory Clin sn Dany | pool ar Gouin” TE bs Wishes for fined a ees wet 
fir nee of about 100 miles, you pass through a beau- | amusem ent he may find it in farming his Wind, Bet sha apartments, s ce tara pe saad Ss chanel 4. 
arab ntry, wi reely a een | probabiliti t realise a rent of 462. Agriculture. — 1 e 
. 8 more | ment of the agricultural interest as such good humored 
as tham 


of Turnips any part of the : . w took 
Merefore only fair to 5 that alt weer a dis- | than 20 bushels of aed 1 4 8 I grow more =| red ipo Segoe ai Gasstis of the IIN teat 
tinction be according ` . Pi — 45 the farmer 


ae 
1b 


8 
Š 
y 
4 
-e nry T 


| 

2 it ) ms Te a | 

Many of them a yard deep; and yet for those enig the | believe ~ 18 I was very large town 1 bes aie bay bear 33 only as 
em cre i y pa ws | grow | 

, Most convincingly that it is not so much from the supe- | manure in 13 „ Port I consume all that I grow ee pve . e- . ry 3 

| fea? : nd F pany ri * 4 — 5 2 two beady taal oa tiles, or 3-ineh pi 5 pipes, should be laid in the bottom. | 

tee . 2 . 9 

y of their farming over our own 20 ewes, sometimes more ; + nig 3 3 ped sa wil be found Rigas satis'actory an athe 

l ‘a the Smaller pi are liable to Sone, 

f ally, The — and most eee fee ee ana Yor r Wheat, Oats, milk, &c., 910 meg the orgs at fe t hot are e the Aerie aes 

i that al these and amusement of farming my land, as I am told, as | ea i ; 

l al . — mi of . — perth ta | well as anyone in the par rish Ps oid be a correspondent 1 55 . hcg Oe 3 is aga ag Aes w 

large cour 8 hes for further 3 glad to give it fluence 
dae 5 — ia” an a M. and Small Farmer. rays, which rises (by ' Capillary attraction), an and refreshes 


pes 
E 


764 * 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


—- 


(Dec. 1, 


4 


the roots of the 11 8 when once „ fesen 
the s to 


iio 4 


h rse of t 
sient 12 ir 3 by ee e quit N of |i 


throwing off by pve ag all superfi water. us 
we find P draining keeps ae warm in winter 
eool in 


1 th e drains are too distant from 
rmin 


enthusias d taken up, and the style 
pave troekin $ is Ape more S than would be 
ry on arm calculation was 
‘am age, the 8 3 for buildings, &, to far 
certain number of acres 53 ado pted at 
Tiptree Hall, it would answer ev A ut 
ntal failures, which must necessarily 
me. 


t a good cas 
andlords and tenants that the ay live 
ot 


grave consideration 
t individuals in that particular 55 Tr Sily, 
l ov 


of its valuable properties 
hould be 1 eg ld 2 55 ghed into t 
3 w it will form a lasting d ‘ 
anythin gi else, as it contains a gr 
vegeta hat can be more * 1 to N land 
than iad from the tank carte n damp weather! 
Guan “gts a most ai Du acquisition to hein 
resources, bath m its portable nature and its fo 
* qualities 8 genuine), but we should endeavour to 
he es independent of foreign aid, by m 
3 erful fertiliser from night-soil. Hoe 
comes k fattiog cattle, so far e carcase of the 
animal is concerned, is considered a a dead loss? There 


centiv 
Society s 
next meeting for the six 
each return ing to the owner a fair profit for 
his maintenance—a Dr. and Cr. account to be pro- 
duced. Nothing should be rear hey r fed on a farm 
without the prospect of gain. Falco 
Sex of 22 the last nn, I wanted to 
raise a stoek of 


cy m 
he sale of the produce a coun 


- red t 
Wes breed sales of produce are t 
s 


mers agree on the |v 


th the seed ( 3 3 3 an I mentioned 
rfect 


been so 
eg anà a full f fortnight scene’ than the tae 
in the 8 soil, which is 


grew more luxuriantly, and the cobs were m 
t it did not ripen so perfectly. 


My cor 
mismanagement, thr ut 
“Indian € i E E ere did not 


ostly larger, 


one at 


K should think a no 


on 
maturity. 


a stiff cold clay, 


se 715 the best adapted to its grovt. for its roots 
do not pierce downwards. A dry aod 


one of yel w grain The F. 
[See 1 lending article of Nov. 10 in the Gardana? 
Chronicle ] 

Sm ith field. — It appears by the pamine market 
article, in e, kie mes of November 6. 1849. that the 
average num of beasts sold at Sm 


4135, and ma e average num 
this year (1849) there were 422 
84 * na 110 sheep fewer. The total number of sheep 

ted from abro ia into London, from January 1 to 

mor 


etime. As 
in a state of n e e panic, and hav 
of their diodais, by 0 ir 5 ears, i 7 wish you could 
which e from 


3s. 


There has 
a 

try. state of facts exists as respects 

beef, Fork is equally ppe heia pirat something has 

occu o diminish t nsumption of 


jou explain this, 
art of the eure the fa mer 
and their brains are affected with fright. 
hem aa 


ben efit, 
good heart, and indeed still fur 
gentleman has allo bee his penta, for — 5 frst half of 
the present 8 for the Tur 
value of 25 per e 


23 


orthy o 


e hoped that 
mitation will be Ao ald followed. The 
principle A “Jive and let | th 
po! 


is in 


n from 


otherw 


to endur 
possible for the 3 to exist in the dee 


state of those who should employ them! Under su ne a| of 


ised, the co try 

assisted exertions te 
be irit of F ene 

to lighten the weight 3 ayh: 8 ountry, 

alarming substantial 

“It is the 

If party 


Pee 


the Ch aiid. 
a” 


ithfield, in the 855 St 


on 
e end sound d 


—The letter which has lately isa in the | © 
ur 


f circumstances, 


labours (the want 
bri inging destruct o 
creatures ? 2 rep 


ate, when st 


ort 
On 15 other side 
his 
100 ac All t 


es. 


have ce sh 


a bal 
de b. a 


8 


X foes of 12 it in 


eeting. a 
The saii 


the latter of ‘less 
to the 


the see 


port tion 
ee the 
the ground. 


; | Spirit ever yields 7 fades: = it should succumb to he 
ants of Ireland ; after all, what can reconcile 

man, or body or the gratifying theie 

spleen, to i which Ireland 


g 
ts were cut up a 
pera throng! 
anted. 


emain a blo 


and said : 
ectof “Thick and Thin Sowing” ae 
irst, it is his 1 
prine 


to 
1 5 a pc the ot were as 
Grill — The brai 


3 Boe and in 


“at a cost of 4: 


At harvest it 


of a d profitably | 
a upon body i gta 2 — 
= of 1188 may be P tea ix but 
i ou s to danger when it is near, 
if he sees his friend 


rete ee ou 
n the hist 


and; it may 
eral soils, but there it is. 
meh sy heads 


oR F. W., 


mmunication “ High fasta an 
. — profit rr a loss of II. 6s, 6d. on 1 8 


e statements, to be o „ i 
to go more into 


eet, with the p f every 
stock kept and sold, and the ee 


8 


i uture more aT 


poi 


sow 


poultry from A favourite hen and cock. | Scot eomen, to try their fortunes on Irish soil. many instances broken thn n this respect, 
They were of the erste red game breed. The | report és 5 nsible pe „showing fair] 2 „„ 5 e 
cock 1 but the 1—— was a little crossed. | the condition of various districts, the nature of the land, ut a ok corn Where we sow wit 3 th 
The a deep she | size of farms, accommodation and capabilities of im- poi sow with only 2 dashels ; 80 : - r 
was the — 12 K * which laid yellow eggs, they | provem oneous opinions from eaped, be „ 5 ie 
were easily collected. 2 I 13 | gettin d prov ft how 4 would be Bt th — ages derivable from thin sowing, 
of the t under a b be hatched ; one egg | justified in n Fisking his capital is “admitted on all | pr duce per acre is of itself a ee pre 
pot broken, the other 12 hy E. them; one ae that an importation of . and industrious | armer to adopt A y — apers 
i r the shell, and so the . posse: ing maney. is the grand eng a for 1 pot | it sa 
„ question, which, if it has not se eful 
reduced to 11. th one died before I could enint: of the miseire N the coun try; and we | least arowsed attention. d led a 5 51 
ascertain its sex ; of the 10 remaining, 8 were cocks and. unfortunately witness the opposition of iait of the "Jail y | The question has traveled werfe have 
2 were The 13 smaller eggs I also Ted under | press, e eround thes Le my a will not meet with | earn hom far the pre me matice in Scotland is 
a hen, and she- re a me 10 8 -T all e of a hom This idea would dither wiih eonomy or sound pee 
‘ x e is | make u es has been discus made 
no reset in the shape fl me ezes laid by i hes same | jokings. and did not the he a of 2 . ne rye: "be a i —— N it 
they vary Io this |inhabiting a ifice land (productive to a selves, ee ai east in accumulating 5 55 tional evi 
r that hong thee ne ane bee saad — proverb), depend upon substantial assistance from git, My mind has been so co lete 
Lock black, yet th t four broods which I have| England. Nothing can ensure the p ty of Treland | ject, so far as it 1 y own thought 
from the same a “a cock this summer, every | so speedily as a thorough reformation in the agricultural -T eee = gent exact to 
i llow-legged chicken has proved a cock, an inte ards the tenu land and the 1 pence view of the merits or dem 
3 one a pullet. Nomen fietitium. mode of cultivation H this to he brought about | lar mode of sowing — „ 
. ee „ —I sent to the Real e Chroni-| under present cireumstances? Landlords are almost 3 rat any season of the 3 
i of accou my sowing £0 r. sorts | bankrupt and ey ie nre = pay rent. 82 anything | ploughed and 5 4a 
* and perhaps the result will N Half be more wretched for a How i after a cro wedish Tanz yer 


1 

44. aot r acre, 
and dest 
hout the re miolo seas 
~ vest it was strong 


* 


48—-1849] 


and otherwise to satisfactory as to prove e to my m nind th 


other part of the sam a Paine 


i 


here the soil was 
st a 


to som ery e—the 
worst I ever saw; and when spring arrived, it came eto bag a 
on whether it should or 8 not * 
4 ned to give it a chance 


255 


of Wheat ever re This was irectly a p 
on the side of thin sowing, inas — as the whole of * plants 
ost 55 da have been 
— — ith regard to 
5 


In 1848 I 


8 


and din one instance, the crop from sma ing was 
balkese Į ever reaped. In another — stance — * — . 
4 omg to the 72 gave a 1 crop than 

ridges, am not 


that will apply 
ve 10 to 2 all 
the — 3 of themselves, ng ca a di. 
Thus, Pages — 


— ha Žr- tag atis inmas | 
3 = certainly be sown pr — bd te 1 to te acre 
to 3 keg 1 if drilled or st baa 1 oe! 

Oats end 8 Br exceed 5 bushels per acre, and I hav 


to circumstances, 2 
an unnecessary waite of seed. 
agreed that scp —_ than one-half x — seed usu 
sown —— plan hich live to atta aturity, 
ca for existence that, pra 43 — oven sided 
sor a 80 tha — ly the 
prerada that reach maturi a “the vocates * sowing, 
desiring to — — 5 process, sow onl apr seed 
— produce hich 2 operly dered, will fill 
the This, polin Bes 9400 be ace anomp shed by de- 
iad seed in such a eee. as 1 an equal 5 


Ir 
he great 
. to be erti aa thin sowing, — and hveing 


is the 
rt 


T| on a the 5 and 


vom 
brained | p 
dibbled Oats 


+ | RUSSELL 
err of the 


bats hav 
122 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 
SL pant ce poe G 


1 te the adoption of thi seeding under all circums 
bu where the laud is in good con „ and provision * 
tor 8 it of 9 d + inclined to to follow it, as I think it 
von system that safely adopt 
ligbt land, and bave ‘ee prot and 2 whereas 
thick sowings follow, you must sow late and thick in spring to 
"e patty 
ELL, 2 had made no experiments 


as impossible to arrive at any mcrae 
egy sees A uad 1 of 91 a 8w se 

vereig ween Mr. Gu land, 
1 ad Mr, Hi, 1 ſormer holding 
that more Oats 


=~ 
> 
5 
3: 
3 y 
2 8 
E 
ga 
— 
8 


utions: 


eee to be sown, 


rs of this Soe Boge uch see 
28 phe and that, individually, the mem. 
fi 


art of 


erm precarious a mo 

of bine to admit of — go N 0 — being used. 
od nig proe 8 a berter I bed, and hence th 
is ong a sb road- 


t part, the 
After 2 us that the 
3 thing 1 on the quality and condition of 
the so „and so on, it was Sanka to talk 


ne 
s perfectly absu 


requi 
saat toning Prevails, tin we progress can 72 ma 
y of seed to like the extent” advocated and 
practised À Mr. Remte ae and Mr. Mechi. In Scotla 
e braird tot 
drilli ibbli 


ud w 
mother 


the old and still rE e — f broadca antag; 
a — its and onlin and, lastly, d ar dee a: 


riflin ng — 
so that the loss, 
On all 


Pressed an 
gl press. roller m 
is =a far dista: thas 1 
ê gaun 
inly one great a om) ofa society | 
d ig ear, 


uch practi 
u the meantime, the 9 ect must run the 
con and it is certa 
this such 


3 oF evi- 
t no 


: merely the effect of siring a thinner ra in sprin: 3 
unable to give pra 


soil this 


T had on the same 


clim 
md quantity of 2 that should be sown on any land; 
d he ved, as an amendment, age “the previous 
ient fo: of the 


Mr. 


member to 0 
3 eee . 
who, siis tbe members so urg 
kindly garni A to do so. R. R. 
Miscellaneous. 
mes Pees ye Eeg.— Death, during the 
moned from among us a devoted 


Death of J 
ast week, "ies su 
man !—Ru 
anticipated the stroke of death; ay last, how- 
. it was evident that his life was * : ebbing away, 

thr his closi 


early sowing on 
if | 


r. Brown 
tion of * tt but 
as | 


> E 
| might be expected to tell favourab y on ti 
— 


whom nothing better need be said, than rte 4 
worthy of such a father, Mr. Ransome 


otation on i, 
DRY." 
The furnace t 7 * eA — om are still, 
1 The engine puffs its fiery breath no more; 
o lon 
No busy feet are tramping on the — 
Some years ago, an anxious man 
Beside that fi took bis earnest 
Marking the fiery flood ae: prong it ran 
Flaming and sparkling o e sable sand 
From its — a to its aa tined mould, 
„A from his bosom burst the father’s praver, 
, and his sons bebold 
And share the fortune which he founded there, 
His was a hopeful spirit—he had a 
dg) Mines 9 a unrequit 
Lik 1, though his heat yng melt, 
‘Tw ra Pay better form 
He ive to prove how indnst 
A height proud indolence 
His sons have prospered, 
And far and w 


m trena 
cle tat — pul * 
de resounds that father’ red 
For sixty years those furnace fires were glow) 
The Old Man sleeps—his children’s owing, 
See on another spot their engines going, 
A ie 5 coronet on Or b 


ploughshare 3 

Silent and sad they saw — atal 

The ‘melting mood’ apis. ted aaa” 
Some tear- — ee that last par i 
And transient sorrow badh Paggee bees — 
Old Foundry! I have this long and well, 

And chiidhvod’s me aoe ès haunt thy blacken’d wal's, 
Hark to the rn a i — is thy passing bell, 

r w man ht ite iron ene en 


ofthe — 
Where t — ay * — — thy an, chabert 2 
nAg gnas mane wan a pin . 
8 with the wd minat aten banks Tita 
While sail a mer crown the flow 1 oe 
Rich with sanverials brouglit and borne 
There thy successor boldly rears ite head, 
Long may it scary aud its memory be 
As dear to kin d hearts, when years - en 
As thine, Old Founder, ever will to m 
Ipswich Pape 


J. B. 


Calendar of „Operations. 


OVEM 
br ee rade 26. xi Moog 5 report we have been 
uch * es ns Ban © eather permitted, which 
favourable; Fey * and a agam 


he grow 


2 


2 arliest is 282 well; pera it looks e at 
by any me 


re er eek a ee for th 1 delils bel Sang arin dae 
being j tter for the 5 
ker; 1 5 let the ge 175 e so free from 

and in n goo and, like 


ood 1 * ome sort 
* — purpose, will 
e not s a gt on the whole I pons i ng let the 
land be 3 and the drills "e together, and then less will 
depind p the spring hoeing. We have been eng: —1 — 
up our angola Ware mich turos out a very FE od crop ; 
we are also engaged 8 e land for — — 


an race, 8 


Turn 
in ae w * 
week, W 


cleared too he 


ee o'clock in the 
time, 


took their last gleam o 


„ 


e used the 


f 
and peacefulness — can only accompany 6 
We have 9 


topping, and loading the Mango} ‘wh l 
do at 7s. 6d. per acre ; and Turvips, wailed, copped, a 
— Toco 


fibr rous root cut * and — ose 


ut half a 
of ohh for more khad 20 years he was senior 
abundant means, if he so desired, of exem aplify. 


tl beautiful s 
eat 


3 
of this, however, bis great study was to seek 
‘htenment t of the workmen, 


ployed, and this it was bee elped to 
the dyin g» le 

rially helped “to to maintain in the 
ent, tended much to SUCCESS 5 


Tae 


the soil, there have zone with 
ane Le integrity of the manuf: 5 


ider. G. i à 

a aag — G. 5 58 si-w 8 

g seasons for Wheat ever known ; indeed 
fine duri 


mov ements that tended to advance 
iten the people, and to 


worth, whereve 
talent, however humble, 
from hin a cheering encouragemen nt. In 
ife Sle ears is a rich return to him who peaa his bem and 
ry deceased was d long enoug 
pi idim reward, — of his heart 


eap this | for 
and the | the fi 


, the 
mg the past three 
for agricultural 


next year’s Carrot or Potatoes, in 
for ing planting 2 re the . on the land and 
ploug in Crossways, haste: to pero 
have been em ed in 


nd the Darst 
mog catile, “having fed 

them with i or the sake of — 

in * Borg we commen h 

The work forthe me 


now be ha ment 
ds have now 8 
our horned ewes have nearly finished . e 


766 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. _ Does. 


2 on Swede Tarnips. SMITHFIELD, Mownar, Nov. 25 en — A Now 
sin . 2 for our early lambs, cut with] There w uch larger r of Beasts t age room for | * Hh oes report that the — ai durin ibe 
re shine and given in troughs, and we find they eat | than were © aortally in the mar ker; this caused a slow trade at | have been considerable, part cul atiy é past wee 
py ers ce to cut Swedes ; indeed, whilst they can get | commencement fo for all kinds ; but the choicest qualities not meg n 3000 t All Potatoes Nave Wi sold ire Continent, which | 
them ìn 1 und they refuse Swedes altogether, and we think it | being over abundant were eventually freely bought at about st week, with: the exception of choice Y ork Regents, Wii 
werent Carrots will make a very choice lamb. Our South. late rates. Several second-rate. however, remain ‘iowa, wud still command a high figure. — following are gents, 
— are beginning to show for lambing, and we expect | sales effected for this description were at rather lower prices. | quotations :—York Regents, 90s per ton mn Wishes: 
i d pumber to fall in 5 a fortnight; we should say The number of Sheep is not excessive; a large supply to the | 60s. to 70s.; Scotch, 608. to 10a Seotch ehe hee! 
h best flocks of Down ewes are full a fortnight earlier in| dead markets causes a very slow trade, and late quotations | French whites, Par to 70s. ; Rhenish do., 50s, 8 DR; 
lamb than last y a 5 Turnip crop con inue to | cannot be fully realised. Calves are sold slowly, but are not do., 50s. to 65s ; Belgiz 
5 Sed tee P ight, in 3 K hich we lower. From Holland ae hited Rete 115 4 he 2650 
ue l 5 roots at the 87 oi Show Sheep, and = 8 Calves ; from Spai easts ; from France, Monpay, Nov. 2 3 
my he excelent dispi ay 0 Botley and South Hants Far: mers’ | 60 Sheep and 14 Calves ; ee — and N orthampton, 2700 nr age samples at ile ‘supply iy of English Wheat by lana 
Club, to be held on the 17th of December next. JB Beasts ; and 100 from Cam 0 ealised the prices of this day se’nnight, wh 
SEES Sou cet Ba Per st. of 8 lbs.—s * Per st. of 8 Ibs. —s d d ported for the red. Kent white birt ie ich were 
Best Scots, Here- est Long-wools. 3 4 to 3 8 28. per quarter lower, Holder 1 of and red It 
` Noti —— to a. nts. fords, &c. 3 10 to 4 0 Ditto Shorn salad upon former prices, but inferior cme foreign in. 
BEECH-MAST, SCARCITY OF: M C. says, having the care ofa | Best Short-horns 3 8—3 10 8 vee i quality 8 8-8 2 could only be disposed of in retail, 8 ties, as also new, 
large pre of Pige and, . anxious to make the most of | 2d quality Beasts 2 8—3 4 Di — * + | upon the prices at Monday last.— Engli Kè “idee ls, per gr, 
— I was 01 ne 106 k out for the falling of the Beech-mast, | Best Downs and „ pes be noted Is. to 2s. per qr. lower; distillin ng B must 
* * e thereof for fading; but find there is ne pee aha .4 0—4 2 Calves . 25 = “4 dear, but inferior See is rather cheaper.“ DaT as 
ngle one to be seen here in a large plantation of Beec — Sho —The Oat trade is has pe and Fea 
May Task is this general! asts, 4220; Sheep and Lambs, ak 700; ; Calves, ite; Pigs, 258 no variation in prices. VY, but we observe 
U. They say it may be sow Fripay, Nov. 30.—The arrivals of E Grain 
peer "it ail bs jac ue fret dry time after winter 711 st T} n la week have been small, foreign Wheat pit: during the 
too early. Sow from — 8 pecks per acre ba d; the — weather! is bad Tor eee all om very large, and having but a small attendance of ‘and Oats 
0 RLAND Carts: J P. John Hogg, or John Postlethwaite, | are about 2d. per 8 Ibs. low sold: We | was heavy for all articles. In Wheat so little cute rade 
Keswick. ha also a larger soppy ‘of Sheep, and but few nted ; ince ss nearly nominal.—Grinding and onze done that 
Darr Farmtne: Subscriber. The main profit depends upon | prices 9 9 and Pigs also Der with Barle re ls, per qr, cheaper; other aa cler un malting 
seeing that your cows are milked thoro ughly. The cong of | a id 11 sale at lower — ee and and Germany there | een ns dod Peas remain as last quoted, weed in 
8 making are too long to give here, but you w find | are 384 a 1870 Sheep, — 150 8 from Scotland, z 23 qualities of Oats are a slow sale, at a declin, iat but the 
em in the reports of Cheshire and . Be N pe Lei cester and Northampton, 350; and 150 Milch —The Flour trade is very heav Y. Floating g cargos Pinta 
former published in a late volume of the English Agri- | Cow Be Corn are held firmly at 27s, ; a at 
cultural Society’s Journal,” the latter about to be published. Bost ents, Here- Best Long-wools. 3 4to3 8| Wheat trade bas continued dull We ee 1 paie 26s,—The 
If the thing is not customary with you, you will, at all events | fords, &c. 3 8 to j = Ditto Shorn the 23d inst., and a decline of ls. to 28. per qr. has 1 
at first, tind it cheaper to buy thun to make. est Short-horns 3 6 — Byes aaa quality 2 = 0 general, particularly on home-grown and inferior nates 
Farm CALENDAR: We know of no good o! 2d quality Beasts 2 6 23 2 y Barley has also declined fully 1s. per quarter in 3 
Forze: LBS. We doubt it the green cope — r = ag A Best feeds aes owas ete — 33 2s markets 
x — N — 1 
spring, if mixed wit ch lime. If there are a lot o of er a fap breds a ` pS Livenroor, Pawar; Nov: , 
But Beasts, 1182; Sheep and Lambs, 5, 420 Calves, 208; Pi s, 280 | at this day’s market, and the business was of the 
—.—85 if à woody they should be barut or this material buried in the | 18 p and Lambs, 5,420; Calv $ character Tii: prices we no change ; having, —.— 
UTTA PERCHA : 8 . Load of 36 Trusses. small _— there — a firmer look for the best 
earth, has really been found to endure and — been applied SMITHFIELD, Nor. 29, : Wien — — — 2 
sd —— ——.— of pig bone manure from a ta e e h at tid, Pri Moz 4 y 65s to 4 Soe th see eee ove 608 to 805 | prices. oatmeal ste. 9d. to 21s. 3d. per 240 lbs, Arrivals are 
8 nferior ditto. ew Clover ... —_ _ 
with entire erect growing leaves, said by Lawson to ee eee ee eee — Aira. 5 24 y mo 3 
further al. New Hay ig ue J. CooreR, ee W HEAT. BARLET. OA TS. RYE. 
MBS : . We should fear t oput them on Rape alone, even Trade exceedingly dul AVERAGES, 
— they had been on Turnips already. But give them Compennanp MARKET; ne 29 Oct. 20. 413 ld} 28s 240178 4d 248 94 
yme hay tco, and you may do it safely. r D rae t EN is: as. GOsto 75s — 27. | 41 7 28 5 2 23 8 
One ACRE 4 Sub. In the ordinary course of farming, your | In ferior ditto 17% K a oe 41 628 7 16 10 22 9 
4 having been pastured two years, would come in for Oats | New ay 155 8 re 1 * = D: 26 30 — 10 | 40 7 28 8 16 11 22 6 8 
r Wheat, without manure will Jerusalem | Old Clover . . 84 0 | JosHua BAKER. —, Wen, | 40 628 3 16 11 |23 T 
8 ro — x ew -and-ink, Cabbages grow. Je e WHITECHAPEL, Nov. 29. — 21. . 40 4 28 3 0 24 0 
ichokes grow. i id H TE 68s | N i „ — 
Pieklixe: Clericus. The saltpetre is said to open the flesh to papi dite aa 50 5 y ca ditto. o 63 Aggreg. Aver. 40 11 28 517 0 23 6 
receive ake salt. The sugar, we imagine, is added to affect chs New Hay Ae Sa Sie 94 | Duties on — 
taste. We don't know the 1 purpose of bay salt, Old Clover Men eter er PT reign 0 $ * 
unless its excellence be affected by joe »ize of its crystals, 3 luct matio the ies bt wines 
make it l therefore, possibly, Sth —Fruipay, Nov. 30. PRICES. Oer. 20. or. 27. Nov. 3. Nov. 10. "Nov. 2 For. “ 
mor surely. Common salt ar iy will po pork. Fres Messrs. PATTEN and Sulrn report that the demand con- | ———— 
ichie Lee be e —— t inter v How long pork may pian ood for new v Hops at improved prices. Yearlings and | 418 7d „„ 
bet Pome the ps Present paou 6 8 ae 
Pi as HT. Bleeding ee — is certainly the best treat- Mid. and Farnhams, p. ae, 18 41 1 — — aie 
I nent for the symptoms you eee The brain is Hipsi Kents . p. omt "1608 —— Yearling Ke nts, — 40 7 oot as. ae mez | 
Weald of Kent . 140 ing Su ssex.. 50 Zw ot 15 a 5 | 25 
tomach, ‘the absence of any post ortem pas prevents us Susse . 126 — = 147 803 — 20 — 40 40 4 i. ŠA Sa A 
We would aaea = modification 
of the diet as a precautionary measure. W. C. London. 8 Wake field. Boston. 
SPADE Hus BAN DRT : Mi ian. We know of on published Ca- 8 j — saa 
lendar of Operations fora spade — but will see that the „PRI 3 
forthcoming Cyclopedia of Agricu ure contains one suffici-| CURRENT. Nov. 19 Nov. 26 Nov. 20 Nov. 27. Nov. 16 Nov. 230Nov. 21 Nov. 28 Nov. 22. | Nov. 29. 
ent'y fuil for the purpose. Dr. —— published a pampulet k 62 lbs. 62 lbs. 
on the sabje qr. ar. 70 lbs. 70 lbs. qr. qr. qr. qr. A 
WHEAT arrizn Pras: JF A. We know ‘no reason why Barley Wheat— b. b. . . . d. a diss d. „ ds. 8. 3. 8. „% Hes Ol Me d. s. ds. d. 6 
should sueceed better than Wheatafter Peas. Butthere may New, red wes 1464043140 004315 10 6 315 10 6 336 to4435— 4432 to39 32 to38 [5 0 5 s t 9 5 3 
and it is wel — 8 a 9 — „ white . 42—482—48ſ6 ' 4 6 $16 4 6 8/41—45/41—48)36—45/36—45 ja $ ae es 4 / 
local circumstances. That is to say, the circumstances shou id ld, red . 138—43| 88—436 3 6 76 3 6 7139—-43)39—43) — we 55 74 10 9 
doe ul And „ white ... 43—4543—45[7 0 7 4½ 0 7 4 —480 —48) — — 35 6 6 0% 6 5 
is possible — sr little j 3 otch Fereign... —. 136—-52/39—5214 4 7 24 4 7 0036—4 38 a 1b e a 6.2 
pes et rists 10 inions based — 2 experience, may xí pie TES y l og! as Prey tenes s 
have pi chee w * with the want of g ood feeling par 480 lbs. 480 lbs, 4 
them which mon te Rye—Old sés 0 204-22 — — — — ge 
WINTER Bea NS: Anglian. Ap x pecks per acre, in rows 26 Foreign... |20—23|20 23 — — — — — — er 5 
inches — wil ws the seeds about 14 or 2 inches apart. Foreign meal |5/,—6i|5/.—6/ 12 oa e — 
To dri th s a perfectly satis poi en bor “Te manured 8 y Stii spi ae! Risin qr. 
the —— year, the land eed manure for the Barley— qr. qr. p 19- 23 : 
Bean crop. — ee to jem sides iled, the turves | Grinding * 24262425 . pe 20—22ʃ20—21ʃ21—23ʃ21—23 20—24 na ; 
. farm mianure—yourdaestions | Malting... |o 126202527} ˙ ůQ . Ä 25—31 3 : 
8. Communicati hi fter Wednesday cannot Foreign... —. |18—26) 18—25 — — 21—2621—25 — — see a 
wered till the following 8 6 bush.|6 bush. thes Lone. 
Malt—Ship ... A * * =n 35.383538 aus — — „ 
Markets. i 4% | 45 Tos. | 
COVENT GARDEN, ott 1. Gats— White... | 18—24|18—24|3s 2d 38 34038 2d 3s 3d) — — 113—1813—18 ; 
Grapes continue tg well supplied, considering ae 16—2216—22ʃ2 2 7p 2329% 7i — ji~ — i 
Pine-apples hardly — for the demand oreign 13—20,3—20ʃ2 3 2 4 2 3 2 4 . pe — — $ 
Scenes te and Walnuts are ndant, touts plentifal, 8 qr qr. qr qr j 
nges and Lemons more ; G ble Pears f j 2 d TE 4 
scarce. Pomegraiatal obtained at 4d. each. A — Peas — Boilers 28—3228—32 33s— 338— 26—3026—32 — ET 2 196 Wa. 
Vegetables, Turnips are good ntiful; Carrots the same. 196 lbs. 3 
ers and Broccoli are sufficient for the demand, Po- Grinding... * xi 27 —28s | 27 —28s i as . — 11—12 ie rs 
tatoes have not altered since our last account. Lettuces Forei o4 2913429 ay? 2 5 
and salading are plentiful. hrooms fetch from Is. to oreign . . 24—3224—32 29 —30 29 —30 — — — — 1 
is. 3d. per potiie, Cut Flo ae * t of H Pelargo- 
miums, Gardenias, Bignonia v Tropmolums, — — New, small. 243024 —30 men — 30—31ʃ29—3 
themums, Fuchsias, Primulas Ferber and Ne . aie = 33 —37 32 —37 |32—33/32— 
3 i f 
Foreign _—.... |23—36|23—36 25—34 | 25—34 |26—28ļ:6 
Linseed—Feed | | — | 40—42 | 40—42 [|32—40|32—40 
ien ..- |4148|37—45) — — — — 
ea 
British . . 9. 1292. 128/72. 15e—8/]7/. 158s—8.| — | — 
Foreign 71 7. ae . 
Indian Corn— 2226 22—26 27s—29s | 27s—29s | — {| — 
p. sack b. sack] 280 lbs. 280 lbs. 
Flour— 32—40/32—40| 30—32 | 30-32 | — | — 
Averages and Impts.| Averages. Imports. | Aver. Impts. 
qrs. . s. 
WHEAT ... 16570 | 40 6 | 11462 41 5 106: 
BARLEY |... 3 590 28 3 27 6 5623 
OATS... + 44810 | 16 11 6083 17 10 406 
RYE one ee 93 7 — — 
BEANS)... ee a: f 2143 31 7| 798 
AS... oi ta 30 7 83 0 | 289 
i f OMAS | 
|| KINGSFORD SEGAR and l SANDARS ee k 
Srowmp{ | Maray A TONNICLIFER $ am DUNNS| _ Womar 


y 


48—1849. ] 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


767 


: Sales by Auction. 


ROMPTON PARK NURSERY. 
ESSRS. PROTHEROBas ND Zen 


with instructions and Mr. 
— — Te to submit to an 


Iron Safe, &c.—M 

be forwarded on 8 si letter enclosing 12 postage 
stamps, PROTHEROE and Monis, e eee 1 muy 
also be sra ls. — * 1 to pure 2 the pre- 
mises ; and of the principal Seedsmen in 1089 


al 


Popular Works — | 


PRINTED FOR 
TAYLOR, WALTON, ann MABERLY, 
BOOKSELLERS AND PUBLISHERS TO UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, 


UPPER GOWER-STREET, 27, IVY LANE, 
PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON. 


28, 


DARLEY. 
SCIENTIFIC LIBRARY 


oF 


7 


FOR THE U 


SCHOOLS, PRIVATE STUDENTS, ARTISTS, 
AND MECHANICS 


1 LATE oo WILLIAN Petrie i E TAYLOR, 
the family of tbe — L T ‘COOKE —— LL. 
ped to offer the follo ts, as ros 
al which as cones and ‘he mente of the es 
compel them to make in — his widow and 
chi 
The late Dr. Tayxon, t GR TNT e ee devoted 
the extensive acquirements, the unwearied industry, and the 
great abilities — Do ae ~ he was endowed iu — ihe 
degree, to he education of youth general 


d the minds of the young, he undertook the re- 
rage d a o or N schoolbocks, whose dry uninte- 

— ing s distasteful to the 
tudent ; — in re- Dec, N = adding new and 

— * age he re 


been y the 1 hich a man of 
— ag talents might have been expected to turn with aver- 
re a labour of love, 


10. endeavours for the promotion of cation he 
had acquired wen a mass of information, — Mit op opinion was 


TO GEN CLEMEN, BUILDERS, NURSERY N, and Others 
R. D. A. RAMSAY has received — — to sell 
of Auction, on the premises, the 
Ground, Brompton ag ae 
Hye ik Corner, on MON * om 
Stock — a country . — dechning the buries, a 


10 2 re MEN, FLORISTS, and OTH 


Carn 
8 &.; a qua 
about = ‘Standard Roses, a few large Pede oe varie 
gated and green 3 100 Magnolia grandifloras, a 

e day prior and morning of sale, Catalogues 25 i 
ad of 1 ‘principal Seedsmen, and of the en Bromp- 
on Nursery, Fulham-road, Brompt on, Lond 


R. D. A. RAMSAY has received ar 9 are * | tions are mad 


t men in every departmen of different 


political views; and he was employed by the “British Guvern- 
MA ong 


the purpose of this Work to furnish a Series of E 


m 


on Mathematical Science, adapted to a 
To youth of either sex at public 
persons vagd as* been 
ose attention has no d in early 
and to Artists ais Mechanics these little 
Th 4 ini fth 4 


n ar vind brought as near to our 
nest ideas as possible; the demonstrations of proposi 
ae amaf thon mind and penj f ™ r . memo tpt 


Fil 


Br — ye 
Instead of dedicating — 4 to a and merely amusing 

writing, he devoted himself to the less lucrative, t far 
more ——— toil — instructive” — 22 2 

—— nts — His and ism, He 

with m the periodate and J lending journals © of th — 22 
and was nage a mem d scientific insti. 

— — . teadiog to social and moral — e 
d at peration, 


vili 


H 
ith 


rom his career a 2 =  indefatigadie —— he 
tes — suddenly „removed by oh and has 


1c. | and 
1 simplest but to their shortest form. 


I, 
A New Eprrton (being the fifth) is now ready, 


A SYSTEM 


on SLAM will seil by or ea at the Auction 
ESDAY, 


a: 


rained Fruit Tree uts, 

tock of an —.— Horist ; also, on each day, a case of Dutch 
lbs. Catalogues at the Mart, and of the Auctioneer, Epping. 
1 GOOS = FEATHERS, 16. — lb. — Bed 
Feathers were never 

HEAL AnD . Pr po Pri 


Wa Adh 


Poul Best Gré e Goose ose ed 
White ditto asa 
Foreign ditto 6 Lr a ditio 0 


3 
Puritied Steam, a war m dust. 
Heat and Sons’ List of Bedding, Sontahaing e particulars 

of weights, sizes, and prices, sent free by post, ou application t 

heir Factory, 196, Tottenham-court-road, Loud sa, 

BEAUTIFUL TE 
OWLAND’S ODONTO, en "PEARL DENTI. 


FRICE. A white Powder, compounded of the pares an 


POPULAR GEOMETRY lz 


Containing in a few Lessons so much of the Elements o 
Euclid as is necessary and sufficient for a — voderstanding 
rt and Science in its leading truths and great pri 
Br GEORGE DARLEY, A.B. 
ice 45. 6d., cloth. 


II. 
New Epirion Just published), 


COMPANION 
POPULAR GEOMETRY; 


most recherche Ingredients of * e Her pab P F — In which the eee of Abstract Science are familiarised, 
le e in preserving au eautifying the Teeth, i : d 
Strengtheuiug the Gums, and in giving sweetness and perfume illustrated, and rendered practically useful to the various p 
to tue Breath, It extirpates all tartarous adhesions to the | Poses of life, wit ‘a numerous Cuts. 
and eusu i the enamelled 


the brighiness and colour indicative of perfec 
ness; while, by Nr 3 their Pi 8 to oe Teeih, 
they give unlim „ment and resh zest to ap- 
petite, "by Rovere 8 stive ora 8 mastication 
The Proprievo sabes of this Dentifrice AE bes themselves that its 
oftiead cy 10 prese rviog and embellishing the Te veth far Herri ge 
lic as, ip 
d its “selection by Her 1 wad —— 
at the 

st 


Cullse quence, obtaine 
a 


the Court 3 


on. 
1 oppe ame Ad. 
dress, thus—* a, ROWLE ND and SON, 20, Biro ARDEN,” 
engrave Stam which js — 
pea ud by Chemists and 


pooracnE PERMANENTLY CURED BY 
a E'S ENAMEL decaying Teeth, 


post, by J. Winuis, sg East Temple Cham 
d 1 


DIETETIC COCOA. 
Messers PATIENTS, DYSPEPTICS, 
N TAYLOR BROTHERS „ ere 
any prepar: de 


2 the nut are 
— — purity, and natritious 
—.— Ir is an essential article of diet for 


‘ytor Brothers, at their Mills, Spital- 
— es r in 110. ELA ale Ib. tin-foil | 


and 

ki ee ane me may be had TAYLOR 

, b CUCOA (ony ove-shird the peice 

1 original SULU BL whieu article exceeds ONE MIL- 
* Moy parna VUNDS per annum—a tact which bas induced many 
! spurious us imitanons, w which, although 
e totall y devoid of the | 


for 13 peony i 
is preparation 


Both 
Cocoa | With POPULAR peared ie on 4 and the 
carn Application Geometry. 


1 GEORGE DARLEY, A.B. 
Price 4s. 6d., cloth. 


Tap Borie 
A SYSTEM 
POPULAR ALGEBRA; 
¢ PROGRESSIONS. 
By GEORGE DARLEY, A.B. 
Pri 


. . 
12 11 af th 


and fo three — —— tue — child 
11 years of age and the Baa i an 3 who have thus lost 
thei ector and = e fi ove abi and in- 


whose la- 


s principal 

| Student — Manual of — 
ii 

Student's Manual of Modern 

story. 

gayane and New Editions of 

Pin e Goidsmith’s His- 
— ad d. 


Ireland. 
History of British India. 
Hi jistory of the — de of f Orleans 


t. Peel, pay cornet Goidemith’s His- 
Revolutions an park kable vme, 
Conspiracies of Europe. Paani s Goidsmith’s His- 
Romantic Biography of the tory of Greece. 
pleak Eizabeth. 


ttee Rooms, Provost’s House, Trinity College, Dublin. 
(Signed) — Sapte, Cix, Secretary, 
Contributions will be thankfully lly received, in the name of the 
irah z — 4 ort the following Committee, or at the under- 


nsdowne, Berkeley-square, London. 


‘sei nes, there are, perhaps, no treatises which ean be read 
with more advantage than Darley’s Popular Geometry and 
Algebra. ”—Library of Useful Knowledge, article ““ Mechanics. 


Sse le 
4 8 rs STEM 
POPULAR TRIGONOMETRY, 


The get — — ‘Dublin, Palace, Dublin. 
The Lord Chancellor, 26, Upper broke-street, Dublin. 
The Bishop o Norwich, Palace, ich. a 
The Bishop of Limerick, Palace, Li k. 
The Bisho Cork, Palace, Cork. 
The niet Just arh 2 eee eee Dublin. 
The Chief Pale oe for I ix Park, Dubin, 
Very Rev. Tne Dean of — en roe Dublio e 
Very Rev. — Tow nsend, B 
Rev. The P 
Rev. The V. 5 Colle 
Rev. Dr. M‘ Donnell, 8, F. ‘ 3 Dublin. 
Kev. Dr Tota, Rig J — egs, blin, 
Rev, J "e 1 1 — oe’ ry 
Sir Phillip — art., Merrion-square, D 
Sir Henry f de la — 0. b., at Messrs, Cocks, Biddulph & Co., 
A ss, London 
Sir Henry itis, Brith at — 
Sir Richard Mui 
rhe ag pre vers. M. P., Free T London, 
orry Conneilan, eng Vie — Park, ga 
icbard „Wes terrace, London 
John ae e * Mu. P., ‘One sah, h Rochdale, Laticahire. 


Joseph Na I. M. . Mou 
y 25 1 @ 0.2, , Mvuntjoy-square, 


iu 
No 


James Whireride, beq Dublin, 


. Evory Ken 
ir, Auster, 5, Lo 
C. W. Dune, Esq., 9, Lower Grosvenor-pi 
+. R. ter, Esq., * of T 
fenry Ashworth, Eeg., The 
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richard Be Aa erde  Burlington-street, 
— H College, Dublin. 8 
essrs, D. La Touche & Co., Bankers, Castie-street, 
— Loyd, om tim & Čo Banh —— ae, helio, 
å s% » 
r ¢ } € * Co., Baukers, Charing-cross, London. 
Atti wood, Spuover, & Co., orgia guam, 


Br oni DARLEY, A.B. „ 


zap ice 3s. 6d., cloth, 


FAMILI AR ASTRONOMY. 
Br GEORGE DARLEY, AB, 
Wirra Enoravinos.—12mo, 5s., cloth 
< © There is a vast deal of astro 


ly ge 


D 


nomical information conveyed 
unassuming manner in this delightful 


little volume, hich the n 
1 Pe pees 5 EE iii 


by all 


. . Darley,” Sun. 


b oe © oo on 09 $o f 


768 THE GARDENERS’ = AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 


ready, price 6d., Part T 
ae PENNY. ILLUSTRa TED NEWS, 3 
ich en s, illus Sier e of the pri 


2 
1 5 
© 
He 


iterature. 
ndon: W. Srravee, 21, 1 all stall 
booksellers Sa jalina tations. 
hie day is publis ished, price 18, or post free 18. 4d. 
FA ö RENTS AND TENANTS’ PROFITS: 
or ppa de in Scotland. By Davip Monro, Esq. 
WILLIa dinburgh — N 


CONDUCTED 


Second Number now aie pri 
URTISS BEAUTIES OF THE ROSE, 
ustrations and ee sil UNDER THE SUPERINTEN . 


EDWARD BECK, 


Sauvag: nge—Chius A rehduke Poets a PH erpetual, 
pone de St, adegou 
1 2 work will make more Rose growers than E th 
Writings hitherto published. ”—Gleany’ s Garden Almanac, 1850. 
4% Curtis's Beauties of the Rose’ will make a splendid work.“ 
—Gardeners and Land Stewards’ Journal. 
Londun: Gsoomprrpee and Sons, 5, Paternoster-row ; 
and all bo ksellers. . 
7 
Just published, price II. lls. 6d, with 15 highly-fisished 
DA coloured plates, and numerous wood engravings, 
* TE ROSE GARDEN. By Wii Pact, 


| ISLEWORPE. 


orie OF THE 8 


É Y 
ë PRE i 
His ine e full, and precisely oh eg the amateur 
requires. Gardeners’ ee 
4 „Any amateur w N re Paul's Rose Garden,’ will 
make his course war @ he successful cultivation of this 
iful flower, and will soon save all that it costs Sal in the 


beau 
pa of his operations.” —H. 25 . Chron 


very handsome volume, especially suiteu to e use of G 5 d 
8 n aud ama ed Gardeners and Land Stewards' á Me 
ig a? Journal. . 
“ The ‘Rose Garden i is not only elegant and usefu i 
ni „ an “indispensable Seapine Eka and aig reference t to Í 2 
all engaged in the cultivation of thi lar flower. ort Š n A 2 1 des 
Fe Rgriguledriss and Journal of Horticulture. Tun Volume for 1849 is dedicated, by permission, to her Grace the Ducness 
“ An extremely useful aud instructive hook, which ought to Š \ 
be in the hands de cultivator of Roses. — 0 ttage Gard. Dowacer OF NORTHUMBERLAND, and will be published on December 5th, ele- ae 
3 ee on o 7 — . each group of which is dis- } : š ki ‘ ate 
cussed separately, is given on a very complete and excellent gantly bound in cloth, price 13s. 6d., with a Frontispiece by Johx Burnet, Esq, | 
plan ”— —Aunals of. Horticulture, Bid ‘ F. b full 1 d Plat d Wood f 
mp penning i is han 5 a 3 5 1 ure ates, and man oodcu 
Siti ee cana coe Apa R.S., Thirteen beautifully colo 7 y ts of superior 
; lorist. ee 
“Given in so plain and understandable a manner, that the excellence. <i 
— FI est i ae y g 3 AN ef 
lorist’s ourna 5 ž 4 a à i 
“Mr. t sful Roseg in England. To prevent disappointment (a hackneyed term, but in this case the truth), 
Sournal ot Sind n i 2 š 1 1 
1 parties desirous of obtaining the Work had better procure it as early as con- 
OBSERVATIONS ON N GUETIVATION OF ROSES 
IN POTS, including For 2 venient, in consequence of the number being — 8 sale in Monthly Parts 
MORNING | (RAMBLES YN THE’ ROSE GARDENS OF having nearly absorbed the quantity printed. 


HERTFOR gues 
T. Pires, Paternoster-row. Edinburgh : 


Nate er! 5 South bridge; or, b t, from the . * * : 1 
r, Cheshunt, H On JANUARY Ist, 1850, the First Number for that Year will be issued, 
CE FOUN . UF ANY BOUKSELLEK, +s £N C ELLA 00D- 
CONTENTS o 9 go NUMBER ron SATURDAY containing a coloured plate of MITRARIA COCCINEA and Hoya B „a W 
ATH ST, e N EUN M, CUT, an ALMANAC FoR THE Monru, with a CALENDAR OF OPERATIONS, and a 
JOURNAL 3 ENGLISH AND FOREIGN LITERATURE, number of ORIGINAL and INTERESTING PARA on FLORICULTURAL and Hort- 
IENCE, AND THE FINE ARTS. 75 
8 Large Quarto Pages. CULTURAL SUBJECTS. . 1 
eviews or, WITH EXTRACTS FRO ‘ 
Principles of Scientific B The Maid of Orl : Hre * i i es 
By Dr. r; Schleiden, t „ eee eee The steadily increasing demand for this Work from its commencement makes 
by E. Lankester, MLD. ‘ The Golden Calf: J. 2 ini 
The Cites and haa às of aba] Orayford: a Nove ERT it unnecessary to quote the many favourable opinions expressed by PROFESSOR 
luci By R. Murray. | Black William’s Guo: a Ro- 3 : 
N Twenty-five years’ | | mance. Linp.ey and others when reviewing it. 
. ws Hu s Bay | Passages in the Life of Mrs. 
Ter ean. Margaret Maitland: a Tale. 
Se ections ma the 3 and | Roland Cashel, xd C. Lever, : 
Lett of „Bernard Barton. 


TA SHORTER NOTIC : 

Applications of Anastatie The e of the People De À a i 
Painting and Papyrography. Ia Sante da Peuple] By M. CHAPMAN AND HALL, 186 STRAND. . 22 
By P. H. Dela Motte. Léiat. $$$. 

G 4 in cloth 
a9 Li 3 ee an 35 n the Ist January, 1850, will be published, price 1s. Just published, price 1s. sewed, edi 22, bound in cloth a0 
a iro 1 Tea 8 the HE HORTICULTURAL M AGAZINE, an ‘es e een 7 
S . Lieut. R. trated Perio ical, ee oats to Ploricu ture and | JONS anp SHA ee i 
Sm th, F. Practical Gardeni ng. for Review, Advertisements, and FOR üi the four 
Soldiery Discipline, By Capt, | communications for lis eat tor, to be forwarded to the Pub-| This Number contains a copious Index had at 
BE oasis. 4 W ti Wilmot, lisher, C. Cox, 12, King William-street, Strand, London. of this popular Work; any of which may be 
Recreations, iving e of America. B a 
Miss Brown, E. L. Magoon y fcap. 8vo, with Plates and Woodcuts, price 7s. 6d. cloth, Also, 1s. 6d. each, the New Raition of 


ISS ACTON’S MODERN COOKERY- BOOK. JOHNSON’S RURAL ey ae dia 
For the use of Private Families, The Ninth Edition Léndon ae RIDGWAY. a 
i with Snr for Carving, and other additions and 


Original Papers.—Ppublic 3 
dusts of Prema — Exhibition of Pro- 
r Weekly Gossip.—art Exhibition of 1851; Munifi- 


t —Re ase 55 Ps ents. 

. dition Presidency wt Linnenn Pontes aeti . relie Ex Lee The whole of Miss Acton’s recipes, ‘ with a few trifling ex- Bee sows anp INFLUEN 
gad ihe Howler Rewe ove Benevolen kor 9g ot ceptions, which are scrupulously specified, are wep to such NDE’S BRONCHIAL 
—!)wellings of the 8 Cla sorship of | 25 MAY be perfectly depended ou, from having been prove Medicin 1 effect to two of any other 
University Colleze—Cnrio us é ie atic Proj reject Death of Meat our own roof, and under our own personal inspection.’ | Influenza, Asthma, and all Pulmonary 
Prince Hohenlobe — Kennedy’s Aus Expedition — ie moreover, that t e Pt ag are all reasonable, and | formed Cures when all means had 


ey do not bid us sacri- | respectable Chemists, a d. per p 5 LL 
London, 


erin 
fee ce 10 lbs. “of excellent mea t. that we may get a couple of 95 9d. each; or by s j postage s 
Fleet-street, 
post. 


Statistical (Rev. E. W. Edgell‘ On the best qnarts of from it; nor do they deal with butter and eggs | 2 $ } Chas 
‘Means of n the Registers anterior to 1837 ’)—Eth- 7 if they 8 Miss asna book+is a good beck ee a — F y 
nological (Dr. Latham ‘On ch Boon of the 1 of | every way; there is right-mindedness in ev as 
Polynesia’ }—Horticaltural (Observations on us kinds | well as 50 — —4 and experience of the s — 4 she W PAT T 
= F fia) 5 a. Gould On the Birds. of A Austra- | handles.” — Medical M at ALFE A D Co.’s NE K GES.—The 
Smith On Flexible Lo dent Loneman, Brown, GREEN, and Lonemans. 2 USH an adie a 7 inet 
e W 1 has t he important pi ae f sear ji 
ne — eee the New Houses of Parliament SUPPLIE mg e or lage ag ONLY. divisions of the tee : $ 
(Maclises Sprit of Justi ee, The Committal of Prince On Ist of January, Part I., price 2s. 6d., super royal 8v ordinary manner, and is famo ; 
Henry, by Cope, and Herbert’s ¢ ar Disinheriting Corde- CYCLOPED T A OF AGRICULTU R E, loose. — 18. p, 
lia) — British Lostitution : * from tne Old Masters. Practical and „ pairs in bon ge 8 rape ~ Art, parc of the usual tims, abi 22 
Pine Art & . — Dr. Layard’s Excavations at Nineveh— | and the Business of Farming, in all their depar Bene dat pe tigger Cag 
Muanifie nt Bequest to the 3 Gallery Exhibition of — and practically t treated. By upwards of 30 “of he 2 sian bristles, w cA 
Wonks of Artin pil aarp iy Spurious Copies of | eminent Farmers, Land Agents, and Scientific Men of the day. Pros pec ag ct in the 
—— te i iae tue of Mozart—Destrue- | Edited by Jonn C. Morton, Editor of the 4 3 wh a 
tion of House. With above One Thousand Illustrations on Wood and Steel, | manner. ties of abso 
* 1 — Drama. esday Con — Hay- | BLACKIE and Son, Queen. street, * i Anor College- ——— 
r bear As Othello" Sadler's ells ( “the Hanes street, Edinburgh ; and Warwick- square, Lond parties’ te i eee: a and destructive 
- The Lov ase’ 
Maan (The School 1 7 s a THE BRITANNIA AND CONWAY TUBULAR BRIDGES. luxury of a * 
On Dec post 8vo, Is., BINGLEY, and 
8. door from 


3 By the Author | % rio. — 1 
som 


Je by 


ni ris út Mo o. 13. 
n oporation which, we ather | 1 eres t, me 
row, Stoke Newington, both Precinct 


an ge mt 


t 8vo 2s. 6d., THE RAILROAD 3 
Ge TE 7 — THE LONDON AND Non 
Sanden: 


ben Murray, Albemarle- street. 


28 


r 


He, ET ee 


e 


Sas 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


No. 49—1849.] 


SATURDAY, DECEMBER S. 


IN AMERICAN NURSERY, BAGSHOT, “SURREY. 
. gland a Ts eM b OHN WATERER has much pleasure i in — r s 
leaf, pitcher on . ... . 77 —.— for iore 768 e he has published a Descriptive Catalogue of his exten 
Horticultural 27 e 5 1: sive 8 A RHODODENDRONS “and other America 
Camellia „by iu Peaches for forcing... Ker 776 e plants, 
5 trees, managem ‘774a 
f 1 4 | Plants, diseases 2 ir JACKSON'S IMPROVED KIDNEY, 1 MOST PROLIFIC 
b Finthbago Lat 1 7 e ARLY POTATOES. 
$ S cgn * ` ROMAS JACKSON anp SON have much pleasure 
Elyaston Cast 713 a ee inp n announcing that in consequence of their 8 a very 
— ich ashen 778 6 — L 5 Wer p of their IMPROVED KIDNEY POTATO, they 
Caie S EORR T 979 — Oa 8 779 b have reduced its price from 15s, to 10s. per bushel, All orders 
= without ploughing ...... 170 Slugs, to Kill. 7745 | of or 7 9 — in London, or at any 
— condition of. +r Stock, on breeding 79 tat the S vasa 
oo: Hei ef ffy e| Nara, Kn — 
i in piate; Fir ee PAMES MES this opportunity to thank 
BOLTON... cesor osisssa 714 Taphips, v —+ iia — — 10 his 3 Ho he their 85 favours, also to inform his © 
ese i 145 spondents that YLE’S SPA — GERANIUM 
Feet cm — n a: a source of great 3 he purposes sending a 
Landlord and 9 72 14 toe each | and all lige fying Zh. urchased it of 2 — tans sea 


ee ponies 
Met Lane Expreve —y[— 2 7 
— — 


8 Subse’ 
Wednesda 85 1 e 17th 


L 1 


8 will be hel 


dont E 
k Hone, Ludgate-hill, for 8 il of bein h. 


the charity for the past year, ant el 
Report fom the Committee 


pies year; also to c 


onsider a 


at the 


as recommending corthin alterations in the Rules 


Ins itution. 
od Election of TWO 


ondon Coffe 
the Accounts 
fficers for the 


of the 


PENSIONERS will also take place rpp 


g the following 4 eng 4 e cases have been ex 
— 


and AERE of by 


the Com 


Nam 83 Residence. 3 * 
EDWARD MASHALI s Tanaan „ 8th . 

Mary Brow ie Sta. “i 
Jonx — i — ie Wm. 70 
T M w Wie: y PEPE i 72 
JOHN APPLEBY „ Clapham... aed 57 
D avs — di E i 7 
James BATTEY a. Chelsea d 066 
EDWARD BEACH 5A Quedgley, Gloucester 3d... 75 
Jokx Cocks y 3d 63 
RICHARD ROWLAND Sutton attic, Dartford 3d 77 
Joux SHEPHERD .. Claph 8 
WILLIAM BROWN > —— 2 T 
Rice Evans à aas Staffordshire Sa 11 
Joun HURDEN 2d ... 65 
aus ROBINSON * iia „2d, . FO 
SNo * en rough ste 4. 68 
FITZGERALD N Ist OR 
Joun H 3 Mar * Nee is: 42 BS 
Hemar: — „ Colerne, Wiltshire e 84 

chair to taken at 11 o’clock precisely. The ballot 


— will ve allowed to vote whose ae for the year 
2 0 


is unpaid on the day of election. 
Epw, R. CUTLE 


8. 


21. 
UBBERIES, as they 


THE SEASON FOR PLANTING BULBS, 
G M, Clapham Rise, near Londo 


tary, 
97, Farringdon- street. 


ich they 
ward — any part of the Ki Continent. 
Ae ARDY — N PLANTS s. d. 
Andromeda floribunda, fine established plants, weil rs 
with bloom, per dozen ee 
85 25 —— new hardy Belgian varieties, ‘on their own 
ts, with flower-buds, one of a 22 * . 29 
25 9 A k do. be 15 
dromedas of sorts, includi P 33 
6 — , one of — sort, by name oe sa : 
25 — ‘Arnevions arabe; one of a so sort, by name .. 10 


1 
te hardy and highly orna- 


$ OL 
Mental.—His Catalogue of Bul 7 &c., may had on application. 


selected bulbs, and eee 
J. G. WAITE, Seed 


(ied TRADE IN THE Sima eg te 25 LAST. 
AITE to 


hardy varieties 

N ew Hardy Yellow Rhododen tendons, gach 6d. to 10 
eee with o bloom 
friends gt , es 2 


Merchant, srk , High * Ladies. 


A ESSRS. pinas anp SGN 


rm th 
z LIST of 


; 3 
Howes, KITCHEN GARDEN, and i “ther er SEEDS, is now 


liv: 3 
8 r 


ENJAMIN R. R. CANT, St. John’s-street Nurser 
establis now ready for delivery, strong well- 


ter, has 


same may be had at 


ollowing : 
abc 7 0 CRUSADER 


ner, 


a 3 — s. 6d. each. 
PING’S BRILLIANT .. ER i 
* SIA SPECTABILIS se 
rriage and Tease free to acct 
~i reference, no unknown cor- 
rr- eee] discount to the trade. < 
_ NEW GERANIUMS AT VERY LOW PRICES. 
BASS axp BROWN beg to refer to their Advertise- 
, Ment of New Varieties last sent out, of which they Bara 


7. Suffolk. 


a Catalogue = this be Tas | y one pi 


ARDENERS’ BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. | 
“oy ob ao i 8 piren avd N ANNUA 


ant of pw kind named a. his 
i ae 1 — eight last 
med on 2 first page of his List, beginn m Arnold's 
Virgin Que to compensate in a 2 or we 2 of 
Sparkler, s gest to signify the sort they they wish to be 8 

Royal Pelargonium Nursery, Windsor, Dec. 8 


ERICAN PLA 
HOSEA WATERER begs * ce he has i. |* 
published a New and Complete Catalogue of — = A * K 
CAN aud CONIFEROUS PLANTS, had o 
1 inclosing two stamps for tron “te e 2 
OSEA WATERER, Knap Hill Nursery, Woking, Surrey. 


“PRINCE ALBERT” SEEDLING GOOSEBERRY, __ 
ists WATSON begs to inform the trade and 


2 48. pet unt. For every dozen ordered, 17 plants will be 
ent; 8 p ee for half-dozen, but no allowance wage — 
nuniber, ‘ost-office orders "payable to Tuomas Wa 


T80 
Spital, "Hexham Northumberland, will mest with pr — 


[Price 6d. 
Me 8 5 ROSE, 0 2 arene 3s. Gd. each 
Dwarfs 2s — of may be 


— e A 


BO Nurseries, ORR Ber 
TEW AND ESTEEMED FRUITS, which ought to 


deuon 


Pyramids on Dwarfs on 


RS. Quince Stocks, Poar Stocks, 
1 Belle de Noel, Decem d January 2s, Gd. 22, 6d, 
2 Bergamotte d' Laperen, April and May os 8 6 2 6 
3 Beurré Breton —— Muy and June sn 88 0 
i Beurré Giffart, — 5 na 2 6 1 6 
5 Beurré Gris d’hive u, Fe bru. ruary . 26 16 
phy or ed — ye pi Ai + Feb. and Maren. 
ing from Easter Bourré, tree 
—— aud very hard 9 6 10 
Cas datas do Mars: A April to July ss 6 5 
3 — d'hiver, Bruneau, Mare 26 4 
Joyenné —— 4 July, the raty early Peit.. os e 
10 Doyenné d'hiver, Nouveau, Jan. to Muy. 6 2 
11 Doyenné Somes It, January to . ee 6 2 
12 Josephine de Malines, Foran to — A .. 6 2 
13 Onendaga, or Sw * * 2 6 3 
14 Soldat d' Esperen, — j os (8 0 
15 Susette de Bavay, March to May 8 2 
1 eee he de Jog “e brid large, Dec, .. 3 6 2 6 
Th a with th of No. 7, are all melting Pears 
of first- — 11 fall 2 are given in — 
— 7 Dai of Freie — post, free, for four stamps. 


ali hardy, and succe 1 14 Pyramids. 


and Pag Journal, 5 the ASh 1 1848; we the 
Gardene 2 Chronicle of the same date 
3 he Gardeners and Farmers’ 'Journal.—GoosEBERRIES : 
. IF. Your seedling, which we noticed last year, nag had oc- 
ession to speak highly of, we have again examined, 
report confidently with re arour, and therefore 
pos rit belongs to the class then ets desert Goose berries. Les 
we fore, the colour is red, resem) 


and can | 


Pyramids. Dwarfe, 
1 Autumn Compote Rivers’ sg bela 22,6d.) 23. 6d, 
2 Belgian Purple, September oo * 3 6 
3 Clown of Gold (Esperen), Se: Hp? „ 58 
4 Early Favorite (Rivers's), July 2 6 190 
5 Early Prolite“ (Rivers . 50 2 8 1 
6 Huling's Superb”, very larg e, Sept. 2 6 24 
7 Jefferson “, me st excelient, ‘September «2 3 6 3 
8 Quetsche St. Marnus”, October 9 2 6 2 
9 Reine Claude de Bavay *, Sept eT os 2 6 2 
10 Reine C mie d’Uctobre*, or Octobe 
Green-gage, October 2 6 2 6 
— Coe’s Late ited *, October to November 2 6 1 8 
a'De Montford, Augus 2 6 2 6 
U hardy varieties, Ind bear well 65 Standards 
— 2 or pn — thus *, dwarf trained trees 
n be supplied at és 


THE L 
Fruit of this ae 


bling arringto 
Red, but larger, and round ngewe than oval. We think this is 
likely to become one of the most useful and popular of our 


ners’ Chronicle.—Goosesrnares: T. W. Your 
seedling, 9 pr size of the Red Warrington, round, hairy, 
dark red, h good appearance; but, owing to long car- 
riage, y N 1— a correct opiaton o of its favour. 
The Spital, Hexham, Northum 


. J. & H. BROWN offer 8 Nobilit, 
entry the peepee | ine or toons 


wi for 


12 Rhododendrons, including rime white, — rose, 


one, 
most abundantly from August 
dozen; or 60g, per 
Belle d' Orleans, a new and fine p Geary, . Gd. 
r SABŲB3 — s ben SIDE 41 
Basiran t 
Tamarix pa Se iene leg i — 


6 oping Nerd Ma nolias, “ove of a sort, by name oe 20 
Hardy He .. 8 


le — 
A ae of 2 gon 


— 
© ano 0 
o iid ik eceooeoo SS AS sss 
© F 
— 


F 

riends and the 

t, and begs to say he 
Mor yp 


22 for their li 


aad fs thus enabled to offer 


ensure 
and different from any in cultiva ion 


h sugary and aromatic faa T 
arf Roses, on their own roots, by name  .. 16 the Ribstone Pippin. It ts 
12 Tenscentd Ll Caki m w. the end of May, and a 
tandard and half-standard — p eee 125. ane a den plants 53, each; the 
on oie per 100 25 Remittances from unknown previous to the 
New Crimson Moss Rose, | per doz. trees being sent, by Pos Genaela, San made payable to James 
— Q 5 x .. tn iia Pe 10 ag also an extensive stock of Fruit and. Forest Tree, 
12 Greenhouse Azaleas, one of a sort, eng gered plants.. 25 i A first-rate quality. 
3 Choice. Camolliss, by name, ditto -- 30 TO NURSERY MEN, PLANTERS, dc. 
50 Choice Greenhouse a rage one of a sort, ape name 45 0/ HOM AS KENNEDY CO. Nu 
2 Choice Ericas, one of a sort, by name ‘= i TH bee 3 3 — 
8 — 2 ums of of newest — best kinds, per dozen + ; of W cid p peaaos — s ig: ved 
i i ozen purp order to bave the 
+ First yate Carnations and Picotees, per dozen f and 33 prod leafed, they have commctel Slingo a aretha 
* urin and Cale 8 hom varieties, per — A — —— 5 and well rooted transplanted TREES at 
6s. to uced 
utifal Lilies, Lancifolium 200,000 3 Fir 1 to2 feet, 20,000 Oak, 3 to 4 feet. 
<O bolbe det O filenin e — interme- „00 Po. do., 2 to 88 feet. 10,000 . 3 to 4 feet. 
— a Eini um, super 300,000 25 i 12 = trans- 10, 2 Birch, A pion 3 — — 
lladonna, longifloram i 12 0|- Plant. 24 feet. 30,000 Booh, 14 to 2 feet. 
T ore Choice Paurt 8 : 50,000 Norway uce, 9 to 000 Do., 2 
Fine Dwarf and Standard Trained P: ectarin N eye pac 1 peau m0 B E 3, anà 
Apricots, 2 Pears, and Cherri best 50, Norw aySpruce, f j ae k: 
ved sorts of these respectie’ kindi sus to 80,000 Scotch Fir, 3 years eii T0 yeamore, and 4 ft, 
— l or, per pee 24 0 50,000 Do. do., 4 years old. | 500,000 five years old White. 
om es : dan, 1s — per dozen .. 15 0 50, 000 Silver Fir, 9, 12, and ksets, 5 
Finn 3 an d Raspberries, per dozen 3 0 8 inches. 500,000 six years old White. 
Strong Vines, Figs, and Apples, . 1 : aoe — Gilead. Quicksets, extra 
4 skin agent oe , 24 . bs é 
AENA thin shell a Choice Hardy 1 for 10 0 A large K of i 10 Fruit Trees, Goose. 
Glycine sinensis, e: n pots, 15 to 30 feet 3 6 | berry and ant Trees, Evergreen and Flowering Shrubs, &. 
Th ge marked sent by post; also Lists of | Prices and samples will be furnished on app! i i 
Greenhouse, Stove, and cecus Plants, aud Garden seeds There — Oo crooning on via Annan to 
4 ¢ t twice a week, and railroad communica- 


4 8. 
‘Albion Nursery, Stoke Newington, London, Dee. 8, 


den dail Bp tea parma of the n 


ARGE PiviTEp “MONTHLY 9 eee 
od 


770 THE 


Mn maistan ROYAL ALBERT RHUBARB 


grown free r early | 
forcin g, T it far surpasses all other kinds. If ‘planted i n 
gellar, or any place 8 the frost and light are kept from it, 
it will produce large stalks, 1 magnificent red colour, in five 
or six weeks’ time. a large stock of roots, 18. 6d 
each; also Myatt's Linneus, * éd., p Vistan 9d. The 
usual allowance to the trade. Pos t-office made payable 
to WILLIAM e Enfield iaag Middlese sex, will meet 
with pr 


RIBERS beg ie 5 eall l tho attention 


e to their extensive Stock of all 
T N 


EVE EEN A FL 
their 1 and 2 years seedling and 1 and 2 year anted 
— e . from the T also 2 years 


2 year lan 

with a — stock of 2 eaters years transplanted Thorns 

or Quicks. All of the — quality and will be sold cheap. 
Application may e to either of their establishments. 

Catalo ogues will b I be se 1 be 
Roe and Fewo, N urserymen, = Perth and 

Brechin, N.B. Ns 


healthy, st plan . 

Herbaceous Plants on ine held se 8 for correct- 
ness and quality, r W comprise upwards of * L and 
W. M. for display in the fi rden, 
as also his stock of elne MAER he has — a lecting 
and selec cting fo for up The Hardy Shrubs are 
extensive in variety, being — of 500 species and varieties, 
and comprise all that is new — valuable, both deciduous and 
evergreen. To gentlemen forming Arboretum ms, this offers a 
very 1 — The nomenclature adopted 
is after Loud 8. 
Hardy Sh owy. "Herbaceous Plante, by name—per 100— 3 
Handy fov 8 Deciduous Evergreen Shrubs, do. „ * 

ard; 


eat 


2888 888 


Garden Roses, of select sorts „do. is 
Holly pika Ka double conn all shades c of colour, do. ,, 30 
Do., finest double, for exhibitio er doz,.—20 
Heaths, nne Greenhouse sort ag ere * s, do. 
—_— psec iy ew ARSS Plants, fine young Wasiy; ‘do. i. 


mh ally ha zalea , do 
Calceolarias, 2 porem Donia rarities, 855 
Do., very good of older sorts, 
Cinerarias, including Henderson’s 1818 & 49 vars., ao.» 25 
Currants, May’s large late Victoria or Raby Castle 
e Selection left to 
Also Seeds Sood from the best sorts of 1849 of Pansy, 


per doz. ae 
a 


15 
6 


Hollyhock, Antirrhinum, Cineraria, and Calceolaria, in packets 

at 2s. 6d. and 5s, 8 

. — A . — extensive supply of every description of 
Nurse Gr. Pre es, 


URAL ROOTS. 
AMES GROVE, Great Ba dow w, Essex, who obtained 
Prizes at the Che Imsford and Essex Agricultural Show for 
nine years A succession, begs to callthe = of gilap en 
visiting the Smi a a 1 11 Show to = of roots, No, 116. 
SE HEA 
ds 2 LEVIES IMPROVED POLMAISE STOVES 


„the 8 in London, with Plans for 


— "Tene ey 14, 8 10s, ; 30 feet by 14, 
ba ie 60 — a is, oe 105 Stoves for Churches, Schools, 
pa Halls, size,— Hothouse Worke Stamford-hill, 
DR. NEWINGION’S WHEEL DIBBLE. 
+ LA 


DE NEWIN ITON has 
he has had no time to atte 


nd to eb ae Bnd rtise- 
ment; he will refer to it, h 2215 ~~ 


whom he — appointed. 


— = THEE 


E. een and PENFOLD, manufac 8 — 
ton’s Agricul a ag yp plements, will hie a at 8 field 
Sho él and 62, six different kinds 
Mac and without wheels, It is particularly re- 


mber of g 
— 1 caught the ro before ite 
; let the public judge for 
amine Tesis Ross’s impl 


igenuity, Another 
been patente, — with wh — ch nnd 4 
together the unscientific rh — of br 
ing or sowing by hand, will n no doubt ot pr with. that a — 
it deserves. It Is calculated that as t his implement will 80 
m = s ad in raigh ormore if re 
ength, and in . 4 2 to m admit of hoeing that half 
the usual ity wn by band m: 7 be dispensed 
with ; 5 a asa iad | has nothing to do but see ge the boxes b 
s fast as he likes with the m — — it 
on wheels, he could get over 


—— 


a Hand 
3 2 with, ease 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


TAS SWERE: NTED "AVIOLA ARBOREA,” 
— „bas 
dit 
large as the double blue Hepatica, and it possesses the f follow. 
ing superior nka 5 all others * bass assa to which it 
elongs: one blo s quite a a-dozen of the 


s large alf. a 
single variety, one * will produce 10 — the — of 
flo mths, and also very lon 


| 


sed 
I * — from a a s 
nd the 
with — * as the plan ts were the fi 
were not kep 


was sent 2 oy M aoak: py 5 —— 
wers; it will bloom for . N ng | gent’s + his * hereon: 
stem to the flower, whi ieh is * advantage i in D the identify it sik any of t is in 
ye itse ecimen for the greenhouse = ud + his for his i 
or conservatory, a * * ery large size when grown s of it :—“ I cannot give you any 
npots, I agii Se in — last, ina conservatory, 2 had excepting ‘that I consider it new, or at 
the almost ae eee number of 385 expanded b s on it at | in this coun is new to me, 
e time, with hundreds of buds then to * * had then — d The b 


— in Leen the whole of the winter, It scented the con- 
servatory 80 much, that had a per 
woul b d 
head of this truly beautifal p 
circumference, and 16 amant E ‘height ; the branches do not 
hang down, but stand out straight from the plant. It is worth 

notice, that many hundreds of the old doubl x Violet, and others, 

whic 


— been sold for the Mos Arborea, 
oga rchasers, 


e bushy 3 


great DN to t 
65. Fapa 100. 


J WEEKS anD Co., King’ stencil Chelsea, Patentees 
and 2 — oat HOT- WA TER APPARATUS, 
Economical Boilers of e warranted to la st 15 
hours without attention. 


their Show Nowitey and @ — d, Chelsea; and also 
most of the Nobili 23 ‘Seats i in the country, the 
ondon Nurse — Ki 


piah 


will te open to pero on the 

10 o’clock in the 

— residing at a . 
. — the varieties, 

—— 

* F Bury, 


T TO SIZE. 
16 oz, Pa 2d. to kas per foot. 


ALSO THE 1 OF THE CHOICEST PLANTS, 
VINES, FERNS, &c. 


1 un 4 
a 


WEEKS anD D Co., Sig s-road, Chelsea, HoRTICUL- 


TURAL ARCHITECTS, THOUSE BUILDERS, and — ae 


2 


heen so much cecal that | 


implement, v which bhas just 85 
to ba 


attention i 


lately improv 

— * * an 4 — 
E — and Roots, sent from 
Dr. Newineton’s can, 


Hand oes, Cultiva 
2 — 2 ga of Sten 

erent Lette 0 oats ae — i 
also be exhi 


F 
| See the 


00. 61, Gracechurch- street, 
w enasna Southwark, Inventors 
d CONICAL and DOUBLE 
ILERS, gy er tage: solicit the attention of 
scientific 4 to thei uch improved method of 
m to Pi * It ha dane mbani 


. Ter 
ds * are now pom 
— by which the cost is 


p prospectuses _ 
s well as nomena of the highes pon quae 
hey may be seen at most t of the Nobility’s s and prin 
2 1 the kin 

and Co. beg to in en the Trade that at their Manufactory, 
every article required for the construction 
uildings, as well — — nys iia them, may be 
obtained upon the most Sewer 
cg erected upon the most 


Meoir en &c., of Iro 
a, Palisading, Field and Garden 


mental . pi ae 


HILL Siep — — a inform the numerous 


4 \ ka spplioants for bis one BOILER” of a — and 


hinery, 
4 —. 12 feet 


2 
HORTICULTURAL — rar AND HEATING 


0. ls. 
thouse Works, Stamford-hill, 


S FOR CONSERVATORIES, Ge, 
ame anD CO. sapp ly 16-02. Sheet Glass of 
ture, ces va 


in 


83 WINDOW „CLASS, and GLASS SHADES: 
, 35, Soho-square, London 


— first Saturday in oooh month, 


3, » e 


95 
“100 feet and 200 gs cases of 4 4 Sheet 
—* 1 h Plate Glass, from 1s, 2, 


Duc. 8, 
PEARL” BL 
R. JARVIS i isc di ‘to Sell ay RA 
received from Sona 
cond of ae oaks, It has * 


3 it to yr perfection asi 


at all e 
The d 
unch long an d loose, w 


premises, every d 
forenoon. till rap che 
will be f 


8 


of the 1 leaves are 
well — fo 


Rad a oo the 


D 4 
at the Victoria 


a 
by 


any other 
m application, * “Teter or otherwise 
1 to Mr. Jouw 


, 
FOR CON SERVATORIES, 
James wan LLIPS anD Co. have the 

a their New List of Prices of GLASS fi 


for 
— 


HARTLEY’S PATENT aera PLATE, packed in boxes 
each : ' 


6 by 4 and ple fi 
Sby6 „ 84 by 63 ... 13 
MILK P 


Window Glass of every description, 
Prge fortrying eeban. men 
tubes Self-Registering Thermo- 


Traps, 33. 

Slabs, 9 2 and Dishes, 
Fish Globes, Plate and 
and Lamp Shades. 

tubes, 78. 6d. ; 
meters for Green 

Estimates and List of Prices forwarded on a plication to their 
Warehonse, 116, Bishopsgate-street Without, London. 


GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES AND HORTICULTURAL 
PURPOSES, &e 


MILK PANS 
PASTRY. PINS 


PROPAGATING&BEE CUCUMBER GLASSES 


A 
MILLINGTON’S 


per ards. s Sla 
12 to 24 parts — e 3 
pss 12 to 24 oe long, 
Wasp 
— — 1 
Eastern Counties Railway. 


URNER, Engineer and Agricul 


GLASS, 
from or ounces, at 
cases 


— Hoe — de had, on 
treet Without, same 


ses of 


ame — 


Hastern Counties Railway, g = — 
N. ORWICH PRIZE ROLLER M 2 for Linseed 
nd C anufactured rie! (a — se 


Puce Foundry 
N. 8333 aboye Mill, for which H, ai Ha 2 were e DY by 
t 
them at the the ensuing Smithfield 0 Jub inst will be Lid, 12th, 
13th, and 14th in “i 
"HE pace 3 CATHIE bee 


ke place at Birmingham, 


Decem 


— and Friday, the 11th, ch, ious and 
ber, 


GALVANISED. re GAME NETTING- 


52 2257 72257. 


5 
ote 
ie 


ised, ; 

2.inch mesh, light, 24-inch wide 35 per yd. ra 
2inch ,, strong ; * ” eo 
2-inch „ extra strong s yt ie ” 5 
inch „ light Pai 19 Pn 
46 nch „ strong ” 2 
lg-ine „ l. 

All the above can be m any wai — 
If the upper half is a — mesh, — will reuse arf 
fourth, Galvanised’ sparrow-pro — 
ber re pere forwarded 0 aur Ks 

Manufactured by BARNARD ven B „ Market 
Norwich, and deliv free of expense 


borough, Hull, or N — 


/ ee ea 


a si wed was plaia on ie ul, gene 


49—1849.] 


NEW GARDEN 7 ~ ME GROWTH, AT LOW 
ATESSRS. SUTTON axp SONS, growing their 

Seeds themselves, and taking t care in proving all 
thé new kinds introduced, are enabled to supply their cus- 
tomers with the _ kinds in . — very moderate ex- 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 


parent, and, as admitted contract 

| roduced by finas ei — ae 
wever glazed with rough plate. The 

were justly dissatisfied at the Substitution o 


the was 
of the windows dene 1 


— th 


and of su quality as ent disappointm tment 
Cat crops. — — will be sant, vost ¢ freq, on application 
to Joun SUTTON and Sons, Reading Seed Warehouse, Reading 


2 Goods delivered free by rail to London, 459 
cester, Bristol, or Basingstoke. 

— — œ—́ͤ—ä6—j— U . 
2 ST. ALBAN’S GRAPE.— Plants may 


5s. each on the recei an of a Post-office order. 
RoBERT Jo! i ye = S neral Seed Warehous use, St. Albaw’s. 


TABLISHED 1786 — 
ARLY PE AS WILLIAM E. RENDLE & Co. 
have 
roft E 21 feet. | W. Early Em , 3 
Bur Prince Alber, 5 Na Patreartt ee tea |in 
Fairbear of Eng- Early Kent, 
— 1 arly — 3 ict. 
Early Warwick , 


These will be BPs per at — usual low prices. 
and prices, apply to LIAM E. REND 


We ar 
New and — Choice seeds for the ens 
DRUS DEODA 
W. MAULE an AnD SONS beg osu 
Gentlemen, and the Trad 


and Co., 
Bae Plymouth 
now laying in a most — assortment o, of 


mind Noblemen 


— hey have also large supplies of the other Himalayan 
— and the beautifal new Rae crates from thes 
Priced Lists will be forwarded on receipt of one pee. 


ara, can still be ha 


sees ea on the Natural Habits and Quality of the wood | three 
— Deod a 


d by en 
—Stapleton-ro road Nurseries, Bri 


g three postage 


0 SEEDSMEN AND MARKE ETG 
J. EPPS be 


oon have been 
—.— may be ed on as — — genui The 
pou are jea ten low, which will be sent on 2 
Also samples if required. 


Su 
For Catalogues 


DENERS. seit 
begs to offer the following SEEDS, 
=m — tocks ö 


1 their agreement; the contractors main 


particulars of ager 


$s 4 
“ The question of thickness was waived or with- 
drawn by the justices, so that the only point o 
inquiry was,—is the glass used ‘rough plate !“ 


te 
3 


e the differing proportions and purity of these 
substa s forme _ Fes surfaces in 
different ways :—1l. B it into a 


this is crown g . By forming cylinders, 

which a t open and then flattened,—this is 
a cylinder glass, broad glass, blown plate glass, 
and 3. By pouring melted glass upon a metallic 


surface, and passing over it a heavy roller, to reduce 


Skirvin le-top Swede t to an even thickness,—this is termed r rough plate 
White Wie Belgian t Carrot Early Purple Spronting glass, sas late — N glass, &c. It is the 
Grainge's Early White tik: Shik cold surface whic is ‘cast 
red Mangold Wurzel Brimstone, visible 
leas Globe s ditto yu Imperial 28 pir the 3 by unequal contraction. 
AS. r. HARTLEY — that the glass in dispute — 
t's dwarf white Marrow | Chappell’s Cream 
De. meer mind me Adams fine Barly White longed to the second process, and that the te 
bridge’s Eclipse or Stubbs’ ‘rough plate’ had ree been a meg sich ty 
Bsr ee ae the trade. He w nished that any perso 
Indented Marrow Green curled Savoy. versant with the glass tisde could call the — — 
_High-street, Maidstone, Dec. 8. ‘rough plate,’ or that there could be any difference 


gee 
bs, and Ornamental 
quantities, a 
A sent o 8 on receipt of wre "postage 
(on urseryman, Loughborough- 


informs his friends that he has no Seed-shop in London. 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 


SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1849. 
2 FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. 


Moxpar, pi eaat. — — 915 
11 ee né 
— e.. sesse 7 


to a material now 


of opinion as 
Mr. Lage also 


so wel 
it ifications, Bee osa 


so much used an 
— pea other 
e de- 


Plate Glass Company; Mr. Cunistis, agent 
Union Plate . Mr. Waser of the British 
Plate Glass Co and Mr. GosLETT 
Soho ni ned Glass ware all deni the | 
mat could be rough plate, or bore 
any — ie to it. 
by a would have su that 
manufacturers of plate glass, 
ose 


this evidence, given 
might have decided 
Gots Gabios for if th 


lass do not 


of forming an opinion. fe should also 


the g 
before it is ground 


mains translucent— | Professor Donapson 


ic f all cast plate | side, 
ch indeed is A condition 3 a The tae catia? tn pordelain 


j Weonespar, — 
3 af wa thew that the learned arbitra l have 
trusted his own e can be more 
1 134 Antiquarian, unlike rough plate the material 3 em- 
Fama, - 1 Astronomical. nomic loy ester, a sample of which was pro- 
Sauna, = wf aa iA duced before the Horticultural Society on Tuesday 
a — last. no; Professor — = 
Wr have for some time past o pointed eyes to his own, and called in vice of sun 
. —— of Garden il 1 eee y 
dings, in consequence of its shee e been this: é 
ava adfant bree whitch É 93 “Mr. Youne, of St. s-lane, hesi- 
plant- Continued experience leaves us, tation in —— the in question had always 
no room to doubt that this is the ial yet been considered by the trade rough plate, and, 
i other a fae A Ee ae | Seat orale ieee arbar aprins r 
: i aal vast of ans 4 
Doses. B hones peed ahah, daky t point Sw INH e Mei reet, said it was ‘blown 
out what is meant ugh plate, so that buyers | rongh plate glass.” Mr. Bra t, a practica J 
may not be deceived by de: 8 of many years - ——— — — 
: ' ious 'his has become when foreman o rks, N ER, | 
—— in —— i 7 St. s-hill, had supplied both cast and 
award by Professor Hoskixe, the par- blown as rough plate for 36 years. Mr. 
tic which we collect from an article in a recent Conbrrr, of Northumberland-street, considered both 
number of an excellent orary, the kinds ‘ rough pl essrs. Foorp, who 7 Jen 
It that Messrs. Lock a ss = ode sof d 
Ga glaze the new county j i in- | consider: re equal 
diester wil? nah plate’ Glas a qui of on entitled to be called ro en er 
inch thick. The justices. required this glass to be the cation would ag aa 
Used in order to prevent the in of the prison | sup Tal made tis cosy he ap 
‘seeing through the windows. “tho win ws,” p = this — a 
Builder. 0 magistrates, term. 
a ie hg “hat s with They, said, moreover, that, as there rpe no differ- 
Which these noo dl were filled was not the ‘rough | ence in the ssc the 84 3 a Peon 
b: aga =: Sg — 45 e eee io ane be 8 inches) de 
Surface, through which rong 995 2 there is no trans- blown could be lina more i age > | 


he 
referred to the volume in yp ers Cyclo- 
n and glass, in the intr ction | 
trans- | whereof two descriptions of plate glass and | 


t for the | sta 
„of the term in th 


make 
rough es is, it is hard to tell who are | of 


e into 
work, and one — ey 128 of the justices, that ‘ro 


certain meaning; secondly, that the article objected 
to did not come under the description, inasmuch as 
ass; smooth on both sides, but after- 


rit was n 
wards slightly roughened on one 4 and mood a 
was n m e aril tood and 


FEL 


and plate 
cation are not to be held to have each 


„that is its u 
state ; — that, „. the glass obj 
to possesses the characteristics of plate glass, and is 


immediate Ke of plate, sheet, and 
2 as window glass —as to justify its recognition 
that te 
T pee deserves 
the evidence of the a — tne tani ll trust it will 
2 The learned arbitrator thinks the o 
) justices 


ame as rough 
award to the study of Professor ag smn 
ther writers on log 

We reasoning like this ís a direct 


: must say tha 
encouragement to Aie It justifies the man who 
for wheaten flour, for 


gypsum fo can plead 
chat it is called flour by some of the ted. It 
| countenances the vending of Rhatany + aes brandy, 
and sugar under the name of 
ple can be found to swear 
under the name of 
and-thirty years.” It ac 
mountain limestone, Epping 
the name of guano, because 
trade as British une; in short, it sanctions 
an 


yi cp Pooley fl 
3 of this ir 


are the disgrace 


THE 


who, though not what is e a “practical,” has 
had as much practice as most m 


lass in preference o 


another ; if no circ 
overstepping of the learned gentleman’s prescribed | see 


He had not to 7 pease man had done 
he e 


were wi 
he had no AN to look at. If, however, he had in- 
vestigated that point he might have found a sufi- 
cient motive. 
We shal 
sham to be a reality 
article. We, 8 draw part 
— gre case; and we warn our readers t 
they too are not placed i 
of of the pe oma i justices. The roug 
Which we have recommen a 
that which the glaziers above mentioned tell us they 
call so: but the cast È aese made 5 eee and 
elsewhere; 1 we recommend e 


, or a counterfeit a genuin 
articular attention 
o take 


this g 
manatees, tie 
it, will no doubt, hae thir own sakes, aay out 
n be obtained. As for 

and which 
e purpose of imposing 
deners, it is ma unfit ea sgi horti- 
8 urpose. The true kind v more in 
quality 3 is desirable, vet the hg will answer 
the purpose. The best sample of it which we have 
yet seen was manufactured by Messrs. Hawt TLEYS, 
and sold by Mr. James Puituirs, of 116, Bi shopsgate- 


One word more before we quit the subject. 
: Among other attempts is one to ban uade buyers 
that thin and genuine rough: -p 


will not e the 2 inch glass, eeen is | pan 


song en eno ough, we can only say, have no dealings 


T? One 


OF ANY USE, OR ARE THEY N 


tion elsewhere, whatever gives perfume to the flowe 
sweetness to the me — to the skin, and siigh 
to the solid fabric tree. 


it is who fly in the 
ason, fact, and their Bible. 

The following ap from se well-known corre- 

spondent, tells its own tale, and shows to what 

horticultural offences se are now O 


0r On karaa a few gardens in one palo f regular st ar 
a ur f regular structure amo 
October. tober, called at an old establishment, ‘when, plants ; 2 for insta e cup. of th ed 


in charge so 
— 5 he ‘ 2 in ited > 
in good rite 


you, or ‘some of pe ur grier 
an 2 on i tis important branch of horticul- 


or motives the ory. age 
read that ‘the een of respir ation, to 
tion, and digestion, which are the particular offices 


of 
1 ot wever, be no parties to declaring a i 


plant. 
pruning, trees will ripen well | good 
cted to the e he of 8 
. n fra 


particular not aw la 
e | think a 


h A Cor 
MONSTROSITY represented in the following cut. 
case in which t C 


the late Professor 


ran . early | some ve 


prov 
under 


tov 
reir mca can — oxi The long 


SE 


P 
ble, one plant on 


GARDENERS’ 


“ It is said, that in the art of gardening Nature 
should be imitated as far as practicable; but under 


rspira- 


ves, are essential to the health of a pl 


rme 

sequently, whatever tends to impede the free 0 
of leaves gor a to diminish the healthiness of 
i a judicious system 


as when subje 
off the leaves while still green and health 
disbudding, in the ay part of the s 
hoots than what I 


When 


winter’s 838 and as so e 
pona. I 7055 e branches all the benefit of the 
ver the trees 1 cutting out 
e and whic 


e to come out at the ty prunin 


the same time I pinch off the points of the remaining Ard 


ones, g fasten all close up to the wall; so that 
when winter comes pope 
prune, 1 of havi deer 
1 oun sue with 


d to. This is the system 


RRESFONDENT at Camberwell has sent us Be 


1 which the common Cabbage prodecad Ta 
its en) on the upper side, a pitcher-shaped e 


leaf is seen to grow 


This as figured many years 
the “ Transactions of the Horticulture! EP 
De 


appearance 
by 
ANDOLLE, W. led such 


nepenthiform. They are 
h 


e branches 


lere during ti the autumn 


in beauty 


roduce i 


i w 
zi s with which we have doing, ts more than 2 feet high may be easily ob- I have ‘sometities 3 — 
subject 5 vols ; our let heze ed, crowned with a eet ra 4 of fl 53 | size, but soft and full of sap; a 7 
manner not to nistake: We, therefore aul. 12 or 14 inches in len There is one peculiarity | velled up. On a closer investigation © 
stitute, for farther comment of our the words ant ft this Plant which requires attention. When it is bas ed to me to occur usually 
of the same experi rienced and i yi ords | put into its’ blooming pot it should be pl where the soil is poor, or in soils where 4 
ener, deeper than before, and for this reason: Like the noble —— subs tances are SEAEOY ? 


CHRONICLE, 


€ | the dormant plan 
e 


(oe ae it throws out greater part of in rg 
e. its true roots, b vhi 

the parts iy “which “th * cts ners roe 

strictly r 3 


18 
the surface of the so soil; and if adana f ng a 
e en the Tesourees Of the pag 


The following will be found a lerabl 
course of culture: When it is — 
e 


season, I am to 


ipl or argon < 2 
ds t 


om 
Q 
. 


e r under glass, as well as those against the - -r00 
0 


sion, seated on a stalk, on which a oa hi 


wn that there are two 
variadi of this plant, and that. one is very superior to 
the o in ba respect. Had I not grown 
bys or two seasons, 


E 
2 


cee is of a r compact, more robust 
other, and its foliage is much larger and more 


plants, 
in the en thence it 


ber beautifu oe: marked, assi bears a raceme of larger 
flowers, which are set close: their axis, 
aran 


assumes a 
ance, andis very unsightly to look upon. G. L. 


_. DISEASES OF are hh 
inued from page 


insure to the cultivator an 
Suddenly aay are observed to fall, so as to leave 3 
ere and there on on the boughs. All 
mediately aseribed 
— — to the mist, which, 


tion is 9 adv. 
e subtra 


its accustome 
bably the circulation is 
of the vessels. On the 


favour of an extrao. spring, reg with 
warm, and moistened * rains, par consi- 
great vigour. T in pried which 
derable; it stimulates highly the ur, iaity into the pe- 


| 
| 
] 
| 


e 
‘theless stands the grea 
in extent and design, which perhaps any man 
ing | su 


a 
that if the plant —_ 
of the year, from th 


yir in the early part 
it 


vigorously 
7 —— „ 
e dry summe: 


„ wants 
guide the 


are 2 — a su 


rs 
B® 
8 
8 
F 
= 
2 
4 
fa 
5 F 
cd 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE: 
2 — re 2 half the eff dient ti d to in eul- 
inds of trees, however, t have been em- ing the Mushroom, such as large pots, tubs, boxes, 
ployed with equal propriety, such of Lebanon; | or old casks cut in two, and placed under shelves in 
ut the rapidity of wth which distinguishes | greenhouses, or in sheds and cellars ; but the material 
Douglas Fir may have grea it the preference. a and the modus operandi here set forth, 
H trave rod just described, we should in all cases be adbered to, as near as cireum- 
approach the garden en ich is clothed on each | stances will admit. Pharo. 
side with large Hollies, and eh of — rarest Pinuses. — — 
he gates of the and exquisite TRADE MEMORANDA. 
— exceedingly massive, — gilded in the ‘Jonn Hanpronp. The proprietor of the Thirsk Nur- 
most costly style. a were originally in „the pos- is desired to forward a “ quantaty of Frute Trees, 
session of Na apoleon Bonaparte, and were ined order as at futt,” to Warwick-house P Liverpool, 
the Petite — by the father of the — Earl, | Plambs,” 


tg be counteracted 
the ‘reaches whieh may be garded as a 
rule to be observed in the cultivation of — 
trees in rich Tea In the second case use 0 
copious irrigations, mixing some rich —— vith 
the water, = be of great advantage. 


| Cedars 
one 


nce ; . 
eaten steer the 
m 8 


ese gates open on a scene of great 
for whether the eye turns to the right or to 
same charming effect is beheld. Iri 
11 feet high, within a few feet of each — fr an irre- | 
gular ee to the plantation. These ked by| 
of Lebanon, Deodars, and Hemlock S Spruce from 
right and | 


Trees trained in espalier or against walls are subject 
to a an 1 — excessive stimulus of the sun’ 
reflected r hat account let = cultivator | 


always — for — —— such varieties of each tree 
are the longest in ripening their N ee, S well in the 
as at the = of the seaso; 
ts fall on ea of the nutriment 


of the Figs to detach themselves pra the tree, they im 
t to the fruit, con- 


confess 
ired effect produeed; for 


shoots, and th „ worst car pop- 
toris is undoubtedly that which is owing to cold and 
other causes that weaken the plant. 


ELVASTON 1 THE SEAT OF THE 
“OF HARRING TON. 

Tars is stunted about four miles from 
the London 


be that it is anything 
rs — — 
mental gardening. Th in this 1 
bold rugged scenery, with i ks and natural woods, 
for which Derbyshire is so famo Flat level pas- 
e chief characteristic of the district, The 


n this 
middle of so uninviting a a trac — so — 
test work. of a skill, 
in one poma e before ; but bein 


i carcely kn known, to e 
of the Earl of H rringto 


43 5 
EA 
4h 
Şe 
2 
2 
£ 
gP 
3 5 
5 
oe 


on road, omer 
epee suddenly upon plan- 
ides of the road, a 


teipe 
as the st 5 demands, are 
— — ds of which are git with gold, giving 
the a — in fact, of huge bronze gates 
the lodge itself being partially hid 
Wh — are thro 


ground commences, betw: 

trances, 3 i one. straight, and flanked 
on each side b —— ki 
intended ath 


rows — Dou lines, 
2 dears “eg as ye 14 


to be 
— — — — not 
an arrangemen 
— 2 ae — ithe straight appro roach roa 
country, all com dee "o 
fo Ao to demand — 
clearest defined ed principles ; 0 other mode of planting, 


from 
— 7 feet ‘high, h, the 


pe Ame to pews what 


force | of 20 feet hi 
ws | are allowed to extend 3 feet u 


xis 
to be 
ils of this interesting 


ur may be ob 
The 


appa- 
wh 


wn open an exten- | 
sive line of straight avenue is presented. In the dis- | 


hem can only in- | may 


left of ‘hie entrance is the Pinetum, — — 16 aeres 
und, in two $ 


centre 


0 a row o 
olden Yews, opposite the openings. The next line, simi- 
larly raps tied consists 0 caria imbricata; then 
behind this, are two ro 
grafted on the Cedar of [diene and arson 
The branches of the las 


a 
en — were 
n both Pie pë behind it 
ante This . it must be remembered, 


erfect a 


the pon to the centre, fro 
sward, is ee the y dest degree i 1 eagp a 
a age trees can reach th 
1 2 is no mean 
example of one. K. e 
(To be continued.) 


VILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENING. 
Waen a little judgment and ingenuity are brought to to 


unlimited means. The villa gardene 
profitless work to attempt the culture of m 


—— re that 
e 


counter; and ai 


kiso dazene” of Holey Oaks asorted, 
f which a remittance is is promised. reference 
mpanied the order, nor was an — te 
usual in these hard tir i mes) about prices 7 ( 


Hom e Co orrespondence. 
nigra ° Larpenia —I am pas to see at last that 
ndi 


Mr. forward and vindicated the 
—— oa gave some two or three months in your 
r, as to the capabilities of that much e t rar 
flower, Plumba ntze said I should 
be much su if it were not found to be one of 
the 3 flowers e garden by the time the 
me approached that season, it 


utu — 
se inly did pro 

hopes of it, till etek as your co states, 
that it is “one o ost attractive autumnal flower- 


— — roots, in the | same border with 
lvias, Fuchsias, &, only selecting for it a spot 
sheltered from the winds and screen rom sun ; 


re it has 


o have spoken so ill of 3 ged done the same, 
3 


the wou ve ns 


— n rise 


ment, you will hear of it, I mg, 
have — by, as mi 


y. 

nd 
reson putting out their plants, and new ones — 
if . would consider a 2 what 
* may be. t is rather the custom to jad plants 
in secundem artem 2 it is well called). where ds they may 


2 


very ile are and sti 


to procure so 
straw shaken out of 1 it; this 
bout 12 


; the — 8 

i to decline, 
ormed, A layer of this partially 
d first be about 6 inches 


A 
5 


eee beat this down into a 


ng is eee — in either | acres 


tt th Th 
the | of the houses alluded to, and th then e stable 


ye ly solid cake, | wi 
ectly soli e, 
perf — beer 


ng 


Hi 


ther 2 must do all they require, 
with th 


or take 
is Plumbago. T doubt not it has 
bent aussie silasila: winde scorching 
many gardens, and no wonder it has failed ; and 
fore it is that we hear it so Bea 


ushroom spawn from an? „ 
break $ into small pieces 2 the size of bantams’ 
over 


e dry. 
rfectl xamine 
ope an i the hent — further to deeline, 
to spread sakr wei litter inches thick 5 ~ 
the bed 3 and should — 9 become ee > 


S 


appear in 
six weeks, and will continue for 


warm water, such as you can suter | 


e 
chimney 
to be 0 
alloyed. The vater W 
the 


ace of the bed become dry, and | gutte 
er be er ee. remove the covering, and give it 


tops, as 
stance of its inu I now beg to hand you a small 
** — of . yd material which — fixed 
t 18 ths to carry 

=| about 18 mon h has. been the elen produced by the 


774 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


f ing Salvia splendens ; but asthe the branches that induee the roots to make growth. the outbreak of a fire the flame, heat. and — mm 
— * Ax ag À 8 eppane to mao e likely to be un- | They ought, however, to caution the 5 — burn or suffoeate the p erson.atfompa oke wou 


‘om the n anni would 
81 soon as they are rooted, we in lifting and saving the roots; and have a always been | the individual from rsonal inju vat 

pot thom off into ot 3 about the a size as those repaid for the trouble, in getting an earlier crop of | killed the flame and ober — b but after 
they came out of. When . are filled with roots, fruit. Argo, Chichester, Dec. 4. neutralise the effect of the smoke as to rende 
they are then shiradi into the pots they are intended to Ringed Camellia Stem.—I send you a grub belonging | rounding atmosphere cool and respirable, aan 
flow n that the plant afterwards require is to a family that has lived at my expense for — 80 was destructive to life, and thus ford the 
lenty of ote with some liquid manure — years, and I have no doubt but some of — my moe stopping further —— and preventing the Means of 
W e in their flowering pots, they should be a their way to your Camellia corresp t (see | of any embers tha may remain, These — 
grown in the greenhouse, and their tops should be p. 708). [No, no.] ase lost e of — by equally effectual i — putting out fires in 

pinched off 1 but not erai than n August, or the iheir attacks. I was a long time in discovering what | which more serious fires often arise, Ano, me from 
bloom will be defie This plant is not particular as | the cause was; but having noticed a aqpan — stocks — remark, In putting out — fire by point 

8 s . 
a 


ch inj — 
in this e produee bushy plants from 6 to 8 feet | quite dead, I made a minute examination of them. 1 tire; after the applieation of thes vapour of the unhurt by the 
Men which — profusely from the end of October to | took out the mrs sn — the bark 2 as I thought, annihilator, although the fire is extinguished, ra 
Christmas. In places where it is required to keep the | rotted away ; degrees I found the adjoining ture, books, or other p ty in the room — 
2 gay during the time I have specified, this = were a wale . and appeared to have been | received no injury from it, and the floors 
* * nant be Ph exceedingly useful. T. Blair, m; and I at last —— the depredators at saturated with water, ahs 2 property in them not 
. — on — looking — — 1 koa my soe be troyed also. Vi ndex, Dec. de- 
ale o Gade ceous Plants. mihe. collectors of forming a regular ring round the dead plants; from > 
0. of Or much advantage from 22 at Mr. this I concluded that the eggs had been laid in the Pa 
Stevens’, in King-street, — * as —— * centre pot, and, that after ane the bark off the larger] Hor CULTURAL, Dec, 4.—J. R. Gowen. Esq 
imported pun and those consisting of duplicates of |r and what portion of t tem was under ground tary, in the chair, The Dake of Hamilin? 
growers, or as the stock of some one giving up the cul- | (for they do not eat much oe the smaller roots), they Heseltine, Esq., and T. Henry, Esq., were d 
tivation of 2 I, however, baer from een — the next plant. Subsequent observation Fellows, and tlie following gardeners home ected 
making = at the last — which were adver- has confirmed this opinion. The Camellia will not show ing members — Mr. H. Bailey, gr. to G. correspond. 
838 ging to, or being imported 5 Mr. Low, | the i injury, panai for six months after its infliction s| M. P., Nuncham; Mr. R, Errington, gr, to Sit’ P sy 
No notice was pe that they were — to the sale- | and o cause is not discovered, | Egerton, Bart., Oulton-park ; Mr. T, Ingram, 4 
i rom tke hothouse, and the result i in; an j 1 4 t s 
hased 


2 
> 


morning, lost nearly all its leaves, — — wi — 
not recover: and same misfortun oa fr 
Vanda, bought at the same sale. I find, . — that 2 — 
were equally unlucky. This evil would 
been avoided if at the sale the state of the plants 
had been described by Mr. Low’s direetion. co 
Mr. Stevens eould know nothing of the matter. A 
Subscribe 


ingly-bloomed plants an — 


‘| purple flowered Barkeria Skinneri, each bearing 
from 12 to 13 — The plants vat h growing 
i 5 


erm 
| also contributed Vanda trieolor, — white-flowered, 
pumi —.— Augrescum, and Lycaste Skinneri, 
Knightia e Angreecum, 


soriber. medal .was awarded for the 
Successful Transplanting a om — tree in 1836. Vande a Barkeri From Mrs. Lawrence, of 
—This operation took place when I was gardener at g-park, came cimen of the extremely rare 
Dyrham Park. “The tree stood in be f a new co Vanda violacea, having 8 spikes of 
as being built; it was 30 years old, 20 lovely, Sg 9g delie to iii waxy flowers; 
al 


feet high, 2 feet in circumference at 1f he so plants of Vanda tricolor a 8 sweet-smelling 
ground, and 48 ft. round the extremities of the 2 Otiorhyneh e, the black and clay-eoloured ves V. — a well managed Saccolabium denticulatum, 
I cut the all round to the e very hottom, 4 feet — — rr A the | 2 variety of thea 3 Leelia (L. autumnalis), 
1 „ in or 2 nified, the tine po ots r showin 2 Cypripedium barbat » Barkeria ria Skinueri, a i 
1 su datoak s as to seeure — life of Inchus — — speciosus. A Bankesian was 
the tree. In — November it had made roots for these, but more especially for Vanda 
6 inches long ; but I am now of opinion that before I have found that the 7 turns to a small brownish — and tricolor, and the 
large are moved the whole of the large roots ought black beetle, v very slow in — motions, and rough on the same garden also furnished three small plants of the 
to be ent two years previous to lifting. The next point back—embossed as it were. I have no doubt I im- | beautiful orange-flowered Aphelandra (A. aurantiaca), 
is to make a puddle for planting; this ought to be so ported it from Londo rst p ere | whieh promises to be a very fine thing —Mr, 
thick that the ball will make way slowly to the | three new ones, fi id two eas ; gr. to E. Druce, Esq., of sent a well eulti- 
guard agai they had — together and died at speci c ium insigne, for whieh a Cex 
effective way of doing this, perhaps, is to join eross pieces C. J. Pres zon. [The inseet is the larva of the Otiorhyn- | tificate of Merit was awarded. It had 27 perfect flowersan. 
w g the stem, and to drive down a post or picipes. Salt, — aloes, it.— From Messrs, son, of Kingston, came three var 
at each end of such pieces, 3 or 4 feet into the solid | quass or gas-tar water applied to the roots, would | rieties of the beautiful Lelia autumnalis, for which a 
earth, nailing their tops firmly to the cross pieces just Saad drive the insects away.] i of Merit was awarded ; also Lycaste Skin- 
Properly done no wind will over-| Destruction of Woodlice and — in Mushroom-|neri, a small plant of the charming Odontoglossum 
the When I was at Castle Toward, in the | houses.—These are two of the mos t formidable enemies | membranaceum, Sophronitis cernua, Oncidium hasta- 
— 1820 — 1821, all round the new castle, to the to the Mushroom-house. The one here was so in- tum, and a specimen of the seldom-seen Vriesia 


speciosa, 
many aeres, was planted with “on os of various | fested with woodlice, that the erop was eaten and bearing a long feather-like spike of crimson floral leaves, 
sorts sorts 30 and 40 years old, from the thickest parts of the | disfigured to such an extent as to render it next to | from among which the flowers spring, and in which all 


woods. They were planted, without — my 40 to 50 | impossible to procure a dish of Mushrooms fit for the beauty of the plant consists. Jadan 
feet apart, Of these, I was told by the er table. I reso very mea likely to | stated that the flower-sp had somewhat ad- 
Kir, Esq., that only a third died. I believe destroy them, but with no go t I tr , Was proved, beth in size 2 
pe tree of any age may — but according 2 salt and ‘water, which I co j — strained keeping the heart of the plant, out of which it isst 

age, corres g eare m into the here they harb : 
previous and after-management of it. James Cuthill, | repeated t ere is now not an | Mr. Summerfield, gr. to J. S. Venn, Esq., of Highbury- 
„ insect to be seen. If the walls of the house are syringed park, produced a plan 


ment af Peach Trees.— ihn eae instruc- | once a month, not a single slug will enter the house. Mr. Henderson, of the Wellington-road Nursery, en- 
tiome on thin abot a admirable, and those whom he | Care must be taken ho owever, in using the liquid, not to | hibited a seedling Heath, ealled Bein 2 
lead would do well to bear them i n mind. E bed, or it will prove fatal | cross between E. Hartnelli and E. hiemalis. It 


to 

. Plan, however, though neither new nor original, to the spawn. W. M. retty, as all Heaths are, but its short shining, mer. 

differs from his in some „and I believe that Phillips's ‘Patent Fire Aunihilator— The questions | . flowers, tipped with white, are ao — 
it is a point in advance. When the trees are received asked by — D. R.,“ in your Paper of the 1st inst, are on those of either of its parents. — Mr. M 

the nursery, and before planting, they are thinned —1 ur gi om the fire anni ecaries’ Garden, Chelsea, sent a dwarf 
pae 6 Sh — * 2 3 hilator is — to life? 2, whether the stream of | th easuring 3 bore one ar 
lanted in the spring | va will last a sufficient revent the fire from | It had 31 stems or branehes, 1 uttiog 
eens dnais in to give the fresh-made and 3, whether a single machine | m ms It raised 


Sane fi ail le -y p 
to at full length, as left in the winter, and as the rvations which are a ed wa 
near as possible to nd a person de = , of Isleworth, produ ayn 
© „extend the four fingers of his band. ment made at the Garden of the Horticultural Society | weighing 3 lbs. 12 of., and a listle known kind, mig 
rom this vertical position each of the shoots receives | with: a No. 2 fire annihilator, afford a satisfactory | Black Prince, weighing 5 lbs. 6§ 3 but it 
ph sea o become established answer, I may state from my own own experience in the use | the sort called Buek’s Seedling, or an ; 
e i t, whi to be | 


Proportion. Should an —— get fas 2 
' on. | any, however, away too fast, tion. To the 2d and 3d I reply, that the vapour from „produced a specimen 
to aah ås pinched off early, in order to allow the others a No. 1 machine lasts nearly three minutes, and that in dite Derby. — It was made of 
— — Tan — e little timely management | from Nos. 2 and 3, four . each. Whether one hard earthenware, and 
this way Í have gen y succeeded in getting all to | machine will be sufficient to ex tinguish a fire in a house, | written, with a li 
y of 


= an u i e, xtent of | whi 

y bearing, as I seldom the fire, and the time it has been burning. You —— stated to —— 

Dins i : A may conquer a body of men in t field break ; but it is rather expensive, 

—— e unaingia — ms, bu, if th — ——— being ‘Ie. 3a each, It will be figured in 

— attention to wateri dry weather im the | have artillery. The number and size of the eke, | Number ofthe Solty Journal- Mes, Do 

Base, Ties aro the prineipies ious as to the nana | required for any house or other description of property | Oxtord-street, exhibited some beautiful 

of ide woor a — ie as ee depends entirely upon the nature and extent of bre roperty 

of its advantage by trying one tree agai req protection. It is recommended in in any | Measuring i : Teignton 
i against another of | ease to trust to one machine ai W. Esq., of Bishop's 

those shortened — een soon find that it is | be in readiness in case of peenar maree ama . it vas stated to 


49—1849. ] 


THE GARDENERS’ 


on a trellis npon = wall of a house, where it bears | of their existence, One of these plants can be said to 
o be regretted that 4 dsom organs neces. 
fruit is — roe eating.—Sir W.J. Hooker, of 3 sary to the idea of its existence.” P. 538. 
00 i a charming w lour drawin Can e well be more conjectural than 
co where the Sikkim Himalayan Rhodod would say, more opposed to — i if ak 
are found, and of the costume ai e natives. In 3 place he says: 
Dr. Lindley produeed a n of counterfeit rough s given us minute ana l observa- 
plate s, some account of which will be found in tions on the Fern stems, b but hre are . — 
re phase = _ of = e TPS 


8 8 
B 
fer) 


goo 
er- lower in the now pretty w 
Abronia umbellata, various Chrysanthemums, and one 
or two other plants, 


ebiew. 
Principles of Sc * 3 or, Botany as an in- 
ductive Science. . J. M. Schleiden. Trans- 
* ted by E. W M. D. 


8 vo. Longmans ; 


' pp- 616. 
; mas book is an elaborate 88 of the botanical 


e author, and an 


he ex- 


a 

reg 12 a cl 
e N as the We author 
ellow labourers in a very difficult t subject with s0 little 


considerati on, 


h of dise 
| meag himself ans! int aye jous ough to f 


of such un- | w 
late eat his 


Ne vertheless, i in speaking 4 > view of thelr tractare, 
of which — ee. not approv 
“ The attempt to —.—— eres stem of — 3 as 
merely co me: ed of leaf-stalks grown 


4 at variance with the law of its development, 


r | and, oot, ol fy so totally devoid of foundation, that 


we do not deem it worth while to contest the point.“ 


9 2 
we, 


hat, K to Prof. Schleiden, the attempt in 
question 2 entirely at variance with the law of de- 
velopment, concerning the history of which law we are 
eee still wholly in the dark! 
The rage for introdueing new maid into science is 
thus 3 attacked :— 
ec The v 


anity of wishing to be referred to is the parent | of 


of most useless raig He a this disease will not come 


to the 

stood to * a antn: ily, wherein a man becomes 

abased lower for we e stands in it: then people 

i bene sem words, without sufficient 
6 


CHRONICLE. 


together is so p 


ue of synonymes is Fare 2 — 
be 


essential conditions of the act,” says phy- 
siologist, “ appear ueleat U, and the 
roduct of a nucleated cell, with the combination of the 
two.” ( 
We have alluded to the ones RE in which much of 
re book ii i volved ; 5 a bad 
pecimen of it it 


4 


which 
we a — the ws A and 


I own is a — 


ures, without injury to 
pparent individuality — — of the 
24, 


may mean we cannot undertake to 2 


Unto tunately, on the other hand, such sentences as 
3 misunderstoo 
hing * be more groundless than the assertion, 


s this my more like a desire to catch t 
med persons, by ionas in the 8 
7 b against n new names, than th 


edles crea 
sive "a but the 
mpani 3 
d Prof. 
roposes u bon 
seed-bud,” which he pn 
tinal substitutes for ovu = ed a new name, as n 
88 sS as oe that he grey 
tood term, there is no seri 
bj ovum in which ev 9 is 
hatched the plant. To call s = bud is not even a 
peer s hypothesis; for it has one of the ee 


1ous eno 


oO 
© 
4 
co 
ad 
— 
2 


which, we must be permitted 1 say, that he is as s far from 
i l 


y and unerring sagaci 
mean 2 5 view botany, especially manne anatomy, 
ought to have suddenly sprung up like reer . 
perfect in all its parts ; he cann tten 
recently de ed have become eapable of ssn 
o minute ana m short 
since chemistry becam 
but a very few years — p g 
was thought of or its observation 
underrate the difficulty that = tate of understandin ing 
the true purport of man rit ig appea ae 
and of escaping from their misinterpreta Kno 
things so well as he does baly at aloes fe 
to understand why — hand sal te eternally rained 
against t his predecessors and con od oubt 


e| wh piah Deta 


ata 1 namel y, the 4. er of further 
—— a property in whi ae 

with prong 3 while it wants the pee 
and espe at property of prken ying the in- 
The Professo arks, 


receptacle e 5 brother delinquents. 
his do m is the vice a the engi as we . 
already = 8 together with h style, 


tion of new P 


nfo 
nkester, with all, his skill ea knowledge of | pares 


—— ated substances from i inorganic ‘matter, But the 
discussion of this possibility has been entirely fruitless.” 


observer may venture to 

difficult to Bg te ; we therefore 

by, and rely _ direct attention to the 8 
statemen mts : 

A fungus, as I eee very seldom consists solely 

of — 5 ells, annot regard the iy . e 

c. (Coniomy se ot 93 ndent | plants.— 

— — 4 2 ee species of plants, as as Pe uc- 

as devoid of individuality and simply 

inconceivable 


want o 


the su bj 
ar tolligible,” raint ot =" the bes 
As e of Fle abt we take the 


1 will here, in i ark that the style is 


that . logie is sometimes bad and rera ie 


often | germen proceedin 


2 course 0 
trary. Just as e does any p 
exist in the Geraniaces (Link, 3 ipid; 3 the — germens 


own pages. Take the 


we 


5 7 Corvo and Flores ae 
ing bout plats 0 , ee r 
ips by the bas ; and 


boi the soil in 


ite ideas l 
e | which the last, which was sp 


ryptogamia, 
Jants, | Phanerogamia,” 


come blended 
| together ; 3 12 fe — organ A —.— among 


em.” P. 3 
irely dissent. No doubt can exist 


the 
admit the 3 of th 
ia ce 


r author po a tudy Geranium, 
3 Sent believe that he | f 
ee e opposite to that | i 


t books in modern 


the | as me as other men 
hese 


the axile come of the style of many y Myrtle- 


„forget nothing and learn nothi 

i to discover what the 2 
ol an learn from Prof. Schleiden. At 
al after bisw we he to ae no more of his un- 
rivalled accuracy o rvation. is clear that he is 


are made wi h great regret that they 
in . — the work of a man for 
ill in observation we have 


ong 

find t th following paragra 
“The al 1 tion of faid matters occurs 

| mostly, ir = aay, in connection with cre ne 


e The formel mau a for d 


Crypt pia cay time failed to find sup 
ryptoga 


port 
and the groups of | 


the class of the Ferns ; 
spiral cells in which the spiral vessels 


ed 

gu mucus) were found near the capsules in in 

some — of Ferns; they were p1 
nd the di 


; are 
uch an assumption would 
renis the 9 2 upon having 
C: sim $n because they 
1 than ourselves 
— — have endea 


No one has more ii. 


| the analogy which many botanists 


objected 4 


table substances rich i in earbon, which are known 
en er — names of garden-soil, mond (hem. 
substances, en 


776 


tropical Orchidaceae. they grow luxuriously in 
our hothouses, and find that only one or ie of 
their roots adhere by their sides to the bits of cork 
on which they grow suspen nded, and 4 * that 
e peeuliar covering of their roots “isting ishes ‘aes 
from all other roots, and that this 


f the, fact in the text see A te 

This subject suggests a beautifu experiments | 
of determini 95 the fey rae tie y 

he root-sheaths of absorbing gases from 


the Ep and introducing the ams to the roots.” 


£ 
€ 
for the purpose 
1 
t 
E 


In another place we have Syo iinet observations 
upon adaptation, which only ma s regret that the 
author should not apply the 5 of his vigorous un- 
tanding to the — atka of a special work on the 


2 The dependence of the liſe of the plant upon the 
life of the earth is in me highest gega, k gine t 
W. n the agen which 


of 
should be undulatory motion 


the water at the time of the 8 of the V. haa S 
an e development of the capsules of 
Ambrosinia Bassi. These phenomena may appear 

accidental, 5 they are 9 8 of the 


are seen e formative pro. 
the earth. The rain oild. not fall at the 


| su 


3 CHRONICLE. 


and prune all the shoots on whieh there is no fruit. 


ppc — It w 


o do away w 


with the 
necessity of seeping the, spits rari Toia any portion 


of these very shor 
TSTS FLOW 
Excessive moisture and sharp Feces. are highly detri- 
mental 0 vocate 


e made some grow 
the spikes ring the 1 they ought then 
to receive protection ; therefore we would advise ae 
ae eur to take his nagar accordingly : at all e 
a light covering after this period will e beneficial, 
whenever the weat theri is "ikel? to be severe. We ould 
5 to have the opinion of our Tulip ar 1 1 Si 


, that when this is the case many change 
985 r eoloun, or peed 1 at the next ty of 
Our ruck Pinks, and we 
. — after an middle of Novem ber. are pe ty 15 
means, doing well. All 3 of 92 kind must 


<> 
m 
i=] 

es 


0 
e much mo 
Nig were ‘planted earlier, * a 


nt 
S 
S 
E 


cae grea’ a hold of the ground. The 
6 5 ‘and seedlings planted An Tate wil 
sid 


e time, and under the exi apes circumstances, | and ES have, during the past 5 
without at the same time causing the internal formative | hibited a potest bar. * to flower than we have r 
energy of the ea bring forth an Ambrosinia; and Collected for year Aber sh Bose adopted, in chiar 
the omg Oe relations wonld at the same time be | that the plants may n t be ned, has been to rub 
so arranged, that on the developed spathe rain should D buds betw r. the finds er oF thumb, taking care not 
fall. The 8 7 of the 7 ee is boat-shaped, and ‘0 injure the stalk ; for experience h when 

È fats upon the water. f the capsule, et this has happened, eee it y radial Kane and 
as it neared the of the plant, great danger has 
aris 


ed app ik A uniting with the spathe, form 
d 


g-form 
a a little cavity, the spathe is divi 
ha: 


Sprengel, on the 
ed in the Structure and Im- 
pregnation of Flowers ; Berlim 17 a Mg ** 

The following sentence 


„the 7 answer 


we belie 
that EF be given to the 8 auey of what is a pe 


species 2 

“ Where we have not long- gic observations, 
embracing thousands of individuals, as in long-cultivate : 
plants, to lay an inductive foundation, i is mere child’ 
play to acs to determine wh 


mos 

may assist in constituting the 

finitions of a more advanced science, E 

of spore must, in individual cases, 
8 4 05 z h 


ithout any 
utes 83 where 
can be no resu 


' is an le g 
-who is familiar with the subjects of which it treats ; but 


-which is, we fear, not to be included among th eelemen- | 


stary works by which 


V i 
caution at this dull season 
tage of every fine day to allow tempera’ 

* 15° mee higher than that at which it is kept artes 
night, bro. 


moisture in the 
a 


n: in some ilia 55 tes eed its Tilini: 
TCHEN GARD EN. 


Before the general manuring and trenching of vacant 


¢| ground, — is necessary to decide on the rotation of crops 
which are to be cultivated upon it during the ensuing 
summ aah t may be ordered with 


h 
only, but for a soo or cycle of 
the first i prineipls to 
be 


o annual crop n for two su e yea 
n the same plot of gro any Another — should 
be mad e by rink — Sth at those crops which i 


tely s rare not such as are liable a 
be prey ios same kind of insects; as thei 
e i ouraged to a fearful. y 
putting into their way the species of food whieh they 
is important that both the ma 
nd the depth of the trenching be nme 


by 
the requirements of crops ; an eir rotation 


mere students can seriously profit, | 


with great sd 
of the year ; ra ‘eke sen 55 


to the e of da daylight. Be careful that | 
g material over th 


or 80° in 
shoul 


the e 
should e so a ered the —— ry ln not —— —— — 
to the sa or two succe 
S| that the d diferent i tence of te of soil yi aac to a 
The 


any Meh of them, the 


ground for very deep rooti ing plants, s 
Carrots, Onions, &e., and in the following year ma; 
devoted to pe. cultivation of the Cabbage 


State of the Weather near London, for the week endin Dec. 6, 1549, 
as observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiswick. 


Bazourrzn. 
Max 


ye 
g 


ry 
admira 8 in preparing t ef 
T 


Duc. 8, 


Nov. — Rain througho 
Dec. fler Forsi — "elon 
— vain thi 
3~—Kain; ; deadly and sete 
4—Hazy. ; cloudy and fine; 


— . i 
— Gor pe clouded; * 1 
— . — radar —— low ‘fox; Tae e 2 clea 
4 deg. below the average: cloudy, 


State of the Weather at Chiswick during ti 
ensuing week week, ending Ber. 15 let Tears, for the 0 i 
Re i 
oe Sa 
wea] See] og | No.of Prevailing 
De. | ESS | EEE] 35 | tion's | Quant [oo 
“me | 236 | E | Rained | of Rain, lx Shs 
n 45.5 35.6 40. 0 i 
Mon. 10 46.7 ] 34.7 | 40. 1 oa 
es ll 6.0 32.4 | 39.2 8 0.62 
ed. 12 440 34.9 } 40, 7 0.26 
Thurs, 13} 46.5 [ 320 } 39.3 0.3 
Friday 14] 45.0 34.9 J 40 11 0.32 
Satur. 1 46.2 | 357 | 40.9 „ 050 
Mei oe Sa 4 
The highest temperature durin, & the. thes abou 
1942—therm, 62 deg.; and the lowest on 13th, L910 el cruel denn 


1 of sea. water. 
3 ent. 
d be given per acre 
o given just when the plants 
: Tyro. Mrs. Jene Physical Geo ” 
Faut TREES: Philo. T Howi i 


e your Panor. 8 to 3 feet deep, - 
Toas. N and e ung. Good 
from eyes are likely to — a than others of a 
Cannot Th 


George, Bellegarde, and N 
and Violette Hâtive Nectarines are proper ‘orf forcing, 
Rivers, Sawbrid ponori, has the noci of the Stanwick Nec. 
peor under his car e. HIP II. bis: ng an orchard of 
ject as 


Bos 
turmer Pippin, Court- aai lat; 5 and fo ibe 
: Alfriston, Bediordshire n PD ow’s Seedling, 
Meal Waltham Abbey Seedling. Marie 
Passe Colmar, Thompson’s, Fe pris ee 8 
m Park, Winter Nelis, Ne Plus Meuris, Ma arch Bergamot, 
Eas ter Sen ré, and Beurré K for baking: the Catillac, 
h : Mayduke, Elton, Downton, Knight’s Ear Barly Black, 
ad ia ence, Ke ntish, and Morello 
gage, Pu urple- gage, Royale Hative, Jeferson, Washington Cos, 
Golden Drop, Ickworth Imperatrice, Shropshire D 
and Early Orleans. 
Ink FoR Zinc LABELS: Ces en Verdigris, in powder, 1 drachm; 
sal ammoniac, ditto, 1 drachm; lamp black, 3 a Se 
and water 10 drac ms 
Insects: OB. The worms which you have sent are the com- 


which ea a it should be pared off an 


stant Reader, Divide the a m 
the vegetables by — 8 2 e—of an or Yew, 
erican Arbor-Vite. If you wall is to bear fruit trees, 
aee — should not be nearer it — an 12 feet, dori 
mere 8 in which gase the 1 
cause the ro wall-trees will go und 


Kir 


: * 
trees grow; th 
The moss does por hurt the tree, but the bad land 

Names oF Froits: W D. 101, 104, Glout e 1, Beurré 
Rance; Blenbeim Pippin; G, Norfolk Storin ng; $, King 


ignonne; 56, reer eee Grise ; 67, 77, Rymer ; 15, s 
u Canada ; 86, Boston Ru 
bbey Pearmain ; 100, Court of Wick; 110, Margil.—T W = 
1, Ne Plus Meuris; 2, Glou Morcesn -Wis 228 
aware that the Dunmore . is kn amay eas 
3 — in the ne urhood o 3 
ants: R 1. D. — there 


— 

is mets oy much like it except D. ochreatum (alias Giat- 

bridgeanum) and Paxtoni; 2, 9 some oae en 
not determinable, but allie ercifolia 

apparently new, ee it be a pede ae 

ke, and can 


lit 
it may 
Diplotaxis — The hingi is je Elaphomyees 


talu m brachypetalum, Achau 


such words — 4 
is short, the accent — — = the > st 


lo : the of. 
fication, that they cdanot be made Oat We admire t 1 
hand — in which you set — 5 — 8 Ferns, but if you A 
have * her ba teh to send us, „ 


80 as we e — "0 thout arp eg 

the 1 f time i ge: e a ior of ae bits 

it takes more time to see what 
the amema a time is to us 

2, Adi: 22 3; 3 rag: 
Ar om 55 5, No hrolepi r . 

Prarie i tre inola, 8, Nephrodium molle ; . or 6 


in 

3 to the er 3 — bt ae 

u will generally find ans 2 

„ unders rstand how a ona which 
can be sa 

he excellent the tle Ga — 1 deseribed i 


It long story—much 9 
We will, however, try ow condense 1e hy ne it most 
iddlesex Man may plan! a or ia in mid-winter. 


3288 ad by 82 bd — 2 
a 
8 *. 


Colonist. 


Vints: A Mi 
mapie except late in autum 
„ The V; 


t sent to ; i 
Maiatae. X. 
provided it it comes“ ad Garden, Kew t reed 4 
rovins hat Rose-water replat ; 
Damask and me take up your Yucca on aint 
u no with safety. f 


: 


WW NA N E O NNE S S 


Plied inl engths best suited to their 
— — 


W ae 


49—1849. ] 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


THE FIRE ANNIHILATOR COMPANY, 
PHILLIPS’S PATENT. 
Mei PHILLIPS’S invention for ex 


se and Ware ga Farmin 

4. Out-buildings T — of E 
ur given o out from the eager is  produceabe at 
onds after any fire has been disco 


over those ca sed by tar, t ne, oil, sugar, and other 
highly inflammable — — which, when in combus- 
water has — : 
— 2 — Ma s fixed for the protection of Mansions 
De eet ng 8 Dos aud — lites 3 
á Price, —— uding Price of each 
of Machine. arge Charg 
gor YY ·⁊· £3. 0 0 5 0 
„ an n O27 5 
a wom. sects 010 0 
om, or DU Bata C20. 60 01%... 2 12 : 
6 0 ig dite 0 14 


Ich, or? 7 
The Machines can be made to order ot any size, at a ER 
portionate rice. 

Applications to be addresséd to the Secretary of - Com- 
pany, 150, Leadenha i ndon. 
oe AAAA : 


Manure sent 


— 
Tiss LONDON MANURE COMPANY beg to offer 


e — . e themselves that every 

e free from the e adulteration. 

5 — t fi Importer’s Warehouses, London 

Manure Coupes" ; Wheat Manure and Urate, Sulphate of Am. 

monia, — nom Ammonia, or Ammoniacal — eaea 

Superphosphate of Lime, Gypsu m, Nitrate of Soda, e Baw: 
dust, and every other Artißelal — 

_Epwanp Por ARD PURSER, Secretary, Bridge-street, Blackfriars. 


pERUVIAN N GUANO.—As Agents of the Peruvian 
right, for the 


character, in whose * E and fair — oe | 


= place implicit confidence NY GIBBS and $ 
sondon, December 
BY HER ROYAL LETTERS | 
MAJESTY’S PATENT, 


te: 

PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS, KING’S ROAD, CHELSE — 
- DENCH invites the attention of Gentlemen about 

to pad Hothouses, &c., to the vast superiority in every 

possessed by, his s PATENT ee which be will 

warrant Raray in every respect to any others, Good Glass 

from 16 to 21 oz. per foot, — a W A g 1 4 Sato le. ea |a 


ciple, the roo: 155 9 without w. or rn Ea and the 
er principle be rafters aa “the glass 7 5 in with 
putty. Patent Sashes, 8 no elit, from 7d, to r ft, 


ATING BY HOT WATER. 
ARSON’S ORIGINAL ANTI-CORROSION 
ised Bri 


* 
8 Paint det — for the preservation o 
of Iron, W Stone, Brick, Com 
the practical test of — 
and wees? at 
— 


1 vour, and which, n in 

society of —— Long have given them, have n n 
d me 5 55 — me hitherto — re the 
Fete tice. ie ts of C d Pric a da oe” pE with acopy ot 


to be sen 


Government for 7. importation and sale of this valuable 
in 0 m 


| fror 1 


fre | Sand Eatin o CLUB ‘PRIZE CATTLE SHOW, 
nowt sang Roots, Implem - 9, 
— — of Wednesday, and closes on 


oa n Tue 

Friday — — of S 

18, r ean — aturday as heretofore, 11th, 12th, 
e eee 


aar, Ki ing- — Portman square 


The Agricultural Gazette. 


777 

The first 3 would ultimately e 
rainage; in t 15 „it Is 

to intersect the lan Ta E een a for a 
year or two before A — s à Ta of the 1 
commenced. The second is generally believed 
be effected by the ap * of lime. Thus ‘ia the 
8 lime will <guecl the 


SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1849. 


MEETINGS gt — TWO FOLLOWING hen 


Tuxspar, Dee —Axricultu 
UBSDAY, 

RDNESDAY, — Meeting and Anunal tag of the Smith- 
THURSDAY, — is field Club, at Baker-etreet, London. 
Farnay, — n 

UESDAY. — i 
Weonespar, — 3 Exhibition of Fat Cattle and Poultry 
Tuvrspar, — at Birmingham. 


generally piri red a 


rmanent 1 1s 
vance gene 


It has generally 


4 rowth of — taben within the pipe, 
Chronicle has already r alluded to ia the Gardene ners? 


the drain by the loosened earth in 
—to carelessly laying the pipes, so that any sediment 
that is possible accumulates in those which are below 
the 3 eve 
Chem 


A corre- 

spondent from Tav ows : 
“ The enclosed 0 which I send for your 
PRET was taken from some tile Ags which 
in February las e soil is a peat, 
9 ee, 6 feet to 4 feet in depth, ie upon 
sharp gravel, into which gravel the tiles were laid, 
1 to 3 feet—as deep as the outfall could be 
had. We find the substance not deposited at the 
3 of the tiles, but ert acs round es oe 

the tile, i ze ra places to almost the 
clusi sion of a e for 
has all along ela a large quantity. 
e main drain, and fs the 
cting to aoe mint 
er. 


1 e 
d, and now feel quite 


wed thing wo Could 
cation © on D to how to 


ing w 
any 
should feel deeply obliged. J. P.” 


the 2 trench | whatever the 


w 
ical Processes in the drain water itself. 


the topi 
the watir, of which ‘there mu 


water 2100 —— 


t su 
act without iifting 4 . when doubtless the 
vou fur ee usj t 


no longer n 

webe in the soil too * jo doubt, one effect of | lime is to 
ays te the ir y 4 

ao the iarrta ofi iron, thus detached, in an un- 

rb 


combined state long enough to permit `t t 
| the oxygen of the air, and lose its ye ym. to dissolve 
in rain a and thus to enter the d ipes 
block them up with ferraginous Gaeue Our cor- 
te gees wi vil, no — have to take up and rela 
tiles 1 dral drains; and we advise him, in mr À 
ition to this the application of a 
dressing of lime to Fa land. i oe 
the editor of a 


Let us 
a para- 


receives * 
endeavou 


ome journa 
| pe is published ‘i their 22 dining 


| ae for poe e wy opin 
| respondents ; but that 5 is 
reall 


ped brags e a this wae If a man be 
— e fo pr irae mage or creditable for good 
is e wi rdingly, 
e daioi 5 f the disclaimer he may 


e is ainly n not res onsible for the a of 
argument they ibit—no will give him 
the credit of mar accurate and skilful reasoning— 


re one will lay 
velope. Iti — the presence or absence of inte 
lect which they display that will at all connect 
hem with himeelf. He is no doubt answerable 
thus far, even in this t of 
cs discussed in these 
nications must be 


esion of the deposited particle: 


mee 0 7 maa 


PATENT. 


A nee aie 


8 pi 
F. ™ MNEILE. AND Cosot Lamb ’s-buildings, Bunhill- 
and 


Masgsty’s Woops AND FORESTS, 
Howovkasts BOARD OF ORDNANCE, 
HONOURABLE East INDIA Company, ' 


euch (at 
2e of the Sr the Nobility and Gentry, 
E, Hanover- 


other description of Roofing, and 
Sa a aai on of Roofs. 
e. 


— S pod 7 — 


no more than 
. of Roofs, or 
particular application of the 


ROYAL LETTERS | 


deoxi eoxidising agent, will not 


into the 


-| by our 8 
remedy for this mischief, or rather the method | v 
videntl: 


© 


t downwards by 


a fr 
ipe: but, if, as we believe to have 


t, is to posse 
konsi the e matter, being 80 
e permit it to 


The a 
inner surface of the pipe, instead of their sabdane | | 
to case 


dun nS hawt 15 
perad 


1 is the 


oxide, rom it is a 


with which rain is charged ; and the 
iron thus f. —_ being soluble in water, is Peart | 
soon 


water holding it in solu- 


while to read 
and the iit of the me Lane 


— fairly express the opinio: 
writings an and of his courtesy. 
eve 


aninion 


5 eens 
e solid form, E . pe Bee the inner 
— f th + and accordingly the 

wend is evidently, for the moat part, 
2 


of preventing it; must e 
either for removin . ial 


soil, or for converting it i aa pari where it is.| 


vy 14410 as Ourse 


bee e 

LANDLORD AND TENANT. ae 
To Mr. Mecnt.—Among+t the many gentlemen who > 
now publie at the vari ienl- 


778 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


Duc. 
made | look on the wreck of — labourer's — — 
0 


cause your speeches and arguments have been g ng 

bear . the general business of farming, and | for better times, all exertions of the tenantry are reduction of taxes is not in * ape: 

that you have avoided riding your particular hobby with useless. E. Compton, Water Newton. no special 1 
ion as the thin seeding, anti box-feeding, — == pointed out. 

and other new-scheme advocates have done, But there FARMERS’ PRUSPECTS. This is to take a wrong view of the worki 
; at fault i mode of making y tat ts;| Mar I offer for your consideration, and for insertion | ation. Supposing taxes reduced one-third the 
you urge farmers to copy you, and assure them of in your Paper, a few remarks on “ the condition of our individually will have to pay one-third less, and 
success, but you never properly define which t of country,” as affected by the two opposite principles of | to deal with a surgeon, a lawyer, a m 
the improvements done by you come under the head of | protection and free policy. Permit me to add that if in |a vaddler, a blacksmith, a wheelwrigh 


with apathy, only hopi 


215 


a 
E 


i 


ili 


landlord's and which of tenant’s improvements, and the main the following views are correct, the Duke of r persons, all of whom enjoy the A 
have hitherto advanced what you rea done in both Richmond and Sir Robert Peel might easily harmonise | as himself, ho receives from —— — 
ities as a proper proceeding for tenants, forgetting the faetions, and ultimately establish our national in- all their dealings with himself, and in return enn * 
that bad yon taken Tiptree Hall Farm as a yearly | terests on a sound and therefore lasting basis. ja -third cheaper to them, 1 well 
tenant, that you would never have expended the capital I would commence with the position that a kingdom, | add the clergy and labourer to the above list, save 
you have done without some better guarantee for the | however constituted, considered apart from labour, is of the church does accommodate herself to — ’ 
safety of your [outlay than the great majority of the no practical worth. Let labour enter, and any given and, for the labourer, I coul 
of the day have, In a speech made by | produce be obtained, and at once we have an available | from all reduction whatever : ` 
you the other day, you stated that many farmers were value. Constituted, however, as society comes to be, In conclusion, such I believe to be the correct ex- 
struck with the expensive appearance of your farm | we find in it other elements than those merely physical 1 position of our present state, such the on) complete 
i but that when you stated the various advan- | we have, in full, labour uninformed, skill equivalent to remedy for our present alarming depression, tt 


{ 


K 
25 
He 
EH 


deri th lways agreed that you were occupation, a proprietary, and, lastly, special institu- | all may yet be well, It matters nothing 
tages you derived, ao y n The 2 which — 4 sar be sup- whether Wheat is at 7s. 6d. 


our ou pay- | tions. J or 
Mr. Mechi, but you are the landlord, and it ported is the first thing to be determined by society, are in true proportion ; but if he 
a ia 


y i 
is a great advan to find a man, as you state the means of support for all baing drawn from the first, | obligations are left at 7s. 6d., if his receipts are 
— mage Penner tse En of book-keeping, is, i Now, the produce of labour for | of 1750 and his those of 1830, man ee 
asa any given term is ily de unable both as to sooner or later come upon him, and the English labourer 
lieving, who can come forward and tell the landlords of | quantity and value. Take Wheat, the great necessary zink into de wil 
this country who are quite as much behind in their | of Hife, at what may be called a natural value, 5s. per | he suffer, fiscal difficulty beset the 
generation as their tenants, how at the present critical | bushel, and wages, occupation returns, and taxes | and all end ia national bankruptcy. I chall subscribe 
state of farming business they can materially assist their can evidently be calculated upon some assumed (though, ‘© the earnest hopo that our rulers may seek while 
tenants. It was stated at the same meeting that your of course, just) proportion; and all parties will be there is time—and the time for adjustment is the mo- 
success had been quoted by landlords when their tenants | respectively equally well off. If taxes, however, from | ment of transition—seek to avert so serious a catas 
comp ble to make both ends meet. | whatever cause —— or official extravagance), trophe, and with a happy concert of all parties esta- 
Do 2 f our succes Wai 2 3 + third, z te ly everything blish our national a sound and therefore 
Fc Aint a guasgi abara j | vpad eg unless the result of labour shall rise basis. J. B,J. N. 
you, come from pur- y- This may be effected in two ways, —— 
chase hard working, ill-conditioned and | production or inereased Ado the latter QUALIFICATION OF LAND AGENTS. 
that gain an we gery outlay. | ve laws are establ which have Is I to the advan. 
And now, whilst we di of business | for their object to give an artificial value to the bushel to be derived by lando fit persons 
which does belong toa to do, pray use your in- of Wheat, and this meets at once the in- | for their agents ; and T see no reason why parties seek- 
fluence and eloquence in endea to induce land- tax. If such tax be submitted to, the consumer | ing this occupation not be as 
lords to build their tenants some of those excellent | pays the origi and its increase on all he con- |as for that of any other business or profession, as 
buildings where you make — e an at sumes ; if rejected, unquestionably the grower pays all it has hitherto been one selected at 
&e., into manure without the of having it exposed | the increase. Ts be evident, — ae E tab oe random is able satiaf; to these duties, 
to all weathers, and a per centage of the best to be high, the value of labour must be high also ; and |i ces the natural that 
parts of the manure away ; to give drain tiles | as we cannot king writing turn o y bo understood at a glanes, and with- 
where wanted, to allow tenants to clear hedgerows of into 6 quarters (at „ not time enough out talent or education, When it is known that a large 
superfluous timber, particularly Ash ; to remove from | emergency), we must of necessity the price of the | t a ta tota 
D quarter from 40s, to 60, and in strict tate of the first rules of grammar and orthography, this 
Clauses binding tenants to systems of | is in while dealing at home. If in i iablo ; and who then can be 
farming; to regulate with more justice to the course of trade, however, the English merchant ence ts 
deenpier of the land the quantity of game kept himself—and he soon does find himself—unable the soll! Ifthe rudiments of Jearning are 
thereon, which js not only a nuisance for the in- pete with the lighter taxed foreigner, he must not con. | absent from the and directors of 
aury it does the cropping, but more particularly for | demn the dear rate of Wheat in England, but the dear | cerns, they will remain in perfect 
the temptation it hol oat dee MBean te peal, Gt rate of taxes which makes the dear Wheat ;| modern improvements, and are not 
expense of whose prosecutions, and the maintenance of | and if he wants cheap Wheat, let him get it by making | arguments, howerer correct, 
whose families in the union, the farmer must pay; but | taxes and this he can do by official ex- advocate, and change only reaches 
above all induce them to relax that kind of copyhold | penditure from 7+. 6d. tothe Ss. rate. 1 he only lowers | tenantry seeing a person of this class 
B ean. wader which wo. di sulle, | ihe Wigh Wheat tt, hars the farmer (bie friend, | great trast, aud controlling letya bn. 
and which, of all things, prevents tenants doing what | D, to pay the difference between Sy. and 7s. 6d. | conviction, that as ed in mw 
they would wish to do, simply beeause at some future | in taxes, and this will ruin the farmer. directing agricultural operations in its 
day, seldom far off, he must pay his landiord, in the As respects the first mode of meeting a rise of taxes must, therefore, be of much less use ia 
of advanced reat, for his outlay to | —increased preduction—such does, without doubt, take | into effect. 
he is entitled, or leave his farm. place, tenga alewiy, be all countries and at all times;| This feeling is imparted 
Could I see your farming accounts, I feel sure I but I waive the consideration thereof in this conncetion, | labourer, aod hence ee ae 
should find two statements of outlay—the buildings because, speaking generally, I believe one part of sach among t ia 
and many other improvements placed with the original | increase to be the legitimate reward of labour, skill, think their agents sufficient, with so few ef lber 
cost of the farm, and the rent you value farm at | and landlord, and the remainder to be (if I may say so), | this particular, the farmers romain satisfied travels 
paset as interest far the outlay ¿ and i, aa you state, the providential provision for that steady growth of popu. | own ; no wonder then that knowledge 
is satisfactory to you as a Surely the anme | lation which we all see and ecknowledge. | Increased | slowly when with these weighty impeller 
system would answer in other places. Wi game . ht not, except to a very small extent, to Let baving set better 
have, Lam cure, too mach senso to be annoyed with ; a 128 tiom. wa the at all events that some will, without 
covenant you have none, exeepting that ome whieh | not enhancement in of any fixed sam favourable 
ee man sosabree an. who intends to sucssed, vis., to | consequent apon a deslino the valuo of labour, Let | doubt, follow 1 am, not pleading for colors 
his land to the best advantage for himself and | the sum be 50 millions a-year; this sum at a price | or high classical attainments ; pts A geno 
landlord ; knowing, as every farmer does, that both per bushel (7s. 6d. say) requires the sale of a certain | these situations should 2 — meS 
es omy’ 
= „ , 
prove to them how to exactly | i epas 
all it would be if they would eme forward | the amount the tax payer r with practice. Numerous agents think i e 
do their part in carrying out such ofthe above | be can 75 of ace ; with a tax of read any periodical work on agrienitare, ed land- 
r 30 the is called upon to sell 75 instead of the veniare t Stade det three Sour. thee eia 
i are many reasons the only persons 50 whieh be had to sell previously. ordinary eg- | agenta never see Journal Royal 1 
enn be oxy te de them. When ence the ne- | ertion or 9 Society of England. If this be so, how can 
outlay is made, they or their deseeadants have a A the means of extraordinary effort remarks ie 
the of the inerease of rent, and do not, like the have away, 9 far as the tenant is concerned, oe 
farmer, lose the outlay and still have to pay an increase | with prices, Nor must the want of capital be 
marant for the improvement, becanse he has inereased the charged upon the farmer; he had enough, but is sad- | 
market value of his occupation ; and if he does not denly placed in a sitaation for which that eapital must 
to pay the extra rent, some ether person will. | prove unequal. n 
„men now begin seriously to look out to their tS et ee valne of produce, 
own interest, and not to depend on the security of any consequence, in such circumstances, an equitable | 
— made on the aspect of things present. The adjustment should be inatitnted. 232 
———— — - shouid be bushels of Wheat at 7s 
—— value of men’s property; and those who are per bushel, and that number of bushels converted back 
fortunate enough to have saved ready money by | a to money, bushel at 5s, and then 
r parties fare ali farmer receives less, but 
the improvement of their land pro- | them pays less; and in like manner the landlord and 
we aze to land the way 5 any prape ice te | ne nothing more thn the princi 
: $ a 8 
owners of the land ha tsenenved Gute Satenett tate, | of ive Othe e Oa ad a aaa a oe 
i free trade party, just principle, and if applicable to any, equally applie- 
i I amount | able to all, The ver cannot more easily acc 
whieh the present high date himaif to the cheapness of the times, than ean the 
poor-rates can never | landierd ; nor is there or Be apea in subjecting the 
co-operation fandhoider to the same as the and for the 
the owners of the land | civil list and official salary, these may imitate the 


49—1849. L 


THE AGRICULTURAL TAL ae 


sentative, then he resorts for occas 

valuer in the n eighbourhood ; but the 

is often unsought ne difioulties have overcom 
ts. 


— proved by a proprietor who h as before | € 
referring to Pris law bills, or . extraor- 
with the accounts 


stew: 
in all respects . to their duties. The legal — 
who fam 


a possessed the family confidence i 


for years, by no means looks on the existing state 
— —— — — psn. : but, on er 33 
— 4 sted continuance. 
— “the — 
remedy; notwithstanding, should any 


best mode of —— the 3 and upon the fitness 


improbable of all 3 to a 


e commencement harvest. Isit 
superabundan; erop this year? No, we 7 
ove than seve s used b 


of |6 
their past and present proceedings, and I have also | 
ronas to ward off the effect of teir suicidal acts, 
re disabusing the public weg with re 
tended 5 price which th 
s | afford to sell fı 
Cobbet e my of stating, for the 
Pace ” that 
this season grown 
13 was perfectly ripened by the middleof September. 
as sown the 5th day o 
a stiff soil, and the 


adhering to the old. ‘plan, = and, in his views, the more 
illiterate the man the 
time, that whoever it 


on, and the place obtained pr te influence, 
— implying that, eee er nt m, there can 

This position of affairs — fairly esta- 

motion, the 


THE FORTESCUE ' TENANTRY. 
Tur 1 letter has been addressed 
Fortescue, to his try: 


— that the state of —— 
1 
my rent le, resent low 
— the — — e held by many p per- 
prospects, 


sons respecting our secre 
ver for — — of the — 
th 


by Earl 


afford remu- 

neration for 1 ii toil and his eapital, T — that 

the capable of doing 
t I am sati 


by all to whose cases 


3 — 

ome 2 — 1 

— 2 ae > quantity of a old 
that was nearly | 


If | F 
time — are calved 


is- | fat, u this piece, “aa very 
11 2 — A 2 


l urnips 
fully acquainted 
His (Mr. Bond 


| the animal system. 
and of 


. e 
believe, the most reamp far 
e 2 wet hase at 
growt 4 pm 2 

whie ts growth by cold. By continued 
feeding with a little cake and Turnip in winter and 
ey were 22, 24, and 26 months 

iece ; 


as Sadler. 
Sheep p Turn iin for your perusal 


it | ( 
extract from the speec 
th 


a good thing, . * 
l — an — zs to that rule. 

a piece of poo: Bann for — 
not use ch artificial 


I have 
e Cobbett’ s Corn, 
has 


J. applies that whi p 


generally stin 
badiy —— when pre are young ; it: is is just like any erop | eu 


rnips. 
fearing it may escape your editorial 2 5 es following 
of the Rev. d, delivered | to 


wy he had ciated 
he cow 


in particular, for the last 3 or 4 


and in some cases 0 to b 
The fact is, the plant will take — * 
it really re ; and if more is supplied, i 

it behind in We do — think it — se 
. manure could have > been taken into the 


ach, b 
to the land being edu, for shee a from byme 
wet natura uperad oe Pw. s 


of a tenant. ualifieations ata te for a 
are intelligence, enterprise, 1 
to ex great su 


is no question this may be greatly 
meem. by education and study. It is this whi 
‘or | leads ion of different systems, and 


pr Ae — of the soil. 
erent, and the wan 
backward 


mind 
With us 


at comman 
It is 


2 
E 


properiy to enquire, when 
farm, Horry ba sep he possessed, 
him proportionate to “the means 


2 


in never answer. It must be equally 
ous to the landlord, tenant, and labourer. Ifa 
tem re- 


He se ae at the time this 


easy rcumstances, 
* — Aee le them to come up well with 
ir rents at the dime they are due, but hold oaran in- 
ducement to them to exert themselves in increasing the 
value of his To the labourer, high farming must 


might have ing to the land beieg damp, or 

something “a but t aid not at that time attribute his 

vl a, at During the hard frost in ‘the 

ber, the 4 — — very —— Tarai 

he turned the whole of h upon this 

ground; when — — bl fed during the first igion a. 
came to him, and told 


Turnips 
| he (Mr. Bond) aia — nen the sheep away immediatly, 
of them alive. T 


he would not remove 


em were al 
immediately removed, aud it was a fortnight before they | 
as | recovered their health. is fact 


He commun 
a neighbour, and offered to let him turn his —2 oe 
he please, making him at the same time | 
with what — is own. 
Bond’s) red we 
nen e did 
Bond) 8 had ten, with a sort of brown purge. 


hands, bu t those. as are 2 are generally | better- 
attended to. As the whole land — be under arable 
prance rs 3 of labour 

e — it would be if it 


roots? 
is is an in 


great j interes 
e are of opinion that 
quality of the manure a 
who have been in the habit of 


with no such bad results 


we 
employing the manures in question in of ae the 
same proportions, one party | w 


; — is — | uncertain, 


d, | at 
f | wet, the plou 


disease in question, and ‘or these reasons; s 
arties 


state the la only be come upon with t 
crn tne 23 if it t be thoroughly saturated w 
ore harm than good. 
3 E Pir 5 y e as far as ay or neg 
v a re 


‘of and it is bee b 2 the dr. , 
soe ot weh horoughly — ed. The fallow a 
ed 


cmp If a sober drought 3 the elods 
and e that nothing less 
can b m 


tinued wet prevails, thë e groun 2 IE anin a 
water that the seed time is deferred until the winter, and 


> 


These require a stron 
where il is not minutely pulve: 
hen the 


4 its ‘ine will be nen 2 its lying in that 
— its oe being checked, 
tarved 


state, an 


the waste of man 
is so 


conclusion, that a system of — 


may answer well, Lege i 


088 ; the covering is removed. The 


| ble dista distances : in ag „ no action 


gregated bod n be | 
exerted by pen of the 2 of — power of — 


composition is inversely as the attrac- 

—— ies are mi 
laced at insensible 
i soil and 


It ma 


been now 


p surface will form 

a most favourable bed to the young germinations, an 
er extension may be made by trying if the occasion 

ted coverings of the land would not dispense 

res altoget bee The substitute would be the 

ecomposition that would be effected during 

each time that the e was covered. Such a finale may 

ceed. 


carried on without science, or without those improve- pea 


ments w ern discoveries have in 
not briog to the landlord su a is posses- 
sion, capable of better things, phe to do ; ; it is equally | h 
clear that the tenant can profits, 


with any money in them, 
as — of his land in Grass. Ploughed land 

the yng sy t described, will never do him any 

21 as once said of Ireland by Sir Joseph 

York, t roy 1 P. were AN at the bottom of the sea 

g us a Service, 80 same thing with his 

boot ad out por i — doing him — greatest kind- 

ness that could befall him. Self int therefore, as 


c. Law, org 


p 


are o the a sop phere ation, t te wate or 
condition in which 
in which the combinati 
land consists in de — and 1 
of organ t have 
surface of * 


lived and died on the 


ma 
r 


im- from a m 


and on th mode | f 
tion is promoted: The ‘ertility of 
* k- — remains fall in ** 


ground, on being exposed to 
produces a a wonderful fer ertility. As a proof, 
y an y aren 
vps sadentable, it remains to 
ground instead of plovghing gA = so thickly | b 
to kill every vegetation. This be done by 
of thick mats of or ae an 
with coarse wool; and on remain from 


mix 


seuffling done longitudinal 
or, as caren Whi likes ity — hold of toug 


— be plou w: and | scien 
be feted bye by by experience: The Turnip soils will be 
to the season of sowi seeds | P 


reason of the land not 


ted 
EA es, a = damp and cool nature 


urned 

is sown on the soil 
n i me This 

niab or the e tins 

kill weeds far more * ually tha any pro- 
will bring the soil an 


condition of minute | 


on clay k 
ber of one year to the same month of the next 58 


d. . 
empl undreds 2 


rtain. | for 


pen neglected, and 
=, quent upon the want 


Capabilities of ye ne Labour.—In a previous 
ee r of the * Gasete a writer who signs 

mself G.,“ ra very roundly for not making 
— of their — He states that the pr 


y be 
isad- | doubled, and repeats all that sort of thing which is now 
hos 


so common in the mouths of those who do not live by 


their farms 


labourer hires the e kind of land at 60s. and suc- 
In solving this 4 — he makes an egregious 
be gays the labourer 1 ood r 


Now this is true and it is 


Fg 


false ; the time which the labourer — in his ae i 
t ment, w would other 


wise be spent at the ale-house, or in 
muddling his time away, and —— any — 
Will „G.“ assert 


spends in his allotment, that his produce will allow him, 
or this time, as much money as he would have received 
aster for the same time! And if 44 does find 
— positive inquiry, or kesping a register for 12 months, 
that the labourer's time in his allotment — as well 
as working ſor his master, there is — another con- 
sideration that turns the e in ur of the 
e labourer in his DADAR & is 


— 


o- | himself, and that simple circumstance will make the 


more deeply and m 


is procedure is = correctl 
s, when the manufacturer at 


p e 


8 
n, by paying him according to his quantity of 


} operatio 
* would not only benefit the farmer, but mmo, the 


urer more contente Every o ver 
looked after workmen, knows that there are a n — 5 
will do half as much more work than another set, a 
is it right that 
his ene r the . or lasiness 
of pale farm 


the farmer to employ as many labourers as possible ; 


and on the * hand we have heard farmers say that eac 


7 — not employ the laboure 
Now 


uires 7 tter 
way of 2 me we for 82 done; the farmer gets infinitely 
less la mone n the manufacturer, and | si 
with as much 


r Neighbours. my persons who 
Ler women, and children, take 
an inte in thei are by establishing places of 
worship, schools, and ne g clubs, exclusively 
their benefit? or do they 33 
a them urther 
nferred on each other 
dent i n the eommo 
that it proves the fact that one cannot exist without the 
other. They should, therefore, acknowledge a mutual 
prove their sincerity of feeling by an 
The master should recollect that 


® 


E porti 
bours, for the education of 
the young, A 8 — se teaching all his people 
lessons ence and morality, dales statistics of 
“et Tox oh the lowe 
the profligacy and 
proper 


superintendence 


THE AG RICULTU — GAZETTE. 


t of 40 or 50 males an 


ted the mind is filled with horro 


— to 


nda | tary law, which facilitates the duties 


ng. | of attending ames twice 
a A close 


that 8 


working for on t 


nd —— 
the good 1 3 man should have all 


* 


es 
without the N of produeing 


mai 


riji 


2 * 


Ẹ 


7 
a 


females, a 
15 and 16 years, sleeping together in oot 


1 
i 


cious habits prevailing in a . 
To deny this State of things is impossible « te 
80. 2 * 


i 
Hi 


i 


are no 


1 
tf 
1150 


SES 
p 
K. 
gs 
a 
R 
8 
3 
d 
E 


upon certai 
he 7 with daily bread ; this is 
ard to the observance of the hours duals Nr > 
sa - by buiding 
ical rewards to the well-conducted, and 
ing a few annuities to the most sober and 
to certain number 
servitude, 
any 4 


nal inspection È 


establishment, vy the 


be most solemn, A 
oan misery of their 
gainst them. With what apathy too 
the distress of their 


Pi 
ili: 


i 


of mamm 


i 
hi 


: 


ii 


ji 


i 


i 


8 
8 
ih E 


3 


credit of — bonae ; ; worldly motives 
others—it is the fashion—indi 

pion yyy — ates i system. 
the time which children are allowed 


5 
TH 


to 


8 
E 
5 


wealth and luxury is appalling—pain and 
e, without A the 


0 
Every ony should be 1 to eg en 
2 pree 


accustomed to earn their 
and wickedness s stalking 1 "the 
shadow withou Falcon. 
The Val we of Ten IN ips. 
the neighbourhood of Colehester for good 
urnips and on 


ji 


ton for Solin. ua 
sheep . in this 
to 1000 2 


con ——— Mr. 1 
(without any other 


weight of m utton. J. 
ov, 28 


Lin | 11 
f 
l l AH 11 Bue F 
nen 0 init i a 
ee ya T 
27 HENTI 12152 af THE 
un iik 7 pane lft ia 
$ ž 8 F 
11 ala le 14 . He HH ee f 10 0 1 1 ii 
„ HY Male, at 1 0 il ON ipl 1 
Te, ul ie 11 . niit in 111 piatli H 
joii | | e ft | e 1 e 
. 55 8 iO ni HEHH a | fe 
| 15 qed 1 id X aii es 1 a lit | ~ 110 | al | 14 125 e H 
Hy : 1175 us 11 11715 if 47427 H i E 5 rh e l . f 
alpi tee 1 15 fi ii df ji biu fi Hit 0 i i 155 
e i 1 % ig Hah ait hilt e ip 
f iii 1 e 1 Ne l Hii ii halin 1 110 
al HER 1111 —B— l Hy NETET i hk; we 11352 
z|: THIR Hri ile ninii ni BHRT HE an; alll | i tHE ii diy 
ai 1 IHE 1 e HE 12115 Hi hi 1112775 int 1 0 +} HHE 1 f ini 11151 
3| ee 115 niki K r K. ii Rane 1175 Hip 1112 l : 1192 e ij ut 
zl: k 124757111 l 11 1 i nt» 1 ii Ait 
0 W RAN. TERIN 1 117 ne 
< 11 5 aH di AHE FR HIH 21225 11 11427 1 
E i H 1044 meat i aaa l iit 
ilii SHE 1. TER i 
"| ada i fie He 0 uu 1 . Akt 
i 1 e a i jili ee Ulki 
F hy za j HE alti | 
1 I 
CY 22 Fr p 
ii ERTE 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


ur sheep, but allow them to jute themselves over 
e ground, we only allow 45 or 50 ewes to each ram. With 4 3 EC. 8. pplied, 
more than this number, barren ewes are apt to be too numerous Hothouse entiful particularly from — 
W 1 b ple — the se: sellin h the Ci 
e to put a ram same ewes more than Pine-apples are 3 zent for — demand. ason. g heavily, with the ex Ontinent, all of — 
one season, experience showing tha at the the irste cross takes Walnuts are abundant, Qhestnuts Filberts and ge nts, which are in een aft of choice ich are 
pag he sire, a DURA wet 2 pag sag Len abundant. Good ta — a 2 „Oranges and quotations 2 Ter te ents, 805 The following fie re 
supposed to have been well — rand 2 gm at * | Vegetables, Turnips are good and ple r —— N * Scotch, 608 to 5 to 110s, per ton; Mit dap 
some properties superior to the ewes, it Cauliflowers and Broccoli are s — Carrots the same. rench whites, 60s. G 708. e o tch Mn each, 
—— poms retard d the general in —— of rey h: — —7 T o. | tatoes, have, n altered since Our pg ag ae N do., 4 to 55a, Cr Belgian dn, mths 
80 e voided, even and other salading are plenti .  settuces 0, 50s, 4 
Sru the ‘shepherd a wr a ng a sheep to those ee s whic gue 15 > Sd. per pote Cut well — — Fanz > M — LANE, ce 
44— nias, Bi nonia venusta, T 1 ONDAY, Dec, 3.— The 
nets ges en 8 are consi — — the | themums, Fuchsias, Pr: ropwolums, Chrysan- | carria : pply of of Engli 3 
Bose of a, thros ot four shear, siderably mare vigorous than nin Camels Cineraian and oses, | man Hew ee les, the mornin ad ler ta a 
our nu: the form 0 is da 5. 
a sheep will never r bo iaid 0 = — am 1 — — ben Ib., 43 to 68 Oranges, — 100, Ui 4 128 limited aad — —— ny boeken ‘hon the 
— agh Such of the cast ewes as were unfit to be sold fo — Portug + 2 W. Ss to 9 | Almonds, p er pec decline of 1s, to 2s. 1 aracter, and {a the A a of the mast 
breeding are getting Tarnips, "tad spout half a-pound Oats Pears — do a E sweet, Ess . 5 tote an “malting B e mase Do a aitta ected 
daily, F Ragai gren arai p por Gon, $0 to i so a, Wm p.100, 1s 8d to 2s foreign 2s., and grinding anaha 1 e le, bac to Best 
quicky as pos 38 pos sible. ‘During a ere weather, Dein allowanoe — N — sieo te ri p. bush., 16s to 246 are unaltered in value,- White Pe Is, Per qr, Pky 1 
8 = —. creased. Our h Nu D r have Lemons, 7 1 doz., 1s to 2s berts, ~ pt 100 9 Seah to oe — per quarter sale at Friday s quotations hae : 
aged in carting st ones for stalls. i — being t 
for shelter during snow, should be c — . 7 Oran per 100, 00 to 138 2 a azil, p X Ten. 25 to FR ; a decime of 
di A ut 12 yards ges, — don, 9d to Is 6d ies . The arriv. 64, to 
in diameter, but if for black Leng — those built with three | Kent Cobs, . to 65s p. 100 Ibs. Grain of alt kin nds contin — i Barley 
en nEs t tant legs are ave perhaps the best, affording convenient * —— thinly attended, and Mon ue large. ; and foreign 
shelter from every point. The walls of both kinds ought to be Cabbages, p. doz., —— Onions D hel, tained for any — — ay’s prices wore ui irket was 
33 mtn ge, e i da he At aa le 
so ere this, ha f coli, p. dos. — ay s rough — 
z it well turnee up, plough — 5 2 — por doz., 85 — r | sh — 7 — * d'to sa Barley of "ail — . also — ana 
d rendering it al sels Sprouts, pi hf, sieve, | A reduced terms. op 
fi tisa paris nately which re thro against te | sora 25 were atoa C770 
mits, we will cover the „ * O ic ports, and ga : 
Turnips, to protect them rent toe frost, by throwing a —— Potatoe 8, per ton fray * 100s Paniom Bara ian by = subsequent thaw, padidi me. o to the trade genomo t te 
furrow over each drill, During == — oat å mr pro . 33 ni e, Is to 1s 6d admit of many vessel gto the Pow „but the 
occupy some time. A Lammermui e Troi per b 1 toes, p. hf. sieve, 3s to 4s are dull, and — re peron 1 The Bele and 
Turni 8, p. — oe eg dtos6d * pest: 41 8d | appears to be heavy unaltered. hn Pr France the 1 tte 
— — 1 4 * 4 are barely maintain d. 
Arts W 8 to 8 — p. bål., 28 t048 — — cd ad shee 34 = LIVERPOOL, Turspar, Dec. 4 
— * —. 
it to be rich in mineral — — of 3 — per | — — — buneh, 24 % 4 demand. Wheat dance of of dealers, be 58 
i 5 m „ unch * 
pos sence slowly, and therefore is of re little — . bundle, 8d to 1s Pars! — —— neglected, and — oo prices, but oth ae eal 
— ee decay of it might be hastened by using — es, p. 12 bunches, 1s to 28s — Roots —— rather less money. 1 nee in 
mene 2 rapid z dees, ring sal ance, —— — 40 rer per doz. bunches, Marjoram, per bunch, = ste pit TE —Indian Corn sold 3 an po Pi al 
W 
8 * has, would ever useful | Carrots, per bun. , 4d to 6d — por bunok; 28 — bushel 2 bare of ine 0 but other 
DELAYED PUBLICATION : Piti A and 1 will have seen that — santo ee and we make n 2 N n 
Farm BOILDINGS AND 1 — 27 
— of of Lande * — oh 2 BT i. See Low on the 1 Load wh A pee —— Wheat, BARLEY.) Oars. En bs 
The solid cakes Prime — s 7 Oct. 2 
roof the mized meals alone, without — mot | erior it. 5 5 Ee en- Nov, d.. f f a Theis o a 
The ant Mr. es the ground — — — — aes 50 60 Straw ae sal S —— erve — 3 28 8 — 4 oF 
food means of it the less nutritic 8 J. 2 —— 28 3 16 11 23 
pelatable portions of farm. produce m utritious and less —— 40 4 28 3 7 
ay be rënd Dec. I. 17 0 4 0 
and palatable by vas — ered * Meadow AND MARKET, Dee. 6. I —— 40 2 28 1 16 4 24 T J 
Hiquor 9 mes s ts. The Linseed | Inferior ditto... Hay 63st „ — 2 s.. G0sto 75s | Aggreg. Aver. | 40 0 28 
useful than the meal unbolled. Tt soaks into the chaff 's aa octecsae e „ | reign Grain 0 5 7 . 
e former being sufficient to rend 1 nfs Josnva 10/10 
the Is nder a great deal of UA BAKER, 10 4 
inquiry i in anot — to the cattle. We have published your | Fine Old Hay — cuarsn, Dec. 6, Pr omy a 8 in the last six weeks? Corn : 
her part of the Paper, as it may perhaps pro» | Inferior ditto p 822 — Clover ... ... —sto—s oo Nw 2 re. Ener Nor. 36 Dre L | 
Bir sass: ING: Clerious. A good a „ 55 | Inferior ditto... . 50 69 | dis 5 —.— | 
770 Ea iao ioar mi |A e T l Bi AE aE | — 
Glendower. In a cold stift POTATOES. —S0 40 6 — 2 =A 
Bere opr le cee E 
urine; and in both cep the cattle dry, and absorb thelr tana : — vs — : 
ion, as well, it is quite ards its own ù ondon. Liverpoo 
atk Resa: Join Dizm i's ons buses de tacts o . 
has, we think, ——— ewe cal our climate} CURRENT. Nov. 26 Dee. 3. Nov. 27. 1 ; 
Msa Pisuet: IE. Pootahiy e bue ts s | qr 70 b 70 ba. 3 Nov. 28 Dee. 5. Nov. 29. 
at Jers i N y very work is & sails. 8 je doom ale qr. qr. 621b “S g 
Be retary nh neh ana p EE aaa e tek me fle ee 0G AS B G Geot skal oba si wr ly 77 
London Briton. ‘Tho tarkeys sold at Christmas in | Old, red —. 138 S\42-47/6 4 6 86 4 6 841—48 een 
e Live? J R. Urine will no doubt ul ie. Coat Ee & Sh So a —ä— 
long enough. They — if they be immersed 21 Foreign... — |55—52/35—52 A 3 1 0 7 4 —48} 408) = us 50659 
e —— 52% 4 7 0% 4 7 46—40 364 — | 
sooner apna N ins ure. do not know what Rye—0ld .. 20—22 os 480 lbs. 480 lbs, — 1 EG 
244. g 20— —— biel eas 
to Tia sty rach dae deep poe the be. permanent ongi F F. oreign... 2 20—23 ae ws 0. — 3 oi aia 
work hol 5 not so great as that the water wonld . —. 5i 5i.— 6i ed * 2 ET — „ 
wedge drains nnel of its flow. If you resolve to make Grinding qr pami eee proto 
ps rinding on Wei ba qr. a 
nd more Malting 25 23—25 — ae 20—22 20 or qr. 
wee ... 2 | 
N ae 27 — 26 30s—31s | 30s—31s 26—31 rn, — | 
ears, — 20 — iii — 
Malt—Ship ... — . 6 bush. 6 bush. H 
* 22 2 35—38 
Oats—White... 45 lbs. | 45 Ibe. i 
White |18—24) 824/36 2238 % 243s saf — | — mig 3. 
2216—2227 2 2 7 2 1318 1725 E 
Foreign 22 6} — i 
inferior l 2 32 4/2 32 — 1617 
made 4s, ; this q 3 a pren 
— tn a Peas—Boilers 28—32 2831 33s— | 330% 2030 26—3 | 7 
7 4s. 2d. is an ex. Grinding.. 1175 — ' 30—36 | 
— — Foreign e age 2 F 
— — Beans „ 
mee; New, small oor 124.03 a . 
d a Old oe 40 der i 1 2 bs 
7 6| Foreign 23.36 1 ; 
quality 2 6—3 0 —Feed B| 
* owe 7 a ig — vs 
8 oo. 7 4 4 — — k 
British . 91. 125 — — 
R Foreign. 71 „ 
$ r ' — — i 
tw this description 22—26 22—26; 276—29s 27305 ö | 
the p. sack p. sack 280lbs. | 280 Iba. * — ome 1213 
1 sack | per sacki 


n 5240240 30—92 | S032 | — | — 


Aver. Impts. 
Dec. 4. 


49—1849. | 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


a a e 


783 


“BROMPTON PARK MIDDLESEX. Og ROAD, 
ESSRS. P EROE Axpo MORRIS 
youred —. instructions f fro 
RT DONALD, 
rved Sale b 


Are 


n ROBE 
unreser v 
ANTS, together with — Gree 
P proved Hot-water Apparatus, Ti 7 

tensils ; also the stock of deeds, Shop 
till the Sale, Catalogue par k had on of the 
principa 33 an ah th 
TLEMEN, FLORISTS, AND OT 


ESSRS. PROTHEROE anD MORRIS ‘vill ‘submit 


om Mr. JOHN | SANGSTER —— l 


2 ener on MONDAY, 
10, at 12 o’clock, the: whole of the ee GREENHOUSE 
Carts, and 
Counters 
Counting. house Desks, = tron Safe, ee. May be viewed 
uctioneers, epee Essex. 


. TO THE FARMERS OF ENGLAND, 
MARY WEDLAKE AND CO., 


ENGINEERS AND MACHINE MAKERS TO THE HON. BOARD OF ORDNANCE, Woops, WORRS, 
EASTERN COUNTIES, AND SOUTH-EASTERN AND BRIGHTON RAILWAYS, &c. 


Daughter of the late Mr. THomas WEDLAKE, begs sincerely to return her thanks to th 

. for the last six years have so woe bestowed Rae 2 on her Establishmen 
founded upwards of 40 years, at Hornchurch r the of the Fairkytes Iron Wo 
meral at in — mirte with yey * shes * 


ose friends of her late father, 
nt, the Original Implement Factory, 
rks; and 7 begs — remind 
ceased parent, she continues 


ge er de 
to publie competition, by Auction, at the Auction Mart, Upon an inspection of their various Machines — — nected 
Bartholomew r-lane, e, on THUR HURS 1 SDAY, De camber 18th, a 3 = ioe tone will find a l kinds of Machinery recently much improv ed; and M, W. a — Co, 2 being determined t to meet the 
— tandard an SES, consistin of 8. y attention 
is ids, ape uals, Bourbons, é&c. ; choice AMERICAN — their friends t to the r paas horso Threshing eee which, if it does not surpass, at 1 —— is equal to steam power, without 
pi ANTS, 1 O Azaleas, Rhododendrons, Kalmias, — nn. 
med a floribun cti f DUTCH 


BULBS, 3 of the ‘finest double and single Hyaci 
Nare „Jon 1 s, Snowdrops, — Gi yo — 
— A us, ye * viewed the mornin 
Catalogues * 5 hel at the Mart, and of the Auctioneers, 
Leytonstone, 


— 
n 3 (on 8 ft. Leg = and Pillar Roses, Azaleas, 


s, Camellias, Vines, Dutch Bulbs, &., & e. 
RH ASLAM will bell by Auction, the above, att. 
the Mar, London, on WEDNESDAY, December 12th, 
and FRIDAY, December 14th, 1849. Ca atalogues a at the Mart, 


and of the e South Essex N urseries, Epping, Essex, 


4 due —— oe at the Nursery an 
Gardens now occupied by Mr. C Es Jacksen, who is retiring 
from business, the whole of the Stock of EVERGREENS and 
other SHR , FRUIT TREES and PLANTS, EN. 
HOUSES and FR 8. The y Stock consists of an 
mse * e — hea get Hollies. 
Portugal and com tinus, Yew 


» 
ucarias, 
bees and — — Box, — i and 0 her . 


erican Plants, Roses, and other Deciduous Shrubs, and Ever- 


suit urchasers. Mr. J 
oti is residing upon the premi 


the stoc me by private — a wey prices, 
til the 


day of sale; and further — ae yea ay be had from 
Charn 


him, or or at the office of Winstanley 


ey, Solicitors, 


TO GENTLEMEN, BUILDERS, NURSERYMEN, 
R. D. 


and Shrubs, 300 Standard and Dwarf 
— mornin ned Fruit-trees, &¢,—May 


* and 


VALLE 0 ESDAY 
December the 18th, and ree wig days, until the whole is 


d dispose 


preys gr to be had of the Aiii 


N 


above Machine will be found made of the ve * materials and of first-rate workmanship, with self-oiling boxes 
which + the brasses and other * from giving w. wi ? 


UMEROUS REFERENCES CAN 35 ae 


TR, —In answer to your letter respecting the Threshing Machi 1 hed 
perfect» satistified with it. It does its work — 5 * without injuring the hg nye it will thresh faster, and is T 
the horses, than any Papen aad of this description that I have ever seen; for my part, I do not see that 2 — any improve- 
ments wan nted, y VINCE.” 


Yours 
“To Mr. hum, Bs — 
LEWITT : “ We have done upwards of 60 


= Hare 
Mr. Bu Says, I wer he, ed 2 of Oats in one hour, Mr. P. Brown by 
2 loads of Wheat-straw wards. We have | day; straw uninjured ; two quarters and a half of Rye in little 

more than an 


up 
ee ee of 2000 of a's * of grain in 12 months, 
ee tee expense for repair.” Mr. Wasmnouy : : In all the course of my experience 
never saw such @ machine before. We can- | farmer, 5 never saw a machine of such power, and so 223 
: ae get — et to feed it.” tially co — 


All letters to be addressed to Many WEDLAKE and Co., in full, th 
5 Stand, Mark-lane. 


Fairkytes Iron e e, Fenchurch-street, City; or 
A list of the different articles made at the Works may be had on 


. tho —— and * 
personal atte 


10 SEISE GROWERS, FURS ERT MES, FLORISTS, 
0 BE SOLD OR „en with immediate possession, 
K-CRES gn BRIGHTON, most 
desirably ——— — 
whole of t 
12 they aan Succession 5 
Plant 


wards of 10,000 — of yr e cha of t 

sectional walls are clothed with full g Fruit Trees of the 

finest sorts; and — -—_s > amen * laid on to 
n 

for the — weer part of as the Premises pi sold, a large — 


PARSONS, — Agent, 


AND OTHERS. 

275 LET, Twelve Acres of FREE- 

near A about half a mile 

from th the Birmingham line, five miles 
= Padding —* . Sound NN Earth and 

i sabe mag a for any purpose. 


one corner, 
tin imm session be had. Also 
S 

from the Pinner station on — 


— Beet the Freeholder, Mr. CLARKE, 


RTS. 


Per Rae ane 
O BE SO 


Lors P. arable, and'120 me 
a ame — a teow — (140 eres free of F Tithe, eo 
smd 13 | 
— a —— ates 
re 
cal Man aso mare ons capit: pital 


or to Mr. Pun 


— “Tendon. T. S 
epee may 
A pamphlet 


— N, late of Coade’s, ae — 
4 — Co, "By, 2 a i 
of Drawings forwarded on 
QREY ¥ GOOSE FEATHERS; ls. per 3 
Feathers were 


o cheap as at present. 


* — ation to the Auctioneer, f 
as i 


AY begs “a to offer his services to 
as an rai — =o. ; 
on, 


LDIN NG ASSOCIATIONS, NURSERY MEN, MARKET |, 


The Field may i 


d of good | these, 
— 


1 one 
eg ee ae to Mr Qo 
from t 


aa are . — 


ANURES, ( CHEMICAL, Ce, all of first qu 
Peru — 
Vitriol, Taaie a Soda, S oda Ash, Prepared N 
pared Bones, ss „ &c., may be had, in any quan, of neni, Pres 
BARNES, 129, U pper Thames.street, London 


hd and others, that 
of pe 


555 TO THE AUSTRALIAN COLO- 
—By ie re 3 n * 
PHILLIP. and NEY, frigate-built ship 

COUNTESS OF 10 0 8 8 ma eH coppered 
fastened, 700 ton eg 3 Jun., a er, lying 
e St. — sail the ast week in De- 


RAY, ORMSON, anD BROWN, Danvers-street, 
Gentry, and 


ea, 
ardeners, to 
every description of Building connected ortieul 
work done by them at the Riche Hon. the Earlof Eiaon $0 j 
i have had the honour of referring so long, still con- | out in > 
satis faction. Mr. "Kinghorn be happy comps enclose 


ey also beg to 
season, for the W. 
don, in their Bo Botanic G 
They beg also to say the ‘building 1 a . 
Heating sa not erected by th atent 
eee roiti engine, and fi 


or Passage, 
ey and gentry inthe country; anà to toseveral | 


. W. B. BuUrro™, 


N. B. Pl i furnished free.. 


FREEDOM from CO 
WABRES From e J, W Bo 
222180 


—.— PILLS are now 
ase and prolong life.” 


ers they are 
oom they have a pleasant taste. Price 
lls, — — Da Suva and * iy 
to sold. t by all medicine vend of whom also may be 
had Ok, aden “FEMALE WA Cee g only remedy 
no Taste of 


recommended 
2 ͤ :. — — —— 7 
HE WONDERFUL EF 8 OF Samna Ai 


y 24 b 
wit te Suet an 
pirits, and to have imparted a lasting 

disease. After 
operation they go direct. to oi eer 

Is, 

— N = less vos and less by every 
ar disease will speedily be 


street, in tl 
18 oe LIFE ieee 65 years, with the exception of 10 years, when he served 
None are unless t 8 gaa * 4 


Medicine.. 3 apr Bonet Pos 
ING AN 


j — fac-simile of — dane 

3 o., Crane: ou He —.— 

N. DER Pa 12509 aud e. Rigger: 

ets at Ils. ured by Hollowa: * an 2 an can 

ae d in boxes at 18. 1}d., 28. 9d., ait family pa wl deo . — ia a 
13 Fe respecta table medicine vendors throughout the a 


eo i directions are given with each box, Sold by all tina Ho — 
Chemists. 


2 — * 
Strand, oe a 


* 


784 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. (Dec. 8. | 


T COMPLETION OF JOHNSTON’S PHYSICAL ATLAS, 
QUARTO EDITION. 
This day is published, in ope? volume imperial 4to, handsomely 


bound, half-morocco, price 2. 128. 6d., 
1 PHYSICAL. a OF NATURAL 
A. 


Reduced from sme I in imperial folio. 4 the use of 
Academies, = Families 
88 prn pie artie G. S * F. G. a 
Geographer at Edinburgh in = phie to] — TET onorary 
ember of the Geogr ciety, Ber. 
ition contains TWENTY. “FIVE eri. se 


* 
pressly for this edition, by Messrs. W. and A. K. JOHNSTON, 
and carefully coloured ao nder their supe — one with 
DEX 


Orr 
* A series of maps, distinguished ‘first by great clearness, and 
next by great beauty of execution. + + %) The jet etter-press 
which accompanies them should not pass without praise.”— 
We di hool libraries 5 
fed the 8 of aero and university Brea te in 
* 


ist resent ? whose interest shall not fail with the year 
—nay, nor with iis age— which has produced this splendid 
contribution to science.”— Dublin Mail 


By the same came, 
10 


s 


In imperial folio, half- bound russia or morocco, price 102, 10s. | 
THE tak Eas ATLAS; i 

A SERIES OF MAPS AND ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE N CE : 1 

GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF NATURAL 


aos A SN 
5 5 3 eee and beautiful publication. ”__ Government 4 , 
2 


“ The ea my of t the execution of the Maps is commensurate 
with the in E importance of their matter, "mord Colehester, 
President of the G phical, Socie: 

“ Their tordshi ips are fully sensible of the 3 and e 
tensive oipe displayed in this Atlas.”— The Lords of the 
Admira 

5 These Maps on Physical Geography are exceedingly in- 
structive and interesting; and the knowledge they convey is 
not to be found in any other Atlas.“ Sir D. br ewster. 

The greatest boon that has ever been fi d on the geo- 
graphical education of the empire.“ Pr ofe ssor Pillans, 

ysical sami appears to me ex- 
tremely 1 N J. D. Forbes. 

c The self of an * tunity of expressing 
her 9 of ripe 5 extent, aud execution of me 
Atlas, and of the valuable information it contains, which h 
afforded her the greatest assistance.”—Mrs. Somerville's Phy. 

“You have rendered a most essential service to the 23 ssemi- 
nation of a knowledge of cosm phy.”—Baron Von Humboldt. 

„This so highly useful work, indispensable to vary ie 
occupied in studying the great features of the earth. Haro 


ork of which the methods are w 
fitted for 1 —— as vane who come ignorant w to the 
ter eure 


Ee a ee OPE UNE eee 


ae ze 
À u. AV. x. . ; 
se * , en K 3 eleri ‘ Phy- F 
s n —— i ine. pi a 
“Embodies the materials of many volumes—the results o 
long years of research; and-exhibits the thost valuable pot ie THE FAMILY | FRIEND has ee, — itself as the favourite of FIFTY: ‘THOUSAND SUBSORTBERS and itis 
of the most distinguished mën of the age, pictured visibly to | anticipated that the Excellence and Cheapness of the VOLUME now Advertised will insure it r Jakes POUDARITI, 
the eye.” — Edinburgh Revi e fo 8 a much abridged 5 ot she principal pee of the pages co 
„ The book before us is, in short, a graphie encyclopedia THE Whee ta A DAUGHTER, OK THE RUINED HOME; and ELEVEN other TALES. 
of the sciences—an Atlas of h k ledge done i ps. | LECTURES TO L 2 — FOLK, by GRANDFATHER Wairnnitin, upon interesting branches li eh SCIENCE. 
aug i Ilustrated by many Wood 
“A i i fact f the p . 8 PICTURES FROM ENGLISH HISTORY, by AUNT MARY. 
day. hg York Titans Forla MPLETE SYST M oF MARINE Eytan making popular the Beauties of SEA-WEEDS, Illustrated with many 
We venture to predict that y years will elapse avings of Plants 7 —— f all the Fam 
bef “Geographical 2 E * LUSTRATED tbat ur IN WAX FLOWER-MAKING, by a Practica Boraxisr. The only Series of Instruc- 
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“ By devoting a to th templation of lobe | EIGHTEEN SUPERB WORK-TABLE DESIGNS, by Mrs. WARREN, Beautifully Illustrated, and accompanied by accurate 
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he speaks of the life of the earth.! North British K TOILETERY. 5 7 USEFUL and TESTED RECEIPTS in MEDICINE, COOKERY, EXPERIMENTAL SCIENCE, 
c. &. 


SEVER AL HUNDRED 8 cONUNDRUuSs, ARITHMETICAL, CHESS, and other PROBLEMS; DEFINITIONS, 
m e folio, ball Bound russia, price Sl. 88., we r e. 
Ti 


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THE NATIONAL ATLAS PLAIN INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE MANUFACTURE OF "GENUINE REVALENTA, 8 Nata Natural Remedy for Constipte 
OF HISTORICAL, COMMERCIAL, AND POLITICAL 1 at a triffi 
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Epition; with an INDEX sof ppwards of 14,000 8 nes 0 with ö eck ae S FROM HISTORY—STATISTICS—TRIFLES—TREASURES—HINTS TO 
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old by all Booksellers. upon Superior P. aper, 3s 


Will be published, by Megsrs. KENT and Rien P. = | London : . 

row, dom, o ° a Bata 5 sed 78 bee rue 5081350 * ndon: Hobrsrox and STONEMAN ; aud all Booksellers i 
continued Weekly, i 

. GARDENERS’ HIVE, Wee ANDEL’S MESSIAH. GHORTLY WILL BE READY, an pes 2 


] 
y Miscellany GACRED HARMONIC SOCIETY, Exerer Hatt. Esse Ross's, described by an 
3 —— R- MR. C tion, to enable eee 

lon i RIDAY, . By J, Handa vite receded by the | their own —— 
! butions, Letters, for Review, Newspapers, Flowers Dead March in ocalists: Miss Birch, Miss Dalby, | or sow 
and eos opinion, Drawings of Flowers, or subjects con- | Mr. Lockey, pee Mr. H. Phila with Orchestra of 700 Per- Price the ep. SN named. by. 
necte aa Sa Buildings, Embellishments, or Ap- | formers.—Tickets, 3s., 5s., and 10s. 6d. each, at 6, TRNA per day by one man, 5 
Paracas ust be nega we asd carriage, and porterage | Or of Mr. Bower, 53, Ch aring. cross, The Subse ying te 1,2, 

pers cs J. . benezer House, Peckham, or3 Guineas. Subscribe who have received no p this | be — Apply 9 Ros 
Surrey. An Advertisements to be sent Seend to the E Season, will be furnished with Two for thie occasion. Weekly Numbers 1 

b 

Y ON THE TAR preparation, ; in every department 
wee 


. Kent and — Paterno w, London HE COTTAGE GA 
ons Kat ished, P les E 5 ices gp êd., ULTURAL AND DESCRIPTIVE SEED. | f. W. Jounson, Esq. 
Or: 


IN CHRONI LABELS. B 
C DISEASE; A y Tu Homas ge se: F. B. S., A, Ce doors, Beaton on Gera 


angs, ne mere ok varió a 3 ses of e ee ve organs, sea Botanic Garden and W Px 
ey 5 r J. 5. Guu, ee 8 hte oe igi slg cab a With a variety of aare ing an r 
“Dr, saagi has as published ai a — and — work on the i laden the wend INSIGNIS (Beautiful Nemophila), | ing an ooi 2 e 8.0 9 ig hind. 
— i i Cate 1r (| 
t 5 — 9 Review. : ie Fe 33 
oe 3 at written by a well-educated | arent 9 e E A. deep blae, white centre; May to „R HISTORY OF FRANCE, from the in arii 9 
i drop e Period. We oo raed ia . . 


th 3 Sow, to stand through the 11 5 bg spring 
OS EGE e blooming, in 3 in the 0 pea pron for spring 
ae a0 witb Map, ae in Sfarch and June, Rich lieht garden sot! 
F WATER TO THE 0 hese Labels are printed — i AAA 7 in. by 5 in., so as to be y . je 

Foss ead Drainage of the Maroy eadly folded fr ue i the seedebop. A crear utes ofthe e Win eee 
Improved 5 subjects for whic they | have b been 8 including the Parish ok St —— both in the County i 2 in the | Gi, 


— Princes. street, Soho. 


Mei 
Education a aun, 86, F 


. 
. 


ee Taha bitants, addres * | popular eultiva ted an e obt mort on | TOW: Stoke bee in the Precinct oe 5 Ay 
“A wo ae Lond tnt e Coven them at the, Offer, Nasaiy, ere all Ad 
n: s. P. —— 2, Parlement street, To be 1 A — 1 of D, M. Armp, 170, Fleet-street; and gets aud Communications are 4% be 45 f 0 78 
$ SATURDAY, CEMBE 1849. 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL | GAZETTE, 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


country. Priced Lists will be forwarded on: ea 


o. 50—1849. 

N J s SATURDAY, DECEMBER 15. [Parc 6d. 
INDEX. om reg pape r —ů— 
Ig zu:: . . 790 € | Gooseberties for succession . 792 e RENDLP’S NEW SEED CATALOG TO THE SUBSCRIBERS TO T 

the it Groupi ng flowers, mode of - 757 5 R Ducks, NEW BOOR CATALOGUE OF | CARDEN ERS’ BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION, 
ö —— 5 791 = published, and entered st Stationers’ Hall, —The case of JOHN SHEPHERD, No, 11 on the list for 
94b | Ireland, holidays i in ey t will yi uch value to all purchasers of Kitchen the next Election (the 1705 January , 1850), and the Bw Seg on 
ak ~ re cation, is most res 
Maize, Ke ne en, — — —— Flower Seeds. ion, i fully and 2 
Sie. diat * tive Catal i Subscribers by Mr, GRISSELL, of Der Palace Yard, ed wed 
— e re s ie ns a descriptiv Catalogue of the best | ster, — aa hankfully again receive Mr. Guesexu. 
ean, & CULINARY VEGETABLES in fares n, with the time of hopes, 2 — e ~ bag me yp that Joux Suzr- 
5 f * — e sowing, height, and other useful particulars, as — oa wil ‘be 10 pa 
oe e it aa mode of grouping the quantities as y WILLIAM E. Respe & Co RICAN PLANTS. 
Fer in Cabbages = reta, London for aie bps OSEA WATERER begs to announce he has ast 
Colours, contrast of., i con iink a descriptive cuni published a f bis AM 
mpe — of all the 
Drie c9oked UP 9 choicest habe best varieties of AGRIC EEDS. —.— e X W ous . — = ns 8 had ‘om 
Baston Cn e 1 „Fan RT 3 contains a most — arijiet List of Hosta Warerer, Koap Fill Nursery, 2 — 
— an e all the „giving Ist, the 2 MAN ETTII — Amateur not 
a fits of 795 a | Victoria regia . . and duration of each variety: , the colour ; cien se of 300 or 400 23 — 
poor Moore's Handbosk on, — —— 3d, the height ; and 4th, the time of ‘flowering. Also | cipally 8 and the — varieties, both — 2 
n 7 Vipers int some useful in formation e relating to the Dwarfs. The Dwarfs are either on their own roots, or on 2. 
Freis from the Mien and) Wheat, Mr. Wilkins oper mode of — with the of testing the — e ga y ay EAE 1 e, ped 
owe 2 iin, J -7 an, 8 quality of p:n * brn a full detailed list | per pre- Mey to II. I. T., 9, Wellington-street North, 
1 + 791 b | Zinc lables, ink for 790 e| of all the bes t Garni Stocks, Asters, | Strand. 
age reer ote as well as the uantitie ies 9 by WILLIa E. nern VINES azp PINE PLANTS, 
DENYER begs ic fa» arsed his friends and the E & Co. . eir e HOMAS PAPE be say that he can supply 
* public in general that he has a very large s tock of Copies of thi s val be obtained Ji strong himpr F- — oT T feet in pote, raised from 
* es, the prices much reduced, 15s, to 20s. per | tion gratis l ta and well rooted, White Providence and Mon 
dozen ; also : ruit Trees, Eve vergreen Shrubs, and Ornamental pero roe | Plants, clean and health, .d. Y. — riores 
Trees of the finest growth, in large quantities, at low prices. KITCHEN a ees he SEEDS —— 
A Catalogue sent on application, on receipt of two post 4 
stamps, to EDwanp —— — — 5 3 _ COLLECTIONS OF 4 Sune, NEW GARDEN SEEDS, OF HOME GROWTH, AT LOW 
Brixton, near Londo 8. 
E. D. informs his friends that he has no Seed-shop in London. No. 1. — Complete Collection of 20 quarts of Peas, and £ s. d. N ESSRS. SU anb SONS, growing their 
DENJAMIN R. C NT all other Seeds in i roportion, for ney aie ’s supply» wt @ Seeds themselves, and taking great care in proving all 
A . CANT, St. ges s-street . No. 2,—Complete Collection in smaller quantities . . . . 1 10 0 the new kinds introduced, are ena — — supply their cus- 
Colchester ready for delivery, strong w No. 3 —Ditto 1 K : | — 5 with the best kinds in cultiva moderate 
established plants of the following: No. 4.— Ditto di and of such quality as na an Asari tment 
e EES CRUSADER 78. 6d. soh, Complete Lists of the sorts — in each 3 will n the er ops. Catalogues will be sent, pont a on application 
| rock iia SPECTABILIS, 8 a 22 oft — be found in our new Book Catalogue U Sorron and Sons, Reading Seed Warchouse, Reading, 
$ ge and package free ra ad on. Goods delivered free py rail to * Oxford, Glou- 
ace on 20 ey unions requested 2389 unknown cor- h a Gon Lie ye * st hinds, and as fie Bristol, or Basingstoke 
dents. The 05 zal discount t ‘o the mad tra some of the choicest varieties are — under our own inspec- | CUCUMBERS. 
tion, we can warrant tt THE THREE BEST CUCUMBERS E én vet SENT OUT. 
l pep e MAULE oa SONS d to remind Noblemen, j Lots oy Pitches itir Nee Bax weeny RD TILEY Bhan gent the publie mi 
and the Tra hat upply any No. 1.—100 — on — sorts, including ant the pa Hardy, iy, the has re te yh — atone. 
iL. Senf various sia cag of this ic most ornamental E — — Pee u, and Greenhouse Aun — — of his 10 ORY OF A 
ve also large s es o er Himalayan i ‘ sensenra n RD 
i? Coniferæ, and the beautifal new oor hodadending m0 Pins ren to gor poeks no Sit ote — t A 


di — 
pee Lists of th 


ods oft N N 
Bath, 


de of 
eg 


he inte 
pw their 
at 4 oradh s White Spine, 1 15. a 


* Pamphlet on the Natural Habits and Quality wood | be found in our new Book 
1 . eaten, coma tale 2 — 2 ne $4 istol. All orders above £2 will be g delivered free mere carriage Lae of — ‘at the I IX * * — e 
TO Stapleton road TE o any station on the Great Western, Bristol and] E, T. begs to mention that he has the whole stock of the 
W J. EPPS begs to offer the Slowing SEEDS, Gloucester, 1 2 — Exeter, —— South Devon Rail- | “ Brougham Hall,” Green-fiesh ; it 
° boon ag have been grown from the finest selected stocks ways ; 3 Or os 


possible, and may be ee on as neat and genuine. The 
h will be sent on application 


n Dev 
Cork, Dublin, Ped dpp, by . ‘ 
2 —— — oo communjecation 


tion to all parts of Great 
nd Ire 


Florist, 1 ulteney-bridge, 
cash or Ba postage su ey aehos y must — 


irvin le-top Swede Broc 
—— Belgian ot pooh 9 ie Spronting For Catalogues sar 3 further particulars apply to . — 
j WILLIAM E. RENDLE & CO; Union-road, Plymouth. | NO 
Long red Mar Mangold, Warsel ee Invisible ESTABLISHED 1786. ra CARNATIONS, meen 
in s URU to offer 
| AMES WHOMES takes this opportunity to thank TON begs 
: Knight's . — ite Marrow Chappel's Oream Sua trons for tbeir, int favours, also to inform his Corre- H lag aa iag "aan on * — a plant of 
Do. do. blue do. do. Adams’ fine Early White spondeat ‘that, finding H OY LE'S\“ SPARKLER” GF GERANIUM 7 MD — — 
i — Eclipse or Stubbs’ e of + t disappointment, he sation FREE 2 n re 4 E N 
Shilling's Queen ucen Cabbage ond a o kindly purchased it ast season a er 1 4 6; Lallab Rookh $ 
Tode ader ( 1 5 <o $ 
2 plant of Cessation er, or any one N of Pian kisd named in his Belle of the Village 6 6 Norah A sa ei 
. Green curled Savoy. Catalogue of this Satan (mi xception of the eight last 3 8 0 Plu 2 
: raa Maidstone, Dec. 1 named o a first page of his List, beginning from Arnold’s i "5 ol Sener Liai s 
the failure T E y * „ 
o MANNINGTONS . e by sole e e ne 2 Sens Alonzo (Poster's)... § ad Sparkler , 1 7 5 O 
: MES LORIST, re- , : An t ret-r eties for Ts, or 12 
J AMERON, po in and Fo public = Royal Pelargonium Windsor, Dec. 15. for 18s., with aa plant of Hie Prometheus for carriage, viz. > 
for thei e has now | . rp FSS T N —— e nee dri 
e quan — M Oa aiee ginal cm APPLE, ITCHELL’S ROYAL ALBERT RHUBARB F 
and is thus enabled to offer them ed a price has its macy over all other kinds for its 4 Hi 
them extensive cultivation. It is a middle-sized . ordinary earliness, delicious flavour, and splendid red — * 
aud different from a eu „ and remarkable for its | also a most 0 and free grower, — 
da sugary and a flavour, or in ory rem: to ae it far — pe * other — a r: 
— ed oar ae Way, ihe 9 y aoe dwarf an rr ee Mra a ia ion, Stron . — roots ls, 6a 
ants sachs ’s Linnaeus, 1s. 
bine . e — onan to the suran e trade. Post-office orders made i — 
trees being sent, by Post-office orders, made payable to James | to WILLIAM —— Enfield Lp omg Middlese a, we 
dox, Nurseryman, Uckfield, 18 with prompt attention. N. B. T he above is from 1 
J. C. has also an extensive stoc ka Lag oon Forest Trees, | weeks earlier than the well-known m Victoria. i 
ns, and Roses 
z PEARL” BLACK GRAPE. 
os D Ne. GOOsEDERRY. 
OMAS WATSON 2 to inf rm the trade and Mo J ARVIS i is disposed to Sell tee above GRAPE, | 
388 d out ed from an Ey al six years 
Po ame compe lly, that i nom pre GOOSEBERRY, and the second of its bearing. It — been pean ina vues i 
* lant. For dozen ordered, 17 plants will lants, and as the plants were the first * — . 
Babe, Rt for half-dozen, but no allo aay, vino ge not kept to 2 1 a pound-and-a-half, 5; WEEKS anD Co., King? road, — 2 
E come —— iS — to Mr. ekg lyon a of the ee oa he Gardens, eto and M aA ma aroari A 3 „ PARATUS, 
ö 4 P . he, being ne warrant 
a cae extracts from. the Gardeners Frontify it 4 — any of the kinds in "general use, sen of any yet invented, at prices from 31, to te the fire warranted 
rad Farmers Eesti spice 18th August, 1849; also the friend * } 2 1 A “4 on — er citar Po is what the to last oo —— —.— o be seen in extensive 
b . 8 Tere oe — — RRIES : 1 ‘th it new, or at all events not also at most of the — and Gentlemen's Seats in the 
; 21 A Somers seedling, whi ga 3 last Lane and ee oc- | in this — 7 he 13 new to me. “The lobes of the leaves 22 15 Ark O l — — 
| gation to spea can coup. long and loose, well adapted RKS, ISLEWORTH.— 
i Bom report contdeatly oe hat —.— to flavour, and therefore ing with 3 . . ufactured in Slate for Horticultural — 
We ated before, she colour i red, res resem aain of one of the best judges of 
E larger, and round ra than orl. N . 
006 5 become one of the popular of our the whole t being in my fota $ 
From the Gardeners’ Ai og 
e about the size of the Red“ e ‘wand, ay | espana ar me, p 
i > a appearance ; 
Spital, Hesham, 2 5 ` 


* 
786 THE GARDENERS 98 
1 PATENT ROUGH PLATE G GLASS, Bi as 5 PHEASANTRY, Beaufo forvatreet, K ing’s- T 
In submitting our list of prices we would beg to direct road en, by specta n Majesty an 
attention to ies Article of the 2 ide of H. R. N. — yo“ on NAM NTAL WATER roeL 
Saturday last, u e subject of Patent Plate.“ | consisting of black and white ew ay pian, Canada, China, 
Some alterati Seth been made in the mode fac- —— — Koar laughing geese, shieldrakes, pintail, 
on this + 4 of Glass, the quality is greatly improved, widg and 2 teal, gadwall, ador, 
we bow supply — perfectly flat, and, by — per leed and M Carolina ducks, &e 
ad Messrs. or and Co., precisely at their prices. Cut | — esticated pinioned; also Spanish, Cochin hioa, 
to order in p Malay, Poland, — aod Dorking j= em white, Japan, 
14 by 10 aor a 1 — Bid. 1} foot under 3 foet.. âd, and common pêa- fowl, and par Gane pigs ; — at 3. wa 
3 fee’ iò feet.. jd. 4 fees „ 5 feet. Jd. Moo. passage » Gracechure A andl 
Š 5 7 è * 6 feet „ 8 et. Sid. * — — — — 
We would recommend, if — r 30 inches y & 
long ; 30 Tea by 9 would be considered a good size 
99 2 OXES of 50 € - 


ED IN BOXE feet eac * 
28124 12. 7 S by 6 and 8} by 6)...134. Gd. 
7 by 5 12s, Od, ® by 7 and 10 by 8 15a. 0d. - 
A h 2. & Metal Hand- fram 
Slates ; — 2. eh s from 2d. each F Cucumber 
Tubes, Id. inch; Peach Glasses, 10d. — y as 

6d. per $ Pa Slabs, Hysciath Glasses and Dishes, 

Ornaments Globes, Pi 


r ` 

— 1 and Lamp Sha rt Lactometers for trying 

Saas ality of EE a ae Ta. êd; — —ͤ ck 

JAMES PHILLIPS and CO., 116, — STREET 
WITHOUT, LOND 

Continued ex sco leaves us no room to doubt that this 
is the best material yet produced, — that it will in time super - 
sede — of all other — for the eres part of gardening 


sample of it which we have yet seen 
was n d. —— — and sold by Mr. Jauss 


Pur. of 116, Bis 2 
— 2 Demm y meas ere’ Chronicle of Saturday last. 
GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, 25 n Nobility and 222 2 
Hess anp CO. supply 16-02. Sheet Glass of hate waste Gr vane toe omen tee are the Inventors and 
of — 


— — recommended 

GLAS PIPES. Noblemen and te ‘oy d whom the most complete 
ESSRS, COATHUPES axo Co., Grass Maxurac. — neve been 
and others, th ed to GLASS 2 
at are prepar . 
PI ä to 7 feet 
the lengt. being as diameters of bores 
GLASS FUR ee ai — ) HORTICULTURAL ͤ— ñä 8 TING 
ALSO THE CULTIVATION OF THE ——— PLANTS, 
VINES, FERNS, & 


— FZ — . 


112 HEETE ri it A Ie anne 


7 


WEEKS awn Co., King’s-road, Chelsea, Homrce:- 
= a is of J. Tema A — Dunarea epi Hot. wart 
> aa — — Sohne Weuke pom — 250 Siteet se to quality 
— — of materials and workmanship. have now crerted om ther 
Plate size. — meg t great of Green. 
Patent ena, from oreing-pits, $e, all heated by HOT 
11 00 24 Tubes, r Building, Heating, and Ventila all Howtiegitaral Eres. 
from 12 ts, a. | Uone By means of these are — 
each. at the | Steve, se, Ferns, and other Planta, in each immense 
Warehouse, 87, the | Pumbers, that they are sold at LESS THAN — eh ws 
© = Gen — Mashroom Spawn, and com pected with 
3 tee, and 2 
machinery. J erden oa app te 
W 12 feet GTATUES, a casts o op ane GARDEN 
alased 8 ORNAMENTO, COA Ker. ARMS, sad ARCHITEC. 
2 het Vavonar and Co, , Moses h, London, 
A 3 — i 7 
chest on te, | of Drawings forwarded oa — 
LIGHT, CHEAP, AND DURABLE E 1 
L ROGGON'S PATENT a ROOFING 
imparriona to 
‘vain, 


J 
Finch mesh, light, 24inch wide ised, 
2: a 
strong „ — 9 
Men , light 7 s 
if ack — 4 2 
wT abor e width r 2 n a 
ea è can F 
If the u af in a conres mes it wili due eae prices, 
one. 
per for pheasantries, 34, 


Menaractured by 12 BARNARD and B 
ISKOP We- ur, 
Norwich, an expense — 
borough, Hu cil, or Neweastia — _ Stor: 
STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROOF 
WIRE NETTING, 


* 
4 
* 


asat 


26 
„ 
be 
44 
29 


Fa 


va 
te 
g9 
i 
4 


re 
e+ 
* 
e 


æ 
5 Sd 


242352 
te”a 
22258 
ev 


HARLES 1 D, YOUNG arp arp COMPANY 


. oF ‘inom AND Fi unn wean 
ank — s 
Rettet, Desert sacana, eey 128, an cm 


Eomecacs ; Gras, 
. 
This Net wae ehibited at the Show of the Mga må 


Protection, it can be remoted to 


7 
3 


i 
i 
i 


pose, to wooden etakes driven 
— kodga Polias. os SA 
porto raeh “ak at 
pieces three of mote oe 
cient guard, ot Hethe repense, for Plants and Shrubs, 
raren 30 ins, ls, Mi; and 
1 yard. 
Ors web of Fas yarde, 13 Tan wid, wilt oost ENI 
— i 
— 8 213121 


cors, barn floors, 
ISH MANURE — . 8 l 
z 2 URE Tee R ovat pared to grant 


i 
i 15 
ili Ji 


i 


l 
: H 


Duc. 15, 4 


— 2 


l SoD] 


g J 


ANCIFOLIUM, THE — 2 JAPAN LILY, 


THE GARDENERS’SCHR ONI CLE. 


side, the l 


tLe ROOM, Clapham PARENTS AND GU — 
H. — —— Wer joni tant residing De one darker by 13 
axe To nis Mas Esty Tus Kino or BAXONY for some begs to offer a Comforta ome to one or two Young contrast; and the difference is 
e ee ent mar e —— 
splendid Lily, * for elegance of for freedom of of W. Parkins, Stationer, 2, Oxford-atreet: London. D. Da care | where i Se reels OE rrai thy 
— mire tamil y. 1 fave t the ree ere oe pr rene r — — line of con 8855 oo Baen = 
—+ 
Een tnd are ihe ree ornament to he parteris as Tne Gardeners’ Chronicle. Ast contas of colour it found by experiment, 
Should be without pepe han T te are now at a SATURDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1849. and it may also be proved by @ r 
price so moderate as to be within reach of all that, whenever the ards t i t 
LILIUM LANCIPOLIUM ALBUM, by the dozen, 9¢. MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. colours at one and ‘the wo or ad i 
X atholozical . . „ „ 46e 8 r. u. 
E De. PUNCRATUM, s te i . seal 8 Pm. each is so modified it appears b she couse 
Pa Do. 5 8 nd enc Fetes cette ea le whith Wonk 5 
Do. 0. CRUENTUM, 2 — * 422 British Architects bz bz 8 F. ae i which would be uced by the 
Do. Do, RUBRUM, = *SPECIOSUM ‘oo, Tuxspay, 18 tiaman — 14 —— ——2 8 r. u. addition itself mplemen lours 
5 22. Od. to 218. each. Wepnaspar, — 194 Society ern —— its neighbours ; and this modificati i bove. 
H. d. v Cataloy Bulbs, &c., may be had n application, d 9] Geological . . 7 . f. K greatest Where the * on 18, a8 above, 
ECK’S PELARGONIUMS, and other raisers’ eee, — getr. En thee 
Flowers.—Now ready for è and going out, Twelve Sarvseas, © Maai Shem Thus 
She 22 Nr = box and ca i T Bediond . . 8 Fiat. Mae 9 —— bated bya reference to the following 
3 —4 * ‘or A k, ‘Sinch Wast great and deserved attention has been of e — . — . 
pots, and ready — — shift into a 8 late ope paid to the improvem 1 of horticulture, and red. bl o. 1, which is a contrast of o 
gaea Ones asters Cepeben, E em ** mg Cassan- and to the best methods of growing plants, far ret — x4 ue, — tary of orange, when 
Rosamond. Sundown. Or Nine aide above, and Hoy ive Ore little Ay 1 been n give n by gardeners to the art — akes it Violet or amaranth coloured . 


i grouping their productions so as to set * off in 


Ep Islewo t 
wa Rib 1734 2 and * pleasing ma rigor what No. 3,8 e, givi Eames E a — 
ARLY PEAS WILLIAM E. RENDLE & Co. s n may have a fine ol red, add llow, gives i — 

have a i vereren lowing excellent hinds. . * flowers irap 2 of the most agreeable | and viol Agee 8 
Daneoroft E art tival, 3} fect. | Warners Fal Taa 5 h Colour; xhausted his skill in io F theo mplemen 
2 Prinoe Albert, Sides as meat ft, karly Kent 3 fes Surprise, 4 feet, — ing anh quality, and has ase mie $ d; heis “ eee be = 2 — red, gives it a violet tinge, and 

— ariy Frame, — — condemn that whic used him in nfinite trike 2 following 
g Table sho the 
CCC 
* * 
— — ‘Plymouth, | isola ooked at individually, the effect} pro- — oe * near ry si ible the same tone, 
„ eren. — wf | dive by e o~ e abge Bh al and may be otherwise 
— eal and Cate Se by siraly y backing it u it up with other plants, it would o „ 
TERS AND THE — not only gain by th but be no longer un- . Modifications produced. 
T SU cl BERS bog leave to call the — at to the sight “Would h he give nothing to rr 
of FOREST, ORNAMENTAL, AND FRUIT TREES, Red. gee Fy 7 
BRGREEN AND FLOWERING annons ‘iid "with a reasonable chance, not to say certainty, | 2. {¥ il „ Violet, or appears less 
tu aon 8 —1 — 1 ant 2 years transplanted of success ? e have taken only one instance Rak’ * „ 
geediing and 1 and 2 years true native SOOTOH | Where a knowl va the laws governing the contrast | 3 { Blue P o e ) 
gry with ale > otock of 2 and 3 yoare tr ted Thorns | of colours w be of use, a hundred others will Red yellow, 
—— oe — 2 2 be sold cheap. offer ere to the minds of every intelligent 4 { indigo 8 N 
re oe en 1 5 4 Vial „ „ yellow. 
unknown ents, is with a view of remed the evil just Violet indi 
m Pierson and Toauboii, Nurserymen, Ge, Perth and noticed that we proceed once lg lay bilire cur 6. 4 Take tie red. 
NURSERY, BAGSHOT, SURREY, ers, ch mo than formerly, the Teen. liant green, or appears 
J WATERE WATERER has much pleasure g | great principles relating to the contrast of colours, 7. err . s», brilliant red, or appears 
a Doseriptivo 1 2 his exten- | as — ie Ae. EVREUL, in his treatise “ loi Groon e. [less k 
sive sogon af of m of RODODENDRO Sous other American C Orange „ Fellow, or appears less 
Ra v5 XID EDIN TUE MOST PROLIFIC hilosopher having been we by the "French 110 
OF EARLY POTATOES. ove e use of a supposed aa i erg 
OMAS JACKSON axb SON have —— of the dyes — | in the national] 9 2: brown: 
— . sam ele tisfied self that, in fac j 
vy crop of their IMPROVED KIDNEY POTATO, they , at, in fact, n Violet. „ 
— reduced its price from 15s, to 10s. All e, a epee whatever had taken place ; ut that 10. J Yellow... „ illiant orange. 
e bushel or more delivered free in London, or at any | the of brilliancy complained of arose from 47 ; blue, 
‘station on the South Western Railwa P on 
Nursery, Kingston, Surrey, Dec. tr loss of killi in the art of blending colours. Hence II. § Yellow... „ orange. 
NEW GERANIOMS AT VERY LOW PRICES. is treatise, of which we propose to give a Blues . » > indigo. 
Bess axo BROWN beg to refer to their — very short abstract. * — 5 — 
ment of New Varieties last sent out, of bare Every ray of white light is composed of a certain et a am 
Sill Soe strong plants, see Gardeners’ Chronicle, daved Octobe, | number of red, yellow, and blue rays 1 in 13, Talige Phew * ; 
of CHUICE FLOWER moots, of the same Pheir | certain proportions. , yellow, and blue, are PP. aad lying yellow, 
Best nsaan nat inana Faan Aas ep oasa en | coUed onara corona; other colours, being pro] 3S 1 Vidas, 3 nai th 
Application. duced by a Pee AR of two or all of = Blue : green, 
and Horticultural Establishment, Sudbury, Suffolk. are MPOUND COLOURS. 18. Indigo... „ deep violet 
FLOWERING BULBOUS ROOTS, &e.— HYA- cht falls upon any it is either wholly „„ 
CINTHS, TULIPS, aa NARCISSUS, | absorbed, or wholly reflected, or partly absorbed and | 16 {Vi red. 
QUILS, ‘CROCUS, EMONES, LI- t e eee 

— be trom WM, HAMIL. — reflected by that surface; in the first case the} 15. {wae ss „ We 

Dre and l k, in the second white, emp 75 the Violet „ red. 

CINTHS, dere varieties Os, 15s 75 186, third, it takes the colour of the reflected ra When colours that as ly as possi 
s TULIPS, 2 ape — * tts In the last -r by = evident that the effect 1 che comp other are contrasted, the 
S e abso reflected rays, if combined, colour of is rendered more intense, or its 
oa an = Prist Cainig may satis on would be the A. of white light. í Now this or is my ned. is follows im 

perty possessed colours, or, in iple last laid do 
4 ap i 2 tee by post post d, costs eins ie words, by dierent colours of producing, whe when conte È by ‘spe ment. Colours, whe 

BOLARIA, GERANI ULA SINENSIS combined in certain ons, white t, * dee 2 nd 

mag saved from the best varieties, and warranted pes gee: 1 saying sat Such rays or such colours | tim 

„ e eee er MPLEMENTARY the pais bo the othe, we 

M. Nn N i his a Gak con 
deen See LON Anan pisuar” aniis a: mors |- Bad in complementary to green, and: vior veres 


» 
Greenish yellow te — 
Indigo » to orange yellow ,, 
d j an 
olet, indigo and oran 
| duce white light by their respectiv 
rast of 
produced on the eye 
ferent cle bodies 


and the depth or tone of their 
resp to the tone or 


intensity of colour, it 
if two Powe of — 


ntensiti two ions 0 
colour differing only in intensity, be 


and 
placed ads by by 


and grey.— a 
‘consequence of its receiving the com of 
ted; the red appears purer—less oured 
Orange and grey.—The grey ap appears bluish; the 
orange purer—miore brilliant, and — 2 a little 
wer. 


Yellow and The is tinged violet ; the 
llow appears more brilant, and, at the same time, 


Green a eA ed oe Alga the green 
N -The nigel ale 
gy-— 45 "Gn orange; 
rr a little greenish. 
Indigo and grey.—As the last. 
Violet and grey—The grey becomes yellowish; 
the violet purer and less dull. 


_ 788 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 


, having one and the 


2 colours 
age R to ‘them both, are con- 


When 


blue: | 
When a ee colour is contrasted with one 


imple colours, the com 
is common to both, 


tary „ 
violet, — complementary of yellow, to 
Su 


pends ; anyon 0 
and a little 3 can, with a knowledge 
above gene a 2 ia tell A nearly what effect 
when asted will produce 
aa 


then, by his alone, he tell what effect 
ought to be produced. Whether such effect will b 
Pleasing or not is another question; that is a matter 

of d is y the laws of the orem’ 


Ir will be learned by many with great satisfaction, 
that Victoria has already ripened seeds, under Mr. 
Paxton’s care, at Chatsworth. 


VILLA AND SUBURBAN GARDENING. 
cultiva 
faction there is 


g sailen of success, 

Nash’s, of Bishop’s Stortford 
have been so often mentioned in this Journal ; but this 
is the “ey gon not the i 
ease may be attributed to a well made border. 
indeed a * point in the tation 8 this frui 
The N whether for a Vin 

a greenhouse, the open pn 70 peta to be made 
what will swer in 


of necessity be foun 

border, ro the less that finds its way in this latter 
rders are scarcely 
suffer from drought, for should they require moisture 
given them artificial] 


from t instr 
directions, but * 


a decrease. 
The material igh can pore to constitute drainage | rather more 


is — eyan a Ae alwa 
tablished 


«CEREUS rapt page 
8 1 this eray species 
in 


remarkable and aaa E 55 interesting. 
The plant of it at this place, of which the accom- 
ber in 


— 


= 


The flowers are Amit Sale the at of the 


— diameter 


is with a mixture of two-thirds 
a fine si 


leaves, and iss rside from one of the 

large ‘indentations of bit margin. They are 

on the outside, but of a rich 
nd about 6 inches in 


play can scarce agin 
If the flowers are pa off jus 
| expand, N a glass ot 38 they will open 
be seen to great 25 I have had them for 
— days in tis state, by Be g a circular 
ee of wire over the petals, to prevent them from con- 
ting. Wm. B. "Both, Carclew. 


ON |THE PROPAGATION AND CULTIVATION ! 
OF GREENHOUSE AZALEA AS. 


up the el gaara ye en the drainage. en 
t and one-third sand, 
of . 


round hich I find 
the fingers, 1 A up level with the sim of the | to. 


po 
to have 
„ 1 believe it i is ry to 12 2 | 


e and a 


t| h 
middle of May naar 


many as 20 flowers open at — 5 and a finer floral dis- th 


when they are about to | tio 


2 
or 
NEW PROCESS FOR as 
y F a SUG 


8 | 


o 
8 

R 

E 


EE 


F 


d 

: 

5 

4 

i 

t 
a 


in 


ik 
Hi 


j 


85 


F 
8 
i 
2 


j 


F 
f 


12 


FEF 


3-inch pots in the 

a rather firmly round the ball of the 
en be removed to a cold pit and 
well shad 


grafted to succeed w 
gata, peer — Gledstanesii, and all 
ment, by which, their flowers come 

ttoms. 


quicker the un on takes es place. 
the grafts are securely tied, 1 read the 2 in ue 


e 

— them in front of a close house, occasionally pog 

them lightly ae If the stocks begin to ating a 
they sipan a by allowing be 


growth, as by so doin 
1 roots of 7 plant, 


rry o supe 
iar plants je die by so doing- 
ants may have —— same 


a po — 
the sirere 


care 
Colchester. 
ACTING SUGAR 
w CANE. 


1 


LHE GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


789 


of time; 
de used for the feye of dissolving the sugar out o 
the crude juice expressed from the Can 


e difficulties, indeed, ap not se ‘to the sugar or | recom 


a. water, but to the rments produced: 

its action on the —+ gar Cane. The 

sect of M. Melsens was, then, to exclude the air from 
ro 


prevent 


and the ferm 
the 


atter. 


Iphurous taste ; 
| taste is yya lost— “ist, b 
water, exposing i 


process is that the sugar r obtained by means of bisulphite , 
of lime has a is is true, but the 

np har the 
to the air, whereby. the little sulphite « of lime 


and | 


em, 
e | 2d, by exposing a sugar to an atmosphere containing } 


is done the 


rocess | 
“The quantity | 
of — ät for t 2 — ee 
the Sugar Cane by pry — of lime, as above 
recommended, is at least double that obtained by the 
usual processes. 

In consequence of M. 


2 


Melsens having made all his 


= F on the Sugar Cane at Pa refo 
small scale, he is not able to state how bisulphite of | bases 


the large coloni 


> 


rape su 
sulphurous ad com aerd 
the sulphurous acid is 38 rted 


“nd — iege more wey the 3 
r the double 
purpose of pre 
sulphurous acid, ‘and of meter a. hee sulphuric acid 
— orm F ee s of the li 
N cold water “containing 
hite Fie, even in . stallised 
without undergoing fea J chango, by sponta 
evaporation, at a low Several other 
of the same pang 
e 1 ; in each the su 


rea 


W 
— — — acid, combines with the latter and forms 
le 507 


= tan 


ee Merger Pi 


any appearance of molasses. ents 
sugar dissolved in water, a = of lime 
in excess, was boiled, and the 
times after — filtered, sometimes without any filtra- 
tion at a 

From the experiments which M. Melsens has made 
with 8 2 lime, it is probable that if a cold 
solution of t d on the Sugar 


for some ne and mig posed 
— for its clarification without any sensible loss 
or dete 0 


But this same salt 
coagulating, a 
egg, blood, anà yolk of egs mixed 
212°, 


so possesses the property of 
e ure of 2126, milk, white of 
with water. 


sugar. 

Bisulphite of lime, moreover, 2 4 K and 1 
effectually bleaches the coloured s ces found in 
the —— it prevents the e ot r 
coloured m 
Palp o of the Cand ; it — th 

uring evapo 
tne = ie for their 5 the joint 
alkali, 


Nee, under 
by the 


evaporation of the i 
ture, the coloration was visible ; indeed, 
Bee the — was 8 destroyed, 


ined was perfectly 
that bisulphite 2 f lime can be employed 
of su tiseptic, pre- 


pate e bagasse, in 
— of e it out un- 
4 g dissolv ied in wate 


the | the 


n left to evaporate, some- | na 


of the manufacturers — mselves. 
root sugar bisulphite ol 


lime is ui ite as s usefu las i in the arera of cane sugar; 


must refer those among our readers who desiré an 
further information on the subject. 


ELVASTON CASTLE, THE “SEAT OF THE 
EARL OF HARRINGTON, 
(Con — from p. 773 
ALTHOUGH the avenue described in 4 last article 
eature without a parallel in any ge 
English n, it nevertheless has one, an 
Elvaston ar; -t it will be remembered tha 
wing of the main entrance is situated the Abies and 
icea division of the Pinetum, where a 
50 feet wide and 1200 feet long is 1 pre 
A specimens of equal beauty — size, 
every plant being a pa specimen, It is difficult— 
, impossible—to convey any equate idea of the 
impression which a first sight of this noble plantation 
produces upon a stranger, 1 one who admires 
this style of 8 


ecessary to 8 what this Pinetum con 


for Teh 
rough the incipient bud, that it 

glasses 
* Se m 
proof of the value of visen could 
than that so protected at Elvaston 
are never injured, while others left to take their 
are stunted, eae 

Returning fro 


d 


e Pinetum 


summer-house, a building enriched in € 
and otherwise embellished rf a 


into the latter 
arch of considerable proportions. 
The en is 
Portugal Laurel yaa a Be 
top and perpendic . 
closed with Yews. This 
a) = 


uare on the . 


oriental scroll ries 
octagon 


greater rofusi 

periods ; all the * employed 

and of every hue from 
itima to the 


here are 


is trimm 

eet ; the two side plants have 

ths 2 feet pigh and — feet square ; out of 
secondary b: is circular ; 


be obtained from | 


bounded on three sides by fail 


Ci 
silvery-looking — 


Yew 


This is about 1 foot high and 4 


statues on 
feet high, b, ani produces 
front of them. This part of 
by five enormous Yews, — feet 
of these 


12 “about 1 


Leaving the “Albambra Cong pes — 


| high, constituting a screen to th 
terrace 


tion 


the pie specim 
me | of a semicircle, extending the 
lanted 


geous finish to 
ing — beautiful . 


else 
be 


gs supports two other gardens, distin 
ve st 


— alternately with Cupressus 
e red Cedars are dressed 


appearance, 
yoides 
into columns 10 feet 
consists 


aes 
- 


very remar on account 
of the mens used in it. The form is that 
breadth of the whole 
wit four rown of Chinese Juniper 
rfect specimens, height 
—— a gor- 
age of ww, haa, br nize 


An individual plant may, 
h re of simi 


We gee that wen size is taken into 


togethe 


— 


< the dee 
e of O 


The 


ect | ita effects of those which are as yet 


Nose 


varieties of the Rose (la Rose, 
our 


— the 


disease is the same that others have ealled abor- 


Home Correspo 
es, e. — 


can be made to the above] walk. Inside 


marbl 
, surrow 
* Golden Yow on a ra stone or tile, which it repre- 
sents ; all the beds having a similar edgin ng next the 
this bordering, a a second edging of com- 


790 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [Dee, 15, 


— —— 

emp Rose in June should b And is by a cle rgyman who used it for years. | (if I may use the expression), is a mere mola 

2 pp galaa — file Py My Rose W does rai me, psu Forsyth * Mary's Church, Torquay. [We | of the midrib or of a lateral 8 . 

Sir, every — a what would the 8 “et id are not aware that we have condemned green Maize. be seen upon the main body of the leaf at the — 
3 ” say to this—the numerous family of “ Les | We cannot say that we like it 9 gir that is which the r * ee, Nr In al 
Iei Aria For if this be hy a perpetual, | matter of taste. doubt if we can tra ogy to the f. formation 

what is it ? 11 1 is not of br family “ poepie i mo ost Vine Borders——As I find from the many different | i of th pees or pitcher of Nepenthes: no ; no of 

lish, 


È 
33 
aS 


assuredly ; ended by y 
and brought up, I . no doubt, Sea that lowly | great variety of opinions exists as regards Vine nee Whe ther w ph have here any indication of a 22 
e-roof ; and there it faces the due north-west, as I beg * 3 all such waverers to Mr. C. Hoa deney in eaf to assume the condition ure 
simple and unpretending as its humble owner. And I say small w Vine Roots,” oem I think, belie other of the ora appendages, I do not feel or 
of it. Esto perpetua :” for there were four or five buds * oad 5 ‘ight principles. of n 2 is sufficient 00 even to suggest. It is very common to find a beset 
Posy to come on in suecession— weather permitting !”’ est dispute pee tions of deep or on the ower seat of a Tulip one-half of which 
And here let me add, whilst in that neighbourhood last ms att ae pony the materials which ought to com- | mains green, whilst the other half has * Te 
Satur — — (the 24th ult.), about 10 o’clock A. u., I saw pose them. I ony dissent from bim in one 8 In such cases a curious result is sometimes Petaloid, 
what fs ne to me to be the aurora borealis; for it | that is, the employment of carrion, which I think is upon the flower-stalk. This stalk on the perk — * 
sented all the peculiarities ordinarily | likely to produce the gross and unripened wood, and in | mediately above the coloured portion of the bract, has 
attending that remarkable phenomenon. In the N.W. | consequence fruit, which we should wish to avoid. a tendency to stop growing, whilst on the 
was a dusky (not very dense) cloud, from which were | The smaller, short-jointed, slowly-growing, and harder | and above the green portion, it continues to * 
emanating many fine feathery streaks, shooting up to wood we can obtain, the better chance there is of ripe | usual. The stalk in n consequence curves, and cracks in 
the zenith, and some of them were slightly curved and | fruit. Under Mr. Hoare’s system I 70 able 5 several places, a and sometim iolent a 
reversed at the upper ends, I observed them con- ripen Black Hamburgh Grapes against wall that the flower is fairly decapitated, Of this deseri 
tinually fanning and flickering up and down, and at the open aa ia this 7 and the last, although tion of self- miai n I po an excellent example 
times almost disappearing in places ; then shooting out|the Vines young ones. 7. A, —— Carrion | or two in my p iaai a 4. 8. e Hitchin, 
again as bright as ever, and then a deeply-tinted hue of | cut into R pieces, and added to a compost suc ch Standard v. 2 Peach Trees. —I have observed 
violet ee would come over these, as they assumed | as Mr. Whiting has stated, omitting the manure, this autumn, in the north of Englan rary and à particulary 
various forms, 8 dimming a and contracting, | may be used with ee of suceess, if ae 8 in Scotland, that the Peach t trees had suffered from 
rising and falling. Iwas particularly struck ym this | method bs pursued, When the ma oe 1 one one ave uring the previous spring and Pesci great 
rich violet tinting ; and 1 = no doubt, but for the | lected and well mixed together, pre ing 1725 ; indeed, so much so, that many are 
brilliancy of the poser all the prismatic hues — ny have | border, let the heap be frequently daN foe 122 space killed, or worthless, . This, I was informed, has not 
been as distinctly seen as that was. If this was not the | of 12 months, ep as pues 8 as 5 ssible to occurred to a similar extent for many years; the 
aurora panan; then * else could it be ? the wanes frost and summer's sun. Care should be frosts during spring and early summer having 
What mean those coloured streaks taken in making the — 2 to di it when the mala is | unusually severe. It struck me, however, that stand- 
Min in a dry — for much of the future success depends ards had not suffered to the same extent as dwarfs, 
Here was —— feature peculiar to that rem arable 3 partic ary ger the soil is of a heavy close | under precisely similar 1 On f 
henomenon most * 2 observable. ane 2 nature To renovate an old bo — road i this to patera very intelligent gardeners, I found that 
were of an —.— ly dark blue; and all ar ae with soil from a cesspool, if done with judgment, | it had not eseaped their observation, Many opinions 
still, as if mute with —— And this fect generally e e than stable manu If the ie} der is in an have been aoa on this subject. One preferred 
appears to accom aurora; may b influ- | impoverished state blood m asi be given in moderate | dwarfs, because the sap has not so far to travel before 
enee of one’s own mind, Then presently * slight quantities, but by no means put in freih ¢ carrion. G. R. it had the protection of the wall, and was besides not 
most imperceptibly, a repose came [These statements are, considering the quarters whence | so long exposed to the low gsdis r its passage, 
over the scene, and all was soon as if nothing had been | they come, quite astounding. ] My reply to this was, that the watery fluid, in its ascen- 
there to disquiet et This all passed in about 20 meum; 3 and young e . Insects.—It gives me | sion, passed through a stock (generally the Mussel Plum) 
and here let me rve, the aurora is ordinarily the much pleasure to bear most willing testimony in con- | constitutionally hardier than the Peach, and one that 
forerunner of cold eo frost. Voici À Addio. firmation of. the useful e eie of your corres spond- ps 18 ur to receive injury from cold. This ig 
Cheked-up Drains.— I have received the follow wing, ent, Mr. Cuthill, both as to theory and practice, Ta why I prefer a hardy stock to that of the 
mentioning an accident to which I — all the tile. pipes, the means are applicable; and speaking, as he does, Pla “itself. hen the sap had reached the Peach 
ially i ill at all times m from his own e 


some insects. ine i 
were grown, choked with the fibres of that Toot, 2 una, and ie we peponi similar to what may be | ease in the dwarf, and consequently to a warmer and 
though fully 3 feet below the surface. “I am 8 with; a d been for many years | drier position, where it is well known frosts do not 
to inform you that the eollar n en i s 


pipes jasi laid a of injury. I also 
in the spring are quite choked 3 ts; not a e into my possessio ann swarming with pa that the effects produced by the cold was in the elabora- 
drop of water can pass through. The tien were laid cag, Nadira giay worms, beetles, and creeping | tion of the fluid in the i and foliage ; perhaps 
18 inches under the surface, yet the roots of Grass an of various deseriptio as, 45 L ded me con. | not in its upward progress. Will you be so good as to 
pushed down to the pipes and entered at the eollars, | stant gv nity of trying a mmon modes of | throw some light on this knotty matter. R. 
reat care was taken to prevent this by stop- getting rid of them, but with cas Bile effect; an acci- 
i ai Sow 


they hun i 
teach 2 not to use A cy for the conveyance of water, | and _with what rapidity they filled their 8 wich all | too ims in the pen. W. 
in places where they ean be laid at a depth of the insect tribe, worms, and grubs ; also how ver ry little | Animals.—As far as * Addio” goes, I am disposed to 
3 or 4 feet at lenat. > W. C. T. mischief they did, or had any disposition to do, and how | think Gat he is apace ri sd in Agas he 
l Maize a Su te for Green Peas. — Not- easily this may be at all times guarded 3 7 5 by i a the sand martin L 
withstanding your wholesale condemnation ot “Indian small wire fence or common net. They have done me banks. But — pen * mee birds and animals 
rn as aa agricultural crop, I would beg leave to re- | effectual —_ 8 I now keep them pve for jet various kinds frequenting the water-side, that it 
mind you of its immense importance as a horticultural | and for orname I may mention that m tams | dificult to fix the adits of oe holes on 
crop. “ What,” you will say, fear, “do you | are of a dar shins breed, and to be commended for 2 of these num i * 
mean that men will be induced to ent green Maize | their social qualities, as well as their beauty. They | humble bee would 8 with a Tat of chalk or 
leaves ds cows eat Vetches?” No; it is not the grass | never quarrel, me this alone is a virtue which many | before him, without some help or other, 3 
of pi anys but the grain that I E eat, and not the yellow | breeds do not lay claim to; they give very little tend to say, though I am much Siege. BS 
out of the husks after harvest by labourers trouble, but require shelter in wet weather, and | will call in the aid of some one stronger eming A 
labouring til i midnight for nothing. Not — all. And a warm dry roost. So much for bantams; and to provide him with winter-quarters —— 
now let us grapple with the question. You know that now, as connected with the same subject, and per- | when the waters en been bigh, Th have occasionally! 
Pea-meal is —— — — — haps more important in i allow me to say | the tail of a fish pr e M L in rivet- 
the*u ean % 


to appease cooks grange apani cross), — this vege- mana they e jas doeile, and are the door is open for any that Lash come in, 

table is not forthcoming, in season and out of season; a 2 or where their ria a are required. | really do not see that “J. B.“ has oar b 

and let me tell you that a . supply of green Peas I think with Mr. Cuthill that the use of such aids are tional light on the 9 pain Seg if “A. he will 

requires considerable skill and a great extent of ground. | not sufficiently appreciated, and may be well worth | satisfied with “ Addio’s”’ Ad a . 

Maize meal is e y no favourite of yours, and I do | attention in many garden establishments. E. Brande, say so, as I should be as 2 

not gly 8 ; . J question aup much pi Turnham Green, Dec. 6. himself with the opinion of “ some co 4 ditional infortite 
s ened d of upper, mid | Nepenthiform Expansion in Cabbage Leaves.—I in these matters, if he shouldhaveany p 

or lower class that would cheerfully eat Pea porridge | have every ney Mein and A had examples Rina me of the | tion ana us pene Aen ari of “A. SH? aqui nine 

N with delicate i i at r the f your 


TODA A GAIA vegetable, and see the change. The and thi d of ae a hEN — preys iy Ben 4 the solution 
1 0 í b he | and this ription of monstrosity was T agosa N e e surmi € ‘cle headed “ Animals“ 


S led to more than e gardens.. 694, I have waited aw. : 
need not say a word about its cultivation, for every one and I especially examined a bed of Cabbages in which | further suggestions were offered on the grape 
knows that it is a plant of the easiest culture, and that the majority of the plaats were thus affected. The im- appearing last week, I now we coe 

Summ the twill produce green | mediate cause of the phenomenon appears to originate | of those who may justly be consi how Sas 
Maize cobs plentifully. I recollect. it 30 years ago in a | in the unequal development of cont para portions of matters,” and leave others to judge ponj ” ab 
grocer’s garden in Aberdeenshire in guod cob, As the 2 oat Shere one part ceasing to extend, those next | support the opinion sneered at by Pag 
18 * th anyos oe a g ſorward mad produce a folding and vies for es es patie, e | wh 

nigga eas crumpling of certain porti which in th e steep san so d j 
ey, it has not the same same effect upon the Maize, which camp P po th had be w bann gy Hee ched ‘ton hate makes * Ten” Kc. And another (a a 

t an 


ava 


1 eee habit of plant. You will there- 
pat well to giv a the green Maize a trial in this cha- fantastic f 
i — you . mn it. Many of your readers appendages of which you have figured an example. I advances, 
th 3 ot in ä upon sas point, E have not observed the 122 of the cup in its fresh take up their stations for wot eel ierced bank 2 
those who have sojourned in America. Who w sta: i ome sandy and e r Land pit, and the 
poe thet Se. w which. Kasas ripen in English the form is usually more strictly e presi Bomo .¢ * 
5 rt w en they do ripen well Pip few that! exam es of cristated part s the under surface of the | sides are seen bored with 
a Nr n ìr valu 8 would think leaf is the ontermost, and pe upper 4 innermost of | 3 inches diameter. dae 37 8 
gentleman’s bill of fare — le very day io | each detached fragment, In some there is very little | able 3 ae ie E bil 4 


BSE 
Ee 


5 
3 
g 
8 7 
2. 8 
S 
$ 
af 
2 
= 
© 
55 
8 
E 
RG 
E 
Dki 
z 
a 
8. F by 
n 
RS 
4 
é 
Be 
58 8 
il 
1 
Be 


3 

2 F 
1 i 

i 


50—1849. | THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 791 
Pr ͥ — —— —ę—q 
nnch for what on sand martis. does, an nd I said no | most all cropped before I sent down the seed from town, ; “ Botanical is said to have “ died during the 


Register” 
e i war;“ it ceased to appear at Christmas, 1847, 
rr the inquiry of “ A. H.” As to the rows of Potatoes, which were 22 inches apart; these, Beck's bevutifal © Foca” te sald to hove i. 


if | had a fair start. In other respects treated us it was a year been steadily increasing 

so much self-complacency, he will find, if he will | precisely like the others, but they never ; they | up to the prese 7 . ‘We suppose it ioe fallen into 

consult the type of your Paper of the 24th ult., close to were miserably and bore hardly anything. The | discredit with this author the time when one of 

the “ broad margin ” of 7 1.— attended tome of Cobbett's . con t ventured of * Mr, Johnson 
remarkable for the ra of e advantage of i 


corn, wh | to epe 
re occurrence sue being raised in a hotbed and in an arm-chair article composed other 0 
thing in your P aper—which told his, before he printed | out. The Potatoes grew so slowly that I — tate have | materials, at be A er abn 
his article of the Ist instant, that “in the paragraph | thought any interference was impossible. Our Potatoes | was not agreeable, although richly deserved. 
—.— Page 626, 3d 2 instead of these have been just examined, and = 4 bushels out hese 


of| T Sean ae ae v are as straws which 
2 formed when the bird ealled,’” Ke, he was to read | 100 were found to be diseased. ZL . Chichester. tell how the wind Nes, and serve to show that Mr. 
r han the bird — Ke. And for — | Johnson Bor ar to rm gg the publie = subjects 
my own part, I can see nothing in the original paragraph So tities. he knows nothin 
227 H. —2 warrant any e aro in regard to the Enromorocicar, Dec. 3.—G. R. W 2 Esq. of h 


g abou appa every 

page ~ 4 of which the following | is a glaring 

when es are found, though proof. Part of his plan is to inform his readers what 

periodo y as * If I understand ‘ A. H. eorreetly, the org mg ae a. * pee os 1 plants to secure for every month, and here is the list 

holes or burrows he refers to are only seen for two d for a monograph of a genus of Tortricidæ, the furnished for September, The capitals and italien 
: : are ours : 


of speci th wide w 
Tinea 12 r which had — found i in old — . Treads hit fal his full . — mands, 
out * of coal mines near Glasgow, at a depth of — 
uarters of a mile. It was — — sa “For, besides bis fruit “harvest, even mis Fiona 
chen larva = ya fungi growing there. The specimens, | Beaurixs n There ar 
co at might bave ew ex ah from such | Jn Horders.— Aster. Celsia; Chelone, Liatria, Colehi- 
a locality, Ginn 13 y bright in their cum, Solidago, Eu n Lobelia, Bol- 
Ar colours. Mr, Stainton also exhibited the larvm o — divaricatus, Gyn, mo- 
Tinea Lappel which. 1 within the seeds of —— Phlox pyramidalis, Saffron Crocus, Epilobium, 
Bur ibi odonea, Gentiana, Lilium, Mirabilis, Ceisia orientalis, 
series of specimens of Peronia hastiana reared from the | Zinnia, Senecio, Polygonum orientale, Rudbeck 
larvee which feed upon Sallows, proving that several | Dahlia, oo „. serotina, and variegata ; Aralia 
supposed species were only varieties — od e r ordonin pu gnus OM, 
| Salvia X. and ‘riloba, Kalmia ee serotina, 
a Arbutus unedo rubra, Ligustrum jucidum west 


33 
- 


EE 


table ia. of cooking ripe Vegetable Marrows for my cimens, 
table is to cut them into manageable lengths, to take 
t en 


ishes, and 
the water; I then mash it well, and add salt, pepper, | in A to 
— j and a me milk, and it is then “a dish belief 7 its being the real cause of the Potato rot. The leat 
x in this way, all who taste it | eggs are deposited on the leaf-buds, and the larvw feed Groundsel or Senecio (kind not #peeified) ; 

mey within the anant tha ing to the root of the plant.— | which flower in the * g; Ephedra r 

paper was read by W. W. Saunders, Esq., F. L. S., hideous shrub hie rarely flowers at S 
Y | containing descriptions e, several remarkable New ce floral beauties 2 not on T 

m orsetai 


H 

ew it Salsola fruticora, 
Š ; Society or ARTS 52 5.—B ren, Eeg, V. P., 
e pdr 8 in the chair. The reading of Mr. Taah ‘ prize eseay on beauty of 


and advise their im mportation t : I pe ease to 
increase the beanties of that fine old town 
sap ot r . obtain the aquatic | ™ raw material by a single anr and by delete will n Who can do otherwise than with Mr Beck in 


F obtain — ë 
i entirel ait Mr. Johnson of having used up 
. Fyre mmm Ba |S pct a ti Tin 
a vey constant supply . — — es menm Ar ss — =, than 50 per cent. of saccharine matter, if we have 1 is, we pag ten believe, entirely his owm 
a iri sen — 


— ar led in vacuo, may be rapidly concentrated at a low 3 
the Limnocharis Humboldtii, and the double white bol perature ; . nA has K ted a double A Er 1 1 Talon 
Wir iy The imesh e bed f te 1. ee ee alue nitore, Dy — 

ear 
— Ma s Planer ane until November; and | he saecharine liquid ; 2 without — — 
that yards 


scribe 

than b ; à processes, and also the manner 

atone time, I had also flowers of the double pu 983 12 sugar manufactory should be 
Lily 5 ill — ou them with built, ony is of opinion that nothing but a 2 1 iJ 
ea Do wee "Bilt [o thank you. | 9f, the present ayetem cas —— sary : | of the 
Nt awkesford, m . colonies. To prepare for this, two things of manu- nomen, 

poms not flower with the water at a temperature Ist, a thorough knowledge of the modern art — ch 

sie: s.—This year all the vipers seem to ve been 2 — manipulation for the instruction of 

ed at the idea of having Siete throats tied up, if . ; laboratory 


was 
| trating paratus and processes in Many new | 
3 example, and —— — 22 t whom nahi the Tib of 2 
> re gar 


F 
1 
Ry 
1 
i 
H 

it 


și 
Le 
$ 
1 
| 
1 
: 
i 
ii 
E 
H 
=S 
Hii 
1 


1 find 
them ‘heehee a (ror Manes. — ever, but s short tenancy to find ou 
4 Looker-on.— your Lending Atel tyof making some ob- | ! el of exquisite art. eo — penton to — er. — 
in the gar. | fruit are charming is a study ;| becoming filled with draughts, smoky 
ta th ed of Say The ot manured, | Mr. Owen inting | walls, weak floors 
except 


and one by which the many 10 The 

May, ‘he ground was not magati by anythiog we have seen. 

tows wi iene has been at the map proia meo ne raege= the of the floor 
bushe i 


E 

4 

$ 
717 

1 

J 
Ë 

a 

R 
155 
Pee 
Fer § 
a 

A 
E gs 
Hf 
HPH 
sief 121 
$ 

WHR 

aal 
1 
Heel 
157175 
117 
UM 
MEEF 


i probably unrivalled among | sty cleining the fleet, 7— —— 
. * —ů— modern coloured Sedme. ay hae beneath. The greatest evil feu Ita, perhaps, f 


4 
* 


i 
Ẹ 


ohnson. i remedy 
— for 850. not ‘oe tter — the — occasioned by the shrinking, & 
remarkable in thie For hay is cannot be depended 
; Hortieul- | slips of — y, &¢. ; but this s 
lente in the * sh it drops through, 
pot 4 — 8 —.— — Sere din ie The | upon, as in case of further rinking it drops 
great dislike it has — Pe ground 


S 
@ 
7 
Tl 
E 
Ps 
di 


E 
A 
2 
DA 
T 
1 
t 
-9 
RAR 
4 * 
8.8 
Aa 
A 
28 
£ 
Fg 
ve 
7 
af 
* 
AE 
ot 
7 
z 
é 


792 THE 


t waterproof. 0 that ta percha 
* a apa vison Be og percha fil it become 
iron or . point all 


beg 


GARDENERS’ CHRONIC 


turf is wet in any part of the pleasure-ground, this is an 
excellent time for remedying the 3 sant cutting 


wher y of t is unavoidable, et 
the pe drains 5 filled with pte do rabii as within 12 o 
15 inches of the su 1 5 e a passage m 


: same a new piece wer 
ta percha, it will so unite 
ag ts ig wy — ae portion to bear 
2 a valcke as ed other p What has been said 
of making good the space e the oor 3 
8 apply to al ape bag et e panels e 
doors ; and a shake has h itherto al withou 


e festive season is approaching, when every one 

looks abe to rang for their chief enjoyments, prn 
as this feeling is eeri vek e ith A 

annie halls of England nion f 

let it he cular . of the e 10 con- 

8. gratification 


d p f his employers pide their friends. In 
this respect the plant houses and t occupants will 
of the first importance at this dull season Ja and th 

in such a to display 


Every care apen 


for the ro r, even if th 

filling the drains up with — let it be w 

to prevent any after making of the surface, 
25 RISTS’ FLOWER 


ell rammed in, 


Pinxs.—The late frosts have giv ce us 9 
trouble wih our i k sag ne not p n wM 2 e 
, but in som nstances 
we e find it 1 y necessary, if health of stock as well 
dera 


as correctness ture is a desi m, that 
— should — — — sail not 4 "this to | 

frighten th a glance is often sufficient), 
but to him — forgetfulness ; for we have 
often seen, 525 a severe frost, Pinks which have not 
got of the d ogn — hay come $ out, 

and their ro ts expos to all w Now. ough 


e [this may happen i ina night, yet if a a ‘vgn look-out is 
sare ii an 


foliage n turning oe and in some cases spotted with 
— ow this ie 8 m se determination of culti- 

vators to take to ‘ go 
© | hardy enough if they were 
pe is so bad for this ai of plants as that continued 
“shutting up ” (if we may so eer 10. that ae 
often subjected to; stagnant air ath to 
ÅURICULAS AND POLYANTHUSES.— ne seta 
tions still hold good, The vol fi the — ahaa 
wi ire an occasional dressing, and parti 
should be taken of the crowns, as r are often rA this 
season expose 

RDEN, 

If it be intended to graft any young Apples or Pears, 

the — = 8 0 e gathered before the A ple and 


LE. 


one stem was trained u 
branch till it w ag ty 


Duc. 


hw 
was 10 or 12 aa 


15; 
— 


N cm Cane 


Pins : Diss. You 
ee me not too dee 
1 TREES: 


u may yame your Nuts 
p or eaten 9 
A Market Garden in, 


135 
great care Pear 

** 

ce may be 


<H 
of the squares is eee 
— Dunmow. The 


n of your man that iro: better 
lead, is simply piesa The only question ee 
have hse enough. 

A Lover, „4e. 5 


Locutt 5 p ea nta a check when you 


moved ‘it goma the w. house. 47 
Sag every year as pe Pi out in 
arge uara ie pd in 15 172 tas of the ites 


house teat z 
Mummy POMEGRANA 


O. It appears to be * 


PTA 
dead, We will bari it tried — ym sown in a hothouse 
where the temperature is mos t ev Thet be best way will be to 
ing very little 


or no w 
NAMES OF Fron pte D. Scarlet Crofton. 
NAMES OF PLANTS 


„ Clav: 
ard, in to keep up Let perfect | Pear tre ned, and laid into the m er and Sphæ ærophoron coralloides 7 
3 oist soil urner. Pray 
order and 25 e ent re at that the behind a Seas wali; till the proper season of grafting. ga — 8 „ „ 
‘eye may nowhere rest upon aught that might offend it. 1 should, of course, be selected from those varieties of Coix ; either C. arundinacea or new. We should like to 
Let a healthy atmosphere be kept p, avoiding th l in the locality, as there is a great see a better specimen.— W B H. There is no difference what- 
extremes both of and moisture, that the leaves m — in this respect as to the applicability of an oti ee ee Page TEER on ee 
not suffer with d yet brivelled and dried variety to a. particular v 8, let om — 8 * Me + 1525 nel ey e pr 
Hf our advice, with regard to striking Gloxinias in See d e RO. We coosiler this iy be a 
up. oul b 8 triking the scions be taken from clean, healthy trees, perfect] sale. J—G C. We consider this to be an el state of 
„ has been followed, and if they have been free from canker, whi ny db ' Asplenium lanceolatum, no no 8 = its con. 
i vouno 224 ti t. t 
k 951 py Ras ah Aed nieo h ii J heredi lso free from insects, which, if thus in dry exposed paote, ths TES pinn 1 iy d 
Pla and sbou epotte rich soil, in 4 or communicated to the young trees, are particular ly po opposite ; but when growing in places favourable to a more 
= inch ES and 8 1 en eat, These, jurious to them, and not unfrequently cause many ne ean and prolonged growth, the fi Pe and 
if properly encouraged with heat and moisture, wi i the pinnæ pass from opposite to E g 
1 Pints A aie ts no F Feb hin thes aes failures, Cuttings of Gooseberries and Currants should} specimens would be acceptable, S.—A BC. A few flowers of 
hid y wul also be e planted in nursery rows. P d actively with | some Acacia—perhaps A. Jophantha.—G D. Phylica capitata, 
5 ie aor mie oF ike ge: „ the retraining of the fruit trees against walls; and ao nee 1, pey E eni val Fries; 2, Agaricus 
reate are = us, Fes, AS far as can be 
already showing flower. Those have an abund i say 28 on eee coveroi he specimens being a mass of corruption; 3, Agaricus nudas; 
of Achi 11 f e immediately applied : it is not less necessary duri ing Bulliard; 4, Agaricus cyathiformis, Fries; 5, A 
chimenes may excite a te at p rt o their ext two mths for the ATS of shade, than it terreus, Scheff., Sow., t. 76; 6, A 8 orus, $ 
stock which first put to rest; no stove plants are | will be p aaien as a shelte 7, Agaricus rutilans, Scheff. All in a horrible state of decay, 
more easily 4 and few are * Shes when 2 ae rpc 40 en accordin, Be : > 
in flower; r while to e thei on State of the Wea f k ending Dec. 13, 1849, o i 
x ` ding D » 1849, PROTECTED TRELLISES Your plan of making the sashes 
- commence $ aa continue as te! as n = i CONI slide down, so as to cover both and trees, is good; 
9 EPART EN * BAROMETER. T TaskMomnreEn. |] J) their having been so — duri e last two months is 
are in a condition f. ing . =<. Wind. Rain. good also ; during the winter ein spring, no further — 
bp s ere in pots of a suitable size, which =i — — ere for the trees is required than what is rigs 
. 4 5. E. . sigh 
they were shifted into last season, with plenty of fresh 24:3 570 ee H RHODODENDRON LAYERS: P T O strike all the 
y loam, and the wood being well ripened and well Bijat p ORG) Ge 00 | better For be 220 “ slit” or tongu ey may root without 
supplied with fruit buds, may be introduced into a mil ata NN. 6 » Sow your Rhododen ik 8 „ 
temperature, and plunged into a bed of tan, leaves, or a7 | 30 3% E. “00 aa pressing i ein A 8 noel tle ie heat, — cover them 
some ot! oom supply them with a — —j ligh and carefully 
- 5 igh — with * pbe = —— be gra 
pot Grd must be taken not to mat: 9.916 29.792 |] 43.7 | 31.2 | 37.7 || 0.13 
D 7—Slightl 
too 50 the 3 * the buds, as they will = 2 — 2 frosty. Sven SAND: HF Teat n. ‘Weare not quite 2 —— 
ain drop o 0 W y n they expand — oe sty and nd fog RY 5 Y ery fine; ; dense fog at night. — 8 Sorgen * 4 — a: Ph —— eren Tomy eee 
? seal pee, orm haze 
— ho one en will ses — 5 first comm = . 5 througout 533 no consequence. Next week we shall mention the sand 
ment w or the night tempera-| — 13— Foggy with alight d h again, r 
ps gee my ie ea an ee dete otne wei 1 Jer 24 i aerae, Vinenits: M H. Yos, We would certainty build on arabe Se 
obtain an in e . 
2 near 
if the 11 be — e and clear; 60° of ttom State of the Weather — —— during the last 23 years, for the the border—the object should be to ar Bb te 
Wi sufficient 9 with, and after ensuin „ending Dec. 22, 1849. the surface. Use the 16 oz. patent ro g Tt is 
the buds show signs ery slight} in- must overlap, unless you use it in very long squares. ie 
of and = lg beat? may place. Vines 228 82835 nee | Greate eee Bake ge 3 —— — — — 'edge to — — 5 e or permit your 
a — PEs È z 
in pots may, on their introduction, be ed in the E E Sa . A oung Gard e Excess ofall kinds oon os material enough 
same manner, giving gentle syringings twice thri however hardly likely to * fermen 
é an Aa ž gmg oF ce at command to hurt your Vines. Of course you knee 
day, according to the state of the : Ag ges Boe eo fof. 1s. | ognin that it must be removed when comes.— W. 
treatment will apply to the starting of Figs, Cherries, | Tues 1 453 | soa faai qo 35 re is no great objection to placing yonr bee na 
-and Apricots for the first fe ks, but after that the | Thur, 200 % f 32 %% 1 | 038 and there are nons ak We o not Eagan, oiak S 
will require to be kept much * the — 2 aa 44.0 7 020 p eiaei 1 34 grow any except the har 
3 : h ur. 23} 457 | 346 |4023] 12 — 1. 
~other kinds of fruits, The adva g thee | e wee — Ving Eves. Recei ved from an anonymous corposi 
fruits in pots is, that an early supply can be obtained e highest temperature during the above period occarred on of the Grape called Rogers’s Seedling, which arent ; 
and ion kept up early in the A kaipaan = Cr Ae an D e 1 of the * Society. badly burn, or 
1 : i ` War WH. Y bricks must have been 
ta an entire house established trees a ces to Correspondents. — 1 not “ ‘era rumble down veri 2 ring SE. 
e of 1 3 which is kes age goes wd their To 3 Conn neren DEN TS.— May we beg it to be N that trees, or after a * shower 2 e fruit and face them 
i z energies of thes — mnot answer ing — privately through We are with dust. We . you face tn 
iad y to give reasonable infermation ; fr 
Soe till a time of year more 5 for 1 but we cannot consent to the labour of writing dane. ite, roe sate 2 5 8 Weeping ba 12 — 
their LANCHING : ave received from Mr. Roberts, of Eastch t, is istinct avd 
| a Sgr ome pecimens of Cardoons, blanched, , withou t i a 4 pee 8 Dov ton Yew. T 
In this Ac inai A let perfect neatness prevail, 105 up, mi — aes T — 5 — serve Misc.: J.D, We would recommend you > api i 
ow that the sooner the process of earth — ht our ner 
oS for ry e of more brilliant attrac- | abandoned or modified the better for the vegeta + — . i + Ph 925 Senda tee the best for 
— * e fallen leaves be carefully removed, draining tiles placed to edge, so as to form a tube, would Since, however, you are of a different 
inked oe of the soil in the borders and el 1 2 k can be d therwise.—H J, All 
ver, or made clean with the rake. The walks ee Hook er's “ Muscol ogia Britannica,” vegetable seeds are useful in South Australia. 
should be pat int into perfect order, and receive a sli oo oe ap il aca Vers „ ou had a beat winter 
f , £V ill fly. 
en of clean fine gravel where necessary, Etoile, Diamant de on. Inn 8 a, te 1 e „ repot iea it a ee A 
the drai and grids be examined and cleaned ; and, if ae ame Camerson, Mada’ hauviere, Polar Star, Thalia, | cuttings of the pieces epee te of Fe 
in very rainy weather the wa lies o n any parts of the 9 phurea pallida, and Angeno The above are all Salter's.“ wintered of Oe aerar e „ 
walks, let the defect be died piper Sub. You give no residence, and therefore we can start them in spring. received too 
drain, or by filli remedied by i only guers that your climate may be unfavourable. The *,° As usual, many communications have been re 
or Swe ing up the low places with new gravel ; ;| with all's moh tomer where they will flower, is to starve late, and others are unavoidably 2 
nothing erferes so much with the ported of as much Ñ sunshine seman Pe pr ot of soil, and to roast them with inquiries can be mad —— — Earp 
at this season, as damp dirty walks. If the asby bloomer ane Wee s forthe Rose, ir is —— 
e have seen it best when only 


50—1849.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE: 793 
“THE IMPROVED “FLUE BOILER” AND FURNACE. compare them in detail. Nevertheless we can speak unfortunately, only render the contrast ter w 
as Sa with some confidence on their relative merits on the | compared others where the ry is of 
whole, from memory of s in Baker-|the most primitive description, and deeply-rooted 
street ; and we can some extent, contrast indi- | prejudices maintain th daney in the ds 
ani 


ILL begs res — my t o inform the nu 
9 — for his “ 4 ta ofa — i and 
at he shall be prepared, early in December 


a 
El Boller to be the most effective and economical of any in use. 
Horticultural Works, Greenwich, Dec 
ROYAL LETTERS 


PATENT, 


PATENT a a “WORKS, KING’S ROAD, CHELSE 
DENCH = ber ee Gentlemen — 
&e. superiority in every 
posseased by bis PATENT HOUSES, ha Ay — 
warrant rior in every respect to any o Gla: 
from 16 to 21 oz. per foot, 1 {00 t wide, 3 — Toa: furnished, 
e Houses when completed m 1s, 3d. to 1s, 6d. 


8 


ERUVIAN "GUANO. —As —— of the Peru 
Governm and sale of this valuable 

MANURE, — 1 it right, for the protection of consumer: 
respectable de 


and alers, to apprise them 

of the artic — is still extensively practised, and to recommend 

them to apply either to ourselves, to our a Messrs. GIBBS, 

Baicut, and Co., of Liverpool and Bri or to dealers of 
hed character, in whose honesty aan ‘fair aa eo 

— Decent ber ANTONY GIBBS and 8 


4 lige LONDON MANURE ( COMPANY beg — mews’ 
under, and pledge 3 that every 
m shall be free from the slightest — — 


monia, Phosp! of Ammon r Ammoniacal — 
— — — 5 Lime, Gypsum, Wisrate of Soda, Bone — 
dust, and every other Artificial Manure. 


Se —— . Bridge-street, Blackfriars, 
ESSRS. NESBIT’S CHEMICAL AND AGRI- 
CULTURAL + tin’ 38, Kennington-lane, London.— 

Asound practical know ledge of Anal tical and Agricultural 

Chemistry, * eology, Surveying, Levelling, Railway Engineer- 

ing, &e., toa food modern ed My ie. 2 NESRII's Academy, in 


Mr, NE SB 
— Tni Engilen Parsing, 15 are published by Lone- 
3 and may be had of all Booksellers 
e terms of the School can be hea on — aiia either 
3 or letter 


GRICULTURAL DRAINING: THE DERBY 
LEVEL.—A Very Superior Draining Level, of great sim 
ni price 3. . 585 to be had of the Maker, JoHN Davis, Opti- 


ARD PURSER, 


t| even the 
ees bi 


, Mensuration, Gauging, | Sam 


in 
oO 
co 


hat no rec 
seems to have been kept by the Smithfield Club, of 
ge animals at each succeeding exhi- 
ould i 


tion. have 


a point o 


repo 
meeting, 5 . as proving 
the gradual i par ae of 
size of similar 3 would a 
similar rsa in — ae case o ned sonal 
Whatever the value . — — w hich such 
——— supply, it 
conferred upon 
ity and want of Jiti 


e have obtained, merely observing now 75 the 


b rity of the Baker street 3 s ap- 
pane in — greater evenness of the animals ern 
the absence of inferiority than in the 


greater excellence of — prize animals. 

mark to make on the methods 
sifieation peher at Birmingham and Baker- 
In 5 2 the 5 are 
s well as sex 


of one 
street respectively. 
classified 7 5 the 
an 


age; sidered. 
We — the Rosa nt for the greater likelihood 


of accurate judgment which it gives ha former 
greatly superior in that respect), but because, as 
adopted by the Smithfield Club, i it is almost the 
only remaining opportunity for eee among 
different Pagers hes patrons | 
of any o i 
without 8 in which different cs 


Quite as 


ifferent breeds 


relative eres to fatten of — 5 
o obtain an un- 


should cease, because it is difficult 
mai d bee of their merits 


y. YF y P 
of the ofthe empire. 


Sin ma 17 AND D 61, Gracechurch-street, 
. and yey Par k-street t, Southwark, 1 1 05 
he ene CONICAL and DOUBLE 

CYLINDRICAL B L BOILERS, 3 solicit the —— of 
improved method of 

‘applying t Tau 3 to Pineries, n 4 — 
ich — nei heat as well as bottom-heat is 

uired di without the aid of pipes or flues, 


in operation, 
well as akan of the highest authority ; or 
ee Nobility’s seats and principal 
the 
-=s ma Trade that at ve Manufactory, 
a 2 — e construction 
beating t them, may 
ron or Wood, erected upon the most 
ornamental designs, 
Fences, Wire-work, &c. 
WIRE-WORK, HOT-WATER APPARATUS, 
GREENHOUSES, & o. 
OMAS BAK MANOR-HOUSE, MANOR. 
PLACE, 8 1 Manufa 
INVISIBLE WIRE FEN ing ae ren- 
Arches 


E walted on 


Dra and 
Esti — i) Town and Country, and wings 


Shi Ma ina for the “Trade as usual, 
or Domestic Greenhouses. 


wark Bridges. for raising water: | 
2 Ba he; Hotwater gpa Fountains. 

bs supplied with Gas or Wat 
ette. 


iltural Gaz 
N DECEMBER 15, 1849. 
MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
Rare Dee. 1s—Agricultural Soci of Englan 
8 seen both the rar CATTLE EXHIBITIONS 
ere we cannot of course undertake to 


de p ‘Seppe’ force on 
uch 


Palisading, Field and Garden pen 


of | mod 
for | than 
aoei 


Tuer i is no reason to believe that much advance- 


2 — of labour. 
logist and the chemist, when’ ri 


rising and prosperous com- 
munity . for rgi refined products, re-act on the 
producers, greater exertions to extract 
more jibetally, to gee: the tastes and requirements | 
of the period. 
In rightly amisi and applying the 5 
arm, in whatever form 
of che success of the pean a de- 


he am 
3 „ whic hich the latter 5 chance may excavate. 
The ee rn — — over Pate in 
uch greater 
e e ces will allow 255 w vindicate, 
and should i et upon us the truth that anything 
ike perfection in this department of our art has 


ca tke ak 


ces. ay 
rd of this kind 


all the breeds of ewer » in | Scote 
ach to 
cast 


pity that the ony opportunity for determining the | w 


may | half the num 
‘od 


and characteristic practices of hus- | are 
the length | lea 


cemen 
suggestions 2 * re be met 
with the reply, that the po of “ letting well 
alone ” is always adhe 
Rieti i in some of the English Beere which have 

highly advanced in some departments of the art, 
there appear a laxity in pa of pa 3 which 
is rat o be wondered at; broadcast and 
drilled Turnips isagi s side 1 2 in Suffolk; 
and 


mine whe zp 5 bem ct ai! subject of experiment 


or matter o 


Detailed — which have for their object 
the siino of the ex 
panics 

‘ror is — ph a great aii 
w — summed up. It is quite 5 what falla- 
cious guides farm accounts "o been in this 2 ; 
but if the total expenditure in any department is 
taken throughout the year, 1 made —.— of 2 
paa, hasta is less risk of being deceiv 

mple, which ro * show the 
—— of ‘the Scotch syste mportan 
item, that of h 


gigantic waggon and the cum 
138 ned with small enclosures, may hav 
. 3 ng these contrasts, it is a for 


We aiii t passing through a up a Pog 
trict, in Tincol Inshit ire, a few years 
hich 7 5 vs kv spirited description 1 0 


of that county was particularly applicable, where 
57 cattle are] looked upon o jeg machines whereby 

make and certainly we could point to 
no district, sae of the Tweed, where finer grain 


boots tt at one ga 


crops are + ORAS n land of similar — But— 
to ma 
An j P another to let in the foe $ sae 


f ill- "S 
1 —in one field a waggo on-load of manure 
being l wes Land land — its 8 bya — 
d idle until this 
farm a 


2 
team-engine was th which 
ted from the cha by hand-power, 

— a a and boys w 
yh operations. e same oait of work would 
e been accomplished in Scotland by a fixed 
washington costing no more money, with 


ro i 
The produce of a district is not to be arrived 
at by selecting p few instances ary will not 


represent a Ded statistics 
are difficult t — aden be 
e ted at 


8 3 
8. 


. va 
obtai „but 
rted that Mid 2 scotland, ren 
e, will not average, in a series of — hag 
27 bas hels of Wheat per acre only 


wh 
over one-seventh of the farm), 40 0 Barle and 
44 of Oats—w 


have ei 


orig ‘that the oe 
ae other part 3 that m 


escription o 0 orse pong, 
and large fields with no 


owes his 2 
E gland is a much m 

ure affords interesting 8 of its 
diversified condition, amid ao customs 
which have grown 


new circumstances e arisen. 1 
triets may out as — tapii otai 


but these, 


t 
ge To 
tightly working out these simple elements, athe ‘Seotch pe 


rity. 
extensive field of agri- | 


up and n e progress 
of the art, in its required development to meet 4 | 
which ha iđe 


poini 
what capital and skill can accomplish ; 


ra valuable substitute fo or — 


, | fallow i 
sources of riches open 
other hand, land well adapted for roots 
relatively highe er rents; according to the yield of 
grain, rofitable returns are obtained from these 
o| In the 3 ainis manner, the rent of land is higher in 
ine than it is in 


794 


THE 


AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 


[D 


were as profitable as the grain, instead of being, 

is too frequently the case, entirely sacrificed 9 

the F of the latter. There is certain 

tendency ag er present time to endeavour to 4 

wha tually be an unprofitable extreme in 
our practice in this respect. 

Let us next examine hep system of disposing of 


the drill I have 25 invented and made, which is so simple | 
and accurate in its operation, that one grain of seed only can 


—— perfection a 
rilled in any given quantity of land: at present I can put as 
litle asa pin nt, or as much as 4 bu — of seed upon an acre, 


the smaller s ouble the larger, r quantity, 
rely for my Wh 


th 4 ++ 
some for a fri 


end me rate, except a — —— 

the green crops in Scot where a moderate profit dibbled. The anantity of s ne “sag Sed 12 pecks for ane 
F mall fields, one 34 s, and the other 2? acres ; I began wit 

is alway : expect ted to be realised, whether they 5 1} peck per acre, and ended with a little over 2 pecks With 

pine by cattle or sheep, and compare 1 it with | reference to my last year’s operations, I had a small field of 

that in the South. R. eans. a plot of Sadi a a plot of Wheat; the two 2 


— WI LKINS « ON 4 THIN- HIN-SEEDING, &e. 
as occurred since I last w 
cohen I have long — of the — of the 
I have all wee t aid down, and on which I re peta on 
the contrary. every day I liv ve, every experiment I make, every 
information I receive, Dindi only to CORVINA pends more firmly 
that I am pursuing the right course, and spurs, me on to per- 
severe in it. 
Not, however, Bas again and again assert, that I have 
ever considered thin-seeding to be a substitute for slovenly or 
negligent cultivation ; but just the reverse., I have never urged 
ho did not horonal drain his land angst 
it: b. 


. 


practised by N and market Lag ring I have never yet 

substituted the spade for the plough ; but I am convinced that 

were the former entirely used—except upon light soil 

latter entirely thrown aside or r converted into 98 England 
Id h a 


> 


but that she would feed all her sons, and h 
—— to seer for other nations. There would also * fall 


| for a peculiar 


verge H of seed per —.— for th 
fi ley — 
Keo qua nage generally used, as I 
abou As soon the whole shall be 
— F. shall ee: eon to Ta A e ial the arah, and I 
regret that I cannot doso at the present time, except as to the 
Wheat. This, I observe, was not planted till very near 
Christmas, and then under as unfavourable circumstances as 
could possibly occur, the ground being so wet that it was like 
ragging the drill through a mud-pool ; I hes waited * so late 
kind of Whea t, which I cou d not obtain earlier. 
The crop astonished me bayou measure, gohan not a quarter 
— the seed grew, as Mg the — H also of most of my neigh- 
bours (man yo 7 san ploughed the 


are still in the straw 
h 


t 

. wish to see some 4 Wee by steam- power, T 

would be far better still; but it must * be a plough, but 

5 of a very different ‘ind, me, or perhaps py 
he er change at this; but should 


ae —— de acc N 


„perhaps a dozen workmen waala 

fn cn oe —. — 5 in it, and at ew 3 
have often been taunted with be a garden farmer, 
aid hiia —— ing like this — often os applied to me, 
“You masi no farm ener of 8 = 


oe crops on a "tow acres of last p= t we > cannot 5. ate 500 
acres only ;” but what does this 
what, but one of two things, either that garden culti- 
— as I have sta ted, is the correct one; or that those who 
use such language have not — means or ‘ability to cultivate 
a s they But there i ing 
so grand and imposing in 55 of a large farm; it 
her: s the 8 .* dignity in his own, and consequen ice, 
as he thinks, in the estimation of others : Mr. Peter Matthews, 
for example, treated with contempt my friend Mechi’s 170 acres, 
and signed his letter against him * „A Farmer of 800 
aeres;“ but, althongh I have never see r. Matthews’ farm, 

I durst exhibit m many cottagers’ gardens in my parish against 
it, or against any other 800-acre farm in the kingdom, both as 

to ac cultivation and prod 


I must rge! that my we ea Mr. Mechi’s practice | I had. I was peo applied to for considerable portions by two 
last year, and Mr. Thedan’s ex were not — favour of | millers, a fess ersons for = quantities, ai that I 
“seeding, or t. exhibited at the Witham | could h 1 if Ih —— them I had 
Farmers’ Club by those gentlemen, made them m appear not to | bushels ; epi , although I determin -i end it ioe ia small 
beso; and as ar portant, I must trespass a quantiti es, to accommodate individuals, 1 was obliged to die- 
little to examine them. First, as to the experiments of Mr. appoint N g” t, as I before stated, s mples s of the Wheat 
Thedan, which I saw and exa clo; about the middle = be exhibited at the Cattle-show, a oe Th 
of : they h nd were watched over Mr, y will excite general —— My has 
with minute boy and attention; on his part, therefore, alwaya been that it is the most valuable e ‘of “Wheat ever 
— 8. thing to be praised. t I expressed my introduced into this country. 


srg u 
2 — tae the — would not be favour- 
able to ten ‘hin setae ly The temperature of his ground 
from an excess of w: 


8 my 
eve I may write 
8 of s aeres of thickly dri drilled Wheat perished wE 
in the ground and never 7 and so it was Mr. 
Thedan's ental crop, many of the grains planted rotted 


nt: ut er o gre atly as tonishe * s, I could 
enter my ‘fla anywhere in the dark or blindfolded, and pull 


up root after root which had produced 2000-fold, and I pulled 
up some roots producing 3500-fold and upwar oye 3 e it 
remembered, that every seed was planted — Should 


ington's Ys pot of 
a: tg tural Imple ements, ae _Teafatgar-square, and wil 
ae — — > wee — 
if a entlem s gro ask thing curious likewis se, „ shall 
be obliged F he wil, ina ‘friendly manner, take —+ also, 
ord DE: of n 


in ay p 
in the st straw, a veli 
z leris "o that I took several zon ined Barley to Norwich, 


from single grains, also containing 46 ears each, and many ears 
had 41, ne in them off ne corn. . Wilkins, Wis, Nov. 22. 
8. Ih 


Mr. Robert Baker’s last attack upon me, as published — the 
f November 24. I allude to ow j 0 
observ at is another, and I suppose, in “Mr, s 
imagination, an amended eion of a letter which some Wing 
since was DAT — reulated t will 
ment, and my answer to it, and send 

them to 4 — for the edification of the num erous readers o f your 
rna the me I = ust now take permission to 


mends the reverend gentle. 

man to give us a statement of facts,” and very soon afterwards, 

my kind ee von ae publis shed fact of 3500 grains into 
35,000, thus convertin 

Wheat I 

ing 


— i —5 it 
use by a very farar one, and 
por ig and all of Aa 1 spoken and written of it in the 
highest praise. I was likewise applied t 


alsoinform Mr, Baker that I 
have now none to sell; and that, 3 I was pressed to sell 
whole I grew a high price, I sold it to 
several at lees than two.thirds of that sum, in hordes that I 
might But my friend Mr. 
Baker has made some piee seat By = numbere — his lots pro- 
8 1 rg ata for, as he never forgets to remind me 
n he fav vours me with his advice, T conclade he 
There is Lot 1, 
Lot n comes his clerk, Mr. Johnston, and his 
men, eee Paul and Sons, sorting and weighing, and 
h 


A Plants that grew 


g 
ow, if I required puffers to 
ock d 3 1 e 13 i 


help to to kn 
clerk, Mr, Thom 


From my friend’s in thie 
county, or rather to farm in it, I oct sagas on * hie principai 
ađmirers; it has been my opinion o other 


living man —. re 80 to 
but I am sure his candou if I ure aa he has, 
that there are important points in which I have a dis- 
him, one of whic here state has his 
of cattle, but the ocher has 2 care 
ing out of his own advocated principles, For an 


3 and his ings ts 
the most preju thick-seeders ; |, 
has failed, he states, where with care | 
Last continue the 
27 as in the thickest, I lied 'ap 
e t, I pu = 
Wheat from ne rly 
— 
gap in the row withou 
tion to this, 
he quantity 
3 


is eg 

en Figa 

y it down as a rule, that in poser Ah 

ited; I would rather 

or 20 grains 

is 

* — times ty of three, 
— 3 of dibbling and hand- | 
droppin | admirable s 

eee ‘ic eg ie such irregula: are scarcely t0 be 

dibbling be preferred, Dr ge at rome : 

admirable in serani eaaa this evil ; L > nt 

‘ity of seed of any tind pet d any required. quan - 
But if drilling be preferred, 1 shall be glad en 7 of fend | 


M Tery simple Hens, 
a committee 


sors whose 
‘And besides, 
i never test my pacts eam bates my servants as witnesses, 
or do 2 ever appeal to them in such matters, bnt to educated 
— disinterested gentlemen, who pn be induced ze — 
fear oor interest to deviate from the truth, all sof 
lotting. measuring, weighing, — appraising on ‘clothe z odi. 
sider Messrs, Baker, Jo nay aul and Sons, as but one 


individual, or but one firm. ow. N Yow. 27, 
Home Correspondence 
Winter Beans.—At page 766 you say that 6 pecks 
acre, in rows 26 inches apart, will place the seeds | 
1} or 2 inches apart. I conceive that you will —— 
quantity to ensure 2 inches 


îs 22 yards wide and 220 long, The 22 yards wide will 
give 27 rows, 26 inches apart, Mir 
number of feet in a = 660, and therefore the 
nutnber of — foot) will be 3960 in a row. 

Therefore total number of seeds oa 13 me 
‘oh, | 120,6278 H vier rete quarts, 2 z 
I find contains 1390 Russian pA oom 
Beans ; pay 970 py * 66,720, or about half of the 
the 


hel at our Beans co: 
determination of 

horrid 5 

worthy the 

ik it was for nothing . 

run into the sea, inste 


Thee 
in 


duced 
which they = to 
as it 


sidered an 3 impossibility. My = 
ink a 


as follows ; to on each side of 
ckwo: 


in o * 

as to help t the 5 of arge 
eat might be brought * Ireland as 
Ih simple ay 


th the my 
nly prove an excellen ¢ dee and a 
good deiae, but it would also very much enrich the whole 
38, much more rich than guano, and would em 
a yas number of Pp on in every direction, and 
be easily moved by wa Aed "a to the most remote and 
poorest districts, wher ure cannot had at any 
price. J. Cuthill, Florist, Conde erwe: 
„Balance Sheet. — Through your Paper I bing much 
wish to see a balance sheet from so our nobility 
or gentry from J — Ist, 1849, to * Zlst, 
1849, especially on a grazing fa farm must, of eourse, 


bring forw. ard 1848 — ea pital, i. e. stock in hand on the 
Ist January, as follows: 
Dr. 
Stock in * Mak 1849: E. 24 n 
Live and D ve .. 2000 0 0 
ay Tard sit vet 500 
2500 0 0 
Interest 35 EE A „ a © 
£2625 0 0 
Bought in the Year: 
Cows dies ee “ oe 
Sheep Pal pen r iy 
Pigs ue * 
Horses £ 5 
heat v * . 
12 Wurzel x 4 ‘ 
es 


Rent and Taxes eee 
Property — oe dad 
Trades men's Account 
Depreciation i in in value or horses 2 6 e ed 
Wear and Tea — 7 cent.; 
&., in yo — ‘AY e Fund to meet the 1850 year’s 
deathe, e., say 10 o — — your — 
r Huxtable e, in his balance sheet, 
the above items, which are of importa, 
w your farm pays you, and to 
pe sae farm your bank, 
cent. on your capit ital, and a 
to be the farmer’s profit ; 
a 5 or 171 per cent nt. to. meot h above expenses 
y: Shon ‘keep an improvement 
ye, 


y ou in hedges, 
say 10075 ‘should he divide itor e 
I should be obliged if a corr 
Paper, would hat an acre 
0 


ew is 3 
qia is 1 (341 do not care whether it Wes p a 
low farmer wd se Wyse oe 
you anna ih had eter aon 
you are a nigh oF or 2 ee yeng you 74 
go 8 . by the next ship 

! up and bestir your yourselves. 


Wi sa Town P 


ree, Betelan, 
Cumberland (Crosekill,) bien En 


. 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


795 


real 

cially to f. as the 

majority of * 1 e grey rote cs of 888 ore 
®Traineau” would be a very good name. I obse 

many of your "correspondents are 


rongly down to two 
Ach, 7 inches dee 
5 fio draughts the implement is 
made of larger sine 6 age Square, and then of course 
the number of t breakers is increase 
121 16 or 18. That the front part of the oe par 
fore- 
“of the ee pieces must be sloped 2 awa ay ti thus, 
make the cross bars for one of the smaller sized 
implements, take pieces of stout As 
and cut off o 


tran e to the 
pieces, About 12 . — from the front of 
itudinal bars, and on 


than | towards fa 
5 


ard, | Labour 
Ashes, de.” 
S: 710 


with appropria 

r the adjustment of M at cat 

mployed. 
nds you a more 3 — va 

that this may enable any tolerable workman to construct 

bs: page Me sd valuable implement of the best materials 

„ Cottle 76 ding. I am endeavouring to 2 the 
compound” system of feeding fat cattle, as recom 


By your Paper, and can compose a food much 
relished by the animals; but if my memory does not 
ore of you 


co 
ingredients, 80 as 
of being cut into slices ; this 


US, | 


i 
= * arate and ane . 8 — 


mstructed in 
tied y For — the calls intended for 2 cows 
up; an them ro 
if , ™ 1 


ing first-rate manure, I have found the 
from opposite th 


sheds built o 


me, as a reader of your 
d instructive journal, to make a fow remarks 
lations oak in 


i 


experience of any one will 
eee calculates the produce 
ible aerating fat shee 


FOL 
i 


J 
T 
2 
3 
f 


1711 


i 


my cow |i 


j 


eee 
5 


i 


r on 
they are old * pi put up 
he 


is a bold will | ca: 
— 30k, ge of 100. 
eg ream 

how many 2 are kept, |p 
what their produce are kept 


. 


hi 


from the time they are weaned until they are put up 
for fatting ; and sy, how far 30 qrs. of Barley will 
atting them. We have 


ity be saved fi 
t others less favoured are 
subject to, then may he an akpa on acre of | 


He next gives two cows re ys for p 
by pagas 17 E i 
They 


60 fat n 


rom inmen 


the man 


are necessary, 
materials, and the . — that will 
acerue when the end of the business is reach 


portant of 


| _ The yearly sho 
of care 


and — ided wih pa proper 
ect of 3 utility, and 
and the poin admired 
ample ion to * amateur 
of conn iy oF tak the 1 of secreted 


of flesh, an 


most gratifying and instructive, 
o is capable of viewing Nature’s works. 
in ie: mirror at 9 no sight can 


108 
24 
Profit on 100 ho ogs (ni 1) 
8} of Wheat at 4 qrs. at N. (being 1 sack above the 
average) 
Produce of two cows. 


S — 
oo oco 


0 

0 

0 

Sj and Ta ates 0 

— bills 0 
1 i cone fro om yeaning, and other 

0 

Ditto. 3 and wear and tear of .. * 


om micron. 
Wilkins Wheat.—I have now before me . 
bread, — 7 and pastry made from the Mum 


heat, the flour of which came from the mill this 
morning, Never did I eat better, sweeter, or pleasante 
bread ; the ing and pas , also, equally as 
good. In general, fiour is not £o good di ly from the 
mill ; but I repeat that I never this: it 
ant to the is also 


off. A ther thi I left in my barn ut a 
dozen sheaves, unthreshed, for samples ; to-day I wanted 
them, but to my grief every ear had been off and 

awa vermin. t a grain is left: and this 
has been done, though I have other Wheat Barley 
in straw and in sacks, barn, appear 


Whe at is ab a 2 kind ? 

n Irela have read 

Agricultural eae n f Nov. 24, signed by “ X. Y. Z, 

in which he s of the impossibility of making 

Roman Catholics 2 on any of their holidays, and 
that e farms in 


during one mass 


; , there- 
— quit 23 work at 12 o’clock and repair to their |€: 
from 


l to their usual occupa- 

to rt 2 as on other 

— to spend the hour from 1 to 2. I beli 
seeret here has 


0 
192 10 0 


£29 10 0 
of 


read a paper in n your For th 


ffect, | prizes of this year wore adjndged as follows. 


pe sandy or invit 
plea 
| object generally: satisf; 
first re 


the e production and preparatio 
of very peg attention. The cultivation of it, as well 
as of the so adv of an en- 


ear show an indefa- 
uch credit 


h railwa: ways 
us in the a will convey — 
e general rendezvous, without travelling 
curring the expense of 2 
or alteration 


i from ever 


i eai opportunity of examining 
imals which are hibition the —p tion. On 
the days of public exhibition th prevents. 
e 


to the proper quarter 
in due time, and his attention on this point adds much 
the favour that granted. Our own visit was. 
most agreeably indulged with the noise d leisurely 
xamination 


d in the sh 


be 
the | the ni, of hike instead of dof Saturday, as grt dng 


By this avoided the necessity of per- 
: animals. 


be wanting in such cases of 9 The 


and give them regular work. J. C. S. 


——— feedin 
SMITHFIELD CLUB SHOW oF FAT CATTLE, 4 


2 splendi 
the o 


the poorer this must 
ey force them to 9 tisk days of their 
labour from those employe: them . | 


the night of Friday, 
served that labour 
with the laws of Nature, and that in every primary 
Success will w oe 
of attention that is 


pa with 
egree a 
The * of — may — 5 but che aws 
be subverted; the pr 1 ma 
much altered, but the ori A type 
se in the ne of the i 
been m 


easure of recording the 4 1 


l rem 
ae —— world has House, near Ross, 


„ of 
Hereford, for a 4 yem ; and 3 months 
Thomas F! 


reford Ox, bred by Mr. of Didley, 
Carrots, 


2 a weak of any 3 


ss 11L.— = Oren pE Saet a 
4 years ol E, widhons reitti trictions as 


and not exceed ing 
feeding, yet the kind or Baar ‘of food must 
Ist meda 


K ear Taunton d 
Barley, — ld. Devon Steer, bred — himself, and f fed on 
„ Flax ay, Grass, an 3d 
— * 51. to his Royal Highness Prince Albert, of 
Win dsor Castle, for a 3 years and 11 months old Here- 
ford Oa bred sd , William Vaughan, of Cholstrey, 
near „ Herefo rd, and fed on cake, meal, 
Toots, and hay. 
Crass III.—0Oxen c Steers of any breed, above : 
not exceeding 3 old, without restrict aree 
‘to feeding, yet the kind or Yow köd of food must be ce 
prize of 25/., and silver medal to the dee 
Richard S 4 horp, near Swindon, 
years and 11 months old —— 


for a 2 years 
Te. eel fed on hay, 
and F] 


Sha IV. 1V.—Oxen or Steers of any breed or 
above 80 and under 95 stones in weight, wiles 
1 yet the kind or kinds of ‘be * 

ze of 20/., and silver medal 
ht Hon. the Earl of Leicester, 

ells next the Sea, Norfolk, 

onths N D 


meal, Barley meal, 
Lentils, 2d prize of 107. to Mr. 
John Tacker, of abbey Print-works, Stratford, Essex, | to 
A and 1 week old Hereford Ox, b 
1 


etches, Turnips, Mangold Wurzel, oilcake, and Bean, 
Das ‘Oat, a — meals. ; 

o VLO en or Steers of the Scotch, Welsh, or 
Trik (K erry) breed, of any age, without re rey nd as 
to feeding, yet the kind or kinds of food must be certi- 
fied. The prize of 107. to Mr. John 2 as n., of 
Thorpfield, near Thirsk, Yorkshire, teres about 4 years 
old West Highland Ox, breeder 


man- 
near Mansfield, Nottingham, for a 4 years and 
short-horned 


months old “anh bred by 
ica tel Grass, hay, Turnips, 
and Bean meal. 2d prize of 101. 


Grass, hay, 
a 3d prize of 57, to Mr. Bow 
irencester, Gloucester, for 
and 2 22 months < 5 pure short-horned Cow, 


Si 
orca on hay, roots, oilcake, and 


Cu ta III.—Fattened Cows, of 5 years old and 
upwards, 3 fe 
os Kinds RN as to ice ethene 
heifers are not — lst prize of e = 
ver medal to the breeder, and goid: medal as the bes 
Gow or Heifer in the Ti, Sty an e 
Samuel Wiley, of Bransb by, mene Yorka or 97 years and 
2 months old 5 Cow, bred by himself, and 
fed on Grass, ha; a 
2d prize of 102. a Edward 


ld 
5 5 Richard Dud- 


Grats, Clover, T, seeds, may ins ‘Sek Turni 
and oilcake, 


ss 18 \.—Fattened Cows of 5 isl aa 
wards, hat R Tan had at least 9 pop calves at 
pre births, without restrictions as to feeding, yet | 
kind or kinds of food food: must be certified. lst prize 
r ae” Mr. Richard 
near 


any breed, above sje 
be erde yea 


e William 
io 


am 
Each she eep not to 
e 


as to feeding, silve 
d be 


to Mr. 
by 
-| him 


ts, 
Wether Sheep, 1 year o 


| near 
and fed on 
f 


r | breed, 1 — 
Ist prize of 20/., and — 
gol 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


Carrots, and Clover. 2d prize of 10/.to Mr. Robert 
o | Beman, of Moreton in the Marsh, N for a 5 
Cow, bred by Mr. 


rs and 7 months ol ur 


hay, cere Wurzel, Turnips, oilcake, and flour. 
a Stock ee Iver medal to Mr. Stephen G 
N near Norwich, Norfolk, for a 4 years and 
9 W old short-horned Ox, b bred by himself, and fed 
on white Turnips, Sw angold 
Barley meal, Linseed eae; — hay. 
8 
Lass X.—Fat Wether Sheep, of any long-woolled 
ss meda 
t pen of Rag Be p in 
the 10th, 11th, oa 12th classes r. George Wains. 
ley, of Radston, near Brid — oiga Tauk for a pen 
of three 21 months old Leicester Wethers, * by 
i i e Most Hon 


Lincoln, for a 
Wethers, bred by his Lordship Paua the stock of Mr. 
andy. 

Lass XI.—Fat Wether Sheep, of jaj long-woolled 
reed, 1 year a 3 restrictio to 
220 = live vadi. 
of 201, and — — * to 


2 
„ 
* 


feedi 
Ist prize 


r, Essex, for a ae of 


y 
Giaa XII. —Fat Wether Sheep, of any long-woolled 
breed (not Leice: = 9 1 year * witkout restrietions 
medal to 


restrictions as to 
e of 10}, and — medal, to Mr. 
ittle heatley, Ox- 
ford, for a pen of three 213 mon er old long and shor a 
woolled 2 bred by hims d prize of 51. t 
. Ch oward, of Biddenbam, n near Bedford, for 
ld Leicester and Southdo 


ng sho: 
Bao te 1 year old, without ictio 0 
Each shee’ not to aig 220 lbs. Hof! live 


s Lordship, from the stock of t 


late — Harv: 


paige “wie Cross-bred Sheep.—Silver medal to 
e Earl of ee of Holkham Hall, 
k, for a 20 months old 

lordship, 


—Fat ee Sheep of mac gl eg 
ear old, without restrietions 

the . aon 

the best pen of short-woolled Sheep in 

dl Mr. Rigden, of Hove, 

near Brighton, Sussex, for a pen 7 — three 21 month 

e 3 

stock of Mr. Jonas Webb. 2d prize of 104. t 

Foljambe, of Osberton Hall, near W. is 

for a pen of 


mer- gham 
down Wethers, bred by himself, from the stock of 
d 


of 10/., and silver 
i 


and up- | medal to 


onas Webb 

tass XVI.—Fat Wether Sheep, of — short-woolled 

breed, 1 year old, without restrictions to fee eeding. 
Each Sheep not to exceed 200 ) Tbs. live to The prize 

medal to His Grace the Duke of 

ond, of Goodwood, near Chi * Sussex, for 

n of three 21 months old Southdown Wethers, 


a pe 
bred 27 his Grace. 
—Fat Wether Sheep, of a 
wooiled. breed; 2 years cond without restrictions as to 


Wurzel, Bean and | 0 


in the | bulk, 


ar 
self, from the 
o Mr. Ove 


c 
any short- 
and 05 silver —.— Bn fin 


n Class 
a Ra oa of Mr. 
ak animal was 


EE 


3, 


2 
È 
Fz 


3 2 ear Colches 

ree 25 wee 6 days old i impro 

2 585 red by himself, and fed on mprored 
ota 


i 
Hi 


5 
II 


8 3 
48 8 82 
$ ge 1 
HEHH 
11 F 
LATES 


classes, 
of Coleshill, near F 
Berks, for a pen of three 71 weeks old Coleshill Pipe 
bred by his Lordship, anil fed on meal, and whey, 
T rock: Preas,— v 


ene 17 Horn 


Barley, groun 

The ch won attention among the animals was 

reford Ox which arie the lst — 
best 


any case 

bulk of the carcase form 

—— the greatest w 

compass, and that without hhoro the — 
wn coarsen 


t ey not a large on as the 
be a = Pa ber, 1 pe 
very great superiority of all . — points. 
in 


and 
mentioned. The a 
men and Farrow, of R 
second prize, a shor horned ox, showed a large 
built in yore" the handsomest shape or colour of that 
pag ay breed. e le — were coarse in bone and 
e head, čisproportionately large. paalit the — 


put ery symmetrically square, with 
3 a shoulder v was well poign and ribs fe provided 
The 


vered, and 


d 
— The fore 


eshy carcase, 
lumpy secretions of "oy ool 
shoulder was rather 
the iors deep an 


sed. 
ength 5 feet 4 inches. 
pms 8 belonging erg, Royal 
respectable animal 
Girth 25 ye $ feet 4 inebes. 
1 re 


d 2 


the animal mal frame. The | 
the posterior squareness of the | w 

It was much and justly are ry and had no 
— in the show, though it m. no prize, nor attracted 
endation. Girth 8 feet 3 inches, and 


—. 

; age 3 years and 11 — 
III. the first Bain showed a sized 
te colour, of iiih symmetry ; 
— which isa 


showed vi 
the thigh 2 The you 
uch 5 pay 7 feet 6 inches, 
inches. ird prize exhibited 
a Devon ox, of v 
i my Girth 7 feet 7 inches, and length 4 feet | 
Sold to Mr. Waite, Wormwood-street, City. 
Class IV. the first prize rested 


rize, y Hereford Stee 
* n the exhibition, 

was not unostaly 10 at, 5 very fi . and uniform rmly 
covered. Girth 8 feet 7 inches length 5 feet 6 inches. 


evon 8 


and better 
specimens 2 — western bre 
Lass VII. the short-horned cow of Mr. Fletcher 
uncom — a specimen of that breed. The 
length and squareness of the splendid igor the rotun- 
dity of the girth, the levelness of the bac k, width of 


years. 
. Girth 8 feet d — and length 5 feet 
e second prize 8 a Devon cow of very 
fine parts, an possessing all the points of the most 2 
of all British cattle, Still, * varrowness behin 

very ani f sort. 


8 fee 
> Engl 
first 


cow ow, 
ey height mioni 222 the 
* rotundity of the carcase. seful animal | in 
excelled the > others in our opinion. Girth 8 feet, and 
tag 5 feet 6 inches. 

TRA ere 7 medal showed om animal 
— 2 carcase an The 


nd S Me which posse 
e prize ones, which 


a bo 
is cnsentiad to form — wre ul parts. The 


length aioi 2 


, 
132 
ia = | 


d | be doubtfel between them 


aif beyond the common exhibitions ; 
ohl Rabi 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


Devons needed the animals of Mr. Quartly 
copes animals are too small. We — 
ill e forward next year. The t-horns 
falling off of five the — of Earl Spencer. 
n the classes of —— -woolled SHEEP, ‘the chief prize 
itai 


be 
body long and — ſore-flank 
traight, head long and 


the head, bu — 

wool was — if not sapere py e — prizes. 
Mr. Fisher s’ sheep were —.— deficient in the 
symmetry of the head, though Maar orar 


m 
Mr. Stokes’ were aleo coarse e head, but superior 


eman. In general opt gunn 
better exhibited. The 


all competition. 

superior had eve 
ceed the Duke of Richmond's i in the fineness o 
ck, and also i 


arser th 

head. The Earl of Chichester's sheep were 
mended, which is equivalent to a prize. Mr. Humfrey's 
showed a large coarse j otherwise were goo 
— Mr. Foljambe's sheep supported his character 

a breeder. The carcase show 

idth than any of the other prizes. ead is rather 
wide at the top. The pony of Leicester's sheep have 
ost the proper black face, a 
ure stock, — are well ſormed, and ſorm 

breed 


top. 


— Leicester deserve much „ 
l in the p aera wed a wether sheep 


The | seed. 


tions 
| and the fat thoro! 
imals. | posterior can 


| this consummation, which is ce 


„the 


a more uniform — 


797 


The frame is set on two wheels, which are pulled 
c 
ap esa u 
and lifts the ony te downward — — eonan 
ze | iron into the for the 


and might be extended to a horse frame, and wrought 
8 on the top, or regulated by machinery 


In our — uding remarks, we are satisfied that 
cows or 2 lon 9 — shee and 
been “a a oe 
sses are at — an an average We ae y —— 
to see that the animals progress year to fies — 
of ally fat to the level bulk of useful flesh, 


b 
completely 2 with Lord 
horned Ox in — „and Mr. W . Hereford 
Steer in — * e carcases were evenly 
cov 2 fore-point of the ealt to the 
and no tendency to lumps was 
taste almost universally now leads to 


able. The public tas 


one-fourth of 
e carcase would have oa 

u, the ne —— ultra of animal 

y 80 

reporte 

pr ticket of admission to the show of this * * 
ſour . of the holding. The omission is small, 

but still noticeable. 


THE BIRMINGHAM AND MIDLAND oe 
EXHIBITION — — CATTLE, & 
ust congra nye = 3 ol the Midland 
Counties Herald, to w understand this 
exhibition is mainly ion, upon the 
this year attended his efforts and — of 


lace ; and 

about 240 lots of sw tog A very fin “exibition 
indeed, as shall be hereafter stated in 
lected po this roof. e — with 

d the arrangements of the whole aflair were 
The — 5 + — no prize list 

The prize Hereford Ox, y Lord W arwick, was a rè- 
markably well mods animal, weil fattened all over; an nd there 


n | any uae “aithin the reach of o 


8 which won the 


cow 6. the ya 


in 
. 
f 


ane 
in — 


clas ass disqualified ft 
respectively, 9 feet 10 i 
engths 6 feet $ — 6 feet 

y were n 


ri 


the 


UUIG ve 


form 
formes improve — — uti i. The w hite 


both, and — ay — larger one, of very 
s extraordinary both for number and 


vi bein 


able, | 
co 
of Pigs w 


size of the 


ene verance, to produce a breed of one’s 
wn may be prod 

great difficulty is to stamp th 
The club never before boasted such a 


true mode of breeding, to select the materials, and by Th 


a in quali OR STEERS. 


the) Class I.: : Herefords.—10, to the Bari of Warwic sand silver 
| medal to the breeder, „ John Wheeler, Tri 
mals, | Lin ok Ludlow. — to Mr. II. Cham 9 


Highly commended, . 
Prince Albert, and a silver medal 
Devonshire.—5l., 


d 2 y 
points, the palm of merit might 
ap i and Lord Radn 


e body. 
4 n the 


— Rob ere near Thirsk, Yorksh a 


—— w 

*. the flesh being dressed for 
removed, is more pleasing in the white colour thes 
As ed before, the pigs of this 


exhibition of roots. 
but coarse in 
or red and yellow — 


urrey 
yif oi a merit. Edgi 
sheep-dipping apparatus in the usua 
becomes yearly more — more 
d loses the 


attention was 


eur New 0 
„ Class 


an 
fy plication, Our | Mr. 
r. Newington’s | 


rting 
aibble, which sows an acre per day vith: the work of one 


as ‘ons,—I01,, to 
ie tat Fog Mr. James Quarts, Mollan 
Mr. Thomas 3 sin gton, 


Northam tonsh -4 
Class I Scotch and Welsh Breeds, —10l., 2 _ — 
„ AND HE 

{ 

me hone ae hby-de- 

Ager Sen in Shropshire. 


refords (Heif ers). ., t 


„ to 


toner lan e, Tardebigg. 

unite ea Charles Knigitiey, Bar 
Northamptonshire, w ded by t the 
Class VIII.: Oxen 


n E. Vernon, Esq., 
mbleton, 4 „ Shel. 
don, Warwickshire 
VIII. A: Cows,—10i., to Mr, — * er. 
on, and a 
Mr. Richard W 


— rg Do 
uneaton. 


ton-h il, ar N 
3 vil it. B: Heifers, 4 to the Right Hon. Lord Hather- 
a 


desley, near igre 
HEEP 


ass IX.: POE F a to Mr, Francis obbins, Stone. 
Warwickshire, and a silver medal aiso to 1 Rea as 


to Earl Howe, Gopsall Hall, 
wy à Aer er mei MUG, ae as breeder, 


“Glass XII.: Short-woolled, not utes ng Southdowns.—2I. to the | 
le arwiekshire, and a silver 
. John Baker, 


, Woreesters rshire, and a — medal 

coe! asb 55 3“. to Mr. William Shipway, 
tl Worces tershir: 

Hanley TA 7 : Best pen m three Long-woolled Wethers, not 

ex ing 34 N i to Mr. John Henry Lees, aoe pee end, 

near Coleshill, p a silver medal also to Mr, Lees, 

. to the same, Commen ae . 
III. * Best pen of three Short-w i 
pia SP Bon ae 51. to — — Earl of r abr also 

-a silver — — his, lordshi a eeder, o Mr, Edmund 

Powick —_ ire. 

ge or OATTL SHEEP. — N N meng 

Bainesse, d Fon e Mr. R. Lue fton aor 

Worcestershire ; and Mr, B. Swatield 93 Derbysh 


ss XI ceeding ree months old.—5i. to Mr. 
David 1 Mace, Pisa Isle of Ely.—3l. to Mr. Joseph j 9 


Highl I 
5 8 15 Fat Pigs, exceeding 14 and not epee $ 
mon d.—5l, to . Arthur Perks, Kingsbury, br 
shire.—3I. r. Thomas more, Dean-street, Birm: 5 
Highly commended. 
Class XVII.: Fat Pigs, exceeding 18 months old. 5“. to Mr. 
ames Baldwin, King’s Norton, 5 Birmingham. —31. to Mr, 
Lowe, Comberfor mworth. — mended. 


Class XVIII. r Breeding Sows of a large breed,—5l, t 
* — Tuley, Exley Head, near Keighley, 
3l. to Mr. Edw win np radeon, Headingley, Leeds. 

8 X ing S a euni 15.” 9 —5i. t 
—3l. to Mr. Charles 


Class XX.: For pens of five Store Pigs of one litter, not ex- 
ceeding 7 months oan be foo Aer 8 b 
hill, near Burton: u Matthew on, 


88 near ohare 3 to the same. 
Class XXIII.: Brawns of a large breed.—5l. to Mr. Edwin 
He ley-hill, — —3l, to Mr. J. Cartwright. 
Longton, agg mis Potteri: 

Class XXIV. : Brawns re a small breed,—5l. to Mr. Thomas 
Alkin, Grendon, near Atherstone.—3/. to Mr. Edwin Eddison, 
Headingley-hill, 

— or Pras, — Mr. Carmicha el, So park, n 


owerby-} 
Fletchampstead, eel "co. 0- 


— Yorkshire ; Mr. Harris, 
; Mr. Ball, Bretforton, near Evesham, , Worcester: 


same. 


niums, Garden 


‘occoli, p 


ots, per 


rimia * 


Hops ar 


The 


COVENT 

Grapes are plentiful for the season, 

the 8 Filberts and Walnuts 3 br Ee 
tiful, Oranges and Lemons abundant, 

Amongst Vegetables, 

ihe 


an Potatoes have 
Letiuces and other salading are plentiful 
price of Mushrooms. N 
— 


Pine-apples, per Ib., 48 
Grapes, hothouse, p. lb, Sa to 6s | Almo ka 
p 


bages, p. doz., 
Saule p. * to 48 
-doz, bun a yy tol0s 
Gie eens, 15 doz., 1s 6d to286 
Brussels ema 


8, p. hf. 
1s 6d to 
Sorrel, ela. nf. seve, 6d to 9d 
Potatoes, per oe Avg 100s 
— 3 cw . 
Sa Ae ush 


yang p. bundle, 8d to 1s rr 
tadishes,p. 12 — ls to 2 
r 


4d to 6d 
P. on. 18 to 28 


SMITHFIELD, Bosca mal Den. — 0. 


r of 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


Harkets. 
GARDEN, D 


not alte 


Bigno 


0 12s 
pples, kitchen, p. behs 25 to 4s | 
Lemons, per doz. to 2s 
per 100 , 68 R 126 
0 per ‘doz., 9d to 1s 6d 


ee tiny 


Turnips are goo 
Caulitlowers and N are sufficient for 


* s sufficient for 


ood table Pears scare 
and plentiful ; Carrots 


since our last 4 
No a tory a in the 
consist of 


| Oranges, = a. 5s — 12s 


8 J 9s to 36 
100, 1s 6d tom 
, 168 to 2 


P. 
Filberts, per 100 Iba, 433 to 608 
Rut 


S. 
Onions, p. bushel, 3s to 4s 


— Spanish, p. doz, AA 6d to 4s 
Shallots, per ib, 4d to 8d 
Garlic, per Ib., 4d to 84 


Artichokes, P. doz., Is 6d to 38 
Le ery 2 P. sc., m to 9d 


& 18 

ve, 38 to 4 

Mushrooms p. pot» 1s tols 3d 
bush., 3s to 6s 


o., d 
Endive, 5 per score, ls 
8, p. hf. sie 


hym 
Parsley, p. doz 


Basil, per — 24 


—— OES.—SourRHWARR, D 
report that the arrivals re the Continent 

are so oe dee less prices nary been 
foreign Potatoes, particular 
nearly unsaleable. 


rly inferior Bret es which are 
Choice Yorkshire — gn still command 
ee a are this day 


submitted to with all 


HOPS.—Fruway, Dec. 
ATTENDEN and SMITH re — 
. although as 2 at this season, but little is doing. New 

ry scare 


hat the market is 


Beasts is 


siderabl late ; 


s than of 
ee * ive readily dis- 


than our top quotations a: are r 
much s TES and trad 


more 
make , but it is too high 
8 el ves being 
Pretty freely given for er berg 


s f in ene 
not very plentiful for the ra Sheep 
choice descriptions rather better, Ti a 2004, and for 
favourable causes slow sale for second-rate Tag w. 
‘Porat ors tba is about He same as on Mon Trade for 
e d i 
Best Scots, Rs. . 1 d 3 4 
fords, &c. o4 4 Ditto 3 Stos o 
20 Aer Beas 5 i 1 = 6 Berg 3 0 3" | 
sts 6| Di — 
Best Down - bani rns PE 1 a 
Half-breds 44 0 Calvas Te ee 
1 Sho * 2244 
easts, 2035 ; Sheep and Lambs, rie Ae 1 
tio; Pigs, 2%, 
HAY.—Per Load of 36 Trusses | 
Sul — Dec. 13, 
me Meadow * 955 to 705 Clo over 
Inferior ae 50 — New Clover . „ 860 808 
0 „ „„ „ 
New Har. = . e 
ry dull trade. 


D MARKET, 

Prime Meadow Hay 65s to 3 . ee th 

8 gee 50 New Clover o Sito te 
pse Hay t. s.. — — 

ola Clover ;.. 0 


— a. e 
a Josava — 
— — a a 
MARK LANE. 
Monpay, Dec, 10. . supply of English Wheat from the 
morning was small, and the con- 

dition generally bad ; aa m o actors succeded 
— on . the terms o of this day sen foreign the 

usiness done was limited, and chiefi ses 
of old red and the 2823 Bre dy fy confined oo aw 


LIVERPOOL, TUESDAY, “Dec. 11,—At 


t this day’s market there 
ge ig demand for Whe at; good Irish m ade an e | 
1d, to 2d. per bushel, "the somal! being 2 other kinds and 


— 2 brought the full prices of last Tuesda i 


Flu 
PRICES, 


ctuations in the last six weeks 
Nov, 3. Nov. 10. Nov. .de. ‘Mt Dees eb 1. Dre. 8. 


mbe 
choice qualities a are especi ially ' — 
= „ 1 
Calendar r ar of Op erations. prices n some instances rather more 
Svssex Panu, Deo. 10—We have had a good deal of wet London, Liverpool. Wakefield. | Boston. Birmingham. 
weather yaa ey mei but still we ha e had seven ploughs at work I : | 
— — 5 der, bovine the| CURRENT. Dec. 3. Dec. 10 Dee. 4. Dee. 11. Nov. 23 Dee. 7. Dee. 5. 1 Dee. 6. Dee. 13. 
land drained, as we t ploughs into the dr: 2 fields, 3 qr. 70 lbs. 70 lbs. qr. qr. ; 62 lbs. 62 Ibs. 
when wet- a great advantage, _—— this — of —— 2 in ea 5. . , A, W diam . d 8. 8. 6. d. 8. d. e. d. 8. d. 
8 horses are engaged carting New, red .. 40 to43 38 to435 8 6 15 8 6 2935 04435 43/39 to3 32 7036 (4 8 5 24 9 5 3 
earth fi ad f 3 
ä — — — white . 42—47 42476 4 6 86 4 6 8/41—48/41—48/34—44/34—44|5 2 5 65 3 5 7 
Oats and Peas, cleaning out ditches, maki d repairing Old, red de 2 — 6 3 6 66 3 6 6|39—4339—43] — 4 9 5 3410 5 4 
in quality, and the quantity per aere ds 18 bushele; tre basin e l — | Z fs 6 5 Bh 6 5 9 
is also very good, and will return a profit for growing ; it bas Foreign... . 35—5235—52 4 4 7 414 4 7 03648036480 — | — f 8 5 814 8 62 
now gone ah rough the process of steeping, and is dried in 480 lbs. 480 Ibs, 
-cellent order. I shall soon begin to break and swingle it. J B. er ey — |20—29/20—22 pa hd — — — — ee 
Notices * Corr ents. reign... |20—23 SEE 23 — 5 — iiis 2 2 dia 2 
Avorn: G D R. An Prot once rt Sm will rer ign meal 5.—605ʃ.—6, Oe y * Ty ey ma 
y you witha 3 „ by which you as in ey qr. qr. qr. n 
of your subsoil to a depth of 12 to 20 inding soe 23—2523—25 — — 20—21 | 20—21|21—23/21—23|} 19—23 19-3. 
‘Canpaces: 4 B W. We have no ana of the Cabbage, But Malting... —. |25—27|25—26| 30s—3ls | 30s—31s |24—29/23— — — 24—29 24—29 
— — h inferior on, they are be r an i 95|18—95 21—25 20—24 222 
other green erop we believe. We can st her es ee py -a Fik sjen SI 
ede grek pirer them than stripping the outer leaves and 5 6 -|6 
Rave heard has been dose so a in the usual wa: this we | Malt—Ship ... . 0 a — 35—38035—38 — — T r? 
as one so as tọ keep them th 45 Ibs. 45 lbs. 5 
ramia OF ÀGRICULTURE : T R H. It is the one we alluded Oats— White... |18—24|18—24|3s 24 38 3d)3s 2d3s 3d — — |13—18)13—18} 17-2 117 
to. We do n not know what is meant by “supplied to sub- Bla X... |16—22)16—22/2 2 2 z FF — — — — 16—17 ey | 
aS phon . address tbe b salsa? saa 324) — | — | | op a pe 
very much oblige us by information on th . be hm well as qr. qr. qr. | a. ‘30—36 
on — e will see that we have publi his Peas—Boilers 28—31ʃ28—31 33s— 338— 26—3226—32 Sa pni he. 
: column, 1 
Sor mar m LE —— Pape already exposed for some Grinding... | — 7) „ 11—12 1-12 
&c., and spread it over ar Grass land ai Foreign ... [24—30|23—30 29 —30 zme ries cae aes PE A 
the rate of 2 or 3 tons per acre. 5 12 Beans 3 
TxVExTox: Sub should write to a patent agent—forin-| New, small oe 19 2 i | 
stance, Ch whe —and 7 23 23—29 — 8 —3 29 0 27—28 22—27 22—27 1 28 b: 
tions from them. Fre registering costs, we believe, ee | OÀ e S| || ga 36 | 32—36 [32—s3s2—saaa—sdsa—sa] Mois | -ii 
N. and Foreign —. 23—36ʃ23—36 25 —34 as 26—28| 26—30 2 1113 PPA 
— — We — the disease to consist in im in Pere OE | 
ment functions stomachs and liver. From the | ' — 
ity of its progress there appears | oon — | — | 40—42 | 40 32—40/32—40, — | — — ie | 
F700 — [37—gsls7 as) “© OTe I |] TP 
linir: y randir ge of food. Tn the absence of all | Linseed 1 | 
2 Mun aera on rods oF on British... 197, 128197, 128JL. 15a—81|71. 15e—8,| — | — — . 
8 jot suggest Foreign mz | 7 — — — — 14 — — e 
Grass, we cannot suggest anything further. 8. ait | 
: Owen Glendower, In answering you r question last 2 
n o the printer, the | Indian Corn— 22 26/2226) 27s—30s | 27s—30s | — | — | — | — | 12-3 | mek 
ord or twos — mora? She addition of a . sack|p. 280 Ibs. 280 Ibs. p. each p. sack per saek. Rs 
— ae Senet to have and the the | Flour— 32—4032—40 30—32 | 30-32 | — | — Í 30—36 a m 
answer is thus the reverse of our Cold j | 
a a ee rbs sing 2 d 
7 damen 27 adl, and Small Farmer. Tt he will describe Averages and | Aver. | Impts.| Averages. | Imports, | Aver. | Impts.| Aver. | Aver. | ggg oii | 
treatment ewes he keeps on his extent of land l 
from the 1st of December to sumo when the lande are 4c i — s. d. 8. 8. qrs. | 
East Ang pera See — 45 0 14510 40 2 | 1564 39 6 12373 |36 2 | 4374 
Yew ; 4 BARLE : 
— Sup relates that twoheifers died in his neighbourhood —.— Y „ 27 6 17550 28 1 661 25 5 413422 5 176 
daring the n ih ie here was proce tees | ae RYE. 7 11 13660 16 F 2574 jis 4 259 13 5 931 
very much affected ror Ete r 
Paen turne per — 7 as if we Pts tei — 130 8 5 30 2 542 34 0 — 
Euna ram: A A 1 for 6 KING SEG. ANDARS THOMAS 
“warning the soil” read “Burning the soil." s- Siem and LAY. Nele and DUNNS| WRIGHT. | 


50—1849. | 


Sales by Auction. 


O GENTLEMEN, NUR SERTMEN 


Mg PROTHEROE AND MORRIS will — 


t. — r by Au „ at the Auction Mart 
Bartholo e, on THU oe ere! 20th, about 500 
CAMELLIAS, —. of all the ed varieties, well s. 

— a — 


and Album os 
HOSES AMERICAN wah ee 


‘ wage 
— ~ — . — 


y be — d at the ee ae 
ursery, Leytonstone, Ess 


RY A AND GREENHOUSE STOOK 


large Bulbs. ot LILIUM {Lancifoium, 
and Dwarf 


rops, 
the morning o of 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


799 


_ pier imag COUNTIES RAILWAY.—The Trains 
Christmas-day as on “ng, re Tickets 
ued for . — — te Lines 


psgate Station, Dec. 12, 1 


Ea 
iss of this apy on the —— 
— 25th instant, will be a ailable for the —— * on the 
in ‘es P. Roney, tn aa 


THE FOLLOWING WORKS ARE CONSTANTLY ON SALE SALE 
AT THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE a TA 
5, UPPER WELLINGTON STREET, STRAND, LONDON 


SECOND EDITION, REVISED AND ENLA 


E ART 55 ADVERTISERS, 

F THE JANUARY È pit 2 of the A 
2 TWENTY TH 

printed. Tos 


h 
, this Journal is aa | 
inds ‘of — Advertisements, 
Boni: £ ; ART-JOURNAL 
FFICE, 3 Chambers, 49, Feil Mall. 


In one vol. royal 8vo, illustrated by —— and Woodcuts, 


e 9s., in cloth bo: 
HE RESS OF DEVELOPMENT 
MS, and of the Vari gs 


the whole in the meantime dispose d of by priv ate 
= of which due ene will be given), 
Gardens now occupied by Mr, CHARLES J ACKSON, 257 is tiring 


from business, the while = the eee 21 EVERGREENS and 
SHRUBS, Fite TREES a G k 


Deodars and other Pines, — sage: sapa as an 
ricar n Plants, Roses, and other Deciduous brubs, and Erer. 
The Eme manas Stock. comprises 


ag of fine enn Geraniums, Fuchsias (some 
6 to 10 ret high, for 22 China Roses, Azalea indica. Rhodo- 
s, &. The Greenhouse Frames and Plants will * sold 

V 


ery reduced prices, 
urther particulars oa be had from 
3 ey and Charnley, Solicito 


Mu, D. A. RAMSAY ‘will sell. by Auction, on ng 
Premises, the Brompton ig og Ground, Fulham Road 
Brompton . 5 from Park 


lia Roo s + Sadana pawn, 
ergre 
-—May ay prior and 
morning of sale, Catal alogues 3 be daa. of, . principal Seeds- 
men, — of the ö em Brompton Nursery, Fulham: road, 
Brompton, near London 


— 5 


2 55 leave to offer his services to 


PROG 
. OF THE ue OF STOR 
eae, of the Subject to 3 
‘Youn Col. = C.B., F.R.S. Joun WEALE, 59, High Ho Tone, 
AN EL GANT Ti HRISTMAS OR BIRTHDAY GIFT. 
5 price 27, 10s., 2 quarto, splendidly bound and 
poh up in morocco, and gilt, by Messrs. ACKERMANN and Co., 
London, 
FLOWERS F THE GARDEN 
4 A te i f Thirty-two highly- 
and single specimens), drawn 
111 y Miss May; with Descriptive 


letter-press, by W. May 
Miss May was to publish = truly elegant Work — 
the request of her numerous Friends, by whom it has 
roan with the mos st marked — Kir g which now — 
her confidence in it to the Publice. 
48057 to Miss ANNE Exiza May, The e Hope Nurseries, near 
Bedale, Yorkshire. 
win be published, by Me: Messrs, KENT an and RICHARDS 
row, London, on oe 
to be GARD Wee 


s, Paternoster- 
January the 5th, 1850, price 2d., 


1 DENERS’ ote i eee Miscellany 
2 werke oo 22 under the superin- 
tendence of J. T. ren p, Secretary to the al South 


and "Plaats for o opin 
— ted with Horticultural Buildings, Embellish 
aratus, must be forwarde 4, » po 
F E, 
Surrey. All e — be sent dir 


ect to the pabiishes, 
Messrs. Kent and RICHARDS, Paternoster- don 


row, Lon 
PRICE edie OF ANY BOOKSELLER. 
4" ENTS ge NUM MBER F 5 SATURDAY 
„ DECEMBER 8, 
ATH 


Just published, price 4s. 6d. in one small mh, 32 
U A C MIST 


By EDWARD gd 
Hon. Mems. Rox. AGR 


— Ra EA 
Price 5s, 6d., cloth, 
ORNAMENTAL A AND DOMESTIC xl wierd 
aa the 


their History and Managemen Rev, EDMUN 
Saur Dixon, M.A., — of Int wo Keswiek. 
The Birds treated 3 

Domestic Fowl in The Musk Duck | The Pea Fowl 

eneral e Grey China |The Golden and 
The Guinea Fowl 5 Silver Hamburgh 
The Spanish Fowl |The White Fronted) Fowls 
The Speckled Dork- or Laughing Goose Em Cuckoo Fowl 

ings Wigeon he Blue Dun Fowl 
The ETAS Sap The Teal and its The Lark 

Fow. congeners 
The Malay Fowl The White China The | Poland Fowl 
The Pheasant Malay Goos antam Fo 

Fow he Tame Duck The Rumpless Fowl 
The howe Fowl The Domesti: The Silky Negro 
The Mute Swan | The Bernicle Goose owls 

e Canada Goose |The Brent Goose The Frizzled or 
Ta cr! am or |The Turkey Friesland Fowls 


a good deal ee useful information, pleasantly 
pe Pt 20-9 phen emi with picturesque sketches, and varied 
7, disquisitions — the Naturalist.”— Spectator. 

ment and instruction for the lovers of Nature,” 
Chroni 


yt e best w. on Poultry that has ever 
lished. R is “a elighttally 28 ma 2 2 peee al know- 
ledge. The author has, for some ti ose observer 
of the habits and char ardeterstics of 8 und — as h 


rous nds in "differen 

he aan of draw attention 
— oa in bg oy E calcu- 
iderable — 


to it, viz., the breeding and rear iog of domestic 3 

present state of things in — et of our 122 
most wr parte and has indu 

management of poultry 

ment does not pay, and never 


the country.“ -A sell 
“ We are gias to 1 ave t 
to a a subject mu 


he 

respect 

uced the 8 — the 
3 Ap That their mism 


proof that no portion of the goki. arming operations of the country 
would show . —, gain than a careful reformation of the 


strict] derate ch ve satisfaction W Ne 
given, and letters address 05 ton Nursery, Fulham- | JOURNAL OF ENGLISH AND FOREIGN LITERATURE, oe opinions we CC 
8 pinion ay refer to Mr. Dixon's rer 
road, Brompton, promptly at attended t SCIENCE, AND THE FINE ARTS, n vann is published, most oppo 3 1. — bina? pur- 
N.B. 23 " —— red and offered for Sale by Auc- Thirty-two Large Quarto P Pagos, — our im of this 
tion on rms sent on application. evie OF, WITH EXTRACT branch of — employment. The work itself has — — been 
A BE DISPOSED OF, a FLORIST’S BUSINESS, meek rss (aly Alma. ek of Modern Athens, | publie in an t e @ improve 4 form. mow pleas te saod 
concern, in an excellent jobbing neig the U 3 Kingdo grie Fa Br Li — 3 be, we En — 
hoot” for € the value of the Stock and e ae 120l.—For Lives of the Chief Ju * of | The e Double 0 y "By Me . T. agricultural u. that . find > natisi aad 
address, apply to A. Z., at the Office of this Pape: Englan By Lord Camp-| K.H aim. es an It gives the evidence of i a 
EN DENS. bell. 1 Notice. ] e 3 By J. tion, and is totally free from all th l —— It is 
TPO BE Lat ee oo GARDENS, on Lens, ean years, Hist * St. Andrews. By n k. * . —. — verre the — of — gg ee — — atom 
’ i Rev. C. Roger. A 4 
from the 5th.of January next, together with the Melon- £ i Mr, Dixon’s 
und, th fo — the Dwelling ouses (except the HORTER NOTIC ~~ ar ac Eigen oe Par wet À oy so 
Tead Gardener’s House), bles, and o a oe s Responsibilities z Em- Rudiments of Public Speaking. | fared tp not only as a standard book, but the caly one which, 
ing — S, Fruit Trees, Pine Plants, Vines, G. I. Holyoake, as . to 1 the important subject of 
Shru teek, Crop, Utensils, he. ping 2 persons desirous Pit qi Future of Civilisation, Remains Ey Ea tly Masonic which it treats.”—Old Bell's Messenger 
4 ing. a of the same mie —— y Top — Boon A — iA —.— to sity „By Rev. G. Oliver,| The title of this book might lead a person to suppose that 
8, under sealed covers, indorse enders ampton | Popular tianity. By D.D. it is a to the poultry-y essay the 
Court Kitchen Gardens,” and addressed to the Commissioners Foxton, A. B. “ore. a woke of — treatment of fowls. It is s more than this, however; 
of Her esty’s Woods, &c., No. 2, Whiteball-place, on or t entertaining book for the reader, evincin 
before 12 — 9 on F pay. the 4th day of Tana next, Ori al Papers.— wim 8 ry podem pat wor. of a most in- 
stating the nt of rent they are willing to pay for the same gin 2 8 L 5 8 — Libra- quiring mind. It reminds us much of White's Natural 
777% — benerer Bits 7 of Linnean | 2a ee 
ardener, 
of the 1 s he i conditions 1 ey Oo rta by| Foreign Co a vès ondence,—A Journey from Shanghae 
applying at the Offic e of Mr, PENNETHORNE, Architect to the to the City of Hangchow-foo, At the request of numerous Subscribers, the price of the 
said Commissioners, 7, Whitehall yard, London. Weekly Gossip.—p cts of the Book Trade— TREE ROSE is reduced from 4s. 6d, to 38. 6d. (post free.) 
Management of the British Museum—Death of M. Verbe: HE T ROSE Lr fee i 
TO NURSERTMEN —Cambrian Li ety—Industrial Home for Gentle- —Practica 
12 BE LET ON LEASE, a NURSERY — miles le's Coll 1l: Ca f ane Chole 0 ve ities from Arti Reprinted from the GARDENERS’ aoa. yaa 
tatio) tai } e’s College— — oO era—UCnuriosities i * 
7 8 — Be — E 7 Re egions—Leverrier’s Planet State Papers of F ’ CONTENTS, / 
Dwelling-house, five Gr „ and three 8 of Pits; | Societtes.— Royal (Presentation of Modals) Institution of Annual pruning P - ce, 
* good repair. . B., at M N per, Civil Engineers (Election of Associates 3 ri of ing heads, 25 
Bolton's, Seed Merchants, 152, Fleet-s New Publications : Engravin gs bii ` er 
i SL Binding u e, 8. 
mae aR GARDENERS, hed ‘Bune and others imgs inthe North of „ n Glean- — aar knife at te Paced man 9 ING. 
r° ET, Old Establish e|. ‘Thillon—The Wilkie Gallery—Roman Tesseræ, Budding, time bote from -| Aphides, to keep 
above line, within two miles of the City, and with a pa Column (Carew’s year, day Roses, diffe orts] : 
17 Lease, — Te Oe Gg if ty latter: pre- Death of Nelson’)—Nimroud ae eg J day, state of the on 1 Free- growers, 
ate Latin. Estate Agent, No. 1, Hanse. place, Old — mepe, Old — — of M. Granet. Be 1 2 — —— w Graft, — * 
ow Pablicatians.: Bud, insertion of | budding with a| and finishing 
e ee 4 7 U i 0 
r „by Stephen Heller——Jullien’s Album for : s — 
d anden GROWERS, ren 8 Society (‘The Messiah ) — Mr. | png preparation of Sap-bud, treatment | 
s onesta Tanne ay certs— n e| f i Grafting, 
T° BE SOLD onl LET, with possession, “ate (welt Night) Durrer ( The — 42 n | Shape of trees tado at 
the PARK. CABARET — 4 — 8 * trand ('The Gentleman’), oT a Shoots ond buds, Operation in differ. 
whole of — ises are walled 4 1 comprise a peaks ef Society. opyright—Jullien’ Me ndelesohn Night’ Shoots for budding | Preliminary obser- 
12 N ann — i ote Peach, Stove, Propa- Porte of Chop Parisian Nove — upon, and their v. 
Vaud; and Plant 1 Tae h — he wan a SP at . Hall—City Improvements oses, catalogue 
Various fish pt hon y and water from th Latina ys ai * S ada eee — — Proposed Na Gallery for Scotland N wild pres ose. pa 
for the use of every ps 8 premises. If sold, a * Munifi cent — 1 sh Scion, choice and 
ton of the aed Sky rimae. Wh Sorian, Order The Athen eum of any Stocks, planting ont arrangement of 
S eae ly to Mr. Parsons, Auctioneer Agent, MIGRA TION TO THE AUSTRALI oe C$ OLC COLO- G 8 —— 
i NIES.— oF curing ; colour, A DIX. 
AND esti As cg orga hate HILLIP, ma SIDN NEY, the fine British frigate-built ship height; sorts | A selection of 
d of their ormed t 3 COUNTE is OF TARROROUQR, A1, : — hg «nee foe diren ope: eties 
HEWITT | piri Surveyor under under the Act, will — oe ENNETT, Jun., Commander, cies of Rose; tak- | Comparison be- 
Pl: for Inclosing and 2 e Docks; will sail the last week in De- ing ap, trimming | tween budding 
ang Pang ng, Road-making, and other ro soos, wii leave . e the Inst roots, sending a and grafting 
ie aens g and will enter into Contracts to has just returned Colonies, i na 
... . ee Price Sd. or Ss, for 25 copies for distribution amongsı 
sengers, Re d. —— vered anywhere on, on a Post-office 
Ger GOOSE FEATHERS, ls. per lb. — * eee * * aan dz e ‘will be order ‘being sent to the Publisher, James MATTHEWS, at the 
HEAI eathers were never so ch p as at pr mira 5 on board. The Office of the 
a W RE eat soon, wc [HE corraakns CALENDAR OF GARDEN 
re . . : oe . She has RATIONS. 
— pe bee r : rg — a — 1 elegant accomm for cabin metho rs Bite with Wells's | By Josep Paxrox, Gardener to His Grace the Duke of Devon- 
Puriged by Steam, at warranted sweet and free from dust, seg Yr te 2 9222 ee iy fect > re- e tl tent ih ance ire, de, os Above 52,000 have 
ied by an l ner: e 
Heat and Sons’ List o —— containing full — Saal engine, and 155 1 For . or Passage, fe to JonN —_— 7 


sent — Bn on — 


8 *— 


already been sold. Illustrated with several woodcuts, 
n: 3. Marruews, 5, Upper Wellington-street, Strand. 


800 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND 


te deel sehen? E men bln 


m.. 15; 


SUPPLIED TO SUBSCRIBERS ONLY. 


On 1st January, Part First, > as 2s, 6d., Super Royal 8vo, 


(CYCLOPEDIA OF AGRICULTURE 


PRACTICAL 555 es ah ie 
THE THEORY, THE ART, AND “THE BUSINESS OF S 


IN ALL THEIR DEPARTMENTS, ARE THOROUGHLY AND PRACTICALLY T 
BY UPWARDS OF FIFTY OF THE MOST EMINENT FARMERS, LAND AGENTS, AND Fiat j a THE DAY, 
5 BY JOHN C. acta ON, 


OF “THE AGRICULTUBAL GAZ. 


With abobe 1 ä Ellustrations on 1000 and Steel. 


Tum object of this Work is to apare to the 3 reader the whole of the truth 1 connected with his 
know the methods it employs, and the 


Profession, so far as it is 
risks itincurs. For this mail every topic requiring 3 has been placed in the hands of those with whom it 
has been a matter of personal experience a 
} Agriculture is so 1 a subject, 


that no one writer can speak from personal knowledge on all its departments; 
and it is a 3 s0 Vi with circumstances, 
knowledge i any pre 


and therefore er age to pe ae pee een : aei = no aips kind of 
een meike ondense i in one W 3 xisting 


p“ 
oO 
be 
a9 
2 5 
. 
et 
— 
5 
Qu 
. 09 
EE 


In offering, therefore, to the 5 of Great Britain a CTCLOP EDTA oF AGRICULTURE, hoa AND 
Scikxriric, intended to be a Standard book of reference on all the subjects of which it treats, we should greatly mistake 
the exigencies of the times did we p 3 a mere compilation of bygone information, which, however interesting in itself, 
can be of little real use to the pract ital 
„ The only way in which the iow € of pi art can be br 
detailed with accuracy for his information; and t 
perfect Theory of ere has furnished; is to get aay department of the wide subject in the hands of sea pa 
have made it their especial study. 

To accomplish this desirable object en been the great aim of the Editor a . € the CYCLOPEDIA OF AGRI- 

ural w 


CULTURE; and for this purpose the ance of our most distinguished a s has been engaged 
te topic will be discussed by i 8 in order that the whole ani 5 presen nted as periectly as possible 
aa reader will therefore receive no mere compilation of other works—he will, in every section of the subject, be 
tructed by “e man who has ai us, even j the “C — * W „ Whi 


made it his 

sly, have been 4 mere abstract of previous publica successive sentences 
el by those who have themselves carried - = e processes desteibe d, or the instructions er and in 
that one appendage to the Work, the prc of farm opera are given as actually practised in twenty different counties 

of Scotland and England by more than twenty of our most saa farmers and cultivators. 
As regards the 1 S the Work, the names yi its writers, —a list of which is appended, —are sufficient guarantee for 
the Ae partio. value ormance. A Work on the eher = Art of Agriculture, of which tlie several departments 
en hy ial contributors, may well ‘command confide 
Ani us on w. eel, of Farm Buildings, Insects, Plaats, cultivated and cm Agricultural Machines, 

Implements and 8 ‘ke, will be given wherever it is presumed they can be 


A LIST OF THE WRITERS. 


THEORY OF AGRICULTURE 
Its 555 ANY, fully Illustrated by Wood — pes 23 of the IX ST OTS w hichi injure or benefit Crops, and affect Cattle— 


Y, Ph.D., F.R.S. DISEASES OF PLANT ERKELE JohN Curtis, Author of “The ish Entomology,” &c. 
La, ELS, King’s Cliffe, W. ee. Its 8 Morton, F. „Whitfield, Gloucestershire 
Its CHEMISTRY—Lyon PLATTAII, Ph.D., S.; JoHN THOM. R, F. G. S., of the National a, Survey 
AY, Consulting Chemist tothe Roy. Agricult. Soc. of England. Its ne au "GENERAL PHILOSOPHY—C. Wren Hos- 


Its ENTOMOLOGY, including DESCRIPTIONS and ILLUSTRATI 
ART OF AGRICULTURE. 


. 


The EDUCATION of its Practitioners—C. WREN rri oe DATRY—Messrs. Haxron, Fifeshire; 7 Cheshire; STAL- 
Its PECULIARITIES, in ENGLAND, SCOTLAND, se , Leicestershire; TUCKER, Dorset: 
Franpers—Rey. Wi Hickey, M.A., Thatcha m, New vers Berk CULTIVATED LANTS, including Crops, Grasses, a nd TREES— 
shire; “ag! gA Tenant of Drumnod, Cupar-Fife ; T. G.J. Messrs. ROBERT BAKER, Land A; and Tenant, Essex; 
van den Bosch, 0 , Lincolnshire; eat Davis, d Ag 
Its MACHINES, fully Illustrated d by a on Wood and London; J. H. DICKSON, -dresser and Agent, London; 
HN C. Morton, Whitfield, Berkeley, Gloucestershire. WILLIAM F: and Factor, Mid-Lothi 
Its BUILDINGS and ROADS, fully Diustrated by Engrayings— Jonn and Jas. GRIGOR, of the Norwich and Forres Nurseries; 
James NEWLANDS, C.E., Borough Engineer, Liverpool. oN H Fife; J. RTON M. Paine, Surrey; 
vig ia erya, 3 ones ee Huen RATN BIRD, Tand-Agent, Hampshire; WILLIAM ROACH, 
p gent, A VEMENT an 5 8 
Wastres—Rey. 1 1 — a GIRD- othe eet yen 3 Were 3 . 
woop, F. — S.A „Agricul I. Han- CKER, Dorsetshire. ; 
NAM, Tenant, Kirk eer —— 1 oo Eidi of. CROPS—J. e Tenant of op e 
x Haxrox, Cuj r-Fife. eaters NG — Mess: ARKE, Lincolnshire; 
and their Managem MP. J. W. x, Hampshire; i HANNAM, Yorkshire 
x ; the Horse, its Breeds and Manages | CALE INDAR of OPER vac ee in ARABLE, Mgapow, DATRY, and 
ment —W. C. SPOONER, Vi 8 uthampton. Sr 8 eee J. A. CLARKE, 
i j ens its Breeds and Mana SHEEP, its Breeds J.W. CLARK, Gursoinsine G ORRIE, HAXTON, J.C. MORTON, 
„5 ; 5 essts. JAMES Carrp, Wigtonshire; J. PAIN E, PALIN, RA n Roach, RUSSELL, 
re , Lincolns hire; Colonel Le Jersey; H. STRA SMEED, SPOONER, S ECS HOMSON, TOWERS, TUCKER, 
Fond, Editor ofthe Snort. Horn Herd-Book; G. TURN. J. WILSON; A. T. WILSON, J ani 
n ; E. F. WELLES, Worcestershire; Jons Witson, | AGRICULTURAL 0. eee 
8 3 and A. T. e oe = Hoc, | AGRICULTURAL § ATISTICS—J. C. MORTO. 
Breeds NAM, ire. TI. Cr ‘of SS on the ART, 8 . 
1 ein PIGEON, 3 5 8 Dub- whiss, Cupar-Fi ü oe 
Un zz—J.WicHToN, | DOMESTIC ECONOMY — BREAD, BEER, CIDER; MEAT, &. 
Costessey orfolk. N pi S. Drxo N 
Toimik Wakil on, M.A, J. Towns, Surrey; WILLIAM EWART, Newcastle-on-Tyne, 


BUSINESS OF FARMING 


ya 9 pede e — INVESTMENT of CAPITAL—J. C. Morton. 

Joux „Age Hospital tes; agi CCOUNTS — Tuo untan 2 

Arat r fr C. Monrox. „„ rem 
URER—J. ILDERTON BURN, of 1. SALES, &c.—J. Haxron, Fife 


eshire. 
PO laters rind Soe Ry. Hickey, M.A.,; A. SOMER- RELATING to 8 —J. G. Batt, Solicitor, 


LAWS 
oe of Berwickshire); J. C. MORTON. Stroud; J. Bricut, M.P., REN Hoskyns, BA. 
BLACK IE AND SON: 
, een EDINBURGH, 5, South College Street; LONDON, 
. Peete oe 1 Crichton Street; f NEWCASTLE, - 1 5 ron 
Perera - 85, Great Har Mogan TR Norwicn, - - - 48, Upper St. Gites Street; 
Bristot,-- - 78, Stokes C 2 Norrincnam, 25 c on 3 


PiyMoctn, - - 54, Yor 


pe 
LIVERPOOL, - -115 —— * 
41, William 


Caklislk, . . 8, Chapel Street LoxboxpERRT, 


a tes, 
. By OWERS ; or, 
gathered from the Field and 
1 rere n en een 7 
the same Author, uniform with the aboy 
SYLVAN MUSINGS: or, the "Solio the Wooda as "Babe 
New Edition of “The Spi the Woods,” 
pepi 1 = 


* GREEN, =< Lowemans, 


SIR 
New Edition, in 8vo, with Plates | ey 
UTLINES “OF ASTRONOMY 


—— To all intents a 
p Astronom my must be EFA poses, indeed, 
— has been the revision, correctio; 
the original treatise; so numerous the additions toit; 


1 PAES te co — trains of i inquiry 0 ed en oo 


LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, and 
OHN 


— BY SP 
New Edition, fep. 8vo. Woodcuts, 5s, cloth, 
THE SCIENTIFIC PHENOMENA of DOMESTIC 
era familiarly explained. 
= CHARLES Foote Gowen, Esq. 

“The object of Mr. an is to 2 the attention of the 
young to io enquiry, by ex ing — — of natural 
philosophy, 3 his Ay ta ‘rom eu mmon matters 
as — frost on the bed-room window, th 


as neat as the examples are well chosen,”—S; 
London: LONGMAN, BROWN, GREEN, and LONGMANS, 


3 NEW am DREA ae EDITIONS. 
ix ition, carefully revised and enlarged, fep. 8vo, 5s, 
INTS TO MOTHERS FOR THE MANAGE: 
MENT OF HE 18 DURING „ Šer d 
IN THE LYING-IN ROOM: with Hints on Nursing, & 


a ae . 
ame Author, 3d Edition, fep. 8vo, price 58. 
THE “MATERNAL MANAGEMENT OF CHILDREN IN 
HEALTH AND D 
erp BROWN, GREEN, and LONGMANS, 
EDUCATION OF DOMES pate! 
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IN DUSTRIAL. EDUCATION. 
B 


servants, fenling t at in ac 
value, and give ie greatest recommendation in our power.” 
“at . Messes nger, 
very ul collection of didactic little tales, good advice, 
and household and kitchen receipts, The book 


imple poet TY, 
is e designed for the N in female uational schools, 
with the view of prepari em for the duties of home or 
5 77 


ndon : LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, and Lonemans, 


1 One very thick Vol. S vo, price 2. I 
R. kA hs DICTIONARY OF Rs, S MANU- 
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E ARON HUMBOLDT =. WORK. 3 
Just published. in — Boy, wa niform 3 — pi 
and Coloni ibrary price 
F NATURE, in Different Lands and 


SPECTS O jas — 
Different Climates; wi ; 
ALEXANDER VON td Translated, ith the 1 
sanction and e and at desire, 
BINE 
*,* The same work, s., price 3s. 6d. each, cloth, or 
2s, 6d. each, e Ad 3 with ta 8 E 
HUMBOLDT’S COSMOS. Sabine's A 2 
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sewed. The Library Edition, in post 8vo 


pres 12s. each, clot wines 
ndon : LONGMAN Brown, GREEN, and Loxe 565 
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Third Edition, in fcp. 8 vo, with Forty Wood Engravings, 


price 6s. cloth, 
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os 150 
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THE RURAL LIFE OF ENGLAND. ro, Woge deute 4. 


VISITS to REMARKABL LE PLACES. 2 vols., ng ee 
THE RURAL LIFE OF GERMANY. ‘oodents, 
gs ah UDENT-LIFE OF GERM ART ag he 

: LONGMAN, BROWN, 2 
HOUSEKEEPING, FURNISHING, COOKERY, £C» 
n 1 large vol. 8vo ts FOL 
EBSTER A — D PARKES’ ENCYC. 
OF DOMESTIC Et ECONOMY. `. into. 
“Th ntents —— ng which 2 
comfort, convenience, ty, — and enjoyment 


f v. Hohn which a 
s This large volume contains 3 5 which Sol ad 4 4 
be m 3 in extending the ex 

a 


ri roe 
“The is no sort 
which 8 not found i in * eee a Le i 
Lon : LONGMAN, Baown, G 


In 80, wW In 8vo, with numerous Wood Eng ravings, 


* LANDED PROPERT 155 
MENT of ESTATES. 8 pinsa „ 
* a” most valuable of P. e e be 


ot the 
ed which w have 
Gardeners’ 


o 


Professor Low, 
MENTS of pes erh AGRICUL’ 
ie 200 W 
a the sd, nith 200, ICATED 3 of GREAT 
vo, 1 Engray 1 


avings 
ndon : LONGMAN, BROWN 


of No. 13, Upper 7, Chi 

Printed WILLIAM 1 eure Evans, 0f 

Parish of 3t Pancras, ae hate a Printers 
A 


and ba by the ne said county, where 
— Drexunzx 15, 1849. 


. 


e 


gURE. vaio 


2 EEE 


THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News.—The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22. 


[Price 6d. 


No. 51—1849.] 
| 


ENDLE’S NEW SEED CATALOGUE, | 
— DLE’S NEW BO 
ers’ Hall. 


E d ti 
It will be found of much value to a L of Kitchen 
Garden, Agricultural, and ‘et r See 


80 wing, height. other useful par rticular, a as "wall as 


1 * 
lawsaffect- § , Glazing ...... a 
. .. 07 
— 8 — Society o "a — — a Linnean Society 
ey e | Malt tax 
‘aye — e Mats, garde en. "and glazed sheds — 0 
Garden, 3 = 8 | permanent + )cultivater,, S17 a 
ne Plants s, disea: be 71 „ 
e Horccultaral . sa to nher. . . . 803 a—S04 c 
. — — tor ide q 80 
— a Souler, — Seriptare bee 805 
. —* — 3b |P. 2 show vis . S0 a a—#13 
of plants e e = ogue, re - £03 
e eee 75—80 os 
of . coos 807 € 
how to . .. 
fa sile.. e 
— and glazed sheds. 


MARDE xh BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION. 
G xorice is — a bet Agel — ANNUAL GENERAL 
s Ins r will wg held 

ndon Coffee 


wn Election of TWO PEN page: lay 52 take Ea from 
among the following Candidate 3 hay 
sag 2 8 of by the eee 


esidence. 


* pa fet 

EDWARD p MARSAL London 444 tide . 8th, 
Masr Bro Do. „VE 
Joun — i xton ttc 
A 8 . Dulwich „ Sth. 72 
APPLE . Clapham 4th 57 
Nona DUNCAN — 2 85 70 
urs Batrey .. Chelse Pa Es 
ARD BEACH Quedgley, Gloucester 28 „75 
KS sa . 63 
Richard RUDLAND Sutton-at-Hone, D Dartford 3d . 77 
. ww. Claph „ ew Th 
MLLIAMBrowN =... Ando aa Dors fE 
‘Rick Evans ii Stone, Staffordshire e 
Jonn HURDEN a WE ee | Tag 
_ CoRNELIUS ROBINSON 3 „ Bde iat 
| (MEW SNOW t Farnborough 1 A . 65 
i PirzGeratD Fulham . 64 
f Horkixs „. Nuneaton, Warwickshire ist 227 63 
Amar SCHNEIDER .... Colerne, Wiltshire 84 


The ch chair to be 3 at a o’clock precisely. ted valle t 
ose at 2 o’clock precisely. — 
. subscription for the yea 


published — e Cat e 
— aea of RHODODENDRONS and other American 
_ Plaats, &e., which will be forwarded on enn: 


es ROYAL ALBERT 


i * prolific bearer and free iom with largo, stale. 
05 > . 
7 2 any neus, ls. 6d.; a and Victoria, 9d. 


than the e en Victoria. 


and 
the qua untities furnishe d by WILLIAu E. Rennie & Co. 
Jor their collections. E 
Part 2 contains a Ae pd g pach Say of all the 
choicest and best varieties of AGRICULTURAL SEEDS. 
RT 3 contat ns a * excellent descriptive List of | 
„giving—lst, the 


f each variety ; 2d, the o olour ; 


7 a d 

3d, the hei 10 and 4. 

some useful information 
proper mode of one via ule? manner of te the 

quality of pred 2 8 2 0 a ful detailed * 
of ali the best ocks, Ast 

Ko., as weli as deve — nities s Furnished by Vein E. 

REN DLE & Co, Sor their collections 


hie Pasal 


ENE LANGELIER, Clarendon Nursery, St Helier, 
begs to offer the 2 1 ney PE 4. which 
the en of each, 


Parr 1 contains a arid pee 2 = best | arge, brown, i 0 a, my 1 yn 
ee Teer wet LES in cultivation, with the time of two years old; fine achat on . stocks, 10s. 


BEURRE DSLAVAL.— Ripe ens November — D 


ecember ; 
rassane, 3 excellent; 


fine waxy colour, siz 8 
parus or north-west wall will suit it well, Most of the trees 
a bea state; stock limited, 10s, 6d. 


GABOURELLE'S SEEDLING.— —— kitchen fruit, the 
greatest bearer of Pear trees. Ripens 1 and Janu 
ey adapted for pc for 4 “the a — 
trained, and are rous; 

10 —— en omitted in 

the printing o his — — ve Catalogue, — they will be 
found excellent and m LANGELI 

and BEURRE LEON DE CLERC, Those who may have re- 

ana them, may be assured they are of first-rate Lr poe 80 

s GROSSE 'CALEBASH. Ha yd a iango 3 superior 


8 is left to eb 

se — . he will be espouse for their accuracy, 3 or 
kitchen Pear, is irable, as a take sort, being so useful 
— wih: y 


No. 1.—100 y packets 3 etka, including all the best 
rdy, and Gre 


= 
p 


Copie s of this t best one of each sii 368. 
tion gratis, by danas two penny N to pay = postage, 24 Freie be! of each, yo 3 to 4 gts ee i, Bot bres ne 
LETA 
KITCHEN GARDEN SEEDS. 2045, N . obs 60a. 
N ron ECTIONS OF GARDEN SEEDS, po rge, not Jess than 4 or, 5 years 0 id ssh 705. 
ona r 50 rs 5 et, . oe 
ya 50 do., 1256. 
eh 1.—Conoplete 8 a ee 20 a an gid D Pe eas, and ; 10 3 The cols: spied ‘with any cian at per 3 rper — 5 
supply from orts and upwards, only one 
— 8 Dito dito Collection in smaller quantities . 113 10 0 | each, first quality, at 101, per 100; many will be in a bearing 
No. 4.— Ditto d 1 
Application to be made to Messrs. Pip 23, Paternoster- 
rary Lists. 8 1 — tk Cat — in each collection will row, London, for tie” Descriptive ‘Dateless Fine Camellia 
le weg 8 tocks for grafting or planting in 8 where they do 
well, from 408. to 50s. per 100; als super tion, all 
W F eee ofall the newest kinds, and as | stroog a and aS ot — a O o ue wiil be published 
e bav £ as well as of wh an ex- 
some of the n varieties are grow es ely, lex: : 
tion, we can oa Sern ata , Ag Ta —— ‘and correct to names | or reference from unknown corres] 
OSTAG 10 SEEDSMEN AND MARKET GARDENERS, a 
TO SEPPS begs AND MARKET SAIOEK p 


to offer * following SEE 


ger packets, 25s, 

No. 2.—50 11. tt 15s, 

No. 3,—25 Ditto econ 

Cdlaplete Lists + the sorts co 

be ak nd in our new Book Cat arta 
li orders above £2 spa ek 2 Free of re M 
ny station on the Western, Bristol a 

| Gloucester, Brist * . Exeter, or South Devon Poe 

ways or to any on and Cornwall; or to 

Cork, alg 2 Liverpool * Steamers. 

cation to all parts of Great 


For Catalogues and further particulars apply to 
WILLIAM * n & CO., Ae Plymouth, 
ABLISHED 1 


SEEDS! SEEDS! SEED 
P. AYRES to intimate “that his priced 
descriptive 89 of select VEGETABLE SEEDS, 
„ all the novel f the season, is no 
ill be forwarde ppop iene ye poets ge stam 
ands Nursery, Blackheath, Dec, 22. 
1 IMPROVED KIDNEY, 8 MOST PROLIFIC 
OF EARLY Bi At 


“PRINCE ALBERT” SEEDLING GOOSEBERRY. 

H MAS WATSON begs to inform n ue and 
a — the public generally, that he Mi now p send out 
. strong plants of this splendid Seedling "GO0SEBE ERRY, 
a 1 plant. For every dozen ordered, 17 plants will 

5 pov i plants for half-dozen, but no 9 8 below that 
1 8 e ATSON, 


W, begs to refer th he pu T ee 
| Farmers? Journal, pl the 18th — 1849; also the 
Chronicle of — Gate: 


3 wi examined, and — 
confidently with respect to flavour, and fo: 
to std . — ee first-ra' Bor ope Goose As 


embling the Warrington 


HOMAS J ae te geo weed 8 ere 
ii 


free in London, or at —4 
station on estern ae 
Nursery, Kingston, Surrey, Dec. 22 


heavy crop of 
3 have reduced its price from 15s. to 10s. per 
0 more delivered 
W. 


Carriage free (way or pt office in 
0 or Bristol, or t y station on the Great 
lern, th-western. South-eastern Railways 
JOHN SUTTON anp SONS, growing their seeds —— 
and ly proving all the new kinds as soon as in 
are enabled to supply the public with new Seeds of such — 
as will prevent disappointment in the c 


OF 3 


GARDEN SEEDS, containing full quantities of the king of 


t Hardy, 
ouse eaae, Biennials, 
8s. | 


tained in each collection al i 


Skirving rple-top Proceort. 
bun Belgian Carrot Rests Purple 8 prouting 
= Grainge’s a White 
— oh Mangold Wurzel Brimston visible 
—.— Globe 2 pa Winter ion 
anish 


Sakma r "white garton Chappell’s Cream 


Do. lue Adams’ fine » Eárly 1 White 
Barbie! s She or Tor 

| Shilling’s Queen Ca Cabbage 
Fe on Cress 
3 Marro ' Green curled Savoy. 


High-street, 3 Dec. . 

INGTON’S PEARMA po 

AMES CAMERON, Mona e 
frie 


turns his best 


ensu 
re diferent from a any ia cultiv: 
gary and aromatic 8 superior re every . to 

| the ee Pippin. Ic is z — height of flavour — January 
till the end of May, an go arer, — dwarf 
maiden plants 5s, each; the usual allowance = 
Rem es f unknown correspondents, . to the 
trees being $ sent, by Post-office orders, made payable to JaMEs 
Came N, Nurseryman, Uckfield, Sustex a 

3.0 Ch Fruit and Forest Trees, 
Quicks, Evergreens, avd Roses of E 

“PEARL 


R. JARVIS is di Sell the above GRAPE, 

1 raised from an Ey P six 
nd the second of its bearing. It been grown in a Vinery 
with plants, and as the lants were the sideration, fires 
were not kept to it perfection as if it had been in 
a fi house. ot Grapes, of a pou half, 
was to Mr. Ma the Royal Botanical Gardens, Re- 
vs Park, for his opinion thereon; and he, being unable to 


before, is red, re s Surpri 1 ar f England, olip | in r 15 
ion, Sutton's Earl is 3 to me. The lo — ee the meni are 
Eamel and round r: rather er thane al and 12 shree 2 * — y Champion, kinds of — as also N Cucum- N — 1 he bunch long and lo for 
tg r, Broccoli, Cauliflow , and — er ang 4 — with — singe The gers resemble — se of the 

itchen Gard — Black Prince, sugary an ‘i is the i 
a oy, * Gardeners’ Chronicle. — Goos nf s: T. W. Your — rte Of tion of one of the best judges of rahe ntry. The 
ut the size of the ned ‘Warrington, roun — "iong eat No. 2.—A COMPLETE COLLECTION, in smaller quan- , be dis osed of, Twenty Viss rais E ses this 

appearance ; s 15 ear, and about Eighty Eyes to be taken m the nt 
922 — inion 1 tiss, 1—4 SMALE, AND 0 CHOICE ASSORTMENT, 12s. 6d. Ihe whole being in my possession; and to a fehasher 3 
4. ree not to ape atime agreed 
The advan eee oP Cig ont ter era — are wered O be made to me, prepaid, and no oer wil 
5 lied to that is not satisfacto’ 
BS an Mono mis, eG a sei egg [i Sa 
“et, glass ends, 1 door, and 3 feet of glass in front, glazed | quality. Should an ay article Got De regn 18 
in givin ar, and ini AND IMPROVEMENTS. —-Landowners us of 
5 wa ba s in Lond 8 . ie ie of those to be Draining and their Estates are informed that 
103.; a do. do, 15 TET ie : do, 18 by 12, oats ey e SUTTONS NEW SEED oe will Mr, HEWITT DAVIS, Survey der the Drainage Act, will 
4 do. do. 2 ty B. 34, 10s., including a plan for | forwarded y post on 8 es ._ | Suppl. and Estimates for Inclosing 2 Breaking 
inch Greenhouse Lights, glazed with 16 oz. CHOICE, FLOWER SEEDS uai free by sa Hallows | New , Road-mak 

Painted three ti 1134. Sot: 2. inch do., 1s, | The best 50 sorts, 12 ; the best 30 sorts, 7s, 6d, ; the aod Parm "Improvements ; and will enter into ‘Contracts te do 

Mashing HARD Weeks, Siamford-bill, | 20 sorts, 5s. the Work,—Offices, 3, Frederick’s-place, Old Jewry, London. 


|” Reading+Seed Warehouse, Reading, Berks, 


802 


THE GARDENERS’ 


——SS 
CUCUMBERS. 

THE THREE BEST CUCUMBERS 
EY to remind the public gene- r 

dy to dispose of good sound see 

that he 5 now ready 4 a en ae 


EVER YET SENT OUT. 
for nter 


5 — ebe 
on's Favourite, or Win 


Cucumbe 
that he has che whole stock of the seed of 
” Gr pon fiesti it has 
R 


B. T. begs to 8 
was unequalled Melon 


LD WEATHE 
e SIXIS THERMO 
for HEAT and COLD, of the best construction, 
liable to a gus of ord 
Fourteen-in iter rmometer sae 


OMETER | 


and not | 


and £1 


48. 6d. 
for ‘greenhouses e. 
t e hu r tp of the 
n Hothouses, Sic chambers, ais with 
es (this is an invaluable 
Hydrometer, for for ee the anii of sage f 
of this acid should be without one, 


by ee as qual 

shown, whether for Cu 

tions how to use — one 
e Mi 


All ee of eee ee eee a Philosophical 
struments, made ENRT BAKER, A Hatton-garden, 
pemes a wili be sent on the wr an a t-office Order for 
unt, Boxes are charged extr: 
NEW AND SPLENDID SEEDLING POTATO, THE 
“STOKE COLLEGE SEEDLING.” 
F have to offer 


variety ; it h er been once SE vy ease. See 
t area AA opinion prt it, Nov. 10, p. 7 of this Paper: H. S 
Stoke Co 2 Your Seedling — vA excellent 8 and re- 
minds us o otatoes here is but a 
limited 1 it will be — ra Speke 2 . of 6s. 6d. 
cash or stamps. Mr. S. recommends Jan as the planting 
time for this varie 

8 er N averhill, Dec. 22. 


ty. 
= ‘Bienes copy the above, as it will not be repeated. 


Lo — — — — . — 
HORTICULTURAL 3 AND HEATING 


ALSO THE CULTIVATION VOR THS GI CHOICEST PLANTS, 


VINES, F 


i a eae 


enabled to grow | 
and r Plants 2 such immense 
S TH ALF-PRICE, 


W HILL begs respectfully to inform the numerous 
e applicants for bis“ Reig BOILER” of a small and 
te size, that he shall be prepared, 


early in December, | 


TTOS 


” 33 E 35 
5 » fa EEJ 3 


up, at 22d. 


me e e o size. 


each; Grape 

Glasses, 10d. 

Slabs, Hyacinth 3 — 
Fish Globes, Plate and 
and Lamp Shades 

4 tu Ts. Gd. 


bes, 
meters for rth oe 
Estimates and List a 


Arti 
Dee ember 8, 


is the best mate rial lyet 


purposes,” 
Pia : 


TILES and 
7 NAMENTAL WINDO 


Gents 


— 
1 = 
1 

inch 


All 
If ne upper ha if is 
fourth, 


— 


— —— 

FOR As Poa ey ge 
th 

16 oz. from 2d. to 34d. per foot, 


8 8 * 10 ty 2 20 
100 feet and 200 feet cases of 2 Sheet Glass, for euttin 
foot. British 


tubes, 


o 8 experience leaves us no room to dou 


A W 
GLASSES, GLASS MI ILK 3 PATENT P 1 
and Co., 35, Soho-squa 
Chron 


ALVANISED WIRE 
7d. per yard, 2 feet wide. 


j awg light, 24.inch wide 


CHRONICLE. 


In boxes of 100 feet. 
nder AZ 
: by : and dae i — 5.. 16 


a fret 


h Plate Glass, from 1s. 2d. to 2s. per 


ARTLEY’S os nd . 
of 50 feet 
e . 10s, 6d. Thy Sand 7h by Sh 123. Od. 
Mil R oh iy 4 . 18 G „ 10 by 8 15 0 


10s, Aapo rare ing Thermo 


Prices forwarded on oro Na to their 
Warehouse, 116, Bishopsgate-street Without, London 


Hee POR 8 8 ROUGH PLATE GLASS 
FOR ONSERVATORIES, &. 
8 Le Tun GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE of Saturday, 


3 this 
produced, and thatit willin t 


PHILLIPS and Co., 116, — 


GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES, & 
Hun anp CO. supply 16-0z. Sheet Glass of 
British Manuf: re, at prices varying ee 2d. to 3d. 
per square foot, for usual sizes required, y thousand 
feet o ich are kept ready packed for 8 a d 
Lists of Prices and estimates forwarded, on application, for 
——— RO LATE, THICK CROWN GLASS, GLASS 


LASS, — S SHADES, 
„Lon — 


idle first 8 in each month. 


GAME NETTING.— 


N 22 


sores 

5 722225 ce 
So 282 see 2 9 

1 h 


igi J 1 


2 a. per "ya. 5d. per "yd. 
” he 8 
iy 11 11 
“anes ” 6 ” 


g 55 14 11 
he above can 4 made any width at 83888 „ 8e 
coarse mesh, it will reduce the price one- 
8, 8d. | 


per square foot. 
„ by BA 
Norwich, and delivered 


| borough, Hull; or Newcas 


Patterns forwarded. 


RNARD and — Market. place, 
a. of expense in London, Peter- 


to supply sizes to suit every e of Apparatus, ET that 
of 100 feet of 4-inch A List of 
Sizes and Prices will, Ishortiy be be published. ws ILL guarantees 
iy: owe ae be the etive and ner age: of any in use. “RAY, ORMSON, anD BROWN, Danvers-street, 
ea, * chelsea, — vam mee — of the Nobility, Ge ntry, and 
| to their er of . ting and Heating 
GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES AND Se every description of ‘Building co conn Horticulture. The 
PURPOSES, &c. 5 — ee by them at the Right Hon — Earl of Kilmorey’s, to 
hich they have h 7 honour of aga so long, still con- 
tin ues to give perfect satisfaction. Mr. Kinghorn will be happy 
to show the work and give any informati 
be beg oe st do banes built | paan durin — 
don, in their — Garden —— = 8 the 


TINGABEE CUCUMBER CLASSES 


MILLINGTON’S SHEET GLASS, whieh is of 
Ey 3 — re a varying from 16 to 32 at 


PROPAGA 
pene 
large Sheet Glass, = 22 ‘up, at 24 


Plate to 25 1 0 sek 

2d. . n ý 
— Rough miine Glass, from } to 1 inch int . — from 
— upwards, Glass Slates and meg: —— miam from 


each. 
Warehouse, Sn 87, , Bishopega: e-street Without, same side as the | 


es Railway, 


100 feet and 200 feet cases of | 


of the ae > a i 
N.B. Plans and Estimates furnished free, 


manure tan 
| pipes, &e, 


CORN MA 
eee PATENT COPROS. — A 
for Corn and 


a0 on the bank 
rphosphate of Lim iC. 
No. 3, New 


ANURE. 


other 2 pon red — the 
of the Thames, in 


old, in a 
8 Marita ane, 


Pat tent 


adopted by some! by some houses. - 


HEATING BY 


, WEEKS AND Co., a King 8-road, Ch, 

and Manufacturers t BOT, WAT elsea, P 

arrant their Boilers e most eficient 
of any yet invented, at prices — 3l. to 

to last 15 — without attention. 70 *. — fire are 

t, King's. Chelsea, 

in the 


Patentes 


R and mee 
5 thefire 


eration at their Show Establishment, 
and also at most tof 58 — oa and Gentle ad, 
us Seats 


5 VASES, FOUNT 
AINS, 
ORNAMENTS, COATS Ga 
TURAL EMBELLISH MEN F ARMS, and ben 
VAUGHAN Co., 60, — En, perishable Stone, 
Croccon, late of Coade’s, Superintendent, h, London, f. 
seen — Croecon and Co.’s, 2, Dowgate-hill, 8 may be 
wings forwarded on application. City. A pamphlet 
7 MIGRATION i Pe NAIAN, COIG AL 
NIES.—By a regu AUSTRALIAN COLO. 


PHILLIP, a 1 SIDNEY in ADELAIDE, 
~ n tish fri E 


country, the Lon 


couples ; has ample height in ‘the a tween d 8 
mirably ‘ventilated hem lighted, and the 
most liberal ; there will also be a brary on 
22 ——— is 20 alaniini which will include 
= msils, She ope Bh a very handsome poop an 

nnen accommodation for cabin passen arries 
— a surgeon. This vessel will be the — wich We 
Patent App fog ale br pon: ch acts as a perfect ventil 
engine, and fog sign For Freight or —— appl — 
WHITTAKER’S, 78, Mark-lane; or W. eo 
Tower-street. n 

EWSPAPERS FOR THE NEW YEAR—THE 

NE EVENING MAIL will be found to be an maa go 
and cheap Newspaper for country y cironlation, it being an , 
ing edition of the Times, and contains all thei 


of aes apache Published three inves esa N oem 
— rded by . et n re aat 


tion, at 25s. per quar 2 
1 Clean papers ge pu epee 
new and corrected list for 1850, 0 the London — 
and Magazines, with price, $s aie & ‘ke, may be had 3 
Joun Nasua and Co., Newspa Saville-place, Re 
gent-street; and 4, Upper N t, Portland. place. 
Established 1800. 


AREY GOOSE FEATHERS, 2 pen lb. — Bed 


Feathers Hapi never 80 cheap aa 


mg AND W esent Prices 3 
&d| Best Grey Goose. lun 
— — . White ditto „ 
Fen n ditto 1 6 | Best Dantzic ditto 30 
1 b warranted sweet and free from dust, 


ina. — "List of Bedding, con containing full particulars 
of wi me ry sizes, and prices, sent gs $e on application to 
their Factory, 196, Tottenham-court-road, London, 


F{OM@OPATHIC PA PATIENTS, DINTA 


and 1 of Delicate 
fen arias . 
COA, as bein Na superior to any pre 
— — p 15 s factu 


delicate digestive organs, is agreea 
nervous system, and proves at the same time 
and refreshing. 
Sold wholesale by Taxtoz Brothers, at „ Spital- 
wa London, and retail, in 11b., ste va it — — 
ost res 


Brothers' original SOLUBLE 
of — the consumption of which 
LION POUND Fey 


Ta¥ 2 
ipa 


— —.— 
the purchase er “thelr r in ety 

which vere their name, with directions for use. 

Grocers and Tea-dealers 


Nees AND Co? s NEW PATTERN 

BRUSH an — eor 

has the important 

divisions of the 
ma 


ved Clothes-Brus t 
part dt the Risen time, and incapabla o of tia 
Penetrating arma ee with the eme e 
sian bristies, which do vot soften ike common nion. Welvete 
rushes of improved, graduated, and powerful fric poniai 
ct in the most surprising abt 

vin xi with its 


gen * 

valuable properties o absorption, vitanty, and : a 
ns of direct importations 3 

profits a nd destructive 


(\HRISTMAS PRESENTS. — The ing 
herein iy ennea Pea re a a 

i e 1 

is 

“by 


4 


tion of — alleled 

from the — 1 effects of inc: 
the —.— 
Odonto, or 


dent biao 
Pearl Dentitrice, is invaluable fi 
the Teeth 


Ons. 
MITATIO CMe — 
“of “on article on 2 uk, thus, u 


can be more worthy of 
2 RE oF CS I 


The 
LAN ben — that 
Label, with their Signa’ 


RON 
Sold by them at 20, 


Hat 


! 

. 

a e 

ums. p — 

un, or in more este, 


51—1849. | 


RICAN PLANTS. 
ea WATERER begs to announce he has just 
Hat New and Complete Ca e of his RI- 
— 1 CONIFEROUS — which oe be had on 
for postage 


tion, inclosing tw 
ale ill Nursery, Woking, Surrey, 


OSEA WATERER, Koap E 


-BENJAMIN R. CANT, St. John’s-street Nursery, 
lchester, has now ready very, 2 we 
established plants of the fi 1 $ 
1U YLE’S CRU . 73. Gd. each. 
PPI nes BRILLIANT ` * 2 a 
pocita, TERE 


for 1 sg ae d package free i: London, 
ag orders, = reference, requested = unknown cor. 
0 discoun Stews 


ICK — 
AMUEL COCKING, neee , Biggleswade, 
9 to dispose o large antity a WHITETHORN 


R 


se of — "years growth, at t 2s. 6d. per 1000, very s 
s' growth, at 48. per 1000, deliv ered free withia 


TICK THORN, four years anpi anted, extrao 
Q N 3 in root and o 3 feet. 1. 1 . 000 are 
age 


; any less ae 10°. bee r 1000. 
to eh pried station in London, ad only, 
BERT Dang 8154 Warehou Alban n’s, Herts, 


THE GARDENERS’ 


green, or yellow 


STABLISHED 188 
PE 2 AM E. RENDLE & Co. 
ne stock of 


4 feet. arly Frame, 3 f 228 


ck, 3 feet. 8. 
These will be sold at their usual low Prices. omt Catalogues 
apply to WILTIAu E. RENDLE On, 


Uni 
We are now laying in a most ae assortment of 
New and oe ee for the ensuing season 
TS AND GUARDIANS, 
LADY, residing nee Reagerar rec Pimlico, 


A begs e e to one or two Young 
Ladies, wh may * e caro and attention i a mother, 
ener given uired.— Address, H. D. D 

of W. Parkins, Stationer, 25, Oxford. street, London. 


The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
à SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1849. 


In our last Number we pointed ont the principles 
. according to M. Cu 
colours; we now proce asu 
—— namely, the harmony of colours; we shall point 
the results which have been obtained by e. 
“different colours in juxta-position, and shall notice 
y 


be observed that, with respect to the present subject, 


allowance must be r eg = psig an 
that of two 3 nearly may 
ie one person m: the other ge 5 The 
lowing propositio — omen are allowed to be 
3 universally correct by persons of cultivate 
and who have made the harmony of colours 
oy special study. 


1. The com lementary arrangement is superior to 
À To produce the 
n 


n pairs, go togeth 
= ampere and one ot A colour containing that 
For 


e one. 
and yellow harmonise better nas red and orange. 
» Red and blue 1 nd violet. 
Tellow and red E: ens orange. 
‘Yellow and blue „, „ yellow and green. 
Blue and red x i and violet: 
Ble’ and yellow d 


3. In an 


Sar col th one, the brighter the 
Bie 1 sie h e he ge the | vicinity of the farms, had embarked in the cultiva- native, cs the 5 to 35 5 00, ae 
better the contrast, Or, in other words, in arrange- | tion of any of the foreign Cottons.” The various 800 * i 2 bre ay 
Mats of tke rt, the tone or intensity of the simple | experiments, moreover, which, for a pee of 30)" N To ir e e 
colour ou P to be lower than that of the binary | years, had n made within the limi ne a qs 1 aiffasion 3 i asf 
colour. —— were likewise pronounced to 
ot and Violet 2 better than blue — violet. have airi fi ie — as oral s — He Be a ag a ap Joar tho elton did 
w nts were not pub. we 
: Aer u ae ad „ blue rane green. been favoured with anything like reasoning on the tpt i rims wi = e eee e eben, 
4. When two colours harmonise badly, they had | causes of fai f Eni nable 11 ere a econ ual ie uation, it i gianni that 
better be sep . these were of a political, commer 
eth ver pelea fad | Pee — g 5 p een . e n 2 doubt that — — uve ca ofa ere nature. 
_ bined with two bright colours. In such cases, in- failure resulted i ant of adaptation of the me- The position of Dharwar does not at first appear 
Med, it is better than white, * 4 thods of culture to the soils and climates in which 75 favourable, for it is situated i * the table land 
Mparatin iy ents made; for we can adduce |o che pre elevated Bg probably about agers feet; 
“xample harmony of 3 very satisfactory proofs that the American species vet ve unable to „ ts exact 
ements, viz., red of Gossypium not re ow prod mea height, "nor have we 1 05 i learn x that an a 
imi bay Presiden when the weather been kept there either 
orange, red and yellow, ee T ellow, = ytd 2 Tha = jecies which by 2 experimentalists or by any other 
sociated with dark colours, such as yields the Pernambuco and other South Ame- Though med soil does n seem better than that of 
iolet, or with bright colours of a deep|rican Cottons, has become so completely natural- | man sala: ai aa a OE =e 
ies which often pe ag ised in many ae z k have a native name indi aan are certain a of climate, which 
— w. eee. 4 iat o kupas) assigned to So Mr. ELPHINSTONE, paanga seem t " 1 the eases w which facilitated the 
hit blue, latel collector P pet il reheated a Cotton | cultivation o in addition to the 
White, So. eter an on 8 f palit spec he called Concanee, from supposing it energy of the collector, Mr. Saw, and the e judicious 
‘aoe ak richt and the to be a nati rages een Concan. Of this 55 Cotton management of the planter, Mr. Mercer. Dharwar 
colours, os beng ee | was e Ma by the Bombay Cham om, | being situated about 40 miles from the western 
and in the first case the brighter | merce, “to be superior to the New Orleans. „I Chants and 70 the sea, enjoys some of the 
the worse the effect produced. | was afterwards ascertained that the seeds were thos, advantages of a maritime classe especially in a 


nW 
— better 5 gs onda by white, black, o 


- | without containing any black they are as intense as 
ssible. 


d too much, either in thei 


Thus in the following arrangements black is in- 
ferior to — 
blue. eee and my 
and blu 


Grae and violet, 
range and viol et. 
Lastly, with yellow and violet, if not inferior to 
— b at all events produces but a middling 
effec 


CHRONICLE, 


8. “Grey with two luminous colours, though it 
does not produce a decidedly bad effect, 
makes the arrangement look flat, and is inferior to 
black or white. and orange perhaps grey | 
may be better than white ; ‘but it is inferior to it as 
well as to black when placed with red and green, 
red and yellow; orange and yellow, orange an nd S 
and green; it is also inferior to 
white with 8 and blue 
. Grey associated with da 
and violet, and with bright * of a deep to 
ve = t produce so good an as black in t the 
the colours ae 5 lock well when 
eng it is better to separate them 
Grey and two colours, the 


ark colours, such as azy 


10 nd 
other dark, is cere than white if the latter produces | Gr 


a contrast of too deep a tone, ok ee than black 
it the latter increases the propo of dark colours 
o much. For example: eri is 1 chan black, 
w with 

Green ont oe 
Green a 
hen two colours harmonise a 17 had 
r gre in 
ttention. must be pai aid 
the colours and to the PORT of at and dark 
colou For example: the tone of the 
ene the effect of white with r is 


oes 
normal tone; is, when 


Lastly, grey is not so good as black with red and | § 
orange ; nor does it produce so violent a contrast 
as white. 

, with regard to the proportion of 


, again 
ours differ 


Then 

light and dark colours ; whenever the colou 
the black or 
arrangement in whic 
separated by black or by white is preferable to that 

which the e or the white separates each 
couple of colou 

e cain: white, blue, white, violet, 

&e., is better a * white, blue, 
violet, white 
- | black, Kc. is better aan’ black, red , orange, black, &c. 
e give in another column what M. CrevREUL 


range, e 
black, and grey. 


h white 
In a future Number we shall pro- 
duce this author’s practical obseryations on 770 
method of distributing 3 in gardens, SO as 
prossaa the most pleasing appearance 
rast of their colours. 


td 


Southern Mahratta country, to which we 
ae = ention in our last article on Cotton, 


failure is stated to 


, orange, | © 


e by th - 
y econ- | for 


| own sold for 


of the “ Bourbon variety. 


— which the r of Commerce 
pronounced equ the — New Orleans Cotton. 
The seed from which this ted 


exclusively 1 


P 
cultivation of Bourbon Cotton, and stated that the 
oil 


and climate of the — lying between the 
ubermuttee and the Myh romised a more 
eee result. He 3 only recomme 
but grew Cotton, which was pronounced ‘ 


ch was full 
—. * any ee. in the Isle of Bourbon,” 
in England, that it was “the best ime 
ported from Bombay r. — from Bourbon seed.“ 
it was 20 years afterw, 


Cotton, we have not only a strong proof of Mr. 
LDER’S sagacity in 5 site, but also of the 
permanence in charact the introduced Cotton. 


With ope to the sikika: of the farms in Goozerat, 
not be surprised when we eee with 
Mr. — (vide Cotton Papers, p. 5 
three 


0 ed 
knowledge of practical e in general 2 of 
Cotton e in particular We no 
doubt that a ner of the present day, wke had 

and was ted 


tal 

mployed. and Br have 
long been famous for the good quality 1 nes indi- 
enous Cotton, and which, when se a clean 
state, is well fitted for r many of our —— ures. 
But the culture of the mast erican Cotton has 

ceeded, even in the re 
— apparently in consequence of the hot dry 
weather which succeeds the rainy season, as on the 


Bengal side. 
i to the Southern Mahratta co 
have ee all the first 
p bes has heard that M 
Smet» samples of experimental Cotton 
ie India House 


eng 


district where the greatest 
for though the plants 
n acre not 
-the 


| success kia been mabal; 
were small, and the quan 
rge, yet natives A to 
cultivation of ‘New Orleans Cotton on their own 
nses of culture, following i vi . great 
measure t their own method, were not greater than 
igenous Cotton; while the quantity of 
per acre was larger, at the 
e proportion of Cotton to seed 5 6 
higher in the 3 of 31 to 24 cen 
price was 65 rupees per candy, at a time we their 


and 6 saad, ad —— 
~~ ‘ge sawed half ee, late sum. 
vantages see o be appreciated by the 


804 
greater degree and a more uniform 
at e The Ghauts, nit is well- 


the year. But places a 
the Ghauts — jae 
monsoon 


cultur 
Wien 15 criticised this expression, 
y this ans a cool climate 


eat, and so 
of excessive moisture, a applied the word miid, w 

ately humid would have been more dee 

But we rho observations both of the thermometer 

Dharwar and other situations 


e we can be sure that we d on 
sions. It is probable, however, that the culture might 
be su along the line of country 


wan. M 

bable that ee on be produced in the moister parts 
of Candeish as 

the Gulf of 8 as well as as in parts of Cattywar. 


EFFECT 18 COMBINATIONS OF COLOURS, 
AS DETERMINED BY M. CHEVREUL. 
. CoLours anD WHITE. 
A. Binary Combinations. —All the simple colours are 
improved in with white; binary 
mstances, are not 
pe it i is found that the effect pro- 
very much on the tone of the colour 


The othe following binary arrangements are Asn in the 
order of 3 on best being the fi 


ry Combination of Colours complementary 
to each 8 with is impossible to arrange 
? 


y complem 
0 the > complementary colours 


N ea and 3 cent is epee ome better than 
4. eee white; and this is better than 


1. Blue and o orasan 
2. White, orange, blue, white is agreeable, and so is 
3. White, orange, white, blue. 
LOW AND VIOLET 
1. Yellow and violet are better together than 
yellow, vio eee ; and these than 

3. erm yellow, white, violet. 

C. Ternary Combinations 8 . 

Colour 


Mia 
1. Red and orange look 1 gether. 
2. White, red, orange, white is hardly bet 
3. White, red, w wwe Bat beien, but ae isis. 
1. Red and y 
N to de rather 


to green rather 
2. White, pe yellow, white, i is 3 z than 2 855 above. 
3. White, red, w white, ee is still be 
L 
> irah and blue do 8 8 together, especially if the 
i ee ref mat sears Ian b amarna : anne 
a Pe are preferable to nes, 
2 „white, is be tina he spars, and 
8 white, bine, 4 is better than 
I0LET. 
1. Red and do not PN well together. 


2. White, sek violet, white, is not so the first. 
3. White, red, white, vi * is better tery either. 


D YELLO 
1. Orange and yeva- i infinitely b wa than orange 
re 
2. White, orange, yellow, white, is agreeable, 


state of, 3. White, 1 — 
1 


A. B 
mee well with — Ne 


as of Guzerat, and at the head of | the first arr 


1 8 55 amiss, 1 if the red 
a searlet, the | anı 


would be perhaps better than black, but no 


white, yellow, is not so good as the 
erhaps, as the first; there is too much 


NGE AND GREEN, 
en or pe amı: wis 
ange, green, white, 
te, orange, Shite, 8 is perhaps ae still. 
E AND 
1. Orange and = pom pretty — vir are not so good 
as orange 
. White, — olet, ‘white, is better than No. * 
x White, orange, 3 violet, is better 
YELLOW AND GREEN 
Yellow and green are rather pleasing, but 
. White, yellow, green, white, is more 80. 
White, e white, green, is not so good as No. 2, 
nor, perhaps, 3 


Orange and 
bh pa 
Whi 


Yellow and blue are 1 aspen’ than yellow and 
green, but are less liv 


bi es yellow, blue, white, is perhaps better than 


83. White, yellow, white, blue, is perhaps inferior to 
18 the last. 


r GREEN AND BLUE, 
I. Green and blue, especially if they are both dark, are 


mi 


Las are green, | blue, white, is an improvement on the 


preceding. & 
3. White, ‘a, “while; blue, is apa still. 
EEN AND VIOLE 
1. i and violet, en ally if oy are both light, 
do better together than green an lue. 
2. White, het violet, white, is not much better than 
the precedin 


8. 
3. 8 , green, white, violet, is scarcely better than 
— the 


nint AND VIOLET, 
1. . — and violet do not do at all. 
2. te, blue, violet, 1 is r. better. 
3. White, bie, white, violet, is not so bad as the last. 
orouns p — 
th lours loo 


d black, or violet and black, may be placed 
colours are wanted ; 
d. 


—ů 


Zright green a ack. 
With respect to 255 3, the yellow should be brilliant 
and inte 
B. Ternary rh aee 255 1 e ee to 
Black. 


1. Red and green 
2. Black, red, green, black; arrangement is s 
totally different fro m the fn, that i it is difficult 
ide on their relative 
3. 1 8 1 5 7 1 * en, is . to No. 2; there 
uch b 


“a AND ORANGE, 
Blue and orange. 
. Black, blue, eae black, not so good as = eee 
3. Black, blue, black, orange, is not eq 
White is better — bk with ee and slong 
ki! ND VIO 


a i: Iere and v 


iolet. 
k, sallow, violet, black, not so good as the firs 
8. Bit yellow, eee te not so good as the me 
C. Ternary Combi gs ee 
Colours with B ack. 


1. Red and orange. 
2. Black, red, orange, black, better than the above. 
3. Rari ta black, orange, better tban either of the 


Black | 1 better than bor in these combinations, 
ED AND YELLOW. 
1. Red and yellow 
ck, red, ye ello ow, _ 
3. Black, i ia fleck: € 24 Both better than No. 1. 
Black is, in many 8. ope s opinion, better than white 
in the abo e arrangemen 
Rep axp BLUE. 
. Red 


and blue. 
2 Black, red, blue, black. 
3. 2 5 red, black, blue, is inferior to No. 2. 
White is better than black in combinations of red 


Dis. 
5 AND VIOLET. 
I. Red and v 
2. Black, nits 3 black. 
z Black, red, b black, violet, 
Both of the last are preferable to the Loe but it is 


difficult to = which the better of the two last. 

White produces a better effect than black with red 
and violet. 

os AND YELLOW. 

* Orange and yel 

. Black, orange, yellow, blac 
3. Bla lack, orange, black, ye ellow. 

The first is inferior to che last; in * 2; white 
in No. 3. 
į ORANGE AND GHT — 
The same observations made on the 


orange and yellow are applicable here. 


1. Yellow and bri 


arrangement of | < 


THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE, 


ORANGE AND VIOLET 
White is decidedly won — to b 


and violet. 


LOW AND GREEN, 


1. Yel 


* am 
better than black in Ne. 25 prr atl in 1 


White may be 


and blue 
6 Black, eioi; blue, black, not so good as 


may be preferable to black in 


3. Black, yellow, black, blue, not equal to No, the first, 
` Whi dik 2. 


ment. 
` GREEN AND 
1. Green and blue. 


rst is 25 over good, 

that 2 and 3 are better. 

than black, with green a 
* 


Me Li and v 
5 “violet, me 
3. Back, T ara black, v 


White it is 
PO. 250 © Produces a better effect 


Buur, 


not quite clear 


25 e 


Black may be bette 7 — green a rg von 
green and blue; at the sam on — 
inferior to the 3 arrange . * — uth Ba 


with green and blue. 


1. Blue and violet. 

2. Black, blue, violet, black. 
3. Een blue, — violet. 
None ee 

in case d — and no 
violet. 


All the om 5 ours gain 
ianey by being eo * 
A. Bin 


violet. 


excepted, grey is inferior 


1. Red and green. 
2. Grey, red, green, grey. 
3. Grey, red, grey, gre 
These three are prety 
last perhaps is not Bae good 


K Blue and orange. 

. Grey, blue, orange, grey, 

3. Grey, blue » BEY orange, 
ELLO 


1. Yellow and violet. 


1. Red and orange. 
2. Grey, ee biden Aa a 5 
3. tage BO „ 
her t 
With red 463 orange, grey 
than white, but is 
AND 


rey d 


Red and b 2 
5 9 50 Ys anter ue, Fron. 
rey, red, grey, 
No. Sis better 4 No. 
White i is better 


1. Red and violet. 
2. G d, violet, ee aan 
3. Grey, vie grey, v 
It is har 
with these — it is 


. Orange and yellow. 


places the grey. 
white. 
ORANGE AND 
Grey does very well . 
not produce so pleasing a 
l. Orange and violet; bann, 


wG violet, grey 5 better 
thie orange, grey, violet j 


nor gt 


to say wheter ge grey 
is certain! 


better than black in both, with green and violet, and 


BLve AND VIOLET, 


e very good ; etn e e 


brillianey are required ; 


black 2 a — effect than white with blue and 


— CoLours AND GREY, 


wih gr in purity andjbril- 


grey, 


ations. 
and blue or pa — violet are both agree- 
able, thes je: so good as black and blue or black and 


and oranges grey and yellow, grey and light 


the eye; they oe be, 


green, xA also e to 
by some, thought — ie jar with the same 
black and ro 

In 


l binary saan orange alone perhaps 
white. 


B. Ternary ——— rs Colours, complementary 
0 


with Grey. 


nearly equally agreeable, the 
as black, red, black, green. 
UE AND ORANGE. 


Both inferior to No. J. 


W AND VIOLET. 


D ORANGE. 


better than the first. | g, 
; better ter than either of 


produces a beter sit 


. — 


Gre pretty well with red ani and yellow, . 
inferior to — spay erate same colo 


nag anaa 


San gener No 
this a 
D VIOLER. 


better than the first. 

28. 
better than eier d i 
y 2 


NGE AND YELLOW. 


— | 


Grey is in 


GREEN. 
1 


not 50 


ee 22, N 


ee chr oe | 


51—1849. } THE r CHRONICLE. B05 
me memea — — ͤ̃ — 
YELLOW AND GREEN. be removed wi a sharp knife. ife. Rather lose your, g: velvet having various openings and loop- 
1 Yellow and green. root than — a dama iece to remain, for the = jes, which are formed * with architec- 
2. Grey, yellow, green, grey. will turn 3 or commence a sort of dry |t tness. m the walk these loop- 
4 , yellow, grey, green. rot e ground; although this will not kill a hia or representations of vinden present occasional 
with yellow and green is agreeable, but — Rose, it materially affee its general h health. — 8 of viewing the which has a rich 
fst, and is not so pleasing as black with the same pre all the roots, y hort ular appearance, from the extraordinary 
or if they be mai one dded, and with a — colouring of the numerous su subjects employed 
YeEttow anp BLUE. single shoot, shorten it to half its mero Then dig in in its — 
1. Yellow and blue. one good sp tten dung into the 1 It must be observed that this garden is nearly a 
2, Grey, — blue, grey Zh i the garden for notwithstanding much — have been | square, of which the castle may be said to form one of 
3. Grey, y so grey, b ‘sires taken, an to taken the sides. The object evidently aimed at has, in some 
Gre h th se is rather flat, and is inferior | soil, not — completly mix | measure, been to produce effect from some of the prin- 
to white, yer * it with a patch that shall be 18 inches cipal rooms, is has certai most su 
: REEN AND BLUE. take out as much soil as wi ke room fo root in | fully attained. The covered way only constitutes an out- 
Grey is better than black, but not so good as white aren. and pe it go 2 to allow of the — Aar line to the centre, havin er gements within it, 
with these colours. own to its place, w is with the nes of the root | the whole being surrounded at right angles with a raised 
G AND Vio ven with the soil. — tha tthe root i t 30 ft. wide. te xt — 
It is oad . to use grey with es and violet; well as it can be spread: fill in the soil, . it very stands in the centre a ular w 
is r, and so perhaps is blac firmly all round about the extremity of the roots ; but | and on each side of this two Irish vont in "the form of 
BLUE AND VIOLET. t close the stem, and w n its place, and | half-circles, 8 feet high. "The of these is to 
The re e - 0 black — soil e a little, * down strong upright the garden, In the concavities facing the castle are 
with blue and violet are kymer e present cases, | stakes behind th mpi tall enough to reach to the es in gold, supporting richly-carved figures in 
allowances Sy course made for — difference of — side of che — * — so that the tree is gold also. These contrast advantageously with the 
tone in + ora in — place. ve a pruning till the proper k of the Yews. Eight covered seats placed 
— ason, which is the spring, rh before the — begins * 4 ae here represent the form of an old 
ROSE GARDENS. to fill out — buds. The objection to close pruning in hall chair. The of these, as well as the covered 
IGN OF eee is, that in very hard Sot sometimes it kills | walk, on variegated Box, 18 inches high, er my A 
CHOICE OF VARIETIES, AND BEST MODE OF ` back the branches two or three joints ; e, if they | spring the American ere -vitæs, which are d 
PLANTI gh 
E come e choice of plants, or rather the . 2 to two joints in the autumn, it would | like manner "The terraces right and left are thus 
choice of varieties. In a 123 a the tree altogether to kill any of them back parm arranged : Irish You and Gold Yews g- 
en only want to know st shies abe join ses have roots with more fibres than the In front are Gold Yews and Irish Junipers, similarly 
y pos, 68 ey riara have on which standards are worked ; therefore planted ; 


will — ely you properly ; but there is one error into 
uerile Rose at fall, and tha 
1 


which many p 


a 1 scale to 
order continuous s bloomers ; never mind what they are 
called, whether hybrid this, that, or the other; have 
those which begin 3 ne, and do not leave 
of till the frost en them . Those who only grow 

or two cannot spare room for Roses that bloom 
but three weeks, or * oes that leave off for a month 
The summer Roses, so called, 
e 


are the first, and als, so 4 75 are the 
The garden dependent on either of these looks 

desolate or —4 a great part of the a 
will know what is wanted, re is no 
of a respectable man deceiving anybody who 
gives such an order. Be not anxious for a t 
i y as you can 5 ans we rip- 


It is of the greates 
this stipulation, not -z a the 5 and s 
but also for elimbers 


best pillar 

tinuous bloomers, and pil t of 
bloom lock very miserable. It i k true that some of the 
most nobl in tivation are short-lived, 5 


or not 
equal to res continued beau 
very handsome varieties. In a fin 


it 


ar ere 
because there might be a com 


mend 8 len 


Of the lag. sriking, e 


they are all as nearly as possible eas feet high. 
immed into columns bearing 
crowns of the same, 
cond terrace rises above this on the north side, 
centre of which stands an enormous columnar 
pag 30 feet high, with a N ‘crown 8 feet 


various parts of the 


a if — one shoul ppe 
w wi — it, and at any f 


placed round the 
and the effec ety even i it is not placed at a 
ground is 
growth, and sme . flow 
For Ro wns there should 1 be a 2-feet circle 

t 


h below ; 
lil, and the 


2 because 
ier ears, with turf e 


oot from the * k abov: 228 it is very 1 


2 arfs within proper 
d destroy- 
nally attack the parts. 


ELVASTON CASTLE, THE SEAT OF THE 
EARL OF $ OF HARRINGTON, 
(Continued from p. 789.) 
In passing from the py aia garden by the terrace 
already described to the garden of Mont . elipped 


apat: a 
a n of q . thurifera | 


ich — a val specimen 
12 feet Sighs in the sean — ofa — pillar, and behind | 
us insignis 25 feet high, 8 symmetrical 


2 
zi 


5 but a less vigorous x 


r | be i 
22 feet 3 inches, or 204 inches on an average annual! 


the | o 


halte walks. The 
| pincushion form, have each a Ade 3 20 feet 


Yews, and Irish Junipers. Th ap 
ré stone steps facing the entrances, with 
ered walks which lead to the interior 


is often set 


and Cyptomeria j 13 
er eo fully ainsi © b 
rangement of sape [sish 
J e mep 8 p 
king — + which the — — so amply 


dise loses. 
The large Araue uearia, as has been observed, stands 
| the middle the FP thle 


W it is a 
hat: ved. an te in rtion with an Araucaria in the cen and 

4 3 gg ee * a Plaisir is 9 under the th are beds in scroll pattern filled with var 

the colour ; a and supposing we are zi rows | south front of the castle, from the pripon 1 N S - and . . 8 zpr 
e singular urroun 

the he ne and L 1 Fark a. light, — enclosed on two sides ‘eight pees 7040 Arbor-vitæ and Box, the same height as the covered 

8 by Yew hedges in the form of walls, th ing | way, — circular seats app 2 h 
8 $= quite perpendicular, an — . , of as square yi i — e „ ith co vergin lines of — 

pod ieces of masonry. e ce portion is a | the bower w. i n 
abet il el a tha maybe the es — they were p , the direction of which is the outline of a Box hedges. All these erg ee Gold 
darks may be varied so a8 to form rich contras ts in | square pincushion having rounded corners, and gently | Yews, hedges, &c., — — —— guise 
mf vari a and les and yellows | pressed on th four sides. This walk — 8 feet wide in being in the highest possible state of artificial 

— so far as crimso purp the clear, and 8 foot high to the cen gt ent. The must be ane therefore, as a work 
ri are contrasts to eac is planted skori sid of art, - one which we believe has no equal else- 


words on plantin z will be in place here, fo 
om planting depends nh of the success that attends 


lightfal retreat 
progress When the plants e, let | rays, and — it a delig 
all of them 8 — — not rikat shiny weather, exterior k ect — — 2 
can afford to lose any of them, 8 with all the care a bv gt viewed 7 — eleva - 4 ans eee 
gu ‘and —— Tet —— dommgs listie distan ce it presents the of an even light 


taking up 


Ameri 
now completely envelopes the walk, y excluding the ‘the sun’s 
a 


f it, and 
where. 


I be continued. 
DISEASES OF PLADER 
Continued from 


page T 
VI.; one species. 222 4 that is, priva- 
tom of trun, stem, or statk.— greatest number of 


_806 THE 


GARDENERS’ 


—— + are furnished with a trunk or stem, woody or 


herbaceous, which 


rts the parts of fructifieation at | 


sat i urehased 


rdinary e 
1 y observed 
this phenomenon amon wers in ardens 


un — 


and ipe (aie and oe till the 14th, Some 9 — 
of the ety called Coralline grown under a wall, 
which carey nene their buds above-ground, — 
their flowers h eir usual vivid colours, but 
pee aby ‘tale at all. 
in barren soils, plants are often -= 
with an an reduced stem. This m 
be attributed to the want of proper vigour. The same 
may also be seen in plants always Kept i in — shade, or 
which have —— sun only for a ve ry short time. This 
kind of acau fre weber | in plants removed 
from our ich N to the hills. 
I consider as a mere variety of this disease, the want 
cles or stalks to those fruits which are 2 
e head I w 


e — of — 
academy, which causes certain plants which usually shoot | * 
forth a high much-branched stem, to remain perfectly 
dwarf, spreading in a circle on the soil i 


- | field, Sus r. J. 
Atkin, Priory Ae Northampton ; Messrs. Whitl ley i 
Mi 


e and Os 
Molesworth, ' Govham, Nr 


high relative — with reg 
amongst the Bota f this country. 


0 The 
eee E aee the Senate with 


Garden is so — inde —— 


Miss Catharine 
Curator of the 


ulham, eren 


th 
ny Copenhagen 5 7 “te Curator of the 
Botanic Gar rden, Dublin; the Curator of the Botanie 
Garden, Glasniv -a abn ta 
Garden, Liverpoo e Curator of the Royal Botanic 
Garden, =e asa D ‘Dr. Patrick Neil, Cannonmills, 
meaner rgh ; Dun sq., Arniston, Edinburgh ; 
A. Bloxam, eae Leicestershire ; R. Bev. 

“ge Edmund’s, 

(Signed) — James Cartmell, ae gy rage te > R. 
Ta — Tobat Phelps, W. „ H. Philpott, 
John Haviland, W. H. Stokes, Charles 0. Babington. 


Esq., B 


THE POPLAR OF SCRIPTURE. 


A i A h 
and Chestnut Tree; and 2 white strakes in them, 
made the white appear which was in the rods,”—Genesi, 
h They sacrifice upon the tops of the mountains, and burn 
3 upon pras hills, under Oaks, and Poplars, and Elms,” 
sea iv 
iag was 8 — ar aye shol mention is thus made 
in the Holy Scriptur ich caused “cattle to be 


CHRONICLE. 
imens o f e gales or varieties of — and wood. a it a pears that — 
oat ger have been D a Poplar 


re i 
f the donors to whose liberality the Botanic | s 
8 


College i 


in the r 


ganas i 
-used officer, wag. 


collected by that gallant yaey peas 
specimens were q 
mite distings nt 


which dried 


f 


i 
F 
EF 


Be 
i 


when young, with a copious glaucous 
moreover differen tly shaped, larger, al- 


B 

p 

5 

8 
1 

A 

a 
88 

x 

ES 

Sz 
BFE 
777 
mr 


if 
He 
HE 
111 


and sender 
Ches 4 8 Po oplar very remarkable for havi 
fruit invariably wales d, instead of 2. val 


E 
E 


i 


dentibus incu subspinos subse 
qualibus, petiolis ires ae rehire 


oliis brevioribus, rai 
Lap mie 


pubescentibu 
n 
BRITISH ONMENT OF SCTE FOR T — ADVANCE. 
T 


8. 
one in communication with Dr 
a cuttings of this — post, 
triking in the ensuing spring. J 


ground. omenon was obse: early as | ringstraked, speckled, 1 58 — ” and under which Sept. 18.—Seeti . 3 pa: 
in 1735, a yery rainy year, by M. Moebring, i in — sacrifices were offered up upon hills ? KESTER gave a report of the proceedin 
case of th Papaver Rhoœas, or Field Poppy, which h mittee appointed by the Association for the 
at the same time hd leaves streake white, — of the periodie phenomena of p — he n Since 
3 indications of the state of debility of the AM the last meet ing the committee tables 
After oe” for the obse n of periodic phenomena to upwards 
— lant, which i toy common in our fields, and NY wy, of 50 individuals. Of th — had been re- 
J have found it to ex Lg. ie of this Sg turned Mr. Matthew Moggridge, of Swansea, 
malady, under both the shore cheated cause j: | with very complete observations on the various phe- 
This defect disfigures the fl ery m oll; and it j 2 by the d another on 
must therefore be a great object with the gardener 5 53 the foliation and defoliation of plants, by T. L. Lloyd, 
prevent it, and to give to his plants long and well-pro- keii Esq arrival and of birds at 
ned stalks. Theref e must —— take en ; lanrwst, in Wales, had also been sent by Mr. Black- 
in planting Hyacinths, Ranunculuses, and other wall, and observation riodie f for 1848, 
roots sufficiently deep, especially when near a — at Polpero in Co by Mr, T. E. Couch, As the 
be er that the bulbs or tubers should always covered year had not inated since the tables were sent out, 
th $ ience pa was — that many more tables would be sent in 
ma shown me that these roots, and others Smij a pray of a few months. New tables would be 
„if planted too ace, are v issued to all who would und too In the 
pany to apr ik saa and k. soil should not be too li mi of a fe committee hoped to collect a 
roportion as it is irremediably light, the roots sufficient amount of —— reduce the whole into 
soul be be — a planted. Irrigations also must not be su rm as would show the relation between meteor 
spare ons eti I have 10 land hen: 
prevente 2 pr deformity by commencing to water even ; open and organie phenomena a specimen of a Fern from the 
in February. It al useful to protect the English coal measures, in which the fructification was 
plants from premature and excessive heat, ning evident. He believed that to find fossil Ferns in 
for Anny from the immediate action of en this condition wasvery rare ; indeed, so rare was it that 
1 on the co say, ie oe ses he had been induced to infer from the shsence —— 
want ut or de ficiency of sap, it “yoy be prevented appearance of fructification in British fossil — 
—— or by removing the plant to a better situa- that during growth they had —— —— inte a teme 
tion. But if the ity is once developed it cannot perature lower than was wepo 
eg? So, if it is the effect of climate, there is no vented the development of their — 
oo other remedy, when the plant P r Buckman of the Agricultural Colleges 
cannot tivated voura m- Ciren x paper fairy rings, with notes 
n some of the edible fungi by which they are 
OE dows: the vd o cured by 3 . plar, sid the translators of the Bible, caused. The gave an account of the first 
3 g one only to train | and as such it stands in our the white devel t of these rings and their subsequent 
up, so as to replace the old 2215 the d being first | Poplar, was added, which the Greeks called /ewke, and — He had observed several species of 
properly pr so as to supply the necessary nutri- | the Jews Libnen. But other critics, among — is to fungi growing on the same ring at different seasons 
ment. This operation, to be successful, requires to be be mentioned no less a than Dr Royle, of the year. The Agari prunulus, which is onë 
the by an ex cultivator, and in such | have suspected Storax tree (Styrax officinale) | of the most delicious of edible Mushrooms, we 
case the tree will often resume its natural beauty. ed. I have not room for the lear found in May, but this was succeeded in the later 
laai a , acaulos uced wilfully, - ments upon which this conjecture rests; but I may ths the by entirely different species 
se ys from amputations, which m there is nothing in the context of the p is led the author to suspect that the mycelia 
— — — 8 u ee or by i tirna i the Bible t opinion | of the fungus might be only a nidus ins wei da 
that some tree yielding incense, as must sporules of the various kinds of fungus were in 
PASE ve . i (the statement is, that incense was to grow. The rich iant Grass that springa es 
REPORT UPON THE BOTANIC GARDEN, burut un lar trees) ; that, if it were so, the | the interior of fairy rings, generally consisted «ia po 
CAMBRIDGE. young 25 0 a a onl 15 sufficient y fragrant for the | Grasses, s glomerata, Lolium perenne, of bers 
‘Cunist’s Couns hill ae, which Poplars | pratensis. In to an explanation before 
The New an, e ee 15, 8 may be; and that ry abundance of the latter tree in phenomena, the writer referred to a paper ile patho 
make the — Report to the Senate: The parts the Association last by —— 
of the New Botanic Garden upon the plantin and its application to useful purposes, justify the belief | referred to Dr. Badbam’s book ye ible 
of whieh the Vice-Chancellor — g that a e was really intended. As to the Storax that many species of fungus now neglected 4 tat he 
of the Senate on Nov. 8, 1848, rogy te pes tree, I do not find it recorded as an 3 „and and fit for human food. — Mr. H state 
eee aan if it be its pie are not likel be ; 
ceeding 1002., have been planted, and the aan „ 0 y to mountainous ; lished some 
shrubs upon them are in a flourishing condition. The the tops of the mo are the last which it 2 i rence to Mr. Way's. Le ds ee 
trees in that part of the Arboretum f ing the belt, a pete tes to occur. 3 „ which w —— ea the plants, ed for a 0 
which had planted, 5 E plars are amongst the commonest of all in alles p aa of the fungi —_ to be 100 were 
able p n — * ose eastern regions. Dr. ‘Layard tells us that e “the | nitrogenous consti the mineral why the Grass 
vantage resulting from 3 d a diry to | the most beneficial, bee, reason 
fo which te “p erana — beams to span a room 30 or 40 feet wide a ld not derive them the soil a6 wise 3 
776 herbaceous — — from the old Ga e Palm and the Poplar ; their trunks still form the si of fungi 2 of Prof. Buckmans, different 
and the donations of 890 species ex ee ar : uses in Mesopotamia (II. 3 This is again refe iv ps in gpa pod deserved 
1 ae eae 1 1 o by the same great discoverer ( Pros and in species of fungi was very . 
erbt. te .d a planted the | — C S01) Dr- Lapard -states the | further —The Prinee of Agaricus cm- 
division. berang fier now em Bae eee ee eae Tigris | curious fact that the Ag: i 
Euphrates, are constructed of planks of Poplar | pestris, our common 


—ü— 


‘has ae ne either in the stove, gree 


51—1849. } 


gicevers4.—Dr. La: 
of our — — 
times dis ish the | 


TE! 


ich turned 
us, and he was made ill by them for a urie 


With 3 ett arr- of the pro- 
eedings 3 Although the papers 
do not con nay new generalisa sations which will alter 
the — — tion of science, contain 
pumber of observations very indicative of the rapid pro- 
gress of many departmen e tendency 


an 
pr the — ep of — — ‘the practical pur- | t 


poses of hum. 
Hom e Correspondence 
The Victoria: — account which you gavo 
Victoria regia reminds me of a few experiments which 


all a the 

stove toa pond in my garden, and 3 it a — inches 

_ the e 80 M to allow 
in 


© 
488 5 


e pond a plant of Po 
azurea. (Bot. Mag., 2932). amd 10 me vile of short 
herizontal stems or runners, w t threw out on the 
surface of the water, other 
rapidly as 2 form, ere ne summ 

of large handso 


change Breeze — s driven —— 
pond to the perished in the 
winter, I Sapte ‘nae 3 vun * from the 

S. 


it continued to inerease and pl 


a 
flourish like its predecessor, but with m 
nhouse, or 

also in April, 1836, placed a pot of Calla 
— hich was just coming into flower, with th 
base of the 7 i 


ts on 1 


ansea. 
. 3 s SG ieee all the 2 
draw on the effec 


uently stirring the groun 
myself Ta one of Dr. Newington’s hand-culti- 
tl 


— Í had 


FT 


p 117 112 
kale 

ji 

: 

1 

A 


en economy more objectionable 


p 
nH 
125 
i 
+ — 
775 


fford more protection than 
made with half-inch deal: I nail t 
ether by an inch thick 


——— ——m na . 
's Saw-mills, Brentfo ive 
3 tation for 8s 0 sq 


TH 
- 


4 
i 


2 
4 


T 
£ 


H 
SES 
2 


g 
F 


F 


with a sa 
require no planing, and I believe diay 
thicker than the half-inch board usuali 


F 
: 


THE GARDENERS’ 
ous at Rome, stated that it so closely neram | genes My es tells me that one of these 
was that it was th safer As I trust 


cheap g 
the same 
Š ne e 


t 
ve of the |r 


I in namin 


Having pro- | and 


| board shutters is equal to — mats, 

lass and or growing Grapes, 
Peaches, Strawberries, Caledon ke, which I have already 
Chronicle. those 
who wish to form them may 
boards d. each, and 
— felt i is ld. per po and if this be nailed on 
the side of the 


CHRONICLE? 


en touched af 
trust that | encircled it, and — pe s fell o 


| tree ; the tree was 


business being rather extensive, havi 


re were many — from ladies and 
gentlemen in the neighbourhood 
losing their trees, 


rebate is done away with by 
nailing a strip of half-inch deal —— the middle of the 
rafter, leaving space on each side 

and putty. 


ontgomery 
rafters, per foot run, and 
ch he considers necessary for 


nae so's 


— s Roses. I howe 
the fi frost out of one — these hou 
with o „ b not 8 gaa the 
dition of zinc —— bor — rater from top of 
the stove, neo a Mr. Rivers, sag 1 shall 
do so this winter, and will — you the 
— are ne ‘moveable ` will be requisite to cut holes 
f about nehes we A tervals of about 
4 feet in the back 
over these, for * —.— ventilation. 
1 foot by 18 ine — es, ms i be obtained at Mr. — 8, 
* at 3d. * — Dodman 
D y years ago my attention was 
iarain to the * of drains with roots, ater at 
place was conveyed through a kitchen-garden in 
tile pipes, jointed with 8 clay, and, if I recol- 
leet rightly, th id about 3 feet deep i in the 
soil, yet they to be lifted fro 
of the accumulation of — within them, The 


ro 
* running without any in- 
nean A there an age tone 
been 1 — 0 years be 
Johnston that rabble — 
d 


3 ort: “ The ae gare which you ga 

„as Leu suspected, an A and I are little — 
it Conterva bombycina, 

The filaments are eee fine, 

the whol 

ing minute insects and 

organic matter, w 


is of your 
looking like a mass of soft ily due site The fila. fila- | respon: 


ments themselv nae = almost colourless or 3 
pe reenish. These plants pass rapidly into putresce 

P. Mackenzie, 7 5 Plean, 8 

The Vi eevil.—When I was at the Botanic | ha 
Garden, Birmingham, in 1843, the Eng alluded to by 


e “4 their foliage. 


result. As the i 


m time to time to be e 


erva sor- |p 


very damp, 
quite green, while all the other trees are — 
t will be seen that imperfect d nage 

s the cause of all this, and it would be well if * D aaa 

would remind mas nat, without draining where it 
wanted, manuring or anything else will not produce 

superior fruits or good crops of any kind. Fortuna, 

[Remind! why we are continually reminding our 
aders 


E 
2 


Balsam Dye. The fresh leaves of the com 


use 
leaves are sometimes employ 
dye is ay WM hs the form of a paste, and is 
more 8 according to the depth of — hue 
req 


Animals.—1 * ve e often seen e I understood to be 
. e for in great numbers on the face 
rer f. pependieular), of pa banks. But what I 
observed this autumn (which date I only affix to 
| observation, not k 1 existence), were holes in the 

art e banks, and in a chalk-pit, 
ong field mouse holes from their 


l fi near 1} foot long, and which I o send- 
ing a a stick in to keep open the line of direction), ended 
in nothing. No nest, remnants of food, or sign 
animal life 
chalk were nearly on mg hy mnd, I 
aje reg ned seven impression was, tbat 
re preparations for 827 — of mes capriciously — 
rather, for e unknown reason) abandoned while un- 
finished. . 
What is ihe best fete: sb Felling Larch ? — You. 
have had some disc in your columns 
the relative advantage 3 ‘Oak timber, whether fallen in 


own opinion. is against summer fell 
2 are we lo find the Drains 7 our P 
ou have made, and 


than 
” Every year demands a fresh supply, 
do not uch protection; Ca: 
ze 


> 
| ceive pec 


ei 
deal lath, top and ti 


y | other two, taking 


Rose trees thee, snd threatened their papar The 5 to 
» and f | 


trees at the time being entrusted to 
them not looking so shoty nach aga 5 te e 


trees, 
insect did the mischief, 
visits to the buds during the day, = they were of no 
avail, Re then concluded that the depredations were 
commit + 98 ge Been 


‘Ali ttle 


trees. 
the tree, and after a rigid search I found one. 


1 catch me if; 


iH 


, and that 


ners, one holdin two corn 
— * — 1 secure the whole 


| g: 
exiting pe . lawn, uprooting * — w in n search- 
which i 


then it was vou can j 
but after a little e eg F rar I hit upon a plam, which | cove 
pr „e piece | th 


for dra 


roo 
least 60 feet from any part of the drain, w 
3 feet deep. J. B., V, Somerset, Dec. 7. 


808 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [D 
EC. 22, 


Glazing.—taving had occasion to re-paint and 
our green i 8 — gal E sare | apa * be Nee: pen tr es of in future Dee. Mn drizzly throug 
r : z | ent we s — B Raini of 
as area meg a 1 0 aint to wh ne- | remarks for the 8 ott = amateur 2 — the pre Aer t = 8 — Sai 5 e 
att appl —— in er t ay was bedded, and season. n regar ard to watering ETR ne presen — A ds fine; clear at night 
over the e edge o of the pew ais sides 5 pp heirs rent | requires most attention at * season 1 strictly 2 22— Clear and fuer cloudy: tro 5 rain a ae 
i 0 ight the to the simple directions we hav ra e e rene 5 de. abon 
gore 3 s m pe yg she vag putty was then applied. viz., to water no plants (aquatics iaeiei) 5e keeps Rate ofthe Wenning week, cod be a, 
F: 5 2 560 à J ; be r e. ntire exclusion is sufficiently dry beneath the surface to admit me C 
water fro nd interior of the house, and | plants receivin i abbas 825 
1 a full supply. i i 2827 i Greate | 2 ailing WaT 
3 a the patty to adhere — > ee and lasting than | dryness can “only be ane by ana 2 55 er fee FE 3 H mic 2 tit Hees 
ght also add that the glass was putty | no descri . e ine, | Ot Baia, iE j 
lapped, except a few left in each light to ‘carry off the Keep t ais pend a ae ais 1 mnt - a 
ter condensed on the glass. This I „„ Spe the state of the external 1 4 38.9 12 0.25 in, | 4 
halite: ani e the score of prevention of breakage by frost, it | fire- vat, but by 5 idi g ne — e or | es 5 22 ie a 23 
asy matter to a rrents of air to make cre ’ ch as possible the | Thurs. 27 423 | : 45 : os fi - 
u ation of unnecessary m K. a az % | 360 5 an faaata, 
p oon the os — by 3 re Sanders, and by admitting ee | a 3 9 er ere ta Satur, i 5 ma m5 10 5 ; 37 
, „D an is a good |i i i i wb ———— oe wt sos 
par sees E th a good | in connection with moderate firing, remove any super- 2827 th Page 5 yae 2 a are period occured = 
plaining it is | abundant moist pat ce 200 B dae s 
not clear. ] a oisture which is produced by the necessa „ 2 ee MION ee Dew idee 
very operation of watering, &c. Along with other ers. an any e eee N 
ar fya e greenhouse conservatory, we shall A Notices be Correspondents, 
an early opportunity of introducing a fi i . 
tho purpose o ote Nr e was held, for 1 management of bib inter mediate . wre prs N Chiti, Mexico, or California, or the thing 
ting a Presi the room of the | also for his st : ol Nen Holland and : 
apts pof Norwich. As it had been publicly Ri eonseratory y y acceptable and will fin clang — Care peal They wi 
a Coun, ‘that Mr. Brown had acceded to the wish of . It is to be hoped that advantage ies been taken, of | " rotanicat Label tor ing is what you want: tat a 
=e that he should b Winated President, the late mild weather for the planting of trees and 10 „ Herbarium,” "edited deore eng 
of ex he r of Fellows assembled, for the purpose shrubs, and that the operation of mulching ait we by Messrs, $ —— . pees di London published 
of e Sisk pest their feelings on the ee A ballot before pointed out the necessity of, has been duly per- frequently been blige’ 70 nes —J 8. bin 
e r. Charles formed. If it has not, it should be immediatel é t ys pres een wa ioy "approve. per — i 
was unanimously elected. Mr. tended to, that the : . Forester” may answer your pur 1 Bows 
8 1 of = ~~ i was 755 . e 5 oo roots may be shielded from the be written your purpose. A good book has 
e Socie hie BE i 
Rev. Mr. Yates exhibited a flowering speci $ f e | soil be made as suita bl ane the oparoa: st dpe ak thes 2 eee ma 
Canna edulis in his pecimen of the e as „passible to the peculiar ficially m expand, and the consequence is if not thinned 
sah ea „grown in eee at Highgate. f the plants. When is not naturally good eat many will always drop off. If the at Be be 
F ar let pains be taken to make it Re y adding loam, 40 g, in one e x mers will remain, on ĩ⅛ ͤÄK 
? | COFFEE: Cofee. We will tell * next week 


chair. i Taking th ba oh "Presi leaf 3 i 
thio e 5 Pre ident madia fa amo parias pamane anything else which will im- | Goncretinc Vine B 
* late severe eee S — T paranana The 72855 05 on this — in „ 40 — 
plants, of ear’s volume, more especially at PP: 2 one wit bocca z 


cir 
hesitate teil : 
recently before sec E 8 x e Bolaga satis btan the hardih y 
y 1 . 3 5 
a aka the duties which E nom w at red upon I pim |t e 8 ve r oubts were previously enter- vd : Bub. Te & lon g job, b 
2 1 
wit with gall like p exhibited specim of a Pea 8 755 red — in the 8 eee e be ane eradi ners . Mhe m a moment “they ap poar, 25 you mil e * 
e 3 pointing out ORSYT a 
4 eee produced by the attack, of some which may be freely exposed in ‘more open rots e are bright 5 5 well and is handsome, Ths 
Di i obini read fro ogg, tions, and others for which it will be ce ee de FRUIT-TREE BORDERS: JS H. If the wall is not more 
Sound ina fia at No y be the he Bae (K (Katy arvensis 4 EY sheltered s Tee w are they will be guarded against — Sry Bh abe, wid ofa border y> tones soil rsa 
had assumed the s 5 orets the injurious effects produced by a combination of e 4 feet wid as this must include a walk of 3 of 
nt the outer ones a ai m and damp. Ift . ide, owing to the ground rising in front of the wal 
were perfectly 3 Anna tion of stamens there 4 be i 1 pac 7755 extensive, then from 4 106 Tekk piar rit rial 3 no depe 
ley’s s observations 2 g < $ e s, an 
and the unity of — e, of the Diphydee, farther consideration. In anticipation o a n 5 for ay pert be s prepisi 575 hatos as the rest ner 
phoridæ, was read of the Diphydæ and Physo- 5 stivities, there is everywhere a demand for evergreen 2 feet; 19 tie bee * t be less = 
— —— “ee ae and in taki ing them m, let the trees be proper ly 3 inches of broken stones and eis ee 40 a 
Rebiew be rs stematically pruned, with a view to the form should answer well, Manure moderately in the first inne 
Gau ews, pe ple de tte symmetri ski ises ation | searocly any if the soil is naturally rich ; afterwards add, fo 
p. atalogue of Garden, n and Flower LORISTS’ FLOW i 5175 see Pear trees growing with sufficient vigour, 
ae ds sold by W. E. Rendle and Co., Plymouth. Fe gl NCULUSES. —Thes e have KI been lost sight GREEN-FLY: P ear ena speedily oF effectual} 
ia contains lists of ood ebe kó, Sh ahit of during the few past months, but a gen Piste J as tobacco-smoke. We should think you na eatin 
appended to the names of many of thé a vision will not be out of place. If there i p tree, even on a wall, with some material sufficientiy alosa te 
the list of Peas we observe “ Bishop’ Eariv In | of florists’ flowe : HPR any one sort | keep the smoke about it long ee to kill them, It is 
very good sort ieri er e e cee i ile} Wigs an ckuderl unsatisfactory than another, it is worth a trial next year. 
pi 8 3 80 Ben rae no sticks.” ‘The above and d when t dek te ese, apt to mildew at "fhe crown — „ rw. geam e 
8 sort, but i his is the case, inevi 3 ? ou The 
entirely y Ae ugra by _Bishop’s se page to be conseque We are not pa 5 — . ea sibility of giving legal opinions ought ot to be as 
Shilling’s Early Gro yal Er to this pet of fl = rticularly fond of manu newspapers. Our wn-legal opinion is that * 
Ni so be dispensed with; x i e jr wb me pat authorities 85 removable, unless there is some agreem 
page th we kail First hey ly ae is stated ae 8 a Pett ae Whe our m be. - | Insects: A Sub. No can advise en p eE inspecting 
e Br nyt of all, good bea and sufficiently old or not we cannot say, b the aie hak “can be no real difficulty in clearing the 
There o the Paris Cos 3 0 valuable roots ae a : Js ut we have lost| house by some means or other + but you will probably bare 
1 FAN e 855 although iti is hd y applying it. Our advice is to give as to ae Sal “the plants and bern all your soil. Such a swarm 
y the best of all Cos Lett muc sa heath a papi of enemie 
wa Thetta uces for summer | ¢ os o Been bie hooey stron Fi s as you describe must be l in good earnest. 
e pao Market Cabbage” is certainly hik Pike oag ini P late e with ika Pan 7 07 £ such ae boiling w water, and turpentine are all l useful helpers in 
ma i INKS, AND 
h 7 . wil require 5 safely „over | IVE a agaia vy is not pah tee to timber, The reas 
frame was, no 225 


a good name, n 1 
i y varieties find a ‘ 
the London market The London Batte: eir 8 Ae pr ge What with tha wet Wealliee add What Wilk 
acon u did not put it h. The end of of February 
Pol Pp on soon 1 g 


as the Fulham Cabbage; rost 
zat all they have suff 
a pr ly th 8 e s Falta F ape will pore’ A rok e 1 3 2 0 1 ip the E The question about hot air is = 3 
À P : í cerown—the is a matter of erience when 
8 * bc are tif „ On the sible 4 eng . ng, and should a new T mer ny water we do not know Ne to . the — 121 iy 
per a of ao ai e, and will be found of service dow Ap a long stem, it will be advisa to pe 5 uld never be wet in win rer slight 
n to the surface. We would ike al ib 175 — all that is required. Al em dens ig 
— bm rer aE e the open border by either a net or branches of Fi sorts on yer gene. suffer 1 drought. a 
alendar of Operation but it will be evident to all je trees i | Serera rans year such cases, Thought 
(Fe S. detri all that severe winds p high! p ce must be uides i 
or a ensuing week, ) etrimental to t yi as well as ot sr floris ts’ flow mh y W : An Appren „We have not the book at hand, . 
Coser 05 — of; 0 provenit my ele) M-A e oa meat week, Dy fu, Yo er 
an ning elen 
ee, — of E — structure i — eee e when the ode is digging up 125 * — you ask a question, describe a ty 1 
can be mo se on of each, about as much as wi Ar ñe se a | Names or Prants: FG T. Lastrea wits mai 8-5 N: Cor 
ce for a| tainly; quite a new Coix, a nd v urious, Many t 
d Tue, 1 loots like sy 


indefi 
‘font 1 is is ee —— to ‘to fe ery extensive | couple of weeks, be always under protecti tigulat 
e largest i on : 2 
ee. half hardy I — a 1 of tre ial acne 3 ae litter, Fern, ae tha wet nie 4 82 . z 9 but the guete being smal | and im a 
rom strali r | These me enient material which will exclude frost. 2 is not sufficient to determine by; 2, 3, 4, and 5, et $ 
8 should be pu ut on while the ground is PENNEN FON e Cc poe B. Nigerent kinds of 
i Haris, Ornithogalum, Sella, Pa 


the Cape. In man 
y instances it is a lied 
Ad pplied to the ps i Si 
house, which contains plants requiring a an uncongealed state, as it would do harm rather than whee a age are rig 
ood, olets, Alstræmerias, Sta Arme sempervirel®) 


poe ir 
bre Sop an ee 5 Se gh paar those of 15 whe 5 5 while the panal is net by preventing "a e e Campanula, Saxifragas, f 
ee) 2 re b actin u „ > nulia ra beris $ 
number of Caves it si gnifies Aw — 2 weather. It must, ee 5 os o of a chan nge of | Lathyrus — * Alyssum saxatile, Zs 
and is used to cultivate many choice pl — r; portion which is cov h derstood that the Anemone, Py: „and double Pinks. "shrubs: 
display, during thei 0 plants, and to till s ered up is not to be left untouched gallica and — } Spiræa salicifolia, Leycesteria formeits 
which have ng their flowering season, many others till the arrival of frosty weather, but used i santin es Corontlia BEM 
À tier d been tei in pits or frames. Fer hb rotation ; and as the coverin 22 19 in the regular Pyrus japonica. f kiish 
-of the la A or houses present use, it is to be g is taken off the part for Posric acest us: Will the writer of a letter signed ene, 
d that is space beyon nd, so that a pe 3 33 Sex hie nade a a 7 —— t 4 5 100 aerieng £08 
ui ress. 8 
which require a — 8 rature; ; and oe oh hen shall alwa: ays be 0 ede e next ensuing | mous communication. e subject is t 7 : 
. 3 species with or “is of e e ground beyo Lr ction, ese ny ScaLE: Inquirer. Destroy it now, ie the leaves weit 5 
eacias, Myrtles, Oranges ta e If, by a means of spare rade ai wt ee whites 5 3 a ae ae re of TH ‘is r send 
oad at, s either in in pots, or planted o agnolias, | portion of such crops as Parsl s contrivance, a a|” without a chemical analysis ot ien , ae 
y remain in the house ; sate peis those | can be protected 1 0 mil beck Spinach, Sorrel, &c.,| question. In tne absene eof ‘knowledge o ‘of ther patare 
la — 9 a eultivated Ja gat es < ys smaller | when th > Ad e ound Meg convenient, | _ the impurity Potted in it, we must mmend it. watt) 
the season of bloomi places, and in u widths — with snow. Some Horse- Vineaar: A Subscriber. Dissolve wugee 2 ) in wale 
of Heaths, Epacri ming. The latter will consist ish, Jerusalem Artich es, Parsnips, &e., should so as to make a sweet fluid; put in a bit of the plant, a 
with G ises, and Wee eae New Holland got up an! laid in moist soil for present use f vos lh 55 Por s044 pe 2255 rhe ace 253 of on vol, fop, l. 
x bs ums t f; * 2 re eR NES IN 2 ee p. 0 
vario us seasons; Primulas, ad and show ds, State of the Weather near London, Worms : Sub. $ 
Cinerarias. for autin. wi ’ ysanthemums, and | ‘sa eee at tk for the week ending Dec. 20, 1849, tell you what it is and J bow to kill it - 1 pot 
8, for autumn. and 1 í iem he Horticultural Gardens, Chiewick. 7 Lan tters distinct but 
and other tender annuals f a aig with Moon’s Te PAE) ge MEAT TC: e aii aay ee 3 pln eas cthee phen b 14. 
[Se Se SS Se . 
n o! — — owever, be all the safer if s ; . 
should be w manent plants, the next . 45 2 fr t. Weare ee ten with such a plant as r 
Plants to ranile upon pig ag which the sm allen Laute. 3 sporum Mayii; whose name is Pittosporums 408 
are to succeed each other 3 that z Monday E a? however, too tender for this climate, except P. Tau 
quantity of the different kinds f a sufficient Tues. .. 18) 4 that is hardly an exception. Smith. Sow your in 
C The en, y be provided for Tag 0 ; ae de gh ina or p pan, anà HNO ant 
special treatment — ttom-heat in a stove or warm pit... + 005 
Of | Teer. 3 been given 15 you under nder a tong name; What you DS TE 


51—1849.] 


THE rears GAZETTE: 


809 


AISE HEA 
LEWIS'S IMPROVED POLMAISE STOVES 


si 10s. ; 60 feet by 18, qr 10s, 


Stoves for Chure 
and Halls, a according to ouse Works 


, Stamford- hill, 


e particularly beasiifal. p pair at eee du a 
which set us longing, were scarce ed a the | 
e of ure and of the eys Sars (with 


fowl) jungle cocks, both remarkable and valuable | 


Middlese b 
Or WATER PIPES AND TROUGH PI PIPES, irds ; the same too of the golden, silver, and pie 

H ith all the usual conn phe easants, as well as of the excelle ent t blac 

J. pera 93 What: Be 18 “Banksid 8 age India ducks, which, however, ha te not t suficient 
keeps ipes, wit 
Elbows, Abr Tee Please: Collave S Pikigo Bodkete, aud daylight to call forth their badai Ac on 
Spigots, Throttle es, K., of excellent quality, and at very 1 hatched with a batch of diet tid Tiving 
een * uiring the work to be done can have | with them am 8 160 attracted somewh at, and not | 
—.— for the he — e,, at a stated sum. Rain-w tren J eat deal more notice. It was curious 7 see the 


at J. JoxEs's, Iron B 


a 
pipes, Sutters, —— ghts, Rallies — Air Bricks, and 
ridge 1 


numerous on castings are also 
Wharf, B do 


, No. 6, aan 75 


Tis LONDON MANURE C COMPANY beg to offer 
~~ —— and pledge ce from th 7 thon 5 Manure sent 


sha 11 be fr test engar 
+ 


, Phosphate A or Ammoniacal baie of Am; 
phosphate of Lime, 2 Nitrate of Soda, Bone Saw- 
and every ae me an Manure 
. See 


EDWARD PURS * Blackfriars, 
TEPHENSON AND CO, racechur rtee 
and 17, New Park-street, Southwark, Inventors 


and Manuf: acturers of the 3 CONICA 


ee — n een solicit the attention of | ? 


Horticulturists eir much impro 
—— the Tank — to Pineries, Propagating Houses, 
Se., by which — gece heat as well as bottom-heat is 
o any required degree, without the aid of pipes or — 
8. and Co. have r ver state 7 — at the request of 2 merou 
akin nie lers of Iron, as well 5 
Copper, by which s hese Boilers, which 
are now so well k known, scarcely require ig ai em , but to 
who have not seen them in 
and p N 
. beg to inform the Tradethat at their Manufactory, 
wn 1 every article required for the construction 
of 1 Bui uildings „as well as for heating them, may be 
upon the most finn es ig 
Conservatories, &c., of Iron or Wood, — upon the most 
ornamental 5 Pee Palisading, Field and Garden 


Fences, Wire-wor 


BY HER ROYAL LETTERS 


“MAJESTY’S PATENT, 


DENCH invites the . on of Gentlemen about 


E. DENO HOTHOUSE | WORKS, KING'S ROAD, CHELSEA 
* toerect Hothouses, &c. 


vast superiority in every 


| Fespect possessed by his PATENT t HOUSES, which be will 


any others, Good Glass 
52. or foot, 1 Bot wide, 5 Pre long, ned 
the Houses when 8 charg m 18. 3d. to 4 


Per e 
— — the roof being —— * wood or i fe and the 
putty. 


principle being wood ratters and the glass pu 2 with 
Patent — — agimi g n eed — 7d. to 9d. per ft. 
HE Na BY HOT WATER, 


CHEAP AnD DURABLE ROOF ING. 


BY HER 
_ MAJESTY’S 


ROYAL LETTERS 
PATENT. 


SAVES, A 
F M‘NEILL Axp ae 1e of — Bu — 
* m, NH oF) Manuf, acturers and 
i ASPHALTED FELT FOR ROOF 
Houses, Fee Buildings, Shedding, Lee 7 for Garden 
* , to protect Plants from Fro 
At the 
wi has 


exhibited and obtained tw 
and 


SLE OF * 


P STATE, 
ora pores 4 REGENT’s Par 
And on the Estates of the Dukes of Sutherland, Norfolk, Rut. 
land, Newcastle, y Joeta tar Bu (a ond), 
ate Earl Spencer, and most of the Nobility and 2 
d fe IETY’S HoUsE, over- 
1 of any other description of Roofing. 
saving of Timber in the construction of 


. length * 32 inches wide. 
E Penny Per Square Foor, 

for its Use, am Testimonials. 
157 references HN 2 — 


the 
. M‘NE AND CO. 
Felt Manufactory, Lamb’s-buildings nhill-row, 
covered with the Felt may be seen. 
s the entrance to West. 
with F. M‘NEILL and Co,’s Felt about 
e Tero of Barry ‘ 
issione? Woods and Forests are 
result that they have ordered th 
Rooms at the Houses of Parliament r 


_ SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1 


MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
25 e 122 i h ural A Society of Ireland. 


ks and hens were ran 


4 


ved method of | the 


Gilet Neonki | iinta Shows, it is this Felt during 
been O SILVER MEDAL 
i opted by time o 


| Birmingham. 


sua Gazette. = 
be 


th the engrossing interest | 
ded, to | 


t, the cocks and hens were 
e principal performers, the — of every eye, 
the observed of observers. All this is good: this 
principle of preferring a tun — to the 
thin t to illustrate any department of mere natural 
istory instead of a 


ornithological collection, in the bas Ko pA 
oultry show eal goo od t be not 
carried to y But it seems “hea chit on 
he Birmingham exhibition rown, in 
succeeding years, the res 2 * f gu 
ng public opinion in these matters, as well 
he agr reeable 2 l f following and 
rewarding it rea 


feel a frienilly anxiety tnat a high position may be 
3 by the meetings which have 3 

well, we will advise that the promo S $00 
as par e take high ground, and 5 che judges 
to set aside all specimens that are of inferior pei 
even * they be the only ones of “we class e 
hibited. Year after year 


— in lofty pens 
guinea-fowl, Muscovy ducks, — — ted geese, 
common rs cks and geese, and all truly domesticated 
te ee and also for any birds illustrating the most 
theory of domestication ; 


eresting and important t 
withholding all marks of approbation from whatever 
is undeserving to receive ey It goes much against 


the conscience of judges to be compelled to affix a 
mark of excellence to things that they would, 
their own premises, immediately consign to the spit 
5 ee * N ke were in a proper state to g0 
which i s the . Perfectio 
bth ‘practical ‘al 2 is the ———— 
o be aimed at, e 3 if not quite attainable te 
9 Ba 5 80 aspect of circumstances 
fore, as the Birmingham Poultry Show has already 
had its “Rules,” &c., adopted 4 other similar ex- 
eee * is likely for the future to be taken as 
standard example, we will s 
882 5 to be observed o 
In the first place, the birds differ ae the an nimals | o 


n fou 
| live produce a 
griculture, or to get together an to 


- thal er pe rds 
s | their flock of So 


on this principle, qe greater, of co 


oh ai one or two who 
occasions. 


5 in cn circumstance that the latter are 
red soon after the show is closed, 


01 A t is therefore of importance 
they Boula, “contract no ere i 


increase the pys of 

that the exhib'ti es libs 

ma per to be res considerably warmer ; re this e 
arranged i ent building, | ®2 


exce kink: fok 


mos 
ia) 


wi ý 
aks whole of it, — and al. shows 


ttendan 
gra rain is aati in pha eo Ani a sufi- 
ncy of soft food, 2. e., or 


n 
if coarsely | 

gravel, of course. 8 bage, even 1 
chaff-cutter will be found ere 
t ih SS ved from the successful 


| ditiagu e aracteristios 
th 


pt the comm gee 
whole week | in the (to them) 5 3 of 
in on perches. 


e 
offence. 
eee to be 


eceive pigeons, baskets of eggs, ‘and 
poultry, ; in which an interest has to be excited, if it 

es not yet exist. 

Sri epar arrangements are ere pa he arrived 


and the 
as been achieved was: a 
‘Tt just shows what 3 singlenes 
and a sincere desire to gratify and realy our 
bours can effect. A few gentlemen, who are well 
<r 


dTi 
— 


year to rom most — Dtg useful 
y t of such a ee e has just been 


a 4 8 by en 
of cocks and 1 s from well-b 

as perfect in its way as 
ato 5 or ti dai 
e larger t 


ds 


iry of Herefor 
or short-horns. 17 ek bill kept 

will be che 
1 hose who 
tion well dee 


oar ment. On the environs, too, 
s i ct, we are assured, will U good; such 
meetings as hey rage have a tendency to convert 
the * — the cultural aud manu- 
factur — into a friendly rivalry, a good- 
—— ae oa, et — indulgent 
strife after oe e nufacturer will 
amuse his leis Siete attempts at 12 ng ; 

n | agriculturist, during —— cond to such a town as 
interested in the results 

indust 


ustry. 
ersity and excellence of the whole show 
will appear from the fact og a sum, appeoa to 
as 4 5 5 in zes, of 
1ng B 


nave tr grou 

latter selecte resentation 

al 1 the Dev von, and theo i pat ro 
d of the sheep, the Leicester and Southdo own, the 

of each being accurately 

e promoters of the exhibition 


3 e 
ht; the same ripe 


at present retain ‘the oo 
however, may be ed to pone equ 
mirable results, if ebe. * ther parties. 
2 medal, of the excellence at which the reader 


d it is “ta particalarly suitable for the 

whic vo —— — in view, ) 

various Poultry shows 

which 155 likely to g” “instituted in different counties 
of England — Scotland. D. 


Tun outils of legislation in this country has never 
presented! a fairer opportunity than the present, for 
a r aiin and searching inquiry into err ee of 
ses that may be fou m exercising an 

or ind 


It can 
it may justly rrii brooks consi 
position, for the enco it hes « ente 


— 
— 
— 


w. 
detey ab hee, ain activ 
eny let it t be hnas and carefully examined into, 

and i 2 it ive i 
Yet how 
at the aera: cost where the raw article (so 


ch most aba the long denen 


t only limited, but is under the 


toan owner w 
it 
We have before, from — to time, adverted to 


its 
says Mr. CALVERT, 
“The positi 


e long foreseen the reces- | ; 


_THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


i obeyed the master who could rightly wield the 
talisman—or crushed the possessor of it. “ Observe,” 


the tenant life of a much 


x 
by acts of chari 


made permanent by the — — act of pub 

Phe there is not an acre in Englan 9 

To very Real-property Lawyer the 
fectly intelligible : it is the parties most 
d, icu don 


subject. 


If extraneous proof be 
2 — intelligible t 
2 — net in 


it in 
Drainage rs — the whole dif 
has lent money on landed — e 


ý proportion of the Pane of his estate 
sity that would arise for their consideration: time | pass gagees and creditors, who 
and events have fully realised our expectation. The | safety of investment, care not whether the property is 
subject is not new; but its importance 1s newly | well or ill managed, and who bably entire 
disclosed and derives fresh — fro ry ad- strangers to all who dwell — it. ieme Syne erie 
vance made in agricultural questi expe- re ies in his p 
rience. We have lately received a most striking = in his county, for im roperty, for 
uable pamphlet,“ addres o the Chan , for any of those innumerable acts 
cellor of the Exchequer b — ERIO CALVERT, of be cence by w a a cana ang an s 
„., in which the subject andled with a the welfare of others, his funds are always deficien 


— te ol 1 and clear insight into the n 
are 


come as ih 


remedy 7 evil is always slowest, — from the 

hat compound intelligence of facts sepa- 

rate — distinct in their nature, —which must be 

brought to bear upon e W udgment of them, Writing 
from — — r. CALVERT says 

You are probably aware, that in this part of the 


| concerned, is 
al: 


re * the nominal possessor, 
imperfectly, but deriving 

from it very little benefit : via the other the creditor, 
who enjoys the proceeds, but never troubles himself 
about the 1 It is hard to conceive a state 
of things more injurious to all parties. Yet the evil 
may possibly go farther, "The difficulties of the land- 
owner may be so great as to render him unable 
= ag his propery. 1 by the law to part 
n of it, he may be compelled, however 


re- 


— ray inflict ea the _neighbourtood all the 
jen ne 
1 55 perha a m : 


of absente 
The picture is 174 to the life. 
most painful _ of it, as 
that this same 
proc ot only affects the a as i 
the 8 of the Tenantry, — Laborer, and the 


mye 


The ar. 0 e 
requiring this primary and fun- 
r process in agriculture, scarcely d 
nam t resolves itself 
virtually into — * between a pecu 


niary 
mission of so ree or four shillings per acre 
on e o me rg an the value of at least a quarter 
of n the other, minus 6s. 6d. for interest. 
at 

A landowner who is only tenant for life, is con- 
tinvally told, that he must meet the difficulties of the 
times b 8 tivati 


improved syste on. lly 

„that such improvements cannot be effected 
without the application of capital, and inquires how 
he obtain ital. Even if he 


wealth independent of land, it by no means follows that 
he ean use it in agricultural improvements, en, 
who have several children, can afford to spend large 
sums of money for the exclusive benefit of the eldest. 

Were the | er a tenant in fee, 


He would make land provide 
the capital, of which the land is to receive the benefit. 
But if he is tenant K for life, the nature of his tenure 
prevents g 

exorbitant terms which — N upon nn, rae 
Thus although he icul 


be useful and important with a view to that object ; 
but they nly impose a check; in many cases 
mountable, to the improvement of land.’ 
difficulty inage Act (9 & 10 Vic. 
c. 101) has removed; as the writer shows. But 
; T The act of Drainage is the founda- 
tion cement of a new m of 
w 


re- | field untilled and rank with 


and the money Band for the | if 


| explanation, 


Soil; but it reacts, if it does not most frequently 
i i : it renders him a 

begets a class of 
very class with w a i consociates him. 
It would be difficult to gard throughout its whole 
course th upon Society by 
| such a state of Sam, 
to the apo It is 
e root o nexplica 


— 
E 


rate of interest, taking de — 
dence of title. The Sood he — which the — 
market and the Money market might be relieved 

pl Tet pro» 


— — 
2 Lawyers, now 
. James Srewart, Lo 
errabr — the Soricrron-G rv: 
others might be named, if — e 


| — of space has — — to merely — 
and epitomise; but we cannot deny ves the 
satisfaction of — ng to our quo the oone 


f Mr. Carvzur's practical anf 
to the 


full . — 0 — 
or the employment of 1 redundant Capital, 
La 


“It bes ev 


otherw 
of ‘dhe willing ass ie idle the side of a 
weeds. The history of 


vidently been intended. in all recent legis 
wa He T ate ge that 


perian growth is well sketched by Mr. CALVERT as 
fol 
“ The tale of misfortunes, which have 8 in 
great families during this century, is very u 
character, an e briefly narra 
es beyond his incom m ineurs a debt, and is prevented 
by the wee duties of his position, Loree as 
r pe te by vanity or false 
a correct knowledge ers the 
ar 


by a want of obey 


| state — his affairs, irom making a a —— in his 


blishment and expen 
persu 
debt. 


age, a 


is father, constantly 

his income, augments ts debt, and 9 
ndson once m the inheri 

‘the son or the A 


Eg 


to ru 
To enable the Tenant i for life; t under proper safe- 
guards for the inheritance, to avail himself of this 
sole emancipation from the false position in which 
he is plac 2 forms one of the principal suggestions 


of the auth 
is —— another subject appended to it 
— of a proposed Reoister of Titre Derps—a 


P 
Briey, but m 
d, that if the Agricultural 


d, there i stronger reason why money s 
erection, 


It is in 


in vain that you attempt to 


mere heir-loom, to be locked up, and handed down 
as the t r the vanity, of man ma 
prescribe. It must either go with, or under, the 


pre ss of improvement around it; 

refuses to to be in a t 

upon its owner, 
ient 


— 


natur 
figured in the fabled n of Dan Genii who Ader 
= A Letter to the . Woop, Bart, MP, 


bo — * i ining Agriculture, by 


given estate or any. part of it Hias Been it 


5 


Enon 
» and 


Bee 


rectly inflicted ae ma > soil b ci 
stacles which clog its transfer and its — 
e mischief would not be allowed to live out 


ments, 7 


ee 


b 
narrated. The gorri 


to saddle th the inheritance with the —.— wage 


5 — 


IN ENGLAND,” 


— — ¶— 


THE MALT TAX. 
s. me — = 3 or re art 


has 
0 


cotto 

3 till he had given. notice to the exciseman, * 
then -s wi a — hour, per to continue 
Waere. peters or forbidden as 


ciseman, 
suited the 
nsideration of the exigencies 1 
men, in ond be eonciaded with pagan ai 22 
cotton wool. 
most justi; this 
enois trade—a monstrous 
ah e au of capital—an undue 


2 $ - 
H. H 
4 3% 
st 155 f if Any 
1 6 $ ii iji i} n Hiter 
HE HEH : lige e UHRE 
e e ACHE 
* i 3245 2 13133 a 
ne e Palaki Be e tila 40 f 1 
ane Hirini Hik rain Huan l 1% ie hi i 
5 il i gnilih: Ang, Ait jigni iieii int iii 159 I ien 
e if itis: Hi 1 Af a ae | be 1115 18 a ee 
Pater fairies 1 i 1 e 1111 
ate HHH e 1 ahi i 140 ana id W 
miij e ie ER 10 e fat iinei 
fy id- 115 it fhalti ib EFIT HHI EHH EE 1217171 14125 AR A 1175 Ap 115 Tee 1335 
inhi fe THE HH aE 111175 HIRE ve 111445 ait 
Wale Naif 1270 EA n kdl Hii ‘i 111 duel 1110 : HE $ JEH inka 
8 bist] Ad itl Hi e ninian f 2 235 Waal = itn! 113 2172 
Shae sll V ah inil a ap a my 
< 1171 1142145 ify 214441 7 e 2333 {i = pits 
1 17 e 100 % % % 1 e R 
— sates 3 17; 3 11 F iili, Pi taas 333 F Fp j 24227445 1135 H SE 
— Hilt: juste 43 i ab 14471715 fiili HE 15 Hult 1 135 
~ 4245. : oe Ee “3% 112115 ji $ £ 23 44 
E ith: MFHT tH 15 REE 1175 427121 7725 rl 174771 f 1711115 HEHH 
JHR pea Hyi e 1 0 1 1 : 1 
S ER 1 flush e 117145 1 H 
AR JHR at thine HHF 15 i 1 fut Hit: 1 0 12 7770 1 Hr 
elii Hih 11 afis i 141 1 ii 10% piii 10 
m 77171245 22217473 TRA 117155 E HEHEH 
e Mina -o pE inal T 
Ht hs 1125 725 15 PLE 1412415 HHE 133717245 HE ti 
11413 ti 2747175 222 i 1 PE Fad 
BHIN 1 e a I 
Bik Hels li ee THE 1111 dads 
21211117. ALH Paidi 1111 BTH 
JRR IGHT fle th 
el 


-THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


nt had ordered 
that language for distribution ye ut their South 
American d ie t onsidered that there 


n dependencies. was 
were only two modes by which a pisii r could avoid the 
disappointment and 1 2 incur in purchasing 
ious guano, pray either by a a Tord has 


ining 


perfect reliance could be tis ied! 
IxDlax CORN. POW ae iin of Indian Corn, o dif 
ferent 8 and gro is season in . 
of England, along with deta iied statements con- 
nected with their respective aon and produc 
fı Mr. of St. . B- 


uare, nehes 
Little Canford, D orset; N 9 
n and Mr. John S of Bowoo 
ts K 


g. 
OTATOES. 7 8020 NRY MaxxINd, of 251, 


iles, M. P., 
ured the me 


T the plan 
urs. The yield from peii considering the small set, W. 


The Council ordered their thanks to Mr. Manning fo 


of Potatoes by W H3 was aceompanie 


received, with the thanks 


unication 
of the Council : : fom ‘his Grace th the Duke of Rutland, 
Farm Accounts ; from Dr. 


rt, specim rasses ing 
7 8 0 5 * a statement of their 


affinity to th 
ical Roofing- 


8 
cultivation, and a reference to his Geomet 


tiles to be used instead of slates or other covering for 
ings 5 Mr. ers, V.S., on diseases in 
Cattle; from Mr. Harris, of Braunston Mill, a drawing 
of a new cultivating implement of his own inventio. 
from Mr. Donaldson, on ing without plough- 
ing; from 5 toring decay ; 


in Draining. The ordinary meetings of 


njoni, over the Christmas 
recess to the first 8 February. 


A Sprctat Covuncit, on le. state of the Finances 
Society, was held o preteen: the 12th — 
Chir, the Right Hon. ibig Portman, Trustee, in the 
Hon. H. W. Wilson, Colonel Austen, Mr. Ra; 
Barker, Colonel Challoner, — hears: 
Mr. Hudson (Castleaere), Mr. inder 
Shaw Gastin) Me Mr. oii Shelley, Mr. Aarin Smith, 
Mr. 5 George T 


5 the Society. and reported the vario 

the Committee, acting under the a of the 

Council, for their recove: The Council then took this 

important question into to their seri serious eerste and 

unanimously agreed to the following resolution : 
“That th to proceed in the 
Sem — and that notice be sent by the § samp woh 10 bay 
on or — as ; f Febru 

the County Court 2 —. 
Tn being 5 each case in suc 

determine, an 

8 * in furtherance of this order 


tails 9 par 
amined as certi 
Ir. 


A 
e oa to the e — General Meeting, 
day. 


T 
Messrs. as gee Pavzera, of | Members of a 5 on tay occasion 
Ing. 


pene 
eene 520 transmitted additional 
e The Council 


0 
bers. This total amount, bei 


HEN 
e Council with the following 
h 


mbers on t: the 15th March 


n Potato seed was set in ordinary garden- ground 


ts f 1 i in a vari ** of 


his communication, and for the 1 555 


TEs 


a 
members of the 
ight, of Edmonton; Ar. Robert 
n, of Ngee gn piano, Fe, and Mr. 
i Crompton „ of eld-hall Derby, auditors 
] 


t of the Society. ate accounts were duly ex- 
rtified to be ect. 


Sprcrat Couxcrl for agreeing to the report of 
was h me © on 
m.; present, Mr. Ray 

ir; Hon. Captain Dudley Pel. 
onel i: Mr. Grantham, 
Mr. Jonas, Profi 8 Raa Jonas Webb. 
The Council sonida * nd pats o the report to be 
made by the Council to the be in General Meeting. 


The half-yearly tats Meetine was held at th 
| anit Ar house, in Hanover-square, on Saturday last, 
1 5th of fore his se the Duke of Rica 
| 415 0 in ne 
7 on, * Sui savy 
5 eFI the following Jaani from the Council : 


he Council have to cake thie srie alse to the 
eir present 
the pas er" N If. year, 2 
have been elected, 3 


co 
E 
= 
88 8 8 
2 
o 
8 
#F 


in > 
7 607 Life Member 
rary Members; : making a total of 5388 Mem- 
g 124 less than at the 
former General Meeting. does nde indie 
reduction in the actual Members of the Society, as a 
do aoe for 
coun Nine 
ree ; oining the Soe 
agricultural improve * n higher grounds, 
. a permanent desde st i the mikn ncement of its 
objects, nak in its e dane prosperity. The Council 
have direct of the Governors an 
Ay e be printed and pen 
to S b — 2 A part of the Journ ri 
ong the atthe recorded, the Council regret t 
specify that of their venerable Metnber, Mr. Hill * 
of the found of the Society, and a constant 
attendant to wi ithin h very short period of his 
at their various mee ot N The Couneil have 1 up 
the vacaney in the y oceasioned by his lamented 
= on by the election P A ene They have also 
ected ck eerie Member of Council, in the place 
of the Ear of Lovelace (w — present kon, gras nts 
prevent his das atondanes), and Lord Camoys a mem- 
e place of the late Mr. Umbers. 
ouncil eran Barty at the General Meeting in May 
they had altered the By 


nd local pu 7 5 ae at the 
of the Society : the new Members 


a to 
Soe eae decided to revert, after the end of the 
to — Bi Seng day for their ene 
me to nesday, as more generally co 
venient to all 1 
Finances rA 77 eil have pas under ou most 
se ey 


f 
bseription remaining un aid o the istý. The 


ir engagements to 

repeated diveslar letters: by an attempted system of! 

collection, by personal communications kindly made to 
rties bers of el, ey sus- 
m, an 


d 
the 


Y| plea to whic 


ance 
order 
to report at each = council | 


neglect to comply with the 
e Socie ety and they find that no plea, 


ground of inability to — rge 
ch the Council have always most con- 

eee attended in the case of tho ibis who, 

from adverse ciran have unfortuna 

N to meet e 5 e small dem — 

The Coune 15 r for an ins 

all this forbearance, “the j just ap à legal 22 the — 

of the pe iety gave them these 

a Court of Law; but thinking that many of the ‘he $ dis 

faulters Red 


8 
Mr. 8 RAYMOND Barxen, | 3 
; ilson, n ee 


cil finally 
zes 


that the o 4 nion of eminent Coun 


member in — 


1 
by direction of the * 


removal is kei names from the list, which were put | o 


tho 
ociety en . mayest end friends 
who, 


e- law —— g | 
-day of their ordinary deoti from We aise Ju 
y have, 


J 

in the great majority of „can be set up on the m 
their W cat 

al wa th 


vario 
facilities they aff 
ved 


ase 
ubse 
itle himself to the privileges of t 
py Aae yg ae to pa he 
which ma ay be due, till he sh 
the So ocie 


85 i eans volu 

es ly recoverable by the 

920 Of the Society. Eve mber is 1 

le gal liabilities by the areala sent 3 

election. We are, therefore, of opinion that none of th 

3 in the case are available for resisting pay bene 

subscriptions in arrear Yment of the 
(Signed) FREDERICK THESIGER, 

Inner Temple, May 7, 1849. 


Of the parties thus i wns, * 
favoured the Chai with a nf te one-half 


SAMUEL Wanney, 


t have refused him the ordin courtesy of A N 
nde se circumstances, the Council feel that thee 
ty to the Society places them under the painful 

sity of resorti Qe — of — 

these payments by ess issued e Count 

Courts in thal distriet throughon ut the] kingii, against 
1 Mem 11 arrear; 


of eontributin g Members, 
the Sar iety a definite and legitimate amount, instead of 
Ing, as 
a 8 timate, 
unsettled claim 
CouNTRY Met INds.— The — ch meeting of this 
year has proved eminently success 
an =, character of the live stock 21 implements, as well 
onnected with their con- 


e arrears, 
“founded on vague probabilities and 


“0a 
=] 


e vacancy bein 
ho Sie White Ridley as 
accepted 


Pe iani m, the Council h 
a ee t of Implements, 
a year in advance of that in which 


by agricultural machinery having this jrek pe 

— in so striking and „ pe 38 of 

the Co in of 
to! 


Couneil 1 e 
Norwich 1 to the eee A aei 2 of al 
city, to ocal committee, and 
occupiers of sites of — and os 
vo sonic who had so zealously co-0 
the occasion, | their cordial thanks 


rable they 
— ment t required oft them for prom 10 5 
of the apn The also 3 
us Railwa 


cularly to the Eastern Counties 
great attention paid by them to the local requirement 


Mee th 
Jul 2 — as usual, the principal day %5 
ron hey aie also determined the ny 
offered for that meeting, and the various 
ith the competition, all 


of which vil 


“2. | 


—— —ů OT e 


terms and er, 


51—1849.] 


— eiod for, thal 
be fouud detailed in the Prize Sheets Singita for the 
and to to the 


They have emrt that the 
requested to commence their 


soon after as the judges may have 
wards. 


„Investi 3 r 
ng, oured by 


1 pau are in a 
eng 
Par ety a Jou 
anv | Pee an Cou neil, during * 
2 familiar chemie 
— meetings — topies 
Aeidated by experiments. 
VETERINARY 15258 —The Council have received 
and adopted the following. report from their Veterinary 
Commitee : è 


ve progress in 
of ey —— will be given 
He bas als Tage 


of practical interest, 


E VETERINARY gourre —With a view to 
we collecting ‘aad perpetuating a body of au 4 informa- 
2 the diseases of Cattle, Tiea t d Pigs, an 
— thei r progress, the — ciety appoints a "professional 
inspector for 2 purposes. y Member of the Society who 
a competent professional opinion rig advice in 
ve disease among — stock, — 


d list the cy oe will — ea Dike Veterinary 2 — 
h o Members of which, with — assistance of 
d 


and 1. 1s. Per die 
sharge the cost of t trav malar 
— 


ser vic J s will be a by 


e| the Rev. 
— crea arran 


ing 8 de 
al e 8, after their 
and | sust 


e Socie 

he sere for 8 aid. “This charge e may, , however, 
be commuted or a altogether at the discretion of the 
Council, on such step b ecommended by the Veterinary 

mmittee. The inspector, om his return from visiting ar 
diseased stock, shall report to the Committee, in writivg, t 
results of his observations and proceedings, which nun wil 
be laid before the Council. When contin gencies arise t that 
may prevent a persona al discharge of the duties t 
2 he may, subject to the appro N of the Committe, 
me competent professional . to act i n his stead, 


S RAYMOND BARKE 


cordial aequi the 
Vansina College in vi request made to m by the 
ei ok Professor nds should be allowed to 
rinary — of the Soe 
UNTS.— ciety havin 


uncil reporte 
in that year. in ph following terms :—* a 


and 
lof Mr. 2 Philli 


Corr D F 
been 2 ilidir d 
aluab 


ended by 
in a wield “thes pin. 
the — mena L * — — 


cabinet 


particular mode of cultivation they may 
furn — ere — useful direction for future guidance. 
DINGS. e Socie 


| 


r. S w 
= 52 -= authors of “the Essays on Farm Build 
e Judges, for the kind manner as 
t 


staal their 


of 


ged in 


guard- 
prepare a on their reception 
ecess and con 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


adopt, and th 


respective Essays 


ou me Committee for publication. 
B rted 


to the Couneil 2 completion of the monan he 
undertaken, at the r House 


the 


Committee 


generic relationship, 
specific ——— "ie exhibi 
specimens tra-sized variet, 
the American (and aly introduced — — Ameriea, but 
ed from source we sann trace), 


to go on with 
; exactly as in res a supply of sheep 
for the ateher, the first cross een the Leicester 
and the answers 80 — Touching these 
and a few other lots, we heard song of Hecate 
pointedly quoted 

1 Black spirits and white, 


isa, mingle, m a 
at ming 
It seems curious that somo of the most praiseworthy 
Nos. are 


dozen chickens, and in 


ere, 7 the m 


resources of the e 


ountry. 


By order of 800 Council, James Hupson, Secretary. 
„1849. 


Py Dec. 1 


qT 


to m 


kindness 


soi uA 


o 
4 


members o 


On th 
Challoner, the t 
acclamation to the n 


e than a few 
Shelley, seconded by Mr. Kinder, the thanks vf * 
Society were voted to the auditors for 


meetin 
oble Chairman, who expressed his 
Society, and his firm 
of ulness 


WINGATE, ro ag by Mr. 
dopte 


otion of M 


"Oh the motion of the Hon. Captain Pelham, 3 

Mr. Ray ety 

were voted oe Way 

for their kindness in delive ering. lectur es or ane the 
the oce: G 


sal tg: 
and Profes 


8 
rwich 
as very favourable, the 
The 


sa e 
n, 8 sa 


award a prize to cngle-combe 

; er K may draw out 

they are treasured, 

pretty, curious, and 
but it was remarkable to ob- 

ll the beauties of 8 present (and indeed 

of all the Berria came forth, and their 

gas-light with which the extensive build- 


task — — in- 
dividual speci — Bis 


of C n OE, cock, Malay, and — e 
dau, W are re indi cated by it, besides thote to 2 we have 
already — the reader. The e geese, of w theve 
were only th ries for competition, were val good. 
The — — too, were good— though we must protest 

introduction of dissimilar birds into the 


pps in other classes 


Norfolk. fa sAr ven 1€ too, merit 
raise. r well: grown could 
hardly make an . . w e took tħe 

en, . blues, here 


e Essa n the Keeping of Far rance few ott 
ccounts, haying reported that none of the Essays are 5 nf supporting it in its operations of usef shown, amongst which we + ily get English 
worthy of the prize offe iety in that class, to the country. pa A 3 aa the competing speci- 
uncil a a Committee to report on the mens, several pens, to add to the interest of the meeting 
t mode, in their opinion, in which a 2 farmer THE BIRMINGHAM AND MIDLAND í 9 = ord opportunities to p , Were contributed 
may be in the copu manne: e EXHIBITION : THE POU fia ary 1 mer 1 — a 
requisite accounts connected with his 3 establish-| Tn general excellence of the rE a extended Mr We 1 helsea ; Mr. Mp Dih ahe Rev 28. 
72 . t Í . essop, . 
ti wet having = oie ae Gene Se Seer a ee bat f i Dixon, Ke. These comprised black East Indian ducks, 
jungle fowl, Bernacle geese, guans, ks, 
„ golden, silver, and pied pheasants, &e., besides the 
usual varieties of poultry.” 
PRIZE LIST. 
HE BEST — AND THREE HENS. 
ass nish,—15s. or sil Mr. Edward Simons, 
Edgbaston ; 7s. (d., Mr. John W. Ward, 2 5i, Mr. B.. 
Bissell, Bracford-street, Birmingham, 
Class II., P or 2 * 1 Mr. J. Gough, 
Birmingh or sil Mr. G. ——— 
Yardley ; 10s., Mr gig Belly Oaks. 75 6d., 2 be 
M. P.; 53., Mr, Richards, Northneld; „ Mr. J. Bis- 
str 
a III., Cochin China.—l5s. or silver medal, Mr, James 
— Bradford-s ham; — Reciaioags 
— Re Moseley-green ; 7s. Ca., Mr. Thomas Mellon, New- 
e street, 
` f wee 1 Mala . or . —— Mr. James Bissell,. 
Practical men them as might tend to _not 7 
Ese Cera” Eie Coun | omy ey, nd TU DPE Ree yr ou ee 
ki he show. I Clas sant , or Moss Fowl.—I5s. or silver 
© that forms of accounts f any kind ; if - — birds displa 3 Mr. James rn. Atid Ses B e (as (as 


accounts are to be kept. They 

thus gained, and the peyote fact of asig upon 
farmers the necessity of keeping records 0 

Outlay income, and of prot tit and loss, 3 aaah 
Se departments of their farming, will in itself be a great 
Step to prem: es we 3 


eee 


us on their 


* 
il “also e extend to other other object aapoy to that | 


— e 


e Ek them a valuable historical 


ticularly excelent. me 


were 
at almost crus enamelled closeness of cle Fb, Game,—15e, or l, Mr. G. 
plumage which igh bred, high ditioned | m — m; 153. or silver , Mr. James Wyley, Longdon, 
imen, whether in the richly-coloured black-breasted | near Lichte d — ; 7s, 6d., Mr. D. Mould, Smethwick; 58. 
* the delicat ly tinted duck-winged EZ 2 H. pony — Be soviet — Mr. R. H. Tipton; 
8., Mr. Jo 
Better black Spanish than th Ta cen Class VII., Golden Hamburgh.—15s. or 
uced; every pen was of a first-rate order. ‘The Bay, ham; 7s, 6d., 
ce | Dorkings ay also in t force ; and the er who | Repton ton-on-Trent; 15s. or silver amet 1 
had decided to make that fine breed hi stock, | Spangled, Mr, James Dison; Horton, Yorkshire; 7s, 6d, Mr- 
would find 5 epee y opportunity of spang the sub- | Class Vill, Silver Hamburgh.—L5s. or. silver medal, Mr. J. 
varieties, whether pec! y, or red, That er Bradford-street, cori, eon A ; — ie, it, Cox, 
com ro ham; or silver te , Silver Span- 
large family of Seal -laying double bed 2 gled, Mr. 0 me bury; 15s. or silver medal, Mr. 
the Hamburghs, which are suc favour’ Whilock, High-street, ngham (equal); 78. 64. Mr. 
the midland and no co we: might be T. B. Wright, Great Barr; 5s., Mr. T. B. W Barr, 
oer’ in num s and e competition in mes 8 IX. ot 5 sng or silver medal, Mr. iv Poa a 
everal branches of F gold eiie silver papai pret | Stet Birmingham, ander 
tapas, moonies, red caps, &¢., affording to the student | lass X., Poland.—15s. we, Birmingham. 
opportunity rarely wi their ass XI., Poland (Silver gi Gold). 162. or silver medal, 


street, Birmingham. 
Class XII., New or 


W. 


: 10s., Jam 


Malay 
Ios, Me. —— Bissell, ieee —— an ayni 
ewt. 


Repton.— 


GEESE.— Class 2 
78. êd., Mr. E. Hew 
Small Hea 


DUCKS.—Class xv, Sede —10s., Mr. A Ash, 


8 —Silver Poland: 7s. 6 


Co 
gham. Trum mpete: ers.—58., Mr. 
Antwerp.—5s., Mr. Henry Grant, e 1 
k- headed e vege , Edgbas 

„Sir G 


Distinct 
dwio © i e oe: 
Mr. oS Her k, mgs „Ar. W tg Abin ag 


FOR THE i BEST PEN OF CHICKENS OF 1 
1. — sh.—1l0s., Mr. — Bissell, 


— Dor king : 


aa 
S Mr. *. Lowe, Birm 
? ios., Mr. * Hodgkinson, M Mosely tamp 


Oldham, N 


eos William Hodgkinson 
ts Poua AND * 


Pait J. Stubbs, P 
pore ns „ 
Grant, Cou 


ard Armée 


r. George Blythe, Edgbaston 
Mr. James Bis 


W. H. 8 Bradford, 


Philips —.— . E. 
Sparkbrook ; 58., Mr. J. Shackell, 


78. 6d. 
1 


a gMr. George 


(Equa'.) 
Whita 


ssell, 
r, 


ry Bar, 
Mr. A ok 
ls tone, Wilts ; 


tenson, Birming- 


North- 


to 75s. ; 


Scotch do., 


—— pp — i whites, 60s. to 65s. 


30s. to 60s.; Dutch 


do., 408. to 50s. 


0 758.; 


Scotch Za M* 
sh and Bel 


p — * 


Hothouse Grapes are s 


tiful, Oranges and 


abu 


nee ‘Potions hae. not 


rice of M 
their appearance, 
niums, Garden 

th 


e-apples, per lb., 


Grapes, hothouse, p. T hed to 5 


— Portugal, pe 
by oats, per done Bet 


r half sieve, *— to 128 
itchen, p. bsh., _ to 4s | 
Lemons, per 1 1s to 2 ae 


en, p. 


hrooms, 


„ Bigno 


53 to 8s | 


— per 100, 6s to 12s 


Oranges, per doz., 9d to 1s 6d 


Seakale, — punnet, 
Geal Aonta p. 7 
Broccoli, p.doz. bu 


Brussels Sprouts, P. 
1s 6d to 28 


Sorrel, — hf. sieve, — to 9d 
Potatoes, per 


Turnips, p.dos.ban,1 
Red Beet, — doz., 1 
Horse R. 


Cuc 
Leeks, per bunch 


8d. 75 to158 
Greens, per doz., Is 6d to 28 6d 


Nabe — He pŠ 
— each, Zs to 38 6d 
2d 


AN 


35 to 68 


hf. sieve. 


icbatcteea 


— * are sufficient for 
= demand, 1 and Walnuts $a abundant, ayo mem san 
Lemon ndan Pe 

— Vegetables, — are good and — va —— 
— Cauliflowers and rosea are sufficient for the de- 


nt, good 


alte since our last account, 

7 —— other 3 7 plentiful. No alteration in the 
Asparagus and Seakale have made 

Cut Flo owers consist of Monti, Pelargo- 
nia venusta, Tro 
emums, Fucheias, pce? 3 ge Certi, and Roses, 


azil, p 


per 


8, P- 
pomar à — as p.s 


ums, Chrys 


Oranges, per 100, 5s to 12s 
Almonds, per peck 6s 


Filberts per 100 a 60s to 65s 
3 „P. 1 — 5 bane he T 


Ei 


Kent POOR, 2 to Shep. 100 Di 


| Onions, p. bushel, 3s to 4s 
panish, R. W ls 6d to 48 


0., 6d to 


888 EA geia 1s to ls 6d 
Mushrooms, p. pot., 1s tols 3d 


bus „ 38 to 68 


Sm mall Balade, p. pun., 2d to 3d 
Watercress, p. 12 bun., 4d to 6d 


“ges 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


J. W. Ward, Repton ; 7s. 6d. Mr. James Bissell, Bradford- 
riety.—15s. or silver * 


samples. Our market has been heavy at the following quota- 
— York Regents, 80s. Ae. 1108. per ton; Wis 
Rheni 


5 


san- 


tur 


r; 
— 160 Sheep, 
8 Bo; Trom 
and Nor 


or C 
Best Short-ho: 


slow, but pric 
F 


SMITHFIEL 
is the — “gr 


Best Dow 
Half-b n 


Ditto Sborn 
Beasts, 5185; Sheep. and — 24 #30 ; 


We havet 


from the home 


Monpay, Dec. 17.—The 
carriage samples this morning w 
disposed of on the terms of this 
Barley maintains our quotations, 


ru cheaper.— 


RIDAT, DEC., 2 


.4 

rns 4 Hadr 4 

— e Peasia 8 0—3 8 
and 


* 4 4—4 6 


to 4 


FRI 


y a lar 
uyers. It is difficult to 
sold must be stated at 
of Sbee; 


New Beans are a he 
White Peas are 1s. to 2s per 

es 78 unaltered. 
1.— The arri 
day have been small, those of het 
market was not well attended, pete rthe 


rge sup 


qr. ch 


e Monday. 
¥ market i *. 


Calves 


21, 


* Beasts, and 
aes an Fcarcely 
abou y per $ 8 That few 


supply of "English Wheat 
pane se — a. 
but low descri ption: 
avy sale, and rather 
. e 


of English ain 
morirai i sinet Hen, 


eaper,— 


d 121 


3 105., P 
; lery, p. bundle, 8d tols 8d | Marjoram, per bun ch, 2d ETTER 
Mr. G. Lowe, Birmin sins * Mr. k- 1. * ‘Small Heath. Radishes, 12 bunehes, 1 11 72% Mint r por bane neh, 2d pee EAT. |B. Oats.) RYE. | Beans, | Peas, 
Badeort Ts. 6 an r EO Lows, Dinn M, mr. 1 | Soreth Der bun. ¢ | Basil, per bunch, 2d Nov. 10......... 40 14 283 801611422 6a) 29s 4a 50 74 
e XIX, Cambridge gert . ops Hol So] Bea eae 
* a . ig OPS.—Frinay, Dec. 21. "ee 8 30 7 
Philips, M. P.; 10s. rag re Naylor, Esq., Moseley-bal 10s. 6d., Messrs. P , Dec. 40 228 1 16 4 24 1| 98 6 30 2 
. mi Glass KX 7s, 0d. Ar. E. Hewitt, | ine the Tinm ä — 38 5 26 ole oa elas Ju 
brook ; 5s., Mr. E. A. — aid l l n Load of 36 Trusses. : fad 
EGGS.—Ciass XXI,—5s., Mr. Prosser, King’s Norton; 2s. 6d., SMITHFIELD, Dec. 20. Aggreg. Aver, | 39 11 2711 |16 7 23 5f 28 10 30 3 
ae — Ge m Repton ; 2s. 6d êd., 5 bi cree” Small Heath e E ssiphe o Hi 658 to 728 Clover 60s to 808 ibe —— 1 1 5 = — 
» | Inferior ditto 50 rd New eee e 0110 
3 Te. Gd, Taber Highgate ; 5s., E. Tattersall, | Row . a ý ® ; 
Gower-sireet. auka. Ae Jos. Greenwo od, Kingsbury, a — — ea e > 4 > ool at 7527 Nor 0. Nov. 17. Nor. 24. DRC. I. | Dec, 8. Dro. 15. 
eford-hall, near Norwich ; Henry Hinxman, Esq., of Durn Waeradhives, 2 * * 1 ssi * e w * 
d-house, ‘near Salisbury; and Mr. John Baily, of Mount- | Fine Old Hay . 638 to 658 | New Clover... . —s 5 eer ee 
Berkeley-square, London Inferior itto oa: ig Inferior ditto... . 55 60 | 40 2 ie ee ee BSE poe 
—— New „ „ = “ PAI He e 
Notices to oes empre Old Glover oe ee 8 9 re A 50 pr ig «oe ak i 
ArsæNIC: & H. Will any one accustome $ 
poking Wheat be — enough to state one „ me a London. Liverpool. Wakefield, Boston. Birmingham. 
tity used per bushel of seed prepared "and the PRICES TETT miami l 
plan of applying it. | 
Sees eienn] Contes papam ee 
n Mare valier Barley), s per acre, in ; qr. qr S. . qr. qr. 62 lbs. 62 lbs. 
25 1 der tock If it is not dry, delay till first week in Wheat 1 e doa URE a dik eek . i: a 
Bouse: Co Rerder, Ton may dibble 1 newly New, red 38 to4 3038 to435 8 6 25 8 6 235 to44 36—44 32 038 32 1038 4 9 5 Se 9 5 3 
— — ; there is nothing in that to diminish „ White ... |42—47/42—47/16 4 6 85 10 6 8/41—48/4249]34—-44/34—4415 3 5 75 3 5 7 
hed, 2 The ere hitet. bine has already been ithe 5 C S e S S 0 owes, george «Ming ßId awe 
given in this Paper, will perhaps suit you. They are water | |,” whi see cae — 7 0.7 47 0 7 4 C 497 T 
Tee C Horsnail. The Second 3 ave, we * i eee PR SE aoin Re EI EARMA : 
think, — — ng en dea: you ask * Rye Old dölja ðv E 2595 480 Iba 
Da. NX WING ron's Sowine Macuine : D Esdaile, We have not Y ans yeas sae 2 75 Pre aia, cog Ay ane 
_— en 3 which a lad — drill 9 acres a da F Fore reign... 20— 2320 — 23 — — — — at pa — — 
with one orse.” erhaps some of our correspondent oreign m — — — — = — — 
speak of it. The Nee 8 are ood. T arle a 7 saat | gt vd 8 25 
Kout RABI: Inquirer. It should be consumed afte: Gri ait * A. T ha 
——— done. — -s and the Swedish amen mie —— alti mg eve |23-—25|23—25 8 a 20—21/20—21/21—23/21—23 | 19—23 — 
. There is a real eco: a g. 2526 25—26 23—2823—28 pe — ens 
Yt noe te. with Swedes rather than with 8 Facilas 18.95/18 5 e ee 2024 24 atid i 
8 are themselves nutritious, and their Josiah . vo te „ ge 5 5 
ment is in a more i than any artificial mixture i 6 bush. 6 bush. 
can have. We believe that the meal dis more likely to Malt—Ship ... | — — — 35—35|35—38 — = aye 
144 s thoroug pap pao than meal unboiled. 45 45 Ibs. 
25 . i 
ah ll ey oe "yea oy a tad of — —— Oats— White... 1824182438 24 38 3d/3s 2d 38 3d} — | — 3181318 17—25 | 17-2 
Paralyse aud prevents them from moving their heads Black 16—2216—222 2 2 6 2 2 2 6 — — — 16—17 liam 
Ir eating; and. to move, they either fall over or Foreign |13—20|\13—20/2 3 2 4 2 32 4 — — — rece 
a . — = ne of them died of it i ana g, qr. qr qr qr 
and the other one has just recovered, Somedecoy ducks and * 5 5 ý 3 af 
golden bantams — 80 bad i in their legs, — Peas — Boilers 28—31 26—28 33s— 3 26—3226—32 — eas 30—36 
hey walk as if they had the stringhalt. Be 196 lbs. 196 Ibs. 
be much obliged if any 1 suggest some remedy. Grinding. 27 —28s | 28 1—12 nn. 
2.5 rape : S S B says, 5 2 the Gard i 7 e eT B i g 3 11— 
P ee, oreign . . 23302229 30 —31 25 TRE ee ji: 
rendered unt unfruitfal jis sheep are allowed to graze in them. 3 112 
; the not a , and as I am i ew * 23 —29ʃ23—29 gai — PEN, ai —1 
terested in the same subject, I should be obliged if some one, Ola F; ee ee ee ee ee — 
who has practical — his opinione iie 7 vs 32 —36 32 —36 /382—33/32—33/32—34/32—34| 14—15 ; 
same — — in Ta Airin, M my brother who 70 Foreign — 23—3623—36 25 —30 25 —34 30/26—27| — — 1113 u—13 
Pie NG: W Smith. Certain nly a very extraordinary rela- Binseed— 42 4 — 
tion, The merits of the “ „ system ” 1 are 2 . ee ee 4⁰ 40 —42 32—4032—40 — He ne 3 
not by such a set of cruei blunders as you describe. e [37—45 37—45 — es ouens BEI ane 99255 yore 
Som: C py oa ty of run r in wet | nseedCakes : 
rather than the competition of the sol” Tietoni orn — 6 120/91, 12. 2264 18.6 — | — | — — — Ta 
is present in y propo: t we do not E l 890 3 4255 as Biss ee 2 25 
. had 1 it and apply rndian Cc. 
re a to t i l orn— 22 2— 26 — a 
mine present, otherwise burning —— ee ad of 22—26/22—26| 27s—30s | 28s—30s | — — — — ak ; 
Waces: Exeter. W gag sre pa you reter to. p. sach p. sack} 2801 280 Ibs. p. sack p. sack | per ny 
8 vis Fecoinmends common Flour— 32—40/32—40| 30—32 30—32 — — 30— 363036 31—33 3 
; Y 22 0 rrots ar uitable 
3 80 ae a ee ye sown in w 
are p enough to be less 8 by J 
1 growu to — of an tag typ ari rows nenen 3 Impts.| Averages. | Imports. | Aver. Impts. Aver. Aver. 
Beans 15 inches might be placed at * ec. 18 
7 feet froma corresponding couple, an interval wide eno 
for two rows at Cae : haeie ! ugh E E4 H k qrs. s di ees d. 
Nee PPT 2 vy 4 628 2 4 21582 38 11 15007 37 3 2178 
your - eae Le 5 
f fas Bh: — aecens (were they sown on light | O amg = 7 $ pe — ~ a 24 10 | 4301 19 9 — 
. o EE YE — — 960 HS 0; S77 is 3 = 
1 e — 28 4 2266 er 5 1286 28 6 775 
Tpe Committee e that the arrivais from the mien t T a Ri l eg 3 l 1932 me nra eor 958 
Seat a rik, e e. 
bad usual English iiol, tends d KINGSFORD SEGAR and DAR THOMAS 
wer prices of all sorts of Potatoes, particularly second-rate Steep { and LAV. TUNNICLIFFR. and DUNNS| - WRIGHT. 


o 


51—1849.] 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


815 


7 uep o RICHARDSON will sell 4915 publie 
Auc the Greyhound Jan, —— on 
DAY, Dece — 27, at 12 o’clock, a large an 
of splendid Standard, Dwarf, and Climbing. ROSES, e — 
e lea arieties in cultiva: d consisting 


bri "Chinas, — 1 * The whole aay 
be inspected o on the m rning of sale, with the 
names and varieti obtained of ‘tee Auctioneer, 1, Wilton- 
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HAMPTON COURT PALACE ROYAL KITCHEN GARDENS. 
O BE LET, these GARDENS, — os 

from me oth of Jan gri next, 

, the Glass-houses, th 


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URSERYMEN, GARDENERS, & 
0 BE LET OR SOLD Lease of “the” well- 


0 

d long 1 PARADISE Pontaro 

Hornsey-road, Islington. The whole or part of the Glass and 

Stock may be taken at a valuation.— Fur he articulars may 

— had by 5 to ae srs. PROTHEROE and 3 Leyton- 

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GLOUCESTE 

E LET, from La * “iets, SPARABLE 

9 44 miles from 8 on the Gloucester — aa 

„ containing 1154. f Land, whereof upw 
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CYCLOPEDIA OF AGRICULTURE 


PRACTICAL ee SCIENTIFIC; 
THE THEORY, THE ART, AND TE BUSINESS OF FARMING, 
IN ED. 


ALL THEIR DEPARTMENTS,,ARE THOROUGHLY AND PRACTICALLY TREAT 
BY UPWARDS OF FIFTY OF THE MOST EMINENT jae LAND AGENTS, AND SCIENTIFIC MEN OF THE DAY, 
PITA BD BE JOHN 0. MARTON, 


HE AGRICUL 


Mith abobe Fen veiii R on 5 and Steel. 


THE object of this 8 is to present to the Agricultural a the whole of the truth immediately — with his 
Satin 80 an is known to the men most familiar with the sciences it involves, the methods it employs, and the 
this e every topic requiring * has been placed in the hands of —— with whom it 


it incurs. 
bs bee cia ak experience and study. 
rr 8 eee eee on all its departments; 


ure is so 333 a subject, that no one writer can spe 
oe 11 1 is a subject so variable > with circumstances, and ee so liable to mis representation, that no other kind of 
de to condense in one Wor existin 


er had equal s 

al — 5 requires the ben of those who have had personal acquai er laws and require- 
abate ; writers retailing an experience at second hand upon these points, can neither be accurate nor full enough for his 
In offering, therefore, to the Agriculturists of Great Britain a CYCLOPEDIA OF AGRICULTURE, PRACTICAL AND 
Screntirio, intended to be a Standard book of reference on all the subjects of which it treats, we should greatly mistake 
the exi — the times did we presen 3 a mere compilation of bygone information, which, however interesting in itself, 

can be of little real use to the practical m 
| The i way in which the knowledge of his art can be brought down to r present ae its various metho ae 

tailed with 2 ed for his information ; and the explanations given of their success or failure which the now 


ect Theory of Agri ene has furnished; is to place every department of the wide subject in the hands of those idaho 
made it their e 

To accomplish this desirable shies has been the great aim of the Editor and 8 = the ae oe, or 5 

CULTURE; an purpose si istinguishe icultural writers has been engaged. Each 

separate topic will be discussed by its own pais in order that the 8 55 may be te as perfectly as igi ssible. 
The er efore . no mere compilation of other works he , in every section of the subject, b 

instructed by the man who it his 5 study. Thus, even in the Calendar of Far tions, which 

might, perhaps harmlessly, bstract of previous publications on Ke practice, the successive Pesci ic 


and England by m n TS * cultivators 
As regards the eu of the Work, the names he its 


writers,—a ient guarantee for 
the practical value f the e performance, 
rta 


ended, are suffic 
n the parii and Art of 48 of, which the several departments 


A LIST OF THE WRITERS. 


D THEORY OF AGRICULTURE 
i Its BOTANY, fully Illustrated by Wood Engravings—Jonn LIND- of the INSECTS which i injure or benefit Crops, and affect Cattle 
LEY, Ph.D., F.R.S. Diseases or PLANTS—Rev. M. J. BERKELEY, Joun Curtis, Author of “The Bri 
M.A., F.L.S., King’s Cliffe, Wansford. e 
Its CHEMISTRY—Lyrox PLAYFATR, n D., F. R. S.; JOHN THOMA 
Way, Consulting Chemist to the Ro saath Soe. of England. 
Its ENTOMOLOGY, e e and ILLUSTRA 


ART OF eee 


F 
Its HISTORY mer GENERAL PHILOSOPHY—C. Wren Hos- 
s, B.A. 


The EDUCATION of its Practition Ç, rae . soen DAIRY— N, Fifeshire; PALIN, Cheshire; STAL- 
“Its PECU het e in ENGLAND, ScorLA N shir ire; TUCKS R, Dorsetshire. 
FLanpErs—Rev. W. ganep A., Thatcham, New bry ere CULTIVATED ic Aa Paki CROPS, GRASSES, 3 
Ba i Tenant of Drumnod, Cupar-Fife; T. G.J. essrs. ROBERT BAKER, Land Agent and Ten 


M 
ng deen Holland. J. CLAR gre: hire; witt Davis, Land e 

Its MACHINES , fully Hlustrated by Engravings on Wood an London; J. H. Dickson, Flax-dresser and Agent, London; 

Steel—Joun C. Morton, Whitfield, Berkeley, Gloucestershire. WILLIAM Gorrie, Farm Manager and Factor, Mid-Lothian; 
Its BUILDINGS and ROADS, fully Illustrated by En: s— Joun and Jas. Gricor, of the Norwich and Forres Nurseries; 

James N ps, C.E., h Engineer, Liverpool. oun Haxron, Fife; J. C. Morton; J. M. PAIN k, Surrey; 
The SOIL: VALUATION, SURVEYING, ENCLOSURES—JOHN BRA- YNBIRD, Land-Agent, Hampshire; WILLIAN ROACH, 

VENDER, Land Cirencester. of Boes and Gloucestershire; James SMEED, Kent; Ro oe a SON, 

Wastrs—Rev. W. Hickey, M.A. mal GIRD- 

woop, F. k. S.S. A, Agricultural Engineer. Surrey; T. TucKER, Dorsetshire 

wax, Tenant, Kirk Deighton, a Yorkshire. Derik- 2 of CROPS—J. vee Tenant of a eee 

TION—JoHN Haxron, Cu . CLAR Inshire; 


ANIMALS and th ir Man nagement: Con? A J. W. CLARk, Hampshire; ra 3 Yor . 
5 Anaon, Drszass, &c.; the Horse, its ‘Breeds and Ma CALENDAR of OPERATIONS, in ARABLE, Meapow, DATRY, and 
V. 0 Surgeon, S uthampton. Strock Farminc—Messrs. BRAVEN DER, CATRD, J. A. CLARKE, 


The Ox, ita Breeds and Man: t; the SHEEP, its Bre J. W. CLARK, GLENDINNING, GORRIE, Haxron, J. C. Morton, 
and | Messrs. James Cap, Wigtonshire; J. A PAINE, PALIN, RAYNBIRD, RICHARDSON, ROACH, RUSSELL, 
c ire; ILE COUTEUR, Jersey; H. STRAF- l gee SPOONER, STALLARD “ase TOWERS, TUCKER, 
TORD, ofthe Short-Horn Herd-Book; TURNE A.T. WILSON, J. Wiaur 
Devonshire; E. F. WELLES, ire; JoHN WILSON, AGRICULTURAD SOCIETIES—J. C. More TON, 
Berwickshire; and A. T. WILSON, ermuir. The Hoc, | AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS—J. C. Mor 
its Breeds and HN HANNAM, Y „ The pje of C me the ART, R. — Tenant of Kil- 
1 1 AT, Plage D. Ricwarpson, Dub- s, Cupar-F 

LPACA— W. Bre —J. WIGHTON, DOMESTIC ORTE Brean, BER, CIpzn, Meat, &c. 
Costessey Hall, orfolk. Poorer iw. E. S. Dixon, M.A., J. TOWERS Bii WILLIAM EWART, 2 — 
Intwoou-with-! Norfolk. 


BUSINESS OF FARMING. 


LANDLORD and Dore WreN Hosxxxs, | INVESTMENT of TAL—J. C. Mor 
BA; i Gray, Agent for the Greenwich Hospita tal Estates; FARM ACCOUNTS Tuona C. — Accountant; Man- 
J Drax, LandAgent; ct pg tl gee geo C. Morton. 
* TENAN and LABOURER—J. ILDERTON BURN, of MARKETS, ; SALES, &e.—J. Haxton, Fifeshire. 
y; Rev. W. Hickxx, M. A. A. SOMER- ea RELATING to AGRICULTURE —J. G. Barr, 3 
of Berwickshire MORTON. 


troud; J. BRIGHT, M.., Rochdale; C. WREN Hosxrx 


BLACKIE AND SON: 


Street; EDINBURGH, 5, South South College Street; LONDON, - arwick Square; 
Re Ant tes p DUNDEE, - <=- 75 Crichton Street; NEWCASTLE, - i Con 
Grey Street; IXVERNESS, -- 25, Gilbert Street; 3 Nokwien, - - 48, Upper St. ies . 
ä 785 Stak Cro n Street; LEEDS, - ~- - - 7, Park Row NOTTINGHAM, - 32, Clumber Stre 
i 78, Stokes t; Liverroor, - Ins 5 Hickson Row; PLyuovri, - - 54, York S 


«+ 8, Chapel Street Loxpoxverry, 41, William Street; 


This day is published, in a handsome 4to vol Price & > 
MANNERS AND CvSTOMS OF YE ENGL ves 
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ENDENNIS. —The Publishers 
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perg ae lat ice 13s, in clo w Doat ds. 0 ume the First Will be 
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TRATED WORK BY JOH 
This day is 3 price 58. 6d, M; and Ta fd. 
sive G TROUBLESOME 3 


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MRS. PETES y Rte soa OF FLOWERS,» 
5 published, in lv iform in size > with 10 


ill eauti 
Tuas . MORAL OF FLOWERS; or, 
gathered from the Field and the Garden, hg 
rat Edition. 
New Edition of “The Spir it of the Woods.“ Illus 20 
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By tke sam 5 , uniform w 
SYLVAN MUSINGS: or, the Sue ro tie Woods, Bi 
: LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, and LONGMANS, 
— — — 
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In the om pans Thi more especially much new matter is 
introduced. To all intents and 
Outlines of Astronomy must be considered 5 gi work—s9. 
careful haa sarat the revision, correction, and remodelling of 
the original treatise; s toit; 80 
important the tow 3 of inquiry opened up. ”_ Examiner, 

London: Loneman, BROWN, eee and Longmans, 
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In One very thick Vol. 8vo, price 27. 10s., the 3d Edition of 
Ly epee ees Aan me gat OF’ ARTS, MANU- 
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RECENT IMPROVEMENTS in ARTS, MANUFACTURES, 
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3d Edition ot his Dictionary.“ Svo, price lis. 

London: LONGMAN, Brown, GREEN, and Longmans, 


SABINE’S ee Lae ENGLISH „ or 
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ALEXANDER. Von ‘Bo ;MBOLDT. 2 


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Translation. jp ; 
sewed. The Library Edition, in post sro. Vols. I. and IL, 
oth. 


ce 12s. each, clo 7 
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ORN MURBAY, ‘Al 
On the 3d of January, 1850, will be published, to be continued 


eekly, o. I. o 
TRS PORET ECONOMIST ay ADVISER 
NCH ous Y ESTABLISH, 
MENT. “Conducted bi GEORGE W. . De Mes Editor of 


* The Cottage G amy 
5 5 MAN SRGEMENT, by, the Authoress 
N > aad ‘Ou „ in “The Cottage Gar- 


f. rA 

lousehold, by a Lincolnshire Dairy P 
he Work-table and oo fe 5 Savado, Autant 

k Ins Man 

nims farmeri 
nimals, by Mr. Spoo niae fi — Gene 

Sidney; Science applied to E day Life, by C 

Esq, Kathor ot the Scientific . a of Domestic Life ; 


* 


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Editor of the Domest, 2 at 
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EN’S DISEASES. 
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D CHIL he 0b. By onua WEST, 
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row, sony Fo ewingtom 2 in * Precinct ot yd 14 — in the 
eee vie sient: 
parish of St, Paul's Covent carious are 1 magssap To 758 EDITOR 
mepts an 


SATURDAY, DECEMESE 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE 
AGRICULTURAL GAZ ETI. 


A Stamped Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News. The Horticultural Part Edited by Professor Lindley. 


A Hortical Highland 

— 1, Law of — 

— Cumber At dut 

fholera and iungi Mal duty: * 

ee, to make M le cricket . 821 
urs, groupin oa of ^` ewington’s (br.). cultivator... 822 
2 kae strik Packe: = Seeds, ~~ au Ga, 

A so e 


Garden er, rev. 
N to emp 1 
— fee 
— mo * chats culture of. 821 : 


eeds 


81 
$2: 
. — = any 
ng 8 of. 83 
1 


Poppy N chemical consti- 
BOE sociva tation of... .. dee. 821 
g plant 0 Rabbits and sulphured rags.,,, 823 
V on malt +. 827 a | Rev ews, ad coves, 823 
. Roads, paris sa 827 
tion from Ireland vour, to prevent. > 830 
and politics. Shrubs, town „ $22 
and free trade Silkworm ... os E2; 
without ploughing, 828 — 27 Sugat cane „ 821 
~È 1 oe 8 2 Timber, to measure 824 
825 Villa gardening .,,, l 
Vines, disease in £23 € 
¢ | Vine bord 


Zine, durabi ility ETNI sereas 823 


> O THE ‘SUBSCRIBERS TOT 
i + ARDENERS e tbe INSTITUTION. 
he case of Jonx SH D, No. 11 on the List for the 
next Bleotion (16th January, 1880), and the third 10 1 cation, 
is most respectfully and e ommended he 8 
eeribers by Mr. GRISSELL, 3 N e Who 
thankfally again receive proxies. Mr. GRISSELL e 
the — of the — that Joan SHE 
8 successful at the next Eleet 


CK FOR 
| GAMUEL Co COCKING, Albee &c., Biggleswade, 
e of a large quantity of WHITET HORN 
ICK, of “ed “years? — at 2s, Gd. per 1000, very strong. 
ie years’ growth, at 4s. per 1000, delivered free within 
= 


former Catalogues. 
,, CHOICE | VEGETABLE SEEDS.—Complete collections of 
t t sorts in proportionate quantities of each, 


jra 7 . and small — at, per collection, II, 21. 
1 A collection of g orts for a small coa r on 6d. 
e bra neh railway to Sudbu 2 — 45 the 


wich, — Kory now 
— or any station 


onthe Oo 

2 Post-oftice orders payable to Bass and Brown, or to — 
ROWN, 
Seed and Horticultural — Sudbury, — 


EMONES, 
AREY ‘TYS0, ‘Wallingford, Taste, begs t ounce 
hat he has selected Tw ee Splendia SEEDLING RA- 
NUNCULUSES, saad in 1848 1839, with which he — 
. heya se first t prizes, and what 1 % can recommend for e 
hibition. Descriptions and rios 4. ie forwarded in a genera | 
Daisloges for 8 o postage stamps. 
* of 100 named —— * eka "Boe to 5l. 1 Bs, 
to — r 100. "pou le T aai 50 sorts, 20s, to 30s. 
Im erman Seeds: Asters, Stocks, enen &., 20 
ede per — sg 
Tyso’s “ Tre m the Ranunculus” can be had of all 
booksellers, nee 64. ri greet Ane post for eight stamps. 


88 


THE WARD BEST CUCUMBERS EVE ER YET SENT OUT, 
Spey TILEY begs to remind the public gene- 
4 has now ready to dispose o one sound seed 
of his VicTORY OF BATH, GORDON? 8 
vag hte ng pee haketi FAV 5 RITE 
on). These CUCUMBER 
ee 1 to the satisfaction of hundreds of growers, 
any comment on . 

s. per packet; Gordon 

on’s Favourite, or ¥ 


\OUBLE ITALIAN TUBEROSE ROOTS.—The 


pea 

S of Orange, Lem Trees, 

with Catalonian, Aarin, and Arabian panar 

, any of which y be bespoke.—N. B. Orders by post 
_ponctually attended to. 

'ERBENA, TURNER’S « MRS. MILLS 


* 


1 at — 
nd a 


free flowering, an 
s 5s,— “Roped . Slough. 


{ 
| EED POTATOES. 
ł 


HARLES SHARPE has much in 
he has got the under-mentioned sorts of | 


g that 
POTATOES " to offer 
dur success 1 yea 
the The 


again this season, which have for the last 

rs peg ee 5 in all parts o: 
very early a 

ductive; — — as 1 vane 2 — best sorts for 

| ns; they are offered at the following prices, packing | @ 


-osral allowance to the Trade.—Wisbeach, Cambridgeshire. 
3 PEARMAIN. 
Jars CAME 
say he hee: now 


feral hs bet th ls s 
'T sale a eee cient e the e above» valuable AP 3 


ie pe bushel of 56 Ibs, Per a 25 1e 
— one Potatoes ... 10s, Early Manleys 85. 
—— e . 10s, Early Cockneyss 

Ash-leaved Kidney 5 EE eer i tag aoin 

Second E atavoes ter and Spring use: 

_ American Native s ot Kentish gee Kidney Fyi — 

ene bs, | Forty Fold 

_ _ Orders will be forwarded on the receipt ofa Post-office onder, 

| 5 care will be taken to ensure their safe delivery. 

{ 


«piles 
a ee Anri Tr 


5 BEE 
EY 


tn oy It ie a middle-sized 

t eo on, and remarkable fi 

and aromatic flavour, superior in every r — 

— Pippin, It isi in ans Bare of favour from January 

of May, ata ry good bearer. ng dwarf 

58, ea he usual — ce to the gads 
from rs 5 corresponden ts, Perles to 

Sent, by Postoffice —.— meis . to sf 


f Fruit and Forest Trees, 
e quality. 


_ VATE WORKS, ISLEWORTH. — The following 
E les, actured in Slate for H 


bove is from Glenny’s | Gard 


as the whole stock of the seed of | 


No. 52—1849.] SATURDAY, DECEMBER. 29. [Price 6d. 
bet zosia oa 1857 | foe 270 N BROWN’S gio cera SPRING yp SEEDS! SEEDS: 
cultural of Englan ) | Fence plants in India .. 0 OGUE FOR 1850 OF SEEDS A LANTS . AYRES be intimate that his priced 
raring of e BR © | Fin Sench, and SaS 255 The part contain. FLOWER AND VEGETABLE SEEDS is * des criptive Catalogue of select ct VEGETABLE SEEDS 
i Fungi and cholera ...,........ 215 now N h will fou sn assortmen the | containing all novelties o 3 and 
Bree ‘Soe. eof Landon Hares ani — + rags . 823 b| newest an a — areal es that can be procured, and contains will be 8 on the receipt rk 8 
„ India ........ 523 6 | the usual 3 and useful in — provided in their kheath, Dec. 29, 


Bro 


Oklands Nursery, Blac 


NEW DARK | roousta, 
TURNER inten 


= SIR JOHN, FALSTAFF. mrs. 


SLERODENDRON BETHONEA 
hip NIN 4 D Co. have 


need = the De 
r 
ee by post; also a 
tis t we V Flow Seeds, Containing 2 best and 
most approved 3 V 

Gang 1 — — Dec. 29. 


) ENE LAN dEL MER Clarendon Nursery, St. 


PP 


1 having been tri ved these lust five years : 
EU * Pee pe Ripens February me March ; 
uality; trees 


. brown, melting, AN ‘ees vigorous, Will do 
—9 as a pyrateid or on a ‘val all the trees — not less than 
wo years old; fine 2 on Qu ince stocks, 10s. — 
S BEURRE be EAT AL.— * No se 
of the 


— Round — fruit, the 
greatest bearer of Pear trees. Ri pens December and Jan $ 
well adapted for orehards, for te ich rees — 
trained, and are 


very v voro 
R. L. re been omitted in 
the printing of his Descriptive bears io] but th 

found eet and melting, viz., LA LIER’S_ 
EURRE LEON DE CLERC, — who may hav 
sured they are rate 


eived them, may be as of first- 
2 a large Ar 


is GROSSE CALE SASH. 


n that te 
har ae — 1 — “ Brougham se ¥ * A it h 
assed all others 2 seasol 
vou 


UE OF 

SEEDS is 3 i ished, a d at Stationers’ Hall. 
It "i be ma. of Much value <0 all sake downn of Kitchen 
Agricultural, and Flower 8. 


Fa 
CULINARY hip BTA dae in 
wing, height, and other useful ee eee “a 3 
uuntities Arnis by WILLIAM E. RENDLE K Co. 
lections 


escriptive eee of all the 


a des 5 Marge tg T ond , 
me of 


ien ys ape 
selection is left to bim; none but the best mel 
* and he wili be ansible for their 


* melting. strong — healthy, one 
24 dos, one of each, from 3 to 4 years old, bith 4 
ow ms 
24 dec tee tan e tre i. 
50 do., large, not — than 4 or 5 emed wee 


50 do., larger, well grown and fine 
abe — supplied wit with tity at per 100 or — 
any quan at per or per 
en 200 sorts and e peng Riga ouly one of 
each, ee are many a bearing 
state. 
4. pear ne psr aee 


Sane Ss Gee 
for th le Bg Catalogue, Fine Camellia 
erisir for r or planting 2 ee where they do 
well, ee also a superb collection, all 


choicest and best e nf AGRICULTURAL SEEDS. ealthy, © will be published 
Part 3 3 contains a most e celle ont N ee a of ceparately, as s well cl —.— es — T wren an ek 

hardiness and duration of each variety ; 24, the colour; | °F references from u 

aa, tho 8 Ae HER VERY BEST KINDS OF KITCHEN 


height; and 4th, the 
eful in, on and 


proper mode of th the manner of te 
quality of = seeds, 2 ae > a fuli detailed list 
of ali the best Germa as Stoe Aea 


Jo., as well 2 the e Sarnished by WILLIAM 
KENDLE & Co. 44 their collections. 
e e, of this v panie Sata oent can be obtained on applica- 
tion gratis, by incl o penny stamps to pay the postage. 
KITCHEN GARDEN SEEDS. 
COLLECTIONS OF —— SEEDS, 
„ O 
4 


0. 
rawings 


3 


A A lance stock of Slate Slabs, "Of all sizes 8 


2.—Complete € Collection in smaller 


3 2 * * 
No. 4 — ists of the the sorts contained in each 3 ‘rill | 
be found in Book Catalogue. 


e ee SEEDS. winds — 
We havea superior k of all the newest as 
. of the toirt ser e are grow blag own inspec- 
tion, we can warrant them to be quite newand correct to name. 
SCALE oF Prions ones n bo ee Handy: 
. 1,—100 packets choic N a 
age Half. if-Hardy, pede Annuals, Bie 8, 
Per 


GARDEN SEEDS AT REDUCED PRICES. 


JOHN SUTTON anp SONS, growing their seeds 
a 8 rovin a aa kais as soon as introduced, 
are — prassa supply the public with n w Seeds of such quality 
as will 


KITCHEN 
of the king of 
land, Sutton’s 
Eclipse, 
kinds of 

Kitchen 


for the 
ro 2—A COMPLETE COLLECTION, in smaller quan- 
No. rg are fone ae on sg gga 12s, 6d, 


ennials . 1388. larger packets, 25s. 
itto ditto 10s. a 15s, 


All order: 
to an oat hg 
5 ster, Bristol and Wee or — Som nett 
ways ; or to any town in Devon Cornwali ; or to 


lin, or Liv l, by Steamers. 
Cark, IOS team Pi i D 
d. 


a VILIAM E E. ETAT 00, 0 & CO., pancho Plymouth. 


all parts of Great Ih 
domes 


of 
CHOICE FLOWER SE 3 sent free 8 os FE — 
The best 50 sorts, 12s, 6d e best t 30 porie Ta 6d. ; the best 
20 sorts, 5s. 
Reading Seed W Reading, Berke, 
. ed PHEASANTRY, a street, King’s- 
tment to her Majeety and 
MENTAL WATER FOWL, 
, Canad 


* 
pinioned ; also Spanish, Cochia 
and Dorking fowls ; 3 white, . 


tic 
ae and at 


ESTABLISHED 1786, 


— f l, and pure China pigs; 
an A E D 
moon-passage, Grac echurch-street, 


* 


THE 


GARDENERS’ 


CHRONICLE. 


818 [Dec. 29, 
S AND GUA — 
zun: ALVA Cue oo 
RNER bd neck leasure in offering LADY, “residing ‘nea Evclahon-eguare, Pimlico, G N pe: Bay GAME NETTING. 
a. hte as much ple plants of which o offer a — E Home to one or two Youn er yard, 2 feet wide, 
3 1 new 3 Ladies, bo ie may re re tho © . or ention 1 E ae a 22422 ase 5 — Sete 
> .—White, distinctly | Good an requ ire ress, H. D. D., ca 35 seas 
Ra — pad — sary att irae beautiful; apne aee eae 185 fr sreét, London. 3 22 $ RRR 
1] arranged. np xhibitedat C AISE HEA RS OLS? 
being mre Is blo — poi oce a , and — — the J 18˙8 IMPROVED POLMAISE STOVES 725 ses pussies 
hest award and commendation. Warranted the fines „Deb. are osha chi to the Railways in London, with Plans for 8 
ever offered by C. Tun 3 to 4 feet—10s 8 petal, fixing. Ag reenhouse : 20 feet by 12, 6l. 10s. ; 30 feet by 14, 
MRS. SELDON (Turner) Bright pure yellow, g 81. 103. ; 60 feet by 18, IOL. 10s. Stoves for Churches, Schools, 


was — 


0s. 
9 — Deep crimson, full 
d constant, 2 4 feet— 10s. 6d. 
SERAPH (Fellows. \— Bright novel es 
very e leggy or ay TN 
t Nor 3 feet 

Carica at ame (Fellows) Silvery lilac, very con- 
— * — 1 * Palo lilae, full size, fine 
4 feet 7s. 6d. 

„ dull red with white tip, a fine 


compact, fine 


form. 2 to 3 feet—7s. 
MRS. LABOUCAE ER Sf car Fancy, scarlet, white tip 
a sweet riety ; being v ay bright, constant, and not mor 


> fin neon 8 raised, when caught 
will noe be — for. 
Puare ers Le N aay have ‘planta pr 
A Descriptive Ca atalogue rea at n January 
novelties, —Royal Nursery, Slou 


381 Il +h 
Y © 


1 — Halls, parce. Gy to size.— Hothouse e Works, Stamford-hill, 


ae WATER, PIPES AND TROUGH PIPES, 
h all the usual connexions, 
Wharf, No. 6, Bankside, London 
ith 
m Collars, N Sockets, and 
, and at very 


kee 
—— Syphons, 


pipes * tters, Sash. w Ante, ae are . A Bricks, sand 


ARTLEY’S PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS: 


8 by 6 and under 10by8 
10 by 8 j 14 by 10 
14 by 10 5 14 fo 

fae 3 pdl 


” 


1 3 


* 
42 


4 
255 $a ge 


of ev cription 
= —— of Milk, 4 aban 78. 6d 
rr for e e Glass, & c. 
PHILLI 28 and CO., 116, BISHOPSGATE STREET 


HARTLEY'S PA PATENT ROUGH PLATE GLASS 
NSERVATORIES, &e. 
122 wy de ENERS’ CHRONICLE of Saturday, 


ued experience leaves us no room to doubt that this 
the best material yet produced, and thatit willin time s EA 


s „ a ee Oe 


a . it is w 


>- T 


PS. & 00% 1165 BISHOPSGATE STR 


CHWs, apo AND ROUGH PLATE GLASS, 
OTHOUSES, „ &e. 
Of every bP te oe — —— 


Messrs, —— net 
100 and 200 — cases * eg Sheet Glass, a 2 
foot. Small ditto. „ 6d, per 100 feet, 1 — in boxes ready 


mensions, receive estimates at the lowest prices. 
GLASS MILK PANS, CREAM POTS, Lactometers, Bee 
Glasses, Fish Globes, and all kinds of Dairy Glass, Propagating 
Glasses, Hyacinth Dish es, Cucumber Tubes, and every other 
deseription of Garden Glasses. 8. 
8 supplying. 5 — i ge never 


3 ow Wholesale Ware 
amp Sha es, Gas — oe 2 White 
Tead, P Paints Colours, and Pamps for Farm 

talogue of 18 12 ith the most t complete. ever published. 


Fo 6. 3 or * hout one. 
had Gratis on sending two postage 2 to Messrs. e 
and Co., 48, Leicester-s aware, 


Wharf, No. 6, Ba nkside, Londo 
WIRE NETTING, ONE 5 PER ane: ENGE 
RA 5 


N = 
8 ieies a 


222222 RS 
. 


8 
222 


22225 
2 2225 2 22222272 


RZE e 


_PER SQUARE 


ing, 


slig 
was exhibited at the late fn Ban Mes Cattle Show, and wa 
highly eulogised both i for its utility and pretty dares arece and 


It forms a light and durable fence against the aepredations o 
hares, rabbits, and cats, and is peculiarly adapted for Ties, 
Pheacantries, and to secure poultry ; and by the . —.— 
requiring no pae it 1 ope — training all kinds 
of creeping plants, Large quantities s kept in stock, of 
18, 24, 36, and 48 3 wide i “it can, pana, bs ede to any 
terns forwarded free of expense, 


ETS, AND SOLD BY MESSRS. 2 
EE T. * 


ding ¢ the make of | 


12 inches wide 3d. og yard | 30 inches =— o* per = 
18 „ „ % „ 43 
H j T 3 2 k 
Galvanised do., ba per foot 
— * str rong Imperial Wire Sheep Netting, 3 “feet, 1s. 6d. per 
ning yard; if galvanised, 2s, 

Wire Nursery 24 Fireguards, Wire 110856 
Sh 5 Covers, Meat Safes, &.; "Window 


gany frames ; ‘Gothic 82 1 Bordering, 6d. per running $ 2 

Flower Traine ers, from 3d. each; Garden Arches 

Flower Stands, from 3s. 94 “a ak. * Galvanised Tying Wire for 
ahli f Wir 


STRONG PREMIUM HARE AND RABBIT PROOF 
:WIRE- NETTING, 


Cnankxs D. YOUNG anp 15 9977 (Lars 

W. AND C. YOUNG) 

FE agy eee eee Fone — AND WIRE WORK, &c., 
PARLIAME MINSTER, NDON ; CASTL 


E- 
412 — Be savate, sen 128, HIGH-STREET, 
* 


EDINBURGH; and 32 QUARE, Glasgow, be 
respectfully to = the atO “of ‘Landed Proprietors an 
m to their s ne Feie é-Net Fence, for exeludin m 2 


GLASS POR n CONSERYA TORTS, &. 

ETLEY anp CO. y 16.02. Sheet Glass 

British es vary 
oA 2 hich s ssc y packed 

which are rea 
dnd tee fOPWEMags, 

pea Roden PLATE, "THICK CROWN GLASS on SL Ass 
TILES and SLATES PROPA NG 
8 and N Banas 
* Co., 35, Soho-square, London. o 
Chronicle fi first Saturday in each month. 


GLASS FOR CONSERVATORIES AND HORTICUL 
PURPOSES, &e. virg 


MILK PANS 
` PASTRY PINS 
= — — pn 


— Piopi Plate Glass, from 4 to Linch 3 from 
12 2 eber Jin, Glass Slates and Tiles, Milk Pans from 
u 82 Nr + 1 „each. . Tubes, 
— — neh, meters, a, 64. 
— S — bad, on application at 
arehouse, 87, ade ene Without, same ‘side as a 


R 


h the —— P a Medal 


young Plantations, Nurs 
"thee Net was exhibited 5 the Show of the Highland’ — 
Agricultural 1 wt —— held lately at In —— 
: ere its Efficiency, G Stre , and Bree 
general a tention, — had awarded from sra — 

high commendation 

The use nee done | roy Hares Lage 8 oy bbits i in i Gardens 
and Youltg. sepaman t in the ot 
@ year or two i 1 will am ount to more th "the — pin or 
protecting them ge this Net. It is so ap ate that when 


— ag 2 aes adva need to be independent of i 

pr rotecti —+ A of ror — ations . 

‘the greatest facility, by an ce 

Hares i Rabbits, it is of i ny labou — sufficient, — tebe ta to 

— and attached, with small wire sent for that — 

pose, to en stakes driven into the — about every si 

or 4 feet apart. ‘Iti s, besides, — adapted for — 

— a ges, te - 7 exis aa Fences, com im- 
dhe e vermi eut up into small 

N more asr ra it forms a most q> 


Paices.—18 ins. high, 9 ; 30 ins., 1s, 3d.; 
36 fia, | 1 6d. per lineal a 
Ora of 100 yards, 18 ins. pa will cost .. sel * 0 
Do. 00 yards, 24 ins. wide <è 5 . 
Do. òf 100 yards, 30 — baci s 1 
Do. yards, 36 in 
If more or less than H web ie * it would. i Bit 


at the same rate per y 
"This ert is also ‘admirably adapted for Pheasantries and 
ultry-yards, and is charged at the same rate. As carriage 
tees, been an arene — parties at 4 dis. 
st, Cö. have made ieee — 
h they will 3 p: —— it at any of 
er oe England, and Ireland, for one 


Scans the 


great 

ting we By cons ing that 
the ‘weight of one yard of their 24-inch is equal to 2} 
pal ot piv ples for i in the marke t; -the sa e widih; 


a 


ät 9d. 

65 . Sam 
J NG te „ manufacture every, descrit tion of IRON 
and WIRE WORK required for th “i 


4 „England, and Ireland 


ery descri ge of | der 
an 


a 
| manure tan 
p 


2 
oe 
22 
oe Japanned 
2-inch mesh, 1 — 3 wide oe 
— see e 5d. per y, 
2-inch „ care strong », 77 * 12 sł 
1$-inch „„ light li : = 
1}-inch „ stron ey 1 `- 5 
ita ch extra strong , 8 
H the there can — made any width, 4 proportionate prices, 


it the upper half is 


expense in London, 


cere R 
REEN AND HOTHOUSES made by machin 
ted best materials. Lean-to Greenhous 
by 8 feet, "ies ends, 1 door, and 3 feet — oo ass infront, — 
nted three coats 
l c h n Lon 


of be ur, delivered tọ an relive: an 

for 151. 10s. ; ado, do. 15 by 10, 291, 1 2 57 

281. 10s.; a do do. 21 by 12, 327. 10s., including a plan fa 

brickw Greenhouse —— lazed with - 2 
2.4 


ork, 1?-inch 
heet 3 * = three times, 


lizd. 
— — 
Mid 


— LEwIS's Machine Kothowss Works, Stamford hig 


Aer Ea a 
IMPROVED FOUR-HORSE PORTABLE STE OC ENGINES 
AND BOLTING OR HANDON ee 
—— nn 
Works, and 70, Strand, beg to call anemio 8 hd Bie 
Engines 75 Thr ee g Machines, which 
tity o 


REE ROE and HANSON, Sou — 
in fuel, for the work —̃ thaw. — “before u 


= phon They may 7 be seen any day at their works, Sumner. 
sing Water, 
Dee ya Well Pumps; Bath s; Hot-water Apparatus; Fountains, 


Towns oes with Gas or Water, 
RE-WORK, HOT-WATER APPARATUS, 
N MENG o. 
T. THOMAS BA R, MANOR-HOUSE, — 
PLACE, KING’S eb CHELSE 
INVISIBLE WIRE 8 
ed Rabbit-proof. WIR 
Walks, Bordering, Flower Stands, Pheasantre es, ke. 
coe eee BUILDINGS, Green and Hothous PARATOS 
es, &c. Thesame heated by NOTATER APPARAT 


* improved a = sona cal p — po 
arties waite ty, and Dra 
Estimates free. Work fòr the ' Frage as usual, 

Ward’s Cases, or Domestic Greenhouses, 


YDRAULIC 1 WATER RAMS, Soy 
on Improved Principles; Engines worked by Steam or 
lie power, to raise from 1 gallon to 1 8 


Sinking, — ‘Collectin g * i &c. Towns supplied.—Direet 
to Joun Leca, Cheltenham 
CORN MANURE, 
F PATENT COPROS. — A new 
the 


re, for Corn an 0 


LA 


— th: d No. 1 
Copros for Corn Crops, poe — Tu —.— — 
of E 

i 
oors, and barn 
ipes, c. 


DIETETIC COCOA. 
Hemer PATIENTS, DYSPEPTIOS, 
nd Persons of Delicate Constitutions, are 
co ended to use YLOR BROTHERS’ 


bithe 
— principle, by which the oily po 
ised, at the same time its flavour, puri 
properties arei main sores 3 2 
hose under Homæopathic Treatmen 
tive ans, is bie and soothing 
delieate digestiv 3 = pa 1 


in 

old wholesale by 
fields, London, and retail, in 1 Ib., 3 lb., and ae 
packets, at 18. 4d, per Ib., by most 3 
Tea- dealers in the ee whom also may b 7 A 1 — 
Brothers’ original SOLUBLE COCO ee one-thi 155 5 
of Coffee), the 8 2 As which ar 
LION POUNDS per a am fact whig fa 2 od uced n 

rties to man imitations, 7 weben . 

what resembl appearan “totally devi 


iele, ainst these counterfeits, Ss 
aoe — pond the purchase of their * — packets b 
which b — their name, with directions for Sold 


Grocers and Tea-dealers. 2 
S „ T this Festive j 


e social board, or jo in 

al anxiety is created for PB 

the following alled discoveries 
to increased requisition, — 

Olk, for erea and sustaining a luxuriant 
be WLAND'S NT OR, for — nes skin e te: 
ROWLAND’S ODONTO, OR 

+ 1 n mparting a pear’ rake eee fo the 7 
Patronage of er en ut Europe, — 4 — 0 
ciation a by Rank and Pas with the well-kno 

thee arti ar Rg — them a celebrity opps 
aor ELEGANT AND SES 


for the TOILET 
ROW 


base 
SON 4 


OF 
GENUINE of each 

t the foot, in Red 
Signature at by them at at 20, Hatton Garden, Loudon, 


| respectable Chemists and Perfumer 


Hydrau to 
a — of 500 feet, and from a denen of Seger 
Vapour, atear an — — other —2 of Baths. Buildings, 
Conserva s, X., h ted by Steam, Air, or Water. Boring, 


of 
ce — j 
ential and = properties of thè ——— and only gene 
viele mck 


oT TRACTION, amd ce 
TTRACT 
NAL A pes Na : 
WLAND’S MAGASBAN 


bears 5 “4 92 * * 
ceding that of the Article Ja the "Wrapper 4 e : 


— 44 


= E 


ri 
) 


— 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE, 


819 


= RICAN PLANTS. flowers of one eolon but of different tones together. | sorted to, 3 is no new one to be offered, at least 
Hoss WATERE pikan A Rog 5 ss taloga pled rig It is is belter, then so far as relates to the harmony of colours. In order, 
CAN Poi CONIFEROUS PLANTS, which may be had on Red flow 2 pees) rose, or orange flowers. | ee, 2 render this 14 of our subject the more 
application, inclosing ep sta tamps for postage $ tage to Yellow „ 5 greenish-yellow complete ractically u to our ers, we 
r EEA Mame Blue y Fiolet- bie subjoin the following rules laid down by M. Cuevrevt 
Q. , 
* Colchester has now, ready ay for à tens Nursery, And even ree red from orang nt r produ cae A general harmony between the dif- 
Jlo E 
SANT. B HOYLE’S CRUSADER oi . Ts. Gd. each. Blue violet. ies of = c., isolated, in rag or 
UcHŠIA 21 tr — 2 * i ” It must be remembe red that this is only a general | in part, close ar from each other, must be con- 
F The Three for 18s., 55 * and package Kats Tafa. rule; arrangements qalar to those here condemned | nected Siana W the same form of plant as that of 
Postoffice Kag H — beeps a — from unknown cor- may, at times and in certain cases pee to or ike they are composed, o or by analogous 7 105 or 
D BAGSHOT, „ SURREY. * on paper), be very 05 PR or lastly, 
OHN W ATERER has m — h ple in announcing | B. Plants crowded together, to produce a by the same colours of . — or of leav By the 
no has published 5 geriptive Catalogue of his ex ned, but not badet Effect. same means a house should be kotar wit 
e collection of of RHO. . ong, ae American I — oie aa ue Cononne. different parts of the garden. If neighbouring clump: 
3 „A very goode may be produced by sowing the opasa those near do not run enough 
BECK ae "ELARGON TOMB, and other 1 s of several varieties of the same species of an into each other, or are out of perspective, recourse 
of the following varieties, including box and carriage to Lon- | annual or biennial plant thickly in patches or 2 ld be had to a line of pare different "from and 
„ will be torwarde xchange for post-office order on| borders. As ample, we may take seeds of | cutting the first, which will add to the general har- 
poia, and ready fo for a an immediate shift noai er siae: = rkspur or China Asters; or, indeed, any which | mony of the whole. 3 
Blanche, C ker, Forget-me-not, Ariel, Cassan- | produce short stems, with a great many coloured ká wall endeavour to fi 
ara, N e cane Junii, Negress, flowers—white, rose, red, blue, violet, &c. room for some of Pid paei cal arrangements which 
32 83 * , Cuxvngur, recommends à comi of plants for patches | are found to bear out the views of m philosopher, 


ty, from WM. HAMIL- 
mene ea), 9s., 12s., and 188. 


115 5 tet i mintat ie Bee 
colo an 28 6d. 
GUERNSEY 


dozen ; med), 6. 
— TULIPS, Ie. ei i JONQUILS 
3 r dozen, 
= ws anombRors, 2 

1128. d. each. A Priced pa oe — i“ had —— on 
EEN g Biot Saou — je or ory. spring 


sowin oe post, 6d. ex 
Kb 01 FARA, 8 ani — PRIMULA $ SINENSIS 


r border ished to have 


fi 
- 5 presenting nothing but flow ers E the eye, the 


colours must be arranged according to the laws of 
eee already laid down, and the plants must be 
far apart from each other to be capable of a 
gre cater egree of development than in the Preceding 
case ; their stems mp. alse o eprend out why hide the 
ground 2 their 

R THE — 
— — 


T SHADES DIFFERENT, 
ng res Ne buta cone of tone, 
mn crow ther, are not o he same 


objections as the owers * — —5 ted a 


now, we trust, sufficiently explain 


Tux Crorgra has happily in great measure, 4 not 
entirely, left us, a circumstance for which v 
scarcely be too thankful, and — it have Bon Se 
almost as completely all notions as to its 
. A an 
casion to ase rot 0 
ately the very opal | Nair 22. pave occurred 
in a multitude in the west of England 
more e — an which ve — rise to the 
theory | in question, — without affording any precise 
to their natu 


Sery Ane.” Veketabl from yp boat. Tade a Mek lyse e cannot dismiss the subject g * 3 a view 
ea. a takes this opportunit onding hig a readers the 125 . differen p Vhen F prege chee ‘hich e ve rad 

1A Karree oppo 22 readers the fact, that there is a ye — en ough we seen bodies h ich we belie 

WER SUPPORTER fo er - yE „ 

nap tg th ea 12 8 bir aren f f e more | be arrangement in which the flowers are | organic, existing in great quantities in cholera c 
simple, T athe: e Hiyacin 12 Wed | all "ats nearly in ‘es same plane, and one in W we had not been so ee 
— per dozen.— Address, 156, Cuearsipe, — are in totally different ee ome the larger o supposed by 
A Post-office order requisite from unknown correspondents, 83; 

s 


TERE. Rt ALBERT oe 
still ha all o kinds for its extra- 
ordinary earliness, ia. deter — “Splendid — — — 
also a most prolific bearer and free grower, 4 i stalks. 
For early forcing it far surp variety. For 
py br . it is 
‘te lanted roots ls, 6d. 
ictoria, 9d, The 
— e . Th 
attentio e above 
weeks earlier than the ian Victoria, 


are 2 


line of flow he same distance 3 the eye 
nothing can T uce a wor th blue Iris | 
coloured flower placed next a clear violet or lilac 
ou * d to these 58 
of k Alyssum, Persian w 
Candytuft, and al Tulips, in such a way that the 
golden yellow, the white and the red are in 
one plane, and the dark — and — 1 i or lilac 


re in 2 more distant plane, a most agreeable | 
effect will be the result. 


e wh 
first cells were descri nular ; 
bodies of Lia ps kodi as those chalk, 


less confounded 
with one another, leas sufficiently disti 
ed; and the structure of the larger and 
conspicuous bodies was not exactly 


80 
So i le ng hich produce a di eable | in the supposed of propagation of these 
The Gardeners’ — — my ee tint, . See — in on te plane; that it 8 € rcely possible.to accede 
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1849. produce a very good effect when contrasted with | of their identity with the er and more si 
GS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. 3 pre a Ba arim er eee | aye dba L the | part of pru 
SDAY, 3 5 P.M. 
page e 41 The tern cal of a good combination of colours is speak aed with due consideration p 
Semuk e e E often very agreeable to the eye. When , for example, the unexpected structures which occasi 
eee. a line of plants presents a repetition of the same 8 1 a the dierent branches of Natural Bester 
Is the two articles already devoted to the 2 — species a certain number of times, and presents them The smaller bodies, at least as c sould with 
of colours, we have laid before our readers the law $ | regularly at the same intervals, a very pleasing effect | an — onsi. as independe 
of con a few general rules relating to har- | is produced e repetition of the same arrange- and not the mere component parts 
mony. On the present occasion we shall show how, ment of colour is what pl It is as well, in | plicated organisms, consisted in J. aa l 
according to knowledge of tho repetitions of this to intr too gres 2 cell, A few uniseptate spores of the common Cige 
laws rinciples may be applied practically in| variety of colour; for example, a re jum were, in one instance indeed, observe by 
the grouping of flowers in g . ment of three colours, including black and white Air. Brooms, but from circumstances connected wit 
Th rst place, plants may be isolated, so that is as a general rule more e than a repeat ated | the matter e ed he satisfied the who 
the whole of them are S alpebT seen, separale from | arrangement of five colours. called his attention to their SERRE, they 
ed — object; r they n rouped To the preceding remarks on the contrast of the Were purely after-growths, and not original denizens 
en Present b. mass of flowers, pro- colours of lowers objection be made, of the fluid. But not only were the smaller 4 
ducing ae = not any individual effect on panel. ibe t the green colour of the leaves, serving | Simple ce cells, but their —— were 7 peo 
—— e. = T the next place, flowers are either of NRT: oat und for the flowers, destroys the effect | and even, and there was Pe: trace 0 
diff — ze of the same colour but which wou ald otherwise be p * ed by the contrast | cept occi the t yellow. II 
2 8 These distinctions are of N . This, how Any 1 5 so ; as soon as larger bodies were ap do a certain stage ¢ 
important, and they ony serve for a classification of | th — otis: same ‘time with didinctaces rowth, pnicellul ñ the « central cavity never ex- 
the rules we are about to lay down. i pwe lt defined colours on any ground, its attention ibite an, re. sternal ne owe ver, 
irely absorbed by them, and surround- | consisted ef seve ral gi tv il tabe 
3 o 28 „ if of a dark colour and in a of whieh Wasstadd vi i lit bers elt u 
distant plane, produce but a feeble impression. strongly from i 
;| With regard to foliage, there is great difficulty in connected by veins, indicatin, ene 
ining a good contrast of colour ; 10 ae 1 — thes "rn ie 1058 
trast can be produced is t of ae aril 
— Sng violet. red, or of green with the color T neares allied to red | e ofa Genea. The co colour r was a more i 
to red and rose flowers contrast with e ‘ead fo Ac of tin * obsery 
own tt wl 24 btained | by planting 323 with a ion green | the veins so strongly developed as s to projesi EA 
~ next be oliage near others whose eee vary > from — concei — salap ach it 1 4 a pg 
ow flowers or by placing t a blueish brown appearance Wem 5 
wid rero very well wah blu ih Hag on ones, rat eae] pex those wi e oe leaves, ker pane eo aah i mon l sch he etm 8 in 
een rather con 4 stly, a e 
3 lowers of a rose —.— — more to ee a silvery foliage, 3 * is e n nos a T Di A 1 7 ; ee By a ir 
amaranth red and deep blue} inge n, wit ose foliage daa 
flowers rg well’ to ae: ae ‘nd vik the same green! eolow, but “a inten: tinct wall. | 
1 flowers are n However important it ma may be to produce a good pati ol om fae. — 
near each other. White a flow: wit tial re 7 5 particular effect, how d isa nt highl am ES Sot tha 
ban ln alwa always produce a e t, although his or siat object look well, it it is no at P 7 * na monic, mnie _— op the’ Trude al 
cases than in others. ess des to produce ge be tungi, develepee i i 
HE SAME 1 UT OF DIFFERENT SHADES. that the eye, after being pl with viewing a pa while the fluids — yet within 
It is so Sicul to succeed in getting a N may not disgusted when taking a general view and no fungus is ba hay isa ai 
t of different shades of the same colour, |of the whole. In obtaining a good general effect, | organs, which deed Mal siete i “that 
chat it is better, as a general rule, to avoid triazine the principles already laid down must still be re- food. It was once indeed s 


Kai 


820 THE 
they the spores of the common bunt, but they 
are many tim es largor yo 25 a totally different form | v 
and structure ; and w of no other 2 of 


viz., the stratose Rested 
see 


ge 
> 


the supposition is 
any very widely deed species could hate escaped 
their notice nally been suggested that the 


lished bd r. Hass ALL, in the i An 
History,” and the a bunt given by Mon is 
work en bey . iei of pollen, do not seem to favour 
this n only remaining theory, as far 
we 4 aware is ta Bpis weg be io eggs of some 
Entozoa; but n able to point out any 
pastcalar genus ú whi they can be referred. 


Tha 
slightest dou e very curio 


the solution of the dinis which —— AENA 
M. J. B. plo 


have puzzled everybody. 


ecial PEDA for that purpose 
this e are GEORGE PATTON, 


n the 
URRAY, . — bý Mr. Groner Patton, the fol- 
resolutions were pas 
E tit would be of groat benefit to aM interests 
d se 


no M ountains 
0 


GARDENERS’ 


substitutes for seedlings, but for permanency and 
vigour of constitution they 40 not bear a moment's 
ss praia 


d not, however, have the subscribers to 


* 
the Edin marge plan entertain ahn ap of much |? 
cky 
3 


novelty to be found on of the 
is is, indeed Ver little real im- 
e best t species are, as we suspect, 


y known eee an abundant s supply of | « 


n | seeds “Of the old on would richly reward the 


parties a epe ente 
If we might advise 


points hit ‘examination the u 


as yet unknow 
e same as P. Ben- 

h mountains near the 
city of Santa Fé, the same traveller found his 3 


feæilis, of w ich the name alone has reached u 


Novelty, cher refore, be = extent, is to be ele 
for, though, perhaps, not to the degree which some 
sanguine minds imagin 


ON DRYING 4 0 SO AS cy PRESERVE 
R COLOUR 
No science, 8 requires s ee actical know- 


ledge as botany ; ; in its study, botanical ramblings and the 


sistance. The usual method, however, of dryi ing panis 
is generally 7 7 and troublesom me, and, above all, very 
whatever quanti * rs is em- 
ts, and e P 


ed, that a great deal o prac 

ke sage out ve 
ala ts to remedy these inconveniences, 

ve I Aan the 3 of laying their ‘leads before the 


y. 


tice 


8 
< 


n a botanical excursion, I arrange my plants be- 

tween e of grey paper, which immedia “ely absorbs 

any free water arisin from r rain or dew. In this state 

can be preteris. for 24 hours Tei altera- 

ext da fica Bis pli atta © 
my ow mijozi 


of arboricultùre and horticulture in 
: introduction of 8 ae 

trees, shrubs, and 5 5 from the western 
parts of North America, as are suited to the climate 
of coun 


th m i 
in which t they a =x 8 Kid in 24 or 30 ho 
pr our of their leaves and the en th 


he following is the theory of my method: The 
water of composition — 1 — evaporates but 
slowly in ordinary cases. It, however, struck me that 
by raising the te mperat re and diminishi ing the aimo: 


try. 
That, considering pe hay result of the 
labours of the late Mr. in 
the seeds 


hose parts of the 


his Sear t 

country | | 
ist 

e meeting 5 satisfied, from the state- 


good restl 
* 
I; Ci i gh and 


CHRONICLE. 


| 


80 
e, we hee say that the best 


di — of heat, 


the v 
Gen . Necrosis, 
shows 2 by a dry blac 


sai 


thatis,a kind of bu 


plants are ofte 

The fact Felted by Adee nson is 
y the sun’s rays refi 
— Piney — 


i 

may prevent t 

lants s 5 develo oped from 
struck by the sun's rays when 


Se 


quently are 
rules for covering io ng plants or earthing them 
firs y show above grou 


interior of the 
country, and Laren paseta —_ hry > Atlantic 


2 feet in diameter. In this: a T ar a oe of 
papers ae 100 specimens. 
8 lbs. of lum ime it 


ment of Profesor eee 
for the undert 
carry out these views, are of opinion that an effort 
be now made for edllecting: fands sufficient to 
X 


each 
shall — the „or SO man of 
e amount as lease, each ee ber 
being entitled for every TR of 52 t — 
share of the pl and ie oni ich ma 


names 1 . be rece ed b 
Professor — and Mr. James M‘Na ie 


ing the apparatus, th 


‘aad dry and like the specimens I have the honou 
lay before Academ 


the Academy. Gannal in Comptes 2 


— DISEASES OF PLANTS. 
‘ontinued From p. 806.) 
Genus VII.; one species. PHYLLORISIA, withering of 
sages and—Genvs VIII.; one species. Sre.ecorista, 
withering AA branches 1f plants are attentively 
observed in the of summer, we shal 


e necessary details. E 
We should hope that a great accession of English 


nd many others 


plate now on sale are rel enon hos 


h 


— the col- p 
a person 


| sorbet n 
wn 


especially in 
the long —.— of the 
in the drying 15 and death of the whole 


Cold also will produce the same effect, and it will be 
seen to cause the leaves and young shoots to shrivel z 
2 this case, with 


3. . f 
1 


t | runs ns parallel with the gardens 


u | scene is — raeng song e wi 


ially if the whole 

1175 vores to restore woody-stemmed plants and such 
as can be protected in winter. The withered parts 

must be cut away, ei eat the plant well protected from 


Generally, I think, I a in 


surface of the plant is injured. ea 


o- 2 above. 
its 


which burns up all resis ; py fw 
travellers” reports, will even set fire to ar 
There are some who would call the prosent as 

e |in faliki spena of necrosis by the 
eath. the 


re now bg, it com 
sive energy in the development of th 


ye functions, 
means of which the first period of 2 
Whilst the force of heat 


combustion; 
and I now ask how fhis oan bear ‘ths: slightest mom A 
" — sud dea ong In 

undancy of — suddenly arrests the vi 
fa 8 and causes instantaneous death. In 
no such suddenness has ——— The vege table 
perishes, in the necrosis we are ting of, because it 
becomes disorganised, but that aioe more or less 

ad 


r: ual, 
. Secon pee. Execrric Necrosis.—The cases 
where plants are entirely or e N by 
he highest. 
such maladies I give 


eg ee two species of 33 iene ie latter, 


plants, genre irrigations may prevent n 

the first species 

e CASTLE, THE SEAT 9E THE 
ec hr 0 RINGT 


—— * the 3 
ali lea by a fight of 
ghee irs ptt 


the ey — 
nearly as as possible 


We hav 


— — appro: 
te thse Gard 


5 


er — eve 


star in the — 


in most finished - 


g that the evils produced by 33 * only 


Thie was erroneously printed Mont Plaisir in our last. 


Moo 3 
aa highly een 5 


a a 


52—1 — 
is entered at the sides -r arches of iron ; 

s the interior de- 

ofa 


ong large ewe and Yews. 
shun 3 of a costly and antique 
ceived when a t nd 


haracter in ground of this kind, embellished and 
orna! in the most costly a n 2 to 
employ trumpery works of art in any part of the 

Placed at regular distances eas these 
are marble reo on stone bases 
pre nea with Roses an nd Cotoneaster micro- 
phy! 


of appropria in the e of ea 
ment 


Dahlias, variegated Pelargoniums, Salvias, Lobelias, 
shrubby eae ge &c., and the whole pegged close 
to the ground. contrasted 

as to werk out the idea of a wi embroidered carpet, 
which they entirely represent ; about 6 feet 
across, gi e s in Eo, and 2 4 — 2 scarlet Pelar- 
goniums, a ced four divisions of this 
* They are en with the silver edged |o 

5 and * Ivy-leaved kind with Lopho- 
sperm is uced so ang over 
and dangle i in the air 2 2 of the gilding; at 
ads, and a e termi nation of stra 


sion. 


into to form, a 25 ‘dispos 
ary 1s 


THE GARDENERS’ 


guineas | sam 


; the plinths, however, ca 


ru 
In the other 5 1 e this 3 a ber * 


contrasted with the marble | and arm 


and the woody mog 3 7 the whole ep of 
the Cane. 6 ts do not, as asserted 


is a difference of nearly 4 per 


same is true with regard i to the joints ; for there is t the 


CHRONICLE. 


by 
Peligot, contain “ho 2 quantity of water as the | b 


orous animal, whilst others 
— feeder, and to be very 
ouring th 


devouring roots o — ‘then M. 
Leféburier has crete at prove it is * 1 

bterr insects, an upon plants, 
insect feeds. (Nouv. ——— ee 5 pP- 2 1 
fi it on ants, 


pangs kept a specimen for months, feedin 


hton kept six of 3 ages in a box of 


ediffi 
at different he 15 as there is in the t © correspond: 
of the stem. That, i 1 to estimate 
the value ta a Sugar cane, the middle third of its length 


ce the 


2 TO 
* 
Turs is one 


British species, like the erg dragon flies, equal in 
size those — Wars regio it is a curious fea- 
ture in the phical distribution of these animals, 
that v nied species of this 

of the glob ereas, in * 
markable in a their * like this, are of very limited 
geographical range. 

This insect belongs to the family of the crickets, 
several species 


icket is a ent rg ded its — — | 


the mole cri 


g clever 


3 to tarha the ‘appearance of repetition and | 
tameness, eff blend | li 


essary that these 
also partake of an artificial character ; hence they have 
been ie 


minarets, &c. 
8 of the same plant are 


-erown made to grow 

top of each, and these are formed in the — fed ont 

manner. 

It must be observed here that picturesque garden 

has nothing whatever to with the subject dade 

consideration. The grand object, as must be apparent, 

has been to attain the most eminent position which the 

materials used m ; aterials 
ves 3 been ted m 223 to their 

as to their 


appropriate and without any regard 
costliness or 2 diffiew culty by which they could be pro- 
cured, as we shall more fully show in the sequel. R. G. 


. ON * — ETSIN 


ess sweet ; nothing then but 


‘to be set in 


THE 3 are the . to which the n 
his can 


pair 
form gence of anything 


female 1 2 It is in fact genie e male which makes 
- | loud dull 1 irrup, which is gly the ms 


Our figure represents a male . ericket (Gr 
size, 


natural size, d it vil be 


this | them 


mean saccharine richness of any Cane brought before 
him. Comptes Rendus. th 
h 


ter — and 2 other plan 
. | to be attac 


n | Sugar-canes 


m these 
the — is both — — carni 


soil for a considerable tim states that they 
ifferent plants given them, 


— yv Án they attacked it in 
co to anything 22 with iness, and 
that er eed kept even for 
attacked each other, 


. 


some observations published in the 
number of the “ ne Agricole,” we learn that 
ts have been 

by these feet at the roots, and not 
onl rforated so as to allow a passage for 
wh ted by Latreille), but the interior 
considerable height, M. 


i 


been communicated to the Dai 


J ae a 
it is quite evident that 
ivorous, and that 


it occasionally commits much mischief 
W. 


J. 0. 


ON THE CONDITIONS ESSENTIAL TO THE 
OST PERFECT CULTIVATION,—No. XI. 
ed to link together and to con- 


plants in glass 
gether, The agriculturist can eryd ‘take the climate as 
it is, he is entirely a creature of cireumstanees at the 


least modify 
his purpose ; ond: ia wel for him: if ko 


That thi io often don, those 
best gardeners can abun- 


2 — aae 
conversant with the skill of our 


| dantly testify. „ ‘This success is to be attributed in a great 


measure —— 
ae he 


d moisture, in in their relation to the develop- 
ment of ‘vegetable life. Air and light a 


are undoubtedly 


that the fore wings, or rather e nivale 

and oval, whilst me ‘wings, which are very . cal 

when expanded eo what more than a quarter 

of a circle, fold up in . — most beautiful manner into 

two long and very narrow fillets lying along the back, 
reaching md the extremity of the 


talpa vulgaris) of the 


8 8 
— 


ese iors 

3 the aid ta 

8 from behind. The wing covers ‘of the a 
detached beneath 


portion towards the | 


of the male havik eres 
"4 nale (m+) Bavin 8 cells than that of the 


1 vity in the 
iis teen, wl within which 
hate 


y 


wings 
recently hatched is represented in ‘the accompanying | Fd 
woodcut. 


body, which | cirew 


ae 


“Te would appear tat many ny persons consider 
house 3 which 2 may 
e fr te erian wat hee aprison. It isa 
worthy of rem remark—confirming, wich a 


kindness 


own 3 
it, 
its 


E 


ATAATA 


pop otpa k 


Much discussion has taken place as to the real habits | 
writers contending 


of this insect, one class of writers that it is | 


6 from lack of air. 


822 THE 


GARDENERS’ CHRONIC 


LE. 


latter mode of treatment is, with some slight 8 
tions, ry gg aaa a me „ of Oak, in 
whi fat gen to seek s yes 
and durability 1 their “a wooden walls, and 5 

ful gye Alas ! how will they 
. our plant-house— 


and the following 
od s seed, from 

particular | s 
it was out een like 
h it stood, a 


of ha e 
of light re it to elaborate more effectually the 
fluids necessary for the formation and development of 
~ 
From an absence of a due amount of light and air, 
the foliage. of plants becomes flaccid, the. stems elon- 
gated àn enge tiolated, and as ranga ss 


— ow it a physiological fact, 
admitting of no exception, - that ie imperfectly organ- 
ised be — perfect flowers and fruit, if 
such å 1; and it is 3 * that a 
— making an and maturing $ its wood un unfavour- 

circu — ce . wood or 

bud — are the * — ryos of future growth. In 
plant culture, the results of ill treatment does not 
terminate with the ae ne but as one season’s 
apy 8 wood bears a 1 relatio n, and exercises 
t whie 2 is to succeed it, it 
follows that good or ill 1 
its influence in a corr 

I ages 8 upon all w 


recognised prinei 

1 — endeavour = iise 
young gardener that ph: a light for expe- 

rience, will work miracles ; and ‘hat i in the . — ad- 
vanced state of — it must form part of the gar- 

days of pure — ism are 

gone ; science must be wedded to the art. I shall take 
Ep this subject again in my next paper: G. 


upon the 


— — AND — — G. t i Chronicle, to direct attention to it and insure a A 
Ir amateur r was to consult half the k they are not quickly put into a suitable hive near at From amongst the numerous landlords by whom 
— which have es u upon the Vine, and was hand?” He adds also, by way of irony, “ It might Paper is taken, I do ir of finding one 
attempt, from their directions, to fo t well hen y ough to step forw. d introduce into Parliament 
Suitable for its 5 eulture, my opinion is that he take especial poe ain tether it to the ground.” Now, it is the necessary enactment. In the meantime I believe it 
would have one of the most diffi and exing ay the rms that prad maras these flights, and might be shown that, in small they might be 
tasks he ever encountered $ t suc es there is little or noc f “ tethering ” | So planned, at very little additional expense, as not do 
written this subject, the or t ees s by ing them intoa table hive,” for | come within the scope of the present law, even as no 
terious it has become. Now let it be kept 3 in pre soon 3 it and follow their scouts, already in own. My views on this subject I reserve u 
— that — ful results, the most sim p n of a home of their ection, This fact | another occasion, and until I see what are the ô 
means only are —diligence and application are | is so y well established as to need no further comment; of your readers on the propriety and probability of an 
more valuable — FESR e recipes, which mie ad | and i ardly necessary to o that swarms fre- | alteration of the la ee y letter, having 
3 intment, and involve experimentalists in end- quently make combs in any bush or branch on which read your replies to co ts, Sept. 15, 
xpense, Without, therefore, attempting to S they first alight. I may, however, 4 C. C. M.“ fess your inability to say whether the — 
— ett opinions now existing the at there must bë of course a first swarm by the | white Azalea blooms in the open air, but you believe 4 
Jeet, T —— 3 ving instructions ae Raen a second comes forth, a “shat will | will in the mild . was one 
tensive experience whi not happen, however hot the hive ma bes except her the plants I brought here seven ago, which m 
tended with the most satisfactory results, su e in a certain state of dn his er the nition said . not live. Te Ta 
and old pastures are the places * accords exactly a Lama, Dunbar, and Bevan ; | previously “lowered regularly 20 miles from kekar 
whence turfy loam is to be obtained. Select such indeed, all apiaria ve carefully studied bees. southward. It is still alive flourishing, al 
neither too stiff nor too sandy—let it be as full of fibre Notwithstanding this, however, “C. C. M.” advises me flowaced abundantly last summer. It is right howevel 
as can be obtained; this r r is uch im- mory by a sal of Huber. W o say that it has not flowered for e ea 
t takes a long time to decay, and prevents he hi self t 10 & so he vonid ae that the opinion he | but it has been ved toa t. Then 
m becoming elose and adhesive. Keep this gave is ers only to rm, ins to Camellias. I believe this is as hardy as the common 
always before you in making Vine first, viz, that e ont ive agitation immedi Laurel ; it will live peke in ee a not flower 
it is on this condition le d Pes . the exit of the i by the queen peer * — 4 Pe by tht 
is, In th re, that this not being allowed to destroy the young queens as they | co ot 80 pe ngs you with a 
£ be secured, never eut the turf thi stiecessively a a state of perfect existence.” If list of of soins plants that te peni 'zardening 
inches, because in this way a r portion of “C. C. M.“ has any doubt especting this, I refer him | world d i to 
matter is obtained. Get ht er as the | to Dr. Dunbar’s in ing unt of the calling of the} ` Highland Pine and Scotch —In 8 
may require, — at tne | 2 bee, in reply to myself, in Loudon's & G W. B. H, you state (p. 792), that “ there 1 
the t constituting | Magazine” for March, 18 839, by which ibe may learn difference whatever between the true Highland Pity 
9 ji whether his own memory is not more “ treacherous” | and on Scotch Fir, except that which is cause 
— this in dry than that of J. Wighto by ituation, and climate; the name is mere 
a ar — in a perfectly dry nor wet Ton Shrubs, Wintering piped Law aigi 1 applied for the pon of sale.“ Now, Tam of i 10 
between conditions; — Like, I say, many of your readers, I ha that this calculated to mislead peo oe 
e or plaster rubbish, and some ll garden, which is managed al ie y 8 “with the nature and habits f. he 
eg n : e latter should | myself and f: mily. ough an amateur o g stand- | tree. It names are À 
ton or two of erusbed bones W » my attention has hitherto been principally attracted Pinus syivestris but the late Mr. Don, of Forfar, 
of crush will do good. ardy shrubs, evergreen an — icularly | sidered the true Highland Pine entitled to be pin 
ye using manure, but the the former „ While I lived in the country; 1 Pinus s; ei. horizontalis, All who haye pad i 
18 very protracted ; and t d to | tion to Fir plantations i must have 


may 
i in layers al 
i touched for 
other 


border aega as mes 
deen most satisf 


p 


e case may be, | i 


r 
be 6 h — 
ternately. w 


= coloured. The final results, therefore, of a border 
formed upon this principle, and with th 

which are withi in the reaeh of 
understood, adm 


the instructions are strictly attended to. Phar 


=o ome Vr ee a te 
ngton’s Cul 


t, at the same time, provide them 
selves with the i jacket, * Baye ess.“ i 
of broad webbing passing round the loi 
* being porn te ded ** the 
shou mple contrivance it e 
e. By means of this belt the instrument is drawn 
by. thro rowing ae it the weight of the : 
it there is too much strain 
and hands. 


a: One ò 
the 2 on one-half of a crop of 
oniy was ther 3 superiority in the other half, 
bet sins he assured me, the labour 4 using the common 
i diminishe d, from the loosening of the 
aa 5 the ja vedy that he N 
giving 


tivator is ery useful e 
that some of its details have een i improv 
Swar mt 8 10 Bees. —In your Number for the rid = 
Novem 5 — 9 to some 5 
ale on“ 1 Old Apiarian’s” observ 
w 
8 
rease their pasturage.’ s may 
r what term 
not efined. By some 
mited to 23 miles, while Huish records an 
instance of his yat: ng se seen eee 
which 3 w. 


cause of my 


d by a 
e ened c or eg n Ea lengthened ar 11 at e i 


his own ease by | grea 


his 
the fact is p swarms ge not fly | t 


ush on an 


failure ‘ite a as much 


lad to ee ae 


on arison of 


b, bit 12 hould Ales vieh to bere 

a supply of n plants for the rooms, and therefor 
perhaps, what I w all 

g ita pit—so 

K . e nt, 


e 
o my own, and who to let 
another pie, ® byt “helt experience, at 5 mistake, no 
* as an inquiry in you 
e law as Tg kus to gardens, 18 12 Te ‘i t 


E 
B® z Png 1 


7 


subject in the columns of a journal like the Gardeners 


0 
produced away from * soil and climate 


52—1849.] 


THE 


its growth. „ It t is, — — to mislead your re; readers | 


to assert, that “the 


N., 
these cir- 


to have the measles ; so if our Vines | p 
escape mildew, oe will have the oe b or some o —— 
rot 2 


I have ro very — hitherto in 
alate period of the season, 
ed when on entering the 
house one Monday m eon’ 
had left the night before 


coddle them up in a 
ae, was so disappointed 8 Ishould 
any of your 


not bother 


better how o di 
their heads about the mth — of the — but 
g-heeled-Ja 


rt of asp l 


eaves n 
On th rary, the white Mul- 
berry tree is the 1 of t — silk manufacture, the 
ves of whic for the worm ; and no 
— * * — — with any ad In 
ilk is the quan- 
tities, th the white Mulberry tree is exclusively oe 
th vantages of producing a superi 
Fy tht, anc much earlier th than the 
rry is 
the Willow, Freee aner an 2 — 
at a small ex 
erg — the lovers of a combination o 
ificent foliag 


it is the ae : 
and 4 0 its robust habit and beautiful 3 + a ea 
in diameter. estical 


ee r. or a bed, if 5 
N plan of raising them is 
this: sey in March I a in 
shallow pans 
— y constantly evaporating sof 

the seed, enables 


until Nature has performed her office, 
and leaves cease to exist. The seed 
share.of praise for its curiosity. 
t T may use ti e Ss me like a woodeock’s 
ead an 2 y seed-vessel ; and most 


. in on — for — ce 

eed-vessel, One not be forgo 

are to procure seeds from a first source, for it the 

Principle is ever so slightly impaire — 

make it grow will be futile. es 
Durability 44. r W. b. 

opposed to 


e 73), aud . 
f zine. 


in 1 
Serviceable as ever, and I be the 
Present time. This cistern, moreover, had not fair play; 


e Highland’ is merely | 
ale.” Fad the H Highland | bulged out, and ca 


| earo fully to answer its intended 


at th 
e | most plentiful. J. 


of Mr. J. Reynolds, 
Wi 

surmounted by ; ; 
it is 


pots filled with 
tar 

ca 
and 


eventually planted out the be- 
8 from which time they will form subjects 
admiration 


| which 
— of 3 3 which oceur i 
dance 


GARDENERS’ 


it was badly made in the first instance, the metal ae 
properly fitted the wooden casing, so that parts of i 
used a considerable strain ; rd feh 


le r h of time. I have 


[We can 
has been necessary to take Prac yz every 
piece of zine-work which we have seen put 
S Hares.— 


ipped in brim. 
s subjected to this K ating and unable 
to avail themselves of the e of the hare destroyi 

et, will not regret trying the brimstone; the ex- 
fhe trial. S. of the last few aon —— me to recommend 
the tria 


“Vortex,” “ Addio,” or any one else 


v Ani To 
23 in the unknown animal sg tom ay take db 
ne m 


* at the Say: ae as put A. H.,“ 
694, they will be 2 to determine 
k 832 without tho assistan Bewick 
ir, that the ho 
— ~ sat by my lar ‘cong bee, were certainly not made 
sand m 
— localities kae by them, but “ 3 on 
” says “A. H.“ I need 
t sand martias make their holes under 
banks, never on the nd as to = rats, of course 
a little * 


some ae in brown 
earth, i. e., earth, not chalk * 
and “ Vortex” knows — it of the vering habits 
of bees if he imagines that a chalky soil would prove an 
insuperable barrier 2 way when 
quarters and perhaps n rsery was the 
* I beg to inform “ Addio” * that ‘the 8 
e erratum he 
— ipai came un Perhaps“ A. pel P H | ao 
— should meet his eye, will say whether t! 
are not about large enough to admit one’s 44405 
finger, with generally about : sme i of 2 earth 
e . * me of the year they are 


surface of the ground, If“ Vortex” will look at “ A. H.'s 5 
paragraph, he 


— s 
Anniversary 


corresponding member. Several do tions 
nounced, The Secretary read the report o i 
from which it appeared that 15 new members had been 


Society n members. The distribu- | 


The report was 
weiche a at took 33 for th 


he 
FR S., cat E. e i Esq , F. L. S ents. 
iE. Dennes, “a ‘Mr. T. Moore 
and 


BorantcaL oF EDIxnU BURGH, Dec. 
in the chair. The following communications we 
read :—l. On the Plants of ‘e s * Falana, 

B Archibal 
eigen 


CHRONICLE. 


| y — seeds. 
ions | cellent hedge round — Tropbis aspera, 
i the same 


of his reasoniog, 
| shall give one 
ts | reader to the 


a winter's | an 


elected . the last gwy meeting, and that the |I 
ions | tban 


couldn't learn 


l . "Hassall, Dr. Coche, 
but be 


13.—Dr. ya e 


of vert ain n species of Grevi 
glesia, and other Proteaceae. By S. Cobbold, Esq.— 
the occurrence in the stem, —— 


rior cellules of various colours, and a nucleus 
to or bul out from the cell wall, 
that whatever e the function of these 


of 
end to which they seem copes: viz., the 


n great abun- t 
of the species 


sal eer the organs of some 
pe air 4. 9 plants used ah 3 wer ge | 3 
and Fences in “Soa rn India. r. Cleghorn 


Thera, is s invested 


823 


are handsome and most impenetrable. thin, with 
um lacerans e et oe 
L., forms an ex. 


rapid! 
oh the 


a by Wl 


is well adapted for 
Wind. id 


ri 


no doubt, that will be wholly new. 

half-bantering tone, the unknown au 

no, not trifle—it i 

both masters and 

must do good, because all po egg il 1 
and none 


wife, provided she w: 
didn’t aoe well for a m 
mforta 


— 
hard she had to work how 
washin n the 


and 
ing at the hall through lady’s ae 


it was 50; 
if 


1721 
SERE 
1 


Peer make 
-tabs, — the lines, a 
say 


| 1 
ih 5 


th 
H 


72 
= 


CHRONICLE, 


824 THE GARDENERS’ Poses 
meuds the consecratio of t mortuaries,“ or est in making such preparations as will facilitate | Bate of the Weather near London forthe woah ETT 
ande in, waste ‘hand tting on fha main go ori | 8 to the paai prem when the weather is observed at the Horticultural Gardens, Chiswick. 7 8 
railways. His suggestions merit attention.—— Hi more favou . To this end the stations for the} pe, Moo“ Bann . Txexwomnras. 
First fp yet Atlas for the use of Schools (Lang plants may be prepared by conveying suitable soil, &c., A. Mar- | Mins Max., Min.)Mean|| id. Rain, 
mans), is o, with * eatly engraved useful | to the spot, and by making holes ising mounds for | Friday., 2 6 |} 30401 f z039: | as | ae boop || 
— ' well ates for beginners The map, their reception. The value of t wing machine is N 2 30.73 2016 87 2 325 || NE. 2 
rep ting Canaan vided a g the Lanes and | now becoming so well known as to 0 cat nage need of | Monday ?: 9 30.404 — 1 on a4 1 x 1 |} 20 
Palestine, in the Our a are especially | praise. ose who have had an opport of judging Wed. . 2% 11 |] otis 2% % „ 3801) we oy 
i mendation, both for their completeness | for themselves must esr paren. satisfied of its great | T .27| 12 29.493 | 29.434 || 41 | 24 | gos nN: 2 
and accuracy. ark 8 . advantages ; ne thos o hav enjoyed such an | Average 30.209 | 30.194 || 37.7 | 27.0 37.3 — 
Systems oe 5 (8vo, L ongmans) may be recom pppoe rtu peti 7 ecomme nat ris e our word for | Dec. 21—Overcast; fell of very broaden „ 0.07 
mended * portion of the reading public, and | it, and pro one against the forthcoming season = ae eee densely clo clouded; overcast at night 
to no i tag ied 2 d that 18 ps 3 will do as much work — a act pee | 1 8 sharp frost, 
OF FOREIGN wonks we ought to notice the following. 4 men, a expense not exceedin ng 8s. per dg. ðõ 
Blume’s Rumphia is com ple eted by the publication Bat to make ake e ee of the greatest service, and to — 27- Clear; some red clouds; clear and cold; sharp frost. 
of a thin fourth volu ume, containing, among other things, | ensure its work being of the best neat ity, the surface of Mean temperature ofthe week, 6 m below the average, 
of some of his little known Orchi botani- | the turf, mene level or on an incline, should be made si 
cal notes relating to them. We to see that this | perfec etly e n, and free from holes or other ena ensuing week, ending Jan. 5, 1850 
long-expected portion of so great a work, needing illus- | tions srg ortion of turf, therefore, which is in this n B mail 
n e th i issed with a few | state should be taken up, and relaid, afte - r the cand Dec. | us| SEE] SE | Yearsin . — 
i 7 proi? S | which it | Quantity. 
plates and an inconsiderable quantity of letter-press: | beneath 9 been brought to a firm surface. | and Jan. | AE | FSA | Ae | kamed. | of Rain. 
both, however, are valuable, harp sand and finely sifted Seat aban i are y anelahi 
have also received the four first parts of the same 2 for this e as worms have a great ob- Mom” 3i A r GB Breve ; 0.30 in. 
ors Museum Lugduno- Balavum, an 8vo work, con- jection to pass through a stratum of these, ff xi Tue 42.4 Í 30.2 | 36: 8 0.70 
taining important botanical men randa 5 to th 5 which ihe ese pests create is in a great e Rer. aa e A — 
eee ch East I —— The P. = avoided. Another n which E materials aa, 4j 41.2 | 315 | 364 9 0.45 
din e Ro; al Societ of Van Diemen’s | possess is in preventing grossness vs e lux — e ERGS 
y y p P mB 8 he highest temperature during the E abou riod 
wholly hn os by papers on ans he e den cate “Kind asseta, 56 deg. ; and the during on the Ist, 1837—therm, 12 der. ae 


isins Of died island.—-—The 


Nederandsh iy ruid-Kundig 8 vol 


ast 57 of the 
part 2, 


critical notices of Goo aud, by De 
Vriese, Sat van account of the third meeting of the | 


in which are numerous observations upon the 


plants of Holland. 
treatise on 


Pr of. Miquel 


8 figures of some 


frican species of Fic 
de — Vie boomen, 5 , ta), — 
of 


wild 
has published a 
Astin 


in the turf, and by this me 
0 


being smothered, as sin phe 
rally are, by ~~ oe of a coarser natur ook 
after the seeds pine and Ae as soon 

as the capsules begin 2 en 

Ars 8 Flow 

After the frosty weather we have “had and consequent 
closing of frames, in which Auriculas, Polyant uses, Car- 

nations, &c., are wintered, it will be absolutely necessary 
tò subject the stock to a searching scrutiny ; 3 


We have before us the 24, "3d, fied ah — will be better for abundance of air, when it can 
— „ Lichenes Helvetia eee ee ly, the be given with safety. It is just Feine ‘that some 
— . of Walpers's Annales e Systematic | leaves on be uriculas will have turned yellow ; that 
plete—a most 3 work, notwithstanding | Offsets which have been planted y the sides of the 
pots may 4 — their A 888 laid bare, by the contraction 

Wiican. of Bee soil ; that n fly, which will keep its hold on 

ants in all 3 may a ear in force; 
On the Ch see C Constitution of P py Seeds. By nat beans of the drainage o the “ae inae have become 
M. Sace. Sak, au of the memoir ‘from anas the — in each and every ease — — attention is 
present extrac w that | neces ARNATIONS AND Pa — Some little 

th 


e. 
in order to — exact natn of orga 


of the alkalies i es of plan 
23 analyses, it a ie — 


the form of organised — 
be generally true, it is Be that the 
organised substances cannot 


Complies Rend: 


Calendar of Operations. 


ensuing week. ) 

Seg DEPAR TMENT ex 
0 taken during the next few 

of exciting influences 


weeks to me fa 1 
the plants w 


nection with a 
to, and if Ay es anala root action be sec 
small. 


= as a natural consequence, w 
swe'led fruit. Vinertes.—It is 
in front o 


peed, 


ro 


e GARD 


nt — 


ot the 
Pie phy should prove to 


of 
e ascertained by — s 
oe’ 50 — of —— they 


proper supply of water, be a gd 8 
will be filled with highly el 8 sp, 
ce large 


ers are Jost 


frosty to admit of the trans- 


* ie eee it 
ip 


By 
that — whole 3 


nutritive value 


ontain. 


tes, 
point, in con- 


fruit is 1. fish — 


| with, | care 


sary. 
dirt will, even with er une te 


t m 
in the axils of the leaves; Fie be ust be carefully 
brushed or blown out, for w wet it is attended with 
deleterious consequences e plant.— If Tulip beds 
st be covered at all in sev ea 


wW. 
thus — 


the 
appe ar about March, when ~~ 
them, Saarien that the la d finer the foliage, 
the larger the bulb, and consequently the amateur will 
have to wait a less time f a 
F 


Frut pAr 
as 


e 
artificial heat, the latter should always be 
h esp tion, that the moisture 

to esca 


pres extreme hea in summer, 
sudden variations i M Sate 
KITCHEN GARD 
t tren nching of vacant d — done with all con- 


Mi er. In mentioning i 
garden crops, last week, w d to recommend the 
branches of Spr ir, Yew, or other evergreens. 
These are quite as effectual, if used ent abun- 
ce, as Lad gy and other matters, whi e too untidy 
seen in a well-kept kitchen garden. Attend to 


„the forcing of Rhu Sea Asparagus, Chico 
e| &c., and k keep up a done if possible, equal to the 
demand. Let Cauliflow Endive, and Lettuce, in 
frames, be frequently tin 5 sea divested of decay- 
tect e ravages 2 slugs, by 
and soot upon the 


ing foliage ; 
ly sprinkling a little lime 
surface of pg 


Notice s to There ano ch pp 
Books: fan done 
Corres : Coffea. — great “thio g is 


+ 


r daily use. Soyer 
ish coffee — 7 be cured by pu te — 


The] plan — wort 
t the 


says that the fault of Engl 


th Ai 


stir irripg it well, so that it does not rie 
trying by coffee drinkers, among w 
honour to rank. A very nice French pat 


Coxtrens : K. bg te 
Taxodium may b 8 y inserting the half 
3 ehari Side wists, taken ne wit heel, in a under a 
bell-glass, and placing them in gentle heat. Autumn is the 
best time “ga ea operation, 

A 4. You will find a list of good sorts of Goose. 
berries 22 792. Of Currants, the Red Dutch, Knight's 
Large Red, White Dutch, and Black Naples are amongst 
the best il 

HEATING: J R M. Either your external chimney is too 
waleh is ‘Probable, or the dapor do not act, or the m 
are chok We w nothing of the merits of — 

ite ney- bet — "al the kinds which we 
employed have been useless. The 7 mouth — yte 
F than — highest part of you 
T it is so very weedy 70 eee you had best 
and re- sow it in spring. 
rA 8 Reader, Turm 

D S. Centropogon ais 2 

nicum or Cassia, and 


without their flow H. porum 3 
a New Zealand plant, “from the ‘Bay of Islands, 8 
tender. M J B. Carissa ferox, the Arduina pie ; 
Bot. Cabinet. 255 „Aristotelia Macq et Meee, 
hse mes 

Names or Fruits: A G. ock, or Ye sweet cider 
Apple; 3, Carlisle Codlis ; 15 9. Golden Noble; 5, Pomme 
de Neige; 6 „Alexander. 1 

TIMBER MEASURI “pnd tbee Young Apprentice asks why the divisor 


2304 is used 25 of Ter p= as 22 11 s 


* 


generally. very ex xplicit e on 
h b; — u 
run thus pone fet in the length by "m Why this 


n — of inches in — 

the piece in inches, and these ie 1728, the number 

of inches in a cubic foot, will give 5, t 

f the end in inches by 
and the 


e grea 
jirth.” it the transverse nee 


correct 
r. i 
f k; rouse ósi of the above length and girth isa re e 
ion more than 1084 feet; 195 the aurin, _— examples itis | 


— 
8 
3 


uccess in September, I 
= Roses it — et been 


2855 
282 
Pog 
oe 
Ow 
>] 
8 8 
0 
a 
8 


wy tar 1 Anon. e BA s St. Alban’s” is an 
Grape, but later than the Royal 


: ell 
s s greater soi “With — care your large ine mel ; 
dove in 


3 them up i 
fr st; but 


* 


52—1849.] 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


825 


nine LONDON MANURE ‘COMPANY beg to offer 

as under, and pledge themselves that every Manure sent 
eut by them shall be free from the slightest adulteration 
Peru e olen Gun uano direct from Importer’s W Londo 
Manure Company’s Wheat Manure ne ‘Urate, omnes of in 
monin, Pho-phate of 9 — or oniacal Phosphate ; 


— and every other Artificial. mii 
Epwaxp PURSER, Secretary, Bridge-street, Blackfriars. 


BY HER 


MAJESTY’S PATENT. 


PATENT HOTHOUSE WORKS, KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA 
DENCH vites the attention of Gentlemen about 

* toerect Hothouses, d., to the vast superiority in every 
respect — by his parket SOURED which be will 
warrant super or in every res y others, Glass 
froma 16 to 21 . per foot, 1 foot wide 3 feet long, furnished, 
and the he Houses when — chary ed fro om ls. 3d. to Foes 
per superficial foot, accor tit 
ciple, * roof being — gh heer mail or pathy pod ie 
principle being wood rer and the glass put in with 
patty. Pate 5 N 1 o paint, from 7d. . per ft. 
TING BY” HOT WATER, 


THE IMPROVED “FLUE BOILER” AND FURNACE, 


RLS LED 
W L begs respectfully A inform the numerous 
. meh ants for his FLUE ER” of a small and 
intermediate size, that esh : 
— y description of Apparatus, from that 
J to 2000 feet of $ -inch pipe: 

Sizes me Prices wil n . W. Am 

~ sorte — the m ve and econ ar —— 


ral Wor oR “or — A a Dec. 
Smee ENSON anp CO. 
and 17, New — street, South w. aa ntors 
— of the Im NICAL ‘aed DOUB LE 
Erlln DRICAL BOILERS, S, respectfully 7 the attention of 
Horticulturists Pe ir roved method of 
* ie, boise Houses, 
well as bottom-heat is 


et 


to any re 


he 
Copper, by which the cost is re 71 
well kn 


d Co. beg to 3 = Trade that at their Manufactory, 

17, K P ark-stree required for the construction 

of Hort 1 Buildings, as 5 — pal bow. them, may be 
obtained n the mosi antagen 

Conserv — 


&., — 2 or Wood. — upon the most 


Ponces, Wit 1 8 Palisading, Field and Garden powered 


ces, Wire: wor 


Bi TS CHEMICAL AND AGRI- 


Geology, Surveying, Levelling, Railway Engineer. 
tng &c., may be obtained 3 Messrs, Nessi1’s Academy, in 
dition to a good 


Mr, Nessit’s works on N metic, Mensuration, Gauging, 
Land Surveying, English: Parsing, el, are ö by Long- 
MAN and poem 2 Senge = Sena of all Bookse 

ool e had on 3 either 
personally o or 5 T * 


The Agricultural Gazette. 


SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1849. late in n ting the ee EA d o iae cake Matit 9 great 
MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. colonies, similarto that e ari 8 e of the day. With the fair us of uni- 
Tavsan, Jan. e Imp. Society of Trel missioners, leaving the choice to the emigrants them- al peace, and the mind and spirit of all nations just 
2 an )—Agricultural Imp. Society of boni selves; and seeing how nae of the Iris try now peculiarly bent on i rsuits, one can 
1 have e in the tates, it is hops ion scarcely set bounds to our prospective advance in ma- 
T is right, at the — of the year, frankly to well w rthy of eonkideration whether assistance | terial prosperity-rih e rs * e 
— x ee ge that there has latterly been a good deal | should rhe peng ed to those emigrati n | cursor of moral and social progress. heel ove impe- 
at an political — our col than is | colonies. Every subscriber should have the privi- Ainai to that advance — the vestiges o — 
4 — * nsistent with the - character of a Journ lege of naming emigrants to double the a rstition in the shape of 9 cy aun 
Se Ate a to the advancement of his subscription ; and every person receiving assist- | have been tly 1 away a oed a ia 
se and the Business of Farming. It ance to should be required to find two aoe 58 fs ig peti = ariin 
81 i part, we 1 confess, 15 - Securities at home 12 erig e N 3 advantages, cannot fail to the lion’s 
etrors—we must confine ou orts to the These would in Ireland be the relations of the Na the Forai. 
ag cag — tural ones. And though it has — with his Indra or his priest. The party prospeet-—the doubt h will 
leled almost impossible during a period of unparal- reco tending emigrant for aid to be 38 cannot any longer 
— Politico-agricul tural excitement to avoid allu- always one 8 ind repose, Exposure 
the fa controversies of the day, we must, for n the case of emigrants to the United States, 5 co 
ee ee "spon eee, poor that of 0 pe 1 should Be a sects amount, m more | th 
ies arising e 
N relationship of landlord with tenant, of tenant pi ea ag 3 associatio 
e ats d of all three with the land—an and | the country, sorg w which the emigrants 
at raising the prices 5 which aim communicate with cent bady and 
publish in our ‘present Nuther all munica- | fo 3 le i 
tions we have in type which are at all chargeable | vessels by which they are to sail; and 
with political bias: and shall cite itary condition, b 
future, that 1 2 is” some surveillance at their sanitary e , by 
3 ; ci in 
aur columns only a that point of of view 2 a little 3 nd ae allo 5 a 9 
exhibits e result o bee ital as now. bu 
iier aspects of the matter which furnish the pet 1 ee ee e pros Nelle would have fallen, as in justice it should fall, on the 
‘pies of party politici we shall endeavour to checks which it imposes, to maintain the voluntary generation that had been en d — prices artificis lly 
avoid, 8 flated. The ens tivation 
23 of the emigration, and to . a os Ka 3 ‘ith 


Ir extensive ano D InklAxp be a neces- 
Wees in the co: ction of a sounder we be 
ble 


ants 3 
Stee oie 
leaving pau 
Sources), 
2 


be assisted and directed (in order 
evils which result from th tem 
gps emigrants entirely to their town re- 
uestion is, how can this assistance be | 
The usual objection to the int inter- | 


exertion, it wou 
which is now 


are destitute 
m, Ni vane of Soda, Bone Saw- | liable to this — a 
d is l worthy 


cottier class, 
pa of the Pots 
ork; and t 


bf relation 
summer of 1847 we were informed, on good anthority, 
that an American wag usually brought to one small 
market-town orth, near whic were | 0 
stationed, not less i 100 letters containing such 


re ittances. 
relief committees, by the rat 
applicants was, that they were in 1 rec — oft suc 


and we were 
and by those who are 


whic 

stroy, and Sia it ts be well » take. ‘Sivantage |» 

of in promot 
eh 

| employing some Irish 

made el 

of sums which astonished us b 


to whom they were 
scarcely recognised in En 


ndon 
gric 1 po 


ference of the ae is, that, by repress ing individual 

98 that stream of emigration 

ae eously ae out of the 

country. Assistance W way of loan, to those who 

of the means of anovi; would 
It has 

of a trial. 


experiment on a small scale in the first instance, | T 


ROYAL LETTERS 20 extend 


ie 
culation at present depends, we K no doubt o 


the operations if found to 3 and, 


m our knowledge of the sources on h Irish 
its suc 

Emig — rast 3 = Pa two classes—the 

veh uced to pauperism the 

tr — i mare ni in quest of 


e en of farmers, pos 


of som 
peer re emigrate with thei inten tion * carts rt 


A considerable portion of the capital with 


nd. 
which the latter emigrate is property of which they 
5 defrauded their landlords. 


The greater portion 
the 8 emigrate by means of funds remitted 
who have preceded them. During the 


8, against 


se ne 


in aracter of t 
h it will 5 well if the 


the necessary of emigration. 
ad 2 proof of it man wi 


e eae to Ireland 
eir magnitu 
well as by the remote degrees of . of those 


s the chann 


We propose, therefore, to nid oe ion by means 
of an association suc ritish Association for 
the Relief of Dist nd ; m- 
to receive — for the purpose of 

assisting destitute persons desirous of em igrating ; 
to be incorporated by Royal Charter, and to hav 
wer 8 raise ee by way of f loan a, the aia 
purpos is no reason why i 
should “he . to Ireland. We 5 that 
assistance shall be given to the emigrants pA Dy 

way of loan, to be repaid within = or more y 
according to the distance of the country to whick 

they 2 proceed, and other e ee render- 
g nec the d e e from one fixed rule. It 
uch an association to circu- 


as | here, 


15 of relationship 
lan i 


operations | need 


of honour than of law, and they would know that, that, 
on the one hand, the repayment of the loan by which 
they had 1— en enabled t to remove from mise 
prosperity, would, in many cases, affor 

and relatives a — 


amount subscriptions. erence would 
be provided for from the funds raised by t ocla= 
tion in the w 8 ag loan. It is more than 9 


that in order to enable them to contract such g 
loan the — “of the State would be required. 
This will be the least burthensome form in which 
the Government can meet those demands which will 
infallibly be made on them 


h 
Parliament, they will be obliged to gran 


eai 
the c olonia governments 7 oe also k expected, 
with the o that such aid Aas exclusively 
a rere to directing the stream of omig ation to the 


W hile we write, it is announce at that labourers 
are so much in demand at el that the local 
ment are red of 50 1e 
the 


colo 0 even advocat mA a pre to the 
system of convict labour though it m eets, in general, 
with great opposition ; and it is determined, if a 


y of labourers cannot 
m, to have recourse to China. 2 

under these ä it is not too much 
pect that the colonial tir pea ‘woul gladly 
funds thus as to 
n equ 
country, 8 if, by means of their agents 
they had influence in the selection of 


nflux of eee ey would facilitate measures 
e and vet dati. 
by adop 

Basang of the 
e'lon of which ad been 


for insurin 
character of the ae ty ths 
for t 


enabled to remo 

heap Surely, whilé there is this demand f 

labourers in our colonies large districts in ireland 
not i aste, se” t of 


poor’s rates to which they are.liable, fo 
pilitin in 1 —— 


ment. 


United Staton, ` we have no fear on this 
Irish peasantry are are more amenable 


826 THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. (Dec. 29, ~ 
e and improvements of our own soil. Instead p : bushels for Wheat and 3 bushels for other grain | fair proportion of the burthen, an — | 
of this, the jegislétive power of the landed interest was | and for pulse, and . argue by reference to neigh- | conveniently effected by a small art Plage is de mag | 
2 = abused — yrs efforts to put off the — farms that with good farming larger crops may tion of agricultural produce, Foreign butter 
day of adjustment, a e present occupiers of land | be got from ese repr — that quantity of seed, cheese are still subjected to a — of Pe — 
Seabee so — loss e that tempo thus admitting a saving of a r 3s. per acre; finding cent.; and if instead of indulging re 10 
depression which should have becom e by this ti manures s averagi ng 4s, per acre, he menaces and objectless combinatio ons, the 

of hi À m the legi 


£ 
®© 
iti 
8 8 
Sre 


t from t n = ‘i in 
fluctuations of business. All callings have their ups and OR a raw and catt ttle droppings, and leaving them 5 per cent., I believe they might — ail 
their downs, and there is scarcely an interest in | to fer exposed to air and water. Proceeding 4 limited object this ensuing session, and 80 — 
the country which, within my limited recolleetion, has the 3 of erop, he would find perhaps Wheat | to agricultural panic and depression, without a an end 
not sustained and overcome heavier depreciation of|and pulse averaged 28 b — Barley at 34, Oats at 40 detriment to any other interest in the stat PPreciable 
capital and far severer difficulties than are now suffered | bushels, and — root crops at 12 tons; and he would | sion to this extent would be adm 
armer. How did these interests triumph over | endeavour to show, by cro — obtained from land of | politic; agrieultu uriets, however, are 
ir difficulties? Did they trust in appeals to the similar quality, that by ‘deeper ploughing, thinner sow- | as experience must have taught th 1 
Legislature for protection? No; they sought relief as — more frequent horse-hoeing —_ rolling, the use of | their prosperity depends on any cotteession free ae i 
the manufacturers of food should seek it, in improved | bet ter protecte — and more perfectly burying it Legislature ; or on anything save only their own well, . 
processes, in the application of greater skill and greater | in the soil, the averages of crops might be raised at least directed industry, and the bringing to d 
economy; and, by cheapening their products, extending | one-fourth, and that without any increased command of | business established — and the : 
or them. Why should the nay ge * — capital, of science and experience. P. teachings | 


the demand fi 

soil look to other means for extrication from his diffi- e tigation con , would not the armtha- 
culties? Why should he waste his energies, as he is in- | naturally say,“ T will remove all excess of game and CAN FARMING CONTINUE PROFITABLE 
vited to do, in delusive efforts to throw on others those | timber Interfering with the proper cultivation of ‘the WITH FREE TRADE PRICES? 

local burthens which justice and policy alike require to | farm, but I will not — the rent by one shilling ; if | No question at the present time is more important to 

be charged on realised property, and to fetter and em- | you or some o — competent party will not engage it all d > have — answered than is that which 
barra ral i er th i is i ön 


possibly borrow cent. : 
— farmer = pense a more rational and a more | will halve the surplus with me, but I shall at least be | world in * can ly of food to this country, At first 
st course, ust be evident to him that such | spared the 8 +9 neglectful cultivation and the | it will appear to admit of ready reply, and to be one of 
schemes are not 3 r designed to make the cul- | risk of exhausted lan very simple calculation on data which every practical 
tivation of the soil a safe waa profitable business, but I put it to 2 an — te landowner e eee man can afford; for nothing seems plainer than if 
geniy r sustain rents; 2 kag eg = have no interest | ations such a above be not those ae in mys e great | farming with past prices has admitted of only a fair 
mes, except in so far e is incumbered majority of case should guide e and influence them in | proportion of profit; in future, with the reduction that 
i a —— and all he —— fily ak ot me Legislature | forming and r at a ices sent time. has lately been made in the value of all its it 
would be the power to wg mine his leas Of course in the | cane 5 of those farms hand the e be! cannot but be productive of loss; for whilst the pr 
r us for illustration sake suppose dach a power the teen eh —. inconvenient location, or the of all its returns have fallen a fifth, certain of the 
and sketch the probable course of a tenant | exhausted co — the land, preclided profitable charges on land continue the same. And, with this 
—— it, and realising his — — What would be | cultivation, or inv such an outlay of capita view of the future, too many are contented to 
his position ? His capital, originally 2 > would have | tenant could be stend to undertake, the owner pe not ow much farmers, with all 
° become reduced, it may be, to 2000“ unpleasant | take the outlay on himsel f; or the want te mpetition benefited by the reduction in their expenditure 
thing, no doubt ; but if it had been invested i in mining | for such il diti y bring down | will result from a cheaper supply of food. But Tam 
industry, or in railways, instead of on the land, it would | the r not going to speak in favour of this sudden drop to free 
reduced still more, and what is neighbour’s There are many tenant farmers who, perfectly aware trade ; I cannot do so, for this has deprived every 
fare we cannot much complain of. Well, he has bis how much may be done to increase the returns from farmer of a fifth of capital, and must ruin a nume» 
in his pocket, and being solely conversant with | land, and to render its cultivation more safe and more rous class who asali able to gjera 2 2 
farming business, looks out about him for that deside- profitable, feel excessively angry that ews d should be — a — tion — their m work their 
ratum “ farm at a fair rent.” He determines not to compelled, in self-protection, to impro eir system, farms. Nor A rx to — a p the fot ea 
abroad, from natural distrust, and from learning vas when, by excluding foreign produce, or e highly taxing cultivation of “Tate as if rs ee 
would have, if not to purchase his farm, at least to it, they might have been preserved from such a dis- a. — at once to enlarge their 
supply it at his own cos t with the Berma and oiher |a agreeable necessity; and there are some whe really inish the cost of produ i i 
ming. For sim cele in their hearts that such leon ane on is at no one’s an the future . — prices by Sonat that a reduction  =3 
reasons, and from ‘the — Sos 'a good home — expense. If. interest * ae e our to the most of wages, and therefore a diminished cost of prot j 
and dread of unlimited poor-rates, he shrinks perhaps | obvious truths 5 and it is in = Journal that the | will be certain to result from a cheaper supply of food to 1 
from — — pn to Ireland; and having principle of freedom of i —— an be discussed. the labourers, although t this reduction in many ways acts ) 
i 


F 


and inquiries more — of The community has * — „ matter, and reacts in lowering the farmers’ <page 
Dee ge of a good homestead with abundant | once and forever ; and amongst thinking men the prin- | there can be no doubt that in both these ways they will 
tion 


accommodation, lands properly divided and fenced, ciple is considered no more open to dispute than the = largely benefited ; but I hope to lessen the alarm #8 
easy communications with good markets, it is not un- law of gravitation, or any other established fact. No the future pr rofitable cultivation of the land s 
— to suppose he would finally decide on ae doubt political expediency may sometimes justify a — are feeling, by tani a that a saan 
old land. When he bega to calculate | departure from the soundest principle in the allocation | been carried on pro this country at present 
t etek of land his diminished capital aout do for, | of taxes, or for the poas e of 1 or of foster- | prices, and, too, without the ‘advantages | that 80 years’ 
he varie 1 with some surprise perhaps, that the de- ing, some or liar branch of industry; but ; 
o stock and other produce which so reduced | whatever additional price the . is made in its aid. A reference to Arthur r Young’s farming tour and 
. pier admit of his stocking and paying for | consequence to pay for the favoured commodity, must | statistics, taken 80 years ago, shows that at that time the 
the dressings and implements of a farm pretty much the | surely be put down in the same category with “interest | English farmers were cultiva -a their farms upon } 
size of the one he threw up; that in fact the deprecia- | on national debt,” “cost of our armaments by land and — of prices that were even wer than the mm 
tion of his capital was more nominal than real, and he | sea,“ and I must leave to your Protectionist corre- gl ay anticipation of the future i in us to er- 
would probably ine to see if he could arrange | spondents to make out the claim of our “p „ | pect. same time there was but very little 
with the landowner for retaking the old farm at a “fair | or I should rather say of our “ poor wners,“ to a | difference in the scale eir charges, f Fe he 
rent.” He sits down to calculate the free competition distinguished per m nae list of our national burdens— oag. ai were paying their labourers appears to 
value of the expected produce, and sighs at the idea of it is a task I shrin bout what they are now settling down to, anù 
40s. for Wheat and 5d. per lb. for meat; he then pro- Is not eee evar in order to raise prices ? — — ent of rent, rates, and tithe were within 
is to estimate the expenses of cultivation, and some- | and I would 1 Ni Ke gies imagines that. prices 50 per cent., or 15s. or 168. i 
what brightens up when he reflects that he will sow | are increased a s cost, to try the question by a id. From this will be seen 
cheap seed, that tithes are payable in grain, that his | simple — of 3 SE one million quarters of Wheat | in future may expect at least to {realise the 
horses all the live stock will eat cheap provender, | at 40s. will feed one million of people, how many people | 80 years ago for their pi i 
that if money wages be not reduced, his labourers being | will mee ame gaan at 60s. feed? What answer does | increased only to the 
better fed will be abler workmen, more zealous, and less | he get; are one-third to go without, are all to be put on | since been made to their ra Ps + 5 
ziven to pilfer 3 it will cost less to maintain the | short 1 —— are wt to pay one million more for | which amounts to only about a tenth of the whole cot? 
pauper, and that all shop goods will be unusually low | the same amount of food ? He repudiates the idea of | corn at present pri W at this 
riced. He will begin to ses clearer the importance, in | short allowanee—it would lessen the demand for agri- in no better 
production and Las to looking more to the cost of pi ; butif t people have to pay one years ago? That 
duetion b to the — of and that million more for their food, have they not just so much | proved? Had they 
the expenses reduced, an r of all | less to lay out in clothing, and in other articles of ne- cultivate their land 
produce con by his own m family and pa sok cessity and comfort! Do not the producers of clothing, | stack they now raise? And did jd abi 
a matter of no concern to one way or che &c., lose exactly so much as the een of food have | return? It would be for the 
ed? If it be said the produc fi ay j ld on a red 
el s on som else, mend the matter !| to give them 
a 


— —— — uninf jon 

| sophistry get ri difficulty, we merely remove it| what was the comparative | chat dale 

one further back; and if we say “protect every | the farmers, a and the ill state of their farms at that W f 
unmeanin — ion | their inferior stock, and 57 bes 


mar 


i d price tural — rges ar 
of everything for which such — <i be 2x- position of the farmers, and the 
changed was increased in an equal degree! have received in the cultivation of their 

der Protection, — Sa to ae of value, must obviously the improvements which have been made in 
in a j to the protected in- |For i alterations in 

nit 


i 

tection rent or the y | material of the ploughs, and 

si an acre, and that hi er rent | generally, pay more for the protected produce than = 8 and carts, 

Ssd, him to the 8 is calculations have | ot y wou ; e — s erent 
. cone that under free compe- | question we should ask ourselves is simply this—is ve xr 


to give 20s. The landowner | there any ground on which we can claim the concession | the work k that former! required four 
d À to — 1 don't like to reduce rent, of any such power and privilege? There*is but one atak every iy m has 
yoo oe oe acre is the full | that I am aware of, and that is in respect of local | tion; an vibe . se implements er a 
2 ‘teem sts o tey, and capital J a fair return | burthens. The cos pur S ard in to fac 
tails gone into finds inj fom en imagine | thrown entirely on. real d property, and reasons of | the age. of 255 soil, the labour on the tami 
and 8 3 3 praia of | state policy impera tively regel it should be so. Much, been very considerably redu ' 


t of live stock kept, 


pte however, of the ou ition of their 
ied wot nt at by ts ned or put dova | and and just that the epre Ba ee is Seek: ote — right from the better condition 2 


52—1849.] 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


ne more as use and efficient | alm 


unt of corn returned 
nains at least one-third, 
tock has been so imp roved, 
of food, and at a much e 


lications of manures, the am 
h 


per 
ntrasting with the present the ruder 
get of his times, but will also be 

uctive, for they show that many improvements, 
commenced in * Joon have yet scarcely been developed, 
* are not 3 


A in “its recent-comments on my asser- 


id. proved, by 1 1 experiments, 
e 


tea and — ar 


re. | cost 
ung’ s works will be not 5 


gl 


ost universal defects in the practice of agriculture, such ah 
— could be attained ios additional ex pense or 
ditional — — — 1 * To direct 
in this 
wild me — chemen, I took briefly in re 
sod pee supposed t undul 


— e 

e particula as it lessen 
— 1 The price of Barle — ulated not b 1 
home Seale’, but Kr supply, to gain from its repeal | 
more than the + n advantages, the 3 must first e 
the — malt for 3 ng purposes has bee 


farmer thou 
in 


presses — — — opinion ce 
x Wo uld be a 


UA 
s an evil and a bore; “the frugal omen 
wife —— the duty which enhances to her the co — — 
n, and ber 1 
which 3 the 
efe 


mutters a ta blessing on the tax 


thin ng — 
of bie . and his P, 


0 

nquire “into the effect on agriculture of 
the duty on converting Barley into ma alt, 72 E 
dispute my remark 
as food for 


does 

alt and Barley 

r cattle, and in — the whole pith c of bis letter, com. 
this: “ar f the tax ‘would 


ouble the consumption of malt; the — ond for Barle; by and 
consequently doubled, its 2 would go up inata K A an 


Eco 
tion that “ 123 s by troe- trade have lost a fifth of 


3 
oo 


nd can, w 


see little cause to doubt the abilit; 
with the he producer, and 
ring on farming at the prese: 


a 
the fa 
ca a and in 1849, will be t admitted 
have eos on sed by free-trade, and to have been the 


he may b. replaci 5 


— cost 


‘Mon € Correspondence. 
Contrivance to Clear Drai My drainer 
vin At f N 1 Md which 
on arable land, b 


‘oth uch; ns a 
2 oa the tne all pen of water, pee of course 
n the 8 


p was very y vexatious 
Bp the plan I — adopt 
who asked how 
e is a wooden egg 
that is pushed up. 
egg-shaped p woo 
; it is pulled t 
obst: 


kind of G 


ae 
eral —.— ‘which 
valuable Journ — — 


frankly and 
Aminin the dificulties in which the farmer bern 
dicate 


has bee 

I have endea — ee 
ip dispansionately vi — amount 
nerea g fth the uce 
carried to market, — g that by attention to a few obvious and 


I ate admit ‘that I 
chat 


pan ces to . 
d BE 


d for 
Wheat and Oats, and the 
——_ hed, they also so would bring a better price. Few remark 
magine, are requisite to dissipate into air all these bright pros- 
— ots. „The 5 millions to be taken off! malt must be levied on 
re progress in reducing iaei ara the in creased price of 
Barley 3 — other grain, which is to farmer's gain by 
this vement, must of course be paid w — = consume 
such pera ser — in sy th or converted — mal food, 80 
thei ir loss is p J — — ure of th 


agricultural eyes, “that the 

price of agricultral} rode is regulated, * byb home demand, 

but by foreign supply, as that s mes ‘trom un- 

— lands, ang is only limited by the “inadequacy of our 
rate 8 


* — and of ation, 
—— it e 4 go = is n e cause of 


a — a raw material, its cost enters — — ‘inte 


— 33 old ha 


be of between 


ig 3 pos up a 

d, 

a little wisp of ling to the weber’ end of the | te 
through, 

en | too high—and not turn — 


D | tenant, to ma ; 
s prising one, for the sake of a few — 


rum 


ot th 
— present "low talon * 2 1 2 trade Bogs | effectually 
ted return to high n increased 
woul 


recarious A hime at 
— pin must come fen far other, sources ; 
he can never 15 safe a 
prices much beyond foreign av erages; agricu 
the cost of the rT of ‘ee industry, and our —— — 
well-being and pre-emine ependanton her 
continued capacity to withstand by — the competition 
of to admit of our rivos — 
for food being r raised — much be the p 
markets of the world rtain amou 
and must viet! enjoy-—our market is — at home, and our 
80 cation unrivalled ; our competitors 


mean 
from 


i port more or 1 remote, 
whence it sopu bear the risks and th of at porta- 
t miles. Let us limit our demands to what 
is just -m consistent with the general interest, and we must 
—— We entitled to a — dex — about 5 per cent. 
— — for ss of public bu locally charged. 

Let 3 -tia 1 se * — 12 ib and — interest unites with 
n demanding such je — measures as will —.— 

lation one the improvement of land, and en 


tate t the la 
to the occupier m e invests or or 


oce — for the property 
eatesinit. B 
valuable as Fangs may be, divert us for one instant from 
— — — — eer study and business o 
4 gg 


— the $ ased 
—— If a fg — re this can be done, 
— F — — pe and — Én forward in 

ul information and practical 


ania 2 
— s . 
let him 


roa 
— breaking of 


supply of these grains — here it = these n 


i wed, on a calculation 
Wheat, and he fixes g he 


their tenantry a fair start; let them 
now, bys giving ry — rds 
into an — state ; let them 


liberal, open eae 


e room for a more aeration sy enter- 


pa 
increase, an 

naman meg T but to the poor toa an — 

loss m = vould in in many cases be everlasting 


Siate of Pa arish Roads.—At a time when £o 


reep 
esent ee is management * our 
are, of course, exceptions, 
t these are — = far Taaka irst one sees the 


on 
veyors appearing ag to fatgotitint 


i To expect success with such 


were mi 1 
guide the wandering stranger, os knows nothing of 


the o 


its p form. 
the es, 

cutting frequent ou th 
has only 


ngs 
ing, the ditches, openings u “under 
pathways, are = choked u —.— 
note 


wou t 


them 


— 
E 
s 


— gon and cart cout 

but for the jogs, jounces, and staunces of 

man cross- the — best friends. 

J. J. Mechi, * hali, K 1 Esser, Dec. 15. 
The Farmers’ Taxes.— who 


4 


were 
rest ol e oni ; but as 
able to point out a 
their r argument falls to the 


debt borro 
as the price at 
rth 


erously promising to 


the gen 
he is at present, 1 ri B. J. the prs al 
eee ee ‘Whent, 
ern 


the rate of interest 
nd 


tempt the correction 
errors. 
Farm Capital.—As an amateur, 
self pie ae pc puzzi 
„What is tural truth.” 


engage to cultiv uy 

wages, keep 8 and — 

d yet employ no capital in t 

rainy day, Yeates Wak cach a snob 
folly that it will require no len articles 


But look at the balance sheets as revealed by the Court 


| rated 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


e it is qui 


d from farm-yard manure, therefor 
unnecessary to have mats rr -aee large to cover she 


of krup e great firms who stopped in 

the ie of 1847. Nearly, if an all, had been trading | whole of an arable farm. J. C. H., Croft Farm, Bridg- 
with insufficient capital, and had been living up to what | north. 

they made, hence degrading | Scotch —Your correspondent “X. Y. Z.” 


und, | mistakes in — A gt — Iam 
nce 


m the advocate 5 far 
other My 


The question I ans were capital per carts, in prefere 
is to cultivate a farm o principles! only wish is to guar 8 hose nage on the 
neither on those r. M his bitterest oppo- subject may be superficial, from running away with the 
ents, for neither seem to pay echi is idea that there e is anything ee valuable or new 
n 


s wbic 


agriculture, nor can pect, ; 
er present ra aren that they will lend much | shire carts, Cumberland carts, é t-i mewh 
of their money to those who are so engag ese two | amusing to those who know the tory of cart making, 
parties appear t ‘fact ons — the e of agricul- | and who have traced the ene “of it from the rudest 
ture. As in all other things, the in medio, &c. t rms, which now only find pes in some of the 
the farmer’s motto who will ran ‘safely Lang 5 counties of Ireland, or th backward continental 
dangerous channel Taking, tes, to hear graean expatiating upon some ne 


in a state of old-fashioned. pro Ss Wie DN 
uire to . ven ange 
I 


at 
ae 


e year, a 
1 ho 


Attempts have frequently been ma ade 


l 
blish hu 
> 


actions 
obviously binge, Me 
e ing such or A thin 
of their ‘artis Lie eri. that it wil be money in 
poe! 0 80: Kia y 
and stupid fo Ay not going to 
5 feet deep, unless 


8 


Mr. 
* not to ped that as yet there had been n 
high farming system, but that he some. Ma 
we ask him throug ae columns, „Se r, when, ir 
Wheat to sell at 10% d, a rl 


E 


„ per Ib. ; giving, a 
is reasons for Mug that produce would rango «o 
high, 123 such statemen ly 


hing Id-fashi aay 1 
g we old- TER 8 
understand and, therefore 


uctory p: 


greatly in 
and by . * 3 the plants “that g n 


93 
Profi i 
rsons 3 publiely and writing in . 5 


is — charged 111. 
t usual 


ed 
other eee 
de of cons struction 


abandoned —— mething m 
with you r permission, lay a efore ng readers some 
facts which will show the danger of comparing 
t hiogs 5 — are — — — then show how unfair 
is to assume, bec built for 
l, that it is a cheaper cart hi those me ys 
ectable houses in England, who make qui 
different article for about 27. more. The 5 —— 
art d ibe weeks ago, 
4 feet 3 inches 
neh 8 and the body 
is said to eee without heaping 214 cubic ‘swe 
ince I wrote to you last, I have seen hese 
Cum berland — 5 and find that the body 3 with. 
ut heaping, just 19 11 -= feet. I have also weighed 
the axle, and found it to be 47 lbs. The price of this 
i hould fours that the cart has straight 


Pet ere 


Se 


5 
—. 


will 


eb 

Improved Scotch farm e * 

inches long, and 3 feet 6 inches 

15 inches tai, with w 
f 


31 feet ; wheels 4 feet 


worth m 


The bot 
2 2 the load is is kept low down on 
oiste 


e, not 


1 


e again, 
y of the cart 

ight agricultural cart, with a s 

| smaller b — tay holding 24 pes sons heap This 

oards, and removable 


ead 
with 2% i i fyres this cart h 


cubic yard. The body in this 
axle, and is only 24 feet from the 
n a great con — for fi 
with E a 4 feet 6 diamete 

This cart ti 


cn with one exception, they all have larger wheels, | I 


ui ask 


ow, | based on ‘add s stätistios, and which 
sho 


ow | th 


a 
ing-boa aeu 6 inches 32 ; pie 


amply — the 
what | h 


s eg fraternity. I stro 


- | commodi 


per cent. more cubical capacity ; and | wi 


e that the Cumberland cart at 127. will 


turer much better than his own amas yer conn 
carts at even 15“. or 16/. I now lea your corre 
spondents to judge which kind of cart they would 
admitting, howev „that in mountainous distri ae 
Cumberland a light small ay be very — 
untry; still i ah ech with these condi -~ 


of very great im 
prove. 

T be very much 

SEn > ands of more e makers. very mi : 99 A 

mberland One-horse Carts.—It is vals curious tg 


e how easy it seems for your co 

carts, to a plain tale dow I said hie saad 
and 7 cwt., capable of carrying a ton of coals 

lime, were running up e mo s and fi nal 

of Cumberland, and that, as this ** a Cae load f 

a horse, it was worth w or farm mle 
ether it was not desirable for them Mti g 5 up or 


modify their t ton weight waggons, andjeven their 9 ewt 
ch” an rize” ¢ I hese Cumberland 
carts were found to do their work well, to last as long ag 
a heavier vehicle, and, once introduced i in agiven place, 
were not readily abandoned. From asi imple ee 
in ques d th at, from the 0 
weight of. the carts used, even on the borders and im 
cotland, not to speak of the ton weight e of the 
south, there were at this moment 112,000 tons w weight 
of cart be ey dragged about the voile and farms of 
this to no profitable purpose whatever ; in 
other pei that 200,000 horses were spending their 


S 
8 8 


las 5 were striving t 
ugh of monopolist logic wherein it lies 


or 
was not pre 
from e. ends ‘of “the alphabet (A. B. 0. Aid X. V. Z.) 
irrelevant 


given, one would thin 
the Cumberland carts was fairly dr 
cart proprietor who had more ho: faa t an 270 


the one, 
some 


se never seen any b is 

re the admiration re eve —— en On ine 115 beet j 
while running in Ham sy they are 
down by one whom 
a Scotch ‘cart in his “life.” 
unbecom 


strongly recommend pare makers 
to try whether “ the Cumberland cart ” 

toc 
ton, and to weigh <p 
which „ X. Y. Z.“ 


cockney cage a 


May, I — 


and the gingerbread produetions familiar to m 
the name of the Cumberland carts 
the Cumberland cart 


e under 
q mn shoul 2 1 * i 
ave 
nd of mine without either back-band o oF “beliy. — 


10 e g 


ave e made their Cumber 
to tip or tilt ; this vil, no me add somew 
m hat heavier 


> 


al- Eka iana AAA bing are 
chains for 


4 


an ordinary Now the carts 
are all provided with well made 

back-band and belly-band, the "n of 
d is ay on without extra charge, an 


horse. 


Thad 


* The trial bet 


Perhaps we are pea too much discussion =o 
— d one-horse carts carrying ; 


| — details 


— 1 —.— much more 0 di did your spa e or my 
time admit of it, which would show seal clearly to every 
one very oe are the kinds ich your 
ts have been comparing Cumber- 

land cart and the Scotch cart of “ X, Y. Z ;” but will 
what I said in m letter, | 


— the the waggon 


EE ne 


52—1849.] THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 829 


simple an affair, yet, if 2cwt. or even l cwt. can bestruck | Aware, however, that this mode of operation was unnatural, large white Belgian Carrot, and Mangold Warrel, All did well 


d could not last for d desirous, if ib 
off the load of every farm horse in the country, this is an. ever, an dus, if possible, to set excepting the Barley, 
an object 3 of ev 3 9 of tie Gazette. 2 FV. R. ——— ele eee 1 — * Belfast, na „ the cont G — 
Hand Drill. —It is generally admitted that a shilling | 3 — of a Flax mill at 1 — — 5 — the | Bethe 8. — — e W 
ved is a 8 hilling 1 but if I can show that in excellent water power, and he succeeded so well, Wana The H 
ing eat 5s. per acre may ily saved, I that before — year 8388 round the mill was at work, an Hayt l st leapsa! > g Boyton, near 
i ese free trade times I shall i Fa pe meri hag nda 5 izhb 
— — Me brother farmers, Some dime > ary dg —— — and reapesta mite 2 time, Sir Richard, | Of a 1 heat grown on a neighbour's land, 
8 y ; ea y mited, gp napas the plan of | and which was considered a i e in that 
municated for the benefit of “An Enquirer „A plan furnishing the seed to the e large farmers, who ere by this time t : . Mira mys 
3 1 r í ata eto make their own purchases, and he d evoted Ai — r part of Wiltshire, he variety was 
and description of a small reu drill, which I made e 4 ‘s,” i i 4 
„ o helping forward in the world young men, of w T po- Spalding’s,” and it was sown in Nov, 1848 by the 
several years ago, and have found to answer peten posed to make good far of his Rev. Mason erson, of Sherrington, . chal E i 
for sowing Swedes, Moga urzel, Carrot ust mention that Sir Richard and his ‘eds have a school h a it earth. * The 
Parsnips either dry or steeped. With a little e for boys and giris (which they open alike to Protestants pad ampia page n much poy aa 
P ad ie . and Catholics), and which they themselves 9 had ample space to branch, and March they began 


1 have applied it to another purpose, and found it superintend, From amongst the most intelligent and to throw out their stems, ach plant had 32 stems. 
beam 8 


answer equally well. I had the drill fixed on the = er boys of this school Sir Ri mer d i 
lough, and worked bya light wheel wi -| the habit of selecting one, of whom he makes a stew ard Se 
of a p ‘ 1B z y 8 ne ith = uni in a small way, giving him a limited trust at — — — Notices to ry onden 
ersal ton the axle, and hav t h hi p ts. 
5 ape: 5 ave put in with it this | his own immediate superintendence. When this state of pro. | ANSWER ro “East ANGLIA An A.M, and Small Farmer 
autumn about 30 acres of Wheat on land that has pro- | bation has been satisfactorily passed, and the youth has shown | treats 20 ewes he — on 16 acres of land as follows + 
duced Fouen — Wurzel, Swedes „and some he is fu the y, honest, and industrious, and ag accountant, 12 acres of are into four seasons, and 
fallow. It es up very weil and strong in drills e i further intrusted to — 5 Ains bai — t a salary, —— — is 8 isto four equal parts. One season, 
3 inches aa — with the exception of one furrow on pereen. If tbere is no house 1 * 3. sit Richard seta Swedish Turnips one Hd idem + ey — — 
the crown of the ridge, in which the seed is omitted, | his you ng protegé to van to build one, ndin 455 ateriais ewes are now eating off the white urnips in vee 
„ gh the ed, then 
any drills on each ridge as furrows, 1 and assistance 22 aiy the green rounds, inst the Swedish Turnips, of which a part 
in lf vod ridges. whic lete ith requires s much t me it a respectable habit tution, npe in ail are stacked at home, in case it should be ecessary to 
pl 8 ges, uy —4 With | cases he insi K n the decency, re Ly * Aan ess move the ewes trom land in ba 
A Y, lep, — —— * 3 whet 
five bouts of the plough, . are nine the house, and tbat it t should not be suffered nany| last till the end of Ma 
drills on ridge. antages 77 this me I e particulars, Well, the * * south Tar hee a fe — 9, is © ee s fouluwe : 1, ‘white Turnips — Whee 
s f rs Sir Richard's t e is thrifty he sav e tops as ur the bs: t 
ider ea lst, a saving of, at l st 5s. per acre, as por tion of his s ary, and is at length enabled nA —— 8 white Turnips, 2, Rye, sown thick, the — yA 1 — 
the loug plete as it goes, pn the labour | own account as a tenant, He is at first assisted by small loans, | manure; to be followed by Swedish Tu 3, Trifolium 
is not perceptibly increased ; 2d, t heat comes id out in judicious improvements, which yield hi ne m; to be followed by Swedish Turnips. 4, 
Sir wider ‘drills Yh eg mode of drilling ; great return upon the abundant bog svil; he extends his opera- to be followed by green round Turnipe. It is calculated 
h ficiently f. ? | tions, takes a larger farm; aud, being at length thrown | that w 32323 quantity of hay and 
3d, they are su ciently far apart to allow of hoeing ; | upon his own 1 sow 1 nabii to support his family in| and Peas when the Turnips are finished, the above will more 
and, 4th, the seed being deposited at an uniform depth, | comfort, to pay his rent, e way tor another recipient than ‘keep | 7 ewes till the lambs are fit for the butcher. It 
and perfectly covered, all waste and the expense of a be his landlo rd’s frre Benen — sity. So well have the 1 — three crops on the faliow, which 
bo ff bi : 2 philanthropic schemes of sir Richard O'Donnell (of which the may not succeed if the season be unfavourable. Any specific 


y to keep off birds is avoided. Ploughing in is the | above are oul specimens) maana in his own neighbourhood | _ question will be readily answered, 
: h 


n p ” y 
most approved meth putting in Wheat in this (for I regret to say that his means are more limited than his | Booxs : Sub. The c 2 book on Farming is probably Mr. 
neighbourhood, except on Clover leas, but when sown | Will), that he bas raised very many of his tenantry to a state Jackson's, published in Ds series of educational! works by 
hwoniicast it is dent to Avoid having too much seed | Which might vie with the better class of farmers in this Messrs s, Chambera, of Edi b. 

- } country; and I have seen farm-houses on his estates which, | CATTLE Snows : Cogan a Co. ‘bey are held at least one and 
on the ridge, added to which is the ee of | for cleanliness, order, and comfort, could be surpassed no. Often four or five in eve y county in England, during the winter 
g the crop effectually. The expense of a | where, and which evidently bespoke the Prosperous farmer; | Season. Shaw's Farmer’s Almanac con the names of 
drill co mplete te, and ready to attach to any plo ugh “at five and yet this has been effected moe i the — — 2 tation of their secretaries, and you had better apply to them individu. 

N cal 305. AL k Tucker, W. English or Scotch capital or industr the innate | ally, as we e have 'no information as'to dates. 
k min y * fre uckett, armley, nea untry, as to 5 and capital, | Cows: A s cannot the cause for 
Bristol. If, therefore (as I maintain), Lord Lucan, instead of creating a | the fact — mention. The numerous complaints we hear of 
English Forming in Toland. =I thank you f for setting desert and Pope ing it . and directing all his exertions and . ature from various parts of the country points tè 
oa right with oke ôf 1 1 vast mean the e improvement ot the soil of . age ug ospheric cause, i tir eere eeg a change, not only of 
1 vao yo esp any | had first perdi mp'e 4 rr improve the farmers, to a the individual bull, but the breed to which he ja 
ign, E or otherw eves my part a ragi proper niet aon ag | but to mate them the 6 ot ‘the short-born will be a goud —— oss, Your to em- 
the value of land in Ireland. - Depreciation there — 1 — em isha his own hands, and — 1 TIR is desirable, ee G. S H F. The 

. sendiug them 5 go abroad or pon ai h complaint you ma enera e fear the 

undoubiedly is, but Irishmen must look at home, and | and instructed them n she art o ulture where it was 48 beyond our “ken. Iti more frequen tly the fault of the 


ae over the water, for the cause, apy cannot deny | required, and by mean of judicio 5 louse enforced the prospi . 


— ~ — 2 pers. Batis committed, and in certain parts giret ho hit devoted — energy 8 to insuring a | CXCLuPEDIA oF AGRICULTURE e e = — We must be 
reland are e market for the produce o tenants, and so given them peg of answering here m nous questions 
one stated y age à, disgraceful 5 the fidence in their own exertions, he might ad perhaps found | On a work with which the Editurship of this Paper can have 
Pepe enen to the best feelings of our | the task at first more difficult and arduous than sweeping them nothing todo. This column is d 
nature. What is th nd; the transfer of | off the ground, and commenci operations upon a clear | With those questions on farming Ag. Gazette is 10. 
h to more inte ig mpetent tenants h Sir e e bi . ts ha 3 as in chewed rs 1 — — of it to answer 
z ir ar onnell’s experience a ws they must have done, e su t 
been regarded by the former wretched and incapable | his labours would ‘thenceforth sg nile sd letters addressed. to the 5 If any one wants infor- 
i deadly wrongs er <r epee by the and h — would not now have to . no capitalist will — sma — saja of any werk adv: nm 
ion, even u e of those o have | come a ke } is eat Tak ; and, I ma; add, that in the co, , 30t quire pu 
taken land 5 ; 0 meantime not one labourer the lesa w 7 planation we give the following last replies: It is furnished to 
over eads. Observe, these struggles i bseribers i h 
ime mainly ama? , 1a 00 his 1 whilst on the o Ben. — the labourers so| subs 5 only, f. e., a8 we have lately understood, to thos 
8 ves; common sense wou employed would have been — under the a af = only who put their names down in the books of one or other 
8 anticipate a better feeling for a stranger, and immediate superintendence of oe Brow ployer, and n of Messrs. E 8 agen j parts as 
t stranger a Saxon. Yet isit made matter of serious | the more relaxing vigilance of a ae r 
A : e er A few 47 do 1 will the w. work, and these wil be issued at monthly intervala 
complaint against the latter, that in giving utterance to 4 few words more ave done. 1% wil not Disease in Youna Pics: Carolus. The yon. 
opinions which he believes to be based on truth, he is duibble about this or "that district being quiet or other- | mention do not appear sufficient to produce the disease in 
in e value of Iri Irish Wise, — whether the animosity of competitors for land | question. As a remedy we recommend a seton in the chest, 
22 t i ‘ ves, a prev. give the sow more 


ing: property, 
am r 0 0 
damaged it? The Irish themselves, in their insan n for me that the spirit is 2 akam 


squabbles to retain possession of it. In stating the in the north or the south, ought, in —— ruden or dropsy of the heart-bag. W. C. S. 
fact, I am neither the author nor the abettor of to be ainst. Neither shall I 1 ‘defend the rick 8 1 — — me — | 
the mis ence arising. After all, why look to burnings and other : ies, o$- Aag partly in a smail orchard and partly’ by head feeding with 
England for cultivators of ine soil? My advi ce to They arise, not from jealousy against their employers, pollard, Barley-meal, &c., have lately taken to laying eggs 
Irish proprietors is, keep your own auae at 13 but from an ignorant misconception of the natu with dark coloured instead of yellow yolks as heretofore. 
instead of sending them abroad ; refi rm, but do set 8 for 1 rievance—low ite Whether „JFC 
expatriate m. Judiciously treated, terre will repay in Eng r Ireland: such procee os ha green colour; but the taste is not at 8 
your kind exertions to improve their awkwardness an page io only tend to aggravate the evil ides: profess! which ducks’ eggs commonly have, except that they 
subdue their prejudices. Do this, and you will need 5 to remedy. S. Taylor, » Barnwood, Gloucestershire. — — porn y can oot the — — chess. 
foreign aid in tlie g oodly work. ger: at the ames | P as a ace mentioned, or suggest a remedy, it will much oblige. 
rom a late number of the Times. Societies, Tt Journa uf the Agriculvaral Le- to be Pub uini liber 
repays the trouble of repri ROYAL AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY OF ENGLAND. iae amor iaria doen te Gan, eas meet your 
above expressed, that f relorm ought to begin at home. Boc. Curtivation.—The Right Hon. W. G. wish. Professor Low's work On Landed Property “is a fo 
My Lord Lucan d this out, or I am mistaken. Patni MP, Secretary to the Treasury, itted, rowan eo A says, “I — nauufacture of 
sin Aow years ago,” pose the writer, “ I am informed that as one of the Governors of the Society, striking ee ee — — Correspondent 
4s miserablo a state as ute men the county o grat tad mens of the results of modern elem for the in. pa finean, aaan — 
his eteo t00, like Lord Lucan, had a pauper * aud of the ibers during the period meir re- how Fagg moa 4 
estates were, in addition, heavily mortgaged. But he did | cent general meeting. These —- consisted dung 
not Lucan, that the only resource for producing d wn this — on re- should be much 
a better state of things was the expulsion of his tenantry, and the rý Lieut.. Gene i 3 
Fesuming the occupation of his lands, in — to put them in claimed bog lan nd, e en rty = os 2 8 
high condition, and then wait with folded arms unti! capitalists Robert Arbuthnot, near Holly ymount, co. Ma ayo, — 3 goes 1 
should come e and bid id for farme. Sir Richard, I say, preferred | and received — ‘sume are pigs ! 10 75 
of another nature. that of endeavouring Ha fi te —— ion of the Societ them with 
to improve his te , and Mr. Hayter, for ys. Barley, 
and guide them * stand alone, and cate | kindly addressed to Six Robert Arbuthnot such — r 


Only feel an interest in the improvement of their f but connected with the reclamation of the bo the cul. 
. that they had the means within their own “power of | tivation of these roots, as might prove — in in ex- 


i 
i 


g their condition, so that they in their turn might i in- | d 
2 others — a è improvement of the land, with Plaini ~ lage — of the case, and had obtained h bones 
secondary object, but one which he felt from uire enuy 
on rg would go along with the improvement of the le. 1, The situation and quantity of the land, and what fall there frequently 
— © of the chief means which Sir Richard O'Donnell employed was to the river after it was lowered ? The situation of the Fina red 
a griculture on was the en- land is —5 but has a 3 descent to the river Robe, which, low E I 
ement of the growth of Flax. A ears ago he per- though not yet lowered so up, still by sinking a deep drain 1 pons * 
aioe the Agriou of Belfast to send a lecturer to there was —— faik “the soil is of a moorish quality, 2. of 
oo of Newport, and endeavour to interest his farmers in 2. The nature of the soil, that is, the depth of bog before coming Dr, an . 
the Produce, and to give them some simple instruction as to to the limestone gravel ? The soil moorish, but at a depth of a rou explained by plain r 
3 method of cultivation, Sir Richard himself then purchased | foot to a foot and a half marl — 8 —— o appeared. beer Fann : Walt V. We would not ature to 
tenantry ata pri —— hi h Which he distributed amongst his The main drains w S g e , —— Yes restricting us 4 
The first Sani shoal ea — — Abie san Sipe aa 8 ue * 1 peera Meot apart reclaiming e bog; namely, the Turnips Sma * — us to purchase at oniy . = en 
ing spirits; Irish-like, fe mast be confessed: that depth und plan of the the Sr a athe trenching or other| ton. You will not 1 nt A pore lias — a : 
mien tte) no tke “ag 15 * 8 3 . — — a for reclining the — — rt and suine: young stock in the fields ; and you will probsuly - 
g able to find a market for the produce, bare chiefly remar. on „ w 
Which threatened to lie upon the hands of the farmers, wh The nature 1 t essing or other ¢ tivation ? The * 3 1 lf could — rie = as Tara. 
Sir Richard, — morna 0f having been led into asnare. | la na, 3 1 5 gaea fee 3 to Tat rr pal O 
c C/ Toots and all weve burnt and te | fates och with as mach probability of prot as aay one 
Price in the Flax-growing districts, and he set i eee again, else ; T — 
‘4st, where he sold his ba j se Turnips, ce. you had better be satistied with 9 in summer, anc 
Price is considered, but at a ee s thape af Feat, vi peg agen and what results? Sown with Swed Linseed and straw feeding y emag Ad tthe latter — . Å 
Which he had p not been able to receive fo for many years before, | Turnips Aberdeen purple and green tops), Qats, Barley, tho straw being the staple o food, you well 3 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, [D 
= JEC, 29, 


economise it by stall feeding ra rather than yard feedin; less 
the stock is very young: but you — try . COVENT GARDEN, Dec, 29. POTA 
beasts, and turn them ont inst Ai fit — summer feeding. Stall- Notwithstanding the severity of the weather the supply of Fs n 
will be advantageous as mdering the — more | gardening produce generally is sufficient for the demand. ag Sr a e Committee report that the market con 
lication, which is the method | house Grapes and Pine-apples are good for the se upp ied boch 22 and Continental, nies 
ibe on Gunes * on which fold- yard manure is liable | berts and Walnuts are abundant, and Chestn sie “AL mand, makes it difficult to clear shi ry Ret which wed 
grea Drain y our r swamp and every other piece | Oranges an „ or Bo uts plentiful, rap. The following are this day’s quotati time to sa 
requiring = age: we can give you that a i I — — Amongst Vegetables, Turnips keo — Peng et — 7 scarce. to 110s, AZ ton; Wisbeach = ations soem 
There is no manure but is 2 don undrained land. Lime > same. Cauliflowers and Broccoli are sufficient > ee — 606. ov to 75s.; Scotch cups, 40s. to ga to 75s,; tg 
will improve the produce in quality as well as quantity; and atoes have not altered since our last obs 8.3 Bhenisk and Belgian do., 40s, t s; F * 
‘may as well experiment in guano. A chaff.- cutter and Lettuce and other salading are plentiful. N 1 to 608 
green food yom will not — ae * pd ag ro 1 their va — K Pie ree ne Seaka ohare anaes HOPS 
er. copper to boil ppearance. Cut Flowers consist of Heaths, Pel Anwar, Dec 
water and m and soup in is necessary— niums, Gardenias, Bignonia venusta, T pif Hes ao Messrs, PATTENDEN 
— you — this, f 1 I pees at < salt in it, over the straw themums, 8 Primulas, — 8 Taon. 2 finn, with but 1 3 eport that the market 
ay c pati ae thes 9 in a heap till s somew at sodden, n FRUITS. and old Hops are in better demand. Ops on offer, Yearlings 
er s A 
Guma Praca i? agin Seem b Se 8s Batia Percha Company, — p. tb, „ to 6s | n ee 12s 
Hore iN Burr's Nose: P B. . 7 to is — sweet, per Ib., 2st 
ä B. Use a IE f round iron, made Pears, per dor, 2 , 28 to K a | alate, p i n 18 3 ihe ax xt ia oR 75 -rhe supply of En apia Wheat by lang 
Hostes Cow-rsepixc: Mr Kinlock may probably see an Apples, take 5 mali» 168 to oe millors atthe ext 3 
> n,p. bsh., al to 4s | Fibers, er 100 lbs. fo reme rates 7 this day w ared by the 
aka ae ween craps tnt ats |Log IASS No at ptt oda | he gaaon aon ug ogy alg e ga 
— — Por the supply of how many acres of Oran x p. beh., 128 to quotations are barel malting, is a heavy sale, an 
“pater mead . ge per doz., 9dto1s6d Kent b Cabs, 60s to 658 p. 100 tbe [ae last week, y ‘supported. —Beans and Peas are’ and owr 
conditione of level favourable, which discharges 37,0000 VEGETABLES Pe | here ie iieri 1 datter, moot a bende in Fe Oa 
ter in the ours [Cal te y A ins the 8 
i : * — to move about three-quarters W Asparagus, ME Pangia, sto to 63 ‘Onions : r sh pe 4885 s 12 dt 4 FRIDAY, DEC, 28.—D A 
. abbages, p. doz., Sh 8 | been fi r of al 
Lanp anp Lasoun: 6. Thank you. Will youl allots, per Ib., 4d to 8d rm, but owing to “fe my id es 
facts, for we really have no room for — — The ius Gault 9 — dor, 5 20 1258 sg dd to 8d ine ed — r eee ee iia bua i 1 ean er 
trations perieneing was ommi that sneh a ge as you are now reens, per doz.. 15 6 470 25 sa 5 r p. Fea 1 to 9d | ¢, aA go: e. 5 ond 8 a 3 limited, suppli 
ae . What we want are the facts Brussels Sprouts, p. hf, sie Endi e Corn and lo rom, d wa ‘ 
„ ] coast,— 
iors sp: de Gata I It is a very diet for milch cows. Baked. p. uf, sieve, 6d to 9d e Mm are, Isto 1 B a slices — . 23 0 0 Wp hela ior aan pe pas 
be good r i o puegs 
8 who gives his a t nagaan: ee — es Patatos, p per 1 5 to to 100s Smen aiaia. ‘por 3 2d Sr r * 
ve Ak — * 4 — — — per e 8 to 3d LIVERPOOL, TUESDAY, Dec 
a of sho. by butter. 5 A eee te quality — n bush., 2s to 3s Watercress, p. 12 bun., 4d to 6d held out of the usual 3 bs. —Our ma to-dag. being 
eof milk improves the quality Fao ái iro ted Bee palo bu datas ata Fennel, per bunch, 2d to 8d was, however, a limited busine 100 Whea thinly attende 
nee you “speak of has been very g eneral ; we have > three Horse Radish, bal. 2 avory, per Punch, 2 to 4 | demand for Oats, and some inquiry for a ee fae 
complaints us of a similar ard pbk P. s to 4 | Thyme, per bunch, 2d to 3d which made very full prices. Little was d * atmea all 
‘would certainly be benefited by the aoa ee e í pas ara, Gacb, 2a s to 38 6d Parsley, p. doz. bun., 38 to 4s | OF Peas. A few parcels of Indian Cor s done in — Beans, 
if there is no crop in the ground, the liquid ma mans pnd | opka per honei, g — Roots, p. ble. is to is | e™me . n were taken at the eg. 
E there da ae amon in te omad, e ieee un nd | Badlahes,p. 19 bu ’8d tols 3d | Marjoram, per bunch, 2d 5 
compost. W. C. S. improve the mud Rect DE * bunches, 1 is to2s | Mint, per bunch, 2d IMPERIAL | WHEAT. (BARLEY 
Ma, Conpx's 1 K. R, Fhe tom ruth will be more influential | ` ac De der ve, 15 50 2 e ee pt ba jem! bos- 
than fromit; and we have therefore taken the Te. 40s 6d 28 ` l 1 
liberty of giving only the latter part of your — 24 40 4 t felig age id 298 Tals 
Seren Da Lane'ctea. Lou SAD peekebly grou pa o | 3 24 0} 29 8 [30 
. too much HAY.—Per Load of 36 T „ 1. % ts. 40 2 1 i 4 F 
a oS ps e Grow Carrots pe Phone ld W 1 — 8 39 4 7 24 1 8 6 30 
feed part and part on the land, and 5 nmel; SMITHFIELD, Dec. 27, rete MEE E 7. pis 623/91 2 oe 
— Silence at this season at least ene next | Prime Meadow Hay 65s to aoe Clove 60s to 80 — 22... .. | 38 9 25 3 16 % 6] a7 SiH 
OE Badania marea an bogie: — . — — New € ‘Glover — p 9 |15 9 22 9] 27 5 
'apart, towards the beginning of March. The whi . „ 6o |se AREN Aggreg. Aver. 39 7 27 * 
— r . The White | New Hay. > 3 3 24 1 5 16 5 23 5 28 6 20 10 
Chariton good . nds J. COOPER, Bees OF EO : 
whether you can grow boilers; and that depends u . reign G ; 
on th UMBERLAND M gn Grain 1 6 1 - 
ee ee een at 4s. 8 1 Meadow Hay 68s to 728 ater. n .. 65sto 75s Fluctuations in the las „ + ys 
IN Cows AND — FÀ oe let rag — 4 — 4 3 as Ep ee ie 1 1 t six weeks’ Corn 
pimento, mdered, T. 3 prepared chalk, — be 3 we; — 8 OE ai — | Str FE 4 30 CES. | oy. 17, Nov. 24. Dc. I f Dre . 8. — 15. Dee 
— ada ves OSHUA BAKER, 
— — 4 — . a dg toa cow, in thick * WHITECHAPEL 27. i * I. j 15 75 an 
second question, — . Wich regard to your | Fine Old Hay .. 63s to 65s Hen 8 Clover Ee reer 4 3 A 
„ t must depend on the cause, | Inferior ditto 50 we oe crete —e| 3 15 os 
we recommend you to consult a 2 surgeon t] Ros Hay To 55 | Infe rior ditto. „ 60 39 4 Si 5 1 + oo “ 
Seep: Reader. Three Shetland cow: V T 38 9 43 * = 4 Bae" 
8, together with | Old Clover 80 os 225 
ap, and hose, and ach about 12 sheep, e ae 38 9 Hed s.. — 1 
want three * permeate ut 12 Basir 25 E: .. eeN 
rather than & snow ( PRICES — Liverpool. | Wakefield. Boston Bi howe” 
Sueper Hasaow:: S S, The annexed are th ä irmingham. 
> e cut } 
referred to at p. 795, col, a ; CURRENT. Dec. 17 Dee. 24 Dee. 18. | Dee. 24. |D 
; 18. e. 24. Dee. 14 3 Dec. 26 Dee. 20, | Dee. 27. 
, ar. | ne, 701s, | qr qr. | qr. | 62 lbs. 62 lbs, 
Hie tn ie rage al Pager a aE HAE š a 3 i 
0 woe 38 to4 3 38 to43 5 8 6 2 5 8 * N 3 . . So 8. 8. 8. 8. . . . 8 d. 6. fl. . 
08 all | — |42—47/42—47/5 10 6 8510 r * sh 4 tesa ae ot 4 A : 15 £ ; 4 — 
K C aie ke ae endl ae = — 40. & 4010 8 
sow the guano till — and then sow 2 or 3 e cag te aa mot Foreign... 4 353288521 4 TO 2 4 oe A&A oe — 45 & 5 25-5 22 
mee gra Potatoes may be put in the drills — mo apea 480 4 GEET Wi . — 4 8 6:34 42-28 ; 
find it —— ra turn the. —.—— W raAenm asr "pas rai man Rye—New ... |20 2 480 lbs, A 
condition tor mixture wi re Foreign... |20 —23 ee: pee — — . ei 2 ar 1 5 
— kasii — the soil, n notwithstanding ! * — Forei l 23 aag — ome oaia k 3 ; 
SMALL FARMS IN IRELAND — S gn 5/.—6//5/.—6/ — — 9 = — — 
8 MALL ENGLISH CAPITALI Barley— — — — — * ii 
varying K 3 having Grinding ose 128-2512825 . qr. qr. * 
CCC 25 at = — 2021020210123 2022 19-23 | 19-2 
Scenes AE arms in wes x — |25—26/25—26| 27s—29s | 27s—298 |23—28/23—29| — — | 2429 E 
prefer the risks of a sea vo ses, would greatly 18—25|18 
Sed abundance — ——— cot he yen ena (aot ye et 
- eultivation of land at home and the risks attendant on the | Mfalt—Ship . h. 6 $ ; 
and heavy taxes. You will get ainty of poor rates ae She 2 —_ — — oni eg 
‘than small ones to le large capitalists more easily > 45 lbs. 45 lbs a 5 T 
r Oats— White... 18—2418—24 38 2d : i 
shali be stated more simp: equite agres with you. The facts Black... 16—2216—22 2 2 m 5 A — y 8 „ 
Sudan Beer: FB. 7 Ibs. of seed 5 5 : Foreign í : j = — — . 
rows 2 fet apa, ailing the seed iu if inches apart in the ign 13—20ʃ13—202 3 2 an p ae 2 4 = 2 
> rows. i ' F P Ras qr. qr. ° » 
eas—Boilers |26—28|26—28| 33s— 338 26 — 32 26—32 J 8 
— 27 —29s 28 — 298 — so 
22— 29122 : CC 
. 22—29 30 —31 30 —31 — — — ris 4 
23—29|23—29 “4 — 28 —32 27282728222 26 
32 —36 32—33032—3332—34 
23. 362336 33|32—34/32—34. 
25—34 | 25—34 j26—27/25—-30) — | — | 
Per we | mm 4% . pe-, — 
st. of 8lbs—s d i a a a t me -= j] 
| Best Long-wools. 3 6 iti. 
10 3 $ British 97. 125 . 
fa a sans Seg 91. 12s)7l. 158—81. 7“. 158—8ʃ. 
Ewes & 2d quality 3 0 — 8 4 Foreign. 7. 21. — ave s * LEA ee iid 
* .. Indian Corn— 2226 22—26 
a 3 281 2 R wr: 1 28s—30s | = — yi am 
D ee 5 Flour— 280 Ibs. . sack y 
‘Calves, 75; Pigs, 140. 40 32— a 30—32 | 30—32 8 a 
but mne demand ‘Weekly | l l 
— — freely soid ; Averages and Aver, |I 4 } ; 
- Monday’s quota- | Aver. | Impts.| Averages, — A 1 
trade is — — xmports- Dee. 18 Imports. Aver. Impts. Aver. | Aver. 
; i A 8. . : ; 
"o 160 1 25 and WHEAT —. 42 M * ens s. d. qrs. a: k 8. 2 
5 pain, 30 BARLEY .... 428 2 10210 D 11 2903 38 9 10578 37 11 | 4628 
i ay 6to3 8 ATS... - 17 10 11570 11 229 26 9 3748 21 
n. — — ay og 8881 16 1324 13 7 
Pal no te aan 210—3 4| BEANS 1 1 ta 23 5 335 22 6 
„ „ sti 766 |27 8| 658 23 9 417 
tes tee “a A 2 trae q 28 11 374 — 
6 , ae 
Calves, 160; ‘ 
alves, 160; Pigs, 250. | Stenep{ FEAST ORM 7eEGAR and SANDARS THOMAS 
ae ais TUNNICLIFFE. 3 and DUNNS| WRIGHT. 


= wORSERYMEN AND N AND OTHERS. — S. — ELIGIBLE 
TO NURSER og — UNITY 
DISPOSED OF, an old-established i n 


Jo miles f from . orth Bin er . — 
for the same a 1 — to Mr. G. M. Hs, Estate Agent, 
Of 37, Queen. street, msgate. 
TO GRAPE GROWERS, aa FLORISTS, 


E SOLD OR LET, with eee possession, 
the PARK-CRESCENT NURSERY, BRIGHTON, most 
situated 


„ and Ë. im fully n to the south, The 
hole premises ar — 4 a. comprise a series of 
12 Forcing nd $S . Peach, Stove, Propa- 
an lant N het es Pits, &e., covered yu 
— 10,000 feet of glass. The whole of the external and 
section: a J p as with full bearing Fruit Trees of the 
finest + and wW: m the Company’s main is laid on to 
various fish pools and pa — tanks, conveniently placed 
— o nares every par 5 2 he premises. If sold, a large 7 
purchase money may re main on mortgage, if re 
ra 155 to Mr. e daine and Estate Agent, 
Marine armis 


ROSCOMMO 
0 BE LET, a: FARM. YARDS OF SOUTH- 
om PARK, wi 1 2 220 0 acres of the most superior Tillage and 
Grass op eu most spacious and convenient, 
having shedding fo head of cattle, with 


and — — — weighing-house and mach ine, 

in — r ma manure ; also largo arns 

and lofting, stabling, perfect repa air. Ther an 

excellent steward’s — Pint Fag * . which could be 4 a 

very residence with a rg erage outlay. These con- 

cerns and lands offer advantages e agriculturist rarely to 

be met with, They — 2 within two miles of Castlerea, 

and wn, where there are daily 

nveyances to — the Add. ie, and other parts o 

Ireland. application to be made to NIchoLAs Batre, Esq., 
South. 


a moet 


Bannon COURT PALACE 1 N KITCHEN r 
E LET, these GARDENS, on years, 
* the 5th of January —— together with gf Melon- 
M. e Glass-houses, the Dwelli ing-houses (except the 
ead Gardener's House), Stables, and other buildings belong- 
thereto ; and also the Fruit Trees, Pade Plants, Vines, 
Shrubs, — 2 2 S, &., &. persons desirous 
of obtaining a the same are 17 — Sy in Tenders 2 


stating the amount of rent they are willin E 
Ba auriku may be viewed i application È to Mr. 
p r the se Fare nspected, and 


HE LATE DR WILLIAM COOKE TAYLOR. 


mittee appointed to r 


eceive Subscriptions for 


—The Com 
the family of the late WILLIAM COOKE 4 mapa L. L. D. 


of beg to offer gerd —— statements, as — 


— appeal w 
mpel them to 


abilities with whi ch he 


was e owed, to the edut — 


. youth and 


studen 


In order 2 aid — minds of the young, he un 


mod those nary s 

mame style yepi i wo them too often distasteful to the 

and in re-writing, explaini and add 

p ranmi greet hs rendered them as inviting as ey 

been formerly the 8 hoerna task, from w 
might 


the re- 


dertook 
schoolbooks, whose dry uninte- 


hich a 
with aver- 


a f low 
ndeavours for ‘the at nog of education he 


had ara miar such 5 mass of inform 
en — A department and of different 
political | views ; ‘and. he 


that hi 


A FEW FLAN 
nof | By 


THE AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 


831 

eS 

. S ENGLISH BOTANY. 
Re-issue in Monthly Parts at 3s. 6d. 

Part 30 of the above is now ready, as are also vols. 1 and 2, 

of | contain ning together sya 420 plates and descriptions, at 


W by per vol., 
of vols, 1 to 7, comprising the Flowering Plan 
nest boards, well adapted for rae = ak bei ie 
. illustra Flora of this or any country), at 
To be had of the Proprietor, Juprra SOWERSY, 3, Mead-place, 
Lambeth ; and of all nd of all booksellers. 
Now ready, price 1 s., Part the 
HOU GHTS ON FR FREE TRADE 
ULTURE., 


ow. ¥ ~ ECTING AGRICU 
— art I. m mad still be h rice 

“Also, A MEMOIR rela ng to the Industrial 2 — 

and all Booksellers. 


—— on: fae Laren, 


yed by the British Govern. 


more la 
departments of 


History 


in 
1 of — — his pen 
writing, he devoted 25 


borious toil o 


self to the less — tho 
So dei — — * pod 


of be paid to 


taois 


rom his 
and four chil 


heir 1 


* and s 


to light — nl cata 
h far 
n the 


with most of the periodicals and Heading journals of F the day, 
various lite 


entific insti- 


Everything — * to sadaa — — —— 
d to progress in —— received his hearty co-operation, 
without regard to sect or pa 
career of us 2 and indefatigable exertion he 
has been — nly removed by cholera; and has left a — 
dren (a son and three child 
1 years of age and the youngest an infant), who have thus lost 
1 support— — —— 


daughter rs, the eldes 


in- 


i La te Pro KINK! ARDS LETTER Tom — TEN ANTRY 
Investment of Capital, on Eleven Y ears’ 
Practical Soper — og Farming. Second Edition, with a few 
Remarks addressed to 4. 
1 James Rrpoway, Piccadilly; Suaw, Dundee; and 
BLACK Woop, Edinburg 


13 — be contis continued m monthly, | 


HE BOTA icaL GAZETTE, — 
Edited by Anruvn H XTX, F. L. S., &c., Lecturer on 
otany at St. George's pital. 
The First Volume, ining many interesting articles by 
Messrs, B Prof. orbes, Prof. Henslow, 
pam. Leighton „ Purchas, H. C. _ Watson, e.; 


m the works of the chief fo: 


and 
botanists, l with 
reviews of the principal books ed during last 


— 


The Commit 


S 


evolutions 
Con tracted 


Committee 


British India. 

History of the House of Orleans 

R and Remarkable 
of Euro 


the memory 

as bei 
pre — me of Dr. Cooke T 
Natural History of Society. 
tory of Mohammedanism. 


Romantic Biography of the 

Time of Elizabeth. 

Rooms, Provost's 
(Signed) 


r 


to have — placed in a state of independe 
tee trust that the — re 
bours weré so incessant for the —— 2 "of the 1 2 
eneration ead — —— as having a 4 claim on — 
th: 


e la- 


e encouragem nd emoluments 


are liberally bes — y S — ose whose pea — were designed 
gratify the imagination, come tribute of regard will 
rred the graver walks 

— 5 


more genera — soli 


lor's principal Wor! 
833 and Times of Se Sir . Peel. 
Manual of A t History. 
Manual of M oa let tory. 
Revisions and New Editions of 
som gh Laer — His- 
Pinnock, Goldentts His. 


Pinnock’s Goldsmith’s His- 


— rinity College, Dublin, 
LPH Sablxrn, Clk. Secretary 


Contributions will be t thankfally r received, in the name of the 
grus tees, by any of the following :— 
he Marquess of 2 Berkeley-squaře, London. 


particulars of the terms 1 paar on y be obtained by The Archbishop of D alace, Dub 
applying at the office of Mr. — to the | The Lord Chancellor, 26, Upper broke-street, Dublin, 
9 7, Whitehall-yard, London The Bishop of Norwich, 12425 Norwich, 
The Bishop of Limerick, ace, 
Haut EEP a HORSE ro Tis THAN ONE The Bishop of Cork, Palace, Cor 
SMILING PER DAY, and Make — Animal look Better The Lord Chief Justice Biackburne, Merrion-square, Dublin. 
a Paying 12s. and iss. per Week.—Consider the enor- | The Chief Secretary for Ireland, Phas . — Dublin, 
— in these h times of cheapness.— Apply Very Rev. The Dean of the Chapel Royal, Dublin. Castle, 
Personally or by letter at Maur WEDLAKE and Co's, 118, Fen, Very Dean Toa d, Burnchurch, Kilkenny. 
church- street, Oat- bruising — Chaff. machine Manufact tory- | Rev. The Provost, Trinit College, Dubli 
established upwards of 40 years. s ev. The Vice Be Trin N — * 
N v. Dr. M Donne „Trinity College, Du 
f i tithe HORTICULTU RAL MAGAZINE. — A ev. Dr. Todd, Trinity College, D Uns b 
devoted e = Practical Gar- Rev. John Dufton, W m Rectory, Ashford, Kent. 
dentog, ‘pre rig! 1 Will ge go on the Ist of January. Sir Phillip Crampton Bart., Merrion-square, Dublin. 
Man r H. de] Bootie C. B., at 125 


—— 


n det Greenhouse | 


Flowers The Culture Sf Apples Cte ir Hen 
of Brussels Sprouts, Cabbage, — le, and Savoys—Cultu ir 1 Mus RA R ange, Yo ughal, 
27 0 Japan Lilies—Mr, Glen y’s Notes on the New Doblas New The Hon. C. P iers, M. P., i — rade C b, Londo: 

S; Poaching * ew Carnations, New R - | Corry Connéllan, 228. F Lodge, Enant? wtb Eie Peha. 
drons, New oe, —— Pansies, New Cinerarias, a all | Richard Cobden, Esq., M.P., Westbourn London. 
the Neu Florist 3—New Peyitemar— Miniature Trees — | John Bright, Esq., Mi E Oue h, Roc 1 eashire, 
New Plants— acrantha — M 7 e r — Joseph Napier, Esq., M. P., Mou —— Dublin. 

Flowers and Fruits of Scripture—Salt as —The | James Whiteside, 8q., d. 25 2 eg North Dublin. 
ment of Vege bles—and with ansonst ilustrations, pr. Evory Kennedy, Me m-square, Du 
C. Cox, 12, King William.street, Strand, Lond yr, Anster, 31 wer 8 D Pond 
. Di Esq., 9, Lowe e, on. 
MET: aie ALKALINE 7100 TH. POWDER ÈY Lorter, et., Board of Trade, Whitehall, London. 
will be foun tobe the best n 1 2 yet been produced; | Joseph Parkes, Esq., Great George-st., Westminster, London. 
it Sead) fe thc no acids, * an injure the finest | Henry Ashworth, Esq., The Oaks, Tartan, — 4 Lancashire. 
ename he tartar and all impurities, | John W. Parker, Esq., 445, West-Stra 
produces mart beau white appearance so much to be desired, | S. C. Hall, Esg., Art-J al Office, 49, Pall Mall, London, 
and its fragrant perfume tends to sweeten and purify the | Richard Ply. Esq., New B urlington-street, t, London. 
— ad Cn from the many years they have been cele- Professor Hancock, “Trinity * OU 
ooth-Brush Makers, have had opportunities (that | Messrs, D. La Touche & Co., Nets, 
r to few) of testing the relative merits of those powders —— —— Lew, a 80 „Bankers, Co lleze-green, Dubli Pai. 
at have been ght before the pù tie. hey ha w ' Loyd, & Co., Bunkers, 43, Lothbury-st. ; Londo 
guccceded ity procuring the receipt L the above’ | Mesara- Gor, Biddulph, & Cos Bankers, z-cross, London. 
* „ confidently recommend its universal Messrs. Attwood, Spooner, , Bankers, Birmingham, 
— — Wholesale and retail at MetcaLrz, BINGLEY, m Heywood & Co, Bankers, M: 
Co.'s, Brush«Makers to H. R. H. Prince Albert, 2s. per box. Trost Fonp. 
Gautos have the i the i Arms, com- 


OTHACHE Tae CURED BY n's Bounty 4 
2 eee Teeth, | His His Erosie ency Thè ae (1 
CEF painless. 8. h Lord ‘prs a x. > ii 0 65 5 
y ve | Archbishop of D Dublin 100 0 ' 
ment facut ; and | The Literary Fund 2 ; ae 
mn de Voltec K. The Vice-Provost a 3 
; retard 7° 30 0 J. 
. * 8 lie, Bt. 25 0 
sianida eee Johr 57 5 r * „„ $ 
has thi eparé Joi ~ Bag. i 7 20 0 ; 
imitatione and on 1 to produce spurious The 3 „„ 
as Brandes 8 K Enamel A iae eg The 5 am a. ~ é 
gua ainst such i si b oi 6 i 3 
e Af accoinpanien. sa John Feeney, Eq. . 19 10 | Major M.S. Bemis $ 
- * Sani Kurtis 
B ser © S COMPE LAI NTS, INDIGESTION, D | Rer the Provost, T.C.D. 10 0 | Professor Hancock ö. A 
peat es CURED ny HOLLOWAY’S’ rere: , Esq. 10 0) 0, Porter, Esq, LD. 3 
sea el ect g from, any of these Comp —.— Weaienet Dikey Esa. 10 0 2 a yk 
a few doses of this extra J. Minter N n, Es ie 10 CEM. Jennings, & š 
Which 10 a certain and efficacious Remedy for “all a. i ar. ie e 8. Jennings, 3 
ne cl arising > erangement of the Digesti W. Leaf, Esq., London 10 0 Alderman . $ 
cures, but RE.. . B. Bourne; Esq. ... 
strengi and ikewine eserves the te 0 As i, end fetter 5 r ria 10 0 The Archdeaton of 3 
po ee 90 constitution affections; want | Rev, Dr, Lloyd TC. D- 10 0| -Glandeipugh e cy 3 
8 8 and 23 the ne ver thel is no N. Mahon, 2 Rev. T, B, : 
LOWAY’s Prive as . = — st take ‘Hor: toes da 8 ! = ay 1 2 a ‘Youghal . 
Sead bnd ana at Prof 5 Eeq. tf 
roles: a W. Brown, 2 9. 2 | Wm, C. Logan, Esq. 
Strand, Lond ssor N s prre oras — aS wes y. ER : 


His Grace the 

Rev. John West, D. D., -Vicar of St. Kanes. 

Rev. Ral u Sadleir, A. 
es 


SSS SS eoo 


Pet tO 


‘ear, ig 
ry ready, price 12s, cloth. 
E. Tarnos, Red-iion court, Fleet-street ; to whom 
ail otters and communications may be address ed. 
Just pu blished, with n ER: hen, privo 12, 
HE FARM ENGINEER : : on Barn 
Machinery, particularly on the E Paragi of 8 and 
other Motive wb ones to the Threshing Machine, and the ex- 
tended Steam as a Motive Power at Farms. 
By Rovert — 0. E., — A. J. C. E., F. R. S. A. S. 
Back and Sox, Warwick-square, and Glasgow 


London : 
and Edin 


AYR ND MOORE'S S CULTURAL A AnD om 
A e SEED LABELS, 
* Thi e f th t useful and praia 
of the R — „ in Great 
of whatever jal gm! should ox Ping up “his mind to oon iad 


e, Publisher, D. M. Amp, 170, Fleet-street, London, 
whom specimens may be obtained. 
mg * The Retail Trade de supplied b 1 — | cee wholesale 


the Vol, for 1840, being Vol. I 
8 OF BOTANY, 
AS J. eS A 
21. 


pokey 


the AA the Edi 
ow, F. R. S., Drs. L. S. — Pe, 
ooket, F.R.S, Asa Gray, Wallich, 
PRs: Rev, M. J. Berkeley, F. L. S., 1 Hane, 
John Miers, F. K. S., B. Seeman, J. E. Stocks, Esq., and other 
otanists. rds, 128, 6d 


» Reeve, Bennam, and Reeve, King William.street, Strand. 


PRICE FOURPENCE, OF ANY BOOKSE 
(ora oF THE 9 er SATURDAY 
LAST, DECEMBER 


NUM, 
JOURNAL OF ENGLISH AND nane irrena TORE, 
SCIENCE, AN INE A 


D THE F 
- Large 
Revie or, with 
Notes of a Tour in England, Readings for Railways; By 
Scotland, and and Treland By | Leigh Hunt. 
„E M.P., The Nile Boat. By W. H. 
h ther Count xa- 
n g Gao at * 
England. By Sydney Smith, 
SHORTER NOTICES OF 
red lendar. 7215 MRCS. 
J. . g. * e ene. 
Contract: a T mson. 3 
pA ee e ap of British Péint. 
Essay on 5 hag b By T. Moore. : 


edarien at Fe Piette 


al Publications 
Mark : 
Dramatic GossiP-—Musical Taste in 
e Plays at St. James’s Theatre 
—— — —— Atmanac—Engageme ents of Malle. 
— lections at the State’ Paper Office—But. 7 
ter fly Flower eee eee 
Bachs in Private Dwellings. : ö 
order The Athenzeum of any Bookseller. 


— 


THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE, 


[Dec. 29 


SUPPLIED TO SUBSCRIBERS ONLY. 


On lst January, Part First, AE 6d. Super Royal gvo. f 


CYCLOPEDIA OF AGRICULTURE 


PRACTICAL ao ipl 
THE THEORY, THE ART, AND THE — — — OF PARN, 
IN ALL THEIR DE PARTME CTICALLY 


NTS, ARE THOROUGHLY AND P TREATE 
BY UPWARDS OF FIFTY OF THE MOST EMINENT FARMERS, LAND 1 AND SCIENTIFIC HEN 5 THE DAY, 
1 BY JOHN 0. = — ON, 


r“ THE AGR 


ITOR O 
Mith abobe — Thousand og on 2505 and Steel. 


Tux object of this Work is to present to the Agricultural reader the whole of the truth immediately connected — his 


profession, so far far as it i is known to the men most familiar with the sciences it involves, the methods it employs, and the 
risks it incurs s purpose, every topic requiring discussion has been placed in the hands of those with ies it 
hee! been a matter of experience and stu 


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3 it is a subject so eee ces, and d so liable to ay einen ion, that no other kind of 
owledge is worth co any previous attempts have been 
ditors, howev 
i of other 
e assistan 
ments; writers retailing an experience at second hand upon these points, can sales be accurate nor full Pies for his 

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3 + desirable object has been the great aim of the Editor and Publishers of the 5 or * 
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The 3 will therefore very section of 3 subject, Ge 


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